PONTIAC, “MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1957—80 PAGES “r4 =o, PE 7 jure TERRANCE McGOWAN Husband Refuses to Tak About Dynam The suspected dynamiter of his wife’s home, Terrance McGowan, refuses to make any statement, Det. Lt. John DePauw said today. McGowan is held for investigation of attempted mur- der after yesterday's explosion which demolished the! interior of his estranged wife’s home at 370 S. Edith St. McGowan, 58, a self-employed house painter, admit- > pas ~ 1a ge wn ie EP MRS. MAE McGOWAN iting of Home ted to police that he had* purchased seven sticks of dynamite Tuesday, but re- fused to account for the explosives. He said he bought them for a friend. Police found a receipt for the dynamite on McGowan when he was arrested on after the early morning blast Mrs. McGewns, 6, tal@ police she had stepped into the living room to investigate a noise and 80 missed death or serious in- jury. The explosion tore up her bedroom seconds after she left. the room. Mrs. McGowan, employed as a maid at the Hotel Waldron, said She had filed a _ divorce suit against her -husband, charging cruelty, both mental and physical, and habitual drunkeness. On Aug. 13, she obtained an in- junction from Cireuit Court Judge J. Russel Holland, in which Me- Gowan was ordered to stay away from the home which she owns. McGowan has been living with a married son by a_ previous marriage. NOTHING TO SAY He told police that he has noth- ing to say until he consults his attorney who is deer hunting on Drummond Island and is not ex- pected back in Pontiac. until Mon- day. * * * . Both the McGowans have been previously married and have grown children.. Mrs. McGowan petitioned for divorce early this - year, but dismissed the action when she was reconciled with her husband, “I went to visit my son in Virginia after that,” she said, “and came back to find he had sold our bedroom furniture.” Police said they had no physical evidence of how the 3:30 a.m. ex- plosion occurred. The blast broke water pipes in the cellar, which washed away any traces of the cause. * * * The explosion apparently oc- curred in the coal bin directly under Mrs.. McGowan's bedroom. Tt bulged out a wall, wrecked fur- niture and knocked out windows and doors. AROUSED BY NOISES Mrs. McGowan, told police she named the Solent from Southamp- 43 Die, 15 Hurt as Flying Boat Burns, Crashes Flaming Craft Plunges Isle of Wight plummeted into a wooded hillside near Newport last night, killing 43 of the 58 persons aboard. The four-engine Solent, owned by British Quila Airways, developed engine trouble and crashed short- ly after it took off from Southampton for Lisbon, Portugal, with 50 passen- gers and a crew of 8. Many of the passengers were beginning vacations. All those on the plane were Britons, an Aquila spokesman said. The dead included the entire crew, two of them stewardesses; Forty of the bodies were recovered in the gray mist of morning. All 15 survivors were taken to a hospital, six of them seriously injured. A spokesman for the Civil Avia-| tion Ministry said the pilot had/| radioed he was turning back to) Southampton because one engine failed. He apparently crashed about 15 minutes later. The plane had set | out on its usual route in Cloudy weather. | TREES SET AFIRE were set ablaze where the | big plane dropped on this popular | resort island in the English Chan- | nel across a stretch of water also . ton on the mainland. Soldiers, firemen, farmers and police pulled survivors and burned bodies from the flaming wreckage. was. awakened by the sound of | s breaking coal tumbling. ae first She mara a, cat had come through the previously broken basement. window, but after thinking about it. she got up to investigate. The explosion fol- lowed immediately. * * ® Mrs; MeGowan said her husband a day before about reconciliation, but she had refused to talk to him. He made no threats, she said. Mildness to Change Info Snow Tonight This morning's mildness will change to colder temperatures to- night, with rain turning to snow flurries. The low will be 32 - 36. Cloudy and colder with snow flurries is the forecast for Sun- day and Monday. Tomorrow's nearby, heard the crash from about three-quarters of a mile away as| he was returning from a dinner hed approached her on the street PA": exercise. farmer, and his 16-year-old son, Maxim, were among the first to Sid down the face of a chalk pit and into a wooded area. where,” Berryman said. ‘Between us we pulled out five women and six men.” Berryman said. The first man to reach the . wreckage, scattered over an area 100 yards wide, was Harry Tyr- rell, a shepherd employed by author J. B. Priestley. The author, who has a farm Tyrrell pulled chared persons from the wreckage and was joined; At least five hunters were re- by other farm workers and a near- ported wounded. by detachment of troops on a night x“ « & John Berryman, a 44-yea-old go {nto the wreckage, which had “Bodies were scattered every- * * * The soldiers ‘“‘were marvellous,” “They dashed in- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) high will range from 36 . 40 de- grees, Tuesday and Wednesday will be warmer, with rain again late Wednesday. The lowest temperature preced- ing 8 a.m. was 49 degrees. The thermometer registered 60 at 1 Six Bombers « on Flight HOMESTEAD AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. wi--Six B52 bombers left at daybreak on a non-stop flight to Buenos Aires and return p. m.. Into Wooded Hillside on| NEWPORT, Isle of Wight, England (# —A), flaming British flying boat -| The statistics were in contrast in Michigan Tain Wre spects the wreckage of the New TANGLED WRECKAGE — An unidentified state trooper in- York Central's ‘‘The Chicagoan” wand v Cars Pile Up as Eleven Leave Track AP Wirephote derailed early today near White Pigeon. Eleven cars left the tracks, killing one and injuring 38. Express Tears From Its Rails; One Man Killed New York Central Flyer Loses 11 Cars Near White Pigeon WHITE PIGEON (#—Be- hind schedule and on Strange tracks, the New York Central’s eastbound flyer, “The Chicagoan,” tore off its rails outside gan town today, killing one man and injuring at least 38 persons. The flyer, en route from Chicago to New York with in the derailment where tracks cross Michigan Highway 103 a mile south of White Pigeon. One car overturned; others jack- knifed ina heap. “The Chicagoan” had been re- routed at Elkhart, Ind., 15 miles Three Hunters Die i in First Day | One Killed by Gunfire Heart Attacks By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | One hunter died of ‘s deer hunting season. ‘* * * ‘Not a Flying Saucer in the Lot’ ‘AF Probes Reports of UFOs WASHINGTON (# — The Air} |gerations or misunderstood natural | had been made on the car's dis-| nd said today it has looked into | phenomena stories of a huge glow-, \tributor and part of an old rotor five recent reports of mysterious , and Two Suffer Fatal ly (Ondo siete tro = ine Levelland, Tex., and causing auto-|tion which could cause engine jing saucer in the lot. * * x * satellites The Air Force report gave the gunshot most severe description—“‘hoax'’— wounds and two suffered fatal heart/to the most vivid of the stories attacks during the first 24 hours of that began circulating after Soviet | the attention of Americans skyward. This was a ing object touching ground near’ mobiles to stall; somewhat similar | reports from near Alamogordo, N.M.; bright lights seen from a Coast Guard cutter in the Gulf of Me ‘xico and by planes patrolling near White Sands, N.M. As for the various reports of automobile engines stalling “In Erwin Scott, 35, of Lake died|Kearney, Neb., man’s account of; the vicinity-of mysterious objects, being shown. around the interior| the report suggested that, rather Friday night in Clare Community | Hospital of gunshot wounds suf- fered when he accidentally crosted | the line of fire of four companions while-hauntingin- Clare County. Paul Bush, | suffered a fatal heart attack Friday while hunting in Besse- | 73, of Bessemer | of a spaceship by its German- speaking crew. DISMISS STORIES But the Air Force technical in| ivestigators also dismissed as exag-) than mysterious rays, the cause likely was thunderstorms sbaking | ignition systems and, case, an automibile mechanic's mistake. - Of the Nebraska incident, the | ‘Air Force commented, ‘‘Investiga- mer Township in the Upper Pen- insula. Leslie Murdock, .51, of Detroit. suffered a heart attack in a hunt- ing camp in Mills Township, Oge-| Paper in reaas Hints at Events maw County. to those of last year when three hunters died of gunfire wounds in| the first day of shooting. 23 DIED IN 1956 ~ A total of 11 hunters were killed by gunfire and 29 were wounded last season while one man was killed in a bow and arrow shooting and two were wounded with ar- rows. In addition, nine hunters died of heart attacks and two per- sons died after being lost in the woods, * * * Good November weather brought a turnout of some 300,000 hunters for the opening of the 16-day sea- son. Conservation officials have pre- dicted that this year's deer kill to Loring Air Force Base, Maine. last year’s regular season. will top the 69,940’ bucks shot in 100 Years Off | BEAUMONT, Tex. p= with man-made moons circling the globe and all this talk of space travel, you may have been won- dering what things will be like | 100 years hence. * * * Readers of the Beaumont Jour- nal probably have some new ideas after scanning yesterday's edition. Giving fancy free rein, the Journal printed a second front page inside and dated it Nov. 15, 2057. Filling the page were purport- ed news stories about such things as evacuation of Australia, said to have become a space-fighter | base to battle threatened aggres- sors from other constellations; a parade featuring an antique 1957 automobile, for which there was no gasoline, and demands for autonomy from Mars. To Launch U.S, Program Defense Department to Name Space Czar =: WASHINGTON (INS) — Defense Secretary Neil H. McElroy an- _ nounced yesterday a “single man- ager” will be appointed within a month to launch an American program to/conquer space. McElroy said the manager, who be in charge of earth satellites for military purposes and anti-missiles. |BEHIND RUSSIANS that it is “rather obvious that we are behind the Russians” in the will be above all the services, willjmissiles ahd satellite race. * The secretary also told newsmen United States is in “good shape to develop what it needs” to pro- duce an adequate defense against the Soviet Union, able not only to close gaps but to do better quickly.” He declared however, that the He said: ‘We usually have been would have to be increased but felt additional outlays would be “moderate” because of a campaign to eliminate secondary programs within the Pentagon. concentrate on the intermediate McElroy said the defense budget He said the United States will r Ghats hy eh he Ae bs ee ey pee mane range ballistic missile because it is being developed very success- fully and can be deployed at advanced American bases to counter possible Russian advan. tage with the intercontinental ballistic missile. McElroy said the new space di- ector had not yet been selected. His announcement was the first official suggestion that America is planning te make military use of man-made moons orbiting around the earth. Church ay t eismiesiennie a8 Comics ..,...... Secceus . + County News ...........055 b | Home Section . cece 6 15-20 Markets ... Snob | Obituaries ADSCRECErboonol 24 Sports .....:. a awieelele's so. 22-23 “ Pheaters .......... Aeacue 13 TV & Radio Programs . 0 Peabinuieesieaiess 13 Bie Be In n Today’ s Press pA iseveral had been questioned in the ition revealed that local officials) ‘consider originator wholly unreli- ‘able.’ An éarlier news story from Nebraska said the man who told! ‘psychiatric examination. The Air Force investigators said another observer in the same area had reported his automobile stall- ing, but that an interview with his mechanic disclosed that repairs in one | | the story had agreed to undergo ‘on interview with the originator, ‘and that he acknowledged that the had happened there before. | apparently had been left in a posi- failure. The investigators; said that when they checked accounts of a fiery object hundreds of feet long supposed to have been seeh by dozens of persons in Texas, they could find only three who saw the “big tight ” The: light, they said, was visible only inter. | mittently, and thunderstorms were raging at the time. The: investigators concluded that |what was seen was a natural elec- ltrical phenomenon called “ball {lightning” or “St. Elmo's fire’ and that the same stormy condi- tions which cause such phenomena might account for wet engines and | consequent stalling of automobiles, |S) gle -« The report said stories of a light near Alamogordo strong enough to ‘cause sunburn were not verified | fade-out of his radio in the area was the same sort of thing which southwest, to aveld an earlier derailment at Archbold, Ohio. It was on Michigan Central ‘tracks running from Elkhart to |Toledo and behind schedule be- ‘cause of the switch. * * Killed was Henry Nichols, 54, of |Chicago, a Post Office Department lemploye and a mail car foreman. Twelve injured were hospital. ized; seven in nearby Three Riv- ‘ers and five in Sturgis, 12 miles west, Twenty-one were treated and released at Three Rivers; five at Sturgis. Cause of the derailment was not determined immediately, but rail- road crewmen said there appeared to be some construction and main- tenance equipment entangled in the wreckage. * * * New York Central officials said the train, which left Chicago at 11:15 p.m., would not have heen- 164 passengers, lost 11 cars . this southwestern Michi-— traveling the route it took had it not been rerouted to avoid an ear- lier derailment at Archbold, Ohio. When it reached Elkhart, Ind., the Chicagoan was sent over .tracks of the Michigan Central running between Elkhart and Toledo, “It was just like being on a roller coaster,” said Joseph Von Andrews, a Cleveland passenger. “There was a great roar and suddenly passengers, baggage and everything else started fly- ing around the cars.’ Highway 103 was blocked, but (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Police Interrupt Mob Convention Break Up Meeting of Gangland Luminaries in Remote Mansion APALACHIN, N. Y. «#—Two state troopers stepped obviously into the parking lot of a remote hilltop mansion, took out their pencils and began jotting down the! license numbers of the sleek lim- Hub of Deer Country Many Pontiac Hunters Congregate at Curran By JACK PATTERSON CURRAN—Maybe because it was so windy only two of our party including this writer got bucks on opening |day of the Michigan deer season yesterday. The rest of the boys came in with a lot of good excuses, but nothing else.+ Weather in this area is too warm and wet for good’ x -—* * What followed was the break- up of one of the most interesting: parties ever held in this south-! central area of New York State. | | | gangland convention. many of the underworld's lumi- naries and has attracted the inter- est of police from coast to coast} and the Senate Rakcets Investi-| gating Committee. x & & Speculaion has tabbed the| Thursday gathering a meeting to). carve up the racket kingdom of| slain mobster Albert Anastasia or| a conference of the Mafia, a no- torious underworld organization with roots in Italy. However, the guests, of whom slaying of Anastasia in a New York City barbershop last month, insist they just happened to drop ‘lin on a sick friend at the same time. “The “sick friend,” was Joseph (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Free lecture on Christ Setence, ‘Monday, November 18, & p.m. See snouncement, Page 3. ts. In Business. D. & D. Cleaners. 143 W. Huron. $25 Reward for return of cat. Tan with er stripes th white tipped beh FE 2-7383. on opening day. | thing is that we are here, doing! State police termed it a national) What we are doing. The 58-name guest list included sonally concerned, the hub of the |Uinverse is at our own Sleepy |Hollow. jhere, Chuck Rogers, Charlie Wood, | Bob Oliver Jr., ‘missing face belonging to Harry McNalley of Rochester who will join us tomorrow, and a surprise ‘arrival, Bob Glenn. north we could lob a few into the’ Ten-Buck Compound among Bob Eldred, Andy Dickinson, Judge Clark Adams, Bob Armstrong, Bill Bundy, Art Nicholie, Jim Clarke, Dr, Ed Howlett, Art Compton and any stray gin players from neigh- For Quality Cleaning Catt FE 5-816 |boring camps who mn = on ww Y the premises. hunting. But it doesn’t matter too much} whether any of us knock off a buck The important Right now, as far as we are per We have the usual opening bunch Roy Corwin, one An interesting thought struck us as we came in off the ridges. If we had a rifle with an accu- rate range of a couple miles, and no trees or geographical features te intervene, we could stand in this spot and reach many of our leading Pontiac citizens. For example, a little west of A closer shot, and easier pick- ings, might result from a barrage due west. With any luck we should scorch the feathers of Floyd and Vic Blakeslee, Dave Edstrom, Bob Oliver, Ralph Norvell, Glenn Grif- fin, Dr. George Petroff, Dr. B. M. Mitehell, Jim Jenkins and maybe the City Club’s own Perkins. Aiming a little south of east, we could rout out John Cowe and his son-in-law, John Napley and other Cowe-Boy ranch steadies, ike George Marble, Gordon Grubb, Jack Hamilton, Bill Cowe, Milton and Jack Fraser. We'd have to hold high though to miss Charlie Sparks and his gang, holed up in between. Although it would be a dirty trick, because he’s a nice fellow, we could swing due south and make things hot for Joe Clark, truckaway tycoon and hononrary mayor of Curran. In fact, any direction one happened to choose is cluttered with souls from Pon- tiac. Let's face it. We're sur- rounded. We always get rude criticism from some readers on this opening day piece because we have a ten- dency to use the same old names. Well, critics, let's look at it this way. You find yourself in the heart of Michigan's deer territory on opening day. You need some names for a column. Do you wan- der the countryside looking for people who aren't home, or use the A little more elevation on the) neighbor's names ‘and put in a” rear sight might pick up Al Weber good day's hunting? Don't answer ad Ed — rogsting nearby. that. We know what you'd do, too. ¢ ig ty TW } Bore 4 {: \ ; I ‘, ‘ a : THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVE MBER 16, 1957 — What's Behind Teller's Cage Monday at Open House of Pontiac State Bank Have you ever wondered where that check of yours goes after you deposit or cash it with the teller? Well, this question, and many others about the behind-the-scenes operation of Pontiac State Bank and its four branches, will be answered for you at a special open house Monday from 6 to 9 p.m, at the main office, Saginaw at Law- rence Sts, “This is being held to give everybody an opportunity to see and learn about the behind-the- scenes operation of our bank?" said Milo J. Cross, bank president. The “postronic’—a bookkeep- ing machine with a magic mem- ory—will be shown and operated for those who attend the open house, Other machines to be shown will during the three-hour open house, with operations of all departments explained. Other attractions will be refresh- to everyone as a souvenir. Managing Editor fo Attend Meeting By E. H. SIMS How do the ‘‘experts’’ make their long-range weather fore- casts? Weather forecasters study of a number of things in determining what the weather will be, in the United States, in a particular fu- ture period. One of the things they watch closest is the buildup and move- ment of large polar air masses in the polar regions. These air masses spill over and flow down ever Canada and enter the United States. They often bring cold or stormy weather. Their course can often be pre- dicted. If fewer of these polar air masses are indicated, or if they seem weak, then it is likely that warm air masses will push up- ward and over the United States —or at least over a southerly part of it. Taking these calculations under consideration, and other factors something more. than a “guess” ean be arrived at, although the “experts” still miss—and weather remains something of a mystery. The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureaa Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cleady with eccasional rain send increasing winds teday, high near 58, terning colder this afterneen and tenight, with rain changin, te snow flurries tonight, low he Tomorrew cloudy and colder with snow flurries, high 34-40. South to ‘pwhich reinforced the pelvis was re- years old, left the clinic, as her -|family moved to Colorado. In her When, on Dec. 9,. 194, a frightened mother, her husband in prison and four young children at home, brought her two-week old baby to the clinic at St. Joseph Mercy Hispital, even veteran doc- tors were appalléd. * * * The child, a little girl named Mary, was born with dislocated hips and knees that drew up her legs against her -stomach and placed her feet permanently at rest under her arms, | She was just like a little ball,” | one nurse recalled. “It. aidn't seem possible she would ever walk.” P Because the mother had no means to finance medical t- nated time by community physi- clans, th clinic actually spends money for medicine, X-rays. laboratory tests, glasses and othopedic appliances only. = costs average about $22,000' a year, and the Pontiac United Fund is a source of some 40 per cent of this. The clinic wag. founded in 1930 through the support and en- thusiasm of the hospital’s woman's auxiliary which s gives its financial aid, patients“are refered to the clinic by private physicians > “ea” This year, the clinic switched from a fully free to part-pay basis. , F first In 1951, Mary was fitted with new long braces, and a band moved, * * * Recently, Mary, now nearly 13 last examination, the doctor found Mary could walk with hardly the trace of a limp and without braces. Her gait is normal, he said, and she has no pain. ONE OF MANY TREATED Mary is but one of some 9,000 patients which the hospital clinic St. Joseph Clinic Goal—-to Meet Medical Needs of Untortunates Reid Eased Out of Labor Office - Gov. Williams Appoints UAW Man to Replace Commissioner This offers those who wish the op- portunity to contribute from 25 cents to $3 per visit toward their treatment. . This was done te avoid a “charity” stigma to which some patients objected, according to Harold E. Brady, assistant hos- pital administrator. .It brings in about $2,000 a year to the clinic out of its $22,000 budget. “If the Pontiac area United Ftind reaches or. exceeds its goal this year," Brady said, “it will help ass the continued opera- tion of the clinic to meet the medi- lca] needs of the less fortunate in our community like Mafy.” % ' LANSING ® — Gov. Williams yesterday eased out John Reid as state labor commissioner and in- stalled in his place Russell White, an United Auto Workers Union local president. x * & Reid, 74, twice before had been appointed to four-year terms in the named when the second expired been expected. | Reid, 4 50-year .veteran of the labor movement who rose through AFL ranks, has been at odds with the UAW-CIO, Only last Wednesday, the State Civil Service Commission reinstated a subordinate Reid fired for alleged tale-bearing to UAW officials. hi Reid blamed his dismissal on aj, termed certain elements in the UAW. He said “the guy who hed most to do with it” was Lloyd Utter of Detroit, a UAW safetyman “jwho formerly was in the State! Labor Department. ~ * * * Reid said: “I understand the UAW figures claimed they had a commitment from the governor not to reappoint me.” ; Williams told newsmen he had offered Reid two other “less strenuous” governmental posts, but that both were turned down, The governor said: an “John Reid has served the peo- ple of Michigan long and well. He brought the accumulated wisdom of years of experience to his posi- tion, and he deserves a sincere note of thanks.” * * * | Before coming to the Labor De- partment. post, Reid spent 12 years on the State Unemployment Com- pensation Commission. For many years, he was executive secretary of the Michigan State Federation of Labor. “In view of the strenuous pro- gram we are contemplating, we felt a younger man would be in a better position to undertake the program which will probably last several years,’’ Williams said. | | sees each year in one of its de- partments — obstetrics and gyne- cology, orthopedics, psychiatric, medical, surgery, dermatology, pediatrics, eye, ear, nose and throat, neurology and urology. Using staff personnel and do- BEST FOOT FORWARD — Joseph Mercy Hospital Clinic, works with a young patient to help her restore full use of an injured leg. It was exercises like these completely deformed limbs. that enabled the clinic to restore to normal Therapist Joan Klumpp, of St Suagest France Ship Munitions — the child bofn with Ranks Only Behind New York. trial growth and consistent, steady development of the state.” It adds that “‘this tax structure is particularly noted for the ab- sence of the many so-called nuis- ance taxes which discriminate against certain types of business activities." NO COUNT KEPT No agency keeps count of the number of industries locating in Ohio, But in the Jast dozen years more than 20 completely new au- tomotive plants have been built ‘in northern Ohio alone. They cover! more than 490 acres under roof, provide 65,000 jobs and have a combined annual payroll of about three billion dollars. The chemical industry also has grown rapidly in northern Ohio and along the Ohio River. Albert E. Redman, director of the Industrial Development Depart- ment, says there are up to 30 fac- tors that can be considered in pick- ling a plant site and they are of variable importance to different (Fifth in e series of articles on tazes and industry.) By BILL TERRY COLUMBUS (®#®—Ohio now is the nation’s No. 2 industrial state, sec- ond only to New York. Within 10 years Ohio hopes and expects to overtake New York. CITE REASONS Various authorities cite different reasons for the tremendous indus- trial expansion which has taken place here since World War Il. Dr, Clyde E. Williams, presi- dent of Battelle Memorial Insti- tute, a large industrial research organization, says Ohio's; geo- graphical location is its most po- tent asset industrially, The Industrial Development De- partment of the state chamber of commerce says Ohio has an ex- tremely favorable tax climate for business. * * * But Stanley J. Bowers, the tax commissioner, says that while low Ohio Now No. 2 Industrial State in US. 2 | Split. Between Nations May Heal by Meeting Tunisia’s Arms Needs t WASHINGTON W#—U.S. officials . said today they would be delight- certain classes of industry than ed if France would take over the those in Michigan or Pennsylvania, task of providing guns to Tunisia ipecause Ohio does not impose the,on terms acceptable to the Tu- “planned campaign” by what he| groped door of the plane. Bits. of their clothing were stil] burning when they reached the farmhouse. 