* q j : ‘ ’ : - The Weather -’ é U.S. Weather Bureau: Forecasi , Clear and very cold (Details on Page 2) PON ‘TAC PRESS 116th YEAR | eer * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 —28 PAGES ASSOCIATED UNITED PRESS PHOTOS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE BS Frigid. Air, .= Deal Death to Eastern a. & x * * * -*® 2 A Winter Many Will Remember Pontiac Press Phote | MAN, IT’S COLD — It got so cold in Pontiac last night that the Dawson mill pond dam froze “ solid, the first time in recent memory. The dam, located in Beaudette Park, has a large volume of water flowing over it normally, but the freez- ing temperatures congealed the moving water. etn ad type tages ania © arg ag. ae AP Facsimile der to declare-a state of emergency as transpor- tation slid to a halt. With sub-zero winds piling up drifts six and seven feet deep, officials ap- pealed for help from nearby cities. DOWNTOWN DESERTED — This was the - aftermath of a four-foct snowfall in Michigan City, Ind. Snowed-in cars on this downtown street stand as mute testimony to the city’s paralysis. The heavy snowfall caused Mayor Francis Fed- AR bd Ft ; “a Facsimile schedules, In Pittsfield, Mass., however, four hundred passengers on three trains were marooned all night in the Berkshire hills by huge snow drifts. - SNOW STEAM—A New Haven Railroad train offers a misty view as it plows into a snow drift on its way into the station at Hartford, Conn. Al- though sriow was heavy in most Eastern areas, trains on some routes were able to maintain “GOING NOWHERE vase In fact many of the vehicles in these two long lines of traffic near, Washington aren't going at all. Stalled cars and “trucks snarled traffic So badly that’ ‘only one. Wirephote of the four lanes on the i ities at ight was 4| open. Traffic on the merging road at. left was blocked by abandoned automobiles. The Eastern & & ‘9 Below Numbs Pontiac a aes Storm wil From Southland x * * x * * --- Coldest in 18 YearstoNew England Forecast Here Lafe Tonight Minus Twelve *. Explain 1958 Contract Demands Roads Passable, Some | Schools Close. in State; Cars Fail to Start i DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TEMPERATURES | 12 midnight ....... -6 2 MW 6 co ce ccc -8 BO. coves cecscs -9 S @.0R. coc: ssecee. -S J | ee ee -7 1G am... -4 | DD OMe oc cccccses -2 | 2p. ........... 3 the” state” shuddered in numbing cold today, hit by one of the decpest of deep- freezes ever to blow into this area. The worst isn’t over, jeither. The forecast for to- night is 12 below. The mercury shot to a frigid bone-chilling nine below, at 3 a.m. Pontiac area residents will have to go back to 1940 to find it much cdider. On Jan, 19 of that year the mercury plummeted to 12 below. push the mercury be-| low the zero mark were cloudless’ -}skies and northerly winds that caused many snow drifts. passable, but some five-foot drifts on back roads. The weather forced schools to | shut in Almont, North Branch, and Utica. All Oakland County Schools Were reported open. Counties were shut due te im- passable roads and buses that wouldn't start. Thousands of cars also failed this morning, The ‘major Automobile Club of Michigan emergency sta-| tions in Pontiac said they were! some five hours behind in answer-| ing calls, There were nearly frozen batteries, radiators, gas lines and other mechanical trou- bles, Because many oil heat users with dutdoor tanks have found their oil | lines frozen during this cold spell, fuel oil companies are suggesting ,, (Continued on Page 2, Col, 4) * * - Haases Report ‘Sunny South’ Icier Than City Pontiac Press columnist Joe Haas and Mrs. Haas are driv- ing to Florida for a vacation trip. They wired this morn- ing: Pontiac and the _rest of! 10 degrees below zero around 4 The Oakland County Road Com-! mission reported all major roads) Schools In Sanilac and St. Clair . - _—eameiniene tate Be Gs > UNION center, the UAW's director of its Department, chats with his as Moran, left, a.m, at the Pontiac State Hos- pital. Recorded in downtown was a~< “Denieé By HAROLD §&. COHEN A flat denial that the UAW | would exchange its profit sharing jplan for a four-day work week ory imade by Leonard Woodeoc UAW’'s General Motors resaaird ment director. SPEAKERS — Leonard Woodcock, and Charles Beach, president of Four- Day Work Week Exchang | 127 Perish as Mercury Falls Below Zero and Drifts Pile Up By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — A death-dealing storm swept across the Northeast yesterday, leaving snow- falls of up to 58 inches. The storm had hit an area from Mississippi to New Eng- land. The storm was centered over Portland, Maine, to- day and heading for the Atlantic. Meanwhile, a polar air mass over the Midwest dropped temperatures to the lowest level_of the year. The upper Plains had readings such as 30 below zero at Bismarck, N. D., and 29 below at Bemidji, Minn, as Winter’s double-barreled blast / left in its wake at least 127 | deaths. | While Weather Bureau officials |in New York City hesitated to call |the Northeast storm a_ blizzard, ithey conceded that one of a bliz- jzard’s three key features—tfrigid temperatures — had made use of Pontiac Press Phote jthe term possible. Pontiac seetaes Local 653, before the start of a c_ * & 8 : mass meeting Saturday. The union officials ex- | The temperature in New York plained 1958 contract demands to Pontiac area |CitY was down to 6 degrees before GM workers. |dawn, General Motors sistant, Ernest + The two other attributes of a jblizzard, swirling snow and high |winds, had already taken hold of jmuch of the Atlantic Coast, STILL SNOWING | Even after the center of the ; ‘storm had passed most of the sy" On irec Sc 9 pay snow continued to fall from the pees Great Lakes and the up- iper Ohio Valley to New England. Gusty winds reached 50 miles an hours. i x * * Lebanon, N.. H. recorded 58 linches of snow on the ground “I only said in answer to their questions, that if GM proposed a four-day week, we would give Some 400 persons it serious consideration.” Woodcock told the workers that) ithe UAW is deadly serious about! : ithe profit sharing plan, because it| While Boston and Caribou, Maine, benefits labor without adding to in-| reported depths of 19:and 32 inches, respectively. , flationary pressures. , Woodcock spoke at a meeting of! ‘all Pontiac area GM workers, held ' ‘Saturday afternoon at the Pontiac) Loea! 653 Hall. jattended. Woodcock said he was misquot- Complains done the same thing.” | ed by errors last week. 4 No Whistling in Space, ‘Moon Man’ ‘SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (P—Airman Donald G. Farrell tice attack this plan as ‘novel 2.000 calls of. ‘completed seven days in a make-believe space ship yes-| terday and came out saying “I believe anyone could have Scientists at the School of Aviation Medicine at Ran-| dolph Air Force Base jubilantly agreed — the 23-year-|' | In Boston, a 37-year-old record He scored reported comments by) . swept from the books last GM and Ford officials calling the) night when 17 inches were meas- plan ‘novel and dangerous.” | ured. The City Weather Bureau “It is the same plan that Ford spoke of “the wildest coastal and General Motors have, used for} sterm of the winter.” The old |years among their top executives,"’| mark for a 24-hour snowfall in said. “How can Harlow Cur-| the city was 16'; inches, set in - 1921. At least 11 Connecticut commu- nities declared states of emergency and similar steps were ordered in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 'when he has received $3.5 million ‘in the past 10: years from profit | sharing.” | * * * Woodcock attacked “‘price rig-) 'ging’’ by auto manufacturers say-) ling, “We have today an oversup-| Here, Use My Pen N.Y., had just proved that) man is ready for space | flight. “There was one strange sensa-| tion,” Farrell said after a solid) *~ week in a _ hermatically sealed|— tank that represented the cabin of| a space ship, “I couldn't whistle.’ Other than that the calm vol- unteer reported few physical or) mental © discomforts on being locked in the tanklike experiment-| “During the last three days in Indiana, Kentucky and Ten- nessee, we have encountered deeper snow, more sub-zero” weather, and more icy roads ’ than we have had all of the winter in the Pontiac area, “Bottles of Coke in the trunk of our car froze and burst. It is near tero in northern Ala- bama today, with deeper snow than we've had at any time in the Pontiac area this winter.” a Pe a In Today's s deine oo ed £8 De es Bn Comics ceuaubeseseveds 20 County News ......+5.5- ina Bodliterials 2... ccceccccunse & Witehe «ck ceiasrectecees 22 Obitwaries oo. 6. ccce ce ecces 16 Sports .....ccseeeecctees 18-19 Theaters ~........ ive TV Radio Programs. peaes 27 Witeom, Earl ......ccceees 27 Women’s Pages ........ 11-13 ee 0 ecsetneceseedds ey 17 GASOLINE. PRICE DOWN al space cabin. He could not see} jor hear what was going on out-} iside, | | x * * | He did not think the clustered) \researchers could hear him. How-) lever, it was. revealed during, She Winner TAKES TITLE—Pontiac .Cen- tral High School drummer War- ren Norlund, 16, took the senior | boys trophy Saturday at the | Land-O-Lakes baton twirling con- | test. For other pictures, see New Super Premium Ethyl Gasoline with 99 Octane Rating, designed for today’s |Engines, Do not allow your Engine to! Knock or Ping. J. 8. Parmer Gas and Oi) Co. haz Orchard Lake Ave, just off Sag. St » 32 Oremers. _Lake _Aye..just-eft-sae- Page 15. GASOLINE PRICE DOWN New Super Premium Ethy! Gasajine with 99 Octane Rating, designed for’ today's, Engines. Do not allow your Engine to) ‘Knock or Ping +. & Parmer Gas. and Oi! Ce p Jerome “Bright | Spot" Needs Sharp storm dumped 17 inchés of snow on this area. | ears. 06 te “a's. Ten 0. FE OMS = fe eee a siping a — — s * old native of the Bronx,* ply of cars and a shortage of pur- jtests that he could be heard by) chasing power afd yet prices go ispecial microphone that «was re-: ‘up. This is not free enterprise.” pie, his report on paper. | . He charged the aute firms with ‘Only by checking his watch’ and| planning to force workers to ( Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Blown In on,Snowstorm Troubles Pile Drift-High YORK, Maine (AP)—The editor of the Old Farmers Almanac, which is widely considered a safe weather fore- caster, was scheduled to speak here last night. Sponsors had let editor Robb Sag- endorph pick the date, on the assump- tion that he would choose a nice night. The speech was canceled. * * * CINCINNATI (AP) — Mrs. Mary Hart had cold feet so she heated a towel and_went to bed. The idea worked and she soon was asleep. But her comfort was short lived. She awoke to find the bed afire. Mrs. Hart and 10 othex residents of the building fied into the early morning cold. Fire Marshall Howard Fox said damage was about $500. ie x * BOWIE, Md. (AP) — A young couple LANSING & — City patrol- man Kenneth McKay reported teday his ball point pen froze solid as he was weiting a traffic violatién ticket. He finished the job with a refill cartridge. snowplow couldn’t reach them, but one boy managed to wade through the drifts to a telephone and call ‘to reassure their families. His report: “Having a wonder- ful time.” , * ASBURY PARK, N.J. (AP) —When the annual Jersey Coast. Boat Show closed its doors Saturday night, the exhibitors found piles of snow out- side. A dozen of them curled up in the sleeping facilities provided in the’ boats they were exhibiting. * * * NEW YORK (AP) — A policeman’s widow got snowbound in her Brooklyn cottage. Two police radio cars, two sani- tation bulldozers and a police emergency squad failed to reach her. Finally a brace of cops set out on foot to walk a mile and a quarter through the drifts. They took sticks from 66-year-old Mrs. spent their wedding night’ with 20 rela- tives and friends in the Ascension Cath-— olic Church. Five-foot drifts of snow blocked the church’ doors during the ceremony and reception Saturday for Joan Patten, 20, of Bowie and William A. Fletcher, 22, of Covirigton, Md. A bull- doter blazed a rescue trail yesterday. * * * NEWARK, NJ. (AP) — Among the hundreds of Boy Scouts marooned by snow on weekend trips to mountain_ areas were 40_ boys Stranded-orr top of ‘eieentiriny”“ Mountain in New Jersey. A Eleanor McGill's woodshed ,made a stretcher, wrapped her fn blankets and carried her out. a a ae: WASHINGTON, NJ. (AP) — When Mrs. Oscar Dancy went into labor at her home on top of Montana Mountain dur- ing the height of the snowstorm, state police sent a snowplow to clear the road to, her house. The snowplow got. stuck. So police called in the National Guard _which..sent a 45-ton tank to plow through the road. Mrs Dancy was Tushed to a hospital. im a . isn Le ae eae Cee! A ena m ar, serepeinenineey re a Tragedies Hif ‘Alma Refinery Plant Fire Kills One; 2 Executives, Pilot Die in Plane Crash ALMA W—A Leonard Refinery Co, worker died Sunday of burns, bringing the company’s fatality list to four after two separate disas- ters. Fire and 15 explosions that ripped through the maze of pipes and tanks at the east edge of Alma claimed the life of Gordon Ander- son, 34, of St. Louis, Mich., a vac- uum unit operator. A plane crash in a blinding snowstorm near New Buffalo, in Southwestern Michigan, killed three others a few hours later. They were Delbert Young Hew- itt, 48, president of the Leonard _ Crude Oil Co., a subsidiary of the refinery; William Elliott, 38, man- ager of Leonard Crude, and Stan- ley King, 34, company pilot. * ® * __<. The Civil Aeronautics Adminis-|*°™ No Space Whistling, = ~ tration was investigating the crash Sunday . Anderson was one of six refinery ® workers burned by the flaming gas- _ dline, oi] and asphalt. He died at’ ~ 6:20 a.m. Sunday in Gratiot Com- *Nnunity Hospital of burns on 90 per - cent of his body, Robert Balcer, 31, of St. Louis, was listed in ‘‘serious condition” Sad Poet's Pleas - [Seek Surcease_ BANGOR, Mich, @ — Taxpayer John D, Jones penned his pain in poetry to protest the increased tax bill on his suburban home. -Jones, a professiona] entertain- er and magician, fired off 30 lines of verse to the Bangor Township \Board of Tax Review in Van Bu- ren County. * Jones lamented in winding up his poem: x * * Due, no doubt, to malignant inflation We've suffered your constant re-valuation, Our assessments have increased nearly 200 per cent Which, frankly finds us pretty well bent, We humbly petition that you re-appraise, Just devalue to balance the raise. 121 Killed as Snow, (Continued From’ Page One) York and Pennsylvania. The big problem was drifts—some as high ‘as a two-story building blocked highways and isolated entire towns, Pennsylvania, 9; Connecticut, T% setts, 5; Colorado, 5; Iowa, 4; West nois, 2; New Hampshire, 2; Carolina, 2; Virginia, 2; Missouri, 2; Michigan, 2; Maryland, 9; Wash- Michigan, 2; Maryland, 9; Wash- Jington, D. C., 3, and Maine, 1. Among: the causes of death were accidents on roads, exertion from shoveling snow, trying to jockey ears from drifts and exposure. FREAK BLIZZARD A freak blizzard over an area only about 20 miles square around ‘Oh, to be as carefree as a grouse— Let’s sell our home, move to the poorhouse. — for a dD gee To you, my salutations and compliments. Jones hasn't received a reply from the. board yet. Michigan City, Ind., dropped up to 48 inches of snow. * * * The Lake Michigan port city's 30,000 residents were almost com- pletely isolated, Mayor Francis Fedder declared a state of emer- Says ‘Moon Man’ (Continued From Page One) ~at the hospital. Reported ‘quite satisfactory” were Harmon Drap- -per, 45, of St. Louis; Lester Hamp, ‘4, of Alma, and Ramon Wolfgang, of Elwell, , A sixth worker, Richard Gault, of Ithaca, was released after treat- ment, * *® * A company spokesman said the damage will run between $250,000 and $500,000, The refinery will be that Farrell's “out of operation unti] Wednesday./stemmed from The trouble began at 1:20 p.m. ‘simulated 18,000-foot altitude was When a valve apparently failed on|maintained in the space chamber. a tank of 20,000 gallons of butane gas and the tank ruptured. “Harold Grant Runs for Seat in House : Harold A. Grant, president of Fisher Body Division Local 596, UAW, has announced his candidacy as state representative from Pon- tiac on the Democratic ticket. Grant, 41, of 481 N. East Bvid., is vying for the post being vacated by Rep. Leslie H. Hudson, a Demo-} crat. Grant is a native of Pontiac who has been active in the Democratic . Party many years, both as precinct delegate and as an unsuccessful candidate for state representative Married with three children, ~ Grant is a naval veteran of World War II and Korea. = “s : Weather - ~ By E. H. SIMS. Why is the weather of the Ha- waiian Islands practically ideal? The much-famed climate of the Pacific vacation islands is caused by their location (latitude) and the huge mass of water surround- .-Iing them, and the topography of the land itself. The ocean area provides a con- stant temperature, since {it does not give up its heat as readily as a land mass. The latitude (about that of Cuba) promises warmth. The breezes from the sea in day- time and down the mountain! slopes at night insure comfortable temperatures, rather than exces- sive heat. Thus the combination of dow mountains (these conditions per- tain to Oahu particularly and to most of the other islands general- | ty), ocean mass, latitude, prevail-| ing winds and other factors con- tribute to the amazing constancy of Hawaii’s good weather. The Weather Full 0.8. Weather Buarean Repo PONTIAC AND VICINITY — re partly tleudy — eontinwed cold with ercattered | enew flurries tenight and tomorrow, Low | tonight 5-12 below, w, Mek temerrew 7-12. Today in im Ponting omead temp g & a.m. 8am: Wind ane 25-30 m.p.h. Direction Northwest jun sete Monday at 6:07 p.m Bun rises Tuesday at 7 Bp. a.m. Downtown Temoeratares a. 6 &. M,. 0.2605. A il M.. secosccel 1 Tem... 2-38 12 mM. ....cceeees Ba. M,..c000...8 Ip. m. 9B. M.. erecee- 4 2D. M...ccceeas 10 a. m 4 Sunday in Pontiac fas recorded downtown) “Hlgnert Cempewratare ......cceserversce 8! Lowest tem 2 ores eee 4 pera ifeen. temperature .......5.2-cs renee Weather--Partiy clou cloudy, windy “One Year “Age ti in — “Mean : Wea mer y dloudy a * Bighest and Lowest. Temperatures This Date in 86 Years 89 in 1911 -12 in 1940/5, climaxing a 1'4-day trial before Gundey's Tomocratere Chart _|Judge Doty. A life sentence is| federal pay raise bill which will M I L L E R fH Memo! i8 jimandatory for this crime. -| half-way meet both Republican Bismarck 28 4} Milwaukee, 9-18 Drew, 2993 Welch Rd., Commerce| 49d Democratic demands. e es ‘ Browns é, , “33, Township, admitted shooting Karl) F ' t Co } 12 +1 Ne 43 33 g Enicago ; 3 New York § {|Kolm, 63, in his small grocery Science Grants in ‘58? urni ure mpany Cincinnat i 2 Priston ob f |store @° 1010 Oakley Ra., two miles _ } Den Phoen north of Walled Lake. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (INS); “ rat i * Fe Before he was. sentenced, Drew | ~Sen. Estes Kefativer (D-Tenn) Our 23rd, Year. at This Same Location” tig|alleged the judge's instructions to predicted today’ that Congress land rr Catefi Deli 4 | the jury was prejudicial. Judge| will establish this year a vast 44 Oak Ave. . 2 ul Free chee b | Doty replied: “The jury had no! seholarship program for engi- vane! FRIDAY | EVENINGS adel its-verdiet:"——.| neers and scientists. i Aino ' House approval, All closed. other New England states, N ew} Ohio, 7; New York, 5; Massachu-| . Virginia, 3 North Carolina, 3; Tii-| - South |: | ticket. Three times governor of “ of Pennsylvania, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDA BIRMINGHAM. — Pessintalas sioners tonight will decide on the ee ee from Bower street to Hunter boulevard. Plans call for a 37-foot ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY—Harold E. Stassen, who resigned’ Saturday as President Eisenhower's disarmament adviser, smiles as he reveals plans to seek Pehnsylvania governorship on the GOP Minnesota and former president cf the University af Feamyivanis, Stassen is now a legal resident district’s worst in 22 years, Thou- ‘Isands of government workers re- main home today with White schools were ‘ * * * Schools were closed in hundreds of other communities in a number of states, business offices were closed. Many Sunday church services were canceled. NO POLICE LEAVES Many industries, and ee ae a Farrell's other comments on the test included: “T lost four pounds “At no time did I get bored. “I was kept busy enough that there was no thought of oreene) discomfort. RECORDED EVERYTHING “I kept a diary and put in everything that transpired. “I got a little bit tired. “Really and truly, I could like to make a trip to the moon. : “It would be easier if there were someone with you but that is just my personal opinion." Back home in the Bronx, his grinning. — Mr. and Mrs. Jarhes A. Far- re “Hurray for Don!” shouted a 12-year-old foster brother, Ernest. * * * And in Niagara Falls, N.Y., Farrell's girl friend Jo Ann Bur- den smiled and said, “I'm glad it's over.’’ When the yotng secre- tary heard that Farrell had said he “really didn’t have time‘ to think about her,” she said: ‘Oh, that's all right. I don’t care.” Farrell crawled into the 3-by-5- foot cabin with no more fuss than a Sunday motorist getting into the family ear. He emerged in almost the same fashion. His eyes looked red as if strained by two glaring bright lights that burned night and day for the benefit of a battery of cameras designed to record his movements. 5 * * * He ducked out of the cabin and stretched to his full six-foot height for the first time in a week. Only by shifting scientific equipment ithat almost filled the cabin was Farrell able to partially lie down for his 4%-hour sleeping periods. With more shifting, he gained a Scant square foot in which to! ‘Stand stooped and take a few ex- | jercises. “I believe I was afforded ample space for the duties performed,” he said. * « * He said he had plenty to eat arid ate everything put inside the cabin ‘“‘from Vienna sausage to quails eggs.’ “The eggs were boiled and! canned,” he said. “I think maybe someone intended them for a gur- prise but they were quite good.” “This airman not only knows jhow to ride a space ship but he |knows how to hold a press con- ference,” “said Senate Majority {Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, who! made a special trip here just to greet Farrell. Life Sentence Given $Drew for Murder | A sentence of life in prison was ‘handed down this morning by Oak- land County Circuit Judge Frank | L. Doty for Edward L. Drew, convicted earlier this. month of murdering an elderly Commerce Township grocery last October. A jury found 26-year-old Drew guilty of first-degree murder Feb. In New York, Gov, Averell Har- Lisson canceled all state police *2/12-Below Forecast civilian Tense units mobilized to aid the highway department. «* * * Northeast Pennsylvania was crip- pled by its worst snowstorm in 50 years, An estimated 40 to 4 inches fell in Wayne County in the extreme northeastern corner of the state. ‘Hundreds of weekend pleasure- seekers were stranded by the storm in the eastern area, includ- ing up to 1,000 who spent Satur- day night at Maryland's Bowie Race Track. * * * The fall of 8 inches in New York City was the heaviest in al- most two years. Public and paro- chial schools in the city were to carry on today. TRANSPORT DELAYED Throughout eastern New York and in other parts of the North- east, plane and bus service was canceled and trains were delayed. Power failures harassed many towns, . * * * The snowstorm started Friday on the Gulf Coast of Louisiana, drove into Mississippi, swung east into the Carolinas and then headed up the Atlantic Coast. Maryland State Police reported almost all major highways in the state impassable due to drifting snow. A huge traffic jam developed at the Baltimote line on U.S. 40 Cars have been stopped there for 14 hours, * * * The temperature dropped to 23 degrees below zero early today on 6,684-foot Mt. Mitchell in North Carolina. Yesterday's high tem- perature there was minus 6 de- grees. There were 28 inches of snow on the ground and winds of 40 to 50 miles an hour. SOUTH SUFFERING In Atlanta, the hardest cold wave of winter's worst visit in years hit the South today and a natural gas shortage added to the hardships. * * + The natural gas shortage was re- ported ‘in Georgia and Alabama The Atlanta Gas Light Co., which serves 58 communities in 29 coun- ties, started radio broadcasts early in the day appealing to resi- dential customers to cut their ther- mostats back five degrees, They also were urged to delay washing, and any cooking not Strictly necessary. * * «tk 4 below zero in the mountain sec- tion to 19 above at Brunswick, just north of the Florida line on the southeast Georgia seacoast. Atlanta ireported 5 above zero. HAZARDOUS ROADS . Schools closed in at least 10 Georgia counties and many roads were hazardous because of ice and snow. A similar situation existed in Alabama, Among the schools closed because of a gas shortage were those at Phenix City—adja- cent to Columbus, Ga., and Ft. /Benning—and Lanett. Predicts Compromise WASHINGTON (INS) — GOP Leader William F. Know- land has predicted’ the Senate will hammer out a postal and Georgia temperatures ran from) | FURNITURE SALE! Considering Style and Quality We Believe Our Prices Can’t Be Beat! Senate Probers Question Schwartz By FRED 8, HOFFMAN WASHINGTON ® — Allegations that some persons connected with the White House tried to influence decisions of independent regula- tory agencies may be aired today before a House subcommittee. ‘Bernard Schwartz, who has made such allegations, was sum- moned back, to continue his testi- Fa for Pontiac Tonight (Continued From Page One) = and turned around and went i ating the lines to prevent freezing. ' Some people looked at thermom- back to bed. Nearly 5,000 public and parochial students in the Utica area received an extended weekend when nine schools remained closed. Some 625 students in the Almont Commu- nity School district cheered the ‘‘no school” news. - o electricity this morning a o’clock for about an hoar, The weather was blamed for con- tributing to the deaths of a young man and a boy whose bodies were found in their car which was stuck in a snowdrift on U.S, 41 near Mc- Farland in Marquette County. Police listed them as Spencer B. Peterson, 22, and David Soulliere, 15, both of Marquette, They died of asphyxiation after their car be- came stuck, The “ice box’ of Michigan over- ‘might was Ramsey, nine miles east of Ironwood, which recorded “warmest” spot with the mercury hovering a fraction below zero. Police reported many roads in the state slippery because of drift- ing snow. Road crews from Oakland County, out around the clock since Friday night, had to use { sand in an effort to remove ice from roads. other reported lows in the state were: Ironwood -20; Houghton -15, Pellston -12, Grand Marais, Battle Creek and Flint -13, Jackson -10, and Gladwin -9. The five-day forecast for i’ontiac and vicinity was for temperatures to average around 16 degrees be- low normal—high 34 and low 20. The lowest recorded temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 Air ‘Pressure 35 below, Muskegon was the/f Allegations mony before the House group which fired bim 2 week ago se, Hs counsel. Schwartz was ousted in a row over the conduct of the subcom- mittee’s probe of the Federal Communications Commission and five other-regulatory agencies. - He has charged that FCC Com- missioner Richard A. Mack ac- cepted at least $2,650 dollars from a lawyer for one of four applicants for television Channel 10 in Mi- ami, Fla. Schwartz said Mack was pledged to vote for the lawyer's client, which received the grant last year. Mack, who has said Schwartz's : charges are “without founda’ will testify later in the week, per- haps —— * * Schwartz hes said a “white House clique’ has exerted pres- Realtors Will Hear Speaker at Banquet p-m. at nike Tempio. Tickets are available from any member of the Board of Realtors. Cunningham, a salesman, is for-| , mer director of physical education Income Tax Forms Got You Stymied! a.m. was -9. At 2 p.m. the reading was 3 degrees above zero, You Save Safely Here! Will . Union Head Denies Change in Demands (Continued From Page One) strike in dune when a backlog of autos will carry dealers fer sev- eral months without new preduc- tion, ‘ Me have 7 strategy, too,” plan. Maximum length of SUB pay- ments would be extended to 52 weeks, from the present 24. He also proposed that GM foin the union in a study of hospital- medical costs to see if they can will begin at 6:30| be lowered, :> the dh aoen suse oe Mamie’s Brother-in-Law Linked With TV Case WASHINGTON (INS)—House in- vestigators linked Mamie Eisen- the application of National Airlines in a controversial Miami TV license case. Chairman Oren Harris (D-Ark) of the subcommittee on legislative oversight, read from a sworn affi- davit that the brother-in-law, Col. Gordon Moore, and Mrs. Moore had once been’ house guests of Na- tional Airlines president George T. . 38: hower’s brother-in-law today with} concrete pavement at an estimat- ed cost of $7,900, 85 per cent of, which will be borne by abutting property owners. — : x * * Commissioners also will consider applications for zoning map The second application is from F. H. Henkel who asks that one lot on West Maple avenue be rezoned to multiple dwelling use. the fire is believed to have been caused by an overheated furnace. | Birmingham Women’s Club has! A big dart i This tals for any year in U.S, history. (Advertisement) AUTHORS WANTED BY N. Y. PUBLISHER New York, N. ¥.-—One of the nation's = stent i i tion, send for € Van- Avenue, 4, Office, New York) an gives s nee, ere oon $3.79 GLAMORENE RUG CLEANER SPECIAL 2- -BENRUS ® Self-Winding ® Waterproof ® Shockproof 17 Jewel Watch Regular Price $75.00 YouSave $37.50 Prete: Fh TERMS TO SUIT YOU Gistinetion thet’ winds’ test as you wear it. Shock- resistant, anti-magrietic, WK 108 Y2 PRICE! DAY SALE ‘NORTH SAGINAW PHONE FEderal 3-7114 Qs Lv. Flint ONLY 9 2. RS. 15MIN. 2 he ra. New York 11:15 AM, Convenien becebit MICHIGAN, SPECAL t return service ton 709 oor ) Ar, Flint 10:25 P.M. AIRLINES 2 a | oe THE, PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, sn i Formosa Merrily jonyhod, ne ee aos 1 ash ts Merona ee Oc i E Tobacco Dept. 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Borcelan Tops—W hite "New fae Sear ) “COSCO” Baby Jumper $7.98 | Base Cabinets Enamel—Black Base ~ DOUBLE DOOR Value 6" Genuine Cosco jumper with plastic upholstery seat and back—removable EE for washing, Sturdy chrome plate frame, enamel tray, gliders. In as- sorted colors. Slight Scratches and Mars—Others at Savings, Too! $6 North JIMM). eee Rh 680606080 0bh0bhbe8 Oban bb een eeeaba in neansaeaan: With 2 Drawers $29.95 Value All Tonite & Tues. we 36"x30"x20" Size Large base cabinet with 2 doors. and 2 cutlery drawers. Two shelf spaces. Ready as- sembled, flush handles. ROTAERS Floor ‘doa ssnd. dens. conde, 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor Special “Purchase! N ENDI y “hdeictivel Corl x SAVE MONEY 4a gf Boys’ - Girls’- C JOHNSON All FIRST Quality ouve Pever, Saved Beto NOW: ‘on Sale hildren’s than you'd Soles... rubber hee $4.95 “EJAY” SHOES Boy or girl, red only, crepe so Ange soles. 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PIPES 2 Pipes for $1.00 Big assortment of briar pipes Nin smart, modern styles, Screw bit stems. f 98 N. Saginacw —Main Floor Tonite aed Tuesday Sale of DRUGS & COSMETICS HURRY! sets For Purse or Pocket ALEASELTZER a 5 No Hmit—none to dealers. > 49: Leaves beth hands free to apply make - up, do your hair, etc. J ERGENS LOTION with Dispenser $1.00 Size LISTERINE Antiseptic Reg. 33¢ GE —— SMM FILM SPLICER $4.95 a Bar-Lites boxed $13 Value $7 iB Stainless steel blades and § UL. approved bar-lite with handy storage & carry case, Poid- ing bar complete with 4 GE\ bulbs. scraper. Easy to use, makes all your aueat reels into one long continuous reel. 7 Ideal Git Fun for Youngsters Genuine Viewmaster Save -$30.50 on This WOULENSAI en _ Theater S Sets 7 ee Camera aaias Pack “eee E MOV re gor?d ‘69° $13.20 ‘Value All {1.8 lens, built-in filter dial,, pic- - ture window viewfinder, weather eye exposure dial. Brand new, latest model, full factory —— As a real theatersturdy. shadow box stage With screen. Viewmaster projector shows reels in colors. Easy to operate for any child. STS Ae CAMERAS | eee enti | = 96 North . Folding E Seoesososesseseseceosssesssesesesseesessecos Complexion Glo - Bottle HL With. Dispenser K———- | $1.25 Value =| | 69° | TUMS for the Tummy 3617s Reg. 25¢ — Limit 6 . $1.75 Lanotin Plus Make up eee ee 69e Pal Single Edge > Razor Blades we vewettey $1.00 Hazel Bishop Pera ‘ | PHOTO FRAMES oe choice of single, dou- #5) ble or folding double eel frames, Limit 3. : SON, Saginew aE mie Theil 96 WN. Seginew St CLIP THESE COUPONS — Bring ‘em With You! All Items Specially Priced TONITE & TUESDAY! © . Another adv.-full of ‘COUPON SPECIALS’ that offer worthwhile savings. these coupons. 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Limit 2. ‘ Lady Esther 4 ~ pur- COSMETICS — Main Floor pose cream at this Full 8-ounce Can of Ronsonol Lighter Fluid 25+ TOBACCOS — a Floor fA (aes CHOICE OF 3 STYLES eee] aaakha Regular 49¢c — Now 2s] New switch spout—works yin all makes lighters. ‘ = Limit 1. For All 3x$-inch Pictures 59¢ Value — Now 21° CAMERA DEPT. — Main Floor Famous ‘HELENCA’ Nylon -Men’s Stretch. Sox fat 59 Value po PAIR , Cc i Assorted colors & _ patterns. 1 size J Pl fits all. (3 pr. for I 7éc). Limit 6 pra, — MEN'S hese oo we Bring This Ad With You a BROT ali a FIMM) F: Soars “ ef = =. : ‘pies es oar aes on = herrea oe. Dy ee eet oe eee Bene oe Bee See Se gece ee ee ee doe 2 4 ges ‘ * i : i i 3 : ee la La, Sst * ‘ ‘ i 4 ed = } E : : ; : » ae #5 % : \ * . ‘5 ‘ : - : ; vy reer ; ! 5 r i ‘ i eo. : é = FOUR | fees eee s oS ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1058 oe ‘ ELOY AE 8 a | eet AirForelels == People 60 t0 8inotfo Race (Lauren Ba Lu MAIL THIS AD TODAY— NEW YORK @ — “I don't be “Bogie” used to do in the old days,and there you are... flat. Some-/to learn to shift for yourself. But that whatever they do they must -. «+ and let us tell you how R Specifies That lieve in’ a useless life,” saiq/When either had. finished Meee ee ee eee cae te 5 MaMiCS SSSide well, and Wal the World Gaemeyy | you can still apply for 2 $1,000) .2°POr! SPee ‘eat taee Marl. “You levee Ol ce Ce Fee cane tte ot fallowe them a damned thing. I think life insurance policy to help) Spanish Sites Mee t)uen ™ ogg down...) > there nape gad “ something for somebody. But it hasn't been quite the} .Lauren hasn't gotten over the/there. a ca bag ‘a take care of final expenses; Urgent Requirements ree se same fun. Lauren, one of the best-|death of her huskand yet, “The children give you a tan-|, Lauren restlessly. lt. another without burdening your family.) : After the death of her husband, |liked gals in still has|isn’t looking for anybody's sym-(gible reason for but|the cigarettes ye WASHINGTON i — The Air/Humphrey Bogart, a year and a sudden, deep, throaty, infec-| pathy. you can’t lean on them. I love|Smoking from three packs You handle the entire her , Inearby hotel livingroom table, re snsaction ST Nee nes te ae aan enh tie wean Ges rest of ber/kind ot quewton mark bebiad i jmarked matterotthctly. “Bet more & ie was ay. Be, smoke about $.00) 8, $874 No obligation. No one will call|it is building in Spain. |she said cheerfully when asked/sage of time. The passage of time|“Bonzo"), who is 9 and wants to/Tead what they say about cig- nics everything. piscine vO gag the ow s**t _ Tear out this ad and mail) —onting Office which said somelgasid “ i 1d; “My main problem was to learn'wants to be a ballet dancer. “Keeping” your sense of humor _ g* it today with your name, ad-'o¢ the bases involved in the hallf- So she went back to the studios | the rest of the things take over.'to live alone. When you've shared sy awe ee * sf ME Ay yng A nd oA gt Oakland Fuel & Paint a ere, 6 — _ ——a. ~ a - Fd * ee —— ee dress and year of birth to Old billion-dollar construction Pt©jand starred in her 14th film,) “But I haven’t any long-range your life with someone for 11% ge 430 Orchard Lake { doubtful military'« ve h Century-|plans. I've learned not to, and I!years, it's a problem suddenly to|thing they want to be — exceptiof the time. But it helps you ge \ ae suet ct tad, ei "Wen Stok aa fase en to Neciaower Sat aque an yas Wisknad with both halves./bums,” she said. “But I will tryjover the rough spots—and the dull FE 5-6159 West 9th, Dept. L221A, Kan- value. ‘ * this world.” sas City, Missouri. yourselves York to celebrate, as she and]... “] suppose it’s good training—'to impress upon them two things—|ones—in bend M/ORKING ‘MOTHERS Free Pick-Up and Delivery | Service Available FUEL 01 No Contract _ Necessary F YOU. THE PUBLIC! Yes, they are running care as cats! They are afraid to give you the freedom to choose on your own behalf the television programs you might want to see! They say that you must be compelled to watch the programs they select for you or nothing at all! , Who is so afraid? What are they so afraid of? - The president of CBS and the president of NBC and the president of ABC and These men know better than anyone else that your TV set is technically capable the president of the Nationa] Association of Broadcasters and a number of other of receiving the finest new motion pictures and hit Broadway plays. These are very powerful people who run television networks and are so afraid to trust you attractions which you can naw see only by leaving your home and going out to the that they are operating a nation-wide propaganda and lobbying campaign, hop- theatre or stadium, because the advertiser can never afford to sponsor them. ing to high pressure you and Congress! The networks know it would be cheaper and more convenient for you to see They are afraid that even the limited trial run of subscription TV, recently these great features in your own room at a cost to the whole family of less authorized by the FCC, would prove a public demand for really great programs than one ticket to the movies! No b -titters—no traffic, no parking fees—and and be a huge success. no commercials in the program! WHY NOT SAVE / ONE PENNY FOR A GALLON OF y/ ffi; | 4 all seano | Vee, This is what wakes them up shaking in the middle of the night! They are afraid you will find out how good TV can really be! . This is why they are flooding the public and Congress with the phony charges It is astounding enough that the networks dare undertake such an unprec- that Subscription TV will make every set owner pey for the programs he now edented thing as the outlawing of a new competitor at birth. It is shocking sees free. They know this is not true and that it cannot ever be true, . ‘enough that thei Selon t ' al ee bed the LON ONLY Tc... Your Choice of © HOUSE & SEALER UNDERCOATER @ VINYL, WALL BOND (LATEX) : PLASTIC WALL TILE IN COLORS | ho =o Asphalt oJ - Ere oe epee et wats TILE “Tell the decter my “as | * TILE OUTLET and now she As feels just fine!" CEILING VINYL PLASTIC ALLEQUIN PATTERN | TILE LNPETIME GUARANTEE : >< Sa. Ft. Be Each = OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY ‘TIL 6 FREE PARKING At Zenith, we have time and time again pointed out that it would be plain busi- ness stupidity to ask you to pay to see.a program you are now receiving free. The FCC has stated that it does not intend to permit, during the tests or after them, any practices that will impair the availability of advertising supported or so-called free programs. But despite all this—the phony charge continues being dinned into the ears of millions of Americans, accompanied with the request that people ‘object to subscription television in letters to Congressmen. The campaign is paying off tly. Thousands of letters from people rebelling against the idea of having to pay for present television programs are offices. ' point where they insult Congress by seeking to use lavish entertainment, pressure from special interests, and letters obviously induced by unfair propagande to obtain legislation to protect their own pocketbooks. It is amazing enough that they can take in hundreds of millions of dollars each year out of the public's airwaves, for which they pay nothing, and then use most astounding, shocking and amazing thing of all is that three organizo-_ tions in New York City could have amassed such terrible power. The question is no longer whether subscription television will benefit the public. The been our position that most powerful and dangerous lobby the country has ever known. Between them, they will have an ironclad grip over what shall be seen and what shall not be seen on the nation’s 40,000,000 television sets. This power is now being used to prevent you from even sampling the wares of a new competitor, subscription television. It can also be used for many purposes, political as well as economic: Where will it stop? If anyone has any doubt about the manner in which this power is being used today, here are a fow of the facts: | . Last January 13, on the eve of Congressional hearings regarding subscription television and proposed action to loosen the strangle-hold networks now have on their dependents, the affiliated stations, the Columbia Broadcasting System threw an enormous banquet in Washington. There was provided @ lavish star-studded . program of entertainment which CBS would have charged an advertiser a quarter of a million dollars to televise. It was specifically designed to attract members of Congress. What these guests had not anticipated was the presence of scores of executives of affiliated stations, well briefed beforehand, and strategically seated in the hope that the captive audience of Senators and Congressmen could be indoctrinated against subscription television. : Stations were urged to go on the air at home to repeat the charge that subscrip- tion TV would take over all TV, and to urge their listeners to write opposing letters to their Congressmen. — : One station, a CBS affiliate, went so far as to tell the kids listening to a children’s | program that it would be killed off by Pay-TV and to be sure to get mother and dad to wee their Congressman and Senator. : . Others bought space in local newspapers to publish the same hony charges. Still others scurried through the halls of Congress, urging their entatives to ent for legislation that would ban even the FCC-authorized trial of subscrip- tion TV. . NBC, another network, asked its affiliated stations to contribute money to an — —— a eaf pe the purpose of fighting subscription TV. ashington has rarely, if ever, seen such a dis of pressure lobbying from entrenched and vested interests. : ai gas: Ss All this has just one purpose—they want to pressure Congress into THINKING that the people are against subscription sion. The networks and the movie theatres don't really believe you are against it~on the contrary, they are so afraid you will support it during the course of the trial run proposed by the FCC that they are frantic in their*efforts to prevent you from having that chance! If they really believed you were. against paying a small fee for better, | Programs, or that we won't be able to bring such programs to you, then they * should welcome a public test. They know as well as anyone that we must have your support, earned by giving you the top-notch programs you really want, because without your support, even a limited test would be a crashing flop! superi ior programming “ question is whether our democratic institutions and processes can co-exist with such tremendous concentrations of unbridled and irresponsible power. Chil brut f. e The Tulsa Trimene avery week-day afternoon by the Tulse Tribune Ca. Ne Tulse Tribune suek- agency — of this newspaper is entered a4 pocond close mall matter at the postoffice st Tulsa, Okishome. ender act of March 2, 1870 Member of the Associated Press, which is exclusively entitled to ose for republication of tae teed Proce Aaea™ News, Inter Ameri: Press Asen., ANP, SNPAo ABE = Tulsa, Oklahoma, Thursday, Jan. 23, 1958 What About Pay TV? America’s three major radio- ‘that If you want to see good shows them i i if i & z ef | H th He le lit } ; | i if z Hi 2 i le [ i : ig | : i r | : I i F 3 ' ildtiad! HEE yea Hite it cif eer ul E i ni i i iy bit sida E H f a : | § é We have here A very fundenntal tesen Is there any reason why Americaris should Do the electronic screens America’s living tad pelt otectehencentt hoy ae they belong t attr You can g6 to the symphony, or you can play - them? Is it in ot “eet eee & record on your phonograph. You can take a prise" to give the three networks dictatorial bus ride, or you can walk your through -. power over what shall home, bap ny A al tal Vee you ean Program the home-ewner be alowed te buy 8 | Zenith Radio Corporation CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Ey: 2 PIE CRN 2 TMM ne ee i i __.. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 Ty ' ORTONVILLE HOME DESTROYED — Four fire departments battled this blazé which de- stroyed the Virgil Hickey home, 700 State Park Rd., Ortonville, shortly after noan yesterday. Much of the -family’s furniture was saved, but nothing was left of the house except the chimney. Brandon Township_Fire-Marstal William Buck- ingham said the fire apparently was caused by faulty wiring., Other departmefts fighting the blaze were from Atlas and Independence town- ships and Oxford Village. Firemen said, how- ever, that the house was a mass of flames when they arrived — too late to be able to stop it. jlcebreaker Suddenly Isn’t)>rh at Bayview Park. ‘Snowbound in: Georgia, |*wldn't beat their set up. as Maumee Bay Freezes jvessel, said it would be able to, College Boys Happy | TOLEDO @—It's cal The Coast Guard cutter Tupelo, jis about two feet thick in Maumee bers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 8 moe 4 which: doubles as an icebreaker,'Bay where ice-breaking operations was frozen. in itself today in its!are expected to resume March 1, Lt. Henry Wear, skipper of the They were with their dates on a weekend house party at Lake Winfield Scott, 110 miles north of ,, |batter its way out of the ice if the , Ga, @ — Men- Atlanta, ises. He @stimated the ice fraternity at Georgia Tech figure| The party of 12) persons drove if you've got to be snowbound you'to the lake Friday; An eight-inch imation agent, successful market- ing; Walter Toenjes, superintend- ent of the Graham Experiment Station, South Haven, new apple’ 5Die as Blast é 6 TILL 9 Open a Waite’s se Charge Account ~ Today! Choose the Budget Plan | -.. add to your account while paying only a small ; amount monthly —or the | coreniont 30-Day Charge an. The . Jacketed_ | - t You’re So Very Proud of Your New a} Is tops Slimmer Figure... Trim Off Extra Inches with SLIM-CYCLE The Fun Way : , : to- Exercise ; Sheath . at Home! i Value $599) S meeting of the Southeastern Michi-| gan Fruit Growers Association Wednesday. All fruit growers are invited to attend the meeting which begins at 10 a.m. . Speakers during the program and their topics include: Robert Haines, Michigan State University entomologist, insects and new in- secticides; Josephine H. Lawyer. Pontiac consumer marketing infor- Firemen Stymied TOKYO (INS) — Firemen shin- ing up for weekly inspection were interrupted by a_ three- alarmer. They rushed off in their | truck and were halfway to the _ fire when someone remembered | that both hose nozzles were back daughter; Mrs. Oglesby’s broth-| ‘er; and her mother were killed. Killing five persons. Two others) ‘were injured. A house next door, and a grocery across the street were damaged. * * x Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Oglesby; a Two Oglesby sons were injured. Firemen said they believed the) at the station being polished. Walled Lake Family Surprised | coal. Baby Born, House Robbed furnace in the home exploded. It! had been, converted to. gas from]. * * * Virgil Oglesby was 47 years old; his wife, Nellie, 44; and their dead daughter Patricia Ann, 5. The two others killed were James H. Cooper, 56, and Mrs. Roe Charge Yours at Waite’s . . . Long Wearing ... Easy to Clean ... Decorator Approved MATCHSTICK BAMBOO CURTAINS ‘Third Fleor il Pn ee tj Natural Color Cafe Solid Color Painted Cafe > oH ¢ Pr. $599 Pr. ar 48” wide by 26” long 99 ‘ 60” wide by 36” long - 2 if 60” wide by 30” long .......1.29 pr. | Matching Valance ............ 1.79 | a 26” wide by 36” long ...... .1.69 pr. @ Pink @ Lime Green © a i f ti 9” deep by 52” Valance ....... 99c @ White . @ Turquoise | } it SPATTER PAINTED CAFE — il | ; ; : i op & one $159 Pr. Choose: f Wh WW ! li ag wide by 20 boy , - @ White and Gold <— Ome WA | it 30” wide by 30” Iong ............. 2.29 pr. . @ Turquoise and Gold ‘il a0 PAL TE | 30” wide by 36” long ..... be ceeees 2.59 pr. — @ Pink, White and Gold | | We Wilh nh 52” wide by 9” Valance ............ 159 @ Brown, White and Gold . «Fourth Floor! - During. Florida— Vacation |tinc. Cooper’, the moter. | . | , toe, i cap Sea Hey, WALLED LAKE — Ernest Campanaro and fils wife, | vere Gece a. hospital. Bobby Sally, probably will never forget their trip to Florida this’ |Lee was released, but James was’ year. held for treatment for minor in-| Their vacation at Miami Beach was interrupted by a juries. ; baby — born to Mrs. Campanaro, 35, two months ahead of x & &* schedule. A girl, whom they named Diane, she weighed in | Fire destroyed the 1'%-story i home and damaged the house Feb. 7 at two pounds nine ounces at the Hollywood Hospital, next door. The blast damaged the} Miami. _ | grocery. Campanaro, who owns a Walled Lake Supermarket, this wife and daughter, Debra, 10, were hardly back on. Fares on the Paris Metro, or the beach when they received word their home at 471 W. eer. ma # t US. cents. Walled Lake Dr., had been robbed of an estimated $700 ares on the New York subway are 15 cents. in cash. and $7,000 in U. S. Savings Bonds. = Walled Lake Police Chief Albert Decker said the break- — in occurred sometime between Wednesday and Friday. The Christian theft was discovered Friday afternoon by Campanaro’s sis- ; ; ter, Mrs. Florence Mahar of 220 Wanda St., Walled Lake. : Science “We hadn’t expected the baby until April,” Campanaro || | vai. Frees Man! kek *&® OU “We were caught without baby clothes—didn’t even Have || Would you like to know | a name picked out.” more about Christian Sci- || The couple will have to leave Diane at Variety Chil- ence, the religion which dren's Hospital, Miami Beach, until she weighs about six | brings freedom from sin, pounds, which may be about two months. sickness, and death? For an | The family was to fly back to Walled Lake yesterday. | explanation of this liberat- | ing religion attend - GET AHEAD WITH A ! BILL CLEAN-UP A FREE LECTURE entitled Get the cash you need to oi off leftover seasonal bills. Ren make only one monthly “Christian Science payment here instead of sev- Its Message of Liberation” eral . . . have majre coum left over at end of the manth. GET A FRESH START by Elbert R. Slaughter, } Member of the Board of | Thousands of people have gotten a Fresh Start in their ig Lectureship of The Mother | - eting with « Bill Clean-Up Loan at BENEFICIAL, — _ the same! Get your loan in a-single trip to the office when carom Benericiat first. Or, if more convenient, write or come in. You | Church, The First Church || of Christ; Scientist, in Bos- |} will find BenericiaL likes to say “Yes!" when you ask te . loan! ton, Massachusetts Sunday, Feb. 23 3.P.M. IN First Church of Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car WREN EET, PONTIAC as ee AEC E Sree: Federal 2-0340 SEES. ® All Washable and Colorfast! Solid Color Broadcloth Printed Broadcloth Kitchen Prints Embossed Sheer Cottons Seersucker: Prints Printed Organdy ww Diminity Prints Lurex Cottons Novelty Lino Weaves Wamsutta Prints Full Sailcloth Prints ‘SPRING COTTON © Huge Selection of Prints and Solids! © Full Bolts! © First Quality! © Some Drip-Dry! © Terrific Savings! 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THE E PONTIAC PRESS © ‘Editorial Pose BAROLD A ican" President and Publisher . . * Our Right-to-Know Should Be Protected Hearings have been concluded by the Freedom of Information sub- committee of the House Operations ‘committee on the people’s right to know what goes on in their govern- ment. : In defense of secrecy Federal ad- ministrators long have quoted a pro- vision in the Federal code regulating “custody, use and preservation” of government Yocuments. The intent of this clause obviously was to make officials responsible fdr records under ‘their care and not blanket authority to keep them secret. wk & & The First Amendment to the Constitution bars abridgment of freedom of speech and press. To this end the newspapers of the country carry on a constant struggle for less secrecy. Witnesses for an amendment to the statute include such well known newspaper men as JAMEs S. Pope, executive editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, and CLarK K. Mot- LENHOFF representing the Freedom of Information committee of Sigma Delta Chi, national peoicamonsl journalistic fraternity. . x * * All witnesses favored a simple clarifying amendment to the statute MEMBER oP THE doubt that Tunisia has been provid- ing refuge for the guerillas. x « * But bombing of innocent and helpless villagers is another thing and a tragic blunder. The French people deploring such tactics, are demanding to know who was responsible. Foreign Minister Pineau says thé attack was not authorized by his government and there now is talk of apologies and indemnities to Tunisians. President Bourcutma is a friend of the West. He has resisted extremist Arab pressure and has been trying. to mediate between the French and Algerian Nationalists. However, he refuses to close Tunisia’s borders to the rebels who strike from bases there although his country is heavily dependent on France economically. ke * * Unfortunately of the 25 planes which ranged over the village for an hour, 17 were made in. this country and were given to France under our military as- sistance. program. This has brought the United States into the picture so Moscow and Cairo are taking full advantage of our embarrassment,. Politically Algeria is an integral part of France and the French claim the trouble there is an internal mat- ter. However, this raid into Tunisian territory has made it a matter for that “this section does not authorize ———— withholding information from the public or limiting the availability of records to the public.” The amendment would in no way affect other laws which expressly authorize secrecy such as those concerned with military er trade secrets or income tax returns. It simply means that '.Government agencies may not keep secret public information on the basis of a law clearly not intended for that purpose. x «kk x Editor Newton of the Tampa Tribune, writing in Look Magazine, warns that we have far more secrecy in all levels of government today than even five years ago; that if this se- crecy keeps expanding eventually we - will have lost our right to know and with it the rest of our freedoms. The Pontiac Press strongly believes this amendment should be made law. ey : : sauna === MEMBER0P “sane?_sumtad oP EE mania U. N. Should Discuss French-Algerian Strife . President Bourcursa of Tunisia has appealed to the United Nations and France is holding emergency cabinet meetings over the French air raid on the yi. Tunisian town of Sakiet- The United States and Britain protested to Paris and con- demnation is worldwide. All this - perhaps may help to placate Arab indignation but won't settle any- - thing. x * * As far as that goes, France had provocation enough. Tunisia has been a sanctuary for Algeria’s guerilla bands. ‘Recently guerillas crossed from Tunisia and attacked a French patrol killing 15 men. Last fall France warned that under the “law of hot pursuit” which we ourselves used in the Mexican war, it claimed the right to pursue insurgents into Tunisia and has done so on numer- ous occasions. There seems to be no THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by Tue Powrtso Press Company 4 W. Huron &t. Pontiag 12, Michigan Trade Mark Datiy Except Sunday Reuesews Bassers, Executive Vice President and Advertising Director . Howsrn A. Prreoreate n, ai TRAD went., Jonm A. Ruzy, — a fee President and Circulation Manager essa’ tome Cont tateice™ * vertisi Secretary and Manage . Rosser? ‘Tana, Groser ©. toeman neds Classified Manager Entered at Post Office, Pontiac, as second class matter —anes ee J a ta —, me — F ner Pontiac FE 1 Critics im advance. The Man About Town Not Always 2nd This County Started That Way; Then Dropped to 13th Pessimist: A persen who thinks - the only place he can find grati- tude is in the dictionary, A proof of the great development of Oakland County in the past half century is found in the fact that in the 1910 cen- sus it was thirteenth in population among Michigan's 83 counties. The growth which had then started lifted it to second place, ' which it has held for several years. When our county was organized in 1820, it was in second place, Wayne then also being the only county to have a greater population. It held that position for 50 years. In 1870 we dropped to fourth place, in 1880 to sixth, in 1890 to, eleventh, in 1900 to twelfth, and in 1910 to thirteenth. Then the climb to our present position started. Our county now has nearly twice the population of third place Kent County, and nearly three times that of fourth place Genesee County. : Going to Florida a few weeks ago, Don R. MacDonald sends word that the natives put a heavy emphasis on the unusual when talking about this winter. Second county in the state in . most everything else, the final 1957 figures, recently released, show Oakland County to be in that position in sales tax col- lected. My Dryden: correspondent sends me word that, honoring . Mrs. Peter Ulrich, “who devoted 70 years of her life to work in its Methodist church, a pairiting has been hung there. ‘ Keen for unusual combinations of names, my Hillsdale correspondent sends word that . : ‘ Diana Prettie and Harry Quirk of that city recently were married. If you think our young folks do queer things, please note that a clipping from The Pontiac Press of Feb. 3, 1902, sent me by , James Hudgins of Rochester tells of two boys, aged 13 and 14, being turned over to the local officers because they were too drunk to drive a horse. Outside a Georgia town a sign that says “Slow Down; You're Speeding” brings an immediate lift on all acceler- ede whether going too fast or not. ——_—_—_—_—_— Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. Susan Bendig of 161 State Ave.: ninety-first birthday. Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Voss of 3646 Brookdale Drive; sixtieth wedding anniversary. Mrs, Rachael Larrimore of Ro¢hester; eighty-first’ birthday, es and Mrs, Robert A. Mason of 136 Prospect Street; fifty-eight wed- 2, oye | Going F Rather Far Afield? David Lawrence Says: Need ‘Regulatory Agencies’ Study == WASHINGTON — The cloud of scandal—involving here and there an isolated case of impropriety— has blown across the so-called independent com- ~ missions and may unfortw nately tend to called for atten- no more impor- tant study this year than the LAWRENCE one a House committee has begun to make with respect to the “regulatory agencies.” Congress back in 1887 recog- nized that, with the growth of railroads, transportation required governmental regulation and hence established the Interstate Com- merce Commission, What was then a railroad monopoly has ceased to be one in the transportation field. The pattern, however, has been more or less followed in setting up eight other independent commis- sions—the Federal Trade Commis- sion, the Federal Reserve Board, the National Labor Relations Board, the Federal Communica- tions Commission, the Federal * Power Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Civil Aeronautics Board and the U.S. Tariff Commission. * * *. Basically the trend arose — of a peculiar defect in the Ameri- can governmental system—an un- willingness to let the executive branch of the government do the regulating of business or financial or industrial practices or employer- employe relationships. Congress has always main- tained that it should not delegate full power to the executive “branch of the government in certain fields, but should retain a hold on the independent com- missions as a kind of creature of the legislative branch. This has resulted in all sorts of terminology. Sometimes these in- dependent commissions are for- mally caHed “quasi-judicial” and sometimes ‘‘quasi-legislative,’’ and in @ recent report by the Hoover Commission, emphasis was placed on the need for transferring cer- tain ‘‘administrative’’ functions to the regular executive departments or at least giving considerable administrative authority to the chairman of - independent agency. ; * * *® When the New Deal came into power, the first serious challenge to the independence of the regu- latory. commissions developed. It came from none other than Presi- dent Franklin D. Roosevelt himself, who on this point at least was as reactionary as any of the Repub- licans in the days when the wick- of corporations was in the headlines. a : For in 1933 Mr. summa’ “God knew what He was doing when he gave some folks greas,- or sugar) in the-food: _mings—and then created the that _has long, “eats barley soup, respects, but that “I do net feel that your mind and my mind go .along together on either the policies or the administering of the Federal Trade Commission.”’. The Supreme Court of the United States unanimously repudiated that doctrine and ordered the family of Mr. Humphrey paid his salary till the date of his death during the term for which he had been appointed and said commissioners - couldn't be removed except for such causes as are specified by Congress in a law. * * ; ° * Mr. Roosevelt had given utter- ance, however, to a view which unfortunately prevailed throughout his administration — namely that, whether it involved a member of an independent commission or a justice of the Supreme Court, the The chiet criticism of the regu- latory agencies, according to a Hoover Commission report, is that they have become too engrossed in_case-by-case_activitiesand_thus fail to play their roles and to promote the enterprises entrusted to their care. * x * Much of the work could be done by the regular departments, and the commissions should really be confined to ruling on questions of law. It would be much better if Congress took a broad look at the functions of the coinmissions and gave them a mandate to do more to promote the well being of the industry they regulate and to think less of ways of harassing it and crippling it,-especially since competitive industries go unregulated (Copyright, 1958) Di. William Brady Says: Diet of Pap Won't Keon Elderly Woman H ealthy An Indiana reader sends a stamped, self-addressed envelope for the pamphlet Wheat to Eat, __and asks for sug- toast, some tea] : and milk. (Mrs. pR. BRADY W. FL)” * * * Mother may continue to breathe for quite a while on the diet de- scribed, but that is all. The minimum. daily ration of milk that may help her is 14% pints — three glasses. If she refuses to take fresh sweet whole milk, may- be she will -take buttermilk, skim milk, or evaporated milk in one form or another; or cream on her " cracked wheat: at breakfast. Buy wheat from farmer, feed store or public market. Crack it in your old coffee mili or in a hand or power mill such as that described in the pamphlet. Besides cracked wheat or rolled oats or oatmeal as cereal, mother ~ should have bacon, sausage or other meat or fish or two eggs for breakfast four or five days in the . week. Poach, boil soft or hard, scram- ble or fry the eggs — as she pre- fers. Egg cooked the way one pre- fers, or raw if you like, is most digestible. Cooked egg. is slightly more nutritious than raw egg, be- . not have teeth or dentures to maintain good digestion, It wouldn't matter so much if it were only the question of swallow- ing the food. Meat, for instance, nearly an hour after the food is swallowed before the enzyme is destroyed by acid gastric juice. From carbohydrate material we * * * letters, not more than ope page words to A om, | we'd - | * You'd have the spending and confidence you seek because members BERRI 2 Nie eyes out about work. Worried was probably among those that bought everything their hearts desired while making good money and didn't save a cent ue a rainy = ‘I share of their parte If I happen to be among those he considers vultures, that have waited for a depression to spend — my money, I'm glad. I saved “mine till a dollar is worth a dollar, instead of 50 cents. Of course, my wife and I have al- ways lived within our means, regardless of what I make. We don’t try te keep up with the Joneses and buy a new car every year and fine clothes, We're happy to have security when a slump comes and you won't- ! buy thing we don’t really need, regard- less of how cheap it may get. We give God his share first. You try that, Worried, it might help you. Un- Worried _ Hoorah! Finally the little man in the union at Fisher Body has gotten up on his hind legs. The no-strike vote this week was very gratifying to us. We and nearly everyone else on the pro- duction line haven't had a 40- hour week this year and are in | no shape to withstand a strike. I have yet to see, and my hus- band’s been in the shop 10 years, real gain from a strike. I for one, and I’m fot alone, am relieved the vote was no. Come on, men on production, don’t let the union run us all into the ground - in June as well as now. Again I say hoorah! ‘ Struggling Worker's Wife ar GEA Gk Ge mee cep, audit mot bo 8 start. - k* * day? . . . Well, that is human frailty . . . And everywhere we find it . . . And that is why it always seems . . . We have to be reminded of . . . The need for loving care . . . And try to do with all our hearts . . At least our equal share . . And let us keep remembering . ..» Each week and month and year . . . To live in loving brotherhood . , . And always spread good cheer. ————-¢ Copyright, 1968) Income Tax-Fax you tax - return, issued by the Internal Reve- nue Department. ' YOU'RE WORTH $600 As a taxpayer you are entitled to at least $600 deduction for your own personal exemption. In the event you became 65 years of age or were older dur- ing 1956, an extra $600 may be claimed as a deduction. If you are blind you can claim another exemption, How about the married folks? A husband and wife may file a joint return even though only one of them had income. If a joint return is filed, or the wife had no-income, the same ex- emptions apply to the wife. Usually it is to a married couple's mn aieaee to file joint returns. Looking Back © 15 Years Ago NAZIS HURL Yanks back 35 miles in Tunisia, REDS HAMMER fleeing Ger- mans. 20 Years Ago 1,600 STATE taverns face loss of license. COUNTY TRAFFIC periled by ice, Case Records of a Psychologist: Ed Wife Is Great Aid to College Man ie all college men had wives like Jean, they’d obtain higher school grades and be far hap- pier. Married men now are making better school marks on our college campuses than sin- gle men. And if you college - wives will use the smart budget strategy outlined below, you can actually prove that two can eat as cheaply at home as one does at a restaurant. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case X-331; Jean L., aged 20, is married to a G.I. veteran who attends a leading College of Op- tometry, * * -® é ‘Hees ts 2 wee derful aid to me in many ways,” her husband “In fact, I can’t ‘how I “She will stop at the vegetable requires no mastication’. jt gj. ™arket on Saturday night Rests just as well if it's swallowed in chunks; leas he or she prefers it that way, Proper mastication—which ‘ism. — brings the salivary enzyme (ptyalin) in contact with every particle of carbohydrate (starch Dige of carbohydrate begins Toning Soh eam sear ft wanaadl = —_— for ’ c and pick up stuff at a song. For the deal- érs realize that much of “So Jean buys an ample supply for just about whatever she will offer them. "She also cot el when bread and pastry at alr bake oaks Meranes Ge ie least if they pick as wisely as I did. Marriage is wonderful and my grades are higher now than they ever were before I settled down with Jean.” MARRIED STUDENTS One of the great advantages coming from the recent war has been the fact it has made it fash- jonable for college students to be married, Young married couples by the thousand S are now living on they work and often stady ‘to- gether. Sven: i the Wired ace oot oth: , cially enrolled in coliege courses they obtain much of the benefits therefrom, For they often do a lot ot ‘the library research for their husbands and then type the final themes or term papers, squander an to his girl friend's. home a ore waste a similar hour at the date. to do that extra driving, Mis; tik Gl tiede tee and — an enh A smart wife can thus prove it is literally true that two people can eat as economically at home as one can dine at the restaurant. For she will spend no more on groceries for two than her mate would be charged at the cafeteria for his own meals, if he were single! Remember, the more brains and tte ott SS were ad ‘Shiny fee 7 * tga PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1958. Johannes Brahms, noted Ger- ray eg he ae a |Would Halt Oil Sdiinbint Fff orm ies She t attack the Library Secking Books ;¢":” and “How to Make an Atom. “genet orts Strained Hg) fOwrduecOnly Genny |F,Biab m tox Om cn ===" ____Indonesian Rebels Order euimeawruntd Naaae an og Ge ee The American Embassy saia| OXNARD, Calif. M—City Atty.|wrote; “No massive retaliation, |N in North ica SES Stoney end made U-S-|Joseph Goss. wrote a letter to} please.” — ew ze on ukar no conciliation efforts more difficult. /n 212 White of Oxnard asking him to return two books long overdue A Oe Hot at the public library, | JAKARTA, Indonesia (®—RebeliOilmen say the government-held Tunisia Demands That snauttanae wae = The paige a leaders in Sumatra have ordered sectors of Borneo could not begin! U.N, Investigate War _ & new economic squeeze on Presi-\to supply Java's needs, . Al * e - [dent Sukarno's shaky government kt * * -| mm geria | Fiteday. His army chief replied with} ‘The rebel order underscored the| fo Apparently unenforceable order/Quter Islands’ main economic| TUNIS W—U.S. efforts to con- ——_ ps neg complaint against the Jakarta re-|ciliate between France and Tuni- In the first major step since it|py to sell ett mame Gh bake sia wore Guentmned today by « proclaimed its existence Saturday,|at giving them a fair share of the|!Unisian. demand that the U, N. the rebel government on Sumatra|return in tax appropriations|Security' Council investigate the ' directed -all foreign firms to halt|or foreign goods. — Algerian rebellion next door. oi pecs grins = to a Their other major complaint is * *« * central government treasury .|that Sukarno’s “gui democra- leis F | There was no indication whether|cy’’ fosters ft te and cor- Tenisian Preskiect Heblb Bow a Georges-New ) the companies would comply.|ruption. guiba cabed his U.N. delegate, ~ Jewelry De vporis ‘Most of the refineries are on Su- * * * Mongi Slim, to put the new de- 4 N. Baines : |matra, which is largely controlied | The arrest order was issued by mand before the Council as an ex: by the rebels. |Maj. Gen. Abdul Haris Ndsution,|temsion of Tunisia's previous pro- x * ‘one of the more pro-Western lead- test against the French air _at- If the ‘oil companies comply, it/ers in the Sukarno regime. But it/t@ck Feb. 8 on the border village Cockr caches jwould strike a body blow to the/seemed unlikely he could enforce|°f Sakiet Sidi Youssef, The Coun- |Jakarta government, which re-|it. . cil is scheduled to debate the ear- One Full Year Guorentee }iceived millions of dollars annually The rebel center of Padang, Su-|#t Complaint tomorrow. From Houses, Apartments, Gro- [jin royalties and much foreign ex- matra, ig some 600 miles from Bourguiba said in an interview) - cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- fichange from the oil shipments.|ja;arta, and the Indonesian navy|/2@ had enlarged his — demand main out only one hour. No Motor transport on populous Javaland airforce haven't the cfaft to|°°°2¥%¢ France had countered his signs used, also ig dependent on Sumatran oll, transport a sizable force. first protest to the res Dad miles away on his birthday? : Rox Ex Com LU] fede dane caer and ee dt 7 Souee che Give him a call by Long Distance. , American Caltex and rebel operations from : ’ im. = j 4 1014 Pont, 6t. Bx. Bidg. pany Stanvac and Rayal Dutch Sheli— Suld the government decide to Funan nctaren, Mie eee operate mostly on rebel Sumatra.| ‘6° — Ph rs bea oe *-e 4 Rates are low, For example, any, would be seriously hampered by Ahad Fi tere! Pt ypen Rares evening or on Sundays you can call . OPEN EVERY '2°* of. transport, caue rebels were concentrated = there, The Tunisiang claim 79 per- (et 7 ro? Martha Raye Undergoes |sons, including women and chil Closed Tues. ona : ° dren, were killed, This week only) Emer gency Operation Western sources termed the MANHASSET, N.Y. @®—Actress|"€W Tunisian move “highly em- = . Martha Raye was resting comfort-|>@trassing.” They feared it. would MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY on ably in a hospital here today after/S've the Communists a new plat- an emergency appendectomy, | Miss Raye was stricken while rehearsing for “annie Get Your Gun,” due to begin a two-week run at the New York City Center Wednesday night, | Her manager said she un-. doubtedly will miss al] perform. ances, Order Autopsy on Body | of Actor-Van Zandt, 54 ! HOLLYWOOD @ — An autopsy | has been ordered to determine | the cause of the death of actor! places a thousand miles away for as little as $1.50. 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Okinava » — noe vs Latest Bill—Potter ‘Air Force got its signals crossed and put Okinawa under a’ false WASHINGTON (® — Sen. Kotter| air defense alert for an hour to- (R- Mich) says the natural gas bill’s chances of becomirig law this day. -|year were killed by what he termé x *& * “the latest brazen moves of gas ‘The 5th Air Force said an alert 'tycoons.” signaled by a training group in) ‘Consumers throughout the na- the Pacific was mistakenly trans-|tion, therefpre, can view the inci- mitted to Okinawa and the island.dent as a ‘kind of blessing,” he went on yellow alert — “an aig| Wrote in a newsletter to constitu- raid is probable.” lents. yesterday. te oe & | Potter referred to a dinner in People ran for air raid shelters,/Houston, Tex., last week in which aotakcrae crews went on duty,,Texas Republicans raised $100,000. and soldiers mustered at the arms The appeal for thouse funds ‘said lockers before headquarters the Republican leadership had called off the alert. jfought for the gas bill and could). = ibé counted on to do so again. | Potter said: “By their ery lerudeness, the Southwestern fat boys stacked the deck against themselves. No member of Con- gress, regardless of his position ‘on an issue, could hold his head up) if he accepted money tainted with) GOT A GAS COMPANY PERMIT? THEN THIS IS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WHAT'S MY LINE? INSTRUCTIONS: Ss ple Ye gem ny. Ba” now scramble os few os possible to guess VAM AN . ce ee ee oe we wn = 1 SATHOP 2 ESNEC o 3 TOMEE 4 RAOMA ~ 5 DOMCEY 6 RYSOT 7 TAGSE . 1 em Lberece. e “uw OPEC enywer: Chord, grAnd, SwooN, peDal, thime, melody, piAne, treble, geokge, a-i7 - Public Works Bills WASHINGTON ® — Two bills’ calling for a boost in unemploy- ment compensation and a stepup in public: works projects were troduced in the House today Rep. Dingell (D-Mich). | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17,1958 “Tl am afraid . . that unless Denton, who. ‘ievoduned bills . |similar to-Dingell’s last week, said: “More jobs may be just (D-Ind), who each proposed re- establishment of the New Deal's Public Works Administration, earlier belittled President Eisen- hower’s prediction of an economic upsurge. The lawmakers compared it to the corner, but we to get to that corner, and fast. ‘William Henry Harrison, a Whig, served as President of the United States for only one month before he died in 1841. a built-in commitment on his vote." Pig he < St at its best-with ler There is a size and type to meef your needs and budget | Northern Treland’s six re . LOU JANKA Heating & Air Conditioning Sales and Service — 177 Edison, Pontiac Bus. FE 4-281 Nites FE 4-005 ‘North Ireland Police IRA Raiders Battle MIDDLETOWN, Northern _Ire- Airliner in Trouble Over Battle Creek | BATTLE CREEK w — An American Airlines DC7 carrying land, Feb. 17 uw» — Raiders from land police fought a ame gun battle early today. The raiders, believed to be! publican Army, attacked the Mid- iidletown constabulary station. They were driven off and escaped across the border. There were no police casualties. It was not known here whether any of the raiders were hit. A few hours before, six IRA men attacked the Blandford camp of the British army in Dorset,. in the heart of England, The raiders, believed to have arms, fled empty-handed after shooting a sentry in the stomach, and tieing up seven guards. with the Irish Republic. Commander-in-Chief Evangeline Beoth of the Salvation Army once defied Adolf Hitler on his order that Salvation Army workers could not wear uniforms. Hitler backed down, reversed his order. MOTOROLA 3-WAY PORTABLE Value 39.95 Leather Case Free GIANT SIZE STEEL FILE Index folders, lock 12Y2"'x9"x10"". $939 IDEAL FOR RECORDS Reg. 3.95 -, 932 W. Huron $9q95 | and key, handle, ~». TRADE FAIR 83 passengers and made an emergency landing here yesterday when a fire warning indicator began flashing. the Irish Republic and North Ire-| The 78 passengers, bound non- | crewmen * * q stop from Los Angeles to New York, were taken by bus fo De- troit’s Willow Run Airport where | ansther plane. * * An airlines spokesman said no evidence of fire was found and > it appeared the warning indica- ter was faulty. The plane was kept at Kellogg Field pending an inspection by company me- chanics. Fresh aan AT CASH 78 North Saginaw MARKET LEY Queen Colby MILD CHEESE » 29° Tender Beef CLUB STEAKS 09: 4 eae Fresh Dressed Nig gy Pan edi Q: Y FRYERS dn wo". Tender Sliced they continued their trip aboard LIVER. 25: FRESH PORK 2s a 3 1"|g This valuable coupon Needle ~~ by shen SHORT RIBS 39: | | ROAST SHOULDER 29: : REMUS: BUTTER WITH MEAT PURCHASE members of the illegal Irish Re-| been seeking! .. HI- F—TY PHONO STAND Wrought iron, brass trim, complete with shelf, casters. $9.95 $ 3 29 Value ADJUSTABLE & ea mere ee ite Huron Theater Oppos ‘Open Daily 9:30 te 940 — Sunday 10 to 3 2 a @ With all these fine-car features Tudor Family Sedan If. you want the most for your money in eye-pleasing beauty, restful comfort, topnotch performance, and tight- fisted economy .. . this big family sedan is for you! See it and drive it at your Ford Dealer’s, now. ~ This offer is good for a LIMITED TIME ONLY! THE NEW CUSTOM 300 FORDS ARE THE ONLY 1958 CARS PRICED LOWER THAN CORRESPONDING 1957 MODELS’ *Based on comparison of tamatome «59 suggested retail delivered prices SPECIAL CHROME wy : Bob eR Writes to cuca No. abe Comrade, SAC Rosens Neb, — Nikita Krush: See Nu-Vision Optical Studio 109 N. Saginaw - . Pontiac, Michigan (Advertisement) Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort Ph adr 1 * falda flee teeta -TO eat and talk in more comfort, Sorinkte s tittle PAS- Plates. No gummy, slate odor” (dente breath). pla ure ). Ges SSTEETH at any drug counter, Do you remember last November'|is when you told Bill Hearst, Frank Conniff and myself that your great concern was that World War Ili might emerge from a “mad” Strategic Air Command pilot who would decide to bomb Russia on |his own? You added also that per-/. haps a pilot, living in what you called our psychosis of war, might honestly misinterpret an order and bomb your land. You further added that in such event, the Sov- iet Union was prepared to wipe out our major cities and overseas bases. * * * Well, today I asked Gen, Thomas S. Power, commander-in-chief of SAC, if there was any chance that this could happen — either through pilot insanity or wrong signals — and he said, in effect, that there |__'THR PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17) 1958 ul ae ses aibbber that this aid” come acta hy SAC has the greatest com- the first punch and retaliation got under As for a pilot blowing his stack, and setting off over thousands of miles to a bombing target, Gen. Power laughed and said: “It takes two to tango.” I recall that you fellows have great difficulty comprehending our expressions, “It takes two to tango,” means, in this case, that the pilot couldn't do it on his own, mad or not. Too many cooler heads 3S ‘See or Call INSURANCE Buy From an Agent Displaying This Emblem MAYNARD JOHNSON * GENERAL INSURANCE 807 Community National Bank Phone FE 4-4523 When Buying would prevail. So much for your fears, com- rade, , | | If you need any other assurance of our good faith, there’s a big blue sign on the road leading up to one of the gafes of the head- quarters of SAC which is -em- blazoned with this legend: Peace Is Our Profession They ‘mean it very sincerely at SAC, though you and your associ- jates have expressed complete sus- picion of SAC’s motives. Your sus- picion springs, of course, from an ideological root. It seems incredible to you, as it. must have seemed to your predecessors, that a nation which Has the * Answer adeet dlls wesdaceaee Yuan, the Nationalist Parliament. The Judicial Yuan a Yui's rejection of the control) would like to see muci of the world live as it does — in our case under democratic forms of gov- , jernment — would hesitate to im- pose its will on the opposition when it is capable of doing just that. * © * In other words, if the positions had been reversed between 1945 and 1949, and Russia held a mon- opoly on the A-bomb and the means of delivering it, common sense (Communist type) would have required that it conquer the world then and there — instead of waiting tediously for the workers of the world to arise, or economic erosion to waste our will. It is understandable why you therefore believe SAC is the potential spear- head of “aggression.” ‘ It is a peace-keeping organiza- tion. At the moment, you have persuaded a certain number of Americans to belleve that you are right when you say that the manned bomber is obsolete, and that your boasted possession of the intercontinental ballistics has reminded that SAC ri very much | dic still in business, You are smart | enough not to have to be re- minded. Assuming you do have an oper- ational ICBM, recall that it will take it 25 minutes to reach our major targets, Fantastic, indeed. But equally fantastic is the fact that SAC is prepared now to get the major portion of its entire striking force in the air 15 minutes {Premier Resigns, after your first ICBM: goes up... and the aircraft commanders know their U.S.S.R. targets so well. x * * As you pointed out several times’ during the three hours and thirty-j five minutes you were kind enough | to give ts for our interview, ~The is not a threat.” It is simply a. few of the things SAC can do, and would do, if somebody talks you! into heaving that first blow, Or, | regrettably, if one of your own) pilots or button-pushers blows his | stack. Hoping to hear from you soon, | I am, yours truly—Bob Considine. | P.S.—It takes two to tango, i i Chiang Says ‘No’ TAIPEI], Formosa — Presi- dent Chiang Kai-shek hag refused to accept the resignation of Pre-| mier 0, K, Yui, who quit after) Nationalist China’s watchdog body| impeached him and Pena wp ie} * * a A brief announcement yesterday said Chiang had ordered Yui to; continue both as premier and gov- | ernor of the Central Bank of! * * * Yui had refused to appear be-| fore the Control Yuan to answer) charges of wasteful government) spending, contending that he was a Se — oe ee ie ee ee — a, “co i J ; | es: eenecnene 3 x \ : , \ \v \ \ \ \ | ° | ! | | | / / mais \ / ~ “i ee « _- oo oe ae — EE — a < C college education . .. money for emergencies ... Use a dollar now — start her savings account at Pontiac State Bank during our “Six Weeks for Savings” campaign. Once you start it’s easy to add to an account. — = en wee we stay, 5 ~e, ————_—— IT CAN BE THE MOST IMPORTANT DOLLAR IN HER LIFE F rom it can grow all the important things she’ll ever want .. sher You can even save by mail! Make deposits conveniently by car at our. drive-in windows or at our 9 to 6 walk-in, You'll be surprised how. savings grow and grow — Pontiac State Bank pays 244% on Savings ‘Certificates. Start with a dollar, today! a “@ Auburn Heights, 1303 Baldwin, Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Miracle Mile Branch Member F.D.LC. PONTIAC. STATE BANK ii Can't Charge Battery MUNCIE. Ind. @~ Jesse Gilmer regi yale BEY Thing BOM BET TER SHOP HERE! Prices Good MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, CLI Shecudaadd We 18-19 P Ti ata a Mapas, | “CLIP THis COUPON k Crushed or 5 V4 Slices le Tall : No. 303 Can | Giant 46 Oz. Can B Lloyd J. Harris’ Frozen | CHERRY PIES Ange Family Size i) Gold Medal Flour 251.79 ot Bigrh Gee "i we © WHITE © YELLOW CAKE MIX . © CHOCOLATE Your Choice 10 FE 2-1298 es Sania aaa ry and PEOPLE'S FOOD-0-MAT 465 E. Pike St. SUPER MARKET 700 Auburn Ave. EN a _ oe as me PONTTAC: PRESS, MONDAY, FRERUARY i 17, 1958 SE aes } aoe : A a eo little ‘push’ don't you think?” Ella Fitzgerald Saves Her Voice for Songs “LATEX. PAINT : By PHYLLIS BATTELLE has much to do with her greatness is: T guess thet’s{utor of oth iat mei é tes ee, Se ORK UNS) = Ella Fitzas @ singer. Because. she bebeluwiy A. why tc ng 1 z ieee — ‘Teach scise™ Gal. $ lain her emotions on table for/mean so much to me, certain ones iow you're @ since then things have just ‘ + eral a gentle lady whom many, ie : . p ° levery person comes “along.| “They make me remember |Sentimentalist, you can't help lov-) happened to Ella. Professionally, . —s Mdolize and few know, is a finger she can save herself for her songs; |things, and. it. hurts some. But/ing that." all of them good. In the last year " Felt’ Base - That is to say she is both and because through. 23 years of/that's just an experience. - The famous Fitzgerald. voice was her. career has boomed, from : . mfortable and wary of her|professional acclaim she has avold-| : heard by: the populace for the first] Grang? insisting that she record ) LINOLEUM aan words when in the presence of a/ed rubbing elbows and minds with it's why everybody likes |time in 1935 at an amateur contest full albums of Cole Porter, Rod- | NEW YO aK —! mew face, however friendly its|men in the secular world beyond) >#llads, 1 think, like Cole Porter |i, New York's Harlem Opera gers & Hart, and an upcoming | ‘3 _formulatior | 9x12 $, Saracen zg, Snes Sey el ett Me eat (ee Ts || ce hc ba Rg | RARER MM tn | “fm still tryin’,” she says as —_- ar kind of song.” “I actually went on to dance,| “They've been trying to tell me vases Seg USE OUR BUDGET PLAN OR LAYAWAY she thaws out a bit after a half. , She doesn't discuss her personal “Ena, when she gets more ac-\In Newport News, Va., where ]/that you can't just sit back and E Sia tae ts snes ng muaney a hour of lengthy questions and ji, (a marriage to bass player|customed to the face that is ad- came from, they thought I was a|Wait for things to happen to you, Rindésr 3 whieh often recut URSELF MAR’ quick, halting, solemn answers, ip. Brown ended ih divorce in dressing her, begins to loosen up.|pretty good dancer. I lost my nerve|she says with a wispy, reflective Nervousness. In such cases New Improved : “bot Fm still shy. When I’m /1953) except as it reflects on her|She talks about songs affectionately|just before the show about danc-|Smile. “I wanted always to be lazy let by combating feritating germs innctd. | singing I can ham it up. You | atiitude toward singing as if they were children ing, and I remembered Connie/@nd go to the movies. Now, through) urine; and by relaxing. 56 Saginaw St : =.) 2-1026 . * Fe 1B “ = a + ‘ at | : . ; ‘ can’t ‘shat me up. But I don’t |" «11, 9 sentimentalist. I've had} “There's a song I heard I'm|Boswell who was a great favorite|these albums, I'm tryin’ to be more ted Ponlety' aid suseest Got 256 S. cs ed., Sat. ‘til 5 « do much talkin’. some unhappy times, but I don‘t|crazy about, I hope Norman Granzjof mine, and still is. So. I sang|@mbitious. st druggist today. Bes how much better Open Tues., Thurs. ti6—Wed., This inner sensitivity of. Elia's'regret any of it. It’s an expert-i(head of ‘Verve’ records, distrib-'instead. “And really, I have more of a you feel tomorrow. Money back guarantee. , ca 7 Te — = wal CD BS i ~ = D Q3 =! = c= “TYE Spotlight Instant coffee didn’t give you the most in coffee flavor and aroma, you wouldn’t care how much time and money it saved you! , But rest assured! Spotlight Instant gives you everything that coffee has to offer except the grounds. Smells like good, hearty coffee ia) wef should, and its flavor matches its aroma. ‘That's becuse Spotlight Instant is pure coffee roasted, ground and percolated by an ex- clusive Kroger method with the newest proc- essing equipment. That's what gives Spot- | light Instant coffee the perkier full-bodied FLAV-AROMA everyone enjoys! ee ee ‘golkegey a for hasty, tasty Spotlight fasten the perkier coffee with -FLAV-AROMA gives you everything but the grounds! 6-oz. JAR as Shown SAVE 30c¢ OR MORE OVER NATIONAL BRANDS | MAXWELL HOUSE, 10¢ OFF Instant Coffee « |. Look for the jar with the stars on fopl 6-02. $4 19 Jer ‘ a ee ; ‘ MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY! - SUPER VALUE FOR LENT! HYGRADE FULL SHANK HALE == LAWDALE PASTEURIZED ~ MONDAY . TUESDAY ONLY! Chicken Legs North Bay Smoked : ; : se ; . Broccoli & Breasts “::' —— Rg ‘Chee 2 Bunch of tender shoots, The choice pieces you like best, ‘Grated. Buy plenty at this - _ Lean and tender, sugar-cured. Your : - . Imitation pro: Kroger low price. Kroger low price, low Kroger price, . Creies, gene oc trem hans... 4 _ Sale priced this week. ~ 19 late. eee VS We reserve the right to limit quantities, Prices _— ——- Sunday, sop | 3, 1958 waless otherwise indicated, 4 a 4 { eee Be : Pees ‘ - ; i th a a: : i | } . * i ere tc se kas oy —— "ments prise eomeee idwthecn si ’ me te SM epeepane ge Ne IY LE tk eee Cay Looking over the wotds of their ‘song for one of the last times before their Wednesday evening con- cert, to be presented by the Secondary Vocal. Music Citywide Festival Wednesday Geographic Unitof UF “Fride Holds Tea Discusses Plans for Campaigning This Year Members of the Geographic Division and fund staff of the Pontiac Area United Fund met at a tea in the Walton boule- vard home of Mrs. R. G. Bump for the purpose of analyzing the past United Fund cam- paign and laying down basic plans for improving the divi- sion’s role in the 1958 cam- paign. — * * * The discussed various group problems faced by the door-to-. door yolunteer worker and stressed the plan for educat- ing the public about the serv- ices available to them through the UF at the Friday meeting. DIVISION GROWS When the Geographic Divi- sion was originated in 1952, it restricted activities to an area encompassing six small dis- tricts in the center of Pontiac. Today, it has grown to the extent that two separate co- chairmen head the residential solicitations in Pontiac and Waterford Township. * * * During the 1957 campaign, Mrs. Donald White, Water- ford cochairman, had 22 dis- -trict captains and over 375 solicitors calling on the town- ship's , Cochairman of Pontiac geographic solicita- tions, Mrs. Ralph Norvell, had - 18 district captains working under her supervision. Junior League of Birmingham Tests Recipes Junior League of Birming- ham mernbers met Friday in ‘the home of Mrs. James Mor- ton to test recipes submitted by. various Wom- en's clubs, The contest is being spon sored by the cookbook com- mittee under the chairmanship of Mrs. R. Gurden Miller. - Judges for the contest are Mrs, Roy G, Leitch Jr., Mrs. Don A. Cargill, Mrs. Fred G. Crosby Jr., Mrs. Richard F. - Jones, Mrs. Morton, Mrs. Rob- ert G. Leckie Jr. and Mrs. Miller. - Camp Fire Girls Entertain Moms - Un-A-Li-Yi-Troop of Camp Fire Girls ‘from Longfellow Schdpl entertained mothers with a Valentine - Dondero to Show: * Film on Seaway show Eighth Sea’ Tuesday at Pon tiac Business Institute. . The film concerns the . St. . Seaway _ Refresh. . ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 Department of Pontiac School System, are (left to right) Larry Thomas, Gayle Dafoe, Carolyn Cudno- hufsky and Robert Walton. Will Feature Voices of 1000 =. Wednesday will mark the an- nual citywide junior high vocal mitsic festival presented by the Secondary Vocal Music De- ‘partment of Pontiac School System. * Composed of over 1,000 teen- agers from five junior high schools in Pontiac, the group ‘will perform a variety of mu- sic in Pontiac Central's gym- nasium. Club, under the direction of Margaret Snyder, singing Dyk- ema’s “Somewhere a Child Is* Singing”; Washington . Ninth* Grade Chorus, singing ‘An Evening’s Pastorale’ by Shaw and “I've Got Shoes” ar- ranged by Cain. Gordon Wilder directs the Washington group. David Stimac will direct the Madison Boys’ Glee Club in singing “The Vagabond" by Cain and “A Light in The Win- dow.”’ Lincoln Junior High's Choralines, directed by Sue Eckley, will sing ‘‘Indiana Hol- iday” by Tiompkin and “Old Cape Cod” by Rothrack. OTHER SELECTIONS Singing “Down in the Val- ley,” a mountain song, and “Battle Hymn of the Repub- lic” by Julia Ward Howe will be Jefferson Boys’ Glee Club under the direction of Mrs. Eleanor Pyles. _ * * * Instructers helping with the concert are William Coffing, Leonard Griffen, Julia Hollyer, Julius Middledorf, Jerry Smith and Mrs, William Tompkins. Respect Neighbor Just because a neighbor is friendly and hospitable, don't feel free to run in and visit at any hour of the day. Even though you don’t feel like work- ing, your neighbor might be busy. - 5 ae These Lincoln Junior High Choralines are burst- Ing into a chorus of “Last Night the Nightingale.” They will be among the more than 1,000 teenagers Mr. and Mrs, Floyd H. Sink- ler of Opdyke road have re- turned from a motor trip to Bradenton, Fla., where they visited their sons and daugh- ters-in-law, Mr..and Mrs, Don- ald Sinkler and their family and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sinkler and their family for two weeks, ~ * *« * Dr. Joseph I. Chapman, pas- tor of Bethany Baptist Church, was in Champaign, Il., where he participated in special stu- ' ent religious activities Sun- day on the University of Ili- nois campus. ev his visit in “ee will where he will attend SS eis ale winter meeting of the Lr of the . Baptist Hospital Fund. . * * * Three Pontiac students have been placed on the Dean's List for scholastic excellence dur- ing the fall term at Ferris hon stitute, Big Rapids. .. Honored were Patricia ziel- ke, a pharmacy student and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Zielke of Berwick boule- vard; Vena Towle, a student in. the commerce division and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eu- gene C, Towle of South Wind- ihg drive, and Richard Ba- shore, pharmacy student and son of Mr. and Mrs. Noble Bashore of Cadillac avenue. * * * On the Dean's List at Kala- mazoo College is Jean Hilton, Mrs. Wallace W. Edwards (left) of Otsego drive enjayed a visit from her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Austin. R. Wolfe, missionaries to French Cameroons, Africa, the past week. Dr. and Mrs. Wolfe took their leave Why Men Leave Home Pontiac Press Phete of the Edwards family Sunday and are now in New York where they will remain until late March when they again will embark for Africa. daughter of Mrs. Lillian Hilton of Seminole avenue. She is a senior. ; * * x Another local coed receiving scholastic honors is Sharon Holland, daughter of Judge H. Russel Holland of East Iro- quois road, a freshman at Marygrove College. She has been cited by the school’s reg- istrar for maintaining high scholastic standing during the fall semester. * * * Among eight University of ‘Michigan students chosen to sing on ‘Festival of Song,” a statewide series of educational participating in the citywide music festival. The singers are (left to right) Carol Henderson, Mary Lou Highbaugh and Pat McClelland. 5 -Personal-News of Area When Michigan State Univer- sity's Drama Department pre- sented Aristophanes’ ‘‘Lysis- trata’ the past weekend, Don- ald Bumgardner, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. D, Bumgardner of East Beverly avenue, and Dawn D. Menton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Menton of Orchard Lake, were inchud- ed in the cast. * * * Receiving congratulations on the birth of a daughter, Mary Jeanne, Feb. 15 are Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. French (nee Jeanne Rogers) of Oak Ridge, og Teme M., are Frances Sekles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Sekles of Ottawa drive, and Stasiuk, son of the William uks of Nelson street, Bride-Elect Tells Plans for Nuptials Jo Ann Robertoy Will Speak Vows on April 5 Jo Ann Robertoy, whose marriage to Ray Lingle will be an event of April 5, an- nounced her bridal attendants at a shower given Saturday afternoon at Devon Gables by — Mrs, Clarence Murton of De- troit. ‘ *~ * * The bride-elect chose Mar- jorie Richards to be her maid of honor, with Mary Lou — Lackie, Mrs. Robert Pickett and. Carolyn Lingle, sister of Miss Robertoy is the daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs. Nelson A. Robertoy of Osage circle, and the: prospective bridegroom is the son of the Lester Lingles of North Paddock street. * * * Among the guests at the luncheon were Mary Jo Worth, ry Killian, Miss Lackie, Mrs. Pickett, Miss Lingle and Miss Richards. Good Teammates Good mate for that wool sheath in your closet is a car- digan in matching color. To- gether, they make a fine team, particularly if the sheath is either sleeveless. or short- sleeved. Maternat—grandparents —are— Mr, and Mrs, Earl D, Rogers of Oliver street. Mrs. Helen French of Deland, Fia., is the paternal grandmother, Dear Abby.... _ AprilMay. Unit Gathers With Mrs. Lemaux Mrs. Duane Lemaux opened her Shore View drive home to members of the April-May Group of the First Presbyterian Washington Teeth Weren't ‘George’! By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: lady! Didn't you know that Paul Revere made a set of false teeth for George Wash- ington and Re- vere was no was a_ silver- smith! . And Washington wore them, too! Thank you for letting me stick in my two-cents worth. HISTORY SCHOLAR DEAR SCHOLAR: .And the teeth Paul Revere made for Washington were far from. “George.” (That’s why his lower jaw stuck out.) In the 1700s the silversmith hammered ‘out teeth and the barber substituted for the doc- tor, but today, thank heavens, we have competent specialists. \Let's use them! * * * DEAR ABBY: I am 11 years old. and hate to do the dishes. I have two sisters, Margaret and Mary Jo. Margaret is 22 - and Mary Jo is 19. Margaret is getting married this month and Mary Jo is getting married in June. Surgeon Couldn’t Forget His Dreams of the ‘Sea hs thousands of Amer- ican udbends a2 a fathers walk bah = their families and homes Company 3 hata ge ks have changed.) By JOSEPH R. Mj : INS Staff Wyiter Dr. Howard -H. kissed his wife’s mee. Slipped his hand over the plbnde of his out of LL ikfast nook. +. “Are you operating. this afternoon, Howie?” his wife called. - “I don’t know,” he said over his shoulder... “I don’t know when I'll get back.” " It was the first time Mary H. had heard her husband speak. yaguely of him work She frowned ‘and watched his dis- - —-. into the hall. / overcoat, pulled on his gloves, glanced for a moment around the hall at his paintings of the séa and stepped out.the door into the cool fall morning. He didn’t come home. He joined the legion of men who have. left, ,and are not ade- quately supporting 4,500,000 wives and children in the United States. a ee 7 It has been estimated that 1,000,000 persons—the great majority of them. men—disap- pear each year in the United . States. MOST 40 TO % An analysis of the men who disappear has been made by Dan Eisenberg, head of Trac- ers Company of America, the only commercial organization that specializes: in locating , missing persons. He found that in 5,000 husband disappearance cases which the firm handled in‘the last three years, three- fourths were from 4 to WO years old. - a ey eee be served by the ‘TBI Women's Club, . t *. *. Tare, be sipped” ino hs This : middi age bd was Location Service. 1904, 1926 and 1949, the serv- ice's chief counsel, Jacob T. _ Zukenman, found that ‘while the majority of desertions took place with husbands aged 35 or less, the next 10 years (35- 45) are still what. might be termed ‘critical’.” Dr. Howard was 44. On the surface there was no reason why he would want to leave home.’ He was lanky and sofft- spoken, His charm and _ skill with a scalpel had made him one of the leading surgeons in a major port city. He wascomparatively - wealthy. His wife had been confident of his love for her | and even more -confident of his love for their seven-year- old daughter. SOMETHING WRONG °® By nightfall she knew some- thing was wrong. She learned the doctor had warned his sec- retary the week before that he was taking a vacation. He had . * not apperred at the hospital. In studies nD checks in the mail, and she found out how thoroughly Dr. H, had made his plans. A week before his disappear- ance he had | instructed’ his broker to sell all his stocks and bonds. He had closed out his bank accounts. With the cash he had purchased two paid-up annuities and directed that monthly checks be sent his wife and daughter. te Mary made cautious inquiries in medical circles throughout the country. She found no trace of her husband, Then she called on the Tracers Company. The agency sent ati Operative go talk with her. He ‘noticed paintings of the sea in the hall. DAYDREAM OF SEA “The sea always Was sort of a daydream with How Mary said. “Sometimes when we were he would talk about it for hours. He knew a gteat deal about the sea, tides and winds and currents. he ge Within: four days, Mary and her daughter received annuity eS “We aimost./bought a sail- ' boat.once, but he was too busy . and* we couldn't really: afford it. We had to pay off medical school debts and some other things."" The sea was the only clue. An agent--began checking seamen’s hiring ‘halls. In one, an official remembered a story told by two sailors. The agent finally located ong of-the men. * * * “T can’t tell you much,” he said. ‘I didn't know the guy except to work with. We ran into a storm irt the Caribbean, and some of the freight broke loose. Two of the boys were crushed. PERFORMED SURGERY “This guy, Mike, said he had fooled around with medicine, He. asked the skipper if he could see what*he could do, and he talked the two fellows into letting him operate. : * * “When we got to. port, the docs at the hospital said he had saved their lives. I left ' the ship, but he’s still on her.” —The-—agent—kept-tabs-on the — eh ager Two months later, when the ship steamed into — port, Mary was waiting on the pier. It was a little more than a year since her husband had disappeared. * * * : The black hull of the freight- , er warped in close to the pier, tied up and dropped her gang- plank. Mary stood almost an hour ‘before any of the crew came down the gangplank. The third man was lanky, wearing a heavy raincoat buttoned up tight.. He\ walked -head down against a drizzle, and he didn’t see Mary until he stepped onto the dock. NAGGING BOREDOM In the days that followed, Mary learned how age, the never-lost dreams of boyhood and the nagging boredom of the daily routine had sent her hus- band away to sea. At one point, lie smiled and then chuckled at himself. ‘It's hard to explain,” he said, “to give you the feeling. But I had to get out, et away, to eee - ee ke (Tomorroy: A father who worked too hard for his family) You said in your column that it took an expert to make a set of false teeth. Read your history, ' dentist? He’ «Oooo Ever since they got their en- won't do the dishes and my “ should be between 35 and , 30 and have no ties. * I want her to be refined, have ‘a pleasant personality and to R. J. M. another section of this news- paper—and be prepared to fur- nish character references on yourself. A lady has the right to. know with whom she is having the pleasure. * * * vo DEAR ABBY: It is no sur- prise that you can’t tell men from ladies anymore. In-school they teach boys cooking, sew- ing and how to iron, When a man gets married he goes to special classes to learn how to feed and diaper babies. How nuts can people be? - gS. DEAR S. S.: There are mony homes in which a man MUST do woman’s work, It’s good to » know how. in case you have to. * * * * DEAR ABBY: I have an aurt who must be color blind, She bought me a shirt for Christ- mas that I wouldn't be caught dead in. Every time she comes over here she asks me how come I haven't got the shirt on. What’ should I tell her? : GORDON DEAR GORDON: Tell her you are ‘saving it for special occasions.’’ (Maybe you'll be invited to a costume party.) * * * DEAR ABBY: My girl friend and I got acquainted with a. couple of sailors who are on the USS Wasp and we told them we were 19 but we are only 15. They told us they would call us when they got back from their cruise. We know they are back but we haven't heard from them. ‘Should we call thern or not? WAITING DEAR WAITING: Do NOT call the suilors. Maybe the poys — trom the Wasp found out Rew old you wefe and didn't want to get stung. ' THE. PONTIAC PRESS. ! MONDAY, FEBRUARY. 1, 108 EL ERTS eta Sn aro Cetera Tent oe o \ 4 eye 2 Be oe tie y Reminds You: Heed Your Heart/ ‘NEW 1958 ° L- : | statist Te cn Os ao sks dn su as ks tc oes | _norony net Mat Sh tet Sao pers at es that they actually can im-| tune teller to predict that —— — . . . Bb : a woman's appearance as| glasses would be beautified FLUFF-DRY SERVICE & lwhich ‘the Ai ri Weert: Amo-lane, prove gy orb oe gy Sec) OB ea styled to flatter different . and to with clothes for ——— jciation calls your attention in alg Pa ae Wh allen women won vocation, UD Make Mondays Sunny-days : ee ee eae cores (om heart and blood? Lp? Ree ene ee Some women have glasses for all What a relie! to send all your family wash to Pontiac § Bosses Laundry! Oceans of gentle suds and man finales make fjcerning this ever increasing ‘haz- it ch-so-bright! Clothes and towels. are uy dtied and ard. folded. Then when Carelul Dan returns them there's almost sehen Guana: nothing left to do. Wouldn't you like this service? aa . » REMOTE TY TUNING nines eanetaeal parc re ; _ |, It you cannot afford several . n TV ‘hers some extra burden about constant-| 9 wes i. une Free Plastic Bag with Dry Cleaning asks your help, When you contri- ly. In order to fonvert food into Bs peas ~ eps that. d oh ho : bute to the American Heart Asso- heat and energy every 48 calories: ope vou wuld Across the . Room DRY CLE ANERS ciation you will be helping saveimuct have one litre of oxygen. thousands of lives, maybe even’ This means that we must have 120 7-Hour Service at Our your own, — ‘litres of oxygen for approximately! -— -—e = In one of the more recent pam- (ever 600 calories. + becations . . "ee Your Siiees just as your: hair- phiets published monthly by the = Fach normal’ respiration sup-| . ; . 540 S. Telegraph Rd. ; 95 do, can make your face appear} hi gent Went To thle Beiter American Heart Association, Ds. |plies the blood with only 25 ml. _eagllige ™ fag ranted 033 &. Hunter—Sirmiachen | Herbert Pellack, chairman of the | of oxygen. Thus it takes 4,800 res-| : ates \ nutrition Committee and associ- (pirations a day to supply the neces- recta Tae a| ate professor of clinical medi- sary oxygen for 600 calories. Since BOBETT god | cine, New York University Post- |the pulse rate increases with the You end the Set but SPACE mer, You also can flatter and em-| 5 panies re ae ee ee Graduate Medical School, points respiratory rate, the heart must od ona rele apearled work harder. velops in overweights twice a ra * * paoeee Oe, Aue fe emer HG beet RE pes! ‘ F oo Actually, those who i women Featuring Girdles & Brassieres cS weight. saat. Wout chia aioe gg Sal Rat al a BY FORMPFIT we f ee ee Pang amps Bea ; ‘must eat more just to maintain uty Service ‘his overweight. His heart must also Servin Union Lake Area J, pump blood through many more! FOR HAIR STYLING _ - | feet of blood vessels to supply his 2. Be ful about ig THE LARGE F IGURE PERMANENTS ~—_ fextra poundage: near hyped pres a HAIR CUTTING — | Wo alt know that a loss of | — | frames cast a shadow. | Dens DDD at Compt i ot I Meo | Seam, acne cl es Met em i ote wm ome ad F i : : _ * _jte give an_ | Girdles up to size 48 : heart trouble. Certainly, - correct " sweep L - ‘ULTRA MODERN weight is a wise preventative | tion calls your attention in a special way to the wish x *« * | | BEAUTY SHOP | measure if h to miss car- | dangers of heart trouble and, even more important, to | ome ; | 21” For Every Figure Type Yiskt-eur downstairs costet department. Our expert corectioss 16. ‘Union Lake Rd. the latest scientific data concerning this ever-increas- slips eS ae This! ee Mens. 4 ; 3-0882 ‘ . balance the glasses . In. will assist you to @ proper fit. | To wear or not to wear glasses! '"g hazar d. 5. Veils are usually not flattering | > that is the question; whether it is to the woman who wears glasses. prypaet vs vers = seer ae S II Di | l Cc ~~ whole effect is too fussy or] AS LOW AS a be me, CUS ye ' “busy.” : objects, squinting generally, snub-| IVC isloyalties Cause + + 8 L BOBETTE SHOP | roomie fens oro ae" Many Marriage Failures =m whi am rae 269" 14.N. Saginaw (Next to Strand Theater) RIKER FOUNT. AIN [ft end these troubles (my apolo- the eyes, send a stamped, self- Charge Accounts Invited gies to Shakespeare.) ‘addressed envelope with your re- _The war_of vision versus vanity) Ajring Mate’s Faults, Tiffing in Public|quest tor leaflet No. 8. Address Jo] LIBERAL TRADE-IN | Can Result in Constant Conflict ae | Gh ee es ( Tomorrow: “Reducing Is Easy : $1 39 95 By RUTH MILLETT _—Just Do a Little Arithmetic.” : % Recent scientific studies show that one of the major . | NO MONEY DOWN! |reasons for job failure is disloyalty—disloyalty to one’s November Group -. | 2 YEARS TO PAY! |firm, disloyalty to one’s immediate superior, disloyalty |P|qns Style Show 1s | to the head man: Open Monday end Friday. Apparently there are a lot of people in the World who) Mrs. Richard Ferris-and Mrs. | + Nights ‘til 9 P.M. + Bradley Scott participated in the can identify themselves? program when November Group of | with | sn i nization without feng She Balks —_-BStPmstzterian chores met in] WAYNE GABERT the Moreland avenue home of Mrs. any gc and to oe that) Vi Carlos Johnson. 121 N. Saginew eir salaries. P made ' Othe same thing is rare many at isiting laeahanee ao to Py Ase March | Phone FE 5-6189 Horaly mn iMeeteoe x ccig fn Nightclub 0S ee — — tor bases failures. | Fe ot just\the big disloyalty we | Refusal to Attend INSTANT SELF-STYLING COMES mie ~hemrage _ on Sine ls Disappointing to NATURALLY AFTER A HOLLYWOOD conflict between a busband and | Others in Party | | wife. Some of these small disloyalties | By EMILY POST i. j E R M A N E N I , are: | “Dear Mrs. Post: My fiance and) | Showing each other up to the |; and three other couples had era, ae All PERMANENT & 4 « night. After the theater one of the | WAVES ‘MB Violating each other's confi- couples suggested that we go to a $ 75 dences. certain nightclub where a_ well- | Talking to friends and relatives known comedian was appearing. ; Nene about each other's faults. All the others thought it a good — ’ Not backing each other up when) idea and were all Set to go. oer ca aks stand re) “Lind bar atthe show was ; : garaing ! . qu as I not care’ - Be : this type of inm I RCA WHIRLPOOL Speed Queen ee contig ing up for each oe ala ¥ lan rg Brongenpar orate Experienced, Licensed ? , : ° : 2 i Deluxe 12 cu. ft. TAPPAN NEW - , Full Size tatertertaly relative. or tatew. |Ues ier cout! ge. They said they: | omneke REFRIGERATOR MATCHLESS GAS RANGE WASHER fh, Suisse gla! "e otra wn Someta cn iste | Ho Appointment Mecetrr bing thn ks woh 15 disappointed. ‘ i: YOU GET ALL THIS: ~ * Custont Haircut * Permanent by an on any permanent, offe the worst instead of expires February 22nd. $ , $ $ Pageung Begdion te : a | 198: wit 919° TRADE 98 rapt: fl sed th Sag oj wry miei a a ns HOLLYWOOD!!!” P . Fully a clock-controlled—Fuill width Bi ity — F delivery © privacy of the ‘ .| others wanted to go 1 should | SHOP Factory List $329.95. Big 12 cu. light potas Pater PI nse ha $5. [I These are the small, but impor-| eve pat aside my own feelings | ft. Size. NQ MONEY DOWN. $265.95" NO MONEY DOWN.) NO. MONEY DOWN, [tat dishoyalties that cause tiction| sag gao-siety vile Gus coon. A eee Saginaw St. FE 8-3560 INSTALLED FREE DELIVERED FREE . ger ducer eancmees = uch like to he 2 Over Bazley's [Report on Parley | | Mrs. Irl Williams and Mrs. John | Lamont reported on fourth annual|! \Regional Conference on Christian |\Social Relations in the Local/i | Church to members of WSCS of | Oakland Park Methodist Church RN LET EL LOUIS Beauty Shop . _ FE 5-8000 PERMANENTS-$3.50 and up samvete With No Appointment Necessary 10 W. Huron ‘weeds. ine Sommaire an Wake Your Selection Now! 115 MONUMENTS ON DISPLAY Our sympathetic understanding and vast experi- ence can assist you in selecting a memorial sym- bolic of the life of your loved one. Why not call upon us to assist you in this important selection. PHILCO 21” TV eae Diagonal Measurement , Sound Out Front.and It. Swivels 199% ssbcaniy wood finish console. Deluxe chassis. Deluxe tuner. 262 sq. in, viewable 4 F gaat ares. Base extra. 5 - OOV E R " ast. J CONSTELLATION The cleaner that walks on air. For- merly $97.50. Complete with attach- 3 Remember, Too, During Our Spring Sale ~ You Save. 20% to 40% (RTHE THOMAS memorial ethinced by the Easter Hoover Del . | | "$ os a Lily, eloquently speaks of the Resurrection and the Hesnnvats | nave Former 124.95 79 ‘a Life of the World to Come. - _ Phone MARKERS ve Overall Length 4 ft. 4 in, Height 21. 8 in. $1450 FE 2-4800 | | $3900 Polished Front, Back and Top SALE PRICED at $345.00 A written guarantee wit every Memorial LARGEST DISPLAY IN OAKLAND COUNTY’... WE ERECT MEMORIALS IN ANY CEMETERY OFFICE AND PLANT OPEN DAILY 8A.M.TOS P.M. SUNDAY 1 TO 5 P.M. PONTIAC GRANITE & MARBLE COMPANY _ 269 Oakland rene AN) HOUSEKEEPI sep ff) "of PONTIAC 9 Phone ——=_—__51 West Huron Street "Open ieliey and Fridey. ‘til 9:00 FE 4-1555 . aOR a qT. