riage : ; 4 ' ¢ me 2 ¥ bie : + es : oe Sr . by - Commission, The board's decision, - ens, son of towtiship supervisér, en $200 bends. vs Weather Saree Forecast” —* Snow flurries, cetder (Details ep Page 2). te ith YEAR i a: . ¥ amar? “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNES SDAY, DEC EMBER 30; 1959 — 24 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNA ON A ASSOCIATED PR a Tie. s eae HS . FIND EMPTY CASH. TRAY _ Shetitt’s De tective Sgt. Leo R. Hazen reaches for the empty cash tray left ‘by bandits in a lonely Pontiac Township held 3 last night. Hazen found the tray abandoned car Township Fires Police, Firemen Searching for Bandits while a the “area “aro Ponting Press Photo : fe “pandits” on Collier road. The thugs>es-_ > caped with $400 from a grocery store. 2 Thugs Elude Police Net« After Holding Up Grocery Two bandits who held up a Pontiac Township grocery ‘Columbia, Oregon andj store last night.slipped out of- pelice net manned by 8 Accused of Taking sheriff's deputies, city and s Goodfellow Funds Have 8 Days to Appeal .. the pair had escaped with '$400 from Stoné’s Grocery Five Reyal Oak policemen and Store, 3210 Joslyn Rd., in a .threé firemen, fired after being, stolen auto. eharged with pocketing Goodfellow * * oe eve Se ays en to Kent Stone, owner > the store, a t a) 18) S. P said he was at the rear of the ice Commission for reinstatement. | -building when one of the bandits) * * * ntered through the front door. Should appeals be turned down: & the Commission, they then; could take their cases to Circuit Court. So far, none of the accused has) indicated he intends to appeal. But. the Township Board, responsible for firing the officers and firemen, | voted to instruct the township attorney to file charges against the: eight men with the Civil Service head, came into the stere, jumped over the counter and tried to take the -cash tray from the cash register. “When I started” toward fhe front, he waved a.pistol at me and isaid, ‘Get the cash out,’ ’’ Stone said. ° * * * Two other employes in the store were Dan Bryant, 17, 3082 Hill St., Pontiac, and Dale Brontley, wag.reached at a secret “meeting! last night. i Among those dismissed was Sgt. | Jamés Gatewood, who was acquit- ted in Justice of the Peace Court 16, 1430 Vinewood St.. Pontiac’ of charges of larceny by conver-) | Township. sion, Bryant got the money tray . Township Supervisor Eilwoo qd and gave it to the masked man. Dickens said the trustees do not! feel they are bound by an action at them and said, “Now get to L Strikes in justice court. _| «Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Babson’s Forecast Will Appear Friday The Roger W. Babson business and fimancial forecast’ for 1960 “Policemen and firemen,’’ he said, “hold a responsible position . in the ‘community, and can only | do their jobs if they hold the trust and respect-of the citizens.” “Also among those fired were Po-' lice Capt. William Ware and Fire Capt. Samuel Mitchell, “Others were patrolmen William, Boyd, Ernest Wilson and Ananiah Ruffin, and firemen Edward Ten-'- ant and James Atiderson. All plead. ed not guilty when charged Dec. | 17 before Justice Lonnie C~Cash) in Royal Oak Township. * * = , They were charged, along with) Constable Willie Brown and citi-| zens David Lockridge, James Dick- editiom of The Pontiac Press. * * * Babson, a pioneer in the field of business and financial statis- ties; enjoys an unusual record of-accuracy in his ahnua! fore- casts. ° eect , omens! and Robert Thorne, with pocketing’ money collected “Dec. 14 from the. business, commodity prices, 4 turned yesterday by someone sale of Goodfellow newspapers. , , taxes, trade, labor, inflation, ywho apparently didn’t think e * | farm outlook, stock market, real | too mutt of the actor. Between State Police filed the” charges;~estate and politics, two pages, apparently as a after they handed $57 in marked! « *k& Ff bookmark, Was_a slice of ham. money to the paper sellers and) L#ok for it in your New Year's | The ~ library did-net disclose only $6 of the money was turned Day edition. the actor's name. in at the end of the day, Thorne; the onlf one. to plead | guilty, was fined $25 -and placed | The manhunt was called off at 1 a.m., Stone said the man, wearing a § silk stocking over his face and The bandit then waved his gun | will be printed in the Friday) / sasked A Hint Full of Meat Topies hicluded will be an ontlook for the Pontiac area and — ported yesterday that ah auto- the nation, in the fields of general | biography of an actor was re- tate police. five nh after -_}- o-oo No Hope Seen. in Bus Deadlock Negotiations Move to Saginaw After Pontiac Talks Prove Fruitless Negotiators turned to Saginaw today “after a meeting in Pontiac yesterday “failed Yopring about a’ settlement in the 25-day: bug. strike. * * * “We see no hope for @ break,” said one of the union officials after the meeting. ' - The Pontiac strike is by 38 | | d¥ivers and mechanics of Pontiac City Lines, Inc., a subsidiary of National City Lines, Inc, of Chi- cago. City) against Natiénal Lines subsidiaries in Saginaw and) Kalamazoo have also continued for| (25 days ' Both vesterday’s session in Pon; ac_and today’s in Saginaw were} arranged by tate labor mediators. in an effort to get the strikes off dead center. * * * Prime stumbling block has beén wage increases. The union has for higher pay and the companies have said they aren't “making enough money to meet the union demands. — FONTANA, Calif. (UPI) The Fontana Public Library_re- \New Engineer, DPW Chief Named en one. year’s probation. Ware is standing trial today in Justice Courts He faces a maxi- mum of 90 days in jail, $100 fine and two-years’ . probation if con- victed, . The others have been released City Manager Walter K. Willman today named a new city engineer and a new sapertntendent of pub- lic works. * The .action reduced the township’ police force to six men under Act- ing-Commander Albert West and three firemen,. plus. volunteers. : * * Elevated were James N. Car- lisle, assistant city engineer ‘for Two Promoted to Ci city Posts. | Another ' department head ress assistant DPW superintendent five | years. “Carlisle will replace Lewis M- Wrenn, city engineer since 1932, and Christian will move into the post held by doseph B.. Jewell since 1943. Wrenn and Jewell five -years, and Clyde Christian, Temperatures Back. are retiring Friday. ~ |ministration that spends all of its ‘time repairing damage instead of | plac e€. owston, 4 onfer: Oe ES “4@ Sen. Humphrey 3 Flings His Hat Into ‘60 Arena. | Will Enter 4 Primaries; | Blasts Administration’s ‘Counterpunching’ WASHINGTON ~— ‘Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey} | (D-Minn) today plunged ‘officially into. th “raee for (the 1960 Deniocratic presi- "dential nomination. Huimphr ey announced at news conference that his name will be ‘entered in }presidential pr imartes_ in Wisconsin, the District of South Dakota. He said that if financial support is forthcoming he will enter other : pr imaries. | Humphrey _indicated he .- will campaign primarily on foreign ‘policy, and national security is- sues, - He aimed barbs at the Eisenhower admin- istration. “We can no longer tolerate a government that reac ts instead of | taking the initiative,” he said in al \statement handed to reporters. a . “We cannot afford to have an ad- % building solid, grams.” By long-term __ pro- today’s | announcement, | Humphrey became the first among the Democrats most immediate. | Boston Shoreline Battered ~ Frank L. 32 --years on the. bench, veteran Circuit Court Daniell (left) and Miss Helen Calbert, te retiring at the same time affer many years “Doty, reporters, t A JUDICIAL HUG — Senior~Cinguit Jtidge who: is- retiring tomorrow after home tl — + e Flee BOSTON (AP \—Thousga nds homes, persons fled prominently mentioned as pres- cially into the race, Sen. John F. Kenhedy: (D-Mass) |* returns Saturday from a Jamaica © vacation and- is expected to con-! firm then that jhe also seeks the nomination, TO PLAY ¥f COZY ;seem unlikely to be matched by a itrio of other major potential con- tenders for the poming ation. ne ii! Adldi_ E. Stevenson. twice -party’s top nominee, Senate Dem- ocratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of, Texas and Sen. Stuart Syming-| yon (D-Mo} are expected to con-' tinue to play it cozy. Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown | ‘ef California narrowed the field | with an announcement Tuesday: | he will take no active part te- ward becoming the serious candi- : date he had come to be regarded | in.some quarters, But Brown held firmly to his re- solve to keep other aspirants out. room: Avon Township home, of the California primaries. He in- /scribed by the youngsters as anything tends to be his state's favorite sony candidate and to head the state's 81-vote delegation to the Democrat- ic national convention. mind whom he will support, a — their 13 At a preliminary hearing be- | fore Probate Judge . Moore tonrerrow, authorities will > ask temporary~housing for 11 “ \ The at the end of the year is. Ray Ransom, ing Ww. since 1934. City commissioners a ready have named Edward C. Bloe, replace Ransom, ; + * * } On the Commission's recommen- | dation, Willman last night selected) their hun- dreds were rescued and damage idential possibilities te get offi. was vecorded in the millions from some streets and inte the first which = ‘gave. floors—of-fny homes. ‘New England coastal floods. Communities along Greater fered the brunt of’ the tation as the Atlantic Ocean spurt- stormy These early- bird announcements to New Jersey ‘the ed a la record ocean tide one of its oO miles of Boston shoreline suf- ange! Tues¢ f lay. flood devas- rom “Seek to » Take “11 from Parents "Court to Request. Their. evacui ation. Removal _ 4Room Avon Home from ‘Filthy’, Juvenile Court authérities tomor- ine gw wilk ask ; for move 11 children from their four- iter than known.” Their 2621 “Weaverton ~ St.. ‘and ‘‘unfit” for the children. * parents, * Mr. He said he hasn't made up his Richard Barrett,-have been charged Was looking out her window wher He, with child neglect ‘also said he won't take second. ties described the Barrett home at) wall, “ filthy’ and | the 13 children, scheduled for court Jan. 12. ito as parents de-| het- we've ever a and Mrs. Arthur E. case Judge Moore’ s “Rahn taken to the honie by the mother, report that her after husband The neglect comiplaint was filed city assessor | W ith juvenile authorities by Deputy. Charles G. he former deputy assessor, to) Mrs. Helen* Barrett, 46... | REPORTS BEATING of worst Maui The highest tide in 168 years 14.3 feet — brought ocean wa- ter to a depth of seven feet on The flood tideg were driven by a northeast storm which battered an erder to re- OCEAN POURS IN There were evae vations and res- icues7 if Quincy, Scituate, Cohasset on the South Shore at Revere, roorth of Boston. At Scituate, Mass., Ragee June Sheriff's depu-'the oceam broke through the sca “Then came tons of stone,”’ said, “and water -cascaded across. %he road. My children panicked. I called police. eo us out.” Later she remembered a phe Was) From Circuit Court vast - Coast Floods and Streets and ‘lots on the Winthrop and* Nahant front and they. * } she ‘Ed Sullivan’ Sa Liar, ‘Shouts Hedda Hopper | HOLLYWOOD*4)—A suggestion by TV emcee Ed me a te “ “} :: ~ Restored Chief ~ Also Sits In at | Strategy Talks Smith Declares ‘No Sensational | Demands’ Planned . Mayor Philip E, Rowston today took the city’s first move to reinstate Herbert W. Straley as Pontiac’s police chief. Rowston began a confer- | Clarence L, Smith, Straley’s attorney, to discuss details of the return. Straley and City Attorney William. A. Ewart were included in the j huddle. “, | * * | The conference was being held ‘at the same time a reinstatement _ order was to be signed by Circuit ‘| Judge Morris K. Davis in “Tonia. ® Straley theoretically could de- mand his: job back as soon as* he is arnved- with a true copy | o Pentiace Press Photo The : _ Of cqunty service occasien was # luncheon | of the order — probably Thurs- gets together with two geen yesterday noon by fellow —Cireuit Court | day. Ms. Dorothea” -empidyes. .A fourth retiree, Court Officer John 3ut Smith said before the .con who will Dwyer, was unable to attend because he was ference that no sensational de- were contemplated ’~ oe * “Wee not going to go banging on the Poliee Départment door," he said. ‘We want to do it as smoothly as possible.’ Smith said it ; couple weeks" before Straley. | walks into the Public Safety | Building again — for the first off the kas and | time since he was fired by the electricity and an Edison Elec. ! Civil Service Commission April 4.. Co, mands" may take “a had not shut ~ trie man rowed her back Before Straley returns, Smith to the house, On the way back lsaid, the city should clarify the to safety, a gust of wind jduties of police &itef asx distin- knocked her out of the boat inte jguished from the job of public New England for. the second suc the icv water. The Edison man | safety director. cessive day saved her, WILL ASK CHANGES ; * *& * More than 300 evacuees were! Smith said he would ask ’ Row- The storm dropped up ta 16 Doused overnight in public build-| ston to considér changes in the . finches of snow in New England. 1nss in Quincy Police Department’s rules and reg- At least nine deaths were blamed * kot ulations, on Yhe storm. Thousands had to seek shelter smith believed that the rules More than 700 families were ¢!S8ewhere througheyt the flood) and regulations and city charter forced to flee their homes in |@’ea when water rose several feet” provisions concerning the twe the town of Hull on Boston's 7% their cellars and extinguished jebs were ‘‘confusing.” South Shore. Scores of wemen furnace _— | Straley, at Smith's suggestion, and children were plucked from 1" Sow more 44.007 homes were has already asked Ewart to pre- first floor windows by rescuers, —tthout power when the storm pare an opinion concerning duties - ’ snapped power lines. Two men z 4 Coast Guard craft and private were electrocuted by fallen wires. involved in the two posts. boats; were called to aid in the’ at Newburgh. NY. a Grey. eee hound bus bound” for New York) ‘Ewart said this opinion may not Pelting rai, sleet and hail ham- with 18 passengers aboard skid- be ready until next week. mered at windows. Patrolman ded and overturned on the New Rowston said ‘ta couple’” of. the Paul Dunn waded shoulder high York Thruway city colmmissioners had asked him in water to rescue’ two women . ¢* to take an initial step now that the and ‘two Children in Hull. Scores. of parked. cars. suffered city is officially. ordered to put ‘ “ees Straley back on the job. sea water damage when they were! py), mayor did not name the flooded up to window, height along and in industrial parking Greater Boston water- commissioners Commissioners were informed at their regular meeting Iast = night of Judge Davis' intention to sign the order, But they made no comment, “News Flash Commissioner Ri abert A. Lan- _ dry and Milton R. Heary, both MOS¢ owe “TUPL—Soviet Pre. Supporters of Straley, had demand- mier Nikita Khrushchev today ¢d several times earlier this menth that the city voluntarily offer Stra- ley accepted the Western invitation for aoosnmmit conference in his job back, . Paris on May 16. ih But faced with opposition by vwston and the four other, com- missioners, they agreed to hold (Continued on Page @ 2, Col. 8) Novi Woman Killed sul. Walking Along Road - ivan that Hedda-Hopper makes television hay out of ‘her She had. called deputies Monday ‘tort: was | newspaper €0o. “Liar!” lumn-touched. off this. indignant re-| “The-fireworks came Tuesday when Miss Hopper i killed” struck | walking last night when she was by an automobile while along the side. of Novi (beating her. | \ - James E. Kephart Jr, as the new, ; learned Sultivan had meee to twe actors’ * organiza. road near T2-mile road. ° te N |. § ) ; deputy assessor. ‘Kephart, 5344) | Hahn said the eight girls and oe k * 0 orma r now ue) Tubbs Rd., Waterford Township, | five boys range in age from 16 tions about the way Sanh Mrs. Harriet A. Hoyt of 46045 , : has been in the assessor's office) Bvonths to 18 years.Eleven of the talent > was being linéd up that it was to be a nefwork pro- Grand River Temperatures will average near _ three years, . | = acne under juvenile court for a TV show she will do.. “8 ain athe than a local one: Ave, was dead the hormal high of 26-33 and! ‘The-three retiring department i ; . _.| Sullivan's program ‘and the Hop- ‘There is no ‘question about | Oakland on arrival , at normal low of. 10-20 for the next‘. heads were given a farewell last | The two oldest children, Patricia, ) _ show Vie fo the national TV. ™Y willifigness ‘and eagerness to Highway Northville Com- five days, the weatherman éays: | | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Pet Snow vie for The re do an interview.with Hedda any: | a dirty , @ Trail, W Most Michigan highways were EE tg 12 free trek 40 0 ahead,” Heston. sald Toe hepato , slippery this morning, except in . University in 1949 with a degree|. a | Miss Hopper shot: back: “When! He said he makes logal appear! police said hee. Hos et ~the “aan oe Kalamazoo ‘and — : in civil. engineering.|. Carlisle was 6° The (Sullivan) says I don’t pay My} ances free. continually: walking oni the eat ie > = = sere ¢ — employed as a: consulting engineer 18 people, he’s a liar. J guess? he; Miss Hopper and several of Hes-| . 4 when Seelbinder, al pee. were slippery only in ‘spats, Oe Oy ~ 8 must be slipping. Ed. Sullivan is/, 1 f “Ben-H ,;roa en i also. gQ- “Automobile Club reported. in -Anin “Arbor after _ graduation, 19.15 , ton's colleagues from .“Ben-Hur'’|i,¢ ‘south, attempted to pass alte : “and from 19§1.to 1954 was resident sag (ecared.to, death I'm going fo knock itaped a segment of the Jan. 10) shor ‘car and -struck Mrs, Hoyt Winds west to northwest. at-&15).. engineer in charge of construction|, aw g Radio Programs 28 ihim off. the aif. show without hiin. from behind!