Patel cccirm _ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, JANUARY 1, 195730 PAGES | aa Sy A x ee E ee re _snqq the trains were traveling was not 4 J UDY BRADLEY Believed Dead ~ in Train Crash 2 Long B&O Freights Collide Head-On Near Martinsburg, W. Va. MARTINSBURG, W. Va. (@— hree en were missing and dead today in the wreck- age of two long Baltimore & Ohio ‘freight trains, which collided ~ head-on early. today near Martins- burg. a * The two-unit diesel locomotives, one pulling 145 cars and the other! 160 empty coal hoppers, rammed into each other on @ slight curve on a single track spur line two miles west of Cumbo, W. Va, Seven other crewmen and a railroader “deadheading’’ home after work were aboard the two trains. One was injred critical- ‘ly. the others suffered bruises and cuts. The missing were not immedi- ately sentified. ek Dr.J. °C: “Godlove of Martins- burg, who was summoned fo. the scene, reported that he was told three were dead in the wreckage B&O officials ip Baltimore said the trains were the eastbound No. 96 and westbound No, 648. The exact cause of the accident was not known, and the speed at which "\iimediately determined, There were unconfirmed reports that 35 to 40 of the westbound cars piled up, while 15 to 20 on the eastbound train left the rails. Wreckage was scattered for several bundred Yards. : Railroad alticlade sais traffic on the main line wag not atfected. ‘51's First Baby Here Born at 12:54 A.M. Honors in the city for the first baby delivered in the new year|’ went to Pontiac General Hospital when a baby girl made her od pearance at 12:54 a.m. -.The girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Chapman of 1008 " Rd,, Milford. St Joseph Mercy Hospital was'} “gong when a set of twins, of 7500 Cornwall Ct., Birmingham. At 4:10 a.m., Pontiac Osteopath- sic Hospital reported the delivery of their first baby of the new year to Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Cole, W. Walled Lake Rd., Walled Lake. | 1 "Fly Refugees fo U.S. a [it ihe Coming year thanit id tn) MSU Coed ] “Happy New Year. And here she is! This is the first official We're very happy—yes, Miss Judy B ‘Meet Miss Front Page, udy Bradley *Miss Front Page for 1957 as selected by The Pontiac Press. and proud, too—to present , Gaughter of Mr. and Mrs.. James H. Bradley Drive. Miss Judy is currently a laboratory technician in General Hospital as a pan of her course at Michigan State,- where she is a Our Miss Front Page is very much a part of her university. Two years ago she was officially selected as Miss Michigan State, jan honor she bore with an easy savior faire that was both. becom: ing and characteristic. When the 10 Western Confer- ence queens met so they could elect Miss Big Ten, our Judy was runner-up by an eye lash to Miss Minnesota, (Which just #0es to show: that judges are human and subject to unaccount- able errors on occasion.) this comely young woman head the 1957 Front Page parade, You’ li get one each month. All hail—Miss. Bradley. Nehru and Chou Toast - Friends in Fruit Juice NEW DELHI i — Premiers Nehru of India and Chou En-Lai of.Communist China toasted the New Year with fruit” juice today. drinking to continued frie p between their countries, Chou, visiting here since Sun- day, was,dué to leave tonight for Peiping, Nehru was reported to have given Chou_a resume of his talks with _ President__.Eisenhower and other leaders on his trip last month to the United States, Can- ada and Britain. Spokane’ |Lake — Michigan's largest inland) We're pleased as Punch to let! ‘lyesterday evening. Lake Ice Takes: 2 Cars, 4 Lives Lone. Member of Party Escapes Into Blizzard to Report Tragedy HOUGHTON LAKE (INS) — A posse. of 300° \ volunteers today marched out onto’ frozen Houghton lake — to search.for two men and two women reported missing on an ice fishing expedition. ‘ John Whorley, 45, of Lansing, was the only known survivor of the five-member party which drove, onto the frozen lake in two cars Whorley struggled through 10 degree temperatures and a raging blizzard to a lakeside cabin last night to report the two cars carrying. his companions had plunged through the lake ice.. He identified: ‘the victims as Albert Sohn, a Houghton Lake laundry proprietor, Arthur Klatt and his wife, Bernie, and Doreen Butler, all of Lansing. The distraught survivor told through the ice wiile he was_re- turning to shore. He said he leaped out but his companion, Sohn, apparently