cl peep aE TRIO The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast , snow s. (Detailg Page 2) a E PONTIAC PRE Sn i cl as gy ae aluilg sane alae IN - Wie tyne } 116th YEAR xkkek* PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959—52 PAGES City’s Outstanding Citizens RECEIVE JAYCEE AWARDS — Honored by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce last night were (from left) W. B. Neal, William Neal was named key man in the Jaycee organization; Coulacos William Coulacos Gets Man of Year Award V. Coulacos and Max E. Kerns. By PETE LOCHBILER For thousands of Pontiac yqung- sters, the choice of William V. Coulacos as “Outstanding Young Man of Year’’ is a good one. The Pontiac Area Junior Cham- ber of Commerce last night gave the 32-year-old insurance agent that title and its Distinguished Service Award for 1958. daycees picked Max E. Kerns as outstanding boss of the year and W. B. Neal as key man of their organization. was picked as Year,” Kerns, a partner in the H. W. Huttenlocher insurance agency, was Cited for community service. Neal, a self-employed vending ma- chine distributor, was selected for his Jaycee activities. * * * The awards were made during the annual Bosses Night banquet, at which the guest speaker was, William J. Moriarty, assistant) sales manager of the Mercury-| Edsel-Lincoln Division. MSUO's First Building Proceeding. on Schedule The walls of Michigan State University Oakland’s first academic building are most entirely closed in. up, and the eens is al- George Karras, MSUOQ supervising mie reports, that workmen are now putting in window panes of the first classroom structure to rise on the 1,600-acre campus. , “We're right Karras said today. Aluminum .window frames are being installed in the one-story laboratory wing, which will house, in addition to labs, library and office space, according to Roy J. Alexander, MSUO director of stu- dent affairs. The three-story classroom wing is almost completely windowed, Alexander said. Facilities for closed circuit TV are being provided in all class- rooms, he revealed, adding that | the new institution plans to use the system in its instructional ee * P= Designed to be virtually inde- pendent with its own faculty and administration, although a ‘“‘sister’’ school to Michigan State Univer- sity, MSUO will open its doors to a freshman class of 600 in the fall of 1959. : Since both wings of the building) are almost completely closed in, work has moved rapidly ahead, Alexander reported. Interior walls are being installed in the three-story wing, and are already erected in the one-story sction., 39 CLASSROOMS The buiding will contain 33 class- rooms with a seating capacity of 5 students, and six classrooms hold- ing 70 persons each. Also in the building will be two large lec- ture rooms, four elementary and advanced chemistry and physics on schedule,” + wings will be connected by a cov- ered patio area. The building’s library will hold 200 students at a timé, and will have enough shelves for be- tween 70,000 and 80,000 volumes, he said. A relatively new heating con- cept, currently in use ‘at the Air Foree Academy, will be used at MSUO, Alexander said. * * * “A boiler will use hot water un- der high pressure, which will flow through pipe installed in the ceil- ‘ings,”’ he explained. PARKING LOT Dr. Alexander said that the one- story wing should be completed July 15, but office space will be available eas early as the end of June. A parking lot near the build- ing is almost completed, except for some grading, Alexander said. He reported that applications are rapidly com ingin at the new institution, and that 29,000 intro- ductory brochures have already been distributed to interested stu- dents in 18 different states. ‘Arson Hinted in Fire EAST LANSING (UPI) — Fire broke out today at Capitol Plas- tics Co. and caused damage esti- mated at $10,000 to $15,000. Deputy Fire Marshal Phil Al- bers said the blaze might have laboratories, Dr, Alexander said the two! and Kerns was selected as Pontiac's outstanding boss. The honors come at the annual Bosses Night banquet. 'figure, technically, in the selection, Pentiae Press Pheto “Outstanding Young Man of the Coulaces was cited primarily for his work with young people. Although his five years as head of the Pontiac Boys Club didn’t they weren't forgotten either. * * * From 1952-1957, Coulacos be- friendeq thousands of Pontiac boys, gave them leadership and} counsel. | He won praise because his friendships were personal, his in- terest sincere, his help real. It was estimated last night that Coulacos knows 2,000 or more boys by their first names. Since he became an agent for North American Life Insurance Co. two years age, Coulacos’ interest in youth hasn't lessened, The list of his activities for young people is a long one. Williams Urg es State Mortgage Vets Fund ¥ *% * ame Head of MSUO * ** »* ¥ ¥ é sae Durward Varner Receives Post, Hannah Reveals Had Been Coordinating Growth of University Since Its Inception Durward B. Varner, as- sociated with Michigan State University Oakland since its inception two years ago, today was named ad- ministrative head of MSUO. The announcement was made by Michigan State University President John A. Hannah and approved by the State Board of Agri- culture, governing body of MSU, at a meeting in East Lansing. The 42-year-old Varner has been coordinating the growth of the uni- versity in his position as MSU vice president in charge of all off- campus programs, When Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson held. a presg meeting in He's the spark plug of the Down- town Kiwanis Club's youth com- jdaughter, Monaghan Reports mittee, putting in many voluntary hours at the club’s youth camp. * * * He's a member of the advisory board for the Foundation for ‘Emotionally Disturbed Children at Pontiat State Hospital and makes it a point to visit young patients at the hospital at least once a week. Coulacos is active.in the Boy Seouts and the Wever-Owen- Hawthorn Community Club, He's been a Jaycee five years, serving on many committees, and every year puts in many hours as a solicitor for the Pontiac Area United Fund. x * * Married and the father cf one Coulacos was honored also for his business success. In his ffrst two years as as insurance as,ent, Coulacos has underwritten more than $1,000,000 in policies. A native of Quincy, Mass.,>and a graduate of the Springfield, Mass., College, Coulacos lives at 2306 St. Joseph St., West Bloom- field Township. Truck Sales Climb, Sales of GMC trucks contin- ued their upward trend in the first 10 days of 1959, it was an- nounced today by Philip J. Mon- aghan, vice president of General Motors and general manager of GM Truck & Coach Division. Deliveries during this period represented a 28.7 per cent gain over the comparable period of 1968. This followed a December do- mestic sale total which was the highest rate of sales since Janv- ary of 1967, and 38.9 per cent January, 1957, to announce they were donating their 1,400-acre es- tate, their spacions Meadow Brook DURWARD B. VARNER Hall home and-a $2,000,000 cash endowment to Michigan State, Var- ner was there, He immediately envisioned the tremendous educational potential. in the offing, His elevation to become head of MSUO, which opens this fall, is ef- fective immediately, President Hannah said. * * * Varner said he was ‘'pleased be- yond words” when informed of the appointment. “I have been handed one of the great educational chal- lenges in this country,” he said. It will probably be mid-sum- mer before he will move his wife, Paula, three children, Tom, 16, Judy, 12, and Susan, 4, from their present East Lansing home to Oakland County. No home site has been picked here as yet, he said. Shaking Before House Battle RIVALS WITH GOVERNOR handshake took place before the battle for the floor leadership yesterday in the Michigan House Despite his referee-like pose here, Gov. Williams was only a bystander yes- House Dems Simmer |GOP Cuts Down With GOP in Control of Representatives. By GEORGE T. too badly about yesterday's Although they would feel — This happy . Pears, nan Joseph a House speaker. TRUMBULL JR. LANSING — The House of Representatives is in the controlling hands of the Republicans — nothing + startlingly new—and Democrats are inclined not to feel setback. more politically potent with the’ House leadership, some Democrats stirred . under- zation scuffle that “now the’ Republicans have to prove themselves.” Democrats, including the three from Oakland County, wouldn't state flatly that the Republicans will have to bear the major re- sponsibility should they not be able to bail the state out of its most crucial financial crisis since the depression. However, the Democtats indi- cated after Wednesday's Repub- ican victory that they may not be hesitant in the future to place the blame squarely on the shoul- ders of the “leaders’”’ as the 1958- 60 legislature. With this in mind, Buchanan, Rep. Don R. Pears, elected House, speaker, called upon both fellow) Republicans and Democrats ‘‘to| guid® Michigan back into the sun- light.” “Let's not have this House known ag the House divided,""he urged hopefully in his acceptance speech. * * * Pears, a 59-year-old life insur- ance and real estate salesman, gained the top spot in the Housé after his party successfully ward- The story of “Woody” Varner is resulted from arson. over December a year ago. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ed off Democratic moves to turn (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) + f Pontine Preas Photo currents after the organi-¢* Executions Rise fo 195 in Cuba Castro Declares Every ‘Murderer’ to Be Shot Despite World Opinion HAVANA, Cuba # — “We ghave given orders to shoot every one of these murderers.”’ Fidel Castro declared Wednesday night as the total of Batistans executed by the revolutionary regime was then r ported. at 185. * * * Fresh dispatches today told of! the execution of 10 more men by order of revolutionary courts, boosting the reported toll to 1%. Criticism mounted abroad of the | | AP Wirephete gought to name Rep. Republican, right, and Kowalski, Detroit Democrat, as Kowalski lost. Power of Dems Limits Committees to 5 Members, 4 Slated to ‘Be Republicans LANSING (PF — In the face of angry Democratic protests, major- ity Senate Republicans moved to- day to clamp a tighter grip on most standing committees by limiting minority membership to a lone Democrat. The action struck a blow to chances for greater inter-party harmony in the state govern- ment. Democratic Gov. Williams reportedly has been of a mind that have marked the past. Demo- Republicans outnumber ictats this session, 22 to 12. After a GOP caucus yesterday, Sen. Frank Beadle of St. Clair, |Republican majority leader, said lit was decided to abandon the four [Republicans and two Democrats ratio set up two years ago for 15 jcommittees | The size of these committees, | he said, will be reduced from six | members to five, with Republi- cans claiming four seats on each and allowing one to Democrats. “Our theory is that because of the situation in the house, where. it is so evenly divided, Republicans | liams today urge ifrom the huge lately te apply balm to frictions | 50-Million Trust Shot-in-Arm for Budget Sickness Governor Asks._Action to Ward Off Impending $135 Million Deficit LANSING (?—Govg Wil- mort- gaging the 50 millig@M dollar Veterans Trust Fund to itide the state over a cash shortage he said might zoom to 135 million dollars by May 15. In a message to a joint Senate-House meeting, he called such a shortage “un- | manageable.” He said uQ- Jess the Legislature acts ‘promptly to relieve it, the |state must skip payrolls |and default on welfare pay- /ments. Even wringing all available cash veterans nest egg will not put us on easy street,” the governor cautioned. He prom- jised to meet the long-run prob- jlem of new taxes j later. “‘head-on’’—but Williams opposed outright liquidation of the trust fand, calling instead for its tenyporary utilization. Ultimately, he said, the fund should revert to its present status, He did not say in how many years, At the heart of the mortgage plan was a proposal to turn ovd# ' temporarily perhaps 30 million dol- lars in Veterans Trust Fund secur- ities of the University of Michigan jand Michigan State University, | both now in dire financial straits. x * * The schools would be authorized |to put up the bonds as collateral for loans and to apply interest from the bonds against borrowing costs. Similarly, he asked lawmakers to approve: 1. Transfer of 16 million dol- lars in veterans fund securities to the public school employes re- tirement fund, thereby freeing that additional amount of school ald fund income in the months ahead for distribution to hard pressed local districts. 2. Appropriation from the state general purpose kitty of $1,100,- 609 a year to the Veterans Trust Fund to make up for temporary loss of interest to the vets fund and underwrite continuation of the indigent veterans benefit pro- gram. 3. Ransoming of the mortgaged securities “over a period of years.” In picturing future state fiscal prospects, the governor noted that mostly because of laggard state aid payments local schoo] districts have borrowed beyond 50 million dollars, and that the state has fal- en almost $15 million behind in obligations to the U. of M. and MSU. $34 MILLION SHORT At the moment, he said, the state treasury is 34 millions short of what is needed to liquidate gen- hurried military trials and firingiin the Senate are going to be eral fund obligations, not counting squad deaths. But the rebel chief- tain, asked by newsmen if the exe- cutions would be stopped, replied: “No, To the contrary, we have given orders to shoot every | one of these murderers. And if we have to battle world opinion to mete out justice, We are pre- pared to do it.” Castro had scheduled a news conference later in the evening but called ft off with word that he was ill. The nature of his illness) was not disclosed, but the stren- .j uous life he has led during the past two weeks was probably telling on him. eso ke Asst. Secretary of State Roy “ Rubottom was summoned before a’ congressional committee today, to face q demand for U. S. action to halt Cuba's noowectaton wave | of killings. Y Chairman Wayne Hays (DOhio) of the inquiring House Foreign said he “What the State. Department is going to do to calm Castro down before he de-| Affairs subcommittee, wants to know , é populates Cuba.” WALLIS ARE UP—The first academic building on the campus of Michigan putting up up the interior walls. Roy Alexander, director of student affairs, said : : State University OaRiand is right on schedule, according to George Karras, MSUO pepe nygetlir vay day viper © pregnant oon yom gama MSUO supervising engineer. Workmen are now installing windows in the building and we oeaneied coats a Sepeaans Gi. FS Sepetetey, 20ee on te as Stace ee ' ie . \ A > rs responsible for whatever legisla- tion comes out and passes, Beadle said. Accordingly, it was agreed to claim control commensurate with this responsibility,” he said. LA. Gev, John B. Swainson, a ful,” a move to “punish the peo- ple who have found it to their Sen. Harold M. Ryan of Detroit, | \Democratic floor leader, said the 12 Democrats combined received more votes Nov. 4 than all 22) Republicans. Democrats registered te net gain of one seat. {ORHAN In in Today's Press eee re ey eee Comics .......0. cadsaececee . 49 County News ...... vee 1 Feditorials .......060 Apconoc 6 Food Section ......... . 633 Green Empress ..... eeseene MO Markets ..ccssscescccsc..s 46 Obituaries .....5.5- ABSEIORE 20 | Theaters .........:0s-0cees PT TV & Radic Programs ove» Ot Wlison, Baril ........ foe... Women's Pages ....... . 2H Democrat, called the plan “spite. — advantage to elect Democrats.” | 'a school aid arrearage that hit 44 » millions today. The amount will grow steadily from month to month until it hits 70 millions in mid-May, or about 135 millions counting the school aid arrearage which also will continue to mount, he said. W illiams said the school aid def- jicit ‘“‘must’’ be regarded as part ‘of the over-all General Fund cash (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Weather for Today Downright Dismal Mostly cloudy, rather windy and “/much colder with occasional snow or snow ‘flurries is the prediction | for the Pontiac area tonight, ac- cording to the U.S. Weather Bu- reau. The low will dip to a frosty 12, Cloudy and continued cold with scattered snow flurries fs the fore. — east for Friday. The expected high will be near 18 degrees. The cold: will continue through Saturday with snow Surries newer the Great Lakes. The lowest temperature in down- | town Pontias prectding § aun. was 32. The reading at 1 pan. was 2. HV THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15. 