ees aoa opens ar. Careful Study - before making a final de- cision as to location of aj ~ ing is completely outgrown. The Weather Wednesday: Occasional Rain Details page two 113th YEAR ——-— Mteitiel * * ~ PONTIAC, ‘MICHIGAN, THE. PONTIAC PRE TU ESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1954. —28 PAGES + ane be as ts . / HUKE OVER PAGES ABBOCIATED PREse UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REWS SERVICE = Talks on Germany ‘Off to Good Start’. Milo Cross Asks on Courthouse Says Need Is Great but | Proposed Site Wil] Hurt | Downtown Business Milo J. Cross, president of | the Pontiac State Bank, today urged careful study new courthouse for Oak- land County. The Board of Supervisors has proposed construction | of a new courthouse on | property the county owns between West Boulevard and Telegraph Road. This larid is a part of the} county’s building center on | which the County Conta- gious Hospital, Nurses’ Home, Children's Home, County Infirmary and other buildings stand. Financing of a new courthouse on this site will be a special issue on the November ballot. The site already has been annexed to the City of Pontiac at the supervisors’ request. "There can be no question of the need for a new courthouse,” said Cross in an interview with the Pontiac Press. ‘The present build- Police Force Boasts Double Feature ee ee oe Police force. their fellow officers, both Fred- promoted to desk sergeants at the — face an uphill fight in fendin but they said the Wisconsin Ck “And wha. will provide transpor- the general public who have to do business at the court- tional city-owned lots, so {Don't Leave, Gls! areis}..SEOUL, Me Thouannds of South Korean organized laborers and dis~ | staged a sitdown strike in front of ,’ a | South Koreans Shout war veterans today staged demonstrations against the with- drawal of U.S. troops from Korea. Some 20 crippled veterans the American embassy while an- other 100 were shouting anti-with- drawal slogans at the gate of the foreign correspondents billets. | Veterans leaders said 50,000 Ko-| rean war veterans joined 200,000 labor unionists demonstrating in major South Korea cities today against the redeployment a U.S troops. A Husband -Outcooks. Wife in Cookie Baking Contest LUDINGTON (UP) — Now they know who wears the apron at the | = _ |home ef Mr. and Mrs. ae toe | ton. Appleton won first prize in al cookie baking contest at the Pere Marquette Grange last night. His wife was an also ran in the ued on Page 2, Col. 4) ‘contest. U. S. and Canada to Build Radar Fence WASHINGTON (UP) — Concern over the development of two Russian jet bomber types helped prompt a decision by the United States and ees to erect a radar fence as far into the Arctic as “Our security requires ut, announcing yesterday that a distant early warning (DEW) line will be built across “the most northerly prac- ticable part of North America.” The two Russian bombers, which first appeared over } Moscow several months ago, have altered a number of in the Arctic ” “joint statement said in defense calculations. Out-+— among them is the of time oe ee areas might have gy for attack after the first warning. When scientists and airmen were considering a DEW line more cas- ually than they are now, they thought in terms of six hours warn- ing to major cities in the northern United States, That was when Rus- sia’s bomber force could be ex- pected fo mount 300-mile an hour copies of the American B2 or —-? ee ee eT ae ow eee? ee eS in a North "American radar de- fense system which has gradually been pushed outward from most likely target areas. Detailed plan- ning for its construction-across the frigid high north will start at once. Pinetree, the first line, incorpor- ates -radar control units to direct LOOK ALIKES—-That sums up the philosophy of | together, Fred and Ted Goines, both members of the Pontiac | years ago and thats me way” “tr'tt -atways be Better knows as _the “We beth _— from high school ‘liams,. said McCarthy would have 'Laborites OK parts of Canada, is the mid- Canada line which will be fi- nanced and operated entirely by } the-Canadian-government, | The DEW line will be the next step. At the same. time, the tion nets are being extended sea- ward in all directions. defenses are provided by and huge aircraft packed with early ‘warning radar. Be SE nn nm teen cee ‘twins’ by and Ted were same time 4ast | married aid hav | left. | older. McCarthy Seems’ to Face my Officials | Uphill Struggle in Senat © rm WASHINGTON (# — Sen. McCarthy appeared today to } g off a vote of censure when | the Senate meets Nov. 8 to weigh his conduct. Some of his associates privately conceded as much, Republican will fight vigor- | ously and that the picture may change before the Senate} returns nearly six weeks hence. Thrown into. the balance _yesterday was the unani- mous report by three Re- publican and three Demo- cratic senators recommend- that their coll y was silent on the course he will pursue, and his chief attorney, Edward Bennett Wil- no comment at this time on the committee's report, based on nine days of public hearings. The Chicago Tribune, however, | quoted MeCarthy as- saying that if the Senate upholds the ac- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Arming of Bonn Attlee Resolution Wins ' “By Slim Margin Over Bevan Opposition SCARBOROUGH, England (INS) Former British Prime Minister Clement Attlee’s resolution. favor- was aproved by a-narrow margin today at the Labor Party's annual conference. The resolution, bitterly opposed by the left-wing faction of Aneurin Bevan, won by a majority of only 248,000 votes, , The 1,279 delegates attending represent 6,983,822 votes, . The victory for the Attlee forces came shortly after forrher Chan- cellor of the Exchequer Hugh Gait- skell defeated Bevan tor party treasurer. Gaitskell's margin over Bevan, who thus wag left without 2 seat on the policy-making national execu- tive commitee, and over a third candjdate, was better than two to one. His victory means the Labor Party now formally regards Gait- skell as its future leader and po- tential successor to Attlee. joined the forre at the double or nothing.” How can —yeu-tell? of+->ringing the two top Army officials ing West German rearmament | + + Pentiag Press Pheote same time 13 The twins, 40 years-old, are | e children. That's Fred on the Well, he's 17 minutes | Confer With Ike Stevens and Ridgway Visit Denver Vacation Headquarters ‘ML Re-elects Officers, Then Heads for Home’ ‘of the American Federation ‘of Labor began streaming | /home today from their Los | Angeles convention, Convention Ends After Condemning GOP and Planning Expansion LOS ANGELES (INS) — More than 700 top officials where | they re-elected all their offi- | cers, condemned the GOP | administration and planned | | huge-expansion The eight-day parley came to a close yesterday after | George Meany was chosen | without opposition to his thitd term as general presi- | dent of the ‘member organization. The 73rd annual meeting. se lected attended the event; a play starring Helen Hayes Seattle, Wash., for its 1956 cond ing. Chicago already had be ‘as the 1955 convention a The delegates adopted a long | list of resolutions, headed by one declaring America's economy is | in a recession and urging the | federal government : ‘envourage new activit The _ resolution a that Secre- | tary of Labor James Mitchell had present economic situation, Mitchell addressed the conven- | tien last Monday and accused the DE NVER n—President Eisen- | hower arranged a conference today accusing Mitchell of poor manners while the guest of the federation, with Se¢retary of the Army Stevens and General Matthew B, Ridgway, Army ¢ st --+- Murray , assistant presi | dential press secretary, told news- imen there wee Ne /mergency to Eisenhower's vacation headquar- ters but declined to give any — for the conference. Anather caller on the President's list today was Dr. Arthur F. Burns, chairman of his Council of Economic Advisers in Washington. Burns customarily reports to Ei- senhower every Monday morning. But they have not met in more than five weeks There were reporis here, mean- while, that the President pians to get away this weekend for another four or five-day stay at a Reekyt- Mountain trout fishing camp he has vjsited twice since his vaca- tion began. The camp is located at the secluded ranch of two of E'sen- hower's old friends, Akset Niet. sen and Carl Norgren, at Fraser, Cole., 70 miles northwest of Den- ver, Since his last visit fo Fraser, the area has had its first snow storm of the year, capping in white the nearby mountains rising to nearly 14,000 feet, The elevation at Fraser itself is more than 9,000 feet Eisenhower's headquarters here in Denver—announced today that he and Secretary of Agriculture Benson have requested the nation's railroads to reduce rates on hay shipments into states hit by the | drought, «Benson réported to the President here yesterday on drought condi- tions in 700 counties in 15 states. Last year, in response to-@ simi- lar appeal by the government, the railroads reduced freight rates (Continued on wed on Page 2 2, Col. 3) Oct. 4 Is Regis Registration Deadline in County The Pofitiae City Clerk's Office sons. wishing to register for the Nov. 2 general election. The last day to register in clerk's offices in all Oakland County gov- 11944 has seen "| postwar period.” Mitchell told the convention that “the mildest con- traction we have ever had in any actually to combat what he catted the problem now facing America addressed the convention last Friday and was warmly despite the un deriying hostilffy, after he prom- Express Drops Into River From_ Bridge Weakened by Flood BOMBAY, India @®—An express passenger train plunged into the icy waters of a flootied river 50 miles east of Hyderabad early to- | cay sod johes $0 papionn use| killed or given up for lost, -—' Officials said it was one of wérst disasters in the wor = just after midnight when a bridge near the weakend by a flood, collapsed be- neath the weight of the train. 