was weet! in the car. - With 6 Fatals; _ Record Praised 640 persons injured in 1955. state police that his car went a, ae] 1955 Saw Sixteen Die on Streets of Pontiac; Straley Lauds Drivers Pontiac entered 1957 to- day with one of its best traffic fatality records in years. Six persons died in traf- fic here last year, com- pared with 16 deaths in 1955. Officials hailed the rec- ord, achieved in the face of an upsurge in traffic deaths throughout the state and nation. “Motorists have done a fine job, but must remember,” Police Chief Herbert W. Straley said, “traffic is continually becoming more and more dangerous. “Only with. every driver’s care and concern can we keep the rec- jord down again in 1957.” The part played by Pontiac po- lice officers in driving death from city. streets was praised by the Chamber of Commerce gsafety committee chairman, Clyle R. Haskill. “The police are to be com- mended for thseir increased ef- forts in enforcement of traffic laws, investigation of auto acei- dents and their accident preven- .tion program,”’ he said. “Especially, I ~want_ to mya their educational programs as primary reason for the eacrenil in fatalities. Their: efforts every- day at PTA meetings, schools serv- ice clubs and other public gath- erings have done a great deal to hammer home the constant dan- gers of the highway.” 9m Haskill also commended the city’s ‘motorists and the members of his committee who have vol- untarily worked for greater safety in the past year. Although final figures have not been readied, it appeared that the number of accidents and he number of accident victims also were cut in 1956. There wer4 1,270 accidents with “? ) «te Through ‘November this year, there were 1,021 accidents with 574 injuries, : In the last seven years, a lower number of fatalities /was recorded only in 1954, when five persons died, In 1950 there were-17 deaths, in 1951, 16 deaths; and. in 1952 and 1953, eight deaths each. | The. 1950 record. is the worst in the city’s history. ~~... Weatherman Makes New Year’s Resolution CHICAGO (INS) — J. R..Fulks, meteorologist in charge of the Chicago weather bureau forecast center resolves: . “We would like to pledge that the weather will be what every- body wants. Failing this we re- ‘solve to be asaccurate as possible every day in telling people what to expect.” igeilone Host Hands-Off Plan ical Middle East. Pwould. wilt. to- Thousands for~ + Rose Bow! Game PASADENA, Calif. @ — New Year's greetings to the nation go out today from Pasadena, where the 68th annual Tournament of Roses is being presented. A city of less than 150,000 Pas- adena is’ expected to play host to nearly 10 times that many people on its big day, which starts with the Rose Parade and ends with the Rose Bow) football game. Sixty-three floats, ranging from simple displays to mechanicak marvels, and all cove with flowers, will wind for five miles along a street banked high with grandstand seats, past buildings with ‘faces peering - from. every window, and, past throngs on boxes, chairs and ladders in every open space. Ike Will Outline Congressional Leaders to Hear Mideast Policy at Meeting Today ‘WASHINGTON (INS) — Presi- dent Eisenhower outlines Democratic and Republican con- gressional leaders today his pro- posed Middle East “hands-off” warning to Russia, The chief executive wants a congressional declaration giving him advance authority to use political, economic — and, if necessary, military — ae At the New. Year's afternoon White Howse session, the Presi- dent is also expected to expound briefly his domestic program. This calls for a 7@ billion dollar. budget and rules out any pos- sibility of a tax cut in 1957. But the big question in today’s bipartisan conferehce is the ‘so- called “Eisenhower Doctrine’ to keep Soviet power out of the criti- to! United Press Phete LIVING IT UP — Easy Street runs right through the middle of his enclosure at the Paris Vincennes Zoo, as far as this happy brown bear.is concerned. And why not? There’s plenty of food, a good place to sleep, and as for entertainment — what can beat the fun Nee DE eee ee ee ee Advance reaction to the proposal was mixed. Some Democrats in- dicated opposition, and there was also evidence that many Repub- licans would dislike any such commitment from congress, ° Nevertheless, prospects were good that if the President presses his case as he did with his “save Formosa” resolution two years ago, congressional opposition