HAPPY HUNTING — Charlie Warriax, left, and Simeon Oxen- dine, Lumbee Indians who took part in the rout of a Ku Klux Klan rally near Maxton,'N. C., Saturday night, smile over a KKK banner which they captured, The Indians were angered by burning of two KKK crosses near Indian homes the past week. Today Sheriff Mal- colm McLeon said he James Cole, of Marion, ask a grand jury to indict the Rev. ., a self-styled KKK leader, on charges of inciting to riot. Cole’s rally ended with Klansmen and spectators scrambling for safety as hooting and pistols into the meeting field. meine emptied ys, oem Take Lives of 140 Landslides, Flay Peru, FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES LIMA, Reru — Landslides, earthquakes, tidal waves and n ertzn telat Geath, Gitrbstion od tajustte. Peru was hardest hit. Reports, some of them delayed, sald at least ee a en quakes. An earthquake rocked northern Ecuador Sunday, poe and Lilling at iadét 12 poryens, Seas 6 wean Sabana ana four persons were missing. Reports said three children children's hospital collapsed in the quake. The Quakes Ecuador Ike Offers Economic Facts Sees Upswing — | if Prices, Wages Not Excessive President Asks Powers of Business to Avoid | Hampering Excesses business decline is taking place but said that promis- ing trends point to an up-;. iswing soon _if unjustified =~ — price and wage increases, are avoided. In his annual Economic” Report to Congress, the - were killed when a ward of a of Esmeraldo Province said five customs officials drowned when a launch was sunk by a huge wave in the Esmeraldas harbor. The governor also said 30 per cent of the buildings in Esmeraldas were damaged extensively. x * The earthquake hit Esmeraldas at 9:08 a.m. Residents fled in panic into the streets, while ships time). * {Pontiac and boats in the harbor sought safety in the open seas. A report from Guayaquil said it was hit by the tidal wave and that the town of Las Palmas was under 12 feet of water for some time. It said the Enrique Dufer Hotel and several other buildings collapsed. Some 300 persons were reported trapped near Mexico City following one of the worst snowfalls in Mexican history. _| —Searchers Scour Pacific - for 2 Planes _ vessels and 20 rescue planes Beowe ipmdiost wae wren qr fe HONOLULU @—An armada of ships and planes continued into | the second day today the search of 75,000 square miles of the mid- Pacific for a missing Military Air Transport Service cargo plane with seven men aboard from. Travis Air Force Base, Calif. The four - engined C97, flying from Honolulu to Kwajalein, last was heard from 385. miles south- west of Honolulu, Eight Navy and Coast Guard Carrying 17 GUAM @®—SOS signals caused | the Air Force to widen the search area to §0,000 square miles today in a hunt for a BSO weather comp that vanished while track- ; a typhoon. yesterday from the area 600 miles west of Guam where the plane with 10 crewmen aboard combed the search area. * * * Wednesday's outlook is partly to mostly cloudy and cold with a few WASHINGTON (INS) — President Eisenhower ac-! knowledged today that a! President pointed to threat- |» ened excessive price and | Bait for Unpaid J Williams Offers ‘Antaiaty ts for poten by jase 30 , LANSING (® — Gov. Williams today announced a period of amnesty for persons who owe the state intangibles _ tax but have. never filed returns. ’ He said those who voluntarily file a return and pay up before June 30 will be excused from penalties which the state revenue department can levy against delinquent taxpayers. The governor said his action does not require legislative approval, but nev- ertheless. that it would be included in an intangibles tax increase plan he will present to lawmakers tonight. & A boost of 21 million dollars will Ps be asked for the current fiscal le year ending June 30, and an equal amount in fiscal 1958-59, to tide the state ever financial shoals immedi- E ately ahead. “However,” “The state doesn't want the tax- payer's hide in the form of penalties," linquent taxpayers years. vantage of the PERILS * ios those who pay up tarily. = A spokesman for the state revenue department said its investigators have - turned up an average of <3,000 de- charged only the amount of -their back taxes, plus six per cent interest. -* * The governor said the revenue de- partment generally has followed a policy of forgiveness with respect to penalties, but not interest, toward Thus, in effect he will formalize a - practice usually followed by the de- partment, he said. he said, “people haven't known about this procedure, and a lot of them we assume are holding off payment because they ‘of 12 per annually in recent and up to in cases involving fraud. Williams said ines whe take ad- amnesty will be He said forcement. back nes volun- The governor estimated that up to one and one-half million dollars might be paid over by delinquents as a re- sult of the amnesty. ture to authorize $250,000 for hiring of additional auditors to stiffen en- Revenue officials, he said, have estimated this would round up an additional two and one-half million dollars in the next fiscal year. The governor reminded taxpayers the intangibles tax does not apply to government bonds at any level, social ing to flurries, and a little colder, with @ -high near + 26. ja.m. was 25, At 2 p.m. the mer- cury stood at 36. The charge against. the ave may now be manslaughter. A passing motorist, Robert Straw- der of 513 Bloomfield Ave., wit- nessed the accident on W, South crossing south to north when the westbound Figure 35 Miles < at $23.8 Million —in First Contract cent a year in civil cases, 100 per cent of the tax bill x « &* he also will ask the Legisla- eo = The car was last seen turning) right from South boulevard into Franklin road. x * *&- Police later found other bits of car struck her, WASHINGTON (AP)—In time high. The country “can afford meet the Russian challenge. recovery.. | to Congress, President Eisenhower said today: : Production has dipped sharply from summer's all- Defense spending will help bring 1 a pickup this year. Steep wage-price boosts can hurt buying, delay his annual economic report ‘to pay” whatever it costs to Anticipate 90 Per Cent Federal Funds for First Intangibles Tax | do not pay voluntarily range up to 25 per cent of the tax owed plus interest Link i in Super Road The first 35-mile ‘section ,|of the proposed north-south ‘ \\expressway past Pontiac "\will be under contract by _|the second quarter of 1960, »\according to a $73 million Oakland County highway -\construction schedule dis- closed today by State High- way Commissioner John C. || Mackie. The section, running "\from east of Pontiac to a »|point just south of Flint, » will cost an estimated $32.8 #/million, of which 90 per Jjcent will be in anticipated = federal funds, Mackie said. Matkie revealed a schedule for spending a total $73 million in an- — wage boosts as a possible! = he said. “The state only wants the earaid.” The tax does apply to income and ticipated state and federal funds on roadblock to a business up-|! taxes owed and it needs the money “re non-income producing securities, mort- Oakland County roads over the turn which his advisers say now." . Penalties assessed against those who gages and land contracts. “inext five yea rs should start this spring or! — RRA SEEM ASRS ARE BARE AONE EEL IE IE POEL LEAL LLL ERE AE LOE The major projects contained -|in the early fall. UAW Wants 80 Per Cent __ oS orlenay pr of his Eisenhower dit not use word) (Oakland GOP ] proposed five-year plan-for_new “recession” in the 199-page docu- Michigan highways. ment. Administration officials ad-) Other details about the north = aratores 10 Ask Layoff Pay Hike Wooton leoictt eee a minor recession, but they called ee Ing onig en outa Sek | DETROIT # — A high-ranking|of the main objectives in the con-|the first four weeks and 60 per cent . smaapds ghar Meck to oe 2. _—," South Dakota Governor,| ‘the ; trem Pontes south new per * F cent would last for the entire bene-| President to Address) x conmecton & the vicinity tw fit run. Party Gathering will be placed under contract in oe ee en. Sete _ pe ye ge ry and will funds payment an estimated $22 million, ac- SUB should be sutficient to handle| Oakland County Repoblicans Wil ceding to the schedule, the broader program. However,|ther this evening a Onsmeane + oahauns the auto makers be asked to/Temple to hear an address by) 40". aencegen os hike their contribution to the SUB/South Dakota's Gov. Joe J. Foss) trom’ the Detroit River’ north © fund if necessary, he added. The! the governor's talk will preceed| Grand boulevard in Detroit trols a pod auto companies now allocate five! 11° 0) Cirvuit television address| (called the Walter P. Oispsler eat Ratna SE, net|pregrena Inst night. He said one workers 65 per cent payment for |cents for each hour worked. by President Elsent from Chi-| €xPressway), will be placed un- not a threat to propose controls, eet Ppt oe cet er: |cago Which will be seen at similar rege sarctapogpiratiaed—y ped ae oy me come the UAW's recently announced (gatherings throughout the nation-/ grawn up and right-of-way ac- To provide the proper climate l Hil- un vic im Jie bargaining program which im-| The dinner marks the fifth an- | Tuired at that time to link the for new growth, the laid cate. © Gunand. Soe S- 20008 saegreary af Putciieat Meee | Comore God artery portions down these “musts”; sharing plan. ' ceed accel ana Oe pS ae mates ~ must avoid price Lines were being drawn today) ceeds will go for the party’s 1958 oie increasés that are not justified by for a likely United Auto Workers) election expenses. A breakdown of the estimated costs. Union family fight over the top Tickets for i ; are| Cost of the Pontiac to Flint section —— leadership's attitude on the shorter r tonight's affair are) snowed the 29-mile portion from mat sabrcent = woul week = ren a ee or aw olican|Pontiac ta Grand Blane will ‘cost increases outrun im- are @' ble at. Republican provement in productivity per) Mrs. Anne Gilmore, victim of a hit-run driver Friday r Das raged alter ood — co 351 Woodward Ave., = — 2 ~ the —— — a yap awe night, died at 10:45 am. today at St. Joseph Mercy /otricials to sidetrack the shorter a, | road’s terminus at the new Fenton- : Hospital as police pressed their search for the motorist.|week in this year’s contract bar- — er expressway will cost $6.4 mil- ive? Mrs. Gilmore, 67, of 456 Harvey Ave. had been in Se ae papa sayfa Snow Piles Up in London |lion- s fe You'd Better Keep critical condition with internal injuries and multiple convention starting Wednesday. | LONDON @ — Britain shiv. | Dates for other Oakland County — a of her leg .and¢ | Fhe anion will--hold~a- two-day} ¢ ~a- colt wave -/¢xpressway —and-- superhighway. it. __|_ The. man knocked_Mrs. Git-|convention of 3,000 So to which piled up snow and clogged construction listed in the schedule: She underwent surgery Friday|More some 50 feet from the inter-jact ‘on proposed demands in 1958) transport in many parts of the eeBadlggs mobapeomagh Aint Snow shovels may be in order night and again Saturday morning) section. ‘ apd dnaallc aad lensed road north to the vicinity of 11- today and t . The U.S.