The Weather Resp onagl a es Clear and cold ‘ Lo (Details on Page %) EP 0. ail ‘oth YEAR 3 kkekekr PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, wethoobera Le FEBRUARY 2, 1959 —80 PAGES a dt = % FISTFUL OF MONEY — That's nearly $10,000 worth of greenbacks the boys are sifting through. They found it in a paper bag in a vacant lot in Cheektowaga, N. Y. while chasing rabbits. Police PONTIAC’S ICE QUEEN — Sparkling Marilyn Gary, 4078 Bay — Brook Dr:, Waterford Township, is Pontiac’s Winter Sports Queen ° of 1959. Posing after winning the crown at the Parks & Recreation Department Ice Carnival yesterday, the blonde, brown-eyed 18- year-old will be Pontiac's representative at the Michigan Winter Queen Contest in Grayling. Pontiac Press Phote ‘4 Oe ‘AP Wirepheto- FLAMES CLAIM INN — A tower with a weathervane begins to topple at the height of the fire which destroyed the three-story all wood Deer Park Inn, a Long Island landmark. The heat was © so intense that firemen couldn’t get close to the building to fight — the blaze. . 4 pee Via Camera. Lens | Home-Delivered AP Wirephote are trying to find out where it came from. From left are Roy Anderson, 14; James Weiglein, 11; and Otis Montgomery, 13. The cash will belong to them if no one claims it in 30 days. Jail Mother of 7 in Indianapolis Must Serve Alternately With Spouse for Laxity in Son’s Support” INDIANAPOLIS w — A mother of seven children was in the Ma- her part of a court sentence im- |\failed to make welfare payments. * * * Mrs. Catherine Robbins, 35, tear- tron yesterday when she was brought to jail in compliance with ‘an order issued by juvenile Judge Harold N. Fields. The judge or- dered Mrs. Robbins and her hus- make the payments. The money, plus $1,200 in back payments, is tuition for their son, James, 12, who was committed | by the court to White’s Institute, a private correctional institution. Both say they are out of work now. * * * Robbins, who served the first week's sentence, said he told the judge -they could not afford to make the payments and asked that the boy be sent to a state school instead, but the judge refused. “We haven't done anything,” to go to jail ayway.” The couple denied Judge Fields’ estimate that their in- come averaged’ more than $600 a month. They showed income tax withholding statements and paycheck stubs showing their combined income during 1958 was $5,263.01. They explained they had to pay medical bills, meet household ex- penses, clothe and feed eight per- sons and make a $75 monthly house payment. * * Robbins is a railroad carman and his wife worked in a factory. 1244 Million Persons Get Fatter Pensions WASHINGTON (% — The gov- ernment today starts mailing out fatter social security checks to more than 1242 million persons. * * * The checks reflect the 7 per cent average increase voted by Congress last year. x * * Social Security Commissioner William L. Mitchell said the new monthly total of insurance bene- fits will be about 740 million dol- lars, an increase of 59 million doling. Milk Price Drops 1 Cent Per Quart The price of home-delivered milk in the Pontiac area dropped a cent a quart today as a result of a cut in the price paid Detroit area farmers for their milk. xk we | Major dairids and independent creameries took part in the price reduction, which oceurred through out the — — The ‘price for home-delivered standard or homogenized milk now is generally 2344 cents a quart, or rion County jail today, beginning] | posed because she and her husband) fully fell into the arms of a ma-) ‘band; Perry, 36, be jailéd: alter- nate weeks until they pay $21 a week or prove they are unable to Mrs, Robbins said, ‘“‘but we have ‘Is Season's Low, - Nixon fo Follow Eisenhower Line | in 60 Campaign Report Vice President Will Push Economy as Major Issue WASHINGTON (#—Vice President Richard M. Nixon appears to have linked his chances for the 1960 Republican presiden- tial nomination to the Eisenhower adminis- tration’s record. There had been specula- tion that Nixon might strike out on his own to es- tablish a position inde- pendent of the _ White House. But word passed to associates in- dicates he is giving his full sup- port to Eisenhower's effort to hold down spending. He reportedly con- siders this a major campaign fac- tor for 1960. Elsenhower named the vice president last week as head of a Cabinet committee to combat in- flation. Eisenhower has emphasized he regards a balanced budget as es- ‘'Admit Negroes With out Fuss RICHMOND, Va. (?—Virginia calmly thrust aside the color bar- rier today and for the first time in her history put Negro and white pupils together in public schools. Grudgingly, but peacefully at the outset, the Old Dominion made the transition from segregation to inte- gration in a fraction of her public schools, in Arlington County and the. city of Norfolk. r Ne violence, no rowdy ine. dents occurred as four Negro pu- pills filed quietly into Stratford Junior High School in Arlington, across the Potomac from Wash- ington, . 4 Two hundred miles down the state in Norfolk, Negro children Virginia Schools Quiet began showing up to enroll for the first time in six junior and senior high schools, Again, there were no disorders, Police with riot gear stood by at Arlington just in case, None was in sight at Norfolk as the early birds began turning out to, register. * * * ,° The quartet of Negro childyen at Arlington—three boys and a‘girl, marched onto the school grounds from a seldom used vogdWay and through the doors shortly before 9 a.m. They were alone. They didn't look alarmed or worried. Nobody tried to stop them; there was an absence of picketing and ‘demonstrations. = land County Republican wo must be done. Realizing that not much out money, a campaign to County GOP Decides It Has Work to Do Taking their cue from national party leaders, Oak- rkers held an election post- mortem of their own ‘Saturday and decided something can be accomplished with- raise $46,000 in funds was announced so that the party might match the opposi- politicking. County leaders! New York Story hope to get 300 dollar-a- month contributors as well' scribes, x * * can't do as well, All of this seems likely to put Nixon In a somewhat opposite position from his greatest poten- tial rival for the nomination, moa Nelson Rockefeller of New ork. Before Rockefeller became gov- ernor, the Rockefeller brothers , fund which he helps to support issued a report that recommend- ed, among other things, a higher level of defense spending than the $40,900,000,000 Eisenhower has out- lined in his balanced 77-billion-doi- lar budget. Nixon stands firmly be- hind this defense total. Rockefeller also is represented as favoring greater spending for natural resource, housing, health, education and welfare projects than Eisenhower has been will- ing to undertake under the Lin- coin concept. After only a month as governor, Rockefeller already is under Democratic attack in his home state on the economy issue. Can’t Pass Driver’s Test LONDON. (UPI)—Derek Brown claimed in the Sunday pictorial that he has driven 100,000 miles ‘in the past 22 years but still can't pass Britain's driving test. He’s taken it 12 times and failed every time. “It has become a fetish with me,” he said.. ‘I'm determined to pass, however long it takes.” to which Nixon obviously sub- Beyond that Nixon has made it clear he supports the Lincoln con- cept that Eisenhower frequently mentions — that the government should do for the people only what they can’t do for themselves or Page 25 as 2,000 $5-per-year sub- scribers. sential to Ward off inflation, a view| George Labadie, former financial] advisor to Wayne County Republi- cans and now executive-secretary of re for the Oakland GOP, outlined the new program, which he said would require 500 volun- teers to head the drive planned for this spring. Claiming that the Democrats have been sustained by union con- tributions, Labadie called upon a revitalized effort ‘to provide a con- tinuous source of income for year- round activity.” _ Labadie, about to move his residence here from Dearborn, spoke to about 100 Republicans meeting in an “Action confer- tion. party’s year - sone! News Flashes WASHINGTON ® — Secretary ‘ef Defense MeBitoy said today the defenses of the United States are “prepared to meet the threat it Yaces today.” McElroy sought to reassure congressmen who have been openly President Eisenhower's adminis. tration is dapgerousty cutting armed forces strength in the name of economy, , ANN ARBOR (®—Doctors at Unitersity of Michigan Medical Center today reported the use of an artificial kidney in treat- ing a 9-year-old boy. Patrick DeWitt of Monroe, son of Mr. and Mrs, Howard DeWitt is believed to be the youngest ence” Saturday morning at the Bloomfield Hills High School. Lawrence B. Lindemer, state party chairman, was guest. The group leaders returned from six separate panel discussions with summaries containing more criti- cism than praise for past election organization. Typical was a synopsis of a dis- cussion on motivation, which was headed by Jim Burlingame, a par- ty worker from Waterford Town- ship. * * * “Tt was agreed,” he said, ‘‘that we are a bunch of salesmen willing to sell but not knowing what the product is. What we need is a down-to-earth, easy-to-understand epistle of what we stand for.” A similar self-evaluation came out of a meeting of the Republican National Committee which met in Des Moines last month. ‘‘Where does the party stand? What are its principles?'' inquired Senate campaign chairman Barry Gold- water. Lindemer, should he survive a ripple of opposition for re-election as state leader at the State Con- patient in the Center’s history to use the mechanical kidney. The machine takes over for hu- man kidney’s during an opera- tion of when doctors are treat- ing kidney disorders, BONN, Germany (#—The Ade- nauer government called today for a four-power foreign minis- ters conference to discuss the German problem in the second half of May. A government spokesman told a news conference that Bonn proposes the foreign ministers of the United States, Britain, France and West Germany held a special coonference of their own during the 10th anniversary meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in Washing- ton April 2-4, Under 30? Don’t Enter NOTTINGHAM, England (UPI) —Men and women under 30 have been forbidden to use the elevator in Nottingham’s giild- hall. ‘‘The lift is in great de- mand and young people are in better shape to climb the four (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) flights of stairs,” an official said. Something like 100 police, equipped with white heimets, portable foud speakers and ra- dios, canteens, and the custo- mary night sticks and guns, had begun converging on Stratford long before the schoo} :opening hour, : They saw to it that only pupils and school employes entered the grounds, Even parents are kept dren on the steps of Maury High School to become the first of his the city. There was the usual chatter of school kids, but no trouble. of any kind. Again there was no disturbance Betty: Jean Read, another of 17 Negroes assigned to previously all white schools, turned up unes- corted at Granby High. The opening time was 9 a.m. in Norfolk—15 minutes later than at Arlington, = +> The six Norfolk ectisols,, ‘closed since September under Virginia's) now dead massive resistance pro- gram, were holding no classes to- day—only enrolling pupils and as- signing them to classes, * * * : At Northview High School, two pairs of Negro girls turned up just before 9. White students watched curiously and quietly: By that time, police were on hand and cleared a path for the Negroes. One white girl was heard to say: Even Colder Marks Reported by Neighbors Temperatures to Stay Below Normal, but Will ‘Rise a Bit HOURLY TEMPERATURES out. Wiicceseee Lo SAM, ..0. A ; = .* § 2 a.m —1 10a.m. 6 Down in Norfolk, a Negro, Lewis cise und neds Cousins, and his mother calmly pa- 4a.m.,....—h UD m..cccess 19 raded past a cluster of white chil-| 6 at%......—6 pam... 8 ae Pontiac and surrounding race to shatter the color line inbareg was turned into a vir- tual icebox this morning as the temperature ‘dipped to a winter's low of six below in the city while neighboring communities reported even colder read ings. The bone-chilling cold snap which started Satur- day night dropped the mer- cury to its lowest point at 7:30 a.m. in the city. As the sun came out, the tem- perature began to edge slightly upwards. .Throughout the night thermom- eters registered suz-zero tempera- tures, Tonight and tomorrow the weather will be slightly warmer. “Here they are , . . I hope they're satisfied,” Others get back to school, The historic cracking ‘of the color barrier in Norfolk and Ar- lington, small as the crack may be @ the outset, came about through the force of federal court decisions and what Gov, J, Lind- + say Almond dr. has called “the hammer of federal intervention.” But under desperation measures jammed through a special session of the state Legislature Saturday, no Virginia child can be forced to attend an integrated school if his parents disapprove. * * * At Almond's behest, the Législa- ture repealed the 40-year-old com- pulsory school attendance law and offered tuition grants of up to $250 guid they were glad to this morning: Rochester eS avecenccecesssOEe Lake Orion cebesccessecsc™et Milford es beivvsccececcsss seit Waterford conrrecccccens e@ummke Flint ABCC MOODOCODUCGC ee Oxford POO TE Soe Romeo erevcccetececcoese cme Today's high will be between 15- 20, bu¢ tonight the mercury will hover between § and 10, tween 20-24, Winds are southwesterly at 8-15 12-22 m.p.h, tonight, The weatherman says cold temperatures with readings 3-6 3 below normal will pre- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Tuesday's high is predicted be- m.p.h. today, and will increase to - (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Poetry Works Where Prose Failed Before verse: When you want to call your waiter And you're sitting all forlorn— You will get him to you quicker With your lights than with your horn, For there ain't a man among us Who has eyesight that has growed To the point where he can look around And see Whose horn has blowed, Far Whiter Than Last Year’s, Too You can’t change the’ weather by complaining about it, but if you've been griping that this win- ter is colder than last year’s, you're absolutely right. * * * Not only has this winter been a' lot ¢older, but we've had nearly four times as much snow, — And the worst may not be over, Data compiled by the U.S. Weather Bureau in Detroit shows Comics ..... 6 Soneccanonse 2c that we are. smack in the middle of the da win. a sonoorsondconc bs ter “toe box” period. A step out: Markets . , on a . . - . ‘ 94 Goors will attest to this, Obituaries, trerccsnecees. & Midwinter officially was Jan. 22.) Sports ...°....... 040055 20-21 That doesn’t mean that Jan. 22 is| Theaters .................45 18 traditionally the coldest day of the TV & Radio Programs .... 29 year, but it does mean that gen-| Wilson, Earl .............. 2% 46 cents a half gallon, * erally the 10 days to two weeks “ preceding and following that date may be expected to serve up the year’s coldest, day. COLDEST IN FEBRUARY Last year, as in mény years, the coldest day came in Reoraery ¢% 4 IESG SLEEPER AG ABLE In Today's Press | TIRES Women’s Pages eeeroenee 13-15 cury dipped .to 9 below zero, the coldest temperature recorded in| Pontiac in 18 years. Today’ s six below has been the coldest thus far this winter. The previous low’ was one below on Jan, 5. “Average temperatures show a vast difference. In December, 1957, {the tempenature averaged 34.1 de- “grees, or 4.6 above normal. * * * In December, .1958, the average temperature was 22.4, dr 4.7 below normal, January last year had a nor- mal, average of 26.6, while last Snowfall offers a stark contrast.) 4 Surprise! This Winter IS Colder This was Feb. 17 when the mer- Up to the end of January last winter there had been eight inches of snow. This year the total is 27 ‘inches. JANUARY? WOW! December, 1957, saw about §.1 inches of snow fall on the Pontiac area. In December this winter 6.4 inches were recorded. But January last year contrib- uted only 3.4 inches, while about 2 inches have accumulated in the past month. So button up your overcoat, Be- fore long it will be Apri] and then you can complain about all the rain washing ie ‘your grass seed, bites Verne ©, aiid Present! Judge, ATLANTA (®—A suburban drive- in hag noticed quite a decline in horn-blowers since its carhops be- gan handing out cards with this Cireuit* Court. Commissioner to Circuit Faint Hope Stirs inlceberg Crash ‘Weak Radio Signals Heard but No Survivors Found in Search HALIFAX, N. S. —Weak radio siginals stirred faint hope today. that some of the 95 persons aboard ' the missing Danish ship Hans Hedtoft might yet be found amid the iceberg-dotted seas off Green- land. Hans G. Christensen, director of Denmark's Greenland department, said in Copenhagen there was little doubt the signals, picked up by a rescue ship and two Greenland shore stations, came from’ a sur- vivor of the Hans Hedtoft which collided with an pect last Friday. But Royal Canadian Air Force search and rescue headquarters here said the irregular dot-dash messages were on a frequency normally used by aircraft send- ing “homing” signals. Head- quarters said it .was convinced the signals did not come from a lifeboat of the Hedtoft, ~ U.S. Coast Guard headquarters in New York also said its cutter Campbell, which has been engaged in a fruitless search for survivors” signals on the frequencies nérm- — ally used by lifeboats. - The Campbell. was en route to Cape | ee a , said this was almost { spot where they calcula jboat would ‘have “These signals, Christiansen, ——— since Saturday, had not heard any — 4 i ‘ i the group which looked into party activities, expressed the belief of the entire group that campaigning should not be a “last minute rush” right before elections. President Eisenhower fostered this idea when he warned GOP leaders in the country not to let the party become ‘‘the hibernating elephant’’ that awakes only at elec- tion time, x* * * “Our weakest link in our strud- increase the party's effectiveness during the coming campaigns.” “Perhaps this beating served as a very good lesson for all of us,” History Could Repeat — as Young Makes Plea WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen: Ste- But history may be on his side. JOHN L. LEWIS John L. Lewis Said ‘to Be ‘Quite Sick’ WASHINGTON (AP) — John L. Lewis, 77, president of the United i\Mine Workers was described as “quite ill,’ Sunday by his pbysi- of | cian Dr: John Minor's report came after Lewis had an attack while under observation at Georgetown University Hospital. Lewis, who entered the hospital Friday, suffered either an attack of embolus or pneumonia, the physician said. Embolus was de- fined ag a foreign or abnormal particle circulating in the blood. Audrey Hepburn Will Be Flown ‘|to Hollywood DURANGO, Mexico (AP) — Her doctors and her husband planned _|ta fly Audrey Hepburn to Holly- wood today despite a setback in _|her condition. * * The doctors said the actress, who suffered broken vertebrae when thrown from a horse last week, had a bad day Sunday and could not rest, sleep or eat. * * * One doctor thought she might have suffered other injuries not yet diagnosed, Another said she might just be having a delayed shock reaction. * * * Miss Hepburn’s husband, actor Mel Ferrer, planned to have her flown home in a special plane, Miss Hepburn was injured dur- ing location filming of the four- million-dollar movie “Unforgiven.” Ike Gives Space Report WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presi- | dent Eisenhower told Congress in his first annual space report -| today that the goal of this na- tion is peaceful interplanetary flight. Looking beyond the U.S. project to place a man in orbit within two years, the chief exe- cutive said that new programs are aimed at “exploring our so- lar system — first by unmanned, then by manned deep-space ve- hicles." Freezing Drizzle Across Texas Cold Wave Due to Stay By The Associated Press mid-winter cold wave kept an across broad areas from to the Atlantic today little general relief appeared air, which dropped to degrees below g The Fall U. 8. Weather Weather Bureau Repert . Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding § a.m. rises Sets Monday at 1:05 p.m. Tises Tuesday at 4 a.m. Dewntewn CS Re ee ae | eee 12 OMe svaee cs 8 Wh. ins ae G Sis cont sard a eae ee 16 © BM. ..95.008-5 : 10 @.. 66.5445. Ct ) in Pontiac (as down ) » Eitoen seepeentone wepdeeee bates eens § 7 eroee urronece eeeen sens: 13 y Sunday in Pontiac m (as ) = A Bounce 13 be eeereveee eee 1 E "“SOMIPOrACUure =... vsuere terse 68 oT ReT eee Pie #eeee most severe cold numbed the northern tier of states from Mon- tana eastward through northern New England. . ‘ © & It was below zero as far south as northern Missouri, Freezing rain, snow and drizzle accompa- nied the colder air throughout western Oklahoma and wide areas of Texas. A glistening coat of ice slicked highways and streets in western) and northern Texas and snow fell in the Panhandle. Driving condi- tions were hazardous, At least 11 an@/deaths were attributed to the foul temer-| Weather, Many schools were *|dered closed. ‘ * or * *® ye A belt of freezing drizzle stretched from Wichita Falls, Tex. through Abilene and San /Angelo. Snow extended westward across most of New Mexico, Rainfall was heavy along the Texas coast, The rains moved into parts of the cen- tral Gulf Coast and’northern Flor- ida. Skies were ‘generally clear in the cold belt in the northern States. Snow flurries, however, flecked the lower Great Lakes re- gion. * * * Mild weather prevailed in south- ern Florida, One of the country’s highest early morning readings was 72 at Key West, Fla. one of - 65! the lowest was 28. below zero at Lone Rock, Wis. Osteopathic Hospital Wins Resident Approval Pontiat Osteopathic Hospital has been approved for resident training siby the American Osteopathic Assn. Miannounced Harry H, Whitlow, hos-. ta . ‘ Cian {unveil his 140-million-dollar new Quietly in Virginia Fi, . : _ | ‘ = 4 | Be * * Yes » ’ me ] Prepared fo Act in Cash Crisis Due for Close Scrutiny as Time Runs Out By ROGER LANE LANSING (}—Now that all Gov, Williams’ cards are on the table, this may be the week Michigan legislators take their first close look at the state's cash emergency, Time for action if the state is te avert payless paydays will be get- ting short when lawmakers return ‘at 8 p.m. tonight from a weekend! ' lat home after watching Williams tax program on television. * * * Still waiting for their decision were four billy to carry out Wil- Hams’ plan for mortgaging the 50-million-dollar Veterans Teust’ Fund to keep the wolf from barg.- ing in the state treasury door this month or next. Few Republicans have shown any more liking for the governor's solution to the emergency problem directly at hand than they did for his long-run revenue prescription Friday night. . But however distasteful, the cash situation demanded a remedy now —or within weeks—while the an- swer on new taxes is at least a few months off. * * * No alternative to the Williams mortgage proposal has yet been formally presentéd, although there has been vague talk about utilizing the trust fund in some more palat- able way. ACTION PROMISED Rep. Rollo G. Conlin (R-Tipton), whose taxation committee controls the governor’s bills, has promised to give them speedy attention and an early decision one way or the other. If the bills are reported favor- ably, perhaps after revision, a quick vote by the House appears Williams Tax Proposals | a #0 ie THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2. 1959 islators Return T. tA on MAN-MADE GLACIER Orion, is more than 30 feet high of camera enthusiasts every This tower of ice in front of the Villa Inn on M24, south of Lake of three on the Inn property which draws scores “tower” was created by Chef Julius of the Inn, who has been making these unique ice forms and is just one weekend. The freezing weathe Mg (J : Pontiac Press Pheto for the past seven years. An old dead tree with broken branches piled around it forms the base for the frozen structure. A fine spray of water is played on the formation constantly during below- tr, The hose is moved to create different shapes. likely. No one has advocated | boarding up the University of Michigan or Michigan State Uni- versity, both now approacing des- perate straits. The two universities would be the main immediate benefici- aries if the Legislature goes along with the Williams mort- gage plan—or if it decides to liquidate fund securities outright. From initial Republican response to the governor's tax program, it would seem the final solution of the new revenue problem has yet to put in an appearance. And this tends to put the GOP majority on the spot, since few lawmakers have argued seriously against need for more revenues while criticizing the Williams pre- scription for raising them x * * Whatever the answer, it ap- peared more certain than ever that it will bear'a Republican labe]— possibly a program keyed to a flat rate income tax touching from the top to near the bottom of the economic scale. Williams’ graduated tax Sug- gestions would exempt about two-thirds of potential taxpayers, those grouped toward the bottom of the income spectrum, Another aspect of the governor's program — which drew fire from the Republicans is its adding of tax burdens for business rather than the granting of tax ex- emptions or concessions. The governor's plan will be sub- mitted to, Legislators in detailed form Tuesday or Wednesday. Integration Goes on (Continued From Page One) a year for attendance at segre- gated private schools. In his battle to prevent any amount of integration in any Vir- ginia schools, Almond had been compelled to hoist the white flag. But he still is planning to call together a special commission of legislators to work out some | new method of combatting inte- gration, Segregationists in the Legislature | were unhappy with the package pf bills put through Saturday. They talked of making a last stand for tougher laws at the opening of the General Assembly at noon today. * * * But there was nothing they could do to head off the advent of small portions of integration today—four years, eight and a half months af- ter the U.S. Supreme Court de- creed segregated public schools to be unconstitutional. Chief Justice Warren refused late Saturday to let Arlington de- lay any longer the enrollment of four Negroes at Stratford School. Blaze Costs $75,000 BAD AXE w—~A fire of unhde- termined origin destroyed the Bow- ron & Bowron Co, farm machinery sales building in Bad Axe today. No one was injured. Firemen esti- Weekend Fires Claim 4 3 Others Killed in Traffic By The Associated Press A wave of fires claimed four lives ‘in Michigan Sunday, injured two firemen and drove 50 persons into bitter cold weather. Colleen Paffpaff, 4, of Charle- voix, was fatally burned when her night clothes were enveloped in flames. Police said she apparently was playing with matches while her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Fritz Paffpaff were asleep. * * * Six-month-old Michael Moore suffered fatal burns when a fire reared through a_ two-family -home on Detroit's East Side. Firemen helped 10 other occu- pants, seven of them children, to escape, Frank Williams, 43, died when he was trapped in his blazing farm shack near St. Joseph in! Berrien County. * * Occupants of four apartments escaped into 10-below zero weather at Ionia Sunday. Fireman Ray Barber of Ionia suffered smoke inhalation in the fire which caused damage estimated at $50,000. * * » In Detroit, fireman Donald Putrycus, 30, injured his left foot tling a blaze that caused an estimated $50,000 at the Valley Platers Co. Another Sunday fire occurred at a potato warehouse at Stan- ton in Mentealm County and pre- maturely baked about 8,000 po- tatoes. * * * A quick-thinking Detroit police- man, William Smith, 29, tore flam- ing pajamas off his son, William Jr., 6, when they caught fire while the child was playing with a cig- arette lighter. The boy was taken to a hospital where his cordition was reported as good. * * * Six-year-old James Bess of Battle Creek died Sunday of burns suffered in a fire at his home Fri- day night. The child was burned over 90 per cent of his body in a blaze believed to have been touched off by defective wiring. Mickey Cohen Bumped Off— Chair, That Is LOS ANGELES (AP) — Miékey Cohen got bumped off Sunday — bumped off a chair, that is, The dapper ex-gambler was struck by a neighbor’s car that lost its ‘brakeg and careened into the driveway of Cohen's. home. Cohen was sitting in a wicker chair in the driveway with . his back to the street. . The’ car shoved Cohen and his chair, 20 feet into a fence. — “You never know when fate is going to come around after you," mated damage at ..$75,000. said. Cohen, shaken but unhurt. , * > - 2. { By The Associated Press Helicopter Fans Frozen Swans to Freedom TRAVERSE CITY (AP) — The Coast Guard blasted a flock of some 100 swans off the ice of Grand Traverse Bay Sunday. The Coast Guard was called to rad gue =. The Day in Birmingham os Lincoln Avenue Widening to Be Considered Again for Fourth Day _1T Deliberate Fate of Nursery Slaying. Seven women and four men went into their fourth day of delibera- tion this morning in hopes of reaching a verdict in the first-de- gree murder trial of Detroit gardener nays L. re: Alyear, 35, is accused of slaying 51-year-old Anthony Jasinski, care- taker at the Ilgenfritz Nurseries Inc., 22951 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield, last July 31. x * * Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer dismissed the jury —one short of the customary 12 due to the illness of a woman juror—late Friday after it still had been unable to reach a unanimous verdict. * * * Judge Beer ordered the jury to continue deliberations Friday after it had announced ‘: could not agree, Deliberations then began at the Waldron Hotel. Today, how- ever, jurors were back behind cloged doors on the second floor of the courthouse. Swiss Women Lose BERN, Switzerland (UPI)— The men of Switzerland decided yesterday, 654,924 to 323,306, that woman's place is in the home — not in the voting booth. By that vote, the men who are Switzerland's enly legal voters turned down a government pro- posal which would have given women the vote in federal elec- tions. Similar local propositions have been rejected repeatedly. Dems to Elect Officers Officers for the new Bloomfield | Traffic accidents claimed three) the rescue when Humane Society| Democratic Club will be elected at lives in Michigan over a cold, icy weekend which kept highway traf- fic to a minimum in many outstate areas. Two of the traffic fatalities were recorded Sunday in contrast to} |Michigan's record of three “death-| less Sundays” on highways. this year. * * * | The Associated Press “fatality {count started at 6 p. m. Friday and ‘ended at midnight Sunday. * * * Merrill LeBlance, 53, of Belle- ville, was injured Saturday night in a three-car collision in Romu- lus Township. He died of his in- juries Sunday. * * * Frederick Budziak, 28, of LI- vonia, was killed Saturday when his car ran out of conffol and over- turned on an Isabella County road one mile south of Beal City. 6 Temperature. Has City Shivering (Continued From Page One) vail in the state for the next five days. . P If it's any consolation, the latest five-day forecast said little if any snow is expected in Michigan this week. Only ‘occasional snow flur- ries are forecast between now and ' Friday. | x & * | Mrs. Lawrence DeRycke. of 27 \N. Baldwin Rd. (Lake Orion) and | Mrs. John Yasaitis, 100 N. Baldwin Rd. (Clarkston), who live only six [houses apart, each reported read- | ings of 26 below at 6:30 this morn- | ning. | Their thermometers stayed at | the 26-below mark until 8 a.m., | then began rising rapidly to a reading of 1-below at 9 a.m. | Flint woke up today to read- | ings of 22 below, breaking a rec- | ord low set in 1942; Gladwin reported 20 below; Pellston -20; Grand Marais and Osceda -17; Sault Ste. Marie -15; gaginaw, Traverse City, Kinross and Jack- son, -10; Escanaba and Alpena -12; and Grand Rapids and Houghton 8. Detroit, by comparison, was the “hot” spot of the state. The read- ing there was one above at 7 a.m. x * * Other unofficial area tempera- tures were: Rochester, -12; Lake. Orion, -18; Romeo -10; Oxford -10; Pontiac Municipal Airport -17; GM Proving Ground near Milford, -16. At 1 p.m., the temperature-was 15. above in downtown Pontiac. The Tokyo department ‘store in Tokyo has under its roof six rail- way and subway stations as well officials noticed some of the swans were trapped. A Coast Guard helicopter cir- cled low. The powerful gusts from its whirling rotor blasted the frozen swans loose and sent the entire flock scurrying for open water. The best way to tell if a man’s having a good time at a party is to look at his wife’s face . . . The ideally run college (claims Carey Williams) is one where the foot- ball players are satisfied with their salaries. —Earl Wilson. HOPPE DIES — Willie Hoppe, the world’s greatest billiards player, died Sunday at the age of 71 after a lengthy illness in Miami, Florida. a meeting tomorrow night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Wienner, 3483 Sutton Place, Bloom- field Township. The public is invited. Gardener Accused in- graph road just south of Maple road at 3:38 a.m. Hospita| authorities said Bald- win suffered multiple lacerations of the face and right leg, -and contusions of the chest, His con- dition was reported to be “‘fair- ly good” today. Bloomfield Township police said the driver of the truck, Lewis Frederick, 30, of Detroit. was un- injured and was not being held. No tickets were issued, The Women’s Fellowship of the Congregational Church of Birming- ham will have a 12:30 p.m. lunch- eon meeting at the church to- morrow, : The program will include a film “The Touch of His Hand," deal- ing with a leper colony in Burma. Mrs, Robert Eddy will report on the Arab Mohamedan World when the Ruth Shain International Re- lations Class meets at the Com- munity House at 10 a.m. tomorrow. The Wednesday meeting of the Village Woman’s Club will be held at the Oakland Hills Coun- try Club tomorrow afternoon. John Mason Brown, drama crit- ic, lecturer and author, will speak on “Seeing Things.” MRS, GEORGE TALBURTT Mrs, George Talburtt, 74, of 612 Brookside Dr., passed away at the Arnold Home in Detroit yesterday after a long illness. The body will be sent to S. H. Hines Funeral Home in Washing- ton D. C. this afternoon by the Manley Bailey Funeral Home here. Service will be held Wednes- day afternoon with burial’in Fort Lincoln Cemetery,: Washington, D. C. A former resident of the capital, Mrs. Talburtt was with the U.S. Treasury Department for 20 years. Surviving are two sons, George W. of Birmingham, and Orville R. of New Haven, Conn. and one daughter, Mrs. Doris M. .Bagwell of Washington, D.C. Thirty-seven youngsters won prices at the Ice Carnival spon- sored by the Parks & Recreation Department at Northside Park this weekend. Competitions ‘for boys and girls were held in various age brackets, featuring figure ska and racing. Taking first place for figure skating im competitions for 14- year-olds or older were Joy Ca- pogna, 359 Auburn Ave.; Sandra Stockton, 76 8. Avery St.; and William Deschaine, 631 Third St. Second prizes went to Jackie Bowman, 659 Lookout Dr.; Jane Rindfusz, 179 Nelson St.; and James Bennett, 3069 Eastwood Rd. Winning third prizes were Jer- ry Bowman, '659 Lookout Dr., and Gloria Lacey, 141 Auburn Ave. In the 20-lap derby for boys age 15 or older, Thomas Crandall, 61 -|Glenwood Ave., took first place. Second was Larry Chapman, 3120 Detroit St., and third, was Charles Bedford, 40 Sheridan St- Others who won first prizes are 37 Win Prizes Here in Ice Competition Aleda Reid, 123 Mohawk §&t.; Pamela Davison, 159 8. Avery St.; Marilyn Seibert, 139 Riviera St.; James Kimmel, 647 N. Perry St.; Michael Shelley, 959 Spence St.; Bruce Cowley, 802 Blaine Ave.; Roger Cook, 927 N. Perry St.; Micki King, 173 Perkins St.; Laura Doyon, 57 Park Pl.; and Peggy Johnson, 404 Edison ave. Second prizes also went to Pam- ela Pokorny, 1393 Latham St., Bir- mingham; Karen McAleer, 351 Au- burn Ave.; Vikki Davison, 150 S. Avery St.; James Hudson, 88 Oli- ver St.; Jeff Ledford, 662 Linda Vista Dr.; Ricky Lavoie, 151 Cad- illac Ave.; Judy Reid, 631 E. Co- lumbia Ave.; Patricia Shelley, 959 Spence St. and Lorraine King, 173 Perkins St. * x * Third prizes went to JoAnn Field, 147 S. Avery St.; Barbara Field, 147 S. Avery St.; Robert Dugan, 363 Nelson St.; David Mar- shall, 651 First Ave.; Larry Cush- ist, 466 E. Beverly Ave.; Donna Davis, 560 Lowell St. and James Atkinson, 32 S. Roselawn Dr. . yr ? Won’t Need Cues Any Longer Billiards” for a half-century less play—died Sunday at 71. “I don’t thing I’m going cushion master told hospital before his death. His brother, Albert, Hoppe was hospitalized under treatment for cancer, had suffered illnesses before back to win titles. * x William Frederick Hoppe as & streetcar terminal. MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—Willie Hoppe—“Mr. cues any longer,” the balkline and three-~ asked that his leather-cased cues be given to a longtime chum, Sid Mayer of Skokie, Ill, one of his last callers. , said. The onetime boy wizard of billiards His last, and 51st, was the three- cushion crown he won in 1952 at the age of 65. He retired that, year as the last of great champions of the “golden twenties.” pants when he made his first shots on a of near-by to need my visitors just Willie Hoppe, Mr. Billiards, Dies table he had to stand: on a box to reach. He started at age 7 to play exhibitions with his later brother, Frank Jr., then’ 9, after teaching by their father who kept a hbtel, barber shop and poolroom at Corn- wall-on-Hudson, N.Y. i Willie developed in smoky poolhalls said Hoppe four months exhibition. his brother and bouriced the calm, deliberate style of play that carried him to world titles. In 1911 he won the distinction of being the only known player to give a White House ek we Re Hoppe trained for matches as if for a prize fight. He gid roadwork, watched his diet and got plenty of sleep. He began defeating the staps of bil- liards at age 12, and at 14 bested Maurice Vigneaux of France in an 18.1 match that drew worldwide attention. Besides his brother Hoppe leaves was in.knee- three sisters, a son, Willie Jr. of Sonora, Calif, and a daughter, Alice. P ; =" ; “ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRU ARY 2, 1039 Sr rer yy Tyrer evurey. YY - vee Oe . 