WaT al TAG, = MICHIGAN, RURSDAY, JANUARY 14, "1058 —26 PAGES. slet Rap Prof Sang P : ® High Tax Rates, Deficit Spending Haunt Congress Others Face Debate _ WASHINGTON (?) — The [spectre of deficit spending -jand continued high taxes haunted Capitol Hill today in the wake of President Eisenhower's peacetime record $73,900,000,000 fed- eral budget proposal. Congressional reaction, OK on Defense Funds| ‘in tke’s Budget Likely;| - both public and private,|. was that the fiscal picture ~tpainted by the President in his annual budget message yesterday was anything but bright. But Congress had not expected a rosy report in the light of cur- rent defense needs. ‘ There was little doubt that would approve all or most of the $39,300,000,000 outlay for the Defense Department. More argument was eee over nori-defense spending propos- als in an effort to widen the nar- row gap between expected spend- ing and expected revenue during the coming fiscal year. CALL HEARINGS Even ‘as it put the finishing Appropriations calied hearings for Jan. 27 on the : fealty balget Sor he your staet- -)Chairman of the Senate's Prepar- As Chairman Cannon (D-Mo) of the full House Appropriations €om- mittee put it: (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Warrant Charges {Henson With Killing was issued today by. Prosecutor The warrant was issued follow- ing investigation by Hazel Park land Redford Post State Police into what authorities at first believed was an accident. Henson, 55, a factory worker, iwas expected to be arraigned this’ SGiteeneen batore Hane Pork ie nicipal Judge Robert C. Baldwin. : - *e *® The body of his 57-year-old wife floor of the Henson home at 62 W.. Maxlow. An autopsy showed Mrs. Henson, the mother of two, had died from loss of blood ‘from | Baca teereth : oe = ‘=~ Pinching U. S. “All of the in- through industry of plans to share "5 second degrer taurder warrant! - |eould lead to reducing federal rev-/space will be climaxed with bat- ‘ships./atures are the prediction for the Helen was found on the kitchen ‘along the line. . STATES BARGAINING GOALS—United Auto ’ Workers union President Walter Reuther dis- cusses his union’s aims for upcoming collective bargaining sessions with the automobile industry. Reuther's proposal—regolutionary for the indus- Workers would chasers a rebat UAW Head Patan 1958 Cente E Reuther Also Onptcad | Within Ranks of UAW Curtice Labels Scheme as ‘Foreign to the Concept. of Free Enterprise’ DETROIT (#—Leaders of the auto industry’s Big Three—Ford, Chrysler and General Motors — have greeted Walter Reuther’s profit-sharing plan with sharp words that amount to rejection. A Ford spokesman called the plan unrealistic. General Motors President Harlow H. Curtice said it was “foreign to the concept of the American free enter- « AP Facsimile try—asks the_ companies to share their profits over ten per cent with workers and customers. get a bonus, automobile pur- 2. Police Ring Down Curtain Sarah Cooling Off | After Her Spree FROM _OUR WIRE SERVICES HOLLYWOOD — Actress Sarah Churchill goes be- fore the television cameras today in a much more chastened condition than yesterday when a kicking,’ swearing, ripping performance landed her in jail on a drunk charge. ' Miss Churchill, jailed five hours yesterday, has de- nied the charge, saying she intends to plead innocent. ‘The redoubtable daughter of the redoubtable Sir Auto Plan Seen | 4 Los Angeles County Jail and had ta be forcib aid fined in a chair. Ear had ripped off a Sauipe jacket, kicked another eS ene ene ee with some im- guage mortal lines by Bobbie) Unions’ Merger Snagged Again MFL Insisting Member of Teamsters Sit in on Discussions DETROIT @ — An attempt to ‘merge the Michigan Federation of Labor and the Michigan CIO Coun- cil has snagged anew, as it has twice before, on MFL insistence that a member of the ‘Teamsters Union sit on the merger committee. x* * * id The Teamsters Union has been ousted by the AFL-CIO for alleged - Government Says That Burns. Throughout it all she Povey ome) adaprlrbeng + * * prise system.” How UAW's Plan | © & Colbert, president of Chrys to Share Profits _|nationary. For a different reason, the Unit- Works in Action | 12 "Son. aut ee United Auto Workers’ demand | Within his own union. for profit-sharing would work in x «+ & a hypothetical case: The reason, says Suppose a company has a net |, UAW “minority” | capital of 200 million dollars. Ten |Reuther turned his back on de- per cent of this, or 20 million dollars, would not be involved in the division of profits. ~*~ * * If the company’s profits be- fore taxes amounted to 100 mil- lion dollars, 20 millions would be deducted. Under the present General Motors formula, the corporation sets aside 6 per cent of the re- maining 80 millions, putting it into a fund for executives, In the Slate, president of Ferd Io General Profit-Sharing | -sciaimed that the English were Would Cut Tax Income “the master race” and that Ameri- cans were “‘no good.” Td use one of her own phrases: “There'll always be an Eng- land, but I'm not so surp about the United States!” It all started when the sheriff's WASHINGTON «@—Government' ‘experts said today any big spread! profits with workers would cut That was their private reaction phone all from a pone compan to word from Detroit that thejexecutive ‘United Auto Workers have pro-|an had been using foul and abusive posed _that—aute—preducers—_split-atanguage—for—nearly- major share of profits before tax-|while talking to the operators. es with workers and customers.) Deputies Barney Miller and CIO probably would lift the char- ters of both the state organizations, call a merger convention for Grand Rapids Feb. 24-28 and fix the eli- gibility of convention delegates. x * * George Dean, president of the 300,000-member MFL, said tersely yesterday ‘“‘We do not iritend to comply” with Meany’s request that Dean's organization replace Team- sters on its merger committee. long The hang-up .came_.on Dean's) _ Tea May Brew in Political Pot at White House WASHINGTON @®—The White House political pot may simmer up with a serving of tea before Cabinet secretary Maxwell Rabb) . wants President Eisenhower and} insisterice that Gilbert Clark, Flint business agent for the Teamsters and president of the Genesee County Federation of Labor, be members of the Cabinet to opeti their meetings with “a little tea party” so everybody will be more’. door of “tiss Churchill's rented ‘beach house and were greeted with (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) income rate — around 15 per Predicts Space Ships. come.” brackets, allowing ter |i War for Outer Space | dedoctions. | If-the plan were adopted in the my's ballistic missile chief says! auto industry and spread widely that “as sure as anything in the among other Industries, the result|world” a war for control of outer ‘enues by billions of dollars, Cor- porate income taxes how yield about 20 billion dollars a year. In turn, the government would/ness committee have either to reduce spending or|B. Medaris, who. said to boost tax rates somewhere|has developed a national space in Pontiac Tomorrow mony. before the Senate Prepared- days. included on the MFL's five-mem- ber committee to work out merger details with a similar group from the 700,000-member Michigan CIO Council headed by August Scholle. relaxed. ing a whole series at new infla- Rabb get the idea during a reii™é 9 the auto cent visit to Japan, where it’s cus- mobile Upon tomary to start meetings with tea. industry.” Colbert added: “Mr, Reuther Just in case the idea catches, he : brought back a tea set. (Continued on’ Page 2, Col. 3) Cloudy Skies, Cooler Curtice Comments on UAW Geals Cloudy skies and cooler temper- Pontiac area during the next few Tonight the U. S. Weather Bu- reau predicts cloudy and colder with snow flurries. The low will be near 25 degrees. | US. Unoffically Pledges $18,000, and marked one of the first steps, changes in Ponttiac’s original ap- Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy Says Demands Foreign to Our Free Enterprise. of General Motors, relative to the UAW’'s 1958 bargaining © goals: The UAW’s recommended 1958 bargaining objectives made public today are in keeping with the Union’s earlier threat to exert its tremendous economic power to force upon the auto industry “the biggest wage increase in the history of the Union.” DETROIT Here is how the {Pears hedded for opposition from ————- Following is a statement by Harlow H. Curtice, president — mal high of 33 and low of 19. Snow flurries are expected through By PETE LOCHBILER + and m in an, undertaking that will plication for an advance loan two0|saturda ‘Pontiac bas been unofficially a require many months for planning| months ago. But these changes are| The lowest recorded temperature _ feured it will get a $98,000 advance!and several years for completion.| “minor,” Stierer added. | |in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 lgan to plan its first federal ald) pepogy scHEDULED The. application asks the URA |8.m. was 29. The reading at 2 p.m. 5 felines _ _ 2 pong nore gh tier Na — as cenees 5 aes ~~ wee oe port on progress to the “ae * ivan Rearecl "Atnciniserig| aon tealeht ai Vance cat thi he on for 4 They’ll Wait for Ike (URA) Officials in Chicago, ac-| . : for the project. i WASHINGTON (INS) —The to Robert A. | a emma Approval of this application may Joint Chiefs of Staff were - ys PR llr Todaty’s Press |, lone as «year. When 0p-| Socta “make. ho further sate oy an aden panek ; } . proved, the city would enter a] Dot. on reorganization of the ) that our’ project report |somscncnmemammeysmnamemmisees | planning period of about 14 months, igh Guaeend: will esi ie al aod aie ete 19. * * * the President has revealed his fe pee ae The first stage would lead to a ; sci" % [he projet aren and analyng [Khrushchev Vacations js a6 to a7 |Telocation of tantilies displaced by! MOSCOW uw — Nikita Khrush- ‘ sien sd Bl ; chev is away from Moscow for Torte Programs wos 25 |THE REPORT | @'rest, the Foreign Ministry Women’s Pages ....-.... 21 40 18 mi final Lrspeag lin cose Mog ‘tended no diplomatic receptions — AORN ENDO Hees Ser eeeeig 4 * 3 % * x« * In addition the Union proposes a radical scheme under which it would bargain not only for employes they represent bat also for salaried employes, shareholders and customers over the distribution of the earnings of the business. This scheme is foreign to the concept of the American free en- terprise system. It is unfortunate that these extravagant demands should come at a time when public confidence needs to be reaffirmed as a basis for an upturn in economy, - — The chances for such an upturn would yastly improve if instead of announcing such extreme demands, the Union would base its. “Objectives on the economic real- ities the. nation faces today, not only here oo bere lew also abroad. * ee’ * we’ sincerely hope the delegates to the UAW spectal con- position on these wholly unrealistic collective-bar- gaining objectives for ib rane than geting Into ea “Cee Military Stays Vague;, Say Explosion Chances | Practically Nil WASHINGTON {INS}—Pentagon issue with colleagues who have gent ‘Truman for any lag behind sources today fixed “somewhere advocated reducing the power of Russia in the development of mis" in the United States” as the place where an Air Force plane carrying’ an atomie bomb crashed and burned without set@ing off a nu- clear explosion. ‘14D-Ga) - said today a “two-fisted ‘secretary of dtcnee" ean straighten out the nation's missile | program without creating any new lagencies, Russell, who heads the Senate Armed Services Committee, took: the Joint Chiefs of Staff and plac- ing the missile-satellite programs under a single head He added in an interview he is Yavorably impressed” twoFisted yes Chief Needed’ ve WASHINGTON Sen. Russell | the lead in the -race’ for rocket :two Republicans said the nation. wéapons and —" satellites. “= * eked of California, and Wo Sen. Senate Republican leader, ‘Rep. Martin of Massiichtisetts, ‘House GOP leader, stirred up the | storm by blaming former Presi- had “rested on our oars during tion while the Russians went to work. cid % _“If today we are behind the So} viet- Union in some respects in the race to perfect the weapons of the future—guided and giles. - They spoke out in reply to Tru- man’ 8 statement in New York that he does not think Eisenhower is! The Air Force still refused “for'the speed with which Secretary of good ducer maker.’ security — asons’” fo savy where Defense ‘dc Flroy has made deci w when the American aircraft Was sions but isn’t passing final judg end. ment until more changes are But the sources said the crash | OO A new political storm clouded was in thi, country and ‘was explained away at the time as a routine accident.” _ Ait Force spokexmen empha sized that there «as “no possi bilitv’’ flames brom the burning plane could have de soneied jeadly nuclear pay'o “The fikelihoed of such an accident is practicaily non-ex isteni.”’ a Pentagon Official said. He added that the mathematical possibility of an accidental U.S atomic weapon explosion was about three billion ” The, sources indicated Ait Force announcement was partl designed to.calm British fears that atomic bomb-carrying planes might “ene in the f acidentally crash and precipitate a nieclear disaster. consideration United Sales in congressional! te put the : City Renewal Gets Unofficial U. §. OK © ‘Continued From Page One} ow 1 + & In an unusual “‘public memor- he’ andum” addressed to » Tr uman, the Auto Makers Score | Profit-Sharing Plan. | (Continued From Page One) | also appear to again insist tha | part of management's joh be > turned over to him so that he | missiles—a - considerable part of ithe blame lies on the doorstep of ‘your administration,” they said. : * * * York, Truman first In New so far bY <4 good policy maker nor is he a icommented that the Republicans “always have to have semebody ‘to pass the buck to." Later he added, “The facts arc not as Kefauver of Tennessee, 1956 Democratic vice presidential inominee, fired back that “‘no amount of political statements or lagen will hide the facts.” “The facts are that the budget jhas been cut and cut during the |Kisenhower administration, and been frustrated,” research has i'Kefauver said. the lost years_of your administra-| | ‘ The Senate Preparedness sub- ‘committee called for testimony ibehind closed doors from repre- final application for a loan and ¢al@ increase stilt further the al- isentatives of companies engaged grant If and when this is ap proved, the project would actually’ begin * * * Stierer said that this data has been submitted to the URA “The area involved is bounded | roughly by Pike street, the Grand Trunk Railroad and Osmun street ready dangerous degree of mo- nopoly power he possesses.” American Motors Corp. and, Studebaker-Packard Corp, had ho immediate comment. Under their present profit position, neither ‘would be affected by profit-shar- ing . DROPS DEMAND in producing the Titan and Van- guard rockets. It asked for later testimony by! Nathan Twining, chairman) 'Gen. of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testimony yesterday in which Maj, Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, commander of the Air Force bal- The subcommittee made public’ at Tonight's Meeting Oakland County Board of Super- visors wil] be appointed tonight as the Pontiac City Commission fills up vacancies on several admini- strative boards. The vacancies are on the Fair Employment Practices Board, the Historical Commission, the Zoning Board of Appeals and the Board of Tax Review, The supervisor's position Was left vacant by the resignation fwe months ago of Willis M. Brewer, who had served M4 years on the board before taking the new position of Read Co-ordina- tor with the Oakland County Read Commission, City Manager Walter K. Willman is expected to report on a proposed trade of property near East boule- vard and Featherstone road, where the Evangelical United Brethren Church has planned to erecta new church. There are no public ioean ithe- public improvement program. Reuther Right A new representative to the! scheduled nor any other action on) * JESSE L, LASKY Movie Pioneer Care, city manager, said. _ REJECT PETITION ward Saver Contract _ | to Second Low Bidder - eon and tell about er work tn } later : didn't meet all the “ist required by the city, L. * R. “| Son. (George Jacksgn. Reserva \should be made with Mrs. Jack- * * * Mrs. Frasér E. Pomeroy will continue as president of the group. Other officers to be re-dedicated In other business, the commis- Dies After Talk — Jesse L. Lasky Felled by Heart Attack; Made ™ Films for 44 Years | HOLLYWOOD t®-A heart at- tack has ended the career of Jesse L. Lasky, movie* pioneer who helped build Hollywood's vast film ACTOR'S WIFE BURNED — Mra. John Wayne, the former | Peruvian actress Pilar Palette, was burned on the arm but | saved herself and baby further harm in a fire today at | the actor's Encino, Calif , home Aas ~ sf Weather By FE. H. SIMS w Why doesn't the cold front give ample warning before its arrival? The cold front, as we have here- ~ tofore of bserved, may be right upon you before yoti notice it. Sus- picion should be aroused by a sud- den pickup in the wind, especially if its comes as the sky is clearing, or has just cleared Temperatures | will also begin to drop But because the leading edge o f this “front wil move ovér your head, on the earth's surface, be-| fore it moves in far above—at 30,000 or 40,000 feet, for example, | there will be no clue hi gh above | from | schoo] an the north, west and seuth and _{ by Paddock,—Perkinsand—Park——- |" hurst streets on the east (with the exception of the City Hall | | mrea). i Because of its proximity to the ‘business area, the official title of jthe project area is Central Busi- ness District Fringe No. 1. { There are a total > acres in-| volved. of which about 35 per -cent, to be rehabilitated or conserved | Of the 451 homes on the 117.5 acres | lof improved land involved, approx. sharing. plan to the plans under; Secretary of the Treasury Re- | 29 per cent are substand- 19 U.S) limately jard according ?to the jhousing census There are about 81 families liv- jing in the area and about 6 pet lcent of all substandard housing in 'Pontiac is located there « * * It is figured that the total] cost lof renewal would be about $4,030 1372, including $2.731.199 for site acquisition and $852,673 for site im- | | provements and facilities. j | But resale of property is fig- | ured to bring back about $1,472,- | 333, making tW8 net cost about | $2,558,019. Of this, the federal government ‘would pay two-thirds and Pontiac one-third Pontiac's net cost there- fore is figured at $852.673 el High Schools Go Over | ‘Grid Changes June 2 | LANSING u® — There will be! no decision tntil a June meeting! on whether Michigan's high schools, Te TWH go Stone eit the eee) NCAA football’ rules changes, chine two-points for” passing the ball after a touchdown. | . * * * | Charles E. Forsythe, state high athletic director, said a meeting of the Football Rules Com- mittee of th state High School ‘Athletic Association is not sched- uled until June 2 « in Named for Wayne Post LANSING w& — Gov. said today that he will appoint | Williams Reuther, when asked about the toursiay week issue, | said: “Yau will notice I have not! been beating the drumg for the shorter work week since the first Sputnik went up" The UAW leader said his plan will provide increased oes | | ing power, and sald it was of- fered as a factor in halting the | “growing imbalance is tn be cleared and 65 per cent} — power and produc- Reuther compared his profit- which GM share in Ford executives of thejr firms. * * lie said: “‘The fantastic profits of many of America’s giant cor |porations have been shared in by ‘the high-paid executives of these corporations while both workers’ and consumers have been short “| changed ° and profits * Reuther said about 800,000 aute bing victim was sought today on a 300,000 new cars from Aug. 1, warrant charging disorderly fight-| 1914 to Aug. 1, | industry werkers would be cov- ered by his plan. He said if the rebate plan had ‘been in effect for consumers dur- “ing the past 10 years, customers. \would have received an average. of more than $70'a car. * * * The UAW chief said the actual jamount of a genetal wage increase jbased on productivity, would have | to be worked out at the bargaining table. The present assembly Plant) laverage of $2.40 an hour includes) icost of living and productivity in- creases, Reuther indicated the union will seek a short-term eentract. He aald it will be “considerably \the installation of officers of Pon-) . tess’ than the current comracts which run out cient June 1. In adtlition to a wage increase, Réuther indicated the union will) see kan increase in supplementary z unemployment benefits (SUB) for} laid-off workers from 26 to 52, weeks. | He said he also will seek SUB| for workers “whose purchasing | — power is reduced because of short | work weeks" | between | Tistie missile division, said the’ present Thor missile unmanned aoa of the) " ey News Flashes WASHINGTON & — The Fi | senhower administration teday | asked Congress to boost the 275- billien-dollar limit on the nation- | at debt to 230 billion dollars. bert Anderson asked for the five- billion-dollar boost in letters to Democratic and Republican lead- ers of the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance committees Spartan Grid Player Charged in Stabbing ¥ BENTON HARBOR (PF — A stab-| jing as the result of a brawl fol- lowing the nton Harber-Helland High School” basketball game. A warrant was authorized yes-| terday by Assistant Prose cutoE. ‘Ronald Lange against 19-year-old Allen Hill, Michigan State Univer- sity freshman football player who suffered a knife wound in the thigh during the scuffle last Friday night. Pythian Lodge Plans Installation Service proved so that it “ean perform! Michigan Grand Chancellor An-| drew Jackson of Ann Arbor, will, ibe here this evening to preside at, be cut by 860, It further an- "sew AbOut Rebates Henry Ford | Shared 1914-1915 Profits With Auto Buyers ae a ‘designed and brought down to the ‘size of 100 square feet required by the ordinance. sig was assured of apother hear-| A few vacancies stil] remain in ‘some of the hobby and crafts, groups being formed at the Bir- mingham Community House. Myra Showman, registrar, said enrollment still may be made for bridge classes to be conducted Wednesday and Thursday eve- nings; creative pottery-ceramics, Edmond” Leavonworth,-first--viee president; Mrs. George Burnham, ; Mrs, Earl vice president; Mrs. secre: Chastened Actress Cools After Spree (Continued From. Page One) a torrent of Churchillian abuse. The officers said the 4l-yearold ac- "| tress" purse had been opened, the contents flung about the floor, -lip- stick had been smeared on the walis and the curtains were torn down. ‘YOU'VE HAD IT’ at the annual meeting ‘qe Mrs. Mas oe ike tN -~ ™? oes .<3 te Lasky, 77, a moviemaker 44 lyears, collapsed and died in Bev- ‘erly Hills yesterday shortly after jtalking about his book, “I Blow |My Own Horn,” before a women's literary club, | The producer, apparently ‘good health up to that moment, | ‘stumbled and fell as he turned to Tuesday afternoons and evenings; and design, Wednesday evening. Other classes still open ate: enameling, Wednesday afternoons: igardening, Thursday mornings; | ‘homemaking, Thursday afternoons; | in interior decoration, Monday morn- Americanism, ings; painting, Monday and Tues-| day evenings; photograpby, Thurs- DETR@T i» — UAW President walk toward his car at the Bev- 4ay evenings; sewing, Monday and Walter Reuther said at his news conference yesterday that, ‘thought the late Henry Ford once | paid a rebate on Ford cars. in years in which auto companies make profits The record shows Reuther was right In July 1914, Ford announced | that on Aug, t, its prices would neunced that if the company sold 1915, all retail buyers would share in the pre- fits to the extent of 840 to $60 a car. . ‘erly Hilton Hotel. Only a day ear- Pro Bowl professional football | igame in Los Angeles Reuther made the point in dis-; cussing the UAW's latest proposal for year-end rebates to customers) * * *' Lasky, Ceci] B. DeMille and Samuel Goldwyn formed a trio) that came west and produced the | ‘first feature Jength film, ‘‘The |Squaw Man,” here in 1913. The edrly-day producers fol- lewed this picture with other) films, ineluding “Rose «of the) Rancho,” “Girl of the Golden) West,” ‘The Warrens of Virginia’ | “The Governor's Lady,” “The Woman,” and many others, * * * Lasky once recalled that De- Mille, director of the Jesse. L. By the end of the model year, Ford had sold 308,213 cars. Making | good on his pledge. he rebated, nearly 15'9 million dollars to the! /buvers. This Wwas-the same year in which! Ford put the $5 daily wage into. effect. High Taxes, Deficits — Haunt Capitol Hill (Continued From Page One) |ers- Lasky, Lasky Feature Play Co. had been the one who selected a barn amid |a Hollywood orange grove for the first production and that he, Lasky) ‘had suggested Arizona. : “T wonder what would have hap- pened to us, and maybe to Holly- 'wood, if Cecil had selected a site jin Arizona,"’ Lasky mused, In 1916 the Lasky organization | merged with Famoug Players ‘Film Co. to become Famous Play: |; forerunner of Para-| mount Pictures Corp. * * * i |Tuesday evenings; silver working he lier he had attended the annual|@"d Jewelry, Friday mornings and — n advance first aid class will enone Thursday evenings, with a beginners class to start after its _ completion. 4 Special for children is the pup- |petry class meeting Thursday aft- ,ernoons and the painting and draw- ing, Monday afternoons, Both ses- ‘sions are from 3:30 to 5 p.m The regular meeting of the Unit- ie Ree ae Women of Birmingham 9:30 a.m. Friday at the Baptist Coach will be followed by the group's anndal meeting. Special guest at the 12:30 junch- ‘eon will be Miss Amber Van, coun- selor to international students -at the University of Michigan. She will speak informally at the lunch- Jaycees to Present Awards at Banquet — Judges have selected the winner of the annual Pontiac Junior ‘Chamber of Commerce ‘“Outsfand-| ing Young Man of the ‘ill con- i test. a} When the deputies finally quiet- ed Miss. Churchill they left but she reportedly followed them to their car carrying a glass of rum and |spouting a rich stream of invective. ‘The officers countered’ with an “You've had it,” and placed her under arrest. * * * While being taken to jail she tore off Miller's uniform jacket and maintained a steady flow of ‘unprintable epithets. At the county jail she became for a moment pensive and recit- ed the lines of Robert Burns: “In durance vile here must I wake and weep. And all my frowsy couch in sor- row steep.” But the durance vile was for only a short time. She was released on $50 bond and must appear Thursday in court. * « * The slim actress, dressed in blue ‘Capri pants, silk blouse and tan sweater, denied she had been drinking but said she often used the telephone, adding: ‘That's what it's for.” ; She had worn an ill-fitting jail ismock during her booking earlier, at which time she commented: “Se this is American justice. At least It takes two stalwarts to | hold me.""” She then held-up two fingers in the ‘“V" for victory sign made famous by her father in World (War II. | She rehearsed her TV show last - sie ail « * “The winner will be pr * ‘night and her director, Walter Grauman said, “Shes in food a shape and I'm confident she'll |tiac Knights of Pythias Lodge No 19 and Fannie Tompkins Terffble crease for national defense is No. 41. The joint installation will justified and will have the fully support! | be held at & p.m. at the lodge hall gf Congress.”’ | lat 18 West Huron St. A social hour will follow the installation rites. Eisenhower's estimate that despite heavier defense * * * There was some skepticism over spending, the budget would be in balance when the year ends and the Treasury would show a surplus of half a billion dollars. Some members noted that the 1880, the son of a shoe store! owner, Lasky arrived in Holly-| wood by a eircuitous route. He began his career as a cornet play- er af 16. He later was a cub re- Porter on the old San Francisco Post, a gold hunter in Alaska, and even managed a magician before joining forces with DeMille and Goldwyn i New York City. Lasky leaves his widow, Bessie; administration had expected a ' ‘budget surplus this year only to) --teee.it fade inte a nad the face of a declining tax col- in the sky * * * i Phi fadtare ie oe shy signs: ——e. ae a eae Se : at Orne aauies, Reuthers&- S enables the cold front fo come in ps Tey é eh a Pee ea weeks. i said, will be demands for im. by surprise, ‘ounty bench witha | proved pension benefits, correc: tion of “wage inequities.’ and im. Temperatures Plunge 20 Degrees * Arctic Air Drives South CHICAGO (INS) — Bitter cold arctic air moved southward today over _the stock- ralsing sections of The Weather Full t %. Weather Bureas Report « UNTTAL AND VICINITY —4 loudy and terning ceilder tenight, «oow fleur ries, lew abewt 5 Temerrew moctl+- cloudy with snow flurries, bigh about ae Winds nerth te eact at 5-12 miles an heuer teday becoming nertheriy at 12-28 tenight the northern plains, driving snow lahead of it and sending tempera- tures phinging 20 degrees in the} ‘ast 24 hours i Meanwhile, the Weather Bureau warned that brezing rain will make driving c¢nditions hazardous and roads icy from parts of W est Virginia thynigh Pennsyivanie Maryland and the Middle | i States The precipitation — will! spread northward into New Eng-! land as a misture of rain, snow proved hospital-medical-insuranée| programs. Reuther said the union's pro- posed bargaining program ‘“Te- flects the realities of both our growing domestic difficulties and the increasingly difficult inter- national situation,” He termed his profit plan a “reasonable approach If they (the ‘compaties} make a lot of money we want aur share We hope, that Sputnik has made them more, aware. of their responsibilities ’ Reuther added * *-* ‘This unten js going fo act in terms of what is good for the CONGRESSMAN DEES — Rep. Andresen of Minne- teday at Bethesda, Naval Hospital. He was August H. sota died Md., _{Means Committee, also called joptimistic.” ‘Rules on Army Trials | today that civilian employes at lections and higher spending * % » Chairman’ Byrd (D-Va) Senate Finance Committee called the new bud “reckless” and “likely to lea of the’ | Republican on the House Ways and estimates of receipts “somewhat | WASHINGTON =U. S. Dist.