|im am attempt to save her life.) he griver, according to wit- Mile road to be under contract by Weather Bureau predicts light snow Police are seeking a light-col- | nesses, stopped about 100 feet At a Glance: the second quarter of 1960. jseeumulating: up to 2 inches by| cred Pontiac, 1950 to 1962, with from the scene, got out and ex- ; 2, Connected with this, a 9.5 mile tonight for the Pontiac area. damage to the left front, which | amined his damage, picked up & Ik T. lk Ab t M east-west in the vicin- The prediction for Tuesday 1s| witnesses described as the hit- | plece of chrome trim knocked KE J QIKS Ou ONEY ity ot 1.-Mile trom the proposed mostly cloudy, with snow diminish-| run car, expressway to the superhighway western to Grand River, to be un- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) By MAX E, SIMON Larry Schwartz, the 23-year-old youth from Utica travel to Red China last summer, is home. who defied al various __.U.8. State Department__ban on One of 40 American students who) q)) was invited by Chinese students to travel behind the Bamboo Curtain and see the Red Star’ first-hand, Schwartz said today turing the six-week trip through China the Communists made no effort te talk politics with any of the group. ignorant of wlio Premier Chou En- lai was when he «ame face to face with him. ee Schwartz said that while — aaa aad "prior to his trip, and Was totally) we; “vast, poor conuldn't help Ket the feeling that Utica Youth Back From Trip Behin Schwarts’ chiet impressions of things ind improved snc the Jas Tong as 30 years sid they bad ___ __}witnessed_a_surprising change inia. ites Tabs bad (soon Io CH Bak a “The institution of land reform = ‘Bamboo Curtain fa Glee, iniaging the tation out oljhe walled in,” ‘Schwartz said. “But Comics sveedeTaeeeeseteeeeey 2 +8 2 County NewS cesccsesvcscess Editorials pesdereeescssenctces sf Markets eeeee** eee ere ee a Obituaries | eenarge Bs ‘ De ed adel is Theaters eee eee eee renee ene ee 3 TV & Radio seenepeewnnrenee | Wiison, Earl Women’s Pages OO O+CR Cee 13 0.15 Mystery s sn seagiabiaeinesi>ege » : orehee- acento PH FoWTIAG Puss, wos. 1AxUaRY 20, 1058 = (The Day in Birmingham — for the Young: Adults of . Air Traffic Cains Four Killed, Four Hurt | E Feb. se ef hag pm Lote 8! Tonight at Dinner ecognition Event. Rochester. On Jan 24 pictures and bli a. Lives in State in Chicago House Fire’ to Honor 5 City Employes" = for Republicans a cmap oe aac eal tl Aiwin Wied, assistant principal| WASHINGTON \#-—President E- YON Covers Pariod cones tek sme tad] matnone san Tesh. econamie growth. mans = Preis ia rm pot “oa *loffice today—and kicks off a new —“From 6 PLM. Friday xd fe to Midnight Sunday By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Trafic accidents claimed 11 lives in Michigan over the weekend The Associated Press tabulations day t midnight Rarmond A. Farmer, & of Keute 1, Midland, was killed earty Sanday when bis car Wet © MIS where kt runs dtadcad inte “US2e verth ef Midiand and traveled 375 feet inte field, Carence Jahnson, 43, of Manror ‘@ied earty Sandey when bis car’ keh Us 4 om Frenchtown Town ship. Leslie Bitterbender, 4, of Battle Creek, was killed early Sunday in an auto crash in Littefield Town ¢ ship, Emmet County, near Petos- key. .HEADON CRASH KILLS ¢ Harold Frahser *7. and Giemm Bowman. €7. both of Grand Rapids were kilied Saturdey mgit when their car callided beac-on 8 ith ancther on NTl McKervey, oute 2, Cheboy- gan, who police said was driving in the wrong lane of the divided ag 2 a am rr highway. Ciarence Nybekke 35, of Wailed Lake, wes killed Saturday night when tis car ie Pontiac trail’ where ft rums deadend into Milford road in Qakland county) and went imo a field A passenger Otis Pa , 2 also of Walled Lake wes injuned. dames Halil, 23, of Ecorse, was killed Saturday when his car piled imte the officers of a Marine supply firm in Detroit. Otte Waldemaier of rural Hart- ford, was fatally injured Friday, mught when his truck crashed into an embankment near Keeler in Southwest Michigan. Stanley Dombrowski’, 69, of Ham-! tramck, was killed Friday night when struck by a car while at- tempting to cross a street al an intersection in wraahaes + Albert ee 52. = his wife Estelie, 48, of Grand Rapids, were, killed Sunday night when their car! erashed headon into a truck on one mile! north of Saugatuck in Ottawa! slippery U.S.171, about UAW Asks 80 Pct. in Unemployment (Cgifinued From Page One) bargaining in the auto industry A major demand for Reuther and the top echelon is for a. profit- sharing arrangement with tye auto companies. Their dropping of the | has brought > jead- shorter work week criticism from rank and file ers, however. : One of the most forceful critics has been Cari Stellato, president ef the big Ford Local 6%. Stel- lato and others ‘are reported | forming a convention caucus. While a battle appeared almost. certain, one group said this would | have no effect on the UAW’s ultt- mate stand in the bargaining effort. Reuther and the UAW Interna- tiorial have recommended that the shorter work week be dropped this year as a bargaining demand be- cause of nat tional economic c eondi- tons. _ Woodcock says workers nave | been sharing in avis indusiry financial jowses ‘‘for many years” _ through their layofts. He said that the workers lost income when the companies sthed wed short work weeks to balance production with demand. The union official, on statements that the UAW iia posal would deprive the auto in- dustry of expansion capital, said the car makers could obtain capi- tal for expansion by medium-sized and nesses.’ The Weath er it C5. Weather Berea Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Snee te- night and ee (fae eedy with snow pees and » litte colder La — nd Seutheriy winds #%-15 ting te sertheris temerrew. small busi- , Tedsy b in Peatia. Lewest = preceding § am. ors 3 mph: Tiset Tuesday at € iT? = Dewntewn Temperatures eee | sw Ss. « m. # 12m a m,........ 8% i=. M..:..... a M,...... ” 2p BB a ™ rs Sendat in Pontiac fae recorced au BAN, Fighest temperature — temperature temperatute “ Weether-—Partiy temperature . ‘eather—Trace te snow : Highest an¢ Lower Temperatures This Date in 6 Years , lag 1908 NUSSeeseseey ire that swept a Southaide Chicage ot 1 near Grand Rep ods. Criticaily injured was Roy B.. commenting | borrowing | - money on the interest market “‘like | i i | i ~ wear 25. eeres | wolies hour, late tonight and | eeeee vast weeer + feseeweserees rH See ohee wae Nels brether. 14 vears will including an infant, were killed guns roaming house, rewang 30 resi . trom Provident Hospital the ate hurd floor an attic’ rae aoe 4a | Federal Reserve board. -—.| aso nor eames camverted to Living quarters. _— ta sé i ee: Cae ca | wounded in a gun battle with a The dead were urd Mt Marv, sident embeize burglar last fall, will receive the Weber acta dee So A fourth woman. Mrs. Mary) the independent Federal Reserve. city’s first award ef valor. Mi atthews, 34, was transferred to ounty Hospital suffering first end’ see a burn However, he commented that it | continued its tightenoney policy - |“wnchanged until mid-October” al- ham Fire Department wil] be rec- First Ew eof the hr, ‘ncutng som gua tad coor ented fr Peary sere fe a re mgre cat ee satiety had leveled off and turned down * * * a in some lines in laté summer. Honored fer 2% years of service Contr act Due i in 60 aipolera Hillebold, fourth division = come administration spokesmen Will be Irene Hanley, city clerk, fire marvhal, reported the blaze .i4 they thought the Federal Re- and Frederick Kemp and Samuel started from undetermined causes in a second-floor stair- | well. He estimated damage at iserve had been too severe in its Snel, both volunteer firemen, ‘credit restrictions, but they were! = hesitant to criticize the agency and gg rege amd, Loocmsaages! did not blame it for the recession. her post as city clerk, is a native Looking abead in 1958, the | of Birmingham. As the city has Presidemt said “There are Conmtunued From Pace One) der contract by the second quarter of this year | $6,008, ee ‘kie's announcement also 0an-; ithe scheduling of the pro-| Coroner Walter E.° McCarron: ai Pasy street widening “in Said the converted attic did not, Poritiac to be under contract by have’ a fire escape and he de-| pounds tor expecting that the | Today there are several clerks the second quarter of this year. [eiared tis. Popa Se ‘fully 10- decline in business activity meed~ working under her supervision. vestigate” the tragedy | mot be and- that eto- . This preject involves about 3.5 ee prolonged = Among her other duties, Miss. miles of widening, grading and |Hanley serves as secretary of the resurfacing from U.S.10 (Saginaw without extended interruption.” | planning board and the taxicab’ He said Administration policies board, and with the exception of mreet}) wert to Se ety Eee iattie into 13 rooms was ‘‘one more! , a KS a . 4 ? 8 ed to be under con- “will be directed toward helping schools, she handles all city elec- case where money has been put) \ tions. s year are the extension Of aheag of human lives.” to assure that result.” M24 as a four-lane divided highway | ~*~ * * i — from Lake Orion north to the coun- | The President based his confi-| - City commissioners tonight will ty Line; resurfacing of M15 from Lake Orion Man Injured idence of a business oa = * have one public hearing. It con Clarkston north to the county line |jmumber of factors. Among ™ cerns the paving of Elm street and widening of M&7 in Holly. in Crash; Condition Fair | | were continued high business con from Hunter boulevard to Bower Mackie said, “It should be clear-, 4 1 ake Orion man is reported in fidence despite the minor decline’ street. ly understood that this schedule is fair condition at Pontiac General’ that has taken place thus far,’ entirely contingent on three 1aC-' tiogpital today with possible inter-| |good consumer demand, easier | request from residents. of the tors nal injuries received in a car acci-\CTeGit. the defense build-up. Pros tunter boulevard area protesting That anticipated tederal and dent Saturday evening, according Pects for greater spending byw. parking lot at the corner of He said a lack of fire escapes | land what he called division of the) state revenues are. fortheoming. to Oakland County Sheriff's Depu-| State and local governments and pores: street and Hunter, which the outlook for a rise in residential i parki of 1342) and ‘other construction. \- =u = “ oe, the However, White House advisers — states hac ' midnight and stand until early If the revenues are increased, the | ties. program can be accelerated. If! Arthur M. Bergman, 53, they are reduced, the program will Maple Point, was driving ee on | be delayed |W, Clarkston Rd, Orion Township, expressed the fear that. if wage| ‘2 That the state and local com- when his car collided with one | and price increases are excessive, munities can reach agreement on driven by Stanley B. Kubacki, 30, ‘there will be a consumer resistance route location and cost-sharing. (of 314 W. Clarkston Rd. to the prices and a strung effort “3. That right-of-way acquisition) Kubacki, and his wife Margaret, by the Federal Reserve to keep is not delayed Jy extended legal 22, were treated for minor injuries them from causing inflation. This proceedings.” jand released imay » sided struggle, they said, : | could Jead to excessive une mploy- ment. Twice within a week burglars entered the Mars Coffee Shop at 1383 S. Woodward Ave., Birming- ham, On the first visit last Wednes- day night, they made off with a * * * Eisenhower's warning ‘prices and wages takes on special significance in view of the coming neg¢ tiations for new wage con- tracts in the automobile industry. M: on Wagner Begs Detroit: Smaller Cars, Please | Commissioners also will consider School.” Service will be held tomorrow for Donald M. Teer, 60. a Jackson industrialist and banker who was .. a directer of the Murray-Way Corp se | Several prageenn Mave keen dias ial for lacerations. the shop again was broken into and this time a 16-mm. film pro- st: | the party's ‘ aks Car Rams Utility Pole The President and Mrs. Eisen- —— on Dead-End Street — Se a es ight aboard his private plane, nger Birmingham. the huge International Amphi "ae Fear who died yesterday,| ——*—* theater where tonight’s dinner is was ‘chairman of the Teer |. William P. Park, 49, of 273) being held.