1950 __ Cannon Assails Budget Pressure Tactics Takes Exception ,.. Dick (Continued From Page One) Appropriations Leader Says Witnesses Should one that engrosses. education from i boyhood da Not Have to Back Plan’ Durward B. Varner toBureauLetteras First MSUO Head -eral Land Bank in Houston follow ing his graduation, Varner was} called to active duty as an Army isecond lieutenant. He served six i 4 } ins been t igged with the years, Iwo overseas and Ml dis-, WASHINGTON (P— Chairman(nickname “Woody” since his col- charged a lieutenant col ne! | ‘ Clarence Cannon (D-Mo) said to-|lege days at Texas A & M. It) ~~ * day he does not want witnesses originated as Varner’s family lived| ( pressured to support Pregdent in a little cattle and cotton town students at his alma mater in| Eisenhower's budget when they called Cultonwood in eglern 1345. Later he moved over to the | appear before his House Appro Texiss it miversity a ae Shere i HITS Sea Also, sotne of hin college pals on ann - EIEN Cannon criticized a letter from believed his first name to be Budget Director Maurice W. | “Durwood” instead of Durward. if wus in May . of 1949 that Stana which cautioned depart ack of money desunch Varnes Varner julned Michigan iBiate ment and BRGCACY heads against for an educational CHreer rather nie ise Gepactiee | od ote asking more money than the budget would provide. The letter the government offic than engineering, dreamed of reportedly reminds * * *® lals that US After [ paid all my fees and Which he always He was made assistant dean of ture economies, In 1952 he be- came one of the youngest direc- tors in the country when he was | named to head the Cooperative | Extension Service at MSU, 2 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. next Thurs- a violaton of the 1921 Budget Act tv ask increases in budget requests without clearing them through proper channels. But a Budyet ssman denied that i wil Bureau spoke vas meant to pag pio Hesse s pechive Kisenhower will send his 77 billion-dollar budget to Congress Monday Cannons committe plang to start heanngs “How are we going to intelli gently act on a budget when the witnesses who were the experts in preparing it are under re | straint when we ask them to give us details,’ he asked in an in terview Meanwhile, President 1 er and top Republican spokesmen | ppeared ready today with a fight ing defense of the udministration’s| enh { pace. missiwe and security pro | rams * * * Key leaders in’ the new and; heavily Democratic Congress al-| | ready have promised searching} nd critical investigations into all) phases of the kisenhower defe nse | and policies progranis Viee President) Kichard M. an investigation, and expressed | to fellow Republicans confidence that the programs will stand up under the scrutiny. Tuesday | | captained lleam Nixon has indirectly invited such | tuition I didn't have enough money left for engineering instruments," he recalled His wreat lave for Michigan State University and the high esteem in which he nih has, led him to turn presidencies at a large midwestern | university and a southwestern col his friends say And throughout his visions in. to the future, Varner says the kreat prospects of MSUO have eye, | kept him with the institution. biis first taste of learning came | from his father who, asx a school Ite acher, taught him all iduring high school in: Cottonwood + * & From there Varner ithe Texas military college ibecuuse he became ly impressed” with what he during a visit there with a high school #1 club enrolled at in 1946 “tremendous haw | He Was president of his sopho classes and val-: raduating class also commanded More and junior edictorian of his gr of 1,400. Varner the Texas A & the NI cadet corps basketball Vat sily Varner graduated with a de- | gree in economics in’ 1940, the sume year he married his wife, whom he met af a college se clat function at Baylor Univer holds President Han , down subjects | and | In 1995 he was given the title of; vice president, the first such posi: | tion in the 100-year history of the school * Ld * Learmming of his new apposntment, | Varner said his big hope is that the can help “build a great tradi- tion of jearning at Michigan State | University Cane House Dems Simmer With GOP in Control (Continued From Page One) the organization into a parliamen fary circus All this came Michigan voters last Nevember | = brought aboul an unprecedented 65-55 split in the membership. about because AP Wirephoie who discusses it with R. C. Woodhouse, left, gen- eral truck sales manager for GMC, and J. M. Gilroy, assistant general sales manager. Wil- liams gave the new product a trial run prior to the show, where it will be on public display for the first time IN CHICAGO SHOW — General Motors Truck & Coach Division's new lightweight Diesel high- way tractor, star of the division's exhibit at the Chicago Automobile Show which opens Friday, yets a close igspection by C. J. Williams, center, president of Hillside Transit of Milwaukee, Wis, Exhibit Stars New Diesel Cab GM Shows Trucks in Chicago | Oakland voters went along with) ‘the statewide tide. They elected | three Republicans and three Demo (Tats | Pears had said earher that Re |publicans, if they should capture |control, would give chairman and lco-chairmanships on all commil tees to their party members ‘NO COMPROMISE’ | Democrats said they were willing ‘to compromise because of the split, The Day in Birmingham . : BIRMINGHAM—With the preci-| sion of a military operation, the two annual telephone bridge par- ties sponsored by the Birmingham Alumnae Assn. of the University of Michigan will get under way at! day. Mrs, Paul C. Robertson of 25665 Franklin Hills Dr., who heads the committee of 17, says the group hopes to top last year’s record of a thousand dollars which provided scholarships for three U. of M. freshmen in September. She said-about 30 have already signed up and ethers are need- ed in the bridge event. Students in the Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills and Troy area are| eligible to file for the scholarships. Prizes in seven categories will be at the home of Mrs, Frederick Adams, 325 Overhill Dr. Hostesses are to notify Mrs, Adams as soon as a winner is chosen, and prizes will be sent out immediately by “runners.,’’| The bridge parties, the main source of income for the scholar- ship fund, have shown a steady annual gain since they were started several years ago. Mrs. Robertson summed it up by | saying ‘'the more hostesses, the more money; the more money, the more students we can help.” Baldwin Library announces a special department temporarily set up for the benefit of income tax- payers. It includes the 1959 edition which discusses in full changes in| tax laws and howto apply them. | ©, T, Moore, vice president and chairman of the Personnel Committee for the International Institute, will be the guest speak- er at the Senior Men’s Club meet- ing at the Community House to- morrow, Moore, who served as director of the U.S. Naturalization Service for 26 years, will talk on ‘‘Problems of jthe Foreign-born in Metropolitan Cities.”’ Lauron W. Mercer Service for Lauron W. Mercer, 69. of 112 Linda Lane, will be held, |at 11 a.m, Saturday in the William! |R. Hamilton Co. Chapel in Detroit. |Burial will follow in Woodlawn | Cemetery, Detroit. | He died Wednesday in Wom- U. of M. Alumnae Plan Telephone Bridge Parties Surviving beside his wife, Jean, are two sisters in California. Mrs. Arthur C. Hensel Service for Mrs. Arthur (Zoe) C. Hensel, 84, of 1171 Cedar Dr., will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Bur- ial will follow in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Hensel died Wednesday at Pines Convalescent Home Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Lawrence Shafer of Knights- town, Ind., and Mrs. Robert Konersman of Birmingham; and two brethers in Quebec. new ANTI- ad capsule Fortified with VITAMINS A, B,, C, 0 More Complete Relief of Cold Miseries! @ Shrinks swolien membranes © Relieves sinus pressure and pain e Dries up mucus rr 1 $498 *For symptomatic relief of colds ba - ed 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor Non-liggle—Right Fit oilet : Tank Ball Reg. 85c Value 29° pregs leaky toilets Perfect seating, will not piace. quality actly as pictured. Both the President and the new) . ler. | (aBliCeR Senin leader Everett! aly ar niete:maicr ‘but Republicans declared no deal.| Star of the GM Truck & Coach BJ) Crandell, public relations! up newness of the lightweight | en’s Hospital, Detroit, after a | 1 Dirks a of Ilinut Melanied After a short time with the Fed Dining the fussing over which Division exhibit at) the Chicago’ director | Diesel highway hauler is the | brief illness. i - the programs publicly Wednesday | party should) have leadership $1) Automobile Show opening OF rid:sy Also attending will be Roger | ee ee | 3 Ir. Mercer had been senior vee | Etneniere en told aN ational! earold Lapeer Rep Paani will be a lightweight Diesel tilt M. Kyes, GM vice president in | vast engineering development | president of the Square D Co. frexe (Glub tuncheon ihat this ’ Cramton lashed out against his fel) cab model that has an outstanding churpciotl(: Milireck(unaleevoraill| program that in the months | | Detroit since 1953, country had ‘made remarkable! Cd 0 ice low Jawinakers array of new engineering features cihes| plnate ahead will bring a steady stream ress” in the field of long range lelat! ‘designed to bring more net profit P . | of major product improvements bn gt in the Kg rang JAMES W. FONTER ‘In my 50 years of legislative hig the truck fleet operators, it was) It will be the first time that) for truck owners, Monaghan Spills Burning Grease missiles ; Ta os service never has there beeq announced by P. J Monaghan, the new GMC model, DLR 8000, | sald, 4 Aa to the Soviets accomip inh SYLVAN LAKI ervice for such a trying time for the state. ivice president of General Motors; has been on public display, in a) tabliieed Sets House Afire ments in this field he said, “If we| James Willan Foster, 59, of 259%" poes it matter who gets the | mick exhibit.) A 1 it be! The DLR-8000 ‘has stabi air) | lund general manager of the divi-) truck exhibi rounc eee rid denendent fro heel j did not believe that they were;Pontiac Dr, will be held at 1) qpeaker, Let's geq busy and do | 41, |grouped nine other GMCs, a cut? en Aas . ad Zh Ns ae ae A fire gutted a Waterford Town- ‘ ‘ 7 orl i sea tunes , ? ; Ret | pensi abricated frame and alu- : nnewhat ae ad i ; if an eee a Salunday ont ythe |G a) ee + the business that we were elect | Attending from) the truck divi away V8 engine of 200 horse- nur Gs a with only a 48- inch | Ship home at 5 Ta. yesterday, | vey we would) Tatest Oe ay ise nats Pune ome, Seuay bbs | ed to do,’ shouted the Republl | gion will be Monaghan, BR |power, a cut-away Torqmatic —— : are an estimated $4,000 dam- stupid, because they have been; bor Burial will be in Ottawa P ark tet anda 6-710 Super rose : can veleran, Woodhouse general sales man- transmission, and a (1 Super “ab. It's - ~w feat ; sorhing at jt for many years and emetery agers B Mosely, Eastern re-. Economy Diesel engine of cab. It’s many new fea ures| “Joseph C. Warley of 1384 Mur- eur urgent work in this field an The body will be at the funeral) Regardless, Detroit) Democratie ane Salen man rer: Ww L.. Van * * * ake It the lightest and safest of ray St. told Waterford Township) the long range missile has started home after % pm focliay Rep Joseph Jo Kowalski staged aj & zi i es . ‘ ; . any highway tractor in the 60,000 firemen that as he lifted a burn | ; ; a ; mal dying fight to enforce a 1955 law] deWater, executive assistant in| A photographic display involving. wound GC.W. weight class, he only something Wike four years Mr Foster was dead on arrival dying He ) charge (Ch dealer | (relailoas ind, 11 back-lighted. full ioc) tran pol Es é ing pan of grease from the kitch | i af i ‘k-lig ™ “ans | ago" Wo Pontiae General Hospital of thes Legislature which woul d B : oi ae ; v . bbiciaed a) t continued en stove to carry it outdoors | Wednescdiny ihave required 96 Republican voters OL ies 8 eee mae me oni * * * | dropped it, setting fire to the kitch- . Tle beach th smployed as a tool vder fo w ‘control instead of work near some 0 re nations: , ~ CONE bee , ; Legislators Have Lunch EET ROVE IRE MOS I OEUET ae Manes (landmarks will serve as a back. Our GMC truck exhibit this) en. It then spread throughout the md odie quaker oat the Workrite at Governor's Mansion fei & Pie Co, Detroit and was * + NTA! , \] romember of Bocal Tao of the phis Democratic lastditch stand M V F oa winnie ae Simi tonatetl Savina Ne Re ae Leona Dloamsnied fortuiTie aan neo nt orfgage ets und legislators and their wives to tune hi hig mother Mra Mary Fosler of cs ea es aly pe at today Svivan lake. @ son. dumen W ee I) Hanada co - e&) (Continued From Page One) = * ba jah of Keego Harbor; a daughter, | "n i to oe eure of nec: jshortage even though the Legisla- | Vhe lawmakers were scheduled Mis kred Pherfler of Windsor Me tear c th was in- iture has not yet technically rec fo gooaver to the governors house Ont. a stepson, Gerald Phelps of Cexaty) VOUNE pic : when ognized it as such (ter hearing Williams deliver bie’ Waterford Tewnalyp. two step.|oPCaS7 at freon yestert e W en ; w & fist Jegislative message of the daughters, \h Charles Crumb anothes etrolt Democrat, P AS he never has before, Willian Neel fof Orchard Lake and Mrs et nk J O'Brien, was ood a stressed the “joint nature’ of re Turkey and bam were served. | MacDonald of Waterford Township Detroit and not present loons | sponsibility shared by the execu call Tle later appeared, however and the | Arctic Air Moves eastward | Cold Weather Returns By The Assoctated Press vorthern ond Central Plaus and Wintty weather, with cold and the ippes vd omic Mississappe snow spread from the northern Vatles 1ooheaded eatward and Rockies Info the niidcontinent to owas expected to cover tiost day, ending a brief spell of faarly exclading the eastern senboard nuld weather and Southeast states The aretic air covered — the * * * Snow accompanied the outbreak The W eather of cold along the eastern slopes of ithe Rockies, with falls in eastern, Full US. Weather Bureau Report Colorado, Wyoming and western PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Cloady tather windy and turning calder today Nebraska Highways west of with snow flurries high 44 moe Yer > close c : i a Fee@ylcntuer Gina a eadi mech) cold Denver were closed, Gusty winds with occasional snow or snew Havciee swirled the snow, cutthag visi tonight, lew t% Tomorrow partly te “ifthe \ F mostly cloudy and colder with scattered bility. Drifts nearly two feet deep! snow flurrtes, high IK Winds northerly were reported in the Coolden, Colo, ree tontebt, t ‘ ice So ee eee eae ee ee’ aren and f foot seri in/Cheyenne Wyo. Four inehes of snow was Teday in Poantiay Lowest temperature preceditn & os indicated in the resion Lighter) alla we reporte 1 > Upper! At @ am Wind velocity T8 m p hh Gall ube is ed ive "I i Direction-— Wert VMississippt Valley and in the Lake 1 net urec ARs | Be ee JSuperior region Moon sets Thursday at nadnis Temperatures dropped sharply \ 4 t ' . soa) eco Laing 00 B00 6 ax the ievy air moved into the Downtown Temerralunes Northern Plains. with below zepo i a oom ? tia v H Ath i en , readings in North Dakota and fan ! lor Montana * # tt aa aor The colder ate dipped aw tat Wednesées in Pantie: south as Oklahonia and the Texas sichert ns recorded downtown) . 'Panhandle lighes emperature a raveat) tem peratite cane », | Wet weather prevailed in wide men rosa to ee ” J} dS areas from the Rockies eastward eatlher—Pog rigegie Atlantic Coast, The major ie the One Year Age in Pontiac belt of precipitation extended from Highest temperature : S00 Lowest temperature .. ..... danker o |Missouri and Arkansas northeast- Mean temperature sree lward through the Ohio Valley and Weather—Partiy cloudy. : lower. Great ifell in most Lakes region Rain areas, with snow near } Highest and Lewest Temperatares This) Date in 84 Years 59 in 1932 -10 in 1891 Lakes Erie and Ontario, 8 ‘i Tuesday's Temperature Chart In other parts of the country, pena 32 Marquette 44034 . re ; Beluners) 40) be tines 47 ssi 8kles were mostly cloudy in the | Biemerce Fy -$ Miami B 1 83/Pacific Northwest and Southern Townsville 76 64 Milwaukee 38 26'p Buffalo 42 36 Minneapolis 41 | Plains and fair to partly cloudy Charleston 89 49 New Orleans 70 st lin other areas Chicago 4431 New York 19 43) Cincinnati 64 40 Omahe 45 a) * * * Cleveland 46 «34 Pellston 1 97 Denver 42 3 Phoenix 69 44 In contrast to the cold in the ie 40 39 Pittsburgh ho 42 : uth re $ gt: Louls oe oorthern _ ; aprons "or orth 75 43 8, Francisce 6} 50 warmer air spread into eas G. Rapids 34 8. 8. Marie 20 ia ern Ohio Valley and lower Great 1) Lakes district. Rain was reported ag in wide arvas in Eastern sections 38 a) 71 #97 Traverse CC. 34 Jacksonville 72 43 Washington 4\ Kanses City 58 8 Gea ttie 4) Los Angeles 70 53 Tampa 93 “ 4 {iedis, | the present 99 . Williams Asks State Legislature and the need for cooperation (tive By their majority, Republicans | imperative’ voted down Heuse Clerk Norman ibetween the two ' votes | b. Philteo's ruling ne aoe | Although he devoted more : H der. | were néeded to win the space in his message to the cash ship. Then by the same one vote mural, Republicans won their point that it takes but a major: | ity of those present and voting | to orgwAlze. | crisis, the governor listed unem | ployment, particularly in the De troit area, as the state's No. 1 problem the execttive can dispel the No single act. by ee | Republicans or the Legislature Kowalski warned that should their ranks dwindle and ‘auzly praspect of a certain de the Democrats gain the majority gree of continued joblessness, he | ‘they would attempt to reorganize’) iq i re Howse ; ‘ . ; a a CHRONIC) UNEMPLOYMENT A 2 EDGED SWORD | He blamed increasingly chronic ‘We're serving notice ON YOUL lunemployment on a complex of he said, “that this is a two wea factors, most notably automation, sword |!oss of defense contracts after the | Forty-two minutes after the or | Korean War, obsolescence of Mic h- ganization battle began, Pears was! ‘igan industrial plants and the tend: ! rostrum and hand-'ency of big industries to decentral largely for market reasons escorted to the eq the gavel ize R Charts \. Boyer (CR But he said there are solutions “py. f i) 5 3 M . tec) beat Rep, Albert KR. He said the governor's special set. vans ec) (OF tit) for apeaker (enee advisory beard, the 100 many orrigan committee on the st: ate s economic future and a strengthened ite tem by the same 55.54 mar: | | jnomic development commission eco- | | ‘oak ind’s SiN legislators— Demo-|could be expected to chart a course lerats Arthur J Law (Pontiac), or improvemet nt James Clarkson (Routhhield) and John Co Hiteheock tblazel Park) and Republicans Lloyd ee Hearst to lake Post — ‘son (Waterford Township), arre| E. Roberts (West Bloomfield Town- N H ld b ¢C {| ship) and William Hayward (Roy-| OW e y ur ice al Oak)-—voted along party lines} . throughout WASHINGTON WA President Fis¢hhower yesterday appointed publisher William Randolph Hearst Jr. as chairman of the President's Committee for Traffie Safety. } Hearst, president of the Hearst Consolidated Publicationg, succeeds Harlow H. Curtice, who retired re- cently as president of General Motors Corp. In accepting Curtice’s resigna- tion from the committee today, the President. thanked him for his public service and praiseq his work. Hearst, who has been acting chairman of the safety committee's advisory council, will take. over from Curtice at the committee's next ticeting early in February, Marie Torre Safe for Year NEW YORK vp — Columnist | Marie Torre will not be asked ugain in court for at least a year to reveal the source of an item she wrote concerning Judy Gar. land, the actress’ lawyer said today, Blaze Costs $40,000 SAGINAW (UP]D—Fire caused | damage estimatéd at $30,000 to $40,000 last night at the Gen- | eral, Roofing Co, year is by far the most interesting | and significant we have ever, had,"’ Monaghan said. ‘“‘The 10 imodels we are displaying are a) “oO fa eee }representative cross-section of the! oon in Lodinane® shrimp Cock CME line which we believe to be : | the best quality product The complete trem. the- ground. and nine grandchildren. idrop for the exhibit. Among the pictures is the world's largest portable indirectly illumi- nated transparency, measuring | ee naga $$$ Drive Launched to Help -Burned Out Area F amily | 2809 Duck Lake Rd., as Mrs vid Newsum family of Highland sum tried vainly to reach Township whose home burned! baby’s crib. idown Tuesday are promoting al campaign to raise funds, clothing! and furniture for the destitute fam lily of six Friends and neighbors af the Da- The couple's other small chil- dren are Vikie, 112, Edward, 3, Lois, 4, and Michael, 5. The Newsums’ six-month-old son, David, died in the fire that swept! through ney HS Sate at Waterford Teen Club land read near Duck Lake mous person for the family's use. | They presently are staying at the ihome of Newsum’'s father at 96 Monterey Ave. | Appr9ximately $120 in cash ‘along with clothing, food and 4 Closed by Police tiniare aire Sao teen’ ener ied Waterford Township police have! Anyone wishing road at i ‘ub, Highland ers, Steve Fearn and Sally Jean of 1735 N. Duck Lake Rd., jWrig tht of Pontiac. The couple was charged with op- range for pickups. in the} New- the A two-bedroom home on High- road has been donated by an anony- to contribute closed Steve and Sally's Teenage|More money may leave their do-| Pontiac | nations at the Fire Station on Duck ‘Lake road and arrested the own-| Lake road or to call Lester York | chair- man of the campaign. He will ar-; | entire house. | Firemen battled the blaze for | more than one and ¢ one- e-halt hours. WEEKEND SPECIAL Only _§; 7 MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Nylon Clippers COMBS 3 66° @ Fer Butch Cuts @ Fer Tapering @ For Clese Cuts Regular $1.50 value Easy to use. Just elip on to your elec- tric clippers. i | Raeean OVENS Sx TAS SS Store-Wide Pr “til 9 Pienty of PARKING ice Reductions Big 9 HOUR Sale ‘Vow Going On! OPEN TONIGHT P. M. Come Right Now to Share in SUPER:S. AVINGS! Conveniently Nearby jerating a club without a license. | ‘They pleaded guilty and paid a so AAT TTT fine in Justice of