} * Be opt es POL fh ce 7€ 5b cr z ! ae * : : it : : j ae : » Down Ladder ~The Weather ~ Neth YEAR +) 4 U. 8. Weather Burean Forecast | ps rane. ; ly itonight snow flurrie colder tomorrow — o Z cain inthe “a * of Fi a PRE KKK PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1958—28 PAGES - , +, to Life || Court Decisions Give? Airlines Delay on Strikes Mediation Time; TWA, Eastern Negotiate * By The Associated Press Court developments in pressure on two airlines in- volved in labor disputes. ‘Talks -aimed at ending ‘strikes at two other lines! ‘continue today. ' The strike moratoriums + “Pan Am, American Win New York City have eased’ 'give breathing space to Pan ‘American World , Airways: ‘and American Airlines and keep their planes in ¢he air. The struck carriers are 'Eastern Air Lines and Trans | World- Airlines. | The Transport Workers Union pledged in State Supreme Court Monday not to interfere with Pan American operations, nding the outcome of mediation “over union demands. The line had accused the union of curtailing the amount of over- | time its members could work. ° AP Wirephote DRAMATIC RESCUE — A badly burned boy is brought down aadder by firemen during the holocaust at the parochial grade school on the northwest side of Chicago yesterday. Milk Deliveries in Pontiac Reach Near Normal Today Milk deliveries neared normal in Pontiac today after ployes, including 1.400 at the Air | a settlement was reached by dealers and union Officials, se eete demanding fewer ending the 26-hour wildcat strike by milkmen, ‘\working hours with no pay cuts. | Under the agreement, a 20-man fact finding board will The contract expired at midnight. be set up to study griev-' — | ances of the drivers, who) walked off the job yester- day protesting unfair price competition by retail stores in the Pontiac and Detroit areas. Milk Election Fraud Claimed in Area ns SoS" wer Petitions the ll-day-old TWA strike were | recessed late ‘Monday night still} deadlocked over .a seniority issue | involving machinist foremen, 'Talks were scheduled to resume) ~ *« * ‘today. By midafternoon, milk supplies An apparent election fraud. TWA wants foremen to continue were virtually non-existent at local Which centered around a group of accumulating seniority as machin- stores, where stocks were low any- grade school children hired to fill jsts. The union is opposed. way after the weekend out nominating petitions for three; At Miami, Fla., EAL officials State Democratic Club of Michigan,! and union leaders planned to meet Inc., candidates, was traced into again today. | Oakland and seven other counties today. The story was unfolded to the State Board of Canvassers by Billie S. Farnum, deputy secretary , of state, who related results of an ‘annually, escaped @ rupture in joperations when Federal District jlargest in passenger miles flown | \Judge Frederick vanPelt Sepa deliveries were cut to a trickle in a metropolitan area of some 3,500,000 persons, with all Pontiac deliveries halted except those to hospitals Nominating Filled Out by Children in 8 Counties As a result of the 3 a.m. agree- ment in Detroit, employes of Pontiac proceys plants were baek on the job early this morning and approximately 100 - route sales- men returned to the city's two major creameries to begin home deliveries at 7 a.m, Silence Pinball Noise Borden's and Detroit Creamery from the Secretary of State's office. reported that regular Tuesday de- jtheir pinball machines in order to|ment, she dashed out to get her talked in low voices, almost i cooperate with the city’s anti-noise daughter, The Board promptly directed that evidence be turned over to campaign prosecutors in the eight coun- _ : ties — Oakland, Wayne, Monroe, | Macomb, Washtenaw, Genesee, ' Berrien and Jackson — where | alleged frauds occurred for what- | | liveries would be made on sched- ule, but two smaller firms — Nye and Maple Leaf — suid home de- liveries would be an hour or so late, 4 * * *. Processing plants had canceled their shipments of fresh milk from farms yesterday: afternoon while the outcome of the Detroit negoti- ations was still in doubt, TO MEET SOON ever action they deemed neces- sary. Oakland County Prosecutor Fred- erick C. Ziem said he had not; heard of the alleged fraud before, | 3 . and could not nrake a statement The study committee of 10 mem- : cof 19 mem: about what action he may take|- bers from the drivers ions ¢ ; : 10 from the milk de oe as “ UNHT He Feesives evidence) APT: € -alers was : ; : . : ‘S '° Farnum’s office. | meet soon to take up comptaints of A * * the 3,000 milkmen who took part in. phic foferral possibly ould) lead the work stoppage, although union to warrants against 14 petition cir-| contracts have a no-strike clause. | ee el 5) During a Laretie ie clause. culators for William L. Johnson of | eorlalons, attended Tronwood, who sought to unseat Oe crane a ASST Gov. Williams; Homer Martin of ! " (Continired 6n Pace 16. Col. 6) Plymouth, a candidate for the U.S. | ; ast wane : Senate, and Michael T. Mohardt, | —_ as a lieutenant-governor candidate. ; H : Farnum said the real case was, Big Mac Lit for Holiday not that circulators were paid for, ST. IGNACE (?) — The Mack- handling petitions — which is legal kinae Bridge gets lit up like a ‘under Michigan law — but that Christmas tree tonight, And the Circulators signed a statement they) red, green and amber lights out- had witnessed the signing of the lining its suspension cables will Petitions and believed the persons, remain on through the New ‘© be eligible electors. | Year's holiday. Normally the | “The neal ise} pecnity, SF ar cables, which arch up to 47-stery [UM sid, towers, are outlined in amber = On petitions circulated in Pon- lights. | tiac, he said, 98 per cent of “Names were accompanied by | phony addresses. | The school children, ranging -in \age from 7 to 13, were employed ‘by a Detroit man in Jackson, Far- /num explained, to fill out petitions). In Today's Press Comics see aoewiass ialoye' |e ate 2t for the three candidates at $1 per County News .............. 15 ‘set, , SO Pedltoriats ccccsssneseeccs conn 6 All three candidates of the mav-| Markets 22... .s3........00. 22 erick organization, founded by) Obituaries sprecetsessess... 9 (Johnson to oppose Williams’ reign! Sports vieeeeeseeeesces 17-19 ‘over the state, were ovérwhelming- Theaters ,. 1 2 oSEWRNE SEE 20 ~ly defeated in the Aug. 5 primary. 1 TV and Radio Programs... .27- i ‘The petitions were circulated to ° End of Tr * ¢ : x *k * SCENE OF DISASTER — Firemen on roof and ground battled the smoke and flames in attempts to control the fire in Our Lady of Angels School Strangely Quiet Silence Hangs Like American Airlines, the os CHICAGO (AP) — A’ strange, , 1,500 members of the Air Line brick building, The chat marks: Pilots Assn. Court argument con- of flames traced a rough pattern! wall. in front. * * . ES om Tile ‘the school. : * * * * Gu agic School Day school yesterday, which occurred just 20 minutes before classes were to end for the day. Across the -streety from the rope stared quietly, as if they brooding silence hurig over Our school, a housewife, Mrs,..Mary|couldn't believe what had hap- Lady of the Angels School today, ‘Jalowiecki, dashed out of her Pened. Cold_ winds blew through glass- ‘apartment, Her son Ronald ‘was! ‘continued a ban on a strike by less wirdows of the two-story one of the first youngsters out of “T went upstairs (in the school) of the lin black near the top of the north and the smoke hit me and I went, right back,’’ Mrs, Jalowiecki said. | A geography, seared and shorn; Then she burst into tears and of covers, lay on the sidewalk out/sobbed: “‘The kids on the second |floor were hanging out of the windows and screaming, At least a n Schoo Where 90 Died ey 87 Children, 3 Nuns Trapped in Holocaust 100 Hurt in Chicago Blaze That Could Be Careless Accident From Our News Wires CHICAGO — Police today investigated the possibility that a careless student may have accidentally set a fire which killed 87 children and three nuns in a Roman Catholic school. The investigation of Chicago’s worst fire in 55. years ‘turned to’pupils when it was learned a.number of boys ‘had been assigned to carry trash to bins near a base- ment stairwell where the blaze apparently started; The flames and blinding, black smoke swept Our Lady of Angels Parochial School a * at mid-afternoon yesterday, | less than a half hour ve- Boy, ] a: Tr apped fore classes were to be dis-in Schoo] Blaze missed at 3 p.m. . Tells His Story | The fire killed 53 little girls, 34 bos and three nuns. The children feta wats wire ee ranged in age from 9 to 1. rader, = tcnaped’ for’ 20 minutes n his second-floor classroom at Our Lady of the Angels School. Here: is his story.) By TOMMY RAYMOND CHICAGO (UPI) — I hesitated mained hospitalized today. Four (4, the window sili thinking about of the injured were hear eam. |jumping—and how I would look Many of the children leaped | dead—when firemen shouted to me ‘from the upper floor of the two-'to wait and they’d save me. An inquest was set by the _coroner’s office for Thursday morning. Nearly 100 children were injured and 82 of them re- AP Wirephote i) |story building, their clothing wna x * ® : |hair afire:--Others suffocated as| Most of my other classmates a ‘they sat at their desks. had got out and I was the last one. |But when I walked into the hall the smoke was so thick I ran back into the room, I ran to a window in the room and threw same beoks out through the glass to break the window. It's funny, but I re- member the books—my reader Deputy. Chief. of Detectives Frank Pape and his squad ques- tioned two 13-year-old boys dar- ing the night, He said the boys, = Daniel O'Shea and Patrick Searchlights were trained on the| Machaj told of carrying rubbish building during the night while| to the basement shortly before ifiremen and investigators careful-| the fire broke out, aaa text : ly combed the blackened interior | Authorities sought a third boy Ath "h ‘a . . : building. |who was in the basement with) — er the window broke 1 got on Through the evening mothers |Q’Shea and Machaj, and planned|' sill art can eek about and fathers made their way to the to question other boys assigned to —— A ee = ~ . ahrgpes ‘parsonage, The Red Cross set UP | carrying trash to the basement. gs ame gor ac a sd a boo la center there to give the rela-| 1+ would seem to me that some! oe wl a * “sad Sere pr |tives ail the jnformation they had youngster was smoking down there|® Now tat 1 hed aac is a gee Be OES a oe x * Silence also ruled the school half|10 jumped. I saw five or six sit-/°" children who were missing, in| and flipped the cigarette away it started, I remember we were. an hour before the end of Mon-'ting and laying in the gravel (on the ground directly under the up- A stranger walked into the can- per windows), They were full of day's classes, Then: dy shop of Mrs. Barbara. Glow-|blood. It was horrible.” acki, just north of the school. * * * ‘He asked to use the telephone.” she related, ‘‘and I told him I had chilly air of the Northwest Side |no public phone. Then he said the as fire trucks, police school was on fire and left.” * * Helena, | grader who emerged unhurt. » Wilson, Earl ................