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 days, how to prevent many dis- eases which in times past cost immunizations wears off in your children are protected Your baby needs lots of ten-. tie should then be given a boos- doesn’t matter. exactly what der loving care, but he also ter injection be he ts 18 the schedule is, so long as oe et ee Jatt needs the protection of mod- | months of age. all are done. \ehtiteh parlors, | em medicine. We know, these The effectiveness of these Be sure to see to - that all Hostesses for the: group were, ‘'Mrs. Claude Kittner and Mrs. Dor- -| Olson participated in the program when members of Women's Mis- 4 Be Sure Your ut Baby Receives — 2 : Disease’ Im niz ati on. Ss hots— _ |Berglund, Mrs. Hans Michkelsen, | ant time, so booster injtctions : the lives of thousands of ba-' | should be given every: two me a “er tind Willams Park. ona oe bies. years until adolescence. After | that tetanus alone should be given every two years. - GOOD PROTECTION The protection against diph- theria is as good as. that against smallpox. Protected children just don’t get this se- rious disease. The protection — against. whooping cough is not so perfect. It is = but not perfect. Some children even though protected by immunization will come down with the disease. However the case will prob- ably be mild and nq serious consequences need be feared. Shots aginst polio or infantile paralysis everyone knows about these days, This is a disease which can go in the class of solved “medical prob- lems, like smallpox and diph- theria ; : We can free this land of ours _ Some diseases-we prevent by ‘the way we feed babies, some we prevent by clean and sani- tary water and milk supplies, some we prevent by draining swamps or spraying with DDT to destroy insects. But some we can prevent only by giving “shots” to the babies them- selves, You owe it to your child to see to it that he lives free from the shadow of past evils. - ROUTINE PREVENTION Routine immunizations for every child in this big country of ours should include protec- tion against smallpox, diph- theria, tetanus, whooping cough and infantile paralysis. . * * * Depending upon where you live and what the risks are, your baby may need addition- IT’S FUN TO EAT OUT. And especially so at Ted’s where the food is always in style and the service is Custom Drapery DEPARTMENT % a ® | MARY FRANCES WEAKLEY Mrs. Sherman Weakley of State avenue announces the engagement of her daughter, Mary Frances, to George John Felice, son of Mrs. Elsie | Felice of Sovth Marshall street. No wedding date has been announced. Dumplings ‘Cook Gently Tailored tor your room, with an added touch. of elegance because they come from Spen- cer's. New, smart and exciting materials await you. Our Color Stylists and Home Consultants will be glad to bring samples to your home. (No obligation—of course). Choose from Fortisan, Fibergias, Cotton, Rayer, Cornice Boards, Traverse Rods and Bamboo. VENETIAN BLINDS | WINDOW SHADES friendly and cheerful. . al immunizations against such | of this dread disease as soon oe thin; hoid fever, Rock ’ : With Stew Muniain ‘pated fever and | guts ae recive te To SEAN X UR TTT TS f) YOOOWARD ot SQUARE LAKE ROAD Mrs. Kitson Adds —o lio shots. Canned Carrots to} proviem. medically speaking. | routine immunizations on | 2511 Elisabeth Loke Rd, FE 4-7775 MI 4-764 — | Browned Beef Time was when widespread | slightly different schedules. It . —— _ | epidemics of this disease A - : snuffed out the lives of many children, and left those who survived scarred for life. * * * Vaccination against smallpox is one of the most perfect im- So munizations we have. In fact — ¢ Sess All the best fashion news nly a pound of meat 13) we just don't have this disease | This is the Furniture SATE Re | of spring appears in thinks so. | oa ee See Featured on the cover of FAFA ag en re Maternity Wear. * * * not required by law. But the | E52 ag Mikes. Saker” bis nice wemne eg ae, See therm now! only way we can keep small- : jof eight, Mrs. Kitson finds her| pox from cropping up is to bell = full: She loves to} have everyone protected. LIVI we i ‘she cf Gifts are) REPEAT IN 1 YEARS —TFOR YOUNG HOMEMAKERS = U largest selection in articles she crochets the area. be given anytime during the By Mrs, George Kitson first_year of life and then re- . | eden A ~eonty os need t ne medium re is no o repea The Little Shop 1"cun llega cooked carrots, undrained| it again unless we go some- 1 can condensed to MATERNITIES | ! mat soup where where there is a greater risk of the disease than in this _ 24 E. Huron St other ingredients and simmer! Immunization against diph- cn 20-30 minutes. Make dumplings) theria, tetanus and whooping FE 2-7691 with biseuit mix. Bring stew to cough ean all be given togeth- AUTOMATIC WASHER Here at Wiggs we specialize in top-quality furniture from leading, nationally-recognized manufacturers. And Ethan Allen authentically interprets all the warmth and charm of Early American furniture. This fine collection is flawlessly constructed of solid Vermont rock maple, hand-rubbed to : a warm brown nutmeg tone. ' Over 150 . | nal Church: |Inland Missions, was the day’ | viewed bg Par DR mp bony ged rtportrnas Open Stock pieces coordinated for living room, dining room and bedroom. | Years,” for members of Saybrook’ training in the Belgian And you save 10%—or more—on every piece during - our February Sale! Mrs. Dan Kellogg was the meeting! Sale prices on every piece even if not right in stock. place for Standish Group. «Mrs. : ae Carl Malkim was assistant hostess at the dessert luncheon. Mrs, John Morrison was in charge of the pro- gram. f | building fund at their meeting Fri- x * * s i danet and Joyce Livingstone presented a musical program for members of Colonial Group when they met at the Ottawa drive home of Mrs. Harold Euler. The luncheon committee consist- ed.of Mrs, William Knudsen, Mrs. William Gordon, Mrs. Philip Vier- jech, Mrs. Mac Whitfield and Mrs. Edward Anderson. i Guésts were Mrs. Malcolm Bur- ton, Mrs. Karl Ostberg, Mrs. Max Sutton, Mrs. Rosemary DePuy and Mrs. A, B. Smith. Ethan Allen | ROUND-the-CORNER GROUP A Wonderful, Coordinated, 3-Pe. Group for Living Room, Bedroom, or Den! © 3-DRAWER CHEST ®@ CORNER DESK @ SHUTTER-DOOR Rated No, 1 for Washability Reg. 279.95 The group made scrapbooks for’ the children at the Contagious Hos- Our. February aie al Upholstery Sale Specially Priced at Only - . Still Going On! coe 169% FOR ALL 3 PIECES Individually Priced at $59.50 Each With these Ethan Allen matched pieces vot be able to make the most of - , limited wall space—and have all the meas space you need! Just perfect _ for today's homes—yet reflecting the gracious livability of Early American — design. Ethan Allen DINING ROOM Group EARLY AMERICAN GHARM FOR MODERN LIVING Round EXTENSION TABLE & 4 SQUIRE’S CHAIRS 129" _.. YEAR-END DISPOSAL We still have many, many yards of beautiful fabric left over from last year ... you can now have your Sofa or Chair, or both, covered at a saving you can’t afford, to miss. . 2% to 40% off Of finest Vermont Rock Maple, this graceful dining set’ brings true Colonial charm $ to your home. The 42” round table extends to 72’ with the 3 filler leaves, and easily seats 8 to 10 people! And handsome matching — are available at February Sale prices. The Table and 4 Chairs Specially priced at only $54 Buffet Base $80.55 Matching Pieces Not Shown: 48.\Inch Double Dresser ...,..$99.75 Bookcase Headboard Bed, Double Or Twin Size vonseeensSS .00 Deacén’s Bench .... oo $5 50. ee ee ee ee | Matching Server. Open Hutch Top. . .$52.50 eeneee i EBRUARY SALE Savings in Every Department = China, Crystal, Home Accessories : DOWN! | Easy Budget Terms plete Line of Latest ' ne eee PAY! |] | or90DaysCash | |“ Matisene, DEFERRED WI G U 5 “ind Friday. Saas Os aa Sapiens PAYMENT PLAN : -and: Eradoy : | WAYNE GABERT _. right and-Upholsterers | AVATEABEE- Paone FE escie9 210 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 4-0558 ‘Gren e'Yoors es HOT .WATER- PROOF and SOAP-PROOF Will not dis- ee neni for one full year in ordi- : nary household like fine china. y By MALLORY Regular $5 Value| WITH ANY | $2.50 PURCHASE ae DINNERWARE a °. soupP- CEREAL BOWL ° CUP. ¢ FRUIT-DESSERT BOWL ms oe SAUCER « 9% INCH DINNER PRATS po nich Captures First Low Temperatures Fail to Discourage Turnout of Youngsters te : j 3 gone’ J ; ee, - wd | } ; Pe ee MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1958 . ea es . bent ; PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, rad , bg . By LAOMA SANFORD Lake Orion Correspondent The Land-O-Lakes sponsored baton twirling contest at Lake Orion Saturday attracted 550 ‘en- tries from Indiana, Illinois, Penn- sylvania, Ohio, Ontario and the state, despite sub-zero aveather. © * * ———Warren Nortund of 147 Lincotn Ave., who has been twirling for seven years, was the only area first place witmer, and Sandra Sheldon of Lake Orion placed second in § stiff competition among contestants in the 15- year-pld class. Hitting her eye with her baton cost her %4 point and the championship. * * * Carol Verbeck of Davisburg and Sue Aumaugher of Sylvan Lake placed forth among 14 en- .. tries in duets. * * * Junior Queen, Diane DeWilde of Fulton, HL an unexpected win- ner, competed against age win- ners Selita Smith, 5, of Sharps- : : , 4 4 ville, Ind.; Donna Bush, 7, Carle- TYPICAL TEACHERS — Helping youngsters are June Wolak, under age 18. June Wolak teamed with her sister Jane, 10, to win tn, Chiko: fans Miller, 2 18, of Dearborn, (left) with 25 students; June Ciampa, 14, of Dear- duets;. June Ciampa won the coveted first place in the 14 year Pasletie Loteery. 9. and Bomie | born with 20 students; and Betty Feist of Hamilton, Ont. with a olds; and Betty was second in the senior strutting against 19 2 : z a & 3 0" fo: iS) See dancing and baton school that has 300 students and five assistants champs. oe —n = oe age eee FAMILY GROUP — Mrs. William Sheets and were also entered. "They drove from Merritton, | rf . : Seni El Tulk daughters Carol Ann, 9;-Linda, 5; and Diane, 6, Ont., near Niagara. Mother was calm but busy | P a ee © - had quite a day. Each girl had earned two med- with nine contests, six costumes, and Carols | born, and Sharron Shutty, 15, of Oak Park, regional National Ba- ton Twirling Assn. ‘ch s, as well as Betty Jane Fitch, a SE Yes Sa ier Sr Ss Se Set es eee Se of Highland Park: Barbara Hod- , Be ; : se oe : 7 son, 13, Royal Oak; Elaine Ful- ler, 16, Detroit, and Jody Mar- shall of Plainville, Mich. * * * Jody, who is a scholarship ma- jorette with Purdue University, also won the senior strutting. De- lores DeWilde and Sandy Baker were other strutting champs from 75 entries. £ ££ ° #2 Junior boys title was won by Eugene Backer, 15, of Lansing. as The corps with their trim. out- fits were a picture of precision but judges following new NBTA rules erased points for lack of uniformity in hair dos and make- up. sa e topped June Cjampa, 14, of Dear- ais before the strutting contests in which they nose bleeding in the afternoon. = ag bd * * Roy Hess, director of the Land- O-Lakes twirling group pointed out “Corps are increasing in popularity because they allow in- dividuals who are not champions to become winners. The large number of trophies and medals were also.to encourage young- sters ofteh discouraged in the competition.” * * * Mrs. Edward Smiddy, of Pon- tiac, was praised for her food— over. 300 meals served by the Parents: Advisory Club to raise funds to purchase new uniforms for the local corps. * * * . Only quiet period of the day RECEIVED CHEERS —- The Hamilton, Ont., “Flashettes” in _. Mead, Jean Wallace, Linda Suteliff, tront,. Linda Brownhill, 0p dich walle erat Coe ™" Pan . their red velvet and far costumes received loud cheers when de- _ Paulette. La Rous, Donna Petrie, Donna Burgess, and Barbara who was to be a judge, and in EDGED FOR. FIRST — Skip Frizzell of Plain- State student; were edged out of first place in clared Junior Corps winners, Left to right they are: back row, Moore. serious condition at the Royal Well; Robert Angelinas of Wyandotte and Allan _ the stiff senior boys competition by Warren Nor- Paulette Ladowy (nine year old champ), Lynn Tregaskis, Barbara ' Qak Hospital emergency ward. Kramer, of Philadelphia, Pa. 4l-r), a Miehigan und, of Pontiac. + ae yeas gee TROPHY WINNERS — Selita Sue Smith, 5, years experience.’ She topped the, Chicago’ Music ass _— : (left) holding her lamp trophy, is shown with ‘festival and is second nationally for her age é , Of Hamilton, Ont., was clutching j EIGHT-YEAR-OLD EYEFULS — These baton-swingers were so close, a twirt- third; Carol Sluka, 274 Tilden St., fifth; Coleen Cork of Hamilton, Ont.; Suzanne ‘her mother Tudy Smith, » Broup. Nadeen, i Sctita of Sharpsvitie; ic ie. 9, Ea ~~ Off of the top three was-necessary-(Lelt-to-right)_Norma-Hacket of Plainwell, was __ Miller, Hamilton, first; and Karen Janes, 821 Stanley Ct.¢ Royal Oak, forth, tly i Me \ ‘ * « - . Yt j 4 . Roan oe oe Fa. i 3 4 F — ‘ * : i : " bi h mh Seatiae : pr se | 7 pe : . a ( ; /. . é J ac ac, t=. « te ny \ wt Q : ae $ f : is ; ; ; ‘ i ' ’ * SIXTEEN Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas ——— = = ns MRS. ANDRA AZUA a ia ti a at Whe Capel Comey ly Saturday. , She was a member of St. Vin 1 died a cent de Paul Church and a mem-; Mr, Forks Friday. ber of Our Lady of Guadolupa. Surviving are her husband, one brother and a sister. - Service will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home with burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. EDWARD FORKEL Service for Edward Forkel, 8, of 3946 Hazelette St., will be held).:.¢ Church with burial at Oak Hill A. Schutt Funeral Home with bur- Rev, Myron Everette will offici- ate. Surviving are his wife, Hattie, his sons, Edward of Los Angeles; | Earl, of Pontiac and his daughters, Mrs. Eleanore Lingenfelter and Mrs. Ruth E. Everett, both of Pon- tiac. One sister also survives. JOHN F. HATCHETT Service for John F. Hatchett, 60 of 180 Wessen St., will be heid at 1 p.m. Tuesday from Trinity Bap- APPEARANCE COURTS! CALL TODAY Pick-Up and Delivery . FE 5-6107 GENEY Park Near Our Door Municipal Parking Lot Cemetery. The Rev. Richard H. Dixon, Jr., will officiate. Mr. Hatchett died Wednesday, Feb. 12. His body is at Frank Carruthers } Funeral Home. / BETTY J. JOSEPH Betty J. Joseph, 14-month-old Service will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Huntoon Chapel with Cemetery, Kingston. The Rev. William Miles will officiate. MRS. WILLIE D. MCKENZIE Ann) McKenzie, 94, a former Pon- | tiac resident who died Saturday, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Smith Funeral Home, Imlay City. Burial will be in Imlay City Cemetery, Mrs. McKenzie was a life mem- ber of Imlay City Chapter, Order; of the Eastern Star, - She leaves two daughters, Mrs. Gay Mclnally of Pontiac, at 2 pam, Tuesday at the Melvinjaren and three great great grand: County General Hospital. children. 7’ : Mrs. Cowdin, a resident of Oak- CLAUDE SNYDER land County for two years, was .|of Central Methodist Church will x * ® Service for Mrs. Willie D. (Tracy) Unexpect Graham Funeral Home, Fenton./day at Hackley Hospital. He was ber of the Order of Eastern Claude Snyder, 68, of 23 Hartung oor, Chapter 266. Ct., died Saturday after a long ill" survivin: @ are three nephews and ness. eed He was mukeed at Wilson two nieces. Foundry for 37 years. _ WILLIAM E. LAPP Surviving are his wife na; - his daughters, Mrs. Ada Everett enue & ae ne = fd i . ih = snettins of Us tauns at Ons pre Pero —— ——e |Grand Rapids, was held today at ter, Mrs. Peter Kowalewski, in mn Harold of Aubum Heights and) (ne — & te fuera Roy of- Oxford. qFAOmMe, y City, urial Jenbach 5 tae: teat Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Tues-| ven Leo, Henry, Nicholas, Chapel with burial) r James and Paul, fail’ of North|Pontiac General Hospital after a SS wae Congo Smiiery. “The Deaths Elsewhere — — of Detroit, ee Sa illness. Rev. Donald C. Andrews, of United oO tica; three other daugh- preastarian Church, Oakland) LA JOLLA, Calif, @ — John|ters, Mrs. Raymond Kreiner Moody, 89, founder of Moody’s in-| 7 Lalas See epee: vestor service who won worldwide | _ MRS. ROY WRIGHT fame as a financial analyst, died’ Service for Mrs. Roy (Anna) C. yesterday. The service he found- Wright, 76, of 137 Orchard Lake/¢d in 1900 now supplies informa- Ave., will be held at 2 p.m. Tues-'tion to the nation’s banks, invest-| day a the Pursley Funeral Home| ment houses and ‘business execu- with burial at “Perry Mt. Parkjtives. He was born in Jersey} Cemetery. The Dr. Milton H. Bank|City, N-J. officiate. BALTIMORE @-Dr, Grant E. , { Mrs. Wright died Saturday at Ward, 61, internationally known her home after a long ilnless. | |C@Mcer expert on the faculty of QUALITY! ALWAYS FIRST She was a life member of Pon-|Johns Hopkins foam died WHY SPEND MORE ; When Quality for Quality | You Can’t Buy Better ‘yesterday of=cancer, _ pap a8 core agama the Hopkins faculty from 1927 un- Priestess of Pontiac White Shrine, itil his death and on the University No. 22. of Maryland faculty from 1930 to She is survived by a som, Fran- 1951. He ~ ale, = Br. Ohio. | is, 5 i cis, at home and one brother. ST. PAUL, Minn. @—Dwight B. KENNETH BARNES Jones, 57, managing editor of the ._4/St. Paul Pioneer Press since 1948, amy argh" “hd, apa home, 110 Dennison St. Funeral arrangements are pending at the|:s. Minnesota and Florida before) Bossardet-Mabley Funeral Home. joining the Pioneer Press in 1929. MRS, WILLIAM M. CARNEGIE /He was born in Devils Lake, N.D. HOLLY—Service for Mrs, Wil-| \wuUSKEGON «®—William J. Bal- liam 2. Oteria) Carnegie, 79, of/gooyen Sr., city attorney for Mus-| 15467 Lake Rd., will be held);.20n Heights and Montague at 2 p.m, tomorrow at the Davis-|more than 30 years, died died yester-| will be the Rev, Donald igs’ palgooyen was admitted to the A. Shoub of St. Jude Episcopal |jospital last Thursd le Ej lay after he suf- Church, Fenton. Burial will be in/ro.oq a heart attack while driving | Ottawa Park Cemetery, Pontiac. |) i, car. a Mrs, Carnegie died yesterday ~ * * at her home. Born in Montrose, Scotland, she had been a resi-|kenbrod, 70, a former sports dent of Oakland County for 33 [writer for Detroit’s three daily years. - newspapers, died today in = member of the Scottish Episcopal|ing in retirement since 1954. Church, Scotland, and was a char- =. %..® ter member of the Lady Drum- ‘HOLLYWOOD @ — Stuttering mond Bone Lodge, Daughters of comedian Joe Frisco, 68, died of Le cancer last night. Death came in Surviving are two sons, William |the Motion Picture Country House | C. of New York City and Donaldjand Hospital. Frisco had been ill| D, of Fenton; three daughters, |several months but appeared on a/ Mrs. radio program four weeks ago and | sing, Mrs, Charles P. Taylor ofja week later was honored at a i f ‘ a : ’, F F Louise at home; |Hollywood Masquers Club testi- -|monial dinner attended by 1,200. : * * anatomy at the University of Chi- OXFORD-Service for Mrs. Roy|cago Medical School, died Satar- (Emma) Cowdin, 82, of 11 Pontiac/day, He was born in Watford, St., will be held at 2 p. m. tomor-'Ont. We are proud t they provide: without penalty. - Jater date to convenience. A True Open End MORTGAGE open end mortgages. This is what @ You may pay up the mortgage at any time without advance notice and @ Your mortgage can be increased at any borrowed for additional improvements _or for any other satisfactory reason. o offer these truly the original. amount @ You may pay any additional amount at any time without notice or penalty. @ You may pay interest and principal in advance at your COTTONS” Priced for Savings ! 80 square percale. Fresh new prints in Penney’s own imagina- tive designs, Machine washes to perfection. 36” wide. 23° Crease resistant cotton, Em bossed cottons, magic de- hem kitchen prints, harem ye novelty n , weave for a to you. “ 38° \ Regulated Cotton Here’s a Penney value at any @ Terms on our conventional open end rftortage up to 25 years. @ Monthly payments include Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance. We have cash available today . .. for these attractive open end mortgages. Come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous representatives. , WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS. RATE . ON SAVINGS All Savings Accounts Insured fo $10,000 by an Agency of the U. 8. Government WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS Pontiac Federal Savings Home Office 761 W. Huron Street Downtown Branch 16 E. Lawrence ,_ Rochester Branch 407 Main St. 2 eae 5 7 Lees en ae time, a material that’s color me sanforized. Brilliant prints, terns and solid colors. 36” wi oh oven mites “GE Yord * 5 : ee : 5 ae wae “Miracle Mile Peancy’s. “Open Monday thru ‘Friday, 12 Noon to 9.P. M. _ Saturday 10 A. M, to 9 P. M._ ~~ PARP itl pewkivwa: Penney's | aa ene em \ ®Sorxscwyerz4845e"3 5 © Ft 32 S@nmreasas SS 4 ¢ ; ‘ oe: = is ; : : LR * * Z : ' : : 4 ae ae : 4 9 Z \ ; ! | ° j a ' : : e x a : << : ‘ - i es : & aw : ve aS : pa) f i there. Presumably—he took that} said “Craddock. envelope off her with her other "ae ar ie nee reason —|Woman coming in, radiant with) CRESCENT CITY, Calif, w—A|they paid for it in pennies, The thing ee : ie bee “efficiency and success, is more slighted cigarette was blamed tor Couple explained they saved them ond s, and then didn’t. Why? than I ean bear.”’ ‘the death of three persons and|UP together. ro tes eS Coe ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRU ARY ‘17, 1958 ; ~e aon fs > ie ° 5 f Ja 2 ’ iat “7 . f ‘ Pushed out of a train on to the eee ae, .. 1 think usiaty ithe faintest idea.” He looked out . . ‘ Ta\¥¥ ce ' {railway embankment.” - didn't want hes joqtics through the ene ed ot Whole Block Bank Married With Pennies P ; Gu | ESS 0 Tf “Ob—yes.” made,” . port, Late, Eyeledecner coving ANADARKO, Okla. (@ — When oe vi “What the envelope really) “Let's hold on to the basic fact ge ae jo foam “et vit» Cigarette Blamed — William Allen and Mary Galloway/ ~ proves. is that the murderer was'that someone was going to imper- thie a _ neg ae ale pagers 8 deb pe teat = ' ' nse 2 Copyright 1957.41 ra \gal papers a _ {dropped it by- mistake — or — I “That's a very interesting ques- oie os ?\tion.”” sai : a, looked up tontine in the dic-, ‘injury of four in a fire that de- (Advertisement) (Adve te ase net Se, way ann Se an ae” Pe ees) Me = oe northv i 17” Bnepector Craddock said not have checked that postcard if it'men, too,,made a thorough egos | “Somebody sent a wire saying] ‘The first cccetiias were over |lumber town a a Science Shrinks Piles terly to Miss Marple. “T've let a |*adt't been for. the Martine busi-jof the place, didn't they. and vtartine was going back to France, and now Lucy was wandering One person still is missing, whole family be poisoned, Alfred |D¢S$ fitting the bill so well.” didn’ t find: it. lt only harned "Pithen arranged to travel down with) rather ajrlessty ered the | Damage was estimated at 174 New Wa Without Sur Crackenthorpe’s dead and now! “So convenient,” murmured /@ter in the boiler house. the girl and kill her on the way.) room, touching a china dog {million wollane f ai y ger y Harold's dead too. What the hell's Miss Marple. “That's understandable.” said |You agree so far?” here, an atitimacassar there, the | os ere Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain, going on there? That's what I . #* * % Cotie. othe Te marten 1” “Net canelly.” sabd Iie Mar-.| PO? HR Mex We the window. |, suslties octtirred at te Stops Itching as it Shrinks Hemorrhoids should like to know.” “It tied up,” said Craddock.| chap used to spear up any edd - _ ple. “I doen't think, —realty, — “I thought you probably would,” [Bay City Hotel; ,.where the fire) New York, N. Y. (Special) — | a problem!” And these “Poisoned tablets,” said Miss : ‘After all there's theletter Emma‘ stuff that was blowing about | | you' re making it simple enough. said Miss Marple equably. istarted from a cigarette ona mat-| For the first time science has | sufferers were a very wide va- : Marys Comeetully. received signed Martine Cracken-| and shove it in there.” L ats tn cc ek. found a new healing substance | riety of hemorrhoid conditions : : “Simple!” explained Craddock,; Lucy spoke slowly, quoting the |tress in a third-floor room, Police with the astonishing abili f 10to 20 standing. .Y. * thorpe. Lady Stoddart-West didn't) «where it was very convenient |oy. tre miyi ee words. “Lorenzo Tonti, the Ital-|Chief Bill Burke said. nishing ability to | some of 10to 20 years g. : aot, . : You're mixing me up,” he com- i shrink Bs sherpa stop itch- All this, without the use of “Yes, Devilishly cunning, really, /8¢M4 that, but somebody did. for the boys to find,”.said Miss ‘plained. ian banker, originator, 1653, of a| Burke identified the dead a8) ing and relieve pain—without | narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- They looked just like the tablets/S®mebody who was going to pre- Marple thoughtfully. |‘ Miss Marple said in a distressed|form of annuity in which the|Bobby Booker, 22, stationed at) surgery. gents of any kind. The secret is that he’d been having. There was |nd to be Martine, and who was) «You think we were meant t0 voice that she: wouldn't think of Shares of subscribers who die are/Requa Air Force Base near Ka-| In one hemorrhoid case after | a new healing substance ie. a printed slip sent in with them /8°me to cash in, if possible, on fing it?” doing anything like that. added to the profit shares of the|math; Elmer W asankari, 53, Cres- another,“very striking im rove- | Dyne*) =the discovery of ‘by Doctor Quimper’s instruc-|being Martine. You can't deny, r= & “Come, tell me,’ said Craddock, survivors.” She paused. “That's |cent City; and William Maughan, iid Uy deateee ebesevetions’” See, Alseaty regrch inatit tions". Well, Quimper never or- that.” “Well — I just wonder. After all, “do you or do you not think you) it, isn't it? That fits well enough, a logger. \. ee Pain was relieved promptly. wide use fon healing = dered them. There were chemist's| ““N®.n0.” ‘it would be fairly easy to know)know who the murdered woman /49d you were thinking of it even x kt And, while gently relieving | tissue on all parts of the labels used. The chemist knew) “And ‘then, the envelope of (where the boys were going to look was?” ‘then before the last two deaths.”’ George Sec hrader, 72, and; pain, actual reduction or re- This new healing oialenes nothing about it, either. No. That| the letter Emma wrote to her next, or even to. suggest to them ee: (Continued Tomorrew) |George Pittman, 23, were serious- spnotion (shrinking) took place. | is offered insu socuaeciete box of tablets came from Ruther with the London address on it. |... Yes, I do wonder. It stopped Miss Marple sighed. “It's so ly injured in leaps from upstairs Gis ingroveneen er fi. Oe He oe he Dae pation ford Hall.’ Found at Rutherford Hall, show- you thinking about Anna Stravin- difficult."’ she said, “to put it the <2 = | Lagoa Ma Sh 38. a hotel’ tained in cases where doctors’ convenient pn fps 3 “Do you actually know it ing she'd actually been there.” ska any more, didn't it?” right way. I mean, I don’t know Christians, in Israe | guest, cc aga ho e observations were continued positories or “came from Rutherford Hall?” | “But the murdered woman a ee —— —_ who she was, but at the same| JeRUSALEM.— There are about) Nine business houses were ag PLorygeche Hips tena mony por with woe His sold at “Yes. We've had a thorough|hadn't been there!” Miss Marple |" Te?'Y may : es |time Tm fairly sure who she was, 45,00 Christians in Israel, most of devastated by the blaze. ough that sufferers were able | all drug censaekaliettateaten check-up. Actually it’s the box Pointed out. “Not in the sense you| “I think someone may have |if you know what I mean. them Arabs. They have more than| : to make such astonishing state- | guaranteed or money refunded. that held the sedative tablets pre-|Mean- Sh only came to Ruther-| got-alarmed when you started ‘Craddock threw up his : head. | 160 * laces of worship in addition, About 5,000 trucks enter or leave: ments as Piles have ceased to be eae U. 8. Fut On, scribed ‘for Emma.”’ ford—Hall after she was dead.! making inquiries about her, }“Know what you mean? T haven't! t 3O religiols schools. “New York City every” day. “Oh, I see. For Emma...” é : : * * * “Yes. It's got her fingerprints on it and the fingerprints of both the nurses and the fingerprints of the chemist who made it up. Nobody else's, naturally. The pet- son who sent them was careful.”’ “And the sedative tablets ‘Yés. That of course is the devil with tablets. One tablet looks ex- actly like another.” * ¥ * “You are so right,”’ agreed Miss Marple. “I remember so very well in my young days, the black niix- ture and the brown mixture (the) cough mixture that was) and the _white mixture, and Doctor So-and e's pink mixture. People n't mix those up nearly as much. In : fact, you know, in my village in St. Mary Mead we still like that kind of medicine. It's a bottle they always want, not tablets. What were the tablets?” she asked. “Aconite. They were the kind of tablets that are usually kept in a peison bottle, diluted one in a hundred al outside appli- cation,” “And so Harold took them and died,” Miss Marple. said thought- fully. Dermot Craddock uttered | something like a groan. ~*~ * * “You mustn't mind my letting off steam to you,” he said. ‘Tell it all to Aunt Jane; that's how I feel!" “That's very, very nice.of you,” said Miss Marple, “and I do ap- preciate it.” Dermot Craddock gave pala fleeting grin. “But the fact mains that I've made the ghastly mess of things all the line,” he said, “‘The Constable down here calls Scotland Yard, and what do t get? They get me making . prize ass of myself!” “No, no,” said Miss Marple. SEES Croing great and for good reasons! 38 Chevy — Ril: wie The impala Convertible with Body by Fisher. Every window of every Chevrolet is Safety Plate Glass * the original murdered woman was! This Martine business seemed a perfectly safe bet. The whole thing seemed to tie up. And now what happens? The real Mar- The sales iisvane, we're happy to say, ieave no room for doubt. People like this ’58 Chevrolet enormously! They like its tine shows and turns out, most ps ete hy, saler “te aba looks, its new length and lowness, its remarkable new ride, its peppery new performance—all the things that make the woman in the barn now? Good- ; ness knows. First I go all out on it mone but 1 new. Stop i in and see how easy it is to own. 7 ll get the best buy on the best seller—Chevrolet! the idea she’s Anna Stravinska, and then she's out of it—" . ar 7 2. £2 He was arrested by Miss Marple giving one of her small —, significant coughs. “But is she?” she nrurmaured. Craddock stared at her. ‘Well, that postcard from.Jamaica—” “Yes,” said Miss Marple, ‘‘but that isn’t really evidence, is it? I mean, anyone can get a postcard sent from almost anywhere, I suppose. I remember Mrs. Brier- ly, such a very bad nervous breakdown, Finally they said she cught to go to the mental hospital for. observation, and she was so worried about the, children know- pine > arated iyo postcards and arranged that they should be posted from different places abroad, and told hehe eee eae eee ee, eee ee ee ee eee Ree eee eeeeenene eee eee OO ee Pie New Chania = ‘new idea! : IN BODY-FRAME DESIGN Rivals the World's Most : This new Safety-Girder frame, wed- ‘ : - ded to Chevy's new Body by Fisher, Expensive Cars in = fries you greater rigidity. the Cushioned Softness of its Ride with NEW ig a : 3; TURBO- : | | BULI | FULL THRUST VS FS a RE ce en ee ee em cee ne SS ee ee SNS SE SE NRE RY ED SSS SSS ES OR SU ee GE NE NR RY RES ER ERE NEN NE SY EY Set em em ot NEW CHEVROLET “ a STATION =* WAGONS Chevrolet’s new wagons are lower, wider and nine crisp inches longer. All have a new, . larger liftgate that curves clear around at the 75. yeoman corners. And it raises completely out of the way for easier loading. If you’ve got the yen for a wagon, Chevy’s got just the one for you. Five, in fact, to pick from. COITL, This new and revolutionary 250-h.p. V8 is the extra-cost saa gue. option for people who want potent performance. Revolution- SUSPENSION. ary, because the combustion chambers are machined and in ‘Standard on all models... ry it! the lock to help bring you now smocthness, Just sample it. Fo odieeneliaennedinenadinnnadieenaditenendiemmainemetiemetaamad eemaitmnamtiaaaatammatiemmatieaamamatimmetanetaeemmemmmemmtiamatemetmmmtnes | * NEW a POWER - Gp err ag * oe 2 ss (oe os os . 5 * ‘ i : z 4 = P ‘ ‘ See : eee : ae = * ; : 2 5 ae 4 : ee : : i wee vi : ae . eee 4 Fars r : s a : i ji : ‘ i x : : : ; : : feos é 5 i : * oS ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 nee | | [press Box|1] SavesMade | a ct boes 110008 ren a eS , sda Aeeaasin Ist Period | pion, tackled more than it could) handle Sunday in the opening round of the Detroit Catholic League basin f ft 4 . ketball tournament at U. of D. Me- 0 ~~ IC Ory morial .building. The Ravens were Pistons Clip Hawk Quintet, gh ui el x Srcase Wik] Late Mc Wee to in (seh br bd Vaadplomc RUE MG Madd plas wm se became a rad mahenten Tetralt See Detroit Back in Phird/tet Dukes’ newly acquired flair for) NBA’s Western Division, ending the game. put. the Pistons ahead 6542 at} yy.our — Bill Hoeft, left, but we oa o mya ‘ : a. i ; ‘ ; . halftime. yesterday uddy tk dramatic finishes is proving trou-) Two nights before, Dukes hooked) aithough the contest ended o® | The Hawks cl the gap to| im the list of ‘signed players : ; a tense nete, the Pistens twice Spot; Adams Says Club ‘Kissed by an Angel’ DETROIT W—The final score) read Detroit 4, Toronto 1, but Jack Adams said the Red Wings were “kissed by an angel.” in a two-pointer in the last 23 sec; onds in giving Detroit a 111-109 vietory over the world champion Boston. Celtics, It was only Bos- ton’s second home court setback of the season. Dukes’ shot last night was Pt iblesome for the National Basket- Frank Lary remains as a holdout. iball Assn.’s division leaders. 71-48 at the end of the third quar- ter, finally taking the lead 98-96 Halas Returns as Coach A qualifying round for the 1958 | : National PGA golf tournament - will be held-on June 16 at War- a oe ot ee | te in Flint as a : $50,000 Buick Open. . * * * Former middleweight champion) aw, could have been trailing; shot just before time rai bien ; : i ; ; — Owner rge ching reins to Driscoll say- Gene Fullmer has signed for a by five goals in the first three and and tipped jt in for the win- pepe ai - rea re Sie end on = March 3 bout with unranked MIO half minutes,” said the Wing re , comeback | duties were getting to be too mach : Savage at Salt Lake City, Savage 5\general manager after last night's) was high for the|ing to make a coaching : or hia » home a 2° hockey’ game at Olympia Stadium. wi oy Sollowed = ge hs be y~ “nee “a ae ae pe : : i * * * ad "s ‘ : ne ee je Poo | Except for the weiliant cual 20 and Dukes with mrvcticn. e ae Soc up piloted Son’ tanec Gordie Howe carnied the Wings|/BuSy Week for Parochials ‘Detroit Skater he cirait so aie tree erates tine |Brooklyn for boxing was post-/ = 88 * * % | | ; a n nronio through the final period. First, : : : cdater. Ste: sles won the. Tehien poned until March 1 when several) Jim Hady and Joe Smith will : > he set up Red Kelly on a 20-footer M idwest Champ Open leat soni: of the fighters were unable to, meet the Donovan Brothers in an : SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (#—Club jearly in the period, stealing the f @q Ives a p ames Miss Rawis, a Texan playing — oe fig barrier. | Australtn tag-team match to head. professional. Bill Johnston, who|puck from two “Toronto players TROY, Ohio # — Gary Visconti|out of Spartanburg, S. C., nicked|was cancelled when « judec ami eee roeram: plays only the winter tour—andjand sending a pretty pass to Kelly ; a little off par every round, but a judge | The Donovans, Northwest tac- oe ee not too much of that — was showing the big names of golf a thing or two today. He was the only player winning money in all tour- naments this year. ‘ The Provo, Utah, Municipal Course pro, a deadly swinger off - the tee and as imperturbabile as a marble statue, won his first tournament in two winters of ftry- ing yesterday as he galloped in with a 3-under-par 68 for a total of 274 on 72 holes and $2,000 first money in the Texas Open. * ® * Most of the field that pounded along behind him in this storied tournament also is on the way to Houston. Among them is Bob Ros- for the goal. : : =- § * * Five minutes later Howe took a pass from, Norm Ullman at mid- ice, skated around a Leaf defense- man and rifled a 2%-foot back- hander over the shoulder of goalie Ed Chadwick, who had a rough night in the net with only 21 saves. Other games last pight in the league resulted in victories for the Rangers over Bruins, 3-2, and the Chicago Black Hawks over Cana- diens, 40. Montreal and Boston tier; 2-2, in a Saturday contest. Ice Show Postponed By H. GUY MOATS ~ With all parochial league com- petition settied, area Catholic school basketbali clubs are use of the time this week, and next to sharpen up for the coming distric# playoffs. None reached divisional trials, Orchard Lake St. Mary’s coming closest as runner- up to St. Benedict, with a 82 mark, ‘Seven games are listed starting with tonight's tilt at Shrine, against Detroit St. Benedictine. Pontiac St; Michael and Or- chard Lake St. Mary tangle Tuesday at 8:15 in the 2nd The week will be a busy one. “ |be his first starting nomination. Other Shamrock starters. will in- clude. Bob Mineweaser end Art makigg/Robak at forwards, Pat Campbell ‘and Tom Dabbs, guards. | Rams of St. Frederick will play |Tuesday night at St. Frances de |Sales, in Detroit. Detroiters fin- lished Sth in the West Sice loop, |Rams 3rd in the SCL. | , * * * | Detroit St, Rita returns to Pon- tiac for the 2nd time this season when the Irish oppose St. Mich- ael's on Thursday in the only game of the year played on the Sham- rock's home floor. of Detroit won first place in the junior men’s event of the Mid- ‘western Figure Skating champion- ‘ships over the weekend. ~*~ *« | Sandra Shaw, \placed second in the junior: ladies iclass at the end of the three-day tournament. : * i * James Browning and Janel Har- ley of Lansing teamed to take ‘second in senior pairs. Robert E. | James of Ann Arbor and Dorothy- ann Nelson of Chicago placed third in the silver dance event. also of Detroit, | because Mrs. Pung was chop- ping great chunks off the 74 set Sunset Club course. Then Saturday Mrs. Pung lost her touch and took 81.‘ Her mar- gin dropped to one stroke as Miss Again yesterday Miss Rawls shot 73 and won by four strokes with a 291 when Mrs. Pung took 78, missing eight putts of five feet or less, Beverly Hanson of Indio, Calif., shot 75 to tie Mrs. Pung for sec- didn't get much attention at first ag Women's par for the 6,116-yard Rawls shot another 73. — many exhibitors were unable to reach the Saddle Tree Farms Club,| A soccer game between the first Vienna team of Austria and an all- star American aggregation in New York also was cancelled. An Eastern Hockey League game between Johnstown and Washing- ton was postponed. | High winds and sub-hormal | temperatures resulied in the postponement of four regattas in and competition among ——. dinghies on Long Is- The Connecticut ski meet at Sal- isbury was postponed until March 9. The 2nd day of competition in the Tri-State Speed Skating Cham- | ant aay, team champions, defeated Hady and barefoot Al Warshawski in the opening show at the Armory Dino Bravo, the Italian giant. tangles with Irish Sampson, the “pride of Dublin,” and Martino Angelo faces Ted Marshall to round out the all-star card. i. & Advance tickets are adbiahie at Griff's Grill, 49 N. Saginaw, or the Armory, FE 44130. The matches are sponsored by the 107th Ord- nance Company of the Pontiac National Guard and this Wednes- day’s bouts begin at 8:30 p.m. \) burg of Napa, Calif, the greatby Severe Weather Games Friday pit St. Mary pionships at Grossinger, N'Y. aleo battle between the teams this NHL Standings coal stretch runner who almost won (OL) against St. Hedwig in De- Ca Res Its was i the Texas Open with a great 6-| Last weekend's severe weather| SCS JSMTS, Some rat | sell, while St. Frederick 6908 leu... ws Tore wee, ee Pontiac Pair Doubles under-par 65 on the final 18 holes. | brought about postponement of the ‘ ‘a aaah be te Detroit St. Ceceilia. New York .23 23 9 55 6 is. ; St os Oakland County Boat club, Syivan| ™eeting, but this could an- Detrdit 2.23% 8 $4 126 168 SATURDAY'S COLLEGE art of numerous sports events ‘Cham $ After Rolloff He wound up in second place at; V@sian M CluD, 3) ; Bost . : : | od wa “e Lake city and Ploneer Highlends other story, despite the advan- | Closifg out the week’s basket- | Bostos a 3 MB 3 31 10 oy Basi SCORES -— including the NHL game at Chi.! \ = = es tournament | SPone0 ood ice review tage the Orchard Lakers will {ball business for the parochials Chicago 1. 20:28 6 46 117 141 Geax Weaas ean cago, were delayed because a The Pontiac duo of Marge Spal- ‘ , : P . - : , , i i ‘ | Wes ; i -~ seed ; ' by: six ‘strokes after the first two| Chairman John Benson thi s| S8ve &@ elr own court. ai ee ae —| cen, thane | {goals and~one touchdown run— : : a : No. 1, 13; Do : . “|which came on a fake field goall Weary Ton Blosane betnt 3 i $A; iim Ronin ; : moe pl kicked 15 field ae ‘ee ‘sie extra ts. Wiraerenk rh, x me ief remarks were made by Pgt Devany Car. mae Jones Keeps Winning ‘Grant, A, Wilson Bow, Blessing, ~ ie 4 os 77 ee AP Facsimile . ST; PETERSBURG, Fila. it — ) Pat Devany of Grosse fe, Mich., in four events Saturday as Eastern|tween 60 and 70 attended the din-ishot an 82-78-82-77 and carded a 319 _Aliin- ihe women’s—epen—golt- ment, She won $73.66 in prize mon- ey. : # : GamMLeD ON WEATHER — LOST — These blanket of now. An estimated 1,000 people “tans-breved_a_snowstorm fo attend Sat-- stayed at the track until Sunday waiting for a urday's program at Bowie race track and-were—chance to digs out their cars. Some 3,500 others |gan_73-31. in.an—indoor—meet- unable to make it home through ‘an 18-inch returned to Balfimore on special trains, Y psi eeresses $4 , n tilimets eeeineses Wisconsin ........ o + MOTOR MART , AUTO PARTS | FE 4.8230 men and women qualifiers Saturday’s finals at Huron Bow! will be announced in Tuesday's Press. PAont: linn ‘Signing of Hoet Only Heartening News for Tighe. 9 Still Not in Fold; Games Set This Week May Be Canceled LAKELAND, Fla. » — Cold weather continued to plague train- ing plans of the Detroit Tigers AUTOMATIC 12 Years of Dependable JB. 4 Tl TRANSMISSION Service at the Same Location SERVICE REBUILDING ge se L 15 MINUTE | NO DOWN PA e Liviuet SERVICE While you velen in ower com~ ‘Pontiac fortable waiting room to your 1] Transmission Service favorite Hi-Fi Music! ie - asin gay cee Call FRASER § _To BUY or SELL | REAL ESTATE Representing : Bateman & Kampsen Realty FE 40528 OR 3.5021 Automatic Washer and | last season, took a pay cut. He be needing a few more dollars.” | ulars Frank Lary, Reno Bertoia, | Harvey. Kuenn and Charley Max- | well in addition to Mickey Mc- | Dermott, Hal Woodeshick, Chuck | Daniels, Jim Greengrass and | Lou Skizas. cold which has panicked the na- 'today and the only heartening de- velopment for manager Jack Tighe was the-signing of Billy Hoeft. \Hoeft, Tighe’s single southpaw jamong the list of starters, ironed| — out \salary differences in a te phone conversation with General] Manager John McHale yesterday.) The 1956 20-game winner, who dropped jo a lowly 9-11 record wouldn’t say how much he was getting for\the upcoming season -but disclosed that he and Mc- Hale “were never far apart. = “T admit I deserved to be cut,” the 25-year-old \Hoeft said. “but itm hoping to — it up in a I hurry.” \ x*\ * WOMEN WINNERS — Mrs. Ruth Debow, left, was the top morning, qualifier with 651, Mrs Doris Lanktree, center, rolled the best actual game .of 220 and Miss Pat Donner was the top afternoon qualifier and had the best actual series with scores of 662 and 557 in the women's quali- fying round of the. 1958 Pontiae Press Saturday at Motor Inn. Women and men finalists will compete next Saturday at Huron Bowl. Seat- mlbedi Anna .Winters, the oldest woman at 76, who bowled 281 to go with a'285 handicap as a large crowd cheered her on. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1958 Amoros, Sutil leftfielder from Havana, Cuba, back to their Montreal farm club in an outright’ year. He was one of three Dodg- ers unsigned for the 1958 season.| Whether this had any bearing on mia sale was not revealed. ia 3 . * * #* The surprise move was dis- Sate Moving. closed yesterday. The Dodgers got Local or Long Distance waivers from the other National League clubs to send Amoros to Agent Red Ball Trane Co. Montreal, where he played for al a year and one-half before going to]. OWNERS! the Dodgers in 1954. MERCURY a * * * Amoros, a lefty, batted .277 last! ‘our ~~ Us foe That leo! 420 N. Main ee KAVERLEY MERCURY SALES AND SERVICE | MEN WANTED To Train for High Salary Position in Redio & Television. Day and Evening You to Remain Fully Employed While Troining. © ee ennel 2 Cal Ser Societe: 0. Obligation. encirenies Institute brings you “wiielence Sunday on CKLW._T¥-12:36 P.M. ctronics_Institute;"* Weodward Blocks Nerth of Fox Thester | Korean Veteran ee Re eee eee eee ee eee) ee Hees WO 2-5660 Approved. 2-18 noes PROMO ccoccesveceneeeerece ° coves she seeeere ee tse “T really we a great year,” he declared. I'm expecting to be a father in August and | figure ry With Hoeft signed only nine of the 39 players on the Tiger ros- ter remained without contracts. The nine, however, include reg- Hoeft appeared undaunted by the By BILL CORNWELL ANN ARBOR — Michigan State will have a double incentive for Forddy Anderso n's cagers to share the conference title with Indiana. * * * Spartans Risk Big 10. Lead Against M victory—here—tonight when the| MSU was voted the league's Spartans clash with their archirepresentative to the NCAA tourna- rival, the University of Michigan,iment last year, and the Spartans in a Big 10 basketball headliner advanced to the championship at Yost Fieldhouse. The Spartans invade this hostile den of the Wolverines. with a half lina: Once ,again the Spartans. find Dryer Repair Service All Makes—Expert Trained Technicians ALL WORK GUARANTEED Complete Line of Automatic Parts. _ All Types of Dryer Venting Supplies BUSSARD ELECTRIC Phone FE 2-6445 84 Ookland Avenue — Free Parking | | game Wednesday before taking on ja rookie te | the St. bite’ Cardinals Thursday. | warm up enough to permit bat- Tighe had planned an tabrengend am from the camp of But he now says unless things ting or ga both games will be game hold on ist place in the craziest Big 10 cage race in years. Holding that exalted position will be ‘their No. 1 incentive. : Not far behind in incentive will be their desire to gain revenge for a pair of setbacks at the hands of Michigan last season, the 2nd defeat being particularly costly. It was on this same court last March that the Wolverines trimmed the Spartans in the final game of ing to bounce back into the victory | column after dropping a foul- ridden 85-76 decision to Ohio State Saturday at Columbus.’ Michigan is now even at 4-4 in the confer- the Hoosiers breathing down their necks as they enter the U. of M. lair. A vietory over the Wolverines would preserve State’s lead and gain a juicy bit of revenge at the same time. The Wolverines will be attempt- ‘goes to Illinois. rite the season, thus forcing coach x« *« * Wind, Cold Ground Jumpers Michigan State was not even pushed slightly Saturday in trim- ming a stone-cold Illinois team, on ee 69-56, in a nationally televised game from East Lansing which ence standings while State is 6-3. idle. * * * tonight at Bloomington while Wis-| consin visits Iowa and Minnesota _Purdie and Northwestern take the evening off. = DON’T SAY Muffler MIDAS See King’s Ad on never reached the living room TV Firestone CAR SERVI NOW ONLY ‘Lining. Clean, Inspect Bearings. Prevent Costly Install necessary weights. Correct ‘caster. | toe-out. Inspect steering. “SAVE. MONEY ON THESE SERVICES DRIVE IN TODAY! Reg. $3.50 BRAKE CONDITIONING Reg. $4.00 WHEEL BALANCE plus Reg. $7.50 WHEEL ALIGNMENT _ Reg. $15.00 $ This Is What We Do- Stop Quickly and Safely .. . Remove Front Wheels and Inspect Brake Drums and inspect Grease Seals. Fluid, Adjust Brake Shoes to- Secure re Contact with Drums. Carefully Test Brakes. Precision dynamic balance., Make Your Car Steer Easier. ‘ ao Ves GUS ae WS) VC oe a= / 2 , © OD — bos q = - 4X, = —_ = its FETCH tk \ iS 2-11 ap é OVER = Pat. OF. OUT OUR WAY x4 SEARCH] [ BiLS! BILLS! BILLS! TROUBLE WITH 1S TOON, WE'RE ROTTEN SPOILED, Th |) MAGAZINE... = T.RALLIAIgS \ {] 1958 by WEA Sorvics, ine. TM Regus. pm. on, 2°!7 WRAY MOTHERS GET GRAY DIXIE DUGAN Ni A ” — , WELL, I KINDA LIKE 'EM : ers mee pn , | | MUCH’ BETTER THAN TH’ 5 | : | : REAL FRESH ONES, TOO/, a You'll Find Yl {fll Yor nia 4\ _ PROFITABLE g Spearmint Gan Z| OPPORTUNITIES J rive rten Y Yea Wl ha sco Your Teeth Take ‘advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and sell- Ing problems. To Plece Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-818! ‘ADrown After Car - for a: Sunday afternoon drive in . the road & TOE er oe en eee ee eee 2 Regt ae tee oS _awanrr. # \ fim PONTIAC, PRESS,. MONDAY, resrudRy ¥, 1958 (Starting Today: Your Income Tax | Plunges Down Cliff members of a Seattle Hee out Olympic National Park, were trapped and drowned when their automobile plunged down a 100. foot cliff from a gravel road and landed upside down in six feet of water in Lake Cushman, The dead were Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Clark, both 48, and their two children, Susan, 5, and Loren, 24. Mr. and Mrs. Arvis Rudeen of McCleary, Wash.,. and their two granddaughters, Susan, 11, and Mary Tauscher, 8, Elma, Wash., managed to get out. Mrs. Rudeen was admitted to Mason County minster but the others had only minor injuries, The sheriff's office said recent heavy rains apparently weakened (Editor's Note: This is the first in ing your By G. A HODENFIELD Associated Press Writer There's no use trying to ignore it any -lopger, It's that time again when Uncle Sam expects all his money-making nieces and nephews to file their income tax returns. The deadline isn’t until midnight of Tuesday, April 15. However, if you have a refund coming, odds are the sooner you file your return the sooner you'll get your money, Even if you owe Uncle Sam more than he already has taken, it’s wise to get start- ed now. Those who wait until the last minute are more apt to make mistakes, and mistakes can be costly, Rudeen tried unsuccessfully to save the Clarks, ~ Killed on Visit to South WHITLEY CITY, Ky. #® — Rose Marie Fitzner, 36, ot Warren, Mich. died yesterday an hour after her auto went out of control. and crashed off U.S, 27 north of here. State police reported roads throughout the area were slippery and hazardous at the time. * * * Some weeks ago Uncle Sam sholld have mailed you a copy, of the same type of form that you used last year. If he didn't, or if you are paying income tax for the first time, you can get the forms and instructions sheets from your local bank or post office, or from any Internal Revenue Service of- ' fice. Before you start the actual work on your tax return it might be well to develop the proper mental atti- tude by repeating slowly several SEE US TODAY! ax, MERCURY OWNERS our car MER tor wat “eivinitr Sales Y MER |. Main Fw Hot | OL 1-914) Income Tax Deadline Is pe Is Apri but You May Gain by Filing Early times: “It just isn’t true that Un- cle Sam wants all my money and the shirt off my back — it only seems that way.”’ Actually, the tax laws provide numerous ways in which you can reduce the government’s annual bite, The tax collectors insist they want only what's due, and not a WORRIED OVER DEBTS? pay your payments, when due, see : MICHIGAN cusrr COUNSELLORS and a ede # payments you can afferd, regardless of bow much or how many yeu owe, NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY aie th . Member of Credit Cognsellors bel pest th am neie 9 Yeats of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” | cent More. They proved that last year by refunding milliong of dollars to surprised taxpayers who had made careless mistakes in filling out their forms, This series of articles is designed primarly to help the vast group of |Americans who deal directly with ithe government on taxes due for salaries and wages earned during gi techy Daily 9 to 5.. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1 Evenings by App’t. MICHIGAN CREDIT ‘COUNSELLORS 1% 6. Saginaw . Above Octane Theater 1957, | WHO MUST FILE If you are under age 65 and had an income of $600 or more during 1957, you must file a return, re- gardiless of whether any tax is due. If you are 65 or over, you must file if your gross income was $1,200 or more, If your income was below these minimums you don’t owe any tax, So, if your employer or em- ployers withheld any taxes dur- ing the year, you must file a return in order to get a refund. You can fill out your form and mail it in just as soon as your employer (or employers, if you the year) provides you with his record of how much you were paid and how much was deducted for taxes during the year. This information will come to you on form W2, and a copy (copy B) of this form must be attached to your return when you file it. There have been no major FREE PARKING FREE DELIVERY SPECIALS FOR TONITE & TUESDAY ONLY! | Open Tonight “til 9 P. M, IRONING BOARD COVER & PAD ONLY | 00 Guaranteed Scorch and Burn Proof Reg. 4.95 5-Ib. Bag ONLY 25° ‘One of Our | Real Sweet Specials! 9 PIECE SOFA BED and CHAIR OUTFIT Included: .. ®@ Sofa Bed © Coffee Table @ Matching Chair - _@2 Table Lamps @ 2 Step Tables ©2 Throw Pillows tdnerepiing Unit in Seat and Back ga CHOICE of COLORS || ‘| q f $ “4 = 88 = q 2 ; 4 4 Es Reg. 239.95 - |bursed expenses, ete. icome and tax for money eg be worked for more than one during Wants Summit’ [Junior Editors Quiz on- - SCIENCE — changes in the tax laws since last year. There hag been only one ma- jor change in the form 1040—the addition of a line on the first page for the listing of travel and reim- However, after the forms were printed, the Internal Revenue Service decided that the public hadn’t been given enough warn- ing of the details involved, so it ruled that you are nt required to use the new line. A later’ In addition to filing an income tax return for money earned in 1957, many taxpayers will have to file a declaration of estimated in- earned in 1958, This is designed acimatily for self-employed persons, but it also applies to other taxpayers who will have income during the year that will not be subject to the withhold- ing tax. * * * ~The declaration includes the amount of any such income and the “amount of tax that must be paid on it. Then the taxpayer must make quarterly payments to IRS to cover the difference between the estimated total tax due and the amount paid through withholdings. The idea is to keep taxpayers on a pay-as-you-go basis, underestimated your tax, your nearest IRS office can tell you how to file an amended declara- tion. After you get your facts and figures together on your 1957 in- come, the next thing to decide is which of the various forms to use. That will be the subject of the bl If you find later that you have — Confab ‘Soon Stassen Advises: Add ‘Poles and Czechs to U.N. Meeting ‘WASHINGTON im Harold E. Stassen says a‘ summit meeting should be held, with Communist Poland and Czechoslovakia added to the participants and U.N, Sec- retary General Dag Hammar- skjold acting as moderator. ‘The sooner the better,’’ he said with reference to the time for such a conference. 2 © Stassen, who resigned Saturday as President Eisenhower's dis- armament adviser, made his sug- gestion in a television interview. Stassen quit his disarmament post to seek the Republican nomination for governor of Pennsylvania. A summit conference should be held at United Nations headquar- ters in New York, Stassen said. If Hammarskjold served as “‘mod- erator or manager,” he said, na- tions not taking part directly would “‘all have confidence in the way-in—which their—interests—are handled.” * * * Stassen did not say why he pro- posed including Poland and Czech- oslovakia in such talks, which would normally be held among the United States, Russia, Britain and France, However, would give equal representation to the free world and the Communist In his view, Stassen said, the kind of conference he proposed achieving a ‘sound, safeguarded first step agreement” on disarm- ament should be only one of sev- eral topics considered by such a meeting. Stassen declined to say whether he had discussed his plan with next article, Eisenhower, such a lineup would have a real chance of from f around the earth unless centrifugal force, which is pushing it outwards from the earth’s center, and gravity, which pulls it toward the center of the earth, were exactly balanced. If not, the satellite would either veer down toward the earth, or shoot off into space. To demonstrate these principles, pour a little water into a bucket and, going outside where there is room, swing it up and around using the full circle of your arm. The water does not spill over, even when the bucket is upside down over your head. The rapid revolving motion has caused centrifugal force to push the water away from the center of the circle and this has overcome the force of gravity, which would otherwise have pulled the water out and given you a good wetting. Your arm has prevented the bucket from flying away, just as the force of gravity keeps a satellite circling the earth, instead of whirl- ing off into space. Before launching a satellite, very delicate calculations must be made so that these two forces will re- main pecmenently in balance. *:& *% FOR YOU TO DO: Tis 1 iain outgh to « wilting etal ana ‘Hollywood Headlines - By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD i® — No doubt pagestadinne? The most demonstra- tion of that fact is in a recent TV audience Some long-hairs claim the West- Sage Brush Sagas Reign Today as King of Video erns with top stars. - ; Rare is the Western that has lost money. It is a sure - fire staple. early days saw Bill Boyd as Hola ‘ern is the sole original contribu-; FRI DAY SATURDAY SUNDAY IN-A-CAR HEATERS Et AT HIS ¢ LVIS PRESLEY ES] ROCK »RE AT JAILHOUSE of the FOREST Artistic merits of the Western went largely unrecognized until John Ford’s “Stagecoach.” After) it came a flood of expensive West- TV. also was slow to realize the artistic value mem ate perigee =, long. Cassiday, Gene Autry, Dest your head, noticing centrifugal force makes it rise higher. Stop spinning and gravity takes over; the weight quickly comes to rest. * -*.