the Peace Pa Daley's court. | Police said residents had com- plained about the’ conduct of teen- | AMOTS attending the club The club opened in September, as qa private club with each mem-| ber required to pay a $1 fee, Police said they found that the club was|= not confined to members only, but |= that anyone could participate in its activities. The club cannot reopen without the“ Waterford Township Board's approval for a soft drink license. Baby Dies in Detroit as Candle Starts Fire DETROIT @ — Two-monthold Julius Cash of Detroit was burned |E= fatally last night in a fire appar-|Z= ently started by a candle used Zs because electricity had been cut off for nonpayment of bills. ’Firemen rescued his two young sisters unharmed. Their mother, |Mary Cash, 20, had gone shopping. | HERE'S HOW each week, month or wher — = —— awe me ena Sonne” eel a leoatenll re — — BRAND NEW Factory Guarantee Set Includes: 4 / i\ 7 (or any electric ever you want to. You'll have it paid-up by Christmas and at no extra credit charge or cost — you pay only the advertised orms | Layaway a train today! SAVE MORE Than V4 Genuine LIONEL Military and Highway , 44.Pc. Electric Train Sets Regular $47.19 Purchased Separately Join SIMMS ELECTRIC TRAIN CHRISTMAS GIFT Plan! = — Just pay $3 down on this train train) and a smal] amount + nce Nau” a i ‘ f THE P . EER Ne a gh apr we} 6m / PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, oe ¢ é Sate : : : ee ’ ¥ = ~ i Sok, ‘ f 7 siiiiacithrdecthdelit nti cant’ die ee a eo ‘geeaed 5 ales adits iin Fe ach vi Fa ONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1959 Urgency for B sa v St. Augustine House Near Oxford Ex-Executive Heads Religious Community By LEE WINBORN ADDISON 'TOWNSHIP—Nestled in the hills southeast of Oxford is St. Augustine House—a Lutheran reli community, believed to be “the fimst of its kind in the United States. It was founded by a man who is devoting his life to Christian service and the de- velopment of the ‘“‘Congregation of the Servants of Christ.” Arthur C. Kreinheder was an ex- ecutive of the J. L. Hudson Co., Detroit, for over 20 years before he decided to fulfill a life-long ambition and study for the priest- hood in the Church of Sweden. Father Kreinheder, who is now 53, found the incentive to study theology after a visit to the re- ligious community of Taize, France, which he had read about in a national magazine. He spent Holy Week in 1949 with the Brothers of Taize. The. follow- ing January he resigned from his position at Hudson's and left for Sweden to study for the Lutheran priesthood. RETURNS HOME Six years later, in 1956, Father Kreinheder was ordained and re- turned to his ‘home near Oxford to take part in the establishment of a religious community for Lutherans. He offered the use of his home on Drahner road as a retreat house for members of the Fellowship of St. Augustine. The Fellowship was founded in 1956 to “promote interest, study and understanding of the religious life in a community for Luther- ans.” In a little over two years since Its founding the Fellowship has grown from 15 to ever 200 mem- bers. Included on the Fellow- ship roster are clergymen, temi- narians, deaconesses, pastors’ wives, students and lay people of various Lutheran synodical affiliations, ‘During our first years,’’ Father prayers of the Fellowship were an- swered,"’ Father Kreinheder said,” and a religious community called ‘the Congregation of the Servanis of Christ’ was. established.” SOME TAKE VOWS who have taken vows and two oblates who follow the life of prayer while carrying on their reg- ular vocations in the community. Oblates are not boung by the three vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. During our first years,’’ Father Superior Kreinheder said, ‘our service to the Church and its Lord will be mainly one of worship and work at St. Augustine House.” “We see many opportunities for service—great vistas for our work of preaching, teaching, assisting the poor, helping those abandoned by others and publishing booklets and liturgical materials," he added. dust recently members of this religious community offered their services to the new Community Hospital near Almont to do what- ever tasks are assigned to them. The daily schedule at St. Aug- ustine’s House begins at 6 a.m. with prayers followed by break- fast and morning chores. Prayers at 9 a.m. precede another work period, and there are prayers be- fore dinner at noon which is fol- lowed by rest. PRAYER STARTS DAY The afternoon schedule other work period and a meeting at 5:30 to discuss.and reeharse the liturgy for the following day, Angelus, Vespers and supper at 6 p.m. come before a recreation tim-, and at 9 p.m. the Office of Compline, a short period of prayer, completes the day’s activities, On Sunday and Feast Days the Holy Eucharist is celebrated at 9 a.m., and no work is scheduled, Father Kreinheder said. BUILD BIGGER CHAPEL St. Augustine’s House is on the Today there are two brothers, is) marked by prayer at 3 p.m., an-| [crest of a hill on 40 acres of wood. |hall. Last summer a larger chapel led land and has a smal] chapel ofwas constructed near the house its own at the end of the entrance|from a dismantled quonset hut. | LUTHERAN FATHER SUPERIOR—A former executive of the | J. L. Hudson Co., Detroit, Arthur C. Kreinheder of Oxford, gave | up his position in the ‘business world in 1950 to study for the priesthood in the Church of Sweden. After his ordination, he | returned to his home on Drahner road in Addison Township and | founded a religious community for Lutherans, said to be the only | one of its kind in the United States. BS ” ee * it might as well be a dog leash. THE LITTLEST PONY — William Hine keeps a rope tether on two ponies—mother and daugh- ter—in White Water, Ohio. But for the little one, and higher. But Baby weighed born, and was 16 inches long, 16 inches high. Now, a couple of months later, she’s fatter, sort of broadened out, even as a grownup, Farmer Hine predicts, she'll be one of the smallest ever. in at 16 pounds the day she was - 3 Million Dozen a Year Rotten Eggs Used in Food WASHINGTON (UPD — Ameri- cans are unwittingly consuming about three million dozen rotten eggs a year. *® *® * This statistic comes from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration which is trying hard to break up what one official calls “the smelli- The smell is figurative. By the time the spoiled eggs reach the ed on a wide scale throughout the East and Midwest. cording to FDA officials: Here's how the racket works, ac- Shady operators go around to Pea TE i 3 § : HT i 2. By seizing illegal shipments of eggs and bringing charges against the shippers. Fifteen seizures have been made in recent months in New York, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Newark and Nasliville, Tenn. BOSTON, Mass, “=k & The temperature hovered at the I I EDGE LOIS SEN Be Bad Roads Give Holiday fo Some _ Close Brandon Schools, Buses Unable to Travel on Several Routes Brandon schools in the Orton- ville area were closed today when. “treacherous roads made driving, hazardous,"’ school officials said. In the Rochester Community | on the side roads because of icy conditions. School District, buses were sent |the out but drivers were instructed to|Price — on domestic quota sales | masons that -are Eastern Star} travel only on the main roads, not |My — would be paid directly to' members will be guests of honor. Future plans include the re- modeling of the garage into a guest house for those who visit the re- treat. Now with overnight facilities at a minimum, residents in the neighborhood take in visitors to St. Augustine House for short periods of time. * * * Seminarians and other students are not expected to be able to make contributions other than their labor, Father Kreinheder said. Pastors and others who spend their time in study may con- tribute whatever they care to. savings of our members and by contributions,"’ the fz.cher superice added. Southtield Vote to Decide Bond of $375,000 SOUTHFIELD — A bond issue jof $375,000 for parks and recrea- /tional purposes will be put on the April 6 ballot if the city council) approves the proposal af its regu-| lar meeting Jan 26, Administrator Paul McNutt said today. A bond issue of $450.00 for the) same purpose failed in the Nov. 4 election because it did not get 60; per cent approval from the voters. ranch Universities Told by Hannat Mammoth Wave Sweeps Toward College Campuses By TOM DYGARD EAST. LANSING \W—The war ba- bies are growing up and going to college. * * * The mammoth wave of human beings that flooded the secondary schools now is sweeping on toward the colleges and universities. | If the bond issue is approved, no mill tax income set aside for parks | and recreation purposes when the, issue, Instead of Present Aid Programs } WASHINGTON Herman Talmadge (D-Ga) has proposed legislation to abolish present federal farm programs and substitute direct government payments to farmers for part of their output. * * * Talmadge's move kicked off a fight that most observers believed would last into 1960. ® *x * Administration farm officials are bitterly opposed to direct sup- port payments for farmers yener- ally, although they have approved this type of aid for wool growers. Most Democrat farm leaders ap- parently feel that while the ad- ministration’s farm program should be tossed out, it will not be practical to write a new across- the-poard program until next year. * * * Talmadge said in a speech pre- company. introduction. of his bill that the plan would abolish all ‘government planting controls and price supports. | ' | * In place of this sytem, farm- ers would be given quotas covering their individual shares of the U.S. domestic market for | farm products, ‘armers would grow as much jas they wanted to and sell their products for whatever consumers would pay. * * The difference between open market prices and 100 per cent of he ‘fair earning power” parity | Be Given Direct Payments jcollege pared for Senate delivery to ac- | | i | | | i (UPI) — Sen. the farmer by the government) ‘For “under the Talmadge proposal. No individual farmer would be! allowed to collect more than | $25,000 a year. | * * * j Talmadge estimated his plan) |would cost between $1,500,000,000 and $2,500,000,000 a year. Presi-| dent Eisenhower, in his State of) the Union address to Congress last week, estimated the cost of the present price’support program in jthe current fiscal year at more than $5,000,000,000. OES Members From Clarkston to Visit Others CLARKSTON—Several members of the Joseph C. Bird Chapter, Or.| munities on Initiation Night, in ob- | servance of Friendship Night, * * * Tonight, Oscar Reame, associate patron will visit the Berkley Chap- ter and take part in the initiation | ceremonies. * * Worthy Matron Mrs. Roberts will attend the Walled jLake ceremonies Saturday night leat proceedings as lelectra, Tuesday evehing. * +* '% - | Initiation of all new members of | eae Clarkston Chapter 294 will be! United before. How can the problem of burst- ing the seams of higher educa- tion be licked? Is the answer in bigger and big- iger universities, giant communi-! Senator Proposes Farmers ties of students? Or is the an- swer in more smaller colleges? HANNAH HAS SOLUTION Dr. John A. Hannah, an old hand at the business of mushrooming expansion, says the solu- in branch universities. every university there tion is Movies Arrive in Clarkston No Theater, but Youth Invited to See Films. in Church Saturdays CLARKSTON — Youth in the | a maximum size beyond which it is not intelligent to go,’ he said. Hannah, president of } State University, said he be- lelves the MSU cutoff point should be an enrollment of 32,- 000. fhe present enroliemnt is almost 20,000, better than three times more than the 1945 total The American Council on Educa-| and a 29 per cent increase over additional taxes will be required.|tion says there will be 12,283,000) the 1946 boom year in educa- A portion of three tenths of one/Persons of college age in the) tion. ie States in 1965-66 and 14... 304,000 in 1970-71, compared with! “We are supported only by the|city chearter was drawn up will 8,571,000 in 1954-55, When the cutoff point is reached -- when the campus is so large and sprawling that students can't cover the interest and principal re-| On top of that, a greater per-| yar, to elass in 10 minutes. when quirements of the proposed bond centage of the college-age popula- ine necessary administrative ma- ition is going to college than ever, chinery is “ay bulky that it defeats its purpose, when duplication of \facilties becomes imperative—the |school reaches a point of dimin- | ishing returns, ‘MUST BRANCH OUT’ | “The schoo] must either stop en- |rolling students or branch out to another campus,” said Hannah. i‘We can't stop enrolling because our society demands more and |more training for young people, ‘and it demands equal oppor- tunity.’’ MSU is branching out, Next | fall it will epen Michigan State | MSU officials expect 600 fresh- | men for the first year and an | eventual enrollment of 36,000, | The branch will be autonomous except at the very top and will | Rot necessarily be an exact im- | age of MSU, It is a matter of record that i\the area is lacking in higher edu- |cation facilities, Pontiac js a city of 80,000. ¥et neither Oakland County nor adjoining Macomb Co area may now attend a Saturday tY has a four-year college. night movie and see the latest films, although there is no theater in the area, according to Mrs. Arthur Thompson. In a move to ‘keep youth off! 'WHY A BRANCH? | But why a branch rather than a new, independent college? “One of the most important rea- the streets” by providing suitable 808.” said Hannah, “‘is that the project. © “Tammy and the Bachelor” will be shown at 7:30 p.m, Sat- urday night, in the sanctuary of the church after all religious | equipment has been removed. } | All youths are welcome, regard- Marvin’ less of faith or creed, Mrs. Thomp- ;son said. Also scheduled for’ future show- |and Mrs. Jack Sanderson will take| ings are “Private War of Major part in the Commerce Chapter ini-| Benson,” ‘Treasure of Lost Can-' guest-/yon,"” ‘The Glen Miller Story," |eTuirements of the world today land ‘‘Walk the Proud Land."’ invited t ts f | er enon i enn, | Prepared to set the student up for Circle members have rounding communities, new films for entertainment, the 2"e4 {s getting he school quicker |der of the Eastern Star will visit) Margaret Richard's Circle of the ‘his way. MSU has the adminis- other chapters in surrounding com-| Methodist church is sponsoring the trative facilites, the know-how, to \set up a new university. “The prestige of the degree is no small matter,” he added. “A student graduating from _MSUO will get a degree from | Michigan State University. He will have to meet Michigan State University standards, We have the prestige that it takes years to build, and MSUO will have that prestige immediately.” Pointing to the growing need for |e more people with post-gradu- ate studies behind them—Hannah jsaid branch universities are better held at 8 p.m. Monday and master they belong to a church or not, | 2dvanced education. to take advantage of the Saturday night movie project. All buses went out in the Lake At Michigan Township Assn. Meeting jOrion School District, and only ,one driver reported having dif-/ \ficulty when he skidded near an. ‘intersection and had_ trouble, |getting under way again. | Oxford and Romeo community to the Michigan Townships Assn.|‘Government closest to the people school officials reported that all| (MTA) have been urged to guard is the best government'—under- buses were sent out this morning | but a number of Romeo buses were late returning because of the. icy back roads. | | Lake Orion school buses dam-} jaged by vandals yesterday were | repaired in time to make the; school run.this morning. All students attending the Huron Valley Schools were in session to- day with the exception uf those on back roads who could not be picked up by the school bus. Tea Output Increases BUENOS AIRES — Argentina’s tea production climbed to 4,000,000 pounds in 1957 compared with a 1946-50 average of 228,000 pounds. An increase in plantings indicate future annual crops of 44,000,000 pounds. east WP Sa Perished | in St By DICK SINNOTT Sounds Alarm on Annexation by Cities LANSING (»—Some 500 delegates against attempts to undermine township government. The warning was sounded yes- terday, by the group's executive di- rector, Joseph A. Parisi Jr. The group claims membership of about 1,000 Michigan townships. Parisi said: “The real issue faced by the townships today is the issue of whether or not we want to sur- “We must be ever aware of any new idea, scheme or plan which— under the guise of so-called ef- ficiency and economy—transfers the functions of local government to the next higher level, or worse still, to the state or national agen- Parisi said the township adage— lines the fact that Michigan's 1,260 townships make up half of the state's population. “We must convince township critics,” he added, “that these people are no jess important than ee no Baptist Circle Sides Missionary Meeting WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN. SHIP — The Elizabeth Missionary Circle of the West Bloomfield Bap- tist Church on Orchard Lake road will have a missionary meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, A film titled, “A Day With the Bothwells’’ will be shown. It con- cerns efforts of missionaries in the | Beigian Congo. Visitors have been | cies." es as screencast a ee oe Ti BEE EOE Eg POINT BE Bb PTE, Bd wage invited to attend, Es eG, EERIE hott their brothers who Jive in the 194 cities of the state.” “The critics,” he continued, “have yet—except to abolish town- Ships and create big business—to come up With any constructive crit- icism which would be of benefit to township residerits.