ci AC PRES xxx * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1957—36 PAGES ‘Into Schoolyard N ‘Here she is. This is Miss Front Page for February. Otherwise, this comely lass is known as Earlene Crisp and she S. Center street. Miss eg ae at St. Joseph's hospital k her training. When a flock of our boys here at The Press where she glimpsed Miss Crisp’s pictures, they planned an lives at 106 and indefinite character. She graduated from Bryson City Deaths Increase P ito 13 as Floods Become Worse More of South Faces Threat; Damages Run Into Millions By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The toll of death and destruction mounted today as new heavy rains fed one of the worst floods in the history of the Appalachian the South. Thirteen were dead in Kentucky, West Virginia, and Virginia—first to be struck when | rolled out of the mountains four days ago. President Eisenhower declared Wertions of Kentucky and West Virginia a disaster area as dam- ages ran into millions of dollars. But even as already devastated areas began the herculean task of getting back to normal, new flood warnings were raised in) Tennessee, western North Caro- lina and northeast Georgia. RISING SWIFTLY Farther south, the Warrior Riv- er was rising swiftly in Alabama, iwhere the Tombigbee also was expected to go out of its banks. early illness of prolonged ‘high school where her parents still * *& » swimming, reside. Miss Earlene enjoys bowling, You can enjoy Miss Crisp. Heavy rains continued to pound east Tennessee from Chattanooga to Knoxville. Eight and a_ half inches have fallen in 12 days, dancing and ice skating. AFL-CIO Will Refuse ike Plan fo Limit more than twice the normal amount for the month. Twe hundred families fied their homes at Sevierville, 26 miles southeast of Knoxville, as water * from: the Little Pigeon River Occasional Snow, Partly Cloudy, Mountain region and car-| ried the threat deeper into {Colder Saturday Occasional light snow and little Wade Boosts) os net |weather man’s prediction for Pon- MIAMI BEAOH, Fla. ()—The AFL-CIO is expected)'#¢ 2nd vicinity, low 18-23. | Saturday will be partly cloudy to turn thumbs down today on President Eisenhower's and colder, high 23-38. inflation control plan to limit wage boosts to changes) The U. S. Weather Bureau in in productivity. Membérs of the AFL-CIO Executive Council were re-'for the next five days. [Detroit has forecast temperatures | N rose to two and three feet deep in the center of town. The U. S. Weather Bureau at Asheville, N. C., sounded flash flood warnings for the mountain section. The Southern Railroad reported three freight trains stalled by landslides in western North Carolina. Homes were evacuated between Wants No Hacks; Orders 60 Cadillacs DETROIT wW—More than 60 jewel-studded, custom-built Cadil- lacs have reportedly been ordered. from General Motors for King Saud of Saudi Arabia. Automotive eitcles said the cars: would be air-conditioned and some would have one-way window glass, enabling passengers to see out t being seen ‘-~ Armour plate and special gun) mountifigs are reported going on) some; still others. are being es-| pecially equipped for desert hunt- 3M's neither cofifirm nor deny the Rifleman and Pal Hold Up Elsie Bank ELSIE @—~A riflerman and his Cadillac Division would policy statement blaming) tion on high prices rather, than on high wages. | Eisenhower in his State of the Union message to Congress sev- eral weeks ago expressed deep gpncern with rising living costs. * = He dalled on business to be cautious in raising prices and on labor to avoid seeking wage boosts beyond what is needed to compensate for rise in produc- tivity — or improving industrial — and to adjust for living costs, The AFL-CIO economic policy statement was reported to contend) that many factors beyond produc- tivity and living costs adjustment must be considered in union bar- gaining for wage increases. * * * Companies making high profits, for example, the union leaders be- lieve, should share the earnings in the form of higher wages. to be undertaken by the joint Sen- ate-House Economic Committee in +, Washington. The AFL-CIO council also is @x- ‘pected to adopt.a new plan calling is'on Congréss to- broaden consider- ably the nation’s Social Security the current wave of infla-| The mercury registered 26 at three to five degrees below normal Robbinsville and Upton, where “ported ready to approve al Preceding § a.m. the lowest tem- me fed by 24 hours of con- tinuous rain covered sections ie U. S. Highway 129. In Tennessee, portions: of Knox- ville and Gatlinburg already were under water. Schools were closed ’ and highways were cut off. In Today’‘s Press oo * The latest drowning victim was jperature recorded in Pontiac was 22. 1 p.m, The FBI Story ............ 12 ‘a ll-year-old Kentucky girl, Jan- Comes... oo... eee eees, 23 jice Smith, swept away when County News ........-..... 22 |her home at Feds Creek in Pike Ha@itertals ..........5.05.%... 6 \County. High School ,............... 19 | Gov. A. B. Chandler, returning Markets . 8 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) s Reese ences cae % thru 27 Lacie ooh 1 OOOO SUES DAREN + i '» Visi wy & beds Pra Report Tito Won't Visit Wilson, Earl ....... 71 | BELGRADE (®—Yugoslavia an- Women's Pages... 14 thru 17 inounced today that President Tito, Pot 0° Gold Purtie cule tale 23 |““for the time being,” will not visit Answers ........ 10 ‘the United Sates. You Can Run the Team When You're the Manager The crowd is silent. Everybody wonders: “What happens now?” That’s up to you, because YOU'RE THE MANAGER in a new ‘series that starts Monday in the Sports Section of The Pontiac Press. You'll sit-in for such experienced handlers as Casey Stengel, Walt Alston and Birdie Tebbetts in making decisions on what you would do if you were the manager in a series of 24 classic game situations. Afterwards, Foe eects Ga RN hare SHES actually happéned. how your baseball know-how stacks up with that of the, experts. Remember, it ss Monday — don't miss it, /xou "RE THE MANAGER i is an exciting exercise’ in finding out — ENGINE SKIDS TO STOP — The engine and | cowling from a fowr-motored plane which crashed in a school yard at Van Nuys, Calif., has erupted | stop. a section of dirt like a velcano é as it skidded to a ra Victims Include ~ 2Younasters, 5 Aboard Craft 73 Hurt; 2 Boys With Serious Injuries Still Fight. for Survival LOS ANGELES (INS)— Three 13 - year-old school- boys, who were among more than 70 youngsters cut down by the flaming wreckage of an airliner-jet collision that took seven lives, battled for survival today. , A flaming DC7B com- AP Wirephote ‘Shiny Models Await Crowds Knudsen Opens By 1. JAMES BINDER The ignition key was a News Editer, Pontiac Preas Laie of scissors used by| Souped-up, fueled and Pontiac Chief Semon E.) fussed-over for weeks by knudsen to slash the cere- - eight of the city’s leading ‘monial ribbon spanning] car experts, the 1957 Auto ithe entrance to the show ot a sputter this morning’ Motor Sales’ new Rierite! Cross,,and began to throb a8 puiiding, 40 Walnut St. efficiently as any of the Business and govern- engines that power its more ment leaders who wit- than 30 gleaming “stars.”'nessed the ceremony were| More Than a Lot Supermarket Fires rhe Tre Why Not? Baffle Investigators Insurance investigators today re If s i ke you want the shekeis in Pot-O-| mained baffled over the causes, Gold, now is the time to start. working on it. There’s more mon-/Of two area supermarket fires! ey now, and the more money the|which yesterday caused over $150,- more entries we get, and the More/|909 estimated loss. An electrical fire was ruled out! ‘at the Giroux supermarket, 1535 Cooley Lake Rd., Commerce Town- ship, where more than $100,000 worth of stock was. believed de- stroyed as the building was gutted. Preliminary estimates of $25,000 to $30,000 damage to the store it- self had not been revised. entries we get, the more apt there| No immediate explanation of the is to be a winner, so don't wait/estimated $30,000 fire at the Do- another day. jnato supermarket, 6500 Hatchery This week's puzzle appears on|Rad., Waterford Township, was! page 23 and is worth $600 now. given. | No winner was found in last! Authorities said ¢here is no sus- week's 7,679 entries, and that picion of arson at either store. means more money for the next | winner, You have until Tuesday at OK $600,000 for MSU midnight to have your entry post-| marked. Bétter start working to-| LANSING (®—The House yester- day to give yourself plenty of time|day adopted a Senate-approved to read all the instructions, rules; resolution althorizing Michigan and clues, | State University to build a $600,000 Explanations for answer to last women’ s cooperative living unit on week's puzzle are on page 10. the campus at East Lansing. imercial airliner plunged crazily into a crowded schoolyard in suburban Los Angeles yesterday after a collision in flight with an jet Scorpion interceptor e Display. the first of estimated thou-|). 0. were idlled, the pilot in the sands of area residents who jare expected to crowd into the bunting - bedecked ‘building to see the three-| day event, Control Demands Seen ‘WASHINGTON (INS) — New demands for stepped-up electron le control of all plane flights Sponsored by eight deal-| “*re. certain today in wake of ér-members of the Pontiac| thy ‘ce"sirtimcr once o worhuen Automotive Trades Assn.,) Los Angeles schoolyard, |the exposition will be high-| . lighted by a series of vari-(fet, ded. ad two children playing ety shoes, fashion displays! Seventy-one youngsters and two ‘and the crowning of “Miss *dults were injured. The disaster brought a sharp demand for an end to test flights over the Los Angeles met- ropolitan area. Both planes were | being test flown at the time of | the collision. 1957 Auto Show.” ‘The building's main floor, | | 16,000 square feet in area, will be! — largely by 11 different of cars from the now ‘rooms of local dealers. "| displays include three ec, |Motors Corp. “dream cars,” the Angeles appealed directly to Pres- Pontiac Bonneville and La Parisi- ident Eisenhower for action after jenne, and Buick's Wildcat. |parents and public officials raised a cry for a = to such tests, A special feature of the show * * will be a booth at which visi- The ill - fated ele were flying tors may cast ballots, at 10 at an altitude of 18,000 to 25,000 cents each, for their choices feet when they apparently met avith among the three candidates terrific impact. The big luxury who will vie for the title of |DC-7B went into a spin and then “Miss 1957 Auto Show.” Ibegan to disintegrate in the air Manned by the Women’s Auxili-/Just before. it crashed. ary of Pontiac General Hospital,| lan ae Pecacr bs Sry _ the booth’s entire proceeds will) ee epi’ ade come hat a pt Mayor Norris Poulson a Las - be turned over to a special fund) for helping to finance the hos- pital’s 5 wing. * * * The winning candidate will be) presented to crowds at a 7 p.m. coronation ceremony Sunday night. year-old co-pilot of the big Douglas iplane and a part time actor, f shouted over the ship’s radio: “My God, we're going to hit!" * * * | There was a pause and then he icontinued in the voice. of a man iwho is about to meet death: Nominees, who will appear on| «yidair collision! mid-air col- the show floor at various times )jigion: during the three days, include) | Judith Wood, 2701 W. Huron St.; sella” _— uncontrollable— Jo Giroux, 8306 Cascade’ Rd.; and| Uacontrollabte: Margaret Hedden, 4607 Baldwin| “S®¥ goodbye to everybody . . Ave. As 4he four-engined plane spun Entertainment this evening will/angrily to destruction, 75, seventh- (Continued on Page 29, Col. 5) | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Falling Plane Rains Death on Schoolyard va _ Wreckage from a ees which pated in 8 ina pom school yard (near Van Ntiys) yester- be | & ty ! %.* " day afternoon lies scftered over fre school grounds. ‘ : & » P ~ ¥ Fy * . les 4 4 ee 2 : ’ : io oe eaten é # ; _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1057_ Mailmen to Hold State Meeting at Annual Banquet Set Saturday in Pontiac Michigan mailmen will meet in Pontiac Saturday with pay raises “las their main subject. * * * James Rademacher, regional jrepresentative of the National As- mailmen at their national conven- tion last September and currently under consideration by a Congres- sional committee, Rademacher, president of the Detroit branch of Michigan let- tercarriers, will speak at the annual state banquet and meet- "| Ing at 6:30 p.m. in the Congre- .. | ational Church, The Pontiac branch will be host, said Harold Wright, co-chairman ,of the program and a member of the state executive board. He said about 270 -mailmen are “(Police Traffic Unit Lists New Hours - Effective tomorrow, the Traffic and Violations Bureau of the Pon- tac Police, 40 E. Pike, will be ‘c.osed on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays to those persons applying wd operator, chauffeur or taxi cab nse. license business will be from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday only, Police Chief Herbert Ww. S said. The bureau will be open Satur- days from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m, only for payment of traffic. violation fees, release of impounded autos and other police business connect- ed with traffic violations, Straley added. This will conform with the stand- ard working days of other city civilian employes. Traq’s airways carried 40,000 passengers in 1955, up from 10,000 in 1947. Made to Sell-at $3.95 — SAVE HALF! f WROUGHT IRON and BRASS Magazine Basket ad SHCHOHSSSHSHSSHSSSHSSSOHOHSSHSHHSOHHSSSOSOOEOOOS prs oe “WEN” Electric Soldering Gun Regular 5 99 $7.95 a Instant heat for faster work. just plug in, press trigger — anyone can use it. oes : ; 4 ; SESoeseesssseeseeeseseseooeoseseoeseseeeeses 21-Pc. Black & Decker “sii Set : o € : Z i Z29 € E: 2 ee . Pontiac Deaths | {T Perish as Planes (The Day in Birmingham = ss 4 Lad mEGeer ‘“ Two Seek Reel 1: Mrs. Blanche Merrill Cole Crash Néar School | WO vee eelection; ‘ : - = * : fe L Z | | Service for Mrs, Blanche Merrill! S) ieet Poem Fil : D dl F b 23 _* ' \cole, 64, of 161 Branch St. who ‘si eat See Ing eaqine Fen. ' -, ; h *” ldied Jan, 26 will be at 2 p.m Mon- (grade boys frolicked in a “schgol- ' County Mothers’ Marc day at the New Hope Baptist yard below, unaware of the im-) pipwINGHAM—With a Feb. 23{mother, Mrs. C. G. Sheppard Tabs $3,000 Below ‘56 Church. The Rev. Ford B. Reed pending disaster. —~- deadline for filing petitions, City|Indiana, Funeral service will be All-Time High wilt officiate with burial fallowing The sprawling school, located On ie Irene Hanley said today two| {0M Bell Chapel of the William P. ime mig in Oak Hill Cemetery. 500) comiiten Go. at 3 Dm. Sat . the northern side of the crowded, - p.m. Saturday. 