Snow, Cloudy, Cold; Tale So Often Told! The U. S. Weather Bureau says partly cloudy and colder weather can be expected iff Pontiac tonight, with occasional snow flurries oc- curring. Tomorrow it will be fair and continued cold, Low tonight will be 6-10 degrees, high tomor- row, 20-24, The lowest temperature preced- ing 8 a.m, recorded in downtown Pontiac was 12 degrees. At'1 p.m., the temperature reg- take the. oath for a fifth challenge of our time. our world leadership we must provide our chil- dren with the education they need for the world of tomorrow,” he said. “A society of automation, atorhic and solar power, eannot be oper- ated by citizens meee to yes- ©C-'terday’s standards,” The “little red schoolhouse” may be an object of nostalgia for some, he said, but “as an ade- quate educational plant it is gone forever,” All this means -bigger spending, he said, Oratorically, the governor's mes- istered 18 degrees. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) - “Tf -we are to continue to maintain our liberties, our high standards of living, ; in technology and industry, Williams Set to Take Oath.of Office Today LANSING (? — Gerhart Mennen Williams, set to time as Michigan governor, said today “the cost of government will unquestionably go up,” especially for education. In an inaugural address to. thousands of persons assembled on and around the east steps of the Capitol, the 45-year-old governor called education the No, 1/¥er + ) Crash hl 3 | a Wood Hotel Burns in North Wisconsin ASHLAND, Wis, (#—An_ all- wood three-story hotel, built .in the days when: this northern Wis- consin community was a lumber- ing capital, was flaming furiously today. The occupants of the Menard Hotel escaped injury, but author-| ities said the main problem now was to keep the blaze from spreading to six other wood build- ings to the west of the hotel and funeral home behind -the_ -burning structure, Firemen sald that as long as the wind remained from_ the west there was a good chance the fire could be controlled. yrs Ross Miller ‘Critical After Car Hits Ice, Skids Into Tree : County * Bheritts de nol ‘Sheriff's d was critically injured go a-Holly man was badly hurt in the most serious of . Oakland County highways over New Year’s Eve. — = g6. » 2 2 5 8 & : i Hf % Fig? i ; és a SSF top of him after car overturned on off a Towns i :? Remarkable Recovery . Continues for Curley (” — Former Gov. BOSTON James Michael Curley continues to maintain his remarkable re- The hospital said, although Cur- ley's condition wag still critical it continues to improve. Mrs. Curley visited with her 82. year-old husband for an hour, the longest since his operation, and he was “doing very, very well.’ - S NOTE: In the folleving are an ne neue Economist Bab- son offers his predictions of what 1957 will mean in terms of business pros- perity. The first rt deals with the react for the = co a w appears exclusively Press. The second the . ha png Br Ka By ROGER W. BABSON . I look for another sprightly year for Pontiac business, predicated largely upon my feeling that the automobile industry may as much as 10 per cent more business T sei: oetialinn: in fact, about i, of Sets to have here in “ cata le, wea now | ucts, electric power, public con- struction and roadbuilding, There will be, too, a few lines feFom|that should lend their support to business in 1957 by changing little, if any, from the excellent volume of the year just. ending: Paint, ., \varnish, lacquer, dairy products, the (including department, food, and variety stores.) ‘There may be some mild sagging in fron, and steel foundry, prod- ucts, Residential building is likely drift perhaps 5 oe 7 iad cent es 1956 highs, due tightening. ° Employment may have irregular to credit Taecal living costs will reflect some fractional gains in early 1957, but final tally for the com- ing year will be close to that for 1956, Buying power will be gen- erally well sustained, although buying will tend.to be more se: lective as the year moves along. All in all, Pontiac merchants and businessmen should enjoy another top-notch year in 1957, Ronin no sharp declines. Higher labor,-and tensify the profits squeeze, (Mr, Babson's forecasts about In Today’ Ss Press vee eee Oe ee “See hake eee eee eeneee eee ee eee materials costs, however, wif to the national business outlook in general is as follows:) Both presidential candidates, in their pre-election speeches, prom- ised peace, prosperity, and prog- ress, They stated that they must do this in order to. enforce the Employment Act of 1946. This is the basis of my Outlook for 1957, tem- ert of course by Russia, te War int will not start .s Manufacturers will be taced with higher costs for both ma- terials and labor. A.