_— : _ $520,000 
    
  
  
      
The Weather 
‘HE PO 
  TIAC PRESS|   Cloudy, win “with 
a few light showers. 
(Details. Page ay 
115th Tm keke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1957-44 PAGES ASSOCIMSTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE - To 
  
  d 17 Bodie * 
  i * 
UF Hits 60,Per Cent x & * ’~ * * * * 
With ten days to go, the Pontiac; Watson 
Area United Fund campaign today. ticipation of all industrial em-/total campaign geal, 
ployes in Pontiac and Waterford) The Commercial Division's suc-| passed the 60 per cent mark in its, la ie ee aes ad eae ou a . ‘ownship, The division is asking cess so far was given careful scru- 
drive for $612,000; campaign chait-| its chairman. ‘minimum 
eac h contributor to meet its quota, | pledges of $10.71 from tiny by 
(Continued on Page 2 man Dr. Dana P. Whitmer an-| 
nounced today. 
The UF's 4,300 volunteer work-| 
ers have turned in $384,066 in con- 
tributions and pledges, or 62.8 per 
cent of their 1958 goal, Whitmer 
said. 
Whitmer and other campaign 
leaders were encouraged by the 
success so far, but at the same 
time pointed ouf that “any let 
up now. might mean failure.” 
During the final ten days of the 
drive, UF solicitors.must come up 
with $227,044 to put the drive over 
the top and guarantee UF support 
to 55 community service agencies 
next year, Whitmer said, 
COMMUNITY CHALLENGE 
“This is a. challenge not only 
to our volunteer workers, but also 
to the whole community,"’ he said 
The spotlight today was shifting 
to the UF's giant Industrial Divi- 
sion, whose 1,700 volunteers under 
the direction of chairman George 
Watson so far have raised 68.8 per 
gent of their $404,273. 
“It is vitally important to the 
drive that this division go over 
the top,” Watson sald, 2, + Col. 2 
  
      Estranged Mate Arrested : By HAROLD S. COHEN 
53. 
murder. 
  
last Tuesday. Winds Blow Up 
Storm in Area   
la.m. by 
| 
of Fallen Treey, Wits, car. mevtun-ca AT 
Broken Windows “ 
Winds up to 65 miles an hour ment window, $0 
Prepared for Deer Season Opening 
urged 100 per cent par-;which jis about two-thirds of the 
€arroll Os-' 
Blast Rips Pontiac Home; 
An early morning explosion tore apart a modest! 
frame bungalow at 370 S. Edith St. today and narrowly) 
missed injuring the sole occupant, Mrs..Mae McGowan, 
Police have arrested her estranged husband, Ter-| 
rance McGowan, 58,—for investigation of attempted 
Officers said they found on his person a receipt | 
*for the purchase of seven 
sticks of dynamite, dated, 
Mrs. McGowan, who ts employed 
as a maid at the Waldron Hotel, 
said she went to bed at 10:30 last 
night, but was awakened at 2:15) 
the sound of breaking 
glass and coal rumbling ‘down the 
Leave Only Scattering piie in the basement directly un- 
| At first she thought it was a cat 
‘coming in through the broken base-| 
but after thinking ‘ 
f Airliner Passengers.     — 
4 
    } 
  Believe Plane 
Ditched Quickly, 
Rule Out Blast   12 Wear Life Jackets, 
One Strapped to Seat; 
Plan to Recover Debris — 
HONOLULU (INS) — 
Seventeen shoeless bodies, 
12 with life jackets and one 
strapped to a seat have 
been recovered in the-,Pa- 
cific search for 44 persons 
aboard a Pan American 
plane which hit the ocean 
jabout mid-way in its San 
‘Francisco - to - Honolulu 
flight a week ago today.   f | Only five of the rubber 
life jackets had their cart® 
‘ridges expended, indicating 
ithat the doube-decked “Ro- 
mance of the Skies” made 
an emergency landing 
jwhen it went down last 
\Friday night. 
This killed the theory of a major 
explosion aboard the craft. 
Air line officials pointed out 
that passengers are always in- 
structed never to release the air 
cartridges to inflaice their life 
jackets until after they are 
forced te abandon a disiressed 
| plane. 
| The reason is that they other- 
‘wise-might not be able to squeeze 
)out of a sinking airship, 
The plane ‘made its last routine 
radio ground check at 5:04 p.m, 
'(7:04 p.m. PST). Wrist watches 
worn by three of the passengers       
  
Traverse City farmer Leon 
safe blew up quite a-storm throughout about it for several seconds, she 
the Pontiac area last night, but got up to investigate. 
a only a scattering of. fallen M ’ . : : 
= “broken windows SeGowan said she had “HUNTERS TAKE BREED =Notonecto trust just entered her living reom ; Pontiac Municipal Airport -Te-| when a tremendous ¢xplosion the Michigan hunters who open the war of the 
ported gusts up to 65 m.p.h., but. sheek. the ‘hewie. She canon north woods today, 
no damage to planes or buildings. | hered nothing after that until) @°d Watson paint’ proper identification on his 
DOORS BROKEN | neighbors led her from the 
ib Police in -Rochester said large —. 
plate glass doors were broken in| The blast completely demolished - 
Fetters Drug Store ahd the D & her* bedroom and tore a gaping 
C Store in the village. hole in the floor directly under her 
‘bed, but Mrs. McGowan escaped 
_ Birmingham police reported |with only a tiny cut on one foot. minor damage to Kroger and — 
Kresge stores in the city when | jwonse: IN SHAMBLES 
gusts ripped off awnings. Windows. throughout the house 
‘were hatterec > pr he Trees and downed electrical| shattered, the wall under her wivie acre came girects wotaa| ‘bediroom window ‘was blown out, 
“a pie t aboard at the thee PS beans Soe ere 2 meee ‘ite ra a “iff'S in all rooms and the basement was department with a number of calls. | lbadly damaged. 
No destruction to property was re- 
Detectives Raymond FE. Meg 
— nd Robe = | gitt a rt A. Emery, inves- 
FALLEN LIMBS | tigating the explosion, learned | 
luncheon clubs at the Elks Friday The Pontiac Parks and Rec rea-| that Mrs, McGowan was sepa- 
noon, Jan, 3. tion Dept. said eight calis of fallen’ rateq sinee August from her hus- 
limbs had crews working until) band, who is a self - employed 
This will be similar to the ll p.m, A fallen tree near. the’ house painter, 
ales Reteee See wee Bele ibus termine) on Perry street | They went to his residence Jast week to’ hear President John |piocked several cars in a drive-| . A. Hannah of Michigan State i976 Kettering Ave., and found ne 
way. lin his car stuck in a ditch directly University, The former secretary ‘ heed Winds gushing area the De-!in front of the house. 
of defense will deliver a talk and troit area plunged two 17-year-old| pany eure quentiens in the dat- erorse duck hunters into the De- = T RECALL BLAST | 
= Pe ot Be preee. troit River when their boat over-- When McGéwan was searched Tickets that are not picked upturned in rough water, 250 yards.at the police station, a receipt fox 
in advance by the luncheon clubs 
will be placed.on general sale. jin a motorboat. 
Explosion Rocks 
      
       
  Cc, E. WILSON 
C. E. Wilson Slated 
for Address Here 
Arrangements have been com- 
pleted to have C. E. Wilson, for- 
mer secretary of defense, address 
a combined meeting of the Pontiac+ 
            | (Continued on ee 2, Col. 6)   
Bungalow —   
| 
y Pontiac Press Photo 
10 Mec he seereioty aaert 
     
  | Louis would be dictat Happy Forces Seeking Sight of Enemy   
Army of Hunters Invade By JACK PATTERSON 
There's an abroad in 
Michigan today. army 
dreds of thousands of _ men, 
'gerously armed, silently, stealthily 
,geeking contact with the enemy 
From the rich farmlands of the 
south to the bleak reaches of the 
western most Upper Peninsula, 
units of these forces are 
an enemy outnumbering 
ane it two to 
  
‘Cloudy With Rain, 
Snow on Weekend 
Be prepared for a very damp 
football games af Lansing or Ann 
jhas predicted a cloudy day with 
rain for the Pontiac area. The 
‘high tomorrow wil] be a coolish 
0-54. 
The outlook for Sunday is not 
‘too pleasant either. The forecast 
‘is mostly cloudy and colder, with' 
'a chance of snow flurries. 
The lowest recorded temperature | 
| preceding 8 a.m. was 46 in down- single purpose, 
individuals, jtown Pontiac, The reading 
at at 1 p.m. was An army of hun-| 
dan- | 
stalking: 
enemy isn't + There is but one order 
day: find the enemy, destroy it. 
THEY'RE HAPPY LOT 
Like 
is easier to put on paper than 
But the most General Orders this 
one 
ito carry out_in the field. 
troops are doing their best. They 
imake up an unusually happy 
army. They are fresh, rested, 
well-fed. 
They are united in a single. 
minded effert to carry -eut their 
orders, They are happier than 
most. troops, too, because the 
shooting back. 
out in the darkness 
They. shivered them- 
during false dawn 
out this evening un. They were 
this morniag. 
selves wafm 
They will be 
isight. And for most of them 
more of the same thing. 
Some, having successfully 
countered the enemy, en- 
will stay up 
ivery 
very late tomorrow. For 
there will be no tomorrow. 
ARMY HAS RANKS 
Though this is an army with a 
and the only differ-| 
  
‘Evidence Found to Support Governor's favorite Holstein 
figuring the paint job might 
insurance 
of the character 
idividuals 
off shore. Volunteers rescued them dynamite was found. He has made day if you're planning to go to the til failing light obscures the front additional $100 has 
, to make 
Arbor tomorrow. The weatherman! morrow morning will bring some have 
late tonight and stay abed appear 
a few find the 
answers to choose ” Mian, es 
The cow doesn't mil ied a it 
be at least a half 
polic y. 
between thos 
In the top echeion is the sports- 
guided by ‘the spirit and 
letter of the laws of this type of 
warfare;—even mindful of the 
vast superiority he enjoys, in 
weapons: and supporting _ equip- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) 
last week's puzzle 
on page 16, and you may 
explanations for the past 
elp vou decide which Answers for 
puzzle will h 
icontest 
it is an army of and Study the writers’ 
vou may fi puzzle for the current done at the site of the 
logic Was 85 feet beneath the 
nd your own se- the 60-foot hole and attempting te|-a possible death penalty Will Hole Cerne, 
Seattle Wonders S Workers Toil Around 
Clock Restoring Sewer 
Service to Residents | stopped at 5:27 p.m., indicating 
  
            
   agua i CANADA 
jose 
Perks Chat yerreo 
States 
    mal hime . 
be (Ceca   
_ithat the plane crashed 23 minutes 
SEATTLE UW — Seattle mar- 
shaled its reconstruction forces, 
counted -the probable’ costs and 
worried anxiously teday whether 
a great gaping hole in the North 
End's Ravenna Beulevard had 
ised growing 
Permanent Bulge * ho * + The size of the huge opening,’ 
in Pot-O-Gold ‘upon the lips of which a dozen 
houses crouched perilously, didn’t 
Is $1,000 Load ly, ‘de change materially after it reacned 
Since no winner has come forth dimensions cf 200 feet long. 120 
to claim the $900 ior last week's feet wide and 60 feet deep. But 
Pot-O-Gold purzie. the poor old pot engineers said the stoppage might 
has another permanent bulge. An Hot last long 
been added to Fighting to relieve the danger 
the spoils worth $1.000. You and te restore something akin to 
until Tuesday to mail the normal sewer services to a heavi 
puzzle on page 28 and try to re- ly populated area several miles 
lieve the pot's load square, engineers and construec- 
tion workers toijed around the 
clock at widely separated places. 
Virtually nothing was being 
hole. The) 
break in a great main sewer line! 
bottom of 
lections next week will be the ones approach it directly was consid-| 
iences in rank are _Gifferences in ‘to form a correct solution, 
View   ord ton peri -s later. 
Nine persons with Michigan con- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) 
  
People Are Raving 
About DEAR ABBY She’s one of the most colorful 
| columnists in the papers today. 
She has a brilliant slant on 
everyday problems and readers 
have come te think of Abigail 
Van Burean as. a coni.darte on 
whom they .nay rely. 
Wateh fer this colunm § start- 
in Monday in 
THE PONTIAC PRESS 
- BULLETIN 
NEW YORK (INS) — 
Soviet Secret Police Col. 
Rudolph Ivanovich Abel 
was sentenced to 30 years 
today for spying on the 
U. S. The lean, hatchet- 
faced Soviet spy escaped   
  when he was sentenced in 
Brooklyn Federal Court.   a? 
  Williams Voices Faith in Staté’s Future By ROGER LANE 
LANSING W—Gov. G. Mennen 
Williams pas found what he ob- 
viously. considers a good argu- 
ment against those who say 
taxes are the main reason for a 
joss, of industrial jobs in Michi- 
gan. 
He points to the annotincement | 
of Chrysler Corp, plans to move | 
existing operations from Evans- 
, Ind., as powerful evidence 
that ‘tax pélicies are not the con- 
trolling “factor. Indiana arid Ohio 
have been in hot competition 
with Michigan for new jobs, 
Chrysler sai its move from 
Evansville to a point near St. 
by trans- 
portation and market | considera: 
tions, notwithstanding! probable 
Missouri business tax diadvan- 
    early this morning shows damage signs from fore the blast. The front door is partially blown 
/ the front, The broken wiridow is in the bedroam - _ oft its hinges.. PX ee ; }   tages. The governer sometimes has 
been called unfriendly or even 
hostile ‘toward business, 
In Today's Press 
  | with. the taken 
his closeness 
United Auto Workers, 
his unremitting advocacy o: a 
corporation profits tax and his 
reputation among Republicans 
as-a big government spendet main this can be 
ice to In the 
as a reierei 
It also is true that despite his 
personal background of wealth 
Williams seldom hobnobs sorial- 
| ly with the big names of busi- 
ness or finance. 
‘WILLIAMS BELIEVES | 
| firms ‘faith 
nomic COMIN oc iccancioes 83 
County News ©. ..5....56: res) OE 
Editorials 2. .....6...05. Noon 4 
High School ................ 8 
MERTEOED 5. ccs pecivcsocec: a8 
- Mystery peepererenes 1. 
Obituaries egne 5 
Pot-4)-Geld Puztle . Seirus 
Pot-0-Gold Answers ' 16 
Sperte ...ci. Gs 0 to 4 
Theaters ..... . 3 te 9 
TV and Radio Programs . 8 
Wilson, Earl — _ 
Women's Pages ..4..0 Btn. 
i ‘ f ’ i reaf- 
£cO* Williams 
in strongly 
Michigan's Sut 
future 
There .is evidence to support 
‘this view, 
Major gas, electric and tele- 
phone utilities have been push- / 
ing large expansion programs in | 
Michigan, all in anticipation of + 
7] ng hastivens and reside La 
rands 
* * * 
The Michigan Belj Telephone 
Co. alone plans up to 200 million 
dollars in new construction and 
improvements in the near future. 
There has been a virtually un- increas 
tial den 
interrupted growth in non-manu- |, 
| facturing employment ° in the 
state since World War Il, a fact 
viewed by sone economists as a 
healthy sign of d maturing econ: 
omy 
In the last five years, Mich- 
igan has gained abont 100,000 
jobs in the service industries, 
retall trade, transportation, 
communications and other non- 
manufacturing fields. 
: “2 * 
A. recent summary 
4 
a 1 new 
by. the j state economic development ce- 
%, partment estimated that 193,000 
manufacturing jobs have 
‘been added in this period, most- 
ly, from expansions by existing 
fins but some from 100 new 
companies locating in the state, 
ye, wm ® 
If these new jobs had not been 
          
  created.the state’s net manufac- 
turing Ymployment: loss would 
And Mich 
Sic Natural \& 
Paine off m 
  
$45 Reward tor\retare of eat, 
Tan. with tiger strips,with white tipped 
tall, FE ‘ 7 ON =   w, 
    
    
   
            
  
  cs 
_ attained. Stamping Plant Strike 
Threat Ends but Trouble) 
Looms in 2nd Factory 
DETROIT  — The United Auto 
Workers Union and Chrysler Corp. 
reached agreement last night on 
a production dispute that could) 
have idled 71,000 workers in the 
company’s Detroit area stamping 
plants, 
Norman Matthews, UAW Chrys- 
jer Department director, and John 
Leary, rover Corp. labor re- 
announced the 
pone ge ol a roe 
bargaining session that extended| 
mee an the gy 6 p.m, Thursday 
_o a Chrysler. stamping 
plant workers, members of UAW 
Local 212, will vote on tay wasn | 
of the agreement tomorrow. Terms 
of the agreement were not fully). 
disclosed. 
However, Matthews said Chrys- |. 
ler had agreed to reinstate 14 
  ssion. 
Had the stamping plant workers 
gone out on strike, the first’ pro- * 
_THE PONTIAC’ PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1s, 1957_   
TYPICAL SCENE — This gray tableau was witnessed all over 
Oakland County yesterday and early today, as hunters loaded their 
gear and headed for the woods. More than 10,000 vehicles crossed sula. night, carrying an invading army       
  : Pontiac Press 
the Mackinac beldes during the 24 hours before midnight 
of hunters into the Upper Penin- 
  
duction facility to be hit would 
have been the Plymouth Body 
Plant. Williams Voices     area Chrysler workers within two F@ith in Future 
  
Board of Supervisors will meet in 
the next two months with property 
owners who feel their assessed 
    
    (Continued From Page One) 
ployment, and will continue to 
do so. 
Among 
ter, huge salt deposits attractive to 
The trouble is that these and 
other sources of employment gains 
are relatively small compared with 
the fobs lost. At Hooker’s 15-mil-| 
lion dollar plant, for example, em- 
ployment numbers about 100. 
For years Williams has urged     these are abundant wa- The proposed Oakland County 
expressway (U.S. 10 relocation) 
and the 35-mile proposed extension 
of Northwestern Highway as an ex- 
pressway are both “vital’’ to Oak- 
land County and should be built by 
the State Highway™ De partment, 
“|Rep, William S. Broomfield (R- 
Royal Oak) said today. 
Broomfield approved of State 
_|Highway Commissioner John C, 
Mackie’s recent decision to budget 
funds in the next five years for 
construction of @ new U.S. 10. 
way from Eight Mile road to the 
Fenton-Clio expressway leading 
"| to Flint and beyond. 
last week announced that 
he budget funds to build a 
northwestern expressway only as 
far nerth as Eleven Mile road. 
Mackie also announced plans for 
an east-west expressway in the 
vicinity of Eleven Mile road to! 
connect ’*Northwestern with the 
‘Farmington - Brighton expressway 
along Grand River. 
“We need new north- south ex- 
pressways much more than we   Broomtield Preeses Need 
for 2 County Freeways 
Mackie's change ‘in plans con¢cern- 
ing the Oakland express- 
way, Broomfield pointed out that 
“Woodward Avenue already is car- 
rying its capacity in traffic and | cific 
a relief road is a ‘must’ for Oak- 
land County.” 
A month ago, when Mackie an- 
nounced his first five-year highway 
plan. for outstate Michigan, the 
Oakland County expressway was 
year plan. 
FOUGHT FOR ROADS 
Broomfield lashed out then at 
the postponement, saying that Pon- 
tiac, Royal Oak and other Wood- 
ward Avenue communities were 
being ignored by the Highway De- 
partment. ’ . 
Broomfield said he hoped the 
various communities affected by 
the proposed U.S, 10 relocation 
could agree with the Highway 
Department on the exact route. 
Costing an estimated $48 millidn, 
the first 40-mile section from Flint 
‘past Pontiac to Eleven Mile road 
jeast of Woodward could be under 
construction in two years, if there 
is agreément between the state, e,| 
county ‘and communities involved, 
Mackie has said       
        
By E. H. SIMS 
What happens to the gas in us 
when we board a passenger air- 
liner and ascend to five or ten! 
thousand feet? 
In approximately half of the air- 
liners in service today, in the Unit-) 
ed States, the passenger compart- 
ment is “pressurized.” This means 
that the pressure of air against our 
bodies is maintained at a near- 
constant rate, : 
_ On the other half of the airliners, 
and these do not fly at high alti- 
tudes, and are usually the smaller 
airliners, the. pressure varies di- 
rectly in proportion to the altitude     
In these airliners gas and air in 
one’s stomach expands as the pres- 
sure on thé outside decreases. 
Thus, if you reached 16,500 feet 
the gas would expand to twice its! 
sea-level volume. This could be 
quite uncomfortable. For this rea- 
son, and because of the necessity 
for oxygen these airliners do not 
fly over ten or twelve thousand 
feet. 
In a private plane, even if using 
an oxygen mask, gas expands to 
three times its sea-level volume at 
25,000 feet and five times its size! 
at 34,000 feet. That's why pilots 
are advised not to eat gassy foods. 
The Weather 
Fall 0.8. Weather Bureaw Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy tonight with a low ef 42-46. Te- 
morrow, clondy with rain, high 60-54. 
y winds ot 20-80 miles an bens, 
cone. Y gimintahing tenight and 
  Today Tix ‘Pontise of greater economic stability. It's 
‘coming, steaily but slowly. 
* * * or more 
tion. of industry and the prospect) 
In summary: 
Whichever explanation may 
preve correct as to the loss of 
manufacturing jobs, conditions 
haven't altered a great deal, 
Thus, if taxes, auto industry de- 
centralization, Gov. 
Detroit wage pattern, automation 
or federal defense policies arer 
chasing away Michigan manufac- 
turing jobs, the exodus logically 
should continue in the period im- 
mediately ahead. 
At the same time, there are 
direction gf employment growth 
and greater built-in economic sta- 
bility, ~~. 
Michigan probably will get along 
fairly well, barring a nationwide “|need an east-west expressway west 
jmented. 
| Mackie would run into trouble 
with the 
Williams, the 
long-haul influences operating—al- 
though at a slower pace—in the! of Northwestern,” Broomfield com- 
Broomfield anticipated that 
purchasers of bonds 
sold by the previous highway 
administration for the full 35- 
mile extension of the Northwest- 
ern expressway, 
ing the state in good faith would 
build the complete road,”’ he said. 
* * * “They bought those bonds believ-: The second section, from Eleven 
Mile south to the completion of the 
Hastings - Oakland expressway. in 
Detroit, should be finished within 
(10 years, according to Mackie’s 
plans. 
* * * 
The whole route, from the De- 
troit River north to Flint, is eligi- 
ible for designation as an interstate| 
highway with the federal govern- 
ment paying 9%} per cent of the 
cost, Mackie said. 
  
