i | Se | way es \ Ps « © , 4 e ut THE PONTIAC PR 116th YEAR. keke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959. —88 PAGES ’ “PRESS INTERNATIONAL OMIT EE SOCIATED PRESS 7e Nation Writhe Under Icy Whip of Giant Storm Freezing Rain Slashes Path Ahead of Heavy Snow, Bitter Winds KANSAS CITY, Mo. —A giant storm lashed the nation with snow, freezing rain, bitter cold and even thundershowers in the South as it crept across the mid-continent today. The storm area stretched from northern New Mexico to Cape Cod on the coast of New England and from the southern Great Lakes into the Mississippi Valley. As it meved slowly northeast- ward it dealt its harshest blows to the Midwest—Kansas, Missouri, lowa, Nebraska and Illinois. Twelve deaths have been at- tributed to the storm. All of the victims were killed in traffic ac- cidents on ice or snow covered _Toads. Three were killed in New Mexico. Montana, Pennsylvania and Towa each reported two deaths, and Oklahoma, Kansas and Hllinois had. one each. In a_ special summary the Weather Bureau said snow, cold and high winds kicked up blizzard} conditions in Nebraska, Iowa and) the flatlands of tral Kansas. Immediately ahead of the snow, there was a narrow band of freez- ing rain. In the South, thunder- showers accompanied spring tem. peratures. There was even a tornado yes- terday afternoon in Mississippi. The funnel touched the ground near Vicksburg, but apparently did no damage, The heaviest snowfall _ this and northern Missouri. Kansas City lay in the center of the ares: At midnight, with four inches on the ground, the snow began again, and the Weather Bureau said it would reach eight inches. x * * Parts of New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, Qklahoma, Nebraska and Iowa still were getting snow. The northern three-quarters of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Mikoyan Plane Forced to Land Makes Emergency Stop at Newfoundland After Engine Catches Fire From Our News Wires ARGENTIA, Nfld. — Soviet Dep- uty Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan resumes today a homeward flight that was interrupted last night when the airliner flying him home made an emergency landing at this top-secret U.S. Naval air base. The Soviet official was side- tracked when one engine of the airliner caught fire and another had to be “feathered” (shut off and the propeller blades adjust- ed for least wind resistance). Mikoyan — apparently unshaken by the mishap which set nerves jangling in more than one world capital — was to board another plane today to resumie his flight ik to Copenhagen, = i He ended his 16-day visit to the United States Tuesday and started home with a party of five, includ ing his son Sergo. were 35 passengers and 14 crew members aboard. ‘ The spokesman said the plane had been under close guard after it arrived at Idlewild and that thcome Tat | Eves. 4 Sat. W. R, Bolin. PR 41102 or PE 58773 Anges Compbel fax Accoantant, t- f 4 1 morning Was in eastern Kansas} pital earns FE 2-3016, 903 W. a * Objector Loses One-Man Battle Over Sales Tax MOBILE, Ala. (UPI)—It was Harold Harrison's opinion that the combined city-state sales tax of four cents was too much. Officers said Harrison put up an argument at a local restaurant, but finally paid his bill, which in- cluded the tax, Then he walked out and slammed the door behind him— with such force that a glass panel was shattered. Judge Herndon H. Wilson yester- day fined Harrison $15 and ordered him to pay for the panel. Record Budget Adopted for City Outlays of $5,919,250 OK’d by Commission Last Night A record budget of $5,919,250 for 1959 was adopted last night by the City Commission. : Following a public hearing at which no objections were raised, commissioners accepted City Man- ager Walter K. Willman’s budg- etary recommendations with no changes and adopted the annual appropriations ordinance as an emergency measure. The emergency label was used to get the budget out of the way be- fore the Jan. 31 deadline, Willman explained. Features of this year’s budget | are: 1. It is designed to maintain the 1958 tax rate of 13.27 mills for each $1,000 evaluation for the second straight year. 2. It is about $235,000 higher than last year’s. 3. Of the $962,509 earmarked for capital improvements, $520,- 000 «is -already committed to completing Pontiac General Hos- About $600,000 in departmental requests was pared from the budg- et before its submission to the Commission, Willman said, . * * In answer to a question from the audience, the city manager stressed the budget was based on need, not on the city’s maximum ability to tax. “The city could gain $1 million more a year by levying taxes on state equalized values," he pointed out. “But we are sticking with the lower, city-assessed valuations.” The prediction that the tax rate can be kept at 13.27 mills is based on the assumption that city assessed values will go up $5,000,009 this year, he said. From taxes, the city expects to net $3,649,250. Income from such other sources as state highway funds and city-collected fees was estimated at $1,870,000. To balance the budget, Willman said, $400,000 will have to be allo- cated from the city’s unappropri- x k * DAY FOR BUSY HANDS — Pontiac area to its second sleet for busy hands. Following three x *« * After Mother Nature treated the storm in 21 days, it was a day or four inches of snow came a x *&* * Crusty Weather Glazes Pontiac Area 7 solid glaze which coated windshields, trees, and anyone foolish enough to be out in it. Out came the shovels, scrapers and bags of salt, and Michigan winter received a few more oaths. x *k *& Pentiac Press Photes ~-~e-— News Flashes WASHINGTON — President Eisenhower said today the So- viet Union must come to under- stand that the United States simply won't be pushed around in working fer world peace. Eisenhower told a news con- « ference that was the purport of his message to Anastas I, Mi- koyan, the Seviet deputy pre- mier as he left for home after his U.S, visit. WASHINGTON (® — Philip W. Bonsal, a career diplomat, was nominated by President Eisen- hower today to be the new ambassador to Cuba. NEW YORK (UPI)—Benjamin Franklin Cohen, an official: of dames R. Hoffa's Detroit Local 299 of the Tearnslers Union, was convicted today on perjury by a federal grand jury. Collins, secretary-treasurer of the Detroit local, was convicted on two counts of lying before a federal] grand jury investigat- ing wire tapping and racketeer- ing in the Detroit lecal. Death of Atlas Expected CAMBRIDGE, Mass. P—Atlas, the American satellite which broadcast President Eisenhow- er’s Christmas message of peace to the world, was expected to plunge to its fiery death today in the vicinity of the Haweiian Islands, Next—One That Swears LONDON (UPI—A_ well-bred slot machine that says ‘“‘Thank you" in a melodious feminine voice when the coin tinkles down has ated surplus. been introduced here. Legal Snag Looms LANSING (UPI) —At- torney General Paul L. Adams said today he will give “top priority” to un- tangling a legal snarl! that looms over one phase of a plan to use the Veterans Trust Fund to ease the state’s cash crisis. From Our News Wires LANSING—<A legal snarl loomed today over ond phase of a plan to use the Veterans Trust Fund to ease the state cash crisis. At the same time, it was learned Gov. G, Mennen Williams probably will make some revisions in the plan before giving it to the Legis- lature in fina] bill form. These devolpments on the step- gap financing plan came as Wil- Hams’ office announced he has completed spadework on _ his 1959-60 budget proposals and will present them later this week. These developments also came as veterans organizations urged lawmakers not to tamper with the fund which was established to assist veterans, House GOP Floor Leader Alli- son Green (R-Kingston) raised the possibility of a legal hitch when he asked Attorney General Paul L. Adams to rule whether securi- ties from the veterans fund could be used to meet obligations created by borrowing from the public school —_— oo fund. * * of Williams’ plan that would use S : Heavy Ice Artistry Glistens Green did not challenge the part. Plan for Vet Fund Falters the veterans fund to meet state obligations to the universities. NO SPONSORS ‘ Bills to carry out Williams’ plan to mortgage the vets fund were reviewed by Democratic lawmak- ers yesterday but none appeared willing to sponsor them in the form in which they were first drafted. Qne change would make it so that the state “will” rather than “shall” restore the fund within 10 years. Some lawmakers want te make it 5 instead of 10 years, “There has to be some. public relations done on this bill,” Rep. Einar E. Erlandsen (D-Escanaba) said last night. “There isn’t a man on the floor who would have signed this bill earlier today.” Meanwhile, leaders of the state's eight congressionally chartered veterans organizations urged law- makers to leave the fund as it is. : * * * In an open letter to members of the House and Senate, the com- manders said that to tamper with the fund “would be both morally and economically deplorable.” The veterans group, chairmanned by Nicholas R. Firis, commander of the Marine Corps League, said they considered diversion of the “are unalterably opposed to any tampering, changes or attempted diversion of the trust fund or portions thereof." MSUO Receives 70 Applications Before Ist Day Although Michigan State Univer- sity Oakland has announced Febru- ary Ist as the official date for receiving student applications, 70 prospective students have already written in, and all of them enclosed the ten dollar application fee. “We are very pleased at this tremendous advance interest,” said D. B. Varner, today. down shows 50 per cent are in the top quarter of their high school classes and 90 per cent are in the top half. This js an unusually high percentage ry ar students.” * Of the whole, 10 have applied for Business Administration, 18 for engineering, 18 for Liberal Arts and 24 for Teacher Education. Es- timates of the total size of the freshman class next September place the figure at 600. Reds Protest Planes In Today's Press ee ae removal Comies 29 |$120,000,000. eee tee ee gee es | County News eee ters eeace Bt " Editorials bd Pee ete eeeet se eneee Green Empress Sees eesee Obituaries Pe eee eH eee te 3 St ee kee a, ) iy fund the same as liquidation and/| fs | The commanders previously had given a flat ‘‘no’’ to a proposal by Gov. Williams for: use of the fund. Williams proposed that the bulk of securities in the fund be used as backing to obtain loans by the major universities. The governor) said the fund itself would remain intact. Lawmakers, meanwhile, report- ed that their mail was running heavily in opposition to touching the fund. Sen, Cylde H. Geerlings (R-Hol- land), chairman of Senate about two dozen letters he had received, only one approved utiliz- ing the fund. “You are mostly not likely to hear from those who might favor jarea schools were closed today \due to bad weather: Taxation Committee, said that ily Missing After Fire Worst Storm of Winter Expected lce Will Coat Highways After More Rain, Snow -As Pontiac and Oakland County residents struggled through a.3-4 inch snowfall and freezing rain this morning, the U.S. Weather Bureau and State Police warned that the worst is yet to come. Troopers at Pontiac and Redford posts and Oakland County sheriff's deputies said driving conditions were very hazardous today, and morrow. would become worse by to- In Pontiac, all schools opened on schedule this morn- ing and school buses were r unning. Most schools in the northern section of the county were closed due to ice and snow, however. Waterford Township schools were closed, Final exams x *& * for the Kids! The following Oakland County Huron Valley, Waterford Town- ship, Utica Community, Romeo, Armada, Rochester, Holly, Orton- ville. Addison, Lapeer, Walled Lake, St. Paul Lutheran in Livonia, Im- lay City, Our Lady of Victory in Northville, Capac. Dryden Community, Avondale, Lake Orion, Metamora, North) and Clarkston. Examinations, originally sched- uled for Walled Lake High School students today, have been tenta-| tively rescheduled for tomorrow. School buses in operation this. morning were for the most part on the main roads only. NYACK, N. Y. &—A spectac- lar fire destroyed a fashionable apartment house in South Nyack today. Hours later police listed the idea,”’ Geerlings said. three occupants missing. | scheduled today will be giv- ‘en tomorrow at the junior and senior high schools, H eres What ‘Supt. William Shunck gre Weather Did ™ Ps 2 drop in temperature, the Weather Bureau said. Today's high was predicted at 35 with rain this morn- ing and afternoon changing first to ‘limited to picking up youngsters Challenge Legal Standing of Graduated Income Tax “The legal status of a graduated income tax in Michi-| gan will be challenged and probably proved unconstitu-, tional,” declares Louis H. Schimmel, Executive Director of the Municipal Advisory Council and one of the lead- ing tax authorities in the country. “This means a delay of about two years with the chances favoring an adverse court decision. “It is proposed by the Citizens’ Advisory Committee freezing rain and sleet and then to snow tonight, Snowfall tonight and tomorrow should range from 3 to § inches before diminishing to flurries. Tonight's low will be about 22 with a high of 24 predicted for Thursday. Winds will be east to south 15-20 m.p.h. today, shifting to west and northwesterly 20-30 m.p.h. tonight. The Weather Bureau described Branch, St. Hugo of the Hills, Our) ORE i Lady of Refuge, West Bloomtield, |. eee of Besipisge Rr ithe winter. Traffic was paralyzed, ‘stranding thousands of trucks and cars throughout the state. Pontiac state troopers reported most highways in the area were slushy but not yet ice-covered, ex- cept for side roads, Sheriff's depu- ties expected the worst will come itonight when temperatures begin to drop and the slush turns to ice, Troopers at the Redford Post reported traffic moving very slowly. on U.S. 16 and said that many side roads in southern and western Oakland County were impassable, The rain is washing away the salt being put on major highways, State Police said. Sheriff Frank W. Irons warned all drivers to stay home unless it is absolutely necessary to go out. tax be adopted by the Leg- islature. The revenue from, this tax is estimated at) $220,000,000,” said Schim- mel. “Fifteen years ago the Tax Study” Committee appointed by Governor, Kelly was advised by the Dean of the University of Michigan Law School and by other authorities that a graduated income tax could not be legally adopted by the State Legislature unless the Constitution of the State was amended, * * * “The recommendation of the Citizens’ Advisory Committee that the Legislature enact 4 graduated income tax seems to be an invitation to test the con- | stitutionality of the tax in the | courts, A law suit means delay. * * * “If the present Michigan Su- preme Court sustains the opinion of the legal counsel for the Kelly Committee, then it that a graduated incomet- | nicipal improvements. cipal and interest on bonds is- sued to build schools and mno- * * * “Whether or not the Legislature ean reduce local taxable valua- tion by removing certain proper-) ties that were represented as tax-| able assets when bonds were sold, is a question that will have to be decided by the courts. “There are some school districts where the removal of personal property would seriously affect the ability of the district to comply with the terms of its bond contract. * * * “Any litigation relating to— taxes would seriously restrict the marketability of Michigan mu- nicipal bonds, particularly those issued to finance school build- ings, It is improbable that any capital improvement financing could be undertaken by Michi- gan municipalities while this question was being decided by the courts. * * * “It has been proposed by the Citizens’ Advisory Committee ma- jority report that their recommen. dations be adopted as a package. If the legality of the two principal “We expect even ei , highways to be temorrow morning." Many main trunklines throughout (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Stricken Te CECIL B. DeMILLE Movie Pioneer Dies at Home Long, Illustrious Life of Cecil B. DeMille Ends With Heart Attack HOLLYWOOD um—Cecil B, De- Mille, 77, pioneer movie maker famed for his Biblical epics, died today. DeMille died at his heme at 5:30 a.m. He had been i] for a week. Death was attributed to a heart attack, With him when he died was his daughter Cecilia, and her husband Joseph Harper. A nurse who had been attending the veteran film maker notified them when DeMille appeared to be failing during the night. pe DeMille, who’ remained at the top of motion picture hierarchy from the days of its infancy until the present, had just turned from greatest pictures. extensive travels on behalf of the movie, “The Buccaneer,” when he became il. - S$, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 _ ee epee ie ge care (sg Se eee ees oki? ar ie op mer + . ene ea Stores, Plants Wyil! Choose Queen Close forDay gt Ice Carnival Mass to Show Support, of Executions; Defy Selection of a Winter Sports U S ‘Meddling’ Queen will highlight the annual | Pontiae Arca lee Carnival next) SAAD : weekend | HAVANA (UPII—An_ estimated, Parks, Sponsored by the Pontiac & Recreation Department and the North Community Club eine ot Cuban war criminals’ “oresdC | aekdan) Gl and)Eeps ind to defy US “meddling” in the carnival will feature an ice this country’s affairs show, exhibition hockey and con O0.U00 supporters of Fidel Castro! began massing here today to dem at their support for the exe- : ' rot) OMS TP a“ * > tests open to all Oakland County Rash government office beys and girls sclioois jactories and stores closed The winning queen will have which was also pro claimed of national mourn it for physicians said to have Leen killed by supporters of ousted s President Fulgencio Batista be- they tended wounded revo [honaries, fur the da am a Alyea Denies Jasinski Killing Accused Testifies He Had Not Part in Vicious | Southfield Murder 1 did not kill Tiny fine David Salvador, new president of phe CTC Labor Federation, ot dered its members—except news- men and transportation or com | munications workers — to stop | work from 6 a.m. te midnight. A few hours before the sched led start ol the mass meeting, | Agriculture Minister dfumberto, With these words. accused mur Manin announced that the derer Raymond L, Alyea, a com teats of 900 fo 600 army men held bat Marine Corps veteran, took the prisoner here will begin Thursday! witness stand yesterday in his own or Friday in the Sports Palace, aidefense The trial is being heard “OPT tadium with a capacity of 15,000 in Oakland County Circuit Judge! William J. Beer's courtroom. who drafted Cubss new, “Tiny” is Anthony Jasinski, 51 penal code while he was serving whose brutally-beaten and stabbed nthe hills with