* Parisi said representatives five Michigan cities—Flint, Lan- sing, Battle Creek, Grand Rapids and Muskegon—recently organized “to study the possibility of finding a new and easier way to annex township territory.” the MTA ren- dered considerable assistance in 1968 to townships fighting annex- ation.” of | STUDENT'S ILL-PREPARED “Community colleges serve a great purpose if they do their job weil,”” Hannah said. ‘But too often we lose students who met the standards of their junior college. then found themselves not well enough prepared for advanced study on the university level.” A branch university would set the necessary standard from the start, he said, Hannah suggested that commu- nity colleges offer excellent oppor- tunities for students who plan to attend college only two or four years, and then quit. *® ¥ * | From the standpoint of operat- ing funds—the money that a state- supported school such as MSU must get from the state—Hannah pointed out that branches repre- sent a unified drive. “The branches won't be pulling against each other for the money |available,” he said, The need for a common goal and a unified leadership may re- “We won every election,” he, sult in one state board for higher added, The MTA is scheduled to wind up its three-day session today with election of officers and considera- |tion of resolutions. Molasses ‘education, but Hannah added: “Places where that has been tried show very little evidence that it was a help. But costs alone may lead us to that.” "Sea ik TR ELE meena | icky Ooze of Great Flood (AP) — It was Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1919. Clocks .ticked off the noon hour in Boston’s busy North End. A train clacked by on the over- head tracks of the Boston Elevat- ed Railway, bound for Charies- town. The conductor waved down to firemen at great molasses tank erupted. and his companions were A tidal wave of sticky, black dead. liquid spewed over two city blocks In all, 21 persons perished, 40 with such force it hurled trucks were injured and the damage ran House 31. egainst buildings and crumpled to millions, houses. The next day an investigation freezing mark. There was a hint of snow in the air. The everyday bustie of activity 8 feet wide—that towered over the Purity Distilling Co. It con- tained almost 21 million gallons of molasses. A’ guard shooed the -youngsters away, 5 muffled rumble as warning, the * public for the disaster. In his in- began. It ended officially six years tice Wilfred Bolster blamed the Mothers beckoned children to flee the fluid tury, slipped, rove . petent to determine structural lunch, One, Mary DiStasio, 11, slipped again, and were en Lawyers for 125 plaintiffs stee] construction. ran back to take another look at gulfed. charged the company had con- “As long as the public keeps the aweseme molasses task. The fire house collapsed, trap- structed a faulty tank, while the one eye on the tax rate and pre- A city laborer, Michael Sennott, ping two firemen for two hours. claimed it was the vic- vides iteelf with an administra- sat down to lunch with five com- At one point the molasses ran tim of anarchists, that a bomb tive department enly 50 per ceat panions in the nearby Public steel construction. had been placed in the vat. They qualified, it has no right te com- Works yard. He munched on a TOLL DETERMINED begets S eunen plain if it does not get 100 per ” ham. sandwich, he 8 oak, the welt 6 ws Os: o eaperegg 8 cent protection and production. Le et Little Mary DiStasio’s body was month trial during which 3,000 wit- found beneath four feet of mo- * * * ¥ nesses were heard, the plaintiffs A moment later, with only a lasses. The. Public Works yard But Municipal Court Chief Jus-~ agreed to settle the case for «was a blanket of molasses. Sen- $104,000, - ‘ Poe forge Z f if f ALF GOBBLES A MEAL — This Automatic Letter Facer stacks letters, scans them front and cancels their st Mechanical Postman Next? Robot ‘Alf’ Speeds British Mail outside London By TOM A. CULLEN | At Dollis Pll SOUTHAMPTON, England Where the Post Office has its x (NEA) — Having fathered the post perimental laboratories, the talk office in 1657 and given the world is all of helicopters, its first gummed postage stamp iniguided missiles to carry Her Ma 1840, Britain now leads the world Jesty’s mail in postal automation, with the ro-| Ag far back asx 154 a German bot postman just around the cor- enthusiast experimented here with ner lmat-carrying rockets, and brnest Actually, the machine has yet’Marples, the to be invented that can walk up General, claims that the idea can a garden path to deliver a Jetter, not be dismissed lightly, Marple but General Post Office engineers) yoes on to predict that the day are working on the problem. iis not far distant when a lettes rockel ried present Postmaster OPEN 9 T0 9 MEN’S LUXURIOUS ALL-WOOL SUITS 2 superb groups... DRASTICALLY REDUCED 24" REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE: REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE: REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE: REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE: REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE: USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN o+eNO EXTRA CHARGE! 200 North Saginaw Street back for stamps, amps. imarvels, open their ‘them. |man, |peramental | * faces them, counts them and ieorne! iplan to current use) posted in London at 8 am. willy nsitive be delivered by rocket in Aberdeen, Seatiand, at 1} am quietly * Ld * Meanwhile in Southwmpton, the * port of call of the big trans At lantie liners, the latest In au- [est tomated postal equipment is on ‘view for the world to goggle at. | In the past year postal repre sentatives of 28 countries have worn a path te the door of the Southampton post ofice, where the machinery is being tested, in ot ele ad," the mail is lively, | GIANT CAN’T READ Showpiece at Southampton is Alf;ter and the three-penny stamp of ‘(short for Automatic Letter Facer) ordinary mail, but this difficulty ‘a three-ton giant, six feet tall and '90 feet long, Alf stacks letters, | iscans them front and back for stamps, faces them, counts them, \then cancels their stamps. | He does everything but steam envelopes and read But if Britain is counting on Alf jto spare the postman his fallen) arches, I would say that the post- flat feet and all, will be; # bigh voltage scanner. with us for many years to come. \For Alf is high-strung and tem-|in Southampton, where Alfie is * “Alfie hates squares,”’ the South- x *« * jampton foreman confided to te, in explaining the machine's OP-|. ation in Southampton, These en- leration. I turned, half expecting to’ siie a postman, sitting at a key- ifind the 20-foot leviathan twitching board, to sort letters twice as fast ito the rhythms of rock-'n-roll, ' But no — the ‘squares’ that down to three times as many se- Alfie hates are square envelopes. | actions Forty-eight is the limit 'These flummox the monster which 4¢ the pigeon-holes a pos cae ‘js trained to grope for the 1ONB | peach conveniently whe ad edge of letters In ae {ace | Whereas the ily PE 144 therm with the stamps in the same . = The Post Office now has a|" eC standardize envejopes lithere are 67 different sizes in to color, car is placed in his hopper. * Nor can dummy mail be used to| Armand Seguin (1767-1835) discov- ‘New jered morhpine, which was isolated while dummy stuff in 1806. Quinine was discovered in foreman explained,|1820 by two Frenchmen, Joseph ‘When you compress the air out of Pelletier (1788-1842) and Joseph letters they become lifeless, and|Caventou (1795-1877). Later they the machines don't get the proper|also found strychnine and brucine. feel of them’ When Alfie wag first unveiled,|French chemist Charles Garhardt. machines like Alfie. CLEARANGE Dut Mle Vee spectacular... it : 7 rae aay to view the latest gnainen tee he was ‘unable to distinguish be- tween the two-penny stamp on newspapers and other printed mat- has since been overcome. Post Office engineers experi- mented for nearly two years be- fore they hit upog a method of giving the two-penny stamp a specia) distinguishing character- istic. The solution finally arrived at was to print on the back of the two-peny stamp a graphited line, which is easily detected by Nowhere else in the world but being tested, are graphited stamps on sale to the public, Electronic sorters are also in op- las by hand and to break them The next step will be Ye Com- pleat Robot Sorter which will read the addressed on envelopes, then sort the letters automatically. And not only squares, but Alfie|and the Post Office is now taking hites color postcards. Inasmuch as|a poll to determine how far the _ Alfie's photo-electric eyes are high-| public ig willing to cooperate in using this the use of postal codes. means to identify stamps, he goes) mad when a_ color post-| French Discover Drugs PARIS — A Frenchman, Prof. Aspirin was discovered in 1853 by THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 15,1950 o—— But Expects Competition ANN ARBOR —Assets and re- sources of the Great Lakes states offer a matchless opportunity for future growth excelling that of the 'past, the Great Lakes: Industrial |Development Council! was told today. “But,” Dr. Richard J. Lund added, “competition from other regions makes it imperative that all concerned with industrial de- velopmeat of the region use every tool within their power to do a really effeetive job of protecting, promoting and pub- licizing.”* Dr. Lund is assistant technical director of the Battelle Memorial Institute at Columbus, Ohio, a pri- vate research organization in many fields. His views were expressed in a paper prepared for delivery before some 200 council delegates. The council is made up of rep- resentatives from industry, trans- portation, utilities, banks, cham- bers of commerce, universities and real estate organizations in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and Wisconsin. Its No. 1 goal: Pro- mote further industrial develop- ment of the Great Lakes States. Sees Growth for Region “The Great Lakes states can’t afford to rest on past laurels— competition is and will be mighty keen,” Dr. Lund said, adding urg- ing regional teamwork promption at town, city and state levels. x * * In his paper, ‘“The Future of the Great Lakes States vs. Other Geo- graphical Areas,’’ Dr. Lund com- pared the five-state Midwest area with the’ Middle Atlantic, New/of the mineral resources total fo England, Pacific (California, Ore-|the Great Lakes and Middle At- South Centra] (Oklahoma, Arkan-|Workhorses such as limestone, sas, Louisiana and Texas) areas. [sand and gravel, salt and gyp- GREAT LAKES TOPS wun,” he said. * * * In nearly all categories, the| «1 js worth noting that our Great Lakes stood at the top, but reserves of these coe industrial strong and growing competition for| jinerals and coal assure ample — and expanded industry is com-|gupplies over centuries, while oil & particularly from the Pacific! and gas in the Southwest are bound a ae South Central groups,|t pass their peak and begin to : . , ,|decline much sooner, possibly be- The five-state Midwest group led fore the turn of the parca the others in total population in “While mentioning minerals I 1955, he said, and projections indi-| s,ou1d certainly mention water, cate it will gain 32 per cent more|ror here the Great Lakes region by 1970, compared with the n@-| sands far ahead of all others. And tion’s gain as a whole of 27 per/it-, a resource that will loom ever cent... more important on the industrial But, he pointed out, the Pacific |development scene in the futire.” | | | ei. | { | é ie will amaze the experts! VERY SPECIAL REG. $199.95 ANNUAL JANUARY Famous Brand Automatic DRYER BARGAINS ‘80° OFF SALE! RCA WHIRLPOOL 10 LB. CAPACITY AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER $239.95 a | 9, NOW ... $10 Down FREE INSTALLATION It boasts automatic pilot ignition... satin-smooth drying drum... positive heat control... big 10-pound capacity. Free delivery, 1 year service ... 90 days for cash. List Price General Electric 2 Heat Plus Fluff Dry and f 4 2 Q* COMPLETE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED Hundreds of magnificent worsted suits! Hundreds of rich, wanted flannel suits! Suits that feature comfort, perfect fit! Suits styled and tailored to perfection! Today's most popular and wanted patterns! DON’T MISS IT...1’S THE CLEARANCE EVENT OF THE YEAR! Reb Hl OPEN EVERY NIGHT TiLtit 9 PLM. GOOD Open Monday and Friday ‘til 9 P.M. 51 West Huron Street 10-LB. DRYER Lomaad $ Only Only $10 Down Including delivery and 1-year service. One heat for your regular fabrics .. . a milder, gentler heat for special care plus room temperature heat. HAMILTON Lifetime Stainless Drum DRYER BUY 148. | Model GAS MODEL $168 Installed Free Big 10-pound drying @rum can’t rust, chip, corrode or flake. Fabric set con- trol safe for all fabrics. MAYTAC High Speed Drying FAMILY $178". SIZE $10 Down 3 temperature settings for all types of Lr att ray aw te ng em- perature d and wash and wear for drying wash and wear garments with wrinkle-free results. QUEEN Z,, NEW LOW PRICE BIG 10 LB. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 VIPs Huai on foanmmeriation Riddle , | Mr. Commuter, Your Problem Rates Top Priority Ey uisite Beauty! y! | CHICAGO (AP)—Here's a hope- jdents and 13 mayors and other) Elimination of the federal tax) basis. He proposed the creation) A committee of 12 was appoint- (Richardson Dilworth of Philadel-! ful piece ‘of news for you, Mr. City officials—got together this on commutation tickets. jot a tri-state—New York, New| ed to meet within the next 30) phia and Raymond R. Tucker of | ly h MALL it y! Commuter week to exchange ideas on how to) Provision for deducting commu- Jersey, Connecticut — transporta-|days to start work on a program. |St. Louis. Cup if 2 : solve the commuter problem. tation fares from federal -income tion agency. , a eS | ae eed people in high places ’are! Most of the railroads contend they taxes. .* * *& ‘Railroad president .members of $2, 5 R Bill | : —— thinking of ways to help you. make no profit in operating the; Giving the railroads a better, One of the basic points in his| the committee are George Alpert! 00 Restaurant Bi | a Their main concern is to keep/commuter lines. ‘break on heir taxes, allowing, iplan is this: ‘of the New Haven, Ben. W. Heine- ‘Seems Just About Right on moving you from your home * ek ok them more freedom in_ setting, x ke ok ‘man of th Northwestern, Wayne! station to the big city and back! Here are some ‘of the sugges-|fares, adding or removing trains) «4 sharing of mass transit) Johnston of the Illinois Central, NEWPORT, R. I. &—John B_ again. tions: * jand closing unprofitable stations. deficits, where they occur, among/A. B. Perlman of the New York Dowdell, 21, of New York City, It's a bad situation and the; Government subsidies. | A new U. S. transportation pol-'ai! the jurisdictions of government|Central and James M. Symes of entered Wan Foo’s Chinese. res prospect is even worse. Motor ve-| New equipment to lure motorists | icy that would encourage the|that have a stake.” the Pennsylvania taurant and was hit with a bill hicle traffic s appreaching the|pack to the rails. : joer of railroads. | That means lecal, state and Ted-| k ke &® for $2,500 before he had even a saturation point in the scores of * * x * * eral governments. Mayors on the committee are: morsel of food. cites. And the main trend in. the A federal ca to buy catio Mayor. Robert F. Wagner of Some Eastern interests advocat- | John B. Haynes of Boston, Rich-, Dowdell came in through a 12- H “ation’s growing population is to-| ment and lease it to the rail lines) New York, one of the conferees, ed federal subsidies at the one-/ard J, Daley of Chicago, Anthony foot plate glass window with his ward’the huge urban centers. or to lend. them money -to buy/said the problem is regional and day meeting. Midwesterners gen-|J. 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CJ 100 for $1.39] 300 for $3.99 Ht si og LILLY'S TESTAPE $1.69 ad © WEST HURON ST. | © 4895 DIXIE HWY. / Next to National Store——An SOD $+ a Telegraph Rd. : | BEER, WINE, CHAMPAGNE . "MICHIGAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS’ e 148 N. ~cppheasl Neer Sears 24 N: SAGINAW Pontiac State Bank Bldg. = : = Un f } Se ' eS oe ane > Se 2 “ ae + ‘ ee our. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15,1959 7) ae der to view the latest engineering be was unable to distinguish be. But Expects Competition imarvels, tween the two-penny stamp on . GIANT CAN’T READ newspapers and other printed mat-| . ye | Showpiece at Southampton is All Hter and the three-penny stamp of e e S SO. Yr oO Ww t ey r (short for Automatic Letter Facer) ordinary mail, but this difficulty » | > e a three-ton giant, six feet tall and jas since been over ; , 19 ag yo { stacks letters, | * ’ ‘ ’ : 20 eet ong. a tie ee post Office eagineers expert | ANN ARBOR Assets and re-, “The Great Lakes states can't; group which gained 78 per cont iscans them front and back for, stamps, faces them, counts them, mented for nearly two years be- sources of the Great Lakes states seine = ot a ae ee ae 1956, 2 ex: ithen cancels their stamps. fore they hit upeg a method of joffer a matchless opportunity for com, - > ste sation ae ep Ad onether per | He does everything but steam| S!ving ay crea) ord * | future growth ee Oe the | ing regic 1 ratiemaed al (lew — r ew Aiea pen their envelopes and read special guishing racter- ‘past, the Great La! Industrial a ennsylv : jopen, bhai “eevee istic. The solution finally arrived \Development Council was told. *™ city and state levels. | New Jersey) he figures will gain them. + * ra 22 per cent; New » 16 3ut if Britain is counting on Alf; ®¢ Was to print on the back of (today. wae os pias ge. ——. ‘to spare the postman his fallen) the two-peny stamp # graphited “But,” Dr. Richard J. Lund In his paper, “The Future of the C rage = hap i ‘arches, | would say that the post-| line, which is easily detected by ided, “ de . Great Lakes States vs. Other Geo- states 21 per cent . i lman, flat feet and all, will be, * high voltage scanner. , “eompetition from other (eraphical Areas,” Dr. Lund com- same peried. i ay ee wcame| Norio te wal em im ie a’ Not me es For Alf ig high-strung and tem-|in Southampton, where Alfie is velopment of the region use Ca e , New a Gea Lowa maa ~ i peramental, { ested. are graphited stam England, ic (California, Ore- pera being t ; gra PS! every tool within their power to (25, and Washington) and Westjlantic regions, plus other basic . : - on sale to the public. do a really effeetive job of coun Central (Oklahoma, Arkan-|Workhorses such as limestone, | “Alfie hates squares,” the South- x « * protecting, promoting and pub- |... aos and Tacaa) og) ayes a SoS jampton foreman confided to Me,| Piectronic sorters are also in op-| HMeixing. Louisi areas sum,” he said. lin explaining the machine's OP-|.,.tion in Southampton, These en- Dr. Lund is assistant technical GREAT LAKES TOPS -_ * « leration. I turned, half expecting to! shle a postman, sitting at a key-\director of the Battelle Memorial In nearly all categories, the} «1 js worth ‘noting that our joni ese BE toot evininee twitching | hoard, to sort letters twice as fast| Institute at Columbus, Ohio, a pri-|Gtet Lakes stood at the top, but reserves of these basic industrial |to the rhythms of rock-'n-roll. hat/2® by band and to break them|vate research organization in many strong and growing competition 10F minerals and coal assure ample aut no — the ears that’ down to three times as many Se-|fields, His views were expressed "™ and expanded industry is com-| supplies over centuries, while oil [Alfie hates are square envelopes.|iectiong, Forty-eight is the limitlin @ paper prepared for delivery|"6 Particularly trom the P acific| and gas in the Southwest are bound | These ew the mons ag the pigeon-holes a postman can/before some 200 council delegates. ogy oie South Central groups,/t pass their peak and begin to 3 ‘ lis trainer th) grope or se eac conv ient! hand, by : ‘ ALF GOBBLES A MEAL — This Automatic back for stamps, faces them, counts them and edge of tetters in order to tace ach i eae We to 144 [bien oe © wee ond The five-state Midwest group led oe oprah arene be Letter Facer stacks letters, scans them front and cancels their stamps them with tne stamps in the SAME selections, portation, utilities, banks, cham- ell amie in hes — In “While mentioning minerals I youre’ The ; ia Ottice ervelopes| The next step will he Ye Com-|bers of commerce, universities and cosy gteal cee Pe gdeggied iced should certainly mention water, Mechanical Postm: Next? pan ao Gaon vince jn (Pleat Robot Sorter which will read|real estate organizations in) ) 97" compared ae the na, {fF here the Great Lakes region ecnanica ostman 1 . I" rere ae ent siz pthe addressed on enve > then|Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois don’s ens as ot 2 per stands far ahead of al! others. And ee . ‘current use). ‘sort the letters automatically. and Wiséonsin. Its No. 1 goal: Pro- cont hole J J COLOR POSTCARD A MENACE This will involve coded addresses, mote further ustrial develop- : more important on the industrial O ot ee S ll IS Ql! And not only squares, but Alfie and the Post Office is now taking|ment of the Great Lakes States. But, he pointed out, the Pacific idevelopment scene in the future. hates color postcards, Inasmuch asa poll to determine how far the aa a _ Alfie's photo-electric eyes are high-|public ig willing to cooperate in it’s a resource that will loom ever By TOM A. CULLEN i} At Dollis Hil outside London posted in London at & am. will jy sensitive to color, using this the use of postal codes, SK \UTHAMPTON England where the Post Office his its ex. be delivered by rocket in AGCTOCCH ans io identify stamps. he goes| Fe 4. = Imenti aborautories, the talk Seotl ind, at JT] am ale d whe of a ’ (NEA) — Having fathered the post periment il daa quietly mad when a color post-| office in a we given the ie is all of helicopters, rockets and * w * card is placed in his hopper. ‘French Discover Drugs | its first gummed postage stamp in| guided missiles to carry Her Ma Meanwhile in Southampton, the | *\ * * | PARIS — A Frenchman, Prof. | 1840. Britain now leads the world Jesty s mail port of call of the big trans At | Nor can dummy mail be used to Armand Seguin (1767-1835) discov- in postal automation, with the ro-| As far back ay 1934 a German lantic liners, the latest in au- ‘test machines like Alfie. “New ered morhpine, which was isolated bot postman just around the Cor-| enthusiast experimented here with fomated postal equipment is on pail is lively, while dummy stuff /in 1806. Quinine was discovered in| @ ner, mail-carrying rockets, and Ernest) Slew for the world to goggle al. \, dead,” the foreman explained.