— and where Eisen- Wickwire Co. mantfacturers of Marion St. told police he crossed) hower was nominated for a first airplane and auto parts, and was road on West Wilson ave-| term im July 1962. also director of the National Bank |"¥¢. ® car in front of him) they plan to fly back to Wash- of Jackson. his vision of the dead ition tomorrow. ; Other corporations for which he *4 served as Grecur are Yotmas; % 6% First white men to settle in ‘Acroquip Corp., allo all af Jackson. |Jodmer, 56, of 181 Elm St., were|in 168, established a trading post treated at et Pontiac General Hospi-|which is now marked by @ state ' park. | MILLER‘S FURNITURE 2ist Annual January Clearance Sale ONLY 10 MORE SHOPPING DAYS LEFT FOR BIG SAVINGS NEW DRASTIC MARK DOWNS For Clean Sweep 144 Oakland Ave. | 4 i Open Friday Evenings ¥ S-caliber automatic pistol, be] NEW YORK (AP) — Mayor Robert Wagner, who is also chairman of the Metropolitan Regional Conference, has ap- pealed to Detroit auto makers: Please make smaller cars. *x* * Parking lots can park 15 per cent fewer cars than 10 years ago, and 40 per cent fewer than before World War LI, the mayor said in a letter yesterday. It's the same problem in curb parking. * * bd The cities, with enough traffic and parking problems as ft is, are suffering a “continuing bufden” because cars are so much lenger and wider than they used to be, said the mayer. CAR SERVICE SPECIAL SAVE MONEY ON THESE SERVICES DRIVE IN TODAY! : NOW oo YOUR OLD CLOTHESLINE IS WORTH... encase RIGHT NOW, I’D PAY TO GET RID OF THIS LINE! Reg. $3.50 BRAKE CONDITIONING + Reg. $4.00 WHEEL BALANCE plus $7.50 WHEEL ALIGNMENT Reg. $15.00 § 9” 95 t NOW ONLY This Is What We Do- Stop Quickly and Safely... Remove Front Wheels and Inspect Brake Drums and Lineng.— Clean, inspect and Repack Front Wheel Bearings inspect Grease Seals. Check and Add Fluide Adjust Brake Shoes to Secure Full Constact with Drum: Carefully test brakes. i : re : Tat 1a See THIS AMAZING NEW 1958 HAMILTON th pracy ridyti fa nl VR phate hadg gt ag gaan Prevent Costly Ul eer ~a6 Precision dynamic balance, Precision wratic batance: install necessary weights Make Your Car Steer Easier...” Correct caster. Correct camber. Correct toe-in and toe-out. (Above are chief causes cf tire weer}. inspect steering. 5 ee nnn Don’t Risk Deadly Fumes. oo MUFFLERS as low as 49-53 Chev. FREE INSTALLATION 49-53 Ford LIFETIME OUARANTES OTHERS SLIGHTLY Model 290G Shown irestone STORES | AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER * Touch-and-Go Controls * Carrier-Current — * Sun-E-Day _ Lamp ¢ Fabri-Dial Temperature Control * Double-Pass Lint Con- trol * 130-Minute Timer © Fluff-Dri Drying * 5 Minute Heat _ Economizer Gnd HAMILTON DRYERS ARE PRICED FROM ONLY \ . 95 AND YOuR CLOTHESLINE f FREE INSTALLATION a ea\ _THE PONTIAC 2 PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1958 Paulist Fathers. “Order. F ormed. aby y Convert = x NEW YORK (INS) — How is a — order formed? Is it pri- vision? Zeal? Luck? is no well-marked high- ‘Catholic lealled the Paulist- celebrating its first century, way, of course. _# great Ss clasiged from ‘an extraordinary familiarly set of circumstances. Its founder was a_ convert to a Chicken Causes $10,000 Accident Crossing Road STAR, N.C. wne ‘Matter why Chattanooga School Damaged by Bomb CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (®—An explosion of a home-made ‘bomb Catholicism named Isaac Thomas Hecker, born on Hester street in New York City in 1819, the last of the five children of German immi- grants. The father, John, was not a religious man. The mother was, indeed. She was reared a Lutheran, became a Methodist in this country and was a very devout: one long after her son had made his spec- this _cihcken crossed “he. road, near a Chattanooga Negro schoolitacular mark in the Catholic everybody wishes he hadui’ .c jof 3,000 pupils caused damage es- x ke. a timated at about $1,000, police The chicken dashed out in trpat said today. * * * of James Mabe of High Point yet) terday on US. 220. *Police Chief E. H. Brown said Mabe braked sharply to avoid th Ublast at Howard Schol_pogssi- the fowl. Behind him, James Rob- bly “owas eaused by dynamite ert Ricks, Negro minister of High’ place’: = p.m « m= BY N. Y. PUBLISHER New York, W. Y —One of the nation's New Sponge Two- Faced - largest book publishers ts seeking manu- i Pont ha come up with a scripts of ail types—fiction, nen-fietion, | Dy poetry. Special attention te new writers If your work ts ready for publication household sponge combining abra- send for booklet N-68—it's free. Van- sive and absorbent e tage Press, 2309 8. Michigan Avegue = 2 —— It's) Chicage 4 ‘ nt. ‘Mato Ottice, New York) made of a layer of plastic foil : — joined to a layer of cellulose spon by a special water-resistant ad- hesive. The cane side scours and REMINGTON Electric Shover RECONDITIONED Tonite G Tuesday Sale of DRUGS & COSMETICS i i i a ii ta i i tl ail —While You Wait Service— 400 FOR THESE BUYS! | HURRY! Oy sate ih thin hy i ahi Ai i hi hi ti hi th lit i he ti te i i i en - TABLETS @ ADIUSTED 2Se Pkg. @ STERILIZED @ CLEANED SEW SERVICE Remington factory representative will be im our store every WEDNESDAY of every week. TUMS for the Tummy 3 ROLL PACK 25¢ Value Electric Shavers —Main Floor You Seve More at Simms on Tonite & Tuesday Sale! 9 ll tl la i i a i lin Ni iin ii Ni Min i A Mi Nin hin hi i Mi Mi Hh thn Ae hi te tie ti he ti i te de i | c wer Tere eee eee ee ee eee ee eee eee ee eee ee rwrrweweevrvrveweveevewvveveYeYeveYveYTYeeweeYYeeTeY TS shatteéted 23 windows, —— lili lini lily li A li An i Al Nl Min nc An i i i ti Hh A Ni Ni Min thin ti Mt Mi Nis Mi Ni i in i i i Ns i i i i dh ti eosin i nil ai seen fs A f i a > m Episcopalian. «Isaac Hecker, as a’ boy, attended the Methedist church, As a young and not’ well schooled boy, he nearly died ef smallpox. But when fold by his mother that he must resign him. self te death, he said, Mother, I shall hot die now, God ‘Indonesia, Japan Sign i | JAKARTA, Indonesia inesia and Japan today formally brought an end to World War II hostilities. Their foreign minis- Mers signed a peace treaty, a rep- afations agreement and a pact ‘calling for future economic cooep- eration: a CAMERA DEPT. SPECIALS TONITE & TUESDAY ONLY For ‘Easy Indoor Movies 4-Lamp Bar-Lite Complete with 4 BULBS $10.95 > 687 Value $1 Holds in Leyawey Makes movie making as easy as shapshots. Metal bar lite complete with 4 bulbs. Camera Mounts on bar. Fine Quality — by RCA RECORDING TAPE $3.50 Value 1200 Feet i ean 7-inch spool in 1200 foot rolls. Limit 6 reely per person. > Famous KALART 8MM FILM SPLICER | $4.95 Value 37 Stainless steel blades - and scraper, Easy to use, makes all ~your-shortteels into one ——- me. 4 she eer ee Church. Another son, brother of the: founder of the Paulists, was an) “No, | u—Indo- I RCA sound recording tape on tong! has a work for me to de in the world and I shall live to de it.” his mother's blessing, Hecker moved to Brook Farm, a sociologi- cal experiment at West Rosbury, Mass., but later he switched to the House of the Thoreaus at Con- ford, to stutly under George Brad- ford. It was while there that he decided to join the Catholic Church. He was received into it on Aug. 2, 1844, ai old St. Patrick's Cathedral. * * * He must become a priest. He chose the Redemptorist Order and |was sent to study at St. Trond in Belgium. Fellow novitiates treated him as a fool. He became the servant- baker of the household. But at last he attained. priesthood, was returned to America and assigned . to a parish in Greenwich Village, During the summer of 1842,- with! pe ac = Jerry Lewis Moving — HOLLYWOOD. #—The 17-room Bel-Air home of the late movie) producer Louis B. al ym comedian Jerty Lewis! for $350,000. beagle get patec diy «tag @ 5 Repeal of A SIT 3 to work- among German immi- grants, He rebelled. Hecker protested that the congregation would grow more rapidly if he and the other priests were permitted to speak English. When his New York superiors rejected his suggestion. he took off for Rome to put his case before the Redemptorist General. On Aug. 30, 1857, while there, he was expelled from the order for disobedience: Pope Pius IX sup- ported him, ho@ever, gave him (and four others who supported him) permission to leave the Re- demptorist Order, him ohees a 1 ibe worthwhile savings. these coupons. Folding Metal Legs ‘to form a new congregation. Heck- jer formed one of the most articu- jlate, zealous missionary bands of PING-PONG lal, the first ‘religious society of jmen to flower from the American '|people and devote itself to them. TABLES 4x8-FOOT. —— Junior Size |: 7 a complete sell-out. FINAL CLOSE-OUT! Just 14 items reduced to cleor in this below-cost sale. Better come early—we expect epee spose cerececeece sD wwe — | : . . Y : — p99 : TONITE i ee Sn E Full 15x36 inch. Stripe bor- Two section style. Eight doubie- @-E ders. Soft & absorbent for braced, folding legs. Tempered | quick drying. (Limit 6). F Masonite’ top, sturdy tTeinforeed Ideal for youngsters and small © | DOMESTICS - — Basement space area. Discontinued Colors — She List Price Fine Broadcloth—White Oagly Ladies’ BRAS $1.00 Vaives 39° trregulars im- to 4~A to C cups. eoiled and 32 Holds 3x5’* cards (not in- cluded) in coral- and char- treuse colors only, (LIMIT — i) Small Size Only Ladies’ GIRDLES Values to $1.89 49° Room for 8 Players KITCHENWARES — 2nd Floor Game Tables “LUSTRO-WARE” Recipe File Box 18° Large 4-Foot Octagon Shape Power nets, latex Moker's 99 fronts, non-roll, $24.50 2-way” stretches. ~ List Pajamas f é $2.89 Quality a | 77 Bhert er long sieeve. Sanforized flannet Sires M to only f O° Sees | Medium Size Only Ideal for poker, card games, checkers. monopoly. ete BOTH FOR— Wash Powder & Room Deodorant ‘Fab” and ei cal Fpressrrassvovvvssovovoo> aaaasssazicccuasrcunonasessosssasevssccrsusssaseusasscanazesss leather feet. Sones -aneeieenannetasaetanaenes TONITE & TUESDAY .- Size 5% Only infants’ Loafer Original = Seller Textured design in colors. Ideal for nate la ay 60 oor hail. «Limit 3). . | Leather sole, knit wool top. wn euffe, on. Sites 7's Original $10.95 499 Double breasted, military style. Water “repellent. Broken sizes 6 to 18. Th ee Ss Galvanized—20 GAL. Sie Cans ‘with COVER far $1.25 Values OKL Bae. nut Quick’ ZZLLL 6" iLIMIT_—2) . 4 Odds & Ends ~ $16.95 Value second, lurninous dial. Maker ; Latest model. 