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117th YEAR.”   
PONT LAC, MICHIGAN: rege 
MON D. AY, “NOV EMBER. 16, 1959—32 PAGES   
  
  
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| Here Is the N   ‘ew GMC Pickup Model for 1960     
Reveal Striking 1960 GMC Trucks ~«* * 
Fresh Approach Result 
of Imaginative Testing By HARRY J. REED 
MANAGING EDITOR, PONTIAC PRESS 
Results of a multi-million dollar four-year pro- 
gram of fresh thinking and research were placed 
yn display across the nation today as the city’s 
Truck and Coach Division of General Motors intro- 
juced the 1960 line of GMC trucks. 
Designed to blanket the needs of the trucking 
ndustry from the smallest pickup to the largest 
highway rig, the shining new line of trucks shows 
which came directly from the fabulous “start from 
‘cratch”’ project. 
The new line of V-6 and V-12 gasoline-engine 
vehicles is evidence of the close scrutiny every phase 
of the hauling industry received, including manu- 
acturing methods-and machinery. 
The new GMC line is designed to meet every 
rucking need, according to Philip J. Monaghan, 
vice president of General Motors and general man- 
ager of Truck and Coach Division. 
“Never before have so many engineering, design and styling 
adv ancements been combined in one truck line,’’ Monaghan said. 
“It is the result of our four-year development program that 
brought together in our new GMC models the power, weight, 
flexibility and dimensional requirements needed to meet the 
economic demands of modern trucking. 
“These GMCs feature the first complete family of V-6 and 
V-12 gasoline truck engines, independent front suspension, new 
lightweight aluminum and stee} tilt-cab designs, sturdier frames     
Area Hunters Hit 
on Opening Day 
By JERRY CHIAPETTA 
SPECIAL TO THE PONTIAC PRESS 
CURRAN — Opening day of the 1959 Michigan | 
regular deer season presented hunters with sub-zero 
weather and deep snow in this area. But they still 
closed the day with a better than average buck kill. jearthed a ‘‘shoeking’’ ansurance | 
A beautiful blanket of more than six inches of "bonding racket allegedly used 
fluffy snow covered this popular northeastern area. 
. Snow. ain. | M “‘Nllege Hoffa Plane With 42 Aboard 
inBond Racket Feared Lost Over Gulf Insurance of Officials 
Goes to. One Firm, 
Magazine Charges 
  NEW YORK (UPI)-—The Sem} 
ate Labor Committee has un-! NEW ORLEANS, La, 
‘?— The wreckage of a 
Nationa] Airlines plane 
with 42°persons aboard | 
CCT OF Menten | | vicinity = | where the plane last was 
observed. 
The Coast Guard said the last 
fix on the ane put it, in the). 1 
ot ‘Candeleur Island, a long, narrow | and scores of other major product improvements.” 
| BUILT. IN STRENGTH 
Common to all GMCs is a ruggedness and high-torque pulling 
j ability never before achieved in trucking, he said, citing the 
ew 60-degree “Vv” design engines as oytstanding examples of 
this built-in strength. 
: “These V4 and Twin Six engines were designed ex- 
clusively for truck work,’ Monaghan pointed out. “They 
have the high torque needed to get big loads moving and 
the durability required to keep them rolling. 
| received it,’ Trowbridge said. ‘Performance figures show these engines have life potentials 
The plane, Flight 967, took off up to three times greater than existing designs, making them 
|from Miami at 11:05 p.m.. EST | | the most important truck engine development since diesel engines 
1 nil landed in Tampa at 12:02 | went on the market 20 years ago.” 
| am. . It tank. off at 12;29 | * * * 
}a.m,' EST for New Orleans, An extremely important economic factor is that all gasoline 
Ys When last heard trom it was | V*% 274 Twin Six engines have many parts in common, enabling 
at 14,000 feet which might i operators and dealers to reduce capital outlays .for re- 
| have provided enough glide | P!acement engine parts stocks.   -new-eoncepts in suspension, frame and cab design — 
between Mobile, Ala. a N 
| Orleans 
by Teamster boss James Hoffa; miles_¢ast-southeast of | eee 
“tq channg! millions. of dollars | New. Orleans. There | A radar station at Houma, Many hunters walked to favorite stands Sunday of profits to his pals,” News- 
  
morning by moonlight. Itt 
was so bright and clear 
that at 6.a.m. you could | | ing with Dave Edstrom, Floyd 
Blakeslee, week magazine reported today. 
* * * 
The_ magazine said in its up- 
his _ brother Vic, coming issue that the cemmit-, 
see your shadow in the | Louis H. Cole, Dr. George Pet-| tee has learned that the union 
| roft 
Griffin and James.-Hankins. 
\* * *. mt Fr % 
Pontiac “hunters -at' Club 24, | 
north of Curran, bagged two | 
bucks opening morning. Ralph | 
Norvell once more was first in | | this area said this was the first. 
had a good snow. Last y this camp to score, At 9:15 a.m 
Norvell said he was trying_to 
remove, the top of his thermos 
bottle, 
“it I had_had it off and 
were drinking my coffee, I 
would have missed him,” he 
said, 
Norvelf, Pontiac insurance | rain soaked this ‘‘club peel es 
* * * 
The sub-zero weather present- | 
‘ed Jack Jacébs, Royal Oak | 
| architect“ with an unusual ex- 
|perience. Jacobs, hunting -at | 
/Crow Bar Ranch, said oil in| 
his bolt action .270 rifle froze 
and the firing pin merely dent- George. Watson, Glenn | has asked all its locals to bond 
| officials with the Summit Fidel- 
jity and Surety Co. of Akron, 
Oakland County hunters in | | Ohio, a company that has been | 
arred from doing business. in 
‘opening day in many years they | at least one state—Massachu- 
setts—since 1955 = “loose 
practices. us 
Newsweeks said the. secre- 
tary-treasurer of Summit's 
Illinois office t- Sol “C. | 
| Schwartz, longtime associate 
of Allen. Dorfman, who con- | 
trols some 20 insuran¢e com- | 
panies. 
Dorfman is the son of Paul 
man, shot a fat spike buck asec cartridges when he tried) portman. whom the Senate it ram through the woods. 
Bob Oliver, Pontiac auto deal- eight times to shoot at 
different bucks. two Labor Rackets Committee has | 
|identified as a friend of many | 
er, connected about two hours! He said he finally put the bolt | Chicago hoodlums. 
after Norvell got his-deer. in his pocket with a hand. warm- | “Hoffa is an old pal of Allen | 
Oliver dropped a six-pointer |€T t free the sticky firing pin. Dorfman and has thrown him | 
in its tracks with a single shot 
through the neck, 
“He stopped in a natrew 
opening in the woods,” Oliver | 
said. “That was my thance,” 
_Norvell and Oliver Were e hit. ! * * * 
“| “When the third buck came |teamster insurance business be- | ministration. 
} | . along I finally got off a shot,” 
| Jacobs added. some three million dollars of 
| fore—half of which, according | 
“IT don't know | |to the Senate Committee's 1959 | 
who was more surprised—me | report, represented a ‘payoff to| 
jor that unlucky buck.”’ 
a spike. 
But Don’t Expect Any Cut   
WASHINGTON _ (#—Congress | 
starts today taking a _ long, \ It was the Chicago mob’, 
base to include: income — which | 
now for one reason or another 
is not taxed. Thus basic ‘rates hard took at the income tax, might be lowered but adequate which has been shifted around lrevetines ieeinlaioed, a bit but not basically changed | 
since 1942. 
Lowered. rates, balanced off 
by bringing under the tax’ some income whieh now escapes it, 
are among the objectivas~ of 
the House Ways ait. Means 
Committee. 
But all concérned” have 
made ..it __plain__ no income. 
tax cut is just around the 
corner, . 
World War II saw the trans- 
formation .of .the income tax, 
with rates drastically hiked and 
exemptions lowered. Once a 
levy only the well-to-do had to 
worry much about, it became 
the painful and pretty general 
fact of American life that it 
is today. as critics descrifie them—but 
a number of fairly basic com- 
ponents of the present tax 
sion by a specially invited 
group of specialists. 
However, one theme running 
through most of the 2,300 pages 
published by the committee is: 
In practice it will be extremely 
hard to bring about any funda- 
mental change. 
HAVE TO GO SLOW 
Chairman Wilbur D. Mills 
{D-Ark) accompanied his first 
announcement. of the commit- 
tee’s plans with a caution that 
“constructive tax revision can- 
not be accomplished overnight.” 
The committee has earmarked 
five weeks to hear specialists] 
in particular’ areas. f           Not only these leophales— | 
structure are’ up for discus- | ” the maga- 
zine _Teported. 
aoe ee 
Weighing ae Tax under present plans, be sub- 
jected early next year to the 
rough and tumble of regular 
legislative hearings, with “op- 
posing interests represented. 
Committee aides said such 
|elaborate an approach to tax | , over | La., about 60 miles southwest of were no signs of any 
New Orleans, was tracking the | survivors. 
  
“it just dropped off."’ 
Col. L. M. Trowbridge, 
commander of the Air Eorée’s 
Air Defense Command radar 
station at Dauphin Island, 
about 30_milex south of Mo- 
‘bile, said there was “po ‘call 
from the aircraft that it was 
in trouble."’ NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — A 
National Airlines plane with 42 | 
persons aboard disappe 
a fog-covered section of | 
the Gulf of Mexico today and | 
was feared lost. 
‘JUST DROPPED OFF’ 
The four-engine DC7B was on time for it to reach land, an 
| airline spokesman said. 
The craft carried standard 
plane on its radar screen when| escape equipment for a flight | Powering the 61 basic new GMC models are seven en- 
gines: three gasoline and one diesél V-6, a gasoline Twin 
Six, and one gasoline and one diesel straight six. 
The gasoline Vs and Twin Six powet most models. Their 
| over water, including inflatable | | displacements” are 305, 351, 401 and 702 cubic inches. The 702 | life php and lifejackets. 
  of hitting land. An airline spokesman said the 
plane had two outside chances See Additional Pictures on Page 17 
| Twin Six has Pe horsepower and 630 gross “topque, while the 
He said it might have been | others have horsepower ratings from 150 to 205 and torque out- 
| possible to make it to a sandy | put frem 260 to 377 pounds. 
|island chain in front 
|river mouth or 
| area on the mainland. of the | 
to a swamp | ‘of highly developed suspension systems that sets new standards Coupled with these advanced engines is an impressive lineup 
in handling ease, maneuverability and riding comfort. 
| it ‘‘just dropped off’ 
| it, a routine flight from Miami to | 
New Orleans early today. when | 
a radar 
screen that has been tracking 
The plane disappeared about 
a half hour from landing at 
New Orleans near the same 
spot where National Airlines’ 
last fatal accident almost 
seven years ago killed 45 
persons. 
The plane was carrying 36) 
passengers, five crew members 
and a man believed to be with 
the Federal Aeronautics § Ad- 
Coast Guard cutters and 
aircraft swarmed over the 
area but fog and brisk winds 
hampered the search. Coast 
Guard officials said the fog 
made it difficult to get search 
“planes and helicopters off the 
ground. 
A Coast Guard cutter bearing | 
two doctors and a store of medi- | 
ca] supplies left Gulfport, Miss., | 
under full speed early today. 
+ * * 
National Airlines said one of 
| its Convairs left Miami shortly |   If it had issued a 
distress signal ‘““mayday”’ 
“we would have | 
Iwo Admit Part in Fire 
at Their Furniture Store’ Two debt-burdened owners of a Pontiac furniture | 
store have admitted to city police they took part in 
an unsuceessful _plot-te- burn their—business—estab- 
lishment Saturday night. 
surance, they said. There are no large trees in| Many light, medium and heavy-duty models have independent 
the swamp, the spokesman said. | front suspensions with torsion bar springs. With one end anchored 
to the frame and the other supported at the wheel, each bar 
| twists separately under road shocks, soaking up heavy jolts and 
| high-frequency vibrations. 
As each whee! is independently sprung, the movement of 
"one has no effect on the other. This virtually does away with 
possibility of wheel tramp and shimmy, an important 
ais caae factor. 
Frames match the suspension systems in sturdiness. Up to 
35 per cent stronger, they can withstand as much as four times 
| more twisting Stress than existing designs. 
* * * 
Four distinctive cab styles are available: a Conventional 
105-inch bumper-to-back-of-cab (BBC) versian, ‘‘B'’ Conventional 
cabs with 90-inch BBCs, ‘‘L’’ Series 72-inch tilt-cabs and 48-inch 
aluminum tilt cabs. _ 
All have increased glass area for wide visibility, low silhou- 
ttes for easy entry, roomy interiors, wide tracks for safe cor- 
satin and better road stability, and low-level headlamps for They hoped te collect in-| | 
Both, residents of Oak Park, are being held in the | extended night vision. 
Oakland.County Jail for¢—— 
investigation of attempt: | 
ed arson. They are Sid- 
ney Cohn, 41, of 21190 
Kipling St., and Irving 
Aaron, 50, of 24701 
Church Sty 
Firemen had _ extinguished 
flames at the Lord Furniture &   ~ STYLING FUNCTIONAL 
Their styling blends.a pleasing appearance with functional 
ility. Hoods open wide to expose engines for easy servicing 
jand maintenance. ‘‘B’’ Conventional models even have a sep- 
arate hood opening for inspecting or adding coolant. 
All cabs have foam rubber seat cushions and other driver 
comforts and aids. Nongiare dashboards contain easily re- 
placed unitized instruments with foolproof printed circuits. 
While straight trucks and highway tractors comprise the bulk 
of GMC’s new line, special purpose models are covered fully. An 
example is the new GMC Jr. Van, a half-ton high-cube retail arrested Sunday for investiga- | yt 
tion of conspiracy to commit 
arson. The police check is con- | 
tinuing, 
Damage to the store was 
| estimated at $1,000. 
Freezing Rain   
  
before 7 a.m. with a number of | Appliance Co. of Pontiac, 125 
airline officials. A National’ W. Huron St., 10 minutes after 
spokesman said the officials | they reached the scene at 6:23 
figured the spot the fhisS8ing/ p.m. Saturday. The alarm had 
| liner disappeared was about:110| been turned in-by a passerby, 
legislation had never before |miless east-southeast of New| Keith Campbell of the Chapman fo Turn to Snow 
snow flurries tonight and Colder with rain changing to | |delivery unit with walk-in rear and side doors. 
Extremely maneuverable, this 98-inch wheelbase van has an 
‘unrivaled 243-cubi¢-foot load area and more power and torque 
than any other step-in van in its weight class. Its body ahd 
‘ | chassis are fabricated.as a single unit, eliminating double frames 
| to permit the extra load capacity. been used 
~*~ * * 
Congress has Amended the 
lincome tax laws several times 
-- of _studies already gathered-and + in the past 17 years, without 
changing essentially its basic | 
characteristics. _There.h.a ve 
been alterations in rates and | 
exemptions, special provisions | 
for some groups—such as mar- 
ried couples and working moth- | 
ers—and a.number of revisions | 
described as loophole-closers. 
* * * 
Among the issués which ap- | 
pear certain to be argued over 
are’ the lower rate on- capital 
gains, special provisions for | 
dividends, oil: and other mineral | 
dépletion allowances, and the | 
tax treatment. of expefise ac- | 
counts: ahd such fringe benefits 
  Specific proposals that win 
committee, consideration will, as hospitalization fer employes 
and stock options Yor executives. | civilian fishing boats. 
‘reported that a four-engine| |.Orleans. 
Coast Guard officials at 
Mobile , reported that all its ° 
search planes and ships had. 
entered the search as well as + 
Air Force rescue units trom | 
Miami to New Jrieans and _ 
“We've got everything in the | 
area we can get out hunting, ‘“ 
|a spokesman said, } 
| CHECK BOAT REPORT 
A fishing boat in the Gult | 
plane circled over it for a time | 
and then headed north, but. the 
Coast Guard put little stock in | 
the report. 
A Coast’ Guard spokesman 
said a plane was being sent 
to check out the report but 
pointed out the beat was lo. | 
cated about 156 miles from 
. 
—< 
  Hote]. 
Firemen said there were 
eight small figes in the store 
showroom. -_ 
yellow h ombs 
wrapped in, white. {cloth : 
bags ch cena t 
under cushions and ets 
tresses. 
Fire Marshal Charles E. Metz 
immediately called the . blaze 
| the work of arsonists. The cot- 
| ton bags had been wet. As the 
water evaporated, oxygen 
reached the phosphorous, caus- 
ing -it :to ignite, Metz said. 
The owners denied any knowl- 
edge of the fire Saturday night, | 
but admitted Sunday they knew 
the blazé was to be set. They 
told Detective Orville C. Johns- 
ton they were $30,000 in debt. 
The two implicated Nathan 
Wolfe, 45, of Detroit¢ He was) morrow is the forecast for the} 
Pontiac area. 
. The low tonight will be 26 
with a high tomorrow of 30 
degrees. 
je Southerly winds. af'4 m.p.h. | * * * 
Filling out the basic model lineup are newly engineered four- 
wheel drive models, package delivery chassis in various weight 
| brackets and advanced school bus chassis that include rear- 
engine models. 
Operators are offered a full range of ‘medium and heavy-duty are ¥xpebted {0} dual-drive_and ‘“‘pusher’’ axle tandems, giving them the widest 
: Ko cuk Ye ch. to- | choice of six- x-wheelers ever offered by GMC. 
        