~ All. businesses will be con- fronted by increased competition, both within their own industries essary in 1987 if profits of manu- facturers and retailers are to equal foolish for anyone to now forecast the stock market for Average, now around 490, may de. ing 1957. 32. All investors will want ‘‘safe- ty,” but’ wise investors will first {decide whether they also want ‘‘in- ..14,come” or “profit.” Only by luck z)can you obtain all three features during 1957. $3, ean buy, during 1957, well + seasoned’ preferred stocks (preferably (cumulative) which will give, with safety, a yield of near 6 per cent. I will gladly send, free of charge,-a list of such to any reader so requesting. 34, During 1967, good utility with certainty. 83, Investors r to -_ Lt moderate x brackets. ' investor high -brarkets state, /homage to wilt greet Unsteady Peace Lends Hope for Tomorrow | } i | of ing of international tension, New Year’s Eve revelry was a quilt of contrast throughout the! were the rule. \ | by atteiiding traditional watch) night services and ‘holy hours. in their: churches. ha In Japan, the advént of New| Year meant a time for paying: é “s ancestors and re-) newal of solemn occasion and-many of the| country's 90 million inhabitants, donned bright new kimonos to, 195F-in-aceustomed style= > Ff * | _New Year's’ Eve in Hungary i | '] . z ; ‘ Many observed the year’s end, ous faiths. It was al streets by the 10 p.m. curfew or! before. | tion. s * * “In the United States, | ily. The death toll from auto ac- cidents alone stood at well ‘over 250, ‘ In Washington, President hnd rs, Eisenhower spent a quiet New Year's Eve at the White House. He and Secretary of State Dulles:-were- scheduled to outline their Middle Eastern policy . to M Vivid Contrasts Mark Eve of t cline to 400 or advance to 600 dur-'-By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS stood out in marked contrast to, In Times Square, New York’sjof the brave people of Hungary” , The world celebrated the arrival celebrations in happier parts of traditional gathering spot for wel-|and to call for a healing of the \\New Year's Day against a the world. There was no celebra- coming the New Year, a police rift in Anglo-American relations. backdrop of unsteady peace but'tion for the unhappy populace of estimated crowd of 450,000} French Premier—Guy Mollet with hope 1957 will bring an eas-/the revolution - wracked nation.|jammed into the area to herald |The people had to be off the the arrival of 1957.. * * * New York night clubs reported globe. In the United States and! In the homes, many made cold a brisk business, In Washington, much of the Western world, tradi- by a shortage of coal, thousands D. C., night spot managers noted deeds of your army and the au- tional year - ending celebrations'mourned those killed in revolu-|a smaller turnout, ; At Hollywood, a Texas oil mil- lionaire tossed a party that cost : the na-'$125,000. David (Tex.) Feldman tion's traffic death rate over the/40, gave the party to prove, he| |holiday period was rising stead-isaid, that Texans aren't boister-| ous as’ one- movie had depicted them. Sa _* * «& In Europe; most statesmen looked , to the New Year with sorhe. misgivings but with a de- congr ‘essional i leaders today, ; dr’ Windia’ Churchill took the decasion to praise sire for peace ufipermost in thelrica ‘ ‘hero ism * —_ said he hoped the New Year would find France and Poland bound by closer ties. In a separate message) to Israel, Mollet said ‘France vi- brates with admiration at the ers.” bd West German Chancellor .Kon- rad Adenauer, in a New Year's dacity of your soldi * * starid by his, poli¢ unity and t President Tito of Yugoslavia said ‘there is no doubting the future and the victory y of European ip’ with the he New Year co Franco said, it was a mistake to. believe that the Soviet Union is weakening: Soviet President Klementi Y. message, called for hig country to Peace. Integration I ssue Flares | in Alabama Dynamiting _ suffered minor injuries, but himself was unhurt. * ca = The organization ‘has played an active part in a campaign against bus segregation laws in Montgom- ery. Twenty-two Negroes were ar- rested last week but there