39 Oakland al da ita ree oe MIMEOGRAPHING ; SERVICE Bulletins, Letters, Etc.. FAST SERVICE! } Christian Literature Sales: rs Trrerrrrerrerrr TS PIPPPPPPPPP PADD D PSPS PLS FE 49581 | MRS. FRANK COLLINS Service for Pontiac’ 8 oldest’ wom- an, Mrs. Frank (Cillie): Collins, 108, who died Friday, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Church of God with burial in Oak ‘Hill Ceme- tery. Her body is, at: the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mrs. Collins, who came here from Franklin, Ky., granddaughter, Mrs. Rose Smith, PPP PPPP PPP OPPO 405 Branch St. She was a mem- still apply for your family, on you. (Advertisement) People 60 to 80 if You Will Simply Send Us Your Name & Address ... We wil] explain how you can a@ $1,000 life insur- ance policy to help take care of final expenses without burdening You can handle the aie trans- action by mail with OLD AMERI- CAN of KANSAS CITY,. No obli- gation of any kind. No one will call Tear out this ad and mail it to- | day with your name, address and year of birth to Old American Insurance Co., 3 West 9th, Dept. LA221A, Kansas City, Missouri. ber of the Miller Burial Church Society. PETER A. COYLE Peter A, Coyle of 414g Putnam Ave., was dead on arrival at Pon- tiac General Hospital Saturday fol- lowing a heart attack, He was employed as a checker by the Grand Trunk Western Rail- road and is survived by a sister in New York. The body is at the Huntoon Fu- neral Home, CARL GARCHOW Carl Garchow, 62, of 795 Corwin Ct., died Sautrday at Pontiac Gen- etal Hospital. A member of First Christian Church, Mr. Garchow was em- ployed at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Evelyn, and children, Fredrick W., Mrs. Barbara Gravilla, and Mrs. Jose- urine; OYSTEX usua: lief by combatine frit Feliet Safe ad old. Get OYSTEX it REA SE Does BLAD IRRITATIO MAKE YOU NERVOUS? laboratory form LADDER dy. opin in acid pain hine Mattingly, all of Pontiac; Mrs. Lois Smith of Drayton Plains; Mrs. Roberta Jordan of Royal Oak; Sister Mary Francis of Warren; and .Mrs. Judith Sasser and David and Gerald Ohngren, all of Pontiac. MRS. JESSIE W. HILLIKER “Mrs. Jessie W. Hilliker, 64, of Gladwin, formerly of Pontiac, died Make No Mistake! resided with her ‘Deaths in. Pontiac and. Nearby Areas as viene after. an Biness of four weeks. Surviving are twd daughters, iMrs; Bessie E. Se ot Troy; Mrs.. Ellen E, Massey of Clio; and a son, Floyd J. Miller-Jr, of Caro. She also leaves a sister, Mrs. Sel- ma J. Hudson, and a brother,’ Hy- att M. Kersten, both of Pontiac. The body will be atthe Melvin A, Schutt Funeral Home until noon Wednesday when it will be taken to White Chapel Memorial Ceme- tery for service at 2 p. m. and burial. WILLIAM JONES ’William Jones, 75, of 362 N. Cass Ave., died Sunday at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital following an illness of several months. A retired Pontiac Motor Division employe, Mr, Jones was born in South Wales. He is survived by three daugh- ters, Mrs. William Symonds of London, England; Mrs. Walter Nor- ris of Rochester; and Mrs. Frank A, Reed of Pontiac; and a son, John of Pontiac. He also leaves nine grandchildren, a brother and six sisters, Service will be held at ‘1 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Otttawa Park Cemetery, ; MRS. CLARENCE SHELTON The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home for Mrs. Clarence {Roxie Ann) Shelton, 54, of 117 Putnam Ave., who died Friday at St. Jo- seph Mercy Hospital. Service will be held at 10 a.m. stent tbariayy formant, hex a eden, cad five setae | Tuesday at St Michael Church fre eee about | Service will be held at 1:30 p. m. with burial in Mt, Hope Catholic Peet viene aatin bes'Wet: |Tuesday at the Huntoon Funeral] Cemetery. biesas Urine dae th coenkon Kidnesae |Home ‘with burial in Perry Mt./yRs, FAYETTE M. THOMPSON fn secon Frnteuone ne Monten a Park Cemetery. Service for Mrs. Fayette M. ervousness. In such cases New I; (Ada F,) Thompson, 84, of 30 Sher- idan Ave., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Fu- neral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Thompson died Friday at her winter home in Hialeah, Fla. after a brief illness. EARL ELLENWOOD ~“ KEEGO HARBOR — Service for | Earl Ellenwood, 71, of 3087 Grove St. will be held-at 2 p.m. Wednes- ‘day at C.- J. Godhardt Funeral |Home with burial] in Walled Lake Cemetery. Mr. Ellenwood died Sunday at KUHN Richard D. IS the Kuhn MAN for SUPERVISOR REPUBLICAN |Pontiac General Hospital after a long illness. He retired six years ago from Oakland County Road Commission. Surviving is a son Ora R. of! Keego Harbor and two grandchil- dren. NORMAN CHURCH — CLARKSTON ~- Norman Church, 39 of 6564 Northview Dr., died sud- denly at his home Sunday, he was employed at GMC Truck and Coach Div, Surviving” are his wife, Ora, and children, Michael and Jane Ann, at home; his father Louis Church of Union Lake; his mother, Mrs. Lau- ra Church of Pontiac; a brother, Roy of Pontiac and a sister, Mrs. helen Boyer, also of Pontiac. His body is at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home. RALPH A, CLAYCOMB OXFORD — Service for Ralph A. Claycomb, 50, of 845 S. Lapeer Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrowat Bossardet - Reid Funeral Home here. Burial will follow at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Oakland. He died Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, vollowing a short illness, My. Claycomb, who came here from his birthplace, Osterberg, Pa. was a mechanic. with the White Owl Express Co. trucking firm. He was a member of the Coon Hunt- ing Club of Oakwood. He leaves his wife, Estelle; four daughters, Mrs. Rosa Mae Dyer and Mrs. Buelah Tyler, both of Oxford, and Janet and C&rrie at home; three sons, Thomas, Elmer and Robert, all at home; four sis- ters in Pennsylvania, and eight grandchildren. MRS. MARVIN LUCAS ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Marvin (Dorothy V.) Lucas, 49, of 564 Charlesina St., will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday from the Pixley Funeral Home here with burial at Sunset Hill Cemetery, Flint. She died Saturday evening at Avon Center Hospital after several months’ illness. Mrs. Lucas was a teacher in the Rochester Community Schools for the past 10 years. Surviving besides her husband are her father, Frank E. Bowron of Desert Hot Springs, Calif; one sister, Mrs. Leona Marr of Long- horn, Pa., and one brother, Harold Bowron of Flint. . ALEXANDER P. MacLEOD ROCHESTER — Service for Alexander’ P, MacLeod, 75, of 643 John R, Rd., will be held at 10 a.m, Wednesday at St. Andrew | Sc t william R. Potere Funeral ome, : Mr. MacLeod died unexpectedly at his home Sunday morning. He was @ retired electrician and a member of St. Andrew Catholic Church. ‘Surviving are his wife, Edna; one son, Kenneth of Warren; two daughters, Jeanne at home and Mrs, ‘Mary Freeborn of, Rochester; and 11 grandchildren. PURMEDUS REYNOLDS ROCHESTER — Service for Pur- medus Reynolds, 77, of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Pixley Funeral Home here with burial in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. Sunday morning following a brief illness. Surviving are two sons, Manor of Wisconsin and Fletcher of Cali- fornia; two daughters, Mrs. Robert L. Blome of Rochester and Mrs. Henry Stickney of Springfield, Ohio; nine grandchildren and two sisters in Washington, D. C. GILBERT RAMSEY MARLETTE—Service for Gilbert (Gib) Ramsey, 83, lifelong resident of this community, was held at 2 p.m. today in First Presbyterian = = |Church here under the direction of Marsh Funeral Home. Burial was in the Marlette Cemetery. He died Saturday morning in Marlette Community Hospital after a long illness. Surviving are two sons, Riley and Truman, both of Mariette; one daughter, Mrs. Edward T. Bur- roughs of Birmingham; six grand- children and one great-grandchild. One sister, Mrs. Redelia- Harris of Marlette and a brother, Bert Ram- sey of Flynn Township, also sur- vive. Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ABERDEEN, Wash, (AP)—Dr. O. R. Austin, 81, a Medal of Hon- or winner and one of the founders of the American Legion, died Sat- urday. He was born in Danville, Mich. and had been a physician in Aberdeen for 53 years. * * . TOKYO, (AP) — Etkichi Araki, 67, Japan’s first postwar ambas- sador to the United States, died Sunday of a cerebral hemorrhage. He was ene of Japan's leading fi- nancial experts. * * * LUGANO, Switzerland Mrs. Therese Schnabel, 83, widow of pianist and composer Arthur Schnabel and herself a_ well Catholic Church here with burial ‘will be recited at 8 p.m. Tuesday Wars. He died; (AP) — Jan. 16. He was released from al hospital Friday, Doctors said Korpi| suffered only a slight discoloration of the hands. . Human Icicle i Recovering Fast After Ordeal. ‘ About 35 per cent -of on 135 Branch SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (®—|people are. under, age 15. Hospital authorities said today that|--— Paul Sawyer, 30, found severely) frozen in a snowdrift Friday, is making an “amazing recovery" and is apparently out of danger. ~ He and Frank Alstrom, 54, who died apparently from over-expo- sure, were discovered in the snow on a bush trail in nearby Korah Township. Result, of an autopsy on Alstrom'y body ure expected tomorrow. ’ The hospital said it is too early to tell whether frostbite will cause permanent injury to Sawyer’s hands or legs, He was unable to move and talked incoherently when found after being in the snow for several hours. He was admitted in critical condition suffering from s&yere exposure, frozen feet, knees and right hand. Three bottles of wine and some equipment were found beside the two men, employed by a logger. Sawyer was the second human icicle found in the Soo area in the last two weeks. William Korpi was found in a snow bank on pated Island oat ner ey ey ti le . ee: a oe watch ee ee for our Gms | Wan ax are ae oe opening! I | Gy ae 2 =e mie oe a wracumet 7 a a a | a In Our Beautiful New Store et. = ee 22> ae a a a ae tT a | 0 re ee es { - ‘ 5 ; i { | | { | ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! a ea tear rn Le SN known singer, died Friday. Mrs. hnabel and her husband were among Europe's outstanding mu- in Mount Avon Cemetery. Rosary|sicians between the two World ci ace | = | ams : ies ) wee . (} a “ * os ~ = ASK HAMPTON’S TRADE-IN POST FOR TRADER BILL, CON OR SKIP HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron St. Fe 4-2525 JUST ARRIVED! 959 combination refrigerator-freezer New G-E swing-out shelves bring: : right out front! No more fumbling for foods you can’t messy spilling of hidden foods! These remarkable new G-E shelves practically hand you the food you want when you want it. all the food reach! No more Open Nightly ‘til 9 P.M. PO fo Aarts ed steer Ment Shilves slide up or down at the touch of a button to give you the exact shelf- spacing you need when you need it.. And shelves life — out for easy cleaning. Sturdy steel — <= fey she And- that's far more than you'll‘ever have to put on them. They'll take a whole shelf full of "milk bottles without a strain! He - sekneee capacity, with its oon domain eee packages of fromenToods Two ice-ejector trays with oy storage container on freezer door. Just slide ONLY $999 A WEEK ate tested to hold tray into slotted container. ( ) a and pull handle to release ice cubes. Family-size tor section 9.4 cu. ft. capacity, BOLD PRINTS ! with aaeyugerersd : FP) automatic defrosting. : STRIPES! Two aluminur P ee “| let you store “tall-as-you- like” bottles right in the SOLIDS! Pit e you plenty of storage ibility. See new bold prints, / gingham checks, neat US Twin Ve ane, woven. corded, dobby awers. Handy Egg Rac patterned and = mylar god Buta Keer vt chambray stripes. Meat Pan. Straight-Line Find full hemmed, 4 Design (no coils on the back). || PENNEY’S SPRING BRENTWOOD JAMBOREE! YOU HAVEN’ SEEN ANYTHING LIKE BRENTWOODS AT ‘ and 5 yard ‘sweeps! New styles! Details! We have junior, miss- es’, women’s and half “sizes. Meet your favor- ites and ne w cottons at Penney’s coast to coast Brentwood Jamboree! Sizes 9 to 15... 11 to 20 —1414 to 2414. Choose several... Use layaway! |. SHOP PENNEY’S .. .. ' you'll live better, you'll save! Qpek Monday: ‘and Open Every Week Day % 30 A. M. to 200 e M. Monday Through Seturday 10:00 A. M. to 9:00 P.M. ) aati! ee ee if You Will Simply Send , Us Your Name & Address ... We will explain how you can still apply for a $1,000 life insur- -your family. You'¢an handle the entire trans- action by mail with OLD AMERI- CAN of KANSAS CITY, No obli- gation of any kind, No one will call on you. — ‘Tear out this ad and mail it to- day with your name, address and year of birth to Old American Insurance Co., 3 West 9th, Dept. LAQ21A, Kansas City, Missouri. expenses without burdening - Does BLADDER TR RITATION Agathe worrying about | ance policy to help take-caré Of no york. tery, Her body is at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mrs. Collins, who came here from Franklin, Ky., resided with her granddaughter, Mrs. Rose Smith, 405 Branch St. She was a mem- ber of the Miller Burial Church Society. PETER A. COYLE Peter A, Coyle of 4142 Putnam ve,, was dead on arrival at Pon- tiac General Hospital Saturday fol- lowing a heart attack. He was employed as a checker by the Grand Trunk Western Rail- road and is survived by a sister in The body is at the Huntoon Fu- neral Home, CARL GARCHOW i Carl Garchow, 62, of 795.Corwin, Ct., died Sautrday at Pontiac Gen- ebal ‘Hospital. A member of First Christian Church, Mr. Garchow was em- ployed at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Evelyn, and children, Fredrick W., Mrs. Barbara Gravilla, and Mrs. Jose- phine Mattingly, all of Pontiac; Mrs. Lois Smith of Drayton Plains; Mrs. Roberta Jordan of Royal Oak; Sister Mary Francis of Warren; and .Mrs. Judith Sasser and David and Gerald Ohngren, all of Pontiac. He also leaves 12 grandchildren, a brother, and five sisters. | Service will be held at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery, MRS. JESSIE W. HILLIKER Mrs. Jessie W. Hilliker, 64, of + = Richard D. Kuhn “Wake No Mistake! KUHN ISthe MAN for SUPERVISOR t | REPUBLICAN ters, Tuesday at St. ‘ : this morning after an iliness of Service for Pontiac’s oldest wom-|four weeks. an, Mrs. Frank (Cillie) Collins, 108, who died Friday, will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the Church of God with burial in Oak Hill Ceme- Surviving are yurial. WILLIAM JONES William Jones, 75, of 362 N. Cass Ave., died Sunday at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital following an illness of several months, A retired Pontiac Motor Division employe, Mr, Jones was born in South Wales. He is survived by three daugh- Mrs. William Symonds of London, England; Mrs. Walter Nor- ‘ris of Rochester; and Mrs. Frank A. Reed of Pontiac; and a son, John of Pontiac. nine grandchildren, a brother and six sisters, Service will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Otttawa Park \Cemetery, MRS, CLARENCE SHELTON The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home for Mrs. Clarence (Roxie Ann) Shelton, 54, of 117 Putnam Ave., who died Friday at St. Jo- seph Mercy Hospital. Service will be held at 10 a.m. Michael Church with burial in Mt, Hope Catholic Cemetery. MRS, FAYETTE M. THOMPSO Fayette M. (Ada F.) Thompson, 84, of 30 Sher- idan Ave., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Fu- neral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Friday at her winter home in Hialeah, Fla. after a brief illness. Service for Mrs. EARL ELLENWOOD ~ KEEGO HARBOR — Service for Earl Ellenwood, 71, of 3087 Grove St. will be held at 2 p.m. Wednes- day at: C. J. Godhardt Funeral | Home with burial in Walled Lake Cemetery. Mr. Ellenwood died Sunday at ‘Pontiac General Hospital after a long illness. He retired six years ago from Oakland County Road Commission. Surviving is a son Ora R. of |will be recited at 8 p.m, Tuesday two daughters, Mrs, Bessie E. Seybert of- Troy; Mrs. Ellen E. Massey of Clio; and a son, Floyd J. Miller Jr. of Caro. She also leaves a sister, Mrs. Sel- ma J. Hudson, and a brother, Hy- att M. Kersten, both of Pontiac. The body will be at the Melvin A, Schutt Funeral Home until noon -hiidren, Michael and Jane Ann, at Wednesday when it will be taken home; his father Louis Church of to White Chapel Memorial Ceme-| Union Lake; his mother, Mrs. Lau- tery for service at 2 p. m. and He also leaves Thompson died ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2. 