40% Sines 3 and 4 only. — Sanforized flannel. (SCUFFs to match— — Ie) Former E 24x14 inch, Heavyweight E Coco Doormats - to $ 10.95 Sellers b Ladies’ LOAFERS | 3 i2%=\,122" (sion Smee aoe 3Se Fab _weshing - powder and 89c" Florient deodorant $1.79 ¢ in pressure can. Value DRUGS — Main Fleor ; . SPORTS DEPT. —Znd Floor Pees aes eoccecoocoosowoossetace Looks Like Fine Carpeting 30x30” Rubber Mats = Choice of , Tip-Toni, * "Hud- or “Lilt Refresh- Boys’ ROBES Seil- Wind. Waterprool MEN'S cin - “Timex” Wrist Watch 4 Sheets with 10 Envelopes hir Mai Stationery ® * Choice of 3 Popular Brands stg Pick-Up Permanents gi i COSMETICS — Main Floor Six Utensils in One REVERE 112-QUART Double Boiler Wie 88 Famous CHARLES ANTELL gore. FORMULA 9 for Hair Use as double boiler, sauce pan, $1. 79 Value open baking dish, table server, Hagen dish, or mixing ; Tops for sauces, baby canal one foods. NOTICE: 25% Discount Off | . All Revere Ware New tt Cer Storet ~~ i be ‘wr T TT ere eS eS ee ll ill il lil ill ili lini lin li lin lil lalallala lili li cli lin tthe i ia in is Ain i tn ns ta Sin i tla A ite tk i i ti di ill te i i i i ti ee ltl il lt ik i i 4 | oo - ” “ : eran ae i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i “a eH pe papa ey RE UME ap Sp ym aE emia BE POCO YC CeCe re eer VU VV Pee eS Revere, Keystone, DeJur and, other 8mm movie cameras.’ With case, $1 holds. sonnet Center Focus—COATED me 1x35 rs With 7" & STRAPS | $9. Aa a | 7 ee, x35 - ——— ong for all around ee Oe nae A On ge 8 tea Bizes dost plug inte ejectricst_eaties —/EE triewer. instant heat for fast HOUSEWARES — 2nd Floor | | CLOSE OUT — Former.to $1.79 __ Men's Winter Caps Sport é Hunters’ Style 6:|p fy. i i | | i ited All sizes @ to, 16; Zipper eolor 66 99 men Alvined, Bi with ear Viewmaster ; Reels - Reg, 40c Values Boys’ Fiennel . 100% Wool « 1°) trorely sents, Sum over =a] C e : 5 ee 14 = some Pajamas | Boys’ Pants Famous THOR’ 2.5 $5 Quelity j gers — Mein Floor %4” Electric Drill | with GEARED CHUCK © $25. 95 I Value Precision cahesee gaperm all thrust bear- dings. vane ba motor, we chuck for conversion to son at~ Pa ; G | | 58. omeaemat per wr yr Ae a ee ag need MRR namin cE | 99 pre-culfed. Limited selection, ON Spee HO VALUABLE COUPOI Ist Quelity — Discontinued Titles Gennia = Cled oe a ¥ | y | e 3149 Value ¢) : uine Copper-Cla e | Pi cca’ ee REVERE 2-QUART DROPS 9 Bo Ss Suits Be ws. 38¢ Package . ses oo. lint 1 per : hes ayeiity oulon-dkin’ paper jer < with ‘Air-Mail’ ma en- Sauce Pans pa eatin 1°° Broken Size Ranges velopes. —— $7.50 —— 88 RINSE ° § to 16 S$ 99 SUNDRIES — Main Floor Value 4 Single or double breasted. | Save : 69c PAL Pkg, 20 4 / Wrinkle-tesistant rayon $2.62 SINGLE-EDGE 44¢ Fits All Popular 8mm Cameras gabardine. — : ee ee a havens | . BLADES . EDNA-LITE DUAL . ) brand new fr otiginal taetary . Telephoto TE nwewe ; we cartons Limit 2, New 18-0n $B — Wide-Angle LENS | Sore cloves ea | 5 “Bruce” Floor Wax fi ADORN 3 .§ | — Soldering Gun Heir Sp ie $24.95 10 | $1.69 Quality 9 9 $1.59 Value cf , lair Spray 2 Value 95 BSi Full HALF GALLON size, - , mi 99¢ ce Cis Ar GALLON ao . rownie, Bell .@s Howell,’ aiue | For wood or linoleum, a CLIP THESE COUPONS — Bring ‘em With You! All Items Specially Priced TONITE & TUESDAY Another adv.-full of ‘COUPON SPECIALS’ thot offer None sold at these prices without Sey oe 0) + * . a4 2 : é got _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1958 When Quality for Quality — You Can’t any Better; vO TUE “FABRICS © AS SEEN IN 10 DERFEN Seterdey's enewer stile, mOuth coves pao, color emotion aenwSeym «Ase! ' was leenerde do % e Whats My Line. Inc a 4-20 Petoskey Bids on Futurity |breeding. The event would be add. ed to the three- night card planned PETOSKEY (#—The Enimet Fair guring the Aug. 18-23 fair. Board has put in its bid for the, Se $20,000 Michigan futurity sponsored) There are more than 3,740 acres by the state for young harness’ of parks in Kansas City, connected j racing horses to improve Michigan|by a 150-mile park drive. ee : Buy Your Major Appliance fiom WAYNE GABERT’S “TAKE ADVANTAGE of OUR SALE pices: - BUY THESE GREAT NORGES NORGE PUSH BUTTON AUTOMATIC WASHER Don’t buy a single yard ’till you see what’s cropping up at Penney’s! -PENNEY’S ADDS A TOUCH OF “GOLD” FASHION FABRICS ~ NORGE DRYER WITH 21-INCH BLOWER LOWEST HEAT __ HIGHEST AIR FLOW SAFE FOR ALL FABRICS SALE PRICED - WOVEN MYLAR _CHAMBRAY es Le eee SR epee ~ REGULATED: COTTONS. WITH MYLAR WOVEN MYLAR GINGHAMS BUTCHER RAYON LENO WITH MYLAR © All Gas Dryers Installed Free! : NORGE TIME LINE AUTOMATIC WASHER FILLS —WASHES—RINSES—SPINS DRY SALE PRICED | “168 Dollar for dollar you can’t buy better ‘cause Penney’s buys big from leading fabric mills, works closely with leading color and textile designers ... brings you the best for less! This season gold takes ovér as Penney’s presents & new trend-setting selection of fashion fabrics flecked with golden Mylar metallics, (only the low Penney price policy remains the same) Along with our fondness for gold is a bold use of prints, with florals and stripes as favorites in our famous Regulated Cottons . .. wonderful Woven Chambrays ... Gaily-lit Ginghams and Butcher Rayon Lenos . .'. but come see them for yourself... nothing can tell our story like our merchandise! 2 Years: 90 Days | to Pay Same as Cash | | | Get Our Deal Before You Buy! WHY SPEND MORE [- ge i 4 passed in styling, selection, @ '-$ for its success the country yord why spend MOTE for the “glittering look”? iain > . for every imaginable use! A i. they'll obit argo © pair ~ See ee LING MODELS i Miracle Mile “Each fake. fccanee stylist, PAT BOR- ney’s Miracle Mile Store in person all, this ‘week. See living models in our Pat Borgeson in Penney’s Miracle Mile fabrie depart- ment all through the week. ew with confidence, it’s ', FAMOUS RONDO A new Spring selection of abstracts. Rondo is unsur- low price...3 big reasons ‘Sew ‘for Spring with NEEDLE ‘N THREAD A fair new fashion of your — Own making =~+~+@ touch of— * golden glamour in cotton, broadcloth prints. New black 2010. GESON, will be at Pen- big front window. Meet. Rondo high-count percale in ‘fresh florals, provincials, Qc 4 and white designs, too — all engin teen eee oe Famous Imported SOLINGEN SCISSORS Where, but at Penney’s can t finer scissors for Toast ‘Nickel plated! good c one-time si +4 80 Sarr, ONLY sdinsidicit derecho ee | WAYNE GABERT f}iracte MILE PENNEY’S - || __ “DOWNTOWN: PENNEY’S eo ae _ Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 1. . . Open Mondey Thru Friday 12’ Noon to 9 P. M., aie Oren: Monday and Friday 9:30. A. M. to 9 P.M. : 121 B. Saginaw St. Luts” FE §-6189 aan Saturday 10.A,M.to9 P.M. |” kg ay’ + All Other Days 9:30 A. M. te 5:30 P.M. | , t | : , : a) ye Ue seed ¢ eo I, \ | si 5.614.212, an ase of 212,938 for} NEW YORK “Things a col: the . year,- commission esti-/umnist might never known if he!96 million, miles: in , So -% “mated. The growth since the 1950/didn’t open his mail: swat that fruit fly and sa your ~ - Federal census is 1,462,535. The That, if you think rabbits know) World! commission reckoned the city’s how to multiply, consider the fruit Test Milton. C. Herman, the! _population at 2.366.457, _|fly, which produces as many as|mink furrier,says: “The only 25 generations in a pea yean | thing today's ‘nul dresses The Republic of Panama has a : population of 650,000, jleaves te the imagination is what's — them up.” of fruit flies lived and ye, in just 12 inantha they'd make; ball) ~ | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1058 Pe That some people are afraid of a smart doctor. After -William Harvey published a paper early in the 17th century on his dis- ‘covery of the circulation of the blood, almost all his patients de- serted him, although he was still) the trusted physician of two kings. That if you need calcium, here’s a way to eggshells, then grind them fine enough for comfortable swallowing. overdo it—you might sprout _— ers. was subjected to a cruel and un- usual punishment, He was com/like paper that can be used for ney F Frit Flies, \selsd Your World| | it cheaply: save your them thoroughly, But don't It ‘Gene. your circulation.” a | That if you're weary of paying) at in Gi ony 6 leeds laundry Nas, chen wp, A teapiie- ymaking clothing is being devel- oped. (“T’m tired of pine shirts; don't you have anything new—in elm?”’) * * | That the great ambition of little Princess Anne of Britain is to own a kitten. But she can't have one because Queen Elizabeth's spirited | Corgi terriers won't allow a om near Buckingham Palace. Wortas Pest Answer to a aa ; subdued by that miraculous cushion of air that cradles the frame .. then it is diminished still further by Cadillac’s new hydraulic shock absorbers and by its specially engineered system of rubber. body. mountings. Pretty rough road, you'd say? Well, you certainly wouldn't be aware of it if you were sitting where these happy travelers are. For they’re riding in a new 1958 Cadillac—and here, without a doubt, is the world’s best substitute for a new highway! Just what is this special Cadillac magic that works such wonders on a rough roadway? Well, let’s take a look and see what happens And, of course, should any suggestion of it still remain, it meets its final demise in those deep, luxurious, Fleetwood-crafted seat to a bump when it meets the wheels of a new 1958 Cadillac. cushions . . . and in the car’s marvelous steadiness and balance. *° vas of the election returns and issn eseee= Se SS __tehoose between the two high men i. First of all, it is “softened by big, buoyant — Cadillac ‘tires All in all, this is just one more good reason why a journey lit no candidate gets a majority! in a new Cadillac is the finest distance between any two points. jof the total vote. . .. then it is gently cushioned by those massive, perfectly balanced Cadillac coil springs — “VISIT YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER We invite you to try it—and to get the full facts about all of the wee a eonrnnratoccnnnnase eof, if the extra-cost. sption. of air suspension is present. it i is ..._new.Cadillacs, including..the. distinguished _ Eldorado. Brougham, ns rR ee Every Window of Every Cadillac is Safety Plate Glass —t think the end justifies the means— | +if it- means making ends meet.” ; * *« * a That Monique van Vooren, the Belgian bombshell, has learned, this about America: “Some people | £ | GU Sweater © “| Sheath -Orlon cardigan, linen-look rayon sheath That the pharse ‘‘cool as a cu- eumber’ doesn’t make much: sense. Thermometer tests have’ iproved that on a hot day the in. aide of a etcumber is warmer th air outsid. Just what thah& the air outside. Just what can ayman believe? Rah Left Lead Won‘t Be Known “Until Late This Week == GUATEMALA @® — Candidates ‘today in first returns from the presidential election in this one- time Communist beachhead of the. Western Hemisphere. But the out-| come of yesterday's voting was’ not expected to be known until late this week. * * * Provisional President Guillermo Flores Avendano said no matter who won, the danger of Commu- nist influence in Guateala prob- of the right and left were leading | Sizes 14 to 20 14, /2 to 221, Just. the sort of versatile fashion every going south or spring wardrobe should have. A_ linen-look rayon. sheath, gently slim, topped with a. high-bulk Orlon ; . short-sleeve cardigan that is lelicately embroidered ‘ afd nylon tluting practical fashion too — sweater and dress are completely washable. Choose sunny pink, mint or beige. a] y Charge Your at Waites .. . . Third Floor ably is less than in-the—United States Guatemala City’s 183 polling, places gave 18,393 votes to Gen. Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes, 62-year-| old veteran right-wing | and 13.811 to Mario Mendez Mon-/ tenegro, 47.--sf the- a) Seer tionary Party. nd * * * Col. Jose Luis Cruz Salazar, 38- year - old mi dd e-of-the-roader backed by the late President Carlos Castillo Armas’ Democra- |tic Nationalist Movement (MDN) | had 6,861 votes. Col. Enrique Ar- | don wailed far Sma with 457. Ydigoras "os en expected to | score heavily in the capital, but | returns from rural districts could | change the trend. Ydigoras car-, ried the city in the Oct. 20 presi- dential election which was void- ed after the general's supporters staged bloody riots protesting pro- jclamation of a government can- ididate as the winner. * x i Voting yesterday was generally | quiet. Flores Avendano wafned | ithat the Army. stood ready to up- hold the decision of Congress, which will make the official can- -|Husband Makes Choice DENVER #—Mrs. Mary Asmus was granted a divorce when she jtold Dist. Judge Joseph E. Cook | she gave her husband a choice between her or the chickens he kept in the house and quoted her husband as saying: “I'll take the | chickens.” : oe. inns ago cane 7 “My bedside telephone costs _ only about a dollar a month’ Se Fc wee are sige ; A : : Surprisingly little for extra one-timé charge. _Especially for calls at night or when you're cleaning or making beds. You won't have to race downstairs, or to another part of the house when the plione rings. _ In addition to the monthly cost there is a small one- ‘ume installation charge for extension phones. Your choice of colors; including adjustable loud-soft belt;-for— To order ‘stepaaving telephone convenience for your = - home, call the Business Office. ~~~ MICHIGAN BELL a «ee all the convenience it brings. Unofficia] returns from 94 ef 4— ‘Matehing “Oblong or Oval . . Colonial ROOM SIZED Hand- RUGS Hooked 6°? by 9 Usually $49.95 §9Q”° 9’ by 12’ Usually 59.95 Sizes: 42” by 66,” Reg. 14:98 $10.99 30” by 54”, Reg. 9.98 @Grey : $6.99 @ Green 22” by 42”, 20” by 30”, i @ Rose - Reg. 4.98 Reg. 2.98 @ Brown $2.99 +, $1.99 @Biack Long-wearing, superior qualit patterns that have beer is about 10! square feet). Conv t/Terms A y cotton hooked into the enter -tavorites—for- generations. These” are handsome, year-round rugs that provide a high-light for any type of decor—blend gracefully into traditional rooms, sparkle 1 with interest in a modern setting. All sizes approximate (S12 Come in tonight! — Waite's . . .. Downstairs ‘THERE IS é _ WHITE Ax STILL TIME to Take Advantage of Great Savings on Linens, Pillows, Blankets, Bedspreads, Towels in | - Waite’s Big bLoR SALE | Feinh Fl Peer o and Advertising Director wane 4, rermoenain President and Publisher Editorial Pook = ve MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1958 Tohn L. Dewi Deseriiee | Today’ s Labor Leaders Dean of American labor leaders Joun L. Lewis recently uttered some rather pithy observations on his fel- low contemporaries. Just what this all proves is unknown, but it does _ point up his opinion of the big wheels of labor today? * * * The New York World Telegram and Sun commented in an edi- ‘ torial that Johin L. was the near- - —est Americas ovelratem xi ue indiv idualist ne yhrdine maker.” We certainly agree with this de- scription. * x * Grorcr:.Meany, President of the AFL-CIO,“n honest plumber trying to abolish fm in the labor move- ment”; WALTER; REUTHER, President of United Auto Workers, “An earnest Marxist chronicall . inebriated, I think, by the exuber of his own verbosity”; ANgURIN Brvky, British labor leader, ‘“‘He’s trying about an economic and politica lennium in Great Britain enti through the medium of political ac-& tion—I prefer that while waiting for the millennium the American work- man should enjoy a high standard of living.” x. * * While other labor leaders seem to be getting the lime light, Joun L. is basking in his past accomplishments and playing ___the role of elder statesman for labor. Building Outlook Good President Ersennower’s budget for the next fiscal year calls for more financing for special housing proj- ects for the elderly; raising the ceil- ing on FHA home mortgages to $30,000 and addition of $3 billion a year for the next five years to FHA’s mortgage irisurance authority. A construction news and mar- keting agency reports that con- tracts for future construction totaled $298 million in Novem- ber, an increase of 14 per cent “over a year ago. Contracts for the first 11 months of 1957 showed nonresidential building _up 19 per cent; residential, 8 per cent and heavy engineering, 19 per cent. we we * The omnibus. housing. bill signed by the President on July 12 reduced ~~to three per cent down payments on = the first $10,000 of the cost of a new home. Previous to that the rate had been 7 per cent. Down payments also were reduced on amounts over $10,000. The provisions of the bill checked a two year slide in private residential construction. Outlays rose steadily throughout the rest of the year although over the entire year such construction was down about 10 per cent from 1956 due to © shortage of mortgage money. x * * However, in August the maximum > ‘dnterest rate on FHA insured loans was raised and down payment re- quirements lowered as authorized by the 1957 Housing Act. Then in De- cember FHA Commissioner Mason notified branch offices to go easier “THE PONTIAC PRESS Published of Tae Powrmue Press Company 48 W Huron &t. Pontiac 12. Michigan Trade Mart Daily Except Sunday Ressri: Bssert, dJouw A Raev “kxecutive Vice President . Assistant Advertising Manage Howsen A Prrecesatp mm, Exrt M. Treapwett, Vice President and - Cireulation Manager Business Manager GO Morsmett Jonna: & jouw W. FPrreore Local pavertising Becretary and Basior Manager Roere? B Tose, — C iwmaw Managing Editor Classified Manager a —— in er standards as to how large an income a family must have to qualify for a loan. . ot *. More recently the commissioner announced that home buyers no longer would be required to furnish their own cash to cover the closing costs on purchase of a house. Dis- count rates on FHA insured mort- gages were adjusted regionally to encourage lending. These steps de- signed to stimulate home building have been received enthusiastically by the industry. that total 1958 construction should be $49.6 billion. This would mean an increase of 5 per cent over last year’s total of | $47.3 billion as estimated by the Departments of Labor and Com- merce. The construction industry, a major segment of our economy, has good prospects for the coming year. e The Man About 4 Town Fishing Is Tops Pontiac Area Excels in _Another Winter Sport. Se Winter: Not such a bad sea- ‘son, if you avail yourself of this “Inga great possibilities, A sharjiglap on the wrist comes in a letter from ; Seymour Langworthy of Pontiac Lake. * He writes: “In your praise for Oakland County as a winter resort, you haven't been snons enough on ice fishing.” And Seymour's right. A’ Mittle study shows that over 5,000 anglers already are pulling the finny tribe through the ice of our 423 lakes. Over a thousand fish houses dot these lakes in numbers from a lone individualist to several dozens on some lakes. Thousands more do it with- out the shelter of a house. And there's room for as many more. Can any similar area in Michigan (or the entire nation) show a better setup — for this health building and meat budget saving winter sport? My top ideal of a man who srows old by staying young, Harry 0. is under the weather. for you, Harry. Whitfield, We're all pulling A native of Oakland County, Harry Hosmer, for many years a prominent Flint con- tractor, is dead, aged 63. Back from a frigid vacation in Florida, Arthur Shurley of Rochester says whole plane loads of warm clothing were rushed from New York by Miami merchants. A woman with finger prints all alike is reported by ~Patrofman’ Ray Denton of the Pontiac force. This is an extreme rarity in what is generally considered an infallible means of identification. This winter already has made history, according to Burdette LaGrange of Auburn Heights. He says this is the first time of record when the Ice in our lakes was not safe until so late in Janu- ary. : From Rochester, over the signature, “Lover of Uncontaminated Air” comes a letter praising the missive from the office worker who deplores the nico- ever, and closes with: “I don’t think they should convert an office or other work- ing place Into a skunk den.” Soon celebrating her ninetieth birth- day, Miss Anna O'Riley of 2511 Auburn Road, was born on Palmer St. in Pontiac, not long after the Civil War closed, and has seen us grow from a straggling country town. Peach trees budding = in January are reported by Art Ashman ~ of Waterford, who asks, “Is it mild winter or dumb trees?” Verbal Orchids to- Rutered at Post Office, Pontiac, as second class matter —_—__ ne oem te entitied Hgeentora |b 2 oe to the use ae Soomnt vepuntiontio news — Rewspaper as weil rm Ye A goad dinpatched a, teed Paems aa va carrier tor 40 cents ; cerrt woe ioe by mall oes ae oo | MEMBER or claus oo keer re OP CIRCULATIONS ee ‘n advance Henry Schweitzer of 85 Pine Grove’ Ave.; birthday. Mrs. Margaret Clancy > of 7398 Hatchery Road; le birth- da ” Méts. Minnie sertasstier of Metamora; eighty-fourth birthday. Arthur Groover of Oxford; eighty-first birthday. ¥ eighty-ninth | Banned From. H Hi 6 } “The Doorway’s Big Enough—If You Leave That Stuff Outside” - David Lawrence Says: Ike’s Letter Not Revealed i in Russia WASHINGTON — How can the course of peace be advanced in the world when the very words of the President of the United States, seeking settle. ment of outstand- ing issues, are not. even printed in the newspap- ers of the Soviet Union? How can there be solidarity and under standing and mutual help- fulness exerted between our own allies when the LAWRENCE newspapers of Great Britain and France, for instance, do not print the full text of such an important document as the one President Eisenhower sent last week to Bul- people of Great Britain, including the members of parliament and the news writers and the commentators abroad, still get the full text of President Eisenhower's letter? The United States Information Service cabled the document to its European stations and the cost of cable tolls was thereby saved for the European press. But this does not help much unless the general public, too, can read the full text of such an important document. * * * While the West German, French and British press gave more than normal space in handling long extracts from the Eisenhower letter, the spirit of candor and sincerity and the constructive sug- gestions contained in the Elisen- hower letter cannot be conveyed by summaries, fragments.or ex- cerpts. It has to be read in its entirety. Here ig a cause for real concern. . If ideas are not transported fully Smiles The hardest time for young- sters to go to bed is every night. ~*~ * *° Cheer up! You're not the only one who is still writing “1957.” Dr. William Brady Says: hways’ Fa vin" ecu mals Cae alae dn ake oe 15-year-old son lost his life in @ needless accident. Why must we have | " motor scooters on our highways when they are such death traps to our youth? Any boy with the ambition we expect him to have can, on a part time job or paper route, save enough money to buy a scooter, and he cen pet a Hemet of 14 at wy at om eee nee for it. . * =f Since my son's death I’ve read of many accidents resulting in death to beys 14 to 16. We didn’t permit our son te own one, but he was invited te ride home from school, and like any red-blooded boy of 15, he accepted. He was killed instantly, the driver injured, and police records show the accident was the driver's fault. He was a boy of 14, and his driving mtn pol ctommate, put be seuied ont == celved his driyer’s Hoonse the day before the accident. — * * * * Parents cannot contro! the lure of scooters when they are all around, _ but if they were. taken off the highways, more boys could grow inte adult-—— hood and the fear mothers know as their sons reach this age could be _ spared. I'd like to see a move made to ban motor scooters from our highways and save Michigan's youth. —-O8- 186 W. Yale St ‘Job Not Finished but We Get a Bill’ Are we the only residents in~ Perry Park who ob to being billed for storm before they're finished or even working? ” Or could it be we're the only ones that can't afford to pay for them right now; therefore we yell the loudest? I didn’t think anyone got paid for a job until it’s finished, and the way it looks out here now, Mrs. Elaine Gerber - “fhey’lt be lucky to have it done by summer. I just hope it works better than. ~put-in-last-year.