have been few violations the past few days pending a court test. ; Another shot was’ fired into a- Montgomery city bus yesterday but no one was injured. It was the fifth time a bus had been hit by shots since the buses were inte- grated under federal court order ll days en, * * Police Commissioner Claude Sel- lers said last night that the city. of Montgomery would hire 20 ad- ditional policemen Wednesday to help maintain order. There are about 140 patrolmen and detec- . tives available for use outside the police station and ‘the jail at. present. ’ : Night bus runs were suspended during the long New Year’s week- end after a Negro woman pas- senger, Mrs. Rosa Jordan, 22, was shot in both legs Friday i ‘ i 7 g ie ait i gz u i 2s yagi ae |Ye eodocccccccccoocs ~~ @ At home or away from home — cc i end other hezerds, too. of shied to paliey im PONTIAC. STATE BANK BLDG. “— PONTIAC FE 5-8172 Beat, Rape, Kill {12-Year-Old Girl ny Optometrist Eyes Examined FE 4-5211 “, DR. H. BUSSEY OPTOMETRIST extends a wish fer a happy holiday. season and future péace and prosperity to all friends. and patients. DR. HAROLD BUSSEY, a COPPaSsO ODOC DOR OOOSO DOC OOCCOSEOCLLLECLLOLEN, 160 W. Huron Established in 1898 Farmer-Snover ‘FUNERAL HOME AIR CONDITIONED FE 2-917] €66*°08666666666666 0996000004800 0600600000000000000800000000800% | said they denied the attack. ” M. D, Mangan, unemployed fa-|people get interested in for a ther of the children and five oth-|single day? Why do they want to jers, said Jeannette had taken four|surround it-—or it to surround | soda bottles “‘to trade them down) them? “Latin American: Boys Arrested, Questioned; Deny Brutal’ Attack DALLAS U—The body of found stripped. raped, ‘beaten tal shot in an-ieolated axon last night. . * * ie -..14-rnonth-old._ brother... Dick! was found asleep in the}. tall grass ‘a short distance away. Police said’ his fifgers were morning after the night before many ailing Americans have a sudden personal interest in one of the world’s oldest wonder drugs. wank to pad it ‘= their. wrists; some to douse it on their hair pie Hopegaior A few want to crawl STEAM AND ‘PONDER Some elders: wish merely to sit/but it is a cruel master.” Johnie Library, police have been de-| smeared with blood, indicating he|in a room in. which water has _ By HAL BOYLE =: it as-celied weter. tart ine ancient Chinese did. y have a proverb that NEW YORK —On New ‘Year's “Water is feared less than eine yet fewer suffer by fire than by water.” Here are a few ‘other observa- tions by critics of water, who ‘lperhaps didn’t write them while Penjoving a. New. Vear's-omal de} eltete: “The people of England drink no water save at cértain times A “ | J ohn “F ue, Sn elusive ‘“Ma@ Bomber. Water Wins the SpotlightBomb Threats “4 on Dreary Morning Atter, | Public Nuisance. Wave of False Alarms Hampers Police Effort to Find Real Danger ‘NEW YORK 7 — Ralies today sughe false bomb threats they say are hampering the hunt for New. for penance.” P62 Since. last... = Osive attributed to the Boab “Water is a very "good servent, Bullein,. 1562; er’ was found in New York's Pub- luged- with 41 calls “Water doth very greatly deject , had clung to his sister's body for/been turned to steam gs they anne * 2 8 some time. sweat and. ponder the follies of the re Saw Ba strength Operating on a better-safe-than- . * * heat, i Police Chief Carl Hansson said two Latin American youths, 16 and 19, had been arrested, but at the store for some candy for the baby.” * Ld * The children left their home/gard it as an essential to normal about 4 p.m. and were found about life. But poets and philosophers . disagree as to the importance it Doctors at Parkland Hospital|should have in a well-run civiliza- . | tion. But police said he probably! vaRYING VIEWS | Joe Pena, 17. Pena told police of seeing: two boys washing blood|‘erested in these varying views: from their car. boys as saying they had raped and killed a girl and were going left in the field, - BRIDGEPORT, Conn. boy, born at 12:01 a.m., was Bridgeport’s first baby of 1957. He was born in St. Vincent's Pomerenk, theyear ahead. stance, water, human race? Police said Pena quoted the| things.” Pindar, & BC. : " necessary beverage for the thirsty back to kill the little boy they had is water.” nt of A trian. ~ - — |soldier ig water.” Napoleon Bon- First Baby at Bridgeport |aparte ( — Alwise man.” H. D, Thoreau. - “Drinking a man sick, Hos.