the Weather U.S. Weather Bureau -Forécast Hot, chance of thundershowers (Details Page 2) E_PONTL ic > RE ARARE OVER PA ‘117th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1989 ar + pales “UNETaD suaes earn, oe ANSWERS CAREY — ‘Rep. William Cramer, a Florida Republican, poses with his graphic answer to a threat of réprisals against him and others for voting for the Landrum-Griffin Bill. ‘Voluntary as Traffic Ticket’ It was provoked by a letter from AFL-CIO Vice President James Carey. The picture on the card shows a truck driver injured by an acid bomb. Cramer attached 99 stamps for mailing. a] AP. Wirephete Group Probes UAW Gifts’ From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — The Senate Rackets Committee questioned a former United Auto Workers (UAW) official today about his con- tributions to the union's political fund, described as ‘‘voluntary as a traffic ticket.” * * * Called back to the witness stand was Jess F. Motsinger of Detroit, former UAW International repre- sentative and now a member of Detroit Local 288. This is the second day of pub- lic hearings in the GOP-directed investigation of the UAW. The inquiry was thrown open to the press and public on the demand of Democrats and union presi- dent Walter P. Reuther after a week of closed-door sessions, Motsinger told the group yester- day that he had to contribute week- ly to the old UAW-CIO Political Action Committee (PAC) in order to keep his job. The PAC then gave the money to various candi- dates for political office. Asked if his contributions were voluntary—as required by law— Motsinger said that they were “about as voluntary as a traffic ticket.” ee He said “I know what would happen” if he didn't , contribute. * * * Motsinger said he received a let- ter of thanks from the then Sen. uy Gillette of Iowa, a Democrat, for a $10 contribution... Motsinger said that was his first. inkling of how his contributions were being used, Gillette was defeated for re- election in 1954 by Sen. Thomas E. Martin, a Republican. Motsinger told the committee UAW Secretary-Trdasurer Emil Mazrey of Detroit sent him a card to sign about the political fund. This card, he said, called the deduction a em: tribution to the old CIO Political Action Committee in 1953, Motsinger testified ‘he resented the way he was treated as an in- ternational UAW representative on the Detroit staff of UAW Vice President Richard -T. Gosser. Pe ata Semone ah waeees . cumay News ......h00. 2° Editorials ....:...... Ticeyes Ow ~ Farm & Garden Hep ererery 2 Markets. Peeee Peewee eee eeee 3 Obituaries eter ee ee eee ner es & & Sports Seeker eee ee whet ies, 30-33 pon ara Se iwhetaewes,, NO TV @ Radio | . & eeeet ts 79-71 : . Women’s Pages .. Motsinger now -is a non-officer member of the United Auto Work- ers, Local 228 at the Ford plant in Willow Run. * * * He said he also was ‘required to pay $10 in cash every two weeks to a “flower fund” maintained by the union. There has been testi- mony that the fund was used to finance intra- union election cam- paign: Sen Carl Curtis (R-Neb) figured that@since Gosser had about 130 international representatives on his staff, the flower fund contribu- tion totaled $33,800 annually, Motsinger said the union as- signed him and other ‘interna- tional representatives te do po- litical work in New York “City and elsewhere in 1954, although he said their salaries were paid out of the dues al] members are required tp pay. * * &* Sen. Carl E, Mundt (R-SD), a committee member, against dues paying members. D. Roosevelt Jr., prosecutor at the time. x * * Motsinger said many interna- the staffs of UAW vice presidents work exclusively on Political mat- ters rather than on any negotia- tions with employers. Names Laos Regent ° VIENTIANE, Laos i» — Ail- ing King Ssisavang Vong, who ascended the throne in 1904, has appointed the. crown prince ,as regent of Laos, the government called this “taxation without representation” Motsingey said Gosser assigned him to New York City in the late summer of 1954. He said Franklin a Democrat, was opposing Republican Jacob K. Javits, now a United States sen- ator, in a campaign for election as tional representatives assigned to Hawaii Joins Union Today as 50th State Ike Signs Prsloration at 3 P.M, Ceremony, Designates New Flag WASHINGTON (#— Hawaii, a group of volcanic and coral islands, 2,400 miles west of San Francis- co, officially joins the union |today as the nation’s 50th). state. President Eisenhower ar- ranged a 3 p.m. (Pontiac time) ceremony at the White House to proclaim statehood for the territory after a 56-year effort by Hawaiian citizens, now numbering 585, 000. * * Besides signing o statehood proclamation today, the President isues an order designationg a new 50-star flag to become officially 2f- fective next July 4. The new banner will take the place of the 49-star flag ‘which became official only last July 4. The 40-star emblem, to provite for Alaska, has a blue field of seven staggered rows of seven stars each. It supplanted the 47- year old, 48-star flag which had six even rows of eight stars each. * x * mation, the government will put on sale*a special 7-cent air mail stamp commerating the event. )The signing also will be the ig Soon after the Hawaiian procla-| “= PILOT WALKED AWAY — This crop-dusting plane lies completely demolished on a highway near Stockton, Calif., but its pilot, Allan Blewett. suffered nary a scratch. The By GEORGE T. After two relatively quiet hearings, the Ways and Means Committee of the Oakland County Board of Su- pervisors Tuesday can expect some fireworks for cutting signal for Gov. Willia F. Quinn, a Republican elected as the state’s first governor last July 28, to take the oath in Hongiulu, capital of the new state. Quinn will then notify Washing- ton of his certification of the elec- tion-last month of Hawaii's first congressional delegation in time for the two senators and one rep- resentative to take their oaths here Monday. * x * At Gettysburg, Pa., President Eisenhower got in some early morning golf today in advance of the trip to Washington to proclaim Hawaii -the 50th state and unfurl the new flag. The President, ac- companied by George E. Allen, a frequent golf companion, reached the Gettysburg Country Club shortly after 7:30 a.m. Cancels Red WASHINGTON can activities wi the or 79 California anounced today. Hearings Pr The House—committée on urf-Ameri-. li cancel hear- ings scheduled Oct. 14 for the investigation of Communism in California school system. Subpoeriaes issued for some 60 school teachers also will be canceled. 4am. ...76 10a.m. -.83 6am. ...75 Noon .~.89 8am. ...7i 1pm. ..91 Even the kids have slowéd down to a walk. And grownups, except for frequent trips to the water cooler, are trying their best to remain motionless. dors are the only people - who seem to.be busy as Pontiac con- tinues to swelter in 90-degree plus temperatures. Yesterday’s high of 3} tied the year’s record highs on dune 8 and 28. ; The Weather Bureau another high of 93 today giving odds that the record won’t be topped. redicts lard County residents will seek re- lief in exodus to the ‘lakes this weekend with-a “hot . and humid” forecast through Mow _| day. The mercury will sag only to a low of 74 degrees, says the Weath- er Bureau, Ice cream and soda pop ven- _ t isn’t - It’s a safe bet, though; that Oak- - many area * The Weather Bureau's “Discom- fort Index,” a device that com- that today,” « weath- “The Sereli*iemedtatire on this dat® since 1872 was 100 degrees Even the Kids Have Slowed fo a Walk the Child Guidance Clinic 1960 budget. Set to Protest Clinic Appropriation Cut A force of backers of the clinic,. which “treats emo- - |tionally disturbed children, ‘Stormy Waters Capsize Ship; Attempt Rescue May Be Worst Disaster in Peacetime on Seas Near Island Nation From Our News Wires MANILA — A Philippine interisland motorship sank in stormy waters off the- northern coast of Palawan Island. .First reports today indicated more than 100 “|might have perished. The Philippine navy and air force launched -rescue operations’ in what could. be one of the country’s worst peacetime maritime disasters. Radio messages from the area Jin the west-central Philippines said the Manila-bound ship Pilar II capsized and sank early Thurs- day. First word came from a fish- ing vessel today, which radiced it was picking up survivors. The Pilar If was described as a 240-ton ship with space for 83 passengers and 29 crews The Philippine navy rushed the patrol vessel Bohol to the area to help the fishing boat .‘An- tonio the 12th seek more sur- vivors. . AP Wirephote through two trees and sheared off a power pole as it plunged to earth. Blewett credits a crash helmet, which he was wearing for the first time, for his escape. plane cae Pontiac General Finances Better ‘Not Out of Woods Yet,’ Says Official as Latest Report Shows Profit Another SOS message received in Manila said ‘the - fishing boat Fengham Benz was in trouble off the eastern Luzon coast, * * * The .message said the ship was leaking and that water was com- ing in “very strong.” It said the strong wind and the strong speed of drift also threatened to sink the vessel, A motor boat capsized Thurs- day in the southern Luzon area TRUMBULL JR. Pontiac General Hospital's finan- cial picture is looking up, Harold B. Euler, hospital administrator, reported last night to the Board of Trustees. ‘We are certainly not out of the entirely from «the county’ s is expected to appear be- Worker Dies as Bulldozer Strikes Tree A - freak accident yesterday claimed. the life of a Pontiac Township man, George W. Stiles, 63, of 4157 Lapeer Rd. Operating a bulldozer on private property next to the home of Preston Kenyon, 392 Indian Lake Rd., Orion Township, Stiles ran into a fallen tree and a large ‘\branch struck him in the. chest and head, sheriff's deputies said. They said he was: dead, when they arrived. Kenyon told them he saw Stiles attempt to stop the bulldozer before oe the felled tree. Oakland County Deputy Coroner Dr. Arthur Calkins, of Lake Orion, pronounced Stiles dead. He suf- fered internal injuries. Thieves Have Vision MORRISTOWN, N.J.-(#—These thieves are looking ahead. With the temperature reading a swel- tering 97 degrees, burglars en- tered a vacant house yesterday and made off with 31 radiators. fore the money-governing in strong winds believed kicked up by typhoon Iris but the. 14 persons aboard were _rescued, Thé skipper of Antonio the 12th said the fishing ship had picked up seven survivors who reported there were more than 100 persons aboard the Pilar II when it sailed for Ma- nila from northern Palwan Thurs- day night. Striking Prisoners Placed in Solitary PARCHMAN, Miss. ) —For- woods yet, financially ° speaking, but our positign has greatly im- proved in the last 12 months,” a said. seven-member committee to protest having its $35,- 000 county appropriation dropped. Tuesday's afternoon session will be the third for the committee as it seeks to cut more than a million dollars from its preliminary budg- et of $13,997,018. The cut is necessary, officials say, because the county didn’t get its $6.47 in tax allocation on which the budget was prepared, and since ‘additional soufces of tax relief from the state don’t “Kuler gave some figures con- trasting this year’s finances with last year’s, but pointed out that the hospital still is not in position“ te fund depreciation. “We won’t have 4 balanced op- eration, with depreciation funded, until after the remodeled east wing is in use and our revenues climb.” * * * In the latest accounting period, ending Aug. 15, the hospital showed a $20,958 operating profit, pushing the operating profit this year up appear forthcoming. Noel A. Buckner, chairman of the Board for the Clinic, said the county’s action will probably mean closing two of the clinic’s branches next year and the third in 1961.6 * * * “You just can’t throw 15 years of work down the drain because the Board of Supervisors has an Oedjgus complex,’’ Buckner said. NOTHING NEW Bickering over what the clinic —established tn 1944 — should re- ceive from the county is nothing new. A threat of closed doors hung over the clihic last year when su- pervisors allocated $32,500 instead of the $72,000 the clinic had asked. ‘ + Walks. - Ox Pentiae Press Phote fures. And as We does so, his thoughts go back to SO St Seay ot it WHR Ont Ge ky te. For next year it requested $65,000. Robert ¥. Moore, chairman of the Board of Auditors, said the clinié was cut out entirely be- cause “they have been ¢ arrying over a balance of more than we've been giving them each year.”’ Whether the clinic will be on the outside looking in will rest fi- sali visors when it meets to approve the .1960--hugget “flext month. Buckner said’ the clinic probe (Continued on Page 2, Col. Man Nearly Hits Iwo in Fatal 2-Story Fall” yesterday from his second - room at 124% S. Saginaw St. sidewalk. Tt: dead man was identified by Pontiac Police as Fernando Ochoa, 65. to $27,998, Euler said. This is not taking into account). depreciation of $12,800 a month, or $162,400 so far this year, he noted. IN RED LAST YEAR By comparison, at the same time last year the hospital was $110,585 in. the red, not including depreciation. Now the hospital has $152,000 in cash on hand, said Euler, while a year ago it had only $48,917, barely. enough to meet bi-weekly payrolls. This year’s operating profit has been achieved. despite a $52,000 cash refund the hospital had to give Michigan Hospital Service (Blue Cross) because of an over- payment last year, a pointed out, Higher . occupancy alee and a cut in expenses figure -behind this year’s profit, Euler said. The occupancy rate this year has ty-two rebellious prisoners were in “solitary confinement. at the ‘state penitentiary here today after more than 150 staged a sitdown strike in protest bver the slaying of one convict. The demonstration came after the shooting of prisoner William Jenkins Jr. of Oxon Hill, Md. * * *~ A trusty serving as guard, R. +B. Hall of Prentiss, said he shot Jenkins Wednesday - when Jenkins tried to escape, ° Charge 8-Year-Old Girl With Grand Larceny BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) — An eight-year-old girl was. charged with burglary and = larceny yesterday. Juvenileeofficer D. R. McClesky said her two, four and six-year- old brothers helped her break in- to a sandwich shop and steal $10 in money, cookies, weiners , and ( (Continued on n Page 2, Col. 1) chewing tobacco. nally with the full Board of Super- A laid-off worker fell to his death story He narrowly missed hitting two men who were standing on the He was pronounced Sead at Pon- ‘60 Pontiacs September 25 was reveale sell 425,000 units in 1960, compared to ie 000 . in 1959. Questioned about the anticipated impact of small car sales, Knud- sen said he wasn't worried about them. = Public to See the New October | d as the announcement date for the 1960 Pontiac yesterday at a press preview of the new model. Cars will be in showrooms on Oct. 1. In speaking to automotive writers from all over the nation yesterday, Pontiac General Manager. Semon E. Knudsen said he hoped to+———— Premature Blast Wrecks Space Rescue Test | tiac General Hospital by Oakland) ithough the car is approx- County Deputy Coroner Dr. Leon! imately the same length, width | today and wrecked an attempt to F. Cobb. and height, it has been -rede- test rescue methods for the men .