      Mackie has said that of the $25 
million in bonds sold, $21 to $23 
million would be needed to extend’ 
Northwestern as far as Eleven 
Mile. The previous highway ad- 
ministration had conceded that it 
would cost an additional $10 mil- 
lion at least in state funds to 
complete.the expressway to south 
of Fenton, 
COUNTY ‘SHORT CHANGED’ 
          miseries everywhere. 
United Fund Hits 
60 Per Cent 
(Continued From Page One) 
mun, who said that he was not 
“completely satisfied.” 
Today's report had the Commer- 
cial Division at the 52.5 per cent) 
mark, While the division's retail, 
group No. 1 has reached 81.9 per 
cent ‘of its quota, Osmun said, 
‘other groups within the division 
were lagging. 
_ “The government and pretes- | 
sional groups have only reported 
    Pe petted temperature preceding § a.m 
At @ am: Wind Velocity 15-18 m.ph 
Direction: West. 
Sun sets Friday at 8:10 pm 
Sun rises Saturday at 7:24 am 
Moon sets Friday at 1:31 pm 
Moon pipes, Gatardey at 1-26 am 
Dew ntewn Temperatares 
45 COM veces. ll a.m... mare 
7 e.m... 2.48 12 m rele 
@am.... 0. 46 lpim........ 47 9am 48 
0am... 46 F Thursday tn "Pontiae 
(ase recerded downtown) 
Highest temperature. veces OM 
Lowest temperature .. : see §0 
Mean temperature oe 
Weather—Miid. “rain, “78 tn 
One Year “Age in Eeatios: 
Highest temperature .... #1 
lowest temperature .......c0e0005 8! 
ag —he : 
het—Rain, wed. in. 
‘Bighest Lowest Temperatures 
This ate im 85 Beste 
  
    6.9. per cent and 28.9 per cent, | 
respectively, of their goals,” he | 
, said, 
To spur efforts, Osmun called 
for a special meeting of the di-| 
l\vision’s leaders Wednesday, The | 
idivision's goal is $164,280 
The Geographic. Division, led by 
(Mrs, George Eldred, found itself 
faced by reverses today. Having) 
led the campaign at this point last 
year, the division to date has 
reached only 56 per cent of quota. 
‘Poor weather and Asian flu were 
‘blamed by Mrs. Eldred for the Ny 
slow start of the door-to-door cam-|$ 
ipaign this year. 
  
News Flash 
          i in i i@ jn 1933 
Nation's Temperatures 
Raitimore 61 $1 Angeles 65 53 
? are 33M sareuetie z 3» 
Brownsville 86 €8 Memphis 46 Buffale 88 80 Miamt HH 7 
Charleston 70 38 ukee 850 44 
Chicago ee anaes “4 40 
Cincinnati. 6) 3 Or 74 #63 
veland eo Mu new York. 66 57 
Denver © 32 Omeha 81. 42 Detroit 3 7 ni ee ¢€ 
age 33 «Pittsburgh «= 54 
nape ts Bb Feancieco G1 49 y e Aeiseo 
S on “i 3 6. 8. Marie © & 
‘in § verse C. 84 43 
hingten 2 34 
“3 tile so 4 
(ee ‘ pa 61 ‘, bust that would produce economic Broomfield argued that Oakland 
County. shouldn't _ be ‘short 
ichanged” in the state’s plans. for 
inew expressways, 
| “There should be no bargain- 
| Ing table, either, at which Oak- 
| land County is offered either the 
| U.S. 10 expressway or the North- 
| western expressway, but not 
both, 
| “Both these roads are vital for 
\this county, which at 700,000 popu- 
lation is the state’s second largest. 
|The roads must be built to relieve 
‘present heavy traffic and should 
ibe scheduled for construction with- 
in a relatively short time.” 
* * * 
Saying hé was “pleased’’ about 
United Fund Reports 
Gifts of $50 or More 
Pontiac Area United Fund head- 
quarters has announced the fol- 
lowing list of donations of $50 or, 
more to the current drive.   
Auburn Heights Nike Site os 
Wever Schoo! Employes a ssees 99790 
Stewart-Glenn Co. Employes |... 00 
‘Hawkins Beaty. °C He oe 
Farm Crest mplojea oe ee ia 
    ; Haanes, : 100.00 
|Pontiac Federal smal 
Lecce en Employes ........85 100.00 ai oe 
WASHINGTON \ — The AFL- Ann Arbor Const. Co. 
ClO today suspehded. the Bakery (Lazeile_ 
Workers Union from the feders- > a hae < 
tien. Hodges Motor &® ‘Bervice "0.00 AFL «CIO President Gearge i frome Pink) ue aeons 50.00 TT 
Meany sald actions: of the Bak. Benevolent Sexist ety $0.08 
ery Workers eecutive board con- Bester & lavnenees Finance Co 4 99 t. JOM, MD o.......s, stitute ‘allure and refasal | to Lerds Furniture, Employes, 80.00 
comply” ‘with an order to cléan Rawara - = hopsd 
house. oe M.D. 
Don R. GacBousia, Tne. 
  Borden Co, Employes ... $808.20 | Pon, Retail Store, Employes 797 80 | 
Bd. of Ed. Office, eorcres woe. 409.90 
Elks, Pontiac No. 810 300.0) | group his tattered forces and pre- 
if r a 
Kye peiry Co., Empbyes win'oe plete ie grimmer, more relentless enemy, 
ta airy Co. Se 133. 8° an enemy against which his best 
Irving Gordon, D Ds. ..."!! - 131.00 defensive measures will avail him Dana P. Whitmer issieiiceren-- LOGS nothin Boys’ Club, Employee . 112.28 8. Catholic Boe. Service, Employes 10200) In the deep winter months no Cnrpentert coat Yalea 7 No 998 A 109 90 |fleetness of foot is fast enough, no 
‘ 00 Army of Hunters 
Invades Woods 
(Continued From Page One) 
ment, over the enemy...At the 
bottom is a very different type. 
| He wages unrestricted warfare 
against the enemy, his wives and 
children. He fights with his 
brothers over the bodies of the 
slain. He is a disgrace to society 
and to civilization, and above all, 
to himself, 
In between these ~y extremes, 
and numerically superior to both 
is the average trooper, observing 
the rules insofar as they don’t 
work a hardship and willing to 
deal fairly with a weaker enemy. 
FIGHTS GRIM WAR 
And what of the enemy himself? 
Forced by the limitations of nature 
to fight a wholly defensive battle, 
he must rely on great speed and 
mobility, uncannily excellent de- 
tection gear. 
Disorganized, lacking adequate 
communication facilities, he must 
conserve his resources, seek 
minimus exposure of his forces 
to the invader and hold cut until a 
new month signals the end of the 
attack. 
And this he will be able to do, 
but in se doing he will suffer 
heavy casualties. His dead and 
wounded will be counted in the 
tens of thousands, 
But he will survive, as his kind 
has always survived, and he'll re- 
pare to defend himself against a 
keennesg of ‘hearing, or ‘sharpness 
of nose protection enough, against 
the deadly spectre who haunts the 
drifted flats and silent forests, 
ruthless, bony-faced starvation, 
  
College Raising Funds 
KALAMAZOO (# — Kalamazoo 
College's 125th anniversary fund 
drive bas raised $915,656. The fig- 
wear eT Recover 17 Bodies 
From Airliner (Continued From Page One) 
one family; were aboard the Pan 
oS 
They were H. Lee. Clack, 36, 
Philip Sullivan, 59, and his 
wife Bess natives of Ypsilanti 
were going to India on a State 
Department assignment, 
igan connection was Lt. Cmdr. 
Gordon Cole 36, of Alexandria, 
Cole of Grand Rapids. 
“(EVIDENCE OF FIRE 
Navy searchers on the scene 
about 1,000 miles northeast of Hon- 
ofilu said there was “some evi- 
dence of fire’ when the plane, hit 
the water, 
  The bodies, ah of. which eullered 
sighted by multiple injuries, were Navy Lt. J. G. Earl at Silovey of 
|his low-flying sweep of the ocean 
after taking off from the aircraft 
carrier Philippine Sea yesterday. 
Muitiple fractures such as 
those sustained by the 17 victims 
lent belief fo the theory that 
the plane must have hit the wa- 
ter with such a force as to 
cause instant death to those 
aboard. 
Wreckage was scattered over a 
33-square-mile area, The bodies 
were refovered by Navy helicopt- 
ers. Two of the bodies were tenta- 
tively identified as those of the 
pilot and co-pilot, one of which was 
strapped to his seat, 
RECOVER DEBRIS 
At dawn today, Navy ships 
steaming to the wreckage area will 
launch small boats to recover the 
debris from the luxury clipper. 
The debris wil] then be sent to the 
Philippine Sea which has been di- 
recting search operations. 
The Civil Aeronautics Board 
said in Washington that one of its 
investigators will board the car- 
rier today. : 
fly from San Francisco to the 
carrier when it comes within range 
of the West Coast. Navy Secretary 
Thomas S. Gates has ordered that 
pe clipper wreckage be preserved 
ntact. 
The condition of the bodies 
heightened the mystery shroud- ing cause of the disaster. The 
passengers evidently had re- 
moved their shoes and donned 
life Jackets at the direction of the 
plane’s captain, but he apparent- 
ly either had no time or no work- 
able equipment to flash an SOS, 
Diarmid said the evidence “‘indi- 
cates the pilot did not have every- 
thing go sour suddenly or he 
people to get into jackets and get 
the pilot ditched the aircraft." 
Removing the shoes is routine 
preditching practice for planes at 
sea. . 
A Navy officer said there céuld 
be three reasons why the plane 
Honolulu-bound from San Fran- 
cisco, sent no distress signal. 
“That's the big mystery,” sald 
‘the officer, who declined use of 
his name. } 
He said there could have béen a 
no/fire, a propeller could have flown 
ft, ar a imistege could have. pit 
the plane. 
‘He considéred’ the loose propel- 
ler the likeliest cause, . 
ip were found 83 miles 
    ee ad 361 N. Woodward on Nov. 
nections, including six members of 
formerly of Midland, his wife, Ann, 
34, sons, Bruce, 9, and Scott, 6, 
and daughters, Kimi, 7, and Nancy, 
2,  foundjings adopted* by the 
Clacks. 
postponed until the - second five-|. 
The other passenger with a Mich- 
Va., son of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. 
Civil Aeronautics Board investi- 
gator William S, MacNamara will 
Coast Guard Capt. Donald Mac-/E 
would not have had time to warn! E 
their shoes off. I would assume j BIRMINGHAM -—- Of special in- 
terest to art lovers in the area is 
the Christmas Carohsel which will 
open at the Bloomfield Art Assn. 
a display will be items ranging 
from “nostalgic toys to free form 
  ; Yule Caroma Showing: 
of Art to Open Nov. 22   
  
  
    
tree ornaments.” Works of art will 
linclude painting, sculpture, weav-| 
ing, ceramics, cards and jewelry 
made by members and a few out- 
side artists. Franklin Page of the 
[Detroit Institute. of Art will judge 
the art shown, 
This is the first time the BAA 
has had the opportunity to show 
the creative talents of its more | 
than. 700 members. 
night, from 8-10 p.m., wil] be 
special for members, with. the 
public invited for five successive 
weekends to view the display. 
Hours will be 2-5 p.m.,; and -7- 
730 p.m., Fridays and Satur- 
days, and 2-5 p.m., Sundays, 
Mrs. Don E, Ahrens and Mrs. 
Cyrus Osborn are cochairmen of 
the social] committee, Mrs. Robert 
will be hostesses at the members’ 
preview. 
The arts and crafts show 
len and Mrs, Chaimers Smith ; 
sisted by Mrs, Milton F. Couison, 
Mrs. Rocco DiMarco, Mrs. John 
W. Jickling, Mrs. Owen A, Lucken- | 
bach, Mrs. Edwin N. Cobb, Mrs. 
M. L. Dacey, Mrs. Russell Haeg-| Always, Compare Pri 
SIMMS Before You Buy 
Nationally\Famous Brands 
Bulova * Elgin 
* Longines 
WAICHES Money-Saving 
ISCOUNTS : Brand oe . 
\ 
USE OUR LA 
  39.95 Watch WAAL” 
ATAVY AT ces at ° 
PLAN 
now 27,50 f 
Schilling and Mrs. A. M. Wauter | 49.95 Watches, now 33.00 
159.95 Watches, now 40.00   
be headed by Mrs. alleges =| 71 50 Wa Watches, now 47.00       
  
JEWELRY    
     HP EWORITE PrOLO 
CHRISTMAS CARDS 
That ONLY You Can Sead! 
Sere oe rg AS : 
i 12 CARDS $100 
for 
1 25 CARDS for... . .$2.00 
ORDER Now! 
    er, Mrs. Arthur V. Handgren, Mrs. 
bridge, Mrs, Lawrence Angevine, 
Mrs. C. C. Patterson Jr., Mrs. 
Dale Douglas, Mrs. Paul Cooley, 
Mrs. Rowland J. Farrell and Mrs. 
Hilbert H. DeLawter. 
    Den 8, Pack B-7, Cub Scouts, 
gave a farewell party recently 
for Howard Becker, Jr, Howard, 
with his sister Kathy, and Mrs. 
Becker, left Birmingham 
Wednesday to join Lieut. How- 
ard Becker, stationed in For- 
mosa, where he has beer serv- 
ing with the Army (Ordinance 
division since last July. 
  The Rotary Anns will meet here 
Monday at the home of Mrs. Wil 
liam DeGraff, 951 Fairfax Ave., 
for a 1 o'clock luncheon. 
Mrs, Fred Rollins, vice presi: Vance H. Day, Mrs. Cecil Dum-'} 
dent ef the Oakland County so. |E 
  
OM Es 2 } 3 
Explosion Rips Home|   but'Woman Unhurt 
(Continued From Page One) 
  ing to Det. Lt. John DePauw, Me-| 
ber blowing up the house, 
arated from her husband for the | 
second time last August because 
he drank. and threatened her. . 
* * * 
The explosion was first reported 
to the police about 2:20 a.m. as a 
“shot” but an investigation by two 
officers quickly revealed that it) 
was an explosion, 
The officers reported a strong 
smell jike ‘gunpowder’ in the’ 
house. They called the Fire Dept. | 
and Consumers Power to secure 
the utilities. 
. ® * * 
The blast aroused the entire 
neighborhood but did not damage 
adjacent homes, 
  
First French Ships 
Sail Through Suez 
SUEZ (INS) — Three French 
naval vessels sailed through the 
Suez Canal today,, the first to’ use 
the waterway since last year’s 
Anglo-French invaSion of Egypt.   on their way from Djibouti to 
luctant acceptance of Egypt's com- 
plete control of the canal,   
on Freshest Candies! 
MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS 
     Mint Patties POUND BOX : oe ag ag igs 2 
mints. in 
value, 
    E 98N. Saginaw —Main Floor no formal statement but, accord-- 4 
Gowan said he remembered buying| i 
ithe dynamite but. did not mies : 
Mrs, McGowan said she had sep-| . 
Toulon for routine refitting jobs 7 
— but they signified France's re-|~ 
E Friday & Soturday Prices|| 
£374£   
  
Pre-Christmas LAYAWAY ‘Sale! 
Hi-Heel "T een DOLLS USSU FUSED ESUEUSUEULETSLUESSELETENESETEENVEAETETE: yeueervesveevert     
   ‘teen — —_ 
knees nd — dynel 
hair, hi-heel shoes . * 
  
  13x17V4-In.. Top 
ray Tables NO LIMIT 
= All You Went 
Use for TV snacks, bedside 
table, barbecues, ete, 
Toped. 
  
The ships were small — a tug,| ~s 
a landing ship and a supply vessel,| 
    
      
   ANOTHER SHIPMENT Repeat Salé of Our "Best Selling’ 
Night Gowns 
     
     
     
            
      
        
     
                    
    
  
<Aa 
i _THE PONTIAC PRESS, F nipay. NOVEMBER 15, 1937   
   OVER Pag   
United Statés Leading 
Europe in Big Trees 
WASHINGTON — ‘The species of 
large trees are much more numer- 
ous in the United States than in 
‘Europe, there being 140 species in’   -America that exceed 30 font in years a, height compared with 30 of this 
Size in France. 
developed with fewer than 25. im- 
portant native trees. : In fact, forestry. in Europe has, Official Mixup 
Paso, Tex., TUCSON, Ariz, @—A Tucson po- ,cial business and said. 
iliam Hogan.” J 
“Tm Wil 
“We're glad you 
gave yourself up,” replied the desk 
lice officer -walked into the as ocmenne. Hogan was about to be 
ssc snot be Mr an Mer    in and Save—9 A.M. "til 10 P.M. 
| Open Evenings '©® FRIDAYS lable fo exp! he was ‘William! 
Hogan, policeman, net the William! 
FRIDAY and SATURDAY Hogan wanted by El Pason police 
for assault.   
  