|1820 by two Frenchmen, Joseph - Actually. the machine has yet|Marples, the present Postmaster In the past year postal repre “When you compress the air out of Pelletier (1788-1842) and Joseph | to be invented that can walk up General, claims that the idea cun- sentatives of 28 countries have letters they become lifeless, and Caventou (1795-1877). Later they, a garden path to deliver a letter,/not be dismissed lightly, Marple worn a path to the door of the the machings don’t get the proper|also found strychnine and brucine. but General Post Office engineers|goes on to predict that the day Southampton post ofice, where the feel of them.” Aspirin was. discovered in 1853 by are working on the problem. iis not far distant when a letter machinery is being tested, in or | When Alfie wag first unveiled, French chemist €harles Garhardt. Famous Brand Automatic DRYER BARGAINS *80" OFF | RCA WHIRLPOOL 10 LB. CAPACITY AUTOMATIC SS GAS DRYER List Price $ te $159 NOW ... Only $10 Down FREE INSTALLATION It boasts automatic pilot ignition... satin-smooth drying drum... positive . heat control ... big 10-pound capacity. VERY SPECIAL Free delivery, 1 year service ... 90 days REG. $199.95 for cash. = eens i CLEARANCE } Blut Mle We spectacular... it OPEN 9 109 will amaze the experts! MEN’S LUXURIOUS ALL-WOOL SUITS 2 superb groups... 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Air fluff for tumbling without fhe00D HOUSKEPINGZ., 51 West Huron Street | FE 41555 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL @ PLM. 200 North Saginaw Street ele : f THE NEL ERERS THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 VIPs Huddle on Transportation Riddle Mr. Commuter, Your Problem Rates Top Priority CHICAGO (A4P)-—-Here's a hope- ts and 13 mayors and other Elimination of the federal tax!basis. He proposed the creation| . A committee of 12 was appoint-;Richardson Dilworth of Philadel- : ful piece ‘of news for you, Mr. city officials—got together this on commutation tickets. jof a tri-state—New York, New) led to meet within the next 30} | Phia and Raymond R. Tucker of . Commister: week to exchange ideas on how to; Provision for deducting commu- Jersey, Connecticut — eee idays to start work on a program. , /St. Louis. Many people in high places-are reside Ried sacra! Assi retinas fares from federal ‘income tion agency. x *«& “& lost 0! rai s contend they’ taxes x * * - Railroad president members of, thinking of ways to help you. jmake no profit in operating the! Giving the railroads a beter| One | of the basic points in his the mada snag it Alpert. $2,500 Restaurant Bill Their main concern is to keep|commuter lines. break on heir taxes, allowing plan is this: ‘of the New Haven, Ben. W. Heine- ‘Seems Just About Right . on moving you from your home x * * them more freedom in setting 3 * * |man of th Northwestern, Wayne! "station to the big city and back) Here are some of the sugges- fares, adding or removing trains) «A sharing of mass transit/Johnston of the Illinois Central.) NEWPORT, R. I. John B > again. tions: and closing unprofitable stations. | deficits, where they occur, among} |A. B. Periman of the New York Dowdell, 21, of New York City, It's a bad situation and the, Government subsidies. A new U. S. transportation pol-/a)) the jurisdictions of government |Central and James M. Symes of entered Wan Foo’s Chinese res-| prospect is even worse. Motor ve-| New equipment to lure motorists icy that would encourage theithat have a stake.”’ ithe Pennsylvania. |taurant and was hit with a bil) hicle traffic 8 approaching the back to the rails. growth of railroads. That means lecal, state and fed-} * * * , }for $2,500 before he had even a} saturation point in the scores of e+ *« x * * eral governments. | Mayors on the committee are! imorsel af food. cites. And the main trend in- the} Aa federal agency to buy equip-/ Mayor Robert F. Wagner of) Some Eastern interests advocat-| |John B. Haynes of Boston, Rich-| Dowdell came in through a 12- * Mation’s growing population is to-| ment and lease it to the rail lines| New York, one of the, conferees,'ed federal subsidies at the one- lard J. Daley of Chicago, Anthony) feet plate glass window with his ward’ the huge urban. centers. or, to lend them money to buy/said the problem is regional and|day meeting. Midwesterners gen- | J. Celebrezze of Cleveland, Frank) ear. | ‘So 29 inefi — 16 railroad presi-imodern rolling stock. should be handled on a regional/erally opposed them. iP. Zeidler of Milwaukee, Wagner,| The $2,500 was for damages. | Ly quisite Bea ty! | g per (ality! Umericas Finest DIAMOND VALUES @e¢eeeCCHCC SC HKEHE HCH HEH HEE SE #5 oP ete ret enero - = ea pectacular Bri SELF-SERVE uper DRUGSTORES 4 COM og | © DISCOUNTS brn SY BAD ON NATIONALLY FAMOUS DON'T Go On "BEING FOOLED ‘About. a OLAFSEN VITAMINS Hpi aELEMENTS aif AYTINAL Free! 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T°] Vitamin E nese 4 Wee, i Therapeutic B . uate, Mx a cn wot o0 | i Campion Tablets STF 100 Gerets “ama 2... SA) trates ta nen GERIATRIC | , . \TRIC v e Oleum Percomorphum ihe | 125 — I Re a ee $ 45998 Reg. 10.58 Nutrition aid for NII oncencrared A and D drops. 50s [] 100 for $4.19 folks over re . : ~ (4) "A GBM GERIATRIC Elixir = 28-100 Rybutol*:::, . DW ae pace nese a Do Your Nails ? ' $ 6 79 5089 ~ Fortified! For folks over 4. 1240.., Peel or Chip... & sess GERITOL TABLETS 4 97 ee i z Value or ; QUID ae Dp Ce - Break - Split - Crack HAVE STRONGER MORE VIGORETS GLAMOROUS NAILS IN | —_<.ciiiatesaas SES = erence ar matrenen in relehon tp Vigor ets n mcicated for the fragiment or prevention ef @ defaancy of ane or IPA Vitamin B-] THIAMINE CHLORIDE If, due to a deficiency of Vitamin B-1 (Thiamine) in your Capsules mere ele se diet—you are a victim of chronic fatigue, jittery nerves, di more oF mmnerols gestive upsets If you have little appetite, suffer from spell For Problem - : i f - . } . . ca : 5 : : = —— more Vitamin B-I to your diet. These prices are the lowest P _ cd MULTIPLE VITAMINS of depression or sleeplessmess——ask your doctor about adding Free! Regular to be found anywhere x 29 Bottle of 30 | 25mg Tablets 100mg Tablets | io | Vitamin A Vigorets ove [J 100 for $ .99 | [] 100 for $2.99 Seve 83¢ ]° Toe ne a ou’ VITAMINS al Ola: Beron nN [1] 300 for $2.69 | [] 300 for $7.99 30c¢ Bottle ca: on pecs 89¢ MINERALS | dasty "adult requirement "Sasty "adutt "requirement . 0 on $2.39 (SUPT $795 F _ wag Everyday LOW PRICE on INSULIN U40 Regular 10cc .......... $1.09 U40 ‘PROT-ZINC | hoe oe ae r ee | Pore 5 Make Our Store Your Vitamin VITAMIN. C 250mg (5000 Units) Per Tablet pay Elsewhere Up to $5.79 4 3 U0 PR orang Se Our Low Price... - USU NF eee [) 100 for $1.39(] 300 for $3.99 $1.69 e © WEST HURON ST. | © 4895 DIXIE HWY. 24 N. SAGINAW Corner Telegraph Rd. , SEER, WINE, CHAMPAGNE ~ Pontiae State Bonk Bldg. “| 1 ee eye toe ee eee ee eee $19e LILLY'S TESTAPE | e 148 N. SAGINAW Near Sears 5 | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 Reds Will See ‘Oklahoma’? | | | | U.S. and U.S.S.R. Plan Movie Swaps & MOSCOW (UPI)—Russia and the done in the cinema?” |the Russian people have had United States will soon face each| The Russians, like people every-islightly more direct access to other in yet another arena—the|where, doh’t like to be told what/American thought and opinion. movie theater. they should think about the outside/ Now they not only read Nikita In a few months, if all goes well, world. They prefer to see and/Khrushchev’s letters to President Soviet citizens will start queuing up judge it for themselves. Eisenhower, but also what the at box offices throughout the coun-| The next best thing to traveling |PTesident says in reply, and in his try to see the first American fea-| abroad ts to meet Western tour. (°*" words. ture films to be shown here pub-! ists in Moscow, read non-Soviet | Some are able to glance through | liely—and by mutual U. S.-Russian) newspapers and magazines, hear “America,” the monthly illustrated | consent—since the end of World! overseas broadcasts and see for- magazines distributed here by the, War II. | eign films, State Department. Others have ex-| x * * ; ; _._. |changed words with one or more of | . ° J Store A ticket costing five rubles (50, in the past two or three years, the 5,000 or so American tourists | Self Service Pic N Pa Y cents) or less will buy them 4) props . cmmemm \who have visited Russia since 1967. | glimpse into the fields of “Okla-| [> esis | ~~ «*¢ * homa,”’ where “‘the corn is as high) | None of these pleasures, however, as an elephant’s eye,’ into the) lquit (matches) thatl ol seeing ae Bronx, where a butcher named American film | “Marty” found himself a_ girl friend, into Ernest Hemingway s| story of an old man’s struggle with the sea, and into other phases of American life, Simultaneously, movie houses fror. New York to San Francisco | will herald in lights the arrival | of seven Russian films all pro- duced in the post-Stalin period. The Russians have seen them | before. They remember Deanna | Durbin in “One Hundred Men | and a Girl,’ Sonja Henle in ‘Sun Valley Serenade,” Walt Disney's “Bambt’ and “Snow White,” maaae PINT SIZE ie Mie ‘ : * t : . ~ oe te Ds 5 = CANNON _ J! i I | Charlie Chaplin's early tnovies A 1.69 and even the exploits of Tarzan. REGULAR $1.6 Occasionally, one of these pid eh} |American films, some of wh lwere purchased during the 1920's The American movie fan's diet will be further enriched by the] land 30's and others taken as war - d: Bolshoi Theater dancing “‘Swan| itrophies in Germany, is shown on ee Lake.”’ by the ‘'Idiot’’ of Dostoyev-| lSoviet television. . . but so seldom} oH SOFT BIRDSEYE : sky and by a drama of wartime lthat it can bardly be said that} # % PIN UPS ’ Russia, ‘The Cranes Are Flying,”’| ‘American films play In the Soviet | A 5 FLOUR SACK which won first prize at the Cannes Union, | International Film Festival | Ever since the inter-government- | lawaiting the day when the first of} 27'x2P" Pure Finish Papi te why be Taso pettiness) )) 7) DIAPERS KITCHEN \'x" Jy | al cultural accord was signed in) = aa a , Ithe 10 t .d States feature movie KE YOUR NEX Washington last January the Sovict| SPACE CHAIRMAN — Rep. |N¢ ited) States Teatine mow ce TAKE YOU T ; Absorbent; Comfortable people have been asking Overton Brooks (D-La), 62, has purchased under the ead eoie 1 itie ti adie), meee) y Reguler ) s : te ont has Its lere in Moscow. | “When are We ever going to see, been named chairman of the me mis has lls) pcem are ee | CUNNINGHAM'S a $1.49 Velue oat 38" your postwar movies? What is a) new House Science and Astro- | | A Vetoes Pochage of 6 cultural agreement for if not to nautic Committee. Brooks says | A qualified pharmacist must he | DRUG STORES! é ae ae ' bring the best of Hollywood to us the United States must move jable to compound and dispens« and show Americang whit we have! faster and further in the effort ‘about 40,000 different items Ws WANS: OY : —— a as M OUR DRUG SALE-DISCOUNT PRICES _ 1” LYDIA PINKHAM COMPOUND... °1'° | ee se | [1” ONE-A-DAY VITAMINS... | - [98° DRISTAN TABLETS someon .... 71° _ [17° WHIZ HAND SOAP CAN .... 2-27: NE ANTISEPTIC .....10z 99 er = . A at G SIZE ONG an Be PERCALE COVERED HALEYS | i= fi =-PLUMP PILLOWS . PEE owes WS ez. ge | MO. 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HI-POTENCY RAINB CANNON MULTI-COLOR STRIPE : “es B-COMPLEX | COMBINATION @BATH TOWELS qv : | VITAMINS BOTTLE AND 20x40" SIZE oy : | shes. 1.99, $s] 33 SYRINGE Flufty Soft, Absorbent aah : \ ottle o : ® | Reg. $3.89 Ae 3 9% | stag ee, SQQO6 | ite rice $287 Pig roe : o ~ =. a . _ | FOR YOUR BEAUTY CARE ! | Display Samples | DINETTES | r ome 7 a a . [Slightly Marred | $ 3 9° 5 | One-of-a-Kind | Ree, $69.95 to $119.95 All to Go at Close-Out Prices! Chrome black, new bronzetone'! Tables have marproof plastic tops, chairs upholstered in long-wearing plastic ONLY 10% Down Delivers Any Set! si ¥ 3 FROME. POA, : x $2.00 Size REG. $1.80 SIZE REG. $1.49 SIZE REG, $2.25 Size REG. $2. rs CHARBERT |Toni Adorn} LADY Nutri Tonic | ESTHER | Cor OeNe Het Sere y FOUR PURPOSE Home G& up Non-Greaty CREAM Permanent’ $qi9 “yoy SCHRATZ % at Qos HALF GALLON SIZE BATHFRESH (Hawes HANKSCRAFT ELECTRIC Be | 2 Ae De t) SS Bus ’ : | | ESR Choice of Fragrance < VAN) § 95 ~ RAS 3Q¢ NG? vee 5495 Qh ma Ba Batch eh th. he Bi __FREE! QUICK CHECK RADIO & TV TUBE TESTING — TEL-MURON OENTER | DOWNTOWN PONTIAG | DRAYTON PLAINS SHOPPING CENTER | NORTH-END SHOPPING CENTER | Telegraph at Huron |- 29 N. Seginew 5060 Dixie Hwy. : Rochester | : KINSEL DRUGS | | | Huron at Saginaw (Downtown Pontiac) — Miracle Mile Shopping Center See eee RSLS HSE HERHS RAO REEL BREBEEEEE aa hs 88 N, Saginaw St. (Ne * w Location) FE 2-0179 ee ee te wes ye) j \ oo THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 | SALE DATES e JANUARY 15th to 17th Hygrade HONEY BRAND READY Th . . — “SMOKED ar | be. te ° 4 to 6 POUND AVERAGE Vegetable Shortening SLiceD BEETS © 2 4Y* WE TO LIMIT QUANTITIES HEINZ TOMATO Pie APPLES. «1 Giant 3-Lb...Can FOOD CLUB, ga = 5 INSTANT or DRY ¢ MILK 3s: O9 Our Finest! Fresh GROUND BEEF 49: Dinty Moore na Shedd’s PEANUT BUTTER APPIAN WAY , > s. Dinty Moore PIZZA MIX 3” no ST = TOP FROST Frozen Zi cz 5 PERCH or COD TOP YOUR CHOICE FROST = :fittcygus FROZEN © MIXED VEGETABLES FULL gue Gas HOT DOGS =- r ) (“2 A SALE $1.00 SIZE SAVE 7s ONLY Bs 5 0 é | uz a Gold Standard Tall Can nq) sor oe 30 eel ve. © D=O=MAT Si We ine 2m MM. ANE AE fi COUPON samme | a Redeemable at People’s thru Saturday, January 27th _ FREE 60 GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS — With This Coupon When You Buy SEALTEST 1 GAL. ICE CREAM B This coupon has mo cash vaive. Cive to cashier when she checks : your order. Limit of 1 to a customer. oe 8 ee eee ee a smal \ / * SBN in 3 By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor (to cool. | Let's get mid-winter meals out of] sige together flour, baking | the doldrums. An interesting des-| powder and salt. Beat egg until | sert will do much to keep the| thick and lemon colored; add family happy (even if you do have| het water gradually, beating | | constantly. Continue beating | to have budget menus for a while’ white adding sugar, Fold in va. | to recover from the holidays.) nilla, bran and sifted dry in- | * * * gredients. Dessert should complement a Spoon che sauce into 1-cup| meal, not just add to it. lf, for amard eupa; cbver with sate a Rial mee 5 uit (Bake in moderate oven (375 de- s$aiad, j f j 9 Se dessert ‘50. If the main course of Brees) DiNtencreireceat Rach your dinner is a little on the light! 4 side, make up for it with a heartier, dessert. | * * * | Cherry Dowdy is probably the most economical of the three des- serts we're presenting today. You may use either frozen or canned cherries. The batter is made de- liciously different with whole bran cereal, heat, stirring constantly. Set aside * ’~ This second pudding, also a fruit one, is made like the layered \cookies 6 many of us baked for |Christmas. It is another pudding to be served warm. This time the fruit is pineapple. Pineapple Toffee Pudding Vy cup butter or margarine ly cup ene sugar ; 5, cup flour Cherry Dowdy | a ecae 2, cup sugar | l cup brown sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch | I teaspoon baking powder 2 cups pitted sour red cherries, frozen| 's teaspoon salt or canned 1 tablespoons dete 3 \ ‘, teaspoon vanilia « cup sifted flour Sassen | + cup hot water » cup sugar | Cream 14 cup butter and '4 cup Wicagpesn veniiia fievering |brown sugar; blend in % cup flour. ‘, cup whole bran cereal 'Pack evenly into bottom of an 8x&x | Mix together sugar and corn-|2-inch pan. Bake in a moderate ! starch: combine with cherries ‘oven (%50 degrees F.) for 8 minutes Bring to ful] rolling boil over high, While erust is baking, beat | ' x ‘4 gu 1 saspeon pening powder i“ > ahceped aleendsior pecans ear = 4 cup well-drained pineapple tidbits ; | ding and eat it too. f : f - x : q ; iw te : i i pa eireey Ce ee ; i) Z : | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 j ee | :F No Danger at All omae trom atkuraie te citer eolheaver, Sted, Vinegar . [Deets ae a ee Aluminum cooking utensils are foods or water in the utensil dur-| Piayored vinegars to use in herbs as tarragon or basil the eggs until frothy and gradually (pieces. Whip cream until stiff; fold|omists. If aluminum pots and beat in 1 cup brown sugar. Mix the dry ingredients and blend |cereal. Yield: 6 servings. perfectly safe to use, say Michi- gan State University home econ- in sugar and chocolate coated| become colored after cooking in them, you may rest assured that ing the cooking time. making French dressing offer in- pans| Adding ‘salt to egg whites short-/bought or made at home. Peel] Next you stew apples, add ens the time they must be beaten|and slice a few garlic cloves intoja stick cinnamon for spicy to be stiff, a cup of vinegar; cover and re-i flavor : \ ——— in along with vanilla, coconut, nutmeats and pineapple. Remove crust from oven and) pour batter over evenly. Return, to a slow oven (325 degrees F.) and) bake 35 minutes longer. Serve | warm, plain or with whipped |, cream, Serves 6. Since whipped cream is a naugh-| ty word in the vocabulary of any-, one on a diet, some of you may, shy away from this third recipe. | So let's explore the ways you can cut down on the calories and still! make the dessert, FRESH DRESSED STEWING HENS BAZLEY'S EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Not a Weekly—Nor a Monthly—Nor an Annual Meat Sale But Everyday Low, Low, Low Prices 2 19% You may use the packaged dessert topping found on any grocer’s shelf. You may whip | chilled evaporated milk, You may whip nonfat dry milk. None of them will give exactly the same | flavor as whipped cream, but | you'll be able to have your pud- in dozen cartons and are guaranteed fresh. OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. 