43 Killed, 15 Injured (Pe Day in ‘ a (Continued From Page One) to the flames. Some were singed but they didn’t hold back, They penal cyt Sai. ater S8Gy® wee crash as the plane hit the earth, and we saw a-red glow from the flames,” he said. Two women survivors, a Mrs. Case and her daughter Shelia, staggered to a nearby farmhouse. They said passengers had been aware of trouble since the take- post by Williams, but was not re-| off “We talked among ourselves last April and hig exit. long has|wondering why we were still fly- ing instead of making some effort to land,” Mrs. Case related, “We realized the crew must also ave been worried because we never received instructions to un- fasten our safety belts. “All of us had our belts fast-/ 9 ened when we crashed. The plane was on fire before it crashed. “There was no panic. We were all too confused. Mrs, Case and her daughter ed in darkness to reach a Boy Confesses to Killing Baby Tells of Smothering Tot Because He Wanted to Slay Somebody LOS ANGELES \#—Juvenile of- figers stood guard today over 15- yeafold: John Lawrence Miller, who has admitted smothering a baby girl because “I always want- ed to kill somebody.” The youth, a reform school fug- itive, was booked last night on suspicion of murder after a flight from Reno, Nev. His capture in the Nevada city yesterday ended a _ widespread search that began shortly after the body of 22-month-old Laura Helen Wetzel was found in a neighbor’s home Monday in the suburban community of Rolling Hills Es- tates. Sheriff's Sgt. Charles McGowan said ‘He admitted every detail and told us he ‘wanted somebody’ but he’s sorry now that he did it.” to kill Miller got as far north as as Aircraft Crashes - (Cub Scouts at Wing Lake Planning Pinewood Derby BIRMINGHAM—It's car for J. 74, of time again at Wing Lake a Ra. Nae” Asdred the Cub Scouts there Friday morning in St. Joseph thelr second annual Hospital after an illness of Derby, The event is Z 7 p.m., Nov, 26 in the cadtdlt it’ the “tilllandiions room at the school, W Southfield area for 64 years and a © Wing Lake Rds. Pr of Detroit, Mr. Aldred re- « x* * & 1953 after 32 years, with — for the 1957 of Birmingham. a designer from the Chrys- or Chee. dasiaad and prowed 06 ne: Sues -on member of the State of, Public Works and also partment. Craftsmanship, design, been on the engineering etc., will be judged” as well Since ‘this retirement he speeds. had been a member of the main- The tiny cars, raced down staff at the Community é pleted, He is survived by his wife, Ale- ee thea, and seven children, Lenora inches high and may not weigh Robert R, and Wanda Lee of more than 5 ounces, Birmingham; Mrs, William Minor Entrants make their own of Honolulu; Mrs, Russell Hurd of and spend many hours at the Royal Oak; Mrs. Russell Brown of ing, sanding, polishing ard paint- , Calif., and Frederick C. of them. The race is run in/Sc’ with the U.S. Army in . heats down a 32-foot plank under|New York City. regular racing rules The Rev. Reginald Becker of x * * ce ee ee The Pinewood Derby burial will be in Rose- Fo nanned tand ‘Park Cemetery Klamath Falls, Ore, where al hitch-hiker he picked up was his} jundoing. DeFanl, fold Reno police he recog- scriptions. Pontiac United Fund Announces Gifts ler from broadcast “de- The Pontiac Area United Fund The hitchhiker, Lloyd) headqyarters has announced the |" following list of gifts of $50 orjhe said the entry would include a race for Webelos and an- other for den chiefs, Council Meets to Heal Break 15 NATO Powers Are Talking in Secret on Arms to Tunisia Hills, has listed the following who will receive items: Mrs, Ralph Campbell, 429 Far Hill Dr.; Mrs, Rey Rauch, 4226 S. Verone Circle; Mrs. Ernest Nathan, 165 Baldwin Ave. Ellis, 7425 Lahser Rd.; in Harry Cunningham, $540 Woodale Court; Mrs. Howard Schweppe, $941 Cottontail Lane. Mrs. Earl Lutz, 6178 Lantern Lane; Mrs. John Byer, 6640 W. Dartmoor Rd.; Mrs. George How- ard, 30442 S, Greenbrier Rd.; Mrs. L. W, Smead, 2300 W. Long Lake Rd.; Mrs, C. A. Addison, 3375 East Point Dr. * * * Mrs. J. A. Psenka, 4797 Stone- leigh Rd.; Mrs. Karl Scott, Lake- crest Dr.; Mrs, Clare Swaze, 3720 Erie Dr.; Mrs. A. M. Simpson, 97 Osceola Dr., and Mrs, William Cay, 105 E. Square Lake Rd. The fair will be held in the Lake- p.m in a ner in Coden ob lee from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. I * = . 7 ‘By STANLEY JOHNSON PARIS w — The Permanent Council of NATO met in a tense session today to try to smooth over the rift in the Atlantic al- liance opened by United States and British arms shipments to Tunisia. ~< x * * Representatives of the 15 NATO powers meeting in secret included Etienne de Crouy - Chanel of France. He was expected to raise France's bitter objections to the arms deliveries yesterday. The Council was also scheduled to make plans for the NATO sum- mit conference next month. The meeting was a regularly sched- uled one. x* * * The French representative ap. ' peared after a French delegation refused to attend a Closed meet- ing of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, an advisory body. The delegation walked out of the As- Fred J. Aldred Service will be at 1 p.m. Mon- day in the Manley Bailey Funeral PKC Fixes Date for Winter Show - -President Ed Kraft of the Pon- tiac Kennel Club announced this morning that the club's second win- ter, all-breed show would take place Jan. Pie * “We have AKC approval for the show,” Kraft said, and An air of futility hung over the Assembly sincé all its resolutions stressed Atlantic solidarity and the vacant French chairs” indi- cated that at the moment such solidarity did not exist. * * * The Assembly adjourned aftér final speeches had been cancelled. Last minute resolutions included one to meet again next year. range 600, based on last year’s same class of business taxes those|nisian government. . more to the current drive. a 1 states do. Real and personal prop- x * Se casts cece msievers son ist. a I ke Slates Golf ‘erty taxes are the heaviest tax' The possibility of working out|Mitchell Typwriter & Oftice Equip. 325.00 4 ‘burden business has to carry in a formula to meet Tunisia’s fur- promod bel eng pntmas me y+} Ba! Aere plan mar toe the Pon- Session After .; Auto. Club of i on t. Clemens ° ° . ° criehey cam cost four times ae ee rete epee A” imelfianey ect 7" Meselstreet. Judges list ts now betore| AlTival in Dixie much in one district in Ohio as |split between Washington, Lopdon|Ciy Beverage Emplovees 1g.a|the AKC for approval. ARI ees in another.” _ land Paris over this issue in ad-| Janis a& Stier, Inc. 100.90 a Powers says*that for years Ohio Vance of next month’s North At- ore: hooey im Jacobsen 100.00 Bees pa on oneneaan nee ee ee an has had a conservative govern-|/antic summit conference. eq see Dor Gus ‘will suuaas «teow atkandy er i arrival in h § ¢ ec Tm. . 8. an, Sr. a a endly gree on r the ment with both the administration ~ ke Verne C. Hampton 35.00 the State’ Fair Grounds 2 : ea . Vv. i , giving |deep South. and legislature using care im in-| Secretary of State Dulles and Pieiffer-Oakiand Employees $3.00 area dog owners a double Otel The President—in Dixie for the creasing public expenditures French Foreign Minister Chris-|£te!ffer-Oakland 80.00 | nity in ~ ‘ : . Bucking Building Company s0.09|Nity in the same weekend. first time since he ordered federal “I don’t think any major gov-|tian Pineau are scheduled to meet|Paul A. Kern - 50.00 " troops into Little Rock, Ark ernmental services are being ne-|here Tuesday for a discussion of|Br',)} chose $0:00 . |help enforce a beret court Pi glected,”” he said. “Many people;NATO problems and the Tunisian|Dr. Edw. F. Collins 58.00 . | yey A See pe ersons in ure dealing “with school integration— think you can solve most all prob-| controversy. Prank Steere 80.00 : . arranged lems b: nding money. I don't ier Felix Gaillard) Ch*ries Patrick M.D: $0.00/9 , fp aneaGarcas o ms by spending y. n't.| French Premier Felix Gaillard) yO" Ser 50.00 the Augusta National Golf Club. said in Paris yesterday: that the December NATO meeting in the French capital—which President Eisenhower plans to attend—will retary of the Ohio Development alr —e = pole and Publicity Committee, says the first and settled to the satisfac- reason industries are locating iN) tion of France the state “seems to be taxes. I “Tax dollars should be spent wisely, and taxpayers, including industry, expect that.” Prentiss Mooney, executive sec- * * B29 With 10 Aboa Overdue in Alaska d tracting industry to Ohio they aren’t the only reason for the growth. The Industrial Development De- partment says: | “A favorable tax structure in | Ohio, combined with a friendly | attitude toward business on the taxes play an important part in at-! firms. can tell by the way letters from sevéral small plants in Michigan read they weren't happy about taxes there."’ But Mooney added some employ- ers give greater weight to the services a community supplies — which are supported by taxes. “Ohio at least is not behind VIEW ALL FACTORS “Everyone is tax conscious,” Redman said. ‘The tax climate is important, but all factors have to be considered.” * * * Bowers, from his department of t said, for example, that there is no way of undoing what has al- ready been done, Within the past two days Britain and the United States have delivered to Tunisia close to 1,000 guns and many thou- sands of rounds of ammunition. taxation, observed that ‘‘the Ohio part of government, has contrib- tax structure is more favorable to uted substantially to the indus- Michigan on the advantages it of- fers, other than taxes," he said. American officials were not cer- ain a settlement is possible, They flight since about 9 p.m. last night, Air Force officials at Elmendorf Air Force Base reported. An Air Force spokesman said the plane left Elmendorf yester- day morning on a round-robin flight and last radio contact. was This action was taken in spite|=Tty ster § Pam. over Talkeet- southeast winds 8-15 miles per hour be- coming south te seathwest 15-25 miles per hours this forencen shifting to westerly late this afterneon and tonight. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 #.m.: 49 At @ am.: Wind Velocity 10-15 mp.h. Direction. Southwest. Sun sets Saturday at §:09 pm. Sun rises Sunday at 7:25 am Moon sets Saturday at 2.64 p.m. Moon rises Sun at 2:37 a.m Dewntown Temperatures Selene ayers il o.m.... een acini m : anoOcoo Own ipm.... .» BS Friday in Pontiac fas recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature ...........-08 Weather — Cloudy Qne Year Age in Ponta eewen tener tease City's Community Center of angry French protests that such weapons, moving to Tunisia with- out any control by France, might find their way across the border into the hands of Algerian rebels Solon Draws Up Doors will swing open Monday: at 22 centers as the 1957-58 com-) munity center recreation program of the Pontiac Parks and Recrea- Program Starts Monday Science Program TRAVERSE CITY — Rep. end q Uriffin (R-Mich) said today he has/| iwritten President Eisenhower a letter proposing a. two-point pro- ‘gram “to help meet. the nation’s! increasing defense need for sci- and low-organized games, mixed dancing program for both boys and girls. * * * And mother and father haven't, fighting French troops. U.S. of- ficials discount that possibility but concede that the issue presents great domestic political difficul- ties for the French government. Freight, Passenger. to search an area southeast of Talkeetna last night but its heli- copters were forced to return be- cause of bad weather. sumed at daybreak, weather per- tion Dept. gets underway. * * been overlooked this year either, said Buzz. There will be archery, table tennis and square dancing for them, as well as for teenagers. The program is an annual af- fair designed primarily for Pon- tiae school children from the fifth grade up, It will ran” This year recreational activities during the winter months will be available at 21 schools, using new multipurpose rooms at many, and at the Lakeside Homes community center. “This is an increase of seven places over the 1956-57 program | through March. ‘because of increased interest . 5 I | The 22 centers will be at: Bag- generated thon,” Goctered " ley, Baldwin, Central, Crofoot, ard T. Buzz, recreational direc- tor of the city department. Eastern Junier High, Emerson, Hawthorne, Jefferson Junior High, Another new feature of this|Kennett Road, Lakeside Homes, | year’s program will be after-schoo] LeBaron, Lincoln Junior High, 'programs at many schools for fifth! Longfellow, Madison Junior High, | and sixth graders. This will include Mark Twain, McConnell, Owen, | a boy’s program of such sports as}Pontiac Central High School, Wash- basketball and volley ball, a girl’s/ington Junior High, Webster, We-| Highest temperature See, 2 Lowest temperature ..............4.. 20 Mean temperature .................. 40 Weather — Snow flurriés, very cold. Friday's Temperatures Alpena 46 43 Les Angeles 66 $2 Baitimore 68 44 Marquette 42°33 Bismarck 36 29 Memphis 71 «42 Prownaville 85 66 Miami 80 676 uffalo 87 40 Milwaukee 61 46 Charieston 72 50 Minneapolis 44 32 Chicago 86 60 New Orleans 82 70 Cincinnati 61 84 New York 66 50 Cleveiandc 57 49 Omaha 43°34 Denver 43 26 Phoenix eo 5) De 64 48 Pittsburg. $87 43 Dw 35 27: St. Louis €3 48 Forth Worth 7¢ 47: 8. Francisco 69 46 oO 53 48 «©&. Ste Marie 49 34 Hough 8 31 Traverse C. 46 #37 Jacksonville 85 6¢ Washington .70 47 Kansas City #7 42 Seattle so 4 Lansing | 85 4 “x Tampa ’ Program of dancing, club activities: ver, and Wilson, - i f \ . entific brain power.” Griffin said he suggested that scientific research and develop- ment functions be taken away from the Army, Navy and Air Force and transferred to the new civilian branch of‘the Department of De- fense to be hedded by Dr. James R. Killian. The 9th District congressman also said he suggested the estab- lishment of a national academy of science “to complement” West Point, Annapolis and the Air Force Academy. : , Griffin said graduates of the science academy should be re- quired to setve three or more years in the new research and’ develop- ment branch in lieu of other mili- tary pave: 4 Trains Collide CHANTONNAY, Trance ‘mA freight train and a passenger train/ collided at a small station near The coastal area. . Railway officials said the ; sy a peddlers, too = about 50 miles north of An-\Garcia Wins Election He said the plane belonged to| MANILA «®—(resident Carlos pag ei Radar Evaluation] P. Garcia clinched the Philippine gnt, : The spokesman said the Tist| rious rival, Libertal Jose Yulo, Air Rescue Squadron attempted] conceded defeat, ‘ He said the search would be re-|, * «* *. In advance of the President’s arrival White House aides had joined in the general speculation as to whether Eisenhower's dis- patch of troops to Little Rock Sept. 24 might provoke a show of ill feeling against him here. But as he stepped smiling from his plane the President was greet- ed by a burst of applause from the crowd of about 250 persons on hand at the airport. The crowds have been about that size on other arrivals since the first few during Eisenhower's first term. Girard Trial Cost High ' TOKYO w — The trial of GI William §. Girard, in which a verdict is expected Tuesday, was reliably estimated today cost the U. S, Army in Japan about $85,000 so far. . in Train Wreck * * * Mrs. Alphonse Myrdek of Camil- lus, N. Y:, told police her three year-old daughter, Bonnie, slept through the pile-up, Bonnie was tossed about and didn’t wake up, but her grandmother, Mrs. Mary Nee about 65, suffered back in- s. = election today when hig only se- to have x Aide Says He’ll Answer Senate Probers Teamster to Talk Garbage © THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, N NOVEMBER 16, 1957 Red Spy Spread