     
    
    
  
King Frederik of Denmark is 58 
  
     * PORCELAIN Enamel TOPS     
    
  Styled Exactly as Pictured 
         
        25% Wool— 
   
  hhh bbb be hh hh hhh hhh hh hh 
  STEEL CABINETS 
\ TONITE & SATURDAY Only! 
Sensationally Under-Priced 
909 
Et * 36"High—14x20° Top 
_* Cutlery Drawer—2 Shelves 
just 20 of these at this great 
» savings. Other style cabinets at 
_ proportionate savings Regular 
$22.95 
Value 
            
         
        he 4 Men's One-Piece 
25% Orlon > 
SHIRTS or i | DRAWERS : @ long and Short i 
Your Choice Each leeve 
bd 
2 ° 17 * 
, * 
Long sleeve — ankle . Catton knit for all 
; length. Genuine g winter comfort. A 
+ Bradford in complete famous maker. Sizes 
es . er % hed te 
y Seeeseseegesesoesossseseees 
JES “Men's 50% Wool $ Men's ‘HANES’ + . ; 
Ba 3% SHIRTS or ; UNION 
DRAWERS + — SUITS _Your Choice Each e Sizes 36 to.46 
ag : 
e 2 
orion plus 25% : 
pat dig Heavy winter @ White or ecru colors. 
weight. All size @ Short & long sleeves 
e (Extra” heavy. $3.25) 3 
—Bargain 
  » Basement 
  
  Se CECE CCE ELIOT 
Appliances Make. Wonderful Gifts for Weddings, 
iversaries — or LAYAWAY for CHRISTMAS > 
i i 
   $15.95 Value— Now 
10” 
, Brand mew fully guaranteed iron. Latest” model with all the 
» improvements, Buy at this low price now—for yourself or for 
f gift giving. : 
 PCOSCHSHHSSS SS TOSeereseseseeeeeseoeseeseees: 
Genesal Electric—Westinghouse—Toastmaster 
' Automatic Pop-Up 
TOASTERS Original to $18.95. Value 
—YOUR CHOICE —     J 4 a 
. 
' : , 
  
——— 
       
     
   
   
    
     E Choice of 3 relia makes—~and all at one extra low price, aa 
’ new, fully ser ry A ta With cord. Only $2 holds in free’. 
w .layaway. 
; 98 North 
Saginaw     
» ELECTRICAL 
—ind Floor        Se a 
      SAVE AT SIMMS on Nationally Advertised 
REMINGTON sum| SHAVERS 
* Newest 
Models 
                           
  * Factory 
Guarantee 
All models 
complete 
tin delexe 
caves. 
SALE 
PRICES 
Effective 
TONITE & 
SATURDAY 
       BUY NOW at Our Lowest Price 
ROLLECTRIC —Reg. $31.50 LIST— 
This Week Only at SIMMS            
Our ‘best seller’ of all elec- 
tric shavers now at EXTRA 
1 62 savings. A small deposit 
(Price Without Trade re $0) holds your in LAYAWAY. 
Seeeeesseeeeeesessensscosceseosessoeossesee 
Trade ... $20.95) 3 
® 
. 3 i m m 3 aR 
     
      
     
  AUTO-HOME 
lighter or regular home § A. 6 or 12-Volt Models 
outiet 
Without Trade-In . . .$9.95 $33.50 List 
(WITHOUT 
Senn Mees chapdbtedicevcecéccncoosecnceeda ‘ 
SAVE NOW for Christmas Gifts see ret Your Own : 
Ladies’ REMINGTON . 
Por under 
se a a    : 
     =((@= zon set 
OTHERS f Here Every Wed. | New REMINGTON 
Just plug- im auto cigar 3 
- With aan 
                 
  E blade to spare        
      
    
   
      Keyes Receptacle 
    
       
     
    v™ervrvreeeereerererrrrerrrrrerrrerrreereeeeeee eee 
$8 N. Saginaw —Jnd Ficor 
Talelhsiate] deh ieteL. 
7” POWER SAW 
            
   
      
   
   
             
   Model 701M 
Regular 54.95 Value 
Rugged, extra powerful motor cuts 
2 x 4's at 45 degree angle with 
Ball bearing slip 
clutch prevents ‘kick-back’ . com- 
plete with 7" hardened steel blade 
Universal AC-DC Motor, 115 
volts. Onty $5 holds 
98 North 
  Power Tools 
*—2nd veg      
      
           
ee 
“UL aevaket st Quality 
Cut Any Length 
PER 
FOOT 
(not welded). Color coded .for all indoor ir- 
ing. Limit 500 feet. None to dealers. _ 
14.2 ROMEX WIRE with 
GROUND — Per Foot . 
         
      
          
    
   
    
             
          
    
   
    
       
     TONITE vo SATURDAY py SPECIALS” 
    
1S ROMEX WIRE: 
        
           
Meets all REA specifications. Continuctis wire 
5'     
   SALE of ol i te a TOOLS     © SATURDAYS 
' @ MONDAYS 
        6000 PARKING SPACES 
WITH 224 RETAIL STORES 
AU Sixes Bangains Galore 
GUARANTEED PERFECT FIT 
Short —/Tall — Regular. Styled for comfort in 
pyoportioned lengths for all women! 
Ladjes’ Rayon Gabardine 
P-R-O-P-O-R-T-I-O-N Tailored 
Slacks Wrinkle Resistant 
      
  
       
      
   Ce ee, ee 
“Choice of 20 Assorted 
TOOLS — Your Choice - 
  \ Priced to } 9 A = 
$4 in Most cree eee . 6-Jar Screw feck : G einieie® Stores “ * 3-Pc. Sovow th Sreretererets oe 
* 10" Adj. Wrench evacciele Fine gabardine - materials’ in ennaer *® B-Ft. Tape Rule .....,. 
* 9” Alum. Torpedo Levei. . 
*® Vernier Calipers .. 
* 8" Linesmen Pliers .... colors ~— washable non-shrink sizes 
to 20 (EXTRA SIZES 38 to 44 $3. ne e oe 
*® Pkg. 20 Hacksaw Blades. . Non-Slip 
* 12” Comb. Square Agsoc Inner 
*® Adj. Pump Pliers-....... . : 
* Screwdriver. Socket Kit... Waistband { 
* 8-Pc. Flex. Socket Set... \ * 6" Block Plane . Famous ‘SNUCTEX’ INNER WAIST#.... 
* 62" Long Nose Pliers... 
* 6-Pc. File Set 
* 7" Tin Snips nee 
* 4-Pe. Wood Bit Set... _. 
* 7-Pc. Nut Driver Set... . . 
* 26-In. Hand Saw ..... BAND prevents creeping blouses. Usually » 
found only in higher priced slacks, 
       
5, 
LADIES’ ‘Capri’ Style—Washable 
Corduroy Slacks 
98 
  Hurry for these! Plenty of some tools, few of others—all regular $1.49 
te $1.98 tools at only ie each. Not every tool pictured—come see for 
yourself. Sizes 10 to 20 
Side zipper and zipper at 
    
  98 North TOOLS ankles. Assorted colors Saginaw —ind . Street Floor od   
    New Shipment 
SANFORIZED Washable New Styles 
       
Ladies’ Winter 
, Dresses 
All Sizes 
9 to 24% 
388 
Holiday Styles   —_ 
Now Is the Time to LAYAWAY CHRISTMAS GIFTS | 
—and SIMMS LOWER PRICES Makes It Easy! 
| Best Buys in Photographie Equipment] Compare This LOWEST PRICE Anywhere in Town 
sot FLASH BULBS _ aie 
SAME AS PRESS 25 G #5 
10" 59° NO LIMIT—None to Dealers   All Sizes 
9 to 20 
) 288 
    f Rayon lines & 
fine cottons in 
- assorted solid g Pine cottons 
Many ,«* broadcioths 
fancy trims, but- 
= ton pockets, 
_ stitch trims ete 
Prints, plains 
and checks, 
      
      
       
         
      
  
  
       
       
       
        
    
Toggle Switch 
     
"Switch Box 39¢ Value 
Ag) 27: 2-inch deep with 
Romex clamp. x 
2% inches ‘Octagon Box | Je Value 
24° Gara    
     
   
    | Less clamps 
  
  For Dining, 
MODERN SQUARE 
LIGHT FIXTURE $2.95 Value 1 66 Bed & Eig Room | 
-CIRCLINE FIXTURE 
Complete with Bulb $10.95 Value 88 Taree square shade 
(styled as shown). Pat- 
terned ginas iblub ex- 
tra). 
Square PFictare With 
Puli-Chain White enameled ‘fixture 
complete with circline 
bulb. Complete at. this 
low ice. Buy now. - 
     
     
    
TELEVISION WIRE    
     
     
          
     
     $2.95 Value 
1.99 In brass or crnmer fin. 
ish. S8L700. Blub extra 
at this low price 
  Per Foot 
Replace old, worn-out or 
brittle TV wire, 300-ohm 
plastic weather-resistant 
insulation. 5¢ velue.’ 3° 
    
$1.50 Value 3 8 8 
  outdoor bulb. Complete, not exactly as shown.   
l5e Value 
9s 
Plastic or 
plate at this low 
price, Pits 3% to 4-inch 
boxes. Porcelain. Be Aecepal 
| 4-inch box. Gal-| 
4 vanized finish. 
Porch Light Fixture 
Outdoor Yard Light. 
Weatherproof bulb holder with GE weatherproot | 
isgseoune Plate 
metal &   
    Compare this low price anywhere in town? 
Less than hall. price that's heer n- SPECIAL PURCHASE — Big Savings 
expensive for flash pictures these days! M ’ 
cate Buy al] you want. (3 eartens, $1.69). ; Sale of Ladies 
CO CCe Ceo neorreaeeocoreccooceoocooeeoeeeoeeeD Terry Cloth- Robes 
‘ Popular Sizes to Fit All Snapshot Cameras 
ANECO 620-120-127 FILM so Guaranteed ‘All-Weather’ 
3 ROLLS ° Values 
+ to » 
Cc ‘3 $6.98 2 tor : | w $5.90 
i ~ | ‘| Choice of Cannon terry cloth with 
2 4 ‘ certificate for monogrammed let- 
' ‘ ters or Manne! housecoat. Robe in 
“Med The guaranteed all weather film,— pehecag be ten 12 to 1h grey oF 
@ takes pictures under any weather q & 2 to _, 
     conditions. Choice of 3 popular sizes      
       
      TONIGHT and SATURDAY Specials        SOCSHHSSSHS SEEK SSeS eHeHEHESEsEeHEEEesEESEEsEee 
   
           
     
         20c Value 
19s 1] 4 MENS WORK CLOTHING 2s , 5 i ie e 
@ cup with narrow ears. BRAND MADE         
           
      Workers who KNOW QUALITY choose ‘Car- 
hartt'—at Simms LOW PRICES you can afford 
the best ire workmen's clothes. 
        
     
eclic c.2. | Argus 300 Projector sorte saa 4* ARGUS C-3 Push-Pull Automatic " cires 30 6 42 TosonGoece                 
     
          
           E CAMERA, FLASH, CASE . 75 i: OM 
ws AOS 62.50 | /\ —_UNLINED JACKETS 49 Vv h Value. [ : \ Sanforized. Brown in 
—— . P ; sizes 36 to 44. Unlined... 
3 Power blower cooled to keep 
mm camera with coupled slides and projector cool while 
eee: shutter speeds to sont slides. Wide-angle lens BIB OVERALLS 719 
1/300, colormatic setting’ Only system. $5 holds in free lay- sanforized in. all 
$5 holds in free layaway away sizes 34 to 50...+..s0ee   YT ITITITITI TTT TTT TTT TTT TirirrirrirTrei rey 
SIMMS BIG SELECTION: OF BAR-LITES CARPENTER O'ALLS Sanforized in 
  6 
4-Lamp BAR-LITE enscie 98 
(HI Complete with 4 BULBS sean 36 NOM oe 7   Extra heavy 13'4-ounce brown duck material 
is water repellent, Santorized and washable. 
Copper riveted at strain points. Full cut for 
comfort. ° $10.95 Value 
Makes movies as easy 
snaps. All metal bar with 
camera base mount 
plete with 4 bulbs 
$1 holds in layaway. +6 
W-Shape BAR LITE 
with 4 BULBS 
787 
4 bulbs in W-shaped bar for better light |     
     
     
       
   Com- 
Oniy Ef 
    Genuine ‘BEACON’ — Ist Quality 
DOUBLE BLANKET $3.29 Value — Now 
Big double sheet 
blanket in variety of   $11.95 
Value 
arrangements. Exposure guide on back. JE Colors. Full 70 x 80 
$! holds. 1f. inch size, Stripe pat- 
tern. 
Nyion and Rayon — Orlon and Rayon 
‘BEACON’ Blanket Stripes & Plaid Patterns 
  
  Fuses Sc Value (be Value 
9° 
‘rela 
      
    
     
   ee 
Simm). 
         
   
       
   
   Saginaw 
Street BRO STAERS . 
         
      
    Choice of blends 
in stitched or satin 
binding. -Big 72 x 
84-inch size. ‘First 
quality on sale, Value fo $6.98 66 
  With 4 GE Bulbs and Case | 
age and ¢arrying case. Folding bar 
New ‘V’-Pack BAR-LITE 
Vapack barlite is small, compact— 9 Folding BAR-LITE 
$13 Value—all for 
UL approved bar-lite with hand stor. 937 
; with 4*bulbs. $1 holds. 
JOS GRRE RSELO CCN UCOREOeCERseccheecesueeiescecss 
With METAL CARRY CASE : ” $18.95 Value 87 
a new design in “bulbs. Complete 14 
with metal carrying case. $1 holds. PA oe 
      
      e 98 North ' 
      
  CAMERAS | 
El SIM M3... eo )    Floor ROTHERS E98 N, seohey 
t ae ee © ps 
gts a 
rile + 4 
Fi 
4   
 “Hal Boyle Says:   
hired man? 
A generation ago he began to as he was, 
disappear from. the Americ an 
place, 
* * * for other feet. 
The hired man at one time was 
af neighborhood resource, the poor ple, 
relation by loyalty but. not by medicine and escaped the loca 
btood of a dozen or so families undertaker, 
hp had adopted. 
: cpuld ask the hi: ved man to work ter     Hired Man a Memory 
NEW YORK (—Remember the!for them. ety Seoatihy worked 
for t lies he chose, lorn| ment of the wealth of the healthy. 
ont lhomarreartys He did the jobs they could do kids. He would stay in a warm kit- 
to chen on a cold day and listen to a 
wife's complaints as 
Actually there wasn't much he/served food or poured His pay was invariably low. No- themselves but. were too bus: 
scene, and left a gap in family body spoiled him with money. No- 
life that has never quite been body expected him to brood over ‘ ; 
(fled, There is none to take his'the fact his fate was to brush the couldn't de, He could and did mow, main thing was he was company. 
idust from the welcome mat spread'the grass, fix a light plug, clean 
Often he would work for sick peo. Carry out 
who having survived local ment. 
would vic toriously| 
call in the hired man to brighten was generally 
Any family in the community up the place to make them feel bet- man, When 
      
    
He was also a kind of measure- 
de or too proud to do in public. 
    ithe yard, paint the house, or even| man? 
the ashes from the base- 
1] * * * 
  he eame He took his time about his work. 
He would stop 
He did like every 
tried to do in the 
20th century. He specialized, He 
But in those days the hired man|married and «had 
an outdoor-working: spring. His ears ee to his own 2 
indoors it|wife, his play time to his own'came home 
we as usually to eat in the kitchen. ‘children. find sea ty «Parole Board OKs ings ine met ett 
as she'to meet 
» The|lem, 
else has * 
his own off- 
  Whatever happened to the hired|thority on light ‘bulbs, of Past Generation 
: sit ttre ane set, :   
opment. 
  Venezuela Plans to Mill 
All Own Flour Soon ~ 
CARACAS—Venezuela expects to 
be producing 40 per’ cent of its 
wheat-flour requirements early in 
1958, according to Dr. Antonio 
1e"|Bricene Parilli, director of com 100 merce in the Ministry of Devel- 
    Leopold, 
thrill-killer- "Hearing for Leopold |. SPRINGFIELD, I, Nathan petitions for SS 
_Leopold fest sought parole in 
1953, gr che getcw gy nandbwes 
belay ems doy gow 
a rebearing of 
much publicizedidenial. 
the 20s, won a new 
chance “yesterday to bid for early!petition in July, after Gov. Wil. 
freedom opens. 
* 
Leopold, now 52, has been in 
Stateville Prison 33 years for the 
1924 slaying of 14-year-old Bobby|dampness and should not be used He filed the current sensi 
liam G.. Stratton denied his pled 
" Hfor executive clemency, 
The Illinois Pardon and Parole x + * 
-|Board, in a split feciion, sven 
"led a rehearing on his. parole ap-|pleaded guilty to 
plication and set the hearing ein lly ie sing in 
an unspecified date next Febru- 
Two new flour mills are under ary. 
construction and by the end of 
man 1958 the country may be self- 
isufficient in wheat flour, he said. 
In 1956 Vénezuela imported 185,712 
metric tons of wheat flour and 
all| 7,081-tons of wheat grain. Leopold and Richard Loeb 
and were sgentericed, Loeb 
was stabbed to death in a prison 
fight in 1936, 
  Ordinary animal glue absorbs 
  in work exposed to weather, ac- Franks. . 
The brutal killing and efforts to'cording to the Encyclopedia Bri- 
extract 1 ransom from the victim" 's|tannica. sr tapceresgs   
  
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   THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1957 
    
   Cutoffs to Divert Traffic to Right   
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   | ‘Two new roads are planned for 
the near future to alleviate the 
  
| DUNDEE i — Plans for a 10- 
million-dollar plant near Dundee 
\capable of producing 18,000,000 
anniounced here by a Canadian 
cement company official. 
* * * bags of cement annually have been| 
  Sun-Fire Fuel Oil 
     
     
   
              
           
   
         
    
     
            
    Denis Tempe, a spokesman ‘for 
Clarkson, Ont., 
' We Give Gold Bell Gift Stamps! 
Order a Ton Today 
and Save Money! limestone underlying. the proposed 
plant site three miles north of here 
and about 14 miles west of Monroe. 
Options on 1,400 acres. have 
been obtained. The plant. would 
Operate under the name of the 
Dundee Cement Co. and would 
| employ about 200 workers. 
Final construction plans are 
awaiting the outcome of objections   
iby the cement company. 
* * * 
The company’s construction plans 
are contingent on the closing of 
various roads running through the) 
|plant property. Objecting property| owners claim the~resulting dead- 
end roads would decrease the value 
of their land. 
The Monroe County rodd com- 
mission conducted a hearing on the 
issue last week. Another hearing 
is scheduled Wednesday. WEBB FUEL CO. FE 4-1518 351 S. Paddock St. Plans to Ease Dixie Left- vis eatwer to Williams Lake Rd., on 
the west, and Walton Boulevard to 
the east, 
* x * 
The project was ammounced today 
by acting District Traffic Engineer 
Joseph Marlow of the Michigan 
State Highway Department. 
Motorists approaching Pontiac 
from the north, who want to 
make a left turn from Dixie 
Highway to Walton Boulevard, 
will turn right on a new cut-over, 
to Williams Lake Rd., then cross 
the Dixie to Walton Bivd. 
The same type of. cut-off will 
exist, if the motorist is heading 
towards Flint from Pontiac, and 
wishes to turn left on Williams 
Lake Rd. He will turn right on 
the St. Lawrence Cement Co. of| another new cut-over, to Walton said test borings | to. Wil- 
have disclosed a 40-foot strata ot | pave per a + the Dixie to. 
* * * 
Past the ‘ blue-print stage, the 
lans are now ir the offices of the Pp 
right-of-way department and in the 
final stages of completion, accord- 
ing to. Marlow. 
2-YEAR STUDY 
  | The State Highway Department 
has been working on the left turn 
filed by three property owners problem at this intersection for 
more than two years to help reduce 
wkose land adjoins that optioned|+. nigh number of accidents which! pel occurred there, Marlow said. 
x ®& 2 
“This type of quadrant has been 
jused in other parts of Michigan,” 
the added, “and has proven the 
least expensive of all types of ‘left- 
turn movement.” 
Marlow continued that whether 
the project became a reality or 
not, depended on the cost of 
property in the area, 
  A report received by the high- 
  
  
  
    
         
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way department fror- Lansing yes- 
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agreements should be concluded: 
sometime next week,. and con- 
struction will begin early next 
spring, Marlow concluded. 
  