%% ‘qualify them for a place on. the TERROR IN FACES oa Parents watching the Women’s Pages ..........11-13 August ballot. fire at Our Lady of; Angels school show. terros a Pi The sound of sirens filled ‘bulances sped to the school, | * then a strange silence envelope OSAKA, Japan (UPI) — The, The stranger had a calm Association of Pachinko (Pinball) about him, and Mrs, Glowacki's! investigation conducted by two men Operators today signed an agrée-|reaction was slow. But when she city ment to. remove the bells from realized the import of -his state-| school. air/the area. Mayor Richard J. ee ei pase ie lit candles, And in the church too) investigators turned up evidence : a in there was a strange silence, | of arson, Authorities said they ONLY we x & * | had not ruled out arson as a pos- SHOPPING 6 a second-'| whispers | me He behind strands of . The U-shaped school at 3808 sible cause. 19 cays Tit The crowds : Sg ee AP Wirephoto youngsters yesterday in the Chicago blaze. the cars and am-| Daly and themselves and prayed. Some} Jured or dead. And there too Was’ when he thought he heard some- having a singing lesson. We didn’t a strange quiet“as relatives and 4, coming,” Pape said. However. know nthe aeaae the ire eae the workers went about the riM he emphasized that no one was ail cla saddens ao baad 6 Or al | Dasiness: |under- suspicion at the moment. | screams of “fire!"” | | “At the present time the origin, We started leaving the room like ,of the fire is still undetermined,” | we had practiced in the fire drills, ‘Pape ‘continued. He said it didn't) you know we had two or. three fire “make sense that x ok * ; The doors of the parish church around the corner were flung wide jopen in the freezing night. The qe and children went in and out. i return to his classroom. | They entered pews, crossed The FBI offered its coopera- forward to the altar rail and] tion in the probe in the event always figured it was going to burn down some day. i went Iowa St. was built some 40 years) Sgt. Drew Brown of the arson! CHRISTMAS S /> a | BBS. It was remodeled about five getail said the thick smoke, at! jyenrs AES: Fire officials said the fi-st believed to have been oil, ap- / ‘school was checked last October Oy / iD ear colati aE parently came from thick wax on Sod jand no violations were found. EXx-' the school floors. anys lits were adequate, they said, and |the ceilings were of wood lath and |plaster. There were no false ceil-'| \ings, The heating plant is fueled iby oil. | | A single fire escape, with exits from the first and sécond floors, iwas in the center gf the rear, or -least Side of the Building — the 3 ibottom of the U which joined the Pp Sh Ppp Gg S p wings LFTeSS Oppin nooper * * * = | As news of the impending ais Hunts Buys for Christmas _aster spread through the low-in-| : hundreds | He said the flames spread quickly when second floor windows were opened by - panic-stricken young- sters seeking an escape route and sucked the smoke and flames up, (Continued on Page 16, Col. 2) | jcome neighborhood, ‘rushed to the scene. Grief-strick-| By JANET ODELL en parents began crashing’ pontiac folk were braving the unpleasant elements to through police cordons as _ the ‘dead were removed. Several peo. Shop when the Shopping Snooper started her rounds. (Continued on Page 16, Col. 1) Because the next few weeks will bring a flurry of parties } | : to which everyone brings an inexpensive gift, we want to Expect Little Change begin with suggestions for them. le : | Admittedly, it is easier to find such items for women in Weather Picture than for men—unless you stick to ties, which are so | unimaginative. You can get*— I The U.S. Weather Bureau pre-g box of humorous matches know what it is. Round see-through — a child would grills already this winter because | But Constant stream of men and wom- e+ the fire deliberately” and then|this is an old school and eisai ; hae Dae en area. ro) ees | she likes casserole cookery, pre- | Twenty-five ‘wasthe lowest re- Mt her with a set of four 8 ‘dicts partly cloudy with little tem-| ' ‘perature change in the Pontiac [OF men. They I get a ‘area tonight, with the low near 25.'chuckle out of the sayings lw ~ on each book. W ednesday will be mostly cloudy Hew about a.car key flashlight? 'with a chance of a few snow flurries and turning colder. To- It not only holds the key, but {merrow’s high will be around 33 shines a ray of light where it will do the most good. The Weather Bureau's 30-day ; forecast for December promises | . a = Laas, petit aged jnear normal temperatures and) ore will please an: woman who ‘nee al snowfa 2 Mich-) 0" ** Le | is fussy about her clothes. Or, if ounce covered glass casseroles, .cording in downtown Pontiac pre- any, but it’s always a comfort to 4 s ft , j thermometers are made to be fas- tened right to the glass without shutting off the view. Schoolgirls will adore collars that can be autographed. Special. . ballpoint pens come with these col- lars. They'll also be delighted with mink poodle pins. * * * Particular homemakers will ap- ipreciate tiny paper towels, one set imarked for lipstick and the other for razor wiping. Most homemak- ers enjoy a calendar towel in the kitchén. We found one. store that had them printed in French. Attractive cups and sauters in "and angitish as flames and smoke claimed: many jceding 8 a.m, The reading. at 1 It won't change the temperature varied designs are to be had! in. 'Ipm. was 32. , a number of stores. * uaa tae Tas THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1958 ~ Residents Polled Sympathy syepethy with. the striking Pon-| tiac milkmen was expressed by, area residents today. While everyone was glad the strike was over, people felt that the: milkman — as an American) institution — should have economic protection. The consensts was that home- delivered milk was worth paying a little bit mere for, if house- holders could afford it. . Milkmen say that unless retail store ‘prices are forced into line with home delivery prices, they will go out of business. Their 26-hour wildcat which ended this morning, was aimed against thetwo to five cents: a quart difference in the price of; store-sold and home-delivered milk. ' Here’s what some Pontiac area citizens had to say about the strike: “I like to have milk delivered to, our doorstep and I expect to pay! a little more tor the service,’’ said! interests to | “Naturally, I lfeel drivers are justified in trying ito keep them- selves in busi ness,’ he said. “But at the same time, no one can be blamed for go- MATHENY of lower prices.” * * * Mrs. Willis Henderson, 68 Florida it,” she said. * ** * “The milkmen have definitely got a apcbncall declared Lloyd Craig, 316 W. Ypsilanti Ave., who felt the - ereameries were i partially at fault. “Route sale s- men ought to be able to sell home at the same to | #2 Ave., hoped that milkmen wouldn’t lose their jobs, but at the same time allowed that she has preferred to purchase milk mat stores during @ the past several months. “IT didn't even mrealize that it costs less at the stores, but I've. low prices charg- ed at stores. The sell to both the milkmen and the stores — they con- _ CRAIG trol the prices.” Mrs. Ralph Carver, 255 Racbura| in Eastern Third same creameries|= noticed that now we only use as ~ much milk as we HENDERSON need. Patricia Herceg., there was eco “Tt’s only natur- | housewife, I She believed| ‘would require the judge having |him, but to require that all such Eye Legislation | to Aid County 6 State Representatives Invited to Meet With Supervisors Group Oakland County's six state repre- sentatives and State Senator. L. Harvey Lodge (R-Oakland County) have been invited to meet with the Board of Supervisors’ Legislative posed legislation the county hopes will be enacted next year. John G. Semann, committee chairman, called the dinner meet- jing tq be held in Berkley so that R “members of his five-man panel can/ meet legislators who will be in Lansing beginning next month | Expected te be introduced to | Semann’s hew Arthur J. Law (District 2—Pon- tiac), James Clarkson (District 4), Wiliam Hayward (District 5) and John C, Hitchcock (District 6 -. [ Semann will present a drafted /1959 Oakland County legislative program listing 12 proposed new laws, or amendments to present (ones, put together by the com- mitteé after several meetings with / department heads. * * * Headjng the list are the needed ‘law changes to make it possible to ‘consolidate the Drain Commission lic Works. Contained also im the list are four pieces of legislation spon- sored by Macomb County legig- lators and the Supervisors Inter- County Committee which have the endorsement of Semann’s committee. Among these is a suggested amendment to the controversial one-man grand jury law to per- mit any person testifying before such a jury to have a legal coun- sel present with him. Further, under this proposal, it charge of a grand jury investiga- tinn not only to file a public ac- count of all monies disbursed by monies be disbursed under the con- trol and direction of the Board of Supervisors as to manner and ac-, count. Man Struck by Car Here Slightly Hurt Committee tonight to discuss pro-' committee are four | representatives. They are | Pentiac Press Pheto ADDRESSES LAWYERS — Judge Williiam J. Beer, newest | member of the Oakland County , Cireuit Court bench, was the principal speaker Monday noon at the monthly meeting of the Oakland County Bar Association. Judge Beer spoke to county law- yers gathered at the Waldron Hotel on the ‘Economics of the Profession.”” © Oakland JPs Go ‘on Trial’ Wednesday Oakland County’s justices of the peace will put themselves on trial tomorrow evening. . The justices will meet to hear complaints from the public at 7:30 p.m. in the fifth floor com- mittee room, County Annex Build- ing, 1 Lafayette St. Chairman of the meeting will be Judge Claude M. Salter of Grove- land Township. The forum is being sponsored by the Committee on ‘Public Complaints of the Oakland County Judicial Association. “We're willing to let the chips fall where they may,” said Judge James L. Renfrew of Huntington Woods, president of the association. ~“There have been many com- plaints of abuses by the justices, and we want to hear about them. We want to correct this situation. “Since we serve the public, we want to know what they think our faults are.” Renfrew said most of the coun- ty’s justices will attend the meet- ing. He said that no time limit wifl be set on questions, and that the Lester McLaughlin, 60, of 121 Lafayette St., was treated for min- jor injuries at Pontiac Genera] Hos- pital last evening and released, after being struck by a car. Police said McLaughlin wes crossing E. Montcalm street just east of Wing street when struck by an auto driven by Darrell H. “When we had milk delivered by the milkman, we always: seemed to jhave extra milk on hand that we had to drink up.” Temperatures ve Boy, 15, Admits of the Country By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Warmer weather moved into the chilled sections in the Eastern -third of the country today as tem- peratures appeared running near , normal in most other areas. - The general warming trend was evident from the Northeast south- ward into the Carolinas and the Ohio Valley. 10 to 20 degrees higher than Mon- day morning, ending the spell of zero. cold that gripped northern, ‘tified the boy as Paul Leroy Ron- New England over the weekend. : Mild weather for the date also: prevailed along the eastern slopes of the northern Rockies, with temperatures in the 40s. Gusty, winds of more than 40 m_p.h.