= Es _taking a position, and his willing- Pa UA W Delega tes Ready to Vote on Profit Plan DETROIT W—The United Auto Workers’ special convention on bargaining strategy was ready to vote today on Walter P. Reuther's tactic plan for the auto industry. _ The UAW president appeared confident that he had ample strength among the 3,000 delegates to win approval of the plan. It would give the auto workers a one-quarter slice of a com s its over Seteie eeny profi a on becteke redhaired labor chief 10 per cent on net capital g debate on the plan, the tled at a delegate’s sugges- *tion that it “appears we're 35 From Pontidc Attend Convention Calls on Nation to Tighten Belts Senator Bridges Urges Sacrifice to Surpass ‘Soviet in Space serving as “a rubber stamp.” * * * The criticism came from Lewis H. Michener of Long Beach, Calif. He said the 1958 bargaining pro- gram should have been worked out in the convention instead of being publicized before the dele- gates convened. Reuther retorted, “We only told you our thinking. The com- panies rejected our thinking, We could have been criticized justly if we had not given you time te think it over,” Reuther announced that General Motors President Harlow H. Cur- tice had rejected the union's in- vitation to address ‘the convention eee e e ek £ * Venezuelan Dictator Ousted Perez Jimenez ‘Flees Into Exile fo Climax Revolt Five-Man Military Junta Takes Power, Pleads to Maintain Order - CARACAS (INS)—Vene- zuelan dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez’ 10 years of volt by soldiers and civil- ians. Hundreds apparently |killed in Caracas and other cities -as last-ditch stands The listened politely as delegates Reuther’s administrative assistant Jack Conway, read Curtice’s letter. years to come” to sur _ ‘ pass the Soviet Union in missiles) He renewed a proposal he made and satellites, last fall that three- * 2 © year contracts, which run out Bridges, chairman of the Sen-/around June 1, be extended for ate GOP Policy Committee anditwo years. senior Republican on the Senate} + *« Preparedness subcommittee, said in an fnterview: “There is no } crease in the basic wage rates blinking away from the enormity (6 cents an hour or 2% per cent of the task we face. We nuzst)wage rates, whichever is greater, strengthen . Weion May 29 and @ like increase must advance availability/year later, or a total increase date of quantities of new, more/basic wages of at least 12 cents weapons. We must pros-jan hour over a two-year period.” - — § PiaaggoiP-ol ee Coted sae bcomanitice was told bY lwas the first to reply rejecting our Secretary Defense MeElrey proposal, He said it was foreign to that he expects fo have an ad- the free enterprise system He ee creerennier ‘ton plan isaid it would undermine confi- dering the current session, + “T fail closed doors, drew praise from/per hour in profit sharing and giv- Sen. Johnson of Texas, Democrat-|ing every consumer a rebate will ie leader of the Senate, who has undermine their confidence. I think Pag eager unl pl nediaaron hsb patrol (lates the lack of a “s@nse of urgency’ People employment and purchasing in the administration. power.” * * * * * * ® : Johnson said he was impressed by McElroy’s ‘‘candor, his deter- mination to seek out facts before Ness to assume his due sibilities once a position is taken.” McElroy listed “14 steps that have been taken to speed up im- portant programs since Sputnik I was placed in orbit and. this. in- how GM workers would bene under profit - sharing. One chart showed a huge cake with candles. Reuther used charts to illustrate “This is a kind of birthday respon’ icake.” Reuther said. “We thought of this because GM was celebrat- ing its 50th birthday ang we wanted to get in the spirit of the occasion. | We have a big birthday cake here and it ig marked, ‘if this were the 10th anniversary of the UAW bonus fit'oners inside the building were set) giving secretary's testimony. Add Up Korean Bonuses LANSING. @ — State bonus payments: to Korean veterans now total $57,275,505, the state general's — * _jconsumers.’” plan in General -Motors alone, five billion six hundred million dollars in more purchasing power would have been shared by workers and x * The convention unanimously adopted a resolution urging Presi- dent Eisenhower to calla national full-employment conference, were made by the dictator's security police and loyal! army units. of the capital to maintain | But the jubilant Caraquenes sacked the soo feren ienenes dimenet newspaper Heraldo and attached security police headquarters in wild demonstrations, The crowd attacked the police building with stones and the police: fired on them. Many were killed power were ended today: when he fled into exile in the Dominican Republic at! the climax of a two-day re-/ A five-man military junta took, power and pleaded with the people’ FIRES ACCOMPANY FIGHTING — Smoke rising from numer- ous fires forms a haze over a section of Caracas, Venezuela, yes- terday, during the fierce, bloody fighting between security forces and foes of President Jimenez. Reports said that gasoline fire Haze of Battle Hangs Over Venezuelan City bombings destroyed 30 buses and other vehicles, a textile factory and several houses..Despite lower government announcements, re- Namie sources Feperted eat at tenet 200 perrens God and Beatret were injured in the riots. AP Facsimile See Trustees for Teamsters Hoffa Expected to Be Replaced in Deal With -13 Protesters until a new election is held. - © * * The trustees would supplant James R. Hoffa as controlling head of the 1,500,000-man union. The proposéd arrangemént would of a settlement of the lawsuit GENERAL JIMENEZ and injured but the political pris- free. Perez Jiminez, his wife, four daughters, mother-in-law and sev- eral of his political henchmen left Jimenez Story Page 17 La Carlota military airport short- ly after 3 a.m. IN RECLUSION They flew to Ciudad Trujillo, capital of the Dominican Republic and domain of Generalissimo Ra- fael Trujillo, going into reclusion pounded Another onetime dictator, Ar- gentina'’s Juan i). Peron, Pig | cepted,” |Washington for the meeting. upcn arrival. Their plane was im-| °. meeting of the Teamsters exe- cutive beard, “Tt is safe to say that. the agree- ment providing for trustees to ad- minister the union will be ac- a top-level source told International News Service. ~*~ * * Hoffa, who has been enjoined the lawsuit, and outgoing Presi-' dent Dave Beck have arrived in. It was understood that there has been no definite decision on a choice of the trustees. The proposes that the Teamster board choose one mem. ber and the dissidents a second, with a third impartial, non-union representative to be agreed up- The trustees would administer the union’s affairs at least until a new election could be held un- (Continued on Page 2, Col der strict supervision. — Blast Hurls Railway Tank Car 300 Feet elgg ie 2 i WASHINGTON (INS) — Reliable sources said today that a three- }imad trdsteesitip Will be set up to fun the giant Teamsters Union ‘|pended $664,000 for welfare cases. jput on hiring additional “except where required by emer- gencies.” ; APPEAL PENDING é ‘Would Make Figures Public Under Law Eisenhower propoged to ‘Congress today g seven-point program pro- | persons responsible WASHINGTON (INS)—President! jected to viding for criminal prosecution of | for labor-| lke’s Labor Program _— - Accounting for Union Funds ment, His program would require | full reports to the government on the thanageméiit of julen funds and that these reports ‘would be made public, “goldfish bow!" treat- failing to file would be sibject| to criminal penalties. | * * * Mr. Eisenhower Proposed that embezzlement of union funds, dalse statements of entries in books, wilful destruction of frec- ords and the payment of money Conlin Springs | Plan to Balance. 1957 Budget Urges 90-Day Payment on Liquor Purchases to Bring Fast Cash LANSING (®—Rep. Rollo G. Conlin (R-Tipton), House tax expert, last night uncorked a surprise pro- |posal for virtually balanc- _ jing this year’s state budget without increasing the in- tangibles tax. In brief, Conlin suggested the state go to a 90-day payment basis in liquor purchases instead of pay- ing cash on the line as it |does now. He said this would en- able the state in short order to pick up 18 million dol- lars to replenish dwindling state treasury cash, Fund transfers already in the works would take up most of the remaining budgetary slack. Gov. Williams: has estimated a state deficit by June 30 of nearly 35 million dollars. As the main part of a plan to make budgetary ends meet, he ied an ii 2 million dollar increase in the in- tangibles tax, and its retention in fiseal 1968-59. The governor had no immediate comment on,,Conlin’s proposal, Said Conlin: “T have been in contact with a number of distilleries and they are willing to accept this arrangement. It is sound business practice and many of our major businesses op- erate on a 90-day ‘payment plan.” WOULD RELEASE CASH by a labor leader or employer! Conlin said his proposal would Persons filing false reports or|to influence actions should be/have the effect of eliminating a dip into the funds to help load in Oakland County. = ‘Courthouse Fund Reduced =" == by Use for Welfare Cases Money for the new courthouse appeared jeopard- ized today as county officials said they were forced to ease ani increasing welfare “We have gone into it very considerably,” said against formally taking office by Robert Y. Moore, Board of+ ‘Auditors chairman. Just how much of a $1,400,000) building fund has been depleted is uncertain, he said,. because of- get dispersions. But a check of certain appro- priations from the fund reveal that it has been sliced at least | in half — because of welfare costs in addition to several other building projects. One of the reasons for the in- creased welfare costs, Moore pointed. out, is that the state cut its contributions to counties from 50 to 30 per cent. “And welfare cases are increasing,” he added. wk & Having “spent $1,137,000 on these caseg lasf year, the official said the county is well into its 1958 $87,000 shy of — costs last ryear. Back in 1956, the county ex- County officials here and in other counties are fighting in Lansing ool igen state to resume its past Whether this dip into a build- ing fund was legal, was con- ficials are still studying 1957 bud-|- appropriation of $1,050,000—some) - funds available’’ to use for welfare costs, for which he said an esti- mated $1,323,000 would be needed in 1959. Better Bundle Up —It's Getting Colder Temperatures are dropping in the Pontiac area. For tonight the U. S. Weather Bureau predicts colder weather with a low near 22 degrees, Saturday's outlook is mostly cloudy with little change in tem- perature. Occasional sn 0 w, | mixed with rain, is*expected to end by evening. The Weather Bureau's five-day Snow flurries are expected every day —— eee: ; The fmcit nd tempera- ture in downtown Pontiac preced- ing 8 a.m. was 22. At 1 p.m. the mercury stood at 33. In Today's Press Comics . weedsenpaces 6 County News ..... iseucees - 33 ‘Falitorials ..... 