“Ee, a OVER ONITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS — EK PONTTAC PR ~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY; OCTOBER 31, 1959 —28 PAGES City Man Finds Force Will Not - ° Solve Anything : [ S ? ‘J - CS a. _Long-Lost Nikita Declares sr: — By MAX E. SIMON e This will be a big week for’ Edward White, a 48- °| Tells Supreme Soviet! cccsional through city streets to-| *| That He and Ike Favor |night. —— An occasiona} light rain will fall on the Pontiac area this evening, with the low temperature about ee 2 The Weather - U. &. Weather Bureau Forecast Cloudy, cooler (Details on Page 2) * PACES Be 4 kkkKe 117th YEAR. Vanishes Over Virginia From Landing } | | sy Halloween Edict: (Goblin Gloom (With Drizzle) The weatherman is providing an appropriate setting for costumed Halloween figures of children be- hind horror masks. Long shadows cast by bumber- | Governor Greets Senator ) # Steady Drizzle, Fog, | Mist Hamper Search | in Mountain Foothills { _ CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. > ‘ year-old Pontiac factory worker: He's going to meet | his sister. : . ° 3 ae » Not that there's anything unusual in brothers © Early Summit Talks © meeting sisters. Except in White's case, he wasn’t aware | | | * he had a sister until August. He has never seen her.: “ From Our News Wires 44. ‘ This week he will. . *| MOSCOW — Premier) _ Skies will be mostly overcast P—A es arp : Edward White doesn’t remember his parents. His 8) Nikita S. Khrushchev told Sunday and temperatures a little with 27 persons aboard dis- earliest memories are of a state adoption home in Coldwater where he was piaced in childhood, together | the closing session of the cooler, the high near 52 degrees and the low tomorrow night 40- 45. appeared Friday night five ‘minutes before it was to + Supreme Soviet today that » he and President Eisen- ie are agreed. that -|“problems facing the world with his brother. | At the age of seven, White was taken into the home of a Pinconning couple, Mr. and Mrs. Charles White. It make a routine landing at [this college town in the \foothills of the Blue Ridge From 10 a.m. yesterday until the | same time today .56 of an inch of rain fell- in downtown Pontiac. | © meant separation from his brother, but not for long. c| Morning winds southerly at five, Mountains ket can only be solved through Miles an hour will be variable at) ; | \five to 10 miles tonight. | About 100 searchers } . “The Whites came for me in March of 1919,” he J) negotiations, and not by Forty-eight was the lowest tem : . slo thr recalled. "And on Dec. 25th of that same year they i ahs eae fae underbrush during the night but by midmorning still had not found a trace of the missing Piedmont Airlines DC3. A steady drizzle, fog and mist ham- pered a planned air search. The plane, enroute from Wash- ington to Roanoke, Va., checked in with the local airport tower at 8:24 p.m. and received landing ? instructions. That was the final word. The airliner had fuel to last only until 11 p.m. Maj. Charies A. Rausch, Civil Air Patrol commander for the central Virginia area, said be- tween 20 and 30 fixed-wing air- craft from as far away as Massa- chusetts were awaiting for a break in the weather to join the force.”’ Fd perature in downtown Pontiac pre- ; Khrushchev said Russia “‘great- ; ly regretted’ the border incidents. * between Red China and India, and 4 brought my brother Raymond home for me as a 4 He said they both favored ceding 8 am. The reading at 1 Christmas present. ~ an early summit meeting. ?™ “_™” | ‘His foster parents inquired about other brothers and sisters. They were told there were no others. The brother died at the age of 14. “would be glad if such incidents # were not repeated and any contro- write the adoption agency in 1932. “I wanted te find I | settled eee remem were for Jobless Pa something of my background,” he explained. The | : | Whites encouraged him. He learned the name of his _ Pay — Khrushchev’s first ma- i reign policy speech since | Rate at Pontiac Office Is Highest Since Last Year's Recession | x * * ; ’ . | 1,500 a Day File Curiosity about his background led “White to =~ "ht parents and where he was born. his retarn frem visiis to the Unit- & For the time being, he was satisfied. : He married and moved ‘to Pontiac in 1934. fq . He knew his parents had lived in Flint. CHECKED PHONE BOOK “My wife and I sometimes went to Flint and I'd look in the phone book hoping to find the name,” White said. “I never found it.” ed States and Peiping, and its concilatory nature obviously Pentiac Press Phete OLD POLITICAL FRIENDS — Renewing an old friendship at the Elks Temple in Pontiac Township, county Democratic chairman. In in- troducing Humphrey at the annual Oakland County Democratic dinner, Williams called him “Michigan's third senator.” last night were Gov. Williams and Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (center), Minnesota Democrat. At the right is Carlos Richardson of Waterford — ——-+ :| to the summit. % A good index to the effect of, | Meanwhile, in Paris, a foreign the steel strike in Pontiac is found) |ministry spokesman denied reports, at the local office of the Michigan) Security Y¥ Commis- fot an impending announcement set-| Employment 7 4 iting Dec. 19 as the date of the) sion. Sometimes he thought of looking for other blood 5 ;;western ‘“‘summit’ conference in| Laid off factory workers ‘ire fil- ° “h relatives “but something held me back,” he said. “I *| Paris. | ing initial applications for unem- H UM hre Kicks Off search. had my parents—Mr. and Mrs. White—and so much | The spokesman said, however,| ployment compensation at a rate Reports of hearing a low-lying airplane trickled in from through- out a four-county central Virginia area. Rausch said as soon as two reports come from the same floca- &\ that the western “Big Four” have} of 1,500 a day, said Paul Kimball, Sie oa. on that date as the start) district. manager. (of their meeting. He said diplomat-| This rate is the highest ice|) 500 la offs Biic exchanges between Paris, Wash- last year’s recession, he said. | ' were | time had passed...” His wife convinced him in August that he'd “never really be happy” until he learned more about his 13-State Tour in City ~ family, | ington, Bonn, and London still tion the search would be centered He started the searctt at the Genessee County, {| under way. Long lines are forming every D . car ¢ \there. . Courthouse, : Reliable sources said earlier to- day outside the office, 242 Oak- rastic ervice- uts By JOEL RIPPA Two helicopters which churmed ; > that announcement the meet-| land Avé.,.as state workers proc- = j : through the mists and rain dumng aban records showed his parents as being ee cocks besin Dec, 9 ld be| ¢ss the flood of claims. Ann isles If Tax City Editor, Pontiac Press the night were sent back to Ft. {Continasé on Page 2, Col. 3) [made this afternoon in the four! More than 11,000 automotive) SOSNES fan Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) kickeg off a Fisl's. Vs. today. Two move Pel Ensinenghinccdiemtnenuetimenmemannansemmnemnns |: such a summit! workers were iaid off in Pontiac | 13-state political tour in Pontiac last night with a major fo, clearer weather. and two more meeting were made known last! ; ; a eee I. rm free : voock. e . |in the past eight days. Yesterday From Our News Wires | policy speech on world arms control, but not before tak-;were en route here. 4 mw ° = | 1,000 were idled at GMC Truck &! LANSING — Michigan faces dis- ; : var | . Court Will Hear Steel Union Major points Coach Division. Wednesday, 2.400\charge of more than 2 “0 state 428 Several pot shots at the Republican administration! 