- ~our sidewalk they (I think it’s still there, but we haven't seen it since the day the cement dried, as it har either been covered with mud or water, and we paid $100 for that.) Of course we could always move if we could find a sucker to buy this place with all the mess going on. Mrs. Fahrner 650 Kenilworth Cost of Superhighways Doubled in Eight States WASHINGTON W—New Bureau of Public Roads figures showed today that eight states have dou- bled—in two years—cost estimates of their parts of the nation's 41,000- mile superhighway system, now figure their -portions of the interstate system of expressways will cost less than they originally estimated, ESTIMATES IN TABLE The estimates were in a new table submitted by the bureau to Sen. Gore (D-Tenn), chairman of the public roads subcommittee which of progress on the big highway program, conducting a study set up the 90-10 financing ratio for __ other hand, four states mates are not strictly comparable to the old. In some cases mileage of the interstate system within a state has been altered, and stand- ards have been changed. Many states have contended their original estimates were hastily prepared and fauity. These estimates were submitted to a commission headed by Gen. Lucius D. Gay. The commission was named by President Eisen- hower in 1954 to recommend a highway program, ¢ _The original estimates were used as the basis for the 1956 law which the superhighway network, Neither the old nor the new esti- Gore asked for the figures so _ mates are based on the full 41,000 state-by state comparisons could be made with the old estimates, The new cost figures are par- ganin discussing how-a—“summit* conference can be successful? - These are practical questions that could have more of a bearing on whether there is adequate de- fense against aggression than all the discussion in our ¢ongressional: committees about how to get mis- siles produced fast or in the ses- sions of the parliaments abroad about whether missile bases are going to be established there. For, unless peoples can _ re- strain the impulses of dictators in Eastern Europe, there is danger of a miscalculation that could lead te global war. The most important way to advance the cause of peace is to keep peoples well informed. Moral force can be a real deterrent of war. The very fact that many days now have elapsed without publi- cation of the Eisenhower text in the Soviet Union illustrates dra- matically that the Communists fear __the American viewpoint may pos-__ -sibly be given support by the Soviet people. ee The press of the United States gave extensive space to the Bul- ganin letter to the President, many newspapers printing it in full text. The President's reply was issued about 3:30 p.m. last Sunday, Wash- ington time—which is 8:30 p.m. London time and 9:30 p.m. Paris time—but it took more than an hour for it to be transmitted, so the text did net get to either capital early enough for the editorial writers there to read it in full before writing their comments for Monday morning papers. Editorial appraisal was made on the basis of fragmentary summaries. ant enough for every editor in Europe to ‘read in full before making. any comments. Yet, because of a tradition that yes- terday’s news is not treated again the next day, the full text -of the American letter has not yet been printed by any newspaper in Great Britain or France. ~ How, then, can the important The Country Parson — _ i “As the sur creates your shad- ow, God creates your soul—but in each case it is you who de- termines the shape of it.” Iron Plus B‘Vitamins — of Aid in Gray Sickness I may be wrong, but I believe sequence of I invented the name. the gray sickness, for what physicians call mia, deficiency anemia or fron deficiency anemia many years ago. This common type of, anemia occurs chiefly in women in the for- ties. At 35 or 40 a woman should be at her best, at the peak of per- DR. BRADY fection. In days gone by, a type of ane- mia called chlorosis was common was characterized by a peculiar greenish pallor. _In many cases the physician could recognize it at a glance, be- cause of the greenish pallor. Ex- amination of the blood showed only moderate diminution in the number of red corpuscles but a great di- minution in the hemoglobin (iron coloring matter). . Dr. Osler asserted that “the treatment of chlorosis affords one of the most brilliant instances ~ of the specific action of a rem- edy—it is a minor matter How iren cures chlorosis."’ All I have to say about it now ig that I never observed such ex- traordinary effects of iron. But _tine addicts. It is much stronger, how- Here was a document import. never_mind—chlorosis is so rare today that some, physicians have never seen a case, * xk * A similar type of anemia—num- ber of red corpuscles only moder- ately diminished , but amount of hemoglobin (coloring-matter) dis- proportionally diminished — seems to have taken the place of chloro- sis. This is called hypochromic anemia, nutritional deficiency ane- mia or iron deficiency anemia. - CALLED GRAY SICKNESS Because of the grayish pallor of the girl with this type of anemia, I call it the gray sickness. It oc- curs generally in women in their forties. The gray sickness is caused, in teenage girls. Chlorosis, other- _ wise called “the green “sickness.” — plexion of at anemia is _tion_ state. Read the advice below. Scrapbook this case for later least -one bleeding, frequent slight bleeding as from internal hemorrhoids, or occasional or pe- riodic excessive bleeding as in me- norrhagia, or occult bleeding, from peptic ulcer. The color of secon- dary anemia is white. Pernicious anemia, cause of which I do not know, is character- ized by a greater proportionate di- minution in the aumber. of red corpuscles than in the quantity of hemoglobin. The skin or com- Signed letters, not more or 100 sere lone pertaini than one page "dheeea’, i diag- heaith ne, not nosis, or Terentendets will be answered b Dr. William Bredy, if a # ad self- addrersed gprs is sent to e Pon- tlac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright, Seaper' miles of the interstate system. The old figures are based on 37,760 miles, all that had been allocated at the time these estimates were east_of HR STUDY FIGURES Gore has said his subcommittee will study the figures carefully be- fore voting on them. Congress must approve the new estimates before they can be used as a basis for apportionment of money to the states. ae Looking Back 15 Years Ago NAZIS STRUGGLE vainly halt Reds near Salsk. PROPOSED CITY budget ex- ceeds income by $93,000. to - a 58 The eight states which report- ed their estimates have doubled are: Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hamp- shire, Tennessee and Virginia. Those with cost figures below the original level are: Connecti- cut, Michigan, New Jersey and Oklahoma, For the nation as a whole, the average increase in estimated costs was 37 per cent. The old estimates added up to $27,600,000,-. 000. The new figures total $37,- 600,000,000. * * * Bureau of Public Roads officials have oe that the new esti- SPANISH REBELS seize US. oil tanker. KING FAROUK, 17, weds Far- ida, 16. : THOUGHTS FOR TODAY And the Lerd said unto Moses, Wherefore criest thou unto me. Speak unto the children of Israel, that they go forward: —Exodus 14:15. _ * * * The grandest of al] laws is the law of progressive development. Under it, in the wide sweep of things, men grow wiser as they grow older, and societies better.— E. G. Case Records of a Psychologist: Investment in College Pays Off Herbert is at the educational crossroads. S. college or take a job? He says he doesn’t know what he wants to pursue as a life work, so he wonders if it is sensible to spend money on higher educa- +i) Grammar Grad, ciosesegye 116,000 from one or two years of general gh School Grad. ....... 165,000 subjects in the Liberal Arts col- 1-3 Yrs. College ........... 190,000 leges. College Grad. ............. 268,000 Even if you go to a Liberal Arts Your high school diploma is thus worth $49,000 in future earnings so by all means graduate from high school discussion. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE Case X-307: Herbert L., aged 18, is a high school senior. * * * “Dr. Crane, I get out in Feb- ruary,” he began. ‘“My mother wants MC [0° BO gegen right into college, # but my Dad thinks 4 I ought to go to work in his store. § “And I actually don't know what I want to do as a life work. So would it be sensi- ble for me to go. And then take a minimum of at _year_of_college,_for- will thereby add at least $25,000 more to your income in later life. Teenagers who quit high school college for only a year, however, you will profit all through later life in a broader outlook, plus a wider cultural horizon. And your confidence will be ‘Or you — greater, which is one reason why n, Dr, Glick’s data showed that even » one year of college adds $25,000 to saad aes a ee on to college and spend all that ‘money, since I DR, CRANE still have no special career in mind? If so, what ‘kind of college should I select?” . COLLEGE FACTS _ nutrition, particularly vitamin B - _ If you are smart enough, to make titty sound a tices one Therefore remedy ‘by all means go svenie is - must not be Yust iron but also on to college for at least a year. on val- adequate daity ration of the _ Dr. Paul C, Glick, of our Census Sable practical such as an ily " Business Law, Applied Psychol For further information and ad- meee tte See Sete eat Accounting, Typing, Medical Sec- vice send me, ss power, ~ retarial courses, etc, ‘ ' per, a stamped, self-addressed en- * * ££ Unless you @xpect to spend four pag and ask for the pamphlet. onthe Gray Sick Pigg Piney A ie gateing yous tae sepa ® sions, such as law, Sileny medi- A third type of anemia is called Auction ‘Fife Income Cine ‘ete., you will get better divi. secondary anemia. It is the con- 14 