| Ochoa suffered a fractured skull ‘signed completely, and is quite | Who will make the first space and a broken neck. Dr. Cobb ruled} qiteerent from ‘the very popalar flights, acc a the death a suicide. 1959 | model. , : Weta. ‘When the victim fell, he brushed Russell Schlusler, 47, 934% S. Sag- inaw St., and Odell Therp, 38,- of 478 Oakland Ave., who were talk- ing. on the’ sidewalk. It continues to feature wide- track wheels, with the wheels five inches further apart than most other auto makes. - . aa’ ° 6am 8 OL Ome... sss . 86 TV B.8.Wcces cece 78 hee . 89 8 a.m.., oo. 16 lpm... U1 9 am... , .80 16 OM. ...c8 ccs. 83 Thuteday in Pentiae 4As recorded downtown) « Highest temperature ............... 93 Lowest temperature .......... 69 Mean temperature ... weeiciect vn 61 Wreather—Hot, humid, ‘sunny. One Year Ago “Age tn —— Highest temperature ...... UL Lowest temperature ....... Weleeewas 63 ate —<— TOCUFOE ocee. ve eere i rt er—Rain., eel “Mighest and ‘Lewest Temperatures This “Date in 86 Years 100 jn 1056 - - 4 in 1876 ture Chart uette §8§=685 12 $1 72 Beh. 86 %% 91 is 92 an a 92 py "i “in Gas Chamber | Stephen Nash, Killer of 1, Takes Last Walk < San Quentin Today By HARRY JUPITER SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP)— After running most of his life, Stephen Nash was scheduled to walk to his death today in the; San Quentin prison gas chamber. The . execution was set for noon (Pontiac Time). The gaunt, hypndtic-eyed knifer spent the last two of his 36 years of life in isolation on death row— isolated because of his fellow mur- derers sickened of his boast that he killed at least'11 men and boys. He never had a visitor, and there was no one to claim ne “body. * * * : Arrested on Los Angeles skid road in 1956 when police found a bloody knife in his pocket, Nagh admitted killing 10-year-old Larry Hice under a Santa Monica pier and John Berg, 26, in Berg’s Long Beach apartment. ~ Convicted—of -those two mur- ders, he confessed many others. Three, in San Francisco, Sacra- mento. and Richmond, Calif., were |, verified by police. They believed the others, too, but found no proof. Nash relished describing the way his victims died, just as he relished his last dinner of steak and pie. When Superior Judge H. Burton Noble of Los Angeles sentenced Nash to die, he called the lanky, toothless stabber ‘‘the most evil person who ever appeared in my court.””» Nash merely smiled, in the same -way he did when he refused spiritual comfort on his last day of life. Finances roma at Pontiac- General (Continued From Page One) averaged 92.72 per cent, while last year it was only 84.12. The hos- pital's operating expenses this year total $2,269,912, while last year the figure was $2,403,473. * * ® + With the higher occupancy, the year total $2,588,947, while last year’s were $2,363,946. This year the hospital has been able to set up $210,156 in reserves to cover its’ accounts receivable. Euler noted, and another $348,000 for anticipated losses on state and county patients, bad debts and pa- tient costs not covered by Blue Cross. »| medical HIGHLAND ESTATES FROM UP HIGH — The new Highland Estates Subdivision is a picture of attractive orderliness as seen from the air. Its boundaries are M-59 on the north, Airport road on the west, and Elizabeth Lake road on the south. About 200 homes have been built or are in the process of construction. The ’ a Gave J ae subdivision has room for still another 100 houses. Names of important Scottish places and people have been used for subdivision streets. The homes range in size from five to eight rooms. The subdivision has blacktop sree sidewalks, curbs, gutters and storm sewers. a ee of Pontiac Chief resident is Dr. year of surgery Ee in Aug ust, 1960 The appointments include 12 other resident and assistant resi- dent positions and 11 inierns. Resident physicians are: year resident in surgery. jan is a graduate of St. honorary member of work. year resident in surgery. education at Union Medical Col'ege. resident in obstetrics-zynecology, M ost ol Nation Due for Sticky _ Humid Weekefid By The Associated Press It's going to be hot and humid again today in most: areas from the Rockies to the Atlantic Coast. No early general break in the long spell of muggy weather ap- peared, Temperatures in the 80-90 degree range were indicated again inmost of the swelter belt. A sticky weekend appeared in store for most areas. Temperatures during the night in the warm-humid air were most- ly in the 70s except for parts of the Dakotas. Readings were in the 50s and 60s from the Pacific Coast to the Rockies. The mercury climbed to 101 de- grees at Pickstown, S.D., Thurs- day. The 90° at Buffalo, N.Y., was a record\for the date while Pikeville, in e ern = tucky, baked in a reading® Precipitation during .the was widely scattered and ly light. The more general precipitation belt was in the far northwest, with showers from Montana into Wash- ington and Oregon. Other wet spots were mostly in the southern tier of states from Arizona through Georgia and in the north- ern Great Lakes region.. The Weather Fall es Weather Bureas Report PONTIAC AND~ VICINITY — Partly cloudy 7, and continued warm and humid teday,’tenight and temerrew. Chance of thundershewers temerrew afterneen or oan 2 Winds southwesterly 8-14 miles ming light tenight. High teday 93. lon tenight 74. Hi; Teday in Pontiac a temperature preceding 8 a. m At @ am: Wind velociay iw m p.h. Direction—West. Sun sets Friday at 7:25 p.m Sun rises Gaturday at 846 am. Moon sets Saturday at 10 am. Moon rises Friday at 9:02 p.m. mat igh temerrew 97. Revaters , Temperatures 7 Sovettcssssesas Oregon ‘Medical School. Dr. Robert Leichtman is be- gining his residency in internal medicine. He is alumnus of the University of lowa Medical Schqol. Dr. Wendell L. Leach is enter- ing his second year of surgery residency. He completed h’s med- ical education at Wavn> Sta e Un- iversity Medical School. Ta * * Dr. Raymond L. Mavor is a second year resident in obstetrics- gynecology and a graduate ‘of the College of Medical Evanzelists, Medical School, Los Angcles. Dr. Taylor McKenzie is begin- ning his assistant res dency surgery. He Medicine. complete his residency tiac. a Dr. Nicholas C.-Rendziperis is entering his seconi-year in sur- gery residency. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Medicine. tant residency in patho’azy. ma Medical School in Japan. Dr. Rabindra K. ° completed two years of in‘ernal medicine residency and: is obstetrics-zynecology. He is Medical School. The new interns are: Dr. Franz Bauer ‘Switzerland: Dr. Avelina P. tanislao of the Philippin- Islands; Dr. Harold. E. ital of Washington, of Geneva, Twenty-four appointments to the house staff of Pontiac General Hogpita] for the training period 1959-60 today were ‘announced by Dr. John Marra, medical director. Robert C. Buslepp, a graduate of the Univer- sity of Michigan School of Medicine. Buslepp will complete his fourth Dr. George Berberian, a third Berber- Joseph Medical School, Lebanon. He is an the New "|York Academy of Scicnces and a Coller Award winner for research Dr. Hyoun C. Chai is a third From Seoul, Korea, Chai completed his Severance Dr. Earl Gregoire, a th’ rd-year is a graduate of the University of in L is a graduate of Baylor Medical College School of Dr. Donald C. Niederiuecke will in ob- stetrics-gynecology in October. He will enter private practice in Pon- Dr. Minoru Sato beg'ns his assis- He completed his cduca'ion at Okaya- Sharan ‘has now entering his second year of resi- *jdency in pathology, uate of Patna University Medical He is a grad- College, ae ia. * * Dr. on F, Wilker is begin- ning his assistant residency in a graduate of the University © Iowa Es- Appoint 24 to Staff Hospital D.C.; Dr. Antonio A. Laxa of the Philippine Islands; Dr. Tad E. Lonergan of Glendale, Calif.; Dr. Angeles; Dr. Severina M. Ramos of Manila; Dr. Stephen Schweins- berg of Ann Arbor; Dr. Charles C. Terry of Washington D.C.; and Dr. -|Hanna-Liisa Woodward of Lonaa, Finland. Ready to Protest Cut in Clinic Funds (Continued Froii Pages One) will be left with an estimated $67,- 500 in other funds for 1960 should the full board go along with the auditors’ recommendation. Hurting the clinic in the cut, Buckner said, is the fact that it depends on local funds to match state funds. * * * Ironically, Fred W. Smith, Royal Oak supervisor and chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, served on the clinic’s board from 1955-57. x «* * When informed of the proposed cut,. Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore, who just last week steered a proposal for more help in the state for troubled kids,’said it was ‘“‘quite a catastrophe.” k ok “We need doubling of facilities not lessening of them,"’ the judge said. Buckner criticized Smith's committee for not inviting his group to a hearing before the cut was made. In hearings Wednesday and Thursday, Smith and the other six members have listened to four de- partment heads and several super- visors as they tackled the unpopu- lar job of taking money away from departments. They have heard criticism and praise, but mostly pleas that certain items not be cut. : * * * At the conclusion of the past hearings, Smith said it did appear that more money was being added than taken away. ' Besides the clinic, which has branches in Pontiac, Birming- ham and Royal Oak, the audi- tors suggest:making a big dent in the $2,000,000-plus' 1960 ap- propriation for the county's So- cial Welfare Department. Moore, in suggesting a _ trim- ming here of $533,700, distributed sheets to Smith's committee sno ing a welcomed and gradual de- crease in welfare ‘expenditures for the first seven months of this year. The proposed cut is being made, Smith said, in hopes the load will continue to lessen next year. * * * Also on tap for Tuesday’s hear- ing is the appearance of welfare officials. Whether they plan to pro- test their cut could not be deter- commissioners were busy at a meeting today. Girl Drowns in Pool know,” Chief William” Stone * * ’ No One Would Help Her MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) — A fite chiet says several persons stood around a motel swimming pool and watched, wifhout attempting to save, a drowning 14-year-old “Why some one didn't dive in the relatively shallow water and get her out before it was too late, I'll never girl. said yesterday. © * -® Called by the motel manager, the chief pulled out Michele Cline of San Anselmo, Calif., but she failed to re- spond to artificial respiration, . * “Pve never seen anything like it in my life,” the chief continued. “My God, you'd think that at least one person would havé had brains enough to get the ygiri out at once.” x &. . , A young boy who could not swim saw the ‘girt ‘alone in. the pool andéran to the motel office. - The girl had-been staying at the motel in this town with her annt, Mrs. Alice Smith of San Jose, Calif. : “4 Gharbaaran R. Mathura of Trini- dad; Dr. Alfonso Puyana of Los; mined as the welfare office said Pontiac Schools Have Funds Won't Be Affected by Deadlock - in Lansing in Fall Classes From Our News Wires Several The Pontiac school system will on 1959-60 school aid credited with putting many school districts on an increasingly critical financial ba- sis. Harold R. Brown, fiscal officer in the State Department of Public Instruction, said he is “hearing al, the time’’ from administrators who talk about a delayed start of fall classgs. Louis Schimmel, financial ad- visor and member of the Pon- tiac Board of Education, today said the Pontiac school system is in no dangér of such a delay. Schimmel attributed Pontiac's safe financial position to sound planning by the city and the Board. “The school districts in trouble are the ,ones which don’t collect some victims, have become entangled in blood- not be immediately affected by|spattered deadly violence during the legislative impasse in Lansing, the past 24 hours. Laverne Bryant, 44, was stabbed night by his 18- year-old stepson during an argu- to death last ment in a tent at Six Mile Lake, near Felch, Bryant's home, State Police said the. stepson, Stanley Brodies, has admitted stabbing Bryant 12 times with a 312 inch hunting knife. The youth said he turned on his beating Brodie’s mother, 36. waitress from Michigan fee shop where she worked last night, husband surrendered to a detec- tive. their local taxes until December,” explains Schimmel. ‘‘They have to depend a great deal on state aid to open class for the fall term. “In .Pontiac we collect our taxes beginning July 1 for the 1959-60 year. In that way we face no dilemmas when the fall term rolls around.” The increasingly acute situation faced by the Legislature and other |school districts in the state stems {from 2 principal: facts, accord- ing to Brown. 1. The State already has fallen 40 million dollars behind in school aid distributions for fiscal 1959-60 a source of up to 80 per cent of operating revenues in some dis- tricts. 