The Weather . 8. Weather ef (Details on Page 2) » f THE PONTIAC PRE OVER PAGES’ 117th YEAR _* * * ** PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY eo 6, 1959—30 PAGES OMITERSSOCIATED PRESS cel ge : \ SLOW GOING — Two days of persistent rain- fall left its mark on M-59 west of These cars find it’ slow going, Rain Damage Is Light; Expected to An end was in sight today to the rain that has fallen | Totals VI Million Steadily on Pontiac and southern Michigan since Sat-| urday. City and county officials ——4 Steelworker PITTSBURGH (# — The |inadequate.” |lapsed last night. | Donald proposed a meeting with top executives of five leading steel firms, but they did not reply immediately. With negotiations completely | broken off prospects increased that |President Eisenhower will invoke [the Taft-Hartley Act with its 80- day ban against the strike McDonald was asked at a news conference following the policy committee meeting for his ‘ap- Pentiac Press Phote street still is negotiable. The Oakland County Road Commission reported only a few scattered washouts throughout the county. Telegraph road. but the flooded | End Tonight orm Damage | Cattle Being Rescuved in : | plied: | have reported only minor; Colorado; Floods Still +1 would describe it as vers — ‘nuisances, added to the Threaten Oklahoma | rave. " Dock Walkout in ke s Hands. Federal Mediator Puts Longshoremen’s Strike in President's Lap From Our News Wires NEW YORK — A federal med-|floods,” said Arthur Hilliker, of- jator says the six-day-old long-) shoremen’s strike is now ‘‘a matter for the President.” The official has declined to schedule further talks with either side in the dispute. an end to the saturation by to- and Texas. | been reported by the Pontiac | grumbling of the citizens,| | The policy committee statement | expressed union solidarity and \from almost three inches of! By United Press International went on to say: rain over the three-day| Officials in the Southwest totaled “We resent the statement by the period. jup the damage today from nearly, spokesman for the industry that a week of rain and sought to pre- we are seeking a ‘something for The Weather Bureau promised vent further flooding in Oklahoma nothing’ settlement: . “The sweat and hard work of Steelworkers has brought hundreds of millions of dollars of record profits to the industry. “Steelworkers have earned a fair settlement by their work and record productivity. We are asking for the ‘reasonable some. thing’ we have earned by our night with partly cloudy and cool; At the same time. a massive temperatures predicted for drive was under way in Colorado |Wednesday. to rescue thousands of head of A minimam of drain fleeds has cattle and sheep still marooned by last week's five-day snow storm. | Department of Public Works, | Civil defense officials in Tulsa, | Okla., said flood conditions there | *‘We've had only a few scattered were still critical and nearly a | Until Justice Is Done’ saying it has earned a fair settlement, pledged today to) continue the 84-day strike ‘‘until justice is done.” The union’s 170-member wage policy committee issued a statement reaffirming the union’s rejection of an in-| idustry settlement offer classed by the union as “totally | | David J. McDonald, union president, said ny further meetings were scheduled with the industry. Talks col- Mc-+———— | comms of the situation. He re- | to Stay Oui Scat! It's United Steelworkers Union, | | Bequeaths $17 Million to Charity BOSTON (AP)—A bachelor lived so quietly that KEEP Wno few people Trust Co. disclosed Monday night Stone had left 17 million dollars mostly in common stocks to the Permanent Charity Fund, nearly doubling the fund's principal ; a oe The trust company, serving as PLAYING WITH FIRE — calmly along rail of lmer C dogs trustee, said $100,000 is being as- signed immediately to help com- are walked during cross bat Boston's juvenile delinquency his owners, Capt. Fred Manni Stone's only living relative is’ ning, en route from Leghorn, Sidney Stone of Wayland, a cous- wk death by poking his nose into * * * He said the philanthropist was in the shoe business as a jobber at the turn of the century. He WITHIN Ord, Calif. Boysun doesn't realize he is taking a chance on sudden No Immediate Word on Data From Lunik III Soviets Are Expected to Release Information Within 24 Hours Off-Limits! | | MOSCOW (# — Soviet scientists kept intent vigil at a receiving “mechanical brain” today as the time ar- rived for their little flying | observatory to begin its his- toric first reports about the ‘far side of the moon. By Russian reckoning the 614-pound Lunik III, laden with automatic recording and transmitting instru- ments, was to soar within “— DOGS knew Fe was wealthy has left 17 4,350 miles of the moon and |milliou dollars to charity. Start its biggest mission at * * * 9 a.m. (EST). The bequest was by Albert \] . ® That “moon hour” passed with Stone Jr., 82, who died May 10. IN( L () S () I no immediate word flashed to the The Boston Safe Deposit and , a - eager public that the electronic data was being received by the “mechanical brain,’ a complicat- ed, inter-linked computing system of listening posts and scientific AP Wirephete centers A Siamese cat named Boysun stalks achene However, there was no doubt here in the Soviet capital that all Was proceeding on schedule, ynstitution past the enclosure Boysun arrived this week with Maj. Ramona Man- assignments Fort Ings. ng and his wife, linly. to new At least a limited revelation of what the Lunik sees is expected tu be disclosed within the next 24 hours. Even if not detailed, it may it least say that man’s new space- has registered a view of the hitherto unseen part of the moon * * * at what is normally an off-limits area Ed “It has been com-| nd volunteers sweated to fice manager. eff gradually. The rain hasn't been| Arkansas River. heavy enough to do any damage yet.” Flooded conditions have been re-jfeet above flood stage ported on M-59 west of Telegraph | kogee, Okla., at ~~ * * His announcement came Mon- Presidential Press Secretary James C. Hagerty at Palm Springs Calif., that ‘‘the matter of the! dock strike is now before the Pres- ident and the White House.” Also Monday the government took its first limited step to curtail the strike, but union chiefs threatened by implication to expand the walkout to include seamen, The Port of New Orleans, second largest in the country, remained closed today despite a federal judge’s order for the striking long- shoremen to go back to work. * * * About 50 longshoremen straggled to the docks this morning and} wete told by representatives of) their locals to go back. to work.| However, they refused to cross picket lines of the clerks and sweepers union. Observers said Longshoremen’s Locals 1418 and 1419 had appar- ently complied with the judge’s order, but the docks were still barren. A federal judge had issued a restraining order Monday against two union locals whose walkout touched off the mass strike by 85,000 longshoremen Oct. 1. Seven other New Orleans locals were not affected by the order. SOUGHT ORDER The National Labor Relations Board sought the order at the re- quest of New Orleans shippers, who maintain the ILA failed to file a required 30-day advance notice of the strike. * * * The way appeared cleared for possible federal! intervention through the Taft-Hartley law with the announeement here of total stalemate in negotiations. * * * After brief talks with both sides, Deputy Federal Mediation Director Robert H. Moore announced no more meetings were scheduled. Shippers claim the ILA violated an agreement to extend their con- tract to Oct. 15 and declare they will, not consider any talks until work resumes or until after that In Today's Press GET ER BRIAR LP MOI ED eeeeeee eee veeeree County DOOWE cccsvccescsccgac. At Obituaries ..... eeaee i TV & Radio Programs ...... 18 Wilson, Earl . “Women’s Pages .......... 13-15 4 ‘ Eight Mile roads b the County, day, along with a statement from | tang Commission, ” , | Problem in the event of a heavier | | downpour. in Philadelphia applicants are hoping to take the wall washers test scheduled Wednesday for five openings. * * * effort to learn which method is prreganesstk generally and so- cially correct what wall‘washing methdd the ap- plicants use, clean,” he says, “Wwe don't care if 18 |the guy starts in the middle and works both ways.” ern Highway between Lahser and Okla., Thursday. 83 MILLION DAMAGES * * * “There are floods along the edges of roads and some wash-| outs, but they are not serious now, dollars: is aie eke smaney. lee not, The, ood threat in the Dallas- ani h to create danger of ort Worth area eased when the noug »| Trinity River crested at a flash flood or serious damage.” Hess said fallen leaves clogging catch basins could pose a serious Division estimated damage from’ |were expected to be ‘looded today, however. Farm lands around Mineola, in ‘East Texas, also faced flooding ifrom the Sabine River which was lexpected to crest at 17 feet today, |three feet above flood stage. * * * Officials of flood-stricken areas warned against drinking water un- less it is boiled at least 20 minutes to prevent disease. Romeo was most affected by the wet blanket over the area as several power lines were sev- ered last night at the height of strongest downpour, Early this | morning the village was blacked out for half an hour by a power failure from the persistent wa- ter fall. Street and traffic lights went out in a two-mile section of mid- Detroit for two hours last night) due to a power failure, also. Forty policemen were stationed at cross- ings to direct traffic during the emergency. through heavy snow drifts in a cattle stranded by snow. the heavy Officials said stranded families in the valley in south-central * * * : iohti -.. |were airlifted food and supplies to) ae Public a Commission |) st until blocked roads are re- cial said the blackout Was | opene d. caused by cable trouble from yes- build a sandbag wall along the ing down gradually and draining | Flooding was expected down- |stream when the river crests three | fair and decent contract. Mus-; remain on strike until justice is tomorrow and 10 feet done.”’ road and two spots on Northwest-! above flood stage at \Vebbers Falls, The Texas Disaster and Relief |a weekend of floods and tornadoes » at a conservative two million 35 feet. | |Farm and ranch land; downstream | Road crews in Colorado pushed | hunt for 6,000 to 8,000 sheep and | snow-battered mountain| Colorado | | labor. sold the company in “The steelworkers will not ac- |cept ‘the sweetheart contract’ of- fered by the industry, We want a|2€5S- ice Ex-Tiger Bob Shaw GOT OVATION McDonald was asked whether {there is still a possibility of a voluntarily negotiated contract. “There certainly is,"' McDonald replied. The grey haired union leader Was given a standing ovation by From Our Wire Services The Chicago White Sox pinned their hopes in the fifth and per- haps final game of the World 1910 and joined his grandfather and other relatives in the real estate busi- Faces Sandy Koufax 1. the policy group both before and Series today on ex-Tiger Bob | after the meeting Shaw who was beaten by Los | R. Conrad Cooper, leader of Angeles 4-3 in the second game. the industry negotiating team * * * of U.S. | Shaw takes the mound against | strikeout specialist Sandy Kou- fax, who set u National League record in August by striking out 18 San Francisco Giants. The weatherman predicted a high of 82 degrees with the pos- and a vice president Steel Corp., was reported meet- ing with his fellow negotiators at the U.S. Steel headquarters | here. The talks — resumed last Thurs- day at the urging of President |Eisenhower — collapsed Monday) ‘ibility of considerable cloudi- night. Each side blamed the other.; ness today. The smog which In a final action, United Steel-) hung over the game yesterday is expected to be back. * * * Another partisan crowd over 90,000 will be on hand in Los Angeles with the game sched- uled to start at 3:45 p.m. on Pontiac television sets. * * * If Chicago wins, the serjes re- sumes in Chicago's Comiskey Park Thursday. If the Dodgers make it four in a row over the White Sox, it’s all over. See sports pages | for details. workers President David J. Mc- |Donald asked heads of the indus-, try to meet with him ‘‘any time, | lany place’’ to try and break the | stalemate. Similar requests from McDonald | have been rejected by the industry. Heads of the 12 steel companies directly involved in the negotia- tions have told McDonald that the industry negotiating committee. headed by R. Conrad Cooper of U.S. Steel, has complete authority | 'to reach an agreement. Pontiacs, Other Cars Selling Like Wildfire rn in its first three days. There are good signs that the outstanding sales record che No. 1 spot in the medium price field—may be topped by ‘the 1960s, according to S. E. ef the 1959 models—which rocketed Pontiac into The new Pontiac automobile has set a smash hit pat- scope, Confusing radio signals prevented British observers from deciding ,immediately whether the Soviet ‘moon rocket made its scheduled pass across the far side of the moon today. The Jodrell Bank radio the world's largest, up signals at 8:58 a.m. EST. Speculation about wha would be found has been rife for cen- turies. Yesterday the 84-year-old astro-botanist Prof. Gavriil Tak- hoy said possibilities existed that the presence of lower forms of tele- picked ‘Knudsen, General Motors living matter might be dis- EWS as vice president and division ‘sé. general manager. sind Be oe eS DETROFT wh — Income tax Other cars already on the mark- correspondent for Tass, said Sun- claims totalling $3,250,000 against 527 international representatives et doing exceptionally well, local dealers reported are too, and officers of the United Auto | During the first three days of Workers Union have been settled sale — Thursday through Satur- for $106,000, the Detroit Times 4... — Pontiac dealers delivered reported today. The claims in- volved a dispute over whether a flat allotment of $7 a day in expense money paid tnion offi- cers and representatives from 1955 to 1957 was in fact income. more than 6,000 of the new cars and confirmed orders for an ad- ditional 17,359. Knudsen said. This record was hailed as one of the most successful new car advents in the division's history. Thousands of telegrams from dealers indicate ‘the most. en- thusiastic reception of a new Pon Time to Go Home BRUTON, England (UPI) — Author John Steinbeck said yes- "!@¢ ever experienced by the di- terday he has decided it ‘s |¥S!0N. Knudsen said. : Locally the 1960 model is ‘off time to leave Britain and return | ito one of the best starts within to the United States because he ; heard a radio broadcast by ,Memory,.” said Henry Gotham President Eisenhower “‘and he (Manager of the Pontiac Retail Store, 63 Mt. Clemens St a foreigner.” sounded like 3 In the first three days, 40 new terday’s all-day drizzle. Service was restored by 10:30 p.m. An unseasonal tornado forecast for the extreme south-central area was called off this morning with no funnels or threatening (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Wall Washing Big Problem PHILADELPHIA (# — Richard Levin of the city’s personnel de- partment admits he has run up against a blank wall. “It seems,’ laments Lavin, “there are two schools of thought on how a wall should be washed.” One school, explains Levin, says you should start at the bottom and work up; the other insists you start at the top and work down. More than 90 civil service job Levin said he made a sincere Right n@w, Levin. does not care “Ag long as the wall comes out } ‘ " ; BURIED UNDER SNOW — This tiny Southern Colorado town , of Westcliffe is buried under more than 4% feet of snow. Giant , piles of snow from last week’s storm block the town’s main street. Several snowbound families have been rescued from the sur- Southern Colorado Town Digging Out rounding territory. Army rescue units are cutting Weasel tracks through the blizzard banks in a massive drive to save 8,000 cattle still marooned by the storm. The 14,000-foot high Sangre de Cristo Mountains can be seen in the background. and or- 45, he re- Pontiacs were delivered iders written for another (das * * * Public response has been ;mendous,"’ Gotham said. “tre- { | Sales of Chevrolets, Oldsmo- biles, Cadillacs and Imperials are especially good in compari- son with the last couple years, they said. (Initial sales last year were cut by industry-wide strikes.) Chevrolet, top seller last year, is off to a fine start in Pontiac, laccording to Harold Serra, sales manager of Mathews-Hargreaves Inc., 631 Oakland Ave. In the first three were 65 deliveries and orders written for 82 more, he said These figures include delivery of 16 of the new, compact Corvair car and orders for 16 more, he said. Good reports on_ initial also come from Stanley Koska, sales manager of Jerome Motor Sales Co., 280 S. Saginaw St., and, Willard Love, sales manager of! R & R Motors Inc., 724 Oakland | Ave. Jerome handles Oldsmobiles | and Cadillacs and R & R Imper- ials. days there Looks Out for His Own AP Wirephoto | A seal that became beached | yesterday during low tide was saved when patrolman Jack Seal | carried it to deep water. Sales t day the satellite would be able to photograph the far side of the moon, but there has been nothing further to confirm a camera aboard. is * * * All Moscow newspapers published a diagram, obviously official to show the strange flight path of the Lunik. The diagram with a dotted line representing the relation of the earth and the moon today, shows: The Lunik takes off from the side of the earth on the observer's left (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) ‘Told Answers for TV Show Stempel Is 1st Witness Today in Probe of ‘21’; Coached on Gestures WASHINGTON (UPI) — A big money winner from the now de- funct TV quiz show “21” testified today he was given the answers to all questions prior to his appear- ance in a nationally-televised con- test with Charles Van Doren. Herbert Stempel, 32, graduate student at New York University, said producers of the show sup- plied him in advance with all the questions and answers and coached him on the acting gestures he used on the show. y See Early Story Page 18 Stempel was the first witness as a House commerce subcommit- ee opened a four-day investigation of charges that some big name television quiz shows have been rigged. Before questioning Stempel, the subcommittee turned out the lights in the House caucus room and watched a filmed reproduc- tion of the 30-minute show ‘21’ | that was seen by millions ef Americans on Nov. 28, 1956, In the show, Stempel, then WESTCLIFF, England (UPI)— champion of the game ‘‘21,”" with $69,500 in winnings to his credit, was pitted against a new chal- lenger, iUniversity English professor. Van Doren, a Columbia Oe ee FS ee EL ee et Oe re od ss | he" Toernape ig Shee: aaah ne tg a \~ oO St . ee Oe oe on Ph ge 13 Officials Reappointed ~ fo Their County Positions t THE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 r OU ile Negroes Agree to School Switch: The Day in Birmingham Rain Slows Construction of New. Baldwin Library Parents Moved From! sirmMINGHAM — Two days ofjcording to City Manager L. R. With only one new member! Delos Hamlin Farmington, il " Were continuously steady rain have pel added, the Oakland County Board Township sunervisor and chairman Area; Children slowed construction of the new! A hearing on assessments of $1.14 of Supervisors yeste unani-jof the Board of Sunervisors, and Sent Back wing at the Baldwin Public Library /|per front foot for resurfacing Lake- pe yesterday mously approved the reappoint- John G. Semenn. Berkley super since ground was broken en > side street has been set for 8 gan ments of 13 officials to county |visor, were handed new three-year! DETROIT (UPI) — Parents of peeaee pease hens Size Oct. 19 in the commission room positions appointments on the Board of | 70 Negro children today agreed to| uP from gouging out founda- the Municipal Building. John C. Austin, auditer since Public Works send their to tion hole, but other workers m + 1938 and vice chairman of the) Returned to the Oakland County a school they had moved away|S%s ahead — trees 0g || Boare of Auditors since 1950, was Planning Conimission were J. from because of “‘undesirable ele- site and ying os sari ers. ofla ar reappointed to another $12,000-a-;Robert F. Swanson. its chairman,)| ments.” ° year Umer year Serer. and Ralph A. Main. James F. The parents kept their children Linn “Monich enpocts: tha, $183,000 There were no other nomina- tions from the Board of Super- visors for this pesition. None of the incumbents was opposed. Renominated by Ferndale Super- visor Orph C. Holmes, Austin, 64 of S28 Pine Grove Ave.. Orion Township, was praised for helping establish ‘‘an efficient administra- tion of the county at the auditor level” Another reappaintment was that of John