      | hight” cried ic a 
Tuesday. S; REO er 
The highest ‘fembaratuge re. | “nee ng a Ti aE. Reds Purge 30, corded in downtown Pontiac | Today S Fress a ow ; 
before 8 a.m. today was 32) siieecnemsmmeiiemeees | . TAIPEI, Formosa W—Nation- 
degrees. - The temperature at.| : = alist China's official Central 
1 p.m. was 37 degrees. Gunte awa TT Gy |News Agency reported today 
| Editorials: 20.20.2202... ¢ that Communist troops execut- 
| Reds Grab 6 Boats ee ere 26 ed more than 30 persons in 
| Obittaries ............. 4 |Fukien province in: September 
SEOUL, South Korea —; Sports ........5....... 19-21. | after mobs burned down more 
South Korean police reported | “Tension series .......... 24 | than 70 food storehouses: The 
Monday Communist boats cap’) Theaters .. % | agency said the mobs were pro- 
tured_six_small fishing vegseéis. TV & Radio programs ..31 | testing a cut in food rations. It 
with 13 fishermen aboggf off Wilson, Eart 31 said that more than 500 other Korea's east. coast Jagt “week. Women’s pages ....,.. 12-15 | persons were arrested. 
r , 
_ | be | 1 ? ail ™~ , 4 
r ase , ‘ 
     ¥ FT ee sonny y Migeigrcapenoge ) 4 ; 
® te ’ i ee ee PPL 
_ ss —s * Y= =. 9 
~ 
    THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959 _ 
Invite S idence City Managers (confidence Vote 
to County Dem       
‘Viewpoints on Russia’ 
Library's Next Lecture   At Smart Junior High The Day in Birmingham 
Slate First Performance   
¢ 
  Dice Game 
Need US. Aid | Hard to Table’ to Fete Willman 
    
  | DETROIT (UPI)—Poli id N Smeekens (R- uae . . (UPI)—Police raid- | LANSING Ww — State administra- Sen. John P. ( Michigan have been invited to . 
One Firm Sends Wire! ca a dice game, smashed the |tors today faced their tightest cash| Coldwater) sald 10 days ago Gov. | honor Pontiac City Manager | Chairman Richardson! pirMiINGHAM — Two Bloom-|an hour and a half-long program . . | table with axes and arrested 37 !pinch in months, with nearly 44) Williams was plotting a “phony | Walter K. Willman for his re- | Back Against |Sy Hills women who toured|titied “Viewpoints on at to Ike Asking Disaster wane wore yesterday, {Million dollars in top, priority mon-| payless payday” Thursday to em- | cent election as president of the ed by 20 inst pYesia with their husbands this|the Baldwin Public to- Aid for 5 States | ‘ley claims to ration out in the next) barrass Republican legislators. | International City Manager Scholle Charge past summer will be featured in}morrow at 1:30. p.m. b = On hse od two weeks. The governor called his stafe- | ascn : The women sharing their im urn . re] “ ” - Two hours later they The most urgent charge against; ment “nonsense. The invitation is from the A group of about 20 “‘just plain pressions as well as their pictures WASHINGTON (UPI)—President found it nailed back together and | the led state treasury was a 
Eisenhower has been asked to de- crlpp ed . . 
the game going on again with |9) million dollar aid distribution to Did He Hide Inmate in the second lecture of’ the cur- 
rent series are Mrs. William Mc- Williams heads back to Lansing 
and. the tax troubles tonight after Southeastern Oakland County 
City Manager’s Assn., which Democrats” met Saturday to ex- 
tend a vote of confidence to Carlos 
    clare five cranberry-producing| eight of the same men playing. jjecal schools, some of it for Eaton : 
states aS “disaster areas” to pro- i ~~ * * TRapids, where payroll funds for 38/C°™P leting political foray into) plans a ‘luncheon in Willman’s |G- » Oakland County of Camp Pontiac? Gaughey and Mrs. Robert Hatt. vide federal aid for farmers who! | Onc broke his leg as he leaped |teachers were exhausted Friday. {'"¢ southwest. honor Nov. 18 at Kingsley Inn. tic chairman, ‘ Mrs. McGaughey and her rod Williams was scheduled to ad- 
dress the Texas AFL-CIO conven- 
tion in San Antonio, Tex., today. 
* * a 
In a reception in his honor at 
Houston last night, Williams told Richardson's county committee “It is just and fitting that |. anization was described last Officials Were set to speed the 
money to the 83 county treasurers 
without delay, ver, the for- 
mal go-ahead awaited from 
an e meeting of the 
State Administrative Board Tues- 
day. .. ' 
A second pressing obligation due 
r board decisions F ae Thursday's 
26,000 state   
  ‘'ScoffatScare; - 
Gobble Quarts 
of Cranberries 
PLYMOUTH, Mass. (UPI) — dentia] campaign. 
i * 
i i   
d 
4   
I 
f facd_a 50 million dollar loss from} from a second floor porch in an 
the cancer scare. { escape attempt 
a ee — | 
The plea was contained in a’tele-| . | 
gram yesterday from George C. P. Three U.S. Cardina s) 
Olsson, president of Ocean Spray, ; 
Inc. | The firm represents 75 per A E h N d 
coool the industry. mong tight Name 
Adintchetretan eneeunes tus | VATICAN CITY (AP). — Pope|to 
laboratory tests showed most John XXIII today named eight $4,400,000 payroll ‘to cranberries te be free of con. "ew cardinals of the Roman Cath- | employes. 
tamination: lolic Church. They included two} One board member. said the big 
|Americans, Archbishops Albert|primary school interest fund in- 
Olsson accused Arthur S. Flem-|Gregory Meyer of Chicago and stallment, payable yesterday, prob- 
ming, secretary of health, educa-| Aloysius J. Muench of Fargo,|ably would be paid as rapidly as 
tion.and welfare, of conducting ain p. ‘possible without forcing default on 
“eremberry witchhunt.” * * * the state payroll. 
He said Flemming’s “‘unneces-| The Pope's action increased the| It appeared likely that’state war- 
sary, untimely and imprudent” College of Cardinals to 79 mem-|rants -(checks) already prepared 
warning to housewives just before| bers, its largest size in thé history for mailing to schools would be 
Thanksgiving that some cranber-|of the church dispatched in blocs daily until 
ries were tainted with a weed| * * ;counties at the foot of the 
killer which could induce om The elevation of Archbishop |ical list were sent theirs at the 
in rats had ruined the industry. (Meyer, 56, had been expected |of the week. 
. * —*_* oe he succeeded the late Sam-| < 
~——The government said its~‘score-;ul-Cardinal- Striteh—as—arehbishop | 
board’’ of lab tests on cranberries|of Chicago just a year ago today. | 
199 out of 202 lots to be|His archdiocese is. the largest in) 
safe«for the Thanksgiving dinner|the United States, having nearly} 
table. two million members. g 
z 
F 
i 
g 3 
i   
Lock Three in Waterford Cooler 
Grab $2,200 From Market Pontiac State police detectives 
today were looking for two armed 
|bandits who barricaded the owners 
and a stock boy of a Waterford 
Township market in a meat cooler 
Saturday night and escaped with i   lf : i i i 
  
¢ 
= | | 
+ gilt Heart Attacks Kill 9 Hunters 
State’s Accident. Toll 23; 
One Man Shot to Death 
A i   
place. 
Total consumption—about 1,000 
gallons. 
  
  By. The Associated Press 
Traffic claimed 16 lives and mis-|near Grand Rapids. 
cellaneous mishaps another seven| 
to give Michigan an over-all week- 
end accidental death tolt of 23. 
In addition, one hunter was skidded and crashed into a tree 
Killed in miscellaneous accidents 
over the weekend were: 
*® * * 
Ronald Sulfiow, 20, and Margar 
C. Fierst, 18, Mount Clemens, died   | Super |$2,200. 
The robbery took place moments 
before closing time at the Walton 
4120 W. Walton Market, 
killed by gunfire, and at least nine|of carbon monoxide fumes in his| Isopi, said they were turning- the 
died of heart attacks. 
Three of the traffic victims were 
pedestrians. Five of the miscella- 
neous dead were killed by poison- 
ous fumes. 
‘The Associated Press death count 
beg@n at 6 p.m. Friday and ended 
at midnight Sunday. Traffic vic- 
tims were: 
* * * 
Mrs. Myrtle Schaefer, 60, 
Rapids, killed Sunday in 
crash on M46 at Slocum. 
Mrs, Barbara 
Mount Clemens, killed Sunday | in 
a car-cement abutment crash near 
Monroe; 
John Grand 
a car 
» 32, 
=~ 
Royal Oak,   8, 
killed gunday in an aute collision | Portland, found shot to death Sun- 
day in Clare County. 
| as about 50 years old, 5 feet |Health Insurance Institute. -_——_— at Clare; 
Edward A. Hudson, 20, Wyan- 
dotié, injured fatally Sunday after 
his car missed a curve and crashed 
at 
killed Sunday when his car struck 
a utility pole in Detroit; 
Richard J. Fritz, 21, Owendale, 
killed Saturday night when his car 
struck a tree near Cass City; 
John F. Husley, 37, of rural Ben- 
ton Harbor, killed Saturday night 
when his car struck a truck on 
US. ai; 
William Flaig, 74, Lansing, 
struck and killed by a car Friday 
in Lansing; 
Swanson, 35, Newberry, 
struck and killed by a car Friday 
night on M117 in the Upper Penin- 
sulay Wayne Gathagan, 2, Madera, ty 
Pa., and Michael Beshke, 19, De- 
troit, killed Saturday in a two-car 
collision on ‘U.S: 10 near Saginaw; in Detroit of carbon monoxide| 
fumes from a stove; 
troit Sunday; 
Southgate; : 
James E. Neuble, 37, Detroit,/a@ce. parked car at Mount Clemens Sun- 
Joseph Zakrzewski, 38, Detroit 
and Stanley J. Danilowicz, 35, 
Dearborn, deer hunters, asphyx- 
lated by gas fumes in a trailer 
at Lewiston; 
Charles Kieler, 89, died Saturday | outside lights off at 8:55 p.m. 
| when they heard a car approach 
and stop in front of the store. 
Isopi told troopers he left the 
x * There was an estimated $700 in 
.coing in the safe, troopers reported. 
The bandits walked to their auto 
and drove away. 
“They were very cool, not a bit 
jnervous through the whole thing,” 
|Isopi said to police. He, his wife,   
  door open thinking he had a last|@"d their young employe banged 
minute customer. Two men came/|on the cooler door for 20 minutes 
jinto the store. One held a handker-|before knocking the board loose. 
chief_over his face. Both carried) the masked mans partner was 
guns, they said. 
* |younger, shorter and had a thin 
The masked man motioned to|build and wore a gray felt hat. 
“Timothy Duggan, seven weeks/his chrome, snub-nosed revolver 
old, suffocated in his crib in De-|and said, “You know what this is. | 
|Now get to-the back of the store,’’| 
Derrick Lewis, 19 months old, | lsopi said. 
died in Detroit Sunday after drink-| 
ing a lotion used to treat burns. 
The hunters who died: 
Roman J. Schrauben, 43, Route 2, 
* * * 
Heart attack victims were: 
James Robert Northrup, 57, Hart, 
found dead in woods near St. Ig- 
George TZeigier, 59, Battle 
Creek died in a woods near Al- 
pena, 
Carl Tebblas, 52, Flint, died near 
Standish; _ 
Edward P. Shemanski, 65, De- 
troit, died near Manistique; 
Chelsea E. Foy, 74, Manistee, 
died at an Upper Peninsula hunt- 
ing camp; 
William E. Cault, 58, Belleville, 
died in Montmorency County; 
Herman Brower, 66, Kalama- 
zoo, died in an Escanaba _ hos- 
pital after preparing a hunting 
camp; 
Floyd H. Shay, 59, Route 1, 
Battle Creek died Sunday after 
downing a deer in Kalkaska Coun- 
Ross B. Riddell, 47, Detroit, died Sunday while hunting near Seney.   4   
James H. Murphy, 23, Wyan- 
dotte, killed Saturday in a car- 
truck crash in Wyandotte; 
killed Friday night when hit by a car in Detroit; 
Mis. Marie McMaster, 43, Ada, 
died. Friday night when her car 
  ———>— 
The Weather 
ther Bureau Report 
VICINITY —. Colder   
rew. Nerthwestert 
15-2, miles tonight, continsing temor- 
Lew tonight 26, high tomorrow 39. 
  rew, 
Dewntown Temperatures 
6 O.M... coer. 32 11 a.m... 35 
9 O.@..8. ceed 32 12 noon...... c 
6 OM... .-cceee R 1 p.m.. ” 
Pam. 3 
$6 BM... c0002- xu“ 
Today in Pentiac } 
Lowest temperature preceding 8 &.m.’) 
2 3 
Sun sets Monday at 5:09 p.m. | 
Sun rises Tuesday at 7:25 a.m 
Moon rises Monday at 6:25 p.m. 
Moon sets Tuesday at 9:08 am 
Sundsy in Pontiac 
ims recorded dowptown) 
Highest temperatures - 
Lowest temperature oa 
Mean temperature . : 
Weather — Mostly cloudy 
Highest and Lewest Temperatures 
Date in 6 Years   
  
  
  
    5d 
  69 im 1953 8 in 1933 
. gE ‘s Temperature Chart 
Alperra "3s 2 Marquette 0 627 
Balt 50 44 Memphis 41 4 ismarck 20 -10° Miami Beh. 85 71 
fale 3 3 + is 4 3 3a New Ovieans 8 53 c 42 30 New York # 37 
a OA phe nw 
, BH Biber 3 orth ah Se wt Lowls | ba 3s B Se"iace” 3 . Marie 25 22 Bh prsioston 32 24 
ae 52 - - & 
a He then herded Isopi, his wife, 
and a 14-year-old Waterford Town- 
ship stock boy into a meat cooler|han any other age group. For 
atthe rear of the store and|every 100 persons,in that bracket, 
propped a board against the door.|there were 33 injdries during ‘a 
The masked man, described 
  
Waterford Twp. Family | 
Flees Blazing Home 
A Waterford Township family of 
five was forced to flee from their 
flaming home in their night clothes 
early today. 
Mrs. Robert Rondo, 4860 Eliza- 
beth Lake Ru., awoke at 8:30 a.m.|house from Frank Morton of 3675 to find her bedroom filled with|Brookdale Ave. . 
black smoke. 
husband who dashed to the kitchen 
and found the entire south side of 
the frame house afire. She- aroused her 
Rondo pushed his wife out a 
side door and groped his way 
back into the house to find their 
children, Robert, 2, James, 1, 
and Margaret, 5 nionths. 
In the meantime, Mrs. Rondo|the house and 
went next door where her neigh-'$3,000. 
  Pontiae Phota 
4860 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford “Township, $3,000 in damages, apparently started after one 
and her three children were forced to flee from of the children awoke “turned on a stove — 
their home this morning as firé swept through burner. The children are’(from left) Robert, 2, 
the dwelling. The- blaze, causing, an estimated Margaret, 5 months, and James, 1. 
® ? 
}   
It’s a Suffering Age | 
More injuries are suffered by 
Americans 15 through 24 years old’! 
recent year, according to the em 
  
  ! 
bor, Mrs. Leroy Prue, cama 
Waterford Township firemen who| 
battled the blaze for more than| 
‘an hour. , 
The Rondos were renting the 
  * * * 
The Rondos’ furniture and all 
their clothing was destroyed. Fire- 
|men said that apparently Robert 
had awakened and turned on a 
burner on the electric stove. An 
‘aluminum. .skillet which had con- 
itained chicken fat was burned 
\through. 
Firemen estimated damage to 
its contents at   
Taught by Miss Wong 
NEW YORK (UPI). — Comedi- 
enne Mimi Hines of the Ford and   
Heart Attack Kills   Hines team claims she tearned 
speak Chinese from a_ girlhood 
|pal named Jennie Wong in Van- 
|couver, B. C. 
  
  Bog 
    GEORGE F. McTAVISH 
Named Sylvan 
Police Chief George McTavish Has 
Been Acting at Post 
Since August 
Sylvan Lake City Manager 
David E. Firestone has named 
George F. McTavish as Sytvan 
Lake Police Chief. 
McTavish has been serving as 
acting police chief since the ouster 
of former chief George. W. Purdy 
in August. 
McTavish, who lives at 5901 
derose St., Waterford Township, 
has been with the department 
for three years. Before that he 
was employed by General Motors 
Truck and Coach Division. 
He was promoted ‘‘due to the 
manner in which he has performed 
his job, putting in many extra 
hours on the immediate and fu- 
ture problems of the department,” 
said Firestone. A 
* = * 
Last year McTavish completed 
a 120 hour police training and in- 
vestigation course sponsored by the 
Michigan Police Chiefs Assn. 
The new chief is a former special 
deputy of the Oakland County 
Sheriff's Department. He and his 
wife have four sons. 
Given Probation 
in Traffic Death   
St., Lake Orion, was found 
the auto death of a nine-year- 
last sum- EI 
    Hunter in UP   | A 4T-year-old designer with 
General Motors Truck & Coach 
Division was one of 10 deer 
hunters to die on the opening 
day of the 1959 season yester- 
day. 
Ross B. Riddell, of 19737 Wex- 
ford St., Detroit, died of a 
heart attack. He collapsed near 
Seney in the Upper Peninsula. 
Riddell was a designer in the 
Division’s production engineer- 
ing department, a position he 
had held since 1953. He was 
married. In 1954 Maj..Mayer was one of 
a team of United States Army 
    
factory condition today at Pontiac 
General Hospita] with injuries suf- 
fered in an auto accident Sunday. 
Williams of 3212 Henrydale St. 
told Oakland County sheriff's depu- 
ties he lost control of his car on 
South boulevard at Slocum street, 
Avon Township, and hit a dirt em- 
bankment. He suffered facial in- 
    “ | 
|munists of American prisoners of 
lwar in Korea. | psychiatrists to make a study of 
brain-washing’’ by Chinese Com- 
Arthur Johnson, executive sec- 
rétary of the Detroit branch of the 
National Association for the Ad- 
vancement of Colored People, will 
speak at the Community House 
tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the monthly 
meeting of the Democratic Club. 
Johnson will present his views 
on the status of civil rights. 
The meeting is open to the pub- 
lic. A question and answer period 
    juries. will follow Johnson's talk. 
  
Watson Retiring as Personnel. Director   
Pontiac Motor Division General 
Manager S. E. Knudsen announced 
today the appointment of Theodore 
B. Bloom as personnel director of 
the Division, succeeding George 
M. Watson. 
Watson, of 1550 Groton Rd., 
Bloomfield Township, is retiring 
Des. 31 under provisions of the 
General Motors retirement pian. 
Bloom was born Dec. 11, 1915, 
in Palmyra, Mo., and was grad- 
uated from the University of Mis- 
souri with a B.S. degree in 1938. 
He joined GM's Delco Remy Divi- 
sion,. Anderson, Ind., in 1952 as 
befare moving to the personnel 
department where he held the 
relations prior to his transfer to 
Guide Lamp Division as assistant 
personnel director in 1950. 
Bloom was made personnel position of supervisor - of labor . 
  GEORGE M. WATSON Gets Pontiac Motor Post 
  THEODORE B. BLOOM 
  
and has held this position until his 
new appointment. He is married 
and has one daughter. 
began his career with GM in 
1916 when he took a job with the 
Oakland Motor Car Co., pre- 
decessor to Pontiac Motor Divi- 
sion. 
He held important management 
responsibilities in the sales, in- 
spection, export and personnel de- 
tartments prior to becoming per- 
sonnel director in 1944. 
The Watsons, who are active in 
the civic life of Pontiac, have one 
Watsoy is a member of the Pon- tiac ber of Commerce, 
Kiwanis, Boys’ Club, Michigan 
  ali ite lt he Li tht director of Guide Lamp in 1955, 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Wed- 
nesday will hold its fourth an- 
nual ‘‘Clinic Day,” a medical staff 
function and clinical exercise. 
The hospital's medical staff will 
hear guest specialist lecture at the 
all-day function. 
Among them will be Dr. Julius 
Rutzky, the hospital’s own clin- 
ical laboratory director. 
Rutzky will. speak at 1:30 p.m. 
Wednesday on “Iron Deficiency 
Anemia.” . 
He is also assistant professor of 
pediatrics at Wayne State Univer- 
sity’s College of Medicine and the Hospital 
to Hold Clinic Day 
    DR. JULIUS RUTZKY   
trician at Children’s Hospital of 
Michigan. ; 
He is a member of the Society 
    > 
  
| senior clinical instructor in pedia-* 
trics at St. Joseph's Mercy Hospte 
tal. Z : 
the|Gardner, 3 
surgery at McGill University, 
treal. Yat be Dr. John McDonald, professor 
of pathology at Wayne State Uni- 
versity’s College of Medicine; Dr. 
Morton S. Bryer, consultant in in- 
tal, New York; and Dr. 
, assistarit professor of 
Mon- 
x * ® 
" Campbell will speak at 8:30 p.m. 
"tat 
  Other speakers for the day will will begin 7:30 p.m. 
” Ye + 
Mt the Miadey Gk te Gener   
     al 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVE MBER. 16, 1959    
    
Poland or Turkey to Get Security Seat?   
U.N. in Stubborn Deadlock UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) seat. But the Soviet Union is anal cil, 
Delegates to the General Assem- ing stubborn. 
bly are-working behind the scenes oe Toe deals, 
The target date for ending the oerett-seamliy le Kieg 5 Be 
year, Thus, the deadlock would’ 
Nave to be resolved one way or, 
  
are sepaatedly cool to any! ‘The walls of the Mormon Temple | 
in Salt Lake City are of white 
granite and 10 feet in thickness.     seeking a face-savi i ’ 
ing ee The Assembly has failed after to break the East-West log jam 
over a disputed Security Council|an unprecedented fight through a4 
ballots to decide between Commu-| 
31 National Park i. "sssess 
Sites Suggested sume balloting. Tuesday after a 
two-week breather, but there ‘ap- 
peared little hope of a break-|i 
Bills Would Establish 
7 New Ones and Shift 
the Status of Others   
through by either side. 
* * * 
Faced with the bleak prospect 
of having to stay.in session until 
the election is decided, delegates 
are béginning to talk about a pos- 
sible compromise. j 
* * * 
The plans put forward range}, 
, \from a scheme to split the two- WASHINGTON (# — Congress is) year council term between the twoli 
getting réady to consider 31 Pro-/ ontestants to an involved deal} 
posed new national parks, monu- \that would give Turkey the seat in| lj 
ments, shrines, memorials and his-|Teturn for Western assurance the) if torical sites. presidency of the 1960 General As-| 4 
The United States now has 29‘na-|Sembly would go to a representa- |; 
tional parks. The most recent one|tive of Communist Czechoslovakia. '4 
was dedicated in the Virgin Islands| yUST SAVE FACE 
Dec. 1, 1956. The United States, apparently | 
: = kes * feeling its prestige is slipping al! 
Bills pending in Congress would)jittle more each time the Assem-|m establish seven new parks—Arkan- ply goes through another round of| 
sas Post in Arkansas, one of Cape/futije balloting, is reported anx-| 
Céd, The Great Basin in Nevada,|ious to reach sonie kind of agree-| 
Ice Age Park in Wisconsin, The) ment that wuld end the deadlock) | 
}     
        Cliff Walk in Newport, Wilson’ S| and save fate for Washington. » 
Creek Battlefield in Missouri, and) The Russians, who don’t want to) 
Padre Island in Texas. lsacrifice the only chance they ever! 
Falling into other categories |had to place a Red satellite on the) 
would be the Indiana dunes, the | powerful 11-nation Security Coun- 
Oregon dunes and the geographi- | greceneneane 
cal center of the country, which | . 
has shifted with the admission of |(¥ 50c¢ Holds Your Choice 
Alaska and Hawaii as states. in FREE LAYAWAY 
Until Christmas   
  = 
In addition there's a bill to 
change Dinosaur National Monu-| 
ment in Colorado and Utah to, 
Dinosaur National Park. 
The Park Service says national) 
parks are planned to conserve | 
superlative scenery and must be} 
authorized by acts of Congress. 
Monuments include land of great! 
significance and distinction and can 
be established by an act of Con-) 
gress or by presidentia] proclama-| 
tion. 
         