78 N. SAGINAW Choco-Wheat Dessert 1 cup (6 of.) sem)-sweet chocolate pleces 1 cup whipping cream 1'4 cups whole wheat shreds 2 tablespoons sugar Melt chocolate over hot but not boiling water. Add Krumbles, mix- ae a 33: ing carefully until cereal is well-| coated, Turn out onto waxed paper or buttered baking sheet; let stand; until hardened. Break into small VRESH CARROT TURNOVERS — Carrots are the last thing one would expect to find in a turnover. Think how atfractive these would be Oe eee a) SLICED BACON Ibs. POT 49 bo” *] " ROAST We Reserve LEAN CENTER c | ie Limit PORK lb. | Quantities - CHOPS CUT 69 “NONE HIGHER” le | um / |S) ——— ei Py) on a winter menu. The cheese sauce zips them : up pe with fish, these would be good for | SWANSDOWN Cake Mix Friday nights. | @ CHOCOLATE @ WHITE ae @ YELLOW @ BUTTERSCOTCH Carrots With a Difference Mincemeat Cookies Get Put Into Turnovers ~ Quick Easy, Good The versatility of vegerables {s'crust, The turnovers Important at any senson of the with a cheese sauce : 1 fee; , | = year, Unfortunately too many in | Fresh Carrot Turnovers dividurts have an aversin to them are werved There's an old saying that it's bad luck to count the things you, make. That's a good motto when | ng. $100 18 medium freah carrots It's up to the cook t make vege-! iimch boiling water In saucepan you make cookies, so beloved of, ; | easpoon salt | > tables so appetizing looking that! 1 to tablespoons butter or mar-/Old and young as a treat for their) LOOK at t everyone wants to eat them. ee icaseee cu eelt ifriends. Just keep the cooky jar) * * * | ‘ teaspoon ground black pepper full, with cookies tbat are eany | . Whole carrots, partially cooked, | eel mix to make and wholesome, and | are wrapped ina biscuit cruist and| ‘+ teaspoon powdered dry mustard jeverybody will be happy. \ 1/16 teaspoon cayenne pepper Cheese baked, Just a bit of dry mustard, sauer gives interesting flavor to the} ida) ee Cetialee jm -| Wash carrots, leave whole and of place In a saucepan with boiling ja |water and the I teaspoon galt. Cov- oe im er and cook until carrots are per tially tender, about 12 minutes Drain, Season with melted. butter or margarine mixed with the \ tea spoon salt and ‘s teaspoon ground | New Cooks Can Fry Wee Pies black pepper. ipackage directions. Add mince | as ‘meat broken into small pieces. | Blend biscult mix with milk ise well, Drop by teaspoonfuls two “ Unless you're a most unusual * tinches apart on greased baking J mustard and cayenne pepper. Ro , | “new bride, chances are you're not ne cay Force rel sheet, Bake in’ moderately hot) out Into a 12x6Inch rectangle. Place 3 seasoned carrots dlagon ally across each square, Bring two opposite ends of square over top and secure with a toothpick. vet quite at home at the range. | However, if the thought of bak-| ing pastries and pies throws you! in a tiezy, relax — you can bake to your heart's content without) even Hghting the oven | Bake on a greased cooky sheet On top-of-the-range cookery has/if 4 preheated moderate oven (475 udded a glamorous new scope of degrees) about 20 minutes. Serve) culinary art — even such things with Cheese Sauce, Garnish with le 1 package cooky 1 # ounce package condensed mince even (100 degrees F.) and about | 12 minutes. Makes about 48 cook. | Cocoa Whipped Cream New and Unusual A 9-ounce package of condensed! ince meat added to a package| cooky mix makes easy cooky-| r fillers, with fine flavor and wd Keeping quality. Quick Mince Meat Cookies mix | Meat Prepare cooky mix according to s, three inches in diameter. | | | | | | i Chocolate — flavored — whipped Hamilton Grade A LARGE EGGS > his SUPER-SPECIAL Pure Homogenized as cakes and pastries can be|paprika, Yield: 6 servings, “haked’” with cool convenience! * * * rizht in a skillet in a matter of Cheese Sauce minutes, | J tablespoons butter or J tablespoons flour iM cupa milk 44 teaaxpoon salt ‘Me teaspoon ground black pepper cup grated sharp American Margarine Taken from the new Skillet ; Cook Book, first complete cook book devoted entirely to skillet (cycigay cieene cooking ever published, this ree: | Melt butter or margarine in a Ipe for Skillet Turnovers, which (milk and seasonings and cook, stir. are small crescents of filled pas: (ring constantly, until thick, Stir in try perfect for desserts, snacks (Cheese, Yield: Approximately 1% or the main part of a meal, Is ‘cups, easily made with prepared ple ¢—————__—— crust, Then the crescents are filled and fried in pure vegetable oil to a golden turn — three to four minutes an each side, Try them with your favorite fruit or meat filling. or Skillet Turnovers Use regular ple crust or biscuit dough recipe or prepared mix; roll out % inch thick, then cut Into 4-inch squares or circles, Place a large spoonful of filling on one side of each square. Lightly dam. pen edges of dough with water and fold over; press edges together with fork, Fry turnovers in 1 to 1% inches of pure vegetable ‘oll heated to 375 degrees F., until golden brown on both sides, 3 to 4 minutes. Drain on per towels, Keep warm while fiying remaining turnovers. Serve fruit turnovers with syrup, -popfectioners’ sugar or sour cream —havé” meat turnovers with hot types of fillings should be cooked i previously. . skillet cooking. Look for cookbook jeream is delicious as a frosting on SKILLET TURNOVERS — from the recipe in the new Skillet Cook Book, the first book ever published completely devoted to angel food cake or as a topping for puddings or cream pies. To make chocolate flavored whipped cream, whip until stiff 1 cup of chilled heavy cream and % cup confectioners’ sugar blend ed with 4 tableapoons cocoa and a dash of salt | The term ‘“shallow-fat frying” means to cook food in from one to three inches of hot fat, HICKORY SMOKED, LEAN SLAB BACON GG, By the Piece PREM Van Camp's Fiesta CATSUP 2 i 99 Pressels Skinless HOT DOGS Grade } Lb. 43° Van Camp's Pork & Beans offer on vegetable oi] label, Store Hours: Mon., Twes., Wed., Thurs, Sat. 9 to 9 BLUE BONNET 49° gun, $00 FROSTY SEAS FRESH FROZEN ‘BREADED © SHRIMP "49° DOMINO PURE CANE SUGAR FROSTY ACRES FRESH FROZEN FRENCH FRIES qT Pgs. 7" MORTON'S FROZEN NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE Chicken--Turkey--Beef, Each DINNERS 4g: Lg. 6 Oz. Jar 83° NESTLE’S CALIFORNIA NAVAL ORANGES Shedd’s Peanut Butter, farge 2-Ib. jar .....,....., SMUCKERS' STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 3 iar $]00 Sunshine KRISPY CRACKERS V-pound box ....... Friday 9 te 10 «— Sunday 9 to 6 \ Ever-Ready Cocoa .b. can | SUPER yf MARKET @Beer © Wine © Liquor to Take Out | Corner Baldwin Ave. and Walton Blvd. Phone FE 2-5192 +5 DAILEY’S Hamburger Dill Slices MARIO MANZENILLA OLIVES We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 EN AN EVENT LIKE THIS COMES ALONG YOU ARE MIGHTY LUCKY! 38 YEARS WE ARE CLOSING OUR DOWNTOWN STORE SORRY All Sales Final— No Exchanges, No Refunds USE YOUR LION CHARGE IF YOU WISH THAT IS THE PL EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Ladies’ Car Coats $ 6” Regular $13. *. ae quilted lined convertible Better hurry EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Men’s Suiting Slacks S 90 i—* oe and eel — for these stock. vorucen: want to py of these. EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Boys’ Winter Jackets and _ewens wa fl 4° the greatest bay } buy yet. ey fo for EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Girls’ Winter Coats $16 Regular to $29.95. All wool, ee eee oe slack endenentannes EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! oaths SHOES $6°° =e egies ana $12.96. } By One Half OUR STORES. SAVINGS WILL BE SENSATIONAL! AIN AND SIMPLE REASON FOR The LION’S STORE CLOSE-OUT SALE With a Big Sale At Both Stores to Reduce Stocks SAVE UP TO 70% WE CAN’T HAVE 2 STOCKS IN OUR MIRACLE MILE STORE, THEREFORE MUST SELL HALF OUR MERCHAN- DISE! IN ORDER TO SELL OUR TREMENDOUS STOCK OF CLOTHING AND SHOES IN THE SHORTEST POSSI- BLE TIME, WE ARE HAVING THIS SALE AT BOTH OF BE AT EITHER STORE EARLY! THE HURRY! HURRY! ale Starts Today! Both Stores Open ‘til 9 p. m.| Pur aw Street, the Lion Store will serve the public in our new above. To accomplish this in the shortest possible time, corer in both our downtown and Miracle = Stores, “fk A Few of the Thousands of Items For the Entire Family now on Sale After 38 Years on — ee (Mile Store the sale will be con ‘ Reg. $3.98 Cirle’ Dresses ..........-..05.- $2.90 4 LADIES Reg. $5.98 Girls’ Dresses .............54. $3.90 BOYS 4 Reg. to $2.00 Ladies’ Jewelry ...... PC BOO ar Ln pbospencopene $6.90 Reg. $24.98 Boys’ Jackets and Suburbans $16.99 Reg. to $5.00 Ladies’ Jewelry ....... To shee $3.90 Reg. $19.95 Boys’ Suits... 7... .--e0e-.. $14.90 Reg. to $7.98 Ladies’ Sweaters... 24.0.4. $3.99 Ree. $5.98 Sub Toon Skirts... $3.90 Reg $24.95 Boys’ Suite ....... $16.90 Reg. to $12.98 Ladies’ Sweaters ........4.. OR ape) ed Lee Bat noteak) BO 2 2IEE Os $3.90 Reg $14.98 Boys’ Sport Coats ........... $9.99 Reg. to $14.98 Ladies’ Sweaters ........... g7.99 «Res. $3.96 Girl's Robes... soo $2.90 Reg. 39c & 49¢ Boys’ Socks 3 for $1.00 Reg. to $5.98 Ladies’ Blouses ....... 2 for $4.00 Reg. $4.98 G == Girls’ Robes ........... $3.90 Reg. 75 G 79c Boys’ E-Z Underwear. 3 for $2.09 Reg. to $7.98 Ladies’ Blouses ........ 2 for $5.00 Reg. am cote CEN. hee Reg. 89¢ G 95c Boys’ E-Z Underwear. 3 for $2.59 Reg. 49c Ladies’ Panties ..3 for $1.00 Reg. $2.98 Girls’ Sleepers ...............$1.90 Reg. $1.29 Boys’ Ankle Drawers ........... 99¢¢ Reg 79¢ Ladies’ Nylon Panties ....... 2 for $1.00 Reg. $6.98 Sub Teen Bulky Sweaters ....... $4.90 Reg. to $5.98 Boys’ Cord Slacks .......... $3.99 Reg. $1.59 Delight Form Bras ...........-. $1.29 Reg to $7.98 Boys’ Cord Slacks .......... $4.99 Reg. to $22.95 All Weather Costs ........ $13.99 : MEN ‘'S Reg. to $5.98 Boys’ Dress Slacks .......... $3.99 Reg. $1.00 Sitk Squares . . 4% Reg. to $7.98 Boys’ Dress Slacks .......... $5.99 Reg. to $69.95 100% Black Apecs ‘Coane. ‘$38. 00 R ‘ Reg. to $11.98 Boys’ Dress Slacks.......... $6.99 Reg. to $17.98 Winter Storm Coats ........ $9.88 ha 65 eee feponna Toten Us censbe F400 Reg. to $3.98 Boys’ Sport Shirts .......... $1.99 Reg. $29.95 Ladies’ Knit Dresses ......... $11.99 Reg. $75 Men‘’s Cashmere Blend Topcoats. $51.00 Reg. to $3.98 Boys’ Sweaters .........-... $2.99 Reg. $5.98 Ladies’ Skirts ...........005- $3.90 Reg. $24.95 Men's Sportcoats ........... $17.00 Reg. to $ 5.9% Boys’ Sweaters ........... $3.99 Reg. $10.98 Ladies’ Skirts. ..........000. $5.90 Sie pe apy ee keocteaas, ocr Grito: Reg. to $7.98 Boys’ Sweaters ..........-. $5.99 Reg. to $14.98 Ladies’ Skirts ..........44.. $8.90 Reg. $4G $5 Van Heusen Colored Shirts... $3.39 Reg. $5.98 Ladies’ Nylon Slips ............ $3.99 Reg. $4.00 Van Heusen White Dress Shirts. $3.49 SHOES Reg. $3.98 Ladies’ Nylon Malf Slips....2 for $4.00 Reg. $5.00 Van Heusen White Dress Shirts... $4.39 Reg. to $8. 95 S Ladies’ Besttorm Girdles ...... $3.99 Reg. 2. 50 Men's Ties A OA A SAO A OROS © $1 99 Reg. to $8 98 Ladies’ Lide Cirdles DF beeeeer $3.69 p04 $1 50 Men's Pioneer Belts SSAA OOS Ss $1.19 ‘ Reg. to $14.95 Men's Portage Shoes SOs ooo $8.99 Reg. $7.98 Ladies’ Wool Flannel Slecks..... . $4.99 eg. $8.95 Men's Dress Slacks ............ $6.90 Reg. to $14.95 Men's Jarman Shoes ....... $8.99 Reg. 10 $17.98 Seecial Group Lodies’ Dresses. $9.99 ' R&B: $9.95 G $10.95 Men's Drow Slacks... $7.90 Reg. to $14.95 me Shoes ....... $8.99 . Reg. $12.95 Men's Dress Slacks .........$10.90 Reg. $15.95 Men's Perto-Ped Shoes ...... $11.88 Reg. $10.95 Men's Knox and Mallory Hats... $8.99 Reg. t0 $19.95 Men‘s Porto-Ped Shoes ... $15.88 GIRLS’ Reg. $15.00 Men’s Knox and Mallory Hats. $12.99 Reg. $10.95 Men's Low Work Shoes ....... $7.99 hae es pote wanescnee 3H 506 Boies Reg ee Men's Porto-Ped Work Shoes 4 ; : & ajamas ....... i . $3, gs Slippers Fleece Lined. .... Reg. 39¢ & 49c Girls’ Anklets ........ 3 for $1.00 Reg. $1.98 Men's Sweatshirts .:......... 3. 9 fag Sin.95 peste-Pea Shoes .. “Hass Reg. 59¢ G 79c Girls’ Anklets ........ 2 for $1.00 Reg. $16.95 Men's Winter jackets ........ $7. Reg. $15.95 Men's Ripple Soles ........-. $12.88 Reg. 39¢ G 49c Girls’ Underwear ..... 3 for $1.00 Reg. $4.98 Men’s Hooded Sweatshirts .... . $3.99 Rea. $9.95 American Girl Dress Shoes ...... $4.69 Reg. 59 Girls’ Underwear .......... 2 tor $1.00 Reg.’ 5c Mow’s Socks... 0.0.0. c cece cess Be Reg. $13.95 Maturalizers ... 0.000000 eee $7.90 Reg. 79 Cirle’ Underwear .......... 3 fer $2.09 Reg. $1.50G $1.95 Men's Socks .......... 68c Reg. $11.95 Enna jettich Shoes ........... $6.85 Reg. $1.98 Cirle’ Slips . error Reg. $1.50 G $1.95’ Men’s Socks .....3 for $4.00 Reg. $10°95 Ladies’ White Nurses’ Oxfords. . $8.90 Reg. to $16.95 Girls’ Cor Costs ........., $10.90 . Reg. 55¢ Cushion-foot Work Socks .. 4 for $1.00 Reg. $9.95 Ladies’ Losters, Seddias, Oxtords Reg. to $19.95 Girls’ Car Coats ........... $14.90 Reg. 69c Men's Work Socks .... 3 fer $1.79 ond Commels .. 6. ove epics ccinsvess $6.99 Reg. $16.95 Children’s SnoSuits .......... $11.90 Reg. $4.00 Men's Sport Shirts 0.00... 0..0. 2.90 as Children’s Poll-Parrot Shoes... .. $4.99 Reg. $19.95 Children’s SnoSuits .......... $14.90 . Reg. $5.00 Men's Sport Shirts ............. $3.90 MP4 7.95 Children’s Scamperoot ....... 4, $3.99 Reg. $22.95 Children’s SnoSuits ....... $17.90 Reg. to $7.95 Men’s Sport Shirts ...... oes $4.90 Reg. $4.95 Girls’ Patent Leather Sendals..... $1.99 Ss : \ a} thing ong shes EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Men’s All Wool Finer Suits 1 Regular $50 and $55 Clipper Craft and other Famous Brands. EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Ladies’ Sport Oxfords $999 Regular $8.95. From such famous makers as Golo, American Girl and Friendly. EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Ladies’ 60-Gauge, Cc 15-Denier Nylons 3 Patr $1.14 Regular $1.00 first quality, fa- mous name at a ridiculous price. EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Men’s Winter Jackets $ 99 Regular $16.95 with quilted or foam linings. +e EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Boys’ Polished Slacks 1" 99 R $4.98 fi — Sollee axtion tev oe n EARLY SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL! Ladies’ Millinery cok aoe to $8.95. PP ae Hn entire =*|2 another we Time 2 this! ee | re deni pit ete setars | ; i | 1.02 Shore = who shall ac ' of consoliéa- 2 Waterford Township rns $ io co sees eee Oe ae lowing three days ae 4 ww Chemi-| 2%, sign, signal, or other 4 Market Pushes |si.'=' ais 2.0 homes are Borglorized | so. m+ cs eee re made on ‘ ,|eal. Co, reports a megs An act of ion ; qd iba news remained good. aaeeaaet morstinn, between 4\$28.028,044 for the six months end-|-saae *,%, ee qe * * rare eerel samtetiane Nene OF lant Wer, %, or Sdk i dake he ee oe for New High © | resem scama te ra at Sua gael ly at the start resumption ) stolen, ! OF d "s ee, i 2a 2 for the : act! 8, fy rn Codyen |, April $1 tll ern, Sait 8 pred ay eh es ’ ’ ’ procurer, ri NEW 208k © ee | Kaaitabi Telephone, Gopdyear,| Te home of ars. Joseph Bocson!. 21 — higher—$341,881,379 ade iterize be, deemed eet ae k Stocks ket continued to recover General Dynamics, Union Carbide, ir eae Manson St. | against $337,203,102. ordinanes. ud oadle vf New York Stoc pushing toward another record) ener 0 Central, Phelps Dodge|°" | piggy bank containing $25 in —— Section 2. All ordinances and paste of Grain Prices RK E | S | | Quotations) high in heavy early trading yond and Anaconda. coins was reported stolen = — an ta, 189. echt Jed. sieciae cael axe GRAIN sia (Late Morning Pivotal issues rose from Hubert ‘Carlson home at J A tnd after tis fn al CHICAGO, den is (AP) — Ope fes iter decimal point ave eighths) 1 4 | point or oa, An astort- . (shoals St. « ance Relative to| effect yan trent Comm: of grain p oo top prices | Piaure was unchanged or s ~ mous," by edging to seid Bie Commis- When coe Looe ott The following are Me #4.6/ment of stocks was P 1. os dare BP City 1089. Mar. eee: iv id May . cece. > * covering sales of rae otal jAdmirel .. .. ni — aL. @1 slightly lower. : Automobile thefts. were slashed Ort City of Poogisc, Ordains: mon pale ete B ily gehen oy :, 183% J Shae nec ht to the Farmer's) ,), peduc .... 87. 444 of | Fraud Deca-| Section. nded by Mayor Hay 5... rou; May .. showed a string one amen Sep i aR Rye .... 136% [Produce broug’ ers sold by! aited ch... 0462 Kelsey t . 1 | Most motors . ax if 80 per cent in yer i te ee et, “annie ADA R. EVANS. Cora (old) — “ May . 121 (Market by growers a kage lots.|aiued girs... $43 Kennecott, . 198 plus signs but gairs were small. tur by ticketing motorists who left) aaing estes tee uemeded bastion 30 46 ee : 1.104% tholesale package chal .., 39 rske, BS .. 324 ear sales ran ag/tsid « : Jan. 1 : aoe eae rn gen wha furnished by rey iid 2) Kroes, M"| Reports were of rising DETROIT w — Two brothers bys tn their cers. Fines [ey ee ee 21% Mar. oo... 9 15B M {\Am Airiin .... Le 105 | in December, taxihigh as $300. beens arkets, as of) Am Air) | lass of a $250,000 income uly 2. cee. PAM Mey “990 \Detroit Bureau of \A "500 HR GN&L 13}! Metal Cmax was up| convicted 1.16% July. osees Am Gyan “ pote 4) American tenced to prison P ccscesse Sep veers. 10.008 Wednesday. Am Motors - 424 Lock ¢ tive dealings. Pfizer|fraud were sen . < ' Am Mew iter! jadvanced more tha a point, terms January 15, 1959 : . lam Tel a& Tel 2351 Lork arg ies t California |day in U.S. District Court. duce . wid Superior Oil o : lodge Calendar = ——Detroit Produ [Aaecnae #3 Pooh gf oy 50 ponte Sellowing wide a a New Issue FRUITS Armco ‘o. 283 Martin Co .. i Judge . 5) t& Co. 2? tr ance recentl Special Farah Pea Po Oe | appies, Delicious, bu, 2... 042 | Atchison ee ee ae ‘ jadv re 7 . & leased Edward Zacharski, ban " Interest Exempt From All Present Federel ; is cron ae weed ‘ : yan, 16th, 4390 P. Pi. Ww Work in PG: VEGETABLES 118 Belt « Me ges Mer hae mt Cit Financial, which weathered epee: his lag Norman Income Taxes and Michigen Intangibles Tas Lote otchkiss, WM. | pects, ed, bu cg ¢ “( 43.6 Ulnn MeM 1166 news| but 3 sete s SOO RE ne Air Minn Mé& sure yesterday on 4 degree. ie Ps dege Pee salts Se if rawr ieee io woe =f (ees Fee Slee Go will re-enter, O. Zachary, 29, — ange 1 . 00 000 : l f bent ioc ce be Brist'My. |. 768, Muciler® Brass 3 ; \new car financing, rebounde ar Cireuit Court of Appeals. ‘ ’ 1 eeceouno ris c 29 Ss. ' News in Brie ery ea fe den TR deh te Matra ny than 2 poi aviation wan ott| a on School District = Parsnips % bu. re "P40 Burroughs 39 = -Nat Cash North America t pair was Clarkston Community : 1 aapenenn: Potatoes (bag) 60 ibs dos |. 150 | BNFrgue 83.6 Nat Dairy ... 494 of a stretchout {n cer-| The Detrol Thieves broke Into a rabbit hutch |Potstoes bag) 60 Ina }80/Galum & 182 Nat Vana. 143 (tO reports ; guilty by jury Oct. 31 of conspiracy kle nty, Michigan roperty of Eugene Kuer- { a eat pascal No. 1 8-Ib. ‘ant te Campo Boup . oes hal ech . 99 \tain Aircraft programs. eat freed in Ga tax re- Oa nd Cou . = Leach R4., Avon Town-|Fyrnipe topped, bus Gan Pac”. 207 Nort a West) Ob8 The market, brokers said, was 1 acheme J : nd 3%% Bonds bitz, 2628 2 Capital Airl.. 21 we am Av... 404 resiliency fol- t . 4%, 44%, 4% a b ship, and stole 10 muskrat nae Poultry and Eggs Corre: Cp... 2 Nor Pec sae ap continuing | to show ) F , Oaklan Case, JI ed j Nor Bla Pw 23) ee it was reported to the eter Tra 883 Onio O41 - 41 1, ac shown ante Sheriff's Department yes- DETROIT POULTRY “ ee Re, a Ovens Ae a" ao Dated November 1, 1968 Due June J ’ : —Prices pald Chrysler 4 Pac roe | 5 epres terday. pa pee ‘orb. ‘Detrolt, for No. Sip aes oe H : depres eel id This District, 50 square miles in — P - ia a : me orm Due 1 Darrel R. Perkins, 21, of 57 Tre- Ge A smith 19-20; light type, hens Coe A fe be eel De’ OM sents the consolidation of some ten fi Amount Coupon Due Yield ig ent St, was found guilty of reck-| | Mss measr Ube ecient “Rocks 23 Colum Gas #53 Beary JC Nee. school districts. It lies eleven miles northwest $25,000 44% 1959 2.00% a driving today by ae i ce ponies things 3 Coneum Pw nF Sadie 101 8 \of Pontiac along US-10, the main highway 25,000 434 toe ae lum, fi Ios. 21-22, duc Cont Bak . 