i ec eel = ae kkkeke PONTIAC, aati MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959-28 PAGES d Baby President to Tell Mikoyan Allies Won tQuitBerlin By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (#—President Eisenhower is expected to impress tpon Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan this week that the Western allies have no in- tention of abandoning Wset Berlin or creating a neu- tralized Germany. Eisenhower and Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s top following further policy discussions between Mikoyan . and Secretary of State Dulles. The Soviet visitor met-with both. Dulles and Vice President = a week ago before starting his present tour around th Interest in the the Forthcoming discussions was sharpened over the weekend by two surprise Moscow moves, 1. In notes to the United States and 26 other countries that fought Nazi forces:in World War II, the Soviet government proposed a 28-nation con- ference to meet at Warsaw or Prague in two months to wirte a German peace treaty. The 12-page note was accompanied by a 25-page-detailed outline for a treaty, including provision for withdrawal of West- ern and Soyiet troops from Germany and a ban on German membership in any military alliance. West Germany is a member of NATO. 2. In a second note Saturday night, the Soviet Union called for resumption of East-West talks on the problem of preventing surprise attack in the nuclear missiles age. The United States responded promptly with a statement saying it favors resuming the talks —which broke down at Geneva Dec. 18—but wants an agreement with the Soviet Union on the range of problems they should ol aaa balaae with. Both notes were sensed at toe State Department Sunday. Bit even before the German peace treaty plan Related Picture, Story on Page Two came in, officials said on the basis of a Moscow an- nen that unacceptable. at Grosse lle | Housing Unit Destroyed in Blaze Started Child With Candle DETROIT w—A fire apparently touched off by a child playing with a Christmas candle destroyed a 2T-family housing unit at Grosse Ile Naval Air Station yesterday. Down Off Alaska * PBs clearly They expressed hope that Idetatied study might open up an opportunity for some constructive counter pro- posal, however. One of the provisions of the So- regimie—which the ‘Western pow- ers have declined to recognize— Land the anti-Communist West Ger- man regime. Mikoyan in his talks in Wash- Executions for Batista Backers Military. Trial Executions of the followers of former Dictator Fulgencio Batista are mounting in Cuba as the forces of rebel leader Fidel Castro continue hurry-up military trials. awaiting trial. “They were judged,” he said, adding that “if anyone killed 15 or 30 people, he has no right to live.” day in a mass grave on the out west of Havana. * * * nillo announced Sunday that Cu- bans will not be allowed to witness the firing squad executions of Ba- tista supporters. But they will be allowed to see the bodies after- ward. The announcement came after a crowd of 3,000 attended the ex- ecution Saturday in Manzanillo of six Batista supporters convicted Directorate troops Sunday Castro started his revolution, * * * closed since before Christmas were ordered to reopen today. proposed! tay Bill Introduced WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Alvin M. Bentley (R-Mich) intro- duced a bill today to give tax- payers credit on their federal in- come tax for any new state or local schoo] taxes. He said it would encourage local govern- ments to spend more for school construction. Cuba Speeds Up: 50° Supporters Dead, 3,000 Waiting Fast HAVANA, Cuba () — Britons Afraid to Speed on Superhighway LONDON (UPI)—The first of- ficial report on use of a new superhighway designed for fast travel indicated today that most Britons are scared of speeding. : County Police Chiet T. E, St.'Johnsion re- ported to Transport Minister Harold Watkinson that most drivers timed during its first month's operation stuck to 40-50 miles per hour. Only one driver timed by po- lice in the first month was doing more than 75 on the eight-mile highway called the Preston By- pass, St. Johnston said. Thus far about 50 Batista supporters have been exe- cuted. Nearly 3,000 are Asked Sunday why the Batista followers were being executed with- out open’ trials, Castro said, ‘“There were not so many, . .two or three dozen criminals.” Correspondent Jules DuBois of the Chicago Tribune reported that the mutilated bodies of 160 anti- Batista prisoners were found Sun- skirts of San Cristobal, 60 nie Military authorities in Manza- 2 Killed as Blast Shatters Bar Worker Hunting Gas Leak a Victim; Father Saves Girl, DETROIT ut—Two persons were killed and two injured today when a gas explosion ripped through a suburban Romulus township bar and living quarters as workers sought to find a leaking line. Mrs. Josephine Smiegel, 53, own- er of the bar, and Harry Gara- vaglia, 32, Taylor Township, a -| Michigan Consolidated Gas Co, em- ploye were killed. Leonard Smiegel, 32, son of the bar owner, was critically burned in a fire touched off by the blast, Smiegel managed to save the lie of his 4-year-old daughter, Tonette — by throwing her out a second stery window of their home next to the bar. JOYFUL NEWS — Mrs. Frank Chionchjo is John Fumo, after = said =) Mrs. es baby kissed by her mother, Mrs. 36 Killed as “German Airliner — found alive and At left is Mrs. her brother, aoe was AP Wirephote healthy in a Brooklyn apartment. Chionchio’s father, and at right, n oe Anonymous Tip Leads fo Flat in Brooklyn Divorcee-Widow Denies Snatching Infant From Hospital After Birth NEW YORK (#—The kid- naped Chionchio batly was found alive and healthy Sunday night in a Brook- lyn apartment. The infant girl had been the object.of an intense search since she was snatched from a hos- pital 242 hours after her birth nine days ago. Police. and FBI agents, acting on an anonymous the baby in the Vlat of Jean 3-year-old di- vorcee and Widow with sev- en living children. Her apartment is about 142 miles from St. Peter's Hospital where the child was kidnaped late Jan. 2, x * * The child was returned to the hospital. Authorities said she was “tin good condition.” The youngest baby ever kidnaped here, she was taken before her parents had the chance to have her baptized “Lisa Crashes in Brazil Rain Squall moving out of the University of Havana and the board of governors was working on plans to reopen the university. It has been closed since All public and private schools, Smiegel's wife, Betty, 28, suf- fered cuts on the legs as she) rushed from the house. Police said Garavaglia was in ritrace a reported gas leak when the blast occurred. Another gas company worker, Philip Becker, of Wayne, sur. vived the explosion and caught the Smiegel child as her father dropped her. Becker said he, Smiegel and Gar- ‘avaglia were in the basement un- der the house and that Garavaglia had crawled into a basement un-' der the bar to reach a line to a ‘|\gas watér heater, “He hadn't been gone five sec- onds when there was a tremendous poof,” said Becker, “air and flames shot past my face and all around me.” Cloudy and Warmer Forecast for Area The U.S. Weather Bureau fore- casts considerable cloudiness and |Saturday Meeting Set WASHINGTON (#—President Eisenhower will meet with Soviet Dep. Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan at the White House Saturday morning. Press Secretary James C. Haggerty said no time limit has been set. warmer for the Pontiac area to-| dav and tomorrow. The mercury is expected to climb to 35 degrees today with a low tonight between 20 and 26. The high Tuesday will be 30 to 36. Wednesday's outlook is partly) cloudy with little temperature change. The five-day forecast predicts vp® % % x * a) Investigate Murder \ temperatures will average four to eight degrees above the normal high of 33 and norma! low of 19. Total precipitation during the five-day period is expected to be less than two-tenths of an inch with snow flurries Tuesday night or Wednesday and again about Saturday, The lowest temperature recdrd- ed in mtown Pontiac preceding 8 am. was 18. At 1 p.m. the reading was 28. , Churchills Start Trip LONDON (®—Sir Winston and Lady Churchill, bundled up against London's freezing tem- peratures, left by air today for a six-week stay in the sunshine of Morocco. Lindemer Running Again COR Ee Tene ges ebeeesesa © Green Empress ........6.., 18 Mafiets .. . wc cvenes cece soo MR Sports oo... .ecee ee .. 1617 be, ee b. TV & Radic Programs...., ba | Wilson, idesvtctesespes, HA Women's Pages....csecsss 12-3 Pov. {the basement of the bar trying to] ey RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (UPI); let Capt. Wren McMains of West- :It exploded and split apart in| —Officials today blamed a blind-) ing rain squall for the crash of a) at the controls after he missed German Lufthanga airliner which| the runway Sunday at Galeao In- | killed 36 persons in an explosion’ fire “‘hot enough to start a} *peaction." Three crew members survived. All were reported out of danger today. _™ only American aboard, led Billy Graham Defies Illness Goes Ahead With Plans for World Tour Despite Eye Ailment DALLAS, Tex. (®—Evangelist Billy Graham went ahead with his! plans for a world crusade today in the fece of advice by physicians) to curtail his activities because of an eye ailment. * * * Graham told reporters that he intends to go to Australia, Indo- nesia, Malaya, Cairo, - Jerusalem and Berlin this year. Graham's illness earlier caused him to cancel a scheduled appear- ance at the Dallas First Baptist Church. “The program may be cut somewhat by doctor's orders,” Graham said of his projected tour, “but right new I plan to | go.” He had announced previously he) would go to Rochester, Minn. Tues- day for a check-up at a Mayo clin-. ie instead of leaving for the West Coast en route to Australia. Graham insisted he felt all right but ‘‘there’s something wrong with one of my eyes.’ ‘But I don’t know what is is,” he continued, “The doctor told | me what it is—a long technical | name — but I think he’s as con. fused as the Republicans are | these days.” “] spent two days in octors'| offices and about midnight last) night I got orders not to preach,” he said of his cancelled church! appearance. “I don't have cancer, he had no heart attack; I haven’ t had a stroke and I'm not blind.” é * * * A cable sent to Australia said the medical examination showed “angio spastico edema of the ma- cula.”’ The macula lutea is a small ¢ yellow spot on the human retina atid ig the most sensitive area of Argentine Chief Coming WASHINGTON & — President Arturo Frondizi of Argentina will visit Detroit Jan.27 as part of a visit to the United States. Fron- dizi, who will enter this country at Charleston, S,C., Jan. 19, plans pnd lange maaan turning home Feb. 1. * over Park, Stamford, Conn., died | | ternational Airport in a blinding | rain storm, s *& * The plane touched down in Rio Bay instead, bounced onto Tubia- canga Beach on Governador Is- iland, where the airport is located. Eleanor Wants to Show U.S. to Khrushchev | SIOUX FALLS, 8, D. (UPID— night she would like to take So- viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev | “by the hand and show him around the United States." “It would be the best education he could get,” the former first lady said, “‘but I would not lik to do it if there were dem strations against him.” Mrs. Roosevelt, speaking for the American Association for the United Nations, said it was easy to sympathize with refugees who | rioted against Soviet Deputy Pre- mier Anastas Mikoyan, but called the demonstrations ‘unfortunate, because we wouldn't like it if such a thing happened to one of our government officials over there "’ Excuse, Please! So Solly TOKYO (UPI) — Police called ‘off today a five-day seareh for bamboo shop owner Osamu | Nakagami, 21, suspected of kill- ing a man found Wednesday in his shop. Embarrassed police ad- mitted they had learned that Nakagami was the murdered man. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt said last | | flames. Heavy mud delayed the rescue| ‘until it was too late. Most of the victims were burned to death. Fivemen who carried portable ex- 1 tinguishers several hurdred yards Rose.”’ Mrs. Iavarone denied the kid- naping and claimed the child is hers, police said. They quoted her as saying she had delivered the baby ynattended In her apart- ment dan. 2. Chief of Detectives James B. | Leggett and J. Kenneth McCabe, chief assistant district attorney of Kings County Brooklyn, said Mrs. ~ lavrone would be charged with kidnaping. McCabe questioned the woman ‘through deep mud to the plane} for an hour. were forced to delay thetr opera- ‘tions until the flames died down. * * x They sought refuge from the rain beneath the unburned tail section. One shouted to officials: “‘No one’s alive in there, It's hot enough to start a chain reaction.” Officials said most of the vic- tims were burned beyond recog. nition, Attempts at identification began in the Rio morgue today. | ** Hamburg, Germany, Aires. Mains asked for landing instruc- tions following a flight from Dakar just a few minutes before the crash, Eyewitnesses said the plane's jlanding gear dipped to the water near the end of the runway. The plane rose several feet to clear the runway, dipped sharply to the left and crashed and exploded on the beach. The three survivors were navi- gator Heing Wilhelm Jeppel, host- ess Hilde Dehler and steward Karl Francfrank. y were tossed free of the wreckage with 10 passengers, but the passen- gers were killed. Among the dead was Gary Levy, Latin-American director of Reuters News Agency, back to Rio following a_ televi- sion interview in London. Others Kottulinsky, who were married in | Vienna on Dec. 7, 1955 in a wed- iding attended by most of Europe's royalty. The plane was on a flight from) to Buenos, Airport tower operators said Mc-} the seawall, but then bounced off, who was en route) were Count and Countess Jaroslav’ Asked what evidence there was to support the charge, McCabe sald the footprints of the Chion- chie baby taken shortly after birth match those of the baby found Sunday night. He said that footprints, like fin- gerprints, are only one of a kind. Telling newsmen of his ques- tioning of Mrs. Iavarone, McCabe id: ‘She stil] says it's her baby. She answers questions in a calm voice.” First positive identification of the baby was announced by the FBI, quoting the father, Frank. * * * Chionchio, 28, a lawyer for the Port of New York Authority, said he recognized the baby on the basis of a “general family resem- blance” and a small scar over the left eye he had noticed the night th baby was born. “I feel very happy.’ Chion- * chio said as he left the hospital to rejoin his wife, Frances, 26. She has been staying with her parents in Brooklyn. Leggett said the baby ‘‘certain- ly” is the Chionchio child. He in- dicated the footprint of the baby ‘found in the apartment matched the footprint of the Chionchio baby taken shortly after birth. He said the comparison was ‘‘okay.” * * * | The blood type of the baby was identical with that of Mrs. Chion- chio, the FBI said, but did not correspond to Mrs. lavarone’s. Leggett said medical examina- tion showed that Mrs. lIavarone | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Pontiac Press Previews New York Styles | By JUDITH L. OLEMENCE Women’s Editor, Pontiac Press NEW_YORK — With the potato sack, pyramids and balloon dresses ‘all but out of the picture, there’s nothing left for a woman — but to look like a woman. This spring dresses will be fitted and curves will be back where they belong, New = York dress de- signers, unnerved © by the bellows of rage from the a normal, natural look for women. The high waist-7 line of the “Em- pire is stil] an im- ~~ portant look, but MRS. it is completely CLEMENCE modified, with the whole waistline é a .)will show earryovers of Curves Make Comeback clearly defined. look is out!) According to Eleanor Lambert, director of the Couture Group of (The nightgown the new sithourttes get a ‘rising vote of thanks from the —- male and female.” ‘The 30 designers who will show spring collections to more than See Pictures Page 12 favorites, the shirtwaist, easy-fitted suit, the ‘fittle black” dress and the full-skirted dress. COLLARS BIG We're told that few designers the wn- fitted look, Necklines are low, and this spring. cat the New York Dress Institute, | 200 fashion editors here and abroad are Showing new editions of old the larger the collar the better The most popular outfit will be the easy suit with short unfitted jacket, slender skirt belted at the natural waistline. Hemiines vary — some just cover the kneecap, others are about two Inches below the knee. The bouffant type evening dress has been nosed out by the long, narfow version, and street-length evening coats are worn over the gowns, Important fabrics for evening are satin, printed silk lace or layered chiffon. a , 4 See toes a ¥ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 TWO See Senate Vote on Filibuster. Expect Johnson Plan to Defeat Liberals’ Attempt to Curb Long Debates WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Sen- ate appeared likely today to de- feat a liberal bloc’s anti-filibuster proposal and eventually adopt a compromise plan for shutting olf debate. A showdown vote was expected before nightfall on the liberals’ motion that would allow a ma- jority (50) of the 98 senatoos, in- tead of the two-thirds (66) now metal solvent which he tipped * wr * Opponents of the liberal pro- posal were confident they could defeat it. In its place, they pre- dicted, the Senate ultimately would accept a compromise by Democratic leader Lyndon B. John- son (Tex.) to let two-thirds of Senators present and voting curb debate. Both Republican leader Ever- ett M. Dirksen (Hl.) and Dem- ocratic whip Mike Mansfield (Mont.) said they believed the Senate finally would accept the | Johnson compromise. The liberals, led by Sen. Paul il. Douglas (D-Ill), were hoping that enough pro-civil rights senti- ment had built up during the week- end to sway some wavering sen- ators their way. But they ad mittedly were waging an uphill tight. Mystery Man Tries to Burn Restaurant DETROIT 1m — Police today were looking or somebody who's trying to burn up a Detroit res taurant piecemeal, The owner, Ernest Mantredini, |Koyan said, “perhaps it could with-/ meet Mikoyan and his party. of Farmington, told police gray one third at first, and subse-| 6 last week he had received threat. | ening phone calls. Saturday night firemen had to put out four | small blazes in the kitchen. They | | | | Calif. Gov. Edmund G. Brown as ; | | 108 ANGELES (UPL) — Soviet 'Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoy- ‘an takes time out today in his good- ‘will tour to visit a movie studio, Last night, in a discussion of cold ‘war issues he called for a mutual withdrawal of U, 8 troops from Germany | ’ #* * “Tp the West does not want to withdraw all its men at once,” Mi- quently withdraw others in stages a * * * Moday where a reception will be! Beverly BEAR FACTS — Russian Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan said ‘The Russian bear looks more friendly,” in an exchange of jokes with and Russian the state’s flag. they posed with received at the t » i , AP Wirephote ‘The governor apologized for the egg-tossing reception which the visiting Russian San Francisco airport. r’ 6 Mikoyan Pays Visit | to Hollywood Studio Los Angeles began yesterday, His plane was prevented from landing at International Alrport because of heavy fog and had to make an unscheduled landing at Lockheed Air Terminal in Bur- bank, about 25 miles away. Demonstrators, armed with eggs, jplacards, and at least one sling) shot, were left without enough time) to travel to the other airport to) * * * The only other known attempt to demonstrate against the — high! He will tour Paramount studios Soviet official occurred outside the Decision Due on Thompson Flint Teamster Official May Stand Trial in Dry Cleaners Arson A decision will be handed down tomorrow morning on whether Flint Teamsters official Jack D. Thompson should stand trial for arson in the mysterious burning of his fellow unionist, Frank Kier- dorf, last August. Girl in Car Shot on Expressway Ex-Boy Friend Arrested After Witness Describes Assault in Detroit DETROIT w—A Detroit man is being held for investigation of as- sault with intent to commit murder was riding in a ear on a Detroit ex- pressway. +. | Carolyn Barnett, 21, of Detroit of the neck and gide and head cuts. She was riding along the Edsel Ford Expressway in -a car driven by John Martin, 21, of Detroit, po- lice sald, when another car raced past and a shot was fired. The bullet ripped through the car door and struck Miss Barnett in the neck, Police sald James Tate, 34, an ex-boy friend of Miss Barnett’s, is being held for in- vestigation, * * * Police said Martin told them he stopped the car to seek help but ran away when he saw Tate had stopped and was running toward him. Martin said he heard two more shots and saw Tate beat the woman before driving away, po- lice reported. Tate was arrested about a half 'hour later, in the shooting of a woman as she was hospitalized with bullet wounds BIRMINGHAM — The 417 con- struction permits issued by the amounted to $3,890,623, according to the annual report of Andrew F. Butt,’ building inspector. The 61 single-family dwellings accounted for about half of the $2,360,675 spent on new buildings in 1966, Other major items in- eluding 15 resi- dences, the city’s first motel and the new post office service build- ing. The 500 permits issued the pre- vious year totaled $3,877,647. December showed a total of 19 | permits issued, amounting to $167,- | 975. Five appointments will be con- firmed by city cdmmissioners at tonight’s meeting for the newly- formed Bureau for Fire Preven- tion Board of Appeals. Asked to serve are Winston T. Kellogg, 1876 Northlawn St., Carl B, Marr, 455 Fairfax Rd., Edward ©. Faulkner, 1611 York- shire St., Charies B, Kass, 1028 Chestnut St. and Robert L. 0-Con- nell, 2352 E, Dorchester Rd. Lengths of their terms will be determined by lot, the first man selected to serve a five-year term, Kidnaped In (Continued From Page One) ‘did not bear a child nine days ago. He said the woman took ‘‘good lot experienced caring for children of her own,” he said, . * *® * Offictals at St. Peter's said the ibaby weighed 7 pounds, 1 ounce care’' of the baby. ‘She had plenty} fant Found Alive in Brooklyn Flat been married twice and had eight children. The youngest is 3. The oldest, a 23-year-old son, died last summer, he said, Her first marriage, to John Rob- ert Getch, ended in divorce, -Leg- gett sald; and her second hus- band, Peter Morello, died two years ago. The use of the name |Iavarone was not immediately ex- Flint Municipal Judge Donald | nen it was returned to the hos- plained. | R. Freeman, who heard two days of testimony last month during Thompson's pretiminary exami- nation, said teday he would de- Hills Ifotel last night liver his opinion from the bench | | j pital. The Chionchio infant weighed 7 pounds at birth. Leggett sald Mrs, lavarone, a department store employe, had ® * * theory that the kidnaper was a The Day in Birmingham | ‘58 City. Construction Hits $3,890,623; ¥2 Is Homes City of Birmingham last year; - Police had been working on the, the next four years and so on with the last term for one year. American Lamb Council, will speak on menu planning ysing the less expensive cuts of lamb. Plans for the bridge party-fash- Silent Film Actress Murdered by Sadist CARMEL, Calif, (UPD—A sex : fon show Feb. 25 will be discussed. The Altrusa Club of Greater. Bir- mingham will have a 7 p.m. din- ner and .business meeting at the Community House tonight. Mr, and Mrs. LeRoy Kiefer will show pictures on the World's Fair in Brussels. Kiefer represented the General Motors Corp. at the com- pany’s exhibit, The Ruth Shain International Re- lations Class will hear Mrs. Grace P. Reilley of the Bir- mingham Travel Bureau speak on her visit to Russia last Novem- ber. Mrs. Reilley was one of the groups chosen by the National Travel Corp. to tour behind the Iron Curtain. Mrs. Albert Henry Private service for Mrs, Albert (Mary) Henry, 73, of 663 Ann St. Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Cre- mation will follow at White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Henry was found dead at home by her daughter Saturday. An autopsy is being performed to determine the cause of death. A native of County Cork, Ire- land, she had lived in Birming. ham since 1920, She is survived by two daugh- ters) Mrs. Frank Wadsworth of Northville, N. Y. and Mrs. Thom- as Haldane of 3075 Maple Rd., Bloomfield Township; a son, John P. of Detroit; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. | | will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the/E frustrated mother who took the could find no evidence of forced |)’ shim after a visit to the where Mikoyan was given a dinner entry Fire Inspector Marshall Rob- Inson, during the investigation, picked up an apron hanging on the wall. From it fell a piece of highly inflammable phos. phorus. It burst Into Names on the floor. Robinson found a doz en other pleces of the chemical In the kitchen. Yesterday Det. Sgt. Glenn Me- Queen visited the restaurant to speak to Manfredini. A fire erupt- ed inca box of napkins and in a metal canopy above the stove MeQueen tried placing a pan | under phosphorus that was drip- | ping to the floor Tt burned through his overcoat, sult jacket | and shirt sleeve He war treat | ed for burng at a hospital McQueen said a suspect named | by Manfredini was questioned but | denied arson, The detective said | the probe would continue today | Cigar Prices Advance BERLIN — West Germany pro duced 4,700,000,000 cigara in 1957, or 3 per cent more than in 1956 A trend to higher-priced cigars was maintained, and the total value of production increased per cent to $22,000,000. i) Nation Generally Warmer | , and the sentence was accepted campus of the University of Call fornia at Los Angeles and a lunch- eon as guest of the World Alfairs Council visit Mikoyan's three day to Sentence Achenbach to 10-15 Year Term PETOSKEY, ) — Former in- surance broker Paul Achen. bach today was sentenced to 10 to 15 years in prison for man- slaughter in the death of hia 78- year-old mother, Mrs. Clara Achenbach * | Circult Judge Edward WW. Fen- lon made no recommendation * withoul comment by the defend. ant. * * * Achenbach, 46, had been charged with first degree murder and accused of fatally beating the woman whore bedy was found in her apartment last No- vernber, Authorities said she had been dead at least six months, came es Freeze Hits North Florida By The Associated Press More frosty weather kept Flor-| ida citrus growers on the alert Monday after another all - night; vigil to protect their crops Strong winds fanned cold air from the southern Appalachians into the Southeast, Temperatures dropped to below freezing in northern parts of Florida ‘ Generally warmer weather pret * The Weather Full ( 8 Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Consider-! able elogdiness foday through Tuesday High teday AS and flow tonight ‘M#-9fi High Thesday wi Wind south te southweet #-13 miles an hour * * | Tedeay in Pontiac Lowe t Cruiperatutce preceding & fim 1a At & am Wind Vedas it 734 mph [Mree tier Beoutiy Ben a@ta Moiday at $8 9b yom Bin tiees Tuesday af 8 aan Moon seta Monday af 8 27 pom Moon rises Tuesday at 107) a in Sunday in Panthae ‘as recorded downtown) Highest temperature A Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather- Clouds Qne Year Ago In Pontiac Highea! temperature 4 Loweat temperature ae 14 Mean temperature a4 Weather—Falr Highest and Leweat Temperatures This Date in #1 Vears f3 in 1800 -1@ in 1018 Dewntown Temperatures 6am ., 18 liam 4 TAM ...4.. 20 12m 26 6am,. + D8 lpm........ 26 9 am 18 10am 20 Sunday's Temperature Chart Alpene 7 90 Marquette 27°«21 Baltimore 34°18 Memphis i) 41 Bismarck 38 13 Miami Beach 66 48 Brownsville 73) 62 Milwaukee 32° («19 Buffalo ‘6 94 Minneapolis 20 16 Charleston 49 32 New Orleans 0 42 Chicago 3) 08 New York O95 Cineinnatl 40° 28 Omaha o8 13 Cleveland 24° (139) Pellaton i Denver 60 20 Phoenix 2: 48 Detroit 26 18 Piltaburgh aa 14 Duluth 24 «18 «Bt Laue 444 Port Worth 61 48 8. Francisco Go 60 Gr, Rapide 27 14 8 B Marie Jo 17 Houghton 71°18 Trav. Clty 31 14 Jnckeonville 64 97 Washington 44 98 Keness City 47 31 Beatile aa Los Angeles 76 62 Tampa 9 38 % ee A jacposs Northern sections the middle also warmed considerably Sunday | swith temperatures in’ the [rqads and isolated villages in north: jeast jworked for two hours to take an {hospital from the village of Coly ‘in Aberdeenshire {boy drowned in the flooded New vailed in most of the nation, Skies! were mostly clear to partly cloudy | except for rain areas In the Pa-| cific Northwest and snow flurries | At Hooks manager, Lakeland, Fla., Homer fF, Florida Clarus Conumission said he didn't believe the damage to crops thus far was too extensive. Tlowever, he said, another two oor three nights of freezing Weather could be danger jous, Most citrus men, he said, had heen warned in advance of the ‘eold A warming trend was veported in New England and from the Great Lakes region through the ower Mississippi Valley and east- ward geross the Appalachians into Atlantic states Texas 70a in southern areas, Southerly ‘Missourl and across Kansas to along the eustern slopes of the Rockies in Colorado. Readings were in the 50s and 60s. LONDON — The worst freeze in 12 years coated Britain with ice and snow today. Tt left a trail of stranded motorists. Heavy snow fell jn the interior of the continent, Isolating several villages in Humgary and causing floods in French towns along the River Selne.. The British ship Benvrackle hit a mine in the North Sea, but was making for a German port under its own power in heavy seas, Drifts up to 2Q feet high clogged Scotland Two snowplows expectant mother 10 miles to a A 10- year - old by Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association — of America. Two men identified as Zoltan trance when Mikoyan arrived | | of disorderly conduct. ee of the egg-throwing incl- dent | * * * | Mikoyan's first day here was @ jfar ery from hla reception in San | Francisco where he was greeted by| and were arrested on a charge | This Tuesday. He has to rule on whether Gen- \esee County Prosecutor Jerome F. /O'Rourke presented enough evi- |dence to link Thompson, 41, with Laszlo, 20, and Miklos Laborcry, |the Aug. 3 burning of the Latreille 2, threw eggs at the hotel en- (Dry Cleaners just outside of Flint. * * * evidence, according to |Thompson's attorney, James E. a scintilla of proof and “relied upon inference built jference’ to pat Thompson as an accomplice at the fire which cost Kierdorf his life. baby out of a longing for a child of her own. x * Thousands of tips were checked Free Press Editor upon in-| lsclous on the second floor of the! ~ iAuto Flectrie Shop, 367 S. lan angry ege-throwing erowd al’ . ; the airport Street Signs Display Inspiration to Rectitude | SHULLSBURG, Wis. uy — If you ‘need inspiration in this old lead) mining town, just look at the street Victim of Fumes Still on Critical List eesecet names include: Virtu A 31-year-old Waterford Town- Justice, Truth, Judgment, Mercy, | Given New Post | DETROIT — Pulitzer Prize- winner Lee Hills, executive editor lof the Detroit Free Press, has been 1 It appeared that Mikoyan was Haggerty of Detroit, contained “‘not named executive editor of Knight Newspapers, Inc. * * * | newspaper group, announced yes- terday Hills would have supervi- sion of the Washington bureau and also will continue as executive ed- itor of the Free Press and the Miami Herald, * * * In his new position, Hills suc- ceeds Basil L. Walters, who has become editor of the Chicago Daily News. Knight sold the Daily News to Field Enterprises, Inc., publishers of the Chicago Sun- (ship man who was found uncon- Peace, Wisdom, Faith and Charity:| Times, last week. John S. Knight, president of the out, hundreds of persons questioned and many square miles of territory searched. A special telephone was set up by police to receive calls from anyone who thought he had any information about the Case. It was on this phone that the tip wag delivered. charge of the New York FBI of- fice, said {t was ‘‘a heartwarming H. G. Foster,, special agent in Trial to Open © Accuse Ex-Convict Here in Slaying of Texan After Struggle Gangster Killing male or female.”’ Turkey has a woman military air pilot: She is the widow of a Turkish air. force. officer. Her name is Sabiha Gokcen. taser, Re . : te va, Hae, REMINGTON Electric Shever RECONDITIONED —While Y Fm gi A Wait r pede el pl ~< . _ — $950 @ =~ Parts ~&) ye ; OU 3 ¢ ADJUSTED BLT, E e STERILIZED 4/ 14 \ E @ CLEANED SIMMs €. tory represe: store every week, sae ea Electric Shavers —Main Floor SIMMS Main Fleor | CLOTHING SPECIALS Tonite and Tuesday Only The prosecution is expected to open its case tomorrow against |Demitrios Tsermengas, accused gangster prince in a Commerce Township home 13 months ago. * bd * | : of the murder of a self-styled Texas, Chief Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor said he expected the second-degree murder trial to experience to s¢e the close co- operation between the Police De- perce and the FBI go before Circuit Judge Frank L. | Doty on schedule. He praised newspapers for hav-, o i _ ‘Tsermengas, a 39-year-old ex- ne : very important part) oss Sank hen Gave Tex., and now of Ecorse, has Newspapers published the for-| samitt ealghasting! Geereel Reams mula the baby was supposed (0 but said it was accidental. be fed. Sagi-) naw, Saturday morning was im- proved but still on the critical list at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Edward Shaw, of 6401 Elizabeth Lake Rd., an employe of the shop, was lying on the 2nd floor of the | shop where co-workers found him) when they arrived to open up at: S aim. Saturday The crime rate in Oakland Coun-| ty rose for the second consecutive year, according to figures released over while working late Friday | today by the Oakland County Sher- night. jitt's Department. Police said when Shaw passed) Bright spots in the department's out he fell into the liquid, inhaled, Year-end report were the decrease the fumes and suffered body burns,|!) serious crimes and the drop in idrownings for 1958 Apparently Shaw was over: | come fy fumes from a can. Of | metal solvent which he tipped There were 861 theft complaints | during 1938 compared to 634 tn | Pythians to Hold County Theft ter than average mark for law en- forcers handling theft complaints. Grand larcenies went from 155 & year ago to 207 in 1958. Of the 207, detectives closed 44 cases. The number of simple larcenies rose from 80 to 104. Detectives solved about 23 per cent of these) This makes a total of 275 cases solved out of the 861 reported, or Rate Up But Major Crimes Drop ifrom Texas feared for their lives with one of three guns he carried. * * * a known narcotics peddler and in- volved in several murders, was shot in the head as the three wrestled away the pistols from him. His body was found in a grave) near Alpena last September by, Texas Rangers and Michigan State, Police detectives acting on a tip! given to Rangers in Texas. for them. They ranged in age from 19 months to eight years. In normal years, at least 8 per cent of the drownings occur from June 1 to Sept. 1. The lake patrols nearly reversed this figure, with only 52 per cent occurring in that span, Irons pointed out. U.S. Uses Most Nickel He said he and two companions'— after Kean, following a day of E drinking, threatened to kill them /— Kean, who Texas police said was' E Girls’ and tindies’ BLOUSES Reg, $1.29 te $2.00 Value =, OT Choice GIRLS' SIZES 4 to l4i—in wash ‘n Wears, nylona, dacfons, lace trims, some appliques in whites, solids, 3 Exbina stripes. : Resistant Children’s : Sleepers 2-Piece Style Sises 1 to 4 * * * Rounding out the final report, ' the department recorded a drop in, OTTAWA — An estimated 60 per cent of the free world’s 1957. nickel production—which amounted | Speech Contest for Students | The Pontiac Knights of Pythias | Lodwe 19 ia accepting applications ifrom high schoo} students in Pon- ltine Interested in competing for, [honors in the THth