66.645. is. 6 Market Basket ...>.27 thru 32 - Mystery Story eeeevene oon MH — bc due cece! ebtaeeeee 1 Sports oF séeedess 39 thru 44 Theaters ae imade a felony. The Chief Executive’s recom- mendations are an outgrowth of the scandals revealed by the Sen- ate rackets committee investiga- However, the President also recommended changes in the Taft-Hartley labor law to pro- hibit secondary boycotts in some eases and so-called “blackmail” His proposals follow closely an outline of the administration pro- gram presented by Labor Secre- ag James P. Mitchell to the AFL-CIO convention in December. * *~* Mr. Eisenhower said nothing about any federal “right to work" law or extension of the anti-trust laws to cover labor. Mitchell has said the President would oppose 'sai such measures. — In his message, the President pointed to disclosures of ‘‘cor- ruption, racketeering and abuse of trust and power in the labor- management field." He recalled that the AFL-CIO has launched a campaign to rid labor ranks of corruption. Mr. Eisenhower stressed, how- ever, the. importance to workers pairment (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) tie-up of state cash in liquor inven- tory, x *& * “The physical inventory wil] be on hand, but very little state money will be invested in it, Al- most all liquor stocks are turned over within a 90-day period,” he said. The Tipton Republican, chair. man of the House General Taxation Committee, said two steps were necessary to put his proposal in operation, pay visions of the law setting up the liquor revolving fund would have to be amended. Legislation to accomplish the -— et my 5 ee Rent, he Cutie contiesas ‘Gat th deepen: al will have no bearing on budget (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Dr. Fuchs Leaves Pole AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Dr, Vivian Fuchs and his British expedition left the South Pole at midday today to con- tinue his transantarctic trek. If he makes it, he will be the first man to cross the antarctic con- tinent — Central High School will exercises will begin at 8 o’clock in the boys’ gym- nasium. : Miller is a former director of admissions at Wayne, teacher and 131 Will Receive Diplomas at Pontiac Central Tonight One-hundred and thirty-one members of Pontiac participate in graduation - will (Ceremonies tonight at the high school. Dr. George L. Miller, professor of secondary educa- tion at Wayne State University, is scheduled to addréss the class on “The Significance of This Hour,” The 1. Ree ee Fg Ye a Boer vane: Her Death Seen Cok S r pale Churchill's Art IC of G Seis Up Group, eee for Ad-Libbing as No Accident Kounty seat issue -shownin US. for Business Developmentsszetm mcm: : 3 RK we — ind Me wm bd; : , Butler, oe was gut off on 2 CBS fel iion Two Testify in veering AQQI n Befor e Boar d ~One-Man Exhibition in| psrpamincHAM—Looking toward) special meeting and initiation at Cucies Latin, Terry Wel, RY fee Siew ome Stil . program fast night when author Sa : economic future of the city,| 8 o'clock, Both the dinner and |Chapman and Bobby Church. Donald C Keyhos, « tormer| Prior to Murder Trial! : . Kansas City Attracts ine stmninghai Chamber of Com:| meeting will be held in Birming. | * XO eee eck| Of Frank Henson Roya) Oak's request for.a special! sister ‘project, the Evergreen) Large Crowd merce hag formed a business de-| ham Masonle Temple, Howard Kuba and Charles Rare’; Says trem te sent seen election. on changing the county) sewer system. ‘ |velopment committee. In addition $9 taitindieg, the| ot ware specail’ from Se oe <—— | Pontiae to Royal Oak. | ; John W. Knecht will serve as : Scouts, den and. . * * * } _ Seat from lag to Roya | “All our contracts with the'com-| KANSAS CITY, Mo, @ — An ‘ meeting will honor past matrons : one two’ A meow enone explained jah Srnertay tht thet Dec 2 ind und fo a lintan River “°*" manies In the first are signed.” xhtion of $5 oll alntngs by calrman of the commie “chang patrons as well as charct| yout pins Several dens Put OL j 5 yes oh : + dee) sposa \ j ni tig ' a: r ’ ‘ . that nobody knew what he was death of 57-year-old Mrs. Frank topics, dated for the January ses: ee eg wo we are ready (#0 pile a, te Walon 1 Rockhill sil Bingham, Clarence Blenman, John) cnapter, => — * * os areal a Hazel Park was nt sion of the Oakland County Board) Pending still are contracts with Nelson Gallery of Art last night. ae Wile prolly ae Sunday, the OFS ay ochecees = jan accrden of Supervisors tomorrow. ~ Detroit which will serve as the) Jt was the first time Sir Win-/4"e Wilson, chamber president. | ofticers’ practice at 3 p.m. in the Admi iteri Keyhoe was silenced for about * * * | Royal Oak's city commission and raining! calle! Gar the tortal(pecl: See oan eee Fear heen| They will make a thorough study Sesenic ‘Teongie,. Pp Two t Loitering i 15 seconds == aye, Dr. Malcolm C. Young, patholo- chamber of commerce made the ¢.4_ Sc idisplay ed to the public in a one-|f business conditions in the city. — in City Gambling House - - tion of a documentary on fying (gist at William Beaumont Hospital,/request for the special election a, a « *€ = ' committee is being asked | A newly formed supper grou : objects. The program was “UFO and Dr. Ernest W. Bauer, Hazel year ago, and it has been studied! s —~ jmee a, = - he od * Pre we ae e. Two persone pleated guilty yes- Enigma of the Skies.’ “UFO i , Other ftems waiting action to-| The sponsors cabled compti-| to develop a program designed to |the Pyads, sbyterian Young 4 ; st nds f ca ide tified lyin e ilpn tel eit upele the fe '0.in committee since sd) morrow include: ‘ments to the famous British| attract new retail businesses of a | Adults, will hold a get-acquainted terday in municipal court to Jolter-, peed .. or umident ifiec lying Nestity in the pre-trial som * * * | Setting special elections for an! statesman: type which would be “pullers” of meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the ing in a ee ya, - : o bn . Sis ale thor ot "The of Mrs Henson's hushand, who is A “hold erder on $20,000 in incorporation of Novi as a village. * * *: ¢ eustomers. First Presbyterian Church social! . Judge Maurice ] " nnegan ~~ Keyhoe as the author of charged with the slaying county funds to finance a Clinto®‘ang-fer annexation of 447 acres to! hall. Verna Lee Van, 32, of 499 Highlan Fixing Saucers Are Real.’ He had i , ee : sam) “Your pastime paintings have “The Chamber of Commerce feels : Ave. and Robert Lyons, 34, of 546 ust said: “We are meeting in George F. Taylor, chief Oak. River sewage disposal system Oxtord. delighted the largest audience that in the future outside competi-| Mr: and Mrs. Robert Girardin) yontana Ave as three days in secret with A congressional com. land County assistant prosecutor, (study will be asked. __ Recommendation of the Health ever to attend an exhibition open-|tion is going to increase. There|#"€ in charge of the group, which |, % , mittee. If these mectings were Said he expected the testimony The Ways and Means Committee Committee that three hospitals be ing at the gallery. Please accept presently are enough parcels of at- is composed of young married publit it would be proved,” when before Hazel Park Municipai,|is expected to’ propose withholding considered for housing emergency our sincere gratitude for honor-|tractive real estate available and couples. -_ The pair was arrested in a Jan, ‘ - mshi Ja- |11 rai > the gound was cut. ° Judge Robert C. Baldwin to con- the loan until five teliggt lier mentally ill from the county. ing America, our city and the|the customer potential is here,” 3 11 raid at 501 Harvey Ave pe ~*~ * * clude today. padapadt pine Eencaie ogre That $50,000 from the contingent! museum with the loan of this|Wilson said ~ ° - . eo - Orio ca = ¥ : ' CBS later issued a stafement; Scheduled to take the stand today | epay the county “should shar peo — page _— ewibe distinguished collection, the ~~ * * 20 Begin Training No Need to Pay Full Price signed ‘by Keyhoe saying the in-|Were police officers called to the oo fay year. Ci) eee He added that if Birmingham — PRICES SLASHED on | he Hi home at 62 W:| ; De ene ye Sending co his art aleu the Siow Sc. where Henao, St The raped apetem, edarnd |, Appropriation of $1500 tn ore] the aitenfance was high despite eoromic coniion, thee foc QS AUXiliaty Police |p Tic Razors. - Yeu rules for approval of script discovered his wife's body on the, by the Board of Public Works ords can begin ¥ Tec: icy, snow-packed streets and a ther-/ must be made known, so that other ; Abe SAVE Ps SIMMS. changes, The statement did not/kitchen floor, Authorities at first last December, is te ges en. mometer reading of 23. The worst pusinesses will be willing and ea- Twerty more Waterford Town-|E pad ah pod SATURDAY e disclose what Keyhoe was going believed the death wag either an’ serve the Cilnton River blizzard in 46 years dumped 15 ger to locate here. ship men began a 10-week training to say further. . accident or suicide. 4. rom Waterfo P Sees Way to Erase inches of snow here Monday night; course in auxiliary police and Red MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS + * Later a second-degree murder, Macomb County line. and Tuesday. |_Larceny from a garage is an of- Cross first-aid work last night at Newest Model SCHICK Robert E. Costello, producer of warrant was issued against the, Supervisors from the five town- «_«, “| The paintings — landscapes, ten repeated entry in current police the Township Hall. . the show, said he ordered Key-|tormer factory worker when inves- ships approved the plan in No-| tate udget Deficit seascapes and still lifes—will be! records, according to Birmingham | re ae Power Shaver hoe’s microphone cut off when he tigation disclosed eviderice indicat-| vember. | shown in eight other cities in the [Detective Lt. Merlin Holmquist.