4
The Weather . Details en Page *)
snow, colder ,
U. S. Weather Bareas For
Rain or snow —— ee
117th YEAR etd PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY,
ee eee ee ahd f FEBRUARY 9, 1959-80 PAGES
Willman About Charges:
Think I'll File Them’ Removal action against Police Chief Herbert W.
Straley appeared imminent today.
City Manager Walter K. Willman was expected mo-
mentarily to file charges against Straley with City Clerk
Ada R. Evans.
Tl] at home early this morning with a cold, the man-
“+ager hada prepared copy
Asks for Probe
of Jim Hagerty Man Who Touched Off
Adams Case Accuses
Ike’s Press Secretary
WASHINGTON (AP)—The man
who ignited last year’s dramatic
Sherman Adams case now wants
Congress to investigate White
House press secretary James C.
Hagerty,
* *
Dr. Bernarl Schwartz, a former
House investigator, called for the,
probe Sunday after accusing Hag- |
erty of stepping into a television
case for political reasons, Hagerty
immediately denied this.
“Mr. Schwartz was either mis
informed er was deliberately ly-
ing,”’ he said.
Schwartz, who is a New York
University law professor, makes
his charge against Hagerty in a
forthcoming book, ‘‘The Professor
and the Commissions.” Parts of;
the book were released Saturday.
Hagerty replied by making four
letters public.
* * *
Last year, the House Legislatjve
Oversight subcommittee removed
Schwartz as chief counsel, But,
exploring some of his accusa-
tions arid using files he has as-
sembled, it launched investiga-
tions that led to the resignations
of Adams, who was President
Eisenhower's chief Yssistant, and
Richard A. Mack, a federal com
munications ‘commissioner, The accusation against Hagerty |
involves a television station in |
the Albany-Schenectady area of
New York and a series of deci-
sens by the Federal Communi- |
cations Commission.
Hagerty said the FCC had made
its decision before he requested |
some information about it.
* * *
But Schwartz said,
did reverse its original decision.
Teacher Mooney
Caught Driving
Without License
Arthur C. Mooney, 50, a
suspended Waterford Township
High School teacher, was back
in the Oakland County Jail for a
short time this weekend, this time
on a charge of driving with a
revoked driver's license.
Mooney, of 1651 Grimshaw St.,
Commerce Township, was arrest-
ed by Oakland County Sheriff's
Deputies late Saturday when they
noticed him driving in Union Lake
Village.
He pleaded guilty to a drunk
driving charge last Tuesday ‘e-
fore West Bloomfield Justice
Elmer C. Dieterle and paid $100
in fines and costs. His license
was revoked at that time.
Mooney, who is awaiting trial on
a charge of furnishing beer to
minors and _ examination on
charges of gross indecency before
Pontiac Township Justice Robert
W. Hodge, was released on a $50
bond Sunday afternoon and sched-
uled to appear on the revoked! -
license charge before Dieterle)
today.
His examination and trial on the
other charges is set for Feb. 27,
after being postponed three times.
The teacher was suspended after
alleged acts_of gross indecency
were revealed by a student in-
volved in a fatal auto accident
Dec. 13.
Move Over, Baby
NEW YORK (UPI) — The
Brooklyn Industrial Office of the
State Employment services re-
ported today that older people
are getting second childhood eat-
ing habits. The office quoted in-
dustry sources as saying the tre-
mendously expanded demand for
baby food comes from. middle-
aged and older people on spe-
cial diets or having — trou-
ble,
tomate Verne C, Hampton, Court “The facts;
do show that three months after)
Mr. Hagerty intervened the FCC Pojitical Scientists, Note of the accusations. He said
he was “studying” them.
Apparently wary about commit-
ting himself in advance about sign-
ing the charges and delivering
them to Mrs. Evans, the manager
would only concede, “I think I
will file them."
The charges, if signed, will be
filed with Mrs. Evans in her
capacity as clerk of the Civil
Service Commission,
It is her job to notify Stuart, -
Austin, chairman of the Civil Serv-
ice Commission, that charges have
been filed and his job to call a
meeting of the three-member
board to consider them.
As the deadline for filing charges
narrowed down to a matter of
hours, Straley was adamant about
his refusal to resign.
“My plans have not changed,”
he said,
Officials involved in the dis-
pute began to get together late |
this morning, after Willman 4r- generally on procedures to follow lem of Germany.
‘physi- rived at City Hall,
Willman indicated be might ,.
make still another attempt to get
Straley to leave his seven-year
post quietly, avoiding an
hearing before the Civil Service
| Commission.
* * *
The manager said he wanted
once more to talk with Straley
and City Attorney William A.)
Ewart.
Straley was in his office th
the Publie Safety early” this morning, attending to the |
few duties left te him by Public
Safety Director George D, East-
man. rs
At 10:40'a.m., he left the build-
ing, declining to say where he;
was going.
* * *
At 11:08 a.m., Eastman, who
| prepared the charges against Stra-
ley, arrived at work after spend-
ing a weekend in Chicago on busi-
ness.
Seven minutes later, the man-|
ager summoned Eastman to a con-|
ference in City Hall. Willman had
left home and arrived at his City
Hall office shortly before.
WASHINGTON (®—Rep. Peter
Frelinghuysen (R-NY) has a open| drive this morning, as another
ie windshields for work-bound GLAZED OUTLOOK — It was drive and scrape, scrape and
sleet storm coated the highways
drivers. Blowers had difficulty more of the same in —
| WASHINGTON w—Sccretary of|
| State John Foster Dulles said to-|
day the Western Allies have agreed |
lif the Soviet Union invokes ‘
cal means" to block access to Ber-
He also renewed the West's of-/
fer to talk about a general set-
tlement,
“We are willing to talk with
the Soviets in a sincere ef.
fort to reach agreements,”’ he
said.
Dulles returned to Washington at
\8 a.m. after talks at London, Paris
jand Bonn, —
told newsmen his talks abroad ‘‘re-'
‘confirmed the unity and firmness
of our position."’
“We do not accept any substitu.
tion of East Germans fc> the So-
‘viet Union in its responsibilities
toward Berlin and its obligations
ito us,”’ he said.
“We are resolved that our posi-
tion in, and access to, West
Berlin shall be preserved.,
“We are in general agreement
/as to the procedures we shall fol-
low if physical means are invoked
to interefere with our rights in this
respect.”
Dulles did not elaborate. He gave
no hint of what procedures the
Western Allies have decided to fol-
low if the Soviet Union tries phys-
ically to block the routes to Berlin,
isolated 110 miles inside East Ger-
many.
modern definition of a congress-
man: “The shortest distance be- Dulles said he returns from his
six-day trip ‘encouraged by the
tween two years.” unity, understanding and resolu-
He was 76.
‘WILD BILL’ DONOVAN
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C % missioner as Circult Judge,
. Women's Pages. seeveeses 1415 Death of the former director of the Office of Strategic :
“e|members of the armed forces who
{ Services was attributed to a!
heart ailment.
He had been in Walter
Reed Army Hospital here
for some time. |
Donovan won the Medal of Hon-
or for leading the famed ‘'Fight-
ing 69th” regiment of the Rainbow
Division in World War I. His fight-
ing prowess became a legend of)
the war.
His nickname of ‘Wild Bill”
stemmed from the exacting
methods he used in training his
men and the aggressive example
of spirit and vigor he set for
them.
The OSS operations Donovan
headed during World War II were
worldwide in scope, The organi-
zation conducted important re-
search at home and daring ex-
ploits abroad, many of them be-
hind enemy lines,
* }
* “
The shadowy army also fostered
resistance movements and made
possible eseape of some 5,000
had been shot down or trapped
behind:enemy lines in-vavious the-
atefs,
President Harry S. Truman in
1946 decorated Donovan with the
fhak leaf cluster to the Distin-
guished Service Medal he re-
ceived during World War I, Pres-
ident Eisenhower in 1957 award- In a prepared statement Dulles;
‘All seven members
‘dren has
jaks, parents of Zrust's wife, Caro- West Agrees on Strategy
if Berlin Blocked--Dulles | tion in the three countries I visit.
ed, ‘
“We discussed the whole prob-
We exchanged)!
views on thé prospects for a for-
'eign ministers meeting with the
|Soviet Union at which all aspects
lof the German problem can be
‘discussed, not only Berlin and a
‘peace treaty,
pose, but also reunification and
European security,
ern powers have proposed.”
* * *
Dulles talked to the heads of
government and foreign ministers
of Britain, France and West Ger-
many and with Secretary General
Paul-Henri Spaak of the Atlantic
Pact (NATO).
Dulles left Bonn Sunday with a
hint that some slight conciliatory
move toward the Soviets may be
in the making, but only if the
U.S.S.R. also is in a conciliatery
mood.
