oe : : Ge
S28 re
baer exeer ‘PONTIAG, MICHIGAN pate pe
Teddy’ S
peas
©
‘Sti ck’
Was the Taney”
That Lifted FBI
Lge ly Note: The following articte is.the third In a series of oumnents
from the book b BI Story
ety
‘e|
By
~~ gation-had- its
gon
*
fneome Tax Reterns Prepared —
? Angus Cam welt Tax. ggg
. 993. W. Huron 8t., Open Eves. FE 2-3615
~ From the time he entered
-By DON WHITEHEAD |
The crusade in which the Federal Bureau of Investi-
ning-on July 26,1908, was President! —
__ Theodore . Roosevelt's fight - to curb. the “public be| _
damned” greed of big: ‘business combines and to halt} Don Whitehead. Today's: accoun
the White House in eS;
ber, 1901, Roosevelt was roaring against politital and
_ business corruption and demanding stronger federal
controls over the excesses of the rich and powerful.
He was thumping heads with his “big stick,” and
he sometimes’ included heads in Congress.
There was ample reason for the Rooseveltian roars.
There was, in truth, a “mess in America.” |
There was a mess in whi
the “trusts,” were flouting ch the industrial combines,
the SKerman Antitrust Act
and in effect. thumbing their noses at the federal gov-
ernment and the people.
There was a mess, too, in which men of high repute)
were conniving with federal officials to rob the govern-
ment of valuable land in the West, where almost. 40
million acres had been set aside .by previous. admin-
istrations as forest reserves.
This green and temptin g treasure was supposedly
being watched over by a government agency, the Gen-
eral Land Office, which was more interested in selling
land for private use than it was in Roosevelt’s policy of
conservation.
The thieves were busily|
dipping into this treasury
even as Roosevelt took
office after the assassina-
tion of President McKinley.
Roosevelt was deter-
mined to halt the thievery
and the antitrust viola-
tions.
But in the midst of his fight
Congress suddenly balked at the
Department of Justice’s use of
“detectives” in its investigations
and passed an amendment to the
Sundry Civil Appropriation »
_which left the department without
an investigative arm with which
to collect evidence for prosecu-
tions,
Roosevelt was furious. But his
fury - could be ~ Only
against the background of what
had happened in the past.
After the Civil War, Congress
had passed several laws encourag-
ing homesteading. and making it
possible for families and indi-
viduals to buy land and settle in
the West.
*
One of these laws was the
Timber and Stone Act of 1878,
which provided for the sale of!
lands in California, Oregon,
Nevada, and the Washington
Territory.
The lands were considered un-
fit for cultivation, but they were
covered with virgin. forests worth
millions.
Enforcement of the land law
was “lax. People fenced public
lands—sometimes innocently—for
their own use. Others bought huge
acreages through fraudulent
schemes to turn a quick and easy
profit in resales to lumber com-
panies.
SMELLS BAD
Roosevelt had been in office only
a few months when the Secretary
of the Interior, Ethan A. Hitchcock
of Missouri, had reason to suspect
that his own department was in-
volved in the land frauds.
He detected a bad odor in the
General Land Office, and he began
an inquiry. The attorney general
arranged for an agent to resign
from the Treasury’s Secret Service
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Owosso Judge Gets
Jury Probe in Flint
FLINT The one-man grand
jury probe into alleged police brib-
ery and-corruption in Flint has
been placed in the hands of an)
Owosso circuit judge, serving his
first six-year term.
Micheal Carland,* whose circuit
includes Livingston and Shiawassee
Counties, was told of his selection
yesterday by Meredith H. Doyle,
State Supreme Court Admin-
istrator.
Judge Carland said lie “i cts
to come to Flint Thursday“to open| ©
the probe. Some 70 subpoenas have
been issued for -two former high
police officials “and 68 persons
listed as gamblers.
} The 50-year-old Democrat from
the 35th circuit was asked to enter
the case after the Genesee County
circuit requested an outside
jurist.
Two men have already been
‘charged with conspiracy to. bribe},
pa to —— gambling.
sa
Mideast Plan
Runs Into Delay
Slow . Ike’s Proposal,
Says House Member
causing a slowdown in House
Foreign Affairs Committee action
on the Einenhower Middle East
resolution,
, the comshittee chair-|
man, indicated. hearings on the)
resolution may last through next
week. That would be a week later
than. he previously planned. “Too!
many people are asking to testi-
fy,” he said.
But Gordon said it is ¢till possi-
ble that the House will pass the
resolution by the.end of January,
a target date Secretary of State
‘Dulles expressed hope for after
a closed session with the commit-
tee yesterday.
Eisenhower has asked a four-
point program including author-
ity to use U.S. troops if neces-
Sary to help' defend against Com-
munist aggression any Middle
Eastern nation which asks help.
Military and economic aid to the
area also would be authorized.
4-1212 Is 1 Top Number
CHICAGO (~The busiest tele-
phone ‘number ,in Chicago last
year, as in ot years, was the
Weather Bureau's Weather 4-1212.
It rang more than 20 million
times, Events at. ‘Last’ Moment,
McAlpine Mute
on Hate Letters ‘Innocent Plea Entered
for GOP Leader After
2-Count. lnchibienone
A 41-year-old Pleasant Ridge
man and 1956 Republican cam-
paign worker stood mute yesterday
when arraigned ~on two counts
arising frem a Federal Grand
Jury investigation of Detroit's “‘ra-
cial hate letters’’ mystery.
A plea of innocent was entered
for Jehn R. McAlpine, 29 Cam-
|bridge Bivd., a former Detroit
advertising man and 1952 state
GOP campaign manager.
MeAlpine was indicted yester-
day morning on two counts in-
volving the alleged distribution
of 6,000 letters sent to Detroit
Negroes urging them to” vote
Democratic Nov, ¢ because “the
| Democratic party keeps the col-
ored in their place.”
One count charged he caused
be distributed and the other that
ihe caused it to be distributed in
interstate Comaneree.
ca *
If convicted, McAlpine faces a
maximum sentence of up to. one
year in prison and a fine of ug
to $1,000 for each misdemeanor
charge.
State Republican Chairman |
John Feikens today described
McAlpine as “sincere, honest,
hard - working and completely
trustworthy.”
“I believe he is innocent of the
charge made,” Feikens said. “‘He |
World War II, in many civic pro-
jects and is a loyal citizen.”
Federal Judge Ralph M. Free-
man will hear the case.
A Berry That's Berry Big
PLANT CITY, Fla. It’s hard
to believe but farmer John F. Lee
of nearby Turkey Creek raised a
strawberry measuring four inches
in diameter. The big berry lacked
just 1-16 of an inch of being a full
four inches.
anonymous campaign material to
has a fine record of service in|
| , to Secure Prized Senate
*F Foreign Affairs Job-= | ~ = io
"| WASHINGTON (INS) —}\ +Sen.John F. Kennedy (D-
(Mass) has ‘been selected.
on the Senate Foreign Re-
lations Committee. .
The Senate Democratic
the 39-year-old New Eng-
lander despite the fact that
Kefauver held_ seniority
vjand also had applied for
the Democratic vacancy on
the group.
the foreign affairs job was
direct reversal of the
Democratic national con-
vention last summer. when
Kennedy for the vice-presi-
dential nomination.
Senate Democratic leader Lyn-
don Johnson of*Texas, in announc-
ing the committee assignments,
said that vacancies were filled
with the idea of trying to give each
region representation on a major
committee as well as on the basis
of qualification and _ seniority.
Johnson said the steering com-
mittee also sought to give each
Senator a major committee post.
Kefauver, who is now on the
Armed Services and Judiciary
Committees, sajd of the action
‘passing him over for the Foreign
Relations Committee:
interested to learn that .seniority
lis a rile that may or may not
be applied in determining ques-
tions.”
Asked if he would carry his
fight for a seat on the Foreign
Relations Committee to the Sen-
ate floor, Kefauver replied:
“This is the first I have heard
about it (the assignment). I
,haven't made any plans (for a
‘floor fight). I haven't anything
further to say.”
Reminder: Ignore 12
in Puzzle of Week Just in case you missed it yé@&-
terday, the 12th answer of this
week’s Pot-O-Gold puzzle will‘ not
be counted- in the judging for
winners. If you have -it right,
wrong or leave it blank, it. will
make no difference, You can still
win if you neve a. the others
right,
Because of an error im the puzzle
mat sent to us from the New York
syndicate, the clue words given
for answer No, 12 will not fit.
Therefore, to eliminate confusion,
we are discontinuing that answer
entirely.
GUT 10 tA = The second
; Wessels - ‘of sada nations were
steam out to sea from Port Said was the Liberian-
| fegistered fanker “Statue of Liberty,” pictured .
. yesterday” as it Jeft-the-embattled Suez-Canal.
of 13 ships to
caught in the
% forthe tip back north Dd
- Vessel Escapes Clogged:U p Suez
7 —|stood at 34 at 1 p.m.
2 j
é
over Sen. Estes Kefauver| -
(D-Tenn). for a prized post)
Steering Committee picked)
Outcome of the fight for}.
Kefauver squeezed out].
e a il blame Sen. Kennedy
hyn G ater We sells Tan!
Mild Winds to Blow
|preceding 8 a.m. in downtown Pon- JUMBLED WRECHAGE — Its three passen-
gers were only injured when this twin-engined
amphibian, named “The Goose,”’ crashed in a
wooded area-north of the Dutchess County fair-
grounds near
Aboard the craft were New York State Comp-
_ trolfer Arthur Levitt and two state conservation |
department pilots. AP Wirephote
Rhinebeck, N. Y., yesterday.
| Eye-Witnesses Testify in Killing
To Arraign Rash
on Murder Count ‘they wa , land. Tax. Dias
Gir No Hint
= shtousess:GOR:=Ch Sah inte
George Van Peursem.
of Zeeland as Speaker
"LANSING ~The Mich-
igan Legislature quietly
launched its 1957 regular
session teday with Rep.
George M,. Van .Peursem,
Zeeland Republican, wield-
jing the gavel as speaker of
the House.
There was no hint of
possible major decisions to
come on knotty tax and |
spending issues that some
leaders have said will hit
the citizenry where it hurts
—in the pocketbook. —
Van Peursem, 44-year-old law-
yer starting his fourth term, won
the top post in the House by de-
feating Rep. Rollo G. Conlin, Tip-
ton farmer, in a ciose contest. ©
The Republican caucus gave
Van Peursem the nod last night
by a vote of M4 to 2%. His selec-
tion then was made unanimous.
The GOP caucus choice was as-
sured of ratification“ when formal
pay ag organization took place
As the session prepared to get
under way with a series of for-
Chairmanship
to Sen. Lodge ‘Drayton Plains Man
Accepts Post to Head
Rochester man shoot. his wife to death as she returned
from a weekend of drinking. : -
Blanket Bundling
Turns Out to Be
Blanket Bungling
DENVER #®—Mr.-and Mrs. P,
them.
Among their Christmas gifts
was an electric blanket a
double one, with dual ‘controls.
They quickly put the blanket to
use. Mrs, Martin, who. shivers
more than most, set the control
on her side for moderate warmth.
Her husband, who's somewhat
warmer natured, turned the. heat
low.
Mrs. Martin subsequently
switched on full heat — and shiv-
ered, Her husband, growing too
warm, turned off-the electricity.
Finally, they gave up and snug-
gled back under an old, non-
electric blanket.
’ Daylight came, and examina-
tion disclosed the switch on swig
Martin’s side controlled her hus-
band’s share of the wantin, and
vice versa.
Colder With Snow;
The United States Weather Bu-
reau predicts snow flurries and
colder for the Pontiac area tonight
with the low around 18 degrees.
Tomorrow will be cloudy with a
chance of snow by nightfall
The lowest thermometer reading 7
R. Martin confessed somewhat
sheepishly today the joke was om Luther C. Green.
Rash was remanded to jail,
the -shotgun shooting early. Nov.
26. He will be arraigned on a
first-degree murder* chargé be-
fore Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams
at 1:30 p.m. Monday.
‘The four witnesses testified they
were with the wife, Nina, 48, dur-
ing the weekend. They. had return-
ed home to the Rash home about
2:30 a.m. Monday morning, they
said, and Mrs. Rash was opening
the front screen door.
Rash opened the inside door,
they testified, with the shotgun
enough of this.” Then he fired
once, striking his wife in the
chest, they testified.
Rash did not testify. A factory
worker, he called police and ad-
mitted the shooting. Explaining his
wife had a ‘record of “running
around,” he said: “I couldn't
stand it any more. Killing her was
better than letting her break up
other homes.” —.
He said earlier he fired when
his wife .refused to order her
friends away from the door. This
was not mentioned in yesterday's
testimony, nor. was the point
pressed by Rash’s counsel,
Assistant prosecutors Walter R.
Dennison and Jerome K. Barry
brought out the testimony of the
wife's friends. They were identified L, J. Rash, 52, of 313
Woodward Ave. was bound,
over to Oakland County
Circuit Court after testi-
mony was examined before
Avon __ Township Justieg)
where he has been held since a
“T’'ve had |-
of the Legislature got underway.
dge,
6610 Longworth
St, D rayton
Plains, is. “no
| stranger to the
~ gtate capital, He
served a term in
ca * Yesterdiy he
merly held by
Clyde F.
lings,
serve on committees for conserva-
tion, and veterans affairs.
Under long standing custom, all
committee chairmanships went to
Republicans, who control the upper
chamber 23 to 11.
. * *
‘Sen, Lynn O. Francis of Midland|?
was “promoted to the chairmanship
‘of the corporations committee, re-
placing former Sen. .William S.
Broomfield of Royal-Oak, who went
to Congress representing the 18th
district.
Lodge won ‘the senate post vacat-
ed by Broomfield in the November
election, amassing 138,559 votes to
opponent Fred Elias’ 108,975,
Joins Newsprint Hike
MONTREAL. (AP)—Consolidated
Paper Corp., Ltd., said Tuesday
it will raise the price of newsprint
$4 a ton, effective March 1. A simi-
lar increase was announced Jast
week-by another major Canadian
as ‘Evelyn DeLaire, Charles, Alver-
tiac Wags 29 degrees, The mercury son, Michael Klein, and Russell
Harvey. manufacturer, Abitibi Power &
Paper Co. . Oakland County's State Senator
L. Harvey Lodge was named chair-
man of the Senate's elections com-
mittee today as the organization
4, of
took the post for-
LODGE Geer-
(R-Holland). He will, also malities, the only question remain- -
ing unanswered was whether Sen.
Harold Mr, Ryan of Sen. John B.
po orth Se ote meeting, with that it
would be consumed by assign-
Introdutction of a few bills was
a possibility. One of the first slated
for presentation was a measure by
Sen. Carlton H, Morris (R-Kala-
mazoo) calling for elevation of versity status,
It was a foregone conclusion
that Rep. Ed Carey of Detroit
would be renamed Democratic
minority leader in the House,
And Republican senators chose
Morris, Sen, Frank D. Beadle of
St. Clair and Sen, Frank Andrews
of Hillman for leadership positions
at a pre-session caucus last month.
* * ca
Morris was returned to his post
as majority leader, Beadle was
picked as caucus chairman, suc-
ceeding Sen. Creightén R. Cole-
man (R-Battle Creek), an un-
successful aspirant for Congress,
and Andrews was chosen to re-
place Sen. Harry F. Hittle (R-
(Continaed on. wed on Page 2, ( 2, Col. 1)
Psychologist iologist: Looks —
for Deep Trouble
MILWAUKEE @® — A psy-
chologist in a suburban school
system told the mother of a pri-
mary class youngster that a pos-
sibly serious personality prob-
lem might be in the offing for ~
her child, a conclusion the psy-
chologist drew in part from the
fact the youngster used -only
black and: red crayons in school.
That afternoon the mother
asked the child why only those
colors were used.
“All my other crayons are
broken,’”’. the child explained.
Mergers Brought Suburbs Into Fold in ’56
KALAMAZOO ~- In a series of
mergers. absorbing surrounding
{suburban areas, the City of Kala-
mazoo expanded nearly two and
one-half times in geographical
area in 1956. ,
The annexations have increased
'the city’s population from 59,000 to
82,000 as the area within the city’s
boundaries expanded from 9.48
square miles to 23.1 square miles.
Citizen groups in the suburban
areas initiated the “grass roots”
moves to come into the city.
One motivating factor was the
need for municipal services avail-
; jable in the city which could not be) Se
once rural areas that have become
urbanized centers.
OUTGREW SCHOOLS |
Another factor was the need for
school facilities in some of the
suburbs where soaring enrollments
are showing the greatest impact
and bringing pressure for more
Suburbanites found that school
facilities; could be obtained at
lower cost to the home owning
ee en
as | school districts
with limited sources for finan-
cing. This was particularly so in
providing high school facilities.
yer as part of the city | suburbs have merged with the City,
of Kalamazoo, Moves are now un-
der way in two of the remaining
five suburbs for annexation, and a
similar move jis indicated in a third
suburb in mid-1957.