- ss ~miles an hour will diminish tonight. for a “near , Port- Forgas. Wilson, Eart 93 * ok * * * | Seelbinder wab.relen ab w+ Twenty-one . yams ihe lowest re- . '* | ‘Women’s Pages ott he tor Chariton Heston got into! “We didn’t miss him;” she said. lice area raking i cording in downtown Pontiac pre- j Carlisle asad “with the Army in, mn a PARES ' |the act — or out of it, He with-! Sullivan sai Heston made $10,- st — ceding 8 &,m-At. 1 p.m. ‘the ther-| Faqs ; eee Europe during World\War II and We Most ove! 309° Off, Sale! drew from the.Hopper..show,. say-}000-appearing!on Sullivan's Sunday We Must Move! sed = mometer read 2, { JAMES N. CARLISLE, es ELYDE CHRISTIAN, (Onetinard 'e on Page 2).Col. 4) stayoaugns “if 630° Oakland ing he had noty fanderstood, eure night’ show. | Sidfoagh gett gy ait, Sei > eo SP oe ys a A a ee oeerted are : pale % ie ™ al oy 1 in . co i e xX . . oly ; — et, a hy F ; ; 4 nn ¥. Poot . fe "a pete é ; - \ “Pi eas a2 : ence at 10:30 a.m: with A 49- year-old Novi. worran was 4. ie ey Return 4 a vio make ri as “Three diese} truck drivers have's er lous vélunteered as guinea pigs in a’ Farmington “os with. the Brighton Exeresswas court test of Michigan's debatable * *& law prohibiting excessive vehicle” ngise and annoying smoke The long-sought test will take place in Oakland County Circuit Court, probably sometime if Feb- miary. It.is being spearheaded by the - Sggregates Carriers of Mic higan, Imc,, a statewide orgadization of gome 40 sand-gravel tracking | companies using mostly diesel trucks, : ‘Members of the organization age, uphappy about the number of fines they've been receiving from police! for “excessive spoke or noise emanating from the slacks beside their cabs , * * *& attorney, William B cartends the sé “Their tl mer of Detroit. ta spel out specifically what ‘‘ex- eessive’’ mean. Hie also wonders how arresting State, Police troop- ers determine this ‘SHE LAW’... IS VAGUE: “The law in its present state is vague as to what deternunes eX: cessive:' said E. S. Mather Jr., Farmington truc king company. of-, ficial and treasurer of the associa-| tion “The trucker feel it shouldn't. be left up te an officer's whims, whether it's @xcessive er not.’ “he! said. ‘The controversial Jaw says in| part that every motor vehicle must) have a proper muffler “to prevent! excessive or unusual noise and an- noying ‘smoke.”’ Found guilty Dec, this law by Farmington Town- ship Justice James P.-tawson- were Sigmund Kaminski of De- troit, Robert J. Mays, also of Detroit, and John J. Miner of * 92819 Brookdale Ave., Farming- ton, All drive for the Freeman Trucking Co. of Detroit. been hanging! ” “This question has ffre for some time around here, said Lawson. ow has become more ~ Paper Predicts Stiff Steel Law ‘Eisenhower Labor Bill, ‘Extending T-H Order, Apparently in Works NEW YORK (AP; — Wg--a tough new labor next month . The newspaper said ‘in a dis- patch from Washington tha} the ad- niinistration’s proposal is likely to receive sympathetic consideration | from Congress ‘if the. threat of a/ nationwide walkout persists. 15: under” The Wall Street Journal said today the Fi | senhower administration is draff- bill de- signed te block a new steel crisis /- the to S10 fines or two-day yall terms but suspe nde d sentences he agreed with Eimer thet pee CASES would make excellent test mate irial. Appeals of the. convic “tions! iwere added to fhe Circuit Court! calendar Mondas sentenced three He “when . “it's net the question of fines,” | the justice said. Its a pure question of law we'd like re: _ solved.” Eimer wishes tor a oeonyietion mn Circuit Court so that ne State Su- preme Court can, BIve pinion on what constitutes ES “We either get this | thing d ‘ined with some — particularity pay fin s or stop using diesels Amer. said. - ° pe ONE CONVICTION REVERSED tlon of the 1949 vehicle code. fails” He said an earlier Cireuit Court test failed recently whtn Judge! Frank L.. Doty, reversed a convic- judge measuring’ -same law. The had no way. of amount. of smoke. ~ “And besides,’ the jadge said, “ “the truck. was going upgrade a“ Court Seeks to Take 11 Avon Children | (Continued From Page One} 18, and Richard, 17, ‘adults by the court. ca * * * Deputies described the 34 by foot cement block structure i filthy: throughout.” ithe children ‘ ‘said ‘they plenty to eat.’ t | Rahn said the living room. fur. | niture consisted of “h chair, a. | | television set and baby's ¢rib.” Eleven of the youngsters | slept on the floor in one bedroom \overed iby a single blanket, deputigs said | ~ PLASTER BOARD WALLS | | The watls were made of plaster board and were ‘‘unpainted,: dirty, and. broken out in_ places, authori-. ‘ties charged are considered 30 as There was a hole in the floor , at the ‘entrance to one of bedrooms, they reported, Rahn said the ceiling leaked and. there were puddles of water on ‘the floors in two edn ooms * *® . He noted in his report, however, that the house AS WE vm but damp.'' The childre n all seemed) in godéd health, he added | complain about their surround- ngs, “They said that food was “one thing they didn't lack,” he reported, ‘people. tion from Lawson's court under the’ said police | the ‘managment to help: make it so. i] | gaining process strengthened. “TRENDS CONTINUE but added that} always had | the time, and this naturally is «going to cause more exhaust. * Capt. Fred David, district State Police commander, agreed “‘it's al matter of judgment’ for officers to ticket. for these offenses, But he added that when tickets are writ- ‘ten it is when the smoke or noise |is--extremely” unreasonable. . ‘of * * “We can't give our officers a chart of formula ‘saying whether the smoke is too black or not,” David contended ee een mete oe } ‘1960 Best "Year Ever for America’ | w ASHINGTON (UP}} — Secy. of Labor James P. Mitchel] predicted Tuesday that 1960 will be the best year in .history. for the American oan x * But he called for ‘‘better com-| munication’ between tabor and He said a lot of problems. could be’ solved and the collective bar-/ Mitehell said. in his annual fore- cast that the number of jebs will climb to a record high next year, while wages increase and unem. ployment falls. ‘ington, Ind., : ob ie; ... | problem, it would appear here. But he warned that rising Prices, all wear cei shootin’ irons way {persistent joblessness in some) - 0 ae areas and possible weak spots in labor-management relations could cause ‘some trouble. Reds Balk at Terms New Inspect Even so, he said, ‘The year be-| fore us should be the best that the. American people have enjoyed. ..“This promising outlook Is | | based upen the continuation of trends—retarded toward the end of 1959 by the steel strike—that | led to new record levels ef em: | ployment, production and income | did to the highest standard of | WASHINGTON — + AP) The ited States and Britain are fac- living in our history,” he said, United SE . "ys ling a new crisis in their negotia- Mitchell said it was essential tions with the Soviet Union for an the | Rahn said the children didn't | that costs and prices be held down enforceable treaty outlawing test ‘in 1960 by. impreving productivity.'explosions of nuclear weapons x * * It may reach a head soon after Unions and employers share re- the three-power talks resume Jan sponsibility in this field, he said. 12 in Geneva. It is not the first ne time a deadlock has threatened. | * * The crisis centers around de- ‘velopment of an international in- ‘ spection system strong enough to \discourage cheating with sneak explosions. ~ Unless the Soviet Union. modifies Vali of Writ‘ ts opposition to strengthening the ‘system already proposed, Presi- Justice Roth Issued It dent E isenhower indicates he may order a resumption of under- | in A cti on to Seize (er ound test explosjons ur the | Furniture from House United States ‘POSSIBLE: STRATEGY CHANGE, | A Circuit Court hearing has been Before such a step would be | “They told me thes were better'ordered to test whether Walled taken, officials said, the United ‘off now than they d ever been,” Lake Justice Herman A. Roth States would very likely change ithe deputy said | Taken to the Onkland County ‘Childrens Home were! Susan. 16, * * * Kathleen, 14, John. 15, He n. ll, The plan is geared only to the James, 9, June, 7, George, 6. Mar- current steel dispute and would garet) and = Timothy >vear-old! not revise the Taft-Hartley. pro-;twins, Mary, and Juha, 10) cedures for dealing with strike! months , emergencies generally, the paper) said. Eiseghower is expected . ° ask | Two Thugs Slip Police Congress for the right to coOurt to seek an indefinite wren sion cof the Taft-Hartley injunction that halted the 116- day strike Nov. Jan. 26 RETROACTIVITY DEMAND? He also is expected._to demand | that the ultimafe ‘settlement, in- cluding wages increases, be made! retrdactive by law, probably, to! the starting date of the renewed injunction. . The President is hikely to. pro * pose that 4 new fact-finding board study the steci dispute en} fact-findin its. President by The pres- g panel is sche Sduled “final report toc thé next Wednesday * * * proposal may The new include a) provision requiring union. and road near Baldwin road, about a home management to coma&me bargain- mg with the help offederal media- tors. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Repor PONTIAC AND’ VICINITY JP gouey with occasional snow flurries to- day. High 28. Partly cloudy, tonight ow 1%. High Thursday 30. Winds west nesthwest 10-15 miles; diminishing te. night, Today in Pontiac are lemperature preceding & a m At 8 & im Wind Direction: Northwest Sun sets Wednesday at 5 08 » » Bun rises Thursday at #01 am seis Wednesday at 6 vs ¥ Moon rises Thur Réay at 9] veloity 5 wph. a. Downtown | Temperatares 6 a.m lt 7 7am $3 12 mm : fam 21 ipm 38 $ am 22 if a.m 23 Tuesday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature , - 29 Leewest temperature i 22 apes temperature 28 One Year Ag Age in Peatine aol tyne at temperature Lowest temperature ... (Mean “temperature .. oWeather—Pair and covet Temperatures { Dete in id Feaee | © int 1886 ay’ Temper perature Chart 2 18 Memphis 43 38 ‘ami Beach 77 Milwaukee: Min lis 64 eae we ey 7, The current injunction expires | Mostly | fy 1 facto Baldwin road + / 3 23 31 ~ — Z & “Net After Holdup (Continued From Page One! \ the back of the BP acy open eae | ing to Stone: “Before gat te the back ‘had run out the front door, We /rushed back to the frent‘in time to store," Apr Wwe See a black and red car speed! -south on dosivn. the store. owner. ‘related GOT LICENSE Nt MBER Bryant got ME bes psp number Stone sai d there was waiting in the « another man Within 15 minutes the getaway | car was found. pulled off Collier mile from the stere, Pontiac Police found the car and identified it as one owned by Joseph | Traveno. 