i, SN TN oo a bE a A | SI cuinien, ops night that relations between United States and Rus- The Weather ' U8. Weather Bureau Forecast Details Page 2) f i CHAKE OVER 116th YEAR _'THE PONTIAC PR kk kkk ONITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 7c Khrushchev Says | Red Economics Can Win World FROM OUR NEWS WIRES MOSCOW — A buoyant Nikita Khrushchev pro- claimed a historic new Communist doctrine today: Red economic strength is enough to win the world and neither hot nor cold war is inevitable any longer. This was the powerful, underlying message of Khrush- chev’s keynote speech to the opening of the 21st Com- x * * To Ask Dulles Thaw’ Views May Comment on Red Leader’s Statement on Easing Tensions WASHINGTON (Secretary of State Dulles said today Soviet leaders are trying to delude the world into believing they want to end the cold war while act- ually seeking advantage to win it, WASHINGTON (UPI)—Seretary of State John Foster Dulles may reveal today whether he agrees with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev that there is a pos- sibility of a thaw in the cold war. * ® * He also may shed some light on the prospects of a four-power con- ference this spring on Berlin and Germany, Dulles holds his first news con- ference since his discussion here with Soviet Deputy Premier An- astas I, Mikoyan, who hinted last weekend Russia May not turn East Berlin over te the German Communists May 27 if east-west talks are under way by then, The secretary is expected to be questioned about Khrushchev’s sia might improve as a result of Mikoyan’'s visit. * * Terming himself an optimist, Khrushchey said: ‘‘from his report to us we get the idea that the possibility of a thaw in our rela- tions is not excluded," On the Berlin issue, the United States and Russia have agreed that negotiations are desirable but have shown ho signs yet of agreeing on the ground rules for such talks. . ~ American, British and French of- ficials, in consultation with west) German representatives, expect to begin next week drafting the western reply to Russia’s unac- ceptable Jan. 10 proposal for a 28- nation German peace conference on Moscow's teyms. Detroit Hospital Cuts Welfare Case Load DETROIT @®—Children’s Hospi- tal in Detroit says it must drastically curtail treatment of welfare patients because of “criti- cal financial problems.”’ . Mrs. Gerald B. Slattery, presi- dent of the hospital board of trus- tees, made the report in letters to state, county and city officials. She said the hospital was unable to absorb the loss for care given state aid patients in 1958 caused by the shortage of state funds. The hospital said it has been forced to cut down immediately on munist Party congress in which he launched a stag- gering seven-year plan to beat the capitalists. “With each passing year the U.S.S.R. is growing stronger,” Khrushchev proclaimed before the Communist world's most powerful assembly. * * * “The domestic and international position of the Soviet Union has never been as stable. . .(we are) a mighty bulwark of peace. There is every reason to state that the So- cialist countries stand at the head of all progress." Khrushchey gave the cheering delegates and assembled leaders of world communism this assign- ment for the seven years ahead: “The historic task of catching up and surpassing the leading capitalistic countries in per cap- ita output must be carried out. . . make the most of the time factor in Secialism’s peaceful economic competition with Capitalism. , .” * * * Khrushchev’s State of the Soviet Union message was all encompass- ing, and in it he spoke belligerent- ly but without a hint of war. He put the accent on “peaceful com- | petition,” and in his emphasis on a rising standard of living seemed to indicate a considerable de-emph- asis of military spending. x * * “The invincible camp of Social- ism has everything necessary to bridle the forces of aggression," he said. Khrushchev announced that the Seviet Union has started assem- bly line production of interconti- nental ballistic missiles. In a review of Soviet achieve- ments in science, including jet avi- ation and rocketry, Khrushchev de- clared: “The Soviet Union has started the serial production of interconti- nental ballistic missiles." * * * More than 1,500 delegates from throughout the Soviet Union and Communist parties in 70 other countries applauded vigorously. In the political field he called for “further consolidation of the Soviet Socialist system, the unity and solidarity of the Soviet peo- ple, development of Soviet democ- racy, the activity and initiative of the broad masses in the building of communism, extension of the functions of public bodies in mat- ters of state importance, increase in the organizational and educa- tional role of the party and the Socialist state, and an aill-out strengthening of the alliance be- tween the workers and the peas- peoples of our country.” On the international front, Khrushchev termed nuclear dis- armament the “task of tasks” and said the Soviet Union would conference, “It is essential to learn to solve (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) 1 Dies in Seaplane Crash NORFOLK, Va. WB—A Navy seaplane with a crew of 10 crashed today into the waters the number of bed patients admit- ted under the Afflicted Children’s of this Atlantic port. One crew member was known dead and Act. three were missing. ants and of the friendship of the! continue to work for a summit | a ams ‘PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1959—24 PAGES ay gress of the Soviet Communist OPENS RED PARTY CONGRESS — Nikita Khrushchev speaks at the opening of 2ist Con- Tells of Missile Production Party today in Moscow. The party chieftain announced that the Soviet Union has started assembly line produc- tion of intercontinental ballistic missiles. AP Wirephote County Spends $251,000 Since November Should the snow continue to fall in record amounts as it has so far this winter, maintenance and construction on local and primary roads in Oakland County might have to be skipped this year, de- clared Sol D. Lomerson, member of the Road Commission. Lomerson said today that the Commission has already spent $251,000 since Nov. 1 for the re- moval of snow and ice from the 2,700 miles of roads the Commis- sion has to clear. “This is more than we spent all of last season, and about three times as much as we spent up to this time last season,’ Lomer- son said. Residents won't have to worry about the Commission running out of money for road clearance the rest of this winter, Lomerson said, but secondary roads will.go un- touched this summer if the Com- mission has to continue to dip into funds originally set aside for this purpose, Lomerson said. * * * o This is because the commission It's Tax Time Again! Did you know that one out of four income tax returns has & major error? Remember, Uncle Sam wants only what you owe: Learn how to avoid costly mis- takes. Before you fill out your federal return, be sure to read the six-part series on “Your In- come Tax,” starting today on Page 9 of The Pontiac Press, Salvation Army Major Reports — $238,377 Spent by Center The Salvation Army's Men So- cial Service Center, 118 W. Law- rence St., last year operated on a were divided between laundry, rec- reation and entertainment, profes- sional medical and counseling serv- ices, Christmas expenses and med. ical supplies. ; The greatest outlay was for operational and This totaled $148,818.79, The greatest portion of this, $73,106, was paid in employes’ salaries and wages. The cost of reconditioning salvaged articles amounted to $16,489, while re- In Today's Press Je Sees cian ne ME mE Comics paerees ee ee nN County News 2.6.65 ..6c6s5 18 eetreee terest eee, € Editoriats Greea Empress eet eee etn ene 8 ee ce be eee vend et ee ee BT eee 4 eee ee 14-15 pairs, depreciation, licenses and other ttems accounted tor $16,757.85, Remaining operational expenses went toward such things as rent; (utilities, telephone and postage, Costs. | equipment repairs and renewals. The balance of expenses, $26,114, were administrative costs. Of this, $25,126 went for general manage- * * * The section pertaining to activi- ties showed that 447 men had been admitted to the Social Service Cen- ter during 1958. These clients, as they are referred to at the center, were made up largely of alcohol- physically Wilson, Bart ........ ware * Women's es eeeee *) 10-11 Snow Stealing Road Building Funds — |HUDDLE ON LEGALITIES relies on the county’s share of state receipts from gas and weight taxes to pay for maintenance and cdn- struction of local and primary roads, which includes snow remov- al. Rackets Group Calls Teamster McMasters Summoned From Detroit to Tell of Financial Dealings | WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen- |ate rackets committee kicks off another year of hearings today, jsummoning a Detroit Teamsters | Union official to explain his finan- ‘cial dealings. The committee sought the ac- courtting from Roland McMas- ters, a right hand man te the union's President James R.. Hoffa, — McMasters is business agent of Detroit Local No. 299, to which Hoffa belongs. The committee has denounced Hoffa's connections with gangsters and racketeers and his general handling of the big) union’s affairs. * * * Officially, the committee is scheduled to go out of existence Jan. 31, but it has asked another year's extension and the Senate is expected to approve. The hearing ushers in four days of hop-skip hearings on many subjects, They include a further ex- ploration into charges that Allen Dorfman, a Chicago insurance man, has collected more than a million dollars of overcharges as a broker for the Central Confer- ence of Teamsters’ welfare-pen- sion insurance funds. * * * The committee is to start hear- ings Feb. 3 on its allegations that gangsters allied with some team- sters and other union officials have muscled in on the lucrative juke box and vending machine in- dustry. Warmer Weather Due Tomorrow A little warmer weather is on the way, according to the U.S. ‘Weather Bureau. Tonight's low will ‘be a cool 12 but tomorrow's high will climb to near 28 degrees. Today's westerly winds at 6-14 miles an hour will become light southwesterly tonight. The Bureau forecasts scattered snow. flurries) “We have already clipped some of this year’s program for mainte- nance of local roads,”* said Lomer- ‘son, “and possibly equld cut into construction on primary roads.” He said Oakland County ex- pects $3,975,000 as its share of state receipts from gas and weight taxes, For the 12 months this must be spread $775,000 for 1,800 miles of local roads and $3,200,000 for 700 miles of pri- mary roads. Lomerson estimated that for an) average winter the Commission ispends $200,000 for clearing roads. Costs include wages for a crew of about 200 men and operational costs of a fleet of nearly 120 trucks, * * * Work on state trunklines by the Commission won't feel the pinch of lessening funds as this work is done under contract for which the county is reimbursed by the state, the official said. Eastman Drafts |bert W. Straley are being jalleged offenses. 7 Ouster Charges Against Straley Says He Has Approval of City Manager to File Formal Complaint | Charges of incompetency and lack of leadership against Police Chief Her- drawn up today by Public Safety Director George D. Eastman. “I now have the city manager's permission to prefer charges,” Eastman said yesterday after a conference in City Manager Walter K. Wilman’s office. Eastman met Willman after the city manager talked to Stra- ley and asked the police chief if he had reached a decision on his future plans, Willman warned Straley his fail- ure to resign would result in ousteriera) months is brighter, Gov. G.| charges being filed before the Civil) Service Commission, * * * “TH never resign,”’ Straley de- clared yesterday, ‘‘and I'll fight any charges against me. I defy the reputation of Eastman to be matched against mine any day.” Eastman closeted himself with City Attorney William A, Ewart late in the day to discuss the legal issues involved in filing charges, The safety director said he'd prefer charges just ag Seon 4s they were prepared, but Was unsure of when that would be. He also was unsure of what pe- riod the charges would cover. The | | GOV. WILLIAMS x &k * ‘The Future’ Looks Rosy to Williams LANSING (UPI)—Michigan’s ec- | ‘onomic future for the coming sev-! Mennen Williams cautiously ven-| tured today in placing his budget} recommendations before the leg- islature, Rhere is no reason not to ex- pect the present upturn to extend into substantial recovery in the near future,” he said, “with even a better general economy ex- pected before the close of the next fiscal year." Williams cited an expected full recovery in the nation's economy in 1960, “as measured by such basie economic indicators as gross national product, personal income and personal consumption expend- itures."" * * * He said revenue estimates for the state during the 1959-60 fiscal Civil Service Act calls for charges being filed within 90 days of * * * Since his arrival here Oct. 7, Eastman has twice recommended. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Dingell Introduces Hart WASHINGTON @®—Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich) was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court yesterday. Hart was intro- duced to the court by Rep. John D, Dingell (D-Mich), City , sph: pues — The uti Coon Hunting © “AP. Wicephote raccoon at the top of this 30-foot they headed downstream slowly ‘into Lake Erie. : Israel to Ask for Aid year, reflect “favorable estimates of recovery in the Michigan econ- omy” but he warned that the re- estimates for this fiscal year. “In general, the recession has reduced receipts from most sources of the general fund,"”’ he sald, “but the present upturn Is expected to increase the final amount of revenue received to a figure above what would result if there were no improvement in the current ate of collections.” An increase of about six per cent or $17,000,009 is expected for the 1959-60 fiscal year, he said. “If, as most of our economists think, we expegience a general business recovery, we should have a fairly -good revenue outlook,” Williams told the lawmakers. * * * He predicted personal income would be up and retail sales, par- ticularly consimer durable goods, would increase and provide more state revenue. However, he cautioned, ‘It is possible to have a sizable busi- ness recovery and still be a long way from full] employment.” FaithfulSwan Reunited With Mate at Last DETROIT —A lonely vigil for his feathery girl friend has ended happily for a faithful male swan. The female, cured after she was frozen to the ice a month ago in, the Detroit River, was reugited with her swan swain yesterday. The two swans had been part | of a flock which landed to rest | on the way south for the winter. The female became lodged in the ice when it was time to resume the journey... Conservation officers rescued the! female and brought her ashore where they nursed her back to health. The rest of the flock — except the faithful male — con- tinued south. Yesterday, hale and hearty, the female was released. Together JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector &—A Finance Ministry spokes- man said today that Israel soon will ask the United States for financial aid to counter the ef- fects of the current severe drought. Israel is expected to ask for between 20 and 25 million dollars. cession caused reductions in the) Budaet Charts Total Outlay of $474 000,000 Definite Proposals for Increased Levies to Be Outlined Friday LANSING (?—Gov. Wil- liams today pro 140 million dollars to back up a n ‘general pur 7 in 1959-60 and to plan whittle the state’s deficit. The basic budget, he told the legislature, amounts to an increase of about 45 mil- lion dollars over the spend- |ing stride that will be hit this fiscal year after press- ing school and welfare needs are met. * * In e budget message, Williams: 1. Made no specific tax recom- mendations: These will be aired on a statewide telecast Friday, and spelled out in still greater. detail to lawmakers next week. 2. Urged a boost in revenues | to nearly 448 million dollars, with 24 millions tagged for debt re- duction—the first of five annual installments of about this size, 3. Called for a long range, 146 million dollar building program at colleges and other institutions, and creation of state building avu- thority to handie it through bond issue financing, 4. Proposed allotment of $33,- 700,000 or 87 per cent of the sug- gested operational spending In- crease, for education from kin- dergarten on up. He pegged the state's general mideciared: fund det at $110,600,000 as of next | June 30, end of the fiscal year, and declared: “If this budget appears to be large, let us remember that we are paying not only tomorrow's bills, but the bills we have accumu- lated through yesterday's neglect.” x * * The governor said two years of “severe austerity” by the legisla- ture in setting expenditure policy represented “disregard of the facts of our public life” and only stored up trouble. An “explosive population in- crease’’ contributed to the situa- tion and so did the economic re- cession which skyrocketed welfare costs and cut deeply into revenues, he said, Williams went on: “The responsibilities ef a sov- | ereign and civilized state cannot (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) New Car Sales Still Going Up Average of 17,000 Sold Daily in Period From Jan. 11-20 DETROIT (-Dealers sold 136,- 009 new cars in the second 10 days of 1959, Ward's automotive reports said yesterday. The statistical agency said Jan. 11-20 sales were 9.6 per cent great- er than in the first 10 dayg of Jan- uary. » -» & Ward's said the Jan. 11-20 sales were 17.2 per cent above the same period last year. Tt said an average of 17,000 autos were sold each day during the period compared with 15,500 dur- ing the first 10 days. The agency said 124,000 new cars were sold during the first period. * * * “The rise is in sharp contrast to last year at this time when auto buying declined at mid-month,” Ward's said. “More than one mil- lion of the 1959 cars now are on the roads, adding impetus to the industry's drive for increased sales.” lke Slates Conderence’ WASHINGTON (UPD — Presi- dent Eisenhower will hold a ‘news conference at 10:30 a.m. EST White Wednesday, the \ sks Tax Hike of $140 Million for State Optimistic . }. “ i it ! if E _. "HE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1959 _ oeoe bol Spending, Williams Asks r’ ha Wants 18Million More for Schools System Would, Get Seven of Every © / Eight Dollars Increase ~ | LANSING (®—Michigan’s mush- Roe’ ‘ae & State rooming public school system, from kindergarten through college, would collect roughly seven of ev- ery eight dollars in spending in- creases proposed by Gov, Williams, in his 1959-60 budget i t+ + Williams, taking note of “the enormously increasing problems of publie education,” recommended 1. A 21 per cent boosg — $18. | 400,000 — in the operating Dudget for higher education, raising it to $106, 100,000, 2 A liberalized formula figuring state aid to local school | districts. It carries a 78 per cent increase — $20,500,000 — in the allocation from the state’. £e" eral fund, and an overall boost of 29 million dollars. | Of the $44,400,000 yeneral fund) increase the Governor proposed be- yond the current $379,500,000 spend. | ing program, &7 per cent would go for to schools, In keeping with their size, the §NOQWBANKS PILE UP — Thi COUSGEINT Os NE aru Michi-| cal of what thousands of motori van State University grabbed the} | County have seen as winter has biggest share of the higher edu- | Y cation budget. Williams recom inended $34,275,000 for the Univer- sity of Michigan as compared with) | ") million allocated for the cur-| e 9 ; eve . rent fiseal year, Michigan State's 1t S share would jump from $25,315,000 | l 1eS to $28,384,000 * * * | | Under «a legislative economy inove, both schools took one et dollar cuts last. year from their! allocations the year before | | The city of Pontiac last year con | This year’s recommendations jinged ty taint the Clinton River, include $550,000 to operate Ure | U. of M.'s new branch at Dear: born and an identicay amount standards for Michigan State's new branch The overall efficiency at the sew. in Oakland County. MSU's share |age treatment plant here was only! also Includes about five nition (8) per cent, 12. points below the dollars for its cooperative ©%- minimum of the Water Resources: tension service and agricultural Conmimission John Hennessey,' experiment station, plant superintendent, reported, With Wayne State University * s . ready to become a full-fledged} And yet, since the efficiency rate state institution after a three year| Showed an improvement, state of- transition from municipal to atate| ficials are pleased with the report, control, Willams proposed to boost according to City Manager Walter its appropriation from $9,719.00) Willman, to $15,425,000 . “Ht in manifest that Pontlac School fiseal experts estimate the} needs new sewage treatment fa- tate would shelf out about 330) cilities, Wilhnan sald, “The million dollars to local school dis-| state knows this as well as the tricts next year from all sources city administration, under the governor's plan. That's about 20 million above the current! fiure, | jwith a pollution rate violating state. “However, the state has given no indication at will erder the cily . A to construct more facilities . “Since voters turned down the Nex “oe a | A Nearly seven million of the ID sewage treatment plant bond issue | crease would come from their (Wo ast fall, at the moment there is | thirds share of an expected 1 no plan to increase the plant's ca- millon dollar gain in state sales) pacity except on orders from the tax income. Legislative appropria| state” tions would furnish most of the veumpe a. ; ver |KEEPING TABS Williams proposed to raise the! Willman said the state is contin- uing to sample the Clinton, keep- state school aid formula from $190 10 $210 per pupil jing tabs on whether the pollution In actuality, the new formula tate rises or falls would lift the net average con.| The city Haelf took more than iibution from $151 to $161 per 125,000 samples last year at the re- quest of the state, Hennessey said. pupil, requiring the legislature to raise its supplementary general) “Due to the Himited capacity of find allneatton from an expected the extsting facilities, 72,200,000 $6,600,000 this year to $46,700,000, gallons of waste were bypassed next year i atraight Into the Clinton with * “ye e Cold Rain Slicks Roads its heaviest snowfalls in years on the county. g kcene Is lypi- sts in Oakland dumped one of ‘along county roads. Pentiac Press Phote Here, a road scraper plows along Indian Trail on the eastern edge of Orchard Lake churning up the huge snow banks which continue to grow Detroit Asks Los Angeles for Facts DETROIT (#—The auto indus- try has asked Los Angeles for more information on area auto exhaust emission to speed final development of devices aimed at camereine air pollution. x * Charies M. Heinen, chairman of the Automobile Manufactur- ers Assn. Vehicle Combustion Committee, made the request yesterday in a letter to Warren M. Dorn. Dorn is chairman of the air pollution committee of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors# Heinen asked for the latest county estimate of the daily emission of hydrocarbons from auto exhausts and the method of making the estimate. He also asked the minimum necessary reduction of hydro- carbons a day needed to bring the total to an acceptable level for pollution control purposes and whether the same measure- ment methods would be used to test the effectiveness of an exhaust control device or pro- cedure. Five methods of reducing ex- haust emissions were described here Jan. 16 at a meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers. One of them was a catalyst unit which would replace the car muffler. a elther partial or no treatment,” he reported, * * * | The total flow to the plant last| year was 4,969,000,000 gallons, Hen- nesacy reported, Seventy-eight tons of chlorine were used for disinfec- tion and 4,400 tons of solids re-| moved, Budget of $4 (Continued From Page One) be ignored, and when the at- tempt Is made to ignore them they pile up inte an inescapable backlog which must then be met at one time, “That is where we stand today.” Interestingly, the tax increase figure corresponded closely with the yield of the tax package rec- ommended Dec 3 by citizen ad- visers to a special legislative tax study committee, But the governor cautioned against concluding that he was en- dorsing or otherwise accepting the citizens committee's specific tax) recommendations. Under its austerity policies, the ‘a moratorium on new capital im- provements and whacked Wil- liams' proposed 4J2 million dollar, ‘budget to 341 millions Last spring it voted only lion dollars for 1958.59 But the chickens have come home to roost, the governor sald, and the current operating expen. diture lid must be tfted to §379,- §00,000—by 46 millions, 3 mil- East Continues to Suffer Cold and wet weather spread:kansas and Missouri into the Ohio reress areas in the eastern hall Valley and Middle Atlantic states af the nation today but skies were! Cold air followed the wet weath in many sections The biggest temperature drops t * * were south of the wet belt extend ing from north central Texas along clea et Acpuatupe of pain, freezing rain anid slicked highways and | ERS tects inca wide belt from Kansas southeast Pennsylvania, Tempera ind Oklahoma across northern Aries were 10 to more than 20 de ‘grees tower, with biggest drops lin Texas The Weather * * & ron also was colder ain northern VICINITY —Partly ¢- - cloudy today and tonight High today Colorado, southern Wyoming and reread ead atten tage eaeren eeMery Netiralcn and it still wie . a at Winds wenterly 6-18 miles iekiy becom. Chilly in most of the Midwest and Ing Hight southwesterly tonight, iNew England The second majer precipitation ™ area was in the Pacific Northwest, SHOW tull 14. Weather Nareau Report It PUN TEAC ANID Today In Pontiar Puwest temperature preceding 8 @ 4 Of this, $26,200,000 will have to channeled from the general ifund into this year's school ald jkitty. and another 19 millions in | supplementation wlll have to be jvoted, 4 millions of it for poor jretef. | * * * Digested sludge produced 26,900,- 000 cubic feet of sludge gas to operate heat and power generators at the plant. The department figured that it cost $39.79 to handle every 1,000,000 gallons of flow received at the plant. This figure was broken down to $2.34 per person in Pontiac. 