    FASTEST SERVICE 
All Rolls 24H0UR Plush Pile Fur—l0":Lorig 
Musical Tiger 
88 
‘ 
j 
$ 
, 
4 — ses es Se | 
Regular 
$3. og! 
    Tin by 
Noon Musical tiger is built on a musi- 4 
BACK cal turntable. Soft. lovable cot- 
NEXT ton filled body with plush pile 
DAY fur in tiger stripes. Plays nurs~ 
oet'12 Noon 
Complete Satisfaction Guaranteed t LOW EST- IN-TOWN Prices! 
Why Fay 7c to 10c Bach 
LIFETIME FADEPROOF 
PHOTO PRINTS OCC 
pehedetdane 
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LEEDS 
LSI 
SEE 
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wat fa 
SUPER 
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Best Lares p 288 ri . B. 8 — by 
automatic a al 
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    Nearly 2-feet Long 
Got 7in= ALL METAL 
Diaiatasrted : | Auto Transport 
“DEVELOPING if ($4 88 by MAIL 
—No Extra Charge— 
We Are Now as Near 
as Your Corner Mailbox 
Ask for Your 
FREE Envelopes 
>. 
353. 
Fale 
Be 
Rh 
Row 
BP 
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Steel cab and trailer with 2 die- 
cast metal automobiles. 21 '/2 
inches long, 4¥2 -inches wider! 
and 612 inches high. Eight 
rubber wheels. ‘Structo’ make. ‘ 
‘ 
(Qe DEPMAM SD sxcriies ; 
¢ CAMERA DEPT. —Main Floor e'} 98 N. Saginaw—2nd Floor ; 
se ccccecccccccoecoccoes | NTS Coe oe Ore ree eereceereeesedeeseseeeeeseereseseseceseseceeseseececeoceenecoee SESE T TEL SS LE SSSR SES PPP ORELSDSTECSET SES ER SLOTS ET 14 CSOSA SRS S PETS Ole Sees 
i tn a a ee 
        
        
      
       
  FREE $4.95 Remote Control Cord With 
Bé&L eee Week Only 
LAY-AWAY FOR 
- CHRISTMAS       
  tr 
BAUSCH 7 & LOMB 
    ¢ COLOR SLIDES 
Always Stay in Focus 
BALOMATIC Automatic 300 Waitt 
Regular $84,50 Seller 
E. Lifetime guranteed, fully Guaranteed pro- 
jector that takes all 2 2°’ slidés including 
super slides . .., and the slides never pop- 
out of focus —- no need for annoying re- Projectors 
sete 3 69° 
$99.50 Value — “a ot 500. Watt ‘AUTOMATIC $ 87 
SLIDE PROJECTORS . & Pee Remote cord        
               
        
  \ 
  
   
  » BAUSCH & 
sausch © SLIDE TRAYS 
Sat ate hos    
      
      
      
         
   
d Reversible Acetate. Covered 
§ V — 
    
Ideal Gift Idea! : 
MUSICAL VV | 
DECANTER $5.95 Value 94 Exaclty As 
Pictured   
    
          
                      
      
        Gleaming gold-finished frame, amber 
glass bottle holds full “fifth”, 2 oz. jig-, 
ger top. Musical mechanism plays 
automatically. Choice of § tunes. Gilt 
boxed. r, 
      4.455% 
SPECIAL PURCHASE — All One Low Price 
SHEARS - — and MANICURE NIPPERS — Over 1000 on Sale 
Values to $2 
        CHOICE 
    
   
  1 Pinking Shears ... 
8° Straight Trimmers . . 
8” Bent Trimmers .... 
7” Straight Trimmers .. 
FORGED STEEL 
Imported from Germany. Pine ” ag oe 
keen - edge steel. Styles for 74" Barber Shears 98c 
every purpose. Y_"" Thinning Shears . . 98c Get yours now 
ter complete selections. 
  
SOLID COLOR Sheet Blanket Sanforized .100% cotton blanket with 
whip - stitch binding. First quality in 
72x95-inch size. Lilac color only. 1 
STRIPE DESIGN Sheet Blanket 100% cotton blanket with attractive 199 8 
stripe design. Full 72x90-inch size. Ace- 
tate satin binding, 
JUMBO 80x108” Sheet Blanket Sanforized 100% cotton blanket in lilac 99 
color. Whip-stitch binding. Buy for your- 
self or for gift giving. T 
PLAID DOUBLE Sheet Blanket 100% cotton double sheet blanket with 
attractive plaid designs. 72x168-inches 298 
with stitch binding. 
BEACON BLEND Blankets Rayon and nylon blend with wide ace- 4 88 
REVERSIBLE (7283 tote satin: binding. Choice of 72x84” or 
” 
COMFORTERS | Nea   
    4 72x90", Variety of colors and prints.     
  100%, WOOL Pilled 
‘ 97 95 
Full 72 x 84 inch size comforter in 
reversible acet. another before Jan. 1. iz 
   
       
   
rE CCC 'E 
    
      
    
        For 25 years Simms has been the DISCOUNT STORE in Pontiac and here is a typical adv. showing you why . . 
sundries and others—all with items at cut-prices. And we'll be here at the same location to ments—drugs, household, hardware, clothing, 
. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Regardless How Much YOU SAVE. Rights reserved to limit quatities. give you service after the sale . . 
        
     
       Pack of 50 Fast 
ANACIN TABLETS 
ir 466 715¢                 
     
        $1.06 Value—Twin Pack - 
Colgate Toothpaste 
7 Ae eh                
          
  Pack of 72—Famous 
4-WAY COLD TABS 
we 72s 98c 
Regular 30c Package 
TUMS MINTS 
7-Ounce Spray Can 
LIQUINET 
HAIR SPRAY 
53° Reg. 
$1.50 
       
     
         
        
        Single Edge & Injector 
Pal Razor Blades 
Reg. 79¢ 49 ¢ Pkg. 20 
          
   
    Popular VETO Cream 
DEODORANT 
       
   
    : 8% -Ounces—Lotion 
Jergens Shampoo       
       
               
    
      
      
    
     
  Holds $50 in $c-10c-25¢ 
UNCLE SAM BANKS 
$4.95 344 Value     
    
     
     
     
   
     
    
   
    
   
   
     
  “Plastic—With Memo Pad 
POCKET SECRETARY 
and PEN 
    a 
a a 
4 
         
    
        
     
            Famous O'CEDAR 
DUST. MOPS. 
gi | 1             
        
       
    
      
   
  Heavy Inner-Fleeced. 
Boys’ Sweat Shirts : 
Choice of White & Colors Warm THERMO-KENIT 
Boys’ Underwear 
Tops or Bottoms 
Reg. $1.98 
i 1”. Ne 
ny ‘ se Scientific knit traps 
body heat for 
warmth, without 
weight. All sizes to 
10 years old fo $1.29 Value 
    
     
  All cotton sweat shirts with re- 
inforced nylon neck, In all sizes 
for boys. 
Ceocoececeeoooscoeosseososooososeoooeseseesetee 
Boys’ 3-Pc. Matched ; 10-Oz. DENIM 
     
     
      
   
     oan & Pant Set Boys’ ‘Knees 
$4.95 Value Dungarees “ 
   
        kee 29 #$1.98             
       
       
     Flannel! lined 
polished cotton 
pants in black Banforized blue - denim 
at with matching jeans with vulcanized 
; flannel shirts and double knees Zipper     
          self belts. Sizes 3 
to 7 fly. Sizes 6 to 16, 
  
       
   
    
  Irrs. and Ist Quality of Values to 49c 
LADIES-MISS-GIRLS’-BOYS’-CHILDS’ 
Anklets 
and SOXS 
alT; many All Sizes 
3% to 11 
You’re sure to find many, 
styles in whités and wanted colors 
in this big selection. 
Buy as many pairs as you like. 
(6 Pairs. .96c) (3 Pairs. .49¢) 
      
   
     
   AMERICAN Made 
Kids’ Long Sleeve 
POLO $1.29 Value 
SHIRTS. 
89c 
Cotton knits with 
plastic sole feet 
Sizes 1 to 4 only 
Assorted colors. Variety of colorful 
stripes. Knit collar 
& cuffs. All siges 4 
to 3 & 3 to 8, 
Inexpensive Room Dividers 
Fits 32” to 80" Doorways 
Folding Doors 
3°83 
Durable Giny! plastic doors in white or beige 
colors. Metal teack, mylon guides, easy to 
Pd keep clean. Easy fo install with just a screw- 
> if driver. $5.95 
Value 
  SOOOHOSHSHOSOOSOHOOOOOHESOHESOEEOOSSOOSEOEES 
$100 Fine for Littering Roads 20-Gallon PLASTIC 
BE SAFE WITH 
CAR LITTER BaskeT |- Garbage Cans 
= Cover Reg. $2.00 
$9.95 
1 49 = 
Unbreakable plastic won't dent,      Lightweight, rustproof and dent 
Clean Mart uses in house gost | Proof, Washable plastic with ye ied , = y snap-tite cover. Full 20 gallon ssorted colors er 
‘Durable DENIM-Washable 
Auto Seat Covers > for 2 and 4 Door Cars 
Choice of 4 Colors. 
Fits most models of car. Easy to 
slip-on . Snug fitting. Just 
throw in water. to wash. s 
  Why Pay 
$5.95 
or More? 
    
       
     FRONT 
SEAT 
ONLY 
  
96 N. SAGINAW ST. .     
      
              
      
   Pre 
IIIT 
III 
IIIT 
ITI 
IIIT 
TTT 
iri 
riiiisiiiTiiiiii 
ri 
tirii 
iii 
iii 
rile 
ririiiii 
TTT 
eer 
TTT 
TTT 
Tee 
SSCSSSSSSSSHSSHSSSSHSSSSSSSSSHOSHSSSSSSSSSSHSSSSSHSSSHSSOHSOHOSSSHHSSHHS 
SHHSHSHSHSHSHSSHSSHSSSSOHSHOHSSEHHSOSEE 
      . look at the complete depart 
  Sanforized WASH ‘n’ WEAR “ 
¢ Boys’ FLANNEL SHIRTS 
1”. Piannels im check 
plaids and Logg 
a rhe 
$198 
&, 
in 
Gises f.. 
BASEMENT BARGAINS 
Boys’ Flannel Robes 
Flannelette robes fm 
Hmited colors lat 
er in sizes 4-6- 
 Gagemeny pancanes _| BARGAINS 
seed Sweaters   
pullover ae lst 
os ne sizes 6 
| BASEMENT BARGAINS _| BARGAINS 
Boys’ Pajamas $2.49 Value 
195 
          
  Sizes 3 to 6X 
29 2 tee 2.50 
No ironing of ero 
Keapsit Vacuum Bot Full PINT SIZE 
| 
For hot or Fop 1 ones 
— Red Sipps 
eae cep, Made le ee 
HERMOS. 
2nd FLOOR BARGAINS 
BISSELL Shampoomaster 
22-OUNCE LIQUID 
ano Cleaner Reg. 
$1.49 
         
     bh 3014 Pont. St. Bk. Bids. FE #1887 Oo tion ja.m . 
]iiwcrmencors = sm ____________ |the Lakes Church, with burial in 
; ie |Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. 
aa . | He died Sunday after a seven- 
oe , month illness. The Rosary will be 
se 3 said at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the 
= | AMERICA S NO. 1 PRIZE WINNER foo) )*Gcanardt Funeral Home, 
. for Beauty and Efficiency of Furnishings and Equipment | Keego Harbor. 
= Surviving are his wife, Frances, 
mrlibicerey i ttt Titt iti tite ee ee | 
{prawns 
eee 
mes 
en FOUR 2 
  
ITCHING Torture lined like Magic 
te a modicgeed creams poet Sores 
whi! raw, 
in tissue. Stops atching—s0 
med Don't cullte enodher sstnute. 
today at ali drug storcs. 
————   ‘Dignitaries Dedicate 
Baltimore Cathedral 
  
Cockroaches Written Guarantee 
From Houses. Apartments. 
Groceries, Factories and 
Restaurants. Remain out only 
one hour. No signs used. 
Rox Ex Company 
  BALTIMORE (AP) — The cele- 
bration of a Pontifical Mass Sun- MRS. DORA BLETSTEIN 
|\day marked the dedication of the!” ceryice for Mrs. Dora Bletstein, 
1814-million-dollar Catholic cathe- 73, of 1071 Berkley Ave., was held 
tdral of Mary Our Queen at, 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Ira _ 
. as . : . min Funeral Home, Detroit, wit 
Francis Cardinal Spellman, burial in Cloverhill Park Cemeler 
archbishop of the New York Arch- |? : Oak she died Saturd y, 
diocese, and James Cardinal Mc- Royal al a am si Pe ay. t 
Archbishop of the Los An-! Surviving are a son, SSorris © Intyre 
geles Archdiocese, joined 15 arch- 
bishops, about 100 bishops and 
more than 1,900 other church dig- 
nitaries and invited laymen at the 
ceremony 
quest financed the five-year con- 
    
  
   
      
Table Service « 
  In seats of honor were relatives) _ . ; 
of Thomas O'Neill, deceased _ service _for Julian Kruszewski. 
apartment store owner whose be- v7, of 6765 Maceday Dre Water-| 
ford Township, will be held at 11} ad 
  
  Pontiac, and two grandchildren. | 
Mrs. Bletstein was a member of 
Congregation B'nai Israel, Hadas- | 
‘sah and Sisterhood of B'nai Israel. 
JULIAN KRUSZEWSKI 
Wednesday at Our Lady of THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959 
employed by the Doherty &. Do- 
herty Construction Co. 
Surviving are his wife, Jennie, 
and a daughter, Mrs. William Kel- 
ley of Pontiac. : 
MARCEL DURSKI 
LAPEER — Service for Marcel 
Durski, 73, of 340 Fox St., will be 
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Muir 
Brothers Funeral Home. Burial 
will be Mount Hope Cemetery. 
Mr. Durski died yesterday at 
Lapeer County General Hospital 
after a brief. illness. 
Surviving are two daughters, 
Mrs. Wanda McKillen and Mrs. 
Eleanore Hill, both of Lapeer; and 
three grandsons, 
SAMUEL HAMILTON 
TROY — Service for Samuel 
Hamilton, 79, of 3437 Livernois Rd. 
will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday 
from Price Funeral Home, Burial 
      five daughters, Mrs. Stella M. Mar- 
riott of Waterford, Mrs. Helen Car- 
son of St. Clair Shores, Mrs. Dor-| will be in White Chapel Memorial 
Cemetery. ' 
Mr. Hamilton died Saturday. 
Surviving are his wife, Anna; a 
daughter, Mrs, Harry Eller of 
othy Mangold and Mrs. Viola Pet- | Royal Oak: a son, George in Scot- 
ers, both of California, and Mrs. | land: three brothers and two sis: 
Julia Ormsby of Detroit, and two}ters, 12 grandchildren and 13 great- 
Just North of 14 Mile Road on Woodward—Hunter Blvd. 
Yuuttes You “To Se 
1 Prize Winner. 
37 AWARDS EACH MONDAY — WORTH $225 OR MORE 
Win $50 for your favorite Charity, Church, Club—or meal 
coupon books of $5, $10 or $25—or a luxurious Dinner—in 
the novel Popular Foods Contest in effect daily. Secure 
entry blanks and full details in the restaurant, 11 a.m. to 
9 p.m. daily. No entry fees or purchase necessary _ 
Extra Opportunities on Mondays 
and Tuesdays — and Afternoons 
2-5 p.m. (except Sunday) ERVE Tension 
Each visitor on Mondays and Tuesdays and from 2 to 5 | SECONDARY 10 KIDNEY IRRITATION 
each afternoon except Sunday, will receive 2 contest tickets. 
Enter as often as you like. You may win more than once. 
Anyone over 16 may enter. Not necessary to be present to } 
win. Winners names will be posted each Monday at 1 p.m. 
Distinctive Cafeteria Service «¢ SUBURBAN sons, ‘Frank of Detroit and William grandchildren. 
RESTAURA of Pontiac 
Ricetanl NT Also surviving are 20 grandchil- FRANK J. QUINLAN 
— ~ ~ drer “arnt ~ € ies —_ ; 
ERIN J. LINSCOTT 
Service was held at-Mt. Hope 
|Cemetery this afternoon for Erin 
iJ. Linscott, two-day-old daughter 
jof Mr. and Mrs. Gene Linscott 
lof 3171 McCormick St. She died 
Sunday. 
neral arrangements were by the 
| Sparks-Griffin Fumeral Home. 
EBB C. VOORHEIS 
Service for Ebb C. Voorheis, 56, 
of 4878 Fenmore St., will be held 
'at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Donel- 
'son-Johns Funeral Home, with bur- 
ial in Lakeview Cemetery, Clark- 
+ ston 
He died Sunday in University 
Hospital, Ann Arbor, after'an ill- 
|ness of a year. Mr. Voorheis was   | $$ 
(Advertisement) 
| Bacxacne & 
| Thousands are how discovering how much 
| stronger and better they can feel by 
combating ordinary Kidney or Bladder 
Irritations. These irritations often occur 
  Surviving are the parents. Fu-| Iroquois Rd., died Sunday at St. 
Joseph Mercy Hospital following a 
long illness, 
Last employed ‘in the service de- 
partment of GM Truck & Coach 
Division, Mr. Quinlan was a mem- 
ber of St. Vincent de Paul Church 
and the Knights of Columbué. 
| Surviving beside his wife, Loret- 
ta, is a daughter, Mary Ellen at 
home, 
Service will be held Wednesday 
at 10 a.m. at St. Vincent de Paul 
Church, with burial in Mt. Hope 
Cemetery. The Rosary will be re- 
cited at Brace-Smith Funeral Home 
Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. 
CHARLES W. STONE 
ROCHESTER — Service for 
Charles W. Stone, 68, of 616 Sev- 
enth St., will be held at 10 4.m. 
Wednesday at St. Andrew's Cath- 
olic ‘Church. Burial will follow in 
Mount Avon Cemetery. ° 
Mr. Stone died yesterday at his 
home after several months illness. 
Rosary will be recited. at 8:30 
p.m, tomorrow at William R. Po 
tere Funeral Home. 
He was a member of the Holy 
Name Society of St. Andrew’s 
Chruch and of the St. Vincent de   
  } after 35, and may make tense and 
pi Jtegous trom too freweniy urnina ar [Pall Society. oe Distinguished | | fe: irom Mraduches’ Backache tnd fee > ving | 21d, tired, depressed. In such irritation. RORERT C. WIAND 
Carty-Out Pantry | comfort by curbing irritating germs in | SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — 
| pune, ter! wpe pad by eiving anaitene |Service for Robert C. Wiand, 22. ~ | CYSTEX at drugeists. Peel better fast. \of 10129°Graham Dr. will be held   Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas | at 11 a.m. tomorrow at St, Rita's 
Catholic Church in Holly. Burial 
will be in Lakeside Cemetery, 
Holly, 
A U:S. Air Force cadet, he died 
Thursday in a jet crash near Vance 
AFB, Okla. 
Graveside service will be con- 
ducted by the Air Force. 
The Rosary will be recited at 
7:30 p.m. today at the Dryer Fu- 
neral Home in Holly. 
Surviving are his father, Robert 
J. Wiand of Pontiac, his mother 
Mrs. Agnes Hollway of Marine City 
and'a sister, Mrs. Judy Parker of 
the same address here. 
  