West German Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer, was picutred by a Ger- 'man spokesman as opposed to giv-
ling something away in the negotia-
as the Soviets pro-| Pontiac Press Phote
removing the fast-growing accumulation, and windshield wipers
only made it worse. The cheerful — man says there may be
tions
rewrn, without getting anything in
* *
Both German and American
spokesmen also said the Western
powers are stil) far from agree-
‘ment on a detailed policy on how
to meet the Soviet challenge in *
progress was made in the talks,
* * *
‘Meanwhile Allied representatives
here completed the drafting of a
note to the Soviet Union: proposing
that a foreign ministers’ meeting
be held to deal with a wide range
of German. issues.
The Western foreign ministers
before assembling with the Soviet.
May 27 was originally fixed
by the Soviets for turning over
to East Germany their powers
controlling allied access to Ber- iBerlin, But th indicat t;
as the West-| ey aoe the
may meet a couple more times}. County Mishaps
Claim 2 Lives Sledding Boy Killed
of Earlier Injury
18591 Wodcrest St., Harper Woods;
and Neil D. White, 18, 1430 Cres-
cent Lake Rd,
* ~*~ *
Mr,
lin, The Soviet Union also has
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)
Family Gone;
Town Puzzled Contractor, Wife, Tots:
Disappear; Door Left
Unlocked, Utilities On
SILVER LAKE, Minn, (AP) —|
of the Earl
Zrust family vanished Dec, 29 and
jhaven't been seen since. |
Heart Ailment Claims
‘Wild Bill’ Donovan WASHINGTON (?) — Maj. Gen. William (Wild Bill)
Donovan, who directed the government's daring intelli-
gence operations during World War i, died Sunday. Disappearance of the building |
contractor, his wife and five chil-
the 600 residents of,
Silver Lake worried, Mayor Joe!
W. Gehlen said no one here knows.
what's happened to the Zrusts. |
Zrust is 30; his wife, Caroline,|
28; and their children are Sandra,
10; Susan, 8; Terry, 5; Douglas,
3; and Russell, 2. |
* * *
The Zrusts left without locking
their home. Only the car and
some heavy clothing were miss-
ing. The rest of the clothes and all)
/household furnishings remained. '
\Utilities were not shut off.
The disappearance was first dis-
covered by a milkman who made |
\a delivery to the Zrust home Dec. |
(30, then found on his next trip
that the milk was still outside,
Zrust's widowed mother, Chris-'
tine Zrust, said she had no idea
where the family could have gone.
Neither did the George Stachowi-
line. Sisters and brothers who saw
the couple Dec, 29 could shed no
information,
The family had a winter fishing
house on Lake Mille Lacs, Investi-
gation showed, though, that no one
had been to the shack,
* &
Mayor Gehlen said it was,
learned Zrust had been to the
court house in nearby Glencoe a
day or so before the family dis-
appeared. He obtained copies: of
birth certificates for the entire
famly, but gave no indication of
his plans or why he wanted the
documents,
Silver Lake is about 40 miles
west of Minneapolis,
Some Dirty Statistics
NEW YORK (UPI)—The De-
partment of Air Pollution Control
announced yestérday that’ t h’e
average accumuluation of soot in
Manhattan last year was 107.3
tons per square mile per month.
That's approximately 1,285 tons
(Continued on Page 2, Col, 4) State John Foster Dulles. Ike Back Home
Today to’Meet
With Twining
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presi-
dent Eisenhower returned to his
White House desk today to face a
busy schedule after a quail-shoot-
ng holiday ~ Seether Georgia.
*
The piece *rlew back to the
|Capital last night, ending a five-,
day visit on the estate of former
treasury secretary George M.
Humphrey. The White House said
he cut short the vacation by one
iday to take care of official duties.
* pointment today was with Gen.
Nathan F, Twining, chairman o
the Joint Chiefs of Staff. But he
also may confer with Secretary of
On Tuesday, FEisenhower will
confer with the Republican Con-
gressional leaders. On Wednesday,
he will meet with West Berlin
Mayor Willy Brandt who is visit- ‘driven by Charles Fordyce, 19, of
Eisenhower's only announced Pre acted
'Township. Fordyce told police his, ship police.
6 down an em
liam Beaumont Hospital ofa frac-
tured skull. David was visiting his
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. A. Taylor of Farmington
Township, with his family,
The Waterford Township youth
died at Pontiac General Hospital
Sunday after suffering a fractured
skull in a smashup last Thursday.
* * *
He had been a pasenger in a car Highland Rd., Waterford
auto hit a patch of ice on a curve
on Airport road and then rolled
over, smashing into a tree.
* * *
Fordyce was released from the
hospital and is scheduled to make
an official statement at the Oak- by Car; Teenager Dies
A Harper Woods boy and Water-
ford Township teenager died yes-
terday in area hispitals as the)
result of separate auto accidents.
Dead are David M. White, 9, of
David; one of five children of
‘and Mrs Jerome R. White,
was sledding with his brother
a hill alongside| prs
Oakland W. 1 Ni oad Find Runaway Boy wa hard Lak d, .
ghway) chart taker Dead Near His Home in 59 Township, ac-
cording to town-
The boy slid
bankment onto
the road into the path. of a car
driven by Vito Geluso, 34, of 18424
Myron St., Livonia.
* * *
He died three hours later in Wil-
ihad reported seeing him at a
This Citizen Suggests
an Easier Way Out
of $35,127, Nation Slips
and Sloshes
— Snow, Rain
By The Associated Press
The major part of the nation
slipped and sloshed in ice, snow
and -rain today as winter's rough
elements poured out qa mixture of
foul weather,
A cold wave stung the North
east and Northern Midwest,
A treacherous area of freeting
rain or driazle extended over
wide areas in the central part
of the country,
Considerable fog blanketed many
sections in the Midwest and across
wide areas in the Gulf Coast re-
gion and South Atlantic states.
Ice glaze warnings were issued
by the Weather Bureau to motor-
ists and stockmen in the central
plains area. Driving was extreme-
ly hazardous in many areas.
Freezing temperatures. hit
Southern California early today
in the wake of q storm which
struck with rain, hail, snow,
thunder and lightning.
The weekend storm ended a
near-record drought in the Los An-
geles area,
After briefly cleared skies, more
wet weather is expected,
Temperatures plummeted early
today as the storm moved south.
Many citrus areas reported read-
ings from 29 to 31.
Snow fell as low as 2,500 feet
Sunday, hitting some of Los Ange-
les' foothill suburbs.
Hail even pelted Southern Cali-
fornia beach cities.
In London, influenza and an epi-
demic of measles, helped by Brit-
ain's winter smog, today were fill-
ing hospitals to capacity and fore-
ing doctors to work emergency
hours.
The smog that swept Britain last
month brought a heavy toll of lung) .
complaints, sore throats and cold. ) Glassy Roads;
Some Acci One Auto Rams. Rear
of Bus Carrying: 40
Rochester Students —
A freezing rain brought
hazardous driving condi-
tions early this morning,
forcing a number of area
schools to close, and slow-
ing motorists on their way
to work.
Sleet caused schools in
Huron Valley, Southfield,
Walled Lake and Brandon.
Township to cancel today’s
classes.
In Metamora, the school was
open, but the single bus was forced
~ /to return without students after the
driver found the rural roads too
glazed to permit safe driving,
school officials reported,
Waterford schools were open,
but the buses were not running
today,
One minor accident, involving a
ear which rah into the rear of a
Rochester school bus, was report-
ed today by the Rochester Police
Department, Driver of the car was
Howard Miller, 18, of 5730 N. Roch.
ester Rd.
Miller told police he was unable
to stop on the icy pavement at the
corner of Fifth and Helen streets
at 8 a.m, The driver of the school
40 students, was Roberta Moore,
2889 Emmons St., Rochester.
No one wags hurt in the mishap
and né one was iticketed, police
On the heels of that, cases of the
four-day flu began pouring into the|
already overflowing hospitals.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—A boy,
who ran away from home after
being spanked, was found dead
Sunday in an abandoned building
a block from his home.
* * *
Inspector Walter Kracke said
the boy, Charles Matthews, 11, ap-
parently died of asphyxiation
caused by an unvented gas heater.
Anna Mae McClain, 32, told, po-
lice she last saw her son wher he
left for school Friday morning.
She had given him a spanking a
few minutes earlier for misbe-
havior, she said,
* * «
She didn’t report him missing,
she added, because he had run
away before, and a neighbor boy
movie Saturday.
“I knew he was around here
somewhere,’’ she said.
WEST WILDWOOD, N.J. (AP)
—Borough Council members have
approved hiring a municipal -con-
sultant to suggest ways in which
they can spend a treasury surplus
land County Prosecutors Office to-|
day. The accident occurred at,
ing the U nited States. about 1:30 Thursday. dents had a suggestion: lower the
laxes. One of the approximate 500 resi-
‘Return to Lansing Tonight
GOP Legislators to Map
Sales Tax Hike Strategy LANSING (AP)—This well could be the
week in the Legislature that
Shortly after they return
Democratic votes.
The GOP House inembers
the i-cent salés tax increase issue to a
statewide vote in the April 6 election, along
roposition expressly authorizing a |
tax on individual income.