F ear and Misery . | | Give First hi d y paoephioras,: Olsnests, grote How Agent Betray ed Refuc ees... , Seabees sjoames of ne y wtgeia pret. Dos ugee * in Poison Cases OPEN SUNDAY 10 to 4 who were to be engulfed by alher father and gave it to Morros pionage which he s panage ting in the U.S. of feeling of no escape. rruts weddin Uahtae Mave cenmunoed AMA Says Treatment, By JACK SOBLE GEORGE LIKES SELF he was leaving for’ the Unitea| Should Begin Quickly, (Written with Jack Lotto) Hard-drinking, terrible-tempered|States for a couple of weeks “on| Doctor Called George wags somewhat enamoured|an important business mission.” | Misery, unhappiness and fear}with his own good looks, and __| followed in the footsteps of George |Bofis Morros, who was a courier WANTS MONEY BACK CHICAGO (INS)—The American) Zlatovski. for the ring, once used that van-| When he didn’t return in two Medical Association urges the fol-| Because of this American Army|ity to his advantage. months, Jane began sending him |jowing first aid procedures in cases) Intelligence officer turned Soviet x * * cables and letters demanding her |of poisoning: spy, the dreaded midnight knock} Morros, a well-knéwn composer |"0ney back. There was no re-| —One person should begin treat-| mn the door followed hundreds of/ang movie producer, successfully |SPO"S¢. In April, 1951, George;ment immediately while another| iron curtain refugees to America. jcreated an impression he was very learned that Morros was inj{calls a physician. Greece has little manufacturing. ees other drugs normally used for|Agriculture is the important in ‘burns should be avoided. dustry, (This ts the seventh of 12 articles in which confessed Soviet spy Jack Soble Ridiculous Prices . , Vienna. He and Jane flew there, x * * For rs, George and 1 |fich by the way he lived and ; ; | Ever have clothes that never look clean? cbeaay Geared the secret to |threw his money around. He was |CoMfronted Morros and demanded/ —When only one person is avail-| We’ k h I the di the unanswered mystery which |always talking about some multi- their money. able, he should call a physician) e‘ve got the know-how to get out ell the dirt, plagued the FBI, Congressional |million dollar deal he was about; | * ted - ahh ne pole it a a Osive OF] Call them what you like—LEMONS, DOGS, WHITE ELEPHANTS, i i irati | inv if en- |fo consummate. Bed SOURS est ise) Ube rio entero) Lh bok ena non’ BUYERS’ BOO BOOS —the simple fact is we've accumulated a revive colors, banish stubborn spots, perspiration oe and ‘weitere 96 J z cident for me, Morros told them [corrosive poison 1s swallowed, he mountain of merchandise that won't move at regular or even one- stains, and make the press last longer. You'll be ° ane and George both were {he didn't have the money and|should induce the victim to vomit] half price. It’s worn of torn, taded, mismated, or outdated in ' ; How, frightened immigrants taken in by the colorful, loqua- couldn't get it for a while. George |and then call a physician broken sizes or broken spirits. Frankly we're tired of looking amazed! Call us today! ‘asked to no avail, were Russian — ger pial rege aremersaet angrily punched the roly poly| —Vyomiting should not be in- A : and in onder ths sornacre else will fave te) look Gok 2 LN. j able tions f . : Russi P he - : i while, we're practically giving it away. S$ a umu |U..N. and embassy diplomats ussian in the face, knocking out) duced if the patient is uncom: | our store and if you have imagination and a few cents in your t tact them in per r by| foreign car complete with chauf- |... ey. eee: : : « coal whew they Tears “hiding nd fer and the trappings of a movie several of Pel ive teeth. | scious, in a —- a convul- | jeans—DON‘T MISS THIS SALE! If you find something you 5 SHIRTS $413 der| figure—dark glasses and beret . sion, or has swallowed petroleum || want or can use it’s GUARANTEED to be a BARGAIN! .. . LAUNDERED ne a pecanlice y Amerinemaaaaa unde: * Grabbing the bleeding, thor-| products or a corrosive. AND IF YOU DON'T COME TO BUY _- COME JUST FOR ities? ; ; : : Oo Ss oodcoc o- Carry assu Just before George moved into |ughly frightened Morros around —When retching and vomitt LAUCHS! The activities of Zlatovski, and Yugoslavia in the winter of 1950|the throat, George, murder in his ‘ : i ] es ters ie im. eve the. Soret and Ye vied Mere te) wand hs Iowaeent OS™ Ce "heas wee ina] | Fe | Goodman's | %.27 : | nd SHIRT nrg = piaagelt Nivea in the |Hotel Raffael, in Paris, where he “One of us is nos going to |the hips to prevent the poison from Parent — GRESHAM CLEANERS Si StURy [ecssere"cicic! °° Petes saving ws hls vite, Kath | eave“ roomate inet fetring te ane anecition J DEPARTMENT STORE |_S'o™?* Bet the $4,000.” SY . : \MMIGRANTS COERCED As Jane later told me, Morros oe —In the cases of inhaled poisons, | 520 S. Saginaw St., 1 Bleck North of Wilson Ave. FE 2-2784 Drive-In Service — Save 10% Cash and Carry! |_ With information supplied by ear ice vee rte he ogg Wile,|/the. victim should be carried to| | i, hi immigran 000 c 0 , : 605 Oakland Ave. Branch 5 Oakhill FE 4-2579 [from Russia, Soviet envoys were (108° a lucrative business deal. | “Darling.” he begged, “I will itiial eration bee the J . _<—_@pen Monday thru Saturday 7 A. M. te 8 P. M able to seek out and force many S FROM JANE throw myself in the Danube if breathing has stopped or is irfegu-| “ “ : jrelugees to go home or become you don't cable me $4,000 im- lar. The patient should be kept e ls ion tol protect the lives! of loved In an apologetic embarrassed mediately. I'm in desperate need warm and quiet ' S rks-Griffin peasy 0 Pp manner, he asked Jane whether lof the money. ed i. * ‘ pa . she could loan him the money for| He got the mone IN A on oe cctection'|? Short Period. . rae —With skin contamination the FUNERAL HOME Westridge - of - Waterford ; Thus a new word—‘‘redefection”’) When she told him she didn't | (Next: "soble tells how an | Victim should be drenched with “Thoughtful Service” —sprang up with increasing fre-| have such | sums, M j American w stream of water. Rapidity in | : ; arge Orros oman stole U. 8S. | ® Mi For the Discerning — Northern Pontiac's Deluxe Suburban | Miquency in the American vocabulary| suggested she get it from her | secrets from her di plomat father | Washing is most important in| Community. Both Traditional and California Contemport a F Display Homes Await Your Inspection. ary to describe the growing numbers) well-to-do father. | to pass on to the Soviet agent reducing the extent of the injury. \of refugees who were unexpiained-| In the meantime, he promised.| with whom sh. DRIVE OUT SUNDAY 2:00 to 6:00 P.M. AND:| Billy returning to the Communist he would give George pipers job | simi} a = a on i Papua be SEE MODELS homeland they once fled. jin one of his movie picture ven- | (Copyright, 1957) running water, except those caused] or by appointment . Moscow immediately saw the | = = = DIRECTIONS: Off Dixie Highway, near Waterford. Turn on Cambrook tremendous potential when | : Lane to Ledgestone Drive—right to Model George told me he was fraterniz- HELTMAN & TRIPP If Sacre Builders and Developers of Westridge-ol-Wateriord He was told to concentrate on 4192 LEDGESTONE DRIVE jthis one endeavor, and did so from [December, 1949 to October 1950. [AUSTRIA WAS CENTER | Austria was the natural focal AUSTIN-NORVELL a for these refugees and a logi-. cal locale for welfare agencies to! AGENCY, INC. For. a chert period George | worked with one refugee commit- tee. Thus he had access to confi-| dential files which listed the as of the displaced persons, their origin, family history, and | |most important, lecations in the | \United States where many would be headed. | . Other data he obtained by hav- | 42 Williams St. Phoe FE 2-5841 24-Hour Ambulance Service the red carpet is out for you QPEN | HOUSE | 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. Monday, Nov. 18 at our | Insurance of All Kinds FE 2-9221 70 W. Lawrence St. Corner Cass The Insignia of Superior Service | Distinguished Insurance handied the files. In this manner, until I re- Sound Protection «Service Since 1920 -_ jassigned George to Yugoslavia to | Balgh T. Nerve report on conditions there for the Kremlin, Soviet agents got the, 7 Come home main office war mth Saginaw and ) Lawrence oe SEE! Recordak in Action Proof Machines Coin Sorters New Postronic Bookkeeping . Machines Hostess Guided Tours ; 2h “Behind the Scenes” Bank Operations FREE! Brand: new quarter free to every member of your family! « FREE! canna atteit Ot sass ceryy, . a house nice to come home to all ZS" Co — Refreshments mas 7. winter long! It’s twice as dependable -_ — —— a —because Shell certifies you gee: aw By = | for every Th aT premium grade heatifig oil, and we — —— member of the S PONTIAC 6 certify you get service you can a, ' : &. = familv! “TR Ss é count on. This is modern heating at = ssp SS amily! TATE BANK its very best. Why not callus - A ROIENS . uo this week for more details? a PO 1 HS Brings Sunshine Inside STATE BANK BRANCHES: Auburn Heights - Drayton Plains - 1305 Baldwin Ave., Pontiac ROS a Miracle Mile Shopping. Center . ; Member Soe _ IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC’S TALLEST BUILDING 590 South Paddock een ee S| poo eyes : wie | AM c AVE pn DAE Que oe 2. 3 : f I | hs THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1957 . 7 |g open Me double in ears — Pineau En Route to U.S. Sed at Oberammergau |. tse cit years we mum : : ar 1 Church has doubled, Fi By INTERNATIONAL NEWS | Gaillard. Before taking the for- Evangelism Plan For the thirty-sixth time in slight- eye WT bree Sem 4 Christian Pineau is a grand-| eign minister post under the pre- _ ly more than 300 years; the devout/i9s¢ . 4 father who writes children’s books.| vious government, Pineau had | Divides Work by Types, villagers of Oberammergau in the} The number of candidates for He is also one of France's most] been supply minister, public) ¢.- i ator Occypati Bavarian Alps are preparing its|Holy Orders in the Episcopal able diplomats. works minister and finance min. | ‘OF Labor, Uccupations worldtamous Passion Play, to be|Church has also doubled in the And as he is preparing to fly| 'teF- and Prisoners — given again in 1960, according to|eame eight years; 363 in 1948, 748 to the United States today he may} Courteous, portly and brilliant, Ithe Information Mt have somewhat mixed feelings. [he has been something of a shut-) Fyangelistic leaders of the “loss ae — FRIEND OF U.8. feet eine eel a al United Church of Christ of Japan “i ja yeaun a aur | BETHEL TABERNACLE found a planned hi been studying three special- ~ | adsarioae sale sara to rensia vee steer ee ined types of evangelism in re- ing major wars — since 1633, the |... pestosest\Chsreh of Pontiac dle East, behind the Iron Curtain, = lis: villagers have enacted the Pas- contrary to the conceptions of/and to most European capitals and aeenal dakar! aitevyease sion of Christ in fuifillment of s solidarity.” But one of his sons is\south Americ | . Married to an American. Another, - = * * on evangelism. vow made after the Thirty Year's Worship il = : , Claude, bas been Air France man-| Twice, in 1952 and 1955, he failed! Se War when their prayers for de- Service 7:30 In keeping with its 1957 theme, “Spread the Church Into Society,” the United Church held a confer- , ager in Washington. And Pineau himself has been vice president of : the parliamentary group for Fran- to form governments after being designated to try by the French president. ; co-United States amity. ence on “occupational evangel- based on : ” Rev. and Mra, E. Crouch He was born in Chaumont, in |.” of the Bible—currently it's 5 . The 52-year-old son of an army zs ’ ism. Discussion was concen- *Inh 1348 Baldwin Ave: nerthern France, in 1904. He trated on the special programs) Job’ are given to help train ; etficer recently was appointed FE 5-8256 foreign minister in the new French government of financial litieal science, and then entered expert Pre the Bank of Paris with the idea . = ee ee re of making it his career. Labor earned degrees in law and po- 3: 38 churches throughout Japan, which had been selected as occu- pational evangelism centers. : upheavals in the Iats 1930s | The United Church is endeav- Malte Hall—82 Perkins St. (Off Auburn) Christ Lutheran turned him to labor protems, | ring to find methods of reaching Affiliated with of Spiritual Churches and became an ardent | workers in all types of occupa- Circles............3:30 p.m. Turkey Dinner........5:00p.m. Waterford Township ee tions with the Christian message. Evening Service. ......c.ccscccaecseeescceneccoeccoe 4200 Do MM, Airport B4. at Williams Lake Bd Speaker: Rev. Hector of Detroit Sunday School 9:30 A.M. * During World War II, Pineau| Along a similar line, the United Sliver Tea .......... Aicnreaneond .... Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Worship. .11 A.M. founded the underground news-/Church is holding “Labor Gospel PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING : Arvid B. Andersen, Paster paper, “Liberation.” As a resist-|Schools” in three a = . ' ance leader, he made two clandes-|churches. The schools, held one i tine flights to Britain. Twice ar-|night a week for six weeks, are FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN cusuenany acces _ rested by the Nazis, he escaped for persons who will go as Chris- 44 NORTH ROSELAWN seueet Liguer” he URCH the first time and barely avoided|tian evangelists to the labor mass- Sunday School 10 A.M. Rat. Service, 1:30 “Life Without Liquer™ [ — Gunter Genel © oetess a.m, [the firing squad the second. jes of Japan. fan Serve TP tba To : «] Morning Wership ........ 11,00 A.M, “ , , All services preached by Rev. Jack Kline, of Breman, Ind. ack to the way of evil because uf Capt. Jennette Stern and Capt. ely Communion First Suedsy ithe loss of millions of dollars in|@ lack of a job and a home.” _* = ,| Beatrice jobs f the Detroit| . | Evening Service . : ccsciw 2200 P.M, THE REV. JOHN W. WIGLE, Vicor ; seas fae 300 American Baptist sn “ae teen — n be e a 100th Anniversary of “AN UNSTAGGERING FAITH” ‘se time. preca Salvation y Ww guests of) ale ; ir — Pastors Get Challenge the local organization for all serv., Mission Trust Fund} Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Wed., 7:30 P. M. ; Cenaeier avo ie response to many requests on Urban Religion lices Sunday. _ | Shows Strides Youth Service ..................