— Judge Alexander aaa ruled | tached to the U. S, armed forces i | to substantial def-| icit spending | with all of its evil! |eonsequences.”’ Rep. Reed of New York, — | | f ithree children, Jesse Jr., William and Nancy; and two grandchil- \dren. Funeral services were Raid theif Today ta Peatise and slect United States. Union demands’ 67. Andresen. a Republican, was | abroad may legally be tried by nner teperature preeeding # 6m | Minct, N. D., reported twe de: jcome second. ’ | first elected to Congress in 1924. | court-martial. a ba = oe 3Ne ra) sa — Deracses- eeneee velocity 10 m™ PP prees above ero and other | Bun sete Tuesday at $22 pm points generally were in the | ee EGTA S AT teem at midnight, Snow fuertes ‘Small Georgia Case e Involves B ig Issue | Moon. rises Wednesday a2! 58 5 m were —aiong—the lead | Pewntown Temperatures ing an of the advancing colder sce OS en air which extended inte extreme. ' es A 0 ue > ~ northwestern Nebraska. 9 n +} 25 mM & E we m sn livestock warnings have been rssued for northwestern Kansas De mac ice Gasatees ecause'nl the uch coldee ea WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme “guarantees of free speech, press s and as- eS eee cc 4g ar and blowing snow is expected Court yesterday deciared Invalid a Bax- sembly, and was incompatible with the weathers Pai, mite eee 268 in that area ley, Ga. ordinance requiring union or- Taft-Hartiey Labor Att. One Vear “age | ip EeeGee Highest teniperature ....... Lowest tempersture . Mean temperature Weather—Fair, " : Highest an Leeest Temperatore hose im 84 Voars 56 tm 1056 tnt Monday's Temperature Chart Alpena 38 Marquette a 14 : Fat) 8 in 1802 One of the coldest spots at mid- ; inight was Lebanon, N. H., with a ‘reading of 2 below zero in contrast to a TO-degree reading at Key |West, Fla. Widespread precipitation contin- | ued over the southeastern portion vot the country, Florida ahd areas vas far north as Pennsyivania listed ganizers to obtain a city pefmit before soliciting for members. The decision was. given on an appeal by Rose Staub, an employe of the Inter- national Ladies’ Garment Workers” Union. She was sentenced in Baxley Po- lice Court to 30 days in jail, or a $300 J. H. Highsmith, attorney for Bax- ley, defended the permit requirement as — @ reasonable regulation within a city’s police powers. . He said a permit would have been tes 1° it to Miss Staub- if she had applied for it. Frankfurter and: Clark, fh their dis- sent, deseribed the case as one of those 28 [sonargnary % incl . ‘ ty rain. Rain also hit the Gulf States Zz Milwoukes 32 2. from Mississippi eastward and ex- BOR. Oprens 57 ry tended into the Ohio Valley. Roa- 33 | hoe 3 hy noke, Va., listed an inch of rain i Prev if 3g,erd Citarieston, 8. C., 1% inches. 2 Fittebureh “ a4 Snow flurries occurred over the SB 'stewe hu central and southerti Rockies and i taunts 1 + \cold weather wast the general rule i} n 4 in the Rockies and 2 i westward Hi the: Pacifie Coast. Rain seavenied * ‘along the North Pacific. \ fine, for soliciting unior member- . i ships without applying for a petmit. Justice Whittaker delivered the 7-2 decision. Justice Frankfurter wrote-a dis-—— senting opinion, joitied by Justice Clark. . x& k * : Miss Staub’s appeal contended the _ Ofdinance abridged the constitutional — ro small cases for it concerns the essence of our fed- eralism == due regard for the constl- [% -, tutional distribution of power as between — the nation particularly the distribution of judicial — - Power as between this court ahd the _ Judiciaries of the states. that carries a large isste, afid tl states,/ and more | Biggest Bargain Fy — -of the year and key man of the eee hs get ready, mark dows: | @15 Salesladies @10 Wrappers; annual Jaycee Bosses Night ban- quet beginning at 6:30 p.m. tomor- row in the Elks Tempie. Gov. Williams will be the prin. | Te speaker. Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams, H. W. Huttenlocher, John Fitzgerald.) Ralph Norvell and Howard Pow- ers. , * * *t Also on the agenda will be presentation of awards to the boss ‘job of judging was done by! Born in San Francisco Sept. 13,/ distinguished service award at the| come through for us She was booked in jail under the name of Sarah Beauchamp, the jname of her late husband, Anthony |Beauchamp who committed suicide ‘in London last August. She has reportedly been emotion- ally upset since then. Producer Albert McCleery, who recently signed a contract with Miss Churchill for six TV shows, said: “Miss Churchill through many tragic months, which _ unsound has taken a -and-stability Event in. our’ HELP WANTED FOR THIS SALE. @e5 Salesmen” a { } / @8 Cas di : Apply Ee iloyment Office pI tA te ‘AT GEORGES goods and train ieleipecals fer 25 years in EWPORTS Pontiac. aq hiers has passed a _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1958. - Once e| Once teeth break tone th gums they do not ordinarily grow gjin” th ‘mouth except at the roots. - ' 4 HOW TO DEAL WITH YOUR TE The quest for peace of mind— or for good mental health, which is another name for it — is universal. Yet very few of us ate blessed with all the.internal qualities and external circum-— stances that automatically as- sure us of peace of mind. We have to work to achieve it. Following is one of a few sim- ple, ready-to-hand actions which may help you. TALK IT OUT When something worries you, ‘ talk it out. Don't bottle it up. Confide your worry to some levelheaded person you can trust; your husband or wife, Published as a public service by with The “Adv eine Coun Executives Association. h cil a The Pon NSIONS~ father or mother, abtod thied, your clergyman, your-family doctor, a teacher, schoo! coun- selor, or dean. Talking things your strain, ~ helps you to see your worry in a clearer light, and often helps you to see what you can do about it. This is one of eleven simple Suggestions that can be helpful if they are applied diligently. If you would like further infor- mation, write for the free new booklet: “How To Deat Wirh Your TrNsions,” written by top experts in the field of psy- chiatry. Address: Better Mental Health, Box 2500, New York 1, New York. nd the Newspaper — “MRS, CHARLES CANNON | lite Miller) Cannon, 85, of 118 Mt. Hill Cemetery. Joseph Mercy Hospital. FLOYD E. FRANKLIN Service for Mrs. Charles (Caro- St. will beat 3. p.m eckenice bunt the Huntoon Fu-| church neral Home. Burial will be in Oak Mrs. Cannon died Sunday in St. Dai in Pontiac and Near y Areas en Amalia Bisballe, 12, of 1049 Ab-| Re seguami Trail, who died Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon- tiac, will be held at 11 a.m. tomor- row at Lake Orion Methodist Church. Officiating will be the Rev. White Chapel Cemetery. The body rests at Allen's Fu- neral Home. 3 GEORGE H. MONTGOMERY _ tiac Press in Cooperation Advertising| Dr., pital after a brief iliness. aed gas Funeral Home. MRS, ROE LEWIS rie) Lewis, 67, who died suddenly | iSt. ifrom the Church of God, 575 E. ‘Pike St. Her pastor, the Rev. Perry C. Morticians > Huntoon Funeral. Home 79 Oakland * Avenue FE 2-0189 Member of Orrin Hunton, Jr. ry Wednesday when it will be taken , | to the church. MRS. JOHN W. SCHAFFER i i |White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Schaffer died yesterday in ‘illness of several months. 2 HELEN A. BISBALLE ~ Floyd E. Franklin of 3228 Warren Drayton Plains, died this morning in St. Joseph Mercy Hos- Franklin's body is at the) Service for Mrs, Roe (Mary Ma- ‘Sunday at her home 43 Bellevue) will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday} LE AKE ORION—Cervice for Het WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for George H. Montgom- ery, 77, of 404 Farnsworth St., will’ be held at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday) at Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Burial i will be in Lakeside Cemetery, Ox- -|ford. He died at his home Satur- iday. THOMAS A. TEEPLE WATERFORD TOWNSHIP lService for Thomas A. Teeple. 78, jot 1385 Beachland, who died yes- terday at the St. Joseph Merc Hospital, will take place at 2 p. a. agg will officiate, with burial|Thursday at C. J. Godhardt Fun- n White Chapel Memorial Cem-| eral Home. Officiating will be the — —— (eaary. 4 Mrs. Lewis’ body will be at the, ‘| Pursley Funeral Home until noon | ~ Deaths Elsewhere MIAMI, Fla. ®—James-C. Flan-, iders, 82, mayor of Toledo, Ohio, | jin.the early 1900s and for the last Service for Mrs. John W. (Clara) 30 years a resident of north Mi- tives of the township Fire Depart- Schaffer, 72, of 248 S. Marshall St.;ami where he was active in a ment last night. | will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday}campaign against gambling, died ‘from the Sparks-Griffin Chapel. lyesterday. The Rev. Ra'ph C. Claus of St. ~ 2 (Trinity Lutheran Church will of.) BERGAMO, Pgs ce ficiate, with burial following in/°™® ‘ia. eee crieenee who built free homes for the poor. died Sunday. The priest founded Ithe ‘ ‘Society of Volunteers of Ac- Albert B. Johns. Burial will be in| | Smathers of Detroit and Mrs. Ken- _peth_Karnun sen Rateri HL Benedict. Burial wil be in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens Cemetery. A 40-year resident of Oakland County, he had operated the Teeple Market for 19 years in Keego Har-| Surviving., are his wife, ‘Lydia; three daughters, Mrs. Clayton |Bunker of Pontiac, Mrs. Homer iFred W. of East Tawas: and a) -|sister, Mrs. Mary Houghtaling of Ortonville. Sixteen grandchildren’ and 15 great grandchildren also survive. Eyes Authority. ‘of fire Chief Waterford Twp. Board Discusses Problems of Department Rule i question of just how much |power is-allocated to a fire chief was discussed by the Waterford Township Board and representa- Fire Chief Edward Smith is a paid, part-time volunteer fireman and his authoritative powers have been challenged by :members of ithe department ; After a -lengthy discussion, Trustee John Coleman sujgested eee REMINGTON 2 RECONDITIONED NEW SEKViCE—Remington factory representative will be tn our store every WEDNESDAY of every week Electric Shavers —Main Floor |eeccccceoccecece seeeee0. Y when he was transferred to Osia Sopra village in 1950 and used the society to obtain gifts of land to build rent- free homes From the Hame of the Golden Hawks... The newest, most original Hardtops i _‘on the American road... == ssf 1958 Studebaker or arly fila. j | The word : mind” that Smith Graw up a plan to be presented at a firemen's execu- | tive beard metting this week with township beard members and representatives from each of | the department's three stations | present. | The group will plan to discuss) ‘rules, regulations and insubordina- ition proceedings for paid firemen. tiac Press. Pontiac Michiger Another question was raised on whether to use stock er mutual jinsurance policies on township- jowned property and equipment This was tabled for further study next Monday Two $65,000 insurance policies on the Township Hall covering §& per cent of its total valuation will expire Jan. 2] The problem of establishing a charge to private contractors for hydrants was also tabled. Clerk James Seetertin wax authorived to: check procedures in. surrounding com mynities A used car dealer's license was | appreved for Marion Cerder for | a let to be established at 3560 Elizabeth Lake Rd. was ; otiginally a verb rather than a noun | PT WEDNESDAY ONLY Outdoor Thermometer Window or Wall Famous “Tru - Temp’ out- door thermometer is easier to read, and install. Ac- curate and de- pendable. Chaney ° e ° Wednesday ;. e Only e ° e ° ° : e e e ~ e ie : . e e e Ps e ° e e > : Cotton — Elastic Tops e ‘ e ° e e h > ° Reg. $1.00 Value ° © e = e * e . e - e e — e : : © Boys’ alt cotton-socks-in popu--@/ e ‘ar blazer stripes. Ankle length, @ @ elastic @ heel and toe. Sizes 6 to 10. Eis ie N. Saginaw —Basement 4 Covccccccvccsccooos cASRENERCRRAFToRares wes wee" RSNERLE Pe PONE ees em ae ne ‘Wyman PRBS 5 ye ee pera ios ow & Laat aN (WP LDA eh a SO top. Nylon reinforced » seeeeeeese ; = & é : haw COR. 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Studebaker- Pa | ckard CORPORATION a Koss & Printz Motor Sales : 7675 Highland Road. OR 3-5200 ~-Mazurek Motor Sales 245 S. Blvd. E. FE 4-9587 -¥ “eeccccccevcccccccccoecs iM. XQ of 7 Onty 90 inch just 12 hang green or beige Ladies’ Flannel Dusters. \ Ye Length Sleeve — Mondarin Collor: : SAVE $1.51 on This Special $2. 98 nd Fully washable face in choice of pink, blue, mint or floral prints, Patch pocket, button front' in size 34 to 40. Limit 2 per cus- Reg. 75c Value Full for longer wear forced mim. Limit 98 North Saginaw BIGGEST BARGAINS and FINEST-EVER QUALITY SPECIAL PURCHASE Sale of Simms is bringing nearly $1500 in savings to Pontiac through this special purchase of over $3200 worth of finer-quality, ready-to-hang curtains and draperies you'll find anything near equal to these bargains Plenty of Some—Few of Others—Many Odd Lots ented ‘flik’ proof...“ designs lection $10.88 Satin-Back DRAPES 23 pairs. 48x90 inch panels, modern or traditional in Ready to hang $10.88 pr.) $14.95 Jewel-Glass DRAPES 25x90 inch pairs Green or gold colors colorfast. = $19.95. Textured. DRAPES — ' Cotton textured cloth lined with fine percate Abstract leat design in choice of colors WEDNESDAY ONLY SPECIALS Hot-Dipped GALVANIZED 10-Qt. PAIL 10-quart pail, PRICES SLASHE GUARANTEED Ist QUALITY Ready-to-hang. many with pat- feature _inch lengths 25 to 36 inch panels . washable, color-locked fade« Suncromes” . wanted colors . . 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J re a M . 1» ot : * ~ - » Money ‘ Regular $8 Quality « Wide launder, ironing. Sizes for twin or double beds.” PILLOWS, SHAMS, each Fit ‘Standard size bed pillows, colors. Oversize Famous 7 xs 92x90"’ $27.50 Glass-Tex DRAPES full fashion, ready-to-hang draperies in rose and green. 52x90 panels. Patented ‘Flik’ feature. Real deluxe feature Easy to care for. “CAMEO” Panels. . .. $15.88 pr.) $1988 PRICES SLASHED ON CURTAINS we | < blue. ruftle, easy to requires no Wide reffies. 3 % iS Curtains 1 a Bw ay __ — sigd a 7 NA IRONING . {\s3 Fi 2 vi MeN wality 7 B Priscilla style, 4 vq s w complete with b sf k tie-backs. Two . panels each 36 x 90 inch. Fit most windows. . : Genuine “CAMEO” Robe, green or : Shir-Back Curtains - $5.95 Quelity 88 50x90-Inch Per PAIR. ($11.95 tge. 90x90, per pr. $5.88) Sheer chiromspun, easy to launder, little jroning necessary. Decorator wra: to a in soft, even folds. Mint green on) $11.95 NYLON Cris-Crse Soran ie $6°¢ att. ‘23 "Came" Shir Bak Penels — Pes Pa 4 190% nylon, automatie ara tape. Sheer and lovely in eve sg88 THE PONT! AC PRESS. TUESDAY, J [ANUARY 14, 1958 sibia iting Crackesithorpe,” he added politely. Eyewitness fo. Sea nto ce * "ric, answering for Bis sister. an “You're only, young once, Your ; first inquest, I expect?’ « ewes on DY Agat tha Christe: Sah eee: soon."* “We can't: stay here tating.” sald Harold irritably. “There's quife a érowd. And all those men! with camer a? At a sign from him, the chauf- 'feur pulled away from the curb. 'The boys waved cheerfully, ~ “All over 96 sont” said Ced- “That's what they think, the — young innecents! It's jest begin- | finding the —_ and medical evi-' dence was given as to th, cause ef death — strangulation, The _ proceedings were then adjourned. | It.was a cold blustery day when | _the_ ‘€rac wkenthorpe family cz came | ‘out of the hall where the inquest had been held. There were five of ‘them all told, Emma,. Cedric, Har- THE STORY ze FAR: A blind in Hy Passing Ts Smaps up ie respectable Mrs MoCileuwddy ® trip te visit her friend, “iiss fluttery old woman with a he Le # ¢own to her imagination Marple obtains a large scale Mrs. MeGiilicuddy's a “Toe oid ter pet effort, she writes to Lucy ‘yelesbarrow, brilliant young woman who her meade for herself a unique profession-taking temiporar charge ef households and running them uke * . . , | wing.” eae iss ‘Marple “fipures the body .Old, Alfred, and Bryan Eastley, . ~— ve Ye ee a — ~ the hus of the dead daughter ‘It's all very unfortunate. Most egiecte: Retnectert ‘all, bail by Mr’ Crack- Edith, Theré; was also Mr. Wim- unfortun: ate,” said Harold, “I sup- enthorpe. & rich Manufacturer Lucy borne, the senior partner of the pose _" gets herself emploved at Rutherford Rail bs rm =a reckentherys ' firm of solicitéys whe dealt with. He looked at Mr. Wimborne who se T in - stalled “T, Uae pegbherhenn. posing the Crackent s’ legal -affairs. compressed his thin lips and shook He had come down specially from his head with distaste, London at great iKtconvenience to) “I hope,” he said sententiously. ittend the inquest They All stood ‘that the whole matter will .soon for @ moment on tHe pavement,'be cleared up satisfactorily. ‘The shivering. Quite a crowd had as- pelice are very efficient. However, ing golf. Lucy searches far the ¥ She finds a piece of fur on « bust railroad tracks Alexander and ¢ below the Eastiey, Emma's nephee Ww James Stoddart - bern that houses & sarcophagus Lucy pries it open and finds the body of a murdered woman. Nene of the family ean identify the corpee. . CHAPTER 11 FORMAL INQUEST The Inspector looked hard at Lucy. “Im not saying anything to any-. one at present.’ he said. “] haven't _lYes, yes, of course _ a had neburaile been pre pared oad sane tienes hii he said’ in a‘ hesi- tating voice, “I hardly know... I did feel that the whole place ‘Ineeded a thorough clearing out and cleaning. And th-ve was —" she hesitated — “a very — and disagreeable smell — r She had counted accurately on the immediate shrinking ‘of everyone from the — ness of this ‘idea . -Mr, Wimborne mtrmerea = +2 about — ithree weeks the police surgeon| said... | think, you know, we! | must all try and not- let our) minds dwell on this thing.” He} smiled encouragingly at Emma) who had turned very pale. “'Re-| member,” he said, ‘this wretched) young woman has nothing to do with any of- us." * “Ah, but you can't be so sure! of that, can you?” said Cedric. * * * Junior Editors Quiz on- yas “HISTORY . , * Lucy Eyelesbarrow looked at! thim with some interest. She had. already been intrigued by the! rather startling difference between! the three brothers. Cedric was a big man with’ a weather-beaten rugged face, unkempt dark ‘hair, and a jecund manner. He had arrived from the Airport unshaven, | * * * and though he had shaved in prep-- § ANSWER: When Capt. Merriweather Lewis and William eae me oe —_— = Pee ‘Clark made their famous exploration of the Northwest in the Sa rane the ciotnes in whic early 1800's, they passed through North Dakota. There they| to be the only ones he had; old Dired a French-Canadian trader, Toussaint Charbonneau, as) gray flannel trousers, and a an interpreter and guide. Charbonneau’s Indian wife Saca-| patched and rather — threadbare jawea, which means bird woman,’ also joined the expedition baggy jacket. He looked the stage'and trudged hundreds of miles with her baby on her back. Bohemian to the life and proud qs @ young girl in Idaho's Shoshone tribe, Sacajawea had been captured by. another tribe and sold to Charbonneau.) | When Lewis and Clark trekked through the Shoshone territory, State Bill WouldlAboluh ne : = proved very valuable She knew the country, tate Bi ould Abolish we and she also _persuaded—her—people to sell the expedition \ Nid pe QUESTION: Who was the bird woman? (Continued Tomorrow) verified your statement yet. For all I know, you may be making ’ the whole thing up.” - — Lucy rose’ : * * i Thank you. Then 1 ll go back to the kitchén and get on with things.” ° “We'd better have the yard — , i 08 W, is thal Wiiat you think, es ¥ Bacon?” The chief Constable looked in- _quiringly at Inspector Bacon. The Inspector was a big solid man—his expression was that of one utterly disgusted with humanity “The woman wasn't a local, sir,’ he said. ‘‘There’s some reason, to’ believe — from her underclothing| — that she might have been a foreigner. Of course." added In-| spector Bacon hastily, “I'm not! letting on about that yet awhile ~ We're keeping it Up our sleeves _ until after the inquest.” INQUEST KORMAL The Chief Constabie nodded “The inquest will be purely for- | mal, I suppose?” “Yes, Sir. I've ner.” “And it’s fixed for-when?"' seen the Coro- The policeman was very kind and fe tus In at the back door. “Tomorrow, I understand the (cembled: the of'the whole thing, as Harold says, ether members of the Cracken- ‘the “Body in the Sarcophagus” |has been most unfortunate.” thorpe family will be here for | eee Se it. There's just a chance one of chad been fully. reported in both!PLACES BLAME them might be able to identify ‘the London and the local Press.| He looked, as he spoke, at Lucy, her, They'll all be here.” +*~ * ® land there was distinct disapproval He consulted a list he held in| A Murmur went round: “That's in his glance. ‘‘If it hag not been. his hand. ih vem. . for this young woman,”’ his eyes “Harold Crackenthorpe, he’ Enns said sharply: “Let's get seemed to say, “pdking about. something in the City — quite an|®W@Y ‘where she had no business to be important figure; I understand, Aj.| The big hired Daimler drew up _ none of this would have hap- fred — don’t quite know what he '° the curb. Emma got in ee | does, Cedric — that’s the one who motioned to Lucy, Mr. Wimborné,!” This sentiment, or one closely lives abroad. Paints!" The Inspec- | Cedric and Harold followed Bryan |resembling it, was voiced by Har-, tor invested the word with its full,! 'Eastley said: “I'll take Alfred with) lold Crackenthorpe quota of sinister significance. The me in my little bus.” The chauf-| “By the way — cr — Miss et feur shut the door and the Daimier| _ piquant details Chief Constable smiled into his ba | Myeicabarren! ja) what mustache peeres Uo ah an’) = | made you go looking. in that * * * “Oh, stop!” eri le d Emma... sarcophagus?” “No reason, is there, to bel eve, rbere are the boys! — ckenthorpe are ——“Phe boys, in spite of aggrieved —— ~ that the €ra famtty when this thought would occur to connected with the crime in any protests, had been left behind at one of the family. She had known way?" he asked: Rutherford Hall, but they now |,,,., the police nels make dirs “Not apart from the fact that appeared grinning from. ear to thing: what surprised her was that the body was found on the prem- ear. itiseemned to have occurred to ny ises,” said Inspector Bacon, “And -‘We came on our bicycles ! cou ; ‘ible that ~said one else until the moment. ‘an aru Aten Whe famiy Stoddart West. The. pain was) Cedric, Emma, Harold and Mr., ° is artist member of the family very kind and let us in ‘at the Wimborne all looked at her. might be able to identify her. nick of the hall. I hope you | don’t! Her reply, ‘for what it was’ What beats me js this extraordi- : z ————— nary rigmarole about the train.” “Ah yes. You've been te see this old lady, this — er —" he | glanced at. the memorandum ly- Sam Benson Says: athe State Motor Lapa Highway Lucy had already wondered just. | Turnpike Authority horses and food: A statue of Sacajawea stands in. Portland, LANSING \®—A _ bill to abolish : - ithe Michigan Turnpike Authority * eo has been submitted in the Legisla- FOR YOU TO DO: Read an account of the Lewis and Clark ture for the second wn aight year expedition and trace its route across the maps. by Rep. George A. Gillespie (R- % * Gaines). * | * Gillespie called for repeal of the (You may win-$10 by matting-a-postcard with a-good ques- 1953 act creating the authority and fon to Violet M Hig ins, AP N feat i t The transfer of the agency's funds to ey et eee eee eet nrg aS g Pontiac Press. The prize for this one goes to Joseph Seese of Johnstown, Pa. Tomorrow: Why do =~ turn ear Fund, effec tive July The Funeral Director Has Many Talents 5+ And much is expected ol him. First : he eet Se Sent ee community and its. problems. He provides many services only remotely conected with his profession. He must be alert and available — . He must be Sige your Pensend Director. 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Topcoats! and ving saucers atthe bation ol ne Oportswear at garden, and Russian agents in the | 0 lending library, But it seems quite | iP 10 70 % | clear that she did engage this’ 0 s and young woman, the lady help ; told Her to look for a body =| Reg.. SUITS! TOPCOATS! _ Now which the girl did.” $34.50 ODDS & ENDS—broken sizes ..... 16.00 FOURD ONE oo 49.50 Triple Twist Suits—hard finish ... 24.00 : Gu Gun Week ae 53.50 Sharkskin Suits that hold press. .. 29.00 very remarkable story. Marple, | 36. 50 Wool Worsted Suits . see eeee 34.09 _. Miss Jane__Marple_—_the name. 29.50 Lined Gabardine Topcoats oe veces 14.00 seems familiar somehow . | - Any 39.50 Zip-Lined Gabardine Tepes. vee 19.00° (Mnik you're’ rgit about Ws not 49.50 All Wool Tweed Topcoats . . .. 27,00 ~ being a local case — though we 45.00 Wool Blend Trench Coats . Ino 24.00 let the mailman | do your * Savings Deposits — *& Checking Deposits and checkin wont advertise the fact just yet. 34.50 Triple Twist Twill Topcoats ..... 19.00 For the moment, we'll tell the Press as little’ as possible.” _ 58. 50 Imported Tweed Herringhnoe Fis guia: Was oe | tens... or 8200; al affair. No one came forward | to identify the dead woman. Lacy | was = to give evideace of | PHILLIP MITOGEN ALL OUR SPORT COATS $29.50 Imported Wool Tweed Suburban Coats . vee cece $1487 29.50 Ivy League Sport Coats.......... 16.87 34.50 Stripe or Plaid Sport Coats . 19.87 OVER 3,000 PAIRS OF PANTS ¢ $ 8.95 us Cheep Dante Poses 2. $4.87. 10.95 Gabardine Lancer Dress Pants... . 5.87 14.95 Imported Wool Flannel tee. 9.87 9.95 One Group Lightweight Pants .... 2.87 12.95 Quilt Lined Gabardine Jackets .... 7.87 re a ee SAM, BENSON | 20 S. PERRY ST. ’ Free Perking in Gofege Next to My Store Nl PONTIAC _1t ¢ 4 ae \N DOWNTOWN PONTIAC’S | _ ae home or in the office at your convenience, and let the = mailman do your leg work! Bank- by-Mail envelopes Inquire next time you drop in; 7 ot SOME OF OUR SERVICES FOR YOU: oe : Savings Accounts . ' Home ‘Loans a Deposit Boxes = C STATE B Beanches: Auburn Heights — Drayton Plains — 1305 Baldwin, Pontiac Toe Miracle Mile Shopping Center : ze yy ee et we Bank-by-Mail envelopes and a Pontiac , State Bank Checking Account can save you a lot of time, expense needless trips. Use our free Bank- we . Mail envelopes to make deposits to savings and checking accounts. Use a checking account to pay your bills. Do banking and bill-paying at accounts” all five offices. - Auto Loans — Drive-In Money Orders Home Improvement Loans : Personal Loans 7 ee te * ___THE PONTIAC PRESS. _ : TUESDAY. JANUARY, 14, 1055 504 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. See home , Get Dependable RESIDENCE and OUTSIDE THEFT INSURANCE | and BE SURE... it safeguards your property no matter where you are, and the cost is nominal for the val- uable features it includes. Call us for further details... LAZELLE Agency, Inc. ss / “Insurance’’ Phone FE 5-8172 don’t =e on PARIS (INS) _ _ Revolutionary fe eine. the luck to protect [French constitution may lead to ae this - downfall and plunge France increase you and into still castkic auido impasse. * ‘revision, __The youthful Fresich premier is ready to deliver a bitter fight | in Parliament to push through what he regards as vitally needed constitutional reforms. His aim is | to give France a regime of gov- | ernmental stability without aban- doning the nation’s fundamental democratic freedoms. The battle will begin after Parlia-| ment returns to work Tuesday. The major changes Gaillard and ‘his government seek are these: | that a. gov = coul | * * | —In future, under the proposed when the government ‘poses a question of confidence the opposition would automatically submit a motion of censure. The _Lvote would take place on the cen-| ‘sure motion. Negative and favor- ‘able votes would be counted. If the! {would remain in power. _—The government virtually woeid SAFE Me Might tw dieweive the: National Assembly at any pe got wane De gina tee Be atdpdorahe Says Dulles Should. Resign From Office from November 1946, and slightly, MIND to initiate measures which might governmental ° expendi- The’ present constitution, dating lamended in 1954, had tried to cure France's chronic governmental in-| stability. * : * * * It provided that a government should not be overthrown unless, | in a formal vote of confidence or, the National Assembly voted against it. The 1954 amendment provided that a. government could be con- by a simple plurality, rather than only by an absolute ma- jority. Yet, experience showed that in- ‘stability persisted, hampering gov-) ernmental procedures and damag government terrific battle lies : since the whole mentary system will be discussed | in. the debate. Their opponents: in- clude influential members of the! : Assembly—especially from the ‘right wing. parlia- ce _|His 1V Boast True “* |guppose it will blow up,” he said lat the time, I did. Firefighters Sore KEEN Ke © confined the damage to the set. Police Set, aniel Ha . been bragged once his television set was} Beef did not become rab of Temple Israel, has ahead of them|"iMe years old and never hadjin the American diet until after elected president of the Detroit Lt- sa been repeired.. “When i .goes, Ithe. Civil war, - ‘Commission, ‘stand against a summit Landon says , Gectetiny of Sate Dulles should resign because his) confer- ence with the Russians is “taking the world down a dangerous road * * _ . Landon is a former governor of counties in southwest Kansas. * * * A new secretary of State, he declared, is-the—first req | After forming the present gov- | But all deputies who abstained ernment, Premier Gaillard called ‘from voting or were absent would, (upon his Minister of Justice, Robert hands. ‘be counted as having voted in'Lecourt, to prepare-a new consti-| favor of the government. ‘opposition failed to obtain an abso-' Gaillard and _Lecourt know a about 18 head per capita, ing France's reputation abroad. of a positive and constructive for- eign policy that does not leave the initiative always in ‘that threatens disaster to all man- |. censure, on absolute majority of Kind.” Russia's | * NOTIONS * COSMETICS &« STATIONERY - PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED on ORDERS of *5-or MORE! 