1950 ‘in Poi and Ney. rs Keego Harbor and two grandchil- dren. ; NORMAN CHURCH | CLARKSTON — Norman Church, 39 of 6564 Northview Dr., died sud- denly at his home Sunday. he was employed at GMC Truck and Coach Div, Surviving are his wife, Ora, and ra Church of. Pontiac; a brother, Roy of Pontiac and a sister, Mrs. helen Boyer, also of Pontiac. His body ig at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home. RALPH A, CLAYCOMB OXFORD — Service for Ralph A. Claycomb, 50, of 845 S, Lapeer Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrowat Bossardet - Reid Funeral Home here, Burial will follow at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Oakland. He died Saturday at St, Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, vollowing a short illness, Mr. Claycomb, who came here from his birthplace, Osterberg, Pa. was a mechanic with the . White Ow! Express €o: trucking firm. He was a member of the Coon Hunt- ing Club of Oakwood. : He leaves his wife, Estelle; four daughters, Mrs, Rosa Mae Dyer and Mrs. Buelah Tyler, both of Oxtord, and Janet and CA&rrie at home; three sons, Thomas, Elmer and Robert, all at home; four sis- ters in Pennsylvania, and eight grandchildren. : MRS. MARVIN LUCAS ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Marvin (Dorothy V.) Lucas, 49, of 564 Charlesina St., will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday from the Pixley Sunset Hill Cemetery, Flint. died Saturday evening at Center Hospital months’ illness. Mrs. Lucas was a teacher in the Rochester Community Schools for the past 10 years. Surviving besides her husband are her father, Frank E. Bowron of Desert Hot Springs, Calif; one sister, Mrs. Leona Marr of Long- horn, Pa., and one brother, Harold Bowron of Flint. ALEXANDER P. MacLEOD ROCHESTER — Service for Alexander P, MacLeod, 75, of 643 John R. Rd., will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Andrew C&tholic Church here with burial in Mount Avon Cemetery. Rosary She Avon after several Funeral Home here with burial at Church. nal Surviving are , Edna; | one son, Kenneth of Warren; two| Hospital daughters, Jeanne at home and ‘Mrs, ‘Mary Freeborn of, Rochester; and 11 grandchildren. PURMEDUS REYNOLDS ROCHESTER — Service for Pur- medus Reynolds, 77, of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Pixley Funeral Home here with burial in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. He died Sunday morning following a brief illness. Surviving are two sons, Manor of Wisconsin and Fletcher of Cali- fornia; two daughters, Mrs, Robert L. Blome of Rochester and Mrs. Henry Stickney of Springfield, Ohio; nine grandchildren and two sisters in Washington, D. C. GILBERT RAMSEY MARLETTE—Service for Gilbert (Gib) Ramsey, 83, lifelong resident of this community, was held at 2 p.m. today in First Presbyterian Church here under the direction of Marsh Funeral Home. Burial was in the Marlette Cemetery. He died Saturday ‘morning in Marlette Community Hospital after a long Human Icicle II Recovering Fast After Ordeal people are. under-age 5. NEWSPAPERS 75¢ 100# ~ CORRUGATED 80c 100 Pontiac Waste Material Co. 135 Branch * FE 2-0209 and is apparently out. of danger. He and Frank Alstrom, 54, who died apparently from over-expo- sure, were discevered in the snow on a bush trail in nearby Korah Township, Result, of an autopsy on Alstroin’s body are The hospital said it is too early to tel] whether frostbite will cause permanent injury to Sawyer's hands or legs, He was unable to move and talked incoherently when found after being in the snow for several hours. ‘He was admitted in critical condition suffering from severe exposure, frozen feet, knees and right hand, Three botties of wine and some equipment were found beside the two men, employed by a logger. Sawyer was the second human icicle found in the Soo area in the last two weeks. . William Korpi was found in a ee eee = Sena, «arene a snow bank on Drummond Island illness. Surviving are two sons, Riley and Truman, both of Marlette; one daughter, Mrs. Edward T. Bur- roughs of Birmingham;—six grand- children and one great-grandchild. One sister, Mrs. Redelia Harris of Marlette and a brother, Bert Ram- sey of Flynn Township, also sur- vive. Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | ABERDEEN, Wash. (AP)—Dr. QO. R. Austin, 81, a Medal of Hon- or winner and one of the founders of the American Legion, died Sat- urday. He wag born in Danville, Mich. and had been a physician in Aberdeen for 53 years. * * * TOKYO, (AP) — Ejkichi Araki, 67, Japan's first postwar ambas- sador to the United States, died Sunday of a cerebral hemorrhage. He was one of Japan's leading fi- nancial estes ‘ * LUGANO, Switzerland (AP) — Mrs. Therese Schnabel, 83, widow of pianist and composer Arthur Schnabel and herself a_ well known singer, died Friday. Mrs. Schnabel and her husband were among Europe’s outstanding mu- sicians between the two World ry ak) a oo | ee ee ee oF : Se hes le et | 2 ee | | er ee RS ST a ee Oe ee ee ee opening! In Our Beautiful New Store iP ALWAYS FIRST | Wee eed r | . 4 | HAMPTON’S TRADE-IN POST - ASK FOR TRADER BILL, CON OR SKIP HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron St. Fe 4-2525 JUST ARRIVED ] 1959 combination refrigerator-freezer =) 7: New G-E swing-out shelves ts bring. all the food te ia right out front! | No more fumbling for foods you can't reach! No more messy spilling of hidden oa, foods! These remarkable new | G-E shelves practically hand you the food you want when you wont it. | .* O60 te Brectan “Bhan CR epecchnate pA Nenana Big zero-degree freezer @.1 cu. ft capacity, with its own door stores up to 89 packages of frozen foods! Twe ice-ejector trays with handy storage container on freezer door. Just slide tray into slotted container. and pull handle to release ice cu Big Family-size erator section 9.4 cu. ft. capacity, with completely automatic defrosting. Two aluminur ; door shelves removable and adjustable, let you store “tall-as-you- like” bottles right in the door .. . give you plenty of storage flexibility. ONLY $3 99 A WEEK | | i i 2 “PENNEY’S SPRING BRENTWOOD JAMBOREE! YOU HAVEN'T SEEN ANYTHING BRENTWOODS AT BOLD PRINTS! STRIPES! CHECKS! SOLIDS! See new bold prints, gingham checks, neat woven . corded, dobby patterned and mylar chambray stripes. Find full: hemmed, 4 and 5 yard sweeps! New styles! Details! We have junior, miss- es’, women’s and half sizes. Meet your favor- ites and new cottons at Penney’s coast to coast | | Brentwood Jamboree! | Sizes 9 to 15. ..11 to 20 SN —1414 to 241%. Choose | several... Use layaway! “SHOP PENNEY’S ... : you'll live better, 7 you'll save! ie | sada operant ]] PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE | PENNEY'S DOWNTOWN STORE : nny | pap eating ead aad * more than 150 pounds! And that's far Open Every Week Day Open Monday and Friday ) eye k aad I ever ha to ‘9:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. — All Oth ~~ Open Nightly specing you need when you seed it. And sale He ote ant wae Monday Through Saturday i30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. — er 3 : “sil 9 P. M. ves lift right out for easy ing. : milk bottles without « strain! | 10:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. Week Days #290 A. M, to 3:30 P. ~ , 5 4 >, oe ‘a THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRU ARY 2 1959 ws : Hal Bers Says: Men Use $8 Million More to > Please ‘Nosés NEW YORK (AP) — ol teen & columnist might. never know. if he didy’t open hif mail; © The Ametican male is getting more fragrant every ‘year. In 1957 he forked out 39 million dollars for after shave lotions, or about $ million more than U.S, women * "spent‘on perfume, x x * But he has plenty of historical precedent. Alexander the Great) - wore a perfumed battle tunic. Na- poleon used up to 54 bottles of cologne a month (he must have| mond nipped on the stuff), And Cardinal ) ") | ‘| R LIVING |! 2 if Oakland Fuel & Paint O Orchard Lake ee 5-6159 tf YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG AS THIS FELLOW Richelieu anticipated the atomi- zer; He used a perfume bellows to, U, s. trains are steadily whit- tling down their passenger serv- ite, But Japan is planning a 340 million dollar rail program fea- turing e ‘‘dream train” which will make the 450-mile run from Tokyo to Osaka at an average speed of 1530 m.p.h. ’ Today's bon mot: “Some people aren’t deaf—just hard of listen- ing,” says singer vey Des- * * * Medical expenses have added to the high cost of living, but Amer- icans still spend more for tobacco and alcoholic bevérageé than they do for all forms of medical care. They even pay more for chewing gum than they do for research into mental illness. Vaudeville may b& dead,~ but those who forecast the early de- mise of radio have been proved wrong. A survey by the Hotel Ed- ison here showed as many guests still listen to radio as watch tele- vision, New Yorkers must be the most time - conscious people in the world, They spend more than a million dollars a year dialing the Melephone company to get the cor- rect time. * * Do you object to your wife work- ing? On the Island of Aruba in the Caribbean a wife cannot take a job outside her home unless first gets her husband’s written permission. Everyone knows that Alaska is the largest state, but do you know which is our largest city—in terms sprawls over 454 square miles. Culture note: The United States now has more than 400,000 bars. (And how many churches?) . x * * Farmers now can produce four) OR OTHER SELECTIONS SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER Gosselin. Like the U.S, men jailed here, they are bitter over the eight days which have passed since they were arrested in a gambling raid. * * * “lm no criminal,” declared Mrs. Nathaniel, 35, a Santa Mon- ica, Calif., divorcee. “I was just out for a little fun, and now I'm) treated like an arch felon.” games,” said Chula Vista, Calif, “I and two guns, We thought it was a hold- up." * * * Americans arrested were confis- cated when Mexjcan federal police raided a gambling club at the sub- urban Rosarito Beach hotel, All 44, together with nine Mex- icans, were formally ‘charged by federal Judge Eduardo Langle Martinez Sunday with violating the laws of Mexico by gambling at cards or dice, or just by watch- ing such gambling. The judge may keep the cases year. * * * paid it and gone free, U.S. Consul General duced for those remaining behind bars, NGS TIJUANA, Mexico (AP)—Twen-|§ borrowed blankets today as the), cold light of another dawn: crept Two of them are women—Mrs. |. “T wasn't even watching the . Miss Gosselin, of|) meh friends had just had a drink| ©. at the bar when the officers en-|) . ered with shotguns and machine- 3 of all under trial—there are no|| juries in Mexico—for up to one) @ Bail for most of the prisoners has been set at $1,600. Half have|# Robert) js. Hale is seeking to have bail re-| = Be. a sd) Le sd ik. ee eee Cut Agai Ladies’ Winter Coats ENTIRE STOCK - Regular $5995 The money and cars of the 42))" Girls’ ‘Winter Coats = Warm and wooly... just perfect for several months | of cold weather yet this winter! Regular $2995 a Jackets: Many styles to choose from in wools and water- repellent styles. Regular to $14.98 > ee : = 3 ree . es s j ert ; + * . 2 ‘ ee j ‘ A a Al... _‘THR PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1950 : CES Re ee ay 4 e be ly r h aerardinr ae ves g Life Easy shag” fh nthe me = yM it gi iis akin a * i 2 E fk RUTH MILLETT enough, to do to keep them busy| oa bls hands and more ase it, and out of trouble. energy than he knows what to “| “We didn’t have anything else do. with, wo | ee Once parents believed strongly : to do” said three young boys wholinar “Satan finds work for idle} ‘Take the same kid and tell him broke ‘into a school house, smashed/ hands to do.” But that homely|he has to earn his own spending]. windows, slashed wall maps and/moral has gone by the board as) money, that he can have his own) globés, splattered walls and floors) °tildren's happiness rather thanjcar when he can pay for it him- with jak, tore up furniture, end] ‘heir character has come to be the|self, and give him some of the left the school building a total] ™4in ‘concern of parents jobs tha have to be done: around} : RS ea ty a bel tS yt Si a te ae ee kids t don't t me or. ee pee er Abe ot oday for idle hands. And parents ough wey a ‘ i for fun, who knows ‘the value 2 money well enough not to think first time in that property destruction is a big * joke. * American * ok dinnerwar What we parents must face is J that you don't build character in | a child just by making life easy for him and removing all obstacles in his path. All that does is make an unhappy, restless child who} * thinks he has to have his fun and excitement, no matter who pays for it, - Cottage cheese is sometimes + . Pontiac Press Phote . {called Pot Cheese, Dutch~Cheese eager poy ne — Pontiac Federation of Women’s Mrs. Nellie Monroe, -president of Pon- = See his teeth about 3.98 times @ week.’ Christian Temperance Union held a tiac Federation of WCTU, Mrs. A. D. luncheon for local ministers and their Stimer, the Rev. Galen E. Hershey, wives Friday at Oakland Atenue assistant pastor at First Presbyterian United Presbyterian Chugch. Looking Church, and Mrs. L. G. Rowley, state over program notes are, left to right, president: of WCTU. The: “Different” Look for you... PERMANENTS $5 — $6 — $7.50 Complete : Styled Hair Cutting $I. 50 National Officer Talks on ‘Trends’ Ministers Feted at WCTU Luntheon , a TOM... sees e seers Ministers and their wives ,; Church. was increasing. _ were honored at a courtesy Mrs.. L. G. Rowley, national She also said that interested ANNALIESE BEAUTY SHOP |) r,s ' the Par | vice president and state pres | euators and parents ae . tiac Federation of Women’s dent of WCTU, was guest sponsoring legislation to keep (Over Tasty Bakery) — — Tympereece ue speaker. In her talk on alcoho! education . bis e - ‘riday afternoon at Oa ‘Trends’ Mrs. Rowley said schools: on @ par wit r Kyle Wilson, music director ; . and director of youth activ- - anc ities for First Baptist Church, , was soloist, accompanied on ‘the piano by Mrs, William Bradley. The Rev. Robert a mother of four speaks... | Winne led group singing. . ‘ program were the Rev. Gelen ~_ ‘ _| E. Hershey, president of the Ministerig] Association; Mrs. Wy Nellie Monroe, president of the Pontiac Federation of WCTU; Mrs. A. E. Stimer, toastmas- - aS 0 f eS f Dy ter; The Rev. Theodore Alle- . bach, pastor of Oakland Ave- nue United Presbyterian roast, bake, broil—even fry—in this Church; the Rev.*H. H. Sav- age, pastor of First Baptist ‘ nie Chin rocwcis || $4v08 hours of hard work{". | Seee= General chairman of the af- , ir wi . Joh in: REPLACED FREE IF IT BREAKS* | eee = ST In charge of dining room and dinner arrangements were Mrs. Clyde Anderson and Mrs. Howard Brown. PTA Will View Film at Franklin School A film entitled “The American Negro” will be shown at a meet- ing of the Benjamin Franklin PTA, to be held at 7 p.m. Feb. 12 at the school. Mrs. Matthew A. Hill, school pro- gram chairman; is in charge of the meeting. School Principal Mr s. Vida Walker and PTA President Mrs, Sam Whiters also will assist. Now you can cook and serve meals in one easy opera- tion—with this fabulous new china—that’s guaranteed tlameproof! So durable it’s “replaced free if it breaks.”’ Yet INFORMAL by IROQUOIS is true, translucent, English-bodied china! Four beautiful patterns from which to choose—all with matching cookware: china fry pan, dutch oven, covered _ casserole, samovar, lazy susan—and many others. * In accordance with warranty 16-PIECE STARTER SET— Includes 4 each of dinner plates, breakfast or salad $] 995 : plates, cups and saucers ........0005-- AACA AG : 5-PIECE PLACE SETTING—Includes dinner plate, 6 9 breakfast or salad plate, cup, saucer, and cereal ...... $ . 5 45-PIECE SERVICE FOR EIGHT ee ee ee $69.95 ~ Patterns shown at left: Harvest Time @ Rosemary @ Lazy Daisy TO PLEASE A MAN, CALL CAREFUL DAN FOR FLAWLESS DRY CLEANING le: 4 : * Mrs. Danis Utt _ 357 Buckingham Flint, Michigan Busy mothers like Mrs. Utt shouldn’t be without the convenience of an Auto- “Our Gas Dryer is an. essential matic Gas Dryer. At the simple turn of part of this home. The clothes that a dial you eliminate hauling, hanging four children can dirty in a week’s and hoping that the weather stays nice. With the turn of a dial you get per- of extra work to dry all that wash soft and fluffy that ironing time can 7 the old-fashioned way. It’s done actually be cut in half. Yes, it’s the FEBRUARY SALE FEATURE! quick and easy with our Gas Dryer.”’ . fast, safe, modern way to dry clothes. Save 10% on this custom-built $395 7 to Not only his valuable clothes but the whole family’s deserve Pontiac Laundry's gentle care and expert workmanship. And it costs no more to have finer dry cleaning. Cali Careful Dan at ~- DOWN- FILLED SOFA __ A GAS CLOTHES DRYER IS THE | Ae tecaved ” Unsurpassed comfort is yours shies sol sink into the soft SOLUTION TO WASHDAY DRUDGERY Joy Mothproofing FREE Cover Choice 4 — fcuri venir Senate of = all seat sofa! rye it k | i hb W | } wilhbe. si ition.t ivi fry | Ee ne eorpralegeteid alles eT ca cect Ask Your Nelghooy Who Uses One _ EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS - JRING OUR FEBRUARY: SALE—SHOP EARLY! miture at Least 10% OFF—Including Special Orders! \ DRY CLEANERS 7-Hour Service at Our © e __ Deferred sible A 3 Locations * Available 540 S. Telegraph Road 7 ] 2682 West 12 Mile — Berkley > . 