| whipped parts of Montana and dry velocity swept Laramie, in_south- eastern Wyoming. The Weather Fall U. 8S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly elondy and a little warmer today, high 35. Winds light variable today. a tenight, . Semorrew mostly cloudy with a» chance of a few snow flurries and terning colder. High 33. Sow winds 10-15 ‘amiles tonight tncreasing te 15-25 miles tomorrow morning and shifting te northerly to-! morrow afternoon. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am At 8 Direction — calm Sun sets Tuesday at 5 p.m Sun rises Wednesday at 7: 43 am Moon sets Wednesday at 11:59 a.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 11:18 p.m. a.m.: Wind velocity © mph. Dewntown Temperature 26 ' d iw ] , J we ' ] : f 4 J f , f d d " vd | ¢ p Bata Lteveene: = a La 3 and when she screamed and tried : a mod ceuvsene® / | gem... 28 )~)©0o D pm.....+....32/to get up from her chair shot her * . ° me Ad ee a a scond time in the head, accord- Special Personal Attention 4 i ae a ing to Wolford. She slumped back, 4 nihiac ® (as Pecorded downtown! ‘her books in her lap. * Models to Show Fashions CORONATION CRYSTAL DUO i Wighest ae nee recs tent eee a | Rondeau was bodked on an open 4 After Shave Lotion and Cologne Seon srogy Mocca SereeeerEes 215)charge and Gratiot County Pros- . | j Weather — Sunny. jecutor Frederick Passenger said * All Gifts Wrapped Free ¥ alee One Year Age Ago in oon iee ‘he would ask Probate Court to ; i Fs st mperature .. «s | com eae ee the case iy temperature ........cc0... 22 {Waive jurisdiction so th 3 F mane temperature y..osseccie0 28 could be handled in Circuit Court. * Free Refreshments y meraeolDline A oo | = es | | ee — a | After Shave Lotion, Cologne and Tale ry $7 in 1951 6 te 1886 -Y, le C | 4 e — — 4 in shimmering gold bottles arpentender's,, Tem bree iat 0 uie aien ar 2 | 77 | - $495 ell prices pius tex ae Ee pe. ' | Boe ite, Bi : |] ; _ Spent sarees | nne | ® 14 . i 87 81 ee, 68 56 Consider plans for a chil- | 7 | TO sit.e0 Sinsionati «41 16 Omaha 36 gei¢ Oren’s party and one’ for I ott NEWPOR i Ss 4 ‘teveland 30 86 Peliston 26 15 grownups, too. Get up guest Drug Dept ‘ ne 36 35 Phoenix 11 Bie lists and hav hild hel if ‘ 98 North ° j mh dpe tsk a x18 with invitations. If you're | Sagi er | Roe eo Ok tae oe bo I yore 74 NO. SAGINAW ST. ge + zognew —Main Ml G. Rapids 2 2188. Marie 26 4 Sending gifts abroad, wrap || Himes ¥ Street Floor ry Sockronriie #7 43 Wastinton 26 21" them for mailing tomorrow. | Fim We Give Holden Red Stamps ¥ HC 4 Kapsas City 47 28 Seat 57 49) | - en ——————— Les Angeles Th M9 Temps all “ion al Bowe WRAWAHRRADWI Temperatures were cloudy, Httle temperature change low 25. Killing Girl, 12 Shoots Neighbor Victim With Gun Borrowed From Her Brother ST. LOUIS, Mich, (AP)—A 15- year-old boy told police today he shot and killed a rowed from her brother. Police Chief Herb Wolford iden- \deau, who lived two doors away from the victim, Carrol Ann Risk. |The youngster explained the slay-' jing merely by saying “I had an' /urge to kill her,’ Wolford said. The girl was slain as she did her homework in her living room. | southwesterly winds of the same Her body was found by her par- lents, Mr. and Mrs. Christian Risk, | about 6:30 p.m. Monday after they ‘returned home from helping their | son Michael, 15, with his newspa- per delivery route. Chief Wolford said the Rondeau boy said he borrowed a .25-caliber the pretext of using it for hunting. He had carried it around in a boot since then, he said, bothered all the time by an urge to kill. When he saw the girl’s parents ‘downtown Monday night, the boy 'related, he knew Carroll would be home alone and he rushed over iher homework. | He shot her through the head, 12-year-old neighbor girl with a gun he bor- pistol from Michael Saturday on) to her house. She let him in when, he said he wanted to borrow Mich-! ael’s bicycle and then returned to. Kelley, 28, of 236 W. Fairmount St. * * * Kelley told officers that an auto making a turn in front of him obscured his line of vision and that he was not able to see Mc- Laughlin in time to avoid the acci- dent. Sentenced for Break-In at Waterford Grocery Gerald Showan, 18, of 4771 Dixie Highway, yesterday was sentenced| to a term of from 142 to 15 years) in prison for breaking into a Wa- terford Township grocery store last $65. Showan, who had been placed on probation before, was sentenced by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty. month and stealing cigarettes and) magistrates will stay until the last complaint is heard. No Regular Meeting of City Commission Since Pontiac’s seven city com- missioners are in Boston today, there will be no regular City Com- mission meeting tonight. Commissioners are attending the annual meeting of the American Municipal Assn., which began Sat- urday and ends tomorrow. Ada R. Evans, city clerk, said| she was required by the city char-| ter to make a token gesture of A government study shows that) 56 per cent of the retail price of \a loaf of bread now goes to the baker compared with 45 per cent, 10 years ago. The wheat grower from 25 per cent in 1948. | BUY HER THAT SPECIAL GIFT ON Wednesday, Dec. 3 7to 9 P. M. Whether it’s Nylons or Mink, you'll find big selec- tions at Georges-Newports at reasonable prices. calling the meeting to order to-| : ; night, then announcing the lack of | “It’s so quiet, you can hear a turn on a Capital Sunbeam i a quorum. . page ' The next Commission meeting! Viscount,” says Trudy Marks. Reason? Four Rolls 4 TOASTER ; y will be Tuesday. Royce jet-powered engines bite the air with an un- ats ly $29.95 Value now gets 17 per cent, a decline) | The Day io: Birmingham |rorow Bal Gurl hl West Maple Speed Limit ee aaa Burial will be in Acacia Park Unchanged After Hassle auspices of Bi ? F&AM 4. = BIRMINGHAM — The recom-, Dial MI 6-4222 and a deep voice Mr, Koskinen died Sunday at St. mendation of Police Chief Ralph| will answer, “This is Santa Claus Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. W. Moxley, and °T. M. Vander-| speaking.” ; + eee 8 stempel, traffic engineer, that no} ints ot Mrs. Clans wi be at | Bor the past 30 years, he Bas speed incréase be allowed on West! this special number from 5:30 te | heen mot acest at pode te Maple avenue stirred up a contro-| 8 p.m. Monday through Friday praject engineer at the 1 versy among Birmingham commis-| for the next two weeks. Park plant ‘of pods ie | sioners = — P The special telephone hookup is} Corp. . __|made directly from Birmingham kc come) if é t Vanderstempel maintained that) 's home through the ef-|ham Lodge F&AM 4 and First since Maple narrows from four to two lanes at Chesterfield, a legal speed of 35 miles per hour rather than the 30 now enforced, would create a traffic hazard. Commissioners questioned this on the basis of the traffic engi- neer’s report which shewed an average speed of 38 miles per hour at present. On his suggestion that the speed be increased after Maple is made four lanes wide west to Cranbrook road, Commissioners pointed out that drivers will again face a drop to two lanes. * * * Vanderstempe! said at that point Maple becomes a county road and) is no concern of the city. After asking another study that wil] show traffic volume as well as 5 missioners agreed to go along and continue the pres- -ent 30 mile per hour limit. An access drive request for the Colonial Court Apartments, Inc., off U.S. 10 on Colonial Court, was turned over to city manager L. R. Gare. Gare will negotiate with Samuel Frankel, president, to es- tablish an escrow fund. x * * He told commissioners Frankel is aware of the new state rule of no financial participation and that at some future date, the drive may be removed for highway widening. forts of the Birmingham Recrea- tion Board. Snow skiers residing in the Bir- mingham ‘schoo! district are invit- ed to meet.to organize an adult ski club at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Birmingham community house. rr It is hoped that final plans may be made-and a tentative activity program set up. . St. Clair Shores and Oni of Walnut Lake. The marimba originated in Afri- ca but was populi and per- fected as a musical instrument in Central America. The Lutheran Church of the Re- deemer will hold its annual Christ- mas musical and tea at 1 p.m. Thursday at the church. x * The program will feature Nancy Kochendoerfer, organist; Virginia Pearson, soloist; and Myrtle Wug- gazer, pianist. Mrs. Wuggazer, wife of the Rev. Theodore Wug- gazer, pastor of the church, is chairman of the event. A book fair and book sale will be held in the Vaughan Elementary | School auditorium until 9 tonight lin Bloomfield Hills. : * * * Helen S. Williams, consultant in, Children’s literature, will be pres-, ent to help tha public select ap-, propriate books for.their children. | | : Controlled Even Heat FRYPAN WW" Cover Extra — $1 Holds f ae on oe oe on ee ee $16.95 Value Olavi M. Keskinen Service for Olavi M. Koskinen, | = of 3675 Squirrel Rd., Bloomfield a Librarian lauds Tene. Capital Viscount silence i MIXMASTER HAND MIXER $21 Value 13" | White and Colors 4. sua eeenenane A PERCOLATOR 8-Cup Size $27.95 Value 10-Cup Size 20.88 t‘S2aE eae eee eee eee A canny lack of vibration. You*één actually hold a conversation in normal tones. Go Viscount, next time you fly. Call your travel agent or CEdar 4-2694. | 20" | VISCOUNT SERVICE TO. ! vice WASHINGTON + PHILADELPHIA ea || BUFFALO - ROCHESTER CTE} ; | VIA CONNECTIONS AT DETROIT. elobeeb PsIMmM 3 | DIRECT SERVICE TO NEW YORK PITTSBURGH - CLEVELAND WORLD'S LARGEST JET- 98 N. Saginaw —2nd Floor af CRYSTAL FLAGON DUO After Shave Lotion and Cologne “¢00 senate: tke BA Warm Gift Eute ee eet Cee tay Pee Ce eee tino, 5 > are Calls for Meeting ‘ ion School Tax Plan BORED «TORRE 1150 ward Lapin tape meeting for all township citizens who are interested in discussing the pros and cons of a four-mill fowniahip, school tax: tir crease. residents are request- ed to contact Mrs. Regovich. rere te 3:30 iy) "REMINGTON | for the Baby Infants’ } Sleeping Bags 5 Reg. $1.69 Comb cotton knit with erivees snap C i y openings, zipper bot- colors. y tom. Assor Assoried Styles é Meterial Girls’ Blouses Reg. ¢ $1.95 ! Dacrons. nylons, cottons . short and % length sleeves. | ' All popular colors and white. , All sizes 7 to 14 | ‘Pull Style in NYLON Girls’ Slips $1.99 Value 97° Nylon top with lace and ribbon trim. Crino lin skirt with rows of lace ruffles. ese only in sizes ARIMA AWAD i. a i Bas ee He Sizes 7 to 14 and $2.89 Sack, chemise, tail- \ ored styles included in these better dress- | Girls’ Dresses 3 a ty = eo e i= a - » “ ° lace trims, some with belts, short & roll-up sleeves, etc. ER EK ES % NYLON Ladies’ Panties f ; Reg. ¢ | 89e Elasticized at waist and legs. Lacé trim on legs. Choice of : Better 10 white and pastels. All sizes 1 5-6-7, Nylonized Acetate Tricot Ladies’ Panties Re A for 1.00 ] ] ] ] : J 4 39c , Pastels in stripes. Sizes 5-6-7. : : ] j 4 y ARE ARAARA AAAI ATARID bere ae 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor Fee. mo. — a att } MB page Pes ee oe ee Lois Case eee ee oles ate cet = a? i RA Ee ele ee OR ee ee a a ' 5 ; 5 = 4 € a : we # é Hy ; I \ . : ees r . « : = z | ; _—__THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, pss | t r ® . i ‘ Ld . st of De... a Vote Suaaested (City Milk Deliveries |!ke Due