24 Millions Called for by Governor increase ordered by the State Civil Service Commission in December. Third in sizé behind the proposed higher allotment for education and the pay raise was the governor's recommendation for a four million dollar boost in mental health spending. This {tem included $1,160,000 for training, research, commu- nity clinics and “special services vital to prevention ane early treatment.” The rest was pretty well diffuseq throughout the de- partment, ‘alling the entire budget one of “rigid and severe economy,"’ the governer said his mental health proposals “do not represent the needs nor standards that should be maintained,"" but some modest im- provement. * * The remainder of the overall in- crease was pretty much appor- tioned in bits and snatches across the entire spectrum of state gov- ernment—a million dollars or more here, a fraction of a million there. Willams strung along with un- successful recommendations of earlier years in urging small sums for a number of new agencies. * * * These included a housing com- mission ($25,000), a commission on the aging ($40,000), $50,000 for the Great Lakes tidewater commis- sion, an atomic energy commis- | Another $%,600,000 was provided | * LANSING (AP)—Gov. W | fund budget at a glance: | General operations, pay | ralse, ete. ....... renee School ald supplementation... | Revenues, existing sources ... Revenues, new taxes .... oe | Deficit reduction |. (The state deficit, estima | | \- Total general fund outlays .... Total resources available . sion ($35,000) and an automation the Ohio River to Virginia and (9 meet the state employes salary commission ($25,000) * * illiams’ 1959-60 state general . . .$377,200,000 .. 46,700,000 $423,900,000 ... 307,800,000 +» 140,000,000 SO CODON 447,800,000 eee ue eee 23,900,000 ted at $110,600,000 as of June 30, would be pared by mid-1960 to $86,700,000.) | ‘Army to Fire Second Rocket | ' CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. At ® am: Wind velocity 2 m ph With rain reported in many areas re tier Aouthwest t 1 vols Puenday at 690 pm Little change was reported inj le CI at 7 ‘e ain ithe flood eonditions in five east Mars ne Weiteotay af @ @ teh Sicueh aieen ensetiee, On OO aw iF lern and central states hit by last Downtown Temperatures Iweek's damaging overflows, Crest | bar eee oe IN am estages all along the Ohio River, ij ar 4 ? 5 re , ace es. ‘ : ae 5 the US. Weather Bureau reported, 2 a : are lower than was indicated last foam » I F _ week and further flooding will be Monday in Pentiar minor, (As recorded downtown! j Mighes! temperature ... = ol Powerst Temperature issn eee beens Mean temperature . . Weather —Bunny i leo z : One Vear Age in Pentia Gulf Coast, But rain. along with Highest temperature vise ee ae we \cooler weather, was forecast dui I A OMPerMtur@® ,.cessee. tenes 30 5 i ys Moe need Se “37 (ing the day in most of the Gulf Weather—Cloudy istates. ay | Highest and Lowest Temperatures This’ Date th Aa Veare él in te1é seetey:s rem? etare Chart » Listed for AFL-CIO Alpena 6 Marquette 16 seis . * Memphis 64 38 smare -? Miami Beach 78 67 Brownaville 78 00 ‘Aiwaukee, 25 0| Due to a mixup at headquarters e - Charleston @1 69 New Orleans 71 88/ °C seamen formed Oakland Qutin- Chicago 24 #9 New York 35 : ‘ouncil, The Chicago M8 New ¥ 38 gaity -CIO Council, The Pontiac Cleveland 20 19 Pellaton 7 4) Press stated yesterday that Sam- Denver 38-18 Phoenix V1 43) A P as elec boa Detroit 1600 «3 Pittsburgh 7a 31 el Haker wesjelected we ” Duluth h }3 2 - Leute 40 90 member at large of, the Council. Wortt 6 34:8, Pranciaco 60 62 E ak Crd. Rapide 15 4 8. @ Marie 14 9 Instead of Baker, Dorothe Duna- Houghton a R Tree. City ta 19/Vin was elected, aecording to a lacksonville 4 Was to 2 TEC j : fansas (hy 36, 14 Seattle to asicorrection made by’ the Council Los Angeles sad Wad Tampa aa se today, e « ? «in 1938, Wrong Member at Large! fire Its second moon rocket ® miles. a | * * * | fe | Skies were clear over most of (Georgia and Florida and along thet e@ tl : (UPI)—The Army plans to Feb, 28 in another attempt to send a 13-pound payload skimming past the moon like Russia's Lunik, it was learned today. x * But officials are concerned over the possibility that the public will overlook the seientific importance of the space probe and notice only that its payload is just a fraction of the size of thé 3,245-pound Lupik. * rw * After the Alr Force failed in three tries last year to orbit the moon, the Army tried last month to blast a 13- pound payload past the lunar sphere and on toward the sun, But bad alm and insufficient speed spoiled the shot, ing ‘Straley Maps Ouster Charge ; . “ —_ |Against Police Chief Causing River Pollution (Continued From Page One) Straley's ouster, but was turned down both times by the city man- ager. Straley is protected by civil serv- ice, which Pontiac voters adopted for the Police Department in 1957. Under the act, the chief is en- titled to a hearing before the Civil Service Commission on any charges brought against him. “Any charges against me are trumped-up,” Straley asserted. “Why are they bringing charges now? Why not sooner? * * * “Instead of letting Eastman make charges against me, Willman should call him into the office and order him to help me get the de- partment’s troubles resolved,’ the chief said. . Willman said, however, “Any hopes I had that they (Eastman and Straley) might work togeth- er have been squashed.” Straley accused Eastman of do- ing ‘‘everything he can to humili- ate me.” He also charged East- man with “heaping indignities’ on him and ridiculing him in the eyes of the public and police officers. * * * “He doesn’t even speak to me," What is there in his makeup to make him act that way?” The chief also claimed East- man had gathered a group of “troublemakers”? in the depart- ment around him, “showed fa- veritism and given them soft jobs.” Straley has been engaged for two years in a running feud with the Pontiac Police Officers Assn. (PPOA), an employe organization to which a majority of the officers belong. It was the internal departmental strife that led to the City Com- mission calling in the Public Serv- ice Administration of Chicago to study the city police situation. The PAS report contained sharp criticism of Straley's sev- en-year reign and recommended the hiring of a public safety director to reorganize the de- partment. Eastman relieved Straley of command on Nov. 12, and has given the chief only a couple of reports to prepare since then. “Tt feel deep sympathy toward the chief because of the position he's in,” Eastman said. Eastman said he also finds him- self in a “difficult situation.” “But that’s an occupational haz- ard,” he quipped. Willman stressed he will not file charges, but only receive them from Eastman and decide whether to forward them ¢o the Civil Serv- ice Commission, About the charges, Willman ” ness. Straley has been an adamant op- ponent of the Civil Service Act which was strongly supported by the PPOA and adopted after the association campaigned strongly for it. =. “In a way, the Civil Service Act is protecting me,”. the chief ad- mitted, “My reply to those who are say- must go’ is ‘Eastman must go,’ the chief declared. Moscow Flays Nassar dent Gamal Abdel Nasser’s United Arab Republic of mak- and the little Pioneer III probe stopped climbing at 66,000 ing. spurious attacks on Com-| Straley said, ‘What have I done?| ~ i |The Day in Birmingham Pontiac Motor Man to Retire Jamieson Served 25 Years in Many Sales John C, Jamieson, executive as- sistant to the general manager in charge of dealer relations for Pon- tiac Motor, will retire Feb. 1, un- der the provisions of the General Motors retirement plan after serv- ing the division for 25 years, it was announced by S. E. Knudsen, general manager. * & * Jamieson’s retirement ends 4 colorful career which included duty in almost every phase of the au- tomotive sales field. His affiliation with Pontiac in 1934 was preceded by nine years of retail dealer sales experience in Arizona and two years with the Chevrolet field sales organization. « * * * From 1934 to 1944 Jamieson held various positions of responsibility in Pontiac's Denver, Chicago, and Dallas sales zones. He was named zone manager in Dallas in 145, and in 1949 was promoted to the post of regional manager with headquarters in Kansas City. Jamieson moved to Chicago in 1950 to head the Midwest Region before assuming management of the Pacific Region in 1952 at San Francisco. * * In 1953, he was appointed assis- tant general safes manager in charge of Pontiac sales in the Western half of the United States with headquarters in Pontiac. Jam- feson assumed his current execu- tive duties in May, 1956. - A native of Edinburg, N.D., Jam- jeson studied at North Dakota State College in Fargo. He and his wife, the former Bessie Wilson of Minot, N.D., make their home at 1497 Pilgrim, Birmingham. Economics Can Win World—Khrushchev (Continued From Page One) contentions problems by peaceful talks,”” he said. “It is time to un- derstand that threats are a hope- less business when they refer to the Soviet Union.” * * * He offered no new solution for the Berlin crisis, a major source of East-West friction. He said nei- ther East nor West Germany can be eliminated ‘‘without touching off a world war.” minutes after the session opened. The title was ‘Target Figures of the Development of the U.S.S.R. National Economy in 1959-65.” For the first time in history foreign newsmen were admitted to the great hall of the Krerolin to hear the hours-long speech. To seme it seemed as if Soviet policy had decided the nuclear age ruled out war ad a means of conquest and left an even more powerful weapon—ec i progress. The confident party leader and 2st Congress with unparalleled personal power. Even V. I. Lenin had faced a divided leadership in the days immediately following the Revolution. Josef Stalin held power over a seething volcano. Khrush- chev was at the head of a united party. Jury May Decide Alyea’s Fate Today A Circuit Court jury was to be asked today to decide the fate of Raymond L, Alyea, accused of kill- ing a Southfield nursery caretaker. The jury of eight women and five men has beer listening to tes- timony since Jan. § before Judge William J. Beer. Attorneys for prosecution and de- fense presented their final ' argu- ments this morning. . *& * Alyea, a %-year-old ex-convict from Detroit, is accused of stab- bing Anthony Jasinski to death Aug. 1 in the nursery where he was employed, 2295) Northwestern Highway. The prosecution contends that the killing occurred after a rob- bery. The defense says that Alyea walked in on the robbery and fled, fearing to be implicated and re- turned to prison as a parole viola- munists. >: % i tor. = Capacities Since 1934) Khrushchev began his speech 30] premier went before the party's) City Tightens Restrictions on Dogs Running Loose though the ring was missed only yesterday by Mathrath. + BIRMINGHAM — A sharp. in- crease in complaints of dogs run- ning at large in the city today brought a warning to owners from) Circles of the First Presbyterian Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley, | Church Women’s Assn. will meet . « * ‘at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow. Moxley said the city ordinance, Circie 1 will meet at the home clearly states that dogs must be of Mrs. Ralph Main, 1819 Fairview “under reasonable control” at all » 1; Circle 2 at the home of Mrs. times. |Clifford Dunn, 332 Arlington Dr.; " * * ‘Circle 3 at the home of Mrs, F. J. Police and the dog warden have Zoellin, 538 Pleasant St.; Circle 4 been ordered to adopt a get-tough) with Mrs, Albert Hopkins, 540 Ber- policy on stray animals, officials' wyn