7.933 S. Hunter — Birmingham ‘ ‘ Li 2 |: 1 < ' : . Some MAK PONTIAC PRESS © MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1959 ack of PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, - At Avondale High School ~~ .. Area Teachers to Meet AVON TOWNSHIP — Avondale Senior High School will be the scene rrow of an all-day meet- ing of the Northwest Area Visiting -Teachers Study Group, Mrs. Bon- nie J, Norman, visiting teacher of the Avondale schools, said today. * * * Among the schools to be repre- sented are Port Huron, Bay City, Mt, Clemens, Lexington, St. Clair Shores, Corunna, Detroit, Flint, Yale, East Detroit, Saginaw, Owos- Farmers Won t Pay for Parking MSU to Cover Meters During 44th Annual Agriculture Conclave so, Farmington, Sandusky and Mid. Others are Pontiac, Waterford, Warren, Roseville, Walled Lake, Bloomfield Hillis, Memphis, Roch- ester, Troy, Milford, . Clarkston, St. Clair and Avondale. Professional problems will be discussed by the group in the morning. Guest speaker of the aft- erngon session will be the Hon. Judge Arthur E. Moore, Probate Court of Oakland County, and a panel of his Juvenile Court Work- rs. + 2 x * * The Avondale American Field Service Committee for the ex- change of foreign students, com- posed of mothers in the district, will prepare a 12 o'clock luncheon for the Visiting Teacher group and guests. Paper Reports EAST LANSING w—The park|Hank Greenberg ing meters will be covered all this week at Michigan State Uni- versity, The reason? The farmers are coming to town, returning to the campus ef the former Michigan agricultural college for the 44th time. * * * ~ And they have resented the idea of paying a nickle or a dime to park on a campus they consider their own. Some 50,009 farmers, driving everything from pickup trucks to Cadillacs, will attend the week-long sessions. Theme of the gathering this year is health, plants, animals and man. The session will cover all aspects of farm life, including agricultural animal husbandry, botany plant pathology economics, engineering, and ‘social sciences. © * * More than 60 farm groups will Gets Divorce CLEVELAND (AP)—The Cleve- land Plain Dealer reported today that Hank Greenberg and his wife, Caral, were divorced recently. The former Cleveland Indians general manager, a member of baseball's Hall of Fame, said in New York: “I don’t know where you received your information. Don't say I denied the story. Just forget about the whole thing.” * * * Mrs. Greenberg, the - former Caral Gimbel and heiress to @ New York department store for- rm * DISPLAY POLICE BADGES — Officers of the Oxford Junior Polige League proudly show the badges they received in ceremonies Saturday in the Oxford Municipal Building. They are, from left, Lt. Greg Roberts, 11; League sponsor, Pa- 20 Oxford Boys Finish Training OXFORD—Saturday marked a high point in the careers of 20 members of the Oxford Junior Po- lice League. After eight months of preparation and training the boys received their official badges in) ceremonies staged in the Municipal] tune, could not be reached for comment. She also was reported in New York. A Cleveland attorney who for- merly represented Mrs. Green- berg, Victor De Marco, was quot- ed by the Plain Dealer that the Greenbergs were divorced in Ala- bama. hold annual meetings. These range xk *« * from the dairymen, first to arrive today, through nut growers to bee keepers on Friday. farm machinery will be top at- tractions. \ Youths from the 4-H clubs will display their talents. Special events including a dress revue, will be staged for the farmers’ wives. The basic farm exhibits, espe- cially the animals, always have been the top attraction. * * * The livestock shows, the farmers cannily watching prices paid for champion beef animals, sheep and swine, attract the largest crowds. The ‘horse-pulling contest always provides some dramatics. MSU sponsors are carefully watching the weather. Bad weather cuts into attendance but the farm- ers always show up in force for the non-commercial event they con- sider their own. Patterson to Direct UAW Region 1-C FLINT w—The new director of United Auto Workers Region 1-C fs Elmer §._ Patterson. Patterson, administrative assist- ant to UAW Vice President Leon- ard Woodcock, was elected to the 512 OE ore Le ree He defeated M. Otis Bishop, pres- ident of UAW Local 599, by a vote of 466-to-198. Patterson will fill out the un- expired term of Robert A. Carter which ends in October. Carter re- signed Dec, 9 to-become Flint city manager. , x * * _ Region 1-C has 20 locals of some 85,000 UAW members at Flint, Lansing, Owosso, Fenton and Hol- ly. Feb. 18, 1946 and have three chil- dren, Glenn, 11, Stephen, 9, and burban Shaker Heights. gross neglect and extreme cruelty. onciliation. Parking Meter Business Booms in Miami Beach MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — The parking meter business is booming in this resort city. Sherwynn Fincher reports park- ing meters took in $722,000 last The Greenbergs were married) Val, 5. They have a home in su- In 1955 Mrs. Greenberg filed a . ; suit against her husband charging Protection Bill The suit was dropped after a rec- year. meters have been added. JOANNE ALETA MARSCHNER The betrothal of their daughter Joanne Aleta to Kenneth H. Johnson of Commerce is an- nounced by Mr. and Mrs, Henry- E. Marschner of Grosse Ile. The fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Johnson of 801 Com- merce Rd. No wedding date has been set yet. He expects even more money to come in this year, because 700 Building here. * * * Presenting the badges were iYouth Officer Patrolman Chauncey Brooks, who started the organiza- tion last May, and his assistant, Reserve Officer Don Tyler. Oxford village officials, believ- ing children of the community to Keating Readies be their “most prized assets” sent Brooks to Michigan State Universitiy to take a police juve- nile training course in February 1958, The two-weex extension course impressed Brooks with the job he might do with the youth of his own community, he said, 100 LIKE IDEA Upon his return he mentioned his plan to form a Junior Police League to a number of boys, and about 100 were so enthusiastic that they wanted to sign up for the pro- gram immediately. start with just 20 boys,” Brooks said, News Source WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen. Ken- neth B. Keating (R-NY) announced Sunday he wil] introduce a bill to permit newsmen to keep their news sources confidential except where national security is involved. f) *« * * He said he would push for early hearings by the Senate Judiciary Committee on the ‘‘admittedly con- troversial subject.” * * In a biweekly broadcast to New York radio and TV stations, Keat- ing noted that New York colum- nist Marie Torre went to jail to protect a news source because New York is not one of the 12 states with laws protecting jourhalists’ sources. * * He said that while he believed corrective legislation is primarily a state matter, he decided after a survey of varioug state laws that federal legislation would be desir- able, . Tunneys in Amsterdam for Marriage of Son AMSTERDAM, Nétherlands (P— Former world heavyweight cham- pion Gene Tunney and his family arrived here today for the wedding of his son Varick to the daughter of a brick manufacturer, * * The bride-to-be, Mikie Sprengers, and her father were at the airport to welcome Mr. and Mrs. Tunney, Varick, his sister Joan and his brother, Gene Jr. Mikie is 23, Var- ick 24. : * * * The Roman Catholic ceremony will be Thursday. The couple will honeymoon in Switzerland. Expect 500 at Lake Orion ‘Contest Baton Twirlers to Compete LAKE ORION—Over 500 baton twirlers are expected to enter the fourth annual International O’ Lakes Baton Contest Feb. 14 at the new Lake Orion High School, according to Roy G. Hess, who will act as director again this year. The contest will start at 9 a.m. and last all day. In addition to the 500 individual twirlers there will be 20 or more corps competing for the 275 medals and 125 trophies, |ledo Marilynettes. These Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Wisconsin land Canada—some of them travel- Land ling over 600 miiles—will be on hand to compete for prizes. ‘* * * Becausé of the larger floor space in the ‘new high school, a new class,’ called the « “Exhibition Class,” will be introduced this year —jn addition to the regular junior atid sepior corps, The exhibition ‘corps have about 70 majorettes and a full squad of drums. = ae ® fs: > A special invitation has been is- sued to the national champions,. iFred Miller’s Blackhawks’ from Dayton, Ohio,, and also to the To- {wo corps have @ rivalry dating back many years, Hess, said, and only a few -Jand «advanced twirlers and- for points separate them when they appear against each other, he add- ed, Last year’s winners, the Betty , Fiest Junior Corp and the Betty Hurst Senior Corp, will be in a contest to defend their titles. They are both from . Hamilton, Besides the corps, there will be classes for beginners, intermediate boys in single .acts, “Others are scheduled for two baton twirlers and duets plus three classes in strutting, . m & & % Any inquiries about the contest may be sent to Hess at 686 Cres- A room in thé Veteran# Assn. building was provided for been occupied during these ses- sions studying mechanics of finger- printing and learning how it facili- tates identification. * * * The boys, who,range in age from 11 to 16 years, also practice wres- tling, boxing and archery. Now they are planning to expand their ranks and train for their first ap- pearance marching as a unit in the Memorial Day parade, trolman Chauncey Brooks; Capt. Dennis Snyder, 13, and Lt. Harold Prince, 11. The League now has 20 members, and is planning to expand its ranks in the near future. Madam Bovine Reigns as Queen at MSU Today EAST LANSING — The cow was queen of the campus today at Michigan State University. * * * Dairymen were the first to re- port in for the start of the 44th annual Farmers’ Week at Michi- gan State. Most Monday activities centered around meetings of the various breed associations. Dairymen had a general s¢s- sion scheduled for the ‘morning in the main auditorium of Kel: | logg Center, Theme of the Meet: | ing was the probable future of the dairy industry, * * * Breed associations scheduled an- nual meetings and elections of of- ficers. Among those meeting were the Ayrshire Breeders Assn., the Brown Swiss Cattle Breeders Assn., ‘the Guernsey Breeders Assn., the the Jersey Cattle Club, the Milk- ing Shorthorn Assn., and the Red Danish Cattle Assn. Pentiac Press Photo * * * The Michigan Artificial Breed- ers Assn. also had q meeting lscheduled. Only other event the} opening day was a rural electrifi- cation meeting. General sessions get under way Tuesday, More than 50,000 farm- system for dry areas of the town- Needs Donors the group to hold its regular meetings every two weeks. The youths have Junior Police Get Badges™ | will werk; so now we are ready | to open our membership to other | boys—a few at a time,” Brooks | sald, “The League has been self-sup- \porting through payment of dues 'since it was organized. We didn't iwant to be obligated to anyone if jthe idea didn't pan out,” he ex- ‘plainned. SPECIAL ALLOCATION | Now with itis success assured, ithe League will receive a special village allocation of funds begin- ining with the new fiscal year July il. The village paid half of the “Because of limited personnel, expense of the badges—the boys finances and facilities, we had to (the other half from their treasury. Brooks and Tyler receive no compensation for the countless hours they spend working with the youth group. But they say they are “well paid”’ in satisfac- tion for the job they are doing ers are expected on the campus beforé the windup of activities on: Roseville Youth Hurt in Toboggan Mishap SHELBY TOWNSHIP — A Rose- ville youth was listed in “good” condition today in Mount Clemens General Hospital, Mt. Clemens, aft- er suffering ‘a back , injury in a toboggan accident ' Sunday after- noon at Green Glen Park, 49099 Ryan Rd. here. Romeo State police said that Issue in Fi armington Towns - Candidate With Rem Could Cinch By MARY CELINSKE Pontiac Press Corespondent FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — Water, or the lack of it, continues to be a major bone of contention on the local scene. With both major policitical par- ties promising to promote a water ship, residents in these areas con- tinue to haul water into their homes! from nearby Northville and Li- vonia via truck, barrels, etc. And,- in spite of Democratic Supervisor Frank J. Stephenson's vow “that a water system for these people shall not become a Rochester Area Flection political football,” there is little doubt here that any advocate of a strong plan in this matter will be a cinch in the forthcoming election, Both sides of the polictical fence promise action, But Stephenson said a city councilman in Farm ington, whom he declined to name, told him the council had no real intention of doing-anything to ease the water situation until some- time after the election. Stephenson has said “I won't be a party to polities with a com- modity as necessary as water whether I am elected or not.” He added that he has instructed-Dean- Stanley, the township's financial consultant, to proceed with plans for a water system without the city of Farmington's participation, * © .* Blood Bank Being Held Tuesday at St. Andrew Catholic Church | ROCHESTER—All persons in the Rochester area who are in good health and who are between 18 and 59 years of age are urged to give blood at the Blood Bank to- morrow -at. St. Andrew Catholic Church, Mrs. Russell W. Nowels, blood relief chairman and coordi- nator of the Oakland County Red Cross Chapter for the Rochester area, said today, The blood bank will be open from 2 to 4:45 and from 5:45 to 8 p.m, A special appeal has been made to give blood for Johnny Castor, five-yéar-old boy who ts the victim of leukemia or cancer of the blood, Paul Meadow, 18, 18521 Beechwood iwith a friend when it hit a bump throwing him off on the slope. The pair were sliding on the side of one of the main hills, police sald. Meadow was taken to Avon Cen- ter Hospital, Rochester, for treat- |ment then transferred to the Mount ‘Clemens hospital. Rd., was riding on the toboggan) with the boys in fostering a bet- ter understanding of citizen-po- lice relationships, Weekday Ferry Service Proposed for Alaska Officers of the League are Den-| PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. (» — nis Snyder, 13, captain, and Greg/A six-times weekly ferry service Roberts and Harold Prince, both|between here and Juneau, Alaska, 11, lieutenants. The other 17 boys|with intermediate stops, has been are patrolmen. of the United States of America Each member carries an identi- fication card which certifies he will do his best ‘‘to obey the laws recommended in a report for the Alaska Highway and Public Works Department. The report says the system would be self-supporting after only “The program has proved it (and to be a good citizen.” a few years. Chairmen working on the blood |bank are Mrs. O. Lester Dallas, re- City Manager Earl Scherffeus said he knew nothing of any move on the part of the city council to delay the formation of a water authority. “In fact ‘the opposite is true,” he said. ‘The council has adopted a resolution, indicating the de- sire to form an authority and pro- ceed as soon as possible,” he said. Scherffeus sald the city al- ready has employed a financial consultant to examine legal implications and draw up neces- sary papers for forming a water authority, The report is ex- pected to be ready by next week, “As for playing politics," he added, ‘‘we don't care who the township supervisor is," Both Republican candidates for supervisor aecused Stephenson of “trying to make political hay out of the water issue. “Two years ago he promised water for the township within six months," said Joseph T. Brennan, township attorney and Republican candidates, ‘He couldn't deliver. Now he has had to look around for ‘cruitment; Mrs, Joseph A, Watson|4 whipping boy ‘and picked the \Jr., publicity; Mrs, Charles W. Tal-|city council.” iley, receptionists; Mrs. Fred A. Brennan termed Stephenson's C. Dillman, nurses’ aides, nurses. Others are Mrs, Robert Wilson Gray Ladies; Mrs, Lester Gilmore motor corps; and Mrs. Donald C Baldwin, registrars, ist Church. Clarkston OES Votes tron Mrs. urged that all members be present to vote on a new set of by-laws. Correspond With Banana Boat By LEE WINBORN ROCHESTER — Miss Louise Burkitt's fifth grade class at Har- rison Central Elementary School here has “adopted” a ship—a ba-| nana boat of the United Fruit Co. Line. * * For four years Miss Burkitt has tried to arrange the ‘‘adoption’” of a ship through the U.S. Merchant Marine for her class to correspond with during the school year. This is the first year one hag been avail- able, she said. Shortly after the beginning of | school last fall, Miss Burkitt's pupils read about the banana cargo ship “San Jose” in their |Kingston, Jamaica, and Santiago, weekly paper “Young Citizen” which they take to help them with their social studies and reading. The 32 members of the class drafted a letter to Capt. F. F. Colburn; master of the ship. Inthe letter they inquired about the vés- sel, its cargo and crew. They also told the captain about their class, their school and the community in which they live. TEACHER WRITES According to the rules set up by the Merchant Marine, the teacher must write the letter. Miss Burkitt said a few children stay after school each time to help her de- cide what the class would like to Say. Early in November the fifth received their first let- ter in reply from the “San Jose.” The children learned “their” ship makes regular“ round trips from New York City through the Panaina® Canal to Seattle and back—taking about five and @ half weeks to complete the round-trip run. Capt. Colburn explained that the ship carries about. 68,000 stems of bananas, each stem weighing ap- ‘proximately 85. pounds, amounting to roughly. 