Back — | combers "2" * g tes Near Normal Today 22 Washington — |; ‘etary cone fsbo | |p ms Later Today the busleat partodial the vase on Berlin Issue ee i, onpas engleeiaaimieiaie Sate, : al ——= Included deat Eisenhower vahitie. hix|then translates it into a series of; < Some. Diplomats Favor} a (base of: operations back to Wash-|messages which start to the House’ letting People Decide| nen mak ct ein nny pear nd Bat ery et ing Feople ) pee yr i mcemak wet lseasion of Congress "| ‘The spadework on the adminis-. on Khrushchev Plan rent \ * * tration program for the new and remdiied i = decline in nome ne |. The Chiet Executive, ruddy and Democratic Congress bas’ . liveries and cancellation of some |, H ihe: LONDON Allied hd Ud price te mupevbonihetnine eecdot ts tate ot ee ode lng Camel Sener ee AP) = iwas a ‘detrets has sox vane and other retail outlets normally|ington about midafternoon, Hela period of important, conferences favor of challenging Nikita is three to five cents less thaninianned to be back at the White decisions, 2 Kiri, ane mate, on Oona aa acme ee nference wi e Ts ac- i accum ‘ ‘Set cept or reject his proposal to make price still further. work before dinner; Furnace Co their city a demilitarized free ‘SOLD AT A LOSS’ Friends of the President at the | DETROIT # — The 16th annual city, charge that milk hes| auguetn Nations! Goll Clb onlé electric furnace conference of the Joe been used as a ‘loss-leader” by! the Chief Executive was in ebul- Society of the Amer- Qualified informants said under retailers, meaning that in order] tent spirits as he prepared to |ican Institute of Mining, Metallur- the proposal being suggested, if to attract customers, store Owners! jeave one of his favorite golf gical and Petroleum Engineers will the 2,200,000 West Berliners re- take a financial loss on milk and! courses for the confines of the ‘open here W 2 jected free-city status, Khrush- make up the deficit by charging oo” at oben’ ve dump more for other items, acheme continue abide i by the existing four- ooce Because milk is a necessity, it ; calla apreicansti: power makes « good “loss-leader” fron If the West Berliners accepted the Soviet .Premier’s proposals, then the Americans, British and French would be bound to with- draw their 10,000 troops from their On the other hand, a sectors of the city. for one processing plant said: * * * aes: as eae eas : “There is volume in the milk The informants stressed that ; i . : > | pusiness, It’s a dog-eat-dog busi- this was only one of several ideas . . | AP Wirephote [ness with side deals like a bigger being pondered. The Allied diplo- FIRST AID FOR VICTIMS ~ Numb from shock and pain of They perished in the blaze which broke out at Our Lady of the |discount for bigger purchases and mats who favor some such pro-| burns, three victims of the Chicago school fire disaster are treated © Angels School shortly before classes were to be dismissed for the | such.” posal to Moscow said they are convinced: day Monday, Orion Airman CALLED ‘FRANKENSTEIN’ One dairy owner described the; milkmen’s situation as ‘a Frank- enstein of their own making.’ say- ing it was caused by driver de- mands “for higher and higher take in a hospital. Some 87 students and three nuns were less fortunate. Police Probe School Eire x * * 1. That the Russians would not risk putting their proposals to the test of public opinion. Governor, Statf SN NT ee Pee eee yh oe 2. ‘That in any vote the West| 7277+ . . to Meet Sunday [Ree | seiner reat cently KK i]Jing 90 in Chicago Killed.in Crash (2 County Lodge | animus taser ot the srt There was no indication wheth- er the idea of challenging the} (Continued From Page One) down staircases, Children ducked Gov. G. Mennen Williams will| €rs Local 83 and Teamsters Lo- | Russians thus has yet been con-|,, to the floor, see! cool and fresh . come to Oakland County Sunday| ©@! 155 — disowned the strike, i sidered by Allied eovertiiants at! floor m the st U to the upper air, and oa out. Others John H. Smith Jr. Dies to start a fiveday huddle with they expressed sympathy with it. | OP le He said the fire could have been|sroped their bpd gic beaoeolpd in 2-Car Collision Near | his statt in = = major grafting . i picketing at Detroit Crean It is known, however, that the usa pasa edie the tigi classmates and filing out the| Trucksville, Pa. gram and budget recommenda-|ing was peaceful, but police re-| Soviet move has started some smoke-filled structure. tions. __|ported some picket line flareups| fundamental rethinking among the Sauer had ont wee vnaiie ee ~~ * A Lake Orion airman stationed! The governor and his aides will| elsewhere, with trucks halted,’ y Ilies about thei it t onl : y meet at the Haven Hill Lodgei@rj threat and tire Keg Allies about their position not only) ane. | For some there was no rescue,!at Roslyn Air Force Base, Long = Fivere ened res) in Berlin but in all Germany. _. a « | however . ‘located in the Highland State Rec-/ slashed. } There is a recognition in several More than 85 y tere rei “G od, we tried. God, how we | sland, N. Y., was killed and seven) reation Area on M59. Hundreds of pickets surrounded | Allied capitals that, 13 years ft- er the war, the time has come to examine new approaches and even, take risks for the sake of another high-level East-West attempt af a German peace settlement. Silence Hangs Heavy , Over Charred School “We're going to discuss the leg- islative program, budget, the com- mittee on Michigan's economic future, automation and other ad- ministration problems,” Williams said at his press conference yester- day one Twin Pines plant in Detroit,! where drivers had voted not to sup- port the strike, and one striker’s car collided with a tanker that was trying to deliver milk to another, Twin Pines plant. i | * * \ He said Democratic Party lead-| Three creameries sought a tem-! ers also would be called into the|porary injunction from Wayne! session—but his political plans for|County Circuit Court to restrain) 1960 would not be on the agenda.| picketing, but Circuit Judge Thom- as Murphy refused, saying he, ® : laughing and playing. two sisters, Janet, 18, a student at UAW Calls Strike first box alarm was turned in at S, 2 a, 2:42 p.m. The school let out at * + * Central Michigan College, and wasn’t sure the court had furisdic- ony wen tae Dodge Main PI ee wee By West | Side ating Mrs. Smith was notified ot weld ge ain Plant other persons were seriously in- jured last night in a two-car col- lision near Trucksville, Pa. Dead is A.2.C. John H. Smith dr., 21-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, John H. Smith of 2756 Ad- ams Rd. He suffered a broken neck. Smith was a graduate of the Lake . Orion Community High School. Surviving besides his parents are mained in hospitals, suffering|tried,” sobbed one fireman. “But from burns, broken bones received|we couldn't move fast enough. No in frantic leaps for life and shock.|one could live in that fire.” In the Cook County Morgue, ss * sheet-covered little corpses, a | As the bodies were brought few charred nearly beyond iden- down in the eerie, hazy light, par- tification, still lay waiting to be [ents pushed against police lines, identified by tearful parents, crying, “‘Whre are our children? : . Where are our children?” Just 18 minutes was the differ-| The dead were placed in a ee awe at te ak courtyard where only a few hours ol sucess | bef the child had been robed teachers in the school. The nee aru ~ (Continued From Page One) | | ' ple fainted in the surging mass of : humanity. : > Call F. F. Smith Today! g , tion, A hearing was scheduled for| tomorrow. | Within minutes the building | Visiting Newlyweds Priests walked through the crowd and stood near the doomed Twenty-two victims died en route accident at 8 a.m. this morning. j ° . building, administering Extreme|turned into a wild, screaming in-\t, hospitals or soon after arrival. DETRONT = ues ae ( J 7 AU Ti OMATIC : Unction, last rite of the Catholic|ferno. Smoke and heat filled stair-| Sixty-eight bodies were sent di-/4.H Agents in Chicago . cases and second-floor corridors so fast that normal exits were im- passable, “We are trapped. We are trapped,”” nung screamed from Church. ‘©.’ ® As in most tragedies, there were countless tales of heroism. A nun, who refused to identify ents and relatives gathered for} Oakland County's two 4H agents, | main plant, a key parts supplier the dreaded identification ordeal.'Mrs. Jan Hoerath and Jack Worth-| {or all Chrysler divisions. Of the dead 53 were girls and|ington, are attending a convention| Both sides said a Dodge main 34 boys, The heroic nuns account-lof the National 4H Club Agents| Strike could idle 50,000 in Detroit iy) A honeymooning couple from Fort Wayne, Ind., had clothing and luggage stolen from a car in: e to indy rectly to the morgue where par- toy equa Chrysiee Corp.'s Dodge Victims of Theft | | herself, made three trips into the blistering fire, each time leading out six pupils. ‘I felt untold strength,”’ she told newsmen while being treated for burns at St. Anne’s Hospital. Casimir Janik, 38, a milkman, said an unexplainable impulse made him alter his regular route home. He arrived at the school before firemen. He parked near-| by and several times ran into the school, carrying burned children to safety. * * “I found one girl, her shoes missing, hanging on to a banister. | seemingly in a state of shock,” he said, ‘‘I yanked her loose, took her to church and placed her on; the windows as they huddled with groups of pupils. Many children panicked, stam- peded to windows, Some leaped to death on sidewalks below. “Nothing killed those kids but heat and smoke,” Quinn said. “They just couldn’t get out into the corridor to go downstairs.” Nearly all the eighth-grade class in two upper-floor classrooms per- ished. * * * Screams of children trapped on upper floors drifted down to hun- dreds of horrified spectators and hysterical ' parents. Firemen raised ladders and brought down dozens of pupils. Priests, on the scene even before ed for the other three. Chrysler plants within a week. The ‘Total Accident Toll 626 night Sunday. in the nation last year. 454 Die in Holiday Traffic CHICAGO (AP)—Thanksgiving holiday traffic claimed 454 lives between 6 p.m. local time Wednesday and mid- The figure, though impressive, was about par for any 102-hour period when figured against 38,500 traffic fatalities The Associated Press count showed 626 dead from a” types of accidents during the four-day weekend, with 54 of Association this week in Chicago. struck plant employs 8,500, Company and union negotiators failed to reach agreement before a union-set 10 a.m, strike deadline. despite marathon negotiations that began at 10 a.m. yesterday and continued past the walkout. VATER” CONDITIONERS" Waterford Township sometime last night, David Buckmaster told police his car was locked,-parked-in the drive- way of a friend, Walter Nolan, 6065) Jonquil St., where the couple was & Autemetic! Abselutely neo de! * * * The union accuses the company) denies it has increased work loads. | Neither side would go into dispute details immediately for newsmen. C. Pat Quinn, Local 3 president, said: ‘‘Chrysler Corp. has forced a strike on us. I have given (union) committeemen and stew- ards the go sign.” Quinn described negotiations as of a worker speedup, The company 2nd cape, a $50 trench coat and. x * Ww Saves you cash—every