Rd.; Circle 5 with Mrs. Nel- said. son Miles, 265 Westwood Dr.; Cir- Dogs taken to the pound cannot cle 6 with Mrs. F. R. Woolfenden, be released until owners show 343 Vinewood Dr.; and Circle u proof that the animals have had (with Mrs. C..H. Lindner at 590 rabies shots and are licensed. Wellesly Dr. First and second offenses within The annual dinner and congrega- a one-year period result in viola- tional meeting will be held in the tion tickets to the owners. A third church social hall at 6:30 p.m. offense automatically calls for an | Thursday. appearance in’ court. Mrs. Arthur Brandt Deadline for 1959 dog licenses is Service for Mrs. Arthur (Lucille) Mar. 1, after which fees double. | Brandt, 67, of 812 Kennesaw Rd. | will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday in the First Presbyterian. Church in Birmingham. The body will lie in state at the Bell Chapel of the Wil- liam R. Hamilton Co. until 1 p.m. * Thursday. Mrs. Brandt died yesterday at her bome following a brief tll- The absence of three commis-| sioners from the regular meeting cut several items of business from last night's agenda. * * Four efficiency roll assessments: needing five of seven votes were held over, as was the discussion) ness. of the West Maple road widening , ; >| She had been a resident of Bir- re wore may to Crap |mingham for 33 years. tert : . hu John Martz was reappointed to| Surviving are three sons, Arthur ; J. Jr.. Richard M. and James A.; he South Oakland Hospital Author-"" 0” : i ri where he has Paee iS the eight grandchildren and one sister. city of Birmingham for several : _ $238,377 Spent Police are charging Charis’ ’ . p Boggs, 20, of 727 Purdy St., wit b § | A grand aes) in the theft of a dia- y a vation rmy mond ring valued at $1,300. Officers said the ring was stolen from a strongbox in the room of John Mathrath, also 4 roomer at the same address. (Continued From Page One) ‘tated included 227 men who left the center of their own accord, 84 |who were requested to leave, six c who were hospitalized and two who Boggs confessed the theft and giaq while undergoing rehabilita- showed where he hid the ring in ion, the restaurant where he worked.! There were 65 men at the center police reported. The theft occurred),, of Jan. 1, which is capacity for sometime during the past week,'the center. During 1958 20,870 night lodg- ings were provided by the center and 58.457 meals served. A total of 1,341 interviews were given cli- ents and 582 were given medical examinations and services. There were 104 chapel serv- ices held and they were attend- ed by 5,620 men. Orientation classes numbered 54 and at- tracted 1,056, while the 56 en- tertainment sessions in 1958 Deadline Looms for Sports Queen Contest in City ~ Deadline for entries in the Win- ter Sports Queen contest is 5 p. m. tomorrow, said Leonard Buzz, rec- reation supervisor of the Parks and Recreation Department. attracted 1,893. The queen will reign over the ‘ i Ponte Winter Ice Carnival this ace of ee male attend wacker as ‘mous meetings and related group ; ldiscussions were attended by 665. Girls who are single, 18 years; The Red Shield Stores sold a of age or older and live in Oakland jo¢_) of 129,007 garments, 14,269 County are eligible for the contest, pairs of shoes, 18,535 books, 9 821 Buzz said. The queen will be se- pieces of furniture, and 39,267 mis- lected on the basis of appearance, | .ejjaneous articles. poise, personality, knowledge of, current events and interest in| The report Msted 2,281 articles winter sports. of clothing and shoes to men at x ® * the center as direct relief con- 1 thiet ay is feodelajociatbietes Dues said) 000 items of clothing and furniture. . entrants will win points if they have an interest in skiing or ice| In addition, the organization col- skating. , lected, processed, baled and sold 4,740,750 pounds of paper, 557,120 The winner will receive a trophy, a complete ski outfit and pounds of rags, and 638,617 pounds of scrap metal. an all-expense-paid trip to Grayling to represent the city in . wo the Grayling Winter Sports Queen This department of the Salvation Contest. Army is supported entirely by do- ; __|nations of household discards and The winner of that contest will salvaged articles, rather than cash be eligible to appear in the Miss donations from any source. Michigan pageant. The report emphasized that 90 x & per cent of the income received Entry forms are still available was spent locally for wages, sup- at the department's City Hall of-|plies for shops, various services, fices or at Northside Field, Edison|maintenance of the center and and Montcalm Streets, where the purchase and upkeep of the truck carnival will be staged. fleet. Haggard Heads County Council Vote AFL-CIO Merger Elected president Saturday of} As predicted, AFL _ building ithe newly-formed Oakland County trades locals stayed away from the AFL-CIO Council was Fred V, convention, which they did in ‘Haggard, head of the CIO Council|Wayne County last month. here for the past six years. * * * | Haggard, 58, was chosen at a | Haggard saw the merger as | convention of 225 delegates from Meaning an improvement for Oak- 89 CIO and six AFL locals, which land County organized labor. He met in Pontiac to ratify the mer. |Said the new union's headquarters ger and approve a new consti- iwould be at 21% E. Lawrence St., tution. ‘where the CIO headquarters has : ‘been The merger agreement, ordered, : lat the Rational merger three years, Also elected were Andy Mont- ago, was approved without objec- wereld oe - bene Eo tion, as was the constitution. i y aueene wae “ Elmer Fangboner, secretary- NO atti MS | treasurer; William Lindsey, rec- Bas 5 | ord-secretary; T. C. Holland, sergeant-at-arms and Mrs. Edna Hawley, guide. Montgomery, Lindsey, Holland and Mrs. Hawley are from CIO lo- cals and Ross and Fangboner, AFL. All the officers are affiliated with Pontiac locals. Elected as trustees where Samuel Fishman, a CIO member from Oak Park; Richard Crowner, a CIO member from Clawson, and Joseph Wilkinson, an, AFI. member from Waterford Township. Elected as trustees at Jarge were four AFL members, Norman An- representatives serving as officers ,was set by the constitution. mS ie ~ yes i | | * ‘. : 55 years in show business, Heath footlocker here on arrival and n Pontia and Neab Ar ava Show iyalness » eas ot ohacter member of the| ets Brother's Locker tact Weide fl iene of Wek ie KALAMAZOO (®—George Heath, | International Alliance of Theatrical) BAUMHOLDER, Germany,|seph Furby, also of Pascagoula, Tl, an employe of the Butterfield|State Employes and Motion Pic-| (UPI)—PFC asain, ‘Furby of Brother’ Joseph served in Germany Theaters Com is retiring after|ture Operators Union, Pascagoula, Miss., was issued a’in 1953-54. ‘ LAURAT ALDRIDGE Mrs. Powers, a 40-year Scldant = WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN./o County, died Monday e SHIP. — Service for Lauret Al-|at Allenwood Rest Home, e YOUR OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER _|dredge, three-day-old daughter of} She is eee hee fener, INVITES YOU TO TAKE YOUR TURN AT THE WHEEL... Mr. and Mrs. Richard Aldridge of|Irene, of Highland, and 6480 Conimerce Rd. will be bed at|James of Highland and Ralph o of J : Lf :30 p.m. Thursday at Huntoon Fu-|Clarkston. Seven grandchildren 7 Wf VG fj neral Home with burial at Perry/@nd two great-grandchildren also C. S C171, Mt. Cemetery. survive. e —_—— = died Sunday at University) Members of the oa fog Michigan Hospital, Ann Arbor, /8"Y Contributions may be made to after a three-day illness. the Cancer Fund. MRS. AGNES L. POWERS ALFRED E. WHEATLEY HIGHLAND — Service for Mrs.| ROCHESTER — Service for Al- Agnes L. Powers, 74, of 137 Mc-|fred E. Wheatley, 48, of 2638 Cul- Pherson St. will be held at 1:30) bertson St. will be et 10:30 a.m. Highland Cemetery. conduct the graveside service at |daughters, Mrs. Myra Horning of Lakeville Cemetery. Fort Wayne, Ind., and Audrey De- . ‘Mr, Wheatley was an employe at! ) Lass at home; a brother and a National ‘Twist Drill ahd a mem- < Me _ aren! DeLass’ body is -at “Gas Company ber x: Rochester Lodge No. 5 . Surviving besides his wife, Kath- |Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. erine, are a daughter, Kathleen at s e Ww. NEEB home; his mother, Mrs. Jessie zm Gets Pipeline etme ae 2 William of Bi Main St., Lemon Grove, Calif., a Michigan Consolidated Mr. Wheatley died early this former resident of Pontiac. He) Will Build New. Se morning in Bloomfield Hospital fol- died yesterday after an illness to Offset Loss tup lowing several months’ illness. Watch Wednesdays Pontiac Press For . A life member of the Elks Lodge, pd cg bere 0 Wilson sven jue bc te poe on Deaf Mute Will Face ifornia five years ago. in Oklahoma to Michi will be|(° Surviving are his wife, Rhoda; | puiit by an affiliate of | Michigan harge of Murder Of Lenn Grove and Mes Tube] Consolidated Gas Co. : . eral Power Commission has grant-|"etarded deaf mute faces arraign- deorsiagendrgs a brother, Roy of/ permit to Michigan-Wisconsin| Ment on a murder charge toady in ite QUALITY that makes the great difference! Service will be held at 2 p.m.| Pipeline Co. for the $31,200,000 the gunshot-bludgeon death of Har- Thursda Conrad peline, old H. Mulder, 35, who had re- y ae ey " buffed past attentions to his 16- You can look and look and look at the °59 manding a car that's quality-engineered from jin Lemon G with burial there.| The line will be able to carry x« * * Oldsmobile. But You'll never fully understand its new Rocket Engine to its style-setting WILLIAM SZOMAYA paneer feet of peso its [year-old daughter. why it’s the medium price class leader ‘til you taillights! When you take your demonstration William Szomaya, 49, of 2098) anocation of additional gas for Kent County Sheriff Arnold Pi- take your turn at the wheel™Here's where you'll drive, you'll find the roomiest, liveliest, loveliest Paulson Rd., Waterford Township, the new pipeline gorsh said a murder warrant has get That Olds Feeling . ; . that feeling of com- Oldsmobile ever built! Make a date, today! died at his home yesterday after oo . been issued for Robert Balzeski, 22, . an illness of several years. The line will run from Oklahoma,|a former patient at the Coldwater One of the VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED Surviving is his wife, Lucille, [through Kansas, Missouri, lowa,/ State Home and Training School. Service will ‘be held at I p.m.|/llinois and Wisconsin into Michi-| Prosecutor Joseph Renihan said Thursday from the Sharpe-Goy-|gan, roughly paralleling an exist-|Balzeski probably would be ar- oO = Db Ss KA ©) = | Zz — ette Funeral Home with burial in| ing line. raigned today on qa murder change. Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens ~*~ * * Renihan indicated, however, he QUALITY DEALER | Cemetery. Last month the FPC gave Pan-| Would seek a sanity hearing for handle Eastern Pipeline Co. per-| him. mission to discontinue supplying| | | Mt, samitta JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. 127 milli bic f f d Deaths Elsewhere [22 ,mitton,cubic tect of gas daily] Plgorsh sald Balzeski admited 5 ar March 15, shot and beat Mulder, a prorat ETRO: ) — George D. for thwarting attempts to date | Grant, 86, an auto industry pio- spina 2 page ay; beare victim's daughter. brother, Charles A., developed the| @ated, said the firm woulg spend Grant car and also put out this| ® million dollars for expansion county's first six~ yl ose emia oe ree NT SOMETHING? Sa as Rint oct?) They are hcugen Wines eee | ss s ’ and American-Louisiana Pipeline Co. CINCINNATI (AP)—E. Clifford “Shop the Stores That Dye, 66, who retired last August} The firm is appealing the Pan- Never Compromise = chief clerk and superintendent|handle’s permission to switch its on Quality” transport for the Southern Rail-| supply of gas to other customers. my died Monday after a brief|State, Wayne County and Detroit illness. He was born in Avera, Ga.| utility authorities have joined in = e» - & the appeal. os ANGELES (AP) — P. H. Michigan Consolidated also has @ * TWO newand ° 88 former president and| filed for permission for a $5,400,- ns eee of the South Penn|9 rate increase with the Mihi- INCONSPICUO IS one Co. of Oil City, Pa., died Mon-| 22" Public Service Commission to day of a heart attack. Curry, who|ffset the loss of gas from Pan- retired in 1943, was born in Oil| handle. ty. _ * ® * , : , hearing aids SAN ANSELMO, Calif. (AP)— Air Crash in Italy If you have your heart set | Greatest Men’s Suit Events in Oakland County’s History TUNE IN THE “NEW OLDS SHOW” STARRING PATTI PAGE + EVERY WEEK ON ABC-TV See and try them both! The = ; ; new Zenith Af Areva at-the-ear The Rev. Walter David Knight, 67,|,,, e,° hearing aid. And the brand new well known Presbyterian minister Kills ? of 6 British Zenith fass Hearing Aid. and educator, particularly in the Attractive, inconspicuous, high New England area, died on “Something Special,” here’s an performance Zenish Quality —A Brit. a. Hearing Aids! 10-Da . |of a heart ailment. He had been| BRINDISI, Italy (AP)—A easy way to bring it a Back carances. Free paged a of the student field serv-jish igh — a pe y way 8 demonstration arranged! ce of San Francisco Theological|/burned here today, killing two o' . refi Seminary in San Anselmo since its six-man crew, little closer right now...