ce OT gag AMINA GNI \ * The Weather U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast mF fe | a: THE PONTIAC PRE i] IVER PAGES: eke * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29,,1959—48 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS Tc Croteau to Supervise Designed to Cut Cost to Taxpayer Close Screening of County Welfare Roll By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. LANSING — Social welfare rolls in Oakland County have been ordered screened more closely in an effort to cut costs and to determine if there might be “chiselers” on them. . Meeting here yesterday, the Welfare Committee of the Board of Supervisors appointed a subcommittee, to. make a thorough study of current welfare operations. It will be headed by Pontiac Supervisor Maurice J. Croteau. It was emphasized by Mrs. Hope F. Lewis, Welfare Committee chairman from Birmingham, that the study has not grown out of criticism of the Social Welfare ~* * Board or Department, but rather “to help us see what Supported the picture in the future is going to be like.” Oakland County last year spent ($2,357,610 on welfare, which has ‘resulted in a million-dollar deficit ‘facing the county. | Welfare expenditures for the year 1957 amounted to $1,137,412. | k« * & | | “And it iwelfare load is going to improve very fast either,’’ Mrs. Lewis’ told ‘her committee. | Although Croteau did not dis- close just what he would under- |take in his study, he did call upon ‘the county's legal staff and Social! Welfare Dept. for cooperation. “It’s going te take plenty of. work,” he said, “but I think it has been needed for a long time.”’ Some committee thembers and county officials .at Wednesday's |meeting in the Olds Hotel indicated the study might bring oyt that some unqualified individuals and families are receiving welfare assistance. ROBERT C. MILLER Summerfield Backs Miller vr cen sae 5. * | With this in mind, it was sug-| gested that the county's investiga-| |tion of potential welfare recipients MacDonald, chairman of the | Secial Welfare Board, that each of some 60 investigators had the responsibility of screening 315 cases. Croteau revealed that a national : , average shows that each investi- Postmaster General Arthur E. gator should handle no more than Summerfield announced today that 80 cases. he has recommended to the White Rovet vie red yack was ha bert C,|28reement that “t Is House the nomination of Robert combed,” said Oakland County Miller as Pontiac pro presently has about 3,000 welfare Miller presently is serving Lo cases—a record high.” - acting postmaster, saa! : oy He said included in this total appointed to the post last Feb. 28.|.o. an “awful small” amount of cheaters. * * * “You always have some people Service competitive examina- |°" Welfare who shouldn't be agin petitive there,” MacDonald said. “If the tion, Summerfield said. ; : |department knew who they were Miller, 31, is one of the youngest we'q get them off.” postmasters serving at a major ffice. The Pontiac office has, _ The sumber of welfare cases, once © a he believed, could be cut to annual postal receipts in excess of | $1 million, serves 115,000 aaa about 1,000 with an intensified Requests Nomination of, Acting Postmaster in Pontiac He is a veteran, and has quali- fied fer nomination to the post- mastership through open civil doesn’t look like the — Asks New Farm Program Chrysler Missile plant work on a LINE PRODUCTION — Workers at the Sterling Township More Like Laboratory Than Factory Jupiter missile under production to Quiz Dorfman Eye Insurance Deals, Link With Gangsters, Jimmy Hoffa WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate rackets investigators said today they are ready to show that ex- Chicago labor leader Paul Dorf- man is a friend of gangsters as well as of Jamies R. Hoffa, Team- sters Union’ president. * * * The special committee reported to the Senate a year ago that Dorfman “has maintained a con- tinuous association with Chicago mobsters."’ Committee Counsel Robert F. Kennedy said he hopes to ques- tion Dorfman himself about this in a resumption of an inquiry into maltimillion-doflar group in- surance plans maintained for labor union members. Dorfrnan already has been de- scribed in testimony as the mas- termind who, with an assist from Hoffa, set up his son, Allen Dorf- man, as a Chicago insurance agent to handle these plans, * * * The elder Dorfmar? was expelled from the AFL-CIO last year for allegedly improper union prac- tices. At the time he was boss of the Chicago Waste Materials Handlers Union. Under fire within the AFL-CIO were his relations with man- , agement in collective bargaining | and the Dorfman family’s in- surance activities. In Lansing, Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams reports one of his assistants” is in Washington attending the, racket committee prohe of Team-| sters Union activities. * * ® Adams said Jerry S. Cohen, will try to learn if the committee has center in Sterling Township, south at the center south of Utica. Some 300,000 parts go into each mis- Senate Probers Missiles By HARRY J. REED Managing Editor, The Pontiac Press Missiles are being launched daily at the sprawling Chrysler missile of Utica. But don’t look for any zipping past Pontiac. You'd wait a long time. All the flights are on clec- tronic charts and scanners, be- cause they are part of the sim- ulated flights included in the test- ing procedures at the center at Van Dyke afd 16 Mile road. sile, and elaborate checks are made throughout production. This missile is 105 inches in diameter, 60 feet in length, and is powered by a kerosene-base fuel and liquid oxygen combination. Rolling Along Area Production Lines ~ > F og and Drizzle Ike Urges End Will Continue | Through the Day of Outmoded | Fog, accompanied by a light ‘drizzle, wil] remain through today = iwith rain or drizzle changing to! rice UNDO S snow and turning colder Friday, ithe U.S. Weather Bureau said this A morning. | To Offer Federal Aid Tonight’s low is expected to be! la: weit treezing 3% | Based on More Recent The forecast for Friday calls for | Market Figures ,a high of 34. Today's 8- to 1>-mile-, ,an-hour southeasterly winds will) ‘increase to 15-25 miles tonight and! shift to northwesterly Friday after. ‘noon, From Our News Wires _ WASHINGTON — Presi- dent Eisenhower urged The Oakland County Road Congress today to abandon Commission reported all main “excessively expens ive” roads are in good condition but ; said visibility is poor. farm price supports con- According to the State Highway ceived in depression and Department, the mist has resulted war, and adopt a new pro- western and upper Lower Michi- gan and peace. said at Supporting farmers’ in- Some airports air travel was hait- jed when the blanket of fog settled nearly $5,400,000,000 in the | In downtown Pontiac the lowest current fiscal year. ‘temperature preceding 8 a.m. was Heart of Fisenhower's new pro- jwas 25. gram was abandonment of price | dating back to 1910-14 in favor of new federal supports tied to aver- e S p {age market price of immediate | preceding years. S | The President's proposal ap- covered in the mandatory sup- port program—wheat, corn, cot- Roslyn B. Wyman Is, | Eisenhower recommended that D. B. Varner Announces en flexible authority to scale new price supports between 75 and 90 Announcement was made today price of a supported commodity by D. B. Varner of the first Michi- during the immediately preceding in extensive slippery sections in gram keyed to prosperity The Weather Bureau come will cost taxpayers rover the state. * * * 17 degrees. The reading at 1 p.m. i __ supports based on a parity formula LJ : (st Scholarship plied to the six basic crops now | ton, peanuts, rice and tobacco, Name of Aid Fund, the Secretary of Agriculture be giv- | per cent of the average market igan State University Oakland | years. The tour through the ‘pre. for the production of jet engines scholarship. * * * viously secret plant showed writ- for the Navy.’ ers the parallel Jupiter and Red: | many 8s 300,000 parts are com. | bined to form a single missile, Open: for inspection were the years of missile production, the missiles through simulated launchings and flights, duplicating .. conditions of pressure, wind, force, ears, accortiing “ae RI thrust heat, and vibration. : Production of ground equipment is also centered at the Chrysler plant, which employs some 10,000 persons in its 1,750,000 square feet. The plant was orig- ment. pe Chrysler yesterday threw the doors open to newsmen to inspect | the production facilities which are’ rolling out the 200-mile range Red-| stone and the 1,500 mile range. Jupiter. is strictly classified. However, both powerful 105 inch diameter Jupiter are in multiple production. As one Chrysler engineer put it, “The public now has to dis. eard the mental image of mis- siles being built in basements by bearded scientists, We're rolling now.”* And rolling they are. When they clear the final testing stage, the missiles are as ready as any cars coming off the production line. All they need is a little fuel, and they'll g 0. The Redstone missile, dubbed “Reliable Redstone’ because of its few failures, is now completely op- erational, and is fired by troops in the field combat conditions, Two Air Force outfits are cur- rently being trained at the Red- any information indicating crim-, inal law violations in Michigan by| the Teamsters Union or others. ‘tic missile. : stone Arsena] at Huntsville, Ala., to do the same thing with the Jupiter intermediate range bal the number of units being made | the slim (70 inch diameter) Red-| stone and its stubby cousin, the! inally built during the Korean war| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) * + * ¥» § & Open California Centers sroapite f toe wen MAKING Thors in Quantity ing one of its most reliable missiles in a form so simple that crews can fire them in volleys on 15-minute notice, even from mobile bases. The missile is the 1,500-mile Thor, a combat-ready carry a nuclear warhead known as the ‘‘County-buster” and ls stockpiled at bases in this country and abroad. But because of its limited range, the future of the Thor is uncertain. This picture emerged today after the first press tour of Thor production and testing facilities here and in Sacramento, Calif. Newsmen Wednesday saw parts of more than a dozen Thors én an assembly Hne at the Douglas Aircraft plant here and 17 finished missiles in a storage area. * * * At Sacramento they say a demonstration that a hangared Thor can be made ready to launch by quickly trained crews 15 minutes after the order to fire. ; At the factory, officials showed how the Thor and its launching. equipment can be packaged for airlift to any part of the world. A Thor squadron has 15 missiles, all ready to be fired at once, at the same target or at 15 different targets. In the field, each missile requires only four men to fuel and fire it. May Be Proposed as Substitute for Income Tax From Our News Wires LANSING — Gov. G. Mennen, Williams has considered—but not and maintains 29 suburban delivery! Program of helping past wage addition to its city delivery routes. | learn a trade. *x* * . “The only thing to stop welfare the nomination will be submitted; Coming out of the new study, to the Senate by the President|Mrs. Lewis hoped, “would be a need to aid in future county Miller, Summerfield said, has ; : Cm alee | Gelathading | imaprewe: budgeting. The county this past Pontiac area since his appoint- ment as acting postmaster.” N F| work in kelping to place Pontiac’s ews aS 5 ' new $825,000 post office, completed WASHINGTON (AP) — Judge the residents of the area.” ‘ . . ; in | day te dismiss an indictment ac- M res W s . filler lives with his wife and cusing Richard A. Mack and Todd, 6, and Robert Jr., 3, at 194) N. Birkshire Rd. in Pontiac. ing to influence the award of a Miami television permit. down a defense motion in U.S. oe District Court for transfer of the Installed Today i n Detroit WASHINGTON (UPTI)—Defense vealed today that the United DETROIT — The Most Rev. John! “tates Wil Rave = Sai sqandren F. Dearden was installed today as) siles ready to fire from the West at 51 the youngest Roman Catholic Coast by sext July. Archbishop in the United States. over assembled for the formal in- stallation. Bishops were here to take part in the robed . at sol- 1,400- seat Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament. routes and four rural routes in| ¢@fmers in welfare families to Summerfield said he is hopeful\is a job,"’ he emphasized. within the very near future. long-range estimate of welfare ments in the postal service in the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) He has also “done outstanding last July, at the better service of Burnita 8. Matthe acales: tt i : nree children, Judith Ann, 8) innrsnaal/Al Sudeechia et Gomagils dudge Matthews also turned New Archbishop trial to Miami. 4 Secretary Neil H. McElroy re- From Our News Wires of intercontinental ballistic mis- head of the Archdiocese of Detroit, Catholic leaders from the world Sixty-five Archbishops and emn rites (11 a. m.) in Detroit's | They were to be joined by more metropolitan area. ’ Archbishop Dearden is the sev enth spiritual leader in the 126- year-old Detroit diocesan history. sales tax. Ski Page Today |i trys, Sree ct Snow time is ski time! There's a jhow he intends to raise 140 million ./antil be can take the tax plan to dollars needed to balance record budget. Williams, meanwhile, was tkeep- ing his secret in the official family his _ last night he advised Williams to dealer and long an influential fig- ure in Michigan polities, confirmed I i Today's Préss : The automotive production ex- perience which Chrysler corpora- ‘elaborate test installations that PUt | tion brought to the missile field was an important part in the mis- six Gen. W. W. Dick Jr., director of Special enough to cover the matriculation support Weapons, with the office of the fees for a full year. Chief of’ Researth and Develoy-| We are coatiieet ee 28 EO Lansing SANTA MONICA, Calif, (AP)—America {s mass-preduc- | weapon that also is a workhorse in space research. It can | Underlying Eisenhower's pro- posal for a new price support and production control program was his deep concern over the mounting surplus of farm commodities pur- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Straley Mum on His Visit. Number One will be named the Roslyn B. Wyman. Scholarship in honor of the late Mrs, George E, Wyman whe was a charter member of the MSUO Foundation _ and who died a year ago. Mrs. Wyman gave the Foundation its first donation and with this check the bank account was opened. Now her husband has added He also spoke of the happy co-|this wonderful example,” said Var- operation of an Army-industry ner. ‘They are one of the prime! LANSING — A hush-hush was imeans of building a strong student | Clamped on what Pontiac Police body. Many fine young men and | Chiet Herbert W. Straley was doing women are exceptional college ma- here westerday 7 terial but they lack the finances | “They were just friendly visits,” ‘Today there is a regular wave;-o~: Straley, who faces ouster ‘of scholarships sweeping across the Charges as chief for alleged in- ‘country. Individuals, foundations. Competency and lack of leadership, lindustries and business firms rec He refused to say why he spent ognize the need of more education nearly an hour Wednesday after- \for more people. noon In the office of Supreme “The scholarship movement {s Court Justice Thomas M, Kava- ‘increasing rapidly in all sections,’’| nagh while accompanied by Pon- ‘Varner said ' tine Supervisor Maurice J. Cro- | ‘The opportunity is particularly teau. Kavanagh was Michigan attractive here, for local students | attorney general during much of ‘can live at home. | Straley’s tenure as chief. “A full scholarship af East Lan-| sing, for example, would probably See an ore ae an old fnend of mine.’ Croteau i Penses. so refused tr y whi - ‘MSUO a boy or girl faces $255 | alto refused to say what was dis- ® cussed |matriculation fees and $500 covers |“ eae I can promise you some 'a full and complete scholarship for . minises” hel said | “i on § | Someone living home. . a A Croteau in Lanscng for the Mich | ‘Audrey Hepburn Breaks ix: Sie cee Sie * * visors Conferemce. saxd further, 4 Ribs, Injures Leg i“We're not pust gaimg to be on the ; HOLLYWOOD (AP) Actress! defensive in this matter. We plan ~ ; ressive counter-attack." Audrey Hepburn suffered four rib Tee . a kaos might be fractures and a leg injury in a Wy come to light. Croteau added, fall from a horse while a movie, , coming City Commission was being filmed at Durango, | neering. 'Mexico, her studio said here to day. Croteau rapped the Public Ad- Miss Hepburn was working on’ Ministratiea Service repert which the Hecht-Lancaster film "Unfor bad criticieed Straley’s work as given.” The accident occurred chief, and didn't speak too high- ly of George D. Eastman, new ‘Wednesday. public safety director. Eastman | ia preparing the charges against | Straley. Croteat did disclose some infor- mation about his luncheon meet- Williams Mulls Over $65 Million Tax on Wholesalers 22-22 | Questioned after the secret con” ference, Croteau said Kavanagh is *° peg his program on a $5 tax on! every $1,000 of wholesale business. * * * But Higgins, a Republican, said he did not know if Williams. would fin sight provided no answer. Miller, state controller, said some legislators believed the adminis- Wihams has Lt erans Trust Fund advocated mortgaging * an urgent plea for help from top U. of M. officials. “] admit I don't know the answer,” said Rep. Arnell Eng- strom (R-Traverse City), House ways and means chairman, after hearing their story. A five million dollar state pay- roll went out today. Another falls The session was called: yester- day to canvass possibilities of re- suming monthly payments to the University of Michigan and Michi- gan State University. These were cut off last fall, | due Feb. 12 and was not included * * * in Brown's reckoning. The board agreed that revenues’ The state board will meet again The | Tuesday to try to lay our prior: some cash ties for dishing out available \ \ Comics ......... snonoonssee. C! County News ..........+-,. 22 Editorials ..... AB OC EROROPAEEE 6° “Food Section .......... 2-3 Green Empress ............ fb) Obltwaries ..... 06.06.66... 6 Sports ee ee es tee et eee 39 Theaters Pee etree sei vevevee * TV & Radio Programs ....., 47 Women’s Pages ....,..... BS When he was through, James M. only was out of the 5 a wringing 50 million dollar Vet- funds tration wag crying “wolf” but * * Brown's figures demonstrated the) In this, the board agreed with) contrary. legislators who yesterday heard ‘future.’ But he denied Straley -was looking for another job should ‘he be ousted from the department. * * * ’ Straley himself denied he wes in |Lansing to gather character ref- ‘erences from past employers for his “aggressive counter-attack” to ihold onto his job. “I don't have te go around looking for character refer- ences,” the chief snapped. 'Straley talked with Joseph Childs, |State Police commissioner in his ‘East Lansing office. The chief said this was part of his primary reason for going’ to Lansing, that of at- tending an executive session of the Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police. Besides bis visit with Kavanagh, | (J THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959 | - ‘Sopra fi hrysler Displays Missile Production i (Continued From Page One) ‘team which made missile advances S l t B ; possible. an Today is the last day to register will begin at 7:30 pm. without * * + for classes in the next ae es! charge Included in the testing program Pontiac Public Evening School, ac- Re fated instruction classes for jg gn extreme high temperature} cording to Richard C. Feil, director apprentices are now in ses8i0N, geyice which simulates the re-en- of vocational and adult education but apprentices may register for try temperatures of nose cones for Pontiac schools these anytime sinee the coming back into the atmosphere instruction 1s on an individual ajingugh the actual temperature Classes Adults may register from | 9a aks 4p. m. ‘and Tp. m. pene: oe to Fell of the nose cone test is classified, 10 9 p.m. in the office of the = a sample of the tremendous heat Vocational Education Building was witnessed, at Pontiac Central High School. Classes begin Monday. A minimum of 12 persons is re-; quired for each 10-meek class, ac cording to Fell * A piece of meta! similar to the nose cone material was placed in front of a much smaller heat- test device. Safely behind a pro- tective screen, newsmen saw the metal glow quickly, and melt in . half in jes» than 30 ,seonds, Striking . Temperature in the mirnrlatedi Gets text was 2.690 degrees, but ‘actual temperature of the nose cone test) was not disclosed. Power for this heat test had the Eighteen-vear-old Robert J. Detroit Edison Co. slightly worried n Squires sat in an Oakland County at the outset, a Chrysler official * Srestmvauleg slip Jai) cell-block today, convicted of reported. A 5 million watt trans-, speaking will being the first person to strike a former for the testing device was i , , department, 80 as Tuesday and Bloomfield Township police office: built into the depa in the past half-dozen years not to put @ drain on the rest of West Bloomfield Township Jus the plant, tice Elmer C. Dieterle threw the Sentence Youth ‘for Beating Accused of Police Officer; 10 Days in Jail * The 10 classes to be held oan Wednesday evenings include book keeping and accounting I, inter mediate shorthand, advanced shorthand, beginning typing, sales- manship, Russian, copper enamel-' ing, oi] painting, water, color paint ing and photography. Tailoring cavernne and public he available Monda, , VW ednesday Classes offered Thursday eve- The nose cone test is not sed nings include bookkeeping and book ar the Birmingham High 0F each missile produced, how- accounting 1, office machines, High School senior, sentencing him ®Ver but only on testing new mod- beginning shorthand, advanced 4,4 19 days confinement during ©!s and modifications * * * The number of Redstone and Ju- typing, business English, stocks ahd investments, ceramics, which he will miss his classes “There's no excise for strik China painting, knitting, cake a Fs piler missiles produced daily, or decorating and parent education, | "8% ® pollee officer, a . * ‘the eost figures for either unit, are ; al i _, sternly told Squires, son of Mr. citied, but Army officials were, The 10 vocational industrial and Mrs, R. PD, Squires, 26421 quick to say that the plant is by] no means producing at its full ca- pacity Much of the factory building is| heen! given over to engineering and of- classes open to persons employed in trade vocations are automotive diagnosis and tine up, sbop math ematics blue pont reading. tool Normandy Kd., Franklin. The officer, Martin MeLaugiilin gave testimony indicating Squires and two companions had Brads “ a Sen. eid drinking beer, had thrown beer bot ‘fue design work which could be | oe ena - mie iine are and thes ott of their car at his and swite hed to other buildings to make, advance proveviion Mee aa ye ee ov way for greater production. Oe att ey Wel * * * (under arrest for possessing beer, Future of the plant, as far as All three hose classes from 7 they threatened to beat me up,"'| continued production of the Red. 1M pon will hase a rewistration McLaughlin said stone and Jupiter missiles jg Con: fie of S10 The two hours classe®: Squires, a big six-footer. cut his Cemed, Is of course dependent on from T to % pom will be $7 and, lip and blackened his eye, Me- Army needs, but Chrysler vice four fiour classes from 6 te 10 Laughlin testified | president in charge of the mis- pom are $15 with the exception sile program, Thomas Morrow, of the $20 welding course Alone when he tried to appre waid that the company is work. High school credit courses will be meets eke i“ in | ing with the Army on future pro}: conducted three* hours two eve ye radlo police headquarters | ects at the present time, Himes aw werk The fee is $20 for help. The fight with Squires | ‘Two things left a lasting impres- The citivenstip class on Mon broke out in the patrol ear befere | sion following the tour of the mis- days and Wednesdays and the pei artived, he sald. sile center’ The cleanliness of the Amecicanization class on Thursday Another youth. Michael Hog whole operation, and the youth of 1 ot ae cue AL a ee -the majority of the personnel in- volved ‘dof drunk and disorderly conduct Se : , The building does not look like a and will be sentenced Feb 10. Ho Order Close Watch yin threatened to fight, but didn’t, factory, but like a laboratory. the McLaughlin said presence of white-coated techn Over Welfare Rolls The thin youth escaped during clans adds to the hospital like the melee, the officer said |RcEne, * * * Cleanliness ts also tmportant in imeeting the extremely close toler- ances necessary for successful mis- jsile production. Chrysler vice pres-|! (Continued From Piayse One) = | ‘nts Milford Girl G Soaring case aa ° | OF if oes fo State Bake-Off ite nt in charge of the missile pro yvam, Thomas Morrow, indicated A Milford Township gurl is rep-‘that the contract calls for a toler. re senting Oaldand County today in, ance of 10,000 of an inch in mount- senr had ta dip inta other too omeet the MacDonald figured that) an average size family on welfare receives welfare orders for ne cesmitiess such as food and fuel, amounting to 811% per month inidcambcmadicde Wn line the 27th Annual Michigan Cherry ing the propulsion unit in the mis-' nine family on ifure ! and Pie Baking Contest being held in siles Any more than that, the tre 1 ! 4% ' ‘ ) i 4) \ear * Grand Rapids mendous fore would not be push . Ve ALS Ay r * Cordree Heard, W6yeareld! ing the missile straight lig . \ . € F tN Other developments growing out FTI OL A Clem a Are * bel * of yeuterday x meeting were Heard of 3002 Old Plank Rd. 18 oWe'yve got our production down 1 Oakland County will continue their turns in four shifts at the ¢pic4 and the missiles fo push for a return fe a OO kitchen range calls for split, between counties and the “Eo len ranwes stay that way through delivery all fate im welfare costs It now 1s Winner of the day-long bake-off. lover the country,’ Morrow added. 7300 with the county carrying the Will earn a $300 scholarship and | The completed missiles are deliv heavier burden automatically be entered in the | efed to launching sites by truck Support i std) being given, Natlonal contest elated for Feb. and airplane George Ho Burt vice chairman of | 1 a¢ Chleago. It was difficnit to find anyone | the board and department director Condy ve is being accompanied by, Whe seems near the retirement) for reappointment despite a report. Vins years from it Fif- that the State Social Welfare Dept Carlox Long of Lake Sher. @%e. er even 10 ‘ wood, her 4-1 leader, The junior at) teen per cent of those employec is seeking replacement None has Milford High School won the 4re engineers, and another 30 per heen made so far although Burt's county contest Jan. 17 over 16 other Cent are technicians term expired last Oct contestants | A bright sense of humor Was, Ae : jofien revealed as the tour prog. ‘be axed ° Over a complicated wall-full af flasuing lights and switches — a ‘giant data reducing computer “Think” sign, and a Jap- “labeled ‘for emer- a Dampness Spreads East [ Nation Wears Snow Belt By The Drizsle and fog dainp * Wet and cold weather spread /ened sections from the Ohio River * across broad areas from the Rock. borthward into Towa, Ulinois. In. lk 0) t| P| jes into the Midwest today with diana, and the upper Great Lakes e U ines ans reyion Freezing drizzle fron for Farm Program northwestern Tlinole into Wiseen From Page One) ,»“ere a 3 anese abactis, geney use only te cepacia Associated Prens Vinnesota waminge of heavy areas show bb some * * * sin slicked highwaves, creating hay The snow belt extended from ardous driving conditions the Rockies into the Dakotas and * * * Heaviest snew was along the The Weather Continental Divide and ino nearby Foll U 8 Weather Burean Report (Continued chased by the government under the current support program. Kisenhower sald that by the start of the new fiscal year next eastern apeae, Five inches fell ‘during a six-hour peried at Land er Wyo There were three inches PONTIAC AND SECENITY--Dight drie “ sla today. ell RG af freeeing drivele at Eagle, Colo, and more than held more than nine billion dol- this morning ahef 2 Raln or drieale ~ . _ tonight. Lew 8%. Rain changing to anew (°C hes at Casper, Douglas.) lars in farm surpluses, and turning colder Friday Wish xt and Chevenne, Wyo, and turon| Seoutheasierly winds today 95 mites, Gp Increasing to 1) 15 miles tontght and 0. Falls of more than four inch | shifting te northwesterly Friday after: oc were indicated in parts of Neh He said the huge stock of gov ernment wheat was so large that if noon. ’ i to harvest) one : raska, the Dakotas, lowa and Manan tated badly i] Today in Pontiac Minnesata bushel this vear, the surplus supply : Lowerat teniperature preceding @ @1 It wa hel wae more than enough for domes. 