dey! Taken were the bride’s gown Works on eny water supply! and three other dresses, a fur coat. 10 Yeor W ! three suitcases of clothes. Ne Meney Down—F.H.A. . Awarded Golf Disability] © f—-PHONE-——4 | LONDON (UPI) — Bank man-| FE 2-9892 oe ee eee ak ager Gordon Taylor was awarded | $12,600 damages yesterday after) he testified an automobile accident | which destroyed his ability to play these fire victims. The period closed before the disastrous parochial school fire in Chicago Monday. a pew. Twice I carried two girls ‘ out, one under each arm.” ‘ Students in the school painted a grisly picture of terror. Early reports that there had been an ep con were discounted the fire fighters, led out others. Nuns, with disrgard for their own safety, rolled some pupils ‘hanging in mid-air’’ and said bar- gaining teams would reconvene at 10 a.m. tomorrow, F. F. SMITH, Sales & Service eee USATNLPERRY to do with my business,” he said. by firemen. Commissioner Quinn said the Soiler’ room was intact. Then he said, ‘‘This could haver been a touch-off. It spread too damn _ rapidly.” ‘ start your CHRISTMAS CLUB savings now! For a truly bigger Christmas, one without unpaid bills . .. plan ahead like countless others, with a Christmas Club! A few dollars, or even less each week, will add up to a more fun- Young Fire Victims | From 9-14 Years Old CHICAGO (AP)—The 87 pupils at Our Lady of the Angels grade school who perished jn a_ fire Monday ranged in age from 9 to 14, with most of the victims from fora BIGGER Christnes..g RE: UNA At LLL AIO RNS AR ; second - floor classrooms. Three filled Christmas for your whole family. ; nuns also died me Mase: And, it’s easy to get your Christmas Club started. - ‘ The West Side Roman Catholic . i school had an enrollment of 1,300 in the eight grades, The eighth- ° : grade class eoms were on the Choose Your 1959 Christmas Club burned-out second floor and many DEPOSIT RECEIVE IN pupils in the 12-13 age group were A NOVEMBER, 1959 listed among the dead. Some low- $ .25 3 $ 12.50 er-grade class rooms also were 3...2.2.. ~ "95.00 on the second floor but most of Ro 0 6 5 5 G6 6 o 6 men : them are the first floor, which 0... 7 7 SS" 100.00 was not badly damaged by the ae 8 _ 250.00 : fi 5 ° « * . * ° * ° * | = 10.00... 2... . + 500,00 a Vy’ // / | IP, : |] YOU MAY DEPOSIT WEEKLY OR IN ADVANCE MK OEMAGM SA Just drop by one of our convenient offices and make your first deposit ... the rest you can do by mail! You'll receive a Christmas Club check next November that will help give the whole family a Christmas they'll long remember! 7 5 F Fr | : MEMBER F.DA.C. 4 PONTIAC STATE Six Convenient Offices™ ¥ : ta ' h : aE mr a eens | ne ee eee ee Se ae a a ae a ae en Ca ae ny _ sills —— im eda! wer rw I . a: % eee Pe ee % one td AO ‘ So re ES ey SS ~ i*. ] y 1 is THE atl nS ae PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2 2, 1958 Ly ee Se et #& ~~ ee ee me me ! stop, SON- | W's TIME 10 | READ— “DIET FOR TEEN-AGERS” SEE today’s instalment on | page (1 Postal Union Bars 18,000 Detroit Heads Among Those Dropped Over Election Hassle WASHINGTON w — The govern- ‘ling bedy of the National Federa- tion of Post Office Clerks has suspended the officers of Detroit Local 295 and those in eight other big cities to head off a breakaway movement. * * * ; All assets and properties of the big locals were simultaneously placed in the hands of trustees by the National Executive Committee. The 16-member governing group announced its action after a special session. The nine suspended locals j-reportedly include about 18,006 members, some 20 per cent of the total strength of the union. Union President J. Cline House said many individual union mem- bers are “out of sympathy with ers who have organized a rebel faction knows as the ‘Progressive | Feds.’ House “said the dissenters fol- lowed rule-or-ruin tactics in recent unsuccessful demands for election of national officers by union-wide referendum rather than through delegates to union conventions, He charged that the dissident faction has ‘‘continued over. a long period to flout the expressed LAST TIMES TODAY “FRANCIS IN THE HAUNTED HOUSE” and “SNOWFIRE” wt SaiTh CoRCUNT WED. - THURS. - FRI. ‘The Frankt... Fronchiest... Funnies! bw! - [halting a school bus that ran out- ‘Hof nearby Statler Run, collapsed will of the majority,” adding: “The national union leadership has been left no alternative but rank and file members. Yet we have faith in the ultimate reason- ableness and fair play of all our members and no doors will be closed to anyone.” Halts Runaway Bus Carrying 25 Students MORGANTOWN, W.Va, (AP)— “After I realized what happened, I was scared," That's what Eddie Sowell, a 17- year-old sophomore at University 'High School, said Monday after of-control down a steep hill with himself and 24 other pupils aboard. * * * The driver, Alphus Tennant, 48, at the steering wheel, Sowell, who had never driven a large vehicle, ) OF: risienne [Pa ; apparently of a heart attack. grabbed the wheel and managed) to stop the bus at the bottom of the hill. No one was hurt, Tenflant dissident metropolitan local lead-/ to act to protect the interests of; fool you. It’s all in fun... part S’NO FUN — Don’t let the expression on this young man’s face ceiving end is Alex Tiffany Jr., of Marion, Ind, ‘Bids McElroy. Ho Ask More Senator Chavez Ready to Up tke’s Suggested Defense Spending Sum WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- tary of Defense Neil H. McElroy was invited by Sen. Dennis Chavez (D-NM) today to put up a fight for a substantial increase in de- fense funds in the new budget. * * * Basic decisions on the size of the administration's military budg- et may be made at meetings of the National Security Council Wednesday and. Thursday. Chavez, who heads the Senate’s Defense Appropriations subcom- mittee, said in an interview he understands McElroy wants more money for the militarv than Pres- ident Eisenhower's fiseal* advis- ers are willing to see spent. * * “I'm on McEtroy's side,”’. Cha- vez said. ‘If he will fight for the funds he needs, he will find the majority of Congress behind him, We're going to vote every penny needed for national security.” In the past, Chavez's suboone- mittee generally has voted to in- crease defense spending above fhe total previously allowed by the House, which acts first on all money bills. In most cases the subcommittee’s decisions have been upheld by the full Appropri- ations Committee, which will be controlled by a 2-1 margin by the Democrats in the new Congress. * * x McElroy has hinted that next year’s military budget request may be .a billion dollars higher than the current $40,800,000, 000 level of defense outlays. Eisenhower has been attempting to hold the total of defense and all other spending down to keep the new budget under an 80-billion ( AP Wirephote of a snow ball fight. On the re- Looks More By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Those who think that Hollywood is losing its characters should take a trip to Steve Cochran’s house. Some’ place! It’s got a swim- ming pool that looks more like a mountain lake, complete with is- land. Also 25 animals, including two goats and a coe named od The house, clings ‘to a hillside. | The first greeters are Shane, a German shepherd, and his pal Taby, an extremely companion- able deer of four months. There Formosa has a Core imil- FAMILY NIGHT “WEDNESDAY” *425 ALL YOU CAN EAT 5:30 to 9:30 MANNY?S Huron at Elizabeth Lake Rd. Hollywood Headlines: Cochran’s Swim Pool Like Lake dollar ceiling. Scheduled to arrive here later today from Augusta, Ga., where jhe has been vacationing, Eisen- |hower called for a session Wednes- [aay of the National Aeronautics land Space Coonelt | x Press ee James C. Hag erty said this group will discuss \a reservoir for tax reasons, will jthe proposed transfer to the civil- leventually have a waterfall flow- ian group of the Army’s ballistic ing into it and a mountain stream missile agency. The Army has continuirig down the mountain. protested the transfer but there Cost of the project: $12,000. are reports that a_ satisfactory x * * compromise has been worked out. In another part of the grounds, | In addition to acting on defense Steve introduces two other pals, /SPending, the Security Council is Gretchen and Heidi. Both goats, ©XPected fo review the foreign aid but one smells like a goat and | Sea the other doesn’t. Then there is Girl, @ Doberman pinscher and Seeks Dem Convention mother of Shane’s 10 puppies, “| yet unnamed. LOS ANGELES (AP) — A citi- Cats?" says Cochran’ “T’ve|zens’ group launches its final got seven of them — at a meal/drive today to get cash. pledges it time: three more wild ones come |hopes will win Los Angeles the are cats all over the place. * * * Steve appears in blue gm. dirty shirt and bare feet—he’s beatnik, just likes comfort. He| explains about Taby: It was found) on a mountain road with rear end| smashed by a car. Steve adopted) it, had a vet fix its hind quar- ters with steel pins. Then the fish and game boys stepped in and said a deer couldn't be domesti- ieated. “What was I going to do—set in her hips?’’ says Steve. a while, they sort of dropped the matter.” x * Will YOUR children come up the hard way? If something isn’t done about the college crisis soon, they may have no choice. For these days many of our colleges are crammed to capacity. By 1967, applica- tions are expected to double. In the face of this phenom- enal rise, we’re confronted with a growing teacher shortage. Low salaries are driving increasing numbers of qualified people into other fields ... and discouraging tomorrow’s crop from train- ing for this noble profes- sion. It's a grim sitwation. Something must be done about it. Won’t you help as- sure your ‘child the educa- tion he deserves? Help the college of your choice now, before it’s too late. If you want to know more about what the college crisis means to you, write for a free hooklet to: HIGHER EDU- CATION, Box 36, Times Square Sta- tion, New York 36, New York. Published as a public service in co-operation with The Advertising Council and t Newspaper Advertising Executives Association. THE PONTIAC PRESS Taby, who is named for Colo- rado’s baby doe Tabor, is recov- ered now, he adds, and is handy around the house. Loves cigarette butts and cleans out all the ash trays. Qnly trouble: Taby ‘drinks. It sneaks around at parties and takes sips from the guests’ glasses. Steve wanders through the house, which is a normal Califor- nia ranch-type with a 50-year-old slot machine and an ancient pi-) ano. Outside, he shows the sunk-! en bar he is building. It will house some huge whisky barfels, in. which he plans to make his own! wine. * * * Then he ambles down the two- acre estate to his latest addition. It's a monstrous swimming pool with a tropical island in the mid- dle. ‘“‘The poo] started out to be 48 feet long,’’ Steve says, ‘‘but by the time I finished, it was 66 feet. I'm going to stock it with perch.” The pool, which is classified as her free in the woods with six pins “After out-of the brush. One cat is| 11960 Democratic National Conven- named Zsa Zsa—she’s mean andjtion. The party has asked a $350,- ‘unfriendly and won't eat with the|000 guarantee to hold the conven- 7, |other cats. She’s a real cool cat.’’