Williams has said he will not lend
any help unless the Republicans take a
party stand.for some sort of tax pro-
gram in the event the ballot proposi- with
sradustad
tion meets, defeat.
question. It accepted his offe
bargaining session at 10:30 a
x * *
per square mile for col ws
pest for the. Republican 4-cent sales tax move:
recess at 8 p.m, tonight, Republican House
members will caucus’on how'to proceed in
negotiations with Gov. Williams for 19 vital
A Republican delegation that conferred
with him last Thursday said it was not-
empowered nor prepared to speak on this
The governor indicated that whgt would please
tells the tale pledge, if the
from a 3-day keyed to new
An early
want to put
of the month
It calls for
seemed likely
r for another
m. Tuesday, lost, to.support his $140,000,000 tax plan
and corporation profits.
the Republican cause because of a deadline
’ for putting their proposal into effect.
Constitutional propositions will have to
win final legislative approval by the end
The governor hopes to get his rem-
edy for the state’s cash emergency mov-
ing again within the next day or two.
Veterans Trust Fund.
The four-bill package is tied up in a
House Ways and Means Committee, which
for debate without much further delay.
. The governor plans to get the bali roll-
ing on state government reorganization
soon, possibly Wednesday, He has seven
resolutions ready to submit under a 1958
law permitting him to initiate reorganiza-
tion proposals. him most was a Republican
constitutional questions are
levies on individual income
understanding is crucial to
to qualify for the ballot.
mortgaging the $50,000,000
to get it out on the floor “tapping and racketeering said,
Numerous multi-car accidents
—one involving 30 cars-—-Were re-
ported as Detroit area motorists
inched thelr glazed
Cars on U:S. 16 (Grand River)
Police.
The ice storm was centered on
southern Michigan, and up to four
inches of snow was reported in the
up to 30 m.p.b. drifted snow in the
Sault Ste. Marie area, piling new
snow on top of.some 30 inches
already on the ground,
Warmer temperatures were ex-
pected to ease precipitation to-
day, but the weatherman said
more of the traffic - smarting
freezing rainis forecast Tuesday.
The storm is expected to last
through Wednesday when colder
temperatures will reach’ the state.
The lowest temperature record-
ed in downtown Pontiac before $
a.m, was 10 above zero. At 1 p.m.
the mercury registered 27,
News Flashes D,ETROIT @—An unidentified
motorist stopped his car on the
sleet-covered Ford Expressway
to clear’ his windshield today. An
hour later police had untangled
the last of 30 cars involved in a
chain collision,
One policeman was injured
slightly when his scout car joined
the other cars in the tangle, Most
of the cars suffered minor dam:
ages,
“The car of the motorist who
had stopped was not hit. Po-
lice said it drove away”
after the collision started,
NEW YORK Ww — Benjamin
Franklin Collins, Detroit Union
official and close associate of
Teamsters President James BR,
Hoffa, was sentenced today by
U.S. District Judge John M, ‘cash
in to three years i
for perjury.
The case developed from ri
in .Lo-
cal 299 of the International &
is secretary-treasurer 0
cal. Hoffa is president of
union,
cal aa well as head of the gate
bus, which had @ full load of about
were backed up bumper-to-bumper
for five or six miles at about 10
a.m, today between Middlebelt and
the section just east of Lahser
road, according to Redford State
northern part of the state, Winds
«
i z if fin
| z vf
E e to Clean ean House og % oie
ea
nto Tea orot msters Revolt Against Hoffa's Authority
"t) TORONTO A 21-cent-an-hour increase. Critics
irregularities; in the ratification
vote,
The three-year contract, cover-
ing 7,000 employes of 65 companies
in Eastern Ontario, provided a
Awaiting Report
in Strange Death Lab’s Findings May
Tell How Cafe Society
Woman Died
NEW YORK (AP) — A labora-
tory report in preparation may
shed some light on the mysterious
{death of Mrs. Bette Davis,
year-old cafe society figure.
The medical examiner's office
said the report_ may be ready
Tuesday.
* *
Mrs. Davis was found slumped
over an empty bathtub in her $40-
a - day suite in the fashionable
Hotel Savoy Hilton Friday night.
An autopsy report said death
was due to visceral congestion,
but a chemical analysis of the
vital orgnas was ordered to deter-
mine the precise cause.
* *
Mrs, Davis, a pretty, blonde di-
vorcee and former model, and Sin-
clair Robinson, wealthy financier
and lawyer, had taken out a mar-
riage license Dec. 5 at Greenwich,
Conn, :
Justice of the Peace Tom C.
Golden of Greenwich was to per-
form the ceremony. He said Sun-
that a friend of Robinson's
him Robinson's secretary said
had been instructed to call off
wedding arrangements,
© &
Police have refused to confirm
reports a letter from Robinson day
told
she
the idon Newman, a member of the
‘Contract Bargaining Committee,
presented a motion to put the local
\into trusteeship, like Teamster lo-
icals at Hamilton and Windsor.
* * *
Trusteeship is a device employed
by union headquarters to strip
localg of their autonomy when it
is felt they have become incapable
of governing themselves.
Some mémbers shouted con.
demnation of the proposal.
Others yelled at Dodds: “Go
back to Windsor and stay there.”
Others sald that once a Union
lost control of ite affairs, it never
regained the driver's seat,
The Windsor local has been in
trusteeship about 14 years, Ham- The uproar started when Gor-| .
ROLLED BOXCARS — Thirteen cars of a
125-car freight train were derailed at Greensboro,
N. C. yesterday, blocking the main line of the THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9.
was blamed on Southern Railroad for eight hours.
AP Wirephote
The mishap
a hot bearing.
Youngster Flies
to Happy Reunion
With Mother
* LOS ANGELES (AP) ~A curly
haired who hiked
jungles
in search of his mother files to
{lton for six.
* * * |
After the members simmered
30-| down, they voted to set up a com-|
hire a lawyer to help it along.
The men agreed to convert $2,600)
in bonds, their remaining assets, |
into cash to pay him.
members demanded that
McDougall be suspended. Dodds
argued he could be suspended only
by Hoffa, The members suspe
him anyway and voted to wire
Hoffa the news.
R. H. Smith Acquires.
Knudsen Realty Co.
Announcement was made today
of the acquisition of the William
H. Knudsen Realty firm by Rolfe
H. Smith, for the past nine years
associated with the Roy Annett Inc.
realty firm, 28 E. Huron St.
Smith, of 6450 Maybee Rd.,
Clarkston, joined with the Annett
business in 1950 after 24 years with
the Consumers Power Co.'s Wayne
County district h Ryooes.
*
Knudsen, of 201 Navajo Dr., will)
continue his association with his telling Mrs. Davis of the broken
engagement was found in the dead
woman's suite,
Robinson, a bachelor, was re-
ported to be at his home in Bever-
ly Hills, Calif.
In Buffalo, Mo., Mrs. Davi’
mother, Mrs. Lulu Quisenberry,
made arrangements for funeral
services there Thursday.
a war rather than being taken out
of Berlin.”
His testimony, made public
during the weekend also fore-
cast a tougher Soviet line in the
cold war.
Dulles said he sees no split wid-
ening between the Soviet Union
and Red China. He contended also
this country hag no way of pulling
out of Quemoy and Matsu — target
mer—without losing the whole Far
East.
Michigan Posts
The Weather
. Fell U. 8. Weather Berean Report
VICINITY: .
Low Toll Again 2 Boys on Sleds Are
Among 3 Weekend
Traffic Victims
By The Associated Press
Two boys killed in sledding ac-
n rise 2 am. cidents on snow-covered roads
: Pt ‘ Tuesdey "te acne Ari were among the three traffic
é 7 Semeadaies Sammtecinnes deaths reported in Michigan over
‘ine “HE @.m.....4.64.98! the kend
ei oognassd8 42 noon, ........28 weexend.
s § SB v--cheers 1 P-Bhes ccc: ceed? * * *
bid pansestese Ice and snow driving hazards
eeeene
5 dll Med Adie dda dda deedntalits
. 4.
recorded ,
a
vee ree a e¥Seb bee den dtd
i FASE PRE rere : |
be igbagerereseans vel
ig
pera wittt sasenne Jiand ended at midnight Sunday, were credited by State Police
with keeping the fatality toll
down. It was the sixth straight
weekend this year in which be-
low average traffic death tolls
‘were reported,
The Associated Press fatality
count started at 6 p.m. Friday
+ * old firm, with offices located at 244
§. Telegraph Rd., with most of his
time devoted with real estate ap-
praisals.
He is past president and director
of the Pontiac Board of Realtors.
He once served as director of the
Pontiac Area Chamber of Com-
merce and Oakland County Chap-
ter of Society of Real Estate Ap-
praisers.
* *
Smith currently is vice president
of the Pontiac Board of Realtors
and past secretary. He is a mem-
ber of the Pontiac Area Chamber
of Commerce.
