Tet YEAR 7 Tete "Russian ‘Soll Fi ee Plans Dropped for Police Union : in New York Losing City Job agreed to give up his cam- ‘York’s 24,000 policemen his $8,500-a-year city job. Henry Feinstein, presi- dent of Local 237 of James = /Union, also is transporta- } - | tion superintendent in the joffice of Manhattan, Borough President. Hulan launched into space... Gigantic comparison with a helicopter, indicated by ‘an ‘arrow at heel bus, at. Fight. cs THIS NED ROCKET! — This sli polly Sumied Ciechosjovakian sources shows a modél of a Soviet Moon plane, believed to be similar to the one which "the Russians size of the device is shown by — E. Jack. - ae Yaar ack Mayor Robert. F, ‘Wag- ner told Feinstein Friday he either | WASHINGTON. (urn. arenes tenia to- day: described Russia’s shot at the moon as “A great _ stride forward in. man’s reaches of outer space.” The President’s comment was read to. newsmen by White House Press Secretary James. C, Hagerty several lke ta Red Moonshoot = advance into the infinite} * ‘Baby S folen, ‘Seek Blonde in Brooklyn NEW YORK (AP) — A- news --born baby girl was kidnaped late Friday night from St. Peter’s Hos- _ pital in Brooklyn. A citywide —alarm—went—out—for -a—bleached - blonde, about , 30, believed to be the kidnaper. : The infant was borA at §.17 p.m. to Mrs, Frances Chionchio. Her _ hiisband Frank is a lawyer. It was placed in a bassinet in. a fourth- floor nu next to, the mater- nity ward. Eight other babies were in the nursery, Nurse Priscilla Burke found one bassinet empty shortly before mid- night and notified Catharine John- ~ son, nurse in charge of-the ward. ———Miss—Johnson_told_ lice she had seen a woman loitering’ on . stairwell, She described the wom- an as a- bleached ‘blonde, between - 30-and 35, of light complexion and —+hours after Eisenhower re- turned to the White House Alaska as the 49th state. ‘The. successful launching, as an nounced by the Soviets, of a ve- hicle designed to near the moon represents a great stride for- ward in man’s advance into the infinite reaches of omer space, s Eisenhower said. “To the scientists and engi- neers assigned to this undertak- ing, a full measure @ credit is due and we congratulate them on the achievement.” Meanwhile, Rep. Overton Brooks: (D-La), a top-ranking member of the House space committee said the ‘Soviet moonshoot shows the U.S. space program ‘“‘should be pushed to the utmost.” He said the nation must not.re- lax its effort in the international race to explore, the reaches of space. Other members agreed. «House Democratic leader John chairman and. other committee weighing aout 140, “pounds. A woman answering that de-| scription : and wearing a long black coat ‘was seen hurrying from the hospital by Armond Carazzo, night watchman and telephone operator. Carazzo said the woman. had a bulge under her coat and that’ he - had heard what could have been a _ baby’s cry as the woman left. _ The father, 28, is employed in). the. legal department of the Port): Authority of New York. The moth- er is %..The couple algo have a L-year-old daughter, Gerardette. \from his Gettysburg farm > for ceremonies admitting); 38 at 1 pm. -Teamster Official” fide a Effort After Threat of| | _NEW YORK & — Al. ATeamsters official has| paign to unionize New). R. Hoffa’s Feamsters under the threat of losing) @ CHEERS FOR CASTRO'S MEN — Chetring and waving revolutionary banners, these girls applaud Fidel Castro's troops beside oe Cuban, Girls Greet Rebels a eo Havana streets.” = Castro, Urrutia Ready — By LARRY ALLEN HAVANA (AP) — The bearded rebel leader Fidel Castro made * sional approval of a proposed. law which would limit = picketing. Mercury will Drop fo 10 Above Tonight The new cold front moving into Michigan today will drop temper- atures below zero in the northern part of the state tonight and -to alow of 10 above in the Pontiac’, area, the U.S, Weather Bureau forecast today. - The outlook for tomerrow is also bleak, with a high of about 14 and snow squalls. North to north-| west winds at 15-25 miles are pre- dicted, — * * * Snow accumulation of an inch or |W. McCormack, the-—commtittee; Ss ig- = continuing’ irito “Monday. _The lowest temperature in down- 600,000 Batlling Reds _ TAIPEI (UPI) — A Chinese Na- tionalist official said today “at least 600,000” Tibetans and Mon- "5 \ arrangements for a = flight to "~ |Havana today to restore authority pres! jto this strife-torn capital. designated for temporary presi-| | A Viscount airliner was warmed up to bring Castro and Judge Manuel Urrutia, the man he has dent, from their provisional cap- ital of Santiago at the eastern end of the island. The prospects were good that the provisional yovernment would be set up by nightfall. * * * : Jubilation swépt the 1,225,000 residents in strife-torn Havana with the report that a triumphal appearance was not far off for the 32-year-old Castro, who drove dictator Fulgencio Batista into exile New Year's Day. The first task facing the new regime is to restore order and tg end a general ‘revolutionary - strike that has paralyzed this big resort capital and created a growing food shortage. Radio stations broadcast ‘new \warnings that anyone caught loot- ing or stirring up disorder would be dealt with. severely. Heavy squads of police, sailors, and coast guardsmefi were as- signed to watch all vital centers, including government banks, and industrial plants. Castro’s forces are firmly in they still face the prospect of cleaning up die-hard remnants of) ‘the Batista regime hiding —out—in \ealled this morning’. by her hus- band. control ef the whole island, but} - almost every intersection. > « AP Wirephete The streets of the city are ~ for Fast Tri ip to Havana te Santiago and back in less than four hours. This indicated that the rebel leader and the: man be po ie for er ae : metime this afternoon, with Urrutia mov- ing immediately into the heavily fortified Presidential Palace after being sworn in. The Cuban Supreme Court had ‘refused to swear in Batista’s choice for his successor, Carlos The rebels came out of the hills Friday night and assumed control of all atmy-garrisons, government buildings and police stations’ in ’« *& * Man Phones in Cuba were receiving calls and safe. All’ s Well, | Birmingham The families. of six Oakland County men who are that order is being restored and that they are healthy westernmost Pinar Del Rio pro- vince, * * * Avfierce and bieody battle be- tween rebel tista followers ‘iccormipiitiied thé occupation of Havana: by Castro; followers Friday: More than 40 men were believed dead and esti- mates of the wounded ran to 450. Gunfire was heard in various sections of Havana during the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) _* *& t From Cuba of assurance from the men Soaring Than Efforts by US. _ By HAROLD K. MILKS [ MOSCOW. (AP)—The new Soviet cosmic rocket. wil hurtle past the moon and become “the first. artificial . | |planet and satellite of the sun,” Moscow radio reported . | today. The announcement that the mcie was expected. to go into orbit around the sun came as it soared about three-fifths of the distance to the moon, far beyond the height ever reached by a man-made object. The rocket will miss the moon by 3,750 to 5,000 miles, {disappeared below their ‘horizon. — atellite of ar Higher Pe rican sales-region, - WASHINGTON ( — President Eisen- _- Federal d Maskan officials Other Oaldand people in the hoWwer proclaimed statehood today for - the drama unfold. | watch go ag ih ay as tap ear gy territory of Alaska. ~» Eisenhower flew here by helicopter | 5. Anderson, 1181 B. Long Lake a separate act Elsenhower changed from his Gett Pa. farm early |Rd., Blo Township; D.T. the design of ty et age al flag to pro: _— this —— es! e ser in the ‘He - ponayety af oy ioe to planned return $ s s8on;/ : . Bs i Sere ces : en cca au. | Ross, formerly of Birmingham. of seven stars dane the brief ceremony, Etsehhower one-page proclamation saying|Leonerd Withdraws said, “Wher your husband travels abroad you me to~ expect — like - this” " at the ptush* 0M December Output: = Best Month Since '55 thought an American moon_ shot! toward the sun, they said the rock- t ‘What would be the fate > the , niles away. Traffie—. oeeveee oe un ncn tte eee ee ae the rocket, will reach the vicins ROTOR OOS eee id ar of the moon about 11 p.m. |Miscellaneous ........ 71 EST today, The expected time of Total . since wes elses ces 409 pew year -periéd* brought an ious appeal from the National ty Council for drivers to slam on the brakes and curb the toll. ® -« x The NSC had predicted 390 auto deaths for the 102-hour period that * An unexpected rash of highway -/deathg late Friday night shot the ~~ — : eee fo, ee St 8 ome * | Spondi two years ago. The CF feared the combined +Christmas and New Year total was likely to result in the stunning fig- aaa. = . the nation’s roads. “ x * * ; Some 594 Americans paid in their |lives for auto accidents during the _ were produced by General ‘On the strength on figures, the corporation is painting a rosy. picture for (the 1959 model year. Decembet production for GM in the United States and Canada was 353,080 passenger cars and 49.128 trucks, compared with 304,412 cars and 37,338 trucks during the same month of 1957. GMC Truck and Coach also_re- ported production increases in De= cember of 1958 as against the ve been compiled with In al Motors Corp. in December of 1958—the first month that GM output tapped 400, - }006 units since November, 1955. its December production ~ ‘Ford also reported higher pro- duction last month than in Decem- x ‘thert of 1957. Ford car-truck. out- put last month was 200,252 com- sponding month: of-1957, - - pared with 174,923 in the corre- years ago the Christmas weekend showed 4706 auto deaths, ~ which. combined with the New Year's ; figure, added to an all- time ‘high of 1,115, The Council today again pleaded for drivers to exert safety on the =~ ; —wew YORK tAP)}—Occasionall- General Motors “Oks Refund =~ "WASHINGTON (UPI) — General .ernment’s _Force in 1954. . Two, Hh . SATURDAY, JANUA f It Was ‘Her Second Attempt ly she_sobbed. But her Veined hands wete steady, her gaze level. “J just wanted to get out of the miserable life I was leading,” she said. * * * That’s the nearest to an expla- nation that investigators had today from a wan, middle-aged widow in black, accused of two brash forays on migtows banks in the last month. She was booked Friday night on charges of assault and robbery. _ She was homeless, penniless and en ee te PAO SE “Will Return $9 Million: From 1952 Contract for? 900 Jet Planes Motars. Corp. has agreed to r¢fund $9968 000 to~ settle a government claim that the company Was over- paid on @ 1952 Air Force ‘contract for jet planés, the Justice Depart- ment announced today. * Attorney General William P, Rogers said the company agreed to pay $4,908,000 to satisly the gov- leared for, her makeup tasteful, ~~ seratehing an ear. She's gure not "the kind we usually have in here. tken, ‘member of Best of All - Foil Widow in Bank: Robbery ebtained_inthe first holdup, she| friendless, “phe ‘said — oe ‘had to do something.” The sedate, gentle-seeming woman was comparatively well a : 3 claimed she dropped it accidenit- ally as she fled, but was afraid to stop for it, so she had to try 'groomed in black knit suit .and| again, beret. Her nails Were long,- well She identified herself as Mrs. Vera Wilson, 57, a widow without a family, and said she had gur- vived for the last year by beg- ging, sleeping in subways _ bus and rail terminals. : * ** “I ean't figute it.” said Detec- tive Lt Arthur E. Schultheiss, “A man picked. it up and tried quoted. “But- 1 heard the ‘police sirens and was very nervous, so il told him it wasn’t mine.” Police said the money never ‘was turned in. In both holdups, she showed ‘teers a glass of clear liquid, then pushed through notes describing it! as acid and ordering cash under threat of throwing-the liquid in their faces. It was found to be She's very meek and tender spo- a woman you'd accept as a your family.” Yet she readily-admitted, police, said, that she robbed one Man- haitan bank of $3,000, and tr ied lunsuecesefully Friday to ro an- ‘other a block* away — In ; in- tances, she maintains. to end iher_lonely poverty. of the perry Sa ghil of cash “the! N ewspa per ‘ping districts, water. . Both banks are in’ busy peur \department stores. The original rebbery was at the First National City Bank ‘at 7th Avenue and 34th-Streef, and Fri- day's thwarted attempt was at the Industrial Bank of, Comerce at 7th Avenue—and--35th_Street.. _.| ter capture. came when In- dustrial teller Richard Lundberg, While stuffirig $1,190 in a bag, managed to whisper’to a passing hank officer, ‘‘watch thig one.’ “big: pkions Ads Called — NEW YORK (M—An executive of the nation's . largest retail trade} claim that General Motors over-estimated its costs in re-pricing negotiations with the Air group said Friday the recent New York CIty newspaper “proved dhere is no substitute for! our cust strike | newspapers when you want to com- | |. Alerted, a uniformed guard, Peter McDonald, seized the wom- an as she startéd to | away, iclutehing the bag. murmured: | “Maybe now I'll get three meals 4 day.” She said she was a’ native -of| Johnstown, Pa., -and that her ‘traveling ‘salesman dusband - died 27 years “ago, She said she had worked until two years ago. In her purse when arrested was {5 _cents in change. to give it back to me,” she was). shop- |: / ~- Buick - Oldsmobile - Pontian Divi * _ of its costs” ~ cost in carrying out the contract. . tors,” ‘contracting parties, and ° ~ Motors does not wish to profit “ slated that our production perform- _ance on this contraet was outstand- —duetion-of-about_900 Fa4 jot alr-_| . the department said, General Mo- In addition, he sald,the Com- pany voluntarily returned an- other: $5,000,000 to cover alleged: excess profits on the deal,. In Detroit, General Motors Board Chairman Frederic G. Donner said the settlement was “based on a proposal initiated by General Mo- "The controversy which . pre- ceded this settlement resulted from a misunderstanding betwéen the through a misunderstanding,” he said. - - “Ale sae acceaosibtive have + &* © Edward F. Engle, manager of the sales promotion division of the! National Retail Merchants Asan., said the 17-day strike had made New York store, executives more tising's impact’ deeply aware of ewspaver adver- Castro, Urrutia Set so Fast Havana Trip. |- Continued From ‘Page: One) on of sections of ‘this city Obristinas “business je New “York stores topped 1957, Engle | “of 14; million persons, sald, but this was traceable | Some 600 of Castro's top fight- chiefly. to. momentum of news- ‘paper advertising generated in the first 11. months of the year carried over inte December. Departmeift-store sules in. Man- hattan and Brooklyn in the week ended Dect. 27 were tp 22 per ‘eeont over last year, but if there had? been noe newspaper strike the in- ing men arrived in Havana before dawn from Las Villas province. 1They. were led by Ernesto Guer- _tVara, an Argentine medical doctor] who as-orne of Castro's top Jieu- tenants was a commander in the! crucial battle of Santa Clara -Although a general strike y the rebels until Urrutia takes called : _NATION GETS NEW FLAG — This is, the — nation’s new flag, as designated today by Presi- — white stripes. “ dent Eisenhower. at a the .usual “13 ihe and seven mageered rows of seven each. AP -Wirephote The 49 stars are arranged in | and 7 pom. and Friday, 9 a.m, 7:30 pam., ‘Thuraday, 1 1 and 7: ‘Thursday, ~ |p.m.; me Crait, srk Peak | |Set to Begin Registration. BIRMINGHAM — - Registration a for the 1969 craft and hobby. classes| ment will begin Monday at the Com- munity House, according to Myra, * © &®- Adult painting . Classes, Tuesday 0 p.m; ~ Monday, 9 am., l-and 7 p.m.; sewing, Monday, 3 a.m., Tuesday, 7 p.m. Starting the week “ot Jan. 26 will be ballroom dancing for ‘adults, Monday, 8:30 p.m.; mil- linery, Monday, 12:15 p.m. and ‘Tuesday, 9 -a.m, The gardening class of five | weeks -will open Feb. 2 at 9:30 &.m, Special classes in. alnting = be held for children Monday and Thursday at 3:30 p.m. and Satur- day at 10.a.m, Birmingham fire chief Park .H. losses for see Smee easement Mikoyan Wants to See Nixon — Likely Veep will Meet riences on U.S. 10 in Holly Town- With Soviet Leader on ship. was apprehended by two area His Visit to U. S. ; \y youths as he ran from the scene. Capture Youth. Fleeing Wreck ~ _ of Stolen Car A 16-year-old Flint youth, fleeirig ‘been drinking, was held for State ing, despite extremely difficult! mareteeteaes) cons isiens " Donner | said. The contract called for the pro- planes. -The planes were * con- structed at the Kansas City, Kan., plant of the company’s. crease would have been ¢ closer to, 33 per.cent, Engle sald. Theré was w subway strike in lthe Christmas shopping ‘season | \Jast year and one less. iat rs day. ;, Engi said stores that developed “'pérsonality’’ or “store, image” {in the public mind ‘through news-, sion, In agreeing to the settlement, [paper advertiaing earlier dn. the: year fared better during the ‘strike {han stores that relied on promo- tors “insisted that it-had fot wil- fully made any misrepresentations: during jis 1954- talks with the Air Force, . The department sald the $4,908.- 000 refund’ was negotiated on the. basis of the difference between the | company's estimated ard actual Assistant» Atteriey | General George Cothrim Doub, who han- died the vase for the department, shid the government overpaid. | General Motors $3;118,000 as f result of accounting errors and “mis- statemonts of cost’? in the company’s ® s pricing ‘proposals, : tion of individual items of merchan- dise. = ecbenpenntiann ate asi ‘Says She Killed: Hwabond for Complaints on Food - DETROIT (UPL Mrs, Doro-| thy Flagg. 35, was held today {oh investigation af murder in the | fatal stabbing of her husband tho. complained about. her cooking The womatt said her husband, James, 41, complained Inst hight that the fish she had cooked was too salty. She eakt he kicked her and she stabbed hen with a pocket aul --Blustery Weather Tumbles Mercury Across N ation / Difeetion oe By The Associated Press Blustery weather harassed much, of the nation today, There was a bone-chilling surge of Aretic alr in the mid- section, gusty winds and snow in the Plains and a spreading rainfall in the South- east. . _w. * if ssive cyld front femperatures below zero 4 lous ‘points The Weather a niatner Rurean Report ‘ AND VICINITY — Party Turning elder) snow and Mowing snow and! northwest winds 15-0) miles noon, High today 4. Cloudy and much colder with snow *. Temortaw, party mene? with flurries and colder, Vow, ton a f hb tomorrow 14, Tetal romule a, a snowfall about one lack, serit ~ Fall v 8 am! Wind velocity 3) mp m| Pouthweat fun sete gelurecy wa £12 pm Bun rises Sunday at 801 oe Moon fives Munday at 25) at ~ Moon sets Saturday ot 12 hea is Downtown Tamperaieces m A a.m coca a aL 7.m.. wregl 12m 2 a6 | Sam... evecal lpr - $6) Sain, ase -oa 10 a.m a3 ‘ Friday in ~ Pontiac (ag, recorded semerer®) j Highest temperature ....... ne ck Lowest temperature ...... . oe Moen temperature .. nee ae Weather — Tey st bid - OY ‘eer “Ane | tn et mighest. te vemperatire. Scannot vee 18 mperat * Pebueeass o sees Vesscrrseres: Mt oy Highest and | went ‘Tt peratures This “ fe in “Fears 56 In 1960 - : “16 in 1678 Friday's , Tynperature Chart ipetia orquette 96 7 Himore PH 24 Memphis 8 3%: - Blamarek 0-14 Miami ha 74: rownevttie 70 47 “Milwatikee 30 5 . Buffalo 40 28 Minneapolie 24-7 Cherlesion §7 44 New Orleans hi 46 Chitago -. 