715 Portland St.. who ‘had | reported it stolen from a municipal, “parking lot about an hour earlier. 5 CARS SEARCH ; A half-dozen sheriff's cars. fity patrol cars, two Pontiac state! | police ears and one. from the | Romeo State Police Post combed, the area | Sheriff Frank W. Trons and | | Det. Sgt. Lea R. Hazen found | | the empty cash tray about Ta” * Yards from the abandoned car. “Tt looked as if they had thrown) it info a field and then ran west, said Haven... (TRACK FOOTPRINTS Deputies tracked the suspects ‘footprints in light. snow for almost ,(4 Quarter mile before "|WasS obscured by other: tracks. the trail | ‘Stone described the armed man | as about 26 Years old, 5-feet-5 and weighing about 140 pounds. “He was wearing a baseball type cap,- black leather jackbt and khaki slacks. Doorstep Bus Service DETROIT (UPI)~New Year's revelers are going to get the VIP freatment by Detroit's bus system. Bus drivers will. deposit passengers at their doorstep on request if the passenger lives within two. loc acks of the. regular accord. .| heb lerred in granting a writ which re-| ts strategy Sulted~in a Commerce Township Geneva to seek a limited rather man having the door of his home than a ane test ban 'kicked in on order from the town. 4 limited ban would apply only to | ship constable ‘explosions, in the air or in. the Judge H. Russel Holland vester- day signed a writ of certiorari set- iting the hearing for Jan. 11 when S!0MS. /Roth must produce records to sup- port his issuance of the first writ.’ Roth’ admitted today the writ | Wasn't “entirely proper’ in that, he said, easily than underground explo- * * + A toughening U.S. policy with respect to the negotiations was ‘disclosed’ Tuesday when Eisen- ‘hower substituted a day-to-day, it failed to spell out ‘voluntary suspension of nuclear. cripple, along with a friend of oven the deor, Crandell said he Ir five) @ ordered the friend to kick it in. IG ordon of Pontiac, in seeking Yhe _ tion of the property to properly , Childers. Fiddled- last vear, said, “This is much ado about nothing." : | Prayer Parades "WHOOPS, MY DEAR — Four- yearwld Lisa Winkler, of Bloom- seems to be having somewhat of a gun and holster Anyhow, Looming in Arms Ta in the nevetiations at! water. They ‘could be policed more | UPI Telephoto ‘Krpor Bond jing more than $18,000 a year for ~jinvestment at the airport... ~ Move to Free Hangar) Revenues for Other “Uses at ‘Terminal ‘City commissioners went last night to buy up $66,000 worth of ‘outstanding Pontiac Municipal Air- port revenue bonds, thereby free- _ The move had been récom- mended last month by City Man: ager Walter K. Willman and Fi- nance Director Marvin M. Alward. Alward was authorized to buy the bonds at par value from the Pontiac Employes Retirement System, which purchased them in 1948, There were 90 bonds issued then| 1 priced at $1,000 each and earn- ing three per cent interest-annually —to raise funds to finance can- struction of the small, so-called oo hangars for private aircraft. * * * Twenty-four of the bonds have already been retired, said Alward, and 66 remain outstanding. The city pays $30 a year in interest on each outstanding bond. Funds te retire the bonds will come from accumulated revenues derived from rental of the han- the cowboys on television down low, too. lock 5 Augusta, Ga La} consider free _to resume nuclear weapon. testing but ‘‘we shall not resume, without) announcrng- our in- tentions in advance on Deac itself In ef fleet Eisenhower put the world and particularly Soviet Pre-' ‘mier Nikita Khrushchev on no- ‘tice that without substantial pro- gress toward agreement at Ge- neva the U.S. test suspension pol- icy mav be revoked some time next year | ' ° we ok * Pravda he Us to lift the tests on,Jan government's ‘decision moratorium on nuclear l is a very dubious sign of peaceful intentions in- deed.” Britain announced it will never resume nuclear weapon tests as long as there is a chance for a ban * * * The _ decision drew a mixed reaction on oy Capital Hill Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- ,Minn!, chairman of the Sen- sate Disarmament subcommittee, sharply disapproved, calling “nuclear — brinkmanship" which lmight backfire and upset chances fer agreement with the Soviet Un-. ion, ‘world * * * William Full committee decision would very shght Sen, J (D- Ark), the ‘said the only “a yright involve change" in ‘specifically what furniture was (weapons tests for the _present/the current. situation unless the. to be seized Dec. 1 from the fixed-term moratorium which ex-|U-S.S-R. resumed its testing. He trethe of Marshall L. Twaddle, |pires Dec. 31 ‘said the President “‘may be try- of 304 Glengary Rd., by Con. | sca ewanes ing to suggest a little more ur- stable Charles L:. Crandell. ‘FREE TO RESUME } ‘gency in proceeding with the ne- But Roth, whose court bookkeep- | The United States, he suid ‘ati gotiations at Geneva.” ing practices were investigated! ° . Set Parties “Tt's all part of a family fe ud.'S fre said kok Tuaddle’s sister: Maekie, sought the writ of ee from Roth to get from her, broth, home $30 in furniture and. clothing, she claimed she owned. after moving out of the Twaddle after a quarrel, Twaddle, .a is separated from his By The Associated Press The old passes away, and the! ‘new “begins. Thursday midnight, and across the. Jand, people will! greet the hour in t or clamor. There will be parties-and pray-) er’s machinist, by Roth, Crandell, | Mrs. Mackie, went to Twaddle’s ome. When Twaddle refused to alone, There will be spending, tip- /Pling and the songs of choirs. “I read the writ of replevin from vet Sorts Promote 2 Officials | to Pontiac Posts ‘Michigan I had the right to have, ithe door kicked in’ * * (Continued From Page One) Twaddle's attorney, Herbert: W. ‘writ of certiorari, contends Judge! was discharged after beifig wound- ‘Roth was wrong in granting the ed in France-in 145. writ of replevin because it was not!” A registered civil engineer, he) served properly ort Twaddle andjis married and has two children, and 3 ‘did not contain sufficient descrip- | | James, By Christian, 35, bury St. was DPW superintendent in Pontiac after five years as a civil en- | gineer for a railroad in~his na- tive Chicago. Jodianne, 3. identify it,’ of 946 Canter. “] think he (Crandell) carried | out the writ Properly, ” dudge Roth said. Gordon also contends in yester- day’s writ request that Mrs, Mackie, now reportedly living in-an/| area motel, had insufficient -funds to post a $100 pow. to uality for the writ of replevi Christian grew up. in Jackson,’ and was graduated from Univer- sity of Michigan in 1949. ‘He served as a bomber _pilot with the Army during World War II and made 31 missions over Ger many; . Alsé a registered civil erigifieey, Christian js married and has one daughter, Janet. Besides being Canterbury stregt neighbors, “the new department heads are both members of . the | y Michigan Engineering Society and ithe Oakland County» Engineering | PLE, Tex. (UPI — Bill lders, a poultry farmer, re- ported he was so interested in a Civil War movie ‘on’ television showing raiders burning crops and. barns .that. he: didn't notice his-own barn on. fire unfil .it route: had tamed. to the ground. _ _ 'Sogiety. | nightfall, named assistant | Ss Ol ontrasts to Greet New Year Millions of men and women will, city) remain overnight fer $16-a~eouple- pondering the past and regarding take part” in -éathedrals —and setvices in village chapels, New ithe Year's promise: Other millions will fleck to ho-| wile . ers, parades and paper hat\car- ‘els: and night clubs, to reinforce Empire Room put the rate for the) years ago but says examina- Carrying out the writ issued“ pivals and contemplation, There, their a partial | will be remembering and hoping. CoMedians, ‘There will be crowds and people &!!ls “More revelers will whoop it| dancing and dinner at $15, $20; with noise- numbers,: and dancing cheer up on the streets. * ed * In many places> “special events ,and customs mark the-New Year. 1968, beginning at 12:01 a-m. * * * From then until the fellowing two criers, each accom- panied by a squad of musketeers, move throughout the. town of 3,500, stopping in front of each house, ‘where the crier.gives a lengthy greeting which™ starts: ‘‘Good morning tp you, sir. We wisk you a Happy New Year. Good health, ‘long life.” ‘ancient muskets. The custom, ap- ‘parently origifiated by early Ger- man settlers, has been observed for 150 years. . _* * * Year’s than the last one," was the consensus of San hotels and night’ spot operators, who. reported heavy bookings. in- cluding many out-of-town parties.; Prices appeared little changed from last. year, averaging around $15 per person for dinner, dancing entertainment and favors. spots went as low as $6, a few as high as $40 In most cases, drinks were extra, except for maybe one ‘round: of.champagne. A new motel on tHe’ edge of Bos- n}which seta omni ns for tha: Damage: reached millions, we fe chairman, , Cherryville, N.C., holds its tra- ditional ‘‘criering in" to usher “in| Then comes a volley trom the ““Tt will be a:more ‘festive New; Francisco - Some! gars over thg past J0 years, said Al-vard. Th revenues are froz- en until thée™ponds are paid off. “Picking up the revenue bonds ‘now will let the city use its hangar rentals or other purposes at the, -airport,’’ Alward pointed out. * * * “It wil also save the city the annual interest on the bonds and, enable the retirement system to reinvest. if-other bonds, which are available on the market now at an interest rate higher than three per cent. * * * ‘Both the city and the retirement) system stand to gain by this; move.” “T"' hangat revenues have hov-| ered just under $20,000 for several | ‘years. Last year the figure was $18,245 Cubans Arrest Nine as 3 Planes Land HAVANA (AP}—Cuban author- ities are reported holding nine men, including two North Ameri- cans, picked up after they landed \ provincial capital of Camaguey. * * Havana radio station The VOZ | said the nine were rounded up on {suspicion of conspiracy against ‘Fidel Castro's regime.The report: said the planes belonged to a Venezuelan “airline and four ‘of the ‘men were Venezuelans. Military police headquarters in Camaguey confirmed that several aisinen were being held for ques- /tioning but would eve no .details. * * The broadcast said “both North t Americans and. five of the other: men gave Miami addresses. » Food for the Road NEW “YORK (UPI), — The Kroy Service, Ine plans a New Year's Eve party with- out hard liquor for its employes | tomorrow -night. The employes | are cabdrivers. ‘“‘When the driv- ers leave the party, they may be bilious."’ said- company safe- fv cirector Marvin. Rosenzweig, “but they will” be. sober.” | building a.new courthouse. Judge | Fox said it was ‘‘an awful temp- usual food and fun, also added a, new touch: It urged patrons to! extra, with morning-after break-| J fast in’ bed. New, York's Waldorf-Astoria: evening at. $37.50, including tax. | The Copacabana offered its revue, $25, depending on table location. -dren's wor kshops, at any of 15 member stores, ' more than 16,000 persons, Cum- _ John D. Voelker. ' newsmen he felt he “had a_ job | . convinced his doctors Pa ANXIOUS MOTHER—Mrs. Jeanne oat ot + peaches, Mass., looks up.as a rescue. worker takes her a car mabooned by the tide Tuesday. They were saved by ‘an amphibious’ “Duck” as gule-swept sea waters flooded surrounding - -coast towns jn the Boston area. (weousapae Hed their The Day in Birmingham ‘Bloomfield Art Assn. to Offer Dramatics Classes BIRMINGHAM — Clasges in the- ater, radio and television sand creativity in youngsters, Mrs. Laura Cowman,’ of the association's educational committee, explained. ; The winter term registration will be held Jan, 11. All classes will be at the Bloomfield Art Assn. .gallery, 316 N. Woodward Ave. © Classes at the eletdentary level will meet two hours once a: week. * * * — Facial expressions, pantomime, | story telling and creative dra- matics in puppetry ‘will be offered. Elementary coficepts will be taught at an advanced level for ~ ‘junior and senior high students with emphasis on speech, pos: ture, improvisation and formal | acting, Tuition is $40 a semester. Classes will be limited to 20 persons, *. * * _ The program will be directed by Melvin Whittle and Martha V. Hurd, both experienced in chil- Mrs. Cowman said. : After three weeks of operation, the credit plate plan set up.by imerchants. has proved. successful, ‘according to Dénald L, Cummings, president of the Birmingham Credit | Plate Assn. * * * The nonprofit organization was formed Dec, 10 to allow shoppers | receiving the credit plate to shop, The credit plates, issued to stimulate shopping in the uptown business district, were sent to mings said. “Now that the busy shopping of ithe holiday season is over, the ‘credit plates will get a real test,’ he said. * * * “From here on in the everyday | ‘shopping habits of the credit plate |, holders will give us a true evalua- tion of the plan,” Cu mm ings added |: Mrs. Murice Davey Service for Mrs, Murice A. Da- vey, 52. of 38 Yarmouth Rd., p.m. Thursday at\St. Mathias Epis- copal Church, Detroit. Burial will be at Woodlawn Cemetery. Her body will be at the R. G. &' G. R. Harris Funeral Home, 14731 | MeNichols, until 10 a.m, tomorrow, | Mrs. Davey died Monday after Judge Noel P. Fox to Stay in Muskegon MUSKEGON UP — Muskegon County Circuit Judge Noel P. Fox today withdrew from con- " sideration for any possible State . Supreme Court vacancy. and tained a silence. ! a short lined in Henry Ford Hospital, Sarvbchis: tig: hee mabe an executive of the Fruehauf Trailer Co., a daughter, Barbara Jane; and* her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Gallett, of Detroit. Will Russia Ask for U.S. Trade? Agriculture Man ‘Thinks Poor Harvest May Send Them Here for Food — WASHINGTON (UPI)—An Agri- Plans 7 culture Department official said” today the poor 1959 harvest in the“ Sdviet Union may- prod Russian officials into trade discussions with the United States. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev said ina Christmas speech to the Communist Party Central Committee that the Soviet harvest was the worst in four years, He blamed bad weather and “leaders who do not understand a thing about agriculture.” “We've got the surplus to sup. ply the Russians,” the Ameri- can oféicial said, “and we are willing to trade if they are willing te pay.” But if Khrushchev wants to buy some of the U.S. surplus farm products to feed his people.and- livestock, there will have to be some changes in laws and con: cessions, * * * » The United States sells millions ‘of tons of wheat, corn and other grains abroad under the surplus disposal program known as Public Law 480, Under this act, the for- eign countries are permitted | to pay for the purchases in their. own currency. Public Law 480 restricts sales te “friendly peoples.” Accord: ing. to law, the Seviet Union doesn’t qualify as a purchaser. The United States is ready and - anxious to sell, for dollars, its surplus farm commodities. There are no agricultural products on ithe strategic materials list, so none is excluded from sale abroad. kok ot But if Russia is to do business Congress must liberalize some today commented that in three “Venezuelan planes at the Bloomfield Township, will be at 2 trade restrictions andthe Soviet Union must demonstrate its will- ingness for peaceful international trade in agricultural products. Wheels in Motion ‘to Reinstate Straley (Continued From Page One) off officia] action until the order was signed and received. * * * City Manager Walter K Will- man, Straley’s old boss, main- o¢ “T have nothing to say until I see a copy of the order,” he planned to notify Gov. Williams | aig of his -intention, = ~*~ * * * Ewart told city ‘commissioners Reports were circulated at a Democratic dinner in Lansing last night that he possibly would be named to-a Vacancy expected with the resignation of Justice Judge Fox today told Muskegon to do at Muskegon” and wanted to see it through, Muskegon is tation” to seek the state post but belitved he should remain at his present task, * * * Appointed to the Muskegon bench in 1951, he was elected ; to his first six-year term in 1953 and reelected this year to start: a new term Jan, 1. Judge Fox suffered a heart attack three tions in: the past three weeks that he is rsue_ his “physically able- to fulltime “duties, | and her’ son Richard from_ | they, could ask the State Supreme Court for permission to appeal (Judge Davis’ decision, _ “But I doubt that permission | would be granted since Civil Serv- ‘ice Act 78-does not provide. for an appeal by the city,” he said. * * * Ewart said the city could also ask for a new Circuit Court hear- ing. Commissioners expressed no interest in this move. subject to new criticism if he re- turns_tg his §9,000-a-year post with- out his duties fully defined, “Under thé “present setup, it is not clear whether some exec- utive duties belong to the public safety director or te the police chief,’ he explained, own duties or for usurping those of ithe public safety director.” °° It was Public Safety Director . | George D. Eastman who mar- ‘shalled the charges of incompe- tence, disobedience and mismange- ment which Willman filed with the Civili Service Commission at the time Straley was suspended in Feb- ruary. Judge Davis declared the suspen- sion invalid early this month on technical grounds. . — wow * Terms of a final order in the case. were agreed upon yesterday in Ionia by Smith and Ewart in a three-way telephone conference with Judge Davis, who Was strand- led at home by icy roads. The order provides for back pay ‘for = Straley amounting to more than $8,000. Judge Davis turned down a re- quest from Ewart for a 20-day stay . of execution in the date the city” has to let Straley return, Ewart said the stay would have. provided more time for the city Loyal:to a Fault. _SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) = rs. Towne; granted ~an“interigeutory di- of deser- tion yesterday when. she told™ the court she hadn't seen her ‘h ucs b an, d since. he ‘kissed “het <2" o @ by € and went oe TO Ore acaaee' ivan aes ~ Beyents ago. -Smith said that Straley- might be “The chief does not want to be ~ criticized for failure to perform his «- to smjooth the way for Straley.. yoo %, was . ee ee, Wii «= FF A MMMM peepee =. ‘Death Worked Tirectians - “Unusually Heavy Sorrow. Came fo Hollywood in ‘59 By BOB...THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) — This was a year of tragegy.for Hollywood. Never have e been so many “deaths of personalities in a single. year. You can ex- pect each year} the passing of those who have reached the end| of long: careers, as with . Ethel Barrymore, « Ce- eil B: De Mille, Vietor. McLaglen an.d Edmond Gwenn in 1959. But the year also brought the THOMAS deaths of many figures who were still in the midst of productive lives. Some of” Flynn, Lou Costello, ‘Wayne Mor- ris, Kay Kendall, Adrian, Charles) 1959's losses: Errol Vidor, “William Bishop, Preston | Sturges, Paul Douglas. They died of natural’ causes. In addition, | Carl Switzer was killed in an are Plumbing Board Official Gets Emeritus Honor LANSING (UPD — William J. Hughes, Bay . City plumber, has, been named member—emeritus of the Michigan State Plumbing 3oard in a special appointment by Gov. G. Mennen Williams. x * * Hughes has been a member of the board since 1941 and ‘‘ren- gument,. and George Reeves shot himself, . * * * It ‘was a, tragic year and an eventful one. | Here-is how the top 10 Holly- iwood news stories looked from this reviewing stand: 1. Khrushchev visits Hollywood. This was drama of the highest supporting cast to play it to the hilt. 2. Debbie Reynolds divorces Ed- die Fisher. It was a severing of lone side of the triangle .of the decade. 