Petitions also are in circulation
ine the City of Parchment at the
In Today's Press
4 ‘
fe Se es es ee oN eee eee Set eee ee See In the last two, spars seyen of 12 | County N@WS: cocce sees sevee 14
Editorials ..,.......<.. veces 6
Pot-O'-Gold ..4...6.. 0065005 . it
Sports .......0. coos 23 ther 28
“Pheaters ......00 ccc. eeele 16
TV & Radio Programs o+eg 35
Wilson, Earl 2
Wonren’s Pages . 9 thru 4 (City of Kalamazoo Expands 2/2 Times north limits of Kalamazoo for an
lelection this spring of merger with
the City of Kalamazoo,
The mergers were given momen-
tum after a citizens’ committee
representing a cross-section of the
suburbs then in the township made
an impartial study of the pitob-
lems faced by the township and
means by which they could best be
solved.-Findings led the committee .
to recommend merger of the City -
of Kalamazoo and Kalamazoo
Township into a single COmmnaRy
municipality.
This was. followed by three ae
urbs voting annexation which be- ©
came effective on Jan. 1, and
four more hace S to or
in 198."
Western Michigan College to Unie oO
owt a caine tie i artlinnenalines “5 =
“Our population is just. getting
foo big’ for four circuit judges,”
1950 was Allen aid,
“The population in
‘about 396,000, Today we figure
conservatively about 550,000.
That's a tremendous ‘increase,
Wy
E P
HE: e % ” GE
Pee
od
&
¥
HE 3 ui “Although ‘ourth judge. wit
almost as many, “HeODT
on charges of “eonapirecy to de
LYNN D, ALLEN
Afraid to trust his own people,
should be investigated by the. De-
partment of Justice. He arranged
to “borrow” agents from. the
Treasury's Secret Service. to n the irive stigation. A LN INEM POR RS OR eB
CONGRESSMEN NAMED
The roundup in the land-fraud
: drive was a sensation. Socces of
* *
a
i
ag
Bez
g* §
; ge i?
i # ¥
BR
Fi ad refer, z Hit Bs g .
£58 f 3
e
iF i :
:
4 3
i aie : {Ee net § i é
Li
ch ag 358 i I
LET Pontiac Deaths
Mrs.. Thomas Brown
Mrs. Thomas (Piggie) Brown, 32,
of 468 Ditmar St. died Monday
morning in Pontiac General Hos-
pital; She had been ill. several
months, —
‘ Robert F. Hardy Robert F, Hardy, 49, of 87 Sem-
inole Ave. died morn-
ing in St. Joseph Metcy Hospital
of a heart paen. He was ill two
years.
Born in Dudley, Mo. on Oct. 27,
1907, he was the son of Nicholas T.
and Emily Yates Hardy. 1 j
TH a i
attack.
Stories were circulated that the
spy into the private lives of mem-
bers of Congress and to collect
information to be held as a po-
litical club.
NEVER SUPPORTED
The rumors were never sub-
stantiated, but they helped to cast
methods used in the land fraud Hitchcock decided the frauds)
ca
‘The Roosevelt administration's
use of Secret Service agents in
the cleanup campaign came under
President was using detectives to “HOW'S THIS, saveat” — When the schools
sot com te ha odoin: A Goten’s take tide Men
Eleanor Stuart, of 119 Stout St., long before she
forgets her books. The children have flocked to
the city’s 13 ice rinks which have prospered during this cold spell. William Aho, parks direc-
tor, said “excellent ice still remains at: all 13
rinks.” The new rink at Wisner Stadium has a
warming shelter and music, = Day in Birmingham
"] Zoning and Alley ckeles
Basues L Draw Big Audience”
‘ while residents object strongly to
“ihe id8a or" large “stores or other’
~ Pentiac Press Photo
At the Pontiac office of Oakland
County's new Big Brother agency,
1514 E. Lawrence St., executive
director William L, Clark ex-
plains:
“Give a boy headed for trouble
a mature, successful) man as &
friend to trust and admire.
You'll find the boy changing te
his friend's socially approved
way of life.” ;
That tells in a nutshell, Clark
says, what takes usually from
nine months to two years to
accomplish.
It’s accomplished here by a dedi-
cated group of 27 volunteer men ere -o| Bigg Brothers Hold Out Friendly Hand;
mel Help Troubled Boys to See True Values
group as Big Brothers to help set
bad boys straight.
HAVE DIFFERENT APPROACH
encourage more men into their
They're using National Big
"| Brother Week, which lasts through
Sunday, ‘as an opportunity to~call|
attention to their different ap-
y proach to juvenile delinquency.
Newcomers to the group would
find the Big Brother system works
like this:
- A boy’s case is referred to
the agency by a social service,
juvenile authority, school, or
sometimes by a priest or min-
ister. The boy is headed for
trouble unless he gets a certain
kind of help,
Brothers give,
“We have a series of confer-|
ences with the boy’s parents,
explaining: the Big Brother idea,’
Clark says.
that.
“He wants only to be a friend,
to accept the boy and his prob- the kind Big |
“We make it’clear
that’a Big Brofher is only a friend. |
He’s got no legal control over the!
boy and he’s not interested in mare members so important to
the Big Brothers, Clark said.
The rule is; ‘One man to only
one boy.”.
“This is because a boy wants
to feel a Big Brother is his friend
and his friend only,” Clark said.
“The friendship is . all-important
if it's goin gto change the boy.
He doesn’t want to feel he shares
it with another boy.”
Since the Pontiac office was
organized full time last Septem-
ber with Clark as its director,
there have been 35 boys ac-
cepted. Of that number, two
have backtracked and fallen
into trouble again.
The agency is affiliated with Big
Brothers of America and is partly
supported hy charitable funds.. A
part-time branch was here three
years,
It is governed by a board of;
directors, which includes leading
juvenile authorities, businessmen
and clergymen, who meet four |
times a year.
Persons interested in the Bi ’
a shadow over the investigative} They want to pathetic. He's not there to punish
or chastise a boy. He’ just lets lems, to understand and be sym-| Brother program.can contact Clark
at the Pontiac office, FE 5-9974.
Jsent between the property owners ,
and nearby residents.
The Lamberts desire to have a
Business A zoning on the property,
“active” businesses brought into
the area. The clinics, or profes-
sional type businesses and churches
foFace Court =. Ex-Patrolman Sexton
Charged With Assault
in Off- Duty Shooting
Former Pontiac patrolman
James B. Sexton, 31, faces trial
next week for the drunken, off-duty |
shooting of two friends almost a
year ago.
Sexton’s trial, on a charge of
felonious assault, has tentatively
been set for Jan. 16 before Circuit
Judge H, Russel Holland, Prose-
jcutor Frederick C, Ziem said.
The officer is charged with
wounding Robert K. Stephens,
then 30, and Archie McCowen,
then 24, with his service revolver
in a parked car early Jan, 27.
he only explanation ofered. ‘by!
the two men was Sexton went “ber-
zerk” ater an all-night drinking
ispree, Roth men recovered.
The trial comes ater a long se-
ries o legal delays. Sexton,” who
admitted the shooting, police said,
‘was Not fully examined on crimi-
nal charges | until May 2 2.
At that time. Pontiec Municipal |
Judge Marucie E, Finnegan re-
duced a charge o ‘attempted mur-
der, ruling there was no intent or
malice in the shootings,
Standing mute at his original cir-
cuit court-arraignment, Sexton la-
ter changed his plea to guilty. Be-
fore sentencing, he changed his
‘plea again, and on Aug. 9 was
freed under $1,000 bond pending a/
jury trial.
The case was not heard during
g 'last fall’s jury session.
|
| from Elm street in the Adams-For-'
est-Hazel-Elm section of Campbell’ s
Subdivision objected...No. action was...
taken Monday night. —
Some claimed that closing the
alleys would.stop them from using
City engineers will ‘study the
situation. this week and see if
some arrangement can be made to
permit closing the major portion of
the alleys, leaving sufficient room
for garage approaches, The dis-.
cussion will be continued next
Monday evening.
Dr. Ralph Latt, nuclear scien- .
tist, will make his second appear-
ance as a Birmingham Town Hall
guest -when he speaks Thursday
‘morning at the 11 o’cleck program.
‘Like all Town Hall programs, it
4 will take place in the Birmingham
theater. * * *
Building in Birmingham took
a nose dive for the month of
. December, when only five new
construction permits were issued,
Total for the month was 17, in-
“cluding one razing, one moving
and 10 alterations to oxtaing
buildings, .
The year’s total shows 607 per-
mits were issued, with September's
figure of 91 leading the score. Per-.
mits for the year dropped slightly
\from the 620 issued in 1955. Total
figures for the two years were
$4,914,370 for 1956, and $5,638,469 -
for’ the-preceding- year.
* * *
‘ Square dancing and waltzes have
been occupying the feet of skaters
at the Eton Park rink lately, bear-
ing out the statement of Virginia
Heard, instructor, who says, “any-
thing suitable to the ballroom is
suitable to skates.”
Rehearsals are starting Thurs-
day for the city’s first ice show
and excitement is running high.
One small figure makes a lot
of difference. Notices sent to jn-
terested groups gave Jan: 7 as the
‘public hearing date on Birming-
ham’s sign ordinance. It-was, how-
ever, slated for Jan, 3, and adopted
amthat time.
Commissioners Monday night
promised that, since publication
of the ordinance had not yet tak-
en place, making it official, it
would be brought up again in an-
other two weeks to give all a
chance te be heard.
No heat—no lights—no school.
Derby Junior High School. stu-
—— dents came up with a half day off
| MOSCOW W—Premier Chou En- yesterday when a trench digger
‘lai of Red China and the leaders of |severéd the main electric power
of: 1573! ‘Communist’ East Germany havejcable supplying the ‘school while
d |reatfirmed their countries’ support, working on landscaping.
f the Soviet Union as the leader} The break was repaired. and News Flashes WASHINGTON ® — President
Misenhower reportedly has agreed
only at the’ urging of congressional
‘leaders to deliver his State of the
|Union message to Congress in per-
ison tomorrow, and antitrust cases.
* * *
: The Secret Service. had been
.lorganized after the Civil War
primarily to combat a wave of
counterfeiting of GU. S. currency
and securities,
Over the years, the Justice De-
partment and other government
departments) had adopted the
policy of “borrowing” agents from,
the Treasury Department's Secret
Service the boy know he’s got a, friend,
a good one, and usually an all-
important _one.”’
FILLS ROLE OF DAD
Psychologically speaking, Clark
explained, the Big Brother fills a
role in the boy's life something),
like a father. In this case, how-
ever, his influence is not direct
but indirect.
The boy persuades himself to
be like his Big Brother. He's had to be investigators to gather
the evidence of wrongdoing. * a %
Word spread through the De-
partment of Justice that Roosevelt
had called Atty. Gen. Charles J.
Bonaparte to the White House and
directed him to organize an in-
vestigative service.
And on July 26, 1908, Bonaparte
issued the order creating an in-
vestigative agency within his de-
partment—the order which was 3 Injured in Bloomfield
as Two Autos Collide
Three area residents received)
only minor injuries in a twe-car
4) accident on U.S. 10 at Gulf Drive)
in Bloomfield Township late Tues- |
day afternoon. All were released
after treatment at St. Joseph!
Mercy Hospital.
Alva J. Harrison, 35,
Mercedes Rd., W. Bloomfiel €
plan at the recent special session
to boost unemployment benefits.
Ina contest for majority +
leader, Rep, Allison Green of | ‘Roosevelt Lodge No. 510 conduct
sing the grave -service.
Vernell K. Marshall
Word has been received of the
death of Vernell K. Marshall, 23,
of Round Lake. But these agents-on-loan con-
tinued to report to the chief of
the Secret Service. Thus depart-
ments for which they were
working had no real check on
the agents’ activities,
This makeshift “arrangement
continued until May 27, 1908, when
Congress forbade the Department the beginning of the FBI.
One of the new bureau's first
drives was against white slavery.
Over the objections of miany who
the states’ police powers, Congress
in 1910. passed the Mann Act, mak-
ing it illegal to transport women
across state lines for immoral pur-
poses. considered the law an invasion of not disciplined into doing so.
Clark — said,
the problems he'll come
against."’
in the Big Brother choice:
Like religion (not “If the boy’s case is accepted,”
“a Big Brother is
chosen who has-been thoroughly,
trained by us and orientated of
up
There are three. considerations
denomina- Township, one of the drivers, had |°
chest bruises. The other car oper-
ator, Robert L. Campbell Jr., 25,
‘of 3300 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Water- fractured nose, and his passenger,
Robert Hawisher, 58, of 2548 Silver-
side Dr., Waterford Township, had
multiple cuts of the nose and right
cheek.
Investigating Bloomfield police ford Township, was treated for a| of the world Communist modve-
ment. Chou also extended his visit
in Moscow an extra day, until Fri-
lay.
ITHACA (#—Gratiot County sher-
iff's men and State Police today
hunted a man they said enticed
an 8-year-old Wheeler girl into his
car and raped her while on her classes are back in session today.
‘Dearborn Man Hurt
in Truck-Car Colision
A truck-car collision in Spring-
field Township last night sent a
Dearborn man to Pontiac General
Hospital with rib injuries and mul-
of Justice—and all other executive
departments—to use Secret Service
agents in investigating law viola-
tions, * oc ‘way home from school. It was the|tiple bruises.
reported the collision rred| second crime of its type in Gratiot] Colin C. Joslyn, M4, operator of
when Harrison pulled out into traf-) : .
. dw County. since Jast. October. _ |the car, is in satisfactory condition fic and was struck by Campbell today. ‘The ck s dri by
traveling in a thru traffic lane, Henry Mill, 47, of Flint. The Supreme Court upheld its
constitutionality, thus establishing
the Federal government's respon-
sibility in controlling interstate tion); like interests and hobbies;
and the distance a Big Brother
would have to travel to meet his
“little brother.’’ The distance is A former resident of Pontiac,
he was killed in ar. automobile
accident Dec. 31.
He ‘js survived by his wife, Nat- pro tem post went
. Pears of Bu- DETROIT —Five Greyhound
The Weather cérs named-by the cau-
éet and la ter ratified by the House
as a whole, "teclatied:, .
-Norman E. Philleo, Lansing|!
house clerk; John Klingenberg,
milton, sergeant-at-arms; Ar-
ur Wickman, Carney, postmaster
dnd M. T. Young, Weidman, assis-
tant postmaster.
‘Would Abolish Road Job.
“LANSING ® — A bill to abolish
the job of state highway commis-
sioner was filed for introduction
téday by Rep. George W. Sallede
(R-Ann Arbor).
U.S, Weather ee Repo
ght.
tow tonight 18. Tomer-|
aay ie likelfhoed ef snow by_
it, Mederate nerthwest winds.
Teday in Pontiac
west temperature proceeding 8 a.m
+ 8 + Wind velocity 2? m.p.h
tion-—North.
Pun sets Wednesday at $:18 p.m.
ee ‘Thursday at 8°01 a.m
alee; his father, Kenneth Mar-
shall; two daughters, Christie and
~j Margie, both at home and several
brothers and sisters.
Service was held Jan, 3, in
the Church of Christ in Shepherd
with burial in the Salt River Cem-
etery there, ENFORCEMENT CRIPPLED
keenly aware of the fact.
land were to be enforced, there The action was a crippling blow
to Federal law enforcement and
Roosevelt—a former police com-
missioner of New York — was
He knew that if the laws of the gations have led to more than
15,000 convictions on white slave
traffic charges.
(Copyright 1957 by Don Whitehead)
(Tomorrow: Espionage and
Vigilantes.)
LANSING « — House Speaker
George M. Van Peursem, genial
and: athletic looking, said he
_jdoesn't consider himself a ‘‘con-
serVative’ Republican, ‘are some who do.”
ipost last night.
“but there
* * *
Smiling and a little excited, the)
44-year-old Zeeland lawyer stood
amidst a knot of newsmen in the
spacious House chamber following
his election for the top leadership)
“s
It was the climax to a speedy
climb in Michigan politics for
the youthful-appearing barrister who left his native state to com-
plete his education and returned
here less than eight years ago.
He appraised his place in the
Republican political spectrum in
response to a reporter's question.
“What about taxes?” a news-
lman asked. He referred to what
many observers expect, to prove
the No. 1 issue of the session.
“Well,” was the reply, ‘‘so far
you've seen guesses all the. way
from that we'll need 80 million
dollars in new faxes to (Sen. Carl-
ton H.) Morris’ statement. about
ho new taxes,
"ll scenes Pla
as Deadline
“today.
November,”’ Brewer said. ‘As we
) Brewer warned motorists a
may be purthased without te Sales Lag
Draws Near
Sale of 1957 license plates atethe Pontiac branch of the Secretary
of State office ‘is lagging, Willis. M. Brewer, branch - ‘manager, said P
“We've sold only 10,000-out of 60,000 since they went on wile in
do every year, we urge motorists
not to wait until the Feb, 28 deadline to get their plates.”