A. Macdonald to the Social Welfare Board. Macdonald, 70, of '73 Forest Ave., Waterford Town- ‘ ship. was first appointed to the Board in 1939. He ts now chair- maar * * * The only new face among the appointees was Donald McPherson, Berkley supervisor who was ap- pointed to fill a vacancy, expiring in 1961. on the Department of Veterans Affairs. McPherson re- placed Howard K. Kelley who died recently Reappointed to another three- ear term with the department was Don R. McDonald supervisor , Albert Weber, 77. of 18 E Iroquois Rd, was named to suc- ceed himself as trustee on the Tu- berculosis Sanatorium Board of Trustees. He was first appointed n 1944 Supervisors delayed filling a five-year position on the Board of Health while a study is being made on possible replacement of the board by the Health Com- mittee of the Board of Supervi- | sors. Spence and Vincent S. Madison. In a separate action roqu ring ho nominatians, Norman R. Barnard jwas reaffirmed as coun(y corpor- ation counsel. Lewis C. Jarrendt as civil director and Dr Frank R Bates as dog warden. defense Drivers Break Traffic Laws at Same Rate LANSING (UPI) — Apparently Michigan motorists aren't getting into much more trouble with the law than they did a year ago. The Secretary of State's office reports that records of court con- victions of moving violations on which the point system is based aren't coming in to the central file much faster than in 1958 The rate this vear is 92,650 a month, compared to 92,614 per month for a year ago. These records come in from all Sylvan Lake the states and, according to Secre-| tary of State James Hare, some drivers ‘‘are shocked . . . to find that a 3-point conviction in Florida or California brought them up to the suspension-liable 12-point plateau’ Oakland Authorizes Annual Tax Spread This years county and _ school taxes were authomzed spread in annual action taken yesterday by the Oakland County Board of Su- | JUVEMBER IN MATOBER | ber in Matober for this crazy mixed-up pear tree belonging to Mrs. J. H. Thomas in North Augusta, S. C. For some strange reason forth with a full compliment lells Small Car Clergy Meeting Range in Prices Set at MSUOQ | Cheapest Falcon Low on List Running From gious educators, Dr. George A. and plans and its implications for $1,835 to $2,103 DETROIT wm — Price tags on ,1960 American-made compact cars iwill range from $1,835 to $2,103, | including excise taxes and dealer handling charges. | The price range does }clude Chrysler's Valiant has not been announed Ford Motor Co. was the latest: | te ammounce the suggested list price of its new Falcon. Ford not in- Its price hems. f ~~» — It's Juvem- blooms, though Autumn. the tree burst of springlike One of the world’s leading reli- Buttrick, Dean of Chapel at Har- vard University, will be the prin-| cipal,speaker at the first “Clergy- men's Convocation’’ tomorrow at Michigan State University Oakland. Every minister in Macomb and Oakland counties has been invited to attend the all-day session, sched- uled to start at 9 am Others who wil] hear Dr. But- trick include students and faculty at MSUO One of the primary objectives of the convocation is to explore the kinds of educational needs At this rate it should have ripened pears by Christmas tridge sitting upon it bsranches out of school yesterday when thzy were refused admittance to the overcrowded Pattengill School. But they agreed to send their children to the downtown Houghton Scheol after meeting with School Supt. ‘Samuel M. Brownell for two hours last night. Brownell, whe ordered the chil- a = dren transferred to the Hough- bs ton School because of overcrowd- ing. at Pattengill, asked the par- Q ents for two weeks im order to study the situation and prom- UPI Telephote ised a decision at the end of that the calendar obviously says it's | ‘We don’t dispute that Patten- gill is overcrowded,” said Joseph |Lewis, a leader of the group of ___ | objecting parents. ‘‘But Houghton is inadequate.” * * * Now all it needs is a par- present at last night’s Birmingham Commission meeting. queried the city fathers as to why the library couldn’t be képt open on Sundays. The students said that many of them had part time jobs after school and on Saturdays when the library is open, and could not facility te supplement studies ayor Harry Denyes Jr. told youths that he imagined the reason the library is closed Sun- days is to give employes a day off and that to leave it open seven days a week would cost more as more employes would presumably He listed lack of a lunchroom,) inadequate playgrounds and lack! of fire escapes as his principle! objections to the Houghton School. Other members of the group were more blunt. | | of these neighborhoods and we plain the university’s philosophy | don't feel it is right for them all elements of the community. Varner will speak during the) morning session which also will Schoo! will not get help on the juv- enile problem,”’ said Forest Jones, janother member of the group. | "We feel there elements at Houghton which we) “We feel children going to the| dren exposed to.”’ Both schools have predominant- ly Nego enrollments in grades one through six. Stolen Paintings would not like to have our chil-| Aids Bermuda Solve 3 Rape Slayings; First Clue Reported HAMILTON, Bermuda (UPD— Scotland Yard flew two ace homi- cide detectives to Bermuda Mon- day to track down a maniacal kill- er three rape-murders has cocrottond this vacation island. Detective superintendent Rich- ard Lewis and Sgt. William Tay- lor of the yard were called in by Bermuda's detective chief Ar- thur Ledge as police disclosed they had found their first possi- have to be hired. * * * However, he informed the stu- dents that their query would be sent to the City Library Board for consideration, and that a reply could be expected within the next two weeks. * * * In the interim, City Commis- | to try to send our kids back,” | Sioner Lance W. Minor suggested Lewis’ wife said. that students who could not make it to the library have a friend pick up the necessary books for them. | As part of the commission ere wndest rable Meeting. a hearing of necessity was held on the resurfacing of eside from Midland to Quarton roads. | Only one dissenter was pres- ent. Henry Q. Munn of Royal Oak who owns the property at 1578 Lakeside Rd. protested that while he would be assessed fur- ther for the read work, it would ble lead in the series of vicious slayings that began last March | when Mrs. Gertrude Robinson, | 72, was found mutilated and | slain. In May, Mrs. Dorothy Pearce, | 59, was found assaulted and mur- dered, Scotland Yard investigators {turned up no clues and the honey- jmoon island returned to normal juntil Sept. 27, when pretty Dorothy Rawlinson was slain and her body ithrown to the sharks. * * * Police said they were sure the }same man was responsible for all three crimes. Families on the island demanded |protection. Women were reluctant to go out at night and doors and windows were bolted tightly after /sundown. Seek Tighter pervisors said yesterday its cheapest two- a ; ey con ety not raise the selling value of the The Board authorized se door version of the compact | ‘he new university , alas hie earn tard. supervisors and city assessing O!-| car, which goes on sale Friday, | The fields to be considered for , : ficers to begin levying a total of! wilt carry a list price of $1,746, study are guidance and counseling, | tre oer residents of - = $10,244,784, which is the amount of| compared te $1,810 for a two church business administration, 0 eS ore Pi a eee te | QT aws the county's 1960 budget met by taxation Twenty-two citiés w church architectural trends, trends in secular education and teaching techniques and methods Also to be included are Bible education, leadership development, sermon preparation and interpro- fessional encounters to be door Chevrolet Corvair. ill be expect- Following is the price picture in ed to produce $7,015,937 of the|the compact car field, with excise total, while 25 townships will col- |2Nd dealer's charges included lect $2.28. 846 based on the coun-|, Rambler American Deluxe two- | ae : » qi, _|door $1,835: Rambler American tv's $5.62 tax rate and $1,822,915,- eine tars 1.884: Ford Fal 328 state equalized valuation nl oz jor $1,884; Fo : , rE : ANENT Yesterday Ss approval by unan- oon r $1,912; R am b le r way BE ae tee an el a ne |American Super two-door $1,920:| If approved, the course may be- 337 to be raised for previously com- Rambler American super four-door |come a part of the MSL) contin: Lene sal = ms aiaer araia $1.969: Falcon four-door $1,974; | ing education program open to the P curren’ coumy rail Lark Deluxe six two-door $1,976; | college community. projects to be assessed against ; . re aim of the convo several citics and townships. An-| Orval’ 300 twedeor $1.80% Beedgage ee vileneal of q(feature reports from members of| 300 four-door $2,038; |° the steering committee other was $41.179.812 in ratin | Corvair in ope 4 Perk Deluxe six four-door £2 606 | standing committee to function as ape he costars tion —— approval | street which was torn up during) ‘recent sewage work by the Oak-| i Booty, land County DPW and temporar-| State Tourist Has ily smoothed over , | x * * Resurfacing at this time would} - 'be only temporary, using one anda| _ ; . TORONTO (UPI)—Toronto Art quarter inch of blacktop to stave) GRAND RAPIDS wm — Tighter Gallery officials called in their ex-|off winter weather damage. Then, antilitter law controls and resumed \perts today to restore six master-|in the spring, work should be done publication of state highway maps \pieces stolen and then abandoned|oi a more permanent nature, ac- 47e asked by resolutions coming ir an unlocked suburban garage. | before the 42nd annual West Mich- Waterford Man, Council Also Wants Road Maps Published Again Million - Dollar Found Saturday, Been Misused DR. GEORGE A. BUTTRICK jigan Tourist and Resort Assn. a.” membership meeting ° which, The art theft, the largest in| | * * * Canada’s history, took place Sept.) | The voted increase, and dept service | > \a liaison between the larger body . a Svivation's “Teachitions for schools to be spread in various Corvair 00 (Deluxe) two-door $2.- of clergymen and the university. | The Rev. Robert Hermanson of 14. The treasures, insured for $640,- Car Passenger committee. headed by Lad Suicey amounts among all townships and Sis oo ee Dak or | MSUO Ch coh we. Carer Avon Township. ibis oad 000 but valued at upwards of $1,- ’ lot Berrien Sears has prepared : 7 a t 1$4, : orvalr i ( uxe) four-| : ‘hance as mittee chairman, will present ideas 000.000 were found rolled up like! . . < Z S F REV. WILLIAM M. HUGHES ‘Ss ; \door $2,103 ' will address the gathering to ex- for future programs and the PTO- | wallpaper of the peat tl a m like FTurt 1n Collision om OF ore | ” ~ — i - } . eC Girls in W Finldl posed organization of the Clergy ing in West Toronto Saturday night. y fF & R t Offi : | Cit iris in Wrong rie Friends of MSUO” to plan them.| Emery Shook, 22, of 5257 Ross meeting starting tomorrow in ; , After Dr. Buttrick’s address at} The paintings were recovered Dr., Waterford Township, was in Grand Rapids. Olay UIICIGI CHES covers nes cep — Musical Has Starry Magic Alte Dr, Butih's adress at] The pobsing rere recovered [De Watered Tewvehiy, yas tn/Grand Rapin, Fj . T lk HH Three Mississipp} State College ’ . @ gymen will be divided into smaller, mous call. Police kept the re- |Mercy Hospital today after being urging . Michigan Legislature igures in a ere ll Nomen f oshmen ae AA De } Sound of Music Opens groups to discuss the steering com- covery secret until yesterday injured in a two-car accident last to sceaal We ban on publication iors than | 4 rn vw nitiete. | mittee’s proposals and to exchange| while watching the garage over |night on Oakland avenue. | of state highway maps, The Distric so. ern ; , . fs tnan DuaGdaing scientists i ‘ the weekend in of tra * * * , : ' a . emer of Re coms » They caught grasshoppers | By WILLIAM BENDER ‘has been sprinkled over their ideas. thiev. Ops pping Shook . | state’s last official road map ernational, the Rev. Viliam M e '] nd the 4 the \ eee eo = newest musical play “The Sound Reconvening later the minis. | the eves, e arrests were i _ was admitted to the hos was published in 1958. Future Hughes. presented a ‘‘facts and aha ° = ne i a sok ~e ° Ey ee esha Music 2 / : | ters will act on the proposals and made. (pital with possible head injuries. publication was halted as an Peet = : . Og) Students at , cents ‘ SC a t “ | ; | figures’ talk at the noonday lunch-| ,..,, Becnard Hesaces and Oscar: ite= The show opened its week-long determine further action. Police speculated the thieves had |He was a passenger in @ Car) economy move. driven by Myrtle Rowe, 32, of 8761 merstein II go rolling on. \Bridge Lake Rd., Clarkston. “Or u ii yo é ; = a + j i a ms eon today of the Waterford-Dray All the starry magic this great Premiere here Monday night. Dr. Buttrick began his ministry found their loot too hot to dispose Another association resolution ton Rotary Club. N was held at . * * * F > F } ‘ongreg of to art dealers anywhere in Ia ' the Community Acitivities Build. Don’t Get the Spirit musical-theatrical team possesses — _ at ee bigs — CONE Teg sone! , ™ . | Her car struck the rear of an ®ims at reducing litter along ); —________________ | Rodgers and Hammerstein| Church, Quincy, Ill. in 1915, and world. auto driven by Donald Woodin, beaches, highways and in park us TALLAHASSEE. Fla «UPhi— ‘would be credentials for any completed 28 years of service at) ~ * * J '™/areas. It asks legislators to con- 18, of 792 Blaine Ave. \ minister at the Milam | Florida State University's “Leg: : ° show, but “The Sound of Music’’| the Madison Avenue Presbyterian| Gallery director Martin Baldwin} * * t |sider a law requiring “sufficiently Methodist Church, the Rev. | islative Appreciation Day” struck il k R | t has credits galore ‘Church, New York City in 1954.! said it would take about six months ; . ‘high deposits’ on all glass bev- Hughes is making his annual of- | a sour a ae Sinie Seng unl eve q lons * * * | In January 1955, he became to restore the canvasses. Beg il were traveling saws ieee aaines to ineure their ficial visit to each of the 47.) Emory iRed) Cross. Cross re- . Book by Howard Lindsay and preacher to the university and) Most of the old varnish on the venue ae ities ame Blaine | eturn to the retail merchant. It clubs in his district, acquainting | ported to police that someone waite y Or Russel Crouse, of “Life with Fath- plummer professor of Christian paintings was cracked because the| a si ald entamat also urges lawmakers to consider Rotarians with Rotary’s interna- | stole his automobile during the | jer’ fame. A story about the fa- morals at Harvard University. ‘pictures were rolled up. A few bad! possible elimination of metal con- Uonal activities and projecting | “Appreciation Day” observance. | ‘Continued From Page One) mous Trapp family signers. late also has been guest preacher | jtainers or establishment of speci- future programming. Rotarv more has a membership of 200.000 business and professional executives in ]13 coun- tries throughout the world, the Rev. Hughes pointed out. than e } . Midwest, South Very Wet . while the moon is far away on the of Chicago lopposite side. _ | The Lunik makes a slow, reverse MexicO Sturn to pass to the right of the city Of! moon, which has progressed more Mexico East Easternmost of lies slightly east of the |Chicago. point ~~ jaround the earth | It does not make a sharp turn |to keep close around the moon, Rain, Temperatures Fall By The Associated Press Mild temperatures and rain cov- ered wide areas of the Midwest and South today, In most sections, the rainfall was in its second day. The Weather Full US. Weather Burean Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Frequent rain and cooler teday. Migh 67. dese - stonal rain or drissle and cooler tonight. lew &2. Wednesday considerable cleudi- ness and continued ceol. High 64. Nerth- east winds 1@ te 15 miles teday and tenight ~—Feday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am. At 8 am Wind velocity 5 mp.b Direction Northeast Sun sets Tuesday at 6.06 pm Sun rises Wednesday at 6.35 am Moon sets Tuesday at 9:23 pm Moon rises Wednesday at iB 16pm Menday in Pontiac (as recorded dewntewn) Highest temperature .............0.- 70 Lowest temperature . $7 Mean temperature .............+-. 3.5 Weather—Rain One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature .......... eee Lowest temperature .§ ........s+05.. 33 Mean temperature .....+. sess, .. 45 Weather—Sunny Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in #7 Years 85 in 1879 78 in 1873 Menday's Temperatere Chart Alpena $6. £2 Memphis 88 666 Raltimore 90 Miami Beach 85 79 Brownsville 85 %& Milwaukee 58 55 Buffale 72 «67 Min s 70 56 Chicago 72 58 New Orieans go 73 Cincinnatl 88 #68 New York 79 68 Cleve a3 #67 ha o 4 Denver 67 42 Peliston 55 40 t 72 @ a6 61 Duluth $8 45 Pittsbu oe 64 Port Worth 80 58 8. Francisco 63 Gr. Re 69 56 8S. Ste Marie 58 45 Hough 61 3% Trav. City 67 64 Jacksonville 86 ¢€8 Washington 90 69 }paame 70 56 Seattle 55 48 Angeles £3 60 Tamps $1 Marquctie on ° jinstead, it sails beyond the moon about one-fifth as far as the moon is from the earth. Then it makes a slow turn to the left and charges | St. Louis, Mo. Quincy, Ill, and|back toward the earth. Chicago had about 1 inch of rain * * * |well into the second day. In some| The diagram indicates that the jnorthern and northwestern sub-'moon will be three and perhaps | jurbs of Chicago, the rainfall/four days farther along its orbit. \ranged between 114 and 2 inches, |around the earth before the Lunik| jthe Weather Bureau reported. | pulled back by the earth, completes | At Burwood, Miss.. 1'2 inches of |its orbit. ‘rain was reported up to this morn-| Jt whips around the left side ing. * * * | New Orleans, La., and Birming- ham, Ala., had nearly 1 inch. Light rain and snow fel] in Mon- itana and scattered showers were reported in Idaho, Vashington and |Oregon jinto space on a_ cigar-shaped course, The design leaves unsolved the question of whether the Lu- nik may be lucky enough to have another close look at the = > = moon, Leonid edov, a member | Rain-swollen rivers in Texas] of the Soviet Academy of Scien- and Oklahoma began _ receding ces, said the device may stay in jand residents of low-lying areas 'returned to their homes. | Five deaths were -ttributed to the weather in Oklahoma. two’ in 'Texas orbit indefinitely, radioing back information from space all the while, The solar batteries, taking their power from the sun, “‘generate mane states counted damage in oe See Se ae ns of dollars di - t th hout,”’ he said Oklahoma Gov. J. Howard .Ed-|1° etuspmeet Magna ; ‘mondson proclaimed his state a major disaster area * * * * * * The Soviet news agency Tass said information to come after the Lunik completed its survey of the Mary Martin as the female lead. In addition, “The Sound of Music’’ has that elusive some- thing else—really good songs. * * * Give Mary Martin some good |than two days on its 28-day orbit songs and she could run on Broad-| of Foreign Missions of the Presby- way for years—which is the sort of fate th-t may await this color- ful, warm-hearted and tuneful show, * * * She plays a postulate in an Austrian abbey in 1938. NUNS SING A quartet of nuns tell us in song that she is a moonbeam, a will o’ the wisp —.but certainly no fu- ture nun. ‘ * The mother abbess sends the girl, Maria, out of the abbey io ON Car of Woman get to know the world. She goes jof the earth and then back around to the home of an austere Austrian! ithe right of the earth to sail On| military man, Capt. Georg von'turned gold while she attended Trapp, to be governess to his seven motherless children. The sound of music is what Maria brings to this household. The result does wonders for the Von Trapp family and has a plea- sant effect on the audience too, to understate a bit. * x * “The Sound of Music’ has some’ surprises. These include a chorus line of nuns, no overture, and choral church music of a bygone century. The curtain lifts, and without warning the voices of a women’s chorus float over the audience from loudspeakers in all parts of the theater. Theodore Bikel as Von Trapp and Kurt Kasznar as an influenti- al Vienna producer are veteran! The weather bureau forecast rain today fer parts of Washing- jton, Idaho, Minnesota, Wisconsin, |Florida, from the central and low- moon would cover such things as cosmic rays and lethal radiation! belts in space. Tass reported Soviet scientists’! lower lakes region and over most did not say how far advanced such| jof New England. | plans might be. stage and film actors, and they) sing easily and with apparent en-' joyment. x * x aa, from The story, set against the back-,Sunday morning at the corner of er Mississippi Valley eastward to are now looking forward to dis-|ground of the Nazi push into Bagley and Wesson streets. They Washington, said the test |the Atlantic Coast and into the tories toward Mars and Venus. It Austria in 1938, was drawn from are Billy R. Williams, 26, and| tives had been achieved Trapp Family Andrew T. Darney, 21, both of — |Singers,” by Maria Auguste Trapp. the book ‘The Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Cor- nell, Hamilton, Dartmouth, Ober-! lin, Duke and other colleges. In| 11951-52 he traveled around the ‘world as Joseph Cook Lecturer) under the auspices of the Board] |terian Church. | Dr. Buttrick will be introduced) by Bishop Marshall R. Reed of the) | Methodist Church, and president of} ithe Michigan Council of Churches. | Bishop Reed wf also give the in-, i vocation, followed by a welcome} to the university by Dr. Lowell R. Eklund, director of continuing edu- | cation. | Vandals Spray Gold Part of a Pontiac woman's car church services, but the discovery was no joyous event. Mrs. Leonard Elliot, 39, of 4000 Louella Dr., Waterford Township reported to Pontiac police yester- day that the incident occurred while she attended services at the First Baptist Church Sunday night. When she returned to her car, she saw that part of it appeared to glitter like gold. The reason: vandals sprayed the front of her black automobile with gold paint. Two Men Plead Guilty in Local Morals Case Two men pleaded guilty yester- day to soliciting an act of pro- stitution and were fined $25 each by Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. The two men were arrested early a new-type tactical nose cone. rowably caused by rough handing RAIN Damage Light, will require expert restoration. | Chess Champion Defeats Pontiac Challengers Eighteen Pontiac challengers were defeated last night by an _in- ternational chess and_ checker champion in an open tournament sponsored by the Parks & Recrea- tion Department and its Chess and Checker Club. * * * Seven chess players and ll checker experts challenged the world records, * * * Banks took all the challengers on simultaneously, and defeated, them all, too. He's performed this feat four times in Pontiac in the past four years and suffered only one defeat. . * * * Banks’ appearance kicked off a new season of chess and checker competition at the Adah Shelly Branch Library, where the club holds regular matches, open to any fan, at 7 p.m. Mondays. 