36-12 New. York: 40 35 Cintinoati 43° 29 Omaha Ww. Cleveland = 38 41 Pellaton M18 -4 Phoent* 69 49 1 Pitebargh ow Loulg: . Francisco 4 i = a 3 = = & a 73 61 Feder te n Pontioe— cure temperature preceding. ‘kam | Jiat home; Jay Duatie, 4, Vernon, of N. Carollia; 27" Card: Roy’ of S. Carolina; Grantabure: Wis.) had an early 10, some 33 degrees colder than! the previous cycle, * *. * The area bounded by southeast- ern Wyoming, eastern Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma had temperatures at least 20 de- grees Jower than Friday mornirig. Northwest with Woreshingtonm and TGregon getting Wore “nt the wold blast. Se a © Oh Pee ae , | The le ading edge of the cotd shot was Jo extend southward - into ‘Texas afd eastward into the jower'| Ohio Valley Parts of Nebraska, aque, and Oklahoma ueould. expect heavier: isnow, approximating blizzard. con? ‘ditions, the Weather Buread said Snow flurries and_ light anow swept from Idaho Ang: th the Upper +Great-Lakes << Tt was algo much colder in the! over Is only 48 fours old, food is jalready in short supply. Some gro- cery stores were broken into and looted during the night in central Havana. Police were rushed to the cones fo break up raids. ~~ * 4 RLOTS MAY DEVELOP Unless the strike enda and there ‘out of the political situation, bloody -riots may also develop. Two rebeis-were shot dead Fri- iday night near the Hilton Hotel land another near the U niversity of ‘Havana. | eyavens of the fashionable [yy Side were blocked off and | barricaded. Most foreigners stayed inside hotels, where the food supplies began to run low. The strike shut down. transpor- jtation “except: for a few taxis. Stores were closed, and it was im- possible to buy many necessities: Havana's ~ radio warned ~ par- tisans againete-amnecezanry shoot- ‘ing, and the rebels declared loot- ‘ers would be dealt with severely. Rebel patrols tried to .keep order in the streets. . Rebels kept pedestrians and au- torfiobites from the Hofel Nacional, where many Americans were wait- ling for‘transportation home. Four Americans, William L ‘Ryan, Bob Clark and James Ker: lin of The Associated Press, and ‘Robert Perez of New York, were! seized by a rebel patro} while} |walking trom the AP office to the ‘Nacional’ | A rebet leader told them they could not be allowed to continue to the hotel because they were In danger of being shot™by patrols from anothér. rebel faction, The | by hotel for the night. George Kaufman. and Harold Val- entine, were taken frogh their of- flee-at gunpeint Friday; Driven te in patter stattan, they were later ‘released "| About 470 Americ: in touriats and | vacationing stgents left on the, ocenn-going ferry Clty of Havana for Key Westy Fla, The U:S. State ‘Department sent the ferry because normal shipping and airline serv: ices had been canceled. 4 . se There was: ritin from northern, | Florida into Georgia and west: , ward through Alabama. Freezing rain. was en tap for iTexas and Arkaneas Death Notice. Service for Elijah H. Davis, 62, of Garo, a-former Pontiac and Milford resident, will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Huston's Funeral Home, Caro. Burial will be in Caro Ceraetery. .. * * Mr “Tawi is-died Priday ~morning).° at his home of-pneumonia. Before retirement, he wae a farmer in’ Milford ‘ - Ln. *. Survivifiy are his wife, eanop? eight sorys, Gary and Bruce, both Ronnie -and Harold of two ‘at home and daughters, Linda, #{ Doris of Prt Huron; two sisters, Mré, Robert Hill of Pontiaé and Mrs, Wand Earhart of a rectors. ELUAIL H, DAV Is 4 WILL COME BACK “The US embassy said the ferry lwould come back tonight for any other” Americans who wanted to leave, The State Department in ‘Washingtgn sai threg~ U.S. de- istroyer escorts and two auxiliary ivessels were sta ir case pf need. In New York, fl was reported that police authorities apd ted- eral agents in. several cities across the U. 8, Were on the lookout for’ the elite of Havana's gambling overlords and hood. lums who are known to have. fled to the United States in taree chartered planes. The underworld bigwigs left Ha- vana Thursday. afternoon for New) York, but they. were reported to! have landed in Jacksonville, Flq., after learning that New Yorit po lice were alerted to form a wel- coming. a _t ~ it * ‘* Police Sources fire said’ the gamblers and hoods were believed to have scattered to Miami, New)’ Orleans... Las Végas ‘and other sere where he — has in- teres ! is a halt to the viglence arising! rebel promliked escort to a near: | Three AP staffers Larpy—AHenct the Pontiae Press, jie by off Cuba! | valuation. By JOHN A. SCALT WASHINGTON Ap) —Russia’ 8] Anastas ee 8 Tepexted in- terested’ taking’ over foreign | policy ‘problems. with Vice Presi-. se 7185 Bridge Lake Rd., Clarkston, = Jay Campbell, 17, of 478 Ellis » Davisburg. Ponting State Police rs ' about 75 m.p.h. when it went out | of control at U fal 10 and Foster next week. * ® Tt is. _highly likely that Nixon| ‘will agree to meet the Kremlin] It shot. “wildly off the highway; | trouble shooter some time daring knocking down a speed limit sign, his four or five day stay. jand shearing a utility pole at its Mikoyan, who holds the rank of | base before coming to a halt some first deputy premier, ix also un- 85 feet down the highway, police iderstood to want to meet with | said. \President, Eisenhower. But the) Barely missing the car were high [White House’ has made no move tension wires snapped when the lyet to arrange such a meeting,| pole was busted. The boy, who po- mainly because the visit is billed lice said admitted stealing thé car conference appears to be the most jinjured. important being mentioned th-| He was turned over to Flint State formally in advance of the 63- Police, wh6 held him -for Genesee year-old Kremlin “leader's visit (County juvenile authorities. Mikoyan, accompanied by hig son and. five aides, is due to at. irive Sunday morning in-New ‘York ‘for a 249 fo 3 week visit which includes stops in 10 major Ameri- can civies. Sports Car Show Set nual sports car show~at Henry ‘Ford Museum will be held Feb. 6 a —_ : oe ‘More than 50 sports Converting waste paper into one “including models for Italy, ton of pulp requires 30,000 gallons England, Germany and France, of water. ‘ twill be exhibited. eae ech meson — kee Former City Man Supplies School Financing Data ‘nas: “To ect this situation, the State Legislature has enacted two important types of bn ort tion. - “One, the holding company, fer- Tateresting information locarding’ the methods used in financing In-) supplied by Edson Catts, a former Pontiac ftesident who a row a school principal in Vincennes, Ind. | It shows how. Indiana is hftempt- Ing to meet. the challenge of in- ‘ereasing school population and at, ‘the same time hold costs down to) a level which can be met. by f™ iby the local taxes. When the rent payers, 2 ‘payments equal the total cost, plus (atts sent the. information Ao -M.! a low rate of inierest, the school A, Benson, who turned it over to! cor poration takes title to the build- . ing. "The other type —of— tegisiation enables the local school co tion to levy an ‘accumulative build. ‘ing fund.’ The usual amount of the, ‘to form a holding company and) raise the money.to-build the build: . The school corporation rents | the building with money provided “Indiana's second constitution, | adopted in 1831, prohibits tne -bonding of the atate for any in _debtedness” of any kind," Catts states, Ybuilding fund rate is 50 ‘cents per “However, the local govern:, $100' of assessed valuation, but it ments, county, township, city, may be as high as $1 ‘with the approval _of fhe State Tax Board ‘Commission, - : “Under thia plan this tax wil}. ~ provide a considerable portion of the required capitat before the building ta started so. that the limited 2 per cent limit on bond. ing will provide the remainder of the capital needed. town and = scliool corporations, | may leave bonds tc the extent of two percent of their assessed “There has been no rensasers- ment of real estate since: 1950, At that time buildings were assessed | at, one-third their 1949 reproduc- tidn cost. Older buildings were de- preciated, then aceortiing "to their age. “Generally, with afew excep- tions, land was assessed at leds than one-third of ite selling ‘price. “Personal. “property is assexsed each year, with automobiles taken jin -at 70 per cent of Blue Book: “value, building, some good school plants as well As some poor ones. The) plan is not entirely as loud squawking is evident In Areas, “The state provides Sapper to local school corporations from the Using. the 149 tables, . Hew | gross income tax, This support is ‘buildtigs are assessed at much provided for teachers’ salaries and’ -\ News thane .third ‘of! their present’ school bus transpdrtation,.’ based coat of production. japon, a complicated formula which | . “Several years ago school cor. |takes into: a ‘porations found this @ per cent average daily a ; Meare on noniing was providing ee. Fhe..boy, who admitted he had 2elice by Larry Duckett, 19 of! dent Nixon when he visits here) sald the car had been traveling | ag “informal.” The Nixon- Mikvyan earlier in the day in Flint, was un-|’ DEARBORN (®—The eighth an- | working normally. It was report- tmits toeat-public-minded— citizens “Under this plan ‘Tridiana © is) ae Fiat td based on Moscow radio reports, * moon ene il tonight. (Continued From Page One) great success,”’ especially since it was much heavier and had trav- eled much farther than American attempts. The Russians said their reck- et's scientific. apparatus was ed over northeastern Brazil at 5 a.m. EST today. _ The radio said the temperature on the rocket’s surface was 15 to 20 degrees centigrade—27 to 36 de- grees Fahrenheit. ‘MEN ON MOON’ The Soviet government has: said it will prepare to put men on ‘the moon’ in @ future expedition. From, there. flights further into space! can be launched, it said. A top Soviet scientist; Director | Dimitry Martynev of the Stern- | berg State Astronomical In- stitute, said he considers the rocket “a true rehearsal_for. the real cosmic journéy ...a wtage has been really achievdd ..... The Red tocket to the sun has of four unsuccessful U.S. sreaenpee to reach the moon. ‘The S-pound Us. ~ Air Verse ‘moon probe Pioneer “I soared 71,- 300 miles before, errors of” launch- ing angle and propulsion speed caused it to fall back. - “The moon «will ‘be about 219,000 miles from the earth at the time ‘Weighs about 3,239 pounds without vine wel,” Moscow Radio reported. /Smith, estimated fire nose, - already gone farther than the bést - the Soviet government says” its rocket will get there. The Russian - “cosmic shige | abut - -setting ‘up space stations in - orbit around {the earth as” the laiinching point for travels farther _ ‘into the solar system, The weight they ‘can now send up a vehicle. The Russians have ‘long talked’ Mrey epdngh to calty a tan, * lay, 88, of Detroit, retired Friday, . % _ American Red Cross. first ~aid+ jclagees, December. st at $2,925. The “Sepait-’ answered 39 alarms, 22 for - fires and six for first aid.” of the shop had been forced open. a ’ Birmingham Woman's Chub will meet at the Birmingham YMCA _Mfs, Ralph Main, president, said Peter Kalinke, war correspondent of the German army, will speak on Christiani .|"Communism vs, ~ Presidents of the Oakland Coun- 1 nee Federation of Woman's Clubs ee of the Mirmaidg. Harry F. Menard Buried Today _Ex-Pontiac Resident Was Widely Known Detroit Realtor — Service for Harry F. Menard: a widely known Detroit realtor and former Pontiac resicent, was.-held 3 p.m, today at the Bell Chapel of - William R. Hamilton Co., Birming- ham. Burial wag in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. | “Mr. Menard, 76; was president of the Knight Menard Co., Royal. Oak. He died. ‘Thursday | in St. _| Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, of ra cerebral hemorrhage. He had lived with his wite, the” former Leone Kessell, at 19146 Bedford Dr., Birmingham, fer the past 10 years. A Detroit area realtor and de- trustees of the David Ward estate for- nine years. He founded the Clemons, Menard, Knight Co. in 1915. for a dessert luncheon at 1 p.m. . Tuesday. — veloper, he was-secretary to the | 4 ap Wirephete : EXTENDED ROCKET JOURNEY . — This artist’s drawing, illustrates how the new Soviet _.roeket {s expected to hurtle past the moon and become a satellite of the sun, The rocket is expected to reach the vicinity of the & Reds Say Pocket to Soar Beyond Moon, Orbit Sun Even before the rocket had time to leave the earth’s atmosphere, the government proclaimed it ‘‘the irst successful — inter-planetary flight.’ : They.described the space. device as a multistage rocket with a So- viet flag and the legend “U.S.S.R., January 1959” in” the ke oe & Sy. - Theré. was no mention of the overall weight, including the first Stages that burned “out and dropped off. to allow the 3,239- pound final “stage” fo rifle - on through space. The space vehicle was reported. to contaih 796%) use ‘pounds of instruments, Its. dimen- sions were not! giver. It also carried special équipment| ito create the sodium cloud of an jartificia], comet, . Moscow Radio’ | said. \ Without specifying-aviiere it took | have flashed eastward across the | Soviet . Union, climbed -abeve - the Hawalian Islands ahd was moving away from the earth over the Pa- cific. Ocean, —* xX * The rocket was-sent up at ‘‘the | Second cosmic speed” of 11.2 kilo- meters (about 7 miles) a second, the speed needed to break away from “the. earth's Pig rcs the Russiang said. off, the rocket Pitan ano tol. of theit ‘moon rocket | indicates! road men, ‘Fred Heubner,” “90, al): from the Mr. Menard was president of the Detroit Rea] Estate Board in 1922, a member of the Detroit Athletic Club, Detroit Board of Commerce and North Woodward Congregation--- al Church. Surviving are his wife, Leone; {two datighters, Mrs, John Mead: {Ill _of Upper Saddle River, N. J, I and Mrs. Frank Egan of Bronx: - é ville, N.Y., and two grandchildren. lke Calls Moonshot Great Space Stride (Continued From Page One) L. Richter Jr. of the California Institute of Technology said Russia “did us a favor by as mcadiog up-a moon rocket.” He said Americans were be- coming complacent becatse of the succtss of this . Atlas’ satellite, Senate Democratic leader Lyn- sane |don B. Johnson said he had felt for some time- that the United States was “not going far enough fast ehough’’ in the space field. WILL REALIZE IT MORE _ Johnson, chairman-of the Senate questions that this country would realize the degree of- its lag in space exploration more and more The House Spacé ~Committee only yesterday — an. hour be- fore Russia announced its moon ‘rocket launching — calleg on the administration to schedule - two extra moon rocket shots, proved a resolution Rep: James G. Fulton (R-Pa) that Administfation be permitted to two Thor-Able moon rockets ino standing -idle at Cape Canav- veral, Fla., missile testing station. “There is at present no plan of i which -we. aware to make use \of these | pacity,” t “Fesolution, said: Fulton called tlie ethos “spares” left over trom the com- which three attempts-to iaunch moon- rockets were made last into orbit earth: — | decisions - Ua vedet: wp ale gre He Upeoreany lpctchings choad $0 Sod “in the thing was rocket. | fands of those power, Con- Some ot the instruments: report | ress" in power, Dot wall <3, red to be aboard #% the : ye earth's magnetic | ‘The Air Force-already has at- ity, gas ts inter-| tempted three moon rocket planetary matter and. the a launchings and bas no more pres of . cosmic rays. re ently authorized, The Army has - Old Railroaders Retire. : legs fre oy DETROIT W—Two veteran rail: att pase | Grand Rapids, and George Henties- reach Py _— country’s big ,.. ‘Space Committee, said in reply sto . as the Weeks and months go by. . The committeé unanimously. ap. ~ the-Air Force and National Space - hicles in such a ca - pay Vere! >. = _THE PONT AC PRESS. SATURDAY, JANUARY" 3; 650 tates Yea "Behind t in Sp aa eS SS ace. i ace If coating Rocket Hits a ~ TtDoesn’t Mean a Military Lag ‘Our Missile Experts Say New Space: Probe Duplicates Sputnik Ill By DARRELL GARWOOD WASHINGTON (UPD US, missile experts said today the LONDON (UPI) — The launch- ing of Russia’s moon probe set Western space experts to wonder- ing today whether the Kremlin There was much informa! discus- would consider a rocket hit suf- ficient basis for a claim to owner- ship of the moon. sion of the possibility-of a Russian moon claim at the International Astronautical Congress in Amster- Ordinarily a territorial claim requires physical possession of dam last summer. * -% * United Stages is about one year behind Rissia in ~ bringing the! intercontinental — ballistic missile | (ICBM) into ‘tise for advanced | _space exploration. *x * They emphasized, however. that this did not necessarily mean this! country trailed the Soviets in de- velopment of ICBMs for — military purposes. ‘The experts, who declined use we of their names, also said they | believed a virtual duplicate of the Sputnik IT] satellite’s launch- er was used to rocket Russia's heavily instrumented lunar: robot toward the moon. The “payload” of the Soviet * the territery by one or (mere ex- American Jawyer Andrew Haley, senna ee — =f New Shot Reds’ Ist Since May 15, 1958 WASHINGTON (UPI) mum-minien um altitudes: : 560-145 milies. . and Soviet space explora- tion chronology, with dates\ot launching, weight, maxi- SPUTNIK I (SATELLITE): Moet 4, 1957, 184 pounds, SPUTNIK II (SATELLITE) : Now. 3, 1957, 1,120 pounds, Would Reds Own Moon? president of the congress, tried jhard to get the Russian delegation The Russians sidestepped skilful- = “Haley and some others feared the Russians might consider the planting of figgs on the moon/as tantamount te a claim of sev-— ereignty. According to Moscow Radio the rocket launched yesterday carries pennants with the coat-of arms of the U.S.S.R. and the formal in- scription “Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, January 1959.” * * * A ‘second “possibility, that oc-) curred to Westerners at Amster- dam was that Russia might plant flags on the moon, announce that {theoretically it was in poisession “ then make the grand gesture of ‘giving the moon back to the world,” The value of this “renunciation”: would be tremend- Sodium Cloud’ to Aid Sighting e * The Russians ‘their rocket carries -special equipment ‘ de- jsigned to create a-‘‘sodium cloud” {—like: an artificial comet -stream- ing out from the rear-end of the speeding vehicle. The idea, the Russians say, is to allow a visible cloud which could be .observed ~ and - photo-| « graphed as their.experimental ve- hicle headed through space. * * *- At the. distance of the moon, even an object of the size the Rus- sians claim their satellite is, would not be visible from the earth. American. scientists said the thing in rocket experiments, though in the case of the rockets the altitude was only about 60 Rocket Carries Tail-Li . |Foree experiment was done and ‘for the Moon U.S.Air Force had done a similar? no one knew for sure. So the Air irmed the theony, * *x * As a sidelight to the experiment, it was noted that the-blob of yel-! |low light moved in the sky, shoy-| ‘ ing the drift of the wind at rocket altitude — 60 miles. Scientists doubt that at the alti-| tude of a moon rocket, a sodium! blob or trail could be used for anything other thap a nice handy way of observing the _Pathway of | the satellite. - Some Facts © on Rocket SPEED: Up to 6.9 miles per , second, or -24,840 miles per hour. * OBJECT: Reach vicinity. of | WATER BORNE — Erich Pawellek launches model galley he built in six months time at Wuerzberg, Germany. Three. tiny mo- me moon and report back scientific | miles, - “Moonik”—794 pounds of scientific) 1,056-150 miles. ous. for the East and another humil- -. &o & data. tors power oars, anchor and rudder. instruments and batteries—is ap- SPUTNIK Ill (SATELLITE): ‘May 15, 1958, 2,925 -liation for the West—certainly © in| _ Asai canbe WHEN FIRED: Jan, 2, 1959.