S f i a “S = * of 8 # ; es es k : -- Heard in Ortonville? “8 test at the Michigan State Mrs. Vernon Hutchings, UPSETS CHAMPION — “Here H-0-0-G-G-I-I-E-E,” screams Mrs. Leona Hutchings of Ortonville as she registered one of the biggest upsets in the 110-year history of the Michigan State Fair by winning the 1959 hog calling championship. Pitted against Andy Benoit of Wixom, Mrs: Hutchings yelled so loud and so clear that the judges gave her a blue ribbon without hesitation. Hollers Whole Hog to Capture Contest. An Ortonville woman is a “little hoarse” today after her prize winning bellow won her the hog-calling con- Fair yesterday. 41, of 1625 Hadley Rd., Enrollment Up in Junior Highs City Schools Will Be Overcrowded Until 2 Additions_Are Finished An enrollment inerease in the Pontiac public school system this “The Board of Education fore- saw this situation and additions to the Madison and Washington schools are now under construc- tion. A completion target date has been set with the contractors for next summer, * * * “However, we are ahead of schedule and it is hoped that some of the facilities will be available by the middle of the year and at the start of next semester. Over- crowded conditions will hold until then.” WON'T CUT TIME Proud said the junior and senior high schools will remain on the six-period day, nevertheless, and that ‘‘we are not cutting the pupils’ ctime in school.” cates a 25 per cent increase of *told of her victory in a booming whisper: | “TI gave all I had, and it was) outdoors against a strong wind,| too."’ Her cries reached the ears of “He threw his ribbon down when they gave it to him. It's all just for fun. Every fair should have a hog-calling contest.” Seeking Action Against Hoffa Contempt of Court Case Request Is Brewing in Monitor Group WASHINGTON (AP) The monitors of the Teamsters Union reportedly plan to seek contempt School Taxes » |store lost income is by a tax in- Soviets Play Propaganda “s E PONTIA E UVER PAG U.S. Weather Bureas Forecast , 5 - bon = TIAC P Wetalle Poss » cool : 4 ~ - | . Pe _ 117th YEAR Pie Foe. “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1959—32 PAGES vans inom. $i Need for More Is Studied Here Board of Education to - Determine Requirements for Next 5-Year Period The Pontiac Board of Education is studying the necessity of a hike in taxes for support of the school system over the next five- year period. Maintaining that school income from jocal taxes is growing smaller each year while costs are going up, the Board has begun a study to establish millage require- ments through 1964. . Research findings should be brought before the Board for its recommendations in about two months, according te Dr. Otte C. Hufziger, assistant su- perintendent of schools. If the Board deems a tax mill- age increase necessary, a vote will be asked next spring. * * * The declaration of shrinking income and rising costs and a re- cent Board of Education publica- tion stating “the only way open to your Board of Education to re- crease’’ indicates such a measure will be taken. ‘FINANCIAL PROBLEM’ CITED The Board has acknowledged that “a financial problem has arisen which could stop school im- provement.” , A previous Board study cites the present 18.75 mills tax rate as inadequate. “For several years, each year $15 million,” the report states. “Each year since 1957-58 school income has gone down by $275,000 over the year before.” ¥ * * Income from jocal taxes is got- ten by multiplying the equalized valuation of the school district by the tax rate. If equalized valua- tion is reduced, the study showed, then the number of dollars of in- come the schools receive is re- duced. BOARD DOESN’T CONTROL The Board of Education has no control over school district val- uations (determined by city and county officials) and cannot pre- vent loss of income brought by declining valuations. The first part of the study in progress is investigation of the S unny Weekend to Brighten Our Weather Picture Sunny skies will greet area resi-/ dents for the next few days with high temperatures in the low 70's. The low tonight is expected to dip to near 52. Fair and warmer with a high of 74 degrees is the forecast for Sunday, the weatherman said. A pleasantw eekend is predicted throughout Michigan with no rain expected before Tuesday or Wednesday. * * * At 10:15 a.m. winds were north- eaht at two miles an hour. The lowest temperature in down- town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 47 degrees. At 1 p.m. the ther- mometer registered 71. Bond Rate Hike Gets Approval Joint Action by Both, Houses Ups Chance of Monday Adjournment From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — House-Senaté conferees agreed today on a com- promise bill that would permit President Eisenhower to raise in- terest rates on government E and H savings bonds. * * * The agreement ended a three- day deadlock and removed one of the last remaining obstacles to, adjournament of Congress. *« * per cent. The increase will apply to all of the $42,500,000 of outstanding bonds, as well as those bought in the future. * *® * The Senate, driving for congres- sional adjournment Monday night, (Corttinued on Page 2, Col. 2) Sneeze 2 Blocks Long? CHICAGO (UPI) — Paul W. Henson, 19, admitted he was speeding when given a ticket Aug. 16, but said it was because “the thrust of a sneeze brought my foot down on the gas pedal.” But apparently the sneeze lasted too long. Judge Harry P. Bean noted that “you were 12 miles over the limit for more than Ps WHERE TUNNEL WAS DUG — The dotted line from the dye plant at the Southern Michigan Prison in Jackson to within 10 feet of the wall shows where convicts had dug a 50-foot tunnel The tunnel was Suspected Ringleader Has Bréak Record with a long criminal questioned today as the suspected iringleaer of an escape plot at tunnel within — uw en part in the escape plot, officials said, * ® * The convicts started digging sev- week after noticing that several convicts would disappear in the area of the dye plant on week- ends, The guards began looking for a tunnel. DISCOVER ENTRANCE The entrance of a three-by-three two blocks," and fined Henson (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) $5 Grill Detroiter in Jackson Escape Plot JACKSON (—A Detroit convict; was | Ouflaged, excavation had been carefully cam- * * * Warden William A. Bannan said the convicts apparently worked in pairs on weekends, One worked with a trowel in the tunnel, scoop- ing dirt into a canvas bag which was pulled out by another convict. The tunnel was shored up with slats ripped from wooden crates. The convicts apparently hoped to complete it sometime in Novem- ber. F * * * The tunnel ran four feet below the ground at the same level Yor to go under the eight-foot thick concrete wall. It would have come out at a spot midway between two watchtowers, within 75-yard range on each side of machineguns and rifles. TROUBLE AHEAD The convicts would have encoun- tered considerable trouble attempt- ing to complete the tunnel, Ban- non said, He said they would have had to go so deep under the prison’ foot tunnel was discovered in the sub-bagement of the plant. The wall they would have had trouble! solving the problem of muck and One May Wear 1960 Miss America Crown which was discovered by prison officials Friday. face and three feet wide by three feet deep. about 20 feet, then slanted down hmonths of work sponsored and fi- <9 @ee ee ewe® “eee bY “+. vOSOeS S008 06h 86 22-24 in Vain AP Wirephete about four feet beneath the sur- water. The steel reinforced wall is set about 10 feet deep. lu eee ee eed Ne, Fire Satellite Toward the Moon Convicts’ Work Was All Timed Nicely ee j ; With Nikifas Visit toUS. it's Bad Period of Year —Technically—for Good Lunar Hit Odds MOSCOW (4—The Soviet Union fired another rocket toward the moon today and said it would help open the way to interplanetary flights. This new rocket was launched into space at 25,- 162 m.p.h. on the week- end before Premier Nikita Khrushchev makes his her- alded visit to the United | States. | The announcement of the new : were recaptured within six months. of 1952, the prison was mated at two million dollars. It is the world's largest walled prison. 100,000 New unemployment. Say State Must Make | MACKINAC ISLAND (#—A team of experts, after a long, hard look at the state’s economy, said today Michi- gan must develop 100,000 new jobs a year for the next decade if it is to overcome its No. 1 economic problem— Prof. William Haber of the University of Michigan and Eugene McKean and Harold C. Taylor of the W. E. Jobs a Year Upjohn Institute for Em- ployment Research, said that with the state popula- tion expected to reach 10 million by 1970, some 3,- 800,000 jobs must be avail- able if there is to be full employment. Their report on “What's Ahead for Michigan" was made public at thle Michigan Municipal League convention here. It represents 18 nanced by the W. E. Upjohn In- stitute. Shifts in defense work, decen- tralization of the automobile in- dustry and automation have take- en a heavy employment toll since Michigan's peak employment By mid-1959 when the rest of the country was well out of the 1958 recession, Michigan lagged behind, Of some 8 million persons in the state in mid-1959 only 33.5 per cent were at work. That means, the report. stated, that Michigan right now needs to fill 400,000 jobs before it reaches full employment. With such a handicap and with In Today's Press SOM RE Sg ER ao 2 ie Cmwarch News Hee eeene 6-37-21 Comics, rpereessaceeceneves SEO Editorials shone wen eeesete te 4 Education Series, Dr. Fine 21 Home Section~.......... 1928 i CoP P ee ee ee M11 } TV & Radio Programs .. 32 | Wilson, Eart eee eee eeeene 10 Women’s Pages .......... 02 | ¢ * ok another 1,100.000 new jobs to be found in the next 11 years, what is in store for the state? Prosperity, say the authors of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Hoople’s Back _ "Two Courthouse Bids, Welfare Jop Supervisors Agenda New courthouse bids, welfare cases will be the major|/appropriations, items of business for the Qakland ee County Board of Supervisors when! The it convenes Monday David Levinson, chairman of the welfare committee in Lansing back board's Special County Building)jn January A study was requested) Committee. will recommend ac-ijn order to determiine whether! ceptance of two new low bids. there were any “chiselers’’ on the} totaling $2.740,800, for the general’¢ounty’s rolls, whieh have and mechanical work on the three-\creased in size since the study inilion-dollar courthouse. An elec-jwas begun. trical contract bid of $308,900, sub-; mitted in April, has already been'released yet, a source close to it accepted Isaid the study uncovered very little chiseling among welfare re-| Supervisors are expected to shy away from another legal fight cipicnts which brewed th June when they voted 70 to 4 to accept a bid other than the low bid for the ee ome Bond Rate Hike Gets +52 utercee aus ue &« Conferee Approval Is field is expected to be: bid ain this neing enough to give. the (Continued From Page One) largest of the three contracts 10 squared off for a sharp, sexsicn- OW Burke Co. of Detroit. Levine ending civil rights fight on will recommend this be done.) ihe KA te STAND BY The 3 representatives of the county's cites and townships will House leaders, anxious to ad- first hear a resolution informing Journ today, kept their members them that they will meet again in On 4 standby hasis to act on any pecitl session Sept. 21 to pass on legislation sent over from the Sen the trummed 1960 budget ate * * * It comes to $12 626 784, Or $1,279, \(4) less than the allocation budget upervisors passed on in April The huge cut— $608,700 of it came olf the social welfare department—| developed when the Tax Allocation The civil rights fight was over an attempt by some senators to tack an extension of the expiring civil rights commission to a 83,- 691,269,508 foreign ald money bill. The extend the life of the controversial com- amendment would Poot lared a freeze on Pax Hanna) des _ ntv aS milla