3 She had lived here 30 years and ae ermnndy : wih had already expressed) ¢ omation will follow. ith on essht from the wenter- was a member of the New Hope erna alley, is a their desire to seek re-election. < * « ‘man, Oakland County mothers Baptist Church. Surviving are two of new one-story structures howe| City commissioner, Florence “Sellers sisters, Mrs, Elizabeth Green How _|ing Pacoima High | wiuett, filling a two-year vacancy bee en igiced up a mebr record tay of of Washington and Mré. Sophonia |School, the Terra Bella Elemet|ierm, will seek to return to the| A native of Bishop Aucklind, $86,342 for their Mothers’ March Swady of Brooklyn, N. ¥. a jtary School. and the Pacoima Con- post for a full three-year term at/England and a resident of this on Polio Thursday. Mrs. Cole’s body is at the Frank! i Church, the April 2 election, country since she was nine years Departing from custom, the Carruthers Funeral Home. : - |FALLS TO PIECES Solty Me gcd Sat Gate i. Te \nememee he pene woman, and men too, made the The airliner. flew apart as it\year term is ee ee ae Pet ee campaign an all-day aftr, rather Ralph H. DeGraff fel. The wings hurtled into space, iam Raberts. apis te wis a somber of te than a “porchlight” march. Ralph H, DeGraff, 68, of 1664 ees Singha the. and gevved WOE. clty, was psa Bh ote at aoe Royal Neighbors of America. Although a few scattered re- Old Town St. was dead on arri- . " - ly, t smoke eerily through| winning « four-year term. He She is survived by a daughter, turns are yet to be val yesterday at Pontiac General © COLLINS Scone de has said he will not seek an addi- |Mrs. Ruth Anderson of Birming- $3,000 short s all-time Mr, DeGraff was a resident of H age hurtled into the schoolyard _jland, Calif. a y of Detroit; high of $39,405, according to . Pontiac 45 years, and-was a arver(PONKIAC Motor Gets “Like a bomb,” one witness said,|_ Miss corte ee poten four’ stepchildren, Mrs. Howard Ernest Goldsworthy, Oakland eW resi ent ‘for the Yellow Cab Co. ‘ : and mowed the gymsuit-clad boys|Seekers that each Petition must| Wright and William Horner of Sa County campaign director. | a oe ° down with hot, flying plane parts|°mt#in signatures of at least 25)iem, Ohio, Mrs. Roy £arlson and | Besides his wife, Carrie, he NAW. ant ngineer : : sp qualified voters and not more than! cjayton Horner of Cleveland, Oh He estimated that about another’ leaves a da r, Mrs. Arthur| ’ that filled the air like jagged streased that all sigr — ae, Ve. $1,000 will come in to narrow the’ ; Heard of a four grandchil- : shrapnel. ei ce pen and ink Signer) Service will be from the Man- gap to $2,000, Or oun ation dten and five great-grandchildren. The appointment of C. H, Collins In 2 few seconds, the school: ks nce brevv an fidget Home at 1 p.m ~*~ * * Service will be at 1:30 gan. Fiat Reater © Fetes yard was littered with the mo- | Charles Phillips, 41. of 17326/po4' ‘cy —— > Goldsworthy reported the follow-| Elect Mrs. S. V. Sekles litte the Rev, Willam E. Hale by B. . Starr, general mane: wee wore ovt badly npurca meat lentine ‘Brosh, 21, Of 2581 Sloan| David Guy Richardson collections from the : : , . Hakes F Ges tn Cnltand | to Head Organization, of the First Baptist Church wil Beets cat wal meee into shock and erled hysterical. |St., Dearborn, be-| Art director of the slide film sec- Pontiac, $7,190; Birmingham, Replacing Donaldson officiate, with burial in Perry Mt. directly to Starr on special assign- ly. fore Associate Justice J reed tion for Ross-Roy, Inc. David Guy Bloomfield and Franklin ; Park Cemetery. The boys who were killed were|i" Birmingham eres et WT Sales Bt. and » $21,375; ments. boys re killed esanday ; died in W Bea Clarkston, $386; Holly and Davis- Collins, born in Chicago June 1,/Ronnie Brann and Bobby Zal-|’ , yesterday after a long illness, He burg, $376; Lake Orion, $747; Mil-| At their annual meeting held/Richard Fitzgerald 1922, is a graduate of the Univer-|lan, both 13 and both of Pacoima.| Charged with attempted grand) yome™ ay Sfce = cong iiness ford and Highland, $529; ,|last night at the Waldron Hotel, sity of Minnesota with a degree|The four men who died aboard the|/@reeny, the pair demanded ex- vied an $655; Rochester, Avon and Oakland Richard Fitzgerald, 80, of 34) ; amination and a hearing was set|ada. He was a graduate of Bir- * * Mrs. Socrates V. Sekles, of 185 in electrical er DC-7 were William Carr, 36, of Townships, $1,783, ees Dr. wee Judson St. died yesterday afternoon/nas taken courses at General Mo-\Pacific Palisades; Twitchell, ot|fr Feb. 8. Pacer ee gel Rng pearyrvent te grunge vondjen ye thea West Biccaticld ‘ elected presi-/a¢ St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. — |tors Institute. |Northridge; Waldo B, Adams of|$0,000 was not furnished and Phil. and attended Science dent of the Pontiac Foundation} He was born here on Dec. 3,| pe lips is being held in Oakland| Institute, Cranbrook. He was a vet- pa Ol glee nage add ed 1816 to John and Mary Fltzgersld.|poundry ‘Divieioe in 1960 where] The milct twhe died nthe ye:|County Jail eran of World War II U. S. Army sein $1.0¢2; porn Mg Mrs. Sekles, who is also presi-|-4 member of St, Vincent de Pauline served in various capacities, in-/was Roland E. Owen, 36, of| Broski was turned ever to So neem of De Fm See Somme Wolied Loko ond Gom dent of the Federation of Women's| Church, ‘he had lived in Pontiac/ciyding plant engineer of the Di-/Paimdale, Calif. His radar opera-| Detroit police where he was out |~ merce Township (Incomplete), |lubs, replaces Mayor William W.|*!! his life and had been employed|vision’s Defiance plant. He came|tor, Curtis Adams, 27, of Palm-| on $16,000 bond on another grand | He is survived by his wife, the 9618; Royal Oak, $12,665. ’ |Donaldson as head of the or-|#t Kudner's Bakery previously. to Pontiat in August, 1955, asidale, bailed out and suffered| larceny charge, This bond was | former Thelma Sablin; a daugh- ganization. Donaldson asked the are three sisters, Mrs. foundry plant engineer. severe facial burns and cuts and| canceled in recerder’s court ses- | ter, Ellen Dale; two sons, James Ferndale and Pleasant Ridge,/poarg of Directors not to con-| May ot California, Mrs. Bradford was born in Spencer,! bruises. sion yesterday and a new bond Walter and John David; his fa- $5,897; Oak Park, $5,965; Berkley,| der him for re-election after sery.|22™es Rice of Detroit and Miss Jowa, in 1895 and joined General i was set for $26,000. Trial was | ther, Benjamin Richardson of De- ington Woods, $2,443; Madison ' Recitation of the Rosary will be! Pontiac began in 1926 and he has| Three of the youngsters, all 13, Akerley of Birmingham, M rs. Heights, $1,896; Troy, $2,101; Lath-| Elected te his fifth term as jat $ p.m. Sunday in the Brace-|been Pontiac's plant engineer since|were in critical condition, They| The two men were arrested here) james Ruch of Lake Orion, Mrs, rup Village, $910. vice president was Clarence K. |Smith Funeral Home. The service|December, 1931. are Albert Ballou, Vito Gallasso|*fter an attempt to steal a deep) Rudy gchietting of Crescent Lake Southfield Township, $3,240;| Petterson, local attorney, Milo |will be at 10 o'clock Monday morn- and Raymond freeze from beside the Milks AP-| and three brothers, Charies G. Clawson, $1,728: Farmington Town-| 2- ©ress, president of the Pon- ling from St. Vincent de Paul Hundreds of other children were Pliance Building at 1493 South) o¢ Cass Lake, Stanley G. of Ev- ship. "| tine State, Bank, was re-elected Church, with burial in Mount Hope! Death Toll Jumps in the school buildings at the time|Woodward Ave. They were inter) crgtt, Wash., and William C. of Clarenceville, $887; Novi, $972; and| * ™!s fifth term as treasurer. | Cemetery. of the ‘crash and several bum-| esse one tn regina Phar, Birmingham. South Lyon, John W. Hirlinger, manager of " : youngsters at the Terra|¢d#pment truck : the Pontiac Aven Chamber of Com-|William L. French to 13 in Flood Areas pores Legpoy escaped be- my oe ao ase picked them Pin da Peal dry ig Bag cad terme ag, aeeretany “at "ta,| William L. French, $0, of 38] (Continued From Page One) afer recess = —_ i a wtey ft te 3 pm sate Glenwood Blvd, died here early The 1 was lit-| Sa Morning Story Hour at First Baptist Church. . Foundation. red-eyed and unshaven from a large schoolyard Dr. Robert Macoskey, associate Elected to the Board of Direc-| “is_morning. hurried tour of flood-ravaged(te'ed With broken fragments of Baldwin Lierary from 10:30) | csor, will be assisted by the Rev mares tors for the year was Alfred ¢.|_ Me had ‘been living in Pontiac Kentucky, described|*h Plane and the roots and)t0, 11 o'clock, will, invecey Su)|Willard Stallcup of Emmanuel Bap- DETROIT (INS) — Construc- |Girard, president of the Communi-|%0 Years. Surviving are a brother.|«the most distressing scenes I've|!#wns of houses for blocks around| oo) “Bi tetitskin” and the(tist Church, Pontiac. Burial will: be tion plans for a §2 million of- |ty National Bank, James F.|=¢ward S. of Pontiac; several ever encountered.” the school were covered with Nash “Tale of the|” White Chapel Cemetery. fice center development on the (Spence, of the Pontiac Manutac-|"ieces and a nephew. He said the devastating Ohio|twisted pieces of fuselage. On one |C84e# -_ edge of Detroit (at E. Eight turers Assn., ‘Fred V. Haggard,| Mr. French's body is at the/River flood 20 years ago ‘wasn't|street, the trees were surrealis-|Custard Dr « * Mile Rd. and Mound) were an- {president of the Oakland County| Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home anything like this one, not nearly|tically ornamented with bits of moweed today. The center will CIO Council, Howard . Powers, A Hill ge mrypnart ; PN pcs Loge amet consist of four separate two- |Chamber president, and Donald-'Mrs, usta Hi “The water crept up then, slow-| Im the schoolyard | torn | Owner George Sheppard story buildings connected by cov- (son. ; = ly and menacingly, and with &) ejothing, shoes ad cases Studios since 1942, C. George Shep- ered walkways. Each will have | Leaving the board is Mrs, For-| Service for Mrs. Augusta Hill, 72,|Warning. This one was water and| gym equipment. pard, 62, of Country Club Drive, fts own entrance and reception [rest Brown, who was succeeded| who died here Wednesday will be force. a “ae in. |Croomifield Hills, died at his home lobby. Mrs, Sekles as presidsent of at 1 p.m. Saturday from the Brace- " 8 * boys was yesterday after an iliness of two ae the @f Women’s Clubs. Funeral Home. Alfred B.| Twenty-three counties in Kem-|jured told of the scene of hdr| months. An artist and advertising WASHINGTON The House Ts is te. the poot 'be:|Bidbon of First Church of Christ,(tucky, West Virginia and Virginia|ror in the playing field. Twelvé-|iiustrator, he was a graduate of Appropriations Committee today |caube™of “his recent election as|Scientist will be the reader. Burial|W*'e designated by the Small year-old Floyd Negrate said: the Institute of Arts, Chicago. recommended 275 million dollars nt of will follow in Grand Lawn Ceme-|Business Administration as disas- Piles Bia Meg vn associated 40 pay for improved social se- Taeh roenaechin Oo takerude tenth Deen. ter areas. flying all over’the place, wim 5. th. bendy ask Ome, carlty benetita voted by the last organization for civic betterment.| Mrs. Hill had been a resident! Overesst skies held the threat/body started to run away. Some Catenge, and ieter ene tn Congress. — ‘Jot Ponting 15 yéars siid-e-mena-/9f inne re one to acti tlwere ‘hie by flyin fences, seme cosee of me Dotrett Cites. of ah First Ch , thelicopters, waiting to air-lift ty-|were hit flying pieces of LOS ANGELES (NS) —Earie |3 From County Attend | scientist. she ae vaccine, medicines, food plane. pater mira igre 2 gp A Cagat, 88, brother of band led | Florida jand other supplies into the flood, “‘I tripped and fell and hurt my| Member of the Bloomfield Hillis ce Raviee Ought, repertedty inate Reading Institute Ee area. head and broke my left arm Coumey Cub, Boome aad Ae , i The devastated area in Ken-| “I saw part of a body flying| raft Clubs. Me had been a resi- an attempt > re oo Three Oakland County —- Lorraine Garden Club tacky followed the course of the at = ” dent of Bloomfield Hills for 26 —— holds ow : . were 4 _— | Kentucky, Sandy There has been no explanation| Y°*F*- k ‘alter ts An open gas jet was on and an | Philadelphia Members of the Lorraine Manor ‘™0 Tennessee. occurred. It happened in broad/Greta; a son, James D.; a daugh-| I pictured. | empty sleeping pill bottle was | Attending \ ; Garden Club voted last night to| Among the hardest hit in Ken-jdaylight in perfectly clear weath-|ter, Mrs. S. E. Gawne of Frank- nearby, officers ‘sald. os Tle ee cer cette aiid with the git 10 acy were Hazard, Pikeville and jer. lin; three grandchildren and his Ss . Se Sere por M M Me ee Oa tide of te Woman's Na.|Prestonsburg, where National - DETROIT (AP) — Mrs. Jessie na. Forms Green, are | Warm end: Gorden Acm. \Guardsmen patrolled streets to Bird Griffith, prominent Detroit |rroy, a the Pontes ean tihee. irs, Bob Hiagers te president |Prevent pilfering while portable clabwoman, died Wednesday tn | Education, and Jane Fox, 56 Vine-| The meeting was held at the Seneralors and water Purifiers & Battle Creek hovpltal after © lwood Ave, prycho-metrician for home ot Mrs. J. R, Paris at 132 | Our income lax five-day Illness. She was 83 9nd |i. Oakiand Coun Clin. Fernberry Ave. in Waterford Town- the widow of Harry W. Griffith, |; ty Reading iship and guest speaker was Mrs.|_ 1” Chatanooga, Tenn., the rain- secretary of Briggs Manufactar- | “Me institute had as Its William McCallum, extension *Wollen Tennessee River reached This ie one of @ series of articles prepared by the U. S. ing Co. and a director of the |. rosy BRC of the Birmingham 100d stage here today and resi-| Internal Revenue Service to help you prepare your Income T S asain Detroit Baseball Co. He died room Be clea ne Oe cae branch of the Farm and Garden| ¢™s of the city’s lowlands were Tax Return. . | in 1942, psychologists, reading experts and/Club. She spoke on the import. |Polsed to er an Maden SELF-EMPLOYED? PIECES | ' teachers from throughout the U./ance and operational procedure [tard the Red Cruse and city and If you carry on a business as a sole proprietor or if you render _ Press Corrects Story S. Puerto Rico and Canada. of the national association, comty agencies services as an independent contractor or as a member of a part- Gams ie) Sie of: Testi . ———— The flood level of 20 feet was| ership — you will have self-employment income. If'you had at ej J f Doctor's Testimony police Hunting Boy, 13, [Bound Over to Court — recorded at 7 a.m. the U. §,| least $400 of net yor gos planta See ee ae In a January 19 story concerning on Charge of Assault Weather Bureau reported. No| 8" annual return employment income on Form S the assault trial of ex-Pontiac pa- for Robbery Attempt 9g was expected to go to 31 or 32 maximum amount subject to self-employment is $4,200. trolman James B. Sexton, The| Pontiac Police today are seeking! Ezell Moore,.546 Bloomfield St.,/feet during the day. it had wages sub, to social security — subtract the Press erroneously reported that/a youth, about 13 years old, who)*ccused of assault with intent to) Showers and possible thunder-| _ total pipes $4,200 regan at the ia amount sub- defense witness Dr./A. Tauber of/ran up behind a woman, and at-2° & Crime less than murder, showers were forecast. . self tax. Pontiac testifed that he had not!tempteg to rob her on Franklin\W® bound over to Circuit Court} —_— “a personally examined Sexton. road between Fishér street and °Y Judge Maurice Finnegan and The self-employment tax rate is 3 per cent of the net earnings was charged with the off-| wilson avenue about 7 p. m. Thurs-| on a $100 bond Wednesday. Refugees Total 24,100 from your business but not to exceed the limitations discussed duty shooting of two friends, and J“ Moore wag ordered to appear in - above. The self-employment tax is a part of the total tax to be paid Dr. Tauber testified that Sexton ge : ithe higher court Monday at 1:30) CAMP KILMER, N. J. #@ — ith ; tox ree I derived solely from salary or wages had suffered a temporary brain in- Nabarrette, 1954 W. Wilson’, m. |More than 24,100 Hungarian ref-| W'!) your —— y Nes : jury sufficient, in his opinion, to|™: *#4 the boy ran down the) He is charged with shooting Na- ugees have entered the resettle-| ‘lvidends, interest on investments, capital gains, annuities or pen- explain his behavior, nar pus ie od found nothing: in/thaniel Hall, 141 S. Bivd., in the ment center at_ this resctivated sions, is not self-employment income. Dr. Tauber had examined Sex- ets, weapon was » right knee on Crystal Lake Dr.,|Army camp since their homeland) deou meen ton. The Press regrets the Pons according to police. January 5. = |was torn by revolt last October. at by Internal hevenve Service oftiee, 885 W. Huron Bt Phone PE 2-0206) 4 oa ; . Set of All Popular Sizes $ The Weather - ° | : Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report 4 e suum -./Mrs. Wilson Defends Husband, Tells Ike Off po a - Wiison S ’ : coming colder. w ida variable 8-16 miles . | : er 3-01. Tew tenleht “16-23. 'mign| FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES (go back to Michigan where he| “I think the President should $80-a-month electrical engineer for| A White House official, however, : . tease we WASHINGTON — The most fas-|Was “appreciated.” |have stood back of Mr, Wilson in- Westinghouse Electrical Corp. He|stid Eisenhower has great re- a3 Lowest tempersture preceding # am, /cinating argument in Washington} = * * * {stead of spending his time com. already had designed the first elec-|Pect for Wilson's “know-how” and, : ; : this week is not between President) “I've always made it a point to| menting on how wonderful Foster tric automobile starter produced thinks he has done a “terrific” | ° At S am: Wind velocity § mp.h.! ” | | é in le which the chief execu- Direction—East. P)/Eisenhower and King Saud of|remain in the background,” said) py)) e secretary 0: by W . Wilson later rose|J0> in a role w e |Seuil Archie, but between Hae and|Mve, Chustes E. Wilton when herlucen? an nae” nt hee ty Wostngnens tive considers the second toughest ° ¢¢ B-. “Be : it . m i oman embattled woman. husband was named defense sec- w al aed Back eeceicaee cane of Generalltg the presidency. | : ~ ee ad — : tS aieceemt |e flere | toe retary four years ago. “But I sup- WA 7 ON Sec Mrs, Wilson has reared three} Ike has taken the position that | Diactic cae. BE i: Se eR | That lady is the formidable Mrs.