2. Local borrowing power -has been sharply curtailed by failure of the Legislature so far to pass a schoo] aid bill, the chief borrow- ing instrument. Last year in July and August, borrowings were heavy to prepare schools financially for the opening of the fall term. This year they have lacked credit. City.Man Hurt as Blanket Towrope Breaks A car being towed by another overturned today when the tow- rope broke. And small wonder, said Flint State Police Post officers. Troopers reported the cars | were traveling at excessive speed Y using a twisted blanket for a towrope. The driver of the lead car, How- ard Henderson, 19, of 457 Mon- tana Ave., suffered severe face and back cuts. He and his companion, Travis Schultz, 24, same address, were held for reckless driving. The pair set out from Pontiac towing Schultz's disabled car. They had covered almost 30 miles when the ‘‘rope’’ snapped, Henderson's car skidded through a- fence on U.S. 10 four miles south of Grand Blanc, Schultz's car overturned, | Woman Bank Teller ont Thief Takes Off NEW YORK (UPI)—Bank teller Mrs. Mary Downes fainted yester- day and Gerewih thwarted a holdup. "Mrs. Downes blacked out. when a man handed her*a note, saying he had_a gun and demanding As-ghe fell, she set ofi an alarm gong that sent the bandit on the run: He escaped, emptyhanded. Asks Bids at Porcupine servation Department is asking for sealed bids on lease of the ski shelter concession at the Porcu- pine Mountains State Park. More, than 28,000 skiers visited the park last season and gfoss concession LANSING — The State Con- |“ STABBED TO DEATH rendered to detective Hilton Geer. His bride, Shirley Jean Slade, employe was assailant. Frightened patrons’ watched the attack. Geer said Slade telephoned him and offered to surrender if Geer would come aloné, service station in north - Okla and Slade got into the car. a Michigan minister who stabbed a bride honeymooning at Abraham Lincoln shrine. Police said Glen Sampson, son of the Rev. Orval Sampson of the Congregational Church. of Hart, showed no remorse over the attack on Mrs. Bruce Brain- ard, 25, of Hamden, Conn. worry in the world,” police said, “He isn't the least concerned.” her chest. said he was ‘‘giggling’”’ made his escape. HEARD SCREAMS 2 Victims Are*Dead Many State Citizens Involved in Stabbings Michigan residents — others the doers— stepfather because Bryant was Doris, At Oklahoma City a 17-year-old was stabbed to death in the hotel cof- and five hours later her Charles Slade, 21, of Flint, sur- was stabbed to death and another critically injured when he tried to stop the girl's The detective drove alone to a homa City. He opened the car door At New Salem State Park, Ill., a mental test was being arranged today for the 13-year-old son of this “He acts like he hasn’t got a Glen stole into a bathhouse yes- terday morning and grabbed Mrs. Brainard from behind. He clamped one hand over her mnuth to-stifle her screams and with the other drove a six-inch steak knife into, Mrs. Brainard, bleeding profuse- ly, slumped on the floor as the boy ran from the bathhouse. She as he A passerby heard the woman’s screams and found her lying on the floor. She was taken to a nearby doctor who said the wound was not serious, although the knife came within a half-inch of her heart, In Battle Creek, a Battle Creek divorcee, nude except for shoes early~ today. ing as Helen Lutz, 38, Red Infiltrates Cuba MINNEAPOLIS # — A USS. ; intelligence spokesman _report- ed teday.that Moscow sent a Soviet intelligence officer to Cu- ba last May to guide local Communists on how to pene- trate the government of Fidel Castro. io - ; SB een, Sic ak ee fe ae te arts oy pe ae ine : bonne pe rs Bases =f ¥ : ee @ ; f . ee : : Ugo ‘ im ; 7 _THE RONTTAC. PRESS. PRIDAY, AUGUST 2 2, 1959 tale at The Day in Birmingbam © announced the school’ gin Sept. 10 with students attend day. High school same time, at the schools. on the first day: High school 8 a.m. with dis- missal at 2:30 p.m. Junior high school — 8:30 a.m. dismissal at 3 p.m. Elementary Sch o o | 80:10 a.m., dismissal at 3:40 p.m. BIRMINGHAM ‘— The Bloom- field Hills Board af Education has calendar for the coming year. Classes will be- ing only morning. sessions the first and junior high} 5 school offices are-now open daily for registration. Textbooks will go on sale at all schools Monday. Bus scheduleg will. be available at the Fifteen new 60-passenger buses will go into operation on opening Here is a schedule of class times Kindergarten pupils at Vaughan, |Reveal School. Calendar | ‘for Bloomtield Hills = £ In other action the Board of Education approved purchase of a tuture school site across from Kirk in the Hills, sale of 1959 School .| bonds, hiring of 30 new teachers, construction of a school bus park- ing lot just south of the high school building, and the hiring of a school bus dispatcher. Temporary boundary lines for elementary: schools are as follows: Students residing south of Quarton and west of Telegraph reads will attend Wing Lake School, Those residing east of Woodward avenue and south of Hickory Grove road and to a line just west of Eastway road will go to Eastover School. Those living north of Hickory Grove road and east from Tele- graph to a line just west of East- way road will. attend Hickory Grove School. Hickory Grove, Eastover and Wing Lake schools whose names begin with the letters A through L will enter school Sept. 10 at 9 a.m. Those whose names begin with letters M through Z will entér on Sept. 11 at 9 a.m. Pine Lake School kindergartners will enter school Sept. 14 at 9 a.m. Parents who have not yet en- rolled their children in kindergar- ten may do so now at the re- spective schools, They must bring a birth or baptismal certificate with them. The youngsters should have physical examinations either before school starts or early in the schoel year. Parents of children in kinder- garten and first and second are asked to see that, for the first three days of school, their young- sters who are riding school ‘buses have a note pinned on them giving their name, address, telephone number and bus number, Attending Pine Lake School will be puplis living in the area from the western end of the schoo! district at the Middle Belt-_ on the north side of the Long Lake road to and including the Kirkway area and including those in the area south of Up- per and Lower Long Lakes. Vaughan School will take pupils living in all areas not listed other- wise, with the exception of the sixth grade which will attend the Hickory Grove School. eim|City Editor Unaware of Corvair Plot and bleeding profusely frorh a slashed thrpat, staggered into an American Legion clab for helpi Startled patrons summoned | po- lice who rushed her to Leila Hos- pital where she was reported in fair. condition -after - emergency surgery, Unable to speak, the woman identified herself in writ- held Sept. 8 and 9. * * * in the Hickory Grove School unt school. latter part of January, A teachers work shop will be The school board also announced that the sixth grade at Vaughn Elementary School will be housed such time as the new elementary school on Quarton road is com- pleted. Wing Lake. school will con- tinue crowded until completion of the new school which is hoped for in time for the second semester. Construction of the new addi- tion to the Junior High School is nearing completion, noted the schoo] board. It will be ready for the first scheduled day of Completion of the Hickory Grove School addition is planned for the ANN ARBOR ® — “I didn't know he intended to ‘shoot the Corvairs. But he did. And I'm delighted.”’ That was the reaction of Richard H. Emmons, City Ed- itor of the Ann Arbor News, to the aerial photograph of Chev- rolet’s new small Corvair autos taken by his reporter - photo- grapher, Richard C. Kerr. The photo was transmitted yesterday on the Associated Press Wirephoto network. .» The Corvairs are being built at nearby Ypsilanti by the Gen- il small cars were a_ closely guarded secret and are not scheduled for public showing until this fall. 1 Bids for Schoolcraft program, the bids ranged from about $118,00 to $130,000. They were referred to the George D. Mason Co. for recommendation. Contracts will be awarded at a special Board meeting next Thursday. - Low bidder and last year's in- surance policy holder, the C. A. Lefler Insurance Co. was awarded the bus insurayce contract for $1,920. Eleven bids for the construction of five additional rooms to the Elementary School received by the Waterford Town- ship Board of Education last night. Part of a $5 million construction Watetford Board Receives Construction the ot room as last year to th Society for Handicapped Childre ford Village School. in a building at the rear of Water- Contracts for 28 additional and * * those cars a month ago from a road leading to Willow Run Air- port when I was driving out there,” the 28-year-old Kerr said. “I knew I never would be permitted inside the~canvas- walled field to make closeup pic- tures. But. I also knew I could get them from the air.” e| “Kerr told Emmons he was go- 0! but “I told him I was going to take some other aerials. I didn’t want to disclose I was. after the Corvairs until I really had them.” eral Motors Corp. division. The “I noticed what I thought were , ing on an-aerial photo mission - replacement rs were ap- proved by the board, The con- tract for student insurance went to Al Pauly of the Federal Life and Casualty Co. Pupils will pay a $2 insurance policy fee. has designed most of the schools in Waterford. Township, the George D. Mason Co., was awarded a con- tract for the five new rooms to be jadded to the Schoolcraft School. Conservationists to Visit LANSING uw — A group of 32 conservationists from 19 countries will visit Michigan next week to. The chitectural firrn that|study watershed managemert same prcttect practices. They will visit Michigan State University and. the Cedar River watershed project. The group 1s —- by the United Nations. The gasoline and motor oil con- tract was awarded to the Sacony- Mohil Oil Co. The fuel oil contract was awarded to the Aurora Gas Co. - The Board accepted the resigna- tion of principal of the Covert Ele- mentary School, George C. Tra- montin, who has been named a staff assistant at the Graduate School of Education.of the Univers- ity of Chicago. He will . assume his position there Sept. 16. He had been the Covert School principal for the last three years. e: = the molding of the comedian’s the Smithsonian Institute's Jimmy holds the sales were near $32,000. erynns else ‘in the joint.” Physical Anthropology department. 2; ’ oe ees eipiind acai Aart get's ton! od en, says Jimmy . : Durante, so_I gotta preserve it for posterity. The occasion was famous nose for presentation to and remarks, “it'll overshadow pe aaa Nae Oe ee The Board authorized the use of. ' seats 3 (2) 14° Freeland ... (1) 12'Preeland .... (1) 12° Aero-Craft . ooo eeee SLAYBAUGH’S SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE OUR “WAS” and “IS” SALE! Is (1) 17° Aero-Craft Canoe . ae $196.00 (1) 16° Pere-Marquette Scou ‘ ‘seats 2 meer (1) 8x8SunDeck........$198 $158.40 (1) 8x 12Sun Deck .......$258 $206.40 (2) 12° Aqua-Swan Model B-3 ° * (1) 15° Aero-Glas, fiberglas, $595 $476.00 (1) Model “U” Aero-Line . (1) Thompson Lapchine . USED CHEROKEE BOATS (2) 14 FEET with WINDSHIELD, "STEERING ** © ee WAS $180.00 2 -....$165 $132.00 -....$149 $119.20 -... $198 $110.40 i. .$149 | $119.20 ..$285 $228.00 ..$435 $368.00 $495. os Pe we iA OPENS A.M.-5:30 Pm. — FR. UNTIL 9 P.M. NOTICE: WE WILL CLOSE AT NOH SAT. SEPT Sth Lae Signa nc ag lb Ft a lao a i age al A lg gig te gO igs y = . ; ° : ) J : Ly | ’ ij ? ts J . ; . - 5 cs : 2 . - ag Fi wy : J Ne THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1959 i hs ae ea r » & i te SRE RE ER RR RR aS Bh ARE a ak ‘Princess Margaret Marks 29th Birthday & BALMORAL, Scotland (UPI) . —Princess Margaret celebrated - her 29th birthday today without “ prospects of ending the most ’ talked about spinsterhood in the United Kingdom. But she did get an orchid corsage from a mysterious American admirer. The Aberdeen florist who handled the order refused to di- vulge the name of the sender who was said to have given the princess a couple of dozen red roses recently, - “‘We have a standing order to send flowers on special oc- casions to the princess,’’ said a spokesman for Stotts Florist. But that is all he would say. * * r There was nothing to indicate that anything in the way of a serious romance was in the wind. The petite princess has at her disposal all the money she needs, plus cars, planes and castles. But unlike most British girls her age she has neither a husband nor a steady beau. NOT LINKED . Since she quit Peter Townsend in 1955 because he was a di- * vorced man, the pretty, petite * princess has not been linked in serious terms with any other. In fact, everything has point- — - ed to her being resigned to © spinsterhood anda life of per- © forming official duties. Ps . * * * Royal spokesmen said there ;¢, was nothing unusual on the pro- gram for her birthday today, just the usual family gathering. Queen Mother Elizabeth ar- | rived at Balmoral Castle—the royal family’s summer home — this morning from her own Scot- < tish castle at May. 3 GIFTS AT NOON Already at Balmoral were . Margaret's sister and brother- © in-law, Queen Elizabeth and * Prince Philip, and her nephew * and niece, Prince Charles and ~ Princess Anne. Packages from the family usually are opened at an elab- orate noon lunch and then a few friends are likely to drop in for tea or dinner. Since Margaret celebrated her * lith birthday British news- papers have speclulated on pos- sible candidates for her hand but today there was not very much material even for specu- lation, * * *® The mass circulation Daily Mirror summed up the situation with this headline over a big picture of the princess: “29: Alone.” Pentiac Press Photo - Fears She May Risk Sept. 14 are, left to right. David Oates, Todd Rich, Harold Jacobsen and Debbie Girardin. Getting a prerue of the fun and games to be offered at All Saints Nursery School which opens President ‘Cultural Brainwashing’ Elected ihe | | Nursery School Criticism By EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post:- Is there anything improper about a girl’s. stopping for a boy at his house if they are going to a party together and she has the car? I believe you will be the first to recognize the silli- ness of his having to leave home hours before necéssary in -order to go a distance to the girl's house, when she will not be driving out of her way to stop for him instead. How- ever, my mother feels that by doing this sort of thing a girl will be talked about by the people who like to gossip. * x x Answer: I see no great ob- jection to her doing this on an occasion such as the one you speak of, provided he is some- one who goes to her house at other times. And of course provided that he drives her to her house with her after the party, and then gets himself home by Ais own means. Dear Mrs. Post: My father and mother who live out of town came to visit me and my family recently. My aunt and her husband, who also live here, invited my parents to their house for dinner and asked my husband and* me to come in later that evening to play cards with them all. J felt very hurt over this and thought my aunt very rude for not including my husband and me in the dinner invitation. * * * Answer: She certainly was rude to you unless she ex- plained that she was not in- viting you until after dinner because she could not possibly make room for you at dinner. Dear Mrs. Post: When din- ing in a restaurant, is it ever proper to dip a corner of one’s napkin into a glass of water after eating in order to wipe one’s fingers should they be- come sticky and no finger bowl if served? * * * Answer: Rather than dip the napkin into the glass, it would be permissible to hold the corner of your napkin in your left hand and tip your glass of water slightly over it — just enough to dampen the corner. Stitles Young Creativity EAST LANSING (?