+++- 6:00 P.M. ‘| SCIENCE CHUR for data on the problem, the Bu- | ~*~ * * 2 nce eg hittomore ag pg oe Research and Survey of INDIANAPOLIS ® — About 300 Sunday School is scheduled for’ NEW YORK — This year marks : me Dreke, Speaker hed sere ire! o- od pager American Baptist pastors, laymen 9:45 a.m.; Holiness meeting at the 100th anniversary of the es- " ’ maa ian “ian woe. formation service which shows and executive leaders attending the 11 &.m.; Young People’s Legion tablishment of the first trust fund FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ‘ Ba "high on first American Baptist Urban Con-|at 6 p.m.; open air meeting at/by the Domestic and Foreign Mis- the list. . si voration here this oe = ‘7 p.m. and the salvation meeting sue Bes = 7 Can Oakland and Saginaw more than twelve “typical think urban’ minist t 7:30 p.m. , Soctety’ ‘ st Lutheran t Pos defective and over- in the city igor —_ = weil . Capt, i will spedk at each it abo pips of sere. Jane R ae c ee 5 . ~| heated heating systems are re- |. as Ge nice sn *. 4 - service and Capt. Sjoblom will Bohlen of Philadelphia in an Octo | °2" i". Oaage, oe Churches *,| sponsible for 22.5 per cent of the e |provide specia] music, both instru-|per 1857 meetin Rey. W. E. Hakes. Ass't Pastor 5 ~S §| lows, the record shows. “Fire “Our very survival depends om ental and vocal. is dl th ; = m how to live in the city,” . ° Shortly before her death, Mrs. :- | MISSOURI SYNOD | Pas” _cume, second, cousing fhe Ret, Paul 0. Madsen told zne| A memorial service will be held! poniee, an setive Charchwomaa, | 9:45 A.M—SUNDAY SCHOOL" i rs || feetive electrical wiring and ‘delegates in an orientation address. 3 i pigelicsa Me ir a sclea. expressed a wish that part of rel | Classes for All Ages 1 EST. TRINITY || secures mre tcisne pier, Mode, rete gt [ten Army Bh aad te Cope , or | | e 5 urch Fire Insuranqe Com- partmen : _ H Auhara at) Semie | |pany, a service organization of the American Baptist Home Mission )) 0 1 an of Yaar Her children carried. out that| 10:45 A. M.—MORNING WORSHIP ¥ ae a se Episcopal “Church and the Na-| — said, ee maa y “ee by offering pred — part) DR. DON FALKENBURG, Bible Meditation League ; 5 tional ection Association 's have been basically a rural | Nati _\of herjestate to ety. | ‘ Specking at Both Services. ‘ a Sune Saat ae {| list lack of sprinklers, unprotected; REV. CLARK L. GARDNER / denomination, but America Is leit of Game bane Sohn | The income from the fund is) i First Service 8:30AM. | rea sroces, Commence Meapaty erhon new: G. Ramsey “Layman of the still being used every year “to 7:00 P.M.—EVENING SERVICES l Second Gersice 1100A.M. | and draperies, and sot Mi : 5, S| d The Rev. Dr. Ross W. Sanderson, Year.” Mr. Ramsey, an official Promote the cause of the Bible ) ‘ MESS 4 floors as other major causes al issionaries afe consultant to the Department of of the United Steelworkers AFL-|and the Gospel in foreign lands, | te Ps ~ |church fires. ; P ; Urban Churches of the National CIO, is a member of the general/ especially in Liberia. — : é _|__B was also disclosed that many for Services Sunda Council of the Churches of Christ. committee of the National Coun-| Since the establishment of: this ‘ ST p AUL 2 churches carry inadequate fire y told the delegates city growth will cil's Department of Church and first fund in 1857, with a principal ‘ : 3 ‘ |insurance, particularly considering sooner or later wipe out all dis- Economic Life and also holds of-|of $25,000, the -trust funds of the 4 E Joslyn at Third rise in building costs in the} The Rev. and Mrs. Clark L.'tinction between rural and urban fices in United Church Men and Society have grown to number 686, x ilabl t id ‘North Bide) _|P st 20 years. Gardner, returned missionaries America, ; ion the Council's business and fin-|with a principal, as of Dec. 31, is aval e ‘ E Momine Service Ste eee py eee PER ee ee = eS imited! & Morning Service Bol seen te os olan) tna Mall of the services tomorrow at pee | : and unlimi ed f Sunday School ... 9:30 AM. B con be obtained uy cian one, crray Christian and Missionary Alliance Ce 1 we 1 Celumbia Avenue © ° 4 ta "install proper fire extinguishing Uilding campaign will be national - CHURCH ; | , V.F.W. Ma | | 46 ms scope. | Yl “oetweeo Die and suenavert ee : Monday, November 18 : [Wm ©. Grete. Ponte | Med lye and |} : ; °* ie amar y) » Church Service 9:00AM. &| onar ance i | OSIN ® ee fj Sunday School 1000AM 7 y | . SUNDAY Nov. 17th 8 P.M. in Church Edifice | ra ( 290 N. Case Lake Ra. | ; REV. HARRY L. JOHNSON, . | ; . vangelist GRACE Rev. G. J. Bersche, Pastor Rey. Milton -H. Bank, O. D., Minister Calvin ©. Rice, B. D., Asst. | FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, a | John Hazlett. Asst. Pastor ond SCIENTIST and Glendale || ° : ° : Corner Genesee and || sunday Schoo! 9:45 a.m. || MORNING SERVICES, 8:30 and 10:45 A. M. hg Deon Saray Richard C. Stuckmeyer, Pastor | Sunday Worship 11:00 A.M. IT] ¢ . ” _ Corner Williams and Lawrence Streets . Services at 9 A. M. Paul Shepard, Asst. Director H.Y.C. THE ANSWER TO OUR DOUBTS i ‘ Pontiac, Michigan ena lA M. Detroit, Spesking i Sunday School 10 A.M. Al Evening Service 1:30 P.M. | Dr, Milton H. Bank. Preaching ea € . i Worship eeeves 1] A.M. , % C. diall 1 * Y . A nd | Mia reheeheaetirienencsereia | (BROADCAST Over WPON (11:00 A.M.) W. Y.P.S. .. 6:45 P.M. ‘THE KNAPPS orally inves Lou to Atte The Proxy _ Murder By ERLE STANLEY GARDNER “The body was clothed when you saw it?” “Yes.” “In rigor?” | “I will say this: it was partially) in rigor.” “What do you mean by that?” | “Rigor mortis begins at the clin | and throat muscles and slowly spreads downward unti! the entire body is involved. Then rigor be- The first permanent settlements Houston Balloting for City Officials = Se ee RD eR See Rt. a. 100,000 Houston residents were ex-) pected to vote today for a mayor, | eight city councilmen and a city) controller. Most observers expected a Dec! 3 runoff to be required in the four-| man mayor’s race and several council contests. They looked for| Mayor Oscar Holcombe, seeking’ his 12th term and long called the, Old Grey Fox of Houston, to be in’ the runoff. | Other candidates for mayor| are former City Atty. Lewis Cut- rer, Councilman Gail Reeves and Dr. Ira Kohler, a former city were made at Sault Ste. Marie, in .1668, and at Saint Ignace, in 1671, quette. gins to leave the body in the same Copyright 1967 | THE STORY 6O PAR: Jerry Con- way = bg het by en adve 4 campaign rrel} discharg employe, is conducting ‘to . obtain — and oust Conway at @ stock- olders’ neetns & & mysterous - e call calling herself hon an osalind ers to supply Conwa with @ list of the proxies Farrell has acquired. Though he suspects a trap, Conway agrees to follow direc-° tions and—obteins @ key to a hotel suite for the meeting, but instead of finding Rosalind there's a Woman, scantily attired, pointing « un eat him. He takes the gun away. ince it has been fired recently Con- Way suspects a frame-up and calls Perry Mason, attorney ason goes to the hotel room and finds a wom- man murdered. He traps Evangeline pee ee admitting she is Rosa- im roxy list. Rose Calvert reserved the el suite in the name ef Gerald Boswell but the hotel clerk im contused about the delivery of mes- sages ° Chapter 30 ° Perry Mason said to the witness, Robert King: “On the 16th of October when the occasion was more fresh in your mind, you stated to Paul Drake, the detective, that you had delivered the message to him. Did you not?” “T may have said so, yes.’’ King answered. “And if you could have made a mistake in confusing Paul Drake with the defendant, isn’t it Pos- | sible that you could have made a mistake in regard to Rose Cal- vert and that it was some other young woman who rented the suite, 7297" “No, sir. I am positive of my identification and I am not going to let you confuse me.’’ “Thank you,"::Mas on -sait: “That's all!” Dr. Malone came forward, was sworn, identified himself as Dr. Klenton C. Malone, .an autopsy surgeon who had performed the autopsy on the body of Rose Cal- vert. . DOCTOR TESTIFIES” He testified as to the single bul- let wound, the direction and nature of the wound, the fact that death was instantaneous, that there had been but little external bleeding, that the wound was a contact ‘wound, meaning that the gun had been held directly against the body when the wound was inflicted. “When was the time of death?” Elliott asked. “I fixed the time- of death at between six-fifteen | and seven o'clock on the evening of Ocotber 16th.” “Did you recover the fatal bul- let?”’ “T did.” “And what did you do with it?” “IT turned it over to Alexander Redfield, the ballistics exeprt.” “He was present when the au- topsy was performed?" “He was.” "Cross-examine,"’ Elliott said to Perry Mason. “When did you perform the au- topsy?” Mason asked. “It wag the morning of the 17th.” “What time on the morning of the 17th?" “About seven o'clock in the morning.” yx “Is that the time you usually} Bp go to work, Doctor?” ° * * * “No, sir. I was. called to’ per- form this autopsy by the district attorney. I was asked to perform it as early as possible.” “When ‘were you called?” “About ten o'clock in the eve- ning.” “Why didn’t you perform. the au- topsy that night?” “There was not that much ur- gency about sit. The district at- totney wanted to have certain in- fcrmation by nine o'clock in the mérning. I started the autopsy so I tould give him the. information he wanted.” “Rigor mortis had developed when the body was discovered?” ¥I understand it had.” *When does rigor develop?” “That is variable, depending up- on several factors.” “Can you give me the approxi mate ‘times during which rigor develops?” Mason asked. : “That I cannot,” the witness sald. “The witiés “are in teat dispute as to the develop- ment of rigor. Persons dying un- jf der conditions of excitement or emotion may develop rigor al- most immediately. This is also true if death has been preceded by a physical straggie. ' |was ingested?” conditions existing in this case which made it appear rigor had ‘developed with considerable rapid- ity.” “Did you consider rigor mortis in connection with determining the time of death?” “TI did not. determined the time of death from the contents of the stomach and intestines.” “Did you know when the last meal was ingested?” “I was told that time could be fixed with great certainty. I know that death occurred approximately two hours after the last meal had been ingested.” “You were told when the meal “Yes.” “That was hearsay?” “It was the best information I was able to get.” “It was bearsay?”’ ‘I WAS TOLD .. .’ with this young woman when she took her lunch. I had to rely on what was told me.” “You didn't consider rigor mor- tis as an element in fixing the time of death?" ’ “I did not. There were indica- tions that rigor mortis had set in almost immediately.” * * * “What about post mortem livid- jity?”” Mason asked. “The lividity had apparently just begun to develop. However, Mr. Mason, I didn’t see the body at the time it was found. The deputy cor- oner made those observations." “Now, then,” Mason said, ‘‘the wound in that body is as consistent with suicide as with murder, isn't it, Doctor?’ : » Dr...Malone hesitated, then final- ly said, ‘No, sir, it is not.” “Why?” . ~ “From__the position of the wound and the course of the bul- let it would have been virtually impossible for a right-handed woman to have held the weapon in exactly that position. And if the weapon was held in the left | hand the posture would have been cramped and somewhat un- natural, “Moreover, Mr. Mason, we made chemical tests on the hands of the decedent to see if there was any] indication a weapon had been held in the decedent's hand. There was hone.”’ “You used the paraffin test?” “Ves,"’ “Thank you,” “That's all.’ Elliott called .Dr. Reeves Gar- field,” who ‘testified that he was from the coroner’s office, that he had gone to the scene of the crime within an hour after the body had been discovered. He had super- vised the taking of photographs and had made on-the-spot observations. ‘BODY WAS CLOTHED?’ He has assisted in performing the autopsy. He gave it as his con- clusion that death had taken place some time between six-fifteen and seven o'clock. “Cross-examine,” Eliott said. Mason said. i} \order in which it was formed.” many of the authorities would in- dicate.. A great deal depends upon individual circumstances. I have known of one case in which rigor developed almost immediately.” | turbance at the time of death. I I mean a complete rigor.” that?”’ “And rigor varies as to time?” “Very much. Much more so than “What was the reason for that?” “There had been a_ physical struggle, and an emotional dis- have known one other case where within thirty minutes. And by that “Under ordinary circumstances, the onset is much slower than “Oh yes. Much slower.” (Continued Menday) Gaillard Seeks NIT i ian twos CONFIENCE Vote French Assembly Seen Backing New Premier: on Financial Plans | PARIS w—Just 10 days after he was voted into office France's longest postwar cabinet crisis, Premier Felix Gaillard was forced today to demand a vote of confidence to push financial re- forms through the National As-| sembly. vote Tuesday on Gaillard’s pro- 'posals to raise taxes and cut ex-| penditures in an effort to lift France out of a financial morass. | j|Observers said Gaillard probably dwould win. Gaillard asked for the confi-| dence vote about dawn today after an all-night Assembly _ session. Earlier in the session he warned that such disagreements within the NATO alliance as the raging French anger at U.S. and Brit- ish shipments of small arms to! unite the deputies behind Gaillard because féw would be willing to vote out his cabinet during the arms negotiations, - The 38-year-old Premier's posi-| tion also was considered secure) because of the fresh memory of the 37-day cabinet crisis which ended Nov. 6. No alternative gov-| ernment is in sight and a defeat for Gaillard, forcing him to re-| sign, would leave France without! leadership at a critical time. Charlie Chan in Stew Wilmington law has Charlie Chan, alias Anthony Nardi, in trouble. pulling a ricksha, has been roam- a promotion gimmick for a Charlie Chan television program. But in Wilmington it's against the law to wear a mask in public. Nardi was arrested and will be given a hear- ing in Municipal Court. Pays ment savi COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK on SAVING CERTIFICATES Deposit your surplus savings or invest- at any one of our 8 con- venient banking offices. | Community National Bank 22% a Year © Donaldson-Fuller Agency, Inc. »“Reliuble INSURANCE Protection” 3 Phone FE 4-4565 rigor was quite well developed | to end | The Assembly is expected to: dispute over arming Tunisia! might split up the Atlantic allies. | Tunisia yesterday was expected to) WILMINGTON, Del. @—An old! Nardi, wearing a Chan mask and| ing the streets in nearby cities as x “I may,,state that there. were “AT W. Lawrence St. i ; CASH— LAYAWAY! { j | | HIDE-AWAY councilman, A record 264,476 persons were by Father Dablon and Father Mar- jeligible to vote in this largest Tex-| to las city. Oxford Bus Drivers End Primary Training lies, OXFORD ~— In a School Bus\tin Fleischman got a scare when} Driver Education course sponsored |she discovered her bag containing |ton, annoyed because he didn't HOUSTON, Tex. Ww — About by the Michigan Department of| $50,000 worth of jewelry had been have his pajamas. . i . |Swaps Gems for PJs / _switched in a train station mixup. She hurried back here and found SARASOTA, Fla, (®—Mrs. Mar. her bag was in the possession of Hulbert Bisselle, president of the Riggs National Bank of Washing- Education, the following employes | of Oxford Area Community Schools’ have completed the primary train-' ing: Ray Westphal, Glen Empson, Art Kinney, Donald Hickmott, Charles Shoemaker, and Rex Hal- lock. An advanced class for those who have completed the first! course is being held this month at Lake Orion. © Inkster Votes Monday | DETROIT w — Residents of su- |burban Inkster will vote Monday on a proposed $1,200,000 bond issue provide funds for school facili- a Expert Shirt Laundry SHIRTS $1.09 Including Insurance With Winter coming stay in your car and enjoy the con- venience of our Drive-In Car- Hop Service. Huron Dry Cleaners & Shirt Laundry Main Office and Plant 944 West Huron FE 2-0231 rere wererers WAYS to BUY: CHARGE—TERMS— you can ot SURE...17 175 Westinghouse SATURDAY NIGHT and SUNDAY SPECIAL! EASY TERMS Similar to Mustration 125 W. Furniture, Appliances and Television NDAY 1 to at OUR WAREHOUSE 2239 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. TEL. FE 8-3741 eee TTT TTT TONIGHT at OUR STORE HURON | 1957 Model with Deluxe Features! * Big Full-Width 35-Lb. Freeser plus 15-Lb. Cold Storage Tray. * Five Bottle and Egg Shelves in Door! * Full - Width Humidifier Holds ‘4 Bushel! EASY CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED! - New Styling to Enhance Your KITCHEN Buy It Today! 178” Base Optional EASY TERMS a “new SUNBEAM Shave- ANS Wyk — a = Master nr) Our Reg. ? $29.95 $98 HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER | With | A! Trade Suuseeneeenee ae HOTPOINT Ow be ELEC. DRYER $16.95 49" Pint HH KKK IIH III IIIA IIA KAA HK ‘ | \ y \ , | f . . } ‘ More Room in Less Space! Westinghouse BUY AT LORD’S WESTINGHOUSE STROKE-SAVER VACUUM CLEANER \ *, - \ vs _ Full Factory Guerantee ———— FOR AS LITTLE AS FEATURING ¢ TOSS-AWAY BAG © FLOOR ‘N f = RUG TOOL » D vi mae 2 Complete with Attachments * SSS SSCS CCCC TICLE: + ve % + * ve » % * * % * * * * * % * % * * % & * * % % * % a. * * % * * a * *% * + % * % + % % % * ve * * % % + + * * > % xe * % + + % % + % ve + % » e ba ve % ey Va THE PONTIAC PRESs,. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1957 With thine -out of ten of today's house demanding wood kitch- | en ets, at least one kitchen! ito making a dishwasher with wood front. HOME REMODELING SERVICE : 2 RECREATION ROOMS ATTIC ROOMS GARAGES ® Roofing ® Storm Windows * Porches ® Kitchens * Siding some Additions Or Anything You Need at a Price to Fit Your Budget Our Many Satisfied Customers Are Our Best Recommendation FREE ESTIMATES F E 2-1 211 OBLIGATION NO DOWN PAYMENT Up to 5 Years to Pay G & M Construction Co. 2260 Dixie Hwy., North of Telegraph Rd., Pontiac S\appliance manufacturer has turned | CONCRETE STEPS For a Step in Beauty j THE UNIT STEP See 3 Se ere aa EF ek A re " eo * : ae “ortamen... aaa 3 es = ‘ © 3% — oes as? ; ths | 4 en : i ad j oS a Bites 2 a Fe. 2 a eo eee S Shee ae > + a STYLISH GABLE — This gable is an eye- catching highlight of the ranch house’s exterior. The front is finished in vertical wood boards. On the left there is stone facing, Planter boxes add more decorative touches. __ 429-5" ROOM FOR ALL AGES — Outdoor recrea- tion space for both children and adults is sepa- Gabled Ranch Separates the Kids From Adults | terjects, “prefer a separate din- ing area, And there are two things that can be done here. You could panel the end wall of | the living room its entire length, | | This would serve to tie the living | reom and the dining room to- | gether. If you want a separate | dining room, it would be a sim- So you're thinking about build- ling a new house? | Between your hour of decision jand the house itself, there are| jmany important steps to be taken: '(1) Choose your land with care! Its location and suitability to your! own particular needs are vital. Consider, is it convenient to your job? Easily accessible to church, Ple job to enclose the area with | ‘school and stores? (2) Financing? arched openings." |Determine what financing is avail-/ Now we're in the “multipurpose” | able to you—and the most con- area’ It has an indoor grille set! venient way to handle it to meetiim one end of an exposed brick | your own budget requirements. {3)|wall. The other side of the bar'; rate in this plan. ‘room-by-room description of the house. aoe “Serre bb-epee ON Follow it as you read the a look at the kitchen. Everything Paint Mirror for Holiday Party Decor One of the;handiest places to exercise your creative talents is A man must be free! on the living room or dining room And if you want to keep your). io, —~_| man, it’s @ mighty geod idea to a en ee let him “‘feel free’ right at rover Give Man Den for Relaxing e question howeve rding to June Cabot, a home tee een I gi ~ < PF eonsultant for a glass com-| pain y, mirrer decorations are easy = sedom without baring: the entire|to"Go, and in their’ simplicity they Easy. Give him & éen have more appeal than compli- . a cated decorations which require a A den is a room where the wot of time to make. man of the house can forget * * about ashtrays once in a while. It’s a room where he can “stretch out” both spiritually and physically. It’s his little fort, snug and ‘tight against every- thing, in a world that may often seem to be altogether too busy, too frantic and (in a whisper) too darn feminine! A den is a sort of emotional demonpression chamber to which, the mighty man can retreat to be gradually relieved of some of life’s everyday pressures. Me emerges smiling again, without any fear of the ‘‘bends”—-the kind that cause him to go on a diet of milk toast * One popular method is a series of free-hand sketches on the glass surface with whipped soapsuds, either plain or mixed with food coloring. Stenciling of more ex- acting designs can be done with paper patterns and a pressurized can of silver or gilt. . If you prefer, colored sketches or pictures appropriate tg the oc- FRED W. MOOTE . easion can be cut frem magazines surface of the mirror. These appealing decorations are just as easy to remove as ‘they are to apply. A light rub with a damp cloth returns the mirror to its original lustre. The beautiful Royal Hawaiian Hotel, at Waikiki Beach, recently was redecorated, using over 2,550 regs of a deep” shade of pink WHEN YOU HEAT~ Gas ro "re really living! The best to modern fuels deserves the best in modern equipment. Play safe, Be sure. ACCEPT NOTHING BUT HEATING EQUIPMENT is there for nvother—plus a din- ette and a snack bar! Out on the terrace, York points | out: “You can see {hat the exit, from the two-car garage is shel-' |tered. The garage, has a work bench and storage lcabinets for tools,"’ ————— Square Footage This nine-room ranch style || jhouse has 2,106 square feet, ex- 1 | cluding the space occupied by || the two-car garage. It has plenty ‘of room for everyone. | On the flagstoned outdoor ter-| race there is a picnic table and, | ,an outdoor grille. You could al- most see hot dogs sizzling on the incidentally, 4" | more than mere good looks. It is and creamed chickgn. - Being a man, he'll be stubborn. INC. Best bet is to let him do most of the planning for the den. What's ° wrong ‘with that old pantry off the Sl, t kitchen? How about the spare ec rica guest room downstairs? And the CONTRACTOR — attic? " State & City Licensed | see iv at Given the opportunity, your e Commercial , ' man will choose sensible ma- terials for the wall and floor— © Industrial Otto A. Trzos rugged materials like ceramic © Commercial a poe opal aaa Maintenance 3101 Orchard Lake Rd. or stained. Besides, it comes in peered alae Keego Harbor a wide variety of sizes, colors Over 25 Y. in Ponti and shapes that stimulate orig- ae won i =) “e FE 2-0278 a ee FE 2-3924 & FE 2-4098 S| Eves. and Sun You might want to give him } Call MA 6 6247 some tips.on stainproof upholstery. | * ° and drapery design. But let him| Se ipick his own furniture, his own! \pictures, books ‘and other acces-. PRICED BELOW APPRAISED VALUATION sories. Could be you'll find a new man by letting him go—into his As Low AS... \Nap Protects Your Rug The nap of a rug contributes WE E 'a cushion too, and protects a rug’ | when people walk on it. Rug care ‘should include keeping the nap as close to its origina] state as possible. Streets, City Water and Sewer. 1250 Down 30-Year Mortgage 137 of These Beautiful Homes Occupied! ONLY 2 LEFT! HURRY! Builder won't wait, wants them sold at once, therefore, priced so low. Now 3-bedroom brick ranch homes, screens, over 1,000 sq. ft. Equipped with Waste King Incinerator, Formica Counter Tops, Forced Air Heat, Walk-in Closets. Lots. Live where taxes are practically nothing. including storms and Paved No SEPTIC TANKS. Large 75’ . [and pasted directly on the front — OPEN SUNDAY AND DAILY 1 TO 7 P. M. Only 5 Minutes from Downtown Pontiac 3119 HERBELL .1 Mile Past Telegraph Road to Ferbarry Road, Right One Block | “GET RICH QUICK” BENJ. RICH 1545 Linwood TU 3-4000° What will it cost? Talk it over faces into this area. There are| with a builder and get an estimate! built-in TV and Hi-Fi cabinets and| of the construction cost. built-in book shelves, x * * “On a Sunday afternoon,” York Now, the ‘house itself? Let's visit explains, “when visitors arrive, The Housé of The Week, HW-69./you can walk directly through this This house was designed by Her-|area to the rear lawn and around man H. York, a prominent small|to the outside terrace.” ‘home architect. Let's go with him walk h on a supposed tour of this ranch, ee ad nee = _—. planned for maximum comfort and flagstoned play terrace for chil- leisure. (As we breeze along on) gren, There’s a sandbox and this visit, follow the tour by re-| swings for the kiddies, Their play ferring to. your floor plan). : can be supervised from.the kitch- York meets us inside the foyer en through a corner picture win- and tells us: dow. “I jike to feel this entrance has hospitality. Because of the clear glass panel, you feel you've been welcomed into the house | | before you’re really there. The , too, goes right through grille—and the picnic table sup-| porting bowls of color-splashed salads. And frosty desserts. Later, we went for a turn around the house by way of the service walk. We were in front of the house again and we paused for a good look. A gable jutted down over the sheltered front entrance and the picture window of the master bed- room. On the bedroom side of the) front wall, there was stone facing. The remainder of the front had | been finished in vertical wood ‘boards to give pleasing contrast to A step to the left from the play the horizontal elongation of this terrace through sliding glass doors ‘trim ranch house. and we're in the bedroom area.| Here’s a house, we we Some of the bedroom area could ; just can’t live without. Roont for ‘be earmarked for the children, leisure! Buoyant for happy living! hinges. Ww rae st tor Ci the glass, extending a welcome e just have to se r vated inside and out.” . As a decorative finish, edges can plan! , ‘reassembling the screen, $10,200, Full Price 3 CHECK THESS FEATURES:. , @ No sections to Be Forced Apart by Frost or Settling @ Permanent Beauty—Rugged Dependobility @ FHA Specifications @ Strong Reinforced Casting @ Avoid Messy Installation DAWSON & WATSON | &. J. Dawsen, Hugh 4. Wateen ' Satety Tread M. Sagieow Ot 20 “s Pontise | Reduces Slipping UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE Free Estimates — We Deliver Anywhere! CONCRETE STEP CO. 6497 Highland Road” OR 3-7715 Across trom Pontiac Airport Phone FE ¥.se Get Our Low Winter Prices on the Following: Attics, Dormers, Additions, Dry Wall or | Plastering, Recreation Rooms, Roofing and Siding, Kitchen Cabinets, Built-in Ovens, Floor and Wall Tile, and Formica Counters. Cy ColoGy SEZ} Visible from the foyer is a bar ,aa0jaq “IN0q JO S[reu papvay-sseiq | | and a fireplace. It’s a twoway bar,’be trimmed with metallic tape, ready to serve on either side, with easy access from the play | The fireplace has an open end,/area to the children’s bathroom. BEDROOMS “ALL WORK ARANTEED! v making it Soe as ible ~— the The master bedroom has multi-| Basement Home 9 avs dining.room an y visible from ple closet space, a smart vanity, : 7 ® the living room. before a mirrored wall—and a $500_dewn FHA No Money For Free Estimates Call: The bar and fireplace are in a roomy bath with a king-sized show-| } : Down brick-faced unit which stands in er. 3 Bedroom Ranch Home 1-5 Yeers From 9 A. M. to 5 P.. M. a the SL a a space aiviced into! teto the hhall eutside the mas- $400 down FHA to Pay FE 4-5063 our parts for the foyer, the living’ ter bedroom, we're only a few || OPEN DAILY 1 TO 7 FE 4-6101 x ‘ room, the dining room and a multi-| steps from the bar. York directs ‘wl Yon GETTING INTO A COLD Cc AR PLE ey | us toward the outside terrace. KUSCHELL _ Evenings ME 7-1011 “Women as a rule,” York in- | En route we stopped briefly for Emerson off Mt. Cle MI ¢-4133 er JO 6-152 “HAPPINESS IS NOT Hi hi H R modele A Garage from Bob's Building Service |i 7 - nnn SVEN Ire icnigan HOMme Ke rs Will Solve Your Problems NAGI | MODEL OPEN vo bbiasanascobhanpsese goto § Building Editor: ‘ * Sunday’! to 8 P.M, . : a Enclosed is 35 cents. Please send me a copy of th stud bee z Pes ea eee see] aa ere epee . 