Castro’s guerrillas,| body was foynd Aug. 1 on the floor | ! pecftators bet he himself will prosecute the of thw tigerifrita Nurseries, Inc., defendants 22951 Northwestern Hwy., South are to be Lt. Col. Ricardo field, where he was a caretaker I. (au, Ma) Jest Blanco: ind Capt Pedro Morejon Valdes, who between them are aceised of f three Plies ule Sosa “Men will tell you how 1 even looked out after Tiny,” sald the yearold Alyea, a self-em- fatouring or killing more than 200 oloyed gardener who did some evolutionaries while Batista wos york for the nursery, iy power Assistant Prosecutor Wilham FE Newspapers here say Sosa alone Lang contended us he closed his hax admitted JO8 killings and de... vexterday that Alyea who clared that he “would dot again once served a prison ferm for in the same curcumatances wined robbery beat und stabbed) Reports from Orlente Prov: Jasin ki to death with a jack han | Ince. where Castro launched bis die, hedge clippers and selssors | revolution, farmer, there affler ATTa stole money from a say had a saying about Sona: pas, cuande Sosa pasa? (what “Cue Yoay cheek he had just cashed for ‘him happens when “Sony passes?) — Judge Beer yesterday demed a Cruelty and slaughter.” motion from Alyeus court-appoint i ed attorney, William EO Beasley May Miguel Duque de bestrada that the first-degree charge should rebel legal officer for Hiawana ye dismissed as Lang had tailed Province, said the start of they, prove the murder was com tals here was delayed to RIV@ Qined on perpetration of a rob the authorities time to interrogate 4), 600 farmers from the Oriente Th who will testify Alvea, twice married and the father of three children, was The farmers began arriving Mon bringing with them: harr-rat scheduled to return to the stand today to continue telling his story Ais ing stavies of the atrocities com mitted by Batista’s men of what happened the night of July 31 when police say Jasinski One of the most shocking wa, “Al. stories was told by Hidalguia Habasa, who said her husband Beasley in dis opening stiute wan a courter for the rebels. One [UCEG said he would attempt to show that Alyea became fright day, she sald, an army patrol | dragged him out of their house, cup off his hands and feet, poured oll over him and burned him to death before her ever. ened, fearing be might go back to ‘prison as a parole violator, when he stumbled upon Jasinski s bods “He was barmiess, suid the jbushy-haired Alyea when Beasley Other@ told of cold blooded kill usked how Jasinski wag thought ings by regular troops or ex-Sen.laf by his fellow workers Ltolando Maasferrer’s “private! “DT had no grudge against him Whose vietims often were) We would joke about his weight farmers whose only offense was making him always the goat. Bul fHint they lived ain the battle zone jit was the same old) joke” i ordering today's: to-| ken work stoppage, called on CTC High—Very High Finance members to “support the measures | of revolutionary justice and the) NEW ALBANY. Ind (UPL Joe punishment of ussassing and crim: Berry, a) finance company man inals against foreign meddling, in ager. nonpluxsed yesterday defense of our national sovereignty. when a bank from which he ex nd in faver of the extradition of pected a certified check for $27 10 war criminals.” sent himoone for $) 000,027 10 CL: Siby deli Wiis Vice Hearing Set Feb. 17 Charges against 32 persons wall police vice sqitid rand Pier be aired at a Municipal Court neared commletion todas hearing Feb. 17 as preliminaries * * * resulting from the mammoth Municipal Judge Ceol Bo Me = : Callum 4 @ 8 ter diay otiamissedt! charges against Th more persons The Weather There are still 1 persons, in Full U Weather Bureau Kepert including five women, charged PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Hasardous with conspiracy to violate state driving warning. Rain today, ecewrring as freesing rain until late merning High kaMMDIng laws; seven charged today 45. Rain beeoming freeelng ran and sleet then changing te snow and turning colder tonight Low tonight Tomorrow snow. diminishing fo flurries and much colder, High @4. Total addi tional snewfall tonight and tomerrow ' S inches, Winds east te seuth Ta miles teday. shifting to weet and narth westerly (0. 40 miles tonight with possession of numbers bet slips and six with loitering in an Hegel gambling place. The persons charged with violat ink Jaws face examination Feb. 17? te determine whether they will be bound over to Circuit Court pace wine calm the others. charged with viola Hun seta Wednesday at S top: tion of ety erdinances, face trial in tiaea Th yat? hh a: ‘; Suse yisge Eoeteee ye . ea Judge McCallum said he would Dat hindle all the causes at the same hearmy whieh is expected to last mover ab weeks slate Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & @ 1 Moon seta Thursday at 5 Tuesday in Pontiac (an recorded downtown? Highest temperature 47 lowest temperature ja Mean leniperarure ins The judge dismissed charges Weather Snow. sleet. tain nypainst 40 persons lust week. Filty-one persons were selaed the Dewntown Temperatures — 3 day of the raid, and a number 1 am 7 2 12m 19 BAW cece F) bpm ‘oof others afterward. a am | 10 am 7 The Jatest against whom the One Year Ago in Pontiac charges were dismissed are: Highest temperature ... .. ’ Charles Fowler. George Fowler | lowest temperature .. : si) Mran temperature : Allesia Gillespie, Johnnie James, Weather—6now . Wilson Magby, Sabado MeQuey,| Highest and Lowest Temperatures Gilber' res! ee thy : Seer ue Bens La Ot fens silbert Preston, Lewis Rhymes, o in 1924, William Thomas, Isaiah Wade, Wil- = ‘ey Willlams, Lillian Fowler, Jua- Tuesday's Temperature Chart pee 3 31 Memphis 2 ¢¢ nita Moody and Julia Williams. + 65 Ln 1906 n 23 Baltimore 63 Miami Beach 7) | ae i Townevile nneapols | Buffalo 3 24 New Orleans 73 ‘9 That Settles It! atten ie B Sate “ineinne 4 mehe . Cleveland 4 33 Pellston FF} Hi HOLLYWOOD (UPD Asked Jen ver oenlx é Bi mci Detroit a 24 Pittaburen 48 4) why ip" eset his third one i. . Louis ‘ ue in June . " | Port Worth 76 90 6 Francisco 4 HY “ m 5 ane to * a boy, conn Gr Rapids 7 ] L) Sie Matte Hy \} Ernie Kovacs said: “My wife, Edle oughion ray. City 2 y tus - Incheon tite 77 66 Wachington 4% jg, Adams, and our two girls, Betty Kanses City 25 9 Seattle 41 34,and Kip, spent foutr hours the Los Angeles @5 fi Tampa - lel eee uy Marquette ‘al 11 jother day reviewing girls’ names, NL " \ v) AL | sald | Candidates must be county resi- a + THE PONTIAC PRES ' ally in Havana to Back War a chance at the Miss America title, via other beauty contests sponsored in Michigan this year, Leonard Buzz, recreation supervisor, dents who are single and at least 1s years of age. They must be in- terested in winter sports, but not professionally active in them, Buzz isaid * * * ‘The queen will win a ski ensem- ble, traphy and a trip to Grayling fo represent Pontiac in the Gray- ling Winter Sports Queen contest. Kmtry blanks are available at the Rarks & Recreation office in the City Hall Judging and crowning of the queen will cap the carnival events ‘Sunday, Feb. 1 | Saturday af 1:30 p.m. there | will be races for boys and girls | in age .brackets from 7 to 14) years old, Special events are ‘| | AP Wirephote The Day in Birmingham Alaskans Pray ‘State Approves Bonds for Governor ‘for School Construction Egan’s Condition Grave Following Emergency Operation Tuesday - BIRMINGHAM — A _ §$2,100,000/seph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. She major general obligation bond for had a fractured pelvis and possible school construction in Birmingham skull fracture and was in critical was approved at Lansing yester-| condition. day by the State Municipal Fi- Driver of the car, Jon O. Karau, nance Commission. 40, of 2515 Silverside St., Water- Dr. Richard Featherstone, as- ford Township, told police he was sistan¢ superintendent, sald the = to stop on the slippery monies will be used mainly for : the new junior-senior high school already under canetracten | at | timist will hold a 6:30 p.m, dinner Evergreen and 13 Mile roads. meeting at Devon Gables tomor- Some will be spent to alia a ; . : ; j ; » Birming-:/ Spina, chief photographer Iding. resident surgeon drainage problems at the Birming-| Tony agate qe ‘iceial a said ham High School and on plans for|for a Detroit newspaper and hold- the governor, a Democrat, was the new Westchester Elementary er of 98 awards in the field of resting comfortably, Mrs. Egan! School. \Photography will show pictures SEATTLE (AP) — Alaskans of- fered a prayer today for their| first elected governor, fighting a desperate battle for survival after an emergency operation for a ser- ious intestinal ailment. x * * William A, Egan, 44, remained in critica] condition although Dr. od Birmingham Chapter of Sorop- and the couple’s son, Dennis,- 11,| * * * jtaken on one of his major assign- were at the bedside. At a special meeting of the board|ments. 6 — x * * of education last night, Mrs. Dean| —— The former storekeeper from |G. Beier, of 1509 Dorchester Rd.,| Birmingham Democratic Club Valdez underwent emergency sur-|W28 appointed to the school board. named Mrs. John H. McVay, chair- gery Tuesday morning. He was) The wife of the former mayor who|man for two years when it met flown here from Juneau, Alaska’s is now city attorney, will replace last night in the Community House. -apité ier.|Mrs. Donald Parry who has moved| Other officers elected are John capital, aay a - pours earlier lon Bir vainghars. iFoley, vice chairman; Mrs. John scheduled for children 15 years | old or more, Champion teams in the Parks & Recreation league will vie in the} exhibition hockey game at 2 30) pin, Saturday , At 3 pm. 'preliminaries will be held, if: nec essary, Buzz said * * * | At 7p om Saturday wall he prizes for the winners of free style figure xkating Competition open to beys and giris of all ages At 7 @m the Skating Club show and at % pm be crowned Fartier Sunday there will be fi nals in the racing and figure skat ing contests The queen will be selected at 4% pi Reds Set Control of Berlin Traffic. East Germany Readies Plan to Take Over, | Access. to City the beauty contest | thers Pontiac fir ter Aiuinday peut the will an queen wall | : | BERLIN (AP)—I-ast Germany's) iCommunist government said to-| lday it is preparing to take over ‘control of Allied military traffic jinto isolated West Berlin The warning was in a }apeech to the Feast German Pat liament by Communist party boss | "Walter Ubricht | * * * Ulbricht Het say when his pregime would get control over Al-| Hed military traffic. The Sovict| (inion in notes on Nov. 27 to the Allied pow gis said this would hap ipen in months, presumably at the end of May Ulbricht also asserted that the) Soviet proposal to make West Ber-! sued lid ra ie lin a dlenulitarived “free city has one oim Complete liquidation of the Allied) occupation regime . * * * Ulbricht denied he hag any) blackade iitentions, provided the] Allies nevotinte with his govern: | ment on access to Berlin. The Al have vefused so far to have any dealings with the East Ger Man reyime saying that the /So viet T'nion as one of the victors of World War TL is still responsible ‘for ats zone of Germany, and the Fast German govern jivent ix not a valid, representa- tive government lies Comuininist | “ 9, MIKOYAN FORCED DOWN Mikoyan waved for the photographers as he entered a Scandi- navian airliner at Idlewild Airport yesterday. A few hours later the plane developed engine trouble Newfoundland. The plane was Mikoyan and his party of five were to change planes for the trip to Moscow. Besides the Russians, there were — Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas but landed safely at Argentia, en route to Copenhagen, where 26 other passengers. <x = a | — Worst Storm of Winter to Coat Roads With Ice _ (Continued From Page One) the were reported impassable op oextremely treacherous — this morning. In Detroit, clogged drains on the city's fso main expressways hamble-of rush hour traf- Viate made ia fi What was described as a ‘‘fan- taste traffic jam” occurred when’ colder with snow and blowing and Weather Bureau in Kansas City ‘issued the following special bulle- tin on the storm's progress: | “Storm tenter near Indianapolis ‘at 8 a.m., moving northeastward at about 45 m.p-h. Sleet and freezing | rain southwestern lower Michigan, land snow northwestern lower Mich- | j\igan this morning becoming much, the drains teed over, flooding the | drifting snow over entire area by. super highways Late this morning the U.S GOP Calls Meeting for ‘Overhaul’ DES MOINES, Iowa (UPII— Republican organization leaders were summoned today to go to work on a party rebuilding job | with a warning that they could “no longer afford the luxury of parttime dabbling in politics.” * * * The stimmmons came fron, GOP National Chairman Meade Aleorn in a statement prepared for a closed of the party's executive committer Ilis de tailed program for an overhaul of the party will be laid before the Republican National Commit- tee tomorrow or Friday Re RSLON GOP leaders turned to a dis- cussion of ways to recoup fron in the 1958 elections after two days of hearings by the committee, which will recommend a site for the 1960 national convention, losses No final decision «on vention ely was expected several weeks Chieaze and Pinladelphia were regarted as the strongest candidates, although the San Francisco dele- gation was reported have made oa faverable impression on the site commiltee for to junior, of 26 Rose Ct, and (late this afternoon.” | The weather caused one death, ‘in Detroit this morning | Poltce sald Harmon Windl, 67, | was found dead in his bed at 1 ‘a.m. His wife told authorities | he complained of shortness of breath after shoveling snow last night. | Two planes were believed in, distress last night and early this/ |morning Residents around Hudsonville in [Ottawa County reported a Jow-| iflying plane circling the area. But) lit flew away after a few minutes worth of generators that don’t work fice “it is presently studying ques-| jand was. not heard from after) ‘that. | * *« | | In Lansing, State Police used an jemergency generator truck to set up searchlights around Lake Lan- ‘sing to try to help a pilot who icircled that area for several hours ‘In a light plane, The small craft flew away about | 1 am. and police called off the! search about 2:30 a.m. Authori- ities sald they did not know whether the plane landed at a nearby ‘airport. | State Police sald ‘anywhere from 200 to 1,000 trucks” were _ stuck on main highways, many of them unable to get up icy hills. | . : Dr, Joe W, Baker, who headed iR. App, secretary and Don Mc- the team of surgeons, said after-| The Southeastern Horticultural, wards Egan had a “‘desperate Therapy Council will sponsor a chance to get well.’ His chances,| work shop from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dr. Baker added, were ‘‘little less tomorrow at the Community, than 50 per cent.” House. Mrs. Alice Burlingame, The slightly built, unassuming said the session will be to train governor took the oath of office volunteers to work with the men- Jan. 3, only a few minutes after tally and physically handicapped President Eisenhower declared in the area the huge northland the union's} i9th state. | Demoastrations of possible pr®- A | grams for hospitals will be | Four hours later Egan was hos-| tat re eeee pitalized for a gall bladder ail-| on ia report its findings in the field. ment. He underwent an operation) in Juneau Jan. 6. | Dr. J. F. Ensroth, Birmingham + « ‘psychiatrist, will speak briefly on Meanwhile, Secretary of State “Understanding People.” Hugh J. Wade, 56, also a Demo- —=— crat, has taken over the affairs) A Pontiac woman, Mrs, Alta, of state. He became acting gov- Fournier. 62, of 227 S, Edith St.,| ermor when Egan left the capital. suffered internal injuries when she’ Alaska’s ultra-modern state con- was struck by a car as she walked stitution, drawn up by a 1955 con- across Telegraph road near the, stitutional convention headed by! Miracle Mile Shopping Center this| Egan, gives the state only two morning | elective offices, governor and Bloomfield Township police said, secretary of state ‘the woman was taken to St. Jo-, — ——— | Gee, treasurer. Committee chairmen are Mrs. Howard F. Carr, corresponding secretary; William Merrill, pro- gram; Mrs, Blythe Jones, election board; Mrs. Herbert Fisher, mem- bership; Nick Thimmesch, public- ity and Mrs. Gordon Sweeney, registration. Junior and senior boards of the Junior and senior boards of the Birmingham Teen Club will meet at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow at the Bir- mingham Community House, Discussion of future plans with emphasis on the need for a build- jing willbe held. Giant Storm Slashes Path Across Nation (Continued From Page One) Illinois had six or more inches on the ground—with more expected. The Weather Bureau forecast ‘continued heavy snow today from Has TVA Wasted 46 Million Dollars? — WASHINGTON (UPI)— Govern-|and tests of an additional modifi- ment auditors reported today that cation have been agreed upon. the Tennessee Valley Authority); The report said TVA informe has bought 46 million dollars Campbell's general accounting of-| properly. jtions related to” the ‘“‘substantial”’ * * damages it has suffered. Comptroller General Joseph — Campbell advised Congress that l the TVA “is presently studying” Red Deputy Gets whether it should claim damages from the supplier of the genera. NAVY Base Tour tors, Westinghouse Electric Corp-| oration, Between Planes * | Campbell said in an audit of NORFOLK. Va. W — Soviet TVA operations that the agency) Dep. Premier Anastas I. Mi- has run into “serious probiems'’; koyan got a Navy escorted tour with the 14 turbo-generators, which’ around parts of the U. §. Naval | lit bought for installation at its, Air Station at Argentia, Nfld., Shawnee and Kingston—s+ e a m! today while waiting for a plane northeastern Kansas through lowa and into the Great Lakes region. Generally, snow’ depths ranged rom 5 to 8 inches, with a high of 2 inches at Douglas, Wyo. Temperatures in the southern part of the snow area were in the teens, but reached 5 to 10 below zero from the upper Mississippi Valley westward through the d nerthern plains. : x * * Freezing rain and drizzle, mixed with occasional sleet, fell from eastern Oklahoma northeast- ward through central Missouri and Illinois, along the border’: of southern Michigan and .into cén- , tral New York state. Snow was reported as far east as Pennsylvania and southern New England. Spring - like weather prevailed south of the freezing belt of pre- cipitation with temperatures gen- erally in the 60s and 70s. Showers and thundershowers were reported from northeastern Texas through the lower Mississippi ‘Valley into plants. | to resume his interrupted trip * * _ back to the Soviet Union. As originally installed, the re-| Capt. W. E. Hastings of Sioux port said, the generators failed to| Falls, S. D., commander of the | Authorities fréported US. 23, meet the heat rate specified in| base. showed him around a Navy ‘north of U.S. 16 at Brighton was|the contracts. This required the) exchange, a commissary, and a limpassable, as was U.S. 12 be- itween Jackson and Ypsilanti. F:s- ipecially bad conditions were re-| * * * iported on M-60 near Jackson and U.S. 127 south of Jacksen. Trucks ‘were also U.S. 112. use of more coal to get a given) galley — well away from all re- ‘heat rate, thus boosting fuel csts.