Philanthropist Succumbs; 
Gave Away $180 Million 
HOUSTON, Tex. w—Mrs. Hugh 
Roy Cullen, who with her husband 
gave away more than 180 million 
dollars for education and health 
work, died last night at her home. 
She was 77. 
Her husband died here in 1957. 
His estate was valued at more 
than nine million dollars. 
Both believe that great fortunes 
should be disposed of in the in- 
terests of humanity. 
  
Famous Professor Dies 
CARLOPS, Scotland «#~—Prof. 
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 90, 
regarded as the man who opened 
the window on the atomic world, 
died Sunday. Wilson, who shared 
the Nobel Prize for physics in 1927 
for construction of a ¢cloud-cham- 
ber, was the Jacksonian professor 
of natural philosophy at Cambridge #2. 
  AP Wirephote 
AWARD WINNER—Dr. Glenn 
T. Seaborg, 47, nuclear scien- 
tist and chancellor of University 
of California,-was chosén recent- 
ly to receive the Atomic Energy 
Commission’s $50,000 Enrico‘ Fer- 
mi award for 1959.   
Practicing Doctor at 99 
Can‘t See Way to Quit 
_WAYNESBURG, Pa. (AP)—Dr. 
Lindsey S§. McNeely, at 99 pos- 
sibly the nation’s oldest.practicing 
physician, gives no thought to re- 
tiring. “Who would take care of my 
patients?” he‘’asks. Hé has been 
practicing almost 70 years, 
Dr. McNeely. observed office 
hours as ‘usual on his 99th birthday 
Saturday. He declined a proposed 
community celebration in favor of Plans Yule ‘Stopping’ 
MUSKEGON “UPI) — The post|please send me a good behavior 
Office reported, today it had come|kit at once.” acrdss a letter addressed to Santa 
Claus which read: “Dear Santa, 
  
    University from 1925 until he re- 
tired in 1934. “just another day” at his office- 
home in nearby Kirby.     7 
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  THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959 . 
Ee Sate yes beet Tue anor quayyga gee gling ny eye, oe sow « 
\ 
    
Vast. Membership Sought   
} 
       hes been divided into 14 regions 
jor organizing purposes, each with 
‘ts own chaifman .and organizing 
rams incl members of: the 
 atewide board of directors. 
With a current membership of 
j-arly 2,000 from more than 200 
ichigan communities, the group 
tks maximum enroliment of all 
ens “willing ‘to participate 
ttively as individuals in the 
tification and study of state- 
| problems, and the presenta- 
\of recommendations for their 
kon,”” Romney said. 
vass-roots study groups will be 
il chapters, to be chartered on| 
*mmunity or neighborhood basis 
nin each region. 
) To systematize the studies of 
)ocal groups, feur major study    ‘ 
areas have been determined, in- 
cluding state services and needs, 
governmental organization re- 
quired to meet these needs, 
financing required to meet these 
needs, and impact of the recom- 
mendations in these areas on the 
state’s Bepnemic growth and cul- 
tural development. 
Statewide committees for these 
study areas are being formed to| 
coordinate the ‘total study effort. 
Principles of membership are: 
“1. Members shall be guided by. 
a concept of service and partici-|     
pation that shall place the needs|[sle, Otsego, Montmorency, Alpena. | 
of the state above and Apart from | 
ACID INDIGESTION 
  ? 
v 
  Pascoselcuniaied WORKS LIKE TUMS! | 
  personal, political, ecohomic or 
“2. Members ‘shall seek to keep 
“}themselves informed as ‘to the 
fundamental political and economie 
facts on the state’s needs and 
problems. 
“3. Members in their capacity as 
citizens shall actively participate 
in the study of problems and 
formulation of recommendations 
for solutions that are in the best in- 
terest of all citizens and consumers 
of this state. 
‘4. Members shall recognize that 
any position with respect to Michi- 
gan needs that is contrary to the 
national interest or world welfare 
would be in the long run contrary 
to the, interests of Michigan.” 
  
. |common, The 14 regions and teams of 
|\CFM directors assigned to organiz- 
ing work in these regions follow: 
| Upper Peninsula-West (Gogebic, 
\Ontonagon, Houghton, Keweenaw, 
Baraga, Iron, Marquette and Dick- 
of Traverse City, Judah Drob and 
G. Robert Koopman of East 
| Lansing. 
| Upper Peninsula-East (Menomi- 
jnee, Delta, Alger, Schoolcraft, 
|Luce, Mackinac and Chippewa 
Counties) Francis J. Coomes of| 
|Lansing and Jean Worth of Esca- 
inaba. gt Counties) Lester Biedermart 
Antrim, Kalkaska, 
|Leelanau, Benzie, Manistee, 
Traverse and Wexford 
|\Lester Biederman of Tyaverse | 
City and Dan Gerber of Fremont 
Northeast (Cheboygan, Presque 
| Crawford, Oscoda, Alcona, Ros-| 
Ogemaw and _Iosca 
Counties) Harold C. McKinney Jr. 
Lansing and Frank Merriman) 
Deckerville.° 
° en (Osceola, Clare, Gladwin, 
|Arenac, Mecosta, Isabella, Mid- 
land, Bay, Montcalm, Gratiot and | 
Saginaw Counties) Elwyn J. Bodley | 
and Ben W. Calvin of Bay City, | 
land Edward L. Cushman of Dear-| 
    born. 
f West (Mason, —Lake, Oceana, | 
| Newaygo, Muskegon, Kent, and| 
|Ottawa Counties) Jack Conway of| 
|Grosse Pointe, Dan Gerber of 
|Fremont, James Seyferth of Mus-   
FUEL OIL No Contract 
Necessary Call Today 
Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Bivd. 
  Phone FE 5-6141     
  \kegon and Mrs. Robert Stebbelaar | 
of Grand Haven. 
Flint (Tuscola, Genesee and La.| 
\peer Counties) Robert S. Mc- | 
\Namara of Ann Arbor and Mrs. | 
Morris Rubenstein of Flint. 
Lansing (Ionia, Clinton, Shia- | 
and | 
Livingston Counties) Joseph V. 
Edward L. | Eaton, Ingham wassee, 
Brady of Howell, 
Cushman of Dearborn, Rev. G. 
Paul Morrisom of Lansing, Mrs. 
Bernard Prendergast of Owosso 
and Howard J. Stoddard of East 
Lansing. 
  Missabkee. | Romney to Launch Citizen’s Drive all of Detroit, pt Leonard Wood-|attiee says he was quoted out of| Southwest (Allegan, Barry, Van 
Buren, Kalamazoo, Calhoun, Ber- Ber-|°°%* of Grosse Pointe: 
rien, Cass, St. and Branch! Oakland (Oakland County) 
Counties) Lowell”B, Genebach of| Martin Butyel, ©, Allen Harlan 
Battle Creek, Mrs. Jesse Jai Mc-| and Mrs. Ketchum of Birming- 
Neil of Mendon, Mrs. Charles A.| ham, Judge Wade H. MeCree Jr. 
Smith of Kalamazoo, and William| of Detroit and Romney, 
E. Stirton of Ann Arbor. Macomb (Macomb County) Rev. 
x * * James H. Bristah and William H. 
Southeast (Jackson, Washtenaw, |Frank of Detroit, Jack Conway o 
Hillsdale, Lenawee and Monroe 'Grosse Pointe and Edward L.| 
Counties) Mrs. Berrien C, Ketchum {Cushman of Dearborn. 
Namara of Ann Arbor and William |Clair 
E. Stirton of Ann ‘Arbor. 
Detroit (Wayne County) Rabbi| | Weil of Port Huron. 
|Morris Adler, Fr. Robert F. Allen, | 
George Berkaw Jr.. Samuel 
Brownell, Mrs. Josephine Gomon Counties) Creighton 
  
  U.S. are 
Minnesota. and Judge Wade H. McCree Jr., 
    f 
  Attlee Says Belittling 
of Ike Out of Context ST. LOUIS, Mo, (AP)—Former 
British Prime Minister Clement 
context in a report that he called) 
President Eisenhower ‘‘somewhat_ 
second-rate.’’ But he wouldn't elab- | 
orate. 
Attlee also made it clear at a 
news conference Sunday that he 
wouldn't be drawn into a verbal | 
battle with two Republican con- 
gressmen who criticized him. 
Attlee had been quoted at Den- 
iver as saying Eisenhower was) was standing. 
| somewhat second-rate as a soldier | 
of Birmingham, Robert S. Mc-| Thumb (Huron, Sanilac and. St. land no better as a statesman. He! 
D. told newsmen here he was quoted Offer Suds for Shooter 
|Holden of St. Clair and F. Granger out of context and tbis didn’t sum| 
up his views on the President. 
Asked if he would elaborate and 
Richest iron ore deposits in the| put the comment back in context,|and no questions asked to anyone, 
located in northeast Attlee snapped, “Find out what | who returns a 150-pound cannon | 
I’ve written.”’ Ringing Ax Sweet Music 
to Uganda Elephant Ike's Brothér Edgar 
KAMPALA, Uvanaa wen — 1S Nixon Supporter Officials of the Uga game de- 
partment today reported a wild) TACOMA, Wash. (AP) — Edgar   ‘elephant has found a way to get Eisenhower, brother of the Presi- 
| as weed dent, came out Sunday in support 
* * * of Vice. President Richard M. 
      
| They said the elephant regards   
ithe sound of a woodsman’s axe as| 
|a dinner gong. As soon as a tree | 
is felled, he rushes from the) 
| forest, chases the lunbermen away, | 
and eats the branch tips which | 
| were out of reach while the tree MICHIGAN aR Geos “cbUx or 
  ments, debts or "bills when. due, see 
and arrange for payments you can 
how many you ewe 
  
ONE P Member Smortonn 
And Mi NO SECURITY oi. ea ae yaa REQUIRED 
ton uli ot 
. Assoc. of Credit —& TO P 
wanes 
  
| LONDON (UPB A London 
| pub is offering a barrel, of beer) 
716 Pentiac State Bank Bidg.   “Let 14 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” | 
Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. 
MICHIGAN CREDIT COU NSELLORS 
    | stolen from the premises.   
      
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6 Have YOU ever dreamed that 
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you by surprise? }{ SPACE AGE ATLAS | | 
i 
  
          
   | Rand McNally... 
This valuable $6 edition is yours 
| for only 98c.. Just stop in ond 
visit out Trading Post. See our 
| old-time parode of G-E valves. 
46 PAGES IN FULL COLOR 
© Featuring seographicel and relief maps of all 
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© The earth ond its atmosphere 
© Principal world cities and populations . . 
© World political information. 
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a 
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MODEL HU.13 FREEZER Stores food where it con be 
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  361 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET PONTIAC 
   , lia ein aes Windia diladiieed india dime : s ves i ne Mt ta ee ee 4. ee OE os oe es os mes } ad ¥ . A ‘ + / : 
¥ wf = . ; . ‘ . “4 ey . . —~< . . } . pees 
     
  
  
  sei —n dV ne . — ' . ‘ batt’. ‘a i" J 3 , _ : 
uvd rent , | ee. uw THE PONTIAC, PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959 f t 
Wiliam K. Cowie | Drawer Liners Vuter Plans Bh ak Beauty Hint So aap tee tree person owile | Yuletide Fest yen with = wenh of ned: do-ithen before. 
  | Cut left-over linoleum to fit . deetain an. a tele ene ; 
Custom Upholstery  icives. ‘Tey'll be very easy | Plans were made for a Christ- "9 I etter Scores x 2 ; 
25. Yrs. of Practical Experi mas party to be held at the church s women have a difficult time salt 
On ee y wae whh @ cloth wrung Iwhen the Esther Circle of the excessive perspiration. Urge table ee 
me Ve 1 te Rd. on ng RE out of soap or deterent suds, | Augustana Lutheran Church Wom- | This may come from nervousness rnish silver, special } 
wr aa or may be tied to poor general|care of spoons’ used to serve salty 
. then rinsed ‘with clear water. jen of St. John’s Lutheran church | , cnn A cat ‘ 
tnhlecningeocha reali rey preteen ————-——| met at Mrs. John Lundgren’s home| Hi Back physical condition. Too much cof-'nuts and candies. } 
: ion Moreland avenue. | — laca ionis = } 
(Og TONY?S seats Shop | eo « * . ; © Choice of many 
Main Floor — 35 W. Huron—FE 3-7186) Mrs. Fred Larson and Mrs. e '|Now is the time to order peusaina cover | 
          
  
  
   
   
  George Tweit were in charge of By ABIGAIL YAN BUREN | having his fun. I know that he DEAR ABBY: ‘Please tell * your new, custom-built fabrics!  f 
‘he Thursday Program. ing were, , DEAR ABBY: That letter | is no angel. But in my book— | HONEY that she is a member © thuite ot tem 
—- from ‘‘Honey”’ sure burned youre worse. of a very large sorority. Every i rubber er 
Mrs. Jz Larson, Mrs. Ercell > R EPS 
Kohibass and Mrs. Carl Leedy. 4 i May I anewer her? pairiaiea nor KE year when I take my children | WING SOFA spring . filled 
|Others were Mrs. Dallas Folsom,| y . Fag sid ee DEAR ‘ABBY: Th aiden. away for the summer, my | . ushiens! ‘ 
; ‘| Yes, lam the © : : Three uniden ; . , 
\Mrs. Arvid Anderson and Mrs‘! bose wife who % tified ‘‘friends” clipped that husband entertains himself for Christmas! © Steel-reinforced 
|Fremont Thoe leaves her hus- letter signed ‘CALL ME HON- | with a new employe. He has fall web bettem 
band alone all y € 
s . Oo 
To Save Face sonia: gl 
| The face of your child’s dojl ee EY’ and mailed it to me. If ip tted” around all . S 30% q and hand-tied , 
that letter was written by my a . — ave ae. oO to 40 oO springs! é I married him. husband's secretary I would mer ever since sani 
like to say this: My busband (He does the same thing when during our pre-holiday special! > ah 
' % 
       starts to beg me in January to I’m in town). Honey was‘smart 
take a month’s vacation in to quit her job. My husband 
July. HE is the one who is gets tired of girls very fast. 
anxious for me to go. My He would probably have fired 
friends and relatives tell me her.     With Tony's 
Compliments &t...... 
on G Facial 3 t 
a Be $G°° will stay cleaner if it is given a 
wax treatment. Wash the face = pg aera a 
of the doll with a furniture Sapien! % “a 
wax. the lish with a d claims he has *am ax, n polls bd to scramble an      
          glean cloth. _| ‘egg for his sup- ABBY that he is always ‘‘busy’”’ when | INEZ 
° per every night, he is only they invite him to dinner. Now | ~*~ *« * : 
: looking for sympathy. Before I know what he was so busy What's your problem? For a | o | : I leave, I fill my freezer with with. Thanks for the tip, | personal reply, write to ABBY, 
delicious home-cooked meals. Abby. Id like to thank ‘‘Hon- care of this paper. Enclose a | 
1         
     
  
        
           
     
    
   
      
  
  
                         
  
  