8 : “OFF BALDWIN ST . Name .................000.0..5 ee ieee, 8 $ a (Please Print) : a ‘s Bireee sec cesecsstegpcccee «se csiesc cece sie rielee\ wneaw © lence - a, 49612 | il oe Wee state «| Jim Williams Realty {PRICES STILL iS Rem, / : a / somes, | REDUCED ol iad | ; apecia IM. . ei | PORCHES, PATIOS and reezeways ommercial Buildings | ALUMINUM Additions Concrete Work FIBERGLAS AWNINGS Attic Remodeling Porch Enclosures . Recreation Rooms Roofing SAVE 720% NOW Kitchen Remodeling Siding ON WROUGHT ALUM. COLUMNS , Garages Bathrooms : P DORMERS FE 4.257 .) Lf Vo Substi if BIG ATTIC ROOMS. 2 | “There Is No Substitute for Experience” PR : BASEMENT ROOMS — VIOLA’ Open Daily 9:00 - 5:30 | ICE NO Sauk fend testes me |, Let Us Build or Remodel , REDUCTION a: | name ater sepiatigs for You at a Price to §- BOB § BUILDING SERVICE on aluminum combination MONEY. © oes over pe x ae - Pit Your Pocket t dows and ny ge ACOSPORATAD : storm win an doors. DOWN $x. the nee of your Heme Improv estat Center 207 W. MONTCALM L. W. BOGERT—OFFICE OPEN 8:30-5:00 DAILY—CALL FE 4.6089 Ai the flashing white light jus! eas! “ Oakland . ALL AWNING AND STORM WINDOW SALES - | A.Munay White 9° FE 4.9544 | = S. Telegraph Rd. acing Ruth St., Pontiac MIDWEST SUPPLY ¥, E } ‘ r = \ = ‘ io Li \ \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1957 + ANN LOWRIE Clarkston Student to Get DAR Award Ann Lowrie, 17-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lowrie, 7180 Andérsonville Rd., Clarkston, will be presented the DAR award at the annua] assembly at Clarkston High School in the spring. She was chosen for the award because of her citizenship, schol- arship and her popularity with other students. Ann was active in junior dra- matics and served on Student Council in her junior year, She is secretary to Perry Thomas of the counciling office, she will be in the forthcoming senior play, last year she was secretary of junior class and now is treasurer of the senior class. The Daughters of the American Revolution give the award annual- ly, First Parley Movie to Be Shown at Jayno Adams School Tuesday Night The first meeting of the Oak- land County Council of PTAs will be heli at the Jayno Adams School at 3810 Clintonville Rd., in Water- ford Township at 8 p.m. Tuesday. * * * In carrying out the State Con- gress theme, “The PTA and the School in the Growing Commu- nity,” a film will be shown, ti- tled “Family Circles.’ The film deals with the changes made in family life during the last gener- ation, * * * Chief of visiting teachers in Wa- terford Township Freda Huggett, will conduct a question and an- swer period, at the conclusion of the film strip presentation, x * * The council will be guests of ithe Jayno Adams School PTA, and all parents in the area have been urged to attend the meeting. State Farmers’ Income Shows Upturn in 1956 EAST LANSING W — After four years of continuous decline, earn- ings of Michigan farmers showed an upward turn in 1956, a farm business report showed today. * * * Michigan State University farm economist John Doneth said an analysis of 526 farm records that the labor income received by these farmers averaged $2,646 last year. This was more than twice the average labor income for 1955. To Target 5,000 Miles Away Snark Carries Warhead CHICAGO (AP) — The Air Force has disclosed that its intercontinental guided missile, the Snark, recently car- ried a simulated hydrogen miles from its launching point. xk * * The announcement yesterday termed the Oct. 31 test flight “the world’s first kno intercontinental missile capability” and said the Snark hit “with unprecedented accuracy.” - Oe In its first detailed description of the flight—released simultaneously in Chicago, Los Angeles, New ‘York and Washington—the Air Force said “the range demonstrated by the Snark places any target in the world in range of ‘s United Statés bases.” warhead to a target 5,000 wn demonstration of a true * Expect Ruling on Village Vote High Court May Soon Decide on Rochester's Incorporation Impasse A Supreme Court decision is ex- pected soon that will end the Ro- chester Village incorporation stale- mate, The ruling will be on an appeal of -a 1956 court decision that fa- vored an election for incorporation as a city. The ruling centered on three petitions for incorporation, In April, 1956, the Board of Super- visors was ready to set an elec- tion on the basis of the third petition, when a Rochester and Avon Township group filed suit against the county, claiming the petition was not valid. The pointed to the first petition, claimed the board of Su- pervisors should take action on it, and argued that the other two be shelved for a legal waiting period of two years. The law queted in the case wag that petitions covering the same territory must not be con- sidered oftener 1 petitions in two years, and that must be considered in the order of their filing with the county clerk. Circuit Judge Timothy C, Quinn heard the suit and ruled against this argument, Judge Quinn’s rul- 7 was appealed in December, Legal delays then followed, blocking a hearing on the case until two weeks ago. Set Santa Fe Railroad Walkout for Nov. 22 CHICAGO (#—Fifteen non-oper- ating unions have set Nov, 22 for a strike against the Santa Fe Rail- _road in a’ long-standing dispute over what the unions term the railroad’s refusal to approve a union s planned to meet proced yesterday by George E. Leighty, president of the Railroad Teleg- raphers Union and chairman of the ‘15 unions’ joint negotiating committee, Some 42,000 union em- Youngsters Fire Many Questions About Sputniks DENVER (INS) — A major con- sequence of the Russian satellite launchings seldom discussed — by the scientists, at any rate — is the vast new field of questions opened by the always-curious youngsters. A Denver father asks that a set! of stock answers be launched along with the next satellite to such) questions as: —Why did they do it? -—Why doesn’t it fall? —Why don’t it bump into the moon, the clouds, the moun- tains, heayen???? —When it falls will 1t his some- one on the head? —Won't it break when it falls? .+. Then why did they do it (again)? : —Why does it go ‘‘beep beep’ — Is that its horn? —How can the doggie sleep when it goes ‘‘beep beep” alla time? —Can we hear the dog bark- ing? ... Why not?...I want to hear the dog barking. —How can the doggie come down when he wants to go home? —If it goes in circles won't the doggie get dizzy? —Will you build me a satellite. daddy? * * * And, as if the questions weren't enough, the father complains, there are the near-accidents caused by the childish. shrieks from the back seat of the car. “There it is, daddy...I see it, I see it!!!" Wo eet Your PTA Is Planning HOLLY — The local elementary school PTA will hold its annual open house Monday evening be- ginning at 7:30. Parents are urged to attend and meet the teachers of their children, who will be in their classrooms. Board of Education President Robert McKenney will have charge of a discussion period, and Prin- cipal John Harrower will explain the use of the new report card system. The first grade mothers will serve refreshments. Orion Township The Lake Orion Junior High School PTA will have an open house, with parents following their children's schedules at 7:30 p.m. on Monday. This is an opportunity for the parents to get a general concep- tien of the ebject and general subject matter of the classes, and not a conference period for individual discussion of a spe- cific child. ~ Students will act as guides. Refreshments will be served after the last “‘class’’ bell. White Lake Township The Lee O. Brooks PTA will meet on Monday in the multi- urpose room of the school. A potluck dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. and Kenneth Win- ship will show his pictures taken in Europe last summer. =] on “Book Week.” Marlette “Knowing our children through hobbies’’ will theme for the Tuesday meeting of the Elementary PTA here. McDonald Schoo! at 8 p.m. Mrs. Richardson and sons, who oper- Sets Overdue Fee After Dec. 1, all Waterford Town- ship residents using the library in the Community Activities Building will be charged a two-cent fee for This rule will go into effect be- volumes that has been added to the library shelves. These. should be circulated to as many readers as possible, according to Librar- ian Mrs. Kenneth Valentine. So far, the library has had a’ no-charge policy amd forgotten to return the books after they have read them, Irs. Valen- tine explained. She said that some of the books that are returned are more than two years overdue. Recently, the Waterford Town- ship Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary donated $100 for the pur- chase of new books for children. 97-Year-Old Woman Dies in Milford MILFORD One of Michigan's old residents passed away in Mil- ford yesterday. Mrs. Margaret Ir- vine of 2225 Garden Rd., died at the age of 97. She was born in the Shetland Is- lands, Scotland in 1860 and has lived in the Milford area for the last 20 years, Mrs. Irvine has been ill for four years. She is survived by one son, William M. of Milford; five grandchildren and 12-great-vrand- children. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Richardson-Bird Fu- neral Home in Milford, with burial in Elmwood Cemetery, Detroit. The Carol Miller will lead a program be «the program. It will take place at the Bea | Waterford Library | each day that a book is overdue. cause of the large number of new, (Open Houses and Dinners Slated in Holly, Orion | ate the Bob and Don Hobby shop near Brown City, will be the guest demonstrators. A panel of parents and students will as- sist the demonstrators. Mrs. Richardson suggested youth leaders and any other parties in- terested in handicraft would bene- fit by this display. Marion Bloss, local photographer, will be at the meeting to discuss the taking of individual pictures. Brandon Township Brandon Township Schools PTA will meet in the auditorium Mon- day at 8 p.m. Avondale All parents in the Avondale School District are urged to attend) the special meeting to be held on Discuss Plans — for Recreation Independence Township Residents to Establish Activities Program INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP— Progress is being made on plans for a recreational program for In- dependence Township. * * * At a meeting held at the Town Hall, Ernest Blohm, executive sec- retary for the Inter-Agency Coun- cil for Recreation in Michigan, presented several aspects on the meaning of recreation. Tom Bel- ton, director of recreation in Wa- terford, outlined the recreational ‘program of Waterford Township. Independence Township Board and the Clarkston Community Schoo| Board have voiced their approval of the program within their financial] limits and have agreed to discuss and give their formal consent to set up a Rec- reation Commission for Indepen- dence Township. . Thanksgiving, the Methodist Men's JAMES HUNT Monthly Meeting Shifted by Turkey : LAKE ORION — Because of Monday, at 8 p.m. at the high! school. The Avondale Citizens Commit-. tee has invited representatives of} the County Sheriff's Office, Michi- gan State Police, Oakland County) Road Commission, State Road panel discussion with members of the Citizens Committee. They will attempt to promote greater traffic safety in the com-| munity and especially in regard to! ‘Commission and the American Ag-'on the board meetings. A program gregates Co. to participate in a will the school children. 15-2097. A meeting will be held for in- Group here will hold the monthly terested people in the arca Wednes- meeting on Thursday, Nov. 21. day at 8 p.m. in the Methodist Special guest for the occasion will Church, Clarkston. be James Hunt, director and court * * * : referee for Oakland county. William Godfrey, chairman of * my es the group, at this time will report) Mr. Hunt will talk on the | “Youth Problem and the Big | Brother Movement.” ~*~ we *& - be set up under volunteer leadership ~ to coordinate various club activities in the township. Persons wishing to volunteer, Dinner will be served at 6:30 help will be welcomed and may p.m. in the Methodist Church contact Godfrey by calling MA,House by members of the WSCS GIMBALS Mountings which allow engines to swing ond steer rockets. TRAJECTORY THERMAL HEAT BARRIER The curve described SPACE by a body movjng in space. EXPOSPHERE IONOSPHERE Friction of dense air burns up metols. CHEMOSPHERE Ninety-nine per cent of air is in STRATOSPHERE troposphere and \ ee... § 6 Stratosphere (25 [TROPOSPHERE + 30 miles thick). VELOCITY EARTH Means speed. SONDE ROCKET VENUS © Referring to radiosonde equipment to check high altitude weather— for some time in balloons, now proposed for exploring solar system. SATELLITE PAD GYROSCOPE Thick base, usually concrete, on which rocket launcher is erected. | Evolution of the 5 familior toy top. — The stabilizing unit which keeps concrete rocket on course. ‘and Lake Orion Chapter De Molay. | ee = a — | State Polio Toll Drops LANSING (Michigan should end the year with only slightly more than 100 cases of paralytic polio, a tenth of the toll only five years ago, the State Health De- | partment reported today. The following are top prices cov- ering sales of locally grown pro- duce brought to the Farmer’s Mar- kets by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quota- tions are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Thurs- day. Lodge Calendar Areme Chapter No. 503, O.E.S. 22 Stat St. Special Meeting, Mon- day evening, Nov. 18, Initiation 8 $509 P-m. Refreshments, Officers prac- Produce Fruits Apples, Delicious, bu Apples, Jonathans, bu. . Apples, Mcintosh, bu. . ee mete earans --:+ 28° Crawley, Secy. Apple Cider, tcase) 4 gal. .......... —Adv. Pears, Bosc. bu. . gan gneod sa6 3 00 | 5 Quince, bu. .. Be Boe SIUC COOTO 3 00) Vegetabies | r) ’ Beets, topped. bu. .. © .a--aeeees 1 50) |Breccoli, *a bu. oe ss 225] ews in rie |Cabbage, Curly, bu 5 . 175} 'Carrots, Topped, bu. ... 