Annual Knights: | ‘students from their speech teach: | lof Pythias speaking contest | Fer, and in turn writing to the lodge. | Applications may be obtained by! f A&W. neon St I * * * Deadline for filing is March 30 The subject for this year's speeches is My Favorite Charac- iter In History.” “The Pontiac lodge winner will | be eligible to compete In a dis- | trict elimination contest with the | finaliat going on to state and sec: | tional contests, | | The finals will be held in Denver, (Colo, in August. First prize will be a $1,500 scholarship. Other prizes will be $750 and $500 scholarships and three for $250. Past commander Sherman Ran- dell has been appointed the chair- man for this year's contest at the Pontiag lodge. Means What He Says WINOOSKI, Vt, (UPI) —When| Joseph Sprano took over as chief, of police here, he promised “there will be no partiality or excep tions’ for violators of road safety laws, A week later, his son, Wil- winds | jspread the warm alr into central, River at Cheshire. liam, 22, was fined $5 for speeding. Bo ad) Won ‘approximately 32 per cent closed. Nineteen persons drowned dut-' In 1957 q total of 227 cases were ‘|ing the 12-month period, compared closed out of the 634 reported, for a to 22 in 1957, paralleling the drop) mark of 37 per cent. ‘in traffic fatalities from 103 in 1957. * to 935 last year. ‘RECESSION SPURRED THEFTS' A growing population and several months of economic recession dur- jing the first half of 1958 were the major cause of the Increase in thefts, Sheriff Frank W. Trons said. * * * “In any year where unemploy- ment is unusually high for any period, we experience a rise in larcenies and break-ins,’ he said. The totals were swelled by minor thefts of food and clothing, Irons said, “Our department handled only twe murder cases inst year, compared to seven in 1957 and three in 1936," “The increase in thefts brought a decrease {n closed cases mainly because our detective bureau staff is by and large the same size it was iri 1957, the sheriff said. "The men have done a good job consid- ering the increased respons{bil- ities."" to; CASES SOLVED There were 380 break-ins report- ed last year. Each was investi- ¥ * | Undersheriff Donald Francis isaid, “Our actual gains may be jrealized during the newt few imonths.”” | | “Perhaps we will apprehend several suspects this month who will confeas qo having been fe- | sponsible for a desen burgtartes last year,”’ Francie sald. ‘Thos we would be adding considerably te Cur total of cast, closed and improving our percentage.” The drowning figures are much better than expected, All of the 22 victims in 1957 drowned between June and September. Authorities were alarmed early last summer ‘by the fact that seven persons had drowned before June 1. PATROL HELPED Then the special sheriff's lake patrol went into operation for the first year in the county's history. It patrolled lakes from June through September, In that perted, in which 2 had drowned the preceding year, the toll was cut to 10. Twe freak ac- cldents contributed the remain- ing two victims in October, | gated and 207 were officially closed by the end of the year, for an average of slightly under 38 per, { cent solved. Four hundred were re- ported in 1957, Federal law enforcement agen- cies state that 33 per cent is a bet- Records show that boating acci- dents accounted for six drownings, while four victims were swimmers ranging in age from 14 to 2, Nine of the victims were chil- dren who fell into water too deep the number of jail prisoners by 430, ; In 1958, 6,350 passed through the Oakland County Jail, compared to 6,800 the year before. to about 490,000,000 pounds, a new, record — was delivered to the United States. The previous record , was set in 1956 with 450,000,000, pounds. ed | | iFE 1s . ‘a . | @ Plastic Feet @ Pastel Colors @ Long Wearing Fine cotton shirt, a down , back. Ike’s Message Faces Issues President Dwicut D. Exsewnowsr’s annual message to Congress on the current state of the union, produces a wide variety of reactions just as nearly all Presidential messages do, Democrats yawned. Republicans applauded. x « * ' Of course, the Democrats are paid to disparage and the GOP is committed to support. And there’s. some justification for both. Sharp critics of ANYTHING can stifle an actual physical yawn or do so symbolically on al- most anything you do. On the other hand, it’s equally true that there is real cause for enthusi- asm over some of the President's pronouncements. He speaks of the fact that we enter 1959 on an upward economic trend and this has not been true for the past few years. This is definite cause for rejoicing, what- ever the party. And his present observation is based on the facts and figures and not on faith and trust. x *« * He asks Congress to “cut the cost of government” which he says will be possible under the budget he will submit shortly. If the Democrats yawn at this, they do so with a clear understanding and full knowledge of their own intent, for they control Congress and this objective can only be achieved with their support. The taxpayers want it. That’s for sure. And this applies to the smallest and the largest and includes every last, Tom, Dick and Harriet in be- tween. Ask your best friends — or your worst enemy—and see. xk * * Once again, the President faces integration in the South. He pledges to uphold the law as prom- ulgated by the Supreme Court and states he will bend every effort to bring about equal and joint school- ing for whites and blacks. This will bring a resounding blast from the rock-ribbed Democratic states in the South which have no such intention and which are dedicated to keeping the colored people as isolated and segregated as they can. Make no mistake about that. x *k * The President asked for action by the committee on the matter of “cor- ruption, racketeering and abuse of powers and trust” in the administra- tion of union affairs. This committee was controlled by the Democrats in the last Congress and the whole thing was bottled up by those in con- trol. Eisenhower wants the group to become active in 1959. x *&* * The question of inflation was. touched upon and again labor and management were asked to hold down price advances. He suggested a committee for “price stability” but this newspaper holds little hope for any definite results unless the Gov- ernment proposes to institute a freeze of some sort on everything. x *« * He asks new farm legisla- tion to cut Government outlays in agriculture price supports and this will be a hotly disputed ques- tion, whenever and wherever it appears. The President warns against the frightful costs of an armament race. This SINGLE DIVISION THE PONTIAC PRESS ~ Ee” Hee Trade Matk 7 Resecu. doun A. iter, civecusssPomget Aguteat dverusne Te” RE of Government takes more than half of all the tax dollars you pay. In other words, were all defense to be scrapped, income taxes could — be cut more than fifty per cent. It’s unthinkable, but it shows the tremendous cost that the constant Russian threat is inflicting upon the taxpayers of this country. x * * By and large we feel the President has faced the issues of the times squarely. He hasn’t avoided the disputatious issues or skirted around the edges of controversial matters. He lived up to the demands of the office. ————————__— Tux Pilgrims have been thoroughly debunked in a current magazine arti- cle, and now one wonders if we haven’t been taking that tale about the Plymouth Rock for granite. ———&x————_—____ A “wotr” that is probably most obnoxious to girls is the one that has lost his “fangs.” QE ——————= A FAILuRE is a person who never works unless he feels like doing so. The Man About Town It’s a Good Sport - Bird Feeders Report Much Pleasure and Satisfaction Straight: What the drunk driver goes only when the road curves. The sunflower seeds and cracked corn at the bird feeder of Mrs. Carl Anderson of Sylvan Lake, find daily patrons in a flock of evening grosbeaks. The male is yellow, with black and white wings, and nearly the size of a starling, suggestive of an overgrown goldfinch. The sparrows outwit the blue jays in a strategic manner at the bird feeding board of Mrs. Lawrence Predmore of Birmingham. Of course the jays try to hog: the whole menu, and easily drive the sparrows away. But a pair of the latter will pester the jays-into flying after them for some distance—while dozens of other sparrows gorge themselves. Then a new pair takes over. “Our squirrels are thrifty and saving,” phones Mrs, Beverly Arundsen of Rochester, who says a pair who still have several bushels of nuts and acorns stored under their garage floor, now try to steal all of their food from her bird feeder. “If you think the robins go south fm winter, you should put ouf something for them to eat when the ground is covered with snow,” phones Mrs. Allen Giass of Lake Orion, who says she counts 20 or more every day. A tame canary that escaped from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Coulter of Walled Lake last fall, has returned in a badly bedraggied condition — but sings better than ever before. There’s sorrow in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Roswell of Keego Harbor. Their parakeet escaped the other night, and its frozen body was found on their front steps less than an hour later. A rather unique suggestion comes from Farrand Fenton of Waterford, who writes, “Why not drive out this cold weather by starting your baseball contest?” | eeemmememenee More Texas weather news comes from Jim Appleby who writes that his car radiator was OK until he reached that state, when it froze up. Letters bring nominations for the old- est twins in Michigan as of Howell, 95 on June 3, last. Verbal Orchids to- Edmund Harrison Tayler of 17 Bellevue Ave.; 87th birthday. , EB. P. Tinney of 749 Owego Drive; 8th birthday. ae 3. ree Lee a WORK/ S—— | But Look Who'd Be Holding the Key _ David Lawrence Says: Ike’s Message Tells Off Russia WASHINGTON—The most sensa- tional section of President Eisen- hower’s address to Congress last Friday seems not to have made the big headlines in many news- papers in this region. Yet the fact that he said what he did, particu- larly while Anas- tas Mikoyan is in this country, can hardly be without con- siderable signifi- cance, especially LAWRENCE to the men in the Kremlin—if they really care to learn what is actu- ally blocking a Soviet-American understanding today. * * * For the President's statement by any President of the United States since the close of World War If. Here are Mr. Eisenhow- er’s exact words: “We cannot build peace cept within itself for self-enforcing mechanisms. Indeed, the demon- strated disregard of the Commv- nists of their own pledges is one of the greatest obstacles to success | in substituting the rule of law for rule by force." x * This is the most severe indict- ment of the Communists that any Western government has made in Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Some raindrops fall upon the ground . , . Some kiss a window. pane ,.. All are the small com- ponents of . . , The blessing that is rain. . . A rain can be quite treacherous . . . When it becomes and such ,,. ittle raindrops by the: ..» Are not a cruel lot . . . They are the sprinklers for a lawn. , . Or for a garden taey cual The thirst of corn noch... of corn and wheat ,.. make ‘ther- ... A little less of heat... are the recent years. On top of it has just come nevertheless a grandiose proposal from Moscow that peace talks over the Berlin issue be held with the 28 governments allied in the last war. Its the same old game of presenting in a spectacular man. ner to the world the picture of a Seviet government supposedly ‘anxious to-talk peace and make peace. But there’s no evidence that the Communist regime will respect whatever written agree- ment may be consummated. President Eisenhower realizes, of course, that the United States, to satisfy world opinion, must exhibit a constant willingness to talk. He adds, therefore, in his message: * * * “Yet, step by step, we must strengthen the institutions of peace —a peace that rests upon justice— & peace that depends upon a deep knowledge and