mission for two more years and ate \ ns if - “ Pitas put up $500.000 for the group's OSS i at wi Wedded Te cc 7 lari cena expenses. The commission, which i ‘liminary budget w preliminary budg jaroused southern ire with a. series Actually, Monday's session will [of anti-discrimination recommenda- the 1960/ings at which the Ways and Meang budget and a study report on social|Committee chopped off and added welfare report is the result! of a meeting held by the board's! de-| Although the report has not heen) foe es Lod ay ae aa - + ites % j ie « ie «hae * a a ee ae Si ie ne a a en To - a al be ee ae ee a ~. nie wee a = te i ig a 4 le fos : ; : ee : - \ S \ f J 7 f * os : . i ; ee Re Se ee SS OS ee Se f i Haas (right), Pontiac Press edito sented to The Press at the State PRESS GETS CENTENNIAL AWARD — Joe ber, accepts Centennial Newspaper Award pre- John Swai daily and week! recognition at t Gov rial staff mem Fair from Lt. communities for Cities Appeal to cp for Quick Fiscal Reltef ‘esc cos MACKINAC ISLAND » — Of-/1960 legislature meeting in Janu see nothing more than accept [tions this week, will die Nov. 8 ficials of hard-hit Michigan cities! ary beamed an SOS today to the state gargs 50.59 SHARE unless Congress acts Next week s meeting might pro-| * ® * some debate as some super Hubert HL Humphrey -D have watched closely hear. Minn’, one of the senators backing the rights proposal said he wags confident the amendment wos ; lapproved = be ance of copies of the budget. linees Sen | Ops sad oat would “he ac Study Need for More companied by an agreement from fenale leaders io call up more kweeping civil rights legislation Pontiac School Taxes (Continued From Page One) neeygs determining the financial re Suit by Couple quirements of the sehool district for cach fiscal year from 1960-61 to Stop Gas Line hrough 1964-65 Needs to be considered are Is Dismissed the areas involved in operation, debt retirement, capital outlay, enrolment projection, assumed cost of Tiving Incerease and the base year of expenditures, 1969- i), early next year probably in late January ov earl Felruars Oakland Counts William J Bees imissed a suit by a Clarkston cou- ple who sought to slop construc. ition of # yas pipeline through their land in) Springfield Township These reports will be submitted) io Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, super-| Bradies 1. Miller and his intendent of schools by Sept. 16! wife Hazel, of 8701 Hotcomb Kd., lor a determination of the total sought an injunction, claiming need, thelr property was being taken The third step in the study is to, Without due process of law. The vrive at an estimated income| 'junctlon was denied also, ith existing sources. The fourth) ydge Reer dismissed the suit tep will be to determine the dif-iof the Millecs without preyidice, lerence between the needs of the thus allowing the couple te file a chool system and the income }second if they “The difference,” says Hulziger, | wish hould be converted to additional Tae We aaah ‘Acute Need’ Arises lo be voted by citizens,” for Blood in Area Hutviger that when the} tudy as completed and presented | A Red Cross io the Board of E.ducatton about ibe at the F1k tee inonths from pow at should be and fh too oN coompanied bya inilape Cieult yesterday Judge dis- cuit for chiamvaese The fifth and last step in the Board plan is headed “millage said Bloodmobile will Fengle from 2 ted pam Afonday in and recommended effort to remedy an need" for blood in this crea * * & Mrs, Mildtoad Bonne | of the Oukland County chapter said each week Pontice's use To pints of blood of 2°80 The Bloodnmolyle viata Pootiac trail, Walled Lake, iy Omly onee each mouth The is the eporfed on utistretory. condition EASt eppertanity te replenish the today at Ponte Ceneral Hospital Stock molt Oct VW) * * * Mh Brena tt 4 il out last Oneimiat oe month where one bow needed more than 100) pants of bloed Aj ypotin- ments are not on ary fo visit the Bloodmrobile Manday acute Walled Lake Man Hurt in Commerce Twp. Crash Janus J. Wilson T*conytasre ffer his auto smashed into a tree! Mv this morning at Wixem and Ciengars roads in ¢ Lowrship §hikland sheriffs depu- hes said Wilson fold thena he was raveling else Comunity north oon Wasom when ' hon ‘ amd he Wery iris cocident wandered across his path sintered across hs eth Tittle Warmer to avord al The Through Nation eceurred at - After Cool Snap The Weather | Ry The Associnted Press Foll € 8 Weather fureaw Report : . sporppey . O8 FONTIAC AND MICINITY Fate end Unty skies reigned over most a fils warmer today. high 74. Fale Of the country todas - an cool tentght. lew S87? Tomorrow ; : 7 fore falr, high 74. Variable winds mear 10 Only shower and thunderstorm miles achivity in the extréme southeast Teday im Pentie: “and southwest penetrated the fair Poiest temperature preceding & am Weather Pattern i ; At ® am Wind velocity & m ph Phe mercury inched upward Cigection —Variable Tthroughont the midcontinent, an Sun sete Saturday af € 47 pn i midweek Sun rises Sunday at 610 per Moon sets Sunday at 229 am Moon rises SBaturday-@t 404 pm ea well chilled by a thrust of cool air = | Howevey fait weather ewe tows Tempetetares ay (lung to several sections of the a 1 cool 6 am tlam Ss Fm Meo nes AB 12m ay Last PMN cccesnc ; man Bs! Northerly winds, outside of a 10 om... 63 large high pressure area centered . Friday in Pontiac fe the Great Lakes. cooled some ‘As recorded downtown) |New England , : igi Goes 9 England points by as much lowest temperature oe gg. 88 20 degrees, Lebanon, N.H. had -Mean temperature 565.9 46 at midnight — some 18 de Weather— Partly cloudy ie grees below One Year Ago in Pontiac | ar Highest. tembporaters A omeho ao i] standard Lowest temperature... ..00 Mean témperature aaa t Weather—sunny so "105,000 Engineer Grads nepent “ec Eee Thu Set Russian Record 96 In 1962 30 in 1949 . ¥riday's Temperatere Chart Sew it oe) ee see ictal ag bod : Marquette si, record of 105,000 engineers was vi Ls er pened ES Mia B96 39) SrAduated this year from Soviet Brewnevitie bo 66 Milwaukee 63 45) higher educational institutions, Chicago $3 $6 New Grieans 62 93, V¥Rehealay Fayutin, Soviet yS pom ae 2M Kew York , 74 8 minister of higher and secondary Denver 9 ss Penton 43 u — education, «aid in Phoenix annheur Duluth n §0 Pittsburgh 71 cute nee & al remnant Gal Fort Worth 83 86 Bt eB ps en Sota students . Pranctseo per e population in the Houghton 68 6 . Marie 65 4 alias |sckeon ie " a Traverse C. ‘a Soviet Union, His statement was Caneas ashington 4 y ooo y 7 Section ao reported hy the Soviet news ) lam Angeles 100 44 Tampa aa 74) agenvy Tass, 4 the previous 24-hour | Legislature | | * * * | They urged the Senate and return to a The league went on record foi 3-30 state-local sha - C tt ‘ ‘art ing of relief costs, a formul: | ” Axe e € House Taxation omit 8 _ Aft| hendoned two years apo when drawing up without a a a Uiseai the Legislature put 70 per cent of relief program for local govern the load on: local goverunents ments A few months-ago, lawmakers i * * * h : | rejected wa plea for equal shar- . | Sparkplugs of the appeal, al-| though vague as to exactly what) they wanted, apparently hoped for a broad grant of non-property tax ing power, including authority to levy a local income tax | statement of policy | yesterday on state-local fiscal relations called on the two leg islative groups to act jointly. t | | It urged them to work cooper. t atively with spokesmen for cities villages, townships and counties, | and to ready a program for the) ing after the cost to the state dollars. Despite SOU opposition the convention called anew for legis. the city officials heard the very Will be “slightly’ lative Virginia A Michigan Municipal League through , iudicial approval of the modified Plan for annexation determination adopted = The proposal passed the Senate this year but died in the House It also urged a special consti utional convention 10 overhaul he state's 1908 basic charter Delegates closed the business session of the 6ist annual league | meeting by electing four new Science or Propaganda? — Soviets Shoot at Moon | (Continued From Page One) be planning three. satellite launch lings in the next few months, one ‘of them, a 375-pounder to go into ‘orbit around the moon |U.8. TRY IN OCTOBER launching is expected to come in (October. This satellite would be lrocketed into the vicinity of the moon and, if all goes well, into lorbit around ‘the moon. This aunching is to be with an Atlas- Able rocket | United States scientists have | made several lunar probe executive! §8, the UOS. Ale Force fired a it | Thor . | feet after 77 seconds of Might. On Oct 11 fired another Thor-Able rocket, It} ‘wax intended to circle the anmoon| jand return to earth 1300 miles and fell back to earth * * * } On Nov &, 1958 the Air Force | made its third try. The third stage) jof this Thor-Able rocket failed to, ‘fire and the probe reached only 11,000 miles high. On Dec, 56, 1968, the U.S. Army fired a Juno rocket in a path de- signed to bypass the modn or, with luck, to hit it, The rocket failed to fire all-tts fuel, reached 66,654 miles and fell back to earth. Today's Soviet moon rocket was! the Soviet Union's second attempt. On Jan. 2 the Soviets announced firing a 1%-ton satellite into orbit around the sun, It pressed close to the moon. Radio contact with, this first Soviet moon shot was) lost at 374,000 miles RUSSIA EXCITED | Today's announcement clectri- fied Russia, which is preparing an enthusiastic sendoff for Premier Khrushchev, While there was no living crea- ture in the. rocket ite various parts were crammed with sct- entific instruments designed, among other things, to make studies of the magnetic fields of earth and moon, Soviet scten-, tists appeared confident the shdot will be suécessful. , The announcement, for which all! Moscow Soviet radio programs were interrupted, said; ‘In accord- ance with the program for space exploration and preparations for interplanetary flhght, the Soviet Un- ion today succeasfutly launched the second space rocket *. * 5 “The rocket has been fired to Stundard miles in miles away from the earth It rose to 71,- the United States, ment sources of energy. study the cosmic space en route) to the moon.” uO “Tt is expected to reach the! moon at 12:05 am Moscow ‘time Sept. 14.” the announegment said That ts 4.05 pm. Sunday, Eastern Tine The moon ts q target about 2.160 diameter about 210,000 Like the first Soviet rocket, fired the first year, the new one will shoot out a sodium cloud that should be visible from the earth, the an- nouncement said, Tass said the cloud would appear tonight at cosmic 9:39.42 p.m. Moscow time — 11:39 p.m. Eastern Standard | Time. The path of the rocket also can © ‘observed and photographed by Able rocket toward the | optical means” using light filters hospitals, moon but it blew up at 50,000 land the line of the clement natri- mM on # speetrographic camera, 1958. the Aw Force Tass added . * * * But it will not be visihle over the annaunce- added ENERGY SCOURCE SECRET The Soviet scientists did not dis- close the nature of the rocket’s the kindergarten level through the 12th grade. ps Diocese cesctbaaild OAKLAND MISSES SCORE HIGH—Gov. Wil- liams offers his congratulations Oakland County misses who were al) runnersups in the recent Miss Michigan State Fair contest. They are (from left) Shirley Hutchison, 18, of 2086 Lakeward La, Bloomfield Tow nship; Diane 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY of the | , SEPTEMBER 12. 