| 1. Gasid Toki ele = deviated from the script. The pic-/ing otherwise, officials say, -_ * * | (Continued From Page One) it nited States and Canada after “This particular type of crime OP | nervi th “ d he| ewe ture of Keyhoe remained on the ‘ "| Another sewage matter will also! ithe show closes here Feb. 2. ipeals mainly to youngsters,” he zy = al arias — the} 3 WITH TV ecreen. : : Corus helore the sipervisors when pesbiens i the fiscal year start- President Eisenhower ‘sent a gaid. ar ores yi da nt TRADE-IN ase : , jing July L. ‘tel for th ni cere-|,, eat eccve as | Hit-Run Driver — Basten Tai be’ preeems 2 ;| Hei@sd wot fatty copes on | nileieten sf Mind Ay loctnnd § | “It ts attractive because It in- course, according to Lloyd Gidley, | 14° . seeking approval of a $4,900,000 tangibles tax boost for 1958-59, say-, * * * | volves no breaking to gain em- ‘assistant civil defense director. | avings Oan ssn ing only it would be | try and because of the type of * * + j WITHOUT ; f=) . general obligation bond issue to) Ony 1! would not be necessary) 44.1, authorizing a representative) items th: vallable,”” Hoim- 7A | | ‘TRADE-IN q to make it ‘‘retroactive’’—that is id pee | oe eaters ave _ ~ LS S| — ; finance the Farmington interceptor : | | ; He added that more men are aA ‘ applicable to 1957 security holdings /®TOUP °f his paintings to tour our) quist sald. a 16.95 Reports Growth oun er RAE ah * an bank depeaita 2 "ES country, Sir Winston has paid) - veers are 8 “ng cod rented for this type of work. They =s al e - * * . » | Loungsters a may enroll at th ’ eeti : Of his plan, he said “‘it is a swift America a great compliment,” he ay oral & We ae ones © SCHICK: Model 25 Electric Shaver If three-fifths of the 79 super- wired, ‘I send my greetings and {rom food lockers, soft drinks, he held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Capitol Savings and Loan Assn i ass on the proposal, the,@"4 simple means of getting vee beer and liquor. Once in a whil€/and each succeeding week until with a branch in Pontiac at 75 W Wooter y ° ea Art aWies Sey Depariteent of Public|money into the state's general cousitien 7 cies no mate the they find a camera or gun in the Fep, ‘2, vice the dass will be. Huron St, reports substantial Feb. 3 in Circuit Court Works would then petition the|{und, and that is the problem of} Sir Hareld’ Caccia, British am. Sov Compartment of a car,” he ' graduated. 7 ” Reg. $29.50 growth during 195% i Michigan Municipal Finance Com-|‘"e moment. ‘ni : in Fatal Accident en pel bassador to the United States, ‘ WITH ._ * * ‘mission, according to Harold K.| The Conlin plan was unfolded in|came from Washington to open, ‘olmduist recommends that [WWW TRADE-IN ' According to A Taylor Menzies Schone, acting department direc- 4 statement to newsmen at the end the show . householders keep garages locked ry a“ READY . vice president and Pontiac Branch) A factory worker who sammie tor of a day of mysterious activity on s : at al times. He suggests tha food y A 10” manager, the firm's assets in- driving the car that killed a 67- \the part of majority House and| ilockers, other storage plac®s a creased $4,291,399 during the past. }earold woman pedestrian was He sald construction plans are |conate Republican leaders, ‘ ‘cars be locked. WITHOUT - the increase in mem. bound over to Circuit Court yes-| complete for this project and its | | raduate He asks that the suspicious cars wears, walle the incre nae in er ee a cine oe at Ieavinevthe HELD CONFERENCES me SIMMS Has EVERYTHING TRADE-IN bers’ accounts jumped by $3.993.. terday on a charge 0 eaving the They nf a _ . jor persons be reported immedi-| YOU NEED at LOW PRICES! 12 5 190 secne of a fatal accident. ey co erred at GOP state ately. * sca: SWAGeuabal a ERERGe cal ° re * n A * t V | 0 { |headquarters, three blocks from rom Ig C 00 | = it G_LICEN - satene total auete Yeewvcta George Wooter, 0 ¥CN@ZUCIA UUSIS the Capitol in the morning. ‘The Birmingham Chapter of the Or- |E 5261 Rob HEATED HANDLE SUNBEAM ‘G he association's total assets : ould face all-Republican joint audit and ap- (Continued F P. One) der of Eastern Star will mark | . + | Menzies said. are now $41.5 million. of 219 Harrison Ave, could face p Ji | propriations committee held an aft-, Se es ed i EASE 60th anniversary : I R d Electric Shaver with total reserves over $4 million 4 Maximum pally of five oe erez imenez ernoon session pre-commencement program will Wednesday with a 6:39 p.m. co- | ‘ ce- ° — Reg. $29.50 Locally, the loan asociation has in Jul ies ue eoreee : ! | Lawrence B, Lindemer, Repub- be provided by the PCHS Band_ operative supper. pales by a : oe rere | =o a wits some $9 million invested in first : in oo ae ate ot (Continued From Page One) lican state chairman, and Arnold Under the direction of Dale C, ' ~ 2 a oe TRADE-IN : mortgages in the Pontiac area, he amination before Municipal Cour J. Levin, GOP state committee| Harris. | i 3 D $ 95 i ided. Judge Cecil B. McCallum. | edly fled from his asylum home , Boa | * a * . _ " in Caracas in panic publicist, lingered in the House \ : ———— Wooter was arrested Tuesday | Bo 1 : jchamber and its environs. | Francis W. Staley. principal, is Labor Message Urges = when police spotted hie car A Peronist crony reportedly Was) To close the gap between state slated to present the awards to. i WITHOUT 4 TRADE-IN 15.95 parked behind his house. It fitted [captured by the rebels and con-'treasury income and outgo, Con. Outstanding graduates. The Rev.’ *. a Witness’ description of the car jfessed the Peronists had been lin, like Williams coninted on un- Joseph Chapman of Bethany Bap- ccounting 0 un 5 IB The answer to . ‘ ’ ; the tce fisher- Ne Sth fe that struck Mrs. Annie Gilmore, |working with Perez Jimenez. freezing about 10 million dollars in tist Church will deliver the invo- man's dreaem— — the of 456 Harvey St. Friday might. | sopoist CIVILIANS idle cash, mostly in the hospital “800 | (Continued From Page One) | Roa’ the tee NORELCO Speedster Mrs Gilmore died Monday mom-| The junt isheditem rary bond interest and redemption fund. | 2 os |B fishing rod > : e er ingot (nee anguiies Ih ed a a ire ‘ Lo See eal Some of the legislation necessary, Below is a list of the graduating rights of employes and of the fact with the beet: Electric Shaver : eS | al | AZ _— 4 5 Est se 7 . A oe eacquarters en = + Lar./t® accomplish this already is in ‘lass: |that voluntary action is inadequate B fontroiied heat. is \palace. Rear-Adm. Wolfgang Lar) orks. : * * : lin this.respect ...” twist of the 5 Witnesses said the driver had razabal. and the four ¢olonels in *.. f i By E, H. SIMS A | ge tol : Wi | Those graduating include: ° |stopped to pick up a piece ofjthe junta reportedly were hoping; Earlier in the. day, Wiliams ree] | oe gr Sais! Ripgagenect —The registration and detailed — Simms. Do trees tend to grow to the chrome trim that was knocked/to appoint a new civilian govern. Ported “ alight Ecightening - the | Willle Amerson Savas ae /annual atl S the | eed right — that is, does their grain from the vehicle and then drove | ment. state's financial picture, chiefly | t a pelene-5 e9 ee af: ICE SPUD— pe : lizabeth Arnold Donald Laughr | lean to the right, so to speak? off “ * a |due to higher than estimated yields Susan) Araeldi Chaties Laws partment of all health, welfare and §6 inches long j Progra [ ‘ | handle regulates the His m would require: heat. See it now at $788 : ie Ne onesie sent diaatmtaeaeaa gies { | ihe Clay Baker Marva Lowe : s P We already know that there is a ——— | The junta took over Caracas rom pale aside Page (ee neal el oprah | eed b apices lial rosie 2 i right “force’’ in this hemisphere iradio to announce the fall of Perez ri h xpectations. of yield) carroll Beaty Richard Mann y Stapeyers. LEADER MATERIAL ¢ i ‘ Cit M S t ed ji . \from_ other comparatively: minor Georgia Bedford Ellen Marks jointly, Various pound ; which makes rivers cut more LITy Man oentenc Jimenez state taxes Jeannetie Brattain Max McClusky seat! nvien! iSete : - pe me . . . : toda Barbara Brezee Richard McDonald —AU labor organizations to file wen Bye s i ip tit ota. | yy ‘ ~~ renie TOORS i La cNaeir sharply into their right bank. fop Littering the River Newspaper editors were asked Archie Brook Michael McN age SNELLED HOOKS hich kes ojectiles veer rignt | b- Lots Brown Dale Mehiber with the labor department an- which makes pro) g | to return to their offices to pw Wiihelmina Brown Richard Melkonian 1 financial hich Package of 6 and which makes ocean current; Arthur Patrick Golden, 62, of lish extra editions, the first un- Hare Announces Joanne Burthert parears Moers), aoe Ba a colar TO ae snelled hooks .. swirl to the right. Weather is af- 21, Ss Saginaw St was found censored reports for 10 years. Rosemary Burns Watty Moore ° ea nts made area to ‘ICE SKIMMER A < a ; és : 5 . i ere ; i Merrie Cantarella John Morris - maintain proper financial books fected by it. guilty yesterday in Municipal Court, Larrazabal's* four junta cl: TWO Chan es Kenneth Card Rill Meation and rec Lod to ee - All meta! 44 > adencies are reversed of httering the Clinton River. ae | David Cartier Ruth Ann Neidrick ords open to scrutiny . These tendencies are reversed ing the n j S -esented the air force SCOOP .. ce sereee 4 : : “— see a eagues represente i: . Charles Chandler Florence Nyman of all of their members,” and to in the southern hemisphere, where Judge Cecil B. McCallum sen- and three key army branches. |] J) 1cense Rules eoed Sale pen is ochre nat oe cult simsd ‘tabs ai : Pye € . . } ‘ haus i f - things veer to the left. As for trees.'tenced him to 20 days in jail ‘but, The y were Cols. Abel Romero Vil-, [David Coleman Wants Phippe ga ta. ae as ~ res this claim has never been proven. offered him probation if he would late, Roberto Casanova, Pedro Jose) LANSING WF — Two procediiral tan cased Reger Gays, and nds. Many believe the grain leans mght help clean up the Clinton for the Quevedo and Carlos Luis Araque.\changes in the: method of reckon- ee ee Lilmen, Ratcliff —All labor organizations to file in this hemisphere ° next two weeks. | Gen, Hugg Fuentes, leader of ing or suspending driving privi-/ Michael Denihan Richard Reed yearly with the Iabor department But the answer to the question Golden was arrested on the cOm- ithe New Year's Day air force re- leges of Michigan motorists were beers oops peace meveet detailed information on their con- above must be qualified: maybe. plaint of Mayor William W. Donald- volt which failed, was expected announced today by Secretary of cPtdmt, 2. Rachel, Russell seas, by iewe aml procedures, Study the grain in trees you cut.’son who saw him dumping bottlesito have a high position in the State James M. Hare Janet ‘Dunn © Martiyn Smith and to show that their members’ : or see, which have been cut, and and rubbish into the river at: the|; AS Phyllis Dusten Martin Smith have the rigt ! REMINGTON Auto-Home Fr See) Su : a cul, SG Do SO nto se iver 2 |interim government, They were devised to settle legal | Marie Dworin Sharon G. Smith ave the right to elect local of-| Ret. 33.56 $ 95 ‘ see that you think. Gass avenue bridge. HELD PRISONER objections raised by Circuit Judge | Sete! Easton |, Kurn'steear, | | ficers by secret ballot at least, E TRADE 18 : ee ee eee = _ Eee LL. NE. | : = p “ char olz ren ss : i stereo rsertate z |Marvi Ss i i Jeanette Enfield John Stickle each four years and national of-' = : Fuentes and others had been sak, © te a ee psi Davia Ferguson Patrick, Stinson ficers either by secret vote or (Without Trade ........ $20.95) - RB (el iW \held prisoner in the luxurious Hum-,;. , ake. tues Biegtt if ‘ee 30 Dead in Storm's Wake Ipod Hotel atop “Avila, Mountain,|E&%t Lansing man whose license Salt poster Mary'stare = | through delegate bodies. | iv RONSON Model ‘66 5 : ° , bee 1 | Jack Freed James St { y Q . which can be réathed. only~ by bad By revoked. |Elaine French “Patricia Sutton | | 7, *) Electric Shaver cable car . Hare said the changes were | Joonnie Green Harvest Tanksiey | Nan, COPY: | i ] I ) er as es Or Cas | { Rarold Hanson James Taylor ‘Wayne Goes Modern HAL | i The Caracas radio urged all ex- made after consultation with /Michael Hardiman Eugenia Thompson : \E-Never Fail—Now-F reese Reg. $24.95 : iled political foes of Perez Jimenez) Atty Gen. Paul L. Adams. Robert Harrison Charles Treece DETROIT (INS) — Wayne Un- ; coe a OEE adil ~etur , Jop Heskins ary Turner, ; . zi ni - ' CHICAGO (INS) — The winter's erm Michigan dug out from under|t® return to Venezuela. The court order had threatened | Beulah Hayward rb sesh Mads . versity engineering students i i worst storm, which left at least 25 a snow blanket a foot or more| The military announcement'to undermine the state's driver |/*e' nenaricks aha vatware were offered a course in ‘‘space I ip- ps 95 | persons dead from the Great Plains thick, « possible successor to the/called the uprising — which be- improvement program under which | Wiliam Hertel | eer flight orbits’ starting this fall. ' 7 to the Great Lakes, lashed the storm was intensifying over north-'gan as a general strike on Tues-|motorists with bad driving records |Loren Hines Grivester Vinegar | AARNE SRE $1.49 ¢€ 'E WITHOUT northeast section of the country, ern Mevxico day by workers, students. business- are removed from the highways. Reverie Hest Dennis Warren 3 mena ae “i Val TRADE-IN 50 miles an ho o 5 . : i . lyn Hurst Lessie Watkin: & | e with winds up to 50 miles an hour The corning Aaturbance: Ch: and journalists and supported | Henceforth, Hare said, for mal | Carolyn Hurst pe rr FRIDAY AND SATURDAY | aiu 11 95 snow and rain as it moved into : : by the clergy — a complete suc-|‘‘notices to appear" sent to errant | Yvonne Jerinines Dorothy White ig 4 I 4 | : he Atlanti lat spread rain northward inte Cen- | ~- . Ae ; Marvin Johnaon James le pecia ling 4 the antic today. tral Texas and dumped iwe (C=: — drivers summoned for a hearing Wesley D. Johnson Winterbottom 5 ts = eT 2 for $1.89 i ‘ d ‘ SUNBEAM While parts Cansas ssouri . ; before a state examiner will in-; Garth Johnston Judith Yeager : {IE New modern style, off- treated 3 Le y hile parts of Kansas, Missouri. inches of snow on the Lone Star The toll of dead and wounded ; i abi : : | of dead a ml tocen them) {hall thes gnay) be Patricia Joyce . : |Z — © E hardwood, metal parts piated to ¥ ° : J Iowa, Tlinois. Wisconsin and South- town of Alpine. was not immediately known, Un ea i a ie y may nd rep: | W.°Rex Agar will receive a” A resist rust, | Large reel double Electric Shaver : resented by an aftorney and may i : 1% <= E sta t.. 17 long. Flag stands : Z Snow also continued to fall in officia} reports estimated deaths | Peseta iteatimony! anal cilier aid Ee diploma from Pontiac Cen-| ie ochre deel on atiak) Will kaver \ , tog. 31438 : The Weather SS beeps oe ewe a than 100 and the .wound- |PTese™ ‘estumon) jtral through the cooperation of the) ~ freeze up. | Reg. : 4 the Colorado Rockies, western Kan-| &t more idence in their own behalf. lu.s. Air Fo \e i as, the Dakotas and portions of, ©@ #¢ more than 1,000. Hespitals \U.S. Air Force. “4 < . In addition, the notices will list} Full U.S. Weather Bureaa Report ae 1 14 ‘ | in Caracas were filled with the ay : oe | PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Colder te-|the Upper Mississippi valley. | Scecdoa f reasons for the investigation and: “tear sith por bal Sta ccapornvans Skies were cloudy and there were) = set a time and place for the hear- | : ! | ‘ wie Mabe onow likely Dy tomorrow eve. widely scattered showers or stow! Details of the rebellion were hid-|ing in addition to citing the aw: Call From Pontiac COLEMAN coumny «$1988 aE Single burner .., Guaranteed First Quality “ VHS 1 Fisher's wife, Maxine, was-shot'B, Gould, 28, of Chicago. Gould)? z ; § ICE FLIES— 24¢ : 10-£0 miles on heer. becoming Hight furmes in the Northwest. iden by heavy censorship since ing violations as is now done. : Girls and Infants bang — priced e varie t ht, i - . ing | pi _ ' e I tosereeee F ots CLEAR IN SOUTHWEST ‘Tuesday, but early this morning. Brin 5 FBI Arr st Yt low a : Tedsy/ in) Tentis< Radio Caracas announced the! .., j “\E FLUID—. - Lowest teinperature preceding @ a By contrast, -the weather was FI | i * a i . on . clear in the far Southwest me eeeriae who jhad pues ed ee Tn Man Ru ed Insane Fr oe | cg a , At @am Wind velocity calm he Pp fare St. art : x F aie wa . * . = . iF ‘ : ; OGRA. . ei. : Gas eae | Temperatures fell during the 7m patzor) fen a Gecede hed Hedi Wife-Slaying Trial RN ott oe Nae ert ‘ ( DEPTH GAUGE— Moon sets Thursdas are Moor night in the eastern third of the 2 * * , : we Re : : * Up a telephooe in Spot = ie : Values to. $3,95 F foon rises Prida, at 9 55 8 nition and from the extreme north-| The early report from the radio, FLINT \ — A Genesee County another man in Chicago: and de- ; : . Downiown Temperatures ern plains southwestward through said a “‘civilian-mihtary junta,”’ Circuit Court jury has acquitted manded $5,000 in exchange for pro- 3 —Simms Low Price— : sim iwl. de 12 e™ oY the northern Rockies and into the apparently under the influence of James H. Fisher, 42, by reason ofjtection from a fictitious Federal s Bam 28 1 bm 1.02 intermountéin region. young army officers and news-|temporary insanity, of a first de-|Bureau of Investigation raid, the BIE $3.95 : am... '\papermen, would form a govern-|gree murder charge in the slay- FBI said today. : . Wednesday in Pontiac A warming trend was noted iment. : ‘ing of his wife Aug. 7. ; * * * ; With : iaalpecoras = rae : over the Great. Plains and the | lly | The jury returned its/verdict last The caller himself was arrested : line, i Highest temperature . 3 northern Great Lakes. ' The junta which actually re- inight af 2 f : | = { Lowest temperaiure . 24 | placed Peret Jimenes is com- jnight a ter 3 4 hours deliberation, by FBI agents yesterday in Chi-|® E Ice FISHING ' Weather Party Cloudy 1 meited anos ThE Tain in Texas was expected sowed of Larrasabal and tour |@"dN& a six-day trail. ‘cago and identified as Lawrence|) | a o to continue and gradually spread | miahant) sompursiore = eens s1 (eastward through the Gulf States’ coset: during an argument at the couple's! was charged with using interstate 7° Dressy Straps hase, Seomperasare. - 42; to the South Atlantic Coast by, Caracas showed scars of the two Flint home. wires to defraud a former em- Look at Price : Weather—Snow 3 inches, Bain 38 inch = oyening ‘ days and night of heavy fighting.| Circuit Judge Stephen J, Roth | ployer, mp ies ab Lenan Tempers * + & _ jScores of buses and automobiles|ordered Fisher remanded to the Agents sald he told the oft ICE CREEPERS . 50 in 1981 et Dole im Feors sxe Scattered snow flurries will con-/@94 several buildings had been jlonia State Reformatory. ph the phone that the to Fit All Boots & Shoes , —— tinue in the higher Rockies and burned, Pock marks from tank , ; sal- Wednesday's Temperature Chart R “ leamod and heavy lmachise ‘ FBI was planning to raid his ¢ Pr. Alpena 14 rquette 26 14 spread slowly southward through|©4 eavy = Starts New Life at 94 vage firm on. suspicion thaé it pe aiimore 47 32 & 2 h shells marked several areas. : : : : / marek 23°12 Miemi 7% 6; the northern plains into the Great) was of stolen cars, : . = both 3 i) Minmsepeite’ 33 2) Lakes region. rn COLUMBUS « — John Mor- |, r eotian Mes . Cha $4 038 New Orleans “67 39 Light snow also will continue to) A. Heutenant of former Argen-| gan, at 94, starts a new life Gould further said, according Me Infants’ sizes 3 to 6— Girls’ As. shown, | ad- Ciestnd 4, 38 Omata’® $1 3; fall im portions of the Appalachians tine dictator Juan Peron, who has) today. Morgan is being released Sgn Carpe fra pes viet ties 10% tos. | MIME Sie 'ant asta boots Denver 33 gf Beliston 2¢ -| and northern New England, but it|been living in Caracas, was cap-| from Ohio Penitentiary. He will bord tt get ‘ + oe and shoes, Duluth, 3 a) Pittsburen 40 3 will clear and become cclder tured by rebels at secret police) have a new suit — a gift of the |© led © . 3 13 & Francis #7 49 along the north Atlantic coastal headquarters and reportedly con-) state — a bus ticket to Cleve- ot d ¥ ieee a Loe ware $ section . |fessed that he and other Peronists| land and some $300 that has | Gould was arrested when he ap. ', Fs Bw waston $8 3° Mostly fair and cook weather will|had been working for Perez Jim-| accumulated ih his “personal ac- |peared at the firm to get pag 0 N. Saginew _—Basemen ; t ay 8 $§ $3 extend south to the Carolinas. — |enez. . count” at the penitentiary. velope containing half of the : 4‘ 4 ; BAG _ ve ¥ ‘ $ * ‘ ( ‘ Flath Discloses Unofficial Figures Indicates Loss for Pontiac General in ‘57 Pontiac General Hospital operat- ed at a $71,698 deficit last year, according to unofficial figures dis- closed today by Carl I. Fiath, hospital director. ; 4 An unaudited account had the hospital’s operating: income ast year at $3,401,158; its non-operating income, $170,705. expenses, ee * * | With the cooperation of the cotin- ty and city, he said, the hospital may end up in-the black this year. and operating around the would have had a surplus of about. $90,000 last year, enough to lower our room rates about $1-a- day this year,” Flath said. The county problem revolves $26-a-day flat rate it Flath saw two big factors behind ally looses an average $9-a-day on, the loss, one involving treatment these patients,” Flath said, of county welfare patients and the | cause our average per day operat- ‘the other interest on the 1952 hospital ing cost is $35 : patient."’ bond issue. | | “Had it net heen for these, we | “be-| a a total déseame is way last year. out, the hospital was still $12,800 in the black. interest on the bonds. (plus $2,000 interest on other land contracts) and this ate up our profit and put! us into the red,” Flath explained. ‘ating loss was about $2,300 less Even with this loss, he pointed “But we then paid: out $82,500 Even so, he observed, the oper- Flath said he finally approved by the county board of supervisors and the Pon- tiac City Commission. income was $2,952,712; non-operat- ing income, $102,656, and operating expenses $3,091,476. ideadpan., In 1956, the hospital's operating It’s Still Just a Place B, to Park Automobiles s DURHAM, N. C. * * ! The Durham Merchants. Assn. ~ wanted to call the city’s new park-| = ipays for welfare patients admitted ‘than last year, when the bond 5 Downtown rking to the hospital. “‘The hospital actu jnterest errata to only $3 7 831, bed 1 or een poe king Lat . * * * No, 1.’ Councilman Floyd Fletch- iE has asked both er suggested “Seaboard Parking | eS Oakland County Social Welfare Lot.” * ‘Board and the city to consider! Flath figured “the hospital lost adjustments this year. Any recommendations must be! parking lot * Other city councilmen listened — then named “City Parking Lot." | youll delight. in the bright . difference | you now see in the’ |)* DetroitTimes | i + Es | and music... plus all of the other features read | : regularly by over 500,000 families. But see it with your own eyes... the BRIGHT DIFFERENCE in The Detroit Times. What IS the bright difference? Tis many things. Cool green, for example, replacing the red on the Times front page. New, easier to read type face; new page layout; new local columnists ... John Manning, Editor of the Times; Harvey Taylor; covering Detroit and suburbia; B. Jay Becker on bridge; Jack Crellin’s ‘“‘The Labor Front.” A new Sunday feature section,,“Tempo of The Times,” covering art, books, theatre - phone WO 3.8800 for home delivery of the Daily and Sunday Detroit Times No matter | - what you call it, it’s just a place; — to park automobiles. * the city i o - outstanding quality. IO sass ae ~ Up to $69.50 J 30-60-90 Dey Sale a Real Howling Success. : ENDS SOON ‘ Entire Stock of Sportswear fa. and Furnishings Reduced From — Oto 50% Here Are Genuine Reduced Clothing Prices! © No special purchases or manufacturers’ mistakes — it’s all stock, produced by the finest makers in America! Ameriea’s Finest National Brands of Clothing Eagle . . . Clippercraft .,. . Rock-Knit - Worsted-Tex Phoenix . , . . . Glenwood from our regular Kingsridge ... EXTRA SPEGIAL VALUE! A Selected eer of All Weo SUITS and $ TOPCOATS in the very latest styles. and patterns. regular $55 values. now EXTRA SPEGIAL VALUE! Entire Stock of skins and Flannels : Imported Worsteds, Shark- 2-PANT SUIT SPECIAL! $75 Quality, 100° Woo!, 2-Pants Surts . . . A Sensational Buy NOW i orsted $ sharkskin and gab- ardine in the new- est patterns and> colors. $53.00 This Price Includes the Extra Pants » Here are three large groups that represent tremendous values and Whatever price you choose, there’s a fine ~ selection of fabrics, colors and models available. Up to $59.50 SUITS and COATS Now — ‘43 sh3 63 ‘Open a Hub Charge Account SUITS and COATS Up to $85.00 © SUITS and COATS ‘Now — et or All Wool WORSTED- SPORT COATS TEX SUITS Select Any Coat in the Store Regular $65.00 - $69.50 and Get a Pair of $14.95 All Wool Slacks FREE! A Sensational Value SPORT COATS of fine imported wool tweeds and ' $hetlands by nationally famous makers, Eagle, Phoenix, Worsted-Tex, Rock-Knit. $9Q°0 © STRIPES $99 © PLAIDS $9450 echecs 536% $9Q50 a5" @ SOLIDS SLACKS $14.95 All Wool _ ~*~ Flannel Gabardine Slacks FREE With the Purchase SALE I OF FINE SHOES Such Famous « Makes as: es @ Arch Preserver @ Air Film @ Bostonian @ Thornton @ Crosby Square LARGE GROUP Formerly to $14.95 Now Only $785 [ : $ 885 | Entire Stock of — Wright Arch Preservers All 20% Off “Open Monday end Friday N nae ‘til 9 pm. THE PONTIAC PRESS: THURSDAY, JANUARY. m. 1958 | Now They've Put Him in the Spotlight Life Was Lovely for ‘By fom A. CULLEN LONDON—For Jean Paul Getty, the 64-year-old American oilman who has holed up at the Ritz in London, life was beautiful until] a few months ago. That was before Fortune maga- zine named him as America’s rich- est man, heading a list of 76 Americans with fortunes of $75,- 000,000 or over. Poor rich Mr, Getty, Now his life is a plush-lined, air-condi- tioned hell, Until a few months ago Getty could slip in and out of his Ritz suite and could browse unrecog- ‘nized in the rare book shops along St. James's street. But he was then a mere multi- millionaire whose fortune was as liquid as the oil upon which it was based, floating happily with- jout fixed markers, Families Willing to Be Debtors Study Shows Americans Use Credit Because They’re Ready to Pay | ANN ARBOR (INS) — Most American families use credit just because they are willing to be debtors This was shown in a study by Jerry Miner of the University of Michigan's Survey Research Cen- ter Miner said about two thirds of; the many consumers that started | using credit between 1949 and 1956 did so apparently just out of greater willingness to owe money * * * He stated the remaining third could be attributed to changes in income, home ownership, liquid asset holdings and the number of young. married couples. Miner de- ciared the use of credit in the sec- ond group ‘‘ordinarily has been substantial." and reflected little change during the study period. He said the increase in the number of young married couples) and home owners since 1949 natu- rally resulted in a rise in the use of credit. but ‘‘on top of this, gen- era) willingness to get in debt has risen sharply.” . * * * -. Miner stated about 38 per cent, of American families used con- sumer credit in 1949 compared to Success,’ 4 per cent today. He explained it is ing”’ debt depends amount of its income. Mining the size of a loan, jender is primarily concerned with whether or not the borrower's in- “not surpris- mainly on the In deter- come js sufficient to enable him!) to maintain payments.” Miner found higher amounts of debt were incurred by families| ag either permanent increases | or temporary income declines in| 1955. Persons whose incomes re-| mained stable maintained a rela- tive balance of debts. He added: “Apparently the effect of these| Income changes on the amount of) debt depends on the general opti- mism of the consumer - * * “The relatively large number of | persons who have experienced in- come increases, together with the| general optimism which prevailed | im the economy, may have ac- * * * All that the world knew about Getty then was that he owned a chunk of Saudi Arabia and paid King Saud some $15, a day for the privilege of pumping biack gold from the ground. That and his wives, for Getty’ s been married five times and divorced just as many. But now, in fixing the limits of his wealth at between 700 millon fer — 3 + 4 a lawyer who parlayed an initial|the mansion houses a priceless col- $5,000 investment in oil into a 15jlection of tapestries, furniture, million dollar estate. | sculpture and paintings (he car- And Jean Paul Getty seems to ties photographs of his best paint- have inherited both -his father’s!ings with him so that he woe't 2% ) luck and good judgment. (‘I've jraiea men * * *& never made a bad investment,”; |). |. ; he likes to boast.) Having dug a| Until a lew years ago he owned . fi a, 260-foot yacht fitted out with 10 dry hole on his first try, young = : staterooms and manned by a crew Cott oe Trav ine he was 2.0! 4. “I sold it becayse I found ane ~ “myself getting into tRe shipping Getty’s big chance came dur- | pysiness,”” he explains. ing the depression years when | “Paul is the world’s most eru- he bought up Pacific Western Oil, dite millionaire" says Mark Goul- merging it with his father’s in- gen, the London publisher, who is terest to form the Getty OF! |, close friend of Getty’ “He was Company, Today thts takes in educated at Oxford, about 66 subsidiaries, including |janguages, is a geologist, mineral- Pidewater Oil and Skelly Oil. ogist, a connoisseur of painting.” Today, although he divides his x * * time between Paris and Teheran, Charities? If Getty admits that \Getty owns what he calls a ‘‘feud-|he gives money to charity, he will al style home” in 65 acres of Santa have assorted spongers aroynd his’ Monica, California, One wing of'neck. speaks five: Hobbies? Dare he confess that he collects 18th Century French furniture and he will have every antique dealer in London on his doorstep. London abdunds in Louis XIV. chairs when an American bil-| # lionaire is in town: Why is he in London? lf Getty | telis the truth—to buy rare books —he will have offers of every- thing from the first edition of “Uncle Tom's Cabin” to incuna- bala in priceless Grolier bind- ings. Does he want to marry again? If he says “Yes,” a band of eli- gible women, ages 18 to 80, will fight to get past the doorman at the ‘Ritz. ‘(To forestall this Getty has al- ready described himself as a “very poor marriage prospect,” ‘adding that ‘‘five times married is jenough for a lifetime.’’) Poor Rich ‘Mr. Getty | and a billion dollars, Fortune has | made Getty a* world figure. And these things have happened) to Getty. in rapid succession: He has been besieged by press | photographers, art dealers, earn-| est supporters of worthy causes and plain con-men. .- He has been swamped with over, (700 letters from individuals and Ge all begging al money "He has costracted Asian thy and’ | recovered from it. His name has been linked with! at least a half-dozen loveties—wid-| ows, divorcees, unmarried clothes; models all of them eligible as. Wife No. 6. His suite at the Ritz, which | was good enough for the late Aga. Khan and the Maharaja of In- dore, has now able resembling more the mens cloakroom at Victoria Station | than a cozy little hideaway. Getty hardly dares to set foot outside the door for fear of om mobbed. And now, to cap it all, the fifth. Mrs. Getty has ‘‘told all’ in the} columns of Lord Beaverbrook’s ‘Daily Express. (‘Anything he wanted to do he did—he was Mr. ballyhoos the Express.) * * * And in Fleet Street, where Amer- 4 that the size of a family’s ican billionaires don't bob up every it was like the At any moment day in the week, igood old times. “the the champagne corks would start} popping—or so it seemed, as the, 'British press went trooping to the Ritz to interview Getty. But it wasn’, that way at all. Instead of a “Good Time Char- lie,” the British reporters found | a quet American, aged 64, whese reddish hair is hardly touched with gray. Getty has blue eyes long, fleshy nose, and an air | | of ineffable boredom. | He dresses simply (he is proud that his overcoat is 15 years old), |= | wears no diamond stickpins, nor \rings He neither smokes nor, igambles, and he can't bear the ‘taste of chamagne. (“He didn’t | ieven offer us a cup of tea,"’ one woman reporter complained.) | Where does Getty’s money come ifrom? Mostly from oil. Getty is counted for much of pe striking | head of the Tidewater Oil holdings increase in consutner debt which /;, America, owns about half of the eccurred in 1955.” . Papers Stalled on Desk COLUMBIA, the federal] district attorney's office | Loil fields in the neutral zone be- tween Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, iwith a peak production of 50,000 jbarrels a day. S. C. WA desk in| ~*~ * * But Getty is not in the usual here has three work baskets on “wild cat’ tradition of Texas oil- woe top. They are labeled “in,” ‘‘out”’ and ‘“‘temporarily stalled.” men. He was born rich. His fa- ‘ther. George Franklin Getty, was the r , KRE BAKED HA Complete with PUMPKIN PIE ‘An aeising value in baked ham W! ravy, choice ay bucter PL SGE’S Special! reed eating! Zesty ith whipped potatoes and whipped copping and coffee, tea Of coke. - ONLY AT family’s choice M DINNER a hot roll _ all for only 77¢! Downtown Pontiac—Miracle Mile—Tel-Muron Center become unten | | | bSitetc E’S N , Colorful Sizes 1 to 3 $700 Only Infants’ SPRING DRESSES Reg. $1.59 IRONING BOARD 34-inch Size Only Regular-*1.00 Silicone DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - MIRACLE MILE TEL-HURON CENTER COVER This! CANDY This Sale Only i) They're Rich! They're Good! A Treat For Family, Friends! Creamy caramel and crunchy roasted pea- nuts dipped indelicious milk chocolate! Kresge’s Tortettes are scrumptious... so flavorful and nourishing too! A Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday only Special.:. get many pounds for entertaining! ‘HURRY IN ...3 DAYS ONLY! DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MIRACLE MILE TEL-HURON CENTER E Caramel and Peanuts Covered with Chocolate TORTETTES KRESGE’S—the family’s choice | Sam Benson Says: ’m m Not a ia | Is My Store at 20 S. Perry St. That Sure Is Busy With usd Thrifty Men Who Are Saving Up to 70% Off! Clothing During My Stock Disposal Sale! 1 Rent Tuxedos for Weddings and Parties Are You Har and Gabardines! SINGLE and DOU BREASTED STYLES $80.00 Import Wool "49. TOPCOATS TWO-PANT SUITS Values to $54.50 519.524.527| Reg., Longs, Shorts, Stouts SUITS Values to $59.50 YOUR CHOICE 519 °34 524 All Wool! Sharkskins OPEN EVERY PARK FREE NITE ‘til 9 P.M. in the Garage Except TUES. and peony red — WED. until 6 P. M. Poggi Me d to Fit? BLE Over 2,000 Pairs PANTS! SLACKS! Value to 10.95 YOUR CHOICE 93" To ‘Am One Group 9.95 Value ~ Import Wool Sport Coats al to 34.50 YOUR CHOICE $4887 a. Ca Ivy Stripes ond JUST SAY: CHARGE IT! | 4 Take 6 Months te Pay fon Our Budget Plan, Slight. Service Lite Pants” $987 Patterns Eve Meaney hang - Man Wents . = . ic yo as ee —— | ‘: ab\ = Fig oe ou Vie = a ___THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1058 Pure All Vegetable: CRISCO America’s Favorite Shortening SALE DATES: Thurs tou Sunday - Jan 2 6 BROOK'S Chili Hot =< Brown Beans Fresh, Green, Western NEW CABBAGE 7 Yacht. Club 9 (COFFEE) POUND ONE POUND VACUUM CAN Prices subject to market conditions. _ é Farm Fresh LARGE EGGS ¢ - DOZEN We reserve the right to limit quentities Hunt's WHOLE UNPEELED APRICOT POT ‘PIES Chicken, Turkey or Beef APRICOTS U.S. No. 1 Michigan | ilisbur} Pillsbury | ‘POTATOES fe CAKE MIX e@WHITE ~ Choice <@ YELLOW 8s Your _, @ CHOCOLATE 1200 BALDWIN Saas us aut 7580 HIGHLAND “nes. Open 9 A, M. to 0 P, M. Weekdays Feday 9AM 10 | BOTH MARKETS OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY | _ Sa fos gears gree z ee : “ei * ; : A se . | ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS 888 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD ||| With Tom’s No Stamp Policy Open Daily ‘til 9 P. M. _—) Open Sunday ‘til 5. P. M. —|}} , ar 3 << RAR RR RRS RD We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities , _ Z HILLS 3 = BROS VALUABLE COUPON ON YOUR FOOD BILL: SAVE ‘1% with THESE. COUPONS ALONE upon entities bearer to one {-ib. can of Hills Bros. EE Ney er PS tan -r > as! x oth: Ses yeh , oa Pi as, ey ST ce Geisha Solid Pack “DEL MONTE Whole Eviscerated Stewing Chickens White Meat Tuna | 4 12D hous 89: Seve | TOM'S New Low Price nes "2 a7 a CATSUP COE FEE = a COFFEE at eee This Coupon Expires Jan. 26, 1958 VALUABLE COUPON This coupon entities bearer to one 5-lb, bag of Jack Frost Granulated SUGAR for only | This Coupons & Expires Jan. 26, / 1958: — NS oN See er ee SG a WITH COUPON AT RIGHT ~ a ~ +) ttn, — ne ae CANNED SOUPS Reg, Cc Save 4 Cans | 16¢ one 3-lb. can of SPRY for only... This Coupon - Expires Jan. 26, 1958 NORTHERN TOILET TISSUE SHADYNOOK Grade “A” ‘e @ : ure i Ee , Greaney Butter Lar ge EGGS . Print or, 9 i © Save 16¢ | Dozen . With Coupon =|, on Right Side of Page VALUABLE COUPON This coupon entities bearer to one I-lb. Block of Remus BUTTER for only... This Coupon Expires Jan. 26, 1958 || FRISKIES — 20 ub. 4 79 save — i DOG MEAL Bog 36c! . VALUABLE COUPON . {¢ This coupon entities bearer to | one {-ib. can of Yacht Club 7 COFFEE for only ces - This Coupon Cc Expires Jan. 26, 1958 ‘Summer Isle Sliced Pineapple ‘No. 2 Con e , Cc Packed by Del Monte Yacht Club 1 Lb. Can with Coupon at Right COC POLS 000 000000 000000 0000000000000 00000000000 000 00000000000000000000000000 0000 0c 00 be OCo COO COOLS With Coupon on Right Side of Page Ss See es Le ie ans NIFTY. KOUNTY VAN | CAMP” FROZEN ~ ree PORK & WAFFLES _ BEANS 303 etry ‘21 Cen Can SAVE Se! ee pai upeys. " Kounty Kist / 3 4 CUT ~ Whole Kernel « fe BEETS a CORN | a 00000000600000000006 ( SAVE Ac! SAVE 5c! - U. S. No. 1 Mich. ONIONS | PRICES in This Ad are in effect until se Jan. 26, 1958 U.S.No.1 | a aie Potatoes New seen | LAMB SHANKS — Lamb shanks, a less-tender lamb cut, ré- eeive added attention when prepared with dried apricots and prunes. cookery ... either braising The shanks are cooked by a moist heat method of meat jin Your illet canned corned beef which adds a delightful flavor. Onions cook several minutes in fat. Then rice, canned corned beef, corn and tomatoes are added, All these foods cook together, blending dinner. is, delayed. i Curried Fowl ‘|Calls for Rice, — Nuts, Chutney — their flavors for 25 minutes. And place in 10-inch skillet with water, —this skillet meal will herp hot if’bay leaf, or © ooking in liquid. and % teaspoon salt; Makes 4 Note: This curry sauce is medi particularly good if oso ee and reheated, a fescue win ink the on Sata =e ee ee themselves b to 2 tablespoons curry l can (10% ounces) beef og % teas onion powder 4 cup y cream salt, white pepper salted nuts mango chutney Cut chicken breasts in half; peppercorns, aill-spice eover and simmer until tender — about 30 'minutes. Drain, reserving ~stock. Refrigerate stock so fat will come to top and may be removed. Bone Corned Beef, Vegetable Skillet 1 tablespoon cooking fat 1 medium onion, chopped (about % Stylish Lamb Shanks Cooked With Dried Fruit Being delicate in flavor, lamb Shanks are easily combined with) « teaspoon pepper tat Henprens iard.or drippings cup) 3 cup uncooked white rice 1 teaspoon salt c ‘a teaspoon biack pepper t 13 og. can corned beef, broken up 12 oz. can whole kernel golden corp r 303 can tomatoes and juice li cup water replaced by jstock) in medium-sized saucepan Melt the fat in a skillet. Add the over low heat; hicken and cube. Melt butter (part of it may be chicken fat from stir” in flour and “kRisPY’ Frank Fancles "Crown Rrispy-er” onion. Cook, stirring oocasionally,'eurry powder. Add beef broth, on- cup wat until the onion begins to turn yel-ion powder and 1% cups chicken). low. Add the, rite, salt and pepper.'stock; if there is not that much Dredge lamb shanks in seasoned Add the corned beef, corn, toma-istock add water. to make that flour. Brown slowly in lard or toes and water. Bring to a boil.'!amount. Stir with whisk over miod- drippings Pour off drippings. Add Tr the heat down. Cover with a/erately low heat until boiling and weir, primes. and apcionts. Cover lid and simmer 25 minutes. Add thickened. Stir in cream and cubed . ee water if necessary. Serve from the chicken; add salt and white pepper and simmer until tender, about 2 skillet if desired. This recipe fo taste. Simmer about 20 minutes. hours. Yiefd:; 6 servings. makes 10 servings. Serve with rice, salted nuts and for PROTECTION i.) et EASY-GRIP 5 . ; 1 cup dried * pitted” prunes many flavors.. .. flavors that en-| 1 cup dried apricots hance the appeal of this meat cut as a main dish In this particular recipe, lamb shanks join force s with dried apn cots and prunes to produce a dish known as Fruited Lamb Shanks This meat cut is also good when barbecued, This would probably become of Dad's | favorites. Lamb shanks can also | be stuffed. A rice or bread stuf- | fing is placed in the pocket left | after the removal of the shank bone. one ; amass ae nied = nie During the “cold” season, it's important to disinfect children’s HANDLE amb cut is being served, lamb is : j . < 2 hiwavs served tips hot or cog, Bankies, towels, undergarments. Use Roman Bleach, triple-action ... never serve lamb lukewarm, | bleach which makes clothes sanitary as it whitens them. You get extra health-protecting benefits when you use Roman Bleach. Fruited Lamb Shanks @€ lamb shank Turkey and Peas Added to Nippy Cheese Sauce Fin. A RR tte oss: — : | . highway use, is powered by a 335-horsepower turbocharged diesel | 24 ee ae * Save $22 to $37 on @ach coat © | Save $16 to $26 on each coat — Save $6 to $8 on each coat . pleunted Flakes of Stone Ladies’ Skirts Ladies’ Better Dresses Ladies’ Sweaters ‘paw Is an Ancient Tool Re. @ mw Reg Re Pa | ° ( £. g- Reg. 7 Reg. a Reg. . « SO ae sD a so $11 56 $13 $3 $15-$20 S10 | = $6 ssiosis SSB SA 3 WASHINGTON—Cave man, no|present appearance—blade and pis-| 7 $18 , less than the do-it-yourself en- ;tol-erip handle — in that ancient! ! Save $3 to $10 on Each Skirt Save $5 to $10 on each Dress Gave $3 to 98 on each Sweater thusiast of today, could hardly get! i : _ v along without a saw, jland. * * ¢ | oe , Lee The first saws were serrated) The saw owes much, of course, 4 i Is’ Girls’ . . Girls’ flints. Then man learned how to'to metallurgy. In the Stone Age,| | G r . mount flakes of stone in a grooved pint saws were thick and cumber-| ©) 3 & of w o jowever “4 : | 5 . ; D See eon H| Winter Coats Car Coats | resses feeth was the forerunner of the! ers devise elongated, efficiently; — ba powered chain saw that has been, jtoothed blades. 2} R lar 6 to $15 i such-a boon to the lumber indus-| Iron A be- | 3 egu ee Even so, the Iron Age came 2 Re ular $ § $s _ try. i\fore toolmakers learned- to rake ~~ *e = = ; Reg. to $1 5 i The saw of tomorrow, forest |the saw’s teeth in one direction.) — to $30 be researchers say, will be a ray Armed with the frame and cross- oe that can cut a log swiftly and cut saws of the Iron Age, woods- — Regular d es cleanly without leaving saw- ps had a definite advantage over | > y oe gu $ an : Or os dust. The ray's intense heat the tree. el $35 & $40 1g ae! will plane boards during the | Water- powered sawmills ap-| + = oe :| o) cueeee veoreee: jpeared.in Europe in the early 14th Save $6 to $16 on each coat Save $3 to $5 on each coat Save $3-to $7.50 on each dress ve | « « @ jCentury.. From Europe, young | & A os = _ "The origin of the saw can only Aeris) eo tees the ee : a ~ - ; be conjectured. One legend says) 7 ° ; ° 9 . ‘ 3 j Eg . the inventor got the idea from the, earcelae: xy ams! Wee ped cet. Fe Girls’ 2-Pc. Snow Suits Girls Sw eaters . Girls Jeans &: spined snout of a sawfish; another | * ie * important | . : ef hold t the saw was inspired by; Logging play an importan : : : ee 3 a toothed sting. P Y lee in the building of the United | Regular $ Reg. § Reg. § 3 to 7 Only Reg. S$ i More likely man devised the saw States. The first export shipment |, $17 to $23 $4 $5-$6 Flannel Lined $3.98 .. “ a out of sheep heed, the National included pine clapboards -. trans- Koa 7 ™. * vid Geographic Sdciety says. Flint, ported from Jamestown to England |" Save §7 to $13 on Each Snow Suit Save $2 te $3 on each Sweater Save 68 on cock Pub ¥ saws have been found in Stone Age lin 1608 by a Captain Newport. le » . } f caves. With. them, paleolithic| Though logging is one of the |= ‘ hunters gained mastery over bone,| eldest American industries, the | ~ . . € Ss antler and ivory, developing a kit) saw was one of the last pieces | - Of tools. of woods equipment to become es In civilized societies the saw was} mechanized.’ be = even more important. Most wheels) 1 nas never been easy to ne- al Choice of the House : Men’s , Men’s | mare before 2000 B.C, were tri- S ed | : tiate ravines, slopes and the|—' partite wooden disks. It is ep ear ar of forests with heavy | ~~ Men’s Topcoats || Suburban Coats |} Surcoats and Jackets have been cut into segments of a SS : - circle without a saw of some kind. Tet hag Aas pose (i ne Regular , Metal saws have been —_ Sears > bald on cenily |i Regular : 835 - Regular from graves at Kish, one of the |Tecen A . a ‘or = . 35.00 - é : 5, portable chain saw. . 5 5 é : , ani important ancient cities of/" Fb yen today, however, making a Fs $55 to $7 $39.95 $24.95 mer, saw that will stand the. terrible + . The Greek physician Hippocra- | punishment of gnawing into living ~~ + , who grdepateal ek — ry ogeal ¢ cating : Save $17 to $37 on each coat Save $11 to $16 on each coat Save $11 on each jacket emnall instrument akin to today's |Jobs in the tool Industry. io ie circu saw, z e e e ° j ’ y < ; 4 ‘ ~ Whatever the origin, the saw was| Steel scrap provides about one _Men’s Flannel & Knit Ski Pajamas Men’s Wool Shirts 'Men’s Sweaters = i an old tool when Moses lived in/half of each ton of newly made — . | : Egypt. The handsaw assumed its! steel. Regular § Entire Stock § Reg. to $ Reg. to $ ~ . $3.95 for Reg. to $12.95 $12.95 $8.95 & n | ’ | : Save $1.50 on Each Set Save $4 to $8 on each Shirt . Save $4 to $6 on each Sweater : : 9 : 4 Boys Su burbans— Boys’. Tom Sawyer and Rob Roy Boys’ Billy-the-Kid , e - Jackets and Sureoats || Flannel Shirts : Flannel Lined Jeans Regular Regular Regular $2.98 — Entire Stock , $15.98 to $17.98 $22.98 to $29.98 Save $1.50 on each shirt Regular’ y £ § > , ior sI2 =*16 9 $ - for 5 | $2.98 Matching Flannel Shirts 2 for $3 Save $4 to $14 on each coat | Save $2.50 on each set Boys’ Ski Sweaters and ‘Shetlands Men’s Long Sleeve Sport Shirts ~~ Men’s Drees Caps , | Regular . § Regular $ Regular $ } ! $7.98 to $10.98- $3.95 - $4,95 ‘for $2.95 e Save $3 to $6 on each Sweater Save $1.50 to $2.50 on each Shirt Save $1.05 on each Cap - Fully Guaranteed Shoe Riot - Save Ss to “7 on each pair - sk ONE 4 Speed AUTOMATIC RECORD] | oysrows ™Sexcun amnion St | Tae Es | ded tle doi i PLAYER by Birch Mendis taapewe oh. SB | oe 8B | Se 9 | ah OF mae | Men's Portage . | Boys’ Treasure Chest Girls’ Golo : iia & Loafers | Oxfords & Loafers: BALLERINAS es sigs . ‘6 $8.95 Pale Ss 195 SD sis - $3 _ Shop ‘the Modern we. wee ld a Convenient Charge Account With Option Terms oS Plenty of Free — at Both Stores IN IAC PRESS, _awonsDAy, JANUARY 23, 1958 S| mae co Seay TONIGHT’S ae. ie 3 “a : "gt. Benedict at oars Ly 24 MONTH fully GUARANTEED — in 10 90x14 Whites..s2e.02 ||) | 7-GOxIS | $19.66 | Pe LU | ...in writing! -Secwy cuananreeo v6 4 950x14 Whites. $31.14 |] arse meee, f } , poserosalny-ar ae PLUS TAX. | | PLUS TAX | ‘| ire NYLON RAYON : ea. in sets | eo. in sets | ec. in sets | ea. in sets : 6.70-15 | 15.88 | 17.88 | 13.88 | 15.88 7.10-15 | 17.88 | 19.88 | 15.88 | 17.88 .. : , a TT . | 19.88 | 21.88 | 17. Wheel Alignment |) 1958 Seat Covers || .. BONDED Hence | 2148 lane | was [290 | ai > Pen MATERIALS | FORD, CHEV. PLYMOUTH PLUS TAX | 4 . ee peda en oceatro tem ba ‘Tex and your OWd Tres On Our BRAKES Tubeless Tires ‘tt $2 per Tire Additional ; John Bean Plastic coated § re R “MULTI-FIRE” . _ we Cee — . _ Electronic fiber, new = $ 12° LABOR and 34 95 & SPARK PLUGS — an’ ae. Visual Liner _ new designs. . | Ble x imSHDENAY Se] me \ E | ae INSTALLED FREE 3 & R AUTO STORES" 115. Ne SAGINAW | ) ey ay < gga FREE PARKING. in REAR _. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1958 __ East London, He \ ‘tractor for practical demogstra- 1 BOCM i tion work. Miss M T. Soga, a lead- 2 er in the ‘association, has, made 3 waiee her farm near Cala available to 4 ROKREW the membership for demonstra 5 NOYHE tions. 6 NUGEE . It will be a model farm. which 7 PLYPUS the natives will work themselves 8 VEHt : “If the.natives see these various ’ RNOD farming methods demonstrated to 7 them by their own people, they) . - ‘ will take an interest, association © Meare diy Une. oc et od BOARDING HOUSE | @Z##9Y/. 5 - A K ! A PAINFUL DILEMMA, )\ | LA —anmmgomemmmme, eg a) ce eur IY IRE Fee ee eis” 22x ELARED OUT OF CONTROL AT * ) Welle MEARE ODPL AND @ BEING TRAPPED INTO A CHAR- } WITH MEANS HOOPLE AND .I\ WOMAN'S CHORES!/-LeTS RARE RTY ARE RETIRED: 1\ SEEK HAVEN IN THE OWLS / | ee ee ee FA CLUS WELL FIND AN iZ- MISSILES 1F 1 GO. ANTIDOTE FOR THAT SICK- | BZ Home <. SHES AS VY ENING. HYDROGEN SULFIDE ! Ss ACCURATE AS Z AND HOLD A ‘Ke : SUMMIT AG ___ By Ernie Bushmiller : 1Z CONFERENCE ‘i \ _ THEY ALWAYS. 1 WONDER Pea BZ \\\ I DON'T THINK || SWIM AWAY | WHY g Ni THEY LIKE ME FROM ME THEY'RE a7 AFRAID | gZ OF ME Y sy SS x as uy fe Se _ _ f ai , # dan Webtyfardteoee toteon ta —= TRAM GNISMAGIL LEER 398,-23~ - RWS Ws CAPTAIN EASY s ; By Leslie Turner LISTEN: MEN! THE MISSILE TEST CENTER. Barer | I JUST TALKED 10 DR. SALONIC! OUR NEW WE $0} BUT JUST REPORTED SUCCESSFUL FIRING § ITS ACTUAL DISTANCE WAS SIOO || EXOTIC FUEL Ive cor 7 KNOW! : THE | Fn CYCLOPS.. LANDING WITHIN MILES, HEIGHT 6I2...SPEED 15,000! | | WILL I WANT | 1-23 owersaat tm rm ere a TARGET AREA! a AND GET THIS..IT LANDED THREE ENOUGH ADDED TEST, USING THAT ; DIVISION MILES FROM THE TARGET CENTER! J] | THRUST TOPUT / FUEL, BEFORE we e TW Au cnr —— ——— of : ; BLAZES, 1h OReiTs — “2 Y ALICLL RIGHT! abs GeeaT! WHAT! | md IF YOU $ | : / fy 4 4 Gs = . " _ 2. , } . Behe, 4 e* : vee ' i: a PL UNDERSTeNDIUNAT - F AWP IO SORRN [| F LOO REGAN CEQNT IO 3 ‘e \ Ai | SBOOT LETTING DY }] SAR WAS THAT HE Was 4 LL) MMAY 800 LOOKED CCH TOS YOONG FOR S| TS GY FOR WS}//) MEL 3 | MORTY MEEKLE A . Voce : \ ’ -| THAT CROONER, .. SO SHE CAN HURRY % | | OVER T’ SEE THAT NEW } 1 1|KIO WHO BROKE HIS 1 | LEG LAST WEEK... * , a A Be fo f . eR ae = at ‘i 2 E Z be A F beEy | F af 5 | HE : Lacs Hl : iz Hi business. ; The Fed's action needled com- | mercial banks in New York and Philadelphia into trimming down- ward the rates they charge busi- P i F i ney Fi Hi § E i i the vision employe, and Mrs. ir of the City of frey the debts, a tor it, 1968 | po Fant ees ‘bet asevin| 333 it bas} Hi ie 00 Y * ‘90 ro | 21.870 60 404,319 66. 188.978 30) 15.213.64 Total Genera! Govereerry $1,164, 188.82 : 948,780.00 is : 715,483.00 st ive 66,990.30 as so de Line Highways ..§ 75.900.12) for Street System ....... yy sped Gtreet tang 101. 611.60, CONSER ATION OF PRALTH Health © ........ 4 ..$ 106,000.00 Lirary __- BDUCATION 115,208.12) t ‘891.00 000.00 Airport wee 000 03 Civ Defense. 10.000.00 Tote! 61 and $40.08 Fines, Porfeits nnd ? Penalties 191,500.00 bg oot and Preperty seus (908,330.00 ag eee tie — oeee 956,500.00 Bales a Bervices and Cupibeens end Transters “a ons from other Fund 58,700.58 Total Operating Reveneys $i, 91,721.80 508 8.58 Ket Operating Budget t __ Raised by ten. $3, oh CH nef Soe eee eh _ Total Banitetion to Be Preiion tevere as ye) ....8 276,672.97 Capital Improvement ..... 910,000.00 $3,862,000.00 Less Reappropriated Surplus 400,000.00 Tote ting Dateet to = Talscd by Texetion ....$3,062,000.00 Orperat omuaatin Bone $100,000.00 Total. Debt Service Budget to Be Raised by ‘ Taxation See ee “Debt. to st, came ith certified by x . Assessor and thet a te Ending tic. DeKoning Jr., lvicted of extortion in 1954 and 19/scale corruption and conniving in- jvolving international ag well as ———————/of dollars of the union’s funds, eis] meeting. The for a sre lte samabehgere alo advieed thet ‘\were approximately 1-3 less than se,year and the final six months were ki PORTABLE PRIZE — Employes ot Yocal Gen- eral Motors plants continue to swell the number of entries in GM's $500,000 “Golden Milestone” contest as the February 8 deadline nears. Ray- mond W. Marshall (right), a Pontiac Motor Di- Marshall, Kempf, Drayton Plains, accept from Charles H. E Sa: ae ee ee of 4412 TIN tee rts _oe national Harvester, -leraft, American Cyanamid, South- 1 (Market Prices ier Slightly Down NEW YORK i" — Stock market erm Railway, Paramount and East- ‘én Air Lines. Du Pont, Ford and Montgomery ‘Ward were steady. blocks included: Penn- = Probe of Union Winding Up Hearings on Alleged Abuses of Frisco Engineers WASHINGTON W — The Sen- ate Rackets Committee sought to wind up today its hearings on .al- leged fraud, forgery and phony election practices in the big San Francisco Operating Engineers Union. * * * Chairman McClellan (D - Ark) planned to switch then to affairs of the union's Local 138 on Long Island, N.Y., in which the Na- tional Labor Relations Board says it has found “insinuations of cor- ruption and maladministration.” Local 138 is headed by William who took over the presidency from his father when the elder DeKoning was con- sent to prison. * *. MeClellan had ordered the in- vestigation into charges of wide- local officials of the Operating En- gineers, a union of workmen who run bulldozers, cranes and other heavy machinery. Yesterday's hearings brought testimony that ‘false entries’ in the books of the 22,000-member Local 3 in San Francisco, doc- tored minutes of executive board meetings, and other devices had Clouded the handling of thousands Defers Dividend Action DETROIT (INS) — Detroit Steel Corp. said today its directors had decided to defer action on first quarter — to the February tter was tomorrow. A letter preliminary figures show 1957 sales in 1956 and net earnings for the "less than the dividends paid in the respective periods. ne Janu- shat! take I Building Suppliers to Hold Installation New officers will be installed at tiac Lumber, Fuel and Builders’ Supply Exchange and the Building Material and Solid Fuel Dealers Assn. to be held tonight at the Waldron Hotel. : * * * To be installed by the exchange are Charles Dillman, president;- Robert Mehlberg, first vice presi- dent; H. H. Smith, second vice president, and Charles Crawford, treasurer. ° Members of the exchange board of directors for 1958 are Harold Doremus, Harry Long and Norman Roth. * « * Building Material and Solid Fuel Dealers Assn. will install Donald Hicks for a second term as presi- dent. Other officers are M. A. Benson Jr., vice president, and James Corwin, treasurer, * * * Association board: of directors for 1958 includes William Chaplow, James Church, Ralph Cromis, John Nowels, Fred Poole and. Erwin Slater. 2 Armed Men Hold Up “BOOM YOUR SALES! Complete Sign and Art Service COMMERCIAL SIGNS OUTDOOR ADVERTISING Ask About Our Spring Delivery Plan Janette, Richmond Hyde Grocery Store Two armed men held up. the I Hyde Grocery Store, 326 E. Wilson Ave., last night and escaped with [$180 trom the cash register. Mrs. Rg vide: owner, told police the men walked in at :12 and held-her up. One held a and the- Cher. 3 toy pet, * * the Joint annual meeting of Pon-|Com ‘Baby Dodge’ Seen Replacing Tricycle WEST PALM BEACH, Fla, The days of the kiddie car, tri- for small fry may be numbered if the plans of Horace Dodge II ma- terialize. * * * Dodge, scion of the automobile family, designed a little automobile for his own child, Now he plans to produce it as “The Baby Dodge,” his wife, former showgirl Gregg Sherwood, said today, ture and out. * * Tentative plans call for a two- seater, — electrically to go 2% to 5 m.p.h, for off-street use by youngsters 3% to 10 years old. Retail price Would: be about $185, Mrs, Dodge said. Safety devices would be built into the car, - _ Grain Prices eee rete aa Rye +eeeee R49 ies seen B06 od Restecon i May seeekes Add peveeoesd dd ee eeveeee ‘eRe eee eB ei E: oe te area : " ay eedecewened cycle and other leg-power vehicles CHICAGO GRAIN no. - osm dan. 23 (AP) Opening Mat ccces ee BD eeeeeeeees MAP... peseee + 1% yer Fenqiweees Rtn diy eeeewed ds Suveveees BO% eeceeveesll.78 83}, (C, 3. Nephier Ce.) Figures after decimal points = A oon Allen Elec & Equip Co * 25 26 ldwin Co... © 13 14 Geat Co ...c.