4 pPteamont DC3_ carrying — speech were: | seven airline officials set out at : : i id off at Fisher Body Di-|workers and drastie cuts in serv- ON a host of other issues. 1. Disarmament is the most im-| “°T® laid 0 5 . . 6:45 but was forced * . portant problem of the present day an pres upeagts ey e a C » ()- Of OV ‘and its settlement depends wheth- , S there will be war or peace. The vision and 5,800 at Pontiac Motor ices if Republicans stick to a cau-!' cing j , i I c Speaking at the fifth annual 18th Congressional ta 45 ‘eeaiee faker becduee af Soviets want complete disarma- Division. Another 2,000 were idledcus-approved revenue plan, Gov. ora Ant : : at Pontiac Motor last Friday. |G Mennen Williams warned today. Democratic fund-raising dinner at the Elks Temple, the} pad flying weather. Cloudy weather and occasional rain was ment but are willing to consider other proposals. A shortage of materials, caused) A 10-month deadlock was broken hurrying Minnesota Democrat called for a year's exten- : see hast aca ae hi ani Yesterday Republicans — j 4 3 .q. forecast throughout the day. by the steel strike, was blamed in) Yesterday when Republicans in sion of the American mora-| 2. The Seviet Union supports Red Ghina’s determination to , both houses agreed to tap the Vet- | ; , each layoff. 2 b I r nucle e d The airliner, Piedmont Flight Kimball expects his office will erans’ Trust Fund for stopgap fi- torilum on nuclear tests an 349, had left Washington at 7:30 take Formosa “until the question is solved."’ . . lbe extra-busy until at least three "2"cing—when a tax program “Toll in Mexico offered a proposal for break- p.m. When it cvhecked in here it or four weeks after the steel strike 4”4!ted. ing the impasse between was about 20 miles and five min” But a new impasse in the fis- 3. “We regret the incidents on General Motors Corp. has in- the Indian-Chinese frontier, espe. dicated it will take that, much is settled. U.S. and Russia on test ban/|Utes from a landing cially where they involved casual-| time to get full production un. | | cal crisis developed at the same P Ik er -FOOTCEILING time when Republicans said the q . | talks. ’ Acting every bit like a candidate foot ceiling and 10-mile visibility. ties and we hope they will not be) der way again. repeated. We hope the difficulties) fost idle Workers are also. cl- in Khrushchev's WASHINGTON (#—The Supreme Court has agreed’ to hear the United Steelworkers Union’s appeal of a Tatt-| Hartley law injunction that would send the striking) steelworkers back to work for 80 days. This means the 109-day-old strike will continue at x *&* * Ford Starting least until next week, when the court makes its decision on whether to let the in- At that time there was a 1.500- state needed 70 million dollars in \for the democratic nomination, he! Later in the evening. as the new tates, not the 110 million demanded by Williams. ; nevertheless dodged the question: search started, a drizzle began. Floods, Whipped Up bY Oe you want to be president?’'| The terrain around this town, : : ase ||! | The governor said the Republi- = . : e Short Weeks, jynction stand. The court “i His Ree te te eritek skates! igible ee rrp eiony pnemPloy-can figuring was ‘simply prepost-! Cyclone, C Ruin Towns “Every man in politics must (home of the ——. o iT- } set Tuesday for oral argu-| oom ‘ maiority of ment benefits. To be eligible for erous.” est Coast look to the future” was his re. ginia, is rolling countryside. Many Tu y BU-\convinced \fim the - majority of on a farms and estates and desnse _these, they must first be eligible) Republican leaders said a | for unemployment compensation. _|‘‘growth factor’ in the present tax | Auto workers collect the SUB! structure, a moritorium | checks at the factories where they construction and economs 6. He called for withdrawal of | work. ures would make ply at a press conference ear- Due to Steel DETROIT (UPI) — Steel short- ages virtually choked off all General Motors production today, | left Chrysler Corp. gasping for Americans do not want war and he feels they now understand “bet- ter the Soviet desire for peace. ments. The high court's action Friday | was a triumph for the union, which is attacking the basic constitution- ality of the Taft-Hartley strike- ending procedures. ier at the home of Dr. Howard woods dot the area. MEXICO CITY (UPI) — Authori-| 4 veNeill, 225 Hickory Ridge ties feared today the death toll in Rd., Bloomfield Township. a cyclone-whipped series of floods Ik I Fi Considered one of the leading} = S Ine that wiped out ten west coast! : ; : communities Tuesday may rise as Democratic presidential aspirants, new meas- their program a on life and prompted Ford Motor \Co. t U lovment ation! Williams said it was “an ade- high as 2.000 \the liberal senator said he thought) ; ry, nemploymen compensation | nigh as 2,000. . ‘I } ; to schedule reduced production. ed sep gpulinabla " . 7. He declared the Soviet Union| Pays off at rates which vary ac-| (uate way to cut the throat of | x *& * Gov. Williams was still among the| _. GM reported 185,000 of its 320.000 ia Sa 14 vouee Ot anil ; desired that not even the ‘“‘minut-| cording to the number of depend-| Michigan. d Nearly 800 persons were reported ea Raga a ne was Bronchitis hourly-rated workers are now laid| est hotbed of war’’ should remain! ents a claimant has, and his aver-) House and Senate Republicans dead, 600 in the community of ©CCE&G four times, he said. ' “Six times,’’ he was quickly cor- \rected by reporters. off because of the steel strike.| The government contends the * * * strike is affecting national health Only some Buick, GMC Truck|and safety. It fought the union’s and Coach and Chevrolet division|request for a review, saying the plants continued limited produc-|constitutional arguments are in Laos and said foreign countries| age weekly wage. agreed in caucuses yesterday the Minatitlan alone, but it appeared ought not to interfere because of| The maximum for a single man, state could get by with 70 millions, the death toll would be much possible ‘‘undesirable results.’ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) |higher. Another 135 persons were ‘GIVE THEM LICKING’ [reported critically injured in Mina-| To Williams who introduced him! |titlan, which had a population of at the dinner, he said: . | WASHINGTON \# — President Eisenhower's doctors today con- firmed he has mild chronic bronchitis but said that other- tion. “clearly without merit’ and . . i ‘ | wise he “continues to maintain ae : e ly 900. | The Republicans in your state te & there is no need for further re- R R Pl G Aw Vy jon" | ; m.70 ; ” Most recent to feel the pinch of view by this court.” _ aln, alni, ease O a | It was reported earlier that aS acting: toward you like they| an excellent state of health P ; * « most of the town's population |"S¢d to in Washington against x & the steel shortage was Ford. That firm, while producing about 50 per The physicians issued a’ medi- Roosevelt and Truman.” cal bulletin shortly after Eisen- * * * was buried under tons of mud If the Supreme Court had de-| © =. sy trey hs ieee os ea ces o that cascaded down upon it, The cent of its own basic steel, an. nounced yesterday it would limit workers to three and four-day work weeks. clined to hear the case, it would have left standing the ruling of a Philadelphia appeals court that the injunction is legal and valid. mud was loosened by heavy rains driven by violent, cyclonic winds. The storms and floods brought “There's only one thing you can do about them,”’ he said. ‘Every two years give them a licking. | hower checked out of Walter | Reed Army Hospital where he underwent his annual physical checkup. The 69-year-old President told reporters in Augusta, Ga. last week that he had devel- devastation to four states on the “I'd like to perform an autopsy) | here on the Republican administra-| Paeific Coast. ., _/tion in Washington,’’ he said, ‘‘but A reporter for a Mexico Cityry forego ue essen Previously, Ford planned to maintain full production until mid- November and then shut down Central Topples completely. newspaper reported only one mem-| — 6th Ranked Ferndale | ber of a 100-man army garrison) Foreign policy is the major — ness bronchitis during i “ inatitl: ‘ive i f everybody, said Hum- the last three years. Chi at Minatitlan survived. He said the} concen © ; 3 i ang Is Ba | Today Pontiac Central pulled a few survivor, Lt. Salvador Bote}lo, “‘is| prey. It's a matter of sur- Today's medical bulletin said TAIPEI, Formosa (#—Presi- on the brink of insanity and-Speaks| Vival. regarding Eisenhower's head-to- toe examination at Walter Reed: “The results of these all in- clusive studies shows that the President continues to maintain | an excellent state of health, with like a man in his sleep.” He charged that the Republican * * * {party is incapable of recognizing President Adolfo Lopez Mateos |the social and economic revolu- was in personal charge of efforts) tion taking place throughout the! to bring relief to survivors in the world, disaster areas. “ That party is not facing up ‘to! the exception of a persistent mild = * * ithe challenge of “people. progress| fracheo-bronchitis.” At least 10,000 rescue workers and peace,” Humphrey told the! white House Press Secrétary and -75 military and civilian air-|§59 Oakland County Democrats at! janes © (Hagerty tole report: craft were deployed over the wide the $10-a-plate dinner. * : dent Chiang Kai-Shek celebrated his birthday today amid clamor for him to continue to lead the nation when his present term expires next May. The leader of the Chinese Nationalist govern- ment was 73 by his own reckon- ing, a year less by the Western calendar. . CREE ae ners oe | ing —- ry * Ace areas iy ihe alates of! a. = & = i ireaponee bs niga hr d i p Colima, Jalisco, Nayarit and) «ay, ST . : _ coul y SS Avendale remained unbeaten ichoacs , You can’t fight the Communists) translated into chronic bron In To ays rre Michoacan. if you don't understand them,'’ he chitis. said. ) Soe tare etmar| West Bloomfield was spanking : s Cabin Cruiser to Blame Church News .... .... ....80 ane —_ es al Peary? ig hag He'll Grow Up Fast Comics ....2.... seeteees vos 20 *~ * * on i LUDINGTON (UPI) — The mittee said ne spent eight hours LISBON (UPI)—Macio Lu Editorials .... 1... 6665 4... 4 complete rundown Coast Guard said last night the ¥ d (UPI)—Mac is Home Section .... .... ., 15-19 mR ~ night prep action Fad re disastrous collision July 4 of a ee ee Vieira won an automobile in a Obituaries ....,....... .. 0 | found om the sports pages SALT FLOWS WHEN WET—An unidentified AP Wirephote | Cabin cruiser and a car ferry | (C*Cer was ! " | newspaper-sponsored contest yes- BOTED be ceccc uses Stes 12-14 hee a at ate lie cue dave of Gace ies that Gave live when-they July 4. was first listed as a drown- Walled Lake, one in Upper drowned when their craft capsized, @icd , “ing victim. but an sutonsy showed Straits Lake and ene in Unien (* lost his balance and fell over-) a * * the cause of death to he a heart é |board and ihe fourth suffered 1) Lake, all patrolled. bent atree end diened board.| “But one of the Walled Lake Water sports accidents claimed| drownings took place in May be- the lives of an unexperienced skin’ fore the lake was being policed diver and a teen-ager who fell " Only five were county residents, attack, four of them children and one a This lowered the 1959 total to ]t-year-old boy. Likewise, the ma-, 18, eme under last year’s tell of gority of persons ticketed for water 19 victims. = - : Violations were weekend “pleasure ; regularly, Irons said, ‘and the from a surfboard. The latter was kere” inom “dhe ities aad The water patrol under Sheriff Union Lake drowning took place|a nonswimmer. . , sd aan Frank W. Irons. kept the total late at night after our man had _ counties os WATCH CHILDREN down. Of all drownings, only four gone off duty. The total is one less tham happened on regularh patrolled +. * * The ou ot children — - earlier reported. lakes. The patrol annually begins full. Wander from ‘heir parents’ watch- a - time operation on Memorial Day ful eyes dropped to three this” and curtails its patrols sharply year. This had been the largest after Labor Day contributor to the county drown- “But the records show that if we!ing toll for several years. had a man for every lake, the} In holding the number of drown- yearly tol] would hit an all-time|ings to one less than 1958; the lake low,”’ the sheriff said. |patro} did a monumental job. CAN'T COVER ALL There were 17,600 boats regis- There are more than 400 lakes! fed im 1968. Complete. figures and less than 50 deputies. | Ore mat yet avaliable fer 1900, | Hess said he was subpoenaed! Unpatrolied lakes on which! but Sgt. Donald Kratt, water | ; director, estimates the | to appear before the Legislative @rownings occurred were Hawk nae ree Weubled and Oversight subcommittee to explain} ake Commerce ae ‘at | Paid $10,000 to Get Manon TV Quiz Show ALLENTOWN Pa. +(AP)—Max Hess, the owner of a large depart- ment store. said Fnday might that he paid $10000 to help get a the role he played in getting Ken- Dixie Lake, Springfield Laer pessibly may reach — ree: former employe on the television neth Hoffer on the quiz show : Lake bedependence Perec! istered beats in county waters quiz show. *°$64,000 Question.”’ * * c ‘ this year. ship; Buckhorn Lake, Rose Town-) . ship; Square Lake, Orion Town-| “We really had our hands full. ship; Kent Lake, Milford Town-|Kratt said. “The traffic on area ship; Lower Long Lake, Bloom-|lakes was greater than any of us field Township; Orchard Lake,/ever dreamed it would be. The home with and the Springland Mill Pond, Pew equipment obtained early this blair Highland Township. \year really paid off and the men ePX- money.” said Hess, president of| ~This didn't bother us ‘did a splendid job.” iless Brothers Department Store. plained Hess. “because the \oung There were twe “ 7. ee Lake, | because it proved to be a highly man was eager to appear on the, drewned ia Holdridge _ . ee talked about program which fo-' program and attempt to win on Holly Township; one in Camp | Officia} records in Kratt's file Hoffer. of Reading. «appeared once on the Columbia Broadcast- ing System quiz show, in August 1955. He missed his third question —for $512—and went He explained this to a reporter in revealing that he had been sub- poenaed to appear Monday before a House subcommittee investigat- ing the rigging of quiz shows “It was worth every cent of the out a nickel's BIKE BRIGHTENS DAY — Elementary School pupil flashes prize for the first time. town our goal — to once agnin e\pose! year-eld bey drowned in a water (ters. Not all 70 would have ~ |the name of Hess Brothers and; trough on an Independence Teown- |drowned, but many of them mignt . the city of Allentown to millions; ghip farm. jhave if it hadn't been for an alert of people” | U | In New York. there was no im- ; |patrolman. ; One teen-ager died two weeks) Of these, 29 were given emer- mediate comment CRS of. after suffering a broken neck when The eighth annual Mystery Treat from gency first aid. Contest sponsored by the Pontiac : ficials. They eliminated the “$64,-/D€ dived into shallow water of a Nearly 400 boaters were assisted Parks and Recreation Department 000 Question” last \ear when the Toy gravel pit. This was not}. the seafaring deputies. and Pontiac Area Junior Chamber dangerous as first reports of rigging came out. | Officially rs a —— | om ihe t side, depu- of Commerce was once again a big success last night, even though ifirst place in one division was for- feited ; Second prize in the senior high school class went to Shirley Wil- lett, 16, of 491 Wyoming Ave. ties issued 75 tickets for viola- tions. A total of 73 viciators were convicted, only two cases being dismissed in county justice courts. Five victims were children from 2 to 12 years of age. Seven were teenagers. Two victims were in their 20s,-two were 30 vears old, ore 40, and the oldest victim was 49 Thirty-four persons were charged and third prize to Helen Thams. JONESVILLE (UPI) — Deadly (Continued From Page One! Only two of this year’s victims with reckless operation of a motor 14, of 351 weet Ir is Ra. Both gas fumes were spread over a for instance. 