|wite a widow.” H. G, Bonn, 1855, pital to Mr. and Mrs. Raymond|who apparently never heard of theyeer ahetds fo Ps it is the cause of crudities, fluctu- | ations and windiness in the body.” Just what is dus magic sub-lrobia Venner, 1620, WINE WINS OUT which so many Is water good or bad for the Scientists and bartenders re- ~~. sary theory, police checked out the threats.,Qnly one proved legitimate. That led to discovery of a real bomb early Friday in the Paramount Theater on Times Square, | The quotations in anthologies , * * 6 ranging from those of H. L. Mencken to Burton Stevenson deal with wine twice as Gften as they do with water. i That missile, and the. one at the library, were found unexplod- | ed. The “Bomber” hag been’ sought since 1940. Police say he has planted at least 34 bombs in Briefly, to summarize the situa-|public places. Twenty two have tion for the thirsty, here are some|exploded, injuring 15 persons, No basic facts about water: - } rs It is a chemical combination of Hydrogen and Oxygen. jfatalities have resulted. + * * Four bomb threats calls were! It ranks with alcohol as one of recorded today, Police Commis-_ the greatest solvents discovered A thirsty sufferer might be in“ipy man, but mixed together the omer Stephen P. . Kennedy | “Water is the best of all “The natural, temperate and “The greatest necessity of the * two often don‘t solve anything. warned that hoaxers, if caught, | would be liable to. imprisonment: for up to three years. | Absolutely pure water jis not to * ° | be found in- nature. Nor for that matter, is man. WATERY. WORLD The “Bomber craze has nat, been confined to the New York’ area alone. Homemade explosives Of the total surface of the globe|°r false bomb alarms have been “Water is the only drink for the|by land. water neither makes = * * about 142 million square miles is/TePorted in Dallas, Tex., Kansas covered by water, and 55 million|City, Mo., Wichita, Kan.,; Haver- hill, Mass., Hartford, Conn., Phil-' adelphia, Newark and Rahway, Water, when real cold, comes in|N.J., among others. in debt, nor hisilittle and big chunks called ice cubes and icebergs. It can also be a vapor but is generally fluid. In 50,000 lowans Out typhoid fever. ‘}pounds; and if anyone really feels GO! for 244% on Savings. ‘with Pontiac' State’ Bank Savings Certificates ra Get 212% interest on your savings by placing them in Pontiac State Bank Savings Certif- Do icates. These high interest bearing certificates’ are issued in amounts of $500 or more and mature in 12 months from issue date, or they may remain on deposit at 212% for six-month A intervals thereafter. Funds are insured up \ to $10,000, . PON TIAC STATE BAN K COMPLETE BANKING! SERVICE MAD OFFICE a Dosa Poi’ Tallest Building Saginaw at Lawrence - \, BRANCH OFFICES: Auburn Heighs Drain Pins a \,___ Every Depostor Insured to $10,000 bu FDIC. this form it is wet, many properties that often make it appealing on New Year's Day. Two {jnal things to remember: A gallon of water weighs 8.33 like going overboard for water the Trench in the Pacific where the water—it's salty—is 35,640 feet deep. ; , There is reported actually to be a single case in medical annals of a person who, while on dry land, drank so much water he drowned. But isn't there always, in every situation, one guy who doesn’t know when -to quit? 2 Passengers Killed’. as Bus Runs Into Truck soy beans, Twenty-eight others were jured, two seriously, in the colli-|, sion 43 miles east of here on U.S. Highway 30, Wyoming's east-west route. were westbound on a slight down- grade. 300 different crops, State Commander of the Veterans’ ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. ®—Two of Foreign Wars, has pledged the, passengers in the front seat of alorganization’s backing to a pro- | Greyhound bus died yesterday| posal for a standing committee on when it smashed into the rear of veterans affairs in the U. S. _Sen-' a semi-trailer truck loaded with ate. i in-|been suggeted by Sen. one of its for Pasadena Picnic PASADENA, Calif. «» — You probably could have paved a path from Pasadena to Sioux.City with) all the Iowans who attended that) state’s 57th annual picnic. best place might be the Marianas mere must be 50,000 people said William Larrabee, president of the Iowa Assn, of Southern: California, the event. r The crowd sang fight songs of the University of Iowa, opponent of Oregon State in the’ Rose Bowl, and official greetings were extended by -lowa’s Gov. Leo A. Hoegh. State VFW Head