1, as bel TONE » oD! At #8 am Wind veloctiv 2 mph eee I Uiial Ta tie Use, export sales, foreign dona Direction South of the snow belt as temperatures tion and needed carry over for an Bun aets Thuredas af 5 42 pm ALAR : 98 oh . Sun rises Priday at 7 48 aim ivopp. ul AUER e than 200 degrees entire \ear Moon rises Thursday at 1) 2pm compared with Wednesday moun Moon sets Priday at 10 51 am “The price support and produc. ing Tlowever ih was warner in ; h YY as not Rewntews: Temperatures sechons hit by the dtivzle and fion aan program hh ‘investment from surphis disposal Valley r a are the final cost of fixed price sup Wednesday tn Ponting southern Missouri’ ae poe ene Cea ie STROKE! _ northward through the upper Mis ati sale Dawact Wairersture, eo sn ’ sissippi Valley and the Great (Porte would be impressively Mean temperature . Sako Region large.” ahead ties ALLE + ee | Aides and some GOP party lead- wignent eter Age in Pentise Warmer and dry weather pre. ¢T® nad advised Eisenhower to, Lowest gate tesa " alle 4 an Y ‘ er PTe hand the problem to the Demo- | Mean temperature S707 af vatled in most areas east of the cratic-controlled Congress, with the: Weather—Cloudy snow Mossissipp) River Rains ished in the southeast, dimin-| and snow | tapered off in areas in New York |stiggestion that it come up with hen non Lowest Temperatures the answer * Date in &7 Vears , 86 in 1914 Tin 188s tay: State into upper New England, This advice was based on the Alpe << wh sbigeaehe i Rains which fell along northern) contention that ever since Demo. ea tiinore 30 25 Miarni so 6g Coastal sections of Oregon and) Crats regained control of Con. Bismarck 18 <4) Milwaukee n 1 oh Bismarciile $6 65 Minteapote 6 4¢ Washington ended in most areas «tess tn 1955, most administration Buffalo 40 16 New Orleans 6¢ 47 during the night, | farm proposals and Secretary of Cee on tk Omaha 4p ag) In the West, skies were fair, Agriculture Benson have been | Cimelnnays 37 28 Peifaton 27 28 in most of California, the Great) Prime targets of the opposition, even: 3 J 1O°n lh Denver 85 28 Pittaburgh 4 19 Basin -region, and Arizona In the past both Eisenhower | i Lawl ae nh GS tissue ue x © land Benson have urged lower farm) Fort Worth $2 48 8 8 Marie 28 It was a little cooler-in Oregon, | supports Congress has authorized He] Tbh dachgs | ty northern California and the Great reductions for some crops but not: Jacksonvitie 80 64 remus ” Kansas City 40 39 Geatt 48 ar Anesies @0 62 Tat x { rat Basin region, but reading were ito the extent sought hy' the admin- | Marquette a 23 r |around normal in other areas. ‘istration, \License Plate ‘Sales Running among the 64 entries who will take to a xmaller tolerance than the con- | —| cers, July 1, the government would | fal : a worked," he said. The President :- Vamos ee 12 gin di fey Readings were 100 to more fam 5 i otopm than 20 degrees higher than 24 pointed out that even though the. 9am, a t ‘ a 4 : igovernm recovers some of Its ta c ‘hours earlier ffom the lower Ohio ® ent The Day in Birmingham , Reduction of ll Per Cent in Water Rate Expected ithe Pontiac branch of the Secre:| prRMINGHAM—~Good news fort Based on water consumption fig- tary of State’s office urged drivers the majority of Birmingham resi-| ures for the past fiscal year, Gare to purchase 1959 plates early any- dents came from the Municipal said the saving to Birmingham Ahead of 1958 Sale of license plates here is way | Building yesterday when City Man-! users will amount to about $60,000. ‘We still anticipate the last- ager L. R. Gare announced a prob-|The report will be submitted to minute rush. commissioners for their approval as usua!,’’ warned’ able reece in water rates. Willis M. Brewer, branch manager. | * in time for reductions to become _ For the convenience of North Gare said 2 study of the water: effective with the Mar. 1 billing Oakland drivers, the Pontiac’ department’ § income and expenses branch once again will operate a ‘by James Purkiss, city finance di-| The annual membership drive of isubstation at the Waterford Town- rector, revealed a healthy financial) the Birmingham YMCA will get condition. Reserve funds now onjtmnder way Monday evening with a hand are adequate to provide for| dinner for workers at the Y Build- proposed additions to the system) ing on Lincoln avenue at 6: 30 p.m.) ‘and for contingencies and debt re-|This year’s goal of 1,250 members ‘duction, Purkiss said. is the highest ever set here. The savings will be approxi-| faroig Kalbfleisch heads the | mately 11 per cent Of the total bill, Actual water rate reduction will be slightly over 17 per cent, but with sewage charges remain- ship Hall. 3 | Opening Monday, the subste- | tien will have the sarne hours as | the branch office, 96 E. Huron | St. They are 9 a.m. te 5 p.m. | _ Monday through Friday a ad. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays. So far this year, there have been about 14,000 plates sold in Pontiac, | Brewer said, about 1,200 more jag constant, the consumers Will | Gordon, ‘than at this time last year. realize the lower figure. The campaign will close Feb. 23 However, Brewer expected to, * * *y ++ + | sel} about 35,000 more plates be-' (1.6 suid a great deal of the| At Monday’s dinner the kickoff fore the deadline Feb. 28. credit for the reduction should go} address will be given by the Rev. divisions, Sectional chairmen are Robert Kirkpatrick, George Ta!- Last year, the Pontiac office to the fire department, which has| Charles Whitfield, pastor of Grace sold around 34,000 plates. but 1,76 of maintaining water facili-| Baptist Church here. Committee | about 5,000 of these were pul 14. Constant checks against leaky| members will describe their activi- chased after the deadline. Brewer reminded cn te to inains keeps the loss below the na-| with all “Y”’ facilities. have certificates of title wit €™ tional average, he pointed out. Olin Manchester, cre when they buy plates. us says that with the new building in Cost Announce to accommodate more members | Snow Removal Costs Pontiac A special Chamber of Commerce SIL 000 i 1N Week committee, headed by Harvey > | or | y 0 Kresge, is being formed to work! Z City officials today figured up} out promotional ideas for local, ‘that snow removal costs reached) merchants. A related committee | | improvements Price, staggering $11.0 000 as week. * | Set . at $2,400, 768; The Sys of Public Works: Paving Highest Item ‘spent 1,004 man-hours clearing} | ; streets and municipal parking lote | $2,400.768 last ‘of snow Jan. 18-22 and another 502 | t Weedend TOBACCO Specials | Pontiac spent ; hours sanding and salting, said year on public improvements fi- 3 el, director. nanced through ‘special assess-, Joseph B. Jew ate ‘ments and city funds, City En- . gineer Lewis M. Wrenn announced.| It cost $823 to clear state | The biggest bill was for 8. 17| trunklines and $271 to sand and ijmiles of concrete paving and| salt them, Jewell said; $336 to t bituminous recap. That cost, clear side streets and $635 for | $1,696,565, Wrenn said. | sand and salt; and $1,611 to | | Other improvements and their Clear other major streets and costs $635 to sand and salt them. Curbs, gutters and street drains Jewell that labor and. All Popular Brands— FRESHEST CIGARETTES 2'84 Regular Size | Per Carton ..... figured (2.71 miles), $202,178: asphalt con- maintenance costs amounted to! cicose your favorite brand snd crete (5.3 miles), $124,120; sani- $5,551 while sand and salt cost Prilip Morris. SL oa nae tary sewers (1.34 imiles), $91,983; $5,430. : Chis low price plus 7c tax storin sewers (.46 miles), $43,496; * ty * King and Filter 18 sidewalks (1.70 miles), $30,028;; There were 600 tons of salt ver Carton... jubined sewers (HU miles), spread over city streets last weck, $28,984; grading, graveling and he said. culverts (.23 miles), $5,400; and! | miscellanevus, $178,063. School Board to Discuss | There were 5,141 permits issued Spring Graduation Plans for building, wrecking, plumbing, ! sidewalks and other projects with’ The Board of Education will hold a total estimated value of $6,818,-\its bi-mofthly meeting at 7:50 to- 597, Wrenn said, Fees from per-)night at Bethune School. | mits smounted to $24,187. “The Board will discuss spring, y, {graduation plans at Pontiac Cen-| Balance Sought ltral and Northern High Schools,| Lj and plans for an annual football, Chotce of entire stock including Kent, Balem. Winston, Hit Parade, Marlboro, Pall Mali, Spud, Oasis, etc Plus Te taz ee “on +f o, hid i game between the city’s two high| ac schools. FREE , Famous Remon ee 6c CIGARS 10 a.m. to Oakland Officers Aim 6ip om E «BOX OF 25 | eguiar $0 vale Toward Plan Set Up Your Siinbeam eae Praeets | Limit I box - smokes. by State Tax Board § py perRic SHAVER 4 4 4 4 4 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 @ CLEANED @ OILED } 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 10¢ Fairway Lighter Fluid 5< Full 3-02. tin, Limit 1 per person. LANSING—Local assessing offi. cers in Oakland County will grad- ually work toward a State Tax |Commission plan of balancing real and personal property tax assess- ments @ ADJUSTED at No Cost to YOU! Bunbeain factory serviceman will be here a! Simma to clean, of] and ediust your @unbeam Razor FREE (Parts If Needed Are Extra: | Members of the Board of Su- pervisers’ Equalization Commit- tee, headed by W. Ray Ransom, Pontiac city assessor and city | supervisor, met here yesterday to seek a guide for assessing offi- f $3.75 RITE POINT Cigarette Lighter now at this low price ... 98 ON. Saginaw —Main Ficor i i li i i i i i i ht i i i ~_wrwwewewvevrwvvrervrve+veveerewerevvvevvvverd wT res rerreeTeweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerewevevrevveVvYwVwTwTYTY PPPPPPPPPPPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PP PPP PPPP PPP PAA PAAAS The session, which also included: similar officials from other coun- ties, culminated a series of confer ences that started in November: when the Commission lopped mil- Hons of dollars off the valuation: ‘assigned by local officials on a number of personal property as- seesments of large companies. This cut deeply into property tax Income for the affected areas, in- cluding 10 townships and cities in Oakland County. Save at SIMMS LOWEST PRICE in History oe He bb Lh re BR Qe Derren BLADE-ELECTRIC Famous BANRER’S CHOICE I ‘We want property assessed so see Vales 09 2 that there is equity in its class and uniformity established at & Box of 25 level that will recognize 60 per cent of true cash value,” sald | Louls M. Nims, Commission | chairman, Regular $1.50 seller, Fresh, sro- 2 matic beats aud sav He gave ransom approval of a4 vl an to assess personal property this vear at 60 per cent, as he § said the commission doesn't ex-'§ pect the rates to be lowered in one pump “Reasonable recogni red.” Brand New--Nodel “G" $32.50 List Factory Guaranteed Progress will be : NO TRADE-IN Required . ‘he said AFTER COLDS, FLU, SORE THROAT If you feel run-down because of TIRED BLOOD Toke GERITOL Feel Stronger Fast in just 7 days—or money back! IE S‘sInch ANTIQUE CAR Ash Tray ss, 3 42° B Regular 26¢ value. Bvery, s ash tray B has pictore of car paintéd in the counter of ft ‘ln he i tl in i ii i i i i i i i ti i ti i i i i i i i i i i hh i ti i tt i i Complete With Case Famous DUTCH MASTERS 2 for 25¢ CIGARS a Pack of 5 a8: ~ & Brand New—In Original Factory-Sealed Cases & NOT Re-Built, NOT Trade-Ins SAVE #77.95 OFF nationally ad- vertived Net price. No layawara at thia price. Offer effective white stock of 100 lasts —Nene Sold te Dealere— | | eran drive which wil} operate in four | burtt, Miles Welter and William and defective hydrants and water! ties to acquaint campaign workers a “Y" secretary, © and offer a broader program of - : activities. with Ed Kurth as chairman will, fi 6* CIGARS} Limit I box. Buy i) 5c Lead-in Wire, « contact businessmen with a pack- age plan for financing special cam- paigns. This will establish a budget system, rather than have contri- butions to finance each separate event. Conditions at the slope of Cran- brook and 14 Mile’ Rds, remain ideal for’ sleds, toboggans and skis, according td Robert Girardin, rec- reation director. x * * ) The slope is available for day. or night use. without charge... “Please turn-out the lights be- {fore you leave at night,” Girargins ed. - request z ~ iz Tablets e I (2 ri 98¢ GROVES BROMO noted TT : Tablets ........... voce tee ae i $2.50 CITROID $ ny COMPOUND ........ «.--ee-d8 for 1": 98c COLBAN TABLETS | 77° with vitamin C ...... oo c0ee OD fOr 98e COLDENE COLD 98c VICKS BUFFERED — COLD TABLETS ........... 20 for 77 $1.98 BANARIN ANTI- COLD CAPSULES ......... COUGH MEDICINES ..20 for 77 ¢ \y ai $1.25 PINEX PREPARED Cough Syrup 98c VICKS MEDICATED 77 Cough Syrup ............. ae ereaee $1.00 COLDENE LIQUID 77 Cough Syrup ...:...-..... aonocee $1.19 PERTUSSIN Cough Syrup 98c FAMOUS REM Cough Syrup NASAL SPRAY were eee ent ee $1.19 DRISTAN NASAL SPRAY & DECONGESTANT $1.00 COLDENE NASAL SPRAY ...... ie VICKS VATRONOL NASAL MEDICATION ........ 59¢ BAYERS NASAL SPRAY CHEST. ‘RUBS \4 3 89e VICKS VAPO 69e MUSTEROLE eae ee slelsie ceils CHEST RUB ........ ee eee eer 88c MEN THOLATUM CHEST RUB . 69c COLDENE STICK CHEST RUB a3 98 North DRUGS » ‘ Sgn SIMMS Fleer’ § person. , UL Approved Ria Quality g Home Romex Wires 14-2 ROMEX—Per Foot 14-2 ROMEX G&G Ground—Per Foot... veut 12-2 ROMEX—Per Foot ........ wee. 4€ .12-2 ROMEX & Ground—Per Poot... . 5¢ Cut any length while you wait. pects all REA specifications. So one 66 .3e Limit 500 feet per | 4” Thin Wall Conduit Save on full 10- ‘FOOT LENOTHB 99° | 2” Thin Wall “Conduit 1” Full 10-FOOT length at this price Greenfield Flex Conduit ‘e-inch sise—per foot _10° | Greenfield Flex Conduit _ta-tneh_ size—per foot . | 25 Toggle Switch _ Single pole switch fn bakelite cup | 20c Duplex Receptacle - Flush 1 receptacle with narrow ears _13¢ | 39c Switch Receptacle | Box 2- finch h deep _with _Tomex clamp | 30c Octagon Box 4-inch box, galvanized finish. Less clamp - 35c Porcelain Receptacle _* inch, keyless style for ceiling, save llc now 16 Toggle Switch _ Choice of metal or plastic styles Plates 1.00 Mercury Switch Single _ pole meroury toggle switch 70c Octagon Box & Hanger 4- inch Clamp.and bar hanger . 35c Current Tap Complete with pull chain § 4] 2.95 Square Light Fixture i __ Modern for dining, bed or living Pooms ..... 2.45 | 10.98 Outdoor TV Antenna VHF conical antenna, complete kit per ft. 300 ohm, Plastic weather resistant insulation 1) Main and Range Fuse Box 11” ; S-circuit, 100 amps fuse box .... 