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Watch’ for School News 
7% On This Page Each Friday: F Ree 
"FRIDAY, NO OVEMBER 15, 1957 THE PONTIAC PRESS MAKE !     
  -PON'TIAC, MICHIGAN,   
- constitution. The Future Teachers | Washington, D. C. as their destina-/Narcotics to be held Tuesday. \Daugherty, 
tor, Mr. M. = » . kis 3 
  
Cranbrook Botanist Talks 
fo Central Biology Club By WILLIAM BANK | The Thespians Club has recently 
-*What Is a Botanist?” was the|elected officers. They are Toby) 
topic of Dr.-Warren Stoutamire, a/ Gilbert, president; Clarice Graves, | 
botanist from Cranbrook, when he' Vice president; Sophia Skihner, | 
spoke to the Pontiac Central High) lrecording secretary; Bob Thomp- | 
‘School Biology Club last night. | son, social chairman; and Bill! 
In this speech, Dr. Stoutamire|Kath, sergeant-at-arms. 
talked about the*different phases| The Radio Workshop is putting | 
of Botany, He also showed movies ion three shows per week this year. 
about a botanist’s job. 'They are “More Wonderful Than| 
| Magic,” a science show; “It’ s) 
whe Besiegy COS |e sive Ber ‘Story Time,” a “story” show for! 
wing to ater 6 fet in ie igrade schoolers; and “Citizens of | 
Christmas parade spossored by ithe Universe,” a history show, the Downtown Pontiac Associa- ‘They are presented Monday, 
Ges. They docided on 8 thegne | |Wednesday, and Friday, respec-| » of “Santa comes to Frogiaiid.” |: 1, 
The committee in charge of | i 
planning this float is Judy Low. |PRODUCE 3 RADIO SHOWS — 
ry, Pat Kline, and Gordon Noren. The “More Wonderful Than Mag-, 
lic’ series has a permanent cast 
oe “ interested in entering the with Clark Davis, mmenoUneer: | 
to start work on his project im-| iSharon Mow, Miss Polly; Beverly | 
mediately: The fair is open to any|Chamberlin, Penny; and Dan Ju- 
high school student in Oakland Delt, Peter. The only permanent; 
: : imembers of the other two se ries | County. Projects will be judged on! shee   
‘are Carl Code, announcer for * six categories. They are: creative) aoe | 
ability, scientific thought, thor-|Story Time,” and Lynn Carson, | 
oughness, skill, clarity, and dra.| announcer for “Citizens of the 
matic value. Universe.” * * * 
The committees that will help : =| 
out the dramatics acnatiens eis These abe ghe 4 hg —_ r} . “in “Sehool listening’ an 5 the production of “Lute Song,’'} ih “Sef 6 schools in this area receive the’ 
this winter's play, lave just been} ie.con aids sent out by the work-| | announced, The chairmen of these | shop. By doing their. own produc: | 
‘committees are Jo Ann Wood and) tion, including the technical ev-       ; cto ek oases 'Barbra Wolfe, tickets; Ann Hamil-| gineering, the students gain valu- 
TAKES TWO TO TANGO—That's what Monte School senior play “Daddy Long Legs” which '". Publicity; Sandra Sommer- "| able experience in such things as| Pontiac Press Phote 
Clute (right) tries to convince. Karen Yakey . will be presented next Thursday and Friday at |Vile, Props; Marjorie Crowder,| 1 auction, engineering, writing, PRACTICE EXECUTION SCENE — Water- and Saturday. Stephanie Hill, 4795 Elizabeth (left) 8 they rehearse for the Rochester High the Rochester Junior High School gym. wardrobe; and Bill Bank, light) und, and music. | ford Township High School choir members are Lake Rd., seems frightened as Dick Heltsley, a = crew, The Hi-Y Club will hold «a hay- preparing for the presentation of “The Mikado,” 473 Scott Lake Rd. (center), is about to be   Present ‘Daddy Long ong Legs’ eee 7 |Tide with the | Y ‘Teens Nov. 23. | 
Rochester Plans 4 Acts Bon {st Quarter WTHS Choir Gives Japanese Operetta’ 
Se as Sn Honor Rallis by Gilbert, Sullivan 2 Nights Next Week jo 8 lt or hae! oo of the wins at Lake Orion Comme} School is off to an energetic start St. Fred Seniors Lead 
be presented in the Rochester Jun-| nity High School, students want to by sponsoring their first dance of 
ior High School gymnasium Thurs-/show their colors this season. ithe year next Friday, ‘The eae | School With 21; ; Only 
6 Juniors Rated Tops | an operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan Thursday executed by Terry Walker, 45 Pinegrove Ave.   
By SANDY CLEMENCE | Yuny are reunited and Ke-Ke runners-up who will also be en-| . Students attending were: Chuck 
| marries Katisha. tered in-sthe state contest were: |Bliss, Ray Burke, Dick Carey, Jean 
“The Mikado,” an operetta by! woembers of the cast include: |Betty Vernan, Lanny Younger, Ron Cockle, Jack Davies, Frank Dick- 
ilbert and Sullivan, will be pre- Stephanie Hill, Yum-Yum; Dick Shelp, and Terry Walker. . jerson, Gary Elwell, Bob Fogal, 
By MRHAEL BUCHANAN pnt Thursday and Saturday, Heltsley, Nanki-Foo: | Gene red 2. re nar a cabin the habe eal Heres, Joly Hocediagarpe a kiss. It is the story of Judy wholeils with the basketball scheitles|P¢ 0m $-11:30 p.m. for just jun-| By : |at Waterford Township High School|Ko-Ko: | Arlene Butler, | KAte™: \ Bemis Olsen, Pest, 310. Oak shaman, Seka me has been in an orphan- : * +m lors and their guests. + ote | ante jf iBeverly Wells, Peep-Bo; Janet_Bar-,Bemis Olsen Post, 57 akland Kunse, Jackie. Mayo. and Nancy jon them; plastic book covers; "and’ | Students of St. Michael High'py the WTHS choir. nard, Pitti-Sing: and Terry Walker,|Ave., for WTHS seniors and their Mead: ; age under an amonymous benefac- are contemplating the purchase of The dance committee members (School received their quarterly re-| The operetta concerns the love |the Mikado iguests. The -party will be hosted | x Fe ok day and Friday. 7 | * * * jouth Rock.” 
This four-act ¢omedy heaiien at| Student Council members are) The price is T5 cents per couple 
8 p.m. with a laligh and ends woken decals for windows; pen- ‘and the dress casual. Dancing will! 
tor. : 
| are Fred Coxen, Larry Adams, ' port “Cards this week. affairs of Nanki-Poo and Yum- ra + iby Stephanie Hill and Gail Winter. | ne oul 1 Stars in the play inctude Nan- |!*!t dolls for home decorations. | dudy Carlson, Doreen Davie | Those on the honor roll this Yum, and Ko-Ko and Katisha,| Choral music director Richard Cl isa Wiech COURT [ets ts Spee Marver tae cy Noyes, Judy; Dan Allan, Jur- Future Homemakers of Amer- Steve Lundstrom and class presi- quarter are seniors: Ronald An- When the Mikado (Emperor) de-| J : srs msi sisted by Patty| “ nn Murphy, Pete Murray, y 
Pendieton; Monte Clue,’ ica Club are having » Reyride | dent Jerry Garner, jdrews, Michael Biallas, Robert crees that the post of L ord High| wy ss assisted by Patty The —— op igo | pt oo When ten om 
dcmes McBride and vnton, (tonight. + —stittord-Hi N uchana a witt-he-t nd_Robert Alexander, wrys. went on a field trip. to|Ra y, R ty- 
a ies Eras 7 nam School was honored Gas Midi, “Themes SOOT paagieareal ted. N ki P \dramatics advisors. |Oakland County Circuit Court last'an, Diane Salzbrun, Ron Sayles, 
Se : The junior high school had ajlast ‘week when the Wayne-Oak- ont 3 ec nsins gail ® * * Friday. Judge George B. Hartrick) Dick Shell, Joyee Spears, Joan laine, Rose Marie Flanigan, Heleo|eondemned for flirting with Yum- be ho “ land Le Student C lect- Other Srembers af the cast, whDl student dance this week: This was|'4nd League Student Council elect-| 300 Gotham, Patricis| fram who be emsiead 00 her pan are under the direction of MisSii,. first social event si *Pete De Garmo president for! nee the; arbe Mary-| Eloise Tallant are: Milt Qlsson,'7 ang 8 grades have been in al ithe year ‘57-'58. Pete is also presi-| res et, Kathleen ‘Heitjan iinet | idian Ko-Ko, Democracy’’ speech contest held of the court and then carried on an Wyatt. The class sponsor is Lynn 
oes bc col moet =p school separate from the high) rv eal —— sages ie martin Kacere. Set Mise __Is in the end Nanki-Peo and Yum- ‘at the school this week. The four actual case. Rohrer. 
gare’ u a ar-|. schoot i ther officers elect were ic - 
efi Yakey, Mollie ‘Eberle, Sharon| , |Stuber, vice president and Elsa/Weaser, Joanne iis emerge Mary} 
Upton, Karen Busia, BaxbareiAT CLARKSTON ‘Couse, secretary, both from North-/40" Reynolds, Constance Shindorf, I 
Teague, Pat Marsee, Charolette| ‘Members of the Clarkston High! ville; and Sue Sunderg, treasurer, Joseph Tatham, Joseph semen adi tS O Nn Org an iz es ewe rl ry l ab 
196 per cent of their quota. They Approximately $5,800 was the fi- 
will be awarded with a trip to nal total of subscriptions sold. This Ruth Ann DeGrow, WTHS senior,| presided. He first gave the group Stayt, Barbara Turcsak, Bill Vel- 
is the winner of the “I Speak For|information about the workings sey, Sharon Wallace, and Tom 
    
Clanahan, Dawn Carleson, J udy, School senior class will present a Bloomfield Hills. James Wyzgoski, 
Nunn, Mike Marsee, Claudia Cross, | three act play “Annie Get Your AT AVONDAL daniors include Carol Bauer, 
Christine Blum, Beveriee Myers, Gun’ in fhé school gymnasium! John Fortier, Dominic —Ginnell, 
aoa .| A boat ae to Niagara Falls via) Ruth Kovacik, Judy Meithew, | and Roger Konzal. ‘Nov. 23. bs High ‘tation device for new students who 
the Welland Canal and Port Col-| dase Rindfass. The new Madison Junior 
School Jewelry Club, sponsored by re learning to print, develop, and 
aT r BLOC MFICL: | There will be two matinee , saphy (burn, Ontario, was selec by the; ltting Pauline Woodin, has elected enlarge their own pictures. This. see the movie “Around the World was in excess of the challenge 
Club organization afd elections; formances on Thursday and Fri- | seniors of Avondale High School Sophomore ,Jeaders scholastically/“¥Ss Fé 8 && club, sponsored by Mr. John Blake, In 80 Days.” quota set and a thermometer in have been the main highlights at} day for the student body, The as their senior cruise fae spring. |are Marilyn Biallas, Elizabeth'officers and begun preparations fot lave also elected officers. 
West Bloomfield High School these | ey is under the supervision of | A panel of students has been/Pay, Daniel Dunny, Kathleen Hen-|the first project. x * 
past weeks. ___,| Mise Lorua Wilden, our new dra jacked to attend the meeting of the/Tetti, Pierre Massacesi, Diana/ Officers elected were: John Erk-| Camera Club leaders are: Shar- will irecete Englist The newspaper club, the West; matics coach. | Adams and freshmen honor rollers kila, president; Brenda Keesli : ill recpive a new English type, Bloomfield Writers, has adopted al {Association for ie phere yg es Patricia Burns, Kathleen’ sg = \aa Bratt, president; George Brea- ibicycle. He was also last year's Bi-weekly dances at Washing- , The senior class ‘has selectedjof ‘Instruction About Alcohol and) : Nice president and Ba ‘bara Berry- don, vice president and mary Wil-| jtep school salesman at Madison.| ton began Wednesday, These are Russell Greenlass,’ ena 
Sue Anne Kinney, pi canbe [dard secretary: Five other top school salesmen jeintly sponsored by the school the main hall of the school kept 
everyone posted on the daily re- 
sults. Top school salesman was Eugene 
Coe with a total of $178. Eugene 
Hurst, Club has selected officers : - | Tonya started wotking on their constitu- bore od pete Sis & natal pipet era yp hmagy Rig a es Apel Monica ‘Maddox, Anna Rita Mas-| Other members of the club are: | sk *. were Douglas Vail, Elgin Petersen, and the city department of rec- 
tion and the Camera Club mem- ee vee © $e and alard Passirit, teacher, 0: bring. aj*#ces, Sally Taylor, Margaret} Paula Dombroski, Barbara | Madison’s students sold over Sharon Bratt, Jim Smith, and Art) reation. Social and square dan- iCity Washington, D. C., Pi Barb Sol ‘ ; 
| : . i | Worden, Michael Wyzgoski. erce, rbara Everett, Pat $4,000 worth of magazines in their Solomon. ces will be alternated. 'jGreat Lakes boat trip. jrepresentative high school group to T | Hileman, Judy Clark, Jeanette irecent sales campaign, They! 
PS ee i * ” . |the work shop. be Fee ere at this| Sat Ted Lorenzen Duane Stuk, earned the school a a trampo- At EASTERN * * * 
‘ny Mn en posotont, wea G Peay aot oe ‘* ‘aad with lopics: ee ee Dick Perez, and Don Curtis. line and $200 worth of books ie 
| what company t the pra wil} trav-) if = goin Rajoge ag ooo , Si an “The Time Is Today,” a topic) The Camera Club members are ‘he library. 
Sande Thompson, seeretary. let. re uD. @ 7 ates!concerting future vocations of to- planning to print and make a port In addition, the top selling voice Pontiac Central High School Donna Douglass, Allen Buchman, 
The boys’ ensemble and girls’ ar WALLED LAKE = a visit to Fragge 175 years aay’ youth ‘and a report on the/folio of Madison’s activities and homeroom, A 13, under the lead- choir directed by George H. Put- Sally Hamilton, Judy Whitmer, Dee 
triple trio have been working very . — aa a : ‘progress of our Sodality. Pie. _ lite, This will serve as an orien- ership of Mrs. Lillies Paull, sold nam. 'Dee Kaiser and Jackie Mullen. — 
hard on a variety of songs for the|, Since time ‘is creeping up fast) ~~~ . 7 «|. Homeroom 206, ‘under the leader: ss recon coming concerts. They are both for the debate tournaments, tise |ship of teacher Maurice Levine, Li ° . a, : 
under the direction of choral direc- Walled Lake High School debaters |sponsored a dance last night. It} Lincoln Junior High School stu- 
are now directing their attention, 'was called “The Schoolhouse'Gents and faculty members are 
to practice debates, | | Rock.” and the record ‘Silhouette’ head ‘over heels in a school-wide 
Monday, Peggy Emmert and lwas awarded to the best dancers. ‘magazine campaign to earn mon- 
Kassner, affirmativ jey for xtra equipment not ordin- 
ae Ae ably Sooo arily supplied by the Board of Eastern Junior High School stu-. School cheerleaders for this year 
dents were entertained at a double are captained by Darlene Wood- 
assembly this week by the 110-/hull. The other cheerleaders are:   
  
For the past two weeks, annual) 
yearbook subscriptions have been 
on sale at West Bloomfield. The Susie Sabeunicat- wins provided by | { | | 
Cinda Nurck, Elyse Barbe, Wes- 
} 
| 
| seniors -have. chosen, white and) Becky Odell and Renee *hibo- | Education. 
green as gull class seegeee Their) deau, negative, wil — the ley Hyde, Clell McCall, Delores | o.£e ££ 
class flower will be the fe car-) first practice debate. open- Perry, Mary Anne Shea, and Mr. | Ralph Forman, assistant. princi- 
nation and the class motto is: “The Levine. 
ropes of the past sad col thay 
the future.” School. 
1 *« * : Tonight is the big night for the 
“Tonight is the last football game! juniors. The J-Hop will be held in 
of the. season for the Lakers.; It|the high sehool from 3-11 p'm. The 
be played away against North-|event will be semi-formal with a 
High School. theme of “Prelude to Winter.” ing tournament is scheduled for December 2 at Van Dyke High jpal, heads a huge student com- 
A ten-minute radio script en-|mittee “for checking money and 
jtitled ‘‘Lest We Forget” was pre- subseriptions with team captains 
|sented over the public address sys-/of homerooms. The contest ends 
jtem this week, commemorating; Monday. 
feterans Day. Winst¢ ndricks| ; jVeterans Day. Winston Hendricks}  qy,, Young Librarians Club iwas the announcer. [ 5 i * mn A sponsored a movie at an assem- 
bly this week by presenting the     
  
  Varsity Club at St. Fred 
Plans Homecoming Dance 
By PATRICIA FOSTER 
News at St.” Frederick High|is the results of the recent election 
School this week centers around 
the Varsity Club and its activi- 
ties. 
For the first time the club is 
sponsoring a homecoming dance 
on Navember 22 at the school 
‘hall «preceding ira 
St. Michael High School 
tee ian teem 
qiieen have been selected from 
each homeroom, Students will be 
i to vote for the candidate of their choice: by. buyitig votes and 
results of the election will bs 
i at the dance. - it *° £ 2 
--Musi¢ for the evening will be) | Other news in the Varsity Club 
of officers. They are Joe Sharpe, 
president; Jack Lyons, vice presi- 
dent; Tom Nesbitt, secretary and 
Jack Sharpe, treasurer. 
“Save for something special” is} 
the theme of this week to encour- 
age students to purchase year- 
books. ‘This is the only week orders 
may be placed for the Ramrod, 
which: will be available in the 
spring. ‘ oe 
‘The Fut Nurses Club toured 
General Md Corporation. yes- 
  terday to see Industrial a bape 
n practical operation. — 
Wednesday,’ Maryanne Ciifton, |   ; iR.N, will speak to the ‘girls on the, 
roc the Cage “Office Nurse.” |   ‘ PUAN TREN “TRAFFIC OOURT | — Larry hheciier, 36 Stein- Pontiac Press Phote 
baugh Ct.,” president.of the Pontiac Central High. School Student teen tiafne court. Mary williams: of 16 Esther. St,’ and. Emmanuel 
Council, points out a driver who is about to make an improper left Williams, 206 Cherokee Rd.,-are both on the student committee to 
tur and could be e-teeniger. who might appear before the propdved organize the court now being planned. / f 
f \ \ » , + | 
; jer oh ’ F r Joyce Best and. Mary Rounding! 
|played the part of two school giris| 
| Preparing for an assignment re-) 
|garding Veterans Day. They dis-| 
icover the history and significance 
‘of Veterans Day and become aware 
of the songs and poems written 
during the Revolutionary, Civil, 
{First and Second World Wars. Pam 
|Pullis gave a reading ‘‘In Flanders 
| Fields Martha Cox recited a 
|Poem, “High Flight.” 
* * * 
|. Pam Noren played a piccolo solo, 
“Y ankee Doodle,” and Charles 
‘Parmenter blew ‘‘Taps’’ on his 
ibugle.. A musical background was 
|provided by Fred W aring’s 
ings. story of Yosemite National Park 
from its founding in 1890 ty the 
famous naturalist John Muir, to 
its beautiful development today 
as a beauty spot of the world, 
Tolbert Carter and Pete Ron- 
quillo were the technicians in 
charge. 
* * * 
The 4th hour reading 
ment class adapted a play for 
radioxand a tape recording of it 
was presented to several classes 
at Lineoln and at an assembly at 
Wisner Elementary School. Taking 
part in the play were Todd Twich- improve- 
s record-|ell, Chuck Humphries, Ray Beegle,* 
| Donald Stockwell, Ronald May- 
Eastern’s magazine sales cam-inard, Neil Stewart, and Lawtenée 
|paign is progressing and high sales- 
imen, this week ure Charlen Wie-) 
igert, Ed Haroutuman, and. Gary; 
‘Barcome 5 | Mitchell, 
  