5,500 Mile Flight of Atlas Success CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ¢AP) —The Air Force reported satis- factory performance today by an Atlas missile fired out over the Atlantic on a 5,500-mile test with South Lyon targ The brief report, issued in had céme down within (Continued From Page One) high winds reported. The alerted area extended 380 miles along and south of a line from Battle Creek to Peoria, Il. The Weather Bureau forecast called for a high today of 67 with a low tonight of 52. Winds will blow northeast up to 15 miles per hour today and tonight. High tomorrow will be 64. *® * * From 10:15 yesterday morning until the same time today 1.41 skill of Newel W. Banks, 71-year. | inches of rain fell in the Pontiac old Detroit holder of numerous area. Winds this morning were northeasterly at eight miles an hour, * * * The lowest recordea temperature in downtown Pontiac préceding 8 a.m. was 58 degrees. At 1 p.m. the reading was 61. Better Weather Due \fications to insure more rapid dis- jintegration through weathering. | x * One resolution, being submitted without recommendation, urges is- suance of non-resident family fish- ing licenses similar to those issued for Michigan residents. Absolve Detroit Parents ‘in Burning of 8 Children DETROIT (UPI) Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Crowell were le- gally free of responsibility today in the fire deaths of seven of their eight children. Recorder's Judge Elvin L. Dav- enport yesterday freed the couple at the end of a three-day trial on charges of involuntary man- slaughter. The couple was visiting friends June 14 when fire swept their home. Two of the children died in the blaze and five more died of burns during the two weeks which followed. Supervisors Interested? Fincially hard-pressed Qakland townships and cities might find some relief in a new State High- way Department program to dis- pose of state-owned lands. Floyd J. Waugh, director of the procurement division of the depart- ment, outlined the plan to the Qak- land County Board of Supervisors area. State to Dispose of Land Questions from several super- visors indicated they might be interested in buying up this property to provide more money in their treasuries. Under the state's plan to give first purchase priority to townships and cities, Waugh said the state would keep the parcel off the mar- ket for as long as 60 days if com- munities are interested. He said all sales require approval of the State Administrative Board. * * * “Units. of government would have to use the purchased prop- erty for government use,” said Waugh. 4 j __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 mn 2 ns | y Glass Firms Busy boy's name on the ltst of suspected 3 [AR Fue € et we'd meen acCephalifis a glass containers in the United States, They shipped 20.1 billion 7 cases, the outbreak seems near | TOMORROW | Unit “tn. 2008. Seen Ending eee oe ONLY : .latest case is the only one re- SPECIALS Hearing Losses Are as N.J. Health Head Says ee ane, ee Different as Fingerprints Sept. 10 Was Peak; 19), The number of suspected cases BELTONE Prescriptions || Dead, More Probable 29 died. Of the 10 afflicted persons still living, there is a pos- Fit You Individually TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) — State] sibility some will. die, Dr. Kandel for the correct = te your ]!Health Commissioner Roscoe P.| sioner has reported that the out. a, Kandle said Monday that an out-|break of the rare virus reached BELTONE Hearing Service | °™¢2* °f eastern equine encepha-|its peak about Sept. 10 and has 9 litis in New Jersey seemed near) been declining since then. ROCK BOTTOM PRICES FIRST QUALITY 81x99 Inches Muslin Sheets 3 S. Saginaw—Phone FE 4-7711 9} ' : Stic { Ground Floor—Free Examina- §} ‘s end. « -% Eastern equine encephalitis is a Sen — No Obligntions- | a eat ee * - virus endemic in wild birds. It Reouier 4139 Walxe—tow port despite the|is believed that a fairly rare strain Home or Office death early in the day in Somers|of mosquito—culiseta melinaura— Cords and Batteries for all makes § Point, Atlantic County, of Richard| infects hurean beings with the dis-| PONTLAC’S ONLY Mooney, 12. The commissioner said|ease after biting infected birds. ana that the description of Richard's) There is no known cure or proved inches. High tread count. Limit 4 sheets Gleaming white mus- lin, full size 81 x 99 | BELTONE DEALE j : x symptoms led him to place the! human vaccine for the disease. 3 : Jods Lede a . ge E OCOOOOOOCOOOCO OOOH COETOOOEOOOOEEOSOEEECEEEOEES z Shredded Miracle Fibre Scalloped Stripe Design BED PILLOWS Chenille Bedspread $1.59 Seller 1.19 Random col- Reg. $1.29 97° Miracle fibers ‘ ‘a NOW-In Mich.! HIRAM WALKER’S | CAMPAIGNS IN OPEN — Prime Minister dressed a crowd there It was Macmiullan’s first bound edge ors, full size Harold Macmillan waves to the crowd surround- full day of his planned 2,000-mile tour in connec- Floral (ek spreads. Only ing his car in Middleton, England, when he ad tion with next month’s general election E POOOOEHOOOOOOEOOOOO SOOO OOOHOEEEEOOOSOEOEOOEE fe! EVERGLAZE or GINGHAM ;. Drapes or Bedspreads $3.95 Value Macmillan Is ‘Ordinary Chap’ | or So He Claims to Voters E YOUR By EDDY GILMORE short of belonging to the walrus He is uo a family: man_ the E CHOICE EACH LONDON (AP)—The prime min- Variety. father of one son and three daugh- E ister seeking a vote of confidence * * * ter vith onumerou grand hil : of ev ze vir in Thursday's British elections is) His well-tailored clothes re Gren 3 31 design gingham in an astute politician slightly old-fashioned MUST HAVE MONE) 3 green or rose. Mostly twin siz Although Maurice Harold Mac-| Macmillan likes good conversa When he makes (te Spieades Brae Style millan is rich and is married to tion, good food, mellow port and yt in town the deepest heel 2 1 inch lengtt seccece S | the daughter of the ninth Duke of strong cigars. With the money eve ne can understand it, He 3 SA UREREEESSC STRESS CSD O RE OO ON tral ht our on Devonshire, he has a strong ep- from @ succesful publishing house doesn't hesitate to use cliches : Heavy Sheeting Base ea > comm F affor ‘m all 3 peal to the me yn man he can afford them all. . ‘ . FULL SIZE CHENILLE must | I l Looking out over a_ working ‘ j Bis Sea ES ALS St 3 B d d t STbe%e t t } (le Ve ng on q class audience in Britain's indus- P A on = ve Be tH the e sprea Ss current GOO-mile tour for n 3 trial and grimy North Country, he a y AS rm y ie Co ee m3 in 86 proof, too! @ If your preference is on the lighter side, Hiram Walker’s TEN HiGH 86 proof Says . Pe y rou N 3 : t to Nave money n bank 7 $4.95 “I'm just an ordinary sort of al ) S aap ’ = Value chap.” : ° . - Tit ses Ufts 1 arguing th the 3 A small sea of cloth caps nods in Film wsing Laborites won't have the Ey ; lin agreement ee YA HIS Cr mintiousiie be Ait * * * . = a xension plar FRANKFURT. Germany, (UPI) ston pial “Good ol’ ‘arold,"” snorts anoth-, —The U. S. Army has denied a straight bourbon is for you. Its pleasing a ar alee, ; vee be original congressman's charges that EE factory Representative Here ‘ : . . con man oO ritis LIC lvis Presley's new movie w ( 3 : taste will delight you—so will the price. FULL FIVE 5 YEARS OLD . + . Elvis Presley * neve (nivel iid E WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. cost the taxpayers mone). : REMINGTON Sale of Popular Brand Choice of Big Selection | At 65 — he was born Feb, 10, Rep. George 1 Mahon (D-Tex) Fitted Crib Sheets Receiving Blankets 1894 — Macmillan laoks and acts complained that the government Electric Shaver HIRAM WALK Eps jlike a prime minister was helping pay for the Par 3 Reg. $1.19 R 50 ni : 3 g. : eg. c ti He possesses nearly all of the mount-Hal Wallis movie, “GI & RECONDITIONED c $ y— |requisities of a top flight politi-) Blues,"’ because a tank company — 1] 4 for 1 | cian. and soldier ‘extras’ from 3 . In World War I he was a distin-, ‘"e 3rd Armored Division were — Woe You \~~e REGAL Q7e | 69% to 89 Pint 4/5 Quart guished officer of the elite Bri-| used in some shots gait Service - cory | of $1 Code = 865 Code *864 TEN H IGH |e a Presley himself, a jecp driver —& —— —— 88c "= TYYYUTIEIIII I) |gade of Guards. He was wounded for the d ; ' i : S$ f™ | three times | for the division, has not appeared — & | before cameras yet, He will film E =) KF vs 3 Parts ST N ae . Snap Front — Zipper Bottom BEACON First Quality R S SUPE AUBMAN ea ) . AIGHT yRBO IS St I ER cI t B his sections ol the MOV it il > = Also in 100 proof - Bottled in Bond : BO ee the due deen al a oe ee rin Voy BABY SLEEPING BAG | BABY BLANKETS WHISKEY clubman’s country. He belongs to from service next yea! on —_ ‘N Reg. $1.98 the Athenaeum, Carlton, Turf, A spokesman for the 3rd —° TERILIZED PR \ Jl sine 3 eA DISTILLED BY Gyul. Pratt's, Beefsteak and Bucks Armored Division denicd Mahon's — ° - Cc am gy, fond Jubs delta he a Mabe Eos $ 79 $ 46 ” Ahulhe pb A | ¢ ae charges. He said the soldiers who : ae ~~ Ginew Macmillan is the joy of politi- acted as extras took leave duc 3 \ ve, Hilo Z cal caricaturists them and were paid by Para- — ila 2 G2 | He is 6-feet-1 and carries him-) mount. The Army would be reim : tay “ar Pint 4/5 Quort BF self erectly bursed for other expenses involv- & 3 Pe fnew pastel ey: Cede <= 1337 Cede £1336 Z * * * ing the military, he said F SIMMS SFRVICE—Remington tac- 3 Ceoeeeeseeseeeseesesesevesseeessesesessseseseoeseees : Y His blond hair gone gray is long a : t ry repes os “Ss pag inc Unbreakable Soft PLASTIC ee — g and inclined to turn up over his soy _ “ “AE , Se gaa —_—— temples Record Sales for Pretzels E , JEDIAPER —_ hy Straight Bourbon Whiskies « 5 years old » Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc., Peoria, Iilinois : His face is long and handsome, : Ea 3 / we: f with hooded eyes beneath bushy) The pretzel industry expects —E Ee of ™ 2 ae that slant we chevrons record sales of 130 million dollars E electric Shavers —Main Floor 3 3 PAILS ¥ | se ae woot Ss mustache is only ; hairs this year. Tren eiseseaipsntaansns Aree se ¢ ee eee wdddddddddid F798 Value Ee Unbreakable POLY PLASTIC BABY BATH TUBS Regular 3.95 Value 89 Stvle as showr 8x17 nches Guarantees leakproof With ‘| = | RO , : | je i : ! WY STAR Look aa Hf For This — GOLD STAR... TVOTITETOT TOT TTY y age eV Clothes Dryer 7s ASS of Excellence |b-=¥ HALL AWWW EW cee Regular 44 TVCTVOVUPVOUOVOTONEVOTTETY 4 f > = cape , , < { co The Gold Star is an award E Ly ee: 3 oe dell pm F 3 \ g* geen SES c sed steel ; of merit, nota EP eos y gohanized steel sides F plast ered hardw brand name! Only the WOOD CLOTHES DRYER RACKS IN STOCK SCOOHHHHHHHOHEHHSHHEHT OOOOH SOHOHOEEOESEOSEEEEE \ d ovte C * aa ly éf 4 al dying «ate finest ranges from , THOTT eTT TTY the world’s great Gas Range makers qualify for this coveted award. THETUCTTOVTTEVOTY * * PPPPPTTTTTT TTT TTT itt , 122 Inches — LINE we os Sod race ‘Rubber Tire | steak Knife Sets : Scraper Mats Regular $3.95 SET of 6 ; Regular $129 19° “brain dobar d 97° SF ieeteeahh abi ce LL never needs sharp- dirt off mee and ening eeeeeveeeeeeesceeeeosesesesoeoseoeseeseeeeeeseeeeee oe _ < ce. — — —S ae ES WEDNESDAY ONLY SUPER saint GROUND BEEF.. FRESH LEAN 39 PORK LIVER. *" FRESH 19 BOILED BROKEN HAM... SLICES 49 of = | #.S8n Mr. Tarbox was a retired farm- 2 } rfield er Deaths Elsewhere LONDON (AP)—James Hall, 55, one of London's best known gour- mets and a contributor to maga- zines in the United States and Britain, died Sunday * * * WASHINGTON (‘(AP)—Dr. John Burke, 75, American Ophthalmologist died Monday of a_ heart ailment x * BUENOS AIRES (AP) — Victor Lomuto, musical conductor and composer of tangos and other pop- ular South American music forms, died Monday. * * * BRISTOL, Conn. (AP) — May Rockwell Page, 88, widow of De- Witt Page, former vice president of the General Motors Corp., died Monday, She and her husband more than a million dollars to Bristol charities, social and organizations gave civic Elderly Couple q injured in Crash of 3 Cars, Truck A collision yesterday involving three cars and a truck om Auburn road east of Opdyke road in Pon- tiac Township resulted in injury to an elderly Pontiac couple. Oakland County sheriff's depu- ties said Joseph Ofiara, 73, and his wife, Bernice, 72, both of 128 Elm St., were taken to Pontiac General Hospital, treated for knee and arm injuries and re- leased. Ofiara was driving one of three eastbound vehicles that were struck by a westbound auto driven by William D. resident of the Pontiac Jobnaston lost control of his car and swerved into the eastbound lane, witnesses said. Johnston was arrested and charged with being drunk and disorderly. ’ Johnston, 52, Auburn Hotel in The driver of the other ca Stanley C. McHaney, 38, of 3259 | Rockhaven Ave and Harry W. Anderson, 41 62 N. Marshall St., Tank Truck, were uninjured Returns fo Jackson on Bad Check Count Marvin D. Wilson, a 35-year-old Jackson Prison parolee from Pon- Gregg S Typing Accounti 7 w. lawrence horthand Speedwriting Shorthand Office Machines ng Free Placement Service BEGINNING OCTOBER 19 Day and Evening Classes THE BUSINESS INSTITUTE of PONTIAC tiac, was headed back behind bars) today and a 1 to 2? year sentence imposed yesterday by Oakland County Circuit Judge William J Beer Wilson of 64 Belmont St., pleaded | guilty Sept. 21 to issuing checks} without an account Three rookie Pontiac police pa-| trolmen nabbed Wilson Sept. 11 as} he tried to pass a check in a drug store Police said -he admitted} passing 35 worthless checks total-| ing $770. Russ Congratulate East German Reds MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet Pre-}| mier Nikita Khrushchev today} praised the Communist East Ger-| man regime for its “indefatigable | struggle for the liquidation of the| obsolete occupation regime in| West Berlin.” Khrushchev and President Kle-! menti Voroshilov sent a message) to East German leaders on the occasion of that regime's 10th an-| For Finer Fuel Oil .. . Clarke Oil Co. 659 Pershing St., Pontiac LET US FILL YOUR TANK NOW! Insured Budget Poy-Pion HARRY SHO FE 2-9181 Distributors lor Clarke Oil Co UP MY 3-4591 DON RICHMOND OR 3-5072 JOHN INGAMELLS EM 3-2210 ED ROSS MA 5-9756 niversary. former president of| | the Board of Auditors, said there ning committee a Child’s Play for Thief Avon ie was a rough week for kids. During of a recent seven-day period, police driving a GMC received separate complaints re- jgarding the theft of 20 diapers, a coaster Stroller. of Correction. Oakland County Citcuit Judge William J. Beer passed the sen- tence on Mrs. Sharrow H. Wells, | 18, of 3382 Harvard St. She pleaded | bery. Mrs. Wells was arrested Sept. 6 | by Birmingham Police after she had taken the home to the home of relatives $59. The driver then led police to the home. Her husband, Jack, 22, had been lin the county jail for littering the highway in West Bloomfield Town- ship. He is now a free man after being convicted and paying a $10 fine. A 10-day jail sentence was suspended as Wells had spent 17 days in jail awaiting trial. County Seeks to Switch Road Also Wants _ Pontiac to Annex Property Adjoining Courthouse The Oakland County Board of Supervisors made it. official yes- terday that the county seeks re- location of West boulevard and the annexation by Pontiac of a number of acres in Waterford Township to where the new court- house is being built At the same time, supervisors approved the transfer of $50,000 from the county's 1959 contingent fund to defray costs of a 48-inch surface drain ($35,000), a parking lot ($5,000), and a new road ($10,000) leading into the court- house at the Service Center. Robert Y. Moore, chairman of was $73,436 in the centingent fund before the transfer. Yesterday's action leading to the relocation of West boulevard and the annexation serves as formal requests to the city of Pontiac and the township, said David Levinson, chairman of the courthouse plan- ¥ * * Details had been tentatively agreed to between the county and |the Pontiac City Commission last month. SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI) — It wagon and a_ baby’s |Here for 12 Days guilty Sept. 21 to unarmed rob-| Married only a month earlier, | taxi from her | in Birmingham. Before she left | the cab she robbed the driver of TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 et Besides Turkey, members of the| Ethan Allen’s Green Mountain treaty organization, are Britain,|Boys of the Revolutionary War Pakistan and Iran, The nations|¥ere originally organized to repel wore allied wii Dag the Daniele ene, “s Suatanaillo ned NEW .YORK (AP) — Turkish|tral ‘Treaty Organization and vist|dad Pact undl Iraq withdrew lastjesiblshed homes in what is now Premier Adnan Menderes arrived' Dallas and Pittsburgh. year. Sa 7 “Monday night for a 12-day visit in the United States. * * De ee at ee Washington of the Cen- Turkish Premier { EVERY Wednesday AT THESE WRIGLEY STORES IN PONTIAC: * 398 %* 59 South Auburn Saginaw * 5060 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains * Tel Huron * 536 North Perry Shopping Center 45 S$. 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EXCLUSIVE EXTENDED Stereophonic High Fidelity with FM/AM Radio EMIT (R) Play all youn pecords and the reor ttereophanic pecmnds NEW | AUTOMATIC BALANCE CONTROL ———eew Automatically balances stereo channels regardless of changes in volume settings. alelalie New Extended Stereo Control for Greater Separation...as you listen the sound source seems to move beyond the cabinets. mble by ZENITH QUALITY COMPONENTS e 40 WATTS undistorted, 80 watts peak output in Dual Channel amplifier ¢ 7 ZENITH QUALITY HIGH FIDELITY SPEAKERS WITH CROSS OVER _NETWORK IN COMBINED UNITS STEREO STUDIO SOUND CONTROLS "e Separate bass and treble controls © Presence control MODEL SRDS3— Companion Remote Speaker with 3 Zenith Speakers—may be added now or later for full stereaphonic sound. BUY HIGH FIDELITY NOW... ADD STEREOPHONIC LATER IF YOU WISH Complete Zenith Stereophonic Units as Low as $239.90 ORCHARD LAKE: AUBURN HEIGHTs: | ie Cram: Conden’s Radice & TV ih 3465 Aubern Phone: FE 4-3573 36 8. Te Phone: 4-0736 § Sweet's Radice & Appli an 7 ppliance Phone: FE 4-1133 Phone: EM 38-4114 i 8 a a Das = a bees _- -—-- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 |Public Observatory Clifford R. Straubel, said the e group's star gazing equipment in- i Opened in State cludes a 12inch telescope. Dona-|: GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — The - Woodville Lime Center Woodville, Ohio, is known as the ‘Lime Center of the World.’’ It produces the highest grade white finishing hydrated lime. tke Takes Front and Center Now Hard-Working Herter Stays in Background ‘S9 RAMBLER me, $164.80 HEATER tions made the observatory work possible, he said. — By J esas. See gis gf greet s . 