¢ (Today’s $10 award goes to Karen Ludlow of Alexandria, Va., for her question. Send yours on a postcard to Mrs. Violet Moore Higgins, AP Newsfeatures, in care of this newspaper, Tomorrow: What makes the grass turn green?) —LAST TIME TONIGHT— TUES. - WED. - THURS. _ “A GREAT MAN” “YOUNG STRANGER” When you've — seen “Sayonara” you've seen the GREATESTI PATRICIA OWENS - RED BUTTONS - *RICARDO MONTALBAN - MARTHA SCOTT WiYOSHI UMEKI-JAMES GARNER | «#0 "Tr0vvcree coe mec rast war MITKO TAKA || PLus cozor canroon | ——————— Prices for This Attraction ———— Mat. 90¢ © Eves. and Sun. $1.25 © Children Anytime 25¢ FEATURES AT 1:15 « 3:55 - 6:35 - 9:15 RPP PE a , eae aa ana Get More Out of Life —- Go Out to the Movies! , Now! GLENN FORD VAN HEFLIN 3-10 to Yuma’ MArket 4-2151 ' NOW! SuSPERS ACTION! Plawce TAYLOR wit One A DEAD on oon am. RT sat tam» Coorms Seay fod Strand! Ex. © 2 Great New Hite—in CinemaScope and Color ll, i i dl STARTING Lag eyed Randolph Scott in “DECISION AT SUNDOWN” — Color ' and “ESCAPE FROM SAN QUENTIN" TWENTY-TWO ee eas Slight Demand | sessions for leaders of three Oak- | land County UAW locals will begin) \ ace Pac ....... tomorrow at the Pontiac Motor, Cold, Stormy Weekend [ircenc™..°: 323 fay Air tin’. Local 653 Hall, 38 E. Kennett Rd. a Oust Pratt’... 7 * fo ‘ecti By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS © Tnterlak mae Us Rub ...: bargaini Srocedures, grievance| Seven persons died in Michigan|iny ‘wary... 302 Waigrten "~~". oeacaderee pa labor history, ac-|tTatfic accidents over one of the |Int P aol : a West Un Tel « A t Ch 1 s on ‘coldest; stormiest— weekends in}tet—stroe- 36.3 Wilson Co |. cording to Charies 5.. Curry, TC, odes Int Tel & Tel. 30.7 Yngst Sha T gional UAW educational represen- . mccwthlis tn the carty Isl Crk 33.1 tative. Sessions will be on Tuesdays from 10 a, m. to noon and from 7:30 to 9 p. m. for stewards, com- The following are top prices cov- ‘Boosting Grain Ss Sra Markets by growers and sold by Stock Market .. 36.2 Twenty Cen .. e G State During [rernound ... 15.5 Onderwd Entire . ea te Carbide |. SsArwtssssVIwescesscssesas|s Cease. re 22 aQuUee~e ane part of the weekend capped by cold weather, heavy winds and drifting snow in the latter portions | 17. mitteemen and general member- ship, Curry said. Attending will be representatives ' from Fisher Body Local 596; Lo- cal 540, which represents 16 plants in Oakland County, and Local 417, which represents five plants. Woman Freezes Climbing Ladder . to Enter Bedroom LOUISVILLE, Ky. (®—A wom- an using a ladder to reach her second - story bedroom window, froze to death today when she slipped and became wedged be- tween the roof and an overhang. 2 * *- * The body of Mrs, Robbie. Lee Keith, 41; wag discovered by her landlord, Mrs. Lois Noel, She told police she had the only key to the house and that Mrs. Keith often used the ladder to gain entry. It was three below zero, police -said, when Mrs. Keith climbed a ladder and reached the peaked) roof of a bathroom addition di- rectly cael the pear window. She as d ae sii " down the| roof, her legs wedging between the roof and a short projection.) extending over the back door to! i the cottage. Her shoes had fallen off and | she was not wearing a coat, hat) or glove.s A sack of hamburgers and coffee were found on the ground. * * Mrs. Foci said she discovered the body when she went outside and saw Mrs. Keith's feet and legs. _ Dealers Hold 781,446 New Cars in Stock. DETROIT —~ New car dealer inventories rose to (81,446 uniis on Feb. 1, automotive news reported today. This compares. _ with 652.208 units in sterk 4 month, earlier. A year ago at his time dealers eld 630,034 _ cars a ving conditions hazardous 5 18 6 cveryere mrs wet a Ht HRS Mrs, Edward Goertzen, an ele-|Month ago .... 230.5 67.2 5.1 161, mentary school principal of Tay-|¥eer eq@ .++-- 380 i808 as lor Township, died Sunday follow-}1957-58 low .., 226.0 8.2 66.2 150.9 ing an auto collision. Now ae isa Oe Ins Cari D. Miller, 28, Petersburg, "was injured fatally Sunday when- DETROIT ant Ne Co. his car struck a culvert in Mon- rigures aoe ee on = roe County. eighth: High Low Noon Stanley Stanfield, 10, Battle sien Mee BB Beutp, Co.* at sts Creek, was injured — Rowe ear Ca. ~ m4 %4 day when the car in which he was/@. &. m. Co.* : , ee M Co. 55 85 85 riding collided with a passenger Roel M. Pred. ‘Co. ‘102 10.7 train. east of Kalamazoo. = a : : 15 $ Russell H, Lawrence, 43, Farm-)|toiedo Edison te 1240131 131 Wayne 8. Products Co.* a7 6s ington, was killed Saturday night in a two-car collision in Wayne County. Herman A. Davidson, 50, High- jand Park, died Saturday when his car overturned in Detroit, Emanuel Butler, 67, Detroit, was killed Friday when the car in which he was riding struck a bridge abutment in Detroit, Raymond Bauer, 45, Saginaw, *No sale; bid and asked, Gardella Appointed Firm Vice President The appointment of George A. Gardella Jr., as executive vice president of George A. Garten 'was killed Friday night when his|Co., Wholesale lcar skidded into a tree near Bay Food Distributor ® ity wag made recent- ly Celebrating its 40 Suffers Lacerations th anniversary company is rated js as America’s largest indepen- dent distributor of frozen foods and specialty foods. The main plant ofGA in Head-On Collision 2 A Lincoln Park woman is re- ported «in satisfactory condition to- hay at Pontiac General Hospital after suffering multiple facial cuts in a headon collision Saturday that injured six other persons, said Oak- land County Sheriff's Deputies. Mrs. Pearl McPherson, 37, of $21 Fairfield St., was injured RDELLA JR. the company is in Detroit with branches throughoout the state. Auto-Lite of Toledo -jemployes received a record §3,- 9|On ways to improve operations and : better their jobs in 1957, 191.5|cepted. Maximum awards of $2,500 “were granted for 118 of the ideas ——— — 132 Missing on Korean Airliner. yhage, 5 | Fog Over Italy Hampers 4 three billion dollars. Now it’s 400) Federal spending is rising and GM Employes Get $3 Million for Ideas DETROIT (# — General Motors’ 414,073 in awards for suggestions * * * \ ; Nearly 261,000 ideas were ac- submitted, and 427 suggestions re- sulted in awards of $1,000 or more. The previous record total of payments was $3,225,741 awarded im 1955. General Motors said last year’s: awards brought to nearly 24 million: dollars the total payments made since 1942 when the plan was es-| tablished on a company-wide wae. ¥ * * The suggestions advanced leat year ranged from use_of a can opener for .replacing metal tabs in slots on a timecard rack to substitution of smaller water pipes in a plating job to conserve water, The latter suggestion, GM said, ig expected to save more than 70 million gallons of water e year. Rambler Car Sales Up ‘ DETROIT w — American Mo-| ¢ tors reported today its retailers) sold 2,906 Rambler cars in the first. 10 days of February. This com- Rail Platforms Long » BOMBAY — Of seven railway) platforms in- the world fhat. are aga than 2,000 feet long, five are ndia. when the car driven by her hus- band, Ralph 49, collided with one driven by. Gerald J, ergs 22, of 608 E. Commerce Rd., Commerce “Township. The acei- dent eccurred on Milford Rd. about one mile north of Milford. Both drivers were treated and released. Also treated and released/@re affected. _were Michae} Brown, 42, also of} Company officials, said the move Lincoln Park. his wife,’ Mildréd,|was made to bring production in (35. and their daughter, !jancy, 10, line with current business for the: it ‘Goes on 32 Hours TOLEDO, Ohio > — — Auto-Lite Co.'s four Toledo went ona ‘four-day, reed eo week today. Some 1,800 ‘employes SSS ms = The highest inventory of new. ears ever heid 4y the retailers, was 903,79 units on March 1, 196. / land. Charles Schoenberg, 2. -of ers, generators, regulators and 'Milfded, who was riding with Me- distributors for the automotive |Farlane. industry. = i Red TEL-HURON STORE for LEASE Fronting on West Huron, Store at No. 861, 17 x 40 | Suitable for olfices of all types and retail shop, backing. U.S. gold holdings are published | million. ‘daily, but Russia’s gold is a well kept secret, Its hoard is believed to be second only to ours but far smaller, Top guesses put it at sev- en billion dollars. OUTPUT DROPPED U.S. gold output has dropped.| Miners say that since the price hasn't risen from $35 an ounce since 1934 gold digging isn't prof- itable. Latest figures put U.S, gold production at 34% million. dollars a year, compared with 121 million dollars before the war. Meanwhile Russian production is believed to have been kept ‘in Arlington Plant DALLAS, Tex. —A Feb. 24 lay- hourly-wage workers will be af-|f them in wholesale package lots. “ake NEW YORK (#—The stock mar-| ° - the Naples area. CHICAGO U—Moderate demand Quotations are furnished by the wad ly lower in: quiet tien Sesceme ot |Ket slightly almost all along the line gave|Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of| 11, trading today. British planes trom grain futures prices boosts of more Wednesday. Most key stocks declined frac- ‘and ships of the U.S. 6th than a cent a bushel for some de- tionally. There were a few small liveries in early board of trade Produce pecan) poy es dealings today. Fruits Some tobaccos, oils and base Officials possibili 2 kk oe Apples Joustnad, ba SRE 1 metals nudged ahead but ees oth jaune tng Pec ee ba ry 4 P f es. ¢ &. BU, aeseereeees eaned : didn whent cotracts and wag ADbles Shotie, vet Meco EO pas dey irregularly lower. Farm| | excluded. There were unconfirmed hinged to a general feelihg, trad-),.... coped, Neoepenies coeeeecees 3.00 implements, aircrafts, chemicals reports that the Sera States was ers said, that somé export busi-|Jabbage Stndra . Ol. csicesesesve 2 $0 and most leading rails edged off. Need Tax ut wns ee ness is expected soon. Commis-|Casratesopped. 08 ------7-7"01: 15a] Reports were that steel orders . . - UI, — sion houses were the most active ee ee eeesegerees .- for March are failing to match ) ' \ ‘ SY ¢ ay yo 44 eb atiadidily hha ; SEOUL, Korea — The United Continued cold weather and |Parsnips “bur oc. ss -crs-sssss-.. 1.18| Prices continued soft. More price Ny j {rol ers 0 munists tomorrow to demand the belief that it woah! require (sei gnc, di Wied 2 ER) Reductions and eutbacks were an os Wy e Wien TWO RIVAL ELEPHANT HERDS ' the return of a Korean civilian air heavier feeding of grain to live- Bheberd, nethouss, fochs.) dos. .... nounced for crude oil. ae ras A SH, THE JUNGLE BECOMES A E R vires ner ih eet -_ ope stock set off a scattered de- {S4%%sh Hubbard . nom . mand for corn and brought oat [fui sora so"™'' * 410 FOMy “Steet Republic Stel| ign MAD MELEE OF TRAMPLING AN? US Ea cleate Rate, =e am ote pernes ee an a _ Evie, Inertial Harvest] agers = TRUMPETING GIANTS. yee on Speckerl’ .-., scamutan ouit and ne! amics drop j pea It was one or Near the end of the first hour a fractions. , ponies Communists had gotten . wheat was % to 1% higher, March | DETROIT gulag After a moderately active open- p—Charies R. Sligh| aboard the plane in disguise and $2.18%; corn 1%. higher, March for No. 1 top aiality ive sacl a ing trading became very slow. Biggeeoto’s vice president of the forced the pilots to fly north at $1.11; oats %s to % higher, March /|1° em. Because of the blizzard there was nak executive ” of Manufacturers,| gunpoint. Korean National Air- Gs; Dt % to .—— = oemment: Rang ened gut 2, e;jo0me early absenteeism agama — . a today to “remove| lines charged the 3% had been $1.29%; soybeans % to higher, the widespread below sero weather, Re- diness among floor brokers . roadblocks , to capital forma- kidnaped. March $2.21%; and lard unchanged jceipts this morning consisted of a few| New York Stock Exchange. ’ incen- _ to 10 cents a hundred pound s/petr?,t7me hens st 25 conte and a small - ton and restore personal ince] “aude from agreeing to the U jload of capone a ‘ ve” by higher, March $12.02. a N _ ; ot os : ew York Stocks” dual and tral zone at Panmunjom, the Com © ° Pp . Plrdgug Pree, At (AP) — Bees. 182 — ae Morning Quotations) * * * munists remained silent on the fate rain Prices mae: . What the nation needs to revital-lof the twin-engine airliner. , s, A ; Alr R . 544 Johns Man ,.. 384 ’ Guesac ee an One today. lian ad: — “ta, "medium, 3é-38, ame ene see we Te ean a =. ize its ailing (naomi said, * * Ps a ‘é — 216% ees an wid. “av. 39%: browns |Alum Ltd ,,.: = Kennecott ..., 80.2 are moderate tax rate ane Lt. Col. Howard W. McLellan of May ....cc.00 62% MAY esac 214% grade A. extra large, 43; Pedtum. 3: /am Auris .,-. 113 ee te over the widest possible ‘Buchanan, Mich., was among 32 iy. ° 59%q TY. o.- eee. 1 jerade B. al “Y era 50. ‘AmCan ...... 42.6 ol ** 438 for a Boe BY Be ae | eee rete mine Sela ee BY Eataeaks «ot oc ns tna" Det Beonosic | “Col. McLellan, « U.S. Air Force Rye ; ee orn bag grabs £3 = lie etal 96 Loew's ...... 61 the current lofficer, was as co-pilot. May Reeser 3% aay eee le meee a. ean at as aus large, we ~ po Motors .... 5 Lone, 5 are i Se rue aa t acting ni #4 1.16% Jiy . 1.17% 04a; large, 37%-384s; medium, 35-36. AmNGas .... 55 Mack Trk .... 24.4 tax as e Sep. veveries LMM Bey. TI LITA! Am amelt "1 404 Mattin Co... 33-7 > THE said it undermises incentive aed Ca : . Livestock = Re TED Met Bt WOODS REVEAL THE FEROCITY = | hampers the accumulation Lodge Calenda Pj k R d H A onda... 423 Minn P&L 33 WITH WHICH THE GIANTS FOl \GHT. needed eT - _. Q ad tae Twelve chu, ETROIT LIVESTOCK rmeo d Mont Ward -. 332 election PICK ROGGS, TOMES pernctt RTE" tomo — ree oT Nar Bise 2. 383 Disrbuted by King Features Syadiot, 27 | 1¢ would be difficult, he said, tojofficers, Wed. Feb. 19. st Pontiac slaughter steers and heifers quality Atl Cst Line = Nat Cash R .. 55.4 devise a tax system more hostile st. L. W fo Bolster Economy iazi.sibcorre Recife oR Bier growing ena ate Y [esectoredominaune! conn ean 3/0 eGnio™: ott Rat Game M2 AP spa h pang Sng = | oe : WASHINGTON) Gh_Seule. Dens |sctt pence Ooeee so be sale modereta | enuet iss Et Mg Sep EG } Di | T | | he added, the only way the govern: mb ¢ J nate m.-:® aeee ’ Noe av 4 ocrats picked highways and hous eete,*Peart, i act cae? goss Beta <= HH or Ben SA OVELNMEN Ips in to ment can hope to take tn eooush| — Naws in Brief ing today as likely to offer the to $28.00; small lot high choice 1,133) Borg Warn ... 275 Nwest Airlin _ 13.4 revenue to balance its budg ae opportunities to pump |= Bry Hy hag ge nd pod ye noes sh # aoe 331 Stine .o Bi) out inflation is through a resump- 7 h, 2 ve Pp i } Oakland - - federal expenditures into the fal-|¢aré slests titers $25.80 t0 83 oes gooa|Calum & Ht... Owens Til Gi eal of T ke 100 M i| li D | as luties reported Sunday that some- tering econom Can Dry [166 Bac G te x *« * y _jstandard $18.00. te ‘fake: utility’ cows Cee aii") faa Bee Aw Air Ma O d e | lion O ars E said one had stolen tools worth $75, « x~ *« & $16.50 to $17.50; canners and cutters|CaPier Cp ... 36.7 Petan bet | 3 cconomic- growth, . and a cultivator and power lawn as tae aie Wake econ Mt “taleable Prog a an to en pS Bra a3 Penney. 30 rh case by “eee mower valued at $60 from on sw en . ce jo" ee " : “ . . ° mittee he heads will begin hear-|Prime 990.00 to $38.00; average to high|Chrysier .....: 828 Pepe Gola... 313 By SAM DAWSON tax collections will be inadequate)thought to appear through the! 74. former NAM president pro-(nome, of William. Kramer, tomorrow on proposals to ac-|prade $2400 to 430.0; uty ont PS ee as Cee po: 3 NEW YORK — Uncle Sam’s/until. corporations make big in-/black market. soned a ayeiemetic Wx cut slang Tindal St., Davisburg. sd ‘ips “ celerate the interstate highway/$%,00: cull #1100 to s1n00. | lecle Pace, vn 1d pei peor Bien te au ea me = ‘eared nd individuals she theirs Sub rosa dealing in gold has\iin2. embodied in bills introduced! Wilson Jennings, of 2960 Buck- a program. butchers under 200, pounds steady 10 (Cea "eds "\.. 98% Pi Platte.” Halyou to = Sinhes te lGes cae make theirs) subsided in recent years but e@l-\.. Congress by Rep. Sadlak (R-\ner Rd., Orion Township, reported «ss Sen. Sparkman (D-Ala) sald in\wiihteows, 3 cents. higher mixed num-|Comn ee 3 Proct 0 Sl eae rere Kaew Sor 100 nal: Treeeuty cach haw falien to 2isleeeot Went aS high as $6 aDiconn) and Rep. Herlong (D-Fla).'to Oakland County Sheriff's Depu- : & separate interview he is drafting reese to 's90.t8; mined number 1 anaiocet Ga%°---- “7 RCA. -.:: 34 |tion dollars in emergency resérve/billion dollars, a pretty slim mar- * * * ‘ties that. someone had legislation aimed at making it eas-|; 18s to 40 pounds S11.00; 9 few Ietelcont Ol! ..... 40 Rex Drac |. {14)g0ld so that new currency can belgin. The federal debt is close|\ore™ pun UP The measures provide gradual stoler about $82 worth of storage en aan i, take galt nts ak 420.25) 20°? Pd C381 Rev too’ B -- 383 lissued against it is another sidelto the legal limit of 275 billion|, Other Western countries havejtax rate reductions over a five- batteries from his pickup truck comes fo buy houses in the $10,000 ame ote 0 pounds center 2 $10.38 tolcurtis Pud ... 104 Roval Dut = as to the complicated and often my-|dollars, Borrowing can't — building up gold and dollar period down from 20 to 15 while it was parked at his address. > Peper ne ll or Es ate OO ee iB Ey «Efe may my idee, inane Grn, tte eine Si US ae pf hos Se EA 3 of De | Sheep salable, 1,000. Not enough in oF os tm sas. * *« * limit by five billion as requested. |4ve on foc other acti ta ce, gS Brecers.conet Semen g's Sajna cemate te sey, Hea Sn “Theaeaye, Stel Saas bea |e would cut, the _ i oe today before Municipal Judge other actions to make more Rast Air L....374 ou’ pes CO: 33, |0f gold include the secret hoardjbacking for new currency. 2 ee re no a um. He was fined for venee 28 Individual foreigners have an surtax rates from a top of 91 per Cecil B. McCall exedit- available . ‘ | least Kod ....100 Sou Ry :37¢eof the Russians and how they ~~ © * P housing it a * R "| El Auto L ... 28.1 Soerev RA)... 8 Tiuse it from time to > -Whel- Uncle Sens: ‘ten’t for estimated six billion in dollar|cent to 42 per cent. ‘$100 or 20 days in jail. : Pood Mach ... 81.4 &td Rrand |... 44% ’ ia erl OUS 0d § Ford Mot ..°. 403 s*4 On Cal’<.: 481/amount that the United States)gold—and .even if his cash runs|cTedits, a further theoretical) = | Classes Scheduled oe ee a ee ere 7 . E Jen Dynam .. 62. Std Oh Oh .... rency; the investments of|is still tops. ' - re (Claim Seven | ccs ki Bebe H1Se Met gid mec oS eit manera pow zed Mayet” "OAKLAND COUNTY'S newest, most for 3 UAW Locals : BR fee gt Base id be tured into gold on de hilion dlrs, hal «illo more : beautiful cocktail lounge | : : Gillette oo: 34, ee mand; = the Treasury's, emer-|than a year ago. arom 12 billion GM Laying Off 500 - . i] 2. oe year . Thomp Pd gency gold reserve. of this is earmarked for curre A 10-week series of educational Driving Dangerous in Grah Paice 1.2 Transamer This fe was once nearly ney | Henry ~ Miracle Lounge (Formerly Henry's Bloomfield Inn) The specialty of the house is an atmosphere of complete relaxation, cocktails the way you like them, and a luncheon and dinner menu to please the most discriminating palate. ee Businessmen‘s Luncheons 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Located in Michigan’s Newest Shopping Center Miracle Mile Shopping Center COCKTAILS—LUNCHEONS—DINNERS Telegraph at Square Lake Road There’s Peasy of Coal Weather Between Now and Spring... Michigan’ s changeable weather jawed a furnece so pre- pared that it will give the maximum of heat when called upon, a furnace oil which will burn evenly and cleanly . . . responding readily to furnace controls . . . NEW MOBIL- \ HEAT is that kind of FURNACE OIL os with the amazing \new additive RT-98 it cleans os it burns. ur over thirty yeors in servicing this area with better qual Wy fuel has taught us there is no substitute for quality... ' and NEW MOBILHEAT furnace oil is quality from the = first drop, Get set for a warm, ». comfortable home... DIAL FE 5-8181 FOR... New MOBILHEAT with RT-98 Ue icle. aa ae uaa aor ; ERS “aaa ae “ ar oe 3 a “ 5 THE. PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY. 17, 1958 Couny irs jAditessing High School Principale = =’ SUS. and Britain Negotiate: ny: no allan oo NAW cation em_Recommended Missile Base Agreement |=: s office, ‘Only the father’s . a8 Se | WASHINGTON The United,with which the missile would be | ——- . _ INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Dr:.James = —-._-—“ They ‘should, he said; be given “a. pate and Britain have ‘success equipped in wartime, wail be " Lueten Le, Lacesse, 1005 Colite B. Conant recommend ay‘ tha’ different type of instruction by teach- negotiated an agreement for|stockpiled at the bases but’ they | Charice “A. eagle Joslyn nation’s ne aay . ae ers specially qualified for this work and bases. It seems certain to become|will be under YS. control, Under Sete Ww Unies wt Bate high schools group their stu- arixioes ta undertake 8 the pilot pact for arming other|U.S. law the President cannot Ralph, Linthorne, 24 . 4 a dents by ability, wherever possible, so Bde Bes ee - |NATO allies with medium-range|transfer atomic weapons to any Harvey 4. Lavoie, 11 Cadillac "| that they may proceed at a pace in keep- Only in this way, Conant said, can rocket weapons. other country, | Russel Be la Komen. ea = New York” ing with their talents. _ the slow pony = ee anything like | A torent annoucement is’ not ca fy - Paul ©. Lehmuller, 61 Bloomficl __‘This, the former president of Har-. a satisfactory education. expected before midweek. ‘ 0 summit contee~ ing Teranklin Loving, 392 -Batéwts “S| -vard said, would apply to 15 or 20 per Dr. Conant outlined a proposed pro- | The key to the agreement fs/ence in Paris in December the |+ss Ronald #. Lilly, 9039 Barnsbury cent of the student body that is particu- gram of high school courses for grades {joint control of the missile sys-jheads of the 15 Allied govern- B, Larkone, 00 E. Renaett 2 tem which will be set up on Brit-|ments decided that NATO ~de- Fone 197 Crystal Lak larly gifted, as well as to the 10 to 15 9 through 12. ; ish soil with American - made|fenses in Europe should be rein- | Herbert Fig, 402, Tumor per cent who just aren’t capable of keep- xx & , | weapons. forced with U.S, nuclear missile. B. Md seating G | Lee Lindsey, 813 Bi ing up with the rest. : He recommended four years of Eng- | 1. issue of who would pull the| They left it up to Gen. Lauris Nor-|vine Road; thence southwesterly on cen- : Jeet rane 2%, Bowsra he wy: lish and four years of history or related | 1: -26e in event of a war has been|St@4, supreme Allied commander, |raiie of | Anasmsonville e | Ari, Curry oe Kennett social studies as required courses. TWO J[notiy debated in Europe. Those|*? decide where the missile bases PRED L. TUCKER, pete Cones, for the Cenaly 5 Cannone, | Scores. pel . ¥. Fairmount Dr. Conant, in a speech prepared for years of mathematics should also be re- jwho opposed arming NATO with should be and to work out ar- Souieendeu Suing kek Tn nt matter of the petition — : | Zohn & PeBarmore, 663 Robinwood | the 42nd annual convention of the Na- | quired, he said, with the more able stu- [nuclear missiles argued that the|"@ngements = gg gg mony eS, ee SS aa, ere eee fd "Glenn B. Dillon, 122 N. Johnson tional Assn. of Secondary School Prin- dents going on to more advanced courses, |United States might plunge an Al-/ Concerned. “ SD salad ELECTION NOTICR | petition heving Boon ‘tied te the tet Lawrence BR. Denham, 2731 James : : lied nation into war without that|™ents and the United States: will VILLAGE OF ORCHARD LAKE s ing that the | Leonard J. DePauw, $1 8 Johnson cipals, said the slower students, who and the weaker students taking general or / ly b negotiate formal agreements. To the qualified electors of the Village] the of Ph pig gy pp ge Ag 2 he usually have trouble with reading and commercial arithmetic. non! id am, merely by push- — of Orchard Lake: . Known, and the said child has ¥ . cae @ eae ee handling numbers, should be taken out Another proposed requirement ‘was a ‘ * “ow The Zoning Board of Independence ae Chares A. Duifie, ist Augus _ the required courses such as Eng- general science course in the ninth grade, | 4. 1,500-mile missiles which wil bold" 1 Pablle Hearing 7. March i Benen ©. Castes, 168 Clovese , history, and general matinematics. -or biology in the ninth or tenth grade. Britain will receive from the|gksse suekinas to consaee the fer: John D. Clarke, 442 Kuhn United States, according to re- jlewing changes in Township Zoning Dis-|., - ts: . Rochester : inven at 55 Federal refuges Sot OTA WAHL (2 h ports here and in London, will be) Prom sF to M-1 c. - 3665 j j distributed among four bases T.4N. R. 9 EB, Sec. 31. . BAS Pe et UJ, 5. Welcomes aling 9,422,895 acres. . IN Gather slong the eadern shorey of Unie ahah Soe I MF ‘Robert J. Passeno, 2060 Harned To assure the welcome guests /s Isl - |thence N.85° 26° 50” E. 1126.15 ft. thence wie ss eS | | M | tt British Isles. N.1* 23° 45" B. 465.98 ft, thence N.2° 37° i atvoslds” set Simpson. enn : {plenty of food, crops are set out in |} miay, arie e London. dispatches said _that|/30" E 476.19 ft. thence N.4° 24° 45" B. Beret §. Bests, Peat ny cat p apc anche Britain would pay the Smilon-|° wi a’ atnet's, 313" | it Sorgen. 18h Northen, , are burned well in advance so the; IMLAY CITY — Imlay City PTA|dollar cost of constructing the|W. 183129. ft. to beginning exc. be-| "° veriand RA. arses: i ‘geese will be greeted with an ex-|.i meet at 8 m. today in the|base. The United States will sup-|Sonviie ‘na” located uN? iT 35° E. Senjamin R Davie, “219 Chancery | a .__ |panse of tender green shoots. Oats, , nag ply the missiles by the end of this|*8.7 ft, and N.85* 26° 50” E. 560.50 tt. Alfred‘ 4. re ae Harrington earty owl Survives rye, soy beans, and clover are high school sym. The Rev. William year and U.S. crews initially will Nas’ ee ES, fee thenee Mee "| Pant iW ,Dreer. 3081) Melvin Annual, Long — Flight /planted in clearings. Gram of Trinity Baptist Church handle the weapons. British crews|!0” W. 130 ft. thence 8.85" 26. 50” W. bf 2.2.) ae in Good Health Tho Cameda govse (Branta |“ give the invocation. will take over as soon as they can | be, i Richard P. MeGowan, 144 Ferndale caanteniie ~*~ * * be trained, - 4. R. 9 E., Sec Tin cr tynch ten Guan than perhopte any other water | There will be instrumental en-| ‘The hydrogen bomb warheads,|, Beginning at/an iron stake N.2" 17 25° Hugh’ ©, Browne iiss Dequinare WASHINGTON — Among Vial-| sy54, po cpecion ts seen oun sembles by high school pupils. Me, ‘thence, 8.10" 0 os” fries. f Albert L. Burt, 3716 Weaverton tors to the United States, none is| ally from the Atlantic to the |Mrs: Lioyd Fuller, first grade} eo oe ee ST ee Gene | Charen 1. Bates, S005! Shelny : teacher, is program chairman for ‘ N.O* 04 E. 312.70 ft.. thence N.T1° 41° more hospitably welcomed and] Pacifie, and from the Gulf of |[Tac0er. is, Program chatm it’s No Crime to Forge [2° 3 5 25% Swan ar S ‘ aa Arctic Ques- ‘ . . 6. 86° 18 65" W.| public Meg's Bodyguard Larger Pampered than the Canada goose. | Mexico to the Arctic Circle. tions.” Group discussions will|French Rose in Belgium [t5:c0"f. to iron stake in W. sec. line,| Tequire: Y “aoweret, we After Threatening Letters) S°m@ime their clarion notes on 2 follow. ' line 94.20 ft. to the beginning Cents per capita secording to, the last] ing 5) sin nights, the wild geese come| Adults have a wingspread of/ Refreshments will be served by| BRUSSELS — It is given to Prom Ret te Mel preceding United States census, nor LONDON @—The Daily Sketch!in V-shaped formations to pass the (2° six feet and weigh fromthe 10th grade mothers. money. It is given to sar ot Part of 8. % of section, beginning at on @ public utility, or said today Princess Margaret’ | win ancestral feeding Tvs “the tro at crey ene, Marlette sa Hr that the forgery treatmaant|Seteet Si°"iI"'E, lash ''tram W. &| fase be ih epprered te Sesersetee bodyguard of detectives has been| on marked, the brownish-grey geese M agreed that the forgery treatment din org. section line, thence H.17| of the electors thereon at any | grounds. They are among the first/have black heads, white checks,| Marlette Community School Ele-/can be given to roses, zi BE. 1437 ft, thence 6.84° 32 £.| general or special electton. strengthened because she has rej) 4s, north ‘i pn mentary PTA will meet at 8 p.m.| The allegation came from a} 228.10 ft, to Ely side White Lake Road, LOGE 6. ceived some letters start egain in cartyjend long black necks or “stock-lW aiociay in Bea McDonald|French horticultural com pany ty Sent nue ne The letters were said to have SPring ‘ the National Geo- Himgs.” ___|School. It will be Fathers’ Night.|which has sued a Rod a pod 15020 ft to Bly “line TRE. property warned her not to go through with /SraPhic Society says. Like periscopes, the black necks ‘Bud Hoist is in charge of the pro-lfor more than $20,000. The French |iine OTRR R/W.. thence Suiy along plans for a visit to the West In- se and heads of sentinels protrude|pram. say that their roses, a special/side R/W line 1192 fL. thence 83° 30° dies in April. Though hunted by fair means above the backs of a feeding, Hoist will introduce a group of type protected by international pat-|ot’ read. thence a af a Ww. nhs “Royalty often receives letters|and foul, the big Canada geese are flock. The guards remain tensely'FFA boys who will present alents, have been copied by the Bel-|‘t. tence oo ee tt like this, usually from cranks,” }more than holding their own. Thejalext until relieved by others to\demonstration of parliamentary] gians and sold at cut prices. Is fhe aiiet 180.00 ft.’ thence’ 818° said a police spokesman. . population trend is upward. The|take their turn eating. procedure. The Belgian defedants claim that|¢ 40), ¥;, 629.49 ft, thence along curve , Fish and Wildlife Service esti-| Canada geese mate for life and; A final decision will be made|a new color rose is not an inven-|179.14 ft, thence 8.84" 20° 40” W. 570.30 Free China, where President/mates that some 327,000 came show great concern for each oth-ion the fund-raising project for this|tion, such as a rose without alwiy or whine’ Lane mood. i Chiang Kai-shek rules, has about |down the Atlantic Flyway alone injer. The gander doesn't deign to spring. dhora would be, and therefore con-|=. 100 ft. cuenta strip of and 300 fe *”" ARTHU 40,000 Moslems. Both the Presi-|1957 as compared to 266,000 in 1954. |sit on the nest, but it keeps con-| | not be pa |, Attorneys fer bath eie* St Sepe StO™ cltes the coutney 4 p cone Judge of dent and Mme. Chiang Kai-shek) These and Canada geese migrating|stant watch, and is a fierce de-| Pike's Peak in Colorado 1s sides agree that the case is unique| From R-1 to 0-1. aia The necessary information for bidding] Probate Register, are Christians. along other flyways find winter\fender of the family. . 14,110 feet above sea level. jin international law. sonville Road’ in the 8H % Section 31,|anip Clerk's Office, ied West Huron, — _ Feb. 17, "a, | Death Notices In Memoriam 2; Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted 8 Instructions 9| Work Wanted Female 11| Building Supplies 12A| Moving & Trucking 19| Notices & Personals 25 ° IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICH- ALL MEN OR WOMEN DESIROUS] FINISH HIGH SCHOOL - NO| WANTED WASHINGS & IRON-| ELECTRIC MOTOR SER E- DAINTY ; i. SR SPO ale ST ae | neue OIG |S RRR Ra ae ie BE at Rae eae | select verge pe |Rretee| TUCKS to Rent St, Sie meas Ps 4 St: as * He is not d he’ away. tionally advertised : : : ).m. Wayne Box GENE’s HEATING SERVICE. UCKS, TRACTORS ae hath dear ited We Go 'not mora as those ‘without bas an opening for man ot| A MA RES SELL AMAZING E*postiee res oo Teeeleabaaie sedans “Furnaces cleaned gold, repaired. ston AND, BAUER sponsible for amy debts ‘contreeted of, songe, Kalacio. Fuserel se] mirough faith im Jesus Christ, | {n°,agitg divert sales amd service | Di hess’ ecicnes.” Sidon | MEN — SPECIALIZE? | Wawrep: BABY arrring J0n.| Piggrrotte BS Rochester. PE) item The Secnttrnilers | Reitnde “net "3 voi item st 10 a.m. from the Melvin A.|We Will meet him again someday.| sonal and confidential interview, CASH COMM: Every busi | Go after money — learn WASHING_AND TRONTNOS, 300 ¥. HEATING r _ Pontiac Farm and_- Schutt Home with inter-| Sadly missed by wife and/ see Mr. Bennett between 10:30) mess a prospect. Repeats. Start| @ SERVICE TRADE in a few | W. 386 N. NG a ment in Mt. i jemetery. Mrs. _ family, : and 12, Zeecday, Feereary Basa ot]. withon om, ip Romane. full, | hours weekly, Ait conditioning. Cass. FE 5-1879. ™ hr. ae me Bh ee tl Industrial Tractor Co. Melvin "A. Schutt Punersl Home. Funeral Directors 4| Pole” Felteraph.) Ean MATCH CO te | ag hg: iat ASRINGS DONE Ie MYHOME, | Nesting Go. FE @l0a3 doy or pally?” eluding Sunda: E ‘ ATES 2ONTIA! 22. ca | ; a; PE 40641 Pes "ARNEGIE, PRB. 16, 1998, MARTHA ny RETIRED COUFEE WOULD DIKE| Peoder : UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED seat at Pe ne age Donelson-Johns Salary pass — “i o bw Job. ae caretakers of 8 vuvate your pr 198, eS oe up free of charge, 54638. “COB, Taser, Wiliam ©. and Den FUNERAL, HOME Bik a Sm 2 3 Pontise Press, "Box 13. Bor 10, Pontise Press Painting & Decorating old Carnegie: y, 7 . La Fo he ae = ad if ase EXE. PATER AN L : 1 Waterford and "Utes Work Wanted Male 10), ,.7 hing ? day, Ped. 18, at 2 pm. from the . SECORATOR TO DO INTERIOR Exp. Rose -_FE 82080 | ‘Sharia tes San:| Voorhees-Siple | i aia, caas= | seatont erietont ees | hth" Aremo oe" —| AA TRENCHING | | maxo,ou, somes pervce| tare empem Pe Sa ILL BE Reo ee us. cer| FUNERAL HOME =_Cell_ Pred; Fe esti. mbulance or Moter ave ipreat' ot tee, apaign st sig| AVAILABLE NOW! CARPENTER |— A & B TRENCHING — | FoRNACES” CLEANED. & SERV. | “Tenying FE Re ee Eee nee | EGE Sate vow Duos [fares ne || BB ace eh Ene). re ar Pi | pees aking, Talring 16 | Rano eye cae | UR NETURE NEEDED eee . 15, ’ 3. . complete - , A BGM PAYING JOBS. OFFORTUN- WILLIN TO WORK CARPENTER iy - A 4 oe ANY TYPE OF HOUSE PLAN: voc St A I Ba MB ae a ; or ey seat or | } . on. ‘ 3 low molding CLEA. 5 foreman. Windows, und| Bev, pees! of age. Auely ot 2 & cabinet vork. Ne jeed. C. I. Nelson. FE 5-1788, wi P. ¥ , 4 5:| Custom drawn OL 1-620, ~ ra-| “$22, Deone i | Big Eami Sage Wont aay eae | ape ee | Werle El ees | Foe ee i ngs CA any «| el SE- 2% — YE * P ea Ty : 30 “ : hold , Prompt service and income Tax Service 17 saat : Living Quarters Over 38 Yea CARPENTER NEW OR REMOD- repairs, ore practical to| —~ a a § gore siiaenen nase gling, Kitchens @ specialty. fPbaie, tna remsace, AA TAX SERVICE. W. @. = wenn, Sales. minded". | CABINET MARER AND CARPER. wise Pavate | pee Cre ea a Wish je learn "he real evtate | “ter, Kitchens 0 soecialty 5h REEL AVA, | Roconrng aoe rat “Fara rome wi ™ Ph. EMpire 34196 . Reasonable |e. an *| Wid. Co for Personal Interview Winter A. “a Cortfidential Cali Irving 2 - ; Bay 00 C. SCHUETT, Realtor WALLPAPER REMOVED SY| WANTED 62, 67, 73, 76, 78, 96, lor, | | Sesser Ei S000 after * p= | Employment Agencies 8A auified| “Television Service 22 i 13. SALESMEN ALL TY SERVICE. CALIS AX IMMEDIATE , Decetonsl apne fr men deni — | “ky SDEM CHER as REACH CASH CUS. ee ws ea EVELYN or fe gieridentinl ange re sano ee| ACTION rowers tro Ces" SATESMAN [EDWARDS ieee ris (atin SSE ighland Rd. (M39) i E TAX SERVICE snd tile. field Ads. Call FE 2-8181.} expanding operations ‘and tn-| MA a a K. L. Templeton, R il) Satara eats) maak | Old Ton Serres | opr ela SFELER | aNSEN BE ag | ERR Rego oe a ee | 2 Fle Men available sl} hours, Any job, leid, sanded, and finished. - Peatios Breas pe Semiter with Rent Estste “Happy Hunting” big or smail Fu }000T: _FE 2380 Bram PREPARED ! Mee Drofitable career in pathol: | “hea, Beautifully finished Pontiac | Hobbies & Supplies 24A (ada) y Snyder and a lo | vt medical Laundry, Phone FE 2-8101. on usa; Snyder, Berdina will be Mrs. Robert ‘(He jen) g ino RA | PAINT THE NUMBER PICTURES. dear brother of Charles Landscaping 18A vanbiy go mes. Machenines . Ada Mrs. << Store, 15 . ¢| MEDICAL MISS $300 ry How would you like -to as- . Ph.| CUSTOM BULLDOZING, YARD & . A Pe siglgr ot «ire Shs F 3, ree. Back filing. - RUG WEAVERS : hos is an ire we Oe of yarn, tugs fo your mene- girl with cha EXPERT TREE TRIMMING AND Urements. OR 3-8536, . wes a _ — Notices & Personals 25 "| _Moving & Trucking 19/“\Rp you TOO FAT? | A-1_ MOVING — HAULING Are 79e tired, constipated & seas 8 | nase? HP poe] Be ot OR 32-2276 weight reduction tod BR wy BE 88 F AA-1 Reduced Rates as supers son appointment, | your equity, ty Big Fd EVELYN EDWARDS 200 hale Betoun Bide. ented Male 6| "se or new cert Avca Conmetics | wn Community atk "Bide, | Plains. Instructions ING AND ; | Sb supervisi pe A . BULLDOZING Sent eta, KATES VOR Or Diet| NF SCTROL Tas -GENTRE| WHITE BROS. } ram} ~ O'DELL CARTAGE | Sia" Gir"Soesg_ “vented Bair. vi | 2 Automobile Sales 9 Ballng Supplies 124 wee! oa, ese ii, Meee. | RY OTR OF NOMA TERE ag malt . || HAULING & RUBBISH. NAME| FE 36192, Confidential, fhe Sal- LISTI "AN E our vation A: . . D ‘ ) ATTENTION, MEN Any time. FH 90005. mo _Arin “easty Bay, auc SIGH AAD RAV PRUGRING.| Suit Mato, SOFRLEES — Wi] BUYER G AN A 5-7805. UY 4 , eapeeee pick-ups and deliv- FOR FREE : MI 400¢1/ Organizations, Churches, Clubs. = ICKUP “oe Sell Py bottles Watkins vanilia - TON PICK Sa Wes BROKER re s- Tinie Week. Cell any time, FE cortes maker. Pres, 100 + Tow Listings Wanted VLG FEW M aining in bookke MOVING TRUCKING AND HAUL- - We Bu Equities ror ule eds, moyen a Sage BE sate hess, "In Debt? "|B. D. RILEY, Broker scope so tierats| gortapeea pene feiss wits| fe 4eSP'% Sry oe MOVE YOURSELI — | 1 ou are barme troutie menting | py ity isbe® Labs i 5 wil bes ered. OMAN To fe es ath GUIDE TO GOLD: Sell ~. ANYWHERE MicetGAN CREDIT counsel : “OWNERS Hes (0-0. a iz. : : ) ite eS, ee : : : L + 9 “Open and val eenllere Kove Oukinna Shee: Pe bau, n ave 168 ‘OPEN IN U.8.,| WOMAN, rc 5, Wr M rar) = me AppuaD | ore = . ‘> farm, of land 1 Write| ence fing 60 elling shees,| things youre ‘Using PL. oh ad EN? < Call we we t a mit ci fae, 4 ) - ty 4 3a EMI + TRAILER KN APP SHOES __| “potidtac™ through Classified Ads! ir 7 ‘ ' > dump truck. MA §-0682. | 2070 Airport Rd. OR 3-1892 137 Baldwin ag : : : | \ ; ‘ - | \ ; » Z “ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY. asso Rent Apts. Furnished 33 Rent Houses Farnighed 35 Fee. aie Rooms 37 or otherwise, “ential oad ‘as wane ey ° @ = equities, “Ease Siaities : PAUL D. HAMMOND. ‘%\% W. Huren &t. Realtor FE 5-114: . Eves. PE 5-4714 We Will Buy Your Equity Don't lose your home—cash wait- ing_-s0 o red tape. We also need listings, Giroux-Franks, 4395 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9701. xe WILL BUY OR LIST YOUR LAKE property. Blige waiting. R. F. McKINNEY - Office 8800 Commerce Rd. Ph, ica? Seige EM 33311 WE HAVE ave QUALIFIED D BUYERS waiting for commercial proper- ties, farms & acreage. A phone roi will give you immediate ac- ROY KNAUF 26%, W. Huron St. FE 2-742) WE NEED GOOD—Listing of all types. Farms. acreage, suburban home and city homes. WE — BUY, sell =< trade. per with = for fast efficien' ___ servic L. H. BROWN, Realtor r NGS : We have ‘Seteme with substantial 4 down payments or cash for = + | that is priced right. A e sal will bring one of . = For cou appraisers to your d courteous efficient sexvioe Est. 29 Years mel Wighiand Rd. (M50) ¢ EM 3-3303 or MU _ 4-6417 Rent Apts. Furnished 33 AND, EY? BATH. EAST _ yi FPURN, APT. 154_Chan dler BRICK APT. AND ©) MENT. REASONABLE INQUIRE 22 A -BURN AT OFFICE, i. @ RMS. AND BATH, 2 PVT. ENTS. _Util, ynfurn, FE 63495. 0 CELY 3 AND ALSO 2 RMS. ACEELOR APART- 2 oe BACHELORS 1 bedroom deluxe, Working couples or young ladies. Also 1 garage house. FE 5-2706. BACHELOR APT. SHARP. Furn. very nice, FE 2-4376. ACHELOR : aoe furn, LORS HOUSETRAILER | — Seah. \CHE me m, $7 per week. FE Warm. . PVT. ENTR. AP rion Baldwin, FE GLEAN 3 RMS & BATH. rT Entr, Arults. 2384 Auburn. 460 LES KITCHEN gi da APT. $15 per week; per 1 Sader heat, lights and gas. 3-9389 COUPLE PvT. BATH “AND ENT. CLEAN > Soon 141 Auburn per, Salle. CLEAN, 3 ROOMS & BATH, , UP- pvt. ent. PE 65-1560. GiRLs OR COUPLE. = toh. All Pvt., Ott. furn. Near el-Huron. sone of the GROUND FLOOR. PVT. a eu ered walsems. Near town. 222 N FURN. 3 RM. APT. FE 5-3030. 7 RM. C washing HOLLYWOOD APTS. 2 rooms & bath. Partially fur- ni : ities furnished. ine E. 2-1834 RGE WARM 3 RM. APT. A tiie furnished, ineludi asher, Children we §-2707. R. __util. pvt. er ent., Dorothy y Soyder Lavender | ¢ * 1 TWO RM. & 1 THREE RM. PL 291 Central. 1-2 BEDROOM. PARTLY PURN. iaketroct apts. 8615 Pontiac : ist FLOOR. -3 Be Miratie he (for 3 only). No drinkers. Teas, rates deal Perry, 25236 ‘or t. bath. Adults only. 00 N. ‘pacanet, A Alberta 3 Rooms, p pvt. bath, clean, close in. FE 4-2579. | als Bie al : i = 2 2 ROOM APT. POR COLORED. & my 8. inding Dr. FE 5-0 HER. $15, 2 LARGE RMS., , OR_3-7206. 7 MS & BATH. WIL- — BATH Wit, ee TO BASY "ints ‘Emr rerr yt PER § RMS. (3. AND BATH. $75 ‘\UPPER 5 ee mo. pitis_ulilities UNION COURT | I scam & bath, adults only. cone at ao earelaker . A-12 or §-7871. K. o. ee mpstead, 12 E. Huron, FE 4-826 5 p.m, see 0088" Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 SINGLE BEDROOM APT., 1 month. 1 ae CS veagy - on. ries 1 ie. ar _EM 3-421 } x DROOM. Sais LAKE. : od rn, close to city. Reas, MA i BEDROOM HOUSE. a children welcome. OR 3-41 3 ROOMS & ‘s BATH, io PER mo., also larger homes with bath y week* or month a slightly higher rental. See Mr. Weaver at oo Rd. or phone FE % ROOMS, MODERN, BASEMENT. Nicely furn, $75 month. OL 1-6363, between 4 and 6. 4 AND 6 ange} GAS HEAT. Close to town, 4-5268, £ ROOMS & tie MODER West side. FE 3-9437 before ‘i p.m. or FE esse. 8-10 p.m BIG HOUSE — 1% BATHS, S0ME furniture, near Baldwin & _Howard Sts. OA 82918. BASEMENT HOUSE, FURN: cheng unfurn., $50 per mo, FE 95-3842 HOUSE FOR RENT. CREECENY _Lake area. FE 2-5906. LAKEFPONT ‘HOME, “TIL iL JUNE isth_ or year round. OF NEW, MODERN 2? BEDRM. AN house in Waterford. OR 3-1907 be- fore 5 only. ’ 6 | OS Rey FURN. HOUSE, $i1 WEEK. SMALL MODERN HOUSE. JUST ro for couple. $50 mo. vR cozy. et s e ous ROOMS RooMs WrrH from _burn. PE 5-061 SLEEPING Sor CLOsE “TO ag rot, ore to town. xfast Write’ "Pontiac Press Box 13. Box 112. EXTRA CLEAN — HOME STYLE meals. 14 Matthews, PE 56-0377, — ROOM FOR 2 MEN, TWIN _» soos meals. PE 32-3429. __ oa BOARD OR JUST room. 4 eosk from Sears. Home privileges. Pensioners or elderly WANTED: BOARDER IN Convalescent Homes 38A 2 BEDROOM, WALLED LAKE. ten © Close to oity. Reas. MA 2? BDRM. HOME ON WHITE LAKE _ Rd. $69 per mo. NE 42544 2 BEDROOM HOUSE WITH BASE. ment. Near Elizabeth Lake, $60. _Call FE 5-8906. 7 BEDROOM DUPLEX. x. LIKE flew. 1 floor. Gas heat. 8 _ Rutgers, 2 BEDRM. HOUSE. oh gal sUBDI- vision, Call MY_ 2-574) z 1 ROOMS & DATE FE_5- 7 RMS. & BATH, ORES STOVE & refrig. furn. $50 mo. FE 4-2252. 3 BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE. Good location, gas heat, rage, gre penth. i children wed. 3 Saad HOME. LARGE LIVING tm.,. natural fireplace, wall-to- wall carpeting, tile rec. rm., auto. pot water heat. $85 mo. Avail able March the Ist. Phong MAple 5-172. 7 BEDRMS., NEWLY DECORATED —tull basement, auto. furnace. __ 1841 White Lk. Ra. J BEDROOM HOME wiTH BASE- ment, 2 car attached gerage, $85 per month, Call poeee e "partridge +358 . Huron. ‘furnished flat, Pvt. Entr erson. Inquire 151 ‘Norton 21728. — stov rats bath, Heal. ere STs ER AVAILABLE. ORATED. OR 3-4202 OR OR saan. | 4 ROOMS. a MSDE gO HEM and hot water. FE 4 RM. & BATH, —— ‘HOUSE. FE 2-0430 after 4 ROOM as CLARKSTON. 1 bedroom, auto, ofl furnace, ag refrig., garage. Adults. # ROOM | oD GAs HEATED terrace, a Side. Garage. _Agults only. FE 2A 1875 | ¢ ROOM MODERN gas “eg fenced» ard, 4, sai _ freon Sess @ RM. [ MODERN. GARAGE. AT __ Elizabeth eth Lake. FE 5- f § ROOM MODERN. LOW RENT. Or will sell for small down ~~ ment, E. side. FE 4-6650 PE $3267. : § LARGE HOUSE IN WATER- ford. $55 a m: . 33 Auburn, Of- “ROoMs ry BATH. i. ALL t 3 furnished. _— Gen- poy Fe 44536 5 ROOM, Children welcome. “WHITE BROS, REAL ESTATE sa fice in oe RMS., . PORCH 5 ROOMS, BATH, OfL, HEAT, ey we a __ern, PE 80630 Ask for me = es, Opdyke 1 VAliey 3-0180 Rent Houses Unfurn. 36) conv $ 5 ROOM HOUSE OfL HEAT, #7 2362 Gen off Walton i RMS. & BATH. IN AUBURN Heights. m3 per mo. FE 5-312) or 422. NURSING IDEAL es atl vice rms., central, reasonable. 2t_N _267 N. Perry, FE 4-7073. KITCHEN, 1 BLOCK ts oor sat $7, 7% Au- rig=y Rr mig ye mans: For 2 ladies, FE 5-45 __Rooms With Board 38 i preferred. 20 Newton CHRIS- Box ene Write Pontiac Press | monger ‘MAIDENS | By ies Alan). PS yr ee Q-7 “He wants to help me across the street. Heavens—Do I look that old?” _ For Sale Houses _ 48 “For Sale Houses 4 New 3 bedroom some, la) 509 PE 41157 S-BEDROOM Bi BRICK, | PR KEFRONT Pe and room, very % ment hips 4 ves: eation room. home we: es and an attached 7; e. Call us = ay will De higher in “Smith-Crawford, Inc. 8. Rochester Ra OL 21-0002 E. Auburn Rd. OL, 6-1226 COLORED FOLKS on ST. MONTAN. no new. GI Sovale, i va- RAEBURN 8ST. Practically Aide — type home with Se bese & oil R. D. ‘RILEY, Broker * Pe * 44821 ONLY $450.00 DOWN. NICE 2 bed City. FE 4-1906. — $1,000 down contract. Midwest $2048 al tment. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE PONTIAC LAKE FRONT. down, Smimediate. P Pare 2 bedroom. E. BEVERLY 3 pedveens home. -to-wall carpet in L Base- mien Gas fernece. in.300, ‘terms. Zz. COLGATE. 4 Rooms plus ae $1,200 down . $1,500 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. GI resale. aya 750 down, 3 bedroom ranch $800 DOWN. 2 bedroom home. West suburban cuangery ABRO: 3. Bedroom ranch-style home. Oak floors, wal! e arpet. Soca. Lot 110 x So. 6.400. Terms. Baidw ELDERLY OR CONVALESCENT rivate home. $80 per month ‘« FE soe lin VACANCY FOR 1 OR MAN paced ye me Pam ae sean with fee care and reas. arg oo WHITE GABLE REST HOME. censed, Good care. PLateau 4.2005 * Hetel Rooms 39 HOTEL AUBURIN Rooms by Day or babe OTEL ROOSEVELT. CLEAN, — a A. p= too es ne 00 pa wee! 1b N "pe erry. PE 5-8126, Rent Stores 40 2 BRICK FRONT STORES, Large parking lot. $100 each. DORRIS & SON REAL’ uron Phone re Fe. soem. Rent Office sin 41 2 ROOMS. UNION LAKE BUSI- _ness district, EM 3-4881, ANNETT oR BOONE, Sry BATH, 3 BEDRMS. at door. Drayton ep. | days, Evenings OR ety _er, P.O, Box | gi8 wk, MAple &-1700 or FE)? FOOME a POOMS. CLEAN, ADULTS. 10/5 ROOMS i s ai : 7 ROOMS AND BATH, ALL PYT. fgg Oe lg “Bo Spore Pong . seine Tear door $12 per week. Ideal a Eu Wy couranee Stove & = cchipseaiec, aan vidow ing utilities. No children. essie St { " & Auburn, FE 5-3071. ‘, ALSO ROOMS '3 LARGE RMS, NEWLY DECO- with light. housekeeping. rated, Plenty of closet space. Pvt. 3-5750, bath, On bus line. Near Eastern 2 & 3 ROOM APT. Na! _Jr. Hig 8-2336. 444 E room for 3. Reasonable. FE 4-7059|3 ROOM LOWER. CLOSE 3 LARGE utilities furnished. isT FLOOR, Fain bb Silden $1450 er week ren. $14 rw FE 2-064. 279 5 _ 2 a Lowen PVT. ont. Oul, Soqutte toe bas hanic. 2 NICE LARGE RMS8., 1ST FLR., Pvt. Entr., utilities and washing privileges. 209 Norton. 2 oa a AND BATH, RPHY % block ae bus Adults Te 2140 aig aa 2 RM. MODER LAKEFRONT. be change in caer rates. OR. 2 — TWO RM. APTS. PVT. BATH. 9 aL eget pCa Non. utilities rth 3-0958. Tru Rustic Cabins, . : Broadway, Lake Ori 3 ROOMS, PVT. SAT aie D ENT ; Teak” and baby welcome, FE 3 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE. renee rie children. FE 3-7406 37 RMS L FURN. ALL PVT. _ater qe in, sais, 15 per wk. FE 5-5754. Der 1 ROOMS AND BATH, PVT. ENTR. 12.50 per week. Westside. and week 51 Feneley Court 3 ROOMS & BATH. $50 MO. FE 4-5008 i Rooms AND BATH. CLEAN, +0401. _ rE 3 ee AND BATH ON UNION St., newly decora’ gas heat, FE 4-5425 4 ROOMs AND ea UPPER. Keego. Call after 5, FE 5-2760. On #13 4 RMS. reasonable child sccepted. +7077, ‘4 ROOMS & BATH & PVT. ENT. oe Lake. MArket & BATH, PARTLY vdichasor) Centrally 8.\4 ROOM HEATED 7 BEDROOMS newly decorated, locker laundry espace. Near A West side. Pontiac 4 é ROOMS AND BATH, NEWLY _Gecorated, warm. |. OR 35-1978. 4 ROOMS & BATH. WEST SIDE ak furnished, Adults T RM. ¢ fe JOSLYN BUS LINE, _ Very nice: Adults only. FE 2-4376. 4 ROOMS AND BATH. FE 4-6729 J ROOMS PVT. BATH, 79 CLARK | FE 8-3614 § ROOMS. FIRST FLOOR. CLOS in Call FE 2-6663 or FE 2-7734. 3 RM. & BATH. BABY WELCOME. _106 Dresden, Pontiac, MY 2-1961. 6 RM. APT. NEWLY DECORAT- ed. W. side, ofl heat. 5-0830. week. 43 Augusta, Pontiac. 3 ROOMS, PVT. BATH. $17.00 PER 5 3, RMS. & BATH, GARAGE. EM 3-14 in i APTS. UPST 3 RMS. AND BATH. PVT. WELL heated. "AU util, $18, 266 8, Park.? 3 ROOMS AND PVT. BATH, 1ST. floor, front entrance. Util. furn., ret. FE 2-2706. 3 & 4 ROOM APTS. WITH PVT. hewly decorated, nicely furn., off street parking, pets. 20 Norton bath & ent., __couple only, no J ROOM, i8T _No drinkers. 72 Washington. _auire 95 Dwight. 7 ROOMS, . ee BATH AND PVT oT, New, N. Perry. FE 3 ROOMS AND BATH, private entrance, Electricity ana heat furnished. 1 child or baby welcome. $16 week. Apply 806 St. Clair Street. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 173 STAT \ FE 5-$262. . | &t. 3 RM. FURN APT. COUPLE ON: a 369 Osmun. FE 4-4750 ~ PVT. BATH AND ENT. 2 > famitz. Upper, FE §-8683 after 1. 3RM. APT TILE BATH, GARAGE. Employed couple. or 2 men, 1704 Crescent Lake Rd, Nr, Waterford ket 2 Hall 3 RMB. furnished, Coupie on) 75 PE 5-4032. p y. $75 mo. 3 ROOMS & BATH ell MODERN, an cHILDREN welcome se ik. Ra. ST FaONT 4 RMS. AND 5 RMS. ON DIXIE HWY. GA at Re or 2 children welcome. Cikan. $60. Euclid \ M.|A. BENSON CO. N. Saginaw a AIRS. 4 —— BATH r month, K G. Hemps' PE 4-8294. 6 PER MO. CH CHILDREN TAKEN, xe. | Orchard Lk: rm. house, _ive. ~ Available Immediately — EROME BUILDING CO. WE purchase. COZY HOUSE side, Brick 3 bedroom, gas heat, rooms, bath 4 toom small houses. Ge $10 per wk, McDonald street. M. A. BENSON CO. 549 N. Saginaw St, ae 4-2521 rE Spokane, modérn, full bese’ - bus OR FIVE RMS. $35 MONTHLY. OWN- 535. Pontiac § ROOMS MODERN A) AND GA- Ga- He Waterford, Lake Priv. FE 7 T Rooms AxD nate. ALLISON *5 oUvER 8ST. 7 rooms and bath, all modern. 4 4 decorated’ and floors sanded, cui. dren wi guar- antee. References a = head, Pensacola, 836, 2 Bedrms., base- flewood, Fl, Inglew 871, 2 Bedrms., gas heat, FOR RENT. PRE- fer adults,‘ Information at 200 Oakland. -| Siearka BLE LOCATION, WEST- arage, basement near General ffospital, PE 43101 DUPLEX HO ‘HOUSES. | LIBERTY & RGE CLEAN GARAGE HOUSE “Children welcome, FE 4-006. Lk Business paar EM }- LYNN 8T. 4 bedrooms, full basement, oil heat. 1's baths, oak floors, clean. steam heat, 45425 115 Seminole 3-6900 or MA __ INGLEWOOD, Se — 2 BDRMS., e, gas Th Pad rent, MAE 8’ 2 bdrms., garage. Very ee reek FE 5-6767 LARGE DUPLEX NEAR yi : § bedrooms full basement, gas 2 baths, close to HOUSE FOR RENT. DRAYTON Plains area. Tans pee OR aig sabout option to buy _____.WE__ 3-420 Sell - trade ag i. off Joslyn. Oak firs., Storm screens. . Lot “$ox130. +. ), terms. Income 9 room home, 2's baths off Oakland in _— Keeping rooms ‘rage. $10,500. terms. 2 Acres* Pontiac Trail —_ zie Payments. Option to Sylvan Lake Front i, car Be, Eee: Reduce Roy ; Annett Inc. Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 132 W. Hu PE 41557 MMERCIAL BUILDING, 6,600 sq. ft. for or lease. a — 5 > &w ~~ For Sale Houses 43 OFFERS b- | $500 Down * Rey vetocewanes ‘attrac- me. Good tte, living room mal e and °utility room, FA oii heat, laundry tubs, Vacant, $9,950, full price ranch home built » —_ —, room, oli fur- rental ents plus “gato — ch. OU or. - dining room, kitchen eng bath first floor, 4 rooms. and. be bath h wD. Pin. ished heat. sar pare, . bages, ane and” on en area, $23,- closets, tile family room wi with fireplace. automatic ol! } ag od REAL’ 23 EF. Huron TORE aera! 8-0466 aplum bin: ‘don Fila Near Baldwin & Howard. 7 rooms, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BIGHAM —- 2 bdrms., attached ga-| Designed for Living Is this individually styled - room bungalow — convenient to &t. Michaels eat, 1% car garage. included. SPLIT LEVEL Starter eons, 1104 sq. ft. plus basement area. Rough ee on Low _dn. it vy. EM for de- BI G HOME—$500 DOWN 1%’ baths, gas heat, some fur- niture. Full a. $6,750 with $62 roe tg Phone FE 44088 or OA an McCarroll —— 636 — 2 warms. big hools, Nice basement. GAS For Salé Houses 43 "Par dele Héeases “ale . KNUDSEN Indian Village Well located 4 bedroo car brick arage paved drive. Gal! Thorpe Street Located on corner lot, both streets avon is this T room and home with full basement and ¢ porch. House has oak floors eee oe “tietso0 car garage in this “fine” locat oa Elizabeth Lake Estates , co 5 room and bath home 7. full basement end stair to unfinished at- an You'll like i and we Twould oy to show t to you. §2,- down. WM. H. KNUDSEN REALTOR 244 8. Telegraph rd. PE 44516 aaa rm foment oo we i i e wi fe me ga privile = cons ready to = state. 10,959 with terms Home located on 2 fenced lots. Le “4 family rm. with fireplace, a 4 . © ¢, lake Fle woes Boe, et A rs ¥ rms. poe gy rs, stored it oil eon VALLEY BOF REALTORS T. Te. Trocke 1643 Union take Ra EM_3-4671 E. J. DUNLAP cusToM MODEL NOW 81.000 ese Blast years price f $17,600. FE 8-1196. "BUD" Li Close-in Suburban Two ! home with Silyer Lake priv- fleges. All rooms oversize. Two thermopane picture : es two baths (one ceramic poral attached two car ga- Polity A grand retirem spot. Priced ——— wits terms if desired Modern Housjag First time offered, spick & 8 3 bedroom home, “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor eat ees FE 5-1201 , Loveland — ye Cass Lake Rd. PE 4-1661 He BEDROOMS $500 DOWN 4 rms only $5,600 Plenty ot other good buys, terms Pee ie Ra ,000; $1, wn so severa other good 2 families, down. All furnish PW. DINNAN 6¢_W. Huron PE ¢2577 $84 PER MONTH $1,500 DOWN hile face brick 3 bedroom, full ment still avaliable. Jerome. Building Co. in, an draperi Must be en NEW 2? BEDRM. HOME. AUTO. oi! pee — t White Lk. Call Mr. Cook, Holly. MElrose 17-7327. FLOOR, 1 CHILD. “\CARGE 3 RM. Ds ge ts s ently or nor weekly. FE 4-48 LARGE 3 RM. LOWER APT. ae ern, newly decorated, heat, hot water, b po stove, janitor service. ren or drinking. Idea! he retired he NICE APAR cou PRES WANT A NT? pea is it.) Call 8-8638. ROOMS, em ger EM : No chil ‘TARGE 3 | _tor and stove furn, & BATH. oe water .. $85. FE 5-2864. & BATH. CLEAN, WELL F OR COLORED ROOMS:& BATH. Hi fi . Children "o. K, Cal PE 8435 ri _Apply 56 Jacokes St, St. & BATH UPPER in 9 family ee 49 Putnam FE are or RMB., ODERN _furnished MApie 5-5000. NEWLY on kt Bitte dren. NICE, CLEAN | APT. oT i8sT FL T FLOOR. Stove refrig. wtil. Auburn, ATED. 3 M ent bath, Near town. lities cate. " oeeeuel No chil- NEAR TEL-HURON for working couple, m rE +5203," Broker. = ia FE 28181. PVT. ist — e DON'T WISH FOR} MONEY! Make it easily through ‘Clasified Ads. To , eet, rent, buy, : swap, hire, # ORCHARD CT. APTS. 19 SALMER &T. — Pontiac’s new- cig develop- partments room abie. ante. eal & hot water fur- nished. Adults .oniy. Under Chnskruction bi gy oA A APPLICATIONS for 1 and ve _— for occu- poner “about pril 18 Bit oa MODE 2 bedrms.. Tile coe | beat. Zz SS only. FE 49 . bins and bath. Oil furnace. OR 3-1483 WEAR SCHOOLS. 2 BEDRMS. 16% 160 N. FR 21383 or FE| glassed NEWLY DECORATED, 5 ROOMS New 3-Bedroom Brick house), Full basement. Im- mediate 2. you can't go wrong. Vacant—$650 Down rents fon 1 JEROME ” BUILDING wie FE 5-6767 _ester Rds OL sak SMALL HOUSE NEAR 14 se & aoe Like new 3 bedroo: with 24 ft, living room & tiled bath. To include une new ECTRIC REFRIGE rok ad Galy $00 Gown pie . DRYER costs, SMALL HOM T. LAKE RENT OR LEASE LARGE 7 ROY ANNETT, INC. "RENT WEEKLY OR BUY basement, 544 E, Bivd, N Fo Se SAM WARWICK HAs 2 BEDRM. brick in bel Lake. Gas heat, WEST SIDE, INDIAN VILLAGE. Brick duplex —— room, din | {ng room and kitchen on first floor. 2 bedrooms and tile bath or second. Basement, laundry trays, automatic heat and hot . water Screens, storm windows, nice yard Paved street, Avail able March ist. $90 f month _Vasbinder r_ Inc. FE 38873. For k or Rent Rooms. ns 37 1 a APT REFRIG. GAS ter. 1 —ne—drteker i RM. LiGhT HoOUsERE 3300 Biiz, Lk, Ra, | so Poly 2 sLeEPING RMS. . FOR LADIES. FE 6618. , Tes REN Bp pane. or Prosar eall OOM home. Gas steam heat, furnished, or unfurnished. $90 per month. Beautiful 5 rm. brick home, Full . FE Ie a eg ly. ne a priv, Ww ease, 1. V EE 45000. PE 2-2105. * KINZLER | ) Evenings REALTORS ~|¢ APT. BD INCOME FOR COLORED 38. Huroa FE 8-0466.