Insurance Coverage Up 
“AT WASHINGTON NEW YORK—American families 
The students of Washington Jun- owned an average of $7, worth 
ior ‘High School went over the top Of life insurance at the) ‘start of 
in a pousing finish to the maga-|1997,, 
' zine drive. 10 years ago, more than twice as piuch as 
       
“| POLAROID LAND CAMERA   
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 35, 1957   
   
          
   
        
     
     
    — ralgia fe 4 babe of londing for|it will bir ine two-tone converts iy 
. ie you wouldn't move Set wey . A modem home is one ea Cobithiery to Face | 
, Bernard Baruch supposedly that pc you half the room for 
“hth "Ir Anerta eer asa ltvee the money, Eat wien DStacles in Red Leaders} : | 
By JOHN H. MARTIN MAO DECISION VITAL —s | 
INS Foreign Director The position of Mao Tse-Tung] 
Soviet party boss Nikita Khrush-|!s important in any final decision. 
chev now is talking shop in Mos-/The Chinese red leader was said 
cow with world Communist lead-|to have opposed a Russian sug-' ers. gestion of a revised Cominform | 
« «* * earlier this year. 
* * 
    
The speculation that re-establish- | 
ment of some form of a world Mao is said to be jealous of his, * 
SMALL DEPOSIT 
— YOuR SELECTION! + 
  ag as ; : tion-as a top man in| red organization, similar to the|°¥" 0s FRI., SAT. & old Comintern aad Cominform, world Communism since the death! 
ON. “yy ~~ ihe era} of Stalin. But his country is mM ONLY f bee —- is based on several| ioe aed With ccicinie tudik 
° and it seems safe to assume that 
oO R $] 4, 98 : It is known that Khrushchev his real purpose in going to Mos-| 
ur 4 has considered the idea before; cow is to get help. 
and it also is now apparent that | s . plan 
4 he is undisputed master of So- | | The agian! lt o- f q viet Communist power. It would - pa a zere is imperiled. 
F be logical to assume he would ams for the first phase, me re only in the past few months, have 
2 pcdey Pooch = ter | been discarded in faver of a new 
| program, The latter involves a | 
Several obstacles aris® if Khrush-| heavy switch in emphasis from | 
chev has such goals, Yugoslav) heavy industry to projects such 
Marshal Tito has shied from the} as water conservation and the 
idea of creating another Or-| manufacture of fertilizers. 
izati i f the ; 
Sid Comintorm, or Communist In-| C°0king oil, rice and cotton cloth} iformation Bureau, meaning Stalin, ra Nga ys Maharey papi . Ee. ‘led to his ouster from that group|. ing with heavy lay-offs of state) oes 
in 1948. employes and also because there § ; 
Palmiro Togliatti, the Malian |r. no jobs for many of the million | : 
Communist leader, is sald te op- (or more youths who reach working § © 
Pose any step that would bia- ‘age each year. ae 
tantly reveal Soviet leadership. * * * i . 
He's had trouble in his ows par) China would like new economic|§ § ty ranks since the Russiag tenks | .4 military aid pledges from Mos-| 
suppressed the Hungarian revolt. lcow. But there is no question ofjf § 8 North Saginaw of Communists and non-commu- (o.+/i-nt Soviet gifts to Peiping,| 
)P E 0 a L E S OPEN MONDAY ~~ | Hence, if Khrushchev wants to 
Polish red leader Sicibjelaw Go-jrevive some big world organiza-| 
i jnarty Clothes + Easy Cre om & FRIDAY EVES. any revival of a Cominform. Go-| spokesman he likely will demand)          
        
    mulka also has reasin to oppose'tion with himself as the main) ‘ 
mulka’s pepularity at home is|Mao’s support for it — and get! 
based on the fact that he fought, it — in return for aid to Red) 
Moscow orders and pressures. ‘China. "SIZES 7 to 14 
GIRLS’ PENLONS Penney’s own  Penlons. 98 | They never fuzz or pill. 3 
They never need blocking. i 
NEW NATURES hi IT’S LAYAWAY WEEK |) eeeeoeae eee                 
    
   
   
    
     blessed 
die of shame before they 
would fuzz. They never 
need blocking. Pastels —_. 
deep tones. Sizes 32 to 40 
       
   
     
     
   
     
       
    
     
          
    
   
     
   
   
       
      
     
    
        
     
   
   
      
   
    f a, ?.. 
MACHINE WASHABLE 
PENLON BEAUTIES _ 
4.98 D.9D seer 
6. QS snseme     
      
    
     
       
    
NEW LOW PRICES Cov, MARKS wal Da 
SHOP NOW.:. SAVE PLENTY ON CHRISTMAS 
IETSP#AZ SEE FOR YOURSELF 4G SAVE NOW ON FAMOUS 
The GREATER BRILLIANCE 17 Jewel Longines-Wittnauer 
and LARGER SIZE Watches for Men and Women 
of a Wianond trom MARK'S | ¢ 9 Q* a AP Pox Emerald Cut : B ag 
    
  Diamond Bridal Set 
Our Reg. $150 
Fully 
sg Q50 ' Guaranteed. 
_ NO PAY $1 A WEEK MONEY 
          
     
     
       
      
      
     
         "SIZES 3 to Gx. PENLON SLIPOVERS and CARDIGANS Little girls grown up styl- 
ing.in Penion sweaters . 
Look, Mom! they machine 
wash ... no fear of losing 
  2 gga their ‘shape because they 
need no blocking. They do 
        > 4 BOYS’ UNIVERSITY LOOK LAMBS WOOL GREW NECKS 
4° Penney’s takes the univer- 
isty look and does it up in 
£? lambs wool classics _ for 
= ~-boys — Soft shape retain- 
ing and washable. A warm 
«sweater for winter months. 
     
           
               
     
      
    
   
     
                
  Plus These Extras at Mark's 3 DOWN NUTT not fuzz nor Sizes 10 to 16, 
NOTARY INSURANCE = $1.00 4a = BONDED BRIDAL = 
GUARANTEE POLICY =|; Boox ) WEEK = @ Lifetime Service Insurance coverage b 
*laewene, heldap,. barsiars. | | Brige-te-me. No per’ |] ae jisee || Pay Next Year! a 
EE OR RRS = Bee omnes RR: SS ge BS Bee pe eee 
The Amazing 60-Second - Remington - ele Royal 
‘o9u    
          
        
   Mark’s Special Price i 
   
  FREE 
FILM 
10 
Day FREE? — nae MEN’S UNIVERSITY CLASSICS 
  Drop Leaf Metal : 
_ Demonstration - Free Typewriter Table wee aay _ NECKS 
by factory See Trial | Reg. $10.95 fet GF go pa- oo 
RRA LTR nea ms esi SMe sncapeeiencanss shauna clea | classroom - 95. 
- 
Imported Bone China 
nye? -— CUPS and   aN | 4 RE PA aE 
    “OUR GREW NECKS SPORT THE NEW “BULKY LOOK” Penney’s wool worsted 
re 
* every man wants. Smarter 
with fts contrast- towncra ; ing stripes. Sizes ae. 
eedban ond Gate. 
    
    Ser 9 SAUCERS 
3    
     
    | DOWNTOWN PENNEY'S. Open Mon Friday and’ Saturday 
ale M. too. P. M. 
All Other Days 9:30 A. M. to 5:30 P, M.   "MIRACLE MILE PENNEY s 
‘Thru. er’ ‘Open Monday 
12. Noon to 9 P. M. 
Saturday 10 A.M. to 9 P. M. 
       
aman 
  pion 
A 
  
eet ENG HR ee EE 
Tee a Nl kil ul i   
  
-Franiurter Marks : Fay’ laren 
His T3th Birthday — - Sos - 2 ty zi 4 a Pee 
be PTE. PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1957 4 
  
: ior Editors Quiz on 
to INSECTS     
  
  
  had little in sight by Bismuth is used in many reme- 
indigestion,   Frankfurter 
way of celebration. He expected 'diés for 
, onecreemseueneueuensgustiseesnscosesson 
PRE-CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! an @( aa, 
  ‘Round-the-clock outfit for Color-Slide Making 
salon-worthy 
tho sew Ketek Pony CORnS, MOEA &, wth One 1/3.5 tom, 
1/300 for ection. PLUS fliasholder with guard and handsome, 
fast-action fleld case to protect the camera, And what a gift 
for some special person!     
    
   
  .. 
  
  JArms Delivery 
¥ilater with 500 semiautomatic M1/U.S. lags behind Russia in mis-| 
    
   
  135 CAMERA OUTFIT 
known as honeydew. 
ny color slides, crisp black-and-white ‘pictures, | y 
maintain herds of aphids as “cows.” for flash indoors and at night, speeds to by tapping and stroking them. 
  
35mm SLIDE PROJECTOR 
  | 
| . ! fand their lives make fascinating reading. 
* * * 
  300 Watt You'll recognize the famous 
name, we dare not mention it    QUESTION: What insect keeps “cows”? =| 
ANSWER: Have you ever seen tiny plant lice, or aphids, : \attached to the tender shoots of plants from which they suck] after a French appeal in Septem-/the gap could not be blamed on I sap? This sap they change inside their bodies to a sweet liquid|ber but apparently decided Bour-|interservice rivalry. - 
Some ants are very fond of honeydew and to pe it they 
They “milk” the aphids 
Ants protect their “cows” from insect enemies by taking 
[them into tiny sheds of grass or earth that they build. In win- 
ter they keep the aphids warm in their nests. In the spring 
ALL FOR $ 3 3 50 and summer they move them from one plant to another, so 
, that there will be no shortage of honeydew, 
Reg. 49.95 ONLY x *k FOR YOU TO DO: It probably is too chilly to watch ants]. 
‘in action now, so read about them in an encyclopedia or aj ~~ 
library book. Along with bees, ants are our best known insects) 
| (A $10 prize goes to Dixie Vitera of Waterloo, Iowa, for this 
| question..Send a postcard with your question to Violet Moore 
| Higgins, AP Newsfeatures, in care of The Pontiac Press.) 
      
    
   guiba would turn’ eastward unless | 
he got help from the West. « | 
Paris fears that the guns will 
be turned over to the rebels in 
French Algeria, western neighbor 
of this former French _Peptectar- 
rate. Bourguiba gave “most ex- 
plicit assurances Pg the arms) 
would be u: 80 lor n 
U.S., Britain Shipping| \detense, ee Uk bate Depart-| Weapons into Tunisia | ment said. 
Despite Protest. France Attacks . 
: * * 
Although the shipments threfit.| 
ened harmony among the Western | 
TUNIS # — Despite strong/Big Three shortly before -next! 
United’ States started delivering tg ato ‘oa bes tooling hag oo see 
929 guns and ammunition to) the gesture to Tunisia might ac-| _ Tunisia. today. Officials in Parisitually strengthen the wobhiy) warned a‘serious break in the At-| French government, 
lantic Alliance was threatened. 
ah * * * sf* * ‘: 
Two British transport planes Heavy Civiliqn Authority ; 
landed at Tunis airport after Lon- Cited in’ Missiles Lag | don announced it would send 350 
machineguns, 70 Bren guns) DALLAS #—Gen; Leslie Groves | 
and. ammunition. World War Il chief of atomic} 
American planes were expected) bomb project, saifl yesterday the.       
rifles and 50,000 rounds of amnur|siles development because of “too 
nition — Bd wena. much civilian authority.’’ : 
Groves said that if “a single’ 
The oe = oe the token|missile chief had been named, 
shipments was taken to forestall! years*‘ago, we wouldn't be behind 
President Habib ‘Bourguiba’s ac-| Russia today.” 
cepting an Egyptian offer of arms| The wartime boss of Man-j 
from the Soviet bloc, The United/hattan Project; now. a Sperry-| 
States and Britain had held off|Rand Corp.: vice president, said |     
   
    | 5 
Food, Bedding and Accessories for Dogs, Cats, 
Rabbits, Goats, Horses, Parakeets, Canaries, 
Domestic Fowls, and Wild Birds. 
“Healtho” Canned Dog Food—16-0z. ———20 Other Advertised Brands of Canned Dog Food———— 
French objections, Britain and the|month’s important NATO meeting toe 
@eeeeaee 
- For Those Whe Want Them, We Have 
.. HOLDEN'S RED TRADING STAMPS 
We Deliver 
trom Pontiac 
/ Store Only        
    FOODS 
           
       
  . 44.8 Be            
  
  
         
     
      eee eeee 
*ee@eee 
seeeee 
eee Pee 2 | 
     
     
            
    
     
     
         
      Drayton Store 
@ 4286 Dixie Hwy. Dial OR 3-2441          
       
  
2258 DIXIE HIGHWAY NEAR INTERSECTION OF TELEGRAPH 
LOTS OF FREE PARKING Daily 9 to 6 
BIG DISCOUNTS ON ALL 
LOWS - BIG SELECTION 
      
   
    
IT’S CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY TIME!     ‘Haupt, father of an executed Nazi 
  
    
  ‘tive Germany. 
    
     You Can Say “Charge It”. at 
a Maw MARK DAV]! 
AMERA Sagi naw o i 
| World War II after being landed | desk 1.4343 sey, has been deported to his na- Harriman 66 Today 
  
    
  on the East Coast by a German): z PHOTOGRAPH! ¥ .¥ 7 FOR £55 
in 1942.     « «at this price! | * * * 
Special! | Tomorrow: What was Jacob's Ladder? 
\ "Cle en os harged with) 
$29” Nazi Spy’s Father <5 ae . i , had spent more than 30 years in 
cotinine naam *-sanaren quanrery — |9EME TO Germany |e, ates Se ince na om | NEW YORK 7 — Hans Max|{%@,Danbury, Conn., federal cor- 
| -Haupt, 63, who had been serv-| ALBANY, N. Y, (Gov. Aver- 
‘ing a life prison sentence for trea- ell Harriman, looking. forward to 
son, left by plane last night for an opportunity to go skiing again, 
Frankfurt. Should he return to'turned 66 today. An aide said the 
‘this country, he must go back to|Democratic governor wag in fine 
jail. eS ee looking for- 
| Haupt's son-Herbert was one of|W@rd to the winter sports season. eight Nazi. agents captured daring Zo eamed  epend weiy at his 
submarine. The son was executed ‘Paper mills. in Michigan use 250 : 
tons of water to produce one ton 
The father was arrested in Chi- of sulphite wood pulp. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED 
A-FEW. SUGGESTIONS FOR 
_. BOYS’ GIRLS’ 
Gomes “Building Sets | Dolls Doll Buggies 
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5 0% ~o Musical I Instruments Mie Toy                    
    $1.00._PUTS IT IN LAYAWAY 
     Famous 
    
pplian   
“That's Right! We'll give. 
| you up to what you paid ' 
~ for your present TV!”   
    
“OKLAHOMA 
_IN COLOR eeeene 
Sat. Nov. 16 | @ rt 
See us Friday | eb 
night or Sat. re .. 
morning and 
get a set for 
free home 
  
EVERY | agi 
NIGHT! | MF bion:   NOTRE | 
DAME We'll pay you up to the ae 
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. the prrchase sha new 
  
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W's our atime biggest tredo-tn offer. Limited Hme only (              
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825 West Huron St. ° 
  ESTAR EXTRAS AT HAMPTON’S Accepted , Free e 
Experienced Servicemen © 4 
te Tornis Available aa! sar Home Trial   
  _ Hampton Electric 
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veh Toasted i egae ies LE: 19> of Color I 6” GALVANIZED ~ a | AMF De War brings amazing 
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 = 
Tight Clincher Would Be Unhealthful   
   
  _ tht column that you ca some: 
|times hold the wild hairs in line;   
  
  desired and the pattern .number "Cols Candy 
to Match 
Flavoring | - Mrs. Alderson Has, 
Several Varieties) 
Sealed in Jars 
them, and would not have time as/ 
By JANET ODELL I am going to school. If I wore a 
Did you ever make hard cardy? |waist clincher for a year or more 
Not long ego we ate some anees riper Hol og my waistline down 
by Mrs, Clifford Alderson of Huron) mNCNES 
in Tt was delicious, so deli-| . Even if you had it tight es ‘enough to pinch you badly, 1 do 
cious we begged for the recipe. And not -believe the result would be 
it keeps perfectly in tightly cover-/ what you wish. This would be un- 
ed cans. 
Mrs, Alderson is new in this 
area. She likes Extension 
and sewing. 
HARD CANDY 
By Mrs. Clifford Alderson 
4 cups sugar 
. 1 eup white corn syrup 
1 cup water 
Plavoring 
Confectioners sugar 
Mix sugar, corn syrup and wa-| 
ter in a heavy pan. Boil to 290) 
degrees, Immediately remove 
from heat. Add ‘2 teaspoon (or % 
dram) flavoring oil and 1 cap food 
coloring. 
Dribble into big pans just 
barely covered with confectioners 
sugar. Work fast. Cut into small pieces. 
Eight batches will make 18 
rounds, Seal in air tight cans or   ‘By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN 
(The Friday Question Box) 
“I have started doing exer- 
lie for my waist but have given 
  work 
  
  could help me. healthful and much more unpleas- 
ant than doing any number of 
exercises. You do not 5 to 
me as though you gave 
| them up because I am. tired of/ises @ chance. exer- 
* * * 
“| just wondered Wf you 
bam 60 and in Q. 
good health but overweight. At 
night 1 use the best hormone 
ereams and oils, yet my face 
has gotten so crepy it wearies 
me. Do I need 
green vegetables?” vitamins or 
Flavers Celers 
bora rg niet Come as close as you can to touching —3. 
crease quseee your hand with your foot. This and Anise ed | f . “¢ . i. Clove rio | pray, Sm y exercises are avail . 
Sassafras i able in Josephine Lowman’s leaflet No. Press. ‘Don’t Cinch-Y« our Waist- 1-BhGboleet 
A. Everyone needs vitamins and 
green vegetables. Sometimes ex- 
tremely dry skin is due to a vita- 
min deficiency.. The first thing 
is to eat a well-balanced vitamin- 
high diet. 
* * * 
The green, leafy vegetables arc 
an important part of your diet be- 
cause of their vitamin and mineral 
content. 
  Fi and nutrition are reflect- 
   
       
   Then it might be, wise tg rein-| 
force your diet with more vitamips. ed in all of the cues of the body! 
and therefore do affect our com- 
plexions, Be careful about this. 
Ask your doctor about vitamins 
and keep on with the creams and 
oils. 
* * * 
Q: “Is it dangerous to tweeze 
hairs from the chin? I find that 
depilatories burn and chafe.” 
_A. Ieannot imagine -why you 
thought it might be dangerous. 
Perhaps you were thinking that it 
might make the hair grow thicker. 
| There is no evidence that this is 
| 80,   * * * 
Q. “1 would like a thicker brow- 
line but the hairs that have been 
tweezed come in stiff, and some- 
times white, although I do not have 
gray hair, Can I soften them?” 
A. I have recently mentioned in     
    Send a stamped, self-addressed 
envelope. with your request to Jose- 
phine Lowman in care of The Pontiac 
  