| stricted areas | BIRMINGHAM PAGE 2 Mikoyan had tomato juice. a omelette, bacon, toast | The audit said some improve-| iments resulted when three units! cheese reported stalled an were modified but they still didn’t; and coffee before starting on the meet the contract specification! tour. CENTRAL'S DEBATE CHAMPIONS ~— This is the 12-member Pontiac Central High School debate team which won the Saginaw Valley Conference championship for 1958-59. It now will compete in the state regional tournament next month. From left, seated, are Nadine Morris, a sophomore, of 9T7 Argyle Ave.; Stan Walker, senior, of 1035 James K Blvd.; Phil Somers, senior, of 69 W. Colgate Ave; Pat DeKay, senior, of 44 N. Saginaw St; Gark Davis, senior, of 1909 > Ponting Press Phete Lenore King, senior, of 198 High St. Standing from left are Walter R. Smith, debate coach; Rodger Olsen, junior, of 216 Liberty St.; George Rendziperia, junior, of 178 Auburn Ave,; Valerie Armstrong, senior, of 422 Bloomfield Ave.; Douglas Spurlock, junior, of 21 Pingree Ave.; Ken Freer, junior. of 18 Jefferson St.. and Gary Miller, Marie Circle. The team won 34 debates and lost 14. this season. ‘southern sections of the Ohjo Val- ley and Tennessee. , : Pioneer of Movies Cecil B. DeMille Dies (Continued From Page One) mighty epic, “The Ten Command- ments,”’ which stands as one of his igreatest pictures. DeMille turned out more than 70 pictures, starting in 1913 with “The Squaw Man,” the first movie ever made in Hollywood. The young actor-turned director, filmed it for the Jesse Lasky Fea- ture Play (Co. which he, Lasky and Samuel Goldwyn formed in 1912, with Dustin Farnum, a Broad- way star, in the lead. “The Squaw Man”, cost $15,500, a far ery from the multimillion- lar productions. DeMille was entually to make. DeMille pictures on the grand seale were “Reap the Wild Wind,” “Sammon and Delilah,” and “The Greatest Show Earth.” : The secmd ‘Ten Command- ments,’ made in 1956, was the biggest of all, however. It cost nearly 12 million dollars, used thousands in its cast, and ranks as one of the greatest box office attractions of motion picture his- tory. : DeMille was born Aug. 12, 1881, in Ashfield, Mass. His father was a teacher who studied for the min- istry at one time. It was from his fether's habit of reading the Bible sorbed his feeling for the epic qualities of religion that marked his movie-making career. Track Star Has Cause to Regtet His Speed LEEDS, England (UP1)—British ‘\four-mipute miler Derek Thbotson was fined five pounds ($14) yes- terday for exceeding the 3% miles per hour speed limit in a car. “Tt is one of the few occasions when he has regretted traveling. too fast,” his attorney said. « aloud each night, that DeMille ab- “ ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 ‘ Williams Noncommital on Unlimited Jobless Pay LANSING —Gov. Williams, leus.” Rep. Allison Green of doesn’t say yes and he doesn't say, Kingsten, Republican fioor lead- no on jobless pay benefits of un-! limited duration. * * * Moreover, i i maximum of : = terday. trol in the House. i: aggre cial, unlimited compensation. Williams said: vision.” broke in. representing an labor.”’ Weber said. cality of the proposal. if the AFL-CIO seeking his support for legislation te do away with the existing basic 26 weeks benefits, he hasn’t heard about it, the Gov- ernor told a news conference yes- is bogganing, ers, said ‘unrealistic.’ They said that with the unem- ployment compensation fund to- jit would mean higher payroll taxes on industry, deteri- eration of the state’s business climate and loss of jobs. Kowalski argued that with un- employment at about. 325,000, it would be cheaper in the long run to have unlimited jobless pay than ‘Special Election Slated by Troy School Board TROY—A special election has been scheduled by the Troy Board of Educaiton for March 10 when residents will be asked to approve a 5'¢ mill incr@ase for operational |purposes. Superintendent Rex Smith said|,,, if accepted it will mean a tax rate |, of $22.75 per thousand assessed valuation for two years. He said residents are currently paying $16.70 per thousand and last year paid $25.19. Registration deadline for voters will be Feb. 9. For the first time in the school election the seven pre- Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas JOHN CLARK Service for John Clark, 81, of 112 Oak Hill St., will be held at 1:30 p.m. Friday from the Hun- toon Funeral Home, Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. A native of Scotland, Mr. Clark had. beay employed in the main- tenance ‘depattinent’ of the city schools. He was a life member of Master Masons Cambus No. 114 in Scotland and a member of the Canadian Legion. Surviving besides _ his wife, Amina, are a daughter, Mrs. Ron- ald Profrock of Norristown, Pa.; two grandchildren; and one great- one great-grandchild; three’ sis- , ters, Mrs. Ina’ Hutchinson of, Drayton Plains, Mrs. Mina Brabon of Hillsdale and Mrs. Laura |t Fenzel of Goodrich; and two) brothers. { The body is at Farmer-Snover Funeral Home. WILLIAM AVERY Kathleen 'week-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. KEEGO HARBQR — Service for|"Y William Avery, 83, of 2452 Pine Lake Ave., will be held at 8 p.m.) Thursday at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at! the McBride Cemetery, tcetcake County. Several Republican lawmakers dismissed the objective laid dewn last week by the AFL-CIO execu- tive board as pie-in-the-sky talk. Republicans have an fron grip on the Senate and nominal con- * * * to put those out of work and with exhausted benefits on welfare rolls. Michigan employment security cinets’ voting places will be used. COUNTY Historic. Old Church Mr. grandchild. Clark died Monday after- noon in Pontiac General Hospital after a long illness. Rep. Joseph J. Kowalski of De- : troit, a Democrgt and union offi- lot of money” but how much was said yesterday that he or not known. seme other lawmaker will submit) a bill at the current session for legislation for up to an extra 13 as House Democratic | is the governor's floor 7 Kowalski, ,* leader, i spokesman on administration pol- % icy matters. * * * “T haven't studied any such pro- When questions persisted and Williams said he didn’t know j whether labor might have sub- mitted its plan to one of his aides, | Paul Weber, his press secretary, “We have nothing in this office approach from'geant to lieutenant; The governor said he could not!Richard Overmyer, answer off hand as to the. practi- sergeant. Rep. George M. Van Peursem (R-Zeeland), former House speak- er and laber. committee chair- man, cated it “utterty Fidicu u- officials, who administer the job- less pay program, said removing duration restrictions would ‘‘cost a Last year, even with emergency iweeks unemployment compensa- tion for the long term jobless— making a total maximum duration of 39 weeks, over 10,000 persons exhausted benefits. Four Police Officers 'Promoted in Southfield SOUTHFIELD—The promotion of four Southfield police officers has been announced by City Adminis- trator Robert. J. McNutt. Milton Sackett, from lieutenant to captain; Charles Durbin, ser- James Har- patrolman to sergeant and patrolman to All qualified under civil service examination. | Sackett and Durbin have been iwith the department for four years; Harvey and Overmeyer) ‘have seen two years service. vey, Destroyed by Fire RIDGEWOOD, N. J. (UPD— Fire destroyed historic Ridegwood Reformed Church early this morning in spite of the efforts of firemen from six communities. The alarm was sounded at 3:37 a.m. EST. By the time the flames were brought under control two hours later, equipment and fire- men from Hohokus, Glen Rock, Midland Park, Wyckoff and Fair Lawn as well as Ridgewood were at the scene. The steepled edifice, belong- ing to the Dutch Reformed Con- gregation, is located in the heart of the Community opposite the Municipal Bus Terminal and the Memorial Park. Hundreds of spec- itators were attracted to the area Py the flames. Overheated Chimney MRS, JAY B. WARD Mrs. Jay B. (Clara E.) Ward, 79. of Liberty St., died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of several weeks. She was a member of Bethany Baptist Church and the Rebekah Lodge. Mrs. Ward leaves a son, Ray of Pontiac; three grandsons; and Deaths Elsewhere BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mr. Avery died Tuesday at his home following a 2y-month ill-| ness, He was a member of the Meth- odist Church and was a retired of Keego Harbor; Edna vvery of Flint and Mrs.' ‘Norman Thompson of Ann Arbor; | three grandchildren and one great-| i grandchild. KATHLEEN MARIE WALTER LAKE ORION — Last rites for Marie Walter, the rving M, Walter Jr., 943 Merritt i St. , will be held at 11 a.m. Thurs- | day at Allen's Funeral Home. Bur- ial will be in the St. Joseph section of East Lawn Cemetery. The child died of virus pneu- monia yesterday morning at her home. She was a member of St. Joseph i Church. Surviving besides her parents: are four brothers, James, John, Gerald and Bruce, all at home and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. cn | Po ie aR cS two daughters, six- | oe . Thurs., Fri. Sat. We ‘Reserve the Right to Limit All Quantiities 13x17M% Inch Tra y | NEW YORK (AP) — the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, died Tuesday of a heart attack.’ He had been head of the New York office of the railroad’s legal department since 1949. iE * * * CHARLES TOWN, W. VA —Dr. Bonney Youngblood, agricultural economist who did considerable research in the (AP) 77, an courses Armada Fire | ARMADA—An overheated chim-| ‘ney set fire to a wall in the Ray’ _..'Atkeson home at 78477 Romeo He was born in Milano, Tex. ™, atin SALE ONE-DAY SPECIALS Thursday, 9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. All Famous Brands .. . Loaners—Returned Models—Rebuilts, Demonstrators— Etc. FAMOUS BRAND REFRIGERATORS Choose from Frigidaire, Westinghouse, Kelvina- tor, General Electric and others. Rebuilt and guar- anteed. $4800 Rebuilt 17” and 21” Table and Console Models All Major Makes ‘58-68-78 | Ls] IRONRITE Automatic Ironer This was traded in on a new one — We've com- pletely gone over it and will guarantee. Frigidaire “No-Vent" Electric Dryer The people who trade this in had to have a gas model. We have com- pletely checked it over and will guarantee. No outside vent needed. THE | 29° Famous Easy Spinner Big 9-pound capacity —Wash in one tub... Rinse in other. Rebuilt and guaranteed. |. CANNON: Sa First. Quality Muslin Sheets Regular $2.49—72x108 Inches Plank Rd., last night and caused - about $50 damage, Romeo State’ ‘Police reported today. | Atkeson, who rents the focal put out the blaze himself before ithe Armada and-Romeo Fire De- partments arrived on the scene. 'No one was injured. Man of Strong Habits Receives Nasty Jolt | COURTLAND, Ala. (UPI)— Willie Burt gave police a logical) explanation as to why he made a eft turn into the path of another) | automobile: | “I been turning there for a long’ ‘time, and there never has been ‘another car there before."’ ‘L’ of a Difference | PITTSBURGH (UPI) — There'll ibe an “L" of a difference when \Barbara E. Flaherty gets married soon. She and Michael Faherty. ap-| plied for a wedding license yes- terday. | Southwest, died Tuesday after a lweek's illness, He served as an economist for the U.S. Depart-. iment of Agriculture for 21 years. new ANTI-COLD capsule BANARIN Fortified with VITAMINS A, B,,C, 0 More Complete Relief of Cold Miseries! @ Shrinks swollen membranes @ Relieves sinus pressure and pain @ Dries up mucus ec $498 | I | ‘Soe Cx . *For symptomatic relief of colds = eet Sr aan i es » CLEARANCE SALE EE OS ee Be BARGAIN BASEMENT 98 N. Saginaw — _—Main Fleer ” aT | | Now On! In SIMMS | THURS., FRI. & SATURDAY RINE RIE - an Not a . Unknown Brand—But PRB NATIONALLY AOVERTISED sheets in gleaming white muslin. '* for longer service. ($2.69 Value—Full 81x108 | | PASTEL SHEETS _ 12x108 1” © Emches . ou... ce eee ‘| §1x108 17 Choice of yellow. green, blue or pink. 130 thread count muslin. oe eS Oe eee flat or fitted styles. Full 130 thread count $2.00 LINEN or DACRON-RAYON | TABLECLOTHS 6252" plaid linen or solid color Decron-Rayon CANNON Choice of nch Size—Now .. . $1.69) PERCALE SHEETS 72x108 19 Inches -.....5---.0--85: 2 | 81x108 37 Inches ....++)..6:....-- 2 Over 180 thread count tn these & extra jong-wearing white eabaraiae ‘| Pe ee es Se i” FLT GE SEI LEER BE 48 ~ 558 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHO of PONTIAC 51 W. Huron St. FE 4-1555 Be) BLANKETS Values “ OO YOUR #! CHOICE orton. 72290-inch SATIN BOUND PLAID BLANKET i SIMM): sar ie ea ile ee ee mee Big Savings on 3 Styles %& 72x84" RANCHERO % 70x80” INDIAN % DOUBLE SHEET PLAID Ranchero is blends of nylon, botton, 5 Indian blanket in nylon and © & nylon or big double sheet blanket in | plaids : . - Robert! Ej Schwebel, 54, genera] attorney ml Bt 1.74) ROTHERS Darewee! /&§ farmer. Surviving are a Leo Stone and Mr. and Mrs. Irv- ing Walter, all of Lake Orion. son, W. 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Per running foot only 6-7-8-10-16-20 size nails No hmit size paint brushes 100% cellulose wadding fill Asst colors All metal snack trays ideal for individual while watching TV, Pertect for the kid- dies, too' Rugged construction, decorated is easy to keep clean, clips-on or Metal tubular legs are rubber tipped. 5 different patterns, Pat- Don’t —Individual Size FOLDING ALL METAL! Snack Table $1.98 Value—Now 719: for in- Regular $1.19 Cc 2 North i(k 2 Value oe DIVA IVD crores YOU Pay Full Price for Famous Brand VITAMINS () SAVE $1.56 on Parke-Davis _ and you wont as long as SIMMS slashes Prices the way we do! Compare the brand, potency, vitamin and the price before you buy! Stock up NOW! VITAMINS FOR THE FAMILY (SAVE $1.77 on Parke-Davis Saginaw PALABEC ABDEC Me DLV IMD srctites SYRUP VITAMINS — : 16-Ounces 100 for LADIES’ WEAR SPECIALS for THURS., am 4M ie oe FRI.and SAT. BUY NOW—SAVE MORE! : [| SAVE 96c on ae) AVE $1.97 on SPECIALS for WOMEN RYBUTOL NEW STYLES and NEW FABRICS Ladies’ Skirts For NURSES, WAITRESSES, RECEPTIONISTS, LAB WORKERS ae Abbott's FIRST QUALITY white nylon for long. wear. 60-15 full fashion Ideal for service workers in all sizes, 8'2 to 10'2 ad. E PARKE-DAVIS MYADEC Care : Regular $3.30 value—30 caps. E PARKE-DAVIS GERIPLEX KAPSEALS — Regular $7 50 value— 100 (OF sn5 2 ss: ee ees LILLYS “MICEBRIN TABLETS Regular ‘$8.40 value—100 tor. ee ee oe MILES MULTIPLE VITAMINS _ Regular $2.94 value— 100 tor Noein ce etreeeees UPJOHN’S UNICAPS Regular $7.75 value—250 for.....+- , Vidaylin VITAMIN White NYLONS Liquid CAPSULES 16-Ounces 100 CAPS or 7% ws 37 aE 398 PAIR ee so ee teens Values = ° to $8 GI SAVE 41 on - ‘ YOUR : a Squibb's CHOICE a ° Theragran- ° M Capsules Fabrics include 100°. wools, rayon $ $10.99 Value B acetate, cotton-rayon-orlon, flannel and 2 100 for cotton rayons. Styles include straight, . flared, full gathered and gored Some e 7” have self or leather belts Choice of - solid colors. . prints, stripes, tweeds, ° Ges ite Sole []SAVE $193 on § __T} SAVE $1.06 on = SQUIBB'S : MEAD’S WASH 'n’ WEAR VIGRAN MULCIN ; an | ae . Ladies’ Blouses. in; ae pan j= "yy $4.17 24° siso G4 89 ry Value : : Value ae 1 DSTORE ACID TABLETS 50 mes... 100 [CG Gauseneencdds cace seo sec aoe 1.29 Roll- leeve, Peter P nd ee a = tailored) co\lars. Choice off pared: THIAMIN: CHLORIDE TABS 96< Srripen orste ares solid colors. All Zo mgs] 00 lon ee __ _ sizes 32 to 38. VITAMIN A CAPSULES ' 25,000 units—100 for .... ; 83¢ Wash & Wear——Wrinkle Resistant—POPLIN BREWER'S ee “TABLETS 39 tC) 9 a Full 250 Tablets for.......+++-+++ees22: _ _ Ladies Uniforms TOCOPHERAL & WHEAT GERM 97¢ Reg. $1 49 value—1!00 caps..........-- SO00006¢ : i ° - All Sizes lronized : Scott's 10 to 20 , Yeast -; Emulsion 14\/, to 181%, a 120 Tabs ° 96 Caps - Reg. 12 e Reg. 88 - $1.49 “4 . $3.50 — shoe short sleeve, tailortd collars. 3 » = ton nm front to waist C led sn dow front 2 cht. Sight tlared cile aah (wel late, COD LIVER ; Calcium & i @ controled. White only. bd ake _— OIL CAPS ; Vitamin D 100 fe * 100 fe 100% DuPont Hi-Bulk ORLON | -& PO) . OF: nee OM Ladi 9 BULKY S t ye > $1.39 87 ° $119 67 1€S «nits QWEAaTErS 2 ——— Vade . to Sell at $4.95 'E Warm bulky knits with ™% Peter Par or open E style collars., Fully washable, retains shape. All sizes, 5, M, L. White. pearl buttons, B black or coral. » TaaVaal J BROTHERS $8 N. Saginaw $2.98 Pharmed, 100 EE MULVITE 10 VITAMIN CAPS FOF coin « DELECTAVITE FOR CHILDREN $1.98 White, chocolated vitamins ..... serene ee 3°9 sleeves, IE VITAMIN B COMPLEX JE $1.98 Improved tabsules ... 2 E HI-POTENCY COD LIVER OIL t Regular $1.69 value—16 ounces ee ee ee CLOTHING—Meain Floor TETTVT TTT TT TTT GERITOL BLOOD TONIC B $2.98 value—liquid or tablets.............