SF 5 of _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1958. ee a _ |\Oakland PTA — ee bce ae ee T pe Ay , SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9!" Ew iv program are to provide factual in- , _ , — | bo : : hiatetesen hades geno : 7 | | A leadership training program will, begin in Waterford Township isa with duties and responsibilities in "| Oakland County Council of Parent- Teqeher Sangatin. left for registration in this all-im- portant course, according to Chair- Smittle, professor of educational 2 ] : ) ) ag _ ano ge at Wayne _ State /Dominicans Link Roads . eS AS Major units included in the | CIUDAD TRUJILLO, Dominican , 6B | ~ course will be national, state and Republic—Two superhighways link-/ . : - Eee regional information; counsel- jing Ciudad Trujillo with important] : ) - '|to Hold Course : cath seam wae] An exciting announcement from- at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the high eee, ee ‘The eight-week course: will be Lose up to 9 pounds the first week, up to 24 pounds 74 Two of the main objects of the jin Leadership _ tions, and to acquaint officers, -|school will be sponsored~ by. the ; a | tor reeiaration in NOW! FOR. THE FIRST TIME IN MEDICAL HISTORY | under the direction of W. Ray|man Mrs, J.'E. Frankenfield, : wae the first month with fabulous New — a ? WE SELL WHAT = WE ADVERTISE Finally Reach {Engineers in akland} our tow oveRHEAD MEANS SAVINGS : — ; TO YOU — A LITTLE OUT OF THE por oeteuge Plan Special Week WAY, BUT A LOT LESS TO PAY! SAN BERNARDINO, Calif, #— __ Am expert mountain climber final- ~ ly got down to a ledge where a bay lay by a waterfall, gro- tesquely twisted and still. “Negative,” the climber yelled ta the men 300 feet above. They knew then that the crum- bly cliff had defeated them, Young 16-22 by members of the Oakland Chapter of the Michigan Society of Professional Engineers. * * * A dinner meeting will be held: Thursday, Feb. 20 at the Fox and j- sbocrved during the week ot Fen Step Tables, End Tables $ 5 95 and Cocktail Tables..... : SHOP THE REST — THEN SEE L&S 1 Mile: East of Auburn Heights FURNITURE SALES °* Donald Burns Hounds Inn to commemorate} At last! The miracle you’ve waited ‘A day ee Msp Reg ee George Washington's birthday. He | $945 Auhora 84. (4-39) for! No more reducing i ‘as long as eighth-grader from nearby Colton|@S also an : You Always Buy for Less at L & § 1 you live! No more doing without the was walking along the top of the| Following the dinner, a panel 9-¢ Mon. Thru Sat.—Fri. ti 9 FE 5-241 Seeds caie love be axl Wo manus ooll ta cliff on towering Mt. San Gorgo-|4iscussion will be held and ques- ture because everything you touch seems nio. He and a schoolmate, tions discussed. 1 to turn to fat! 2 and solid footing, nobody could] get to him until John Mathews of the Sierra Madre search and res-| cue team made it down to the letige on a rope. The boy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O, T. Burns, had been at the . NEW LIQUID NON-ALCOHOLIC REDUCING COCKTAIL FORMULATED FOR PERSONS WHO CANNOT LOSE ENOUGH WEIGHT WITH PILLS AND TABLETS Now you can forget the curse of overweight as though it never existed . . . forget that you ever worried about excess weight : . . forget Reduces as It Slims! Makes Inches Vanish as It Molds and Holds! ‘feet down in two steps. pag toe eg —s a path, went 4 EASY WAYS to ae cea a that ugly fat away! or h landed on a ‘ ... Drink off those 1... Actu smpall ledge about 100 feet down, | CHARGE at WAITE S$ ally drink pedo pape ght poe edge but the water pushed him off and/ want to be with the aid of the most fantastic hé fell another 200 feet to the) @ 30-Day Charge @ Easy Terms —— —— reducing medication ledge that forms a step in the) / udget Leye conceived! middie of the act oro af o8 Plen ° — You see results start from the very first day! 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Gey Do you remember the story of the who cried trated liquid into a glass of fruit juice, vege- Wef* enioying mouth-watering chops, steaks, 1, “Lies just to attract attenti he Ab a real, county walked over to the mother | table jui sp nome and you've juicy roasts, vegetables, desserts and all the . a at i abd told her the boy was dead. juice, water, even liquor, and you've got 1. off came ugly pounds, down came figure. WOlf finally a the boy's friends ignored bie | + ” a . : the most wonderfully delicious cock- ns om / ae ere csies for he use he had them 80 often,’ oo $8.98 In 8 Sizes tail you've ever tasted! Drink that delicious Panag inches from waist, hips, wighs, They to believe him when it really counted! Don't let it be true Value for 25" to cocktail and that's it! Down comes your hor- *Y*rywnere® : Don't be like that boy's friends. Don't miss out ; 40" Waists! rible craving for food, down comes caloric __ With less work, less effort, less discomfort on this effective reducing omnes bs ; intake, and off comes your overweight! thon they ever imagiond they drank hecause you-may have been fooled by other Magazine Posts Bond "You burn off those ugly pounds, you oxi- {bit fat away! . . . Drank off that MINEOLA, N.Y. @.— Mrs. Pris-| % Power elastic gives os you sit, bend or stretch! polar ene pn y WHAT THIS Ce preety oer reducers mo bea wld 1 cifla Rose, a material «witness in| %& Four-inch waistband with stay-up-stays, can’t roll! Paig Nat aignnns eo bet —_—-s MEANS TO YOU If you really want to reduce, try L. the. slaying of her airline engineer to 34 pounds te fet pa moyae d the_few moments it takes to All out aad mail thie | husband, was free on $14,000 bond Instantly your figure measures 2 sizes smaller! The REDUCE- ily, you'll hardly believe it! You'll gasp in After all the products you've tried . . . order blank. 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You have nothing to lose Rose, held in jail for 10 spot-reduces tummy, hips, and thighs, by gentle diagonal contro! jd pened cron et == aiterdex you for = after eure 2 and Pvon it's al] ‘but a few seconds of your time: : . “ * * * * ’ Tr, i VOr eas > _ days, was released yesterday un- balanced pressure against fatty bulges. ‘ come Gente onl casa %0 the safe, fs ont ssc for Slain Man's Wife % Side opening zipper for “no-strain” dressing! “had made them miserable for years! . der the bond posted by a detective n ' me "magazine. = Exclusive at Waite's : : ee, on our lifetime the miracle you secretly MAKES EVERY OTHER REDUCING The 22-year-old woman said she +.» in Pontiac! Why Diet? Try it! << new ing . « « this fabulous new PRODUCT OLD-FAS ED intends to remain with friends in ’ . NO PILLS, NO DIETS method, so safe, so easy, so astonishingly the Mineola area. She declined Charge Yours at Waite's . . . Street Floor effective, is here at last! And it’s yours to try ! 5 } :, to discuss the ing. Fe ae ‘Seaeaiant , : - « « yours to prove to your own sat Y i | ee a a nce ee a ee ee ge se ce ee magine: You don't take a single cap- ' * : - a Mrs. Rose, who has been suffer: " sule or tablet! You don't follow a plan, you — bare amt om oF obligation! taveaneees rae ; ee & * sessneee tage 5 : Think of what this can mean to you! Can : ? ing por ol egg Ry mt tired as don’t ae ee ca ae en dee you imagine the glorious feeling whea you os: she wal out assau County your heart wi bruta exercise. You t oe tin eter live, paces J cat, ’ : . ) Jal, ———— by her attorney, BRA FAVORITES sar osentnretingg drain on 20 called 4) what they oo withowt worrying, wahout — i ‘ | Jomeph Zalk. was wearing a es feeling guilty, without feeling afraid? That's Co _ black @ress> You lead a sane, normal life. You sleep, wan Dee's help can do for you! > fan. by work, play just like any of your thin friends. ; : fields. | weer You eat foods you want to eat. You don't Perhaps you have tried other products in ' ‘ | wrestle with your power, and all the while 00d faith and been disappointed. Perhaps : | usly — melt away quickly and pleasant- —_ — cing Lees so - ‘ee your y, the safe scientific Du al way re ie seul Bot Gap oat a! © a : %, age : g . | they give more women ¥ HOW IT WORKS you? Wouldet it be foolish to gu poeag ea few short of your goal! Wouldn't it be the fi : sabe to abet : : gure they want... Vestas thin oth is sen weaneteedal obs silly to give up now when the product you've | true! Perh endering how De-Dol - TOet_le Sail: tarst: Say eet Uy at the figure ro pertonen nese “narechat nchew ‘ther Du-Dol? If not for your sake, for the sake of | : SP psigen ‘ Fs those you love, Try Du-Dol. they want to pay! S'jopical question. Here's the logical answer At neighborhood taverns ..¢ | Where good fellows : get | together, J you'll a _ reducing drug in liquid form! After having Du-Dol has little or nothing in common with ‘other products = may have tried. Du-Dol contains, for the very first time ever, a fabulous Doctor-proved, Doctor ibed been tried, tested and used by countless Doctors throughout the nation, this power- ful drug has been approved safe for use without prescription by the Food and Drug Administration... Secondly, and just as important, is this big difference. Other products depend on one of three basic reducing principles. They fill your stomach with bulk material OR they try to fool your taste-buds into thinking you aren't hungry, OR they contain a drug which works to lessen your desire to overeat. Only Du-Dol combines all three of these medically accepted reducing principles into one great new, entirely different reducing product ...a uct that works three ways at once to help melt your fat away more surely and more easily than anything you ever va ’ ‘TRY AT OUR RISK Send for it now while you are still thinking about it. 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SEE SSE Ea Pe aeeenseseeeeeseee In other words, when you take Du-Dol J ite’s (Dept. 3 Saginaw at Huron you get this powerful poet iano ° SATISFACTION | hobo pee = . a safe drug ond you get » no-catatying con- # GUARANTEED | : $ a centretes to help wa: f that overpowering i F urge.to overeat, and you get hunger-satisfying ‘| Try DU-DOL in your own a Plouse — DOL at hg we If I am Pe a 4 bulk in the form of delicious liquids of your f}. ‘home fot 7 dave entirely completely suticfied in every Sony, t-caay Wwe a wa choice! at our risk. Weigh your- a unused portion and you will refund my purchase ; nf * $ Ses ven aa o BM Oprice immediately, no questions asked, a é ~ yi] 104 dent lose as muck T enclose $3.00 () for regular supply or $5.00 £) for, : PROVED BY DOCTORS ; iooe it yeu don't toon — giant double supply. 8 . ~ S| better and feet better ro 4 you Send C.0.D. (Same Charge my aceount OC ss : carondertavehenDocensetetanas: Bl iene Shaws fy one-act guaran: m4 A. 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Zone...State. oe you lovely rounded contours... give you fit is in for the life of the bra, A most , they lost that weight without # a fg glamour plus comfort. beauty buy! page bo oo a without being told what By *Please add 3% state sales tax . a or jo eat! .. . will depriving eet tae Sie ee : all Style 502, fine, firm broadcloth in white,” pink. themselves of all the foods they loved! EN 600.0 009.9 | TTrTTiitittttiiit i z Sle 392 In finan whie brenda Pg. e 50 A cup 32-96; 8 cup 32-40; C cup 32-42 , PACKAGED, Now in Our: Budget Bra Bar << « Street Floor! Phone FE 4-2511 or Charge Yours ot Waite’s . .. Street Floor ie 3 Ss = % = z | SPS = CORTNENTAL STRUNG CORP, LAP | ,* ce ae ee would, , ar } % ke trades ,wnions and contractors. ‘This at Costa a Elections Lercuick selounesd oka APT Soc te hard whee mente. Sie Example. Democracy CIO Executive Council meeting, will to have the best ef things at any cost e | | be put in force first, on heavy con- struction projects and then gradually In contrast to most Latin-Amer- ican elections the recent voting for a . President and Legislative Assembly ®#Pplied to all building work. Union Man’s Wife every member in Costa Rica didn’t make headlines A formula for avoiding juris- Discusses Contest for us? And after because of orderly and democratic dictional disputes between craft ~ Sa ccna : What's our union coming to when . : : procedures. unions and the CIO industrial it call its siemdne tode must put | ions which enroll all workers in ™ — both of them. President Jose Ficueres’ can- a plant, snd geaeesied mmindhe (Leader, Thurs., Feb. 16)? How oy 7 can we trust a union when it Ghats, Faanqnco Ona, was ago by Federation President doesn’t trust us? I’'m-sure no one er defeated by Marto Ecnann1 of the George Meany, was adopted. ‘wrote his milestone entry without. } 24. of National Union party. Another Under it craft unions will have a = feos van itself. candidate who served only to jurisdiction over new construc- we can prove it, If the union is so’ peg ang type split the vote for Ficurres’ Na- tion and industrial union members ear = it have &@ loss of money tional Liberation party, ran a will continue to do maintenance nee — poor third. work. oomtees a we anyone re . ao an apology. x * * x «*« * Doesa’t our union get paid from From a self imposed exile in Mexi- co, former President Rarnazt CaLp- gron Guarpia directed his Republi- can party in its return to power in the Assembly. During his term in office he had sponsored a far reach- ing social security system and a labor code, But even with Republican party support, the National Union party of This will mean an end of opposi- tion to labor saving technological improvements and may create some unemployment at first. But, as the late Pum. Murray once pointed out, a union should not protect its mem- bers by opposing labor saving innova- tions. It should make every effort to find new and productive work for What Won’t They Do Next! Dr. a oir ~~ bar ene saitstel ‘pesction th ‘eats: David Lawrence Says: ; : ss Aiea tow peeved os pines Portraits Congres betaing bas eaged mations of do POlitical Dinners Now Big Issue “teen lt uM s mrour: x * * . lars each year to construction costs. President Fiaurres, who under the It is to be hoped that the AFL-CIO a dine hanes ed. ach Vaated a ae constitution cannot be re-elected will bring pressure for its elimination , VASHINGTON — Is the mil- There have been many persons As for tokens of “appreciation,” 41°00" oe antiaireraft gun .. . Would much embarrass me lenlum in politics about to be who have made big contributions it may be asked where the line is fired on French airmen. And al- But now the years have passed during two succeeding terms, had in- elsewhere. reached? Are the “‘appreciation” to one or the other of