clear understanding by all peoples, including our own, of the causes and possible conse- quences of failure in this great purpose.” So, with no reliance to he placed on the word of the per- fidious Conmuunist regime, the real chance for a change in the whole picture may have to come through economic pressures from western Europe that will eventu- ally cause a successful uprising inside the Soviet Union and the captive countries contiguous to It. Only when a free government emerges in Moscow, whose word can be trusted, will ‘‘the world be made safe for democracy.” The principle is as sound today as when President Wilson expoynded it in his war message of April 1917, (Copyright, 1958) Dr. William Brady Says: To Be Labeled ‘Square’ Is a Mark of Character “My friends all think I am a square,” writes a Midwest reader, “and tell me pop” (the reader names a popular brand of colored, sweetened carbo- nated beverage) “will ruin my stomach, Do you consider three bottles a week too much?” The reader's friends think he is a square because he is qa teetotaler. Now there’s a DR. BRADY line thefe somewhere beyond which the reader's befuddled friends should not be permitted to go. It may be that they they wouldn't think of going beyond the line when they are not under the in- fluence of the narcotic. When they call him a square he should either call them nitwits or remove himself from their com- pany. A good many teenage boys and girls become drinkers because they haven't enough character to say “No, thank you.” Espe- clally when they are in the com- pany of older or more adven- tureus ones who haye already learned to drink. What they need in such situations but rarely have nowadays is the strength one gets by taking the A man prominent in public life in Washington necessarily attends many social functions. He says he is an abstainer. But does he say “No, thank you” when he is im vited to drink “T am 33 and my hair is turning gray. Can you advise me how to keep my hair from getting gray?” (J. F. W.) Answer — Many readers have reported that the jodin ration has even restored some of the nat- ura] color to their hair. For the pamphiet The Iodin Ration send self-addressed, stamped enve- lope. Bigned letters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady, if a stamped self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Presa, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1969) pe a i‘ Voice of the People 9 \ ‘Let’s Wake Up and Fight — for Our Greatest Heritage’ — Advocate says we don’t need communism in the U.S. but a great dose of socialism would certainly help. I guess he must like high taxes, because that’s the only thing socialism can give us. It’s just common sense that every time we ask the Government (and that’s no one but ourselves) for something, our taxes must go up. * x * Besides, when the Government does it, it deprives tax-paying free enterprise from doing it, so we not only spend our tax money foolishly, but deprive ourselves of additional tax money. It's a proven fact free enterprise can usually do the same job for less money *. x *« * Socialism is just one step closer to communism, and that would really make the Russians happy. Let's wake up, Americans, and fight for the one thing that made this country the greatest in the world — FREE ENTERPRISE. Parents Discuss Education Funds In reply to pay-as-you-go school plan, it would be wonderful if possible, but we never ask if more money will help out!! » We have paid taxes for quite a few years and just now one of our children will soon enter school. Some way should be figured out whereby all families ef school children pay taxes. Then the full burden wouldn't rest on just a few families. The greater percentage of property owners don’t at present have any interest in schools unless they have little ones in school. x * * Another reason taxpayers are against increasing the school system {s that the architects seem to dream up such fantastic crea- tions. If schools were built of more simple design and the chil- dren taught more fundamentals, the general public would probably be all out for more and better schools. Taxpayer and Mother of 3 In the near future we in Water- ford will be asked to approve another four million for new schools. We realize we must pro- vide proper educational facilities for those of school age and de- mand we receive full value for our tax dollars. I suggest we form a citzens committee or league as has been done in other areas with ex- cellent results to work toward better education. We can't. sit and let the chips fall where they may. Ag individuals our sugges- tions or complaints fal] on deaf ears, but as a united organiza- tion, we can accomplish many | things. We must take an active interest. Noted educators are appealing to parents to become active in a program for better education. Let's get the ball rolling in Waterford, Can we hear from others? Concerned Parent Says to Practice What We Preach Why doesn’t The Press close on legal holidays? Not a Hypocrite THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Ye shall fear every man his mother, and his father, and keep my sabbaths: | am the Lord your God.—Leviticus 19:3. * * *® As we keep or break the Sab- bath, we nobly save or meanly jose the last best hope by which man rises.—Abraham Lincotn. Young, Modern American Raises Questions About Proposal Despite the singular aspects of his proposal, it's believed Dr. Ke- vorkian is acting in good faith and is desirous of observing high stan- dards of ethics associated with his profession. * * * However, wouldn't a practice of that nature -esult in a weak link in the golden chain of trust that now exists between physi- clan and patient, who believes a docter is sworn to support life to the best of his means and ability? God gives life and He takes it. Although only con- demned criminals and volunteers would be used, even capital pun- ishment Is debatable, so how can the medical profession accept this procedure without some mental reservation? x * * Sometimes an innocent victim is condemned. Can the medical profession accept the laws of man which are subject to error and gamble with the possible outright violation of the professional oath and also the Fifth Commandment? Even suicide cannot be justified in the eyes of God. * -§ »& This isn’t intended to discount the doctor's proposal as being cruel inhuman and ungodly. There is merit to every suggestion that can be applied constructively and ethi- cally. It's believed the proposal can stand a cross census of public opinion and further discussion among members of the medical profession, Cyril D. Savage 9183 Camelot Smiles If you keep the proper check on yourself, you're more likely to cash in, x * * At least poor handwriting keeps folks who get your letters from spotting poor spelling. x * * A Michigan judge sent a man to jail for being habitually lazy, Gosh, are our jails big enough? * * * An Illinois woman sued her husband for divorce and alimony on their S0th anniversary. A golden opportunity? x « * It's easy, so we read, to hold an alligator’s mouth closed with one hand. But it might be a snap for the ‘gator, too. * * * In the South police seized a bunch of lottery tickets. They weren't taking any chances, * * * We don’t care héw early a man picks up a friend to go to work, just so he doesn't blow his horn. Case Records of a Psychologist: Even Dogs Notice how Fritz developed his intense phobia. And then see how he passed it along by contagion to the other dogs in the neighborhood. We humans tend to foist our negative atti- tudes, prejudices and fears, upon our children in similar manner, unléss we take care and definitely teach them a positive outlook. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE CASE A - 425: Fritz, aged 13, is a collie dog who lives across the road from our farm home in In- diana. He belongs to mm Uncle Vick and fa one day the light- Learn, Transmit Fear Belle, who lives at the corner and belongs to 96-year-old Grand- pa Miller, is also terrified by thunder and lightning. She also runs inside the house and hides under the bed during a thunderstorm. * bd * And our two dogs — Sandy and Botch — likewise ar@ scared and demand to be let inside the house when e storm is brewing. They, too, try to jump into my lap if I am seated or tremble and press against my leg when I am stand- g. Yet they have never had any firsthand experience with lightning. No, they simply learned to dread a thunderstorm because they caught their fear by contagion from Fritz! Put up a bold front. At least ACT brave, for the sake of your youngsters, or you may fetter them throughout their entire lives by. _ When Captain Cook first set foot on some of the islands in the Pacific, he found the birds so tame that he and his men could knock them over with sticks. * * * But after a few gunshots at the birds, the latter became fearful. Years later, travelers found the birds still afraid of mankind, even though the parent birds had died in the interval. For the terror that Captain Ceok's men originally engen- dered, had been passed along Alwave Write to Dr George W_ Crane cate of The Pontiac Press. Pontiac, Ste We cover ‘iy, = 1 | | | a. Vd WIAU 3) THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 Hal Boyle Says: Today’s Roads Are Saltier Than the Food NEW YORK (AP) — Things a,for hypochondriacs. columnist might never know if he|viruses affecting the human sys-) yearly in the United States? didn’t open his mail: | |tem were discovered in the last 10) * * * _ This has been a great decade Deahe And did you know 730 mil-| Invancicntdayelesit wasvante WORRIED OVER DEBTS? saa pensive luxury. afford regardless of how much or how many you ewe. Eighty new lion prescriptions now are fled | x-| is | y,| makes 125 stops, and delivers 900)are named for the districts where HOUSEKEEPING WORK-SAVING LAUNDRY PAIR Hamilton Gas Dryer itive temperature for all ftabrics Ne a 6 satin smooth drun Hamilton Auto. Washer Choice Full size - Preferred agitator washer action. sep Brahe nas ene 3OIo vel INSTALLED FREE GIBSON 14 cu. ft. REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER Automatic defrost, 75 pound true freezer, big vegetable crisper, deep roomy! door shelves $ It's automatic free delivery and service Regular $366.95 NO MONEY DOWN With Trade GIBSON 14 cu. ft. FOOD FREEZER Holds over 448 pounds of frozen food Free $150.00 food warranty protection | year free service, 5 year warranty. = ‘259° The GOOD HOUSEKEEPI OSES, Open Monday and Friday ‘til 9 P. M. 51 West Huron Street FREE DELIVERY FE 4-1555 he r i i tip over every time you set itjwho observed: down, cang joked at British fondness for thing.”’ tea breaks. Now more than 60 per sprinkled on icy roads in America’ cent of U.S. physician has made of which drink. Who on earth would want a pill like that? family has a had buy him a special reclining chair, Mois tax deductible—but only if up in Congress the rest of the family stays out of the chair. If @ guy from the In- ternal Revenue Service calls at QUEEN COLBY your home, don't let him sit in it “That's why their parents have to “For every thing |you have missed, you have gained; * * * something else; During World War IJ, Mrs, ian optometrist, ‘on the new board Ike Plans — industria] workers tion last Nqvember, Short Talks | NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED | containers. jthey are grown. ONE PLACE TO PAY | Apt definition: “‘Tact,” says The high cost of loving: “Few Member American Aucecisiien ef Credit Counsellors Grace Downs, operator of an air things today,’ says Shannon Fife, WASHINGTON (APi—Preside caspase ae hostess school, ‘is the ability to “are more expensive than a girl po) ke Pest ent rolled. Eisenhower reportedly plans a se HOUSTON (AP)—A negro house} wife takes her place on the Hous-; ton School Board tonight, the first: and for every Negro elected to public office he thing you gain, you lose some- since Reconstruction days. Ameri- Charles E, White, wife of § will be sworn in ‘four women and three men. Houston, the largest school sys-’ tem still segregated in the South, | COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE It’s NU-VISION in PONTIAC for BETTER SIGHT ... composed of | than is used on food, |have coffee breakg on the job. Ever wonder ubout the milk-| Speaking of tea, did you know! . . one ips mare gee voles to. If you are unable ay your payments, debts or bills when due, see | man’s job?. Well, the average| |there are 3,000 varieities of this S f abou or the e incum- . MICHIGAN CREDIT cBUNSELLORS and arrange for payments you can milkman covers 25 miles a da pa, Like French wines, they) erlies O | bent. Dr. John Glen, in an elec-| aes = Ae arte of o maintain eur ewn laber- atery insuring fine qual- ity, and expert werk- manship under the con- stant supervision of trained technicians. Fer miner repairs, pew glasses er contact lenses, you'll get fast, courteous Cheese from an unlimited selee- tion ef frames te improve your ap- pearance. en students Lucien Freud, 36, The President and Vice Presi- dent Nixon have agreed to the di- rect appeal, hurdling the heavily Democratic Congress. EKienhower’s 15-minute televi- sion-radio messages, it was dis-! closed over the weekend, will deal | with the cost of living, adequacy | of space and defense programs | and other key issues as they come’ developed a pill| yeast and plant extracts he claims will keep you ober no matter how heavily you at a crossing. * * Odd ruling: * if a member of your heart and you Powell told him. ing regard to your pounds ($14) for careless driving | and one pound ($2.80) for failing | to give a pedestrian right-of-way | “I think you are temperamen. | tally unfitted to drive a car,” ought to see a psychiatrist, Hav- you will see the peint of that.” “Let 9 Years | ol Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” make a point without making an who is free fer dinner '* ries of shart tenting fireside (aks service at NU-VISION! Hours: Daily 9 to S$ Wed. and Sat. 9 to | Evenings by App' enemy ff your doy has an annaving a nie 4 directly . Ue public De F d’ d d ae Ee maton & SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS Cee nate pit of Anais sur SEE OF pipet of hn este programs fee eronesen U1ge Fras bh Pintiye mikte Wan “de ce wae a shoebox top n the pettom of biting his ovn nails im pybfe, you durine inelnext) (wo ents to Get Psychoanalyzed your shopping bag, the bag won't can cure him by giving Impl a , new canine chewing gum, The * * * LONDON (UPI) — A judge seven-inch-long sticks are beef Eisenhower has told close asso- jas advised the grandson of psy- | — flavored and won't stick to dog, Ciates the battle he will wage for: choanalyst Sigmund Freud to get | % @0D rug, or furniture, his program will be the most en-| psychoanalyzed. Another new product: a German ergetic since he was elected. Magistrate Frank Powell fined | an artist, five | ~ Offices in Principal Michigan Cities NU-VISION Optical Studios 109 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 2-2895 “1 think you name, I think iy either! In some Middle Furopean coun MILD Cc tries during the T&th century, ac- cording fo a historical study by CHEESE lb. the Bon Amu Institute, matrimony 78 NORTH SAGINAW, ae held an unusual reward Wfter ‘ marriage a girl no longer had to PETER’S LEAN, MEATY bathe, Some women today believe a wedding ring gives them the PU RE PORK ight to show up at breakfast in 4 sloppy robe and wearing thet yesterday's face STEAK A recent survey of 5,000 Ameri cain husbands showed that three out of four help their wives with LEAN PORK housecleaning chores _ The young generation: “Many a ECK Cc teenager has driving ambition,” points out actor Walter Slezak BON ES lb hide the keys to the family car" —_ Me a a ee os eee * * * EXTRA LEAN FARM FRESH This Valuable Coupon Entities the Life-is-so-unfair-to men note GROUND BEEF LA RGE EGGS Bearer to a 1-Lb. Limit Fresh aA man is considered medically | E Us GOOD C obese if his fat exceeds 20 per cent , R vi of his body weight: but a woman Lbs. a 29 45° Doz. B we lb. isn't peueri as obese unless she ; | | | is more than v5 per cent fat U ER * WED. With Meat Purchase It was Re te Waldo Emerson “What's it like up there?” obviously make the most of the very limited space inside qr satellites. It’s not a place to spend a week end, that’s for sure. The cold is murderous, the air is shot with deadly rays and the low pressure problems are out of this world. cosmic How do we know? Frem the kind of signals sent back to earth by a special radio transmitter inside the satellite. Two Bell Telephone inventions are being used in American satellites. Both of these inventions were developed to improve your telephone service. One of the devices is the transistor... a mighty mite, no bigger than a bean, that amplifies the radio signals. Transistors, which are used in certain types of telephones, The other telephone invention is the solar battery. First used experimentally to power a telephone line in a rural area, it is now supplying power for the radio in one of our satellites. Or, to be more accurate, it is drawing power from the sun, so that it remains active many months after ordinary batteries are lifeless. The transistor and the solar battery are small in size but huge in importance. The Bell Telephone research that produced them is constantly seeking new ways to keep your telephone service the best in the world. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY : THE ) PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 1 } 2, 1959 3 Thmep Seite j ti ip USA. | RUSSIA aot a ee Legion Men Hail Torre USA} suse SESS had de Coa tdi Pam Visit Jailed Newswoman Out of One Hoar of Work I NEW ‘59 WAGONS Roped $] 99 500 Mi 6-3900 in her radio-TV column. ot American Legion Founders paid a call on columnist Marie Torre in Hudson County Jail Sunday. * * * Col, William McIntyre of New York City, president of the group, presented Miss Torre with a letter | bailing her for going to jail rather than reveal the ource of an item McIntyre was accompanied by Capt. George Maines of Flint, a. teen ee ae a yg syndicated New York Herald writer ihotdla arp fei pat of the Statue of Liberty.” Miss Torre received a 10 - day jail sentence last week when she refused to. divulge the source of an item about Judy Garland. $2.38 | 6.66 Rubles rt Te oe annual sale 4 rs seamless stockings Average Take-Home Pay Per Hour Michigan Negro to Test Airline | Will Enter Next Class _ for Pilot Training, May _ Set Precedent work twice as long to buy a 76 cents—about one-third of his hourly take-home pay, while the his hour's pay. DENVER i» — The Colorado Anti - Discrimination Commission says a Negro aviator from Mich- igan has advised he intends to enter Continental Airlines’ next pilot training class. * * Ld \Government, lin recent years. CONTRAST—If Russia's Ivan wants meat for dinner, he has to pound of it as an American work- er does, The U. S. worker pays Soviet worker pays almost five rubles, about three-quarters of At the request of the Japanese 2,000 head of Aus-| tralian dairy cattle will be shipped to Japan before March 31, 1959. Japan has aready imported 5,600 head of dairy cattle from Australia Next Envoy fo Cuba May Be Career Man WASHINGTON (AP) The next United States ambassador to Cuba probably will be a career diplomat, diplomatic sources in- dicated today. * * * Earl E. T. Smith, who had been in disfavor with Fidel Castro's revolutionary movement, resigned Saturday as American ambassa- dor to Cuba. * * * The resignation came unexpect- edly, only a few days after Smith had returned to Havana from a series of State Department consul- tations here. ‘Owls, Falcons to Scare ‘Em Out SPRINGFIELD, II. Matthews, engineer and wild life Starlings Cure: | x * * The Illinois State Journal, porting Matthews’ idea, said: dusk one of the owls would be it cage to entice its mate back when its starling elimination job is com-) pleted. * * “The falcons would be used by policemen patrolling the streets about an hour before sunset. “The falcons could be trained, according to. Matthews, to sweep down upon the starlings and scare ithem from the vicinity, after which ithey could return to their perches upon the officers arms. * * * ‘West Germany Needs 7,000 More Teachers BERLIN—West Germany has a serious teacher shortage, with 7,000 iacene positions unfilled, About 224,000 teachers are employed full- | time at present, 100,000 of them in. private schools, about 40 per cent of the teachers are women. Half, the teachers are over age 45. About 22,000 more classrooms are needed; an average classroom costs $24,000, Since 1954 about $24 000,000 has been spent on class- room construction, which was credited with chasing’ the starlings off the state house. | If successful, he would become erence ithe airline’s first Negro pilot and | ‘presumably the first to be em- ‘ployed by a major U.S. airline. | The word came from Marion iD. Green, 29, of Lansing, Mich., ‘a former Air Force captain and) | ANNOUNCEMENT | —- aie enthusiast, has recommended that| the Springfield City Counci 1 purchase two dozen hoot owls and | a like number of falcons to chase’ the starlings from downtown roofs. a out to frighten the starlings away, and the other owl kept in the! Matthews pointed out that this! would eliminate coating the win-| dow sills and ledges of buildings with a sticky chemical compound, | save up fo $1.05 on every box J row a pilot for the Michigan High- | . way Dept | * | The commission ruled last | service sheer (reg. $1.35) $1.15, 3prs. $3.30 | month that the Denver-based | . | airline was “guilty of a discrim- | 2 t reinforced sheer (reg $1.50) $1.25, 305. $3.60 J ane ee Cartier retusal | to hire the Negro. microfilm mesh (reg. $1.50) $] 25, 3 prs. $3.60 | It ordered Continental to process | ‘Green's application for acceptanice | as a co-pilot trainee. ° stretch sheer (reg $1.65) $] 35) 3 prs. $3.90 The agency said Green appeared | Pontiac area. better qualified than any applicant! ; interviewed by Continental at the} sheer heel demi-toe——(req $1.05) $1.35, 3c. $3.90 J interviewed spied, | * x all sheer saondalfoot— treg. $1.95) $1.65, 3prs. $4.80} The Michigan =n complained short, medium and long colors: south pacific, bali rose and shell Jan. 17 (cl 1-) Ye] \Monday, Jan. 12 Thru Soturday, | | | ,NEWPORT'S + NO. SAGINAW ST. ff e Give Hdlden Red Stamps | engine and serap iin a contest. | ‘of Junior-Size Tractor | son is only a little over two years, ito the commission that Continen- , tal had refused his application | because of his race. Skilled Operator, at 2, TROY, Ala. — Dan Thomp-, old but he’s a skilled cpperaion| of a junior-sized tractor. Dan's hero is Cecil Parks, Pike County's champion teen-aged trac- | tor driver, so on Dan's second’ birthday his father, Ira Thomp-| son, gave the lad a little tractor) he had made out of a lawn mower | metal. Now Dan's busy practicing for | the time when he drive a big one! | PAYING for a MORTGAGE Is EASIER Than Paying RENT! Our PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS open end conventional Mortgages include in their monthly payment: Interest, Princi- pal, Taxes and Insurance. Each time you make a payment your equity in your pr operty increases in value. Each monthly payment is a sound invest- ment in your family’s future. Home ownership is the American way of life. Over 70% of the people of Michigan are now home- owners. We can make it easy for you too, to own your . » - come in and talk with one of our friendly, courtéous representatives. WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS CURRENT , o RATE | ON SAVINGS me All Savings Accounts Insured up to $10,000 by an Agency of the U. S. Government WE PURCHASE LAND CONTRACTS Pontiac Federal Savings Home Office: Rochester Branch: _ 407 Main St. 761 W. Huron Street Downtown Branch: 16 E. Lawrence St. Drayton Branch: 4416 Dixie Highway We are pleased to announce our ap- pointment as the bottler and distributor of ROYAL CROWN COLA in the VERNOR’S GINGER ALE, INC. 490 S. Telegraph, Pontiac Its Here! Big as Life! a discon tinned pattern .. . NOW | get the additional pieces you wish in n Towle, Gorham, Wallace, Lunt, International, Reed and Barton, Community, 1847 Rogers and many other silversmiths’ famous patterns. It’s Special Order Time on DISCOUNTINUED