10, 200,000- known smile, ‘L_of being unfair to the ad-| Vishinsky Plots: | busily today on his general policy little station of Aler, |“ T Huntington Hartford Theater tast ‘Divers Removi From Sunken HAKODATE, Japan U—Japanese divers today began strongly minimized the ‘nation’s removing the first of hundreds of bodies in the sunken}. hull of the ferry Toya Maru which capsized Sunday in * escorts darkeyed. Jodine Rio to the opening® of the AP Wirephete AT THEATER OPENING—Pianist Liberace, displaying his well. night. Many other celebrities ving Bodies Ferrys Hull typhoon with the loss of 1,172 lives. ee + Policy Speech - U.N. Awaits Red Vie on tke’s Plan to Pool Atoms for Peace UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. @ — Russia's Andrei Vishinaky worked speech to the U.N. Gefieral Assem- bly as delegates anxiously awaited Soviet reaction to the Eisenhower- Dulles atoms-for-peace proposals. The fiery Soviet delegate passed out word he was not to be dis- turbed, He was expected to take the floot within the next few days. A” hint of -the line he . might take was given Saturday in the publication of rte secret notes the U Sintes and Russia exchanged = concerning In the exchange Russia refused to go along with the U.S. plan un- less it tied in a declaration out- lawing atomic Weapons Secretary , of State Dulles rejected the Soviet | condition. labeling it a device to disarm the free nations while Rus- sia continued to arm. Another hint of Vishinsky's ex- petted strategy was given just before Dulles laid his four-point atomic proposal before the Assem- bly last Thursday. Russia demand- ed that the U.N, Security Council in which she has veto power—have authority over any international National rural police es-. timated the overall typhoon Geath toll at 1,508, most o a «1 died in. northern, a vers reported 43 rail cars tore} longs “from their moorings on the | boats’ deck whet it crushing bulkheads, equipment and hurman beings in Japan's worst maritime disaster Onty “352 bodies have been re- covered, The dapan National Railways listed 173 survivors out of 1,341 passengers and ctew, The tides still were washing in bodies As a chill drizzle soaked the seene, a U.S. Air Force helicopter dipped low over the wreckage and dropped white flowers into the oily, | debris-strewn bay in a salute to the dead, Hundreds more died in wide. spread ‘marine accidents, land. slides and other mishaps from northern dapan with winds of 100 Miles an hour. Four other ferries also went down with the lows of more than 260 lives, The Americans who-died on the; Toya. Mary were mainly service-| men—most from the 99th Field Artillery Battalion — and their de- pendents,. Several missionaries aleo were aboard, including one who survived. Mother of 19 Kids Finds Little to Do;-She Says ARGONNE, Wis, INS) — Mrs. Clara Samz, 37, an Argonne farm wife, who gave birth-te her 19th child, said having a big family “is easier than you'd think.” She explained: ‘1 don't have much to do. We have a regular routine of performing alj_. tasks. The children take care of each Lather, everyone does his a and atomic agency. ‘Bikes Dispute Way © GRAND HAVEN (UP) — The capsized, | | Liberace, Hollywood Date! Bu Saar Issue. - Stumbling Block} _Chairman €den Plans Fast Action on Freeing ~ and Rearming Bonn LONDON # — The nine- power conference on Gere |}mMan rearmament got off to what delegates termed “a good start” at a 90-minute session this morning. “It started very well but it is too early yet to predict pany result,” Belgian For- feign Minister Paul-Henri | Spaak told newsmen as the nine foreign ministers and their aides left the music room of stately Lancaster House for the luncheon re- | C@SS. Echoing Spaak, Canadian For- eign Secretary Lester Pearson said the talks ‘are off to a very- good start.” British Foreign Secretary An- ‘theny Eden was elected chair- man of the pariey, attended by U.S. Beeretary of State Dulles, Bpaak, Pearson, French Pre- mier Mendes-France, Weat Ger- tan Chancellor Kongad. Aden- aver, Gaetano Martino of Maly, dohan Beyens of the Nether- sr lasek and — Joseph Bech Promising new trouble for them i was a last minute French move to Three divers recovered the bodies of 20-Japanese ON. sing the_treubleseme—Saar—tasue ministration, Meany shot back by | the floor-of Hakodate harbor, They located the bodies | into the talks on West German of about 40 of the 60 Americans who perished. sovereignty and rearmament, Immediately after his as chairman, Eden | streamlined timetable | win agreement within freeing West Germany | oee upation and enlisting her troops | in the defense of West Europe. Eden suggested the powers — France, Britain and the United States — draw up a pia for returning sovereignty to the Bonn republic. The full nine-coun- (ry conference, meanwhile, would deal with rearmament Biden set mid Nov ember—with- in 50 days — as a target for complete and final agreement, | exeept for the necessary partia- mentary ratifications. The current conference is e@x- pected to last four to 10 days. The | British foreign secretary proposed that it try to reach only general agreement, and that experts then lhe instructed to work out details for approval by q second nine-pow- er. parley to be held within a month the nine ministers would report jointly to a special meeting of the NATO council to be held not later than. mid-November. | ing other areas will also be re- ported in later articles in this bi- weekly series, States in which partial returns have been tabulated for this re- In Today's Press In all of these states, initial Te- turns indicate that from 7 per cent to 11 per cent of those who voted for Republican congressional can- |didates in 1962 would Democratic nominee if { é Following thie second meeting, ~ z Me | Congregational Church elected of | Beck morrow Risberg. Bivd Thursday sewage from Birmingham and | morial of take lene Sutfin, faith chairman. kd Pe ters. action chairman fellowship chairman * A = Family members of the YMCA are being offered a course in con- tract bridge The nine . course will be held from 1.30 to $15 pm. on Thursdays starting Oct. 7 . Reastone will cover bidding, scoring and tactics, Paul Heins will be the instructor, Either advanced players or be- ginners dre welcome and may en- roll at the Y. A fee will be charged non-members for all . . . A complimentary tea guild members is being sponsored by St Peter's Guild at St James Episcopal Church at 2:30 p.m. to- Mrs . * * Mrs. Resa Bisherg Graveside service for Mrs, Resa 7. of 1723) Maryhand will be held at 1.9% pin at White Chapel Me- Cemetery, with affange- ments by thé Maniey Bailey Fu neral Home Mre Eisberg died yesterday at Bloomington ty is survived by four daugh Mrs) kugene Hesz, of Bir She Ga.. Mrs. Rolf Elsberg. of and Mrs. Lucius Gilman, Hopatcong, N. J: two sracl delay, a separate $9.000 bid of the | promers: and one sister Belden-Stark Co. of Detroit: was to be used The $130,000 station to ‘be “trilt | ne fof “Albert J at BAe Rd. and Bowers St |‘ will serve the industrial and resi- |! dential areas on the city's east side, as well as most of the busi ness section. - Snarie¢ Sunday morning traffic on Lincoln during church _ hours ghould be relieved by next Sunday, when at Jeast the center strip in that portion of West Maple avenue new being repaved and widened is opened up, City Engineer LR Gare said yesterday . director of youth activities ‘Jocal Y, who will serve as between the YMCA and Hi.Y. President James Reeder will officer and club A=vepresentative of Larro Re- search will bring Kiwanis Club Mrs Harbor blossom of Bloomfield Hills Marjorie Ann Hotchkiss, and Mrs Alma June MecFartand, both of ‘4 Pontiac, two brothers, Mrs. Winona Robi .|sen, Mrs. Ann Rolison, and Melvin Charbeneau Mrs. Mildred Lake Detroit Early Poll Showing Some Gain for Dems __Albert John Charbeneau Funeral arrangements are pend- Charbeneau. 52, f 6 Valley Row, Bloomfield Hills fis body is.at the Manle¢ Bailey Funeral Home Mr. Charbeneat ai cabinet maker at Cranbrook School, died yesterday at Henty Ford Hospital. Detroit Besides his widow Virginia, he is survived by five daughters, Mrs. Betty Peacock of Qochester Leena Manigold MW Keego Mrs Donna Mae Bean Mrs also three sisters, and all of Mt Cherry and Frank Charbeneau, Clemens of Union of (Continued From Page One) ‘lan important double significance. They would tend to indicate a) “That, right. now. the Demo- |] cratic Congressmen from the states represented -—— four of whom won in 3982 by argineof_;—— less than 3 per cent of the total vote—appear likely to be re- elected by bigger margins: and (2) That such a trend, if ex tended to other areas around the nation, would give the Demo- crats control of the House of Representatives by at least 30 seats At this point, it is ‘impdssible to ascertain whether the attitude of rural voters toward the Adminis- tration’s farm program has been the dominant factor influencing the shift in voter sentiment thus far members up to date on agricul-| noted. If so, the total effect on tural developments and related | the national picture would be neg problems in Oakland _County when | ligible. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Increasin cleadiness Law ~ fetlowed by occasions rete Showers pe terning Wednesday wight. tentght ae Meh Wednesday 1-14. Light vert. winds tonight becoming southerty Wiles Wednesda Witting te worth. ik tom: Wind velocity 7-10 mph Bast ‘Tuesday at ¢ pm a at 6 am pe Teseter 8: Pe rises 9 et 9:08 am s* Dewntewn Tempersteres 2 te m. ; 71 ee 7 ee ip. ™ ™“ * fe Stee ee reese ee owns Two weeks from today, this col- umn will report further on the results of the nationwide Babson- poll, as additional thousands of ballots are recorded Meanwhile, Pontiac Press réad- ers who have not yet participated in the Babsonpol] are urged ‘to fill in and retarn the Babsonpoll ballot printed on page 15. If you have already filled out a Babsonpoll bal- lot. please do not fill out another one (Copyright 194—Babson's Wash- ington Service) — AGATE Detroiter er Pleads Guilty, Pays $10 Fine, Costs BIRMINGHAM — Arthur A. Eth- ridge, ®. guilty to a charge of simple lar- ceny yesterday when he appeared before Justicesdehn J. Gafill, and and Tomt weeks David WH Thern-+ berry will report on the Anglican A estree-get testy 2% Resides a _B-8.—degree trom the’ of Detroit pleaded é | (at | a DR. GLENN CUNNINGHAM Athlete to Talk in Birmingham — Former Track Champion Will Speak Tomorrow at First Baptist Church BIRMINGHAM The famed American track star of the early thirties, Dr. Glenn Cunningham, has included Birmingham on his liunerary while on a speaking tour, and will talk at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the First Baptist Church Open to the public, his speaking j engagement here is being spon- sored by the lecal Counei)—of Churches ‘ —Punninghan spoke at Birming- ham High School, this afternoon | ad wilt address another 56,000 students in the area in the next twe weeks Cunningham. whose legs were so that he almost didn't walk again. climthaxed his college career at Kansas University by winning the Big Sit charppionship mile with a time of 4 minutes and 14.3 seconds ' Following Cunningham's recent appearance at Detroit's Cooley High Sehe@ol the principal wrote. “As principal of this school for nearly 2% years, | witnessed the greatest audience reception xiven to any speaker in our history.” years old University of K 5 holds an M.A from the University of Iowa and a PhD. from New York University. He is nationally known in the field of physic al edu- cation A McCarthy Seen in Uphill Struggle (Continued From Page One) cusations against bim = it will have taken a long stride toward “abdication of its constitutional right, te investigate —— in the executive “I do not care whether I am eensured or not.” the Tribune quoted him, “but I will fight agaMst establishing a precedent which will curb investigative power and assist any administration in power to eover up its misdeeds.” McCarthy. under treatment. for a sinus ailment, was reported in seclusion by Williams and in too much discomfort to do much plan ning now to meet the censure move , One McCarthy associate, de. clining to be quoted by name ~ said he suspects that as of now MeCarthy might “lose” the votes of as many as 15 of the Sen | _ate's 48 Republican members on a censure test, and that he doubts that many Democrats would rally te McCarthy's cause. He said the story may be dif- November, , however, after the congressional clections and after McCarthy has entered his defense. Williams said yesterday that de- fense will be “lengthy and vigor- ous.” And in London the U. S. Senate committee's recommendation that Sen, McCarthy be censured played second fiddle in European papers teday to the nine-power conference on Germany ; It received its biggest displays in Britain, Denmark and Holland. Elsewhere, papers cither printed the story on back pages or ignored it altogether British papers were the only ones to comment editorially this morning. . Stevens, Ridgway Conferring With Ike (Continued From Page One) from drought this year is almost. double the 1953 total, Benson told the President. but he added that damage this year is less intense generally than last year. Benson joined the President yes- terday at the chief execitive's beef stew luncheon at Cherry Country Club for about 55 guests. seriously burned when he was eighty Hits | Pt They included golfing companions, paid a $10 fine_plus $3_costs. | Dew ~ eo similar charge against Albert | newsmen who have been covering | Weeks, 42, alsd of Detroit, was dis- | 5; i ¥ TIF. PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1954 GOP Is Behind Jin House Race’ Nixon Forecasts Party Can Win Next Election With Hard Work WASHINGTON (INS) Vice President Nixon is informing party leaders that Republicans today are behind in the race to win the-next House but will retain control of ert Senate in the November elec- Retail from a campaign tour of the-Midwest, the vice president reported to GOP headquarters that an aggressive party organization across the nation can win the House easily and increase its con- trol of the Senate. The sumber one GOP prob- lem in this campaign, Nixon said, is to conyince the voters they must elect a Republican congress to carry out President Kisenhower’s program, He ad- ded the party must close its ranks* against internal division _and get out the Eisenhower vote, ‘The vice president predicted the GOP will gain Senate seats: from the Democrats in Ohio: Illinois, lowa and Colorado. He also de- fied some forecasts by declaring inspired Republican efforts can also bring GOP Senate victories in New Jérsey, Kentucky and Minnesota Nixon reported GOP chances for Senate victories in Montana and Wyoming as even and predicted a dark horse Republican winner in New Mexies where GOP-Gev- jerome Edwin L. Mechem is run- deren. former Democratic secre- tary of agriculture. Nixen told party § chieftains that President Eisenhower's pop wlarity is as great today as it was and may even be greater than when he wen a landslide victery im the 1952 presidential election, To win this year, Nixon reported, the GOP must “equate’’ the popu- larity of the party, with that of Ike. If they do it, he added, the Republicang will win next Novem- ber, And he said there is time left to achieve this goal. — In effect, Nixon declared, the that Ike and the Republican can- didates for the Senate and House are one team — that if the voter likes Ike, he must support the GOP candidate; and if he doesn't like Ike, he should vote for the Democratic candidate. Michigan Folks Enjoy Healthiest Year in History LANSING (UP) — Michigan's 6.852.000 citizens are enjoying their healthiest year in history and are reproducing at a rate of 15,000 a month, the State Health Depart- ment reported today. Dr. F. 8. Leeder, director of disease control, said sickness rates during the 194 “disease” year were at an all-time low while pop- ulation continues to ‘‘go up like crazy.” Leeder predicted the 1955-56 “disease” year will get under way with a “revival of terrific colds” in October. Leeder said if Michigan con- tinues to gain 15.000" babies a month, the state births will reach a Oe a ae aes Milo Cross Favors — Downtown Building |°- (Continued From Page One) that. the parking’ probleni—will be t ferent on the actual showdown in| me’ “I would faver building a new property -nerthor—as-much of it as was required. “This would keep the courthouse downtown, in the form of a mod- ern office. building, leave ample parking room adjacent to it, and still free the present site at Sag- inaw and Huron for commercial uses = |Nixon’s Daughter Says Dad Should Be in Films ..-, WASHINGTON @ — When Vice fil; ia Mass., are seeking an unknown Maniac Sought in Double Death Officials Believe Child Deranged Person SPRINGFIELD, Mass. #—Police today began questioning present and former employes of Bernard Goldberg in the hope of turning up a clue in the brutal slaying of Goldberg's young son and his 14+ year-old babysitter. cently discharged mental patients because of the maniacal manner in which 4year-old Stephen Ross Goldberg and Lynn Ann Smith, a neighbor, were stabbed some 0 times each“in the Goldberg home Saturday night. Goldberg, operator of a whole. sale meat concern, his wife and " Medical Examiner W. A. R. Cha- pin said “decent peaple today are bedeviled by folks who are let out He said ‘‘everyone connected with this case is convinced -the slayings were the work. of some- body mentally unbalanced.” Dist. Atty. Stephen A. Moyna- han urged parents not to become “panic stricken over the safety of their own children,” but adVised them to “make sure all doors are locked and be very cautious as to the manner in which you answer doorbelis."’ City Tax Collection Reaches 94 Per Cent City Treasurer Murray M. Ash- baugh today reported that M per cent of city and school taxes have been collected, which, he added “is almost as good as last year's Ashbaugh said unpaid taxes may be paid until March 1. when un- collected bills are turned over to Oaktand County as delinquent Although taxpayers have until March 1 to pay, a penalty of one per cent a month will be added, a from the Sept. 18 due date; until time of payment. ners al aoe Man Denies . Check Charge Here Deals Moder, 31, of 615 W. 1i Mile Rd., Royal Oak, ayester- day pleaded innocent to a bad check charge and was freed on $2,500 bond by Circuit. Judge H Russel Holland. Trial will be held during the next term of court. Madary is accused of passing a forged check for $87.20 on Aug. 4 against a Berkley bank. a Nineteen Admit Loitering Count Seven Others Plead Not Guilty Following Police Vice Raid Here Nineteen persons, arrested early Sunday during a vice raid at 310 W, Wilson Ave., pleaded guilty to |e street Runaway Truck. {Interrupts TV for Area Family The Martie Stately tasnlly af 1963 KILLER SOUGHT IN DOUBLE SLAYING—Police in Springfield, | four-year-old Stephen Goldberg and his baby sitter, Lynn Ann Smith, 14 Police -say the pair were stabbed at least 62 times. + and Sitter. Stabbed by |< Police also were checking re-| ot mental hospitals before they are || j party must convince the electorate | ready.” ; '|Named by Cleary assailant who stabbed t6 ‘death a Ze 5° 2 i & g 2 Pontiac Deaths Mrs. John J. Davies Funeral for Mrs. John J, (Ethel May) Davies, 61, of 20 N. Johnson Ave. will be held at noéij*Wednes- day from All Saints Episcopal Chureh with the Rev. C. George Widdifield officiating. In lieu of flowers, the family re- quests that donations be made to the St. Peters Home for Boys. Con- tributions may: be sent in care of All Saints Episcopal Church, Pon- | ( tiac. Mrs. Davies died Mogday in St. Mercy Hospitat after an ilt- | 72 =2 F Ave. Fee ae Ht = af ness of two weeks, The body is at the SparksiGrit-} on McKeighan Henry William Haas Henry William Haas, 80, of 5591 Elizabeth Lake Rd. died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a brief illness. : Born Jan. 2, 1874, in Buffalo, N. Y., he was the sop of John E. and Josephine Feidence Haas. He was married in Chicago in 1899. Coming to Pontiac two months ago, he was a member of St. Ann's Catholic Church. and the Holy Name Society in Buffalo. Besides his widow, he is survived by two sons, LeRoy C. of Chippe- wa Falls, Wis. and Clarence of Stanley, Wis.; four daughters, Mrs. Irene Eagan of Chicago, Mrs. Henri Nesvacil, and Mrs. Shirley Frye of White Fish, Montana, and Mrs. June Auchter of Pontiac. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Anna Tourner of Buffalo, Maugu- rite and Louise Haas of Buffalo, 12] grandchildren and 10 great-grand- children Mr. Haas will be taken to the Funeral Home in Boyd, Wis., tonighf for services and bur- ial Saturday. Arrangements are by the Pursley Funeral Home Mrs. Frank Shaw Mrs. Frank (Zelda ‘L.) Shaw, 70, of 252 E. Rundell St. died last night at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Mrs. Shaw had been ill 12 years Born in Dakota City, lowa, May 30, 1884, she was the daughter of Cecilian and Minnie Derby and was married in Dakota City in 1900. Mrs. Shaw came to Pontiac in 1927 and was a member of the United Missionary Church. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs, Cariton Kendall with whom she made her home; a son, Clar- ence of Pontiac, five grandchildren and one great-grandchild. The funeral will be held Thurs- Data Before Trial a preliminary examination of for- bling conspiracy charges. inquiry in 1946, are not |who remain out of an original 17. had come from tion was needed. hearing next Monday. arraignment. for Oct. 20. Man Awaits Sentencing sentence Oct. 4. companions 'Fetndale Aug. 21 and took $86. address, and . Riley, 28, of 154 Perkins Prosecutor in Macomb Says He Needs More MOUNT CLEMENS (INS)—Ma- comb County Prosecutor Fred Nicholson yesterday. petitioned for |- mer Flint Mayor William H. Mc- Keighan on eight-year-old gam- Nicholson said he and his staff, which had no part in the original acquainted with the personalities and testi- mony of the 10 available witnesses He said his only knowledge so far “searching records and files” and that more informa- The petition -will come up for McKeighan. a former state Re- publican leader, eluded prosecu- tion by remaining in Florida un- til last August, when he returned to Michigan and stood mute at his A plea of innocent was entered for him and trial set Robert Hayes, 22, of Chicago, yesterday pleaded guilty to robbery armed and was ordered returned to Oakland County Jail by Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland pending Hayes admitted that he and two assaulted a man in Roberts’In- In- is Show Suspicion. State That Attorney Was Deep in Debt and Might Be Involved — MIAMI, Fila, #® — James T. Roberts, 43-year-old Baltimore at- torney en route to Miami to face trial for the murder of his T-yegr- eld daughter, apparently will get -* cold reception from his wife's perents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ro- senberg. Roberts contends that his daugh- -| ter was the victim of a sex fiend; ¢ he has discounted the theory—held —- by some police officers—that the child was kidnaped and that ran- crime. >His wife, Mrs, Shirley Roberts, expressed belief yesterday in her that she will “stand by him.”’ Mrs, Roberts called ber par- ents to tell them that she planned to fly to Miami teday with her 3-year-old daughter Betty, that the crime was committed for ransom, Mrs. Rosenberg pointed out that Roberts is known to have Tigers Transler 3 Farm Pitchers DETROIT w—The Detroit Tigers announced today they were trans- ferring three farm pitchers, two of them from Michigan, to Tiger contracts for 1955. : At the same time it aia con- tracts of three other minor leaguers were being assigned to Duane (Duke) Maas. 24, of Utica, and Bill Froats. 23, of Yonkers, N. Y., only lefthander among the three. - Assigned to Buffalo are 1st-base- man Keith Little, outfielder Carl Linhart and pitcher Milo Johnson. Seek Alcoholic Care LANSING (UP) — Special re- for aid in establishing al- cohol. rehabilitation programs in Grand Rapids and Jackson will be considered at the State Board lerap py meeting in Grand day. at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon George Murphy of her church of- ficiating. Burial will follow in East Lawn Cemetery at Lake Orion. LANSING (UP)—Kari R. Schnei- der, Tecumseh, today was named by Secretary of State Owen J. Cleary as manager of the new Department of State branch of- fice in Tecumseh. sleeve lengths 31-37). STRADIVARI knows your problem of being properly fitted in a sport shirt .. . knows, too, that you would like to choose from additional colors as well as the usual blues, tans, and greys. If you have a 35-inch sleeve length, STRADIVARI offers you the magnificent, washable STRAD-O-GAB Sport Shirt in your collar size, with extra body length, and your - black, pink, orchid, orange, coral, spice, char- coal, etc., ete.). Yea, your choice of 36 COLORS in @ 35-inch sleeve lenath. And, if you have a 36 or 37 aleeve length, dont be dicheertened. There are many colors for you, too! ($10, “HUB CLOTHIERS | ‘8-20 NO; SAGINAW ST. ~~~ ‘I .. eae No room daze fr dildrn under! This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year at Statler | foom. | family—the one-person rate %& If one or more children under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children uider 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the %& If one or more children under 14 occupy a room without @ parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a applies for the second room. Bring the family for weekend of tun ot the Detro® Statter! in 36 COLORS (red, * Reliable boby sitters + & basket of fresh trull in @very room occupied by children * Redie in every room © High cheirs end cribs |som was the motive behind the - husband's innocence and pledged . Grandparents discounted theories | eeetie NV anes irom tus Pomme feast Sullding Cormse ¥ Cuvecn “yams Pr. E anor" setersiag Menteur OFT het ter Entered at Post Office. Pontiac. Mich. as-second class Miétier MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press entitled exclust te the use tor republication of ail local news ‘wrimtea this news- Paper, as as all AP news dispatches ™ veer All mai) eubh Foe ° . NE a) _ eV ~ a ee, * a Voice of the People Pontiac Press Commended for Eairorial Regarding Utah Indian Termination Bill (earns will be condensed when secee would go on to further heights and turn thelr tithes and offerings ~ hE space, Pull porme, we would all be happier inte the chuck the way they wil nen bo puvitched tf the wrher es Ralph T. Keeling Should, they wouldn't need to coquesta, unless the te erties! rT) 4 held their church up before the world @ “house of merchan- . hereafter or censured by the Unit- David Lawrence Says; i Watkins Report Introduces Real Totalitarian: Concept WASHINGTON — Oliver Wendell the United Holmes—the great liberal who was to date. assoclite fistice Of the Supreme Court of the United States—once wrote that ‘freedom of speech is freedom for the thought we hate.’ ~ » The Senate committee of six a totalitarian concept which pro- Poses that a senator be punished ed Stated Senate not for what he Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER Big advertiser sued an aviator for wasting a sky-writing blurb the same day hurricane Edna blew in, —_—_— only phrase in the Constitution plastering walls with ear-wax and which permits either house of Con- ambushing a file-index. gress to punish its members a Up to now, it has been property Here's the prescription in applied only to fist fights on the parliamentary patois, “conduct floor of the Senate between sena- unbeseeming a senator or a gen- tors. tleman, wrecker of tradition and Never before has that phrase. rrying « bundle by string.” been construed to ytoln “ . sila , guage used by a member of Con- abi ner grees, tat now 1 OpeNs Up & wile mo ipattetens te lagranhons ae Disraeli said tradition was an embalmed precedent. It’s a skel- eton rattling in the hope chést. When the entire Senate begine up to discuss the Watkins report en * big out-of-town circulation for Nevember 8, the American pee Classified information. Joe admits ple will get all the facts surround. he raided the confidential deep- ing the behavior of the Watkins freeze for a midnight snack. It's Committees itself, which in seme always apple week in Washington respects deserves censure. when it comes to dumping the cart. They will learn for the first See time from the lips of Senator Mc- Suppose McCarthy fiid get a Carthy himself whai General Law. ©&fban copy_of one of the tunes ton told him Genera) Zwicker had 0" the secret hit parade? Point — said to him about the Wisconsin ouf the window in the Army and senator's efforts to rid Ft. Mon- N. avy building where the clerk mouth of spies. The Watkins Com- flew that kite. smittee declined to press General —_ Lawton to reveal the facts and For the toughest job in’ closing he himself feared he might be a playground is getting the kids punished by the Army—something out of the swings. About time no congressional committee here- Washington let that old cat die. reason for withholding ° vital to Coggress, That story will Portraits patience With General Zwicker. How much is money warth to Most challenging for the future > you’... What does it really buy? of the Senate itself is the deciara- i; hak 6 on cetes tion by the Watkins Committee «°° » your that it disregards the voice of nd all The things for which the people in elections and that it ¥oU sigh? ,... Yes_maybe it pro- is justified in going back as many vides for you. . . The luxuries of ever a senator may have said be- Stand... The struggle and the fore his current term began. fee? pee ee auch t "“e-. more 1» sean at goede: ban aoe while? . . . The love of these so committee, Unless rejected by 4 smile’... Can money bring you the Senate, it means that several peace of mind . . . When you have senators could be subject to trial done a wrong? ... And can ‘t hereafter because they have said = change the bitterness . . . Of tears things equivalent te the com- into a song? . . . However rich or ments of the Wisconsin senator § poor you are... . This bell of truth “We mer comure, ets on earth; Can give you~ cifically says, moreover, that « (Copyright 1964) senator can be censured for utter . ing “hare criticiam” or tor hs | OOking Back “manner of speaking” or for his judgment been rendered U-boat. agin the Wisconsin senator Te ee es Ace “ly Senator MeCarthy is deserving DONALD R. RICHBERG is ot beaut unis Os Sei. named top man in revamping of no legal or constitutional NRA. a teitiber 2 stating the case for a 1 think Br, Crane ake on its werk Presidential veto of the Utah In- , ‘® reason When churches dian Termination Bill. a man gets more kick out of kiss- peoatting tho Gempel ture’ to ue This bill, authorizing a federal '"€ another man’s wife is poor and | visture and the ballot with the walkout on its responsibilities to fat. The reason @ man get's & Uneomy to legalize the getting of these unlettered and destitute kick out of kissing another man's “filthy lucre” by any means, they Paiute Indians of Utah, was not Wile is “I wonder if she will slap not only lose thelr power with God vetoed and became law and the ™e.” She should do that very ang man but fai) in their efforts trend of the national government thing. in Evangelism and the winning of to abandon its protective relation Another reason, “I wonder the souls of men for Christ. to the Indian tribes goes on un- her husband will shoot me Scripture teaches that Christ is abated. ; Mf he catches me doing it.” The the head of the Church, not the Our national responsibility to hesband might not be justified je od nea sheet “pany eee protect our Indian tribes as long mem. ty tadigdpenty rd in the church? I would as they need protection is never would have to plead insane that pou chaun pew chameh eos questioned by « citizen whe knows and he Would go free for an all day session of the facts, and the Pontiac Press The kiss did not count, it was aut cuduilse af Ga-bamee O00 ts to be thanked for making the only the thrill he got out of it. and seek His face about these mat- facts available. A. B, Culver ters. We, for our part, should be giad Oxford, Michigan Herbert MH. Smith to send a copy of “The Indian ——— 1286 Vinewood Street ae Tithes Speak.” 0 caflection of tet Let's Teach Children ee readers who write the Association #0 Think Things Over — .F.H. Wants to Know on American Indian Affairs, Inc. Why must one wait unt) he More About N. Ivanov 48 East 86th Street, New York reaches adult life to make mise N. Ivanov, will you please, in New York, takes and learn how to solve his ihe near future. tell all the Pontiac Alexander Lesser problems? What good is all of the Press readers in the “Voice of the New York City, New York oar pa Aenollagersd church you attend and your na- * subjects if we are turned tionality? Follow Christ's Ways ee ee eee ks bh qe 0 puts a why for a Happier World paring o molve our you, it «private individual, should The ultra sclentists, especially _ Teach children to wait for the PAY © Svedly com fer newepapes the evolutionists, who make @ still, smalt_voice that speaks out or ane aw es gee ae study of the Universe and thet of the silence before they act. 1 __part_of it called Earth, say that Teach them to submit whatever +a all is the result of cause and ef. Counset they receive to their inner —_t was raised Baptist—Please teit fect, an accident and that there "mds and wait for the seasoned us more about yourself! was No purpose, plan or mind back Verdict that will surely follow. M. F. a of the same. wand tar taste whan owas ao quODENES TODAY They deny that there is any God fer haste when truth te af a or Divine Reason that planned ‘ale. Teach the older children fle trusted in the Lord Gea of tie the el on ee eat ate We is no God. He cannot prove this subs © cue dn oan oun none like him among all the but because his mental make up is "eee, to seek the auiet of Whelr = ites of Judah, nor any thet such that he cannot comprehend for the truth that tc In them were before him. says there is no God. it should ge. . ° “te The Agnostic says “t don't This is an old world. and truth ray B know.” and seems to RAVE 88 isno-stranger to it. Somewhere — arth ny’ loseer exe: . hope for the future. All three in the stillness the truth dwells. Yet trustfully my spérit- seem to believe that when their Never go on hunches but follow the looks to Thee. short span of life terminates this language of the heart which will —Neal. ends all. A rather sad and = oe i ee dreary prospect. = On the other hand, we have hed 4./™u 5 0 Pian worl ser tning past who did comprehend and be- Wesley J. Stingeriand lieved that there was a Divine 199 Disie Highway Mind controlling the entire Uni- “Dyeavton Plains The grentemt wes Jesu . By WIHAJAM BRADY, M.D Christ who believed what the older De 1 c plaints Says Several Los Angeles readers prophets taught and approved of VONIGS -OMPIGINNS, LGYS askeqd me how I account for the their teachings and went further Parade Politics Were Fair ‘they sive various numbers) deaths and taught the brotherhood of man, eythane o got a kick out of Just a in , if rabies is a veterinary ot Se doe ects Se Good American, letter. I would ad- prene tad oats pa un ma mae tes pate See Pa a to follow Christs’ teachings, this : il i; i lk 3 ; 375 i i i i 7 | > akg et St £ i rady. Says He Would Never Submit to the Pasteur Treatment for Rabies i f 8 ° L z rTER il t | i ! | 13 i= | = F rEidie 34 Tu {a et F i & | f I ij itt F ijt i“ 3 t | : ill i if i rie im i i ‘ eft a | li | | \ 4 . 