30 amps, 3 wire, regular $6.50 Box for Dryer Installation %e-inch, two serew model 10c Romex Wire Connectors fi | 39c Romex Wire Staples Box of 100 staples tor. oniy aeeHey Pixture for hallways, thode 4.95 Hall Lamp | Fixture 1” } 2.95 Infrared Heat ‘Yamous General Pamous Genera! Blectete bule for Bulbs 2” 87 PUP TOME oie eee di 4 ij pt pe ce, THE PONTIAC PRESS. * THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959 att (UC is tops ‘SHOP FRIDAY and MONDAY’ NIGHTS ‘til 9 O’CLOCK . . . USE YOUR CONVENIENT WAITE’S CHARGE ACCOUNT Save on Men's 100% Cotton WASH & WEAR DRESS. SHIRTS fe) i e : 99 {ad 4 @ Permanent stay and regular collars e Convertible cuffs @ 32-35, 1442-162 neck S) Valves to 3.50 19¢ The “Swankiest”’ ! Match up sets. MEN’S FAMOUS BRAND Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS © V2 OFF Long Sleeve Knits and Broadcloths $297 Broadcloths, Mostly Wash and Wear $397 Two famous brands! Choose from solids, stripes, checks and foulards in sizes S, M, L, XL. te Se ee . Street Floor Walte’s Men's Wear, HI-BULK ORLON GIRLS’ SWEATERS $19 Special Purchase Long sleeve cardigans and short sleeve slipons in an easy - care orlon. Choose, white, pink, blue or yellow, sizes 3-14. Girls’ 7-12 wash- able flannel lined ks 1.99 eoooet CRISP SPRING COTTON DRESSES Sizes 7-14 eRe Sizes 3-6X $298 Outstanding special purchase! These crisp spring dresses are in dainty ice cream plaids and gay pastels .. , choose shirtwaist or lace trim dressy styles. Note the tiny prices! BOYS’ and GIRLS’ GRO-WAIST S$ :KS .. and OVERALLS +1” in corduroy ; blue, tan, red or toast in polished cotton, Sizes 1- 3, 3-6X. Charge Them All at Waite's— — World . . . Second Flopr Very famous moke ... full fashioned BUTTER-SOFT BAN-LON SWEATERS Cardigans—Reg. 7.98 $4% Short Sleeve Slipons—Reg. 5.98 $399 These soft machine washable Ban - fons keep their mo fuz- zin‘, no fussin’ youth thru a long and hap- py life. Choose white, pink. maize, bluebell, zinnea, aqua or black; sizes 34-42. Waite’s Sportswear , .. Third Floor Much higher quality than the tiny price! WASH and WEAR WOVEN PLAID CRISP COTTON $399 A crisp easy-Care cotton that is really an out- standing value! Coat style with short sleeves, smart tab neckline with %. no collar and a flowing . flared skirt. Choose blue & or pink. Sizes 12-20, Five luscious colors! Famous Make TRICOT SLIPS ands’ PETTICOATS { / Reg. 8.95 and 10.95 $599 Alluringly — feminine, lavish lace trim slips and petticoats in white, black, blue, beige or hothouse pink, Sizes 32-42 propor- tioned short, average, tall. Be sure to select one or more of these luscious famous make slips at outstanding savings! Waite's Lingerie «» » Second Floor FAMOUS MAKE COAT CLEARANCE me 35.00 to 39.98 22 Reg. 69.98 and 79.98 ‘48 . Third Floor Famous make coats in loops, tweeds, camel hair and kay- paca. Sizes 5-14. Shagmoor alpaca fleece and Diana Llamadown casual or dressy coats in sizes 6-20. Walte's.. HALF-PRICE SALE of COSTUME JEWELRY Reg. 2.00 Reg. 3.00 $] $] 50 @ Fresh water pearl, stone set and tailored NECKLACES ff @ Novelty and charm BRACELETS @ Novelty, tailored EARRINGS Jewelry ... Street Floor HALF-PRICE WOMEN’S WOOL SALE of WOMEN’S LEATWER PALM LEATHER WALLETS | DRIVING GLOVES 200 T° | ms _Warm driving gloves In black with red, beige with brown, red with black. Sizes 5, M, L. Fold-over clutch and 32 win« dow leather wallets in many lovely colors. Waite’s Wallets Waite's Gloves Floor «. . Street aes 1 ' ‘ . Super soft, Two lovely styles... Famous Make HOSIERY Reg. 1.35 99« Pr. Flattering seamless and smart thin seam full fash- ioned hose made by a fam- ous maker and brought to you at an outstanding sav- ings! Sizes 812-11, propor- tioned for perfect fit, Al- luring neutral shades. . Street Floor Waite's Hosiery... 4 Lovely Pastel Shades Several Famous Makes FAMOUS ALTEST FLATTERING TOILET TISSUE COTTON BRAS Reg. 2.00 and 3.00 Reg. 12c Roll ] 2 Rolls $] extra absorbent toilet tissue at exciting savings. Double sheets, 4 paste! colors! 2 For $3 Several famous makes, several flattering styles in figure- moulding white cotton bras. Sizes 32-38, Second Floor Street Floor Weite’s... Waites... NYLON BRIEFS AND FLARE PANTIES $ Select several at this special low price! Lace ] trims, white, pink. Briefs, sizes S, M, lL; panties 5-10. Waite’s Lingerie .. . Second Floor FAMOUS MAKE BLEND SLIPS re 2 ST Waite's Lingerie... Dacron-nylon-cotton slips in sizes 9 thru 2412. White. Save at Waite’s! Second Floor FAMOUS MAKE GIRDLES and PANTY GIRDLES Reg. 3.98 2 For $5 Famous make girdles and poy girdles in fabulous owAire fabric, gently persuasive and comfort- able. White, sizes S, M, L. Choose yours now at savings! Walte’s Expert Corsetieres Will Fit You... Second Fleer FAMOUS MAKE GIRDLES, PANTIES Reg. a ee 5.95 on power net girdles and panty era es... in famous makes. Sizes _M, L. Onty 50, so hurry! Waite's Foundations ... Second Floor rice ? ‘al Ce 1 wi ELECTRIC © VIBRATING MASSAGE PILLOWS $399 Helps firm flabby spots, eases tired muscles! Ferovable wash- able corduroy cover, 8 ft. cord, UL approved. , Walte’s Coametics e+» Street Floor Weite's *e + Street Floor 4) TUSSYWIND * & WEATHER a ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959 —_— Inflation is when you never ned |eho wears out two pairs of pants|improving: ‘‘At least now she’s The University of Georgia was| Reporter Unruttled ‘ - Shiela eaosve ts mates says his wife’s driving tee road.” —Ear] Wilson. by High Lashings = By J. W. DAVIS President of the United States and the Chief Justice of the United) WASHINGTON (AP) — Raber tg anu ts Unie John Donovan has achieved a rare ae experience for a Washington cor- respondent. He was swatted verbally by the ‘Irresponsible’ and ‘without foundation” were what they had to say about a Donovan story re- porting that their once-fast mee ship had come unglued. leader Blasts snr pe eo not Donevan. It certainly won't give him any more gray hairs—| Red Opposition eon ha ae and won't * | * x * ici “Tt am satisfied that my story | panty, Official Attacks) was true as well as fair,” Dono-| Bulganin, Molotov and |van said. at oe He is chief correspondent of the Malenkov Group Washington Bureau of The New) York Herald Tribune, One of the MOSCOW (AP)—The leader of|reasons he got that job was his” the Leningrad Communist party success in 1956 with “Eisenhower, | today said the ‘pitiful and treach-|the Inside Story," a best selling | erous’’ antiparty group in the So-| book that quoted freely from con- viet Union should be called be-|fidental White House source ma- fore the 2ist party congress to’ terial, answer for its actions, * * * } * * * Wednesday, The Herald Tribune , printed a story by Donovan about | President Eisenhower and Chief Justice Earl Warren. Near the start it read: ‘Their associa- tion has passed to a relationship today that is cold and distant and marred by disapproval on both sides.” Donovan's story brought denials from both men he named. Donovan stuck to his story. * : * “‘My story was based on sources Spiridinov's blast came amid @lunimpeachable both as to their stream of ringing endorsements of|character and as to their knowl Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush-ledge of the facts,” he said. ‘Nu | chev's new seven-year economic|merous well informed persons in program, Washington have long been aware The third day's session included |of the situation I described.”’ praise from the chief of the Com- = = | munist party in the Georgian Re 1 public, V. P. Mzhavanadze. Burroughs to Build | * x DETROIT uw — The Burroughs Foreign speakers today were|Corp., announced today that con Italian party boss Palmiro Tog-|struction of a new $2,000,000 engi- att; and French party leader|neering and administration build- Jacques Duclos. Both conceded|ing will be started here in the that their parties were having a|spring. The building |s scheduled hard time but said Khrushchev's|for completion next fall, new economic plan will help them, —————————— Presumably the Soviet economic| Florida produces about one- pdvances will give the foreign|fourth of all the watermelons OT cn talking pomnts: grown in the uC aued States Doctors Practicing What Jvan V. Spiridinov, first secre- tary of the Leningrad party, told the 21st Soviet Communist party congress that up to now the group —former premiers Georgi Malen- kov and Nikolai Bulganin, former foreign ministers V, M, Molotov nnd Dimitri Shepilov, and Lazar Kayanovich—had answered only ta the Central Committee, for every pair of shoes... A local |hitting poles on the right side of|chartered in 1785, the nation’s first carers state university. hi | St asseenonTV | qataact, i Mi ye playtex living bra magic-circle’ \cotton cups Ys Ze ‘FRIDAY - SATURDAY | Follow the Crowds! 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MARY COATS $99 FUR COATS CAYS, “Furthermore, I wouldn't fall to snap on the safety belt if my trip was no farther than the corner drug store," he added, lire Gibbens, of the Veterans Administration Hospital in Denver, | is chairman of the American) Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons’ Committee for the Advancement of Automobile Safety. In an interview at the academy’s| nonual meeting, Gibbens said the! tne of properly installed safety belts and shoulder straps have heen shown toe be the most. ef- fective oof all safety devices— when properly and consistently used | them have such equipment in their| ] “Fallure to use them for city | driving, if you have them, Is | like Jetting your tife insurance | puyvments lapawe,’’ he sald. “Many low speed accidents turn | ont to be fatal accidents.” lor, Gibbens said rellable sta- Hees pathered by Cornell Unl- versity Medical College show chances of avoiding death or seri os Injury are 60 per cent im. poeed with average seat belt ine. «ttl fhons I took a survey this week aliong orthopedic sicgeons who visited his convention exhibit) on nee ceneeneenenienn Hospital Group Reports Contest Saved $1 Million Wednesday that a contest for ideas for cutting hospital expenses resulte UTTON- Lg Del ‘i cy of pearly one tlion llars BUTTON iia nlpeaeenmmanlaen Bosc 988 fe. 988 The association said the compe. $ sleet Save now during Sealy'’s en sale ~ A Big pe in. | tition, cosponsored hy the Blue 95 e features of Nothing like @.. . anywhere! Sealy's Loofer Lounge com- | . Ah te 2 16 | Cross, drew 224 different economy twin hehe pined bines big sofa comfort with smart, sectional beauty. Sleeps t | suggestions from member hospl-| vise edding 1 with room te spare, No-sag reinforced base. Covered in 1 ! : ‘ YOU'RE FURNISHING A NEW HOME ' tals. A manual describing these Matching box spring $49.95 washable, stain-resistant Sealaflex plastic . . . feels ond M r CKET 3 Men's $ SHIRT ; 2 Loafer Lounges! They make - en s Sport methods was distributed to the looks like leather! Choice of modern colors ed ace posts . Capa $5990 99 — 8 JA : hose) tala) EASY BUDGET TERMS Sadet owl ety On: oh been Givers 66 raged 44 Savings realized annually This, " through the ideas were estimated ihe at $936,531 * * * One economist estimated that if Russia could achieve eight per cent @ year expansion and the . United States continued to move) . 1/522 WOODWARD AVE., 8/RMINGHAM. MICH. ahead at about three per cent, the Soviets might achieve eco- nomic parity in about 20 years. pansion could be achieved because of the difficulty of sustaining a My. percentage exis aa the thee ‘ Easy to Park . af a nation’s economy increases. Faller wan)sixe $25 MEN’S [| TRAINING § CURTAIN Matching SUBURBANS PANTS PANELS All Wool. 36-46, White. 2 to 6 Fine quality box spring $39.95 | Sed \BUTTON-FREE? = MATTRESS Specially made... : | | ! specially priced! | | SHIRTS, | 1 5 | JEANS Save during Sealy's 7 8th Birthday Sale l LANSING U--The Michigan Hos- PORE. Pal ey - rere } HOUSANDS in --- pital Assn. reported i : AT HI-WAY SEE SEALY’S GREAT/* BIRTHDAY BUYS! Fur Stoles Se oe 99 at Fie $ AG ci ea $12 Boys’ Jackets $12 Ladies’ Car Coats w it Quilted Hood $8 =— 88 Jackets eee vs teoaae (cote tAT OLD soa —_ ¢ vourrt AP ‘ porate ling wom gon, SQOQIS $4 MEN’S GIRLS’ YARD te toate | a i | PAJAMAS SOCKS GOODS o- Smart Cotton Sizes 6 to 10'2 Percale-Flannel ¢ ¢ 1.88 | 14° | 25 —_ i=) cy - @ 12.88 | 10° | 88° MEN'S GIRLS’ CANNON More Beauty UNDERWEAR SCAR COATS SHEETS 79e. Come Save! [7.99 Poplin. 7-14 Pry cane 39° 14.88 CURITY DIAPERS 3.75 Absorbent 2.17 OAFER LOUNGE TOUGH, WASHABLE, SEALARLEN PLASTIC 1.79 LOOP RUGS 1.99 Large 24x36 Sanforized 6-14 99° wn $5.99 MEN'S PANTS *§.99 Boys’ JACKETS IT'S A SECTIONAL —A SLEEPER—AND A For your Pocketbook’s sake check our GEORGE'S _NEWPORT'S 74 NO. SAGINAW ST. Ww prices before you buy The ‘experts doubted that the ? ‘ ’ Widweat’ 7 Ui eet Ge Gr 9 BLOCKS MOF 4 MERD. ..0 00005. 4SMO any FURNITURE ANYWHERE an?) Just Drive Up NEW YORK (UPI) — The’ first, Clyde Nissen, executive Vice or freeze in space and i ap ‘mien to make a multi-billion-dollar president of the: association, said tain not to leak, the way a rough space may record the) © ie ate OE can eon might. , gO istoric event for posterity with 8) What the first space Man Will : 1@-cent lead pencil. eat, wear and breathe can relax “Added: fo List of Uses = Pencil. loooopo pp neseaneneaacoooG: more item on the list, Nissen said, cer- pen| Pencils that write under water were devised a. long time before the ball-point pen came along, he said, but nothing much was made Among the one and a half bil- of this fact. | Officials of the Lead Pencil) when it comes to space writing. ee pails merped ost in the! alse in the pencil arsenal to- Manufacturers Assn. claim they wee : _ | Uni States every year are im- day, he said, in # warm-up for ‘have the only perfect implement He said in an interview that the plements ranging in hardness trom a Week, ts teeta ‘for writing in space—a lead pencil| fit8t space writer need only make/soft charcoal to a lead point so Feb. —ectie Gila tor turned out by what may be the @ selection from a variety of 350 hard it leaves marks on gem stoatblig one dagroue on world’s oldest assembly line sys-| Styles and types Of pencils to find! stones and marble. surgical patients, ang kosher ‘tem and based on a formula con-|O€ [0 use in keeping track of the! ‘These implements are for such pencils for marking ritually ‘cocted by one of Napoleon's young) Planets as he whizzes past them. , wide variety of purposes that slaughtered meat. engineers. 