| Pose it will be different now.” =| “I ager = es a ton pr sons and thtee datighters and| next to the White House itself, ry as gun ith Subday ot 3:00 pm pong ae bee ot ee Today, the 67-year-old wife of \Wilson saa on te : was iy has helped raise 15 ape difficult job = et world | : Yises Saturday at 7:45 am. | tag}! ar outspoken hus-| the Cabinet member was very geod Sek ued { Gllnk ha tase done WILSON PROUD secretaryship lense. Thersday in Pontiac s Tke’s secretary of defense.| much in the foreground for her aap . Its budget is the biggest, its pres- (as pone MB downtown) a good job. Wilson is proud of his wife for sures are almost unsurmountable temperature --- 31 | Mrs, Wilson, in a no-holds. | defense of her husband against king her mind in his behalf desert. wurk “Aa | peered, te . Reck . with . the- | What-she called the criticism of an) speaking her mind in and if it rt nothing i a wences interview, hag lam. | President Eisenhower, It Is the | A son, Edward E. Wilton, de. |2nd he is especially plessed that) does, $34.95 88 basted the President, like the | first time Mrs, Wilson has been | scribed his mother as @ “lion. She spoke up initially without com) 5 oF this he leans over wee Side persoees Pr] Charlie never | @@brelled in a public contro- | ess when any of the people she ng Sim. bechwards. to support Wilson, al- Value : do, tor daring to call a statement | Verty at the capital. : loves are attacked,” Fegpwees expressed his jthough an aide said he simply You Get Everything Pictured of her husband's “unwise.” + & & 4 This “very remarkable woman"| Pride associates and @ could not bring himself to give a Compilete drill outfit for the handy- The statement in question The President had said at his was born Jessie Ann Curtis, daugh-/ Cabinet wives by custom @0 net ipiessing to the secretary's slur re a an wee wee air thelr views on matters con- man. It's not only # drill, ieee ’s decaration that a lot of|MeWs conference Wednesday that|ter of a construction in , against the — Guard. as-a sander, grinder, polisher, buffer draft dodgers entered the Netsonas|WOs0n tade "a very... tnwise|Costello, Pa, “It's a little two-by-| Cemming thelr husbands and Pres: | — ee oD ete. ; uses around the home. 1? 4 Guard during the Korean war to . stopping te|four town about 40 miles south of] SW Mrs. Wilson, who hates Wash- § Save time, money and work. % % avoid: active duty think” when he mentioned draft) the York state line,” she} Actually, Eisenhower inis-|ington and believes her husband ’ % 3) EAGER Codeine tnconnection with the Na-\says. ; tered an almost nted re-|ig unappreciated here, has rolled #4 70 GO HOME tional Guard. ‘ t* * > |buke at Wednesday's news confer-\up her maternal sleeves to take 4 is — grade naar — Pa ee * - ; every oe 10, the family|ence when he labeled the secre-jon the President himgelf. Her bus. | i ashington given ulcers, is 5 comment moved to Pitt . At 22 she't atement } ¢ i & eager to pack up her husband and/ “uncalled for. | oe seis ce crt Bg ” en ‘\. \ f f married Charles E. Wilson — an, tional Guard as “unwise.” ’ : ae | A, pe * i ee * i i ; x oT liad mee hee Ee Si ee ae ee 1 a 4 ee ee eee ee , a : Z z : : aoe : a t ey f / a = rs THE PONTIAG PRESS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 sh i __ figtameve me" “aiSee Check Handling {stant ‘in Dream 235: Oe See filled up the walk and two-thirds)against furniture. We lost two] “That small vehi¢le out there—| The King's ears suddenly|pastrami, Just then an alde came| that many of the nation’s largor|t? 20 Sues Menine Saale SP of the dead crab grass. small vases. it is some kind of smalj Cadillac?"/perked up, “You keep animals injin and explained that only the : 4 ee An interpreter explained that -- @ 85,9 “Oh, no, just an old Plymouth.”| 4. nome,” he asked. King would be dining with us. My st sige: the King thought it might be in-| 1 introduced my family. My 8 ® he if he could drop in, un-/Wife looked faint. The two girls at an average Ameri-'2Wked. The younger one, a ham i : il i : Hi J A i E E Two official taster; came in and , {tried the casserole. One paled un- der his robes, the other shud- dered. Some mumbled Arabic passed excitedly between them. this time./Shortly after, saat and ber Eight others sli around King asked it through his fa , from the!party left. Somet was case be geal The par ar — “Wells fields?” ‘ .jabout having to get back to the filed into the living room| “The one and only,” I laughed.| ‘No, 200 gallons, in the base-| There was an awkward pause|Arabian Embassy. quickly filled up like a| “But surely there are others —)ment tank.” and to fill it, I invited the visitors “Well! my wife snapped, with gold/crowded cdcktail party in cos-|other women who...” The oe ee a it on I hope we don’t lose those air guns, They|tume. Saber sheaths clanked| “Oh, no, no, no,” I hiccoughed.|riously by now. be delighted. up off. the) bases,” I said. ithe i i I , ; : e : FE ii 1) ¢? BE fe i i B33 isl i 8% i zg 4 i “This is your only wife?” the) “ 4 5 i ze ; ae E : ea om, = ae Zach pee ‘e Z :; Ae ee Mere ea "} Be ae 4 ; ~ ~ : ——— . + " Quality Furniture Since ‘1917 ce « ’ ee Ce. GS paid ects OI Reap. ~~ STARTS TODAY! EVERYTHING IN OUR HUGE STOCK REDUCED! Not a clearance sale of undesirable merchandise but a store-wide sale with every item in every department reduced for the sale. Only exceptions are items that, are fair traded or price established by manufacturer. Buy the newest and the finest at these reduced sale prices. Furnish your home complete during this sale.... Benefit by lower prices in juvenile items and everything in furniture for every room in the house. Not only do you save in price alone for with each piece of furniture you are buying the guarantee of satisfaction of the nation’s leading manufacturers and the guarantee of service after the sale that has been a policy of Stewart-Glenn Co. for forty years. ONE of OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST STOCKS of QUALITY FURNITURE! © 65 DINING ROOM SUITES in all finishes © 18 MAPLE SOFA BED SUITES and 10 MAPLE | © 87 STYLES and COLORS of the finest LIVING ROOM SUITES in Colonial Styling SECTIONAL SOFAS and 2 Pc. SUITES © 74 LOUNGE and RECLINING CHAIRS © 135 OCCASIONAL CHAIRS © 53 DIFFERENT STYLE BEDROOM Groupings © 45 SIMMONS HIDE-A-BEDS and 42 SOFA BEDS | | © 142 TABLE and DESK LAMPS in all styles © 173 Styles of LIVING ROOM TABLES in Modern, Colonial and Provincial Styles / 0 i ae @ Large Displays of DESKS, WALL SHELVES, © 15 MATCHING CRIB and CHIFFEROBE SETS BOOKCASES, BOUDOIR CHAIRS, CARPET, © 40 CHROME or BLACK DINETTE SETS HOOKED. RUGS, CARD TABLE SETS Now! Park With Ease! CONVENIENT CREDIT—OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS ‘til 9:00 the corner. Turn ° or right at the al- No Interest ley just south of | Carrying Charge If store. = * Paid in 90 Days! ] / "aaa Just a few steps from th ) ) 87 CARS ° City “Metered Parking Lot. No.2 As Low as 10% — Buy on Our 90 a oe 3 | Down! | .* Easy Payment P lan! Conyne Changes . °° @ Our own lighted) 4 Low Monthly Be lot just around Payments! é . Fi e* aul ; e 86 to 96 South Saginaw Street cf nO Opposite Auburn Avenue 7 ” ;, im : 2 P , ail ; PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac 12, Michigan ‘Trade Datly Except Sunday % Published from Tux Poxruc Parss Building preddent ‘ond Publisher “Eescutie Vie : Mewes E. Poems ©, and Pe... loner Treeserer st] Guerl see kh ke doun W. Preacreato, W. Cuastys Praxres, The Press entitieg exebustvaly te j of local prin is newspaper well as AP news inna, Gesenee, Livingston. Ye fabl Counties it is ! 2 ere = —,* oan Ah wall peorintlons raved MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 = German General to Head RUT EVERETTE oA E 2 5 a S a g Steerery Announcement that a German ; 2 ’ : = has been named to command all NATO ground forces in Central Europe, shows how -things ‘have changed in the last 12 years. Se Taetanrs © ae General Speidel is a thoroughly trained and German Army officer of World War II. He was charged with being im- plicated in the “generals’ plot” to assassinate Hitler and was im- prisoned for the rest of the war. The General is credited with hav- ing saved Paris by resisting Hit- ler’s order that the city be destroyed. rx ® After the war and until he was E E ; PESERRTSOEHLSA ELIS SCARE TES SASS CREE EDOSTET AES 8 the West German government 950. He is credited with gaining 5S = & Yk ® German divisions have been promised by the end of the year. But lot. depends on the parliamentary elections in September. The appoint- ment of General Spempe. may over- ‘come some German reluctance to - ve PODEREDASLOEL ECAH CRON OEDTTGOTEESAL PEAS OOE DS RESET ODE ED | rearm. European Unity in Sight The French Assembly’s approval in broad principle of a six nation common market has brightened prospects for the economic and poli- tical unification of Western Ewnope. At the recent Brussels meeting, France, Italy, Germany and the Benelux countries agreed to pre- liminary financing for a “European Common Market.” This would elim- inate all tariffs and other economic PEGG TI LOT? SERSATVEOHEL as +E It eventually could mean the free flow of capital, labor and goods in an area with a popula- tion of 250 million. Joint de- velopment plans for atomic power for both military and peaceful purposes also have been completed under another organization called “Euratom.” Other European nations, including = Britain and the Scandinavian coun- = tries are considering a broader free > trade area in which tariffs would be = eliminated gradually. Members, - however, would retain individual - control of their tariffs against non- members. ” : CLERTAPETD DEON EE DEES TERETE TT ERPER EE EES 4 ot? x *® * Britain, which held off in the because of Commonwealth . interests, now is pushing Euro- Union. Suez and the ensuing ev ct ee \ every visit. = ‘ i f at readers of the. advantages of mass production for a European mass market. It also draws attention to the opportunity for each nation to exploit its special resources. There are difficulties ahead, of course. But there also is a new optimism over results of the Brus- sels meeting and new determination to overcome obstacles. Thorough Airing Needed. An encouraging development ‘is the action of the AFL-CIO Executive Council at its current meeting in Miami. ; The Council ordered its 141 unions to remove from office any union offi- cial refusing to give testimony before" a Senate Investigating subcommit- tee. The only vote against this resolution was cast by Dave Becx, president of the Teamsters Union, the. largest AFL-CIO affiliate. He rejected the ultimatum barring leaders from invoking the Fifth Amendment. x *« * The Senate met some union objections that Chairman Mc- Letian’s committee has no jurisdiction. A special bipartisan committee has now been ap- pointed to investigate the union's huge welfare fund. * * ® Although there is no Federal law to force a union to open its books, the Taft-Hartley act requires that unions and their leaders file finan- cial statements with the Labor De- partment. These statements can not be examined by any Government agency nor by the Senate. Unions and their financial operations are tax exempt. Y.-® * Alleged irregularities in the con- duct of union affairs are serious. The average dues paying member should be more than interested in brin, out all the facts. ~ The Man About Town Not Been Priced Wall Street:Journal Can’t Hang a Tag on It Either Pessimist: An alumnus of the school of optimism. A letter addressed follows: “The Wall Street Journal says the ‘ New Pontiac Bonneville Convertible will sell for $5,782. I haven't seen that. In The Press. Is this price cor- rect?” Well, I talked to my two old friends, “Bunkie” Knudsen and “Bob” Emerick, about this and they tell me there's no price tag on it right now as they only plan to build 1,500. These 1,500 will go to dealers around the country as an experimental show- ing to see how the public reacts and how the cars actually handle under all-conditions and climates. Hence, there is no price at the moment. However, I'll say this without fear of con- tradicition: the Bonneville is the greatest looking automobile these wide eyed peepers ever glimpsed and it won't go for hay. to me reads as Saturday is ground hoz day, when if he sees his shadow, he ducks back into hibernation for six weeks; if not, he stays out . with the rest of us. The wise Michigan GH goes back anyway. Those heavy snows are not as far back in history as we-may think, according to Byron Knoliman of Huron Gardens, who tells me that it was exactly 10 years ago today that Pon- tiae was digging out of about a foot of the so called “beautiful.” A blue jay that has been partaking of the found put out by Mrs. Angelia Stephenson of Drayton Plains, now brings- up_ its mate, which has no feet, hopping around on two stubs. Heretofore, the lone caller has been carrying away some food on ° Verbal Orchids to— Samuel Striebich of 143 Waterly St.; elghty-eighth birth- day. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schram of 541 Judson St.; fifty-third wedding - ‘anniversary. Mrs. Josephine C. King of 25 Lorraine Court; eighty-third birth- di a Mrs. Charity Gibbons of Birmingham; ninety-second birthday. Mrs. Henrietta Paddison of Oxford; ninety-first birthday. »Mrs. Alice E. Holmes of Fenton; eighty-seventh birthday. . ‘ x THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1057 2 Cheering Section t ‘David Lawrence Says: US. Has Irresponsible WASHINGTON — If this corres- yet the one that is being given relatively little attention, it would be the story that surrounds the fed- eral budget involving $72 billions of at first to be merely a difference of opinion between a cabinet offi- cer and the chief executive. But the President said it wasn't. What was behind it really was a sense of over the in- visible influences that force items into the budget which the nation * co The popular impression is that the Secretary of the Treasury makes up the budget and that the President then sends it on to Con- gress. Actually, under existing law, the Secretary of the Treasury has nothing to do with the proposed ex- penditures listed in the budget. He ig commanded by law merely to furnish estimates of incoming rev- enue and to propose ways and means of raising money if there is a deficit. As for the individual items of expenditure in the budget, he doesn’t see them in advance and has no more to do with their in- the Secretary of the Interior or any other cabinet officer. America’s irresponsible budget system, its weaknesses and its failures constitute a serious prob- such a wide variety of items, the public doesn't come to grips with t.. In fact, no concentrated atten- tion is given to the spending pro- grams as a whole even in the executive branch of the govern- “ment except in the office of the President. This is a full-time job and a president cannot give it de- tailed attention. As a practical matter, what this means is that the director of the budget collates the data and is in a position to explain to the Presi- dent what each item means. But the budget is by law made the responsibility of the President and Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE I have had many friends in life . . » But seldom one like you... So kind and understanding and . . « Compassionate and true. . . Who thinks of me so frequently ... That every now and then... I get a card or letter or... A phone call once again . . . How- ever distant you may be... By miles or ocean wide . . . Somehow you make me feel that you . Are always at my side .. . And always at my beck and call... If I should need some aid... To overcome some trouble or... reach a higher grade ... 1 give my gratitude with all, . . The words than I can say ... And hope sometime to thank you in ... A more substantial way. (Copyright, 1957) ‘LI'L ONES tA at ) Budget Plan gress—and now it involves $72 bil- lions a year. It-is something for ‘the nation to begin to understand or, as Mr. Humphrey says, one of these days there will be a depres- sion that “will curl your hair.” (Copyright, 1957, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Looking Back 15 Years Ago JAPS COMPLETE conquest of Malaya. : WILLIAM §S. Knudsen warns U.S. faces long, cruel war. 20 Years Ago 13 EXECUTED for treason by Soviet. 