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Oil Base — . « Maynard ‘HAND CREAM 99° Once-a-year sale! Ideal for, rough oF chapped Reg. 1.75 __ hands. Perfect for powder base. Save now! ane enue eset SEER HSE “CHARGE YOURS « at WAITE’S . ee .sT REET. FLoor! : Current Budget Will anced a. prtsounity e President and Publisher THE PONTIAC PRESS. Editorial Page TURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1958 MEMBER OF THE and Rep. Harris of the Commerce . —— Meet Little Opposition — Probably the current Federal bud- get ous. mony into the slot which —een— indicated ” by White Boake officials and students of the national economy. x * * One year ago, when the President submitted his annual report, the hue and cry that arose resounded throughout the land. Everyone was “mad” or “indignant” or “irritated” —or something. PéOple felt there should be a reduction and a sub- stantial one at that. . Taxpayers were disgruntled. Hadn't all wars ceased? * * * The current budget is larger than the one which produced this widespread dissatisfaction and - yet it will probably be accepted philosophically and with very few lamentations. Only a conscien- tious objector could whip up much of an emotional lather as the main increases are earmarked Committee. 7 eR iy _ Of 15 standing Senate committees, eight major ones are controlled by Southerners, In the House they are chairmen. of niné of the 19 standing | committees. This again emphasizes how the South is in contro] when the Democrats are in the majority. Southern States usually return the same Democrats to office year after | year. The seniority system then qualifies them for committee chair- manships. * * * This alignment is important and is the major reason why many Southerners have discour- aged violent reaction to the school integration ruling. They realize that with their representatives in these important chairman- ships, the South is in a powerful position to influence any such legislation and why there is so little talk of a third party in 1960. RR | Pontiac Press Awaiting Cl RE ( "a (ie Maybe He Haan't Heard David Lawrence Says: for the Defense Department. x * * Russia's 186 pound Sputnik fol- lowed by her puppy dog whirling in outer space are responsible for the difference. We have had the fact driven home that the Commies are very busy with outer space equip- ment and that they’re very success-. ful to boot. Hence, “money is no object.” * * * The nation is just as anxious to have the Congress exercise even greater economy in purely demestic affairs, but we stand unitedly behind any movement to advance our scientific and military preparations. This news- paper believes that the current budget will pass with very little sniping. There are always a ten who ‘Traffic Survey Report Dems Repudiate Kennan’ Ss Thesis The Pontiac Press is eagerly awaiting the new traffic survey re- poft. We feel the lights on Saginaw Street are badly in need of attention. One of our boys drove from Oakland Avenue to South Boulevard and counted the number of times he was stopped going and coming. * x * (joing north, he was checked by five lights out of thirteen. On the reverse trip, he was stopped seven times. We feel this is un- necessary. Other cities do better. Pontiac should and Pontiac can. * * * Why should we continue to wait for a distant report? Some assistance could be given to a bau situation without any further delay. “view with alarm” When any- - thing drastic or important is done. They will probably sound off and fire a few harmless roman candles that mean nothing. There also will be a few Congressmen who will wring their hands at the totals so that they can be quoted back home as “economy minded.” If they confine these notions to peace time pursuits they will be on sound ground. * * * The two houses will probably “cut and fit” a bit here and there so the White House can’t come to the con- clusion that the job is perfect. The Democrats will insist on some “ad- justments” and a few temporizing measures. But—we question whether — “ anyone can challenge. the defense eect eA SCIENTING NUMIS RIM MUCH Sule cess. , Taxpayers, prepare to disgorge. Southerners Powerful in Present Congress With the 85th Congress in session, Senate Majority Leader LYNDON JoHnson and Speaker of the House, Sam Raysurn, Texans both, again will exercise a powerful influence. As shown by posts in Congress, next in national importance are Ar-_ kansas’ representatives. Sen. McCLeL- LAN is chairman of both the labor rackets. investigating .and govern- ment operations committees and Sen. ' Futaricut of the banking commit- tee. Rep. Mitts is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by True Pontiac Press Cofmpany 48 W Hurof Bt, Pontiac 12, Michigan Trade Mart Daiiy Except Sunday Roser. Basserr, Jonw A Rirey Executive Vice Presideit Assistant Advertising and Advertising Director “Manager Howssn A Frrecesatyp 9, Eat M. Teeapwent, Vice President end Circulation Manager Business Manager oe. Maramait Joapan, Joun W, Prreetaats, * Lecal Advertising _ Secretary and Bdltor Manager Rovret B Tass. Gronst ©. inman, ~ "Managing Editor Classified Manager _ seWepaper as well ‘a all Entered at Post Office. Pontiac. as second class matter m of ali local news printed tn this AP news (dispatches ¥ piel — ss is getters ey) cartier for 40 cents pe Fs ged fee te mot evatiable hy mail ake: = Soe _"The Associated. use for republicat Uvings ton, Macomb) peceer os it are is a 2 Oe eteewhe otted oBtates _ versary. s & entitied exclusively to the The Man About Town 40 Years Ago Snowbound in Our Homes; Worst Storm of Century Britches: What when a man gets too big for he'll be exposed in the end. This is an anniversary. Forty years ago today Pontiac was digging itself out, after the worst blizzard of this century we've had nothing like it since. While the snow was less than two feet deep on the level, none of it remained on the level. ‘ Drifts were ten feet high in the down- town section, and all business was para- lyzed, as even the snow plows, both on ~ the highways and railroads, were stalled. Thesmercury dropped to 15 below zero, pemblance of our regular living was pos- sible. A recommendation for all people to stay at home and not take chances .of being lost in the storm was issued by the mayor and travel in the rural sections was ‘declared impossible by the sheriff whose men could do little to help matters.” Both physicians and funeral directors were snowbound. Even phone service was curtailed, as the operators could not get to their work. That month there were 13 days below zero, and only one day when the mercury climbed above freezing. That top developer of new Oakland County lake frontage, James Cole, ‘Is on a trip to the jungles of Honduras, Jim was there a few years ago, but re- fused to get acclimated. Verbal Orchids to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lorenz of 1145. Holbrook Road: fifty-third wed- SiG anniversary. William VanZandt of 5351 Williams Lake Road; eighty-fifth birthday. Mrs. G, H. Look of Middle Straits Lake; birthday. . Mr. and. Mrs. Fred Busch of Lake Orion; sixtieth wedding anniver- sary. Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Long of New Hudsoh; sixtieth wedding anni- of Waterford; eighty-second birthday, Dr. and Mrs. H. G. Decker * ~ ~ ate MEMBER GP AUDIT BUREAU OF CINCULATIONS eighty-fourth® WASHINGTON — What has been the real motive of the Soviet Union in pressing so hard for a ‘‘summit conference’ @at this time? Why have the radio stations of Mos- cow and Peiping been shouting so loudly and so persistently ev- ery night that a “summit confer- ence,”’ with the United States as a participant, must be held a soon? Why have LAWRENCE the powerful radio transmitters in the captive countries,_from Warsaw _ i and into Asia, been echoing this Soviet line? The answers are plain to see when one analyzes the intent of these short-wave broadcasts. For it is evident that the Kremlin got an unexpected reaction to their “Sputniks.”’ MATCH REDS — Instead of establishing the Soviet Union as theoretically able to dic- x tate peace terms, the launching — Pong] = M k Bi of the satellites resulted in a de- er a es g mand inside the United States and allied countries that Soviet strength be promptly matched. Also, instead of the cutting down of armament spending in this country, which the Soviets had hoped would ensue from an easing of tension, the exact op- posite developed and _ tensions actually were increased. The Soviet government, .there- fore, having overplayed its hand with the ‘Sputniks,” has felt that there. America back to the path of unilateral disarmament—which is what Moscow has-been aim: right along—and that's by a “summit conference.” SOFTEN OPINION is only one way to get . for several ‘weeks throughout the English-speaking world and over the German radio. Kennan has bluntly advocated the withdrawal of American troops from Europe under the plan for a_ so-called “neutralized” zone. x * * Not only have the Communists played up the Kennan lectures: in their press and radio, too, but in in New Yérk City through the homes now being built in the hills - western countries various groups, including some of the British Labor Party leaders, have proclaimed support for them on the ground that the Kennan views reflect what a new Democratic administration ‘in Washington could be expected to advocate. former secretary of state im the Truman administration and at present a member of the Ad- visory Council of the Democratic. National Committee, struck a stunning blow against the Kennan viewpoint in a spirited statement issued last Saturdzy. Acheson sternly repudiated the Kennan thesis as inconsistent with Democratic Party doctrine and said that similar views advanced by Kennan had been rejected when offered by him during the Truman administration. * * * Acheson's statement was issued American Council on Germany, a group of prominent citizens who want to see Germany reunited as a free republic and not as a tool of the Soviets. Acheson's statement is one of the best he has ever issued on the subject of Soviet aggression. He for his courageous utterance, which helps not only the administration in its battle against adverse Soviet propaganda but helps the United States of America in world affairs —a service of true patriotism. (Copyright, 1958) Dr. William Brady Says: for Bellows Breathing Recently I wound up a discus- sion of natural or belly (bellows) breathing with this statement: If any reader conceives the idea that constant or very frequent practice of beily breathing (more than two or three times a day, that is) will increase pa cece "hies it. doesn't. Now comes Mr. = ‘BRADY oe Sai and stamped, self-addressed enve- lope for any particular volumette. Later — if they don't get me meanwhile—I'll tell why I believe three times a day is frequently enough to practice belly breathing. * * Signed letters, not more than one page er 100 words long pertain! to personal health and hygiene, mot disease, diag~. nosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady. if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is sent to The Pon- tiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan, - . (Copyright 1958) * Cainicnn be. peal There's h cide Cee discussion of religion and poiltics than most subjects, and most of us have developed definite: prejudices in these two fields. | - * controlling .it. a scuuty wma wt wiatunacia like tion are unable to support their beliefs. Some have beén handed down to us by parents or associates, and our failure to realize that every in- dividual can arrive at opinions ig the same manner as we can makes us fail to comprehend that every individual has a right to his opinion. ~ * * It isn’t so important to consider that many opinions exist as it is to attempt to a system of education that will teach htman beings to realize that when opinions transfer themselves or are transterred inte Set ‘Example’ Parents try to provide their chil- dren with a fine home and good education but seem to fail to pro- vide them with one of their greatest néeds. In the eyes of your children . you're the smartest and most im- portant people in the world. If you don't set an example for your” children, who will? “The family that prays togeth- prejudices, there is a Species: of danger. Andy H. Rochester Next Sunday instead of staying in bed or watching television, take ~your children to church and form ~~~ a link that will last. Bud Starwas Flint er stays together.” Faith pro- Acapulco Taken Over — by ‘Invasion’ By BOB CONSIDINE NEW YORK (INS) — Spent a couple of days in Acapulco, Mex., recently. Next time there I hope to hear the world’s loveliest lan- guage, Spanish, spoken. The Norte- americanos have landed at Aca- puleco in greater force than at Vera Cruz or in Chapultepec. They speak English, or a reasonable facsimile. And no wonder they've come. It’s a nifty spot. Half the graceful above the stunning bay are owned by stateside people. So is the piea- sant hotel where we stayed, the Pierre Marques. The Bank of America put up the money for a spectacular new place on a steep incline over- looking the HongKong-like har- ~ bor and city. Tt has a swimming — pool in front of every 2-room bungalow, .pre - stocked whiskey | cabinets, pink jeeps to tak you wp and down the hilj or into town, and no telephones, stock market tickers, or tipping. Heard an odd story the other day. Cantinflas, the great Mexican clown who does such a fine job in ‘Around the World in 80 Days,”’ is the national hero of Mexico. ling with jagged rocks. From U.S. teresting compromise will set in. Black and white, small-screen prints will be made of that su- perb picture and these wil] be shown in Cantinflas’s country (at 32 cents a seat) not for a year, a decade or a century. But for- ever. Acapulco has a night club named La Perla which has the ¥reatest (and cheapest) act in the whole realm of after-dark entertainment. The club and its patrons sit qn the side of a cliff at a height roughly comparable to the seventh floor of an open-faced building Before them, on the left. is a cliff, about four stories high. To the right is one 13 stories tall. These latter cliffs are separated by 40 feet of shallow water, snar- The Pa- cific_rollg in an occasional wave. Mexican boys climb the per- pendicular face of the cliff on the right, illuminated carishly by torches from the other side, say a prayer before a shrine, peer far belqw, wait for a wave, and then plunge down from that ter- rible height. If the diver hits the wave, fine. It is fat enough to break his fall. Hf he arrives a bit too soon or Charms _too late it's the rocks for him. Case millions, gets countless write-in v _— every time there is an elec- tion. But “Around the World in 80 Days” has not played Mexico, where the people surely would beat “in the doors to see it. Seems there’s a law which prohibits mov- ie theater owners from more than four pesos — 32 cents — for a seat. ; Mike Todd is waiting for a change of administration and, with it, that law. If the new presidente says “To h~ with Miguel Todd,’ (a state- ment which would involve plag- iarism rather than slander) an in- _ The belly of the boy we saw do it never seemed more than a yard away from the face of the stone as he plummeted down. Pay? Fif- teen bucks. ° 4 Looking Back 18 Years Ago AXIS AFRICAN bases blaste iby. sea. air. BEGIN TIN can pickup. 