the major to be drawn in the public service. ough the French government de- and I Have grown a little troduced many social reforms, which dinners at $100 a plate really 10 oe ae eae dared a artioning take a tee, toeather with expeneee, , tended the action of the military, more... And as it is St. Valen- “ abdooed? or lo . » a ee eee The Man About Town what else, it might conse cx ares, The bonly 3 the ior peaking hebere « Nao pir pelayer sk Anupama me ee er a elect EcHANDI accep be asked, is meant Roosevelt and Truman eras was convention or an employer assdcia- cegge a Bur ! — . ¢ by the hullabaloo rather big. tion? Should members of Congress Algeria has been such a hotly, 4 andy box or flowers . . . But : ~ years ago President oming Vur ay over the dinner 0 Federal fticehelders, of let lobbyists pick up the check for controversial eubject ta French - 4, st may tin» | gueres created a supreme P which friends of course, are still solicited for lunch ee es .' hd am in love with you, my dear _______ electoral tribunal in which a Big Crowds Assemble at paturalgas b111 tude to help the party im power. _couflct of interest” begin or M4 oti te et clear whe would. . I truthfully admit... , And | political neutral had the deciding Winter Resorts in Area Geely fy Texts to The Bae cimare been Seen Or ntagte heneet pete, am | aia caige BO... fea vote. New registration lists were honor House Re- scientious legislators and offi- Robert Lacoste is the resident promise me that you will be... - * : prepared and posted ahead of Stumbling block: What's often publican Leader But if a millenium is to come in cing, will mot need to worry minister in Algeria, Did he give My Valentine today . . . And hald : time in all localities, United Na- covered by a man’s hair. ~ ee lo mee about such things. But they will | the order? He had been near the me in your loving heart . . . In tions observers watched the Figure eites Csenh wth . LAWRENCE national commit- ing campaigns. It was suggested siaies he ate Gieata oak belore the attack. rey nat, MES) y compulsory voting and counting egg a" = teeman from Texas, H. J. Porter, by this writer 20 years ago that J. 9 fuss about services Did Lt. Gen. Raoul Salan, the . as a winter resort. come from was certainly lambasted for writ- all campaign contributions be lim- , »a..o4 or te be rendered. Army commander-in-chief, decide x * * Kenneth L. Hallenbeck ing a letter urging friends to come ited to very sual sus But, un- e sinweca wit 0 te repeisal, or was it an Al Looking Back The Republic of Co8ta Rica is & director of such things for the - ade an | asrenee ne ies hier ee eae gee lag og a ler gerian Air Command acting inde. small, 23,000 square mile Central Huren-Ciinton Metropolitan Authority Republicans in helping to pass the by mail or in person is prohibi- solicitation hereafter will certain. Pendentiy of tim’ te 15 Years Ago American country northwest of Pan- °° cold weather doings at gas bill in previous sessions. tive, and nobody has come for- ly ‘have to be more tactfully oo i. grontier where the French _ SCHOOLS TO issue ration book ama. It has been independent since Kent Sake Park, But Porter made only two mis- ward with an effective plan to phrased. vainly have tried to stop rebels No. 2 | takes—he should have invited cer- lick that problem. (Copyright, 1958) sli in and out of the Tunisian © BIG FRENCH battleship brought 1821 and three-fourths of its foreign ** Milford. On a recent Sunday, 12,000 oo” nent Democra —= = people skated or fished there, or visited Genie as tal an eee “sanctuary?” * to U. S. trade is with the United States. Its its nature center. Its lodge last month ‘service for the gas bill, and he Dr. William Brady Says: It's no secret that Algerian na- 29 Years Ago 915,000 people are mostly middle totaled 625 camper nights. One Boy should have never put his thoughts . y : pry wed agi a og S610 pleas Byecineed pitt class and primary education is com- Scout camporee brought 710. Fishing in writing. , ‘6 . ’ rear eic Racwme ag Isory. On December 11, 1941, Cost shanties on the lake number 140. Sor t-Seppisietee? Gnears Reader Down ut Dumps Sihesa Goatees _ OFFERING SEODE chy heraipet Rica declared war on German ,, Thaly t hom saken, a wondertal method ot [Vf B cki I ] hag besa tats bo tap Algerian y, Ital High praise for their e newspaper saken, a wonderful method of ay e Lac ing odin has been unable to stop Algerian and Japan and later became an comes from my long time friends, money-raising will be lost to the activity on its soil, THOUGHTS FOR TODAY original member of the United Na- . Al. and Dale Barnett politicians of both parties. self-addressed envelope for the The French have erected electri- He that spared not his: own tions of Keego Harbor. They're on a western _ Who puts up $100 just to go to a pamphlet “The Iodin Ration” or fied wire fences along parts of Son, but delivered him up for us . trip and have scanned newspapers from Plitical dinner? Surely the aver. fae comeing: the long frontier but these do not all, how shall he not with him age voter doesn’t have that kind t, please stop the well rebels also give us all > x~ * * all of the large cities they've visited, and I do not advise any one to take %*°P organized freely give thing» Congratulations to President-elect write: “We still think ou } oe ee peo dLagesess medicinal iodin or.lodide without a a — Romans 8:32. EcHA former ambassador to the i te best of all.” om ood wecal. were coed’ ti ean — supervision, and the ge tease islets ot he botees : aus NDI, & . a d to , of ‘United States, and to the people of —— ° 3 6 ee ot sty ain't zmmend fF of the Outside world, - including ng ve! a omy peor Local army draft boards have 31 tions and co es that —e members of the United Nations. And feed me with a shepherd's Costa Rica for again setting an ex- men on thelr March quota. The bought $-100 tickets for din- oaths herds ing portion #0 petaeant * & care; / § ample of democracy in action. Pontiac City board is asked for a Witt Gee an apy e- e F <'s; But France is a member of the His presence shall my wants sup- | 15, and the out-county board 16. Dr, William Brady, if @ stam: Atlantic Alliance, which in part _ ply, : 4 y deductible expense on the tax side addressed envelope is sent to The Pee fos ices the Brench Pr twits chtul ; The induction date for beth is where companies are concerned— tine Press. Pontiac, Michigan. naval base at guard me a wat eye. _ 7 | Buil ° Trades Move March 3. it ld : as oeat-at Ga (Copyright 1953) ’ Bizerte. Apd the Tunisians now are — Joseph Addison. i dir l . — oa role in modern poli- > . : | 8 with qui t rats to End Featherbedding —, sss crums with quite « history are te - Case Records of a Psychologist: At their recent Miami Beach meet- ing labor leaders made plans to end _ “featherbedding,” that is the prac- tice of employing unnecessary work- Emerson C. Beebe Jr., | of Holly. They saw service in the Revolu- tion, Civil War, and at Lincoln’s funeral. One of his neighbors phoned me the ers or the performance of unneces- other day that favors bestowed upon them, but is so many wonderful — martier this week I sary work. Robert H. Dawson, they do not dare to snub these din- roses that even the angels i w+ men cannot be at peace wi now in his 94th year, was cleaning the Nets lest they incur the ill will of ‘nemeen, Nee eer ien . tear combines This has been particularly veer, bs the politicians involved. generous foresight. Churches, ., ; snow off his walk at 20 Wenonah Drive— the YMCA and the CYO, plus , Plant roses prevalent in the building trades = ynich some men only a mere fraction of Ps ~ a. ambassa- " . Boy Scouts and other worthy .Pefore,” as “ and is unnecessarily expensive that age do not. par ssidaalr Gauihandtoa ease groups should profit from this “PUY Dhrased for employers and in the long ———_——— assistants to this or that high of- coos ant eet eee ae eee ° Sits aed aes Gare in procuring their camp sites. _ plant roses run, not good for labor even Verbal Orchids to— Siastaoie We le to: repraneat cas By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE = Wholesome when used to protect workers Mrs. Melinda HK. H. companies in Washington, they sees. oe against unemployment. It’s been 0) ee et ee tok oe ete time planting eddies pioym 8 of Remus; 100th birthday. Sin thane “ippreciatiaal” Musi. time planting additional reses. an open invitation to abuses Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Baer “What Mr. Porter did de Mr. Sunnen and racketeering. of oo St.; sixtieth wedding anni- —— femaths Rapa York pb Me} ora x *« * eeery: — ‘ not very and Mother, plus . Labor leaders and management : +40 wr, “ al a hme pend 4 Senses tan Republican patios Hat 2 Seafratace ed representatives have been studying ine anniversary and thelr respective candidates do turely graying of the hair ae Oe means of doing away with this prac- ae 8 eS mosphere. Mrs. Carrie Nixon portunity offers. They solicit and Getting close to nature is tice and now have announced a na- of 782 Cass Lake Road; ninetieth birth- Obtain — perfect legally — large to the soul | tional agreement between building day. pune: mimay Sims toterented prophets of ancient donors and thereby inescapably withdrew Mrs. Anna Cronin place themselves under at least a THE PONTIAC PRESS of ne South Ardmore 8t.; eighty-eighth tacit obligation to their bene- seemunben eins th birthday. factors.” Published by Tax Powrisc Pues Company Mr. and Mrs. Noel E. Martin sure bo basta ste bo 27 ee * Pontiac 12, Michige® of 101 West Rutgers Ave.; golden wed- |The Country Parson - year ministry, he spent.40 days Trade Mark Daily Breept Sunday ding. . 7 the ee Roser. Bassers, Jorn A. River, q 7 i he liked to withdraw in 2 eoneralage lng | Garden of Gethsemane of 3616 Oakshire Road; Otucmuten Manager birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Jason Colenow eighty-sixth A. Prrecerate ou, President and iness Manager w. Yama. P, Bocas —- There is a definite yuna oaier peamngee of Rochester; fifty-fourth wedding an- proved of (1) the mass adminis- ‘°K. hes inde experiences, —_jogical merit in such “retreats” an ‘semen: imams niversary. tration of iodin to school children tiation to the chery Aged from man-made architecture. For Milanaging Editor Classified Charles Fox to prevent goitre and (2) the mass yo. people of St. we can then gaze a= of Bloomfield Hills; eightieth birthday administration of fodin, in. ‘the ness .of the mountalas and Entered at Post Office, Pontiac, as second class matter 2. On * « form of iodized salt, to the general § ‘For Mr. Sunnen has great fore. and peer into Robert I public. sight and vision, He has thus been 8, © The Associated Preset the of Oxford; ninety-first birthday. the major factor in creating a Ancient Abraham oleae, tka ees = Oe Mrs, Simon Rudduck children get the Hedin they need, cAMP site for ws. And he his also have built up Tae Poxruc Paned ts delivered by cartier for @ cette O° tony. ninetieth birth and I believe the amount of lodin t a dash 9 quarter of & mile carried ia carrier te Rot available olly; birthday, rt raged pee long which provides us with a lake 4 chosen’ the , .Michiness"and’ ell ‘other ‘placer tn Ye United Staten Rethan Witise jedined salt, even though it en. (hat 8 mile and a half long and. jeft Abraham the rich 4 00 a year. All mall sab payable in advance. Of Drayton Plains; eighty-third birthday. . “2486, ke bb cabs be ‘tirely replaces ordinary salt at which Sodom and Mr. and Mrs. Adam J. Richter veliell jell te teulll by whad we table and in cooking , Is less than ® yon wale OR : will saan ont ee MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU oF crncuLaTions Of Fenton; fifty-first wedding anniver- eave out of it as by what we ‘*® ™itimam daily requirement. inte that this is a God-ecad the phony | sary. put in it.” Whether you send a stamped, to us. It offers a wide variety of But py that 4 f / . bs 4 bn ; } - {| 4 i « { ; - . { | a | | | 2 ‘ | | 4 : ie): in a : ‘ i .: Ke owe re Supervisors Tighten | Purse Strings, Grant |. Mental Health Funds Supervisors yesterday tightened the strings on Oak- land ‘County’s shrinking pocketbook, but not before pulling out $50,000 ta care for the mentally ill. + Named iy City Postmaster Bloomfield _ Township Man Appointed to Post by Broomfield x *k * 2 x & ‘*k &k& * _ Where Boy Mat Have Disappeaied Playmate Tells of Ice Breaking Beneath Sled Skin ‘Divers From Utica Now Probing Icy Water After Night-Long Vigil At the same time, an economy squeeze forced Ways oa -night search -and Means Committee members to reject an extra ap- Pontiac's new acting ata visite alneened ages propriation of $20,000 for the Oakland County Child). master is Robert C. Miller, - 30, of 194 N’ “Berkshire Rd., Township boy continued to- Guidance Clinic. Members also ordered additional help, not included in the 1958 budget, Screened thoroughly to see if they are emergency positions. “If this present financial situation keeps up,” de- clared Birmingham Supervisor David Levinson, “‘we are going to end up $1,000,000 0 in the red at the year’s end.” departmental requests for) ROBERT C. MILLER Unemployment But despite all this, supervisors placed a prior- ity number one tag on securing funds and a place ‘Iraq and Jordan Merge in Pact for the emergency care of Miller's appointment will be- ~ . aoe Talks Sought the mentally ill. come effective Feb. 28, Broom- FATAL SPOT? — Patrolman Bernard Tomas, Pontiac Press Photg | Droke. “I ran home,” he said. x «*« * ‘Arab Federation’ Setu field said. of the Center Line Police Dept., gazes at the hole day while sledding on the Clinton River. The Shelby Township police and fire- ‘ * They have sought such a place a P The new appointee is Cadillac | in the ice through. which 6-year-old Gerald search for the boy’s body in the river is con- |men, Macomb County sheriff's dep- Williams, 10 Other Dem * pod — would no longer} Pro-Western—Rival—to’ sales —— for Jerome Mo-| Thacker is believed to have disappeared yester- tinuing today. a uties and emergency crews from s * to the count il, . * tor Co., 230 8. naw s : Governors Offering Ike hor they have bern taker inthe, SYTic-Egypt Unity ac tae 1s els, Goons as Romeo and Roseville searched last Six-Point’ Program past for lack of proper facilities. the company since April, 1956. Mack Under Fire in TV Case goer until 1:30 a.m. . The $50,006-wil) come from a |, AMMAN, Jordan Iraq and! Prior to that time Miller was they stretched a wite fence LANSING @® — Gov. Williams} $69,777 contingency funa, with |J°Cdan joined today in the “‘Arab| niet investigator for the Oakland across the 18-foot river at the Au- the county hoping to get half this |F¢4eration”—Al Ittihad al Arabi|County Prosecutor's office for five burn road b to catch the body joined 10 other Democratic gov- aliecation beck from incerance —procilaimed shortly after sunrise) ernors today in asking President on the Moslem holy day. Their Bloomfield Township. The announcement was made today by Oakland County Congressman William S. Broomfield, two days after acting post- master Leslie H. Dean an- nounced he was retiring years with the Pontiac Post Office. * * * following more than 30|.] years. He started this position in July of 1951. Harris to Support FBI day with skin divers prob- ing the icy Clinton River near Utica for his body. Police said they believed Gerald Thacker plunged through the ice while play- ing with his sled on the river at 7 p.m. yesterday. ~*~ * * A playmate, Raymond Cagle dr., 6, told his mother that he and Gerald were on tle frozen river together when the ice if it moved downstream, All night long two Shelby Fire payments and from self-paying patients The committee called for a re- port in 90 days to see how these collections are coming: NEEDS BOARD 0K The allocation must go before the Board of Supervitors at its merger created a pro-Western ri- val to the United Arab Republic Syria and Egypt proclaimed two weeks ago. : Dept. captaing, Wilfred and Marvin e Mitz, kept watch on the in Probe of FCC Members." en on it. * *. "| This WASHINGTON (#— Rep. Harrisigroup’s _ ousted counsel Bernard; Mack could not be renched for| the ong fo pre eny (D-Ark) today promised full co-|Schwartz. comment. began Eisenhower or a conference on unemployment. Eleven of the 29 Democrats elected as governor expressed con- cern about the national recession and offered to come to Washing- ton to advise the President on a six-point program to check grow- ing unemployment. + -* SCHEDULE EXAM Broomfield said Miller will serve as acting postmaster until the Post Office Department in Wash- ington schedules a Civil Service x *« + King Faisal II of Iraq and King * Joining Williams in the telegram iF lorida Mercury Creeping Upward — but Not Too Far Financial Situation Michigan’s current financial state — which is certain to be a political hot potato this year — a. & Better unemployment insur- |'8 €xPected to be defended by. Lt. The Navy veteran, who gradu- MIAMI, Fila. (?) — Florida’s mercury inched upward which’ he said . poste Gov. Philip, A. Hart tonight when between Syria and Eyypt, eehing|ated from Pontiac High Schoot in'today from the season’s fourth hard freeze and a record| Were Tyg rtae eg, Berar ooh ta? 4. Further easing of credit. [he speaks at a Valentine's Day) \“*** P 120 1946, is a former radio announcer snowfall at the capital city, Tallahassee. Mack became. an FCO commis- but Still It 5 Warmer 5. Richer ‘f pport ; his new province from 120 miles! ang Pontiac policeman. : cc a = 96 & ge + mer Se ee ths away. Also in between is Israel. een scien _Slightly higher temperatures were forecast for to-| sioner. . Northwood Inn in Berkley begin-| _ Foreign Minister Burhanuddin day, but the Miami Weather Bureau said no ~real| The former counsel said Mack Pontiac area residents can’t ex- grams. 6. A tax_cut to help lower in- families. ipect tropical weather, but the mercury is thawing out somewhat. 2. &-® The U.S. Weather Bureau still predicts partly cloudy and contin- Bashayan of Iraq told reporters, “This federation is a more nat- Stranger Found Asleep in Home; ning at 6:30. Oakland County Democratic : Committee Chairman Carlos Rich-| "4! union than Naseer’s United ardson, of Waterford ‘Township,| AF® Republic. said 500 tickets have been sold for} Leaders of the U.A.R. look to warmup is in sight. Since early January it has been one wave after another, bringing Florida* its worst winter on record.| The Weather Bureau said the 22 French Troops Die ALGIERS # — French forces said today they lost 22 dead and 1T wounded in two clashes with Algerian rebels late. yesterday little more than 50 miles from Algiers. the dinner, Hart this week announced he would be a candidate for Senator Charles E, Potter’s seat in Con- the Communist world for military, political and economic aid, Iraq and Jordan look to the West, which buys Iraq's oil and bolsters gress in the Novemebr election. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Sugar Is Sweet... and So Are You he thade to - oe i oes * “ Fi sive Rd. m9 W. Kennett Rd., looks\ dazed ‘as he ac o Polly Ann Schnitz, 6, of 109 | today, pally CO Pe ‘Wennett Ra, Ui i : - ‘ i « valentine she made for~ “Gene valentine miail box. Both are first graders Kennett Road aaaane ai aha 460 W. Pontiac Press Photo to him in front of fr Watchdog Dozes A Pontiac Township family awoke early this morning to find an unexpected visitor snooz- ing in their living room. Mrs. Thelma TerMarsch, of 3080 Catalpa Ct., got up at about 2 a. m. to find a stranger asleep in her husband's favorite chair, with shoes off and his feet propped on a register. * * * She called her husband, Larry, and they woke the intruder. He said his car was stuck in a ditch a few houses away, but he didn’t Marsch’s house. | A quick investigation found “know how he got into the Ter- | North Florida residents - awoke; yesterday and found a carpet of snow spread from the Gulf to Jacksonville. A bright sun melted much of it. A record 3 inches fell at Talla- hassee, topping the old mark of 2 inches, set in 1886. Snow fell as far south as Cross City near the Gulf in northwest Florida and to St. Augustine on the Atlantic. Hundreds of minor accidents were reported by motorists, un- schooled in winter driving tactics. current freeze shouldn't carry the same killing force on winter veg- etables and citrus as that of Feb. | #5. Farmers, however, sef out smudge pots and prepared fires in the hopes they could save the remaining acres of their frost- bitten crops. George Cooper, tables and tree crops, such as avo- cados, limes and mangoes, are more vulnerable now because pre- vious frosts cost them much of a big south Dade County grower, said vege- Denial came quickly from Whiteside in Miami. “Schwartz is a g-- d- liar,” {Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ued cold tonight. The low will be 16 degrees. A a ee are also expected. able cloudiness, with scattered snow flurries. The high will be near 22. ®* wWF-.Ff Continued below normal’ temper- * Jatures with occasional snow is pre- dicted for Sunday. The lowest recorded temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 10. The reading at ] p.m, was 20. their protective covering. Look, Fellas, No Hands! -he had entered through the kitchen door, nimbly stepping over “Belle” — a full grown watchdog asleep on the kitchen floor. Belle, .a two-year-old collie trained as a watchdog, had re- — asleep through every- Oakland County Sheriff's Depu- An automatically guided automo- ties called & wrecker for the visitor and sent him on his way. BIG DEMAND! According to the number of calls received (50 of 60) from this little Want Ad there are a lot of people still looking for good used rugs. 12x13 BEIGE WOOL RUG AND « Like new, 6 months wear. EB 4-4316, Whatever you have to offer, let an Suekaanates Want Ad get you buyers in a hurry! To place your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 Just’ ask for the WANT AD DEPT. EATMORE LUNCH, 91 W. HURON NOW OPEN SUNDAYS - Income Tax Returns Prepared bile cruised along a one-mile check road at General Motors Technical Center today, steered by an elec- trical ‘cable be- = surface. It was the first : passenger car, indicating the possibility of a built-in guidance system for tomor- row’s hihways. Dr. Lawrence HAFSTAD R. Hafstad, vice president in charge of GM research staff, said the demonstration car, a 1958 Chevrolet, was guided by a combined electronic computer and servo system which takes over hu- man steering control by following a magnetic path produced by low frequency power in the highway cable. Angus a gp Accountant 95 W, Huron & » Open Eves., FE 2-3615 4 4 neath the concrete) The car rolied along the two- lane check road and negotiated the banked turnaround loops at either end without the driver's hands on the steering wheel, To turn off the road or pass an- other vehicle, the driver merely touched a switch on the steering gear which cut back into the man- ual steering system. “This is a job put together to test the idea of electro-magnetic vehicle guidance,’ Dr. Hafstad €x-} plained. ‘“‘The system was demon- strated in model form in 1953 by Radio Corporation of America.” * * * Meanwhile, he said, RCA had set up a test strip near Lincoln, Neb., with the road equipment for a sig- nal system. “Our particular system,” he added, “is still In the research —S ee © steering control. “We think of it as the first ‘building block’ in what may be- come a more sophisticated system for controlling vehicle spacing, de- ~ « oe \ i \ tecting location of cars er giving the driver signals for throttle and brake control.’ “Obviously, we can't. predict what may evolve fram this basic it points out the kind of ideas we are exploring,’ Dr. Hafstad said. x *& * The automatic guidance system has three basic parts: A or field created by low Editorials 3........ Vetsnse +, 8 High School ......... tcsans 10 Mark0ts ..,.ccccsesesssace, & Obituaries .......ccc..ca0,, 10 Sports ..... svessscuse MR yi, ee 18-19 TV & Radio Programs... ... 31 Wilson, Earl... . a 13 to 15 @| back » 3 etee seseeeseonss ¢ 1 a Automatic Steering by Hidden Road Cable Demonstrated at GM Technical Center frequency alternating current in the cable beneath the highway; A pair of tuned pick-up coils on - the front bumper of the test car steering guidance technique. But!#%4 Straddling the magnetic field; An electronic analogue computer on the instrument panel linked with a mechanical system control- ling the car’s modified power steer- ing unit Variation in the voltage picked up by the coils. if the car deviates from the magnetic field is trans- mitted te the computer, causing the steering unit to bring the car to the predetermined course, Hufstader said the guidance sys- tem “appears to offer long-range promise of a significant contribu- _ tion “to highway and vehicle opera tion."* “This isn’t an impracticatte dream. It reflects an extension of a steady trend’ toward greater te _ liance on atitomatic devices for both vehicle operations and —_ controi,’" i Saturday's outlook is eonides: + 2 5 # a : z = : : * . FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1958 ei : peas : \ Sa : ot = Pe 3 a : s ; a = + > j “ ‘ % zs = A A ee oy c pe * ; eee £ ‘ * é ; res - i * : - 5 4 . ee ; ae ‘ t | 1 j "Prefer Feb. 22 as te Holiday’ : 4 Don't Want Veteran's Day| : Ameren newest national holiday—Veteran's Day— seems to have lost its appeal as far as most Pontiac city workers are concerned. Members of the Pontiac Municipal Employes As- sociation have teld the City Commission they don’t ~ want Veteran’s Day, Nov. 11, as a paid holiday anymore. They would rather have off Washington's birthday, Feb. 22. The reason? According to John Waldo, the associa- tion’s president, Nov. 11 doesn’t seem to carry much patriotic meaning anymore. Once it did, as Armistice Day, the day World War I came to an end. “Nowadays, we'd rather have Feb. 22 off, so we can space our paid holidays better,” said Waldo. xk « * Commissioners hesitated last night to grant the switch. “We might get into trouble with veterans organi- zations,” they pointed out. And another World War I man, City Manager Walter K. Willman, observed, “Veteran’s Day just doesn’t mean as much te me as Armistice Day did. That was the end of the Big War, but there's been two other big wars since then.” City employes have seven paid holidays: New Year’s, Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Veteran's Day, Thanks- __ giving and Christmas._That’s five. jf -1 to Jan. 1 and only two for the rest of the year. It was after the Korean War that President Eisen- hower redesignated Nov. 11 as Veteran’s Day. ; Henry A. Houston (right), presi ly-organized club, accepts the ROTARY CHARTER PRESENTED — The ~ Bloomfield Hills Rotary Club received its charter last night at a dinner meeting at Devon Gables. Pontiac Press Phote Lloyd R. Hirth, governor of Rotary District 638. The dinner was presided over by William J. Dean, president of the Pontiac Rotary Club which sponsored the Bloomfield group. dent of the new- certificate from Potter Wants Budget Action Now Snows Dampen: Ike's Vacation in South Georgia THOMASVILLE, Ga. w—Vaca- tioning President Eisenhower, greeted by this south Georgia area’s first ground-covéring snow in 4 yeafs, hoped for warmer weather today and a chance at quail hunting or golf. * * .* The President found the tem- perature 34 degrees when he ar- Rochester News Publisher Dies Oliver C. Swords, 62, Known Throughout Area as News, Civic Leader |‘ens The channel deepening, which Congress has authorized, was originally estimated to cost 141 died last night in St. Joseph Mercy) million dollars with completion Oliver C. Swords, 62, owner and publisher of the Rochéster News, : rived Washington | Hospital, Pontiac. He had been in| |scheduled in 1962. =.) Sy poor health since last November. | | But the work is being delayed, by Mrs, Eisenhower, he plans up| A longtime Oakland County potter said, because ‘the Budget to 10 days of rest with headquar-|newspaperman, Mr. Swords was Bureau is holding money requests ters at Milestone, the plantation| instrumental in setting up the city jto a mere trickle.” home of former Secretary of the/form of government in Berkley.) Potter detailed his complaint in Treasury George M. Humphrey|He was village president of Berk- 9 letter to Budget Director Perci- and his wife. ley in 1929 and served as secre- ival F. Brundage. * « « tary of the Berkley City Charter; wu, 4 ger the stretchout on ‘Commission in 1932. Eisenhower still i& trying to| this work,” he said, “the costlier it will be. Prices are constantly rising. Why saddle the taxpayer with this when it’s not neces- | sary?”’ At that time he was owner of | the Berkley Review. He also es- | tablished the Royal Oak Herald- Review and the Troy: News. get rid of the cold which he caught early this month during a weekend visit to Augusta, Ga. His throat still is slightly sore and his ‘Let's Dig That Seaway’ WASHINGTON (® — Sen. Potterated 18 million dollars for the work (R-Mich) today urged the Budget Bureau to recommend increased funds for deepening Great Lakes Channels to permit westward ex- tension of the St. Lawrence Sea- ‘Harris fo Back FBI in Probe of FCC (Continued From Page One) Whiteside said, He said he had never “fixed anything in my life" land that he was never employed and another 18 millions has been recommended to be spent in the next fiscal year. Potter said the latter amount|“”_ should be upped to 35. millions to “A8°- keep the project on schedule. As se ® matters now stand, he said, the} Whiteside also issued a_ state- channel deepening won't be com-/ment saying Mack was an old pleted until 1965. friend and that he had loaned The channels authorized to be |Mack money off and on for 20 depened te a minimum depth ef (years. Whiteside also said he had 27 feet are in the Detroit River,’|"ecords of repayment of all but Lake St. Clair, the St. Clair and $250. St. Marys Rivers and the Straits |yanke RECOMMENDATION of Mackinac. As for the Channel 10 case, Such deepening will permit sea-, Whiteside said that in September way traffic from the Atlantic to,1955 he recommended to Mack the westernmost port on the Great, that Public Service get the award. Lakes, Duluth, Minn., and Super-/He said he did so at the request ior, Wis. lof Robert H. Anderson, then a Without the deepening, larger|lawyer and now a circuit judge. iships traveling the seaway will be He said Anderson is a “friend of able to proceed no farther than long standing.” Toledo, Ohio. * + * i The Day in Birmingham : if jat Eton Park Rink Sunday, _ jin ‘club-sponsored competition. - ,as an attorney: in the Channel 10) 2nd Annual Ice Show Set BIRMINGHAM—"Skaters’ Holi- of Thought.” Sunday. Among the special features will! - be a figure skating exhibition by/fiction, poetry and essays by Marilyn. Seiber, daughter of Mr./Arthur J. Carr, associate profes- and Mrs. Bernard Seiber of 130\sor of English. Carr and Arno L. ‘Riviera Terrace, Pontiac. A/Bader, professor of English, were seventh grade pupil at Isanc Crary|the judges. Junior High School, Marilyn is a member of the Pontiac Skating) Torry School PTA will hold a club and last year took top honors/valentine party and dance in the school gymnasium beginning at 9 Other soloists for the Sunday|p.m. today. Highlight of the even- show will be Marjorie Hanck, Janis|ing will be the flower show pre- Cragie, Allison Wardrop and Helen|sented by parents and teachers. Cale. In keeping with the Valentine A novelty number will be per- theme, corsages will be given toll formed by the German Band of |‘De ladies. Bill Muenchinger, Don Ritter, Neil Hull, Pat Devine and Phil Brown. A “Country Hoedown” | 39.95 Watches, now 27.50 49.95 Watches, now 33.00 59.95 Watches, now 40.00 71.50 Watches, now 47.00 (Pitas 10% Fed. Tax) ed —Main Floor JEWELRY When Charles Fox, caretaker at the Fox and Hounds. Inn, celebrates : his 80th birthday Sunday, His fam- ‘Tobacco | Dept. Specials will be doné on skates, along with bd ity will represent quite a gather. dey nd Saturde waits displays of precision: ding. Fox has den amine 18 for Fri fe " grandchildren, 14 great grand- A group of 40 “tots! will be Pre-ichldren and one great great sentei in “Favorite Sons — iE Daughters.”’ Planning the show and choreog: raphy are Helen Gale and Mar- jorie Hanck. Marion Seydel is ad-| visor, A Birmingham girl yesterday| E was presented with the University of Michigan’s top Hopwood award t FRIDAY and SATURDAY : All Popular Brands—FRESHEST CIGARETTES Regular Size 2. 2 3 for creative writing, She was s PER CARTON among nine freshmen at the uni-| Largé 5% x 3%-Inch : Chosee wok your tavertte | yrad eed cone versity who received $33u in prizes! Morris, Chesterfields, etc. This low CELLULOSE for writing. price plus Te tax. No limit. Janet E. Miller, of 811 Totten- Sp g King and Filter ham, Rd., Birmingham, winner on es PER CARTON 2.33 in the essay -division, was 34e ¢ Choice of Winstons, | Hit . Parade, . Marlboro, Salem Value IE etc. Plus Te tax. No limit. 2 for 24c Genuine cellulose sponge for car, 3% ‘Kool-Smoke’ PIPE $1.50 Value voice-a bit. husky. His physician Mr. Swords moved to Rochester He urged Brundage to recom-) in 1934 where he was employed mend a supplemental appropriation by the Rochester Clarion and the|for the work in the year beginning, former Rochester Era. jJuly 1. He said this would a mem Roches- the channels project more -, phew of pelle dooon and St. with original completion — John Lutheran Church in Roches- Congress has thus far appropri- ter. But the cold caused Eisenhower to turn for the time being from quail shooting and golf to bridge playing beside the fire. * * Surviving are his a nen DettOit News Fills C.; a daughter, Mrs. Monroe Moo: “. Two Executive Posts of Pontiac; four sons, K. Oliver, Changes in two top executive po-| : Supervisors Tighten Strings on Purse (Continued From Page One) bor, “or any other accredited in- stitutions,” What funds were needed was based on an estimated 100 patients per year with an average stay) \of 21 days at $30 per day, as re- jported by county health officials, Schwartz said Anderson, at the time the TV case was pending, was a member of a law firm that} Schwartz said handled the _— nel 10 proceeding for Public Serv ice, Schwartz quoted Anderson as telling subcommittee investigators earlier his law firm had hired Whiteside in the case. * * * Whiteside said he recommended Public Service because of what he termed the ‘fine character, p.m. Monday at Pixley Funeral Frederick W., Dwight H. and sitions on The Detroit News, effec-! high integrity and general reputa- Aluminum stem, flow back. Smoke pe ls ar Interchangeable Bow! ‘Kool-Smoke’ PIPE Set $4.00 Fg Value Interchangeable briar bowl with metal stem. Complete with 3 extra bowls. ~~ James E., all of Rochester. Service will be conducted at 1:30! tive March 17, are revealed today. Warren S. Booth, president and publisher, announced appointment of C. Arthur Weis general man- ager. Weis comes to The News from the St. Louis Globe Democrat Home, Rochester, with the Rev. Walter C. Gerken of St. John Lu- theran Church officiating. Burial will be in Mt. Avon Cemetery. Does the weather bureau in the various sections of the country usually predict snowfall ° accu- rately? No, one of the toughest predic- tightening, supervisors said all un- filled budgeted positions must be scrutinized to determine whether these jobs must be filled. Continuing their economic belt tion in the community” of persons involved in the application. OVERRULED FCC Mack was one of four commis- sioners who voted for Public Service, overruling an FCC exam- iners recommendation that the “When things get like this,” said Fred W. Smith, supervisor. Precision armature, ball thrust bearings. Universal motor, light- 3 ht (4 Ibs}. Gears are ed ; in lifetime grease, : ; and Saturday | Sapeeiciat tions to make, accurately, is con- which U, S. weather bureaus seem to make most often (too often) concerned with snow, is the same they make with hurricanes. The weather forecasts trail the actual event by six or eight hours, and often by twelve or eighteen. One recalls a hurricane in 1956, which was in and around New York, while the weather report still placed it off North Carolina. - This winter snow predictions have often come after what was to fall had fallen. Yet weath- er reports would continue to be made predicting snow, when even an amateur observer could see the sky was clearing and that “in the west it was clear—the snow over. The remedy is for speedier transmission of reports and care- ful observation, up-to-the-minute visual observations, not over-reli-| ance on instruments. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Burean Report PONTIAC AND VICINT eleedy and continued cold wi snow flurries tonight. Low tenight Considerable wit! snew flurries temerrew, High en Gentle to mederate westerly winds. lraq, Jordan Merge cerned with snowfall: The failure|. in Arab Federation’ \tary and economic aid. snOW to be Iraq's withdrawal from the .ikings embraced and kissed. (Continued From Page One) impoverished Jordan with mili- MAY QUIT PACT where he was president and gen- eral manager. D. Roy Merrill, vice Although the new federation: is expected to continue the pro-West- ern policy which both govern- ments have followed individually, one of the first results is likely American-backed Baglidad pact. This would pave the way for Sau- di Arabia—which borders the fed- eration on the south—to join. The signing of the federation proclamation came after more than seven hours of discussion that last night after a state banquet. Senior ministers of the two governments joined in the talks that have been go- ing on since Faisal’s arrival in Amman Tuesday. The agreement provided that all details of federation will be worked out within three months. After the signing, the two young) “This is the happiest moment of my life,” Hussein said. “We from Royal Oak, “you have to tighten up on the vise a little bit.” One of the major reasons why this is necessary is that the pres- ent welfare case load is at the highest peak since 1937. Counties, like Oakland, must bear 70 per cent of these costs while the state picks up the 30 per cent balance. “Other costs stich as hospitaliza- tion have boomed too,”’ remarked Channel 10 grant go to another applicant. Two commissioners voted against Public Service, and one abstained. * * * Mack, a Democrat, was ap-| pointed by Eisenhower to the bipartisan commission in 1955. The contest for the Miami TV) channel started in 1953 and was. decided by the FCC in February) 1957. -has headed the Waxed Paper In-| Robert Y. Moore, chairman of the Board of Auditors, who added that the county definitely will be confronted with a million dollar deficit at the end of the year. OLDSMOBILE 88 HARDTOP Automatic Transmission, Heater, Windshield Washers, Directional Signals, License and Tax. ‘2,864.41 JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC 280 S. SAGINAW Ontario mines produced $660 mil- lion dollars worth of minerals in 1956, ' WEIS HERMAN president and general manager of The News since 1944, has been named executive vice president. | ‘Laurence T. Herman has been, named director of advertising, it. is announced by D. Roy Merrill, vice president and general manag-, er. Herman will succeed Max J.) Gerstman who is retiring, but who’ is remaining with The News at the company’s request for an indef- inite period. | Herman, for the past two years,| stitute, Inc. and the Waxed Paper, Merchandising Council of Chicago.| Prior to that he was associated. WAITING DO NOT ALLOW YOUR ENGINE USE OUR NEW GASOLINE $3.95 to Wie? Values DESIGNED FOR TODAY’S ENGINES 2 . 5 | NO OTHER GASOLINE WILL SURPASS Sizes 12 to 20—14Vs to 2614 | TO KNOGK or PING Special Group Ladies’ Cotton and Better Dresses ee Today in Pentiae 19° years. have tak Lowest temperature preceding & a.m en a step toward great- with the ,Chicago Daily News sl er Arab unity,” at 8 am: Wind og ee Bun sets Friday at 6:0 Bae Sun rises Saturday at 7:29 am. Moon sets Friday at 2:34 p.m. “IT consider this the happiest | |moment of my life,” Faisal re-| Moon rises Saturday at §:49 a.m. SS I ask God to help us. i /& ess this union which is for T t ¢ ani’ am... 18) the good of all Arabs.” | sMiesssenres- m.. merece sam. ae 1 pm 20 WEALTH, POVERTY JOIN | See ee 10 asm 18 | The new federation brings to-| Thersday in Pontise gether about five million people) éAs recorded downtown) . in Irgq—a land of money- bringing’ Lowest temperature, .ciscussclcssu. 1 |OH and potentially fertile river Mean aera SORE ee . 9.5/ Valleys—with 1% million Bedouin. eather— ir nomads and former Palestine res- idents in parched, poverty-strick-. One Year “age 1 in Pontiac Highest temperature wa bee ced sigineieel 36 Lowent tempersture Wisieececeeaa- a HP pen Jordan. Together the two ‘ean temperature ............ Sasiees I Weather—Trace 8 Snow. as total 210,000 square) Highest and Lowest 7 Temperatures This Date in 86 Years ‘Saudi Arabia would bring to IMPORTANT NOTICE! BAD WEATHER and due to conditions beyond our control Ihave to sacrifice my entire men’s clothing stock. MERGENCY SALE! en Everything! Name Brands Included! Sports Coats! Slacks! Suits! Jackets! Topcoats! Sweaters! Shirts! “2 OFF and MORE! t Bre.15: | N. SAGINAW ST. ! i Across trom Strand Theatre =m “10 in 1878) the federation more oil riches, A . ‘e 8 pose aal g| Shout C00,000 square milles of | Baltimore #14 Memphis 37 21 mostly desert, an estimated six | ae sa ree million people and King Saud's Brownsville 60 56 Milwaukee’ 20 0 ; | RR a ge epee B- ew i tees Self Hl Son mentees peccemean : aha rch presumably I 23 Phoent es 4 | ere, 6S ik Pramezen $5 ff) would replace Faisal as chief of | th ll = St. 31 26) state, Ora. mapsds 0 3 4 a beanie * s A few hours after the signi “ =i / s e signing Hough’ 4 Trav. City 19 -1 Taconite ong Washington , EA 2 ig King Faisal, Abdu lah ansas City eattie a e rest of the top Iraquis 21 19 roy f aad - 3 heft by Plane for Baghdad. | a \ . short and eens PREMIUM ONE OF THE FINEST AND HIGHEST OCTANE GASOLINES AVAILABLE TODAY'S GASOLINE VALUES ARE DETERMINED BY OCTANE RATING THE HIGHER THE OCTANE RATING , THE BETTER THE GASOLINE WE ARE THE FIRST TO ASSURE OCTANE RATING BY NUMBER GET THE BEST, NO EXTRA COST AT J. S. FARMER GAS & OIL CO. 22 ORCHARD LAKE AVE., JUST OFF SAGINAW 100% LLY OWNED AND OPERATED Ladies’ and Misses’ 100% WOOL tits Shirte | wie 99 ade LJ Pea! onions "gee = fats a= ast ORE oe 3 =< Fe oe i oe Z x 3 es eke eee foe Boe See et oe ee ee ee ee eee ee eo Slag fi ie nc hin te rat (eB gas Bes eg bP, ore Abd to) Behe 7 ae! te aN eS Aas gh Cer oe 0 he aes Po a : Sy pe I et - . ¥ % $ rr, é = i ee _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRU Any 14,” 1958 ; = - v day Poca. schol got: rod tritafsio, cab si twas wp to (BURMEISTER NOR | tt $28,500;000 in, overdud ‘state the other. to take the, initial step. By Adding Stage to Jupiter see will go into the’ mails| Neither would budget first to Hope fo Shoot for Moon te Read act Ad—Ht's inperant to ‘Tou aud . get the stdte switched from a 30) a : os * a sin 22 S048Y esis gn Lauor pur. 3 jee a mati el ae Pp. Rollo chases and the cash thus, freed PASADENA, Calif. @—Put onefican satellite and you could reach Collin (R-Tipton), originator of from inventory into the pro per moon execution of the Conlin Plan dark- |, proposal to give the ailing state | oral fund, Action by both was|™ore rocket motor on the Jupiter- gp tarcs who designed Explor: ire lc missile that" launched the Amer-|or 1 disclosed this yesterday at a’ Oo ned the state's fiscal outlook to-|treasury a quick 18 million dollar !requ news conference called to report! on the satellite's progress through | the heavens. gy California Institute of Technol- % Le ogy’s jet propulsion laboratory | — a has formally asked Defense De- = a, Pa Thon Biggest aie e3 ° partment permission to try to cir- Mi : oy ; ae cle the moon with some future ™ ee oe me " satellite. ae os There is no thought at the mo- = — ment, scientists said, of trying w ; om this with Explorer II, the second => : : | : U.S. satellite now being rushed to “tat hearin” DESERVES the BEST. 7 © reach the moon, a fifth rock-| : : of the Low- Price 3- for m | atta” sno a Z ~ : our stages of the Jupiter-C. This D lates meriee. soaks adlea a Ie merce and attention and we at Burmeister’s are ready to ¢ F Ithe nose of the missile, not the Ud : Pe ‘e will - our part. ripe pri low — bids can sell ms 2. base. = 4 x the highest quality materials at the price of ordinary materials, : oo state a Pigcnel ont ee or if you are conservative you will save a great deal on my onference ate said Explorer I is performing as® standard building materials. Below you will find a partial list toe’ they expected it would. Radioed O of Burmeister Buys! “a information indicates that a hu- ™m . }man could live ip. a_ satellite. “Room temperature” is being’ J “Room temperature” is being gg All Prices Are per M Sq. Ft. 3 measuring devices indicate no atid ‘seri fans. commie rave ix ° 12x12 CEILING TILE, Reg. $120.00............ ... Mr. B's Price $99.00 o — —_ in i 12x12 QUIETEX ACOUSTIC TILE, Reg. $190.00...... Mr. B's Price $150.00 = radi e et 1 does oa ae nro a uw 12x12 RANDOM HOLD ACOUSTIC TILE, Reg. $180.00 Mr. B's Price $145.00 4 oD in Explorer II at the jet 2 12x12 ACOUSTAMATIC TILE, Reg. $170.00......... Mr. B’s Price $135.00 * a “By means of this receiver wes Seendest oun” cher sail, © = GOLD BOND INSU LAr z “A tape scotia: in the satellite| will save up information gathered while the satellite is farthest away! a Zz AND OTHE R BRANDS - from earth and send it to us, on & command, when the satellite is = MA j i TH ICK nearest the earth.” : ~ gf Because the radio will not bel - BLAN KET TYPE transmitting all the time, its bat- teries will last longer. ° be PER 1000 SQ. FT. Duncan Hines If you're planning to buy a de luxe model of the _Pontiac’s big 122-inch wheelbase . . . Tempest 395 hep so-called low-price three, you're paying the price performance . . . man-size interior roominess . Recommends 3 FU ae TH ICK | 5 99 ; of a Pontiac but not getting its extra in driving and big-car pride of ownership. So why b NKET TYP ‘Pleasure. You're You're missing the road-leveling ride of pti herds car Area Restaurants + = BLA 3 with a low- ? w-price name? -Get_a Pontiec sulbeam Three Pontiae area restaurants |, owe PER 1000 SQ. rt are among 3,000 selected eating MH , places in North American recom- LL D TV ] TI mended by Duncan Hines in the P 1958 edition of ‘Adventures in Good Eating” > ALUMINUM FOIL INCLUDED The restaurants are the Hocade isa} Food Shop, 144 N. Saginaw St.; iT} 95 Rotunda Inn, 3230 Pine Lake Rd., z 2 BLANKET TYPE Bloomfield Township: and Ted’s SEE YOUR LOCAL AU Restaurant and Drive In, 2515 @& Peatioc Méfor Divisign-Roteil So ‘ THORIZED PONTIAC DEALER Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Town- 4! Aluminum Foil Paper Rockwool Center... ... Per 1000 sq. ft. Genus meauk On ras ore eego Sales & Service, Inc. Community Motor Sales, Inc. ship. = re . = e Tporation 3080 Orchard Lake “Michi According to the publisher, Dun- 65 Mt, Clemens St, Pontiae 15, Michigan me Michigng a a = can Hines Institute, "peace, N. Y.., . The Tops in the [ nsulation F iel o . this is the 50th printing of the 352- dock W. pag a — Soles page travel guide book. The book © 54 rvice . Russ Johnson Motor Sales ¢ Homer Hight Metor, Inc. lists all necessary. information = 3 BLANKET TYPE ROCK Ww L North Main Street, Clarkston, Michigan Sd N. Broadway, Lake Orion, Michigan 160 Washington Street, Oxford, Michigan | €eded by those eating out or trav- ime eling. 2 Pins kien eoukt ine treks a ee ae SE EE EE Se a ae HOOOD 5 2 BR Ba he = Aluminum Enclosed—Equal to 6" Rock Wool Per oes = ft, ADD CHARM WITH | PANELING +2! q FAMOUS BRAND J awund NUFHLYON YWILSiawung a yaLSIaWUNG NYUIHLUON BILSIaWw am 3 LING q\ | 1x8 Cedar Paneling, Knotty, per M ....$145.00 4 1x6, 1x8, 1x10 Pine Paneling, per M....$145.00 - a ————y | 1x12 Sugar Pine V- Groove, per M.....$125.00 : | CLAYTON S. .-- Is the Place to) | MUST MAKE ROOM ON SALES FLOOR 1 Carload Plyscore 1 CARLOAD » (Go for the Names You Know! f 5 : _[ seta, sections Bedroom Purntue for NEW _ Ax8x% FIR | 1x8 PINE BOARDS p SR Leite: Kent-Coffe : : All Time is cairn ioe kes” . § COLONIAL DEPT. tow AP FE |g : sey 7) taker: 2 Within’ the next 30° day will h lete, all i 5 105 Aulsbrook Manistee Maple : rniture - men nS PE NG rarnitare. ss sul Aneote . ice . | sce «hams Pera Co”, | RARETISS" GhigATBAGUn, & OARLBVON an"HRE WOOD: Reg_Price 36.98 a teat Char Co Penrice Hurt plang pursing Cn! Parte. ee Carload WHITE PINE | 1 COmLOAD ar meveeia.rebaian: « | Ghats stvingst clave 1x8 Shiplap 11000 2"x4"x8 le Carpets * Brand Names— 1x2 Roof Boards 510500 * | Red Fir x. 4 ¢ : = e ® s Frith, seitin: Kenai 1x12 White Fir $8900 * Sie Men 5 | @ Roxbury ; Frigidaire | t ~ Buy Now on Our Easy Budget Plan 3 i Frigidaire |" ‘No Money Down — Small Weekly or Monthly Payments! ~ ; The Weiman Co Thermador |Z Fix Up Your Home Now and Enhance Its Value . fame EE : BURMEISTER’S NORTHERN 3 Mobilite Modern Lamps ta cn, > 7 Rera & Water Softeners FREE PARKING RIGHT IN FRONT OF OUR STORE ay a EE be Modern Langenau: ; ge Zz Ee > 3 FURNITURE | 7 ' '* Dinette Co. .. - %& Small Appliances q. AYTON'S C art z | _ Blowing Rock Furn. Co. Sunbeam | . Ps) ° BBs wg a APPLIANCES i= * 7940 Cooley Lake Roed—-Pedtive, Michigan a Lieya tte | = EM 3-4171— WHOLESALE -RETAIL—EM 3-4171 3 te DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE. m . GUARANTEED SERVICE AFTER SALE = All Prices are Cash-Way and in Quentities Quoted a4 _ 3065 Orchard Lake Road _ FE 5-9474 Keego Harbor ! Write or Call for Our 4-Page Cash-Way . z tre cee eo oo ~BURMEISTER NORTHERN. BURMEISTER™ NORTHERN EASY CHAIR while you tune TV! ON NEw au 21 Space Command (with Remote Tuning) No Wires! No Cords! | These four charter members of the Zonta Club of Pontiac attended the Inter-City International meet- ing held Thursday evening at Devon Gables. They Picture Area TURNS SOUND ON AND OFF CHANGES CHANNELS SHUTS OFF COMMERCIALS WHILE PICTURE STAYS ON SCREEN Priced as Low as ‘269° Medel 3000-R NO MONEY DOWN! 2 YEARS TO PAY! Open Monday and Friday Nights ‘til 9 p.m. WAYNE GABERT | ~121 N. Seginew “Phone FE 5-6189 Zonta Club President Mrs. Chadd Saturday Mellinger (right) is photographed with Maude Chambers (left) program I Day American farmers own and) operate about 3 million trucks and he are (left to right) Lola Parkins, Clara Natieauet: Mrs. Ada R. Evans and Adah Shelly. The Pontiac club received a charter in Fe 928. comer wae ne esermeweng chairman and Elizabeth Wayne, speak- er for the evening. Elizabeth Wayne Is Speaker oe bed | Service | Your dry Cleaning. brought in by 11 a.m.j Saturday, will be} ready that same day.|| LOW PRICE! ee hoadigena ) ©All work done by senior | if students under super Better Dry Cleaning Job. | vision of instructor. One hundred and forty-four AT A LOW | members and guests of Zonta , | Club of Pontiac attended | the Inter - City International | Banquet Thursday evening at | Devon Gables. President Mrs. Chadd Mel- linger introduced the four char- ‘ter members still active in the club, Mrs. Ada R. Evans, Clara Nusbaumer, Lola Par- kins and Adah Shelly. _—MEMBER— Phone FE 4-1854 National Institute ® x * of Dry Cleaners Closed All Day | __Also introduced were district . | officers and members from Hours: Mon. Thru Fri. 7-7 }) Wednesday —_— |) Cass City, Dearborn, Detroit, Saturday 7-6 Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, y Call Miss Wilson Today Flint, Lansing, Royal Oak, Saginaw. Ypsilanti and Wind- sor. ‘TALKS ON MUSIC Speaker for the evening was Elizabeth Wayne of Detroit who spoke on ‘Music in My Path” relating experiences in music as she traveled in Eur- ope. Countries visited with particular musical significance included Ireland, the Nether- lands, Belgium and France. | Carrying out the internation- al theme, Zonta members were | entertained by Scottish lasses | dancing to the accompaniment | of bagpipes played by Scottish lads. Following the ‘‘Highland Fling,” Mrs. Fumiko Takata performed two Japanese | dances. for Information PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 161% East Huron Behind Kresge’s 2nd Floor Mitchell Cleaners & Shirt Laundry 2267 Orchard Lake Rd. at Middlebelt FE 8-9571 _Panel Crib Crib $29.98 Mattress $10.95 NOW '32.50 TOYLAND “Next to Karen's Floor Covering” OR 3-2100 2 Brownie Troops Have Valentine Party Brownie. Troop 300 of Wisner School acted as hostess for Troop 355 at a Wednesday afternoon Val- entine party. Highlight of the meeting was a showing of movies taken of the girls’ investiture ceremony. 144 From Pontiac Zonta | 15 amuts Attend Inter-City Dinner Mrs. James Rosenthal ac- | companied the group singing which concluded the program. Program chairman for the evening was Maude Chambers. _International chairman is Mrs. Thomas Horowitz. Arranging decorations were Mrs. Helen Reese and Mrs. Dorothy Brooks. Need Mixer: ssc race core boa, tobe hella 3 ‘at |to Achieve | gzfurjastae Nol | Se = ¥S IFluffy Icing Mrs. Fahr’s Recipe} Called Foolproof,| Can Be Varied | Do Away With Hard and Rusty Water! up to “80% on soap. msaiee a unit, you can your own Water Softener for only $ - 543 Per Month Including Sales Tax ‘No Money Down | 10 YEAR WARRANTY | FREE Want a pretty creamy frosting] 4 for your Valentine festivities this) recipe for Miracle Icing and color) it pink. This, she says, is a never-| fail icing. Two aeaesars keep things] mcaming comad on Yor lena] Poth parents Jove to square dance} and belong tothe Do-C-Do club. Mrs. Fahr also bowls in a league} and does some church work. MIRACLE ICING By Mrs. Russel] Fahr l.cup sugar 1 unbeaten egg whit ‘ teaspoon cream of tartar \Auxiliary Hears on Food Trends eral Hospital. er by pre-cooking, pre-mixing, pre- cleaning and freezing. James Jones. Missionary Couple Honored by Class A missionary Valentine Mason of South Africa. Mrs. Isaac Thurman. Grace Lutheran Church was the scene of the meeting of the Wom- Cranbrook to Show en's Auxiliary to the Pontiac Gen-Some Student Art Guest speaker for hs acy ee emy of Art will open a small ex- Mrs. Janet Odell; home edltor hibition of student work this week- the Pontiac Press, who spoke/enq jt will remain in one of the on the subject “Changing food trends”, discussing modern prep- ag aration of food for the consume yon Of student work is hung Mrs. Fritzi Stoddard was chair- gall man of the luncheon. Hostess wasifor sale, but the Mrs. Robert Schapler, and reser-|the is to vations were handled by Mrs.lobserve their work in a gallery} other artists. party was held by members of the Loyal when they gathered in the church recreation room to honor mission-| aries, the Rev. and Mrs. Charles A comedy skit, “The Return of the Little Red School House,” was) presented under the direction off’ ‘WATER ANALYSIS ~ Semi-Automatic— Only a Few Minutes to Regenerate For Information Call: CRUMP ELECTRIC, lnc. 3465 Auburn Road FE 4.3573 PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiec, Mich. Enroliments Available in Day or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person for Free Pamphiet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 an An interesting and very comfortable small! sofa (73 inches long), foam rubber cushions with coil spring base. For the ‘Not Too Large’ home. But itAs 5 ft. 2 ins. | YOU CAN PLAY a CONN Come ia for Proof at Neo Obligation Easy to Own... 34 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0567 Across From Tel-Huron . « » Easy to Play 1 J. Morris Music f between the arms. Reg. $229.50 "Now February Sale Cover as shown—Beige, Brown and Gold Textured Tweed. : Many covers to select from. SAVE 10%-40% on our ENTIRE STOCK of FINE FURNITURE Also on All Special Orders, 10% Down, eee You will enjoy shopping at Gentry’s DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS 4479 Dixie Highway Open Every Friday Night ’til9 P.M. OR 3-2300 ROLLER SKATING Pontiac’s Newest Roller Rink FE 5-5509 85 W. WALTON (JUST OFF BALDWIN) FRIDAY, FEB. 14th 3:00 P. M. to 11:00 P. M. TEMPORARY DAILY SCHEDULE _ Monday Thru Friday Evenings 8:00 to 11:00 Sanerles 10 A, M. te 12 Noon—2:00 P.M. to 4:30—Eve. 8 to 11 your PIANO TRADE-IN SPECIAL ——~ your old upright is worth *150 “French Provincial” , + in walnut] $675 less trade-in! + sagt : For a limited time only, we'll allow you a substantial trade-in for your present piano, towards one of these fine Grinnell pianos, made in our own factory. Make your family happy and save on a piano you'll always be proud of! Fully guaranteed 4 orm on one of these new GRINNELL pianos . : SS SS Sas your old spinet is worth ‘3 50 your old grand is worth *250 all Liesl = EXTENDED ACCOUNTS INVITED GRINNELL'S FE 3-7168 ne S. Sina st sacar RIM + WH ha “hy f ahs VELyive ' the Golden Gloves will be held in ’ The Class A and B City League basketball games scheduled at Pontiac Central on Wednesday night, Feb. 19, will now be held at Madison Junior High, assistant director John Streit has announced. * * St. Lawrence recently withdrew from the Pontiac Class C district basketball tournament, leaving five teams in‘the field. In view of the Utica team’s crushing defeat by wéak St. Clement, the decision to pull out makes good sense. * * * The Tournament of Champions of Chicago Stadium Feb. 24-26 and the finals March 6th. squad for scholastic troubles. Two weeks ago he set a new school half mile record. te * * Tom Wilson, the last of the out- standing brothers to play at La- peer, is recovering slowly from an injury suffered while playing fresh- man football at Michigan State last fall. “Tom comes out and shoots with us in practice when he’s home He still looks mighty good to me," said Lapeer conch Bert Jackson recently. . * « * : The Naval Academy has named Robert A. Bender, former . * * * Veteran right handed pitcher Jim Wilson today became the 3ist LA * IN FOR '58 — Frank Bolling, Tiger second baseman, signed his 1958 contract yesterday despite many rumors that he would be traded to the Cleve- land Indians, General Manager Frank Lane said. several times he would like to get Bolling. Spartans Battle Illinois on TV MSU Can Regain Ist by Winning Saturday; ‘WM’ at Ohio. State By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michigan State will try to regain the Big Ten basketball lead in a game Saturday with Illinois. The contest, to be televised regionally, 4:30 p.m. will be on MSU's home court, where the starts. Victory would give MSU a 6-3 conference mark, breaking a tie for first place with Indiana. The Hoosiers are ‘idle until Monday. . Ilinots, although the highest scoring Big Ten team with a 79.5) average, shares last place with Wisconsin with a 3-5 standing. The road appearances. Because of Michigan State's history, the game takes feature status. Rounding out Saturday's schedule are night engagements sending Michigan (4-3) to Ohio State (5-5), Northwestern (4-5) to Minnesota (4-5) and Purdue (5-4) to Wisconsin (35). National Ski Jump Meet Sunday at Iron Mountain _ IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich. ® — For the first time in its 20-year at least 100 riders are expected to fly through the air in quest of titles in three divisions. 