1 The Pontiac office ts located at 58 N. Parke St. It ls open week:
days from 9 until 5 and op Saturdays from 9 until noon.
to forget their titles as mg plates, Van Peursem Rises Swiftly in Politics “It's too early to tell.”
Van Peursem is identified in
many minds fer two roles “he
played “ast year as chairman of
the House Labor Commiittee and
a leading spokesman for Republi-
cans on labor matters. —
* * *
He spearheaded the successful
Rebuplican effort to block steep
fits sought by Democratic Gov.
Williams at the special session
beginning last Jtne.
Van Peursem said Michigan
benefits already were higher
than those of any other state,
and besides that the higher
taxes. needed to support more
liberal payments would drive in-
dustry out of the state. . we
4
party in'a campaign to place re-
strictions on supplemental unem-
ployment benefit agreements
worked out by unions and em-
iployers. This failed. .
Desipte stands on these ques-
tions widely received as “‘anti-
labor,” Van Peursem nevertheless
has friends in labors ranks.
The new speaker, successor to
retiring Rep,. Wade Van Valken-
burg of Kalamazoo, was born: in
Holland ‘and grew up in western) crime. Since 1910 FFBI investi-
increases in unemployment bene-| ON
During the regular session, Van
Peursem carried the ball for his usually less than 15 minutes driv-
ing time, Clark said.
BOY MEETS BROTHER
there with his parents.
the new Big Brother. They mee
cessful, and openly friendly; _
His openness is not phony.
On the contrary, the Big Brother
knows he is about to take on
a long, hard task. He won't get
paid for it. The reward lies in
the possibility that the worried,
hostile. lad in front of him will
someday become a BaPPy
friendly boy.
and the ngoes for a ride with the
boy.
he is willing to become a friend.
“He makes a
said,
Brother is on his own.
an
attend a sports event, take a hike,
go hunting or fishing, or whatever
they like to do. Sometimes the
boy even goes over to his Big
Brother's home to do work around
the house—he | wants to help his
friend.” |
The bey can get in etait with
his Big Brother anytime, day or
night, though.. If he has prob-
lems; the Big Brother has - to
listen and “accept everything.”
Clark said, “He doesn’t tell the
boy what to do, The big ‘thing
to/a boy is not what his Big
Brother does, but what he ‘means
emotionally.” At a final meeting, the boy is
He is a
well-dressed man, obviously ,-6ue-
After the first meeting,.the Big
Brother drives the parents home
It’s the beginning of. the
hard job of convincing the boy
date to see the
boy the following week;''--Clark
“and after that the Big}Pe
Usually
he sees his friend once a week for
r an da half. They might
However, the cardinal rule in $5 Million for Hungary
WASHINGTON (INS) — The
American Red Cross announced
‘today that its special drive for
Hungarian relief funds has bronght
jn contributions totaling $3,170,000. t bus drivers rescued seven elderly
men from the second floor of a
flaming rooming house in down-
town Detroit (2215 Lafayette West)
early today. The drivers turned
volunteer firemen after completing
their runs at the nearby Grey-
hound garage. Investigating Pontiac State Po-
lice said the accident happened
at U.S, 10 and Oakhill road. The
truck wag reportedly hit from. be-
hind by Joslyn as he tried to pass.
Dividends now are taxed in Ar-
gentina.
v
City Manager Walter K. Will-
man last night was appointed as
Pontiac’s representatvie on the
newly-formed Oakland County Civil
Defense Countil.
* *
The council was established Dec.
20 by the Civil Defense Dept. of
the Board of Supervisors. Its pri-
mary goal will be to coordinate
the various functions and activities
pertaining to Civil Defense = the
county,
* * &.
The City Commission approved
Willman’s appointment at last
evening's. short meeting which
lasted only “| aeiajates.
Pad
Willmar reputed that after con-
ference with the police départment
and traffic engineer, parking has
been restored to the wést side
of East Boulevard between Whitte-
riore and Elm, except during heavy
traffic hours of 6 to 8 a.m. and 3
40.5 p.m,
This restriction does not ovely
to Saturday, Sunday, or’ holi--
days, Willman said.
os last Tuesday's session, some
25 angry citizens protested the
‘pan along with City Comumtis-
stoner Gilbert -W.> Long. > Pontiac City Affairs
Name Willman CD Delegate
east,” Willman jokingly told the
commissioners,
* *
In other action: commissioners |
approved a request to be sent to’
the Michigan Municipal Finance
Commission asking that a surplus
of $34,866 from a $700,000 revenue
bond act of 1952 be transferred
toward a new fund for the city's
planned sewage treatment plant.
WILSON COMMENDATION
' The money is the unused portion
‘from the ‘sale of the bonds which
financed. the present plant off West |
Boulevard.
* * *
pressing the city’s appreciation to A commendation resolution ex- :
Mr, and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson for |"” request of City Attorney William:
A. Ewart.
Thirty school Children attended
the meeting as part of their civics
class training.
Engineer estimates were read
by the city clerk and public hear-
ings set for Wednesday, Jan. 16 on
the following two-inch blacktop ‘
paving projects in the city:
Alton street from Pranklin to Motor;
Astor street Maines to Michigan
and from. Auburn to Pike; Beverly ave-
nue from Laurel to Highwood; Bondale
and Cedardale avenues from Earlmoor
to Howland; Clinton River drive from
the ouster line of Robert Herndon's
rtment paevune to the
Starr; a rm
hard River, drive to Orchard Lake ave-
the gift of their Avon Township
estate for an Oakland County
branch of Michigan State Univer.
sity, was ar ee last evening.
The city snilioee asked that al
abandon portions of M-58 at the |
renee lir omg Beira be re. request’ from the State Highway }, -
~
Want te save $21.07 on @
Norge Triple Action
Dept. that the city establish and | Washer?
Wateh fer Geodrear's
Priee Smashing Clearance
Salé im Thursday's Pontise
Prose. :
— Owners of trucks and tratters must_have their. venidei re-weighed sick time up ‘retirement, was
this year. The weight recéipt must be presented at the office. gt 3 Michigan> attending school in jl
carried over one Week upon the | in| the Big Brother relationship is, “The friendly armistice has. been
Holland, Kalamazoo and Zeeland. what makes Phe Present drive for|signed and peace prevails in the
Mh
i
fa eats
“dle “East” resolution atid “extension
the. prlorlty tbsts <2:
taxes scheduled to expire April 1.
: * * ¢& '
The legislative chiefs agreed to
give priority to the tax extension
and six other administration rec-
ommendations, including the Mid-
of the refugee relief act.
Eisenhower also disclosed that
he will ask for three million
tensive study ef juvenile delin-
quency. This was included a
‘Excise taxes on liquor, cigar-
ettes and automobiles would ex-
pire April 1 unless extended by
. Congress. - The corporation income}
tax rate also is scheduled to drop
from 52 to 47 per cent on that
date,
The administration ‘previously
had hinged its forecast of a bal-
anced budget in the next fiscal
year on the continuance of present
tax levels. .
The priority list was drawn up
at the President’s first meeting
with GOP congressional leaders
since the convening of the 85th
Congress. Eisenhower customarily
meets each Tuesday with them
when Congress is in session,
Dig That Meter Gold
BRUNSWICK, Maine (#—Select-
men have decided to sell at auc-
tion the $2.50 gold piece which a
motorist accidentally dropped in-
to a parking meter. The decision
to sell was reached after news- ‘| to previous prgemedie tat the | Senate e9e: THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1957
' | Issue Already Doomed | for: This Session To ra a . would balance off each other in GOP ‘member of the House Interior Al
organization. © and ‘Insular_ Affairs Committee,
ep. 4. Ls Miler of Nebraska alagrees ‘with the White House that
1. Hawaii for the first time in 24
lyears .tlected a Democratic dele-
gate; John’A: Burns; to-Congress:}-
2. Alaska staged a “rump” elec-
tion and sent two Democratic sen-
ators-elect and a Democratic rep-
resentative - elect to Congress to
ninth’ state. Democratic delegate
years ago, only 21 Senators voted
to outlaw the filibuster which
invariably kills civil rights legis-
lation. In last week's showdown,
the number had swelled to 38.
Should four new Senators join
the most exclusive club in the
world, northern liberals would be
in a much more advantageous posi-
tion to end the filibuster.
‘TURNED TABLES
Traditionally, Hawaii has voted
Republican, and Alaska Demo-
cratic. Last fall, however, Hawaii
paper stories failed to turn up
the owner, Coin dealers indicated
the gold piece might be worth $11!
— or 13,200 parking minutes.
“eea2g
Sujteg Ss. fepsungy ay ayes
Souvsva) Suyqsumry e414
S,avaipeot) 205 Gott mM
syaeqg meng wnuyway
BU US oss eaus oF put My turned out delegate Betty Farring-
ton in favor of Burns, a realtor
who won the enthusiastic endorse-
ment of Harry Bridges’ 1.L.W.U.
labor union.
* The Centaur
The centaur was a mythical creature, half-man and half-horse,
who was supposed to have lived in the woods of the Ancient Greeks.
One centaur was Chiron who had been educated by the god Apollo
and was famous for his wisdom and learning. Apollo entrusted to
Chiron the education of his son, Aesculapius, who became the patron
of physicians. |
Here is a centaur for your stable. Paste this picture on cardboard
and color with crayons. The mushrooms in the grass are red with
jwhite spots. The scarf can be any bright color. The lyre is golden and
the grapes purple with green leaves.
Fold back the left panel of the base and the figure will stand. Cut
around the right hand along the dotted line. Cut a slit in the left-hand. |
Rest the lower end of the lyre, or the bunch of grapes into the slit!
under the fingers of the left hand. The small sketches of the hand will
show you how.
Now the centaur can play on the lyre or hold the grapes, which-
ever you like..Put him in the ‘corral with the other horses.
(Wing Todd, Virginia Beach, Va., wins $10 for sending in this idea
first. If you have an idea send it in care of this newspaper. Violet
| Moore Higgins, AP Newsfeatures. )
| . Tomorrow: Pegasus, the Flying Horse
| Donated Tape Recorder a Godsend Thief No Speed Demon
Blind Puerto
Bar Exam on First Attempt
NEW YORK NS) — Gilberto
|Ramirez-Hernandez, 35, of Brook-
llyn, heard Tuesday that he had :
42 N. Saginew St.
a lawyer on his first try.
It was typical of the man that
he should get the information by
ear — because that'is the way he
learned his law well enough to
complete the four-year colirse in
three
Gilberto is totally blind.
The new lawyer, married to
COME IN AND HAVE —
A LITTLE CHAT,
ANO WELL EXPLAIN
THE “THIS AND THAT”
| 549 N SAGINAW ST WULLE e « Bustders SUPPLIES «FUEL
Pontiac I6. Mich Wf FE 4-252) DENVER (® — Dream car fea-
tures? Jet. age design?. Nope.;
They hold no allure for the burg-|
lar who broke into a Denver ga- |
rage and towed away a handsome
; vehicle the other night. The stolen Rican Passes “pplex=Prench potiticat =
have entered the race to fill the
| Pats Election
| ‘Sunddy Voting Tit Tet — aska during
of Red Strength Since.
Suez, Hungary Crises = ={Bazley’s-
Super Specials?!
5 pila
——{GROUP REMINDS ,
- The group's embarrassing’ pres-
ence around Capitol Hill serves.
‘as a: constant reminder to all,
—— that the Democrats’
‘White House regimes, captured the!
“election” as No. 1 senator-elect,|
with William A. Egan cinching the
short-term nomination. Ralph -J.
Rivers is the ‘‘representative-,
PARIS_(INS)--Political passions
inal soon BEE, rising in. Paris with the BRL. Because
proach of Sunday's crucial bi-|
election to the National Assembly.
Twenty-five candidates, repre-
senting every shade in the com-
politician, Vincent de Moro-Giat-
ferr
* ,* &
Qualified to vote are approxi-
mately 580,000 citizens from six
Paris wards, embracing both resi-
dential and business districts.
The election, coming exactly
two months after the Suez and
Hungary crises, has assumed the
appearance of a sampling of the
French people's political mood,
The campaign is being fought
on broad national, rather than
‘local, issues reflecting the signi-)
all political parties.
REDS IN SPOTLIGHT
Particular interest is centered.
on the voting strength the Com-|
munists .will be able to muster
on Sunday.
French popular disapproval ot|
the brutal Russian military inter- ] *
vention in Hungary extended to)
intellectuals and the) both the
workers, who have provided the
bulk of the votes cast for Com-
|munist candidates,
/ J *
An analysis of Sunday’s vote 1s
expected to show whether French
revulsion over Soviet methods in
Hungary has had lasting and con-'
crete political reperctssions,
‘Sets Courtroom Scene
—in State Legislature
SANTA FE, N. M. ® — Rep. Matias Chacon, Democratic floor!
leader of the state house of | | | ficance being given to the test by!
elect.”
of this. unpreced: action, Bartlett, the only legally
elected Alaskan delegate, cannot
be expected to give whole-hearted
support of the statehood drive,
. Hy
supporting statehood, but- except
for ‘northern Democrats, neither-is|
expected to give more than lip-|
service’ to the bill, if it) ever
Ra at their August pectin ewe ‘78 No. Saginaw
Tender Beef
iUB TANNER, IA TIE,
With Meat Purchase De DAE Mc AE SC
a,
Bileaciead a0
reaches the floor.
—_—
41 NORTH SAGINAW STREET
Sane
“TIL
s€€ SHOP FRIDAY and |
MONDAY NIGHTS
9 P.M.
- JANUARY - ‘CLEARANCE SAVE THROUGHOUT THE STORE!
‘passed his examinations to become | the former Elba Hernandeg, $0,
and father of two children, Iris,
3, and Gilbert, 2, came to the
U.S. from his native Puerto
Rico in 148 on an English
scholarship te New York Cuvee.
ity.
Three. years earlier his sight
failed him completely within weeks auto was a model T Ford, vintage
1925.
Austria's Trade Union Federa-
tion now has 1,398,444 members,
Vienna reports, about 25 per cent!
of whom are’ women. Austria's
total population is about 7 mil-
lion. representatives, found it a bit dif-
ficult to adjust to the opening of,
the legislature. “If the court
please ... ”" he started, in ad-
dressing the chair, Speaker Don-
ald Hallam, like Chacon an attor-
ney, grinned and ‘remarked un-
derstandingly: ‘It takes a few
days.” . |
god: ps
-|court and listen to the best in of his graduation from the Univer-
sity of Puerto Rico at San Juan.
Physicians said both retinas were
detached,
“I went to NYU for about two
years,” he said, “‘But succumbed
to a nervous disorder and had
to quit. I found odd jobs and taught
languages for a while and then I
got a job as a transcribing typist
at the welfare department.
* * *
“That was in 1952, the year I
met my wife and got married.
“With marriage came the re-
birth of ambition. My wife and I}
decided I could and should study;
law. We knew it would be a grind,
_|but we went ahead with it on aii
do-or-die basis. It paid off.”
There was a catch in Ramirez’
voice when he was told his class-
mates chipped in twice te buy
him a tape recorder, The first
was stolen with four hours of
lessons recorded by friends so .
the: budding lawyer could study
‘who speaks perfect
called the recorder ‘“‘a
. I could take it to
“I believe that peo ut
that is the reason elles’ is
Anna Knack, Flint, Michigan. IF YOU SUFFER FRO
ARTHRITIS| | KNOW WHAT'S BEST FOR IT! others, and f tre testimonial
true testimonial,” says Mrs.
“I am glad to tell others of
my experience with O-JIB-WA
BITTERS, as I have. | suffered
|.80 much fOr ys
rover 30°
years, and
have found)
the © medi-:
cine tha t |
brings: the =~
relief that:
you want.:
I had rheu-
matism.,
and -arth.>
ritis in
both knees, ©
but Mrs. Anna Knack espe-
cialy the right one, and was
often forced to sit down because
of the severe pain; but I just
wouldn’t stay in bed, I also
had it in the back of my heck,
and the pain was so fierce that
I couldn’t sleep nights. I dis-
covered years ago that O-JIB-
WA BITTERS brought results
where other settee failed, and besides, it seems to build
me up and gives me lots of pep ff
|too. I sew for others, baby sit
*tiand keep up my house, and I
sjam strong and healthy for a
i|lady of 76. I also find that by ©
_jusing your tea with the medi-
cine, that it’s good for’ indiges-
}jtion, as before, I couldn’t eat
icabbage, beans, onions, etc., as
these foods would upset me but
‘now I can eat anything and en-
ee Joy it, I have read in the Bible |
i
how God created herbs for the
service of man,.and after trying
other. medicines,
nothing compares’ with O-JIB.