3. Eddie Fisher marries Eliza- beth Taylor. | * * * 4. Cecil B. De Mille dies. He was the giant among film mak- ers—the most successful of all time. 5. Ethel Barrymore ends her il- lustrious career. Her death closed ‘a brilliant era of the theater. 6. Bing gets a girl. A happy note in the 1959 news was the birth ‘of a daughter to Kathryn and Bing Crosby, his - first after five sons. * * * 7. Hollywood _ shifts its moral iviews. Franker film ‘content was a running story that evoked much controversy and threats, of censor- ship. \ most famous libertine went out as ‘he wished, living the gay life to; the end. 9. Anna Kashfi_ battles Brando. Their weird marriage sputtered eut amid much recrim- ination. /, 10. Mario Lanja’s. life ends. in dered credit upon himself and thee-Reme. The gifted singer died sud-| * Williams said. * * Gillman, plumbing trade, * Robert E. a term ending owns a of the. board for June 30, 1962.. Gillman plumbing service.in Bay City. Sen-| ate .confirmation is required for his appointment. Essexville, * will succeed Hughes as a member | denly, the victim of a success he ‘couldn't handle. * x * It was not a happy year, Let’s hope Hollywood finds a better one in 1960. : = ma _ Deputy FRB Chairman EVERYTHING TOR YOUR NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY. HATS—HORNS—NOISEMAKERS Pipers Magazine Outlet WASHINGTON (#—Robert P. Briggs. executive vice president of |\Consumers Powers Co. at Jack- soh, Mich. ’ yesterday was appoint- ed deputy chairman for the Fed- ‘erat Reserve Bank at Chicago. The appointment was. announced 35 Auburn Ave. FE 4-8240 an EPs | % No Cover Charge OR 4-00 4769 Dixie Hwy.—D just. South of Williams Lake Road iby the Federal Reserve” ‘Board. ome To Our BIG NEW-: YEAR’S EVE PARTY *% No Reservations Needed % Noisemakers — Hats — Horns for everyone "” CLUB TAHOE 3% . e t' Plains © tte pepe rh thprtratetrtethctectecshtdieseioertecttcie.te pr Jean Baraska HATS — FAVORS Pa LAKE ORION VILLA. INN EXCELLENT FOOD ‘and COCKTAILS NO COVER — NO MINIMUM OPEN NEW YEAR’S DAY — 11 A.M. - 2:30 P.M. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL Your Host the Sorbellis M-24’ at Clarkston Rd. at the Organ = NOISEMAKERS MY 2-6193 1 Mile S. on M-24 kind, and he outshone his stellar|. 8. Errol Flynn dies, Holywood’ s Marlen * {Thrills Broadway. ichief roles in the large all-male in his honor-staged by the city's 7 “search. William N cal School, dent of the AWARD WINNER — Pansy,, at the University of Michigan Medical Center, proudly wears the silver medal of ‘Research Dog Hero of 1959,” . awarded by the National Society for Medical Re- Judy Will Be® “Back ‘Tomorrow ST.._THOMAS, Ont. (# — Blonde | Judy Ferren, 17 years old and a stranger to the ways of North America,—will go back to Detroit tomorrow to help a city of 3,000,000 look for her dost dog, Jinty. Judy, a native of Southampton, England, who lost Jinty while en route here from New York where |her ship had landed, says she will repeat a search she made Sunday after hitchhiking 114 miles frém her home here. But this time Judy will not have to sleep on a hard bench in a Detroit railway station. A De- troit resident has offered to put her up while she is there and Detroit police, railway officials and dog wardens are on the ]ok- out for Jdinty—a three-year-old German Shepherd. A special date has been arranged — ‘for Judy with officials of the New York Central railways so she can inspect all the ‘dogs picked up by| * railwaymen in Detroit and‘turned) over to the city pound in the Tast few days. JUDY FERREN —~ man who was going to Windsor. We got there at three o'clock and he dropped me off at the Ambas- sador Bridge. * * * “I. began to ask for * * Judy rode with Jinty ih the bag- gage car from New York to Buf-, falo, At Buffalo, however, Judy and) (her mother had to take a train s., people on the street that lacked a baggage car. Jinty nice girl who took me to her rode in a sealed car to Detroit. ave me Christmas At Detroit, the dog was to be trans-™” os ~ ferred to a train that would take. her to St. Thomas in time for Christmas, ~ directions I met a home, some cake, Clark Slaying Probe Centers on Motive “T hated to leave him alone— | they told us Jinty would have to go on to Detroit,” said Judy. “I don’t know what it was, bat I | just had some premonition that = PAINESVILLE Ohio (AP)—In- he would get away, Jinty is a vestigation of the sniper slaying country. dog ard is afraid of of Charles R. Clark got back strange people, I am the only jtoday to such basic matters as one he knows.” motive and the possibility of ac- . ; ‘cident, When Judy learned that’ Jinty The love affairs of the. victim's was missing she decided to go to Detroit, She left-early Sunday, tak- ing Ker passport and a dotlar wifti” her beautiful briinette wife, on which spolice have concentrated since the ‘Christmas Eve crime, stil] are due j ‘for much probing “‘E-had never been to Detroit, and) [ois Clark, 30, mother in fact I didn’t even know where may possibly know “' of four, why the shot it was,"’ said -Judy.-“1 walked to'was fired, or, give some lead as |Talbotville, five miles from St-1to who did fire the shot,” said |Thomas, and got a ride- with a/Edward R, Ostrander, Lake €oun- "Andersonville Trial’ 7 prose: Clark was questioned for more than two hours Tuesday by jSheriff William B. Evans and two lassisti ant prosecutors... cutors,.. ~ irs, Sam Rayburn - Will Be Honored ‘by Constituents By WILLIAM GI OVER NEW YORK (AP)—A new play- [wright and some: actors unused to istellardimelight are giving Broad- Ww € > é “| * ~ ,o4 . ~ - oe ne meee Sra hl SHERMAN, Tex. '\AP)—Speaker Trial. ve ‘ “ of the House-Sam Rayburn, who iwill be 78 when Congress convenes. The production, diretted by Jose! Jan. 6, gets an advance birthday |Ferrer, opened Tuesday ight at\ celebration today as’ Sherman the Henry Miller Theater. ~ year took the lives of 257-pas- | 4 GALA $ sengers and 37 crew members. It > NE 2 ls only the’ second time the pas- $ ; W 4 senger fatality total has topped | > YEAR’S 2 200; it reached 219 in 1947. | $ “ $ ' Only twice before have there; $ “ EVE $ been as many as nine fatal acci-| 3 3 ’ dents — in 1949 and again i 19: 51! > SHOW > The worst single year, was 97) _Qraparnanpdaptbsrrdddpdbidsriarrarsirrsoancd i lin i i i i i i i i i Se i i i i tin i i i i hi Ni inh hh hn dial with 11 fatal crashes 66 ACCIDENTS There were 66 individual acci-| ‘dents in 1959, ranging from such hil minor ones as a-landing gear col- | lapsing on a parked plane to those, ‘involving total destruction with 100-) per cent fatalities. This broke the. previous accidént total of 64-set in| 1948, and marked only the second’ time there have been as many as 60 accidents in one year. In fact, only twice before — 1957 and ‘58 — have there been as mah¥ as 50 in| a 12-month period, ‘* Ist Run in the Entire Pontiac Area! YOU ARE THERE in the lost Continent of Atlantis . . . in Mammoth Mushroom Forests . . . in the Stratum of Cinnabar . . . battling prehistoric Dimetrodons and eee Chameleons with 20 foot tongues! | sone cue PAT BOONE. | yy tf (JAMES ENS) ARLENE | Vi | The 1959 statistics are not en- | tirely black. According to indus- | try estimates, the scheduled de- mestic and international carriers | carried nearly 50 million passen- | gers a total of more than 35 mil- lion passenger miles. The year had a rate of 0.73 fatatities per 100-million passenger miles — the eighth consecutive year in which the fatality rate hag run below | “one death for every 100-million passenger miles, DIANE | DAHL: BAKER COLOR by OF LUKE This in itself is no small accom-| CinemaScorE plishment. It means the airlines Ji srereornomc souno are holding the fatality rate down) while at the same time flying more! people on-more trips in , bigger, planes than ever before. The 1959) accident record, while obviously, nothing to brag about, might be compared to thaf of 1938 . a a 2 In that year, there were only seven fatal crashes killing 32 pas-| sengers — but these added up to a ‘fatality rate of 5.20 per 100-million | passenger miles. The 1959 rate of 10.73 happensto be the seventh best in the last 22 years..