      And I have to work months in | ey,’’ too. stamped, self - addressed en- 
advance to do it. * STAYING HOME velope. i 
— I eT a a tom*=built furniture is so 
Fep ERAL band pikes rei pall fo ; reasonab y priced because you are by buying EASY You say you could steal him |, °«snn ee _ direct = | a | ee Peed BUDGET TERMS 
dept. stores if you wanted to? Hah! Over |_ i during this special you save even more! or 
: my dead body! s Have You Tried This? © | ALL WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED 5 YEARS 90 DAYS CASH 
Downtown AND SAUL’S WIFE |» i . \ ; Drayton Plains kt ok d Ch | t Furniture Makers ‘ DEAR ABBY: 1 want to |) L@MON aN ocolate | fewelstaruat ; Open eve night to 9 thank “Honey” for writing |~ an phoistere ; nana ae Seawrder). that letter, and you, Dear /|* C bi D = 
* Abby, for selecting it to pub- |) WCOMDINE in essert "/270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558  ‘GraSe' Years - | lish. ; 2 
I am the “‘boss’ wife’’ who |. By JANET ODELL had a nice exchange of ideas § a —~ - 
was foolish enough to leave * Pontiac Press Editor on how to refinish them. Mrs. © | ee 
“)¥ her wonderful husband for two |) friends know all  tTY dees some church work. i] . ye months every summer. Believe |” hades She enjoys playing bridge. The Different’ Look 
me, Abby, I have read that |. your recipes by heart? Do you CHOCOLATE DESSERT ; f 
letter from Honey a dozen | wish you could surprise them By Birt. Beall T or you... ; : : . y erry - times, and I have promised |~ with something new the next 56 wie on “ 
roeiiat Tvilmeriee fre retrace: LST = PERMANENTS my husband alone again. |} — ; Peet ee oe Complete 
Thank you, thank you, thank |_ clu shasaiale seicigevater eoskian 
you! | Try Mrs. Basil Terry's teas marshmallows in $5 — $G — $7.50 * 
HARRIET i Chocolate Dessert, It’s wonm- water. Add lemon juice and ed j 
*\ «© ® ') derfully easy to prepare. If — cool. Whip cream and fold into Styled Hair Cutting Ww 
DEAR ABBY: “Honey” must | ail your guests are too cal- cooled mixture. fread te awe $1.50 
have wax in her beehive. When |* Fie conscious, use a pack- Crush cookies and place half ; ee ; a married man asks a single t phe dessert mix instead =; the crumbs in bottom of - We Specialize in Children’s Hair Cutting. | 
girl to have dinner with him, |* pped cream. pan. Pour in cream mixture. I ¥ Al A ) 
she should expect the following { Mrs. Terry who is a rather Top with remaining crumbs. ANNALIESE BEA S N 
menu: |= new resident of the Watkins Chill until serving time. Serves (Over Tasty Bakery) 
_ Cocktails: A few martinis— | Lake area loves antiques. We 8: 80% N. Saginaw St. FE 2-5600 just to ‘‘relax’’ us. ; / ri 
Appetizer: “My wife doesn't ¥, a ee . es jth W ase ee ee ee es ee eee a a 
understand me.’ _—_ . 
- First Course: ‘I. haven't had . 
any REAL affection in yeags. G | S H d , 
Second Course: ‘‘If it weren't l r cou ts Ono re 
for the children, I'd have left 
annie my wife years ago.” | The an dee ol fong opened her Allison street 
Soten mms setus| ONE PRICE stand me perfectly. If I were intermediate Girl Scout Troop Mrs, Edmond Vaughn, neigh- 
eo ae ~ TM ehatry, 38 - 280 of the Wisner-Lincoln-Alcott borhood chairman, was guest. 
  morrow.” Neighborhood, Mrs. Clifford | x* * * Dessert: ‘‘It's s0 notsy and | Neville, leader. their F : 
8 here aad ate nay piece |. COleader Mrs, Charles Wil rut eure Goel WiteeY Go $ 75 where If let s0 we can Bacak, Ruth Neville and ‘Mar 
‘ ~~ ~peen THERE” [Newlyweds Plan | 2 'srarded w Gora Howe | 
DEAR ABBY: Since you saw [to Make Home eles ea mee COMPLETE WITH 
fit to print ‘‘Honey’s’’ letter to e eee 
me, I hope you wil be tair [ON Collier Drive | 6. Warer Carol Bacak, enough to print my letter to Ruth Neville and Marsha Webb 
“Honey”: Planning to reside on Collier received -year membership 
Dear Honey: drive in Pontiac are new stars. —_ me 
I'm glad you had brains. |Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cornwall. 
enough to quit your job before [They were married Friday evening Beale pe all i 
you became “seriously in- | Nov. 6, in the Monroe Storeet Meth- sha Webb. 
volved’’ with my* husband. |odist Church in Lapeer. e¢ *# ®t 
What you want? A medal? The Reverend Raymond R. Lamb Badges awarded were Foot 
You admitted to ‘saying ‘‘yes’’ |performed the ceremony in the Traveler Group Musician, Dog 
to a dinner date. And you ad- (presence of the immediate fami- and Cat: Hospitality Skater ° 
mitted saying ‘‘yes’’ to a few |lies. Mrs. Cornwall, formerly Mrs. pao Seomnal : 
other suggestions. Kathleen Lane, chose a mint ~~ 7 
An uhmarried woman who | wool jersey two-piece dress. Her! . 
accepts a date with a marfied |flowers were bronze cymbidium paca , ace Canes ee 
man, and doesn’t know what j|orchids. Mr. CornWall is the son eler and Journalist ’ 
he is after, has no business [of Mr. and Mrs. Milton. Cornwall ; CUT and SET 
NONE 
HIGHER 
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a pe meagan meme oe See NE i Aes Riel a Layman Was attired in a blue gown| muscles wil] do wonders for a H¢ ) ] j ; \\ ( »¢ ) j SHOP 
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  After a reception at the home. of my from bulging in an unflat- 
            | . ‘a parents, the cou-| tering way. For . abdominal 78/2 North Saginaw Street — 7 4 immediately for a weddi muscle toning, your . 
g BE A CALENDAR GIRL rip through the Smoky Mountains. back and. your legs tomets- ] “Qvar Banley's- RE BBG | , They will also visit the, bride’s par. =< Then swe tasting te — ¥ is Cobtttinet 
See These Amazing Results av | pale es os |   
  Charlene James “Miss U.S.A.” 
Asquired through the 
HOUSE of VENUS METHOD 
Before After 3 Months ' : +. ¢ ® 
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For a Course Individually Designed for You 
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CALL FE 4-9582 
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  “a 
  {   
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959 
| Generous Firms Help Equip   
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. 
County's Sheriff Department By DICK SAUNDERS 
Through the cooperation of pub- 
lic minded area firms and fore- 
sight on his own part, Oakland 
County Sheriff Frank W. Irons to-| 
day heads one of the best equipped 
sheriff's departments in the na- 
tion 
* * * 
Aside from five recently pur- 
chased new patrol cars, the de- 
partment has been given patrol 
boats, an ultra-modern rescue wag- 
on, a pickup truck, two genera- 
tors, a mobile disaster unit, and 
NEW MOBILE DISASTER UNIT 
Sheriff's Department mobile disaster unit 
te lephones transmitter and receiver, 
bag 
   in the water safety division up truck donated by General Mo-|receive and broadcast on every 
Newest and biggest aes mod. tors Truck and Coach Division wave length presently used in 
ern additions is a_ mobile dis- The truck carries a gas-pow- aercrnga the aie yore be" al 
aster unit, an imposing 20-foot ered geperator which supplies SUU™ ntal in er isolated by 
trailer and pickup truck. electrical power for the trailer. jtornadoes {loods explosions, and 
re : ; = other disasters 
“With its fabulous communica- This enables the unit te swing AA into full-time operation in any. ; tions equipment we could handle veiitle area Where there is: be It could be used to contact state 
about any widespread disaster electrical power. police, construction firms, DPW’'s 
saris m tik ee and taxicab companies imaginable Irons said “It's the best equipped mobile f 
*- * yadisaster unit in the state.” says) The big transmitter is supple- 
The new $8,000 trailer was dot ‘Donald K- Kratt. head of th mented by 12 mobile phones, 
nated to the department by the ~® EG hs PSPOE, DS) OF OE Mires permanent phones, a tOn- 
Detroiter Mobile Home Co., of St. department's safety division 
Louis, Mich. It is pulled by a pick- 
    
  
  This is the Oakland County 
Equipped: with radio 
walkie-talkies and many Mich 
7 
> 
  
. TRYING IT OUT — Oakland 
Frank W. Trons (right) beans”   Pontiac Press Phote 
County Sheriff State Bank. Safety Division head, Sgt. Donald K. 
over his new Kratt, relays information by means of one of the 
mobile disaster equipment unit. Here he is unit’s three phones donated by the Michigan Bell 
shown in the trailer testing some of the ex- Telephone Co. Deputies have been specially 
pensive radio equipment donated by the Com- trained to be able to operate equipment in the 
munity National Bank of Pontiac and Pontiac 
Ss sn I 5 
MAXIMUM MANEUVERABILITY—This: new 
1960 GMC model LV4000 announced today fea- 
tures a: 72-inch steel tilt cab with setback front 
maneuverability and extra axle for maximum   20-foot trailer 
r 
front-end loading. Models with these cabs have 
gross vehicle: and gross: combination weights 
ranging from. 19,500-52,000. pounds and _. 35,000- 
76,000 pounds, respectively. ‘ 
a 
\ $ f Containing a radigset which can! | necting switchboard, a walkie- 
talkie radio, and a 60-foot alum- inum antenna which be 
raised in seconds. can 
The modern radio equipment was 
donated by the 
tional Bank of Pontiac 
State Bank 
* * * 
A four foot’ refrigerator 
and two-burner range are 
cluded 
operation within 15 minutes and Community Na- 
and the 
Pontiac 
cubic 
also in 
The trailer can be in full 
has been offered for use to every 
pohee ageney in Michigan 
The department has had many 
inquiries about the unit from out- 
side departments. 
Also adding plenty of emergency 
spark to the sheriff's department 
will be a diesel-powered generator   
arriving this week to .be placed 
in the basement of the Oakland A VETERAN'S FRIEND — Fred S. Galloway Pontiac Press Photo 
County Jail. (left), director of the Oakland County Depart- be one of Galloway's last interviews as he pre- 
* * ; * , ment of Veterans Affairs since 1953, interviews pares to retire from Oakland County Dec. 31 
The generator will immediately . ee — : 
: eteré arry R. Strickler ¢ a ct after 15 years of service 
be—pttt +tise—tn the event of a veteran Harry R. Strickler about a claim. It will afte years :     
    
Pontiac Press Phetes 
other devices to co-ordinate disaster work, the trailer was donated 
to the department by the Detroit Mobile Home Co. of St. Louis, 
+ 
Dag Will Leave 
Envoy in Laos Risks Russian Protest 
by Calling Ex-Premier | 
of Finland to Join Him. 
UNITED NATIONS 
—U.N. Secretary 
Hammarsk)jold NY 
General (AP) 
Dag 
risking another 
Soviet protest, will leave a Finnish 
U.N_ official 
as his in rebel-ridden Laos 
personal representative 
Hammarskjold, now visiting the 
Indochinese kingdom, called ex- 
Premier Sakari Tuomioja of Fin- 
land to join him and remain 
up to four weeks in after 
the secretary-general leaves next 
weekend to return to U.N. head- 
| quarters to 
Laos 
* * * 
Tuomioja is executive secretary 
of the U.N. Economic Commission 
for Europe, in Geneva 
Officially, Tuomioja is to study 
the eeonomic situation of Laos and 
the little country’s needs in U.N 
aid. But the Laotian government 
hopes his presence will serve as 
ja restraining influence on Com- 
munist rebels 
U.N. headquarters said Ham- 
marskjold had sent for Tuomioja 
+“after—diseussions with -réepresent-+ 
fatives of the Laos government, | 
and in the light of previous studies 
ef the problems-Laos_is facing 
A fact - finding subcommittee of 
the U.N. Security Council spent 
almost a month in Laos in Sep- 
tember and October, It reported 
ithat Communist North Viet Nam 
|had supplied arms to the Laotian 
lrebels but saitf it found no ‘evi- 
idence to back-up.the Laotian gov- 
lernment’s charges that North 
|Vietnamese troops had crossed 
ithe border to fight with the rebels. 
Hammarskjold went to Laos last 
week for an independent personal 
linvestigation at the government's 
invitation 
Minister Honors 
Wife's Memory: 
‘Church as Usual 
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A 
i}Church of Christ preacher deliv- 
ered his regular sermon Sunday 
‘less than-.two hours after his wife’ 
died. 
“There was nothing else I could 
do for Dottie, It just seemed the 
best thing to do,’ he said. 
Macks Wayne Craig had been) 
called from Sunday School when 
Mrs. Craig, 35, took a turn for the | 
worse in her long fight with can- 
‘cer. When he got home, she was 
idead. 
An elder had been asked to 
ipreach in his place, but Craig's) 
two sons, 1} and 7, and daughter, | 
3, were in the congregation. He 
returned to the churth and asked! 
fo preach as usual and -that wy 
lahnouncement. be made of 
| wife’s death until he had left with 
ithe children after ‘the service. 
  joperate on a car major electrical failure. It is ca- 
pable of supplying enough electric- 
ity to maintain lighting, refrigera- 
tion. the huge main desk radio 
transmitter and receiver, and oth- 
er electrically powered items 
* * * 
big generator is 
by General Motors 
Division in Detroit 
* * * 
Last May the department 
given a sleek Pontiac statton wag- 
on, converted for use as a rescue 
wagon, by Pontiac Motor Division 
The $6,000 vehicle, equip 
with oxygen, an inhalator, first 
aid kits, fire extinguishers, and 
specialized equipment for remov- rhe 
nated 
Engine being} do 
Diesel 
wus 
4ng—persdns—pinned-in-or-under — 
wrecked cars, saw a lot of life- 
saving use throughout the sum- 
mer months, 
The Paragon Bridge & Steel Co. 
of Novi furnished a $1,000 transis- 
tor police radio for the car, de- 
scribed by Kratt as the ‘‘police- 
man’s dream.”’ 
* * * 
The radio has a transmitting and 
receiving range of 100 miles. The 
only radio of its kind in use by po- 
lice anywhere in Michigan, it can 
ttery with the; 
‘motor off for seven consecutive 
days and nights 
ay a 
Defector 
Denounces 
Capitalism 
MOSCOW (UPI)—Lee Oswald. a 
20-year-old. former U.S. Marine, 
Says he will never return to the 
United States because ‘‘] could not 
be happy living under capitalism.”’ 
° * * * 
“I saw my mother always as a 
worker, always witb less than what 
we could use."’ he said in an in- 
interview. His home is in Fort 
Worth, Texas 
“In the Marine Corps I ob- 
served the American military -in 
foreign countries, what Russians 
would call military imperialism. 
“I was with the occupation forges 
in Japan and occupation of a coun- 
try is imperialistic when you 
live with this for three years you 
get the impression things aren't 
quite so right.’ 
* «* * 
He said his father died before 
he was born and that his mother 
worked to support the family. He 
said he had a happy childhood with! 
the usual amount of friends and 
plaved football “and “basehall ‘inj 
high school 
a 
PAYLOAD UP — This 1960 GMC DF700 ~ 
unveiled today has a 48   inch aluminum tilt cab, 
and is designed to, provide nearly a ton more 
payload. 2 featured in the 48-inch cab series County Veterans’ Aide 
to Retire on Kasy Street . 
By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. street—207 Easy St. North in Port “Everyorfe wishes he could get 
Fred S. Galloway will soon be! Chartotte, Fila.” on easy street,” Galloway, 67, 
on Easy street + His many friends, veterans he | duipped. ‘“Now I've made it 
Friends of Oakland County's’ has helped, and business associates} .. * * tf 
veterans affairs expert cast in- smile and then step forward to} Service could well be Galloway's f i . 
quisitive glances when he makes wish Ga]loway well as he ap-| middle name. 
this announcement. They wonder proaches the end of his 15-year) Since the early part of World 
how he suddenly came into sO tenure with Oakland County. , war veterans from the depart- 
much money ae | far—veterans from the depart- 
“I'm dead serious,’ Galloway Director of the Department of| ment’s main office in'the County 
I are finally going to live on Easy retiring Dec 31 
| 
Irish Diplomat 
Tells of Grief _ss swine vin vera x |Korean conflict—ever since. 
John J. Hearne and Son JOINED COUNTY Royal Oak foresaw, in 1942, the 
problems returning veterans would 
jface. So it established an office 
of veteran affairs, unique at the 
time. Galloway was appointed to 
|head it. 3 Young Men 
in Jail Gain 
on Milk, Pills 
MARSHALL «®—Three young 
men sentenced to solitary con- 
finement and diets of bread, milk 
water and vitamin pills all) to Aid Family Following | On Nov, 1, 1944, he joined the 
gained weight — one as much 3 : county as assistant to Dr. Morgan 
as 29 pounds Youth's Car Accidert F  Sipie, then director of the ~*~ * * ouncil-of Veterans Service, which 
Darwin E. Farr. 23, Wyman |! COURTLAND, Va. (AP)—From/handied veterans affairs before 
Short, 18, and William Ejinhardt, the pulpit of a small Negro coun- Oakland County pioneered _for a 
17, all of Battle Creek, were re- try church. an Irish diplomat has ate law allowing counties to 
leased from the Calhoun County | ~ ‘ " P lestablish veterans departments. 
Jail here Saturday. All had been expressed deep sorrow for the|The law went into effect in 1953. 
sentenced by eircuit court Judge death of a woman hit by his son's The Ontario-born county offi- 
Alphonse Magnotta Farr to automobile | cial estimates his office has since 
45 days for attempted embezzle * * * | counseled some 50,000 veterans 
ment. Short to 45 days for break John J Hearne, Irish ambassa- | and their dependents in matters 
ing and entering in the night, dor to the United States, told an) of filing for claims and pensions. 
and Einhardt to 25 days for overflow congregation of more | _ 
breaking and entering than 500 at Zion A.M.E. church) ‘Eight years ago I discovered 
~*~ *« *° Sunday his government “will do|the widow of a Civil War veteran 
everything in its power’’ to help|in. Royal Oak through tracing a 
56.\death claim of a World War I 
Galloway recalls. Farr weighed 189 pounds when 
he went to jail. He weighed 209 the family of Jossie Hamlin, mp when released and was barely She was struck down on a Wash- |veteran, 
able to squeeze into his civilian |™8ton street last week by an auto, ; * as * , clothing and go home driven by Hearne’s son. David, 21.. That's ‘the oldest veteran's case 
© tt &t ee he has ever handled, he added 
Short and Einhardt each gained The yqung man, who claimed * * * 
diplomatic immunity, said he hit} There have been some Spanish- 
Mrs. Hamlin, a widow, while try-|American War veterans, many 
ing -to avoid another pedestrian. |Still from the first world war dur- 
Ambassador Hearne was invited|ing which Galloway served as a 
to the pulpit by the Rev. M. D \““buck private in the rear ranks” 
Nathan, who assured him that\of an engineer company;  thou- nine pounds 
Dutch School Children 
Give Swallow Lift South 
ROTTERDAM (UPI) School “Our People do not have any ill/sands from World War II and an 
children found a barn swallow Will, It was just an accident—jequal number from the Korean 
cena fran cahaneion an; its something that couldn't be affair. ~ 
way south and decided to give e" “ * ¥ “We still find that many vet- 
nature an assist licane Gad hk oe eee + erans don’t realize what benefits *e a 8 8 = e | | await them either from the state - * * * first to pass the casket. They left} or federal government,” Gallo- 
way said. 
His office in a year’s time proc- 
esses about 2% million dollars in 
claims and pensions to Oakland 
veterans. The bird was turned over -to of- : \the church by limousine as pall-| ficers on the ship ‘‘Sheldelloyd”’ bearers moved the casket to the | 
200 «feet from and is now on its way to Africa by! graveside. 
church the | 
sea instead of air 
* * * 
He said there’s probably no state 
which is as ‘“‘generous and gra- 
cious" as Michigan is in efforts 
to assist veterans. 
SORE SPOT 
A very sore subject pops up now 
and then It’s the often contem- 
iplated mortgaging of the $50 mil- 
llion Veterans Trust Fun. Gallo- 
jway is against it. 
As the great-grandfather (the 
Galloways had five daughers and 
five sons) prepares to pack up   
_ | the family’s belongings from 
their home at 2014 N. Connecti. 
j cut St., Royal Oak, veterans 
groups are arranging parties to 
fete the outgoing director. 
Because veterans have been his 
life, the likes nothing better than 
to chat with them. Royal Oak 
i\VFW Post 1669 is holding a testi 
monial dinner for him tonight at 
its hall. 
j * * * 
“I'm not retiring for the purpose 
lof going into seclusion and dying,”’ 
|Galloway stafed. .“‘I'm thinking of 
compiling material‘on all the bene- 
fits due all war veterans and pos- 
isibly having somebody publish a 
book on it.”’ | 
  © 
‘No 2-Comb Flat for Edd 
~.{ | HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Actor *@» |Edd (Kookie) Byrnes{ noted for 
“ |his nearly constant hair combing 
are the DL and DFR3000s. “These models have [had this explanation’ last night 
stabilized air rides instead of the leaf spring | when he denied rumors he was 
suspensions used in the 7000 series engaged: “Man, 4. can't afford 
two combs."’ . : 
: hor ¥ a santies on. his weekly PV--seres, ——- 
     4    
   
   
                      
     
    
   
      
                    
                     tive thu nh 
Grain Prices. 
CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET 
CHICAGO, Nov. 16 (AP)—Open today. 
Mar. .2 37% 
~  @enecces 2.02% May cove. -eee 15% 
Mar 2.06% Jiy. eecoce: Cu 
May soves- SEEM BA, o-....--. 
dly. « as 182% ° avs 
Sep. 1.85% Dec. viru Loe 
Mart 1.37% 
Dec 2.13% May -....... : ot 
Mar. <..-:- 1.173—- sty. * Me May 1.19% LARD ‘arama! 
Jily 1.21%» oe nee 
Sep 1.17% Mar. . 9.07) 
MOY) cceecvesce 9.22 
Dec, os.... 78% 
  
lron Ore Stock 
  «4 & « « a ee 
a4 AOS ear ere SEES ogee 4 al rete atest .— = ea woe 
a al ~ = 
& 
  