1959 ,- > " | ae a - = The’ Day in Birmingham To Seek Action Against Youths Prosecutor. Will Ask for Warrants Covering 6 of 8 Detroit Negroes DETROIT (AP)—Warrants will be recommended against six of eight Negro youths now held in BIRMINGHAM — Three Pontiac Birmingham . They'll also be from whom they steal a wheel tire, connection with a street fight) Donald Redgers, 18, of 840 with police Thursday night,| Blaine Ave., Jose Garcia, 18, of Wayne County Prosecutor Sam-| 670 Ojista Ave., and Willis uel H. Olsen said today. ° _ Brock, 25, whe gave his busi- Olsen. did not specify the spe-| ness address as 6470 Alden Rd., cifie eharges, However, it was re-| ported they would involve inciting | to riet. | : k soe Pasterna Three youths were arrested Frida ight and held with fi A d Friday nigit and held witn ovel ATTONOS U.S. Concert eight are teen-agers. . As top brass of the police de- partment stepped into the inves- tigation, the prosecutor's office) MOSCOW (AP) — Controversial jsaid arresting policemen denied| poet Russian and novelist Boris reports one of the youths had| Pasternak made a surprise public appearance Friday night, first since he was shunned by fellow Soviet ‘authors for writig his been mistreated. |DOZEN AT SCENE at ; | About a dozen police were rel “Doct " lay ithe scene of the fracas. novel = _—. f | Patrolman Fred Dayton, 35.) * * ; . (Who suffered a back injury, re-| He attended a concert of the nson. The Press was one of 33° |mained under hospital treatment.|New York Philharmonic Orches- y Michigan newspapers receiving Three other officers were injured.|tra, cheered its musicians, cried he Fair for having Served their |All four are white. over the music and then emotion- more than 100 years. NL eek |ally embraced and kissed Con- oO | The incident took place in i Leonard Bernstein. hood. Officers were called on a} « * ireport of disturbance of the peace.| Pasternak, whose “Doctor Zhi- Thaddeus Steel, 16, claimed he} vago’’ won him the 1958 Nobel Prize for Literature and caused Sta te |was beaten after being taken to a police precinct station. He was{him to be denounced as a “‘pig’’ with four|by fellow Soviet writers, showed unannounced. The 69-year-old author had lived ; in seclusidn outside Moscow many \W. Hart said the four injured| months after being awarded the lofficers were attacked without prize he first accepted and then been trustees, They were Council- man Edwin W. Niemi ef Han: |Provgcation, and that one officer rejected, His novel ha showéd ‘‘unbelievable restraint” , : . banned in the Soviet Union. It cock, Mayor Stanley J. Davis . ; ; ; of Grand Rapids, City Man. |!0 not drawing and firing his gun|dealg with the misery of a group auger dack Patriarche of East ye self-defense when one of the of Russians in the last years of the czars arid the first years of the Communist revolution. jyouths pointed a rifle at him. Lansing, and Finance Director | Wesley Rausch of East Detroit. | . ; . x & & The 12-member board — then R R b rt i| elected Don K. Gothro, Grayling ep. 0 e S ries Pasternak appeared in good Mayor, as the organization's new healtht and tid reporters he is liv- Kalamazoo ine well and working at capacity. Jr. Lonely Job Sunday |He said-he is writing a prose play Mayor Glenn S | Ing jabout the emancipation of serfs SHEEN SPEAKS State Rep. Farrell E. Roberts!in the mid-19th century. Ata banquet session last night, (R-West Btoomfield)” believes he} “But it will be no more happy | ‘outnumbered to-'nor pleasing for me than my succeeding Allen presice nt Rev. Fulton J. Sheen and be-|/ Morrow when he represents the | novel,’’ Pasternak said. Siowed (honors for distinguished | Republican point of view during a! fe said he had heard rumors. service to the league |panel discussion on state taxes at!of plans to publish “Doctor Zhiv- ‘the UAW Region 1A hall in Detroit. | ago’ in the Soviet-Union “a little Roy (. Eastman, former Ann | ra * * while aco, but 1 do « bab Arbor planning direetor; City ; elit _ 0, ne = Attorney Howard Vielmetti of | toberts, chairman of the Houge’s | lt. |Labor Committee, said he accepted * * * ; ‘ace, f e Recaes pone an aoe jan invitation from the GOP State! He said no more about the novel gives awards of rerctt, | Central committee to debate Mich-/or his present work. He was too igan’s money problems with fellow) concerned about the music he had Honorary life memberships State Rep, Frederick Yates (D-De- just heard. were awarded to Henry J. De troit) and Thomas Downs, UAW Vette, superintendent of North Jegislative agent with the Michigan |Muskegon and Bruce D. Garbitt State AFL-CIO Council, Detroit Broadcasters Ferndale mayor * * * | ‘Apply for FM Station Renewed demand for the de-| The panel discussion, to be held feated annexation legislation was gt the hall, 8222 Joy Rd.. is bein | WASHINGTON # — Fine Arts voted only after Alexander Petri,’ put onby the 15th District's Com-|Broadcasters, Inc., applied to the Feorse councilman and Democra-| mittee on Political Educ ation|communications commission yes 3 Youths Pick Wrong Car in Thett of Wheel, Tire Commerce Township, got more 2858 lt tH oF as E : E : giv Rg rized that the youths had involved. ~« * * They were later arrested due to the addresses they gave police. They appeared in Birmingham Municipal Court ahd waived ex- amination. 4 Unable to post $1,000 bonds each they were remanded to the county jail to await arraignment Sept. 21 in Oakland County Circuit Court. Jam Message to Russians of Nikita’s Talk WASHINGTON (AP)—The Rus- sians aren't letting their own peo- ple know they can hear Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's speeches next week over the Voice of America radio. * * * sians are jamming special an- nouncements of Khrushchev's speeches made by the voice in its Russian . language programs beamed at the Soviet Union. No word has reached here that any announcement has been made in Russian newspapers or broad- casts, either. , The action raises the question of whether the Soviets will con- tinue jamming when the voice of their own leader goes on the air. ‘May See Them Soon COLUMBIA, S. C. (UPI)—Un- employment in South Carolina reached its lowest point in three years today, and 50 temporary employes of the State Hmploy- ment Security Commission were tic legislator stronfly criticized the’ (COPE) committee. It is scheduled|terday for an FM radio station at proposal as destructive of a ba- for 3 p.m. Detroit on 105.1 megacycles. sic democratic principal — that —— ee of self-determination | Citizens collectively — should have the say-so by their votes | rather than giving a leading role | | in expansion of city boundaries | to a Visiting circuit judge and a- municipal administrative agency Petri said. ‘ Other delegates argued judicial determination would take emotion- ‘alism out of annexation disputes. | “Michigan has been one éf the SIDETRACK RESOLUTION fastest growing states in the coun-/as individuals, business firm s, | After discussion, delegates side. try since 1940,"’ Haber said: “And | communities, states and as a na- tracked a proposed resolution to in spite of the controversy over tion, we shall continue to solve our oppose the so-called K12 education its ecohomic climate and fiscal economic problems with reasonable plan pending a ___ satisfactory situation, indications are that success.”’ : strengthening of annexation Haws. growth will continue.” One of their strongest sugges- It was referred to league trustees However, he warned, there are tions was for revision of the state | for’ further study no assurances that with continued | constitution. The K1) phin would force dis- growth new jobs will be provided | pevison ADVOCATED A etx sagt tricig automatically. He said it was the) solution Of grade school districis | “While constitutional revison and attachment of their territory Purpose of the study to explore the: i : can hardly solve all of our state iwithin three years to, neighboring ‘state’s assets and liabilities in or-: i local fi ial bl it | ’ and local financial problems, achool units offering classes from Ger to determine what is to be) : one provides an absolutely necessary | starting point and it will lay a | The authors offered no single (foundation upon which other con- ~ ~~ | structive actions can be built,’’ the report stated in tracing Michigan's financial] problems back to the 1930s when the electorate wrote into the constitution the 15-mill limitation on local taxes, At the same time, the authors urged passage by the legislature of an economic growth act to affirm the intent of the state government to concern itself with the sound economic growth of Michigan. x * * They suggested the act provide for a governor's council of econom- ic advisors; require the governor to deliver an annual report on the economic health of the state and cure-all, Rather, they suggested a program of widespread action and study. “The whole forecast of a bright future for Americans,”’ they said, “depends on the assumption that, (Continued From Page One) jthe report, if the state faces up to the cold economic facts, gets down and studies the problems and takes decisive action. duct hearings, make studies and develop legislative proposals. The authors at the outset frank- ly admitted there was much still : taxes they said that more study was needéd before the general welfare could be ‘served. Of the charges pro and con about the ‘‘climate for industry” the re- port noted that “what the people of Michigan really want is a prop: er ‘clifmate for the general good of how fo Fy g g : 2 i z dropped from the payroll. Seek 100,000 New Jobs a Year available for the years from 1956 on, he said he did not believe that 1957, 1958 and 1959 would show a reversal of the previous trend. “I do not believe that the as- sumption that there has been a radical shift in plant movement in Michigan will be substantiated when data (for the later years) becomes available,’ Haber said. At the same time he emphasized that the gains have been largely in small plants that have been unable to take up the slack in unemployment suffered since 1953. Haber said Michigan's problem is one of hew to achieve econom. ie growth, The state must cash in on its assets of geographical position and a plentiful supply of skilled and semi-skilled labor and at the same time realize its liabilities in order te correct them, he said. Admittedly, he said, it is a long range problem and nothing can be done overnight. But, he added, an immediate start should be made. The report called for a full-scale effort to determine which indus- tries Michigan is best suited for and urged development of re- search facilities in universities and industries to attract scientific tal- ent. Special attention, it said, should be given to the potentials of the tourist industry in northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula. * * * It recommended increased in- dustrial promotion and a detailed study of the reasons for plant moyements to and from the state as well as a thorough, objective study of the actual conditions of doirig business in Michigan. problems and the state’s water fesources should be looked into, the report sald. ie The authors asked that serious consideration be given to the crea- tion of areawide or Statewide de- velopment credit corporations and that existing business firms be en- couraged to invest in innovation diversification. ; possibilities, declared. And they called for a halt to the «m- mm =| Michigtin gained 1,441 new tmanv- facturing establishments over the ee i ra as We nae ae Kay Allmon, 18, of 142 E. Hickory Grove Ra, | Crease 2 pe reent. This, he to these pretty Bloomfield Hills, and Diana Roberts, 17, of 1494 | *!4, so bt Ue ts a bod th = W. Clarkstort Rd., Lake-Orion, Shirley is Mich- eae int dn Oniiel as igan's Junior Miss, Diane, Lutheran Silver Valley | Cont for the Seen sien call Queen, and Diana, Miss Lake Orion. north central states’: And, he said; while data is pot * . dermining of Michigan's reputa- tion by “exaggerating its problems and. minimizing its —s , ne US. officials said today the Rus- NOI : Sl THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1959 BUSY ON BRIDGE what will be the world’s largest lift span bridge is floated into place. The bridge will replace an = — type ae eoaner ik Houghton and Han- la 4 The center span of bridge. cock in the Upper Peninsula. The delicate work requires idea] weather conditions to prevent it from crashing into the finished portion of the Will Accuse Khrushchev WASHINGTON (AP)—Washing-jevery field have endorsed department committee's plans are carried out. GROUPS ORGANIZED Local groups are being organ- ized in each city Khrushchev will visit. Newspaper