2 25/ jCauliflower, doz... wee eee eee 2.00} to| Glen G, Seiber, 25, of 915 22nd oo iSt., Detroit, paid a fine of $90 plus ‘solcosts, yesterday, after pleading 13° guilty to obtaining a hunting li- 100/cense under false pretenses, before 150 West Bloomfield Township Justice ~ ‘Celery (crates) doz. 4-5 |Fennel ibehs.i doz. ‘Horseradish, pk. bskt. ... |Kohlrabi ibchs.) doz. ... ade iLeeks (bchs.) dog. ......-... see ener (Onions, Dry, 50-ih Onions, Green, jbchs.) dog, ........ seo 2 sae 3 1 | Parsni Ls 175 anips, '2 bu. ©. ces ceeeeee 73) . |Potatoes. fancy 50-ib es. 160 Elmer C. Dieterle. | Radishes, hothouse ibchs.) doz. .... 1.50) 173) Perry Park Dairy Bar, 1212 N, 1.50|Perry St., was burglarized yester- \day and $25 stolen from several Turnips ibchs.) doz. ; Greens lcohard” bur OIEcITTE 296 coin: machines along with three [Xeieubawete eer 115 boxes of cigars. Mustard, bu. .. : ool Swiss Chard, bu... .s. "4.975, George’s Sandwich Shop, 1018 Turnips, bu . 2.00 Joslyn Rd., was broken into yester- | Lettuce & Salad Greens \Celery Cabbage, bu 'Endive, bleached. bu Escarole, bleached. bu. 0 Lettuce, Romaine. bu. .......... i 1715 day and an undetermined amount .. 250 of money taken from two coin ma- “ 3.00 Chines. Family style chicken dinner and ‘ tbazgaar. Baldwin E.U.B. Church. Yo Qe 212 Baldwin. Nov. 21, 5 to 8. $1.50 | and 66. A Rummage sale. Central Metho- dist Church“ Friday 8 am. to 8 p.m. Saturday 8 am. to 1 p.m. —Adv. Rummage Sale: VFW Aux. 1370; 396 S. Saginaw St., 9 to 1, Sat. —Adv. fo Attend Rally | Parking lot entrance. | Rev. Edward Auchard Announces Sermons on World Situation | Rummage Sale: Friday, Nov. 15, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 16, The Senior High Westminster 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. 10 E. Pike St. Pon- Fellowship of Orchard Lake Com-|tioak Chapter, National Secretar- munity Church, Presbyterian, will !es Asson. —Adv. attend the Detroit Presbytery) par rummage sale. 2nd floor Youth Rally Sunday evening at Scarlet? Bicycle Shop, 20 E. Woodward Avenue Presbyterian pawrence St. Fri and Sat. Church, Detroit Rummage sale. First Presby. * * * =) Rev. Robert Lak { the terian Church on Saturday, Nov. The ey) Robert take 2 16th at 9:00 to 1:00. Second Presbyterian Church of Saginaw will be the speaker. Rummage sale. League of Catho- lic women, 281 South Parke St. Friday, Nov. 15th, 11 to 2. Satur- iday, Nov. 16th, 8 to 12. Rummage sale. Fri. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. 128 W. e. Rummage Sale, Sat. 10 till 5. 26 Rose Ct., Basement. Accompanying the group will be Mrs. W. T. Irons and Mrs. Ruth Jordan. The Rev. Edward D. Auchard, pastor, will present the Bible Study at 11:15 a.m. Wednesday during the Women's Association meeting. The annual praise ser- vice will be conducted following the luncheon. LEADERS MEET The steering committee for the; |. ance No 17 Amendment to the —Adv. TOWNSHIP OF WHITE LAKE County of Oakland State of Michigan © few’ years have seen the’ public cd peorie-eve Werterford Board |Over Arms Sh Will Study Rural | Zoning Changes © ford Township Board will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday, to study the | rural zoning changes, recommen-| kt & * The present laws were set up, approximately ten years ago, and due to the tremendous growth in the township, the need for re- visions have become increasingly apparent, according to supervisor Elmer Johnson. The changes recommended by the zoning board include revi- sions In building codes, types of buildings in specific areas, and , restrictions of construction work | in various zoning districts. Johnson said that the zoning board has spent considerable time compiling the amendments to the, zoning law, and that the board) will- study the recommendations thoroughly before taking action.’ A public hearing date will be; Rev. William Lovejoy will officiate. ing, Johnson said. PRIMER OF ROCKETRY TERMS—The past conscious, following latest developments in that field, but often encountering mysterious words A special] meeting of the Water- set following the Wednesday meet-, Since then, the French have, - and phrases of description. These diagrams may help the layman better understand what he reads and hears concerning rockets. become rocket- ipments to Tunisia Allied Quarrel Breaks Out By JOHN H. MARTIN London or Tunis. The INS Foreign Director |French have not refused to ship A new allied quarrel has erupted |arms, as suggested by Washington ington, ded by the Township Zoning Board. over arms shipments to Tunisia'and London, but they wanted an, sing tomorrow. amid repeated warnings that NATO over-all agreement made, presum- solidarity is gravely threatened. ably guaranteeing that the arms Despite angry French protests, would not get into next-door Algeria the United States and Britain have or be used to aid the Algerian reb-| decided to send token arms ship- e]s. y ments to Tunisia, the former . . French protectorate, whose presi- 4CT SWIFTLY dent Habib Bourguiba, has been’ What reportedly decided Wash- feuding with the French. \ington to act swiftly this week was * A inews that Egyptian President Inevitable French domestic poli--G4Mal Abdel Nasser is detaching tics. the old unsolved Algerian S°me of his shiny new Soviet-made question and the East-West con-/¢duipment and sending it to Tunisia flict all have contributed to this in a Propaganda display. new dispute among the three ma- jor western allies. With the Communists getting political footholds in Egy pt, Syria, Yemen and Algeria, the United States certainly doesn’t want them to get any sort of Bourguiba asked for arms last July, putting the United States and British allies of France on the spot in their dealing with the Old inside Tunisia, another new North African state. strategic territory bordering the Mediterranean. The French themselves do not lstalled in direct answer to Wash-, | a jobject to Tunisia obtaining arms, MICHAEL L. WOODY Prayers will be offered at 10) a.m. Monday in the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home for Michael | Lee Woody, infant son of Garland! and Winnifred Brinker Woody of, 424 Boyd St. Burial will follow in| Mt. Hope Cemetery. Surviving are his parents; and Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas land two brothers, Joseph and Skate, died Friday of pneumoni George McGarvey. MRS. ARTHUR TREEN Word has been received of the death of Mrs. Arthur (Ethel) Treen, 70, formerly of Pontiac. \She died yesterday at her home, Doolittle Sr.. 76. 821 Rivard St., Grosse Pointe. A noted breeder of blue Persian grandparents, Mrs. Grace Brinker eats, Mrs. Treen owned five of Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. Nor- ibut they want to do it in their own jway. French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau said the Anglo- American decision is contrary to the Atlantic solidarity concept. This is another way of saying the _ |French, who granted independence 4-to Tunisia, regard the Anglo- A 1941 Naval Academy graduate, American arms deal as meddling ‘Burnham was design manager of jn their special areas. the electric boat division of Gen-'_ eA ee eral Dynamics Corp. at Groton, SHOW DISCONTENT * bd * EMPORIA, Kan. «® — Dudley 50 have shown plainly their dis- Kansas Demo-(content with the “ United States lcrat_ who served three terms in 4nd British atomic weapons monop- died Thursday. He was oly within the North Atlantic treaty 4th alliance. , Congress, ‘elected to Congress from the ~junder the leadersmp of Mr. and __| meet at 8 p.m. Sunday and the The French and other nations al- dd Kuples Klub will meet at 8 p.m.) white Lake Township Rural Zoning Ordinance as amended, is hereby rezoned jas follows From Agricultural to Commercial If District the following described property: Part of the southeast quarter of sec- tion 13 T. 3 N. R. 8 E.. White Lake Township, Oakland County. Michigan, being more particuleriy— described as beginning at a point on the southerly right of way line of State Highway M located 808.18 feet north and 3764.38 _west of — ast corner of said section 13 an < 2 t Tun 10:30 a.m. on November 23. South 320.80 feet. thence 8 21-00 W. 100.00 feet, thence MN, 86-19-30" W. | The Rev. Mr. Auchard an-)3:9 16 feet to the center of the Public . ic ‘Highway, thence N. 486-53'40"" 5 a mous es ee es ih tabi! feet along the center of the Public High- ‘and the following Sunday will con- way to its intersection with the south- - : P | r hwa ‘cern the present world situation. |¢1!y tight of way line oe Sate Morey |MS®@ said right of way line being a curve Sunday's sermon will be ‘God having « radius of 5679.65 feet and | ; Whose center les 8 6-23"-30" KE. 5670.65 ‘and Man in the Space Age." On feet from this intersection, thence November 24. tl b 2 ill t northeasterly along said curved right of ember 24, the subject wi DC way line N 63-49°.30" E. 45.11 feet te as i {ts Intersection wit e easterly line 0! ox ue Russians: and Tomor \the public highway and thence N, 65-44’- jrew."’ The Westminster Choir will 50° £. 333.59 feet to the end of said curve, thence N, 87-25" EB. 384.83 feet to the petnt of beginning. Containing 5076 acres of land. : Pessed this th day of November 1057 lby the White Lake Township Board. The ordinance is hefeby ordered to take ef- fect 36 days after date of tion, : BERT A. Me |Mrs. J. O. Sarto.’ The final session 6f the In- quirers Class for adults will | young people's “ccmmn Com- municant Class will convene at Call Preferred Stock This week the Lapeer County ‘ownship Clerk Coop is calling $6000 worth of Witte ee a ee preferred AA_ stock, numbered from 309 to 794, which was issued in 1943 in lieu of cash savings . to be held at the Waterford Townshi earned by buying at cost. The rai 495 W. Huron 8t, November 20. jovem!| i }1937 at 8:00 p.m, To st amendments members left the money in the Co-|19 a fosekiy maces = s JAMES E. SEETERLIN, Waterford Township Clerk Nov. 16, ‘57 SPECIAL MEETING Waterford Township Special Meeting op to be used for operating capital ance. (until now, Two hundred members, will participate in the payment.! NOTICE Take potice that a public hearing will be held at 7:30 P. M. on Tuesday, November 19, 1957 by the City of Keego Harbor City Council regarding the vacation as a public street of that portion of Howard Avenue in said City described as follows: “All that part of 50 foot Howard Avenue lying South | from the intersection of the Southern | boundary of Wilbur Street to a line from | - a Westerly extension of the North line of Williams Street, lying adjacent to its | Eastern Boundary, in a North to South direction, lots 114 through 120, inclusive, Evergreen Villa Subdivision. | Persons interested may appear and be | heard. : Jail Man for Having Burglary Equipment William H. Mé@Neil, 37, of 42 Hillside Dr., was arraigned yester- day afternoon on a charge of pos- session of burglary tools. * * * which was set by Menicipal dvdge Cecil B. McCallum for Wednesday and was remanded to jail when unable to furnish $2,000 bend. McNeil was arrested Tuesday night on the grounds of the Truck- away Corp. 355 S. Sanford St. A traffic death occurs in the champions and one double grand District in 1913 and Was elected * * * EILEEN B. VAN HORN City Clerk He demanded éxamination | man Woody of Frankftn, N.C. Michael was born Tuesday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and died there yesterday. MRS. ELIZABETH J. TOLMAN FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Elizabeth J. Tol- man, 91, of 28081 West 12 Mile Rd., will be at 2 p.m. Monday champion. She was a city resident for many years before moving to Detroit in 1946 following the death of her| husband. Surviving are a son, John C. of Detroit; a daughter, Mrs. Sterling Jackson of Sharon, Pa., and a sis- ter. ; from the Spencer J. Heeney Fu-|. Service will be at. 10:20 am- Monday at the William R Hamil- ton Co., 3975 Cass Ave., Detroit. Burial will be in Oakview Ceme-| tery. ‘ Deaths Elsewhere NEW HAVEN, Conn. John M. Burnham, 40, designer of sub- marines, including the nuclear- neral Home, 23720 North Farming- ton Rd. Dr. Harold Vernon will of- ficiate and burial will be in East Farmington Cemetery. Mrs. Tol- man died yesterday iri a Pontiac hospital, A resident of Farmington for 70 years, Mrs. Tolman is survived by a son, James R. Tolman of Farmington; three grandsons, Chester of Davison, James E, of Garden City and Warren of Farm- United States about every 16 min- * c ployes had previously authorized i ington; six great-grandchildren|powered Nautilus, Seawolf and j Democratic Iman from Kansas in 1925, : son ate! committee-| They want a disttibution of tac- ‘tical atomic weapons to all mem-/| <« « & ‘hers capable of using them and a! - CHICAGO W— Dr. R. Richard eeaier sharing of atomic informa-| national Wohl, 36, economic historian and)" — ; associate’ professor of social sci-| Rumblings inside NATO. includ-| ences at the University of Chicago ing the Algerian and now the. died Friday. He had been working Tunisian affairs, once more reveal | on a history of Kansas City, Mo., the great headaches involved al- as part of a series of studies of Ways in any alliance. The more na- adult life. itions in an alliance the more x .® * chancé of disagreements, | i LOS ANGELES (®—A heart at- tack has claimed playwright Sam-_ * i uel R, Golding at 68. During the, Woman Gets Life Term 1920's, Golding wrote the Broad- DETROIT uw — Mrs. Constance “Open House,’ and ‘Divorce a la wheeldon Clark, 30, was sentenced Carte" In recent years he was 4 Friday to life imprisonment in the motion picture, and television Wri- Detroit House of Correction follow- ter. : -ling her conviction of first degree Funeral services for Golding,/murder of her three small chil- who died Thursday, will be con-/dren. She was accused of smother- ducted. Monday, ing and drowning the children, City of Keego Harbor OWN YOUR OWN HOME... With NO MONEY DOWN! 1F YOU OWN A LOT, you can own the new Ranchaire withi ’ NO MONEY DOWN. See the beautiful 3-bedroom model home now on display at 3390 South Rochester Road, just 2 blocks south of Auburn Road (M-59), Learn how easy you may build this top quality home on your own lot and save hundreds of dollars . . See the outstanding features, which make this home the buy of ‘57. EASYBUILT HOMES. 3390 South Rochester Road OL 1-0002 _ Just South of Auburn Road. * OL 6-1226 i ene é pt ae a ey > SMITH-CRAWFORD, Inc. |. 4