4,500 FIGHT flood in Cairo, Ml. Dr. William Brady Says: Books,. Erotie or Biotic, Contain Lessons of Life When I was young and ill-ad- vised I did read some fiction, such as David Copperfield, Tom Saw- yer, Robinson Crusoe, David Ha- rum and Black Beauty. After I had served 18 years in’ the mines—in Siberia, that le—I ti, _ medical literature. Finally I became disgusted with who-dun-it stuff or rather with the booze and fornication the publish- ers served in lieu of plot. EMULATED FATHER Then I tried to emulate a black- weer reg fice Vilit f sliveft i i i He alee bytes 1012 Kettering St. ed ‘Maintain Defense #3 d i ? z f t 4 g i E FE | ut bit pu iH : ail : i quarrel over Buraimi, site of pros- oll riches. ‘S$ Foreign Director pective King Saud, the colorful guest of Saudi Arabian troops occupied Riecient Sieene, span We the oasis-area.in August 1952, After British protectorate of Aden at the hart her ' “troops lower end. of the Arabian Penin- the Saudi Arabians in October 1955. sula. 4s The British claim that Saiidi His visit to Washington happens Arabia has been increasingly to coincide with that of British De- greedy ever since 1935, making fense Minister Duncan Sandys, wider and wider claims on the ter- ; .. Whose talks-with U.S. leaders in- ritories of other Arab states lead- fansson, in “Adventures in Diet.” voive Britain's growing inability to ers who have treaty protection This is about like eating a two- meet her defense bills. from the British, pound broiled sirloin with all the Part of Britain’s defense bills JOINTLY CLAIMED fat such as a steak usually has on includes the cost of keeping King Buraimi is jointly claimed by it. : ee esd One Geka esckens ram are aes -_ in the t ate os en rt line to pomeme et eastern Arabia, as well as eastern section of Arabia along ae will be anewered by curbing Yemeni territorial am- the Persian Gulf—and the Shaikh Dr. William was bitions, of Abu Dhabi, Their troops offi- addressed envelope ‘te sent to The Fon- = icing Saud's hostility toward cered by the British kicked out the (Copyright ) Britain primarily dates back to the Saudi Arabians. Case Records of a Psychologist: Suggests Novel Ideas If you have trouble planning smith and railroad crossing guard, the games or recreation for a my father, whose favorite reading party or social affair, you will was history, biography and poetry. be interested in Bill's dilemma I found most of it beyond my and the partial solution there- depth. I did enjoy Knut Hamsun's to as described below. Keep a “Growth of the Soil,” which I scrapbook of all ideas such as thought was autobiographical. these, and then consult it when Maybe that quality was what won you must plan the entertain- the Nobel prize. ment for a crowd. puned ee et now just how T hap- By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Mietie' chabiy because the th. _case T-389: Bill A., aged 20, is tle suggested that one might president of the senior class in a learn from such a beok some- "eighboring university. tor thing about the actual effects of Dr. Crane, we're organizing exposure to cold. I learned more a big dance in a few weeks,” he : announced, “and would like to -—— make it different from the usual I learned a good deal about the party. cause and prevention of scurvy 2 * * and about the harmlessness of ex- posure of an isolated person to cold and wet and about the prevention and treatment of frostbite. COLD, WET, HEALTHY Later, when I met the distin- “So, what would you suggest to add a little novelty or unique- ness to our program?” FUN FACTS Well, I offered Bill an idea which “ and a third of lean per, day said had been used at a party held 1 est University Karsten Andersen, were living Law School a few months agd. for a year on an exclusive meat There the students inaugurated learned that neither he nor any member of his party ever suffered admission charge on the weight any illness consequent upon expo- of each girl. sure t Id he years they: Ley ee pa Se es Each boy thus had to pay one- third of a cent per pound for his " yanity, as well as save their not become sufficiently “hard- escorts a few cents on the ened” te withstand the rigors of ‘ sion charge, most of the girls tact- civilization. fully removed their coats, before Stetansecn and Andersen finishea .**¢PPing on the acales. a half a pound of fat,” * ‘ ben > & * * over $1.37 for his wife, saying she 108s regarding other interesting weighed 137, and was easily forms of entertainment. worth a cent per pound, in con- Many such parties degenerate to trast te the ether girls who rated children’s games or else develope of a great deal of laughter and churches as an interesting method tellectual games at all. for setting the price for a church One way by which te enlist supper or other admission charge. _thely active cooperation, yet pro- Those who are worried about re- tect their vanity, is te team vealing their real weight can avoid them up in pairs or threes and this embarrassment by simply pay- fours, letting each group serve ing a higher fixed as a unit. Then they can pool Such a plan might also encourage their combined knowledge in i i | fet iit if i 3§ ags 4 > LMT eT eh rao a Manke RREMN Plater ae : Presenting the Now in this strikingly attractive new Baldwin-built Acrosonic .. . you may select the finish best suited to compliment your own decorative tastes... GRORENT <<) SERENE SEP ia given new life, » new color week: . newest of the light woods, yp mann full. Gained, blends charmingly with other light fu rnishings. EBONIZED . Speer | and Justrous, brings richness, distinction and elegance to any setting. Whichever finish you choose . . . the Acrosonic’s many exclusive features will bring lasting pleasure in CALBI MUSIC CO. Pontiac's Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments and Baldwin Pianos and Organs 119 North Saginaw St. , Now Beautiful Versatile, years to come... see it... hear it... today! — Phone FE 5-8222 | * * * From 1945 to 1955, a | population in-| FBI's responsibilities and limita- CTLOSOMRIE \ creased 243 per cent while crime|tions in the field of civil rights. | ar saiowin | 44.5 per cent, |JUVENILE RATE HIGH | A few statistics tell a part of! vide ‘the story. The major crimes com- ion; freedom to keep and bear thitted in 355 cities in the prewar|' years 1937-1939 averaged 630,257 arms, from enforced quartering of each year. were crimes of murder, al theft. In these|:som cruel un |same cities, the major crimes in|ment; and the right to a speedy ‘the postwar years 1946-1955 aver- publi ‘aged almost $00,000 each year. ve rf ocrtes gid } Im 1955, a serious crime was The most shameful part of the| tonehips between private per postwar crime record was the|* , tat number of teen-age children n-|erved to the volved in major law violations. | Boys and girls under 18 were fri Ww, | unless a federal law is vio- MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT . INSURANCE CORP. Pve Opened My — Christmas Club HAVE YOU? % eee } ® 0 . DISCOUNT! | Better Hurry ... Time ¥ | Is Ticking Away! aq Martin-Senour & y FLAT WALL ENAMEL Mertin-Senour There’s still time to open your 1957 Christmas GLOS-TONE PAINT Club but you’d better hurry if you’re to be SUPER-KEMTONE ene who will receive a welcomed check next 1 Complete of November. Plan to open your Club, first 9] Colors in Gallons & Quarts thing tomorrow. Tool) | FRESH STOCK . | : There’s a a Club for : | ivenyens DEPOSIT RECEIVE | $ 1.00 Every Two Weeks—Receive $ 25.00 | |°$ 2.00 Every Two Weeks—Receive $ 50.00 1 $ 4.00 Every Two Weeks—Receive $100.00 | | $10.00 Every Two Weeks—Receive $250.00 | $20.00 Every Two Weeks—Receive $500.00 | ‘S\a.law covering such cases, federal mnsi-(Keego Couple yt reta-, (ound Thus a mob might lynch a vic- = , | ~Sale a federal law had been violated, Unless and until Congress passed intervention would be an invasion of states’ rights. One of the greatest barriers en- countered by the FBI in civil rights! violations had been local prejudice. Juries have refused to convict even when defendants confessed. Everything in Fire A young Keego liarbor couple themselves In 2907 in South Carolina cab as fatally stabbed |ficer’s innocence should be estab- near the town of Liberty, A Ne- |lished beyond doubt. gro suspect named Willie Earle x * ; was arrested and taken to the Copyright 1957 by Don Whitehead ing. He protested his innecence. | (Tomorrow: The Great Illusion.) : an x i , : e Near the sande Dam the carsvanle’ | AcCOrdion Students and Buyers: haited | and the prisoner “con-|~ 5 = “_ » spe May we tell you a story? A ~ came The mob beat Willie Earle and into our store the other day and told us It Later as . @ charges are untrue, then the of- she had paid $365.00 for an accordion from outside the state. We could have sold her a better instrument for $295.00. In addi- tion, we service and guarantee our Own. instruments. We have good accordions for sale as low as $165.00 and we can sell you a superb 3 shift accordion for as low as $245.00. tr Ont bed Rae tomers. * Come ia-and.talk it.over with us. pay Pree nh earns y Gallagher Music Co. ‘mony, Bat the jory towed ants [28 18 Er Huron St. Pontiac FE 4-0866 possessionless| yesterday after an early morning ‘\fire swept their rented trailer home, 2061 Galloway Rd. eee Ge awe tee ok MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 10 Years in Pontioc — 25 Years in Music - “Let 9 Years of Credit C: Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. & soy yg oy 41% 8. Saginaw Mrs. Idella Buell, 1£, said she jamas and coat, Her husband, Garrett, 21, ‘said the loss was about $1,500. 'No-Growl Prowl Clearance Entire Stock INSIDE PAINT » FEED Regal Wild pe Mixtare | A nutritious blend of Sunflower, sane fay me Millet, Buckwheat, Segd and Wheat. 5 ibs. 0c 25 Ibs. 2.50 t SUNFLOWER SEED 19¢ uw. # Gies:; BAAN | =| soune - the set .. for small birds. e ountrtac ! paeieed a aah Perry at Glenwood Walled Harbor, Milford, Union Lake, yo field Hills REGAL FEED & SUPPLY CO. FE 2.0491 | | Cracked Wheat and Corn perfect [7 Bee 26 be 48 ...with the long, ) Wis ANF poe Advanced In Sight and Sound No.more “round the corner’’ listening with this new Philco. Sound comes out the front of powerplant 21-inch diagonal Le pe on i —™*" long trade! ROA —— EASY TO CLEAR UNDER TOP FRONT ™ CONTROL CENTER 199" See the new Philco “Seventeener”... Long distance champion of Portable TV - HAMPTON | - not on the side. New Golden D into eine inc Bi) oP fo i lala a. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 By ANNE HEYWOOD “What's the sense. of studying. the arts?’’ a reader writes, “You can't make any money out of it. 1 like to sketch, and have thought} of taking lessons, but then, what would I get out of it?” * * * If you don't think ours is a preponderantly mater jalistic civ- ilization, think how many you've heard remarks like that Nobody wants to study any- thing just for fun, or love, or cultural development, Whatever they study has to guarantee them a quick boost in salary. And when they say “She has to work,” they invariably mean that she wil] starve to death if she doesn't get a job. cal need to work is ignored. * * * To get back to the reader who thought the arts were a waste of) Rotunda} “Yon Overlooking - Beautiful Pine Lake ° to the Public Every Day oe the Year Serving Michigan's Most Fabulous SMORGASBORD BUFFET We are taking reservations for parties. We offer Old Fashioned Hospitality in the following din- ing rooms: ® Lake Wood Room ® The 1870 Room ® The Red Room ® The Rotunda Room ® The Pine Room ® The Orleans Room WEDDINGS—PARTIES BANQUETS Open 965 Deys of the Year umes; Study of Art Can Enrich Your Life time, I wrote and suggested that are either free or very inexpen-;money: but it would heighten her! study sketching anyway, Most sive. | she adult education programs today, | awareness of the world around her I told her that studying sketch-' I pointed out, have courses that/ing might not help her to earn and make her notice and enjoy things she never saw before. WONDERFUL LETTER Seven months later. I received a wonderful letter from her, Her sketching class was a great suc- cess. And now she's studying wa- ter color, * * * “The funny thing is,” she writes, ‘‘that I do it awfully well. | This gives me such a wonderful| Baby Sitters Are: Hunted in Capital New Deitel Have Record Crop of Offspring By JANE EADS WASHINGTON — While «their husbands are getting ready for bus- iness on Capitol Hill, wives of new congressmen are equally occupied. Most have found living quarters te fee ted sie See necking touches to make their new Wash- sai i RS SR feeling of self-confidence and ington residences a “home away makes me do all the other things from home.” They ve got to get better, faster; and more easily. | ithe kids in school, check on shop- I've become .so much more inter- ping centers and look up baby- FERN LUCILE ERICKSON The psychologi-; | my oyster. “In turn, it must' make me I've ‘never made so many new friends!’ The arts may not give you a five-dollar raise, but they can enrich your lite in many unex: pected ways. , If you'd like to begin a course in the arts, check your local board of education and see what courses they have. more interesting to others, because | ested in things, the world is really sitters. The engagement of their daugh- iter, Fern Lucile, to Roderic Paul Appold, is announced by Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Erickson of East Mans- field avenue. Roderic is the son of Mrs. Hertha Appold of Des with invitations to social fune- |pjiaines, Ill. and Theodore Appold tions, official and otherwise, ‘of Denver, Colo. No date has been which capital protocol obliges |set for the wedding. them to accept. These include luncheons, recep- tions, teas and dinners given by One More local hostesses, government big-- This last, for many who have small children, constitutes a major problem. Members of Congress, especial. ly the newcomers, are swamped Last night, at Mt. Holly Ski Area, they crowned a winter sports queen, and at the same time ‘presented | @ new and permanent addition to the area’s “staff.” | Above are the queen, Susanne Devereaux, 19, a Flint secretary, and her escort, “Barry Bourbon,” the | year-old St. Bernard who has made himself the pet | of the skiers. He will be fitted with a Red Cross cask and will be on duty to aid fallen skiers. A for- mer polio riettm, Suzanne will compete at Grayling for the state winter sports queen” utle Feb. 9.10. They are meant only for startling nent og hy =" good ive ff .. Uberal Apply tn Person . Prady MARK JEWELRY CO. 4 -N. SAGINAW 5T. Women have finally been sold on the idea of pretty, decorative leyeglasses. But there are indica- jtions that they've been oversold. The idea is to pick a pretty! frame that does something for you The ‘something’ should make ‘you more attractive, ture and for a soft color which The overdecorated frame flat. | >©comes you, If they make ters few, if any, women. | look hard or freakish, ‘ . | Wasting your money, Frames in vivid smripes, in strange, elongated shapes, in vio-. And while rhinestone frames are lent green or red, are no great fun for evening wear, that's exact- help to beauty. ily what they were intended for. people, for startling They do not The frames you wea; most of the. time should be chosen for relationship to the facial struc- “wear well.” you're in ee MID -WINT Charmi | Regular $299.50 _ NOW- 5269" No Down Payment Required ...Up to 24 Months to Pay 4 4479 Dixie Hwy. SES. BEE ae Be a a atom: You Will Enjoy Shopping at Gentry’s! Draytor. Home Furnishings : DRAYTON PLAINS i ER SALE ' OF FINE FURNITURE | ae ng Colonial Sofa Distinctive Sofas and Chairs masterfully crafted for Beauty, Comfort and Value. With Foam Rubber cushions, exciting fabrics you select yourself. Open stock in cherry and maple. Lees New Jeweltwist Longer . lasting beauty . high-fashion colors .. . all” the features of “beautility” woven into one Heavenly Carpet by Lées. RAYON .. . extra clear colors. WOOL ... extra resiliency plus easy cleaning. NYLON .. . added durability. Seven glowing colors. a2a0%x $@°° SQ. YD wear .. Open Friday Nights ‘til 9 Let’s Look at Eyeglasses occasions. | you jin any three colors most flattering, rented a house in Falls Church, sR If they have none, write me, enclosing a stamped, self-addressed ek ey, envelope, and I'll send you a list} «1¢ won't always be like this?” of good books on sketchidg and! pretty Mrs. Frank \.. Coffin, wife of the new Democratic congress- man from Maine, asked at one big shindig, I told her I was afraid partying in the capital was a merry-go- round that barely slowed down _| while Congréss Was in session, |LOOKED WORRIED. Mrs. Coffin, a former social worker, looked worried. “I don't mind a little of it, in fact I really enjoy it,’’’ she ex- plained, “‘but whexe dv people get the an x* * *- The Coffins have four young- sters, three gitls and a boy, rang- ing from 2 to 11 years of age. Sizeable families seem to be the rule among the new mem- bers. Democratic Rep. and Mrs. George 8, McGovern of Mitchell, 8S. D., have five children, four girls and q ooy, ranging from 18 months to 10 years. vic, ae, colleagues and consti- Way to B a ke The 34-year-old former college » professor and his family are living 2-1 . in a rented house in nearby Mary-| i | land. You can put an old dress back) * * * in fashion with the always fashion-| The Democratic congressman able bolero. And we might add,'from Oregon, Charles O. Porter, the bolero is flattering to every brought his wife, threc boys and a age and size. Tiered fashions via girl, aged 1 to 12 years, from Eu- skirt or jacket as here the bolero gene in a station wagon. They have .