4:.%.2 The national_meet, scheduled at 2:30.p.m. (EST), Sunday, will be preceded tomorrow by the 23rd annual Kiwanis Ski Club invita- tion tournament, The same jump- ers will compete both days. both Olson and Zuehlke last Sun- day to win the U.S. Central title and could do it again. Another fa vorite will be Wilbur Rasmussen of Ishperning, Mich., former Olym- pic jumper who made the six-man international team but chose to remain at home. * * * The Junior division will be head- ed by defending champion Jon St. Severud of Eau Claire will be bid- ding for his third straight title in the Veterans division. Ties for Second -|Wings 5-0 ‘last night and pushed Spartans are unbeaten in seven) Illini have won only once in six) chance of going in front of the iclosest title race in Conference Andre of Ishpeming, while Lloyd)qualified Des xs ae ee eS ee ee ee gk ae ee. Wel yg _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1958 Detroit Pushed ruins Bo x * & 1b Red i x * * Several Tiger Vets Report Early to 4th; Boston Harry Lumley Scores 2nd Victory Against Motor City Crew BOSTON The Boston Bruins shutout ‘the Detroit Red the Wings into fourth place in the National Hockey League race. The victory put Boston in a tie for second place with the New York Rangers, who were idle, Boston and New York each have 51 points. Detroit has 50. Boston put on one of its best offensive displays of the season in giving goalie Harry Lumley his second shutout of the cam- paign, Losers to Detroit in only three of their 11 meetings, the Bruins put together two goals in the first period and three in the second. LAKELAND, Fla, (@®—The De- troit Tigers, armed with a fresh! supply of players and considered stronger in most every department, opened their rookie camp at Lake- land today, Only Florida's unpredictable weather could spoil the early camp that is sprinkled with several Tiger veterans who have new things to learn and new responsibilities to carry. Manager Jack Tighe arrived with his family several days ag° and settled down in a mote] just outside of this citrus belt tewn, Most of his coaches have been | to third base, or even first base, Rookies Open Cc amp to a new sacitied this season. He has been a shortstop for his en- tire six-year baseball career, * * * The Tigers say he will be tried in the outfield in~ 1958, and that newly acquired Billy Martin will be the club’s new shortstop—unless it is discovered that the ex-Yankee and ex-Athletic cannot handle the shortstop job. Too, Kuenn might be switched if the outfield experiment flunks out, The crew-cut Kuenn has not signed as yet but Gen. Mgr. John on hand for a couple of weeks, overseeing the work at the Ti- gers’ baseball school. Among the veterans due at early camp are Harvey Kuenn, Frank Lary, Al Kaline and Bill Hoeft. * * * Their early arrival is a solid Boston continued its blazing attack in the third. Bronco Horvath scored his 2ist goal tor the Bruins while Vic Stasiuk and Jerry Top- pazzini each collected their 19th. * * * first period tallies on tips-ins after long shots by defensemen Allan |Stanley and Fernie Flaman. ‘Boston put the game away 'y in the second period. rvath sent a 25-foot shot past wing gealie Terry Sawchuk. Buddy Boone scored thrte min- Stasiuk and Toppazzini got “the | jmust follow if they expect to im- prove upon their 78-76 record that put them in fourth place last sea- son. All three suffered serious let- downs, and they are three of the Tigers’ most important players. Kuenn batted only .277—a whop- ping 55 points under his 1956 av- erage, and he drove in only 44 runs—just half the number of | rums he drove across the previous season. , More important than anything utes later and Leo Labine-tinish- ed it off at 6:07. Lumiley, replacing the injured Don Simmons, had 33 saves, Saw- chuk had 36 saves. . * * * This was the 8th time that the Wings. 4 More Tigers Inked for ‘58 yers, including vet- eran Gus Zernial, re- turned ‘their signed 1958 con- tracts. Harvey Kuenn, | Hoeft, Charlie Maxwell and Reno Frank Bolling and Joe Preske and Tom Yewcic agreed to terms yesterday. Boone, Dark Collide in Players’ Tourney MIAMI, Fla, (‘®—Favored Alvin Dark, shortstop for the St. Louis Cardinals, teed. off against Ray Boone of the Detroit Tigers today as match play began in the 18th annual National Baseball Pay- ers’ golf tournament. ‘Detroit has been shutout this sea- ison, and for Lumley it is his sec- 7 ond win in as many starts against step in the direction the Tigers| - else, Kuenn is scheduled to -shift! ings, 59 * McHale is in Lakeland and it would not be surprising if the two came to terms before McHale re- turns to Detroit. Lary and Hoeft must be big win- ners if the Tigers are to be a con- tending team, The two combined for 41 victories two seasons back. Last year they accounted for just av. * ® * Ray Boone arrived in town sev- eral days ago but is concentrating on golf. He probably will not start heavy workouts until all the vet- erans are due on Feb. 26. AP. Facsimile WASTING NO TIME — Herb Score, Cleveland Indian ace left- hander who missed most of last season after being hit in the right eye by a line drive, is wasting no time getting ready at Tucson, - Arizona, ¥ . NHL Standings DAY'S as New Yorks a Chic THURSDA RESULTS Detrea at Toronto troit goalie, shot after he slips through the TOPPAZZINI MISSES — Terry Sawchuk, De- spoils Jerry Toppazzini’s driving PORKS| Wing defense set Watrous Retains Quarter-Century PGA Golf Title DUNEDIN, Fla. @-—Al Watrous of Birmingham, Mich., finished one stroke ahead of Dick Metz of Val Verde, Ala., and Charles Sheppard, West Newton, Mass., yesterday and - successfully defended his PGA ° Quarter Century Club golf title. . Watrous shot a two over par 74 to go with an opening day 70 for a 36-hole total of 144. The tournament is for pro golfers who have been in the PGA 2% years or longer. Municipal Golf Fees May Rise AP Facsimile up by Marcel Pronovost (3) and Warren God- frey (5) in the second period of their game last night. Boston won 5-0. Increase Is Requested by City Commission for Public Course Dark, three times winner of the} ,{is well back of the all-time one By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Elgin Baylor appears to have the major college basketball scor- ing title in the bag, but even with played last night. Maryland, ranked No, 9, breezed past Clem- son 72-54 in the Atlantic Coast Conterence. North Carolina, rated lith, needed a pair of field goals from Bob Cunningham and Tommy’ Scoring Ace Baylor Hits 47; me his dominating 34.4 points-a-game average he's a long way from set- ting records, Piston Ace ‘Shocked’ The 66 junior, who played for Idaho as a freshman, swished 47 points for Seattle last night in) a 9969 victory over Regis of, Denver. It was the lith straight for the Chieftains, now 13-4 and ranked 16th in the Associated Press poll. Baylor, who scored 27 in the first half after Regis junked a zone defense, now has scored 624 points in 19 games. He had a 33.7 average going into the Regis game. He hit 15 of 26 field shots and 17 of 19 from the foul line. At his current average, Baylor he probably ing basketball “if I stopped to think how rough it is.’ The Detroit Piston forward, lead- ing scorer in the National Bas- ketball Assn., was ‘‘shocked"’ when he saw a few games on television. “I was really shocked when I saw how rough things are out there on the court — especially up under the basket,” he ex- plained. “But it’s altogether dif- ferent when you're out there yourself, playing instead of watching.” : season average record of 41.7 set by All-America Frank Selvy at Furman. Only one of the top 10 clubs With such stars as Anstein Sam- velstaun, Art Tokle and other members of the international team out of the way, the scrap for the senior national title is expected to be a two-way affair between‘ Billy Olson and Keith Zuehike, both of Eau Claire, Wis. x * * > However, 22-year-old Ted Lalmn- er, also of Eau Claire, outjumped St. Thomas Clips Eaglets’ Wings Yardley has plenty of scars to {show for his five seasons in the NBA, “There's a lot of talk about the Marr's 63 Tops for Texas Open 76 in Yesterday's 1st; Round ; SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (® — Texan Dave Marr, one of the brightest youngsters coming up in golf, led the $15,000 Texas Open by a whopping six strokes going into the second round today. * * * *s NBA Is Rough-- Yardley DETROIT (® — George Yardley wouldn’t be play- receive in a career,” said Yard- ley, their Opposing players bump Yardley in the arms and elbows in an effort to drive his shooting off. Since it is their practice never to hold onto an- other player for a long period of time, Yardley — who has re- markable fingertip control of the basketball — generally gets his shots off. His percentage of success is among the highest in the league. Yardley wants to coach after his [playing days are over, but he claims he never would coach in the college or professional. ranks. “Td like to quit after next sea- son afid go back into full-time en- _|gineering work — and work in some high school or junior col- lege coaching on the side if I could.” The Piston star feels he has learned enough from his unusual experiences with four different Burkemo Had 71, Bone |coaches so that he could do a pret- ty good job on the high school or junior college levels. “My coach at Stanford was Everett Dean,” Yardley ex- plained. “He’s the finest man Pve ever known in athletics. He taught young men how to be- have, how to be a real man. “My first coach when the Pis- » }tons were at Fort Wayne was Paul Birch. He was a real taskmaker floor. Defeat was : He also showed they had been and a fine teacher, but the boys eae of sh peeaes “ the Eag: looking in the wrong plaee for the|didn’t play well for him. He just » their straight. best bad weather player—he cer-|couldn’t handle men. Podesswa and Klott compiled tainly could lay claim to the title| ‘Then there was Charley Eck: 46 points “between them, more with that 8-under-par 63 he banged|man. He took the strings off. It was than enough to outscore the Or- out yesterday over the soggy,|like coming out of a dungeon when chard Lake crew. Podeszwa had greens-frozen 6,490-yard Bracken-|Eckman took over. Things were 12 baskets and Klott 10, pee ridge Park course. free and easy — Charley admitted from ail angles. Eaglets’ * * * he didn’t know a whole lot about rg Pit Chet Wlodkowski | It was a day that saw only 15 of basketball. Things were fine when : : : a field of 150 players able to bet-|we were winning, but when we St, Thomas’ season’s mark is ter par and it was the first time/started to lose — well, you know now 11-2, St. Mary's 10-4. ns in a long time that a par 71 was what happened to Eckman.” be es sage vag oy . among the top 20 scores on open- ; score. Eaglets were never in con- Oe et te mem Jackie Pung St. Pete — tention. pes, Jay Hebert of Sanford, Fla., the|Leader by Six Strokes ear te Foret eee te fed Mike! sr. PETERSBURG, Fla. uy — ski 35-511 Kryska 02-3 2 Jackie Pung shot an 8 under par Haas 10-2 2 Sliwin’ki 6 1-2 13 Walter Derbeme Scores “gen 66 to lead the field’ by seven omemn aia i Py os se Reggie Myles Jt. ..............36-36-79/Strokes in the first round of the "10-4 ; ey Poe 4 Finn ll seb werveeee ces a St. Petersburg Women’s Open golf Bor ied 2 Orlando ‘102 2 : on eee AP Paesimtte Mike Diete 02201. cecisse_ 38-40-48] tournament. cin - sion] _ UPS@IE DOWN AND BACKWARDS © Gene “et in the Texas Open Golf Tournament (et wary pea: Seven strokes’ behind was Betsy “le Me bp Gharts Bone of Pontiac blasts from behind a tree by in San Antonio. ‘parred the hole and posted | Tony Onaraa’ | vee eee Rawls with a 73, a stroke better Bt. Mary ye | 4 using his club with the head upside down and a. %6 for the first 18 oe. . , bee Makatiea acs. cssoseesesss OOS if * : A ae \ : at i ie number of stitches hockey players “but basketball players can give them a pretty good run for money.” * * * Capt. Joe Hughes counted 17 of his 20 points .in the second half as Holy Cross came from behind ae defeated the Quantico Marines Jean (Feets) Lefebvre, Gon- zaga’s 7-34 Frenchman, scored 23 points before fouling out mid- Kearns to come from behind in the last 34 seconds and defeat Wake Forest 60-57 in another ACC | Denver barrelled from behind eee eee for Niagara in a 76-65 victory over Seton Hall. St John’s of Brooklyn/ $1 built a 15-point lead in the first| light hours, 40 cents to 50 cents; half-and rapped Manhattan 77-6624 league play for nine holes, in the other half of the New York Madison Square Garden double- generally | header. ating loss. For nine holes, from .75 cents to $1; all day, from $1.60 to $2; twi- from 7 cents to $1. Ewalt said Detroit had made courses. “There’s no reason to raise our fees as high as Detroit's, if we don’t have to,” said Com- missioner Floyd -P. Miles. “We're not trying to make a profit at the golf course, just break even.”” About half the golfers using the way in the second half in an 83-68 victory over Seattle Pacific —but it was 5-9 Loren Anderson of the losers who was high, scoring | srea 37. Once beaten Wheaton, the| 97e* NCAA small