and radio adver- tisements are urging. for a nationwide demonstration of mourning. Protest rallies are being ‘ encouraged. But the em- phasis is on peaceful, dignified L. Brent Bozell, an editor of! the conservative weekly National! Review, who runs the Washington’ headquarters of the committee, | has outlined its aims. +e | “We think the subs "thing Khrwu-| shchev could learn on a visit to) the United States that would> be} Rg The committee reported Friday Soviet it has mailed 10,000 of the mourn- Khrushchev's visit to the United bes bands throughout the country States. and is filling requests at the rate The bands are being cut, sewn of 500 a day. Black arm bands andthe mournful tolling of church bells are the two most common ex- pressions of disapproval Khru- shchev will apparently encounter during his American stay. But " Fliers’ Bodies to Remain Buried in Mountain Snow “They are sitting up in the cockpit end, in a way, they're still flying,” said Mrs, Horn, mother of two teen-aged sons. Harold Horn, a captain in the Civil Air Patrol, and Charles Car- the way he would have wanted. When he did something he had erratic ; 4 - ‘ such a fevver that there were very they that Pays = few things he couldn't conquer. | — | “It wouldn't be right to bring) WASHINGTON CALM him down.” In Washington, the wearing of| UP! Telephete mobilize dignified public demon- Among 578 Employes Splits Up Big Trust Fund (AP) Nearly 14% million dollars from firm's CAMBRIDGE, Mass. —{Harmon P. Etlott, founder. Elliott son of the mains on the board of directors. recently He was asked what he thought the | a trust fund established more than sold the firm to Bessember Se- effect of the distribution might be. 20 years ago bya’ generous em- curities Corp. of New York with The ployer has been split up among ithe understanding it would be kept laughed. 578 workers at Elliott Addressing’ running and his employes kept new automobiles,” he said. Machine Co. ' | working. * * * * * * Individual’ shares range from) 2,500 to $4,800 before taxes Elliott is now retired but re--who had worked for the firm at ¢4Y night as her composure crum- first meeting of the year Thurs- test movement in the West, will j|day night voted to support a new! speak. Refugees from Eastern Ev- Checks were distributed on the |amount of $2,500 plus "$41.60 = icity plan which calls for annexing ropean countries now under Soviet. major parts of five suburbs to the domination are [ecnataled t hold) Sn ae tale oy Dah tes 0 eration on Heart jpechsieariel eric ‘Appreciation Tea iy", Yor « since overnmental mourning services _ day. No one came up with any) * * | ngle g F wild plans for spending the Miss pa Samsen of Boston, Will Pay Tribute The = ; ' PROTEST RALLY | money. With Hole Succeed \40 years a clerk with the firm th min vat a as ph eh A protest rally is being held in. GETS OVER $4,000 ire ceived approximately $4,200. ito Ex- Librarian | ee a — ney beens by the American iShe said she decided sh } \Council. It calls for annexation Typical was Miss Margaret’ 1 onDON (AP) — Surgeons re/not mak ny pla pigs! along school district lines in| (UPC! of Churches which ts plan- | Connell of Waltham, who received) 00g Frida @iean H. Griffin ly —— Liver Cancer Deaths Up _|s iis Serie mies meh writing infor arm ban ‘of death causes in Michigan showed| 4 ‘a significant rise in liver cancer hiv entitied use puoi new The Press 1s delivered ty tarrier for 45 cents a week; where carrier service ts not « , by mail in Oakland, Genesee, ving- —. ané Wash- a cae oh Geel mat ; ae erie, Se. teen rate e tote at t bér of ABC. ine, Micuqed. tenew claewere at sage — ¥ Se ye eR Ba ee ee EOE VT or eee es oe EE EE LO Rg LE ee ee Re Oe ee EPTEMBER 12, 1959 BROWN BROS. 108 West Sures FE 6-031 _HE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, S , : ; red SOMETHING NEW—This modern-styled ranch has a habitable All Work Guaranteed — Free Estimates! Reliable Waterproofing 24 Whitfield , | Phone FE 4-0777 area of 1,450 square feet. The interior arrangement features spa- bedrooms and an optional third. FOR ANY MODERNIZATION WORK. CALL @ Remodeling FE 5-8405 8 Sais @ Remodeling . @ Siding pas AMBASSADOR INSULATION co. 2110 Dixie Hwy., at Telegr TV.gr BEDR'M H-4@ a2 -O PATIO STONES At Big Savings 24" 224° 16x16" 12°x24" 16"x32” 31.20 | 60¢ | 70 | s1.30 Smooth Finish — Choice of 6 Colors — Factory to You LARGE SELECTION OF OUTDOOR FIREPLACE UNITS Trellis—Pergolas—Bird Baths—Lawn Ornaments Patio Furniture—Picket Fencing—Redwood Flower Boxes ROGER A. AUTHIER CO. 1 Highland Road (M-59) at Teggerdine Road OPEN DAILY 8 te DARK — SUNDAY 10-3 EM 3-4825 FLOOR | PLAN FLOOR PLAN — Excellent integration of kitchen-family section, living-dining area and the be made a permanent bedroom-by replacing the folding partition with a solid wall. bedroom wing are apparent in this modern home. Used | inets suspended from the sloping Cathedral Ceilings a ee Throughout Modern Hom ius and basement stairway. | Dining and living rooms are on By DAVID L. BOWEN the fact the entire roof construc- the rear side of the high bearing This design breaks down bar-|tion is plank and beam. The rafter, wall that runs from end to end riers of tradition and opens up beams are exposed and stained to/ beneath the ridge of the house —_ —_ to an unusual degree. pind rin en ewe ae Division between these rooms is i rom the outside, the home a ' r ivy pears conventionally modern, mt material that offers both struc-| echieved with a narrow divider the interior arrangement is full of! tural strength and insulation in one! Screen, innovation. |Peckaue: | A low brick fireplace is set in Most striking is the cathedral) The material, manufactured by \the heavily glassed rear wall. Two ceiling throughout the house, with) several firms, is usually two | features are unusual about the the sole exception of bathrooms.| inches thick and is nailed to the | fireplace: it is recessed so as not This lifts the usual restrictive lid) rafters. Because of its strength, | to rob the living room of valuable rafters can be spaced further space and it has a pair of exposed apart than the usual 16 inches | SPECIAL: BIG WHSE. CLEARANCE SALE While They Lest! BIG 3 FT.x 3 FT. Stanley Prime Aluminum Windows | cylindrical flues as chimney. Paint- = cont. ed a bright color, the flues give Roof beams in X-75 are 4x8s an unusual sculptural effect to the spaced four feet apart. | fireplace masonry. Asphalt shingle or other roof) FLEXIBLE SPACE coverings can be used on the ex-| Combined, the dining and living terior surface. The interior surface} rooms run 2% feet. Another 11 feet can be painted, if desired, or left a ee see with its natural white finish. can be y psing Architect Samuel Paul also calls ‘for an impressive amount of glass, | flooding the home with light. To further increase the spa- | elous atmosphere, the architect | has made frequent use of divid- | ers instead of solid partitions to suggest room divisions rather | than enforce them. | The plan has been designated ture is reduced to an absolute/lroom and |X-75 in the House of the Week) minimum,” says Architect Paul, | Series of distinguished homes,’ It ‘this system provides a consider- |has two bedrooms and an optional, able saving in construction costs.” | third. The home offers 1,451 square Watt 1s FOCAL POINT the living room. For a family that requires three permanent bedrooms, this folding partition could easily be replaced with a permanent wall. cious living and working areas and wide windows. There are two | = — A ranch with the colonial look FEATURING 4 bedrooms, 12 baths, glass tub enclosure, slate entrance, fire- place, all custom kitchen, large wood windows, oak floors, plastered walls, full basement and attached garage. ONLY SIG.O7TS ON, TOUR Shown by Appointment Above All, Maintenance Free Brick & Aluminum 1250 Square Feet ee BATEMAN & KAMPSEN Study Plan Order Coupon .. FE 4-0528 377 S. Telegraph Send to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. COLONIAL RANCHER | Enclosed is 50 cents in coin. | Please send me a copy of the || study plan of The House of | The Week Design X-T75. No stamps accepted. Please do not use sticky tape on coins. oe “protects \ NAME . eee (Please Print) STREET 2.2.2... 2c cc cces cece CITY cc ncneec STATE vieseccscs The room shown as TV or bedroom easily could | = divided by a counter and rin | | | } | i ' i { } ; 4] | folding partition the architect | “Since labor on the ceiling struc-jifies between the TV or guest/ Blotter Test paint before you apply it is to, brush a small amount on a clean} white blotter. Oils will be soaked; up in the blotter leaving the pig- ment on | SR A way to test the color of a) portable Santee Dog | Runs | FE 5-7471 the surface. : + Ne Down Payment + 36 Months te Pey’ E. J. DUNLAP | 4 + First Peyment in Nov. CUSTOM BUILDER | on 4 Anc or Fence V Factory Installed FE 8-1198 MORTGAGE MONEY| Available for Home Owners —__ <> Desiring: Conventional Bank a = — = Mortgages or Refinancing = of Land Contracts. “Applications can be made at our MAIN OFFICE or any of our FOUR BRANCHES PONTIAC STATE BANK MAIN OFFICE 28 North Saginaw BRANCHES Auburn Heights Drayton Plains Drayton Plains Baldwin Ave. at Yale Member of FDIC Miracle Mile Center | feet of habitable space. zi ice | eck: iN : decorative me wa runs The cathedral ceiling stems from) , the outside through the wall ‘at the front entrance, creating: SEE US FIRST la focal point on the exterior and for Land Usntracts—Real Estate— | Separating family rdom from foyer tnsera | ay et ion the inside. | DAWSON & WATSON | Family room and kitchen are & J. Dawson, Hugh A. Watseo basically one large room with o's Saginaw 8 unbroken window space across are large size and each has two | large closets. The master bed- | room has a private bath. | The exterior facade of X-75 is a blending of contrasting mate- rials, Vertical redwood siding sep- | arates sections of brick facing, The carport is integrated with the main the front, The two areas are | structure and has provision for out-| = = —__—_— | door storage. a | Over-all dimensions are 52 feet ROY ANNETT, Ime. | oy 2 tect 6 inches. 4 tut base. ment is called for in the plans; Realtors | but the home could be built on a. | slab foundation. In that case, the | heating equipment would be placed in the space shown as basement stairway. 