/—Kids been acting up lately? Don’t clamp down too hard. Brainwashing may stifle their creativity. “Polite, cultural brainwashing” is snuffing out the spark of youthful creativity, contends a re- search psychologist at Michigan State University. * * Dr. Harold H. Anderson notes that “in children creativity is universal; non-existent.” among adults is is almost Anderson has edited and contributed to a new book, ‘Creativity and Its Cultivation”, published this week, * e * 4 He writes that “the so-called socializing, the po- lite cultural brainwashing of children, is made up of small incidents, small obstructions, small deflec- tions.” “Out of such deprivations of spontaneous ex- perience,” Anderson indicates, “children become uncreative, unimaginative, self-conscious, self-pro- tecting conformists.” * * The MSU psychololgist maintains brainwashing is not a new device but “a technique of child train- ing in the Western cultures for centuries.” Anderson says cultural brainwashing of children at home and at school is not sudden, dramatic nor easily detected. * “But,” he continues, “after months and years, if the child has not revolted, the spirit becomes heavy, the motivation is sluggish and activity lacks direc- tion, meaning~er purpose. The spark of creativity becomes stifled.” Jo Ann Rohrbach .F eted Jo Ann Rohrbach, bride-elect of John G. Prosser, was feted with a bridal shower Wednes- day evening, given by her at- tendants, Loretta Lauinger, maid of honor, and brides- maids Mary-Jo McBrearty, Ruby Lawrence and Kathy Mc- Clelland. The event was held at the home of Mrs. James Rose in Lake Orion. * * x Miss Rohrbach is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Rohrbach of South Edith street, and her fiance is the - son of Mrs. Francis Dumas of Pine Lake and Dr. M. G. Prosser of Williams Lake. St. Michael Catholic Church will be the scene of the Sept. 12 wedding. Thursday evening Miss Rohr- bach was honored at a sur- prise party given by Mary-Jo McBrearty on Ogemaw road. - James Rose, Ruby Lawrence and Kathy McClelland also held a shower in her honor recently ee Guests for the Wednesday af- fair included Mrs. Bernard Amman, Mrs. Jerome Oullette and Mrs. Arthur Landry, all aunts of the bride-elect; Mrs. Katherine Duffley, her grand- mother: Mrs. Floyd Halpin. Rita Ann Halpin. Mrs. Charles Halpin, Mrs, Alfred Heck Sr. Mrs. Alfred Heck Jr.. Mrs. Margaret McClelland, Mrs. Carl Fox and Sheila Fox. Others were Mrs. Joseph Hayden, Mrs.’ Nuete Kilgore, Mrs. Charlies Lauinger, Mrs. Michael Lauinger, Mrs. Lee Pike, Mrs. Anthony Lauinger, Mrs. M. G. Prosser, Mrs. Mrs. Lee Ells- worth, Mrs. Cle West and Mrs. Dumias and Mrs. Rohr- bach. Mrs. Mary Thomas was elec- ted president of Zone 8 Past Presidents Club, MOMS of America at the meeting held Thursday evening at the Jos- lyn road home of Mrs. Arthur Burgess. Others elected were Mrs. Le- orna Ogg, vice president; Mrs. J. M. Nelsey, recording secre- tary; Mrs. Duncan McVean, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Frank Polasek, treasurer; Mrs. Vena Naugle, chaplain; Mrs. Samuel Sprague, director. The installation will be a joint affair at past presidents state parley on Sept. 9 in the Ameri- can Legion Hall. At the meeting Mrs. Sprague took part. and chaplain Mrs. Naugle gave a memorial for Mrs, Bessie Clark. Mrs. Harry Luxon will be hostess Oct. 15 at the home of her daughter Mrs. G. B. Prit- chard of Second avenue. 2 Shower Fetes Mrs. Reynolds Before Stork Mrs. R. O. Reynolds was honor guest at a stork shower held Wednesday evening at the home of Patricia Phelps on Stanley avenue. Rita Anne Flicker was cohostess. A “This is Your Life’’ baby book was presented to Mrs. Reyfiolds by the guests; who included Mrs. Robert Alessi, Mrs. Leon Kramer, Mrs. Thom- as Thornberry, Mrs. Robert Flicker, Mrs. Melvin McKin- non and Mrs. Fred Beckwith. Others were Mrs. A. A. Phelps, Dianne Flicker, Mary Anne Reynolds, Mary Cath- erine Donahue, Veronica Clan- cy, Mrs. Leo Coyle, Mrs. Den- nis Daugherty, Mrs. Ernest Pruente, Mrs. Frank Thorn- berry, Mrs. Fred Hurturbise, Mrs. Roger MacQueen and Mrs. John Clever. Mothersingers Hold Picnic Mrs.. Charles Chapman of Silverdowne drive was hostess to Pontiac Mothersingers Tues- day evening for a cooperative picnic. Mrs. Russell Jacobson, Mrs. Grace Reddeman and Mrs. Norman Davison assisted the hostess. Members have decided to re- sume rehearsals for the winter _season on Sept. 15. On Sept. 8 tt: group will meet at the home of Mrs. Ranson Robb on Sashabaw road. ae Couple Mark 40 Years Wed Mr. and Mrs.-H. E. Hotch- kiss of Chandler avenue were surprised on their 40th wed- ding anniversary Sunday with a dinner party given by their six children, Earle, Herbert, Phyllis Stewart, Dorothy Schroeder, Leslie and Larry, at the Earle Hotchkiss home on Williams Lake road. Attending besides their sons and daughters were 12 grand- children. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Irving Tubbs ‘of New Hudson; Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hotchkiss of Lake Orion; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hotchkiss of Lapeer; Mr. and _Mrs. Elmer Hotchkiss of Ox- ford; Mr. and Mrs. J, A. J _ omens Section. St. Patrick Cathedral to Be Scene Judy Wood Will Wed in New York By RUTH SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD HILLS —Ma- donna Chapel of St. Patrick Cathedral in New York will be the setting for the wedding September 9 of Judy Wood and Louis Moleila. Judy is the daughter of Mrs. John G. Wood of Lone Pine Hill and the late Mr. Wood. She was graduated from Kings- wood School and attended Ben- nett Junior College, Milbrook, NeY: The bridegroom - elect is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Molella of Millbrook, N. Y. His brother Philip will be best man at the ceremony which will be followed by a recep- tion at Hotel Plaza. Louis is caning here this weekend to meet Judy’s young friends at a cocktail party Saturday in the Wood home. The couple will sail, Sept. 11, on the SS United States for Paris where they will live ‘after traveling on the Con- tinent. Judy’s sister Mrs. George T. Trumbull Jr, will be her ma- tron of honor and only at- tendant and Mr. Trumbull will give his sister-in-law in mar- riage. The Rev. Francis E. Stack of St. Hugo of the Hills Church will fly to New: York to perform the ceremony. Another guest in the Wood home this weekend will be Judy's close friend Ann Em- ory of Woodstock, Ill. Among close friends plan- ning to go to New York for he wedding are Dr. and Mrs. farold R. Roehm, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Newburg and their daughter Judy, the A. C. Girards and’ their daughter Shelach, the Joseph Flahertys and Mrs. Wood. Judy and the Trumbulls will fly down Sept. 6. *® * * Many plans are being made far parties to fete Mr, and Mrs, Robert W. Budd, form- er Bloomfield Hills residents, who will spend the holiday weekend with Mr. and Mrs. John B. Poole of Rathmor drive. ; Mr. and Mrs. Poole will give a cocktail: party for their guests Friday, Sept. 4. -Mr. and Mrs. John W. Richardson will give a cocktail party the following day in their Benning- ton drive home, later taking their guests to the dinner dance at Bloomfield Hills Country Club. * * * Mr. and Mrs. David W. Lee are back from a trip to Cali- fornia where Mrs. Lee visited her brother-in-law and sister ¢ Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Col- " lings in Pasadena. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Au- oo dette have invited guests for - a cocktail and supper party Sunday, Sept. 6 in their home on Harsdale drive. Mr. and Mrs. Graham J. Grateam are spending this weekend at The Homestead, Hot Springs, Va. Mrs. Gra- ham, who just returned from a ten day visit in Maine, will attend the Bath County Horse Show. Parents to Give ‘Son Open House Army Private Dale Payne will be honered at an apen house Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. given by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Payne of Winton drive. ® * * Private Payne has just com- pleted basic training at Fort Hood, Tex.,*where he will re- turn for duty on Aug. 28. Friends and relatives have been invited to attend the gathering. Clean Cleaner, Too Vacuum cleaners are fine for cleaning, but remember they need cleaning, too. Empty the dust bag often to insure good cleaning suction, advise home management specialists. Opens Sept. 14 at All Saints All Saints Nursery Schoool will hold its first classes Sept. 14. Children 3 to 4 years old will attend school Tues- day and Thursday mornings. go on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. The school is run under the Parent-Teacher Co-op system. with Mrs. Robert Girardin as full time teacher. Enrollment is still going on Children 4 to 5 years olf will for the coming yea Any- one interested may contact Mrs. S. J. Bridge of Tilmore drive. Bride-to-Be Honored A miscellaneous shower honoring Carol Lawlor, bride- elect of Stanley Poniatowski, was given Tuesday evening by Kathy Jackson and Mary Theeringer at the Theeringer home on South Marshall street. Miss. Lawlor, daughter of Mrs. Hugh J. Lawlor of We- nonah drive and the late Mr. Lawlor, will marry the son 9f Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Ponia- towski of Orchard Lake Sept. 3 at St. Benedict Catholic Church. : Guests at the shower were Mrs. Lawlor, ‘Mrs. Harrison Hansen, Mrs. Joseph Lucykx, Mrs. Elizabeth Jackson, Mrs. Francis Theeringer, Jan Cop- page, Betty Lauinger, Kathy Hansen, Lorraine Hap and. Judy Gocha. Also attending were Myra Levering, Donna Carlson, Mary Soderberg and Elizabeth Moun- tain. o mms ~eveew 5 , 4 Green of Pontiac; and Mr. 5 : > : = 4 ; , ee Pak and Mrs. Sam Ressler and sons eel Thome, center, is back home with his family | tL : . rn or "Dwight Davis. left. of-E€ranhrook tour. The group sang in eight coun- of New Hudson: J sa te oa 1 Enstme; Company. With him are his father, Dr. Maurice — = Scho! Bloomfield Hills, ts a member tries. Pictured with Mr. Davis is Dr. Aiso~present' was geal . after spending RE GRMINEN 88 6 BUCERE (Ab Lemon Thome; his sister Maxine with Nymph, and ‘Mrs, * of the University af Michigan Men's Philip A. Duey, professor of voice and wee pvc — coupe ~ School of Music and playing with the, Rochester Thome, Joel has been appointed new conductor of Glee Club now compleung a European | condugtor of the. group. bridesrnaid 40 years ago. - Lhamber Orchestra and Rochester Summer Opera ithe Eastman percussion players. ia” PRO “4 4 o puta \ é a 4 geet : 3 y FA ; i —— . ; = y } j oe ' 1 eae : mee as ae wie . / : ‘ , aie : ] r , Se f : = w | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST a1; 1959 _ \ = is ; : TWENTY vu, $, War Department expendi-/% The average person's forehead tures during 1789-91 werel|is about twice as thick as: the $632,804. In 1944 and 1945 they| bones back of the ears, according : were 50 billion dollars eee the National Bureau of ‘Stand- 2 year. ards. i ¥ Kingsley Inn Announces New Fall Fashion| Programs Each Wednesday ’ With various showings and Designers Collections Commencing — Wednesday, August 26, 1959 with , ALVIN’s of Pontiac Presenting . First Exclusive Trunk showing of the Dalton _ Collection Meet the Powers Model of the Week Miss Michigan Universe — SUE WESTERGAARD Back to School Children’s Clothes The Lion Store _and the exclusive new Delman Shoe Collection HELEN FREUND Commentator UReserbe Your Table ‘Now — MI 4-1400 II PPABDBAA A A dh headed hed ded N EYE GLASSES CONTACT LENSES \) DR. CLARENCE I. PHILLIPS ) _ Optometrist \ 205 Capitol Savings and _ Loan Bldg. 715 West Huron Street PONTIAC, MICHIGAN PHONE FE 4-3241 (ffs IPA LAL LE O Ne LIMITED PARKING AT REAR OF BUILDING TL hd diode de ded dedeheduteuteudh y ‘a Pontiac Press Phote Kenneth Quick, a young English’ potter, has arrived for his first visit in the United States and has had the pleasure of meeting for the first time his cousin, Mrs. Harry Wacker of Scott Lake road. Mr. Quick operates a pottery at Cornwall and was a visit- ing instructor this summer at Haystack, a design center and workshop in Liberty, Maine. Noted English Potter Meets Kin on Visit Here Visiting at the home of his cousin, Mrs. Harry Wacker, whom he met for the first time this summer, is Kenneth Quick, an English potter who operates Tregenna Hill Pottery, St. ives, Cornwall, Currently, a study exhibition of his pottery is be- ing circulated in this country in connection with his visit. Mr. Quick, who came to the United States this summer as a visiting instructor at Hay- Stop today and see the eee val piece below: BUTTERNUT MAPLE ues now being offered in our Annual August Sale. Compare this special ~~ Ml stack, an art center in Lib- erty, Maine, is staying with his cousin and Mr, Wacker at their home on Scott Lake road. Mrs. Wacker is a Pontiac State Hos- pital employe. * * * Since beginning his career.in pottery, Mr. Quick’s work has been exhibited and sold at Lib- Robin, Nance, and Leach, St. Ives; and the Edinburgh Fes- tival, His ware has been seen before in this country in the Bernard Leach Traveling Ex- hibition in America, Mr. Quick worked at the Leach pottery | from the age of 14 until he was 24. * * x In the exhibition currently being shown are standard ware items for daily use’ including tea and coffee services, cas- seroles, fruit bowls, jam pots, honey jars, cactus pots and vinegar bottles. The work is hand-thrown stoneware. ‘Ground Him_ for Safety se . Abby By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN . DEAR ‘ABBY: My dad is in | his seventies and when he drives a car he is a danger on the streets. His reflexes are poor. I am afraid to let my children ride #e% When comes here for his vaca- tien and wants to drive, what can I do? His pride is tied up in his ability to drive. He thinks he is a ABBY good driver, but he is a threat. Others may have this problem, too. Can you help us? WORRIED DEAR WORRIED: life and limb (your children’s as well as his own) are more im- portant than his ‘“‘pride.”” Tell your Dad that because you love him and want him around for many more: years, you don't want him to drive. Get the rest of your foinay to back you up. This may seem cruel, but it is a lot kinder than letting him kill himself. (P. S. Nearly 37,000 people -were killed and 3 million were in- jured on American highways in 1958). * * * DEAR ABBY: Should I send -wedding invitations to people who live too far away to come to my wedding? I’m afraid if I don't send them an invitation they’ll feel hurt. »I am also afraid if I send them an invitation, know- ing they can’t come, it will look like I’m asking for a present. Could you advise me, please? OCTOBER BRIDE DEAR BRIDE: In recent years, the formal wedding in- vitation has taken on the con- notation of a ‘‘bill.”’ Send invitations only to those friends and relatives whom you feel will come te your wed- ding. Very few people are “hurt”? because: they fail to receive an invitation to a wed- ding they cannot attend. ue ‘DEAR ABBY: A very well- mannered and'cordial neighbor has deliberately trained her dog to do things on our lawn that she doesn't want done on her own lawn. She knows we disapprove strongly because she has stood in her doorway and watched us chase her dog from our yard several times. We are puzzled. How can dog owners train their dogs to destroy and mess the property of others? Your advice is needed. GREEN INK BUT NOT GREEN GRASS DEAR GREEN: You are mistaken. -Neighbors. who train their dogs to destroy and mess the property of others are neither well-man- nered nor. cordial. Don't rely on anything so subtle. as . “chasing’’ her dog from your yard to convey your disap- . | proval. Pay.your neighbor a visit and tell her that if she doesn’t keep her dog out of your yard, you will ask the law to help protect your property. Dad Determined to-Drive, but Dangerous DEAR ABBY: My four- year-old daughter was born two: years before her father and I were married. When she was born I had to use my maiden name on her birth certificate. Her father and I are married now. How can I get her birth certificate fixed up proper like it should be? MARRIED NOW DEAR MARRIED: I doubt very much if you can “‘fix up’’ a birth certificate after it has been filed. Consult a lawyer. * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO TROU- BLED CONSCIENCE: Return the stolen articles and ask to be forgiven. Since this was your first offense you will probably be given another chance. It is doubly unfiar to remain silent while suspicion falls on innocent parties. x « * For ABBY'S pamphlet, “What Every Teenager Wants to Know.’ send 25c, and a large, self - ad- dressed: dtamped envelope to this paper 4852 SIZES 144-24 , Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bergey are honeymooning in eastern Canada following their Friday evening wedding at St. John Church. The Rev. William La- Fountain officiated at the cere- mony before 300 guests. The bride, the former Glenna Karen Swan, is the daughter of Mrs. Violet Swan of Menomi- the: s of Det The bride wore a gown of cream satin and Chantilly lace and carried a _ bouquet of white roses and _ stephanotis. Mary Wirick of Hudson was maid of honor and Marla Jack- son was bridesmaid. Sandra Kay Chapoton was flowergirl. Best man was Marshall Ma- honey of Detroit and Robert Bergey of Arlington, Va., and Robert Scherzer of Detroif were ushers. The bride is a graduate of _Augustana College and is doing graduate work at Wayne State University. The bridegroom is of the Frank Bergeys nee road and her husband is— Glenna Swan Married MRS. CHARLES BERGEY a graduate of Michigan State covery Keeping That Man Party Fetes Mrs. Lingle Mrs. Gary Lingle was hon- ored at a post-nuptial kitchen shower Monday at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Dale Anderson of Detroit. The former Constance Uhl, eaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cherles Uhl of Drayton Plains, exchanged vows with Mr. Lin- gle on Aug. 8 in Weston. He is the son of the Lester Lin- gles of North Paddock street. * * * Shower guests were Mrs. Uhl, Mrs. Lingle, Mrs. Floyd Sims, the bride’s maternal grandmother; Carolyn Lingle, Nancy Reuter, Mrs. Rosemary Shearer, Mrs. Irwin Olmstead, Sheilah Olmstead, Mrs. Robert Gerrity and Christie Anderson. * * * Others were Mrs. Clara And- erson, Mrs. John Adams, Mrs. William Murphy, Maureen Murphy, Mrs. Virgil Anderson, Mrs. Donald Thompson, Mrs. Fred Schimmels, Mrs. Mildred Salecki, Mrs, Rupert Turner and Mrs. Jack Murphy. Choose from Open Stock yO . SALE SALE | use bolls eiesh f WCTU Unit R TABLE . ut Dir Halo UL CHAI i fr 11 Wtlne 3 a an be Cas Holds Picnic $19.95 $124.50 Add a bottle brush to your | “I want a pretty neckline — : ry Drop pro ae welt ‘ Windsor Chair ie gene gra bee interesting above the waist,”’ says Members of the Frances Wil- ‘ open, "x42" extended. garden, and p ur: . th i half-sizer. W : as ‘lard Women’s Christian Tem- Fentlry a Dip it into thick soap or de- |, caaal wah i ealopea — By RUTH MILLETT ey ee perance Union met Wedneaiay , DRAYTON tergent suds, then use it to [ing simming dere Tomo th w's{ The sooner a wife learns a few on man ig such chatter) atiernoon at Murphy Park for HOME FURNI 3 H | NGS OR 3-2300 VERMON coax dirt from the seams and pattern: Misses’ skirt. facts that apply to most husbands =~ then Sane ain that he never| , cooperative dinner. crevices of plastic or canvas Printed Pattern 4852: Half si i : = to you! i i COlONt . : i: : : : sizes|the happier she'll be. For in- _ Following a speech. on | CONTEMPORARY 4479 Dixie Hwy. WINOOSKI eee . . apie one = Size 1632 requires 4's yards 39-inch} Most men don’t like to discuss nt Wien ' . a aioli ia ington of Birmingham, a dis- DRAYTON PLAINS eraninice of wicker and /labric. a matter to death. Women may couples peel ah a thee ai the dite cussion was led by Mrs. Leroy wrought iron furniture, Printed directions on each pat-|enjoy talking around and around sind oh pettogethers.| So) sivive Shafer. Also participating in a problem, but a man wants to decide what to do about it and stop the discussion. 4 Most men dislike having a wife the program were Mrs. Bonnie Hyde and Anne Vone. to make your social life as a couple as interesting to your husband as you possibly can. . : : A tern part. Easier, accurate. = Send Fifty Cents in. coins for this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send YOU WILL HAVE NO NEED TO WORRY to Anne Adams, care of The ”on- tiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 ‘West 17th St., New York 11, N. Y. ‘Print plainly Name, Address with ‘Zone, Size and Style Number. unload her troubles on them the minute they walk through the door at night. So feed him before you bring up any depressing or dis- agreeable news. And try not to worry your man with matters you can handle yourself. Most. men love comfort and have a right to expect it in their homes. So don’t be ashamed to cater to your man’s comfort. That’s a lot more important than running your household to impress your women friends. Non-Support Case When bras and girdles be- come shapeless and stretched, it’s time to pitch them out. They may be delightfully comfy at this stage but they're not giving you any support. Mature Women If You Buy Your Diamond at Connolly's We're Pontiac’s Only Registered Jewelers Most men need to feel that their wives respect their judgment. So marriage to let a man do things {never miss an opportunity to say, in his own good time. -|“*You were right about su¢h-and- Most men aren't nearly as fas-!such” and “I’m glad you sug- cinated by the details of other|gested this or that.” And squelch people’s lives as women are. So/|the urge to say “I told you so” don’t be hurt if you get an un-|when things don’t turn out -just Most men hate to be nagged at—so it makes for a happier American Gem Society ( THIS IS YOUR PROTECTION . | We must take annual examinations on knowledge of gem stones, jewelry, etc. to retain this title. We are also judged on the quality of our merchan- dise and the ethics of our business. 8-2 sruerpenee response when you |Tight. INSU RE start discussing the marriages of | When dad is in the driver's |friends or what a poor house- YOUR FUTURE Garden Club seat it's a sign no one else |keeper a neighbor is, or the mis- Pp 0 lt 7 wanted the car that day. \take friends are making in rear- , repare yourse or ALL OF OUR DIAMONDS Hears Talk career in the Beauty ARE SBLECTED FOR QUAL- Profession on Conservation Richard Durnbaugh, Mc- Carroll Elementary School ITY AND VALUE AND THEY WILL STAND THE MOST RIGID OF COMPARISONS. - Enroll Today CHOOSE YOUR DIAMOND LOOSE FROM FIVE DIFFER- ENT GRADES IN ANY SIZE TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET. THEN SELECT A MOUNTING FROM OVER 500 DIFFERENT STYLES AND WE WILL MOUNT IT FOR YOUR IM- MEDIATELY. THERE IS NO GUESS WORK WHEN YOU SEE YOUR. DIA- MOND UNDER THE HIGH teacher, spoke on the subject “Conservation” at a luncheon meeting of the Better Home and Garden Club Thursday. This summer the club sent Mr. Durnbaugh to the Conser- vation Institute at Higgins Lake on a schalorship. Mrs. Harry Winkley was chairman for the affair which was held at the Woodland avenue home of Mrs. A. D. Stimer. Assisting Mrs. Wink- ley were Mrs. Harriet Seaks, Mrs. John McCormick, Mrs. William Mustard and Mrs. Phone FE 4-1854 Miss Wilson Closed Wednesday PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 161, East Huron Behind Kresge’s 2nd Floor Come In for Your | Eotee cae ane AeuE Mee ice: embers, Mrs, || Free Demonstration TO BE THE SOLE JUDGE. Fred Tucker, Mrs. Ardo || in Our Downtown Studio aia, wore welccrreed’at Oe MERLE NORMAN i WE HAVE EVERY PRICE | : me welcomed af the 12 W. HURON RANGE FROM | Fe i: | BU06 to: et oe |AMERICAN PROVINCIAL} — ST LIKE HOME! i | _ TERMS ARRANGED TOSUIT ==> | 16-Pe. Set for a 7 3 7 J U | e INDIVIDUAL Satisfaction Guaranteed ' Every diamond carries a full value guarantee that states grade, color, size, and perfection and full trade- in value at any time. YOUR BUDGET AS LITTLE ;- i | AS 10% A MONTH WILL DO. 1 At the Country Carousel you and yours will enjoy the tasty, delightful well-cooked dishes ard - ’ specialties that are prepared by our competent 4 chefs. Come in.and enjoy dinner in a clean, -. }* pleasant, home-like atmosphere. _ COUNTRY CAROUSEL 1306 S. Woodward, Birmingham BETWEEN 14 AND. 15\ MILE RD. : 5 n Stock So refreshingly new and | different—this bright gay | anid colorful dinnerware can’ be yours. tomorrow. | DIXIE POTTERY Open Daily 10 A.M. to 8 P.M, — Sunday 12 to 8 P.M. FE 2-0294 |] 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 31894 , . \ tt * + 4 . . ‘ * = s | ¢ « 4 , * 2 5 . . TRADE IN YOUR DIAMOND We Will Allow Full Value : ‘Exactly what we would sell it for on a larger stone. Estimates / aenans without = — SEWELERS fy. _ 16 W. Huron St. 2s : ~¥ oe, * ' ' 14 : ai z ' msde = : s nes a » a i ere - 7 7 ie By g 2 Hee ¢- 7 te . ag a oe Le lee ( i v * : ao 5 ee : ‘* \ 4 j » ij a wo Se Jaa ‘2 Ce TWENTY-FOUR - THE PONTIAC’PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1959 , ae e mA Custer Verdict Still Not Known Was: He Hero or Bad General? Experts Not Sure Even Today WASHINGTON (UPI)—June 25 marked the anniversary of-the most humiliating defeat ever suf- fered by the United States Army. x * * On that date in 1876, Gen. George Armstrong Custer and 211 men were massacred in the battle of the Little Big Horn. ‘ The 83 years since then have failed to dim the Custer legend, or the controversy that exploded the moment the 212 bodies were found on a lonely Montana ridge. There have been as many books written about this comparative- ly minor Indian skirmish as en the battle of Gettysburg. j At least a dozen movies have been made around the Last Stand. .More than 100 paintings depicting Custer’s death have graced the walls of every kind of establish- ment from Bowery saloons. to swanky museums. * * * Up to a point, the facts of the battle are simple. Custer and 10 troops of the Sev- enth Cavalry, about 400-men, were ordered down the Rosebud ‘River as part of an over-all plan to box in an estimated 8,000 Indians. Custer started out as, ordered, but ran across a fresh Indian trail. On the afternoon of June 25,' 1876. Custer found-a large Indian village and spotted hordes of SEEING: DOUBLE—Operator () UPI Telephoto Donald Rosh said his head really was. spinning after watching four sets of twins take a twirl on his ferris wheel at Indianapolis. Doubling up for the gala ride are (top to bottom) Harry and Jerri Lance, 3; Jan and Jill Fischer, 3; Donnie and Donna Tieford, 5; and Linda and Brenda Kerner, 4. braves moving out of the village and away from his advancing cav- alry. - - Custer, apparently thinking this was the main body of In- dians, made his fatal mistake. He sent Capt. Benteen and two troops along the bluffs on one side of the river. Maj. Marcus Reno was ordered to attack the village with another three troops. And Custer continued;along the ridge after the supposedly flee- ing Indians. ‘But the ‘‘fleeing Indians’ were mainly squaws and_ children. Reno's charge on the village splin- tered against hundreds of scream- ing braves. He retreated to a bluff where he was a in on three sides. Custer was far up the river — in more ways than one. In follow- ing what he thought was the main Indian force, he ran into an am- bush. Reno’s command heard heavy firing. The shots grew fainter and fin- ally died away. Benteen finally re- joined Reno’s troops and their com- bined forces managed to stave off all attacks until the next day when reinforcements arrived. * * * The humiliating defeat resulted in loud demands for a congres- sional investigation. Reno in par- ticular was condemned for failing to come to Custer’s help when he heard the firing, but he ‘insisted it would have been suicide to leave his bluff and try to break through the Indians attacking his own com- mand. But Benteen, who regarded Reno with unvarnished contempt claimed Reno over-estimated the force attacking yhim and could have come to the rescue, At any rate, the House Military Affairs Committee~ refused to in- itiate a probe. Reno himself asked for a Court of Inquiry by the War Department, The Court convened in Chicago three years after the|; massacre, and exonerated Reno of cowardice, * * x There never was a formal ver- dict on Custer’s own part in the battle. To this day, military ex- perts and historians disagree on whether Custer was