WA BITTERS. That is why I
offer this trys testimonial, so
that others th ho have rheuma-.
tism or arthritis may know of
the wonderful results obtain-
able from this herb medicine.” know. that_
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST - POR GENUINE O-J18-WA BITTERS’
Thieves Admit jurisprudence over and' over
again,” he said.
Firewater’ Had
Burnt Flavor
BALTIMORE (® — Two defend-
ants were hauled into police court
on charges of stealing $61.75 worth
| of liquor from a tavern, closed
jafter a recent fire.
Police said the burglars drank
seven fifths of whisky on the spot.
Frank Williams. Jr., 38, and Each piece will
quemvete silverplate by skilled'silversmiths.
‘James Richardson, 35, admitted) there is no better time than right now to have — ARTICLE
| breaking into the place and were|your worn silverwars, precious entiques ond cream Pigchors $3.95
‘held in $3,000 bail each for grand priceless heirlooms repaired and r Senne Souts 4.95 |
ijury action, Williams told the original beauty. Take advantage of this excep- went ere |
magistrate: tional sale and bring your worn silver in TODAY! Weste Bowls 6.95
* * «# Tea and Coffee Pots, ea. 9.95
“We did go in that place, sir, Sting in eny article in need of ropleting — Water Pitchers 9.95
and take some. drinks but we) “hether it be silver, copper, gold or nickel . . « Serving Trays (per sq. in.) .O7 didn’t think anybody’d mind, We we will gladly give you free estimates.
didn’t think it was any good,
sir,”
“If it wasn’t any good, why did
you drink so much of it?’’ magi-
strate John A. Janetzke asked.
“Tt tasted burnt, sir,” Williams
replied. ENP RED ATT 11 eee
“wer.
FALSE TEETH or Irritating?
6 Ww. Huron St.
0 mab Pd wi hath Nex rooney a eromer ren
LIMITE cee TED TIME ONLY BRING ARTICLES | in N TODAY! | |
“The Store Where Quality Counts”
be heavily replated in
SALE PRICES |
\ q
As Prerensy’ PrN
COMPANY
Pontiac’ Oldest Jewelry hieds
ee FE 2.7257 |
na $23.99 | b
ey |
| VALUES TO § 88 | Last! . $59.99 21 to | COATS « TOPPERS $4928
548%
- DRESSES - Junior, Misses’ and Women’s Sizes to 2412 ‘
«iD» 7 Values to $12.99 Values to $16.99
PAJAMAS .....R
Ww a SKIRTS ....... Reg. $2.99 Ea.
BLOUSES ...... Reg. $2.99 Ea.
SWEATERS ..... Reg. $2.99 Ea.
| SLIPS......... Reg. $2.99 Ea.
GOWNS ....... Reg. $2.99 Ea.
: eg. $2.99 Ea.
i) PETTICOATS... Reg. $2.99 Ea.
i} CAN CANS... . Reg. $2.99 Ea.
GIRDLES sees Reg. $2.99 Ea. BLOUSES ...... Reg. $1.99 Ea.
POLOS........ Reg. $1.99 Ea.
SWEATERS ..... Reg. $1.99 Ea.
SLIPS......... Reg. $1.99 Ea.
GOWNS....... Reg. $1.99 Ea.
PAJAMAS ... . . Reg. $1.99 Ea.
PETTICOATS . . . Reg. $1.99 Ea.
CAN CANS... . Reg. $1.99 Ea.
N O Ww $1.59 EACH
2 for $1.69—or 89c Ea.
51 gauge 15 denier. Reg.
69c pair, NOW 3 prs. for
HOSE SPECIAL - | $ 75 60 gauge 15 denier. Reg. $200
Pval 79¢ pair, NOW 3 prs. for Price .
CHILDREN’S DEPARTMENT —
WINTER COATS or SNOW SUITS Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14
*An*10 - VALUES TO $12.99 EA. 12°20 VALUES TO $24.99 EA.
CHILDREN’S DRESSES Reg. $1.99 Each
2°83 Charge Accounts
Invited Reg. $2.99 Each
For $5
Jane Lee
7 “41 NORTH SAGINAW STREET FOR ‘3 cH
Setebiaier
£ ia Sail (ates Oath
“THE , PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1 9, 1957 pita ie ee ee sien
: ~ Make your ‘ner time pay olf ler you ee tying your ff
4 —hand-ot- this week's Pot-O-Gold puzzle. The clues below. will
‘| help you decide which word will best fit the solution, and the
— will tell you the deadline for entry and the proper mail-
procedure. «ap Phin aca carefully and send us ‘your answers. — Kavanagh Ma kes Rulingon Child Welfare A * Sam
. sistsof {})-a- number. of -cireles- which-con-.. cmpcsierelini cen aerngaintne tent gl nnn ra mer tain « = scrambled Lb oweay and (2) a corresponding list of “LANSING ‘@—Atty. “Gen. “Thom- ithe state Social Welfare Commis- "Kavanagh added that the opinion|what constitnlos aiienballiiiaias
peated below, .The object is to arrange las M. ‘Kavanagh holds that te ee a cans ba SRM geomet seen ae ee ee
into a gee that best fits its clue. |)
which you select ior Circle No. 1, then would be the ‘state has no right to deny a license | crimination by some 90 privately |public
ae hich ‘you would Print. in the space to the right of a) to. 8...child.. wellape..agency prac:
sats ‘ticing racial discrimination.
: _ The -Puling affects the right of
, it and all letters in ont circle must Leg a sere Was Seurensen fo Ws sald off-duty yee sano i
: f . t ANY: letter in ' ; Ripe ee fc called to duty to, fight any firel. er: course, can represen er i | - Maxey t : y Stele
. s oo well-being of the community.”
De the game in al! the other circles. Study the clues care-- Want to onns0 ca’ le rs The opinion, requested by Iron
*§ fully and artange all the letters into words that you believe won ee ada * : : IMoustain firemen, revolved
| best conforms to these clues. Use your $ signs tq help you orge Deluxe Ges Range nent eit a Gellaition of ithe "
spell out the right words. oe oe “conflagration. é me . .
ele : : | Watek for Goodyear's * * ° : i results. ..
Price Smashing Clea powers ‘2 - exists .
Perera qeqeraranare ease eranseenes Sele in Thursday's Pentias tig oe -“" Under state law, off-duty fire-|as soon as a eo at a cans ied ane rome Finknants fy feog Press. . called back “ or Even on ‘% worlds better! See if
a PUZZLE. ase 32 «th |The law, he said, was designed |men can be Seen ee emit Cee o- the first day, many had no nag- you don’t much of the ir-
os 8 to establish adequate standards |°f Public necessity arising from| sultant destruction to property or, backaches, other por gf woot oD aah
' for child care in private agencies |S*e#t conflagration.” — loss of fire will likely affect the ere less fore and during those “difficult
4 — not to “dictate their admission | The Iron Mountain firemenjwell being of the community in} /!tery before their period. Za”
policies.” asked for a “definite statement” on!which. it occurs.” = Giecovery eers mere - Compound.)
5 t ~ : “= e ®
’ a
a a ®
4 a
J a
Es é
z fs
a s
J a
' a
5 a
8 #3 4
oe | +}. hee been eee si dks dvtan 4 os « iia gh a cduds che t :
iH 2 posh teitada ved don: 410 fo ee eeee we fe oe ones G06 :
a a
ij 3 reee TS eee eee ll een eeeeeear eee eennne * |
4 Pe We as aks a -d608 a (Omit this -week) : E T Iki 4
Ss “ - + . iy
H J ee eet tree 13 avaebeeer eer nee toe buae * 8 Pye y one *3 a ing
2 oe eeuneee “eee M4 tebe ee ee eeeeae ee eeeee |
H eS ae ret ee reee 15 teen ee eee eee ee Ree . : =
, = i | 8 a ee ‘st eee 16 been eR ee eeneee Bevacee a bo f K, E
] NAME s a u roger 3: ve ay eee
t iedietiuobass perro a
; chr ....... +e eeeee teks PHONE NO, Coe eee ee eteee } . ! 2
Lecnuwgeneuscessnansansennanna=t ey
Clip Along Dotted Line and Mail )
“SOLUTION CLUES Little sister, big sister, they're all talking.ebout the low, low prices
at Kroger . . . AND NOT JUST WEEKEND SPECIALS, BUT
EVERYDAY LOW, LOW PRICES. ¥és»Ma'am, Kroger prices are
low. Everyday! Shop Monday, Shop: Tuésday, Shop any day and
save more money on your family food bill with Kroger's low 1. The mistakes St « hs cam qreatly amuse « sephicl-
2. Can be picked only when ripe.
re 2. A redlly savage one cami be a! damngecous eppenint.
“A, Eran @ mediocre producer will got la shore this,
a
Red Beets , 3 ios 25: _ Maxwell House rar toe $1 7 Avondale fancy cut . . . ’ Kroger everyday low price. ..... 54.
Cream Style Corn’ #10: - Del-Monte Catsup 2 uz 43° &. A song like this could very well have boon sung by Apollo.
nk tet Ss Sera oo SE |
|| 8. Pootry like this is often witty. = = ; Packer's label... . Sean Sinque ceyéay law pee. .
; -to-deer salesman knows it doona't ee th | tees pi ; Krogo Shortening 3279: Northern Tissue Am 33°
2 ; 10. ‘An invigorating ........ can bring a flush to the cheeks. Kroger everyday low price... - . White toilet tissue . .....
2, A. Sevejes are sapetiane quick te wig the coca, Of more Ice. Cream : Ve-Gel. ¢ White Bread 20-0. ¢
seta, uaa Country Club,. asst. flavors beraias Loeves 12. (Omit this wesk) . 4 | L re er Kroger fresh sliced . . . ogee .
19°A finel ........ is quite likely to be effective. . “ : Lawn a e C eese i) par 59: Pineapple Juice 12: 1 c
14. This has definite connection with foot. , Kroger everyday low price... . . Om’ Dole golden Hawaiian . . . Lee.
. 4 eee | : im Ja
| 16 Thi ot cours ten te wen, \\e Margarine mere f'n QO Vlasic Dill Pickles 33° 16. ....,.4. actress is extremely good to watch. i ne | \- J — Kroger everyday low ke cee _. Polish style, Kroger everyday low price. . . . . i
i) ree os , \ — - Krispy Crackers su. 25 Tomatoes _ 22255 Banas pVeacoole | a |) coe , desiahte trek exiop'. 5 See ae eet hak ay Ok Com 5 i
Ke nyone is eligible to enter O-GOLD contest ed 4
Sn cetera itr coer ene mete. ae Allsweet Margarine. 30 Pork & Beans 10° a ‘ A contestant nar A ubmit ax many ¢ trie x he or she , / \ . Kroger everyday low mnee rr er Clover Valley brand. ........ . .
wishe must be on official entr nted in this * ;
Gewspcper. " _ Kroger Gelatins 3 ain 19° Green Beans ? 203 ? 3°
|, < Reapers an entry the contestant must print | his answer ‘ Assorted delicious flavors . ... oe Packer’s label brand... . . 2 & Cone
wi in the proper spaces, cut out the area enclos y dottec ‘ .
OA ee ed ea | Sliced Cheese it 355° Cut Green Beans 2 x C i : 32 must bear a Tuesday, January 15, postmark (or before). No Kraft American or pimento. ..... 2... Del-Monte Brand quality .°< . . . . 4 Cans |
SS ei ! alad Off : : : is Sapa lbs ceceed elie, The mae Wh / Salad Oil » tt 37< Cream Style Corn 2 = 29¢ fl h Kraft all purpose. . . . . re Green Giant brand . ....... ne B | St ¢ ia“ | Pd . reen |
5. The Pontiac Press will award a cash prize of $100 a
k to the winner of each weekly POT-O-GOLD contest. I!
than one. winging answer is received the prize will
vided equally among the winners. If any week or weeks
‘ould pass without any winners, the prize will be added
vekly y_until a winning solution is pgubaiitied.
6. Winners will be awarded on extra cash bonus of $25 | Liquid Chiffon "2 3]< Tomato Juice “2 J 3¢ 6c off regular price. . . oe ee eee Packer's Label nutritious . 2... 2... . 2...
Salad Dressing % 39¢ Peaches Freestone 322% B9¢ Embassy, everyday low price. - - . + «+ - Packer’s Label brand . ......
Diet Aid Bread a D5< Soda Crackers tt DAs Kroger everyday low,pricee. -.--.. - Kroger brand. Everyday low price. . .’. ms ‘
French Dressing "sna" +0. i 376 Peanut Butter - "1g BQ Nudober Bree Kiss ee deen Peter Pan homogenized . . 5... . 0.54
b if they are Pontiac Press subscribers o{ record on the day
vars Gre announced. Only one such bonus can be awarded
tach Bate-winner no matter how many weekly prizes may
umu
OEY
2 ee TRE
op
I
ME
ee
ye As bisa 7. Each week's puzzle will be published Monday, Wednes-
oT Friday until the contest's end. Either or all will be
_— as official eritry blanks.
@ Winners and correct solutions will be announced each
“f fay of the week following 4 contests. Official keeper
answers will be Frederick C. Ziem, prosecutor for Oakland
unty. “Only the General Features Corp., originators of the
, will know the solutions:until alter each contest is over. - .
jewers will be Someernd to the Press judges by Mr. Ziem a
wthe tinal deadlin .
pis Taare fe only one correct solution té the POT-O-GOLD
that correct answer can win. The decision of
ary contestants ee to’ abide uy ee
and’ nano Sat be returned. —
we -d potsles must be addressed te POT-O-GOLD, i , BOX $8, Pontiac, Michigan,, Winners will be
fied : by telephone or in the mails, Chocolate Drops wt A9e Vet's Dog Food 3 25: Hekman coconut cookies . . 1.35 5s ep eee Kroger everyday low price . .
Borden’s Milk - ial * Als Spaghetti MEAT BALLS 245° ee |
Homogenized, everyday low price . Chef Boy Ar-dee Italian . eS re ee
i q '
‘Karo Syrup le sceen Beans + pease Cc neeereerecte!
:
A » 1 aes e Z < . “e
oh tk <4 a fae z J f.
; Be * Ae e ‘ 3 tase aaa ee
4 : a 3 x \ | ek “4 i it ear ae Bal
: ee \ (
t : eed ’ : ; : a
__ THE |PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1957. |
tee 4
|
“Chuck Roast......™ 33°
Turnips Lb. 19¢ Endive _ Lb. 19° = : an
Chef Salad 19° Coconuts ur 19° i
_ Variety of cut up wegetables ..../..4....-.. 3 aa omnes: alae es ;
GROUND
Fresh, ground several times
daily. Stock up your freezer
at this low Kroger price.
GET THE ONLY BEEF
GUARANTEED TENDER
* 10 TIMES OUT OF 10—
KROGER TENDERAY
BEEF — THE BEST
YOUR MONEY CAN
COMPLETELY CLEANED. FRESH WHOLE OR CUT UP
me &
tewing Chickens STOCK UP YOUR FREEZER NOW AND SAVE MORES | re
AT THIS LOW KROGER PRICE Lb.
“THRIFTY” LEAN, FRESH BLADE CUT.
OF Theits y Y Meat com a etd r - n $ ° fee deena % ai
: iia amount of tat found” 9 9 ain fed beef buy has th full ee] °™Ount of food value, “
PRODUCE IS FRESHER AT KROGER!
BRIGHT-GREEN, GARDEN-FRESH BUNCHES, é
GUARANTEED FRESH OR YOUR MONEY BACK! Bunch
ork Roast yn00% 39¢ Rol rom young tender Porkers . : Orc O | Sa . | Meese SOE Re | 2ausage re
YOURE WOE» .+. 00-22 --se se ses Garden fresh crisp .......s0eeceereeeneees ees "Se eewen,
+e eee
woo Bag tees "ee ens a
“eee tee * Full of sweet rich milk .......+. +
ZIPPER SKINNED MAMMY BRAND ICC SIZE
JUICE-LADEN, VITAMIN-RICH. FLORIDA GROWN. ; ¢
PRICED EXTRA LOW. Dozen
BARGAIN OF BARGAINS! KROGER BIG 19cSALE “oe
+ Cello Bag fa Gay Spinach ... . cle8-s FS”
Escarole w 19° Parsnips = 19° i
Garden-fresh, fine for salads ..... Value priced, fine for stews......
oe: pts - a
TTI LLL
-Cut from the-fines} young ter rh Porkers, Stock ip” ou , reezer at this low, low price, /
gee ¥
Tht
2D ES Zs : We reserve, the right to limit-quantities; Prices effective through Swuday, January 13, 1957 F
sb it SS a ee ee ee Sata enema ne ene ARES SAE
1
f . ' ye , y
: |
, a / ‘ uf ' 5 ‘ fof oe \3
ne ee oe ee ee ee ee ee eee ee ee eee
44
af
a
=
cuioaaine of a iparts of Lapeut, Macomb, St. Clair
hospital . chaieled to ‘begin this’ and Oakland, counties. Classifica-
spring, the auxiliary of the Com- tions will includé active,“inactive,
Hospital Foundation, Inc., lassociate, and junior memberships,
will launch its first membership Mrs. Anderson said,
drive Jan. 15. * a *
today by membership drive chair-|
man, Mrs. Edmund E. Anderson)
of Romeo. She said the drive will
continue through Jan. 31 and will
cover the 13 communities Bes be,
‘hospital.
of Van Dyke (M53) and Bord-
man, two miles south of Almont.
open to families liv ing in adjacent | Mpls ee vil a
. eeeikeact corner Dues payable in January will be
$1 per year per person for-adults
This announcement was. made and 50c each for students or junior
members.