- Features Today at 1:39 - 4:14 - 6:49 - 9:24 “JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH” Will Be Shown ‘Tomorrow on the Matinee Only at 1:35 - 4:14 SPECIAL SHOW- TOMORROW Sa , CELEBRATE Ay ( THEBIG NITE Mi OUR GAY. HAPPY ~®7° NEW YEAR'S | Performances at_ 7:00 - 9:30 i MIDNIGHT ) ry LL iy} +Rep. Hoffman Opposed to Forced Arbitration WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep Clare Hoffman (R-Mich) said to day he would oppose legislation to irequire compulsory arbitration in labor disputes. “I'm against any legislation to force a man to work against his EVE SHOW will,"’ Hoffman said, ‘‘or to pre- vent him ‘from \ working if he wants to.” Make Up a Celebsation. Party... | to See This Spanking Al] New SPECIAL PRE-RELEASE 1960 FEATURE haan Open 10:45 Mat, 630 Eve. 90 15 NOW thru THURS. HURON THEATER Special KIDDIE MATINEES Cartoons 1 & 4:45 “Shane” 1:20 & 5:00 “Heidi & Peter’ 3:15 from W ashington. E PITT | IN GLORIOUS COLOR i] Children ‘25 = PLUS — SHANE Li panawouer me PU ‘Adults 45c Children 25c NOW! LAST 2 DAYS! [ ALL FAMILY PROGRAM “IN GORGEOUS -COLOR! DARING YOUTH OM THE FLYING TRAPEZE! PRESENTS aR A PULL LEMGEH (9°9"s) ARIMMATED FEATURE aww /, Sint Od cum, FROM WARNER BROS. TECHNICOLOR® HFicHARD ECan “DOROTHY McGUIRE SANDRA DEE ARTHUR KENNEDY * TROY DONAHUE [ff e» CONSTANCE FORD + BEULAH BONDI-* soe'ty SLOAN WILSON GREAT ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE EARLY BIRDS AND THE MIDNIGHT “FUNSTERS! NEW YEAR’S EVE COMPLETE SHOWS AT 7:00 - 9:30 & MIDNIGHT FEATURES AT 7:13 —/ 9:45 P.M, — 12.20 A.M. © STARTING FRIDAY @ Special New Year's Day Show: Soe a ALL SEATS $1 25° ‘INCLUDING TAX WEED. GOUBWTR.. MAYER Meceats = — osaer arin : ra» 60 ra \ i ~ STARTS FRIDAY oe | ei CK OF Plus: — Vi and Pen nee Feature: hn Xref Ften Prsaucten Perensagy ‘PO Caters: a — ‘t a ” ey il, Hectrorcs | Lead Market Up NEW YORK wm — _Trading was! heavy as the stock market ad- Getroit Bureau of Markets. as of Mar vanced early today. Prices were! moderately higher. Oils and electronics were trad- . 32-6 Kroger... 324 ducklings 6-31: swan geese 20: geese| State school chief Lynn M. Bart- Alum Ltd 4 LOF’Glass ... 69 | 24-26; urkeys heavy type young hens, lett, Am Aina 32 Lib McN&L .. 104 '$7-39; heavy type young ‘toms 31 een ‘oe, Use & My 89 | Afterwards, they dined on roast Am M&Fdy ane UCR Aire 313) DETROIT Bas f beef — fancier fare than Am M&Fdy {86 Lone 8 Gas 384) DETROIT. Dec. 29 (AP)—Eggs f.0 o./Pound of beef — fancier fare thé ; < Lorillard 37.1 Detroit tn case bote federal-state raded offered Republicans who paid $100 Am Motors 80.6 yon aN 174 Wh ' ee Ant-N Gas 58 u ash rites—Grade A extra large 3 I Flint 14 months ago! Am Smelt a3 Mack Trk 495 (34: medium 31; grade B large 31; brows a head at S ag Am Tel& Tel 78.1 Martin Co _ 424 —Grade A extra large 38; large 34: me-'¢, hear Vice President Nixon and) Am b ‘1074 May_D 8tr 48.7 dium 31: checks 20 . a - : Anaconda .... 63.3 Merf Ch & S$ 166) Commercially graded: were fed beans. Armeo st! 75.4 Mpls Hon 136 Ch nite Panes Mme 30 40. see a Armour & Co 34.6 Minn M & M 174:4| eS, 3. arge 35; medjum 2 * Atchison 96.5 Monsan Ch 54.1! _ fi etade B large 28-32 Aveo Corp 13.4 Mont Ward 523.7 bat rH Grade A extra lore 32-33, rene ast e Beth. Stee} a49 Mot Wheei 23.3 large 20's. a Ma, small , Boring Air ... 3 Merorole 1n1.3) 71° 2; grade B large 27' - org Warn 4684 Mueller Br 37.3 - C ey k Briggs xiits he Murray’ Cp 7 Has omé: ac rist Mr } Nat Bise 537 . . . cg gewe ge sei ces «Business Notas in 6-Minute Part u : Nat Dairy avi cerouube oe Net orp 39 alum & 23.3 WN ead- 107.4 . . Campd Boup a7 wet i@ed. | irs M : he SS. Kresge Co. _ MIAME (UPL Irene Castle Can Drv 30.3 No Am AY 37.3 anager of the S. Kresge Co. 66. made a comeback last ‘nigut eee ied | ite. Nor. Pac ‘8.3 Pontiac store since 1953, Victor ye carer nw pla Carrier Cp. 39.6 hie oO} 7.4 W. Hoerath agg in the premiere of a new plas * oy q OWene Crg 88.2 . oe . qo“ y " : Cite Trac ini PAC GARE a4 N. Williamsbury, Cte “Come to the Dance, Chrysler on os. Param Pict .. 4 Bloomfield Town- H Miss Cast da Cittes Sve .... 47.6 Parke Da : ship, has beens, However. Miss Castle, a danc- Clark Equip .. 92.4 Penney, JC © 1213 ding stage star 40 vears ago, had. Cols Palm ete Popa Gola 8 named dry goods) ionly. @ six-minute part in the og alm... " olum Gas . 20 Pfizer buyer. for the lay. Gon Edis. $84 Phelps D ~ dime store chain, |P - Consumer Pw $33 Phill Pei it was announced) The ctowd applauded her on ans. . Sent Gena gy Brest 89 today. A veteran| loudly on entering and leaving Cont. Mot . 10.7 RCA eo | f ith] the stage for -her bit part in Cont Oil 55.2 Republic stl 74.4 of 35 years wit Copper Rng .. 2517. Revion $1.1) the company, | the first act. Corn. Pd 354 Rex Drug 46.2 H 1 b | nas . ; “ate; Surtis Pub is Revn Met 4) ; oerath will uy! ‘Miss Castle wore a_ striking: ere $6 Rey To 0.6) . : . s . ‘ ; , Baton Mie eer Bacon 40.4 Rico wrote that she delivered her E: Mus M4 Sperry Rd 44 * * * lines “stuffily “and lett the stage ther Rad tf Std’ Brand 64 ; : re ee ad 18 Sty On Ca @. T. M. Perkins. 169 Bassett Place, ‘“stitfly Ford Me! 7 Sg O" ie. 43% manager of the Economic Studies Teept Sul. 25.7 Si Of Oh. 53. and Programming Department of —Prueh_Tra "0.3 Slecens JP 33.4 a g par n ind Dynam ei Stud Pack 21F Ford Motor Co.'s Tractor and Im-| Senate Group to Take On eo, Sur d } Gen Fos. 1042 Suber Pao 32.4 Plement Division Tranquilizer Prices en s 303 Swift-& Co 46.4 j va) Gen Metors a3 Leon Gas ‘ee Perkins has been supervisor of oo ord & Bi ae fexaco % economic and volume studies for) “WASHINGTON 4UPI)—The Sen- Gen Tire “80 Textron 25 the | division. He joined Ford in ate antitrust subcommittee has Govssee 4 Ss ransafser 29.3 1957, He is a member of the Amer-, scheduled its second round of drug. Giliette 66.2 Undesweeg a2 ican Marketing Agsn. and the hearings from Jan; 21 to Jan. 29. oodrich ae4 Pn Garbice is American Farm Economic Assn. (It will take a jook at 9 ye ah Folge .. 26 Unit Air Lin 337 + & & ‘charged for tranquilizers Gt No Ry eg git Aire 36 ; so | Greyhound. 20.1 gait, ra 323 John Chiera, 4891 Gallagher, | * * * fillece Fr Ne ts pines a4 Rochester, president *6f the John Chairman Estes Kefauver 1D. Homesty gy US Steel 3: Chiera Co. ef Birmingham and Tenn) said officials of four leading! Inland Stl | 48 eyoun iy Rochester, has. jeined the Michigan, Producers of tranquilizer drugs will) int Bus Men 407 ¢ Walereen Ai] Life Insurance Co. as a district be among those testifying. fat Fe. 108 West Un Ter 90 agens. | Ket auver said tranquilizers con-) Ty # Be > a2 int Shoe .. 34 Weste Fi 108-4 He has been in the gefferal jn- stitute a ‘major branch" of the! ie 308 Youhen Sbat ne surance business for several years;drug industry, with sales at the! fs] Crk Coal .. 24.5 Zenith Rad ‘a Year. He added that the “total | ‘the Rochester Real Estate Board erably greater.”' | and. a member of the Birmingham ¢ Board. Genesee School Board Must Explain, Firing FLINT (UPI) _ ‘A apokesman for the Michigan Education Assn. yesterday said the Genesee County School Board will have to prove ‘there was just cause for firing Mrs. Daisy Howard, county -super- intendént, rn ce a oward was dismissed last r 30 years-as echool su-| /perintendent in a-climax to a long- runtiing feud’ béfween her and some Mrs ae members... +, 1/3360 W. News inBriel Owner of the Roth Lumber-Co., \Huron = St; Waterford Township, \Norman Roth reported to police ' that sometime last night a $60 tarpaulin ‘was Stolen from a stake truck parked in the lum- ber yard ahd an $30 Skilsaw stolen from.\an ‘unlocked rear portion of the' trim shop. Russell Sherinan; 255. ‘Okemah St., Waterford’ Township,: _re- ported’ to polite Yhat a $50, sump pump was stolen’ from the | base- ment of his new home during the -night wh Michigan > EAST ST. | Spr’ ‘ing elections. | Waterford Township is among |the 17 school systems in the county, | that will increase their board mem-, ber ship from five to seven, * x wt An amendment to increase school board membership, Which effects) fourth-class. districts in the state, was passed at the last session of the Legislature. It tive in March. Fourth class districts that do will be effee- Flares Anew | _Brandon, Clarenceville, Clawson, ‘Farmington, Holly, Huron Valley, Lake’ Orion, Lamphere, Lyon ‘Township, Madison, Oxford, Roch- ‘ester and West Bloomfield. Anti- Semitism not maintain full high schdol pro. | gams . will not | board memberships, 7 of schools William J. Emerson |said he could see “no urgency in | the: new measure. | “It seems to me strictly mec han- ‘ical and procedur al. I see no issues ‘involved at all."’ . * » Other county school districts in Com pacts’ Love in U.S. Looks Long WASHINGTON wh — ‘cans and looks like a permanent love, the American Marketing Assn. was told today | * * * Albert E. Sindlinger, president) of a Philadelphia firm which keeps | tabs daily on consumer buying plans for industrial firms, reported! jthe results of a three- year _ Study on -smiatit automobiles Whereas only about 10 per cent of prospective car buyers | would even consider small ears two years ago, 40 per cet now | would consider owning one, Sind- linger told the AMA's annual meeting, And whereas the potential mar- ket formerly consisted mostly of low-income professional people and Sports cay,enthusiasts, it now takes! ‘in almost every income and occu- | pation group, ‘ .4ND OR 3RD CARS Lb | Of those who actually plan to buy smaller cars, either foreign- ‘made or the new American com- |pacts, about 57 percent are people! who intend to use them as second! or third cars, Sindlinger said, In his view, the U.S. manu- facturers could have knoeked the foreign produeers very largely oot of the American market if they had produced compacts sell- ing in the $1,800 or $2,000 price ~ range: Now, since have appeared generally higher linger said it ‘appears that the; ‘compacts won't cut very deeply | into foreign-car sales, t the ‘new versions with price tags than that, Sind- prices) Say New Device ‘Communist plot. Eliminates Need | for Proof Press LOUIS, Ill. Four! ‘printers have applied for a patent on a mechanical device they say j will eliminate the need of a proof * * * The’ printers, employes of the. Livestock Reporter Division of ‘Gorn Belt Publishers, Inc.,-say the device can be adapted to Linotype or Intertype machines. It took a year to perfect, : The gadget: proofs up each slug regardless of the type size as it is ejected: from the ma. chines. . Proof copy is turned out on a roll of paper, i . The device utilizes any color ink] and any kind of paper. It is attathed: to the Linotype or Intertype rhachinés and gets its power from them. a 2 The_printers. are» increase their | | Oakland County Superintendent | The small ‘car has been embraced by Ameri- ‘nto contact with the special com.