merely a vic- tim of bad luck and too many In- dians, or whether he violated or- ders, made matters worse by di- Mailman Scoffs Despite Tragedies Hope Diamond No Hex WASHINGTON (AP) — The! Hope diamond, given to the Smith- sonian Institution last year by al New York gem dealer, has a sinister history. It is supposed to have brought death, misfortune or) insanity to a long string of! owners. When jewel merchant Harry Winston gave it to the government museum last November he sent it by mail, James G. Todd, 35, was the mailman who delivered the 4412 carat diamond, * * * Since then, happened to Todd: | His leg was crushed by a truck. | While he was recuperating, his wife, mother of their four chil- dren, died of a heart attack. In a later accident, Todd was thrown from his car and sufiercd a head injury. . Wednesday night fire swept four rooms of Todd's suburban home. “TI don’t believe any of that stuff,’ Todd said, referring to the diamond's legend of trouble. “Pérbaps I'm actually having good luck — thank God all four eae eee re Pennsylvania Gel 4-Cent Sales Tax HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)—Gov. David L. Lawrence signed into law Thursday a- measure raising Pennsylvania's sales tax from 3% per cent to 4 per cent. Exempt are food for home con- sumption; clothing. material used in the construction of foundations for machinery; maintenance sup- plies bought by charitable and similar nonprofit organizations; machinery; printing services; and repairs to equipment used direct- ly in radid and television broad- these things - have i casting. | Pennsylvania and Washington now have the highest .state sales tax in the nation. viding his already tiny texte, into three hopelessly inadequate col-/| umns and then blundered into an} .ambush. Lady Cabbie Loses ‘Loaded’ Customer BUFFALO, N, Y. (UPI — “Loaded’ is a loaded word that cost a woman taxi driver a fare one recent day. When Buffalo cabbies pick up a passenger, they call headquarters by shortwave radio and say as a matter of routine, ‘‘Number so-and- so loaded.” In this particular case, Mrs. Rita Costello’s passenger also was loaded. He took offense at her report, she said, made her let him out and staggered mutter- ing, ‘You didn’t have to tell 'em.” Most Oldsters Need Glasses . to Drive Cars PROVIDENCE, R. ut o— There’s little wrong. with the driv- ing ability of elderly motorists that can't be corrected with a jin those rooms. Says.Reds May Make Them he ae is still in the research phase.} | ‘Study Balls of Lightning WASHINGTON (AP)—A Detroit\two huge parabdlic scientist’ said today Soviet_ Russia is studing the possible use of man- Donald J. Ritchie, of Bendix, Aviation Corp., research labora- itories, said the proposal has come from physicist George I. Babat, head of the Soviet Institute of | Energetics. Ritchie, writing in Missiles and proposes to generate balls of made balls of lighting as weapons. Rockets Magazine, said Babat | expanding its understanding electrical discharge, | aulenias to! \create an intense electromagnetic | expect that they ‘are probably | field. _ lat work devising applications in The field would develop the ball|these areas.’ of lightning fed from the ground | ~- iby electromagnetic energy. Nuc- No Yolk to Firemen lear fusion ~processes would occur within the ball. Ithrough the sky by directing the | ground antennas,” Ritchie said. | ;'The effect of directing it at an! aircraft or missle can be easily burning truck. imagined. unteer Fire Dept., lot 198,000 hatching eggs from a| They later re-| “It is no ” taree dhoht of fancy! HOLDEN, Mass. "Bot man scence en ‘Cooks’ Decorations (UPD—In. the/ cellar of her home, Mrs. Elizabeth /Marshall “‘cooks" plate - glass “sandwiches” with fillings of bro- | ken glass and metal turnings. | During a 70-hour kiln process, | the plate glass softens like grilled “The ball could be easily moved pers of the Stamford Center Vol- colored glass and metal. The re- saved 155,000,Sult is a solid, slightly. uneven ;block with a center core of oo colors in free-form designs. The fused glass can be used for’ wobbly tals false ‘ceived a $50 check in a letter | many things such as window | etn teak « HLOCMED wae “0 ete . . HA CLEANERS & BLOCKERS 11 S, Saginaw Next to Eagle Theater Oe etd 35 Yoars of ngs igh inde aes in Her Kiln 70 Hours alts * (Advertisement) Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No lenges bo annaved oF foci H-s= ease because lightning in the sky high. above | «cin a Soviet weapon is not,linforming them they were the panes, room dividing screens, cig-| your plates holds them among ae! ctties, lof course, just around the corner. ‘honorary fathers of some 116,000 /arette box lids, decorative garden | Fosanene comfortable. Avoid sx = oe He would do this by focusing'The work in progress: almost /cer- chicks.” walls and shower stall doors. | at any drug coun Rounter. SEL E CTED BY Better Homes MAGAZINE (August Issue) and Gardens - AS ONE OF AMERICA’S BEST HOME VALUES , _ SEE IT AT HERRINGTON HILLS ONLY aa * >See = tihlg. wm [THE BIRMINGHAM- BLOOMFIELD HILLS % ome i Outstanding for Location ond Superior Stylihg of H Homes at t Moderate Seat Miestes F 15 450 e ; 46505 : Drive out Mt. Clem. o very Y INDIVIDUAL ens 2 miles. Turn children were outside instead of! . 1,120 sa. EY. IN: THIS, CALIFORNIA right om Featherstone | With 3 Sree proved an ° ah ase Road to our model and Range © Souck Bor » Ronge home at 1253 Feath- * * * “If the hex is supposed to affect the owners, then the public should be having the bad luck.” | erstone Road. dependable Maer futzecntove electric water heaters assure a mI Cane Many have found it all the support they need @ AT YOUR DRUGGIST CASS LAKE PHARMACY 3000 Orchard Lake Road Keege Harbor / « FE 3-783) {59 RAMBLER. mm 91648 inane on mi 63900 | + constant supply of clean hot water |. SIX’BIG REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD BUY Méecksaseentove 1. QUICK RECOVERY! Exceptionally fast hot water with new, more efficient heating units... insulation. fications. 2. FULLY AUTOMATIC! Quiet, safe, completely auto- matic operation . . . install it, forget it. 3. INSTALL ANYWHERE! Round or table-top models can _ be installed in kitchen, utility, basement or closet... ‘ need not be near a chimney 4. DEPENDABLE! Long-lasting Kelvinator electric water heaters are quality heaters, built to Edison's speci- ° G. ECONOMICAL! Electricity costs so little ... you heat water for just pennies a day. G. CLEAN and COOL! As clean as an electric light bulb and its outer shell is coo! to the touch all over. , thick Fiberglas QQ FOR 52-GALLON MODEL DETROIT EDISON'S SUPER-SUPPLY PLAN.. ; makes Kelvinator electric water heaters even more ‘efficient. You'll have all the hot water you want for all-the family’s needs, 24 hours a if day, for an operating cost as low as aS $3.88 a month. Ask Edison how this new water heating service, combined with a new Kelvinator elec- tric water heater, can mean hot water aplenty round the clock. GET IT HOT... GET A LOT! Displayed and sold by you | wae | KELVINATOR DEALER and DETROIT EDISON — '\ ¥ fi Hi-Fi Disenchantment =~ > Heretic Rips Into. Fanatics feeling, instinct and sense in the book i . * “Listen,” an audiophile told me, not looking up from the trays of little, lethal-looking, wired. things, “Listen; “T’ve got this eight-position amp- lifier; and this two-band tuner; and this four-pole record player; and this exponential multicellular horn.” ° 1; But no records? “‘What do I need records for?” he asked. “I got this tape recorder with switched dual equalizer and rr db based on three per cent of the total harmonic distortion.” What kind of stuff does he re- cord? “I dunno,” he said. ‘Nothing special. Sometimes I tape the Ed THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, ‘AUGUST 21, 1959 Describe Agriculture as Promising Feild a i EAST LANSING (UPI)—Agricul- ture is.a tremendously promising field for college freshmen seeking to train themselves for a career, according to Dr.. Harold J. Las- siter, head .of Michigan State) University’s dairy department. * * * e Lassiter said there were between 14,000 and 15,000 jobs available in the industry this June for college graduates who majored in agricul- ture and only about 7,000 students to fill them. ~ Wr * * ly a few of these jobs are actually on the farm, he added, most being in agricultural educa- tion, economics and research. And the salaries being offered are almost as much as what engineer- Sullivan show or Steve Atien.”’ Thief Mails Back Loot With OU for Percentage BUFFALO, N. Y. (UPI)—A thief took $2,185 and a revolver from the Buffalo Housewrecking and Salvage Co. but a few days later sent ¢he company a letter in which he returned all but $115 of the cash and submitted an IOU (un- signed) for the rest. There is no explanation—and no revolver, either. The thief gave his return address as police head- quarters, Cabin Lacks Timber EUREKA, Calif. (UPI)—Herbert Whitney invited his son and daugh- ter and their families to spend the weekend -at his summer | cabin. But they didn’t have much fyn. When they got there they fofind that someone had dismantled the 20 by 40-foot cabin ahd hauled ing graduates can earn. away the lumber. } can talk about continuously vari- able bass and treble, harmonic and intermodulation distortion, six gang variable capacitor, 10 kc whistle filter, one-piece pulley- idler, hysteresis ssynchronous-drive, cone resonance and flux density. Whatever you do, don’t invite Leon Knize. a He’s dangerous. Not enly to your party, but to the whole American hi-fi way of life. . Knize is a professional musician, an audio expert and the sales man- ager of a big high fidelity outfit here. “Hi-fi,” he said, “is something hardly anybody in his right mind | really needs. Our job is to create | the right climate so he will buy | our product. ‘ ‘‘Most audiophiles-can recite the | names of the component parts. | Most likely they can build a whole _—~ _ system of amplifiers and tuners and speakers. They. know catalog numbers and manufacturers’ names, They know ratings, cycles and waves. — A. =~ Sk . ° ore Gates cate e + . and girls — I've arranged a little get-together By Franklin Folger ae | Segal i oa. ” Ld « 4 ADAM AMES 4 U a _THE BERRYS BOUTS AND HER BUDDIES RA] [ou rop\] [Sue DID SAR WE || Omer RSE? 1 OR MAN WOR LIFE TWEET QO, BOOTS? || OES DAS A MPE WARD XE BaC- STAR. GAZER » WAVE TSA? By Edgar Martin weet * oh See om (JACKIE ‘1 SAID TAKE JIMMIE FOR A WALK | NOW! 7 GEE WHIZ | MOM / = DIXIE DUGAN ~~ HARVEY ONLY ONE MORE OUT FOR A NO-HITTER! x THEN YOU WONT ) .éifor]_ MISS ANYTHING. TURN IT OFF ! SF hae eens OH— BEFORE I FERGET— | 8-2! 4 al | \ a ‘ hwy, “NG @, 4 ~ ALLEY OOP THEN WHY'S IT'S HIS IDEA, OOP... HE'S A SPACE- GENIUS, EH? EH! HE'S yds z EVERYTHING AGE GENIUS...WITH KNOW-HOW A GENIUS ALL RIGHT, [OM AW, OOP, ACT GOT T'BE SO WE'D GIVE MOST ANYTHING TO AT PULLIN’ TH WOOL / fp YOUR AGE! iTS | SECRET ABOUT GET OUR HANDS ON...SO NOT THAT OXY | WHAT HE'S DOIN’? FAR, NO LUCK, BUT... ANY FAIR- HAIRED BOY!- : . < g € “ or . \ ), f He 7 ae PP n- vt ol) AL a") 3 Mae aeses 4 © 1980 by NEA Servinw. ine. TM Rag, U8 Met. OFF. By Leslie Turn2r HAD GIVEN YOU UP FOR DEAD! NANCY f SHOULD BE SHOWS LIKE THIS BARRED FROM TV IGNAZIO HAD TO FLEEY 1 AUSTRALIA: I HEARD SPA APTER THE CIVIL | A RUMOR THERE IS NO WAR. HE HAD BEEN A] LONGER A PRICE ON MY FIERY LEADER ON HEAD! SO I CAME IN TO SEE IF IT RE DISGUISE 1S SAFE TO RETURN! IT'S AWFUL:-- GRUESOME--- I CAN'T LOOK--- fo as age Com. 1999 by Uninet Restore Syadiear, tne, MORTY MEEKLE - MY GOODNESS! YOU HAVE AN AWFUL LOT OF FRIENDG, WINTHROP bod ee: aS Cx xX aa i 1 | iT MUST BE TH’ DIME I DROPPED YESTERDAY... FINO// ..- AN’ GOULON'T HAS TH’ ICE CREAM VENDOR PASSED THIS|- WAY YET? nee oo apne “THE. PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, Augusta, 1059 ce £3 .? ee ‘ Buying Orders in Large Volume Ld Processors were among the buyers of both corn and soy- beans along with some specula- CHICAG Ow — Buying orders were in a little larger volume to- day and grain futures prices were bid up into stronger ranges in early dealings on the board of trade Soybeans ran ahead about a cent a bushel within the first several A minutes while corn and rye also advanced major fractions. It was the most active opening in sev- eral days but demand did not ap- pear very stout after the bulges. The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer’: Market by growers and sold by them in’ wholesale package lots. Wednesday. Detroit Produce FRUITS Apples, Dutchess, bu. Apples, Earl Apples, Wealthy, Apples, Greaieg ee awe sles @ nates e Peaches, Red Haven, = waneweante wars Pears, Clapp's bu. - a Piums, Bur oak. 4% bu... Watermelon, bu. VEGETASLES £900 mame bs po nece ts eo Ss oes eas SVS 3sassessaaye tive activity toward reinstate- | Beans green, fia, vu .........$2.25 : : . more luxurious mobile home. The new series (from left) T. ment of positions. liquidated |5ctnS Ky. Wonders, Se 2S veut eee tke ann will be available in eight different floor plans Pelkey, sales cartier & Ge werk. Beane, Roman, be ‘ $00. Armco scored modest gains among| With as many as three bedrooms and one and a Wheat was % to % cent a bushel/ Beans wax bu. j's9|steels. But Lukens sagged more| "half-baths. The luxury models will be unveiled to. - higher after about an hour, Sep- Beets, “ie = A= than 1 and U.S. Steel lost a frac- « ——— $1.89%; corn uncheneed to Gabbeae. Bae 5 1 $0 tion. Bethiehem ha meaner saber, September oats Pe thad ae 5 seodosocneccoges Vi Cabbage, Red, bu. .......... : 1.50 ¥% to % lower, September new|Cabbage Sprouts bu. os eecccellos 180 * Southern mete ate running GM C D ealer S to 1E@W A Carrots, bu. . 1.50 type contract 67; rye 42 to 1 cent head sharpl terd hie $1.59 i Carrots, dos. be - , $8/ahead sharply yeste ay on a eo y+ ‘BU. ower. higher, Septem ; Soybeans Calas: * $$9| Posed stock split, slumped aroun N W t Ad t % to 1% higher, September $2.10%. celery Gos. 100/115, Baltimre & Ohio and Cheasa- e es vancemen s .. Gueuinbers. Pieke sc $0) Peake a Otte added fractions. ten : umbers ene rs ere ee A tely 100 GMC truck)devel t that includ cumbers, slicers, Fancy. bu. .... 