44 pencil, he Said, will not melt} space _writing will be Just one | E —a es wn | There is a pencil that marks MEN. its now Or never...don’t miss the fabulous pezacZ Luxurious ALL-WOOL SUITS © HUNDREDS OF MAGNIFICENT WORSTED SUITS! | @ HUNDREDS OF RICH, WANTED FLANNEL SUITS! @ SUITS THAT FEATURE COMFORT, PERFECT FIT! @ SUITS STYLED AND TAILORED TO PERFECTION! @ TODAY’S MOST POPULAR AND WANTED PATTERNS! COMPLETE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED OPE™M™M EVERY MIGHT Fitt @ fF. MM. 200 N. Saginaw Street Pontiec, Michigan | delilla wax from Mexico, pumice } garment factory materials so ‘that the lines can be seen only under | steel ingot flaws that can not be jdetected after steel] has hardened, land cooled: Putting these or just common) pencils together can be just as; painstaking a task as molding al piece of metal for a space rocket,| Nissen said. In the first place, the raw ma-| terials—more than 40—come from. all over the world. | These include graphite from | Ceylon and Madagascar, can- | from Italy and a_ rubber - like product from the Dutch East) Indies. The stones used to pul- | verize the graphite come from Belgium and Denmark, Other ingredients include clay: jwater, whale oil, brass, gold deat | and lacquer. | All of these and many more ‘elements are put together in an assembly line technique devised at the time of the U.S. Civil War, when soldiers clamored for some- thing better than quill pens for writing letters home. It is a slow-moving assembly- line, too, The jet age has done nothing to speed the process. It | still takes an average of four to six months to turn out a — pencil. Nissen said 125 production steps. ‘are involved in making a lead | ‘pencil, from the mining of graph-| ‘ite in Ceylon and felling of Cal-| | ifornia cedars to the application | of 12 coats of lacquer to the fin-| | ished product. | The wood has to be cut into | proper-sized pieces, kiln dried and. tinted pink. The graphite, clay,| water and whale oil must be, ‘mixed for several weeks before, ‘they are smooth enough to be Hospital Experience Leads fo Romance |_ BOSTON (UPI)—When the Pratt, | Diagnostic Hospita] opened in 1938, | ithe first two patients were Dr. 'Nelson Saphir, who had pneumonia, | and Miss Grace McIntire, a nurse who had a throat infection. | Recently the patients returned to) ‘help the hospital celebrate its 20th ‘anniversary. Their simultaneous hospitalization had led to romance | and they came back as Dr, and Mrs. Saphir. The Widow Wins Out HOPKINSVILLE, Ky (# — Mrs.) ‘Sue Witherspoon, a widow, is! (Christian County's first woman ‘jailer. She was elected to the post | lover two male opponents. ee ee ri PERFUME $6.00 $900 Size NEVER HAS SO LITTLE BOUGHT SO MUCH! CHOOSE FROM: BB $2.00 $i i Thrifty Priced, ] 50 Only ..... time )6ONLY—ONE-HALF a special light. Anothér pencil is — lused to draw circles around hot formed into spaghetti-like Sina water| seven inches long. Then the strands are baked a 2,000 degrees fahrenheit, until! they are vitrified, like the enamel| on a bathtub. They are dipped| into wax and then put into the spelally prepared wood, sealed, | sanded and painted. * * * Nissen said that it requires only) i | at. @. S E L F * S = RV = 17 sharpenings to use up a pencil, 7 so they do not last very long. A ‘ uper DRUG STORES space traveler will have to take ate a few pencils along. i “It is,” he said, “the only in- strument I know of that is de-, signed for its own destruction.’ , - z ian 2 si % ‘. 2 a [ § 4 . : : ‘ i] : t | Sa om | ‘¢ & | _& : ’ | fi te! i Sa ANNOUNCING OUR NEW EVERYDAY LOW + SELTZER ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIMER B 99; SPECIAL! = EVENING IN PARIS a PRICES ie SIZE BAYER ASPIRIN Reg. c 62c 14 o8. Site noccron MR CAILNUN AUN i bistsize BLADES 20 BLADES Rea Breck SHAMPOO a8 ; Reg. 89% eg. ee” -Oz. Rn a iscount “O 16° rts Wee Hie $1.39 *e Price 76 WILLIAMS fil as walls seal | AQUA ee $1.00 Size 90¢ e.° VELVA “a's are LARCE Rey PACE | ,facouns Bal $1.00 86° eee Home Permanent an ream cen Size vate. Reg. $2.00 98 ere lekusonl& “ee oeete MUM Johnson Pat be be tbe CREAM DEOD. Reg. 4° 63e¢ Powder Discount C Price @eeesee#eeee wereeeteeeeaeavecesiaoe HALF-PRICE SALE ame ste Ter a10e BONNIE BELL PLUS 30 , . Wasioes rol'en bon orcorvenrent. oe Mi COTTON HORMONE CREAM BAN the only Sesgorant In the world that pre TIPS «5 I, Roll-on peop pgeestonttinks with the lingering Q- | Deodorant ts 2 ell er: ok besderaat bat, Discount et Di t c Hoa: “NE? Pace 1S" pico 2 For 98° 4 & 8 ot. Size EVENFLO KOTEX . St Reg. $1.49 SMOOTH MOISTURE .. 7 Py, ss, $929 BACK INTO YOUR ree 5 lot Years ove wi Pad WINTER-PARCHED SKIN “Ponne Pell JOHNSON & TAMPAX JOHNSON ‘ paBy or, We CAL Ue neg. $148 Reg. 79° U40 Regular 10cc_ re _.$1.09 Discount$424 Size U40 PROT-ZINC ...... $1.29 mm ”"° U4ONPH.............$1.29 U80 REGULAR... $2.19 fF Lilly VICKS : saat, VAPO-RUB U80 PROT-ZINC ........ $2.49 Vee Rog. 89% U8SO'NPH.._s—asidi..... $2.49 10's Discount] Ae 100 Clini-Test TABLETS . $ .98 Reg. $A32 Velvet of mice" 16 $1.98 LILLY'S TESTAPE. $1.69 4 Roses 4 WAY TEA DENTAL VALUES noraic, dry-skin cream ry-8 TABLETS IP og Ge VITAMINS by Barbara Gould Res. tre : Prec. "arate 3031 rita, Ug ® oe. west ‘anes aes 3 00 Price ] ooTH aes . SPECIAL ° pRush vice phes tax P Res ¢ * as regular §2.50 sine fteg. 81.00 " *°, Parke-Davis mks wondnr belpag pense Privine [aS anh WO preps bil sy ooce om a pie oe . ~ 3 ‘as ary fay eel tne it i Mose Drops Ha ae qooTHPASTE Bs sale winter's blustery winds! Discount flo *° As 59 e tog 4 SPECIAL THROAT CREAM Price "2° ice My Superbly formulated to help °." we ° firm the throat and neck. oe reat — ee eg *e ADULT [BRR] 5: 59¢ : pane BEN-GAY Bi VITAMINS Reg. 89c *. 100's Discount Bie . Thrifty iiseoent GERITOL Thrifty Drug Store at 4895 Dixie Hwy. DRAYTON PLAINS WIND & WEATHER = s_a_S.D.D. LOTION LARGE I2es, SIZ6. sm $700 6 ox. SIZE si |= SOF HAND CREAM 8-02. Reg. $2.00 now $700 IT aes Pe CrP ep es We Gave He an Red Stamps SPSL PRESCRIPTIONS COST LESS AT 2 | 148 N. Saginaw St. Huron St. 4895 Dixie Hwy. Near Sears” Corner Telegraph Rd. B snag Cae an a | f . ’ | ' ‘ . , ’ ' ae } THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959 aj = Seaway’s Benefits Won’t Show at Once) o Death SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) — Fire-| por’s telephone when undetermined Even though the building up of waterway business started two years ago in some sections, many industrialists clay tor paper mills, South Amer- iterway's effects say chemical com- | ican lumber for the furniture in- | panies have the most to gain im-| dustry at Grand Rapids, ang Cu- mediately from the new mode of man Frank Adams knew fire had _ DETROIT w—The St. Lawrence, ished prodvet for less. This puts trailing such places as Chicago, broken out at his home when he/¢red. Seaway will open next spring, the industry in a better competi- | Cleveland, Toledo, Duluth and Mil- the result Is a |... ; of : bringing more and bigger ships| Sen eames benefits the | waukee in port facilities and devel-| 1 on sugar for the area’s canner. | transportation. | oe: by chemi- and new and exotic cargoes t0) workers wad the people who sell \oeee les, Raw materials neded by cher Michigan ports. | things te the wor kers.”” | Much of the trouble is a squab- Coming in at lower prices and ini cal companies are expected to find ‘ble over public vs. private develop-| ey the before, easier and cheaper traveling along tation. ~~ * : . bod on the new deep-chan- ' - . } 7 iH eneral manager | greater quant ty n ever ore, poe 2 Everybody , Willis H. Hall, & these raw materials put Muskegon the seaway. nel waterway connection with the of the Detroit Board of Commerce, ment of new facilities. “It's @ real selling job getting 3 : f . SEE this terrific Atlantic Ocean is looking to it for said: But nevertheless Michigan is al-|industry on a stronger footing and « * * some of these people even to give antic zZ switch over to seaway transpor- “ 4 ; _ ready feeling the impact of the sea-| make Muskegon attractive to pO! Dow recently signed an agree- it one try,” said one port offi- stat oe eel : aes "y ee ue - hs too 2 and ig hopeful of getting anitential new industry. ment with Oglebay-Norton Steam-| cjg}, But as the time grows near for | ufacturi.ng. The seaway is the leven larger slice of freighter busi-| The result is jobs. ship Co. of Cleveland for operation| That is ol he the opening, many of the civic of-| we need to maintain the stream of} ness next year. . * *« * of the chemical company’s docks! that leads a close feomes fictels oa yt» ei net econouay . This area no longer |S) ygugkegon is looking for more | The tri-county area around Sagi-/on a public basis. to believe the full fruit of the sea- ed with the seaway offer a ‘the surplus area and we must! than @ 100 per cent increase in |naw counts heavily on the fortunes; At least temporarily, this has|way—bustling traffic, more jobs, of caution about expecting an eco of Dow Chemical Co., and seaway solved much of Saginaw’s problem steadier work—will be slow in ma- distances.” foreign tonnage next year. nomic revolution overnight. trangport great ces | Its ; .| lities. The best of the benefits from the #. B. Niederstadt of Saginaw, | Biggest hemes : are Engtish slish china | experts who have studied the wa-| regarding faci eS turing seaway will take a while in com- chairman of the Tri-County Sea-| ah ing, they say. ‘way Study Committee, said: Granted that there will be jobe' ‘Already we estimate that 175,- ‘ = for men on the docks, jobs for 008 tons of goods a year are going, SUPER truckers who get the cargo inland, overseas from our area by way of and sailors to spend money in yaid to New York for loading on| BARGAINS at town. \ ships. Bt Michigan housewives may find “We expect to get new indus: | Cheese from our wide selection of colors, pattems and materials. Beautify your floors with modern low- s ~ some new treats at the super. | tries, mainly packaging indus- | ‘ cost tile. Leng on wear and easy to care for. Easy to install, too. Complete instructions with every order. A market—such as an increase in | iries that would like to send our | ¢ . | } foreign produce—and eee sa, | Moa aot | Harlequin AS SEEN ON SPATTER | some of the - ; : : 5 See ice tech ae coffee and | A Port engineering firm, Knap: Patterns TV ASPHALT TILE a P price |Pen, Tebbett, Abbett, and McCar- i} wagar carry stightty Wewor Priee | 0 ot New York, made a aurvey Vinyl Plastic New 4 ts t tags. ; A the the possibilities for the port of, Til : if But most important 0’ , the Detroit that indicates the seaway) c seaway's enthusiasts figure the|is lined with gold Ne Armstrong SPATTER For doors upto =f long-range effect od, Awe a i (Metallic Series) 32” Wide ¥ jobs and greater economic stability The firm said flatly that every | ¢ Ea. LI NOLEUM i tor people who never set foot on & ton, of cargo moving through | 8 New Exciting only £ dock and never get more than @ 4 is worth $10 in direct bene-| Colors with it glimpse of a a“ —— fits such as paychecks for dock Lifetime Guerantee Real Gold * Carlos E, Toro, manager of the men and truckers, and is worth $20! in indirect benefits such ag new! world trade department of the De-| money spent in barber shops, dry, COUNTER Fix Up { troit Board of Commerce, gave this |cjeaning plants, restaurants andl Lege . Thot : : oxecole: eal ta Demet) ee. | WALL TIL Recreation “Marine engines Detroit's foreign cargo alone is, TOPS and shipped overseas through the expected to increase from the 0... 50°, Off Room seaway can be sold in Europe at!099 tons last year to 300,000 tons the, /0 MICA VINYL CEILING TILE wi Viey! $5.88 half the price they would have to first year of the seaway. Reg. 2c Now Ic _ Deluxe Heavier eight Doers... 90. bring if shipped overtund to New! at $30 @ ton—$10 direct benefits, Reg. 4c Now 2c » SANDRAN 8< Sq. Ft. belere © iadeg dom oe cleat York for transfer to @ boat. and $20 indirect—the total repre- Reg. 5c. | Posie ae ae ee price er 7 “This means more marine en- sents an increase of more than 6% Now 2\2¢ 1/3 Off 16x32" Size 4 ‘ ’ . ' uy i gines can be manufactured and) million dollars in the first year. Reg. 6c Now 3c | sold, which in turn means more A A | jobs. Those taking a dimmer view to, : “The difference ig wot that great ward the seaway'’s economic po. —a full one-half reduction in the) ronoia1 point out that the Welland If You Don’t Buy Your Tile From Us We Both Lose Money Open Mon., price—on many other items, but Canal between Lake Erie and Lake Th Fri Also Adaptable for Wider = 2 urs. ri. eee engines) examples aie Ontario may not be able to handle | ° seer Gon v : “ FREE “til 9 Arches, Stoirweys, Entronces, Ex. com ont traffic as fast as it lines up. The © Semi-Glass name iny oo Cook, palatal phigh pws channel] in the Detroit River, Lake © Primer-Sealer © Masonry Paint PARKING Tl E OUTLET 115 Nl. SAGINAW ST. kegon Port Depaxtment, pu St. Clair and the St. Clair River is Tues., Wed., Spiege! Catalog Desk in This © Latex Wall Bond © Flat Enamel Undercoat way; not yet as deep as some of the “Cheaper rages by water means | bigger boats will need. industry gets its raw materials Michigan's major ports at De-| for jess and ships out the fin- ‘troit, Muskegon and Saginaw are FE 8-3717 1055 W. Huron St., Pontiac Set. ‘til 6 J} & R Store FREE Parking in Rear rrr PB oy 8 Sa naee a e — | Lucky for us... fortunate for you... _ it Ward's buyers were able to secure an- other carload of these famous Kroehler 4, comiot sectionals to sell at this low price... 3 care: COE ag * Contraties® Imagine a 3 piece sectional of famous 4 | a vevarte * spring Ce Kroehler ‘Plus-built construction and : | : long lasting deep-seating comfort at a : | price less than you would expect to pay f \ SP for ordinary furniture. - a /, Beautifully styled with trim, new fashion $ DOWN ) } ae: lines . . . available in your choice of a 4 , << wide range of decorator colors. Lies Pay as Little as supply is limited, so we advise early . q : cose selection. , $2.50 a Week! i | @ LOW DOWN PAYMENT 3 i iil | © NO INTEREST OR CARRYING CHARGE . MONDAY and FRIDAY I i IF PAID WITHIN 90 DAYS EVENING UNTIL 9 © NO FINANCE COMPANY TO DEAL WITH _—__ nates = SAGINAW @ ALL PAYMENTS MADE AT OUR STOR ! 2G | = fee, j THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959 _ a a | i Li % 0 I ee eS eS eae ee oe ee ee ae ae X-Ray Training OK'd at St. Joseph Hospital The busy X-ray department at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital has been approved by the American Medical Assn. for training of technologists. Approval was on a one-year pro- visional basis, the hospital said. Students will be accepted only on recommendation or a referral . basis, it added. Last year the..hospital gave 28,231 X-ray examinations and Your Tank Sse No. 3: Exemptions and Leoy-Pree Income Listed (This story tells sbout exemptions methods o and save ee =—— pare your return. deep therapy in 185- cases. |ple, to dinner and never left, Now you can rejoice and add up your string of $600 income tax exemptions. Exemptions are the biggest sin-| ' gle tax-cutting device. Each one lops $600 off the top of your taxable income, If you can claim enough of them, you'll owe no tax at all. The rules for claiming exemp- tions are stiff and ofter misunder- stood. Many taxpayers, for exam- don’t know that the man-who- came-to-dinner may be a legiti- mate tax exemption. Another question’ that puzzles many taxpayers: what is income? WINTER JACKETS SUB-COATS 1 l/> Off $s 2-PANT SUITS ' Off—Now $99°5 Reg. $3.95 SPORT SHIRTS 4.198. 