20 Years Ago ANGLO-U.S. far eastern accord rumored. _ FRENCH CABINET falls in fiscal crisis. a Case Records of a Psychologist: Soviefs.. L soften public opinion tn all the countries which are members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- ization, where the proposal to hold a “summit conference” is being described in the press as “‘popu- lar.’ But it is evident that the implicafionis of the Soviet scheme have not been thoroughly analyzed. Thus the idea is being advanced that American forces should be withdrawn from Europe in ex- - change for a pledge by the Soviets to respect a so-called “neutralized” zone, which would include Germany, Czechoslovakia ‘ afid Poland, and perhaps ‘the Scandinavian countries -and—in— which there wouldn’t be any missile bases or stockpiles _of atomic weapons. This insidious concept has lately been gaining some ground in Eu- _ rope as a result of the sensation ~ created. by a series- of lectures delivered in London by aged F, Kennan, former American ambas- sador-to Moscow. LECTURES BROADCAST These have been broadcast over the British Broadcasting System and have been repeated by radio There ii is 3 fi doubt ‘that the prac-~ tice of belly breathing is benefi- cial; one has but to try it to prove that. “You" have repeatedly stated that the savage, or the person asleep or unconscious breathes naturally, that is, with the belly. But when awake civilized per- sons, due to a “chesty” com- plex, do not breathe naturally. “That would imply that when “awake people are conscious of their breathing. It Seems to me that we are aware of our breathing only when we practice belly breathing or other breathing exercise; and that we breathe naturally when asleep only because we are fe- ~~ taxed * * * “Breathing is disturbed only by nervous or muscular tension. Just as complete relaxation results in - natural breathing, so belly breath- ing is a most effective means of - relaxing.” Now see here, C. B. If you be- net ae exercise is bene- ficial, why didn’t you just say so and leave me free to wend “my. wacky way to the bowling The Country Parson ¢ of Birmingham; fifty-third wedding an- we Sh Diversary, i ong ae ; 7 | ee) a no good to tell our of Rochester; fifty-third wedding epnic versary. * able C. B. S., green? You've made a chicken- or-egg conundrum out of it. If belly breathing ‘is correct and we breathe that way all the time in our sleep, continues the inexor- “why, this limit of three times a day for conscious belly breathing? If would seem de- sirable that the habit of correct, natural, belly- breathing should be cultivated until one breathes nat- urally all the time. “I: think that is what regular practice of the B. B. exercise tends - to do—establish a habit of natural : - breathing all the time. What say, Doc?” YOU WIN, Sik What I have to say will be de- In my college tertbook “Psy- chology Applied,” I have rated Aristotie as the leading psy- » Chologist prior to the birth of Christ. Jesus is the greatest psychologist of ail time, as shown in part by the examples . ‘below. Read the Four Gospeis “from this angle and you will be thrilled anew at the story of Jesus. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case X-302: Dr. Thomas O. Bur- gess is the famous Christian. _Psy- chologist mentioned. yesterday. ~ x * * “Dr. Crane,” " he suggested, ‘why don't you cite some of the evi- dence from your college textbook to prove that Jesus was the World's Greatest Applied Psychol- ogist?"’ Yesterday I thus explained that Jesus em- ployed advertis- ing methods and DR. CRANE used polis -of public opinion, plus the “reversible why” sales tech- nique. He also neatly sidestepped his who tried to trap him with their two-horned dilem- mas. But Jesus also must have had a powerful speaking voice for he handled outdoor audiences num- bering at least 5,000 men (not to mention women and children), yet had no modern microphone or amplifying equipment. : * * * \ And Jesus was a pioneer in what we consider modern church inno- vations, for he started the first church picni¢ when he fed the 5,000 —with the: lad's loaves and fishes, - eeresen. Christ initiated the Easter sunrise breakfast, - he called the futile fishermen from their boats at dawn after his resur- rection and served as their host at a breakfast consisting of broiled fish and bread. FICKLE CROWDS Arid the fickleness of the crowds did not make Christ cynical, though he reproved them for their desire of free food. “Ye seek me,” he added after the mob had trailed him following . his feeding af the 5,000, “not because_ye saw the miracles, but because. ye did eat of the loaves and were filled.” Jesus knew that most of the people in the crowd were selfishly When he healed the 10 lepers of what was then a sure death, only one returned even to say ‘Thank you.”’ But Jesus still retained faith in people: ee ee Jesus also realized that we are more inclined to believe what we see than what we hear. , So, in the Upper Room, following his resurrection, he showed the nail prints in his hands to the Apostles and even asked Doubting Thomas to place his fingers there- in to convince himself of Christ's identity. And he ate food before _ their eyes to prove he was not a ghost “FREE ENTERPF Risk” ¢ Jesus apparently believed in varying rewards for different amounts of talent, which {s the “free enterprise” doctrine. For when he described the man with the one pound who had run ‘this investment up to 16 . Jesus said this servant was rewarded by- ‘being, made ruler over 10 cities, The other servant, who ran his “eniginalone-pound ‘capital up to" al Jesus Believed fi n Free Enterprise" five pounds, was then made ruler over five cities. If we carried this analogy over to American affairs, we'd see that Jesus would support the numerical grading system in public schools whereby the superior speller or reader or arithmetic pupil would geta higher grade than the child who missed a greater number of the exam questions. However, in some American - schools_in recent years,—the per- nicious communistic custom has sneakéd into vogue whereby a bright child who scored 100 per cent on a test is not to be rewarded above the dullard who scored only 50 per cent, . For both are now graded “E”, m®aning they are both doing _ efficient work as nieasured by the teacher's estimate of. their ‘ability . * This leveling off is a commu- nistlc idea and kills incentive hil the more talented children, are the -malff hope of ieoras For further examples of how * | | | | Jesus used psychology, just read ° the Four Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Always rR, te = r,, Gearge w. Crane . pope gy one ie stamped aay aan haat a * i ee ‘ + Pa 4 £ 3 oo ee Se See ‘Defénse Effort; ‘Refers to Special Report Nelson, now project that needs public good. example was his SUB MiseiLE LAUNCUES — Sketch-diagram conception of a new launching system for the U.S. Navy's ee a ne ee \Author oe |Book Borrowed |Fitty Years Ago iii Mie has just “returned “Dona| The General— : Pertecta novel he bor- a new Electric Adding Marhun: that above fe artis. "| THE PRICE... His speed efficiency the deck of « mimarine, and-contro!l ... visible adding dials... =) the United Nations to New simple as gs * Thus, oe naturally this multi- would lose its ‘superiority in strik- ing power unless it is willing “to make the big effort now.” _ Rockefeller spoke from the conclusions of the Reckefelier ‘Report, which the Rockefeller Fund had drawn up by various experts — including himself — on ‘the state of America's defense. ‘The report began a new year of continued restless activity for the husky man With blue gray eyes. In the past, be has been special assistant to the President, assist- ant secretary of state, and assist- ant secretary of health, — and welfare. * * * | Among his activities last year were work on Dartmouth’s new project for Brazil, chairmanship of Security for You Did you or your deceased spoust have earnings from work of more y income credit.” Being entitled to —you have from pensions, annui- of the temporary commission on revision of the New aed serena Constitution, setting museum of primitive = 3 Man | and hattan, helping on a 5,000-home project in Puerto Rico and leader- | ship of New York's fruitless moves io keep the Dodgers in Brooklyn. After graduating from Dart-| mouth College in 1930, he wed) Mary Todhunter Clark of Phila- jelphia. They have five children, and maintain a home at Foxhall Road, Washington. Microscope Purchased ALBION @ — Albion College has purchased an electron micfo-| scope capable of producing photo- graphs 100,000 times the size of the) particles being studied through; it. It was purchased for about $15,000 in gifts from the National Science Foundation and Dr, Mark Putnam, executive vice president of Dow Chemical Co. Heads Drive for Fair | DETROIT @—Herbert W. (Burt) Hart, former president of the C. F. Smith good store chain here, has been named to head a drive to hold an international trade fair in Detroit in 1962, Hart was appointed ;your “retirement income credit" eeeraree By RAY HENRY Were. you 65 or over in 1956? than $600 a year for any 10 years before 1958? Did you have income im 1957 from pensions, annuities, interest, dividends or rents which is subject to federal income tax? x * * Wt your answer is “yes” to alt|>Y three questions, you're probably entitled to a special break when you file your federal income tax" report thig year. The break comes in the form ot what the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) calle “retirement dl income was a taxable pension Of/ you're not eligible for retirement $3,000 from your former employer; jincome crédit. $600 in Social Security and $1, 5 To help you claim this credit, the from odd jobs during the ye r. | RS has a special form which must crue meet = doeenary clusive construction reduces maintenance cost and made i ti Your retirement income ane poe a to your regula tx|" 1 itorida senator is past see tee ne AC-DC. of $1,200 must be reduced by the $600 in Social Security and the $300 in excess of your earnings over $1,200. Thus, the $900. Then, you apply the 20 per cent to the remaining $300. This means that your retirement income credit is $60. So, you subtract the $60 \from the income tax you would normally pay and you get the ac- tual tax you must pay. As you can see from this exam- columns.. 9 . subtraction... only 12 Ibs. 169°. A nave high in liclney — a new low tn price! The General is @ fully electric adding machine designed to perform with top-speed accuracy (almost J cycles per second), Automatically adds, subtracts, and multiplies; subtraction figures printed with easy-to-spot minus sign. Visible adding dials register continuous totals... % column capacity (9,999,999,999.99). And net an ounce . of extra weight; the General weighs only 12 ibs.—Ex-—_ Has Way fo Pay for Scholarships WASHINGTON @®—Sen. Smath-| ers (Dia) pas sought Free sdchaides vith aime 30 Wek lion dollars worth of selzed war) assets. Smathers said after a confer- ence with the President that Ei-| and salaries of $2,400 or more, * of a bill which would authorize! @ use of allen property assets to finance scientific and technologi- cal scholarships for ‘about 1,500 American students a year. The scholarships would be_ worth about $4,000 each. ~ Cx Smathers told. newsmen the United States still holds about 300 If you have any doubt as to how ito figure the credit or whether you're eligible for it, you should get an official answer from the jnearest IRS office. (Questions on Social Security problems .may be ——— te “Social Security, im care of The | Pontiac Press. Gillies © iif be (million dollars answered by mail from the Pon- ‘property assets tiac office ef the Social 1 Security World War Il He added that at; & Administration, =o is fe present there are no claims|_ Bead charge for this service.) ‘against about half that amount. $1,200 is reduced DONALDSON LUMBER 27 Orchard Lake. FE 2-8381 | t®e credit, may mean a tax sav- ing to you of as much ag $240. Here's the story: Any income—if you're 65 or over ties, interest, dividends or rents is —v =e wee vered by a special “ in- come credit’ provision of the in- jcome tax law. Within certain limits mentioned below, the provision allows you a tax credit of 20 per cent of the first $1,200 of your retirement in- photo- employer. Your “retirement = HT 3 E is $240. So, you subtract the $240 from the $305 and your actual income tax for 1957 is $65. by Detroit Mayor | Louis Miriani. ARMSTRONG 12x12” or 16"x16" Before You Buy ~ Values on- Famous ARMSTRONG TILE CEILING TILE © Snow White ® Ivory | ANYONE CAN AFFORD IT! ¢ ~ Everyone Loves It 4% ite va tl ns yn LPN No wonder so many people think this Chieftain Pontiac is too rich for their blood! Certainly there isn’t a single thing about it to remind you that this big, bold beauty is PRICED RIGHT DOWN WITH THE LOWEST! Feastyour . eyes on its sleek New Direction Styling... then look in- side at its king-size stretch-out interiors, color-matched and fully carpeted in even the lowest priced model! And — there’s even bigger value news underneath the beauty! 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Brous- seau will get a chance to find out what happens in a play after. the last scene. driving fic Judge *.“* * judge? “ Brousseau asked before! : Salpe Wotts pened pasa Ly iebaree. Nasser Fly Brousseau explained he playedinasser flew to the winter resort the part of a defendant on Traf-) 'fi¢ Court, a television show Judge Brousseau, 34, an amateur ac- Watts starred in last year. tor, was sentenced to 10 days for| “Oh yes,’ casi stn to Wt tat thi tne te eanience s iMac Man’ Upeotting - LOUISVILLE, Ky, #®—Officials John D, Watts. real." at La Grange * * Hewn of Luxor, in upper Egypt, ‘ger and a buzcher * the judge responded, | ‘talks. | weapons away. What upset them hip, suffered ina fall at her | , e ~-—tgasped as magician” Al Hixen Woman, 103, iy a ‘Sukarno and Egyptian Presifent|baugh prepared to entertain pris-} _ : a joners by /pulling two guns, a dag- ‘ (Sm a cea place. 