1.75 : 2 pproximately : ruck development program that inclu a Cost of Living Bilt on bebe. tr seteescessens 100 higher in active renee Ford and heavy duty dealers, field sales per-a new family of V-6 and V-12 Egepiant. Long type, pk. : {a5 Chrysler also: gained, sonnel and factory representatives | gasoline truck engines, whose dur- . Bo pero Bae = 1 will meet in Detroit Monday for) ability promises from three to four Okra, PEW. isccse cs seumacess, 205 New York Stocks a three-day sales convention de-|timas the ordinary life of an en- .) Wal Qnions, green, dos, as scribed by R. C, Woodhouse, gen-| gine. | On Pik aaa 10 - (Late Morning Quotations) eral truek sales manager of the a ‘ . Parsley. curly. dos. debs. “90'Figures after decimal point are a ye tate Woodhouse said the conven- : . Parsley. root. se ons + 1:28) 3 GM Truck & Coach Division, as tion Signals the start of a con- — i 7 bi tral ce: 194 Geneseo ...... 33.6 3 Tenth: Per Cent Rise’ Peppers. Caren, rs 130) 4 ar Reduc - Gerber Prod 33 2a yee hioey one in GM's) certed merchandising drive that in July Will Boost Pay Peppers. Pimniento. pe TIES Xoo] AMSG tts o488.s Goebel Br... 3.2. The GMC dealers will sée the will give truck operators the | F eppers. Red sweet, RED... --- 3.75| Allis Chal .... = Gees : aaee " ae 1 ; duct greatest array of product ad- : for 1 Million Workers Panton: Mow, fe. bag Ll Alcon “e 10T-4 Gran Paige 1. 26|50 o> Of & long-range product) cements ever offered by a Pr es ge v2 190) Am Gan". 433 Gt NeuRy 0 Std | se STE con Acorn. bu. ... ........s. 2.00 Am Muray a peeled Pap 35.2! 5 “Convention participants will see DETROIT | (UPI) — {80 pees ee oe Ee Am Motors |. a4 Holland F ... 121 the tangible results of our famed General Motors an- m Delicious. -t4 "bu. ..220011.. 2:50/ AM BaGae «$33 Indust Ray | 20 - ‘Operation High Gear’ and get first nounced today that its bu 100 ae r* Tel. 727 Infand Stl 12. 50.4 hand information on theftremen- Ol Anaconda Ti Cop .. 40 S ic i . sandler My Be aha a (afl ti eee employes will get a two- - 150! armco stl _... 76.2 en n q ion d Tee eat ags aes “ ’ t- of - li ving al 2.50 Armour & Co zm Int Nex 191 ‘ { on ee industry,’ he point- ao eae n ‘aper z a L crease beginning in 453 Int Shoe .... 354 c « «& = zewe) 46 re Hs Int TelaTel eee! Says GOP 1s Scaring ‘The first two days of the con- , From Our News Wires 444 Jones aL Ls. 78} Economic. Growth Out vention will be devoted to product WASHINGTON — The cost of My" 1 Hg Beleey Hey -- 093 studies, sales strategy and mer- rose three-tenths of one per my Balke 103 Kimb Clk 68 of America chandising plans, while the final cent in July to another record ough wi 314 mice Se day will include a tour of GMC’s' high, the government reported to- Calum’ H' 288 TD’ Meng 2. 122|_ UNITY HOUSE, Pa. — (UPI) —)modern production facilities at day. a. an Dry... 216 Lies & My... 8! |The AFD-CIO today accused the|Pontiac. . * ¥ * Cdn Pac |. 28.4 Lockh Airc ... 27.1//.. inictrati 2 Boston ee Capital Aint. 165 Loew's Inc .. 31.4/Eisenhower administration of try-| ' : nae, abor Department said iaiaee Rar. cnc AB Eke © BE ESE B Git iting to “brainwash” the nation inte Choice for President Romaine bu 1.020022 160] Cater ‘Trac :'103.§ Lorillard 44.2/believing that calamitous inflation . t of goods and services contributed eee Oe ee ee Ne? : ftalis just around the corner. . to the advance, with food prices Poultry and E Seca Ole isee atts, So. °:: 3oa| This is just camouflage to ais.| J Edgar Hoover ~ leading the way. nn, n ou ggs ee 38.6 Mead CP ..... 48 \guise its efforts to return to poli- . IT POULTRY ‘olw: © 05 AL erck .:..... : pe diene: ; = ee neice ape ie = DETROIT, oll oe nent pag! con ra ee Mer es Rg ehtige M000. The emann| WASHINGTON (AP) — Retired 1947-49 average, eight-tenths of a eery type hens 17-18: Ught type bens |Gont Can. 492 Mons 83 ltive council of the federation said |Ge"- Albert C. Wedemeyer says : ‘ 50. N pon pe cent higher than in duly alt wane, soe. er Sone "2 Cont Mat “s io Mot Prods ‘ao. * * * fe J. Edgar Hoover.” caponertes under 5 Ibs. 20%: over 5 Ibs. | COD : ; shart hd ols DOD BE ; ; - ; F The ean wil sam wags ee ee Seats EL RES aig eee ratte galt wy (cores anes, Deere. ....-. 60.2 a eid - p46. J = pi i ba 1 boosts to about one: million work-) DeTRorr, Aug. 20 (AP) — Eggs fob [Det Bids |) 437 Nat Cash R 60,| scared America out of years of |ten is allied with right-wing caus. ers, primarily in the automobile, ot in case lots federal state DOo® chem || 844 Nat Gyps ....:3%2' normal economic growth,” the ‘es, testified Thursday against. farm equipment and .aircraft in- arnites = Grade A jumbo, 46: extra| oo ee a ee NY (Central . 263; council asserted, “But they President Eisenhower's 313-billion- ‘ : K . 90. i ye. - jdol i i Hersey E. Riley, chief of the a 18-90: srade ~ iarge Cos posal wt No Am Av 38-4 have . broug' a on repeated re- dollar foreign aid program. =e: ’ ‘dium 28: small. : zi & Mus : 7 Nor Sta Pw. 24-| CeSsions including the recent one * *&* & department's Division of Prices|" commercially graded: me BR Qhio Ou... 413) from which we have not yet re- | Wedemeyer told the Senate Ap- and Cost of wine said most of ano een 2 eee eee Ex-Cel}-0 oe Ovens Til Gl 07-6 covered.” /propriations Committee he’ had those workers receive a quar-| dium’ 25-26. ach 6 Pac in.|been looking fo terly raise of 2 cents an ‘ pos Mot : 285 Bann pi * ‘ot bara counel Sey that aes calibre of the lite ‘Sen, Pace 7 The consumer price index for Livestock Preuh tre’... 363 Pa RR 0. 113 cine ana ben ne truth at all”|Taft (R-Ohio), to support for caine te g nes ivestoc Gen Bak... 12.4 Pepsi Cola... 34.2 truths and often no truth at all ene ast PPO Jumped 5 per = 19 (AP)—Cattle —| Gee Dynem .. 49 Pratt. pe, ggito achieve their aims. president in 1960: tween June and July, Was |Salable 500. sink ter classes steady:/Gen Mills ’....108.4 Phileo -..\.. 284] It said there is a considerable ~ * 1 per cent above the level for ‘c*tterin to low choice slaughte |Gen Motors |. 35 Phill Pet 46.2 : ae steers, 2550-2700: few choice steersiG Tel & El |. 73.7 Proct & G... 95.4/2mount of slack in most parts of} Later he told reporters he liked duly a year ago, - Depart. | 00; two small lots high c hn Time 84 re Oil . 41.1 th no rsistent Hoover, Wedemeyer didn’t su of Labor’s Bureau of Labor -8 utility and stan-'Gen Tire | ° 675 3g.\the economy and persistent un- 8- ment s dard mixed offerings 20.50-24 50: cou le | a mployment despite the business/gest the FBI chief is opposed to Statistics reported today. ce heifers 26.50-26.75: few employme espite the good heifers 26.00-26.25: utility cows » recovery from last year’s reces- foreign aid, but he said Hoover Food and clothing repped gs ONSET and) caters 1830" Police Still § kj sion. would deal realistically with that an average of 6 per cent between 0 fae as 1280. Butchers an and, tows ee Ing e-* «* and other problems. ee ee ee RG i These. views were disclosed in a tbitiws ier ceetve alee But this was more than offset/20,,2; ,18,00-18.28: ome ied mostiy | us aso ine ie statements released today after On SICCUVE SHICE: by ae ee at ae “tore number up 183 Wp. included at 15.36; few | the close of the AFL-CIO leaders’ transportation, 4.8 per cent for{it.00-16.5: number's 270-300 Ib. 13.$0-|ORTONVILLE — Oakland County |four-day session at'a union-run ~ Fi { [ k R | , Off _reading and tion, .6 per 16.75: mb et sows soe &. sheriff's deputies today are con-|S°rt in the Pocono, Mountains. il 5 ar 0 S cent for housing and_.1 per cent!10.00-11.00. / Bum tinuing thenr investigation of the} They also took a ¢rack at the Vealers + Salable 100. Vealers strong: |theft of gasoline from 11 Brahdon Federal Reserve Board on grounds Gulps Down Evidence as Police Approach JERSEY CITY, N.J. (UPD— Police arrested suspected lottery operator Harry Kohr, 43, as he tried to swallow the evidence yes- terday. They said Kohr had written his ‘bets on candy wafers and was Ear MARKETS | Quotations are furnished by ‘ the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Stock Market Prices Seesaw NEW prices seesawed in relaxed trad- ing early today. erally shifted only fractions. * * * terday's sizzling upturn, the sharp- es, Wolf River, bu. : Blueberries, No. 1.12 pts. est in 21 months. Cantaloupes, bu. .......,... Peaches, Golden Jubilee. bu. Steels and rails, the spark- Peaches, Hale Haven, bu. ......... toa ® plugs of yesterday’s climb, turned mixed, Rubbers and air- crafts also moved irregularly. rime vealers 36.00- Sh 00 few standard and @ choice and rime to 41. 00: cull and utility 17.00- Ne 00: thin light culls down to 15, Sheep — Salable 300. slaughter Jnsctagery be to good 4.00-7.00; jambs ‘ity 0-20.00. 26 .00- nage No early sales; choice slaughter and choice feeder cull Liquor Sales Climb ‘ LANSING @® — Liquor sales in Michigan for the first seven months of the year totaled $85.- 667,245, the State Liquor Control Commission reported. The figure gulping down the evidence as they approached him. ° was $82,244,225 for the same period last year” ov . Teachers to See Scie nce at Work Two Pontiac area teachers will be among 37 instructors from Michigan, Indiana, New York, II- linois, Ohio and Connecticut, to attend the fourth annual General Motors Conference for High School! Teathers. -The conference will begin Mén- day at the GM Technical Center 2 to Attend GM Conference visions in ree with local) school administrators. The teachers will see various laboratory experiments and engi- neering demonstrations illustrating mathematics and basic science ap- plications at Research Laborator- ies, Engineering Staff, Process De- velopment. Staff, GM Proving |Ground and the GM _ Institute (Flint). Other GM aiacelives will dis- cuss GM’s personnel, education- sistant to the president of the Study Committee of Educational Services, the following day the teach- ers will hear Dr. Pau] F. Brand- senior editor and consultant or Harcourt, Brate and lambs other classes scafce, | YORK u—Stock market Plus and minus signs about can- celed out as leading shares gen- The market in early dealings failed to carry through on yes- Most motors, chemicals and elec- LUXURY VAGABOND — Thi Vagabond Coach signed to satisfy the demand f{ 10-foot wide house trailer is a new model in the Manufacturing Co. s 54-foot long by line de- ora larger and new model for the public Tuesday at the annual Vagabond Open House in New Hudson, location of the company’s main office. Company officials posing with the president, and F.C. Burt, president* this sneak preview picture are F. Gronback, secretary; R. G. manager; H. C. Childs, - vice school buses week, The buses were parked by the: bus garage and had not been in} use this summer, — according to Brandon High School Principal No estimate of the number of Jack Ferris. gallons missing was made, school officials said. Conservation Men here earlier this’ Lose Pistols, Auto GLADWIN (®.— Four teenage: youths robbed two State Conser- | vation Officers of their pistols and car at gunpoint last night on a lonely highway 14 miles east of this Gladwin County community. * * * State Police and deputies sought, the four this morning in a drag- net coverning several counties. The youths were identified as William Winquest, 18, his brother Roger, 17; William Davidson, 17, | and Edward ‘Bates, 18, All are of the Bay City area. Industrialists to Meet PRUDENVILLE (7 ~— ae industrial ambassadors from = inaw County north to the Straits of Mackinac will meet Sept. 1 at Johnson's Rustic Resort on Hough- ton Lake, Manufacturers in the area also have been invited to at- tend to join in the drive to- pro- mote movement of new industries) to Michigan. News in Brief. Moos yo a8 a i hah neonate ton at Meow a ‘ty te bring a interested. | Adv. attempts | f “a man I'd like to see president|Gratiot County GOP chairman and}the years. 1970 to 1985, both: inclusive SP Production Line that it has pushed up interest! ‘rates in “blunderbuss"”’ to curb inflation: SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)—The first of the 1960 Studebaker-Pack- | |ard models rolled off the assembly termined hope to gain*right of en- fore Name Pontiac Man tne n2tsy was a. four-door WSU Fund Official Olin E. Thomas, of 8900 Gale Rd., vice president in charge of finance at Wayne State Univer- ‘sity, has been named treasurer of the Wayne State University Fund for 1959-60. . Over the past five years a total of more than $284,000 has been raised from alumni, friends, or- ganizations and foundations. The contributions have been used for special projects that include: | Scholarships, student.emergency. ] loan funds, research, faculty con- ference travel, special equipment, faculty center furnishings, presi- dent's fund, athletic facilities, spe- 'cial projects and university cen- 'tenfiial recognition. 201 Building Permits Issued in Waterford Construction in aterford Town- ship hit a new high for the month of July, with a record of 201 per- mits issued for. building valyed -at $1,207,120, Avon Township issued 57 per- mits for $528,750; Orion. Township, 62 for $508,809 and Troy 47 = mits, ah ee The Independerice Townshi p building department issued’ 34 per- mits for $150,000, Pontiac Town- ship 23 for $71,700 and White Lake | ued ee 21 permits for $88,500. uly. ordinarily is the slowest rs Dullding month in the year, ac-) bring cording to Township Building In-- — Carl Walton. Py / { € ‘deluxe Lark, the small car which) centage of the U.S. market, Production-line observers saw only a few changes in styling. A. new grill was added this year, The company said it wifl make a bid for new customers by in- troducing two new body styles, a convertible and a four-door sta- |tion wagon. “This marks the beginning of another prosperous year for the company,” SP President - Harold Churchill said. Scour Pacific but Hope Dims for Capsule BASE, Calif. (UPD—Ships searched a 10,000-square mile area of the Pacific today in Amer- ica’s latest attempt to recover a space capsule, but there-was little hope the instrument-filled package the would be found, _ The 300-pound $1'by.s34nch .. .” said the Defense De- partment in Washington, It was the. second failure in six days at recovering a space cap- sule from orbit, and the third’ time | lin the gl series this year. | _ attorney SP used to gain a bigger per-| cupine Mountains State Park. VANDENBERG AIR FORCE: State, Farmers Step Into Ring Battle Over Price for Xway Right-of-Way in Gratiot County LANSING (AP)—A battle with {political overtones over prices paid, ‘iby the State Highway Department ‘for road right-of-way centered in ‘Gratiot County today. Commissioner John C. Mackie °° touched if off when he said there | was unusual resistance to offers) county. The department is purchasing land for converting U.S. 27 to an expressway from Utica north to M46. . The area is part of the district ‘represented by Sen. John N. Stan- ‘lin (R-Belding), who heads a pend-! jing-legislative investigation of the ‘Democratic-controlled department. * * * Mackie_said 80 per cent of 67 land owrltts had turned down of-| ‘fers and declared he wasn’t going to be ‘“‘blackjacked”’ into excessive prices by the investigation. The Republican State Central ‘Committee entered the dispute in \round two when it circulated a re- ‘lease from Alfred J. Fortino, i for some of thee land owners. | i 2 * * x. Fortino contended the depart- ment land buyers used dictatorial ‘methods. He said the land buyers are just a mile and a half ahead rof the bulldozers. “But if the embattled farmers of Gratiot’ County are going to be run over, they will have to be knocked down first,’ he said. “They are not going to take it lying down.” “Attempts to vilify me or the department won't succeed,” Mackie replied in round three of the dispute. ‘We have made one offer based | on detailed, independent apprais- als, and organized pressure—poli- tical or vocal—will not result in an increase in our offer.” * * * Mackie said refusal of an offer and request for a ‘condemnation hearing is the right of the property ‘ jowner. ' “But we are proceed: nz with hearings of necessity,’ he said,| ‘and when, and if. necessity is de- ‘try within 10 days as the law per- mits.” Mackie added that he could understand the statement from lFortino ‘because he has a_per- sonal interest in terms of lawyer’s fees.” Surf Boat to Do Job in Fighting Fires LANSING wm — A 25-foot surf boat has been added to the State Conservation Department's _ fire fighting equipment. The boat was purchased as excess property from the U. S. Coast Guard at Harbor Beach. It will be based along the Lake | Superior shore and used to trans- {5 port men and equipment to fires in the remote area near the Por- AN, IN THE PRO STATE OF. MICHIG x of Oakland, tition Soest jbate Court i = Coun : Water Shier ‘Injured ing injured. when his towrope - Accepted bidders will be required to 18:00 by department land buyers in thes ifrom their date at a jor rates upon which git is submitted, |$75. 