- 7 wo Imm P P BROTHERS _— cart tt <s ; / pea ) foo een pene os . | ] = | : : ; , 7 ) , THE PONTIAC.PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 = - ¢ _ Te : , | Hal Bost Save Williams, Big 3 ee | Shortage of Men Worries Farm Leaders cota, op jayes conenint | . NEW YORK (AP)—“Help want-tronic age, the space age. They | “The scientific farmer is the cd ogy more hired hands. We need riculture, a revolution so quiet accounts ed—American agriculture.” ‘have coined a new term — “the who survives today. He has an in-|to attract more young scientists) many city people are stil! un GM, Ford, Chrysler 1 oe Jagridynamics age’'—to emphasize |vestment of $15,000 per worker, into the agricultural field. We!..07. of its achievements. New . America may be desperately that agriculture has romance, ad-|as compared to an investment ofjneed more marketing researchers, . Talk With Governor on short of missile engineers, but the), | = ae \ about 500 for industr en-‘farm journalists, machinery de- techniques have speed the ‘growth nation’s No. 1 industry—agricul-/Yentures and glamor, loo. a ly * a si area engineers.” z of both meat and of vegetable) Levy Structure ;, eT iure—also is facing a manpower * 8 jerally. A he eA Hon he | ge : ea | ee aroliwica a sew | ; ast genera $ seen a crops, ey shortage, perhaps the worst in its There are twice as many new, | ™ jee ; i bao Tern ( _ rn : : hues tk peer leaders frank. career opportunities in agriculture) “It isn’t simply a matter of get- real revolution in American a£-| Pointing out that farm output ne we vr Gv. G. : ; ly worried. /each year as there are young peo-/ ~~~ had increased hai despite a 50|ennen ‘a eduied| : ~ i< ple to fill them,” said Hugh Der- | . per cent decrease in farm popula- made up on taxes, was sc’ i dutreaued \ Bee iene pg fie scent mody, assistant general manager U. S. Wants World to Know tion during the last two decades, to confer on taxes today with. Ohevet, young Osing : of the agricultural division of 2 Dermody said: “The fewer the representatives of the automotive aaoerang sneeeerieree sents generation to the glamor of the ~ s | , Chas Pfizer & Co,, a pharmaceu- a 4 M A d farms, the larger they grow, the|big three. Jet age, the nuclear apm, the CIT term. Berlin's Mayor Assured per sceaite’ wey ‘ive “ vtiae sad etait Gow | Dermody is helping coordinate come, officials Large Selection a nationwide program among edu- * * eral Motors, Ford and Chrysler STEREOPHONIC cators, farm groups, and imple- of Red Carpet Welcome “These pee advances have weald most in iis effiee to pee- RECORDINGS jmert tmanutscturers to interest) held down food costs. Food prices sath be an oquitable Oeeue auc at daniel ne the dramatic’ NEW YORK (AP) — American ish any notion that U.S, business) - oat 13 gil eave her digar es of the tax structure. | Suture Ct BEF tere: nsincaa aE ganising a’ Might be willing to sell out Berlin|!ss than 20 per cent, while oth MIRACLE MILE MUSIC | It is more than a drive to “keep business leaders are organizing a Might be wi ai ie prices have advanced about 45| The Governor also was sched- ; ; , : for the sake of trading with the ; Miracle Mile FE 8-002! “em down on the farm’? or lure hero's welcome for West Berlin ie Te ° @ h per cent,” he said. juled to confer with officials of the ~ —————= city boys with strong backs out to|Mayor Willy Brandt. The aim S| * *« * Dermodyflike a number of u.g, | Michigan Municipal League on * a litte fresh air and exercise iy offset the propaganda impact) The intention appears to be to|farm leaders, feels that perhaps ‘heir tax views. Quick Relief from amid the blooming clover. of Soviet Dep. Premier Anastas [.\disabuse both the Soviets and|the major battle between the free nate fo lar oct ee ikoyan's xpectacular tour of the Western Europeans of any idea|and Communist ideologies will be! Williams told newsmen yester- Pile Irritation Ac icutute today is more thant ited States, ithat courtesies extended to Mi-\decided by the world’s bread. 4ay he is “nearing a decision” on "a dirt farm of 60 acres, five cows, nited a basket nations. iwhat his tax program will be. 'koyan represented lack of support and 30 pigs—wi thickens in! Se ee iii poy cue sac, € multalo aren i & ae oe ; Wnckens “ for a firm American policy, about) “Our responsibility in the world,| The Governor’s tax message » back yard, fi y: The State Department, too, is : te are : Berlin, “ in terms of food, is going to be-| was expected to be presented | itching and smarting of piles. It «1 jo a big business in every likely to go out of its way to make ™ ee . 2 pec brought such quick, cooling, sooth: way, i is lerger than steel or significant gestures to Brandt. Talk from Mikoyan of the pos-|come more and more important,”| early next month. His annual | ing, astrigent rellef that its fame "“?: LY | Brandt, symbol of an’ encircled) *!ility of a new approach to East-|he said, budget message was nearing ; \West differences has made the ~ kk completion and probably will be (Advertisement | spread across ‘the land making automobiles or transportation. Of; SaOris a ; icans Ww ork city’s defiance of Soviet commu- : ? Peterson's Ointment a favorite in 65 million Americans who work ve nected to arrive in the West Berliners and many in West-| The Russians will be competing! placed before the legislature this thousands of homes, Ask your ‘ing § °¢ million—or nism, is expected to arrive in the ; druggist today for 50c box or T5c vr ES ee ie some! United States by air Feb, 7, Re-.¢™n Europe nervous. with us over whose tractor, whose) week. arly I . * * * antibiotic, whose fertilizer, whose Brandt is expected, after a brief; scientists and technicians will be f at i y's Olnte- os q pes oe ee mai apple ater ibatbal Aa ay branch of agriculture, lceptions are cale ulated to demol ————_—_—— - stop in New York, to go directly sent abroad to other lands. enon mee sae | to Washington. Brandt, apart from! “Jt will be a warfare of science Louis Miriani er soem B ONE WEEK SPECIAL! . By Find Solution a round of press and television in-\for the support of the presently,M-. Dodge, former U.S. director | terviews, is expeeted to speak be-| underprivileged countries, And, °F the budget. _ | USED Si NGER to Home Trouble fore the Pan American Union, the unless our agriculture can tap the_ Keconditioned . War College and the National|talent of our best youth, we will: in Courtroom Press Club lose that war.” Dust Sets Off & Electrified H | * * * ieiniansimae Gommatincenba ius : . a WASHINGTON (AP) —Both An He will return to New York Feb. Tito Arrives in Ce lon White Sands CONSOLE cee. $34.50 drew W. Roland and Walter L. 10 for a visit to the United Na- ¥, Ai R id Al t eeecanines ‘Stanley showed Up in court with tons, He will be the guest of May- On Last Stop of Tour | 17 al er PORTABLE eee $24.50 ; econdlitencé housing problems ior Robert F. Wagner at a recep- | fess * * * tion the same day and in the even-;- COLOMBO (AP)—President Tito RANGE, N.M. (AP)—Electrically More tax talks were scheduled | HOME © Fsoeed | Roland was geing sued on aing is expected to address the|of Yugoslavia arrived in Ceylon charged dust particles from a : . FREE DEMONSTRATION e Mew Meter ‘Health Department complaint that Council on Foreign Relations. He|today on the last stop of his tou | howling sandstorm set off the air Slim and trim aes f Oba his home was too small for his also will address 2,000 business|of so-called neutral Asian coun-|raid alert system here Tuesday. OR 3-9702 — family of nine. and community leaders at a tries. x * * | i . Terms $] 25 | Stanley was being sued for not luncheon Feb. 11. zt kl The dust, kicked up by winds free bocus gifts: Ml Cee ea s paying his rent fle said his home From New York, Brandt will go; Tito was to meet Premier Solo-|which hit 65 m.p.h. in gusts, \ vi are ene Teedesios, sccopted We Per Week ‘was too big and expensive for his to Springfield, Il, to make a Lin-|mon Bandaranaike later for talks|lodged in the alert system's re- re D eC eC a : Rebels Bd sevice ah mane. family of five. 'coln Day address Feb. 12. From|on the international situation.|lays, became electrically charged, | 4 | * * * ‘there he goes to Los Angeles, ar-|They were expected to reaffirm/and set off the system. i CURT S APPLIANCES | Both cases were settled in one riving Feb. 13. He leaves Feb. 15|their abstention from alignment x & *® I . | 6183 Jameson stroke. Roland and — Stanley for home by way of Japan, In-|with both the Communist and West-| Tt took ten minutes to clean out, tae frosted with ace swapped homes. donesia and India. ern power blocks, the relays to shut off the sirens. me = — i . 10.98 The first sign of spring... dainty lace cuffs on this now-thru-spring slim sheath! Add , | your own touch of glamour —a rope or | string of pearls to the neckliné—for ver- . : | satile charm. Criss-cross waist is slimming. Je0ee Choose navy or black, sizes 12-20 and 142-22. Waite's Inexpensive Dresses . . . 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Extra-thick glass fibre insulation reduces heat loss, permits storage of hot water for 3 days without os thot walks j Tt and won't ride up reheating. A hot water trap prevents hot water from DETROIT EDISON'S SUPER SUPPLY PLAN... yi $895 circulating through pipes until faucet is turned on. naa York wer anon tan aa DP recur $1096 Tank is made of extra-heavy-gauge steel and is phagl for all ce asf needs. 24 hours {Now for o limited nme only, you di ; j : a day, automatically, for an operating cost hove f f hot-dip galvanized inside and out for long life. as low as $3.88 a month. Ask Edison how tesa — heeamabelived ot ® this new water heating service, combined with a new Hotpoint electric water heater, can mean hot water aplenty round the clock. GET IT HOT... GET A LOT! @ great saving. These famous, nationally advertised Sarong girdles ore perfect in every way, come right out of our regulor stock, , Try @ Sarong. You'll find it dif. ferent from any other girdle you've ever worn. Boneless, lightweight control streamlines your figure to fashion’s newest lines. The unique criss-cross front lets you walk, bend, sit in com- plete comfort. And whatever you do, Sorong never, never rides up. I White, sizes 25 to M4 See the ; complete line of Hotpoint Super-Speed electric water heaters. There's one for every hot water need. : Waite's Expert Corsetieres Will Fu You “ * Secgod Floor . > e a s i * T \ % s 4 ke - q ae Ps Official of Bank to Explain FHA in Dryden Area DRYDEN. — Questions on the Federa! Housing Assn, will be an-) /swered for residents and prospec- itive homeowners in the area fol-: |lowing a discussion on the organi-| |zation by Irvine Welton of the | First National Bank of Lapeer at) 8 tomorrow night in the Dryden High School. The discussion is being spon- — sored by the Dryden Area De- velopment Assa. in answer to | : ao eres oe ned aes | EQUAL TO THOSE SERVED tion. Welton is sidered : thority on the subject. AT WORLD-FAMOUS BARS Make them the quick, easy way The development association is_ composed of community minded, with Holland House Manhattan _ persons who favor the advance-| Mix. Just add your favorite brand of whiskey to Holland ment of commercial, indusfrial, : House Manhattan Mix and agricultural and other civic in- : terests in the Dryden area you'll serve perfect Manhattans : every time * * * > PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 soge Chamber Plans rs Dispute Ruling pinner Meeting . they asked? One owner said “I won't go along|ed primarily by the Macomb Coun- with his opinion.” ity Planning Commission. Faced with the challenge that w* * 2 the question ef licensing showed | What will happen after Satur-| “discrimination against one day's deadline for the issuance of, group” the attorney said ‘The licenses remains a moot point to- only recourse now is a test case iday. The owners left the meeting in court.” istill unconvinced they should have Sheldon said at the opening of pay fx 2 perro Sea CARO in existence. the meeting that the requisites Mat, | Seney = ed in the ordinance now apply and will be enforeed. He added that the end results will be his prime con- cern. THE PONTIA 2 f £ to Be Rescinded Walled Lake Council Orders Changes Made by City Attorney avel Pit Owne WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP —! why not the f Gravel pit owners and operators; ‘Township attorney Percy G. Hor- voiced their disapproval of several|ler asked if they wanted a ruling directives: ‘in the. newly adopted)on the question from the state at- zoning ordinance at a meeting in torney general. ~ the 4ownship hall at Romeo last! night. — The group opposed primarily a. acti, SoU, opOBCE Prim ye Register Monday township board that requires each of them to pay a $100 license ice fOr Adult Class Tow see, chee © Se See ict Oxiord of ordinance governing t hours they would be allowed ©! oxroRD—Registration for adult conduct their business. ‘educatign classes at Oxford Area x * This section states they will be (Community High Schoo} will be A resolution to proceed with pre-; aHowed to operate on Sundays held at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the’ liminary plans toward paving cer-. or holidays or between the hours (school lobby. tain streets during 1959 was passed.| of ¢ p.m, and 6 a.m. | Nine non-credit classes will be These streets include Market, Com-, offered if a minimum of 12 peo- mon, Northnort. Nicolet, O'Flaher-' iple enroll. Roger D. Oberg, school | ty, Agnes, W. Walled Lake drive Permit mactinery | o equiparest Senate assistant pa to- and Beverly boulebard. for additional processing unless = : . specifically applied for and permit- “*"- Wig ae | { Rochester Unit Gathers Tuesday at Sylvan Glen Golf Club ROCHESTER — Plans are being completed for the annual dinner meeting of the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce, to be held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Syl- van Glen Golf Club south of here, publicity chairman Jack E, Taylor; announced today. Keynote speaker at the dinner will be Harry W. Anderson, retired vice president of General Motors Corp WALLE DLAK E —At thei rreg- ular meeting last night th ecoun- ci lvote dto instructthe city at- torney to prepare an amendment to rescind certain electrical and heating ordinance amendments that made it illegal for unlicenced persons to do their own work in these fields. * Polio Shots Clinic ssicte Sati te seus Slated at Oxford tions are intended for the public; OKFORD — The Oxford Child welfare and common good, and Study Club will sponsor two polio that the part of the ordinance re- vaccine clinics next week for the lating to gravel mining was draft- purpose of administering polio ae ————=——" shots to all children in the Ox- ford area for a $1 fee | president The clinics will be held Tuesday | * The C. of C.’s plans for the current year will be outlined by Paul T. Williams, newly elected of the organizatien. | Williams also will name persons Another point under fire will not ia | Other popular Holland House Decker PTA Board ouNnC e . : | : The association will hold its first : i . / Martini The council also approved the ‘1.4 by the zoning board + These classes will include typ- . ; he has appeinted to head and r ; Cocktail Mixes: Dry Martini, ; ited b) ara. i : : . from 9 am. to 12 noon at the : adies’ Night at 7 ahaa As Le _ state’s plan for widening the | ae | ing, shorthand, bookkeeping, cer- Will Honor Teachers nea Axford School and at the! SfVe on special committees dur: cae Ladies eae ve oe Daiquiri, Whiskey Sour, Tom Pontiac trailW. Maple road in- amics, Spanish, French, sewing | ; d | ing 1959. eb. 5 in tue high school audi- Collins, Old Fashioned, Bronx, Township zoning administrator.) ; |Ralph Sheldon called the meeting) and public aia Only st lof gravel pit owners to explain) applicants are needed to me er William Hoyt and Mable Shaw the mining ordinance and to seek, a ae training class, Oberg a ° were re-appointed to the election their cooperation in its enforece-| Ten-2-hour meeting are held in a Chic unieekeriirecont: Tan : olice e cker recom- _ leach course except driver training Same 20 ow operators |&2° Some Wovens eT |which provides four hours of class mended parallel parking on Walled ais wus senior Lake Drivexfrom Pontiac Trail to ee ee a =z concer ned [instruction plus five hours behind Farley Street. The council instruct- lthe wheel. ed City Manager George Shaw to with the legality of charging the | «~* * notify business men in that area $100 license fee. They asked it The first class will meet the by Mrs. Kenneth Hedden, of the recommendation and ascer It didn’t conflict with state IAW. ing week on an evening Herbert Holman and Mrs tain their reation. spokesmen also wondered why most convenient for the group. The! Wilcox. i . * . * gravel pits were singled out to pay exact date will be set atttime of| The school service squad will To date $123,000 in school and) the fee — why not other business, 'registration. |help with the serving. W > ET xecutive Same hours on Wednesday at the ALLED LAKE—The executive | sxeville School * board of the Decker School PTA) * + | |will honor the teachers, their hus-- Any child may receive the first bands and wives at a turkey din- shot of the series or his booster ner at 6:30 tomorrow night. shot, Followup clinics for second) 3 _iand third shots will be held in A winter: thei et heer! chosen, ebruary and Sentember, accord- | for the event of which Mrs. C. O- ing to Roger B. Oberg, school ad- |Ginter, PTA recording secretary ministrative assistant. ‘is chairman. She will be assisted Mrs.. a. L. Autopsy Shows Baby Died of Pneumonia | LAKE ORION — Cause of the eee ee ideath of a six-week-old baby girl, | 6 found dead in her crib yenerday Able to Enroll Tonight morning, was virus pneumonia, If CD Police Course 'audit of township books according to Dr. E, Arthur) a * k& « | INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP—| _|Civil Defense Director Ronald A. | Ousted township treasurer Wil- Calkins. An autopsy was held yesterda; | Bird announced today .that enroll-| liam M. Oming was charged in ment in the CD Police Course can| November with embezzlement of tersection and installing a traffic 'torium. Dinner will be served and! light there. Events, sponsored by the Roch- entertainment will follow. ester C. of C. during 1958 will be enumerated in a report by Taylor who is immediate past president. These include the ground-break- Township Tax Till ing eremonies at Msvo. the North Short Another $1,300. nition Dinner, the South Hill] =~ |Bridge opening, the second annual) WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP—Thet” 'MSUO dinner and the adoption by shortage in the township's tax ac ‘the village of a C of C. recom. count has grown from $1,700 to’ imendation that the name of Wal- more than $3.000, R. Eugene In-; |ton boulevard be changed to Uni- wood, township supervisor said to- ‘versity drive. | day | ’ | The new total was revealed by) | the Detroit firm of Ernst and} 'Ernst which recently completed its Side Car, and Quinine Tonic. MANHATTAN MIX Full pint —enough for 32 cocktails. At Food. Drug, Bever- age G Dept. Stores city taxes has been received. This = represents 65 per cent of the total levy for 1958. - Write for free cocktail and canapé recipes: Hewse Seles Co., Weedside 77, N. Y. Dems Boost Margin on U.S. Committees Chance for Labor Leaislation Increases } | Postpone Hearing of Ousted Officer COUPON Spike or Senail Cuban HEEL LIFTS since the callse appeared to be etal but the child had been 4. made at tonight's class in the $1.700 in township tax receipts. He healthy. | , WASHINGTON w» —Changes! Coupled with the committee re-| Hoffa, president of the Team- Clarkston Community Center at)is {ree on bond awaiting examin- Leather c OAK PARK — A hearing of made in the Labor committees of vamping are indications from the sters Union, had no comment but The baby, Kathleen Marie, was 8 p.m. ;ation in Macomb County Justice or 39 Pr. ex-Police Lt. Joseph W. Roberts the new Congress pointed today to Labor Department that the admin-|the AFL-CIO indicated support for the only gaughter of Mr. and Mrs.| The course is being conducted Court Composition scheduled for Friday has ben increased chances for action on istration is not too unhappy with Kennedy's bill. Irving M. Walter Jr., of 943 Mer- each Wednesday and their are sev-) postponed until Feb.