4 i = ae Ys cai nat E Y . > eon The Clarence Z Smiths of W indcr ft drive announce the engagement o| their daughter, Margaret Ann ar THE Zonta Clubs Hold 3-Day Conference Lansing Is Setting for Meeting of Clubs to Joseph R Swengros, son of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph A Swengros o} West Huron . street. Margatet Ann attends Michigan State Normal College. MARGARET ANN SMITH Couple Repeat Their Vows in First Baptist Church Penny Mendez became the bride | bodice featured a deep yoke with of Richard L. Haddad in a cere-| tiny buttons down to the waistline mony performed Saturday evening j in First Baptist Church She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry + Mendez of Drayton Plains and h is the son of the*Jack Haddads« o! 5 ——— carried while in service in Korea. For the 8 o'clock ceremony per. | She. wore pearl earrings, a gift formed by the Rev. H. H. Savage, | the bride wore a white satin prin- | of the bridegroom, cess style waltz length gown The! Vonnie Whitten was maid of honor wearing a beige strapless | taffeta gown with a matching vel- | vet jacket and muff. She carried a | Spray of chrysanthemums in aut- jumn colors held by wicker rings | She wore smaller wicker rings with | chrysanthemums on her wrists. / | Shirley Dobson and Norma Mc- Glothin were bridesmaids. ir gowns, styled like the honor niaid's cee were in toast and coffee and tong fitted sleeves. She carried a white orchid with streamers on a covered testament that the bridegroom \‘ a —MARY KING— SALON COLD WAVE MACGINELESS AND |ghade like the honor Mary King Cold $6 | The bridal gown Wave, Complete —" || tendants’ costumes thy the bride. dyéing. |) | Fred Haddad Yas best man and seating the sn were Da- vid Kasten of icago, T., John Hair cuts, dieaching, ‘shampoos, finger waves, facials, and manicuring ORA OBRECHT for YOUR CHILD dress with deep red accessories | and a White coat. She wore an or- Kyrifsi of Watkegan, H1., Gene Appointments | Terbush and Aorky Grover. 158 N. Perry FE 2-3053 - The bride Was given in marriage —— a by her brother, Mike Mendez IT COSTS SO LITTLE For he daughter s wedding, | | Mrs. Mendez wore a navy blue of Zonta International closed a three day conference Sunday at | Lansing’s Hotel Olds. Zonta'’s Lan sing was host for the event Attending from the Pontiac chap- ter were Mrs. Adrian tsh, Lois Fl lis, Mrs, Ruth Mills Kennedy, Lo- retta Paul, Mrs. Homer Tinney Mrs. Dorothy Brooks and Laura Hunter. Kenneth Ish of Pontiac, q stu- dent at Michigan State College was guest vocalist. chapter Main speaker for the event was Sam Street Hughes. Lansing at torney aff former mayor. ‘The Third Fight Hours'’ wag the title of his talk He pointed out that with eighy/ hour’ given to sleep, we sti'! have eight hours to spend. He challehged the group to think about how’ these hours are spent *He suggested their use interest of civilization’ and showed how service clubs may well do this by inspiration of cul ture. He added that women follow through in this way. Another speaker for the con- ference Was Dr.~ Charlies An- spach, president of Central Michigan College at Mt. Pleas- ant, who balit his theme “Acres in the of Opportunity’ around the slogan, “grow in un- derstanding, fellowship and service.” “These qualities,’ he said, ‘com- prige the difference between the progressive and the backward gommunity.” “Growth in fine community life," he continued, “‘doesn't necessarily g0 along with size; it stems from the people who live there, those alert to the acres of chances to serve.” rrr ee Guests Attend Club Meeting ' Maple Leaf club held its first tat! meeting and tuncheon Friday Hotel Waldron. Guests were Mrs. Ida Crawley of Danville, Va and Mrs. Pearl Woodcock of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont Hostesses were . Mrs... Wayne Bridwell and Mrs. Virginia Tubbs. Guests of all members will be wel- come at the Oct. 22 meeting Sunset. Club Meets Mr. and Mrs. Howard Estes of the Oakland County Convalescent |chid corsage, The bridegroom's to learn |mother wore @ blue dress with ACCORDION | wine accessories and an orchid corsage ‘ ash ODD : —a6s +. After @ Teception held in. the “RENTAL-LESSON” PLAN church parlors the new Mrs. Had @f Private All For dad exchanged her wedding -dress Lessons for a beige knit suit and coat with e p oe oa $19” | spice colored accessories for a trip 4 Weeks ito Chivago. The newlyweds will . Bese ——- ° ) - = vane reside on Lynsue Lane Bell-Fought ACCORDION} STUDIOS . | Call FE 2-520! LOOP REPRE. ttt) N. Saginaw Program is Held by Fellowship Women's Fellowship of First Con- gregational Church held its first fall meeting —Friday—when—they gathered for a luncheon. Colonial Group of the chareh served the luncheon \in the church parlors The program for the afternoon was under the -direction of Mrs. Stanley Kipp,.who presented Mrs George Gaches of Pontiac, and Mrs. Hardy Korff and Mrs. Nor- man Deunk of Rochester. They presented the highlights of the con- ference of Congregational Christian Women which was held at Pilgrim Haven, Lake Michigan, during the summer Mrs. Ketha Olsen of Bifming ham, president of the Michigan Congregational Women's Fellow- ship, was a special guest Plans were made for a church bazaar to be held Oct. 3 and a smorgasbord to be held Oct. 13. Coming | Events -- Pontiac city Panhellenic will mest Menday with Mrs. M A. Benson Jr, 2975 Old Orchard drive Olivia Viela of Pon thae Child Guidance Clinic will be guest apeaker WSCER of Baldwin Methodist Church wil meet Wednesday at 8.30 fer «@ friendship breakfast at Mrs Arthur Lightcap’s home at 117 West New York et JANE WYMAN ROCK HUDSON —Ww— “MAGNIFICENT mes OBSESSION” sants FRIDAY * Home were guest speakers for the recent meeting at Sunset. Club held at Wilson School. Mrs. Pearl Kaufman was a guest at the meet ing and cooperative dinner. in every detail... construct your living Open Evenings Fifth -District! Zonta Clubs of the fifth district] hours given to work and eight |. PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1954. _ a land County Medical Society. Council Will . Hold Nov. 6 Swing Dance City council of Beta Sigma Phi Severity held its first meeting of the year at the home of Mrs Edward Markham on Josephine street Monday evening. Betty Paulos read a report of the special July meeting and the treasurer's report was read by Mrs. Cecil Elsholz A letter from the Polio Founda- tion was read by Mrs. Robert Graham, directed to the eight chapters who assisted in the emeér- gency pelio drive. Announcement was made of the concerts to be given by Pontiac Symphony Or chestra, “Haystack Swing’ will be held Nov, 6 at Pontiac Chieftain Hall and will provide square and round dancing. Betty Giddings, chairman, announced that tickets may now be purchased from any sorority member, Assisting the chairman will be Mrs. Dallas Nelson; Mrs. Ridlon Smith, Mrs. FE. L. Sturdy, Mrs William L. Thomas, Betty Mc- Miller, Doris Ball and Mrs. Ralph Elisworth Haven Hill Lodge at Highland |will be the setting for the dinner | meeting of the council on Oct. 25. + |Consider Plastic If you're thinking of purchasing ;@ television set, you. might con- j sider the plastic cabinets. These | don't ‘show scratches and are easy to keep clean with soap and water. = a : ‘Jumpin’ Jehosaphat! —this really is real coffee! Modern Seing For distinctive furniture that is outstanding individual choice of style and fabric. , F = 8 ye PR AE. ¢ oa, Piant and Showroom 5390-5400 Dixie. Hwy. Waterford, Mich. OR 3-1225 RS ER GON lig: 4 BRE Ee 95 let Elliott design and room suite... to your by Appointment a kt ie Np aPC ? sored by the Woman's Auxiliary to the Oak- Marra will be hostess at her | Lake home for the affair which will be held | right. 4 Mrs. John J. Oct, 6 is the day set for the tea spon-| from 2:30 until 5 o'clock. Taking care of -| final plans are Mrs. John Williams of Green Lake, Mrs. James Blakeney of Utica road ianwood }and Mrs. Donald Hoyt of Clarkston, left to \ BHINGI \ CO he | Pentiac Press Phete Conference-Planned by Soroptimists Soroptimist Club members were | shown by Raymond Swackhammer | at their Monday meeting held in Hotel Waldron, It was announced that Taimee Surola and Mrs. Ray Maxwell will be delegates to the regional con- | ference at Columbus, Ohio, on Oct. 8, 9 and 10. Mrs. Arnold Hillerman | is chairman of the regional bulle- | a The | | Knitting Needle a << > CHRISTMAS | KNITTING | in a vast collection of colors Give a Handknit | STOLE 4 Opposite Pontiac Hospital 452 West Huron , tin committee © -e4 mee Cate Advance Hair Styling You'll be amazed at the new beauty created by our expert hair cuttin: and styling to flatter your facie contours and hair pattern. . Call teday ROWENA’S BEAUTY SHOP ¢* “THE COAT OF GUARANTEED QUALITY” LASSIE. / Ny Se fe _¢- The good looks are free . . . because every penny you pay for a coat with the Lassie label buys more than your money's worth. Like this back-belted beauty . . . of classic chinchilla with Milium insulated lining. And remember the lining of every Lassie is guaranteed for the life of the coat. Tee eae 82% N. Saginaw ey (OVER NEUMODE’S) FE 2-9382 lie _ © tae. ° ero WEdanetgr hy. Be cot Tie ~ 2 Coat Salon—Se ond Fh ; Tee Oe a Se ee a ea 3 ' LR (a ’ 48 N. Saginaw St. We've just unpacked the most exciting and ele- gant shoes to come in many seasons! For a hint see our windows, our special indoor displays of surprise-footwear news . . . Graphite colf... Avocado Green . . . hushed Mist Brown... “eling bocks” . . . “real-gone sandals” . . . slen- der and softer pumps . ... night-life suedes .. . eye-fooling “little heels” . . . luster trims, jet,; thinestones. Pick this week for unusual variety — it’s shoe styles, colors, heels a la corte... at prices modest... Matty ey a ROE Custody Given fo Mrs. Small Reportedly Wins Right to Take Three Sons to West Coast 1 | ie “grat® ene nee wu a DISPLAY IT PROUDLY! State Form offers its ex- cellent protection ond service ot extremely low cost be- couse it cims fo insure coreful drivers only. GET YOURS NOW! Mode of headlight-refiecting Scotchlite to stick on reer humper. Drop in for your free safety emblem todby. STATE FARM INSURANCE Stote Form Mutval Automobile insurance Compony .