679 Piiser " ' : d Sagi- 5 1 2.50 - Judge Cecil McCa A sir sacs Cont Can. Phelps D ..... 644 a ing Detroit, Pontiac, Flint and Sagi 25,000 414 196 . the probation, an DETROIT EG Gont COP&s . 131 ff 9g connecting . ; s ; j ah So gene the Oakland DETROIT, Jan. 14 (ari He me state Cont — ooo at Phill Pet... rt T H E 1 9 5 9 naw. The District is situated in the heart of 25,000 44 1962 eas orderec . i case , ‘on , Fo - 16. . an- 963 ui County Driver Safety School. erases #—Grade A jumbo 47; extra dium corn Pd eee tee RCA - i FORE CAST alee anes whieh ae Smelly nee f ees ay asec 3.00 : ie geese Curtis Pub... Repub Bt! ., 146 inal ular for 30,000 . - eg ational poi isa wid. ave. 4 Ms large ne-40 wid. Ger "£36 44 it i becoming increasingly pop ’ 15 Rummage; C ord. J 16th. 34; small 32; grade B iarge ere. i ex Drug .... ; try; it is 4\ 1965 3. Bt , Jan, a7; 8 D t Bais... Reyn Met. 134 Ae ranging in — 30,000 TO AM. ‘Bat. 17th 8’ to ti AM SF ree Me necks PC een 38 Ray Dut Mee ‘AILABLE NOW! attractive year-round residences , ging 30,000 41 1966 3.30 Clothing for all. ra $1), medium, ‘nee ds sores wr Chem i v4 by sway a .. {13 a outloak for business, fi value from $15,000 to well above $50,000. pipers 4 1967 3.40 ‘ ba t tr ‘a . Rummage sale, 128 W. Ser] Commercially pleiregs 43%; extra phere’ L.. % Scovil ur M4 nance and the stock market 4 farmin g areas within the 30,000 4 1968 3.50 Saturday, January 17. 9-1. " large vate 30" ates 2d" ed ros it} ateanitle ay Shell Os. ae in the year ahead . of alee, There as 6 nd tly some small 35,000 4 1969 3.60 wne—Orade A entre large 38's 30. By ‘ “316 are; Tr) ted in cost-of-living, 59 boundaries, and recen' 4-36 Ye; email 30. |p; jute vas GBinclair expecte : nds per one for 19 District 0* «3.70 ey i 34; median 3 ia M ae old foecony ..,. «. 461 t. industrial pro divide pe ] tin, there. 000 4 197 * ene) 615 employment, d Industrials, 25 Utilities fied industry has been locating 35, Head mer Mad. 174 Sou Pac .... 584 tion, farm income an for 65 Indu: " ted in - diversi 1971°-72* 3.75 Nebraska Man to np k Erle RR oc Bou Ry... a ‘ duc s of the nd 40 Rails are presen PPROVED AS 70,000 4 4 ivestoc Ex-Cell 24 Sperry Ra |). 21 many other vital area a for quick refer- BONDS HAVE BEEN A 197374" 3.80 : roup Ford Mot Se bid Brand 624 these are just table form for q THESE ICIPATION IN THE 80,000 4 National Retail G DETROIT LIVESTOCK Freept Sul § Std Ol] Cal... me economy ... d ELIGIBLE ae ane Ls *.17* 3.85 —8 0 193 4 8 discusse ence. 1975°-77 . (ORK w—Nathan J. Gold.) pernorr iar) —certio—Galadle 600 | rruh’ tre $ oatd On hs |. bee: ee eee torceutel This comprehensive report is STATE LOAN F eee 8*-80° 3.90 - NEW YORK é Se wag |#teers and beiters tp poe or weak tol\Gen Dynam oe Blevens. JP. 97 in a penetra oe tar the yours FREE. No obligation, sea-annea interest (June 1 and December 1, on 145,000 3% 1978*. : Lincoln, Neb., r ae a iy National |t0e" Jower, then easly ree aioe Wan 2 anon. 8 | the Ifth consecutlve year by a just return the coupon below Home g log Co ig em Pazsble at The Detreit Bank's pe 314 1981°-84° 3.95 . resident of the lasses scarce, unchanged. few eers| Gen Milis 7 gather P vali twelfth a / See conan, Hall Merchants Asn. Wednes soto E acta go na ear Mole Hs Bree A] ntionally Omi oor wpe Tevet ti “Optional June 1, 1969 ) jeorge W. Dow- | 26.00 heifers 27 .00-27,35; scattering) (on ime 49) Ayiv ad and Kesea the —— : day, He succeeds Georg 760-800 |b 4 offerings 24 00- Gen Tel 63) xas Co . he 1959 Forecast is off r we ) : d to low goo latter ire 46 Tex O Bul 217 The b- Nephier Co. Tork rlotte, N.C. stander ws 1900-20 80, Gen H ked with su Cc. j. dy of Che * * *& elas pala Tater asarinaiy | nt) Goebel Br at Hearn Rear “. ee pacha to help busi- 818 Comm. Nat. priest Descriptive Circular on request ‘ * y i i Ty Gold Js chairman of the Gold & |éutters 1890-18 “tho mined Not and 3 giet wer 120 ‘ went Cen i nessmen and investors inj pam snd me Free 189 ne , 10) ws stom m o 17.80: | Gr 2 king importan sion i ; : in Lincoln strong. 40" bar dat Sy few up to 17 19. #0 ¥ ohias 1946, making it is Name, First Co. department store 180-250 Ibs 1 adeg }-3 mostly 1 an 4 & % hy 2 pn 6 in the months ahead. and has long been active in NRMA 3508 weld a8 no sy ig Greyhound | ei x tim BI written clearly and simply addres Braun, Bosworth & Co. 4 icp nd 2 of u s : ted earnings and eee 2 affairs. ae ha “tna 2 390-200, ie he Holland H mit Frust ie the estima’ City and St Bi & Co. - Inc. (Incorporated) : 960-300 ibs - +18 60 Hooker C F The association reelected Alfred | joe. 100-600 we th Deady. chetes yu Cont i i eel | McDonald Moore & Co. n. vice president and) (reriime 3800.41 00, standard irquoted| {ne hans. bbe Yan Maal # } . : : C Thompson, f Miller &/6 90/34 00. utility 2000-26 00. cull q [Inland BU 148) Weal Aon 43 PH e a general gare = Va chine | eee ee ia cos) Rinvanteniciamee| roe an wie lad e e 19 es — ~ chmon ' Sheep—Sa hter : ‘4 ‘ Hi Rhoads. i Bichmon committee. | steady. iced, choice 20°00. Toad. choice Hey ee mi Woelworth en Hours 9-5 CRY. ain & Decorating 20 man 0 lambs aroun¢ ba 115 Ibs BhaT a J. Gordon Dakins was reelected 137 0 A choice shorn lambs No 2\{8 Paver _ od Jinth Red Ii [res M1 Business Services 13) Painting & Decorating 20 ie easier aed MOR Te oiceaa Ge Bete eer) callie: omevee| (Mt tle, Upjohn ‘ Male 10; Work Wanted naw A-) PAINTING & PAPER HANO- executive vice p | peite nter ewes 600-11 90 Help Wanted Female 7; Work Wanted Ma DAY | ALL MARE OF FOUNTAIN PENS | Ai PAINTING, & PATER, | = sia . ss i “ Ip Wanted Male 6| Help Wanted Female 7| Help Wante. E RIONT PAR.| ¢ FT. MUSKIE WANTS WORK OF | IRONING RE GUAR | flow othte, Ganon Pring “Pa er removed FE ri ] <—L ne ~— : | In Memorlam = 2) Help Want: xxexern | BEAUTY FORM Ores Senerat house we wo coo meat fate ihr Pe “eae or i a pee Orrice Supply 30, «| SE PAINTING AND, PAPERING. ee Po PLL 5 NT —- BOO a 5 Oo Pi ng. a NER z h Notice Se eee eee we a expe | Sensations! new home ccanane ret Must live in MI 6. v "ENTER WORK, NEW = MIMEOGRAPHING, T¥ BLOOMFIELD thee CLEANERS, A-) PAINTING. INTERIOR - er Lob ea and father, William shay capable, general books unit needs saleswomen Abe ered: _fet aa WI FOR MSU en WORK ay CARPENT fetaria! service EM wad Wall and windows. terior. 10 per cent disc for cash. a ee a A Harty Me pernedliamey 1a: perroll & Sara ee dct High commissions p Jus chance WOMAN care. Live in, MAple 2 ra x PRACT ae ox 00. | 2-163 RE- Guaranteed ere est rE teens. Ln, . 14, 1980, JAM ary 13, Je 1 nent pleeeen ham | xpan opera: 580, y) imate Ress. ms ‘ Winding. 218 E. | AAA AtN . ei A" ibe Reni Or aoa tot tant tare | Ret aps STs Lint Fer cetecd tnetg ea | Base GT, NOURE, | “foie: trv opus Tar nod ue cousrtort PE pain | Bur, tnt, fending. 218 “Ge soars, experience, Reasonable Bylvan Lake. age 0@: "Poner: be- yes said lesen 7e had ceased to ese BE BALES MANAGER | _M! ay TiauT Hovsg.| More & child care. Live In Surges om, SEEPEEPER en and litt) Aces, 7 , Ly, ED 5 AND Tee SORTING WEAS band o i ABSIBTA ; || Sy 1OuT Mi 60044 et Wo! re ._L, Nelson, aM oats LE : sored ee ay A eet | borers we hace tat you were gone | “fot ine of the o ides materia: panvarrrEn FOR Uh 2 a old | WOMAN WANTED GENERAL and wee rae ate, aes e R REPAIR. Immediate service. m a ] Geo Chins (Rent ae God saw that you were suffering see Nise itt ue cor vleceit Vic Lk Onkiand Hel Reasecicaning & sundry, Ove a ba Work puaranteed FE eo PAPERRANGING | — Navarre, UL raaere nist helen. Mrs ceonies And the hills were pore fone Cadet y erect ese in con it Drayton Plains. OR 110. ater trans. 6 days Some nighls. A i Seeds a specialty. FE oe A A oHINe eae rep. Stephen . ‘ re d you ear —_ nees st [inva iBetty). MacDonald: ‘also, And blapered peace, ual thice a| how) Ponling “Pres Box’ #1 S| Gscntae FEkGoa DRY | WHITE LADY Witt REFER: nae Maniey Leach + Begley OF |. PAINTING. PAPERING & WASH- ora by nine randehildren. Sadly anaes y poe Bee tee = ESTABLISHED REAL ; = COUNTER pPEReon only ates “ar iE for care of med Bo and Ts Saar aaa sepa all cher WE SERVICE BE washers.| ing. Guar Reasonable jee wt! he daughters an | 4 2 addition éleanio ; rk fs ringer urdey Jee i at euaeral Mooel in oY BVviKO “Ww EMOR as Heep salesmen Prenty of pooh g Kaye nitminggam _” eee SAR EEn SOs ssaene oa WELDER JOUR. ; DA OR iu ree uct siRVICE i Television Service 22 the C J Godhar tat-| Charles HM Crow who floor time In new houses ———* == a aera rk, days, 34 Phone UL FE Sos. : FE 2-402! ma Uromats Chane fa zt ofan‘ win at | PRD IS. INC | CAR nen mronre, be LU | SHER heaton TOR CT ee rome yew | WEES Uae Soe, | moreno © ALL TV SERVICE CALLS | AN. Comerery ao ge eats at ine we canes Lord. thy ieee dad ; [A OR 31031 te in eo ee rm Ad Utica. “une ee ae CARPENTER WORK — | NEW 8 days, PE RONIRGS PICK-UP Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 revi Pifayal teetronis cg. state after me. | Bul all ie well that's de | - _. = = COUPLE ere ahan Beef Buffet. repair. Kitchens . WASHINGS, IRO T TV tans e J odhardt Puneral Ho \Gadlv missed by wife, son and fam- | COOK . KEEPER 2-0 dell Sere rv be 7 7 @ deliver, Pontiac-Drayton = ALTERATIONS.| ~ Day OR NIGH re $8 Reere Rarber yy ——— | RY | Me ale boa Il time for both. Live apie, M Ez WORK WAN Bi tee OR 3-9992. “Ladies ecialty. FE FE 5-1206 or A RY GIRL, 7, FACTO a1 to 60 Fu 300 mo; Wed ADULT FEMALE @ Td CARE CARPEN tes. OR | _8rea, OR Lent yh A sp M, P. 8TRA FUSON JAN. 14, 1960, Ba be be. F neral Directors 4 an premises. Salary § : hildren. Day sh rf cde free estima ing Service 12 : RVICE, AFTER- 2077 Pisher, Walled La d Flora un LLL Ae Branch lade cc ting epptiee: Good food: Pleasant i-rm. fur- ie amall ¢ tre salinprset tf Build ng MEN'S & WOM- | JENS 8 SE alls. FB 2-04098. loved daughter of Ceeit ghiep of mn ons Appiv 10 to 1136 a m pished ‘heated apt (No ehiidren) Must Mh0ss bet 6 30 em. and (H SALESMEN. BALES ALTERATIONS OW MENS. WOW: noon & evening calls. Prot nnn Putngn nad Mie busie| SPARKS-ORIPFIN onpe a9na) yr" Huron —~ | Lge closet space bath, adjoining * CAPABLE GALESNEN manager. REMODELING CARPENTRY. en's clothing. FE 20620. | 23 Mre Fenay Puson and Mrs Susie Thoughtful Service PED ee ME! elec range.re g-sink gare tor! § “a. ; Beacasr wien ales management of & maton $0044. | _Reasonadl + KING Upholstering Hhodes, dear atster of Cee BTATIO ATTENDANT M = A ted sion; Telephone; unit Fam ees with « ualified nate ne ry NS, A pees Seprai chrey Senn V hees-S Siple Oehameslly Inctined icra) Sieckanp. tecees: oeel ut: | Wonderful Depet erate pales 8 sly veriteg. bellaee | (op Oy get hr a OE boys anita, FE AL'S UPHOLSTERING tnd” Geraldine Puron oe oor Map ou Beaton eee Ht} NO DRIN (on ty ret. many ane pass career or ee eran oa - moving tee plete line of mason-| 4-2196, or FE G AN FE ¢- n = aple 4 a . . UFHOLATER. ia Mpa a neste : tee asf te of at FAM LOOKIR rae a: ag a erences ices madi _ an, 9 oe t} “noon. = " ia x Ree ers. 0 job) _TY. PSE BUILDING SERV alterations, Mrs Bodell. FE ERELE oer Lake Rd, EM Lake bulance Service - Pian lar type of man whe 4-6667, .F jugs 191 4-1 COMPLETE BUILDING SERV. 4-0053 Coo! : Bird Funeral Home. wea Ky |am ted In the usual tun of the AED. WOMAN WOR GEN. | too small. Reas. MY3-3101. ice. ity work, Itcensed. Penta tne ‘AILORING, AL- a . Interment in Ziel ON AYYRLE, Th HOUELIRY At MOaPHnE” aah gist? bul one bi oe Ge — housework & childcare. 8 Help Wanted 8 EXPERIENCE aa Rad BOweER C h CONSTRUCTION co. ere Tt i feemals éene THOMAS UPROLSTE ane Ee ee, ‘De Birmin male “OATS fice. tne who he e_ promotional Mat drive owe, cap. ‘MAytuir KOR| emt, FEM Gus ee & FINISH FE CTH | in m peme 1 FE 80455. AiNG. m “FE R888 Lawrence Bhafer @ pro- by NTING WOR rin A SJ EA at ogre | PUNBRAL ie mote thin” ne Nat any | CURD GIRL WANTED” MUaT Wu | ARB FOU, wanrin cet Sata | TAs EQUTPMCRNE TOR TEPER Be REag | Meet gros , aero Lost & Found 24 ler of Fred and- Pri-| Drayton Plaine ——— growth is unparalicie i dacendacia ly in or. Mave opening for m wage | 8nd ext A 1-820. TANS, o: Funeral service will be he} other industry and just now star heat & depe : DR vetin Can make above oreraee See: | OC aamD _ custom drawn. OL LE VING, B : bale) Funeral Meme ter (Gab. Donelson-Johns meberlantert cry Cashin te and _Pontise site Pas soy | — oN Peety COUPLE = Pa igs LPL da Pe BRICK CEMENT WORE | ‘eats auc mot | op Sey par’ | FOUND. IN VIC, OF TEL-HURON. fi f screaate - Med 1h EXP 3 N " . MAN WANTs pair “ _ Man's wate White Chape "Cemetery. hg ‘a rege ye ev Rchell or Bar Bour | DEN FAL ; AbsaT AN ¢, marital CARETAKER : eg egghead Hotel or house for his room and fireplaces: MA poe NT Servi e 17) Found siLv cHUCITE Vie eek ANDE ARJAN TE, ye —Designed for Pywersig” _{or' persons! interview. tatus, education, weasing expert: ae Ser ee See BRICK BLOCK AND S) caMeey Income Tax ic (atatisle of 8. Parke & Alfred Aa HU eat = oe 8 — ted starting salary, ve oon Geet | i-rm tel_ Keeper. work, also chimneys. ~ Owner may claim a 5 Norma FP. 4836 ‘Lockhart, = Cemetery Lots enee, expec fooated near food, pleasan 7 GENERAL HANDY lnege | Reslavattaa nad enncmer EXPERIENCED n ore aloe Bloomfleld Township, age 40 i x EE SOLICITOR inree references, Sache Presa, li kee heated apt. (No a ODD JOBS ale ee het. ol Guaranteed work. Ph. MY ee Evenings & Sat.| Counter, AUBURN loved wife of Bernard D. Mu LOT PER. lL] > ‘ Pontiac Write Pontiac dren). Large closet space bat man. Versa ws c bs a fair rates is be LOST: IN VICINITY OF a ther of Mrs LAH 6 ORAVE : i PY ee te refrig -sink * & 3 pm. 3-1128. Office hrs. home 5 3 by RVICE small blond short- elie (marne) . Noribey Mino ® Mt Park S ceses” as vatrial background preferred To ~Be an RPERTEN CED Adjolning elec “Television: Tele- PART TIME WORE MORNINGS BUIL D AND SAVE— BOLIN TAX SERV I oe Bie: with wate chest. Ter avon J Mulslander and onaid _vde flere dt 1 pene es Scene A ekitnc Mttretlne - SIL bg ad RTS: R phone." electricity; laundry | rie & Saturdays, ges atation or ge ® through our volume parchases 42_E. Pike; FE ¢1192 or FES-8173| rep breed. Age & mos. Reward. Dans Gees tes As hen, | gee nancial Institutions attrac ig Hai) oils Gieiyal Og CT oe t to you sales RETURN PRE-| FE 49607 after 4. ister of Mra Donna @utphen, les Mee ae qpportuntty for 84° | anpty Pranks Dry Cleaners, ent position ane Greet tory r estimate | AN INCOME TAX lifled aT: MALE ER. FAWN i suited Eevee rand At oe there vancement WiieMie mene eer | RPERENTED ara Thing WITR Chin references ‘Ce call ies. mine: ELIADL eee Fre hla SEE ert way e*countand “with masters degree Lost: Mal M 4 = giea [uneral service ord pe nea les at the Press Dept. Federal tite & Casualty | erry ret. None othar need apply OR PART TIME, SELLING | work. Prices ART TIME UTLDERS L_2-3463| _ Appointment Lat LOST: Bia COGEER, WC: peeyy cen tat fara! | Were replies at Go Wolverine | hederaia Toss | 87 -W Huron mre ecessary. Over 24 We! VET - 31, W eferences, OR | FE_3-7210 BURTON ONE STEVENS WME: pins. Mansfeld from the C J Gedharat ceners a in the following Rattle Creek Michigan All re) 837 Wo} HOORERREPER | °* oat Pe: you. Write Pontiac | or steady wort. CEMEN TE . BI OCR Home calls by ere a eete nee eet attics ‘les confidential Be et nok cits Ge cea hone | td (pea Se 2-00. ¥D . 58-0782 ointment Lost — aa BEAGLE & COCK- Feel Geis Grate Lie wale Li boxes: Bice FO RERVICK Es. | plain cook live iy es eee WILL CLEAN aan re PREPA er, black & tan female, vic. rat? Senate tN ieee sal ae te Ca a Mi ete eon, | wel Sah | ieee Fs tute GETS | PSone Larage Ween | Sine ae Cc J. Godhardt neral Home 6, 8, 12, 17, 20, 22, 28, ritory $97 50 Lay ae Oe: ‘ aah party Mm your nope To licensed Real Es inl ihe old TD. O} man. .00. Phone FE 40706, ‘ ‘ x » 6, 1%, a Cer and tors, FR stalemated tn all around handy Lost: L N rae ae Tan ae i660, HARVEY 31, 82, 63, 70, 74, 76, KO Mat Call ruler” nrudh. “Pr pans, Also. need demonstrators Xe yeu srs sore pofetting byw oe ree A sri IL Landscaping 18A Oras band. Reward. Lt Pod oe im = dof Mra. Minnie A. 91, 05, 101, 114, 118, 7 WSTATE FuULTIN E WAI it vers, fealty "works “and mekes money YounG a PP heed Peat "OR 34101 : setts ‘caves = coer TE Sg tak loved husban Mra TSAL ES ae Light housewo bid t me, . : 4&1 ACH . is a Squirrel | Omstead; nn eke ee == |SALESMEN cub 3 in school, watargng a. ot Med) d Wor anted Female 11 oan casomene EM 34879 moval and Oak our bid. | and Msitvetbel onde oder rane te, cil] FINANCE- | (iavuatearninee wee and | help emplored CVE IN PYE.| For The Inexperience - ner | DRYWALL Hobbies & Supplies 24A | pm trem Doxesen-Jonne, | NEED A NANCE Seed hemes Acety e ar GTR. ae) 5 Mar yhd | Attend ne he Cheese nas ten |i DAY @ ast one Past, sifictent, service Moving & Trucking 19 ~ aoe terment in “ps — Ask fer Mr. h ASP oft yta y PAINT BY NUMBE: Paty ut coneuny. Me Qmatead FIXER? Order Classified man. 311 8 TELEGRAPH 2 al With Bnet, sy merrie. cleaning. DRY WALL TAPING AND PRR 1-A Reduced Rates Beraeein ate " ececenae Z ol Heneleen-Jeb68 T t. find a Ae Grote oid Ntetcak copnetiong C. SCHI JETT. Realtor 4 an , ing. ere estimates. FE 1 or per f distance aie: Pris NU Fi oe, xi? o "en € > re ten 5 . = 4 - ens, JAN” 14 1050. Vickr! Ads to sell, rent, ——~ aye “STATI ediate need for part, FE 8.0459 cusp Meu if. 50181. : G Tin Tames $130 All sises. Grum. POWERS, JAN Gey infant steals | He oe er, Preferably FE 8-0456 : “ENGINEERING DRAFTING a G - HAULING bacher Art Supstios Sherwin Wil- [ : Lynne, 83 a Viera nea ‘Gack Jobe Fr 2 818i Gs SALESMAN Pork peak een n or religious NEEDED; MEN AND WOMEN os deliver, FE : oF service Rol. —— oso A LENT SERVICE jams. 1 W. i - fowtral agar graneaguthver et good job. FE Pom acneace Fre nee | PRL ae parttime ein at up | ~h_dliver, Ruraes tanes Scotia Wary ge at service OR )4061 afters’ | nenonade ounua “FAME | ~ Notices & Personale 25 as . ie -_ } " | Mr and Mre-Menry Powers. Pu. the Want Ad number! vase Midcemer Aracuicuseral as NERA OUMEWORR EXP | new local Nmmediately Cal EM) = ON ae BL: A rE "| “your price, Any time. BaaBre | nounced later. View! Lynne 's, 8) a P| Call" Mr" Riley at PR eaeat | GFN 80 an Priest roca 34164 of EM 3-2 — reruaer Sovet ING, REASONABLE. | 4 comPLETE ak “AT? 32 nounced later Petry - ss ne fet live tive ¥ou shout Or od REE . *| Dorothy's, : | the Sparks. Griffin yale ne a Bren Real Fstate Salesme ne bath : TV. My @-4357 ant Wine the lay oft? A part time for water hen I ne lec | | eres. Sy a 1 Pe eee 29-1344 | ORnkiia Bids age 2 beloved | The Pontiac Pre men ‘to handle sales of new ani | GIRL OR WOMAN FOR Tt ig help to. you. We employ | COLLRGE GRADUATE AGED ; waren, x Franklin Bivd | age Pee mother ADS men : hand} ase stallaicg cca: housekeeping baby care. EM Mis hel Prd ft cs pave aid re yeete A ae Electric KNAPP SHOES wife o - a Tre —- ew par a . beloved daughter 3 ANT . une in con. BONA te for home ee ir any’ n OR 3-1599 re ates teal | Ok W Pe Bite dame ait, | HanOICRPPER ERGO, FOR ae pre | Eh —w AO HE | KR arto * ear sister of Donnie : 2 > Wood eorner a interes isaton i ac Press ox 86 ' ; 5 nttyter, Bord Wetec riaeee es] | DIAL FE 2.8181 Lee twee oituews | Ria nse Raat |g ete ate een MOFTY | Tae goede ve ford Ok bes | ae eee Pee isis Gobndental The Salvation r wee mn > — Nitait R ee: = TY fF awie Hy sth Rs IRE NOUSEWORE BARE " tt | held Or buries Panes’ ‘nome From & a.m. to 5 p.m. “Toone as pati pointes Wave e ER atc Panty an Water or Trp, Pont ite tebe | bysia A tread met M ean VARA TeeD Pe ‘Taste aay tne. a ia. \ “ Om i y ie i s, . : : { Sih ner coer c in On ma All errors nould ee ie ALF AMA WaAntie = So. Lidl vite Fete have SER Beleh athe, Remaenghs Devt “Not wee a aces own trans: Sin Cass, PE i, FE “ODELT CARTAGE | & oye RI x, 3 saat ' Cemetery, Mrs. Short will ile in ried immediately Coleman over-hea a ipers | eae 5 Shh POT VC 0. . Pld paias Fs ; aley Puneral Home, aspumes No reapon bpd i peeialty {tems D & many ro 6 NEA WiTh BLES? Local and lone ’ unwanted hair. j | Fayiow. ae 13. 