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SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 : THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY. 1, 1958 it ae ee ct mictheda et combat bo knew the fice to women: To have soft,|dinne WOULD BE SPENT IN FIRST YEAR: ‘ould come mot con Tams in 1 Buy who-has to. open his frozenihis -malted Z , while serving as an instructor ss mb perenne : ——— | — Si whe ving wa intr | JNJ uclear omb Testing | | $20 MILLION: ‘ in Federal funds m ipleting tours of duty which includ-|. to be spent oe inte cine ‘ke scold tt ED NATIONS, N, 'Y. natures represent individuals sé over four-year : enroliment in -the Army’s : para- More than 9,000 scientists ‘> rather than organizations, he said. fume _ period ~ chute school. i nations have petitioned the Unit-| The petition says: “Each nu- ee aptitude tests of ® d ki oD ie = ed burd Seeih FOR 50 YEARS , ¥ student oe ’ ur en A students in 7th-9th grades. ond higher education guidance. ent ee aes vente et ~ becteggene tq stop nuclear bomb ments over every part of the eee Good g affinity for leaps from the wild| The petition wained that-“each (Oe ‘added amount of ra-/ <> af sige eau — ee ‘assigned to the 50rd Para-jdamage to the health of human| nea” Gf human beings all i / «a chute Battalion beings all over the world... and|tne oct ct huss germ thas ‘TTL DY oo — - Pearl Harbor Day—Deec. 7, 1941/increases “the number of serious-|.uch as lead to an increase in DR. SPENCER OATES million dollars found Gavin, a major by : ithe number of seriously defective —_Optome 3 : a 37 JP in state matching \ aye et A in _ eumieations” © \guidren that, will be here ta. fe = es y ae Se —_ iin 3 funds. States to hove To apportion 10,000 scholar- Te award graduate fellowshi t Fort Benning, Ga. : an eh pitagapaoemeagen: _ 9 ,9:20-5 30 oo. ae ae . Promotions to lieutenant colonel Dr. Linus Pauling, who said he), , tai i : - — $100 MILLION— — $5 MILLION — — $80 “ee. — and then to colonel came his way/felt it “represents the opinion. of = ppeallendtlng oir Previn wants. Leek, tans Su, UM rename re FOR a scien’ 3) au caeeeRois fi woe Te ‘obtoin'!more.ond better To estoblish end operate fore ro Netonal Science Founda-.! scrence teachers, improve eign longuoge training centers, ‘ten in programs assisting jstrate not once but many times,|signed it. -— <¢ «& LOUISVILLE, Ky. @®—~A would- ‘equipment science education. r ee « he « Pauling submitted the petition|De Purse-snatcher tried for Miss , PARKING ON PREMISES THE. ANSWER TO SPUTNIK? — President tude to the states in the ‘spending of the funds. ( evan, jumping with 9,235 names to Secretary|Betty Singleton's and got -clouted cosccsscnecseeseccccccsoooosocoscceooocoocees Fisenhower has called for a four-year, 16 billion: Even so, indications are that the proposal faces dollar program to spur science education for the — heavy going in Congress—from those who oppose missile and satellite age. Newschart, above,” all Federal aid to education, from those who say shows how the money is to he spent. Drafted by the plan does not allow Washington enough con- the Department of Health, Education and Wel- trol over the states and from those who claim the fare, the seven-point program allows wide lati- eee fails to meet the nation's needs. —E Portrait of Gavin: More Guts, Mor e B r @| | NS, Mor e Cour age Sound travels four and one-half/neering at the California Institute | gna soidder Ue sleep. Ge Te toe S| ax MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS * jot directors. i within the next year and Gavinia majority of the scientists of the trol is fendible.” infantry regiment. of the petition when it was first Jim Gavin had given the Army|made public’ last June 3 as an|**w® ‘t said. went overseas in. September 1942 in) world.” Some WU, 5. authorities|)) 4. develop ae “or Sea ct command of the 505th parachute|questioned the scientific accuracy), cataclysmic nuclear war’’ in- Esiablished in 1898 skill. In combat, he was to demon-jtists. Foreign scientists later INDIANAPOLIS. # — Robert C.|_ The scientists include 36 Nobel) Th [Nelson of the Detroit News was|“imners, 101 members of st elected president of the Great U. 8. ational Academy I ee : Lakes Newspaper Mechanical Con- ences, 216 members of the Boviet ference yesterday. He succeeds Academy of Sciences and 35 fel- \John_E. Innis of the Indianapolis lows of the Royal Society of Lon- mame. adil { Star, who was named to the board °°": * « & = ng dur fing recurr Pauling heads the Division of| w Tartine ‘Chemistry and Chemical Engi- siletey rele relax saga times faster in water than in air.iog Technology in Pasadena. Sig-| 4 Money : al by 2,000 scien ample evidence of his professional|appeal by anette iClouts Purse Snatcher. general” hated by the enemy and |General Dag Hammarskjold. The|°" th head. “So many times I idolized by his troops.) U.N. si such documents |tore up the umbrella,” she said. available to its 82 members on|The man ran, without the purse. lrequest but takes no action on|Miss Singleton saved .her purse, Elect Conference Head them itself. and. the one dollar it contained. The umbrella was a total Joss. (Advertisement ’ sneering. cou coughing en and a diftieuit improved, Wonder- ly helps combat | S:eeeeeeeeeesooece Farmer-Snover ° ~ FUNERAL HOME 160 W. Huron St. FE 2-917] - If you are enable to pay your payments, debts or | afferd, regardiess of or how many yeu owe, MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange for payments you ean NO ‘SECURITY. OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED = ONE PLACE TO PAY Member American Association of Credit Counsellors ‘ks of Foret ‘and ‘Bron-| “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You" Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1 Evenings by App't. | _ (Lt Gen James M Gavin's de- can add things up and figure out to be promdted to corporal belie! . cisian to t the Army in prote agains! what he calis its “rapidity jwhy he has chosen to make the pis 18th birthday, he crammed a ¢ + + a” hh 7 eect aeepre hae shaken biggest sacrifice a three-star gen- members of Congress. This is the leral with a good chance to become first of three articles taking «a vs searching ook at Gevin—the man, (chief of staff could possibly make prophet } By JAMES LEE INS Staff Writer lago. Gavin was orphaned at an United States Military Academy. age so early he never knew his * * * Two colonels, dedicated career Brooklyn couple who moved to winning a competitive examination, | men who wore unhappy looks, were Mount Carmel, Pa., where he grew has the reputation of spending | talking about the forthcoming re-/UP- more sleepless hours than any) tirement of Et- Gen. James M.iyouTH OF POVERTY Peony cadet. It was his custom to) ‘ise hours before reveille and hit! Ithe textbooks as hard as he was later to hit the enemy. Gavin, the Army’s brilliant Chief at Kescarceane ae lerty. There wasn't enough money . ito finance a high school education. | One of the officers said sadly: ‘Gavin was a natural student, so. PROMOTION SLOW Jim Gavin_is_a three-star orphan snot was a tough situation that) Hie was graduated on June 13 His boyhood was spent in pov- parents. He was adopted by a Gavin ~ entering West Point by whole curriculum of high school| studies into his off-duty time and. the combat hero, .and the military The record began half a century qualified for appointment--to: the | fhe rnost important advance in Auto Insurance in the century! and oath. the CENTURY offer you FAMILY © - COMPENSATION . COVERAGE . * ... pays for injuries to you and resident rela- tives involved in any auto accident...NO MATTER WHO'S AT PAULT. Avoids lengthy law-suits by offering immediate bene- whose only home is the United catied for a solution. He gave the'1929, and commissioned a second , States Army ;matter thought and came up with |jeutenant of infantry. In the peace- - His companion rejoined: “I'm'the answer—the U.S. Army. time Army—particularly in the in- weea he aon mes mye Only a little skinnier than he is [antry—promotion was slow. Gavin) — sia | new, Gavin enlisted as a private Was a second lieutenant for five cision nm, tealous, | years, a first lieutenant for five | The decision of lea fous, | on an April day in 1924. He took first lieutenant for five) articulate “Slim dim” Gavin te to \¢ as though he felt it was the |More. put aside the uniform in which place in which he belonged _ As a young afficer, Gavin's | he gained honor and distinction «from here to eternity.” | reving, questioning mind focused | mie by few werpich = a | In the next year, while perform-, en the great war that he felt | aa 0 Motery ree ema ling his military duties well enough was inevitable pe on the new | : jp (ma ae Gavin, who as a paratroop hero in World War -II became. the | Army's youngest major general at, 2 AoE a cena a] | Gasoline bills wrecking your budget? | | now—and he looks, acts and feels a lot youngest ee * * * | So he is no “old soldier” seeking’ —__-_____@-Fetirement haven where he can) : dwell with his martial memories. | He is, in the words of Army Secre- tary Wilber M. Brucker, ‘‘four- | star material.” STATES BASIC REASON = | } Gavin stated quite simply, in q testimony before the Senate Pre-| paredness subcommittee, the basic | ¥ 2 om er reason for his request to be retired March 31. He said it was the ‘‘rapidly Th fle il d-h Id | | deteriorating position of the | é penny a-miie record- 0 er! | Army” and his inability to “do | ‘ ; . | anything about it’ because of | —— — “Penta a system.’ a Brucker said he offered Gavin a fourth star in an attempt to pef-) ee | Modern protection for the modern family This must have been tempting, | indeed, to the Brooklyn-born pro-| ; fessional soldier who joined the! -2O Army as a 17-year-old private in} (tok aia thee 3h aes a - - with over liberalized tc adit it evervthing he had. | * * * Yet Gavin rejected the offer, He’ - | ” , : said “'] feel that I can do hetter for the Army ontside than in” | _ the CENTURY pays: liberalized benefits for: bail “To kno why Jim Gay ° +___ ~ i Oe ee — bonds and court appearances...transportation expenses... IFing an if rit ol } | ernepal s/eeud) you have to krow re i ~loss of wearing apparel, due to car theft... plus man an whet kind of a man he is 4 guess Why feed a gos hes? Join the sthart motorists who are switching benefits, too P y . the key word, in any attempt to to Ramblers at a record rate—sales up- 12% over i ae then Get : describe him, is ‘exceptional.’ the car-that set the official. NASCAR economy record—' ls He has more guts, more 1¢ 2 mile for gasoline (Rambler 6 with overdrive). Get the only the CENTURY covers: you, your children, and— : brains, and a greater sense of | | Caf that gives you the best of both: American big car room and other household members against liability-when driving _ duty than any contemporary 1} Comfort, plus European small car economy and handling ease. your car...or using a borrowed car owned by someone out- ean think of. He has the same ide th ' ; MERICANS side the hous i Sauragelletli bac lconvictaue dist —fe_ AMERICAN MOTORS MEANS MORE FOR AMERIC. ee oe plus important Collision and Compre- Douglas MacArthur displayed mine ren Re ed Thal. rage PONTIAC: Rogers Sales & Service, 695 Auburn Ave. @ ae” Sy citar |: tenes ae Ree SSE es eee the CENTURY . tr orea. \ & a re : : _ Engle Motor ales, 1443 5 igh "Road e “.Scuarnn Kaverley Saves: with low, low rates s that 3 a Gavin's brother officer added Rambler, 420 Main Street. are among the most modest of all auto policies. And remem- “Take a jook at Jim's record. If you study it closely, maybe you ber—Nationwide’s claims service is prompt, friendly, equal , to the very best... " DOUBLE HOLDENS. ad ie TRADING STAMPS : SanUG STORES WEDNESDAY : EOUHT PHARMACISTS Charge LESS for | PTE INS: Sg | G-7 my Cay § ts €~) &-) 1 T etty, 9 ey om home office: Columbus, Ohio fits to anyone injured by your car...70 matter who's at fault] ____*net-evattabte in Washington, 0.C. Ask your Nationwide man about a CENTURY policy for your car, for your family! ATION WIDE iz > William F Piel SS eee RANCE COMP. PANY 16525 James Couzens Highway * Detroit, Michigan ~ 7 Phone: UNiversity 1-9380 Posing for cur photographer before the City During the social hour members talked over the significance of the About to pour a cup Raymond Swaney day’s program. of tea is Mrs. F ederation of Women's Clubs meeting Monday were ( left to right) Mrs. William B. Dean, of Judson street, Mem- Mrs. Julian Levine of Comme drive and Mrs. Amold Hillerman of Chamberlain street. bers at the refreshment table are (left to right, standing) Mrs. Clarke Kim- ball of Ogemaw road, Mrs. Ossie Gates of Phillys road and Mrs. derson of Oneida road. An- Frank (seated) of Middlebelt road. Personal News of Interest in Area Mr. and Mrs. Robert Emer- . - and Mr, and Mrs. Senion Knudsen, both couples of, sateniaabanl: are in Miami, "la._attending the convention _ # the American Auto Dealers \ssociation. The affair wil] be concluded today. i * * * Arriving in Pontiac -Monday vere Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Houle Jr. and their two daugh- ers, Karen and Annette, of — Dayton, Ohio, The family will visit Mrs. Houle’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Coilis A: Seott of Franklin boulevasd, and Mr. Houle’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Houle of Franklin. The four will be visiting in this area all week. | * * _~Me-and-Mes-W : — ter of Birmingham wound aon * joation Women Hear Address ~ on Will-Making Mrs. Russel] Auten presided when Junior Pontiac Women's Club met Monday evening at Community National Benk. Mrs. Ronald Hodge and Mrs. for- the event.