|tion here. The citizens’ group © And so is a guy named Steve counted pledges Monday totaling |Cochran. $152,000 | Amateurs ‘Menace’ Airplanes Don't Fire That Rocket! WASHINGTON (AP)—The Civil But it said not all rocket firings Aeronautics Board stepped in to- have been handled properly. day to protect airplanes from the “Launchings have been conduct- a t k : hazards of amateur rocketry. {44 within the confines of airport No airplane has been shot down| . ys by the amateurs’ missiles and. traffic patterns, civil airways and rockets—toy or otherwise—but the in such manner that the rockets CAB said there is growing con-|have penetrated other controlled cern over the hazards. lair space areas,’’ the CAB said. “This concern has been en- larged by recent large-scale pro-; duction of rockets which are avail-| able to the general public at a| relatively small cost through hob- by shops and department stores,” it said. To Film First Scout | HOLLYWOOD, Calif, (AP) — Cecil B. DeMille’s next movie will | be the story of Lord Robert Bad- eA 'en-Powell, British _soldier-hero To prevent such equipment from Who founded the Boy Scouts in | weapons, the CAB proposed a se- 1908. DeMille said Monday the, ries of amendments to civil air {i!m will go into production early | jregulations under which it con- fas | trols air space, It will accept com- ;|ments from anyone concerned un-| til Jan. 27, and will act after that.;M0St Popular canned fruits. Pineapples and peaches are the} Peet Toy Shopy |Should ch Children’ sN dds Buying toys sometimes gets as ‘wale Pontiac area resi- judge-|dents lost their right to drive re- cently, according ‘te the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office. ’ First and: foremost, adults need| Having their licenses suspended to. remember that they are buy-|and ordered to furnish financial re- ing toys for children. And they/sponsibility for drunk © driving Should keep in mind that each|were: child is an. individual. Ronald E. Arnold, 88 N. Tasmania, * * be Also, there are safety = Gace that crop up when shopping Township. toys. Be sure the toy has. true, nae ie Pickard, ial Oe Penis eran ee and that a nontoxic wa L. Pringle, 102 Franklin Rd., Avoid toys with sharp corners} “°*** > — _— Pontiac. and never give a little one some- thing small enough to swallow. Licenses of the following peo With the increase in grading of toys it is much easier to. select items in the field of play that are educational as well as fun, How- 4 In Pontiac Area fast as show in the city. * tory driving record: Paul D. Cremer, 17 Allison, Pon Charles C. Dorman, 31875 Ala Farmington Morris L. Howe, 071 Rennaviile, Birm- ingham. Robert J. Lewandowsky, 93 — 428 Raeburn, Pontiac. Vii i nai 1451+ Fran Rd. se lin field Township. . * * * Found guilty . of judgment were: Arthur W.-Craun, 22791 Albion, Parm- ax *Eieudie ©. Laten, 22$ Florence, Pon- items. As psychologists point out, lack of’ challenge leads to boredom but toe mich challenge is dis- couraging to a. child. U.S. Strengthens’: ‘ ~ . ptienry McLaughlin, 326 Mt. Clemens, | Boycott on Ships noeen Parkd, 22605 Delton, Madison e eae M. Perry, Pont: Gerald F. Prieur, 030 Y yeaa. y S thac. George W. Rae Jr., 016 Slocum, Pon- 1389 Lake Park,| * Maritime Workers Act}. Across World Against ‘Flags of Convenience’ By The hemabeind Press American maritime workers are providing much of the starch in a four-day worldwide boycott of Sreacess Sammut, Birmingham, * of 23596 Tawas, Madison Heights, Divorce Decrees ships flying “flags of conven- ience."’ seg LS ar Douglas is Scott rom James Ham Overseas, reports of success Helen M. tro rol 5 7 were scattered. In the United States, however, at least 70 ships fr were tied up. LD trom Tren e L, The demonstration, which en- pcasifeiteyleag Lene Ziegetbaur tered its second day today, is Birute rom Sigites - Bacevicius | aimed at ship owners operating} Aline H. from Edwin J, Laily Jr. under the flags of Panama, Hon-| Wasa t. from Yuginia i nee duras, Costa Rica and Liberia. By vobadh I, tres from Robert i Snover registering under these flags the Stella from Casimir Kray sanowsh owners benefit from tax benefits| isabeth J, from M par cd to and lower labor costs, transport Joseph J. from Margaret M. Supal rom workers contend. Phyilta trom Witlane bh ternee Robert from Edith N. Kramer Leading the worldwide action is i! Jacqueline 8. from Thomes R. Andrews Resch 27 Fro ple were taken for an unsatisfac-| Richard a. Pitagerald, a Whitte- I ever, in the do-it-yourself area) ™ore, Ponti H avoid too easy or too difficult Goreia 4. Bary, 80 Leb dew, Ponting: Others were: Arthur C. Gau Jr., ving, et souk tesa, 24977 Way- cross, Birmingham, both for un- satisfactory driving record and failure to appear for re-examina- tion, and Maxine L.. Yontz; 1627 Old Town, West Bloomfield Town- ship, unable to pasé test and fail- Une. > appear, for Teexandination: om Aipeime A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL RELEASE Ed. Smith at the Orgon the International Transport Work- ers Federation, which claims a) fj membership of seven million. In! — the United States, 18 unions, led by the National Maritime Union and the Seafarers International |} Union, have formed a_ united |f) front. NMU President Joseph Curran) said SIU President Paul Hall said [| Monday that picket lines had been | J thrown up at piers where 75 ships | I were berthed and all but two ships) were tied up. * * * In New York Harbor, however, |f unloading operations were com-|fj pletely halted at only two of six|f target ships. A third ship began) ff’ unloading on its own and three 7 North Saginaw St Phone FE 4- 6842 “Better Things in Sight” CONTACT LENSES reet ee ee ee ats A wD others managed to unload with the help of an independent oil work- ers union. \ Thirteen ships were tied up at| New Orleans and at Philadelphia Sat. & San, Mat. 15 ships either were tied up by’ picketing or kept at anchor in the | Delaware River. Ten ships were. picketed in Mobile and eight in Baltimore. * x * Harbor police in Montreal pre-, vented picketing by the SIU. In St. Catharines, Ont., the only ship in the Great Lakes flying a boycotted flag tied up at the Wel- land Ship Canal as crew mem- bers observed the embargo. The island of Formosa is 245 miles long and about 88 miles across at its point of maximum width... NOW Thru Wed. Everything for the CHRISTMAS PARTY Tricks — Pipers Magazine Outlet 35 Auburn Ave. FE 4-8240 Jokes — Novelties The board. proposed to prohibit. |rocket and missile firings within) five miles of any airport, and to) ban them entirely in areas of con- trolled air space such as civil air- ways and airport traffic patterns. The new rules also would pro- hibit firings to a height of more! than 500 feet unless the launch) site and firing were approved by) Kadi L~. OPEN 6:00 P.M. =a Pe ._D Neate e “IN 1 BLK. MOTAY SHOW STARTS AT 6:30 P. M. ; —_ + TELEGRAPH RD the administrator of civil nautics. * * * 2150 OPDYKE R FE 4-4611 TONIT / / ‘PARTY GIRL’ Spraniscors - - MeTROColor Robert” — TAVLOR-CHARISSE-COBB em ohn IRELAND et ER BLUE SKY D. OUR EARLY, EARLY SHOW—IN BY 6:30, HOME BY 10:00 EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUNS SHE'S THE QUEEN IN A KINGDOM OF CRIME! M-G-M Presents Cyd Lee J. Pay 2p COREY ALLEN MYRNA HANSEN BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:00 > HELD OVER TONIGHT WEDNESDAY BYotsarttaliate Malil-latel ering The board tactly conceded it may run into a deluge of com- | plaints. | It agreed also that the educa-| | tional benefits from organized prt igrams of experimental rocketry' jare of importance to the nation.| DORIS DAY RICHARD WIDMARK ~Asifeaew® ADDED POPEYE CARTOON new in newlyweds: “THE TUNNEL OF LOVE” N-0-W Last ? Days! onsen PATBOUHE: a a eee ae Se OP Pred strand, THE YEAR’S HAPPIEST MERRIEST MUSICAL JUBILEE 6 YOUNG STARS! 8 SONG HITS! A FESTIVAL OF FUN THM SEN OR con | ds COLOR by DELUXE CinemaScoP Open 10:45 25¢ to 1 P.M. Grenecune =< CimemaSc ore Lee] Me] = | conn Bit ne ee _. -_- Fe eee SE SS ee re - ed a. Se" 2 ts Sa ee - A bd ie Sen Oe, A Me 3 Le DONALD A. BROWN - Brown Takes Job With Ziem Recent GOP Candidate Assistant Prosecutor in Royal Oak . Prosecutor Frederick. C. Ziem yesterday announced that Donald A. Brown, unsuccessful candidate for Michigan lieutenant governor’ last month, has been bired as an assistant prosecutor attached to. the Oakland County office's Royal Oak branch. ~ The 34-year-old Brown returns to the Prosecutor’s Office after an absence of two years. He re- signed his assistant prosecutor's job in May of 1956 to go into private law practice and run for state representative on the Re- publican ticket. Brown, of 900 Lexington St., Royal Oak, ed Royal Oak, Clawson, Huntington Woods end Pleasant Ridge (District 5) in the Michigan House of Representatives for two years. While he was finish-| *t¢¢7: ing out his first two years, he joined forces with GOP guberna- torial candidate Paul D.. Bagwell to form a governor-lieutenant gov- ernor team for the Nov, 4 election. Ziem said Brown will take over a new $5,900-a-year post in -the W. McEntee has been in the county ‘sanatorium with tubercu- losis. The new post, which brings to a total of 12 the number of assistants) ** Ziem’s office has, was approved by the Board of Supervisors in July. Although Brown might take over his new duties sooner, Ziem said the effective date of the appoint- ment is Jan 1. Reports Expenditures Bagwell Committee MASON (AP) — A’ committee formed to finance Paul D. Bag- well’s unsuccessful campaign for governor yesterday reported ex- penditures totaling $41,191. The re-elected Gov. G. Mennen Williams committee last week filed] netrers a report showing $50,446 in €X-log penditures for the same purpose. Both reports were filed with the Ingham County Clerk in ac- cordance with a law requiring |? are The following are top prices covering sales of locally grovv: protue brought to the Farner i rket by eeeene onesechh. pe Mgeertey 3.60 40 io . Gos. 4 Fennel, ibeb + dos FPS eee renee eeee Hor e peeevccescens BaD Kohirabi teha + dos ccocencecoce, 8.28 a pd ur ag oan os prresssenees 2S Parsley dose Shas des. icatvnss 490 fatoee ogg 8) the T° TSTtt hae Radishes, hothouse (bchs.) > vee 1.50 Squash Delicious bu... ..