-| : . proximately what. top American) pounds including 2,134 pounds of instruments, 1,168-150 ‘| Russian eyes. , icy sed masa ee “a ‘| WHEN EXPECTED TO. scientists calculate the Sputnik III} miles. \ : REACH MOON AREA: 1] p.m. _ launcher was capable of sending - “MOONI i LUNAR PROBE: Jan. "2 1959, final stage Toledo-Detroit X-Way asec choy anil sed — EST, Jan. 3. | Senator Ss 10 Rest Bit M Or e, to the vicinity of the moon. weighed 3,245 5} pounds, «destination moon. Final Link Ready S the sodium gas, catching the light) TOTAL WEIGHT AND SIZE: BELIEVE ATLAS EQUAL UNITED STATES {Fins ROGdy SOON ihe already-tet sun, showed up| Unreveated. but Term Ss Begi in Today U.S. scientists also believe that! EXPLORER | (SATELLITE): Jan. 31, 1958, 3 308 pounds, . TOLEDO, Ohio # — The cun-;as a light “three times as bright PAYLOAD WEIGHT: 794.86 America’s Atlas intercontinental, 1,600-200 mil¢s. tractor building it said today the|as the moon” against the dark pounds. ballistic missile, when -equipped| - with upper stages, could send an| equally large payload to the moon. | But the Atlas “not be ready) for use. in multi- -stage space ex: periments until late this year, they said. On this basis, even though one Atlas missile is already orbiting the earth, the experts said the United States might still be con- sidered about a year behind the _ Russians in bringing the ICBM. into use in the more advanced background of the sky. The intent of the American ex- periment was to test a theory. PAYLOAD: Instruments to measure moon's magnetic field, cosmic rays, radiation, gas and other scientific information, NUMBER OF STAGES TO ROCKET: ‘Multi,"’ according to Radio Moscow JS UNIQUE MARKS: Rocket car- x * * VANGUARD I (SATELLITE): pounds, 2,513-407 miles. EXPLORER Ill (SATELLITE): pounds, 1,735-15 miles. _ EXPLORER IV (SATELLITE): pounds, 1,735-125 miles. PIONEER I (LUNAR PROBE): Oct. 11, 10958, 85 pounds including 25 pounds of instruments, 71,300 mptles, insuf- fielent speed. March 17, 1958, 3.25 W ASUNGTON (AP) Although ithe first session of the 86th €on= gress will not get Under way until Wednesday, the terms of all the House members and. of the newly elected Senators start as of noon) today. . | The Democratic majorities in both the Senate and the House will shoot up as the 85th Congress pass- es into history and is replaced by Toledo Expressway link from the Maumee River to the Michigan line should be finished late this month or early next month with a! Scientists had noted that the sky oe lack on the weather. lat twilight revealed a. yellow air tion was made b glow. It was theorized that it was’ Can ee vice Sy due to sodium in the atmosphere project chief for George w. Lath catching the light of the sun. But _jrop & Sons, Inc. ‘ : — - The $4,022,000 section will be 34 Ye : , PIONEER II (LUNAR PROBE): Nov. 7, 1958, reached [miles lorig and the final link in Satchmo’ Plays Venice 1,000 mile altitude, third stage did not ignite. the Toledo-Detroit Expressway. . . VIENNA .(UPD—American jazz March 26, 1958, 31 the 86th. | ; In the Mouse, w all the members come up fof election ev- ery two years, the Democrats will outnumiber the Republicans 283 to 153. This includes a Democrat from Alaska. - At the windup of the 85th Con- ‘July 26, “1958, 38.43 oo The outgeing 85th Congress dium cloud for sighting oud for sighting purposes. ‘to vote until after ‘eeremonies at types of space exploration. have become more popular than|tour with a concert in Vienna's) of newly-elected members of Con-| cancies, three of them seats that cluding 150 pounds of instruments making it first greater. They said that even if —_ "| permits: Congress to _provide oth- * * they will remain convinced that Reds Expect More Back-Breaking Labor rying pennants with the U.S.S.R. | Members go on the payroll auto- coat of arms, and can release matically at that time, although own artificial comet tail of a so- they will not be sworn in and able PIONEER III (LUNAR PROBE): Dec. 6, 1958, reached _ “os | \the opening session on Wednesday.| gress, the party lineup in the 68 300 miles, insufficient speed. A recent - government... survey | ‘king Louis ‘Satchmo” Armstrong McNutt Takes 0 Takes Over The - Constitution fixes noon of| House was 232 Democrats and 195 ae ATLAS (SATELLITE): Dec. 18, 1958, 8,700 riede in- determined that potato chips will wind up his current European’ Jan. 3 for the start of the terms Republicans. There were eight va» The experts added, wever, : sa? M ce lead: « » peanuts at ball parks and other |new. city hall Féb. 22, city offi- § hfi ld H d \gress. It also sets this as the time had been held by Democrats ~ and ay ae ae are cz S ewack talking eine, ar amusement areas. ee last night. as out le a for’ starting the new session, but) five by — ; SOUTHFIELD — Robert J. Mc-| erwise. : Russia’s moon rocket grabs the bee took over his duties as city In the Senate, where the -mem- world spotlight for several weeks, bership will be increased to 98 by the United States is “closing the space rocket gap.” - ‘ * * * aS | They blamed this lag on the fact. this country began development of big space .rockets several years after; the Russians had begun in- __ tensive work along the same lines. | They said this country, mean- while, had pushed development of ICBMs for military purposes to act as a deterrent to attack. They pointed out that. the United States, so far as is known, ,has fired an ICBM farther from land. point to land point than the Russians. . One Atlas ICBM went,6,300 miles in a recent test. REDESIGNING IS POSSIBILITY Dr. Herbert F. York, the Penta- gon’s new director of research and engineering, said that if the Sput- nik III rocket had been. redesigned for lunar probes it could send to the moon possibly a third as much payload_as it placed in orbit around the earth as Sputnik IIT. ‘yesterday, The- ‘passed a law last year postponing (1 on of two Senators from By RONALD P. KRISS TOKYO (UPI) — Red China's _masses, exhausted by the frenzied cent, The tasks ce of us are still arduous and grave.” The official new year must greater leap, 5 * * Chinese propaganda broadcasts and periodicals leave no doubt that another year of back-breaking la- bor is in store for the mainland’s (650 million persons... “Our achievements have been great,” said Red China’s number two man, Communist Party Vice. Chairman Liu Shao-Ohi, “but we should by no means 3 be compla- i ng. an even Seanad attest Pioneer Dies.in Los Angeles ithe next, they are exhorted to do Daily, which lays down ‘the party line, made the same point. “Let us continue in our endeavors,” the newspaper said, “ahd fight for a still bigger leap forward in 1959." MONOTONOUS FREQUENCY Communist officials and news- monotonous frequency. In -one breath, the masses are applauded for their performance in 1958. In even better this year. “Comrades,” said the people's Daily, typically, “you have worked hard; But we have no. reason for compacency. . .we still have a long way to go. . our country has not yet basically got out of the situation of being poor and culturally a blank. icial_Peiping People's! papers are echoing this line with]. Ask Tired Chinese for Another Great Leap —The target for stel original- ly was approximately 11 million tons by the end of 1962, Now the | party wants 18 million tons by the end of 1959. —The. target for coal was 200 million tons. Now it’s 380 million tons. That's nearly double the original goal, and three years ahead of time, to boot. ~Phe target for food crops was 250 million tons. Now it’s 520 mil- lion, more than twice the 1956 goal. The figures are the same across |the board in industry and agricul- ‘ture. How do the Communists pro- pose to do it? USE ‘ENERGY WISDOM’ * L-Po, vice premier of the state council and chairman of the “Na- “With our revolutionary energy. and boundless wisdom,” said: Po- enormous job of trying to make production match targets. _The Communist Party last | month ordered a “tidying up and | consolidation” -of the people's communes by April, spring planting season goes into high gear. The object is to make life more begrable in the communes, giant labor camps that“have swallowed 500 million peasants. This doesn't Mean a vacation for the peasants —they’ll stil] be engaged in the ‘winter harvest and in running small factories—but it does mean the stress will be on better living conditions, at least for a while. SPECIFIC TERMS Radio Peiping, quoting a party resolution, spilled out in specific terms just what is meant by better conan. when the | meér Hazel Park and Harper Woods | city manager, will receive a salary of $14,000 a year The 38-year-old McNutt met with) the opening of the new Congress Alaska, until Jan. 7, primarily because of Jan. 3 anatin on a Saturday. the Democratic margin will jump to 64-34 compared with ont in the outgoing Congress. ye att of the city department heads during the day saying he was anx- ious ‘‘to know them and for them | to know me.’ ~ He Was hired by the city coun- ci] Nov..24 to replace Rugene | Swem who will remain advisor | to the administrator until his * -eontract expires in April, © — McNutt left his manager's job: at Harper Woods to take over his present position. FUNERAL HOME> “Thoughtful Service” ‘46 Williams St. Phone FE 2-5841 24-Hour Ambulaice Service = Cane HS Sparks- Griffin ———— ——— _— MSU ‘At Home’ Classes - will Begin. Next Week EAST LANSING 1# — Classes begin next week for adults enrolled in Michigan State University's: “At Home" educational program. The schools: offer 195 credit = rT Donaldson-Fuller Agency, Ine. “Reliable INSURANCE Protection” Phone FE 4-4565 147 W. Lawrence St. Brey pet eae mote | camiou ca on ta before tional Economic Council. have time for enough sleep, rest |’ : podeds, and carrice ©1090 powmes | LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Paull ox” The people’s daily suggested | 8Md recreation,” it sald. They Seviet lunar robot's 794-pound instrument package is thus only ‘more than a third of the |. pore Me scientific payload, \The total weight of the Soviet lunar vehicle as given in. Moscow is 3,245.76 pounds, but the bulk of that is the empty shell of the rocket's final stage. The payload was not separated from the final stage as in the case of Sputnik III. Russian ‘Moon’ Hides From Gazers in U. 5. By United Press International Unless Russia: releases more detailed information on. its “moon- rocket today, American ~ scientists will have as little chance sighting it. with their most powerful telescopes as finding a needle in a haystack, This is the opinion of several Russians calculate will be il p.m. ge a Stanford University scientist predicted that the lu- Tathous clovd of sodium given off . s . * : 2 | Hawkins, founder of the - Good ‘Humor Ice Cream Co., died yester-< ‘day at Parkview Hospital. He was * * * Hawkins founded the ice cream firm in 1927. He-also founded the Paul Hawkins food vending and =o firm. * * He is aevieed by his widow, Amy, and four children. Funeral service will be held Tuesday at Forest Lawn Mesncrial Park. year they're asking the people to ‘|China's workers are being asked to Some of these tasks are truly staggerigg. .The Reds claim ‘they more than doubled steel produc- tion in 1958, for example, yet this realize as even greater absolute increase. . * * * Steel output, according to Pei- ping, shot up 5.65 million ‘tons in 1958. It’s supposed to go up another 7 million tons in 1959 to reach a total of 18 million’ tons. Food crops, which the Reds claim rose a fantastic 190 million tons to 375 million in. 1958, are sup- posed to rise another 145 million tons this year. For a sketchy idea of whaf accomplish, compare the targets set by the Communists in 1956 for 1962, with the revised targets | \|Advertising Nazi Movie ‘adopted last month in Wuhan for the end of 1959: .. Britains Trample Flag - the same formula, but in more colorful language: ‘‘Heaven- storming teal combined with sci- entific analysis.” For the workers in factories and fields both and up to the same ; basic thing—a lot of hard work. x* « Actually, a brief breathing spell appears in store for the Chinese also must get “tasty, wholesome food” and enough of it. There's a care must be taken of the chil- dren,”’ said Radio Peiping, that the people are full of vigor and ‘at ease, and able to devote their full enthusiasm to insuring a greater leap forward in industry and agriculture." before they begin in earnest the 40.6 Pie Se rh vw point to all this, of |: course.''The working people must!” eat well and sleep well, and good |= “sole ro and Pontiac! solicitations. * In cooperation representation *& It exercises proper firms, it Together — in. 1959” — Your Business Ethics Board i is working every day for you. ,o0 & Through its Soletations Control Plan, it discourages unworthy % It promotes ethical} eae: methods by eonstantly endeavoring to eliminate the - * It acts to stn toate fraud and as in (Direct Door-to-Door Selli ng. *& Since experience -proves that the customer may expect satis- ‘faction only; through dealing with local,. discourages _ Out-of- town, high- pemnarg concerns. = - —— | F i i undesirable practices of fly-by-nighters.... with advertising sources, it encourages honest in Merchandise and Service advertising. : ontrot ‘over Book and Maguatne Salesmen through oe ion. well-established Pontiac people from doing business with wr bt The files of your Business Ethics Board indicate that it is saving our © citizens many thousands of dollars each year through its various opera- § tions. Your support will take its work even moré effective. - & » ar eetae aie ‘ eres get | Film = and his) cnet iennnecennaqeoen IN cs ack M. geet Te 7 4 BUS ESS ETHI BOARD ~ "ae he punt iat Dod fy ry rome biel wea ‘ p; ch the - x, MAME - Pe ee Dd tel o € : 4% -DIVIDEND © rn f ontiac Area Chamber of Célatasied ae “ . Get the Details erry liams? Where is Phil Hart? Sean ‘The ! esis Be a ta Wecarner ties it 12 pA eae now stands as a sacrificial lamb on the political altar. There’s nothing -for him to do but bleat_plaintively and wait to be shorn. wees & * * Hence, the number and quality ‘of the Democratic candidates are of paramount importance. And yet, Burroughs’ Mr. —Tif-— fany and I agree that the Dems have failed to measure up to their responsibilities. The men who should be leaders have allowed ee candidates to oe e ticket. ° : T We contrary to the best inter ests of the party, the nation and the individuals personally and the ‘last mentioned are. going to be held accountable. They face a big obligation. The responsibility RESTS WITH THEM. x“: * * Mr. Tirrany—an Oakland County Republican — has already persuaded © “one high grade Democrat to declare himself for an office In which Tirrany is directly interested. © But where are the Democrats? Where is Willis Brewer? Where is Carlos Richardson? Where is Pat-Van Wagoner? What is Clark Adams doing? What are Williant Dean's plans?) Where is Ed Wil- Are these men going to allow the clumsy, inept, self-starters to leap’ into the arena onee- more and — — claim Democratic spots? - Are Michigan Democrats going to — let a misfit like “Senhtor’” MCNAMARA inate a citizen worthy of the office? ek * _ Once a sincere and earnest out- state. Democrat said to me: “Why does Oakland County continue send- ing to Lansing the most undesirable member of the Michigan legislature? meee . THE PONT AC: PRES Publishea-by Tus Pontiac Parse Compan 8 : ntiac, Dally sree) ohigan atey Basen, E tive Vice Preatdent and Advertising Director, Howano M. Prrecenatn m1, 0 Eant M waitaal hate Using Thtapwert, . | “run again or are they going to nom- - joe President and Ch la aiee Rlawanet reulation Manager . ~ ©, papenens toes : Ld : dope, Pas and Baltor Manager - Manat Gronce CO Inman ; Managing Bator : Chassitied: Manage? a= = eee ——— “Phe Associated Press ts poe gs brine ‘a “the une for re et of all in in U : ‘Pub ~ all Th news Mepatohes + ai fe delivered by aioe ter 40 cents avaiable, by mal) Lap r and ear: elsewhtre in “34 wg all other Fae in Ped ‘United States ep ae @yebie in a class rate You provide the worst Representa- _tive we have.” I suggested he talk to the Democratic leaders who tacitly -_,K’ed this particular patsy. In fact me atte : talked to them Myself. ‘and swallowed hard and looked em- _ barrassed. I refrain: -from ae names. he 6k * ‘The time has come when we must have strong men on BOTH tickets. The chimpanzee is unsafe. ‘We've proved that. This nation ‘can only be strengthened by hav- ing two competent. men running against each other, The Republi- cans have done a.right workman- like job. It’s high time their opponents faced up to their own responsibilities and took a hand in _ Oakland County politics — and in the State of Michigan. ee see ae Last week my old pal, Roscor BonistegL, of Ann Arbor stated -he would not be a candidate to succeed himself as a U. of M. regent. Well, there goes a sound Democrat and one that should uphold the honor of his’ . party in high places. Both the Uni- - versity of Michigan and MSU need strongér governing boards. But we'll never attain that objective when men — like Roscox step aside, : ~ Democrats — it’s your move. And the time to start is. now! é +. BY if rei ~ [he PC POWER of FATT. ci *s The separate faiths of three ey, a rabbi, a minister and a priest, have united to promote good will and religious understanding in: Fresno, Calif., and then around the world. - Rabbi David Greenberg and Msgr. James Dowling became friends while doing social work among cotton pickers and growers in the Valley. Joined by Dean James Malloch, the three went to work on the problem of juvenile delinquency in their area and achieved notable results. -<° ’ Realizing that a lack of knowledge caused prejudice and hate, they began a Radio Forum of Better Understanding that is now in its 20th year and is s broaddast to maces: South America and the Orient by the Voice of America. Although they differ on tenets of faith, they stand together in a common purpose. “Our purpose is to promote understanding," said the Dean. “And to fortify religion," said the-Rabbi. “We feel that religion is necessary for the stabilization of the family and the nation,” re said the Briest. —-— == Fa m Fe PE “y 180) Opdyke Rd, | ge = we rer quest: ack teseont ‘oo Sieh dauilagl Al niciieek adele schools are giving, ‘auch as the Gest teachers mongy can buy, additions and new schools, you must pay for same, . Pontiac has always paying bonds, as it took us years to get out of debt. ‘It we had paid as _ ‘we went ona four million dollar issye in 1929, we could have built uew ‘ AMS eaiecek MUMBA * : _ Borrowing on bonds is like puttin r 30 2 on _ property. Why should our generation saddle our responsibility on future generation? Bonded indebtedness breeds trouble for future peer ado fre ct. = * kok of. £4 Your school laws were amended in 1943 and 1948 allowing a '. tion for _ Consent, aul cans youresheal bensl miey ool tans fie 0 not to exceed 30 years for $7,250,000,- Do ; years, . ‘want to have to pay _ Interest all these years when you could sive two million in interest” on pay-as-you-go? a an ae 2 ~ Let's ask the school board if more mills. eda ‘avoid bond issues _ _and still enable Pontiae to have the best in education, which our chil- "dren are entitled to. I don’t want any more long term bond issues, and am sure many more citizens feel the same way. Let’s stay on a pay- as-you-go. -- Contemplates Plan - of .Teamster Drive - When New York's police force -bends before Hoffa, the top hood™ will have himself a standing army __under arms, in uniform Ea » equipped with. weapons. ~ : ck A Tonmeter seieal said, “We're going to give the police - commissioner a taste of the eco-— nomic force and pressure of the - - Teamsters’ Union.” In. back ’ alley language at means busted heads, ears ri , brakenlegs- and stretcher cases a2 a warnt- up. a Then if’ the Commissioner:doesn't — - bow, the goons and the big baboons really turn it on. Side, Liner why’ Do . Negroes - Vote Democratic?’ The new governor of Alabama - announced there will be-no Ne- groes in the high school and college bands that march in his inaugural parade. Here's a Democrat that —stams- the colored people into earth and he is fighting. ~ “The shade of same He Lynch should arise. And in Conclusion . .. : Jottings from the well thumbed ™ notebook of your peripatetic Te- porter: . Reservations for New Year’s Eve in the Empire Room at The Waldorf were $35 apiece (BUTTOLPH) and Jim Larer’s three ee ee ee) , Song are really growing up. The old- est is six feet six and a half; the “middle one” in age is six feet six, and the youngest (15) is nearly six feet seven and a réal grand family Te are Had a chat with Ep RacspaLg, Buick’s big boss, at the Otiver wedding. He says Buick’s booming. But the star of that particular. evening was ANN OLIVER, the bride. And her mama took second place. * x * Overheard in the Oakland “Theater lobby: “Scientista show us how to sail under the North Pole and fly to the moon; but you're on your own when you cross the street”.......... Few cities have two members of the President's cabinet within 35 miles as we do. And this doesn't count ex-member Wilson who's .