Civil Defense Classes
Beginning in Waterford
Two public classes in civil de-
fense begin at 7:30 p.m. tonight
in Waterford Township, said Lloyd
Gidley, assistant director of civil
defense for the township. mittee with broad powers and | New Orleans today and a happy
reunion with her,
_ Carlos Telmco ‘ince Jr., 14, ran
away from his home in Bogota,
Celombia, last July because he
did not believe his father’s story
that his mother had died years
ago.
He came to Los Angeles, his
birthplace, looking for clues. A
news story carried o The
Associated Press wires was read
nded|by his mother, Margie Hill, now
working ag a waitress in Crystal
Springs, Miss. They talked to each
other on the telephone Saturday.
Mrs. Hill has not sen her son
in eight years, She and the boy's
father, a Colombian airlines pilot,
were divorced.
Mrs. Hill said she plans to be in
New Orleans when her son ar-
rives. :
Heart Ailment Claims
‘Wild Bill’ Donovan (Continued From Page One)
ed Donovan the National Secur-
ity Medal.
Donovan was defeated in 1932
when he ran as the Republican
candidate for governor of New
York, The winner was Herbert H.
Lehman.
A lawyer, Donovan served after
World War II on the war crimes
prosecution staff that prepared evi-
dence against the principal Nazi
war criminals tried at Nuernberg.
In the field of diplomacy, Dono-
van once served as ambassador to
Thailand,
A native of Buffalo, N.Y., Don-
ovan was an outstanding quar-
terback while attending Colum-
bia University.
Allen W. Dulles, director of the
Central Intelligence Agency, paid
tribute to Donovan as “‘the father
of central intelligence in the United
States.”
Army Secretary Wilber M.
Brucker said ‘‘the nation mourns
one of its great soldier-states-
men.”
»
* * *
Donovan's wife the former Ruth
Rumsey, along with a brother, the
Rev. Vincent Donovan, a Domini-
A 13-week course in medical
auxiliary training starts at John
|said, and a four-week course in
‘handling of evacuees and displaced OE ed Ce at cee arget|D. Pierce Junior High School, he| can priest, were at his bedside
\when he died, Surviving with his
widow and brother are a son Dav-
id, of Berryville, Va. and five
grandchildren. ,
persons is beginning at the Com-
munity Activities, Inc. building. Service will: be in Arlington Na-
tional Cemetery,
, Models? Although she looks like
: is / f Sener ag ce caer ate
: TOP FASHION MODEL? ~~ Is this young lady with oper Pee SN ee SR EM ome os eee
if ge ee
AP Wirephote
the flawless
complexion and look of cool detachment one of the top fashion’
one, Princess Alexandra of Kent
is too busy being a princess, to have time to be a model. She will
soon tour Central rica with her mother, the Duchess of Kent.
f *
ee Pega peer $400,000 in
From Miami
and other jewelry from the Gems Stolen
Beach Hotel MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (P?—A thief, perhaps a gem ex-
pert, stole a reported $400,000 in diamonds, emeralds
hotel suite of a vacationing
New York auto rental magnate.
The theft Sunday was the biggest in the history of
Island of Crete
Has Busy Port Recovers From Wars;
Even Exports Spaghetti
to Italy
WASHINGTON—Like most isles
of Greece, Crete has withstood the
perennial plagues of the Aegean
—war and cataclysm.
Iraklion, the chief port, teems
with ships. In the mountainous
farmlands, thousands of windmills
spin like pinwheels to pump water
into fields that were once deeply
wooded. One acre in three is
farmed.
In an article entitled “Poseidon's
Playground,” Gilbert M. Gros-
\venor reports on Crete and other
jAegean Isles in a recent issue
of National Geographic Magazine.
Grosvenor, who is a picture editor
of the magazine, cruised the
Aegean with American friends in
a 52-foot yawl.
HISTORIC SITES LOGGED
The island-hopping odyssey
logged ancient landmarks, Bibli-
cal sites and legendary homes of
gods.
* * *
The Americans’ itinerary too
tee to Rhodes, where modern
|shops are nestled in walls of a
‘Crusader fortress; to Thira and
majestic Idhra; to Greece’s holy
peninsula of Mount Athos; to
Mikonos whose dazzling-white port
has 365 churches to serve 2,500
|people; and to the deserted soli-
jtude of Delos, the mythical birth-
place of Apollo.
* * *
They followed St. Paul’s route
to Chios and Mytilene (Lesvos)
which — of all things — exports
spaghetti to Italy.
Crete with 460,000 population is
by far the largest of the Aegean
Isles. Its past is revealed by many
small details. A farmer’s baggy
trousers and fezlike cap show, for
instance, the land’s long-felt Turk-
* * *
ish influence.
“His plow, hand sickle, and
threshing floor differed little from
those of ancients,” Grosvenor
wrote,
Crete recovered quickly from the
hardships of World War II. Irak-
lion is a bustling city.
* * ®
Whole sides of beef and mutton
sway from butcher's doorways.
Plums, grapes, bananas, and
fresh vegetables make a palette
of markets.
Though American tourists are
rare on Srete,, any visitors are
welcomed warmly.
Expect 350 Persons
for Realtors Banquet
Approximately 350 persons are
expected to attend the 43rd annual
banquet of the Pontiac Board of
Realtors. at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow
at Elks Temple.
* * *
Main speaker will be Dr. Charles
E. Irvin, an East Lansing business
and sales consultant, whose ap-
pearance has been arranged with
the cooperation of General Motors
Corp., said Alcuin G. Kampsen,
retiring board president
Cramer E. Partridge, a Pontiac .
‘
realtor, will. be installed as. 1959
board president, :
e .. *
Harold Meininger, vice president
of the Michigan Real Estate Assn.,
will also,address the meeting brief-
ly, said Kampsen. ! LZ *: i * Miami Beach luxury hotels.
The FBI assigned 20 agents
to the case.
The jewelry was owned by Leon
C. Greenebaum, chairman of the
board of Hertz Car Rental Corp.,
his wife, and her sister, Mrs, Arth-
ur Cole, also of New York.
Greenebaum told newsmen
someone either overlooked or
chosé hot to take some of the
gems.
Mrs, Cole interrupted the inter-
view with “I do not want any of
this in the newspapers.”
She and her husband operate
Mr. Mort, one of New York City’s
leading dress houses.
Because some of the jewelry
was not taken, officers theorized
the thief was a professional, knew
how to appraise gems and knew
what he was after.
The largest piece was a $180,-
000 ring. The other pieces were
mostly diamond and emerald
bracelets and necklaces, The
jewels were insured.
At first, police figured the theft
was $500,000. Later they scaled it
‘\down to $400,000,
“That $500,000 figure is a little
high,”’ said Greenebaum, Later he
said “I guess the amount was
close to half that amount.”
The police said, however, they
are sticking to their $400,000 esti-
mate,
* * *
Mrs, Greenebaum and Mrs, Cole
wore the jewelry on an outing
Saturday night. The FBI and po-
lice said the thief possibly spotted
it then. Greenebaum declined to
——— where they had
The three spent part of Sunday
away from their $100 a day suite
in the American Hotel. Upon re-
turn at 4:30 p.m. to pack for a
trip to New York, they found the
jewelry missing.
Why, Jayne!
Leaves Ball
in Her Undies
RIO DE JANEIRO i — Jayne
Mansfield left a carnival ball Sun-
day in her undies and her hus-
band’s dinner jacket after enthusi-
astic fans pulled off her dress,
She and her husband, muscle-
man Mickey Hargitay, were danc-
ing at a local hotel when some of
her Brazilian fans started plucking
at little flower decorations on the
pink lace dress. Then someone
pulled the zipper in the back and
the souvenir hunters ripped up
the dress as it fell to the floor.
Hargitay said his wife was
bruised slightly and also lost her
earrings. NEW YORK, N.Y. — The un Today's Bachelor Girls:
Pay for Glamor of City |:
today she has them in a unique
day in which we are living,
Man, 82, Burned
in House Fire Charles King Injured
in One City Blaze; 2nd
Damages Vacant Home
Two house fires this weekend in
Pontiac resulted in a total of more
than $5,000 damages and injury
to one man.
Charles King, 82, was admited
to Pontiac General Hospital Satur-
day afternoon with burns suffered
in a fire at his home at 21 Bellevue
St.
King, said firemen, apparently
dezed off while smoking a pipe
in an upholstered chair in his
living reom. Firemen said the
fire originated in the chair and
King received first and second
degree burns to face and hands
trying to put out the biaze.
He was described in fair condi-
tion today. The firs was confined
mainly to, the living room of the
one-story from house. Firemen said
damages were estimated at $1,000
to the house and contents.
x«* *«
Just past midnight today a fire
brokeout in a two-story vacant
duplex at 31 Allison St,
Firemen from three stations
fought the blaze for two hours.
Damages were estimated at
$4,500 to the building. There was
no furniture in the structure.