2,509 tons. * *. *€ ‘ cent Lake Rd.,. Pontiac, Re eS ES The pupils delight in chec e ¥ ae ae a ee Se oe ee ee ee ee ee! the port that the ‘San Jose” is scheduled to visit on their large classroom ‘map of North and Cen- tral America. They have learned that the ship takes 17 days to go from Seattle to New York, stopping at Golfito on the west coast of Cen- tral America for bananas and at Cristobal, Canal Zone for fuel— spending just a few hours in each port, “On the way from New York to banana ports, we do carry some} equipment they have aboard the cargo, usually less than 600 tons! ghip. which is divided for delivery to zk *« In December, each of the 32 Rochester students made _ two Christmas cards to send to their sters ‘their’ banana boat is manned by a crew of 54 officers New York area—the ship's home port, It docks at Pier 3 in the North River there. The ‘San Jose” also may car- ry up to 12 passengerts, having six state rooms with two bunks in each, Capt. Colburn said, He also explained the regular work- ing day of the crew, how the men stood watches and what Cuba," Capt. Colburn said. 54 CREW and men, most of whom live in the} ° ae Ship ‘Adopted’ by Rochester Pupils captafh for a picture of “their’’ boat, * * * They have just received another letter from the skipper, post- marked San Francisco, thanking them for their cards and with the picture enclosed. The students have framed the picture, giving it the place of honor at the front of the class- room, With Feb. 14 fast approaching, the youngsters are now busy mak- ing valentines to send to the crew. They all say they are ‘‘thrilled”’ with the idea of adopting the ship and are enthusiastic about this novel way to learn their geog- The ship’s master told the young-|‘'shipmates.” And they asked the _ VALENTINES FOR SHIPMATES — The 32 members of Miss Louise Burkitt's fifth grade class at Harrison Central Elementary School in Rochester have “adopted” a banana boat and - have been corresponding with the captain since early last fall. Here several of the pupils ‘are Burkitt. * sf £4 Bt Pe ee es eee raphy shown making valentines to send to the crew of 54 officers and men. Pictured from left_are Jerry. . Bull, 11; Marcia McNutt, 11, and Rodney Knick- . _ erbécker, 12. Standing behind them is Miss All blood bank workers will be served dinner at St. Paul’s Method- CLARKSTON — The Joseph C. Bird Chapter 294 of OES will meet at 8 p.m, today, and Worthy Ma- - Jot Oakland County arters 1351 N. Woodward Ave., Birming- ham. : wate Jr, canteen; Mrs, George|charge “ridiculous,” and Mrs. Robert L. Blome, registered |fabrication and only. made the “He's a past master at political statement to get publicity,” Bren- nan said, _| Curtis Hall also a Republican _j|candidate for supervisor, re- marked: “Evidentally Stephenson is more concerned with politics than. he is with water or he wouldn't have created friction be- tween the city and township gov- ernments, which could tend to delay efforts to establish a water authority. “The question of water is too '* Marvin Roberts has|big an issue to play. politics with,” Hall continued, “why should we question the integrity of the city council?" “I'm sure they would not stoop to such tactics,’ he concluded, Township residents in the south and eastern sections of the town- ship have been trying for the past six years to bring a water system into the area, During the past two eleéction campaigns, candidate s have prom- ised to promote the water system. However, to date, little progress ‘appears to have been made, Rhimes Gets Term of 1% fo 20 Years Oakland County Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty today sentenced a Pontiac Township man to prison for 1% to 20 years for setting a home on fire because he held a “grudge” against the owner, Sentenced to the State Prison of Southern Michigan at Jackson was — Rhimes, 34, of 1676 Taylor A Circuit Court jury found |Rhimes guilty of arson last month. He was charged with the $2,500 fire of the home of Jack Marsh, 1265 Cherrylawn Dr., after police received a tip from a man who house. Party Man fo Talk fo Local Young GOP Alfred J. Fortine, a St. Louis attorney and member of the Re- publican State will speak on “In Search of a Po- litical Faith’ tomorrow night at a p.m. at the Republican Committee pedis said he had driven Rhimes to the Central Committee, meeting of the 18th Congressional - {District Young Republicans, _ Joe Bianco Jr., club chairman, — SAPO, FR a te Re, Ae A ee te ie z . z iy - eS $ ha _THE 1 PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FABRUARY 2, 10 i + ee journey’s end he was. going Lest Times PYenight yam 20, STARTS TUESDAY “Ith VOYAGE SINBAD” 4 STARTS SUNDAY ‘GIGI” COMING FEB. ISTH end to the unhappy chain: Angela, |YOU Yule, Miss Seton, the Zollers, the Paamiral and fis sister, Maurice Tarrant... and himself, mused Angus. They were all caught fast in the tangle. His eyes rested on Lord Lor- rimer’s haggard face. If Rosa- mond Blake could see him new, she would hardly feel herself sufficient compensation for all that he was leaving behind. Struggling to condemn, as Miss Seton and Maurice Tarrant had condemned, Angus found him- self with nothing but pity in his heart. It was a tragedy that a man of Lord Lorrimer’s character and reputation had found himself, at fifty-five, in love with a young girl. This journey, he realized, must have been in the nature of a preliminary penance, a_ battle- ground between the past and the unknown future. Was it Rosamond he wanted, Angus “wondered, or was it her lyouth .. . or his own? Having had igo many good things in life, did 5 * o— SAL bE tana oe ERM CORTLAND PLP CET ENE COMPOS Features At 1:13, 3:20, G:2h, 7:25, 0:30 ADDED NOVELTY CARTOON | “Ghost NEXT ATTRACTION Spencer Tracy “THE LAST T HURRAH” “of the the Ching Sea” | « he think he could order the mix- “Ian of 6th Happiness jture as before? Did he imagine COMING FEB. 20TH that his good looks and charm “Tunnel of Leve” would be proof against Time's Iiwear and tear? Fifty-five was an COMING SOON jage at which a man might have “Some Come Running” | twenty useful years before him— jbut a new life with a young girl? * * Angus went back to the story Miss Seton had told, Her sister jhad rejected the proposal to go ‘to South America with Lord Lor- rimer—and then she had changed \her mind. Her letter must have ireached him the day before he was due to leave for Lisbon. No wonder e had sat throughout the journey as he had done. x * * | Angus for the hundredth time, jexamined his plan of breaking jfor the hundredth time, rejected |it. The secret was not his, it was |her father’s and only her father jhad the right to break it to her in his own way—bdut not, decided Angus, in his own time. | He had been shut away too long, | brooding. He must come out of his \musings and learn that the af- \fair no longer involved himself lalone, He must tell Angela the ltruth—and when he had told it, Angus would comfort her. He looked out to see the coach slowing up at the approach to Cudad Rederigo, They got out and waited for lunch, and when it came, it was a quiet meal, Nobody seemed disposed to talk. Before the coach left for the frontier, Angus had a few mo- ments alone with Angela. still looking terribly She told him anxious- “You're depressed," ly. “That's pressed,” “I know. It's nice, isn't it, to think that in the future we'll never have to face trouble alone?” | He looked down at her. | “Just so long as you remember that—" he said slowly. “These have been beastly days Mow La THY because I am _ de- NOW! GREA of all 25¢ to 1 P.M. TEST SHOCKS WITH SOMEONE WARM HANDS! The Great Submarine Picture! “ GLENN FORD ERNEST BORGNINE ALSO DANNY KAYE ME & THE COLONEL Recommended Without Reservation te One and All = > DOORS OPEN 10:45 BLOOD ISLAND ou “FROM the EARTH to the MOON” JOSEPH COTTON , | the news to Angela himself—and) , . by Elimbeth Cadell for you. Wish I could have done something.” “you WERE. HERE’ ~ “You were here — that was "| enough. But when trouble comes to you, remember that I'm there té share it.” “You mean I just hand it to you: and let you deal with ate" “Yes,” “We share all the joys and you bear all the troubles?” “Yes again. Will you remember that?” “Of course I will.”’ She sat with him in the little Observation compartment until they reached the frontier, The formalities on the Spanish side ended, they drove slowly to where the Portugese officials awaited them. They looked darker, gterner than the Span- lards, but the country was, in- finitely softer and greener. Past the frontier, the road be- gan to climb, and the air, which had been almost oppressive dur- ing the afternoon, became pleas- antly cool. The coach climbed, and then they could see, across narrow valley, the Green eran hotel, set amid trees, in which they were to spend the night. Ferdy, handing over the few remaining pieces of luggage, had a gloomy tomment to make. “We started out with thirty- four cases, sir."’ “Yes, Ferdy; I know." “Now we're down to eleven. What’s the Company going to think sir?" He sighed. “I know it's none of your fault, sir, but in all the years. I've been with them, I've never known anything like this happen. Never. We've gone off with ten passengers and we've arrived with ten, all in- tact. We've had a_ troublesome passenger or two, asking for this and that, but asking to leave the coach? Never, sir, never." “Nobody's made any cont- plaints against the coach Ferdy.” “I know, sir, but back at Head Office, where they keep the num- bers, that’s all they'll look at, sir. We've lost seven passengers, sir, and that’s . . , that’s phe- nomenal,”’ “I daresay it is, but there's nothing we can do about it. Mr. aid Mrs. Zoller left to make a quick trip to Algeciras, The Ad- miral was injured and his sister wasn't well. Mr. Tarrant went be- cause he tried to be too funny. “What you want f0 say. to to the window and stood staring across the valley, When he faced Angus and spoke, his first ques- tion was not.a direct one, (Continued tapseree) American Cancer Group Honors Oregon Senator PORTA, Ore. (AP) — Sen. It resembles meat in texture and taste, ac- cording to the National Geograpic Magazine. ‘Pennsylvania Police tds Wa dakouios fa visting te Ottawa. Congress meets atjin hours between U.S. Congress and |noon. In Canada the Commons not ‘ Hunt Slayer of Girl owner, the man who sold it, and By 0. PARSONS HOLLYWOOD — Would you call this type-casting or not? Jerry Wald has Baby Pignatari signed for ‘‘The Billionaire’ which goes in April. derry met Baby in Europe last summer and he asked Richard Gully, who is here, if he thought Baby would be interested in act- ing as consultant and playing a small part, Baby would, He an- swered “yes” by cablette Rich- ard in nothing flat. So Pignatari arrives here Feb, 10 to spend his birthday, which is the next day. He has been in Sao Paulo look- ing over his steel mills. Seems that Baby plays hard when he plays, but really is a hard working gen- tleman when he works, “The Billionaire’ is by Norman Krasna, and Jerry tells me that he will really put Baby to work. And for heaven sake, isn’t it about time he changes his silly name? * * * Making no bones about cashing in on the young singer craze, Co- lumbia will make ‘The Jimmie Rodgers Story’’ with the guitar- strumming singer playing himself. Jimmie's a nice looking boy with a wholesome personality like Pat Mr. Holt and Miss Seton— well I leave you te guess, On paper it might look bad, but you're in the clear, Ferdy. The the only thing that could affect the Company's credit is com- plaints—and there aren't any. Everybody has been most care- ful to say so.” “To you, sir, and to me. What's important is that they should say so to Sir Claud." Angus smiled down at the stur- dy figure. “I've let you down, Ferdy, and I'm sorry." “You haven't done anything wrong, sir.” that he was there seemed to cause a lot of trouble. They heaved him overboard, so perhaps it's as well I’m only doing the job for one trip—or two, if they let me do the return journey.” DONE A GOOD JOB “I think you've made a good job of it, barring these accidents.” “We'll we've got the most im- portant passengers with us still. If we get Lord Lorrimer there safely, we'll get a few marks. Send the luggage in, Ferdy, and don’t worry about anything. I'll ing us both a good write-up.” He walked into the hotel, frowning as he went. The ex- change, short though it had been, gone on long enough. They were all involved, and Ferdy was the there now wondering whether his job was safe. He would go at once, he de- cided, to Lord Lorrimer’s room; he would tell him the whole story and ask his permission to break the news to Angela. Only one duty remained before Knocking, he @as told to enter. When he went in, he found Lord Lorrimer looking at him in sur- prise. ‘QUICK, SIR?’ ile was quick,” he comment- “No, sit, 1... 1 came because y.expression did not} * “Neither did Jonah, but the fact! ask Lord Lorrimer to send a' special message to Sir Claud giv-| mE Tender, Juicy | crystalized his decision to speak | | to Lord Lorrimer. The thing had | last to be caught; he was out | e was free, the distribution of! mail. There was nothing for any-| hody but: Lionel Yule; Angus sent a servent to his room with the! Boone. Debbie Reynolds took time off from the set of “Say One For Me” at 20th, to tell me that she leaves for Madrid Feb, 2% to co.star with Glenn Ford in “It Started With a Kiss.”’ She'll take Hollywood Headlines ‘Baby Pignatari to Try Hand as Actor in Movie the man who just purchased it. Agnes Roth who has been the children’s nurse. Mel Ferrer had a grim time while trying to reach poor Audrey Hepburn in Durango, Mexico. Be- cause of the Mexican airline strike he had to charter a private plane which ran out of gas and he had to spend the night in Mazatlan and was delayed hours tn.reaching her. *S'long, I'm off for New York for my fifth appearance on Steve Allen's Show on Feb. 8,’’ Marie McDonald called before she took off Sunday for the big town. “Got a surprise for you,’ said} Marie. “I'm looking at all of Brig-| itte Bardot’s movies because I'll! |do an imitation of B. B. on Steve’ s| show.” (Marie admits it’s “hilari-| ous."’) | Cyd Charisse has turned down a quarter of a million dollar spectacular on TV in which she would have her own show and sing, The offer came from a De- troit automobile company, The Crescendo was jampacked| for the Mary Kaye Trio opening. I swear that group gets better and better. Lana Turner, who flew in that day from Philadelphia, was in the) audience. Chuck Connors with his wife, Betty, Barbara Rush and) Warren Cowan and Mr. and Mrs, Harold Hecht were ringside. Eve Arden, who was dancing with her husband, Brooks West, stopped at our table to show me her new hair. She’s had it dyed darker, the Canadian House of Commons /take a longer lunch, usually meets sop work until about mid Money Orders ‘Save by Mail Night Travelers’ Construction Deposit Ample Free Parking at Rear of Our Main money received up to the 10th of Current HOME OFFICE: 761 W. ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. Pontiac 1 Ks Federal Savings ‘"* PONTIAC: 16 4416 Dixie H’way — Drayton Plains Last Month Over Two Hundred F ples Opened’ Savings Acéounts at’ PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS Here are the services they have found available: i Christmas Clubs ory Checks Loans Land Contracts Purchased FHA Home Improvement Loans Land Contract Collecting Service Mortgages on Business and Commercial Buildings - Pontiac Federal Savings’ True Open End Mortgages Savings Accounts Earning Three Per Cent Semi-Annually Customers may transact their business at any of our four offices Office and New Drayton Plains Branch. Free Counseling Service and Building Plans for Those Who Contemplate Building New Homes. If friendly, efficient service appeals to you, come in and open a Savings Account today. Remember, the month earns from the first. And every account is insured up to $10,000 by an agency of the U. S. Government. a Rate ~ * A Huron St. <. Lawrence St. NO SPECIAL REASON; 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Were Label A Sale! BUT YOU’LL WANT TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE LOW PRICES! FILL UP YOUR FREEZER, YOUR FRIEND'S FREEZER AND EVERY AVAILABLE SPACE IN YOUR ICEBOX! NEXT TO CEORGE’S-NEWPORT'S STORE FE 5-3162 CASH MARKET “For Your Freezer” Whole, Tender — PORK LOINS — 1 Fresh Cc lb. “None igher’’ PAR-REDI FRYERS Dressed 29: CORNED Kosher Style A5 gr eeeeeee | News in Brief Burglars broke into Skarrit'’s Service Station, 7421. M59, White Lake Township, and escaped with about $8 from a cash register and several'versiing machines, accord- ing to Oakland County Sheriff's Department reports Saturday. dacebson’s Service Station Highland Rd., White Lake Town- . ship, was burglarized of about $10 ? by thieves who smashed a cash :. register with a heavy pipe or sim- ' yilar instrument, Oakland County sheriff's deputies said. _1TeWeek Strike Settled at Auto-Lite in Toledo TOLEDO ® — The electric Auto- Lite Co. was to resume normal production today at four local plants shut down for 11 weeks by a strike, Striking workers in other Auto- Lite plants around the country went back to work two weeks ago. Some 2,200 Auto-Lite workers rat- ified a new local agreement Sat- urday, and the company announced immediate preparations, to get the Toledo plants back in production. Agreement on basic wages were reached in a national settlement. TRRETS hs ha Detroit Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, BU. ..ie.cesc+. +e O6-28 tenet OOP eene b i-ib, eraetoaeeee ; 9 GOR. ccceeseess 1.60 WILLIAM J, SAUNDERS Pontiac Man Retires From A&P Service. Retirement of William J. Saun- diser for A & P Food Stores’ Detroit unit, was announced today under the company's retirement program, Saunders, an A & P employe for more than 30 years, had served as a supervisor, a produce super- visor, store manager and produce merchandiser. He lives at 254 Whittemore with): his. wife. He is a native of Indian- apolis and is a member of the Knights of Columbus and Elks. Science to Meet Food Problem for Our Billions CHICAGO (UPI)—A gr icultural experts see no problem in feeding| the nation’s population of one bil- lion persons that is expected two average lifetimes from now despite the sharp decrease in per capita farm acreage. | x * * With present birth-and-death curves indicating 500 million Amer- icans in 2050 and a full billion in)? 2100, the magazine National Live- stock Producer says that man will stil} eat well, although he'll have less than two acres per person) on which to produce his daily . ders of Pontiac, a field merchan-|'?$ Wy eee Pee ee aT eo Fr Potatoes (bag) 60 Ibs, . vdoveee ote ; Pa ‘ 50 Squash, Delictowa, DU, oo... ey ee Tematcen-Hothee., Th No, i 8-ib. “batt 1 Turnips, topped, bu. ...... See Poultry and Eggs DETROIT vooura® DETROT, Jan. 30 (AP) -— Prices paid per ‘ pound, ron Detroit, for ne 1 quality live poull Heavy type sone 50-21; light type hens, 11-12; heavy type broilers and fryers, EW - Whiles 26-21, barred rocks 26; ca- ponsties over § ees 21-23, DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, Jan. 0) (AP) — Eggs, FOB — cases included, federal-etate grades: Whites: Grade A extra large 40-42, wid & 38, medium avg 36, ni Grade B large 1, Browns: Grade A —_ jarge 30, large 30, medium, 36, checks 29's. ‘Total weekly rece ips of government graded eggs Jan. eo od were #, 130 cases, Com. mores F ; fe 364-38, av av -. ——e 30-30%, wid 36-37, wd +m Grade” A 35 e-36, large 34-34%. + Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—Cattle—Salable 250, Not enough steers and heifera sold to establish a trend; few sales canner and cutter cows steady; compared last. week; bread. Every American Indian once had an average 2,400 acres of land to supply his food and fibre. Today, 175 million people have only 11 acres apiece, With three million new citizens every year, the allowance will be, reduced to six acres per person in just 42 years, and less than one- third of that by the end of the 2ist century. Researchers say these methods will be used to meet the situation: Better plant breeding, greater sol] fertility and plant protection. Greater use of plant and animal food products. New foods from cur- rently wasted plants. Development of new food-producing sources, in- cluding. oceans, lakes and farm ponds. Solution of the spoilage problem. Synthesis of proteins and fats through a more abundant sug- ar production. The Uninvited Guest > LAKEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) — More than 200 guests—20 of them from out of state—were invited to the golden wedding anniver- sary celebration of Carl and Ruby Crockett. When the guests arrived at the home they found a notice of death. Crockett, a re- tired restaurateur and automo- bile sales agency owner, suf- fered a fatab heart attack Satur- day on the eve of the golden wedding date. Queen Elizdbeth I collected hundreds of pairs of richly em- broidered and bejeweled gloves is a flasher system that causes all four front and rear directional signal lamps to flash simultane- ously. The device is controlled by a ‘switch mounted on the instru- ment panel. It has a suggested list price of $7.95, plus installation given to her as New Year’s gifts. charges. n by Cambridge University. Building is of marble . from same ‘quarries used for the Parthenon. in Active Trade. NEW YORK (®--Steels, coppers made progress resumed its advance in active early trading today. ‘ Gains of moat key’ stocks went from fractions to about a point. There were scattered losers. interest to the coppers. Phelps 0] Dodge itself was steady, Magma jumped about 2 and Anaconda a point, International Nickel rose Steels advanced moderately on 4ifurther reports of stepped-up de- aamd and production. Fractional and Republic ‘Steel while Bethle- hem wes up around a point. Mohasco, Welbilt and Fruhauf Trailer picked up fractions in brisk ‘dealings, High-priced international business machines added more than 4, e- * Oils and rails showed an easier tendency. Motors were little changed, American Motors dropped another fraction. Ford eased. than a point. Gains of about a point were made by Allied Chem- ical, Eastman Kodak.and General Dynamics, The ticker tape had a nine-min- ute period of lateness at the open- ing. New York Stocks - {Late Morning Quotations) Figures after decimal] point are eighths STOCK AVERAGES (Compiled by The Associated Press) 30 1§ 5 60 Indust ale Util Stocks Prév, day ..