3 sured, imaginative and aggressive man who sometime even gave the impression of arrogance. He made a lot of speeches, was continually in hot water with Con- gress, took a lot of abuse—par-|niiies was no | ionger around to ticularly from Sen. Joseph Mc-liean on or defer to, had to rely Reg. $ = Carthy—fought back and yet S0|more on himself and assert him- 29.98 managed it that Truman appeared the undoubted boss of foreign pol- icy. * * * approved this. idea. , ation has opened a public observa- all when he was in, Europe with|to experiment than Dulles—may |here. It is uriderstood Herter fully|tory on the Calvin College campus. Eisenhower a few weeks 480. |have felt free to invite Khrushchev The founder of the association, in the last 20 years . Alaska’s population has tripled The sense of taste is quite acute in ants, bees and wasps. Cheese Your Owns t BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI 6-3900 , Were you conscious of him in any imply Herter is any may be more flexible. and Dulles appeared together’ on TV it was Dulles who did of the talking. The President seemed to defer to his judgment. Peraps Eisen. | hower was always more willing to/ try new tactics than Dulles me yielded to the older man’s more | frozen views, * * * | It is easy to understand how Eisenhower, when the dominant self more. He has been doing that increas- ingly since early in 1959 when Dulles began to sink into death Not so with Herter's immediate predecessor, Secretary John Fos-| ter Dulles, who was an aggres-| sive man, too, and stubborn. Dul- acl Herter became secretary. les seemed less imaginative than Acheson, but was continually in| hot water with congressional Dem- | ocrats. He made a lot of speeches, t But he so dominated his job that President Eisenhower looked like a secondary figure in foreign af-| fe e'eea © Talks on Palestine ae DP tide eae ae UNITED NATIONS (UPI) —Isra-| 12.95 I 0 that Eisenhower completely dom-| inates in foreign relations. * * * | Acheson and Dulles, besides; their public speeches, held news conferences regularly. Herter has had only one in Washington since | taking office last Apri] 22. True, he has been out of the country a lot—at Geneva and then, in Latin America for formal con-| ferences—but even when he could naturally be hogging the camera, | el Monday offered to negotiate a | United Nations General Assem- | from cancer, This was made ea- isier to do, and perhaps became | more necessary, when the self-ef- | For this reason Eisenhower— jwho always seemed more willing Israel Offers Arabs complete settlement of the Pales- | tine issue with the Arabs ‘‘at) any time and place”’ they choose’ and with no strings attached. The Israeli challenge in the | bly by Ambassador Arthur Iourie, chief of the Israeli dele- gation, followed a United Arab | Republic attack on ‘world pol- | itical Zionism.” PRICE WEDNESDAY ONLY! Starts at 9:30 Sharp, Ends 5:30 — or Phone FEderal 4-2511 Tomorrow! Double drop side , - 7-YEAR CRIB Sturdy hardwood full panel crib, All around plastic teething rails, dainty decal trim. forced with stablizing bar. Wax birch or honey maple. National Brand Innerspring Mattress rein- Infants’ ao within close range, he UAR Foreign Minister Mah- Soft Crib Cotton Fitted Natural Birch 'moud Fawzi declared that the ban - Blankets Crib Sheets Play Yard Bassinettes Try to remember seeing him =| on Israeli novia in the Suez MISSILE LAUNCHER TRESTLE ILLUMINATED 5 99 99 anal would be lifted only when Reg. 2 F 3 1.19 88 Reg. 10 Reg. 7 RED-E GAS KID RP sve rights of the Palestine Arabs & EXPLODING BOXCAR STATION Reg. D For are 4 Reg. $ pea. $ made homeless by the 1948 Arab- 56” by 50” sive, dainty § —— F . - , i ” is Israeli war, were “recognized ful- | e EL TRAI N SET 5 y : - €, gh moot anforized cot- Paste all-aroun eet: eae bas sinettes on YES WATER. Hot \] ly and actually” | by —— 3 7- Piece LION pant binding. Paste Sel We or crib. ayy eN Higa castors. Sturdy handle, AND QUICKLY, TOO, | Fawzi denounced Israel, Britain f . lodi b ' OUR GAS WILL DO ‘and France — the invaders of Su- eaturing an exploding DOXx car. }ez in 1956 — as ‘‘the three raving JUST THAT FOR You: | | & in 1996 — | stere’s wh — , | He accused Israel of having eres what you get: “violated systematically and even! M : tuesiion $61.10 | Pronounced dead’’ the 1949 sins locomotive and tender ....14.95 Val Se | Missile launcher ............ 7.95 alue 99 places Exploding box car .......... 5.95 : h 6 d in layaway Cobesse 6. cece eee, 2.95 . ’ ; , ef q i 00 YO Geene Ci «055 c 60sec ceseees 5.95 Wow, what action! Missile launcher fires on Infants’ 4-Pc. Nat'l Brand Infants’ 2-Pc. 4 or 8 Ounce Chi p | T ld D Fredle 60 6.55.05 Kaa0e cis 5.95 train and “hits” box car which “explodes”. Loungee Sets Gauze Diapers Topper Sets Evenflo Bottles inese eop e 0 26 sections of track ......... 6.50 Here’s fun for boys of every age. Train goes up, ; | Lighted station ............. 4.95 over, and around the trestle system. Layaway aes 2 For $3 rit rile $249 Reg. 2 For $3 nee: 18< | TOKYO (UPI) — Vice Premier | 45-watt transformer ........ 5.95 now for Christmas or buy with no money down, ; pertec c RED E GAS i hae = ee ae hs _ pay V3 in Nov., V3 in Dec , 1/3 in Jan. Terry or flannel shirt, Soft, absorbent gauze Boys’ or girls’ with Choose either 4 or 8- - a = uy ; pant and booties set, diapers, full size, slight lastic |tned pants. sunce. Complete with . expect some bad years along with it purchased separately $61 10 Waite's ... Downstairs infants’ sizes. 3 pastels. irqulars Sizes S.M,L. ° nieplen chy “cops. the good during ‘“‘the great leap Products Co. forward”’ the Red New China News 1968 Airport Road Agency said today. (opposite Airport) Li, who is chairman ot Red Two $25 Value Cutler Layettes OR 3-1715 China's state planning eneremratty ' and one of its top economic plan- - Complete Bottle Gas Service ners, said the ‘‘national economy to Be Given Away Free ° will inevitably advance in a wave- (Advertisement) i anner.” H “ 1 Wi 1 noe Paneeee | Register in our Second Floor Infants’ Dept. anytime before the drawing 3 P.M, “Its rate of growth may bea | 6 ' . bands! ct..10! @ 1 boys’ wardrobe @ 1 girls’ wardrobe. . aus Vim; Feel ves: bit higher at one time and a bit ' 4 $ Gowns and Orlon Wash ’ n Wear Lined lower at another. This shou No purchase : . call ol deel aa apes seria oP gitar Acti Kimonos Sweater Set Crawlers Jackets comer use body lacks iron. For new | in the latest issue of “Red Flag,” te win. feeling after 40, try Osteex T ° eee Set prj ne haweaki. journal of ihe! Cae: 87° % $7499 i SY Special $199 high- dose Vitamin B:. In a single 2.98 Values Purchase day, = hee ver, 16 Tb of bee munist Party. g ’ 3da ted” size only 69¢. Or But he said the “great leap for- Bi awn: sad kia Easy care orlon sweat- Cordona cotton craw- Wash ‘n wear, flannel aay “one = prac $1.67 67. vig druggist nos in dainty pastels be sxists. ward is not temporary — it will and white. Infants’ ef, Cap and booties set. Jers in prints, solids. lined. Plaids or prints. (Advertisement) jlast.”’ sizes. White and pastels. S.M,.L. Sizes 3-6X. NEW | Observers said Li's article may HELP, THMA aa that Peiping is having FOR isome second thoughts about the | Soft and warm... Infants’ fantastic production claims it had & SINUS DRAINAGE | made. goats eget Seen ae aad | BLANKET Jumper Seats Bronchial Asthma and Bronchitis with | New be os = | combat allergy, relax bronchial tu Price of white bread has risen! 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Reg. 2.98 Infants’ Terry Robes, pastel trim ...............- eee eee sa. 18 46 WILLIAMS STREET DIAL FE 2.5847 S,M, Lb, XL ee. e eee ee eee. 3.98 Sizes M, L, XL ....4..-0005-. 3.98 39¢ Value, Sizes 1-6 Double Crotch Training Pants ................. .. .5/$1 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE Reg. 89c Soft Flannelette Receiving Blankets .............. re ,. 2/99 E. Bloomer style pants...... 49 Snap style...... 719¢ Specially Priced Kantwet Play Yard Pad un od ORR OOOO errr i Pe sine sia shone Bessa me 2-1800 Charge Them... et Infants’ Dept. « . . Second Floor CHARGE THEM AT WAITE’S,..INFANTS’ WEAR — Second Floor t THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1939 a athe 4 ee ee eee il te ee. SO PPR LN LO SS Ow 8 Oe EO SS ee ee ee ee ee ep ere ae Pee For All That Dear Rubble, Says Hal Boyle investment a make is to buy a house with a big attic For he will find marrige turns a bride into a magpie. He is like- 1 ly to find mar- riage will make a magp.e of him, too. Both, for example, may want to scoop up as souvenirs some of the rice thrown at their own wedding The need for an attic is im- perative the mo- ment vou leave the al.ar. Where w.ll you store those eight Silver-plated serving trays every young couple receieves as wedding presents? BOYLE else * * * Also. aging relatives on Sides begin sending the bride groom precious old family orabiha they cannot bear both and mem- to de- NEW YORK (AP) — The best;less to anyone else, a link between wash the spot off her hands, my young man can the warm dead past and the|wife still goes mechanically on |saving new pieces of. string, still], home an attic, and that's the ooking for a bew place te stash way we're jiving—in hopes. warm living present. x * * They lead an ordered life in the ordered rooms below, and dream in the cluttered attic above. Ah, yes, that is life as it should be. The present and past are pre- served separate. | But what is a home without an| attic? P'll te you what a home with-| out an attic is. It is an attic itself. | It becomes an attic everywoere. | For 22 years my wife, Frances, | and I have Lved in city apa-.-/} ments, The family heirlooms and the dear rubble of our own toget | | erness have piled up year by year. | * * * Long ago the small storage bin| in the basement was filled to over- flowing. Long ago we wore out the! kindness of friends who let us! share a part of their attics, } * *® * Long ago were our own closets) jammed. Long ago was there any) BARDOT DOING WHAT SHE DOES BESTIN.. AL: IC i AWS “ | —e Lf: a ce y| NOW... See It Allin CinemaScope ond Color ee WHITE SWAN === rive - 9 08000088008 0OO 008089000000 OSS 000088 S 9008000800808 0808880 SIN \'Acclained the greatest story of the West ever filmed! | ‘" is SFOR GE STEVE "SHANE Young Man, Buy Home With a Big Attic and Randolph, president of th Brotherhood of. Sleeping Car Por- ters. ‘ Meany and Randolph, a Negro, clashed. last month at the San Franc'sco' convertion of the APL. CIO Execuive Counci!. Randolph caid then the fe. eracitn should not colerate se¢regated locals even if Negroes waited them. -_— Ist With Mazda Lights Union Bias Wrangle Only About Methods NEW YORK (AP) — AFL-CIO President Georze Meany. says he and A. Philip Randolph agree in wanting to eradicate Jim ‘Crow in labor unions but they disagreed 1 how to go abort j | Meany told a a ol of Negro cepresentatives of «ve and fra-| Warren, Ohio, was the first city vernal organizations Monday thatito introduce complete Mazda there was no rift be:ween him'tungsten street lighting. NOW! OPEN 10:45 ‘nother theater progra m, It takes a heap of livine to make eer) At 1:39-3:41. 5:43-7:45. 9:47 epee eae nat TOP UL REAM TOR -+oif you value your life!! VINCENT PRICE .- seman S- Extra! 3 Stooge Comedy—Mageoo Cartoon—Sport 1 Thrill THESE ARE NICE KIDS IN TROUBLE' No Teenagers or Parents Can Afford to Miss “BLUE DENIM” iene, OL LEY BRDON de NAONALD GRY: NARA m TONIGHT-LAST TIME CAPRAS a 2. stroy — a faded photograph of space left under the beds to stuff bh: a / | great-grandmother in her first boxes, Long ago was it possible to J Starts Friday cae ANGEL May Britt — Curt Jurgens j communion dress, a rickety old stack the stuff in corners and hide m salnut table hand-made t . Vey pe AE Wirephets i Bh me a In Fine Whiskey... prealisteaiiae actee ie ha al Gut we Ge eee OVATION FOR GAITSKELL — Hugh Gaitskell, Labor Party ¢ ~ _ - F | War oaks aio wien we hed ic cat leader in England's forthcoming general election on Thursday, ‘ Open 10:45 [E 65 < to 5 P.M. f $992 * * * this debris of 22 { marr gets a hearty greeting from const.tuents as he arrives at Percival iT LE SCHMAN N’ S P) The young couple also return fe, ae ie hoe a ey iv “ Whitely College, Halifax, Yorkshire, to address a meeting recently LAST Day | LAST DAY 1/5 Qt m their honeymoon with new- A sign in the background read “Hugh Is the Man for You.” LT) bb ~ oe while we had the place repain ed g g & I G 0 iS the BIG buy! Code No. 260 : ught bric-a-brac, already’ haloed There it is—still in toppling piles THE SIGN of the LADIAT R | vy the own sentiments, which n Color Scope! With Anita Ekber ) = they will want to pass on to a ‘THROW IT OUT M il] S S ¥s : ya wryly grateful posterity Each’ “Throw it ‘all out. or in acm! an eems ure Plus! Adventure Featurette “Arctic Round-Up zs later trip they take will swell the away from home,”’ I threaten m) - - Ee 90 PROOF is why! ral rin cumulation wite of Conservative Victo ry STARTS TOMORROW Code Neo. 261 Now, there is nothing at all But she says she absolut hy A NEW WORLD OF HIGH ADVENTURE wrong With all this tf the young doesn't know where to start. Sh : Re BLENDED WHISKEY + 90 PROOF - 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS couple ea oe wt, things reaches into a box, hands me LONDON (APi—Prime Mimister) -ountry si! he adde t TYRONE POWER <—o \ THE FLEISCHMANN DISTILLING CORPORATION, NEW YoRK City Lda: nit ae moeiee’ Papers on wei “ ~ ee ne , i SE St new etort to hs ca , PATS SOLI LS EAL OCKeT. are yours. ou row them 5 abso.uic.y sure ol a . ' . 4 : They add their receinted — bills, away ‘s ve pat y Sictory in B .iain’s na sae : nas TH F MARK - ses: ME sisal Out! T can't throw these away," J, oud ee clon Thurs: BEOH TROEESSINEL: Deets OF roy? : mn toys, me swt iets or shoes teil her. “These are the mons “Et Br a pres in the * * * nif i their own they loved too much and gents’ levndry list for o world d°pends on the macority th Th leaue ot Beatin s other ans tix “time attic becomes the ChU'se on the Mauretania in 19: = etuoeite Muon Galt PLUS: IN AN INDOOR THEATER crews vault of Meme peels ie eahmenet acl lem Our home ( Fi ’ 10ine = —h Sgr ponsiwhs ind : ° SHOW STARTS the fami. history as rings do has becor’s a worehouse full o iOf Soap to iome ai of the calox tax an beck RE-RELEASED BY 20th CENTURY.FOX STEVE BRODIE-LYN THOMAS Ow! for a tre They know the excite-thines we haven't the sternness of : id ~~ . ment of reliving the past, of feel- eavi to pact woh. Moanwh like see ; ates —— e al 7: 00 and 9: 20 ing through these heirlooms, use- d.omed Lady Macbeth trying to ue en a a ” jad oe * * * Vkaverileous ant) (Advartincments ~ 8 earnest at Urgent xine! is il ii 1 a lab oe DOES MORE THAN JUST “SHRINK” PILE TISSUES! NO SURGERY NEEDED TO na OS's ar his c the { r ermmen WUUIC pursue a Ox e The Seater Hollywood Headlines: peel em card to his mother for neignoo polic ¥ a@uoroad tluting Put Nerves To Sleep - Stop Pain of Suspense } - : ° th th { t the family ONC’ 46a-n at the Conservative Sut he vouth orzo e ami oe . . . . : . ~ government s 1955 attack on Of $ il Pi | j Mi te penta Cultivated David Niven pov mre gar eng Eee Sin ae” eh a wollen Piles In Minutes: ° e sent the care e Old ad- saat . th ‘ ivon sto t discomfort o nless Pazo combines the most arena, aed ds wud mein “ an eal on gid ix whan ites. thou- effective ingredients known for c lever use force exce : se Stainless Pazo® Not piles Thus works 3 ways at once: ete Now Is a Baseball] Buff ® * * self-defense and would always wt eden Rage sense cca but (1) stops pain. itching in minutes; So, postal authonties. knowing try to get disputes settled peace stops pain ai once, promotes hea!- (2) shrinks tissue swelling. con- CARY GRANT how voung boys need soap. tr ed fully’ ing of innamed tissues too — all gestion: (3) ——_ pata of _ a . . “ without surgery! P tions that raw tissues ou get immediate EVA MARIE SAINT eee a loud, ripe Bronx cheer. To my down the new edcress and re aved Macn: Ilan made his statement fist t o thrink” piles poet t new comfort while Nature's own Li i AP Movie-TV Writer horror, aa was coming {from my) the messave. The mother sent the of confidence after returning from offer complete symptomatic relief. healing magic ate ms JAMES MASON HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Just “\O $0”. scap special delivery \ 2.500-mile wh'st'e-stop tour dur-| £1, Tore complete medication. Stalalers Puno’ Buppositories or aly ut the No 1 Gaives fan in , Bivens cricket days MELE ae - — ng which he spoke to an esti- In ances iesia patients had Ointment at druggists. Get relief > Hollywood this World Series ts poping Bin orl "ae eae “ Sees Coffee Intake Hike moted 150,000 voters immediate reilef{. Thats because without surgery or money back! be Oscar-winner David Niven. > aoe gag Osea “ie piss veala ‘Ke . ady customer at the Colise The Pan-American Coffee 3u- , : ‘ ons ub lho as of : xe N . Monee aioe “Its a faseimating “ame.” Niv- opcen coffee a year by 1980, twice * a PONTIAC ein " ORTHMES) a en a: on ie niniked . “Tao thn: that in- as much as they do now * | . Ad It 0 trigues me is the gencralship that - tuts Cc . ; I Fd WS layiSOe - TE . ‘De ath of 4 goes on, Our boy (Walt) Alston is 1 ay DRIVE-IN THEATER Children 25¢ Salesman.” It quite good at it * # 2435 Disie Hwy FE 5-4500 — Is a sight that, “Dve had to take a long time x oo - must be seen tO tg understand some of the intri- be believed — cacies of the game. but J] get all 4 ih " at the Los kinds of advice The other day I Angeles Colise- sat next to man who had two ra- we, um shouting at dios field glasses, a lone cigar. r BRe the umpire when boxes of popcorn and knew every- e a decision goes thing that was going on. I told ® = Le Bardot & Beatniks THOMAS against the him he had to be from Brookliwn, Ld 9 e : h » team. and he was! He was a cook who @ Benen World Series games, he had moved out to Riverside when SENSATIONAL FIRST RUN explained nw ite ni the Dod; gers came here SHOWN 8:20 ONLY My con tax cine Mterested in then act wet an” |. 2ND FEATURE ONLY YESTERDAY THEY HAD BEEN FRIENDS, PLAYMATES. OVER. ' sO as que “reste en we won € pennant, e ’ , . @089000880O0080O88088SH8OCEEEOEEE ad — ave been raised here, was so happy | kissed a dentist et Se NIGHT, THEY WERE SWEETHEARTS — WITH A DESIRE FOR EACH so I agreed to go to the ballpark sitting next to me.’ Niven re with him one day I had been called. ‘‘Bussed him right on the with JERRY LEWIS OTHER THAT KNEW NO BOUNDS. brought up in the rarefied atmos- cheek. He took it rather well.”’ . Y phere of cricket, so 1 gathered it i vould be the same sort of thing. NOW SUDDENLY LISTEN TO JANET, AGE 15, SAYING: MAYBE 1 I dressed quite decorously, My ULD GO TO MY AUNT CLARA’ : V T win, sore: i tunvitife lation wate LAST TIMES TONIGHT CO OTO UNT CL. S. SHE'S OVER TWO HUNDRED MILES sal a words ‘Jerry's Sandlot ROBERT TAYLOR in AWAY MAYBE | COULD JUST DISAPPEAR SOMEWHERE OR... JUST ids’ — he plays on Jerry Lewis’ ’ team — and carried a dirty leath- “THE HANGMAN” & DROWN MYSELF!” er glove a atane AKON CHEE THE ISLAND OF LOST WOMEN an t : CHEER om th NOW LISTEN TO ARTHUR, AGE 16, SAYING: “I'M RESPONSIBLE AND - € umpires came out on e > 7 a ] eae eee STARTS WEDNESDAY! |? | KNow A way our! 7 plause, in keeping with cricket 2 A Motion AND FOR ann 4 tradition. | was alarmed to hear There never was a motion picture like 4 “BLUE DENIM” |S A STORY OF LOST INNOCENCE Picture Whith > aed S % : peaks Heart “* os a" er> » AND THE SOLUTIONS TEENAGERS ARE FORCED to Heart with Brigitte is Beautiful, Bold, Whe es met -E — bal Breezy, Bouncy, Brazen, Bubbly, TO FIND FOR THEMSELVES! Young | Bewitching, Breath-taking, America and Bustling, BUT NOT BASHFUL! THESE ARE NO JUVENILE DELINQUENTS... Their Parents | BRIGITTE » , » we HEY MAN .. IT’S TOO MUCH | Our prompt G courteous _. . YOU GONNA BLOW THE 2nd | 3% FEATURE AND IT'S A GASSER | Service Bees fost tat you @\, | don't have to wait for 4h | your order. e- 2 | | e. an Z ¢. ) iJ DRIVE-IN ox [4 M-S9 & PONTIAC LAKE ROAD | III lr irri Tyr eoce® | Mami kinateumel | ROD TAYLOR ... sosepmine HUTCHINSON “AHou Li “27 few ews 39d WIA0 DVN ee ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 Rona Jaffe on Her Second Book \ Writer Says: ‘| Might as Well Get Married’ By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor Girls whe get married some- times are just as unhappy as who don’t, says Rona who looks like a _ teen- and writes like Boccaccio. those Jaffe, ager lege professors, doctors, lawyers and misunderstood husbands. At first I tried to answer them | all, but now I've given up.” * * * AWAY FROM HOME The setting of Rona’s new book “I'd never been any place out -of the country before, but all of .a sudden I got this notion. So I just got on a plane and went. I spent last wimter there. I couldn't speak a word of Portu- guese when I arrived, but it didn't seem to matter, I was in- vited everywhere, and everybody Rona observes that the Ameri- can colony in Rio is like a small town, with the same gossip, the same marital tangles, the same emotional problems—only more so. “Away from home, people think the lid is off,” observes ‘ Wool is ¢ flying high a this fall. This pumpkin Invitations May Be Sent Jointly ‘ By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs. Post: My sister and I both had babies within a few days of each other. We are planning a joint christening. A question has come up in regard to the invitations. After writing about the love | is Rio De Janeiro, where she in- this youthfw sage. ‘‘They do : lives of New York secretaries in | vestigated the modes and mores was anxious to give me material. | things they wouldn't dream of plaid wool her sensational first book, ‘The | of Americans living away from After three months I was speak- | doing back home. But everybody overshirt _ “Is it proper to send joint Best of Everything,’’ Rona now | home. Says she; ing the language fluently.” knows about it just the same.” invitations or should we each is at work on her second, con- * * * tops a send out our own invitations? cerned with marriage and to be | Is Rona going to get married? | air o f If joint _invitations are sent titled ‘Away From Home.” | “I suppose I might as well,” r would this obligate everyone to “ac wea os Blushing Bride Turns 2: "si Sec: colors | lee The first book catapulted this nl ing is I me . _ y sister's lis stig mre can cope eee nl tat coordinated are people I hard know.” schoolgirlish beauty into fame, fortune, a movie sale and 5,000 proposals of marriage. Into Real Wife When... ready to argue for her point of view. kind is hard to find. If I get mar- ried I want to have children, current American dream.” heather wool tweed tapered tab detail. Answer: You may quite properly send out joint invita- wish to use these to enclose * * * but they'll hdve to be special : : “Of course I didn’t take any children, too—The kind who will | slacks. tions without fear that you are of them seriously,’’ says Rona. understand when their mother The | demanding double presents “Obviously they were mostly By RUTH MILLETT She begins to talk about what a} has to shut heiself up with a | e loose pain an apwitation to ‘ from lunatics, They came from | yemo to autumn grooms: The|Problem it is to know what to| typewriter once in a while. itting topper ristening party never in itsel all kinds of people—lots of col- ‘honeymoon is over when— have for dinner. “I don't want to fall into | futing Is PP s prese ig obligation to send — —— = She gets a far-away look in| You discover that she doesn’t | Margaret esas category of jem a a , @ TULIP BULBS her eye when you are telling her! feel the same way that you do | Modern girls—‘everybody wants eminine “Dear Mrs. Post: I hav .| about your day, while she listens to! about some things you consider | 0 get married and have four rounded some fol dover cards outs a @ CROCUS you with half a mind and visual-| important, and that you find her | Children and a barbecue pit. so zoe h They do, you know. That's the : me printed on the front izes a new cover for the sofa wit y do, yo . collar with (Miss Mary Smith). When I @ HYACINTHS @ DAFFODIL \the other half. You get home from work and | ‘find that no preparation for din-| MEET for LUNCH look happy about it. She begins to point out the shortcomings of your first house She starts using the phrase, belt | instead of sticking close to your side. Don’t worry, though. All these Having explored the moral strict homes. “A girl likes to believe that her mother would die if she had This playwear with a gift, or to send a mes- sage to a friend, is it correct ‘that isn’t just like a man.’ code: of ‘the modern girl, how | bee because her > , : : @ HOLLAND BULBS ee made the girls ran| She begins buying things for the) would Rona raise her own | by Mister cn Lo alee eye [Reaere Y house without asking you to go| daughter? 7 ev n ve aves Waen = along, and you suspect it is be- “I would raise her within the Pants is | my man eames only, or do TASKER?S fste says. “Would you mind eat- ” says she. “I've | a | I leave my name intact?” ing out tonight? I’m beat.” |eause she wants to be sure she | moral code, says she. “I've | available = igets to do the choosing. observed that girls whose par- | locall = 63 W. Huron | She still hangs up the clothes | She gets off in 2 huddle with | €ts exercise no control are more | ocally. Answer: The title is often = ou strew around—but she doesn't! paths i hi fron crossed out but it would not FE 5-6261 y | the girls when you go to a party | Neurotic than the ones a be correct to eliminate your surname too. The best thing to do is to leave the name intact and add in your hand- or apartment — like ay too- |little signs just mean you've got} on afta writing, ‘With love, Mary."’ small living room, or the incon- |, 4 Jo : « ra ; RIKER FOUNTAIN : . yourself a wife, instead of a bride. “I'd want my children to be | : “Dear Mrs. Post: I have Sealtest Ice Cream venieftt kitchen, independent, think for themselves } always thought black an im- Popular Prices She tells you where the band- J ff and know I love them. I wouldn't Riker Building Lobby jages are when you cut your hand, e e rson want my daughter to bury herself ee proper choice for a wedding instead of rushing to give first aid. in a career because she was - - = ———' guest. A friend of mine refuses to believe this as she and many She doesn’t rush to the door to PTA Heads afraid to face life. On the other | of her friends have often worn ’ = / bed / . greet you. hand, I wouldn't want her to ( h ld M d Pp ] [ ] t “ahs ior Crochet Cotton She occasionally mentions that| marry becauset she's afraid of | rel) S airic e€O0p e S Nl! piack an ses to pprwe | ; ee ' lave ever been criticiz = r For Every Need. she wishes you wouldn't do this Introduced j being an old maid. Minds O e ee S ore em ers for that matter, have jai or that. } t even hez at i vel pard that it might be | . The Knitting Needle She begins to talk about what a Officers and committee chair- Election Survey Set | - improper. Will you please 452 W. Huron FE 5-1330 | problem it is to know what to have| men were introduced at the 7D. W Discussed Plains ¢ nc ne Knox. president: Robert Poul! give us your opinion on the t { creasing ai reside ( for dinner. | first meeting of the Jefferson yvem omen Aenea : re ene tare president: M < Ot ! me propriety of wearing black to a = — |! Junior High School PTA re- Rie ‘ince wore wineaies il | ages wedding.” cently LANSING (UPI) — Democratic The Oakland County Citizen ex were discussed v hen mem secretary, and Paul Morse ° * * * New add Fall Hair Styling ana Serving is president is prospects in the 1960 presidential Committee for the Pot bers uf the Yo larried People's: treasure! Answet A black dress re . . ; ; “i aig ll be viewed Saturday State Hospital ll meet to Cl of Cl Temple met! Announceme é é aie 4 : § Simmons. Other officers .C2™P2'8" ¥! Y, State ospital wi nect | incement was made of a lieve an ; Basic Permanents a mons er sini by Democratic National Commit- night at the hospital Monday evening at the North M hay ride to be held Ox ae eved with color either in ac THELMA CROW. O are Fred Smith, father vice |° Bm I t. 13. The cessories or trimming is_ not . Owner president: Mrs. Phyllis Car- teewoman Margaret Price when Moderating the panel discus shall street | { the Artl group will meet first at the home improper for . gue ne al - RANDALL'S HARPER METHOD SHOPPE less, teacher vice president; the party wall honoh husbands sion “Why "Do Children Be Va nd ., ~% Mr. and Mrs, Harold Eagle wedding : . 88 Wayne St. FE 2-1424 Mrs. Evelyn Smith, recording “ ho encourage women’s political eomenMentalla ail? maviilebe ] hu ‘ Fr n Savoy drive. ee Precrerary, and toy Norton, activities Donald Harréwer, principal of “ x Refreshments were served by One cele brity known { for her chie | treasurer. The all-day session is the the Holly Junior High Scho Following a talk by the Rev. Mrs Maddox, Mrs. Curry, Mrs. appearance has a simple rule for . . Chairmen of committees are semi-annual Democratic Wom- * * * John McKinney, new offcers Eimer J. Dunlap, and Mrs. Eagle. wearing the proper amount of ac- Now. ae give your skin a Mrs. T. J. Northcross, pro- | en's Day and more than 400 Members of the panel «are Were installed by Mrs. Kalph —__—_— cessories. She says to dress as gram; Mrs. James Smith, people are expected, said Mrs. Dr. Myroslaw Hrushka. direc Johnson, choir director and OES Cha for simply as possible and before go- d ier bloor Y )! membership: Fred Smith, | Grace Marckwardt of Ann Ar- tor of the children's psychi Christian Endeavor Group coun p ing out, take off one piece of jewel- younger, ewl . | ways and means; Mrs. Len- bor, general chairman of the atric program at Pontiac State selor. Mrs. Johnson acted in the FE] t Offi ry worth Minor, hospitality; Mrs. | event. Hospital; Mrs. H. B. Stenbuck absence of Mr. VanZandt, class ECcls ICe€rs TT Edward Williams, publicity: director of Temple Beth Ja teacher, who currently is vaca- : ‘ : = si The session is sponsored by the, ~ Be ecnetn. ge ; “ot : . a ne eigen Werineteck pk Michigan Federation of Democrat- cop e ry Schoo! and i i tioning in Florida t Meeting . J ( Ss, Te =*nts: p.! = me . sreen JT pring mi) Ol : aes ~W t ' ) new slate ate womMas } | Dorothy Van Dyke, homeroom all ome the Fairlawn School tor Emo un ‘ ‘none Olticers were elected when mothers, and Mrs. Ann Mc- tionally Disturbed Children Areme Chapter 503, Order of Cants and Mrs. David Sim- * * * the Eastern Star. held its an- mons, council delegates The purpose of the commit nual meeting Monday evening tee is to educate the commun- at the Roosevelt Masonic Tem- . | | Epsilon Chapter | Ny on mental illness and to ple ; provide and promote projects Mrs. Victor Bodamer was Plans Rush Tea to benefit the patients. Meet elected worthy matron and Michi: . : ings are free and open to the Harry Eaton worthy patron ie pro Epsilon Chapter of public, and are held the first A semipublic installation will the Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority Tuesday of each month at 8 be held Oct. 19 with practice met recently at the home of pm for the new officers Oct. 18 Mrs. Lola Sandage of Nichols — -o * * * road. S G . d Mhi lester Oles was a . s : | as ap ne were ages al a t. Hugo ull pointed special grand guardian ‘us ea in early November . d for the grand chapter session ane a Founder's Day luncheon che ules Tea to be held Tuesday, Wednes at the Prince Edward Hotel in \ hers of it on day and Thursday of next week Windsor, Ontario, on Oct. 31 Members of the Altar Guild in Grand Rapids . at St 70 «0of =the Ns Plies ESO BY a cae chen h ae ar Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Perkio | by Mrs. Sandage and co- ee ne < pi aia and Mr. and Mrs, William C hostess, Bonnie Coan a tea and pantry shower for Pfahlert also will attend _ _ the nuns at St. Hugo's School kk * . The affair will be held from Refreshments were served t » 7 ae . ; P z= BAS y PIANO - ORGAN 1:30 to 3:30 p.m Friday at Mrs, Eaton, Mrs, Raymond 00 ie schun! Roaticht cid Whe. Wee ee. | MAXINE SEVEGNEY joatright a Mrs "tor > | SAVE 3202 _ Us ; Mrs. Arthur J. Lewandowski son ° ME Mire, Wiesor Ne! Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Seveg- . «ail assical and Popular is chairman of the event ee ney of Santa Barbara, Calif Helena Rubinstein Ss Learn My Simple Chord Committee members are Mrs Furniture that dressed up the announce the engagement of SKIN DE GIFT FFER System PHYLLIS BURTCH panes 7 on nen porch or patio this summer can be their daughter Maxine Elaine oO nN; . | dell, rs varles och, refreshened for use indoo ‘ach, to William B. Schenk of Glen- AW Dorothy Dingman Stewart Phyllis Burtch of Going Mrs. William Stelzer. Mrs ld . . rs. Wash a ee Music Studio street is pl Nov. 7 K } D . SHA ‘ old pieces thoroughly and then ap-; dale, Calif. Miss Sevegney at- Now your skin can look more beautiful—at a beau- FE 2-1810 OR 3-1704 one < t = aurea f1 pas ke cee is ‘ke - = a as ply a coat of white shellac or, tended school and worked in tiful saving! For a limited time, a free gift of Skin || 86's N. Saginaw 2334 Silver Lk. nee te ee enry FeKala enamel. This will cover marred, Pontiac. Her grandparents are ~ 2 . : of Crofton, Ky. Others are Mrs. Edward areas and seal stai ; ; ; se Dew Cream—regularly 3.00—is yours when you pur- —————— —— __ _ Machall. M , el ind seal stains and other. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Raymond chase Skin Dew Emulsion This 24-hour deep beauty | Mrs "C ul ‘ 7 Qua le si blemishes that usually bleed. of Auburn avenue. if ‘ b . Ss T e. aro yicWuaide \ S duet supplies your skin young, dewy bloom. to melt away. -and save 3.00. SKIN DEW EMULSION is an invisible dewy veil under make-up. Your skin drinks up every drop: moisture, emollients, exclusive “ferments lactiques er look is yours instantly. SKIN DEW CREAM’s extra rich emollients work in- tensively all night. Stubborn dryness and lines seem Start your skin on this deep beauty treatment today Reg. 8°°, now 52° with the essentials for a A young- SAVE 3.00 Skin Dew Cream reg. 3.00 Reg. 8.00 both for 5.00 plus tax limited time only SELF-SERVE uper DRUG STORES Skin Dew Liquid Emulsion reg. 5.00 Huron Street, Corner Telegraph 148 N. Saginaw, Near Sears 4895 Dixie, Drayton Next to National older boys and girls. treatment. A—Excellent. people. (20th C-Fox) Blue Denim—Explored with dignity and insight, the problem of decent young people whose early sex drives get them into trouble is forcefully brought home in this worthwhile film to both parents and The impact of terror when the girl finds she is pregnant, and both she and the boy are afraid to tell their parents, is shared by the audience. Even mothers and fathers whose children are small will be able to see how mutual confidence and communication must be built up over the years. Carol Lynley as the girl and Brandon de Wilde as the boy are appealing and convincing, both in their startled awakening to love and the stunned realiza- tion of its aftermath. Moreover, they are held strictly responsible, even to their own part in the failure to bridge the gap of understanding with their parents. Everyone, in fact, is given fair but uncompromising Y—Excellent for mature young DRIVE-IN THEATER STARTS WEDNESDAY PONTIAC { \ N \ \ ‘ N N ‘a William Pulte, Mrs. Rudolf Regenold, Mrs. Theodore John- | ¢ Wher son and Mrs. William Healey | by AULA Have You Tried This? apron to greet Fun to make — Whip up this gay Christmas ll admire it Even Casual Shoes Are Fancier Now guests all wi Happy touch for a joyous day. At-home shoes are getting Santa's jolly face and_ tinkling fancier — jewel trim, over- bells trim this apron. Pattern 659: lays of gold and silver kid, Santa head transfer &'4x12 inches By JANET ODELL pe 40 oc ¢ oe i. yy re “EOC é 4 ee @gold rings and brass 5 holly sprays, directions. Pontiac Press Home Editor IUCKIES. Ser t -fiv e (coins) or 7 7 - Send thirty-five cents (coir for Susan Stump is a_ fifteen- Styles range from mid-heel this pattern — add 5 cents for each ' year-old high school student tn thonged sandals to high-heeled ttern fo t-class rSe - ; pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send Rochester. This last summer mules designed to slim the Grn ele eDrace (O40 Noailes g ( » The Pontiac Press, 124 Needle sie xe: Mus xibbons at tie -ankle beneath tapered velvet craft Dept.. P. O. Box 164, Old | anita a nel . county 4-H Fair and at the pants. Chelsea Station, New York 11, . oe a ee SF Hint alain tter state show in Lansing. she p ; ein i =, y ern num used a recipe that has been ) vame, address j one TSA Meets ERR MUP Se GE Saar ; in her family for some years ; New! New! New! Our 1960 * * a Pontiac Northern High Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book Susan has done 4-H work for School's PTSA members will js ready NOW! Crammed with ex- Sa ‘ ‘ the past three years. She loves hold their first meeting of the * citing, unusual, popular designs to : ; year at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday crochet. knit, sew embroider, to cook, to sew and to swim. in the high school’s little quilt, weave — fashions, home fur- We think you'll like her un- theater. Dr. D. B. Varner. nishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits. usual recipe for 2 quick bread. chancellor at Michigan State (In the book FREE — 3 quilt pat- It keeps well University Oakland, will be terns. Hurry, send 25 cents for CHERRY NUT BREAD By Susan Stump 2'2 cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons baking powder 4%, cup sugar 1's cups milk 1 well beaten egg 2 tablespoons melted 1 cup all-bran cereal 1, cup chopped candied cherries ‘4, cup chopped walnut meats _ Suest speaker. your copy hehehe, , OT EYE GLASSES CONTACT LENSES DR. CLARENCE I. PHILLIPS Optometrist Wy shortening Candied Cherry Bread | Tastes as Good as Cake Sift dry ingredients. Mix milk, egg and shortening and add. Stir only until mixture is well moistened. Stir in all- bran, cherries and nuts Pour into greased 5x9 pan. Sprinkle with cherry-nut top- ping. Bake one hour at 350 degrees. If a glass pan is used, bake at 325 degrees. Topping Combine 1. tablespoon butter or margarine, '4 cup brown sugar, 1/3 cup chopped solt candied cherries and \% cup chopped nuts. Sprinkle over unbaked loaf If you think you want t make this bread the yeat round, buy candied cherries at holiday time and seal them in a glass jar. They will keep indefinitely in the refnge: 205 Capitol Savings and Loan Bldg. 75 West Huron Street PONTIAC, MICHIGAN PHONE FE 4-3241 ” LOUI LIMITED PARKING AT REAR OR BUILDING IIS APLLLALLLLLALLL A Nw DM aa? IB | “PERMAN ENT S Complete with ie — Set No App't Necessary 10 West Huron—2nd Floor Next to Buckner Finance ator or freezer PP ae SHOP elie od oa ae, ae el ee ee, ee — _—_ —_- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 White Sox Face Sudden Death Today From the Press Box BY BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editer, Pontiac Press Could you imagine a city smaller in size than Pontiac holding a franchise in a professional football or baseball team? The story of Green Bay, amazing. Here is a city of 57,000 people located in hundreds of miles of cow country, or dairyland as Wisconsin natives would prefer, supporting big time football. From the air the short landing strips at the Green Bay airport look like narrow paths in a cow pasture. * * * The bumpy ride in antiquated buses from the airport to the downtown 7-story hotel takes you right past Packer Stadium and the beautiful circular auditorium which is used for hockey, basketball, skating and other activities. Four vears ago the Packers talked of leaving Green Bay because of the dilapidated splintered stadium with roadside parking facilities. The citizens reached into their pockets, saved major league football and the prestige for the city of Green Bay. The fine new stadium seats 32.150 and there is enough parking room around the stadium to handle every car in its own lot. or Wisconsin, is something * * * Both games this year have been played to capacity crowds. Next week’s game with the 49ers is already sold out. Where do all the people come from? Don't say Milwaukee because you'd be wrong. Milwaukee is 125 miles away and if the Packers counted on support from that city they'd go broke. Two games each year are played in Milwaukee's Coun- tv Stadium, and the crowds very seldom go over 23.000 his is less than the number of season tickets sold in Green Bay which totals 26,000 this season. This leaves only 6,000 seats and they are usually long gone * * * Green Bay officials are considering expanding the Green Bay Stadium to 50,000 which can be done easily, and then quit playing any games in Milwaukee. “The cost of going to Milwaukee. housing the team and stadium costs isn't worth it,” said one Green Bay official. There is very little loyalty of Milwaukeans to the Packers. For the Packers, Green Bay is like the college town SPOKES ! Dodaers Send Sandy Koufax Crisler Tight-Lipped on Pro Offer New AFL Loop Approaches M Athletic Head Wolverine Boss Admits He Was Contacted for Commissioner’s Job ANN ARBOR, Mich Michigan University athletic di- rector H. O. ‘Fritz’ Crisler and American Football League founder Lamar Hunt remained tight-lipped today about reports Crisler may become commissioner of the new pro football organization. Crisler admitted yesterday he Was approached by a representa- tive of the league but then com- mented “I have been, and re- main, non-committal about the whole matter.”’ In Dallas, league founder and Texas oilman Lamar Hunt refused to talk about the report except to “I'm not in a position to discuss the men we're talking to We have three candidates in mind and all are very prominent in their hields.”’ Crisler emphasized that he knew was one of several persons be- ng considered for the job of com- mussioner (UPI) — SAY, A powerful figure in college football for many yaars, Crisler has turned down several pre- vious offers to join the pro rank. He has been at Michigan since 1938 and was a coach at Minnesota and Princeton before that. The American Football League is Jesigned to be an eight-team or Against Shaw Hodges’ Homer Decides 5-4 Third Triumph After Lollar’s Big Belt {— - — CHEERING THEIR HEROES Angeles Dodger players and c their seats early yesterday to await the start of the 4th game of the World Serie right are Mrs. Norm Larker, M Lions Boss DETROIT — Tobin Rote may lose his job as No of the Detroit Lions 1 quarterback Coach George Wilson is mak- LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Chica- |go’s Go-Go White Sox, who haven't 67 by Badger Record at State EAST LANSING # — Michi- gan State University § golfers have a new mark to shoot at, a record . breaking 67 shot in the rain. x * * Albert E.. (Buddy) Badger, Bloomfield Hills sophomore and candidate fer a berth on the MSU varsity, fired a 32-35 on Sunday. * * * He bettered by one stroke the record for MSU’s Forest Akers course set last year by Jack Reynolds, senior varsity meth- ber from Pontiac. World Series Box ibeen going far enough around the |bases, faced sudden death in the \World Series today before a long- idisappointing kid from Brooklyn. | | Twenty-three-year-old Sandy (Koufax, a fast-balling left hander, will attempt to compensate for a $25,000 bonus and a mere 28-27 F record over the past five years by trying to close out the series jag for the Los Angeles Dodgers. | But the White Sox, undaunted | by the fact that they trailed | | three games to one, promised to | unchain the runners they have | been stranding on the bases with | frustrating frequency and pull themselves back into contention | behind the fast ball hurling of big Bob Shaw. | “We've still got a_ helluva, ichance,”’ asserted Chisox manager | ‘Al Lopez, faced in addition with a second World Series mauling on the heels of his four straight 1954 losses to the Giants when he was managing Cleveland. * * * Ignoring the fact that he now is 1-7 in World Series play, he added: “We haven't done anything the easy way all year and we can't expect it now.” x pe AP Wirepheote Mrs. Walt Alston, Mrs. Roger Craig, Mrs. Danny McDevitt, Mrs. Rip Repulski and Mrs. Don Zim- : mer. They had plenty to cheer about as the | Yet, without unshackling those Dodgers won the ball game, 5-4, to take a 3-1 | baserunners, his task looked Series lead. virtually hopeless. For in two record attendance games in the Coliseum, the White Sox have stranded a killing total of 20 base Blasts Quarterbacking =<: =<" they fell, 5 to 4 berore an eighth- 5 ; inning home run by veteran Gil ery will be looking for other opener at Briggs Stadium, Wilson piodges — adding to the saga of, made no promises other than to those old Brooklyn heroes who Wilson was open to questions he believes the club can went west with the franchise two is he is every week — at the bounce back. But he knows, too, years ago. — Wives of Los vaches were in s. From left to rs. Joe Becker, places to hang their helmets. say | * * * Angeles 6 ganization, but so far only six ing no effort to hide his disap- Fan isle gathering And sae that the Colts will be on the re- The Dodgers had rolled up a ‘ities have been awarded fran- pointment in Rote’s performanc- e asked “” apy ee ne bound after taking that 26-21 de four int with a tad baiee! - : sions try a little of the old razzle- —— : chises, Hunt said four or five oth. ¢s in the Lions’ first two games. dazzle?” : \ZzIC- | teat at the hands of the Chicago barrage of five straight hits which| er cities are being considered as Wilson feels that bad quarter- ~ ‘Bears last Saturd ight routed Early Wynn, the burly! prospects to get the two remain- backing is largely to blame for * * * sues uneay nigh. ri , ‘ ; . + : : . a righthander who treated them s0| ing franchises losses to the Baltimore Colts and Hell, Wilson barked, “‘we Coach Weeb Ewhbank of the acornfilly in that opening 118 rou! : : Green Bay . : f . aa - assig Colt kk : 5 ; He said the commissioner of ay Packers can't even learn our assignments Ss spoke to the group via at Chicago. Compounding his dis-| ‘0 a university football team. Every farmer from miles , :round who comes to town has two topics of conversation New York Oct his dairv farm and the Packers, and Sunday has two ' neanings for Green Bay—church and football. ; This is real cow country. The homes in the area are modern but so are the barns which are within walking the way they stand now.” he league may be announced in 4 alter a, necting 3ut the angry coach isn't con- here. but anid the announcement fining the criticism to one posi- The coach also was distressed date will depend on the wishes of i rly iagel offensive center he newly selected commissioner - ” = to four weeks nA a me see himself “Except for our defensive line; Terry Barr also has a knee a: and the linebackers, our play has jury and Rote has a Charley listance Too Much Van Pelt been lousy,” said Wilson yester- horse and a broken nose. listance. , day after a meeting of the Lions’, | : ~ & * WINNIPEG UW — Quarterback Fan Club in a downtown hotel There are a lot of hurt feelings, J ‘ Wilson. said It's a far cry from great metropolitan centers with millions of people in professional sports centers. Count- ing all the cows, the metropolitan population of Green Bay would hardly reach 100,000 or the size of Pontiac. But even if the cows want to see a game they'd have to settle for standing room tickets. L.A. Using — hisox Script than 10 a game in these four games,’ said Lopez. ‘‘We just aren't getting the right hit at the LOS ANGELES ‘?—The dashing Dodgers have stolen the script of the Go-Go Chicago White Sox in the World Series right time. The Dodgers have been out-hit, “We finally got some of them 11 to 31, in the four Series wired together when Lollar belted that homer yesterday, but that games but the Pale Hose trail three games to one and it could | all end today if Chicago fails to * * * j wasn't quite enough stroke some timely hits, They said before the Series we Instead of the larcenous White Were the weak-hitting team, but ox. it's the Dodgers who are Were outhitting them good—only ining the bases with abandon, Nothing is happening to us.” not only outstealing the Hose, 4. The second-guessers were begin-| thefts to 2. but also getting more MINg to wonder if Lopez faulted in mileage out of their hits * * * For instances yesterday s first Dodger run came on Wally Moon's scoot from first to third which drew a somewhat inaccurate throw from Landis. The ball nicked Moon and caromed past third baseman Billy Goodman, allowing Moon to scamper home. This was a typical White Sox play during the regular season. Manager Al Lopez refused to throw in the sponge as he named Bob Shaw, second Series game loser, to tackle the Dodgers in Chicago's ‘“‘must” game today. | “You play the World Series just like you play any series dur- ing the season—one game at a time,”’ said the senor, not too glum. “We've been doing aq cliff-hang-| ing act all season. It takes four games to win the World Series and they haven't won that fourth one yet. Sometimes that's the hardest one. * * * “Don't forget last year’s Mil- waukee-Yankee series. The Braves were ahead 3 games to 1, just like the Dodgers are now. You know what happened—the Yankees came back to take the Series.”’ Lopez shook his head sadly over the many wasted White Sox hits “We've made more hits, ap- parently, than we know what to dg with — an averagt of more | the Los Angeles Dodgers against the stands to the right of the lef THIS ONE DID IT — Gil Hodges trots to the plate with the 8th inning home run that won Monday's 4th World Series game for score. Greeting Hodges is Don Demeter, Hodges’ blast went into : : 0o,"' Jim Van Pelt. former University of Michigan star, passed for three touchdowns last night as the Winnipeg Blue Bombers walloped “We've been terrible in the de- fensive secondary. And except for Nick Pietrosante, everyone in the offensive backfield has * * * Since the Lions must face the Colts next Sunday in the home telephone and he said he had no alibis for the loss, ‘“‘We just don’t have as good a football team as we had last year,” Ew- bank said. The defending champion Colts aren't blocking and tackling, he added. ers got hurt in the Bears’ game, Ewbank cracked: “No, but it’s a wonder we all didn’t get killed, the way we played.’ Calgary's Stampeders 38-24 to con- solidate their hold on first place in the Western Interprovincial Football Union been terrible. We have to wake LINE UP YOUR TARGET By BILLY WELU When I go into my stance and get ready to roll the ball toward the pins I concentrate on one} failing to name Billy Pierce as'second game at Chicago, the White particular spot. Most aelece| one of his starters Sox might not be tottering on the ejther glue their eyes on the 1-3! Pierce made his first appear. Drink right now. As it was, Shaw, pocket during their entire de- ance of the Series as the third |Dck Donovan and Early Wynn, jivery or fix their gaze on a White Sox pitcher yesterday and faites 15 stop the onrushing Dodg- hoard or range-finder about 15 held the Dodgers scoreless and °'S although reliefer Gerry Staley feet out from the foul line until cot tagged with the loss in yes- the ball is rolled over that spot. terday’s game started by Wynn./ | yse a combination of both ithese methods with my own vari- H k ations thrown in for good meas- ockey Season ‘= preliminary motions of getting Starts Tomorrow the ball set ‘‘just right” in my | hand, I take a bead on that 1-3 | pocket. I then draw an imagin- | ary line from the pocket back down the lanes to where I am hitless through the fourth, fifth and sixth innings. The stylish lefty walked a batter and got in a slight jam when he messed up John Roseboro’s bunt, trying for a force play at second in the sixth inning The grandstand managers sug- gest that if Pierce had started the While I'm going through my By The Associated Press The National Hockey League opens its 42nd season tomorrow} night. And it appears the season| will be conducted mainly to de-! cide which three teams join the. Montreal Canadians in the post- season Stanley Cup playoffs. Opinion around the six-team | circuit is nearly unanimous that | the powerful Canadiens, winners | of the Stanley Cup for an un. | precedented four consecutive | years, have enough top players | to split into two teams — and | both would make the playoffs. The New York Rangers, last year’s most disappointing team, open the schedule against the, Chicago Black Hawks at Chicago.| The Hawks finished third last year. The Rangers, in second place at one point, staged one of hock-' ey’s most spectacular’ collapses and skidded right out of the play- offs on the last day of the season.’ Boston's second-place finishers take on Montreal at Montreal Thursday, with all six teams play-| ing Saturday — Detroit Red Wings at Montreal, Chicago at Toronto, ‘and New York at Boston. | | Se a AP Wirepheto Hosts Loop Starter | The Quebec City Aces—newest jentry in the American Hockey |League—open the circuit's 252- {game schedule tonight, the Chicago White Sox by a 5-4 t field screen. /10 years to perfect so that I can luse it effectively all the time. LINING UP THE TARGET — Billy Welu points to the spot where the imaginary line, which he draws from the 1-3 pin pocket to himself before delivery, crosses the foul line. up now. They'll be out of the Ps = National Football League race before it starts, and some play- 7 ar in oln S a standing on the approach. Then I usually pick a spot at a point 15 feet beyond the foul line and generally in line with the second arrow on the right. While [I still have that line drawn, in my mind’s eye, I go into my de- livery. For added insurance as a control factor, I concentrate on finishing my right arm out to- ward my spot. | I try to roll my ball directly over that line. When I do, I get a strike more times than not. This method is called ‘“‘line’’ or “area’’ bowling and took me about As a youngster, I started by “pin” bowling, next went to ‘‘spot”’ bowling as I advanced in the game, and now use the ‘“‘line”’ with the pins and the spot on the lanes as double check-points. 4 Asked if any of his play-| City Midget Grid Results une Whittier 6, Emerson 2 LeBaron ywen 0 ren 13, Herr ;missal were two White Sox errors and a passed ball. Meanwhile, the White Sox — playing before a second straight | record series crowd of 92,550— left two on in the first inning when Sherm Lollar rapped into a double play, one on in the second and third, and two more aboard both in the fourth and sixth | innings. | | Then, finally, they cracked through in the seventh to tie it up at 4-4 when big Ted Kluszew- ski knocked in one run and Lollar got himself even for that first inning double play smash _ by| spanking a three-run homer over the screen in left field. * * * Hodges wiped it all out for them, land put their backs squarely against the wall, after they left janother runner base-bound in the eighth. Big Gil led off the bottom of the inning with his payoff poke to give the triumph to young Larry Sherry and fasten the defeat on relief ace Gerry Staley. “That's the whole story,” Lopez conceded. ‘‘We haven't been getting the hit we need when we have men on base. We're getting the hits, sure, but we aren’t getting the runs. We used to score four or five runs on six hits during the regular season. Now we aren't getting a run on a half dozen hits.” In an effort to get those hits against the lefthanded Koufax, | Lopez announced that he would, send righthanded hitting third) baseman Bubba Phillips and right fielder Jim McAnaney into the lineup in place of left-handed| hitting Billy Goodman and Jim| Rivera. Walt Alston, manager of ny Dodgers, wasn’t making any claims — probably remembering the fact that the American League Yankees trailed the Milwaukee Braves, three games to one, in last year’s World Series and roared back to win the champion- ship. L.A. 13-10 Favorite NEW YORK (UPI) — The Dodgers are 13-10 favorites to beat the White Sox in the fifth game of the World Series today and give Los Angeles its first world baseball championship, Weekend scores in the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Depart- ment's City Midget football pro- gram: L Weaver 13, 2, Webster 0 IGHT DIVISION tt 7 ton 0 HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION ley 18, Malkim 0 Webster 30, Crofoot 0 t LeBaron 23, Owen 12 LOS ANGELES ‘AP)—The official box score of the fourth game of the 10959 World Series: Chicage A Landis cf 8s Aparicio Pox 2b SAS Kluszewski 1b Lollar c Goodman 3d Smith if Rivera rf .... Wynn p. Lown p .....- A—Cash .. Pierce p .... C—Torgeson | Socooouewcaevcecg ant e| COnnHuweo-woogs! Seocoeocooneor ne Totals ‘ Les Angeles Gilliam @bd Neal 2 oon rf-lf Larker if B—FPurillo rf Pairiy ft -.... Hodges Ib... e. Demeter cf ....... Roseboro c .. Wills ss Craig p . Sherry p a SeonaKscooouscg eccH-ewnocccoota | coocccoouncoe 3) Sr aocoocesoos*?o | CoSsOHwoownosene Lamacsmocasnciln baocnnacsmeasass Totals ..........33 §& 3 231 A—Struck out for Lown in éth B—Struck out for Larker in 5th C—Grounded out for Pierce tn 7th Chicage : : e0e 806 Les Angeles oer E—Landis, Aparicio, Pierce DP—Wills, Neal and Hodges Wills and Hodges. LOB—Chicago HR—Lollar Hodges Wills. 8S—Roseboro, uP Ls 10 Neal, 2B—Fox Aparicio, Aparicio. Craig Sherry WYSR cccscecsesct ces LOWR ..sccccrvesce -- 5 Pierce eece Staley (Ly) ..c.c0e, ee | 1 BB—Craig 4 Aparicio, Kluszewsk!, Rivera, Smith, Sherry 1; Straley, Pierce 1: Demeter. 80—Craig 7, Goodman j, Lollar, Cash, Landis, Fox, Wynn 2. Lar- ker, Craig, Pierce 2, Moon, Furillo, Straley 2, Pairly, Demeter PB—Lollar. U—Secory N. Plate, Sum- mers A first bese. Dascoli N second base. Hurley A third base, Dixon N left field. Rice A right field. T—2 30. A— 92,550. w Lod - ooaeaso o+c0e8 ol -cowoek® A taste of excitement smooth as silk... right to the end... never a rough edge... always a low price. SMOOTH AS SILK KESSLER ESSLER, 2 we, nes a 4/5 QT. ~r ene mote €% ereise tar FOUUS KESSLER CO., LAWRENCEBURG, IND. - BLENDED WHISKEY 08 PROOF - 725<% GRAIN WEUTRAL SPIRITS. ' bab ~- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 : ) i a wii — ee ee ee ee Thompson Poised for Record Run BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah @—America’s fastest auto- mobile was poised today for’ an- other assault on the world speed record. 100,000 State planned to crack the pn record of 394 miles per hour set by the late John Cobb of England. The 30-year-old Californian ex- pressed confidence that his car is fully ‘capable of 400 m.p.h. or better. Giant Matmen Here Tomorrow 750-Pounder vs. ‘Little’ Guy at 330; Klein and Bernard in Feature Noon Opening Game Men Say Outlook’ Good for Success With! Local Waterfowl ; ; _ | fowl season. A special attraction sending 750- pound giant Happy Farmer Hum- phrey against Ray Campbell, 6-7, 330-pound Columbus, Ohio resident will be on a four-match wrestling card slated for the Pontiac Ar- mory Wednesday night. The main event will match Jim “Brute” in the Canadian duck-producing provinces, the season has been cut from 70 to 40 days. This year, it will wind up Nov. 15. visors for the State Conservation | Gentleman Jim Hady will meet Dynamite Johnny Gates complet- ing the card, Bernard and Klein are both former amateur champs. ‘Brute’ can boast of being sus- pended in more states and prov- inces than probably any mat- man in the world. Thor is a masked mystery man. His opponent is a scholarly Sil | Miller, the department’ s water- fowl specialist. Many of the early! targets will be native to Michigan) the state. * * * Later on, when the diver se cies, such as the redhead and can- vasback, begin heading southward | from _ their Canadian nesting grounds, the shortage will very | LANSING — Fair weather or foul, more than 100,000 duck hunt- ers likely will head for swamp and marsh tomorrow for the noon opening of Michigan’s 1959 water- Because of widespread drought | Surveys by district game super-|to win every game," Bernard and Louie Klein.