Fear of Mistake Often Prevents D Decision 
|make a double date with a friend 
lof her young man, Midge’s father 
are high school sophomo By MURIEL LAWRENCE 
te tat ees Helen, said, “No, I think you. are too 
to go out with 23-year-old Recently Helei# has been dating! young imen your mother and I know noth- ly young man of 23 from a nearby| i. about.” 
| He maintained bis decision * * * i 
i. but nee: After 
1 Last night she asked Midge to;   ways right, 
  “understanding” parents. But we wrong decisions but our insistence 
aren't. We just want to be al- that they are perfectly right. 
| On this question, psychoanalyst 
“The person 
Children soon recover from re-| whose authority is respected does 
‘jsentment at our decisions when not call for irrational awe of it. He 
we do not claim absolute right-\does not claim to be unerring.” 
ness for them. What makes the’ 
problems the child psychologists so out of secret need to appear 
are always talking about is not our’ ifaultless. Eric Fromm’ writes, 
Parents who fear decisions do 
—— | by applying a touch of 
jelly. You also can 
‘Jeffect of your brows by using an 
eyebrow brush cleverly. 
x * *   the! 
    
hi “I am 5 feet 6 inches tall 
and weigh 142 pounds, My bust 
measures 35 inches, waist 27/4 
and hips 41%, People tell me that 
I leok wonderful, perhaps be- 
eause I have lost 46 pounds since 
my second child was bern, I 
think I could lose another 10 
pounds. Do you think I'm right, 
and are my measurements really 
eff?” 3 
A. Congratulations on your ee: | 
I know how much better you must 
look and feel, Do not lose another 
10 pounds. . That would make you 
urderweight. “You might lose an- 
other five if it would make you 
happier. Your hipline is too large. 
Take hip-slimming exercising. 
x * * 
Tomorrow: “Observe . These 
Rules and Reduce Kids’ Witer| \Colds. 2     
       
  With Each Shoe Purchase 
. of $3.99 or More 
NYLON WEEK | 
. ll AIG SHOE 
y STORE 
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 
Across from Federals 
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. ’& Sat, Till 9 p.m. °    
   
        
      ae RTE seer — ore   
  
one (cmtit 
  
             » young men she'll ever 
t being wrong is the 
have to take, isn’t it, 
Ht His wife said “Yes.” 
I say it, too. 
* .* * | 
It's the hard obligation ‘ot all) 
| reasonable authority to make de-) 
\cisions for other people it kriows: 
may be mistaken. And yet stick 
with them until. { can make better | 
~ bones. 
UNCERTAIN PROTEST 
\ Fear of this obligation is parents’ 
\chief problem. 
| Many of us are so conrad of | 
imaking the wrong decisions for; 
iMidge that when ‘she announces 
jshe's dating a man sever: years. 
older than she is, we content our-' 
Selves with an uncertain protest. | 
* * * 
We think, ‘The child experts are 
always saying that children should 
be allowed to test their own judg- 
ment of what's right for them to 
do. So if I say ‘No’ to this date I 
may be wrong. And oh, my good-| 
ness, I mustn't be wrong under) 
any circumstances.”      
        
So we -make no decision, Un- 
like Midge’s father, we refuse 
the risk of being wrong. We- 
Designed expressly for the half-| imagine ourselves wouderfully   Shop Conveniently at 
INLAND LAKES SALES | 3127 West Huron 
IMPROVE YOUR 
[all 
            
     Tem 
Uniform heat from floor te ceiling. 
preste-logs of briqvets. You control 
home and fomily sefer! f 
HEAT TEMPERED GLASS ENCLOSURE 
FRAMED IN SOLID me.    
         FIREPLAC E// | A 
    
    
  Burn weed, 
+ your 
See the famous “Masterscreen” 
Traverse Pull Chain Screen that 
adjusts itself to ‘your fireplace. . 
FIREPLACE HARDWARE ~— LOG BASKETS 
GRATES — FIREPLACE CRYSTALS 
INLAND LAKES SALES FE 4-7121- 3127 W. Huron FE 2-6122 
  e 
        
  
gi 
4 
2 
te 
. 
a 
(i 
; 
ro 
© rel 
” 
4 
. 
re: 
4 
j ee 
~ 
* Ca 
( 
\ ye 
$53 
$ 4. 
wee -~ 
& ieee 
    BIRMINGHAM 
sale! | of TWEED, PLAID and SOLID, 
WOOL SKIRTS 3” 
Scores of skirts at a special little price! Come pick yours from this group of 4 
slim walkers, semi-swing and full- -gore styles in rich colors and fabrics. 
Sizes 10 to ‘18. 
Sportswear, 
Parking Level   
  
  i ‘i e 
STORE HOURS: 
Monday thru Saturday 
, 9:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. 
  size figure is this dainty feminine 
Plans Are Made 
      friend. 
No, 8159 with Patt-O-Rama is in 
4% yards of 35-inch; jacket, 2 Pers and bazaar sponsored by Sor-| 
ve joptimist International were out-| nightgown and jacket - combina- 
tion. Nice gift idea for a special 
for Kard Kapers sizes 12%, 14%, 164, 18%, 20%, 
22%, 24%. Size 1444, 35 bust, gown,| Plans for the annual Kard Ka-| 
ae ined Wednesday evening by Mrs. For this palern! send 35¢_ in|/ine¢ y . 7 coins, your name, address. size| — Paschke, general chair- 
re ‘special meeting will be held 
Nov. 25 at the home of Mrs, Fritzi, 
Stoddard on Ottawa drive. i 
President Taimee Surola presid- 
ed at the meeting held at Hotel 
Waldron. Reports of the recent! 
|Midwestern conference were given| 
by Marguerite Parrish, Mrs. Ar- 
‘noid Hillerman and Miss Surola. : to Sue Burnett, The Pontiac Press, 
372 W. Quincy Stf., Chicago 6, II. 
The Fall & Winter '57 edition of 
our pattern book, Basic Fashion, 
is filled with smart, new styles 
for all sizes; special features. It's 
~— stimulating and so useful   
      
    
   Announcin g the Openin g of 
Miracle Mile Eye Clinic     Optometrists 
e     
    & 
R. Gluskin    
    
  @ lceaes Fitted 
® Contact Lenses , 
      
            © Eyes Examined 
® Prompt Service on All 
Repairs 
          
         
    . Colors: Red, White, BOOTS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY 
Misses’ and Child’s 
PULL-ON BOOTS 
oo 
Sizes to 3. 
Colors: 
Red -- Brown 
            
    
        
MISSES’ and CHILD'S 
THERMO BOOTS 
‘3 Brown. Also Women’s ig. ~ 
sizes to 10, 
  
Men’s and Boys’ 4-Buckles. ae $4. 98 
Youths’ Sizes to 2..   
$4.49 thee ee ee ee a 
                 
HAVE TIME-FOR-WINTER SPECIAL! 
vain. keh ah arapeeoraed / 
@ 
2-HOUR FREE PARKING 
YOUR TICKET VALIDATED       
   _FLEECE-~LINED 
SHOE BOOTS 
8.80 
Kickerino's sturdy 
crepe-soled shoe boots. 
snap snugly high or low, 
keep your in toes cozy 
nylon fleece. smart black 
  elk with suede. | 
* 
Shoe Salon. 
- Street Level 
         c Hours: ert 2291 S. Telegraph j) 4’ 4 _ WHEN YOU MAKE A PURCHASE = In Arcade Next to aan 8 aay AT MAES : oy if i \ i 4 
i ; \ i ' : : ; ~ A ‘ 
< : a \ ‘ oes \ &, \ Fe y ee \ ‘ we \ x Wo : ; 
  
we        
    
  
Major Hoople Picks tn My MAJOR AMOS B, HOOPLE 
  ‘One-Point Forecast Champion {- PONTIAC JQ. COMMERCE as gorse ae 
ad, zillions of tle readers! on i IE. 2 No. 6 15 2 Fe ia a Go-Rue. 4 x wallpaper 0. 21 Perey. veare 1s Gomuun 1s A touching tribute has reached me. Seer gy May, Weg + Gerls iiees a Parkway G.° 16 20 Hareck HM. 15 31 
It can best be expressed by quoting — > : 7) bs H. E, it Fe og shell 106. NE Aqhur shell 006. 
the letter itself: Pe Dea Panna 
teen “You .are the world chasaplon 
forecaster when it comes to calling) - 
the results ‘by a single point, I 
mean that- game where you pre- 
dicted the score would be Ala- LAKELAND LADIES 
hardt's 
bama 14, Georgia 13 and that wa: Brigg's Sport 21 11 John D's Ser. 12 20 , = ~ . AN. Hickson 17.5 12 20 IMPERIAL LEAGUE: the actual score! Please tell us Pegey's i6 @ Cab 8 35 “ke Ee . how you do it.” ran Wiplisce (102, B. Baxter 00; Reise Cooler Las. » ie “Leon. Dist. 2B 
The sender Boles 2 Haron ‘pow! a 1 Newecombs - Pe % 
ther legibly, aes: is name WATERFORD TWP. BUSINESS mooie Gh aig = . rons ‘on. en. 
Pine but to it Pts. High individual game and series: 
looks like “Bud Wilkinson.” Of 
course ¥ could be wrong, it 
might even be “Ben Milkerson” “ Blats Beer —heh-heh! .‘ jowards ” «OO. 
E.. Bell 243, C. »_ Corwin 643, 
I must apologize for one of my, Schnitkopf, who predicted the, ~ 
associates, however — Dr. Reggy Penn State-West Virginia score at, FRIDAY NITE “B” 
:26 to T—the actual score was 27's; stephens 26.6 BLD. 
” STEVE'S AUTO PARTS | Mufflers, Tailpipes, 
Shock Absorbers, 
Installed Free — Fig 1 Benderoff’s 
      
  
for giving the wrong team the y noes hy ¢ os 
Cc jins 2 15.17 Oregon H. ‘point after touchdown. onan ee LR 
This week’s big one is Notre) Biue Ribbon %,, St. Stephens 
Dame. to beat Oklahoma, 21 to 20. apenas Also the Colgat Ss us 13 to 13 LADIES ead STARS 
     
       (har-rumph! — 
Now goon with the forecast: 
Yale 21, Princeton 13 
Harvard 7, Brown 6 Chief Pont C 21 14 Blatz Beer 
Ward's 867, Ward's 2446. 
    Ilinels 20, Wisconsin 13 
Michigan 27, Indiana 6 
lowa 20, Ohio State 14 
Missouri 26, Kansas State 14 Jack 3 
Purdue 14, Northwestern @ Felnes Serv. = Weat Bros. 
. Netre Dame 2], Oklahoma 20 | Aahassedor In. 25 Pont. Ree. 
Georgia Tech 2, Alabama 14 
Arkansas 26, So. Methodist 20: i" 
Auburn 13, Georgia 6 SPECIAL 
Motor Tune-up All 6-Cyl. Chevrolets thru ‘5 | Bil Lewis 221, 
— “HOUSEWIVES   
  
  
team : game, 
. Labor ond a se ‘Duke 14, Clemson. 7 jul, 2628. 
Pheer eal Mississippi State 26, La. State 14 BALL & “ke CHAIN 
. Califernia 20, W 14 ize 3 e 
Oregon 14, Ss. California 7. {Team Nob 25 ¥ Eottee Bory Stanford 20, Oregon State 14 
Tennessee 20, Mississippi 12 
Texas A. and M, 2%, Rice 14 
Texas. Christian 21, Texas 15 
Colorade 26, Nebraska Irv 
1957 FORDS-MERCURYS. We have purchased a quantity of FORD 
MOTOR CO. Executive and Company Cars. 
FORD CUSTOMS, FAIRLANE and 500s 
MERCURY MONTEREY and MONTCLAIR 
-Sedans, Hardtops and Station Wagons work dene on Sun Analyzer 
MARKET TIRE CO. Open 8 te ® 
77 W. Haren St. re sain | |Pon. Cater 20:19 Beavers 
Individua] game, 
\Mary SaleX, 711 
520. Team game, 
Team series, Aee's ‘Diner, mas   
      
  
  These cars ord ald with © New Cor Guerentes du.Néw Deb ferme. 
at Used Cor pricés. 
  
  
‘IMAGINE 2 
  schiialetosl Try one drink of Kessler tonight ies YA 
-Wwithout mixer or chaser...and see! 
a . ‘@ete No. 441 Code No, 440 : 
ee 
ee 
  wot ae Canten 980, West Gide Can- 
WL wh +L Shop Out Dec Mol 7; High team game: 
ie ~ 4 Gcahns ¥ u eres’ Bowl, 864. High .team series: 
iHarbor Bar 21 11. Northside A. : 
Pts. ; 
Serv. Glass 22 Land O'Lks 
22 Marge & Ed's 
Art & Lil'é 22 Stewart,Gons 
W.. Larson 
Lavere 
‘to 6. Dr. Regey has a weakness/Paint Shop 21 10 Pabst B. Rib 13 19\Gocia! Brats 20 16 
16.6 Fillmore Hd. 
Pabst | Harsen 533; | 
2652. |Team high single. County Jets, 613; 
i 2 j yee. H'ck'sn er R.R Mtrs, tie is a bit out of the ordinary— i RB Mire 
saere's ‘Cab 23.13 Huron Bow! 12 24|National Boh 33 4 
Mtr. Inn Rec. 22 14 Clay Ceramic, 12 24) A. ype Mig. bf . 
[ eieewennee Phyllis Nelson 226, Opal Ward $11, aifi's Bar 29 18 
F i ' nd a uy by ae 55.95 “> | S¥facuse 13, Colgate 13 PONTIAC “JAYCEES 
Detroit 20, Quantico 6 'M. GosRnd, 29 11 Wallpaper 0. NEW & REBUILT PARTS |  partmouth 27, Cornel 7 Pont. Rec, 24 16 Gerls 
Penn State 14, Holy Cross 7) Guitts Grill’ ale Weed, HE. 1 - * - 
3700 Eliz. Lk. Rd. |Anderson Ins. 23 15 Pox. Cleans. 
on Art & Lil's 14) 
Williams Ineur, 13 g, 
8 Superior Bid 8 
pf high game, B, Budwit, 199; 
— High series, B. Budwit mu | 
Ambassador Insu)., 
: lon high team series, Ambassador In- 
Gr. Tavern 18 2 
Team No, 6 15 m4 
Al Medien, 224 and | 
Individual . series, 
Marvin Campbell, ~. and Mary a 
Low Pour, 1752. | 
    
They 
represent substantial sovings. They are for all practical purposes New Cars 
  LARRY JEROME om (EES Ores Open FP 8 SR 1-9711 Rochester Ford Dealer veeings Bi foo HS 
“For More Than 30 Years — A Good Place to Buy” | : a 
    
  Ke ssler The Smooth as Silk whiskey 
HULIUS KESSLER COMPANY, _—" (NDIANA, BLENOED wwisnen om PROOF. Riese! orate, arias.   
  
68, COOLEY MAJORETTES We Cooley Las. 15 9 Huron Bowl 11 13 
Poirier RE. 13 11. Strohs 1113 
Sem Benson 1113 Cooley Lnge. 11 13 
be — game and series: M 
f2 24/Sam Benson, 2479 
      1s ‘Jean Marohn, 255; 598. High team 
,gigame; Manny's .Bar, 661. High team 
jgiseries: Munro Hotpoint. 2443 
7 OAKLAND, yPOpNTY EMPLOYES 
Pont, Amuse. 16 38 
Goof Balls 16 2 
Hi-Lows 
Hollands Fi, 
Rogers Elec. 
Rockettes 
Guttersnipes 8 26 
Rolletter 7 Ten Pins pA 4 
|Social Katz’ 27 9 
‘Odd Balls 26 10 
Wlia & B Girls 25 11 14 18 County Jets 21 15 
e8an 
13 19) Strikettes 20 16 
il |LaPorse Mkt. 19 17 9 22| “Individual high single, M. Keller, 188: individual bigh series, M. Keller, 497, / 
‘team high series. Goof Balls, 1682. 
HURON powe “a” 
w w 
, Lundsford 20 19 
Pidier Ege i8 22% 
Harris ia 22 311 16 20)  serause 5 
432N ber 17 Drewrys 17 33 
23 1? Deans 16 34 
Food-O-Mat Lr Lg 
(pubann's 18 Franks 31 
| High paavieenl game: E. Temple, 338 
» y,(High individual series. M. Bowers, 615 
21 19 High team game Northern Lumibe er 
17 23) 045. High team series: Jerome's, 2675 
  
aes BALDWIN BOWLERETTES | 
a 2% |Bud & Lou's A 3 Tompkins 22 22 
i@treeter’s 17 Chuck's 23 22 
lz. J. Dunlop 27 ia Nightingale 21 23 Drewrys 61 Pon. Rec. 430 
Al's Mkt 26 HH Deaton's 5 41 Individual games ana series — Ma 
jek, 196 and 516: team game rat 
2 | series—£ J. Dunlop. 953 and 2700 
  
{ 
wie 
19 21 
19 21 
      
  STRIKES AND SPARES 
By Joe Wilman 
| Listed below are the. most com- 
‘mon sparedeaves. They are broken 
‘down by single-pin spares as well 
as two-pin, threepin and’ four- 
pin leaves, 
| Next time you're out bowling 
on.a weekend or in open play, pick 
}out the spares among this list 
which give you the~ most. trouble 
jand practice them, “Sure to make 
‘your list is the 10-pin spare we 
“show today. That’s a tough one 
for ALL ‘right-handers, but you | 
‘improve with practice:                  
   
                  
  
Pct 
«le 
4 
(Copyright 1957, John F. Dille Co.) -§ 
    
  
    ‘My Doddy Sapli. : 
IT’S SO EASY TO DEAL 
With — 
  , DIE STEELE’ Mz 
     
  
‘IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1958 FORDS All Engines -- All Transmissions 
|Payments Start at 61°... AFTER MINIMUM DOWN PAYMENT OR. TRADE-IN! 
NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1958   
REMEMBER 
BETTER SERVICE —- BETTER DEAL 
You Get Both From 
EDDIE STEELE-FORD | 2705 Orchard 
Keego Harbor, One Mile West of Telegraph Road Lake Road 
FE 5-9024 
CLEAN USED CARS Ready to Go!   
1955 FORD RANCH WAGON -: 
8 Cylinder, Overdrive $5 «*° 
. Only Your car down. ....... a. 
1950 CADILLAC FORDOR 
Your car down. 
i _ $31" 
1954 PONTIAC FORDOR 
*34” peiioety only 
    
Your. car down.., 
Payments only ... 
1957 FORD TUDOR 
Your car down. - . 5 9° . Payments only . A MONTH 
1955 CHEVROLET TUDOR 
- $ 45 
‘& MONTH 
1955 CHEVROLET PICKUP 
Ready to go to work for you —$ 4 3” 
Your truck down — 
Payments only... 0.0... eee eee ee. A MONTH 
1954 CHEVROLET FORDOR 
454 A MONTH Your car down 
Payments ofily ... 
Your car down $ 
Payments only 
1956 FORD VICTORIA Power Steering, Ford-O-Matic, 
Radio—Heater. 
sites Down Payment. EASY 
PAYMENTS     
._Payments only 1951 PLYMOUTH FORDOR — 
s11*° 
A MONTH No money down. 
Payments only ..., 
1953 FORD TUDOR 
No money down, 
Payments only 
1956 FORD STATION WAGON Red and White, 8 Cylinder ~ CAN 
Your car down. FINANCE 
1954 CHEVROLET TUDOR 
$3 ] 89 
A MONTH 
1951 CADILLAC FORDOR Your car down. $ 
Payments only . A MONTH 
Your car down 
Payments only ... 
1” 
1953 CHEVROLET TUDOR 
$9724 A MONTH 
1955 FORD CUSTOM FORDOR Ford-O-Matic, Heater, Radio $ 
Your car down. No money down. 
Payments 
A MONTH er a 
1952 PONTIAC TU DOR Hydromatic, Radio, Heater $ 24 
No money down. 
Poy... . ce ee eee eee A MONTH 
“BRAND NEW 1958 FORD PICK-UPS for IMMEDIATE GANAS 
  