The auxiliary board, headed by
Anton Patti dr: of Romeo, sights
| as its objective the desire “‘to
|
[of the’ area that the hospital will
ibecome ‘acquainted with the pur-|
pose and function of the hospital,
jcontribute necessary non profes-|°
Membership. in the auxiliary is sional services, .and. provide.funds
where needed. |_promote _ and te advance welfare | clude William’ Muir. of Almont,
treasurer, and Mrs. Officers in addition. to 5» Patti siting Mrs.
Ralph Sert
Sterns ‘ot Lakeville, secretary, As- ®
‘bership committee ae Frank.
lin O'Connor of :
Charles ro of Almont.
_THE PoN'TAC : PRESS. $8, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9,
Mayor States Problem
larea is still in the discussion-stage.
Ashton J, Berst, meeting with coun-
cilmen here
Se
=
\
; :
Utica Faculty
Wins at Romeo | But $100 Game Profit
to Swell Coffers for
Civic Center
ROMEO—The. Faculty Basket-
ball Team of Utica High School
defeated the Romeo. Faculty 58-56
in a benefit game in Romeo High
gym last night,
* * *
Proceeds from the contest
amounting to over $100 are ear-
marked for the proposed com-
munity building, Romeo
Principal Harold H.
today,
The new civic-center is sched-
uled for construction this, spring.
The game, which Barr said was
“tight all the way,” was witnessed
by about 400 enthusiastic specta-
tors from both communities. High -
Barr said ROBERTA KING
Mr. and Mrs, William C. King
of Commerce announce the n-
erta Catherine, to George Fred
Carpenter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Grant G, Carpenter of Commerce.
Townships Send
Representatives
to E. Lansing
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP —
Many of the townships in Oakland
County have sent representatives
to the statewide Home Sewage Dis-
posal Training Course held today
at the Kellogg Center of MSU in
East Lansing.
* * *
“R. H. Coltson, director of. the;
Sanitation Division of the Oakland),
County Health: Department said George
of ‘Golden Agers’ Roberta. was graduated from Mich-
igan State Norma] College and
was recently attending
Cleary Business College in Ypsi-
lanti. No date: has been set for the
wedding.
Plan Organization
ORTONVILLE—Brandon Grange
973 will hold a meeting on Friday,
at 1:30 p.m. in the Grange Hail,
to discuss the organization of a
“Golden Age’ group for members
over 65 years of age.
that the informative program on
septic tank tile field systems in-
cluded discussions on the following
—_ health aspects of the septic
: “Water. Supply
tt,” orset'k Joy, Sanita- The program is to benefit those
who are living in this aréa at the
present time.
When the organization becomes
‘an et. VU, of M.; “Disposal!
Standpoint,” F. L. Weaver
“What Happens in the ‘Septic’
Tank,” S. R. Weibel, U.S, Public)
Health Service, “Small Sewage’
Disposal Systems,” .E.. Stockton,
Calhoun County — Depart-,
- ment,
Auxiliary Sets Party
UNION LAKE — Ladies of the
Auxiliary of the Union Lake Fire
Department are planning a lunch-
- eon and card party for Jan, 17 at
12:30 at. the home of Mrs. Harry
Burgin.
Cohostesses for the affair are!
Mrs, Harold Taylor and Mrs.
George Gisch and Mrs. Jack)
Switzer. workable, the group will elect their bloc.
own officers, and will discuss the!
programs that will be held in the!
future.
White Lake Announces
Issuance of Permits
Only three building permits were
|White Lake
‘Andrew Plano announced
weak, .
to bad weather conditions
the busy holi¢ay séason.
‘constructed by Moore Homes, Ine.,
Plano said. gagement of their daughter, Rob-|
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP. -
issued in the month of December,
Building inspector,
this |
Plano attributed the low number
and
Five. -homes in the Westwood
‘Manor subdivision are now being existing in the Southfield area with
regard to sform waters.
| Mayer Richard V. Marshall |
{said grea concern is of
+ spending some $5-miltion (for the”
i city’s share of the 12 Town drain)
and then finding that the storm
water problem has fot been
solved,”
Park
Town drain is completed unless
No Direct Talks
onCanal Control Egypt to Bring Suez
Before U.N.* Assembly;
Hope Asian, Soviet Aid
UNITED NATIONS, N, Y. @—
put the Suez Canal dispute before
the 80-nation U, N. General As-
sembly, where large blocs of
countries support the Egyptian
claim to sole control of the water-
way.
Such a move wags: indicated by| The
Abdel Kader Hatem, Egyptian in-)
‘formation director, who declared
his country will not negotiate di-
rectly or indirectly with France
and Britain on the future contrél
‘of the. canal,
“Egypt- can only discuss the,
matter within the framework of
the United Nations,’’ Hatem said
in a statement in Cairo.
If the question goes to the Gen-
eral Assembly, Egypt would count
African countries and the Soviet
| A U.S, Embassy spokesman in
Cairo said Ambassador Raymond
Hare would leave for Washington
some time.”
Extension Club Meeting.
minum. trays.
Fire Department Meets;
i, who has organized
Accepts Two Members
UNION LAKE — The Union Lake
Fire Department met Tuesday at
7:20 p.m, at the Oakland County
Tuberculosis Sanatorium for their
regular session, During the meet-
ing two new members were ac-
__ |cepted, John Pohl and Robert Hill.
A@THOR TO'SPEAK — Dr. Marie Rasey, author and educator
noted. for her work with. brain-damaged children, will be guest
speaker at the Southern-Oakland County Branch of the Assn. for
Childhood Education International. The diriner meeting will be held
et Meio Church, Royal Oak, on Thursday at 6:15 p}m.
schools for brain-damaged youth
served in advisory capacity to the Depgrtment of Educa-
e ton in Indi, will spek on the sue
. More than 3000. persons, incl
_ Satin Sew use expec to attend. “Courage to Move Forward.”
educators from 2 > outhern
Se ee a=
Four Towns Group
to Discuss Party
‘FOUR TOWNS—Cirvle Deborath
convene at the home ‘of Mrs. Rob-
ert Bruce today at 1 p.m. for a
short business meeting and the
discussion of plans for the coming
_jeard party.
WSCS Meets Today
IMLAY CITY, — The: regular
meeting of the WSCS will be held
at 1 o'clock today in the church
parlors, The Rev, and Mrs, Burch
will be in charge of tthe program
and devotions, Storm Water Discussed “OAK PARK — This. “city’s “de-|something fs
mands nee positive assur vance that
ing: into the Oak Park,
Coordinator of the 12 Town drain
lained the condition
Marshall explained that the worst
area was between 10 and 11 Mile
-|Roads at Greenfield where there
ig a natural flow of water from
Southfield into neighboring Oak
He went on to say that as much
as 20 per cent of the city would
still face the possibility of base-
ment flooding even after the 12
Egypt appeared planning. today to
on support from the Asian and}
\Saturday for talks with State
Department’ officials, but he add-
ed the trip had been Planned “for
to Continue Tray Project
FOUR TOWNS — The. Sandy |Beach Extension Club met Tues-
iday at 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs, Elizabeth Mooney of Soath
Commerce. Project for the evening
was the continuing of work on alu-
ters, Mrs. Edna May of Lansing, the flooded water pouring over
Berst said carver ot eratea ta
this area are under way and said
a series of draing will be built
cept storm water in Southfield
before it crosses into Oak Park.”
Marshall said “‘We don't want to
delay the-12 Town drain one day
tions will be “built if Southfield
ect
Iran Educator
Visiting Imlay
Schools Today
IMLAY CITY—A. A, Saidzadeh of Iran wifl be the guest of the
day, He is cdnnected with the field
of vocational agriculture in the
ministry of education in Iran and is
visiting schools in the United States
under the Foreign Exchange Pro-
gram,
While in the school, Saidzadeh
. Will observe classes and discuss
various phases of the school pro-
gram with teachers and atatate-
tration;
He will be accompanied
cation Consultant of the State De-
partment of Vocational] Education.
Calico Swingers
Call Friday
Square Dance
Big enaahag ws TOWNSHIP —
“Calico Swingers” and Inter-
mediate club, will hold a square
idance beginning at 8 p.m. Friday
at the CAI building.
This is the second year that the
group has been dancing. together,
and although there are fifteen
couples enrolled in the group, any-
‘one interested in square dancing
is welcome to join, according to
President Milo Struble, For de-
tail call FE 2-6936,
Announce New Hours
at White Lake Town Hall
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—New
Town Hall offiee hours for Janu-|*
ary and February announced by
Ronald C, Voorheis, treasurer are
from 9 a.m. uritil 4:30 p.m. ‘Tues-
day through Friday and Saturdays
from 9 a.m. until noon.
Tax rates in the Township vary
jaccording to the school district in
which property is located, Total
tion for Walled Lake School Dis-
School |
ley School- District $58.45; Holly
‘School District $57.56, Dublin
School District $65.05 and Water-
ford School District, $77.05.
County Deaths
William James Smith
Service for William James Smith,
89; who died Friday in. a Flint
Convalescent Home, were held
Monday from the Liberty Street
Gospel Church. Burial was in the
German Cemetery, Oregon Town-
ship with the Rev, Frank S. Hem-
ingway officiating. —
He is survived by ‘three daugh-
Mrs. Dorothy Jersey, and Mrs.
Sadie Egner of Flint, two sisters,
Mrs. Lucy Kelly of Flint, Mrs.
\Rebecca Ott of Woodlawn; a
ibrother Vern, of Washington, 20
grandchildren -and 37 gret-grand-
children.
Cubs of ‘67’ to Convene.
FOUR TOWNS — The Cub Scouts
of Pack 67 are holding a committee
meeting for Den mothers and‘ com-
‘mittee men tonight at 8 p.m. at
the home of the Eugene Foley's longer than necessary but We Want; —
to be assured that alternate selu-|——
isn't included in the 12 Town proj-| -
Imlay City Community Schools to-|—
by,
Thomas Kerry, Agricultural Edu-| -
tax per $1,000 of assessed valua-
trict property is $69.20; Clarkston
District $70.80; Huron Val- parallel to~Greenfield to ‘inter. |__|
NEW CITIZEN — Two-year-old Terry Lynn Noble is a bit
‘bewildered by the-lack of response from this decorative fish which
she kissed in the lounge of the liner ‘United’ States.” Terry, Y
Untied Press Phote
among New York arrivals on the ship front Europe, is from
a al Germany and has been adopted by Capt. rate of
a, Okla,
DeMAIN WANDA V,
to Vincent Welch, son of Mr. and
ard. No date has been set for the
wedding.
County Calendar Four Towns
Circle Mirlam is meeting Thursday
t 1 p.m., at the home of Mrs. Raymond
Swac hammer.
Imlay City .
The First Baptist Church will have
a pot-luck supper in the church base-
ment Thursday evening. Following the
meal they will hold the annual meet-
ing.
Sacred Heart Rosary Altar Soctety
will meet tonight at the home of Mrs.
zene Knight. Mrs. J. D, Ausum will
be co-hostess. —
Ortonville
in .the home of Mrs.
sher, Lake Louise.
New Hudson
e WSCS cf the New Hudson Metho-
dist “church will meet at the chureh
on Thursday at 12:30 fer a luncheon
and meeting.
The New Hudson Homemakers will
meet at the home of Mrs. Gleason Tapp
on Wednesday. The Jesson will be
cessories for the Home.”
Farm Bureau members have called an
all-day meetin: th today at New Hudson
Fire Hall wit _— dinner at
noon. Discussion be “Researc.
for Agriculture.”
Rejects Bond Issue
Due to Exorbitant Fees
LANSING: ® — The State Mu-
nicipal Finance Commission today
turned down a two million dollar
school construction bond issue in
St.
that the consultant's fee was ‘‘ex-
horbitant.” .
_ o*
It was the first time the commis-
99|sion has disapproved a bond is-
sue under authority granted in a
new attorney general’s opinion,
The bonds were to be issued by
the lake shore district of St, Clair
Shores. They were to finance two).
elementary schools and improve-
ments to the high school. s
consultant,
by H. V. Sattley Co. of Detroit,
of Locklin Lane, : “too high. ”
Board May Ask for Bids
Hf plans and specifications for
two new elementary schools are
approved by the Waterford Town-
ship board at a special meeting
tonight, the board of education
will probably receive bids by the
end of the ‘month. |
* * *
These two buildings are a part
of the school building program ap-
proved ‘hy the Waterford Township
issue-voted on at that time for 3'%
|miljion inctaded four _ elementary
: “ a eiliieabeleta! electors last February. The bond schools, and a new junior high as;
well as school sites.
two 12-room ‘schools will
located on Maceday Drive
near Williams Lake road, and
one on Elizabeth Lake road at
Lochaven.. They should be ready
for occupancy by next. fall, ac-
The new schools wil be con-
strupted Along the same mown as Watertord Awaits School OK
the recently conipleted ” “MeVittie,
a —_{William Austin Burt, Eliza:Seeman
Legget and John Monteith schools,
with the exception of minor
changes, --
Contractors will be asked ta sub-|
mit two-bids for the schools, one
on a 12-room building, and another Mr. and Mrs. Roland DeMain of
\Leonard announce the engagement
of their daughter, Wanda Virginia,
Mrs, Charles Welch, also of Leon-
St Guild- will meet Thursday at &
ue Agatha
, Pine Knob School
Opens Classrooms
Clair Shores on the grounds|
E, Boomie Mikrut, commission
said the commission
considered..a $25,000 ‘fee charged Your PTA Is Planning:
conduct a program on safety and
will show a movie this Thursday
evening at the Four Towns School
PTA meeting.
Open house wil! be held from
7:30 to 8 p.m. when the parents
may ‘meet with their children’s
teachers.
After the regular business meet-
ing and talk, refreshments will be
served by fourth grade mothers.
Mrs. Charles Paul, Mrs. Lewis
Baum and Mrs. Morland Blumerich
will be in charge, '
Sashabaw Plains -
Members of Sashabaw PTA are
promised an interesting evening
Thursday when the films, “Fishing
‘for Fun,” “Passing Fancy” and
‘Living Unlimited’ are shown at/
ithe 8 p.m. meeting.
Girl. Scouts will have charge of
the flag ceremony and will alse
be on hand \to baby sit. Re-
.freshments will be served. Ev-
eryone invited ‘to attend.
New Hudson °
The New Hudson PTA will meet
Kiwanis Elects
New Ofticers
at South Lyon
Club here installed newly elected
officers Monday night.
Howard Parr was installed as
president; Charles Simnilli, Vice
president; Robert Eckert, secre-,
rectors, John Alley, Edward Bak-
and Lester Slauter Jr,
SASHABAW PLAINS Pine
Knob Elementary School on Sasha-
baw road opened Tuesday noon
for classes,
Nine of the 24 class rooms have
been completed in this structure.
Classes yesterday were transferred
~m Sashabaw School where half-
y sessions have been held.
The building, which is located
between Maybee and Waldon
roads was constructed by the
Bundy General Contractors. L. J.
Reenen was the architect,
George Barrie, principal of the
school, announced that lunch room
facilities are. being provided.
Assault and Battery
Case Trial Jan. 14 -
UTICA w—A woman driver,
angered when she said she was
forced off the road by another
motorist, was accused’ of knifing
a youth in a scuffle that followed
the incident. Ron Jasina, 18, said
Betty Bracken, 29, knifed him in
the hand when he sought to defend
a friend, Marvin Carloss, 17.
Miss Bracken pleaded innocent
to assault and battery and was
freed on $100 bond to await justice
court trial Jan, 14,
OK Rochester Bonds
The State Municipal Finance
Commission has. approved _ the
firm of Detroit’ will present) the /$100,000 revenue/bond issue for the
plans and specifications at ai village of Rochester, for a parking
lot. imeeting.
ono ens cond ft
=k
SS ae _ j
= FOUR TOWNS—Waterford Town-'
ship Police Chief Van Atta will
Three Thursday Meetings
With Guest Talks, Films
Thursday at 8 p.m. in the school
gymnasium. The program
consist of a talk by Dr. Paul
Thoms, Director of Special Educa-
tion for Oakland County schools.
Waterford PTA .