yrs. grade potest cce A dends from Business College than - \ ee ‘ , : ‘} ‘ : J * oy ‘ - . fe Fog 4 whee 6 owes ie Feu teenagers halve 0 life ex- toa eo folded. Then when Careful Dan returns ‘hon ine almost Sunny-days your family wash to Pontiac make ed and PONTIAC Laundry DRY CLEANERS 7-Hour Service at Our 2 Locations 540 S. Telegraph Rd. 2682 West 12 Mile — Berkley — fof Staff in-seeret * ___. | wae PonTrac’ PRESS, MONDAY, JANU WASHINGTON (INS)—Senate de- | witnesses the kind ‘that Gen, Nathan F, tested as a “hell of a note.” -testimony before. the Senate Preparedness Subcom- mittee made public late yester- day, charged that congressional |committees put military officers in ‘a position of being “insubordinate” ‘to President Eisenhower or of per- juring themselves. * * x | He said that senators have a ; duty to get information but he pro- | tested that once the President has ; made a decision on how much mon. (Advertisement) (Advertisement) Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain, Stops Itching as it Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stops itch- ing, and relieve pain— without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another,“very striking improve- ment” was reported and veri- fied by doctors’ observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or re- traction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all — this improvement was main- tained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state- ments as “Piles have ceased to be a problem!” And among these sufferers were a very wide va- riety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne*) —the discovery of a world-famous research institu- tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in expponiery or cint- ment form called Preparation H.* Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H su positories or Preparation ii ointment with special appli- cator. Preparation H is ond oh all drug counters. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. *Reg. U.S. Pat Of. ey the services are to get, military witnesses should not be asked “‘is it adequate.” He said this line of Questioning is a “hell of a note.” But Sen. Francis Case (R-SD), told an interviewer he will con; tinue to ask such questions, He © said his subcommittee on mili- tary construction will want to know next week if emergency | funds Eisenhower has asked for | The chairman of the Joint Chiefs lengthy hearings on missile-satel- lite progrss. n Grilling Officers, if will try to wind up next week its = Pep oe Nixon to Receive Award for Service NEW YORK (INS) — Vice Presi- dent. Richard M. Nixon is the recipient of the fourth annual award of the Women’s National ‘Republican Club of New York for distinguished political service in 1957. * * * The award will be made to either Nixon of his legislative aide Charles MeWhorter at the 37th annual luncheon of the club Jan. 25 in New York. * * * Previous recipients have been for the warning system and | bomber dispersal quate.”’ Sen, Stuart Symington (D-MO),: former air secretary, said that ‘‘if Congress can’t get the opinion of military officers, then [ don’t see, the point of their coming up here) i (to testify) at all.” x * * Both Case and Symington point-| ed out that Congress has the re- sponsibility ‘fer the ‘‘purse”’ as well as of the “sword.”’ Symington said this responsibility would be crippled if a witness is not allowed jto speak up “after the President \ ‘This is it.’ Symington teld reporters: | ‘are “ade- President Hoover -and- former New iYork Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. President Eisenhower, former Many Failing to Register - for Draft in Michigan LANSING — Many young men are forgetting to register on their 18th birthday as re- quired by the current draft law, State Selective Service head- quarters said today. With few exceptions, all men born after Aug. 30, 1922, are sub- ject to registration. — Michigan local beards current- ly have registrations from a total of 836,036 men of draft age. Of Walking...tui: With a Gas Clothes _ Dryer just a step from her washer... Herself hi, Pretty lingerie SX for less than $1. Saye REGULAR 1.59.1,98 paeigr al C “Charge “REGULAR 1,69 Nylon tricots, cottons and nylonized tricots. whites, prints. men's sizes in C Charge It yling in on broad. VY and regular sizes S-M-L-XI. Pastels, Misses, wo. 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(Advertisement) CONSTIPATED? WASHINGTON (® — The gov- ernment says 2,809,300 workers claimed unemployment comipensa- tion in the week ended Jan. 4 — | - New laxative discovery un-locks bowel blocks an increase of 448,900 over the previous week and a new record No. Contract Necessqry Eyewitness 0 Death ... Junior Editors Quiz on KING ARTHUR total. without gag, bloat orgripe x k& . ; . Sie sien Most constipation is caused by what-—-relieves_even chronic constipa The Bureau of Employment Se- doobece call a “thrifty” colon that overnight, yet is so gentle it has been curity said yesterday that al-| loses so much moisture that its con- hospital proved safe even for women in critical ¢tages of pregnancy. tenis become so dry they block the te old style bulk, salt or though the figure to the pre- : = . bowel; so shrunken they fail tostimu- §y Vi tis } : g oa jous high mark set in January late the urge to purge that propels drug laxatives, Cotonaip neither » 5 ae - AUTO INSURANCE an After severe! trips over Mrs. Mc- Giilicuddy’s route Misa aed ol figures $10,000 the body must have been thrown out " as the train passes the neglected $20,000 yark of Rutherford R — by i inj r. Crackenthorp, rich manufacturer eco She asks Lucy Rystestarree. lag apy 7 == = a Geeetete a Bethe Ge has made Property Per. self & unique profession—taking tem- Quarter porary charge of households and run- Damage ning them like magic—to get herself employed at Rutherford Hall Emma, Crackenthorpe’s daughter, engages her, and Miss Marple ts installed in the neighborhood posing as Lucy s aunt. On pretense of playing olf, Lucy searches for the body and finds a piece of fur on a bush below the raiiroad tracks In a barn Lucy pries open a sarcophagus and finds the body of a murdered woman e Wimborne, Crackenthorpe's attorney, telis Emma the murdered woman was probabivy a foreigner. Emma asks if she was French Police question mem - bers of the Crackenthorpe family but decide they wouldn't have planted the body on their own doorstep. Inspector Craddock goes to see Miss Marple. CHAPTER 16 | ® JAY RANDALL AGENCY MA 4-3959 14 KARAT GOLD Matched WEDDING RINGS ness,” Miss Marple. “Do you want to hear what he said next?” “Please tell me,’ Miss Marple said, ‘if it is not a breach of con- fidence."’ . * * x “He said, “Well as this seems a completely cockeyed business, all thought up by a couple of la- dies who've turned out, against all probability, to be right, and since > | know. wish she hada't gene to Hadies often do—but_ not Elspeth} - McGillicuddy.”” “Not Elspeth McGillicuddy,” agreed the inspector. “I'm look- ing forward to meeting her, you Ceylon. We’re arranging for her to be interviewed there, by the way.” “My own process of reasoning) was not really original,” said Miss} Marple. “It's all in Mark Twain. The boy who found the horse. I just imagined where I would go if I were a horse and I went there and there was the horse.” * * * “You imagined what you'd do if you were a cruel and cold-blood- ed murderer?’ said Craddock “Like a sink, my nephew Ray- mond used to say,"” Miss Mar- | ple agreed, nodding her head | briskly. “But as I always told | round table. him, sinks are necessary domes- tic equipment and actually very hygienic.” put yourself in the murderer's place and tell me just where he is now?” Miss Marple sighed. * * * | Georges-Newports. Jewelry Dept. 74 °N. Saginaw St. "you alréady know one of these Ia- dies, I'm sending you down on the my dear Miss Marple, where do tadvertisement) People 60 to 80 ADDRESS A POST CARD OR LETTER NOW ... and mail it today to find out how you can still apply for a $1,000 life insurance policy to help take care of final ex- penses without burdening. your family You handle the entire trans- action by mail ‘you probably appreciate, an offi-| ~ we go from here? This is not, as| cial visit. I haven't got my hench-) men with me. I thought you and I might take down our back hair to-| gether first." : Miss Marple smiled at him. “I'm sure,” she said, “that no | one who only knows you officially | would ever guess that you could be so human, and better looking | than ever—don't blush — New?| what, exactly, have you been teld so far?" \no idea at all, But he must be knows all about Rutherford Hall.” “T agree. But that opens up a there. There’s the Women's In- stitute—and the A. R. P. War- ‘sword, - “Can you go a little further still.) qhere may have been a real King “Arthur, although most historians doubt it. Those who believe he existed say the early ‘history of England is not thoroughly recorded, and they con-| itend Arthur could have ruled one of the many kingdoms that) “I wish I could. I've no idea— /Ourished In England in the sixth century. FOR YOU TO DO: The story of King Arthur has been retold case’ So here I am! And now,|someone who has lived in, or by modern writers in some of our very best story books. Ask your librarian for one. (For submitting this question, Donna McCloskey of Clear- very wide field. Quite a succes. field, Pa receives $10. If you have one, send it to Violet Moore| sion of daily women have worked ‘Higgins, AP Newsfeatures, in care of this newspaper. Tomor- jrow: How do cats purr?) dens before them. They all know | the Long Barn and the sarcopha- | gus and where the key was kept. The whole set-up there is widely known lecally. Anybody livin on ga might hit on it as a spot for his purpose.”’ “Yes, indeed. I quite understand 'your difficulties.’ “Ive got everything, I think.; Craddock said: ‘We'll never get with OLD Your friend Mrs. McGillicuddy’s anywhere until we identify the ce | ; aR ‘intelligent person. AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. original statement to the police at No obligation: No one will call %¢ on you! | lector, and also the note to the sta-! Write today, simply giving tionmaster at Brackhampton. I your name, address and age. Mail to Old American Ins. Co. iri , » quiries were made by the people 3 West oth. Dept. L121A, Kan- -oncerned—the railway people and sas City, Missouri. ____the police. But there's no doubt |that you outsmarted them all by a 'most fantastic process of guess- ‘work " iAdvertisement) More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH Here is a pleasant way to overcome leose piate discomfort. FASTEETH., an improved powder, sprinkled on upper and lower plates holds them firmer so that they fee! more com- fortabie No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It’s alkaline (non- acid). Does not sour. ‘Checks “plate edor breath”. Get FASTEETH today Ab drug - af any -Wweman- * * * “Not guesswork,"" said Miss vantage. I knew Elspeth McGilli- cuddy. Nobody else did. There was story, and if there was no question Rd Factory-to-You cilities: ®@ EYES EXAMINED © GLASSES FITTED © PROMPT REPAIRS © SAFETY GLASSES DR. ARNOLD MILES title pee af equipment ter pre- cision lens grinding, ftiee ef fremes end quick repe'r. Optometrist Mary to | “An her statement by the ticket col- cyjt>” may say that all the proper in-| ported disappearances of a woman, miss--purehase-were-made—jest~ exe body."’ 1 | “Oh, we'll get there—in the end.! (We're checking up on all the re-| of that age and appearance.