28 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 8-0466 COMPLETE REALTY SERVICE all. ONLY $1395 WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT \ Attention Builders and Contractors Call ED for Wholescle Prices and Complete . Information 5 bd “Westridge of Waterford” an Address of Distinction % Deluxe Dream Homes. fe Suburban Atmosphere — City Conveniences % Adjacent to Both Public and Parochial Schools %& Fully Landscaped Lots Both of the principal bedrooms | ae This Daoud ‘“Paneled Family Room—All the Built-i DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICE (A Real Bargain for Some Lucky Family) Formerly S31 5009 Now SI Opp 3 Bedroom Model Located at 4213 tone Drive Ily Deluxe With Pride by , W. W. ROSS HOMES, Inc. SEE THESE BEAUTIFUL MODELS THIS WEEK-END ae Pt RANCH TYPE HOMES 4 Bedroom with 4 Bedroom with Carport Family Room $15,950 $18,700° wan't. TRI-LEVEL LIVING AT ITS BEST $22,000 Complete with Lot OUR MODELS witt be OPEN THIS WEEK-END... OPEN SUNDAY DIRECTIONS 10-8 SAT. 10-8 SUN. 12-8 DAILY 2355 WATKINS LAKE RD. ; 1 to 6 P.M. North Se Obie tear 9 Contre Care} | —— ef oe TW. W. ROSS HOMES, INC. ena? a . Closed Sandays FE HELTMAN & IPP. OR” Hor eats oe Waits Loke Rd. : Meer a Dixie Highway 4 8 ‘ie Builders and Developers of Westridge of Watertord ; 3-941) ft. : ner “ - * ‘ ares == \ a ee 0 A al Ny Al i i i i ie Me aw ae er ee edit bares oe fu ‘ oe ae % SPOS SOS SS POPS SP OS wa es” J * x b SIXTEEN ety shire are said to have the heaviest 6 fo Plyw ntration of people A new plywood cutting blade St et AEF on the market that 16 said to Count Farm injuries | An estimated 1,500,000 farmers are injured every year. AIIBUILDING { SERVICES We Specialize in iding the top. | i THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1959: aaa 1 Raw Materials (gamma tor Tile Come Anaur r rom 12 States rT Custom Made Homes BERSCHE construction co. 2075 HIGHFIELD RD. DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-3955 LOTS with LAKE PRIVILEGES | At Middle & Upper Straits Lakes $10 DOWN — $5 A WEEK BEN 2. SCHNEIDER A 4-1202 er MA 4-2555 514 Pentiac Trail Walied Lake large basement when it isn’t nec- | essary to turn on the regular cen- | tral system. Most heating contrac- |tors are qualified to discuss the unit heater — and it’s easy to in- stall, Order Shell Heating Oil at low summertime: (B) applying fresh mortar with PRE-CAST STONE and | ALUMINUM SIDING ~~ “ir $49500 For Quality Work BIG BEAR PRICES ARE DESIGNED TO PUT YOU AND YOUR BUDGET AT EASE BUDGET YOUR PAYMENTS — EASILY FHA—60 Months No Payments ‘til November GES REATION Cuck Big Values...S0 Coup nn Price! BEAg ADDITIONS mm $995 00 | For Quality Work iz NO MONEY DOWN! No amount of paint will cover a crack in the plaster. So resist the temptation to paint over every crack, crevice and hole in the wall without repairing them. — Plan to spend a little extra time getting your. plaster walls in shape before repainting a room. A little patience will make up for your lack of skill. Don’t, however, attempt any ma- jor plastering jobs — an entire wall or a good-sized chunk of ceil- ing — unless you've had some experience. Leave the big jobs to the professional plasterer, The tools you'll need are few and relatively inexpensive. Al- most any old chisel will do, and a putty knife is something al- most everyone has around. All you'll have to buy are a plas- terer’s trowel and a mason's pointed trowel. The last isn’t necessary but it’s convenient to use. For wetting the old plaster use an old paint brush or a sponge or whisk broom. Sa ; Patching plaster, which you sim- ply mix with water, is best. Plaster of Paris is O.K., but a few drops _|of vinegar should be added to re- tard hardening. Hairline cracks can be filled with special patching compounds available in stick form or tubes. But if you have any large holes to repair, use the regular patching plaster for everything. It’s cheaper. Small cracks need no special preparation except wetting. Aft- er you've soaked the area with water, work in the patching ma- tertal with a putty knife or your fingers, Smooth the patch with a wet sponge, Small nail holes can be repaired the same way, but be sure to fill the holes right to the bottom, Large cracks and holes need spe- cial preparation. First, remove all loose particles of plaster. UNDERCUT EDGES Undercut the edges of the crack with your chisel, The space to be filled should be wide at the bottom, ‘|narrow near the surface of the wall, This will prevent the hard- ened patch from dropping out. ENCLOSED PORCH mie $39500 for Quality Word CALL NOW! OPERATORS ON DUTY 24 HOURS A DAY FE 3-7833 92 W. MURON—PONTIAC to Pay! $ If you find yourself with a large hole between lath strips and nothing to support the patch, cléar away a little more plaster so that the edges of the lath are exposed. Then tack a piece of thin wood to the lath to support IN THE BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOL DISTRICT COLONTAL - TRI-LE VEL with 2475 ft of living area A Wuee Bedrooms * 2% Baths <) . 2 Separate Fireplaces Dining Room oo CUSTOM BUILDING DEPARTMENT: Consult with us before you build. We will duplicate any of our models to suit your specifications, work from your plans, or help you originate your own design from the ground up. HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY CORPORATION 106 Washington Blvd. Bldg., Detroit 26 Phone WO. 3-4816 LCL ALLL eC TER A et EN I SN Phe Houseman-Spitzlcy Corporation has developed BLOOMFIELD HILLS OFFICE: Long Lake Road at Telegraph Opposite Devon Gables—PHONE MI 4-7422 Traffic planned with outstanding features including two-car garage and full basement under ground level. New England kitchen has large breakfast nook; built-in oven, range, dish- washer, disposal. * Paneled Activities Room INCLUDING 155'x175° LOT Soe ssc case San 5 E *40,900. -, See the exceptional lotsa in Brookfield Highlands, Some are lovated on the crest of hille, others in secluded ravines. Let ove of our salesmen take you on «@ tour of this outstanding Bloom. Field Hills property, . Lobated Just South of Long Late Road OPEN 1 to 8 P.M. Daily and Sunday MODEL PHONE MA 6-5597 over J00 tine sudivisions since 1914 PATCHING PLASTER — Patching up sick mortar is done by (A) culling out loose cement with screw driver or chisel before wet after job (C) will head off future cracking. Everyday Tools Sutftice for Repairing Plaster pointed trowel. Keeping surface the patch. Screen wire will also work. Once the undercutting is done,| brush away the loose particles and | wet down the area thoroughly. | Work in the patching plaster, but! don't fill the hole completely. Al- low the plaster {8 set for an hour rgent in the ceramic tile is the mineral feldspar in its pul- verized form. Kentucky The third type of raw material za used by ceramic tile manufac- = turers is fuxing agents, These — = are materials that melt when = = subjected to intense heat. Their = = function is to fuse all the various = = ingredients into a single solid The most widely used fluxing OIL CO. THE WATERFRONT SYLVAN VIEW FE 2-8343 $21,500 os we. 590 S. Paddock St. i a JOHN W. STOPPERT Buildtr | FleVypemenyme or more, wet down and apply fin- ish coat (about an eighth of an inch) and smooth down with a plasterer’s trowel. After the patch is thoroughly dry, lightly sand the edges so that there are no ridges. Then seal the patch with a coat of shellac or two coats of glue sizing. Then you're ready) to paint. SETS FAST A word of warning on mixing) plaster, Patching plaster may set in 10 to 30 minutes, depending on the brand, Check the label. Mix’! only what you can use in the’ allotted time, Have the hole ready | to patch, mix plaster, wet the old plaster, apply the new. Women Still Like enemas sere ipeeeenraraanerreee QAO NOAH Oi OL NON) Oe Oe Oi WL OL ON NOOR Or Cee: Ce OF See Today the Pontiae’s Special Priced $11,750 - $77.00 Monthly *® Face Brick * 3 Bedrooms *1', Baths * Carpeting * Full Basement * Country Size Kitchen Medel at 835 Scottwood Ave. off Perry St. 2 Miles From Downtown McMAHON REAL ESTATE Wood Floors Best Few housewives have been won. over to the wide variety of floors| which have been put on the mar- ket in recent years. By far the largest number of women inter- | viewed in a recent nation-wide test expressed a preference for wood floors in their homes. | Their reasons were varied. Some said they liked the livability of a beautifully finished wood floor | which would take a wax polish and, give charm and character to a| room. Even women who liked| wall-to-wall carpeting wanted fin- ished wood floors underneath, and| they had a point in this prefer- ence because they said such homes had better resale value. Livability and durability ranked well up in the reasons why wood floors were preferred, the poll takers report. Wood flooring lasts longer, many women observed. When floors are made of west coast hemlock or Douglas fir, they develop, with wear, a deep patina which enhances their beauty. One of the big reasons why housewives want wood floors is the matter of physical comfort. Wood flors are easier on the feet and back, especially for those of us who walk a half dozen miles a day doing our chores, one wom- an explained. | | | OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M.-2 P.M, COLONIAL LUMBER 7374 HIGHLAND ROAD OR 4-0317 1% Miles West of Pontiac Airport ot Williams Lake Rd. For a Free Estimate Call: AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. ~ 5,000 Successful Install- ations. In Pontiac Area 17 Orchard Lake Av. FE 2-9124 TORIDHEET AUTOMATIC HEATING . Since 1936 e ' @ KITCHENS H oe * CORE e ve 3 reas et © GARAGES . Com Ae og FOR FREE ESTIMATE Ach About Little As A 24 Hour ioe : ’ ne Our rr or | Phone Phone FEderal 4-2575 | comme Per Day “shonin No Payments ‘til 1960— 10 Yrs. te Pey—No Money Da. Loans MIDWEST Builders and Supply .718 WEST HURON STREET iy, — Yes, winter is on its way! Seon it will be “back indoors’ for most folks! More time will be spent inside the home. That's one reason you should fix it up anew. But, there is another reason — 2@ sound, well-cared-for home cuts down on your fuel bills and cuts down.on more costly repairs leter. Fin-up now! FREE MORTGAGE APPRAISAL SERVICE “Do Business With en Established Firm” in Ooekland County {11 | Ds * anu | PONTIAC, MICH. \ ‘ \ : \ “ \ s P si \, i \ : nies iki, sii = Re ee Re ae i da let ee Gd, kak Ae te, a, Eee, Be ck Ck A, i oe, kG, si, i i a ie ee So te ated remem a pe { l ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 195 _ TWENTY-FIVE > Headed for Crisis This Month |_ADAM_ AMES | it. _____By Lou Fine SHE'S LYING TO DAD... 1...I NEVER SAID Steel Squeeze Is Growing Tighter #225 By JOHN MOODY . jthe unemployment resulting Sa cole be stockpiled too far|Geer said the firm’s overall sup-| PITTSBURGH (AP)—Effects ofthe steel strike so far has dc-|ahead. “ply ef steel is still good but short- the nationwide steel strike—slow-jcurred in or near the big steel | Wyoming reports unemployment ages are cropping up in some spe-| ly building up over the last 59) producing centers. iresulting from the strike is bare- cific product items. days—appear headed for a crisis} Pennsylvania, heart of the steel ly noticeable but a spokesman| * * * within the next two to four weeks. empire, reports nearly 65,000 idled added that construction of the na-| On the other side of the pic- x * * | because of the steel strike. West tion's first Atlas missile operation-|ture, the half-million steelworkers Hefty inventories Seomnaiated |VEEes: where much of steel’s al base near Cheyenne may be appear to be suffering through the during a record six months’ pro-|coal is mined, has 27,000 laid off.jhalted by-.a lack of steel if the'strike with a minimum of hard-' duction prior to the strike are be-| Kentucky, another coal produc-| strike goes a few more weeks. (ship. Many are receiving govern- coming unbalanced. Many smail ing state, has 15,006 idle. Ohio, a) pittsburgh’s 20 - million-dollar ment surplus food and package ‘pry SMaeoIpUcs LeHT Fe, ean ye ny firms unnoticed because of size big steel producer, has upward of/civic auditorium now under con- distributions from the union. BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By Edgar Martin have quietly halted production. | 20,000 idle. struction will be delayed because x * * | TL BELIEVE] F ALVIN, L CANT FIND THE PERIOD DURING LANCIA | An Associated Press survey; Many of the other states, where stainless steel for its massive re-| In most steel areas, utility, = HE'S THE LEDGERS | RAMSEY WAS BEEN IN shows layoffs in industries allied|steel manufacturing firms dot the volving roof will not be ready. firms and merchants are extend-; [4 WHERE'S PITTS CHECRING || PAST SIR MONTHS! —< EDROPE! TREN RE MISSING! | to steel have reached 175,000. Late ™4p, quote employment commis-| , maven ing credit to many of the strikers.| [- S | SOME . . “| reports may push the unemploy- Sion officials as saying effects of CUTS WORK FORCE ‘In some areas stores are adver-| > I ———_ INVOICES! =a ment figures even higher. ‘the steel strike are almost negligi-| Midwest Steel & Iron Co. in Col-'tising that striking workers can| af : ew. ,bie and the effects so far light.’ orado has cut its work force -by buy now and make the first pay-| Even as the picture grows dark) In th ce ay = Vena 4 many of the big manufacturers); “" Me ‘New England states re- who depend on steel for raw ma- ports as late as the first week of terial report they have not yet this month were that isolated ef-) felt the sting of the strike. They o8 ve strike are beginning : 7 (0 eit. add quickly that time is OS | New England warehouses re- | out, “ a rs port large companies, ordinarily | While’ the sconamic squeeze Purchasers of steel in’ mill quan. | ; ge (tities, are shopping for small | grows tighter, negotiators for the — ix of itecl | basic steel industry and nearly a @™OUMts Of si¢el. | half-million striking United Steel- IN NEW ENGLAND By Carl Grubert workers show no sign of coming) Edward Randall surchasing ; > Seas oo . mee close to an agreement. jagent for Hawkridge Bros eel ty / , GO PLAY IN FRONT OF BUT MY MOMMY , CUZ WE MAKE TOO MUCH MAY USE T-H |warehouses in Boston, said the ail SAID atl Nong NOISE AN eaWing les : consensus of the company’s New PLAY IN NO ey IS TAKING England customers were that an- jother two wgks would begin to slow prod n In Texas an employment com- mission spokesman said many) very small firms appear to be cut- ting down but most are not in- x~ * * cluded in commission reports Just how much the 80-day cool-! Reports from the state of Wash- ing off period provided for under! jngton are that-no serious effects Taft-Hartley would help is ques- of the steel strike have been felt! tionable. It would take weeks 10 so far but may take a toll in an- fill delivery lines that were drawn other four mp dry prior to the strike * * © "> Oby AEM Se Secretary of Labor James P Mitchell said earlier this week he would recommend that the Presi- dent halt the ‘strike by Taft-Hart-) ley injunction if steel shortages | develop and further unemploy- ment results. * * * Construction work, especially Steel firms report heavy order- bridges and highways, are just ing for the fourth quarter already. starting to show effects of the An 80-day production resumption strike, In many cases the steel “THE ROCK FORMATION INSIDE “I STARTED WALKING —TO FINO A TOWN — ANY TOWN — THE CAVE LOOKED INTERESTING “ BUT NOTHING WAS IN SIGHT [* — on en cee would start a wild scramble to for bridge and highway construc 912 920 sucucs on ike pee ee build up sagging inventories and tion must be made to order and “Dear. We'll take this one POKED MY HEAD OUTSIDE result in long waits for many CUS: : ——— ve ; Pre SANS SIGRM HAD LORnEGE BOARDING HOUSE A pol! by the National Assn. of Purchasing Agents of big firms in the manufacturing field was summed up by saying WILE SOON HURT “The steel strike hasn't hurt business yet, but if it isn't settled in 30 days manufacturing compa , MY WoRD/ nies may have to cut back xpiai cf sharply.” tre eet) YA oy INCREDIBLE. * * * The Associated Press state-by- state survey shows that most of ALLEY OOP aa AN WHEN I WELL WHILE YOURE > tb YOU D HAVE GET TH’ JOB DON: , ABOUT IT WHY ./( WHY? ROOM 7 PUT TRYIN’ TPUT LITTLE \ YOU WON'T FIND DON'T YOU MAKE | NU, SOME BRAINS ) OC WLUIE Bach J iM SO EASY |) 10 HIS HEAD c NY TGETHER AGA KNOCK TO 4 a) y/ Siamese Twin, | Seoarated, Goes to Regular School FERRIS. Ill. (AP)—Rodney Dee Brodie, who became a medical rarity by surviving a Siamese! twin operation, has taken another step toward becoming just an other one of the boys He goes to regular school classes now on a_ half-day basis Rodney was born with his head joined to that of his twin, Roger Lee In a long, delicate operation in 1952, doctors separated the two Roger died 32 days later. Rodney will be 8 Wednesday “TI hope it works out,"’ said Rod SN By Leslie Turner YOU_CANT PULL THEM APART TILL T TELL YOU OL THE HARDER YOU TRY THE MORE DIFFICULT ITS! TRY...YOU WILL FIND IT MPOSSIBLE | CAPTAIN EASY , 7 VOU ARE WOW IN A DEEP | MALE OF THEM ARE ABLE TC OPEN HYPMOTIC SLEEP! YOU CANT | ““ THEIR BYES. AND ARE DISMISSED ~ ‘ell ' 7 { ‘ OPEN YOUR EYES! TRY,..YOL NOW YOU WILL FALL WILL FINO IT MAPOSSIGLEL Af NTO @ DEEPER SLEEF.. AFTER SEVERAL MINUTES UV OF SOOTHING TALK, TE GROUP IS TOLD THEY : : . "TG DEEP, SOUND SLEEP! ney's mother. “He wants to attend x : - S ALL VERY WiLL BE WN DEEP SLEEP \ LOCK YOUR FINGERS school like the others rather than 406 ~ > tN ' — . . <= } - Axic t z — AT THE COUNT OF THREE! TOGETHER’ WOW THEY have a_ teacher come to the SVE pepe im aise weiner es)" { ONFUS ING = THEN A SLOW CONT A = ARE STUCK TIGHT! house.”’ aan WE Put Detroit on List OUT OUR WAY for New Dial-a-Wire i ae WELL, LOOKIT |] YES, IT’S ANICE ] OW000! HE'S DONE IT AGAIN! ee eee I ey OL COLNE -- PIECE OF I USED TO BE HAPPY WITH PHIL, AND PENNY _— ; Zz ALL DECKED /} MATERIAL ,WELL\ WHATEVER THEY SOLDME, DETROIT (UPI)\—Western Union y / {| OUTINA MADE , ANDA BUT NOW HE'S FORCIN’ ME has irae it ul expand its i BRAND { GOOD FIT’ I TO STUDY UP ON TEXTILES Y new lal-a-wire elex service to | ; NEW i\ MADE U ' | y | NORAN CE ao % , . me and Paper nat as well as . (som) : \ GOT oie atest poser =o NANCY By Eraie Buxhmilies to Cuba and additional points in \ Canada during 1960 fe, q VOY MONIES! LIKE Oe et = = = Ss OKAY-- DO you I GUESS SO--- ---AND BRING award F. Sanger. director of hid ry D : I, (OW ‘ % MY AUNT TOLD WISH It SENT UNLESS YOU OUR GARBAGE public relations for Western Union. Me RD 5 OVER TO DON'T MIND TO YOUR _ told the Financial Analysts Society ti | A |i “- fo ORDER = ae YOUR J) IF J] LEAVE STORE \ of Detroit at a Juncheo ting , NEW GARBAGE : =f Zs ‘ é mn meeting : 1 ne HOME 2 IT HERE--- EVERY that by the end of 1960, the Telex | — oa CAN ~ , Ne DAY y network will link 53 major cities i SS : ; \ of the United States. Canada and | = | ~ ee /-—,, 5 Cuba. | 3 /A| OF {. [HARDWARE , With Dial-a-wire Telex service. } g\| * “| DEPT - subscribers can obtain connections ee, f *e “J in eight seconds or less for instan- | , fi He ‘4 taneous two-way telegraph service ~~ - | | imaged) at special time-distance rates, San- ~~ Ha IP i| ger said. | (Az Ree | pete: : —r ¥ : PY a — BUT SHE'LL GHE'S WONDERFUL AT GORRY IM LATE BOYS y( MEW | to Sign Up Cowboys am): ——— = I'M STARVED. WAVE A PINE DINNER | | WHIPPING UPA Quick 1 OINNER WILL BE ON THE 1 YAT CHOP SUEY | ‘5 (GN'T MRS. READY FOR US IN MEAL .., HERE SHE TABLE IN TEN MINUTES PARLOR ? ALBUQUERQUE,. N.M. (AP}— DUOLEY HOM NO TIME gee iS NOW. 1, = : The Rodeo Cowboys Ansn. has _ YET? ov — Seen tt f fet.) asked the New Mexico State Fair —_ ay * C f 7» aS AN KS) C os rene F + iL re, Vv ew vee) to sign up some star television : — ee Ww if a [Ke /\ | performers as members of the i ; -" Ht i {CA or lose RCA approval of the 7 | t.39 fair rodeo. Heil tea g : “Most Hideo performers belong | | a a =| |” Ra N/R | et ¢( rodeo, there would be no perform- PARADISE LOST thee by pes one. be, 1 ig WS Ral OH | ers, : a = ‘ : : + Fil DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney > =< Maye C2 GANG 7 oar] GRANDMA _ By Charles Kuhn 2 IMB a, OO 6 “4 ga" GEE. GRANOMA, | [HECK,: DON'T MIND | IN FACT, 1 KINDA J] PTS.TH’ WARSHIN’ UP AN’ ee Pi Bh em ¥ 4 * | YOUVE GOT.ME | 1 SCHOOL VERY MUCH! || | UKE TH’ BOOKS | ©] | GETTIN’ READY FOR SCHOOL i lel? Sz “ ad | ALL WRONG / eaten ~~ po nae AN’ THINGS../ | THAT I DON’T CARE FOR! - H fe . “7\/| Bsn p — es SS ee eae rs ad « _ e a \ ** ° vi ge ae i i yes f * a et Pies ~ a Vie Sy ee Tt Feces ee oy, * Fr * f i ee eS SY Yew Ney COS wr ee ow Bee 8 Ne Oe ee Oe ee Oe Pew we SU SOROS NRE RO oe RE RR I MGT TI ee Te gh Ba le ae pA aa ie cena ‘ . : TWENTY-SIX | - es 9 #8, * Meng ee ey ae fe, 2 jeer si, Fie & fr aia i ELSE LAML MLA SL CT EMAL® GMM * * % %*§ VJ/~"S © - * ~~ Wy pe eg cg > eS we : eA A Nike Sil in iS sence et ine a i v | ; , 5 TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1959 enero AON Nae A rence a abt rene e SHeRNp NS i Knight's Rone quabble Rages Question Police Tactics in 70 Hours of Almost Continuous Grilling BRIGHTON (UPI)—The hassle: over whether Alvin Knight's con-, stitutional rights were violated in some 70 hours of almost continuous questioning has created almost as mueh of an uproar as the search for the state policeman he has con-, fessed killing | Brighton attorney, Marin J. La vin, named by circuit: judge Mi- chael Carlin to defend Knight, ! claimed his chent has “already been tried and convicted ino the NeEWSpapers | Knight's trial date will depend on whether Lavin decides to de mand examination for him, court officials said. Lavin, a veteran of 31 af law practice, said Knight's confes sion to police that he killed troop Albert Souden who came to, question him about a $7 robbery will have no legal bearing on the yal er mans guilt or innocece * * * He said the prosecution still has to try Knight on evidence that as, admissable in court and the impor lant things as to defermine whether, 0 the admission of pull was ob! famed through threats or pram ses " FOR ART EXHIBITION From 11 a. m Pontiac Press Fhote , Lavin also blasted State Po intl pom. Sunday, all types of oil paintings will Checking one of the exhibits are (from left) Mrs, ice practices in’ conducting the heoon display for public viewing: in the yard of Merril) McPherson, Mrs. Roy Armbruster, Mrs. initial investigation of the Mil the Maen Zoner Studio at) 25 (Com Pad Caroll ' iM Jack [vunt , ie Weead be af ‘ “ies { Tre ‘ t e) 4 i s. we k ey ford Tool Co. robbery which ‘ > ‘ ines 0 von sain Knight alse has. confessed. , Meanwhile, in Grand Rapids ast . . ® « torney and Cirewuit Court Comins Art by Students toner Donald) Dilley charged in In | cu rovin : reomngaiionn asia yoliras stale Tn v to Be Displayed ties" an holding Knish , . _*» « ' . at Milford Sunda wn T The Grand Rapids Press ran an editorial condemning the alleged MILFORD violation of Kiight(s constitutional rights | VIENTIANE. Lang (AP) Laos: Laotian sol ocither in’ Vietnamese . alfictal hould find at Garay easy units or as leaders of rebel group Iceland Rift Clouded for com ities UN observer that | i diffieutt potter Communit North Viet Nia os The Liothans have an armory of eee rreminet amd tragmaiage Pled) Pathet captured) weapons and oa) library y nterna Politics Loasnebels fodse up an the Asian of propaganda leaflets that cian be hegpaprdeonty traced to North Wael “aan + * & - * + WASHINGTON CUPD YAY | * \ j * eS aif . bol tan Pat proving that) North Veet The Weapon melade Chanese ’ hats Sti ees t eel 01 T By me mdiyy Chaat hoatpyese ie ae Ninally fighting or amd CC yechoslox at ry tisen} | eelandice pobltienins lookup for a Ped China and Sarth Viet Nar CaUMpaten bssue may have been : Thev alsa has Amerie am mya partly orespotsible fer deelhane : i i rifle md carbines the North Viet (NEY reaetion to a series of ines hamese eaptured frome the Freneh dents involving Cs etrvieemen the ] } \ statponedd there - TIE aa , SAME PATERRS Consullations were being held, mo , vee fall re ra meanwhile, to fiad ways of avoid BEAT CSRS ne : . ' . Li \'; ‘ ing such incidents, which Have frighten oe et retreans stirred increasing anti Amertean ised aiauinet Ives Eveneh feeling in Leeland in the past fev 7 * * * ay : arn Gov. David Lawrence tat so far as is known. Laotian : forees have not tought on sun Wie Wheidetiis. anu expected tn) OF Pennsylvania Soys 1 ee } t t eed vipyat . qs » + ‘ l 4 ‘ F bean issue an the Teelundie elec He Didn't Join South What were first described as two tian scheduled for late next month North Vietnamese Captured on * * * | A ASIEN CTON iE: ; northern Lee footing were ha : \ wha ¥ ' th . '; ' The Socal Democrahe Party. ® payid’ b. bawrence of Pennsyl , vit c we ia, —_ wig I Hunori ; ah ‘ weap tie it “ tt tet 1 roruty faction, new as gn contrel vant demes that be has jomed } ne of the Teclandie cabinet. But at is « td crossed tito Ln fey Ses Southern detnocd at yoy ote at considered Little more than a care aceanng Pant MO Bather a eNOS ‘ ‘4 wn toh fuker government ~ om * * ryan ook the wobpeed Dyernect iti | . roby andy abt say thie The biggest party in the coun) Comunittes Have hear lane amt { ' ' ' rf) eOMNEEDD wear try is the tndependent Party * * ~ ramnst ther post iven in Viet ‘ urn Hea sts piven i e Which was expected to win an Jitler made the accusation BM ny imyese TT stall « ald | witied le 1 “1 mf rigene absolute majority in the partia’ day nicht in acstatement that sar iyi pabels teamed by Viets " i ‘ 4 | v if VAET ete ment in’ the forthcoming elee the school segregation poste ds in s N \ he al mn Nerth Viet Nami minht use Vi Vey ant Cthoamese comminnds * * * But an Vbarristaey ba Liaw American officials sugested that PEMee replied that “vt as vidieutous MOE CONCLE RIVE: at least some outnumbercd Social SURBest that LT share the vaews Lack of concrete proof doco net Demoeral may seek! votes by of: segrevationist: necessarily mean the North Viet pitching their campaigns