PATTERNS If you're a proud owner of one of these famous Sterling patterns and: | want more pieces to complete your previous collection, now's the time to do something about it. ORDER NOW FOR DELIVERY THIS SUMMER Take stock of what you need—salad forks, teaspoons or serving pieces " ~and order now! A wonderful gift idea, too, for someone whose pat- tern is here. If you are ordering more luncheon or dinner knives, we suggest that you bring a sample knife with you to insure a perfect match. Also note whether your blade hes a bright or dull finish. | & ReAtte. ss me OE: ORDER BEFORE MARCH IST the pieces you need most... it will be a year before we can take your order again! LADY DIAN A a ~~ » SYMPHONY CHASED ar Ss MARY CHILTON Louis XIV oe) souTrono CASCADE = oe See a " ESPLANADE 3K Now enjoy both... lightness and lift in the new size 3K More to enjoy 3K More for your money It's big, beautiful, and bubbling with flavor—RC cola in the brand new 16-0z. bottle! In RC you get more than just delicious taste . . . you get lightness and lift too. You'll like it more ‘cause you get more for your money. Get some today in handy cartons that hold 96 full ounces. Serve 18—and serve them right with RC! Distributed By VERNOR’S GINGER ALE, INC. OLD COLONIAL : es JEWELERS 16 West Huron Md W3A0 SHR é THE PONTIAC PRES S, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 it y i YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG AS THs FELLOW AND HAD WAY bOWN tie LEW Ges et SHOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE fT eae PAUL BERGQUIST Paul Bergquist, 67, of 3205 Eliz- abeth Lake Rd., died Sunday in Lake Orion after q two-year ill- | ness. | He was a landseape gardener |and lived in Pontiac for 30 years. | He is survived by his sisters, tite 4° BIG DEAL . ELLIS INC. ‘ Ganaces Since 1945 ° —_e Free Estimates “rons | FE 2-2671 ‘Mrs. Anna Swartz and Naomi Berg- iquist, both of Detroit, and Mrs. | Joseph Carlson of Iron River, and \a brother, Henry of Stephenson. | Services will be held at 1:30 p.m. 'Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral |Home with burial at White Chapel ‘Cemetery. Clearance Sale! Other Chests, Dressers, Desks and Beds on display to match above Chest. All Clearance Priced Now! “Our Loner Overhe Beautiful... Maple CHEST Clearance Priced at Only *D °° Roomy 4-drawer Chest of hardwood. Finished in honey maple color. Glide-Easy drawer construction. Traditional metal drop handles, MILLER’S FURNITURE You Money” ad Saves 1144 Oakland Avenue Open Friday Evenings Careful Free Delivery Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas | MRS. CLYDE L. ROBISON i Herbert M. Dudd, 74, of 161 N.| TROY — Service for Mrs. Clyde; Johnson Ave., died Sunday at Avon|L, (Erna) Robison, 64, of 5875 Center Hospital, Rochester, after a| Livernois Rd. will be held at 2 long illness, Leas ee red ia bibs A resident of Pontiac for 46/neral Home with burial in White’ years, he served as superintendent | Chapel Memoria! Cemetery. of Wilson Foundry and was last) Surviving besides her husband employed in Plant Protection at a her father, William Brown of Baldwin Rubber Co. Penna.; two daughters, Mrs. Lyle He waaa ilfe member of Races: comes of Toledo, Washington and velt Lodge 10, F&AM; Oakland! rs. Donald Reese of Avon Town- ship; and six sisters. Chapter 5 Royal Arch Masons, and p; and six siste a life member of IOOF 261, Port ORA SUTTON Huron. HOLLY ~— Service for Ora Sut- He is survived by his sisters, ton, 75, 10261 Milford Rd., will be Mrs. Andy Taylor of Pontiac, Mrs.|held 2 p.m, Wednesday at Dryer Gail Sturdevant, Mrs. Alma Os-| Funeral Home, with burial in Lake- borne and Mrs. Joseph Osborne,’ side Cemetery here. He died at his| all of Smith's Creek, and a brother, home Sunday of a heart attack, | Benjamin W. of Port Huron. Mir | Aulten! was bern’ Match J, Mr. Dudd’s body wil] be at Voor-| 1 . 883, in Rose Tewnship on the jhees Siple Funeral Home until 9) (oo nese he mE ip he ‘p.m. Tyesday when he will be tak * sim en to Arthur Smith Funeral Home,} Surviving are his wife, Mable; | one son, George, of Holly; one Port Huron, for service and burial at Caswells Cemetery, on Thurs-|daughter, Mrs, Ialene Hallett of iday. Holy; eight grandchildren, 11 Masonic graveside seryices willgreat-grandchildren, and one sis- be conducted by the Smith's: Creek|ter, Mrs, Earl Gordon of Holly. | Lodge. MELVIN J. THROESCH LOUIS BE. KUENZER CLARKSTON—Service for Mel- Louis FE. Kuenzer, 73 of 852 Mel-/Vin J. Throesch, one-month-old son, lb St.. died at his home Sunday of Mrs. Annie Throesch, 9900 Eston after an illness of several months.|Rd.. will be held at 2:30 p.m. today) A resident of the Pontiac for 33/4¢ Farmer-Snover Funeral Home. HERBERT M. DUDD years, he was retired from Pontiac Pontiac, with burial in Oak Hill | Motor Division. Cemetery: | Surviving are his wife Alleda, a| He died unexpectedly at his home on Friday. SILAS RAY WHIMS WILLIAMSTON — Service for Service will be held at 2 p.m. Silas Ray Whims, 68, a retired | Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Chap-| Free Mthodist minister well- el with burial at Oak Hill ceme-jknown in Oakland County, will be held at 2 p.m, Wednesday from the Williamston Free Methodist Church under the direction of Gors- HOLLY — Service for William line Funeral Home with burial in A. Drewett, 78, 306 Sherman St., the Williamston cemetery. He died ‘will be held at 10:30 am Tuesday of a heart attack Friday on a train at St Rita’s Catholie Church with| while en route to California. burial in Lakeside Cemetery here.| Surviving are his wife, Mildred; [Rosary will be read at 7:30 to- a son, 5 daghters, and 13 grandchil- night at Bendle Funeral Home. |dren. Three vinnuigies Maat and jLeslie L. Whims, both of Roches- | a Drewntt was is imceet iter, and Joseph Whims of Drayton Regis Catholic Church, Pls tec carvive | the Holy Name Society and the sas ald aa AA Lt , Motly Farm Bureau. | RAY MARTIN WOODWORTH | Surviving are two daughters.| FERNDALE — Service for Ray! \Mrs. Vincent Dennen of Pontiac Shevlin St., will be held at 2 p.m. daughter, Mrs. Keith Anderson of ‘Walled Lake and a son, Jay of Pon- ‘tlac. Four sisters and five grand- children also surviye. tery WILLIAM. A. DREWETT SSS =| Mrs. Wilbur Taylor of Holly; |Tuesday at Stephenson Funeral) "i | MID-WINTER TERM STARTS | JANUARY Day, Half-Day and Evening Classes ) Higher Accounting () Business Adminis- tration ) Bookkeeping | Speedwriting Shorthand \two daughters, Mrs. Beatrice Rob- -ertson of Lake Orion and Mrs. Check the above courses which interest you and mall | Lillian Eagle of Marlette: five sons, this Advertisement to us today. We will send you our Russell of Oakwood, John W. of 1959 Bulletin imuneciatels ‘Oxford, Donald of California, and HOURS ,Herbert and Melvin, both of Oak- Morning 8:10-11:30; Afternoon 12:00-2:30; Lvening 6:30-9:00 The Busin 7 W. Lawrence St., PONTEAC Name VETERAN 9th, 1959 one son, Oliver of Holly, two sis-/Home, with burial in Coleman ters, Mrs, Clara Taylor of Grand) (Mich ) Cemetery, He died at home Blanc and Mrs, Anna Bouquet of) gaturday after a long illness. Grand Blanc; 22. grandchildren! surviving are his wife, Myra: and cight great-grandchildren. two daughters, three brothers and ithree grandchildren, JOHN McCOLLIUM OXFORD — Service for John! McCollum, 69, 3090 Baldwin Rd.,, tornado Is Selective | will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday 7 BUXTON, Me. (UPI) — Robert at Bossardet and Reid Funeral Wists wood (30 epeal meariyalgear iwhen bargainers reached agree- icrib by his parents. Efforts by the |Home with burial In Mount Pleas- lant Cemetery, Oakwood. He died 'Sunday evening at his home fol- \lowing a long illness. Gregg Shorthand | | Executive Secretarial Mr, McCollum was farm man- ager of the George Bass Farms before his retirement about a year ago, | Typewriting Calculator and Comptometer Surviving are his wife, Lavina; _wood; one brother, Archie of Ox- jford; and eight grandchildren. MRS. ISAAC NEWTON OXFORD -- Service for Mrs. Isaac (My G.) Newton, 83, of 9 Hudson Rd_, will be held at 2 p.m., ‘Tuesday at Flumerfelt Funeral iHome, Oxford, with burial in Ox- iford Cemetery, She died Saturday in Colonial Convalescent Home aft- er a long illness, Only survivors are five nieces ess Institute = | Phone FE 2-3551 Hoos ve Address , APPROVED You Get ALL THREE... ‘and three nephews. building a house and was just ready to move in when a small tornado struck. The twister scat- tered his hard work over a 200- yard area, It didn’t touch another dwelling in the neighborhood, Avert Strike in Canadian Ford Plants TORONTO, Ont. i» — A threat- ened strike against Ford Motor Co. of Canada wag called off last night ment after a marathon 32-hour ses- sion. Some 8,500 United Auto Workers had been set to leave their jobs at 10 p.m. at Ford plants in Wind- sor, Oakville and Toronto. The strike was called off four hours be- fore the deadline. * * * UAW Canadian director George Burt said the settlement will be recommended to the membership at meetings today. He said company and union spokesmen reached agreement on an 18-cent hourly wage in- crease spread over 39 months. An additional eight cents an hour Increase goes to 1,217 skilled workers at Windsor, The settlement is along the same lines as that, signed by General Motors Dec, 6. ; A UAW spokesman said negoti- ations with Chrysler Corp. of Can- ada will start shortly. Noted Nurse, Editor DREAM WORLD — Diver is caught up in fisherman's dream in the Miami (Fla.) Sequarium’s reef tank. s ’ Dies at 82 in N.Y. NEW YORK (#—-Mary M. Rob-! erts, 82, chief nurse of the Army | Nurse Corps in World War I and_| ‘longtime editor of the American Campbell {0 Head | pete of Nursing, died yesterday! , tae following a stroke. 59 M h W k | Miss Roberts was stricken Fri- IC igan ee day at the offices of the Journal,) _ of which she had been editor; Birnum G. Campbell Jr., a for- emeritus since 1949. She was edi-;Mer Pontiac man, has ben ap- tor of the- publication from 1921 Pointed chairman of the 1959 Michi- | until 1949. \gan Week organization board. | A native of Cheboygan, Mich.,| Campbell, Yee preskient of Oe Miss Roberts was trained at the 5UMers Power Co. in Jackson, for-| Jewish Hospital Nursing School in| ™¢™lY was manager of Consumer's Cincinnati , : South Oakland County District. A — ee jnative of Pontiac, Campbell went, | to Kalamazoo to become assistant p |division manager there in 1951. | eaths Elsewhere | The appointment was announced | 'in Lansing by Paul Carnahan, gen-| DETROIT wW—A_ three-week-old ral chairman of the annual cele- Detroit infant suffocated in his crib ration, scheduled this year for Sunday. The victim was Thomas, May 17 to 23. | Donegan, son of Mr. and Mrs.’ oo | Francis Donegan ‘Lake Orion Youth Hurt The child was found dead in his When Auto Hits Tree fire department to revive him were) A 16-year-old Lake Orion youth’ unsuccessful. Firemen said the ba-|was reported in satisfactory con- by apparently rolled over onto his! dition after suffering head cuts stomach while asleep and suffo-\when a car in which he was rid- cated. ing was involved in an accident, shortly after midnight Saturday. | Richard Novak was riding in a car driven by Gregory Donovan, | 31, of Lake Orion. I REED CITY (® — Funeral serv- lee for William F. West, former Osceola County clerk and probate i judge, will be held here Monday.| It went out of control, striking al West died Friday at the age of 82./tree along Clintonville road near' He was elected county clerk in 1912/Clarkston-Orion road in Independ- and judge in 1916. He served as|/ence Township, according to Pon- judge for 16 years. tiac State Police. When You Heat Your Home with Dependable Gee Furnace Oil! I. More Eeonomieal Gee's better quality, cleaner burning fuel oi! responds readily to furnace controls thereby burning a minimum of furnace oll while giving maximum comfort, Cleaner Burning Gee's better quality fuel ail is so refined to clean as it burns eliminating costly furnace repairs and giving cleaner heat. More Comfort Gee's better quality fuel oi! gives a maximum of heat and warmth on colder days, holds @ minimum of fire in mild weather. PLUS— Holden Red Stamps given at no additional cost with all fuel orders — Holden Red Stamps are redeemable for valuable premiums. 