-9 because of his wife’s illness, Capt. Paul Me- Gee said this morning. Roberts, 36, was dismissed from the force Dec. 12 for allegedly firing a pistol into a juke box in a Detroit bar during an argument the night before. A hearing before Mayor Pro Tem R. J. Alexander was granted after Roberts protested the dismis- sa] by Safety Director Glenford the anticorruption bill introduced | Hoffa has been a chief target Tuesday by Sen. John F. Kennedy’ jn hearings of the Senate Rackets (D-Mass) + * & |John L. McClellan (D-Ark), is Some additions and changes for drafting a bill of his own Kennedy's bill are expected to be, The advance word is that the included, however, in the admin-| President's recommendations and istration program which will go to’ the administration bill will closely Congress soon. lresemble what was proposed last Goldwater, expected to sponsor) year. President Eisenhower's labor pro-| If so, they will parallel much labor-management control legisla- tion and possibly other labor ‘measures as well. Democrats increased their mar- gin on the House Labor Commit- tee from 17-13 to 20-10 and on the Senate Labor Committee from 7-6 to 9-6 * * * Moreover the Republican side of the Senate group took on a less ‘Committee whose chairman, Sen. | Previous hearings were post- ritt St. The Walters have four sons en weeks remaining counting to- poned to allow compl who are all at home. night's session. |audit, Inwood said. | —— = etion of the Neisner’s Shoe Repair 42 N. Saginaw St. - conservative tone, Sens. Winston) posals in the Senate, said he andjof Kennedy's bill. Points in com- _L. Prouty (VT), Jacob K. Javits) Kennedy are trying to achieve the|mon call for secret ballot union i (NY), Clifford P. Case (NJ), and same things but over different | elections, strict accounting of The jetliner carries John Sherman Cooper (Ky) will) routes. He said Kennedy's bill has) union funds, criminal penalties for enough fuel to drive your family)be serving for the GOP vith Sens.,some good points but ‘‘will not labor-management corruption, and automobile to. the moon—225,000' Barry M. Goldwater (Ariz) andjslow down Jimmy Hoffa, as\a_ sprinkling of changes in the miles ‘Everett M_ Dirksen (Il). ‘Kennedy said it would 'Taft-Hartley Law. GUARANTEED MORE Value... MORE Savings at GRANTS Sale days and every day ...Grants guar- antees low prices with never a discount on quality! Assures you of satisfaction, always! THURSDAY ONLY S. Leonard. NEISNER’S 5¢ 10 $1 — VARIETY STORES i] average 2 ag) 2a y. ery a, eet Sa vad ee Te “ HERSHEY KISSES Delicious, fresh, Reg. 89c Ib. melt-in-your-mouth 69%. milk ¢ te. A favorite with every- one. Buy several pounds! New “Fesco’ Lemon Yellow -ENAMELWARE 2. 1°° Save up ie # . a FABRIC SALE SEASON . Your choice to 1.88 Enamel with titanium added for tougher surface, longer life. Senitary, cleans easily. 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M. , i & , ~* 4 ~ 19Vd _TWENTY-TWO Headboard Has | New Airy Look | | weighty’ look, _ The headboard has under- gone a fashion transformation: _tices are favored fashions. Custom Cold Wave 3% 50 Complete Reg. $15.00 Softly .Sapreme iy | Permanent $@>° Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 P.M. | No Appointment Needed! 2nd Floor poe State Haak Bldg. FE 5-9257 Luxuriousty-padded versions make comfortable back rests = Stick to Marathon to Reap Rewards Cane, brass, spindles and lat- HAO YYW. Atry openwork offsets the bed’s No Half areoree | Some of you now have finished, Andre aaron CSalon | diyour Marathon booklet. _Jiretarial staff working overtime, ‘| those of you who did not write in | wait. || 1 am sorry about this but let 1 Marathon start for you when you Then stick) Jieight weeks. ‘how much you can improve your |] appearance in that length of time. a | By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN i" F | I want to give a little help today ito those women who have joined experience the penalties of a self- be provement program without any) of its benefits. It seems useless to ing extra pounds, in making your iby 8-Week Self-Improvement Mara- thon, or almost finished, the first two weeks of this program. A few of iyou may not have yet received We have gotten such a terrifically heavy ‘mail that even with an extra sec- immediately may have had a little x *« receive your booklet. ‘to the directions in this booklet and those I have given you and ‘will give you in this column for The idea is to see One day a week for the next _ wix weeks I will try to reinforce | your determination and will bring you additional information and help. Today I want to im- press upon you anew the fact that there is no value in adopting massage your scalp one night and ten procrastinate for a while, you. cannot expect results. You will an improvement or ee || routine unless you are going to be faithful in adhering to it. If you just cut down a little on’ your daily calorie intake or count: YET-yOw RE SO CORRECT ANYTIME ( Deane FLORAL LOMPANY F559 ORCHARD LAKE FE 20127 | 559 ORCHARD LAKE bE 2 0127 TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT ANO INTERMEDIATE POINTS ~ Annual Dress Clearance calories tor two days and then) backslide for two or three—If you | do your exercises for one day or' THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 muddle along like this. When you joined Marathon you proved that you are interested in ‘becoming more attractive, in los- Let Marathon start for you when you receive your booklet. Eight weeks is a very short time! Stick to the routine and you’ will be happily rewarded. NEED A CRUTCH? If you are not the strong-willed type who can sit at the table and We ik E t ‘i £f e fi i ¥ 4 az E g 8 iii: 5 rt g 3 i cially during the first two weeks of a weight-reducing campaign. * « * If you did not join Marathon and would like to do so, send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed en- velope with your request for the Marathon Booklet. Address Jose- phone Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Daring Fabrics, Colors Enhance Year's Designs Designers have gone over- board for the fresh excitement generated by vivid or off-beat colors further enlivened by an unlimited scope of surface treatments this season. * * The artfully contrived, ele- gantly relaxed look gets strik- ing emphasis through the tex- ture and color, The simpler the silhouette, the more eye- catching the fabric. Bold, warm colors, or the unexpected intermingling ot several in novelty weaves and tweeds, offer new expressions for all daytime clothes | et « Equally bold, or more subtly | accented surfaces, inspire a completely different-from last- year's approach to texture —_—____ niversary, the gift for your wife is something coral. Ru- bies match up nicely with cor- al. Leslie-Pugh Nuptials Said in St. Benedict Ceremony St. Benedict Church was the scene of the Saturday morning wedding of Freda Joyce Pugh and Robert E. Leslie. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Ray of La- Salle steeet and Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Leslie of Strathmore, Pa. : The bride fore a ballerina. length gown of marquisette lace and nylon tulle over taffeta, with sequins accenting the bod- lee, A crown of lace covered with sequins held her fingertip vell and she carried a cascade bouquet of white carnations, | white roses and ivy. Mrs. Maxine Van RHiper was matron of honor. She wore an egg- shell satin dress with velvet bo- lero jacket, rust colored velvet sash and matching headpiece... Her cascade bouquet was of chrysan If its your 35th wedding an- |themums, in shades of brown and ‘rust. Kenneth E. Leslie of Royal Oak was his brother's best man. A reception was held at Knights’ of Pythias Hall Saturday awe Before leaving for a northern- honeymoon, the bride changed to @ blue gabardine suit with” matehing accessories | corsage from her bridal bouquet. The couple will live on Strath. more street The bridegroom is attending Lawrence Institute of Technology | 500 Casual, Dressy and Cocktail DRESSES I; 2 NOTE— . ; For This Event Only — Regular $17.95 to $159.95 Alvin's will open tomorrow at 9 A. M. Alvin. HURON at* TELEGRAPH Mong Thurs., Fri. 10 to 9—Tues ved, Sat. 10 to6 —Sunday2to5 x i | Mra. Ray wore a white Fayon MRS. ROBERT LESLIE linen dress with black accessories and a corsage of red and white peppermint carnations for her) daughter's wedding. Mrs Lestie, was dressed in a beige lace dress! and the [with matching accessories and a! lcorsage of tpink n rosebuds, Ek Verne MeCall was ap- pointed to attend the state board meeting in Flint, Jan. 17 Brand PRAM SUITS : Vame You want the best for your baby , . . and at Margaret Ann Shop you get it... in TOP Name Brand buys . EVEN IN THIS SALE! so 51,88 1@8 ta. y Regular $3.98 Values.... Reg. $1.98 Values... Reg. $7 Reg. $2.25 $ alue. soneu: Package Towel Seis Pd Vaiue Package Wash Giaine Reg. SSe . Receiving Blantete, 10x36 Reg. 1.19 Value ...... Receiving Blankets 20x40. Reg, 88e cee wes HE MARGARET Riker Bldg. , eae 98 Values..... . THERMO HOT PLATES Metal bottom, Melmae dish insert, suction cup bottom feeding dish BABY BLANKETS Limited Quantity Ce es ove ane een tee eee Quality Name TOE TOP SHEETS *1.90 Reg. 498 3.98 ANN SHOP Working Table Measures, Too Mother or Dad often need a handy measuring rod for mate- rials. This is easy to acquife if there is a work table in the house, Resurface the table and mark off inches on the wood so they are readable when a finishing coat is applied. Making a batch of jam or jelly? You can use a potato masher to crush the fruit. FE Easy, easy Printed Pattern! See the diagram—you can sew this ter- rific topper in so little time. Printed Pattern 4841: Misses’ sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 26; 40, 42. Size 16 takes 2% yards 54-inch, tern part. Easier, accurate. Send 50 cents in coins for this tern for 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Feted on Birthday Sandra Lee Runyan, daughter of Williams Lake road, was honored at a birthday party Saturday given by her mother. Attending were Lee and Nancy was worn by Connie Ann Simmons ‘for her marriage to Parvin E. Conwell Saturday evening at Chris- tian Missionary Alliance Church, The Rev. James Randall of String- ham United Missionary Church of- ficlated at the ceremony in the presence of 350 guests. The bride is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Paul Simmons of Lorraine court. Parents of the ‘bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. iParvin A. Conwell of Drayton | Plains. A Venetian neckline, embroid- j ered with lace and pearls accent- ed the bride’s gown. She wore a |small pearl crown and carried a iwhite orchid on a Bible. | Maid of honor, Donna Simmons iof Mishawaka, Ind. and_ brides- maids, Carolyn Simmons, Lois Brown, and Ann Matteson were gowned alike in green taffeta bal- levina-length dresses and carried yellow rose buds highlighted by white daisies. Dennis Simonson attended as ‘best man. Ushers were Harry Van- 'Matre, Robert Davis of Garrette, |Ind., and John Simmons of Cedar Springs. een A floor-length pure silk gown; Connie Simmons Is Wed in Evening Ceremony Mrs, Simmons wore @ dress of | pale pink lace with pink acces- sories for her daughter’s wedding. MRS. PARVIN E. CONWELL Mrs. Conwell was zowned in light smacnieemmiem Professional PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like It! HAIR CUTTING — a FREE PARKIN IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 No A Sl a fiecessar EDITH STENSON, Owner” sories, Carol Weaver of Elkart, Ind. was organist and soloist was Jack French of Flint. x * A reception was held at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Build-| ing following the ceremony. A fam-) ‘ily reception was held later at the bride’s home. Before leaving on a trip to Gen. eva, N. Y. where they will re- side, the new Mrs. Conwell changed to a red cashmere suit | with black accessories. Printed directions on each pat- pattern—add 10 cents for each pat- |} Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Runyan of|f Wood and Ruby and Harold King. | blue soft wool with blue acces- PEO Chapter Pays Tribute to Founders lowa when PEO Chapter AW met Mon- day evening at the home of Mrs. ‘ James Boaz in Drayton Plains. Oliver gave the tribute. Reading the president’s annual letter, outlining activities of chap- ter for the year, was Mrs. William Miller, iii Wrapping Paper to Amuse Child Your older pre-schooler can have fun with a large piece of brown wrapping paper, says an extension specialist in par- ent education and child de- velopment at Michigan State University. Lay the paper on the floor. Then have the child lay down on it and you trace around his outline. The child will have fun coloring a picture of him- self and cutting out the figure. 45-Degree Angle The secret of many a beauty with a glowing, soft skin is one that we all can share: the 45-degree angle. This means simply resting with your feet up in order to give your blood a chance to circulate properly. | Beauty Clinic. || by Edythe McCulloch | HOW DO YOU SOUND? | Take into consideration both | | the tone of your voice and | f what you have to say. If you have the habit of | || prattling, slow down, enun- | i ciate clearly. Tf on the other | hand, you find your conver- | || sational voice sounds dull, || regardless of how exciting ') your news may be, put your -| enthusiasm into your voice. || In either case... read aloud | often in front of a mirror. | | Try speaking expressivel 1) Accent your action words | and watch for telltale rising |} inflections at sentence end- | ‘} ings that make you sound . uncertain. Next week we'll Mm hel with conversation | | builders. Phone Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shoppe, FE 2-7431, 608 Pontiac State Bank | Ey et ee OUR Ist ANNIVERSARY Thanks to a!! our friends and customers for their support. SPECIAL — Tuesday thru Friday 1.50 bee Cut 75 f | Our Regular $15 | PERMANENT Bring A Friend 2 for $15 Louis Beauty Shop 10 W. Huren 8 FE tad p Solel te Buckner’ som MEET for LUNCH RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest Ice Cream Popular Prices Riker Building Lobby We Buy All Types of WASTEPAPER NEWSPAPERS 7S¢ 1004 CORRUGATED 80¢ 100# Pontiac Waste Material Co. 135 Branch FE 2-0209 Nadon’s for Juniors Sizes § to 15 Miracle Mile Shopping Center T at Square Lake Ra. bay sig on’ eM. i ve | i '? ie tk 35 N. = St. Se ee NS OF ASR re agers ee ae aa ES ES SRR | PAULIS _ : Semi-Annual Shoe in se] 4 e 2 aR FURTHER REDUCTIONS on Our Famous Brand Shoes PAULrS SHOE STORE Serving Pontiac for Over 75 Years OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 s PRN eT ES ila UDR pi aa gel ag ee { THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 Petition and Sports Department Reply Is Presented a sign “Shadford” on a dents went to look at ‘jumped up and down * with a petition. rebuttal: department to print an Last Wednesday on the sports page of The Pontiac Press the ‘following single paragraph article appeared: “Walled Lake basketball coach John Shad- ford was hung in effigy by a group of school stu- dents Sunday night. ‘We strung up a dummy with telephone pole. A lot of stu- it Monday,’ said a spokes- man for the group. He said Shadford’s actions during the game at Southfield when he allegedly and ran out on the floor’ had brought on the hanging.” x * As result of this paragraph, the student council at Walled Lake presented The Press sports department The petition is herein printed, as is the reply and WALLED LAKE STUDENTS’ PETITION “We, the undersigned students of Walled Lake High School, hereby request The Pontiac Press sports apology to our well respected basketball coach, John Shadford, for causing him pub- lic embarrassment over a minor incident that oc- curred during the Southfield-Walled Lake game. We also feel an apology is due the student body of Walled Lake High for giving the impression that even a small percentage of students knew about and sympathized with the unfortunate occurrence of Monday. Except for poor taste in printing this information, Mr. Shad- ford and entire student body, with the exception of a few publicity seekers, would never have known that such a juvenile incident therefore, that it is your duty to officially apologize to Mr. Shadford and us for your unwarranted pub- licity.” (Included were 400 signatures.) PRESS SPORTS DEPARTMENT REPLY We, of The Pontiac Press sports department, feel that an incident of fact, qualified verification, was der no circumstances ethically are we obligated to make public apology to anyone in this instance. When any newspaper has to apologize for any or every reported and verified fact, the freedom of the press is placed in jeopardy. The facts in this artic 1, It was a FACT that the Walled Lake coach was hung in effigy and the dummy. 2. The sports department KNOWS the names of those who did the hanging and . ported it, and we are not obligated ti source of our information: cea ttpts aeNe Sa Sa 2 ORGR eee ernie Cee a Gee Walled Lake Students Protest Article 3. Members of the bers, who saw the “dummy had happened. We feel, = with reliable source and printed and therefore un- x * . of his duties. le are very clear: Was it in poor taste the name printed across hung in effigy? who re- ) reveal the 0 ER SE SE checked to VERIFY the incident and received confirmation from others, including faculty mem- 4. In regard te Mr. which was the given reason for the hanging, The Press Sports department did net make the claim, it merely QUOTED the responsible parties. Members of the sports department have no quar- rels with Mr. Shadford, in fact there has been nothing but the most cordial relations between the coaching staff at Walled Lake and this department. To accuse this departmenf of “poor taste” in printing the article and for giving publicity” to a factual incident, is an attempt to pass judgment on a newspaper reporter in the performance with 1,800 dailies across the country reported that Bennie Oosterbaan and Duffy Daugherty had been CEES BRE sports department hanging in effigy.” Shadford’s actions, * “unwarranted that The Press along The matter of “bad taste” lies with those who did the hanging and not those reporting it; and the mat- ter of “unwarranted publicity” lies with those who provoked the incident and not the one who wrote it. Mauri Rose, three-time winner of the famed Indianapolis ‘‘500" race, will be the featured guest at the Milford Junior Chamber of Commerce men's smoker tomor- row night at the American Legion Hall there.