---- 1.26 8, Hothse., No. 1 8Ib. bakt. 2.75 i Ba SS ssouc scccueccn 1.95 GREENS Cabbage vu Woes Cab ereeeneee 1 00 Colar WU. ..cvaceessceccecees-cece 3-00 Kale, POCO R eH ROR EC ETE HORE 1 25 Mustard, DU, sos. .cece,cecceverens a5 Swiss chard 60. ........cseereee b SALAD GREENS elery ca dos. secceess Eocive, ee: aa Escarole, Poultry and man ‘DETROIT er a Daye. ‘Dec. 1 (AP)—Prices per ©, 6. Detroit, for No. 1 unt. — vont hens nder 6 ibs over Hage Re turkeys ness type vane tom: esoengs - ‘ ae DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, Deo. 1 Rene a f.0 -b. Detroit, in ederal-state grades: - tes—Grade bo 46; large 44-48, wid. a 46%; large 41-42 wid. avg. 41%; medium 33-34, wtd. av 33%; ~30, avg. °20%; g B E ave ‘a: 33. wed avg public accounting of political campaign expenses. Bagwell's committee reported contributions of $41,208 and esti-| mated unpaid bills at $5,190. Spending directly on behalf of money spent on them and other nominees by the Republican and Democratic parties. The Democratic organization re- ports listed expenditures of $105,- 377, plus unpaid bills totaling $62,- 801. The GOP State Central Com- mittee reported expenditures and contributions nearly balanced at $219,910, is - the two candidates did not include|® Blackman Takes Mickelson’s Place AP Names News Editor NEW YORK (AP)—Samuel G. Blackman, 54, chief of the New York bureau of The Associated Press, was named gen- eral news editor of the AP today. . The appointment was announced by General Man- ager Frank J. Starzel. Blackman succeeds Paul R, Michel- son, 59, who died 10 days ago, Blackman, a native of Port Jervis, N.Y., was graduated from Rutgers University in 1927, and has been with the AP since 1931. He joined the Newark bureau after working on the Long Branch, N.J., Daily Record and the New Brunswick N. J., Home News. LJ He was AP’s Trenton correspondent and New Jersey state editor before transferring to the New York bureau as night city editor in 1940. He was named chief of the New York bureau in 1945, During his career, Blackman has covered some of the biggest news stories of the time. He was assigned to the Lind ergh kidnap case from the night of the abductio zs ti! thé execution of Bruno Richard Hauptmann. He also cov- we un- ered the Morro Castle fire and the crashes of the airships - Akron and Hindenburg. Blackman’s successor as New York oe chief will be | named late?. «| ahd aircrafts. ‘MARKETS Stock Prices == Slightly | Lower . A good number of issues * * * : Dealings again were active enough to throw the ticker behind 50/ floor transactions. The lag lasted for only nine minutes and never Was more than one minute behind it in a % point range. Stee declined less than 4. -point. * * * In the electronics group, Radio Corp. added a smal] fraction to yesterday's gain while Zenith fell back more than a point on profit taking. Philco made a small gain. Utilities were firmer than oth- er sections. American Telephone & Telegraph, consolidated Edi- son and Public Service Electric and Gas all gained fractions. The rails were mostly lower, but losses ran less than % point. Oils .|were mixed, as were chemicals x« *« * Biggest opening block was 30,500 go, |Shares of Reliance Electric STOCK AVERAGES lied by The Associated Press) Te we Indust Rails 300.6 1326 Util Stocks $9.2 208.1 1987 high .... 1987 low DETROIT STOCKS . (C. J. Nephler Co.) Figures after decimal ee are ei nue Allen Elec. & Equip. ia s Baldwin Rubber Co.*.. Ross Gear Co?* L. Oil & Chem. Coes. z= ans ~ yn ‘oducts Co.* *No sale: iat and asked. Aomoan 3 Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Dec. 2 (AP) — Opening Dee, May us . dan. g,.+-+..10.00 July seoee 1.20% July Yocees 10.07 Sep. Ws... 3.19 ==!) 295,502 in 58 eve ae aued SCOURGE OF GRASS — Johnson Grass,-a parasitic weed unknown to Midwest farmers a decade ago, threatens to spread its deadly growth over a wide area of the nation’s breadbasket. Farmer Charles Cassoutt examines the sword-like grass growing more than 10 feet high in Kaskaskia, Ill. The American Farm Bureau and Soil Extension Services are battling to get rid of it. GM Production Conlin Speaks Hope for State Tax Study LANSING ® — Rep. Rollo G. | DETROIT — All of the auto "|for Mentally Retarded ° | TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1958 Peak, but Year's Totals Are Below ‘57 Period industry’s Big Three report up- swings in November production as compared with ot! months of 1958. But none ma’ November of last year. General Motors, Ford and Chrys- Jer all made production reports yesterday. . GM said its November produc- tion was 313,939 cars and trucks in the United States and Canada, its highest since January. GM’s pwnd darenagn aan ang «sat er 8 We yee 356,951. Ford reported its November pro- duction the best of the year by — than 30,000 units for any Chrysler said its Novem- te prolate gn a bow hich foc 1958. Ford put its November produc- tion at 189,701 cars and trucks against a previous January high of 159,022. Chrysler said it turned out ia.tnl cove cot boeaks ta Novernber for its highest since December of last year. Ford’s November production last year was 195,558, Chrysler’s 97,634, Comparative Il-month totals were as follows: General Motors 2,295,502 as against 3,081,185 for the same period last year; Ford 1,262,060 as against 2,051,906; and et as 9 ae as against 1,219,248. To Talk on Private Care Mrs, Walter Hardiag, director of Old Acres Home, Lake Orion, will discuss the assets of a private in- stitution regarding the life of men- tally retarded people at the meet- ing of the Association of Handi- capped Children tomorrow night. November Output Hits|*°str Collects $17,837 |’ During November/|2.# Register of Deeds i a: office took in $17,315.60 from actions eres DE papers, there were 2,603 deeds ($4,247.25) and 1,262 land chattel mortgages ($4,619). * * * Murphy's office also recorded report showed. News in Brief November, 1958, figures ‘show/fl recorded/|§ erty mortgages filed ($4,424.25).|f There also was a total of 4,642|9 chattels handled, including 4,619/f nee ee ee the Andrew 33, ceence. © ylonees Cones See ing an illegal liquor sale day before Municipal Judge Cecil B, McCallum and was senteficed to five days and $40 or 15 days. topped the million mark. Waterford Township Board members last night discussed se- lection of a five-member heating board, but no appointments ,wete made until further study of appli- \ cations. Clerk James Seeterlin was au- thorized to send applications to all loca] heating contractors. These will be considered and the Board will be set up in the near future, it was indicated. In other business, the Board re- quested the Waterford Township Fire-fighters Assn, to submit names for three future full-time firemen. The new firemen will be trained at township ‘expense and will work during emergencies in the absence of regular firemen. * * * Because the bid price for black- *|topping one block of Camley street *|was more than 10 per cent higher than estimated, a new hearing date *\for intent. to.proceed was set for Dec. 22. *The Board entered an agree- ment with Parkdale Homes, Inc., requiring a fence and greenbelt & Delay Heat Board Action along the edge of commercial property on M59 at Airport road. Future plans of the real estate firm call for rezoning the land from residential to commercial, possibly for a shopping center. x * * The board Auxiliary, replacing David Put- nam, now a regular policeman. appointed Ronald, [Freeman to the Reserve Police'with many other retailers, regard * Haase says there’s still another market opened up by marriages — the old folks. He says that when mother who has stinted herself on five silver, china and jewelry gets the urge to perk up her own home. Hopes for this month’s increased factor, one peculiar to the present consumer mood, Jewelers, along ithis as a beginning of a new era lot elegance. Do you accumulation plans to C. J. LL 818 Community Hours 9. to 5 ed you can invest as you earn...as little or as mach as you wish? Most Mutual Funds have NEPHLER Co. SOIHHUUIUANIAUNUUOAUNEUOOUGEROUUUOOAGHUOUAUEOAOUEAHOUEAAEUOU AGE know... help meet your needs. them today! = a = = = Net’! Bank Bldg. = FE 2-9119 = K— the children leave home, many 4/ Mas Traffic deaths in the U.S. have | Supplies at sye\| Make Us Your Stockroom se.nceel JACK COLE Phone FE 5-9224 Low MONTHLY as ae for t Guests Receptionist Service ° For Reservation Double $9 Twins $11 Kitchenettes $12 Semi-Permanen: CUTTING TOOLS and SUPPLIES, tne. Walled Lake WILL... if you can't! . FE 4-254] 15 W. Lawrence, Pontiac A — 31: small 26% *—Orade A jumbo | Engineering, unchanged at 47%. Contin (R-Tipton) referred news- | The meeting, which begins at|‘OPPS¢ © __— re — ae ee a Falls . 785,683 Units! men to the Bible to describe the : p.m., will be == at the + gr can Legion Cook-Nelson Post | New York Stocks Short of Last Year Total) situation of tis Tax Study Com- [00 ooo" burn Ave. The public is 714 Community Nat'l DETROIT (Late Morning Quotations) ° 11 mittee, as it met, hopeful of cou- invited. Bank Bldg. ary . Nov. 26 (AP)—Cattle: Sal oT J, ’ able 400 400. on limited ly good | wures after decima! point are eighths pleting its report. and choice yearling steers active. steady! admiral ...... 19.1 Int Tel & Tel 54 The reference was to the Sec- to strong: lower grades slow about | Ae - 80.3 Ist Crk Seal * 43 42 ,| Eleven-month General Motors No Help From Monicker Phone FE 4-1568-9 = Allied Ch 06 2 Book of Corinthians, Chap- vt hy 0 slow not fully eatablished, ed Strs .... 52. $ Man - 93, production reports indicated today ond | ont tale? choice to prime around! Alus chal “'.. 281 jones & -.- $43 \that 2,295,502 units had rolled off| ter 4, Verses $9, which read: JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPD —| . [Alcon .see. #3 — ik, -:: ® \\the lines during 1958, compared'to| “We are troubled on every [Police didn’t find Eliam, | : Livest Aw Airtin ..0> 03 Bresey of” | 3 081,185 a the same of| side, not distressed; we are fey nahi cues us Ga el vestoc AmCan ...... 50.4 arFP 36.4 uring yet ‘ 1085 Ib. yearling steers 95.15. few lots|am Ma Pty .. 863 Lor cues, -:- £1-4/ 1957. perplexed, but not in despair; |yesterday the man who slashed] average to high choice 1070-1100 {b.|A Bee | bee a hay ‘a4, November production was! “Persecuted, but not forsaken; {him with a knife was known to him | ’ steers 28 00: few good to low choice|AmN Gas... 687 Lockn Aire. 408 ed at 313,939 passenger cars but not destroyed,” [only by the name of “Cool Breeze.” | ceumausat cained offerings ‘joes 3 fim Tel & et’ 1190.1 pad SPORE oe wrecks a ar and Can-| — So ¢ , i Richard H. DeWiu Donald E. Hansen canner apd cutter cows 15.00-18.50. m Tob =... --- oH fami es ada, with 356,951 Noweus Res, FE 5-3792 Res. FE 2-5513 wei’ gett, Manet tr, cates Anacongs BY Miran go: Hajeda, wit erin j oe oe mised Wo. J cat 3 usec te. wtcnere| Armour & 0. H6 Meda :; fa3}P* \ Homeowners’ Policies —_ one load mostlys No.)Atchison . .. Merck 2 148 Division ex: | - ! iow yi 19.28; moj/Aveo Mfg ..... 103 Truck & Coach i siding type 319 Ibs 19.28: 412 MerrCha&8. 19 Ibs. quoted ie scines: Tattle? siedee| Beth Steel... 4 Mpll Hon ..'1124] ceeded 7,047 production totals of | | Accident Insurance Firé Insurance ame quoted 1428.16.25" Boeing Air... 495 Minn M&M ..108.6/ November, 1957, by marking ed d t t ; tomobile Insurance wvaners, suing. Mot enough old) Bobs Alum °° 2} Meet ard .<: 3] 148 during the past month. in| Jy X pec te or hr istmas |] Asm Life Insurance _ shee: ‘salable 400. Trade on iimtted Borden, +s. BS Mein’ ‘7! 54 | the auto divisions, Cadillac cam Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance be y ‘wooietaughter. Feated as PE Budd oe ° 1739 Mueller Br ... 28.5 the closest to matching the are. oe Burglary Insurance Bonds — All Types a) = Tae and choice | Parrett’ Hi’. 187 Nat Gash R.. 62.41) duction of November 1967, and By SAM DAWSON lion pou: Since the war they Tenants’ Polici . SRS RM OTL A rd 30.3 Nat Dairy ..-. 484] taiteg to hit 14,370 by two units. | | AP Business News Analyst [have never fallen“below a billion enan es aise alae im Ss . = _ . Cepia Ale ies xt wa, 113] Pontiac Motor Division recorded), NEW YORK rand )—The prcigesl Sac eosiamad aie pe Any onan ° '. ° . 5 : Jewelers say they expect to ; very bad man that will ever DETROIT LIVESTOCK = (Chi¥aier 01. id Nor sta Pw. $17/29,851 during the past month, and 10 "2 ors this Christmas. The(they stood et 1% billion dollars. Se good Sa kjes il bares Geel aula DETRONT, Dec 3 (AP) Cattle sal: /Gin/atl a!" 385 Ohio Ol”... 401) 34,843 during the same month last! OST ace” Council reports| Sales per capita in 1929 were be good, but ne vi . 