— State Form tife insurance Company Stote Farm Fire and Casvolty insurance Compony Home Office: Bloomington, lilinois “tt pays te know your Stete Farm Agent” SL FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL Franklin Aherns—FE 4.9546 Howerd C. Brott—FE 4-692) | Eorl Devis—FE 4-9546 Robert Goff Jr.—OR 3-2778 Vern Hartmen—FE 4-9546 ‘Leo Huffmen—FE 2-020! Lester Oles—FE 2-0396 Hervey Perry—FE 2-020! James Schell—FE 4-9546 VERN HARTMAN —_—— Gebte or Bille when due, and arrange fer payments ach or how many yee ewe “OR R ENDORSERS REQUIRED — PLACE TO PAY “Le’ 9 years of credit counselling experience assist you" Hours: Daily 9 to 6. Sat. 9 to 1. pes by Appointment MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41 South Saginaw St Above Oskiand Theater sce "MICHIGAN C1 carry ‘eden Nasitoms NO sicuniTy " Phone PE 8-0456 custody of ‘three sons and permission to them to California, over protests from Dr Small, who has resumed his dental practice, started court ac- tion two weeks ago to win custody of the boys by obtaining an in- It was reported that this order was amended by Circuit Judge Thomas J. Murphy to permit Mrs. The three children, Steve, 7, Billy, 4, and Clifford, 2, have been living with their mother. Michigan 1igan Sailor Killed in Crash of Light Plane NORFOLK, Va. @—The body of in the Dismal Swamp near Portsmouth, Va The victim, Wallace Norman Bullock of Lincoln Park, was killed | Sunday when a light plane in which The and a companion, Dougtas Eric Newell, radioman 3C, also of Lin- coln Park, went out of control during a loop and crashed. Newell parachuted to safety sec- onds before the plane plowed into trees. Bullock was attached to Sub Group 1 of the Norfolk Group, At- lantic Fleet Reserve. Newell, 23, is attached to Tactical Air Control Squadron 4, Nava! Air Station, Nor- folk. Transfer 20 Inmates LANSING (UP)—Transfer of 20 inmates from Southern Michigan Prison to Marquette Prison was made Monday by state Corrections officials, John J. Spencer, director of penal institutions, reported to- day. __THE PONTIAC. ie TUESDAY, Guatemala. Kyes Estimates Defense Budget Says 33 to 36 Billion Will Be Needed Each) | France, Year for Long Time DETROT (INS)—Former Depu- ty Secretary of Defense Roger M Kyes has said that the United States will have to spend 33 to % billion dollars a year for defense for years to come. With the current defense pro- gram running at 37 and a-half bil- lion, Kyes told the Detroit Eco- nomic Club yesterday that the country ‘has to keep its defense in order to give the military & chance to do the job that they can do ‘The tormer administration of. ficial,. new back as a General Motors vice president, also at- tacked critics whe-have charged that the Eisenhower plan has been to slash essential defense items from the budget. He said such critics don’t knew what they are talking about. Guest speaker at the Economic Club luncheon was Admiral Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who said current strategy is to keep the Chinese Reds guessing as to whether the United States will defend the Na- tionalist island of Quemoy. Lowest fire losses in seven years were reported for U. S. Army in- | stallations in the United States | for fiscal 1953. | “Built in Pontiac by Pontiac People” wr j eS ~ GOLD LABEL DISTRIBUTORS | 85 NORTH CASS AVENUE GMC 1954 MODELS—455-30 Pontiac and Oakland County Distributor - ‘GOEBEL BEER HAVE ADDED TWO MORE GMC’s TO THEIR DELIVERY FLEET a RS 77 East Huron : 809 S. Woodward GMC TRUCKS SOLD and SERVICED by -| WILSON GMC CO. - FE 29203] ye ae By CHAREPS M. McCANN United Press Staff Correspondent Chancellor Konrad “The Old Fox,” Adenauer, London on West German rearma ment, Premier Pierre Mendes-France of France naturally is a. key fig- ure also. If there is to be unified European -defense, he naturally must be satisfied But Adenauer acems to be in position to set his price Tor the participation of the Bonn Repub. lic In the Allied defense set-up. During the last few months Ade nauer has steadily raised his price That there is not more anxiety even in France, over the strength of Adenatuier's position is testimony to the esteem in which he is held the Western Allies byt with the 47,500,000 Germans whose leader he is, When the European Defense Community pact was signed in Paris on May 7, 1952, every: thing seemed set for West Ger- many te start raising 12 divisions of troops which would be part ot a six-nation EBuropean army fitted in with the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, The pact never ratified always fearful of renewed German military domination, fin- ally killed it last August 30 French action has caused the rGerman price-raising. Adenauer lost ground in an important elec- tion on Sept, 12, largely because of the killing of the EDC pact Now the position te that the United States ang Great Britain are ready if the worst comes, to grant west Germany sev: ereignty, whether France agrees er not, and to start . oe it. was The fact is that Adenauer has | .| been compelled to up his price «| He is doing business not only with SEPTEMBER 28, 1054 Adenauer Can Set Price for Helping With Defense Adenauer's terms at the London conference are reported to be ini} mediate full sovereignty and Ger- | man rearmament on..a@“basis of | } will be the man | equality with the other Allies to watch in today's conference in | It looks as if he will get them. | jand thus get even more than was foreseen in the European Ds fense | Community pat saa | But Adenauer never fails to | | emphasize his conviction that Germany and France mast work | together. Adenaucy was 73, unknown inter nationally, when he was elected chancellor of the pew Bonn Re- public in 199. In the five years of his teadership West Germany has risen from the ashes of defeat to become a prosperous and politi cally stable community He has been a leader of the Christian Democratic Party for many years and had been mayor of Cologne from 1917 to 1935, when the Nazis ousted him. The Gestapo arrested him several times during World War U When the Americans treed Co logne, they made Adenauer may: or again, The British, into whose tone Cologne fell, ousted him— they did not like his independent attitude. Now they: like him. “Fhe Oid Fox,’ as Germans call him, is now 78, six feet two, erect, cold-eyed, sharp featured, schol arly and courteous. He is regarded as an indispensable man, An Allied diplomat said ‘of him If Ade naver hadn't been here, we'd have had to invent him.” Driver |s. identified Ara B. Baldwin, SJ, of 73 N Sanford St., was the driver of one of three cars which was involved in a collision Sunday at M 50 and Poftiac Lake Rds., and not has wi Rebecca P., Si, as stated in the Press yesterday. Mrs. Baldwin, treated for head injuries at Pon- tiac Genera] Hospital, was a pas- senger in her busband' 8 car. SEE THE AMAZING “Watch the Dirt go by” DEMONSTRATION 4 Before you : decide on any : er NO MONEY DOWN —-18 MONTHS TO PAY - automatic washer... PROOF , thet THOR gets owt mere dirt tram the grimiest clothes } q — gels clothes visibly z - CLEANER! Wf you d lhe, bring in your own FRESHLY WASHED CLOTHES, Dore us to re-wesh them—te ee! out dirt that ordinery weshers can't budgel aE wi | PRICES, 96 Oakland ROY’S Feraont | YEARS SAVE 20% TO 50x" wae te Beene ot @ Made in Grinnell's own piano Factory @ Full 88-note keyboard @ Modern-classic styling, ebonized finish. @ An excellent student piano @ Basically the same construction as in much . higher priced models SAVE *150 on this Full 88-note LEONARD PIANO JUBILEE WONDER BUY! . —is "eDDe “BD pay as low as myeuunrere ree svvronneaated: ‘alee 250. week! ‘ “a ©dO@ in Prizes in Grinnell’s DIAMOND JUBILEE. CONTEST? : FE 4-4531 its cosy, to win! Got outry blanks ot ony Grinnell store! : -27 South Saginaw oe FE 27168 ia ue. MeN ll : °° Opdyke et Welton Bivd. Box Office Opens 6:30—Show Starts 7:00 : LAST TIME TONIGHT : CinemaScoPE rising out of the might and magnitude of America in the making oon 20th Century- a edie SPENCER TRACY RICHARD ; WAGNER: PETERS ‘WIDMARK: WRADO Broken Lance yior by De luat The personal sage of a fether and his four sons - PLUS Championship Fight Pictures EZZARD CHARLES: ROCKY MARCIANO) EXCLUSIVE PICKETS on the OUTSIDE A DARN GOOD SHOW INSIDE! PONTIAC - RIVE-IN: 1EMTE EF cee, a LAST TIMES TODAY van L&) Tae ets) 2) Calne ty De Land ne To Our friends and patrons for the many; ~ many kind letters and offers of support at this time. it makes us very proud to 3 know so many understand the issue as it - to The Pontiac Drive-in Theatre and its members. It will not jet me hire, its own union men, uniess | hire as many as they say on 2 certain given job. | want one eer eases Setalnanes mon, F) : Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. Telegroph FE 5-4500 THANKS "| Stators of Local 620 of Pontiac, is unfair _ | | PONTIAC PRESS, TI | and television equipment was made | THE "Spook ¢ Light’ ‘ Not So Romantic Whén Unveiled SAND SPRINGS, Okita. uW—The ‘Wo miles west of here. mystery of the cmidnignt spook +—The_boys_ identified by officers light’’ that has drawn free admis as Eugene Anderson, 19, and Jim- sion crowds numbering as much | ™ Rose, 17, both ot Tulsa, freely as 600 persons has been solved Last night as expensive radio CR ae ee ee Keego Theater AIR-CONDITIONED quence, patrolmen found two boys | | flashlights and towels: Some 500) tion, They said they first tried it| last Wednesday and repeated it} | nightly } Hundreds of persons had visited tthe area the last five days, some arrived as early as 4 p.m. in order | to get a good-seat. ’-* On Our Wide Miracle Sereen oe “SILVER LODE In Technicoler with John Payne and Dan Duryea vor the area as residents told of see- ving’th® strange blue-green ball of light for a half century. The mys- tery was further clouded with an Indian legend that ‘'a young Indian | eae girl had been killed by beheading | “THE ROCKET” lon the cliff and each year she Charles Coburn | returned with her dog and lantern jto go to the Arkansas River ad tS a ms) 22) | water.”’ Phone Or Ley WATERFORD DRIVE IN THEATER Toa / NA tt Cor. Williams Leke-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:30 TUES.-WED.-THURS. of civilization Pradeced by PAT DUOGAN - Derected by IRVING RAPPER Grewe by JULIUS } EPSTEIN ond PRELIP GC. EPSTEIN Beggreed by J}. M. Barvie's pley “Renalind”: 4 Poremqum Prnare 2nd SMASH HIT! | | | F "ROSEMARY CLOONEY JACK CARSON + GUY MITCHELL NOTE: “Living Wt Up” hes not Been Shown in the City of Pontiac! | perched halfway up the ctiff with | : persons were present at the =| i admitted the light was their Inven-| Stories came -from all sections) , | Abe Lincoln | place on a |named Stapley Hall. This fellow | South African film of life | Business."" MAKE OVER PAGES SEVENTEEN 'ESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1954 jready to capture the strange se- | Z of merchandise told police he was | 5. Yeor Term ide |“satisfied “to do. $18.70 worth of time” for the crime. Equal to $18. 