  
The following are top prices 
covering sales of locally grown 
produce brought to the Farmer's 
Market by growers and sold by 
kage lots. 
Quotations are furnished by the 
                
9.10/Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 
Thursday. 
Detroit Produce 
FRUITS 
    
    
  
      MARKETS Market Mixed, 
   
  Trading Active 
NEW YORK # — A few -vide 
moves featured a narrowly mixed 
stock market early today. Trading 
Was moderately active. 
Key stocks moved from fractions 
to about a point. Some speculative 
lissues went 3 or 4 points either 
        
    
  
        
          
old rebel, would liked to have 
been among the early . morning 
hunters. 
The last surviving’ veteran of 
the Civil War discussed the new 
deer season with a son shortly 
after nibbling on barbecued pork 
ribs while celebrating his 117th 
birthday. 
The former Confederate forage 
master was 117 Saturday but the 
party was délayed until Sunday 
so some 100 descendants—includ- 
ing eight of 10 children’ — could 
help celebrate. * 
Several hundred visitors paid 
their respects to the old: soldier 
at the little northwest Houston 
home where Willie Mae Bowles, a 
daughter, has cared for him for 
five years. 
Williams had very little to say 
of 
rived and joshed his father into     
  B. W. said he and his father 
jhunted many times on horseback 
from 1933 until 1943 near the fam- 
ily farm at Franklin, about 135 
miles northwest of Houston, 
“I’m leaving at 4 a.m., so you 
just get out of this bed and come 
with me,” the son said, 
“I'm tired staying here,” Wil- 
liams said. ‘‘I don’t feel bad and 
I can walk. I don’t have any 
coat.” 
An American Legion band sere- 
naded Williams from the lawn 
with ‘‘Dixie,”” ‘‘Casey Jones” and 
‘Waiting For the Robert E. Lee.” 
Williams had requested loud 
music, lots of people and the 
pork ribs for. his birthday. 
Beatrice Bielamowicz, the baby 
among five living daughters, |= 
helped serve the ribs.     
Samuel Seaton, 494 N. Johnson 
St., did not have $330 stolen from | 
a wallet in his room, as he had! 
reported to Pontiac police Thurs- 
day. Seaton notified police he 
found the money which he had 
misplaced. 
Two clocks, a table radio, deer 
skin jacket, .22 caliber rifle, mis- 
cellaneous clothing and $10 in 
silver were reported stolen Sun- 
day by thieves who broke into the 
home of Bliss Evans, 3271 Liver- 
nois Rd., Avon Township, accord- 
ing to Oakland County sheriff's 
deputies. 
Pre-Holida yee 10% off 
ck up new 
               
  ‘US.-Russ Pact Herter Uraes 
Says They Must Agree 
on Ways to Avoid Any 
Nuclear Warfare 
NEW YORK (AP) — Secretagy 
of State Christian A. Herter said 
today Communist and free world 
countries must agree on ground 
rules to keep their rivalry from 
eventually exploding. into nuclear 
war. 
‘That is the main task for the 
negotiations that lie in the months 
and years ahead,’ he said. 
Herter set his goal in a speech 
prepéred for a National Foreign 
Trade Council meeting. 
  Armada Builder Gets 
Fire Hall Contract 
WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP — | 
Raymond Ziemann of Armada 
Township will build an addition to 
the Washingten Township Fire Hall 
on Wicker street, Washington. 
~*~ * 
His low bid on the addition, to 
measure 28 by 34 feet, was $4,064. 
Work starts tomorrow or Wednes- 
jday, 
: x « * 
Supervisor R. Eugene Inwood 
said the addition will house the 
four pieces of equipment at that 
fire hall. 
Santa Nixed in Cuba_- 
HAVANA, Cuba (UPI) — Santa 
Claus is un-Cuban and won't be 
welcomed this Christmas by Fidel   
  
    
  
  
          
  
  Tiding in Sunday was struck by) 
another car on Grand River near 
|Farmington road. 
* * * 
Terry Lotz, of 26215 Powers Rd., 
was taken to the Redford Medical 
Hospital. His mother, Nila Lotz, 
and the driyer of the ~other car, 
Clarence Daniel Ward of Detroit, 
were also taken to the hospital for   
  ‘Kansas Assn. of Wheat Growers. 
{He was a past president of the 
National Wheat Growers Assn., 
president of the Garden City 
Equity Exchange, a director of the 
Consumer’s Cooperative. Presi- 
dent Eisenhower appointed him in 
1954 to the Federal Farm Credit 
Board. Clutter declined reap-   
  
  
  
  
        
  
  
Northrup fart, brought in more 
equipment to force mud down. 
Encrusted with mud, the tail rig 
presented a grotesque sight from | 
nearby Highway U.S. 112. State 
police and sheriff's deputies, fear- 
ing the possibility of an explosion, 
kept traffic moving at a fast pace 
and banned sightseers.     
  pointment two years later.       
    
  
                   
  
  
    
  
CASH MARKET 
78 N. SAGINAW: ST. 
  Apples, Delicious, bu- ...........+ $3.50; Way. - Herter expressed confidence 
3: rnment; which: also 
. 3 360 The market was uneven from that on some fundamental issues, igeeles. —- instead of 
+++ 2 )9| the start with the ticker tape which he did not identify, “We pines as Christmas trees 
| as Apples, cider. ¢-€Ai. CABO .....6c0ees Ley late briefly. After a week of can find a common language be-| OO 
see Pears. Bosc. bu. .......... teeeeeee 25 doaen stocks were avail- cause we have a common inter- 
VEGETABLES st.”” able - at marked-down prices. est. 
bs + pesaessecsee Z , * * * { e . . 
Seared! Breck, Bests, No, doe. beh es He noted that’ Soviet Premier} Pilgrim Holiness Foreign Imports and \csbeage, Gury. i." Nikita Khrushchev has spoken of ° . Cabbaj aro ay , E = “ 
All-Rail Shipments Cabbagé Sprouts. ba... apap coer ee lla pail ONLY MOONSTRUCK — This device, dem- : pan aa lol gi Rea taegh ate eg all Church . 
Carrots, dos. behs. ..-.-.........00 2 sania a at Scilk the date onstrated at the Lewis Research Center of the per minute in every possible direction. It will be | ™0n eee : 4 "4 ne ae | 
CLEVELAND #—With a break! See sek: ees : neice ta: mee of a proxy fight National Aeronautics and Space Agency, is de- _ used to train the seven pilots in NASA's man-in- fice ast-West ideological con Baldwin at Fairmount 
in the weather for Great Lakes |Pennel, dos. pail sienrvnavertss *-- 1 Mlto control Alleghany, the holding signed to simulate conditions of space flight. In space program, Project Mercury. The man at “It will take courage of a high| Rev. Melvin Straight 
shipping and the aid of imported|Leeks, dos. beh” 1.75 company for New York Central. the center is the pilot, strapped to a contour right stands on a ramp surrounding the device order and strong nerves over a’ , : 
ore and all-rail shipments, the steel my fog - =e we - * te chair. The machine spins at up-to 50 revolutions to show which way is up. long time to construct a new re- Pastor 
industry expects to have enough|Feriey Row. gor phe.” 2°95] In delayed openings, Magmal I _ lationship between the antagonis- iron ore for near capacity opera- Pak, dos. .. . 2.25 y tic systems,”’ he said. 
ti , : Parsnips, ¥2 bu. .......6.-.--. : 1.15|Copper rose 3 to 55% on 2,300 shares ‘ ’ eb that * he iF clon 
- Magazine reported today Radishes, black. %s ‘bu. ......--- 1-$$| and Motorola jumped 4% to 146% Back From‘Western-Wars’———______— ee = ‘on ere a Rally : 
* * * , re i ae — 1-$¢)on 1,100 shares. Universal Cyclops ‘less than this immense and long- Missionary Y 1 ; » Ted, **)35| dropped 2% to 46 on 1,000 shares. : The metalworking magazine said Gaunagia. te. ow woah 1h term project on which we are now 
Aa wl a ct iB me Ot in nett LO OC nters Labor rena" tal iT million tone od that con-|Sgussh Dutternut, bu.” 1.35) jower, U.S. Steel and Jones & = * * NOVEMBER 17 and 18 
sumption would eat up 59 million Seuash Hubbard, a. 14 Laughlin dropped about a point Herter cautioned that East-West) TUESDAY 7:00 P.M 
tons, leaving an 18-million-ton cush- - ; each. Rails were very cma By The Associated Press dent and Congress next year, Ken-| ‘My second indictment is at (ae will continue to be , — 
GREERS mixed, Automobile issues were Ir- rugged ‘‘despite any ground rules! Slides Following Evening Service 
ton. nedy said, could mean the surviv- least as serious. If they knew the|U8® |Cabbage, No. 1, du. .. satceraccenesoeh Ch ] nd Ford rose Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of| > hanges.” | 
More scrap — which is in good |Callard, No. 1, bu. 1.$0|regular. Chrysler a . New York entered another power-|&! of freedom all around the globe. |facts, the people would never con-| OF exchange bo 
supply — will be used in the [Male PU oss 2.00| slightly while General Motors) 1" political arena today after * ok * ‘done policies which are placing us| Khrushchev makes’ no net Wednesday, Nov. 18 
open hearth furnaces te stretch a ba ; 4 was off a fraction. spending four days touring the| The administration's tight-mon- behind the Communists in nearly apa his ultimate aims, He 
out iron ore stocks, Steel sald. (Turnips, bu. .......0.-.....00.004 3.00 _ © Ff Western strongholds of Vice Pres-|ey policies drew criticism from/@l! fields except consumer "| = Service 2:30°P.M. 
The Great Lakes ore fleet, tied SALAD GREENS eee: Electric ag ident Richard M. Nixon, Sen. Johnson, These have pushed] forts.” ~* * 
anced more a “ up by the steel strike, started Endive, commen. GOB: éeescccicss “ oe eral re a m we * * the cost of money up to a point| id E . S vi 7:30 P.M 
++ 1.35! point apiece. United Air Lines was ; ; small-desi - | issues vening vervice /- 4a. 
the U's. Supreme Court. decislon| lees 144|down about a point. _Recteleler, who promises 10 at|frtyery and consumers are fin/weekend politicking. included an Stee rike Ba upholding a Taft-Hartley injune- Gains of about a point were 15 whether he’ jan tc the Re ing it very difficult to conduct old theme—peace and prosperity! REV. E. K. PURCELL 
tion sending the Steelworkers back Poultry and Eggs posted for Martin Co. and Repub-| \ubjican presidential nomination, their affairs,” he said in a talk|—and a new one—beatniks. and 
to the mills for an 80-day cooling lic @viation. Boeing gained a frac-|+ neq his attention to labor and taped for Texas radio stations. | Sen. Thruston B. Morton Du U U 00 
‘off period. DETROIT POULTRY tion. id 1 the annual convention Symington, addressing a shield [ase the Republican national | REV. ROGER BASSETT 
& « * ound fo. Nov. 13 taPi—Prices per if son-Jackson dinner in Oklahoma!chairman, said domestic prosper-| 1] Foreign Missionaries 
o.b. Detroit for No. 3 quality of the New York State AFL-CIO The locks at Sault Ste. Marie, poultry: in Buftalo City Saturday night, indicted what ity and the keeping of world peace] National Products Skid 
which link Lake Superior with the plieery pe hens type brat oe New York Stocks : he called two tragic policies of the) would be the major 1960 issues. seie . h Everyone Welcome 
lower Great Lakes, will be kept/#7ers $:4,,ie whites 11-18; Rarsed * *_* administration, | Gov, Williams accused Republi-| 6 Billion in 3 Months; 
normal Dec. 15/382; turkeys Silary’ type "young. Mens|Aiied Crh c2cL1n8e Relioee 221 deg] While reports said he dented) «First is their policy of|cans of behaving like beatniks.| . n beyond. the ngth eport Sti 
eal date to allow the ore car-|*-™¥** ae ey ee ee ee es et eee Nixon stre in the West, strength through weakness,” he adding: ‘“‘The one good thing| P —— 
riers more time to get supplies DETROIT EGGS Alcon “-.....: 97.4 Kimb Clk :... e¢.¢)none of these dents showed in the) .aid, ‘‘standing idly by while over about some beatniks—their protest 
to the steel. mills. a £0. vA Gano. 483 LOM Glass "sss ies weekend's major political action.|,ai¢ a million citizens are forced jagainst senseless conformity—the| WASHINGTON (UPD—A govern- BUDGET EXPERT 
= wash: gg Nae pe ag Be tt, taree Am ree $83 Lib MeNa **: 10.8 The bobaogie ee ani out of work for months.” !Republicans have scrapped.” ment report showed today that 
It is doubtful, however, 3a% medium 28; smell 35; grade B Dood t pe te Jogience met ngeles an : the steel strike hurt the economy 
er the ships will be able to op- |3¢: browns Orage A large 38: medium/Am Motors"... 90.8 Lone 8 Cem’. 324\elected Edward S. Shattuck of Los more than had been believed but 
erate beyond Jan. 1 because of receipts | of _sovernment C68t\Am omen 2. 38:7 teriharg "ss a1? Angeles, a strong Nixon man, as t - n ains it still forecast a record output of | 
ice conditions in the upper Lakes. me Am Tel & Tel. 17.4 Low & Nash .. 73-6) chairman. . W h Ss k M t goods and services this year. | 
Stee!’ mill operations last week|iarge  38%-36: large 34 “33.” megiust 24 Armes BU... ee ay D Bir $83| Democratic maneuvering for the ea EI-1C ou The report, issued by the com-| 
hit an estimated 40 per cent of|dronne—Grade aire ares ya: laces AMchtwon.°,: 28.1 Monsen Ch’... $0.3/ Presidential nomination also was G t 2 d Bli d T d merce department, said that the 
capacity, up 27 points from the|B large ss-3. ait * Aveo Comp'..:. 3 Mont, Werd ::: §24/evident. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-(77@© ya! I1ZZaI OQAY (Gross National Product (GNP), 
vious week, the magazine re- Seth Stee! .... 52.1 Motorola 146.4) Mass), Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson skidded from a $484,500,000,000 an- 
verted Production was estimated ~ yee mee. 3t3|(D-Tex), Gov. G. Mennen Wil- k Montan: d Kan-|nual rate in April, May and June § ore Warn 15, 434 Met Cech R @34\liams of Michigan, Sen. Stuart) DENVER, Colo. (AP) — The\the Dakotas, Montana and Kan- to $478,600,000,000 for July, August 
at 1,133,000 ingot tons. ave srist My .. a3. Nat Dairy .. 484) Gvmington (D-Mo), and Gov. Ed-| weather - sick Rocky Mountains|sas. Blowing snow reduced visibili- f arkercer. 
Calum ‘x. a wet ‘Teed “aoe mund G. Brown of California—all i anion Great Piains coped ty to near .- ” aa localities. |2n<' S°Pt x * * | ; o-coeP ae x possible candidates — made talks w blizzard today, 
M agnetic Tape ° Capital Airt .. ng Ho, Am AV .- oe issues for 1960 Sub-zero temperatures were The national production fot the | 
, fo C f ? Carrier Cp eee = ally - discussing the es for . nal-wind guile and #0 Rasa aligpirg i aareg 32 | July-August-September period had 
, hh. A W Air 21.3 x * * charted ow zero at Butte and -29 a tod ot | 
Has Many Uses len UEQOS* Cher & Ob :., 683 Pann 1 +--+ 4$°] In addition, a move started jn|™-p-h. were clocked in parts Of| Helena, both in southwestern pg mpg Masirgter al The | 
| ot bay Mea Si Lag ‘ ‘. 15.5] Wisconsin to enter a stand-in-can- tana; -23 Lewiston, Mont., and -14| hich be July 15, | orthe future ° os ae isteel strike, which began July U.S. Woman Claims |<iart 2quip -. 884 Pepsi Cole. 318! didate for Adlai Stevenson in the! at Sheridan in northern Wyoming.|*°° baited nine days ago by a| 
1)—Members . Colg Palm .... 37.4 - 27 _|state’s preferential primary. Ste-) The sharp temperature drop |faft-Hartley injunction. 
nS ae ee atau | castro Aide Lay Necr|tetq gis’: #2 Fail tts" $.tlvenson, the party's presidential - QU [J] amil prompted cold wave warnings for ‘ine, | sanes YOUNGER is « wisard tng on an international corre-| Death at Transfusion |SonumerP* : 3 Pure Oll ..:. 348\nominee in 1952 and 1956, has said eastern Wyoming, west and: cen-| Anticipating the strike, busl- 1 1) maxing tight budgets stretch 
secalencs without writing a word. Cont Cop aS . 49.2 SCouniis ‘su 1. 68 |he will not enter any primary. . . ltral Nebraska and northwestern] ®essmen taid in —_—? steel | enough to include vital insur- 
They use tape instead of sta- Fla. ( ies . |Gont Of... 46a Revlon... sr mere is a possibility of a three- Kansas, stockpiles last spring, giving the ance protection. And he repre. 
tomar’: MIAMI, Fila. aoe Frcs Copper - 227 oll Met... @2 |way Wisconsin tussle, for both | @ in ansas x & * economy a shot in the arm in J SO nee companies . « rm 
Reels of magnetic tape bearing|blood directly to. Maj. Camilo(Sem* PF! =: 12$ Reyar Dut... s03|Sen. Hubert H. | tumplrey (tt At Scottsbluf!, Neb.. the tem-| APT Nay vee est ned at an if Shourenie 20. if you want the = , ©. -noeee 48. * 35. may run in ; i r 
recorded — —— 4.000 Cienfuegos while the Cuban gov-|Dout Airs +. $03 St vg’ Pa : i the » sanexy.. " Find Four Shotgunned, peste er oto fog annual rate of §9,800,000,000 in J Provide adequate coverages ie 
larly back f among ernment — a widespread|Du Pont .....257 . Y | the spring. 
members of the group in 60 coun-| search for him Bast Kod... 98 Shell Ot) ...-. 31 4| In his address to the AFL-CIO Bound; Nothing Stolen |midnight. The temperature in Prin ; or see 
A ciggrighted tory in the Sun- Ei “Auto ":: $4 sinclair .... 50.3/convention, Rockefeller said an b Murd Denver fell 29 degrees in one hour} Businessmen used up their stock- 
s vias 1 toes 29.7 would solve uraerer Sunday night. iles in the summer by liquidatin; : physicians use the tape El & Mus ..., 11.2 yee rie economy y y nig piles s y liqu c 
a to exchange medital in- oe N “ Psa LlErie. RR San fou ny i: 20.1 the problem of automation. He Helena, Mont&na capital that|inventories, particularly steel re- James Younger 
sored peteasional meetings of.|e2vine Cient wegos lay apparently|Fireseme., «gta Bld Brand... 34g)s0id & Penile “| GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP)—Inj{o0k the brunt of a record storm str Crr oop.000 from. the Gross 1080 W. Huron St. ic | near ransfu we «... 320 - : farm home far off the beaten , Teported a ON, (Eee: 
ten are taped and dispatched half- desth Guring the t — Fruch Tra... 28 Std Ol wo’... 463; “The real problem is one of Sait of this vast wheat area four|SNow ‘depth with about six inches|National Product for the third FE 2-0219 
way around the world. — Gen Elec 62.1 Sevens JP... 9./transition, a transition which) mbers of a respected, well-to-/of new snow, quarter of the year, 
“The uses of tape in this man-| _ ” * to * os Gen Mit "2°°."34 an gg 6.4 “sages avoid human hardship,” do family were murdered over the x &* * _ * ed = * setae THE LIFE 
ner are unlimited,” says Harry| Cienfuegos, w isappeared ool & El . 2 Bwitt & Co. 41.4 weekend. The new storm dropped two to e net third quarter uction 
Sussman, manufacturer of mag-|Oct. 28 en route from = ae - 962 Tena Geo .:. 334 pent + trip took! Herbert Cutter, 48, his wife,(six inches of new snow over Mon-|Wsa partially offset by gains in| OF VIF GINIA 
netic tape equipment. to Havana in a light plane, was Geneese et fax O Oal ... 39:8 8 ; iy re Bonnie, 45, their daughter, Nancy tana, but all main highways re- | consumer spending, government RGIN 
“Recordings of meetings can be mourned by the Cuban govern- tebe Prod , 52.4 Pha par esas oe him to California, Oregon, e Mae, 16, and son Kenyon, 15, were} |mained open. Air travel -was|outlays and the country’s foreign Sj SINCE 1871 + mcHMOND. vinGunA 
distributed to merfbers unable to|ment Saturday. Gondtear 2° 4S84 Tran W Air... 19.4] mgton and Idaho. Although pcg bound hand and foot and gagged. /halted, but trains and buses mang|trade balance. 
attend. College lecture courses can) Mrs. Maris could not as ae Paige vo 23 ee = Ss = the|All were shot in the head. Clut- jaged to keep near schedule. — 
be made available to anyone, any-|reached for elaboration on herlot xe Ry. ths Undored . .... 31 a a Nixon supporters. Some|ter’s throat was slashed. ~*~ * * 
where, and perhaps more impor-/gtatements. She was described as/Qur"On* **.¢4 Unit Air Lin. 376] “tious admitted that Rockefel-| The victims were slain by a) The snow broke an Idaho Power COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE tant, pg Age be ee = a native of bye a ag por moe ie Unit Pruit 2.38 ‘er a wate a lot of friends,”|Shoteun. Neither the gun nor the Co. transmission line between) 
libraries students o -|mer medical techn in ad-| stk... 5 un G . 33 ee ee ith which Clutter’s throat: Bannock and Salmon in central = Ch. 48 weapon with w 
ture.” ing, Pa. Indust Ray .. He pid tsar . ae * * * ; was cut have been found. |Idaho near the Montana - Idaho) For 
* *& * inhead #1 -. a0 Gee oon: Democrats ae tee we fire a Nothing in the house was in dis-| border. Bannock was _ without] Less Money 
Marks P Pact The News said Mrs. Maris,|Imt Bus Mech 407 West Un Tel.. 46.1 the record of the Eisenhower = array. No valuables appeared to|power for more than 10 hours, 
arns reace wearing nun’s dress because it Int Nick...” 100° Werte ED tcl oe ministration, Sen. apes! » 8C-\be missing. Money which Nancy 
The giant statue “Christ of the|‘‘opened doors” went to ,Camp et dee Sa eee noe dressing @ etd ees giao had placed in an envelope for) ~s ; No 
Andes” on the border between Liberty near Havana after reports)int Biiver s. Yale eset gp rig Deseae he power, church lay on her bedroom dres- Oil Well Goes Wild Membership Fees 
Chile and Argentina commemo-|that ee in a Ial Crk Coal «. 34.4 Zenit Rad 117-4] prestige and standing of the ee . 
rates a 1902 pact that settled a|plane crash. 0 give |Johne Man... 496 bear. +--+** 291) Tinited States in relation to the| © on H | d F - border dispute between the two/blood for the major, whom she Communist world has declined.” said Mrs, Clutter, and Nancy ap on | § a e arm Terms 
countries, knew personally. or eee Election of a Democratic preei-/PATently were not molested sex M. E. Daniels Vera M. Daniels . nermplied by the Associated Press — a Democratic presi ally. He placed the time of death] HILLSDALE w — A work crew 
1 : 30 60 between 11 p. m. Saturday and 2/hoped today to cap a new oil well| 4 See ee aeag hoped today to cap a new ot well! Daniels tnsuranre Agency 
Week age x03. 02 doe sre a6 F { B 6 Two of Nancy's schoolmates, | [Geatening roar of natural gas two|f| 563 West Hurom Street FE 3-7111 
100 Descendants Help | igri: Si 8: Bt Bi FAIMINGION DOY, 0, hay” swat and Susan Kidwe mies eas of here. * oe 6, 6 235.8 . ound the ies: e girls cus- - 1989 low ...... 208.1 “127.1 93.4 211.5 h . . The gas shot 120 feet high but 
Old Vet, 117, Celebrate | 8 BE) 8) 85lHurt in Car Crash omar rote to churen with they Wis verted to the side Seser day through a pipe after a crew 
FARMINGTON — A six-year-old |"0Use Sunday Yor that purpose.|teean pumping mud into the well. : : , ” ® ® When no one answered their HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — White|in this bed, hadn’t you?” his son News in Brief Farmington boy was in the hospi- : x * * 
tail deer season opened in Texasjasked. “I remember when we ; knock, the girls entered the house. 5; opened L ms tal today with a possible fracture} Cijtter was a founder of the| McClure Oil Co. of Alma, which 
today and Walter W. Williams, the|used to hunt on horseback. of the leg after the car he was drilled the well on the Bertha 
  