Backs Potter Committee Idea sponsor of today’s LANSING () — Max C. McCarn, | WEDNESDAY iS \e | oe P| ads NERY Check Each Item-Shop-—Save Wednesday A: To 50% Olt COATS AND SETS 6: leans y >”, [ae White Sale Special MUSLIN SHEETS *] first quality, sizes, full : Eaves thierlined. lope hem. Limit 2 to customer, that this movement has dealt in- <== ternational Communism a knock- \ Fils ” out blow. He may be optimistic, “Count. Your Blessings but the Russians are very ' globe can say “Happy New Year” as troubles. * on eon - sincerely and as earnestly as the Good! a meter America. » Ike Helps This means YOU. eoni.’on this 4 big man is hard to ‘find but in We are the favored parple ce President E1sennower the United. globe. We have the most security, states nas not only a leader but a . standard i ee, ; ' Bowlbs,* , used. Perhaps. mile the most to eat, the highest stanc man concerned with the welfare of | REL | limit near schools could be en — of living and the greatest peace of all people. This came to light again What a Row to Hoe ' “ forced. Many cities and states Says Albanians A oe have this law, ds vs mind known’ to civilisation today. recently in one of hls sete ———— - - now N° ase, About to Revolt +’ *© * | ) . ‘ | ) — | e. ‘According to “reports, the Rus- er When Prime Minister Nehru A Y f U d sti Gives His Support. gians are ‘really getting. into yoneniyt: ae Sewnere President sent his personal plant ~ : eS igs ig! iar oe begs same problem is much more to London to transport him. By JAMES MARLOW Britain’ and France to withdraw In Asia all through 1956 the Red intl et ch Semame kaneied rebel Good. Tee ise been serious and is bothering many After completing the conferences = Associated Press News Analyst trom Egypt. Chinese followed a mild policy, the other day that the Irish people kicked around ang knocked into times -as many people and in this country Nehru was taken WASHINGTON — Thig was That break, creating distrust on India’s Nehru, the neutralist, had Tuna dozen world-wide sweep- the ground ruthlessly by a Commie back across the Atlantic the same“ truly.an extraordinary year: it not both sides in the alliance, is not his eyes opened by the Russian steins and ules Seoesh ene See ceva watt show Ger Boas bothering them to a much grea way ° only raised some of the biggest fully healed. It probably will be, performance in Hungary, wa fey Her beet Sn S they haven't . : unanswered questions since World this shove him and the other non- would “make the Irish — ven’ ony Siends anywhere extent. x * * War II but forced hundreds of ~2¢ ™ain enemy is still Russia, (oomunist Asians toward the happy and would give the hard ‘among their “possessions. Today marks a new year. . ot reexamine The Allies weaken themselves by West? Or will Nehru and his Cash to the Government. that needs Albanian Admirer Under normal circumstances the Uulllions of people to ! : Certainly, it’s a happy one. s vor their thinking. splitting up. Britain and France friends try to play it down the it so desperately. I'll guarantee ’ specially built plane would have re- see can hardly turn to Russia. middle as before? to buy a small.hat full of tickets e How can it be otherwise? turned homie empty of passengers. 7, nent for me 18 . * «the W . msowelt, 1 think tke Seis Snttaries Smiles | \ } questions answers st- ‘e honestly x ++ * . But no, President Exsewmowzr or- —ahswers which. may change the 4,) Ailes: “WIR they work to. Looking Back Small Time Gambler The best way to get rid of At no time in history can a nation gered the plane to Munich, Germany, ey Sno oe Ow gether closely again? How will 8 Wease Bee en * ‘your duties 's to dlecharge them “count its blessings” and reach the to pick up a load of Hungarian earth: Ot Went, Maidie Barepe, rede eageg Bar ted “ty STUBBORN MANILA defense ‘Should Teachers P ~ eee huge total that confronts us right relygnes 3a CapnapeeS te CAs: cous * * 6 San President Rosser Fey CUNT PAYROLL its recora ©2P Pupil’s Face?’ cards that wht femind now. Whatever your station, what- try. y, The Rusans lost more ground oe nena quactions shout high of $52,237,500. ol tachers sep veils in you who you forgot to send to. world in 1956 than in Middle ; asser : ’ son came ever your positioa in life and what- any year since fhe Bolshevik Rev. business? Will war break out we nouns home from school with finger. Amyene whe ie absings chsertl ever your current situation, you are The Man About Town olution of 1917. The biggest of all there again? How much progress, | Nia oon Eovernor prints on his face, put there by a B8, breakfast ane has one good infinitely better off than you would 9 year is: What. will the Russians be done ‘to keep the Middle East _ PREDICT REAL prosperity for politely asked what happened. I .