on the In faethe added, it was But Teemtess have not been titi issue of U servicemen in tee. let himself who assectdted with [avos land and the resulting imeidents Southern committee members in The small but vocal Communist he past : Party also was expected to tiarp The contheg between Butler and X- ole 0 iceman on the incidents Lawrence could) preach i elias anext Wednesday, when the Na § s : ‘ . Hthonal Comomittee wall meet here en ence in dying Crash Kills Driver Bae | Butler said) (hat Eaawrener had NEW YORK CAM \ | . nieibed sere committee mretibens he ca i ‘ Th MERE ETT al . rom rayton Plains the Spe miiterial beings ei _ : - . culated hy Southerners ehumerin Serle st The al) utes 10) Aue ach for the chain ‘ hte part ins the tape slaving ol RN Dimetniinine linek ayes o veochoun nan temo il | ola This anaterial Butler indicated) 60 year old grandmother feerald PP dna, U0) ded yestes ba 11 } . epithe s Pyke rT pers Tet " itit das oat Voiveisity Hospital Ann ‘ Vs * : . Arbor tram qapuries caffered ana : : . Jtidee Sonntel Tecvbenn pene ” Tronye oof thy Pec Py ba ess Piuitheae traffic: accident bast Tuesdin 1 Hetneed sentence dridhay on weep tial lode pot consider the ques fe Erne rE M4 PTANeCIS tema hy Inman, of $108 Lanison St, was fon cof segrecation a pelcah yd been If Hed a ; itt Met et a ‘ fi bles a waidil driving a panel truck west an the lesue TP see ne reason for ciny neat celts . { fo second degree metder US 1? BEvpressway in Washtenaw Chaninan ef our paity at any County when it ran off thé read flevel to project sewresation into Rogers tured: suite eM ne , 1 :| bys and struck a bridge pillar, ae jour political disetismons ratnst tis pal Themis Murtha cording to Ypsilanti. state police. | * * * a teuck driver Murtha. tried Cc my ime. anil (7 fe cctre Gn EOS deptee murder charge He hed been in critieal condition ~ OM he party chairman, PF owould con. 1" fhe Care, was fend innocent since Being admitted to the hospi : by oan allboate Wings C tal sider it nat fo he a cnaitter sub es male Wings County Jury. ect to political debate ov p Inman was alone ain hes truck iy ae eon pet * * * -eTsiunix ai when the accident occurred. ithe iso men were aetien! (at Soviet Boss Chooses U.S. Jet Over Red One WASHINGTON Premier Nikita S HERE IS A CREDIT UNION FOR YOU! Anyone moy save in this Credit Union. Since 1952 savers have been paid 4°% Dividends. (UPl-Soaviet Khrushehey will choice of traveling around this country in the Red jet he will fly in fron: Russia or using one 4% DIVIDEND GET THE DETAILS PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL of the three big U.S. military CREDIT UNION alr transport jets. 40 €. Pike St. Ile chose the US jet FRANCHISE AVAILABLE Fastest growing business in America! Estob- lished chain of rental stores. Proven income in excess $12,000 annually $2,000 cash required by responsible party. Mechanical Ability Neccssary—Submit com- §f plete resume—Pontiac Press Box #12. use one of the government's big, 707, jets for his travels around the Savings Accounts Include Life United States later this month Insurance at No Extra Cost! Khrushchev was given the beahag and raping Viola Muiman last Peleary, then hurling her from a car tasdie in’ a& Brooklyn parking lot = F * * Rogers was on the police forer * at the time Ele accused Murtha of blackjacking and raping the vietim At his trial, Murtha ac cused Rayers of the actual killing Lodge Calendar Regular Meeting, Pontiac Chap- ter No 228 OF 8 Monday, Sept l4, at B pm 18'y FE Lawrence St keith Mo Coons. Seeretary News in Brief Kaye Hotra, of 267% Lance St., Lake Orion, ‘reported to Pontiac Police Friday that someone stole ‘her purse containing: $86 from a lunch counter in downtown Pontaic Two cases of whiskey and a dor en bottles of scotch valued at $120, were reported stolen this morning by thieves who broke into Law's! Super Market.2 00 Earlemoor St according to Pontiac police MRS. JOHN R. DONAGHY | Word has been received of. the ‘Donaghy, 62, of Sandusky, a for- mer Pontiac resident. She had ‘been ill several years. | Surviving are her husband of Sandusky; a daughter, Mrs. Rob- jert Bennett of Peck; a son V. Jay iof Sandusky; three grandchildren; ‘three brothers, Ted Coleman of Detroit, Myles of Deford and Mal- lory of Pontiac; and three sisters, Mrs, George Lee and Mrs. Ben- (Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas with burial in the Crescent Hills Cemetery. jamin Bowman, both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Harold Lee in California. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Mavis Funeral ‘Home at Sandusky with burial in ithe cemetery at Watertown. Maxwell Townsend; a brother, Mrs, William O'Leary of Detroit, Linda M. Towhsend, at, home, and Sharon L. Inman of Pontiac. Mr. Inman died yesterday at University Hospital in Ann Arbor from injuries received in a truck ‘accident. GERALD H. INMAN Service for Gerald H. Inman, '20, of 4408 Lamson St., Drayton ‘Home, Drayton Plains, will be ‘held at 1 p.m, Monday at the Coats 'Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, MRS. JAMES E. JENKINSON Dorfman Case ls Decided But Brokerage License Information on Alleged Swindler Is Delayed LANSING (UPI)—State Insur- ance Commissioner Frank Black- ford said today he has reached a decision on whether to revoke the license of Chicago broker Allen Dorfman 3ut the decision will not be an- nounced until Monday “because it all has to be put in wrifting,’’| Blackford said. Dorfman, a dapper ex Marine, was linked by the Senate Rackets Committee to an alleged multi- million-dollar union swindle. Blackford said only that evidence taken during hearings held inter- nuttently from March 23 to Sept | ‘ justified holding the hearings.’ * * * . | Dorfman testified under oath he was repaid from premiums he ad- spy O.) Jenkinson, 76, of 566 E. Beverly St., Will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Sylvan \Lake Church of Chrigt, Inverness at Orchard Lake nue. Burial be in Perry Mount Park Cem@@ry at 11 a.m. Mon- day. The body is at the Voorhees- Siple Funeral Home. | ‘terday morning at her home fol- | THOMAS R. MARTIN Thomas R. Martin, 76, Douglas St., died yesterday in illness of several months. He was a retired employe of General Motors Truck & Coach Division | Surviving jand a_ sister, | Dexter Service will be ‘held at 2 p.m. ‘Monday at the Pursley Funeral | Home with burial in White Chapel | Memorial Cemetery. g Wife Tried in Vain to Revive Douglas (UPD—"I cried) ing following a brief illness. | | ] are his wife, Clara, ‘Lillian Martin of i PAUL DOUGLAS | ROCHESTER — Mrs. Karen S |Christensen, 80, of 2566 Pontiac HOLLYWOOD out for the maid and then began) —_ KAREN 8, CHRISTENSEN Surviving are his mother, Mrs. |trs Service for Mrs. James E. (Pro- b | : ae Mrs, Jenkinson died early yes- s'wiy 557 ft |Shiawassee Rd.. f lowing an illness of several months. line, Th. E Alg. said el land adding the same to ‘ley School of 60 | Livingston Pontiac General Hospital after an apace Road, Pontiac, the 24th day of September, 1959, at 4:00 o'clock p.m. to consider the advisability - the er /Rd., died in her home this morn-! Mrs. Christensen is survived by! vanced for a $50,000 life insurance breathing into Paul’s mouth in an @ son, Clarence of ‘Evanston, IIl., policy on teamster boss James R Hoffa. The broker's attorney, Stanford attempt to save him I guess I must have kept it up for four or of Lawrence, Kan. five minutes, but he did not move."’! A students’ exhibit Clinton, Chicago, claimed a Tack- In these words Jan Sterling told Home. of oil paintings will be on display ets committee report charging Hol- of her efforts to save the life of: for public viewing fh pm Sunday on the front lawn of the Marion Zonet Tuco at ao Commerce Red Some 35 exhibitors will present 130 framed oil paintings of hand scapes, portraits, animals and still life, according to instructor Mrs. Marion Zoner, Shes a radiate of the “ hoon} choclod Tntertor Decoration ind Carnegie Tech at Pattsburyh ‘I freer calven aN Ve hiner cart Pothe adalt edheotiomal progam ut Woalleed Posake For more than @ wear Milford reacart stiidhents: bawe been attend Hi three hor weekly class ses Ons In prepatation for Sunclay - show Some oof ther paintings wall Iw for Saale In the event af inclement weath ey othe exdhabat will te held in the tte die Find Detroiter Dead on Southfield Plot ADetrout math Deas hy Goldstein yo oef ISOS Rosemont, « found Heo am hi roin 4 Southtield fiel vesterda by troopers from the Reford State Potiee Post An autopsy Dr. performept by Rechard FE O'sen at 2 doseph Mercy Hospital Friday afternoon disclosed the cause of death was eurbon monoxide poisoning. from Tam to ft channeled three million dollars per husband, actor Paul Douglas.) in union funds to Chicago mob sters through Dorfman’s agency was “untruthful in every material respect." 16 Cars Derailed Outside of Detroit HURON «UPIi—At least 16 of a 63-car freight train were derailed today on the Detroit to Port Huron line of the Grand Trunk and Western Railroad was injured A fuel tank car, first of the group that was derailed, was ly- ing on its side on the roadbed about three miles west of Port Huron, but it did not break open and authorities said there was little danger of it catching fire. PORT cars n iso) core Other cars were piled up in a mound behind it. Some of the cars were buried in a JO to 12 foot-deep gulley that was torn up beside the tracks . The train Jeff Detroit this morn- ing. bound for Port Huron. The rccident oecurred just as the diesel engine and lead cars were Crossing the Allen ro Man Who Shot Rep. Bentley Out of Prison id grade crossing. tence for good behavior, EDITH M. FISHER * * | Service will be held 1:30 pm 52, died yesterday Monday at he arms of his plati- Funeral Home in Walled Lake tot * Douglas, ;morning in t num-blonde wood Hills home. The burly one- W. Seven Mile Rd. She died ir ‘time professional football player- Northville Hospital yesterday fol 'sportscaster-radio announce ‘turned actor was stricken by a/!5 heart seizure as he was getting Mrs. out of bed at 8 am survived by four daughters Irene ham, Mrs. Grace Beck of Detrvit Despite the fact Miss Sterling and Mrs. Margaret Gilampa of De thought her husband was dead ¢; pit. she continued the moutittoe | Two sons, Roy of Troy, mouth resuscitation and mas- (Charles of Walled Lake; a sister | saged the area around the actor’s Mrs. ,Lilly Orton of Cheboygan, heart. children also survive. Mrs. Fisher was a the Walled Lake Church of Christ A fire department rescue squad, summoned to the New Orleans col- onial-type home, was met by the distraught 36-year-old actress who, said, ‘He's inside, please hurry.” Douglas had no previous record of heart trouble. * JULIA HOOK Huntoon Funeral * Julia Hook, 17, * of 4251 wife at their Holly- Mrs. Edith M. Fisher, 80, of 28/11 and a daughter, Mrs. Emil Telfel acleck pm Her body is at Pixley Funeral nances ‘Bank Bldg. r lowing a long illness. Mrs. Fisher M% 2. Frac. % 0.61 A Exc. Beg. % Cor Bec. line 1212 {ft., ft.. Th 1697 ft Th. 165 ft. 37°10’ Beg 225 A hearing will be held at Boards of Education, determine: ‘of boundaries Gary of Pontiac; and three sisters, |to wit 2 a Sg! me 5 igs of & 528 ft. 188 A. A. 8 1485 it. of B 1485 ft. of NE B. That part of § '% of NE frac. % 2 > Lt of wassee . & W 2944 ft. from E % Cor. N. 65°40 E 517 ft., Th. N 22°30 W Th § 71°40’ W 576 ft, Th & E Alg. Cen. of Rad. 226 ft. to 4, of NE Frac. . part of NW Frac. ag vy Beg & NE Frac. “4 of NW N said Rd 1374 ft N Bec. School District the Huron Val- District of Oakland and Counties, Michigan. that a public the Oakland ounty School Office Building, 1025 N. Michigan on A. Prom ‘the Holly Area You are hereby notified above described. territory trans- The Oakland and Livingston County acting jointly, will the proposed alteration will be made; of the transfer, 1. Whether 2. The effective date if ordered: 3. Whether or not any personal or real property is to be transferred and, if so, the equitable consideration thereof Any interested parties will be given an opportunity to be heard at the time and place above quoted. Dated at Pontiac, Michigan, this 9th day of September. AD. 1959 BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE COUNTY OF OAKLAND By: WILLIAM J. EMERSON. Secretary Sept. 12, ‘59. NOTICE GF SPECIAL MEETING Special Meeting of the Waterford Township Board has been called for Tuesday. September 15. 