| Department indicate a ‘‘pretty de-| same time, too.” Mighty Thor vs Jack Laskin and|cent’’ hunting outlook in the early| | part of the season, said Herbert | and are fairly well scattered across) f ~ | ~.gogy *% x ek * Look’s Recovery Was Happy Surprise to Duck Season Starts on Wednesday * State x * Hunters Await Wolverines Face ANN ARBOR, Mich. | gered ,by Michigan may be in for a shake-|reception was feeble most of the jup as coach Bump Elliott tries| time, and the big Spartan line con- |for Saturday's grid clash here with|tinually ripped open gaping holes |Oregon State. in Michigan's light forward wall | Although Elliott did not say what! Despite yesterday's steady rain, jlineup changes he had in mind,| Michigan's gridders were hard at he hinted that some may be forth-| ‘work preparing for Oregon State. coming. |For nearly 90 minutes, the first “We're thinking of some ssi. |three. teams concentrated on run- ble changes,” aia Shel eskal ining plays in the drizzle. The ‘anh ol ‘be ween et eadia jsquad then went inside to review | sure yet.” q |films of its game with Michigan State, Eliott admitted the road ahead looks rocky but refused to get dis-! () -- Stag-|Wolverines was shoddy, “We made the same mistakes couraged in the film that we made in “We haven't given up by any| the game,” Elliott quipped. ‘means and we're still going all out; Halfbacks- Bennie McRae, Will he said. “if Franklin and Fred Julian, who were we can build for next year at the injured Saturday, apparently have {shaken off their bruises as they returned to action. They should be ready for Saturday's game. First string halfbacks Brad My- ers and Darrell Harper, who also were hurt in the Snartan game jwere not able to work out. Myers was in the hospital for treatment Industrial Golf Teams Elliott poured 39 players into the Michigan State game in an effort to stem the Spartan as- sault but nothing could seem to stop the fired-up Staters. Tackling and blocking by the runners two straight defeats, and passers got little help, pass \of an injured leg while Harp- ier, suffering from badly bruised left ribs, was treated by the team's trainer EAST LANSING, Mich: WH — Medical science might well do some research into a modern phenomenon — the miraculous re- covery made by injured football players between mid-week and game time Michigan State quarterback Dean Look could provide g good case history. All last week coach Duffy Daugherty was shaking his head over Look’s sprained shoulder, Tommy Wilson and Larry Bie- lat would be his quarierbacks for the Michigan game, Daugherty said. Look, he inferred, was most- ly going along for the ride Look might be tested a bit dur- ing the game, Daugherty admit ted, and perhaps used as a punte: But any speculation that the in jured No. 1 quarterbac's could be a potent factor against Michigan was discouraged Wilson started and directed the Spartans to their first two touch downs Look went in for his test at * Shakeup to get well,” wards. Look admitted to only a slight twinge in his throwing arm after the tryout against Michigan. He and Wilson alternated in directing the No. 1 offensive in Monday’s workout said Daugherty after- Daugherty said he has not yet decided on which quarterback to start against Iowa Saturday. But | both will be available and both are sure to see plenty of action. Leading Spartan ground gainer as a halfback last season, Look adds a dangerous running threat to the slicked-up double wing at- tack. He also is one of the best punters on the squad and had a better-than-40-yard average last season Wolves Retain Leading Place in Prep Poll By The The same 10 teams that occupied the Associated Press’ first we>kly high school football poll last week re up there again—and in much same ordei Associated Press the Art arages. Schmidt, MT™, neg, IMPORTED HTS? : = “Peter who has wrestled throughout the| likely be notice ne ent “ ie _— ae Bay City Central retained its world including behind the Iron! Good hunting weather, big duck . - amare a beh top ranking by beating arch rival Curtain. |movements during the shortened vards and hese ayeliaay atte Bay City Handy 14.0. Z around end on an opti nt , Hady, a former national bowling season and other factors could Sanaa oly ‘vem scrimmage * RATING TEAM REC PTS star and top all-around athlete, ts) boost hunter success, however. , ; 1 Bay City Central » os | nN 1e re. v r nr o 4 the current junior heavyweight | As usual, first day hunters | Look n neuvered the team down 3 Grand Rapide ae champion. Gates is the former) wil] mass in Saginaw Bay, Saka | Industrial golf teams of Pontiac Bleech and Ed Novak again '° the touchdown laos: ona $ oe seecontcn as British Empire champ St. Clair and other favorite east- are preparing for the annual tour- SP arhead the Telephone team, “" ot : gh . te . m oe ie 6 Ber ton parte i : i ! hile “NIC =n & + i Was if again Or ie inal ean e ) 4 Humphrey is a popular en ern Michigan areas. nament to be held Saturday Octo- oe GMC = lost a B ouchdow eed, Witine snake : Royal ¢ ak Dor 0 20 with the fans for his et =a Miller said early fall movements, ber 10th at Pontiac Country Club Leger ri Paul Bada. Ronme oe itback Don Stewart. of 20Hamtra eee Vv. oO . A . ) ur s or outsta no ° = : G =" : Other in order ast nsing. Wallea t sce tee oom arenes eaahiaaiieed were noted in mid-September and) Last year there were six in- to eae “nou ke pane Muskegon with a touchdown pass. "ake. Grand Ra ds'Un a Pant coe Wa . ° sk" ape Craps we Bae later. dustrial teams entered with Pon- ‘4! Boller. will take Aa “He got well because he og {ra!. Traverse City Lincoln Park Tret ADLAN WHE : _ luce on (he CMC 4 He got well ause he wanted ion. Bay City Handy. Flint Centre \ | The Canadian drought dried up|tiac Motor upsetting General Mo- P4°e on the G team A woe |50 to 80 per cent of the potholes|tors Truck for the ° ‘Philip Monag- Captain of the Fisher Bod ¢ | & sner y jwhere ducks gather to nest and han Trophy.” team, Jim Anderson expects his - jhatch their you and the short tel); . : 1] t t t faery . a oe tight | The tournament was actually | =ait to fiell a strong team this unI1oOr ] Ss O alr | season and other lighter reg-| eaiiieRed 1948 4 GMC took °ar with Baldwin Rubber again |ulations are designed to cut the| istituted in _— vA ace ;u the hone: ight of the 11 paced by Joe Burgdorf§ and |take in the Mississippi Flyway by en eo ee | See Panik Pontiac's Junior High football 125! and Washington Doo 130 per cent However this is only the 4th 2a ms | their schedules et gtht Joe, Shara > tea Ss t 1e 1 schedules ASS A—Easterr 22 Bag limits for ducks are un-| year that the Monaghan award Ed Wasik joins the defending i eincadne rnoon with seven Jetter Dick Craig ie |changed generally at four per day has been in effect. champion Pontiac Motor team ‘teams competing in Class B Mackia fe) 400 Walniléoe been REDUCE |and eight in possession but there} Besides. Pontiac Motor’s victory this year along with returnee Rube A ‘ + Don Kelly and John B nome |are changes in kill quotas of spe-jast year, the only other two vic- Wideman Thirsda = class A [20 efferson —Bill Nunez «27). Lin lo . | Thursday afternoon six class A coin. Bod Kent 130) Madison—Tom FUEL BILLS | cles. tors were American Forge in 1950 . * = * teams will play and Friday tive Shara 24) and Washington—Vern Riem- h } . of rra | ("; P o6 Te ee | Hunters may take only one and Pontiac Motor in 1953 All team captains are requested class C teams begin caer n EONEERAYS GCHEDULE the pre erre( anadian W hisky a | canvasback or one redhead or * * * to submit the names of thei “ * * ‘Home team and field listed first) . , »} y ’ _ . LOOSE | ome ruddy duck in the bag or in | With a team comprised of Nick players for pairings by calling The Junior High teams are classi- om ae an Ea Be shedda ona welt ome W indup loa Wot Ga Series Wilh possession. Limits also include (Cantor, Ed Fender, Rube Wide- Pontiac Country Club by Wed a pens soht | Washington Blues vs Jefferson “ fied according to class and weight THURSDAY one wood duck, protected |man, and Wayne Beals, the Pon- nesday afternoon. weadison vs Jefferson: Washington| ; | Michigan for several years or tiac Motor squad fired a total of x «© t A total de a ‘oe Washington piace Sd Lincoln ve) gEAGRAM-DISTILLERS COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY - 66.8 PROOF. CANADIAN WHISeY | hooded st y S »SS are com n n e progran ne wr in an Ainal _ one mre iat The playe rs will start teeing otf (hin anid : . Eastern vs ilacala: Waskipeten vs Toca iil aa SELECTED WHIsELES * Sun VEARS 0.0 ¢€ | Bag limits on American and red- '@" “merican Forge at 1:00 o'clock. Jim Hanes of Sha Li Madison, and Jefferson ibye A BAG i breasted mergansers will again be GMC finished a surprising low Pontiac Motor Division is again These are the list of st ols __ \five per day and 10 in possession, 4th behind Fisher Body but supervising the tournament competing in the different divisions single or combined. ahead of Bell Telephone and with their coache Number of &. e ZONOLITE Good hunters will have a 70-day Baldwin Rubber. PAST INDUSTRIAL CHAMPS 9 players on the teams are listed season again — opening tomorrow Val BI Tel 1948 ber Mele teh n parenthesis ) BALSAM WOOL and ending Dee 15. Bag and Por ‘ ae “a et Bell ee ephone, 950 Amer Forge i tet CLASS B—FEa men et Z : : ; : é 'ez 70 IMC 57 iM¢ Junter n Johr T srhades ak tare ha te va ars with 635-71, iii 1331 GMC 1958 Pon M. a-Oeieen Le “21 I in-Pa includes not more than two Canada ea 1953 Pont Mot kins (32 Madison-Ralph_ Spri - ® GLASS WOOL | a —_ |geese or two whitefronted geese) |or one of each. | After opening day, shooting hours’ ! : . DONALDSON ;will run from sunrise, half an! : hour later than last year, to sun-| set. At Wildfowl and Sebewaing) LUMBER Bays off Saginaw Bay, shooting| | will close at 4 p.m. 27 Orchard Lake Ave. O p t T FE 2-8381 ermanen ype | Pistons to Cut { More Player Ex - Spartan ae Lowery Dropped; Play, in Ohio This Week | FRONT END SPECIAL © Wheel Alignment © Balance 2 front wheels © Adjust brakes © Inspect wheel cylinders ® Pack front wheels © Inspect drums © Inspect brake lining 99 ARTI- FREEZE Genuine FORD 79 GALLON *304 Monn, With a BIG BEAR Arranged ) Home Imorovement Mortvace = BRAKE SAFETY DETROIT « — The Detroit Pis-| former Michigan State star Jack Quiggle and rookie! |Buddy Lowrey from their National | |Basketball Assn. squad yesterday.) Ford-0-Matic | Quiggle was getting his second) Gc d Bonded shot with the Pistons who open! Example . and ii SPECIALS uorantee onde their NBA season Oct. 18. He was, STARTS HERE! Id @ eine Brake Relining on the training roster a year ago!’ Mr. J. W. Auburn Hgts. F ! when a back injury sidelined him. ; We purchased a Room Addition Lowery played his college bail at Stephen F. Austin College in Texas. from Big Bear for $995. I paid off Finance Co. A $38 mos! 4 $12 mo. $ $ 8? Sj Reg. $24.95 Ford-Chev.-Ply. 20.000 miles or 1-year guarantee. 1,000-Mile Adjustment. Kuhn Auto Service 149 W. Huron St. FE 2-1215 I paid off Appliance Loan I paid off Land Contract .. $48 mo. Old Payments $98 mo. MY NEW PAYMENT IS $68 PER MONTH FOR EVERYTHING SAVINGS °30 Per Month ut i E 3-783 By dropping the two rookies, coach Red Rocha’s backcourt bri-| gade is set with veterans. Gene |Shue, Dick McGuire and Chuck) |Noble are holdovers from last sea-| son when the Pistons finished third | in the Western Division. Billy Kenville, who played briefly with Detroit two years ago before sitting out last season, is the fourth backcourt man. i One more Piston will have to be| cut to bring the club to the 11-man} NOW YOU CAN @ Finish Your Shell @ Add-A-Room @ Side Your Home @ Build a Garage AND LOWER YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS! Prices Include Labor and Material ewww wwwrrweressseseenesere rs see ewe MUFFLERS 49-'53.. . 3" "54-58... 5 NO MONEY DOWN Drain Transmission and e Torque Converter. l 2 Adjust Transmission e Bands and Linkage. Clean Out Pan and e Screen. Refill With New e Fordomatic Fluid. ' game. BRAKES RELINED 15 FAMOUS SERVICES: All 4 Wheels complete, 4 5. Road Test Car. Remove all 4 wheels; install SAFTI-GRIP taciudia a and eremet : epi ctean wie alae, toed boa | meter OTHER MAKES AT SAME See elvis? ie Call for Free Consultation © Operators on ety 24 Hours @ Day SAVINGS—22 YEARS TO PAY! ||] abor—riusd-Goskets } i Other Cars $16.95 Except Nash, Stedebeder. Hudson MARKET TIRE CO. 77 W. Huron FE 8-0424 CY OWENS, Inc. CONSTRUCTION co. “92 WEST HURON 147 S. SAGINAW FE 5-4101 ~ Sentiment still was dampened by small fractions on some | oc al . rys ef 0 § stalemates. in the negotiations 10| pease, cron TSQ7SRE® aso] buying that soon disappeared. and mellowness. Then we age six years, and end the steel and dock strikes,|Beans. Ky. Wonders, bu. ........:. 450/ The continuing strike of dock wind up with the sm : . Wall street anticipated action un-|sinee semtte 222i ES) weekers and fits impact on for- P GoEhest, Soltest Hour ‘ p rices on Dodge Sey Oe Fee teniey ine. on is eign demand for the bread grain bon that ever touched your glass. Sample ; U.S. Steel and Bethlehe roccolt -- 2.80) seemed to be the -dominent fac- i , ’$ good! fractional losses. Rails showed Cabbage, Curly, bu : 298| tor holding back any real ad- ALL IN FUN — Eleven-year-old Robert Dow Hamilton Jr. Little Brown Jug and find out what’s g . ° Ps Pa Paris Grocers Strike in Protest » to De Gaulle Act Two Trees in Israel NEGIDDO (Armageddon), Israel (UPI)—Gov. G. Mennen Williams | Philip A. Hart (D-Mich), here staged a 24-hour : “ : Oday) ' 7 , helinven teckel, Sordea end Ube: “IT like the Arab people, and I Charles de Gauille’s government to ‘ ‘ , am only sorry that they fear and : . non would have made peace long) are antagonistic to Israel,” Wil- The grocers hoped their daylong osers : MARKETS ans ago if they had been left alone /liams said. “I am sure Jordan is = Paps pe : . . to do so. -~ 44 —, on peace, because she is fusal to. fresh vege- ’ ostering tourist trade that ue ani ~ —_— . t 3 The eee ve top prices M f M rk f Pilg h aig tig cress | prveper only if there is seals Ga meee te yp omy. re na e covering’ sales a taal ly grow ove q qa e t view yesterday, soon after!both sides of the border. or ts are forcing prices) ~ ‘ Market by growers and sold by ied : them in wholesale package |ots. raat Tae loos ater oan edentey active early trading Friday Bureau of Markets, a8 Of trade was extremely dull today : ) / ® Fee | oday, and prices held within an extreme- Sa le Little row J ord price of @0 cents a pound. . ly narrow e mp n ug ro of veentabies like car- pare Sumamberes gainers. by Detroit Produce Costaed 4a tay weather over have increased 10 per cent or | Losses of pivotal stocks ran Apples. Crap % = ass netigoner $1.50 on anne ag oes and find out what S good! more. mostly from fractions to about a| Apes Greenings hoe 338 yD a ~ The government has imposed controls on profits in various branches of commerce. It is re- ported considering large-scale im- ports to ease price pressures if food prices continue to rise. range. at the opening, then softened gradually. The ticket tape was laté very briefly in the open- ing flurry. : point. Advances were in the same : A The list was active and mixed | Apples 1.75 1 *: 238\further delay in the bean harvest ee 2.50 and expectations that the long stretch of wet weather will cause damage to some of the crop dur- ing combining operations gave a go| further lift to bean futures prices. Wheat starfed mostly un- changed but then moved up vance in wheat futures. shows his lawyer father the fine points of a real western gallows Made with home-grown grain harvested an hour’s drive from our distillery. And pure, sweet limestone water from our own under- ground springs. Slowly distilled, then trick- led through fresh charcoal for extra clarity $470 $998 Follows Lead of GM, fea hee \Serros Sopped oe : 38] com remained virtually un- he and some friends built in the back yard of his Columbus, Ohio, ie 8, Aes. BENS. ... 002 -cccccess 90) : i i i lay § Qt. Pint Ford; Accessory Items. Thiokol, ahead about a point, \Caullflower, aos 2.25\changed around the opening. Rye home. Hamilton Sr. explains that the boy is always building things Code No. 914 = 915 Listed - Westingheas “Wlectric, tp more | Stitt: pascal, 2% dos. 222222222! 325 started mostly unchanged but la-| ~—tree house, soapbox racers, etc.—so he gave the O.K. on this _ * isted at Lower Cost then thet and Allied Che Celery, root, dos. .................. 1.18|\ter moved fractionally higher fol-| Project. mical, |Chives. dos 4 cbcteoncoasoce 2.25| lowing the action in wh . about a point higher, were among/|Corn, sweet, 5 dos, ....... «+ 1.00 action wheat. r : Cucumbers, slicers . bu 3.50 Near the end of the DETROIT (UPI)—Chrysler Corp./gainers. Smaller gains were made |pi. dos. bens. |... -.. 138 : first hour today announced factory retail/by Goodyear and General Elec-| Ba*pient. bu 150; Wheat was % to % higher, De- s . prices for the 1960 Dodge and the tric. ° : * sp0/Cember $1.96%; corn unchanged to new Dodge Dart passenger cars. x * *® a 100i % higher, December $1.10%; oats | f Dodge prices showed Chrysler} Goodrich was off about a point. : 150] higher to ¥%, lower, Decem- was following the lead of General |Slight losses were taken by Ana- 2 ber 72; rye % higher to % lower, - : } Motors and Ford in “holding tne|conda, Kennecott, American Smelt- 14|December $1.32%; and soybeans : iteeticls price line.” ing and International Nickel. pe) %4 higher to % lower, November OWN 7 Prices for sedans and hardtops in 338 7 BRO pe . the Dodge lines were unchanged New York Stocks -+ 3.00) Oe | ia reel from 1959, while the prices for six (Late Morning Quotations) tse Young Pontiac vues ee ; mes and nine-passenger station wago:s . — : LANSING (#—The stage finally| the supreme court to throw out ue were dropped $69 and $74 respec-} «amiral ‘19 Goodrich 96.2 . 250 ° was set today for a momentous! the new law as unconstitutional. | HIRAM WALKE! tively. ae aus its Goodyear ho - = Woman Injured State Supreme Court decision on Lockwood id ounpontn At th H Allied Sirs .. $73 i ene . 1.80/ 2 C C lli . the legality of a 120-million-dollar| “O-"WOO%, President of the De- a a At the same time, Dodge an- /Aitis Chal .- 384 Gt No Ry... $24 -: 1.08 In Car COll]1s1on ge (enlea; tax increase, troit Consumers League, con- nounced price reductions for |Am™airin ||| 257 Gull ON 110 2.35 tended the easi 's + BT Gum Ge : . The ruling might come by mid- ‘© the easing of Michigan's many populdr optional equip. |Am Can... #8 a - 18) A 21-year-old Pontiac woman wa , isis wi ment Items. The heater was |Am WaPoy tae ooker Ch ||. 305 “s t30/in‘ured yesterday afternoon in = hii i Sa gc apa pea ole ieee es . : Met Cl. 245 Indust Ray -. 18.6 man 0 1 eae : a revenue » program did not justi riole L ] B J reduced $17.75; power steering [2m Motors || $38 R. i . } 33 two-car collision at the intersection ee Dee et by * ; hisetinld violation | itt e rown ug $14.45; radio $26 and automatic |4m N Ges ... 07-4 Inland st... 93 (ot Peyiand Momcinatect, [ge ee ee ee Se ee , m Sme inter’ : : é ; : “yy | 50 'Michigan’s financial ills. ; = . tasneaieeton 315. oe ie WE ee Carol Partlow, 136 N. Telegraph) y _ | ; ; | 6 Year Old » Straight Bourbon Whiskey The result, Chrysler Corp. said,| ARScoW’*, .- asi tot boees ge Rd., was treated for leg cuts at) mt Seren 75S pect ailees News n B f | was that a 1960 Matador sedan or|Armco St! 13.7 int Shoe... 34.7) 38|Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital and| eked on, rival attorneys argued | | re STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY « 6 YEARS OLD - 86 PROOF hardtop model will cost between! Atchison aT int Tel & Tel 33.1) ~ released. reais sides t =e Sec two | HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC., PEORIA, ILLINOIS $90 and $105 less than a compar-| fa’ @ On ||| 42.7 Johns Man. 50.3| be ours yesterday before the eight | James J. Loughran, of 1750 S. . - eee Sal 56.7 hai gee id 28) She was a passenger in a car | high court justices. Both sides Hil! Rd., Milford Towns able 1959 Royal model, including | is =o aL ownship, told . |Boeing Air .. 301 Kennecott e2 | driven by Harry L. Partlow, 19 typical equinment. Bond Strs 22.4 5 es ; 3 » *%+ | agreed this was the basic ques- Oakland County sheriff's deputie - ypical eq Rorden tre Kimb Clk... 66 | SALAD GREENS 136 N. Telegraph Rd. . y ciara * * * |Rorg Warn 42, Kresge BS . 32.8\Celery Cabbage, dos, ...... soeeee $2.00 tion: yesterday that someone broke into Dodge prices for a stripped|prun Balke 38. LOP Glass |. 69 3\pecarie bu ttt, 288) Partlow's car, moving west on| Is the new levy a use tax in- DiS home and stole a .38 caliber model range from $2,672 for a|Budd Co 263 Lib Mc&L .... 10.7/ Lettuce. Bibb, pk... . 1.75 Montcalm street, collided with the| crease or a sales tax increase? Tevolver and .22 caliber rifle. A NEW Burroughs . wo Lige & My 89.3/| Lettuce, Boston bu. .. 3.00) > crease. Matador 4-door sedan to4$3,315 for|Campb Soup . 4 Lockh Aire .. 25.8 |Lettuce, head. bu. . 139 Car of Stanley Dombrowski, 310 S.| J is a sales tax boost and there- . a Polara S-passenger hardtop sta-|S22 Pel. Jeg Voews, Inc \. 30.|Lettuce. leaf, bu. ve. ee sees sees - 250/Bellevue St., Lake Orion. Dom-/fore violates the three-cent ceil-| A chain saw valued at $154 was SALES CAREER tion wagon. eee ats Lone 8 Ges .. 382 browski was driving north on ing the state constitution sets on Stolen Monday from the front porch 3 Oo ft Prices for the new 118-inch|Cese Jt Be ae as > idk de lthe sales levy, Atty. Gen. Paul °f the home of Robert Morley, 4421 wheelbase Dodge Dart range froin| Gnee’ & Oe as canning! 274 Livestock After the collision, Partlow’s car L. Ada ' told th S "This he Collins Rd., Oakland Township Intelligence, good character and energy quality you for a $2.076 fi Reneca club sedan cix.| re” 644 Martin Co 39.1] 5 ismashed into a utility pole - Adams e court. 1S, rdi . . : permanent position with a well-known sales organization, special- 2,076 for a Seneca club sedan six, Cities sve a May D Str 482 DETROIT sTOCK ) : ‘said, is the ‘fundamental infirm- 9CCOrding to Oakland County izing in Mutual Investment Fund Shares. to $2,736 for a Phoenix V-8 con-/cors Sun. Hy ee se: 46 || DETROIT. Oct. § (AP) — Cattle—| ity" in the new law. sheriff's deputies. vertible. Colum Gas 03 4 : jsalable 2400. Bulk early supply fed } ve , : Mutual Funds represent a simple plan for participating in the . Con Edi -@23 Merr Ch&S .. 17.6) | “It doesn’t matter what the Optional equipment prices for Consumer Pe ee ee on 18-4 grades predominating: tepply of wtilty| ena e ge roup iname is; we must look to the tax! Norman Edler, 60 W. Pike St, J pining and i a ii oes MS) the Dodge Dart were generally /Coot Can | | 44 Monsan Ch .. 48.1/S0ey."\cows. Increased. over last Monday.| litself,"” he said. reported to Pontiac police yester- J Planned Investment: Programs the same as for the Dodge. Cont Sot : s io Motarola 108 |sbout 35 per cent of run; around 100 Due aft Gr d R id | * * * day that someone stole a watch Public acceptance of Mutual Funds is growing rapidly . . . over Chrysler pointed out that a num- oe OR, eet Oe .. nee bait ocak ae an agp! Ay Adams, a Democrat, heads a V@lued at $75 from his hoine. $1,000,000.00 a day. This should enable you, by rendering a sare gla hanical and trim| ore as seerny SP 274 |steady; some steers 950-1180 Ibs. 27.00-| four-man team of states attorneys valuable service to others, to earn a regular above-average income, ber of both mec o raeost ies Deere | $3.7 Nat Cash R .. 387 \iogay high choice te prime 1000-1173 | GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — The named to oppose the tax increase! Ralph Spadafore, 300 W. Iroquois | 27d to enter a professional lifetime career. Ages 30 to 60 desirable Me nak tees Sere clea’ oe fe ee a as poate 34.2 | ep Steer® | 26 00-28 15: two loads high U.S. Senate subcommittee on the adopted by the Republican-con- Rd., reported to Pontiac police Previous investment or sales experience helpful but not required; wh a nt ot Se 1960| 22 Airc, ZR Nat Lead 1112 jpg. 28 50: “load” prime. 