- The program begins at 7:30. x * * Much-traveled former Tiger pitcher Mickey McDermott has been sold to Dallas, Tex., a new member. of the American Associ- ation, by Charleston. * * * Pete Dawkins and pro star Johnny Unitas will add to their trophy collections Sunday when ‘they will be honored for “high principle and achievement sports’ by B’nai B'rith in New York. Two other happy gridders are tackles J. D. Smith of Rice ‘and Clemson's Jim Padgett. They have signed with the Philadelphia Eagles. : * * * Dr. J. Norman Elliott, 64, father of two football coaches and . a coach h_nself in earlier years, died today in Normal, Ill., of a heart ailment. One son, Chalmers, is football coach at the University of Mich- igan. Another, Peter, is coach at the University of California. x * * City amusement tax returns in _ ‘Chicago show'that the White Sox and Cubs grossed about the same ‘amount in 1958 ticket sales but in pro football the Bears had a 41 advantage over the Cards. * * * _. Gordon McEachron quit as Nevada football coach after four years with the comment: ‘‘‘They _ don’t want a football coach—they want a recreation director.” The school has refused to give scholar- ‘ships to attract athletes. * ® * Mrs, Sam Cohén of Knollwood was in 4th place with a 92 after - the first round of the Ladies’ Club Champions’ golf tournament in Sebring, Fia., yesterday, Mrs. ‘Max Kutzer of Syracuse, N.Y., leads with an 89, MSU wrestling coach Fendley Collins said Michigan State will be the site for the mat trials of the ‘Pan-Am games. Dates at MSU are July 30-Aug, 1. The Pan-Am games in Chicago are Aug. 27-Sept. 7. Ohio State will play its first Fri- aay night football game in history! ‘when the Buckeyes meet Southern u at Crippled Wings night. injured the foot a week ago and had missed three out with a bruised shoulder, was described as 30 per cent improved at Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, but he will miss Wednesday’s game. ready NFL Resumes College Player Dra AP Wirephete 6-YEAR PACT—John Bridgers, defensive line coach of the Bal- timore Colts who was named head football coach and athletic director at Baylor a couple days ago, was expected in Waco, Tex., today to sign a five-year con- tract. Kelly Rejoins DETROIT ®—Red Kelly, Detroit Red Wing defenseman, worked out with his National Hockey League teammates Tuesday and is ex- pected to play against the Black Hawks in Chicago Wednesday A cast was removed from Kelly’s bruised left foot shortly before he took the ice for the workout, He games. Terry Sawchuk, Red Wing goalie 4-Day Sessions (Mart Today for Pro Grid Teams 26 Rounds of Choices Will Be’ Completed by Midnight Tonight PHILADELPHIA ® — National Football League clubs resumed their college player draft today as the first order of business at the league's annua] winter meeting. The final 26 rounds of the annual 30 round draft were expected to take all day, starting at 10 a.m. and winding up sometime around midnight, The first four rounds were selected last Dec. 1. The balance of the three and possibly four-day meeting will be taken up with proposed rules changes, constitutional amend- ments, expansion, possible fran- chise shifts, the problem of in- creasing costs, and player de- mands. Last place Green Bay has first choice in the draft—actually it’s the fifth round—followed in order by Philadelphia, Chicago Cardi- nals, Detroit, Washington, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Chicago. Bears, Los Angeles, Cleveland, New York and Baltimore. * * * Where teams are tied a coin toss will decide first picker and then the deadlocked-elubs will al- ternate in succeeding rounds, The Cards and Eagles are tied as are Detroit and Washington, Pittsburgh and Chicago Bears, Cleveland and New York. Playoff games are not included in determining the draft order. Players drafted are listed from the college at which they regis- tereg even if attendance amount- ed to Only one day. Thus, in some cases drafted players may not now be enrolled at the institu- tion listeq by the NFL. available for the pros include Tom- my Greene, Holy Cross quarter- back; Gene ‘OPella, Villanova end; Doctors said Sawchuk may be for Detroit's wake Cal in Los Angeles, Oct. 2nd, games, MICHIGAN HIG BASKETBALL Addison 64, Hudson @ "SCORES Ashley 45, isie Almont 67, Mem Anchor Bay 33, | Schleicher, Penn State end; Hank i|Kuhiman, Missouri fullback, and hand for the meeting waiting for ‘with requests for a pension plan. guard; Ron Stover, Oregon end; Clarence Beamer, Qregon State fullback; Cleve “Wester, Auburn tackle; Art Gob, Pitt end; Maury Ralph Hunsicker, Arizona quarter- back. * * * The players association was on an opportunity to press the owners head- He Some of the outstanding players, It's Contract Time in Majors... Frank Kremblas, Ohio State quar- terback; John Wooten, Colorado! looked forward today to a “‘steady RRS Sls ARE ie 3, enmmmemmmemncs maa amar scciames shot which swished the nets for Falcons’ LAST TIME OUT — Pontiac Central coach Art Van Ryzin helps guard Charley Barge try on his graduation robe and cap and he isn't really as happy as he may appear. Barge plays his last game Friday‘night against Saginaw on the PCH court -a mid-year graduate at Pontiae Central. sharpshooting cager leads ‘the Saginaw Valley in scoring and has hetped PCH to the top ranking in the state in class A wire service polls. Pontiae Press Phoic for the top ranked Chiefs. He is The |quintet iChiefs jwith one big loss. | of f Troy (53) and Chuck Ebersole, No Matter BOMBS AWAY — Rochester center Gene Tth straight win last mght left, Rocheste Pentiac Press Phote Lothery goes up for ene of his four field goals in Also shown are Rod Harris T. the Score, PCH Big Loser Friday By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press | No matter what the score ts Friday night when Pontiac Central meets a dangerous Saginaw High! on the PCH court, the will come out of the game That will be the loss of guard |Chapley Barge, currently the tops iscorer in the Saginaw Valley Con-} Herence with an, average of 21.5) jpoints per game. Barge will play his last game against Saginaw and then take his place among the mid-year | graduates at Pontiag Central. The Chiefs, still ranked number one team in Michigan es sti an the can ‘Avondale Banquet ‘Canceled by Weather The annual All-Sports banquet scheduled at Avondale High School had to be cancelled today | due te the dangereus weather conditions, Athletic director Frank Crowell announced today he hopes to | hold the event next week with Michigan State assistant foot- ball ceach Bill Yeoman = and Paul Smarks, president of the Association, as main speakers. Mays Signs for $80,000; Yanks Expect Problems | By United Press International Willie Mays, “definitely satis- fied’’ with a new $80,000 contract, second batting championship by only three points last year but conceded, “| dropped a fot in the middle of the season.”’ Willie was hitting more than .4009 at the end of May but then went into a long slump that didn't end un- til September. ‘Willie's new contract makes him 7 only to Stan poorey th the . Louls Cardinals ($100,000) on brian, Tyear old en eee the National League pay scale. can have @/req Williams of the Boston Red “Pi Sox is estimated to receive about $125,000 and Mickey Mantle of the New York Yankees is believed .340 season’’ and a possible Na- tional League pennant for the San Francisco Giants, ‘We have 'a' paid-deette toi tu Toe assccttiin plane to counter -iwith 42 home runs dickering for $85,000. Muss’ 1958: contract Was estimated at $75,000, The Yankees onetime star bat- tery of left-hander Whitey Ford, and catcher Yogi Berra were among the world champions ru- mored today to have received sal. ary cuts this year. Ford had a 14-7 record in 1958 but was not the effective stop- gap as in other years. Berra Batted 266, well below his usual 290-plus mark. The big question mark was Man- tle, who finished with a .304 aver- age and Jed the American League! , though his! slugging average dropped to 60 Commissioner Bell's declaration that the league can’t afford a pen- Ahead of ’58 in Play, Drawing Fans Rebuilt Kentucky Strong LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)—This is} This time last season, the Cats thad attracted 93,435 for 10 home games. The best year at home was four seasons ago- when 14 games drew an estimated $155,600. Overall attendance is running ahead of last season, too, by il, 781 to 138,901. ‘_ © 8 On the playing court, the veteran Kentucky team that won its fourth NCAA title was ninth nationally points from .957. * * * $10,000 or more raise from last year’s $75,000. The two players expected to demand the biggest increases are fighthander Bob Turley, hero of | last fall’s World Series, and catcher-outflelder Elston How- ard, Turley led the ‘league with 21 Victories and Howard had an out- season at the plate and afield. Turley balked last year ed $20,000. * * ‘with 12 won, three lost at this mage et vente Despite cuts general manager George Weiss indicated the Yankee The new fashioned ‘payroll will be higher. It had in- fromr four year since 1946. ed Mantle is expected to ask for a} and finally signed for an estimat-| y9i9 The Pirates signed “hard luck pitcher Ronnie Kline ifast-baller who had a but who lost four games by one | run and three by two mins. He is regarded as a potential 2-game winner. a J10-pound 13-16 pitcher, Bob Gilallombardo and first-baseman Jim Gentile signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Furillo hit .290 for the Dodgers last season, Giallombardo won 12 games for Montreal and Gentile hit .249 at Spokane. : ae baseman Mickey Vernon,: signed with the Cleveland In- ae for his 20th season in Major League basebal). He hit .293, eight homers and drove in 55 runs last season. First-baseman Frank Torre be- came the sixth member of the |Brayes to agree to terms. He al-| ternated with Joe Adcock last sea- son but is expected to take over! the regular job this year Pitcher Willard Sehmidt, out- fiekier Bob Thurman and infielder Bobby Henrich signed with the Cin- cinnati Redlegs and Dick Harris. 2-year0ld son of general manager Buck Harris of the Boston Red Sox, signed with Washington the club Bucky started with in . NBA STANDINGS EASTERN ——a. Prk sive © thursday see returning pote care creased every the half dozen sophomores and a pair |Last year the Yankees paid $610,- put the torent junior college transfers is first 000 in salaries; exclusive of man- jnationajly with a 141 record. ‘ager Casey Stengel’s $80,000, Pet 4a ie aid Deere ht {iineapslis ee iat eee Ts a ee (17.5 average in seven games. the Vikings Michigan High School Coaches . record © P, Veteran outfielder, Car! Furillo, IP i Jor jexpect trouble from the Trojans who would enjoy nothing more than to topple Pontiac Central {rom its perch. Saginaw has two potent scorers in Bob Parker and Jim Gronski. Both have scored 123 points for a and are second behind Flint Central in total offense with 237 points scored in four league games. Flint Central has amassed | 257 points in league play while Pontiac and Flint Northern. each have scored a total of 227 we de On the other hand, Saginaw has given up the most number of points, 267. in four games, while Pentiac Central has the best de- LSO fensive average in allowing only (195 points * * ® Among the other scoring leaders John Bandy with 145 average and Harrison Munson with a 10.3 mark are among the double figure scorers John Gillian of Flint Northern, held to 10 points by PCH last Friday, dropped from the lead | fo second place with an 18-point average. Parker and Gronski of Saginaw are tied fer third. All five starters of Flint North. em are among the top 20 scorers. The Chiefs have a great oppor- tunity to pad their lead in the SVC |Friday night against Saginaw, be- cause Barge’s departure could be ‘a serious blow to Pontiac's title thoughts especyalls with key road tL) anes Coming Uf SAGINAW VALLEY STANDING si 1 tames 1 League PONTIAC EER Al 4 Fiint oe 3 6 Ce Se na win Ci ee am t 4 SCORING LEADERS ‘H t Ra ark Groneai, Bishon | Bandy | Brussow jw igor, Gee ae id [pa son milten, FW J hay PCH | Richardson, Fc Lanse Sag. en, FN i. Pp nee AH anley. FN PS troskt Ane | Kokaly Young. Bo iHart. AH ‘Warren, BC Thomgs. FC Bailey, PCH Johansson-Patterson ee ee ad ew DM DD Dh Tod 3 EE SD ee BS ee ee ws i tw Be HS S bi ty We M0 ts oh SF SY Be HY 4 5 3 Match Appears Set NEW YORK (UPI) — Sweden's Ingemar Johansson was given the green light today to “flv to New York and sign" for a world heavy- weight title fight with champion Floyd Patterson in June. That practically wrapped up the million-dollar match. Edwin Ahiqvist, Johansson’s ad- viser, telephoned the good news from New York to the unbeaten esl ony champion at Goteborg, Sweden. Ahiqvist made the trans- atlantic call after discussions with Bill Rosensohn and Cus Pet. promoter 4 ‘D'Amato, Patterson's manager. “We expect Johansson to ~~ Thursday night or Friday.” jubilant young Rosensobn. wo to been trying to ‘close the mated since last Sept. 1. fj 4 c THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 ‘Rocket to Wait Before Deciding to Skate Again | MONTREAL (®—Maurice (The | Rocket) Richard, his left leg in | a cast and hix phenomena] ice | hockey career nearing conclu- sion, sald today “I will not de- cide whether to centinue in the game until I’m able -to skate again.” The 37-year-old star of the Montreal Canadiens suffered a fractured left ankle in Sunday night’s game in Chicago. He will not be permitted to skate again | for four weeks, This was the latest in a series of recent injuries for Richard, who has scored 606 goals in reg- ular season and Stanley Cup | competition—the highest lifetime ‘total in the National Hockey | | League. | | Police Quintet Rallies to Win Roches Gallup Cold as Birmingham Bows, 63-56 Cranbrook Defeated, South Lyon’s Record Smashed Rochester showed it had more iguns than Troy could cope with in posting a 42-35 triumph jin a battle for prestigé between two of the area’s outstanding Class B hoop teams last night at Roches- ter. It was the 7th straight triumph for the Falcons. Troy also has won seven times while bowing twice. Perfect) _* * * Knotted Title Looms x * for SCL By H. GUY MOATS Now there are three! Where yesterday there was but a single unbeaten club at the top t of the Suburban Catholic bas- Ketball circuit, today there are three on top, each with one defeat. With the one-point 32-31, last minute victory for the St. Benedict ‘club over previously unbeaten Or- chard Lake St. Mary there are no clean slates remaining. With the league's season near- ing its end, it now looks like i there’s going to be a triple tie for the title, following the same pattern that was set for last fall’s SCL footbalj champienship, St. Benedict, St. Frederick and St. Michael were co-titlists.. Now, Eaglets, Rams and Ravens are knetted, each with 6-1 records. Last night’s battle in the Ra- vens’ gymnasium, was a wildly ap- plauded affair from start to fin- ish. The noise from the stands was terrific, and the tenseness of the fans was matched by the play- ers. * * * Eaglets started the scoring, but trailed at the first period, 8-6. They were still behind at halftime 19-14. | Only time the Orchard Lakers were in front was late in the fi- nale when Don Duszynski connect- ed to break a 29-28 count. Mark 'Storen regained the tie for Ravens with three minutes left. After Storen’s tree toss, husky Art Massucci dumped in an un- der-the-basket shot with a minute and a half left. proved the decisive factor, for the Ravens went into an effective | stall. Three times during that hectic final minute Eaglets had _ their chances, but missed shots like the long one by Glen Hass (who had a very cold night) that went in. nd inside the ring and| 1; spun arou | popped out while the big St. Mary | crowd moaned. | * * * Chet Wlodkowski, game's leading scorer, with 14, missed one easy Three- Way Tie in Thumb Continues, Dryden Wins | Brown City battled Anchor Bay| right down to the final whistle | | before bowing 33-29. Eight free |throw conversions in the last | quarter decided the issue after 'Brown City had lead at the end of the half and third stanza. Bob ‘Fisher of ‘Brown City tallieq 10 as the only player in double numbers. * * Dryden had to offset numerous threats in edging Armada, 30-28, for AHA with 19 points. He swished six corner shots in the A) iguarter: Wea is now 42. . Birmingham and Cranbrook j _Bill Newman Collects were both losers and Brighton Box cores . ained sweet revenge and 1 r Patrolmen in) § 2 fo atro l knocked South Lyon from the | s7. MARY (OL) — ’ G F T G | City League P ay | unbeaten ranks at the same time |y., “G6.714 Bvernart 22-5 6 | | with a 64-54 win in some of the p’szy'ski 1 2-3 ‘ Btoren $11 ‘ue: mes. \Votru 36-1 Massuce - Pontiac Police finished with 18, eer tp Tuesday sa jwitkér 0 0- 2. “0 ‘Longo 21-1 7] its in arter afte |-| Rochester held the edge all the , eee hee: 10-0 2 A Donar 10-0 2 pes elecn pace points in the 4th quarter after tral aches i — ; 21.2 8 McPaul 10-0 2) ing most of the way, to defeat the way and ‘‘sat on the ball” in t e | =e : ES ‘inf Parcs of Tro} i 8 > . |Totals 11 9-15 31 Totals 14 4-0 32 COLT VS. FALCON Poel M ore if drwy le u ind Hochester Holly Merchants, 50-45, in city) last quarter to preserve its lead. | at Wary lr 8 8 HIT Bruce Ennis were balflar: for a loose ball when Press phate rapt eT oague class C action last night. {Bruce Ennis and Gene Lothery|8t. Benedict -8 8 $32 hid Vanderworp snapped the picture The pair wound up as jan < * * paced a balanced attack with 12 ROCHYSTER | ace + scorim® lender uhbe den Hochester handed Troy a! nd defeat, Another Class C game saw OH- and 3 ial as ae Rod Harris. Roni a ny " Acton } 0-1 1| 12-3 \ ver Burk 4 the o steac ro orer|Ebersole 1 5- m 5 6- 43°45 7 VeE Huai k with Ex k Johnson's 16 was , mly Mi y eer eee? 4 3.6 10 Marrs ¢ 68 13| beat Town and Country, 42-38, de-| with 13 [Hummel 1 2-1 4 Harned 2 2-6 é| spite a 23 point’ performance by) The outcome will likely bring ree 3 00 ; Gree. 0 0-1 0 . be i , zl r A ! ‘ tea Rey ‘ iP a chi j Culp 162-4 4) Cincinnati Has Ist Winning Streak Ite Reynolds about a change in the state ratings _ 7 = a — | * * * since Troy had been listed as 9th 18 12-27 42 tou 3 9- 20, 38 | “ale | Rochester 1 . s In “D" games, Lakeside Roy- and the Falcons 11th. |Troy er en 3% als led by Cliff McCoy's 19 points An “ice cold’ Mery Gallup, | ginmiNGHAM FERNDALE whipped Boys’ Club 42.28 with | entering the contest as Oakland |4.,,, % AAS ors Gene Gidcumb getting 17 for the County's top point-getter with a [Boucher 10 0 “os Tregoning A 3 u losers. | 26 average, could tally only 11 ‘Kelly 2 : . aoareth ts ‘ , ' oi : . | Isbell 4 1 9 Chapman 7 1 15 y Bs The Resecisiog es Hl Charles. Kimbrell with 16 led| it the Birmingham setback. [Foley WK A Seem 4 Bor The Cineinnat Re Yh na S : ' tits Coca Cola to a 33-29 decision over | Apparently nervous playing |New? ae a 11 63 proud pessessar of ay two jeame mel) dois ; . i oothern, against his former mates, Gallup oat os es ue areas winning streak for the | an ae ; ~ *& * \had to come up with nine in the iFersast 16 16 1s 1663) this season focus Te “ ee Fhe Police quint was behind 24-23 last half to reach double figures. | | Serna ara re ‘ ** r raat ” Had ot halftime and 37-32 after three | x * * Whey Hist pic a ot ae IN uarters. Bill Newman got 21 and) Jeff Boucher made a valiant at- al Division pele [ated ie Se John Binge water 13 points, while tempt to take up the slack by) Sa eee cued. inched: cue: Howes the Touith yee Voorhers, Bob Pence and hitting 20 but the Maples dropped | ue tad LE eal at a ee pelt ar ee MN nos Hradsher hit 15, 13 and 12 their 3rd Eastern Michigan con- my St Louis fast najsht a thie bat i | " thi i i oe qoweuvely (or nye Holly t eam. ltest in four starts. It was Fern- windup Boh Pettit scored ohoth Boston Coach Hed Atv ret ldale's 4th straigt F aight in the loop. | points to lead St louis ta iy x sw ite tagged with technical Toy Palmer meshed 28 and Ron| Almont, New Haven. Pe ote the Reston s(ouls vane cere ted ln “ha Chapman, in his Ist start, added! Anchor Bay survived another full) for the losers. Collie . . noth vu period a cleres » Sport S q en af ‘slate of games in a_ three-way * nbn leptin if [an | - ~ . , ; *e (9D he Jock Pectnan fod GO pernts for odie ad try sta ied vy the \ Harel Park's entire squad [So er irs ane L ye saat WEDNESDAY ld 28 | yuthern um #ague Cineimnuatt hich broke open 7 one pecrod : rer couldn't find the range in a 66- lRight while Dryden was winning’ ee ca In a niet) <cuen + + & Cit League Basketball) Wattoping at Port Huron in the | "'S ~ - ee ses PU Gir) DY CaCO GON Moe IOs ape lits third straight to stay close | ht potots am the final thre Tie traumph enahleal the [inks acd Btalien 7 pm and Booth ee other EML, tilt. | behind. va , ' a ’ Ficle Lanicine @ pe opm. at Pen-| = ; j mt Mane Fimbry and Ap fe diet thie Wester DIVISION yar Central sow! hurtmamt | Kennedy of Ontario snapped; Almont and New Haven each esl a sie a ve / Reutl Miner nian nae |Cranbrook’s four-game victory) had easy times. The Raiders, : punch Hows n " " teh ” PW YOR ' CISL 7 “i a ReUAy tall | string and got even for an earlier| down 15-13 at the opening period, ip ii 4) ‘5 Co . ‘ity EL e Maske 7 na ye ae Te 11 Al vert DN CIARA A Aptana sill piny an OSs oy winking 60-53. Jim Wil-| walloped Memphis 67-47 as Don half and Beckhorn 11 Twiiniwe 1 Tl tte A lexhitition at 7 pom and Knights ofiliams scored 16, Roger Rothen- Eschenburg ied nine ecorereteiih * a * an HoY 1) Phere ktloan # 7 1A Columbus will play an exhibition at 8 30) | berger 14 and John Hayden 12 for - . ‘ scale Mimic hed Ga ironies ton Pd bats w fm at Pontiac Central ine Pattee ‘the C : ho led 204 15. Jim Ostrander added 13 and WA LTE WiNlHTES f ! 