1x 60 eh thar’s Were female. — myries Oe en ae are students at Pontiac Central~ five mile area near here today by if he averaged °7) ‘eek or More) EVENING BAD TIME anne =F 8 High. ‘state law. Only two drownings ocurred dur-- Two people were ticketed for An Eastern Junior High student, child, the maximum gee, up te ing the morning hours, and both reckless water skiing, two for over- Marilyn Bird, 13, of 174 Raeburn gence inst nicks , SAS (if he averaced S81 or more). of those shortly before noon. loading their boats, four for fail-'St.. took first place in the junior Residents from North Adams, The maximum keeps on going) The hours from 6 p.m. to mid-)ing to identify themselves and high division. about five miles from the well|/up. For instan / marned man Bight were worst with 8 victims. crafts, and one each for having! Twelve-year-old Peggy Reeve, complained of the fumes that were} with three children ean get up to Seven died from noon to 6 p.m. illegible registration numbers, of 66) Fourth Ave., a Madison held close to the ground by a! $59 (if he averaged $108 or more).| The worst day was Sunday, with drinking while = a —e Junior High student, toak second heavy smog The unemployed have. to- have five drownings. Friday anq and creating exces: tenet >y place. ae Linda Ross, 12, of 305 State Police blocked off a | Worked at least 11 weeks in the Wednesday three each. There were a a motor without a Proper Draner St.. a Washington Junior past 52 at $li-atweck or more jg two each on Tuesday, Thursday! Muller. mile square area around i, weil on the G. Mane farm which UCT to be eligible for compensa- and Saturday, and one drowning a “thundering” o1] well that has been spitting ol, water and slush several hundred feet into the air For a married man with one * * * : ner. “It’s interesting to look back at ywIns BICYCLE is located im the rich Scipie oil a Leach of tin oe srewred: 0 Tpomas statistics, but the only way you Wi 9 of 101 Mohawk field of Hillsdale County. ee : aati iia August was the worst month, can make it pleasant is by looking, Andy igent, 9. of 101 } State Police Fire Marshal Clyde 'S P@!d depends on the number of! marred by 6 drownings. ches eae aad St. was first prize winner of a Marquardt from the Jackson Post jevun eee ae ‘nurnber| ae an gs ae Len ce Net en an the rool pa oe said there was danger of an ex- af. weel= sncked - _ " recks! in September and two each in lakes,” he explained. “Now's the, : piosion and fire, but so far no one 0) VOCE MOUeed up te - — time to start warning people to A Bagley Elementary School hid been forced to leave their oliiai ; Most victims were swimmers. stay off the ice until it's safe to student, Charlotte Nichols, of 249 homes The nearest home, he said, The SUB plan is designed. Seven died while swimming, sixiwalk on, or next spring we'll be W. Wilson St.. won second prize, was about a mile away generally, to guarantee from 60 a radio. Third was Dwight Siat- er, of 187 E. Huron St., a five- of them were in unguarded, un- looking back on a tragic string of supervised areas. te 65 per cent of the emplove's take home pay for as long as 26 weeks. Oilmen called for help to Illinois! 1 Texas. police said Well owner Terry Fulk of Albion said workers hit a gas pocket at The amour around 3.800 feet and the. pressure supplement: winter drownings.” a ‘and duration £ the nd oon Prolong A-Test Ban, He Advocates henefits den Liew oatt a 3*2 Inch pipe and the the total amount in thr employer's “ bd . . cement that had been poured unemployment trust fund. the em- . around it ploye’s seniority and pay rate. his UMD rey IC S OUr In on | One observer said the well; dependents. the amount of unem- Sounded “like a thundering jet’’ as; ployment compensation he |< draw. af sent its innards showerng over! ing. and the number of wees he (Continued From Page One) jtal ban on all nuclear tests, with, the fulfillment of economic stabil-|those above five kilotons being sub- ity, he said |ject to a complete international in- “You can't soft-pedal equal op-|spection system. | portunity, social justice and equal Humphrey said the two-year sus- pension of tests below the five kil- the area has worked In Utah, Arizona, California A voluntary two-year morato- nee rium on atomic tests below five gram aimed at detecting any sus- Storms Rage Out West sue the elderly and ae kilotons was proposed by Hum- picious nuclear blasts, he said. sick find disabled must be pro- phrey in expectation that effec- Soviets tive Halnw the al aces for. he said. v tive safeguards ever all tests for only a ‘‘few" inspections an- SALT LAKE CITY. Utah (AP)—1 At least ‘three peopl den) . noe Bovereiment mat at | would have been put into effect nually as an effective control, A freakish outburst of violent and 10 were hurt afte violent Seas eee — by the end of that period. Humphrey stated. weather. subsided across the West windstorms slashed across north- ‘ y. ; : ; " PA . today while officials figured uplern Utah and southern Caliornia In his prepared speech, Hum-| A five-kiloton weapon has a cial phrey asked for a year’s extension| yield. The atomic bomb dropped on of the U. S. moratorium on nuclear heet of sno overed tt t tests, now scheduled to end ook “several hundred”’ s : Ww covere ne eastern j H posed for discussion a to-| TNT. slopes of the Rockies and parts © Pro — |would be necessary. of the Western Plains states | He charged the administration Two children drowned in flash damages which will run into mil-\and lions of dollars The Weather flash floods drenched |tions of central Arnzona. An_ icy sec- |with ‘‘extreme negligence” in al- s rast IAG Ry toads creed he ont to LOCA] Man Happy, Finds owing tn tiea"et ‘tnarmamen Sccastomal ight rain today and tentght hit central Arizona since 1951. The| ‘to become associated in the eyes row mostly cloudy and cooler. Wich s¢./Snowstorm left 6 to 15% inches | . 