70 Crime }~ Judge Michael J, Manley nite BALTIMORE — Ernest Par- day décided that five years in the ker, 22, charged with breaking a House of Correction would be street display window with a brick | about right. The Negro defendant | and making off with $18.70 worth ‘had an extended criminal record, AN EX-WIFE’S WELCOME—lIt's hard. to believe, but crooner Johnnie Ray, just returning from Australia, is getting an extremely warm welcome. from ex-wife Marilyn Morrison, as he lands in Los Angeles, Calif. Marilyn denies rumors they will wed again, maintaining ‘“‘we are just buddies.” | tardly deed and then leap 15 feet jto the stage. Booth is played by | John Derek, a foolhardy lad who | wanted to make the jump him- self, Being Shot Director Dunne decided he want- | Again at 20th ae By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD u—They ed no actor with a broken leg, were and so a stunt man was called | shooting Abe Lincoln again, and 1| The fellow made the leap, landing |in a nest of rubber cushions below the level of the stage. Then Derek The assassination was taking | jumped, but only to another plat- 20th-Fox stage for} form a few feet below the presi- dential box I asked Derek if he didn't feel qualms about playing one of the went out to watch it “Prince of Players."’ the biography of Edwin Booth. Philip Dunne, a studious type who is directing his first picture, told me the set was an exact replica of Ford's Theater “Too darned exact.’ he com- plained. “I have trouble getting my-camera into it." * - = “Not at all “They gotta hate me before they love me ...” + Overon the ‘Untamed set Susan President Lincoln was being played by a London-born dancef [scene with Richard Egan for this below | can boast the most contrasting as-| the veldt. The redhead sighed | signments of the year. His” last | | wearily. Almost every day since job was with the Jack Cole dancers last May, she has been before the in a Marilyn Monroe number for | camera ‘There's No Business, Like Show She swore off all fizm making | That's hdw makeup | until 1955. “What a joy it would head FE Nye happened to see | be not to be working at Christmas him and admire his Lincolnesque | for once in my life,’ she said. facial structure > ee 8 All Hat! had to Go was sit In) the box and get shot. But John! next project—a loanout to MGM Wilkes Booth had to do the das-|for “I'll Cry Tomorrow.’ | the sage of Lillian Roth, who went | NOTICE |from stardom to alcoholism and | | back again. Susan got a preview of PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER [S UNFAIR TO ORGANIZED LABOR Pontiac Local 620 |. A. T. S$. E. | Re wth re-live her story on Ralph | Edwards’ “This Is Your Life.’ “By the time it was over, I was bawling like a baby,”’ Susan con- fessed. This is her second job as a real-life songstress, the first be- | SOOOIAaY x should set the gifls a-tingle. < HELD OVER JANET ice ARNOLD ws Last Times ‘The Weak and the Wicked’ Today! ‘Botany Bay’ On Our Giant PANORAMIC Screen§ 4-Big Days-4 | STARTS _ Wed. thru Sat. | TOMORROW | al ‘ =< j | PLUS i | ROBERT RYAN JAN STERLING arch Villians of American history. |f he replied jauntily. | ees S aeeemeainaien Still she is enthused about her | Hayward was acting out @ tense | | That's | | her assignment by watching Miss | (444 LA ing the Jane Froman story. New Lake Theater And $0 WU. where they have . 420 Pontiac Trail 4 cracked up a plane for ‘‘The Loot- WALLED LAKE ers.”” The story concerns some air * \Y crash victims and their rescuers, On Our Wide MiPacte Serece \ who struggle over $250,000 -dts- | ® ed towane 6 ss Bacall Screen #7 BARRYMORE: cunc TREVOR a © SO SON ao om eT eon # om ee -spanecae FERRY WALD “-e ree r ae _ : 3 , THE PONTIAC -PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1954 Bearis Dominate! MARKETS | Motor Popular a Grain Trading weer nes in Early Deals - bite Teported CHICAGO W—Light rain in Ili- the Bureau of Markets. ; 7 NEW YORK w&—Motors were in nois and lowa, plus small receipts | , NA" Delicions fancy, ¢00 be; |Gemand today in early dealings of cash soybeans, gave the soy-| Ne. 1, 4.56-5.60 bu; apples, Greenings, in a somewhai higher Stock Mar- bean-market-a—much- better tone | #2) be Mo. 1, 3083 6 ve. spice ai ' on the Board of Trade today: Beans Woidrsve Pinal Veber Not amsas| Trading was quite fast at the advanced about two cents at times. bu; cidéf, No. i, 2.50-2.18 4 gal case.istart, but the rush soon spent Other grains held within narrow | Cesteloupes, tency, 2.50 wu: Mo. 1, |5- | itself, Thereafter the tape idled. price limits. Corn opened slightly | Hucuieverries, No. 1. 328-318 12° ‘pt lower and then ralied. Peaches, Siborta. fancy, ¢00 bu He. as Prices were up around a point 3.00-3.5@ bu. re, Bartlett, fancy, | at the best, but these gains were ‘ me : c . Bose . 7 — In contrast, wheat got off to a ne. PY} tease te Peeone beens, No. ! | rare. Some small losses were in steady start and then eased, In | 200-215 %-bu. Watermelons, No. 1, evidence in Various sections of . = ee 2 gta ed Beans, green, flat, No. | Y the list. trading..Most of the activity con- |, o9-['so bu: beans, green Kentucky Won. aaa tinued to be concentrated in soy- | der. No. 1 233-3. bu; beans, green,| Chrysler started on 3,500 shares round, fancy, 3.75 bu; No. 1, 2.7643.26 beans. bu; beans. Lima, No 1, 2.80-3.00 by.|UP % at 65% and then added a ; beans, Roman, No. 1. 3.00-3.25 bu; beans, | little more to its price. General Wheat near the end of the first | wax, a 2.50-3.00 bu No ro behs an oe een 2,500 shares hour was % to % lower, Decem- | 7-8 whe; taney, 190 dee beds: Sapa pape = to hasta ber~$2:1452;— corn unchanged to % Taney. LO Si-be: He. 1 1 M-L0S Bo Studebaker was up a small frac- . abbage. iO. ‘ .098- : higher, December $1.51; oats. te | city Ne. 1. 160-100 bu: cadsege, Ren. | tion and quiet. lower to % higher, December T7%s; | No. 1, 1.25-1.5¢ bu; cabbage, sprouts, No : th the aedlors wane rye %e lower to % higher, Decem- |}. 160.100 bu. Carrots, Be. i. .16-60 — = = hemicals ber $1.40; soybeans 1%4-2% higher. |'i'se bu * Santiewer ne 1 aeesss (ene aircrafts. coppers. » ; November $2.63%, and lard un- |Get Celery. No. 1. 1.13-2.80 crate; celery, oils and steels. The railroads and 1, .78-1.35 doz. Corn, sweet, No. 1. | uti ’ changed to 10 cents a hundred 78-138 8. dos Sesuphere. ain ‘tee. utilities were mixed Pontiec-Birmingham ree. ce 8 years Automotive and F pest se —— 4 College kgrou . etre © yeors old, Box 16. EB: F : : *| A few good blocks were on the ‘. pounds lower, October $14.67. pan punta keane .30-8.96 bu; ensues tape initielly—Sendard 08 (NI) . ——__— J ‘ fe ee 4.28 bu; cucumbers, slicers, No. 1, 2.15- |) y 100%. Rem- i = — z FLORIS ao C in Pri Rael We i Vine ee. been 2,000 shares ts ci Pt 5 | oo A | a Fain ices ; green. No. 1. .75-80 dos behs; onions, ington Rand 3. Sind Ly * eX. Sa ; rgus Cameras, nc. aes “7 CHICAGO GRAIN pol ae ay ae ag — U.S. Steet 2.500 up Me a - Tom os ail 7 ; CHICAGO—AP—Opening grain root, No.1, %8-1.60 dos: parsiey. (No. 1. heel Co, 3.000 ive ey 1,090 r A Se “s The Annual Report of j —_ iis hese 3.62%. [250-300 bu. Peppers. Cayenne, No. 1. 1% at “a -_- —-. a Argus Cameras, Inc., Mareh . 2.17% Jan 2.653% | 50-78 pk; peppers, hot, No. 1, 1.60-1.50)UP 174 ; ‘ May. oo... 2.14% March 266 bu. peppers, Pimiento, No. 1. }.80-2.00 _ for the year ended Jul ‘Co May 2.66% | bu: peppers. sweet, No. 1 1.00-1.25 bu 2 = y y TO. 180% duly 2.65% | peppers, red, sweet, No. 1, 1.28-1.75 bu New York Stocks 7 31, 1954 is now avail- March. .... a— tatoes, new, No. 1, 1.40-1.50 50-Ib bag J duly 2 Rev 130 | Cage Pomphinn Wo. t tos-tan bu. Re: | A@muel 2 jonme ae OS able Oats— Mareh 12.90 | dishes, red. fancy. 100 dos behs; No.) Dn i's, 33 Kelsey May .. 232 a wind) td ba - sescq «11% Soybean Oil — 16-85 dos behs: radishes, white, fancy, .. O68 : f . Maen per oem score 1080 1 e0 gee bebe Me SN cetie bet eosaan Allied ers ‘s Kime Pi 37 MANEUVERS IN GERMANY—A little girl watches as a hage [post-war maneuvers ever held in Gerfnany. More than . 140,000 Use the coupon below 7 139 March |... ape , rel No. 1, 1.00-1.25 bu; “equash pron rr) ai Kroger at TU, &: Army atomic rifle rumbles through the narrow streets of the | soldiers from England, U. S., Canada, Belgium and Holland are or od eer ia ba i . et neers ~ t isis oe sqench. — oe Liv’ Medan 1H village of Detbruck, Germany on its way to the Tields during biggest | participating. phone for your copy. — Ttellan No. 4, 1.00-1.80 ‘e-bu; squash, | Qo 424 Ligg @ My ee; Pe 3. i k Net tenes bal gare f bemareony | Am Cysa Shed poe “ . ie r} bd = bd _ Livestoc No. 1,'1.00-10 bu. ‘Turnip, No. 1 100.) Am Ges @ BI 286 UTS, cw | Two Waterford Men Get | DETROIT LIVESTOCK 138 dos dehe; turnip, topped. No. 1.) AE 10'S pay 208 Lorilerd ios |g: w H ) q en i | son e en § : DETROIT (AP)—The Detroit livestock pg lg salad : Celery cab- | Am — a3 word Theta 4 Fine for Stealing Beer : | Sieeataey- see Mae - Adard Members New Vern Steck Exchange 4 ee ee rigger yay "ieee or ag ag am Red 88 me 81 Two Waterford Township men|. Speetet commanication Brother . Ls “ - “a hil ' i, , PONTIAC OFFICE t : : . 100-156 | Am Seating 33 " hood Lod No. 561 F. & A.M ) ine. OOM ble i Nis advertising aan weedy, there met cathe ow car enarelt Lear omy et ian 3% Am omelt 201 Mid ou a i who pleaded guilty to simple lar- | Tusaday, Sent ‘3 Senior Warden's Contract Policy “agency, wilt—te—teuet-tesnorriw—te 116 Pentiac State Bank mercial grass steers and helters — Aca rcnth feat, No, 1 Vab-L 8 = i a} Sa = at Meat” War es a;ceqy yeserday before Waterford pee i. bog ely we. ees ; five Norwegian advertising exec Eneos' FS 4-2008 r r : - - —— Se sat Romaine, No. tf, “ fillis D. LeFur- | , . . : - /? . " = ene fet W-35.35, held Greens: Cabbage, Wo. 1 1.00-1 35 | pola 19.8 Motor Wheel . 246 Township Justice Wil . ulives “Who are on. teur here to | peweeeee erecere eeeeereccececeues; erat imate iewe ead Beers. 1100. Ne r 00-130 ba Memetard.- Not Anac wie c sr Mueller Br se gy, were each fined $10 and $10) special Communication. Cedar Defense Chief Reports study American services and oper- } Please mati me eo FREE copy of | 15.00, bulk utility and commercial cows/ 144.135 bu. Sorrel, No. 1. 100-125 | Armco Bt 8.2 surrey Cp 27.3 | costs, Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M. Clarks- GM Work Ne tiated ations, After q tour of the offices, |t ‘ veeete ne “nt cutters mostly | yu. Spinach. Na |e oe. TOY ag He. Aued Dry O 3ai Net Bise oe Edward L. Schnake, 21, of 1400| ton, Thursday, Sept. 30. Work in ; go tas creas Will Glateiie Geivinen and |! Argus Comeras, tne, Annes! Report ee a, Teo et {108-128 bu roe Atl Get Line 117.6 Net Deity 338 Airway, and James H. Smith, 42, Sm Buea faves ai tap. . in Truman’s Term methods with the local agency's ' MOM G2 ccaciseceteniseonscextesees = slow y . Ret 3.4 Nat Gyps { 5796 Grace, were charged with| P. = lepartment : : | eee DETROIT EGGS | Rta ee RR ae On ee oar ac eee ieee vlarket | Elgan R, Wood, W. M Adv | WASHINGTON UF — Secretary |“*Partment heads, § nededad oe... celesesesee: ssssnedes O08. Market soemeee | DETROIT AP — Bags {6.0 Detrott, | Aves Mig $ Nat Theat 4 ~ : of Defense Wilson says most of H about steady, few sales choice and prime) Oo ci aed federal-state grades Lay Lima 4 NY Air Brk .. 