+5..316.8 137.4 71.8 217. Week ago ......316.6 139.0 97.9 2181 Month aso 3145 141.2 96.5 2169 1988-9 high... hs 144. : nf 302 58-29 : i i ae eee 1987 high ....... i Q 1987 low ......5- 226.0 ta 682 1509 DETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nephiér Co.) Figures after decimal pane are —— Allen Elec & Equip Co . = 24 2.4 Baldwin Rubber Co* .. 16.6 17.4 Gear Co* .-; oe 304 1 Gt Lk Ol! & Chem Cot ieee ae OLY Howell Elec Mtr Co ....94 984 064 Pen Met Prod Co* ........ 8.2 8.5 The Prophet Co* ......«. .- « Wa LT Rudy Mfg Co* ....00. » 122 124 Toledo Edison Co ........ 17 17 n Co *No sale; bid and uae Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Feb. 2. (AP)—Opening grain prices: Man Wins Leg Contest DIDCOT, England (UPI) — | Lance Cpl. William Nimmo en- tered a “Fascinating Legs Con- test’ here this weekend and won. “There was nothing to say men couldn't enter,” Nimmo said, ‘I ‘won fair and square.” Nimmo, 21, was declared the winner by the result of an applause meter | and was awarded an électric heater, . i and assorted low-priced issues| / as the stock market |’ gains were made by U.S, Steel) Aluminium Ltd. advanced more} ‘ + PONTIAC PRESS MOND: Y FEBRUARY 2, 1950 “True Lite. eae: wee a Bur THE MORE INTELLIGENT CHIMPANZEE. ALSO LIKEG A ROOF OVER HIS HEAD. HIGH ABOVE THE GROUND, HE GATHERS BRANCHES AND WEAVES THEM TOGETHER..WITH VINES igi “TO FORM AN UMBRELLA: Redio-1V Mesicinns’ |Get 5- Year Contract The new contract givés staff musicians a later-wage increase and a pension’ plan, plus payment for shows that are rerun. The net- works may reduce their staffs in some cities under the terms. The networks involved are the American Broadcasting Co., Co- lumbia Broadcasting System, and National Broadcasting Co, Ford Output in January. Up 30,279 Units Over ‘58 DETROIT (#® — Ford Motor Co., produced 30,279 more units last month than in January a year ago. Passenger car production totaled 160,824 units, compared with 135,- 626 in January of 1958. Truck pro- duction was 28,477 units, compared with 23,396 in the same month last year. ° le «* LUKE STRUCTURE. we Ford divis ed 134,030 THEN HE STRETCHES OUT [passenger cars, including 6,087 Distributed by AND DRIFTS AWAY TO MONKEY DREAMLAND. Thunderbirds. In January a year ago Ford division produced 118,261 cars, including 1,524 Thunderbirds. Edsel production was up from 1,733 cars in January 1958 to “2 < 5,880 cars in January of this year. King Features Syndicate, Speeds Interval From Drawing Boards to Production New System Saves Time and Money Men of Bad KEENE, N. H. (UPI) — ‘No, No! Don’t hit that golf ball!’’ “Better get off the tennis court now. One more game and you could have a heart attack.” Is the day coming when a man playing on a golf course or ten- nis court will be advised, by re- mote control, to ease up immedi- ately or run the risk of a coro- ‘“‘Perhaps one day in the not-too- distant future,” says Horace D. Gilbert, president of Miniature Precision Bearings, Inc., “there will be medical monitoring serv- ices which, for a monthly fee, will Oa Mar. scssvee BETH MOF. svevees 6s% listen in on a man’s heart beat July 2. ccos 4 uly ttt: iv constantly — and warn him of Sep. i M48 RYO" sey limpending danger.” : Corn (new)— May .icee. “s 1:31%4| Such monitoring Gilbert be- Mar. .....s. 1.13% July |....... 1.20% , May we. Ua Sep. Lupa “ 141% lieves, could be accomplished wo. iit wae’ "Ses |through tiny electronic devices =May «..----- 9.82 Jattached to strategic parts of the body. “Dramatic examples of how this is possible have been demon- strated in the various experiments with artificial satellites and rocket- ry,” said Gilbert. “We now can keep track of the ‘welfare of ah animal as small as @ mouse in the nose cone of ‘2 rocket. “The Russians were able to mon-: itor the heart beat and breathing of the ‘dog in their second satellite. Jf Will Electronics Tell Hearts? (These same principles, which will |be refined in the future, can be \applied to the man on the tennis ‘court with suspected or known heart trouble.’’ The tiny electronic devices! would transmit danger signals to a central recording station. Warnings then could be flashed back to the individual, no matter where he was. * * * Gilbert's firm manufactures ball ibearings, the smallest of which is only a little larger than the period _at the end of this sentence. Miniaturization already has pro- cufflink, a microphone the size of a grain of rice and even the 11- instrument package put to- \gether for the first Explorer satel- lite. ¢ | Gitbert said the housewife also will benefit greatly from mini- aturization. Lighter and more ef- ficient vacuum cleaners have been made through miniaturiza- tion. Compressors - for ‘refrigerators have .also been miniaturized “Then again,” Gilbert added, never be miniaturized. Like the ‘waffle iron. Manufacturers could make them smaller, but who wants lanaller waffles?” leaving more space for food stor-| “there are some things that may). agi eee ae bale ner aA das ha ae ay dy allied Ch ..... 99.4 Loew’ 20.7 . Under 1100 Ibe, ware pares ond steady; | A} led Burs: a4 Lone, 8 Gas .. 2 By 8AM DAWSON . Arm Division in Baltimore, after|automatic and automatic business;done, and to pass this along to datsfeow wy Abie pes Dl prrdlhes fh gneth Am Airin. -... 302 nck tx = Hi AP Business News Analyst two years of development, It is|machines to cut the four to 10\the next section. down 26.00-29.00; few loads low to aver-/A™ Can - ++: bo Mead oP...) bo NEW YORK (AP) — Some de-|being used on such equipment as/ weeks (depending on complexity)| Under MMI the basic informa- pm Mirgared ma ont steers sent: pact am Motors... 308 Merr Chas’. Ae) tense plants report today they are/Bomarc area defense missiles. [now needed to get new ideas into|tjon is put: on perforated paper ing average choice steers, 1100-1200 Ib, |AmN Ges .... $4 Momman Gh... 4i3\cracking the preproduction cost x * * actual production to two to five|tape as soon as engineering draw- steers 28.75+29 50; standard to dow good|'am Tel & Tel 233.5 Mont Ward |. 411 weeks. Nngs and specifications are issued. steers 24.00-26.00; utility steers 21.00-|Amaop.. 103 ward .. {\1| barrier. At the rate paper costs have es pec; $3.18; moet ood te average ies Ne Anaconde .... gi4 t Bise .... $47| They say their new system also|peen rising, Westinghouse claims| Here is the problem it tackles:| From then on data needed by average choice 922-060 Ib. heifers 28.00:| Armour a Co’. 26.2 Rat Cash -+ 266lig shaving in half the time it takes|that by 1962 it will have saved its| Manufacturing information fur-jeach department are issued simul- Date gfe emerge ogg oy amg “Ff gomony +, Mine 39° Nat Gyps |... 63.7\to get new developments from the| military customers a half million|nished by design engineers goes|taneously in either tape or veo Mig ..... 11.1 Natl Lead ln 7 ' 7 UtLERy cows 10.00-00.58; canners and Balt & Ohio .. 43.3 NY Central... 28 drawing boards into actual weap-|qollars through its new Mechan-|to eight to 10 other departments.|punched cards. 34.80; individual strong weight utility up|Boeing Air's. 421 NOT, Weet - $ jons production. ized Manufacturing Information| It covers instructions on how to| Thus, for example, purchasing to,24 00 early in weeks adough ola|Sent Siam ss: 4 Nor Feet’ Ga] "koe ot system. make a product, when and where |agents'can begin to gather ma- to make ® market: nominally Natendy: Briggs Mi eee jis Nor ora Pw -- 23%! These cost and time problems) It also says the system mini- to He peranal babi ne areiterials while the manufacturing Strength en utility and ieee Burroughs... abs Helge f ap trouble many civilian goods plants}mizes preproduction and produc. needs , an “ee eee as division is getting ready to pro- most choice and prime, vealers 24.00. Colum oo: 33% Pan A W Air. 284/a8 much as they do the military|tion overtime, helping to hold) duction work sho . cess them on arrival, eeinity ome low. sundara arcend ra amp mere 1% = ~~) forces. And such paper costs have|down both labor and materiel x * * Electronic computers calculate “Gheep and’ lamber'Selable 100. Nom- Gapttel Airis. 316 Penney, Jo’. _.110° |been rising steadily, both in civil) costs. : The system now generally used| automatically the quantities of anally steady: compared last week; most (Carrier Cp... 46.4 Pa RR’ ig jjand defense production shops. Any saving in military spending! in industry is for each department|raw materjals needed. Tabulating aod ut aoaiee wees emhe 30 Geter Trac els Pepa wath 33¢| A new electro-mechanized sys-|would be welcome news to tax-/to add manually all of its OwN|machines process the information rime | wooled lambs around 100 Ibs, pole as Pt . 00.4 Phelps D ..... ¢36/tem has been tested for a month| payers. basic information and how and|gimyltaneously, Electric repeater — 100 ie Non tend 2 “pas iho0-tase: Cities Sve 2) G6 Phil Pet. Si.3|in Westinghouse Electric's. Air! The systém ties together semi-lwhat to do, and when it can bel units automatically send the ac- hotee and prime shorn lambs No. 1 pelts Gon dis as oat Hol OS cumulated data, along with operat- ped et uility and good “ith tow | SoBe ara ti yt RCA ......... 46.6 ing instructions, to all depart- lambs included at 12.78. Sekt Sak a nee My. BA : e 9 _|ments involved. Hogs—Galable 100, Butchers under 250|Gont Can |... pag Ret Drug ... 6116 xk * * Ibs. Soe lower; weights over 250 lbs.iGont COP&S . 12.7 Reyn Mot .... 72.4 slong with sows Ye he lower: few gained Bo./Cont Meter... 11-1 Rey Tod B 101 . ead gu e O Time saved in gearing for pro- lot ai mired ni, sagt 17 208 Tbe ee He gateway rp . 06 : ; duction often a out = premi- o. 2 a Ss. 14.80-| Deere ..... Be ps um expense of overtime opera- - Booville Mf... 243 18.78; mixed ‘grades sows 300-600 Ibs. Boe aire, et Beats ‘noch a e tions. DuPont ..+++- : ‘All of this can, and has, been ee He = =Persecutes Macmittan at ° eos ast Kod ..... 144.4 Bocon: 49.4) done on the huge mechanical To’ Begin Training Course BI & Mus 10. 17 Sou Pac vesse =: : brains. H te jErie RR...... 12, ry Rd’... 23.2 ." for Medical Emergencies Beccello / H sta Gu Cai':. $3] LONDON (UPI)—It Prime Min- underneatah the table and Hele dripping | with Pagpeels ae oes! paral “M. oe: = with the|blood,” the League screamed, a ; ; new 13-wéek course in basic | Eres ae caged sta on oh eo ablgeates ae aa vac United Loeemn Pemriat U.N, |currently the Conservative Party is ae Seat ae ae tee tiie for medical emergencies; Fresh, Tra. 20° stevens, JP... 26.6 “ey. |COSt problems, Save valuabie time will begin 8 p.m, Feb. 9 at Mark|Gen Bi 3.7 Stud Pack ... 14.3/0f unemployment, inflation, or next) secretary general nearly choked, |in Fe — for having met tl —and in this instance, some dol- Twain School, $8 7 mH Sylva Pas. 30.7 |year’s election prospects. but Macmillan went right on eat- tality’" i aoe Sein ae TU liars for taxpayers , < at + 60. : ng ruders. 2 * * Gen Fds .... poe Texas Co .... 85 Britain has never been more ing his soup. n — 1 gen Mile 3a TRE... a|prosperous, nor Macmillan more * * * The om pope by ms Gen hoe. so toe R Bear . a8 sta The last straw for Macmillan’s| No one ay for certain what U f 8 p s p lj a ee + er iden Time... ee Trans W Air .. }°4/ No, what ‘gives the ‘prime min-|supporters came in October when |the League stands for, as its mem- n alr rice 0 icy partment of health and district ine es: Gg” Transamer : shouti en T . : ecrashed the Conserva- | bers seldom get beyond shouting, Oil Twent Cen .. 404/ister that harassed look is the /loyalists gat ed ‘ nurses association in cooperation) Gillette | -.... «> onderwa 93,5 | Ste ian le the Empire!” before Cc; with the Pontiac Office of Civil Goo teh... HH erm '"\3¢s|League of Empire Loyalists, ajtive Party’s annual conference in| “Don't scuttle the Empire: al (1) wo rims Def car 218 Un, Paes 38 small band of “Empire First’’|Blackpool and tried to drown his/being thrown out of meetings. a | Gut on *.:: oe es h with blasts from a| A list of what they are against Open to the general public, tn-|iiote ik °:: i me ee Sica peaking Mee coms ais would include the United Nations,| WASHINGTON (The govern- struction covers training to meet r Ch.) 384 Oe pines’ .., 33.7/millan miserable, e . | ; Weere. 3 ore Archbishop Makarios, NATO Amer-|ment today brought price discrim emergencies arising through pos- " oa :- ta Rubi sss: 98.5, ‘The marvel is that Macmillan | This time the hecklers got 88 [ian air ams in Britain, European |ination charges against two major sible enemy attack or natural dis- Tuspir Con :: $$ US Tob ..... 26 || takes the persecution as calmly = <—— ae — _- Free Trade, Egypt’s Nasser and|manufacturers of bathroom ix- aster, +38. 2 B. m n A Int Bus Mch .504.4 Ward Bk pf .. 90 | a8 he does, s Danish butter (this last because it/tures, - int ey : amie: West SS ae For example, the prime minister cloakroom ant ager =p 7 oe is ‘unfair’ to New Zealand but-| The FTC accused AllianceWare, Safety Flasher Devised ine Baper hE West -» 43 'was entertaining Dag Hammar- tendants. But did this stop ter). Inc.., of Alliance, Ohio, with giving Int Tel & Tel 59.4 Wilson & Co «. a4 skjold at a banquet not long ago, league? x © & iNegal price advantages to Crane DETROIT (Chevrolet has an-| jon cet. a4 Yale ae 4 when a bearded loyalist sprang| It only made matters worse. In the view of many, the League, |Co., Chicago, one of its 850 whole- nounced a new safety device for|Krisey May .. 47. Yoru nt 134 . founded in 1955, has Fascist lean-|sale customers. Crane was charged use in roadside emergencies, It|Kresge, 88 ... 33.7 Zenith Red ...167 slings. Its secretary, A. K, Chester-|with soliciting and accepting un- lawful discounts. AllianceWare manufactures bath- tubs, lavatories and sinks. Crane is one of the largest manufacturers and wholesalers of plumbing sup- plies. The FTC complaint also was di- rected at American Metal Prod- ucts Co., Detroit, AllianceWare’s parent company. The commission charged that Crane was given ille- gal discounts ‘‘with the knowledge, approval and at the behest of” American Metal Products. ton, for example, is an ex-follower of Sir Oswald Mosley, the British Fascist, but he has managed to window-dress his national council iwith such respectable ancients as ‘the Earl of Buchan, 78, and Field Marshal Lord Ironside, 80, But if‘the League has borrowed some of its ideology from Hitler’s brown shirts, its antics are typical- ly British in their wackiness. However, newsmen ‘opine that ;without the League, British politics would be a lot duller, % ‘ AC You're always welcome age . a aNETICIRE : The home of BILL CLEAN-UP LOANS Pay off your piled-up bills now with a BENEFICIAL Bill Clean-Up Loan! Then, make only one monthly payment instead of several... and have more cash left oe each ment Remember : it's just like 1-2-3 te uF come in... and pick up.your loan at. SEN FICIAL! Phone today! Loaris $25 ta/4800 on Signature, Furniture or Car 7 7 wast LAWRENCE STREET, rent, Senta 2-9249 Fleer, Lawrence cues ws EVENINGS fraps ener dln FOR EVENING HOURS Just say . the word! et ye | A, ach AAT, ani is naga IE ate yt tty tin carnegie Alani Ju ern. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY, 2. 1959 A Cees mente & ye io 7 psets Channe) -WJBK-TV Channel 9 CKLW-TV —_ 7. +-Today's Television Programs - - Reagan, Senntiind Sp. insane Atlee fe Ste’ qlee aap “mint to change without nvtice Channel —WW4J-TV Channel 1—WX¥Z-TV edical MEDIC PRO-TEM—Ernie Kovacs stars as a proofreader who temporarily takes up a medi- cal career and gains spurious distinction in the world of medi tonight at 10 p.m. cine in “Symbol. of Authority,” 10:00 (7) Patti Page. Jane Mor-|10:85 (7) News. 6:00 (7) Curtain Time. Comedy. gan, Billy aieiine a (9) Popeye i (9) Boston Blackie. 12:00 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) News- Williams. (4) Price Ig Right. ° (2) Racket Squad. (4) Playhouse. Man from an- ° 6:10 (4) Weather: Eliot. (2) Playhouse. Ernie Kovacs; _—_‘‘®) #on Errol stars as proofreader who be-| |. ; ; 6:15 (4) Box. Four. comes self-educated ‘“doc-| 41145 (2) Top Dollar. s ” gain temporary distinc- (4) Concentration. too ie wala nt mck (D Peter Lind Hayes eo re tion in wor medicine in : 5 ae 6:25 (4) Sports comedy, ° of medicine i (9) Friendiv Giant. 39 (1) Comedy {cont.) 10:80 (7) News: Daly. 11:45 (9) Science All Around Us. (9) Farmer Alfalfa. Cartoons.’ (8) City Deine Seen | (4) Life of Riley. Comedy. | Hy Detective. Jockey.| TUESDAY AFTERNOON (2) News: LeGoff boss are implicated in mur- % der of jockey's wife. 12:00 (2) Love of Life. ‘ 4) Play (cont.) (4) Tic Tac Dough. :40 (2) Weather. ( zB oe (2) Play (cont.) (9) Whistle Town. :45 (2) News: Edwards. A |10:45 (7) News: Gordon. 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. : y Burns, Allen. (4) It Could Be You. ee 10:85 (7) Weather. (7) Play’Your Hunch. (9) African Patrol. _ : (9) Mary Morgan. (4). Death Valley. Thwarted 11:00 (7) Soupy’s On. gold fever is start of famous (9) News. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. corporation. (4) News: Westerkamp. 12:50 (9) News. (2) Union Pacific. Western. 11:15 (9). Weather. | 1:90 (2) Our Miss Brooks. 4:30 (7) Storybook. E. G. Marshail (4) Weather: Eliot. (4)Amos 'n’ Ancy. as “Rip Van Winkle,’ the (2) Weather. (7) Liberace. shiftless loafer’ who slept for — (9) Movie. 20 years. Leora Dana, Bev-|11:20 (9) Theater. Comedy: Mickey erly Washburn, co-star. Rooney, “Summer Holiday.’"