- - only six miles. away.......... According fo Kiplinger, in the “next dozen years, the three states growing the most percentage wise will be: Ajaska, Nevada and Ari- zona. Michigan is well up and is expected to move from seven to ten million. .... -..«- London had 14. consecutive. days. without a . a glimpse of the sun last month. x * * | In 1958, the British passed the mil- biles forthe first time and they ex- pect to exceed this record in 1959 . ea oooe They tell ‘me babysitters got double time after twelve New Year's BY@ .5 0626s 54 pictures are banned in Spain as “too immoral,” but the government O.K.’ed permission for her to make her newest film right there. Incident- ally, she’s-the biggest box office at- ‘traction in all filmland. Lately she has been shown as a comedienne and her backers may switch the “mistress of the masses” into a comedy - gal. . I.don’t know Art Law’s ots bee daughter, PHYLLIS, but if she’s as at-~ tractive as that photo in Tuesday’s Press, I hope she drops in some une with her pappy. —Hagouo a. Freeman ‘FLORENCE | . Brigitte BaArpoT’s— Gov. Williams’ Pals Look Up Ambition Sits at. Dems’ Tables - By GEORGE WEEKS. LANSING {UPT) — The sage of Michigan Demacrats kicked off the 1959 season with-what might stand up as the political: ufider- statement of the year. “There's a lot of political ambition at these tables,” sald state Democratic bossNell Stacbler as he scanned aver tables where sat men named Williams, Hart, McNamara, Hare, Brown, Edwards, Szyman-. ski, Swatnaon, Adams and Mackie, Staebler, speaking At Gov, G. Mennen Williams’ New Year's Day inaugural luncheon, urged Demo- crats to. put party purpese | “above personal ambition. * * * He sounded like a football coach telling candidates on the opening day of practice that not everyone ean earry the ball. - Michigan Democrats, unlike Re- . publicans who are left without a major state’ officeholder, are load- ed with ball barriers for the 1959 off-season—many of them heading - for the same goal. - The top Democrats, and the di- rection they're heading: WILLIAMS—His (ith year in office promises to be his rough. eat. In a year when his backers want to groom him for the 1960 presidential nomination. Williams is_faced with the pros: pect of shouldering the blame tor Increased tatasitéy and an antict- pated 100-million-dollar stg te deficit. SENATOR-ELECT PHILIP A. _ HART—He's on his own now after being under Williams’ wing two _ terms as lieutenant governor, Hart will be sworn into the U.S. Senate Wednesday and doesn't face an election test for six years. His first objective will be to get as- signment on the Judiciary Commit« tee and the Banking and Currency Committee. = * * * SEN. PATRICK V, McNAMARA —He's the senior senator, but al ready Hart appears to be first in the minds of state party leaders. Staebler spoke of “Phil and Pat” . at the inaugural tu SECRETARY ‘or STATE JAMES M. HARK—He emerged as a leading candidate as Wil. Nama’ heir by leading the ticket with a whopping 300,000-vote vie- tery margin Nov. 4 He nearly matches Williams’ output of prpas releases. * JUSTICE GEORGE EDWARDS He says he intends to stay on the Supreme Court if re-elected April 6. However, many consider him the strongest ‘eontender when Williams Vacates and ate siire he — —— ve . “STATE amen SANK roRD as BROWN-—-He ran strong Nov. 4, is a quick man Wittra handshake and has been mentioned *as a pos: sibility for governor, Auditor General Frank Say “paanski, Attorney General Paul ‘ condition of my son's feet. Swainson and Highway Commis- sioner John C. Mackie — other anerabers of Willams’. who have been aicailoaed das candidates for the _ -extcutive chair. : Er | >fett-as-the sole member of the That leayes~ “Sapertntenitent of Publie~Instruction Lynn M: Bart- administrative board who hasn't been tapped by capitol observers They are-considered far back in 8 an early-running contender for the pack a at this oo. Dr. milan: Brady’s governor in 1960 or "1962. Mailbag ‘Virus’. Phony tod - Means Doc Doesn't Know. “+ “Had the virtis several times in the past year and... ."’ (T.M.C.) Answer—I don't know what you mean. Neither _ does the doctor if a doctor made the phony diagnosis of “virus.” More likely the newsboy or barber called it “the virus.’’ * © * “Now he is tak- ing witch hazel extract for vari- cose veins...” (R.W.) Answer—I hope it is the official or standard Fluidextract of Ham- lis (witch hazel) and not the po t distitled extract or wat.. ery lotion. Serid ‘stamped, self. , addressed envelope for the new ‘pamphlet on Varicose Veins and Varicose Ulcer. It is not that DR. BRADY the popular witch hazel extract . is harmful, but the standard Fluldextract is = eetree | for in. ternal use. = * * + “Spent about $35 for doctor aid cortisone ointment for- a fungus apparent result,. Then used the gasoline ~treatment- suggested. ~in your pamphlet, This gave a quick eure . . . White gasoline differs . from ordinary gasoline in fhat it is not leaded. We use it in camp —stovg and lantern.”" (IM.G.> " Apswer -- Thank you. For “pamiphiet on Dermatophytosis _ eres feet itch) send * * * “Please: set us ‘on the - comparative value of ‘synthetic and natural source of vitamins. Friends of ours who take (and a mins from natural sources . (Mrs. D.C.R.). other, ; ‘ * * * ““Fhe— past summer, I sent, for your T After ohe bottle of calelum ¢ap- Signed letters, not more than “one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health — Ph ppd not dis- ease, answered » rage seit addressed envelope "Gs sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac Michigan. will be‘ ‘be "william Brady, if a _W. 5. Downes - ‘lesson. 1 paid $28: amet -gupposedly for six lessons. This was two months ago and so far I've re ’ ceived three lessons, two of them lasting 20 to 30 minutes. Every week the trainer cancels with some excuse. There's nothing you can do but sit back and take it. But I heartily recommend that ~ you call your Chamber of Com-— merce and get. a recommendation _ of a good school. There are sev- eral in this area and this letter -{sn't meant to — them in any way. ‘Sucker Praises Document Exposing Reds Thanks for printing the ‘‘Com- munist Mind.” This document is the most devastating espose of Communist mentality that I've ever seen.- If it doesn’t awaken people from their apathy, then in- deed Lali perce recall. : _—~“Oregon-elected-a ~GOP governor ‘in a Democratic state in a Demo- cratic year. Now they plan to tion and trying to prove Negroes ee ee me we. __2—Kecording to him, they aren't ~~ even good enough to march in a. band that plays music in his own honor. Why-do many Negroes continue to vote Democratic when the Democratic Party is ere on oe ee as near slavery as , and ‘as far from— and equal- ity as they can? * * * 1962. If Michigan Democrats dump McNamara in 1960-and Ore-—— gon gets rid -of Morse two years later, the weakest members of the Senate will be in the ash -can where they belong. = “Tt Seems Pve- Heard That Sone! ‘Britain's labor party has lost out . “No Republican governor any- ~ and they hope to fight back where will take such a stand. The ., Southern: Democrats abuse the Ne- groes year after year, and yet colored people both North and South yee os Democratic ticket. . _ ae Guy ‘Be Sure to ‘to Check on Drivers’ School’. This. is _to warn people of a crooked drivers’ training school in this area. I signed up after a _ phone call from. one offering a free through an anti-U.S. policy. I thought that -was the theme song in England, eer ‘Can Bible je Hold. Lead on these?’ ’~ pe ‘When you look at the thousands "and thousands of books sold on news stands in paperbacks, it _ makes you wonder if the Bible will lose out as the first-place book. (Copyright 1958) Gase Records of a Psychologist: Salutes Sunday School George Bary typifies the highest type of teacher, for he volunteers to handle a ‘Sunday School. class even though his’ whole workaday week is devot-’ ed to similar educational and counseling problems. Say- “Thank you” to these unselfish folks who try to help your children develop morality and — Case A-4is- George A,-Barry-is — No ° Answer—One Ws as good as the / — ith cay ara wane with n cramps. . pamphlet. = sules T had no.more cramps, Now . I'dilike your advice for artiritp or “‘rheumatiz” as you call R. -(B, M. bed ’ me 5 ' Answer—You mean, I take it, my advice. for rhewmatiz om “arthritis” as you =n he unselfishness. And use the- “Compliment Club” as a. class’ project. " By DR, GEORGE W. ORANE. Ferris Institute, in Big Le en Michigan, “Dr. Crane,” he. raioanty in- formed me, “your peychology or umn gave me any; other assist today. “T have wanted ‘outlook of a (student as | auch ald, rn Zou, newpaper “Cae Hi Peggy ous: dps group. Tosi wea cd your :columns tucked away in my Forel gd ca cat me aged Ring!) yp ALERT TEACHERS’ “te fe te wlio’ says Ve bewt. te an: —_ ‘adage ‘attributed to Emer- _ aby has 8 monaoly of fy do © hal, ot any eter ', branch, of _ All good teachers share their - {ntormation with -others.. And likewise kept alert to pick up . . outside. “any workable ideas from George Barry, therefore, illus. trates the well-rounded type of modern educator who realizes that ideas are where mm find them. He recognizes the value of the daily newspaper as a widespread educational medium, and clips rel- evant columns so he can.use them: _ to ese tn Fedo shar a Fil spi Be joo gal for one’s profession or trade ——- too, that George Mapes ed ‘his services on Allen Teachers Pay tribute to the< faithful school teachers who then donate _ their time on Sunday” te help ee enone oe eee -your children, The “backbone of the Sunday Schools: consists of public school teachers who go- that “secénd \! \\ — || LL And ond a “League of Morse in Play WithRifle Fatal to Boy, {4 Friend Is Released to} © ‘Mother After Telling): of Cops, Robbers Game | HARBOR BEACH W—A 14-year-|- [old boy was shot fatally yesterday and a friend were play- “ing wif a-rifle. The victim was Stuart Both of ‘who was shot in the| _Harbor Beach, ' head with a bullet from the .22 youths were struggling for it : : tk & & The sheriff. poenes to continue Attendance i aaak ‘gaid LS told 7 them he had taken the clip out of dacroai - _ The Oxford Junior. Women’s Club will sponsor a blood bank Monday at the Veteran’s Me- morial Buildifg on N. Washington Street. * wh UW Ck Mrs, Homer Hight, ‘blood relief chairman and co-ordinator of th Oakland County Red Cross Chap- ter for the Oxford’ erea féports oo oe et 8 p,m, Py 2.2 ®& 2 7 Those who donate the blood will automatically become members of _ the-Oxford Community Blood Bank which their families _ use in _ emergency. - Michigan Woman Has 110th Birthday [ GRAND RAPIDS (UPI)—One of ‘Michigan’ 8 ‘oldest residents. ob- J in slavery in ceed pe still remembers the Civil War, lives here with a granddaughter, Mrs. Roy Johnson. - McBride said the post mortem _ Showed the tussle never took place. About 100 persons, including sev- | g te a t-great-grandchikiren, | . “were expetted —— a __home—during ar. will be held in-Mrs. ‘Miller's honor. No CUT RATE — Mrs. Ruby J. vye, shown | with her six children at St. Francis Memorial kids, sopaenty unconcerned — their . 5; Carol, The dene ended the society sary decie in nce The posable, i.e., after-tax, income at Early winter activities ies sponsored : Township Recrea: t amet Recreation "Depertinen officials said. : , * ook, ee Of the~13 activities scheduled, _ {three of the five that have termi- nated are scheduled to resume) early this month. These include ladies exercise and gym classes, dog obedience training and classes | ‘in cake decoration. * * * : + The gym ‘classes will resume dan. 6 and will meet: from: 1 to 9 p.m, eac for 10 weeks. The program in- cludes supervised exercising ac- companied by music and free play in the gymasium. A 10-week course in” aig obe- dience training, in cooperation with the Southern Michigan Dog Obe- dience Training Club, will _ begin {at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 14. * * je “ af pueveute ennaallinsl ae wi each Tuesday evening — All dogs must be at. least six according ecreation to director and trainer for the oe - ~ Cake decorating ‘classes. Will “get under way Jan. 19. They will be in: session for 10 weeks. The beginners class will meet from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. and the advanced. classes. from —7:30- to 9:30 ‘each. Monday night. Each of the three activities are open for residents of Waterford Township, They will be held at ‘the Community Center on Williams '|Lake road, according to Recrea- tion Director Tom Belton, wih an Ge eg Chaplain Goes to Alaska DETROIT i—The Rev. William E. Powers, ‘deputy Air Force staff chaplain who recently won a com- mendation medal for service in Alaska, has been reassigned to-a second tour of duty in the north country, Father Powers, who for- merly served in the Grand Rapids Catholic diocese, will be in’ the Alaskan .Air Command. Open in Walled Lake [been -opened- here, Rev. Francis ‘Barnett, pastor, announced today. | WALLED LAKE —. What is be- ern Baptist church of 1959 has x. *& He explained that Walled Lake has been considered a Southern) “upturn_in procurement. ~ The simultaneous rise in social security payments under the un- employment and old-age and sur- vivors’ insurance programs added to current consumer buying pow-|' RECESSION AND RECOVERY | From the third quarter of 1957 to the | first quarter of 1958, the re- eo --. Hospital in San Francisco, is paying the full. 6; Linda, 8, and Gary, "|advance that brought the industry|© a The __er's neck are John to an in the| latter part of the year. a h The acceleration of contract = 5 was ae reflected heal an -|ment-type goods. marries og Lag areidpeiteamet ft : ony other sécial security benefits “over-all decline ir total payrolls. 33 ‘Bected in disposable jual climb since the first quarter of |portation, There has deen a sig- nd the early part of 1958, but showed | "| SMALLER. PRICE CHANGES . -| little change, as food prices leveled ~ |pelatively deep sales declines in} autos and in a variety of invest- ‘These together with. the associ- mand and production was a-rela- however, in unemployment made up for more than half the At the same time, personal: taxes decreased with the cut in ‘taxable earnings and, despite: sary toll tn corporate on) cut in earnings from cur- was thus. not re-) personal in-| came, where the drop amounted to/ |more than 1 per cent. Consumer }- incomes were largely shielded Employment has shown a grad- 1958, but the total remains well below the 1957-high. - During the recession, the decline in. employment occurred chiefly in durable-goods manufacturing in- dustries, in mining, and in trans- Yor plant and equipment has been halted but there is as yet no clear- it evidence of a renewed upswing. | ices. ; cently soared with the introduc- {tion_of-the 1959 models, but with, the interruptions to production aris- ing has improved; liquidation of inventories has been curtailed as a better balance was achieved be- tween prodyetion and consumption. Substantial over-all gains .made at the end of 1958 establish an upward momentum which can be expected to carry the economy to new legele te 1950. ; from the drop in national output. || - nificant recovery in mamifacturing | tut-the other two groups “have shown little. pickup. — Elsewhere in the economy, employment declines were small, and-some subsequent rise has oc- were no first Philadel to. stay out ' eurred in most groups, Unemployment increased during an appreciable decline in the lat- | ter part of the year, It remained cent years, in reflection of the usual tendency for a rise in em- ployment fo lag behind an increase | in output during the earlier- stages be higher, however, then in other re- J. , of completely There is no ME. Le | YOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME WHAT, NO HOSPITAL! - . Jt is difficul to imagine «.time when there tals, Yet previous-to 1751, (the in U.-S. was established in January 4th, 1751) titre were ho institutions maintained for the benefit of. the sick in any part of United States, When the ~_ —— was established men fought Patent ike movers ari recovered wg ihetg, 8 ne Rappler, person, thas s ready ee Were ptoud of our ‘& _VOORBEES- of it. “Tis piace to de” of a cyclical business recovery. midyear. and have since shown off and subsequently declined. Food “ta shrinkage in supplies during “a period in which demand aines amount. Prices of services have ad-| vanced more than other major components of the consumer | price index. The United States economy bes! The physical volume of total out- pat is currently back to ite prior! prices earlier in the year reflected | year, but by a considerably lesser) made_ -quick ‘and substantial re-| continued as 1958 came to a close. | Til 9:00 P.. M. “Owned and Spwant by | Local People’ ee Baptist mission for the past year and a half, with sérvices being conducted in the Stonecrest Build- ing across the street from’ the post a Church status was conferred at an organizational meeting of the’ church committee, held in the) . |Stonecrest Building.on New Year's: Day. Dr. Truett Smith, secretary | of education for the Michigan Bap-| Convention * if Plastic Coyer vf | q is tops if or... Full a fe ie A Shop Monde Nigh "9 O'tock | -MONDAY ONLY | SPECIAL SALE! | Innerspring Construction! | DIVAN-SLEEPER BED | Orig. $49. 95 -. _ MONDAY ONLY ee f aime i ») & a>, ¥ aie é PS NAR ERS: A TO tee ey é * eae C ‘ “* + ¥ @:: ae PAD SEMI. ANNUALLY | rion a ian gas ae it | ae ; ae : a or ; i . ie ee : Be sass af L eS “ : a oe 7 = x , ‘ : ye tar as ete SIX ee “. __.__"THE PONTIAC PRESS. SIX - A ae Le es : 5S. es ¢ - . =i ar ed — ’ 4 er : * ee et : < ; ts — 3 mea ‘ : ee Es z : ha a 2 - « 3 wee “News of Personal Interest = Snyder. Also visiting were her grandson’ and his. wife, Mr. and Mrs. David Ward of Hanover, N. H.—- . * .& & 7-5 Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Draper and daughter * Victoria, of Lyndhurst, Ohio, are visiting Mrs. William ‘Walsh of Canter- a '. Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Brown and daughters Debbie and Eileen of Wards Point drive and their guests, Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth VandenBerg and daughter Kris of Watkins Lake are spending the weekend skiing at Otsego. : * * * Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Reardon spent the holidays with Mrs. Reardon’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Shunck on Longworth drive. Their home is in Nash- ville, Tenn , * * * ‘ Elinor Petroff entertained hér roommate, Bar- “bara Ann Morris, at her home on Cherokee road during the holidays. Both are students at the ' University of Michigan. : * * * . Mr: and Mrs. Robert M. Critchfield of’ Lake. Angelus spent the holidays with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Shook in Louis- ville, Ky. - . | a ik * * _ Holiday guests at the home of Mrs. Frederic L. as Ward on West Huron street were her son and. 2 daughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Ward, and her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and: Mrs. Robert < a. ee Draper’s mother, Mrs. bury drive. — Preparing to return with their parents. At MSU A number of Pontiac grees at the end of thie fall term. at Michigan” State. Uni- ~ versity, © 2 uates are James G, Blackburn, oa s . 