205 CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw COUNTING EXEMPTIONS | for 1968 with their husband or ered income by Uncle Sam. Exemptions will be discussed first — because they're a more pleasant topic. | You are sure to get at least One exemption, for yourself, And You get a second one if you were 65 ‘or over on or before Jan. 1, 1959, If you file a joint return, you also get one for your spouse — two if your mate is 65 or over. Any blind taxpayer is entitled to still another exemption. Additional exemptions are grant- ed for your children, members of your household (not counting ser- vants) and dependent relatives. RULES OF THUMB There are five tests which must, be met by such people if you are to claim them as exemptions. They must: 1. Have received more than half their total support from you. 2, Not have filed a joint return It may be that some of the money| 7" ‘S}you received in 1958 isn’t consid- Incidentally, you can ignore’ the} value of any scholarship in figur- ing out whether you provide more than half the total support of a son or daughter who is a student. Benefits under the GI bill, though, do count as part of a student's support. The relatives who can be claimed as exemptions even though they're} not members of your household are: mother, father, mother-in-law, father-in-law, brother, sister, step- brother, stepsister, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, son-in-law, daughter- in-law, stepmother, stepfather, grandparents, grandchildren or — when related by blood — aunt, uncle, niece or-nephew. In some cases, several people ichip in to provide more than half the support of a relative, such as a widowed mother. Although none of them contributes more than half the support alone, each can take a turn claiming the exemption if; 1. The supported person meets You've Been Waiting For... ¢6 Values to $19.99 BLOUSES Reg. 3.99. Including roll-up sleeve shirt waists. POLO SHIRTS * Long “s. pellriass knits, Big air a shapes Short and Long TS (Some Slightly ts | SUITS $3 $5 Values to $16.99 Cecccccccescecsoccecoscccccecccces AY SHOCSHHSSSSCSSESSOCCCOSS OR OCOSOOEO YOUR CHOICE SWEATERS BOYS’ CORDUROY GIRLS’ SLIPOVER CARDIGAN Volues to 2.99 SLIPS Stighy HALF SLIPS sailed or Gi GOWNS PAJAMAS BRAS GIRDLES SWEATERS acres ya" SS oeCoSeOSSoSSSOSeCoCeeSEO OREO CEOS SKIRTS 9 len. 1.29 | Reg. $1 Belts . 29¢ rls’ and Boys’ POLO SHIRTS 29° 2 for $1.00 BOYS’ FLANNEL SHIRTS Velues to 1.59 BOYS’, GIRLS’ HATS Reg. 1.59 . GIRLS’ 1.29 SLIGHTLY _ SOILED 77 the five tests for a dependent, except that no one person pro- vides half the support. 2. The person claiming the ex- emption contributes more than 1@ per cent of the dependent’s support, 3. Each other person in the group files a statement with IRS declaring he or she is not claim- img the individual as an exemp- tion for that same year, reportable income of §600 or more, TAX-FREE INCOME The following income is tax-free and doesn’t have to be reported “iby anyone: * * * —State and federal Social Secur- ity payments, workmen's compen- sation (including state and federal Prizes and awards are exempt from taxes if given in recognition of past accomplishments in civic, literary, artistic, educational, sci- entific, charitable or religious fields. If you had to enter a contest unemployment benefits) and pay- ments under the Railroad Retire- ment Act. —Inheritances and death bene- fits from life insurance policies. —All government payments and benefits to veterans and their fam- ilies, except interest on terminal leave bonds and retirement pay not connected with a disability. —Gifts, meaning money or any- thing of value for which you per- formed no service whatever. —Interest on state and munici- pal bonds. —Subsistence and rental allow- ances to members of the armed forces, —Dividends on GI life insurance programs (but not interest on div- Lidends left on deposit with the Vet- erans Administration). You also can ignore several other categories in adding up to get a prize or award,.or agreed to. perform a substantial future service for the donor, the prizes and awards are taxable, * * bd if the recipient is a candidate for a degree. If the recipient isn’t a candidate for a degree, the max- imum exempt amount is $300 a month for 36 months. Remember, too, as noted in an earlier article, that the first $50 of dividends on stock ($100 if you file a joint return and the stock is owned jointly with your wife) generally is tax exempt. In addition, dividends subject to tax are eligible for a special tax 14 of the IRS instruction booklet. TAXABLE INCOME The odds are that any other money you collected during 1958 is Scholarships also are tax exempt}. credits which is explained on page missions, fees, pole pe its from the sale or exchange of property rents and royalties, ‘prof- its from farm, business or profes- sion, income from estates or trusts, Even alimony and separate maintenance or support payments received from someone who de- ducted them on his or her tax re- turn are taxable. ° Tomorrow: Tax breaks given job-connected expenses, sick pay and retirement income. The telephone instrument repre- sents only about 6 per cent of all the plant and equipment needed to provide a customer with service. # YOU HAD A NECK SHOULD QUICKLY eeueve mf A 40,000 SQ. FT. FURNITURE SUPERMARKET at the door. © Our huge 40,000 you price. EE BBE AY Lp TH fi C ——_—, ENTRANCE “rea ’ ~ a ce = — OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 A Money-Saving Method in Furniture Merchandising You SAVE Beeause= © We have a low rent location with free parking right . eq. @. area and railroad siding enables us to receive carioad shipments right to our door, making possible quantity buying trom the coun- try's largest furniture manufacturers. @ No special discounts to any groups er individuals. "Everyone pays the same low warehousd direct te PHONE FE 5-9279 © Ne costly displays or show windows to maintain. © We maintain ne expensive ailvery equipment. A nominal charge is made for each item and delivered by experienced contract delivery organizations. policy passes on one of our greatest savings to you. © Factory te warehouse to you eliminates many over- _ head costs, but we still This quality and service after the sale. PLUS DELIVERY S-G: By KROEHLER — With MARPROOF CONSTRUCTION All the Famous Names Are Here! os ee S ‘erms Available of 12 to 24 Mo. — Closed 2 All Dey Wednesday. 20 WAREHOUSE RNITURE SALES wo pony Monday, Tuesday, Read. just Off South Saginaw. AS LONG AS ws Fecdow s AND HAD SORE THROAT) -- DUE To COLDS} |: oS WE A is : hee [SS e}, N Set A tT Sw pie ey ean THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959 Glazed Frankfurters pa pl eragimipt and cook Slumber Party Soup green peq soup ‘and doughnuts.\Comes Out Better | sides until lightly browned. For each 2 or 3 soup servings Appeal to Teeners Add 1 (1-pound, 11-ounce) can | When. holiday spirits run high Remove angelfood cake from its blend 1 can condensed green the feels cool NEW YORK (UPI)—Entertain-|sauerkraut, drained,1% cups diced|#t ® sub-teen slumber party, soup with a soup can a a Shas pos toch it, pws inverting. ing a high school crowd? Serve|cooked potatoes and salt and pep-|Youll want to calm them down} This procedure insures maxiraum jelly-glazed trankfurters and sauer-|per to taste. Heat to serving a bit before bedtime, Serve forth) water and heat, Add a pat of|oniet — no undue amount sticking kraut. _Melt % ep cuprant jelly. 1 temperature, stir ring occasionally. soothing cups of hot buttered' butter to each serving. : to the pan. weer, MILD CURED oo : 4 FRESH DRESSED Pr SLICED A ,, 4 90|_sorast.. PAN-REDI ro er ravers TENDER, SLICED JUNEDALE BRAND PL ABAZLEY aun 78 N. Saginaw Open Friday ‘Til 9 P. M. EXTRA LEAN BAZLEY’S BIG LITTLE PORKER SALE! —|_yunepALe BRAND BOSTON BUTT] 7"nip GUT | cENTER GUT | “PORK” | CENTER CUT PORK STEAKS) pork ROAST | PORK CHOPS| ROAST | SLICED HAM 49 | °39" “A | 89 POP TENDER BEEF rs . Yoo POT SS ROAST SPICY CHERRY HAM SAUCE — Keep this step at dinner time, heat it up to serve over simple spiced sauce in the refrigerator. Then baked ham or Canadian bacon. Youll get the | when unexpected company appears on the door- reputation of a super b cook. warm the cherry sauce, bake a few! Spicy Cherry Sauce (iiss icine ‘the effort required to prepare it is! | | negligible Excellent on Ham sect uenws | Julee from 1. No, 303 can light aweet “cherries oe If you want to acquire the repu-|baked ham, broiled or fred ham i, cup stivered toasted, aaenca LEAN, MEATY tation of being a fabulous cook, laters The brilliant color of the '¢ cup retains TENDER, JUICY ar TENDER, JUICY sweet cherries blends with the, Pe* ‘reps Angostura Bitters ROUND and SIRLOIN SPARE RiBS 7 master a few unusual but siunple bright shading of the ham. ‘The tan | Drain and pit cherries, Combine an a menus and rotate them, If you talizing spiced flavor of the sauce remaining ingredients, blend well, - have half a dozen such menus mas- complements the mch flavor of the| and cook until thickened, Add cher-; 4 ‘es tered you vill probably wot serve ham. ries and cook until cherries are; y the sume guests the same MenuUsS; The beauty of this dish is hal it heated Beexe hot on ham slice. twice in a year. Thus they'll as- aaa ‘ean be prepared in a twink! sume you have a tremendous cull nary repertoire and acclaim you as, YOU can keep the cherry sauce a penius, made up in the refrigerator You ‘Texture contrast often helps. One meat dish which is well can keep a cooked ham on hand, quicken sluggish morning appetites. worth adding to your repertoire, too. Then when unexpected com ‘One interesting combination is a und which can be served with an, pany drops in, or when you're too|bowl of soup and a bowl of dry interesting array of accompanying busy to make elaborate prepara. non-sweet cereal. Children like to dishes, is ham with spicy cherry, tions for invited guests, simply pop!dip into each alternately, or mix sauce, You may use this sauce on the ham in the oven to brown,!them NOW! Borden’s brings you wonderful INSTANT WHIPPED POTATOES ‘For Young Dunkers Day after day, your food dollars buy more when you shop at ATLAS, Pontiac’s ‘“Top-Value” Store! Breast-o'-Chicken — TUNA CHUNK STYLE Florida, Seedless GRAPEFRUIT ve Libby's CHILI CON CARNE Large 24-Ox. Can eeerr eee 39¢ Mix ‘Em or Match ‘Em Frosty Acres Fresh Frozen STRAWBERRIES or RASPBERRIES 5 ur 4 Everyone's Favorite CRISCO Reg. 89c Value Lb. c ASE) CHIC cw Lighter, creamier and tastier than everyday mashed potatoes ...and ready instantly! ' Hamilton Grade A LARGE EGGS Dozen in C Carton Tender Leaf TEA BAGS 100 Count Package T C Only ) Two foll envelopes in box! €ach envelope serves four! . FRANK'S Just boil water...add milk... eee you've got’em made! A9: Dailey's Os. HAMBURG DILL sLices 2°. 39 , COCOA Pound om AQ? We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities SUPER MARKET DANDY Malt Gal. Jug c SWEET PICKLES.......... 99 Dainty Lunch - he $ JELLIES Your Choice, 20-On. Jar MINUTE POTATOES ........2 pkgs. 90¢ | ) | Why RED HEART DOG FOOD.......6 cans Si Wan oo A SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS, Ib. ‘box 29¢ a © Beer ©. Wine © Liquor to Take Out aR ae ~ P ALCOA ALUMINUM FOIL. . 25 ft. roll 29¢ ‘Commer Beldwin Ave. ond Welton Blvd. Use Borden's Milk when you make Borden's Instant > | Loe CABIN SYRUP........24 e2..Jar 59¢ Store Hours: Mon., Tues, Wed., Thats. Sat. 9 to 9 Whipped Potatoes. They go together best! | BES Stone gee ja | Friday 9 to 10-— Sundsy 9te@ - Phone FE 2-5192 Borden’s Flavor-Flakes make possible the Borden's Flavor-Flakee make them in a first instant whipped potatoes,.Just add to flash! Taste so much better than ordinary hot water and a little milk...etir and you -mashed potatoes and eo much quicker... have real homemade whipped potatoes. WO PEELING, NO BOILING, NO MASHING? a we lll acide Fee canes, cai ses ” o* neat lene Teee ee een eS Ee EN EO ee eR ey Se Bee Ok ae me eee) eee coe RIE oT THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1959. ~ FARM FRESH! at ee ies Pee ot Be Fo LINK PORK SAUSAGE , | C 12-0z. Package , —E —S«|,-s SNO-DRIFT PURE VEGETABLE Shortening een hoes ee is. eal tia ee AER S- Dole—Whole BARTLETT Quantities STAR-KIST TUNA Sr DAS ca 3-LB. C CAN Bb tchiib: |The championship team and the), total of 19 sanctioned 700 sets, That Motor Inn proprietor Lou |boy and girl increasing their aver-| while Karas, oldest active league Koprince will be foreman of a Pon-|2ges the most will receive trophies) howler at 64, recently shot a 752 series to become eligible for mem, Karas, honorary king. bership. Committees are currently plan-| Huron Bowl may also head @ p01. Berden rolled an all-|ning a formal installation Banquet . spare 184 in.the Elks Mixed Dou-/and an inter-city bowling tourna- ol al le! bles “A” loop . . . The Huron|ment with Ann Arbor and Flint Wednesday ‘‘A” league recently} chapters. Milford have a tournament com- had 32.200 games and 10 = - That the Fairgrounds alleys in ing up featuring many local keg-| ries on the same night . lers. The state women's battles Lewis picked up a 4 61-10 a in start Saturday at Grand Rapids.'the Montcalm House Ladies cir- . Phyllis DeVolder of Bowl-|s Montcalm Centre team in the Hu- ing Green, Ohio rolled a 124 tripli-| ron Classic has reached the 10th [cate in the Elks Ladies Invita-| That every member of the Cuit . frame once this season needing tional. just three more strikes for a 300. Add Scores: Charlotte Mason ‘ia! Three More Hit 700 in Classic Leagues More top scores have been post- ed in the Huron Bowl and West Max Bottom started it with nine 222 (Ladies Jr. House at Bir- Side Classics with Calbi Music the straight strikes and a 278, Ron | mingham Bew!), C. Bowman 264 | new leader at Huron. Rothbarth fired 11 straight em | ang C. Thompson 664 (Automo- route to a 299, George Chicovsky Durnen 639 (Northside Commu- | 278 and 642 (Elks House), B. Paul 262 (Clarkston Men's) and A. Lindsey 268 and 665 (Goodfel- lows at Huron). 