7 jof the world with the Soviet ea at 5 to 10 miles today andiof snow in the eastern Rockies. | 1S on g- OS 1S er ‘Union.” Today in Pentiac The tornadic winds in Utah! “Why do we leave it to Lowest temperature preteding 8 em howled off the Wasatch Mountain : F Ve Khrushchev te go before the Mat § am Wind velocity 8 mpn Range and caused widespread \Sootinues|: From Esae'e United Nations Genoral Assembly Direction Northeast damage in a_ heavily-populated! divorced in 1919—and, to his amazement, the existence Sun sets Saturday at 5 27 pom : z m and proclaim the great goal of as SS ea Pp region from Salt Lake City 75) of a sister. Moon sets Saturday at 5-27 pm s ge | Moon rises Sunday a! 7 44 a im miles north to Tre monton, on the, * Utah-Idaho border * A check of Probate Court records disclosed that * ‘Dewntewn T empera tureert4 pr} : 6 a.m 11 am an x & . Disarmament has been an Ameri- 7om a 2 = voy 6@ At least 10 people were hurt in the girl had been adopted as a four-month-old infant can idea, he said. “Let the id we “a pr Utah as winds of up to 92 miles by Mrs. Caroline Spalding of Saginaw. know the United States is the Gam x & * per hour toppled houses. uprooted \leader in the quests for world ¥ White traveled Friday in Pentiac THE PONTIAC PRESS; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1959 for most Pontiac residents, but it was one of the brightest days in the life of nine-year-old Andy winner ofa shiny bike in this year’s Mystery Treat Contest. Shown here with contest chairman Robert Berry, the Webster Andy ‘lives at 101 Mohawk St. cused the public eye on Hess his own merits. and as far as we) Dearbern, & girl drowned in a Show that deputies pulled about 7M t T t ( t Brothers. and the city of Allen- are concerned we had achieved, Pontiac gravel pit and a twoe- Persons in trouble from area wa- ys ery Tea on est ie Winners Are Announced +: i irs ag88 TE. |reported to the City Commission at its meeting Monday. Ike Keeps Tardy with reimbursements due to Birmingham for the issuance of driver, chauffeur and liquor |li- censes, the state has notified the icity it is impossible to know when ithe mgney will be forthcoming. | Birmingham has _ missed this jsource of revenue since June. Mum on J.-H. Purkiss, Jr.; the city’s «(Golf Slam rector of finance, says he asked the state when the payments could! WASHINGTON (UPI)—President be expected. He also asked for Eisentiower gave the same answer confirmation of the amount due. (to charges that he played golf Purkiss received the reply from! when he should have been direct- William R. Hart, acting Statejing World War II strategy as he | Auditor General. idid to earlier criticisms by war- | tailed te time colleagues — silence. | “They (the state) mention our request for confir- The latest complaint about Ei- senhower’s World War II leader- | ship came from Field Marshal Lord |Alanbrooke, chief of the British genera] staff during the fighting. | * * *® Stabbed Youth ‘Dead’ No More Heart Massaged Back Into Action, but Boy in Critical Condition Pontiac Press Photo Today dawned dark and-dreary In addition to the golf charge, |Allanbrooke said Eisenhower was “just a coordinator’ of the Al- lie: S, not a ‘‘real director of thought, plans, energy or direction.” * * * The White House had no com- /Ment on the Alanbrooke statements contained in the second and final /volume of a World War II history based on the Briton’s diaries and j autobiographical notes. This part DETROIT w — Stabbing victim! of the book was made public yes- Alvin Williamson, 15, was listed/terday. It will be published Mon- year-old Central Elementary 45 dead on arrival at receiving hos-| day. School student. pital last night. His heart, punc-; Among other World War II fig- Wigent. He was the first place a smile as he climbs aboard his Third prize in all divisions was fivg silver dollars. First place win- tured by a knife, had stopped. Minutes later it was beating ures who have found fault with Eisenhower's leadership in their High student, was third place win- oton range would permit both sides} to break the present deadlock. They could conduct 4 comprehen-| sive research and observation pro-| / { Efficient Carrier | The administration has no real| Hiroshima was a 20 kiloton weap- position because of contention by) on. A kiloton equals 1,000 tons of proponents of nuclear tests that inspections again, massaged into action by a memoirs are British Field Marshal surgeon. |Lord .Montgomery and French Williamson was in critical con. President Charles de Gaulle. dition today after undergoing | . * * + surgery for a knife wound swt: CE, Wilson, 69, The Jaycees awarded more than, fered im ag fight with another gers got a wrist watch ‘and second! prize was a pen and pencil set in the junior and ates pS di- | visions 100 prizes to boys and girs) eemager. Leaves Hospital Pp y members. First prize’ Hospital attendants said the in the senior division was forfeited | youth was listed in records as After Heart Rest when the winner's mother notified dead -on- arrival after he was officials today that they had been brought to the hospital. The rec- talking to the teep-ager's younger ord read “critical” today brother The youngster gave his older brother's name when he realized he himself was ineligible to win the senior high prize. Former Secretary of Defense \Charies E. Wilson, 69, was released Dr. Ray Beck, a staff surgeon, Yesterday from Harper Hospital in opened the boy’s chest in the hos-|Detroit. He entered Oct. 8 after pital’s emergency room and mas-|S¥ffering what was described as a WARREN C. FRASA beating. He was then taken to an TP shang Hasan resigned as Ooo ay rating room for su ; |Motors Corp. president in 1952 to uel : oo become President Eisenhower's sane ‘first secretary of defense, has been ‘Williams Th lilams |hreatens | years ago. Layoffs of 2,500 + + ’ Wilson was on a Florida vaca- |tion when the attack occurred. He what appears to be a steady Bloomfield Township and consult- growth in tax collections. ‘ing his personal physic.an. Sen. Frank D. Beadle (R-St.| Clair), Senate majority leader, | liquidation of the trust fund, cur-| rently worth about 40 million dol-| ‘lars. | The cash would be used to meet riod of years. * * * | Beadle also indicated Republi- |cans probably would insist on a |from three to four cents. Williams and Democratic lawmakers blocked a vote last spring. Michigan’s finances, now face a \in semi-retirement since leaving (Continued From Page One) ‘entered the hospital after returning \said the settlement almost cer-| ‘the state’s most pressing obliga- | November 1960 vote on raising the ithreat from the prolonged steel) Saves Earnings. to Study Drafting If Warren C. Frasa is as effi-. cient a draftsman as he is a Pon- tiac Press carrier, he’s almost cer- | tain to be successful. Warren, 16, of 61 W. Colgate St.,, delivers The Press to his many h¢ reported revenues were down | satisfied customers along W. Col- ‘fem previous months, gate and New York avenues, and’ An estimated 115,000 Michigan! W. Walton boulevard. workers have been idled by the Ys a veteran carrier, havin istrike, according to Michigan Em- ned the route for three years. ployment Security Commission of- —— ficials; not including the number of Warren has his sights set on be-| Michigan people on strike. ing a draftsman. saged his heart until it resumed mild heart attack. \the Cabinet a little moge = two |coupled with some economies and to his W. Long Lake road home in ‘tainly would provide for quick | |tions and be replaced over a pe- ‘constitutional sales tax ceiling | Strike “We are already experiencing effects of the steel strike in Sep- tember use.and sales tax collec- tions,"” said Deputy Revenue Com:nissioner Clarence Lock as JOHN C. TREEN John C. Treen Dies; Once With Press DETROIT (AP)—John C. Treen, 52, one of Detroit’s most versatile hewspapermen, diei today in Bons Secours Hospital. He underwent His hobby, building models, falls | right in line with his future voce MS {J | b F | ’ tion. Warren is a student at Pon-| a Xp osion tiac Northern High School. . 