908 Ib veariing| Problems of the aged and aging|trolled Legislature Aug. 29. It Yesterday that someone stole aj ea ase and coupessticr) SUppied. Sale women re |50 ; od 8 including chrome tender| Pre L746 Nort & West . 93 aise 36%: mest, tr ened ae ill hold a public hearing in went into effect Sept. 1. $45 watch and $35 from a chil- pply. models inc g oe oo 3S No Am Ay 35 steers 25.00-27.00: most good to average(Grand Rapids Nov. 16-17 as part dren’s bank from his home. No travel. This is not insurance but trained insurance people ornamentation on Matador atin Au L $02 — - ow . mG coos ball -ce 24 00-2658: cows mostly of a nationwide seven-city inves-| Opposing Adams, Stanton 8S. should be interested. Possible earnings $7,500 to $15,000 or Polara hardtops and wagons. Also,| & ps 143 Ohio Oil 36 lieee sree eat lower; utility cows; | Faville, his chief assistant earl —— P . is : 4 i ; | § more yearly the 838 cubic inch engine, formerly Ex-Cell.0 2 Owens Cog “pe tae canners and cutters 13.00-|tigation . A . | argecd tee tax te (imposed oa Perncings) ee Le ayn an extra-cost option, is standard) Firestone 126 degiee - z. Bild ce — Butchers under Pat McN : | different persons than the sales ((. : : anne aa INTERVIEW BY APPOINTMENT ONLY equipment on 1960 Polara models.|5o0d neh $12 Pan AW Alr | 737/280 Ibs. 25 cents lower, sows, wetdy'lig chairman of the subconamittes | tax, taxes different items and pontia, roi 7 seterday It i: ahi _ —_ i Sul. a7 Panh Spl... 46.2/most mixed lots U.S. No 2 and 3 190- : gett fey! ’ . nuac police yesterday. It was a | | Fraeh tre 243 Param Pict .. 43.1/240 Ibe. 13.00-13 40: mixed No. 1 and 2/which includes Sens. John Kenne- | I rea’ measured and ad valued at $120. GEORGE F. REUTTER, DIVISIONAL MANAGER Dodge Adds 6-Cylinder Jen Dranm . 47 Penner. JC -108.4/No, 1, 190-370 Ibe. 1378: mized wo. 3/dy (D-Mass.), Everett Dirksen (R- ministered. | WADDELL & REED, INC Model Dart Li Gen Fas oi Pepal. Cola 11.7 260-300 Toe 12 00012 33. mt 7s; No. jill), Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.),! In practice this is not true,| Someone broke a 10-by-16 foot ‘ eve - -12 2 xe rades| : st ~ ’' ple ‘ , rg i i odels to Dart Line fee We ly Powe 33.8) sows | 200-400, Ibs 10-75-12 08; 400-600, Joseph Clark (D-Pa.) and Jennings Adams said, because the consumer aoe ee < the ae 3045 Edgewater FE 5.8078 Pontiac, Mich. elps s. No. 2 an -10 : : “cono So. store, ; te DETROIT (UPI) — Dealer ac-/9,,Te,& Et | $4 a Sia) Sects cckus ack” veniers runy| Randolph (D-W.Va.). . __|is paying what amounts to a four- a my ee me Se MORE, : th - economy (Gen. Tire i}? phi Pet 42 |1.00 lower: trade slow om standard and| The “grass roots” hearings will cent sales tax. 2 EAN oes it Wan Pepori’ ceptance o e new Y | Genesco 325 2roct & G ., 83.4\down: choice and prime 35.00-40.00: give the subcommittee a chance, Und tioni by A : to Pontiac police yesterday. The Dodge Dart has prompted Chrysler Gillette 554 Pure Oil .... 35.3|standard and good 2500-3500: cull and| ; ; nt fe ree questioning by Associate | so aow was valued at $300 Cc ix-cylinder | °°*?*! Br cl anidiog $6.4 / utility 15.00.25 00 |to take testimony from senior citi- Justice Thpmas M. Kavanagh s valued at $300. orp. to add four six-cylinder Sheep—salable 1200 Not enough sales| d eye Ge fF : "| to establish trade. few sales $0 cents,|Z€NS and to visit rursing homes, |Faville acknowledged that mer-| Someone broke into the Gregory models to the line, Dodge General : homes for the aged, chronic dis- chants who may be collecti : a: ; Manager M. C. Patterson said to- ti | d ter ewes and feeder lambs steady: aoe , : cnants 0 ay co ing a Oil Co. building at 94 E. Walton ; p M p load choice 98 1b. wooled slaughter|ease hospitals and housing pro- pe ses , : ne day. on lac an ed S lambs 2075. few good lambs. 100-18 80: jects for the elderly. TLE than 49 cote ace ulate eg es Ne oe The Dart will be introduced to the public Friday in dealer show- “in Guilty fo Larceny Patterson said the Dart will be | offered in three series with a total) A 20-year-old accused burglar of 24 models. The new six-cylinder | from Pontiac, charged with taking models announced today will be in $931 and a revolver from a city ix line, the top series.| home in August, yesterday pleaded) pDerrorr, oct. 5 (AP) — P ; | Eee Rothe ue P guilty to larceny in a building ro seule: Detroit pol No.‘ 1 auahty the elderly. Price fara oe ” . Gee wT Sahuneay OFe P : n 4 . . y, | when arraigned before Oakland 9 ery type hens 17: light type hens . brought by iisirti sailemmes /8, 9 am. to 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 9, GET , County Circuit Judge William J.|i;. “Yhites "Te: capeuing Shee a a4/$1 Putter Helps Him Charles C. Lockwood, who asked Baan, t2°¢ pan ma : | Beer. 21; over § Ibs. 27-38; turkeys heavy type | | Medicine cabinets, 1 20" We will arrange your rent | | De ceiver —. | RUTLAND, Vt. (UPI)—A $1 put-| lcabinet. ‘tactory second. $3.95 Judge Beer set sentencing for DETROIT EGGs iter he bought at a miniature golf! |Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard like loan payments to fit - JjOct. 26 and ordered David B.| DETROIT. Oct § (AP) — Kees to» | course five years ago helped Don Has Four Beaches |Lk. Ave. —adv. Wilson of 29 Cooley St., back to graded: |Hoenig to win the 30th annual| . . : the county jail after he was un-|,. gig erade A, jumbo | 52: extra) New England Amateur Golf Tour-| Prince Edward Island National |ryursdey 10-12 Exchanee St. cat your monthly income. SHARE OF able to post a $500 bond. —— ES grade B dsr c 41-44;| nament here. iPark has four main beaches. | Gh * * * ade arge 44-45; medium} _ 35; checks 20. Wilson is accused of taking the Commercially graded: | HO ME LO AN S Whites—grade A jumbo 45-48: extra) | money and gun from the home of Lorenz Vasbirider of 118 Spokarie Dr. Pays in Vain to Accompany . . sf ° Nikita’s Wife SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The FBI arrested an unemployed en- gineer Monday night and charged him with selling a job that didn’t exist—as traveling companion to Mrs. Nikita Khrushchev. * * * R. D. Auerbach, FBI special agent in charge here, said Wil- liam Joseph Burke is being ac- cused of impersonating a federal employe. The agent said Burke had told PROSPERITY An interesting 20-page booklet, “What Every In- vestor Should Know”, is yours for the asking. Cover- ing fundamentals of invest- ment, it’s particularly help- ful if you aren't a frequent buyer of stocks. Stop in, write, or phone for your copy. WATLING, LERCHEN ra od o Member New York Stock Exchange ond other leading exchanges Paes ee esate eoewaeaeeeq 1 wating, Lerchen & Co. 1 402 Pontise State Bank Bldg. ! Pentiac, Michigan * Please send me more Information spots 1.00 lower than last week: slaugh- Semainder Iambs unsold: cull to choice slaughter ewes 3.50-5 50, few up to 600: good ‘and choice feeder lambs, natives, 17.00-19.00. . Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY large 40%-43; large 40-43; medium 32: small 18; grade B large 23-28; browns— Jumbo 44; extra large 40; large 9-49; medium 30-33; small 17-19. Say Algeria Rebels Execufe Each Other | | Detroit is the only other Michi- gan city where the subcommittee will stop. The Detroit hearing is, set for Dec. 10-1]. The subcommittee’s findings will be used as the basis for proposed legislation on filling the needs of! of less than 49 cents are violating tiac police yesterday. It has not the law. iPass determined what is missing. * * * This, however, is a problem of administration for the State Rev-! enue Department, not a_ legal! question, he sald. | Rummage Sale: First Presby- Rummage Sale Tues., Oct. 6 & Wed., Oct. 7. 9 to a oe B&B Auction, 5089 Dixie Highway. dv Cosmetic Industry to Appeal Order Banning Lipstick Color WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Food| ALGIERS (AP) — The French army today claimed the national. ist rebels have execujed 480 mem- | bers of their own forces for plot- | ting against the rebellion. . | * * * French headquarters released | photostats of what it said was an official rebel report on the purge of “counter - revolutionary ele- ments” in rebel Region 4, south of Algiers * * * The army said the document confirmed earlier reports of a growing tendency among rebel leaders to eliminate the intellec- uals among their original follow- ers. The French said the rebels and Drug Administration (FDA) | |Monday banned the use of 17 com-|women was ‘‘completely insignifi- mon lipstick coloring substances. The order said animal experi- ments have shown thaf the 17 coal-tar colors, also usec in drugs and in other cosmetics, are poten- tially harmful if allowed to enter| the human digestive system. The order will go into effect 90 days from today unless the cosmetic industry, which has fought the move, makes a suc- cessful appeal to the FDA for a hearing. The industry has been given 30 days to file objections. S. L, Mayham, executive vice president of the Toilet Goods Assn., said the industry would appeal ‘and that a final decisioh probably would | r [would severely limit its lipstick! |FDA‘s approved list of color addi- jtives for any type of drugs or ‘ ‘plenty’ of technical evidence that|in question had produced such the amount of lipstick digested by injuries as anemia and liver ail- cant” anil Gould caves ao haris ments~ and that they had some- cause “ itimes affected the growth rate of * *. * ; Is Previously, the cosmetics indus- ena a try has argued that such a ban| - | * * Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. 75 To. Buy, Build or Refinance Established 1890 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 4-0561 Customer Parking in Rear of Office They said these injuries would not necessarily result from human consumption of the colors, espe- | cially in small quantities found in & = color offerings, i: The FDA order said that 13 of the colors may still be used in cosmetics that are applied ex- ternally and do no* get into the digestive system. pletely harmless in animals. * * * * * * The remaining four cofors have! Thirteen of the colors had previ- been removed entirely from the|ously been certified by the Food jand Drug Administration. Mon- day’s order resulted from a study based on new testing information. cosmetics. But under the law their|* . use must be banned completely |. since they do not qualify as com-|!* 58 INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL ° C. J.-NEPHLER CO. 1 | | j *dout Diversified Investments. woman and promised her the believe these elements are more x * * x* * * eh ' as traveling companion huabach susceptible to doubts about the veneer e —s oe pn Under the: federal Food, Drug| The Department of Health, Edu- |) FE 2-9117 i § Wamne. ..«.000.0c.tecese seoas fl , success of the revolt, now in its on repr ‘and Cosmetics Act, the government cation and Welfare has proposed| = 818 Community National Bank Bld e ' fifth year that manufacture $5 per cent of must ban any coal-tar color that |legislation which would allow it to a: Y sisi 9: 4 A ne eueg * * the nation’s lipsticks. : “i =e - lect limite on the amounts of ques-| iit LISTED & UNLISTED SECURITIES — MUTUAL FUNDS. e 1 i Burke, 46, who gave a San Fran- is proved harmful in sign icant | set limits on ques- | OUR PACILITIES EXTEND PROM COAST TO COAST ‘ p Clty... ee eee: Leseesene saseseds cisco address, said he is a native| About one-third of U.S. farms/IS INSIGNIFICANT amounts in the diet of test animals. |tionable colors that can be used | § — ee ae Se eee eee Ot NOW Serene, have television. Mayham said the group had Officials explained that the colors'safely. za aes # rye ( . ‘ ) { ‘ > Sa5¥d WIAD VW. Murder Charge » in Ship Death Radio Man Is Indicted by Grand Jury, to Stand Trial in Boston BOSTON A} County grand jury A Sullol has indicted a ae ae ee a, THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1939 handsome ship's radio operator charg ng hin nurdering a ViVacious Pusst 7¢ In me ¢ liimay @ a shiptx * * * The grand jury returned ul ac InmdictMent Mionaus icuinst Willem Van Rie. 30. of the Nether lands, after hearing only si\ nesses * * * The 240 men and three won the jury reported Van Rte assault and beating did 11] AP Wiseghete ape’ sill lc KUNAWAY TROLLEY —Thiee persons were hospitalized when rush hour yesterday. Three of the cars are piled up in front of Renneteg Bison thi® trolley ran off the tracks and involved four cars in a smashup the streetcar and the fourth is seen just behind. The smashup tied adaUiee CEtt “ , - P . P arve cf » rar t dy - f dw ' "al & busy intersection in downtown Baltumore during the morning up traffic and drew a large crowd of onlookers wdyV MaS TOoUund on [Ne stk island in Boston harbor Sept the day aiter the Ss | . a . - hete on ita six-week 4 " U.S. Offers Flour 40,000 Tourists Stirred Dust in °59 New York singapore t * * * for Victims The pretty, divorcee was a pas ecncer on Ibe cangonanmneer Ss Of Janan Typhoon as sci Van R t the st radio operato j } Adimiited ‘es Police TOKYO ‘APi that ‘ don a romance wi ith States today offered Japan fou WHITEHORSE. Yukon The paved.) The rest of the route, ex Many cars pull small hous« Miss Kauitma R he ‘Ase. millon pounds of wheat flor ti) Mlaska dighway, built im a hurry,.cept. for a couple of miles "| trailers. Some tour sts have cabins b killed teed victims of Typhoon Vera — ‘« bon Whitehorse, the surface is grave on the back of pickup. trucks * . mbassy ‘ * : tl . x The S Embassy wit S 1 vears ago, t ews : * Others pitch tents in) numerous els wheat flour can be supple d J i ng north from Dawson The combination of crushed campsites provided along the high . . ‘ . i nd ae “om silorct ; : ie eth B.¢ and south from Biz gravel and volcanic clay bas Way \ ‘ ! oO S grains allocate lo the : n " F r ace s in | low iina Ne he j : " * ee Delt? Alaska met at Contac: provides a good surface but dust oo ] OS ri iit Aas Ad primary sc Too cniiare Ss cn : as , ir wether Cons an! . “ ~ | aarti in lawson S heavy in dry York jal ce we Utrech al program Cente cee ion Dawson vvadine and resiirtacing are neces PlOStic Surgery Aiding rived ir € \ In N t i! t Japa. @rcek In eight months they had acing am es ; ape ° ° d ) hit largest ’ ‘ ) > s . + &£ 8 n dense oo ‘pushed through 1424 miles ot oAry Rain can make the suriace Deformities in Animals , nese city and the haadest hit area PUN" loppys. but seldom impedes driv t ; e P e ' / 7 Pint a ° . i dau, 0 in the pati Iy plromn 10 day ing TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)—The field nd ay 10008 ‘ workers bepan Today, cars, buses and trac of astic surgery is spreadin aS athorne eects) Tihs nine aM {looded k 1 at 3 For scenery, the Alaska High. pl Ber) P & 1) AINING ‘ nan TOOK tor trailer tricks re A high It winds through to the animal kingdom. A ft teipate many . . 3 way rates high. Sinds ; 7 ' 7 t ( an pated 1 miles an hour over the 1,320 the fertile Peace River Valley Dr. C. C. Snyder, associate ore bodies would be found y. wn r wre bod | I 2 mnile highway ; z ‘ni- Name Te ° oY The lat p unt listed 4 the ghacier capped peaks of the oe pF aie te Uni { olin 122) persons killed in) the storn UNG TPUCKS CUTTY SUPPOOS Reckics, the Wrangell, Chazach, eae : cna aa day that “ om in —— ' pana id Veterinaris re Yeste ; n Bur a. in and 14818 re About a milhon ‘Pd machinery for expansion and” ge pias and Ala-an ranges and = vane w des seller pinch ped . : , Horatwon in northern British : aaa , University of Miami scientists eer Nn onkey and a half persons ate still Rome ' the forested plateaus of the Yu : ; mo! ' 1. the Yukon and Alaska Peni ned PAtanie have been working in the field “ 4} hil bay e “« i on « s . owned by a child whe re hh ud tt i ' sbestos ¢ for turce vears. He said the A lead to ports SETVICE Ss MIS { Hs 401) Miami scientsts bad worked with ping accumne ‘ vil hundser 's of a tly and had . Fe ns ; a rt thes | t ' . ay : Just W ishful Thinking 0.000 tou i ! i successully rep iced such de- ' . lsicer cenePs. Gasol ne 1 fermitics as ce { pi ates in pup- t ) the three-month sun : - : ; - ® . * an : ee ‘jor item, rising to 70 cents a pies, which normally cause them allow Daw son to be destroyed BLILT IN WARTIME i - . , B. WHELIAME TO RYAN Associated Press News Analyst 4 € De ue } tking the \h ‘ hon tr Soviet ‘ try t 7 { ‘ I pon “ s he ev. g t tin of th * * * Ped ( Int t dd the " niversary cele j ) ve Communist take What went on ppears to have moved some in the West to y ! molu f 4 Nov ier Chi r h hat hears ahout this can the West afford to r Y? ard appeur } would seem to have S ‘ - ne s between the ef and the Red Chinese ‘ Howeve ssessing on nds it aif Ht to forget, i € rn $ e Con “orid spent most thei es in the school of deviousnese i subtertfuce * * * Pussib he some puints rflic bh ¢ Khitishehe and the Red Chinese Perhaps tittled Chinese feathers idence ind tes a broad Ollaboration in foreign t Vins s anf Pei ~ iat A « Per ) 4 tine « 1 ( nist Jeader i f I aii ¢ ner tine 1 he Peiping ebration “ ons \I \ ed vant ' fom nist inte ' * * ® i be nanwe to bel all place n Pepin WAS aadcast or published, or. indeed ' t pg 4s ide public S not in the interests of WO wie) wt ene SHORT of CASH? Get your glasses | ‘ i on friendly i Kindy credit! CREDIT DR. SPENCER OATES Op'ormetrist 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. THE ROYALTY OF HEARING AIDS ) op n f | ( torr ns One adpar urd behir Built under the pressure Vs ed ur th ] : afd connect) Alaska with the . Corns Are Removed InA Hurry! ‘ ° . rest of Canada and the United There's never any waiting for action * * * - ' hict t ‘ when you use Dr. Scholl's Zine pads . » « > rit tates, the ighway begins a You enjoy super-fast relief from pain chche, 's American visi re Dawson Creek. Some 900 miles Used with the separate Medications d t ' t northwest it) reaches a traffic included, Zino. pads remove corns ted n aeg ations een ‘ . mas ie * circle here one of the quickest wave known to Mosco und Pe pine \ ° medical scence. Sold every where. i f t uha took place \ tile l ] 1 reaches the 1 Petping might give rise to such Ala kha border, stretching on north- \Uper- fr , bd Rens ©" D! Scholls Zino-pads hat the Communists want the “rom the Alaska border nortl West to believe for the most part, the highwia -~ NO MORE CORN PAIN War to serve a series of airport. “' Nerve-Deep Relief Starts in Seeonds ALLSTATE TRIPLE GUARANTEE 1 Life Ti we eH dele + JAR ANTEE against ' inmetenreland wer}- manship piorsted en treed weer, 2 TIME SERVICE GUARANTEE Coens! all types of reed hererds prorated on months used 3. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED er your money beck. All adjwst- ments bosedencurrent price with- ev! trade-in at time ef retura Salisfactin guananteed or your money back’ SER Not a Recap... Not a Second... But a Brand New Tire... And So Low Priced! THE ALLSTATE 8é 6.70 to Tube-T pe Blackwall Each, Plus Tax AND YOUR OLD TIRE REGARDLESS OF ITS CONDITION © Guaranteed coast-to-coast peat all road hazards © Rayon cord construction take constant poundings © Made with high mileage ‘emulsamix” blended rubber 154 North Soginaw St., Phone FE 5-4171 Rule Nude Art OK for Mails Ate Goya's ‘Naked Maja’ | ait. +0 et Used on Postal Cards; | * PO Rapped in Banning WASHINGTON (UPI) —The Jus-' RS are eS “wate | tice Department came to the aid E b fol a tamous nude Monday. GLASS BLOWING It declared in Federal District | Court that the Post Office Depart- ment was wrong in banning postal | EXHIBITION ,cards be aring reproductions of were assigned to prepare the gov- Francisco -Goya's famous por- e trait, ‘The Naked Maja,’ from the F Gl ae ; antasy un ass Visit the glass menagerie .. . for unusual gifts ... in glass Hand Blown and crafted art glass ... Gifts! 12 P.M. to 9 P.M. thru October 17th. TISDALE OFFICE EQUIPMENT Otfice Furniture and Supplies Miracle Mile Shopping Center United Artish& Corp. mailed 2,- 000 of the cards to theatre own- | ers, critics and press agents last | duly to publicize a movie about Spanish artist. The Post Office impounded the cards and United Artists went to court, Justice Department lawyers ernment’s case They said in a formal answer that the cards were not obscene. ar on The Post Office was expected to, (next to Bank) release them for mailing soon. FE 8-4545 “We just decided it was per- eee - EP Tmaarg haps not a very good case,” a - Justice Department spokesman! said Dr. Stanley W. ‘Black : Optometrist New at University 1 li : CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) } 35 3 Elizebeth Loke Rd —The University of Virginia in- : vorner of Cass Lake Rd. augurates Dr. Edgar Finley Shan-') ; 4 non Jr., 41, as president today. |; Evenings by 4ppointment \n au.horiiy on Evglish literature, he succeecs Colgate W. 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