1959 at ry at the Township Hall, 4995 Huron St, for the purpose of re- some of the Township Ordi- and any other business which the Township Board ES E SEETERLIN, Waterford Township Clerk Sept. 12, ‘58. viewing may come before ————— _ PUBLIC SALE 1958 Chevrolet, Serial No PS8P 125267. the Richardson-Bird,sports Coupe Sale to be held 10:30 am. 1959 at 601 Pontiac State Mich Sept. 12, ‘59 3579714-8 September 22, Pontiac, PUBLIC SALE At 9:00 am. on September 18th, 1959 1957 Ford 2 Dr Serial No. CTFT310140 ‘l|will be sold at public sale at 22500 erndale, Mich. that Pletcher of Livonia,| Woodward Ave. ‘Mrs. Olive Follows of Birming- and the 13 Road a ORION TOWNSHIP—Service will {a be held 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Home for Mrs. Concrete Pipe. 419 lin. ft Giddings | Douglas, hospitalized for exhaus- Rd. She died of a stroke at her tion last month, was released when home following a long illness doctors found no serious ailments. He returned to work despite ad- },. nq Hills Cemetery. vice that he take a long rest : have wanfed to linger in a bed.’ sobbed Miss Sterling, near ia state of shock | Funeral services for Douglas will ‘be held Monday morning at Pierce Bros. Mortuary in Hollywood. SiCK of Orion Township, and Mrs. M Allen of Mio, and a son, of California. ~ Deaths Elsewhere Church Group Sends the feminine version. Public Opinion No Longer Sour Kalamazoo’s Mall Called Wonderful KALAMAZOO UP —- The nation’s fist permanent downtown shopping mall continues ta generate an ait of excitement among shoppers and merehants who footed half. the $65,000 project's eost through as-) Se SSITIOTIES Says office supply store operator Raymond Dykema, president of the Downtown Kalamazoo Assn “ve asked questions af ran- dom of shoppers on the street and they say its ‘wonderful,’ When we first started breaking up the street to put in the mall vou cauldn't find two in) 10) per sons who liked the idea. Now you can't find anyone who doesn't lke u Ile was speaking on the heels of a remarkable night shopper tum: out on preceding Labor Day week- end. Downtown Kalamazoo stores Yave remained open Wednesday nighfs as a shopper concession fot several years. * * * Judging frem parking tot last Wednesday. set some sort of record, + : ise ES Gilmore's Department Store, largest in Kalamazoo, reported its {S8-car lot packed as were most other off-street parking areas nearby, “It was ai tremendous night.” said Judd Knapper, manager of Kool-Knapper Co, a clothing store a one-way north-south thorough-; The Michigan Municipal Finance fare. One block of the mall les to! Commission added to opening the north of Michigan avenue,| day galety by approving a $650,- which carries U.S. 12 through the 00 revenue bond issue to fi- city in an east-west route. The; nance parking space for 250 ‘mall's larger block lies south of] more. , Michigan avenue. ONE-WAY STREETS Burial will take place in the Oak- in her fifties.) } | | sete: ; Mrs. Hook is survived by two bid It's better this way. He wouldn't daughters, Mrs. Wilfred) McGran 4, ct Lester detects | | | | LONDON (AP) — Ann Drum-, mond-Grant, noted contralto, died, | Troape: % nd there was a rubbe; Testaments to Nikita Friday She was ‘hose running from the esxhanst NULANIE AG UAT A. Puerto _ Miss Drummond-Grant spent 26 Ihrough a vent window of the auto pycan sentenced. to prison for six. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (®— Twenty years with the D'Oyly Carte Op-| Pe ant lot near vears for his part in the 1904 ter New Testaments—printed in Rus- era Co., exponents of Gilbert and | ih Ahliwassee: Sf rorist shooting in the US. House; Siatn—were sent to Soviet Premier, Sullivan. : Penresents aa lice ay. Nikita Khrushchev and his delega-| . ‘ ie , | DAV's Second Annual la aa saa ‘ ae Oe tion by a church group here yes- _SARANAC LAKE, N.Y. (AP)— | . Sartiaga Castro was released terday ee aa COMIPOWET. ot Twilight Ball Tonight (rom the US. penitentiary here The Bibles, with underlined pas- (“Melancholy Baby.” died Friday! \ 7 mn 4 oo " ae Rep Alin M. Bentley ¢R Mich) sent by the Memphis Baptist ne an Le | eran wt leit ae . , ale +) wun. Brotherhood Commission. jwho wrote many well-known coond anteal twilieht ball tonient “2s ™ riousty wounded when gun ee ‘songs, including ‘Please Take a! im a kwall far tis cima Fareet UC TOny & xPpectators gallery \Letter, Miss Brown.” | Sire sh hacer exlueln Geeniva.ceuney tt aved the House March 1, 1954 9d . yaa our Puerta Ricans were accused For Feminine Version, | BOSTON: (AP)—Hassoldt Davis, | rhe donee wie he ei dhe in the shooting, which occurred at It’s ‘Mrs. Khrushcheva’ 152, explorer, soldier and author, | anaes dian, aie Oalland Ave, “> ime shen ceertain elements in died Friday in a hospital. Davis. | and teglw at 00 on ae Puerta Rico were seeking | inde; WASHINGTON um — The State who traveled widely, was credited | open te the publi — pendence from the United States. Department and Soviet Embassy with 15 books and several films. | x *& * Will refer to the wife of the Soviet Among his works- were ‘Islands, i frechments will be served ond Gastro was convicted of con. Premier as “Mrs, Khrushcheva” junder the World” and “The Jun-| music will be by oa popubir local spiracy in US, District Court in° during her American visit. |gle and the Damned.” He served | group the POH Cats a group of New York In Russian, the “a” is added jas a writer and photographer) doctors front Pontiac Osteopathic. Tle earned 576 days off his sen- at the end of the name to get with the Denis-Roosevelt Asiatic | Hospital ‘expedition prior to World War IT | | Kalamazoo merchants and civic) leaders struck upon the mall plan in the north block of the two-block | Traific is routed around the mall /in 1956 to revitalize the downtown. mall. “We didn't have any special sale— just regular merchandise.”’ “For the opening four days of the mall (dedicated Aug. 19)," Knapper added, ‘we recorded -a storewide increase of 69 per cent in business. The crowds have con- tmued very fine. There's been an awful lot of traffic from all over the state Our aales receipts show that.” Dykema says. there undeubdt. edly is not much question that the mall will be expanded next year. But, he adds, the city cemmission will wait for reports from its traffic and planning bourds before deciding In which direction the expansion will go. The mall covers a _, two-block jSiretch of Burdick street, formerly * By a series of one-way streets area. which went irito effect last June. | It was then the city parks depart- ‘ment started replacing Burdick’s town,” says Dykema. ‘bery, reflector pools, flower-filled/many years to the car,” he adds, playlot and a multipurpose stage for fashion shows and other blocks now to get downtown.” i|merchant-sponsored events. ‘SHE LIKES IT. * * *® Ne . The city’s half of the mall cost, |, Dykema aernaes ham Pah a ‘said Mayor Glenn Alien, has been)... 4, a. recovered through building per-’ mits for face-titting of mall tront-|"2 mt & © colvtarin the other day age stores and one permit for 4 , = $600,000 Jacobson Stores, Ine., PEE wee aa -% building which is going yp a block .. Well ’ she confided: ‘just love —_ of the, mall area es downtown to shop, now. Parking is handied by off- '1 come downtown at every street spaces for some 600 cars. ‘excuse.’ ” me) 4 o » foe ‘cement planter boxes, a ‘kiddies’and it’s my. feeling that people ‘are willing to walk a couple of “An elderly lady leaned actoss! land; said: ‘Say, aren't you con-) | “It adds some of the aesthetic— ‘puts a bit of beauty back in down. “We have! [pavement with lawns, trees, shrub-| been gearing these downtowns too address being where the vehicle is stored and may be inspected. Sept. 11, 12, ‘58 NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed proposals will be received by Board of County Road Commis- sioners of the County of Oakland, Mich- igan, at their offices, 2420 Pontiac Lake Pontiac, Michigan, until 1:30 o'clock.’ pm, Eastern Standard Time. igrandchildren and 9 great-gran]- September 29. 1959, and will be publicly opened and read at 2:00 o'clock, pm. of the same day for construction of @ member of Storm Sewer as follows Project No. -TM-332, Exmoor Drain from Lakeside Drive north along Riviera Terrace to Motorway Drive, then west along Motorway Drive te,Exmoor Road. then north along Exmoor Road, 1009 lin. of Storm Sewer and incidental work Waterford Township. Materiais and quantities involved con- sist of 585 lin. ft. of 12° Reinforced of 18” 6 Manholes, Rein- forced Concrete Pipe. and incidental work Information, bidding blanks and specl- fications may be obtained upon request Bids must be made upon Oakland County Road Commission bidding forms. A certified or cashier's check in the amount of $330.00 must accompany each All proposals must be plainly marked to their contents The Board reserves the right to re- any or all proposals or to waive and to accept the proposal, that in the opinion of the Board, its in the best interest and to the ad- vantage of the Board of County Road Commissioners of the County of Oak- land. Michigan and of the County of Oakland. Michigan BOARD OF COUNTY ROAD COM- MISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF OAKLAND. MICHIGAN SOL D. LOMERSON Se pt. * Death Notices FISHER SEPT. 11, 1959, EDITH, 28111 W. Seven Mile Rd, Livonia, #0. dear mother of Roy A. Fish- er. ChaNes Pisher Mrs. Irene Pletcher. Mrs. Olive Follows. Mrs Grace Beck Mrs Margaret Gliampa dwar sister of Mrs Lilly Orton; also survived by 13 grandchildren, 9 great-grand- children. Puneral service will be held Monday, Sept. 14, 1959 at 130 p.m. from Righardson-Bird Chapel, Walled Lake>.with Carson Spivey officiating. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gar- dens Mrs. Pisher will lf in state at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Walled Lake HOOK. SEPT... 11, 1950, JULIA, 4251 Giddings Road, 77; dear mother of Mrs. Ethel McGran Lester E Hook, Mrs Allen: dear sister of Mrs. Flla\, Chichester Funeral service will ‘ be held Monday. Sept. 14. 1959 at 130 pm, from Huntoon Fu- neral Home with Rev. Walter Ballagh officiating. Interment in Oakland Hills. Mrs. Hook will lie in state at the Huntoon Fu- 12, ‘59 4408 Lamson, Drayton Plains, 20; beloved husband of Elaine In- dear brother of Mrs. William O'Leary, Linda Marie Townsend, Sharon Lee Inman and Gary Inman Funeral service will be held Monday, Sept. 14, 1959 at 1 pm. from Coats Funeral Home with Reverend Kasten officiat- ing Interment tn Crescent Hifis Cemetery Mr. Inman will lie in state at the Coats Funeral Home. JENKINSON. SEPT. 11. 1959 PRO6- Pr (Tillie, BE. Beverly; age 6. beloved wife of James E. Jen- kinson: dear mother of Harvey Ray McClure. dear sister of B. O. Ray John W. Ray. Mrs. Abigall Kirkham, Mrs. Anna Patten, Mrs. Maude Sherman and Mrs. Clo Ray Gallehue; also survived by two grandchildren and two creat- arandchildren Funeral service will be held Sunday. Sept. 13, at 3 pm. from Sylvan Lake Church , of Christ with Minister Marvin W. Hastings officiating. Mrs. Jen- kinson will lie in state at the Voorhets-Siple Puneral Home until noon Sunday at which time she will be taken to the church for service, Comittal ‘service day at 11 a.m. Perry. Mt. Park Cemetery. MARTIN, SEPT. 11, 1959, THOMAS, 60 Dougine St. 76: beloved hus- Emma Martin: of Lillian Martin. Pu- feral service will be held Mon- ¥. Sept. 14, 1950-at 2-p.m. froin Pursiey Funeral Home. Inter- ment White Chapel. Mr tin ‘ fe in te at _Funera) Home. sik lome RICHARDSON, SEPT. 10. 1956. Altick, 3781 Lincoinshire: : beloved husband of Anite “P in state at the Donelson-Johns Puneral Home after 7 pm today ! ' Yq also E Ye of SE mre 1685 ft. 72 A 48. A B ‘ is a Prac. { NE ’ | ; f = a a x a Nk Se a te hee ee i ees Be laa a ae Be Co ee an ee in _— ies _ td eo oan a: —