| TUESDAY ONLY SUPER. SPECIALS   
BLADE CUT 
  
observation but released. 
A witness told Farmington police | 
that Ward’s vehicle struck the 
Lotz car after running a red light) 
road. 
now.|@ curb and smashed into a plate 
W|siass, window in the Van Lowes 
Hardware Store. 
The store was open but ‘no cus-   
vigorously. He did not stop when US. tourists to —— France, Great Britain, Italy, Ger- 
many and Switzerland in that 
  order. tomers were in it at the time of | 
  on Grand River and Farmington) 
|   Ward's car then crossed the 
other lane of traffic, bounced over | 
} 
to buying, merchandising 
_ experience: state salary desired. (Our employes are 
aware of this ad.) All replies held in strict confidence. 
Address box number 18, Pontiac Press. FURNITURE BUYER | 
AND MERCHANDISER 
Immediate opening in Pontiac furniture store for man 
not over 40 to assist owner with all the duties relative   and promotion. Write your 
  PORK CHOPS rs 29)   
TENDERLOIN 
  PORK ROASTS Jo   
LEAN LAYER 
  ‘SLICED BACON, 
     Es . otf, p * eal te OS ER rn ee ee ee ane ; ‘ 
              THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959   
  
     
  
    
      
    
      
  
          
          
  
    
      
  
    
    
  
              Today's Television Pr %f AY 9 AGHOVISION -¢ TOOTOMS Music World May’ Be Channel 2~-WIBK-TV = Channel 4—-WWJ-TV. —s- Channel 7—-WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV Next f T hi ad D ; fe “t : ) ai tor Third Degree TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS (7:30 (2) Cartoon Classroom, | TUESDAY AFTERNOON r 6:00 (2) Movie (began at 5 p.m.) (7) Breakfast Time. las: d is By EARL WILSON (4) News, weather, sports. (8:15 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. 12:00 (2) Love of Life. (7) Curtain Time 8:30 7) J G (4) Truth or-Consequencés, NEW YORK—Broadway's shuddering for the poor hep from : 7) Johnny Ginger. | (7) Restless Gun. the music world whom Washington quizders tag to be “the (9) Popeye. 9:00 (2) For Better or Worse. | . = . é 4) Bold J (9) On Safuri Charles Van Doren of the Payola Probe.” He may be one of 
6:25 (2) Weather. (eS eee (4) Jeolor) It Could Be You. iiss: Gating ihe task: 6:30 (2) News, Weather. (7) That Roh, : ; (2) Movie. (4), Californians (cont.) 10:00 (4) Dough Re Mi (9) Mary Morgan. He'll have to-explain why he favored (9) Hawkeye. 10:24 (9) Billboard. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. certain singers, nm songs, certain rec- 6:40 (2) News Analyst. 10:30 (9) Ding Dong School 12:50 (9) a ords—and his cut ef each—and he'll have (7) Sports. (4) Treasure Hunt ~ . |h@o* (2) Miss Brooks. to tell about his wealth, hidden and other- 6:45 (2) News. 10:55 (7) News. ps et Peyneeet. wise. He may be ruined. And yet he may (4) News. | A: 00 (2) I Love Lucy. Bingo. preve to be a part of a system that was . (7) News. (4) Price Is Right. | (9) Movie. pair ‘ Pipe 
7:00 (2) Markham. , (7) Lady. of Charm. /1:30 (2) As The World Turng ng on for years and years. 
(4) Death Valley Days. (9) To Be Announced. (T) Topper. | As far back as 1955, I wrote: “The music - (7) Rescue 8. su:30 (2) December Bride. 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. business has reached its lowest ebb yet with _ _ (9) African P atrol. (4) Concentration. 2:00 (2) Medic WILSON kickbacks and ‘payolas’ so common that 7: 30 7 ——— Party. fu: 45 (7) Detroit ToJay. pi Queen for a Day. many ethical people are heartsick. "Tis charged that there ae ie NG — in Court. |are only two or three publishers able to get records made (9) Million Dollar Mo vie. (4) Thin oo |without a payoff to somebody.” 
Drama: Bette Davis, Barry (7) Gale Storm. | * * * ‘Suflivan, Sohn Sutton - in if 3:00 (2) Star Showcase PAN MAIL: - “Dear Oil — Better get your drink names 
Payment on Demand,” ('51). (4) Young Dr. . Malone. | Straight. You had Ray Milland drinking a scotch Manhattan. 8:00 (2) The Texan \ (7) Beat the Clock. |There’s no such thing. If anybody wants to drink such an (4) Love and Marriage. (9) Movie. | ungodly mixture he should at least know what to call the po we — | 3:30 i. From Thése Roots. : damn thing. It’s a Rob Roy. Ordering a Manhattan made sels ee (7) Who Do You Trust? with scotch is like ordering a piece of apple pie made with ge Chairman Doubts He'll (2) Verdict Is Yours. Geren Stas MARRIES — Tele Revert AP Wirephets coaches.” Pred Wehrenberg, Fort Wayne ind. 8:30 “ ead pat — Ask! Any Leaislation 7 :90 (2) ter Day. son, 36, star of television's “Tales of Wells cent wedding.” It was his third marriage and the co. (4) es of Wells Fargo. . ” i ‘ ide’ 7 = : . 
*) Bowen Sue | ASK Any, Legislation in)" Hs cm Hch trent, | Fare” an Lala Mae Hard, 2 ot Vora, brie’ send The ceremony wat Prommed soc4ay, NOTES FROM WAY OUTSVILLE: Doris Dae (9) Movie (began at 7:30) Next Congress Term 1s 0) Sen | i ee the chick with all the bread, and her downcat, Jee Castro, p.m.) | 4:30 ay Ease of Night were making the scene with all the swingin’ mothers and 9:00 (2) Danny Thomas WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Fed-| — ; oa | dug Benny Goodman like somethin’ else. They split to (4) Peter Gunn, eral Communications Commission } oy oot Pessonallty Ice Cream May Be Mashed P se do the Copa gig where they were zonked out by the far-in - Bourben ee _ (FCC) expects to spend more than} 5:99 (2) Movie. OO | Nat (King) Cole. They cooled in a far-out corner. When : _ ps ye Lpariin ubilee. a year - oe pcbmigeriting mvestt-| (4) (color) George Pierrot. | é )? Doris cut out to the girlsville, leavin’ Joe solo, Nat slid over 
4) Theater aot pede ne s lniicion: = 19) Looney Tunes. S 1 e OO! and says, ‘What? What?’ Joe chirps ‘Waitin’ for my 
Adventure: Young married|tices : Prac-| §:39 (7) Rin Tin Tin chick.’ Just then Doris mushes back. Joe wails. to Nat, 
Adventure’ Young married) * *& * | ‘This is my chick, Doris, man!’ Yew!” . 
couple charter Adam Troy’s} Chairman John C. Doerfer said| , pe eae . —— schooner, The Tiki, to go on|he doubted the FCC would have! nary l auéa | a socal paces anaes sadaha can i Pou teh. Rebeoriar ‘onger TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Davy Karr claims an acting school f a second honeymoon in the/any legislative recommendations tim: twagie ee el ae cco the followup TV investi- | beer . ae into a’ glass that| is rerunning those TV quiz shows, to study technique. 
} * hope it will solve their mar- jdrawn up in time for the next + . | vestios ? igations is a check by New York/has been lined With a thin coat of WISH I'D SAID THAT: Dave Barry: says that show business riage problems. f Congress. ng ¢ ee & Shuste “session : {| ru {| | Does that frothy stein of beer Dist. Atty. Frank S. Hogan to de-| glycerine, me lted butter or soap. |is very insecure: “One day they’re putting your footprints in 
0:00 (2) Hennessey Comedy: De.| However, he said this did not have real foam? Is the pretty girl|termine if air ads are fraudulent. * * * ‘cement, next day you're mixing it.” 
linquent dentist Harvey SSF eagp ee See eee ee actually taking a bubble bath|Congressional committee mem-| yijady in the bubble bath is Hefty Walter Slezak’s doctor advised him to give up those ( gets in trouble but is saved take prompt action if the taves- Volcano Belches Lava/Are those lip-smacking cakes,)bers have the subject on their wearing a bra and tights beneath|intimate little dinners for four—unless he has three people | eis tigation turned up evidence of juicy roasts and succulent turkeys| agenda and the Federal Commun- % RR , / ee Senet Ses 6 | valet a existing laws and Smoke for 3rd Day ag 1 thing? * jications Commission includes ad Oe Mie suds. Also Unseen is the/ eating with hint... Teats eart,_beether. ich, . e real thing? S S aC/man who makes the bubbles with (Copyright, 1888) ( (4) Steve Allen (color). | Doerfer said it likely would be} [Into Hawaii Crater The answer, say | professional) methods on its new study of TVia hose connected to an air com-. — (7) Paradise (cont.) jafter the first of the year before jeri ee a Pa a/ Programming. ramen te their | Peso" , , an hearings on net- jlot of things— or a lot of ree SERIER EESRI Ler D d hy th ' § sae oy avon, Shuster. (cont) «|e at coeratnns_ and TY “| HONOLULU (AP) — Angry Kil! sons. SS lallring "scenes? “How do they cals ‘wuh’ the thek cg_ sneer, T'V_News and Reviews ten & . (4) ree leeks . lemme by congressional investi-|2Uea VOICanO belched streams 6 ~*~ *«& k& “| create ‘the Wlusions of realism for! ‘seem to erumble when cut? The! an oe : peep searing hot lava and sent a gray; w | pictorial displays in publications ] ‘D lI’ -H (7) Man With Camera. | gators. _tce |pall of thick smoke high into the idespread interest in the topic cad’ telovialtg? | cake has been sliced beforehand, p it eve Oo Lo ouse’ (9) Harbor Command. ‘aa the : has been an off-shoot development | then recoated with icing. 1:00 (2) News, Weather, Sports. | The commission announced last nar ‘te third rm eruption roared/trom the recent probe of TV quiz) A visit with Manhattan pho-) Those delicious roasts often! (4) News, Weather, Sports. | Wednesday that the inquiry would The 4.090-foot y —_—— show methods. There is, of eourse,|‘08Faphers, photo schools and stu- nave never been imside an ohh Ofters ood P er orn lalices (9) News, Weather, Sports. | be aimed at determining just what) ., | : vorano’s Kilauea! nothing unique about commercial | ‘9 technicans lifts the curtain On! Only their ends have been sea : , —— : Ik: crater showed little sign of f the wizard (7) Hockey. Tape: Detroit)/powers it has or might seek over aie its fiery t = photo methods on the airlanes,|S°M® © the at de over a studio hotplat. Red Wings vs. Chicago Black|the programming and advertising ee! of Li af cae bright| Most of the techniques are as a << *& * kt ke * By FRED DANZIG trouble—in the form of Hume Hawks. policies of the radio and television red-orahge in euticht: — gushed|*S ' advertising in magazines, _ That frothy foam on 1 beer could | The ice cream in the pretty -pic-,| NEW YORK (UPI) —‘‘A Doll’s|Cronyn—came along, she resorted 1:20 (2) Nightwatch T he a t er: stations. . from a 300-yard rift in the crater’ s — — — j ture may be mashed potatoes. House,’™ Henrick Ibsen's classic, hs a oe aco Musical: Fred Astaire, Joan) Jt said the investigation would into i The caramel candy may be a stu-|\came out as a split-level model |Cises monstra torment — : inner south wall into its pit some . ° i ; ; but after dealing With Cronyn, Miss Leslie, “‘The Sky's the Lim-| cover the quiz show frauds, |390 to 500 feet below. Tough on meoding (Mich. ) Students oe eee colored with axle|last night in NBC-TV's @0-minute ( , it.” (48). | “payola” (the accepting of bribes aie ; | Hallmark Hall of Fame production. | Harris — assumed — (9) Telescope, by. disc jockeys to play a partic- | Kijauea Iki—or "levee x * | The 81-year-old play, regarded roared into a magnificent final 1:30 (4) Jack Paar. ular record) and “‘offensive com- i aw Are ra tricks deceitfi? as the grand-daddy of all modern|5C®? of farewell to hubby and her . s O on the southeast side of Hawaii three children. } 
a markght ‘Theater. Mys practices fori to the public re Seg oad pint mreagemar ie 0 eS fy oe. coed She made the flash of insight j - o a 
aye slice-ol-infte sc ‘ tery: Joel McCrea, Evelyn| interest.” pagicte Pl gti Magia Then Eo nace ume pro-|examines the role of women in| completely believable. Kayes, _Relend - ulver '") Doerfer said witnesses at the|blasted up to 100 feet in the air) READING (UPI) —A high | tion. He listed one of them as ducer, of TV film commercials.|S0ciety and illuminates the prob-| | aig want to single out Miss Shoot Firyt,” ('S3). FCC hearings would include net-|before they tumbled into the mile-| school teacher, a native of Iraq, | lack of a “cooperative attitude” \"We only wish to show the Tyjlem through a series of quick-\Heckart for an especially brilliant TUESDAY MORNING work officials, legal and commu- |long, mile-wide crater. gave failing marks to three. | °Y Yatooma. ‘viewer the sponsors product in/OPening, quick-shutting dec scene with Cronyn. : ‘nications experts, civic and religi-| Honolulu Star-Bulletin reporter ey es Teena: x & * \the same light he would see it in and deeds. __ 
6:00 (4) Continental Classroom ous leaders, advertisers and show | Mark Waters, in a telephone call his “hi nd-t 2 Yatooma issued a sarcastic his own home.” | The TV production couldn’t | DIALING AND FILING: The :30 (2) Contenental §Classroom|business talent. ‘from the volcano site, said Sunday failing to — is “high stand-| statement saying “I wish to | This is not easy, the photogs) avoid using up about half of its | Jack Benny Show had good reason ) (color). x *« * | night, “One huge fountain of} ards in English and the school | thank the residents of the Read- \say. Food products sometimes) allotted TV time setting the |to pull out a repeat of an old : :50 (2) Meditations. | Rep. Peter Mack (D-Ill) said/jerupting lava is pouring tremen-| board asked the teacher to | ing Community School District jneed extra coloring or other aids) stage or getting the fat into the | James Stewart anniversary dinner ! 765 (2) On the Farm Front. Eaeneseding that some type of leg- ag ear ot molten rock into resign. for having appreciated the high (under brilliant, not ean ine Yuletime fire . sketch on CBS-TV last night: It's H 
(4) Today. lislation plus self-discipline in the|the floor of the crater.” a P standards of English teaching (A lot of photo values are also lost cti 1 it wag|Still a very funny piece. i (2) TV College. | industry itself is needed to prevent} He said, ‘Channels of glowing Ri ar Reercrep cae the corks which I had hope to execute in jin TV transmission. lee - paced gore tt ¢ 
(7) Big Show. ‘rigging of television quiz shows. (lava, which, at night look like the school system. My interest | “TV production is expensive.” | Diummer_ as Torvald. Helmer, -a}- Art Carney did a lair job es the   ————— streams of 24carat liquid gold,| @: Karl Yatooma, a young man} bo. been to teach the students |says another film executive. “We! . “ with four children and in his ede é self-centered, stern unfeeling hus-|stage manager in NBC-TV’s “Our drop 300 feet down the inner wall : : the fundamentals of English.’ (can't wait all day to cook a roast |band; Hume Cronyn as a pitiful,|Town” special Friday, although 
  