|with sour cream, i you. 'Va. Chicken Origin of This Dish Is Penn-Dutch, Sour Cream Used By JANET ODELL Ever try baking chicken with sour cream? This is a Pennsyl- vania Dutch dish, one we think Cleansing Cream and Skin Lotion by me BEAUTY SET FOR DRY SKIN TUSSY EMULSIFIED TUSSY DRY SKIN CLEANSING CREAM page: #2.%% 1,00 For gentle clean- New vibrancy for dry ing of skin. skin.Leaves you tingling. Reg. 3.50, 16-02. ....2.25 FOR NORMAL TUSSY PINK CLEANSING CREAM AND OILY SKIN TUSSY SKIN LOTION 1.25 «2: 1,00 Dissolves away grime, Gives “all-alive” color dirt and excess oil. to normal, oily skins. Reg. 3.50, 16-02. ....2.25 Prices plus U. S. Tax Reg. 62 8-oz, Size you will like to copy, It’s easy, to do too, | The recipe comes from Mrs. E. | H. Vieriech, She has one daughter. for whom she likes to sew and knit.) China painting is one of her hob-| bies, Her name is listed in the membership of the Parent Guid-, ‘PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich, Enroliments Available in Day or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person for Free pamphiet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 ance Club. \CHICKEN IN SOUR CREAM By Mrs, E. H, Vieriech Season chicken pieces and saute until golden brown, using your fa-! forite cooking fat. Put browned) chicken in baking pan and cover) thinned with sweet milk. Bake in 350-degree oven until | chicken is tender and has been thoroughly pérmeated with sour cream gravy. This will take at least an hour. cream thickens during the bak- ing, add more sweet milk, Serve in a flat casserole cov- Whenever sour | ered with gravy and sprinkled with parsley or chopped chives, a ae RN Se CBBSOSOVEO MOD, For Big pews in FURNITURE AND ALL OTHER BABY NEEDS SHOP AT KAREN’S TOYLAND 4524 Dixie Hwy ; ; OR 3- ae “o OPEN STOCK PRICE ON -THE CELEBRATED RONATION The Fines? Silverplate 53-Piece SERVICE for 8 Reg. Open Steck Price... $99.75 Now ie » SAVE'AL Set Includes: @ 16 Teaspoons @ 8 Knives @ 8 Forks Componion - @ 8 Sclod Forks @ 8 Soup Spoons @ Offer 1 Butter Knife @ 1 Sugar Spoon @ 2 Serving ANTI-TARNISH Spoons, regular @ 1 Serving Spoon, pierced CHEST ;. a ‘ Only - NOT DISCONTINUED PATTERNS $goo Prices Go Back to Regular After This Sale! *Trademerks of Onsida Ud, USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY Pay as little as yow like whenever you wish—we only require one payment a month. Or take your purchase with you and poy only... : 10% Down and 10%: @ Month : COMMUNITY a LIMITED TIME ONLY, ly Sale BUY 3 . PLACE SETTINGS Fed. Tax Incl. with our budget terms. *Trade-marks of Oneida Lid. SE eS eS SSS SS SS SS SF SBS SS SOB eee eee ee ee (GREAT OPP SEASON SU PLACE SETTINGS \ vs AND GET : ONLY 20 ace In most patterns Here's a wonderful opportunity to get a service- for-four, and actually pay for only 3 place settings! Choose from these six stunning patterns . .. each one is modern, up-to-date, beautiful! You pay only $28.00 for each place setting, except in Silver Rose, $29.25, and Stanton Hall, $31.25, Each place setting has knife, fork, teaspoon, cream soup spoon, salad fork — all the place Setting pieces you need for dinner! Decide on your pattern today! No need to hesitate longer — you can have your Sterling Service so easily . OFFER ENDS FEB. 4" ACT NOW! Prices Include Federal Tax Damask Rose* JEWELERS 16 W. Huroh St. Registered Jewelers — American Gem Society FE 2-0294 —_ anil Gee es 7 ae x eee i { ey THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 Look for Psychiatrist to F ind Show = - NEW YORK—You practically have to hit the sai aoasiaad 8 couch nowadays to cover Show Biz, * * * \ Anita Ellis is the latest to tell me how a headshrinker helped her. She’s a scared mousey little babe from Canada and Cincinnati whe dubbed the voices of Rita reve: Jeanne Crain and Vera-Ellen in Hollywood. Now she’s had the courage to bring out_her own album titled, “I Wonder What Became of Me.” * * * \ “My mother was a brilliant singer, but my father was rich and he wouldn’t let her sing; se one time in Montreal she snuck off to sing anyway and took me with her. I was 3,” Anita told me the other night. “T was so jealous of her that when my father asked where she'd been, to get his affec- tiog, I told on her. Me took her reuge and lipstick and) threw it away. x * * “Later when I tried-to sing, ANITA thinking of myself as a bad girl as my father had thought of, my mother .. .” When the psychiatrist plucked this all out of Anita, she: began singing well.” “One song I did for Rita was, ‘Put the Blame on Mame’ in ‘Gilda.’ She tried and they did about 192 takes, but it was no good. I felt sorry for her. I should feel sorry for Rita Hayworth!” While Hollywood goes ahead with the fiction of its big stars singing, the American Federation of Musicians doesn’t, and Anita’s happy that she’s got plenty of proof. “In Petrillo’s union, you have to get : credit,” she says, eyen if it's a donkey | braying.” ’ THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Tallulah’ll wear a plastic pin through her broken finger when she opens in “Eugenie”... The Trendex: Steve Allen 28.3, Ed Sullivan 25... Aly Khan'll fly to LA to see Princess Yasmine and try to get Rita to give him a Swiss divorce to marry Bettina. * * * x Sammy Davis Jr. will star in the film | bio of former boxing champ Henry Arm- strong . . . Mike Todd and Elizabeth —& Taylor have an eye on a Beverly Hills @ honeymoon home, a $400,000 shack... © There'll be a Humphrey Bogart Cancer _ Foundation ... Curvy Barbara Nichols joined the “Sweet Smell of Success” cast. * * * Producer Billy Wilder gave Audrey Hepburn a turquoise mink coat... After his Las Vegas stint; singer Danny Scholl will be tested by Josh Logan for “South Pacific” . Boxer Sandy BARBARA ‘Saddler, who quit when he began to go blind, wants a job was as a disk jockey or TV actor. * Earl's Pearls .. . An old-timer is one who remembers when you could get a landlord to paint your apartment by threatening to move.—Art Moger, Boston. * * * * * WISH I'D SAID THAT:—A woman who makes the match, for her daughter usually intends to referee it as well—Quote. * * * TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Roger Price swears he heard a H’wood producer tell his staff, “We'll keep this picture within the budget if it takes every cent I have.’ That's earl, brother. (Copyright 1957, The Hall Syndicate, Ine.) HEAR | GORDON ‘MacRAE SING Coll FE 8-8691 Ward Plans Approved CHICAGO — Shareholders 2) Montgomery Ward & Co. have vot- ed overwhelmingly in favor of pro- | Posed employe retirement and stock option plans. A company spokesman said yesterday the pro- /posals received approval of more than 95 per cent of over 10 million outstanding. Suggests Lottery I couldn't do it because I kept) shares voted. The company has. slightly more than 13 million shares. Hollywood Headlines fo Aid Schools Solon Says Financing by Sweepstakes Plan “Would Ease Taxes LANSING — A lottery plan, similar to the Irish sweepstakes, has been suggested as one solution to the problem of financing.Michi- gan’s schools. Rep. Edwin A. Fitzpatrick (D- Detroit) said he will introduce a' bill asking that the state abandon’ its ban on lotteries and sponsor | itwo sweepstakes a year to finance! ipublic schools. * * * “Burdens to taxpayers have in-| creased to the point where they] are heavier than need be,” Fitz-| patrick said. “Yet everyone knows that the, Irish -sweepstakes +5 ~a highly. iprofitable venture that hurts no, jone except those eager to take a lchance, Michigan is a heavy con-, tributor to the purchase of $3. sweepstakes tickets. | “If the state eased up its re- strictions,” Fitzpatrick said, | “and sponsored such enterprises | for the sole purpose of build- | ing the school aid funds, it would solve the problem and relieve local taxpayers and provide money for other purposes.” The lottery plan would require japproval of a constitutional | amendment by a two thirds vote of both houses and.also approval) jby the voters, | * * * present, even such games) of chance as bingo and beano| played by church and fraternal | |groups are illegal in Michigan, | | —~ At | DETROIT #—The Wayne Coun-| ty Civil Service Commission has - waived its citizenship requirement) to allow the county road commis- | sion to hire three Hungarian refu- | gees as engineers Viennese Actress Signed tor New Movie ‘Fraulein’ By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS it is intended for Carroll Baker. HOLLYWOOD (INS)—You may). her. Seems they are lining up stories at ae Ps a Ie the Astor family in our’ He Sahat ~F Sct Day was League of, the United Sates » wood movies, son, William, is coming here to}—— have a try at acting. Bells are not ringing for Judy Holliday and Sid Chaplin, who are reported feuding. Commerce dinner, Gordon Mac- Rae told me that he and his wife, John Jacob Astor's joriginally sponsored by the Navy |1922. At the Beverly Hills Chamber of} RICHARD EGAN | DEBRA PAGET | ELVIS PRESLEY | k |McGovern book, remember reading in this column about Anna Maria Duringer, the Viennese actress I met at the O. W. Fischer party and who I said looked like Marlene Dietrich. Well, Buddy Adler told me that he has signed Anna Maria for “Fraulein,” based on the James! which will be) filmed in April ip Berlin. Anna Maria speaks German, naturalfy, and English very well. Walter Reisch, the producer, and | Heary Koster, director, will travel to Berlin to make all arrangements, Speaking of Fischer, the first, ley of shooting on ‘'My Man Godfrey,"’ he introduced himself ‘to every technician on the set. | Made a hit, too. jie: the first imme: Playhouse 90 will present:-three dramas to be filmed (instead ‘of live) with im- posing casts. The first of these ‘is the story of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondolet, whose moth- er house is outside of Tucson. For this, Helen Hayes, been signed. The| Joseph is at St. Martin of Tours, and when Sister Georgine Marie} - | be married Feb. 14. Kat stayed over in New York to await! jurado. Janice (Rule and Raiph| arrival of Lilli Palmer from | Meeker have ilocal order of the Sisters of St. Sheila, are not expecting a baby as was reported in several New I don’t like to call a child a (OVE ME : ‘Kiddies Mat. Saturday prodigy, but 13-year-old Frank | York columns. Sinatra dr. comes close to ; ; = 4 Color Cartoons 4 TENO N DER : qualifying in that class. He Jim Bishop sends me the cover Little Rascals Comedy lof his book, “The Day Christ Died,”” and writes: ‘Harper's sent me this today. I'm a lucky guy. There were 25 lean and hungry years before ‘The Day Lincoln) —_____ Was Shot,’ and now this, of which! | 75,000 copies already are sold.” | played the piano for us at a —OPEN 12:30— buffet dinner Nancy Sinatra gave in honor of Lorayne Brock Busse and Joseph Hall, who will Young Frankie doesn’t care for) rock 'n’ roll, and says he's never | | seen Elvis Presley. But he feels Health Insurance Beats | that Elvis came up too suddenly) iand that he should work as hard Population i in Growth CAMPUS @ Garden Center as Frank Sr., Bing Crosby and) NEW YORK—Insurance figures| BALLROOM Eddie Dreyer BALLROOM P we Como did for their success. /show that almost as many Ameri- Livernets -Featel! ow 151 Weedward (Upet's) a are F ign Sr.'s ae vatated (oe have purchased voluntary] ‘oid-Time Dancing Every monet es Old-Time Dancing Every ord, a rank Jr. congratwia Tues., Fri., Sat. @. Thurs., Sat., Sun. Jimmy McHugh on “I Didn't Sleep|health insurance during the past| 'a Wink Last Night,” included in 25 years as comprised the total) - — er the album. Believe me, coming|United States population in 1930, from Frankie that was a compli-|when the health-insurance move- ment, ment began. ) —— - The population of the United| steht Li foethi States increased by 35,000,000 in Snapshots of Hollywood collect-\the past 25 years and during the ed at random: Rex Harrison same period the number of per- sons with health insurance in- creased by 98,000,000. Europe so they can discuss di-| vorce plans. Mexico will have a new $12,000,- eee (000 newsprint mill with an annual We may soon have a member! capacity of 30,000 tons. read the script, she said it de- served an “A_plus.”” | The other two films are “With-! out Incident,’ starring Errol 'Flynn, Ann Sheridan, Julie Lon-} don and John Ireland, and ‘Lone |'Woman,” with Kathryn Grayson, | | Scott Brady and Vincent Price. /NOVEL-BUYING BINGE A Wayne Hires Refugees, Waives Citizenship Rule I would say that Jack L. War- iner is really on a_novel-buying | binge. His latest move in that! direction is the purchase of “Home Before Dark" by Eileen | Bassing, which is the emotional story of a young woman mentally disturbed. Random House ‘is the publisher) ® of the book and Ingo Preminger made -the deal. When I asked who would be starred, I was told The starting pay is $5,422 year, The three were identified only as Joe and Leslie, both 26, and|_ Charlie, Zi. | They were students at the Buda-. pest College of Technology in Hun-| gary when the October rebellion | broke. Fumes Kill Girl; 7 DETROIT w—Belinda Smothers, 7, died of gas inhalation Wednes- day and her sister, Cynthia, 5, in serious condition when overcome by fumes from an oil space heater converted to gas. Their mother, Marie, found the Drumstick Box Dinners Now sag abe Piping Hot to Your Home from Noon to Midnight Daily. Fried Chicken—Shrimp Fish—Drumburgers PIZZA aes unconscious in their beds. | IRE MAIDENS of QUTER Os OPEN 6:45 MA 4-2151 Golden 40° 5 0: LAST DAY “THE BAD SEED” Eve. & Sun. “URANIUM BOOM” ONE OF A HANDFUL OF VERY SPECIAL PICTURES! eee 5 ae prance Seek: oo Matinee Children 20c Anytime ein SATURDAY ONLY 1,.A WOMAN BORN TO KISS!. — in a trap of clashing emotions! ee THERE ARE / ARE hima waail MORE THAN OUTLAW LUCK RUNS OUT...¢ WRITTEN GY OCiNE (AY SECTS, CORR, TTOPD NOLAN. VRGMA LET CALS Mt Call FE 8-0483| when © grt mects men on ven terms te lost 2 bondlt band! Zane Grey's MAN Saturday Matinee BIG KIDDIE CARTOON SHOW SATURDAY LATE SHOW 10:30 P. M. TRUCOLOR WALTER BRENNAN -- EDGAR BUCHANAN | TODAY & SATURDAY | —Features at— 1:17-3:23-5:29-7:35-9:40 | —_—_—_—— SATURDAY. 