- — * * oA “Mrs. Hodge introduced Hor-~ ~ ace Lodge, who in turn intro- duced Carlton B, Leonard of: Detroit. Mr. Leonard spoke on “Let's Take the Mystery Out of Wills.” | * * * - Refreshmepts were served and Mrs. Auten presided at the tea table. _event. “a visit to Sun Valley, Idaho, on Sunday. Both avid skiers, the. Winchesters enjoyed runs -en the resort area’s_ 9,200-foot Baldy Mountain. thrilled the children. At Miami Beach's Fontainbleau Hote| the family saw actor Gordon Mac- Rae * * * * * Mr. and Mrs. James Mor- rissey of Lakeland avenue and their children, Michael and Darlene, have returned from a 2%>-week vacation at Hallan- dale, Fla., where they stayed at the Flamingo Motel. Highlighting their visit were conducted tours of Indian vil- lages, the Evergiades,.and a wtestling match between an Indian and an alligator, which * Additional local Florida va- cationers are Mr, and Mr s. Morley Bush of Osmmun street who have been in the sunny south for the past two weeks * * * Visiting relatives near Janes- ville, Wis., is Mrs. L. L: Mar- ion of James K boulevard. She will remain there throughout this week. * * * Born to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ae Fern of Holly were twins, Kar- ~Speaking Contest — = Soting Monday in the Old Orchard drive home of Mrs. Ivan Wilcox were board mem- bers of Pontia¢ Toastmistress Club. 5 * * * Plans were made for con- ducting the local speech con- test Feb. 25. Mrs, Evelyn Cole ~ was appointed chairman of the ~ Tentative en were discussed for a council-level en Ann and Kevin Scott, on Club Plans $ at McLaren Hospital, Flint. Mrs. Fern is the former 1 Mackey, Bridge Winners Mrs. Otto Deyo and Mrs. Ernest Guy were winners when Pontiac Duplicate Bridge Club met Monday evening in Elks Temple. Second-place winners were Mr. and Mrs. George Reutter. Third Concert Scheduled John Riley, pee a tiae Chamber of Commerce, ' spoke to Pontiac Federation of Women's Clubs Monday when the group met in the Cherokee road home of Vera Bassett. a 2 Introduced by Mrs. Charles Crawiord es i poke on “Our Opportunities” and dis- cussed current challenges for the residents of Pontiac. He told of the opportunity our community will have when the Rochester MSU campus is op- ened in two years. He also mentioned the many problems” having the university will cre- ate. , _ 26,000 STUDENTS “In the forseeable future we will have a tailor-made uni- versity with 20,000 students,” he said. “It is an opportunity for our children to get an ed- # ucation at a minimum cost. But the community must be prepared for the influx of stu- dents.”” * x * Mentioning the traffic and transportation problems, Mr. Pontiac Symphony ~ to Play January 2] By DORA DAWSON Pontiac Symphony Orchestra will be heard in its third con- cert of this season Jan. 21 in Lincoln Junior High School. * * * The soloist will be Gordon Staples, violinist and assistant concertmaster of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. with Francesco DiBlasi as directer. \\ BACKING NEEDED The acceptance and growing anticipation of the music of such an orchestra, one of the features. of Pontiac's life, brings Yo mind the effort be- hind such an organization, - be- cause it is hot self-running, but needs the baxking of all Pon- tiac organizations interesged in the standards | of geod enter- tainment. * ® aN is the work of years. Every orchestra, however great, that one listens to through the media ef radio, television or records has had its small beginning and gradual growth * * * Tt could be likened to the putting together of colored pieces of glass into a beautiful stained-glass window, or the weaving of the pattern in a fine handmade rug. Bit by bit, rehearsal after rehearsal, the pattern of the composition is brought intu harmony and beauty of sound. The ears of listeners have to grow in acceptance of the pe- riods of musical thought and composition. Not all are pleas- ing, but each composer is striving to express changing attitudes or interests. Nothing, however, can alter the eternal There is moderaie expense. there is willing cooperation. there is mixed talent, ‘and -there is constant preparation to have concerts that are pleas- ing and acceptable. The bringing together of an * orchestra, inte near perfettion, Bridal Shower and Tea Fetes Patricia Dean Patricia Lee Dean, whose marriage to Robert C. Phil- lips Jr. will be an event of Feb, 1, was honored Sunday in the Ottawa drive home of Mrs, William J.” Dean with a miscellaneous shower and tea. Assisting the -hostess were Mrs. William J. Dean Jr. and” aoe * DIANNE FREDRICKSON -Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Fredrick- son of Crescent Lake annotnce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Dianne Fredrickson, to James M. White, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. White of Elizabeth Lake road A June ae .Thene..is..the. eee ~_gramdeur of the compositions by classical and romantic crea- ~. tors’ of music. - MANNERS, METHODS It ig interesting to know some of the manners and methods of orchestra deport- ment. There are the profes- _.__sionals and the amateurs. dif- | ferences in ability.. There are the key players who teach others on their particular in. struments “in separate re- _ hearsals, where also with those piaying stringed instruments, — the bowing is set by either the director or concertmaster. x © ** In the score each instrument has its own line and musical sign to follow, which some- times becomes very difficult, with the predominance of an- _ other kind of instrument fol- lowing its direction of interpre- tation. ing of the director to get his meaning in the give and take of interpretation, which with patience and hard work brings 4 a piece to successful fruition. eae es All of this also brings the amateur to a higher -level of accomplishment, lessening the. contrast between abilities ” And so with the strings of the violin family, the woodwind instruments, the timpani and drums, an orchestra is formed and blended under the direc- ~ tion of its Soonueman speech contest to be held April Mrs. Roberta: Tripp poured — 19. The Pontiac club. will be from a tea table centered with “hostess to contestants from = = roses, “and ivy. Lima and Toledo, Ohio, Red- ford, Detroit and Port Huron. * * -* Each year winners progress from local contests to the area, council, district, and _ finally the international level. Concert Slated February 1 Hadassah Board Meets Monday evening Hadassah board met inthe James K boulevard home of Mrs. Hu- bert Curson, * * * Mrs. William Hartman, Mrs. of standing committees, gave reports. A Feb, 1 concert is planned as part of a cultural series of the Jewish Welfare Federation. COMMITTEE NAMED A nominating . committee, —. by Mrs, David. Uley, Serving with. inet or Sol Newhouse, Mrs. Malcolm Bate 9 Thomas Horowi a . iw ¥ » * presented at. a Feb. 3 board 4 > > _meeting of the group will Effect of Tobacco Even normal healthy. per- sons, after smoking one ciga- rette,— pressure, increased pulse and lower temperatures in the hands and feet. So reports a } national 4 The slate of officers will be meeting. The next regular be March 13. Pi ll ln lll le Mn dle Ml ln Mi Mi i i BON-TON’ - ; Beauty Salon 4 218 S. Telegraph (Near Voorhels) 4 for appointment. call ’ . ea rTwg,COrwrewTtYT ee eee Me be Fo Brigg Out the _ True Beauty ‘That Is Yours eee a “Rowena” | Specialist Stylize Your Hair ROWENA’S BEAUTY SALON 4831 Dixie Hwy. _ 1216 Baldwin 14 8, Main, gata OR 3-3541 FE 5-3735 * ‘MA 5-10 , 7 i. ot : . ‘i ‘ Je ( ae cf ce \ \4 Fa = A. j * 4 us “14 wedding is” plafined S =z ia oh S$ a2 2 a) 75 “About Community Opportunities — lie stressed the importance and cultural purposes. Mr. Ri- > Y includ- Bassett. of a civic auditorium for social - ley noted that we have many ~~~ sion, Mrs. Arnold _Mrs.- Raymond Rapaport and Pontiac Press Photes Arriving in the Cherokee road home of Vera Bassett to speak to City Federation of Women's Clubs. » Monday was John Riley, president of Pontiac Cham- — ber of Commerce. He is shown being greeted by Miss ing the Ponting Symptony Or redeveloping _ our area, eliminating inferior hou- sing and redeveloping these Conducting the business ses- - Hillerman Mrs, Ossie Gates as Frank Anderson and Mrs. Her- man Dickstein. “Appointed to the nominating committee were Mrs. Raymond Cole, chairman; Mrs. Charles Barrett, Mrs, Arthur Crawford, Mrs. Meyer Simon. , os 8 ; Committee reports were giv- en, Jan. 21 was announced as . | the date for tle next Pontiac * Symphony — concert and Feb, 7 as the date for the Water- ford Township Civic Music As- sociation program. Woman's Literary Club was hostess for the group, with Mrg. Raymond Swaney as ‘chairman. Assisting her were Mrs. Ida Reeves, Mrs. Bessie Staybaugh, Mrs, Joseph Phil- lips, Mrs. Edna Dawson Co- * vert and Mrs. Harry Boorn. \ Presiding over tea table dec- opted in a pink and white motif were Mrs. Crawford and Mrs. Covert. a } Special Clearance Pendleton SPORTSWEAR Starts 10 A. M. Tomorrow! Discontinued Numbers A9’er JACKETS Regular Regular $14.95 $17.95 ard $19.95 SKIRTS 10 wn CO $12.95 Regular $14.95 Regular Regular $9.95 Regular. oe WRAP COATS ae “TELEGRAPH at HURON ‘ F d \ r = a eres | s SWEATERS. $11.95 and $12.95 EXECUTARY DRESSES Tos *20 SHIRTS oe 39 Mon., Thurs., Fef, 10 to 93 Tues., Woda, Sat. 10 to 6; Sunday 2 to 5 ya > Ny *7 ithe y tes, * . : : : ; : : ; ; : n S “ het a A s S . re __|_THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1958__ $76 Orchard Lake Avenue oh se p © we wee 8 Ta eau one oe ati Jan. 15,7: 30 P- m. . Set., Jon. 18, 7:30 p.m. : — Mile i Store Only ~ Clearance | Starts 12 Noon Tomorrow | } Discontinued Numbers @ Pendleton “__..«: LORRAINE LINEBAUGH and Mrs. Leo G. Linebaugh) Mr. JOAN RICHARDS | George Rich- Mr. JUDITH E, HIRD Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kasat of Oxley drive announce the en- | = Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Verden A. Hird of Sarasota avenue announce the|of Waldo avenue announce the en-} ‘\ShouldShe | Put Bouquet | lon Grave?. ‘ Remarried Woman Wonders if Custom _ By EMILY POsT “Dear Mrs. Post: I married for the second time six months ago after having been a widow for several years. Every year on the anniversary of my husband’s death like to know if it would be proper to continue my usual practice now that’ I am married, to another man. “T have been told by seyeral relatives that. it would be: very belittling to my present. husband to do this. Will you please. advise, me on this matter?” gagement of their daughter, { ards of LeBaron avenue an- Doris Jean. to Daniel Leach | nounce the engagement of their engagement of their daughter, Lor- gagement of their daughter, Judith of Green strect. He is the son daughter, Joan Marilyn, to raine, to Harold Pankner, son Elizabeth, to Stanford W. Hannon, | Wayne J. Denslow, son of Mrs. of Mr. and, Mrs. Harold H. Pank- son of Mr. and Mrs. Orrell R.| | Walter Herb of Gale Road. \Hannon of Detroit. . - { Berkley. ner of Whitfield drive. “| of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Leach =! o =| 1 ~ Quick Exercises Ease Tense Muscles Change of Posture Proves Restful work. This may be typing or sew- down the hall several times every) phine Lowman in care of The Pon- ing, decapping strawberries, pre- hour. Career women afd housewives paring vegetables, writing letters Gay) when (you) haves the oppor. * * * or any other activity which keeps, By JOSEPHINE LOWM re | flowers on his grave once a year “lsoup for which the _recipe has | Once or twice during the! tiac Press. . ‘is a whole-meal soup, Would it be Tomorrow: ‘‘Marathon Entrants: | Answer: There is no reason fot | discontinuing honoring your first husband’s memery by placing unless you learn that this is — making your present husband un- | happy. “Dear Mrs, Post: There is each! written today about main - dish soups. I've never served my own specialty to company, just at fam- ily meals. This is a chicken corn fong been. in my family. It really jsuitable to =? company?” Answer: Admittedly it is not al May Be Continued)’ I put flowers on his-grave.-T would! = , gon. MRS. Sanaa MEDGEPETH Mr. and Mrs. Vern Acha of West Kennett road announce the Saturday marriage of their daughter, Claudette, to Nor- man Hedgepeth, son of D. T. Hedgepeth of Grants Pass, Ore, The couple was married in An- ‘gola. Ind Mr. Hedgepath at- tended the University of Ore- menu for an important dinner par- ty but, with the addition of salad land dessert, it would be suitable at informal company meals, “Dear Mrs. Post: Would it be permissible for a single man to invite twe women friends to use | his spare pedrgom while they are in town attending a convention? Should he sleep elsewhere?” >) © \both should realize that neck mus- 4 ) er Jackets 3 */cles become tense when one sits your head in much the same po- tunity, do the following two exer- Start. Slowly wet Exercise Daily.” = {for-a leng while “at eoncentrated sition, 'eises for just five minutes: +t Reg ular $17.95 and. $19.95 10 Shirts iy Skirts Reg. $14.95 *o — Sweaters Reg. $14.95 “7 ee ee r @ $77 $12.95 oO Reg. $12.95 Reg. 1.95 and Single Width, reg. $14.50. now $10.50 -| |"1% Width, reg. $2350 now $17.50 | |p SKIMMED MILK | Double Width, reg. $30.50. now $23.50 Se ot ea] Triple Width, reg. $47.50. now $38.50 De) ~*~ &® * 1. Stand tall. Lift-the_shoulders, This tiredness at the back of the! farms hanging limply at the-sides}.+— neck makes us feel weary all over Lower the shoulders. Continue lift-’ Qg}Jand Pak. Early Week Special Cold Wave and can be avoided with a little ing and lowering the shoulders. Methodi reventi dicine. It always x * * Methodist Reg. $15 preventative medicine. J ys) Ch h is restful to change one’s posture 2. Stand tall. Raise the arms) Church was $12.50 Haircuts $1 Mary Lu Pears. owner LU PEARS ULTRA MODERN BEAUTY SHOP 1656 Union Lake Rd. EM 2-0882 and to move about for even a few forward, shoulder height and shoul-! minutes at intervals der width apart. Swing the arms {backward as far as comfortable fact, Aas maticr of (oct)! reed | cial shoulder, height). As you do other day that blood clots are : a _ so lower the head backward. Raise, wedding o more apt to form (if one is sus the Read and relure afm to 60 ng f eeptiets) when the inéhteml= ward, “shoulder-height and shoul- Mary Julia “4 fer hours without getting MP, 83 | 40 width position. Continue. You' Huffaker and many do when ooking at tete- r-width position. ae alr will find that this exercise pro- Emerson vision. = | The corm said the plane Secretary Wilber Brucker, Presi- | Dr. John Kraus, director of the) sheared off treetops for a quarter dential Assistant Sherman ‘Adams: university’s radio telescope, said) of g mile. Budget Director Percival Brun- the breakup started in late Decem-| [he aircraft was deomolished. dage and other me eo of the seal when three distinct parts of| « * * "| tished in the newspaper Soviet Rus- sia. He predicted that Russian scien- tists would first send a nonguided, unmanned rocket to the moon) which would explode on hitting the | moon's surface. He said this will provide valuable information about the surface of the moon. * * * " This would be followed by a rocket that would shoot Phot both the earth and meon in a cigar- ishaped orbit and provide informa- tion on the moon’s surface by tele- vision. 1 Vanguard Test Oy Sa CAPE CANAVERAL, ia. (INS) —Abierice’s second satel- Me lemmehing alias beenme 8 Koetting: gime sedey, 62 officials clamped tight a security lid. It appeared, however, that: the vesket will’ not be fined until this weekend or possibly next week. It was previously believed set for Wednesday. _ Maj, Gen. Donald N. Yates, classified and any information regarding the firing time will have to come out of Washington.” Navy Secretary Thomas A. Gates Jr. meanwhile ap- pealed to the public to recognize the possibility that the second satellite may blow up, as the first one did on Dec. 6, or may otherwise fail. x * * : A storm of criticism followed the first firing that failed becduse of the advance publicity and big build-up. Propa- ganda wise, it backfired on the US. Gates, pointing out that many of the “Project Van- guard” rocket's parts have never been tested, asked for the assistance of the —_ and press in “keeping this test in perspective.” ; He said: “There is a small possibility that this test sphere could attain an orbit. However, I want te empha- size that the next test will be just that—a test.” Gates did not refer to the fact that the second Vanguard firing is expected soon. Other’sources say the Wednesday = ot the whe Important coal resources are ‘found in: 28 of the United States. oe date is now too dios ‘Schools ( Collect Clothing White House~ staff oa ee ee _ Identification of the dead was [Between Jan an S¢| withheld pending notification of The White House = only hat fragments began to split up and’ nest of kin. the meeting was for raaage by Jan. 6, eight fragments were) of some items that all have in in orbit, Dr. Kraus said. | | common.” There was speculation (°°: OT a the fragments OCIentist Predicts bli: ee) eRe Some | Se eee had disappeared. On Jan. 8 uses wi Larly Red Trip to = ' appeared. Dr. Kraus said he be- hour later ays after the satellite was See What's on the other side of the) dollar national debt