| There's no one outstanding who) fits the bill. The M. O. puts her ‘down as about thirty-five, wealthy, | probably a married woman, has) jhad at least one child. Her fur coat iis a cheap one purchased at a Lon. | don store. Hundreds of such coats Marple. “And I had a great ad-'were sold in the last three months,, With me. She has done what I about sixty per cent of them to blonde women. No sales girl can no obvious confirmation of her recognize the photograph of the'tice and go if she wanted to?’ dead woman, or is likely to if the ‘Christmas. Her other clothes seem mainly of foreign manufacture, | mostly purchased in Paris. There. aré no English laundry marks. | We've communicated with Paris’ and they are checking up there for us. Sooner or later, of course, | someone will come forward with a missing relative or lodger. It’s! just a matter of time.” “The compact wasn't any help?” “Unfortunately, no. It's a type sold by the hundred in the rue de Rivoli, quite cheap. By the way, you ought to have turned that over to the police at once, you know—or rather Miss Eye- lesharrow should have done so." Miss Marple shook her head. | “But at that monent there wasn’t any question of a crime having been committed,” she pointed out. If a young lady, practicing golf BEATTY’S TRANSMISSION Ay me « ! a3 SERVICE Complete Service on , All Types Transmission! — All Work Guaranteed .... | Free Check-Up Service! . ‘AT N. Parke’St. — North of City Hall — FE 8-6022 shots, picks up an old compact of ino particular value in the long igrass, surely she doesn't rush straight off to the police with it?” Miss Marple paused, and then add- \ed firmly: “I thought it much wis- ,er to find the body first.” | Miss iquiries’ — to put it in jargon. A |policeman’s life is a dull one!"'| | ‘had any doubts but that it would ibe found?” | “IT was sure it would. Lucy Eye- lesbarrow is a most efficient and “TH say she is! She scares the life out of me, she’s so devas- tatingly effielent. No man _ will ever dare marry that girl.” “‘Now you know, I wouldn't say that... It would have to be special type of man, of course.” Marple brooded on_ this thought a moment. “How is she QUESTION: Was there really a King Arthur? i ANSWER: King Arthur was the hero of many legends of the Middle Ages. According to most of them, he ruled the Britons in the sixth Century A.D. and his knights sat with him at a One of the legends says King Arthur's sword, called Ex- calibur, was given him by the enchanted arm of a lady which rose out of a lake. Here is a picture of Arthur receiving the Call Today | 1950, the current e ge ae ag Tia _Tate of unem-| — snd expels waste from your body. gags, bloats nor gripes; won't inter- Gregory Oil Co , -f A PES ployment among insured eds | segain norma! regularity, the dry, {ere with absorption of vitamins or a EN i 0.422 is 6-8 per cem. compéfed with 7-3 shrunken contents of your colon food nutrients; in clinical tests, did "Phone FESCIN J Se NS @ Coniderably more workers now niche, nea bla bs Wve e pyallgal tut Esc i : = : ‘| remoi . Second, Vs a phy ! : ; « : i Z : our body! 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Lawrence Street, Pontiac, Michigan Veteran Approved rLORIDA a t or Phone FE 2-3551 WINTER HOURS: Morning 8:30 to 11:30 Afternoon 12 to 2:30 Evening 6:30 te 9:00 in FABULOUS tention to that angle.’’ He added, “What are you smiling about." “I was just thinking,’ said Miss Marple, “of Elspeth McGillicud- dy’s face when she hears we've found a body!"’ | “Well!” is what Mrs. McGilli- cuddy said. ‘‘Well!”’ | | Words failed her. She looked; across at the nice spoken pleasant young man who had called upon * 5 We have an extraordinary plan, whereby you may purchase a King-Size plot for only *10 down and *10 monthly. Full price is *595.00 which includes many unusual features... FREE Title Insurance—FREE Deed—No Interest or Taxes on Contract. PAVED ROADS. Plan now for your vacation or retirement home. CUSTOM BUILT MASONRY HOMES *5300 up NOW: Mail o postcard asking us to immediately forward to you, without cost, o colorful folder and a map of the land for sole. OCALA HIBISCUS PARK, INC. Wg 8 her with—official _eredentials—and| |then down at the photographs that ihe had handed her. 430 Seybold Building, Dept. B-13 . Miami, Fle. (Continued Tomorrow) getting on at Rutherford Hall?” * * * “They're completely dependent upon her as far as I can see. Eat- ing out of her hand—literally as you might say. By the way, they know nothing about her connection with you. We've kept that dark.” “She has no connection now asked her to do.” “So she could hand in her no- “Vo.” sons to me. She is a very intelli- gent girl. I suspect that she has/ become interested.” “In the problem? Or in the fam-| ily?" . “It may be," said Miss Marple, “that it is rather difficult to sep- arate the two.”’ Craddock looked hard at her. “Have you got anything particu- lar in mind?” “Oh no—oh, dear me, no.” “T think you have.” * * * Miss Marple shook her head. Dermot Craddock sighed. ‘So all iI can do is to ‘prosecute my in-| “You'll get results, I'm sure.” “Any ideas for me? More in- spired guesswork?" “I was thinking of things like theatrical companies,” said Miss Marple rather vaguely. ‘‘Touring from place to place and perhaps not many home ties. One of those young women would be much less likely to !'e missed.” i Inspector Craddock was tickled. “You don’t seem to have ever Automatic Washer and Dryer Repair Service All Makes — Expert Trained Technicians ALL WORK GUARANTEED ~ “Yes. Perhaps you've got some- thing there. We'll pay special at- “But ~-she-stops“on: Why?" enn enonl ~ Ja nes scmatrmaees “She has not mentioned her rea-|~ ~~ than the hest of the Low-Price 3—for A Bold New Car for a 1 Bold New Generation This time get real big-car comfort for your money! . hefty car through and through! And ole . 4 Get the Chieftain’s road-leveling 122” wheelbase... fully carpeted interiors are standard! Why bee men-nine, stretch-out interior room... a solid, car with a low-price name? Get. a Pontiac for less! BUSSARD Phone F 84 Oakland Avenue — Free Parking ELECTRIC E 2-6445 Mm if : : YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER fie, Mee G) FOR A DRIVE AND A DEAL YOU'LL NEVER FORGE? . : | out g 4 e ’ lene, of Lapeer; Gerald, of Hadley and Patricia of Waterford. brothers; MPs. Helen Weydethever and Mrs. Lide Mahan all of: Pontiac and Mrs: Mary Brodge of Detroit. ELMER E, BLACKSTONE A former Pontiac resident, El- mer E, Blackstone, 75, of Youngs- _town, Ohio, died Saturday after a short. illness. While in Pontiac, he was a mem- 2 ber of the First Presbyterian | Church, --— He is survived by his sons, wil,| liam Stanton of Drayton Plains, and Donald B, Blackstone of Twin Falls, Idaho. Three brothers and three sisters also survive. - Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Tues- day at Donelson Johns Funeral! Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Dr. William H. Mar- bach of the First Presbyterian Church will officiate. TROY 8. COLBERT Troy S. Colbert, 43, of 116 Oak Hill St. died Sunday at Grace Hos-. pital, Detroit, after gan illness of several months, He is survived by his wife, Thel- ma and two sons; Jerry of Dray- ton Plains, and Larry of Pontiac; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Colbert of Harrisburg, Il. and a sister, also of Harrisburg. - Service will be held at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at First Social Brethren Church with Rev. Thomas Guest of the First Social Brethren Church officiating, After the service, his body will be taken to Harrisbug, Ill. for burial in Good is Cem- etery, Hardon County, His "body is at ate Gritin Fu. neral Home. MRS. CLAUDE LITTLE Mrs. Claude (Jennie) Little, 84, of 40 Moreland Ave., died Saturday after a long illness She is survived by her husband and a daughter, Mrs. Paul Rich- mond, of Pontiac. —Service—will-b at the Little Funeral Home, City, with burial at Cass a AUGUST ZOB August Zob, 78, of 64 E. Kennett Rd. died Saturday after a long illness, He was formerly employed at St. Joseph Merey Hospital. He is survived by three children, al! in Rowmania. Service will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with the Rev. Theodore the Funefal Home. THOMAS J. SOBIESKI TROY — Service for Thomas J Sobieski, 64, of 2600 Crooks Rd., will be conducted at 10 am. Wednesday at the Holy Name Church. Buria] will be in Green- wood Cemetery, Detroit. Mr, Sobieski died Saturday at bia home after a long iliness. The Rosary will be recited “ & 30 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co., mingham. “came associated with the Peoples Wayne County Bank of Detroit as a young man and remained there | until 1985 when he became a fell- | er at the Bank of Commerce al Hamtramck, He was a member of the Amet. can Institute of Bankiing, Surviving are his wife, scar two daughters, Mrs. Stephen Rizn x i GOT A GAS COMPANY PERMIT? THEN THIS [S$ For YOU! a ii GAS HEAT| at its best-with There is a tee and type to meet your needs and budget : radia caring St., who died Satur- Scala of St. George Roumanian: ~ ae —Prayers— be offered Monday at 8 p-m. at] Bir- two sons, Maj. Thomas J. of Wash. ington, D. C., and Joseph H. of Chleago; and’ four sisters in De- MRS. ROBERT SHUELLER ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. Robert (Virginia) Shueller, 34, of the Rev, E, John angle First Congregational Church. Burial will be in Wilson County Memorial Park Cemetery, Leban- on, Tenn, She leaves her husband: a daugh- ter, Melinda: and her parents and a sister in Lebanon. CLARENCE A, NYBAKKE ‘ed Peserel Sagar oi lot atl ;|Walled Lake Cemetery. The Rev. John ‘Mulder will officiate. Grave- side service will be under the aus- piceg of Walled Lake Masonic Lodge 528. Mr. Nybakke was killed in an automobile accident Saturday. He is survived by his wife, Fran- ces, one brothér and three sisters. |, ; ALBERT HAYEK |- WALLED LAKE—Service for Al- bert Hayek, 64, who died Saturday in Northville, will be held at 1:30 p.m, tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Offi- ciating will be the Rev, Perry Thomas of Commerce Methodist Church-and burial will-be in Oak- land std Memnerial - Gardens Cemetery. WALLED LAKE — Service for Clarence A, Nybakke, 59, of 2012 West Lake Dr., will be held at 1 p.m, Wednesday. at Richardson- Surviving are two sons, Albert of Sarasota, Fla., and — in Wis- consin; a daughter, Mrs Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Mt. Lodee 27. and ‘was employed as an is engineer for ee aa, Co. * GEORGE P. TERRILL are his wife, Mabel, ROCHESTER -- ‘Service for 2d three sons, William, of Detroit; George Pringle Terrill, 65, of 3602 Home with. peat oh in East Cadillac Mr. erat died this morning at ye are his wife, Ida; a daughter, Mrs. Sarah E. Caldwell ; a , F. L. Ter- rill of Miami, Fla.; a sister, Mrs. Verna of Baltimore, Md., 18 grandchildren WILLIAM M. IRVINE ‘MILFORD — Service ‘for Wil- liam M. Irvine, 74, of 2225 Garden Rd., will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home with burial in Oakgrove Cemetery. The Rev. Charlies Rickey will of- Willard, also of Sarasota; four sis- ters, Mrs. Anna Kahle and~ Mrs. ) NORTHWOOD MARKETS