college champs made it 14 in a row by nenting Lewis 89-70, Third OCSC Fox Hunt Set for This Weekend Last of the season's fox hunts Sportsmen’s Club is set for Sun- day over a site near Groveland. Sunday's hunt is the 3rd of the winter and hunters are asked to convene at OCSC headquarters at 8:30 a. m. Hunting site is in the area about Wildwood road, between Grange Hall and McGinnis roads, three miles west of Ortonville and two east of Dixie Highway. Hot lunch will be served at noon. Shotguns, with No, 2 or 4 shot arranged by Oakland County),, Pontiac course last year were from out of town, Willman point- ed out. “That's because our. rates Se a ee Cage Results By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS East Niagara 76, Seton Hall 65 ’ St. Johns (Bkn) 77, Manhattan 66 Middlebury 97, Norwich 84 (three overtimes) Assumption (Mass) 96, American Intl, i Cross 71, Quantico 65 ider 82, Hunter 74 (two overtimes) Seuth orth Carolina 60, ~ Porest 37 mson Wheaton 69, Lewis South Dakota 103, Sushi 68 . Wooster 70, Muskingum 65 Pacific 63, Co Fresno State 91, a og hates State 70 loads only will be used, and hunters are told not to take dogs. Pt. Riley 111, Great —_ Naval 16 Ft. Carson 90, Ft. x 76 Eligible Valentines the Red Wings who have yet the center aisle. married men in the National players. * * Tom Johnsor and Phil Goyette. The Toronto Maple Leafs, fhan Louise Suggs and Patty Berg. the most altgiblee:- Farrell, six-foot, 23-year-old air- lows of the Space Medicine School at Randolph Air Force Base. said the young man was only “simmering down” from “nervousness of his first few ave in the paged cabin, * o mark in the compact cabinet to- day. He'll emerge from the “‘trip,” Farrell passes the 120-hour Farrell |= a simulated space voyage in near- Sunday at 9:35 of the department on space medi- cine, School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Air Force Base, said he believed Farrell would gain Valentine Pleas From Heart All Wrong, He Says ‘be my Valentine?” preachments of medical nonsense. * * * ciation, says it is virtually impos- sible to break tthe -human heart. He admits that “heartbreak” ‘long has been the leading cause of death ameng heroines of: ro- mantic fiction. In “You And Your Heart,” he explains: Absolutely not. Valentines mak- ing such woeful predictions are Dr. H. M. Marvin, former presi- dent of the American Heart asso- (Republicans Bid for County Win NEW YORK (INS)—-Will lover boy’s heart really “break” tomor- row if you turn down his plea to ‘No Holds Barred’ Meet Set for Tuesday Night in Pontiac Victory in the coming elections will be the target of Oakland Coun- ty Republicans when they officially kick-off their 1958 campaign Tues- day night. | x * * The occasion will be a public meeting at 7:45 in the auditorium at the County Office Building, 1 Lafayette St. m . ismall, 34; grade B, large, 39; browns, | “Parted lovers, disa inted Several top state Republicans periment, Steinkamp said: ‘‘We| Base Bid C—Electrical Work aaa compared with $4 to - 0 a nel grade, B. large 38, checks 26'2-33, wtd. back from recent losses. Smaller statesmen, oacie nga or| Will be present to report on party (have learned that Airman Farrell ug Une anaes ont we woeen aes by a year ago. Beans sold at $1: to, Commercially graded: Whites, grade,S@ins were made by International children, cast off mist s. de-| “ccomplishments te date and jon his fourth day in the cabin is|* bid bond or certified seat 5 ™~ $15 a bushel compared with $7 to's, jumbo, 42: extra large, 38-40; large.) Harvester Zenith ’ resses, . them |i amount of five per cent ( aes er Aa ’ » Phelps Dodge, l f ed i outline -ebjectives. Among in perfect shape and that the itted. |37-39's: medium, 34-36; browns, grade posed rulers, frustrat artists . ifications may be ob- $8 a year ago. A, jumbo, 42; large, 37-30; medium, Southern Railway and Texas Co. were said tp have died of heart- will be John B. Martin Jr., na- (crews are a heck of a lot more — after Wednesday, Pebru- * * ® (as : croak: tional committeeman, Larry j|tired than he is.” | ee i. ios et the oe tre 4 Frozen orange juice sold at an| « eit Lindemey, state chairman, and Dr. Strughold, a German scien- — Adame Reet. Birmingham, ich- | Pelaisiialh =p it ppc nial Livestock New York Stocks cm State Finance Chairman Don E. |tist,’ said a man could be put intoligan. “it™s Nott. Siminenalls © | ing the week ended Feb. 1 com-| DETROIT LIVESTOCK (Late Morning Quotations) The beart was held to be the) sirens. space next month if the mechan-|_%, Se"Supmitted es a deposit for each | pared with an average of 16:6 DETROIT, Feb. 13 (AP)—Cattle,/admiral ...... 81 Kel seat of emotions, probably because Ahrens, retired General Motors |*©2!_equipment were ready. of plans and specifications, same | / cents per can a year earlier. ee tien ere a ey bettors “and Alien Gee reas 838 Kimb Cir ee 03 ewes peticed [het the beat wes Cc pr ide poripe ; id “The main problem,” Stein. and’ specifications in "food, ae lewd makers scatve enchanged: few Allied Yee 432 imag Pred 253 faster under stress of excitement|\°P- Se schas a woul kamp added, “is bringing a man/within ten (10) -days of the opening LOP Glass 72.4 review the f cial status of the jsales standard and good steers 23.60-/Allis Chal :|: 254 Lib -MeNa&L'’’ ¢1|or passion or fear. "review inan we back to earth.” {ee uses Wh te eel i U[fy ceciv—tew ‘utuity mised otterings 1830- Alcoa..." ge MSE & My’... 686) “The language would be poorer|state organization. “It will be a furnish satisfactory "Performance Bond ontiac an ul ty 130 50; uritity pods 16.50-17 $¢; camners Am Airtin “''! 17 eae Cem" es for the loss of all this metaphoric favorable report,” Ahrens, of M40 _ Labor and Material Bond, in and cutters mainly 13.00-16.50. - jam Can ..... 42.1 Lorillard. .... 41.8 ; Haverhill Rd., Bloomfield Hills Se cnet 6 ee ee . ’ | Compared last week: Steers and heif-|S™ Cyan... 40 Mack Trk 235 embroidery, but perhaps general ar . : the total cost of which shall be by F f | Sh | ers active, 50-100 higher, full advance/Am Sat. Hl. 41° srortin Co |... 33 /understanding of the heart would] Said. ——— in a a 00 in on choice: cows scarce. active, 25-50 4. y ... 35.4 May D Strs- . 372 - 4 * * * All ited cents higher: bulls $0-1.00 higher: most jam Barve SF eed Cp 351| be a gainer. , firm for a period of thirty (30) days [ehetce | 1,000-1,250 I. steers 36.50-28.08:/Am NW Ges |... 633 Merck < . a1 — cance In addition to the state leaders, : i eaation eserves the oa 00; standa: 25.20; wes = : hte imprisonment after jury San? ese Maayte” a tesg MAR Red BE ee Gens IMD pe ne tragie, weeny heart ar Lapeer, Ledee Rep f R sin park cnd"ts waive any informal I : — : j most choice ers: - 26.50; igh me’ ae nna * : ’ Ps zi a 0 eCOr @al “Itles therein. . Se camel i a Sa pty sy te andes hn Jone," es an'én » 7/01 the Valentine bears ite re feld Township), Register of Deda Besar URS ienoot 2 ; a Moma of es naenan Gat eS Sin cate at Me™ > Es a Se techie . DISTRICT NO. 2 2 ing last November of Joseph and cutters 1250-16 $0, mostly 13.00 up: Armco Stl 2.442 Nat Bise |. 45.3 For one thing, the human heart | Elliott, county chairman, and Jack} 33 Pet, Jump in Sales MICHIGAN : Wright, 37, of 46 Lull St. utility | bulls 19.80-22.00; cutter bulls Aickesen oS GES et Cosh Bs! ioukd wore Mike au overseed ripe |Gibbs, committee executive sec- h h ce DOUGLAS JOCELYN. : * * * Vealers—Salable 25 Nominati} steady. ‘Aveo Mie ioe 4 wat Oyps ules 44 || fig than the pert red affair on |Tetary, will speak. Pushes Share Earnings Fev. 14. 7. 38. : James Witherspoon, of 130 Wes-|feady. ‘choice and prime "30.0037 00, Bat, Obio -:. 33) Ny’ Central. 143| valentines. At its widest point it | Elliott urged all rogntag: Re) to $13.75 From $2.29|— sme POR sen St., will be sentenced to the /standara | and acon) Wepoap oganen wtility [Benguet | pos id Nia M Pw .. 38) ranges in size from 414 to 6 |Publicans to attend no holds Addition to W tary ‘a ; oc be = mandatory confinement Feb. 24 by | sheep, ‘salable, $0. ‘Nominally steady. boeing ‘Air :°! 34.6 Nor Pac... 362 inches. barred” meeting. NEW YORK @-Ceryder Oop. School. | Rochester Conmente “a Pranic Ee Doty nt UAB Sete aa eats Righer: auger sheep Borg Were “c: 314 Ohie Od. 4] I's the toughest and strongest] says its 1957 sales achieved a new|etaesg?2Pemegcem Reatesees 7 nk E. Doty. wooled lambs 25 80-26 00, iater, price for Brun Bake’. ; 346 Owens ng. 39.3) muscle in the human body. And it Lodge Calendar record high and its earnings last|munity Schools, Rochester, Michigan. for The jury deliberated about 20 few 94 Tb averages; most {holes wooled Purroughes +: 383 Oxens Di! Si7jis far from romantic from a tal Pontiac or were. More than six times}ward Elementary School, os minutes Thursday and returned |'*™ 050-23 00: email lor ceime ican. Pac .':.: 243 Pan a W Air . 14 | functional point of view. Communication, higher than in 1956. award will be made for z : utility 20.50-23.00; small lot prime fall/Ggnita) airi °" 173 1 .... 302 No. 21, F. & A. M., Pri. Feb Architectural, Mechanical and Electrical the vefdict of of first horn lambs Tb. 25.50; most cob -~ .| Lodge No. 21, ee ro guilty i, degree moe heme sont Be ponte Gartier, CD .. 36 Param Piet... 383 The human heart is a real work-14¢n 7 P.M’ Work in E. A. De-| L- L. aaa — said! Tra . nd ae ae murder, climaxing a 2%4-day trial /2i'so25.00, choice shorn lambe 23.50-|Chrysler ...2.. 53.2 24 horse. Every day it pumps from|gree. Gerald Moors, WM. ady.|yesterday rysler earnings Tuesda 25, 1958, at the before Judge Doty 24.50; load good to mostly choice shorn Cities Sve 17 pe RR ...... 134 jumped to $119,952,406 I wi “am rosy. po , lambs number FA pelts 23.75: good shorn Clark Equip 140.5 | ol SS a five to 10 tons of blood through ss ~ Kh 950 North Hunter ~*~ * * lamte 22.09-33 fe; cull to choice slaughter’ Cluett Pea - 414 Phelps D a4 sd rate sagen and it . 2 sella aun share from the ard, Bim Michigan we Witherspoon shot Wright three |e? 600-1200. |Golg Palm :. 82.1 Philip Mor. 49.7| weighs less than a pound. N B f or $2.29 a share report-|deposit ; times with a .38-caliber revolver | weak: few mixed No. 2 acd 3" 190-240 Colum Gas a iat Pillsby Mills 467 . . ews in ne ed in 1956. Wpids are due March’ 18, 1958, at #-00 A if the Valentine k SS a a Tbs. 50-2075; mixed No. 1 and 2\Comw Ed .... 43.6 Proct & G ... 562 ctually, -ma of the new Senior : Nov. 18 in a shoe shine parlor at|31 00: few 240-300 Ibs. No. 2 and 3| + 48.7 Pure Oil ..... 30.2) ers wanted to pick a part ef the | 4. Hernandez, 35, no Chrysler said its sales rose 33 | firn “Schect cornet ‘of Livernots and . in be. .%-\Con N Gas .. 426 RCA ...... eee -3| “ of! . > ete hwo ee -Eae e Rts s a e a yhcwn ae tn Su | Penh dt oe tet Rae y i pa ast wee ua Ts under 23 e o+ee ° ? . . wal trr he in a dice game 4 places hereinafter des- at the request of General Motors Gene Elec .... 60.4 Std Of = % : . and fo ated. ® Hi-Fi Co ing to a G.M. spokes-|Ge® Pas .... $3.6 Stevens JP .. 192] “Be mine, lover. $200 to the building occupied) In 1955 and 1956, Chrysler pneet No, 1 ® Radic oP a orané to a GM. spokes-|Gen Motors s. 342 gun on... 2 || “If not, my kidneys will break.”|by Joseph Herron. claimed around 17 per cent of in-|Precinet | : rhs ather Pap .. 33. erson © Inter-Comm. Systems __ Another local Olds dealer iS Gen Le ee a Swift & Co 32 | ; . Leo ‘A. Capadagii, 32, of 205 = | et ad oe ye 13 = 1 Jefferson Jr. High © P-A. Systems shutting down because of competi-|Gilietie |. (-'°. 36 Texas Co... 863 - |Princeton St., pleaded guilty yes-|“"™,” | per cent) 2 Bagiey ‘school : hoon! = a hae is’ Sane = S| Goodrich . .. i Tentron tt. ne Cany § rien terday in municipal court to drunk} For the fourth quarter of 1957 36 Jefferson dr. Bligh result of a three-month long sales-|Goodyear . ... Thomp Pd ,,. 47.1) : : driving. J Cecil B. McCallum *| 31 Jefferson Jr. High BLAKE Imen's strike. Cremorne ss Pram ale cos HT —. |fined him $100 and. two dane im(¢@"mings totaled $16,376,920 or $1.88| 3 Bugler chet TV __ An auto company spokesman in| Gull ll ... 103 | Un Carbide ... 90.2 = jail or 22 da ~~ |& Share versus $13,680,617 or $1.57) District, No. RADIO Detroit said the closing of Simms| hi" Gent 308 Unit Air Lin .. 283 0 ere | nion e Paes othol pan same quarter the ~ diatent |Auto Co. here “‘is the start of the |jhiuel "RY -: 3t? Ue DCO by * Family style I n hetti : 13-Lincoin School NPE ASTON ([esiement omar: whch was ite Ey Rt pgm 8! Truth mceie en |. santie snc see BEE Ree = ; | z : jt . 325. seeee p.m. : 179, 897, frst discussed publicly a month it Harv ..... a UB Steel a! a. Expect Delaney to Be under 6 free. ‘la year earlier. ' 3 fon School Int Tel & Tel’. 30.1 Woolworth... al” Elected President of F Directors declared’ the usual|Precinct " * johns Man ... 31} Yngst 6h & T 7 oO tj Eaai Pcieoot en pris tea ee dividend of 75 cents on the com-| No. Tuberous Rooted — Double Flowering pee ee perating Engineers |7'%0 pm. adv. |aon Stock, payable March 14 to It Emerson Sehool ; 2 ; shareholders of record Feb. 24,| 18 Pire Station No. 4 STOCK AVERAGES . ; : : BEGON IA BU LBS | NEW, YORK—(Compiied by the As- were niemtces Me. = = Jo- dey Ge thee ea ee = on a —_ ge i) — 38 LeBaron “School . sociate ess); sep . aney ew York to- adv. ea quarter an extra ‘alkim Ea. ¢ | incu Rails util, otecks day was ‘expected to be elected $1 in the closing quarter. ms. “et 7 6 for $1.44 12 for $2.79 Week any cer 2§ SFe 751 1508 president of the 280,000-member| Rummage Sale Sat., Feb. 15th. — : 4c Month ago‘... 238.1 wo 48 160.3 aakeooay Union of Ceersuing 297 Oakland Ave. 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. ‘ 20 wM. A he largest and finest bulbs we've ever seen. Red, Crimson, [Year ago... ngineers to succeed Williath E. L f | f bl T c Pink, Orange, Yellow, White and Salmon 1887-88 low no zm0 m0 3 i808 Maloney. Pint Prete Gee ppares q e n angi es ax B Eastern ae a 1986 high ...... 7 5s : < 4 . : 5 : @ 11956 low 44.0 126.2 696 1716 ~ * : District No, | Maloney quit a week ago in the F | . F aymen § orgiven — hay oe Father Claims Boys ies ciaminee"ote cevse|Ford Claims Edge a so mame | 2 Seah 5 — OV, 27 Wi y year-old rule of the union of hoist- 4 has 28 Wilson Schoo! : | ‘ . ing machine operatives had been vy anyone who admitted delinquency | 33 U.S. Naval Training Center An attractive blend of sunflower seed, wheat, milo maize, millet, e t if a y itfer marked by strongarm methods ’ on intngibles tax payments will Re a City Primary election is canary seed and buckwheat aS = lavish personal use of union} DETROIT — Ford Motor Co.