@& Petals magia treble last July. He was born in Marl-/ x *« * as ; Des . bora, N.H. The four-engine plane, owned by : Something Special savings x * * the Air Charter Co., crashed a DETROIT — Funeral service;Moment after it had taken off account! will be held Wednesday for the|{rom this Adriatic port city to re- Rev. Gernsey F. Gorton, pastor/Sume its flight from the Orient to of Ford Memorial Methodist|London. . DR. SPENCER OATES Church and a Methodist minister « * * Start off with at least a dime a day _ Optometrist for 35 years. Dr. Gernsey, 66, died| Airfield officials said radio oper- ' Sunday following a heart attack.jator Raymond Pawley and me- : ¢ iin Rome-y Vetlve-Smanemm |He served churches in Detroit,;chanic John Hillyer were killed. in Our special ree — Houghton, Flint and was superin-| The other four crewmen were . LLL ARG | tendent of the Marquette Methodist/ hospitalized but were not seriously folders, always available at eee Church District. injured, any of our convenient offices. he Open an account now. Before you know it, you’ll have $50 or $100 put away! \ AUT OMATIC ONDITIONERS* EARN ON SAVINGS CERTIFICATES % Automatic! Absolutely ne _ werk to det tk Saves you cosh=nevery dey! MEMBER F.D.I.C. ‘PONTIAC | STATE BAN K f MAIN OFFICE: BRANCHES: . ; f SAGINAW AT © -AUBURN HEIGHTS «= © BALDWIN AVE. © CRAYTON PLAINS © AIRACLE MILE © vo 6 DEPT. : H ( LAWRENCE 3200 AUBUEN AVE. 1305 BALOWIN et YALE 4496 O1XIE HIGHWAY REAR OF BAZAAR AREA 4 &. LAWRENCE - . é i a4 NORTH PERRY STREET \ ru 3 ’ / « i “ F. ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 27, 1959 Man-Who Shot Switzer Cleared Jury Rules’ Alfalfa’s Killer Had to Act in Self-Defense LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Alfie charged me with a jackknife, | was forced to shoot.” So testified Moses S. Stiltz, 38, Monday, and a coroner's Jury held him blameless in the slaying of one-time ‘“‘Our Gang’’ comedy stal Carl (Alfalfa) Switzer * * * Jack Piott, 37. testified he and Switzer, 32. had been drinking when they got in a fight with Stiltz last Wednesday night. Switzer claimed Stiltz owed him $50 Stiltz denied it In clearing Stilt. the jury ruled Suitzer’'s death war justifiable homucide and thal stiltz acted in self) defense * * * Piott had not been accused of any responsibility in the shooting He appeared at the inquest solely ak a witness ‘Vet’ Urges Pets Get Proper Care for Winter Days BOSTON (UPIi—Do you know how to “‘winterize”” your pet dog or cat? Dr Gerry B Schnelle, chief of staff of Angell Mernorial Animal Hospital, pointed out —lt is dangerous to allow dogs to run free after a heavy snow storm because they are likely to stay on plowed roads and may be hit by cars. Dogs should be walked on a leash for their outdoor exercise at such times —Special attention should — be given to dogs’ feet when they con- tact sanded sidewalks or streets The rodk salt in the sand ean irri tate the tender webbing between the toes. The dog's feet should be wiped dry after a walk —Both dogs and cats can he al lowed outdoors even in extremely enld weather if they are kept ac tive, but should be allowed to re turn to house or kennel when they wish Hospital Trip Expensive for Ty Power's Wife HOLLYWOOD (AP) Mra Ty rone Powers trip to the hospital gained her a san but cost her $15 000 worth of furs and Jewelry Burglits took aomink coat, a mink stole and some of the late Tyrone Powers cuff links a few hours before Mrs Power came home Monday with son Tyrone William Power. The child) was born Thursday FIVE | FAS HION ACCESSORIES — Street Floor COTTON and NYLON GLOVES Womens soiled cotton and nylon Orig. 1.98 glove: 1 many colors Braker size 10. 5.00 1 Z OFF Only 125 pairs 50-Orig. | 00 Earrings ond Pins =. ss ee eee le 50 Orig | OO Assorted Novelty Fashion Jewelry ..... 22¢ 50-Orig. | 00-1.98 Necklaces, Earrings, Pins 2 for $1 14-Orig, 298 Novelty and Plastic Calf Handbogs ........ $1 11-Orig. 7.98 Better Novelty Handbags $3.99 11-Orig. 1.00 Women’s Pink or Beige Soiled Wallets .- 22c 24-Orig. 1.00 Women’s Soiled Leather Wallets _.2 for $1 36-Orig 59¢-1.00 Wool and Cotton Socks, broken sizes, 3 Off 120-Orig. 99c-1 65 Seamless, Full Fashioned Hose Vs Off 7-Orig. 2.98 Wool Slipper Socks, Broken Sizes $1.98 14-Orig 39¢ Nylon, Cotton Shoe Liners, Broken Sizes .. 22c 100-Orig. | OO Men's Cotton Initio! Boxed Hankies ..... 67c 42 Orig. 29c Women’s Print and Name Hankics E., 0, Mio Waite’s GUARANTEES Every Item at Least 3 OFF Original Price medi uen the Watch Wednesdays Pontiac Press For... One of the Greatest Men’s Suit Events in Oakland County’s History “Shop the Stores That Never Compromise on Quality” Broken 41 Women’s Nylon or Plastic Boots Plastic or mylon boots for flat Ong 450 or high heel shiv ze lo 6.95 BUDGET SPORTSWEAR -Street Floor 25-Ong 15 Orig 598 698 Wool Slipons G Cardigan Sweaters 12-Orig 298 Evening Purse and Scarf 40 Ong | ( 10 Assorted Costume Flowers 20-Orig. 898 Beaded Cardigans, Sizes 34-40 33 Orig 5 98 Ski Slipovers and Bulky Cardigans 298 Overblouses, Middy Blouses, Print Shirts $2 $3.99 $1.59 LINGERIE, FOUNDATIONS — Second Floor Womens gowns Group of Gowns and Pajamas and pajama 1 fayon Orig. 5 98 ean hata navel ose. a 680 SPIO 18 Orig 398 Warm Gowns, Boxer Pajam., Shorty Gowns $2.65 14-Orig 5.95-8.95 Soiled Nylon Slips, Broken Sizes . $3.99 30 Orig 398 Cotton Plisse or Batiste Slips $2 20-Orig 10,95-16 95 Nylon Gowns, Pajamos $5.99-$8.99 15 Orig 1250-14" Front Zipper Girdles, Broken Sixes $3 15 Ong 15 00 2250 Strapless Corselettes $8.88 $6 Orig 300 650 Group of Counter Soiled Bros _..... $2 50 Orig. 1.75 2.00 Broken Lot of Soiled Bras oer S| Only 3! Strapless Basque Brassicres of these trapless basqee bras an white, pink, blue or black Broken sires Orig. 895 fo 12,50 $3 SILVERWARE, COSMETICS - Street Floor 100 Orig 1.19 China Handle Serving Pieces, stainless 66c 15-Orig 398 Sterling Salt G Pepper Shakers 45-Orig | 00 200 Children’s Novelty $2.66 Soap Items 66c-$1.22 NOTIONS, STATIONERY - Street Floor 39-Orig 1.00 Soiled Bras, Broken Sixes © ..... 18c 14-Orig 2.99 Clear Plastic Auto Back Seat Covers ... .$! 27-Orig | 00 Damaged 6-Tier Blouse Racks ........ 18c T-Orig. 3 O00 “Jotto”’ Secret Word Game for 2... . 88c 9-Orig. 250 Ash Trays with 30 Disposable Trays ..... 88c 56-Orig 25¢c Packages of All Occassion Gift Wrap ..... 4c 8 Orig 150 Damaged Rolls of Wrapping Paper ....... 75e 50-Orig 49¢ Records WOMEN’S DRESSES-— Third Floor 33-Orig 17.98-24.98 Better Dresses, 8-18, 7-15 yoo auc $10 ee 10.98-14.98 Maternity Dresses, Sizes 10-18 ..... $5 1-Orig. 6.98-1098 Maternity Tops, Slacks, 10-16 .... $3 if Orig. 5.99-7.99 Cotton, Dacron, Uniforms, a 9-18, 1842-24% ......0 252-2572. VA 5 Orig. 899-1499 Drip-Dry Uniforms, Some Sizes or ms Orig. 24.98-29.98 Wool Knit, Crepe Dresses, 10- 20. $10 14-Orig. 29.98 Silk Dinner Dresses, 12-20, 9-15 ........ $15 54-Orig. 10.98-14.98 Crepes, Jerseys, Jr. Misses, Holfs.. $7 20-Orig. 55.00-110.00 Wedding Gowns, Sizes 8-12... . 2 Off |2-Orig. 17.98-39.98 Evening Dresses, Sizes 9-14 . -_$5-$10 Starts Tomorrow at 9:30! Ends Tomorrow at 6:30! Sorry, no mail or phone orders, no lay- aways, no deliveries. All sales final! STOREWIDE SAVINGS! CHILDREN’S VALUES—Second Floor Girls’ Flannel Gowns & Pajamas $2.44 . Eyelet lace trim gowns and pajamas in warm Orig. flannel. Sies 4-14. 200 pieces. 3.98 Misses’, Half-Size, Jr. Dresses wo is20, Tara Orig. 8.99 $5 o 10.98 Jerseys, shirtwaists, rayon prints, tweed sheaths in broken sizes, 24'2, 7-15 Daytime and Budget Dresses Drip-dry cottons, jersey ponts shirtwaists, rayon ¢ repes a few corduroy jun vor suits. Orig. 5. 99 $3 Broken sizes 12-20, 1412-2472. 9-15. 180 and 6.99 pieces Cotton and Rayon Housedresses rayon prints. Orig. 2.99 $2 10. only. and 3.99 cotton flannelettes -20, 141-24", Catton print : Broken sizes 10 15-Orig. 10.98-12.98 Infants’ Northlander Pram Suits .$6.99 6-Orig. 6.98 Infants Convertible Car Beds ..... vues $3.99 3-Orig. 7.98-8.98 Folding Bassinettes, Damaged ...... $3.99 9-Orig. 7.98-8.98 Solid or Plaid Cover Strollers ...... . $4.99 4-Orig. 3.98 Soiled or Damaged Car Sects....... Neat ka: 15-Orig. 14.98-17.98 Girls’ Car Coats, sixes 7, 8...... $6.99 50-Orig. 3.98 Boys’ 3-8 Western Flannel Pajamas. ....$2.44 20-Orig. 4.98-8.98 Girl’s 4-14 Washable Robes ...... $2.99 30-Orig. 1.98-2.98 Boy’s 6-16 Sport, Dress Shirts ....... 66¢ 16-Orig. 19.98-27.98 Boy’s 6-16 All Wool Suits $10.99-$14.99 50-Orig. 2.98-4.98 Boy’s Broken 6-16 Washable Slacks, $1.99 . i a Girls’ and Subteens’ Dresses Plaids, d lid | Orig 3.88 re en ee is ee 2192. 2222 subteen 8-14. 50 only. f WOMEN’S COATS, SPORTSWEAR - 3rd Floor 9 Orig 1798 % Length Knit Coats ............ : $8.99 15 Orig 35 00-59 98 100% Wool Tweed, Solid Coats $22 5 Ong 11900 Famous Make 100% Cashmere Coots, 6-10, 14... _. . $78 1 Ong 159 00 Size 10 Sapphire Coat, Dyed Beaver Collar, $99 6 Orig 698 Velvet, Faille Skirts, 10-16 ........... $3.99 15-Ong 898 Wool Skirts, Sixes 10-18 ...........-- $5.99 6-Orig 798 Velvet Blouses 1.6 «eee eee $2.99 #-Orig 498 Print Faille Blouses. . $1.99 16-Orig 1998-25 00 Poplin, Tweed Car Em, 10-14 $12. 99 8 Orig 9.98-1698 Velvet, Faille, Wool Jumpers, Knit Suits .$5.99 60 Orig 8.98 Full Fashioned See: “Lon Cardigens, 34. 40, $5.99 0-Orig. 5.98 Overblouses, Knit Blousons, Silk Shirts . . $3.99 15 Orig. 3 98-5.98 Long Sleeve Shirts, Blouses, 32-38 . .$1.99 MEN’S FURNISHINGS — Street Floor 15-Orig. 5 00-5. 95 White Dress Shirts, Broken Sizes, 2.99-3.99 ] Orig. 15.98 Orlon and Wool Robes, Drip-Dry _.... .$10.66 15 Orig. 3.95 Interwoven Wool Slipper Sox, S-M-L... .$1.88 14-Orig 5 00 Leather Gloves, Lined, Broken Sizes ... $1.88 20-Orig 2.50 Famous Brand All Silk Ties... ..... . 88 \6-Orig 500 Cashmere Mufflers, Gray, Blue, Brown . $2.88 8 Orig 25 00 Famous Brand Suede Jackets, 38-42 .. $16.66 6 Orig. 22.95 Blend Wash ‘n Wear Jackets, broken sizes, 14.99 14-Orig. 29 95-30.50 Wool and Blend Suburban Coots. 18.88 one 1095 Washable Drizzler Jackets, soiled. ... $6.99 1-Orig 898-998 All Wool Slacks, broken sizes... .. $5.99 8-Orig. 5.98-6 98 Slacks, Broken Sizes ..... .$3.99 20-Orig. 6.95-10 00 3, 4-Button Cardigans, Crews $3. 99- $6.66 FURNITURE, SPORTING GOODS — Downstairs 5-Orig. 10.00 Mahogany TV Stands................ $2.88 2-Orig. 59.95 Separate Magnavox Hi-Fi Cabinets ..... $25 1-Orig 99.00 Toastmaster Water Heater ............ $58 1-Orig 29.95 6 by 9 Ft. Cotton Loop Rug .......... $10.88 4-Orig 998 3 by 5 Ft. Tweed Rugs ........--.55-- $4.88 3 Orig 17.98 30 by 54” Acrilan Rugs ....... $10.88 }-Orig. 58 OO Approx. 9 by 12 Ft. Hooked Rugs waa... $34 1-Orig 49.95 9 by 12 Ft. Viscose Nylon Rug ........ $17.88 1Orig 109.95 Clinton Outboard Motor .............. $66 1 Orig. 79.95 Used Clinton Outboard Motor .........$33 5-Orig. 39.95 Boy’s, Girl's 26 Middleweight Bicycles... $25 7 Enfield Reconditioned Rifles ...... . 18 Orig. 167 Group of Children’s House Slippers — Several styles in children’s house slippers. Orig. 2.99 $] Many colors, all sizes but not in every style. and 3.99 HOUSEWARES, CHINA, LAMPS—5th Floor 15-Orig. 79c-1.98 Miscellaneous Housewores ........ 44c 30-Orig. 2.98-4.98 Assorted Housewares Items ...... $1.88 4-Orig. 29.95 20” Portable Window Fans .......... $15.99 3-Orig. 8.98 Colored Metal Shelf Room Dividers ....... $2.88 300-Discontinued Pattern Open Stock Dinnerware, 75% Off 30-Orig. 1.00-1.98 Assorted Gift Items ...........-.-- 44¢ 7-Orig.9.98 Bross Pulley Lamps. ..........-+---+-: $4.88 LINENS, DRAPERIES—Fourth Floor 50-Orig. 1.00 Toilet Lid Covers .........--++2e0e- 5 tor $1 200-Orig. 39c Filet Type Napkins ............-.-. 5 for $1 50-Orig. 1.99-4.99 Bath Rugs, Mats, Changettes ...... $1-$3 Soiled and Damaged Linens .......... V2 Off 15-Orig. 7.99 Dacron and Acrilan Pillows ...°..........- $3 12-Orig. 3.49 Lurex Stripe Twin Percale Sheets ......... $2 3-Orig. 15.99 North Star Wool Blankets, Twin :.:......- $10 75-Orig. 1.99 6-Ply Bengaline Suiting Fabric ...... 2 yds. $1 50-Orig. 2.79 72” Wide Wool Felt Fabric ........ yd. $1.88 200-Orig. 1.29 45’ Brocades, Jaquards, Taffetas ... yd. 87c 100-Orig. 79c 40’ Wide Ice Finish Organdy Fabric . 2 yds. $1 12-Orig. 1.98-4.98 Redwood Cornice Boards ............ $1 35-Orig. 3.99 36’ Cafe Curtains, Solid, Striped ......... $1 30-Orig. 6.99-16.99 One-of-a-Kind Draperies, $4, $5, $6, $8 5-Orig 8.98 Polished Cotton Bedspreads ............ $4.88 15-Orig. 3.98 Pale Green Tier Curtains ................ $1 Corduroy, Cotton Covered Sofa Pillows Washable, $2 98 square box, round box, half moon and e wedgette shapes. Foam rubber. 80 only. zip covered sofa pillows in Orig. 3.98 fo $.98 White Steel Venetian Blinds Some have parts missing or are damaged. Orig. 3.49 $ Many sizes but 49 blinds only. to 12.99 WITH BUILT-IN UNIMATIC’ CONTROL DOES THE WORK OF 7 SPECIAL MACHINES White Sewi @ mokes button holes ®@ sews on: buttons ® overcasts @ hems @ monograms @ satin stitch @ straight stitch “One control does it all! ng Cenler—-Waile's ... Fourth Floor No Money Down, Pay 3 Monthly or Small Down Payment; Many Months to Pay LIMITED QUANTITY . -ONLY Portable as INustrated 99 Weoite's is the only factory authorized White in Pontiac! I i byCitizens Protest Ss = = Pe avid. ' f PONTIAC PRESS ft. OT Be 3 ee tea MAKE TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1959 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THIRTEEN Rochester OK’s Sewage Plant Manager to Have Plans Drawn by Engineers for Secondary Unit ROCHESTER—The village coun- cil last night authorized Village Manager Paul York to contact the village engineers requesting them to prepare plans for a secondary sewage treatment plant, The plans must be completed in a.year to allow contracts to be let within 18 months, council mem- bers said. * * * The council also approved plans for a proposed 42-unit motel to be| built on the corner of Terry and Main streets. They recommended several small revisions in the plans. The contract to be presented te Parke, Davis and Co. covering the village acceptance of a site for a new elevated water tank and the village-company agree- ment to share expenses of its installation was approved by the council, $ After company officials ok the contract, it will be returned to the council for member's signa- tures. * * * Test borings have been made of the soil on the water tank site to see if it will support the proposed structure, but no results have been reported to date.. The site is locat- ed just east of the village limits, adjacent to Parkdale road. Fashion Show to Aid Romeo Fund for Polio ROMEO—The March of Dimes will profit from a fashion show to be staged at 8 p.m. tomorrow in. the Romeo Community Youth an Civic Center. | Perkins Dress Shop here is co-| operating in the presentation of the | show which will feature clothing from Koret of California being loaned especially Té¥ the local fund-raising campaign. * * * The packets of fashions from the California manufacttirer are simi- lar to those being used in other |jnto effect Sunday, Thomas K.| March of Dimes shows this month throughout the United States. * * * The packets are called ‘‘Around the World on an $80 Wardrobe” and “‘Living in this Jet Age,”’ and are designed for both teenagers and adults. ; The local dress shop will furnish the models, and Mrs, George Mc-, Keough will be the commentator. Romeo Florists will provide the floral setting for the show. MOUNTAINS IN MICHIGAN ? — This photo of what appears to ,be mountains rising from a snow-covered plateau are but mounds of gravel in the pits on M24 just north of the village limits 4 ad Women’s Group Will Hear About Church Merger AUBURN HEIGHTS—The newly- reorganized Women's Assn. of the Auburn Heights United Presby- terlan Church will hold its first meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the church. * x * The recent merger of the United Presbyterian Church with the Pres- byterian Church U.S.A. will be ex- plained particularly as it pertains to women's work, and a film strip portraying the highlights of last May's merger will be shown. * * * ; Officers to be installed at the/ meeting are Mrs, Orvin Weaver, president: Mrs. Grace Shearer, vice president; Mrs. Vernon King, secretary; and Mrs. Ray Stephens, treasurer. : z Pentiac Press Phote of Oxford. The only evidence that might belie the fact that these mounds look like mountains is that the snow is at the bottom of the slopes instead of at the top. * * x Committee and circle chairmen also will be installed at this time. oli This Weekend Near Holly Scout Camporee Planned Wildwood Lake in the Holly Rec- reation Area has been chosen as the site for the Manito District Boy Scout Camporee to be held Saturday and Sunday. Over 400 scouts and leaders will make camp in the hills along the lake. They will start arriving at 9 a.m, Saturday for a full day of ice skating, skiing, and tobogganing. Some 20 troops are expected to petitive basis, The troops also will petitie basis. The troops also will will be given added points for camping overnight. Others will leave Saturday or arrive only on Sunday. * * | George Ross and Howard Far- |mer of Troop 40, Rochester, will be in charge of all activities. Sher- ry Mapley, assistant scoutmaster| of Troop 32, Oxford, will serve as | genera] chairman. Bill Would Permit compete in various otver phases ot | Mill Township Tax scouting skills. - The troop with the highest rat- ing awarded on a point system will receive a trophy. Community Hospital Sets Visiting Hours ALMONT — New visiting hours at the Community Hospital will go Richards, hospital board president announced today. “In grder to offer our patients better care and more rest to speed their recovery, we have found it necessary to make this chapge,” Richards said. Beginning Sunday, visitors may call on patients between 11 a. m. and 12 noon, 3 and 4 p. m. and 7 and 8 p. m. Previously, visiting hours were anytime between 1 and 8:30 p. m. | LANSING Ww — The Senate to- day received a bill that would |permit any township to qualify for q_ Troops with winter equipment allocation of one full mill of iproperty tax provided its budget justified that amount. It was presented by Sen. Frank Andrews (R-Hillman), chairman of an interim legislative commit- tee that studied township prob- lems. Andrews said the measure would remove ambiguity result- ing from a 1939 law. The statute, after providing a full mill for townships, further established a “minimum” alloca- tion of the average of the rates it was granted over the preceding three years. * * * Dozens of townships whose re- quests to county tax allocations boards were reduced or denied last year took appeals to the state tax commission. Some won and some lost their appeals. Southfield Vote to Decide Bond | | City Council Approves Parks, Recreation. Issue _ for April 6 Ballot place a $375,000 bond issue for }parks and recreation purposes on ithe ballot of a special election April 6 was given by the city coun- \cil at their regular meeting last | night. Bond issue of $450,000 for the same purpose failed in the Nov. 4 election because it lacked the 60 per cent approval of the vot- ers, Patrick Flannery said, that the question of acquiring the water sys- ,tem which now serves the city of | Southfield and Southfield Township |will go on the April 6 ballot. The city of Southfield and the and liabilities with the exception of the water system. Clarkston Class to Open ‘in CD Police Training CLARKSTON — Courses in aux- iliary police training for civil de- fense will begin at 8 p. m. Wednes- day in the Clarkston Community Center under the auspices of the fense. cepted for the classes, which will last eight weeks, said Ronald Bird, lfense director for the township. To Bring Midway to Stone School =o on _ ‘Snowball Fair’ Planned by PTA AUBURN HEIGHTS — Stone|Marvin Norris, PTA president, an-; A talent show, which will feature the fifth grade king and queen School on Adams road will be|nounced today. SOUTHFIELD — Approval to gay by Lewis C. Jarrendt, county dered installatiions in every There is a possibility, City Clerk ome ante! Milford to Hold Registrations are still being ac- filed for nomination for trustee to. Independence Township civil de-| rule charter, if moi children singing, dancing and play- ®t crowned at 8 p.m. The fifth Others Urged to Join 23 County School Districts to Install Warning System _ Twenty-three Oakland County! Base station will be the Oakland school districts are ging to get at/County Sheriff's Department when ‘least a taste of new civil defense|the system is put into operation) this spring, said. |warning system and other schoo! mia epCing: be iexid ‘districts were urged to join in to-| Three school districts have or- civil defense director, _ school, while 20 others have or- Installation of the first 63-voice) dered a single pilot unit for ex- radio receivers to carry warnings perimental purposes. iof impending disasters has been! Pontiac, which has a bell and ‘ordered by Jarrendt. jlight warning system in every igned . _ | school, is not affected by the Oak- en ee atta eauier aes land County plan. ling disas- ~ ae ters as enemy attack or tornado, | tion of 13 units in Ferndale schools, the system has been approved for 14 in Birmingham and 11 in Hazel | federal matching funds on a 50-50 |Park. In addition, Avondale, Holly | Se, and Lyon Township will get two |pilot units; and Brandon, Clarence- Each receiver costs either $197 ville, Clarkston, Clawson, Farm-| or $271, depending on whether spe-| ington, Lake Orion, Lamphere, Mil- cial antennas are necessary, Jar-| ford, Oak Park, Oxford, Rochester, rendt said. |Royal Oak, Southfield, Troy, Wa- terford Township and West Bloom- field Township will each get one. There also will be single units in- stalled at St. Michael School in Southfiéld, the Oakland County Beartl of Education office and the Ousting of Avon School Official Oakland County Office of Civil De- fense. Village Primary. for Trustee, Ansounces ROMEO t0 Buy New Police Car Clerk Helberg | MILFORD — There will be a Council Asks for All. Gas and Fuel Oil Bids than 12 in- by Feb. 9 | dividuals were filed for trustees; po yeo — Meeting at a special’ by the Saturday noon deadline, it session last night, the village coun- would become necessary to have ¢jj opened bids on a new police the primary election, There were!-ar and voted to buy the vehicle 15 petitions filed, according tO\f-om the low bidder, Garrison Clerk Bee Prior Helberg. Chevrolet, for $965 with a tradein. ‘Joseph M. Gerrard remains un. = The council now will advertise opposed for nomination as vil- for bids on gasoline, both high test lage president, however, there and regular, on fuel oil and on were ten additional petitions, kerosene for use in village-owned plug five incumbents filed for | buildings and equipment. The bids council, must be turned in to the clerk’s Oakland County Office of Civil De- village primary election Feb. 16, | jdue to the number of petitions) | the new council. | Under the newly adopted home transformed into a carnival mid-|, pat ne forthcoming aa way for the “Snowball Fair’ to be Fey = soon al 6 to o| staged Friday, Feb. 6, by the’p m. and a hayride, if the weather Stone-Auburn Heights PTA, Mr s.! permits. 4 AuHUEN MENG) 5 nor, who fair. : : ‘ a, ts the event and two PTA members. They are, from left standing, Donald O'Connor, 9; Mrs. Lester Arnold, PTA publicity and program chairman, and Clandia Norris, 10. Seated is Mrs. Don O'Con- will be the Pick-a-Pocket Lady at the ing musical instruments, is sched- uled to start at 7 p.m. + High point of the evening's en- tertainment will be reached when Bat are selling votes for their candidates, and the boy and girl with the highest number will be declared the winners. Now holding office are Frank . ae ; | Nealer Their majesties each will receive ‘ . trophies in addition to their The ten new candidates include crowns, Charles Newell, former president cs «x « Paul Plotzer, Hershe] L. Krebs, Tilden E. Siever, Ralph W. Wiese, Roy J. Elmore, Vernon Rounds, John Murphy, Donald Grondin and William Olzack. Only six of the 15 candidates who filed will bé nominated for the April 6 elections, Two will hold a three year term, two for two years and two for one year each. One of the popular attractions of last year’s fair will be revived again this year, It is the orange tree. Children pick crepe-paper oranges from a ‘tree,’ and each “orange” contains a number which is good for a prize. .) A fish pond, cake walk, white Fox, John W. Ray, Wilbur John-| son, E. J. Kauppi and Edward J. office by 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 9. All local businessmen were asked to cooperate in removing | snow from their sidewalks imme- diately after snow storms, If they fail to keep their walks clear, the council will invoke the ordinance governing their re- sponsibility, Sidney J. White, vil- lage clerk, sald today. The village grant of $750 annual- ly to the Romeo Peach Festival Assn, was discussed and will be referred to the Ways and Means AVON TOWNSHIP — Some 80 persons attended last contract of Superintendent of Schools Raymond N. Baker for the coming year. |—the purpose for which the imeeting was called—before * * * roug | Then, Frank Skosich, tepresent- ’ + _ |mittee, arose. He read