1959 PLYMOUTH 4-Dr. SAVOY *% Hester * Turn Signal & ‘59 License Plates 64 (F.0.E. 1230). R& R Motors, Inc. *Pontiac’s Show Plecé—Home of Chrysler Products’ 3%4 Oskland Ave., Pontiac FE 4-3628 tral Conference. Monroe Moore, who hit 687 at! col is te orev talking wth | oc Burling 240 and Cal | wes: Side, topped the group at Hu- jron with a 714 as Ted Sutton and nity at Montcalm), W. Wilkinson | 54 pul paced Calbi into Ist with 650 and 645. Paul George rolled, Calumet Farm horses at Hi- aleah often are exercised by the 'y North Dakota’s 1958 football/husband and wife team of Tony championship was the school'sjand Joan Bensivenga. She is the, ninth since 1922 in the North Cen-|daughter of former steeplechase rider Earl Weisman. Fabricating 770, reafy in the fold and a full slate|237. Buirley Jirs, 66 17 {Sehumann D. “49 34 Huron Bowl 4737 G. Elkins Covet Haw. 46 27 in the new Chapter No. Si ot] cutetia: ELAS’ open: Piazza H. Pipper 556, Bowens tia — peereee 62 223 Harrison Gu 63 31 Bide Rec. eee A-DIVISION M, as 4 Benson Lmbr Cinrs, 41 38 LAKEWOOD SATURDAY BOYS’ = “ PIN 41 43 Huron Th. Shee 241, TT, Fillmore Haw AMERICAN LEGION NO. $17 wl $825 Tornadoes 3% 6H OCB 42 46 38 Four Singles |Minus Ten 4440 Wishers 39 44 40 Blocaders Four Balls 4440 Slow Pokes Pin Splitters 3 41 42 42 ee woexxs BOWLING Hangar Grill a 1s Accessory T. Capital Glass 4424 J&M Hdvwe. A&A Heat. 41-27 Floyd-Lake Pont. Pistens 3434 Palms Bar Airport R.M 6133 Syl. "G@ 4137 Bolo's No Costello BE, 45 38 P. Redner 191, N. Bowers 472, Knight's 735, 2150 — ee CATHOLIC Dede tol S LEAGLE Pts Mercy Amb. ae Stroh's Foley-Beards. Greyhound Bus Drillers HURON LADIES MATINEE LEAGI FE wt Ww | Warn er Car 68125 The Maybees iGalan Mfg 4027 Eakle C. F There were 66 games over 200)Hamil. Dec. 4927 Cut-A-Wa and 15 series of 600 or better at $2095 Complete Also, Merl Kerr 645 and Arn} West Side. Sam Perna headed the Reah 625 (Romeo Men's A), J.|pack with 712. Jim Walker hit the 4 — 247 and 655 (Drayton/high game of 277 on his way to a *& Underceat % Torsion Air Ride | COMMunity), D. Carr 237 (Clak-| 701. ® Stty Rin Whole ¥ All Tne ston Women’s), and R. Thompson Rit. 4431 Imperia) Sa! fear Shell 8 44 31 ree 182, P. Dorris 489, R HURON le pede CLASSIC Calbt Music ~o White's N’sry. 34 hig D'Autermont Be 468, ry 13 69 \p‘Autermont 186; Social Katz No. 1 606, 8H. seen nodes Buirley|Rollettes 1689. \arift's Ag 4; Huron Bow! 66 25 Shaw's Go Getters Kay 0's LADIES MONDAY % De C Lakeland Ph. 3 Seam 2 cet aeerem Sates EEE ey City’ ioe and boat 148, popeenal igtoet mace C4; eam “LAKEWOOD ONE O'CLOCKS & F. $2’ auburn S&10 3622 Elis. Phar, 29 3335 Hobby Paint Luttman 222; A & A Home Htg. 802 Capital Glass HURON Maj. Care 6024 Ted's D. In Pachaud Lor Mc- 28 : 33 Sam Benson's 3 Bugon 406: & 32 GMTC Cr Un 32 Lion Store — Trophies 29 Goebel's Fi. Cov. 98 Pearson's : Spe athe 183 |516; Lion Store-Pont, Fl. Cov. 850, Pont,| \" Cov. 3457. 18 Hendrickson | Walser Contr. 1462 | 54 30 Spartan Air $3 30 Mont. Centre Stroh's Beer 49 34 E. High . Gide Mobil 48 36 Roth Cone’s Rental 44 39 Braumeister 41 43 Haselton's W weetty highs: West Side eee West Gide oo 4, 259 highs: Calbt phries Real Estate, 1196; Bill Bull, 163: Ron Rethbarth, 299. Monroe | 3368: | | Closeout... SPECIAL eee QUALITY Famous DAYTON THOROBREDS 49 NYLON © RAYON 6.70-15 TUBELESS © TUBE-TYPE mdr WHITEWALL Tube- BLACKWALL Type © Positive Blowout Protection ‘aa fh Improved Men-shid SIZE RAYON | NYLON Salety Tread Design Terre BLACKW ALA ; ! 6.70-15 13.45 14.6 7° Leng Cold Rubber 710-15 | 16.91 17.99 Mileage 7.60-15 18.48 19.90 TUBE-TYPE WHITEWALL 6.70-15 | $17.99 $19.90 7.10-15 20.85 22.55 1.60-15 22.75 24.55 DOUBLE WRITTEN TUBELESS BLACKWALL susranres || ona) a | See pectemp tel, aoe nn 760-18 | 20.85 | 2256 5 Spikes, ‘s2085° i hia far 2. Lifetime Warranty against fec- 6.70-15 y 5 Com 7.10-15 23.13 25.13 aeasrarer st 7.60-15 25.60 27.50 Prices Pius Tex and Recappable Exchange sal ‘til March 13 ch 15 Credit Applications Processed Promptly : Ne exchenge mecestary ... if you have no tire to ox add $3.00 per tire. e front r Lebor ond Matericl @ Re-Pack Front Wheels @ Re-Adjust Brakes BONDED BRAKES +128 @ Inspect Wheel Cylinders Plymouth i — IAL GIRLS ‘Top Haters 34 24 Alistars : ind tem i pine) tf Pha rms 625; a Lk. Phar- ao gaines) tee Hatters 1704, 4) 42) sas 32 82) ELKS LADIES LEAGUE P wah wit Com. Nat'l B avail Dr. Miller’ 323 16 Truckaway 25 23) Woollver's 28 19 Chuck's 22 26) \Land QO Lakes 26 21 LaBarge's 21 27 Brewer's 2721 Champagne 20 18 Averill Auto 26 23 Gaifis Bar 20 28 General Party 36 32 Seal Test 1§ 33 G. Bradley 205; D. Ware 311; wth WL : wv é icakson 49 16 Butler Bky. N32 34\Dow. ‘Heat, 3726 Bell Bros: 3045 née, Ramb. 40 Gedhardts 43 25 -Team No. 10 31 °37/Dunseith’s P. Poster-Kilby 3946) AAA _ . Loan 2% Serv. aa Keego Hwd. 30 38/Al's Corral Hgts, Supply 38 45/Joe’s Coney I Db. Motors 364 . ow 28 38\Tem. Sons P. Carl's Svc. 3646|Triple H 4 Cover 44 40 28 Dér-L Shop 27 40/Oak. Vending Wn. Bros. P 3648 Ricky's Pizza 44 #9 i, Bk, 37 30 Kenyon Heat, 27 41 Cardinals Poole 3549) Whittemores 4337 des Frame 21 Club 36 33 Sate i 95 43 Ed's Sve. Reliable Weld. 3351/Welss Gar 4040 Com. Mitre. 3056 Bar MH Ri 21 47)Stanton Fx. 3945 The Spilts 32 52 | Buckners 4040 Pirest. Store 25 54 233, . Lysinger 510.) A. Andonian 265; Foster-Kilby 986. A.| C. Bowman 264, Joe's Coney Is, 101ly LAKELAND LADIES $46; Stanton Blumbing 2781. iC. Thompson 664, Joe's Coney Is. 2891. . ee ee ee 5 44. Pin Pasters Hot Shots rel Fab. 45 3% Robert's Tr'ph 2 % — Strikes ‘s Weodcho uN Guanee 44 Gutter | tore 35 O.. Ward 255. ©. Ward 563; General caine 43 Yard Birds General Fabricating Two & Two Pinmisse sesser os * 1952-56—Rear........ 1957. eR & Sarato panies 13.95 7 DOD 1939-56—6 cyl........, 8.95 For DESOTO 1938-52—6 cyl... 8.95 : $1 For HUDSON : hig 33:26 Alley Cats 20 1952-54—(Most)..... 11.95 For OLDSMOBIE 99 For FORD DRAYTON PLAINS: COMMUNITY | 1951-56—6 & V8. 95 W Liciub Tahoe 54 26 Carter's Ins. 40 40 32 36 Terry Mach, Dixie Rec. 3 3136 Green Glen 4832 Team No. 3 37 43 20 39 Midget Bar 4733 Team No. 1 36 44 28 40| Boucards 43 37 Drewry's Beer 34 4é 19 49 Dawson's 42:37 Irene’s Bty. 32 47 Club Dep. 41 30 Latimer Rad. 32 47 Mike's No. 2: 40 40 Credit Union 22 58 | High ind. game F. Barrett 246; high lind. series A. -Carter 803; high team W L game Chief Pent. Credit Union 080; 43 46, team series Club Tahoe 2731. eae ee 88 ~ 6.95 954.57 ve 1947-52—Champ..... 6.45| Trucks. . 6.95 1952-57— Most $ cyl. ond V8. 6,45. arate mo when at LED 115 N. SAGINAW | i955.sa_ve TA 28 .» Burton 537; Chuck's 5 Shacks 762, Chuck's Shacks 869; Brewer's 23 Real Estate 2167; Chuck's Shacks 2361. - é | Heavy Duty Replacement , New COATED STEEL MUFFLERS Outlast Regular Mufflers 2 tol ae nevnce [10% MT DISCOUNTS On TAILPIPES For PONTIAC. 1949-53. .... — sini Bie ws Gri cies bas 9.95 * Fer STUDEBAKER 1948-53—Most R Store Single. wrarececes 8.95 | with ui 1956-58—V8 Dual. 12.95 New MUFFLER NOTE—in some cases in the years and models shown above mufflers fe Station we gons and Convertibles slightly higher priced STM ELCCOe 10)28 4-0-8 $3.00RF-Vi aa] 23-9 $1.50 ° ’ Spiegel Cataleg Desk in This - 44a Free Parking in Rear Use Your |} & R Credit — Take Up to 2 Years to Pay 21 he Key to a Better Deal! Oakland County's Largest Chevrolet Dealer Why even consider a ‘’Riskey’’ deal when you can depend on Matthews-Hargreaves Chevrolet for a complete selection of new Chevrolets at competitive prices! 1958 Chevrolet Brookwood Station 1953 Chevrolet Station Wagon, New 1959 Chevrolet Impala 69° per month with $300 down This Week's USED CAR SPECIALS With Heater, Directional Signals, Window Washers, All Taxes, 1959 Plates. Wegon, RGH, V-8, Power OT 715 Steering, Power Brakes... 1957 Chevrolet BelAir 4-Dr. Sedan V-8, Power Glide, RGH, W. $ 5 W. Tires, Bumper Guerds, 1590 P.$., P. 8B. ee Pe eee en enae 1955 Ferd Crown Victoria, Auto. 1040 Trans., sead & Satin Brown. 1954 Pontiee 2-Dr. Custom, RGH, “435 Hydramatic eee Gh eO eee oe eee 865 me 9 Passenger, ROH ......... « 1955 Chevrolet 210 2-Dr., RGH, 6 Cylinder, Cashmere Blue... MATTHEWS : nTime... 49 Tex mul 232 : . 1 ! day which might end the 17- week Walter (D-Pa) of the Democratic; Gen Tire 6. 477 tecteans 33g Dolice sald. They were investigat strike of 13.000 employes at nine : . Olllette ..5. 494 Timk R Bear . 4@ (ing the losses this morning. D itt id he i Pittsburgh Plate Glast Co. plant eee ieee et Friday, Ocrmtl Bt ff franew tir 182) A cashier at the National Food itsburgh Plate Glass Co. plants. |¢ormed O'Hara of this last Friday. paced as nN See 295 cashier at the Nationa Lin * * * us . * [eodres: . 1944 Twent Cen . 4! Store at 7070 Sashabaw Rd., Mrs . ' h Palge ... 25 tinderwal : The strike has idled 20,000 work. }ore roe Dorothy Cummings, reported that ers at Chrysler Corp. plants which! Walter said that he told O'Hara. Gt Monna |. ee ue ee = ; cher purse ey oes war depend an Pittsburgh Plate for. before knowing that Jimmy was a (all Ou nee age Soe 60 Lin aulo glans _ Negro. that there was no job avail-jsionand F re th EA — able and O'Hara should not have Home Bie 0 fo) tn WEE Ee 20 aan . JY F 1e8 5 Federal mediators agreed yes: {he youth come to Washington. Ml Cent S28 te Rub . a terday with the optimistic view | Jimmy, standing on the capitol Masel ES Cold atk A etl tat *? A rear window was smashed of several union spokesmen that) steps, said: ‘The southern Demo infana nt Na Weel {in Tel .. 27 and entrance gained at the Eat. ; + op ? Ar . ' ike and RS In sight. ses hope: crits are against me.’ itm Bus ch nag Nee er 424 More Restaurant ea ri W. Hu. ul predictions were made after | Int Mary 19 White Mot ae ron St. at approximately 6 a.m. the Sanee resented a proposal | ©’Hara, faally contacted after int Nick enc iisen ACe L PP 3 asians bile | a day-and-a-half search, sald that [ft Paper 18 & Woolworth. sy An_ undetermined amount of closely paralleling an earlier | y- Int Ahoe ... 16 Yale & Tow 311) company ofter | the whole matter was a ‘‘sad Jint Pele et) et ay cer Bo eC money was taken from coin boxes A Ae misunderstanding.” He jnsisted 20hre Men 021 Zentth Rad in the vending machine, | that the situation could be BETROIT BxOCK® ‘said. A The company was to give " straightened out by Mar. 1 at | ic dl Nephiss Gos answer today. Under both proposals, the work: | ers would return immediately ‘and. much of a proposed contract, in cluding new wage scales, would be put into effect while issues were revolved, Hospital Credit Union | Re-Elects All Officers | All of the 1958 officers of the Pontiac State Hospital Credit, Union: have been re-elected by thé board of directors for another year, They are Richard Arthaud, pres ident; Gerald A. Bax, vice presi- dent; George Hilliker, treasurer; | and Ted Panaretos, clerk, | | At the union's sixth annual din- | ner meeting held at the Roove- velt Lodge, it was announced the organization, has $406,000 in as- gets, and has paid dividends. of 4 per cent and a 5 per cent ir * terest rebate to borrowers, R-elected to the board of dl- rectors for three-year terms were Leon G. Reene, George E. Gleason and Hilliker. Lyle B. Saum was elected to serve on the credit committee for three years, and Mrs. Norma J. Heaton was given a three-year post remaining | on the supervisory committee. Commeretlaily graded Whites Ci A large 36; large 37-37%», Hrowns—OQrade A fimbe 4): jumbo 43: -miedium extra large extra 12-44 the latest. But he didn’t say how. “This is a case of a sequence ‘of unfortunate misunderstandings,”’ ‘O'Hara said on his return here Peninenar Mo Prod © from Chicago. ‘IT told the boy his appointment had been delayed and jthat he could either wait in Chicago or come back here to walt develop. ments.’ He said there was no indication ‘that southern congressmen were trying to block the appointment “but then T’ m not on the patronage | committee." Air Force Launches 2 Bomarc Missiles EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (APi—The Air Force launc hed two. Bomare missiles Wednesday after. noon, four hours apart. The ground-to-air missiles were: directed at two F80 pilotless jet drones over the Gulf of Mexico. Results. of the tests were not dis- closed, The 47-foot missiles were fired over the Eglin gulf test range from the new missile test center on Santa Rosa Island,. The first Bomare launched from the multimillion. dollar center blasted off Jan. 15. It was sue-| cessul, Stocks Trend Up f in Heavy Trade NEW YORK &—The stock mar- ket steadied and showed a slight trend toward improvement in heavy early trading today. Prices continued their firming tendency shown near yesterday's lose as investment money re-en- tered the market after a severe shakeout. Activity in lower-priced stocks | coutinueg with most of them re- suming the uptrend. | coppers and electrical, were higher. Oils, | airlines, rubbers Steels, equipments rails, aircrafts, 9 and motors were mixed, * * * | Overnight news of a proposed 3-| for-1 stock split boosted Freeport Sulphur 342 to 104 on a big pote block of 11,000 shares. | i American Motors was active | | and ahead around a point, Ana- | conda, Kennecott, Phelps Dodge | and International Nickel were UP around a point or better follow- ing a copper price increase by ® Beigian producer, | Fractional gains were shown by ‘leading steels including Youngs- town Sheet, Bethlehem and US. | Steel. Ford, Chrysler, United Aircraft,’ Boeing and Amerian Telephone | added fractions, Eastman Kodak| \and Goodyear advanced more than a point each. | Figures after decimal polnts are @ighths High Low Noon) 28 [Allen Elec & Equip Co * 26, Baldwin Bune Co* 66 4 Ross Crear C Dae joa 2 | WoL On & on co?.. 14 «18 IMowell Flee Mtr Co? a2 83) o* ai 66 rhe ae Cot, : i" 17! Rudy Mig Co ne 12@ 126 Toledo ¥edlaon Co WwW 17 *No bid pee) aak ced. Grand Rapids Store Robbed by Gunmen | GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. h-A ‘Grand Rapids jewelry store was robbed of “several thousand dol- lars worth’ of cash and jewelry today by gunmen who fled in ar. auto later found abandoned down- jtown. | Watchmaker Curtis Koontz told: ‘police he was struck by a_pistol- wielding bandit who entered the _store with a companion short!) ‘after opening the place for daily business on the city’s northeast side. male Reports $32,837 Assets Assets of the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Pontiac Federal Credit Union reached the $32,837 mark) last year, with a three per cent div-/ idend on savings declared, Arthur Kinney, treasurer- -manager, report. ed today. WSU Measure i Bs } / 5 ¥ 1 f f { : . 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29. 