| Brings in $60 per week. 2290, _Open Evenings; And Sunday 1-4 with $2,000 down. FE 8-143 BY OWNER, New 3 bedroom down. $60 mo, Or $4,100 cash, FE 8-6934. orated, t a Equit, Boge cam or a owner, EM 72081. mires el ROCHESTER By owner ~ 3 bedroom brick & frame conch. oe by nee. Fagg road & “ Ginnee. & Theives Washer, Deer es Bh unfit nished setivilte ~ scaped storm 23,- 360 fa aio Ta et Brice. tenant bai, $12.- r home and room bungalow down plus closing _ L 670 W. Te WN open TOR, FE 4-3525 Storth. and screens, Gaeuten area. OR 3.3709. Soe MODERN 4 RM, INSIDE CITY, $5,000 with 8400 YEAR EAR ROUND HOME ON 3 BEAD- Priv., Fireplace, Bar- Grill. ona| us .* DRAYTON PLAIN: Th Jota __] arage too. 0. Hilltop site . on oho side. $2,000 es of extras. Two 56-8767 or WE _— for equity ia | —— Multi-Lakes Realty te ‘new fa a. LAKE a new furn’ s We have a 2-unit a ap A The Tout for ' wil | genome Hurry, $12,500. erms, Cc erce Rd. MA 4-1578 BROWN, L, PRICE — Lovely y terms, $10,250 REAL Maver a Choice lo- cation, Lovely iit. Oak ee "welt it ati. 1% car gar. Pull ment ee a, il base $11,500 FOUR BEDROOM - ern home only 3 Met firs., Pp 20 modern kitch: en with built-in oven and nee $12,050 BELL O Some inv ver ows Ex- Sea’ siete ting “aa tose home in trade. Ae sy elo on thle one, L. H. BROWN, ; Realtor. “totes LisTING =e your R TRADE -— cate in gs med Heights, 3 bes ¢ i ‘) ee + oe RS 2, NICHOLIE WEST SUBURBAN Two room, full bat large lot, trade or sell, terms. ree hardwood floors, oi] heat, storms and screens, Be 8 LOW DOWN AYMENT AND $600 DOWN Three bedroom, ol! heat, alum. storms and screens. yo 8 tae included. It's va- cant, ae only $650 do with ¥ No G Full basements, Le hard- choose: from. Call us for WE BUY & SELL NICHOLIE |: “WEST HUR ON STREET EVENINGS, FE 5-8183 ALL THIS FOR $395 DOWN!!! 3 Bedrooms, face brick ranch 2. basement, luxury ex- tras. Pav oot. Only two left. 1 WILL TRADE Ask About Option To. Buy BE Lh Building Co. ee $500 DOWN a 7 > 2. = ¢ part mode car or what ate you. Pe Sota. BUILD NOW and ent up. fine oo Al | basement coul beat, en- — Here is dye value 700 with Gant, W. BIRD, Realtor $03 ——~ National Bank Bid FE ¢42 Eves. FE $1308 3 — BRICK - 2 car garage. 2 focated “on een | Py aol weet: Fetes ie od ee REALTY 236 NN. Sa Eves, FE 27520. or PE 43300/ ROCHESTER HTS. In Rochester. Mich. BEDROOM ¥ ULL ‘BASEMENTS. $15,500 3 BEDROOM TRI-LEVELS bi As lw as $1150 down. Roger B. Henry, Inc. 511 Main 8t., Rochester OL 1-9111 Office — OL 1-007) Model BY OWNER VACANT for immediate session, Newly decorated, 2 drooms, bath, large. liv- en and utili oll hea dap with $500 down, — No closing costs ing. ta Baa EB gage Alan Call ater Liberty sf r 6:00 p.m, rty Ow, 5 & basement. gh taek oats possession. Pull price re 0,500, with terms Templeton, Realtor 2339 Crueers Lake Rd. ter 6, FE i YE AL LOOK aoe ea in ap- Rite ot _ majestic es = oven estrone cong Pp has Mi double “attached.” saber years ‘Home and income. | oom apart- and 3 roo: Ee nal Au- tomatic eat and do ir. Base- . Bi ie! fiities, This’ ni pay val ez. s wv pavaie acant. George R. Irwin REALTOR on eee home, Wood fa floors, picture re, window, full =p Be is not a pot caD ay or stop at Ties for information. We have lots available also, J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton Bivd PE 8-044] Open Eves 10 to 2 PAUL A. KERN, Realtor Tl'a_N. SAGIN PE 32-9208 “REAL ESTATE SINCE 1919" 2-0579, owner, after For the Large Family 4 bedrm. ranch home. Large living ., com kitchen & utility, cement drive a parking ares. e lot, ranch home aevek. focated opment at Walléd Lk, Convenient to schools, churches & & sapvins center ru price $12,300 $2,- ‘EMBREE & GREGG 1565 Union Lake Rd. : ea or EM ts RANCH, ~~ hina cent moi 2, 3-7928, i é and screens, Sandy beach with bar- —. $12,500 with low down pay- “GEORGE BLAIR ams TOR on 31301 - MDRATTON Pans Eves. OR 3-1708 3 $ YR. OLD. $4,800. Balance $3,700. re mo Trade for EM 3-5341, - $300 DOWN Bcement) Hxterfop complete, Don TWO RE-SALES BUY THEIR EQUITIES mae, ya 5 rr 5-6767 WE 34200 TE MICY WORTHABOUT es Will take bs cash. at be sold at one F. Ww. D DINNAN 66 W. Huron iF 4571 Evenings —Mrs. Naugel 43946 Huntoon Lake Very —- ry _—— bungalow. Ts. . Large living estibule e ture ashington side location” 916 BREWER {OSEEM F. REISZ, SALES MOR. Parke FE 45181 FE 8-0623 BD ied AP a 1-2815 eat ‘eaeata, ais Tre Kitch. | 9687 Dixie Hwy. te St, near Baldwin Rubber. Pontiac off Hatch- = reak Extra e232 5 ACRES * ioe bee Seek we 02 ecroom hove homens living | - as <. Immediate pe . git00; om Se rng month. S| Leslie R, Middleton B 188 N. aged 10003 GODFREY. Als metatE 5.1822 i @ patio, ° epar tion tor . ofl Prneat, conventent & churches, for _ BARGAINS! 400 DOWN 3 ROOMS A ND ATH. WEST, a —$650 PER MONTH. $350 DOWN 5 ROOM MODERN - 130 FT. LOT-—$60 PER MONTH. $350 DOWN- SROe SETH? ste $350 DOWN 3 ROOM MODERN - NORTE SIDE—#35 PER MONTH. R. J. VALUET, Realtor 345 OAKLAND A MULTIPLE LIS a Bet wang Erie hd —- LAKE. John K. IRWIN Babies, Babies, Babies ij ome N side. A real ‘Day's at ‘$13,500. oy better for would be an income. It's big (8 rooms) but it is "ecaied on Huron 8&t. A litle work would wale a income maker. Priced at ‘eal just $11,750, terms. John K. Irwin REALTOR Since 1925 313 West Huron St, * Phone FE 5-0447 A tne OFF F JOSLYN — 3 BED ‘$650 Down 6 ™ room inside the ctr. Pull be ger On pert Sto ta ral — 3 with berries. 4 block to a Only $10,500 with term Near ete Hey sisa war age. GILES REALTY co. $690 DOWN — Located 7 miles ‘othing Down gS Hai . i tT pail MACEDAY " LAKEFRONT. i eg = E F ~~ “COLORED bath. Basement, gas ood $12,900, E ic HAYDEN, Realtor PE 6-044) fag oett t 8:30 VICE -__ FOR COLORED a ee attractive modern two bed- with full base- porns _ SON REALTORS Phone PE 4-157 COLORED Why Pay Rent LAST CHANCE Bedroom Homes Only 3 Left rr} LESs Only ‘$230 down GI Low, w DONT MISS OPEN THIS WEEK ‘A Behind st. ms RONDALES a ESTOWN REALTY CIVILIANS $300 DOWN NO OTHER COSTs 3 bedrms., o + 0 _— new, full base paved. street, A per mo = VACANT—OPEN Walk in and a “ it and if FE Bilin with 58 Fe us H 3 i i af seed yi 33. 7 Fd STON 5 to > 4 : He ‘ * ey Be a ye GKY| FORD ee Se t9508" * kak — ESTATE An, Le aor matt # a ore raclous, dream only “ib Leslie A Tripp, Realtor sae Nor Ee os. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ON WANT PR RANCH? — Iuaury af & fie. br brie “alti: 4 azg a a 3 a7 i i 8 =e z : f ‘ repeat ie i “e interest. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 2 8. Telegraph Ra. Pass MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE DORRIS - 3 BEDROOM HOME, <3. 750 a a LAKE FRO home 24x42 on ag bedroom large dormitory up 12x! arage, workshop, ae and) shade, ex- ment" a s well as good fivable | Two HOME age located tg 44 its, nice ones ive tm pangalow moe ar? bed- base- sn . i attached garage. vi — rom nnd receive > owe bed home on Fear of lot, sell oF coo- sider amall home in. trade. OOTsIteen BLOOMFIELD» Tan be reproduced. f0 $11,600 DE down. MTs — * $1,437. 50 DOWN i Sah Seta PONTIAC REALT zo | Baidwin m1 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE THORPE 20 STREET Yes, here's ole of those old- pe hom School, “Plenty: of room, nice rd and garage, new Lenox ba air —— We don't get very ea for sale in nis choice city lo- cation—call for price and terms. INCOME... * __For Sele Houses cae Elizabeth bake Estates. oe =" stours WM.-A. ~~ Zeta KENNEDY Best Buys - REALTOR od . I Ww. +1006 ‘ ” ps sae, “a AY ‘ T ay H s t qd LAKEFRONT CINPStCAC sar ha Rat 105 E. BROOKLYN hg best material % deal home tor family with chil- bath. plus 2 bath: room, “dining room,” itchen, |. Sith haw-r, 3 ream apart ete ace e at a ciee, Pons a ——— and heater ogg - a 63 and 65 ee ; sale feet ssi aged wert: an VH IEI Here {s & real buy. Two units of | - tt cS haere down oy, tal &@ britk terrace. Six rooms & 4. aneh. a bedroome si: iF = : basements, coal heat $180 mo. Io oe AND ACRES 00 .-@ each. Bal, Cute 2 bedroom ranch style oer Jaye 9 = ae Shown by ap- home with eze- 216 S. SANFORD Smailt barn for.‘horses. {ive sit mo ene teace| | Eats, ce Some fe in top shape. ree "ped: coun. ores 4 . rooms &, bath up; living room, dining area, utility fer gly wo Blige Carper: ; . ie ing, ‘plastered walls, picture $00 wit buadhelnassaalel aus sstove,” gus. heat sass AUBURN HEIGHTS Tied ip ee wfMi's| Gs eat ot ramet bus ing Only si0soy" wiin s2s00 | > sere lot, only i down. __ grated. eis dws fér oc | TT N. Saginaw St. Ph, FE 34-8165 i “Open til 6 p.m. CITY HOM E All the conveniences are re, ¥ er, paved street, c¢ to se 7 + bus See. } real ren ater here only $495 down. Immediate pos- session. 5-ACRE HOMESITE h and Fith lots me fron , in scenic hills north of ston. Good accest in al) weather. Only $800 down. : HORSE FARM Metamora area, 70 acres. ‘ live bed- stalls, tack room, et or Yednge at le a. down will han- Edw. M. Stout, Realtor tor your retirement, 9 rooms | and 2 ARDMORE STREET vais ee oak ee side areas, IF eB. count for MAKE A DEAL LAKEFRONT Excellent sand beach. Life can ~~ “and sum- ? Bateman, Kampsen REALTORS _ FE 4-0528 386 «8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. BY OWNER — 3 MONTH bn — in ka gh fireplace e : ae, ad you, $i4, fo Mul 9-4-2 sag Cor. Mansf ield ‘terms berry ment| OUR NEW LOCATION —— INCOME pa Oak floors, plastered f-car garage, Call information. walls. for more 000 DOWN ee 2 pecteom bun- ‘alow, Lares fring” room. Gaodeas kitch- insula’ s2s.-| NORTH END Fine fenced yard, na . quiet street, Near bus chools. Full price pa.see. ot, fait Bath Sarak ee sce, two thermo: room, other selling appointments. Orr Jost) here ome of the neatest, Yet ot, ere sone most be Beautiful oe. chow. “DORRIg & SON REALTORS . FE 5-9471 IM WILLIAMS ee with terms. IVAN. Ww SCHRAM _ REALTOR OCR ATE aA Dae NCH aad assume GI pay- r BEDROOM RA 750 down j cent contract. REMODPLED a2? 5 aint Sew tees ROCHESTER Sparkling whit? spacious 4 bed- el Home, situated on four ee tae land, scaped acres, with iene” | eee asked \ Located corner idon — i Blue Beech Rds. Appointment Leslie A. Hopkins, Realtor 1415 Main iL 3-0321 ‘MILLER NEW 6 Ft ‘yaneh home. . floor ceiling Windows h —— Re- , attach 2 car re, felted 10 oe ie in the Bi "Builders show and it is e mingham. “only $17, EAUTIFUL ts the word we use 1953 Sea a teeta ation. William Miller - goes FE 2-0263 Huron Price, $10,000 term a GR Partridge “BIRD” TO SEE ear | Wolverine Lake P ‘Owner moving out of ‘or immedia’ ae te sale W seek ront Only $1,700 down s this at- tractive 5 m - sided home west 100. foot water. front lot. — We make m: 10 A \LO ANS—8000 to $1,500" For any purpose. on ‘homes, modern or not, NE Sell temeeded belongings for cash through nes, ost, 1 ‘TFE 2- 8181. come additions of 2 fo "tou ro 3 or ee 4 To build 2. arene pag on a nents Any Proper. a "Pua 3 she “ae 33 Oxf2 Felt Base Rugs $3 % hieabel e of HET Bown” MAID TILE, FM Wall Tile 380 rot Hove Ain. ga ie | i ls a. eee if “GE FREEZ ntly damaged). R. BB Co. I « He WOOL CARPETING dinette set. MI 4-164. at | rig. “gies | vers. must sell. $125. be PARLO} Bog EE Bi | RG Re | Crosley Deluxe Rae beret ea . UPRIGHT CRE | e per wk. sas Wwhiripee!. ow per mie m reg : 159. wi - . MY M50. APPLTANCES, HIFI ALL NEW Consoietie, AUTO T i 01 OR WASHER. f arner e¢lectric— eer's powers. Ra EM BLOND Heres, “CONSOL: a —$0R S181 Com conitres -| TIMED OAK. DOUBLE BED, OF; Money back guarantee sHICcK's a — =| RCA iv" Console | ‘PHA TERMS-¥ og) SURPLUS LUMBER & 8 eS and mattress. Excellent genition. 438 Call alter §:00. OR ODER DINING NEW ra Bi, Sn nak, BARON, ce a > . ' over bo U vy aoe Tet $14.05 up Ww ALTON TV. nS Ee. Wi ae REBUILT WASHING MACHINES makes. Guarantees Thyle Fiecitie. 303. N. Johnsen, FE i Cyn Seger FOR SALE. ROSE COLORED, wii L To Wai"; Oue i4 17, one ‘pace beater, studio ewing Center. PE Siegler Oil Heaters Twice the heat at pais the cost. “GApE-SUY USED MERCHANDISE SALE TV New picture _, | Sag. Foe A waiver’ Years old, rebuilt MAYTAG Washer "Spa BW. eORURON ete TABLE TOP G. ota. mangle, Just $35, ~TRADE- -IN DEPT. Guar, electric washer Table uaratined gona | Ofer, $39.50 e new, Electrie Co ron. Used LS aes In Dept. Aha range taste Davenport & / /enair se : 50 30 re | Se hot wee heater bunk beds « complete ot FU RNITURE | 361 8. Saginaw FE 2-915! |e, Tv. 19 98 ; UP; RC BEA, COLOR rm. set .......638. 4S ECONGMY | ; 2 chests; phonograph sat aces tat wae bk WASHER. . “REPG.. $35; O1L oaee heater, $20; Gas stove, $15: . washer dryer, $125; 17" : ‘garden tractor, b229, 1 il take $75. PE 62766.) _* WALNUT xO Garena? EFT. $120. ‘ ALL QUALITY P + ot M a" Used ent ' Like , priced to seil Used Some pit see New Ad ok ~ com 6340 Hishiand d Rad. M30) oR} a t0e furnish- | " Pee ee ind Mowers $49.95 up ACTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE ‘Sree eee: Wolverans wn Co. 329 8. Paddock _____s FE 20784 fo. oor 6 payments, $11 16, Michi an ‘se 7 IN TELEVISION IN fae Center PE 223 | GOOD {RORKING | coNDE perer CASE i ss $8 430 rr. bes sane is | - . FRAP? sWiKG ; SS ads a ps4 ¥ ; See ry parece, Ho t, Permiien prambing and ele- “Biche abies os iF Taundfy trays, stand teveets, ical cuppton. Secs daz. Sees, i UNDO coos peek e-- y : 5 | Floor Lan aoe Lene ‘ #5 to 4:00 Monicaim Ere AEs ERCMANGE) _ui'teew bepeae ge, _ | et tee eemietis “tos sOMKLAND FORNITURE, = SEAPH oan hoy Ea UBS Cameras, salen 61A ‘BEDROOM SUIT GRTLY : anutseturer’s | WE BUY. recorders. each Revie cevennee | hate ghee oat” ss ase Ey 5 . | > Huren rey, walnut. e Panel * a polly nwcogy og comply and ~ ANCHOR FENCES » Sale Madeal Geads 62 down, FHA roved \ pare with al others. Some seis! Page ESTIMATE FE SOI. | ACCORDIONS, LOWEST PRICES. Secs cg tS omen eam See re nee | aa ee Ee BAKER LIVING ROOM PURNI. Séce>. Hot water and boil 3 LE. WiLL ture, reasonable. 643 sorters, Sarawace, om = Bloomfield Hille. MI 4021 coeak an oh | CASH FO: RADIO: _erating te Sak ae ee COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR. 6} #683 LAPEER R FT. GOOD att gs NG CON- BA OARD DITION. $63 OR 3.5313 | including biueprints a & CHAIR: = OIL \e : heer a3; Sgn, a: At CASH WAY bed: air, 90; Maytag wash- er—like new, | $46: le 0, : : large crib & mattress, $i¢. x8 plasterboard, parson’ s “rurnite re, 42 Orchard | Roe’ bund , Lake Ave. 25 tb, EASY AUTO WASHER & DRYER. | }5%'2%, | refg. electric stove, sewing ma-) 9.0" S$ | ORs chrome or PE 8-0006 Munta 21" TV, ry ren nae Rn _3-2001 of ht pitts =S5TR PRIGIDATRE, Fi REELER R TOP. xt door Schmidt 1 e i SLEMAN Of, FURNACE SUTT. . PLAYER RE- ' Sell PE 9-sbe3 sess “te “ait able Yael 4 rooms, resseushle. HS pete itmeyer, OL oon =~ _ FREEZER - ~ UPRIOnT. Feestr and ext a a Tay RST . years 287 sauleea ea fag mad doors “luk” Ari: i sere Cra ee a .M YyX3 ts brass pair...... Fiuorescent Lake rOOr rf bag = ntuewe Ck ORY REBUILT WaTéR at ia aa per epee 100 al Lt : * : Bose ets RUCTRIC |. | Cofting tile colors” f. : E_43573 | “Ask for our 4page “Cash-W Fccaee| rial one vi uD rinsie ethic, a ;ANTED aes NORTHERN - “"ORRIS MSI UILTt A i. bo TMBER co .} MS. —Teosegeeh ee thr PARTS 4 i es 5 conn a Pe Wi cond Farm & serene DESOTO WA Darrel. See . Tractor Co. Boats Trailers & focessaries. jo & heater. 2 Winchester 270 caliber. 825 Woodward OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES tone paint ..... is" OR 38812. won soit or Se iS 396 Orchard Lk Ave FE 2-020 | es Yisulnted under: ) G-H loader. Hour Meter powe: WANTED wae vat a act: ge. = ; ie Hest “olfer” 814 Lone’ ives USED SAILBOAT 2 tone like new ... d, Miltord. MUbual 362. sai Call OR _3-7753 ey ARM MACHINERY — NE , : he isl used. Pros Oliver Sales on M24, | Transportation Offered 87 3 eee § a bad PBL LOLOL LLL AL AL LLL AL” Re TTL | "eens sun, 1 Orn 5 0; Act Now! Ferry Sebvice tue OR 34254] HOMER HIGHT ‘MTRS. : TRUCK GOING NORTH, PART “1§ Minutes From Have your eq OP & DELIVERY | _loaa. Either way. PE $6806. | OXFORD, MICHIGAN _OA sae for é 's work, Our; WANTED: sTUD: TO SHARE | 1950 : NS, trained mec 8 will SAVE - TO OR HIGHLAND | sonable, FE 35-7784 ¥ BLES & MONEY! | PARE JUNIOR COLLEGE IN merorren| HOUGHTEN & SON | fetoute tramar teite| Volume Sales With holsters 1: a Ithica =kcie io ergusopn ot 19761 CALL PE. 3 PARE AT 5:30 p.m MEANS : 2. E 40006. TARPAULING — ALL SIZES | GARS FOR CONNECTICUT, MEYERS ALUMINUM BOATS. JOE SA & N SURPLUS. FE 2-0022 gen ey New York. gas a Volume apeary motors, Complete line | MeCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS. NEW| sace. PE 23215. FE 20823 after ice fishing tackle and Uve “ana used W _-Mlilier Garden | _ 6 p.m, . _ t a PSL § Woodward (N North of 14 Mi). Bir| Wanted Used Cars 88 savings POPPA ™ ‘Across from le Mile Sa | Ae CES SCRAP & OLD Center esa “MeCalloch Chain Saws | “tan Gn sons * 3 oe By - we ae 2s : AS LOW AS $167.50 AS MUCH AS $3 JUNK AND .s Glsage Deluxe git, Mey On| we ine tradomte andere E2| np eas Pr S00 eave | RSET Ohya is ahs.” Basketball shoes, $3 We have a ew good used chain ie Goer v8 super yes FRAPS we suomaw or, | Me eeance cea enge tat | a ARE TOU TR Eg 1 Gi bal tess 7 N. SAGINAW ST. KING-8 “; pre Tera owe pare i. BROS : € spbed Rae il Pe + Opdvk HOW wo YOU LIKE A NICE Mt Chev “Hetop “44s. sare ¢ Sand, Gravel & Dirt _ 66 in » Ot Opis? 43112] TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL | MANY MORE TO CH FROM pet ar FoR. YOUR UITY IN YOUR JUST YOUR CAR xn 4-1 TOP son! USHED sTong.| McCULLOCH SAWS "9 MODEL CAR? Gill. Earl HOw! yy) Sri, na” ST eons ALwAYs O30 OLDER MODELS H ki Ch W4 TOP sol r SELECTION OF REW AND t D USED a - CQSKINS \ eV. Hida cre Press one ; ; ig EROM E . “Oakland County's 4 WANTED: 1 ROW CULTIVATOR ‘Bright Spot’ ‘astest Grawing : PHOS wae ar model °3 Alls ‘ls Chalmers trac-| Orchard ipo Cass FE 8-0488 Fastest G ” 8 OLive Dealer! | : C ASH 6751 Dixie Highway st M15 snow removal. Auctio Sales 97 MAple 5-6071 Gpen Nite s “ll &. n : ; TVET VR _— AVERILL'S NEED C ‘58 CHEVY) 4 DR. pra WAG- ssilawen hd G1 tb oar WILL SELL COMPLETE HOMES} Sep, it then bring it here tor Standard shift. good condition. Pe gg ber) "of odd lots. MY 2-1521. t0/ G0less. ee SWE Briced to sell FE 3-0446, 94 W, es i For Sale Housetrailers 78 | "E2068 __ FE GHEY EDAWN OOGD GORD. as POL a re ~~ . HICH $8$ PAID FOR JUNKED omy Per T too asc 5) ANDERSON. 36 FT. EXCEL- ._Joe_ Arthurs EM 3010 REAL BARGAINS AT | ome TS me Bud Shelton’ Motor Sales ~ __Wood, Coal & Fuel 67 sisted os & up. FE $1413, , BE => a ANY KIND AT Vandersyt Lumber Mill. Mill now under new 3398 eae on rental payment ba- AILER EXCHANGE La-/ $0_8. Telegrape PE 2-320 OXFORD TRAILER SALES Gardner - Michigan Arrow Richardson - Holly | eR, A . lee. 1 gute 8, ot ‘Lake .o #E ARE BOLD OUT OF trailers. efor To. per sce f 6 ont _ We bse Ho a inp + Bag Bo Rd., Holly MEilrose 46771. AC SETROITER PONTIAC CHIEF ~ PONTIAC CHIEF NT Fee ¥ NG - AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. -~ ee) AKC REGISTERED COCKER pups, Some f parents: able, ‘Need Need Zimmer Gererat aT When ing 1 finest it’ tbe. isu Fomine Sit ae in nila, We welcome -— ences Also « eat omen of g00d used mobile ee at bar gain prices Bob | ‘ | Hutchinson | a" je “Homes Sales nant a Le Us. ae 4 tee oe Saat Pontiac TRAILER EXCHANGE MOBILE HOMES Anderson - Regal Silver Dome - Palace FURNISHED WOBTL Hones | © ‘Pays top dollar by models. Cor, Auburn . EF. Biv pa od See reset M. Motor Sales For dollar -on iste model cars H -_ OR 3160 WE TRADE DOWN Are you tired of wc PAYMENTS"? iow would ——. Le = a in your bk, 8 oF a8 or ‘86 i, naar to choose Always. 2 jer modeis OPEN ‘til ip PM. » | We buy ‘54 through 57 mode) cars “Terome’'s’ "Bright Spot’ ‘Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 WE NEED CLEAN USED CARS CARS. Wh! pay ths -highest cash dollar. bsel trade up or own. Bee "R&R MOTORS 12% Oaklaad FE. 4-3529 WED. SHARE CARS "@ THRU us "3 WIDE LOW | AS __$3.005 "AUBURN MOTORS RISON || CORNER PIKE & EAST BLVD. = ee Se 2, zs =e? Used Truck Parts 89A k Parts 89A Bottle Ga rns "| - Parts and Supplies ALL MAKES AND MODELS ” 8 in io aan tee ators 7 en | Heater. Oxford Mtrs : bar § 8 A ose PES OS. RO wall & DP. = weekdays. OL 1-184. %6 210 CHEVY. OVERDRIVE. Leathe: ry ‘See Our. Large Selection i CHEVROLET \°56 Bel Air Hardtop $1595 Tr upholstery, R& H. rE 56 BEL AIR, 2) werglide. Low A — en hice’ $31 a Lit OR 3: anata e = “I'm broke! " get © 1000 by HEA Serine, ‘Couln't you invite the Wilsons over so I could them_tonight?" = __ ‘For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 1 ALWAYS A WIDE SELECTION OF TRADED IN ON THE ALL NEW CHEVROLET. 1955 CHEVS ........... P9005 & up 1996 CHEYS $905 & up 1957 CHEVS ............ $1386 & up “North Chevrolet: HUNTER AT WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM id MI 4 3735 "34 DODGE SEDAN Green Es. y $605 $36.06 PER MONTH BRAID | “MOTOR SALES EALING STB. MOTOR Mu an 7 7s. "44 FORD 2-DR. This is an 8 cyl. Customiine. R&H, very sharp lowner car, The brice ri bt, and we will be « PEOPLES AUTO SALES ootond FE a ABSOLUTELY NOM NO M cy DN. vmeus of $24.80 mo. ean C Mr. Parks at __MI 47500. a Turner Ford. a ube, Price Is Right! nice - ms th Remy clean RA 2 a pass. car . Sins Romer s Sales & Servi ice 965 Auburn PE 2-9565 ‘55 ne RE, BRAND jose ECONOMY CARS. 22 UBURN. etn WILL ACCEPT Outboard motors, boats, appii- ances, a cameras, etc. As payment a. a gooo ured car. z BILL SPENCE i353 DODGE CORONET «¢ DR. automatic, $475 Clarkston Motor Sales | LES CHRYSLER PLYM > Clarkston, Mi ch Phone MA esti SWEPT-WING DODGE Braod new ‘8 Dodge 2dr. sedan, “Soper CARS & TRUCKS STATT'S MOTOR SALES 1957 DODGE CORONET HA Loaded = with DEAL Radio, Heater, Powerglide. Black Paint. 56 Bel Air 2-Door $1495 ae. Heater. Powerglide. 2 tone i] i i be EVROLET '56 Station Wagon $1495 Radio & Heater, 2 Tone Blue, ET .. $1395 Aros VROL. 55 Convertible Radio Heater, Powerglide. . CHEVROLET 55 Two-Door .....$ 995 Heater « CHEVROLET 54 Four-Door Radio, Heater, Powerglide. CHEVROLET . 54 Convertible ....$ 895 Powerghde. GE! Ay _Rent Trailer Space 79): For Sale Trucks + MOBILHOME ESTATES. Pe front and playground. EM Only 15 minutes — jhito trailer sales. Base Tate $20. Phone MYrtle 2-4611. 80 Auto Accessories PUREE oe wy: | Selene igt HAY oa STRAW GRAIN. besrset._ 5 A 5.0668 ville, ALFA AND OTHY, MIXED 1 Never wet, MU 47416, ai TYPES OF HAY. isT « IN cutting, corn. te rain, __fiver, OA 8-2179, Fireplace 2 EP, fr. COMPRESSOR. LIKE new. — DUAL. CARBS FOR '49— 53 FORD. ve. EM Pp » PE 2-7252 month. Ne on. assume ee ° GxroRD MOBILE MANOR FOR | _Harold Turner Ford. rd Lo 9-400 . RE MANOR FOR | Ce GEE GAUGE GOOD oe 6.13 2 condition, FE 8-8426. ry “= Ra. | *92 $232 PER OA. month. No down. assume A yments. ttom; Where isa vaeation—72 _Firoia Turner Ford Lf wooo lovely acres meludes « private | ‘53 ‘3 FORD 1 TON PICK Bis. lake s ‘ing, good i y FORD F 3 ue rT m money do Rain’ Contact scoop Mil Kilion, r 2 1947 } INTERNATIONAL P PICKUP, $125, 1507 :_Stome § a. ; *83 BECK WIL. SON Mis, ORTONVILLE, MICH ‘4 i CHEV. PICKUP, EXCELLENT INSTALLED FREE _ ED. WILLIAMS #31 8. Saginaw at Raeburn _ Auto Service ‘81 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car. Cylinders rebored. Zuck Ma- chine Shop, 23 Hood Sale Motor Scooters 82 good job. FE 2-8181 is the | iN Want Ad number | é Bird Hatche: 2489 Auburn Ra. Mufflers, tail starters, gen- FE 465'.. eratoers, carb A.-M and sel a. Ue aR. PE) potters ERBACKS AUTO PARTS py ae eT ic "Sharon Almas. 4281, Québec. ne es TROPICAL . GOLD FIsH,!,. TIR Parakeets & 3. Pred Pel) pa ee ees, 0250 UP We mon. > Be; Central Ave., off a ? STATE TIRE ES ee eee on ee. MY 2-1601.) 503 8, Saginaw St PE 4-0687 _Spen eves. Ni A ae x a BLACK. x, Exchange: New Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 67) x 15, $13.95 plus tax, exchange: ee tire uaran- DOGS, CATS BOARDED. — FE iaw PE 40s re Sales. ae |) graph, Tene. 318 8. Tele! 5)" 5016 6 PLY FIRESTONE __tites. Used 3 months, FE 43136. ’ STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRES ‘Hay, Grain & Feed 7 traded in on General Saf res. Up te Fe id cent off, Black or 1ST, CUTTING HAY FOR SALE. White W Phone FE iti Very special, $505 full 56 Gs Chev: V-8 ‘2 ton pickup with long body. New truck appearance. Priced to se Just your car or truck down, Haskins Chev. 6751 oon Highway et M15 Aple Open nites till ® 1952 GMC . ‘1 TON. PANEL $350 LARRY JEROME ccs A ForD DEALER oo DUMP ara PER “MO. 4 MA o money down assume pay- ments tac. George Mi “og Haroid er Ford, PONTIAC'S — CENTER GMC RETAIL BRANCH ir a :|087 | CUSHMAN #ige* EXC. Oakland oe Cass con 2 63942 ‘S33 INTERNA Li | awpESUSEMAR 80 Boe device “pick. eee cond, 905. Pe 12 B. PADDOCK cy ike) FE 4-4246 For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Mercy 8 83 1951 BUICK HT) DYNAPLO Ww, Rae. F "your dint oy, Davigeony 5 Assume ym $3.65 im 951 EV : ‘Boats & Speen a 85 ABSOLUTELY reer honey DN. & mo, EG ; Gal cr at _| i CentuRY Boats == | $a", Sip fe Turner Ford, ; F 00d ~ Aluminum ; ma: 888s BUD SHELTON SiN ND LAKE SALES OFFERS. - FE 4-7121 . ae W. Huron pense ‘57 Cadillac Me ier acacs 4095 56 Olds 4 dr Hardtop 1695 Fix rOR com. A Buick . Hardtop cise ieee ano 'S3 Buick # lly SEs 05 BD. BE iy OR B+ = = * ¢; tn power. : $1298 Rr Chevrolet, Sedan ican Be | Harrington Boat Works | 3% Ford 2 dr. Fordomatie .. Hibs 1800. §. Télegraph Road | {36 Ford 9 4 + $1075 .| PE #e03y mn Su ee | 4 Bulk ajiardton ‘Century : 9 tine Siarchiet |g #95 > oO ; ord 4 ‘Fordomatic $5 75 , 2 ntiac, XU oe $.36s Ags to. ‘sell, alleg find al 4 Ponti ag: Bud We “ition Sales Aubirh at) East. Bivg. FE #9663 90 | PONTIAC RETAIL oo 210, = STAND- a ae E 83230. “8 CHEV. UB FORE. RUNS foesa. $40, 582 Lebaron &, FE ‘57 CHEVY. V8 *DR. R&B. PG SEE McNEAL 635 8. Woodward MI 42042 BIRMINGHAM DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER _ | 80 CLUB COUPE Desoro, Goop _comd, PE FOR SALE aa TRADE °S$ FORD _HT_ Customized. PE 8-0313. meneame tite -at ae FORD CONVERTIBLE WITH oy By . set § clean — ea = after 5 pm. FE 2-3366 ._~_ pon ag Se FoM., $100 manta: Yen S-76i5. * over’ pay- 1953 ere a ee eee ms wr ™ tacky, i Auto Sales 193 "5. Bagi- naw, FE 4-2214 "51 FORDS, 1To CHOOSE FROM. The Bargain Lot. MI 6-4456. HURON MOTOR SALES ALWAYS A GOOD SELECTION OF a ED CARS $52 W HURON PE 22641 1956 FORD FAIRLANE, R& H, WW tires. Thunderbird engine. FOQM, 18,000 miles, oo — tion, reasonanle. ‘96 Ford V-8 Pickup $948 North Chevrolet 89 MM = =6MY 33730 Lk. Orion | ! Pontigg Sal Sales 1938. Pontiae 4 Dr ra | wears teste | fe ws reas Baas YE < “CY OWENS FoRD 55 OLDSMOBILE HOLIDAY COUPE . $1495 “cy” OWENS 147_8._Sagina ___FE 5-4101 {OBILE For top quality new car trade-ins come to Suburban Mtrs. OLDS DEALER 565.8. Woodward Birmingham Satisfaction IS OUR GUARANTEE NO MONEY. DOWN romati new tires. te Spa . $465. 724 Oakiand FE 43529. SPEC TAL gph bmn v4. R & Seg Atr ed, Power steeri pow- er on es. Like new. Ae ‘down, onth, "7 Rambler ‘Station bi gaa Radio. auto, trans. 6 cyl. . $1905 *s3 Nash Station Wagon heater, trans, $1005 * Ford station Wagon, Pull power, 2 Panenge: “8? Country Squire § passen- At Ford ‘biation “Wagon, bee 1724 re ee eT | SAVE > SPECIAL ‘ST Plymouth toa ér.. Can't be told Yess cs Cee eee eee ere "65 Ford 2 dr. Radio, heater, ares owner. sae be " New ive gas 4 mech Gos ne. $295 ; Rees BS ‘$3 Nash fe tee. st Rasen a wee is 63 Ambase: besccdadyss eee ‘Birmingham "Bootie slarchiel Conv Rant i age. 81585. — aie TER AT 8. WOODWARD R&R MOTORS * BIRMINGHAM MI_ ¢2735 | %¢4 Ookland FE 4-3529 a FORD STATION WAG WAGON 4 DR. ‘31 CHEVY, GOOD MOTOR,| P&H, her 6 Ww. $2,000. “FE good transportation, $100. ae ater & p.m. 5-5304. : OWNER, EXC "56. FORD, 0 PAS. 1957 CHEVY 210 smRIES — 2 ger, te Country Door-Black. “Mtandard shift, Pow- we. 28,000 miles" F 4 en er-pack Overdrive. WW tires, ra-| —WW. extras, $1,450. MI 6-245 dio and heate inal owner.| "56 FAIRLANE 2 boon. Rs 10,000 miles. Pune 4-8761, mente, ww. Spotli Meet | ‘Sl CHRYSLER . PRs STATION | }j,*arp, Get our orice on wager 451 es ee sil =| ee sie vépssteoeee sel Conv, .... 57 Ford F’Lane + SO gg 56 Merc. H’top ....$1577 56 Buick ede +++ $1477 55 Rambler soe wee 55 For 2-dr. V-8 ...$ 877 54 Buick 4-dr, .....$ 777] 54 Dodge V-8 4dr, -$ 677 53 Chev. H’top eee Bs 53 Chev, PG Sai. vs8 537 53 Plym. Cl. Cp. ...$ 377 52 Plym., Cp. ie 327 50 Plym. 4-dr, ind 277 Sl Pont, 4dr. ..4...8 '}49 Pont. 2-dr. Hyd. ‘$ Ln ee hee eee es Nest rat en a 62 Oakiend ‘ave, PE. $-4201 seperate _aaee 20K" QUALITY USED CA: New L HANOUTE CHEV— Boies 82 Ford. Club Nice. LAKE ane MICH. a Ep "33 Dodge V2. ware 8 Sharp. 1852 HUDSON ct r Y"No MONEY £ DOWN. Assume Rew Kin a ie = ans. eee “ooh SP Sas | 0 * Pan Bs Buicks. Reasonable. Ta ee ase tne own eie | ECONOMY USED CARS 32162. 22 Auburn off Saginaw FE 42131 53 Su t Hudson soe, canto seat se cere IN WEATHER LIKE THIS = id onea a Lo: ’ ge sno ‘plow. , dl ay My ISN T IT ae Sa wc. WoseR) UP neh Seni erent “Keeet s Sales & Service kei eae 695 Auburn Ave. FE 2-0655 CAN REDUCE YOUR CAR Pontiat Community ae, ee Finance Co, FE 80421 7 "aes ‘33 Ford Sedan Oliver $695 j ‘33 Oldsmobile “ss” 95 Motor Sales oe kes WILL GIVE THE $425 FOPLE WHAT pein EE ~ $205 THEY WANT 51 DeSoto Sedan $245 Pair prices—liberal trade-in al- 8) Nash 2 Door lowances—bank rates —courteous seerse Gell severing abd uus's $195 “beeres by a ears br ad dey ~f ‘32 Piymouth 2 Door ; $175 'S1_ Buick 4-Dr: Sed. $ 195 or eta, flow, runs real oo “tat ne "S31 Pont. 2-Dr. Sed. $°195 $245 DELUXE $e 8—radio & heater, Hy- ag chenass “53 Olds 4-Dr. .....$ 695 _. $245 Saewetse Sb] Se me ta choose se. from. . ” $26 55. Buick “Century $1295} bed penny 2 DR. HARDTOP-Redio & heat- ~ Dyvafiow. ay oe oe ee. ‘35 Piymouth 2 Dr. © "36 Mercury M'clair $1595 : $445 Eagan ona ool eg = ‘82 Ford V# $395 56 Buick 4-Dr, $1795 ‘$2. Chevrolet 2 Door SEDAN ~—Power ecrtne, brakes, . seats and windows. Loaded. Tu- 5 = © ‘60 Pontiac 2 door 36 Ford 2-Dr. Save 5 ain ho soo, "body bel ‘M4 Chevrolet 56 DeSoto 4-Dr, S. $1 305 $1895 Pomer tee co rr) om et Age | 4 Ford sepa nat -$ 695 DR. SEDAN } & heat- pig iomatic, ‘ei i sharpie, 54 Buick ana: soo 99S 4 DR. SS. &. heater, Dynaflow. -A one beauty. "53 Buick Convert. $ 795 = la radio a a tires, ‘56 Olds “88” 4-Dr. age con| ai ‘white “ures, "his This ‘won't ea 54. Pontiac St'chief $1295} 4 DOOR -—Radio & heat- dramatic & real nice car. Ey Buick. ee We Need Cars! Ask for Mike Flynn, Ray ves or 54 4 Pontiac 8 Wag. $ 995 ((48-Plym, 4dr... aes EE ‘ RIEMENSCHNEIDER - Orchards Lake rab, su Maney Pe a FE 2-101. Open Eves ‘86 Olds 98 4 Door ‘36 Cadillac Sedan DeVille $1895 "56 Buick Super Hardtop er $1695 . 86 Pontiac Catalina $1595 "38 Buick Special Hardtop $1395 ‘86 Chevrolet Hardtop $1395 "MO Pord 4 Door v8 ‘35 Paes Bet Air _ $1095 "S* Pontiac ¢ eo . gis: Super Sedan 38 : ” PE «he a § 1995 “8 oxide De tan oheee See ates eee f § Plymouths : 1958 $149 DOWN OR TRADE IN 86 5 et oh 11. TAXES AND ‘38 PLATES ee steaesnsed 4 3, OP sas ina Sonate ‘ ALL MODELS: AVAILABLE "56 ga Meter, + pees SEDAN, radio & ‘heater, $47.50 PER MONTH flow, power equipped. - SPECIAL PAYMENT PLAN | ‘Ss, 886s PY ONTIAC from $1198 SCHUTZ MOTORS 3 core and 6 doers. CALL EDDIE NICHOLAS |S} CADILLAC #3 EO ang At Midwest = ius car is low Mdina’ le 6). PLYMOUTH 4 DR. CRAN-| oo Ral priced at ‘pede ee ie BE sa : R a & See “WE | FINANCE re si saat moro pee aie dy aac 2 sever of eugioes, PB sain. “nae gON, DEVILLE pe gem i3e.| “toes or, Re ag pyar wn. | 52. OLDS AY a wel! A ES Herel Turier Pata" See UICK RIVIERA CPE ..... 8895, ar ‘power. radio & heater and’ automatic. See Our FINE Used Cars AT LOW WINTER }3 Sa Prices | "gaceemad dante vt BEFORE YOU | Sait tet BUY | 16, Wilson Pontiac-Cadillac 1350 N. Woodward B'ham MI 4-1930 1 PO PONTIAC 4-DR. 30,000 ACTU- al miles No money — CHECK YOUR DEAL With Volkswagon recede ke | BAS PH. FE 2-2566 | _ North Chevrolet HUNTER AT 8. WOODWARD CAR FAT MrETS oo suRDEN. BIR) : 4-7735 to some PONTIAC Lake ( Orion Mok Sales AUTO BROKERS iN RD. " Pai Club, —lanncunY MY 2-611 | 53 2. 4 PLYMOUTH 1953 4 DR. SEDAN. Good shape, EM 3.2074. 1957 PONTIAC £T " CHIEF, CA’ ae 9,000 pi ng Loaded. BIG DOINGS! BIG DEALINGS! on WHERE YOU SEE THE . ‘ ut J? K." Used Cars. SIGN ~ Come In Now! Take iawadeen of the wide selection of used cars at Oakland County’s largest Chevrolet dealer, MATTHEWS - HARGREAVES They have just the car you're looking for at just 4 the Price you want to pay. ‘98 DEMOS. AT A LOW LOW PRICE CAR GUARANTEE On all ’53-'58 models — As long as you own the cat ‘NEW GOODYEAR TIRES" _ * Available on all ’56-°58 models | °37 MERCURY _ | 97 CHEVROLET 4 ne er 2 esa Ranoror . *56 FORD '56 CADILLAC A SEDAN DEVILLE | VICTORIA HARDTOP | '37 CHEVROLET 55 FORD es ee ae ; "56 CHEVROLET ie \ agg CHEVROLET *54 NASH ° HARDTOP 34 PONTIAC | eyo | ‘creer, Ac Be , * "$3 PONTI \ 56 Gt ee aA0on ‘56 CHEVROLET. 34 PONTIAC BEL amg DOOR ae bas meres 55 CHEVROLET 8 FORD 54 GHEVROLET 33 FORD 53 CHEVROLET a) ie VOLKSWAGEN em. DAW, . ae... 2 CHEVROLET . CHEVROLET + MANY ‘TRANSPORTATION N SI - ars From $95 to $245 TATION § R TERMS — A Pn ing Cnn Cao Dr . re 7 -- have S Reichic io Tihs We, (160) ORLW, (aoe) 6:30—WJR, Dinner Date Maxwell wx . CKLW, News, Chase WCAR, Page's Party WPON, Music with Mason WJBK. News, Bellboy 4:30—WWJ, 3 Star Extra Bellbo: WJBK, News y WXYZ, Merv. Griffin CKLW, Album me WCAR, Patrick WJBK, Bellboy wean 3:00--WJR, Amos ‘n’ Andy ww, Bet Your Life WXY¥Z,_M_Sherr CKLW, True Detective WJBK, News, Stero Sounds 1 VCAR, News Shook 30-WWa Oueet Star — TUESDAY MORNING @: saad | News, Roundu ww, H. Roberts” WXYZ, Fred Wolf WJBK, Tom George “‘WCAR, News, Sheridan WPON, Country Roundup News, ‘aes. haan) f A It. CKLW, a eric a. WPON, Spts, Mackinnon 8:38—-WJR, Musie Hall CKLW, News, David wan News, George T. Malone News, WCAR, News, M. D. WPON, America to Knees 10:00-—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, News, True Story WXYZ, Herb Anderson CKLW, News, Mary Morgan WJBK, Reid Beall 16:30—WWJ, NBC Bandstand CKLW, News, Davies WPON, PH3 Workshop 11:00—WWJ, News, Wood WXYZ, Paul Winter WCAR, News, B, Martyn 106—WJS, Peter L. Hayes ww, — Maxwell . WXYZ, Jim Ree CKLW, News, Davies ves ww, (se) WOam, (119¢) WEYZ, (12770) WPRON, (1468) WIBK, (1400) —_— — ‘ TONIGHT 11:06—WJR, News WxYz, ¢:00—-WIR, News, WWJ, Bandstand CKLW. News, David 1:00-—WIR, Dr. Malose ee an wx News, Surrel} WJBK, News, George WWJ, Harris, Maxwell WHIZ, Wattrick, MeKensie| GREW. News, | Sports wea Mews Mertze WOAR. Mariya’ spo” * WJBK, News, Bellboy WPON, News, C Lewis we tyn, Spts CKLW, News, Chase WCAR. News * ‘ 2 Ww wie WON. News, Weather "|, ,WPON. News, Sports 9:30—WJR, Jack H 11:80 WIR. Music ; « ace Martie 2:00-—WJR, Wendy Warren “WJBK, of D. Mag CKLW, News, M. Labbit WXYZ, Jim Bachus WWJ, News, Genteedenl CKLW, News, Davies” WJBK, News, Reid 2:20—WJIR, Cpl. Next Door WWJ, One Man's Family CKLW, Shiftbreak, Davies WPON, Don Zee Show 3:06—-WJR, Helen Trent WWJ. Vews Matines WXYZ, Ed McKe: CKLW, suutterna WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Page 3:30—-WJR, House Party WWJ, Woman in House WXYZ, News, amare CKLW, News, 7:00—WIR, News WPON, Don MacKinnon WJBK, News, Beliboy WWJ. News, H. Roberts WXY2, News, Mckenzie ews, Wolf 11:30 8: gl Fg Please pa a. Toby David Cai, Boer ee Muste a thag -my wosnte = Bands WXYZ, M. Shorr WCAR, News WXYZ, Waitrick, McKenzie CKLW, Harry Lime WPON, Early Bird Club ce, wows, r WBE. News, McLeod | WJBK, y . FTER 9:00 WIR, Weather 1: ewe, Music Hall ~ ae tt WCAR, News, Page A ¢ Time. ews, Welt wo wa, We a se wink seete, David cue — Ag yee “Wwd dim yO ae Wi w ,» Gran vestock war os - Bellboy pag &, George WAR, mg CKLW, News, Chase 9:20—-WIR, Muste ww. Tews Rebens °°" | WORK! ewe Reid | SRE-WIR Philip Lenhart F KLW, News, David WXYZ, Wa . Me Wink, bond Ot WON Here, Macilnnon |"WeyE"Rame once“) Sun Rew. 9 10:00—WJR, Symphon WXYZ, News, Winter WJBK, News, McLeo ww. N CKLW, News, Davies WCAR, Arthur Godfrey WPON, Music With Mason 5:30--WJR. Musie Hall WYZ, News, McKenale eaIBIe ¥ $:00—WJR, News, Mrs. P WiB CKLW, News, Chase Reid Sports ; WCAR, News Ace WWJ, News, F. Elizabet aR seg B. Martyn wron Sports Slants -- Today's Television Programs - - Channel &WIBK-TV Channel &—-WWJ-TV Channel 71—WXYZ-TV _ Channel 9—CKLW-TV + ALL IN THE FAMILY — Most popular family on television belongs to Danny Thomas, star of “Make Room for Daddy” which is presented Mondays at 9 p. m. over CBS. Danny's TV family in- cludes his wife Kathy (left), played by Marjorie Lord; Rusty, played by Rusty Hamer; Terry (right), portrayed by Sherry Jack- son, and Linda (Angela Cartwright), newest and youngest member of the clan. ~ Show Business Feels Death of Manie Sacks By EARL WILSON | TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00 (7) Mr. Danger. (9) Popeye. (4) News: Williams. (2) Racket Squa — a Weather: 4) Boy Four. (7) Three Musketeers, venture. (9) Foreign Legion. (4) Frontier. Western: Bad- man meets his fate, Eliot. Ad-| 10:00 sell)-form strange alliance to capture outlaw gang. (2) December Bride, ‘Com- Mae- +———Murray enters race for hon- edy: Guest st orary mayor of the town. (9) Lone Wolf. (4) ried man’s love for steamer passengers in Touch of Evil” Suspicion. Drama: Mar- WrONg | 41; : women tries Gath t vibe 00 (4) Price Is Right “A Harry Guardino, Audrey Totter, ‘arradine. $45 (9) Nursery schooltime, 40:00 (2) Garry Moore. (4) Arlene Frances. (3) Movie. 16:30 (2) Arthur Godfrey. (4) Treasure Hunt. 11:25 (7) News, 11:38 (2) Dotto. NEW YORK—Ahead of the casket, leaner-looking than usual, had slowly walked Frank Sinatra. x * * Now, a few hours later, Frank faced Lauren Bacall and Dinah Shore across a dinner table. They eulogized the quiet saint of show business, Manie Sacks, who knew for three years that he was dying of leukemia but © kept- silent lest word reach his mother in . 4 her 80s. At the funeral in the Philadelphia synagogue, I'd noticed nearly every chin shoot ‘Audience Likes. 4enew—it}, Family Comedy Five-Year-Old Series May Even Top Record Set by Lucy By ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — “You Gotta Have Heart.” * * * Danny Thomas had it in the early days of television when he interrupted his jokes and night- club so o sing and to talk to little children sitting on his knee. But it was the era of big brassy TV variety shows and no one thought about veteran night- elub comedian Danny Thomas as a family man at heme with his But Danny (who is a family man), and telefilm people (who —about—it and Danny’s family show, zooming to new audience highs in its fifth year, has a good chance of topping even the seven-year longevity rec- ord of “I Love Lucy” in the week- ly show league. * * * Why? Ask almost anyone why they like the Danny Thomas Show, now on CBS-TV every Monday night. They'll tell you: “Because it has heart." WARM COMEDY It's Danny Thomas’ big heart coming through those TV sceens in warm, human family comedy. With laughs like daughter. Terry's comment to little Rusty when wid- ower Danny was dating, object matrimony, at the close of last year's season, * * * “He needs help,” said Terry. “After all, what does Daddy know about women? He's been married all his life.” Even Danny becoming a wid- ower — when wife No, 1 Jean Hagen tired of the show a year and a half ago—didn’t hurt the ratirgs, as TV Alley predicted. After a time there were occa- Brings Protests was this Sen. Swainson Seeks |Lieutenant Governorship LANSING (INS) ~ Sen, John B. Swainson of Plymouth said today he will be a candidate for the Democratic party’s nomination for _ {lieutenant governor of Michigan. ‘| Swainson made the announce- ment about a week dfter Lieuten- ant Governor Philip A. Hart said he entering the raee against Re- publican Senator Charles E. Potter year, ON PONTIAC TV_ SHOW — Pontiac Motor Division will pre- sent Victor Borge, the ‘one-man gang’ of music and comedy. in an hour-long spectacular over the CBS television network (Channel 2), Wednesday, Feb. 19, 9 to 10 p. m. Borge in a little sta i i etacinaimee MUNTZ TV. io SERVICE | ee oe Member of Electronics Association FE 4-1515 C & ¥ ELECTRO MART rehearsal horseplay. Artist's Remark on Video Quiz NEW YORK (INS)—A New York artist's inadvertent use of a pro- fane phrase before a nationwide television audience tonight caused a rash of phone calls to the Colum- bia Broadcasting System and its affiliated stations. Larry Rivers, 33, appearing on CBS-TV’s ‘The $64,000 Challenge,” had just missed a question about Renoir’s painting ‘“‘Luncheon of the Boating Party."" He failed to iden- tify a woman in the picture and) her relationship with the artist | (she was Aline Charigot who later became Renair's wife). SWEET’S RE RCA COLOR S al and LADIO Rivers, whose incorrect an- swer cost him 832,000, then blurted out that the women looked like that “in every +--+. picture Renoir ever paint- ed.” At the conclusion of the show, master of ceremonies Ralph Story apologized for Rivers’ outburst, * * * sional dances for Danny, to mixed A spokesman for CBS said the| amusement and worry for Terry |network’s New York outlet (WCBS- and Rusty. Marjorie Lord, called|TV) received 37 calls from view. in as Rusty’s nurse when he be-|ers protesting the remark. The’ came ill, finally became this’ year’s Mrs. Danny. _* * * Marjorie, mother of two herself, amen ea tek aah “Tt seems like we've been mar- ried for 10 years.” GROWING TOGETHER ° Starring in his 139th film, Danny gether.” peared in every show and Sherry Jackson, as Terry, in almost all of them, Both kids celebrated their birth- days on the same day, Feb. 14— Rusty was 11 and Sherry sweet 16. The gradual change of growing-up plots is a constant chuckle for Danny, who laughed: Rusty Hamer has ap- There are other reasong for the show's success. As a coffee shop waitress recently told Danny, “I never know what's going to happen | on your show, Mr. Thomas.” * * * : New characters have paraded through the Williams living room ever since the show started. Bill Demarest as Marjorie’s father and Tom Tully as her uncle are the latest, plus almost 5-year-old An- gela Cartwright, who was intro- duced as Marjorie’s daughter by a previous marriage. ADDED INTEREST Which brings up another ele- ment. Danny and his family are like the family next door—but they’re not. * * * Their. lives revolve around the everyday things of the family next door, with Danny’s job as a night- club entertainer occasionally giv-| ing the family some unlike-next- door show business excitement. “Little peppery things,” is the) way Danny describes them. But there’s something more important people don’t see on home screens. Or maybe they do, “It's our attitude toward the show,” Danny explained it to me. “I don’t get hysterical when our rating goes down — or goes up. ' |There isn’t a single genius in our | organization, Kalamazoo Shooting Investigation Closed KALAMAZOO - (INS) — An.in- vestigation into the death of Donn H. Munson was officially closed * erated three hours and 35 minutes.’ Oftidials had @xumed Munson's body to make a =e in- vestigation of his John C _|up when the rabbi revealed Manie “had “3 (2) News: LeGoft. . (4) Truth or Consequences; = awe (2) Studio One, | Drama:. (7) Robin and Ricky. known. WILSON 6:40 (2) Weather: Phel Senate investigator Barry (9) Howdy Doody. Sid Caesar's face, blood-specked from nervous shaving : ne Ps. Sullivan tries to expose cuts, got white .. . Perry Como’s mouth flew open .. . Tony : ; crime czar's empire in “Tide} 11; : 4 Charisse, Leo Durocher, Im ene Coca registered 6:45 (2) News: Edwards. af Corruption” Pat Neal eo 11:45 (7) Noontime Comics baat = er, Imog 8 stars , azem 7:00 (7) Sports Focus. ‘ * *k «* (9) Gangbusters. 1e:90 (T) Capt. David Seer TUESDAY AFTERNOON =» ‘ Little Manie, the 56-year- (4) Death Valley, Adventure:|"""” (9) City Detective. wanlet teen Coed old bachelor NBC vice presi- Landholders battle pirate y . 12:00 (2) ote} mopolitan. raiders. . : (4) Tic Tac Dough, dent in charge of TV program- (2) Badge 714. 11:00 (7) Soupy’s On, (9) Meet Mr, X. ming, knew his fate, but “went * (9) National News. about doing good” in a notori-/ she smiles 7:10 (7) Sports: Wattrick ° in ‘Westerk’p. 12:15 (2) Love of Life. ously cutthroat, ingrate world 7:15 (7) News: Daly. _ , 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow, ares ory = eos 11:15 (9) Weather. (4) It Could Be You. stipes deste 7:30 (7) O.S.S. Adventure: Agent (4) Weather: Eliot. pl = neo ee | hopes to inform German (2) Weather. ary Morgan. he cm a love and people of Nazi atrocities via got more nm anybody newspaper. 11:20 (9) Theater. John Wayne,|!#:45 (2) Guiding Light. we'll ever know,” Dinah Shore ‘ : 7 fro. ; ” rs i ies $ Movie —, me m —Loulsiapa.”’| 00 (2) Susie. ont, aang soem one Rosy Ridge.” (°47) (4) Sports: Parker. (4) Movie. Big apd (4¥ Price Is Right (color) (2) Sports, (7) My Little Margie. In ‘54, suffering the_flu, Robin Hood Adventure: (9) Movie, Manie learned via a blood sane betrays Rebin af re- 11:28 Pn Nightwatch Th. Jean SACKS count that he had leukemia, union. | Parker. “Farmer in the|3? (2) AS The World Turns, | murdered of his great friend, Eddy Duehin. s:00 (Love that Jill dell.” (36.) 0) ee. Too busy to die, he was always off to Paris, Miami or : e that Comedy:} ; i Hollywood, or secretly getting weekly transfusions when Jill, = finalist in. career|i1:39 (7) Night Court. Re-enact-|* (© Sim Miss Brooks. home. He rained gifts, He carried Grace Kelly her wedding woman contest, tries to woo ment of court cases. , key votes out of male judges. (4) Jack P Peter Usti dress — for himself a new ——— new white-tie ‘Gunslinger poses as. Bonner. He lent one never-before-worn outfit to me in Monaco. I : 2:30 (2) House Party, 7 (2) Burns, ile —— TUESDAY MORNING (4) Kitty Foyle. literally owed him my striped pants. rll mystery.” But Thanksgiving Day at the home of the Ike Levys in Philly , 6:50 (2) Meditations. 2:80 (9) News. he filled up with tears. It was licking him. But he wrote cherry eek te. Stee OO em Trt letters saying he’d soon be back. The Friday before he died he ture: German flying school, 3:00 (2) My Hero. asked to watch Frank's TV show. It was the last TV he saw. ene 7:00 (2) TV, College. (4), (color) Matinee Theater> ney told hi th Seal Peter. woneere:| «2 0 TRY. (1) American Bandstand. | > i ee). oF Hardie seeks convict’s aid) ae ea © Teer Bery. Frank, Dinah, Dean Martin, Leo Durocher, Toots Shor and in’ tracking senator's kid-|7:30 (2) Cartoon $:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. the rest of us will start an Emanuel T. Sacks Memorial ( Talent Scouts. 8.00 (2) Captain Kangaroo. (7) Do You Trust Your Wife? Leukemia Fund veer ; 7 (7) Cartoon Carnivai. (9) Movie. Manie’d have dohated big to something like that. They 7) Voice, Metropolitan Opera tell how in Chicago once a friend delayed their getting on tenor Richard Tucker ~ Oo me o ons te 0 tn a plane because he'd forgotten ng take a air ple rocking 9) Town Mayor. : ni” ir a orig es (2) Cortoen ‘Clateroom. (7) Bandstand. ance. “Come on!” said Manie restlessly. “1 took out insur @) tran Comedy: _ance — I'm giving YOU half of mine! Danny helps immigrant father|9:00 (4) Romper Room. 4:15° (2) Secret Storm. The point of all this is that Manie, who made many stars, accept award for his son. — 4:30 (2) Bdge of Night was unknown to most of the world, but great, and loved by : (7) La Welk. — (9) Laff Time . those he made. Whom would I prefer to be? Manie. ) Lawrence ° ¢ (9) Front - nese 9:30 ra Ladies Eng au Sieaoees THE MIDNIGHT EARL... . Ko in ‘cee anihoteedn, (7) Our Friend Harry, MMonroe keeps denying it, but those awful rumor mongers Heart specialist (Ryan) and $:00 (2) Detroit Bandstand. ‘insist she’s helping Arthur Miller cast his first movie, “The unlicensed doctor (White Bis-|9:35 (9) Billboard. — (4) I married Joan. Misfit” (in which, they whisper, she might even star). Newly- : ts Sir — weds Eydie Gorme-and Steve Lawrence are so busy workin’ a loony ‘ they can’t honeymoon till June... Bob Hope, trying for weeks across b heceis 08) Reek the Chock ‘to get Lana Turner on his TV show, sighs, “She’s still the tough- soe . t gal in Hollywood tq date”... . Singer Charlie‘ Applewhite » eee (4) Mr. and Mrs. North, est oa € PP! e—— for (7) Mickey Mouse Club. gets out of the Army in\six weeks . wae oS (9) Serial Theater. TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: It’s fine for parents to bring up 3 Geotury plant 7 & : ~ children — if only they wouldn't keep bringing them up in i" Resaire word i IK. of C. Celebrates their conversation. ign pesinale pong That’s earl, brother. 8 Scone Washington’s Birthday — te | .| perrorr (INs)—The Knights of | ) Fa nee | [columbus fourth desvee caasented Business as Usual Old Soldier's Airplane ee their annual George Washington While Robbery Ensues Bataan Il Fades Away |} [birtnday party yesterday by admit. : : 34 Rub — i 125 to membership in the) CLEVELAND ® — While three) YOKOHAMA, Japan @ — An 3 Sia weread mn r at the Hotel Fort Shelby. |thugs slugged and robbed a drug-|old soldier's old airplane has fad- Mix _| More than 400 members also|store operator of $500, a fourthied away, — Compass point honored Wilfred T'. Connelly, state| member of the gang sold a cigar ‘Bataan If, the DC4 used by Gen. |. deputy of Michigan and supreme|to an unexpected customer. Douglas MacArthur when he was es director of the fourth order} Edward. Chakoff, 36, owner of|occupation commander in Japan, iene 7 ae oo a the or-/the Purity Drugstore, told police|left the Orient in pieces last night. Cantor he was held onthe floor behind a| The old plane, damaged by fire se: ao | oa Rev. Pail ws Saeed Hicerticoumter white the tunrth, Gay S906) lex year, was sold recently for jody plant 1 | Z a cigar to-a re _ im! $120,000 to P. D. Smith, Los An- a4 ae § Barrier the. cash register was en geles airplane salvager. It was Sernoere iowa 3 Bie asked him to asked him.to return later and a de —-_ Pals wore “ithe 15 cents, United. States aboard the US. soe es Pi _. 388 freighter Pacific Transport. pown line — Honey bees produce 200 million an . it re Eee ot ne eh, geet a Abraham Lincoln wag once of: ‘ tie. : : S. ; . * Munson, who was found dead of a bullet wound in his car last Jan. j j i t } ‘f- ited suicide, A-eoroner’s jury delib- spokesman added that there were! some calls from persons who failed to grasp Rivers’ words and wondered why Story was apologiz-| ing. \ Rivers and his opponent, Leo Lerman of New York, a contrib- $4,000 level on the subject of Silent Movies, DeHoCo Woman Inmate | Slashes Wrists, Throat DETROIT (INS) — A 27-year- old woman inmate of the Detroit House of Correction was in critical condition today with slashed wrists|} PROTECT YOURSELF! Don't ', muffiert ges from o leaky TAKES ONLY 15 MINUTES by H Mides installation speciotiote te | make your cor sefe, PREE INSTALLATION—ond you pay ro more for the world’s finest —the Midas myffter, MUFFLERS, tollpipes, dual ox- heusts for every cer or truck, MIDAS or MUFFLER 2 Detroit Women Held in Texas Motel Robbery | EL PASO, Tex. &® — Two Detroit, women are being held by police in| the $4 holdup of an El Paso motel. | Philyis Twining, 23, and Delores Hoeppner, 20, were arrested by New Mexico State Police at An thony near the Texas border and bery was found in the purse of one of the women. | GUARANTEED AGAINST “RUST-OUT, BURN-OUT AND bLOW-OUT KING’S Midas Muffler Service 256 South Seginew questioned about the holdup of the (Next to Jerome White Motel in El Paso Sat- mday sabe. FE 2-1010 Police said a .25 ealiber pistol similar to one Used in the rob-| Open Monday thru Thuredey “til 5:30 Friday ‘til 8y sebiaduas ane aacsile in. your spare time. BOOKLET — tells you how. American Scheol—P. 0, Box 24 Kensington Dr., Detroit %4, Mich. YOU CAN FINISH gen If you left school, write for FREE Please send me your free 5i-pace High School Beoklet. P.D.P. 2-17 You can hear it . Widest choice of "models. . you can | i "L There is a difference in high-fidelity equipment! For everything in_high- fidelity, there is no finer choice than Electro-Voice. Come in-and see our complete E-V line! “409 E. Maple, Birmingham see it in Electro-Voice! | ’ Me TWENTY-EIGHT Ps — ‘THE PON TIAC PRESS. “MOND AX; FEBRUARY | 17, 1858 ~*~ Farmington Father DETROIT (INS) — The US.’ : A _ Weather Bureau in Detroit today | iday night at Inkster road and ; transmitted the Arieitagd) “4 ‘Byron street in Southfield Town- 9 gage over its teletype to. its eh C’s Is Your : is: ship, according = 7 with AB — a “Qur office is so XXXX NXX Oakland tae i) chilly the .teletypewriter doesn’t . : She B tte J b- work the way it mmmmmmm.. Highway or ll oH or teut to a e : 0 hould xx.,....should.. Excuse the | Toll Mp sei B of errors.mm Detroit area exx = ; oe : ° ata MORE P weather orecast. The e.. will 58 song hting- > pel “v7 Bs a ! try)xx fo tape it . ie ee arrival at Red- HELL, Mich, (INS) — Hell taba: Receivina| SHORTER _ EASIER froze over today. Hospi**l, said The temperature was 13 be- police. They re-| jow rero in this Michigan community, NARROWSBURG, N.Y. (INS) — Fred Pegler of Narrowsburg spotted a huge mound: of snow | in his back yard and tried to dig_| his car out from under it. After - an hour's work, he discovered— imingham, was uninjured. He was A Farmington father of four was ikilled in a. two-car smashup S.tur- % x « ° IN HIGH SCHOOL : | Weather Bureau | | | THE BERRYS | __|Messages [Dies in 2-Car Crash an PRS a Fane he was thrown from his Jn Letter to Bulganin \car by the impact and was pinned) ‘between a fence post a” his auto. * ® The other driver, Sail J. Theut, | 19, of 24001 Glenn Eyrie Rd., Bir-! | inot held. Ike Charges Kremlin M isrepresents U.S. Aims Four-Story Building Burns in Jackson the four-story Moose Lodge huild-. ing in downtown Jackson yester- {Hazel Park Councilman Announces Candidacy _Zigmund J. Niparko, a Hazel Park councilman, has announced his candidacy as U.S. Representa- tive from Oakland County on the The Shérthand Written FREE DEMONSTRATION ‘CLASS THURSDAY, FEB. 20 at 7:00 p.m. The Business Institute. 7 West Lawrence Street Phone FE 2-3551 Phone or’ Return. This Ad jor Bulletin Democratic ticket. Niparko, who was mayor of) Hazel Park five years and a mem- ber of the Hazel Park school board. two years, is a naval veteran ot World War II and Korea. his carefully stacked woodpile, ~ day. Lodge officials estimated dam- age to the building and heat and water damage. to adjacent struc- tures at ‘half a million dollars. __ WASHINGTON (INS) President i the necessity of considering such Eisenhower today accused _ the!Proposals.’ oe Kremlin of ‘‘deliberately”’ misrep-| “In other words, demand resenting the U. S. desire for’ ‘peace| the right te veto disetission of q and questioned whether he should) the matters 1 believe to be vital The blaze broke out in the fourth- | : continue to exchange letters with) to peace.” floor ballroom. Cause of the fire D wescg cea n6) ap ctaat anion’ Re ones SE, ase Soviet Premier Nikolai A. Bulgan-) @ontinuin gin the same tone, Fi-|was hot determined. "The Noéfolk, Va. Shipyard is ae pee ok . : ———— ‘senhower declared: “If indeed a|~The building was empty when the oldest in the United States. It | — = > top level conference were to apply |the blaze started. iwas founded in 1. F Eisenhower, in a letter to Bul- the formula that no one is to say! ganin, sharply assailed the vieWS anything except what all the rest ne expressed by the Soviet’ premier! acree that they would like to hear, in recent correspondence and als© y. would . . . end- up in the ludi-| a speech by Soviet Comment bess crous ‘posture of our just glaring; Nikita Khrushchev on Jan. 22. [silently at each other across the In his letter Eisenhower table.” | wrote: “I begin te wonder, Mr. | * * * Chairman, whether we shalj get | The President suggested that the, anywhere by continuing to write Ideadlock between himself and Bul-| speeches te each other?” ganin “can be broken: by less for- | He added: “I cannot avoid thep™#! and less publicizied contacts” | ieoling: that. if oa iies Coumalak po which both governments would are to move ahead to the establish- try to find out whether there can ment of better relations, we must be a summit conference. find some ways other than mere) prolongation of repetitive public Forget Threats, Honey, Gold ATi Most of us have - ac months when we are a little flat . . . need "| debate.” - EXTRA CASH to pay bills, buy new clothes, Concerning a possible summit| /O Cold for Murder 8 take weekend trips, meet medical expenses meeting, Eisenhower criticized’) prETROIT (INS)—Sét. or for other worthwhile purposes. Linn Bulganin for his attitude on the) woifenden of the Dewem Pelion need EXTRA-CASH right-new . cs which might be discussed./ Department stuck to his story The President told the Soviet |leader that his proposals “‘leave| |considerable puzzlement as to what | you think another such meeting today. He said the police are aware of a Detroiter who is separated | from his wife, but drinks a bit | SEABOARD — your “lending neighbor’. “| Remember, Seaboard likes to help folks stay on their feet! NONE SOLD TO DEALERS OR ha LIMIT 1 ‘could contribute to a genuine set- +o sa ” sometimes, and - telephones his : SEABOARD FINANCE tlement of our problems. —F h Sh | d mate to tell her what he thinks COMPANY * “~ * pany res ou e r Eisenhower recalled that Bul- ganin suggested about 10 topics) | However, this morning he told 1185 North Perry Str eet for . discussion while he himself! her: : \suggested eight. | “This is it. I'm tired of it all. 2 Miles Northeast of Downtown Pontiac | The President commented:| I'm coming over to kill, you.” | Your answer ig that I must be} After waiting half an hour, the ‘ _ Next to the New A&P Supermarket | = | Sas said her husband called iprepared to discuss your proposals “ ea oe that as regards mine there Parking No Problem”) } ais 154. North Segieiw St. : Phone FE 54171 ele hil alee all Us. Bureae Forecast : loudy and continued cold i _ snow flurries : } 116th YEAR. ieee PONTIAC, MICHIG/ , FEBRUARY 18, 1958 —2 PAGES on. City’s Streets | & JUST ONE OF MANY — Ernest Daniels igetk dias Gon. amehitieelh “Se tans dhedone (left), of 575 Stirling Ave., wasn’t alone in his troubles yesterday. He was one of many thou- ntiac area motorists -who-distpvered ee sands of Pontiac area below zero weather. Here M. H. Carter, of 321 Daniels a tow to ‘the near- __W, South Blvd_gives red a ee ens Gives Success Formula to Realtors ‘Get Along With People’ jworld’s second best selling non-fic- tion book was take the words of a formula fulfilled if you, as a salesman, ~ not help them.” Therefore, he said, sincerity oat knowledge of a product do not alone make a good salesman,” you have to have enthusiasm to make An able, inspirational speaker who received an enthusiastic ova- tion last night, Cunningham de- scribes himself mainly as a sales- man, although he is-now president and owner of the Business Institute County GOP Will Fear Financial Status Tonight % Republicans fie Oakland County ,will learn to- night .what’s in their state party treasury as they ‘launch their 1958 campaign here. nance chairman, some 100 party members on the financial state of the Michigan organization) at a kickoff seeting at 7:45 in the supervisors’ auditorium in the County Office Building, 1 Lafay- ette St. Ahrens, of . 