20) | @t US 10 and Telegraph road Sept. | . ‘ : pala Mature ticks and mites have |i celge utility “ond good springers 1eso- | Whites — Grade A. jumbo 01-0). Tit | Rendir av. aLy R¥ Cent... 184/25. They were arrested by Oakland | News in Brief —the—Goneral- Motors. procurement | sient legs { eny se amc sn, 5 16.00, sheep scarce. dium 31-33. wd ane, 33%: email 10-2) | oatl “eect —— My 8 West as —S Special Deputy James Hat iw chien bonlorelh ge = Lesescere cocccccoore peesoccccouce ee wid. av :€ , an : - No Am Av ey. ~~ | . Ls Bi = avy “SS; Peeves Tre ae wid so ps faa Nor es et eee David Marshall, owner of a bar-| ing the Truman administration. | Browns—Grade A. } ; Berden a4 Nor Sta Pw 163 - } wo Fersons nu ave. #8, large S1-04, Sid, eve, 21, "G5, [org Warn’: spe Nest Alrtin .. 116 . ber shop located at 355 Fildew | The Defense Department late 511 Community Nat’! | panera BD large 48, grade C, large 21: ~ ge 34 p avanllie- 3 Curtice Sees GM | St., reported to Pontiac Police yes-| yesterday issued a 500-word state- | : is a Three Trucks Crash | ctztss: sarset wnsnuice to sean |Suea O° 3 Semme Wok agg] x |erdey the breekin of he, stop|ment by Wilson, obviously Intend: | Bank Building _ on large as supplies are irregular betas a tage “ oe) Pan AW Air 188 B B denin and theft of tools, valt at | ed as a reply to Jackson's charge |[ *h FE 4 1568 9 = short in some instances and ample a Wy 249 Penh @PL ... 16 USITIESS 10a g Entry was gained by breaking &/ sunday that a concentration of de Phone ° ° Three trucks crashed together | others to the slow trade WE geo] [may i332 Param Pict .. 36 hoped . ~ carty today on M 80 neer Whitney} ‘coset etry itt'eeetine” pag | Sun, Ree et RRO M3) geeescohe. sweden —Actur-}Ar Windows am fense contracts with GM during P| - r 5 street-in Waterford Township when | Stmand mith hat ant _s00t ives ‘or .. vs nee eS aes i}? | ther broadening of the automobite| Lawrence Casey, 45, of tor w.| the Gest 18 months ot ts r i one trucker’s brakes caused his cater ‘Trec'.. 28 Philee ‘ise 4 | market in Sweden and Fintand-Wwas | Huron St. who was sefitenced to| hower administration ake er Be 4 . ; - stake truck to swerve into oncom- — Sn eS celanese ... 20.5 PRilip Mo... & | predicted today by President Har-|15 days in Oakland County Jail | tributed to ‘monopolistic’ | condi- _ according to Township | | CHICAGO (AP) —Butter firm. recelns | Com-tced :. tea Pllliby Mitte | 423 \low-H. Curtice of General Motors. | and ordered to pay a $100-fine, was| tions in the auto industry oo | ph aren “y ogg = ig yy aE Se! pu Plate | ote 3 ) Donald E. H Richard H. DeWits a a seanent gy NON ins we ter ers Chi a NW... 111 Prost @ O 8 “wen — _—— given an judg ed wg a aes Nowhere in his statement did \, Yona + Hansen schar Q ew! persons were injured: sé H Chile Cop.... 33 Proct & Q .. . M. Nordiska A. B. at a Pontiac Judge Cecil McCallum | witsen name Jackson or Gen |} Bes. FE 2-5513 * Res, FE 5-3793 = Bruce G:-Barrioder;—22;- of 536 = ae ‘s firm; receipts 0313; |Curveter” oss. Or pure Of ia |tancheon following af TEpection Of falter he failed to pay the fine.) 0.) neotors, which Wilson head- . ; ry Overton, Waterford Township, said | wholesale buying prices unchanged (0,2 |Ciimay "ido... 'si8 Radio Cp... 333|the Nordiska plant. He arrived in|Casey pleaded guilty to a drunk ed es president betere he re- | Actident Insurance . Fire Insurance he tried to stop for traffic ahead, | Ff" .eciems 285. US standardg 30: | Cluett Pea... 262 Rem Reel .. S | Stockholm Sunday for a three-day | driving charge signed te beceme top man tn the | Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance swerved into westbound traffic and | soonss et ee et 198 Se oe eS vow ge = oe ieneral Driving with a revoked oper.| Defense Department at the | Burghary Insurance Life Insurance collided with a 3-ton stake truck els : re) .. 64 |Motors’ European ations. , . Bleeas oie: ‘ driven by Harry G, Francisco, 25, cmscaco PoTraToss Con Pe prs M13 Rock Bre. 353| . As evidence of the “new pro- wore ee preted - ean = me - Bonds--All Types —_ - Plate Glass Insurance St. AP)—Potatoes:— Arrivals | COBt es St Reg Pap .. 22.6 | ductive vitality” in Sweden and or cl ! ki . \ ee edie Gn |e ee ne shipments| Font Ou. 112 Seoxtl MI. 388 | Finland, Curtice cited the fact that |Of 19331 Five Points. Detroit. When | sweverthe defense”secretary . — around and collided with a pick- om fair at higher prices; mar- Gove Bs bd Gears Roep 75.4) the two countries now are absorb- | he aren iared to ~ —_ ended his statement with this jab “A wark of art is a corner ef creation seen truck behind him. driven by | tet firm to oigntiy stronger —— Crue 8tl__-~.. 204 Shell Ol =. % Jing cars and trucks at the rate of yesterday before Farmington “I personally deplore public through a temperament, up for Pontiacs with market Curtiss Wr 12.7 Simmons i ly 142.000 hree | Justice Allen C. Ingle. Ingle also F —Emile Zole David A. Fairchild, 40, of 1527] steaay to ee Di Det Rdis...... 33.6 Sioctate oC. “s approximately 142,000 a year—t assessed Murphy $25 costs. If the | statements that are based on " Harger Bivd., Waterford Township, | one's, o$-245. Minnesota and Werth Doug Aire’... 618 Bou . (Mar- i iret cel sestie tats |. Oakland headquarters is at 1603 Michigan State Conservation Clubs, will address the Commerce Ma- sonic Lodge at a Third Degree banquet in the local temple Thursday . He will on the subject of water pollution and natural re- source conservation in general Area Man Critical After Crash Today Robert Hutchieson, 29. of 32317 1] Mile Rd., Farmington, injured early today .when the car in which he was riding struck a tree near Orchard Lake and 11 Mile Rds. is reported in critical condition | at Pontiac General Hospital j Robert Laurin, 22, same adress, the driver. was also hospitalized iwith extensive forehead cuts and is listed as in fair condition Hutchieson sustained a skull frac- ture, and broken ankle, when Laur- in's car went out of control on the road, according to Michigan State Police of the Redford Post. County Republican Group ‘Opens 2 Headquarters | Oakland % W. Huren St.. with Mrs. Hel- muth Guenteche in charge. South S. Woodward, Royal Oak, under PTA Plans Potluck WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The Hudson Covert PTA will begin its couple will live 2 ee 4» » ¢— ee MKS. FRANK DUMONT OUTSES © as Missionary | Adult ( LAKEVILLE — Betty Sole will | | Bagdad. Iraq. for a five-year pe- | | Begin Tonight to Spm thal — She is the daughter of Mr and) Waterford High Includes Home Building Classes in Night Program WATERFORD TO WN SHIP — jeAdult education classes wil] open tonight for Waterford Township in the high school from 7 te-9: 30. George C. Tramontin, director of the program, said that two unusual courses will be offered besides the reguar classes. One will be a home repair and building class where the members will construct a_ section of w home in the high schoot shop Also included in the class plan will be the installation of a com. plete bathroom and electrical wiring to approved specifications. A tailoring course covering pat- tern alterations as well as the con- struction of a tailored suit will be part of this class program “ Classes in typing, blueprint read ing and drafting, advanced and beginning sewing atso-witt-be given if there is enough interest Southfield Realty Group to Hear Richard Jeffery SOU TH FIELD TOWNSHIP — Richard Jeffery will be guest speaker during the United North- western Realty Assn. meeting and luncheon Thursday. Jeffery, a past president of UNRA, and of the In- ternational Society of Residential Appraiser, is now an independent appraiser, His topic for the meet- ing will be ‘Appraisal Approach to Better Listings.” John L. Sullivan is program chairman of the meeting to be held at the Sea Food Grotto, at 12 noon. Methodist Group | Forms |New WSCS Circle DRYDEN—A new circle of the Methodist WSCS has been formed for those who cannot attend the day meeting of the organization Officers of the new Joy circle are Mrs. Helene Staercke, presi- dent; Mrs: Ethel Hodges. vice president; Mrs. Adelaide Thorman, secretary. and Mrs. Maryelien Krebs, treasurer Farmington Slates MSC Conservation Specialist Paul M_ Barrett. extension spe- use from Michigan State College. cialist on conservation and land will act as moderator and shqw colored slides during a public The slides will illustrate the im- portance ‘of America's resources and will stress the importance of conserving them Elected at Marlette MARLETTE—New officers of the Mariette Community Council are Wesley Mahaffy, president: Mrs, Maurice Dunsford, vice presi dent: Mrs. Thomas Roeser, re cording secretary; Mrs. Irven Cal- ee *Bumont Takes etty L. Hughes as Bride FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — |’ -|Pm, Ted Bielecki, é Gets Jail Term Federal Judge Gives _ Six Month Sentence to Farmington Doctor Whitehead, 47, of 33200 Grand River, was sentenced to six months Judgé Frank A. Picard for failure to file income tax returns for 1960 and 1951 - Dr. Whitehead had admitted that he filed no returns for those years, when he made $23.000 and $31,000, Community character wit- nesses told the court that Dr, Whitehead had done much com- munity service Guring his 23 years of practice. Assistant principal of Farming. ton High School Byron E. Oliver said Dr. Whitehead had examined mester since 1943, without charge. Asked whether he was too busy to file the returns, Dr. Whitehead told the judge no, that he could _ have found time , The maximum penalty would have been a year in prison and a | $10.000 fine 3 Air Reserve Unit. at Ferndale Lists Four Promotions FERNDALE — Recent promo- tions in Ferndale's 9606th Air Re- serve Squadron have been an- nounced by Capt. Lee F. Kenney, squadron commander. Promoted to captain .were Ste- Phen J Kietian, of 23526 W. Nine Mile Rd.. and Charles A. Ramsey, of Birmingham New first lieutenants are Ken- nethG. Klee, of-Royal Oak. and Robert L. Furr, of Berkley. Thieves Loot Home Damaged by Blaze Thieves broke into a Lake Orion home which_last—week was dam- aged by fire, and took about $75 worth of jewelry and silver, ac- cording to a report received yes- terday by Oakland County sheriff's deputies Mrs. Charles Banket of 660 Lake- view, told deputies that burglars removed boards from a window to gain entry. The Banket family_has been staying with friends since the fire a Deputies said thieves took live necklaces, two bracelets, and part of a silver setting Volunteer Service Group to Meet in Birmingham The fourth session of the Oak- land County Volunteer Service will be held Thursday from 10 to 4 p.m. in St. James Episcipal Church. Birmingham. Anyone interested in horticultural therapy and local volunteer pro- grams is welcome to attend and may contact Mrs. William H. Bur- lingame of Birmingham or Mfrs. William Hyland of South Telegraph road for reservations. Bernard Houghtalings THE PONTIAC PRESS,,"TUESDAY,' SE No Tax Returns, | FARMINGTON—Dr- Maynard-E- se in prison yesterday by Federal? . the scheot's 200 athletes each se von . Im ent. infor- mation Mrs, Harvey FE STRONG SALES PERSONALITY for exrtustve ta tes sion full Alaa tine eran © Syntaz =.