1959 NEW HIGHLAND SHOPPING CENTER OPENS — Grand opening festivities are taking place today through Saturday at the new M59 Shopping Center at Wil- liams Lake road in Highland Township. Planned to accommodate 12 to 14 businesses, the center has parking spate for 500 cars. Currently open for business are the Colon- Pontiac Press Phete jal Lumber Co., a Foodtown Supermarket, Gallagher’s Drugstore and the Hy-Land Variety Store. During the grand opening festivities free prizes and refreshments are being offered to customers. Moves to House Plan to Halt Election of Governors Board Due for Rough Opposition | LANSING ua — A plan to head off election of a Wayne State Uni- versity board of governors April 6 tottered today on the brink of a legislative grave despite Senate approval, It was the first bill of the 1959, , Session to win final passage in either House or Senate. After the bill cleared the Renate! 2 to 13 yesterday, Sen, Edward| Hutchinson (R-Fennville) neglect- ed to move for immediate effect, | a vital maneuver if the measure Builder's Check to Area Police Goes to Charity A $100 check given to the Wa- terford Township Police Depart- /ment by the Showboat Heights Sub- ‘division has been turned over to ‘the March of Dimes, Police Chiet ‘Millard Pender said. Richard G. Ward of the Fed. eral Homes Corp, said his firm wanted to contribute the money to the department's benefit fund for its “excellent” protection. Because the department doesn't have such a fund, Pender said he was turning the money over to the March of Dimes, Bill Would Curb Scooter Drivers Asks Age Limit of 16 to Operate Vehicles on Streets, Highways LANSING W—A woman legisla- tor is renewing her fight to keep| young motor scooter drivers off streets and highways. Rep. Lucille H. McCollough re Dearborn) yesterday introduced a bill which would repeal a 1956, amendment to the motor vehicle; code allowing 14 and 15-year-olds | jto operate motor scooters. She | ‘asked that the age minimum be restored to 16. a ‘high “inbacy and accident nt The same bill passed the House’ ‘last year but died in the Senate. The bill also would prohibit more ithan one perso from riding a scooter aCe) a time. Donkey Basketball Slated at Waterford A donkey basketball game has a gained by breaking a pane of | ainietic fund, according to Officer glass in the front sterm door Fr -ank Rudolph of the Waterford an astolen from the store office during Tribune will be increased to 10 - 42109 coffee break between 5 and cents a copy outside a 50 miles day | been scheduled for 8 p.m. Satur-| day at Waterford Township High School. Opposing the high school faculty |will be a team made up of Water- ford Township police and state ‘troopers of the Pontiac Post, Proceeds from _ the contest, ;which Jast year drew a standing- on crowd, will go to the school’s |Police Deanne 2 New York Papers Boost Cost Per Copy NEW YORK (UPI)—The price of weekday editions of the New York Times and the New York Herald ‘radius of the city effective Mon- The price will remain five cents within 50 miles. Previously, 10¢ was charged 100 miles from the ity, but the new price zone was made because of continuing tn- creased costs, particularly for dis- ‘Times said. FRANK J. VARGO Frank J. Vargo of 5114 Pine Knob Rd. will be honored by fellow Masons of Clarkston Lodge 60 at a Past Masters ban- quet at 6:30 p. m. Saturday in Cedar Lodge, Clarkston. He is the youngest past master of the Clarkston Lodge and a member of the Oakland Chapter 5, Royal Arch Masons. Ask Broadened Jobless Pay House Bill Sponsored, by 117 Is Similar to, integration. Em Senate's Proposal . WASHINGTON — A Dill to broaden federal - state unemploy- ment compensation standards was sporisored today by 117 House members of both political parties. It parallels proposals introdyced by 31 senators yesterday. x * * Reps. Frank M. Karsten (D-Mo) and Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (D- Mich), prepared to introduce the proposed legislation, which would provide uniform minimum stand- ards for state eligibility for federal ‘contributions. Its backers said the bill would: 1. Establish benefits equal to not less than 50 per cent of weekly wages so long as they are not more than two-thirds of the average weekly wage in the state. 2. Establish a uniform benefit period of 39 weeks. In most states the maximum period is now 2% weeks. 3. Include within the system employers who have one or more employes. Domestics and agricultural employes would be excluded, 4, Permit states to provide for uniform rate reductions as well as individual experience - rated reductions for employers. * * * Karsten said average weekly jobless benefits have slipped from an average of 50 per cent of full-, time weekly wages in 1939 to less than 33 per cent today. Average length of unemployment) has been rising: from year to year, Karsten said, making a 39 week police tribution and transportation, the duration standard a reasonable and necessary one. 200 Sleepless Hours, That Is Disc Jockey Breaks Record NEW YORK (UPI)—Disc Tripp slept “man’s soundest completing a 200-hour sleepless vigil for the sake of sclence. Tripp, 32, ended his wa 7:14 o'clock last night. An hour later he fell into a deep sleep at the Astor Hotel after physicians‘assured him he had broken scientifically controlled all records for wakefulness. “Now he's sleeping man's soundest sleep,” said Dr, Louis J. West, the team of scientists watching Tripp. “He has done something n ever done before, and it's vigil two hours before Tr vowed to stay awake for 225 hours, but his experiment has not been scientifically con. trolled or documented. A third: disc jockey, Red Evans, of | Tallahassee, Fla., tried to stay awake 200 hours but gave up at 190 hours and 43 minutes on advice of his doctor. He had developed a headache. West said he would aw fantastic.” The scientists here did not recognize the wake-a-thon of dise jockey Dave Hunt- er of Jacksonville, Fla. Hunter began his at 11 a.m. some Peter today, Jockey sleep” his usual rising time, for psychiatric observations and medical tests after 15 hours of sleep. But he said he expected Tripp to go back ke-a-thon at to sleep for recording of eight or 16 hours. Even while he was sleeping, Tripp was working for science. He dropped off too quickly last night for arrangements for a his brain waves to be com- pleted. But his pulse, body temperature who heads measured. o man has ipp and has personality and other physical activities were being West said he did not believe the long vigil had caused Tripp any harm which sleep could not erase. He said the experiment had proved that “there ‘js a measurable mental functions tantamount to a major of change when a great deal of sleep is lost.” “Tripp vacillated between belligerence and submissiveness,” he said. “There was a progressive aken lip that.” Y ay ‘ \ disturbance in his thinking and feeling, a deteriorating in his per- formance tests that was getting worse and worse. Prolonged loss-of sleep is not good for anybody, and I can atuiad to ° e e * in Virginia -RICHMOND, Va. (AP)—Virgin- ia's Legislature was expected to indicate today whether it agrees with Gov. J, Lindsay Almond Jr. that the state is legally powerless to prevent school integration re- oe - Almond said at the opening ses- sion of the emergency General Assembly ~Wednesday he knew of nothing he could do to avert token integration. * * * Six closed schools in Norfolk may reopen Monday on a deseg- regated basis. Arlington has been ordered to admit four Negroes Monday to a white junior high school and Charlottesville is also proceeding with plans to reopen its two schools closed in the inte- gration dispute. Charlottesville and Arlington school officials planned a last try today for a stay of integration from Chief Judge Simon E. Sobel- off of the U.S. 4th Circuit Court garded as-imminent in three com-' New Decision Due Today posed the Assembly, after acting on this legislation, recess pending formulation of a long-range pro- gram by a commission he will ap- point. * * * Almond said Virginia was at the ‘end of the legal line in trying to ‘preserve the traditionally segre- ‘gated school system but pledged to continue the fight he has waged against mixing of the races and to fight to minimize integration in the future. He said the state has not surrendered and ‘‘does not surrender now.” 3 White Lake Township Motor Vehicle Ordinance. The Township of White Lake Ordains: This ordinance shall be Motor Vehicle ke Township, gree = awk State of Michigan. ereas it is the desire of the S reonaas Board to enact an ordi- nance for the regulation of the use and operation of motor vehicles within the township; and whereas the Michigan contains all of the regula- tions designed to seaseel vehicular traf- fic and use of motor vehicles which would be appropriate for the township now therefore it is ordained that wand Ordinance of <= of Appeals in Baltimore. : * * * = A group of Southside legislators: whose districts have heavy Negro populations indicated they might reach a decision today on whether to attempt to go further than the Governor proposed. They said a i 1 | Judge Sets Bond ‘resolution was being studied which they felt might serve to deter any) ergency legislation, other than that dealing with appropria- tions, would require a four-fifths majority in the 40-member Senate and the lO member ae * In outlining his program, Al- mond asked the Assembly to ae vide for state tuition grants to $250 each for pupils declihing to attend integrated schools, and for repeal! of the compulsory school attendance law. He pro- in Armed Holdup Thomas E. Ferguson, 28, of 2840 Wilbur St., Keego Harbor, was bound over to Circuit Court yester- day on an armed robbery charge @llowing examination before Mu- nicipal Judge Maurice E. Finne- gan. Michigan Vehicle Code, and all amend- ments thereto, now or hereafter made are incorporated tn this ordinance by reference* thereto so far as the same applies to the operation, control and use of vehicles upon the streets, alleys and highways of White Lake Township, Section 3. Complaints for violations of this ordinance shall be made in writ describing the offense committed an shal] refer to thé seation number of ‘the section of the Michigan Vehicle ° Code whieh describes the offense com- mitted, as being the section number of this ordinance as the same were herein written. Section 4. Any person who shall erp any provision of this ordinance shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall be paoe pte a fine not exceeding $100.00 and of prosecution or in default (herect by imprisonment in county fall for not to exceed 90 days or both such fine and imprisonment in the discretion of the Court. Section 5. This ordinance shall take” effect (30) days after the ane shall be P| published as required by Made and passed by fy White Lake Township Board the 21st day of Janu- ary A.D. 1059 BERT A. McKEACHIE, Township Clerk x Jan. 29, ‘59. 2 ORDINANCE NO. 32 An ordinance to adopt by reference the Uniform Traffic Code for Michigan Cities, Townships and Wag ire »~ To ke Ordains? c wnship of White 1. Code Adopted The Uniform Traffte Code for cities, townships and villages promulgated by the Commissioner of State Police on February 14, 1958, Supplement No. istrative Code, pp. 5 to 37, in aceordance with Public Act 62 of 1956, State of Michigan, is pereny adopted by ref- erence as in this sremence modified. Bec. 2. References in Cod References in the Uniform Traffic Code for Michigan Cities, Townships and Villages to “governmental unit’ shail e. mean the Township of White Lak publish Judge Finnegan set bond at $5,-; 000. Férguson ig being held in the! Oakland County Jail pending ar- Fi raignment Feb. 2 in Circuit Court. | Ferguson and Miguel Adkins, 26, of 71 §. Johnson St., are ac- cused of a holdup of Tom’s Mar- ket, 888 Orchard Lake Ave:, in which $960 was taken. Adkins has already been bound over to Circuit Court. Unable to furnish $5,000 bond, he is being held in jai] anti] arraignment Reb. 2. 2 Doctors’ Offices Broken Into in City Pontiac detectives are investi- gating two break-ins of doctor’s offices in the Community National ‘Bank Building. The offices of Dr. Irving E. Gordon, a dentist, and Dr. Isaac C. Prevette were discovered bur- glarized yesterday it to believed the tntfeders tid|te in the building Tuesday night after |{ime closing hours. All desk drawers in Dr. Gordon's | co office were ransacked, and papers were strewn about the floor, police Nothing was reported missing by the doctors. 12 Cub Scout Awards Presented at Crofoot Cub Scout Pack 8, sponsored |*owld be Sec. 3. Notice to Be Published The ethos 3 Clerk shall this in the manner required law and shall at the same time = ordinance [pubis a supplementary notice setting th the purpose of the said Uniform Traine Code and of the fact that com- pies © ¢ afe available 4 ree office of the Clerk for inspection ll and distribution to the public at all Bec. 4. Conflicting Ordinances Repealed (Use only where applicable) Ordinance No. 5 adopted July 18, 1055, relating to traffic, is hereby specifically repealed. All other ordinances incon- sistent with the provisions of the Uni- form Traffic Code are, to the extent of such inconsistency, hereby repealed. Sec. When Effective The Uniform Traffic Code will be in effect in this governmental unit 30 dare after the same shall be published as re- quired by law. Adopted: voce Ee 21, Fd PMCKEACHIE, At ownship Clerk Jan. 29, "5, NOTICE OF ADOPTIO oF UNIPORM TRAFFIC CODE Notice is hereby given thet pursuant to the provisions of Act 62 of the Publis 1956, State of Michigan, Uniform Traffic Code for ¢itles, town- ships and villages was adopted by ref- erence by the Township Board of the ro of White Lake on the ist day of January, 1959. @ purpose of such Code is to - late the operation of vehicles, to provide for the regnlation and use of streets, highways and alleys and other pubite and her eed rg — within the Town- ship of ake and to vide penalties ag) the violation of Code, a tee copies of the ae Trat- e are ereiabie at the of wnship Clerk for bear spy by and distribution to the public et all lication of required of — No further or additional =~ —— Traffic Code ts mplated, est 9 ee 21, 1089. ERT A. caterer Towns ty Clerk . STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile In the matter of tion fcon- cern Pene: Susan a, minor, Cause No. 16¢ To — Reno, father of said ehild. tion having been filed in this Court that the present of al the r of said minor child are rn- known and the said has violated Honorable = Arthur pte ay pe} Soneney AD. 1988 " ‘Seals e Moors, (A trwe copy) of predate —_ 4, Register, ‘Suventie Dirk on circulation of about half a billion. Jan. 0,