Officials said the firs at times
endangered houses nearby but did
not spread to the neighboring struc-
tures. Defective wiring was re-
ported t o be the cause.
Congress to Get
Ike's Plan to Aid
School Building
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President
Eisenhower sends Congress today
his plan to give the nation more
classrooms, probably by spending
federal money to help needy school
districts and colleges pay off their
construction bonds. j
Arthur S. Flemming, secretary
of health, education and welfare,
will unveil the program at a news
conference shortly before it is sub-
mitted to the House and Senate.
Flemming said in advance there
was ‘“‘no question” that schools
needed federal aid. He said the
President's plan would provide that
help. But he gave no details.
A caeeenmentttiaticememmatiatitenmmmemme
Woman, 72, Proves
She’s Not Too Old
BEN LOMOND, Calif. (UPI)—A
72-year-old woman, who believes
that “people get it in their heads
they are too old to do things,’’ has
just completed an 8,000-mile camp-
ing trip to eae"
* *
Mrs, Etta Konigshofer, who in-
tends to live another 30 years,
made the trip in a Volkswagen
Microbus equipped with running
water and electricity,
“Everywhere people were
amazed that I traveled alone,’’ she
said. “But alone is a wonderful
word. There was no reason for mé
to be afraid. Who would harm an
old woman?”’
TODAY IS DIFFERENT
Not today! Today she goes to
the big cities and looks for new
experiences, for ‘‘glamor jobs’ in
tions. And she pays the price!
There’s morals or monotony in
riage.
Big city men don’t want to get
married; they're having too good
a time. The ideal situation, for
many girls, would be to work for
a year or two after graduation
from secretarial school or college,
and during that time meet the man
they later marry. Thus they would
have the benefits of working ex-
ending before their maturity turns
into cynicism. ,
But, unfortunately,
work that way.
What's a girl to do?
Hold Husband
in Wife's Death Police Say Dearborn it doesn’t
Admitted Shooting
admitted killing his wife in an
today on a murder charge.
Wayne County Sheriff's -
ment said Mrs, Stella Binkowski,
captured a short time afterward.
Mager said the man fied the
house in Dearborn Township
after the shooting but was appre-
hended minutes later in nearby
Nankin Township. He said one
of the victim’s teenaged children
by a previous marriage told him
Binkowski and her mother had
argued about an insurance check
before the shooting.
Mager quoted the youngster as
saying the woman insisted Binkow-
a her.
Assistant Prosecutor William
Bledsoe said Binkowski told him:
“I made up my mind to...
kill her when I got up this morn-
ing. But maybe I wouldn't have
done it if she had talked right
to me,”” cause it was made
*® *
at Ypsilanti State Hospital.
Dads Play Football
ITHACA, N. Y. (UPI)—The 1958
Ithaca College football team had
eight married men on the squad
with 11 children among them. The
college posted a 6-1 record, best in
its history.
Thief Played Safe
Genesee Presbyterian Church taped
her only $142 plus gas. up the loose wires he left behind.
Not Even an Atmosphere to Carry Sound
WASHINGTON~If men succeed
in reaching the moon, they will
find themselves in a desolate world
without air to breathe or water to
drink, 7
As they move about, their feet
will pad silently in dry dust, for
there is no atmosphere to carry
sound,
are they likely to-find any traces
of lite as they have known it,
The planet they have
mosphere si rays
than those of any other color. The
sky will be black because the
moon lacks an atmosphere to scat-
ter any light rays, ’
LUCKIER THAN COLUMBUS
visitors will be far more fortunate |
than Columbus when he entered a!
af i
i : !
5 fk & &
oS + ig Men Will Find Desolafe World on Moon composition is quite distinct from
that of meteorites.
ANY VOLCANOES?
Scientists have speculated that
tektites might be bits of moon sub-
stance, hurled into space during a and different way — typical of the
publishing, TV, the theater, adver- ©
tising agencies and large corpora- .
this catch - if-catch- can world, °
states Miss Jaffe, but no mar-
perience, the confidence and the ~
maturity it brings, plus a happy .
Township Man Has .
DETROIT W—A 45-year-old for. .
mer mental patient who police say ~
argument over a check was held ©
Detective Leo Mager of the ;
ski couldn’t cash the check be- .
said Binkowski had been a patient .
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPID—Police _
say a thief who stole three flood- 5
lights from the lawn of the East . “ a
Re.
ae
lunar explosion. Eventually the .
molten substance hardened and fell *
to earth.
Doubtless, scient ific adventurers
on the moon would look for tektites -
and for signs of lunar explosions. Hn
's iH
ef 0” * f
. ww “
y
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, REBRU. ARY. 9, 1950 wm
A Mans Warld? +
a has ‘and Rockeféller Enter GROUND, N.M. (AP) — About,
one-fifth of the 9,000 persons work-}
ing for the Army Missile Test Cen-|.
ter, the Naval Ordnance Missile
Test Facility and private industry} -
contractors at this proving ground
are women, Members of the fairer
sex hold down jobs ranging from
technical and engineering posi-
tions in the guided missile pro-
gram to clerical and stenographic
work, Crucial Pre-Nomination Period nro
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON (AP)—Time and
events between now and 1960 will
affect chances of both Vice Pres-
ident Richard M. Nixon and New
York's Gov,
How Long
Since You've
Been Back
to School ?
How many times have you
told yourself you could have
taken on a prospective po«
sition, were you better
prepared in Accounting,
Shorthand, Typewriting or
General Business Adminis-
tration knowledge? You can
fi fit these and other skills
into your experience with
convenient courses here. No
conflict with regular employ-
ment hours — able and
qualified instruction from
experts.
(Oly
mr * “ox
Call at School. Write, or Phone for 1959 Bulletin
The Business Institute
PONTIAC 7 W. Lawrence St.
VETERAN FE 2-3551
APPROVED Nelson Rockefeller’ .i- political attractiveness, at
‘the country will be watching him.
Special Carload Purchase
Brings You a Special Low
Price on This Beautiful
MAYTAG Automatic Washer and Dryer for the Republican presidential
nomination. :
The pressure. of events, and the
two men's responses to them, will
almost certainly raise or lower
least as compared with each oth-
er, before it's time for the Re-
publican nominating convention.
kik & |
The very nature of the vice
presidency ordinarily leaves the
holder of that office overshadowed
by the White House and with little
more to do than preside over the
Senate, So Nixon might seem the
one least likely to be affected by
events and therefore best able to
retain, What popularity he already
has,
Rockefeller's job requires more
direct action, The governor's lead-
ership, his administrative ability,
his ‘policies and his thinking and
therefore his voter appeal will un-
dergo in these next two years both
testing and examination,
* * *
He can't stand still. His per-
formance as governor of the na-
tion’s richest and most populous
state will tend to increase or di-
minish his presidential prospects,
since voters of both parties around
He has already shown a willing-
ness to stick his neck out, Almost
his first action as governor has
called forth protests by some vot-
ers who would be affected by what
he wants: he has asked the Re-
publican-run legislature for a 2T7-| .
million-dollar tax increase, includ-
ing a boost in income taxes,
His reasoning: he wants to avoid
a deficit in state spending and bal-
Both
for...
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; him an assignment which could af-! and amt ways to maintain reason-
fect his 1960 chances and lies fhe price stability while sustain- Honer Creek Indian
the same field—economics--which| ing economic growth. ri f
has Rockefeller. involved now.
The. President named him chair
Blue Eagle, Creek 1 art
Poulty raisers expect to “pro:| from Okmulgee, Okla. feav-| :
1.815 billion broilers for the/ily. at the American Indian Ex-
examine the bevblems of inflation | nation's dinner tables in 1959. | position: here. His painting, “But. detagas ste ig tte
CASH MARKE. ay:
78 NO. SAGINAW PONTIAC
FOR THOSE LENTEN MEALS
Farm Fresh
3 “a Doz.
ance the budget while still provid-
ing enough funds to avoid cutting)
some state social programs, like |
aid to education and localities, He
has a fight on his hands and at
this moment can not be sure of
winning,
Nixon,- whose job calls for little
need to stick out his neck, could
rock away his time in the Senate, |
avoiding stands on controversial
issues which might cost him pop-
ularity.
* * *
But Nixon is an aggressive man. |
He may feel it necessary for)
him to take sides—or he may feel
forced into it as°a member of the | “FRESH DRESSED
PAN-REDI FRYERS
“29 FRESH FROZEN
OCEAN PERCH
FILLETS
“™) o}
QUEEN COLBY ie
MILD amie |
SF LARGE
EGGS vin"
Eisenhower administration—on is. CENTER CUT Lb ¢ | SOSNER S¥vLE Lb 1. sues n nd ; : =:
mcs pending bere coer ll SLICED HAM. “79° | corned seer...." 49*F grams and policies from civil =eewcecccese decid :
rights to defense and controlled| Center Cut This Valuable Coupon Entities the |
spending. hoe stands oh wack. be Bearer to a lb. Limit Fresh Cc
A; (REMUS
PORK
sues could boost him or bruise Good lb
een padigreaded arene ont : Tues. and e
ra siness W e an Wed,
interest in most of the issues, CHOPS BUTTER Only WITH MEAT PURCHASE The President already has given te
a)
- The Lessons of Scouting
To develop in the boy those attributes of strength and character, physical .
growth, spiritual beliefs, cooperative effort and personal skills that he will
carry into manhood for betterment of community and self ... these are
the great lessons of the Boy Scouts. We congratulate every boy, man and
woman who is a part of this wonderful organization and upon the 49th
Birthday of its founding in The United States of America.