5 -CARTOONS—2-FEATURES NOW!. Thru SAT. = ahnit solor | ovr» JOYCE MacKENZIE - BARTON shite UNVERSAL-NTERNATONAL PICTURE J GH SNOWDEN ANN H OHN McINTIRE JOCK MAHONEY - LEI Butterfield Theaters DOROTHY MALONE - PLUS; Pepe Le Pew ALSO MIRACLE in the ‘CARIBBEAN | (pAL APP APL PPP PL ee SUN 2 “Spacemen of the Sea” TECHNICOLOR! THE SILENT WORLD Crane Gasir- . Fieawor Parker THE, Added “The BATTLE of GETTYSBURG” CinemaScope, Special EXCLUSIVE First Run Showings! Zs" .. swaggering across 2) the prairie—tangling with flesh and flame in the hottest western | ever made! pe Gold- Hungry Dan Kehoe—a man ‘who carried hell in his holsters... nae COLOR by DeLuxe ian 0 [/an Fleer waits Per Producer ROBERT WATERFIELO » Produced b y DAVID HEMPST Screenplay by MARGARET FITTS & RICHARD ALAN SIMMONS - exes on 8 story by vi nn i: Moric compened & contucied by Alex Morth «A RUSS FIELD GABCO Production Retaaned thre United Artists # A an en oS -THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 ) Soin School Sketches in Romeo wy ~ Architects Fit Carl Palangi to Appear S-levelioSite | in Rochester Series Boa | ROCHESTER—The third Roches- Tell rd ‘We Have |ter Civic Music Assn. concert of the Good, Compact ‘Plan’ |season wil be held at 8:15 Monday for Minimum Expense | night in the Junior High school auditorium here. Carl Palangi, popular young ROMEO — Members of the Ro- bass baritone will be the artist. meo Board of Education last night! Executive Board members of the studied preliminary sketches for Civic group say a packed audi- a hew high school, submitted by|torium ig expected, as was the representatives of the Detroit ar- ehitectural firm of Eberle M. Smith Associates, Inc, The single-story, multi-level building is designed to fit the con- tours of the site, located on West 32 Mile road just outside the vil- lage limits, architects said. “We think we have a good, compact plan to fit the site — requiring a minimum amount of = movement,” they pointed The building plan shows a wing containing a gymnasium and caf- eteria located on the right of the entrance hall and a classroom sec- tion running parallel to the road on the left. There will be four six-inch steps between each level, architects ex- plained. The gym, set down five feet from the corridor level, case in the last two presentations. | | Palangi has been a featured | soloist with the San Francisco | Symphony under Pierre Monteux and Arthur Fiedler, with the | San Diego Philharmonic and other west coast orchestras. He is a member of the San Francisco Opera Co. and is in radio and television, had no thought of being an opera beer truck in the afternoon, going Back in his boyhood the artist singer. At 15 he was driving a CARL PALANGI Judge Lederle Vetoes Branch Federal Official Rules on Troy Operation on Basis of 1945 Law DETROIT # — Federal Judge Arthur F. Lederle ruled today that the National Bank of Detroit could not open a branch in Troy, a sub- urb north of Detroit. The Wayne Oakland Bank, which already has a branch operating in Troy, opposed the National Bank of Detroit in its move to open a Troy branch. The National Bank of Detroit already had erected anew _$%5,- 000 building for a Troy branch. Judge Lederle said he made his decision on the basis of a 1945 Michigan law which provides that no bank may establish a branch in any city or village where another State or National Bank already is the evening. During wartime, while in the Navy, his rich bass voice wag discovered and com- mandeered for solo performance with the Great Lakes Nava) Choir. Ito school mornings and boxing in? Hospital Group Schedules Date Annual Meeting to Be Feb. 5 in Almont School in operation. * * * The National Bank had applied to the U.S. Controller of the Cur- rency in January, 1956, for a cer- tificate to open the Troy branch. It was notified in March that the application had been approved. Plan 4-H Pie Contest ROCHESTER—The Oakland Your PTA Is Planning: PTA members and guests at the February meeting to be held Mon- day in the schdol’s Multi-Purpose room, Supper will begin at 6:30 p.m, Persons attending the event are asked to bring a dish of food to pass along with their own table service, Milk and coffee wil] be available at the school. In charge of the evening’s pro- gram is Mrs, Anthony Zielony, genera] chairman, Mrs, Thomas Harrison and Mrs, Herman Gall are in charge of the kitchen. A program, to begin at 7:30 p.m. wil] feature dancers from the Jackie Rae Dance Studio of Pon- tiac, At the conclusion of the pro- gram, PTA members and guests will discuss a proposed savings stamp program for students of the Commerce School, The Marlette Junior High and the High School PTA are sponsor- ing a panel discussion Monday, at 8:15 p.m. when two representatives of the Dow Corning Vocational Guidance .Committee will be the speakers, Marlette Monday Meetings at'5 County Area Schools South Lyon The Junior High School PTA will meet at the high schoo] cafeteria 8 o’clok Monday, Gene Maybee, principal of Tap- pan Junior High School, Ann Arbor will speak on the subject of the purpose of the junior high school. Parents of the sixth grade pupils are especially invited to attend. Avon Township Exective Board of Avondale Junior High School will meet at 8 p.m, Monday at Auburn Heights Junior High School. Hostesses will be Mrs, Gladys Miller and Mrs. Irene Sundberg. . Dryden Regular monthly meeting of the Dryden PTA wil] meet at the high school Monday evening. There will be a program and a short skit by the Cub Scout group of Imlay City. os CHAMP SHOWMAN — Stuart Hutchins, 19, of Rochester, shows the Junior yearling Holstein heifer which won him the grand cham- pion trophy for fitting and showing at MSU Farmers’ Week student dairy cattle contest at East Lansing. Stuart, a second term fresh- man at State, is majoring in general agriculture. LAKE ORION—Virginia Wasa- laski, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence Wasalaski of Freeland) became the bride of William John Mervyn Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William John Mervyn Sr. of 548 Lake avenue, Buckner Acres, at a naw, was the maid of honor, She wore a maroon satin gown with matching headpiece of satin leaves. Theresa bush, cousin of the bride was bridesmaid. Many- sister of the bridegroom, wore a yellow net gown. Robert Mervyn, brother of the bridegroom, was the ringbearer. Lawrence Wasalaski, brother of the bride was the best. man, and Couple Wed in Zilwaukee Church | would 000 for Community, Inc. County 4H Pie baking contest is| A discussion period for guid- layered net petticoats, and a green|Warren and Francis Mervyn, feet — with prt Ra are “which o rman fer Saturday, in the new| ance and choosing subjects for |ceremony recently in the Statin gown with a lace overskirt| brothers of the bridegroom were - would include two additional ROMEO—The annual meeting ot| Home Economic Room in the new| students interested in Chemistry | Matthew Catholic Church of Zil-| were featured in her dress. ushers. classrooms increasing this total the Community Hospital Founda- high school. The girls will bake} and Chemical Science, also will | waukee. A AL A The flower girl, Nancy Mervyn.| A wedding breakfast was served to 43,000 square feet. tion, Inc., is scheduled for 8 p.m.|in shifts, starting at 9 a.m. be held. oe, to 80 persons in Zeeland Hall, The second alternate, or band next Tuesday in Almont High _ Virginia's gown was fashioned following the wedding. The eve- room, would bring the total in School, directors said in antique ivory satin with lace) State ‘Dimes’ Total ning reception at the same hall square feet to 46,000 or in excess Planning for a busy year ahead, Wayne-Oakland to Play outlining the neckline and forming was attended by 300 who enjoyed of the $600,000 budget for building. they will hold elections and hear a bouffant overskirt. Her finger-| Funds from the annual Mothers the buffet lunch and dancing. x *® * reports from the various commit- D t tip veil was fastened to a cap)March of Dimes, held last night in al aw) & The board set Feb. 12 as the date tee chairmen, A quorum of 2% Slate Ban oncert a = fashioned of stain leaves. The South Oakland County, surpassed The couple will reside near Zee- for further study and possible ap- members is required in order to ee floral eetangecneet ste carrie sain got Rel eos lend after a tour through Mich. | o% "a med — WEST BLOOMFIELD — The/Bloomfield Hills, Holly and West was of white and pink case ” field ‘and Franklin netted $21,-| gan's Upper Peninsula and | H issi Construc Wayne - Oakland County League|Bloomfield schools. Delphine Walkowski, of Sagi- | 375.27, ario. | Holly Girl Missing pital is pecan pap hoy aglliras band will present a concert at} Tickets may be purchased a a | - ; ss School,|the door. : | HOLLY—Missing since Dec, 29 The new medical facility, to be [West Bloomfield High ‘ Thursday, Feb. 7 at 8 p.m. 5 ee, oe ae Pec ee ee Tan Bute) be I the band la made up of 6 stu-|p. | daughter of Bina ‘\W. Pocius of the villages of Romeo and various schools in the| Fj] p | t Holly. Police Chief James Parker Almont, will serve 13 communi. {dents from Wm eveiopmen has issued a general bulletin re- ties in adjacent parts of Lapeer, league. The student becomes a . < questing information on her Macomb, St. Clair and Oakland ee mae Kee point on Shutterbug List | Our policy is to seve you money on everything you buy every time you whereabouts, She has bonde hair, | 346 Romeo Road, Rochester, an-| °™"*™ aon om | buy. We deal only in Nationally Advertised Merchandise and we believe hazel eyes, weighs 160 pounds |nounce the Terms of four trustees and concert mood GS you ALWAYS PAY LESS HERE. and is £4 tall, and wears glasses. \daughter Barbara to Donald Mor-|!7 foundation members will expire| Phonle, light popular amd show | ROCHESTER — Persons inter. Re “ The Pocius home phone is Holly rissey, son of Mr. and Mrs. William/next month. They must be reelect-| tunes, according to Robert Pfeut- est oe oe ee 0 Cosco — . Morrissey of Pontiac Lake road,|€d, oF their positions filled by other| fer, West Bloomfield band in. |attend the meetings 0 von No date has been set for the wed-|Candidates to complete the foun-| structor. Each school Instructor |Photography Club. This group met STEAM IRON ding dation roster, directors said wil] take his turn conducting the [Tecently at tle Woodward Mem-’ Lapeer County Leon T. Bishop of Almont, board| band, eral Library for the fit movie > crtapeamemmerentenmeneen . . chairman, will preside at the forth- te in the season, Short | r Residents Offered |Pianned for Sunday coming meeting, Star tiers ie ae a rtd peered Brightna, ——— — by several a ‘ ew * : Chest X-Rays ROCHESTER — Sunday, at 5/meo, vice president; Mrs. John a.| Milford, Northville, Clarenceyille, * oe p.m., there will be a meeting of|Hannum of Washington, secretary; . The next meeting will be on Feb. | DORMEYER LAPEER — The Christmas Seal|the Brotherhood of St. Andrew, in|and James D. Ligon of Allenton,. 14 and will feature a color film de- p bi mobile X-ray unit is now operat-|St- Philip Episcopal Church. Re-|treasurer. Annual Dance velopment demonstration. ortabie ing in Lapeer County, offering low-|CeMtly elected officers are Lee) Refreshments will be served at | cost X-rays to residents here. Smith, director; Phil Hohl, vice|the close of the session by mem- at Clawson : MIXER F No need for distilled water. Cosco an president and Jack Winter, secre-|bers of the newly-formed. hospital . Set Sweetheart Night thrives on ordinary tap water. Tas echt to wo talon: A Hearytrencurer. . auxiliary, to Aid Center for Marlette Group ee Reg 98 | vormever 19.95 Valve 6 and 7; Lapeer, Feb. 11, 12 and 12 ; DEEP $ 18; and North Branch Feb. 14 ‘ CLAWSON — The Clawson Com-|_ MARLETTE—The Philomathean 17.35 V1.95 FRYER 12.95 a Deaths in Nearby Communities 2a eee is year’s jumn . Appointments for chest X-rays a b) in €d y ommun| les Saturday, Feb. 16, @ Valentine|¥ ©. 12, Tuesday. This meeting will LOW a may be made with the schools. Dance with a King and Queen.|°2 “Sweetheart Night” when the Tuesday Club Date, Speaker Announced LAPEER — Hostess to members of the Tuesday Club on Feb, 5, will be Mrs. Robert Taylor, Pine St., Guest D. Keith, Spanish teacher in La- peer High School, who will talk on “Argentine Culture.” 2nd Pancake Supper FOUR TOWNS—The Boy Scouts planning their second annual Pan- cake Supper at the Four Towns Methodist Church, Cooley Lake road, on Saturday, Feb. 9% from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. - The affair is sponsored by the Boy Scouts of Troop 67, Tickets are now avail- able from any Boy Scout. i ELISE 'P. AVERY Farmington ‘Township Board Trustee Elise P. Avery was elected'Dearborn, will be held from the director for Oakland County, at Farmer-Snover Funeral Home at the recent annual convertion of the. Michigan Townships Assn./be in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery; Youths of the Commerce area dames Peyton WALLED LAKE — Service for| James Peyton, 33, of 3225 Terry, here, who died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, will be held from St. William Church at 9 a.m. On Monday. Rev. Fr, Henry Waraksa will officiate with burial . Mr. Peyton is survived by his wife, Victoria, two sons James Jr. and Mark, two daughters, Sharon and Kathleen, all at home. * Mrs. Grace Mosher LAPEER — Service for Mrs. Grace Mosher, 59, who died at Pero Lake Rd., Oregon Township, was to be held today at 1 p.m. from the Baird Funeral Home wi Rev. Stephen Crowell officiating. Burial will be made in Grant Ceme- tery, Huron County, She is survived by a scn Donald of Lapeer; a step-daughter, Mrs. Arthur Cox of California; five grandchildren, a stepbrother, Don- ald Michell of Muskegon; two step- sisters, Mrs. Doris Howell of Flint and Mrs. Dorothy Kreul of Iowa. Joseph B. Ruelic DRAYTON PLAINS—Service for Joseph B. Ruelle, 69, of 4050 Sash- abaw Rd. here, who died yester- day, will be held from Our Lady of the Lakes at 10 a.m. Monday. There will be a Rosary recitation son, Arthur at home; , two sisters, Mrs. John R. Brady’ of Cedar Island Lake and Mrs. Arthur Frothingham of Minnesota. ; Mrs. Vera Reid KEEGO HARBOR — Service for Mrs. Vera Reid, 62, of 2854 Beland, who died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital, wil be held on Saturday from the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home-at 2:30 p.m. Burial will be in Oak Hill Ccmetery. Mrs. Reid, a lifetime resident of Oakland County, is survived by one sister, Mrs. Martha Hetchler of Saskatchewan, and one brother, Bernard Long of Auburn Heights. Troy Takes Award ¢ for Election Turnout The South Haven Junior Cham- ber of Commerce yesterday an- award for recording the heaviest turnout in the presidential election among the state’s communities of more than 5,000 population, Troy reported 91.34 per cent of it’s 6,940 registered voters at the polls last November. North Muskegon ran second with 91.03. Detroit was an also-ran with 83 per cent, The bronze plaque award was in- Sunday evening at § p.m. in the) Coats Funeral Home. | Mr. Ruelle is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Riggs; seven sons, Lewis, David, Stephen, Richard, Raymond, William and Ralph, all of Drayton Plains; five sisters, Mrs. Florence Valencourt,| Mrs. Genevive Beno‘t, Mrs. Irene| Collins, Mrs. Eleanor Markusic and Mrs. Mercedes Bates; two brothers, Octave ana Oliver, of Detroit, and 16 grandchildren. Fred Arthur Lincoin MILFORD — Service for Fred! (Arthur Lincoln, 66, of 5708 Pick-| jbourne, who died yesterday in| | |2:30 p.m. on Saturday. Burial will _Miss Avery, who. lives at 238046 with the Rev. Perry Thomas offi-| ~Wildwood Trail, Farmington, re-!ciating | Louis G. Barry, Waterford! 2 clerk. Principal aim of wife, “the association is to organize var-| FE. jous townships on 4 county level. Mr. Lincoln is survived by his G. Robinson and Mrs. Wayne ‘Jones, both of Seattle, Wash.; one| Alice; two daughters, Mrs. classes. Persons wishing further in- augurated four years ago by the South Haven Jaycees and won in the first competition by Grosse Pointe Park. The South Haven group said 45 cities were entered in the race last year. New Training Series in Commerce Church COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — A/ new series of membership training classes for sixth, seventh and eighth grade youths will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday in the Parish House of the Commerce Methodist Church. Rev. Perry A. Thomas will instruct. who are interested in further study and possible membership in the church are invited to attend the formation may call Rev. Thomas, nounced Troy as the winner of its |By Tickets are available from any club member and at Class Phar- macy in Clawson. They also may be obtained at the door. The funds will go toward the goal of a Community Center here. Lawrence Livingston's Or- chestra will provide the music as it has done for the past two years, : The event will be held at the Clawson High School. ‘Ground Hog’ Dance Planned for Saturday AVON TOWNSHIP — Style Step- pers Square Dance Club is hold- ing it's ‘Ground Hog’’ dance Satur- day evening at the Avondale Community Hall on Auburn Road near Crooks Road. : INDOORS OR OUT! HUNDREDS OF USES FOR ‘yalspo’ ENAMEL “THE ONE-COAT ENAMEL” Give and e sporting. cheerful “new look” w' ‘al- Enamel. This bright, fast- finish oe in 18 white, black, gold ond Wipes clean e ; Won't fade. Ideal for porch or Hardware No. 1 members entertain their husbands | at a cooperative supper in the) with an International® CUB LO-BOY Cut a full 5-foot swath of heavy weeds with sickle bar mower while riding a comfortable and economical Cub Lo-Boy tractor. Big tractor features | @ Husky and dependable 4-cylinder engine @ Fast-Hitch for back ... click . -..and go hitching @ Matched equipment for the widest range of jobs CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION KING BROS. Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. FE 4-0734 — —FE 4-1112 Your Authorised Dealer — Farmall Tractors—Belen Garden. Tractors — McCormick Farm Implements—Kasce Feeds — Scott Lawn Pro@ucts EMpire 3-304. i ¥ 3041 Orchard Loke “ FE 2-3766 P still left similar reductions. $397 aoe lenty of sledding weather Larger sizes at Womens’ $6 e 9 8 Not all sises available Men’s and Ladies’ Fine Watches 59.50 Ladies’ Gruen ,..,.24.95. 7% 20.95 Ladies’ Rulova ..,,.21.95 49.75 Ladies’ Elgin ...,,.33.75 71.5@, Ladies’ Hamilton ,. . 49.50 50.50 Men's Gruen ....... 24.95 75.00 Benrus Automatic . . 36.50 98.50 Longine Automatic .. 55.00 Man's Elgin ........ 34.50 42.50 Wadsworth W'proof.19.95 Hundreds of watches to choose from The above is only a-small sample. We carry the latest styles in practically all popular makes, at lowest prices. - INTER-COMM. The most compact, durable, inexpensive loud speak. lectronic inter-communicati equip- ment available. Ideal for homes, farms, shops, stores, churches, etc. Regular 39.95 $ 24% ALL STEEL Reg. HAMMER 149 $2.98 69¢ | 6 Fe. Steel RULE STANLEY PLANE Retail D SAW |, Heavy arr 6%" biade. Cuts 2x4 & 2x6's at 4 $34.95 $49.95 mes 1.98 : ALL BALL BEARING 14.2 SANDER KIT | Romex an 524° 3 Yoer in Full Coils ” Va' ' Drill With Key Check Regular OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6 ing, 2258 DIXIE HIGHWAY JUST NORTH OF TELEGRAPH Monday and Friday Evenings to 8:30 i } Ly cy =a et 4 Market lower in Early Trade NEW YORK — The“stock mar- Farmers’ Market by growers ket was irregularly lower in mod- 8 1. | erate early trading today. * * * While a number of leading|{h™ stocks were higher by frac-/3. tions, there was a liberal assort-|}'3)°s'a> —— of losers running to around Bethlehem Steel’ was down Praduce poet PRICES ecaly ‘grewe ‘peeduee, of Wek Beets, 5, around 2 from its New York close Topped’ No. 1, pest bu. Celery Roots, 1.00-1.50 ez. Horseradish, of yesterday and about 3 from its close on the Pacific Coast where 4 the stock had a rise after divi- dend action announced yesterday, U. S. Steel was off around a) pot and Youngstown well beyond that. Among gainers were Montgom- ery Ward, General Dynamics, American Smelting, Westinghouse and Sinclair. Coppers weakened following news of the price cut in the red metal. Kennecott was off more than a point, Phelps Dodge and Anacon- da fractions United Airlines dropped around 2° on news of a reduced cash dividend and payment of a 4 per cent stock dividend, Chrysler lost a major fraction but Ford was steady. Caterpillar and North American =. Aviation were down about a point apiece. Opening blocks included United Airlines off 1% at 37% on 1,200) shares, North American Aviation) *® off 1 at 32% on 3,500, General 3.38 o. basket. leeks, No. . 1.26~1.78 Onions, oy, 1.60 50 ge 1, 100-1 so-tb. beg. Par- . a. doz. beha. Tomatoes, Hothouse, No. cL 3.00 10-Ib. ar op Turnips, Topped, » 1.25-1.75 bu. R — Kale, No. 1, rge. 19.00213.50° '36-2oe — Medium, 10.00-11.00: Small 1.40- CHICAGO POTATOES Fi wer Jan. 31. (AP) — b ent oS Agriculture) — Potatoes saeteae 75; track 255; total U. & ments 477; Red River Valley tiacs 2.40-2.50: went. arrivals none; track 2; su a stags motorste: | sales DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, Jan. 31 Po ee ae f. 0. b. patotony eascs included, eral-state Whites: Grade A, jumbo 43-46, weight- ed average 44; large 38-39, Pgs GH a ee wtd. 3444; reported. & Increase Nikes for Air Defense Brucker Says Missile Will Be Used at 70 Pct. _of Bases by 1958 Nike missiles. He also hag told the House Armed Services Committee that the first ‘‘Missile Master’ system is now being installed “‘at a key installation in the continental ‘| United States.” x * * provides automatic, high-speed electronic control for by detecting approach of enemy planes,— selétting the which should open fire and launch- ing the missiles at the proper oe for iriterception. At present, a number of major | Lake H aatiopaliian areas, including the New York-New Jersey region, are Pon- defended by a combination of the inew Nike weapons and the older 90-millimeter gun batteries, The by the newer weapons, Grain Prices —— Dynamics up % at 59% on 2,000 main 3 B, large u4- s he avg. CHICAGO GRAIN and General El an | CHICAGO, Jan. 31 (AP) — Opening nd Electric unchanged at)? y ine Grade A, jumbo 4}; large a grain prices: 53% on 1,000. (38. wid. avg. 37%; medium 33-36, w Wheat— JU oo sseee . 0% Another block of 5,000 shares of) "*6i,.th, a41-28. wta. ave 0% MAE. ....0000 on oop. United Airlines was traded at! Co Gomnmercially graded: uly 01. Bae Mar wT. 1% 36% off 2. h Grede A, extra large 37; large|Bep. .,,..... 2.26% May ........ +3 ane ne eaium, 051 tre lntge 36;|°°° coe oe by extra large Corn— : p. vecsae bMOM an , i 3 meat and Su oeeady| lore os) tee 18.15 : | rket s on large an steady RouoceS Ie. (a posocosd.. § New York Stocks lon mediums Trade is very spotty and July Tl V3oag May 150100 1bee &. soreny on: Sueptics omee —_ Sep. on 1.36 too oes oe Her} { and short on mediums and ample on i ID. os S (Late Morning Quotations) the balance. Receivers of neorey pro-|May ........ 6% | Apt ne clearing moderate Hal mig Air Red ...... 496 Grah Paige .. 2.4, S47 We Allied Ch ,,.. 91 Gt NR 43.6! : 4 Allied Strs;.. 438 Gt West 8 .. a) Detroit Hos ital Allis Chal ...; 33.2 Greyhound 15 Poul Alum Ltd :1:21194 Gull ou 113.4) oultry reg rin 30 3 footer 1 33.4) mame Bi ESC 8) oerosmetorromerer.. .lncrease Room Rates Pea peo 33 rg $33| DETROIT, Jan. 3ée (AP)—Prices paid [ m Am Gar-@ Ki 385 inepir Cop agg.PeT pound f.0.b. Detroit feel No, 1 kn Mb Pay. 341 Pak te 30 3| quality live poultry up to 10 Am Motors... § int Har Men mnt, wear pe bent petal ar: DETROIT # — Hospital rates v se | je ei pen hho oy | = sist 107 3 Whites 24; Barred Rocks 27-28. Capon- continue te increase throughout oe at aper t ettes ( ) 2- ‘= eeotins . 3 i 39.1 Market about steady, Trade is not very the Detroit area. Am Smelt. | 53.6 nt Tel & Tel ji Sjective. Dealers are limiting recetpts) Ford Hospital yesterday boosted Am Tel & Tel 1766 181 Crk Coal 3ivery close to actual needs. Supplies of tes a Am To} 77.7 Jacobs |... 3. jall classes of poultry are adequate. =, jroom rates $1 a day. reese Jones tebe 292 pel CHICAGO POU:TRY Sinai Hospital increased ward are as es Kennecott 1103) CHICAGO, Jan. 30 (AP)—Live poultry and semi-private room rates $1 << Weag on hens, about steady on balance; | Armat CK - 303 Kresge. 8s 384 ca 266 coops: (vesterday 76s pray and private room rates $2. ‘ 7 ID.) ; -b. paying prices un- ree ~~ “os < rs peer bese changed to’ 1% cents lower; heavy hens| Children’s Hospital upped its, alt & Oh... 455 Lise & My €83| 3809" 5%: Nght hens 12-13; old roosters daily rate from $31 to $35. (This Bendx Av... 61.1 {ockh Airc .. $3.5 }2¥@-13; Barred Rocks 26-26'4; capon-|; Benquet . 18 fesw's | wg sttes over 4% Ib. 23-28; under 6% Ibe is a flat inclusive pea h Steel .. 1792 Lou & Nash . #22 Women’s Hospital saic a rate in- Boeing Air .... 65.4 Martin, G1 44.7 5 : orden +. 6 Mav D srs Tt | crease is being worked out. Brigags Mfg .. 13.4 31.5) ' rist My .... 427 Merr Ch & 8 201 Livestock | Harper Hospital in Detroit, Pon- Brun Balke .. “8 poeagh Bei tiac General Hospital and William oarren ae 333 Mont Ward 38-5) DETROIT LIVESTOCK Beaumont announced rate in-| Camp Boup ... 36.§ Motor Wheel 222) DETROIT, Jan. 31 (AP)—Ho p—Selable creases last week, Capital Airl 3 Net Bis 346 marie “peamueh, done: erty Bm ‘ap r e z i neéer Carrier Cp... 574 Nat Dairy .. Th Cattle—galable 100. Receipts mostly All the hospitals have blamed Caters pe. wes teed... 1114 Peon eis Aes cca eae) en er . r ing wee erate Cen I) Ps ... 655 Ri ata ag active: demand somewhat uncertain lor salaries, Chrysler . 646 No ‘aa As 33 slaughter steers over 1100 Ibs.; to Senta St Re, Pay, By |Eeam “y and ae seSty Sore |g Ag Maman pay wos, moons * 1 } ers a Cora foe 21088 Odie On = 30.1 Seaay: stockers and. feeders in very|™@nded earlier this month by the a Palm .... 43.7 Qwene Ill Gt 084\ cme. ply, unchanged: t two|/Detroit Area Hospita! Council. Col Brd A * 7. ben A Waar ia loads high choice an rime 1116 Ib. the i in hospital Comw Rd : 403 Panh Fb! hieh ch Ring orci tb . dace sar: ae ' a ie rT - ae ot - Ld choice - ere oO; Con Raison". 433 Parsm Pict. 303 duit good and ehoiee steers ts 00-2140; Costs hasn't been reflected! tn Bite Gonsum Pw | 405 Penney. 3C | 78 Up nepy nigh util Ly te oe al - LJ mos u Cont Bak . 303 Pe RR Th steers 1600-1806; ten heaq|P8id hospital care plans. But Blue Son ee ar 2 AA ‘choles o68 ib helfers 30 40: bulk rood Cross officials said it undoubtedly . choice helfers Ww 9) f Cont Mot: 6% Phelps D ... S81'stendard steers and hetters, mainty| Will be—although not immediately. Gorn Pa CR Sere tnt heifers 12.50-16.00; late buik utility cows ; Curtiss wr 494 pg P Pr or {11.50-13.00; some —— and stand- "296 oe Pat bd | NEW BCR s 24A © 32A ___gnid the aret. The Wid. ecneneia’ Board | Cem ment in Hols officiatin: sal ried. Want lding, must mediate ape: oster FE 46-5703 can give, fen eq! ip- pared in you x RETURN be ABBLE Guect on, FOR stat petitio Wid) Mise woos . 26 ee ery. Mr. Pe loly bepeicers . security eeueeee oa be | enor apsls ning for 1 service. accountan’ saa 4 hom PRE-| to number sets. wn $3. wants a ae ie wees ef on Bin Wa een 28 ae Home, meaner co orn. scenes in oe Gee Pt sass et Work Wanted me Ta. tastes degree. Lawrence PES cRENSTOSE, “I drames ROY ee bere ted modern was not as orth of the Wia, ato Rent pe on Sk lr room epariment.. month plus — calaty Satie oot eet Work Wanted Female is € TAX CONSULTANT- ~ Notice 2635 W. Muro F,R | a . ¥ 3 unless ment. Do phy ry $271.48 matic); | A-l 11,. tor. r Internal INSULT. otices & Huron. 0. ealto The hot assessed. Wid, Than Quarters .. 2 Mick 2854 Be 1 1957, M tim you want not ap; Gen personnel per m 1 IRONIN Sea | 53% W Reven ANT- “Notices & Personals 25 SMAL/ OA 68-3339, r ; el. the . Wtd. Cont portation 30 or, age 62: land, Kee RS.| A e fob. Ret a steady pis peneral os _ office onth OS. GOOD Eves. FE seater ue Audi- sonals 25 wi L DER PE 2-742 : were a 3 cars and Wanted racts, Mt Pe eeree 3 Martha H dear sis go Har- pply in erences ull; MIDDLE. spital. 461 W. Pontiac PE ¢ WORK 4-1549 8t.. Ope AAA PR est of bal . 2 ; mong i the st crip eye 1, nard a ee _G. He person on required.| good EAGED WO! Naren |* oe 4-2065. & oY eae ee een seat ae toe 9 cap ont HOME, the sta g items tu ock oe | re Lene’ Sonseal’ servic sb lempstead, 102 | iy, Kennet | plain ~ouawia bos ee a BURTON ec ee DETECT! a Pay . : te by Hi ned ove’ A ee wacal pervice wil E. Hiuron. a oe FOR CEE OA ros: E. STEVE satan shaw cote Piha ad eis. Me FE in partial iy odge and hi r to Ww p.m. este Febru ce will dren. Oth Live in and general BABY SITTIN ves. FE 1-808 e. PE 68-3509 NS. 635 M consultation. atten Know W FE i Og alas barat Pu mosis See dF sr T — Fond of _FE_31 a 140 | _sppeint . Home el ANY © i— ANT T | 1% ata Parisi fi = OFFERED ant tans Gan tee. S ae enney (eg mh © pce |=? calls by GIRL a: O SEL or Hodge’s Rent pty es ma ts me with T an other Sun. Agere fut | EXP. SHOR IRE INCOME ae eee ween L? treasury. dollar raid on s Apts. Furnish Rela will He in l Chaataey Mire. $4 14 off. $30 wk. F and ‘every, Kitchen T ORDER COO Cc. TAX SE Mrs. RB emily ad AN NEED- HAVE Ren 84 1 J. Ode Rvicw| 25 ‘R I, Lan viser E CLIENTS 1 . the state|Reat Hous fer nee oe —— aeinat te © 3| Pre 3 to $4,60 MEA E 8-6560.| 54617 aye K OR 1943 Ox u its "contidential. sen FOR 7 Hous ished 0 33 arbor and eral Hom e¢ 3) P rs 2ZAY “AT WR desired, F bow Lak Army ential. Phone Commercial ae ee eae ee eee een an’ atin 4 | romotic A Vear |) noe ee APPER FAMILY 1 id wou tee wis) ee an buila | Rent 5 Unfurnish Vc gg | RE vening, seen after 7 mal Oppo 5 days ern su: my bi RONINGS | —;5 our hous A ation ch sq. ft. to ing with - Lake Cotta ed” .35 | RICHARDSO! T pportunity | ™% y weca ohtntoce a ome. $3 Bu DONE je_or mi erotred nee Jenne oF . ges. wees 26) 2 iN, To $5 g3. afterno et, 5 GIRL : IN Income ne_ ed K pur- Pontiac Fire . Rooms ll - vice ee BOA per lig Oak Oe GuY. 1 Must have » $5,538 ) Th experienced pes & eve| tin L 14 WOULD eer BEN JAM Tax Servi 2070 Fred ere Shee Lake Suffe F aptain 8 ee sly “sat seneen Thelma "inee Ure. Stand et a oe eee oxperien 1964 he C ountry Mt ark caayl rE ap school RE BABYSIT 18 W. Huron INR. "BACKUS aie Auport ne Herman $ Hams. = on on Wile rs Faci nih ee eed: ee on be] petsost) a am beanaais field cet | HOUBEWOR on, FE_4-1892 2n NA a KS “— : ay ial Bur het Gores ear, Saad ab Ne ecnin aaa| iaues: aniotoes, A svenap ir cel EWORKTRONINGS AND af. Rm. oat coon aba al Bean : « < wale ns Rent mores _ Bi oacocate ; ee ther of M son of Ben and| frin position with A stead 1 6-6644 mile Rd. _ baby siti ONINGS N Eve. FE 153-3671. , Also. ch CLASS TO Tas Captain Fo fee Space| 39) Mrs. James rs. Clare amin;| off ge benefits. security IRONING iting. FE 8-8963. AND EED H 8-0317/5 china firin rge. hor Charles ; r Rent Miscel eer Sate Cote Akerley el UparyOy ll pe NINGS. $3 A Bi with ECP. AINTY MAID FOR aU 6. FE) Pon aah a eerie aero : s ; wen G, g. Cha Mrs. | Bldg. and rsonnel up and A BUSHEL, PICK. Incom Mri MAID ee Pont 10 m acre- fireman, was fal pa tiac . a the. Wwiliam c @ Btaniey rane ib Larapewe ite. PART TIME ents a er_OR. 3-080 ame average return ow 8 per me Ge aean YE 2-0016 14 93 Mark, 2 ~ ve radius ot | gre fac burs tne ntsc) gan eerare ge Cae aaa BAe ye ates P| te ool BS ER eee | seta ot cual from Pontiac then re-| Fer Sale # FOR SALE First Reprint Che at Birmingham. | —** Bietanski's TV. ia pi hae To handle, « vartet a. 28, WANTS DA en Let us \VE MONEY & Betty Mc operators. Nethys, | | Cllen ide cy on bus line. Th General ouses hem. Interm Y occh of. Biswiloe: pig) Rd apeetdr ey ee See prodigy ne ry WORK,| Den Mattio your return thy Da rling uth White t will t . { ursday after Hos- BS sieksitseveres a emetery — ip Whit. irming- ~~ Insura . : y ee a duties sting TAD ning. OR Py a & PBX of Ben: giy cor rm for you. vis . — Do e for 10 to on nice b urnace had a fuel Fo oe pr tnek poms! Mage e Chapel, © nee Ad Pontiac Gstrict office Is DY. 45 : . E. Blvd, N./ ro ao tlgh ockiead an . exploded oil ... .43a| _to th rs contrib gests in Ii & pable of dyuster Write office in housew WANTS PE 41444 _N. I hway. arm on Firemen were ; Suburban Property ae Ament Cuno i : be made pict amas alse ie pppoe Ven oot togad (a8 lp Schaal laa ae. "petween ive 5 LOENERSL vier ris aot n Debt PD | gts a tatty sabi device on the po tepit 4080 Bastiabe's ee quafigctions, Wr experience a Giving fall details 86 yee | See i ee Schacter Hosmer Page It you are having trou WiLL PA gdh Taser Renton | furnace of ty device 5 ie coe ee cee wel JO- ite Ponti and cation. on age, € ck up & WASH! fics nat Fa 108 r paym ble meet AY CAS Bale Bus‘ Mrs. Dor age 69: di Dray- MECH aC press » *xp. LADY _ deliver. F ING. ME TAX i. ICHIGA ents, see in lot in Dra iH FOR Willi 324 W, Wilson, a inexs Btephi othy Rings. Les father ANIC, E _Tu WANTS DAY WO! E_1-4406. _pared. EM "RETURNS foie tao ae idee ole ae ran nee, e Frankli home ¢ eee. eee AS gt ee | oe pli ‘XPERIENCE! P es & Wed’s. ¥ WORK. “| AA 34047. NS” PRE.| ‘hove. amg rt Stee enme lains vic n, when e of For Sale Hepat cad Ralph Raymo vid,| Piym us comm D, TOP ART TIM MIM FE 5-4 MON. INCO _sbove Oakland ve 3. 8a ie r4pm airport. 01 inity, the in rother of alph rotors sg Wil.