  
    
  
  
      
      
  
      
      
    
    
        
  
      
  
  
    
  
      
  
    
                        
  
    
            
                  
  
      
        
  
  
      
  
  
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‘ tt ’ bed of the pit third year of teaching, took his IW he + ambenoss he S eeee cae = pa case to the Michigan Education | Shopbell, a teacher for 20 ae to shoot as-fast as POS- desperate would-be dlackmailer;|was over-studied at times. The p Gin welsh on I fire.” Assn. (MEA). years, expressed doubt the |S!C- Eileen Heckart as a perceptive|real good acting job was turned knee : ; T Waters said he saw brilliant) The MEA assigned a field staff | Parents appreciated Yatooma’s | widow, and Jason Robards Jr. asjin by Kathleen Widdoes as Emily mystery play 1 : member to investigate standards. ‘Ch . Th ht |Helmer’s old friend, unrolied their|Webb. —— 7 7 7 white light sparkle in the pit when . i wee were —_— arming oug \characterizations im ely (al — - tunted scrub trees burst into sud- a paren a pressiv - * Gerdner j j sam Eats. Distt Supertntena Peet | big percentage of the pupils in | LONDON (UPI) — Great|though Robards had the least viork Cee” + Ontemvel oots = said Yat taught every class he taught failed, | Britain’ s national snake charming|to do). . 5 pasate eT Shopbell ges wouldn’t you be concerned?’ he | conmpetition will be held here Dec.| Now we’come to Julie Harris and aq h s 9 Family of five Students Vie only English to-all four high | .oig 4 ther. portrayal of Nora Helmer, a Bask of Beck aT | School classes here and that “a ‘childish and bird-brained at the| , St? | Heart Gas? Times Paster 2 ia nteal bird in Writin : | high percentage” of pupils — aeaeee aceite sosppesommmame (Start of the play; decisive, deter. fot uectetnnS ecoes mek femesh esidity 1 Wille ‘Cather’ g were failing in each class. : — _ aes “eee | mined, awakened—all without soya my tna nr tai “Lady was Competition Shopbell said, however, there |= * | psychiatric aid—at the final cur- . fonts 
4 Beautiful ; | were other reasons the school = ; © tain, - boy ta NEW YORK “(UPI)—More than| board voted last Monday night H U e O On er TOO COMPUESIVE 4 Direct to “mn | 150,000 young Americans are ex-| 0 ask for Yatooma’s resigna- |§ ‘| She bubbled and babbied about ; ws Law officers pected to compete in the “4 ; S h e too compulsively at first and when alae Scholastic Writing Awards — _ f tri 
© Hellen. leader world’s largest literary competi-| West GOP Men nes U on Sea t f ) 2 Go a ealaiial tion for secondary school students olor . 
et ee meeel to ee Beales Pion] TECOrd 168 : By ROBERT TUCKMAN ; Nehru Rejects Offer alis . u 
t 9 Italian d | Magazines, the event offers cash lke ‘and Nix ‘ x LONDON (AP) — Sir Gerald Dodson, long known En, on “to Talk With Chou en ‘eine a co Overcoat prizes totalling $3,675, plus pens |¢ for his stern sentences and needle wit, has retired | 3 | Bene — 4 pa Aaheaive 3 Oitice device a I claire LOS- ANGELES WUPT RE ald after 22 years as recorder (chief judge) of the City of P| NEW DELHI, India (AP) RK — 
$ seinte (ab.) 5 Pouch a enatoen "1 Ooruy short story, poetry, essay and|fcan leaders from 13 western) § London. . He is 75. |Prime Minister Nehru today re- ' + ¢ Figures of 3 British poet = uprising | dramatic script. mates were on record today giving |§ wk &. § ected Communist China's pro- ie 7 French river 3 go8's 50 Hindu rod Juries of outstanding authors and their unqualified support .in the| Lawyers, jurors and witnesses were often the target —posals for mutual troop withdraw- SON OTO N E DOWN +a 31 Otherwise 33 Coauettish menue select seo Dasreaaer “months and years ahead” te) of his tongue. But hardened criminals feared him ~| ais along the disputed Tibetan-In- House of He aring 1 Smal) "the floor 33 Defense — manuscri when contest ends President Eisenhower and Vice!) most. ian border and for an immediate ; . ts 10 Claim ~ 4 55 High os avine 8 : 2 Again. 11 Whips 35 Happenings transportation on March 1, 1960. President Richard M. Nixon. : On a cell wall under Old Bailey, one prisoner f)meeting with Premier Chou En- Free Hearing Tests | . ; ‘ The resolution was taken to}> scrawled: <| lai, sca 1 Pont , es . mean by some Republicans that 7 Nehru told anxious members of| EPR are r] ’ , Nixon was the choice of western If you get in front of the recorder (Dodson), | Parliament that Chou's No. 7 pro- 
oday’s Radio Programs -'- [cr ti'i tester) vere mene” foal or trop wine — racticai. ge per en aa ites To a guilty man whose lawyer had quoted the Bible, 9%) Nehru we taille: lies jnadie coun: Toy Waele) Re) ae a7 wR. Men UALW, awe wwe. on WOAR, (1100) WETR (187%) =—WPUN. (1400) §=WIBK, (150) | yesterday at the closing session deeply religious Sir Gerald said: Ht terproposals, and that he is will- , of the four-day Western Republi- “Your counsel chose to quote from the 103rd Psalm. {| ing to talk over the border dispute; sales and Service TONIGHT News. David 1:00—WJR, can Conference ernors, If he had continued with the next verse, he would ‘ | with Communist Chinese officials ’ * 4:00 WIR. News WW), News Navy wee Bows News, Casey ORL, “Soe "Van aan senators, med My other have read: ‘For the wind passeth over it and it is but he said cargfut ~preparations Sweel S RET T ia CKLW, News CKLW, Ron Knowles WJBK. News, Reid GOP leaders in attendance. gone.’ - As you will be gone in one moment—to 12 4/|4Fe necessary, thus ruling out an en Mon. & Fri. Nights 8 8 WWJ News WXYZ, Surrell 8:30—WJR, Music Hall S | early Himalayan summit meeting. =“ < . WJBK. News. Don Met.eod 1400— WIR. News, Goorts ont--WaR,. Re wa ewe tonal lf months imprisonment. S| Nehru eutectic and 22 W. Muren %. FE 4 
a WAY2 Rows surrev wea News °F Elisane meth | CKLW. Kewa Davies MSU Radio Station || EXPLAINS BIGAMY "| counter-proposals were handed to! : 3) ; CKLW, News, David ° 14 pe . the Chinese ambassador N ii io ae wrow Marte wsee oon, | 190 WXYS, Peat winter Gets Service Award ' Bergen nee eet 0 Digamay Papas An onibe 4 Det this tia or in New) | RCA Color TV WHR News _ WPON. Lark oe i i ; ‘ CKLW. News 11:20 WIR Muste 8:00—WJR, Composite EAST LANSING Radio Sta-|— . “why do people commit it? Sometimes it is to : er Be Ne al WEAR freee few a See oT jae eas WWJ, News, Maxwell tion WKAR at Michigan State Uni-|—  piease their landlady so.that her feelings will not be The national -eapitol has a floor | ‘ — : ry Morgan ears anor versity reported today it has been neal ‘area of 14 acres. The building has | “CONDON $ TV 7:00—WJR, Guest. Hou.e TUESDAY MORNING "1 WJBE, MclLeoo . awarded the National Safety Coun- ati . 430 rooms and there are a total 36 S$. T WxYs an 6:00—WJR, Voice of Agric 10;00—WJR, Music * | rR 
CxLe lege weve. bea wan WW, News, Troe Story view sete” cil’s 1958-59 Public Interest, Award To a prisoner who claimed to have schizo- , §| of 679 windows and 550 doors. bis sedk irenten: Tel-Sures WJBK. Bello SRL Rooster Club wath F ig opie “aise, ton ~ — |for exceptional service to farm/— <  phrenia, Sir Gerald said: “I am told you have ‘ WPON Candleltaht won oe. alae “oh WIBK, Sews, Rete ww eon, French safety. _ two personalities. To be on the safe side, both lh Chhehhudh ehahadrkrdudirhud, Di aw | Whom Gate wire CKLW. Bud Davies The station was. cited particu- " The People of Ookland County 11:00—WJR, Choral s will go to prison for 18 months. 1:am—-WWs 9 star @xtre | nk wm aeuste fall Wi, News, Theater «00—we, Moe nan «| @Fly for outstanding activities in — Never Finished WEY2. Wight ‘Train CKLW. Opener woee. ews Reid WWJ, Dick Prench connection with National Farm He once said judges shine best “upop their seats.” % HIGH SCH \ WPON, Tommie J Wan. News Ow Seer Sees Fare Wark Morr Safety Week last July. | During World War II, Sir Gerald refused to recess , OOL . WCAR, News, Bennett his court during bomb raids. He ordered attendants 4 are invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how you can 8:00— WIR, 7:00-=WJR, News, Muste tnwe-w WPON. Carriage Trade , American School ; WWJ. Bet Your it JR, Time tor Musie |. k isodan earn your School Diploma. yD WY, Hockey ww neve Roberts | Se 40 WIR, mee Ral Real Horsepower! tod ; ect the air raid warning system AT E IN SPARE TIME 8:30—WW4, Monitor CKLW, News, Toby David. | rvespay CKLW. ee * * *. on on oe es oe ee Se oe Oe ome oe Oe ee Oe ee Oe oe ee oe x ‘VIBE Jock. Belivor’ | TORR newt 6:00—W. dag EIRS BEACH, N. H. (UPI) — When a bombed out wing of the Old Bailey was poO. Ber BY Ute 5 4 CRLW knowles Weow Nowe Casey | 808 WdR, tows, wots Tig The first “motor boat” operated | Wine & Domed ow nt seed! face wits \) Detroit 24," a \ 3 WEAR Woodiing 1am, Mut as “| ae jos, Yas : Saw on New Hampshire’s huge Lake ‘Latin taeateas e plaque placed on it with a Gund ale vee FRE OhDase Mish ashen Secale ts $:09-w3R, New Toote, / ,| WHY i WAYE Pau) Winter eae Reve Meteod’ | Winnipesauikee literally had a “one Pn SATNG: “Lat Seales By Gems, thotyh 4 NPN oss debindvavifsvinsins tela te Ae e - a a GRLW. sports. Ja wee Kineriey tare Rei _ mn. Ernie say sagt age Be was oper- the heavens fall.” ‘ % eS eS ee a ot ae | | a | Rews ‘ 20—W. ‘uste Hal a a } ng a t ad eee eC CECE Eee rT eee cree? Tee rey Phene.. Cbste Ooies sbive a ws B. Guest , : “4 2 WIR, eo. ny "WW. News, Roberts 12:90—-WJR, ‘Time Out Music] WCAR Sports mill. ee ene \esecusnsreroewede’ 4 ‘ . “ 
t i : . , y 1 . ) . 7 | \. cE fh ' ’ : \ ; 4 . . +a pees      THIRTY-TWO   
Central Park Financial Iron Curtain   
Manhattan Is Two Separate Worlds 
By JACK V. FOX . 
NEW YORK (UPD — The old} 
song went ‘East Side, West Side, | 
Ali. Around the Town.”” But  the| 
« Jate Al Smith wouldn't recognize} 
the sidewalks of New York today. | 
It's east side, wes* side, all right. | 
Bitterly so. The more than 60 
block long Central Park splits Man- 
hattan Island into two worlds 
one for those with money, one for 
those with very little. , 
In the glittering new buildings 
Why Accept - 
Less For 
Your Money } 
  
CURRENT-RATE- |} 
on ALL SAVINGS 
Capitol Savings} 
& Loan Assoc. 
75 W. Huron ‘FE 4-0561 
Established 1890 
      theatrical 
| the pinball 
in 
more 
‘quency reaches its peak in steamy) ing. 
}August and thén is ignored for an-'Ann,”’ she says east of Fifth avenue, single bed, 
room apartments are being ad- 
vertised, and rented at $390 a 
month unfurniphed. Across the 
park on the west side, a 4, room 
apgrtment can be had for $110 
because of the neighborhood and 
because it is dangerous to get 
0. 
The great chunks of buildings 
alongside once etite ' Riverside 
drive with majestic views of the 
Hudson are taboo for any aes 
seeker. Spacious family units are 
split into half a dozen apartments, | 
with the tenancy increasingly 
Puerto Rican 
* * * 
The newly arrived in Manhattan 
are astonished to find the city so 
markedly segregated into islands 
of wealth and respectability, pov- 
erty —_and—eriminality, They are. 
shocked at the savageness of a 
metropolis: which in so many 
imaginations is a_ sophisticated 
jewe] of the arts, the theater, 
fashion, publishing, advertising, 
finance, world trade 
It is all of that, But it is also 
one of the toughest cities in the 
world, And, according to police 
figures, growing worse every 
year. 
‘There is-a-murder—a-day in New +— 
York on the average 
In one weekend, 109 men and 
women were arrested on narcotics 
charges. 
* * * 
No one in his right mind walks: 
Central Park at night. 
| A woman is asking for trouble 
if she gets on the subway alone 
after midnight. - 
Times Square works in shifts. 
Daytime sees throngs of rubber- 
neckers. Evening brings the 
crowd. Midnight and 
Broadway surrenders to the night 
creatures from the 4 a.m. movie 
houses, the dime-a-dance joints, 
galleries and the 
sleazy bars a block away on | 
Eighth avenue. 
A very rare sight in New York 
is a streetwalker, The late Mayor 
Fiorello Laguardia chased the pros- 
titutes from public display 15 years 
ago, and, while the call girl racket 
flourishes, the police have kept the 
streets clear 
* * &-. 
There are more than 20,000 cops 
New York. Their hands are) 
than full, Juvenile delin-| } 
other winter. Greenwich Village is| spend his week's salary on a 
becoming increasingly a problem; meal for his family. 
| as male and female, 
white, build the beatnik legend. 
* * * 
3ut take a taxi.over to the middle 
east side, a rectangle stretching 
‘from around 34th street up to 80th 
and from Fifth avenue over to the 
East River, and you are in a land 
of opulence and luxury 
* * * 
Skyscrapers have shot up it 
seems like overnight — along once 
disreputable Third avenue ‘whose 
bums moved away when exposed 
to light by the removal of the an 
cient elevated train tracks. Other 
new buildings glitter along Park 
and Madison. 
The finest restaurants in the 
world are tucked in basements 
along the side streets or, like the | 
new “Four Seasons” atep the 
glass pinnacle of the Seagrams 
Building, perched in the sky with 
breathtaking views of the city. 
Here an average man can easily 
Girl's Ambition: 
She Wants to Be 
Grease Monkey CLEVELAND, Ohio 
Mary Ann Semonovich, 18, Is é 
long distance telephone operator 
works part-time in a super 
market. lifts weights, goes bowling 
and takes a pretty acfive interes 
in almost all sports 
* * * 
But what she really wants to d 
is became an auto mechanic 
* * * 
And whenever Mary Ant 
has a free evening she usally cat SO, black and Here are the luxury hotels with) 
'urfiformed doormen opening gleam-| 
ling black limousines; antique shops! 
jwhere a wife can drive even a| 
wealthy husband to despair; Tif- 
‘fany’s where they ran out of solid’ 
gold golf putters at $1,300 apiece. | 
Here “is the vast sandwich- 
shaped United Nations and _ its 
plaza which replaced meat pack- 
ing plants; the new Guggenheim 
. Museur@ designed by. Frank Lloyd 
Wright; the Conacabana night club 
where Frank Sinatra performs to 
standing room only. 
There are islands within this 
island. One is an area of homo- 
sexuals and on evenings they can 
be seen on parade with their 
|French poodles and dachsunds, 
There is another island called 
|Grand Central Station and it is the, 
lscene every weekday night of a 
|jmass exodus from Manhattan by 
ithose who work here but have 
'moved to suburban homes 
Every big city has had its tran- 
sition, but none more pronounced 
and continuing than New York’s 
exodus to bedrooms in New Jersey, 
Long Island, Westchester and clear 
up into Connecticut 
The migration has New York 
deeply worried, Its cfficials see 
——o preat- exaggeration ma recentt 
(UPI) —) Harvard 
a'saw Manhattan moving On a course University study which 
.{that some day would see it ‘‘in- 
-|habited only by the very rich and 
the very poor.’ 
t 
| 
) 
1 . 
1 
be found at a service station near 
|her suburban Maple Heights home 
—pumping gas, tuning carburetors 
fixing transmissions and,changing | 
springs. 
* * * 
I'm dead serious about 
on cars and I think there is 
place for women in the business. | 
 wgalem air Our smaller hands ought to hel; this,” 
Mary Ann says. “T enjoy working) 
a 
us make repA&irs in tight spots 
easier than men.” 
* * * 
Mary Ann's dad, Vincent, a 
truck driver, suggests she ought 
to take up knitting 
* * * 
Her mother is more understand- 
“You do as you like, Mary 
  
  
    > 4 ed eevee eae a 
  
Set the dial for the warmth 
f 
relief. 
      
      
      An electric bedcover is so convenient. 
and enjoy it all night . .. automatically: 
Helps guard against winter colds. Even 
rheumatism sufferers report wonderful 
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a 
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url Tefephoie 
STILL A MAN'S WORLD — The nursing profession, it appears, 
is not a woman's world after all. Henry Voegele (left), Bismarck, 
N.D., and Donald Dye, Noblesville, Ind. students in the General 
Hospital Schoot-of -Nursing—at—indtanapotts—ind-—intend—no—dis— 
respect for the traditional nurse's cap, but merly demonstrate 
what might have happened if tradition didn’t bend a bit when 
men enter the nursing profession. Their uniform consists of white 
shoes and socks, medium blue trousers and short-sleeved white 
shirts 
    
    
  
| 
  
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tissue on all parts of the body. 
This new healing substance 
is offered in suppository or oint- 
ment form called Preparation 
H.* Ask for individually sealed 
convenient Preparation H sup- 
positories or Preparation H ; i. 
cator. Preparation H is sold at — 
all drug counters. Satisfaction 
guaranteed or money refunded. 
*Reg. U.S. Pat. OF.   
Salem research creates a revolutionary cigarette 
paper that breathes new mildness into the smoke 
...new freshness into the flavor. ® cP ong ne. 
Invisible porous openings blend just the right 
amount of fresh air with each puff to give you a 
cooler, milder smoke...a richer, fresher-tasting 
smoke. Now, more than ever...when you take, 
a puff, it’s Springtime! 
Created by R J. Reynolds Tobaecce Company 
  
  
  
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