}1:30 (2) As The World Turns. (9) Million $ Movie. Drama: 48). (4) Mr. and Mrs. North. Lew Ayres, “Dr. Kildare’s (4) Sports. (7) Margie. Strange Case.”” ('40.) (2) Sports. = (4) Buckskin. Indian helps! 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. Seay ad) veda liste. PS|11:25 (2) Nightwatch Th eater. ¥ (2) Name That Tune. Quiz. Drama, Vietor Mature, “Sev-ig:00 (2) Susle. en Days Leave.” ('42). (4) (Color) Truth or Conse- 8:00 (7) Story (cont.) [oo A . quenc®s. (9) Movie (cont.) tn ; — oa (7) Day in Court. (4) Restless Gun. Cattle ib : oer cont) baron: (J. Carol Naish) hides rut a aar. Cliff Ar-)9:39 (2) House Party. secret fear. 5y RGiceeik (4) (Color) Haggis Baggis. (2) Texan. Longley, prisoner (2) Nightwatch (cont.) (7) Music Bingo. run into sandstorm. =e reas Boys > 5 TUESDAY MORNING 2:50 (9) News. 230 (7) Bold Journey. Brazil's 8:30 “Haunted Fort.” J 330 (4) Continental Classroom. 13:00 (2) Star Showcase. (9) Movie (cont.)* (4) Young Dr. Malone. (4) Wells Fargo. Jim helps|®5® (2) Meditations ee est eek: ; : (9) Movie. pl ae fort against In| ,.55 (2) On The Farm Frost. . {: . (2) Father Knows Best. eee 3:3@ (2) Verdict Is Yours. “Hard luck” cousin invades = (2) TV Cotlege. (4) From these Roots. Anderson home. (4) Tocay,. (7) Who Do You Trust? ‘ (7) Big Show. 9:00 (7) Voice Program. “All-Puc- 7:90 (2) Curtoon Frolics. (4:00 (2) Brighter Day. cini Program,” with Met.! ue Breakfast ime. (4) Queen for a Day. Opera soprano Renata oe (2) Kaptain Kangaroo. (7) Bandstand. beldi. - . : (9) Marry a Million. Comedy. |8:3@ (7) Our Friend Harry. 4:15 (2) Seetet Storm. (4) Peter Gunn. Carnival girl is killed in “Murder on the|848 (2) Cartoon Classroom. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. Midway.” . (4) County Fair. (2) Danny Thomas. Danny /|9*0 (2) Movie. (9) Sherwood Forest. sees red when red tape pre- (4) I Married Joan. vents him from giving Ital- 5.00 (2) Jimmy Dean. ian exchange student a home. 9:30 (4) (color) Bozo the Clown. | (4) It's a Great Life. (9) Looney Tunes. 9:30 (7) Play of Week. French|10:00 (4) Dough-Re-Mi. Revolution drama with Sir . 5:30 (2) Bandstand. Cedric Hardwicke. 10:18 (7) Lady of Charm. (4) (Color) George Pierrot. | We!!- (9) Front Page Challenge. ; (7) Adventure Time. (4) Theater.* Ray Milland,| 10:25 (9) Billboard. — a Gia Scala in suspense, (2) Ann Sothern. Cecil Kella-| 10:30 (2) Arthur Godfrey. 22 Past Ford Workers way plays Katy’s broke, dis- (4) Treasure Hunt. . honest Irish uncle. (9) Special Agent. Put on Pension Rolls | ACROSS . IRQN MOUNTAIN — Twenty-| pase two workers at a Ford Motor Co. | or ieee a plant here which closed in 1951 country i went on the company’s pension 12 oom rolls today. 13 bell soe iq Under a new three-year Ford- 14 Bouth ‘United Auto Worker contract, the sear as workers, if they qualify by being 15 Container 5 ” 65 years old, will get full pension 18 But — th ‘benefits for the time they worked = Concorains i) Hh ‘at the plant. They are entitled to 22 Formerly a 82. 40 a month for each year of past} a4 Repair Y | service. Woody plant Ws 7] Sorrowful % TAY ht AN | The union said the Iron Sour: ye Z Zt tain workers were worked into pen-| aoe ° 40 Ai sion eligibility for the first time in —— h 95 t 38 ome paint i | Wy the new 1958 contracts. 37 Rock m — bade . . a0 Apple center 4 ] Old. Constellation Ship a n 8 e * * ° ® suena” i 4 Keeps Historic Spelling earne ” Gave up hope 2 BALTIMORE (® — The U.S. S. 5 = bolayn 5 aca is Gremas ts Geerclare Constellation, America’s first fight- 53 te Greek 3 Lasting six 23 Push away garments ing ship now moored in Baltimore 54 Metric A ncnineie = tn on Plaine region harbor, is historic and authentic to, ames pre tate Bheee roe we ucem caer [the nth degree. yy Stee 7 Employ one 44 Underling Six warning signs around the, st Educational =) -"meraid. Isle” 8 Removes 4 Weary deck, in presumably 19th century! cee 10 prayer ending a crane s ee pani spelling, proclaim: i 1 city in Japan 17 Cheese basts 38 Ogied. “_o“ “Stand Away From Sideing.”’ -- Today's Radio Programs Wise, (ee) CKLW, (wee) wwa, (950) WOAR, (1130) WXYZ, (1270) WPUN, (1460) WIRK, (1490) | TONIGHT WCAR News mee WWJ, News, F. Elizabeth 1:30—WJR, Ma Perkins Mi: Ty es New WXYZ, Breakfast Club WXYZ, News, Shorr ww CKLW, News, David CKLW Heatter, Davies 6: WG nce tens Ww WCAR News. Bennett WPON News. Sports 6:30-WJIR, Dinner Date Wwe, Bob Maxwell WXYZ, News CKLW. News, Chase WCAR, Page's Party WPON Candlelight 7:00—-WJR, Guest House WXYZ, Morgan CKLW. Lewis Jr. . Jack Bellbov Wood WCAR,. News, Patrick WPON Candlelight sah HE 3 ot = CKLW, Bu havin WPON, Tommie J. 8:00-—-WJR, Amos ‘n' Andy Ww4J. Bet: Your Life a bn aa "Russia mage . WCAR, Woodling WPON, Nite Sounds 9:00—-WJR, Ans. Please 4 CKLW, Bitte tand WXYZ. News, Surrell CKLW. News, Sports WCAR, News WPON. Music 11:30—WJR,- Music Ae 7 s TUESDAY MORNING 6:00—WJR, Volce of Agric. WCAR. News, Sheri aa WPON. Early Bird 6:30—WJR, Music Hall CKLW, T. David WJBK, News, George WCAR, News 7:00—WJIR, News, Music WCAR, Rews WPON News, Casey 1:30—WJK, Music Hall WXYZ, News, Wolf poi Sports, David WJBK. News, George - a ha ae" B. Guest tr, Roberts K, News, Geo IN; News, Casey out te Mugic Hall CKLW. wa. David Wek, Seen Gees WCAR. News WIR, Public Affairs "Skew. Jack, Beloy WPON Nite Sounds 10:00--WIR, Sym WWJ, Concert ru Parade CKLW, Ron Kno WRYZ. cere 10:30. WR, ° grageedy WABK, Sound Off 0:00—-WIR, News, Mrs, Page WJBK. News, George WCAR, News, Martyn WPON News. Casey 9:30—-WJR, Jack Harris CKLW. News, M. Labbitt 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, News, True Story WXYZ. Peter & Mary CKLW, News, Mary Morgan WJBK. News, Reid WPON Chuck Lewis 10:36—CKLW, News, Davies WXYZ, News, Winter 11:00—WJR. House Party WWJ, News, French ki WXYZ Paul Winter 11;30—WJR, Time tor Music CKLW. News Davies TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—WJR, News, Wells News, Maxwell E on tae Ba a WPON, : Ne wT awis 12:20. WJR, Time Out Music WXYZ, News, ‘thorr CKLW, News; Davies 1:06 WIR Ws re. — WW, News, ell News, ‘Davies WJBK, News, Reid’ WPON, Chuck Lewis 2:00—WJR, Rt. to Happiness! WWJ, News, Stories CKLW. . News, Davies WJBK, Reid WPON Bob Lark 2:30—WJR, Helen Trent 3:00—WJIR. Dear Shirley WWJ, Matinee WXYZ. Ed MeKensies CKLW Shiftbreak, Davies WJBK. McLeod WCAR. News, Bennett WPON Bob Lark 3:230—WJR. Composite WWJ, Woman in House WXYZ, News, McKenzie CKLW News, Chase 4:00 WIR, Parade ao Bands) News. Benriett WPON, Don MacKinnon 4:30--WJR, Music Hall CKLW, News, Chase WPON, Sports, _—— 5:00—. WJR, ag WWJ, News W. ¥zZ. wattrick. Mekenste Sports, Chese WiBK. News, McLeod wear. News,. Tenn. &rnie a ‘MacKinnon 5:20 WIR, Miusié F pd WXYZ, News, McKenzie CKLW. News, Chase icellent, too) in ‘‘Rashomon”— ‘the Birdland knifing .. WCAR, Sports Only Road By EARL NEW YORK MacKenzie says. alr. off,” the fact that she’s worked with bim all over the country and with him at the Fontainebleau. ‘is now off to Miami to appear But it’s all-talk right now, anyway, for Gisele’s given up ‘her pink kitchen in New York for a home in Encino where, ‘along about July, she'll welcome that -known little stranger. | “What I'd like to do now on Holly- | wood Playhouse 90,” she said, ‘expectant mother role. But now that Tm expecting, I guess they'll inot the type!” + New Jersey Brigitte Elizabeth) ta vania) doesn’t call her any because his family objects. be a good decoration for the Allen or Walt Framer TV erties, - “Rod Steiger and Claire isocialite Butler Miles). Reading the headlines Congressman Jim Healey “He's got plenty of loot. doesn't he pick up the tab for the . When a reporter for The Morning Telegraph, the racing paper, tried to get into the whole thing?” .. Birdland murder, somebody Is Bridle Path Really Although Wally Cox believes the kidnap threats may be phony, he’s staying close to home. . (Brigitte Rohland, of Rahway and says young ex-King Simeon of Bulgaria (now at Valley Forge Military School in Pennsyl- ‘slipped away from the mob to be alone ‘after his great acting job (she was ex- in which he attacks her in a forest. One fan who came to his dressing room to praise his performance was Eartha Kitt (with Gov. Rotkefeller’s new tax plans, to Success? $3 Stethoscope WILSON “I think I'd better get a horse,” Gisele, Gisele was pointing out that TV westerns seem to have! driven singers and comedians both off the “And besides the TV westerns, we have| old western movies after the TV westerns go she lamented. “Isn’t there ever too much of a good thing?” Gisele, who added that when she had her own TV ee: “We had two west- erns against us.” “Is an say I’m . The Barot more She'd Steve prop- Bloom about said, Why said, BRIGITTE “What do you care? That wasn’t a horse that was killed.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Joe E. Lewis wires that Lawrence Welk is not a suspect in . The McGuire Sisters got a 10 grand offer for a one-nighter at a sweet 16 party in South Carolina. * Pretty France Nuyen has x * a new fascination—Buddhism ... Singer Andy Williams, touring Europe, will fly back from Denmark for a chicago one-nighter. .»» Ex-film star Veronica Lake’s enrolled in a local class in Italian cooking . EARL’S PEARLS: In an argument, the next best thing to being right is being quiet.—Terry Zerbe.. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Someone described an aging ac- tress: “She’s at the stage where she won't ‘even reveal the age she used to claim she was.” That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1959) Times Square Signs ‘Called Fire Hazards NEW YORK (AP)—Fire Com. missioner Edward F.° Cavanagh Jr, wants legislation to lessen the fire hazard of the huge billboards in Times Square. Cavanagh appointed a commit- tee to draft a fire law amendment requiring fire accéss openings in the -signs. The commissioner acted after iTimes Square fire broke out Saturday night in a t restaurant and spread to- other structures, burn- ing for three hours and threaten- ing the theatrical area. Cavanagh said the signs which covered the four-story brick struc- ture had made the fire almost impossible to control. » Strawberries on Vines? FRANKFURT—A new variety of strawberry has been developed in Western Germany, It grows like a vine instead of a ground-hugging plant and_can be trained to climb on a porch or trellis, Turns the Trick ‘Symbol of Authority’): Places Popular Comic in Bogus Medic Role “Symbol of Authority,” a light- hearted comedy starring Ernie Kovacs #s a proofreader who gains temporary distinction in the world of medicine, will be seen on Desilu Playhouse, Monday, 10:00- 11:00 pm., Channel who seem to have survived, and as for co-|Hagen, Danny Thomas’ erstwhile medians, there’s only’ Mr, Benny.” She stilijtelevision wife, occasionally calls Jack “Mr. Benny” despite|Kovacs’ assistant 'few days in the hospital. There he becomes enchanted with medicine and doctors—to the extent that he visualizes himself as a great doctor. He buys a stethoscope in a pawn- shop for three dollars, and soon finds himself the most loved “doctor” in the hospital. Also appearing in the comedy jare Don Harron as Kovacs’ pub- lisher-employer, Robert Harris; Michael Landon, Burt Douglas and Ollie O'Toole. * * Ernie Kovacs, whose imagina- tive comedy talents have made him one of television's brightest stars, has appeared on most of the top shows. * of a controversy on the Michigan State University campus, * * * The Michigan State News, cam- ‘pus newspaper, asked editorially |teday for the second time in 10 days why the national anthem is not played at the start of basket- ball games in Jenison Fieldhouse as it is before football games in Spartan Stadium. The MSU athletic ang safety departments for years have tak- en the position that spectator response would enhance hazards of a bleacher collapse. But the campus daily observed that fans rose in unison three or four times when the MSU fight song was flayed at Saturday night's game with Northwestern. * * * A week ago Friday this con- sideration led student editors to question whether loyalty to school was more important ae loyalty to country. Last Wednesday the Student Congress adopted a resolution urging that the anthem be played if the fight song were allowed. University authorities stood their ground. SERVICE af Ai mee AISIS. cev Hip sade MART sen fen, Daas ae ae 2. Co. “Perry and Dinah "are the only: singers starring ee Kovacs is Jean colitis, he learns—and spends a ry News and Reviews” By WILLIAM EWALD NEW YORK (UPI) — CBS-TV's G.E. Theater unpackaged an origi- nal musical, “No Man Can Tame Me.” last night in place of its usual fishbait, It was a useful jf unadventurous departure, sparked mainly by the semi-stylized cooating applied by director Gower Champion to its hokey material. The plece’s principal problem was that its stab at tongue-in- checkness was steamroliered un- der by a script that lacked wit and real alriness. One of its tries at humor was pretty typical: Mother (looking at daughter and young man); “It reminds me of when we were courting." Father: ‘Too bad we had to get: married and spoil it.” This is plainly sausage-out-of-a- machine writing, The Jay Living- ston-Ray Evans tunes were serv- iceable as were the performances of Gjsele MacKenzie, John Raitt and Eddie Foy, Jr. * * G. E. Theater overlapped the first halt of the NBC-TV Chevy Laine and a. squad of performers from Japan, Mark this down then as a review of the final 30-minutes, The half-hour was moderately entertaining, marred by an ever- lay of cuteness, Cuteness — by which .[ mean q kind of iddy- b 1 dd_y- precious - lollipop - and- gumdrop-yum-yuminess—is very big nowadays, TV generates it in huge and syrupy doses ag a substitute for genuine feeling. Watching a Japanese singer pitching out “Lullaby of Birdland” jor a koto-player plinking out |'No Man Can Tame Me’ ja Useful Experiment | facey. Show which offered Shirley Mac-|¢ White” packs a cuddly attraction, but it is the sort of attraction that wears thin very quickly, Too, bringing a singer all the way from Japan to mouth “There's Nothing Like A Dame” also strikes mé as fairly melancholy. SHORT SHOTS: “The Peter Tchaikovsky Story” on ABC-TV's Walt Disney Presents Friday night was a hack job, thin and sur- The touted “Magic Mural Screen” that Disney was to: unveil on the show turned out ‘to be an ordinary picture with the bottom and top of the screen blacked out. The lengthy plug for Disney's up- coming movie, ‘Sleeping Beauty,” also impressed me as fairly out+ rageous, NBC-TV's Steve Allen turned out a pretty funny show last night — I liked particularly the pop tunes \Allen centered around such best- . sellers as “Dr. Zhivago”’ and “Memoirs of Field Marshal Mont- gomery.” x THE CHANNEL SWIM: Frankie Laine will emcee the CBS-TV’ Garry Moore show on March 3 while Moore takes a breather in Hawaii . . . There's talk about “Ticker Tape, been signed by Mike Todd Jr, for the feminine lead in coming ‘Smellovision’ movie Miss Bentley will sail in March Spain where the picture will ‘Cherry Pink and ‘Tpple Blossom | filmed Medium Labeled ETV Educational Gifted Child WASHINGTON (NEA) teachers with the answer to how cation's most important problems, Recent reports show that many gifted children get so bored with their studies that they either quit high ocheel or decide net to ge te college, Main reason for this alarming situation, experts explain, is that most teachers just don’t have time to give these youngsters the extra attention which they need, Many proponents of educational TV, however, believe the problem could be solved if all students re- ceived most of their routine in- television programs, * * * Under thig system, the classroom teacher would stilP be on hand to answer questions, assign homework “ grade examinations. - See ‘the | new r ut her most important b N. ationa ] Anthem would be to give individual help to, WHIRLPOOL each of the youngsters in her woe rig on Stirs a Standing class. This would include devising | ‘Y°SMer with Push- Feud at MSU 'ais'te"tre"orin aes to hep Farad ect r the bright 8 to euda them etevanad in their suid J ust Arr ived EAST LANSING w—The Star!work. NEW 1959 GE Spangled Banner is at the center ETV experts explain that tele- REFRIGERATORS vision would in no way reduce the quality of imtruction. In fact, they say that recent school television experiments show that in some ways ft actually im- proves teaching. TV is also a boon when it comes to presenting routine classroom demonstrations, For example, they point out that an enlarged close-up shot of a teacher’s hands operating a small piece of lab equipment enables pupils seated in the back of a classroom to see the demonstra- tion as clearly as those seated in front. * * ing technique is what some ETV enthusiasts believe the future holds for all the nation’s schools. Its pros and cons are currently being studied in several of the school video experiments that ate being ronducted throughout the country. — Educa- tional television may provide} struction from the special school | In addition to enabling students to get a first hand look at world | events without leaving their desks, This revolutionary type of teach-|- TV to Solve ren Problem they can spark the interest of gift-| ways te send both pictures and we roctteader \¢4 children in courses designed for| sbund to the TV receiver sets. Mildred, ‘javerage IQs, Closed circuit TV is transmitted * * The idea of using TV to boost a| by wires, The Ernest-Kinoy teleplay was |(uiz kid’s brainpower comes at @| At the present time, schools in 34 suggested by a short story by time when finding the right way |cities are receiving the broadcast Henry Slesar. In the comedy, |‘ teach ‘this type of youngster isitype on a limited basis from sta- Kovacs develops a tummy-ache—|Considered one of American édu-/tions set up especially to handle educational programs. Twelve ad- ditional stations are under con- struction, Closed circuit operations number more than 200. The majority of these, however, are in colleges. x wr * Many ETV promoters believe that most schools will eventually make use of both systems. They explain that special closed circuit studios will be built in each school. SAME DAY TV SERVICE if called in by 2:30 P. M. or bring it in yourself and save the difference. See the New WESTING- HOUSE REFRIGERATORS, RANGES, WASHERS & DRYERS DO-IT-YOURSELF TUBE TESTER Expert Advice pice Open ‘til 9:00 P.M. HAMPTON ELECTRIC ts W. Huren St. FE 4-252 | RCA COLOR TY | SHEETS RADI 10-10 These projects invélve two HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME tn YOU CAN EARN SCHOOL DIPLOMA If YOU ARE 16 OR @PRE-HIGR “IF ¥ punistiaikc aaah, ©, @ Bon Send me your free 57-page Address ee Clty 2... tes pvesse agavndvheste iesae PUTT Re ee NOW co ccwecewsencewepees cues