Discussion Panel
to Be Held Jan. 16
The first Parent-Teacher-Student
year will be held at 8 p.m. Wednes-
day, Jan. 16, at the Waterford
‘Township High School.
William Shunck, superintendent
of Waterford Township Schools,
will conduct a’ panel discussion)‘
from 8 to 9 p.m. with “Informa-
tion, Please’ as the theme,
. The idea of the discussion is to
inform students and parents of
the policies and activities of, the
General-school program in W ater-
ford Township and the high school
in particular.
Thad Carr, principal of Water-
ford Township High School, will
explain regulations effecting stu-
dents driving to school, social |
functions in the schools, attend-
ance, and other activities.
Teachers will also . participate
and several students will discuss
the Student Council, Girls’ Athletic,
Association, Dramatics, Future
Teachers, Trip Club and debating
_ meets.
SOUTH L¥ON — The Kiwanis Marlene Noe will summarize
other activities not represented and
parents may ask questions of the
‘panel.
At 9:30 p.m. Pattie Looman’s
‘dramatic group will present the!
tary-treasurer and the following di-| third act of “The Barretts of Wimp-
ole Street’? and the ,organization|
“Ac-| haus, Robert Eoff, Richard Snyder, will recess for a coffee hour. Mrs.
Richard Drake, Clarence Gerrish'Shirley McCoy has charge of the
refreshments.
Photo Club to Meet
ROCHESTER — The Avon Pho-
tographers Club will meet Thurs-
day at 8 p.m. at the library in
Rochester, The program will con-
sist of| a color session and all
those interested are urged to bring
color, slides for viewing.
Reveal Betrothal
| ALMONT — Mr. and Mrs, How-
ard Miles of 301 East Washington
St. announce the engagement of
their daughter, Mary Ellen, to Rob-
ert Schmit, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Dahn ‘of Imlay City. No
date has been set for the wedding. will)
Association meeting of the new) Board Vetoes
School Officials Vote Againg Contract
Renewals for Top Two
at Hazel Park
HAZEL PARK — In a surprise
move, the school board here voted
three to two against renewing con-
tracts for superintendent of schools,
George R. Robinson and assistant
superintendent Wilfred D. Webb,
at the regular board meeting here
Monday night.
* * %
Robinson is in his fifth year as
superintendent of Hazel Park
Schools,
He came from Melvindale in
1952 with 18 years of school ad-
.ministrating experience ‘behind
him,
Webb. began.as high school coun-
cilor and teacher in 1941 and took
over the job of assistant superin-
tendent in 1954:
% * *
Neither Robinson nor Webb could
be reached for comment.
St. Philip Meeting
Set for Thursday
ish meeting of St. Philip Episcopal
Church ‘will be held on Thursday
in the undercroft. —_
A potluck dinner at 7 p.m. will
precede the annual meeting at
which time five Vestrymen will
be nominated and elected.
* * *
St. Philip Awards (Celtic
|Crosses) will be made to the two
imembers who through service have
contributed to the growth and de-
velopment of the church.
Four Towns Board
to Discuss Awards -
FOUR TOWNS — Board of
Education of Four T Metho-
dist Church will meet at the home
of Mrs, Cecil Ries of Locklin Dr.
tonight at 8 p.m. The presentation
of awards~will” be discussed.
To Talk at Dem Meeting
Clark J. Adams‘ will be guest
Northeast Democratic Club, Satur-
day at 8 p.m. Officers will also be
elected at the meeting, which will
be held. at the Caribou Inn
Clarkston, Everyone is urged to
attend.
~
Imlay Firemen Elect
IMLAY CITY — The Fire De-
partment held its annual meeting!
here Monday.
Officers elected were: chief, For. |
est Whitkopf; assistant chief, Or-,
val Harris; secretary, Frank
Buike; treasurer, Fred Hoeksema. Ofticers for New Year 5
|Kinkle, Oten __Dungey, William
Lengemann, Henry John, Warner
|Hoeksema, Charles Wiléox, Harold
Dodge, Dale Scerimger, Walter
Zuhike, Wendall Givvard, and
Douglas Buike. . 7 _
The secretary's repott showed
20 alarms were answered last -
year, total cost to the village of |
$720, There were 13 calls in the
village and 7 rural calls, This is |
a decrease from the number an-
sWered in 1955 when there were
15 village calls and 17 rural
calls. Decrease in cost to the
village was $636, |
‘The department is a 1 volunteer,
group with 16 members.
Firemen, besides ~ the -
ificers are: Andrew, Maples, Leo
ele
-OL- Fi Want to save $10.07 naa
Admiral Clock Radio?
Wateh for Goeodyear's
Price Smashing Clearance
sale In Tharsday'’s Pontise
ROCHESTER — The annual par-
speaker at a special meeting of the -
in
°
ee ee ee, ee
ichorged i in Lake Death
'BENTON HARBOR «#~A truck
ldriver from South Holland, UL, one
Howard Rynberk, 33, has been; - Want te seve $21.87 on &
e
sano I escue Technique :
two representatives re Pontiae ~ |charged with manslaughter. in “| , Norge a Bs
= will-attend the Rescue Training) — boating death of 10-year-old Gloria |
gy Jan. 24 and 25 in Battle] _ -|Bania of Chicago. =~ - “al W atch ~ fot * Goodsear’s”
yon from a rowboat following Price Smashing Clearance
Creek, which is sponsored by the : Jlision with Rynberk’s power-|f- Sale in Thursday’s Pontiac
Press.
Federal Civil Defense Administra-
tion. Sent in Paw Paw Lake Sept. 8;
stood mute at his ai.
Attending will be Robert A raignment in Berrien County. Cir-
| Stierér, administrative assistant) cuit Court and: was frit on bond
\ to the city manager, and William} ~|to- await trial.
+Aho, training director of rescue| : at a ae
operations for Pontiac's Civil. De- : |
fense Dépt. _. Spe gee.
* ae *
The purpose of the meeting is
to develop planning, training, or-
ganizing and operating rescue op-
erations in communities in Mich-
igan in case af enemy attack.
Stierer said the city was making ‘ ; ; Le
Perse te be connec this caime| _ INOOLN JUNIOR HIGH POLITICS — An all-school conven: Pontiac Press Phote
or nenben oF Yaeemect ..tion at:Lincoln Junior High School nominated a slate of six students school. Final election will be Friday by secret ballot. Here, in
ments. to run for president and vice president of the-sehoot yesterday.-In-.-. yesterday's convention, Phyllis Dooley, a ninth grade homeroom
' Li democratic fashion, the six were narrowed from a group of delegate to the convention, nominatés one of the candidates-tor= fg,
“hemmed by S group aft ‘and, at ucles 5. They, wwére..chosen office. The six candidates will give canipaign speeches in a double
ona basis of leadership, scholarship, ‘charac ter anc se Pick tar tie eiinimnailaileias eg te et ee ce ee HURO? S TONITE & asaeal
z ae
‘Ginennkner eect cent pee ne —_—~ oe _— - on - - 1 Aenean an hyn a ne —
PLUS 24 HOUR ALERT
FRI “SY THINGS IN LIFE ARE FREE"
@ CHOICE 3
LIQUORS 3 §!Australia Area Goes ‘Hollywood Headlines @ DELICIOUS From Drought to Flood Plan fo Raise Taxes |
COCKTAILS
DARWIN, Australia — Ten- jin Taylor Township | J oanne Wo O dw. a I d Gets also “BURNING HILLS" —
-eentral_Australia,)
sober normally. they have to buy! DETROIT (INS) — Residents of IE xciting F ilm Assig nment water from carriers,” has. had . more than @ year’s: rain. in obe a subdivision in Taylor Township|
week, And it was still raining to-|Were informed yesterday that taxes}. LoyELLA 0. PARSONS back at his sister's, Mrs. Robert
day. ew thal: Somes will be increased) Macginnie’s, home in Dallas
Annual rainfall in the area av: 100 per cent, effective Feb, 1. HOLLYWOOD (INS) — A fabu- f ’ as.
erages 14% inches. So- far The home buyers, most of whom |ous~Assignment has béen given ;
15 inches have been recorded. are veterans who purchased their| \Joanne Woodward by 20th Century- Mrs. Edward Arnold, hit over |
Cattle which had been facing homes: under Gl-insured mort*! 'Fox—probably the most exciting the head by romance, acted
starvation in the arid 50,000-mile|248e5, said the increases probably|for an unknown since Jennifér| tke @ woman im love at the
area around Tennant’s Creek now|Would force them to sell. |Jones was chosen to play “Berna-| Eldorado, where she dined with
are in danger of being bogged or Some sgid they were led to be- dette." her bridegrom - to - be, druggist
Eitits sik Son
RST. PONTIAC. SHOES.
LIBERTY COCKTAIL LOUNGE
WONDERFUL FOOD . Live Lobsters, Ocean
Fresh Sea Food, Superb i
i
i
i
i
a
i
i
i
85 N i > North Saginaw Pri ; . Bi dro , lieve their taxes would be about). Joanne will star in “The Three, Max Marks. é
rime Beef, Steaks and wned.
WOOO OOO MME Chops, Duck, Turk half the amount they will be boost-'Faces of Eve" by Dr. Corbett — cot ~he Gane 1 WUCK, turkey, ed to the first of next month. ‘Thigpen and Dr. Hervey M. Cleck-| Harry Karl and his attorney,
COV VC TCT TV Vy me Dinners. . 17,625 Enroll at MSU, | Both the Veterans Administra- Jey, which is the strange case of Zsa Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Jolie;
> . tion and Michigan Corporation and g girl who has three distinct Gabor were having dinner at the,
‘ HAVE YOU - > Four Private Dining Rooms Peak for Winter Term ~ |Securities Commission have asked personalities, iLuau Sunday night. Harry’s trying
q DONE IT YET? For Your Banquets _. EAST LANSING (INS) —Mich-|the home-buyers to discuss their to forget the nightmare kidnap
’ igan State University’s registra- complaints with the two agencies. The story was widely discussed |) ior of Marie McDonald.
| Dialed FE 8-8201, FAMOUS: tion deadline is stil five days _—_— and parsraaneayn an when - Dionne
Mea : away and already a record 17,625 appea ~ merican week- °
4 We n. ; WINE CELLAR stodemna have begut ee Chater Winter Survival Kits | ly. Nunnally Johnson intends to |, Jack Entratter, in own Rath
st tata tata. Mr ttn. Lr Mtn. a Main a. a Wines. Beers and Ales | make it as a documentary—and ww cays. tamed 0 been awe
term. FARMINGTON, N. M. wh — oil! it could well be. about a Sands erigagement.
Froqs AM Over the World MSU Vice President Thomas H.
Tocccanseeesescecseuceesenseesnann
fate i
geet
aes
j SSSR
RR
ESRB
RSS
eee
| id this boom-
GOLDEN DRUMSTICK LUNCHES Hamilton expects several hundred | ng pad feld sens a nis being! Joanne, who has been on the! Tomorrow the Ira Gershwins
more students to sign up before ided with kits, Sev-20th lot for about two .years, will] are guests of honor at Howard
Box Dinners Open Every Day! . the deadline. tral setroleum firms * have,Play Eva Black, a very wicked) Keel’s opening at the Sands. The
Delivered Free PHONE: Last year’s fall term ‘had @'equipped their men with the kits:Woman; Eva White, a mousey); MGM brass and many stars are
OR 3-1907 record enrollment of 20,125. The for use in working in remote sec- itype, and Jane, a_ well-adjusted| headed Las Vegas way. PLUS e OUR 2nd BIG FEATURE :
Call FE 8-0483 j peg yhad is normal, according tions during the severe winter Sirl. In nothing Pat. Cobina Wright
‘milton. imonths, ra ped : tory nt 8 a - ——— | Any edition you'll read that Dean’ whipped up a cocktail party for THE PICTURE THAT'S ASTOUNDING THE WORLD!
FREE PARKING
| YEAR-END | CLEARANCE ‘SHOP
= Martin is going to Mexico to co-|Perle Mesta, who has been here
star in “Machine for Chuparosa,”|cohferring about her TV life story.
an independent setup for Robert|Perle wore a white mink—she said
Aldrich. A dea] is being worked) to be able to take her little white
out with Warner Brothers to re-|poodle into places where poodles
lease it. ; aren't invited,
Dean told me today that he
likes the story very much and
| that if he goes to Mexico,
| Jeanne (Mrs, Martin) will spend
as much of the time down there
| with him as. possible. . , ery Nite of the Week FREE PARKING
FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING!
~ “ROCK, ROCK, ROCK”
“FRONTIER GAMBLER” Starts
SUN.
a.
i
i
ih
th
th
th
de.
te
tp
tp
tp
bt
tte
tebe
bd
tndadindndadadiatnd
f
Was
¥
| . , , ) | Tony Quinn has one of the top|> ‘gg » Any eye o he io 63
| | caver 256 SOUTH SAGINAW oa yh typ rn wees aa t : “The Brave One.”
so ee ICSC OMEBINN Reiaxin’Time From Pots and Pans
i eae —— antet why Magento tory | 9 EE ¥
Nationally Known ASPHALT ARMSTRONG’S Nationally Known wew-STYLE CASTING : > - Refresh With, a Good Movie Tons qf! #
SPATTER VINYL—ASBESTOS] VINYL-WAXED J} vers canoe ot wiwcep (MLUB TAHOE 4 a « | appening in Ho ; .
7 Tl LE Spatter or Marbleized FLOOR virtual unknowns being handed top 4 ' = ‘a
VINYL--PLASTIC Heevy’ 1 ‘ 15c Ti LE Tl LE roles on a silver platter is that) 4 3412 Dixie ety A OR 3-9754 : They're All
4 be young Rick Jason is al an
3 l/¢ eg certainty for the role of sume alk mavens a rents SOer ~ HELD Calling it. ae
TILE my »
N
| . soe V6 ies 10! /o° Meany 6 Vo" Ea. [bus” appt Sve, Manin DOORS OPEN 10:45 OVER Another 3 7 | | Charles Brackett tested Rick
“GONE WITH * ed.
:
19¢ 1 3 Ea. . 1 ¢ | who is a tall, good looking, leading.
«Ve Case Lots 5 Vo ; ; ‘man type. Come to think of it, Thru
Ix9x Ye aor 2 meet « See "REG. 15¢ he’s not exactly an’ unknown, SATURDAY THE WIND”
either. He won the Theater Award
‘ S- e. : ‘ - in 1954 for his performance in
ARMSTRONG’S . “Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep.” _
4 ; Come [ n and Look Ar ound ARMSTRONG > Dan Dailey has the lead opposite fe soa 28
: ‘Jayne, and Joan Collins gets the vt ; :
| INLAID We Will Help You With Your Wall Covering f= or tm -_ Wall and Floor Needs | | : , IT finally got d to hearing :
| LINOLEUM gf sone Cicely ane Cree , | . GET YOUR. 1957 Colors ay J Q | The misty Miss Christy has great . FREE TOOLS but this was the first time I) ‘ |
Patterns f . 54” WIDE | ever caught her in person. | EDNA y - \ m- ock |
; Run. Fe. : _— . | She was No. 2 on Downbeat's FERBER L . |UDSON
' : : ‘list of favorite femme singers. a WARNERCOLOR Duane |
‘ ; , ~~» Bp magazine listed Ella Fitzger
PLASTIC _ PURE PLASTIC . 9 Foot Exon a:
1 : RUBBER ws 9 xX 12 FELT-BASE ™~ misty miss has had ony 4
: : : number of motion picture ollers,
WALL TILE , LINOLEUM ENAMELIZED but right now she is so busy! 4
: Ti LE LINOLEUM poovcng’ and singin’ that she hasn't 4
1 1 , even listened.
4 Vax V4 a . RU GS ae ILLNESS DIAGNOSED } 4
Rainbow wo | Snapshots of Hollywood collect- “4
‘ Cc Ez $x9 15° Ea. , - Reg. : 4gc ed at random: Carol Haney’s ill- ; 4
a. Reg. 25c , Reg. $ 98 98¢ ; ness has-been diagnosed as dia- www >
Colors , $5.95 - Ea. betes. ‘Pajama Game” is at a : : seg 4 >
ALL COLORS . : Sq. Yd. standstill pending her recovery. All STARTS THURSDAY 4 tna . ' Fz
REG. 6c ; scenes have been filmed with the “RAW EDGE” . > Prices for this attraction: Next
’ exception of Carol's, L . > Matinee 90c © Nights $1.25 June Allyson
>» Children Anytime 50c in “THE OPPOSITE SEX" _
PLASTIC | RUBBER WHITE ARMSTRONG'S | _™2ny Sut geting hs beats armel
LATEX UTILITY K99 FINISH fT” 3
COUNTER TOP PAINT P AINT. LINOLEUM: {i ate ag? «—SC(OPEN 6:45
C en TONIGHT —
vie BI") as, $388 ca,] 5, 549] rtm 7D Uh a
* starts TODAY! OPEN 10:45 A.M.