600 as Towrope Breaks A water skier* on Round Lake in White Lake Township spent twe} ‘hours in surgery yesterday at Pon- tiac Osteopathic Hospital after be- broke. Peter Pipia, 16, of 1236 Clear- water St.,> White ‘Lake Township, | was skiing when his rope broke and a metal hook on the rope hooked his hand. and then was ripped frée as he plunged ‘into the water at a high speed. Doctors said the hook ripped ten- dons in his hand, Pipia is listed in satisfactory condition today, ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Board of Education%ef Bloomfield Hills School District No. 2, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan will receive sealed bids for the construction and completion of Water Service to the Bloomfield ded Elementary School (Quarton Road site and Bloomfield Hills Junior High Schoo! ioe uarton Road) until 8:00 p.m., ES.T., Monday, August 11, 1959, at the office of the Board of Education, Bloom- tele Be bee ee nt which time, and place a $ will be publicly opene ane ee & » F “oped roposals must be on forms furnished ~~ the Architect and be accompanied by Bid Bond or certified check in the mount of five per cent (5%) of the a submitted ans and specifieations may” be ob- - Architects, Bloomfield Hills, A cheek in the amount car $10.00 must be submitted as a deposit for each’ set of plana and spécifications, same to be refunded upon return of plans and specifications in good condition ithin ten (10) days of the opening of Bids. furnish satisfactory Performance Bond and Labor and Material .Bond, each in the amount of 100% -of the contract. the total cost of which shall be paid by the accepted bidder. roposals submitted shall remain firm for a period = thirty (30) days after opening of bid The Board of Edusation reseryes the right to reject any or all bids in whole or in part, and to waive any informali- ties Me BOARD OF EDUCAT Bloomfield Hills Schoo! District No. 2 Bloomfield. Hills, Michig: MRS. JEAN B. MARTZ, Secretary Aug.-21, 28, 59. NOTICE OF SAL Clarkston Cannuaky School Oakland County, Michigan. tars § and Site Bonds, Series 1959. Sealed bids for the purchase of Build- ing and Site Bonds, Series 1959, to be issued by‘@the Clarkston Community {School Distfict, Oakland County, Mich- tage of the par value of $1,500,000, will received by the undersigned, at the |Clarkston Elementary School building, in the bots be ng Clarkston, Michigan, until foe stern Standard Time, ‘a a ay, ‘the 10th day of Sep- mber. 1959, at which time and place a bids will be publicly opened and ead bonds will be dated August 1, 1959, will be coupon bonds in the de- nomination of $1,000 each, will be num- bered consecutively in the direct order of their toth a $1,500,000, District, maturities from inclusive, 1 to and will bear rate or rates not % per annum, payable on 0 and thereafter semi-an- nually on Decembeg 1 and June 1. Each bid shall state the annual interest rate expressed in multiples of 4s of 1%. The interest rate for each coupon period on any one bond shall be at bag Fie rate only. Accrued interests to date Bf de- .{livery of such bonds must be paid by the purchaser at the time of delivery. har 4 bonds will mature serially on the 1st day of June in each year as follows: $30,000 in each of the years 1960 end 1961, $35,000 in each of the years 1962 and 1963, $40,000 in each of the years 1964 and 1965, $45,000 in each of the years 1966 and 1967, $50,000 in each of the years 1968 thru 1970, $55,000 tn each f the years 1971 thru 1973, $60,000 in se a thesvears 1974 and 1975, $65,000 h. of the years 1976 and 1977, $70 - 000. in each of the years-1978 and 1979 in each of the vears 1980 and '1981, $80,000 in the year 1982, $85,000 in ie year 1983, and $90.000 in each of the ears 1984 and 1985. Bonds maturing in are subject to redemption by the school district* prior to maturity, in inverse numerical order, on any one or more interest payment dates on and after June 1, 1969, at par and accrued interest plus a premium on each bond in ac- cordance with the following schedule: $25 if called to be redeemed on. or vee 1, 1969 but prior to June $20 if called to be redeemed on or we 1, 1972 but .prior to June $15 if called to be redeemed on or an June 1. 1975 but prior to June 1, . $10 if called to be redeemed on or iw 1978 but prior to June 1 $5 if called to be redeemed on or after June 1, 1981. -Notice of redemption shall be pub- lished not less than 30 days prior to the date fixed for redemption, at least once in a. newspaper or pvblication cir- culated in the City of Dztroit, Mich- igan, which carries as a part of its Tegular service, notices of the sale of municipal bonds. The remaining bonds will not be subject to redemption prior to maturity. Both principal and in- terest will be payable at such bank or trust company as shall be designated by the original purchaser of the bonds. he bonds are to be the final part of a total issue of $2.500.000 voted for the purpose of erecting and furnishing new high school building and addi- tonal school facilities either as new buildings or additions to existing build- ings, and acquiring additional school sites, and will be the general obligations of the school district, which is author- ized and required by law to levy upon all the taxable property therein such ad valorum taxes as may be necessary to pay said bonds and the interest ‘thereon. without limitation as to rate cr amount, he purpose of awarding the endl! he interest cost of each bid lw be computed by determining, the rate or rates specified therein, al dollar value of all interest_on ds from October 1, 1959 to their re- spective maturitres and deducting there- from any premium. The bonds will be awarded to the bidder whose bid on the above computation produces the lowest interest cost to the school district. No proposal for the purchase of less than all of the bonds or at a price less than their par value, will be considered. A certified or cashter’s check in the amount of $30.000 drawn upon an in- corporated bank or trust company and payable to the order of the Treasurer of the school district must accompany each bid as a-guarantee of good faith on the part of the bidder, to be for- feited as liquidated damages if such bid be accepted and the bidder fatls to take up and pay for the bonds. No interest shall be allowed on the good faith checks and checks of the unsuccessful bidders’ will be promptly returmed to each bid- der's representative or by registered ail. Bids shall be conditioned upon the un- ualified spiniee of Dickinson, Wright, Davis. M McKean and Cudlip (Claude H Stevens, of Counsel), attorneys, Detroit. pichigas. sppecving the legality of the The cost said legal opinion the bonds will Bonds Michigan The ti seg is reserved to reject any 4 ucation I * Secretary of the Board of by aie aVanAistine, minot. pause Notice is further given ig the above: Geo: Istin ther said, men ue chia, aie ahs i rt Mic lite ty 8 ad rene eat ot Publis by been filed in this Cow chigan Superin lasing the i 4 present wheres its of struction ropnne f° Oo. 151 of t the Bans ‘“ s ih said minor are Public Ac Hae tn v amended, = has violated a TON T ROBBINS, isw that jaid child+ —‘Beeretary of the Board of t rae Son "under, ¢ jurisdiction Aug. 21, "59. nem of the of the 8 : : of J Bees lag on foe eae 8 that D ' e ice ist avons ocety are, Cer eal tic iCourt votes At nex, 1 ‘est. Bivd M ; ei ae Ditch A tek | Oe 5 . 5 at seve “= in the forenodn, and you| s81GG te 19, |, PAY . are ded to & »per- ona, " one "wala bearing, beter of i" : to make sonal dear daughter mA... - cr — 8. r: dear mother of ny shall be served a ‘oy’ publ copy Joan, th and Richard. week. p to said nearing in Kent; r of Mrs. Alex Pont’ "oon an ct (Marilyn) er and Mrs. Prank d ‘circulated in (Norma) ee: dear. grand- . Witness, the. fonoge bie. pr E daughter of Al Pu- Moore, Jud t. ip the City) rerai service -will. be held, Satur- of Pontise in.» sald County, this 18th day . day, Aug. 22. at 2 p.m. from the of August.°A.D 18 |. Pirst Free Methodist Church with (Seal) \ ART ‘THUR E RE Rev. Lyal H. Howison officiating. (A true copy) Judge ef Probate) . Intergjent in Crescent Hills Ceme- risit d VASCASEENNO .. tery axton Plains. Mrs: Bigger Probate Register. wil ‘jie jn state at the Coats Juvenile Division | heral Home, Drayton Plains, until a Aug. 21, Boon Saturday * 1905) s (Plorence) (Blanche) service will be a Sattirday, Lange 22. 1959 at p.m. _* Godhardt Funeral i ©, Keego Harbor with Rev. Sam oiBtout officiating. Ine> terment in White Cha: jal Gardens, Mrs. Rezze in state at the C. J. Ged om Pu- neral Home HOWARD, AUG. 19, 1959, LARRY Dane, 2460 Eastern; age 10; he- loved son of Lether and Imogene Howard; dear brother of Gary, Allen, Robert Janice and Luther Howard J Puneral service will be held Rian taf Aug. pm. rom the untoon Puineral ome* Interment in Hill Cemetery. bos rt AUGUST 20, 1959, EDGAR J., 229 Rustic Circle, 54. Beloved husband of Prances H. Shaw: dear son of John E. and —a Bhaw, Soar father of N. George Russell and phouse; dear brother ee Robert Shaw; ‘Also survived by LU machine Puneral service will be held Monday, August 24, 1959 at 10:00 a.m. from St. Pat- rp Church. dn ic ent in Mt. Hope Cemetery. tion of the Rosary will be @isaas at 8:00 pm, trom. Donelson-Johns Fu- neral Hom SILCOX, fre 20, 1959, JOHN 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd., White Three sisters and 2 grandchildren also survive. Funeral service will be held ney: August 24, 1959 at 3 p.m. fro Richardson- pre uneral “Home: Milford with Rev. Charles 8. Kent officiating, Interment in Oakjarid Hills Ceme- tery. Mr. Silcox vill lie in state at the Richardson-Bird Puneral ome. STILES A a 4 j, 1959, George W., d.; 63. Beloved nusbaga of} Martha Stiles; dear father of George Stiles, re papaere Couturier, . Pox, Mrs. John Wherritt, William . Pauley; dear r-of Mrs. Charles Pritner, cal a Stiles, Irwin Stiles and panics Stiles; Also survived by 25 nildr fu en, Beret arrangements will be an- nounced later by Voorhees-Siple ~ Funeral Home. Mrs. Stiles will lie in state at the Voorhees-Siple Fu- _nera] Home. VAN KUREN, AUG. 20, 1989, JOHN, 38 S. Saginaw; a 69; dear father of Norman Kuren; d dear brother of George Van Kuren and rs. Grace Pan, oe: ‘oo service will Saturday, Aug. 22, Mm. rd the Mel- vin A. Schutt neral Home. In- terment in the, Soldiers’ plot in a Mt. Park Cémetery. Mr. Van Kuren will lie in state at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. VAN MORLE. AUGUST 20, 1959, John, 727 Orchard Lake Ave., age 72; beloved husband of Leona Van Morle, dear father of Harold La- Barge. s. Adelaide Cook, James Atkinson, Mrs. Mary Mason, Patrick Atkinson and Michael At- kinson, dear brother of Jécob and Mrs. Mary Van Morle. Funeral ervice will be held Sat., August 2, 1959 at 10 a.m. from the Mel- vin A. Schutt meral Home. In- terment in Perry Mt. Park Ceme- tery. Mr. Van orle will He in state at the Melvin A. Schutt Pu- neraj Home. Card of Thanks POs Fe ae WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY relatives, friends and neighbors for their sincere kindness -and beautiful flora] offerings during our recent bereavement in the doss of our dear husband and fa- ther, Arthur Warrilow. Special thanks to Rev. Harry Schlosser, Harold Davis at Moore Chapel, and the pallbearers. The Arthur Warrilow Family. 1 — In Memoriam zZ ~*~ Bhd ose MEMORY OF HUS- Son and Brother who passed me four years ago Au- ust 20, “Gone b but eg forgotten.”’ Sadly missed by Loving Wife. Wil- ma, Father, Steve. Brother, Nor- man A. Sandra and Mary Bowen. | Funerai Directors 4 COATS PUNERAL HOME Drayton Plains ___OR_3-T757 SPARKS-GRIFFIN CHAPEL _ Thoughtful Service FE 2-5841 Donelson-Johns PUNERAL HOME “Designed for Funerals” Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor : PE 2-8378 Cemetery Lots 5 1 DOUBLE GRAVE AND 2 SIN- gles, $90 each grave in White Chapel. MA _ 5-90: PRI ARE GOfNG UP THIS Is UR OPPORTUNITY a PI UP CEMETERY LOTS A DISCOUNT. Must a . Lake near Novi.) 4 lots White Chapel ee ee 412 W. teat PO pe N cvenings FE PERRY MT. ae CEMETERY graves. $25 & up. FE 4-9882. BOX REPLIES - At 10 a.m. Today t*er- were replies «t The Press office in the following boxes: 5, 6, 7. 7, 8, 14, 24, 30, 31, 32, 33, 35, 59, 69, 73, 78, 76, 79, 83, 103, 104, 107, 118, 119. 38, 63, 90, Tre The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FF: 2-8181 From 8 a.tn. to 5 p.m. spd errors stfould be mediatedy. The apy aiesiocs no -rés| for errors for that portion--of- insertion of kpomta Jen the sseetiiee: been én “RIFICK “LEAVING STATE. 810,- s modern year-'round Walled ~ Late home conon'etely furnished: olen (zien 42451. % » *