3 _ BS., Industrial arts; Donald Bumgardner, B. A., Speech; Robert 8. Chase, B.A. per- sonnel administration; Kenneth A. Ish, B.M., music; Kenneth A. Johnson, B.A., political sci- - ence; Constance E, Mapes, B.A., speech; and William J. ~ Nydem, B.A., general business. - Couple Explains ‘Mission Plans - Mr. and. Mrs. Harry Parra * ® . ; to studies at the University of Michigan are Russell and Roger Anderson, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Russell C. Anderson of West Iro- quois road. They have been spending the ? holidays a B.A. degree in political sci- ence, and a Master of Science > degree in geology has been - “<7 awarded Net) H. Nutter. Among the school's 472 grad- Dear Abby... She Refuses to Te Se . . a FLORENCE M. NYMAN Graduation Held = . a ae . Jesse M. Soriano has earned dents have been granted~de- — : Mr, and Mrs, Axel Nyman of Euclid street announce the engagement of their daughter, Florence Marilyn,te Airman Charles Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charies Moore of Clark- ston. Miss Nyman.is a student at. McAuley School of Prac- tical. Nursing, Her fiance is stationed at Castle Air Force Base, has bee Calif..No wedding date — m set, - fo PATRICIA CRAWFORD The engagement of Patricia ‘ Crawford to, Kenneth E. Brand is announced by her mother, ‘Mrs, Loretta Crawford of Por- ter street. Kenneth’s parents of Meadowlawn street. eter and Totter - - CAROL ANN BALLARD Mr. and Mrs, Wilson Bal- nounce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Ann, to John- .nie Nutt, son.of Mr. and\Mrs. — Barney Nutt of Downing court. _ “The prospective bridegroom is serving with tlie U.S, Army - and is stationed at Fort Ben- ee _ in ‘Freak Shoes’ With Spindly Heels By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: Your idea of - forming the WWFS (WON’T WEAR FREAKISH -STYLES). © ANONYMOUS was a good one, spoke of their preparations to entér the mission fleld at a ~~ ” meeting of Wayside Gleaners © * of First Baptist Church held” 4 Kriday, - : . Mr, and Mrs. Kyle. Wilsen - and Donna Hersh presented a > musical program, accompanied atthe piano by Jill Hicks. Hos- tess was Mrs, Margaret Put- man, Mrs. Nellie Monroe also assisted with the meeting. Dishwashing Is a Recreational? | HELEN B. JEPSON Next time: the man of the == : ~ : house balks at taking his turn The engagement of Helen Beverly Jepson, at sudsing the dinner dishes, - daughter of Mrs, Arthur }. Jepson and the late Mr, wim icaly be ehesr secre: Jepson of Covert road,-to John Roger Anglemier is — yar isthe way the Secretary announced. He is the son of Mrs. R. R. Anglemier of of State, John Foster Dulles, Front street and the late Mr. Anglemier. Miss Jepson _classifies. dishwashing at his 1 1 Ai 7 6 lege H gs > -allended vacation cabin — according to altenc ec Augustana pollege.- Ler fiance allendec reports, that are definitely NOT Ferris Institute. xe - - top wecret. *s { : 2 te i aes , Ba tac? " N b 9 4 “ae ae , be i ey gaia ' ¥ . . , V ividly printéd silks are on this (uses the same material,: printed witht ‘=~. winters resort scene. Tom. Brigance has “magenta tulips, for the patio pajamas : designed the “split tynic.” right, fea: | a relaxed fullesleeved shirt worm So huring full-blown tulips which.slim the” - with slim. pants. - . *- >... hemline of @ tube skirt yn gold silk. He ye’ - 3 but Ww doesn’t some- thing about . the SHOES we women are being forced - to buy? Those _pointed toes - are uneam- fortable - and bor <™ ridicu ABBY jous. The little spindly heels get caught in gratings and cracks-in the side- walk and are downright dan- gerous! I'm glad I have enough sensible ‘old-fashioned’ shoes ‘to Jast me until the shoe man- _ufacturers get over this mad- one say some- a in sin. The. only difference is my man would like to make it legal but he is afraid of the ‘needle for the blood test. When he was married to his first. wife y he -didn't-have-to havea bleed — test. His wife passed away and we are now living as man and wife. We have a daughter and all get along fine. * * * “We would like to have our marriage blessed by the Priest -but when we found out we have to have a license and wit- nesses: We gave up. Everyone thinks we were marriet] by a Justice of the Peace but I would feel better if things were legal and blessed by the Priest. How can we get it, straightened out without any publicity?’ WANTING TO LIVE LEGAL DEAR WANTING: Keep. “needling” him until he visits any $900. It was he has nothing in4priting. Write the ‘friend’ a letter, asking him to pay back the $900 he owes you. He will surely write back that he doesn't owe you - they will Jet me go. I am 16 and the boy is 18. Thank you.” ; BEING PUNISHED DEAR. BEING: If you had an understanding with your Parents that you cold not only $450: Then you've got it in writing.” . ONE WHO KNOWS 4 * * * i *“‘DEAR ABBY: I accepted a date with a boy for New Year’s Eve. When my parents saw a ‘D’ on my report card they told me that I could not date all Christmas vacation, and and that includes New Year’s Eve. This boy hag made all . the plans and I don’t think it is fair for him to be punished. because of me. Please put your answer in the paper and maybe Spots Fires . date during Christmas ‘vacation. if you got a “D”—then you should cancel the New Year’s date. But, if they. agreed to let you accept this date, and aft- er seeing your grades, changed eg minds, they are un- air, = CONFIDENTIAL TO LILA: Your “big wheel” must have _ lost his ‘‘w.” Lose him, * &# * For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care Of this paper. Enelose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. - NAOMI ANN MALONEY Mr, and Mrs, Harold Melo- -" ney of Carter- street announce ‘the engagement of thelr daagh- _ter, Naomi Ann, to Robert L. Key, son’of Mr, and: Mrs. Leon Key of College Park, Ga. Miss Maloney is a senior at Chicago . Evangelistic Institute in Uni- versity. Park, Iowa, where she is ‘president of the Women’s Dormitory Association, Her fi- ance is a junior at the Insti- tute. A July 31 wedding is planned, : é ness." a ‘AGAINST NEW_ SHOES DEAR AGAINST: The WWF'S: is against all. freakish styles for women; shoes. in- cluded! (Are you listening St. Louis?) - ' a “DEAR ABBY: I see by your column that somebody else has my problem of living a: Fullness jx emphasized ornamental print dress of classic styling jn silk crepe. _ by Pauline Trigere. The fuil flounced skirt is topped . bya diminutive bolero that hugs. the figure and buttons at the waist, oF — ey the Priest, Let him tell you how to “make it legal’ with the blessing of your Church without a lot of publicity, Good luck. Z * * * “DEAR ABBY: I have 9 sug- gestion for ‘TAKEN FOR A RIDE’ who can't get the so- called friend to pay him back — the $450 he loaned him because et § i oe i ih this striking blue 8 1 4 “ 4 “grandmother, '” the next ridge from the tower ___ The only thing, about the job _ Grandma: Mans Tower NEALY RIDGE; Va. (UPD), » > There's nothing-like climb- ing an $0-foot fire-tower every day to keep a lady feeling _ young, ; Mrs. Emily Thomas, 65, of Nealy Ridge; does just that. A she has “manned” a fire tower in this remote southwest Virginia sec-- tion for the past 10 years and loves it. a Nowadays, -she. climbs the tower on steps, installed a few years ago. Before that, she climbed a ladder. , Now it’s “much more lady- like,” she says, - , -. “I've never had any trou- ~ -ble,”” she added. “But I’ve told several of the men that it - looked like we were going to have to install an elevator to get them up and down from ._. the top.” ’ Mrs. Thomas, a widow and native of the.area, spends sev- en- days a week in the tower during the fire season, She packs a lunch and spends most. - of the time alone, occasionally reading the Bible or singing to - herself. “That's a sight to lis She lived alone in a house on that troubles her is a recently: installed radio transmitter. “That thing still makes me . nervous," she said. ‘'But I don't let it get the best of me.” Mrs. - Thomas,: who has reared a family of four girls— all noW living away—says she ‘sees no reason Why other wom- | en shouldn't take firetowers. “They just. have to put their up manning minds to it.” she said. ‘‘And if you do that, then you can do - most anything.” . Emotions Have Effect on Hajr and Its Color Hair coloring isn't entirely a matter that must be tackled _ from the .outside. Once your © hair has turned gray, of course, it’s a different story. But if you want to keep the natural color of your hair, watch your diet. oe Take cod liver oil capsules regularly and be faithful about your vitainins. Your diet should stress shell fish, salmon, green vegetables, tomatoes and ba- nanas. Emotions affect the hair and its color, so remember this ‘the next time you're. tempted to lose your temper. Each time you shampoo your | hair, massage your scalp vig-. your fingertips. hair dry after shampooing and a bristlé brush to polish it, sThis suit of lightweight wool features a semi-fitted shaped jacket and a slim, kick-pleat skirt, The jacket has a chin-chin collar and detachable self belt. May be purchased locally. - Mothersingers Hold Cooperative Dinner Pontiac Mothersingers held a cooperative dinner and holiday = ; _ Mrs, Sidney Fellows, Mrs, Rus- ~ sell Jacobson and- Mrs. Ran- . son Robb, A on 3 A= i c \ $ = No Time to Be Jealous of Husband Dean ae ¥ we . x oe . ne Ca a a IVLC n-t¥ Or -to-7 Sam sf 2 : Boss _ By DOROTHY ROE water polo in the swimming to find a free: phone in the HOLLYWOOD, Caltt. @ — 1 bone house.” ; : you have a sense of humor you = § TART ED WITH 4 “ GAY WITH CROWD fell cmlitentirrs, in bey to When Jeanne and Dean were ail her family respon é ae « pment married in 1949, the light-heart- _sibflities, Jeanne is a gay and queen iStin Mian wheteuks ed ibride inherited a ready. decorative member of Holly- ‘ rete ful of seven © = CTMi@, Claudia, Gail and: - “gwingin’ crowd” including: | “Ghlaten and ber dashing hor . Deana, then ranging in age Tony Curtis and Janet Leight “band Dean fom Ttol °°. Frank Sinatra, Eddie Fisher -—“P im -s0—-busy—sorting—soeks, — Ban > Ad a Me ae elesvage) and = a eee et ¢ ak Teer aie: pe ae wean ae affairs that I now have attained teenage sta- Suaesin tei a fe wouldn't have time to be jeal- tus ‘and the accompanying , 7eante has no ambition to ~ ta gine delet beachig weae problems — bat’ Jeanne rules . &€t into the movies herself. to, ——_ little the roost with accomplished . She laughs heartily as she Gina, 2, on her knee while ease and, frequent attacks of YS: _ expertly taping @ baseball ba giggles s- : “Oh, Belenick brought me out = ona oe YR 4 oe Fe. heryoripe with the idea of mal ay -% 4 “Lean hardly keep ‘up with i “® starlet, % ~The ‘Martin home in Bev- — birthdays,” she says. “Wehave fe bate Oe Sart even erly Hills usually resembles a theny all the time — always ~ give me a screen test. It's just _. ehildren’s day camp with Ma- . with parties, of course. Ihave as well. I'd) newer be able to “, Mma Jeanne a sort of junior ~ to hold roll call at dinner time —_ run: this dormitory if I had to } cbuneelor, leading the ging in ~ to be wire everybody's here, worry about my own cireer- a ree, , and Ws practically tmpomsibie * to." : cfs, fy i +? . See ++ [—— 7 / sat ocak _ame Powmiac PRESS, SATURDAY. PANUARY 8 3, 1050 _ » “SEVEN are Beauty’ 4 a sat bod sed waiter: serve the | a Laacude expression. One of the best bits of. beauty adtice is to keep SIZES 12-20; 40 “4861 Answer: More and-more peo- ple are giving tips to the bar- tender even for a single drink, and if several of you sit an appreciable length of time, have more than one round of _. drinks and eat nuts, olives, ~— ete.,- you should definitely tip him, 5 “Dear Mrs. Post Post: I'm a wid- ow,. thirty-five, and again. Shall mother (my: fa- _ ther is dead) announce my en- gagement and then later send out .our marriage announce- ments, or, in best taste, isn’t | She supposed to do this a sec Ds comapiaarineicapaoa mm groom ies send their own marriage announcements. But at your age you may do it eithet way you prefer. In the papers, the announcement need not be made in anyone's name. That is, it might say that Mrs. John Brown and Mr, . James Smith are going to marry in the summer, or that announce- ment has been made of the engagement of Mrs. John . Brown to Mr. Jantes Smith, ete. “Dear Mrs, Post: When two young couples dine out together in a restaurant and. sit in a booth for four; is it best for : the girls to sit together on one side and the man across from them, or foreach girl to sit on a side with her pwn boy friend next to her?” Answer: There js no definite rule; generally a boy and girl. sit next to ee other and the -other boy and girl —_— them. ; Mozart's opera, “Don Gio-- vanni,” which was based on ‘the foibles of Dén Juan, was first sung ‘and performed in Prague in 1787. : Answer: he dee Tend 5b Pang Ans “I'll choose the shirtwaist,” will jn Black . “| well, Whether ~ | blonde; a brunette or a red- | Sep Oil for Style. _ Black is the color of intrigue, an. extreme of color with—no color, We all know the fashion magic of black when aH the elements are right: elegant, versatile, a wardrobe indis- pensable. Now, again, black is back for dressup. ue * * * Why do so many women wear black and love it? What is the secret of The Lady in Black? The strategy is simple. Nothing sets off feminine skin tones and personal type so r you are a_ af - head — on you, it’s becoming. | A black gown is long-lived be- . cause it backgrounds the wear-—- er, rather than drawing atten- tion to itself through color. And one gets less tired of wearing black over and over. x * * Yes, black is a good ward- | robe investment, especially in after-five, fashions. Rich black velvet, cobweb lace, smoky chiffon, anthracite crepé — all are distinctive and dramatic. Besides- the beautiful-bodied . Empires, there are gowns with a great float of skirt, intricate harem effects, buoyant pouf silhouettes. or ma to. eee lining and “|e cde tec ceimbull ‘ttodtentty during each day to see if your muscles and your tongue are relaxed. If you would like to have my ‘WigCare| Becoming Problem _ t. that patenting hairdo. you're wearing is not all your - own, the care and feeling of this gometimes-coiffure is be- coming a subject of more, and more ferninine concem. - That’s where tips from a fa- mous beauty expert, who has been our famous actresses since they wore Mary Pickford .curis; should come in handy. His tips apply as much to hairpieces that eke out to day’s Empire coiffures as they do to wigs... Take its: cleaning, as impor- tant to a hair piece or a wig as to your own lovely locks. To “shampoo,” says the. ¢x- pert, never use soap. and water on a wig or hairpiece. Instead, send it to a professional ‘to be ‘cleaned ,and dressed, or use ‘any standard dry-cleaning sol: - vent and clean it yourself. Put your artificial hair in a pan, and pour on just enough cleaner to cover it. Clean it carefully by swishing it through the solvent, and handle it:as gently as "you would a fine woolen garment. Be careful’ while cleaning, he warns, not to roughen up or Balanced lines, ‘naleen silhou- ette; adaptable to any fabric, these are the wonderful features of this Philip Mangone suit, so right for meeting spring. The jacket which can. be lined or unlined, is metic- uwlously shaped with three-quarter sleeves, has four pockets worked into_the.actual_cutting of the, fab- ric. The slim skirt has a kick pleat in back for gasy walking, graceful motion. og ee 2 ee If you're heading south, make it in linen, sharkskin, shantung or novelty cottons; for the first sign of the crocus, choose _bright-col- ored yp vengatae, faille . or suiting silks : “(Grown-Up Doesn't Come foale ; By RUTH MILLET? Your " teenager well on- the road to maturity.’ she — | Admits that the kids whose par- ents let them do exactly as they Is willing to face the kidding he Behavigr : “Will have to be done ane Quits saying “You just don’t _ derstand.”’ Says,. “Here, . rm j Aamaoagess knows he'll’ get in order to be O ee ee ee ee ee friendly to a teenager. whois net accepted by his ows crowd, Can say honestly of a teacher, “She's tough, but she's fair." Doesn't act as though the world is coming te an tad when his plans go haywire. : Would rather not always have a date than go steady just for se- | curity, Is willing to save up for some- thing big that he wants. 4 x * * Now and> then says says, “It's not he thought he-just-had to have GUEST ROOM?: Use Pontiac’s me because the other kids were ae | York 1, N.Y. If paid by check, to.do chores ting the latest fad. ‘Says Teassuringly when he sus- pects you are anxious ever him, “Don't worry. I'll be careful.” Telephones you that he’ll be later he thought so that you won't be concerned. _No longer waits to be reminded chores that he: knows he a Hairbrush shortest way to the. shin- well-groomed head is the ir brush, Many women who are otherwise pictures of poise are careless about.this one de- tail, Frowsy. hair destroys the FREE Ang HI-FI MUSIC. Air-Conditioned Sound-Prooled oo - e * : * Se Singte.. a Doubdle.. Twin m1 Kitchenettes. $ Low MONTHLY Rates tor Semi-Permanent Guests FE 5-9224 . 120 S. Telegraph Rd. £ ypuvwvuvuvvewvveuvurs _NEED ANOTHER 7 « realize Length * Nape Gizes Bust Walst Neck . Inches Waltat 10 Mu 24 38 16% i" ae 3 - Mu it ia 38 . 28°. se 1m% 18 40 30 41 il 20 42 33 43 17%, Sine (13 sequires’S yards of 61 inch. material for two piece suit and 15 yards of 39 inch material for lining. To order Pattern, #1331, state size, send $1.00. For Philip Man- gone. label, send 250. For new 96 page Pattern Book #15, send $1.00. Address SPADEA, Box 535, G.P.0., Dept. P-6;. New jbank —- de —— charge. (Next ook ox ie an Amer- From this size chart. select. the ican Designer Pattern by BRIG-| ANCE.) one size best for you. » Experiment: With New . Individually. woven into place,- the hairs must remain ‘as neat as possible while being Saige ‘or they tangle and you need a Pro to unsnarl them, hang or put on a block in the fresh air to dry. Avoid the sun or the heat of a room. Fol- low all the cleaning rules for using a cleaning solvent, and you will be safe. .. After cleaning a wig or a hair-piece, set it, as you would © set your own hair. Dampen with a hair spray, a. curls, allow hair to dry, and. carefully brush and comb out bed tonlins me tee aisle Fragrance — "| It you have worn the same months without alternating with one.or_two others, you need a change, according to the ditéc- tor of a perfume firm. It is no longer fashionable to _ be a one-perfume girl, says the director, .who has been in . the fragrance business for thir- ty years. fel gator it is monot- onous and unimaginative—just like wearirig-one color all the time. No matter how basically |. flattering the color or perfume may be, it becomes tiresome after awhile. fragrance for. the - past —six—|- Be adventuresome, he ad- vises,.and try a few different fragrances. At no cost! When- ~ ever you are in a departmennt . or drug store, make it a point L.