Run. Ft. cay All ¥ Sq. Yd. sion | wader ,
REG. 79c ALL COLORS Want NO WAXING a! world's ooo : i . ine 4 ROBERT RYAN
Ye > ANITA-EXBERG
Tues..-- Wed. -- Thurs. — ROD STEIGER
~—— and Sat. 9 to 6
Monday and Friday
9 to 9 PAINT & TILE || aMaunu e
eas 3
PLENTY OF FREE ! a a | “FRIENDLY PERSUASION” PARKING’ bo ee ON i. Ederal fra 2 "WILL BE SHOWN AT &: 25 ONLY
See
PEA Tete 5
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9. 1957
: DENVER (NEA) ~ On a cold.jarea ‘a8 the uranium boom, has,
» Oil men seen the dusty little village ‘of Far-
mington, N. M., grow from 2,500
“ito 15,000 since 1950, and Cortez,
"|Cole., boom from 2,000, to 5,000.
‘The industry says now that
major development. will- be..de-
layed enty by the tack “et pipe:
lines, Mexico and west Texas.
The Nav
scattered
for -G
atoh
pe
They watched eg listened,
‘sometimes in suspense, sometimes
wi exhilaration, as G;. Warren
g, general superintendent)
lof the Navajo Reservation, opened hali-staryed,
stepchildren of the Southwest.
‘The Suez crisis has spurred talk
of at” least three such lines; run-
: Oil in Millions Spouts Out in Navajo Country ac @ Gk Week Gt to Salt
Lake City, end to southern New
s, 80,000 strong ont
15hillion-acre
wasteland the size of West Vir.
ginia, long have been the diseased,
ill-housed, illiterate
~ Now, they have 33 million dol- |
tone > De at frees he meeten ot |
and employing 1,200 persons in a
new town of 3,000 population,
3..A five million dollar. scholar-
ship program for young Navajos.
4, Continued nite of new
industry, comparable to
ture factory in Gallup, 4 . which
now employs 100 Navajos,
-| 5, Major new facitities for recre-
i¢/ ation, housing, fuel, in
s,/ welfare ‘Programs. __ every penny of it is to be spent
for overall tribal benefits,
According to a long-range pro-
gram outlined by Tribal Council
Chairman Paul Jones (in effect,
the chief), the tribe will use at
least part of these funds for:
z & laeoer eromrens of water A
velopment and. distribution.
" LEATHER FACED DRIVING GLOVE |
A $4.95 NOW S. _ | Pd cca 3
(Advertisement)
SOOTHING RELIEF FROM COUGHS DUE T0 COLDS _ Fether John’s Medicine
Acts Promptly ~~ ‘sealed bids requesting the right to
drill for oil on Navajo lands, +
Before that day was over, bids -
totaling 2714 million dollars on
100,000 acres of tribal lands had
been read,
Tt was the biggest dotiai’ sale of eae
's| Indian leases in history, The high sae
bid of $3,102 for a 2,560-acre tract| Sim
due to its imme- si
diate action sae tethe your| er a a aS a record high av-/3% irritated throat: “2 re rage of $ per acre provided);
feels! s ‘testimony of the oll} —
est | ; mena wag Senlige adage
any member fe aie &
your family.
has been Since then, the Navajos have re-
fully ..used. over. _ ceived another six million dollars
100 years,
crorgoee in Town is
talking about what
heard when
Last spring, the Texas Co,|
brought in a discovery well near.
the isolated Utah-Colorado border, |
just west of a lump-like mountain |
known as the Sleeping Ute. This,
the first producer in the Aneth.
fi LEAN-EXTRA CLOSE
« « « TRIMMED ) g ft
te i i War Il. Such discoveries, |
cettelianiel yoming,
— . Montana and North Dakota, have
Almost Crazy With = (»rought mountain region produe- tion to more than 600,000 barrels
a day, Development already has
cost the industry a billion dollars,
and they're drilling wells at -
rate of 5,000 a year.
The Four Corners oil rush, con!
«i centrated in much of the same
_HERE Is the EASY. EXPLANATION of How sig tnateaniny teachin. gies tenon ett ent eet yA yg tin tag ta NGAGE Py SA AF APE Ra ER ap yg
Our Own — Sugar Cured Hickory Smoked
Smoked ‘ Heievidelanda
a a yg gy a ny pe a me
a
‘Low Cost Opsiation - — No ps to ba.
| We Kill and Process Our Fresh aad: Cure and ‘Smoke Our Own Homs and
Bacon. Make 50 Varieties of Lunch Meats and Sausages in Our Own ‘Plant _
We Eliminate the Middleman.
DEAL with WALLED LAKE’S LARGEST HOME-OWNED SUPER MARKET,
and KEEP YOUR MONEY WORKING for YOU in the LAKE AREA! Spree Roper
SMALL
FANCY
Ww 4 to 6-hh.
Average
Your sitent SERVANT |
he
&
HE
DB
'
i Water Heaters
; Heat Water Faster
National sales retorde show an overwhelming
preference for automatic gas water-heaters
over any other run by an all-automatic fuel.
Gas ‘does a better job—actually replacts
water 3 times faster.
An ample supply of hot water, once a lux-
ury that only the wealthy could afford, is a
necessity of modern living.
More than 75 manufacturers make gas
heaters. You can find every type of construc-
tion, every sort of tank lining, every product
advantage you can think of—in gas. ;
More than 17 and a half million families
use gas water heaters. They can testify that
gas heaters cost less to buy, use and install.
Only GAS does so much, 'so well .. . the modern
fuel for automatic cooking . . . refrigeration
«+» Water-heating . . . house-heating . . . air
conditioning ... clothes-drying .. . incineration.
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY ||
Our Picnics are Tastier, Leaner and Superior to the Average Smoked Picnic, becouse they
are all Slow Cured — Slow Smoked Over Genuine Hickory.
“59+ * HART BRAND GATSUP
= 39° * Waldor! TOILET TISSUE
BLUE RIBBON BEEF GUARANTEED THE FIMEST!
_ TENDER
BEEF Roast (OS age
Bode c ‘ was “Christ’s Way, Evéry Day of| >
the New Year.” Mrs. Ted Koella|~
Be In On the Jr, and Mrs, Allan Monroe con-|>—
SCOOP ducted the memorial service. |*
of the Year! It you give the kitchen floor a;
oa Dial FE 8-8201 —DAY OR NIGHT—
: Van aes
: ,
just mopping lightly with
an or detergent suds.
*
“Helene Curtis” and “Realistic”
COLD WAVE —
’ Lanolin Earlched
PERMANENT =p‘
‘a 7 Wet Lawrence (Over a Prof's Book Store) re 2-4959
GATE:
tig’ Sh
ae a: Savy ee’ +
Te
RES Re
wai * ~~ = e
* tm td at ‘ ete yen. hia Part tea! ws War Sa Wee oe
First Time
for Less |
Than $99.00
E
&
~ @ Luxurious “Orlon and Dynel” fur-like fab-
ric t swith the look and feel of precius fur!
} No Appoin vents Necessary
ey : * Fult-length clutch coats with roll or Peter
“Oscar Blomquist — Specializing - Pan collar and tuxedo front.
in Hair Cutting and Styling’
ie grey, seal brown or” black: *
*
e eves, misses” and women’s sists. Parisian Beauty Shop
“Serving Pontiac for 29 Years”
@ Luscious shades of blond; bien navy,
x
.*" Ret)
oa adel
Famous Cloud 9
COATS
GP osc of
= e rs Ag
ee CA te ti ETRE is eae Peer
ie oy ia
LINGERIE
NYLON SLIPS, PETTICOATS
AND GOWNS a 4 . ‘ae
Values to 14.95
SPECIAL | PURCHASE ~~ @ 29
Gorgeous pieces of manufacturer's sample lingerie includ-
ing many one of a kind luxury nylon and lace slips, gowns
and petticoats.
Lingerie—Main Floor
DRASTICALLY REDUCED
HANDBAGS Formerly Sold From 5.00 to 25.00
now..23 0 15 |
Select your favorite shaped bag from our calf, velvet
or broadcloth selection. — |
Accessories—Main Floor
_-«~—Robes
and
Lounge Sets Formerly Sold From!
5.95 to 39.95
_ NOW
ow. S2B
@ Nylon, Velvet ® Corduroy
@ Cotton Quilted
‘Robes— Main Floor
seo dari : a
DISCONTINUED STOCKS.
NYLON HOSE a aaiad
Formerly Sold krom 1.35 to | 95 a Pair
/ NOW....... yr (a :
First quality, inode by ‘a tenovs manufacturer, . Discontinued sizes ond oe
~~ golors.: Sizes 842. to 11. | pe cD ge ea
Hose—Main Floor , ii / . . f % 4 yes , .
Sl - an / ‘ ‘ . , * 4 eo
roy f — ‘
, ae i
ae i
é Produce Lod No. poe PasAM. .
os oe an, 1 7:30 “John P. . Boyce
DETROIT PRODUCE ain Work in ¥. oe. —_
DETROIT, Dec. 21 (AP) — The follow- 0 ©, degree, jesse Spark-| F. FARMINGTON Service for | was &
Bere BT sna tater pends man, WM. '-“Adv.iJohn P. Boyce, 59, 23626 Warner
oe ook Services brourst “t0 Farmers” Markets Uy ‘ ..|St,, who died at his home following
growers end by them in wholesale} ‘NEW YORK ‘wThe stock mar-| i” Lodge No. 510, F&AM, 22 a heart attack. yesterday, .will be | lian;
— First in Dollar Volume, | gay, were: _ \ket moved slightly higher in mod-|State Street, Thursday, Jan, 10 atjheld from the Thayer Funeral | ford
Survey. Shows bu; ‘No. 1, ” Re So be. ‘ oo early trading today. - 7:30 P.M. E. A. Degree. Winford|Home\ Burial will be in Washte-
__ \Paney, i bas u tal i were up trom Buttom.. W.M. Adv. |norig Cemetery, ‘Ann Arbor.
sae =. = reacting” tn arotind 6 putnt bat|— dra An y, Mr, Boyce, was a
occas ranks it sone th ei Fanc ire be Men i =lthere was also a liberal assort-|meetir er of the merle n Legion
oe : ra. 9 Apples, W: River, No. 1. 2.00-2.50 ment of losers. ; Post No, 284, VFW 4033, State
volume of business, according ott Ts bu Cabbas A - Gains. by steeig and other in- Ce et sonia
a recently-completed GM survey 4s 80-125 be, Cabbage. 4 as dustrial stocks were a feature pay: aaa a ee ee
= which covered the 1955 period. al,’ 1:| after - yesterday's retreat by ‘ Mr. ‘Boyce is ‘survived by his
tes these shares. ‘ N ‘ B . f wife, J. Wilva, a daughter, Phyllis| “DRYDEN — Service for Fred
oe i ceatinn baught goede ox Technical considerations were WS IN DIET sane. st borne, aout » oom, delim P. | Boley, Oh Ot Dee who died
services from 6,357 Michigan Ne. 1. toot stip t_in_the market's ana SEDI Combes. . yesterday at Lapeer County Gen-
of, one behavior, Wall Street analysts said| Fred L. Lucas, 26, of 1065 Frank as eral Hospital, will be held from the
firms for Henry Howland—
=e for a tota} of nearly $1,749, . 125 ; " Muir Brothers Funeral Home at
=e the” Btutty Pevembeds = 25.|a8 there was nothing outstanding Myrtle St., paid $100 in fine and} CLARKSTON—Service for Frank Friday, Bu will be pe
The rance : a Halil - -atter=pleading |Henry. Howland, 92, of 21..Church | a
ce of small |. ‘swing in prices. guilty to drunk driving before'st., who died toda: AB lc COMET Y reser ere ment pote
businesses among GM suppliers o. «4. ; 2 y, will be held Mr, Boller, who bas lived on his
oe Sebi trun te thie Mieke where only .| STEEL UP Keego Harbor Jusfice James'from the Sharpe Funeral Home at present farm for 30 years, is sur-
aa $030 the 6,357. Bethlehem Steel was up around Souphard, - {2 p.m, on Friday, Burial will be in | yj Fred §, Jr., of the
Se e _ Bh weg Lakeview Ce with’ the ved by a son, r.,
er wan ot 4767 laa Reni, La0-E 36 OH os . +9>—pleading—guilty— to—leaving...the Rev. | farm and two stepchildren, Donald
100: employes EGGS 14.09-18.00 30-dox, case: scene of a pro damage i? i : Wright-of Pontiac am 4:
epeoits ites 00-11. peal. 7-50-6008 Steel _and Republic Steel dent, Thomas “B._ Brown, 49, of Sullivan of Fenton. .
Ohio was’ csthnd and New York pom OR iz , TE BANE NO. 01
was third in the number of sup- sieedy resi 5, soo; ichotesale Bs buy: _ General Motors, Ford and received a 25-day sentence to the enn P. Pi ti ‘Sta =r: ;
pers and dollar voime, soci B'aIe Rom me mo ws fa also Moved ahead aa enent before’ Justice reat-grandchildren, alt ‘of C ire | Fe sen ae
. Bip verlar: recipi 22.08; whole: ‘ ae excsigamest © ES Justice |great-grandchildren, alt of Clark- | fhe close of business on December 31, and © oe
* * ¢ . sale buying prices unchanged to % lower;| Missouri- Kansas-Texas preferred ng o armington ston, 1956, Published in accordance with a ca Leonard; dear brother of Michael
65 per cent or. better A white mixed Township. . made by the Commissioner of the Bank- . Mrs. Agnes 8 and
The company said that its dollar 29%-30; mediums 27%; ntandards 28:\had a delayed opening, finally Joseph Leonard ing Department f pursuant to the pro- Mrs. Magdalina Pisher. Leon-
vol dirties che 24; current receipts. Lin t 60, of 2%. The stock ons Section 82 of the Michigan ard will lie in state at Pursley
ume reached nearly $4 billion 26%. selling a off e ne Funeral Home, where funeral ar-
to 15,224 firms in the East North —— ‘|was affected by news that the rail- Lorne A. Johnson, 22, of 22450 COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Serv. | fnencist institu SETS | Fangements will be announced
Central States for goods and DETROIT EGGS road had a new president and nae Ave., Farmington, waived|ice for Joseph Leonard, 57, 2035| cash, balances with other _later ;
serv DETROIT, Jan. 8. (AP) — Eges. f0.b./also that a group of Chicago, |, xamination and was bound over Nalone; who died suddenly yester- banks, Seotasiag ease poe aN 8 wt MARGA- :
ices. __|Detrolt, eases included, federal state ae a tern Railway sharebold. ‘© Circuit Court on a charge of (42Y; Will be held the Pursley im process of Camm tion § 2,488,647.90| gear mother of ‘peacock.