540 Haverhill Rd., Bloomfield Hills, will join with State Chairman Lawrence B. Lin- demer in helping the: Republican Committee of Oakland . County initiate its new drive. State Sen, L. Harvey Lodge, State Rep. Farrell E., Roberts and county officials are expected to attend the open meeting. — Arthur. G, Elliott. county com- mittee chairman, said the meeting will be held to “give everyone a chan~* to see what We are doing and how they can take part.” LE LEAR Starts eater I ao 40-Day Observance _ Protestant ps Catholic churches | throughout the world will observe the first day of Lent tomorrow on | Ash Wednesday. The 40-day season of the devout, a period of self-examina~ ‘tion and discipline in prepara ha] fielded this ~~ ween: a BOE “Yailed. | tians Piles for Lent ‘ashes from Lent is, for ' “ta New * ‘Jast Palm Sunday. on the foreheads © of worshippers, ee From this rite comes the name ot ‘Passengers ‘Surprised; They're in Paris Again PARIS (®—The 42: passengers of York-bound Air France Super. Constellation .got -a big sur- prise today when they stepped down on Orly Airfield: instead’ of Idlewild, The plane left Orly at 10 o'clock for New York. Over the Atlantic one engine. failed, and the pilot returned to Paris, landing shortly after 7 a.m. palms left over from the | the first day of Lent, Ash Wed day. preparation for ~ Traditional ‘services will be held = Cals 4 gregations viola dinne. ve “+ = - churehes well oe will be agit Ponta Area 0 Last for Two More Da 4 GM Reports ‘] Sales Up, Earnings Down Biggest Auto Company Blames Drop in Profits on Higher Costs DETROIT (AP) — eral Motors Corp, reports sales were up but earnings were down last year in con- trast to Ford and Chrysler reports of both increased profits and sales for 1957. The giant General Mo- tors, largest of the big three auto companies, said in its annual report yester-: day that earnings for 1957 were $843,592,000, equal to $2.99 a share compared with $847,396,000 or $3.02 a share for 1956—a decline of one-half of 1 per cent. Ford previously reported earn- ings for 1957 were up $46,200,000 to $282,800,000 and Chrysler an- nounced earnings for the year were more than six times higher than 1956, jumping to $119,952,406. All three auto firms reported sales’ increases. GM gales totaled $10,989,313,000 955, beige Me yar Sales in 1956 771,300,000 or 24.2 per cent greater than in 1956. Chrysler, its biggest share of the auto and truck market since 1953, reported record sales of $3,564,982,510—up 33 per cent over 1956. ee General Motors blamed its drop in profits on fiigher costs. The company’s share of the U. S. auto and truck market shrank from an estimated 50 per cent in 1956 to around 46 per cent in 1957. Ford claimed to account for a postwar high of 30.9 per cent of the indus- try's market last year against 28.4 in 1956. Chrysler claimed 19.5 per . |cent against around 17 per cent in 1956. ; * x Commenting on the 1957 GM re- port, President Harlow H. Curtice and Chairman Albert Bradley pre- dicted a further decline in auto sales in 1958. “Consumer and business spend- ing reached record levels in 1957 but have eased off somewhat in recent months,” they said.- ' sNOw Use, Folks! You Parked Illegally EAST ORANGE, N. J + Kids Clear Hydrants ~ for Plug on Radio cars. ‘4 to "O's. Top %. FE 9-048. ra ; ~ Pott saléy' thr 1867 dame to $6, New Post | | pleds, 0 ed Where traffic moved around snow banks and over icy roads. .,accidents took their toll. Nore High Philip Wargelin Chosen as Principal of City’s New School The Pontiac Board of Education) today named Philip J. Wargelin’ ee: eg seven al that for five years at Pontiac Central High. dren, including twin boys now at the University of Michigan. *® * =.* Wargelin is a U. of M. graduate and holds a master's degree from the school. He taught for three years at Ironwood and Oscoda be- nog ag ale aaa Club, a lay lead- er in St. John Lutheran Charch, Professionally, he is president- elect of the Oakland County Sec- ondary School Principals’ Assn. and chairman of its test and guidance committee. He is also president of the Pontiac School Administrators Assn. Great Lakes Trip for Maytlowet II Possible in 1959 WASHINGTON ( — Mayflower II may sail on the Geet Lakes in 1959. * & Officials of the Plimouth Plan- tatijen, owner of the famous rep- lica, told a delegation of Michigan residents yesterday that the vessel might make the trip down the St. Lawrence Seaway next year. “The trip was proposed by Sen. | Potter (R-Mich) for this sum- mer. Henry Hornblower Tl, Plimouth Plantation president, said financial considerations made a 1958 trip unlikely. , The Mayflower is on exhibition in the Eastern United States. lornblower said a Great Lakes voyage would cost from $150,000 to $200,000 for six months. * * * The Michigan delegation named a five-man steering committee headed. by Frank Davis of Bay City, look into prospects for a 1959 trip in connection with the seaway’s opening. eis GON ar ae oc ene Cae ae | | | | principal of the new Pontiac North- - ern High School. Wargelin, 49, is now principal of} pasion Sas Sihoet. iat ee ee x z The Wargelitis have three ¢hil-|° _ |Coach Co. buses. Fares for school secretary-manager ' of the|: East Michigan Tourist Assn., to|- arming 4 182 Dead as Cold Bitter cold continued to |ing a vast snow removal job country. No relief was in sight still trying to dig out from | New England. At least 182 deaths in the nation’ were attributed to the storm and] cold. Some snow shovelers dropped dead of heart attacks, Some stranded motorists were killed by carbon monoxide, Some chil- dren were crushed to death on | With temperatures near zerp in workers have another holiday to- day. All schools were.closed in the district yesterday and tens of thousands of workers were absent from their jobs. PORT DELAYED Throughout the Northeast, trains, planes, subways and buses | struggled to maintain schedules but almost every piece of trans- |portation equipment was delayed or disabled. Airlines canceled hundreds of snowbound Washington, fe d eT aif Expected Low. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS hold much of the nation in an icy grasp today; disrupting transportation and stall- in the Eastern third of the for the Atlantic Seaboard, x * & la weekend blizzard which| struck from Mississippi o Eleven Children ‘Among 12 Dead i n Atlanta Fire | ATLANTA (p — Twelve per sons, including 11 children in two families, perished in a fire that roared through a two-story du- west section last night. Firemen said they found the .| bodies of 10 children huddled in one upstairs bedroom. In other bedrooms were the charred remains of an infant boy in an incubator and a wom- an, mother of four of the dead youngsters. Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Jones risked their lives in unsuccess- ful attempt to reach their seven children. Cause of the fire was not de- termined. Schools and factories closed. Businesses suffered. All public places, industries and schools were ordered to close in Delaware as Grifting snow caused. an emer- gency. Central Maryland was crippled. A state of emergency was declared in Huntsville, Ala., site of the Army missile center, when’ gas supplies dwindled, APPEAL FOR HELP In Middlesbro, Ky, 11,000 of the town’s 15,000 residents were without heating gas, Appeals were hundreds of schools and industries (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Battle Creek Hikes Bus Fare to 20 Cents BATTLE CREEK ® — Beginning today adults will pay a straight 20-cent fare to ride Battle Creek children go from 10 to 15 cents, The Battle Creek -City Commis- sion approved the new rates, which abolish a previous system under which five adult tokens MACKINAC ISLAND uw — Fire caused extensive damage at the 149-year-old community hall in this resort community yesterday. John Cowell, 22, was overcome by smoke as volunteer firemen and Coast Guardsmen battled the blaze in sub-zero weather. The single-story frame struc- bus| ture was built in 1809 and was once used by. the American Fur (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) hie ee or se eae Seal reatened During Night ‘Attribute Five Deaths in Michigan to Snows, Freezing Temperatures Downtown Temperatures 12 Midnight .......- 3 Be Me ce dee Fecd oes 5 @. i. oc acucsesds 6 ALM. we eesceseeee 8 a.m 9 a.m. ~ eves vention 1) acc 4 cs icsesisee AB Ble eee 4 4 5 6 ccieceasaeare tee eneeeee 9, Pontiac area. And this warming spell |— maybe a whole six -de- grees up the thermometer —is expected to continue at least for two days here, offering slight relief to frozen residents. x 2 2 2 to 6 degrees. A general alarm fire also swept Five Michigan deaths, includ- through a three-story brick build- 4 i y (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ¥ These Are Nice to Have Around In Today's s Press. : Wier Sorts ee Ee ste eh ae nS, sod GOUOE oc ei ccs ts cssviceses; 2 County News. .........60006 1%. Editorials .........6c0ce0ces 6 =. Sepsbicds' seins Obituaries ......6cccccec 5 - gL, ROPER ELE ELeEEL: x» 18-19) ce ee re ae a : : : TV & Radio Programs...... PT HELPING OUT — Providing a little push . of their elephants to haul vehicles out of the © Wilson, Bari ..:.....2....:. 38 | Where it’s needled, circus elephants try to free a snow. Naw, derma wnt: Mt: by. «tal ot 1S tore Women’s Pages ...... - 12% to 18 | truck stalled in a snowdrift im Paterson, N. J. _ inches. ‘ wad sees swan Behasse yt, 20 | The Pan-American Circus. loaned the city four - ‘ : s : 2. hy N A 4 Above Zero. jduring the night for the ee oe oe sae tan amie ye aly SIT AIS te SCO IH aa RES Two: Fd | ‘Monitors Meet ‘Discuss Ways of Giving Members More Voice in Union Affairs WASHINGTON @ — Teamsters bosses meet with their court-' designated monitors today to dis- cuss ways of giving individual) members a greater voice in union. affairs. An immediate problem is how) te interpret the union's constitution! on qualifications of candidates for union office in more than a dozen, - Téamsters locals now under trus-- = teeship. Election of local officers) ~~ is part of a move to end the trustee control. a * * The monitors met. Teamsters i ee: President James R. Hoffa and oe Bie iat members of the union’s executive eo ea = board last week at Miami Beach, i FOR WEAR AND TEAR OR OBSOLESCENCE OF ae e = Fia.. _ and arranged for another ‘pared by General Motors Corp But from one trusted local at Decatur, Iil., came complaints that stitution. This was to be discussed further with the monitors today. Bee eat cael a _part of the settlement of a federal court suit which challenged Hoffa's PLANTS AND EQUIPMENT” “i a iS fae So ee HOW GM USED INCOME — This chart, pre- . in connection with its annual report, shows how money re ceived for its products in 1957 was split up. L Se eee eT mm =—-—s«D EF to proviwe Facuitess , TUESDAY, FEBRU |Won't D ce ee et = “g Ee eg ee pit 1d tne susiwens AND WORKING CAPITAL =e 4 70 SHAREHOLDERS =. ies Lay. A to suppliers; second largest, almost 29 cents of each dollar, went for wages and salaries. NEW ORLEANS (INS) — New i-'Orleans, the Grand Old Lady of! lithe South, chucks away the cares| lof inner and outer space today to) again ‘and have herself a ball. — For today is Mardi Gras. WORRY BANISHED to her reputation for one brief day Ruling be Rex, lord of misrule, who has become a gay young debutante Worries of races, recession and | 'Sputniks have been banished as the “Queen of the South” lives UP| 01g with possible showers. But no as “the city that care forgot.” — ever the festivities will makers will keep warm with the cup called on all his loyal sdbjects land hands together to the to don costumes and masks and ; Join in the revelry, There'll be parades with color- ful floats and high-strutting bands thousands Ss ae enone naan ese ‘Re ee ee —2State Airmen FCC Examiner Testifies Among 16 Aboard| Missing Plane NAPLES, Italy @—U. S. planes resumed their hunt today for an iTV license even though he found subcommittee. it failed to. meet- any of the pert ye BS i é >§ Oe 23 . By E. H. SIMS What are the two weather condi- tions which most affect the way we feel? — The Yirst and perhaps the most important weather factor influenc- ing your physical comfort is, of course, barometric pressure, The weight of the air pressing down on you is definitely a major influence on the wa.’ you feel, because it affects the tissues of your body. Low pressure causes irritation or deflation in many people. The physical effects often produce psychological repercussions, The second factor is the humidity of the air. This affects people in vary- ing degrees and in various ways. High humidity often makes peo- ple uncomfortable, It sometimes affects aches and paing (as will low pressure) and therefore a comni- bination of very high humidity and low pressure produces the most irritable of weather's depress- ing effects. The Weather Pull U.S. Weather Bereau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — cloudy and continged cold with Pn ome gnew flurries tonight and'‘tomerrow. Lew ' |was 12 Katzentine, a Miami radio station owner. The subcommittee has previously | heard charges that: er Richard A, Mack $2,650 while Sharfman said he favored Kat- zentine’s application over three others because Katzentine was a local resident of Miami and had an excellent record of civic action, that he not only would own but manage the station and that he had an over-all good broadcast, record. - ’ ; Regarding National Airlines, | Sharfman said: “I did not give! them-a preference for any factor’s | although I did give them complete | consideration." but added that a “fair analysis” of the four in his opinion showed | National ‘“‘would be the lowest | one,” Sharfman said the four appli- New York Train > 13 Hours Late DETROIT (INS) — The North Shore Limited from New York City and 52 minutes late arriving at Michigan Central tenight 2 te 6. Hirch ¢ w 10 te 3 Northwesteriy winds 15 te hour today and tenight. | Today ih Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding @ a.m. m: Wind velocity 17 ms.ph.| At @ a Direction: North. Sun sets Tuesday at 6:68 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 7:23 a.m. Moon sets Tuesaday at ave Moon rises Wednesday at 17:31 a.m. ae | J 6a. m. LJ aly Sl Reno 6 TO. Men csseese. $ H Ho essseees 8 ' Oa. m3) apm 27/9)" Peach Chicago at 8:45 a.m. yes- 10 a. m No jterday. \ ' en nar tp Pontion ; | It chuggéd into the city at 2:50 Highest temperatare vere $ a.m. today. 28 ‘ 1 «tet New. Yor ct Nurse Is Appointed |= - fo St. Joseph Post CHICAGO (INS) — Two hundred \cold and weary passengers final-| ly arrived in Chicago early: today aboard the New York's Central's Comme Vanderbilt which was delayed 19 hours by stormy weath- er. Trouble started plaguing the train sdon after it moved out of New York. , One of the two diesel one. functioning engine used up fuel than two would have. Dass gers shivered in the fed train for four hours before gree in Against TV License Pick WASHINGTON (INS)—A Federal jcants sharply a Communications Commission ex-jeven before the hearings began in jaminer testified today that Nation- the summer of 194. “Nobody jal Airlines won a valuable Miami overlooked anything,” he told the no criteria for such an award. - jin his mind —An attorney employed by mission National paid FCC Commission- examiner. Chrysler Workers Pulls Into Detroit | Syrarase ed bod to back up: for)” miles to get akound it. engines broke down, cutting off heat in the train. ing New Orleans Chucks Away Cares —— to Whoop It Up During Mardi Gras} ; rm ng ee ee eee PROF, WILBUR J. COHEN U. of M, Man Slated | Workers. | Wilbur J.- Cohen, professor of Twelve Persons Die in Atlanta Blaze. 250,975 Weather Calls DETROIT: (INS) — The Michi- gan Bell Telephone Co. said Weather Service calls totaled 250,975, a than the record * bout 16,000 less the Dispute idles 7,100 DETROIT w — Chrysler Corp. sent 7,100 workers home sre, Warming: of Area from two Detroit plants as a pro- duction standards dispute erupted anew. It was the 16th straight day of work interruption at Chysler plants. Because of what it said was fail- ure of trim department employes to perform regular work assign-| ments. Chrysler sent 5,000 home from its big Dodge Main plant fo Continue 2 Days (Continued From Page One) at mid-morning. At the same time, the Detroit! 2,100 home. Failure to do assigned work also was blamed ¢here by the company. -All 45 trucks were kept in service. The area schools were closed due to lack of heat, snow - clogged roads or because school buses couldn’t start. DRIFTS TOO DEEP While 1,900 Troy elementary stu- dents found their one-day vacation over, some 1,156 Brandon Town- ship students were excused today because of deep 5-foot snow drifts. John G. Davies, 74, was found near dead yesterday in alley his Detroit home. He died of ex- posure, according to the MISS TERESA MOLINARI jury accidents reported. Sister Mary Williams, adminis- Miss Molinari comes to. Pontiac from Dearborn, where she was with the Veterans Administration '« Hospital; She formerly’ was at the Oakwood Hospital in Dearborn and at Selfridge Air Force Base Mil- itary “Hospital. She. recei Big State Snowplow Borrowed by Indiana | Door to Riches. Opens: Butler Willed $100,000 ft I; ; : 4 i ial : Numb Eastern U.S. Still Fighting Cold Frederick B. Twigg, 62, of Eaton, 2 dig itself out of 48-inch drifts. ing degree from Yale University, 4, \ ved a bachelor’s de. .. SS eS Se ee jences from) ~ , rt dl by Li ee erty ai ba eee ne ene oe #8 Ski Club Members Stranded in Storm DETROIT (INS) — More than Telephone ski club and two General \Motors clubs were stranded near Grand Bend on their return from ‘a skiing weekend at Collingwood, Detroit. smiss City’s Suit Expect Suspension if Tunisian Debate 'Ont., in the Nottawasaga Bay area, |r about 200 miles from : ‘. | Against Greyhound Lines THE LAST ‘woRD : 4 GASOLINE PRICE DOWN | WE HAVE SOLD GASOLINE SINCE THE ‘HORSE AND BUGGY DAYS ~ WHEN DELIVERIES WERE MADE TO US BY ~ WE KNOW GASOLINES AND THERE ISA BIG DIFFERENCE = DO NOT ALLOW YOUR ENGINE to KNOCK or PING - | se. our eo NEW SUPER PREMIUM ETHYL witt 99 OCTANE RATING DESIGNED FOR TODAY’S ENGINES — ONE OF THE HIGHEST OCTANE | -GASOLINES AVAILABLE TODAY'S GASOLINE VALUES ARE SOLELY BASED ON OCTANE RATINGS THE HIGHER THE OCTANE RATING THE BETTER THE GASOLINE ‘WE GUARANTEE = MORE MILES FROM EACH GALLON QUICKER START, FASTER PICK UP AND SMOOTHER PERFORMANCE . WITH NO KNOCK ©R ‘PING IN GASOLINE se ae en —* . 3. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TURSDAY, FEBRUARY | 18, 1958 - Z . vai ele ge . : 2 geo Peas By ; 3 8 ew e Z ; < fs 7 : : 7 C . = - Bob Considine Says: | : ,MORE PROOF Why SIMMS is 7 BARGAIN STORE-Tomorrow "9 A. M. SAC aE 3 a ~ : ¥ H S. 4 g s § E : - QMAHA (INS)—“It we desire tolity, it must | Sy Sptee ve rast be ube. t0i™ Meee toile, BY . Uh gp Nigra eg: oe By — oon ae ae ‘ pence, one at the host powering by Gen. ‘Thomas °s|Washngion. re eee en ae ae Oe To HOT DOORBUSTERS| males oh ae Power, USAF, commander in chief,| Gen. Power would be able to| *le- WMS Et 2 | a Ferg woe Strategic Air Comand, Offut Air|talk, if he chose, to any SAC com-| On top of fhe three floors that} In order to be ready to go to FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY * at eae As a7 se, Omaha, It was writ-imander on the face of the earth,jrise above the submerged three|war with the best possible weapon | aimee ten by another general in 1793,/or any aircraft in flight. He has/jevels of the heart of SAC is ajat all times, it will in time replace ane Washington. He_ wouldjavailable a red telephone whose device which would detect anjits B47 with the supersonic B58, __ . _ oun ee eee ne See ce rey nec ynicnile / Setonation as far as 50/ Hustler, and its B52 with the chem- s incomprehensible. |eommander . country. miles‘ away, and do something|ically fueled B110, with a speed of | We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities — No Layawa af care The Coctrel Center, tor ex |, UNce 19 the Tear of the lowest jabout it. searly 2000 mph. and a caling! g Q ¥¢ y figs es Be . ; of the under is an IBM) “<. e 4 of 90,000 feet. : : ENJOY ene Bae [etter one aaa an in ne er! tt | REG, 98 BAN DEODORANT.......... - floors below the main sdminis- |G (bes have memorized an ap- = at steel Qpenk Weela This year SAC will open its first Cc: : tration building, the beginning PUNE Smount of information. eee’ Pressurisation would start, wded, missile base, at Presque Easy to use ‘Roll-On’ deodorant is muss-less and really pro- and perhaps the end of World ‘The colonel who tried to explain it 3 ‘aoe lp aa : *\ Isle, Me., with the winged Snark tects. Save 3)c. ‘ : A War Ill woul be waged—s,o00 |" US said casually: Z vel to “hianer ok Th aac om (range 5,500 miles) as the weapon. Gonmetien. +~ Gren Five ; ; : : T a e = P miles from perhaps a similar “Suppose we would lose Goose |trol center has its own power Later in the year the 130)mile ; ere in the heartland of the : : / Thor at overseas bases. And, now, “ 4 le sores Union Sea ae ete ook assuming whe ram, oline beciming of taining er ver ED WINDOW SHADES... ........ c Maps, diagrams and charts show] a card inte the machine and it to light the city of Omaha. Deep pin Intercontinental Atlas Wes able tines up la bay schon sate you wait. ¢ such things as the location of the} weuld tell us how many men |wells would insure against radio-|* - ri Siz Flees principal targets in the U.S.S.R.,| and aircraft we liad lest. More |active contamination. There is al-| A’ G. Washington said, “. . . mi heinaaanehe the weather en route, location of! importantly, it would tellus how |ways a 30-day supply of food on es are at all times ready or: 19¢ L POINT PENS : - }the jet streams, sites of bases,’ many aircraft and crews were hand—just in case. wi : BAI : ae : 3 : Dr. Laurence E. Morehouse of Retractible ball*point, smooth writing pens on sale. + C the University of California says . : Limit 2 per customer. ! | "ja dentist gets more pain and fa- Sundries — Main. Floor 5 ) ~~ from a .vatieg 6. @ tooth than ———— - —_———- | = 6 7e BAYER ASPIRIN a. E = Bottle of 100 tablets. Genuine Bayers for ' fast, Cc Pin ent 1s ep Here effective reliet of headaches, bimit |. Ag wand to 3380 P.M. » Drugs — Main Floor REMINGTON RECONDITIONED White enameled toilet seat complete with cover and hinges. _ Easy to install. Limit 1. Hardware — 2nd Floor . STAINLESS STEEL MIXING BOWiS.. =| 88 5.95 WHITE TOILET SEATS......... 3 | 66 Regular $3.95 value. Full 3-quart size. Safety rolled ‘edge. Limit 2 per person. Housewares — 2nd Floor BIRDSEYE DIAPERS, DOZEN...... ‘3 1 9 Full standard 27 x 27 inch size. Hemmed edges, Limit 2 dozen per customer, First quality. : : Sie ; Baby Needs — Mein Ficor : ee BOYS’ SHIRT AND TIE SETS......... | 1 | 49 BUT DON'T, -OVERSPEND! NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO., HOSPITAL AIDED — A recent donation by Pontiae Press Photo” — WEW YORK, BLENDED WHISKEY. 86 | Meyer Simon, 111 - St.. atus are (Ir) Simon, hospital director Sister PROOF, Gx GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS | Joseph Mercy mew Mary William, Mrs. Simon, and Dr. Julitis | : equipment. Shown examining some of the appar- Rutzky, director of clinical laboratories. Regular $2.98 value—no ironing Oxford cloth shirt with matching tie. Sizes 6 to 16. Boys’ Wear — Basement : a KIDS’ SLEEPER PAJAMAS........... 66° $1.69 value. Plasticized double sole feet. = -piece, gripper fastener. Sizes 1-2-3. Children’s — Main Floor 24-INCH STAIR TREADS, Each....... 99° Curved front edge, ribbed all rubber stair treads. Irregulars in maroon only. Hardware — 2nd Floor PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE .......... Ag: "RIGHT NOW, I'D PAY TO GET RID OF THIS LINE! Regular 69c size tube. Keeps teeth bright and shiny. Limit 2 tubes. per person, Drag Dept, — Main Floor ANSCO ALL-WEATHER FILMS, 3 Rolls. 88° NOW vee YOUR OLD CLOTHESLINE iS WORTH ove Black and white film in 620, 120, 127 sizes. Pictures under all conditions. Cemera Dept. — Main Floor fr ! ZA Girls ‘WELENOA? NYLON PANTIES, 3 for. “oe Choice of regular or stretch styles, Sizes-4-to 12 only. Assorted colors and white. | ’ 3 Apparel — Main Floor P : | KIDS’ SHIRT AND PANT SETS. . c me $2.98 value. Matching een shirt with flannel. Pay wo — ten ~—denim pants. . Sizes 3 and 4. : : i ae ae : f | Children’# Wear — Mein Floor ‘ : 127 bees T2x108-inch PERCALE SHEETS . > / : Regular $2.49. Twin bed size sheets with scalloped : 7 : | borders, No limit. ¢ ! g _ Domestics — Basement ) 5 PT ns) aT anneal ; } * Sat = ew é ae J oe ~ caf iM v4 its ase Regular 45¢_each.Choice-of big selection for dliverce travels, scenic, etc. aeganmuiny ino VIEWMASTER 3-D REELS, 7 for. . q oO - Camera Dept. — Main Floor See THIS AMAZING NEW7958 - | — Boys’ LINED JAGKETS............ | al A M | LT 0 N | HERSHEY’S COCOA MIX, Pound... 7 Y | serene sore omnes" Bie “AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER a Se ALUMINUM CHICKEN FRYER. ae 99 * Touch-and-Go Controls « Carrier-Current Drying * Sun-E-Day | we oe golden Lamp « Fabri-Dial Temperature Control » Double-Pass Lint Con- Housewares — 2nd Floor trol ¢ 130-Minute Timer + Fluff-Dri si! ¢ 5 Minute Heat Soe eee fee 22x44-inch BATH TOWELS........... 49° Martex heavy terry cloth in stripes or gold. Absorbent and thick terry. No limit ) = Gud HAMILTON DRYERS = Ti 9° | — : , : oe 3-in-] CAN OPENER............. ane ae ~ ye ARE PRICED FROM ONLY “eh Regular 29c seller. All metal can opener with 10° ; : , = : ae J ~ . bottle cap lifter. Limit 2. : * Housewares — 2nd Floor . ‘Model290GShown ts ELECTRIC HAND LANTERN. ......... C ~ FREE INSTALLATION | Gare E ; : _ xs 2 8 ; : Battery extra, Bracket for bike. : Lae _% ; . Hardware Dept. — 2nd Floor Regular values to $1.00 each. Silverplate wach Choice of teaspoons, forks or knives. - Housewares — Ind Floor KNIVES, FORKS, SPOONS - s, T ‘ 98 North: Saginaw Street 3 Fi loors a Simms. Os Sa ee eee phe: THE: PONTIAC PRESS. ‘TUESDAY. FERRUARY 18,1958 a ee . : weed x j Droll Dane: Philosophizes on: ‘His ‘Succe a ee PO By PHYLLIS BATTELLE Qy amusing pianist from Copem iis hie, and it's timing. Everything oe ee OS BON wea cet wes born ith 2 a = SAM catch” NEW YORK’ (INS) — The droll ineviably begins with bis im life is that. It's an instinct, pot sarily mean bel achiewe any | oe ‘poking fun at everything—mostly something yoo learn. - | Ging: wer shocig be be Meee’ _ ‘Dane called Victor Borge mt Rw BORE, fem at everything monty, “My machin: bas af | fr'R” : ; es eS ee gileebic note become) a ee ee et ordered 4 sardine ems bea oni —_— |. Hf Borge’s theery bold: cholesterol, a" ob Die ‘which ima 6 This required Sanne, Saneee © ae enn Senn ae “Look at all those trees.” be : ‘body is born with a body full of “You could compare thee ma ‘said, bead “All the money TIMING VITAL /thousands of little machines. They chines to trees. Are you with they spend om this town, and Thos, when asked why be is Govern bib thousands of various One tree is am cok and there's mot a leaf on them. Dit equally successful as comedian, Physical and mental and psycho t grow tall. Another is . musician and businessman, be said, gical potentials, these Bittle and torn to grew short. Of wed by a trend bay pictarengaty|— oe ne ORNS So in differ earty education is very lowed by a bread boy emt peopl jin masking the machines, or treet. ated Sat Se i a | “For me. the ‘music ability’ function to the best of their ability cap, profiering hot rolls ‘machine and the ‘timing machine” —it's like pulling a tree cot of the. - a grimaced. ear ce inves ogee IP ogi mare dtvaml pag Spy pom ° rh SRAAA , . — chines—tike say. the ‘science re 55 it's grow as big as. it can. ri NY. oo | — search machine’ —don't work to lf i#’s not in the ; Ser ed : capacity Gere y) ; ’ as neaftbes ‘Yellow Pages maybe you're wearing a bat indoors. Flight Closer ke tragedy 08 a lat of people Seller: so ssi wha yeu « | PT 10 wy there'smo such thing, Amd ladies present. There's ne . on oe page Pobonin ny hell te 8.” “6 : peneting say spre.” AF Awards Contract, ‘sear tmacioe art erect Se. according to ths pos, : | c . + An interview with this audacious- —— _emeugh te sappert it” He pe must have sympathy but litde Gee. SS. c-) €-5 ale e-¥ | a: —— i [Sgt “Pe Soe 5 Seine Paes oe 5, aes :, Optometrist ~ 7 North Saginaw Street i ; Phone FE 4-6842 i ‘ * , : iH 3 ; ee i > “Better Things in Sight” _ i i { Open Friday Evenings i Our Responsibility Is S to God and to You. i. | water in @ teakettle into steam. a _ Daniel Webster said, “‘My most im- |The gases created by fission heat ~. * 2 .., Portant thought is of my responsibility 3 would rush through the rocket! =... ae Pe 2 : a & be Cod” We must add that our - Ay. notile at tremendous = 3 E - i Obligations to those we serve are 7 . The <= aseage er tp anagereat pet a Cs A, Persie and’ we some ‘es Gur Gaty -. A | chemical-tuel missiles such as the||)) t= = y Gos y |Jupiter-C, which buried the Ex } : 4: . Ed » The family we serve always must ji |Plorer satellite into space. a ee : have our best. How much or how : Rn — — wo sr ‘ ; " = <> Ettle your cost mgd be des net or a gas such as helium to a point | —_ -_. ho ’ Yo matte er sepemntiiey co Wiha eal locricl. chara eS ks. Quality Shoes at Dis¢ount Prices! = . ee you eo 6h UL Ce ions — would be released. The || xs: wr duty 0 you “ tah: Sapting peaitte —% me Tear We Can Fit You in Sizes AAAAA to EEE Z é . e . «would ther be accelerated past _ 2s 1 wie Pho ely the negatively charged substance 4 to 1 ; Me Paki y at the nozzle of the rocket and : = : : | : * PEDERAL ra A om out into space. | ; ; . ea og 4450 0+ Our Pri yee | ole ees S| hi Arriving Daily! Buy shoes with a brand “up wr Premises 41” by 81” 1.79 panel 56” by 54” eo! pr. 56” by 63”......4.99 pr. 56" y 72"......5.99 pr. 56” by 81”......5.99 pr. 56” by 90”......5.99 pr. 180” by 90”....12.99 pr. 270” by 90”. . -16.99 pr. \! 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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY-18,1953— Railroads in Jeopardy whe flattens out or re- cedes, ttes spring more clearly into focus. The injury is felt more sharply. The penalties that inequali- ties exact are emphasized. Railroads stand out prominently as one of the first to feel hurt in the current economic adjustment. Many of them had fallen on evil days con- siderably ahead of other lines. fet ‘tween the United States and Europe as compared with 738,933 in 1956. x* * * Oddly enough, the greatest gain came in thé westbound travel from Europe. An airline spokesman ex- plained by saying that a new special “immigrant fare,” 40 per cent lower than the one way tourist fare, was put into effect in November of 1956. Since we are now in the space age, it is entirely possible that within a féw years we will be writing about moon travel. k wk ke Who wants the first ticket from The nation was startled not so Pontiac? a3 asked for a 45 per cent rate in- - Owsz of the most inc ompatible mix- Be the ight do eum one eprops tures ever cooked up, now increasing- = -§ === completely. ly cluttering up the air waves, is the Things were that bad. combination of. rock~’n’- roll, tempo, They called for drastic action. S°Spel-song sentiment~and “hittbith x * * cater-wauling. ce Congressional hearings have fo- cused more attention on the plight of the railroads. The Brotherhoods have upped their wage demands be- yond the ability of the roads to pay. Many of them are running at a loss, They're ready—and anxious—to abandon certain classes of business completely. This comes as a shock to the public. The rails aren’t bluffing. Unless they can get relief from their cur- rent plight, they wish to discontinue | prise. The people haven't dreamed the rails were as badly off as they are. Railroad man- agement charges “feather béd- ding” and spiraling wagés as the chief source of troulfle. The unions have exploited these prac- tices‘to the point they are putting their own employers right out of business. xk x -*® Nor. is this purely an “outside” matter. The Grand Trunk Railway would probably drop commuter service between Pontiac and Detroit tomorrow if it had permission. In- stead, it staggers along with an an- nual loss that runs from $50,000 to $100,000 each year. (And yet, some passengers complain.) _ x * * The Grand Trunk costs in gen- prices to shippers. Last year the road lost around $10,000,000, ' Operations like this don’t con- tinue indefinitely. . A day of reckoning lies ahead. Already the Grand Trunk gross in 1958 is half a million dollars behind 1957. Ocean Crossings by Air Set New Record International air travel hit new Would carry an “inferior grade” at $2.50. highs in 1957. According to recent reports, nearly one million passengers traveled by air between the United States and Europe. . x & These figures certainly dispel ‘any thought that the air age is not here to stay. . The traveling public has come to accept air travel as one of the fast- est, safest and most economical ways of travel. This is borne out by the fact that during the year approxi- mately 885,000 passengers flew be- Sacuencuismeemminnel THE PONTIAC PRES Published by Tue Porriuc Press Company ~ “a *. Buros 8st. Pontiac 12, Michigan Trade Mart ‘ Datly Except Sunday Rosset, Baseerr, ‘foun A Riey Executive Vice President Assistant Advertising and Advertising Director Manager pho reulation Mania, Joman, jonm W. Prrictai:d, Secretary and. tdiior Toca “wisi a ag Groner C. team veer A Tuerz is no consolation to be de- rived from the foregone conclusion that Russia will not declare war on the United States. SEE Tue Administration says business is taking a breathing spell. So it seems: And it is hoped it can go pulmotor. , > The Man About Town for Local Sun Seekers Weather: What if it wasn't for, some people would be speechless. Pontiac people are showing their usual partiality to Florida as a place to es- cape the cold weather, although this winter it often wasn't much better than Routings sought at the AAA show Florida far in the lead, according to A. J. Bogue, manager of the Pontiac office, with California in second place, and Texas and Arizona tied for third. A number favor other southern states. Greyhound inquiries and ticket sales follow much along the same line as the AAA, according to Pete Waidelich, — manager for the lines here. California has gained over last year. The present railroad schedules favor Florida, according to ——_—— William B. Gracey, Pontiac ticket agent for the Grand Trunk, better connections now being of- . fered than was the case in former years. Qualifying for a top spot on my list of sporting fans is Archie Barnett, regardless of what sport it may be. In my category Archie is a sport “fan-atic.” A circular of 60 years ago, issued by Pontiae Shoe Dealers, expresses regret that the prices on their _better grade of shoes must be increased from $2.50 to $3 per pair, but they still Black squirrels, once quite plentiful in the Pontiac area, are coming back. One of my readers, _ ss Justus Jardine of Waterford, says there are at least three pair in his neighborhood. "It ig no wonder that __ Ralph T. Keeling knows how to raise sweet potatoes. It’s in his blood. His grandfather, down in the Ohio River Valley, was known as “Sweet Potato Keeling,” as he raised several thousand bushels of them every year. It is about this season that Ralph prepares his cuttings for the next crop. ee A letter from my good. friend, Perry Payson, _ now in Skagway, Alaska, says the In- dians there have been sending up a yang’ illumination bomb, which they now call: “Squawnik.” Our Prosecuting Attorney, Frederick C. Ziem, is usually among the first in most every- thing—but last in the alphabet. eee Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Voorhees of 42 .Clar¢mont Place; sixty-first wed- , DiAje pala / hd As // 7 See Bonjour Tristesse * David Lawrence Wonders: -‘Sputniks’ OK; Wh through the spell without needing a . at About Earth? == rit 5 5 | | z H if uit i [i i : 8 | It blizzard America to emphasize SHG i tage ut " i ieee a 7 i r i ’ i f t Fg seed ' qe sf af vai f' aF AL A od ths i a fi t g 7 e i 4 g [ i i Z | ; 8 3 i Ht i Es j EX, i I E Eke: : i i Hitt | iil TUL | af : ui 5 ceipt of a letter about hidden cE an having an alabaster box of very precious ointment, and poured it on his head, as he ont. ot weente-theeape 26:7. long oeteeiaing to personal greater tax eabvenaed cavaaps'e ooh'ee tae Pon- == tise Press. Pontiac, Michigan, .. $600 — the (Copyright 1958) «proper way Case Records of a Psychologist Teach Children to Shop S likes to get a bargain And she had picked two he spends his money. For quarts of chocolate milk. ted ning is a game. And just — “How do you like that chocolate squeeze bunt” may win milk?” she inquired, and . ball contest, so it pays boys expressed pleasure Gu kids to learn ho to squeeze mazimum value out of . Happy mar- riage requires the efficient use money. aad : : & Le E $s f : i ‘ ; i i Tl E j i rf i Ha 3 i ¢ i a afte " § E & a) Hy i H To il ag gee i rif it het i cH, ut hrewdly - ; ity | é z ‘ass te Fits H < i 3h 4° FY a Fe | : iy Pe Ae al Ea #8e Sag ih ta { " Price. cut 2.54 Boys’ jackets Washable rayon poplin and rayon gabardine jackets. El- astic waistband. 4 colors. !n- cludes reversibles. 6 to 18. Price cut 1 1.10. Save on men’s sport shirts “| 88 “Charge It” Our prices came tu sand fabrics ever. Guaran washable and full Federal’s own S-M-L-XL. Boxers 30-44. Save on lovely | — lingerie 2147 “Charge It” Reg. 1.98. Cottons, plisses, que nylons, advisco’s. @F Nines, women’s in grp- | Hurry to Federal’s, save! Reg. 2.98. Variety of , spring dresses. 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Zz 88 Plus US. tax LIMITED QUANTITIES WHILE THEY LAST! Women’s better for springtime = dusters spring dresses, cut , 4te-2.48 50 tl ie te io “Charge it” others oll Reg. 12.98- te 98. Variety 3.98-5.98 values. Profiles, . Reg. 5.98. 3-way and full- of colors and fabrics. 7- Free Alterations <5 88 tharge iad Reg. 6.99. Glove leather, om insole, arch, crepe’ sole.’ $20, i u- bo savbne Grom gel Price cut 6.10 Women’ Spring coats — lead the Easter parade! © all-wool coats, —ry wed lined. Detachable linen col- lar, pert push-up sleeves. Solid * or striped gray flannel. Sizes 8-18. FREE ALTERATIONS 36 | MEG. 24.98. BRASS POLE LAMP — spring suits S11 “Charge it” Reg. 12.98-14.98. Popular chemise and many other styles. 8-18, 1644-2444. Free Alterations _— = 9.88 “Charge It” Reg. 10.98. Easy-clean vinyl car coat for misses. Sizes 8 to 16. Hurry! ‘Rain or shine’ ; , “ = spring coals : a 1,10-3,10 pslisb: i” Reg. 10.98-12.98. 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Free Alterations ia _ Price cut 1.10 Handsome new sportswear e@ Slacks e@Sweaters 88 @ Jac-Shirts REG. @ Blouses 2.98 e Skirts | “charge It” Washable cotton sheen slacks, 10- 18. Zipper-front corduroy jac- shirts, 10-18. Beautiful eh er blouses in many oy). New Orlon* sweaters, *DuPont’s acrylic fiber spring skirts in sizes 22-30. Savet— Spee “RIGHT. : s . ¥ hee ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958 “Unusual Starch Studied ‘Hal Boyle One His ns a WASHINGTON — The Agricul- ture Department reports that its avy 8 fesearchers are studying a new kind of dent corn having a high amylose content. Amylose, an un- usual kind of starch, can be used e NEW YORK a — hikes a col-) umnist might never know if he x 7 wien companies and independent operators. ) “That: «$0 auto Pal ig recently, saver’ had your)gent for a man to follow the. dic-jof antiteeene 8 ubeclid checked tates of nature. last an average car =e you should. If defective, it ‘can That the giant waterfall sign|years. for foods, the researchers say. didn’t open his mail: : aa 4 and “were no- "endorsements Tbsen who observed, “You: should } never wear your best trousers HOUSE : PLANS When you-go out to fight for free- picks either. One billion forest Custom Drawn room and truth.’* That your doctor is 190 times or it was playwright Henrick! That you don’t have to worry about a future shortage of tooth- trees — a record — were planted last year. let enough odorless carbon monox-| ide fumes seep into -your.car to wipe out your whole family. * * * That the writing of the great artist. and inventor Leonardo Da ‘put up on Times Square by a soft That three out of four dread a ap pe drink company uses 15,000 gallons|in America eventually remarry. a 4, Gerald W. Kehoe; sale toe Didliag § nD said % Dis-!Harold A; Grant, local president. 200 more likely to become a‘ narcotics Pk Vinci was difficult to read because vd 1-52 addict than you are. About one per| That one of George Washing-ine wrote from right to left. Ex- cent of American physicians ac- — — ra oe gosta! ample: sibt ekiL, : SUNN % ire the dope. habit sometime you WwW ip (Advertisement) during their Mra he had false teeth made of ivory That 65 ory have to habe ; mor: “Qne thing is sure — the! That juvenile delinquency/only by its lifelong friends, i jokes last longer than the'wasn't such a big problem among oe * w.- YOUR TENSIONS comics.” ithe old Romans. Until the first) That salami originaied in the q city of Sallamis on the coast of HOW TO RELIEVE -AND BE HAPPIER If anxieties and tensions are depriving you've talked them out. you of the full pleasure of life, it's time for you to take stock of your jeepexpbarea rn po ip tena to be frightened, since many people - today suffer a little mental tension. But a little tension can often lead to * * * That actress June Havoc has this to say about television hu- That if you're worried over the growth of big business in JAmerica, this item may cheer you: Nearly four of every five ¥successful oi] wells drilled in this country in 1956 were owned by and iron? No wonder he some- times looked grim. * * Ls century B.C., a father by law had the power of life and death over his kids. When he told his teen-age son he couldn't have the family chariot, the ay knew he to pronounce the name of bab- bling little brook near Sherman, Conn...it is called ‘Naramiyock- nowhusunkatankshjunk”’ but Cyprus, and was prized as a tid- bit by the Roman emperors. That belching at meals was con- Sidered perfectly polite by the Ro- meant it! Agriculture’ S Outlook Gloomy — you should fellow these suggestions: 1. TALK 1 OUT! Confide your worries-in some level- headed person you trust. You'll be amazed how differ- ent your problems look after — 2. ESCAPE FOR A WHILE! - When things go wrong, :some- times it's best to lose yourself for a while, in a movie or a book. When you face your worries again, you may find ‘Ifirst cold wave of Florida's worst iService alerts Florida people at OKEECHOBEE, Fla, @ — The winter poured down the peninsula the night of last Dec. Tl. ° ‘There was plenty of warning. The Federal-State Frost Warning ‘least 24 hours ahead of time. te *. * irebuild the depleted herds, Pearce has been forced ta sell 1,000 of his 3,000 cattle because there -is no feed. He has burned 35 carcasses of cattle killed by pneu- monia He estimates next year’s calf crop will be only 20 per cent of normal. It will take three years to in Disastrous Florida Winter} ‘At Immokalee, there has been ice on the vegetable fields, 20 to 5 inches of rain in six weeks—con- tinuous cold and biting winds. Moore has ploughed under one crop of tomatoes, cucumbers, corn and watermelons and- half of -an- other. His third crop of the winter mans who thought it pti intelli- | vat Rentucnr Blended rane FO EE et eS ae es WINNING THE WEsT! [te famous Ametican artist ‘ after the FREDERIC REMINGTON “Indian Ceremony” them a lot easier to solve. The cattle rancher, the vegeta-| Pearce, president of - Florida |'8 pa pepcoaenea to ee ss 3. WORK OFF YOUR AN- ble grower and the citrus farmer |Cattlemen’s Assn., predicted -re- ‘ crop on his £ GER! “Blowirig up” can't pos- [had time to get ready. cently that ifthe bad weather con.acres, doesn't L arlepen he The great whiskey of the Old West / M3 ul as itp sibly answer your problem. After midnight, as temperatures/tinued through February, 275,000 ay be wiped out as a name’ When you reach your boiling dropped to the danger point, J. O.|head of cattle would die in south) STower. is winning new fr iends ever y w here! point, work off your anger ina Pearce Jr., a cattle rancher near} Florida. ~ *& * : ais = 64 p ar oaliaa sic ae - = — > The dg pens t ere ec _ The smoothest of fine Kentucky. whiskies has the | $ These are just three of the many easy. | West of Okeechobee, in the Sentence 5 15 Yea riot, So de tiie citric tint taste, the mildness, the quality that will win you too! ! Pint j i + sxeat winter vegetable-erowing re -§J* U5 which te been heavity-burdened _ Code Ne. 555 atric experts have developed to help |S!09 @ . Imm , i with one of the best crops he'd a. ve 7 happier life. To find out more, write | mometer Gamay. had popped out on the trees after could always rely on Sunny Brook whiskey. Some things have changed but _ for the free booklet: “How To Deal.| Northward, in the citrus area’ the December freeze has now been ad t Sunny Brook! ! ' 4/5 Qe. With Your Tensions”. Address: Bet- |nar Orlando, Ernest S. Dil] wor-| Pontiac bandit Lester S. Smart killed. About 6,000 boxes of fruit en, not Sunny Brook! Its rare quality has made it more popular than ever! Code Ne. 554 ried about the 70-acre citrus grove received a sentence of 5- to 15-/ froze on his trees. - Nis : = he had carefully cultivated since 1927. years in the State Prison of Southern Michigan at Jackson for No full-grown trees are dead but THE OLD SUNNY BROOK COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO. » 86 PROOF + 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS x * * , some won't bear normally again f armed robbery. Prange Cocta Published cs a public service Thus began the most disastrous} Smart, 24, of 1820 Hillside Dr., or years, ' by The Pontia¢g Press in winter Florida has ever known. (confessed to Pontiac police last | —_7 - = ud Since Dec. 11, other cold waves co-operation with The Advertising have followed in fearful regulari- Council and the Newspaper month robbing several business, places in the city, and said he’ Advertising Executives Association ehitis by tak: oe ‘erers new escape much severe wheet- ing, eneesing, coughing and difficult . 1 reathing during recurring attacks of Ha ae << Wonder- - y> & combet ~ aller relax pty tubes, remove chentng’ phiegm. Th breathing at drug- ty. In between, torrential rains have fallen. On brown pastures, this time of year the clover ought to be standing tall and green,' cattle are starving. In the citrus belt, 30 million) boxeg of fruit have been killed. Truck crops on which much of| America depends for its fresh| salads in wintertime have been! under, and dead. turned himself in because he had | ' a — a religion. ~« k& + | He Was sentenced Monday by) (Oakland County Circuit Court \Judge George B. Hartrick. =4 | He pleaded guilty Feb. 3 to, holding up the Home Service Gro-| icery at 43 Orchard Lake Ave. He} also admitted robbing a downtown | frost-blackened | Pontiac department store and, barbecue. IL MMO re 1694—Eneores. of Hollywood. F te— fh oe O Nei ton Sete MATZ 27S. Saginaw Sts Ponting, Mich, ‘2 1672 Meed Music for “Young Oo Leo Fedlp. Wien ond hi PO j Please send me the records checked above: | _ Lovers. All-time musical hits, fovorites. "Nom hee ee alee sarge 1663—Eneores of the World. Kurt Maier 1639-—All-Ster Concert. “Mugosy AS ees Stic beret - 0 with from allover the world. Oo Spanier, Sid ey er ae others. Japs ee ee =A C) 1624—fincores of South America, Kurt 1659 Ohilnd: Po Wee Pee a PL. ee SRS , ( 1572—timcores of Italy. Kurt Maier with C) 1391S 0uke” thingten ond his ofchetd oO seat ee Neopolitan songs, . play jozz. ToS ; a 1505—Meeds fer Vl See Y. 19 = is) Sterlight. ~ a) Sroovi HG, & “PreamoAl 5% shin tx iF BOoOocaog0g0 000 GRINNELLS. — a FE 37168 — Come in, Send Coupon, or r Phone = ca s. ‘Seginaw st KAY STARR CONCERT AND SHOWS 1658—Tscheikewsky Concerto No. 1 piano and orchestra, Emi! Gilels. 1676——Johennes Brahms Symphony No. }. Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra. 1689—The Finest Operette Gems, by world- renowned artists. 1686—Music from My Fair Ledy and Pol Joey. All your favorifes. 1647—Cerousel ond” King and |. popular tunes from these hit shows. 1646—Oklghome ond Rose Marie. Hear your fovorite melodies from these hits. for 1644—Student Prince ond. Desert Song. . Romberg’s most famous musicals. 1473—An Hour ef LeRoy Anderson and Dove Rose- ‘Tunes. All-time favorites. 1631—Seint-Seens, Carnival of the Ani- mals. Hamburg Philharmonia Orch. . ‘MOOD MUSIC in My ain Stor Dust, others. . so Most, - What is a VALU E? 12” LP Ultraphonic Hi-Fi Records at just — PEE WEE RUSSELL . oOB@@oO0.0.00 Go “ mtr. ODO00 POPULAR 1691—Musie of Etlington. 1653—Letin Dence Rhythms, with Perez Prado. . 1616—The Best Polkes, 16 polkos. 1606—Gordon MecRee Sings. Ali-time fevorites, rg jaye P. Morgen ~~ with Frank Vol’s ‘Crchectra! 1592—Serah Veughen Sings; your fovorites. 1551—Ken Griffin at the Organ. 1466—Artie Show. Hour, } GORDON 1 aes 1451—An Hour of Populer Orgen Melodies. - 1443—Cockteil Mawr, | Includes Jealous, Girl of My Dreoms, others. 1439—An Hour’ of Irish Belleds. 1433—The Meert of the islonds in Songs. 1405—An Hour with Artie Show. 1. LATEST RELEASES ‘(] 1750—Hi-Fi Music for Meditetion. Ave Maria, Reverie, other favorites. C)- 1748 —Antiques: Jew Peeree with Becouse, Thine. Alone, .Morning, others. 0 1741—All-Ster Jazz. Don Byos ond favorite jozz selections. 0 A739-—Red: Norve Jesx Trio. Blue tent, Rose Room, East of the Sun, others. o 1728-—My ‘Blue Heaven, Ken Griffin ot the organ, 0 1719—Toe Tappin® Tempi. Music with that “tapping” beot. C0 1711—Jeseph Hofmenn Pleys. Fine music __by this outstanding pignist. 0 1710—Seuth Pacific Suite. Fevorite music \ from. this great Broadway show. : 1609-——Gershwin; An American in Paris, . 1345—Letin Hour with Nero Moreles. 4 9 and Grofe; excerpts. from his Suites. ac Latin American Songs. oO 1707—Beetheven Symphony Ne. 5. (] 1447—An Hour of Pieno Dyet Favorites. 1201-—Streuss Waltzes. Played by the C] 1703—Key Sterr Sings, Songs by one of Worsow Concerto, Fire dance. Berlin Symphony Orchestra _ today’s. favorite vocolists. 1421—Tseheikowsky; Nutcracker Suite, and ' 0 ond Gershwin, Rhapsody in OPERA 4 1700—Kurt Meier Pleys encores of ys Foir Lady. Songs of Broadway. () 1313—Debussy; neaanelr pra a Hii ond Ravel; Bolero. s} 1635—Ferty voole sane” with Giovanni 0 1699-—All-Americon Weltzes, Your favorite (0 1260—Rimsky-Komekett; Scheherazade. Maren. Saree _ music in three-quorter time. : . (0 1616—Burtterfly nk ra Highlights by - members of the Metropoliten Opera. _——— ee et oe oe | GRINNELL's: tone eee Siew) | SARAH VAUGHAN | Check your favorites! BIG NAME ARTISTS: 98 * ; "BEN JEROME NBRAID ae 4 - 2 : 3 A oy oe . : ee —— ; = # ee : i : 5 : f : * , . \ \ % A © i Ce a : a \ ( : * 4 \ st, ; : - web THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958 NINE. - — we cetera : kes : hoe esas = i Deal Now! Deal with your local new car dealer. He is established in your community to provide with 4 service, convenience, and prepared to give you as fine a deal as you will get anywhere. You have the advantage of knowing your local Automobile Dealer. Knowing he is ready to stand behind ; every car and deal he makes with you. He is ready to service your car when needed! And he ; will be here next year or next month when you are again ready to change cars. Meet your ’ Cee ee eer eee Sree Oe ee a Sen eae Your Car | N ee ee ee ee , now when your present car has more . sNow *5" ae a | , > Taken from page 19 of the “AUTOMOTIVE MARKET \ 4 REPORT” issue of January 6, 1958. - ‘ THE FOLLOWING CHART SHOWS HOW LATE MODEL . CARS (’55, 56, 57) DEPRECIATED FROM DECEMBER . ® 24, 1956 to DECEMBER 23, 1957. | The December 24, 1956 mark is used as a starter because . ali : | e that was the date of the survey nearest the new year. , $ February .-. . . . 47 August ..... 22 Teeeo March...... 46 September... 35 | went ay April....... 3 October... . . . 49 , } 3 ‘May....... 26 November... .57 ali. | , ii June....... 23 December.... 51 ee ! eer as $227 , $228 Seth quae Oo OE ee Me DeOnn Sony ap Pome the “Prices are based on the average value of Chevrolets, Fords and Plymouths. Deal Now . . . Deal with Your Local New Car Dealer! a Right now Sis de you can get a new car deal that means more in actual Deal in Pontiac: Deal With Your Local New Car Dealer! dollar value than you have been able to get in years. You get more New in pane aoe Mh 358 pera ihe we mong pty Shey memes workers and ay rese — nae watchmen, it year these ne rs of yours received over $1, nN wages ... wages actual dollar value for your a * nae wy bc than sets will sated get — to buy their homes, food, clothing and pay their other bills. This is a sizable contribution to Why . . . look at the table - + « it gives facts about car trade-in values. our commynity and the businessmen, city and sch ools who share in the earnings of this work-force. Facts you should not overlook. Facts that clearly show delay and ‘put- —— ~ pay rage = sagged city, rm ty, _— ~ property. veg at a oe oar : a ! : you had your family w ne fi Ss, conveniences and services you wan get. et... aN ting it off’ will cost Roos mons? in the long-run + + « Cost you as much this too is a fact, you can get as good or even better deal right here in Pontiac . .. where the as $455.00: extra to own a new car. Deal now ... Deal locally... : money you spend stays ‘home,’ keeps working for you and your family. : _. JOW SAM ROTUNDO ms Jerome, Oldsmobile-Cadillac Braid Mator Sales, DeSote-Piymouth R&R Motors, tnc., poe : ty ‘ : Chryster-Piymeuth-Im Fiaed — oe . ‘* : - in : he _ 25 4 , : ” a ‘ | | ; io’ is : ON eA \ : » : : i ‘ ’ 2 : s Ae % ; a : * i ‘ e ‘ ¢ Z | Pg hs ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958_ pram cee 50h sch ¢ wienies sO : JEWELERS ? 16 West Huron St., Pontiac FE 2-0294 Farmer-Snover—: FUNERAL HOME 160 W..Huron St, FE 2-9171 PARKING ON PREMISES a Established in 1898 PPPrrrrrrrrvrrTTririririiririrlititiit TTT RELIEVES ALL 5 KINDS OF MINOR ARTHRITIC- -——_RNEUMATIC- BURSITIC PAI two full in min- Stim-U-Rub Benge mt apie medication right to Shoes @ C0CSC oC OECE EO EOO:= Stop Pain of Piles! Stop it Today At Home —or money back! An amazing new compound has in any other : been developed to relieve torture tion. Its of simple‘piles at home. Caled ane aoe the medica itching in- stainless Pazo*, it brought instant medication goes relief in doctor's tests! Soot Many who suffered Get Peace, Su v ht part series, w to select g your in- (The second in an ¢ this astinhe describes the proper form for come tax return. Later articles will deal with classes of returns, exemp- tions, ‘taxable income, deductions and other important subjects. ; By G. K. HODENFIELD AP Feature Writer When you have all the facts and figures collected on your 1957 in- come and deductions, the next step is to decide which form to use in filing. your tax return. There are two basic forms avail- able—the 1040 and the 1040A. The 1040 can be used as.a short form, Your Income Tax-No. 2 using only page 1, or as a long form, using pages 1 and 2, and) possibly 3 and 4. You should pick the form that fits the size and type =k your Snaemen et egenens. From 1040A is the simplest of all,—anmd“the Internal Kevenue | Service would like te see it used more than it is. It is a printed card, about the size of an ordi- nary check, and can be processed -by machine. It’s designed to save .both taxpayer and tax collector considerable time ‘and trouble. The IRS says about 30 million taxpayers could use this form if they only would. Last year 14 mil- lion did, and IRS hopes at least 20 million will this year. TIME SAVER 1040A doesn’t call for any great detail. You could probably finish your income. tax chores in five minutes or less by using it. All you have to do is fill out a few blanks, sign it, and send it to the revenue service. They'll figure up your tax and send you a bill or If you want, you can compute your own taxes from the instruc- tions you'll get, and enter it on the form. This will be to your ad- vantage if you have a refund com- ing, because you'll probably get your check from the government a bit sooner. However, if you do your own computing and find you owe Uncle Sam more taxes, you must send along a check for the amount —you can’t wait for a bill. The gimmick on this easy, al- most painless, way of filing your return is that not everyone is eli- gible to use it, and you may not want to use it even if you can. For instance, your total income must not be more than $4,999.99. If it’s a joint return, the combined income of husband and wife must enjoy real comfort. ae. ae eanediente, ieee PAZO roved ingredients, includin SUPPOSITORIES : Friolyte, not tained OR OINTMENT ‘had other types of income such as Pick Tax Form_to Fit. and Half the Strugale Is $100 can be in other wages, divi-fix dends or interest. You can’t use the 1040A if you |‘ annuities, rent receipts, royalties, pension payments, business profits, professional earnings, security transactions, farming income, or earnings as a participant in part- nerships, estates and trusts. And you can’t use this form if you want to itemize your deduc- tions or deduct your business-con- nected expenses (such as traveling costs) or ‘‘sick pay."’ Nor can you use it if you claim the special “head of household’ status. If you can’t use 1040A, or gon’t want to, you'll next have to de- cide how many pages of the 1040 you should fill out. Form 1040 is printed on pages about the size of a large letter- head. There are four pages, but not more than $4,999.99, you may be able to get by with page 1 only. Your adjusted gross income is indi--wssrs left after you've dedurt@itone of New York City’s five bor your business expenses and sick pay exclusions. Thus, you can have a total income of $5,000 or more, and still use just page ] if those deductions. bring the adjusted gross below the $5,000 mark. . On this form, too, there are cer- tain restrictions. You can get by using just page 1.if you are single with no depen- dents to claim as exemptions, or if you are married and claim exemp- tions only for your wife and chil- dren. And to use the first page only you must accept the standard 10 per cent deduction, just as on the 1040A. ‘If your adjusted gross income is $5,000 or more, you have no choice. You must use the longer form of 1040, which means pages ? and§, and possibly 3 and 4. MORE WORK This calls for a bit more work, but there are a number of spe- cial benefits you can claim. For % Imagine!—a full-sized station wagon at a price that saves you hundreds of dollars over nearest competing models. And at this unbelievably low price, you get clean, uncluttered styling, all the spacious tomfort of a 6-passenger sedan (seats 8 with optional Hideaway Seat), plus more than 93 cubic feet of cargo space with the rear seat down! Today, look at all the cars in the low-priced Scotsman series! And don’t be led astray by price claims of the self-named “low-priced three.” Compare prices and see for yourself! You'll find the Scotsman station wagon and sedans are Pak: 4, AOL A ay - an ee A II The SCOTSMAN Station Wagon only *2055 equipped This low price includes heater/defroster, directional signals, spare tire and wheel, double wipers, mirror. Pay only local taxes, if any, and transportation from South Bend. Indiana’. _ actually the lowest-priced, full-sized cars you can ~buy. And they offer more real value, too! A drive behind the wheel will show you why. There's new riding comfort on an exclusive-design. sus- pension system, new ease of maneuvering, with responsive variable-ratio steering, new peace of mind with self-centering and brakes! . See America’s lowest-priced, fu Scotsman 2-door, 6-passenger sedan at $1795°, and the Scotsman 4-door sedan Visit your Studebaker-Packard Dealer, today See the complete line of Studebaker -Packard sports cars, hardtops, sadans_and station. wagons. — COR Studebaker -Packard | PORATION | self-energizing — ll-sized cars, the at only $1874*.’: » FE ¥ _ 245 S Blvd, E A 4-9587 American boy. | etc., and this may result in a sub- stantial saving to you. Pages’3 and 4 are for use in reporting income from dividends, |interest, rents and royalties, and from partnerships, estates, trusts or other sources. Rmember, the first $50 of divi- dend income—$100 if the stock is Typical Boy Next Door By INTERNATIONAL NEWS Air Force scientists picked Don- ald G. Farrell for their’ “space cabin” experiment because they thought he was just’ a normal A search of his background in- dicates they were certainly right. * * * For there is little to show that Farrell is anything but a normal American boy with a liking for sports and a tender heart for ani- mals. He is the typical “boy next door,” modest, active, intelligent, and perhaps with little thought of fame. Verse. wea tage wind be an apartment house in the Bronx, oughs. His Roman - Catholic par- ents sent him to the parochial Car- dinal Hayes High School there. He played football in school, built model airplanes at home — spent a lot of time hunting, fish- equipped for these activities. He stands six feet tall and weighs 185 pounds. He chose accounting as a career and worked at it a couple of years before joining the Air Force. His father, James A. Farrell, also is an accountant. However, the elder Farrell says, Donald hopes to enter college when his four-year enlistment is up in August. He wants to become an aeronautical engineer. James Farrell's favorite anec- dote about his son is this: ‘Space Man’ IS "Normal: f Unknown. t to House Unit | fame, except: “We fed him a good d ee ee ee ee “He never Utes to sive up any thing he starts.” Schwartz Uses Word WASHINGTON ® — Bernard | * * Takes New York Snow to Boy Living in Florida “] remember once, around ISKEY. 86 PROOF, 65x GRAIN N But Farrl's moter, Hee, ot QUT-PERFORMS MACHINES | SELLING AT TWICE THE PRICE * « eHigh speed efficiency and control , . . visible adding dials . . . 9 columns... subtraction. . EASY TERMS ADDING MACHINES OF YOUR CHOICE @ General @ Smith-Corona ®@ Burroughs HAND MODELS os Low as $99.50 BUY or RENT | Serer EQUIPMENT aE ’ @ Remington . only 12 Ibs. 169... @ Victor . @R. C. Allen * © ports car or family sedan .. .new model « or old... your motor will | perform at its best with Phillips 66 Flite-Fuel. You benefit immediately from livelier.- ‘acceleration and improved mileage. ‘And you benelit over the long run from. FliteFuel Get FlitePuel can your ee Phillips 66 Dealer, and enjoy your car more! 5 se nor y ; : : sees res : 4 : 2 : ‘ ; : + | 33 ree = ‘ 3 : . ‘. i ; . eal .¥ e ! ul 2 Fy \ r fe +a 2 \ : ; ‘ atl Pesciss Editors Quiz on——— VAT STORE 2 A terre un > . SS » Y Others nominated in the Classification were British Star — Alec Guinness for “The Bridge on the River Kwai’ and onara Leads in. Oscar Derby film newcomer Anthony Fran- ciosa for “A Hatful of Rain.” ; * * * “The nominations for best per- formance by an actress were paced by tempestuous Anna Magnani, who won the award in 1955 for her work in “The Rose Tattoo,’ and is a leading contender this year for “Wild Is the Wind.” *.- BER Her competition will be fur- nished by Deborah Kerr, “Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison;" Elizabeth Taylor County;" Lana ‘Turner, “‘Pey- ton Place;"’ ward, Eve,” SERIOUS ACTING Buttons, a former television comedian making his first se- rious try at movie acting, was - joined in the competition for best ' su sg actor by Vit- torio. de , “Farewell to Arms;"* Seams Hayakawa, “The Bridge on the River ton Place,” and Russ Tamblyn, Kwai,” Arthur | la dacs Place. 4 “Raintree. and Joanne Wood- “The Three Faces of 12 plates around a table that seats eight. I suggested that she put the four younger chil- adren in the kitchen, but she said it would be bad manners . separate the re : from e_children,__ I have seen it done ‘taut and it worked out much bet- ter because everyone was com- fortable and nobody got mad. These kids are all between 10 and 13 and —~ has to help them eat. As it was, everyone was crowded and nobody enjoyed the meal. Please print this, My wife has to see black on white to believe anything. DANNY DEAR DANNY: I agree with you. If you don't want to put the children in the kitchen, you can set up a card table in the dining room_or living room._ Everyone does it! * * * DEAR ABBY: Someone gave my 8-year-old son a guinea- pig. We keep him in a card- * board box down in the base-- ment. When my husband comes home he helps the boy sneak * ‘the box: up into the bedroom for the night. : “We are renting this house and the floors are beautifully bevy gm but ¢ : and it is ike the floor. ~Should I give the guinea pig to the hospital when my boy is at school? I just can't take any more of this, . UPSET DEAR UPSET: It would be cruel to dispose of the boy's pet in his absence. Your hus- barid is being childish. Talk with him about keeping the gui- nea pig in the basement, and just to be on the safe side, try foil or waxpaper ler that box! *: *& * Madame: I don’t even want to call you “Dear Abby” after reading the answer you gave those boys. “Old Fossil’ you called him! ~"“Maybe he is an an ald fossil for » keeping ——. that land in: his yard, but he warned . them. Why not teach those kids re- spect for other people’s prop-. erty when they're young? My taxes are plenty’ high and I . happen to enjoy looking at a nice lawn and blooming flow- ers, I'd keep any baseball that landed on my property, too. Come visit me at the Smith- _.8onian Mrs. Scott They start young at the Sportsmen’s Club but - am , that’s no sign that William Cope (lower) and David MV ii 't good-archers. David-keeps score and it seems that’ he and his friend are doing pretty well. , Sport Attracts Whole Families From the interest being displayed in indoor archery leagues over at Oakland County Sports- men’s Club in Waterford there is sutfitent | evi- dence that the sport is rapidly increasing in popularity. ne ee Sportsmen, their wives, children and friends, from all over. the county, gather at the OCSC club- house every Friday and Sunday for = compe- tition. THEN OUTDOORS It has been reported to us that indoor competi- tion will continue through March when archers will return to the roving archery range that weaves over the grounds = the ae Club. * Events which allow members to become better acquainted socially include northern deer hunting trips, the annual archery fair, archery tourna- ~ ments which draw archers from all over Michigan, and the annual banquet which is held to present cups and trophies to district winners. * ¥:¢ Through increasing interest shown-in archery, this family sport seems to be taking its place high among the ranks of the outdoor activities of Oak- land County. Why Men Leave Home 2 Jobs for. 15 Years—Never a kk new lives under new identities. The articles are be rapa on the files of the ont Company of America, : oat names have been changed. - By JOSEPH R. MARSHALL INS Staff Writer “Two jobs for 15 years,” Casey D. said to his wites“Two ne for 7 ghar * x * “We got no one to watch over the kids, and anyway I'm too tired,” His wife, Janet, sighed. “You're always tired,” she said. ‘Do you know how many I .have who haven't even met you because- -you're friends so tifed?”’ FOR THE KIDS “Maybe you've got too many Casey said. ‘First ‘t friends," later, Casey joined the com- pany of men who leave home and family, and cost the tax- payer up to $100,000,000 a year in aid to.dependent children. | They flee to esc@pe a situa- tion they find intolerable be- eause of personality or social differences, economic problems or health. Faced with such a situation, the man—or orcca- lated “cause” for vanishing. .* *& Dan Eisenberg, head of Trac- ers Company of America, said that the deserted wife often alleges infidelity and that there * often is another woman in the picture. THE FINAL SBARK “But the other woman seldom is the real cause,” he said. “She just. happened along, or provided the final spark that let the guy go the way he had was the PTA, then this political wanted to go. club and now the kids.” children. They are, srewn uP; ~ 49 and 17 years old. =e “They've started living their own fives. They only sleep Loca here. You only sigep here. I'm the only one who lives here, nances and and I'm sick of it.” * * Casey watched her for a- “Vou moment. He shrugged. seem to be having a pretty good time,” he said, “what with the parties and. the men.” it’s bridge parties. That looks great for * * * “The real problems, the un- “Jacob -T- 2a, exec Pro Service, said studies showed infidelity, drinking, fi “That's disgusting,” Jaret teat or underlying causes: of . She turned and walked & a. Bs i Mein ot the room. a. * €asey heard her tym. da “Tnitdeity by ber Wasbaind was «fhe mn alleged by Janet D. | Casey's family. The relatives ee at ‘i : # _of the Family “That's right, now pull just a Mieke bit more,’ -William McNabb seems to be saying to his cri They spend many Sunday evenings at Oakland County Sportsmen's Club engaged in archery activities. toad Even Potter Gets Pulled Into War of the Chemise By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As the war of the chemise rages on, strange things are happening. * * * Husbands are issuing ulti- matums, wives are having hys- terics, manufacturers are send- ing their spies into dress de- partments to sample public opinion, buyers are biting their fingernails and innocent by- standers are placing bets on the outcome of it all. A LAW WANTED Many a long-suffering male, viewing photographs of the la- test sack, barrel and balloon fashions in slick-paper maga- zines, has muttered: “There ought to be a law!"’ : * * * But it remained for a female resident of Big Rapids, Mich., .to make a definite legal appeal. Infuriated by the idea of re- turning to the unlamented flap- per styles of 1925, this lady sat down and wrote a letter to Sen. runt Potter (R-Mich) as fol- op uaieeh ts janie tae den tor to do all in your power against the new style ‘sack’. dresses foisted on us by foreign so-called designers. * * * “Healthy, well-formed Amer- ican girls are draping them- selves in these shapeless gun- nysacks. There ought t6 be a law against it.” SOLONS POWERLESS Potter’s reply: “I'm sorry, but here, I must admit, Con- gress is riers ” * +t The senator included the let- ter and his reply in his weekly newsletter. If Potter's fashion tastes are like those, of the average American male, he probably would have loved to pass a law banning the fashion © which conceals feminine curves. when she talked with a case worker. She told how Casey had been one of the assistants to tne office manager of an insurance company. On Friday nights and weekends he had worked as a cashier at a restaurant. ' STARTED TO PACK ee ee and not always re- Janet told of their fight and_ how a. few weeks later he ha} come home and started throw- ing his things into a suitcase. * * % She had said to him, “Co ahead, then. But if you think the children and I are yoing to starve while you rub around with that Martha womai.. . you've got another guess com- ing. “I've seen you with her at. the restaurant, and giggling. ” “Shut up, ” he said. even ae a week I work, and when I get home the place is a mess talking 3 ROR -/‘At least she’s decent, and /we can talk about something " besides going out at night. You and me are finished. I’m leay- agency con selea: - a ] from your booze parti-s. . But, as a wise politician, he must have realized that such a law might boomerang, with disastrous results. * * * The one thing sure to make the gunnysack dress a raging success would be to tell wom- en they must not wear it. PEO Unit Conducts Gathering “What's: New and Old in the Constitution?” was the theme of the program for Chapter AW of PEO Monday evening in the Elizabeth Laké road home of Mrs. William Miller. A study of the state bylaws was included in the program. x *¢ id Guests for the evening in- cluded Mrs, Frances Plumb, president of Chapter AD, Roy- al Oak, and Anabel Ricard, recently of Chapter AW. Plans were completed for a fund-raising project to be “held Friday and Saturday un- der the chairmanship of Mrs. Ashton Emery. : Mrs. Everett Peterson will open her West Iroquois road home for the next meeting. Let Kids Glorify Their Mud Pies Even a mud pie looks pretty with frothy icing. Treat the youngsters to a big bowl of thick, stiffly beaten soap or detergent suds tinted with veg- etable coloring. This “frosting” will add ‘great zest to juvenile pie-mak- ing, indoors and out. Day Of agreed to write to him. A week later, Casey was talking to a social worker. * * * “Fifteen years,” he said, “two jobs for 15 years. I never had a day off just so we could live decently and bring the kids up right. Then as soon as-the “jade get old enough, she starts Tunhing around. - PLEASURE AT WORK “What would you do? At least at work I could enjoy myself a little bit. You know,” he said, and he leaned forward in his chair, “you know I used - to look forward to the week- ends. Dinner_at 11 o'clock after the crowd cleared, dinner with Martha, and we'd talk... * * * “But I stuck it out, and they I came home one night and found this Joe on ‘the couch, boozed up, with lipstick on. his face. What would you do?” It took about six separate interviews with Janet and Casey before each saw the _of pattern parts, + { i rae : , a ee Sew-easiest! This Printed Pat- tern makes a darling play-set tor your little girl, with a minimum sewing time! Printed Pattern 4840: Children's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 top and shorts, 144 yards of 35-inch. Printed directions-on-eaehpat-/7OT You don't throw a scene or tern part. Easier, accurate. | Send 35¢ in coins for this pattern —add five cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to Anne |there’s a spot for it in the budget. Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West, 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, woman?’ ‘Because the children can’t about him as you do, hg They have not been married to him. So they can’t feel the Shock and anger you feel at his sexual betrayal, Though you may no longer feel a part of him, your children do. Partnership i Woman Reader C By RUTH game, of course. Husbands Advised to Try. n Marriage laims It’s More Fun Than Old Battle of the Sexes . MILLETT “Judging from some of the lettérs you print from hus-|. bands, there are still @ lot of married men in the world who have never given the partnership idea of marriage). a‘try,” writes one of my women readers. | + _ “For their informatoin, I'll tell them how:a partn ship in the home works. There are “The first and most important rule is that both part- is a mature person and act accordingly. “If one says he is too tired to do something, whether to get the dinner or mow the lawn, the other assumes its probably so. ‘ “It doesn’t matter whether one got tired playing bridge, playing golf, working, or just sitting thinking. The point is, you're tired. So let’s get rested, “If Mama wants reducing exer- cises or Papa wants a new fishing take the plunge and then try to justify it. ° “You béth sit down and see if! When and if you can find. it, you're both pleased. If not, ‘you iwork and finagle or wait until the budget will stand the strain: ' “The job of each partner is im- ners assume that the other* portant to the other. If his job means she has extra work enter- taining, or if he wants to talk over an office problem or get some help doping out a letter — well, she’s proud of her part in helping him up the ladder. = * * * “He remembers that when she’s snowed under with house- work, and gets out the vacuum cleaner without being asked. “They add labor-saving devices to their home as they can afford them, not because she is whining) for them, but because they en- joy -the additional free time to- gether. some rules to the/t "THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958 tim _H sit i rif 1% rr t : i ing, “It’s my duty as a . weman to protect my children TS New Version of Cinderella DURANT, Okla. ) — Mrs. Troy Stone decided to take her | shoes off while driving home from a shopping trip and tossed them in the back seat. — * * . A couple of days later, she looked for the shoes and found be: . |S. SGT. and MRS. DAVID F. MARSAC * West Walton boulevard. * * * Then she recalled she had delivered some discarded gar- ments to a rummage sale. She checked at the sale, and found her lost shoe. only one. Textile plants in the U.S. are expected to use about 8%4 million jbales of cotton in 1958. size and style number. | * . 4 i} in Monotone Wool .. . Nothing compares to a Bardley ... it takes you ~ places season after season —',.. exclusively ours THR in Muted Monotone Wool Tweed *- T.. suit that definitely enhances the scenery everywhere _ +«.in a country lane or city street. In mvuted-. monotone wool tweed. blue and red $69.95 > ~ BARDLRY COAT. BARDLEY SUIT 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RD. Use | CREDIT TERS Save Twice... Buy Nationally | Famous Brands at Savings... | Get Double Stamps, too! ASHION SHOP TE BARDLEY SUIT in Textured Wool Tweed . Ovvina- PANTIES te $13.95 Perma-lift’s magic oval pantie can't ride up— ever! Be fitted by our expert... Mrs. W. Dupuis, in your exact \ ce coat that breathes. , ¥: , Fashion {rom the oked and tabbed word GO! Notched for fashion excitement, ' pockets, club collar and this casual suit is a vibrant Spring ‘a busy commuter, sure personality. Fine monotone of where it’s going. , wool, crepe lined, Textured wool tweed in \ $50.95.» $59.95 : 4 : : 4 ~ ' , a ee eS g gee t 8 ® bs oft 7 \ 3 \ . » AG \ . i * \ geet EL ee N : i. oe i is es oe ave eH] Pd ‘f x > fe | bs a dl Sp A a Fd ay J ; sarong _ the criss-cross girdle that walks ond won't ride vp Try a sarong. You'll find it different from ~— o sheng you've ever worn, less, - weight control, streamlines your figure to _ “The unique criss-cross front lets ‘ you walk, bend, sit in complete comfort. Sarong Bros 2.95 $595 » $4950 . Bais! ELVE — Are YW Plans Celebration on Monday Birthday Theme Will Highlight 13th. ff Annual Meeting Monday will. mark the 15th annual meeting of Pontiac YWCA, A birthday party motif will prevail at Grace Lutheran Church Fellowship Hall for the 6:30 p.m. meeting. Invitations sent t9 members Four pages today in Women’s Section “fo a station wagon, public ad- and friends of the association requested, ‘‘Please come to our YWCA's birthday party.” ‘A footnote which wr or eg gifts rariging fysm_potholders_ dress system, television set and live volunteers was included on the invitation. CAPTAIN TO SPEAK Capt. Morgan. L. Howell, master of the cruise ship “Aquarama,” will speak at the dinner meeting. He has had long association an the YMCA and helped found that organization in Hilo, Hawai. * * * The Rev. Francois Jochmans, who recently came from Bel- gium to make his home in Pontiac, will give the -invoca- tion and benediction. Open to all members, their families and friends, dinner party reservations can be made by calling the YWCA. | Eight Become New Members . of Bethel Five - Andrea Alien, Carolyn An- .@erson, Sherry Drinkwater, ‘Sandra Fergusen, Cynthia Hiltz, Darlene Humphrey, Pa- tricia -Rahja and Sandra Schmidt were initiated into Bethel 5, International Order of Job's Daughters. * * * The initiation was held Mon- day evening, with Janet Kneale, honored queen, presid- ing over the ceremony, * * * After the ceremony 7 mem- bers and sts were served refreshments from tables dec- orated to commemorate George Washington's birthday. PTA Listens to Panel Talk at Hawthorne ~Some—-€5--members— of -Haw-— thorne PTA met in Hawthorne School to hear and participate in a pane] discussion entitled “Parents and Youth Walk Hand in Hand.” * * * On the panel were Mrs. Neil Wasserberger, Mrs, Daniel Pe- terson, James Card and Sid- ney Ruff, Also participating in the dis- cussion of how parents can - work with youth groups were members of Boy Scout, Girl Scout and Camp Fire Girl Mrs: John Guenther headed the refreshment committee for the Thursday evening meeting. Sheath Is Favored Despite chemise. conversa-- tion, the jersey sheath, fitted and shaped, contimies to be a prime fashion favorite, Best- liked colors are black, navy, red,. royal] blue and green. Scores must be pretty good from the smiles on the faces of (left to right) James Hargraves (who incidentally is secretary of the Archery Club), Wood., Mrs. Joseph Babin pours as. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kuck take time out Being Rude Fails to Speed Service Acting rude or impatient to a slow or inefficient clerk or waitress or anyone else who serves you doesn’t improve your chances of transacting ' your business quickly. All that it does is create an unpleasant atmosphere, BARBARA A, TATE Mr. and Mrs..Grover J. Tate of Beverly avenue announce the engagement ef their daugh- ter, Barbara Ann, to Robert Edwards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orvil Edwards of Coleman ave- nue, Movie Wins 10 Separate Nominations ‘Sayonara’ Leads in Oscar Derby By LEE BELSER HOLLYWOOD ‘(INS)}—"‘Sayo- nara,” “Peyton Place’ and “The Bridge on the River Kwai"’ were front riinners to- day in the 1958 Oscar derby of the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences. * * * The nominations, five in each” of 16 classifications, were an-- nounced yesterday and ‘the den- izens of the movie colony im- mediately began the tradition- al guessing game that-will go on until the award winners are announced over a national radio and TV hookup on March 2% “Sayonara,” the tender love story of an American pilot and a Japanese actress, won 10 sep- arate nominations for Oscars in the 30th presentation of the Academy Awards. , BRANDO, BUTTONS : They ‘include Marion Brando as best actor, Red Buttons and Miyoshi Umeki for supporting roles anda bid as the best_ picture of the year. - Nine nominations for excel- a lence, including one as the. best picture, were credited to ‘“Pey- -ton Place.’ the sensational best-selling novel of life in a New England town by Grace Metalious. “The Bridge on the River Kwai,’ which concerns. the emotions of men in war, wor eight nominations, including two for acting and others’ for direction and as‘ the best pic- ture * * * Other films nominated for _ the best motion picture were “Witness for the Prosecution" and “12 Angry Men.” THE BEST ACTOR Nominations for best actor of the year wet to three former Oscar winners, Brando for “Sayonara,”; Charles Laugh- ton for ‘Witness for the Pros- ecution,”’. and Anthony Quinn for “Wild is the Wind,” * * * Others aeminated in the : classification were British Ster. Bridge on the River Kwai” pay ee “ _saMe_ Hargraves. Dear Abby - aks Pentiae Press Photos ‘ row Scott and Mrs. Scott. Mrs. Scott kept score for her husband and > for a coffee break at Archers Club of Oakland County Sportsmen's Club. For One Not Nosy, You're Too Newsy By ABIGAL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My neighbor has six kids and she’s still go- ing strong. They say that no two of her kids have the ; and my kids, who are Il and 13, are asking me questions, She is not a welfare case, either, and no- body can fig- ure out how she does it be- catise her husband has been laying around with a bad back for years. eed 4 “fo bills so it means everything is for cash. They got good -clothes, good furniture and two TVs, Will you please tell me ~ how she does it? NOT NOSY ‘DEAR NOT: For & woman who is not NOSY, you are very NEWSY. I don’t know how she - does it, but she does it! * xk * , DEAR ABBY: My wife and I had her brother, his wife and their children for Sunday din- ner. My wife was trying to set film neweomer Anthony Fran- eiosa for ‘A Hatful of Rain.” * * * The nominations for best per- formance by an actress were paced by tempestuous Anna Magnani, who won the award in 1955 for her work in “The Rose Tattoo,” and is a leading ‘contender this year for “Wild Is. the Wind.” - * * w.: Her competition will be fur- nished by Deborah Kerr, “Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison;" Elizabeth Taylor ‘Raintree County;” Lana ‘Turner, “‘Pey- ton Place; and Joanne Wood- ward, “The Three Faces of Eve.” SERIOUS ACTING Buttons, a former television comedian thaking his first se- rious try at movie acting, was joined in the competition for best supporting actor by Vit- torio de Sica; “Farewell to Arms; Sessue Hayakawa, . “The Bridge on the River Kw os Arthur Kennedy, Fa “Peyton Place,” 12 plates around a table that seats eight. I suggested that ‘ she put the four younger chil- The mailman says she gets yoy— * dren in the kitchen, but she said it would be bad manners to separate the parents from | —the- children. Ihave seen it done before and it worked out much bet- ter because everyone was com- fortable and nobody got mad. These kids are all between 10 and 13 and nobody has to help them eat. As it was, everyone was crowded and nobody enjoyed the meal. Please print this, My wife has to see black on white to believe anything. DANNY DEAR: DANNY: I agree with Wart to put can set up a card table in the dining room or living room. Everyone does it! * * * DEAR ABBY: Someone gave my §8year-old son a guinea- pig. We keep him in a card- board box down in the base- ment. When my husband comes _ home he helps the boy sneak the box up into the bedroom ‘for the night. . We are renting this house . ‘and the floors are beautifully varnished, but that guinea pig's - box is soaked every morning and it is ruining the floor Should I give the guinea pig to the hospital when my, boy - is at school? I just can't take any more of this, UPSET | DEAR UPSET: It would be cruel to dispose of the boy's. pet in his absence. Your hus- ‘band is being. childish. Talk with him about keeping the gui- nea pig in the basement, and just to be on the safe side, try foil or waxpaper under that box! * * * . Madame: I don't even want, to call you “Dear Abby” after reading the answer you gave those boys. They start young at the Sportsmen’s Club but that’s no sign that William Cope (lower) and David —WNelson (standing) aren't good archers. David keeps score and it seems that’ he and his friend are doing pretty well. Sport Attracts — ‘Whole Families From the interest being displayed in indoor archery leagues over at Oakland County men’s Club in Waterford there is sufficient evi- dence that the sport is rapidly increasing in popularity. 2 * Sportsmen, their wives, children and friends, from all over. the county, gather at the OCSC club- ray every Friday and mona for league compe- tition THEN OUTDOORS It has been reported to us that indoor competi- tion will continue through March when archers will return to the roving archery range that weaves over the grounds ~ the 1 ai appa Club. Events which allow * i to become better acquainted socially include northern deer hunting trips, the annual archery fair, archery. tourna- ments which draw archers from all over Michigan, and the annual banquet which is held to present - cups and trophies to district winners. * * * Through increasing interest shown in archery, this family sport seems to be, taking its place high among the ranks of the outdoor activities of Oak- land County. : Why Men Leave Home Sports- | “T ests vit now pull just a little bit more,” William McNabb seems to be saying to his wife. They spend many Sunday evenings at Oakland County Sportsmen’ s Club engaged in archery activities. Even Potter Gets Pulled Into War of the Chemise By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — As the war of the chemise rages on, strange things are happening. * * * ettusbands are issuing ulti- matums, wives are having hys- terics, manufacturers are send- ing their spies into dress de- partments to sample public opinion, buyers are biting their fingernails and innocent by- standers are placing bets on the outcome of it all. A LAW WANTED Many a long-suffering male, viewing photographs of the la- test sack, barrel and balloon fashions in slick-paper maga- zines, has muttered: “There ought to be a law!” * * * But it remained for a female resident of Big Rapids, Mich., to make a definite legal appeal. per styles of 1925, this lady sat down and wrote a letter to Sen. eos on aw msgs aah — ‘appeal to you as my sena- tor. to do all in your power against the new style ‘sack’ dresses foisted on us by foreign so-called designers. * * * “Healthy, well-formed Amer- ican girls are draping them- selves in these shapeless gun- nysacks. There ought t6 be a law against it.” SOLONS POWERLESS ._ Potter’s reply: “I'm sorry, but here, I must admit, Con- gress is powerless.” eee ee: | The senator included the let- ter and his reply in his weekly newsletter. If Potter's fashion tastes are like those- of the average American male, he probably would have loved to pass a law banning the fashion which conceals feminine curves. (This the second of articles telling through case hie tories why thousands of iouaiann a, sires titles, The articles on # Tracer: America, Only les nt ete have been changed.) later, Casey joined the com- pany of men who leave home and family, and cost the tax- payer up to $100,000,000 a year in aid to.dependent children. They flee to escépe a situa- tion they find intolerable be- cause of personality or social differences, economic problems or health, Faced with such a situation, the man—or occa- sionally the woman—finds an think we ought to going immediate and not always re- out ‘more. lated “cause” for vanishing. * * &, - | a“ * * “We got no one to watch Dan Eisenberg, head of Trac- over the kids, and anyway I'm —— ers Company of America, said By JOSEPH R. MARSHALL INS Staff Writer “Two jobs for 15 years,”- Casey D. said to his wife. “Two jobs for 15 years, and now you too tired.” that the deserted wife often His wife, aa. sighed. alleges infidelity and that there “You're always tired,” she ® often is another woman in the said. ‘Do. you know how many picture. friends I have who -haven't THE BAR even met you because you're i 5 .. so tired?” : “But the other woman seldom FOR TRE Kips is the real cause,’ he said. “She just happened along, or provided the final \spark that let the guy go the way he had “Maybe you've got too many friends,’ Casey said. ‘First ‘t. was the PTA, then this political warited to go. club and now | it's bridge o & parties. That looks great for . *. the kids. . aoe real problems, the un- Hid wife ‘stood ip. “Will you derlying reasons,. range from please stop talking about the @scapism to work to keeping cumeewn “2 Jobs for 15 Years—Never a Day Off when she talked with a case worker. She told how Casey had been one of the assistants to tne office manager of an ihsurance company. On Friday nights and weekends he had worked as a cashier at a restaurant. STARTED TO PACK danet told of their fight and how a few weeks later he ha! come home and started throw- ing his things into a suitcase. * * * She had said to him, “Go ahead, then. But if you think the children and I are yoing to starve while you run around with that Martha woman. . you've got another guess com- ing. “T’'ve seen you with her at the restaurant, talking and ' giggling.” “Shut up,”’ he said. “Seven days a week I work, and wien I get home the place is x» mess from your booze parti-s. *~ * * “At least she’s decent, and But, as a wise politician, he must have realized that such a law might boomerang, with disastrous results. * * * The one thing sure to make the gunnysack dress a raging success would be to tell wom- en they must not wear it. PEO Unit Conducts Gathering “What's New and Old in the Constitution?” was the theme of the program for Chapter AW of PEO Monday evening in the Elizabeth Lake road home of Mrs, William Miller. A study of the state bylaws was included in the program. x ®& * Guests for the evening in- eluded Mrs, Frances Plumb, president of Chapter AD, Roy- al Oak, and Anabel Ricard, recently of Chapter AW. Plans were completed for a fund-raising to be der the chairmanship of Mrs. Ashton Emery. Mrs. Everett Peterson will nel her West Iroquois road home for the next meeting. Let Kids Glorify Their Mud Pies Even a mud pie looks pretty with frothy icing. Treat the ‘youngsters to a big bowl of thick, stiffly beaten soap or detergent suds tinted with veg- etable coloring. This ‘frosting’ will add great zest to juvenile pie-mak- ing, indoors and out. agreed ito write to him. A week later, Casey was talking to a social worker. * * * “Fifteen years,” he said, “two jobs for 15 years. I never had a day off just so we could’ live decently and bring the kids up right. Then as soon as the kids get old enough, she starts running around. PLEASURE AT WORK “What would you do? At least at work I could enjoy myself a little bit. You know,” he said, and he leaned forward in his chair, “you know I used to look forward to the- week- ends. Dinner. at 11 o'clock after the crowd cleared, dinner with Martha, and we'd talk... * * * “But I stuck it out, and then I came home one night and found this Joe, on ‘the couch, a up, with lipstick on his "5 ace. What would you do?” t took about six ate interviews with Fiat and Casey before Pong saw the children. They are, grown up; 19 and 17 years old. “They've started living their own lives.. They only sleep here, You only sleep here. I'm “Old Fossil’ you called him! Maybe he is an old fossil for keeping the baseballs that land in his yard, but he warned up with the Joneses." Jacob T. Zukerman, execu- tive secretary of the Family Location Service, said studies showed infidelity, drinking, fi- Why not teach those kids re- ers. eee Fe Janded on my property, too. Come visit me at the Smith- tion _ because I fossil ‘FOSSIL, NO. 2 the only one who lives here, and I'm sick of it.” * * tr Casey watched her for fa moment. He shrugged. “You seem to be having a pretty good time,” he said, “what with “That's disgusting,” Janet ye ee oe pe . Mtiybe j a ay it'll work,” Casey said, Si limenke we can talk about something each other's infi- besitles going out at hight. You /1¥. But what, had produced aad mae see Sued. I'm leay- 5. apart at canke oO a ot hard he ‘had no time for his LEAVES JOBS wife and she by trying to con- Janet. waited two nights. be- quer her loneliness in activities fore she called Casey's office | way from her husband. at the insurance company. He . " fF & had gone to work only to say Both decided to change he had to go away fer two things; he would give up the weeks. She called the restau- second job and she would go to said, She turned .and walked _ the pam ¥ Casey heard her crying in intl by her haband was i A A Se ee Ss satiate stigmas e agency con aeted Casey's family, The relatives x * * (Tomorrow: The man ‘who a ee es aa « aie (as ee = pk ef ne = SS es SH ne as See ie = = x Ne = ri ; i ee Sas 2 See. ' : : “ine le pe ae ; ; ue : — elite: Soe F _THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958 / ont oplit Children’ From Unfaithful. Dad|: Soo By MURIEL: TAWRENCE [been seeing another woman. Now| It ‘you fry to divide them fom| But the true mother withdrew!) “Why should an. unfaithful hus- he tells me he wants not only alhim, you may arouse their doubts/@ll claim to the child in order to - sia Mra. T. eS?" [divorce but ful visiting rights with|ot your love for them, ‘They’ teet| reserve. his. wh mt « phage Codes test I. How can “I\“If Mother hates Daddy so that] 1. Seco y lglg 1) t “For mo Lead om agree? should ‘I expose my/|she won't let ts one,hien, alae lef go of him, : t \\ Ag oe _ asses two innocent children to the in-lalso: hate the part of us that be-/SPLIT FEELINGS 12 Be (oo _ a ence of their father and this|longs to him.” And thelr confi-| If we love children, we don’t)” . oO ; iF a | dence that they are wholly dear to|want to have their feelings split| | , : ‘Because the children can’t fee! |¥U Will be badly shaken, any more than we want their) | —" 3 They have nat beta tured | Dp you rat the Bible tary of| thelr father ie as untalhtl | sy Ne acladly | 5 married to Do the Bible , of ; . Rim. So they can't feel. the |Sélomon’s Judgment hetween,the|', them as he's been to you, they ZZ | | shock and anger you feel at his |true and false mothers? The false js in their — * ” betrayal. Though you |mother was willing to allow Solo-|™!™ 4 se - = marae +o * = ee It is resentment of your husband} feed o ei . o secure her portion hat you have to farce thel | . | ee nen ee ‘ 3 i. 2 . or it. : | Husbands Advised to Try ce ie soe ball cs | raves A . os é it, Otherwise you may con- ze —s , tinue fo dress it as moral or Partnership in Marriage _ | tie ies i s mor p AY 1 Goro ing, “It’s my duty as a virtuous \ hale s | Nee Woman Reader Claims It’s More Fun} woman to protect my Pa ae ulevard. a A SPLne ARS FU , Than Old Battle of the Se against these twe simmers.” 1S SGT’ and MRS. DAVID F. MARSAC | attie of the Sexes ei 2 ae . —ennreemen — By RUTH MILLETT. - unfaithful husband, not hig, bik J A ... Buy = sdatgion ; __ faa stand, wot oe ot TOanne Volcheck Speaks Sa ag Twice , ati onall g rom some of the letters you print fyom hus-| nae hate appear fine and altru- iS ; = F Br | t Sa bands, there are still lot of married men in the wofldjiie, “ows in St. Benedict Rite|@Famous Brands at Savings .. . _|WAO have never given the partnership idea of marriage! + ££ i ~~ us. a a try,” writes one of my women readers, =, -_|_ Unless we caus adzalé we el | gt. Benedict Church was -thewith blue headbands. Their flowers Get Double Stamps, too! For their informatoin, I’ll tell them how:a partner-|wish to hurt“our husband involves igcene’ of the Saturday morning|were pink carnations. ao ship in the home works. There are some rules to the/hurting the children, too. Like the| wedding uniting Joanne Joyce Vol- 2. EEE game, of course. Oe acc in ine a tothe ehil,(check and S.Sgt. David Frederick] ‘The best man was Lewis Swann| WB. “The first and most important rule is that both part-jdren regardless of its effect on|Marsac. The Rev. John Boar per-lot Detrolt. Seating the questa were > + them formed the ceremony in the. pres-/Neil Marsac of Oscoda, ~ ners assume that the other? ———— . . lence of 200 guests, the bridegroom, and Jerry Cannes is a mature person and act pase = parade job N V ae _- of : ee accordingly. bererae’ enter) New Version Parents of the bride are Mr. and| - at a reception held in the VFW . “tt one tase be too tired to| Aunts See Se gente 30 Sa over : 3 Mrs. Fred J. Volcheck of Ascot Mall t= Kosge Master hv, Vel h do something, whether to get the Prin engage wth berid Beare of Cinderella — i eeenee © the son} check wore a blue lace dress with dinner or mow the lawn, the other! proud of her part in helping him! Dinar, Okla. up — Mrs. land Clifford Marsac of West Wal-| =s'3,ncccmmerwes Sus 8 sma assumes its probably 80. up the ladder. Troy Stone decided to take her ton boulevard, ! a navy " i with pink ot 2 e ‘ : “It doesn’t matt whethe * * * hoes off while driv ing home ' accessories and demure CD Sere Baie | eng Sag ats | ue oem ‘ae a | Siete | wnerMeserats tr | Smee Sa 8 ome . vour little girl. with 2 rminimum| 0 working, or just sitting | she’s snowed under with house- | tossed them in the back seat. | over tulle featuring a ruffled un- Putti'te tavied enn vip 6 Fak 5 ss : » The point is, you're | work, and gets out the vacuum * &« derskirt and appliques at the pes of pattern parts, sewing time!| ea ae ida the new Mrs, Marsac changed Printed Pat 4840: Children’s s get rested. cleaner without being asked. sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 Size 6 top and “If Mama wants reducing exer-| ‘‘They add labor-saving devices = shorts, 1% yards of 35-inch. cises or Papa-wants a new fishing to their home as they can afford Printed directions on eat pat-/TOT you don't throw a svene or|them, not because she is whining tern part. Easier, accurate. take the plunge and then try to for them, but because they en- Send 35¢ in coins for this pattern Justify it. joy the additional free time to- —add five cents for each pattern) “You both sit down and see if gether. for Ist-class mailing. Send to Anne there's a spot for it in the budget. ee * | Adams, care of The Pontiac Press,|When and if you can find it, “Any man who has never tried : | 13? Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th you're both pleased. If not, you partnership in marriage ought to potty e St., New York 11, N.Y. Print|work and finagie or wait until the give it a go. Man, it’s lots more e plainly name, address with zone; budget will stand the strain. ‘fun than the Battle of the Sexes PRETTY " size and style number. ' “The job of each partner is im-'some of you are still fighting.” BRA g — d c 50 r. ° ~ $2 s ° : . . . Nothing compares to MOLD and 4 i GIRDLE ‘ a Bardley ... it takes you a : aoe Ee $10 places season after season aio a ‘ : 1 exclusively ours LATTER, .. * * . BRA i $695 r 4 / n ; : . cee : ‘ g ; ! ; in Muted ‘Monotone Wool Tweed in Textured Wook Tweed in-Monotone Wool ’ oe : | “ten Th suit that | The unique, crisieross. front: lets 5 definitely enhances the — i you ate — sit in complet .+.in a country lane Sarong Bras 2.95 . or city street. In muted - . monotone wool tweed. ‘ blue and red $69.95 > age t y ? dl ! 3 i : ; \ : ; | i Goat that breathes Yy. ’ 22 | Fashion from the heh och wbhad “7 | word GO! Notched for fashion excitement, : ) ‘| pockets, club collar and dais eoveel ealt-is ) , a vibrant Spring SS os a busy commuter, sure 7 personality. Fine monotone ne co ae of where it’s going. at a, - | : wool, crepe lined, By ee Textured wool tweed in 7 ; : 5 « ; * , ; 2 parchment beige Pe blue and pink te $13.95 i \ ; Y . $ : Perma-lift’s magic oval - ; $59.95 ; 59.95 pantie can’t ride up— : us ever! Be fitted by our : way ' expert... Mrs. W. ! Dupuis, In your “exact : style. . | Hl Perma-Litt . $6995 to 995 : 8 5. eer aye a 8 : ‘ al - * ; . Load soe & Ce } 55. Pater & - eget —s of ee } oe L é ui as y ’ a" A > 2 a 6 aa —_ % % i — — —— eek Cee. weve cg? : ‘ \ \ 8" Fy BO KS ey \ea : el | As | \ ee ‘ \ i < e lN a Weg : ~ = 2, } f 2 : - aes c \ : \ Bees,’ en 2 : . ae 3 : \ } - Ye fe ae a5 oe oe. \ oe _ 4 < . re ae ao “FOURTEEN if Ve oe a = eat be me ve ee 7 ‘ : aS ci : : ay yy cs f ge ie ie & 4 prs eeenncnte en 3 arm MN ay eeapeneeceennenssocees) Discard Drugs EAST LANSING (INS) — ORA. OBRECHT sass “Home medicine chests should Specializing be cleared of leftovers every in two months. ; - & * Halr Styling Mrs.. Thelma ‘Dunn, home and Permanents " management specfalist at Complete Beauty Service poor yal, baron 152 N. Perry FE 2-3053 Mrs. Dunn asserts that few drugs should be kept regularly in the medicine chest. Most drugs, she explains, are or- dered for a certain person for a specific illness. Seeesecsesesosooseesess rwvrvewTeYeYyelhcLTermhUL eh ehh] > ; Beauty Salon § “Dispose of leftover medi- ‘ 218 S. Telegraph (Near Voerheis) cines,”” she urged. “That way d for appointment call | there will be-no temptation to FE 8-972t >| use ther without consulting a 4 . » Dabo bbe hhabatheai doctor.” | Every 2 Months — That Is Yours... Let a “Rowena” Specialist Stylize Your Hair ROWENA’S BEAUTY SALON 4831 Dixie Hwy. 1216 Baldwin 14 8S. Main, Clarksten OR 3-3541 FE 5-3735 MA 5-1000 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Mon, thru Set. To Bring. Out the ' ND -|School for their 1 Swing,” with Leondard Buzz act- Mrs. John H. Garrison of Dancers Gather for ‘Sweetheart Swing’ at Owen Members of the Hoedowners Square Dance Club met at Owen “Sweetheart ing as master of ceremonies. Callers for the evening were Larry Bova, George Beauchamp, | Cecil Elsholz, Duane Brown, | Charles Vandenberg, Howard Hat- field, Fred Froede and Mr. Buzz, Guest at the Saturday dance were Mr. and Mrs, Richard Gar- nett, Mr. and Mrs. John Haviland, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Specht, Mr. and Mrs, Mardin Willobee, Mr. and Mrs. Louis —_ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Beehler, Mr. ‘and Mrs, William Webb, Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Stanton and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Houser. The geographical center of the North American continent is near Rugby, N.D. A monument marks the spot. MARGUERITE’S YARN SHOP Learn to Knit Free Instruction Classes 197 8, Jessie off Auburn _ FE 48722 | C. L. Choate of James street. © Participating in the World Day pe sin ro- gram Friday in First Methodist Church will be (left to right) Mrs. William G. Wright of Chippewa roa Cherokee road and Mrs. Mrs. Wright will | i 2 tae Se * Pentiae Press Phete represent a Japanese student dnd Mrs. Choate, a student from India who attend the American Christian allege in Tokyo. Mrs. Garrison will take the part of a member of the college faculty. Mrs. H. H. Pattison (left) of Pontiac trail ‘and Mrs. George R. Beauchamp of Kuhn street will be Celebrating the 25th Anniversary « Werder Brae White cotton bra for firm uplift 19 2 for 3.87 Just say “Charge it” Reg. 2.25 “Diagonal slash” created for perfect freedom of movement. 32-38 A, 32.38 B, 32-40 C. D-cups 2.29. Pe i Samsung csteseshgesetanss 2 for 4.47 Reg. 3.95. White nyt Wonder bra flattering lines. 32-40, A-B-C cups. 2. 99 2.99 bra..... aa for 5. 87 ” Federal’s trained corsetieres will fit you cornently for comfort‘ and figure, flattery: . DERAL DEPT. STORES For firmer uplift and more figure- LL * as rc GEORGE TUSON City to Join Worldwide Observance Church Women of Pontiac to Gather at First Methodist The prayers of chanting abo- rigines in the wilds of central Aus- tralia will be heard in many tongues circling the globe when the World Day of Prayer dawns Fri- day. eo ee A committee of church women in Melbourne collected four of) | sho have no’ written language but have been taught the Christian) . 4, these prayers from tribeswomen, ‘Gospel. Around them was written Hon ob rst Fri-; _ day in Lent. ‘Each year the service said in some 60 languages and more than 1,090 dialects comes from a different country. On World Day of Prayer, spon- sored in the United States by Unit- ed Church Women, millions. of women around the world will join in-a 24-hour prayer vigil. * * * rvances OD ‘ _ The prayer chain crosses 144 areas on six continents and is never broken in the 24-hour pas-'. sage of the sun around the earth, *. 2 * Mrs. Rebecca Moreau will give the call to prayer gt~-J0 a.m., fol- lowed by singing dod & ace Boma’ teat Beale. At~the ‘Communion service the Rev. Paul T. Hart, pastor of First Methodist, will be celebrant. Mrs. _ will preside at the noon lunch- The farge figure will find the ¥- pedi Rey vite ny wl ing os the open cardigon. If divides large. bosom expanse. A change from the cardigan for - “ithe bosom-y figure who thought - Goubhe V-neot ia rake to an the bosom. It also comes in two tones instead of two constrasting colors — and is more subtle. | Gay Linen Sheath ‘Is Excellent Buy The pure linen sheath in vivid colors (tangerine or lime) is a good buy in current resort collections. If you aren't going on a winter vacation, put it away for next summer. Resort col- lections are advance fashions. Creamelles FOOT7EAN Se ee MACARONI CHEESE » MACARONI TUNA SPAGHETTI MEAT + MACARONI BEEF myiswre wiosme * * * The praise service beginning at. Haushalter. “Mrs. P. vat ieee ie onidliien: LEADING PRAYERS Leading the prayers. for. inter- cession will be Mrs. D. D. McColl, Mrs. J. A. Parker, Mrs. Roy Cum:| mings, Mrs. Karl Ostberg, Mrs. and Mrs. Stanley Kipp. * Chapman, Mrs.. James W. = * * gelical United Brethren, Central Methodist, First Congregational —will__present— a. _depicting the projects of United Church Wotnen! in Japan, Pakistan and India, with the migrant worker and the Amer- ican Indian. The afternoon soloist will be Mrs. Lawrence Devore. portray. in Have your wall to wall wool carpets cleaned at 1940 prices. your date to have/ your ‘earpets re4 stored to their or} iginal beauty. / | on’t let embeddet soil wear out yor r carpets. .« STOP MOTH WORRIES and. COSTLY DAMAGE With Our BERLOU 5 Year: Caaniyiters bef hme ad Service ae Call now & reserve | Uiliew ; | Tuson ore, Service Authorized Dealer * r: 1074 ere ete Pakistan at the W orld Day of Prayer program F riday in First Methodist Church. The. college will be helped from the offerings taken, at services held around the world, In charge of the service of selt- dedication will be Mrs. Cart W. Nelson and Mrs. Moreau. Mrs. Hart will give the benediction. World Day of Prayer, when mil- lions of women around the world _join in the 24-hour prayer vigil, is LOUIS Beauty Shop FE 5-8000 — _PERMANENTS~$3.50 and up staat sou sh No Appointment Necessary : ___ 2nd Floor, Next to Buckner Finance Yew Huron | set aside to unite all Christians inj} [the bond of prayer and to make anil offering for missions at home and abroad. be smert- =een smart ‘Your GOOD cLoTHES - deserve our % GooD | , CLEANING COMPLETE SHIRT r 27 Yeats. heed Dry Cleaning \ eo 719 W. Huron FE 4-15 41536 re emart- sleek: smart i ~~ people of Queen Salote’s island kingdom. The voices of men and women, dedicated to peace and uni- ‘versal good, will cross 144 |tries on six continents. IN BERING SEA By nightfall they wil reach the 1:15 p.m. ng heap Agr it bee, James Passmore, Mrs. Joseph I.) Women of Baldwin Avenue Evan-| ‘DuPont Yours 616 decorator colors -»- mixed to. your order Now can Ha Zone Rave jont the color ce of € Ale ‘con- pe C .Leipprandt won yw flee . village clerk — saw Sid- 9:45 at Metamora School: struction of a junior high. on mn Village presidency the : ney J. White defeat incumbent Commerce and sixth consecutive ain with 156) MARY MARGARET FOSTER, William M. Oming by a vote of | Pupils f ‘i =a en It is planned ~~ vot! He defeated Clarence Briad| “\r ang Mrs. 3. E. Poster | £2,%2 1 Omins wae scoking 0 deuictass awk Mabe tclote mont| have the bulding ready for oc | — ne np age police chief) .¢ 9949 Lansdowne Dr., Water- apa term. It was White's receive their shots beginning at|CUbancy. by fall of 1959. waived 118. ford Township, have announced gabe effien, 9 a. m. Added facilities are needed to Salt Gave. “Wteneee at Lake the engagement of their daugh- | The three incumbents were nom- — provide for a predicted 2,700 in- Orion Village Council posts in- | ter, Mary Margaret, to John J. |inmated for re-election to their pres- -2Will ae crease in pupils in. the next five . clude: William O’Brien, 191, a | Oles, son of Mr. and Mrs. John (ent council posts, | ppose Mayor years, ° ot Schools p ggaeaye Hugh Galloway Sr., > S. Oles ghee ie meg emery ner By ming ae a : " ‘ - Clifford Smart said. ; Gordon Hazelton, 121, | seniors at the University of De- Donald Payne rece 2 2 H precine incumbents. The other three | troit..Mary is affiliated with |272 votes, David E. Pettibone, 259,, REMEMBERED WITH vaLeN tien. ive! Piellicel by all 14.members of the Judah Lake in Madison Election BP w as wae 66 candidates who ran for council | Gamma Pi Epsilon and Pi /and Fred C. Hebert, 237 votes. Siri Lind, who has lived nine years in the Oak- “Extension “Chib- which “‘adopted” Mrs. Lind. os we positions and the votes received | Omega Pi sororities.:Her fiance, | Their closest opponent was Wil-| land County Convalescent Home, is delighted three years ago, She remembered, from weekly |, MADISON HEIGHTS — In the ai: ve ey oe ts versiey bessball co-captain. 4 lip 1 Ny hosel pa igor rer with the Valentine presented to her by Mrs. Ar- _ visits, all but two names, and these proved to Aol Zener election, George 8. is Grover Shimmoes, baseball co-captain. | Howard Pallister Scholz of Joa Orioh “dropped in.” | Horkey, former Roy own-} bert Woodcock, 32. July wedding is being planned: ~ |James Womble with 68. vg eS ee RE ee Dad at in| ship supervisor, and Dewey L, =e co All are members of the citizen's 205 * #8. : Outen will oppose Mayor Lloyd Hy. ee party which was unopposed. - r Mrs. Elaine M. Hosner tallied No Longer Lonely Fergupen'e id: fr «second ‘term. Other village otficers were wm-()XDOW Boys Club the largest vote for the office of Candidates wil vie tor mayer [ay creest sat santhond Bea beee Fomteng Smeg lg GT | Ch 2: Fide tale, Saat om the council, the of- ining: rown num es: Mary Parkinson,|C]atae f), year by Miss Grace McKay who is “| lc a ne clerk, aft Garsiine Campbell, Slates Open House retiring. Her total was 174 oo hy | r S eer er S 1 n ome- peace amd for three Board of Continues i ight treasurer, raldine Sto- Other candidates, Miss Alma Jean - i »| Review posts. ~~ : > rey, assessor, 214. OXBOW LAKE — The Oxbow Haines received 113, Mrs. Edna M.. ORION TOWNSHIP — Life is no;andg-had Thanksgiving dinner at thelence, _menibers are’ Council acndidates, 20 in num: Against Cold — -~ ROCHESTER r’s “Club will hold wade! ton, 112, and. Col. ‘William/longer one day after ergs. ini Marvin Fauss home they ‘are learning things not in- ber, include all incumbents. ~ _ village Bresident-Sygney-Q. Eninces gt latent Wetiliint tual ‘.: jlgneliness for twa-J the a eel cluded in their extension education] devits will ai tp MIDDLESBORO, Ky. (®—Near- nis led the field nie candidates oe to 10 p.m. F, y at the * oe Oakland County 4 ; nt Each of the women were (prégram. . ; > slates, ly a third of this coal mining town ea in Rock ge ony 6260 Cooley Lake Rd. Village President Joseph E. Ry-|Home. | -s et ee eee : ~*~ * &* = Beas yh ee ter’s pi election yesterday. |. During evening the youths mill, unchallenged for re-election,, Mrs. Polly* wh wil: bei. * appear to enjoy the com- ‘ as wea no heat today and He polled 282 of, the votes Will demonstrate their equipment received 225 votes. Assessor Glenn 9; wink of Ban, wo “and. Mre.