-.00 © MB . L. Ol & Chem ~ © 43 14 Howell Eleo Mtr Co .,.. * 41 5 Pen Metal Pd Co ...... = a as The gy: MW cccecres id R Rudy CO 3...5. sess © 42 44 Toledo sor Co .....- Bb b LB Wayne Screw Pu Co . * 21 #23 *No ssle; bid and asked. County Credit Union Elects New Officers The Oakland County Employe Credit Union elected new officers hths | and declared a dividend at the | about fifth annual meeting last night in DETROIT, Jan. 223 (AP) Detroit, cases pore laren at a, 3; rede S| Hin! US, ‘ont, prices slid off gently in quiet early when it borrows. And it made it|Fed could mop up some of thelaccounts, trading today, : ednesday. easier and cheaper for corpora-|excess money pouring back into| Bankers figure for each $1 of| Leading issiles declined trom |’ tions to float new debt issues, [the banks as businessmen and in-|freed reserves they can make $5/fractions to about a point. There * * *& dividuals paid their bills. to $6 in loans. were a few gainers. a But lowering interest charges) The third-and largest tool is to 7 2 ¢ * 2 2 iste furnishes very. little new money cut the amount of reserves that With demand for business loans}. The opening was fairl Ve, | apples, We icusku for the commercial to lend.|member. banks must keep with/declining, there is a question of|then turnover pres: | tne Da. ‘svssanes vases Two other measures the Fed|Federal Reserve banks. In New/how much having moge credit|sure was apparent in any section. | appies Pg epecamaegi can use have more direct bearing| York and Chicago they must keep|available at lower interest will) The newest credit-easing steps ee ay Soot 20 per cent of their ts}lead business to step up its bor-| gave the market only a tem: | Beets, Eh | seviccomeccanee BAP is the buying or selling of|there. In 48 other large cities it's) rowing for expansion, carrying in- porary lift yesterday, foe A ae sesseeeeeeee el U.S. securities in the open mark-/18 per cent and in smaller cities,|ventories and the like. . as Celery, one. rode corr BAB et. So far it has used this tool/12 per cent. Cutting margin requirements for Detroit Steel was oft a traction | Narsradish & base sonst A only along seasonal patterns. By} Banks for a long time have been) stock trading trom 70 per cent to|following a omg chap td ‘ Legere) buying in December the Fed gave|clamoring for the Fed to lower|S0 per cent brought mixed reac- ee ee hans on (Pe ee banks more funds to tide business|these reserve rules and to cut the|tions. One view was it signaled a|*? defer first quarter div BC | Parsley, Root, (bene) don ........ 1.85 over its big Christmas borrowing/differentials between big andi further easing of credit and hence|t0" until the February —- Focatese 60 ss jgegrseeneeees ES needs, When the Fed buys, the|small cities. The American Bank-|was inflationary, The other was * wt Radishes, bon heey dais: ES money it gives the seller is de-/ers Assn. wants reserves cut to a|that it just called attention to the|’ ¥ pain Sheet Whe dgwe [SRR COO MR erreeen or oes SO posited at once in the banks, giv-|uniform 10 per cent on checking deepending sag in business and tojabout e point. Fractional tows Poultry ing them more funds. deposits, with different rules ap-lofficial worrying about it. were taken by Bethlehem, Inter- - — ——— Douglas Air- ‘DETROIT EGGS — Rexs, FOR included, federal - state grad wit ae 38% - 36, wid. e wd. ay. checks, 29. Commercially graded: Whites, _ sar ‘ure ca Horas . yoy and Kennecott off 4 at Tt n Shaiya meat Si entre lores 3-0; 2,000. is 37-39; ~*~ A ae : fe pay small, args. gtade B, large, 34. New York Stocks DETROIT POULTRY (Late Morning Quotations) DETROIT, Jan. 22 (AP) — Prices A . - paid ‘ . Kroger 62 No, 1 top quality poultry up to sites “Ch. ee . Lor Glass 44 *s- fen on oes: light type. Allis Chal —- ane. ae: 12-13; ‘heavy type, broilers or -fryers. > eee an beewe. seat: Tagenmee caat tome batt ; fam Cen cs 43 Lone 5 Cem - 38 | over § Ibs, 26-28: ducklings, 31. Cyen ... ash .. 61.2 Am Gas & El 40.1 Lou & N +4 Metal. ... 17.6 Mack Tek .... M- : am © Ges... Sa Martin Co... Livestock . May D Stra .. 37 Am Rad ..... 12.6 Am Geating .. 23.4 Merck oe! Am Smelt ... 36.6 —... 9 DETROEE LIVESTOCK re ee ee ulna Mae 113) |DETROrT, Jan. (apy) — Am Tob .--- S12 hing Pa... 32 f | salable, 300. 2 pa in early, ones iseose M Ch market. Anaconda 41 Mont Ward .. 33 toute, the, mar $00. Bulk early | Bee a casio fae ty Armco on oe eee we .: 33 slangh Met cows: © ghee | & good chewing o of wi eeitity Armst Cr. ae bd if OF 3 e. oe eh ce disaghter a pal in ] ey = ee bg Mat 9 receipt: balance utility te Sa ete 34 N ~~ ' 42 pm f mixed P ottertn gs: opening trade on | oll is 4 NY Central 6 Slaughter steers active and strong; cows As Sn 38 Nis M Pw .. 30.5/ active and st around five loads of ; Balt ° : No Am Avy .. 0 te average choice 1050 to 1215 : = seecsee oe or Pac ... 453/ pound slaughter — 26.00 to 27.50; Steel <...°90:6 Nwest Airlin . e, most standard to grades ie te | oy oo 24.9 se out... 7 25.50; utility mixed aie rare .. aH ° — 2 "+ gg 7 | 20.00; utility cows 15.50 #0; coma it wae ot saa Ovens WL it . 62.3 three loade uit, ‘come att Jaa se eee oe 4 te ae my oael al a pect pee to ii 0; one - ne eee e i ¢ ice year ( oo: zo cram Pict. 33.8 | steers 27.00. ” cia Campb Soup .. 34 rke Da... 444/ Calves, salable, §@: Market not fully Gan Dry ...... 183 7m, 70 - $7. | establish < © c ves 28 = Shee: ; : ? Pp. 300. A few limited eart: Soot = ee Ri |S ll = ie sales poo oe “nt enough offered to give bs —o <3 Pheios D : tt price quotations Collins a TV set won in a drawing of stubs at- (CRS g"on'.: tts Philip Mor. 46.7 tached to essays in the ‘‘What the 50th anniver- Les: BA Piteesy sang: 7 ‘ sary of GM means to me” contest. At Truck & [Sere Eau’. Peart’ o - sa usiness Nofes Coach division, general manager Philip J. Mon- Coca Cola -° 104 Bare = Lo aghan has offered an additional $5,000 to any Col Bra A": 714 Repub a .. 423| Harold Smith, owner of Smith's , Truck & Coach employe who wins the top prize |fomw fa’. ....413 Rey Too B .. 673| Westside Van & Storage company, “in the nationwide contest. yore er ye cckwer as ie 401 W. Huron St., has announced Cont Bak : > 33 St Jos Lead 25 | his firm’s recent affiliation with Set OF: MY Stowti" age?,. a9}| American Red Ball Transit Co. Topper +» 16 gead al RR .. 22.6| adding long-distance moving to its Corn Pd ...... 42 p : Lodge Calendar Curtis Pub ..., 101 — a local and inter-city services. Ae ‘ammunication; Ponti is 211. 99 Stoclatr 9.8 : Lodge No 21, F & Fri, zy ee Aire... ©8 pee +e de p F. J. Stacy, Pontiac representa- 24 1 Pm. savor oan degree. Du F mat pee Sou Fee : 3 tive of the Lincoln National Life WM. +4 Rody me Sperry 'RA Sonne 33 aghast has been cited for Emer . 46 8 and 45 is Dece ° e Px-Cell-O ..... 31.1 gtd Ol Cal .. 45.1 " mber sales, when he News in Brief Paire Mor + 84 ad ou sin4 31.6 placed 26th in the firm's 2,500 oes 8 .. | Ford, Mot, see “as wae] poe] band OS fo agents across the country, Geek... ee eee sale, Par Gen Dvnam., #16 Sun ‘ , Trailer Ct. Lake Orion. Pr Prim Bat Gen Mec ..... Oe OT ace. 36 _ Death Noti Gen Motors |. 38 Syly El Pa .. 353 ices cu Lake Or ES A Eee Satie Tex . Orion. Pri. & Sat. Gen Tire 2. 2 Textron 12 CAPOGNA, 7A JAN. 21. a, 1058, ARNOLD Rummage Sale. St. Andrews |citette * 32 tek @ bear: as beloved husband of Mrs. a Church. 5301 Hatchery Coehel Br... ds tren W Air. 128 ¢,Gapoena; dear father of Mrs. Good fori lal ° 5 . Ne Pri. Jan. 24, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.) eet ON) 46 | Underwa ee 4 Caporne, Cant. Lewis Rummage : yaa aad See ed Un Pae - Ul get] Qwift and Mrt" George a: an it. Tratees Mah an |e . =! in. 988 de r ur end Ji : — it. Thomas Hall, 197 og solos Sa Unit Aire ..... 844 Gapoene and Mrs. Ide Buffelini. : Indust Ray | ja4 Unit Pruit' > 381 Puneral service will be held Pri- 3 Ing Rand .... 702 pa oes ¢ ee St’ "vincent Se Pasl chana in’ sale. Jan 24th | mapir Coo || ona US Lines ..... : terment in Mt. Hi . _ the Resale Shop. 291 Gakland = Bus Meh Lon ; 4 Rise! heels tee <2 Ere of the Rosary will be © . 2 ; ~. 21K ep. ii e = i ; Int Tel & Teh 30.2 west Un Tel 16.7 Rosary at 9 p.m rf the sisivia Sale Sat J 25. Isl Crk - 30 Weste A Bk 2 A. Gchutt Pune Mr. - VFW Hall, 4880 Sbivd.|Jonee_ 1.383 Wits eGo’. fhe | Mola ah Bunete Dunares ease Drayton Plains. 9 aff. to 4 p.m.|Kennecott ... 87 Woolworth... 41. | CRANK, JAN. 23, 18 : Yagst 8 3.2 201 Baldwin Ave: age 44; belov: Backenstose 15 E. Lawrence. STOCK AVERAGES of Lester and Violet Rathbun, Clearance School bags, dear sister of Victor Bacon and games, novelty winks: % _ price. So by The Associated Press Let camel on aw gt Scher’ items 96 cost. Y= ‘the Mustocn Panera ome” 30 60 by the # 1 Heart of the Lakas Fost 2106,|net_cnanee gt ReieUHLem, | SEPORD, JAN: 3 CARL Keego Harbor, is celebrating VFW |Noon Wed. .. 209 866 151 141.0 loved. hu: yand of Mrs. hay Kemp week by having house Satur. salt day a 63 49 1606 Gifford: dear of Mrs. day night, Jan. 25th. All veterans Month renee oy a2 we Ly afford Puneral service will and Freongg libs friends are eo oatane youre a ee ae 34 176.7 ening. Harold Clif - . 280, ; 8A8 for aaa. B. OFG, | 1957-58 low ...2280 782 O62 1809 1986 high ..... 276.3 155.1 76.9 .191.5 1956 low ...... 2440 1262 698 171.6 Mra. Voorhees Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance - or Motor FOR WANT ADS | DIAL FE 2-8181 - een seceunl _ A FEW MEN for’ outside steady employment. io” opportunity above average. and reference will be considered. Apply 104 6 6W. «6Buren between rely 30. BARBER bem Full “Sf yest “Be "Eanpenren 5 ae tom, wee rem must be Ist class te man, and experienced on Also experienced on power wood ene ee a ¥ mat re Write Ponting Press Box 2% eee Bart ¥0 utile R a teat ited we Experimental Automotive - Sheet Metal Men car, refer- personal A eall < Sr bee Tce and 1 to WANTED, MAN WITH FOUNDRY toel cavity die on sm: cations ame reer? Ww, Hay Weetrl Pomel 2 | w * Capable: and Dependable Stenographer ’ Sales Dept. by . American Forging & Socket Co. FE 2.0154 - GET IT QUICK, through Classified Ads! | Yes, whatever it is— dial FE 2-818 for an ad-writer # and get itt experience, and. experience, “Write RELIABLE PERSON Living in the Lapeer, Lam, North Branch area to deliver a Pontiac Press motor route, Route starts from Lapeer. Gaiy vengte rom that area need apply. Must have late model car, Contact.