five ques- Relief Group Claims jtions the group wants answered at The citizens’ group asked ‘Is | it wise to make q change im ad- NEW YORK (UPI)—American, "a farmers are helping to raise a! — and will the move mean added cost to the district?” CARE (Cooperative for American to Relief Everywhere, Inc.). ‘know how the board action of Dec. million undernourished children | North Central Assn. are sharing in school-feeding pro- Pye surpluses, . . not to renew Baker’s contract. No In Bogota, Colombia, CARE re-ireasons for the action were pub- have had to go on split-shifts since) Baker's attorney has sent letters a free lunch program started last 'io the three board members asking reports truancy and absenteeism * * * down 60 per cent since start of | “We will act as a board and uesd/(t) stay) home (> belpithelr | te EP parents during the harvests have; Far from appeasing the as- In Ceylon, when a mix-up de-| man, Eari Wilson, stated it, “We layed the baking of flour into buns,| @fe asking for the motivations ucation. | jority vote.” In Costa Rica, where 125,000 pri- * * * the past year and a half, Rafael in the meeting when the contract Murillo, Director of Education in|was not renewed. As long as we of tS * & & “Of all the programs which the) Fach of the three men who voted Education Board Ref night’s special meeting of the Avondale Board of Educa- tion to protest the board’s action in failing to renew the The group sat through two hours of board discussion — —¢on the budget for 1959-60 Fa rmers Help |stating their reason for be- _ing present. jing the newly formed Citizens Com- Underfed Children Are the following regular meeting of As ithe board, which is next Monday. Aided by Surpluses | ministration at this time — are the reasons for the change valid bumper crop of school children’ around the world, according to, Furthermore, they wanted The “crop,” says CARE, is grow- 15 would affect the faculty and ing in 14 countries where seven the district's credit rating in the grams based upon the organiza-| Just five weeks ago the board, tion's distribution of US. farm/py a three to two majority, voted ports, public school enrollment rose |jicized at that time. from 70,000 to 90,000 and classes *® * * March. ‘for the reasons they had in failing In La Paz, Bolivia, one school | to renew his client's contract, the food program. answer this at our next meeting,” In the Philippines, farm kids who Gordon Hamilton, board president, been at their desks every day:| sembly this remark incited even they don't want to miss their milk.| mre comment. As one spokes- 60 school principals sent telegrams) Which prompted these individual of protest to the Ministry of Ed-| board members to cast this ma- mary pupils have received sipple-| The board president answered, thentary food every school day for|‘"There was plenty of discussion the Province of Heredia, reported! are working as a board, we will to CARE: answer that way." my native land, CARE is the most | would list their reasons indi- effective , . , The school feeding program , . . has helped greatly in improving the effectiveness. of our whole education.” Servings to school children range from a mid-morning glass of milk, or milk and a roll, to a cheese sandwich with milk for lunch. The makings come from milk powder, enriched flour and cheese given to the nonprofit international relief agency from U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture stockpiles, vidually. All three, John Buday, Robert Sipperiey and Hamilton re- fused, saying they would continue to act as a board. x * * One mother protested, “We had mo inkling that a change was to eccur, Before a new superin- tendent is hired, we want to know why our present admin- istrator’s contract was terminat- ed.”’ * * * When Baker was asked if he would publicize the board’s rea- sons for his dismissal when he received them, he said he would consult his attorney first. Baker had three years left before he would have retired. He was poned because of inclement |obviously shaken by last night's weather, No other date has been (proceedings, which ended in an set, abrupt adjournment. Milford Is Looking for Site fo Construct New Building Township voters had previously approved a five mill tax increase for construction of the building and Postpones Banquet SEYMOUR LAKE—The Father and Sons Banquet to have been sponsored Wednesday evening by the WSCS of the Seymour Lake Methodist Church has been post- MILFORD — A discussion re- garding the location of a new town- ship buikding and fire hall was one Committee for recommendation before action is taken this year. of the topics at last night's council meeting. the village has offered to donate the land. elephant booth, : cotton candy salesroom, pop corn stand, coun- try fair and lunch room will be open throughout the evening, The Pick-A-Pocket Lady, Mrs. Don O'Connor will roam through the halls with the copious pockets in her apron filled with sw One pocket will be labeled “Girls,” the other “Boys,” and by paying a small fee, youngsters may reach into the appropriate pocket for a gift. * + a ( ¥ ZA8h, The possibility of constructing the building in a small park on OVER PAGES * EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1959 4 - Poles Pushed to Buy More Salesmanship Is Bustin’, Out in Western Style;| but Who Has Zlotys! WARSAW — (UPI) — Salesman- Pickets Walk at Gulf The following are top prices| covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer's ship, Western-style, is bustin’ in Poland. The Warsaw afternoon paper ‘‘Kurier Polski” most of the top right-hand third afte of page one recently to a picture the company and the Oi], Chemica out) | PORT ARTHUR, Tex. 7 news-/shutdown of the Gulf Oil Co. re- xia pyet by growers and sold by! devoted finery here was started yesterday them ar contract negotiations between } Quotations are furnished by the| hetroit Bureau of Markets, as of; Oil Talks, Stalemate, | MARKETS [Market Trend in wholesale package lots. NEW YORK (#—The stock mar- LY Italy Searches for New Premier Gronchi Talks With Candidates in Effort to Avert a Crisis / | ROME (UPI)—President Giovan- ini Gronchi launched efforts to lfind a new government today, hop- ling to avert a crisis which could ‘plunge Italy into chaos. Gronchi called in Senate Presi- dent Cesare Merzagora for the Slightly Down iket gave ground stubbornly early | itoday in active trading ™ & as Roomy, By DAVID J. WILKIE AP Automotive Writer DETROIT--An automobile room- ier and more comfortable yet no larger is envisioned by many car designers as the pdépular vehicle of 20 years hence. It will use more light materials like magnesium and aluminum and even glass for structural purposes. It will travel more safely at greater speed on highways adapted to Car of Future Seen No Bigger larger in overall size, was ad- vanced by Jack E. Charipar, chief of Chrysler’s Plymouth Division. Lighter and more com- pact engines, smaller in size and weight, he said, will contribute to this. He also envisioned electro- magnetic suspension systems, ad- justing automatically to all road (Standard Oil Profits Off $1.35; Sales Drop NEW YORK (AP) — Standard Oil Co., (N.J.), the world’s largest oil company, Monday teported sharply lower profits and reduced sales for 1958, $2.73 a share compared with 805 million dollars of $4.08 a share in 1957. Revenues from sales and invest- ments totaled $7,705,000,000 vs. $7,978,000,000 the year before. and driving conditions; elastic fuel celis placed in otherwise Sine Fel Wedron . er travel. of blonde and bosomy actress Fva,and Atomic Workers Union col- Monslay Most leading stocks were Yrac- | first of a series of talks with a its basic design will be much unused parts of the car; and TELEPHONE i Pachonska leaning over a mod- lapsed rene tionally lower. Some were un-| prospective premiers that Is €x- |. 1116 as that of today’s cars.| @ over-all color-filled metal " i srn-style radio set, with the cap | tk * - Rice Gf ainers| to last at least five da dePagis of ed ' ern-style radio set, with the cap | . ichanged, A selection of gainers pected ys. It will depend upon wheels for its surface ‘instead sprayed-on Hon: ee Sines il tb ee Detroit Produce [pwe ked the overall trend. H Politica] observers saw no|tractive force and its power plant surface paints, . E : Col ore Jae 5 t oy ates a : Vole ol IMOrrow, Union s = . A . Eva Pac hone sea has ai Gee oa, The market was lower from the prospect of Gronchi's finding a will be a refined version of today’s! Such_s faces, he said, would SERVIC Tatry’ radio, What about you” a ; FRUITS ‘start in heavy dealings which pul new premier until sometime next| piston type engine. never r polishing or repaint- | Officials of the union, which goiies petictous, bu . 423 the ticker t behind transactions : : You Leave— | The paper also reported that : r LAB sou e UcKer tape beningd tra week. They believe the choice ling. ; - § per Pe 2 sions. resul ng i | represents: about 4.500 of the, _ \for a 13-minut jod. Ax the tape | These are conclu resulting 5 ¢ ° | sandwich- board men, wearing , . . or a e period. / 4P® probably will fall on Ex-Premier ke ke It Rings— iplant’s 6,000 employes, said the) NECETARIES ht Surned at about from discussions by the nation’s ; giant plastic bottles and cigar- (conoeen had rejected w last! jee capuse OETABLE 1 Sage oe He churned at about Antonio Segni or outgoing Interior leading automotive engineers at The engineering sessions brought WelAnsecrali! ? 8 yped, Wy ctielererstalleratacerele: . e game leve | 5 . 3 2 ! é ette-boxes, will soon be walking loffer to continue in effect for one Carrots topped bu. 200 ‘Minister Fernando Tambroni tha | recent convention 1al |the cent information ~~ oe eee 5 » < > ery, do BIEG ee en ere a a } they besincss) virectsjedvertiies ) year the present contract plus a Morven, Noun pk. toe 325 Steels, motors, rails and air a x * + Society of Automative Engineers. Motors, Ford a as a are CALL Chinese fruit Juices and tobacco. 15 per cent wage increase along Lacks 1b a boot moe bis lines were fairly unanimous on | Former Premier Amintore Fan- wae k of thiste: responal-| me oe Jape | FE 4. 25 41 Mon ary gal a es eee \s ifs i , « part i nown | Warsaw’s main department store, lines of that agreed to by the |pParsiey Roots turin) dot. eis... i the downside. A number of se fani, who res Nhe for reggie bility, the engineers also could ‘tions. oume = syiet =~ ei : | Rais et Palining 6 ba : | ing ofits ted smal| gains. seven months w e ’ the CDT, hired elephants from 4|Maxnolia Petroleum (Co. and Potatoes tags 50 ibe 1 20! pow have said the car of 20 years from |—— ‘ : . a toe SO jhe ....0a6 wane m ‘ori ‘] rli nt, ve c y visiting circus and sent them/others. Pay now averages $71 asiises to HO le ls) dow. 1 os] Chemicals, aircraft, and rubbers ifeve i veatecay ” Leephises ony oer probably will cost) macre. But l. uaeh eliele — 5 . ‘ throygh the city with fea-chests 4n hour. [Tomatoes Hethse, No 1 8-lb bake ait were mixed. tion of pressures from the left, pricing is not part of their func- strapped to their sides to whet the: ae jure toueed ay acete "| The market was following| ‘the center and the right. tion. However, the research they thirst of tea-drinkers. Id [through on late yesterday's selling | have under way is growing in its) The government announced Plans, Rey noias W ants drive which occurred after failure, 4 ee forees shal cert over-all concept and absorbing, to open more than 900 self-service | { S ] Poultr and E $ of a push toward a new record,| down ie ani regime | more millions of dollars each year. | stores in Poland because the hand- 2: Or- ] p It of be gus pout oe \While the business news contained | abet mee tol Lara pres The cost of research has to be re- ful of experimental serve-yourself ] iS ba MARS Be the favorable item of a big in-| i the ranks o > parties covered in the price of the product. shops had proved economical, use Cc ass B tock Sheed oe Davai tur a Hee crease in machine tool orders: eee Bnd ee papery Greatly simplified controls were ful and convenient to customers. emt owe , { teas be Ware 1921. light type hens there was also the background of) Caristian Demecrate a right- among advances predicted for cars| And newspaper advertisements! NEW YORK W® — Directors of jg) To chettes under & los. 20-21, over ‘humerous corporate earnings re.