* * be in Europe, Asia, South America or We're Backward =n t= - away from Russia? was told the teacher had gone 00 oi arent, will probably | , Their massacre of the revolting — : : ‘end, w 3 the South Seas. ; Hungarians compelled people ev- eosage next day about the matter. reach from one end of the old ; About Asking for Markers ~y¥ntre — roncommumists ang Dr. William Brady Says: | I have not been ‘called, s0 T'm Check book to the other: Es oe ae . for Our Centennial Farms Communists with illusions — to : - wondering if maybe the teacher The song of the merchants dur- Occasionally, we should all check seca Sati Ge hate tae Ae l h l Fad Au wasn’t partly in the wrong als. . ing the shopping season was no rar” 1957: What should be better foreign policy ig old-style colon- evanc OL ades. way If my son misbehaves I want him — jyi)-of buy. up.on oursélves, This is a good time - jalism, , . | : punished, but he has a slapping * 2 @ a thin 1956 in ene big respect— * e With D il Ni ( f lodi e) place, and it doesn’t happen tO § far they're running even— to do it, The most horrible fate we it hasn’t general election. The Kremlin's new appearance l MUL) up 0 LIVE] vc his tace either. | wonder what every make of the 1957 cars is can conjure for the Russian agita- Sik at tee 4 oe ee er wee econ . other parents about the ‘the best buy on the market.” seni in this country Would be'a sift... eas. your I got word be o cover for an contatally “When I was a girl in Buffalo, out the advice and supervision of ter? te ee | tors. try from Lansing that the Pontiac area is policy. ) . fi A Parent It’s always too easy for the to the for which << one of our The Its in Pol 1 and YOU Advocates ae ey ae bee 2 payne ee ny rete than milk of he to turn land for lagging respect — many, for everybody. I remem n I recommend is not more than ° human kindness deportation qualified Hungary showed the iron grip of illiam they cheer. ! srcrtars ang not eating for nem” Gak- mia coud be lowered if not Sea Usr acy Tre tates, peter att SRE Hom food ceenoe for 60 x * *? land County has over 100 farms that Jonnie’ atter 11 years of exposure Ping, and slight lump in the .7 Loo THOUGHTS FOR TODAY have been in the ownership of one fam- Pee indoctrination loathe commu. ‘rout might be from lack of iodin, Don’t trifle with iodin. Send me I hope the Democrats start .-—— Truly, January First, 1957, ily for a century or more. Yet only about nism. ’ ont met taking the jodin 4 stamped, self - addressed en- grooming Governor Williams right And thine age shall be clearer - marks an extraordinary Happy = one-half of them have been marked. These disasters for Russia had #1 8 your recommended, velope for instructions for taking now for the Presidential nomin- than the noonday; « thou shalt Very few applications were filed durin relaxed Soon I began to feel better and the “‘Iodin Ration.” | ation in four years. He’s the man Shine forth, thou-shalt be as the New Year. : 190. uring oe oe oe - any take new ates . ‘IT con- settee, et mony than ene page this country needs: in the White morning. — Job 11:17. ws . : tinued taking in a year or. pertain: , H . He's the * anne a If your property has been in the own- hv arise: Wit more and then forgot it. Until here Bealth tnd Ariane = BE ne re -get elected Governor of. Michigan Christian penitence is something T * P ership of your ancestors and yourself for the kere haere and 12, Berkeley I began to feel tired Dr. wiltam Brady, if « ~ every time he runs. He even more than a thought or an emo- Changes Taking Place a total of 100 years or more, all that ts revert to the iron Tule of Stalin ‘the, time, no pep, downright Tir"prie “Fontes. uichigns. "does it when Eisenhower sweeps tion or a tear; it is action. — Wil i. i necessary the . Would anything it did now stop élancholy. | es ngage: 008) : owen ommanrall in Russia Constantly Michigan Historical Commission - brealeup of empire? whet aad ef Oe a. ate tie As the new dawns, Russia at Lansing, and the required qualitica- est do to help such & din , .. a0 though oa, , Prva a hes teas ga ton blanks will be sent you. ‘Tere i breakup? No ancwer to any of | Slepatie