5 | ® ait me amends savings Sill Unexplained ——[»rimina sumer ost. 3." Press earnings. _ . | began his newspcper career with | — Warren was one of 10 Pontiac) EAST ee cette Bhat vurea the Pontiac Press in 1925 after: his Press carriers named by the In-| : |graduation from the University of land Daily Press Assn. to receive|2ve, Michigan State University n trot, He had been with the De- award certificates as outstanding |Braduate students Thurs night : 7 «bas not been inted, the head| ‘Toit News since 1931. . ne Oe trees and smashed thousands of to Saginaw in mid-September and peace,” he said. . newspaper boys. + ot the cherie? desactiueas said) Treen ‘served Detroit's Chinese Highest temperature si windows. A dozen truck and checked the address he had. Mrs. Spalding. had gone to “IT have selected this audience! | today. community, becoming the News’ Liven teaporetare. (is trailer rigs were flipped over.| Texas, he was told, but another neighbor knew of her— tonight because it has more to C. of C. Drive Rei Dr. Laurence Quill said he would|¢*Pert on Oriental affairs. He de- ; wenther—lMestly sumay. rain State police halted truck, bus and) and of his sister. lose than most other parts of the; “* : ses ‘have to wait until he talked to at|Voted considerable time to welfare poo rth lal aaa small car traffic for several hours| at night he sent off a wire: country,” added "Humphrey. $15,500 to Aid Firm least one of the injured students|¢tivities, such as bringing Chinese Highest temperat=re 49 $ That nig . west temperature ja (ON Open highways. Proceeds from last night's din- before ‘he would know just what/Children to the United States. can temperature 435 Winds of hurricane force ac- “Dear Sis, did not.know of your existence until @ — ner. will be used to help elect a} MARION, Mich. (UPI) — The chemicals were being distilled| Last spring, he covered the Alas- 1 companied a freak weather pat- month age. Through Probate Court and Mrs. Spald- Democrat for. the 18th District in|Chamber of Commerce said $15,500| when the occurred on|kan trek of the 58ers, a group of , Ne Date ins] Tears (tern in southern California. Rain, ing, I have found you,” . |the House of Representatives. jhas been raised in a successtul|the third floor of the Kedzie Chem-|Michigan residents who moved to 59 in 1933 _ 4 ‘n 183 hail, snow and lightning storms Letters and phote ake followed. James M.-+ Ginn of Franklin|drive to aid Riverside Electrical| istry building’ new homes in Alaska. Friday's Temperatare Chart \uprooted trees in Los Angeles . . Viliage was chairman of the dinner.|Manufacturing Co. in an expan- _* * He is survived by a sister, beets FH Masten’ $2 $B[county. Cotton crops in the lush She was stenned,” White phuckied. Assisting Ginn were John £.|sion program that will add 15| Philip Shreiner of Landedale, Pa.|Virginia Jackson of Frederick, Bismarck 36 34 Miami Beach 8 7s/Imperial Valley suffered damage| “That first phone call was something! There was , Best, | workers to its payroll. was still listed in critical condi-/Funeral arrangements are incom- os med 8 43 Min © | ogi at a quarter of a mil-| so much to talk about.” tickets; James Haddrill, general ee tion at ae ae and Fill-jplete, ........ ion ars . . J New York 56 x * * arrangements; Mrs, Bess Wether- more Freeman of Chicago was on ver & S Oman se fe ey | Their first meeting will be this week in Victoria, [ston and Mrs. Phyllis Newhouse, Sai pea a a ekeal aa de Hold Sheriff's Funeral 57 48 Phoenix se a¢ Fifteen inches of snow fell at} i decorations; Mrs. Jack Moskowitz,! CHICAGO (UPL) — Police 4 Hospital, officials of the two hos- @ OR anal Tex., where the sister, Mrs. Hazel Hammond, 42, lives ) oday oS Slows sl fe oa. Mountain digs Argan with her family seating arrangements; Mrs. Joseph| sought burglars who broke through |Pitals said yesterday. MOUNT PLEASANT (UP1)—Fu 74 «61 worado. “iver ‘ “Nes, . 4 * ‘ Ste pare 43 35 and & inches {cll Se Nee ‘white, who lives at ‘834 Blaine Ave. and works | McCall and Mrs, Robert Fenton, |the: wall of a Maurice.L. Roths- . neral. Service-.was held Friday for ~ & > bw.cy 2 pie ed ‘reception; Mrs. Williams Clem- child clothing store and got away) Anibergris, a substance from the|former Midland County Sheriff eo Se eS and ot canter een a meetr. Dlans to leave Wednesday for thE | ghong publicity; and Wiltiom H.|with 14 sinh sales velped at 90l-lepormn etaie, bon bepertent iWEEkm $. "Des. Onc teem vee % * Tampa % 72 Wyo _/ Lone Star State with his wife Evelyn. a Merrill, progra mbook, 000 gredient in perfumes Pleasant. y: ’ - 5 2 if ; ess => | }“oo er ee oo oes is ‘ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1959 And. Car Number Is Dark Secret’ FBI, Among Select Few Who Know Location By JACK VANDENBERG UPI Automotive Editor DETROIT — One of the best * * * Almost every motorist knows that his car has an identification which is registered with state officials for recovery of the car in case it is stolen. Many know where to find this identification number and those who don’t can find out from any gasoline station attendent or law encorcement official. But until nqw only a select, small group of men even knew about the existence of a second identification number and an even more select and smaller group of men khow where it is located, * * * Only a few employes of the com- panies that make the cars share knowledge of the location of this second identification number with FBI agents and special detectives of the National Auto Theft Bureau of the insurance industry, Even local and state police are not let in on the secret, It is guarded with almost as much care as cevelopment of a new military weapon. 4 By limiting knowledge of the _location of this second identifica- tion aumber to only a select few, the National Auto Theft Bureau figures it is cutting down the chances of word leaking out to would-be car thieves. And, even though it would be difficult to remove this mark of identification if its location were known, the bureau figures the sec- recy avoids such attempts, leaving one sure way to determine the rightful ownership. Short-Lived 1c Tax Upped Sales Income heiniees Firms|” AP Wirephete NEW RULER — Crown Prince Savang Vathana, 52, is the new monarch of Laos. He succeeds his father, King Sisavang Vong, who died Thursday night, after a a Administration lnsisting Steel. Strike MUST End notice that,- if the union loses hia men will walk out ‘again when the court order expires. A midwinter resumption of the be a law forcing the parties to arbitrate. Management and labor alike have long resisted compul- sory arbitration of disputes. “We simply cannot permit a resumption of the strike—that's Supreme Court fight against is- suance of the 80-day injunction, five-year illness, at the age of | — 74. Business Tax Before Attorney | Increase Tied In With “‘Gas Specials’ BIG DELCO 90,000 BTU 1. GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE Outlawed Use Levy, So’! | Includes Ducts and Registers for full 5 room house. Future Uncertain LANSING W—A Republican leg- islator is asking a formal opinion | whether last week's riddling of the use tax increase law by the Su- preme Court wiped out $8,500,- 000 in business tax increases. Most attorneys around the Capi- tol believe the answer is ‘‘no.’’ Both tax increases were voted as part of a package by the Leg-| islature on Aug. 2. A clause was inserteg to make the business tax increase effec- aa. Fe became effective, Sen. Clyde H. Geerlings (R- Hol- | land), taxation committee chair- | man, asked Atty. Gen. Paul L. | Adams to rule on the interdepen- | dency situation and six other points | to clear up some other possible doubts resulting from the Oct. a | Complete with Supreme Court decision. A second question he asked was! whether the Legislature constitu- LANSING (®—Michigan's short-| lived use tax increase boosted Oc-| tober sales and use tax collec-| tions to a record $37,183,000 and! the figure would have been even) higher except for the steel strike. | The State Revenue Department’! reported October collections on business in September — the first | month the four per cent use tax went into effect — compared with $25,640,000 in the same month last| year. The State Supreme Coart Teled| the 4 per cent use tax invalid last week, ‘Any Deer’ Drawing Results Are Due Soon LANSING (UPI)—Mass mail- ings to notify this year’s 208,420 | applicants how they fared in | the drawings for “any deer” hunting permits were expected te begin Tuesday, the Conserva- | tion Department said. Approximately 100,000 will re- | ceive permits to hunt deer = any sex or age in 39 special areas during the Nov, 15-30 fire- arm season, ly could repeal the existing per cent sales tax and sub-, stitute a four per cent use tax, thereby effectively raising the sales tax rate. Talk With Ex-Mate "Upsets Pier Angeli LOS ANGELES (AP) — Police |rushed to the Bel Air home of Pier Angeli Friday night after getting a call from her ex-husband’s part- ner indicating the actress was ex- tremely upset. Police Sgt. W. H. Bertsch said the actress obviously had been crying. He said no suicide attempt had been made. The excitement began when the jactress phoned her ex-husband, ‘singer Vic Damone, at his res- taurant in Fresno, Calif. Damone said she asked about press accounts linking him to. another woman and then became upset. As he continued talking to his wife, he signaled his partner, |Sol Branker, to call police in Los ‘Angeles. U.S. Closes Bases in Morocco Missiles Go to Turkey WASHINGTON (AP)—The West- em powers apparently have prac- tically completed a shift in Euro- pean defense emphasis from bombers to missiles. Two develop- ments make this clear: Smoking in | Bed and Matches CAUSED 21% OF ALL HOME FIRES Resulting in 11% of all home fire deaths. Protect your’ property and possessions! Call AUSTIN-NORVELL Agency, Inc. Lawrence @!? at Cass ." =) Popes Saneuenenesneeees : | LONE STAR 1. The United States has agreed to close down its four air bases) and one naval base in Morocco. 2. The United States has a an agreement with Turkey to set up an intermediate-range Jupiter | missile base in that country, stra- gtegically located on Russia's bor- — rem bases in Moroccan soil has been politically explosive since the lit- tle North African kingdom gained its independence in 1956. x * * The Moroccans have long want- ed the! American forces with- drawn. The State Department an- nounced that plans the with- drawal have been presented to the Moroccan prime minister, * * * Negotiations for the missile base in Turkey, which will offset the loss of the Moroccan bases, have been under way for some time. Forma] agreement was announced Friday. Sinclair Oil Corp. Profit Is Increased NEW YORK # — Sinclair Oil Corp. Friday reported net income of $35,025,296, equal to $2.28 a CALUMET & HECLA, me oe 3 en ye 1, 768,39 1.7 80 Cen J ee baat) co’ RP. en — — {epness tl | all that I can say,” Mueller de- Her Doggie's. No Longer | inthe Window | HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Well, she mr her dog, But now the little rascal in the Sunset Strip district. -|\We Don’t Believe It CHICAGO (UPI) — Almost any- one is at least a little bit nuts, psychiatrist William C. Menninger | said yesterday, Menninger, presi- dent of the Menninger Foundation, | Topeka, Kan., said that’s why we} usually manage “‘to see something | clared. No Money Dow CERTIFIED DEALER rere Contro DELCO can 5364" ~ DELIVERED $11.61 Per Month GAS CONVERSION ~ $89 Only Delivered queer in the other fellow.” | O'BRIEN HEATING & SUPPLY Authorized Oakland County Distributor 371 Voorheis Rd. Our Operator on D After Store Hours uty FE’ 2-2919 | ' 2. || ob. Re | Home “MORE the first! Downtown Office 16 E. Lawrence St. FOR YOUR MONEY L. Be %oRETURN Paid semi-annually on your investment. Savings | placed before the 10th. of the month earn from The issue of the American air! ! CONVENIENCE Four offices to serve you. Save-by-Mail Service. Drive-in Window and Free Parking at the rear of the Home Office and Drayton Plains Branch. SERVICE Prompt, efficient, experienced personnel to SCI'VG you. Personal attention to each customer. Federal Saving: Pontiae Office: 761 W. Huron Rochester Branch o INSURED 407 Main St. te =“ Swnines'3 las Street | a 4416 Dixie Highway — Drayton Plains 1 LB. VAC. CAN BANQUET BONED CHICKEN 20° PLUMROSE DEVILED HAM 5 Oz. Can 2% Oz. Can NORTHWOOD MARKETS 888 Orchard Lake Open Daily ‘til 9 P.M. Open Sunday ‘til 5 P.M. MIRACLE WHIP Salad «. Dressing 4S CAMPBELL'S © VEGETABLE © TOMATO RICE @ PEPPER POT @ VEGETARIAN VEGETABLE @BEAN & BACON © ASPARAGUS or CELERY SOUPS » Del Monte—Chunk Style TUNA Reg. Cans 4 89° FLOUR SHURFINE—ENRICHED 5 29 SHURFINE—CALIF. YELLOW CLING PEACHES Sliced or 4 2 a | 00 Halves Cans CRISP CARROTS SOLID HOME-GROWN CABBAGE 1-lb. pkgs. U. S. INSPECTED FRYING “ CHICKENS TENDER - WHOLE Armour “Columbia” BACON OR SHADYNOOK Grade “A” 99: One Dozen Your Choite REMUS—FRESH Creamery Butter Lb. §9° KING NUT Medium EGGS Ta ob These Prices Effective Sun., Mon., Tues., Nov. 1, 2, 3 4 qomnrennernniee if esPONTIAC PRES Se os lad PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, ee | | | VER uit 5 SATU ‘RDAY, _ OCTOBER | 31, 1959 \ Cee . oe ; See Y cs AN es SRR SRS r round for LIVIN Your Neighbors House By JANET ODELL north wing. Just inside the door velvet throw that is as old as slay pal Press Home Editor stairs rise to the second floor the house. On one wall a large For® 3 years the Kenneth These are wider than the nicbaile cavved alates Giese A Bixee original stairs and less steep sada jan eiuia Gn daeies Recent they have marmtained os Sa | : ' a home in Vero Beach, Florida preserved At the TOR @ my = De come — = The Olsons are raising three ouquet of artificial flowers is sterage while at each end grandchildren and winter minus “°C around the post there are shelves with little the annoyances that cold weather There is blue gad white railings. A pair of cranberry | brings (boots. snowsuits. for wallpaper in the lower hall glass vases is placed on top. nstance was hetter endured way and up the stairs. Back Other vases and bric-a-brac * | dewn south in one corner is a grandfather's stand on the lower shelves. | But they wanied a farm for clock. At the rear end of the room summer hving Ana that farm In the fashion of houses of is a Lawson sofa. The blue and>* : had to be in Michigan. After the 19th Centlry. the parlor was white upholstery with touches — ~ ‘ | long years of searching they mall. Behind it was-the parlor of pink and lavender repeats the . . | found 132: acres of land on Rees bedroom and at one side was_ colors of the entire room. The IT’S BEEN REMODELED — The right wing of this farmhouse dates balck about : Pontiac Press Pheies | " = esinaghige . slain another small bedroom These Gay we tool pees there was a hundred years. The south wing of the original house was torn down and rebuilt. mer months. Mrs. Olson drew all the plans for penaduiinn, hired local carpenters | with'a house on it that m asures three rooms have been thrown a vase of blue and purple del- ag, and Mrs. Kenneth Olson and their three grandchildren live here during the sum- to do the work. The Olsen house is on Reese road, northwest of Clarkston. | its life in the centtry class together to make a_ beautiful phinium on the coffee table in . A year ago this summer the — spacious living-dining room front of the sofa. Behind the sofa. : | Olsons, “plus the grandchildren The five single windows at the ‘8 4 Duncan Phyfe table wide window sill in front of the | moved into their remodeled and front: and\side were kept. but In the dining room is a beau. ed curtains reconstructed farmhouse Joh the Olsens added two