“A Scout Is Thrifty’ .
A good law for everyone. Thousands of Scouts and
Scouters have chosen our bank for theirs. We appre-
ciate the confidence and opportunity to serve them. . . the Ninth Scout Law
Member i eT T TU TUTTI TT TTT TL irri tT
F. DuI.C.
Brenclied at W. Huron at Tilden... N. besrhai Glonwgap ... sopoabed
+ ss Walled Lage cadleian Lakers heheiaiees « MING miler
Within the Next Few Days
We Will Mail to You...
with OLD AMERICAN of KAN- SAS CITY, No obligation of any
kind. No one will call on you.
‘Tear out this ad and mail it to-
day with your name, address and
year of birth to Old American
Insurance Co., 3 West 9th, Dept. slide ,000,
the same 10 years, the total
13% million jobs that must be
filled by the under 25s and men
and-women 45 and older.
‘| FACE SCARCITY
Then, too, industry, education
and. business—growing more tech-
nical—face a growing scarcity of
technically trained and experi-
enced men, They will be less and
less able to afford to bypass skilled
workers, regardless: of age.
Labor Department experts give).
these examples:
1. One Western college now takes.
only “retired” professors aged 60
and over. It's making a reputation
with an all-star group that’s. the
envy of many another campus,
2. A Texas‘ sales firm now re-
|. fuses to employ anyone under 465,
It has found “more mature” men
ery the best salesmen.
3.*A, manufacturing concern has
set up a branch plant in Florida
to attract retired brains back. into
business, The oldstets insisted -
living in Florida, only wanted
work a few hours a day. So the
company set up the new plant,
agreed to the short work week.
number of employed is expected) —
to rise by 14 million. That’s about) -
"GOVERNMENT SURVEYS SHOW — In some jobs older men and women are more reliable, more considered in their judgments,
and more accurate in detail work than younger persons;~ — ‘ t
Ider Workers Lesse
Cows, Hens, Muscle Men
Step Up Yield With Music
NEW YORK (UPI)—The beat of
piped-in music has production LG221A, Kansas City, Missouri.
Ss
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$3 DELIVERS _ ima] Hospital, dogs and cats took
.jmen for strength of grip. Six of humming in 20,000 plants and of-
fices across the nation.
But workers aren't the only ones
being swayed by the melodious
rhythms.
* *
At McKeesport, Pa,, experiment-
ers found that music in the cow-
barn increased the yield of milk.
In the Springfield,..Mass, Ani-
to fighting when the hospital's mu-
sic-making apparatus went on the
blink.
Seon after music drifted inte
the roosts of a Dayton, Ohio,
chicken farm, efx laying went up
14 per cent.
And on a poultry farm in Tar-
iffville, Conn.,. Rock Cornish hens
have been putting on more weight
despite a reduction in rations —
sinee lilting tunes have inveded the
hen house.
* * *
But with human chicks, music,
apparently, has just the opposite
effect. It is used by two nation-
wide chains of reducing salons,
MUSIC HAS POWER
To prove that music has an ef-
fect on the senses, medical science
has run some strange experiments.
Dr. Charles M, Diserins, of the
University of Cincinnati, tested 10
them were stronger when music
‘was played.
* * *
Another experimenter played the
“National Emblem March’ and
measured physiological response
to the beat. Just about every body
function was stimulated, including
the cardiovascular system, muscu-
ler activity, working power, diges-
tion and secretions,
In a six-day bleycle race at
Madison Square Garden, riders
who pedalied to music averaged
19.6 miles per hour; those with-
out, 17.9 miles per hour.
Scientists first analyzed the pow-
er of music in industry in 1938,
charting the effect of melody on
girls in a chocolate factory. Out-
put improved from 6.2 to 10.2 per
cent when music was played.
ac Ef From coast to coast, it is esti-|
Open Monday Pork mater that 50 million persons
A work or play each day to piped:
end Friday Behind in music, . +
Evenings Store Uses range from cradle to grave.
. a M. It’s F Up-to-the-minute delivery suites in
. . s Free maternity hospitals use it. And so
- ~ 9 p. $. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lake Ave. deen the Chinas Mcctoary te Oele
. ramento, Calif.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1950”
4
“4 man will send in a request
for 10 clerks. He'll require they
be under 40, When that happens
we get on the phone, or send
someone around, find out why
they must be under 40. .
But it’s slow work.”
counselor:
considered in their judgments.
often.
younger workers.
himself, not by his age."
just that. “We'll often find it's just an idea
in the employer's mind, and that
his interest in other qualifications
is greater than his interest in age.
Job surveys are helping the De-
partment of Labor. and the Em-|,
ployment Service in this drive,
They show that in some work older
men and women are considerably
better than youngsters. Says one
“They're more reliable, more
They're more accurate in detailed
work. They don't shift jobs 80
“Even in factories, work output
doesn't go down rapidly until the
70s. We're finding that many older
workers produce more than many
So we're telling
the employers to judge a man for
‘These counselors see signs that
employers are beginning to do
| mumici, swtzeriand ue) —
cuir agrenneet todey one draft
the | constitution for an independent
ce| cyprus, with the Turkish minority
fo have a veto over matters of
foreign relations, defense and* in-
ternal security.
+ * *
The tentative charter would ane
the North Atidntic Treafy ization control of military
on. the British crown colony island
in the eastern Mediterranean. But
it has not yet been agreed whether
Greek or Turkish troops will re.
place those parts of the British
garrisons fo be withdrawn.
The question of the garrisons
may be left for further discus-
sions when Prime Ministers Con-
meet later with British Prime
Minister Macmillan.
As far as constitutional arrange-
ments are concerned, Britain re-
portedly has informed Greece and
1 Turkey it will accept any solution
they agree on. The conferees are
keeping London closely informed
of the progress.
Cyprus has been wracked by
strife—and NATO defenses in the
eastern Mediterranean threatened
- since November 1955 when
Greek Cypriots stepped up a guer-
rilla-terrorist. campaign to join
Cyprus with Greece.
* * *
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oe
Undercover strategy...
gentle elastics plus’ ;
firming panels equal slimmer lines!
ee ay (4
ye .
Could. Be Mom and Dad——Abby -
by ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
_. “DEAR ABBY; Your letter
in which the little girl (age
15) was ‘done wrong’ by a
soldier _really
; irked. me, I'll
grant, not all
gentlemen, but
what about. the
girls? ‘You can't
ell me that a
15-year-old girl
doesn't know
‘right from
' wrong.-Don't be
so ‘quick to
judge the sol- dier, It is equally wrong to
put temptation before men
who are weak. So who is
really to blame? The soldier
who fell or the girl who tempt- ed him?”
JOHN
DEAR JOHN: Neither, The
guilty parties are the parents
of both who failed -to teach
their children the importance
of high moral behavior and
strength of character when the
flesh is weak.
* * *
“DEAR ABBY: I read in
your column where the 15-
year-old girl got herself in trouble with a soldier. The
same thing happened to my
sister so | ore how her- fam-
white, Protestant,
drink, smoke or curse and
have never been arrested. I
hag. — for marriage but
was jilted
“y abe I am a total stran-
ger but feel that we could
make a go of it. If the girl’s
parents want ¢o contact me I
will answer all questions about
Graduate Corsetier
to assist you to a
proper fit.
Skippies Pantie No. 843 is a
wonderful example of Skippie-shaping. Light elastics with
built-in power mold hips and thighs . . . and do it
gently. Satin elastic front and back pariels have stretch selected
to give extra control. The 2% inch waistband shapes a
trimmer waistline. White in small, medium, large
and extra large. (Also available as Girdle No. 943.) Be smart
. » » buy two Skippies; one to wash and one to wear! Shown with “‘Confidential” Bra No. 281. Lightest
foam lining in cups to shape a prettier figure. White.
32-A to 36-B. $300
Charge Accounts Invited
Bohette Corset Shop 14 North Saginaw Street FE 2-6921
“ |
Fred: We're Through
Last year, maybe, you had a good excuse. You
said you were:waiting for the right one to come
along. But now! Here’s the most beautiful Buick
ever. With paint you don’t even have to wax.
With wonderful choices of colors and upholstery.
With fine car details wherever you look. “The” |
, _ car, at a price 2 out of 3 new car buyers can afford.
So if you don’t go to OLIVER MOTORS and talk
turkey, you and | are pfft!
OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101
i
be smart-fook smart
Pontiac Zonta Fair and Auction
will be held from 6 to 10 p.m. Feb. 18
at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan
Building. Admiring one of the prod-
'
Checking over lists of things yet to
do are Mrs. Douglas S. Baker, left,
and Mary Kelly, cochairmen. ceeds from
Pro- Ranch. ucts to be sold are, left to right, Mrs.
A. C. Ish, Mrs. Robert Mount and Mrs.
Chadd Mellinger.
Pontiac Press Photo
the affair will go to Girls’
Plans to Marry
BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Mrs.
Bruce Smith of Elkridge, Md.,
and H. Alexander Smith of
Washington, D.C., have an-
nounced the engagement of
their daughter, Mary Bruce
Smith, to Michael Torrey Shall-
cross. Michael is the son of Mrs. Clifford Bateman West of
Lone Pine road and John Shall-
cross of Glyndon, Md. He was
graduated from Cranbrook
School and is in his senior year
' at the University of Maryland.
Mary was graduated fro
Foxcroft (school), Middlebu
Va. She was introduced -to
society at the Bachelors Co-
tillion in Baltimore.
in any Alpha Delta Kappa
Plans Spring Tea
Mrs. Ruth Wright assisted,
Mrs. Walter Bennett was hostess
to Zeta Chapter of Alpha Delta
Kappa Sorority at her home on
Lorraine court Thursday evening.
| Who’ s.to Bian fag This Trouble? my background and character.
Please don't print my name
but send it to the girl along
with my address. Thank you.”
A SOLDIER
DEAR SOLDIER: Marriage
is more than ‘a mail-order
agreement between a girl whe
needs a favor and a boy who
is willing to grant it. Sorry, °
but I can’t put you in, touch
with this girl. You are one in
a million and I hope your un-
selfish and generous attitude
will be rewarded by the hap-
piness you reserve.
* * *
“DEAR ABBY: About the
15-year-old girl who got her-
self into that mess with .the
soldier: Really, if a girl is
dumb erough to fall for those_
lines before marriage, she
should expect her lines to
change, too.”
MOTHER OF BOYS
* * *
“DEAR ABBY: What do you
think of a girl who is 19 years
old, engaged to be married
and she asked -her mother to
give her a baby doll (a large
one) for Christmas? She has
a roomful of dollis.in all sizes
and colors. They are all over
her bed, sitting in her win-
dows and hanging from the
walls. When I told her I
thought she was too old to be
playing with dolls she said she
wasn't ‘playing’ with them,
she ‘collected’ them. I say,
‘What's the difference?’ Does
she sound grown up enough to
_get married?”
HER FRIEND
DEAR FRIEND: Many
grown-ups “‘collect’’ dolls as a
hobby, and there’s nothing
babyish about it — unless the
collector pretends she's the
Mamma. :
& * *
“DEAR. ABBY: A_ good
friend of my husband's makes
it a habit to drop in around
mealtime and naturally we
him.
“Last night was the last
straw. That big jerk looked at
the label on the beer bottle
and said it was the worst
beer ever brewed, but he drank
three bottles. My brainless
husband sat there and didn't
say a word. Don’t you think
he could have thought of
something to say?”
SILENT PARTNER
DEAR SILENT: Sometimes
it takes more brains to keep
your ee shut.
* *
For a socteaal reply, write
to ABBY in care of athis
paper. Enclose a self-ad-
dressed, stamped envelope.
Stork
Shower
Is Held
A pink and blue shower hon-
oring Mrs. Robert C. Phillips
Jr. (nee Patricia L, Dean) was
held Thursday evening at the
Blaine avenue home of Mrs.
Ralph J. Hedgewood
Guests were Mrs. Carl Betz,
Mrs, Kalmuth Blankenship,
Mrs. William Brown, Mrs.
Robert Lenz, Mrs. Keith Van
Kleek, Mrs. Lloyd B. Collier,
Mrs. Dorothy Kennedy and
Mrs, Barrett Harrison,
Others were Mrs, Robert
Coppersmith, Mrs. Norman
Haldane, Mrs. William Moore,
Mrs, Victor Johnson, Mrs, Ivan
Wischman, Mrs, Ruth Bedard,
Mrs, Jeanene Everett, Rose-
mary Cole, Dee Brim and Vir-
ginia Richardson.
Illinois has 50,000 acres of parks.
Plans were made for a spring|The parks include many colorful
tea to be held at the Mohawk road jexamples of
_ j|home of Mrs. Sam Hale. pioneer American)
homes. HELEN £. HACKMAN
Mr. and Mrs, Alva Hackman
ot Brownstown, Ind. announce
the engagement of their daugh-
ter Helen Louise, of Birming-
ham to Kenneth E. Calhoun,
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles FE. Ihoun. of Com-
merce, Mi Hackman is a
graduate of Concordia Teach-
ers College, River Forest, Ill,
and her fiance is attending
Walsh Institute, Détroit, An
April 5th wedding is planned.
Dr. Proud to Speak
Dr, Philip Proud will be
special guest at a meeting of |
the Pontiac Educational Secre-
taries Assn, at 7:30 p.m. Tues-
day at Washington Junior High
School.
Officers will be elected at
the event. al eel |
We Buy Ail Types of
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* Quality or
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a
OUR FEBRUARY SALE
you want — from
pert and. ma. terials aa
William Wrig ioht 270 Orchard Lake Ave. 7. 4:0558 . “Sver’ WING | | SOFA Your Choice of Fabrics brings you
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Furniture Makers
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Crystat clear—hard as a rock—withstands scuffing—
long weoring—brush or sptay——tack free in 2 hours.
Seve. Deller, on Jere scugacnd “*
Pe
| 436 Orchard Loke gaa give her the diamond enpepeuil ring on
Valentine's Day (Feast Day of Lovers) and
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emerald cuts - the
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Your
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we Ne a adit Wey ? ;
a ome scr arms AY, FEBRUARY 9, 1959
Us
Transt nission As the drill continue, pene Megpoered
: | lon | improved: his ability to mentally|tes® ‘People reg Moen Bhd
0 Froduce '|group other things besides furni- near regan fro |
New Coach VU ture. When he was. -el : loneliness when
New Cooch Part tolgeraton are trad tel * | ced we ce cae atm tr hen paral |
x buria ap Mileage, Detroit ot by ller Measure Seeks his Bs wife, the hospital and or even complete pbacw ]
a Orne? Longer Life Wednesday. Markets, as ot} to Keep Car Makers p bene withers commons the oe
“ng Out of Fir however, '
. GMC Truck inancing Field ,
prer_in gg 1 suc Lage apa ler Detroit Produce
for fataragy ‘coaches, that, give rau WASHINGTON ®—Ch airman |
5, ml : that give its Emanuel i" 3
5 better fuel milage, improves ae ocine Deticions, a. srescevece fOaS House Celle (D-NY) of the |
e b celeration and lengthens ‘| antitrust subcommittee
? ee ea lamas wing talee ee he is introducing a bill to divorce
: Philip J. Monagh y by Caer Mt ssesessennssessesp mg] auto financing from auto mani :
ol A at eneeal > areal vice president Horeeadu, seovssceneess 418) facturing, The Veterans Administration op-
hed : manger of the division generul|venna, voond.t don." Shutugiss: AM Similar legislation, which would ole large therapy centers in
were ame ‘ ‘ The trenemission, named “ Foray Rede j WD. se ssesees 8) atfect General Motors and Gen- er ee ‘and Long
, in the . The dreahit" provides overdrive in all ea DU, igh tsrceceee Fiera, a ang oes a Corp., al aphasia cases, that specialize in
su 5 f { 8 . ouse A eae . troduced in the i * . :
“Kozilek, vail and mathe, Mire, Atice|P & much aad main ee aioe jo etn. bt a Sena. : Treatment tne a these
Reaere we Seas as Mrs. ountry, Mona automobile indust
Hunt. John — Mrs. |The new develop ghan said. Poultry and Eggs camnmatralen at ry, Hatha poor ne. depending upon how
B hg he received confir- important step in —e — POULTRY er has preg ate damaged gecnipi brain has been
also finger print check|¢™#ineering program on Sole puns, gy lec Prices peid per| Where separation Dey A cam specialized ae ieee ving ‘the
Mrs, 5. that the body was Coaches and GMC rehire ges “Tetyy {ye hans da — ing ond fusmremee besinecs fro™ ee ieee othe (o mueca © ee
* . . executive said, A i. mary ives reter A fryer Rey manufacture is empen old jobs and live normal lives.