|_ 4369 cuth Gara tasion >, TOP | tailor f E SEAMSTR 4 EOGRAPHIN 5-4896. Wayne G: ME TAX ON AN Theater. eee: : . OR 33169, der . Firemen t jury court, Mr lars. Pistones dear |— Me ge. Milfgrd, MU au. dry cleanin Ess FOR _Tetarial Ser iG. TYPING, 6ec- _lem. 381 arrett. No See oe esti AFTER 8-0456 CA ahd no da used dry hers. Strona Gensrisee - Valen- geet v=)... g plant. FE SENIOR | vice. EM pvr ae acco | 8. Saginaw rking prob-| ®P° ry 1 1957, I THIS DATE. SH or contents mage to the buil : ody lhteg) Maca were) pewats Exp. ——— > SALESM. | Plastic I ENIOR AvAILABL CCOUNTING = & | Ih FE s-cano.) ot oer f lp ae dct 48 HO was ding Sooca cl tberend: Bleanor| rem Beetorred bat AN \Bee new c Demons ine. cl weekends, = - APTER service, exper if INCOME TAX bodd le pred Poo d pee FO URS reported neral se fr Rance pre ag “ee in a Must ta an Sram | Move line of strators | =02"@: eaning and xp., Cpok easonable ced Tax| Mertin L. Pi er than ract- RE To w . Pebru: rvice will be Ruelle. F = soyeenees ve car. Ne Novelties Spring housewa: babysittin -| OR 30364 Home aj Pontiac, Mich rentis, 228 B myself Paeral Puller Brush, ontiae. if you ‘can ot ESLADIES anaes om The home oe , ——— ied. Ser| sagmelasest a ‘TICKETS ASH | Ee icets cad comes at letriet | Bee ae pases en —s epnag Aaa 2-2318 Sa wear To. wor better R NG AND nsur. Une CaUuES — nO IN as fetlows: and neuree dee) Doe eo ay morn- SA TLE) AS ork e eady-to- | pick up TRONIN _Insurance Agencies 17A > U EST! | caved of said drain is alentine Gifts vee cB) Gard ot Thanks mor Purnace AI-ESM EN - og coats Rhos a eto WANTED BABYSITTING. all i fo Aust Agencies 17A I onl AC TR = HOTELS 24 HOURS B ve 2 Swe anks 1 quests per cent seve sales- oomfield E . y| FE Po ironing ead HOUSE- §T. $ in- -Norv I 6 ERVI ~ We are pera os : in : WISH TO on re . Lot toe G m missiog 1662 ashion S O17 eego Harbor. AY HOME, e Agen 8 W. Huron 5 CE to give now m a the W end a natw sineere EXPRESS Ca wy and ood commis _8. TELE hop WASHING. ir FE 2-922 INSURE cy WwW — st. - MItre you a CA ition ‘of ratitud ° u seria tee instal = EGRAPH P | _ fora 8 & IRO FE 1. After BY PHONE td. Ch ee ENT SH COM located an existing Kind Te relatives tor on) Spm or St vic. OR 3-86 ONINGS. WA dena. FIRE. AUTO. xp, Wtd. Children to e381} fer’ nome: on your prop- 1 ra “ saneiani latives for many TR 8 am eno WASHING -$623. TER- DRIVE IN IRE. AUTO, §-6687, nto Board ; fer hom in 24 hours. prop- eating Township of center th Te ieee arin RACTORS gra her up AND IR ooo FOR INSURANCE. A GooD 26 ee ech pon te Pre- . EQUIP! er and deli ONING 0 W. UT WIT URANCE _ HOM aes et Se th N. SS > th TIN, a Bec. the "Necsaeaune pe Nida eng with Sawer use. 1% PED FoR = w very. OR PICK. Lawrene H ASSUR Ee Las children, E FOR on the tabi put your ¢ 153.8 ft: “sow 318.8 6i-3e'w 40 Oak- ene at in Rc Pp + freight boxes to 2 ton tra R eee eee OMAN WOULD | _3-5479 e Cos ANCE | CHILD: _day or week. “SMALL ee us fi e and so fect 50 ft: 1% N 61° = th N guy 1 Mal bull. A spec brother, J Gunter in U .: & car pn pan D our Birmingh: ity sor sin rome $1 ) LIKE > GENERA’ INSUR er Cass’ or, REN LOVED FE 4-3389 aces action — we, w 10k3 fhe te O¢ fh: th W 30° pong Bey ta} thanks er _ton ‘pis ia13%; Disie Rwy. Trailer ¢ high school. grat pe i ° r. Own trans. at. ANCE DA a178. “AND CARED ON. aid p Bn dvb A 62 204.2 ft 3e°19'w -Home yelson John: Dr ton. pisins. Ne N xie Hwy. D er| fied steno: graduate Must WOMAN W FE 2 iDAY CARE PAI Fd 4 “00 N 88° s Fu-| TW 0 ra graph & | OUL! ora | tim AB Law. tenie, of fee samt, wa Ry am a Flowers | Mhseded aS nr age tng Dota MES eben Pa Re INURE By PHONE Sah eine SEES rom |" * mM. Stost, Reaitce ro = . ts Sune tenes te Ey my we cen:| PARM MER DUNST. n 3| SS, Sta t the MEN| nerril 8... welt Edison Co _ B FE, Nicholie & Bute PE’ ‘etn BABY. D pen Eves. Woe = x me iew a6 th x a. <3 ‘centerline a CHANDISE en AN s PLOWERS however oe mga ele y. noon, per Benes 1 |3 W. HURON ae Harger Co YOUNG Pale cinity yeah WILL BUY CR :30 158 ft: N 60° ft y, Grain 7 _ uee Tists married an rain you! NUSUA: ru A-t re 2 z yo KRRIED WOMAN prope Pu LIST ek a6 ft: ww ‘ote a ease (Per anted wossetetens n Funeral _Bemonatfaio’ pan. fora | AL OPPORTUNITY: LIB. Pireplabes BLOCK WORK. PE sina) dren. thom Bre, WOMAN mk. P. chasers, wailing. th 8 desw diet ft ‘tos i th eee: ~Funeral Dicectors__ pos] Pemtne neta, pesplaiuafon| rece pce pore Ones Ge jn Pes wonx.| MAHAN REAL vrai om See Seay in Bravos Pu PONT comimercs RA. Ro. 36 of We Seger BE 7. Pu AMBUL Bragey herr spel quired PE 3014 eae CUSTOM CARI Hite 2 (hd ary CO. Wtd. Househol TAC, EM S311 aa f ae Ce ew td ft. raley Panera: Been GROU YOu MUST =o = " pes. me WA eet be cca | Rough-in. f CARPENTERS. Tom'w. HURON old G Ww + ise Height ; 7 NTED: r e-| _t nish NTE HU ‘° 1001 ANTE a OS segs 'Donels Be OTPe ean) bas ee AegUAINTED. Sift "Pct Ace Le tie | AGB TR dias eS ee “2 ey ee _N a°00' W - th § JRIOE:- th il. ] cn- EXP PON WITH | WTrp. ¥ MA 4-184 re of one child.| Feo © RENC rvice tire hom: EDED - e OR 3 or Drayton ceeteedne Te ft 7°47 wan 1) aUTOMOTIV ~ onns . p ERIE N TIAC, es AeYarrren 7-Day tings. Wate HING LACE CU 1g %2 dollar. aes oad lta! LISTINGS 1355. tinuing ot . to & point ft; th E | “DESIGN UNERAL HOM t=NCED __ week. Phone TTER. § DAYS A wE §-0061 t line, Fi | flea. Ahan PLA seg psiphlg heed ll buy ou Get the B NGS WAN Py hs ER eae Ag bone For Sal ED POR PUN INEXP Ary WAITRESS OR _3-3903 8 ve Ala} LAY eld tile.| _Laund rte Gudhes Pecns ae, Phone 0 on Gennes Sor eeee on. ANTED “Said 146 ft. to con-| Rent ge Housetratier: col ATs PUN FUNERALS” TO NEXPERIENCE lyf WANTE r 6:00. ii, LAYING } SANDIN 'FOR Ty, phone PE 2810 Pontia . LET US @ OR 32711. mmunity bs sHOW YO NOG. LET the . ptt cen: | dake pecessertes Se 30 Orayten Pia FUNERAL HOME pep rr: -NCED fy. Huron 'D onTS _Pontiae Hardwood." G_& FIN.| ‘ce, ~PAMILY LA Ext ai eee eee IT OR 3 Sd ee an * 1 fs . 1 FOR the Main ine appar Seren uto —— 79 | Sei decniocd on Apter i vacane (hoe —_ emar tno. ALL tard wood Poor 3-7647,| 2-810 ph. Poatia THDaY GET eee OA _%2681. AUCTION IT IT ore ig YOUR Main line of the — = vice se me ~ SPARKS-G _ Waterford fw ‘DIVIST MENT as LAKE De-| "Pe! FOR ALTE draw: TYPES OF B r_Service. a - ay eel GP PONTIAGS LARGE ALL EQUITIES, BUY 2 erfved traverse tor | Per is eras RIPFIN pO TATE BALES C repairing must be RATIONS AND <> rv eee ce to 54 Pal ocean cs LA Lesli ES. Sta. Drain. le Moto: Rervice CHAPEL TATE SAl RGE R pply in tho’ AND 15. EM 3-49: NS ____ band Fz 4-7881 yers. Cash aaaat B 1¢ R M Beg. at 40+20 on Por Sale Bic reycles PE 24 HELP TO LES CORPO ea Es-| —°%_? roghly exp |@LOCK 31. EM =p scapin: WA waitin ROKER iddlet De! a a ae rain. | Boats b Accessor 3 VO b_2-504)| FRON SELL 1000 ACRE LAI wot Jeunes. 119 W. Huron oer nmerreng ee ee = 18A TEN TO €. | WANTE aie eae oe ta on the Mi Se ornee . NT SUBDIVIS ACRE LAKE- MAN WHO WW. Huron. eines Se aaa ay thee tEcEINO | o: furniture. BUY: ALL a Manat on Lot 10 and 12 ft. Hop res oor eee cane Orie $5 S- ipl Unlimited SION. quired tn 10 CAN TYPE n.|BRICK, BLOC _FE_ 2-2468. ORK! werale Ph TRIMMING - | WTD. TO Ph.. FE pT fa boyd or small ¥Y LAKE COT. — oe sevnton { the Wanted U tion Otfered FUNER el Ppl ed Earnings cludes filin et office W RE-| werk. Al K AND aees: FE $6563 of OR _niture, BUY OR AU Se area be ranaonen . th . 11, Pon ated in th Heights Wanted at nm "87. Ambulan AL HOM enty of 5 Pp gs aper wor ert of ork in- large Ree: chimneys. NOEMENT ~ Me or OR _ dishes, ,_tool CTION “FUR- 4-0605. 4 be reasonabl lake. “4 gusuine Pog ge hip. © 14) Por ps as a ce Service. P! E a ‘ rospect _Press. Box 112, routine| cial. G esidential — job too oving & Wtd. 8, MY 2-1521. e. FE Ro 3 we dist a Sate or Ne and rn Ste Used an See oe ¢ Cen a on or Motor ne to Fellow vee LIVE IN. MOR Pontiac | _3-1128. uaranteed work. Pa MY A ed Mov ee cking 19 _Wid, Miscellaneous 28 SOULE IS NO ames ance . said : oo oe met a i <<" a ee han . ORE FOR CEMEN . : Ss OVI — arr WTD. PAI IOS U = tance Road: th of 278 ft Lot sooeed. pmetery Lots ; aie 'STIGATE for hom wages. E: FOR| Co T WORK EXCEL NG-HAUL . 20 SMU ~~} Fo BT NO oy RY Hh lig Sade toad hese 4 CEM : 5 PHONE EM ° weather Onc Pete oes ot Ee us ttce © OF ALL KINDS. Reasonabic Rates. SERVICE _oon re Wt i : . C SA NE F . . : 5-3038. i was te’ peers to end 16 of Lots 5 S'ly along the dis- Cha: ETERY LOT: re EM 3-4197 ne POR FOU 3 wes large or residential DS BASEM ates. = Mo ti rrife! Witn our listin dt BB Pye RS back Chapel Cemeter: 3 IN WH ( pellet ay NTAIN, DAY /—2@ See cas ton cocina No| cubbi: ENT CLI miewise Money Wanted quipped care. ager ta for a its han: 14; 15 meters. $900. FE Te tson, Cran art time. A AY 3-042, xp. Free esti uar.| 5 sh of all LEANING | anted with 2 2 full Pt. . ; po Hee anor ' | A 300. FE 5-7594 . H E Corner © brook D: poly in estimates _State 8t kind. FE 5- AND WANTE 28A| eme perosgg Wich pd ginko 2 reaio and 9 of Walter oak Son Bs a ce — wie irenteete Drug. Maple. CEMENT MG AMD | Wi ieatra oes 6 | =| - caweped off r very mod~ t z Two e cos— _ division ; on oad lines = 0 | S | - REALTOR TD. CLERICAL re _ CEMENT & & BIC OCK We ne oEEs. TP TOR |, firs: aust at lots, 6 sot bs HOMES, + eps ile Netsson are now ing the back y wlone : ener Bab COLE, x we The Pontiac P 7404 E. High! graphic — Bes okkeeping , CALE Carpent K FE 5-0782 ae rE nythiag. sisumewen Wanted to. PE eas peeperta. Out anerenge Job ag and eee 1 pe YY 26, 195 ress _ ghland et ot mec me redeeal of a er Contracting _ LING A _ = nted to F oS eee are boomin) Nos. ts ie bask aan tos ald Lat Bisache Merrill. 16) lean § FOR W at Vorter I bao pg ernperomed rpe ent of "OR 32216 DEN ntractin your pric ND RUBBIS dl Rent 29 yrepae You wegen ocr’ List wr eH, thru 33 of ‘kk lot lines o ff. 8 Einabeth 64: dear siste Branch ANT AD WTD:. BR Rd. —— tease penefite— peid be-| | 3-2276 D&} GET OUR Y | NCINE e, Anytime, re NAME ATTEN mnt 3629 DAY RA — st vision located Kast Walto of Lots honia GreenHow ster of Mrs.| D s freight OKERS F ply to Box “118. R & peal ang va-/ URY “WALL B M Bidg. & BID. _or RATORS C 8-0095. WHY exten LAND ! CTION” "TOM henge JE ig ine BE ts of ben a yep erg hag and Mrs. IAL FE ee ee oa pay). O00" Ot og oa all RY WALL BY MACH ervice: eee oe Gr ue cone cassut eee sae of 1352 N. of at 2 eld Mond eral service | 2-8181 vin s. Tractor: actors & Typt LADY | schon _FE 5-4 s No fob too INE FRE LIGHT AN up. FE 45 ASH) Our some und ce on fr ft. to "RIOE, for 2» m. fr ay, Februar tage or 3 must b nd) bo ng requi FOR OF 628 big _Rub D HEA IM. service estrable ent- Betents No a pt. or a| fist ao gg 4. From open actors (eee ee okkee red. kn FiceE CEME or small, bish har vY_ TRU only to you tenant? Geeta nett on the w) Reed urch wit ope Ba 8a I tops ft. vans c ping. owled | Fi NT If O LIGHT HA auied FE 2. CKING. good wil le Fast of p- .m. ne. acce all M retail ge of| OUI LIGHT 2-0603. credit enant get you Se isles + ne) Bas iauine, & Fora || AR ror espe js ee ees ea pera ae SPECIALTY. onAULING, ©, RUBBIS aoe Employment and reler R ra st , Mrs. rs Fs ac, or B iH. ve er- oes the Bast Walton Dr tor| Tener Puneral he ea sey immediate id be re Inter-8 TEEL BR (Help WwW Ww =| PE: Nfuaranteed, tre ere T —. | 118 17 — ee at Sta 6423 Bo ain. DeGRAFP. al Home. ‘ar- sibut assumes ely: The tener coe Carrier. OKERs FoR | . ‘anted — 8 60 2-1608. / ed, free Lehre TUCKS t OR 3- =—- PE eet liams Real- tof. of the back lot Gage a9 No. 1 Ralph H., 16 JANUARY 31, 1987, wan se ter crcesa’ cine: 1953 daregel rhea eed andl USELMAN WA nna s| § R SANDING. OLD 1 ia TR O ent +EACHE - After REAL Manor & Seo Biegral Eo aaa] Gra ie Tora! areas jeer cancel ine charges acceptable ff 1951 try must bea Hint 8. Wood NTED-FULL OR Guay spree ea Lali FEC RUCKS TRACTORS BACHE. AND FAMILY NEED 3" Tone, OF 3 of Bec bdiviston. in Walton No.| Hea ; dear fathe: of Catrie De- oe jon of the f ee Tr ercenta: vintage or esels EX ward a Gieasers GUAR . Bills, FE or ton pick UIPMENT ment avail he house wi D3) s ‘ti 9 — Sur u . located Heteht: rd. Pun of Mrs. A ment of the irst ans-A ye basis. new- PERIEN: Pr anne ANTEE: ump. t “os 1% light able Mar. th base- BU un, 1 to running al Pontiac T in the s held Mo: eral service rthur a which h advertise. Inc merican F fe at techni CED kinds D ROOFS TRA rucks % ton sta _pal repairs and 1. Would Y OR 5 wot t along s lin ‘wp., T3N, Ri BE \s vessee Pebruary will be ered valuel as been re Mich 267 S. Bivd, reight 28 ion for cit LABORATOR 353 N Est 1918 H it ILERS AN Semi-t: kes rt of rent. F 5-3 decoratin: do} 4 will pe SELL Z through ¢ back lot i para to See th lone oat the Huntoo 4, at 1:30 error, Wh nae through tho WT : Eas pontine: doesn G registered i eo | scuped F FE 2-30 ugus See Ponti ND pry WOULD LIK 5-3982. g as| erty or rsona'ly buy division fo of Rast wale of Lot 10 ft ciatt h Rev. Wm. Hak Puneral are made cancellati e D. ROUGH | gist, to Dr. lab. Apply s- HO d FR 4-8450 21, FE 2-8946. I 1ac ig arm 8 modern jelly heal 4 p 4 OR * “RM. CL show pig sell it or a6 prop- w a veoeledegiory Heigh Nos. §2| Park ¢ Interment 1 akes offt- your “k be sure t Ons crew to bi CARPE Saal Mt. Cleme Wickens, patho’ in | USEMO _ L.A. Yo ndustrial and furn. te urn (CLEAN. pr.ce | how to get r you and the eof 1 ts Sub-| He ‘emetery, n Perry M adju i} numb to get in Ro d on ne NTER al, HOw ns Gene olo- | equipped VING ung la Tra Zl ¥ ouse, Enid rn. . 4s 8 reasonab cash the aiton y W iine of 436.8 ft in state Mr. DeG: t. stmenta er. N _VE chester w home ens. ard 8-4553, ral Hos- J foe ad. FE 4 +294 FUL 623 8 actor C OUNG Lk id 1 yr. FE Gov prove le. Call terminu: Heights said hes to a|_neral Hom at the Li aesont “tls will be given Ermont 6-5796, eermoet 140n MA Mt. Clem 08. FLEMING — 50: L. A. Y¥ Ly Open Daily WOODWA 0. sire BUSINESS 471 DR and let par on mare ee 68 of East |PITZGERA - oa even § Help— 6, Detrott: [MAR OR ee oung. FE. cee SO Rees von eaten lee eins So8 a elp W Santee Watk: WOMAN fe 28 finisain R LAYI FE 4-0461 luding 8 or small bath DE- Ae. ROKER lg Se la rn Me ec ran me | of LD, JAN = Closin Help Wanted ena aree FOR 34408 ne 5 no, LIGHT Hat ae unday) an ovine 9 Dr och Ni chard, UARY ¢ tim F steady ite GOO! }disoi T H FE 4-1422 y ecorate. . Reas apt. _ Lake nis i Be eeoage pur ear pale, er mins sng See sts Wpocat “Female 7) tyas'nti my Grn aah eomeed complete NG: seme your pre B30 ei es Peers WE HAVE ~ B iiz0 ft. of E 310 ft one ts exevva| eld iss, Marguerit feeeeaed| | (Ue ed let seen cae i| c Assistant C _Apply_im_person, ee | auscne ES AN WITH % $3153. oe ee, eee Penne . HAVE E 760 {t. of E 310 ft. (oN 130 ft. of feld M Puneral earaeer te Pitz day ple o'clock agate | ocal branch ashier MEN & WO on, 150 N. 1 our.) ditior ercial or 1 iding servi arts work Ca TON PICKUP Sha 6 p.m. ro: BUYERS =! A = . : fou noon th | Co fh of Nat tl OMEN. Perry. | ns and esident. ce, | _4-8421 « Call PICKUP re Livi FOR “RS 8E % : (c) N 360 i of; a.m. peta f reer: will be. s to pubil eg ca as openi tonal Fin me, sell W N. FULL OR | Star remod And _ad- : anytim Share Living Quarters 30 * tore eee Ast 2 Dt a cnoretie Char ry 4, at 10 Tr cation. suet wena Ge ee Nsarieed pretacon R PART - asd tec caimales. REDU ue. Fs rters 30 RD Lots. Just 10 ft Catholt Vince . ansient Want | | Rot ne perience pr assistant; oul products. ationally i estimat TA EDU < = SINGLE WILL Jus tc) W325 ft w 385 ft of W 750 ment i e Caareh © ate) Dal Ae ennee ant Ads | ho ceasary. Conver eferred red Q 8. No ca ad- PLASTE es. FE | ~8" ED R: ; a man 3 Ly TO T BE MO T CALL. ands 100% een ten tote n | Pitzgeral ith inter-/! ane § lied up to 9:30 a.m. Pours, Comiot onvenient working clean 50 “We. Peres te-| _ pai RING FT “Moving. | ATES oe ee TO 30, TO aie Oona ween bee Walton 100 ft. Lo {t.. (@) Lo 45 {t.|, Brace id wil oe metery. M th jay of publi Ww am. ons & spl able worki ing . Perry. 8, _pair work, Ev RST CLA: ovine, F are tiac, F and pri SHARE ING PROB OVER Y GLAD Het t No. t No. tip -Smith in state r. e first cation ny b endid ng condi- enin 88 RE, E 4 you. 8 p.m. = 017 v. bath YEA LEMS. OUR SELL- E 180 f ghts Bub 2 and 3. 1 PREN Punera!l at the insertion. after yaks enefits HS os aes of Pi = gs. FE 2-2936. OD mith © 7, 8 a.m. in Es’ RS OF CO’ OVE : Sink oe 1240 East) jj CH, PEBRUA Hews CAS a §it 20214, betw Mr OvJibway, ONE , F LASTERI -2038. Loc ELL Cc a — SA snore ne TATE SER' NTINUOUS R re N ine fi: we lee tt. ft. of N_ 1960 a RY 1, 1987, W H WANT AD mr hiedal cen #9 & 8 for In: REAL ESTA ONLY Free estimates. MA NG |- 0? Long RTAGE soo IE —_ meat pb peed Loge ne ge ree tt:| French 8 Glenwood Blvd... 1-4 kin RATES | BABYSITTE: rin-| Salesjad ATE Sal R. G SNYD MAvie 54052, 0 Sine ene Gk |e pire share J rm. tT, Ldby , = of hs N 2250 ft: of E 510 ft. of ench. Punere! ef kawnid 5. es 1-Day tom lise FOR feo? time execbent Hetteee, dl E? FLOO a2 ONWA J lhe 5-6806 Moving WAN eges_ FE aD WM 605 W 200 wat pene neral ard 8. 2° 3-Days 6- aft 30 &.m 44 HRS er eee nce sooo andl R_LAYI m NTED TED. 4-3090. M. A. t. of E ft. of N ha etiniss| oo announce rrangement $1.50 Days er 7 pm. to 4 p. ‘| @ real deal org Ge Gatier, Bl Sood hing. Ph Ra: even ts ARTI share WORKIN | ali in ihe & a S 280 age fe N! i seen eA: Funeral H by real 3 1.30 H1 86 62.78 ‘BABYSITTER. - tor: p.m. Call ESTATE, PE S-0018 ys TRENCHING one FE, (WEST, ane ota crete | wae oe "don ee N nee Peak . go ft, Crook JAN. 2g. 5 2.7 6-398 Boor 440i _ Y8. WEEK. = s 1 are 24780 AND STORA' stl oohad OPPO ft. of Bro ft. of 8 of 8 140 ft Se and Sterne - 22 ts 5.04 esate eee a K | REA R eer LD AND _ /Painti RACK, Foe .* yea IRTUNITY ft of fag cies 8 990 ai A WwW Sears 450, George 4 eS - dear ” ‘ ; . yO __Chose_in. ifor 1 ‘ : a. oro ; ist : EME Hot aduits, ee ¥ 4 4 Fa dec. A Ta. | ; : ; 3 rms grrmac. a ee 8 : \ FE #1370. ae eee sae ™ Be os oe ELIE Oi EE Ce OE i 2 — . = oh f ; . 3 | ‘7 i oe ee LJ . : _——— ut * : a i - ‘ ‘ a eS A the he ” 7 Ghee | ees ne