| Pasionship the visits offer’ more! Mri wrt ane Valley Forge Campob waited for emergency supplies of 00 gel masraberdips to afelts Levin, also unopposed, 322, and| Siiri- Lind, 62, who hasbeen ¢rip-| “8? Snzthing else. which a menuber_ translates adi Vide: Gy cub ce [heating ges. : * * * library directors Edgar A. Priest|pjed with arthritis about 15. years, soils oo Non Cure re nl ed See éshments: will, be ‘served by|2"4_ C- SS ee its, of the, - : Smt sero ich: had been orate 4 es | a 9 “girls” of the Judah giske Extent - lanuary dropped cae ¥ Auxiliary of the U 2 agra res |sion Club who have’ “a r Se ee ‘ club, « dpen-to all boys wy Ci : se eee ae ast night-at-a blue und A ee ee wien at age, = an 2 8 Imlay City Lets: Contract |: a. project began about three! quet for ‘Cub Scouts of — Pasomggr shen maytag bee ; |eilite” member | of” the American for Interceptor Sewers | years ago when clut, members Neca Rae: ving Boy's Clu : ed the home and that Clinton: Valley Council, Cprmmis-|myed in oa si gates : : _iulay cry = Contract for) the two Indies were améng those: | sioner Glenn | and Mrs. Reid | with sienna a: solange @ z = truction terceptor sewers) whe had ‘visitors. |. Graha McCarroll PTA. president, “Expect Capacity Crowd to tie the village in with the new! {nv yey te ey were guests, bempcln can a te ai ; , 3 sewage disposal plant has _been| Mir Lihd's, caf ‘Son lives In ‘Awards were presented to John\ "as (eee erance, 1%; William, J. Grosslin,| Regret) perme ee eee nani let to the tw bidder, Teak Vitel ir her justeaite. since the > Lane, William Ward, Allan Colli-|,° g. Chandlet 12%; B. Ford Thompson, 106, and Wil preatet ite managl: wie 1G fem of Teteaiiy: Sy SST 6. [son Pau Olson and Wiltiam Do- iy pson, 106, and/ter concert in the new high school) This: is m.upon. approval)°f ner hustend., Uwe years chmite:and:Darryl Hin-|prentr ifrons nebo nthe Mrs... Jean M. Watson, 93. auditorium 8:15 7 -a Ee “7 : Club her, Joc “ : + brought in from anywhere in the wine * at p.m, Thursday.|of the U.S. Health Service. he pack : Prey yt leman, who Te-\The 750 - seat audit is ex-| Village Mahager David Fire- ich happier when they Sid weet 5 3 votes, was eliminated.| pected to bé filled to capacity for|stone said he expects the” entire $6, her last week and ae * oe HAZEL PARK the first major event in the new|/new sewage system to be in oper- | "” a Valentine “Inve Don Finley, manager of Bell- Mayor Louis Elias topped can-| Dullding. - tation about Aug. 1. mee ee i ee Knox Pip the embattled didates for mayor in Hazel Park's) - When tie, weathen-tmproves and K-In at City firm which supplies Middlesboro's primary yesterday, Elias, who re- - ee a ety ben. te pa hie ee odd spat are investigat Ba anh ge eta oe ane T paced Oe ! xRed Slave Little Girl Almost ghovriee trip. She. his. aipended CW. Pik Epis-| “He said United Fuel Co. of Hunt- ———— who be co : Freezes Waiting Belch, & ater Ut Aven Parke o|troleur awoke Sing ts Fg =F i Cl d School ' Brandenburg, -would. ship in Nominated or City. Conn iy speaks Locally at Closed Schoo. , bottled gas, a liquid which could posts were ard Milligan, be converted: into gaseous fuel role . mma | ee re, wn = Red Spy Swallows which.” would + provide heat for ar S. Beamer, mind Or: | Deborah n Beard was puzzh . about the affected homes. len W. Boyd 444, ror LO Tell, of Experiences when she arrived at school to find Rives, Nuts Bolts s Wrednesd Club (National), 8 p.m. nesday’s Games Class A @ Co gene v8. Shaw's dewelers, 8:30 a Pret) Soauthtieta en St. Vincent de Paul (National), " ; Whiter's ae vs, Pontiac rs ETRALL LEAGUE es At Crery_ Junior — Witehineens4N Mobile va. Ryeson’» Super ene hike Th Ba ince a * Games i played in only 59 games and hit |-216. He has a lifetime batting aver- jage of .230 but was one of the key factors in Cleveland’s pitching suc-| cesses from 1946-57. Porter, 25, received a $65,000 bo- nus in 1951 when Lane, then gen- eral manager for the White Sox, signed him. He also played briefly with the St. Louis Browns. During the past two seasons, -Porter has seen: service in a utility. capacity, appearing in 58 games in 1957. He batted .250. Aguirre, 26, spent most of last season with San Diego of the Pacifie Coast League where he won six and lost 13. He was 1-1 with Cleveland. Woodeshick, 25, was drafted by the Tigers from’ the New York Giants’ farm system. He spent last season at Charleston in the Ameri- ean Assn. and later was sent fo Augusta in the Sally League. With Hegan gone, the Cleveland catching duties will be shared by Hal Naragon and Earl Averill in addition to Porter, City ‘Y’ Swimmers Hang Up 5 Records Pontiac's YMCA swimming teams paid a visit to the Bay City ‘Y’, Pool, Saturday and divided the honors. Pontiac preps lost » 52-32 but the juniors were victors 54-26. * * * Five pool records were set, all by Pontiac swimmers, Four were by juniors, one by prep Tom Mc- Kinnon, who swam the 20-yard backstroke in 13.3 seconds, Tom Eley’s 20.7 for the 40-yard freestyle Bill Borum’s 1:06.9 for the 100- yard freestyle, Bruce Norvell’s 27.3 for the 40-yard breaststroke and Phil Cashin, Norvell, Jim Velzey and Eley’s 1:43.2 for the 160-med- jley relay all ieee! pool marks. * Dick Richards in diving ( preps), ‘Borum in the butterfly, Cashjn ‘in the 40-yard backstroke, Velzey the medley and “freestyle ‘relay team, Duane try, Sherk’ and Butler all were Pontiac winners, »- , Gol nation, IF West Virginia, ranked No. 2 in the National Associated Press poll, took the lead and stayed The Mountaineers led 53-43 at halftime in chalking up their 2ist victory against one defeat. De-| troit now has a 12-9 record. Bob Smith was high for the win- ners with 21 points. Ralph Uchi- son led Detroit with 17. there with two minutes and 49 €°— seconds gone in the first period. | weather warms up. = Howe Among Threatening Trio NEW YORK (#—On the heels of a threat by Temple University to withdraw from the NCAA basket- ball tournament, the chairman of the National Invitation Tourna- ment selection committee said to- day that he had discussed . ‘‘sev- eral times” the possibility of the Owls playing in the NIT. x * Walter McLaughlin, St. John’s University athletic director, who doubles ag NIT selection ‘chair- man, also denied a charge. that Temple's threats originated here beeause the NIT would like to have the Owls in the Madison yesterday when Temple Athletic Director Josh Cody demanded as- surances that the three Negroes on his team could live together with their mates during the pre- liminary games in Charlotte, N.C. * * "Actually, Temple is not yet in the tournament, but with the long- virtually certain to win the Mid- dle Atlantic Coast Conference est current winning streak im the hi “gatres; “the -Owis are jar “eo New York,” he “added. “They want Temple at their National In- “I think it’s all starting out of Scoring Leaders Pressed snd be wl all tof ules the Sy t x * * ‘ Tt was MSU’s 7th league victory in 10 starts and, coupled with Ohio : State's 93-83 upset of Indiana yes- ‘Bloomington, gave. the Seartens a full game edge over Purdue, which moved into 2nd place on a 64 record. Anderegg meshed 11 field goals i qs ana The Spartans had ‘aay’ a 30-29 edge in field goals, but bagged 19 charity tosses in 26 attempts to Michigan's 11 out of 18. In other Big 10 games last night, Towa scored a 1461 Spee Ft i: ss | efeErerras - Sates ‘i, i ot a Prag -* 2 Bi~o0 ee Sl woce poe i CHICAGO W—An effort to pro- _ [tect the amateur status of college jot ‘ _ |were developed at the meeting: _ ‘| 2 Longton : wahees Sgrew G8 Gper- ‘aa i IM ove to Protect Amateurs was at te of lal WOM a ee ems mine epreser of organized Se te —— toe So eats fe NCAA sian, epglicn- Ae _ acted on by March Metering which, league, nS nd not Inter than Ape 3 and Se a Cee Boe oe BIG THREE — These are the / top three quali- fiers who will go into Saturday’s Bowlerama championship at the Huron Bowl. Mrs. Pat Don- ner led the women with a 664 total at' Motor Inn, ‘for 1958 Title Bowlers to Vie " Pentine Press Photo while Frank Roosen topped the men at Montcalm with 730 and Tom Shara at Howe's with 760. Tro- phies went to the three. Jat Huron Bowl -|ehampionship round of the 1938 Press Bowlerama Saturday at the'- Rams Away, Orion at Oxford Tonight Mikes, Eaglets Clash: By CHUCK ABAIR The 2nd meeting of the season between St. Michael and Orchard Lake St. Mary, a road game for St. Frederick and an afternoon con-) test between Walled Lake and Cranbrook headline a prep hoop ~~ ent tussles tonight. * * * Only loop action on tap will be al full slate in the Southern Thumb and Utica’s invasion of Lakeview in the Bi-County. St. Mary will be favored to repeat an earlier 47-38 triumph over the Shamrocks with the add- get over the 500 mark. “te & Led by Bob Mineweaser and Art Robak, St. Michael has divided 12 decisions thus far. Stan Moniuszko and Art Goisdzinski have been the big guns in a 10-3 season. ‘for |OLSM. St. Fred plays its final regular season tilt away from home play- ing. at Detroit St. F de Sales. The Rams have an §-3 re¢c- “ord and three straight triumphs, Walled Lake opened the season by romping over Cranbrook but a much closer contest was anticipat- -ed-this-afternoon with the Cranes) an improved unit since four trans- fers joined the team. * *& * i Some of the other key games of local interest will be high-powered Lake Orion at Oxford, Milford at 45 Places at Houston Qualifying Test | HOUSTON, Tex. “®—The last 45) places in the $30,000 Houston Clas- sic golf tournament went on the line this morning as the first 124 players teed off in an 18-hole qual- ifying round on a frosty day. * * * The Classic starts Thursday at Memorial Park with 130 players, the first 85 of whom drew invita- “~ without having to go through round. Should bad Wen Lost Pet. weather make it impossible for syracuse, maemecere Er the qualifying round to be com-|Ehiledsiptia — ............- 3 3 pleted today it ‘will-run over into; — WESTERN DIVISION tomorrow. Lost All but five of the 124 players fneeltococsccascece gt in the qualifying round are pros. |Detroit .....ssessseseesen: No more than four amateurs wil 7 oe ie & be allowed to qualify and they) Boston st New York Stake in 320 players, including top ranked pros, will compete in the $5,000) tournament at Pine,“ Golfcrest Country Clubs, NBA Standings TODAY'S NBA STANDINGS ‘games will bé Mt. Morris at Or- Chief Wrestlers ious for revenge and a chance to! Rochester’ and Ferndale at Royal Oak Kimball. Orion may come pear matching Friday's 102 total unless death Hal Carlin leaves one of his scor- ing gréate—Jim Drake and Nick Neira—home. OxT6rd has lost 13 in succession. o Rochester and Ferndale should) also have little trouble. The Fal- |cons opened the season by slam- ming Milford. Ferndale will be seeking “its 11th straight win and a boost in the state Class A rat- ings. ~*~ * Rounding out the independent tonville, Wayne at Farmington, Fraser at Romeo, Oak Park at Clawson, L’Anse Creuse at Country Day, Fowlerville at South Lyon, Roseville at East Detroit and Mill- ne at home against Maple mi Southern Thumb spotlight will be focused on New Haven where Almont can clinch another league championship by winning. Runnerup Memphis plays at Ca- pac in hopes of staying in the run- ning for at least a tie for the title. The other game will have Dryden in the host- role against Brown at Waterford 28 - Se - ‘While the qualitying round is be- Philadelphia vs. Boston at Syracuse Se Fare ee ae oe The 2nd meeting within a week between the Pontiac and Water-' ford wrestling teams was to be held this afternoon at 4 in the ‘la 7-7 draw earlier.” was expected to be a highlight of the loca] battle. They fought to Walled Lake will be another their regular schedules, taking part in the 1st! Are. You Troubled with _ HARD, RUSTY WATER? minate This Annoying Problem With an INCA MARINE coreeniZen Water Conditioner | as OWRD, LIFE-TIME “er @ 36 Months.to bd FREE Weise tt Anata ay | <.asegtanes GUARANTEE As LITTLE AS. © NO DOWN PAYMENT © MANUMATIC © SEMI-AUTOMATIC aaa ee ee a a FE 4-4507° MAIL THIS COUPON "TODAY OR PHONE, ee cgaete lighter and a compact i woman champ who ay bei aes es Thomas Shara — € Miller ion 673; W. Waterbury (Pontiac) 668; Willis Merri man (Pontiac) ; Robert son) 663: Mel Small oe a Pontiac) 660; Arn ‘Checking of Averages ‘Brings -About Several ‘Men's Changes and 60 men, will battle in the; Huron Bowl, Two squads of bowlers, at 11:30 and at 1:00, will go into the * Thomas Shara, the young Pont- jac school teacher who lives in Rochester, is officially the top qualifier with 760 total. He won the qualifying trophy at Howe's Lanes. Frank Reosen, from Birming- at A total of 76 bowlers, 16 women! er who would rather wrestle than college. MAT REVIVAL — Kenny Garner of Berkley, a squat 238-pound- been a big factor in the revival of the mat sport at Central Michigan College. Ken started wrestling 10“years ago and has yet to lose a dual heavyweight match in 45 starts — 27 in high school and 18 in AP Facsimile compete in any other sport, has —hant,—wae—the—high— qualifier Montcalm with 730 and he also had the high actual single game of 257 which earned him a bow!l- ing bag. Roosen also rolled a 663 high actual series but this brought about a tie with Harold Hintz of Rochester, thus, the two will en- gage in a one game foll-off for ‘the bowling ball award. * * »* In the women’s division, Pat Donner, a- little Drayton Plains woman who last year took second place in the Bowlerama, grabbed a couple awards in the qualifying round. Another high series was turned in by Doris Lanktree of Rochester who roiled a 554 and was the high game winner of the bowling bag) with 220. . In the final round Saturday, the high actual series for men and women will earn the bowler a pair of bowling shoes. * * * Among the other prizes, . the oldest man’s honor went to Walter By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oscar Robertson is triggering! Cincinnati's late surge in the As- sociated Press poll that could set up a storybook showndown with top-ranked Kansas State in the NCAA major college basketball tournament. * * * Robertson, still less than a point} behind Elgin: Baylor of Seattle in individual scoring, counted 43 last night as Cincinnati whipped Drake 98-64 for a 19-2 record and an 1l-game winning streak. * * * That string hoisted the Bearcats from third to second. in today's AP poll and left Kansas State and Cincinnati well-ahead of the field. Kansas State (17-1) picked up 33 first-place votes te Cincin- nati’s 37, but pulled In enough support on points (based on 10 women's award goes to Mrs. Anna Winters who is 76. There are also the awards to the bowlers who may win the champi- onship and are repeat enties in the 1957 and 1958 tournaments. OFFICIAL QUALIFIERS (Men's Division) (Rochester) mR. -<3 730; {Pontiac 692; William Raymond Lamberton Cherhgten) = (Dra *78; (Walled 1 c. oy Claw Carpenter who is 79 and the oldest —— .|the Australian ee :| Latvian - bern wonder, -| his.own world marks when he )}} Mockton, 19, set up new world | figures for the 220 yards and 200 : meters backstroke. He was locked -|at 2:18.4 for both distances. iq Dawn Fraser, set up new world er standards for the 110 yards and 100! 6 Records Set “in Swim Meet MELBOURNE (INS) — Six world records were established in pionships today. Jon Konrads, the ‘speerela broke . was clocked in 4:21.8 for the 440 yards and 400 meters free- style. He set the old mark at 4:2%5.9 only a month ago. Another young marvel, John Robertson Sparks Cincy in Race for NCAA ‘Show’ |Two Bowlerama \Squads Listed in Final Round beiees Tech vs. Ba: Tens, pooh = a Utica, “108; eats ——_All-bowlers entering the cham-— pionship round of the 1958 Bow!t- erama can make preference as to whether they want to bow! at 11:30 or at 1:00 p.m. * Calls can be made to the Press night sports desk tonight at FE 2-0104, No more than 43 will be listed on one squad. Once one. of the squads is filled, all other bowlers will have to fill the other squad. Ne changes will be made once the squads are set up. The two squads and times will be printed Thursday. STRIKES AND SPARES . By Joe Wilman. I've seen many bowlers suffer at the foul line for a mistake they committed a few seconds eartier when they took their first step of the approach. In many cases, the first step was too long or too quick, and caused them to: rush into their footwork with poor results. In other cases, the arms-and-feet movement wasn’t coordinated properly from the beginning, and they end up at the foul line still uncoordinated, Look at today’s drawing. Notice how it illustrates the relationship between a long push-away motion and a long first step. If the first ' tor first, nine for second, ete. down to ene for 10th) to edge the Bearcats 980 to 971. step -is a long one and the push- away is short, the ball falls too THE. Invincible | De Luxe State, idle last night, holds the inside lane in the run for the Big Eight conference title while Cincinnati looks like a shoo-in for the Missouri Valley championship. The Big Eight and Mo-Valley win- ners meet March 14 at Lawrence, Kan., in the 2nd round of the NCAA tournament. W. L. Pet. Pte. Mich. State ....7 3 .700 754 * * * Purdue ....... 1-8 4 | b- Once-beaten West Virginia,|towa ee porte : See S88 knocked off the top spot by Kansas|Nitineestem "23 5 500 787 State in last week's poll, slipped/Mighigan ....... 5 me to. third but won its 2st Ihst|ieois 22. 3 3 oie Se 3 7.0 oe BIG 1@ STANDINGS THE HATTER 12 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7514 night in a 9866 decision over| Wisconsin Detroit. : E Francisco (No. 5) won its) State 68-59. were the only other members of the top 20 to play all won. : * * seRaeee Australian Olympic champion uj meters women’s freestyle at 1:01.5.'39 Hy Cincinnati (37) (18-2) ....., 3. West min (27) (20-1) | *, ‘4 Kansas (15-3) 5. San Francisco 2, ei. . 6 Temple (13) og sebeess 3 x | v ee y 3 i en * : : = a "y oy ‘ . a an 2 es, 7 ¥ ee Ay \ \ : 4 : s : : ae : a ‘ = + ee ee ee ’ : CEN ee * i ‘ * Serr __THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1958 ola “VEWIINESS 10 a wi 1 Big 6 Feet 2: Fast Dt | CYewiine Dea bona “ium | \Big 6 Feet 2; Fast Draw, Mar 7 " hrictin nice oa Oe is the extreme SUBURBAN can be used jovial Bg —- riecitom Te "ranch ae a Smart on nanetty : en wae exhaust fan bath full basement. Neely landscaped jot. Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor W. Huron Street FE 5-416) = or__ seer 2-9676 Partridge Ig THE “BIRD” TO SEE front home, Full lot, Watkins years old. 5 ACRES behnond a 2 bedroom house, living kitchen and utility. Only * Full Price $6,800 . pie eg me ~ PO Alan 27 school a tad shower. oll lyat, oat! a, “oniy SL Gtroute Franks | on *Binte Rey a es, oR 3-970! all down Sem “9 HOME. = ‘we | aViXOM ae #75 Jdwin ra w. DOW) Ne ‘700. Will ean Sa reauty 7 late r wanaes arse ve you. F PE. 2-0121, MULTIPLE LISTING a ey of Charm took. is 90 ob. in Th tla tee beciroom and place | s perfect livia = | : t an is : r oer in "\. f amhe oy This : feed te sell and ‘y tor vee, it ‘Brand New — kate a REAL {1602 onto take. * 75003 $1000 down. $65- month. 2 miles north of Clarkston, ~ WILLIAM C ~ GODFREY ELTZABETH LK. ESTATES > Brick front raaeh style bunga- low with large picture “window, _ All large rms. Util. rm. with oil REAL ESTATE 1 6687 Dixig Hwy Clarkston: | MApie., 5-1822 __ | TRADES = ones land g¢on- | down 5 e or naeaen wil following a Tratlers, ‘tracts, eats be fag ys pe tata on arms. bee onomyg fgr ry — ; us old. vs. IMME. ie ON ALL & “PANGUS, Realtor ,|Call_collect: Ortonville NA_ 17-2815 3-BEDROOM BRICik finisned exterior, extra veal mews 0, SOx000" wie good drain. age. Blart an aed fed school bus at door, just the place to get started on your own home, and psf down wil) do it. Why pay rent + [AKEFRONT BRICK * TRLELEVEL 3 bedroom scme, large living pel dining room, ¥ery moderu kitchen, Furl basement with ree. reation room. This home has 3 fireplaces and an puemet 3 2 Hod pen will be Meher io ‘Smith-Cr rawford, ine. New F - UNION ick abe “oR RTY: CAR-OTTICE i Fel face BB sen Nr. McConnell School _ Rime te gone! Pours ore ata to a - fie Here's. ries a fava! ‘terms. . Glas furnace. Complete alum.. storm windows and sereens, Alum, awn- ings. Priced for immediate sale. $9,500 with $1,500 down. CLARKSTON anes Only $500 down will e you immediate session of fii. brick front 2 rm. glow that is situated on a. land th shade trees A ‘Tr fake treet it Sueomest coo e . ent, com- plete yr with oil furnace trier home. You: will wy an quickly with only ee BROKER 509 Elizabeth wus eee “BUD” Zoned i ommercial bath.. 200 test — we 3 Colonial in wicture|- Te asren welt landartped prownds. ee alt spare burn- 4 room, 4- tS aia om firing. si ae “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor. * job, place ta live oF a ts good used car, see Classi- SAVE ENERGY, USE. W ANT? “ADS! To find. a ¥ tive recreation ri. in base- ch eats di Daggers ig See Peta Gantry i an . Bpsclous i¢ sat Wy Bo se bells fer | Priced at $13, See this for are living now, REALTOR P? ARTRIDGE re ease) OPEN we Mich. 1050 ¥ HURON ANNETT Full Price—$6,500 fete ol age pay mont, OFFERS a pata a Lake Privileges Aa East = 2-Family fied NOW..,” ue 2 2 store home | 100 00 tool trom a ay Side Most wires home w bedroom” Ti # : ES 382 33 z 7 fa is home—you can move in oa live, because it's lust oe 2 Why you want it. $13,050 price Humphries FE 2-044 — rE erise ON Teles Eves. Open Multipie: "Lustig. Service For Colored Families — ONLY 8600 DOWN. plus closing 7 large 3 bedroom | ee ee eee sions & GAS furnace. — geht Beall and i rte Ginesme. s Ph, 2-412 John Kinzler, Picea 670 W. Huron 8t. MILLER WILL YOU BE the landiord and collect the rent from this exce> FE new heating trances & me 2 lots, new 2. car pew Sg Ail all io _ — and | - a lsare” INVESTMENT — good commercial corner, ik | land Are, in the pkg ry good 6 room houses with garages, one 1 gas furnace. Look this over, it's good. terms are right. FINISH THIS ft. ranch home & save. 3 large bedrooms, tile bath. lovely living a as earpets ine! basement ‘run plastered | pore. — with Jalousie windows, ¢ ‘ Some finfshing to be done. ai $14,500. price William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 Huron of ‘ultiple Listing Service BROWN For Sale Houses 43; For Sale Lake Prop. 44 POLL ae | PPP LLP LLL SMALL HOUSE, BASEMENT. 3/CANAL LOT OFF OF cass &:. ie, Lot 80 x 180, $2,500, ie with shade trees. Call er h. PE 8-306. | s GReenleaf 4-8961. , DU = LAKE FRONTAGE : iota. Only 17 lots avai Priced | from $8,000, Chapin Realtor, OR ' VILEG * Wiy es, garden soil with | es E OAKLAND De heat, gag £ home, close to/ extra teatures. $1,000 down, §7) = Waterford. High and Grade) mo. Owner. OR 3-4492. Full price: $8.950 with good oa ng 2 FAMILY, IX. iM. 4 an an eee down, OR 2 \ E PRIVILEGES — | i sa es “40. 25 foot ving a room. gas heat. $10,500. f cown ‘sell furni or un Cash offers cepted. | REALTOR 3101 W_ Huron | WiLL’ TRADE YEAR-ROUND Open Evenings till 9 lakefront home. on Scott the Most For Sale Lots 46 \BN Tt Telegra; lent 3 family? 13 rooms, 3 baths, | Pama en- | te Box 60. Pontiac Press._ I's MILES Ww. OF ROCHESTER, Ft. 263 Ft. Basement = “HUMPHRIES | 0474 Realtor rE ea! ‘aph nu Eves Multiple Listing Service . 7 priced for e and = att BRENDEL LAKE Large lakefront lot. Attractively | Dorothy Snyder Lavender | Sell your Susiness on terms. We. buy coe and mortgages. . OUT Your partner We specialize in| s finane me OOHY RENT We will —— bay" business and — < ~~ one peqoerty | “FART FIN ANCE CO. 10524 W_ McNICHOLS 1-3680 | Detroit 41. Mithigen” i MILK DEPOT WITH STORE. IN. quire 446 M15 Ortonville. f “LET’S TALK BUSINESS” Automatic Laundry. $1,500 . Good easy to operate, no previ- ous @Xp. hecessary, requires $6,000 dn. Small Town Bar. rity includes apt, Only $4 ree du, to tesponsi- sricHiGaN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION | JOHN A. LANDMESSER. BROKER 1673 8. TELEGRAPH RD. PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR _ Permanent Income DOWN, Trade for ont. Va- hig’ ent. established rts and services. ten | profit, operation for small invest | 1500 pow N, Grocery and sDM gress Feal estate with ae tring ne quarters, a. } ageemn iee an Blue Sunoco Station Located main highway to Includes re estate. Business showing marked increase each month due *. ae w and used furci ture store, Pull price $4. Includes ao to’ Ford cks. Will tek part eg Be - — ‘mM. Investi- “STATEWIDE Real Estate Service of Ponting 3D D,. CHARLES, es ee ad 8. Tele Eves cal Ran a ef oy Fegan “Partridge | ‘ “C” Car Bargain Popular liquor bar and somes ‘ant on busy Us i 000 terms, lease or buy real estate, Rea. 29 «6Years 7001 wiichland _ (M58) Phone 3.3303 MU 4-641? “Building Sites” Aporoved m age loans. j -_& good i Low as $100 down LADD’S, INC, FOR SALE LAKE LOT. 753x305 ON Judah Lake, Also ef, Sees boat. Reasonable. le. FE 4-505 FOR PERRY aA ACRES Lows CALL- H. P. HOLMES, IN PE 5-204) | HI-WOOD v ILLAGE At Houghton Lake of One the 1 wasions and best 1- uer ba: =. Lake area interior bedrooms end comforabie liv- valuable real estate and ali for only $20,009 dn. ~we know you'll wan SUBDIVISION , New 2 stall, now. available for ene, Hwy. & May- NOW SELLING e¢ Rds. bas 40 ft. sales office, 10 PER SENT DN. LOW PAYMTS | ideal fer eperting goods center LARGE business. Call ee A PRLLEyeL Sires fini Reding. ne re eth __ Low axes STANDARD OIL SHOPPING & PRANSPORTATION four financing Feeuired, ‘sites yt BS. WP fare riche on “Maybe | Sonya. Cal “1584. ate Ey TRAILER. RENTAL - Salesman on property 2 p.m. tid” AND dark dally - INCOME | Large house. Exc. cond. 3 apts. LYLE D = _ her's api Located. ooSeowe- -. 4 a . Close to down- . : i wo, Shows income. COngress 42523 4740 VanDrke retiring. Will = large € oF WE REIDY FOR a L rT i ee — RIDGEWAY REALTY +. 975 Baldwin Ave. WICKERSHAM T1985 Ww. Api MAYFAIR bora SELL. TRADE —Large | 4 bedroom sen home. Excellent. location. 32 car garage. Two lots Will accept free & clear home in trade pat ek emg OR TRA frame ho only 3 a ‘old. Pull benensent Mod-. erm to the woh ge All large rms_| 1% car fee Here is a real) eget = i aetat smatlier home | = —Latge 4 $13,500 — OR TRADE—Large | lope bets. Lobe pet eal¢ : : e es basement. O11 AC E ent condition. Will trade for howse- trailer, land trac smaller . home or farm in southern states | PULL PRICE—REasy terms. ‘ely modern bungalow with ~ fell basement. Gas mat Seba to “wall carpeting. Loyely Con- venient locati H Truly, a good value. LIST -— with ws for fast and ef- ficient service. WE BUY. SELL & TRADE i a -~- Our office a at our any ae You'll save; "te. a choose | from. Open 9-9 i LH. BROWN w. Realtor 1362 W. Huron E 2-4810 F Multiple Listing Saeco ‘| Loveland y Cass Lake Fd. FE 4-166) “BUILD NOW or Yours On ow r lot or yours - We wit oR sic or pleted home. e" ‘tome ate er- COCKE R REALTY iv Eves. ay FE For Sale Lake Prop. 44 w rhontigs i obi LaKkE: * AT ELIZABETH LAKE} an a Near en beach, neat ed BEAUTY si o on . from good jake, _ 35.000 with $2500 down. aoe For Sale Farmy - 48 RAAT mar aT GAYLORD, 3 EDROOM ranch type with fireplace. og 72 acres iting, and ski area > Acres balance Price — 22086. Peon a Thivers en Tk 5 ae £0, 2indh ‘Mjacieven Fs “treet, Will j R. D. RIL. EY.. Broker -- | 59 Elizabeth Lake Ra. | PE “i137 FE 4-4821 LAND CONTRACT — ar r cent eel hae ‘LAND CONT Will trade equity in Bhd oa home with gas heat and fireplace, near General Hospital for iand con- pay cash difference. PROTECTION Sapa! New England Life. OR $3 Money ts Loan a ee eet ee NEED = TO $100? ‘TEAGUE GET CASI QUICKLY | Up to $500 — | sen PoNTIAG STATE BANK BLDO. PRIENDLY SERVICE FINANCE CO. 202 N: MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOAN 8835 TO $900 HOUSEHOLD GOODS ; Ba Ph. Rochester, OL 6-0711, OL 1-9701 ~ WHEN YOU NEED — *29 - $500 cro gen get it quickiy on your car or ure, No Se a with your money problems. FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg _Mortgage Loans 54 A Mortgage Problem? We make mortgage loans to meet your ae ae ; yA a iv Ec. & RLU . 10 RON 8T., Eves. EM 30048 “LOANS—$600 to $1,500 iL For any iTpose, homes, mosere or not, S Oakland County. 2. For home "sddittons or tn “ ements : house onstru S Garage ngage? & °° By oh Butidin +4720 . ° of phone > line of id q BARNES HARDWARE. ’ 4 “2 WwW. with 3 overhead heaters. In oper- ’ ¥ ation. Reas. 2-1026. what have you? MA 5-0666. a : > $1,000 BKQUITY IN CABIN | OVER 50 U <7 PROM pelt Hy gg Ff Teds up. TY antennal, 60.88. WILL TRADE G WALTON TV / | it rm. or bedrm. suite, f- i5_ E. -_FE 2 ies hia ANTED Bome "MORRIS M 5s (a ® 7 WORRIS - ae te 0 Wel came tectle coat i ae Sale Clothing 56) Et "a, aa baby. furaac: IRL's, Siz size 1 10 8 12 JUMPERS Ree _& 1 skivts, PS oaiie SINGER soe Stramgtens pa ge : SEAL . : & 4 Size 14. Worn few times. 64 N. q Rosela FE 52211, Sale Household Goods 57 a MET ig RUGS WOOL FACE ams} TRA DE-IN” DEPT. Reversible, Ls ; ‘Em ported, i electric eed Seder CSE Peareere Parente se 8 : ‘BGrehard_Lake ave. -- | 8 PIECE DINING ROOM sET 3 iS = aaa - $19.85 Desk ome kitchen set. 5 pe. ae . $14.85 range. with metal cabinet. e chair & ottoman ....$12.95 rE ‘or FE 2-1189. Apt. size elec range ...:..: 7. 9xl2 Felt E Base Rugs $3.95 | Sty’ Orter IEMs AVAILABLE ale ey Hi-Test_Alcoho! WYMAN'S . BONNY Me VINYL TILE, te aE. Wall Tile a | ier "FRONTAGE OR, ON MONTCALM. ferete wi = | ron =< \ > 5S ROOMS OF FURNITU REY | Cocca’ SEABOARD - baa 1 ae > 17” ‘ é On M59 oppdsite city airport, 2) : FE § 8.9061 $35. FE we story block boilding with i : “< - 1¢ CU. FT. UPR Ge room for. 2 [bust down. 2 Seaboard Fiance c 0. or. New jelightly deine ed), RB. tp. Owner sacr icing ve 108 x rs for & jor will ‘trade equity - 11s es rae PERnY STREET F ron ba “ge &e 2 - paral 3) ome | ae 7 ul ick C ash gy ee OS "THOMAS. ‘ECONOMY WW” Gag RANGE, 3 t . Roy An nett Inc. Q pet hae arena FURNITURE ; re retrige in tae RBA |. 2,828 TO $500 wcie Stecenle “om * cote teak es on mePseral rs on your swo si — o 3463 Auburn Rd = it. Wl OTIS ANTI wore secs to yr Sp ~£ service is aa ck, gy "Good Se * Sass | AUTO Riue an Sa W. Walton Blvd. | ion visit ary ae cers ADplinn Funge.. on mmieree Cc Bald 139 . $s ace, ommerce Henge yy us» | FLOME uto | Re geen Fa ry. t room ag Part paseieen!. | : LOAN CO. RCA Whistpeo! § Supreme are reg. - of heat. Garage. $11,000. | 7 N, Perry St. (Corner Pike) $230: $160, P ARNETT: INC. | Ome Somers: aoe. ROY A NET. INC. | BORKOW WITH {SS Whitipool electric Iropes ae a ALTO i . | ope FE 83-0466. : «og aay Vo ‘Maylae wash- ; — | CONFIDENCE WHERE ANYTHING: You. Fane Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 49a CONT IDENCE ; HERE BE vw _f8,UMION Bt | GRANDAD DID_ es "at the ‘way. # lot - 0 ‘ close to downtown Suit. | pen BP : by fo | For Ss ved @nu- “e fring. ‘Seppe ins toons RES’ gp SS'vear’ef'edper:| find, cer trode dem for real K. G. Hempstead, 102 E. Huron. “Household provides friendly % MONTHS! TO PAY ih tern : oomael on money matters, and We buy, sell or [eade. Co @ out MMEDLA’ CUPAN to are made Drompt-| and look | geollge fho use and 2 sate or leet a aes, on we", ou; parking. . rent.” ADBroR. ren hi semi) selec or phone ay. "OPEN MON. SAT. (9 TO 6 jaod f n+ hy - BM. ideation - A a a fami Jamis : Peete ater & eal . onhiahd Finance - pms Fa Aubure Bu Corporation ) s isiness Dpeersecties His sasionny ang fir Kat Bie APPLIANCE >, HI Fi on tie Re etre Sale $88 "Gs wax Heater - toon Bryere | eae ae 2A atic Electric ers = ‘Reg. $178.05 a9 LINCH BOT 1-Magnavoa Cherry Console, ‘ + ioeed eave = Stak” Wihti; Conaetoue, mils 3 7 em. ere = i. Only 9199.8 Sale aie) WAITES | « BASY is! : i ' Downstairs pee. Ce ae Le . + a as | Le : : ¢ = De = 7 Oe - wis heater . $49.95 Sh ar ELEC me $76.95 8 a 2s 2 VE PLUMBING ___1Soum" Saginaw St. _ ATTENTION PRE-SPRING CLEARANCE ALL QUALITY PAINTS Bits, TU eR ‘Oar Line Of Used and New me in Faeries Ste Jowcome, ies SU RPLUS LUMBER & | Wolvenin rine mr Co. . 329_$. Paddock ______—*FE_2-0794 ‘Do It Yourself 61 IPFPAP® SEWING ¢@ 5s, FOR RENT man ga HARDWARE FE 3420 Mab B. SANFORD | OGM Floor sanders, hand furnace Vacuum cleaners. Wal)- See Oakland Fue! & (yor CUTTING HAY. For sats | | PE 56150. _* ana Horse boarded MA . drapery an cote tea plu and ele- | IST AND IN trical supplies open. Tdays, week. _ Gregory Rd material, gd of: 00 Company Seo Highland ie Ra. He 59) OR 3708 mpson, 60 5 Pers ANCHOR FENCES No money down, FHA FREE ESTIM pproved, TIMATES. Waese “7 EBF AND PORK — AND ears Opdyke Mkt. CAPE 81041. PRICES ” 3 ry eee ee eden eee B28 dh Builders % ¥ » _tlyS'ide We Mootcamm. FE SAND. | fiver “OA paine: “Pireplace nose. TRTUBS, FIRST ) 3 ‘Cameras, Equipment 61A| | 8ELL & TRADE. CAM- GOOD HAY | oon “Soo! recorders. _PE' soot at the Huron _Huron Bt, FE 5-86 Hay AND STRAW PE TOU TOTS Sale Musical Goods 62 | *4y CCORDIONS, Al sizes. Accordions loaned free- with lescone, FE 3508. ACCORDION FOR Sal SALE. WILL sf 5 ln "pees. User UPRIGHT os ; bE 3 . 18 E Huron. 40566, wouIN & Bans BANJO, BOTH WITH WANTED = tefeeSeree - ‘Seseyus 4 “3s i i oats god a LOWEST PRICES, a sanders. — | Hay, Grain & Feed 71) chine Sale Motor Sesiters sz -| et CUSHMAN BEAGLE EXc. Extras. MI 63942. cond. CUSHMAN SCO0 pence is. ese, ‘ gence = Sale Motorcycles 8&3 ARTS \& SERVICE on dace De “cor iis Bag STRAW — Eag "Fer Sale Livestock 72 jor $135. OR 35-8018. N-| 10 ANGORA “AND i TLaT CLARINET GOOD Co fog ig hd Coop BARGAINS * >, BIG LOAD QUARTER |. Zor your bend and cohertee ge berfections os. Bost of them tin of them in ae agg Me By Fy Can Age ay Write . Deirott 3 Purebred the — vernois, Detrot a ‘ 2NO — OSCAR, bow tite 2 a 7 commen . WHEEL . 36 bp ae hp. Snow biow- Ro Oliver Bales on of Oxford. : ARM vm * RRIS S MUSIC - | Seok mort 8. Telegraph 2.0567 at low, low FE 4-5000. ¥ prices. Warwick. REO Lawn Mowers $49.95 up PONTIAC’s ONLY AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE ion Wagon, & ‘48 Fora tthen sinks. $3 ¢ach. OL 1-6413. a he ARMY SHIELD sTORE . Sverytines to Meet Your a. Cisthing. - Furniture. 118 WEST LAW aes Lae FROCaS Talbot re Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 PURNISHED WOBIL HOMES. 16. 18 & iD, _livered, $5_& aoa FE a em 1 il fies. ot Lake Orion on | 1952 37 FOOT 2 BEDROOM. FE ta - 1501 Baldwin’ Ave, _FE 83511, PI RIVATE PARTY WANTS ‘57 bee ae will Foe — ear For 2677 - H All se foil fill. gravel, sand, OXFORD TRAILER Zimmer - - Fastest — : SPECIALS NOW YOU KNOW WHAT Fabuiy cant” . SAFE & RELIABLE NOW! ‘37 MERCURY 4 DOOR HARDTOP top, beautiful 2 tine Pai, Temperature ifs. peti eae | IS GOING 724 Oakland FE 6.2520, DOWN a Dawa of i DowN ‘ p ZERO | BEE COST CARS, — 52 Olds 4-Dr. .....$ 295 oan. radio heater, hydra- ‘53 } Olds 4-Dr. .....$ 695 * SEDANS—Radio & heater. reramet trom, 55 Buick c Century . « «$1295 2, DR HARUTOP—Radio adi heat- 36 Mercury M'clair $1595 2 DR. HARDTOP—Radie a8 heat. * er, autom mileage. ‘37 CHEVROLET "36 Buick 4-Dr. ....$1795 2 DOOR HARDTOP SEDAN—Power steering, brakes $1845 seats and window. Loaded. Tu- Sen puaS” 55 Buick 2y, $90 05 AN iit seus : SEDAN. is - prea "56 DeSoto Dr. Ss. $1395 : ] & Faget ‘S4 NASH poner : : * nord Crestline ..$ 695 “pontiac | fe peagesite. § 56 FORD : ‘4 Buick ck Super. . he Sak ames gener dynufiow. A one owner’ besuty 37 CHEVROLET 53. Buick Convert. $795 COUPE—New radio & heater, dynafiow, a ae: | 56-CHEVROLET '56 Olds “88” 4-Dr, $1596 ‘35 CHEVROLET “a” .- '56 CHEVROLET 4 noe 210 ‘56. CH VROLET Lewes he ean ) me hice car, 57 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON drama: wate ute. Eis we a 53 Stu’baker 2-Dr. = vey ata im i BS es Son at scree a ee Te a te ee THE, PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1958. oes aif ok othe nesses Ka i -- Tesays S Radio Programs - - 5 Return fo V . WIR, (00) §OKLW, (800) WWi, (950) WOAR, (1130 WXYZ, (1270) WPON, (1460) —. (1408) . TONIGHT 10: eww, Classical Mi Sa usic WCA 4:00 WIR, News CKLW. News, Knowles naphs. eeaa ; 11:60—' tand pea } cee MeKensie WxY2. 6 perv WCaK Newt: Page” |. | _WEON, News. sports” : George ae ee WCAR. News, yo : 11:30—WJR, Music WPON News. spe OSte Oipner Date haga Mason Music 0:30—WIR Jack ve K, U, of D, Mag. CKLW. News, M’Lapbitt CELW, Chase WEDNESDAY 16:00-—WJR, arthur Godt WCAR, we moaning WWJ, News, True Sto: ‘ied rao mae, Suan Howe" | “ees eeaaMesteteetn| Gane, Bee, Bary aeaee os ‘ x Z : F wi WWI, News, Maxwell wxra wor ere WJBK,’ News’ Reid WhyZ, BP. M CKLW, Rooster Clup » America to Knees pag “ alton Lewis Jr, WJBK, Tom George 16:30-—WJR, Weather weak fauice | BEGK Sethe aiiatay | wha Chena Mat ews, vi 7:30-—W Ww err Extra 4:30—WJR, Agriculture WPON, Chuck Lewis. wxyZ *yriffin CKLW. Guy Nunn : 11:00—WJIR, News CKLW. Hea.ter, Music WJBK, News. Geor : " ge WWJ, Bandstand WCAR. News WPON Sports, McKinnon Sara. Pau) Winter . Reames e' Andy | 100i Bee mires WIDE’ Mews, mea? ware, Weather. Short 4 AR Daborts a Hows, B. Martyn fF “~ CKLW. News, ‘Tob: WIB'% News, Bellboy wise News, George David | (1:30—WR, Time for Music CKLW, - toacaages Davies 1:80—WsR, “ Hal — Basketball one at Wolf —— WXY2Z, WIBK. News, Geerse WEDNESDAY _AFTERNOON CKLW, Albuia WCAR, News, comings 2s tag ‘News, Wells” W, Back to Bible | 5.09 wir ew Pag tite ews, 2 9:30—WIR, Music WWJ. News, Roberts WJBK, News, Reid WCAR, Shuor WXYZ, News, Wolf WCAR, News, alike Thomss CKLW, Squad Room oa. Ode Pacis Hig — MacKinnon Bound Of ews, iy - me tor Music bogus WAR News - WAYZ News, Winter 16:00—-WWJ, News, Music CKLW, Knowies WJBK, News, Bellboy WPON News, MacKinnon $280—WJR, Music Hall CKLW, News, Toby David CELW. News, Davies 1:00-—WJR, P. Hayes on Wednesday Guest Stars to Assist “Comic Pianist With His Hour-Long Show NEW YORK i® — Tomorrow evening Victor Borge will offer the third “hali” of his “(Comedy and Music” on CBS-TV, an annual event that is well worth a twist of any viewer's dial. * k * - Borge prefers not to call it a * -WEYZ, Jim Reeves CKLW, dove, Te WJBK. News. WPON Chuck ‘oe ’t-—WJR Young Dr. Malone 2:00——-WJR, Wendy Warren _WWJ, News, Copfession CKLW, Austin Gran, Davies WJBK, News, Reid %: ae. ‘J, One ee Next Door WJBK, mene, McLeod binge News, Pagé WJ, Woman in Hse. WXYZ, News, McKenzie CELW, News, Eddie Chase 4:00-—WIR, B. Bene. Ans, Man wave, Writriek, McKenzie mere continuation of his two pre- WCAR. News Pare fine TV solo performances, wd wa, McLeod “something entirely new—the he Music Hal of.thing you can’t do alone.” . Ly. ews, Chase He will be joined by dancers WWd, News Deland singer Doretta Morrow, 12-year- wxye. ematirick, McKenzie old piano prodigy Abbott Lee WJBK, sping cLeo¢e Ruskin, and a 46-piece orchestra WCAR, Godtfre: ws Sits chow witch he wrote hime WPON. Music With Mason 6: ath fae He a aa oF Rane, CELW. News, Eg. WJBK. WWJ News, Maxwell § WPON, Sports -- Today's Television Programs - - _Frocrams furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. KEYBOARD COMEDY — The irrepressible comedian-pianist | Victor’ Borge returns to television Wednesday in a special hour-long older show, “Victor Borge’s Comedy and Music.” In addition to his own zany keyboard antics Borge will, for the first time, present guest sters. The show will be telecast by CBS from 9 to 10 p. m., with “T’'m constantly discussing plans Channel 2—-WJBE-TV Channel &-WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV for more frequent TV appear-) Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors Corp. as the sponsor. . lances, and there is one idea that Channe] 9—-CKLW-TV does appeal to-me ji, (great artistsare-entertaining. | ‘jnot with the traditional stuffiness _jof the concert hall, but to make | People in charge Of recreation " lideas for things to do if they at- ready have achieved some di- vine performances. * “It seems a paradox that 50), many of our great performers are|" heard so seldom and by such rela- tively small audiences, “What has been “ignored “too often on television-is musical val- ue, It’s too often forgotten that ATTRACTIVE MUSIC “I'd like to do a show that pre- sents some of these great artists, their work attractive to people who never have had fine music made attractive to them before. “I'd like to integrate things with some warmth and humor. An artist can be democra- tized without any loss of dignity to himself or his work.” New Things to Do Will Be Offered programs for organizations they belong to will have an opportunity to stock up on a variety of new tend the Secorid Annua] Oakland County Social Recreation School Thursday. The school, held at the Water-| ford Community Activities Build-/ ing, 5640 Williams Lake Rd., Wa-| terford Township, will be conduct-| ed from 9:30 a.m. to:3 p.m, stration Agents, 4-H Club Agents, and a recreation committee com- these" Members of the “Pontiac Master Salesmen’s Guild” in the area . covered by the Pontiac zone will _|be honored at a banquet Feb, 20, nwood Casino. lat the Ein The dinner and entertainment will be given by the Pontiac Division of General Motors as 4 tribute to these men for -their outstanding sales record in 1957. Officers for the coming year will’ be announced ‘hid membership wards will be presented, H. E. Milliken, Pontiac zone manager in Pontiae -will preside at the affair. CaLal isis CHa) SANE TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS (2) Miss. Weather, WEDNESDAY S : L M B A PARK CONCERT posed of home demonstration mem. edad Ir aur ence ay e ' “Once a montli or once oy bers ~— + pp 7) Mr. D 11:20 (9) Theater. Adventure: Dick| 12; osmopolitan. . “ - | two or three months I might like| Mrs. Cleo Rock, county home saad fas anger. Powell. “Mrs. ae a ae on © — to do a show that would be some-|demonstration recreation leader, is (9) Popeye. ('49.) (4) Tic Tac Dough. ew rin up Oy Te : , (4) News: Williams. (4) Sports: Parker. (9) Swing Your Partner. thing like a park concert — a full|chairman of the committee (2) Racket Squad. -(2) Sports Final. ~ By EARL WILSON orchestra and some of the leading : . ® —|2:15 (2) Love of Life. = oie instrumentalists and singers i SCA COLOR 6:15 (4) Weather: Eliot. L: Nightwatch h eater.) ____+—_ NEW YORK —I never say SO many dames ing a guy : Sales and Service ali a ag Van Eafi, “Flight|12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. [as moved in on Sir Laurence Olivier Thursday a.m., after he'd |T*wently ~~ ae Color TV as Low as 6:20 (4) Box Four. from Glory.” ('37.) ” B< o_ Be You. cpened: | in “The Entertainer.” First Night gals twittered and ee Ppa: ! $399.00 rwins. - gu sh “ ” constan hings | 20 (1) Annie Dabie eS ee Ort oat Dee: aa oe ted ork te pe ‘no wrappeale television that are repetetive— CONDON’S ~~ @) M. Rooney Show ee Ree en lcia cm Gein al : : ae smesierns, for instance, WhY | pedie and TV Sales and: Service 6 ated latias well, Jack Douglas, Betty|12:45 (2) Guiding Light. arms around him or smooched his cheek,|not something ren 127 S. Parke ( Bruce, Cliff Arquette. fo , Larry said, “I'm staying at the Algonquin.” “Scientifically we are reach. | Get Our Prices on Color or problems. 1:00 (2) Susie, Ing for the heavens these days, | Black, and_White TV (2) News: LeGoff. (4) Movie. Frederic March admired him from a side-| yet in the musical arts we al. Before You Buy . WEDNESDAY MORNING (7) My Little Margie. line, especially his rendition of a Milton 6:40 (2) Weather: Phelps, (9) Movie. et: ss a, (RM Metin oypnig hor apiten mah psn lovey 6:45 (2) News: Edwards. ; 1:30 (2) As The World Turns. = » “since on etics.” ff AMPTON'S 6:55 (2) On Farm Front, (7) Topper. Arth: odfrey — / een i ee _ WILSON ee at en ld an occ wins ow at ) State Trooper. Adven-'7:99 (2) TV College. 2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks. = ture: Rod Cameron as troop- (4) Today. - (7) Lady of Charm. of iceboxes, — a choco thought se ag ‘ er. necessary .. . y Ann Howes wen’ see a medic a : = Casey Arse 7:30 (2) Cartoon Frolic. 2:26 (4) Faye Elizabeth. the “My Fair Lady” backstage gossips promptly reported @ ANT, RCA ICTOR : Annap en. ¢ , she was expecting. “Not yet,” says she. : 8:00 2) Ca : 2:30 (2) House Party. : 7:19 (7) Sports: Wattrick. @ cote Cooan (4) Kitty Foyle. anit snaea. 5 STS 7:15 2 News: “ye F 8:30 (7) Big Show. 2:30 (9) News. vator going up to Columbia 7:30 (7) Sugarfoot. Western: Su- Pictures. A man in the ele- garfoot is almost trapped by|g:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. 3:00 (2) Big Payoff. ‘« friend's mail-order bride. " (4) (color). Matinee Theater.|Vator said, “Do you know Otto (9) Million Dollar Movie.\9:39 (4) Romper Room. (D American Bandstand. Preminger?” ... “No”. . Drama: William Powell, “I (9) Favorite Story. |“Well, you should” : “What Love You Again.” (°40.) 9:25 (©) News. : : does he do?” . ... He likes pret- (4) Treasure Hunt. : oe Fee 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. ty girls and can do a lot for (2) Name That Tune. j9:30 (2) Ladies’ Day. (7) Do You Trust Your Wife?|them?” . .-. “I havent got (4) Amos 'n’ Andy, (9) Movie, time. G’bye, this is my floor” “* hn asc Fagg Boe ag = ai 4:00 (2) Brighter D . Just _ a Columbia Pic- T You att RCA Victor's famous “Mirror-Sharp” picture—inches- - Tucker, Hans Con- ae ares -SXECULIVE Was passing, lean cabinétry—clean design TV that helps you decorate—“One-Touch a ere ae. laud nie. ae ese, ‘control. There is even “Touch-Turn” swivel TV and a graceful “Glide- et (2) Mr. Adams, Eve. Com-|g:45 (9) Nursery School Time, ‘ “Hello, Mr. Preminger.” edy: Adams live among wa- 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. Charles Laughton to inness-will positively een: Lew. Sone ianee Cd. Gury Meare. get the Oscar fer “Srldge ou the River Kwai” Fa suggested “reality”_for_movie he's di (4) Arlene Francis. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. ; recting. Dick Powell guest (9) Movie. (9) Laff Time. maybe Laughton’d get it. “I a had it once— ; . I've become a hoary old American institution,” Laughton stars. 10:30 (2) Arthur Godfrey. 44:45 (4) Modern Romances. snorted. “Alec should get it on past performances. He’s 8:30 (7) Wyatt Earp. Western: (4) Treasure Hunt. never had an acknowledgement of his work. Sentiment in- Wyatt returns to old express) : 5:00 (2) Detroit Bandstand. evitably enters into it. He’ll get it for ‘Kwai’ and also for _ company job to stop outlaw/11:00 (4) Price Is Right. S tat on ‘The Lavender Hill Mob” and ‘Man in a White Suit.’” raids. ickok. Laughton admitted, though, that he’s “hotter than a fire- ph Arden Comedy: anes ) Hires om ipeney fame. cracker” himself due to “Witness for the Prosecution.” comes nightmare for Liza. |11:30.(2) Dotto. 5:30 (2) Beat the Clock. Direct quote from Grace, Kelly: “I have given up any : (4) Truth or Consequences. (4) Mr. and Mrs, North. thought of making films. It would be most difficult to live i 9:00 (7) Broken Arrow, Western: (7). Robin and Ricky. , (0 Mickey Mouse Club. two such absorbing types of life at the same time. I have chosen ; ' Cochise, Jeffords save (9) Howdy Doody. (9) Serial Theater. to be a wife and mother, and I have my responsibilities in the / Apache — son from Principality of Monaco.” / murder plot. . / ——_ Stokine ‘ehalee heipe doctor FOF Students Not Going to College THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . ) ———=ee regain self-confidence. gs ; Tennis whiz Althea Gibson is cutting ee first records as} / (4) Adventures of McGraw, I ke S Brother Proposes a vocalist . .. Claire Bloom, (whose newest film is “Phe Broth-| / raved is Green gets in- Y : f H . h S h ] a w kein tee an ieee citizen... i ened | WAS = volved reenwich village aw wife, Keyes, return from Spain $269. ' murder case. b) Cals O 1g C. OO spring... a national magazine will profile Ressevelé anders, | 1S ane (2) To Tell Truth. ch. date Cam , chauffeur to celebrities . . . Joanne Dru tells friends that Lew $219.95 — ae WASHINGTON (INS) — Dr. Mil: pases but said that rome of them,/Ayres “may be the guy.” icone : ton. has proposed that/including athletics, have me j ¥ 9:30 (7) Telephone Time. True Mite \ear of high school belso dominant they have “made un TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Iggie Wolfington of “Music Man vary Deluxe 24. drama: Racing-car mechanic to students who plan to fashionable the attainment of in-| WS asked if that's his real name. Do you think,” he ere. “Mirror-Sherp” picture. 3-speaker Panoramic Sound. The Longeten. Rolloround “TV. fights to overcome polio on. td ” “anybody'd pick that as a stage name on ar’ That Powerful Deluxe chasis, Lighted channel indicator. Phono-jack and fepresed tadcned Ruben | |to work rather than tellectual distinction in the schol- eu tone control. “One-Touch” on-off control, Wahogany- or wainut- tons Medd (ey Saoh Comings. Commicty:| Tae Peemments Settee, Wie, atty Mnciotions. _——— creined fnithen; ethers extve. Medel 210882, - . tian) giri|Deed of Jobne Hopkins Dr. Eisenhower said he viewed (Copyright, 1968) Bob's former Italian / Sitl'said this would enable high schools| “140%. t1 ae 6 iets fettaned on Pr a arias vetten. Com{{?,, meme, OF fundamentals). saseinte before the U.S. |r scm (2) (color). Red Skelton. Com-!such as English, science, history as a blessing to educetion. | _ Mathews edy: Jackie Coogan, Mary\anq languages in the first four| _ THe iso Beth Hughes, Franklin Pang-|years for the benefit of potential] He comimented: ‘It, more than one ot born. Misfit garage owner college students. any other circumstance irt my life- 13 Reluctant : (Skelton) joins wife in *~ * * time, She cee 14 Full apology search: for Jack-the-Ripper would be devoted People critically Pe} 16 Pertaining to type slayer. es ms thoughtfully at our entire educa-| tn " tional enterprise.” deposits at _ oe hiboed dared conceited -s : ‘|v Gnre name 8 i Mee attitude threatens Army said y- Draws 1%4-2-Year Term ie River in ‘career. rhos on Bad Check Charge _ 21 New Gulens (9) Political. Sy oF wt WAS $299.95 (4) Californians. Adventure er : For attempting to pass a worth- promising —_ i , Dion sets up duel to save . less $35 check at.the Pontiac Elks 95 Goit mound $$24995 leader, ae Temple Dec. 16, Robert F. Ducag,|27 Tumult J (2) $64,000 Question. ee 30, of South Bend, Ind., will serve |32 lidenesian P ane = oe eS Peary Seeenes at the - apa . =] brah 10:90 (0) Theater, Drama: Charlés students should take a heavier work’ state Prison of Southern 4-3 | res wart i Mo Boyer in ‘The Executioner.” load to prepare themselves for at Jackson. 3a Kote in i . Mekegenr oo 217842, Sha! ct extra. Model 217820, C) Steve Wilsons » He blamed “community Lucas pleaded guilty to passing!» Guie's scale rit fi (4) Crusader. \ pressures” for the inclusion of non-|1,. check without an account Feb. |, Canvas, smelter. Leoll tl chen the REA Peery Srvc Car ena or RCA Victor set owners, FOR pin (2) Highway Patrol. college preparatory courses ori t |<. direction cy maid : 4 Turn ing schedules, 21 Beary” wa Seite | Come in today . ’ . awa | for bia savi _ deduction > 46 Mild oath or big savings 4 disk 47 Preheh river Sa Bice | 3 Enbrcants $e vetan 825 W. Huron St. FE 4-2525 28 Cyinariel Geograph os 4 : ! Society (ab.) Calls for Congressional Representation to Eye Presidential Fitness WASHINGTON @® - Sen. Know-| called today for land (R-Calif) congressional representation on gress _ executive branch in such a deci- any commission set up to deter- mine presidential disability de-) spite Atty, Gen. Rogers’ state- ment he would urge a veto for such a bill. er, the Senate Republi- can leader said he believes such/ a commission can be established immediately by passage of a law, without waiting for a constitution- al amendment. * * -* “I would have no objection to Congress’ acting both on a bill and a constitutional amendment, but I think the commission ought to be set up by action in this session and not be delayed by the necessi- ty of ratifying constitutional amendment,”” Knowland said in an interview. : Tests on First today. ‘ * * * Airman Donald G. of the Bronx, during the seven 1 days in the compact space cabin, neither heard nor saw anything going on’en earth. He was sub- jected to most of the physical and psychological conditions ‘scientists believe man will experience in space travel. Mostly, he smoking cigarettes, |smokes a pack a day. * * * At his first meal outside the chamber, attendants placed a big sizzling steak in front of him. “If Gen. Benson says I'm a said, he missed He ustially Farrell quipped. Maj. Gen. Otis 0. Benson Jr., commandant of the aviation médicine school, branded. Farrell a chowhound during the simulated space flight. — a a : Rogers, who opposed both. those ideas at a news conference this month, late today before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee scaler the problem. The Constitution provides that when a president is disabled, his duties shall fall to the vice presi- dent. But it does not specify who shall decide that thé President is disabled, Rogers has said only by consti- -tutiona] amendment could Con become a partner with the iday flight. Farrell ate the steak, slept most of the afternoon and then ate a ‘roast beef dinner, He lost four pounds, he said, during the seven- Farrell, who now wants to make a real flight to the moon, will complete a scheduled 72 hours | of tests and observations tomor- row. SAN ANTONIO,. Tex, }—Physi- ciang and scientists af the Air Force's School of Aviation Medi- cine continued checks and tests on the world’s first “space man” Farrell, 23,). chowhound I'm going to. be one,""| ‘results, At least so far, oe = 2 eee a a wortse pe When Is Official jindustr and. particularly the is FCC. B * By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON @®.—. What ‘honesty in a government official? = * Dr, Bernard Schwartz, the,emo-| In the end he. was fired. But he tional law professor described as/focused so much attention on the both brilliant and arrogant, has 1 raised this question. It can stand steady raising in big government. f In some ways Schwartz handled ~ himself like a juvenile. But he got * * * He was hired by the House sub- committee on legislative oversight as chief counsel] to investigate six big government regulatory agen- cies which were created by Con- gress and are answerable to Con- Sane aaa io a coak he accepts payments from a busi- ness or industry in return for a favorable decision. ; ? * * * But accepting a “gift” or fa- City’s National Guard : rs i 4 : : § e o Le | Promotes Thirteen A total of 13 men in Pontiac’s National Guard Company M, 125thicommerce Commission, Federal Infantry Regiment, have been pro-|Trade Commission, Civil Aero- moted to the rank of Private First . Harriman} Evk it z vor” is not necessarily crooked al- though it raises questions about the good judgment: of an- official and can shake public. confidence in government. For example: How can an of- gress. These agencies—and the 38 men who sit on their boards and com- missions — make-décisions affect- ing not only many businesses and broad areas of American life but involving billions of dollars, — They are the Federal Communi- cations Commission, Interstate Gas Metering Station nn Explodes, Iwo Die Their authority includes regula-|_KIMBERL, Idaho —A natur- rates, truck licenses; approval for| Yesterday, killing two men. A new radib and TV. stations and air|third pipeline worker escaped se- routes for airlines; say-so on tele-|Tious injury. Phones and telegraph; x «x ® The victims were Donald Bur- tices; and approvals for power/\dett Eatchell and Lowell Melvin dams. Prestwich, both 33 and both of Schwartz, feeling some subcom-|Salt Lake City. Clifford M. Turn- mittee members wanted a white-jer, 45, also of Salt Lake City, was wash, could have waited until he| shaken up by the blast and was ‘jwas completely blocked and then hospitalized. There was no result- nautics Board and Securities and Exchange Commission. \Blle, of Mt. Clemens. *\resigned, made his charges, and ing fire. publicly revealed what evidence * + * : he had, The men were employed by Pa- Instead, to force. committee ac-jcific Northwest Pipeline Corp. and tion, he “leaked” documents to|were checking equipment along made charges, talked|the company's big gas transmis- | newspapers, -jof “gifts” and “favors’’ to mem-jsion line which runs into Oregon bers of the regulatory agencies by'and Washington: Schwartz Raised Question, ‘Congress. It’s Congress which much | Dishonest? ficial convince anyone that this de- cision—in sures from the White House.) An official who yielded to such pressures—by a ruling contrary to what he thought fair and just— could not escape the dishonesty charge even though he didn't get a dime out of it. But what is pressure? Suppose a member of Congress called up an agency and expressed interest in the outcome of a pending case. Is that pressure? Inside the agen- cy it might be considered so. The agencies are sensitive to every year. decides how money they can have to operate. An angry member of Congress could cause a lot of trouble. interest in a company with which the government does business, have to shed themselves of any- thing. Less Snow Fell in Year at South Pole Than Here NEW YORK @ — At the South pole it snows and blows, too. But only about two inches of new snow accumulated there during the entire last year when Americans lived at the U.S. base and meas- ured snowfall, Land at the South Pole lies un- Canada’s After 17 * said his health Pearson. * minister and Parliament by bec East seat. der 8,300 feet of snow and ice— | Saal 54 Cat Quntu! one ALL MAKES... ALL MODELS! ENJOY “OLDS-FASHIONED” HOSPITALITY Make it a fa appraisal on Price Class! and drive the '58 Olde! You'll have a wonderful time going places OLDSmobility! And you'll on cae appreciate the generous “Open House” when you trade for a "58 Ole “~ Rocket Ride Ife da y I mily date this to see with your present car... . et your local authorized | OLDSMOBI Le _QUuARTEY ORALENS Special ‘Buys On Used cars Too! Trading's brisk at your Olds dealer's. You'll find ~ just the right one for you among a wide selection of late-model used Rockets—Satfety-Tested ee priced right... ready to Rocket away! ley _ JEROME ‘MOTOR — ©0., 280 S. Soginaw St., FE 85 3566 Se . q. i ie. j jury Feb. 6. Career Closed | by St. Laurent St, Laurent resigned as prime} minister last June after his Liber- announced he was giving up party leadership, which a conven. | tion last month gave to Lester B.: The French Canadian leader is expected to practice law in Que- bec: with two sons. St. Laurent was a $50,000-a-year corporation lawyer in December 1941 when Prime Minister Mac- k Ki j Early the next year he entered | In 1946 he became foreign min- ister and helped foun the North But members of 4|Atlantic Treaty Organization, |