1088. (pAlite T. ait Rigel the ghee ae Rervice PR 2.1004 FR schoo! boy tn "Batanga Vake Employment Agencies 8A exren ee bome ot "| TROUBLES We “Enone' Pe bane : ) aa Ee $7 Seneca: age &2; beloved dear; } {han to e he firet — | vie 1 A eather need call b Pick-up Shs we part jobs or re- T k R , a. | fas of ha! es ouse, iA od the hectic Sales ( Ypportunity _ 7688, an < “VELYN EDWARDS re tae Jobs. on work, r = Ss to en - " Ww. ip “ } Aen Vereen “wnrough the Netod betuend Hager = gt elroy wAiD i abe ve in, EVELY} t COUNSELING EXPERiEN fim. if : Shaw, Marvin Taylor, Jemen Tay-|) Gutty "Wise ccacchauens sion pro«ram iy’ Mr | Work 2 om salary, Pon-|° VOCATIONAL, tines lor Doak and Mrs Pest! | error aie be eee Farnines ren nterc col he reew tide aA mon ¥ » tee ro ewell, mal servien “wil veer TRI number * oy als ne hoy ere _tine Prong Box NCES ~ SRO Eker ie seal i *Alichesr's. Cathal Sajustmente wil) be given Le Gt PART ay ae x Be "porting ¢ Oiittes surre tt Lod tr Pontiac Farm and rom the Bt. it — Rips. ——- | ahoe ney Co. hureh with intermen: — SERVICE MANAGER 8 a _ —— call *Recttation of the JTOMOBILE AGENCY Shoei Wa TARY ‘ope . Thare- Closing time tor advertise At 0 ag: | KUN tg SF “RETA osary wi be at 8 Cal Bens “4 mtaining type sizes Steady employment for exp rd and gIR shop at heme. akille, Ab day st Huntoon era; So ments co agate ressive man, Good salary & bo | ca: moles of our Won | ageg hoe with good __where My, Faylor Seas ree te tT celeee noone fue Apply Fontes | Press erties vat — 1966 all-oceaaion ares. tractive apg md ‘Sigeen WAHL JAN. 14, 1000, Sear wothas AY previous to, publication wr Goo meegani’ Ce.) ing eards & eifte rea . pene gna eee er He are | Cena, fot the ag pan, srk’ Not eepationcer neceasces, | RMRIOPRRt. 4 0. seree Wahi: be eaneeied up to 9:30 a.m repair, References necessary posts necpiaa: Ne Wy. Write jede SALES wine m~ Maurie Johnao' the aay of pu leation after Write cree i rien to lor re EY Venecle, «inner LIVEWIRG Bai Oreetin ys a4 sarvived by 18 « trandenilaren the firs Wrp 17 i) i ’ oe - aid great “grandchildren. Pu. CASH WANT AD RATES eel aon aa Pe a8) will fteelf ae meee an GRAN HOUSER EERE. ner we. ive In & care fo Bio Vinern, Miss nce tan || tance (tas 1-Days wey de. See work Week Wahi will He ty state Friday | fs 3 ig on Help Wanted Female 7 x 2 chigren “in -senool. Ref. ae 4 hn S “ ~~ m:.. ia eae »PLACE A “LOST” AD.|| $ te ee * ace, Neech Hews hanes #2 SH L RESSER » PL . rm : 7k 2. nad/q . 350 6.30808 1) _— Experienced 44620, CAN EE 2810 Sor an adi ye He Be | |e MRAUTy OPERATOR WORE | “Es UAT winder Wh ei , to recover a 10ss. i 3 i3 9.00 19.80 avaaee COVE IN, EF. opportunities, new nationally ad- 2-8181 for an, aedalla! | i oreues TER TS om wortised coametics, . FR ~ fie , “: a oa ; _ Say “charge it , ; | 2 | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, Language of Deaf Parents Provides a vv os Today's Television Programs - - Programs tursished by stations Usted to thie colume ase subject to change without notice Chaanel 2-WIBS-TV Change! 6-WWd-T9 Channel 1—-WKYZ-TV Chonnel 9-CKLW-TV ate TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00 (7) Curtain Time. Comedy. (9) Popeye. (4) News: Williams. (2) Racket Squad. (4) Weather. (4) Bex 4. (4) Sports. (7) Comedy (cont.) 6:10 6:15 6:25 6:30 (2) News: LeGoff. (2) Weather. (2) News. 6:40 6:45 7:00 (7) Girl Decoy. Policewoman tries to help teenaged prob- micsned Huckleberry ( omedy. Hound. (4) Mich. Outdoors, Mort Neff, host. - (2) Jeff's Collie. (7) Leave It to Beaver. Against dad's advice, Beaver and Wally build boat in ga- 7:30 Russell, for Scandal.” (’41.) (4) Jefferson Drum. Jeffer- son reads his obituary in ad- 8:00 (7) Zorro. Conspirators plan aes on Ed ee rete to Monterey. (9) Movie (cont.) (4) Steve Canyon. Wartime friend asks Canyon to search for industralist whose private plane is reported missing. (2) December Bride. Ner- vous father-to-be Pete gets in magic trick mix-up. (7) Real McCoys. Grandpa almost ruins everything when Luke, Kate want to borrow working capital. |. (9) Movie (cont.) | (4) It Could Be You. Com- edy-surprise. (2) Yancy Derringer. River Pirates steal valuable neck- AS PSA 4 im Miah iz err LA Pi iat) test IOI) ie | B/N j9:00 (7) Pat Boone. (2) Zane Grey Theater. Wite (Barbara Stanwyck) of wealthy rancher, hides man oe Janssen) from lyach mob. (1) Rough hiders. Rebel hater, three sons want to string up former Confeder- ate lieutenant. (9) Walter Winchell. Gang- ster holds woman hostage in her new apartment. (4) (color) Tenn. Ernie, Kate Smith, first of two appear- ances. (2) Playhouse 90. Edmond O'Brien, Jack Warden in “The Blue Men.” 10:00 (7) Tracer. dt Science Fic- (at Yow Lie (2) Playhouse (cont.) 10:30 (7) News: Daly. (9) Parliament. Special 19:30 ing (4) (color) Wacawetade Party. (2) Playhouse (cont.) 10:45 (7) News: Gordon. 10:55 (7) Weather. 11:00 (7) Soupy’s On. (9) News. (4) News: W'kamp. (2) News: LeGoff. 11:15 (9) Weather. (4) Weather: Eliot. (2) Miss Fairweather. 11:20 (9) Theater. Adventure: John Elfstrom, “Storm Warning.” ('53.) (4) Sports. (2) Sports. 11:25 (2) Nightwatch Th. Comedy: Stu Erwin, “Bachelor Bait.” C34.) 11:30 (7) Night Court. (9) Theater (cont.) (4) Jack Paar. Cliff § Ar- quette, Celeste Holm, Jill Corey, Elaine Stritch, Harry Golden. (2) N'watch (cont.) FRIDAY MORNING 6:00 (4) Continental Classreom. 6:50 (2) Meditations. ACROSS 1 Mourning —— 5 ee diving 12 A 13 mauve metal 14 Military assistant 418 Fish trap in a river | 16 Narrow inlet Dish of meat 24 Centra! American | Era pod mse — inlet 37 Boose age 38 patel galt «39 Italian | ostrenpener (1564-1643) at Pacilitates 42 Obliterate ane 86 Wale en the sk 57 Seasoning | $68 Hen peeeucs sty 60 Royal 5 Main artery 6 Swiss canton 7 New Zealand 8 Se insect 9 Ceremony 7 Biblical garden 61 Female rabbit 1 Tidings 62 Fill 19 Sie vetch | 20 P Jack —— (pl) 22 This. bird | H Bread spread 3 family - 3 Blood vessel 4 Merit Columbidee Maje Italian family name td 41 Ghade tree hod a Soest 23 Notion 24 Sharp 25 Scope 26 Fuel A Against 29 Things done 30 Rocky. pinnacles sound 34 Solar disk 40 New Guinea port ‘ace bes Mecien quccndeds ment. (2) On Farm Front. (4) Today. (7) Big Show. (2) TV College. (7) Breakfast Time. (2) Cartoon Frolics. | (2) Captain Kangesse. (7) Our Friend Harry. (2) Cartoon Classroom. 1:00 8:45 (4) I Married Joan. (2) Movie. 300 9:30 (4) Bozo the Clown. 10:00 (2) Jimmy Dean. (4) Dough Re Mi. 10:15 (7) Lady of Charm. 10:25 (9) Billboard. iworld of her parents nurtured an jinstinctive expressiveness that has - ai TV. News and Reviews GOLDEN SILENCE—The silent proved invaluable to Louise Fletcher in her acting career. Pon- 19:30 (4) Treasure Hunt. (2) Arthur Godfrey. (9) Special Agent. 10:55 (7) News: 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy. 11:15 (9) Nursery School Time. -}11:38 (4) Concentration. FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life. (4) Tie Tac Dough. (9) Hidden Pages. 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You. (7) Play Your Hunch. (9) Myrt & Doris, 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. 1:00 (2) Ladies Day. (4) Amos 'n’ Andy. (7) Liberace. (9) Movie. (7) Margie. (2) As World Turns. (4) Mr. and Mrs. North. (4) Faye Elizabeth. (7) Day in Court. (2) Our Miss Brooks. quences. (4) (color) ‘Haggis Baggis. (2) House Party. (7) Musie Bingo. (9) Home Fair. (2) Big Payoff. (4) Young Dr. Malone. (1) Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. 2:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots, (7) Who Do You Trust. (2) Brighter Day. -(4) Queen for a Day. (7) American Bandstand. (2) Secret Storm. (2) Edge of — 3:30 4:00 (2) Susie. (4) It’s Great Life. (9) Looney Toons. (2) Detroit Bandstand. (4) (color) George Pierrot Presents. (7) Mickey Mouse Club. A passenger or a freight train 00 * -- Today's Radio Programs WETa, cis) §=—6 WAR, (118) )=—-: WPON, (1400) )=— WIPE, (1400) Wim, (70m) CRLW, (e00) wwa, oe TONIGHT %, Surrell ews, George WPON, Chuck we. News wae Siereo Wonk New 8, meres , — ewe e.. ‘alone CKLW, News, Chase t:90— im Muste — ey ‘Sauw 7 Big So - WEAR, Music sic: amin *CRLW. Newer a Lethe ; "we Rt, to 2 .mepmnen WPON, & Sport | =_=—— FRIDAY MORNING —_—/19:08—-WaR, arthur Godfrey 2 — 7 Due Date b= Pha oe wiaby Poet ww, yal ry Story A ews, Max ww, ’ x YZ, Mary WXYZ. Daly wees” Pred Wolf ae News, % Moree WEON, Candietighe WIBR: Tom Geom” WOAR Nowe hang ‘i, Poms WIJBK. Ski Ta Wear Kees. Sheridan WPON, Chuck Lewis CKLW, News, shih Beles 100 w 0:90—CKLW, News. David | 8:00—WJR, Shirley cae etme [zeae | TRE Geateame | Fen eos bees woe Jack, Bellboy WIBK. News, 2 : WPON. Candlelight WPON, Barly Bird Bports 1 :00—WIR, Party wcan. Bennett , Woodling Jews, § Lerk | ‘ Wwa aoen Roberts Ce oe ewes, Right Frain WXYZ, News, Woif WIBK. News, emiw. Ra J. : Reve : won Chuck Lewis ‘ , News, 11:30 WIR, for Musie 0;20--W mR, Amos ‘n ancy Thi Uh ot ral Music Hall | — 1:80 = on Da — Were, wal Wettrick, AcKenste &:390—WIR, Bway. Report | Set _ yawiy CKLW, News, Chase WPON. Nite Sounds . News, David AFTERNOON WCAR, ¥ Bennett WIEBE, News, George a WPON, Don McKinnon ae mee me 8:08—WIR, Amos "n’ Andy | WWI, News, 4:969R, Music Han . WW, News, Roberts CKLW, Ne vies , News, McKenzie ~ : tor | SR Bert, Sian ai |RSS ae é Lewis : a i Casey i ie : ie 10,00 WIR. Symphony mh, Morte man | naewen” ot Muse SRLW. Knowtes = Been ‘cen - Sie. Wan WIBK. a ey re, Weng. Sta, 1:30 — wan, % . Page een a Ng gl eee, 8 Say Wry. ee a Vinan WXYZ, kfast Club as ern : WW, Ban 4 David WJBK. News, Reid , Bports, MacKinnon Visual Emotion (4) (color) Truth or Conse- tiac viewers may see her Sunday night when she will eos in ‘Lawman’ on Channel 4 Instinctive Now Through Lip - Reading and Advance Scripts By ERSKINE JOHNSON A 22-year-old blonde from Bir- mingham, Ala., who spoke only the sign language of the deaf until she was four—and who credits the mobile facial expressions of her stone deaf parents for her acting) talent—could be Hollywood's TV- movie Cinderella girl of 1959. Louise Fletcher is the name. Tall (5 feet 8) and sloe-eyed, she is a leading candidate for a big role with Cary Grant in “Operation Petticoat” and an- other movie which famed Elia (East of Eden) Kazan will pro- duce and direct. Her parents have never heard her voice. Her mother was born deaf. Her father, Dr. Robert C. Fletcher, an Episcopalian missionary assigned to the deaf in the state of Ala- bama, lost his hearing when struck by lightning at the age of seven. Parents ‘Listen’ to Her) NEW YORK (UPI)—Last night CBS-TV folded its one hour show, Pursuit, a punishment that fits the crime. * * * An adventure series launched on one important count; It sim- ply did not entertain. Many crities of television be. moan the fact that i Pursuit might have plugged one gap in the schedule: The need for a sharply paced and crackly one hour thriller. But there never Seemed to be any great guidi ‘intelligence behind the show—its scripts were papery and it tried to salvage each enfeebled script by coating it with a layer of stars to lure in the customers, ° Last night’s closer was rather logue into which a couple of ef- fective actors — Michael Rennie and Rip Torn—were poured and allowed to fend for themselves. It, of course, didn’t work out. There is a lesson in the foldup 'of Pursuit and it is a very grasp- ey that is lavished on stars might more profitably be spent on writ- ers, good writers who aren't work- ing in the medium right now. * * * SHORT SHOTS: Viveca_ Lind- ‘Pursuit’ Folds Because iof Failure to Entertain early this season, Pursuit failed| be ‘Power Failure Dims able one. It is this: that the mon-| , plays the title role and who has other commitments in Hollywood. Bernstein of NBC-TV's Omnibus | has won a Sylvania award for his} 10 Towns in Jersey RIDGEFIELD, N.J. (AP) — Al major power switching station a ties without electricity for about an hour. * * * All electrical devices in this| densely populated and industrial section of New Jersey stopped. * * * - Newspapers and police stations| were swamped with phone calls. Service Electric & Gas Co. said a mechanical failure in the con- trol system at the Bergen switch-| ing station caused the blackout. Power was restored at 12:10 a.m. Sputnik Sputters in Space, Silence Lasted Month . NAPA, Calif. (AP)—The Soviet | Union's Sputnik III has regained fors and Torin Thatcher weighed in with solid performances on last) night's CBS-TV U.S, Steel Hour, | but the play, ‘Dangerous Inter-: lude,’’ was a doddering piece . elections are big on TV this week —Richard Boone got mixed up in| one last Saturday on CBS-TV's Have Gun, Will Travel and last) night Gene Barry messed around | with one on NBC-TV’s Bat Mas- terson, * + * THE CHANNEL SWIM:CBS.-TV)| may turn its monthly hour se- ries, Conquest, weekly ffair . . . There's agood chance NBC-TV will shit its Fri- day night Ellery Queen show from As a baby, Louise's first ‘‘word’’ —da-da — was language. voice under the tutelage of Lou-) ise Long, an aunt for whom she was named, in the aunt's Bryant, Tex., home, A year ago Louise was gradu. ated as a drama major from the University of North Carolina and a brilliant career is being pre- dicted for her by movie and TV producers and directors. In a soft, grateful voice, Louise told me why she credits the facial expressions of her parents, along with the sign language, as the wood has found so expressive. * * * She told me: ‘I don't have to look at the ‘talking’ hands of my parents to know what they are saying when they are mad or pleased or excited. The words are also on their faces. I guess I've always ‘spoken’ with my face, too. My mother is a wonderful mimic."’ Appearances in half a dozen telefilms have brought Louise to the sharp attention of movie makers. One of these perform. ances, as a Western outlaw con- first time, will be seen on the “Lawman’> show Jan. 18, (8:30 p-m.—Channel 7). Tt is hailed as ‘fantastic’ by! the show's producer, Jules Scher- mer, and its director, Stuart Heis- more lucrative free lancing. r * * 20 years,’ Schermer says. Louise always sends duplicate scripts, in advance of her shows, to her parents in Birmingham. "7! They are lip readers, but Louise told me: ter.”” “spoken’’ in sign At four she learned to use her! ante yes Ne ing amateur“@foday, after only 11 months of acting foundation for the acting Holly-) scious of a man's love for the | ler. Louise was offered a term’ contract at Warner Bros. but her) MCA agents turned it down for ff “She’s the most instinctive ac- tress I've seen on the screen in “T like them to read the scripts | first so they can hear me and ff the rest of the cast a little bet-|f the West Coast to the East Coast— ie so, there'll probably be a re- placement for George Nader, who! 13 Gamblers | Lucky Number for 20 Others AIPEI, Formosa (AP)—Police unded up 33 men in a raid on a gambling den on the outskirts of Taipei Wednesday night. As the culprits were marched, over a bridge, 13 jumped into the cold waters of the Hsintien River. The police went after them and caught all 13. But the other 20 gamblers escaped—successfully. 'Servicemen, Elderly to Pay Golf Charge DETROIT #—The Detroit Parks and Recreation Commission has an- nounced a new charge of 25 cents on its six municipal golf courses for senior citizens—those 65 and older—and members of the armed forces. * * * | The new charge begins March 1. \Senior citizens and servicemen, ‘formerly were permitted to play| got free on the: city’s courses. A commission spokesraan said ithe new charge will help defray the cost of maintaining golf cours- les and the printing and distribu- ition of passes, into a half-hour) its voice after nearly a month of silence. * * ® The satellite's radio transmitter | |was heard by Press Wireless Inc., Wednesday night at 7 o'clock, George Prokop of Press Wire. | less said it resumed transmit-| ‘ting probably because its motion | ‘placed it in position so the sun! | could roche: ge is ad battery. | He ogy as er at 20.005 /megacycles, he said. | Georgia Bills Aid PRE-NOTICE Hampton’s Warehouse Sale Closing out all 1958 merchandise, odds, ends, etc. to make room for 1959 GE arriving next week. Time: Saturday 9 to 5 p.m. Location: 3740 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Ya Mile West of M-59 Cash or Terms—Delivery, Installation or Service Extre. Some in cretes, some out of crates, some with scratches. GE Filter Flo Washer ..........$177.00 GE 30” Range... .. 5... $189.50 GE 12 Cu. Ft. Refrig. wee ee $299.50 GE 10 Cu. Ft. Freezer .........$229.50 GE Dryer, Electric .............$139.50 GE 21” Console TV ...........$199.50 GE 17” Portable TV ..........$119.50 Admiral 21” Bl Console .......$229.95 Admiral 21” Mah. Console ...$199.95 Sylvania 21” Table TV ........$149.50 Dumont 21” Console TV .......$199.50 Emerson 21” Phono Comb. ......$249.50 Grenco FM Receiver ........ .... $27.95 Philco 21 Console ......_..... $179.50 Motorola 21" Table TV with remote control .......... $199.95 Emerson 17” Portoble .......... $119.95 Admiral 17” Portable, scratched. . $129.95 Emerson 17” Suitcase TV ........ $75.00 RCA 17” Portable, Scratched ....$149.50 Philco 21’ TV with Remote Cable, good for bar, Reg, $329.95, now .. $249.95 RCA 21” Table Color TV, Scratched, New ..... vee e ees $369.50 New Radios ............ ....ea. $10.88 HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC School Segregation 825 W. Huron Street FE 4.2525 AANA Ga. (AP)—A six-bill |. == — : Cae aecition tne ‘ght ere" |The Best AROUND .. . Is the WPON SOUND ‘serve segregated schools in Geor- ‘gia,’ was placed before the Gen- ‘eral Assembly today by Gov. ' Ernest Vandiver. * ! | | * * In his debut speech to the Leg. | islature, Vandiver said he “‘has no intention of turning Georgia schools and colleges over to the federal government for any pur- pose, anywhere, at any time dur- ‘ing the next four years.” | Where Everything. Is FINE... for ‘59 ON THE STATION WITH MORE “Music From Pontiac” 1460 WPON PONTIAC Larry Jim Bob = Chuck Don Payne Casey Lark Lewis MacKinnon Rubber Usage Rising LONDON — The total consump-| tion of rubber, both synthetic and | natural, exceeded 857,000 long tons| in Great Britain and Western Europe in 1957 compared with) about 555,000 long tons the year before, an increase of 54 per cent. In the United States the increase, during the same period was from) 1,258,557 long tons to 1 MAGA0. MUNTZ TV" Member of Electronics Association FE 4-1515 fz i | TV Set and A 60 Used BELTONE PONTIAC CO | SP. M. to 8 P. DAILY . meta ae? | erated by TURE SALES @ Oakland Ave. - FE 49001 Terms on Some ANOTHER at WALTON TV “Get the Kids Their Own of the Chennel”’ $7 4” ® and rorBer Kachonge f Ported WALTON RADIO & TV 515 €. Walton, Cor. Joslyn Rd. TV SALE void the Bettle TW Sets ’ FE 2-2257 BELOW COST i! CLEARANCE Boys’ and Girls’ Figure Sketes, Sizes 11 to 4 Boys’ Hockey Sketes, Sizes 13 to 4 Boys’ and Girls’ Double Runner Shoe Sketes, Sizes 12 te 2.... Boys’ Hockey Skates without Side Strep Support, Sizes | te 3. Men's Hockey Skates, Sizes 8 to 12... Men's Hockey Skates, finest quelity, Sizes 8 and 9 Ledies’ Lined, Figure Sketes, 7 Sizes 5 to 10 $68 Clemp-On Double Runner Skates 19¢ ve $129 These Are All First Quality Srand New Skatee— Ne Used Skates or Seconds “CLOSED SUNDAY” VERKLER “an” COMPANY We Sell Wholesale te Everyens—Free 90 Day Lay Away Fehr "Round — Union Loke Rood EM 3-438] oo LAKE VILLAGE Clese-Out Prices $497 $497 $348 $597 $657 $377 a eC ec i ee i CeCe ee eS ee 6 we ee ee