The FBI had “Hydrashitt wi Bi oe, sa . +.” Coller sald in & ote ¥
saetndenliintate, toon th Mrs.| inter-olty bus I do for the 0 toe, 80-24. peak peared te Plan to Hold
birth ata. when she gave operators what the | DETROIT £OGs : ° © Hold Conference
to @ son last year at W fully automatic torque con DETROIT (AP "The record of enf of Worl
over Air Force Base, Mass. wer transmission did for city cibeserd 4 en we suave gradess the antitrust laws in pipes = pie tow Coors
husband, John, 25, and the buses when i was intreduced 90 |3"- fant 31; small 3 isrge|bile industry demonst rani PERTH, Sco
Michael, 11 months, Ponaffimn years ago.” 20 | SSE have not bem gpl sand world’s leading eet o-The
killed in the crash _ ue ag %:| with the adeuate to cope neve decid beef producers
Accompanying ¥ Hydrashift consist graded eges roratpis, of government misuse of monopoly 2 ecided to hold a world co
wai Mrs. Kozilek to|®" arrangement which gs Ps hy di-Pob. ¢ wore 6,000/€r’ yer ference of beet shorthorn dealers
ccge rere, ra, ut stb et div and_ overdrive ea: grade ‘A enize large 31: Celler said General Motors has|nary house fe fee we ieee vers. ene
Mrs, . Charles Proms Mr, and in each ordinary transmissi sere — am * Browns: gt 7 never left the financing field, Ford Pa United States.
ee ian Wee. A her|gear. Shifting between direct pan uae apt ange, Su: medium’ 24-| Motor Co. eer announcde inten. TO ORGANIZE | : ) ay Cen ee eed Ae
cial plane was to carn spe-/overdrive is accomplished under of re-entering it and “there| special treatment technique therapist J NY, N. ¥. — Veterans Administration hospi ‘aaudkng’ 6 over the weekend. At-
iteet'y bate ent bee yelativds ro ti without _declutching Livestock wn caceneng Teeny” is for patients to select the right nique in teachi sg Norrix uses the new “dollhouse peaitete” teste Argentina Uruguay, Canada "ie
ond = er arrival of a new/shift da moving a button on the DETROIT LIVESTOCK . a victim of aphsia how to talk again. * |land, Britain, the hase ee '
City Health ee York _ The, aresend number of speeds Me AP) = (U8DA) Colon suas New York ae k ani and New Zealand. 8
It. ity “and stands te cks . 7 .
._« « s faster acceleration and ane Ser cows, tneee sendy; (Late | ister | difter-
Police in New better gradeability than wi a ee to Fl gccuses este Gemiael noua can M sorted to
nay ral had tn etn evans a ra mh on, Ss ar Set on Eee et ©! Mom and Dad Call I Sic to ave the lemme”
as fot Biles Kalnicky by 3 cavlaity bin at crusing speed ma-|steey la smacon to gireng Net fully| Allied sea hie ’ ’ a nN Wolfe, a KC97 ° :
urley Manhattan, who said he with prove fuel milage, al ib. n to 26.50—-39.00; choice cere lb, s se a OF FBI t bs pido Said (re-fueling plane)
bnew Min Kani aed to ot power | transmission of |{uo'*® Llosa ge ing| Atm rats a O La ‘WINS nag hsipaved oes a
passengers, The body w 4 contribute to longer|snd 1313 Ib ste ope = edi ! oe. early n a baby sitter
to Chicago on as sent|engine life. rjend i302 Be ON gf mg wel paw an pase { Keepin t who couldn't resist |
identification the basis of his Sy irae sanders te as ~ # by pidge peed SHREVEPORT, La. (UPI) — Ajtive pounds, 124, oune tie oe com ¢ eh can't") |
American Airlines 700-860 Ib. to average Am Mart ee lope Force who | pared } : » COM-|y 5, household
man said “all bodies wokes| Lodge Calendar [sir et oe ;,teanderd | Am Pope: 84 Busin a eas vl Geran coc five pounds, Michelle back into te oe de
York oe oo ie Sears nat" 26.80; “wuliy Pi Be ess in 1821 which of their twin daughters was % ounces. signed for Margie and oe
tified letter price { : ‘ ino. 46 | : ' i
rate said bedine ¢ not one of|Feb. 11th at § o'clos Wedneed is, Mahara, and Cutters ay Hina Man “fl WATERTOWN, Mass. (UPI intentionally ae ory rage ory ae eoneamrg el vee the nest pleas iigiooahe until
- 5 f . o'clock. , 0033.00; 4.80; cutte . #0. : . )— e pro t the
sense ee hae nO co glans easel lO aa = eaale bart ON
adv. —galable 35. Ni a 61.3, ON nything na : . Wolfe said tha *
[Annual ung of ude ag ag eran eg ES | onl Moy oc et ped pat gag mutt narery at Godftow Air Fore |pctice Yo mae dated esl
Y Lith tae arte heeday February aa, ow up) to 4.00; sandard and By ee ee ee i ee hema gO emg ge load lane re ear of
| 0 f. ts Post 2 RAT 1 hoon ae and as ae utility 16.00- Central ©. < 36.3 of Yankee traders. = Ri epagebg lieutenant ee that the twins a twins to match those taken b
5 be , m *
at Dow Chemical ¢C — LW. Burnes; Bey nt ta ane incCampered last yet slaugh-|C , tae ii Wiltiam "eas Vahiewssl ade? Spiegel; =e =o sae The a= department put tw
. er; most good r ewes 2.00- | ( y: ‘4\founder of ' ’ naméd Margie “ detecti fe
adv, |!#mbs 110 ip and choice wooled| Ca: the nation and Michelle.| “But . tives on the case.
0. i] d tambo 16.00- '26-20.60 i tow che m4 oe i ning company, which in bears x e * “| whkeh Sy bel a remember (FBI men were mies -
" Mich. (UPD—F ews in Brief = = isp; mou, good tnd. cltoice | ase, J «43 /his name, got into the food Faced with the ae eee at ie ee ee eel cal | Washington
ing H. Yost J: jeld- ‘ down 17.00-19.50: Land 2 pelts, 108 ib. ~a4 -- $finess more busi- prospect of ones,” Mrs. |firmed con-
assistant y sata bag.DOen named oe. wp to 1h40 opaly in ghee a by accident than any- enrolling the girls in kinder- Wolfe chuckled. “We couldn’t (twin Plise findings of which
lations of ‘or of corporate re- Wayne R. VanWagoner e . | 80 early in bs rys! ** 999 But . garten, the Wolfes decided to remember either; we just re- longed to which footprint.
dong Dow Chemica Oe Sad pat chee rfl saps nary ab gee +, 3) "pot the fm begun 18 years a0} aa t ther are ted ——
ing H. he late Field- guilty to a Orion, a0 mostly 10-290" Ine. 16.00-14.38, tow = a eee 23.4 Whart still! 9 te various methods a
bad Yost who was football coach|'€8s driving 8 charge of rect Ne, fo Ae ea Sofa Gaus. agy Rare OW eee aan Oe ees ad stage the twins apart. A i B M
versity of at the Uni-|migton Township Justic ar-|3 0nd 3 330-300 Ibe. quoted 1a bovis Ye; | Geet Gon oe the First.” of footprints confirmed by
years Michigan for many|/4wson and oe James te ue ee swehed |p me 70.7 ’" & t the FBI showed they
ae ceaee, York wan turn of|® fine of is yan Gib pects oF SUS, Sarees ee ree re ee a1 || Underwood, born Mrs. Wolf oon a yt Arendal Alsen mes - for the im T. W. GLAUSER
: | 28 years. two children ’ wife and oe strange assortment of items W. Third Ave. CEdar
Zeckendort said . 7 Node ovesage at|Reynolds Asks A n ":: 38 Ito trade for food which would keep ee A AND B 5-0681 ‘Flint ‘5, Mich.
structure would ege. The ; ‘191.4{fresh dur Wolf ‘ :
dollars. and eed gelling Satie ’lto Buy British uthority Un Pee acs 38 ing long months at se8. wins were says that whan the
rooms, It will be erected er gar rs locg erage econes ish Company .! B.4l So Underwood tal, officials tagged Michelle WOULD YOU LI
| Of Rochefaller Center on te rm to raise iaeamy their education|€"s of Reynolds Metals Co. 1 “t Seaflem of a sae inal the prob-|“Wolfe A” because she was born Bud SELL Y aa
| ve of Americas and is Ve. dairy farm ily, They operated|to be asked here toda were baer 1:3 4T3]food to keep the sailing preserving|four minutes before her ) OUR HOME!
to be ¢ompleted expected until the children, |°tize the y to auth- «relfree of ship crews|Little Margie sister. ,
: . aes ee Ee, © Farmington Township
Saki, wcll te saa tet Masens|pt of Calannen, torte waiter So ) © Past Pres. Farmington School
orders are soe 1 Angeles County, said ~ Board
moeatne, re borrowing, fem later|equipped with electronic yp owen © Post Pres, Detroit Ber.
Sa aa vce Sn [mee Se A :
rig ellen a a
auto companies, bust onstrated successfully ’
rong aren ip olhamcndo ge Me
for the hoped for spring up-|day sald engineets foresee the ,
Sr et Sot a a a
@ ’ yet. 33
seen. eg to e|maat atthe se te By radio .
/ +
-