| Ist faction of the already-trag- of the not very distant future. | reminded Poles they could new. R. J. Reynolds re a Co, today 4 ibe 23 ‘ports showing lower income for | mented Socialist party. These would be concentrated in al buy cars radios, furs and furni- eget ‘nded ‘ ; a Posplit' of pETROIT poGs 11958. | Fanfani alienated the right wing | single unit on the order of General | ture on the instalment plan. Un. )C/488 & common sto - oa ite own party through his tire-| Firebird II experimental | like neizhboring epee | Stockholders will be asked to Dare ie cake fate OF dete ee. United Whelan rose ', to 105, yet ae nie eee Le efforts oe - ‘the instalment buying privilege in Tall fy the proposal at the firm's tades crane h puncioad. exive tures on 1,100 shares eo) pabilsked| re- ‘to win ‘the support of Pietro Nenni’s| The Firebird has na foot pedals | Poland is not restricted to ‘con Ponta) ecatne April 8 in Jersey gy 45 eta) avy O)'s, large 42:43, td Wa Kea ee arian! | ‘leftwing Socialists, who had worked |for braking or accelerating. scientious and hard workers” and|C!lY. N. J Pcie) see Mis aise Paes recent eae ee a le ‘hand in hand with the Communists small control stick replaces the) members of large families There are 9,965,000 outstanding {! wid ary 40) browns Grade A extra) (, _ as for nearly 14 years. conventional steering wheel, claw (8) shares aa only 35,000 ante 41 large 4 medium 36. stall 32 | Grande & Western wipd out its Televisio ted | © ae ACG leas O87 checks: (31 3! fenterday Firebird Ill is powered | ‘ ston sets wern ‘expected of the old common. The latter an egialiy Catal 1 polnt jumpd of yesterday on Q — pe ‘ord to be added to the credit: pur- | Whites (Cirade A juirho 40", 44 6 stock split news 2 Area 17ms with a gas turbine engine. Ford | ' will be converted info class Bo iarye 40 41 | 1h 40 re 1s bi . : chase list soon. | common after March 31, when “Sl 300 browns Grade A jumbo 45 Losses of about a point were and Chrysler also have carried | ; - Pol Ap t E met : extr larme 60-4] [irye IB, 0, al e B d N ‘ rimen work with gas | 3chind this pleasant new cam | the class B will be known simply i dium rT) lama Ju. grade = aves yioe taken by Pan American World Au Are ran ame cau neem ren in evereart paign to sell consumer goods, how-| as common. ———— - ways, Pfizer and Standard Oil . li . eal Y umerous ign oblems ever, is the depressing fact that ' (New Jersey), Fractionally lower Contest Fina ists ing mi gn pr e Poliat cethook aul Under the plan proposed by the Li k ‘1S : : have been reported in all in- os a etbooks remain {Ny card, the authorized stock would ivestoc were US. Steel, General Motors, ; stances, but no industry expert | The “Tatry” radio embraced by ibe lncreaaed (rims millionte DETROTE LIVHECOCK American Motors, General Dynam-'| Two Pontiac area businesses are sili bay ony eae (lermalat) engine! It! (The h f d ' actress Pachonska would. at 3 | minion and its par value would be DETROIT Jan ics, Raytheon, Allied Chemical, among finalists being considered power other than sparkplug-fired | t's your Ce Ome Oo cicos. 000 zlotys, represent a month and able 2400 Bulk . Americ can Can and United Air in the annual “Brand Name Re- | You have privacy, a place to entertain half of work for tt b dropped from 310) to $5 a share, Ee id heifers, mostly © ties tailer of the Year’ contest. spon- internal combusition is in early | f q ’ d a half o Oo or the average _ orteted offerings , bnes . | i " prospect. | your triendgs properly,. and a secure Pole ly Conca ee ‘sored Be Brand Names Foundation, . ; : ter sleers and heifers : ! (The “official” rate of exchange 600 Girls Just Too Many | Tite West hea tat eee Inc, in New York City. Even some of the ardent advo-| financial investment: Let us help you for the zloty is four to the dollar, | if fh ate ai a fae higher New York Stocks | 7 “iy De Mi lores ce a the different ne | purchase and finance a home of your the “tourist” rate is 24 10 the dol-| LONDON (UPI)—Six hundred choice steers 1100 and ’ iLate Morning Quetations) ney are Osmuns mens aoues automotive power currently under | . : . lar and the “free” or “black” rate Australian: girls aboard the liner steers Gi cce, tiie oni ee Be ona 60. Figures after decimal point are eighth: in downtown Pontiac and at Tel-\test say broad refinements in the) on with one of oor low cost budget fluctuates around 10 to the dollar Strathnaver who arrived here to secre to yp w good steers aan 2400 Admiral ..,... 183 Jones & L .,, 604 Huron Shopping . Center and | piston type engine may be ex-| planned home loans. None of these rates, however, give day were too many for the less het tea 26 00 28 00 ena pees Aine es , cas Kecnecotn toe 2 ROD Sale setvice at Tele- | pected. Yet to be established eo an accurate picture of the true than 100 boys on the 30-day trip 2376-28 0 atant ek 1B 00-20 50° can Allied Bite... B47 Kimb Clik 69 graph and Maple roads in Bloom-|some of them say, is whether any | = : : purchasing value of the zloty in The boys complained the Tto 1 Mow: gialabe woo Butehers 125 low ace vie: at re 56... =i field Township. jother type of power plant can be Ca itol Savin $ & Loan Assn Poland . ratio left) them ono place to be ilne ian t are " aa on 0h Banc aie . Soa on a ia 5 st ; Brand advertising, sales train- | produced as economically as to- s ae eats aa 1 triin OF as m1 £ ~ > Production of the Polish ‘War. “lone with just one girl Bis ae Mu Tal et [) ES) UT AS Frye 485 Libby McaL . 11 | ing and promotional activities day's conventional auto engine. ; : a ele at) tb 740 Mo Am Cyer 492 Ligg & My 932) ' The idea of cars both roomier ish 0 sazawa" automobile, a sturdy but and 2 2 30200 1b tak i is ae nlcpaeos64 Lanka Alte 222) will be taken into account in the . om eatle eC ee Establis ed 189 far from modernistic car : : | ii iks apened. Nl grain “yoo. Ain Motors... 38 @ Loews ... 21) final judging prior to announce. 2&2 More Como! e ht genial oe 7 net | Grain Prices Jory ated Moana le ee as Fand 2000 Am N Gas... 666 Lone 8 Gan .. 46 ee uted Le I ————— high but authorities obviously ex | CHICAGO. GRAIN Venlers Naisble [18 Fully ateady (Am News 986 Lorillard aig ment of the winners Ap 15, | . AUTON * ontiac pect the supply will be able to) CHICAGO Jan 27 VAP) Opening cbelce and prime venie: 14 90.42 00 a EsieTsl he a Rash as said Henry E. Abt, foundation ' | meet the demand from Poles who)” Wheat _ a Deeds oe ea desig asco Anecond 666 Martin Co 14 | president. CUSTOMERS PARKING IN BACK OF OFFICE veal ah 2 116s FEO 28 08 ell quoted down ta 16 00 Anaconda ue y f “e . mes , . at Slice) mt ie slabs Armeo Stl . 104 May D Btr .. 486] a aie ne a a posit of mes noon 4 one Mat Att; rere hie r Neck oe v Neatinociadcniee Acaour & Co ie eres : apt The annual contest is designed | ld on ains 0 € one-ha e aS, zloty July .. .18ry Mas : . fi" ep ahore ¢ rst good and Avco Mf Mergen Line = \ — ——- eee and pay the re le au a Bep. : yas, duly ti chotve calaughter, wooled lambs 18s0. Balt & Ohio 443 Merr ChAS .. 303 to promote aggressive and imesh | pay the remainder in 12 to 18) mar Die, Bep 624 25 two ioada chowe and prime wooled) Beth Steel .... 626 Mpls Hon vee native selling, hes ed pene y Car @ months. | Corn told) hiye ; lambs around 10 Ibe 21.60: ulllity to eee cine oes ae Mion ue ae * | 714 Community Nat'l Mar 114% Mar W's goed wooled lambs 1550 1860 good and Bohn UM ses 8 pn P&L | a LY oO } Ma i ' choice ' ambe Nu i) ve} Bond 6tr - a41 an Ch .. 41 . j ; . aes He ce ay URE ienoislse loslchules ini prime we to/ Barden | 160 259 Maen Ware | Osmun’s is oi be to win 8! A bicycle and hobby firm serv-, News in B ’ f |May ». 1 ig May B78 2000, cull ty choice wlauuhter ewes 700| Borg Warn . ys Motorola. 502, first-place award or one of (ont icing the Pontiac area for 31 years | Bank Bldg. | July fils ard (iruina) 12 50 ria v as ‘ Mueller Brass i 2 5 ficates of distinction. Reeve = Brun Balke ... 312 yc 2 3/certl 1G announced the opening of a Your, ndependeni 3 re | [Budd Coss 202 Nat Hue st |could also win a first place, or one’ = paey sunvunced git a 4 | h AGENT 3 Burroughs». #03 Nar Cash R.. 72 | { 14 certificates to be issued in 'new store in Drayton Plains. ‘msurance Phone FE 4-1568 9 An estimated $260 damage was Chane leg Nat Qype ee A “ Fi te Abt, scatlett’s Bicycle Shop, 20 E. cones ale caused by vandals who yesterday | Can Dry i. 24 atl eee ee tne _ Station cateeoly: Lawrence St., announced today broke 13. electrical connections| al ld UJ Ue a atl ea ee Gee de sale that it has just opened a new bi- and three thermopane glass doors oe 243 Odio Oi . ge Oe ee ae ee al ee Die BAKER HA at a house under construction at! afer a LL stil Cn Highway. } 1 Ti OL mi 651 Red Oak Lane, Avon Township, ee A nee, Pe Par O&R) owns ip en The establishment was scomenly according to Oakland County sher aaa OT een Eph rales Kerns ee , Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen Nfs deputice: . Cities Bye 622 param fict OM tI [ ccording to the management, : Ie nee Cala scales eee -_ i ee In ansing the new shop will carry a complete’ Res. FE 2-5513 Res, FE 5-3792 John Omalia, a construction sup-| Cola Palm 00 Pepsi oe _ 284 line of bicycles, children’s wheeled , at ; ‘ : ar srand juries hastily aum-icolum @ os y Homeowners’ Policies erintende nt fold Oakland County FT CUS SO AR (Ove! fo Rrand juries hastily sum Con Bais “se Ehclcs Dp a LANSING iP — Some 500 town- goods of all ty S, H.O. trains, and | ITG “RY The ac . ar nat ECE ce ace Sal : I A sheriff's deputies Monday that rea ‘RY, ‘in ac-moned in Barbour and Bullock , ‘Con ey Mra aA Phiica soe mt ship supervisors are in Lansing model planes, boats, car kits, juv-, Accident Insurance Fire Insurance kitchen cabinets and vanities val-(THUAL of former Judge George Counties Con Pw pf 416 984 4) kg Gg’... 76 today for the annual convention of enile furniture and other toys. : : : : Fear Cont Bek dog Proct “ Automobile Insurance Life Insurance Hed at $310 had been stolen from | Waiace on 4 ae me iis Johnsen ruled Monday that be- Cont Copas 112 me on oe ee the State Assn. of Supervisors. | | Liability I Plat Glass Insur e (wo houses under construction at) !2ve a nines a. toe role of 8 cause the grand juries made the Cont eter gg ftepub BU... 113/ They will discuss township prob- | : N { Bbity snsurance e uranc Wd and 1815 Sundew St... Com- ee al carlic Ate Tor Bewerner ecords available for examination Copper Rng a Hoc pe. 324 lems with special emphasis: on usiness 0 es Burglary Insurance Bonds — All Types merce Township, by thieves who} boasting he defied civil ments IN Ginee carried out the effect of forte bub. 1a Rey Tob Bo. 102 6 urban taxes and tax equalization. fal cin ; entered the new houses through| Y¢Stgators and got by with it hie order and only pretended to Bey, ° 0S. filvay ge l.. 40,| Governor Williams will address Frank Antrobus, general agen Tenants’ Policies inlocked windows | Wallace Inaisted he disobeyed 9) 409 the court. [Dis C Beag ... 358 Bt Re -« 474 the group Wednesday night. Pontiac for the Lincoln Nationa | . federal court order, despite the . Dous Ale yea Seon — a The lineup of speakers also in-| Life Insurance Co., recently attend-, Charles EF. Patten, 48, of 207 court's finding that he had com In Washington, southern sena DuPont 294 Shell Ol we. 8 [cludes Republican U Rep. Alvin ed a special conference sponsored | In every work of genius we recognize our Reexton St ; Walled Lake, Was sen iplied with’ it. and actually: helped tors today propo ed ai constitu. eer au a eeoaiens AT Bi ND Se a ons aS “Albert by his company in Chicago. About, own rejected thoughts: they come back to 1 fenced to 10 days in the Oakland:the U.S. Civil Rights Commission) Monat amendment to resolve the picon Mig). 64 Bucony: seoned 4a Coates of North Carolina, a local | 115 of the firm's agents partici us with @ certain alienated majesty. County Jail after pleading guilty get access fo voter registration School Integration crisis by as. €! AOE Woot ae oe 2 government specialist. (Kent Coun: pated. | —R. W. Emerson. 1842 d fo driving with a revoked license records | suring states and their subdi- pine yee Oe apecty Ra... 24 'ty Prosecutor Joseph Renahan; | 4 before West Bloomfield Justice EL! * * * | Vinions full control over publle pCa po (ayy Sit Brand... 652) = ,| Charles R. Miles, a salesman for} . . i : U : Atd OU Cat... Ol og 3 rune a cdward iner C. Dieterle Monday and was! The former state judge declared education, if ae ih Vr {era On Ind .. area Councilman’ Ed Genesee Welding Supply, Inc., has| ————_____________— = a bound over to Oakland County Cir he had successfully defied the au] The measure. introduced by Sen | See eee Gia Bu on a. ‘ returned from a_ sales training | cut Court after waiving: examina. thority of the federal government | tterman ke. Talmadge (D-Gar with Prach” Tra ig Fae ce oa we error nrOcne course sponsored at Indianapolis, f1 P e E : F Hon ona charge of drunk driving and the civil rights ageney. “They seven Dixie cosponsors, appeared Gen Pec Tig au her Pap 7 444 (C J. Nephier Cot | Ind. by Linde oo: a division of) _ were defied and backed down.’ to be the South's lonk range an. Goo Motora ee as ce Boo pads Figures after decimal Polnigh Loe Neon| /Union Carbide Corp. | i Alyy San : . he said iswer to all other 1959 civil rights Gen hel tt texas © 86 2 7 +3 ~~ 2 Policemen, Fireman