-to—_sample- fume. Ask. the salesgirl to touch it te your wrist, let it dry, then sniff for your first critical impression. You may ‘enow-immediately whether or not it is the perfume for you or -you may wish to try it again when you are in the store an- illusion of good . looks. - OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5) JANUARY: — _ CLEARANCE - other time, - ~ HURON ‘at TELEGRAPH ss * * * If you take advantage of this free- esting service often iar with the fine fragrances that can do go much for you. Next to. the elephant, the white rhinoceros is the largest land ani- mal. . It stands six feet at the shoulders and is 13 feet in length. Songs About VIPs Are ‘Extra. Party Fun WASHINGTON (NEA) — Of the hundreds of thousands of words that are printed and spoken each year about Washington personali- ties . have been the subjects of Hank's light, clever lyrics include House Speaker Sam Rayburn, Washington oh * panic.” But out of all the anxiety always come the éxact words and music that she wants. GRATEFUL FOR ‘GIFT’ The vivacious, former night club entertainer completely pooh-poohs the idea that her rapid-fire comi- | ‘Her Lyrics Bring Rhythm fo DC. Scene politics: or making taportent busi- Attention . (of Quality -Aldon’s. Carpet . . Builders Homes’ Only) _- installed by us, will help you | sell ‘that better home. ADVANCE Floor Decorators 3700 Seshabaw Rd. eee ness contacts. Ir Hank can usually be found at the plano, surrounded by senators, con- gressmen, diplomats and an occa- sional. Hollywood celebrity, singing ‘her latest compositions. She hast recently recorded 14 of her favorite numbers on a long- playing record posing ability should make her feel extra smart. , {which is simply titled “Hank” ° , made her Specials for: Mon., Tues: and Wed. ‘Only The e ple in musical verse has 1 ’ t * * In addition to writing songs and y : cut nom Santi ten “A talent is a gift,” she explains, | maintaining her active social life, -f Hankins Fort, “Tf better “known to= —_ {shindig 1 d guarantee ‘has Mack bo Wl | MISS FORT ~ Hank's activity. in Washington 7 ade pe 1 ee song about the guest of honor. | ‘social. circles is not reftricted te sie pode half-interest in | ‘And the words that have made|-— * * * —,. | being a guest at other people's (a music publishing cpmpany. — | / | ~ [ner so poptlar around this pub-/ But the fact that Hank always| Pertles. Actually she’s considered t * ) licity-saturated town are the lyrics |shows up with a delightfal, original) 0° Of the best hostesses In town. | «I'm going to paint -when I get , [ie te Campers tor more tan peti oonney ee Her parties which whe calls|too old to do anything else,” she}, ) |, 150 songs. who working habits. — {““Howdy-Do’a/* 1 “But I don't know when | * *& @& Hank is the author q@ such hit) numbers as “Put Your Shoes On,| A Leey,’t “1 Didn't Know’ the Gun] Was Loaded,” and-“'Save Your Con- - Reg. $20.00. Just Wonderful s] | Permanent Reg. —_ sri by cen NI TR EVERY WAVE COMPLETE Reg. $10.00 to $12.50 Creme Pecmeineaiik:: Paetuding cutting, ofl eam shampoo, and style wave.” ASSTVLED? BAIRCUT «$a Open Monday and Friday “til 9 P. M. including: HAIRCUT SHAMPOO , - FASHION SET @ J tetas “keep thee in all places whither thou Behold, I goest, am ath thee, and will ‘IT will instruct and teach thee A the way which thou shalt go; I will guide thee with mine eye, OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHURCH REV. DEEG, Pastor — MONTCALM and GLENWOOD , Morning Service: 10:00 A. M. “THE PARABLE of the OPEN and.CLOSED DOOR” : Confident Living: Senior Highs Members of Orchard| Merger Meetings é ree 6 BE CHURCH SCHOOL ~.- Postor WORSHIP SERVICES FIRST PRESBYTERIAN cHURCH HURON AT WAYNE - REV. WILLIAM H. MARBACH, 0.0. Associate Pastor - KEV. GALEN £. HERSHEY, B.D, | eee 9:30-1:00 i to, 9:90-11:00 i | Orehard Lake Community: Church, | Presbyterian, wil] be host to a [group of young people of the Sev- tenth Day Adventist Church Sun- day ening... teachers will attend a meeting at Church in Detroit Monday -eve- ning to preview curriculym ‘ma- _|terials for the sarah as Y. M. C . Rev. _ Sunday School . Morning Worship ..... Bible Study : Evening Seryice Wednesday Prayer Servi Pars - Friendly” General Baptist Church . A. 13] Mt. Clemens Street R. Garner, Paster — FE ped ee Srepuns oF ce “Where Friends Meet Friends and God Moeis an" The Senior High Fellowship, of A delegation a church school Trumbull Av eimué Presbyterian} Boy's a “Aoke | Hosts Sunday Gone After Pace Change} By ‘NORMAN MINCENT PEALE , Plain of persistent stomach ache. He was a ‘ tensé alittle boy; he told us that-clocks seemed to tick too fast and TV entertainers aunies too loud. social psychiatrist into the home to study the found, was a restless businessman who came 4 briefcase under his arm. At dinner he talked only of business problems. After. dinner he PEALE * * The Detroit Presbyteries ao [United Presbyterian Church. of ‘pyterian Chureh, U.S.A., will be formally imited at a special meet- ing’ at the First Presbyterian Church of oes at t: 45 p.m. Tuesday. Gordon Lyon is elder- aa Columbie Avenue Sunday School... 0... e eee eens Rev. .M. P; Bord Nes Pastor "Cooperating with Southern Baptist Convention a 9,000,000 Members - BAPTIST CHRCH _ 64° West Columbia Ave. FE 56-9960 : 9:45 AM. Morning eouee soddbasdboasooe Foeqo cues 2 TT00A. M. Oo, Ue ee ee eee ie oe pees eu SSCA Li al | , EVENING WORSHIP pre fin sears fay ote clen deee 7:30 P.M. Se sioner and John Emmert, alter- nate commissioner' from the ‘Or- ehard Lake Church, The Rev. Edward’ D. alno will attend, The women’s organizations. of ‘the twe church groups, known as the Presbyterial Societies, will be'a united on Wednesday, Mrs. Don Brieden is president of the Or- ichard Laké Women’s Association. ' Mrs. Harold Welch and Mrs. Fcc |Emmert are members o of the res- North America and of the Pres-| - Auchard, Pastor, Po - Huh cag Oh nine wee tease ta-oat paieiaietiiaiel clink in-New York by his mother, ‘His family physician had| given him all the tests he could, but the child continued to com- ; Our clihic studied the child and at ar ~living situation of the boy. The father, he! '- home every night with worry on his face-and|- disappeared into his shady and worked ‘ally DR, PAUL L. KINDACHI ~~ evening: The petnas wadlal ie Eames Gos eae committee. The. phone started ringing. for her at eight o’clogk every morning and never seemed to stop. “The tele- “phone drives me nuts,” her son told our psychiatrists, We went to work on the. father and convinced him that his attitudes and actions were a cause of his son’s trouble. Our doctors found that the father was punishing himself! for sins he had committed eaglier in life. We helped find peace of miAd so that he was eventually able to bet organise: his work so as to get it done, during office hows. -_* «x *& “Then we Sersusded the mother to reduce her organizational lactivities and to confine her telephoning-to the period from | nine to three o’clock when her ho in school. And we helped the child himself to find ds and playmates (not as easy ‘task in New York. as” ft is in smaller towns and citiés), He needed more normal contact with children his own age living as he did-exclusively tn an adult world. ~~ One of our clinic ministers then asked the man if they a « a ‘byterial Board. —~ | The’ Christian The Junior High Fellowship is! paren aaabeeraas aa it y Teeny evening. “The Salvation | rny 29° W. LAWRENCE STREET ’- 1s Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Young People’s pate 6 p.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7:30 p.m: - ‘Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7-:00 p.m. CAPTAIN AND MRS. J. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music — Singing = True to the Word Preaching - | God Meets. With We — ~_You Too, Are Invited Church Starts Exchange PHILADELPHIA «» — Women ‘have launched @ program to ae ‘mote American-Egyptian fri ship. As part of it, three leading; Egyptian women, including the) Egyptian ‘ ‘mother of the year’ and! her daughter, will visit America ‘this spring for participation in local: Meetings across the country, spon- ‘Women. ° a = Z Edueation - Com-| jes ne sell -meet Wednesday aa (fing Sponsoring a pizza and skating par-| | ; ision and it pleased him so much that he undertook the obliga-|®' \tion. A new sensation of peace, a slower tempo’ and a greater of the United Presbyterian Church | ~ | sored by the United a tact ran then suggested that they should offer prayer regularly and the husband said to the wife, “Okay, you = at the din- ner table-” “Oh, no,” she said “you're the head of the house.” __ It was the first time his wife had ever made that admis- feeling of love flowered among the members of that little family Pipe oh *. It was oes long bfore the boy's stomach ache and his ten- sion vanished. He had been tense because he was living in the midst. of a tense situation. And where there is tension in the home the children suffer even more than th adults. In this case, the solution required not only’ doctors to ‘find. and sci- entifically heal the basic cause of the trouble, but a pastor to teach the family the therapeutic value of prayer. —witttind-writter, “Of the- cometh healing.” And there is no greater need in America. toy) day. than for the healing of God ‘in the emotions, the. mind sors ote avd tha ever had prayer in their home, They said they had not. He | © g Free Methodist. Slates Meetings: Dr. Paul LL Kindschi, - "Dr. Byron . S. Lamson Guest Speakers Association, will be guest speak- er this weekend,and all-of next weak at the Flint District Quar- terly. Meeting and Spiritual Life Crusade: being held at the First + Methodist- Church, 501° Mt. 2) * * indschi will speak tonight * Dy. at the Youth Rally, and. tomorrow - tand the following Sunday at 11 a.m. -|anid 7:30 p.m. With the exception of Monday, when no meeting is held, all evening sessions will be- gin at 7:30. Former president of the Iowa. Minnesota Coference of the Wes- leyan Methodist Chytch, hé pres- ently is president of the Board < ‘Trustees ofthe Miltonvale Coljége and- secretary oy ihe teed at te Breanna ke dian School at Black Hills, 8.D. At 3 pn, Sunday, Dr. Byron S. Lamsogi, general missionary secre- | tary Of the Free Methodist Church of North America, will speak on soper ssior- Lid ‘Dr, ‘Paul Ll, Kidschi, executive ja nondenominational project, will | Pee Poee baad ot Roxio mS Wednesday Silver Tea, —s Sunday 7:30 P. M, Youth Richt wo. a CHURCH _&. Pike at WELCOME ' “Forward in retth® a. F, Deagies ‘CKLW_ Dae 3:30 P.M. GOD partment of Family Life of the De- troit Council of Churches:and Dr. David Treat, director of Clara Eliz- abeth Fund for Marernal Health of Flint. The’ third panclist will ‘be the | LISTEN to WMUZ FM > Time hw | ae Wed. e) ponsored CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Ave. FE 4-001 Rev. John Rozeboom, director-of | Family Life Program of the De- troit Methodist . THe Rev.” Robert Benedict will | moderate “Youth in World. " --—=- ££ ¢ #£- Panelists will be Probate Judge|l Arthur E.. Moore, James Hunt and William McCarthy, both with Oak land County Services.- According to Mrs. George Gaches of First Congregational Church, chairman, tuition may be paid by the student or the church may pay a fee =. group, es “ Dr. Lamson has visited all of the denomination's mission fields scat- tered throughout the world. — od * i tet Trot the Bait tr to TWiT tiportt Rev. Paul Johnson FE bon “TIRST 6 GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249 Baldwin Avenue Sunday School 9:45 Morning Service 11:00 Youth Service 6:00 Evening Service 7:00 Wednesday Prayer Service 7:30 #-TITL—FE._ 5-9822 ia, i your wrath. , hate wat, i (Copyright, (1968) ina _£ | BETHEL TABERNACLE | First Pentecost Charch of Pontiac | 8.8. 10.A.M. Worship 11 A.M. | Evangelistic Service 7:30 P.M. Tues. and Thurs. 7:30 P.M. Rey. and Mrs. FE. Grouch |p tase Baldwin Ave, FE 5-ae50 | << oee Churches of Christ Slate TV Program w ow’ wan “PONTIAC "OF CH f?- Gible Study a é Morning Worship .... - WXYZ Detroit 5:39 to Everybody 1: Minteter - Sunday Kvening Worship’... Wednesda? Evening Hervice . - Listen to Herald of Fruth . CKLW-TH. Channel 9 Saturdays 8:00 P. M. [ 6: 109 P, M. Sundays. ‘180 North. Perey Street “CHURCH RIST - WW eleomes All Visitors. . ee a a) s | nvited! ! | i ‘The Christian and ‘ ‘outh Hour, 6 “Invites You: : Marimont Baptist Chureh Yen Worship, 11 A.M. Sunday School, 10 A, M.- 730 P.M. Evening Service, 7 _MARIMONT .+ A Growing Church. :30 P.M. With a Friendly Welcome! - “REV. PHILIP SOMERS, Pastor Walton oe 1 ee Uae . Missionary Alliance Church M-59 at Cass Lake Rd. “Rev. G. }. Bersche. Pastor Sunday Schoo! . O48 A. M. Sunday Worship 11200 A. M. “STRONG SPIRITUAL DESIRE” : ‘Church Starts Magazine ‘ferian women's -Glenn Cuphingham, famous track star of thé 1930s, is returning to Michigap for another series of pub- lie appearances sponsored by the Michigan Temeoreece Foundation. Churcheg. of Christ throughout Michigan Re cooperating in a TV | program beginning at 8 tonight on 'CKLW-TV channel 9. -The program, known as ‘‘Her- ald of Truth,"' will be in addition to the radio program by the same name over WTAC, Flint, at 8:30 on Sunday morning and on WXYZ at 5:30 Sunday evening. The . W. W. Hall. ¢ jcomineny | s will be welcom NEW YORK wm AX re Presby- zines, the Ne year-old ‘Missionary Horizons," and 34-year-old “Outreach,” were combined thjs month as a result of the mergef¢ forming the United Presbyterian Church. The new pub-|_ lication / ‘called “Concern,” will be| the official “magazine of United) | Pre Syterjan women. : Saeed f pen the Lord, He it is that doth J sesensiaen | : shed 2 o 4 ae i Specter: ‘Mu: = Sunilay § sien H: 00 ALM. and 7:45 - P. M. vin * ie NcHTLy 7:45 + @ Soul. Stirrin @Congr egatie al Sthaine - , e. ~ @. Prayer for Stick F IRST OPEN BIBLE c HURCH / “The ‘End of Your Search Jor a Friendly Cc hure h” 1517 Josly n Avenue 4 Block North of Walton Blvd. t a A.Y.P. 6:00 B. M. He will be with A. a decade, and\at his retirement, E llatic Service 7:00 P. M. thee, He will not fail thee,-neither|)’ GLENN CUNNINGHAM he had run the mile under 4:10. Once rege: SHALL. lforsake thee: fear not, neither be more times than all other run- ) ~ S°'S8 OPENED” iceman. ie a Lagi the chao bapetrt ners combiged. a i — will take him to 38 schools, When he and his eight children | First United —_Jeight Rate seven Porgy are- not . entertaining — under- ) ee a appear. J ivibedet ben ae Jo tal Chureh | Senday—in_ the agers “pr \Cedar Point patch to Seven Mr. Mer aL. Roberts, Paster” | United. Presbyte His Cunningham spends his timel go before thee, Sunday Services .... , [topic will be “The Race a 0 rite." De wettonal Services 110 A. | A graduate of the University ne _ of Kansas, Mr. Canaingham sens: FE 2-497 Ir FIRST CHURCH OF YA HE BRETHREN. Ex-Olympic Track Star Oakland: Church Speaker - earned his M.A. degree from the University of Iowa and a Ph.d from New York University. In 1933 he was chosen by 600 af the nation’s top sports. writers. to receive the Sullivan Award as. out-|: ; a standing amateur > athlete of the’ year. * © ate He was> captain of the’ American track team touring Europe and the Orient in 1933, and in 1936 his fel- low athletes” voted him the most popular member of the U.S. Olym- pic. Team. - KNOWN TO MILLIONS | . eee ’ Mr. Cunniirigham is known to mil- lions of Americans as the greatest American miler of our time. Asa boy he received terrible burns on his Jegs and body in @ firé. He started running“to gain back tao : strength and health. a the a of. — = throughout the-co untry The Michigan Temperance. Foun-| ~ | dation plans tp offer his services | to every high school in the. state | during: the next three years. come geen mages = A, M, “a af _ LAST. WEE K of —= : with FRED JEN SEN | . “Known as the Walking Bible” or Mon. ~ You Se 77 REV. R. E. STATON, Pastor : "MODERN ‘NURSERY ee, Préaching 0 Will Hear: ' : BRING THE } FAMILY tr Williams St, at W. Pike MORNING MESSAGE BY THE PASTOR, t1.00 A.M.” MUSIC” : RVANGet ISTIC SERVICE, t-00 P oa | PRAYER MEETING AND BIBLE STUDY AT THE WILLS WOME gp sy LEROY SHAFER; Pastor set " wens ean etn me ech! Parish Slates Election The ann meeting and election oe vadievones is scheduled for Thursday evening following the j &:30 dinner tn: All. Saints: Eptaco- | Pal Chureh. oe zl Soints Episcopal Charch _ The ‘Rev. © George Widditieia, Rector "The Rev “Dart K. Mille, Curate: + SUNDAY SERVICES %4 "96 A.M.—Holy Communion 4 9:30 A.M.—Moérning Prayer ot Sermon by the Rector : Church Soont ee ee Sermon by. the Rector ‘ - School A nt —~ Pied ORME | ny ort EPISCOPAL CHURCH = «i | * aaa sak, . - WO) Halehery Ra. Drayton #00 A. M.—-Holy Conimumten te ‘h M--Holp Cértniunton ™ [| 4:30 and 11:28 A, M.-H. “n - Ma Pemliy Ser Berviee and “fT 7 1106 A. Holy joanne = Bertram T. write, wow} tor, said the public is. invited. Officers of the school are Rev. Chureh, dean; the Rev. falar H, i dist Church, ‘the Rev. Karl W. Ost- berg of First Congregational, Church, and the fA soth James" Ww. |e, eta ona Strickland -of ity. Baptist Church will serve Pea | retary and Harold Brown of First Christian Gargh,, treasurer, |: -|follow -the-potluck dinner ‘at 6:30 fo Observe Rite Joslyn Ave. Church. | The Sacrament “of: the Lord's. Supper: will be, observed “at “the | 419:45 a.m. serviée tomorrow at in Today's ) PILGRIM ‘HOLINESS ~ CHURCH Baldwin at Fairmount Office Phone FE 8-8651 SUNDAY SCHOOL, 10 a.m. D. D. McColl of First Christian WORSHIP—11 a.m. GOSPEL HOUR—7 p.m. Salvation’s Story Re-told © “Begin the Year Correctly. Be in _ Church with Us! the Joslyrr Avenue United Presby- terian- ‘Church. The-Board of Trustees will meet at the church Monday evening. An ecclesiastical meeting will Wednesday evening in the church |: parlor. The pastor, the Rev. E. I. Watkins, sald annual- reports |; should be turned in to him = by — i i | | “i : | speaking to high « school assemblies | Ginst FREE METHODIST CHURCH (ee ~ Rev, RE. bere, += fa * South Saginaw aude rare : ta Mart, Pastor ’ 10:00. A. M. “MORNING WORSHIP «- 11:15 CHURCH SCHOOL Wed. . 130 P. M, Bible Study and Prayer Fellowship ae cbt AO 6:15 PLM... sates Pima RE cameron ( i Sunday School. | Richard S. Stuckme © Church’ Service . | Sunday School. = Sunday Schoo! B Charch Service . i. a, School .. ST. MARK. 1979 Commerce Rd. New Church Building (West Bloomfield Township) . Wm. C. Grate, Pastor = Sunday School .:. 4 ——- Service 7 (Next to Dublin School Howard E. Claycombe, Pastor Services at 8:30 A.M. A.M. 7%. M and li Church Service . eee: Lutheran Churches MISSOURI SYNOD | BLOOMFIELD j TOWNSHIP A Square Lake & Telegraph Wm, C. Grate, Pastor - 10:00 AM 1:00 A.M. & “Cedar Crest ; Farnsworth off Unies Lk Ra. | .10:00 A. M. 4 GIS A. M. : THE ‘PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 3,-1959_ 3 1 eo oe eee ip ee ee ee eee Fu ‘on "ANew Day’ Pastor fo Speak CENTRAL . ‘CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. FE 4-0239 347 N. Saginaw Bible RE Sis AM. | Youth ico 600P.M. Service 7:00 P. M, e = to Be* Shown Sunday at Bethany Baptist * service will be-William Lewis. A new constitution for the Beth- REV. MAURICE Highland — Congeogatonal Church _ Milford Rd: at M-58 Sunday School 10.A. M. Morning Worship 11 A. M. DIRETTE, Paster ‘any Church will be presented at the 6:30 fellowship supper and an- ‘nual business meeting Wednesday. An audio-visual presentation, “& Wonderful Year at Bethany,” will be a part of the program, * New Location 70 Chamberlain, Cor, Edison ‘Sunday Service 11. ‘ M. ‘camping season at 7 Pp m. Sunday ithe vesper service at 8-p. m. _ Reports also will be given on the American Baptist Assembly pro- gram at Green Lake, Wis., which FE 2-4609 / in ae was attended by several Bethany delegates. ed ‘National PONTIAC CHRIST PONTIAC WALLED M. Frederick Lutheran | Council Churches ASCENSION 96 Williams Wa. LeFounigin, Pastor SUNDAY SCHQOL.. ONS AM. CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M. ? WATERFORD TWP. | Airport at. Willianis Lake Ra. Arvid E. Anderson. Rastor SUNDAY SCHOOL... 9:30 A.M. CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M, ST. JOHN’S- 87 Hill St. at Cherry St. Carl W. Nelson, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL..~ CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M, SHEPHERD of the LAKES 9:45 A.M, LAKE Meeting at Walled Lake Elem. School W. Maple Near Ladd Rd. Foutz, Pastor CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M. t Oa 1 School for Ministers Night Classes for Older | Men Already Working at Another Profession GARDEN CITY, N.Y. @ — A new kind of Episcopal seminary opened here last wek-It holds} witt inctude the celebration of Holy; classes at night, and is mainly for older professional men — engi- neers, bankers and others — pre- | paring for the ministry, . ot * * Ceremonies dedicating the new- ly completed building were led by the Rt. Rev. James P. DeWolfe, bishop of Long Island, and the Very Rev, Robert Farrar Capon, dean of the school. ‘ Called the George Mercer ar. Memorial Schgol of Theology, the institution already has an enroll- ment of about{50°men, all over 30. Most are jobholders with Their classes are set at night | and Seturiays to enable them to plete courses for holy orders. Besides its seminary. curricula, aa "e United - | Presbyterian} ~ Churches Worship. Bible School Wednesd Prayer weeee 10:00 A. M. 11:20 A.M. esene * Youth Fellowship.. 