BRAND NEW 1957 HOES Immediate Delivery—Just a Few Left, Priced From ...... | Ss Qh | 
  
EDDIE STEELESs: . . . All you wise, thrifty people 
who will be cashing in your Christmas Savings Club money should 
give serious consideration to buying the car of your choice as a 
real Christmas present, with a minimum down payment and no 
payments until 1958. 
’ 
  
34,000-Mile Warranty on All New Cars 
‘i - 6-Month Warranty 
‘NO MONEY poten on All Used Cars 
ON. ionic CARS 7 
        
$9724 
2° , 
eu erin a 
      
  
  
     
  aaa 
  : 
f 
: 
: 
E 
  ; Ee gederol 
  . ElsenhowWer 4ays must come 
_ or indirectly. 
', For example, 
+» Department puts its spending on 
its various farm programs includ-| 
* * price supports at 5% _ billion 
' would need to convince the public 
. turn to deficit financing, raising 
  : \ 
    
  
By SAM DAWSON 
NEW YORK @—More guns can) 
"be sold to the Ameri — “public | 
' More easily today than less but-) 
— ter. 
But the considerable increase in. 
defense spending which President. 
and 
which most. Americans probably, 
approve = wave to pag paid for. 
And the yey a of paying 
for it will bear on both individuals 
and business firms, tither directly 
One Way would be to keep with-| 
in the present budget plans by 
_ paring sums for various doghestic 
programs, 
the Agriculture   a@ year—a figure which this) 
year's large crops aren't likely to, 
trim. Any. paring back of such 
supports will be hard 
through Congress. 
x« * 
Veterans’ outlays also run’ 
around five billion dollars a year. to put! 
Less butter for @ither the farm- 
ers or the veterans would plague 
not only them but also the mer- 
chants and manufacturers with 
whom they deal. 
A second way to pay for -more| 
defense would be to raise taxes. 
To d@o this, Congress. probably 
of the immediate peril to secur-) 
ity. 
Ss * 
The third would be, as 
- President. Eise wer hinted in 
  e in Dale ense i 
ust Be Paid for by Public 
  his Oklahoma City speéch, to re- 
the federal debt limit, and running) 
the Treasury in the red again. 
  
      
rowing as the. Christmas shop-| 
ping season approaches. 
tok oe 
The discount rate is the interest 
which the 12 regional Federal Re-' 
“setve banks charge their .mem- 
ber banks on borrowed funds 
Banks borrow from the reserve 
system when they need extra 
money te meet the demand for 
loans. A low discount rate encour- 
ages them to. borrow in order to 
make commercial or persons! 
loans, thus helping to oe th 
economy rolling al a oak jace 
= * 
Wail Street was generally sur 
prised but pleased with the news 
It wag called “constructive.” 
“stimulating.” “forthright and! 
, courageous,” and recognition by 
the Federal Reserve Board that! 
“the forces of inflation are reced- ing. ‘* 
* * * 
That, however, wasn’t a unani- 
mous opinion. One major bank of- 
ficial said, “‘I’m astonished and 
speechiess . . I regard it as 
wholly “unwarranted.” 
The annountement came after, 
the New York -stock exchang se) 
were (closed, but in San Francisco 
stocks élimbed sharply . after 
ag and grading was brisk. the,       
| TRV more 
|General Motors moved toward    
  grumbling about the sacrifices 
ithat go with it. 
The Pentagon is reported to feel 
‘that the increased spending will) : 
run, abouf one or two billion dol- 
lars a year. a” 
  ' Declares Cities” 
Growing Fastex. 
Than Planning 
PITTSBURGH W — Cities are 
growing faster than governments 
lean make plans to handle the 
growth, a city planning expert said 
last night. 
* * * 
Richard L. Meier, research as- 
soclate at the University of Michi- 
gan, predicted the rapid growth 
will continue for another half cen- 
‘tury or more. In a speech at the 
opening session of the Operations 
‘Research Society of America, 
Meier declared: 
“It is everywhere evident that | 
the metropolitan areas are mt | 
| equipped administratively te cope | 
with anticipated growth.” 
He said that some probiems, | DETROIT, Nov, 14 (AP)—E 
once solved, such as sewage dis- 
posal or mass -transit, have to be * 
solved all over again. 
* * 
He declared that some public 
Sffrited citizens ‘‘have begun to 
see the need of a metropolitan gov- 
ernment which would coordinate 
the dozen or so functions which are 
of mutual interest to all residents 
of a =e area.” 
  
Strike Relief 
         
        
    
MARKETS The following are top prices cov- 
reg brian of locally grown pro- 
ht to the Farmer's M 
“a oe growers and sold by them 
in wholesale package lots. Quota- 
tions are furnished by the Detroit 
Bureau of Markets, as of Thurs- 
day. 
Produce 
Fraite   
Pears. Bose. Bi, oi cis sc aeus bases 
Quines, bu. is 0! Gate 
eapslandds Beets, topped. BU. .....-.-9.+00 
Broccoli, 'y bu. 
Cabbage, Curly, DU. 2. .csesceegeess 
Carrots, Topped, BU. ic... ceeees 
Cauliflewer, dos. retry er 
Celery (crates) doz. ss 
Fennel (behs.) dog 
Horseradish, pk. bakt. 
Kohirabi (bchs.} doz. 
(Leeks ibehs.) doz. 
Onions, Dry, 50-lb. 
Onions, Green, (behs.) doz, ........ 
Paraley, Root, (behs.) dod. ..creees 
Parsnips, ‘2 bu sesreetavenus 
Potatoes. fancy * $0-3b 
Radishes, hothouse (behs.) doz. 
Squash, Delicious bu. Fie 
Tomatoes. hothouse. ‘(bskt.) 8 ibs... 
Turnips (beles.) GOB... cae. ccc wens 
Greens 
Pabbage, bu. 2... ee vee erog oes 
bu Boonen beet te eh eee 
See 
seekeeedee 
eet rere 
ve henhareneese 
le tne necro eres 
  be emene 
Bsseesssssseseens eeeses akehenelotedkeledeket 
Lt 
ek 
td 
‘vimanas 
: ce 
oe . 
SZS2 Saussss = 
€ 
c 
Fale bu. 
. Spinach, by 
Swiss Chard, 
Turnips, bu. a 
Lreciy * Balad Geccns. 
Celery Cabbage 
Endive, bleac 
| Escarole, bleached, bu. ...........- 
Lettuce, Romaine, bu.   
  
BD 
BS 
9 be 
sects eeee 
  Mew Heeb eae reaeres 
Poultry 
DETROIT EGGS 
t.o.b. 
Detroit cases included, fedéral-state 
: Grade A jumbo 58-60, weighted 
50: extra large 58-60, wid. are. 
. wd. ps M6; wer 
wid avg. 4; il 
avg. 38%. Grade B laree 2 1-84, wid, oe 
. ; 
large 66; medium ® a, + 
smalt 39, Grade B nape aoa avg. 
49%. Grade ay _leree 31, a se FT ie wid, te a 
‘ommercially raged: 
hites: Grade A jumbo 88; e@eatra 
mene 62-45; on 41-4). 
rowns: Grade jumbo 86; lar 
|$24a; medium 41 “a. Grade B large 4. 
DETROIT POULTRY : 
DETROIT, Nov. 14 (AP)—Prices paid 
for No. 1 top quality hve 
p.m. fob. Detrait, rahe + Grade A Oggi Os a 
  
  
able." 
  * * * 
These include general contract-| 
Ling, erchitecte al designing, car- 
:pentry, masonry, cement work, | 
| Pox fing electrical, painting, heat- | 
ling, plumbing and plastering, 
Arthur Gard is president of the! 
new company. 2 
GM Shareholder List 
Now Tops 700,000 
General Motors now is owned 
than 700.000 share- 
holders, the broadest ownership in 
the history of any industrial - or-| 
ifanization, Preside ent Harlow H. 
iCurtice announced today. 
The new high was reached as! 
its” 
Oth Anniversary Year — 1958, 
The total represents a gain o 
200,080 shareholders in 214 years 
and 100.000 in little more than 
(18 months. 
“The public ever - widening 
participation in "the ownership ‘of 
‘the business means.the further 
Strengthening of uor .free enter<| 
ES lstanding alongside. 
» The fire caused an estimated 
       
  pouliry up to 
Heavy type Kens 1620, light type hens “Mate ‘Sages 
on Credit News NEW YORK W — The stock 
market surged ahead strongly 
early today in response to the 
Federal Reserve Board’s easing 
of credit. 
division, posted gains of one to 
about four points. Some special- 
ties made biggér advances. ~ 
* * * 
The lowering of the discount 
rate to three per cent from 3's 
per cent by four reserve board 
regional banks was a big’ step to- 
ward relieving Wall Street of its 
tight money worries. 
About the biggest block was 
30,000 shinres of Bethieh®n Steel, 
up three at 39/,. Even the slow- 
moving utilities joined in the 
strong upward move, American 
Telephone rising 244 at 166 on 
..3,000, Lukens Steel roared 
ahead five points at the opening, 
then trimmed its gain to 4 
U. S. Government bonds were 
strong also. 
Gains of about three points were 
made by U. 8. Steel, Kennecott, 
U.’ 8. Borax and General Electric. 
Ahead around four were Gluf Oil, 
Caterpillar and Du Pont. 
et 
Two-point gains were scored by 
Boeing, Douglas Aircraft, General 
Dynamics, Dow Chemical, Illinois 
Central and Royal Dutch. 
Baltimore & Ohio, American 
Smelting, Philoo and New York 
Central rose a point or better. 
Among the opening blocks were 
U! 8. Steel, up 2% at 55 on 10,000 
shares; North American Aviation, 
up \ at 27% on 15,000; General 
Motors, up 2% at 37% on 18,000; 
Gulf Oil up 3% at 112% on 2,500; 
and Jones & Laughlin up 3% at 48 
on 12,000. 
New York Stocks 
            
   
  
blast, The gas was being fed into 
the crane from a 100 gallon truck 
Stunned and burned about the | 
hands and face, Hagerman | 
| jumped into the truck and drove 
it out of the reach of flames, 
said firemen. 
* * * 
$2,000 damage before being extin-|,, 
jSuished.. Firemen attributed the!’ 
se to an overheated ed thal 
lot the crame, igniting the gas. 
‘Hagerman refused hospital treat- 
ment for minor burns, 
  
Farmington Man Found 
With Wrists Slashed 
The body of a Farmington Town- 
iship man, Willard Martinson, . 
/was found last night In a barn be- 
jhind the home of relatives where - 
‘he had been living at 38765 W. 14 
Mile Rd., according to State Po- pec. 
lice of the Redford Post. 
* * .* 
Detectives said Martinson’s 
wrists were slashed. He wis a 
  thi aid. ey s z Léading esteie, advancing in all; 
  
ROAD SLOWMANSHIP — Travelers planning 
to motor through Central and South America are 
forewarned that this may be one of the road- 
blocks they are likely to encounter. The primitive 
ox-cart makes haste (as only an ox-cart can) to Panama by 1959. Perhaps there will 
) gravel “expressway” for ox-carts by 
  
Study County 
Streamlining Supervisor Carey Heads 
9-Member Committee 
Probing Government 
“Oakland County government is 
operating under antiquated state 
laws binding it to cumbersome and 
outmoded procedures,” according 
to Supervisor John L. Carey of 
Springfield es * : 
-Carey is aan of a qpecial 
nine-member committee set up by 
the Oakland County Board of Su- 
pervisors to study streamlining of 
county government, 
* * * 
The committee held its first or- 
.|ganization meeting in Pontiac yes- 
terday. 
      (New Pontiacs 2.5 Million See 
at First Showing 
“Two and a half million people 
visited Pontiac Motor Division 
dealer showrooms around the 
country last Saturday to make it 
the biggest first-day showing of 
new Pontiac cars in recent years,” 
E, Knudsen, vice 
Reporting 
to the new 1958 Pontiac, Knudsen 
of revealed that Pontiac dealers sold 
well over 11,000 cars on the very 
first day that the new line of cars 
went on public display. 
“This is even 
more encouraging in view of 
competition from general 
ly rainy college 
    
  
        
    
  
STOCK AVERAGES * 
“atvanys dosed by the Associated Press 
>       
  Broomfield Hits 
Seaway Change "ts 
- |;Commerce Sends Telegram to lke 
Against Playing Into 
Hands of Railroads 
With his. two-months tour of Oak- 
land County completed, 
iam S. Broomfield (R-Royal Oak) 
today leveled criticism at.seaway 
changes, social. security and vet- 
erans housing, 
Broomfield said in a telegram 
sent to President Eisenhower tha 
a reported move to turn the St. 
Lawrence Seaway over to the 
Department will “play 
directly into the hands of the rail- Rep, Will |*itlines 
~)Manufacturi 
i 
i 
e GbE 
te ile 
FET, if F 
“lsteniniéd froth competition with 
regret 
tion, but declining patronage of 
this service and its increased 
tl wages, materials and other costs 
poeple F in a very substantial 
Aid Daisy Workers 
When Plant Moves 
LANSING i — The State Em- 
ployment Security Commission has 
asked to immediately start 
tinding jobs for workers who will 
be idied in May,when the Daisy 
Co. of Plymouth 
moves to s. 
* * * 
Gov. Williams asked the Com-   
  «Te is wayeredve | that no ob- 
"the seaway project, for the good of 
PERSONS CONCERNED 
  