small- tiful big cherry buffet and a Knotty cedar is used in the and Mark are eleven and eight) paned p-cture windows at the cherry crop leaf table. Chairs kitchen for walls and cup- respectively Lindy s mine real All of these. except the have rush seats. The ceiling boards. Hardware is black. Two four-iooted members of thr the dimming room one, are dressed light is an old fashioned brass Little shutters .clese the pass- family are Senor ai chihuahua in sheer white ruffled curtains ind china chandelier through to the family room. and Rob Roy. a magnificent Glass shelves filled with antique Between the kitchen and the Counter tops are Formica in a eclhe Rob Roy stays behind glassware in many colors dec- main part of the house is the wood grain pattern. There are when, the family makes its’an- orate the remaining window family room. Stone from the half swinging doors to both hall nual pilgrimage south Plants add a bit of greenery a an used te make a large and utility. room. Workmen were still putting The original woodwork with fireplace. The day after the The floor is beige with coral, the finishing touches on the new white paint doe, duty as mason finished laying _ this green and blue stars in it. house when the Olsens moved it has ever since the house «was stone he died. An old hand- There are built-in bins for in. The entire south wing of built, Walls now are Wedg hewn beam is ased for the Storage and a lazy susan cup- the. beilding had been torn weed blue te match the wall mantel. beard in the corner. Camsters dowh and rebuilt, But the to-wall carpeting. The ceiling All the furnishings in this room are jugs painted white with hoase for the most part was is white. ire serving a second generation blue tops well preserved. instead of Most of the furniture in thie The Olsons’ own children grew There's a guest room on this nail, te held the & by & beams : : living room is antique. A rocker up with them There-are sturdy floor. all done in yellow and together, there were pers . , : : P } - d Jove seat are upholstered in) maple chairs. drop leaf tables. white with touches of green Virs SOF . Plans ft amethyst mohair One low lady's a big black leather chair and @ Nearby is the. downstairs bath- ‘hs remodeling Loe ca chair with tall back is _ beig« red platform rocker One other — room ' 4 t Int wit } , > . \ : eee PS e : kaa he with a floral design on the back = chair is a black Hitchcock model One wonders why our an- “ E . na | ; . ‘ ‘ ther ie of ‘he a ° seal KNOTTY CEDAR cestors whe had poor heating oS ep ee wae Fi _ : i = a . There is knotty cedar panel facilities _ built rooms with ier rics ; . : . ‘ i tot cannes ; ing on the walls with a farm fifteen-foot ceilings. Th» Olsons’ we ; —————— scene paper above The floor bedroom has windows that is tiled in ‘a woodgrain pattern come within a few inches of SRR BEES Et Qn the baby grand piano with a multi-color braided rug the baseboards and a_ ceiling there is a) patchwork silk over it. There are plants on the (Continued on Page 18, Col. 4) BLUE AND WHITE — Wedgewood blue and white are the hogany lyre tables on each side of the purple mohair love seat. All colors Mrs. Olson chose for the large living room-dining room area. the pictures in this room are originals. The bouquet of delphinium Walls and carpeting are blue. Woodwork which is original, ceiling’ on the coffee table was in perfect harmony with the rest of the and curtains,aré White. Accessory touches are pink and lavender. room, repeating its shades of blue and lavender. Much of the furniture is antique. Note the ——— = = ma- . — St - = NOW! SLIDING STORMS es m™ and SCREENS a eat Be, CLIMATIZE “A py heeap YOUR HOME through an older generation of Olson youngsters. Walls are knotty FAMILY ROOM — Young Mark was home from school with flu when we took pictures of the Olson house. He took time out cedar. The floor is vinyl tile with a hit and miss rag rug on it. That shuttered opening is a pass through to the kitchen. There's a won- m watching TV to pose for us in the familv room. Here every hing is @ ed ty the children’s activities. The furniture has I.sted derful big fireplace tn this room L101. C, od FITS Ail SLIDING GLASS DOOR Crystal Plate Glass insulates @ Lomo VJ. 1443) 4 9 TO SAVE ON FUEL BILLS PAY NOTHING ’TIL 1960 EASY TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED PREVENTS WATER CONDENSATION | reRms AS LOW is $5.00 PER MO. FULLY WEATHER STRIPPED - ALL WEATHER hase EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS FOR DORWAL IN OAKLAND COUNTY © ‘SAVE UP TO 25% AF-YOU ACT NOW ON cE US | 8 | -. ® Storm { - ~ Windows “HIGH CEILING — Fifteen fcet from floor to curved ceiling. To wide board floors. Dust ruffles are purple as is the little velvet © Aluminum 3 RUH @y NORTH : dramatize the high sweep of space the Olsons chose blue and white cushion in the wing chair. Bedspreads and ruffled curtains are © Bath “i } paper in a flower and bird design for the ceiling with a tiny print white. ‘ paper below the molding.; There are striped hooked rugs on the - i 3 ; ae f ; a wa Lo . .ate R ee. ete 9 =e , ; " P * ! J ; 4 bo . . \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1959 i Fee Ae BRR Y ws ¥ brett ae 28 ABODE * £ Pay useful. INSPIRE TIDINESS — Small fry learn habits of picking up after themselves more easily if their rooms are designed with plenty of storage space for games, clothing and teddy bears. Wall of built-ins like these, scaled to child’s size, is boon both to children and weary mothers. Designed of long-lasting Douglas fir and paint- ed to suit the child’s color eye, built-ins are attractive, as well as Cleaning Metal add the phosphate, boil five minutes, then just enough water to cover them, three or four talM@spoons of rinse the parts in hot water. 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PADDOCK ST. ruffled curtains at the low win- The wide board floor is pol- ished and is covered in strategic areas with striped hooked rugs in blue, pink and lavender. On the four poster twin beds there are white spreads over purple dust ruffles. The large wing chair in the corner has striped upholstery in shades of lavender. A purple velvet cushion provides an aceent spot. At the opposite end of the room there is a pair of matching chests. Behind this room is a dressing room. This not only . provides a lounging spot for Mr. Olson | but closets for both adults. Old | houses were noticebly lacking in closet space. | In the boys’ room there is more cedar paneling. There are | red curtains at the window. | Paper above the wainscoting has | | | Indians gn it while there are | Navajo rugs on the floor. The boys have maple beds with brown corded spreads. Their room opens into the bath- room they share with ‘their | sister, Lindy’s room which she helped | decorate is all pink and white. The wallpaper is pink with white | figures; the floor is pink tile | with fluffy pinky rugs. Ceiling, | woodwork, curtains and the | painted bed are white. Her | patchwork spread was made by her great grandmother. She has 4 a tiny dressing table and for | lounging a white plastic chair. | The Olson home is an interest- | ing blend of the old and the new. | | Wherever possible, the old has | been retained. But modern prod- | | ucts like vinyl tile floors have | | been used in the new sections. HOME LOOKING _ SHABBY! then dress it up with wonderful THE PRE-CAST STONE SIDING FOR EVERLASTING HOME BEAUTY For FREE Estimate and details call S FRAME a THIS MODEL SLICHTLY HIGHER WE DO ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK Home Modernization — FHA Terms Available OPEN 7 DAYS-9 A.M. to8 P.M. 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