5:45 P. M. Evening Service .: ..7:00 P.M. ‘Meeting. . 7:00 P.M. JOSLYN AVENUE the schoo] also offers general aca- j demic courses to enable men with- lout college degrees to make up | such requirements. *« *** * Construction of: the building was made possible through a gift of Mrs. Helen B. Mercer of New York City in memory of her late hus- | band George. Camping Season Slides} “Assisting at the 8:45 morning ‘at the annual camp reunion and at} vos re St. Paul Lutheran Church \Ottficers to Be Installed - The first Sunday of the New Year, at St. Paul Lutheran Church Communion and the installation of church officers. Paul Williams is the new presi- dent of the congregation; Gerald Phelps, vice president; Don Wil- cox, secretary; Willjam Fisher, treasurer; George Kressbach, fi- nancial secretary; and Ralph Mon- roe, assistant financial secretary. The Board ef Elders will include Louis ‘Clauson, Gilbert Buhl, William Kuchon,_ Walter Mann, Ben R. Hawkins, Bruce Reigie, Bert Colbeth and Andrew Tasca. Serving on the Board of Trustees will be T. O. Halverson, James Banks, M. L. Lorenzen, Charles Goffer and Herman Anders. + _Elected-to the Board of Finance; were. Fisher, Kressbach, Monroe, Charles Mutz, M. L. Lorenson Jr., iucation_ were Lewis.Russell, Sun- ee oe - NEW YEAR'S EVE — Kneeling at the altar rail in St. nae 2 Lutheran Church in the service of Holy Communion on New Year's Eve is the Luther Schultz family of 472 Lowell St. They seek God's we lncpveen Ae a mistakes and His ‘guidance for the coniing year. From Jeff, they.are Luther The Rev. George Mahder is pastor. DONELSON BAPT ist CHURCH | Kitsabeth Lake Rd. of Tilden Sunday School... ‘Su, __Moraing Worship... 110A Yoyth Service ........... eapiph vxpevsees i de gba $20. a. Service .. *** ites roe chebetlt 1:00 P.M. W if , Paster—REV. LEE LaLONne . EWALD | WATERFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH Andersonville | Read — Near Dixie Highway Sunday School ..... pg cee Weng > bavinegies Guae 9:45 A. M. Morning Worship ... . . eae ‘e204! ‘Mo and 11:00 A.M. Evening Service ..........- peice costacss+ees-7 3M. Family Bible Hour Wednesday .....-----+-**+ -++ 7:30 P.M, ROBERT 1. WINNE, Paster t tal—Und inational 0:00 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes for all ages. a 1:00 A. M. WORSHIP A rent? Christ” a ast Pperer” ~ Morn. Worship, 11:00 Evangel Temple Wee Prayer igen Pn teoed ee and Study....... 7:30 P.M — : nag 145) eee espe _ AUBURN HEIGHTS / ing et Both Services MMI ERStraey nhs BacTkak” reset patent iota ~ ee ee Se fa 2456 Primary Street Susthrg School ... 10600 A. va fe | Ist CONGREGATIONAL Worship ..........1bISA.M. Fi P | CHURCH .- - Holy Communion . o Mill, E. Huron Youth Fellowship... 6:00 P.M. R end 10, Clemons : = tv. Malcolm K. Burton, Paster 3 . woh : Rev: Kail W. Ostberg, Assoc, Paster. |) °! . CHURCH _f£ 10:30 A.M. Drayton Plains, Michigan “WISDOM IN Wd. Tetawieenn Je, Paster R A MYSTERY” j@ School....... 9:45 A.M. oe The Rev. Mr. Burton, Preachin orning Worship ..11:00A. M.~ A Prayer Revival. Sinted fAouth Groups..... 6:30 P.M. BS ae Fe Evening Worship.. 7:30 P.M. ‘ , Wed. Prayer and ‘ Guest Speakers Will Include: Study Ho ue RE BBE Rev. Orvitte Windelt, Pontise; + ‘Bev. Ww. gE Hakes. ‘ere. ‘Pastor 9:45, A.M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes for All Ages 10:45 AM—MORNING wWoeSun ‘ "| PRIS PRESENT EVIL ACE’ © —7;00°P.M. —E€VENING SERVICES * ON "THOU *RED Ker IN MALAYA’”’ Det H. Sevoge Preaching inthe Morning THOU SHALT BEY “- " SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY . “GOD” _, Sunday Services and - Reading Room Sunday School 2 East Lawrence Street Wed , , Dail 1190 A.M 11 A. M. to 8°P. M Service 6 P. M. Friday to 8 P, M. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST a ‘o -} HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS RADIO STATION... \ TV CKLW. -| EVERY SUNDAY 000 RC. ‘Sanday $45 1. i 9:45 A. M. I [nate Novival WRON 10:15°R. Hach Sunday = A LOOK AHEAD As the curtain opens on a New Year, we know not-what it will bring. Yet we look for- ward with faith because of the Great God we worship. " Dr. Tom Malone. Pastor Oe, Tom Malone SUNDAY SCHOOL 7:30 P.M. | wae Complete! Departmentali ed Sti Oo Sunday School tor All higen.’ Moers, Supervised Nursery. ' Baptismal 7:30 Sunday Night’ "Sunday School Attendance Last Week 1.246 7 BAPTIST CHURCH ‘ Fd f ¢ t JHMM MHEG T a! cancer. He ts also a direct man who will not stand for “probably” when hé means “possibly,” and \f you argue that-he is a hard nian, he will agree . On the matter of cancer rescarch, Dr. Rous said, #Y¥ou read-a study here, a correlation there, an hypoth- esis and a counter-charge someplace else. And then you ,are left unable to fit them into any instructive order. “Even drom my own standpoint as a laboratory scientist, _ othe facts on theprobiem — though less random and tess con- fusing — are scarcely more conclusive.” To the vitally interested, but non-scientific, observer, one question pushes Itself through again and again: Does cancer research know where it is going? F ORESEES CURE : “Yest,” Dr. Rous said. “It is working toward a cure. But. ‘the differences of opinion amongst ‘workers in cahcer .are _great — and all to the good, as leading to different attacks on the problem. 4 > “Many men of many minds, possessing highly various knowledge, have entered the field of cancer research to find out what they can. The differences in the printed statements. one reads are largely due to those differences.” .In addition, Dr. Rous sald, consider how young modern cancer research is. Young Boys Set trips a day. The ticket is good for two more cave. — California Fire Started Major Blaze LOS. young boys admitted to city fire periments with a pack of matches Lads 6 and 8 Years Old 7 Say Play With Matches| ANGELES (UPI) — Two}. officials yesterday that their ex-| _ | touched off a major. brush fire that threatened several exclusive | homes near Beverly Hills. said they were playing with the matches when the tinder-dry brush ignited in the Benedict “Canyon - Beverly Glen area. In- The boys, aged 6 and 8 years, |. * WILL INSTRUCT DRIVERS—Pontiac North- ern High School instructors, Arthur B. Tyrrell- (standing) and Russell J, Buller, go over in- struction. plans for adult driver training course they will teach at Northern ee Monday. ‘Pontiac Press Phote The ear is one of six new Pontiacs that will be’ used in the instruetion. The six-week course _ is being sponsored’ by the Pontiac Schools Voca- tional Education Department. “/Township fireman, was | Fhe Ekin . 3 to Jobless Soars injured seriously in a 20-foot fall from a ladder while battling the stubborn flames. . For a time, wind-blown embers endangered the nearby Medea Ho- tel, ‘the city’s largest. Some 20 guests were herded into the lobby of the 125-room hotel while fire- men played hoses on the roof, a a building, was being remodeled for use ‘as office space, It had been a 100-room hotel. -+~ Firemen said. the blaze appar- ently started in a second floor stor- age room at the rear of the build- ing, located at 33 S. Gratiot, Emergency Pay Original — Estimate of On his way back, Rock said, the dog began howling so he reached | through its wire o ea fence and slit its throat. Although it had lost a lot ot blood, Heikkinen found his dog in time. It is recovering and the neighbors are friends again. . sity ee gap nS Be esue ti ee edi Meret ce ee an A Oa ' Crete SE a ey car 2 po ae a esi, a ee * : {7 Jee tt eae aN oa “ pe SEO me ee Soe car sg Wee “ : a as 5 é ee ‘ x Poe x a =: ¢ a = : are ~ a? - vet = PRE on Le ahs ° fa “ * SS Rages 3 Hours; Damage Edward C. Rock Sy owe 510 ; man who tris to make sense out of the random, day-to-day | with a commutation ticket received Estimated at $100,000 veut poe ; reports on cancer research ts in for great confusion. asa pieces Ldap nie : a a mney oro * ; = | oa or ee MOUNT CLEMENS — Fire-| Dog owner Ernie Heikkinen sai These are the words of an elder statesman of cancer re ecmmutation ticket in his: . ha sg Sl nat woe : be search — a scientist whose career is almost as long @8 €X- |mas stocking. He asked his father Ne 2 mag Iped M arate eause Rock iM vey tee owe. j periments into the working of a killer disease. rod it ‘er es agg firefighters in a three-hour battle erinarian. 1 incent, , commu daily t before bringi under |* 5 tk *« * Xavier High School in New York, ~ ast night efor’ (ringing Undet| Rock told State Police the dog a Eddie attends St. Joseph’s aches mated $100,000 damages to the for- had barked continually some 30. - : He is Dr. Peyton Rouse, this year's winner of an Albert (pore leer Fikin Hotel hee feet from his window Christmas “S_ Lasker Award for medical research, Member Emeritus of the | It was estimated ‘Eddie has} - ca . Eva oe when he went to = ‘ kerfeller Institute and the discoverer of a basic cause. of ‘Ttraveled more than 1,000 miles by! . . 7 Heikkinen home to ‘protest e Roekertetier inne making as many as three round- Kenneth Whipple, “40, a Harrison! tounq no one there. q DETROIT wm — Hubert s. Tuck- er, city engineer of Harper Woods, has been named _atting city man- ager of the Detroit suburb. He will serve until a permanent manager - is chosen from 40 applicants. Rob-_ jert J. McNutt resigned after four years as city manager to take a similar post in Southfield. NEW ‘59 WAGONS RADIO HEATER - BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI6-3900 A x + vestigators sald their memes! oe = i a nai $3 1 Million ‘May Be ——— were withheld because of age. —Doubl din Michiac ae “I made a significant find4n 1911 by filtering out a virus ' ee t th t : in icnigan that had caused a cancer in a chickén. Today, 47 years later ‘|, ‘Nes ore wer one ob vo mat | du river | ourse Arrest Teamster ee I 5544 that chicken cancer is still kept growing tn many labora- LANSING — Emergency job- SEAT RE Whippedby winds of up to 50 miles less pay benefits, originally esti- mated to run about 31: million dol- lafs, probably .will wind up cost- ing twice that amount, Michigan employers have been told. . Colin L. Smith, manager of the 'Mchigan Employers’ Unermploy- |ment Compensation Bureau, said, Narcotics Hearing ° |in a report to members that by the| end of November claims totaled more than-55 million dollars. The temporary. benefit pl an still has four months to go under legislation approved by the legis- tories by one transplantation after another. an hour, the flames had edged. 5 : . Howard the homes of such celebri- t PNH But those 47 years are a very short-time when you think ities as Elizabeth ‘Taylor, Marion to Begin d : ‘on oast ( arge gj yy 1 ¥ ‘ee] ” | that modern cancer research !s less than 60 years old. Tl Gavies und Doras Duke: : ia The first adult driver education One home, valued at $190,000. course at the new Pontiac North- was destroyed in tbe ‘holocaust... High School will begin Mon- iwhich charred 650 acres, day. Meanwhile, 150 firefighters re- | Area residents interested in reg- mained on the lines of the other |jstering for the six-week course, fire in Topanga Canyon in af | sponsored by the Vocational Edu- ettort to extinguish several minor jcation Department of Pontiac hot spots on the eastern perim- |schools, may phone Pontiac Ceén- eter before this evening, when jira! High Scheel er enroll at the » SUNDAY In these years, what have we learned? . . * * practive area at the school. This | includes seven skill sections with a, Fugitive From Chain traffic signal, four stop signs, a Gang Also Faces Detroit one-way street, hills and garage. | The student drivers will. also_be instructed in the ‘“‘do’s and don'ts” jof driving during five classroom hours, They also will receive one hour of taining in heavy downtown traffic.In-previous years, the class @ That animals have cancers like those of human beings. And that experiments with these animals tell much about the disedse in man. @ That tissue injury always precedes cancer in man. | @That what one eats, drinks, smokes and does many happen to be of a sort to bring cancer on. And tf we couid only avoid cnacer inducers, we might be able to avoid cancer. @ That cancer-inducers are all around us and even in- DETROIT 4 — Stars Team- sters Union business agent Henry A. Lower was arrested yesterday as a fugitive from a Los Angeles eee winds up to 60 miles an hour /first class period. provided five hours of traffic driv-| oad gang. lature just before it went home s 4 = = - ine —e ing; seven months age. -— fp were predicted, Two clasers will be conducted | “the two classes will use six of “Lower, 56, already ts facing : eo: That pumure! are often harmless at first but undergo :two narcotics charges here and in change and become more dangerous.as they grow larger. New Jersey. Chief county fire dispatcher C. H. Ness said an additional 100 Smith said that by early Decem-| and 12 residents will. be permit- \ber 242,000 claims for extended | the eight 1959 Pontiacs with dual| ted to enroll in each class. One controls located at Northern. aeren’ of valuable watershed and MUCH YET TO LEARN men would be called in at dawn} wilt meet Monday and Wednes- [ee Lower’s fingerprints match (benefits had been filed as against! “mut what we bout cancer,” Dr- Rous said today to assist in mopping up| day, the other on Tuesday and those of William A. Lowe, a first estimates that about 115,000, ‘But what we know abou ‘ operations. Thursdays, both from 4:30 to ( ruel T hief 1963 escapee from a California |eligibles would step forward. °. -| — _ nothing compared Lo. what must. be learned: —_—— — at te __* —*_ —+ 6:40pm —— —— {| = road gang, police _ said. __Lewe | Extended. ben efits _granting u n- ee “What causes those other cancers trom. which | we have. The Topanga fire consumed: 5,000 i * * . Pilfers His was sentenced to a one- year | ‘employed persons up to 13 weeks : f not yet been able to get viruses? We still don't know why most tumors grow, -And even the task of isolating known viruses has been extremely diffic ult. “Tuniors are so various that no blanket cure may be found. We must learn how to cope with each sort.” But science has learned a great lesson, Dr. Rous said, - from two recent discoveries: First, of antibiotics which cure diseases that once appeared hopeless, and second, of the unexpected effects of hormones in checking - ~ tumors — sometimes for years — or even making them disappear. = “These achievements have led cancer workers to ask themselves whether it's necessary to find out'the nature of cancers in order to cure them. Why should we not take a short cut and barge at the problem, trying in all sorts -of. ways te cure?” Li ole It is this approach that ts being: explored now. Thou- sands of substances of all sorts are being tested In labora- torles and by drug firms throughout the civilized world — first in animals and then, if there ts cure without harm, on human volunteers with incurable cancer. “The results of this attack,” Dr Rous sald, “are ) already: - most encouraging.” oreo ae eee esa destroyed “81 homes and County Fire -Chief Keith Klinger said in- vestigators were still searching for signs of? arson. - The small business administra- tion in Washington, D.C., yester- day notified Rep. Joe Holt (R- Calt)-that Los Angeles County has been declared a disaster area) because of the fires. East Cone to Take Communist China: Tour - BERLIN (UPI)—Professor Man- fred Von Ardenne, East Germany's top atomic scientist, wil accom- pany Premier Otto Grotewoh! on ___|his tour of Communist China and! the’Far East-next Sunday, the East German ADN news agency said today, -Tt said Grotewohl also will be accompanied by East German For- eign Minister Lothar Bolz and by Deputy atinisiee for Trade Gerhard Weiss. ieead nomen ane dur Disneys True Life Adventures HOME, SWEET HOME 3 - FROM ADULT NEIGHBORS. Blome AGAIN : , + THOUGH CASPIAN TERNS ARE UNFRIENDLY TO WANDERING WAIFS, THEY ARE VERY APRCONATE WITH THEIR OWN HOUNGETERS. «t 13. Dingtitutha by winx F eatures Syndicate, es: Novo LITTLE TOMMY TERN z= \VANDERSG FROM HIS PARENTS’ NEST (cr AND MEET6 WITH A RUDE REBUFF : AR we Says Tax Head Pontiac Northern instructors, thur Tyrrell and Russell J. Bulle Students will be given 7'4 hours; of Sniving| in = by 28 loot Business Rising, Ar- { Bring Optimistic Report, ‘From State Official Teaching the classes will be two ‘Iron Lung: - |multilung equipment in his broth- CHICAGO (AP)—A thief stole a/ | polio victim's lightweight mechan- ical lungs while he was getting a post-surgery check. ™ Henry Messerschmidt, Elkhorn, Wis., 32, . of ~ left the 100-pound er-in-law’s parked .car while un-| jserwoing a REED at a hospital. | * Seeascarenide "ato can remain Collections i in December ‘outside an artificial lung no longer, |colonel to obtain narcotics. ‘than two hours, returned to Elk-| jhorn using the bulky,~heavy me-, jchanical lungs the multflung re-| |M. “term in Los Angeles for cashing | jobless pay beyond the normal 26 | cheeks without sufficient funds, Lgwer said he was not Lowe. The ex-Teamsters official ap-| peared before Circuit Judge Lila Doesn't Get Cigarettes, Neunefelt after his arrest and! was freed on $1,000 bond. His but He’s Sent to Bars MIDLAND, Tex. the height of the 1958 recession. Jee aring was boston’ until March “Lower will be examined Thurs- -day in Detroit Recorder's Court on a charge of forging prescrip- tions to obtain narcotics. He also ‘faces trial in Camden, N. J., ‘on charges-of posing as an. Army lice’ headquarters Friday and counter, * * * “Gimme a pack" of cigarettes," he told Sgt. Byron Richardson. er”’ of drunkenness. |weeks maximum, were provided at (AP) — A 35 year-old man staggered into po- slapped a dollar bill down on the | Richardson locked the ‘‘custom- in the city jail on a charge [ ©-NOW OPEN e Rolladium Skating Rink | ADMISSION 60c INCL. SKATES | 4475 W. Huron, ~ ‘FE 5.9677, Post Office Windows ” kai hi a Mh hi Mi MM ih Mn Mn Ne tt tt i it i gloomy reports, Michigan's chief | tax collector sees a ‘steady up- grade" in business around the; istate, State Revenue. Commissioner, aAuis M, Nims, came up with an optimistic diagnosis of economic activity yesterday in reporting $25,- 154,000 in Decefnber sales tax col- llections on business in. November. | ee ee ee “We collected $26,124,000 in De- ‘icember a year ago, but sales taxes on automobileg last month were $100,000 ahead of last year, and we feel that's a definite indication that we are climbing up again,” he said, “It was the first month that taxes on cars exceeded those of the same months of the year be- fore since ‘November 1957." “Alse?* he said, “sales and use taxes combined brought in $27,700.- 000, down nly $47,000 from De eembér 1957."’ . } ‘ * * * Sales of hard goods and new) homes, which slumped last year along withr auto sales, also are be- ginning to pick up,-Nims said. “We'll get a better focus pn | the economic picture next month | | when collections on’ Ghristmas | business is in and the auto indus- try is operating at full swing,” he wall. Sales; tax collections, generally activity, totaled -$288,209,000 last year, from 1957. : * * . year began July 1. ‘sueeninesnitaarare AARARCOn ae Lady Swings Wild GADSDEN,, Ala, male wrestler, Jessica Rogers lost: her temper during a match here, took a ‘wild swing at her opponent | and the referee, missed, fell to the | LANSING (®—After- months of| an accurate barometer of business) fj a 20'y million dolar drop ie CUPL — Fe. canvas ard sulfered a dislocated |f Tprterc Wh ct: The new equipment — valued at. 2,000, was obtained a month ago. Big Sheba Sheba Goes ‘o Resting Place of Dead Elephants DETROIT (® -- Big Sheba has gone wherever elephants go when they die. Sheba had been the friend of children since 150,000 bought her with their pennies in 1923 for the zoo On Detroit's Belle Isle. The elephant grew from 600 pounds to 10,000. Every year mil- liens visited her elephant house and gave her peanuts. Then Sheba developed cancer of ithe forehead. She had been treated by Dr. William K. Appelhef, zoo veterinarian, for the past six months, suffering was relieved. Her weight) was buried near the elephant! house in a_ plot surrounded by) trees,” Open Till 5:30 P.M. on Drunk Driving Charge | Barry Sullivan has been ordered to Yesterday Sheba djed and her. driving charge. had dropped to 8,000 pounds. She day by California highway ‘patrol lance, * Pontiac is among. the 103 post offices throughout Michigan and Illinois which have extended the hours of window service. Open Tonight 6:30 P. M. Show Starts 7P. oe Acting Postmaster Robert C. Miller announced today that. the “windows arenow open at the “TONIGHT- SU main office on W. Huron street from 8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Previous- ly, they closed at 5 p.m. Mon- _day through Friday. Miller said the exceptions are the money order and postal sav- ings windows which close at 5 “SUNDAY EARLY BIRD. SHOW Come Early — Home Early! Open 5:30 P.M. Starts 6:00 P.M. ainacnetinatbectnsh nda as een NDAY 3 HITS [WE DO HAVE ‘| IN-CAR | HEATERS. To Keep You Warm p.m. as required by law. “THE WHOLE BATTLE-SCARRED 'j . LOVE-SCORCHED. SAGA OF THE . “U.S. MARINES! - € oler Barry Sullivan Arrested MAIBU, Calif. (UPI) — Actor ‘stand trial Jan, 24 on*a drunk Sullivan, 46, was arrested yester- CinemaScope officers. He pleaded innocent and was released on his own recogniz- The Big War Hardest hit by the downturn/if were public schools, which by law] iD pick up two-thirds ot the sales tax!