8 WC esaetads rai ee ii AB. ikings # yontia ' : } but | deat ae - ia 1 OG 2 Pyatek “1 pm. and naan mB Country vs Holl ‘the ranes, who lec 20-9 at the excelled in rebounds. John Bar- York but all but one ¢ " ' Twine 120) Merchants, #10 pm at Madison Junior| Ist quarter and were still ahead ber's 11 topped Memphis noothe furs Hnutes of Feitx 6 HO Bit HOST High ; . , 7 My US Ur) SMCS) OCT Ue 1 1b 108 Totals wong Waterford Basketball (Ey eee Oy Wu, ‘tte Vhie IKriets hrevtedie wpipee al Seca a a e ie ct Apes ecres R ae u rant va Three 3jrighton cagers, sparked New Haven led all the way SHA SUD tet xu otek a inyuicrd Siiat tkaee Fee ote iigh = by Don Appleton’s 24, combined| in bombing Capac 55-37 fea. ' clue. : ea pe eterace JuBles for 48. points as the Bulldogs! turing a 24-point night for Nate arudly pm @ PL Jt H —- ———— — - layvee Scores ¢ a High Al UMINU M SI ) | i Junior Hockey Tournament : . . * FINALS @peneer Floor Covering vs ) , “) Fernilale St Birmingham 1 Fisher Hill Merchants af 7 pm for a! ff Ih Fiance $0. Utien JI Class A tithe and Pulman Ponting re) DERNIZ A] famthere 4 Cousitry Tay 29 Northern at & po for t rrown et 4 Median ti tC) Bt Mary 26 ely fitaii fet i Te 4) Rochester : RE M ODt It \ st sein fet $5 Ob } far 14 High Scheel Wrestling 7 Anchor Bay 41 Brown City 46 Pontiac Central at Bay City Central ‘i Atimront 44 Metnyyhi | Ban Jortthern at Heval Oak Kimball Al | ER Al Riiehten 40 fr uth 1 54 ye Walled Lake at Waterfore — — Past Jretioit '5 Mamtransk 4) Varn Livke at P thftele = flare! Park af Port fluren | Fa Inyton at Perk le City Schools Away, Vikings at Waterford | Matmen Busy Thursday Pontiac Be Read matches far bath back in action at Port Huron jstopped the Lions '19 in defeat | nipped Mt, | but South Central foes Ortonville and North Branch played out- side the loop. The Blackhawks Morris $1.49 to even their record at 4.4. Mike Ribner got 17 and Don Nellenback 15 North Branch still lost at Bad Axe, 61-54, Rameo's scheduled home tilt) against Roseville was postponed | a week due to examinations. iL,"Anse Creuse squeaked by Grosse Pointe University School 47-45, Uti- ica turned on the power in the! final quarter to belt Fraser 57-37, | Hamtramck 86-55 and Country Day won out over Lamphere 47-42 in overtime. Dave Wren hit} e LABOR and MATERIAL | e RE-PACK FRONT WHEELS e RE-ADJUST BRAKES 77 W. Huron St. BONDED BRAKES e INSPECT WHEEL CYLINDERS | MARKET TIRE Co. socked East Detroit] 2° FORD CHEVROLET PLYMOUTH FE 8-0424 | . . . 8 [ot full f ‘st ( ich last w FREE PLANNING SERVICE hools and on 1 infer Lakes Cranbrook, which last was in com- League schedule will make up anpetition Dec. 14, remains idle un i! almost complete Oakhand Coun-til Feb 7 ty wrestling schedule Thursday “ " : ; ‘ Fly to Beautiful Pontiae Central pets ag i“ une , ip for the bipe Sacinaw ules JAMAICA Leanie meet conrine up neal Hritich West Indies menth by commpetinie at B cits : ( while Neathers pape Complete Air Tours Give You nts mt TS " @ Nichtserine fine ¢atnne sive Hirsh Us PPOs 0nd Ea @ Comfortaht tactting ight Vik Priprvbe etl @ Wonder tiap aeerncrer ered at pecrns MM ddeat Lo che rh VAY wil ' ii fhe ane youl eel a “Your dealer in dreams fhe Td. slate ahespite 1f hasan BIR " reeapds of both te voy boating M NGHAM ton will be oat Ber yom South TRAVEL SERVICE field hosts Van Dyke in thee CWACh PLIMMER REPLY others 17 Ba rite Sha eve tirg ya yan ‘ County power Thacel Park will SPECIAL SERVICE Complete Front End Alignment (Reg. $10.95) Balance 2 Front Wheels ‘Reg, $5.00) Pack Front Wheels (Reg. $3) Adjust Brakes i Reg, $1.75) Inspect Brake Lining Inspect Drums SELL YOURSELF PONTIAC 99 Take a Demonstration Ride Today --- | Inspect Wheel Cylinders *‘Q” With This Ad HNVIVNVIVUUUUUULVUVUUUUUOUUUUUUUUUOUO0UUUUUEUUUULUUC AAMAAAAAAAAAAAALEAAAAAIPTS AL DAMA AARAAAA AAA iAdded dead eed nAgaee GOODSYEAR SERVICE STORE FE ee 6123 (OOMHMMARE Regular $20.70 Value BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL Most Fords, Chevies, and Plymouths 65 Mt. Clemen VEEEE EE TET TET TOPE ALN TATTERED gf The wheels are moved out § inches for the widest, steadiest stance in America. Before You Buy — Any Car — Anywhere Check with FACTORY s St. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE BRANCH Behind t Thrift Drive a New Wide-Track Pon- tiac with its sen- sational Tempest 4208 Economy | V-8 Engine! ! l i se soc tes he Post Office St. Mary's Bows Art’s bucket | and| Petty. John Kersten caged 15 | Terry Wills was a one-man gang) er Downs Troy to St tay Unbes shot and Mike Witkor couldn't con- vert two foul line chances in a frustrating windup, that pointed up one of the coldest goal-getting nights of the season for the Ea- glets. The Orchard Lakers collect- ed only two buckets in each of the first three periods, on 12, 17 and 15 shots, respectively. Mark Storen’s 11 points paced the winners. In other area parochial con- tests, RO St. Mary disposed of a stubborn Madison club 55-47. The Royal Oak five grabbed an early 12-point edge and never to R x * avens was headed. Diminutive Tom Alsheckie-had a hot night, with 33 points. Madison’s Moos had 14 to lead the losers. Royal Oak Shrine dropped its second First Division tilt 49-48 to Wyandotte St. Patrick. The Pats grabbed the verdict in the jast 18 seconds on Dave Johnson's free throw. TUESDAY'S FIGHTS RICHMOND. Col ml Sen yee ——— © aSOYs Moyer, 1523, Portland, Sutpointed Tony Dupas, 150, New Orleans. 10. Code Ne, 700 $485 “ss '. Code Neo. 190 WHI A VERY SMOOTH SKY, INDEED! BLENDED WHISKY, 86.8 PROOF, 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS, SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CO., H.Y.C. ee FIRST TIME IN PONTIAC! of finer woolens. piece from which made. NOTICE: Harwood, and only Har- wood, can show you hundreds of yards Select the actual your suit will be | Sh 450 sh Qs wool product of America’s CUSTOM- TAILORED SUITS at 54.50 & 59.50 We made a special pur- chase of finer woolens from Chicago’s largest woolen house of hundreds of ‘’suit lengths.’ Every ene a finer quality, all best woolen mills. You can see these large, full-length pieces, feel them, handle them—smell ‘em if you wish! We'll custom tailor them for you in any style at $54. 50 and $59.50. cee Se ee ST eC SC Pe Se ee we ew ee ewe wee ewe gee MANY OF THESE BOLT-ENDS HAVE ENOUGH MATERIAL FOR 2-PANT SUITS—-CUSTOM TAILORED FOR ONLY..... $79.50 MEN: LADIES: We have dozens and dozens of Here's a deal for you' Custom woolen pteces just for custom tailored skirts, beautiful all sederee pants. Specially priced $15. 95, 2 Pr. $29.95 wool materials at. . $13.59, 2 for $26.95 ONLY HARWOOD COULD DO IT- AND HARWOOD HAS DONE IT!!! EXTRA PANTS *> Another group of fine domestic and imported woolens for custom tailored suits. the regulor price and for only $5 get on extra pair of custom tail- ored pants! Purchase a suit at ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee Re ee Se ee Oe ee Oe ee cee eS ee ee ee ee ee ee te ee ee WEAR A HARWOOD FINER SUIT! BE WELL-DRESSED! IT COSTS NO MORE! ee Se ee ee ee ey ee ee Re ee Ge ee eee a et ee ee eee ee ce ee Ce ee ee ae ee ee ee IN OUR READY-TAILORED DEPT. SUITS EVERY SUIT SALE PRICED Values te $75.00 Values to $69.50 ecteitonieisnh 2 808 TS Values to $59.50 ......... $9.75 ee ee ee . -$39.75 TOPEOATS EVERY COAT SALE PRICED Values to $72.50 ........$59.75 Values to $59.50 eo -Sa9.05 Values to $49.50 ........ $29.75 SPORT COATS EVERY COAT SALE PRICED Values to $49.50 .... $33.75 Values to $39.50 .... $29.75 Values to $32.50 ... $21.75 PANTS. Values to $15.75 Values te $19.75 REAL SPECIAL PRICES! .. +e. § 8.88 $11.88 Cee ee ee CLOSE-OUT: ALL SPORT SHIRTS 1/2 OFF hee ey ae RE Ae eae ee NY ESN em ieee a ne Gl rm etn eet eer ees eee ee elle ee GLOVES LINED AND UNLINED 1/3 OFF ee ae eee ee ale eee cee cee eee ee eee ee eee ee ee ee ee eee te te ee a ee ee ee TUXEDO RENTALS We rent only the finest! PERFECTLY FITTED BY OUR MASTER TAILORS eee eae eee eee fee ees ieee ems See GS ete ey ln emis lee item Settee nes: Sli: Ge RO le ee ee WE CONVERT DOUBLE BREASTED SUIT _— to NEW STYLED SINGLE-BREASTED Tallon el | ARWOOD Sz Clothiers FE 2-2300 Finest # Tusede — — peered THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, 3 ANUARY 21, 1959 Big 3 Committed | to Smaller Car GM, Ford, Chrysler Hope to Produce New Models by Fall BY JACK VANDENBERG UPI Automotive Editor DETROIT — All of the “big three’’ auto producers have now passed “‘the point of no return” and are ‘definitely committed” to production of a new smaller car, industry sources said today. The sources said Chrysler Corp. was the last of the biz three to join the race to turn out a new line of cars which would be placed in between the small foreign cars and the standard-sized American car of today. Ford -and General Motors made the decision to produce smaller cars in December, the sources said, and Chrysler joined the race this month, Intreduction dates for the cars are aimed at this fall but prob- ably will drag into winter in the case of Chrysler, the sources said. Until December, both Ford and General Motors had been going ahead with plans to produce small- .er cars. But they were holding back on any vast outlay of money, such as that required in tooling up for actual production, until they could determine what sales would do in the 1959 mode] year. They actually hoped, sources said, that their drastically re- styled 1959 models might be the answer to the demand for “something different." But, while 1959 model sales were encouraging, the demand for smaller cars continued. Foreign cars continued to take a larger slice of the American market. And American Motors’ Rambler and Studebaker-Packard’s Lark pro- viding the finishing touch with im- pressive Sales. Explosions Jar Buenos Aires Peronista Unions Defy Order to End General Strike in Argentina BUENOS AIRES —Bomb ex:, plosions jarred Buenos Aires today as Argentina attempted to recover from a two-day general strike against President Arturo Frondi- zi's belt-tightening program. The blasts were set off as leaders of the 62 Peronista . unions defiantly announced after a secret meeting that they had decided to continue the walkout indefinitely. Unless the govern- ment cracks this strike, it will keep stich industries as textiles and metals paralyzed. Communist unions and 32 inde- pendents, voted last night to call off the strike which began snow- balling last weekend, Many strik- Two other big labor camps, 19) produce brought to the Farmer's them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of ‘Monday. Detroit Produce bu. 1. Tomatoes, Hothse., No. 1 6-Ib. beet. 2.15 Turnips, topped, bu. "s . 3.98 ___ Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY ers have gone back to work. aimed at railway property and | may have been set off by dis- gruntled Peronistas or Commu- nists to interrupt the back-to- work movement. Frondizi of Argentina, after a day) of ceremony today gets down to the hard business of his American visit. addresses a joint session of Con-' gress today in his first steps to- ward the goal of his visit. Many observers think Frondizi has come to the United States to seek capital In County Health Report 2 New Polio Two more cases of polio were reported in the county last week, but because the illnesses began last year, the State Health Depart- ment is counting them as 1958) cases, according to Dr. John D. Monroe, county health director. They Just Don’t Build ' Them Like They Used To | CHICAGO {(UPT)—The Univer- was less than spirited for the con- struction of a harpsichord for cam- pus use. Of two oo companies Chicken por... Cases Listed | These two cases, one in Royal | Oak Township and another in| Farmington Township, raised last year's total to 66, compared to} 27 in 1957. Several of the bombs were | In Washington, President Arturo *"y Frondizi confers with Secretary, of State John Foster Dulles and. ity live poultry: | Heavu_type hens 19-21: 10- it: ‘g-4 Ibs. whites 21-23, caponettes ynder 5 lbs. 21-23: over & Ibs 21-23%9: swan) an 33: ar kore heavy type young toms | light type hens. { } DETROIT EGGS DETROIT. Jan 20 ache in case lots. federal es . Whites: — Grade A jumbo 48; ee 44-45. wid ave 44', ave 43: medium 37-38 wtd ave sa: Lee t. rey 40-41. wid. avg 40% Cheaks 30', wtd avg. 32 Soeerrealiy graded. | Whites — Grade A exfta large 42 ree 38-41: medium 35-36: small 30 browns—arade A extra large 40'.. 38'2-40: medium 35'2: small 30 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK ETROIT ‘AP; — iUSDA: — Ca'tle— salable 600 Slaughter steers steady. mos three children, ‘Romeo High Schools. Reschedule Exams ROMEO — The junior and gen-| \ior high schools here ‘will be open’ i'tornorrow so that students may take their mid-year examinations that were scheduled for today, schools officiale announced, today. ‘Elementary schools will be in ‘session for one half day tomor- Following is a list of communic. FO as originally planned. able diséases reported to the i ty and city health danctntil ast week: ; Past Year) Week Asad Aes, ee | 3 1! © OEP EECSH EG Fee z e © per « i ed 6 1 4 Der neces 4 6 raised anes © OS SG 1) Sere | r o, OAKLAND COUNTY s —. ad es | 5 by ee | : ; 1 5 6 és a, ef Trotots fever infections 1 i ne ees Sa ee | ‘ Li ; \ ‘Makes Big Impression With Birthday Bomb _ YEOVIL, England (UPT)—Jas- Batstone made a big” impres- sion on his birthday. - He and two friends: detonated a “hirthday homb of their awn mak- ‘ing that blew a huge crater in Jasoer's yard and blasted rhunke of iron a quarter of a mile. covering sales of locally grown! Market by growers and sold by “MARKETS [Aircrafts Rise; The following are top prices, Market Active | ; FRUITS , Apples, Delicious, bu. ........... Nv. $4.25 VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu , L% Carrots, topped, bu 3.00 Celery, dog. stalks Se ESO 1.25. Horseradish, No. 1 pk. ..-.....-.0 326 Leeks. tbehs.) dot ene eseeees 1. 'Onions. dry ibags) 50-Ib. .......... 3.50 Parsley Roots ‘behs) dog. ........-- 1 Sa Parsnips 43 bu. .......... Te wena tte Potatoes (bag) 50 JDS ww eee 1.10) Radishes, hothouse (bchs.) doz, ..., 1.50 Squash, Delicious, 50 * NEW YORK p-Awennie con-, tinued with plus signs in a nar-, rowly mixed stock market early today. Trading was active. Fractional changes were the rule for most key stocks. A num- ber of issues were unchanged. A fairly wide move occurred here and there. Champion Paper spurted nearly 3 points in a resumption of yes- terday’s 334-point rise on reports that some investment companies have added greatly to their hold- ings of this issue. American Telephone dropped an- other point as profit taking con- tinued. Youngstown Sheet was the best mover among steels, adding about a point, DETROIT. Jan. 20 (AP) — Prices paid, AMON aire per pound, fob Detroit. for No. 1 qual-| |to a aoe higher. heavy type broilers and fryers | (AP; — Eegs. fob) State: extra! larwe 42-44 | ctarge Major declines, three celebrants were hauled aie: year’s probation, court, given a lecture and Douglas Aircraft) was ahea| ‘around a point for a good showing rafts which were steady _M. Byers had a delayed open- ine It rose 4% to 54 on its first trade, a small block of 500 shares “ While the latest figures on the | short interest showed the biggest | month-to-month decrease since | records were started in 1933, | there was little efect on stock principally affected. Columbia Gas, which had the biggest decline, was unchanged | Among other stoks which showed | US. Steel rose al fraction and Studebaker-Packard was about unchanged New! York Stocks /mittee’s ideath of two men patients at the | (Late Morning Quotations: Figures after decimal point are eighth : s s for the weakening economy of Ar- sein, Seutn, sie toes Sse _ Se naive, | gentina. i choice; steers 1100 Ibs. and down 26 25- air Reduc ,. 85 Int Tei é Tel 61.5 2950, one load high choice to prime ated Strs ,, 846 Isl Crk Coal 0 11037 Ib weights 3000: few average tO ajum Ltd . 32.2 Johns ‘Mas e high choice 1150-1200 Ib ,bteers rotten: am Airlin ... 271 asl er L 83 ; 2950: good to average choice heifers amc 493 ( 36 00-28-00. utility cowt 1900-2050: lat- am Cyan ‘og Kimb Clk 614 ter prime naid sparingly: canners and am M & Fdy 874 Por Seer : - Libby Mc jcutters 15.00-19.00 Am Motors 404 Hoes—salable 50 Butchers and sow? Am N Gas €A 5 eae Aiee Abd = Zi lb | El t d Ol ) Ca S ee SE eee aalae a ead Am News * 4H oew's 213 rege aur $ ecte 31 Yb butchers 1700-1725. mixed Am Tel & Tel 729 Lone 8S Gas 437 No 1 and 2 190-230 Ibs 1750-17715. no Am Tob .. 105 Lorillard 86 1 ° * * early sales No 1: No 2 and 3} 230-260 Anaconda 673 Lo Nash 86 6 Chairman, Arnoldi Is and Girls Ibs 1625-16 75. most No 3 260-300 Ibs Armco Stl 7 4 Mack Tr 334 A | ! - oO, mixe grades sows -4 Armour & Co. 265 av t | Ibs. 1425-1500. No. 2 and 3 400-600 Ibs Atchison 296 Merck 47 ew rresiaen | ? \ 12 75-13.75 Ave 117 wer c= ie : | fi — Vealers — salable 125 Steady most Balt a On !o 46 n } NEW YORK (AP)—Do call girl choice and prime vealers 360-41 00. Beth Steel 522 Minn MeM 1193 Minn Pal 382 The Board of Directors of the play an important role in helping individual prime held higher standard Boeing Air ... 