-| ‘statement that the synagogue des- | recently appeared in Communist | east Germany, ~ ‘government has threatened to ban German Police Spurring| Investigation After 3 More Incidents * BRUNDWICK, Germany (iP— Thrée new anti-Jewish incidents were reported today in various parts. of Germany. Police tried -to find out if they, aré ‘part of a concerted nationwide campaign. * * * Swastikas and anti-Semitic sio- gans were painted on the monu- ment for the war dead and victims! of Naziism here last night. . The slogans read “Out With | the Jews” and ‘Death to the Jews." Investigators immediately’ its package of so-called nuisance itary of the Michigan Tobaeeo and LANSING Not to put a lamper on your cel i don’t forget the new taxes come in with the first day of the new year. The state- will start collecting on telephone calls ‘ond telegrams the state hopes will raise en additional |_ 49 million dollars during the” next 18 months. ments licensed to sell eed and hard liquor, — As soon as there is a néw tax, someone tries to figure out a way to get around it. “Phére’s a possibility that boot- legging could become more of a problem,” admitted George J. Burke, business manager of the State Liquor Control Commission. “There also probably will be more traffic in legal whisky coming. in from. other states.” - Mike Spagnuolo, executive secre. Candy Distributors Assn., declared the added tobacco tax will create a multitude’of problems. — a er er “The machine vendors, for in- stance, " he explained, ‘‘want to up the price only a penny to 31 cents. But it costs a penny to put the change inside the cellophane pack. So they’ll probably charge 32 cents and return three cents change out excise tax. It. will go to $5.55 with , but/the new 8 per cent excise tax. Bar policies on liquor by t saae ink eapsuné eal hae holding the line in many cases to ‘charging five cents extra for pre- full “ounce “shot glomt ‘seven le; full ounce ‘shot glass to seven- eighths of an ounce, —§ _ Beer—The tax on a 32-gallon barrel of beer was doubled from $1.25 to $2.50, Bars are expected-to hold the increase will be about half a cent on a 12-ounce bottle and a little over a dime’ on a case of 24 bottles. ; Se * * cents for a six-bottle or can pack to 10 to 15 cents a case. up from five to six cents a pack. Expect to. pay a penny. more when buying by the pack, a dime more by the carton and 32 cents from vending machines. Prices will vary, as some stores feature items, to attract customers. ‘Other tobacco products—A new tax of 20 per-cent-of the price paid by wholesalers has been added to cigars, smoking tobac- co, chewing tobacco and snuff. The six-cent cigar is expected to; go up a penny, the 10-center two| pennies and the two-for-a-quarter cigars to 30 cents. Most smoking tobaccos will go up three to five cents a can. Extra pennies also line on beer by the glass. The tax}. The price change on carty-out} beer is expected to vary from five Cigarettes—The state tax will go! . low cigarette prices as “‘leader”|-~ 938 Featherstone Rd. to the bill by the telephone company or telegraph office. There is no plan to collect extra on pay thephone « calls, CANADIAN lager beer Sold in Oakland County at your. tavern, beer or food store. _ Distributed by Pfeitfer—Oakland Distributors Pontiac FE 8-4565 of 35. They also have to change over all the machines.”” ~ ‘bring in more -than $50 worth of, ‘lower tax rates He is even miore apprehensive of ‘smuggling from other states with, ‘The JAW makes it a felony to ‘cigarettes without paying the extra| ltax and a misdemeanor for less) {than $50 worth. But as a practical matter, it would be terribly hard. to run them down unless the en-’ iforcement is greatly stepped up” he said, - Here's a. rundown on the new. itaxes and how they will hit the’ iaverage consamer: i Hard liquer—The ex cise tax | was doubled, from 4 to 8 per cent. The bottle of whisky with the | ‘base price of $5 cost $5.35 with the | 3 per cent sales tax and 4 per = { Producers to Vote | on Milk Marketing DETROIT (UPI)—The U.S, De- |partment of Agriculture announced got! ‘today that a referendum on a. proposed federal milk marketing, ‘mission set up to probe the Christ-order for Southern Michigan will mas. Eve desecration of a new |be completed Jan. 9. synagogue and the monument to! Nazi victims in Cologne PAINTED ON WINDOWS The commission was notified that swastikas also were painted on several shop windows in the Rhine- land town of Rheydt. One of the stores is owned by The word “Pig” was paitited on his window. ed. a Jew. ‘the state criminal agency ‘taken up the case of an 85-year: old sienstadt (Terezin) camp who ‘was , threatened with crucifixion. * * * In Bann, the head of the rightist German\ reich party denied his. declared that men who paint_swas-’ in the organization. Withelm Meinberg, a trmer general of the Nazi SS (Elite Guard) spoke at a news con- ference as. investigators con- tinued their probe of the 26.000- member party as a followagp to the desecration of the Cologne sYnagogue on Christmas Eve by two party members. ~ | . ' ‘The two, Arnold: Strunk and Jo- sef Schoenen, both 25, have been) expelled from’ the party, They are under arrest in Cologne. Both have admitted responsibility. . POSSIBLY RED PLOT Meinberg repeated a_ previous evcration may well have-been a ~ He said Strunk and Schoenen’ | Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's the German Reich Party, com- posed chiefly oft former Nazis, if: Give Mobile Service| LANSING ip—Atty. Gen, Paul L.- Adams held today that state banks may fot use special -trucks || or trailers .to offer mobile check’ {cashing ..servive, « . * * * be offered forthe receiving of ‘deposits or the lending. of money, Adams said in an opinion to Alonzo L. Wilson, state banking’ ‘commis- ‘sioner, The attorney feneral said wach Intire and William St. Louis;. Richard. Sterline of! nearby _ Belleville, and ‘Kenneth Robinson of Ci alfokia, ok, both of activities constitute branch bank. i operations -in conflict with —'s Authorities in Hesse announced | area to include |200, Lansing and Saginaw and party preached anti-Semitism and) tikas on synagogues have no place}: itis proved to be responsible for the synagogue .incident. State. Banks Can't Neither may such mobile service Financial. Institutions - The - All milk producers eligible to i | vote on the proposal have been | maltied a. ballet and insfructions, The ballots must be postmarked: by midnight, Jan. 9. Approval by two-thirds of the producers is required for the or. | der to take effect. * * * order would- expand the Southern Michigan milk marketing 28 counties and has 18 townships in five other counties. It would extend regulation of! Jewish survivor of the Re- milk handling to such presently concentration| unregulated population centers as: anonymously | Battle Creek, Bay City, Flint,| \Grand Rapids, Jackson, Kalarma-| surrounding territory. Higbie_ to Pay Dividend has declaréd_a regular quarterly dividend of 20 vents per share—on the $1 par value «common stock, payable Feb. 1, 1960, te_stockhold-) The Board of Directors of Higbie| 'Mahufacturing Co. of Rochester to open your. garage door Let Genie, the new electronic garage door opener, lift your garage door while you stay in the car. End the wear and tear of climbing out of your car... unlocking the garage door... tugging it open... and turn- ing lights on. With a Genie in your garage, you merely touch Genie in made by The Altence y, Inc, prey of the Femews Alliance Tenna-Reter fer TV. enie ROLL UP and ROLL IN! Never get out of your car! _installed by us, and it’s priced - GARAGE DOOR OPENER ‘a dashboard button in your car—and your garage door opens automatically, And, of course, the Genie leeks up also. So if you have an over- head door, let us put Genie in your garage. No wires, easily . amazingly low! In Ookland 1457 W. Huron, Pontiec ers rs of record Jan, 15, 1960 STEFANSKI Radio & Electronics — FREE! : Mail coupen for | literature today STEFANSKI 7 1157 W. Huren St. Pontiac, Mich, | ’ MAME | ADDRESS. | PHONE + | J County It’s . _FE 2-6967 IN 1959, AS. IN TALL — THE YEARS BEFORE... * . the investment: we treasure most. highly is Our warm and friendly relationship with our many clients. On the occasion of this holiday season, may we extend our sincerest appreciation for your patronage. We look forward to continued service on your behalf in 1960. May you, and yours, have a Prosperous and joyous NEW YEAR. FEderal 4-2895 wt r ” Watling, Lercher& Go. a” Members New York Stock Exchange . Pontiac “State Bank Building, bendiiny: Michigan Serving Michigan Investors Since 1916 Ann Arbor : Jackson * Kalamatoo + “Pontiae i ' ‘ af 4 * Birmingham