|| revenue. With payments from the/| state lagging behind, districts have!! been forced to» borrow more than}if 50 million dollars for operating| 7 purposes since the 1958-39 fiscal a I UNCHEONS ue LUNCHEONS: Served Phone MT44800 Box & Homds Inn Woodward Avenue in Bloomfield Hills and DINNERS DINN JERS: Monday thru Saturday 5:30 to 11 P.M. SU NDAY DINNERS: from 1:30 P. M. to 9 P.M. | They Fought! The Big Loves elt Foundl Daily 12 Noon to 2:30 4 for Reservations’ .. [———=TONIGHT EXTRAS ee ; “ZORRO’S FIGHTING teaion” Perr wer FSU CC CCC CU CT CCC CCC CCCCCCCUC?. _ wrrreweeefefégt'Tf'TvTT7"TvTvvvvVTYVYTYVTQVTYVTYVTYVVYY a Es ‘ ‘ i : 3 * f oP ; ‘ gts = + i - | oe \ fo, ie ; sae : : : ane Ps ‘ as ; . / a eC : ee | pees pes THE PONTIAC rns. SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1939 nia ELEVEN ad mics ian This geet Ns” Gente ir ! x — = — | "Post Office Door Sign _|ins- of. “thie: sign over “its office pa Pontiac Theaters | ss-wea: “The th,voras ot] pe op page g : _ _ |door. ce abate Here Maiens el Miyrnia’s Life’ Flashes Confuses Freshmen’ {"The newspaper is the POT, ATHENS, Ohio @ — They may/The sign over its door reads: _ have to change the name of the;POST OFFICE. Staffers.‘have to- student newspaper at Ohio Uni-jrefuse a lot of freshmen trying a Eee ee i ied. eet mee ar Delore Her — on TV Paul Burke 8 : versity here . ..oF else the word-ito mail letters and wa. Jerry .Lewis ‘ versi : BA: Boris Kariott, Wend With Pietro “The Spider”; “The ga “By EARL WILSON . : Packages. + ters” NEW YO Myrna Loy was lounging around in her te 2S ee — ey pa . . lounging pants recently peering with half-opened eyes at a | TONITE--Liast Complete Show Starts 10 P. M. jon Brando: “Cry Baby Killer,” Blank Not Long Enough |TV set on which gal with & Mexican accent was wildly Carolyn — for All Six Generations 3 e a ahd peers 2 exclaimed. a friend. cia you HI — JRON . Sat.-Mon.: “The Badlanders,”|, LEXINGTON, Va. @ — Dan- know you were on TV?" = Y soupay “NO!” squealed Miss Loy:“‘What channel]? TEATS I'm watching some young Mexican broad.” “Dear!” shouted the friend. “That's you!” Miss Loy recited this with a tired laugh the other day. “I suddenly remem- bered I had made this picture at Colum- bia a jong time ago—and forgotten about Alan Ladd, Ernest Borgnine;“The|iel Blain Jr., ran out of space ™ Raw Wind of Eden,” Esther Wil-|when he tried to list other mem- , sero bers of his family who had attend-| * Tues.-Thurs.: “Damn Yankees,” |ed~Washington and Lee Univer- Tab Hunter, Gwen Verdon; “The |sity. : Silken Affair,” David Niven There wasn't room on the en- Fri.-Sat.: “Man of the West,”|trance form to list_six,generations Gary Cooper; ““A Time to Love and’ who had attended beginning — in a Time to Die,” John Gavin 1789. a “Js INDOOR THEATER SHOWING IN-THE PONTIAC AREA ean za se \ am it, But the world won't let us forget!” Out oF Tus SILENT DAWN THEY RODE... DS #4 ee | ~ WELSON Although she has avoided live TV — she ALAN ERNEST 2. - Zr . . As doing a show with George Gobel Jan. 13, however — Miss Loy | . , 4} r Dy Se Fe % ; is seeing-herself become. one of the great stars of or au to, e. D= NINE - , vate) aeh a 4 3 RD ; { the release of eld movies. = . | fis ~ 2°42 + 4 EACH WITH — , FE 4-461] : - “After they see me in those old ones,” she said, “they gen=]- A PAST | Serre erally say, ‘Well, you've improved.’ Or perhaps ‘grown’ is the | ‘word. “* TO FORGET... ‘discovered’_me, I was-in Oriental” girl, and. 1 didn’t _Dyiamnbin, snes ia the civil “The Tth Voyage speak English for years,” she remembered. “When of Sinbad,” starring Kathryn Grant and Kerwin Matthews. This first ame in, I was in ‘The Desert Sone”. and ae tal stuck new. method makes possible special effects never before used in = for quite & while. Then for a while I was the wicked woman | lor movies. The picture may be seen through Jan. 7 at the Oak- —without an accent. The ‘Thin Man’ series started in 1934 land Theater. en eye and we made six—about two years apart.” ; 4 z “I wasn't following you in your Oriental period, " I-re- ali | marked tactfully. Hollywood Headlines isogbed. dear, I had one!” She tossed back = red hair and B lon de Ci n d y I Ss a N atu r al x * * “Joanie Joan Crawford—and 1 were AEE: We were for Champagne Buildup babes in the wood. “aan ee “Gary Cooper and I had come from the same street in ~ _, FULTON: DORAN *TOOMEY | || - Helena, Mont. He was older—of course! I don’t remember » Pe reoneanaeas e | ; Although Sighted a st AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE _ him, but he describes me as bellybustering down a hill on a OEE: YWO 0 ri ae bees ene Suamone and ‘Rock ; . . sled with him looking at me through an fron fence . . . |Robbins, & ~ destroyer, is | Hudson she hag “beén preparing |] for it since she was eight. That’s when her family moved/i~ from Hammond, ard = _“Anyway, in Califorfia, Valentito saw some photographs the first young” actress -ever“to be jof me. I was invited to the studio to meet him and his wife, launched with champagne. ~ Natasha, They were very dear to me, just wonderful. Joanie How that came about can best and I were both in a thing-he-made called ‘Pretty Ladies’—|b¢ pie waa wea ee re on aca Ra = in the chorus.” tential star. lat 11, a featured dancer with Ken _ PRODUCTION. e “Miss L that Néwatays ee new kids have to sa | a eat oiaeal capac ss Loy. says that “No ener : | Cindy barely 21, has a bubbling-and as a-teenager, a veteran ‘Jsome training—but we didn’t.-We learned as we went along.” personality. That alone should] r on television and on| THE \DLANDERS | She learned, for example, playing “The Daughter of Fu give a good publicity man a peg. | ay. ; Manchu.” But her first picture, ‘‘This Earth | _* *« * ee T “PLUS e “ : Is Mine,” is laid in the vineyards). She was with Shirley Booth for ° ‘ And a wickeder girl you never saw. I had cobras for of a great California Wine mak-'19 months in “By the Beautiful pets! Recently some friends of mine had a dinner party ;,, family. She was a natural for, ‘ the night that was to be shown on TY. All during dinner. “champazpe build-up. Now she lao te Rock Hudson ee this was discussed—and then it didn’t come on. I explained [ig known as “the champagne | The latter is her greatest thei to them that I had called CBS and made a deal. Actually, __ blonde." | “When I was at Glendale High,” I guess CBS yanked it. Bud * extmre, geal Inter. she confesses, “I was president of ati ” “But some of them hold up pretty well. ‘Best Years,’ of aeroeeceenes — weir wit ay the Rock Hudson fan club. m4 i course,” she added, a mite proudly, “has never been releas the-standard_ preparations. But, 5° far she hasn't told Hudson “How many pictures have you made?” . the publicity department decreed.°! this bobby-sox maatealion. = . “The last time I counted — that was some time ago — ‘it should -be champagne. os ” whee aaa 7 S hs f it was about 60.” a —— to * * he Aad yee know netora.” . x * * “Actually,” says Westmore, “it! . wm * Miss Loy, recently separated from her diplomat husband, |does wonders for her hair and I) ceeds vary widely in size. It is still around with such UN figures as Eleanor Roosevelt and can recommend it to anyone WhO takes 300,000 hemlock seeds to “} Marian _Anderson—but she remains 2 -comedienne:_When—t = afford it. = Sf ‘make a pound, but certain tropical ‘asked her about her hair shade—was it auburn—she answered, — ring hacer ace Shane coconuts may welsh 40 pounds “ : = A I always said it was red, but if you want to get fancy dear, Gngral colored! @reaealand c:ivavn apiece. —— ——— you can call it titian!”... That's earl, brother. - F eharapeaae eiared convertle 7 IN-A-CA THE LATEST HEATERS (Copyright, ioe) : : If she orders a cocktail at a SSSR eCKeeeeeteeevessseeeeseeseereaeane oe eeeesne sensenevenannaseotecasscsacsecescesecem THE FINEST cafe, it must be champagne. = Cindy, even without champagne DIRECT F OM 66 WEEKS IN CHICAGO * . Hy Community Theaters Tambiyn; “In the Money,” Bowery Boys. has al] the attributes for stardom, » eg : ————- — —— | Milford °° , including talent and years of ex- 6 WEEKS BEG. MONDAY : vant, ‘Damn Yankees,” color Oven perience. She's an offbeat charac- 7 : Sun. -Tues.: “Twilight for the Godg,”|ter, somewhat reminiscent of Shir- NITES and SUN-s _ SUNDAY b: “quantile Raiders.” color, | Mt ee re eae” Ieee “apy Y MacLaine. Physically, she's an) - 9222 Grand River ® Detroit, Mich, © Te 4 1816 bo -Sat.: opr kenstein, 1970; h Diane — Prvent urs. rankenstein, ‘Spy athe men Paoli the Sky. American Bardot... __. Sun.-Tues.: “The Barbarian and ale | Geisha,” color. John Wayne. Eiko Ando; ; NOW Th 'The Fearmakers,” Dana Andrews, Dick | | <“Wed.-Sat.: “The Blob," color, Steven | MacQueen, Aneta Corsenut; Married | Monster From Outer “apace,” Tom Tryon, Gloria Talbot. | Hills-Rochester "The ‘Tunnel of Bosal color, pons: ‘Dey. Richard Widm Sun.-Wed.: “The Darberian and the Geisha,” John Wayne, Eiko Ando, color.| START Open 1:45 R s LAKE THEA : Continuous Civte-Farmington nam nnn mg ee ee NRCS «Senn ru Wednesday ——— “ ones aiken ce: | a 7 , ing Jets,” Rex Redeem, udrey Dalton. | 7 . TH th f \ : —_ " ‘\ F 3 ee ee ee ene So Vi 4 . | Cooper: “In i fl BRA baron yc gyroed Aegis 4 E ey > 5 ' | | Douglas; poser mens? icq punere. : O ive ; } eit \ | RITA ‘CAM , | Lake-Walled Lake 0 } TK Z x arest é ome Ta cin ; | att : me of the bale Ware gery >! 83 = bee - me ¢ IN_AMERICA’S = | COMING THURSDAY — A WALT DISNEY SHOW! caper, Julle Londen peo | | a) WHITE WILDERNESS — PAUL BUNYAN | utente,” color, Rex Harrison, Kay Keo- |) i KERWIN MATHEWS 8 i Bun.-Tues.: “Tom Thumb, ” " color, Russ) { Ki fh ‘ Starts SUNDAY- Technicolor* @ -RCHARD EER. ee Tom re PS ‘ A COLUMBIA PICTURE OL OL Af OLCS Thai (FAS GS OS Cf Vit | EXTRA! “The Wonders of Chicago’. Megoo Cartoon | - +," "Glamorous Hollywood”’ Thar: ,, “The Inw of the 6th Happiness” a oa | L nal ~os ook ond-tyrics by eae 1 MAN JAY LERNER E veryone! ¥ Sunday Doors Open 12:45 Ghews ot 1-t-5-7 & 9 F. M. — L WHO OWS + he 0-6-M Release i” SCIENCE GONE WILD! EMAIL ORDERS SNOW Will the men of the future be the . | 2. ar “Pacts TS "Eh TeRDAY MATINEE aT 2 ee os, 8 , — $= " 4.30 : : $6. $5. 78-—$3.20 as [ Bisesteeeremagmeremmes | : witobartcd oe Mahe cheeks of Gatey eters to RIVIERA te peng stones : : : uy FAIR LADY” WILL NOT PLAY ANY OTHER ciTY rm michigan . ={ res 4 a ee ee oe Saree ra ¥ : “QPTENTION Social Groups, Clubs, Large Organizations! |: ww mA. : ES - HW you went @ Block of choice seats tégether, we strongly | 3° PIDER: ' : L nine = Se ney TONIGHT —Last Complete Show Sea Lig ta sh gap Eaters PLEASE: NO PHONE RESERVATIONS saa uaa Nie dearth ” | vou Twi. MG ae By ELMER, Cc. WALZER oe Financial Editer NEW YORK (UPI) — The stock "market regained its traditional role as a barometer of business in 1958 by rising to a record high to pre- dict a swift recovery ‘from a bust- ness recession. In that respect the market proved it was smarter than the economists, than the business men and the Russians.» Economists and business men. had foreseen a slow, paintul tip- turn for the economy after the sharp setback that -bégan. in mid- 1957. a es The fussidns had anticipated the recession would develop into | _— depression so that they could proclaim to the world the falla-. cies of capitalism and thiggylories of communism. Stock averages rose to unex- plored territory in the stratosphere of finance with trading the heav- fest since 1930, making it the fourth largest market in history, beaten only by 1928,-1929 and 1930. eee Se thighs, the valve of Hs issues rose an estimated 50 Dillion oo _dollars. The economists said the real ¢étate, "Stock ‘Market Lives Us? to. seldom break when business is-in |dend ner — fell. below éthey _feel se nadig nf at return on bonds, a situation’ sel-/market will be upward sr a neag was hee dom seen: Bonds, “if inflation is it is , and that would give be bi k market. considerable com- ety ao anticipating the bi a These experts eatin there were excesses, including lots. of sharp decline if give mat It was held also that much of the huying for investment was speculation that could prod ‘a|petition. When stocks de a definite incentive. But most-of the buying aaeel saver in =e point out, » is admittedly for investment with reversal comes only when some the giant funds—pension, institl-| p24: change occurs, such as a tional, banking, insurance and) business slump or a world crisis mutual — the mainstays-of the that engendérs fear in the minds | 001 market. of stockholders. : Hence, they are convinced’ there. done as- insurance against infla-|Will be no wild selling in the mar-j tion. This theory holds. tha¢, com- |ket. mon stocks make a good inflation and even | lose some of its gain, but It may level off for-a-time decade. peat ~ Hing « as Trae ay ae e ter of B “and invest the money tn siocks The market had one ofits wid? thes ‘ei seca i. ite: tellows. ore Golng 0k mall a coal aedee Se lions by selling short — selling stock they borrowed: in the hope it) would decline so they could buy'It next back at a lower price.~ Little fellows ofgatiized ‘vest. ment clubs throughout the nation and steadily bought stocks. They a oe heavy buyers in --the ae en "sis ake te monthly investments of as little: as $40 for whicly fractional shares are availdble to the purehasers. The little fellows also bought heavily of mutual fands,— ‘the main line of the next few years, - probably into "the LITTLE FELLOWS IN During 1958, the little fellows “sey jow-pficed stocks and they made their deals in odd-lots — lots ‘of less than 100 shares, The professionals who hold thet; the right way to Play the market worth jest advances of the year imme- assets ‘diately following the election. The eestor theory was that the’ *Democrats phy drei : voagees J {controlling Congress) would con- “Brokers, -who suggested caution centrate on spending, bringing NeW js:. in 1958, held in several in- ing the year. Before the business ,ernment deficits and hence NeW) cote, a tough film -bonded to alodized aluminum. It protects in the sare way undercoating ° Flat, satin-texture finish in beau- _ tiful colors: chateau white, cloud - grey, mist green, primrose yellow Immediate Occupancylil On Three Chotre Ranch Homes * |. and El Dorado coral. protects your car. based paint, (swimming pool paints} "| _ Complete deluxe, mareing the IF YOU CAN AFFORD masonry pain, oF weterthinned| WUnNAg eran aoceenerree * = paints and portls cement seca: ve t) eg ee, |} Factory to You ) paints will do, the job, Beautify Your Home with. _ALSCO ? ~ ‘ > Reve Salesman's Commission — Where the dampness is likely to Application Made by Ovoranteed motel i, ALUMINUM COMBINATION { be ee tince motstre i _— ea _ ee ee an improves its cure. = 4 P sae a a | - 1 orth ; * ee oe ee ‘Midwest Supply FE 4-2575 |} ## SUI? ie 9. rac mi sina - P| ! ip powder in e a se pp y = ‘ > Full 1° Thickh—Any Standard Sise > ot colors and is mixed with water Hh 9 N. Telegraph | Rd. 0004 14 Sasa $26. 95 ; eS be used tn free | two 0 See This Amazing : ie > Complete it We Will Build for You: ® ADDITIONS © KITCHENS @ BATHROOMS |? arwinno COs “lun 4. cnrnnten to the mateready | Softener Today at A) se ) ‘ One-Stop Service () 1702 8. Telegraph meer a0 | steps already described, the y l * RECREATION ROOMS ~° * HOUSE RAISING fh) * BASEMENTS * KITCHENS Resa esssesdsdeesaas Wills should be thoroughly wet- Hl. H. STANTON 0 "wan MODERNIZATION ~ Heating & Plumbing >) MANY STYLES, SIZES, PRICE-RANGES fil Contractor (os ste re 5.1003 aT LOW WINTER PRICES 2 ESTIMATE CALL FE 9. 7004 IN THE BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOL DISTRICT: SPACIOUS GAPE -Ornamental Pfeil BUILDING SERVICE u , Open N Evenings S Corner Svtite : 6 Sandeye 124 on 3.2276 il / gM Mi fA AS 1. Wf ue Sie nahamtneenn panei 4 a ond. EriscoPAL a" pene LA a T @ ee | Don't let icy steps cause your family to take a ‘nasty fall . .. protect them with: ‘Ornamental } 4 Iron Railings. ct — i . . a ; : ; m , ae weve pose metupas SPACIOUS $32,000 1. eee Ne FHAMALID AD HOUSEMAN. iTzty orrice One eae pan 7240 ] : Have a minimum of 2,050 sq. ft. of living area! Plus . tutt base<— ment and24 car garage, wonderful for extra storage space. ‘Oak floors, copper plumbing, ten roomy closets, Two fire- places, built-in oven and range, forced-air heat, community water system, 2'4 baths... gas heat. Close by lakes and new m- 915.950. : Pine Lake School. . Ler . CUSTOM BUILDING DEPARTMENT ~ < . Oe ati cen phone Commins metemie.: 1: HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY CORPORATION , MODEL AT Conenit with us before you build. We will duplicate any one of- our models to suit your specifications, work tem your plans. or help. A originate your own design from the ground Check the beautiful lots and buslding sites in New England Estates, . 406 Washington 8ird. Bidg., Detroit 26- Phone WO 3-4816 : soomnind HILLS OFFICE: Long Lake Road at Felegraph Opposite Devon Cables — _ Developer “ Over 300 pend Properties Since 1914 - : oo. a “at Dai, 10-8 Ser. nd Som . W. ROSS HOMES, Inc. ‘|: 3941 § Tlopaph Ba E4801 Medel om 4-402” 6497 Highland Road OR 3-715 OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.\TO 6 P.M. : : . Seturdey ahd Sunday. 0 A.M. te 8 PLM. . Net . f % st > ' THY PONTIAC PRESS. “SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1959 FIETEEN. * 00 Toad. Th at $25,000 and will be sho by appointment onl don't you call today? - aad : : OL 1-0575 Ray O°Neil, Realtor 262 S. Telegraph ~ FE 3-7103 » feature in modern ranch and multi- ‘lem can be-eliminated by hanging AMBASSADOR INSULATION 0 Pontiac's Oldest Insulation Co. IT’S SMART TO INSULATE Do It Now with FIBERGLAS Federal 5-8405 zines that are to be stored in a > Available in Ranch Home Many builders have found that ample crawl space is an important level homes, Most homeowners are using this space as an auxiliary storage space for seasona] clothes, blankets and other bulky items that often fill closets ‘to capacity. There is often excessive moisture in a crawl space, but this prob- a bag of calcium chloride, which can be obtained at any hardware ‘store, from a nail or hook. A pail should be placed under the cal cium chloride to catch the water that drips down from the home- made-hu siditer The pail should be checked-and emptied regwarly. Any .clothing, bedding or maga- crawl space should be kept in con- tainers that resist moisture and : e ~~ - “ARE YOU SURE?” * Is your fuel oil Fully treated to pre- _ vent Corrosion — Sludge — Beet — Freezing? “po IT vounseiF” Treat your own Fuel Oil in your own tank with WHITE FLAME LIQUID SOOT ELIMINATOR and be SURE. 1 pint can will condition up to 250 _ - gallons of Fuel Oil. Sold-at Hard- ‘ware Stores — Only $1.35 per can. OAKLAND CHEMICAL . COMPANY — 774 Woodward, Pontiac FE 5-8416 H. J. Mestaneanre : Salesman f fire. «due ow eres