AMC Predicting 
Profitable Year DETROIT #—American Motors 
Corp. says early indications point 
to a profitable 1958 fiscal year~— 
the first in the company's four- 
year history. 
President’ George Romney an- 
nduncing a million dollar plus net 
a 
  ry i heavy type broilers and fryers (Late Morning Quetations) 3-4 lb. Whites 10-20, Barred Rocks 26-23: After the meeting, Carey said geese 30: turk of a tele- 
see oad wp tee oo Tax- Free Gift Elen bene 36 asary pe tomer” |AM™HESG "oh deka aca 7: 3 | Me committee’ wold probe all | grams received by the home office , up in - lied Strs .... 40 es 3 L |... 47 | phases of county government and 
ter: less butter for those benefit-| Allis Chal .... 387 Kelsey Hay .. 36 | seek ways pe | aie to bring pe: Livestock , Kennecott .., 86.6 Pontiac sales people aré confi- ing from various government do-! Am Airlin .... 163 Kimb Clk 46.2) about more efficiency. bt 
mestie programs, less butter for, Mazey Praises Verdict, Am Can. 81 Lop Glass "". 12 | |Gent that the new models are going thens pt the | taxes, less! DETROIT LIVESTOCK Ama Pay 3 Meat . a, “This may mean recommending)to assure the company of success 
butter for those who in time might of U.S. District Court) perncir, nov. df (ar) — (vena) au Beas. 21 Ie E.G oy home rule, although this possibility |i its quest for a bigger share of find their dollars tewer ju n Uni B efits Begs — Salable 100. Market not estab- | am ~wee 4 Loew's ....... 124 myst be given expert study,” he) the new car market. A large per buying ry on Union Benefi Am Rad... i14 bone & Com: 203) goods. Cattle — Salable 250, Bulk early sup-|Am @melt’".. 41} berillard —... 368 —_ * eentage of Ponting. eowrecs vib * re * | ; 0.52. fatty finde: utility cous | ia fae ni 3 rahe pn ag bs + * * ~~. |tors seemed seriously in the mar- tion. 
at the need to catch wp with! MILWAUKEE (®—A labor union | 3 32° few thin canner’ doug ty 1520 lam Tob’ S34 Martin, Gi ... 384) Conceivably, Carey “said, the ket for a new-car. * 
the Russians is widely ‘accepted.|*Pokesman indicated a major ad-/ Sormeres, lat eeek, senehter essere and tee ait’... ii May D Sirs . 37 study could result in changes that 
And when the American public is\Y@"¢ for organized labor ig ee 40-1 00 higher? bulls “00. |Armout & Co .. bs a .. : fh 4 would affect county government N : B : f 
convinced that Washington has eens out of a verdict by a U commercial: pie “end yee | peer S as. : bre throughout Michigan. . ews in rie 
found the right. way to-do it with-/District Court jury which decided tieng te 8 Sante bigher, high ‘oie 84 Mpls Hon... 83.4 e “« 8 out throwing money around need-| Yesterday abe eg alee ror Ee ene lot prime show calves a ch‘. 33 | “We may seek constitutional | Clarence A. Freeman, $1, of 
lessly, there is likely to be little sxable os tinea. ss agg Be “ » Ward -«. 14 changes would affect the |3560 Big Beaver Rd., Troy, was 
ne «Bae cele Sle 13 HSI 2) Te mudy may alo rem in|Pontac Mung Juige Cel ibs. 23.80-94.78: good to - wis 08 Ge *!*-3aq| The : n Pontiac Mu F | B. : Emil Mazey, Detroit, secretary- heifers 22.06-21.80° Baad” tet low abs ? wrray Op : ry recommended also it oat s = 
’ k treasurer of the United Auto)seed ers 18.00-22.00; utili -« HEB het Dairy ... 36.6 legislation of the en-/McCallum yesterday. He was conomy " S lWorkers, hailed the verdict say-|*8¢, wits 38” anne tna cnet ess itt Rat ‘*: 4, |abling type, which would allow fined $100 or 20 days in jail. He 
ling that if it is upheld “an tmpor-|!! 11-00-43 48: utility and commeres He a oy serie — counties to make changes'is appealing the case to circuit 
, ae fees —— Rehr This. decks canner nod cain, Hae yo aa its ay Cons Bes oH t care : vhs * court. 
ave been established. This dec ones seek ston ** gag Nort & Wet . 67.5 ; Perry, owner 
sion is a vindication of our -[steerk $5-00-94 60; medium’ tor pond ines. (CSP 8. oe wes Carey believed that before the! 7 ‘ : . te. goad 4.@ Nor'Pae ..... 14 Perry & Jones Service Station, ition that strike relief . . . is not |74-%. lCase, JT .'.. 153 Nwst Alriin .. 1, (Study ts through, university experts | « 199 Sashabaw Rd Independence 
subject under the law to federal|nominaly steady, Compared lest week (Seen in Pe 7 See Ot: 3@ ,|will have been called upon for ad- elses : Nominally steady Compared last week (Cen Ill Ps ... 27.6 Owens Cng ... 394 0 : axes’ id prime [ches e264 Pac G & El... ae7;wice about specialized phases of} = 
* «& \a3. $'00-87.00; ‘tility end standard 16-00 Guise Be . $e3 pet,” BLAM - 12-} government. County Sheriff's deputies yesterday 
Cuts Discount Rates in ,,,, Raskin, Milwaukee, attor-|44-0°. ‘Clark Bauip a Peram Past |. Ht “Before we come up with any cut ‘oo oe mare — > i oO i 
4 Sections of Country rey for the union, said the dect around 200 feeders lambs irre, un: (C0ie, Palm “fer Pevah <9": 143) recommendations, he w ever, ete , “ | slo ave an importan’ ar-|early sales er as fully steady, UO Pepsi Cole ... 188 there’s going to have Fri. 8 am, 1 
‘ing on similar court tests invelving|74" cg Soo rigs ny to mostly” enoies a Fe Piler p.', $ial ef meetings, a let of pea tte Pa 3p (pm. to raat am. Sat. . am. WASHINGTON uP—The Joe millions of ddllers, nominally steady, Compared last week r= os . 41.7 Paatee oT . a full stud of existing data ona 
Reserve Board gave the nation’ ++ « © [stauenter | Inmbe” active. 25 cents | to Gon tm pe ant Phill Pep. 31. y 
leveling-off economy an meer we conte’ Wigner: samphier ahesp ana (ceme Sek .... 9 ‘seuuy Sie . @ \ studies of our oe —— ¢ y The verdict came as an out-\0 cots Meher: | slaughter seep end t Plate @ . 70 ” Carey belie ed shot in the arm today by cut- jowth of the sicike ty Lesa poe |tceder lomhee steady, mest chaise ane — Sovas 5 Grect & GO ... 8 = ved. terian Church on Saturday, Nov. ambs , : 2 P . r 
ting back its discount rates in four or ine UAW. acainst ne Kober fos ts 23.35; ood and vchaice 30 46- 72.80; ‘en oe aceegy s¢ | If the Oakland County study is 16th at 0:60 to 1:00, 
sections of the country. Co. of Kohler, Wis. The UAW hagite choice slaughter cneep ¢.00-9.00; most Sapper Ras... 104 BOR haga oes a reread vengei beconte a state-- DAR rummage sale. 2nd floor 
The immediate effect is to make poured more. than eight million ir. sarecty 3128 ee eens scans Curtiss Wr | 31.5 Rex Drug . . ment..C = ! a govern-iscarlet’ Bicycle Shop, 20 E 
it easier for banks to. obtain mon- dollars in striker assistance in the|@Dd seed feeders 17.00-20.50. | srg SRE : pk Rey Tob B. 61.6 . 7 . ; Lawrence St. Fri and Sat. 
ey for lending to businesses and strike, oldest major labor dispute -s £ ay 1. 264 Rock Spe ... 28.3 x & & ' 
the general public. And it ap- in the country. The strike beann + 64 7 J ctr az"| Before coming to Oakland Coun- Rummage Sale. VFW Aux, 1370; 
peared to herald an easing of as a contract dispute in April 1954. mnt. 198 Bt doe Lead. a44ity, Carey was Mayor of Dearborn, |396 8. Saginaw St, 9 to 1, Sat. 
tight moo bolic ies that bave ac- The plumbingware firm returned uc hin ing. East a to a 32.4 a Bee ni ese from 1935 to 1942, when he ~Ady. 
companied a wo-year USINESS tp production about two months Emer Rad ene 4 Sears Roeb .. 35. R i Sale, Sat. 10 till 5. 
boom. ilater with new workers and non-|, #§ $$. gee meg. ¢ jEx-Cell-o°.... "333 pincer... ras % 8% . — 
* pee oe Mor 383 Socony’ 0:2. 48 | He also served on the Dearborn|% Rose Ct., Basement. 
A spokesman for the Federal} : ve S 10 a tae ge OE le a) mm Ol ms faa lechout hoard, on the Wayne County Swenid 
Reserve Board said the action . Ford Mot .... 44 Rd -. 18] Board of Supervisors and as vice-| Rebekah Bake sale. Sat. 16, Mul- was “recognition that inflation, at Combined Build Tra'<.. 184 $id Ou Cal $¢4 resident of the Michigan Munici. inca aoe four eae ini 
least temporarily, has ceased to ers Waterford Wor ker Gen —_ . a sac > - $33 pal League. Adv. 
be the dominant factor in th a we a k 37 economy.” ee Locate j in Bl fj ld Though | Hurt, . Drives Sen Mitts. ts Bui Ly ‘iM k Pair’s Bab Rummage sale. League of Catho- age A a oomile Gen Motors .. 37 meat uskegon Pair’s Y ine ta buen Saris Ok e emphasized, however, th Truck From Flames Gen Shoe .... 21 Byl¥ women. 
board's belief that there is no rea- Par an -. 3948 aeene, ‘gal. Ha aE lown Special F ood Friday, Nov. 15th, 11 to 2. Satur- 
son for any public alarm that a A combined _ building service Gen Tire 3 Textron. --:: day, Nov. 16th, 8 to 12 : | : . . " ’ . a 02 
business recession may le ahead. trades. wnt ar meter mllding| ite ak hie Goebel Br 3 Timk Pi, a — ( — Two dozen cans Central Meth * ire rades is offered by the new Waterford Township laborer avert- Goodrich 593 Tran W Air -3 of a soybean preparation were) Rummage sale. o- 
The board announced late sex Tr ades & Crafts Associates with ed what might have resulted in ai nosmeer #03 ee Cen 22.7 flown to Okinawa toaay to keep|dist Church. Friday 8 am. to 8 
terday that, effeftive today, the offices at 1739 §. Telegraph Rd., serious explosion this morning, ac-\Gt No Ry .": 363 —— : 9¢.7,4 three-month-old American baby|P.m. Saturday 8 am. to 1 p.m. 
discount rate would drop from the Bloomfield Township. cording to Pontiac Firemen. Bonen . tas uae ae Lin-. 232 /alive. Parking lot entrance. —Adv. 
wiser 4 3le per cent to 2 Lhe firm. offers maintenance, 2 Guif O1 ... 1123 Ynit Pruitt... 385) Julie Ann Abbott, infant da 
2eyear high of St per cen 12 musing ue hoa o ead ex g(a iiecrmam 8, of $00 ebtad’r "a2 out - Eller of Sgt Orr abbott of Muster |, Rummage Sat, Fide, Nev. 14 banks in Atlanta, New York, Rich- SU"& buildings or homes, and the, Costelie Excavating 2 Tewsking parole te) os 258 |". FP ao an 34320, Mich., is allergic to milk and ; Ne ee pagans pepe 
mond and St. Louis, Similar ac- 4°S!8" and construction of new res-| Op, -was refueling » large crane |Indust Ray. 183 UB To 17.6 dairy eee Chapter, National Seeretar- 
tion by the eight other reserve ae J, commercial and industrial | at an excavation next to the Pon- bo ee ge i $4 eet On Tel |. He The Red Cross located the cans jes Asson. —Adv 
banks is expected soon. Beal & | tiae YMCA, when the “gasoline |Inspir Cop ... 33.4 Wests a 21 ,|and sent them to the Abbott family ‘ : 
* * * | According to Bruce R, Lafer, | exploded, Int Boe Mch' 3037 Weoleorm |... 3Teat Kadena Air Force base on| Knights Rummage 
The action came at a time when’ Secretary-treasurer pf the com. | - kx & int ery «++: 204 Yale & Tow .. 36 Okinawa. U. §. military post ex-|Saele, Fri. 6-9 pam. Sat 9-1 p.m. seasonal demands for money are pany, it is unique in that “with | eer ‘as blown from the|!¢ Paper ||| 87 yoaet daar ‘q9.4.changes began checking ware-iCommunity Activities Center. 
_ high. Both businessmen and ee one phone call any one or all of lerdaes pers by th ” foros of the tnt Tel & Tel i —— 1167 houses for more of the prepara-|5640 Williams Lake Rd., Drayton 
chasers tend to increase their bor-| major building trades are. avail- gia y we Is] Crk Coal .. 33.2 Maning Man 3 tion. Plains. : ~Adv           
i 
For Both Play and Work /-   
  15 15 60 
Indust Rails Util Stocks 
Prev. Day ....228.9 63.6 68.7 152.3 
Week Ago ......233.5 87.2 69.1 155 
Month Ago ..,.233.0 94.0 60.0 156.7 
Year mg «987.7 132.10 1.7) «177.9 
1957 Hig eoee M800 134.7 T7.5 188. 
1957° Low ,,...:238.0 63.6 66.2 150.9 
1956 High .,..,.976.3 185.1 76.9 ,91.5 
1966 Low ..... 244.0 126.2 69.6 171.6 
po hag os 
iC, J. Nephier Co.) 
ods ik decimal ints ate eighths 
n Elec. Sees } 258 2.46 
paladin Rubber C HE orc 13.4 144 
Ross Gear Co*  ....... 4 62 
G. L. Otl & Chem, Co. . 16 #18 #15 
Howell Elec. Motor 6.3 64 
Pen. Metal Prod. Co. 12.2 22.2 122 
The Prophet mM cae bese 9 9.3 
udy M Co.* 8.4 69.7 
Toledo E nm Oo, vey 18D 12.2 12.2 
Wayne Screw Prod, Ca. 21 2.3 
*No sale; bid and asked. 
HICAGO GRAIN 
igmcaao, Nov. IBA LAP) — Opening 
grain 
' Wheat— _ Oats— 
2g etnee rete ; My 
|‘ Maroh « veces 224% March. .... 6™% 
BY. ceoves 9-21 v core 40% July . vesss. 108 
Bept.-.. seers 2.00 c, 1.33 
’ —_—. March 1.34% 
veoe L10%. May. 133 
Msc seese 1.03 
se 128 “Dee. 12.20 
rm 4 we) weeee LOT Jan. 2 secees 2.00 
+ 128% 
  
      graduate of the University of Mich- 
igan, currently, enrolled as a teach-. 
  jprise system,” Curtice said 
  lion, miles, 
ing student at Wayne State Uni-|8,200 feet above sea level at. the 
versil y. South Pole. Antarctica covers about 51% mil- 
with an altitude of in 1952. rs 
* 
he ordered troops into Little 
there. 
use of 
    This visit provides the first opportunity for a show of 
~ any Southern seaction to an Eisenhower visit to Dixie since 
* * 
Presidential aides believe thére probably will 
serious public display of oe 
troops. 
The President and Mr&. Rlsenhower Gplebiiied the. First 
Lady’s 61st birthday by going to dinner Jast night at the 
Alexandria, Va., home of their son and daughter-in-law, . 
Maj. and Mrs, John Eisenhower. — oT 
Seaton Sipe Foor. RSS PEN 
  iIke Off to the Deep South™ 
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Eisenhower plans to 
travel into the Deep South today for the first time since 
he ordered federal troops into Little Rock. Ark. ~ 
* x * 
Accompanied by Mrs. Eisenhower, he will go to Augusta, 
Ga., for about five days of play and work. It will be his 
16th to the Augusta National Golf Club since his election 
= 
* 
Rock last Sept. 24 to help en- 
acon & GUE CERaE, He GREENE HC Cental High: OeHeeE 
* Ps 
any 
for            
  “The company’s 
flying start," Romney said, ‘and 
  
Pontiac UF Seeking 
[Volunteers for Office Rambler car program is off to a | suit mission to set up an immediate 
stacles be placed in the path of task force to work with the com- 
pany, the employes and the com- z S$ al 
  
To Arraign Mother 
in Slaying of 3 Tots 
criminally respon 
ble for the deaths of her three. 
young. children, found - beaten to 
death in their beds Monday. 
. The woman is expected to be 
arraigned within a few days. 
S ues de ie eee 
the inquest the children, aged 1 
“Ito 5, were bludgeoned with a ham- mer. He said Mrs, Gorka, 36, had 
been released recently from a men- 
tal hospital, Her husband was at 
work in Beauharnois when the chil- 
dren were killed. 
Stockholders to Meet 
DETROIT  — Stockholders of 
Detroit Edison Co., will meet in 
an atea conference in Detroit Tues- 
day. Among other things, Presi- 
dent Walker L. Cisler will discuss 
the company's | in 
atomic poner dev 
aN THR CIR   
  
COURT FOR THE 
k and THlst Sa, 
a Parton 2900 N, 28th Pla 
ao Fitte = (§2. 
: November 13, 1997 e 
Be x ya_at Law, 
sn Wabeck Buitding, ‘Birmingha pees 
Nov, 15, 22, 29, Dec. 6, 13, 20, 27, “1 
ATE AN — In the Pro- 
ooke ‘Comns he ge oe a Oekisnd, 
Ftveniie B Division. doctele 
[ry ae a enue?   
on 
bouts of the Pree a eta a or anita 
ie wnknown, and the said child hes 
violated a. law of the State and tas 
said a under the 
Jurisdiction of - this tt, 
In the of the le of the 
po that the hearing ditten on ne’ wil be held at the y Service Center, Court Annex, 
at in of Pon« 
AD, 180, at nin aex i BD og ‘a ie, 0° 
fm the ser and are 
te Speer petsonally at said 
         con sete Rae pee 
  4 
     spit, 
naatiien/Naahn 
Laiehiaehendiemsen 
aang 
dade te tee cola 
tnanais 
con ins, 
scotuitonsssscdans.saamn   
     
    
       ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY,’ NO\ EMBER 15, 1957 RE. Ve es ee ae - 
ey i : : 
' made a study of Indian dancing.|parents while a child and has 
Conductor Frets {Bodine became ‘interested while) been daneing regularly at Indian 
visiting in Taos, N. M., _ with his pow wows since he was 16. 
Be Modern! .... fo t= Next Month 
    i :   3 
z for His Concert ~* 
OKLAHOMA CITY w—Guy Fra- 
ser ‘Harrison,. conductor of the 
Oklahoma City Symphony, had a wa Pusrome Oiaboma, city sympbon Let Sears Restyle Your tian ‘ : era mublic - sot - _ er baton-wave wOEBUCK AND CO Old Rings at GREAT SAVINGS! 
      
4 
   
fa 
      
    In this state that has more In-) 
dians than any other, he couldn't’ 
find a redman who could dance eo 
in. full regalia te the stately, 
Strains of an Indian dance played 
by a full sone? orchestra. 
* * 
ae problem began more 
than a year ago when he com-, 
missioned Oklahoma-born com- 
poser Jack Fredefick Kilpatrick 
to write a major work to be per-' 
formed at the semicentennial cori- 
  ~* 
3 
= 1/3 OFF            
    
      
  
  
  
       
         cert of the symphony next Sun- « 
day to celebrate musically the’ . on this 
50th anniversary of Oklahoma . 1 
statehood. Mou nting e J 
* * * a4 ; 
_Kilpatrick wrote the work y Vf Beautiful fishtail J f 
“Oklahoma Symphony’’ in three i setting Hf 
movements, The second move-' 14-kt. yellow or 
ment, called “Indian Land,” in- white gold / 
: aa: cluded a short, authentic Indian © 4 full cut side R 359.95 
for boys of all ages dance. . + vey eee included pe 95 ‘ e@ Use . oF who know. the score... Kilpatrick's Symphony No. 8, ; ——— Rosy 39 “Oklahoma” is the first work of} = Y 
. its kind using a state's name in . Pd plus fed. tax 
the title, Will Rogers Jr., son of| a Z . 
the late humorist, will narrate‘ the SSS 
three movements, p 
gat Harrison sent out calls for an Liberal trade-in allawance for your old mounting, 
Indian who could handle a sym-, regardless of condition. 
phonic tom tom but to no avail. 
Finally, right in his home grounds | tf AR See Our Wide Selection of Ring    ONLY A MEMORY—A scene familiar to most | "AP Wirephete deer hunters in past years was the huge traffic Ro Na Miley atthe Geni etiaen tbtting the thin- Se the | Mountings Priced From $12.95 
          jam at Mackinaw City, where hunters.crossed the _ sands of‘ hunters heading north can look forward s = & Watch and Jewelry Repair, Main Floor 
Straits by ferry boat. As can be seen here, to much easier going, with the new Mackinac | J was Jim Bodine, a University] 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 masses of autos were piled up, often for many Straits Bridge waiting to serve them. of Oklahoma graduate who has’ 
  
  ; 
on Disiiniament Commission 
More Shuffling in U.N. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Russia's ana to 
reject a Western compromise plan enlarging the U.N. Dis- | 
armament Commission touched off moves today to add 
more nations acceptable to the Reds. 
x* * * 
Hopeful of appeasing the Soviets before the General 
FRIDAY AND Assembly takes up the commission’s composition this .after-_ 
SATURDAY noon, India headed a drive to add Red Poland and pro- 
ONLY Soviet Egypt to the 10 nations already proposed. — | 
The 21 Latin-American nations, irked because they | 
were not consulted on the choice from their. area, decided 
to put im their own amendment asking to tack Mexico 
onto the list... 
The frantic activity came in the wake of the Assembly's | 
call for new talks to break the arms deadlock. So far it 
was an empty gesture because of Russia's announced refusal 
to sit with the 12-nation.commission or five-nation sub- 
committee since their memberships unanimously oppose her. 
, * * * 
The Assembly voted 56:Q yesterday for a Western reso- | 
lution asking for new negotiations in the subcommittee. 
Only the Soviet bloc opposed the plan, which endorsed the 
Western. arms proposal Russia already has rejected.   
    3106 
fle boys 124 0 9 
     ROEBUCK AND CO. 
  
    
    
       
   
    
      
   
    
    
              
  
  cuilé’s TY Chit | first class fun for Tots... on Sears eg. 5.98 3 : “ * t e 
Compact’ folding chair te de- Po | t ; 
light your child. Easily con- 
verts to desk or table. Buy : ‘ 
new. for Christmas giving. 
Here's the ticket that will give your youngster the thrill was 9.98 
Doll Family of having a tricycle . . . his own. All the young set on 
. Set of 4 Dolls the block will want a turn on this big, fun-packed, 
See T 9* smooth riding bike. And its adjustable handle bars, sect . 
and ball bearing front wheel means full-tim 1e, long-last- 
An entire family. Brother ant ing fun and happy youngsters. See it at your Sears store ar ign 
is in weothar's arms, Sturdy today! os ron! 
vinyl. oe 
      
* 
AWAADR SOBEL VERE 
  Moulded Plastic Colonial 2 Story Birch and Bronze 
Happi-Time Horse Metal Doll House Table, Chair Set 
4.44 rut sixe 10.88 SRoom 2,98 _19%-in. ton =, BB 
  of 4.98 i. 
Handsome, rollicking spring , , a 
Let him ride the range with horse 1834x31'/-in. long, 17- Furnished doll house includes Becutifal 16 ply birch finish 
Roy. Has Roy Rogets’ signa- in. from floor! Red saddle and 36 diff ferent pieces of coloriul - table. 17x24-in. top. Plastic 
ture on belt and on. holsters. trim. See it at Sears scaled furniture, protectively tips on bronze colored metal 
Genuine leather holsters. Reg. 17.98 Spring Horse... .14.88 rounded, on all edges. legs protect your floors. 
  SNORT RIND BES OR OE ETI 
Shop Sears 
TOYLAND 
TONITE—: 
SAT. 1 Roomy 26-In, Folding . Double R-Ber nes “Thendias Burp Gun’ & MONDAY      weolt is ithe Anstans ou decidlp bb tah bs heageen' 
7 Crown. For whatever your driik—and wherever you     . have it—you are sure that 7 Crown always britigs to your ene: {Rega May Set, Soml or Aumemetic 
Glass the perfection of American wee at its finest! vinr! ody 9.98 ste 3,98 re2" 2,44 Nite ‘til 9 
dpe en fa hsagcr loom Dehontey, Weer Por) Goanle ey ane wes ‘til Christmas @rctién. foot Btady, plus 8 cowboys. Also ‘Single or automatic firing ; 
or ear handle. horses, steer, dog. ‘loud stacatto bursts of gounds : : 3 Toy Land. Perry St. Entrance 
y on tach” SEARS. 154 North Saginaw St, | pemneter fect a Phone FE S.A171. |”       
  . é 3 ‘ pende valle: a & : 
= Fi ae OF AMGERIOAN WHISKEY At 115 FINEST. a 
! Ssnasaullbeiti SNE Gum LAN, MU Sa , ae j