451 hasaan Ch au? Pontiac Varnish Company, 30 Di8 corporations swing business SO er oe eee any CP ELM cei ea Ee Mont ward 414 deals? Sheen and lambs alable 1600 Briegs Mf .. 193 War Bis P Brush St.. has reorganized follow- Slaughter lambs and aheep! atcads most Rrist M: ~. 00 a dete R mal ing the group's annual meeting.| No. say businessmen. aood sed shot 7, wanted siaae Bier darnbe Be Balke 824 Nat Dairy 83 unaer s utility to goo U 0 Nat Gv Pi Paul J. Ziegelbaur of 7380 Frank- | Yes — to a degree — Says the ry a0- sled noe ised cuotce shorn lambs perreushe = Natl cleaa UO j j o 1 pelts 87 Ibs 1 eull to choi Calum a N entral 2 in Rd., Franklin, has been elected city's chief magistrate. Slaughter ewes 6 50-12 15 mosily 8 oo wo. Campb Soup .. 54 No Am AY 43 chairman of the; A Senate committee should in- jean ry ee . | é Lg Ld board. He re- vestigate, says the AFL-CIO. Capital Airl 22 Qhio OW a3 places C. H.| We'll investigate, says the city Pe Te be pee gee air mela Hutchins founder, police: department. iCater Trac 74 Paoh Eol 5 1 poe Da m2 : | iCen Ill Lt Pf 80 sp president for the x *& * iChes & Ohio . 721 RR ‘ A . " . Fe el Cola Bh) past 56 years.| The new twist in the -world’s! cher 7° «Phelps D $3 Hutchins is now/joldest profession got a thorough Cities Ave... 613 prin Pet a3 honorary chair airing Monday night on the CBS arto ilnd = na) ads Ld ee man. iradio program, ‘The Business of epee a3 RCA Sn cl + | i em 13 The company’s Sex.” narrated by Edward R. Con N Gas $42 Rex. Drue #2 board i Murrow Consum Pw Hs spd Ute new a In- peg: Cont Meter 13 : ) u . Unidentified speakers from the Cont Ol .. 664 Roval Dut oi cludes Ziegelbaur, \pysiness world and the demi- Copper Rng 791 Bt me Ps 4 ZIEGELBAUR Frank Arnoldi, of monde told of company policies Deere. B48 Gee a. 2740 Franklin: Rd., Bloomfield Hills,'that include keeping prostitutes on ba Cems 0 ne Hcp 2 Harold E. Howlett, 104 E. Iroquois! public relations payrolls or paving, Rood BUST gist mPa Rd., and Dr. Harold A. Furlong,'them: monthly fees for dealings ‘Da Pont 212 Sou Pac ans of 207 Navajo Rd. with customers. ap are ; ee ao Rd a : Arnoldi, who was secretary and. * *« * Exton Mig ee Gs . ‘ FE! Auto 377 Std iy} treasurer, was elected presidnet) As spokesmen from the top Emer Pad lge Sie CONN S es and chief execu- ranks of big business generally Erie RR. «128 Bn Spo} tive officer. Zieg- denied the sex-for-sales practice. | Food Mach 446 Stud Park 187 elbaur, former Police Commissioner Stephen P. | Piel Degli eo Switt & Co 107 : ‘8 = * 2 aa } president, is now Kennedy ordered an investigation. | Prueh Tra 193 Sivss’ca sa executive vice Mayor Robert F. Wagner's of-| a NB Tinie et president. fice said: ‘We will not. tolerate, Gen Dynam 627 Tim R Rear 33 Muehlbeck, the such scandal and vice in the city. i Sen Fds gy TEtyeniames 3 5 z t 80 wen en. former industrial . Kennedy, acknowledging the dif-| an tac a Underwd |. 22 = r a 48 n Carbide sales manager, is eas cppenind ner: Pcl set e RAY E. SMITH food eal BOM Un Pac : " information Aliette _ 471 Unit Air Lin. vice president of ; : oodrich g27 Unit Aire : 2 sales and Harold that ae aid the probe, He Tel- Huron Merchants 3 | pee ees , 1242 ucla $24) ] promised to protect informants. A&P . 802 Un Gas Cp... J, Bauer, former- but threatened t t Gt Ne Ry $61 UB Lines ..... 326 ly controller, is ARNOLDI busi a prosecute any Gal One ina us eel 7 . Ss usinessmen oun 2 a8 Bie secretary-treasurer und employing | Name New Mana er Hersh Choc . 712 U8 Tob . 24 2 : prostitutes, Belieed F 13 $ Van al. ’ 13 ; ' om West U 4 Arnoldi attended MeGil) Uni- _ * + Hooker th Wl welA Be 306 versity and was with Ernst & A promise not to disclose names) Elected 1959 president last night, Insolp Ie Wee's we Us Ernst, Detroit, prior to joining had been made to participants on of the Tel-ifuron Merehants Assn. Interiak Tr 722 wilson & co 74 the company in 1932, the Monday program by CBS of- was: Ray E. Smith, new manager, i Hare 417 pee fail, Ziegelbs ficials, who refused Tuesday to) Paper i944 .Ynest Sh AT 1774 ti oa SS r, director of the Pon. identify speakers to police jof the.S. S Kresge store there. Zenith Red | 191 iae Man i ; iversity Dies sels se a Deputy Police Commissioner. Smith, 42, came to the Pontiac. DeTRorT STOCRS : ¥ é i ' d phier Co is past den’ ae uate. He\ james R. Kennedy said the net-jstore last julie after six years as Figures after decimal points are eigh'hs president of the Detroit work employes “full rated High Low Noon Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Assn. ee fees manager of the Kresge branch injaten Blec & quip. Co." 24 and Detroit Paint & Varnish to the limit they could’ and that) Highland Park. Balwin Rubber Co 6a v4! I TO " Hes ear Ca* ae 4 duction Club. he respected their right to refuse. -_ * *& G. L. Oil & Chem. Co° 16 3 No one is going to jail here, He was a member of the High-|Howe! Blee. Mir. Co 7 7.7 77 h id B- | peninsular M. Prod. Co 8 81 F hi . e said. land Park Board of Commerce|The Prophet Co. ms 1 114 ast T inker Wins ** * * : : | Rudy Mfg. Co.. 1m4 134 124 five years, serving on its parking! Toiedo ‘Edison Co. 168 166 166 oe | This was an apparent reference! and retail store committees. *No saie. Vid and asked KINGSTON, Tenn. (UPI—R ay to Marie Torre, New York Herald, A World War II vet s Gullett settled a dispute with E.L./Tribune television columnist who is command = the East" Soe Baker as to which is police chiet|recently served a 10-day jail sen American Legion ‘Pot te nee 7 Cities Ad d of Kingston by arresting Baker|tence for contempt of court for’ at 362 Shaddick Rd. Waterford yesterday on a charge of imper- refusing to divulge a news source Township. with his wife phigh thei sonating an officer. in a court case. ™ uOri e During Year LANSING ® -— Seven more Michigan communities started fluoridating their water last year, the State Health Depart- ment reported today” But the names of the commu- nities ate “top secret’ as far as the department is concerned. Sas ee ae ae ing ont the pegged of those add- i + Capitol to Speak for :4 to Paint Church Belfry | Newspaper Advertising Execu-— | | presented a brechure costed Lodge Colendar Special communications he rh Lodge No. 561 will be held at 22 State Ave. at 1:00 p.m. Thursday, January 22, 1959 to con- fer last rites upon Samuel A. Gray who lies in state at Tc. ee Funeral Home. Royal Clar Special communication Cedar Lodar Lodge No. 60 F. and A. M. By DAVID J. WILKIE Clarkston. Thurs., a 22, 7 p.m. Work in MM. deg AP Automotive Writer “Gordon § Stayt, WM. DETROIT—The auto industry is, ‘pushing ahead into what may be- News in Brief ‘come one of its most profitable |postwar years. | Many industry Two revelvers, a shotgun, lady's watch and portable radio iwere reported stolen yesterday by ‘burglars who broke into a summer | home at 1855 Squirrel Rd., Avon ‘Township, belonging to Wisson ‘Seyburn of Grosse Pointe, accord-' ing to Oakland County sheriff's | ‘deputies. Coldwater Men to Defend Home Civic Leaders Go to ‘unforeseen the total easily coul ‘top six million units. * * *. This would be far below the | record 744 million new car sales reported for 1955, but that total was achieved with widespread distress selling among the retail- ers. In many sources it was called a year of profitiess pros. | perity lor most automobile re- | tailers. Few cars were sold at list price. : Right now the industry has a develop into a boom. By tradition, too, a substantial upturn | is due. ! State Mental School ‘ear analysts accept, analysts say the market was over- ‘the predictions of 542 million new Sold in 1955—so much so th car sales this year as conserva-| ‘required ‘tive; they say that barring some, ‘normal balance. These experts say ‘adverse developments _ presently the production of nearly eight mil- q-lion cars that year forced retailers ito make exorbitant trade-: ‘ances and slash prices heaviis inventories are manufacturers planned it that way after winding up the ‘sales trend under way that could year ‘To Head Senate Committees Auto Industry Forging Ahead Toward Very Profitable Year * * * Despite the disclaimers makers, many industry at it regain three vears to allow. None of the industry experts will isay that price discounting has been jhalted. Many do say the cults ar less drastic. ‘price discounting |continue ‘exceeds demand They say also that probably will as production long as ‘ * * SUIVEYS * indicate mounting Latest dealer But the 1958 mode! with relatively few outgoing models in dealer stocks Sizable inventories with a wide LANSING HA grim and deter- | mined delegation of Coldwater) civic leaders, bearing brochures: ‘and testimonials, headed toward the capital today for a talk with | legisjative leaders. | LANSING u—Five | —_ Their objectives: senators were Republican installed in new 1. “To defend the good name committee chairmanships today as ifencing over completing ofpaniza of Coldwater Home and Training | School.” | tion for 195960 continued in \the 2. To prevent re-appointment evenly divided House of Rep. Harry J, Phillips (R-Port | Minority Senate Democrats” | Huren) as chairman of a House = who sent up a big how! last week, committee apvointed last year to | made no outcry yesterday when quiet them Name 5 GOP Chairmen the GOP majority voted to limit them to one berth on each of 15 standing committees. = = A Republican concession helped The GOP let Lt Gov. John B. Swainson, a Democrat, fill minority committee seats * * * of most, lions of 1955 buyers who s! lback in the market figures for last year have not yet ‘than 4,600,000 units, (Such an upsurge almost invariably variety of different body types is ~ follows a couple of years of dis- one of the penalties of operating ‘appointing volume. in what probably is the most com- petitive business in the world. There always is considerable hoast- ing by the auto makers about owner lovalty, but retailers know new car buyers can be lost if they are asked to wait indefinitely for the model they want. So, with distinctive changes in mest makes, the industry is building up inventories. If a sales lag should develop it will be reflected quickly in curtailed production schedules. The auto makers presently do not anticipate a sales lag in the months immediately ahead. But the almost industrywide overtime scheduling has boosted output above the retail sales volume. Some leveling off of overtime oper- ations already has been indicated. This is ancther of the penalties, that go with a competition meas- ured in fabulous figures. The in- dustry already has built about two millon of its 1959 model cars. Tt will add a million to that total in ithe next eight weeks : ® * * Throughout 1958 the industry’s sales experts talked about the mi ‘i rould | Total etl s been announced. But indications are they will be only slightly more including im- ports, The poorest valume since 1952, pat total included relatively few of the 1955 buyers. Many of them lenould be back in the market this year. British Car Builders investigate Michigan’s mental eee ee an ee bespital system. | iP 1 ees had two Demo- . crats apiece. The 20 new Senate Heading the group of 30 who vol- Queen Elizabeth committees, with some exceptions, unteered for the assignment was will have a four and one ratio. Dale A. Dean, ene alderman. Scheduled July 3 Overall Republicans outnumber * Democrats 22 to 12 It grew from i a lips com- Visit to Windsor investigation into the WINDSOR. Ont. (UPI) — The home for the mentally retarded. Canadian government bas an- Phillips, whose seven-man com- nounced that Queen Elizabeth TI mittee soon will make a report on of England and Prince Philip will its investigations and other activi- visit Windsor July 3 ties, leveled charges of patient) Mayor Louis Minani of Detroit. abuses and brutality, ‘who invited the Queen to visit the State Police, the Mental Health | Motor City when she tours the St. Commission and the Branch (Lawrence Seaway, said today County prosecutor's office all en- chances were slim that she would tered the investigation, but found Stop in Michigan no evidence to warrant criminal | The Queen's only stop in the In the House, split 55-55, ocrats were driving for an equal break on committee assignments but had almost no chante ~ot— getting one—on committees that — count, Speaker Don R Pears (R-Bu- chanan) was elevated to the driv- ers seat and committee appoint- ment power last week when Dem- ocrats temporarily lost one of their votes due to the illness of a De troit woman lawmaker. \ Dem- | Top Million Mark LONDON (®—Britain built more {than a million automobiles in 1958 —the first time the million -mark has been passed in one year The Board of Trade said the pro- | duction total was 1.051.551 ecom- pared with the previous high of 897,560 in 1955 * * * Auton¥obile exports boomed to a new high of 486.810, or 60.000 more than in 1957, the Board of Trade said prosecution. ‘United States will be at Chicago ‘July 6 where the royal party will Phillips last night submitted 4 visit an international fair and resolution to revive his committee, exposition He stop in Windsor which went out of business Dec. 31. will be brief It calls for another $15.000 appro- According to the details of her priation. '15,000-mile tour of Canada, the ‘ * iQueen and her party will arrive “We need more time to accom: at 12:30 p.m. by train from Chat- plish our job.”" he said. “Whether ham, Ont., tour the Windsor area, I Am elected chairman or not does and at 4 p.m. board the royal not matter.” lyad ‘ht “Brittania” for Sarnia and Dean said his delegation hopes Cpic¢ ago. “at the very least” to dissuade | House Speaker Don R. Pears (R- Buchanan) from re-appointing Phil- lips to the committee | 2 incammatives Bought CHICAGO — The Chicago, | Milwaukee, St, Paul & Pacifie Rallroad bought 52 general pur- | pose diesel locomotives for more than 8'4 million dollars each. The 1,750 horsepower engines | will be built by the General Mo. | 7 Men Must Move Bees ELKVILLE, ll, ws — Bees held up painting the Elkville Methodist, Church belfry until members Gus) tors Corp, electro-motive divi. Gray, Myrton Piper and Melborn, sion. Porter volunteered to remove, ——————— Y them. | The largest sturgeon ever caureht Although the price was sevenjin the Unifed States was a 1,285- stings, it was worth it. It required, pounder, 12’, feet long. taken sel three hours to remove three the Columbia River in 1912. It had washtubs of honey. 1125 pounds wr roe N ewspaper Advertising “Spurs Sale of Ramblers CHICAGO (UPI) — Newspaper) advertising, spurred an 80 per cent sales rise for one auto company | despite an industry-wide 30 per’ cent drop in 1958 an advertising. group announced Tuesday. The Bureau of Advertising. a di- vision of the American Newspapers, “Publishing Association, made the) dent-elect, said earlier that ‘‘to- tal selling’ — a grouping of large advertising classifications for in- tensive local campaigns — has started to “unify the selling forces” of the newspaper indus- try in an unprecedented way. - ' ' i = “Fresh and bold news pe < x alban : — proacif,” he said, had received ad- TETICAN MOOES Lesa RC vertisers’ praise as a “major Romney for his use of newspaper] achievement.” George Lemons, NAEA presi- | ap DESK LAMPS—You can do much better school work when eyestrain doesnt discourage study. Take one of our lamps back to school. From $4.50 WORLD GLOBES give a true picture of geographic relation- ship — make study and refer- ence much easier. All styles and prices. From $3.95 @ DICTIONARIES Webster and Random House from $1.00 up @ Beautiful line of STA- TIONERY, and NOTE PAPER ... for men and women @ DIARIES and TRAVEL BOOKS e@ SCRAP BOOKS PHOTO ALBUMS and (7 W. Lawrence GRADUATION GIFTS TYPEWRITERS —Don't be satished with yust any kind of a school paper. Hand in a good one — one done on a portable type writer, From $69.50 @ Kem Plastic PLAYING CARDS e@ DESK SETS. . scissors and letter openers. e@ BOOK ENDS @ ELECTRIC RAZORS @ AUTO COMPASS with light @ BAROMETERS @ BINOCULARS ond < FIELD GLASSES General Printing & Office Supply FE 2-0135 advertising. ea | * Romney, * * | who spoke af the | Conference ROOM An Added Facility at the | tives Association meeting, was | how national advertising contrib. uted to increased sales of the | Rambler, American Motors’ | small car model. The company's small car adver- tising campaign, said the bureau statement, “was a daring move. rr rrr ee eae ae eet SAVOY tf it didn't pay off, there might: ‘not be a second chance.” * * * After three months of the cam paign, the company showed its: first fit since June, 1955, and esse eres * . ae RESERVE IT TODAY later counted an 80 per cent rise while the rest of the industry dropped 30 per cent in sales, the statement said. FOR YOUR SALES MEETING ksh irene ere to. make the announceemnts from here, Communities are so split ‘on fluoridation that they said they would. be barraged with letters and t ealls from anti-fluoride people » - The radars Me communi. ty, Wertheimer said, complained that he received telephone calls in the middie of the mght about the matter, Phone FE 5-9224 120 S. Telegraph Rd. 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Face He put out i stances have been lost in time, it Ov | er Memory Lapse iis believed to be the grave of a | Korea simplified its writing into Grave of Early Pioneer ' phonetic script in 1443, but Japa-| 2 inese characters were used during 2@t Off by Iron Fence Ifarm south of here. ithe child may someday seek it.| billfold. ; order -on it and the city issued) to cover the second one. — him another check for the same KOREA—The Republic of Korea the Japanese occupation. After, BLUFFTON, Ohio uw) — A weath- Pioneer child who died during the| OWENSBORO, Ky. i — Mayor) amount. A few days later original Sixty million American women: the way of an oncoming car ond oe = Aeneas Sr AT AIC ty py | noticed his check cleared the bank. It was/are suffering with “sick feet” be- ™ has directed that all government/World War I the American Mili- er-worn iron fence sets off an 8-foot trek west In the early 1800s. The Benjamin Hawes : . : ‘ documents must be written in Ko-,tary Government returned pri-;square plot between an oat and Amstutz family has preserved the) month's check from the City of endorsed in Hawes coqgtsbise cause of wearing pointedtoe shoes, |suddenly found ine it the Dow rean phonetic script instead of in mary-school instruction to pho- corn field on the Walter Amstutz)/ grave on the chance relatives of Owensboro was missing from his , ona peygeress — ld preeatirp bag — by necticut River. McNeil ferry ) | u . THIRTY-ONE a stop - payment| promptly wrote the city a check Better Watch His Step! | McNeil stepped out of ee ana nena na acme eNO BIRDSEYE—BEEF - CHICKEN - TURKEY BEST FRESH 5 $4 MEAT PIES wi... .5 GIFTS IN SOMERDALE—FROZEN LIFE ARE VEGETABLES : 3" ~: 15° FREE . DWANS—FREESTONE PEACHES mer Ly ®eee#e*# CANS BONNIE SOFT WHITE TOILET TISSUE 12 =: 99° GOOD ALL PURPOSE SHORTENING 110 3 ci. 59° ... 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