| be forgiven — except for a six in Distriete 1 8. 1. two conaientes bs. ) a i @ 2 UMBUS t , unds, : says final registration figures for| per cent interest : office of City Commissioner. 5 Lbs. 60c 10 Lbs. 1.10 25 Lbs. 2.50 Nove ia oe °. iy ati ah Delaney, 61, is a, lifelong friend|19°7 gave its Ford Di ee ear charge oy “he oaatee, relative to opening and closing & ‘most three weeks ago have been|°t AFL-CIO President George |329-unit edge over it nearest com-| issued the proclamation nan shat be coame h ee . 1 claimed by their father. Meany and was elected six months |petitor, General Motors’ Chevrolet! the Department of Revenue has Toreseen shall remain _ until S A LT John Newsome, 38. of Columbus, (22, 88 Secretary-treasurer of the |Divison, in 1957 auto sales. no funds to enforce or publicize |longer, “very qualified’ tector ekant ‘reported to juvenile authorities that ———ers eo * * Ford said final new car registra-| the intangibles tax. scribed forthe desing of the pan i for Thawing and for Water-Softeners ROCK SALT ... 100 Lbs. 1.70 GRANULATED SALT... .100 Lbs. 1.70 MEDIUM SALT ........100 Lbs. 2.05 SALT PELLETS .........100 Lbs.'2.05 ~ REGAL FEED and LAWN SUPPLY COMPANY 28 Jackson St. Phone FE 2-0491 re ‘the boys, Johnny, 14 months, and Mike, 3, are the sons he has been ‘searching for since his wife, Doro- thy, 21, left home a month ago. | Mrs. Lois Kapp of Columbus told ‘police a woman identifying her- iself as Mrs, Newsome left Johnny * Hunter P. Wharton of Pitts- burgh, a union vice president and assistant to Maloney since 1950, was due to be elected secretary- treasurer in place of Delaney. The union's executive board met here for the main purpose of nam- ‘with her almost three weeks ago, and that a few days later, re- turned with Mike, identifying him ‘as the son of her roommate. | Newsome said he has filed suit ‘for divorce and is asking custody of the children, The boys remain under the care of county welfare authorities, : Excellent Opportunity ‘SHOE MANAGER | Man to manage family shoe department. Opening in Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Salary and bonus atrangements. State experience, age, references. All’ replies contidential. Send Reply to Pontiac Press, Box No. 3 "| find Mrs. Newsome. Declares 50c Dividend | jdent Insurance Co. Thursday de- _— holders of record Feb. 21, 1958, L. | K. Kirk, president, said Standard ' Insurance Co., lost $2.16 a share in adie | Authorities have been unable to DETROIT (# — Standard Acci- clared a dividend of 50 cents a share payable March 5 to share- ing Maloney’s successor and fill- ing other posts as required by the change in union leadership. * * * Maloney, now 77 and critically ill in his island home off Miami Beach, has suffered a series of heart attacks. Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa named Einar 0. Mohn, 51, as chairman of the Teamsters 11-state Western Con- ference, The choice was expected. Mohn replaces Frank W. Brew- ster. : * * * Mohn, former Los Angeles Teamsters council head, has been administrative. vice president in ‘Accident and its affiliate, Planet 1957 on an adverse | underwriting experience, principally on automo- the union's Washington headquar- ters for five years. ry Sper op- posed Hoffa's election to succeed Dave Beck .as presiderit, arid bile claim costs, \ \ \ ailed himself to be re-elected a ice president. if f \ e.* 1A 1 . weight during the make-believe journey. * * * “He's a great eater, a real chow hound,” said the Colonel. Steinkamp’s briefing disclosed that a manned space flight is “practical very soon.”’ Regenerat- ing equipment modification and solution of problems connected with recovering a satellite remain as barriers. Dr. Hubertus Strughold, a mem- ber of the Space Medicine School's staff and reputed father of space medicine, agree that modification would have to include weight as a main factor, The chief duty of a man in a satellite will be to monitor elec- tronic equipment, Steinkamp said. Man’s reactions, he told newsmen aren't fast enough to pilot a space craft in the sense that a man pilots a supersonic plane. Asked what he had learned up to date on the space cabin ex- tion figures for last year, com- piled by R. L. Polk Co., automobile industry statisticians, gave Ford 1,493,617 registrations to 1,456,288 for Chevrolet. The figures cover the sales of 1957 and 1958 models pre- duced in 1957. Ford said Polk placed the total new car registration for 1957 at 5,982,342 units, and said its Ford Division gained 2% per cent of the | 1957 automobile market. -The Polk figures, Ford said, gave it a lead of 23,670 units over Chev- rolet in combined car-truck regis- trations in 1957. Ford had 1,770,918 to 1,747,248 for Chevrolet. Ford said its share of the ex- panding auto market has increased ll per cent in the last 10 years. Polk reported 3,490,952 new car registrations in 1958. laire and Central Lakes fought the flames in e : ¥ , 2 18 below zero temperatures, — ‘blaze was caus a \ > : ’ A : : jlurgy department and was a pointed assistant director .of jin charge since 1955 and will $ product ‘development, tooling and plant erigineering proj- ects in the automotive field. To Close Indiana Plant KOKOMO, Ind. # — Chrysler Corp. will close its automatic transmission plant here all next week and will recall its 2,800 workers on a five-day week basis Feb. 24. A company spokesman said the closing is intended ‘‘to balance inventory of production parts.” . Separa te proposals will be received as we A—General Construction Base Bid B—Mechanical Work paper wealth. Penalities up to 100 per cent and 12 per cent interest may be oa | Faulty Wiring Causes’ Fire in Avon Home Ste oC the tue Cloak pot te y * on entene tec" Siemoete for Com: t Prim City Clerk Feb. 13, 14, 1s, "58, NOTICE TO ELECTORS OF THE City of Pontiac, Michigan, Take Notice: Notice is hereby given it petitions have been filed in the — Michi- be laced Ballots Satin tad tase y P cg \ 1942 as a member of the metal- engineering in 1953. He has been FUNERAL fF Ambulance He | se fs Bs i is] 8 : bd nt h H 5 EH ) 2 § i Q 2 ° a * Rev. 4 | Interment in : will ston, Sunda Park ¢ im state at ir land Bee Pastel’ Home whee, he _ay be seen Priday morning OLIVER, FEB. 1638, ROY EF. 4 oN. we 58; be- foved, father of ure. Waits Mrs. Charles Barrett "and Robert Rt cits con oe arks-Griffin Punerai Home te in Perry Mt. rk emer. ww . P| service under Mr. Oliver’ will py at the Sparks-Griffin al Home. Card of Thanks 1 WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY friends aa, po ae = for their pecs bereavement . @ our recen and Rev. rett, Baldwin Ave-_ nue Church, for his comforting words. Carl Lemp. In Memoriam 2 MEMORY T A. a who Set home Feb. 14th, A friend, sadly missed, but never By—Gienn, Zona Sommers & Chil- dren * Feb. There is a face that is always with Us, There is a voice we would jove to hear, There ‘is @ smile we shal) always FESS we tod os : by m son * IN MEMORY OF OUR DEAR Mother, Grace ver, who eae LA * nad & Marvin. Fureral Directors 4 Donelson-Johns —— Thoughtful Service FE 2-5641 + .Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME PE +-8378. = ae Cemetery Lots , 31187 « geaye ee zoe par cars apraeae RZR° 5 Help Wanted Male 6. per month . Pull or : s apg m, Interviews in expansion 10 to 5, Regal » 2617 Dixie Hwy. ; re ak A FEW MEN Pay opportunity. theve. no doctor pon ge eo be Sonadesed: Ft between IAC Selary 485 wants @ hour week Boretimene: A =e, k high ‘school diploma, clty dent, ability to operate truck. fil’ Panett” oO” chigar eral Home, Clarke - e is. ‘ (SPR BEE A EE ee es Construction of Hig h School |] Still on Schedule at Romeo} THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1958 ‘The White Sheep of the Family’ _[Brooks PTA to Meet |Avon Players Rehearsing: 8 p.m. in the multi-purpose room - — ‘Real Soon! ssiciasd nbeoe whe wal ollowed, f Similar discussions are planned for future meetings, the superinten- dent said. ' ®t * * A locally conducted teacher's institute -was scheduled for March 4 at the high school. At Walled Lake Library ‘To Represent Michigan in National Contest at Chicago Next Week WALLED LAKE — Mrs, Noel Vv. Swindler, a member | of the Walled Lake Story-Telling League, Children from Walled Lake and the surrounding area are invited to heaf the story, The library is located on the second floor of the Mrs. Dorothy H. Meagley, in charge of community relations, has announced the addition to eight members to the the library staff of volunteers, They are Mrs, Ruth Brede, Mrs, Pearl Wallace, Mrs. Gene Louwman, Mrs, Trudy Champe, Mrs. Joyce Garland, Open Meeting Today in Wolverine Lake Orion Council Picks Board for Election Children to Hear Story | Church here at 2 p. m. * f Mrs, Ida Van Lare, Mrs, Mary Palmer and Mrs. Hale Watkins. * * * The library will be open from Lapeer to Observe World Prayer Day LAPEER — The World Day of Prayer—Friday, Feb, 22—will be observed at the Grace Episcopal * * The first Friday of Lent, the day will find women of 117 coun- tries uniting in prayer. Each year the program is written by a dif- ferent kroup of women, with the 1958 program planned by the women of Australia, Seven Lapeer churches are combining in the service. They are Chirch of the Nazarene, First Presbyterian, Monroe Street Methodist, Pilgrim Holi- ness, Free Methodist, Liberty Street Gospel and Grace Epis- copal. a film strip depicting work fi- nanced by offerings at prayer services. Other leaders will be Mrs, W, N. Miller, Mrs. Donald _{high-schools until 1957. Since last , [September she has been teaching ‘}Point, N.Y. The wedding date has _Mrs. E, B. Green -witt Warrate JOANNE CREIGHTON Mr, and Mrs, Frank M. Grang- er of 4494 Granger Rd., Oxford, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Joanne Creigh- 1954, Miss Granger taught .art in Royal Oak elementary and junior in the American High School in Baumholder, Germany. Her fiance is a 1955 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West not been set. January Milk Output Shows Rise in State LANSING @® — Michigan's Jan- uary milk production Thursday was estimated at 407 million pounds by the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service. This compared with 402 million pounds last year and the record of 410 million pounds in January of 1946, the 153 million eggs produced in a og greens mai at 149 million, down from New Comedy for Feb. 21 ROCHESTE R— Avon Players are rehearsing with a will, this time to bring to their Rochester audience an imaginative, lively and decidedly unique comedy, “The White Sheep of the family.” * * * The play will have a two-night run, Feb, 21 and 22, with curtain Congregational Church to Hold Planning Retreat ROCHESTER—The annual plan-) ning retreat for board and com- mittee members of the First Axford on North Rochester road, * * * : ’ Dr. Harold N. Skidr-ore, min- ister’ of the Michigan Congrega- tional Christian Conference, will open the retreat by leading a dis- cussion on the theme “Strength- ening Our Fellowship in the Church.” Following the afternoon plan- ning session, a buffet will be served at 5 p. m., under the direction of Mrs. C, Ward Crissman. The evening meeting will begin with a devotional service conducted by Mrs, May- nard Remer, with music led by Leo Yocum and Harold Dawe, and Wesley Holyoke. * *« * the same month a year ago. First Congregational Church, Assisting in the general plans|” for the retreat are Orin Romigh, |; Al Musson, the Rev. E. John Yuells Junior High School auditorium, * * * Playwrights Ian Hay and L. du- Garde Peach have reversed the normal situation where q family ing “‘black shéep” to produce some hilarious plot developments in the three-act script, The play centers around the activities and home life of the Winter family, whose members make their living in unethical ways and guard closely any in- trusion on the family pattern. Alice and James Winter, daugh- ter Pat and son Peter all are of questionable character — but the qaudienee at Picadilly Theatre in Dorothy Seiffert is directing the as assistant. Bob Halback is execu- tive producer. The cast includes Elaine Smith as Angela Preston; Pat Kucera and James Coyle as Alice and James Winter; Mary Chapman and Tom Severance, the Winters’ daughter and son; Chuck Grant as John Preston; Jim Jackson as Sam Jackson; Don Weston, the vicar; and Susie Seiffert as the fears for the welfare of a wander-|. of the school. Mother Singers, will A Founders’ Day program, featuring the Pontiac be presented. Get details in the First Free Methodist Church ad Saturday, time at 8:30 p.m., in Rochester ay rt Avon production, with Ed Kucera! | maid, 50¢ DOWN 50c AWEEK will entertain children with a hour-|) 4. 4:39 =. ae i ton, to Lt. John F. Lovell of Madi-|Coneresational Church will be held| London, England, where the play long story trom 1 to 2 p.m. Satur-dtately following the story hour. |son, Wis. Following her graduation| °™ 3 to 7 p. m. Sunday at the! was, ee oe Set in 14K Solid Gold Mounti day at the Community Library. oe te home of Mr. and Mrs, Henry tin _ x * * from Michigan State University in ek ke 8 Now wad 1 N. Saginaw St. $9750 Frat Jewelers “House of Discounts” Holyoke will moderate the eve- ning discussion concerning church retreat is sponsored annually by the prudential committee of the Wanner, Mrs. Benjamin Minford, Mrs. Peggy Swartz, Mrs. Raymond R. * * * Carl M. Smith. the prayer service, by Janet Hurshburger. Announce Engagement liams Lake Rd. have ding is being planned. ; Lamb, Mrs. Stephen Crowell and Mrs, Rowena Euler. Chairman for this year is Mrs. Sharon Rinn wil] sing a solo at accompanied DRAYTON PLAINS — Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Loree of 5641 Wil- the engagement of their daughter, Jeannine Anne, to James M. Rahl, son of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Rahl of Romeo. A May 10 wed- All Woo TWEED | 6 Gorgeous Colors and | Choice of 8 Plain Colors! SPECIAL! iar 79" at 5-902! Cuddle it! Squeeze it! sleep on it and you'll *Du Pont polyester fi plump and soit. Similar pillows sell for much more when bought elsewhere! Harmony House Dacron” Pillows © Delicate stripe and floral cover ¢ Packaged in sanitary plastic bag Hit it or just plain agree it's wonderful! ber filling keeps it It's washable, won't mat my Sears Pillow Sale! 99 21x27-in. Big 6-Inch Thick Foam Latex Pillows Reg, 6.98 4.99 Es. 19x26-in. 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