Sixty-five per cent of GM’S/""wnites: Grade A, jumbo 44-83, weight b ‘breaking and entering in the night |FUeral Home, Pontiac, A Cran-| %%) States Government Kenergl corvine, woe Oe Pee, ihe
ers has obtained options to buy a obligations, direct and p.m." from the
Michigan suppliers — 2,490 — have jed average 48%: jarge 32-27, wid ave time before Justi brook gardener, he is survi eentoed DeWitt C. Davis Funeral
Gone business with the fon |28:, medium 20-33, wid ave nt! aSillarge block of M-K-T congmon ore Justice Allen C. Ingle . r, survived by| guaranteed . ....-.---- 5 13,040,683.16 _ REHS C. Deve Dee ear
ne 8S corporation] 37/23. wtd. avg. 28. Grade B, large k yesterday. He was jailed unde his wife, Irene; one brother, Mi-| >Usations of. States an ficiating. Graveside service, under
for more than five years. Another 30-35. wid. eve. 34 sock. $2,500 bond T chael Leonard of Pennsylvan political subdivisions 214,740.97
2,584 have been suppliers for more |.o°°s" > Orade A. jumbo 42-62: wid. M h * * * ’ nd, - two sisters ire ppeadiy-esbere Ofner or bends, notes, and Ge- 50,000.00 Lodge No. dit, Interment in'P
jave are wid ave me-| Most other leading. rails showed ® » . s onir ‘discounts “in- =. ts«d|:COaesmnemcole .
than 10 years and 1180 for more isp eit ae. 3it sont 2 nhtloeteetnal “guns bat Santa Fel, Fatering a gulty plea to speed. [it MIS Denesivania. Arvange athed re carn | Mees ie tens Ooms
years. . | Soermerctally Taran: 23%. dropped a fraction, |ing, George N. Hutchcraft, 27, of aleo a Peseapiveni. Arrange- ~—_ ‘rewitses eee ass — Mr nentersoms beloved 26 ars. A mes
qian: Grade” A, large 31%33; me. Aircrafts, coppers and oils were a" Hosptial Re. Waterford Town-|™ents will be announced later, | »ritare and” + $268,146.83 Emma Sanderson; dear father C
bd * u ee
* “wr Grain Prices Browns: Grade A. extra large 36; steady to slightly higher. p was $10 and paid $10 Birtin C. Millerd . Setuees . + 1aa.eni 14 304 217.66 Warner, Mrs. rt Coldwell,
larce 30-33; medium 6%-29; small 24. Opening. blocks included Stand- court costs after a hearing held|. UTICA — Servicé i Investments andother assets Robert and Jack Narsh; dear
CHICAGO GRAIN | Market about steady. Supplies amplelard Oil (New Jersey) up % ‘at bY Township Justice Willis D. Le-|Millerd, 79, of 7715 Hl Mi ie Rd, indivectiy, ses oF ofl Stnderson and Carlton Sanderson,
CHICAGO, Jan, # (AP)—Opening) sizes fairly heavy. Demand WS pairty we.|59% on 1,500 shares, U.S. Steel up, |furgy Tuesday. who died Monday ile Rd.;| bank Pees or ee Mabie |: eral service will be held
Peaest tive but offerings plentiful. %» at 70% on 1,500 and Royal ° General Hospital, é- bel Cement Other sseets oso +_ ree - from he rntoan, Neral ome
if Bs . al. will be held from |e tec ew ees 270.48
Mer ewsevess 2388 MOP srescsess CHICAGO POTATOES Dutch off % at 42% n 3,000. val Your friend's in Jail and needs) Milliken ospital, will be held from | egal Assets cima Sanaiaai| iin, Mar, Walte, B, Mune offic:
MAT oeeeeee aT MAY “ccccces: 10 |p CHICAGO, ee ee otal or MA 5-4031.|Thursday at 2 Buri Conttery Mr. Sanderson will Be
weeeee’ 999%, Ry Potatoes: Arrivals 60; track 393/ total —Adv y p.m, al will be | Demand deposits of individ- in state at the Huntoon Funera
* eeeee 1.46 +08. shipments Priday 623; Saturday 607: N k ‘lin Prestonville Cemetery uals, partnerships nd Home.__
Mar vece 135% May ..cseee BATH Sunday 20: supplies moderate; demand ew Yor Stocks Survi : : corporations , . .., $11,827,191.21 | WARNER, alt F] 1
May ..... 138” Ty. 146% slew; market for _Russets eliehtly weak- . . poy Nas his wite, Enola; a a | Time “arte ort > ‘individ E Ro eo Be * Romeo, formerly of
Fy cess vee ~ 2.40% Lar R Aen 8 dull; Idaho won (Late Morning Quotations) B N { son, . of Utica; a brother, s, rmin “widow of ote:
Be HS ak aa rites tae ecien e usiness Nofes |sisnin'coxiomvite: wo eters: | isin esi Sag East Seta ate A
May «-scoe. 15.35 : overnmen ne ng ettie in -
a Allied “Gh “0. 983 Ee kena .. 132) ~_———— Hall, An Saar cod Mrs. Mertie stal savings) . 262,774.77 dren and "22 great-arandeniaren
Li k Allied Strs 44.2 Ligg & My 65.1| The ti ’ of Detroit, and two |-Deposits of States and po- «| Service Th Dm. a
While most human cancer is ivestoc Als Chat ae if. bee iste tive S.. 88 Hara promotion of Kenneth F. grandsons. peitical of bees ONS .....5 2.541,622°78 Manley hate bukit Home,
found people group Al os Loew's ...,,.. 20.1 Hardy to director of th ving “t vical 000. 183 Oa .
te in older » nO age DETROIT LIVESTOCK Atairtin’ .). $25 ROTHMAN 0° 304] and " ue savings Enio A. Warnos Orme depois (certified 482,400.70
is immune, DETROIT. Jan, on (apay —)Am Can HT Martin QI 2... $17) supplemental benefits section] «ROCHESTER — Service for Enio| Stmer Rubles — In Memork Memoriam 2
] 4 aoe. A ee? (Siashter as Ces 6 Fi 3 May Ps ae - of the General Motors Corp, Fi-'A. Warnos, 50, of 1401 Hartwit, Other Mabilities’ -.-.. + Lele at IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR
steady: cows opening up Saal Cau ply. |Am Motors. 6.4 Merck . . 30.5 nancial Staff was announced who died.“yesterday in Vetera TOTAL | LIABILITIES 0 ob: Deer Father Willard 1. Seaver,
less active than iM ‘Am N Gas @34 Mergen. Lino yes- y erans including subordinated ob- — posses away 4 yrs. ago.
hhensee enttle pa ang Sender: other | am + BG Merr Ch & 8. 218, terday. . Hospital, Ann Arbor, will be held | sations shown below) $25,064, 153.90 wary 6
, 1046-pound’ steers 2. . pr Am Smelt ||) 55.6 Monsan Ch 6 . from the Pixl Funeral H . CAPITAL ACCOUNTS when al is. stil! ‘and silent
i - and choice ughter steers 19.00 to 22.00: Am ear 108 Mont Were . a | A resident of 412 S. Glenh ey ome on Capital’ pegeauataecasessoss $ 500,000.00 And sleep forsakes = exes.
® Se rinatie choles atecen af 22.00;|4m Fel & Tel 176 Motorsie ---- 384) Dr., urst/Thursday at 2 p.m.,.with burial | SUP Sea ‘profits 600,000.00 | Our thoughts are silent
fis mae end eepees steers and = Viscose | ee Net dash R.,. a Birmingham, Hardy formerly|in White Chapel Cemetery The Undivided profits ac- ee.oue.ve crein our dear Dad les.
: snd chaise mauahier Walfere shown: @t-| ne t24 Nat Dairy .. 31 served as assistant director of the Rev. Walter Gerken wi i aj count for preferred eap- Sadly missed by Daughters, Ver-
' ‘ ; ity cows 11.00 to 12.80. latter price pee Anse we c 1 Nat Gyps .. ‘section. He succeeds Mark E. a rken will officiate. | tai) 9,326.00 na, Lena, Ruby and Sons, Robert
— INVESTING $00 Leer Utility ond” commercial Armour & Co. Bt Net fea... ah ‘Kelly who recently was named ve Pronean: Saon many of. cae. Total Capital Accounts ...-§ #17 900.1 er LOVING MEMORY OF HARRY
bulls 14. , 2 Nia M Pw..,.. 30 ’ ' - _——
Traine moderately active: eee ety atl Rett a Si NY Centrai el The comptroller. fson; two step-children Patricia | Tota! Lispilities and capital wea 61 Fee ee marry, yon
ea fer! m AV ... ccoun . .
‘for FREE f iacuee x 2800 to 33.00 0r 8b soe: "| Benewet : : 3 Nor Pac ..., 42.5 The corporation also announced Grundner and Carolyn Omans, *This bank's capital consists of: you not torsotien toot in sarin
“| for your FREE copy of Peres. Sity'and sisndard 13 Bas anh Beta Manel the Appointment of Robert M. Cone Wot, Oy rl, and one sister, Common "stock With UA) soo gp 9g| Siay! "Gert beter, Sediy sed
d Dividends Over the cull and 10.06 to 18% to 00; Boeing Air: $74 Ohio Ol... 4 12\ as director of the staff's insur-| William and Lauri, and one sister, ° “MEMORANDA —_ by wife "Seuditer, and family.
- 3 “Years” Sheep—Sa early sales. Bora Warn 8, Quens Cog. #3) ance and pension section. Gertrude Kirkpatrick, all of Assets pledged or assignes IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY
! i . . Mother, Mrs, Catherine B.
; a basic guide for CHICAGO LIVESTOCK {My .... 453 Pac GO & El . 90 Rochester. for other purposes .. 900,000.00 Lare, Meter.
run ke 426 Pan AW Air 18.5 Loans as sh bo’ passed away 11 years
common stock lnone it eee: po oe 8 Ah Galabte Baad Go 195 fan "Piet a ne rs Corp. has an- Mrs. Harriet McSherer after” “seduction of tee ses13.40 but © gone, “andy “missed
‘ - with prices it . . unced a nt : 312. by her son. Waldo R.
__ investment TTR pein met teats t's Mute leat"pece . ; acation insurance company
Businessmen's $ Mrs, Leona Belle Wolf, 30, of on C t ti 1956 NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING chance for advattement’ "”
LUNCH EON /Cedar Lake, Ind., was found guilty DETROIT STOCKS . Ons ruc 10n in ; meeting ot Mie Tncnbers of the Pontise "APP LY
. sterday by a Cc. J. Neph . <
Complete: sou soup. pm nner, fot eight men s Sederal court Jay Figures after decimal point are fights WASHINGTON w& — Americans;compete increasin i 1956 File Ua await gheet ie 8. WALDRON, HOTEL
SERVED , pane ‘the Nov. 12 kidnaping of Mrs. Alice | Allen lec. uboer Ce Co. . 2 3 spent a record 44% billion dollars|‘‘with the heavy a ae for Uae, Michigaa, san, Wednesday, January = a San Jaa. # and” 0 to 2
11:00 A.M, to 2:00 P.M. | Myrtle Simons, 36. Ross Gear Co, ae ae oY gon construction in 1956, setting ajfunds from many other sectors of | 2°" nirpose of considering” Bg AA ALL-AROUND STUDEBAKER-
tol | Mrs. Wolf’s husband, Robert, 26, Goeen res Chem. Go.";; * 15 16|mew money peak for the 10th|the econom, the fener PACKARD MECHANIC - MUST
gobs “gj pleaded guilty to kidnaping Christ Horan tee Mont ry 52) successive year Even a the report said, “the H Becticn ‘4 Deegers of such oth 0881, a 1A, CALL PE
. > » COs © 8. . " said. “t etio such other
KOSHER imas eve. The Prophet Co. ..:01+ 5% 101 108 In 1955 expenditures totaled just/13% billion dollars of new private vastness us mee legally come Sefore A
CORNED BEEF = Toledo anutact oo t3 133 133 Under 43 billion dollars—30% bil-|housing put in place in 1956 was| — <<. Pontiac Federal, Savings FEW
_ Ph. FE 5-4061 for Take-Outs | Iceland is about as large in area ayne Screw Pe Cd TS MM lions for private construction andjsecond.only to the extraordinary “pee Associaton working men needed st once for
, las the state of Qhio, $12,400,000,000 in public building.| volume of the previous ye a JAMES CLARKSON, | Supertence helpful, Apply 1004 W.
ax Th d The report was made today by * * & year. . Euecuuve Vice @ Becretary Huron open newts. A al. App ci iy 1088 w.
. p ursday Luncheon the Commerce and Labor depart-| ‘The comparatively high 1} ian 2 nist ATTENTION
Don't G wee ; ments mparatively high level _ NTIO}
amble with to Aid Kitchen Repair ne , which have predicted con-jof home building in 1956 reflects Saiccmen 30 Be te | tepeeoent
z ° struction outlay will soar to a new|in part ™ yTs.
Home Security. 46%-billion-doliar peak part’ the ‘continuing | pressure ath N fi sancng te cronies Dawe mst
‘ Yoo Teachers of the McVittie and) ollar peal in 1957, jof a sustained demand for larger e 0 Ices desirable, ‘but not necessary as
— ‘Drayton Plains schools along with) The physical vol and better equipped homes,| 0 ww ~~4e—~—— ~~ me Sameer’ gar own sales ‘train
businessmen have been invited to) pyilding i cal volume of new|backed by rising in@omes; a| S89¥CE. JAN. & 1957, JOHN should average ‘vel Seer 8900 f ~~)
ilding in 1956 was 2 per cent steadily incfeasing and high! . 23626’ Warner St... Farmington; month. You are paid while a
attend a luncheon at the home of pelow the recede y ne ghly Mo-|' ae 80: beloved | husband ¢. We furnish Oar
Mrs. David Mehl unp! nted 1955 bile population; and accelerated Wilva ce; dear father of required. Ai Bree . Car
. ehlberg, 3269 Sasha-|fevel. Thi Phyllis Be. y at-our branch
is indicated that rehabilitation of urba Ps vit ane ¢ and John P. Boyce. « Office. 1203 Lincoln Ave., Reo:
baw Rd., from 11:30 a.m. to 1! structi con- n centers. Funeral” service. will, be held al Oak, Dail ae
pm. tomorrow. l. rk an being bought less,| Virtually. all categories of pri- Zhareday. Jan. 10, at 1pm. trom [aaa y between 1 & 4 4
costs being somewhat higher|vate constructi ivi ¢ fe service wader BARBER WANTED Time.
Sponsored by the Ladies Auxil-| tha ion activity’ gained on. Graveside service under ED FULL TIME.
n in 1955; > th t f FE_ 2.9325
YOUR HOME iary of the Waterford Community| Industrial construction passed cortructs 7 ton and. best build testes on ge on tn Was mignone BARBER — STEADY
a i. ovcee
TODAY!- oe oc ‘il rieerends the bh ae the three-billion-dollar mark for ing. P will He ip “state at the Thayer COuIvE OUARANTER
~j r . ‘en h itchen| the first time in history, but home * * © y BOZEK, sit ai bees R_3-7260
to Mi ™ church, accord-|puilding investment declined by| Private construction expendi- Waterfront St. Waterford, age were * FULL OR PART | '
| 1 "8 rs Mehiberg, chairman.|19 per cent, from 15 billion dol-|t , Rent LS Sins Bh Kye) )
)- DAWE- GROVE. | lars to 1314 bill on dol-tures combined totaled ($90,800). Fharsdar. Jen-i0, th pm. tem Sree, St Beate . “10, & : + B
Stamp taxes have been doubled ” 000,000. in 1956,,only a little above} © the. Costs” Puneral Home i 0°43 pm. Michigan ‘employ:
; ; 8 ane. mt Security ! i.
pe 2-8357 |i Argentina on public and pri-| The gov the record 1955, figure. But pub- Interment fn via Gusee park isst00,
- government “report saidjlic construction’ prose 8 per ‘cent || tery, Book wilt Ne in state» sedent markch” Gekiten Mer: iene Gonte Puneral Home, 3141: “ae ies W. Maple Re. "Bis
vate documents. +,
, i
housing mortgage detbands had to
to a new high of $13,400,009,000, Sashabaw Rd.w Drayton, enor Ww. mingham, * DESIGNERS AND... DETAILERS AUTOMATION AND
SPECIAL MACHINERY MANUFACTURER
EXP sors ron DAIRY AND
Y PERSONNEL OFFICE
a Sears, Roebuck Co.
184 N, SAGINAW BT.
record of ability. ah i you
can, suit, eee our
P of le time, ‘Top in- r ty come for a mee who can. qualify.
““HASKINS CHEVROLET
“Oakland County’s
Fastest Growing Dealer” 6181 Dixie Big er at M15
EXP. TV TECHNICIAN, MUST AE Birra Mh eee W. Huron.
=xP ~ COMBINATION WELDER.
ray-' rp. 1% mi. zo a
Woodward, on Maple road, Bha
EXCELLENT T OPPORTUNITY F "FOR
y young man, between
bookkeeping and ine ‘caper
ence essential. Car required. FE
8-084) for @ ent.
EXPERIENCED IN REAL Es-
tate. a. cond: s of
a new with ample parking.
Close to to bank. excellent Neca ation
for tor roe busines: s, J. R. Hilts,
rr. i?
cAbORATORY Ls ae erreel EX-
cellent Pon-
tiac opera Hosp. salary N.
Perry.
»
LINCOLN
DIVISION °
FORD
MOTOR CO.
Must fill the following
positions before moving
to Novi
EQUIPMENT
DESIGNERS —
(ExELDING BODY aL ASS! rte
BLY FIXTURES) .
PROCESS
ENGINEERS
(EXP. IN CHASSIS & L AS
SEMBLY, HARD & SOFT AtRiM, SEW, OR BODY-IN-
WHITE)
QUALITY CONTROL
ENGINEERS POSITION -
IN METAL FORMING & (EXP.
STAMPING, onive BUCKS &
TUR ES.
ARC .
ENGINEERING
CHANGE. ANALYSTS
(EXP, IN ANALYZING AND MOD-
ING ENGINEERING
NGES. NG Qu AL
* ROCUREME: AND
MECHANICAL ENGI-
RE- TIMING BACKGROUND NEERING
QUIRED.
PROGRAM TIMING COORDINATORS
D EXPERI-
A KNOWL-
. EDO ENGI-
NEERING M & AUTO-
MOTIVE OPERATIONS.) (4 YRS.
Join Lincoln Division now
and be a part of the di-
vision when it begins occu-
pancy of its Novi office
ifMarch.
Apply
NOVI TOWN HALL
8:30 TO'S
Saturday, Jan. 12
r JN SPECTOR ‘or dry cleaning. Birmingham
cl » 4 a so" 263 .S. Woodward. MI
You wan JE peopl eet
som pew car Enjov ¢ ae
- pon eed -
ization, *. =4 de ——. and
— e in
MEN 18240 To-Traim for.
Drafti 1-Di our Ad under INSTRUSTIC
po ar a A