9 S ‘ m4 |store and heifers. ‘increased | show cS Equtp -. SBA Pac G eh wa year. ~« * today its members anticipate a 7/$4.40. The oe cn “ im who was not at some ee a Regestue ee n 5 i 1949 as si “> Penney. Jc. al Divisions and their monthly and|business, which would pel the |year's pls a peak of $9.9, tbe BEDE emma oor oe eae SNES ee week's strong close; cows strong |Colum Gas ... 204 pens; Cola .... 25,4 1l-month totals are: year’s total to a new high. i Py activé, strong to 2c higher than|Con Edis ..... 582 yg, OTR: i i uM \ Chri Population growth has helped Cc "Me hen prods: otter alomes eares: most sales Cont Bak... 43.2 Phiice ats i88lcn ae rh te sie ae li perio i ail patted to the t a total sales volume, but part of the "Now You n Seve ney When | » Geer CiesseS SCEICe, MOst sauces we emotes : a 8; evy = fs q Bvigidg RI chee $1190 TR seers Cont COB 5 AT Pract 0." 184 Boutlec 'goasl Seas “inet “aM37 to Soweler, In. this period he &ain in per capita figures are ex- You Buy Home Insurance! 00-1119 Ib. steers 28.80" short load high Cont Mot... 12 Rea Sc asgee ee 3139 315.357 388.688 normally chalks up 28 per cent of|Plained by the generally prosper- hoice to : 28.75; "on ’ war. Se edge eo eR 1 ig 50-37.26; . S.Curtis Pub |. 15 --++ 68-2) Conc : ‘ . 410/in Chris sp’ 23.50-25 50: utility “ste 1.00- 23.50; Ltt aad best choice “heifers "100-t8 ive 26.18: [Det Eas ats ii Royal t Dut Se therefore, could spell disaster sg ar points out other sve Ran"sbote te oiine arouse Tao-feae Bernt” wg Sete” Sa\Talanrinter Rates oe et __|market. Teenagers. and those in| Sisvecwheest | eis 31 Ce rather Abe tn Sect pee ca] Te einen fr You tome, he 00: reanaata fo Poviaedd 1s oo Be. E} Auto 371 Sunciate eae 634 : il presitient of the council, says most o ae ps £ aliverware. Ou R 1ve r ton for : ome, ; § Hogs—Salable 809. Butchers under 260 El & Mus ... 93 J ..s0ee | e emporari y of the nation’s 24,000 retafl jewel-|lay a store o' Contents, Theft and Personal Liability. ! pepe teeth er le op betel ire RR vcs 196 Se Ry se Sie ers are solidly optimistic. In fact,| The steady growte mes —_ - Sy a1 xe eiefere 4 ri e 190-215 Ip wetghis, 16.00: load No ifpuestene, 1206 Sti'on ina’... eta) WASHINGTON (UPD—Tempor-|they outstrip the soothsayers for| population bas ad tro chee H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency Tbs. 10.25 and tot 233 Ibs, 19.38. poscne ct wa Std OU NI... 58 jar, ¢ leprinter rate increases on|the department stores and other ying of graduai on’ Sulete-Salabie 200, Prices unchanged Prosh Tre. 2 Stevens JP... 26, 1/2 orm Union Tele raph Co. and|Tetailers who are looking for a 5jother gifts helped swell jewelers’ 7 vealers. quoted. $3 00-40 00: 's aad ane ert ree 724 sun ol... 1) 63.4 : Tel . & Telegraph|Per cent increase in yuletide buy-| profits. And the council holds that B. W. Hattenlocher Max E. Kerns jgped. 26.00-33.00: cu! and utility 16.00- en Dream .. 962 pate hed as See Sect ce ae oe |ing. “the rise of the education lével in Vast 306-320 Riker Bidg FE 4-1551 bol poco EA a * $53/CO. private lines went into effec s produced a pro-|f “ere 5 cnc saie, ae, Putt rampiyigee i, a Bees Soy today. The council says from 1829 tothe country has produced a. Pro - active. steady on lambs: ter eweziGen Motors |. 484 Textron ..... 184, . 1957 annual retail jewelry salesjportionate rise in aste : t lambs: slaughter ewes Gen Me 563 Tran W Air .. 162| The increases are designed to! ; « * * srecn ¢@, higher: sagt cholee tOlGeE time | F7- eete ner | Stl : :..|grew from 526 million dollars to ; Y choice ‘wooled lambs. 21 00-22 60: vtility (Gen tze «$27 Twenty. cen 386|¥ield the companies 15 million 3 record 11% billion. The high postwar marriage rate to food, lambs 1850-21 00: small load Gocbet Br. “3. «Un Carbide ..119-4/dollars more in revenues a year. Sr and the spurt in the birth rate cal to ehoice slaughter sheep 800-10 60 oeaveay ve as Unit Air Lin . 29.3) The Federal Communications) Business recessions usually spell ‘has played a big part. And jewel- = mest food and choice feeder lambs Grah, Paice “ at ok patel ene Commission (FCC) allowed thetrouble for jewelers, but the most ers look for even better days _ Gt West 8 Pr 138 4 Un Ges Cp .. 324 teletypewriter service hikes to gojrecent one saw scarcely a bobble.jahead. They expect that the real TOKYO (UP Af Gul On 01114 US Rub ..... @& |into effect despite heavy protests) The low point of the depression, |marriage boom will start in 1960, 1) — Japan is spend-jfersh Choc <. 67 US Stel $¢2/from major users vf the service. |1933, saw sales slide to 175 mil-|and look for 1975 to show nearly Ing nearly a quarter of a million|Homest,, .-- $0¢ US Tob, 1... 267 : twice today’s number of weddings. dollars ts a Sy psi? ae Oe a eee “ ag Marriages produce not only chil- ecutives that it’s easier to talkjtmtertak Ir || 244 Wes ** 667 ° * * wedding anniversaries — business over the telephone than/i} Bus Mch 4834 Wistorth 1s Waterford Studies Applications Sake the jeweler no lit- in a geisha house or on the golf Int Nick 18S Zouith Red -.1514 tle ilinks, nt Shoe... 334 t * P ee ew wie MCR Sia Ss & 8 +o} es ORR s % on é i‘ seu! 3 ae ee nda ere wy gree “ wie oe wr! sen pate el ; Boe bs ee art a a ] i / : - E ( bios THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1958 TWENTY-ONE P . j ae) ' : oe By George Sixta hortage Found, Banker Arrested Injections by Needle Push Tiny Core of Skin into Body ‘ j j i) j ‘ j | California Man Accused By DELOS SMITH reason why these grafts should not cggrals back ogeirnrsa oss Mak UPI Science Editor ‘|“take’” and grow if they get into|wi ion I ¢ preci ake Entry NEW YORK — Two medical sci-|a proper “bed.” But they're sur-jneedles ‘of all bores, from the 4 * entists were only curious at first.|rounded in the beginning by the|smallest upward. They punctured LOS ANGELES (AP)—Federal authorities have arrested a sub- urban banker on a charge of mak- ing a false entry. of more than $800,000 in the banks records. The U.S. attorney's office said More arrests are expected today. : “The shortage at the bank may be in excess of one million dol- lars,” the FBI said Monday as it arrested John E. Petersen, 49. He resigned several days ago as vice president and cashier of the Sun Valley National Bank. The bank was sold Saturday. They wondered what happened to the skin when a doctor pushes a needle into it. When they found out, their curiosity turned into worry. In a majority of such needle punctures, they discovered, the pores of the skin are not merely pushed aside as the needle goes core of skin a little smaller than the diameter of its open end. And this core is likely to be. injected into muscle, vein, or the medication and later perhaps by a blood clot. Either would tend to prevent a take. Just the same, they continued in reporting to international tech- nical journal’ ‘The Lancet,” there is the possibility of the skin cores causing under-the-skin cysts. In- deed, in experiments with labora- tory rats, they've produced cysts by injecting cors of the rats’ own through. The needle cuts out a) Kin In cases where injections are into the veins, it is at least theoretically possible tor the skin cores to lodge in tiny veins of healthy skin, removed during surgery, many times and then counted the number of times de- tached cores of skin got into the needles. This happened in 69 per cent of all punctures. The least meaning their investi- gation has, they said, is that doc- ‘tors should disinfect the skin- care- fully before pushing a needle into it, lest surface infection get carried into deeper layers. Skin prepara- tion before injectiqn is often per- functory, they said, and this could be the cause of abcesses under the skin and in muscles which are not SR eo _ By Edgar Martin | KOT T LMOO-REE! 1 ROPE THE NEXT WREETING OF THE “GASB. Cus8" WONT BE SO : EXHeUS WIE) NY a SOCK OK @ WOT “WLP, GE WWHIESTED YS KOA OS "GO-GS WWPUSTRIESY VT Cant Tt x *« * tissue under the skin (depending | g,- lungs, they said. Just what happened to the mon-} on where the doctor is aiming the ey was not explained. It was orig-| needle tip) along with whatever THE GIRLS inally reported that Peterson had| medication is in the syringe. » been accused of misappropriating| Theoretically at Jeast that is not SS uncommon after injections. By Franklin Folger We VEE: ~ the funds, But the FBI said o se good. \¢5 _— charge against him was that ientists, Drs. Tho “made or caused to be made a Gans cas Wate ‘Norris, had. to <* false entry in the bank's TeC-|a-knowledge that thousands of ords." to thousands rigs ialaifira tion i coraisted alee re Game ees ae So of people by thousands of doctors failing to charge to the individual every day, and there has been no customers’ accounts at least $800,- reported trouble from all these 000 paid out by the bank for| ores of skin transplanted into checks drawn on the accounts, deeper body layers. said William Alexander, of the| wit, more widespread <.ware- Los aa ~~ office ness, however, the very high inci- Bank examiners are still trying pperina coer penis ms Gee ee ee a ie eee) aoe vA eterna 1 Gon Ce thy reported He is being held under $35,000 That was their purpose—to 42°2 _By Carl Grubert | SWEETHEART, YOURE WONDERFUL ! THOUGHT WE HAD TH PROBLEMS OF A LONELY OLD AGE LICKED/ bail. spread awareness among doctors. e. § 0m na ay Cotes Sun Valley National was sold| They were struck both by what Bol Sah BEL BERT: CAVE he Saturday to the Security-First Na-| they had found and by no scien- : a) Sale tional Bank of Los Angeles. tist having been very curious Security-First National offjcials| ®Dout the fate of punctured skin said they had taken over “‘certain| beforp. Se far as medical litera- the confidence of its depositors.”| In effect these tiny cores of skin oS le meHT Be CRAZY— become skin grafts when injected 93-5 25 P= \\ — a 4 hgh saan voip esen sii), AS ii : . AG © Ny A a tb : Believe me, when you taste their fried chicken you'll all agree U.S. Labs Seek ment ns a 45 NO! it was worth the four hour drive.” Young Talent gs JOVE,I FEEL SUST A Start Recruiting Drive KE A MAN WHO HAS JUST ESCAPED FROM ‘py MA Je Ae for 200 Engineers.and| |” Scientists for Research | A THE BLACK HOLE OF CALCUTTA! BIG J mT WIGS, AS AN EMANCIPATOR pes YOU RANK WITH GARIBALD! AND STAND YOU WILLIAM TELL/ AFTER L PAWN SHALL SHOW MY GRATITUDE / BY STANDING YOU , : TOA FINE CIGAR, fie \* NW, OR PERHAPS ~~. Ae \\ = ae AS AIR AT A GAS STATION! WASHINGTON (#—The govern- ment has started a nationwide search today to recruit some 200 talented young engineers and sci-| entists for research work in key federal laboratories. It also held out the promise of more attractive and promising as-| [ S Ge — WO signments and opportunities for ; < SS career advancement, ' Sa ; 4j ) In another departure from stand- rs) | AS, ard procedure, candidates will be i) given a written examination de- signed to identify more success-| §////11)\\X\\))Y MI) fully those applicants with a poten- —— tial for scientific research. } GME Meare ess oie era Se oe " : 4 , i} ot AS tet Sab gi Pa—t 7 gis FR 5 = ~ ‘ OKAY/ OKAY! § ; wm ( YOU'RE MY = (Ms Sires FRIEND! “4 oe CMD SW he SS TRwitiams 12:2 © '956 by MEA Service, inc. TM. Reg. US. Pat. OF THE BOOT JACK Service, Inc, TM. Reg US. Pat. OF By Walt Disney By Charles Kuhn THEY WASN'T RUNNIN’ | | GRANOMA JUST MADE ANOTHER T’A FIRE,MR.OTIS/ BATCH O’ GINGERBREAD,” ULL FIND OUT WHERE IT IS / | f