3. ATTENTION! COAL USERS! Order your coal in lots two ton or more and save 50c per ton. Dial 5-818], SAVE 50°10, of co. ht COAL and OIL AKE a Rh Medel FP-142.39 aa, Yihkee/ NO MORE DEFROSTING... EVER! WY FRIGIDAIRE Frost-Proof FREEZING IS HERE! It’s true! You'll never de- | frost again — never even see frost again. For with Frigidaire Frost-Proof Freezing, moisture is whisked away before frost | can form. And, of course, there's no frost to defrost in the big Flowing Cold Refrigerator Section. See the proof of Frost-Proof Freezing today! it ¢ oa eS ee at OSMUN’S Great January Clearance Hundreds of top quality suits, topcoats, . outerwear and sportswear .. . Reduced in this our greatest January Event Yet! SUITS & TOPCOATS | Famous Martinelli and 1Im- perial Worsted Suits — Some Botany 500’s included! Hand- some Imported Tweed and Velour Topcoats by Glenwood, both raglan and set-in sleeve models. ae Fa A group of such tremendous appeal and value that we must respectfully ask that you do not delay in making your se- lection — Hard finish worsted and sharkskin in regulars, shorts, longs, extra longs and portlys. Sizes 35 to 50. "OD Usually Sell for $71.50 Imported Fabric SPORTCOATS $22 Values to $37.50 A big selection of patterns —colors—sizes. Famous Make SPORT SHIRTS $op 99 Usually Sell to $6.95 Long sleeve, colorful plaids, Ivy button downs, ribs, plains. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Famous Make SUBURBAN COATS McGregor Lakeland, REDUCED ‘ Field & Stream, wool trim- 4 lo med and water repellent Usually $22.95 to $59.95 «= BETTER SLACKS — 1500 Pairs — ; Worsted flannels, gabs., REDUCED : imported Daks, dacron feck coy IQ%. blends, in fact, every- Usually $10.95 to $29.95 thing. Plus Many Other Items On Sale at Big Savings During Osmun’s Great January Clearance “Shop the Stores That Never Compromise on Quelity” Dewntown Pontiac Tel-Huron Center Both Stores Open Tonight ‘til 9 P. M. ! NO MORE | 133 lb. F rost-Proof FREEZER... ! ice-stuck packages! =. Plus © Instant Ice Cube Service~frees, stores ee aoe ! sakes aaneaiie iy frees, dripping frost water! : © Giant Picture Window Hydrator | NO MORE 1 © Roll-to-You Shelves ' cleanup mess! i | © Flowing Cold — for faster chilling ' NO MORE 1 ' @ New Sheer Look Styling ] thawed-out foods! } ® Your choice of 4 Sheer Look colors (ee en ae a er ot os annem enel at no extra coat! ME+KRFS- 1004-90 CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY | j ~‘ ‘ nls lesion THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 Silence Is Golden’ ee Abby i s Hard to Use a Razor on Flying Fur DAR Celebrates <. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN from his family, ant os tel words you do not happened to us. Fights, sick- th An “DEAR ABBY: My _ hus- that we have lost our son. Is IGNORE him—you do what my ness, bills, problems with his hniver r band’s sister (very bossy): told there any consolation for par- | mother did to me. You wash | family, and even a paternity | =, : ; Se eseet | PO Coens | emcees | tm ese ee | = ‘ you ma prove his : old daughter an electric razor and print mine instead?” innocence. Well, he is 42, and nonnsien came buen yunee thaument pi Mtg eat - for Christ |' DEAR INCONSOLABLE: A TIMER | his latest reason for not marry- the American Revolution, was ob-|Eidred and Rosamond Haeber\ mas. I philosopher said: “If a DEAR OLD: No soap. me is that he thinks we are oor c4 with a | tee eG ised POuE ieeeat) ow her I'd rath- | ™an does not keep pace with | You're outta lux! OLD to get married. He [Pes va luncheon at Ted’s)Mrs. Lioyd Porter, regent, an- er she didn’t | bis companions, perhaps it is x« *« * says I’m too old to have my reir _ |mounced that 10 flags have been because ‘we because he hears’ a different “DEAR ABBY: First of all own children and the adoption ox ee + 2 re to area Girl Scout didn’t allow drummer. Let him step to the I want to say that I am 38 agencies won't favor us e+ this nea oad a a Phage ad lai Hallenbeck ld of tri our daughter | Music he hears, however | years old and single. I have | age, so without children, what's | iicriig » laws, “Commu- en to a trip to shave her | measured, or far away.” been with this future | the sense of getting. married? abohng _ ae ne ee ee Smith Soucas | : * * * husband of mine Sor % years. | Should I dap hig afer 10 |, [Otek Gusts wpe memberg ot/School, Gunterwvilie, Ga. where a | Se ~ * “DEAR ABBY: Have you | Everything that could possibly | years or keep going with him, higan DAR state board. she delivered 300 articles of cloth-) French } high time | lost your mind? Say listen, come up between two people | hoping he'll break down?” Others ‘attending the Thursday |'"S donated by chapter members. Stitched | you did. She | Sister, when an $-year-old kid | to postpone a marriage has TIRED OF WAITING | sathering were Mrs, Harry N Delegates elected for the DAR | ABB looks like a DEAR TIRED: You will | Dey®, state chaplain; Mrs. Gil. | state conference to be held in | . baboon.’ I “break down" before he does. | bert K. Pulliam, ‘state corre- | Detroit in March are Mrs. Lioyd | ignored the remark and sure enough at Christmas our daughter received the electric razor. Now she is begging us to let her use it. Do you think it was right of this sister-in- law to give our child a gift she DEAR VERY: Your’ sister- in-law used very poor judg- ment. Put. the shaver away and don't bring it out (or mention it) unless you want to see the fur. fly. * * * “DEAR ABBY: Our son, 28, is the heartbreak of our lives. We brought hint up in our church, which he never fully accepted. For 10 years he cast around investigating this re- ligion and that. He studied Greek and Hebrew in order to translate the original scrip- tures. He finally decided to dedicate his life to teaching the religion he calls the only ‘true’ religion. He has drifted away How to Get Along With That Man. By RUTH MILLETT To get along with men, a woman|Persuade a man to do has to know at least this much: |f0F you and then to stand around Every time she wins an argu- ment with a man she loses a little of his admiration for her as a woman. There are a few things a man doesn't enjoy being kidded about; his hair if it is receding; his help- lessness in the face of a balky car or leaky faucet; and. his making a big deal out of a small illness. The surest way of making a man wonder if he really does love you is to insist he doesn’t. suggestions and criticisms. While a man may not be entirely want to have his wife belittle it. All bad news should be saved for a husband until after he has finished a good dinner and had time to put his mind at rest. the breakfast table. It is as insulting to a man to have a woman question his ability The more a woman talks the less attention a man pays to what she|'° judge character as it is for a says. taste or her social savvy. . TO PLEASE A MAN, CALL CAREFUL DAN FOR FLAWLESS DRY CLEANING Not only his valuable clothes but the whole family’s deserve Pontiac Laundry’s gentle care and expert workmanship. And it costs no more to have finer dry cleaning. Call Careful Dan at FE 2-810. Enjoy Insured Mothproofing FREE No matter how often she has heard her husband tell a funny story, a wife must laugh as ‘heart- ily as though she were hearing it tor the first time If she doesn’t intend te take a man’s advice she shouldn't ask for it, for it riles a man to have of ‘‘we"’ i woman is actually push- ing her husband into the back- ground. Sorority Plans for May Day Breakfast The West Longfellow avenue home of Mrs. Robert Angel was the setting for a meeting of Phi Kappa Tau Chapter of DRY CLEANERS 7 tow Service at Our Locati $408. T. ecu heed Pi Omicron National Sofority : | Thursday evening. 2682 West 12 Mile—Berkley . 933 S. Hunter—Birmingham Irene Wallin, national presi dent, discussed the National Foundation at Fort Wayne, Ind. FAMOUS (2 CYCLES 3 SPECIAL! Automatic WASHER 2 CYALE PLUG DISPENSER WHEEL AT AMAZING PRICE ! ‘OTHER MODELS PRICED FROM $168.00 Installation and explained changes in the constitution. Pledge, Mrs. Gene Shell, and Mrs. Robert Hausman and Mrs. Maynard Holmes : were appointed to begin plans for the May Day Breakfast. Navy Mothers Vote Donation Pontiac Navy Mothers Club voted to send a donation to the enshrining of the battleship Arizona at Pearl Harbor and the monument to servicemen who lost their lives on the Arizona and in World War I when the group met Thursday — at Naval Training sta- TIME-LINE a next meeting will be Feb. 5 at the Naval Training Center. Bagley PTA Holds Workshop Meeting and attended workshops on ‘‘Study- ing Michigan Schools" at the ley School PTA. and John F. Perdue. Mrs. James FULLY AUTOMATIC ‘58 DELUXE MODEL With Bailt-in, AUTOMATIC SUDS SAVER gram. Gloria Foote Plans to Wed Mr. and Mrs. E. E, Foote of the gagement of their daughter, Gloria to David Putnam of Wa- terford. A Jan. 3% wedding is planned. OES Club Meets Mrs, Mary Erickson, Mrs. Melva Allen and Mrs. Edward YEARS TO PAY It is just asking for trouble to something giving him directions and offering satisfied with his job he doesn’t This man is allergic to orange blossoms. If it’s marriage you're after, lose him while you're still under 40 and look further. * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO DIXIE: You were not PATRIOTIC— you were IDIOTIC. Did you at least get his name, rank and seria] number? . * * * For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of The Pon- tiac Press. Enclose a_ self- sponding liam .H. De@raff, state treasur- er; Mrs, Bradley D. Scott, state — librarian; Mrs, Robert F. Watt, Porter, Mrs, Lisle Echtinaw, Jes. sie Brewer and Miss Hallenbeck. Alternates are Mrs. Grant” Beardslee, Mrs, Harry Bates, Ag- E. G. Clark. TWO NEW MEMBERS Few men like to be asked what they want for dinner—especially at woman to have a man question her addressed, stamped envelope. At Federation Workshop Club Chairmen Gather Chairmen of the 24 member clubs were trained at depart- ment workshops when Oakland County Federation of Women’s A group of girls from Central Senior High School sang sev- eral numbers during thet lunch- eon hotr. In the afternoon session, Mrs. John Ritsema, president of Michigan State Federation of Women’s Clubs, spoke on “Club Work and Our Responsibility.” with Mrs. president, the day. Clarence regent of Piety Hill chapter, Bir- — and Mrs. Lucius How- Registrar Sarah VanHoosen Women's Literary Club with Mrs. Harry Vernon, president, and the Pontiac Woman's Club Myers, were hostesses for nes Nilton, Mrs. E. C. | of the DAR National Societ lan Monroe, Mrs. E. V. Ha - Church Women Given Program A talk concerning Pontiac eral Hospital was given by Raymoed Rapaport Women's Society of Bethany church. were Mrs. Basi! Hartt, Mrs. G Shearer, presid Walley who sang a solo, Huthwaite, Alice Serrell, Mrs. Earl McHugh, ' Grace Clark and Miss Jones. pe fidjlenbeck, chairman of the * * * hostess.¢ommittee, was assisted by Mrs. William Kalwitz, Mrs. Harry Going, Mrs. E. V. Howlett, Ella Smith, Mrs, Frank Gerls and Mrs. Delegates for the April meeting y are © Mrs. Echtinaw and Mrs. Bradley | D. Scott. Alternates are Mrs. Al- Mrs, Going and Mrs, Clark. when eas aah isaac oct hii a i SE wiett, Gen- > Mrs La the |= Bap- | he tist Church met Thursday at the *~ e Also participating in the program p : eorge |= ent, and Mrs. Percy .. accom, Bs panied by Mrs. Lillian Hilton. | i ee | Founder's Day Date Is Given Plans for a Founder's Day celebration to be held Jan. 22 in honor of Sophia Maier John- son, founder of Sigma Beta So- rority, Inc. in 1923, were dis- cussed when Psi Chapter of Sigma Beta met Thursday. Mrs. Morgan Siple of North Perry street was hostess for the gathering. A showing of spring fashions will be held at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building Feb. 26 at 8 p.m. with fashions by the DeCor and Margaret Ann Shops. % Nurses Group to Hear Talk Dr. Vérnon® Abbott and Dr. David Packard will speak on ‘Frostbite’ -when Practical Nurses Association meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the doc- tors’ classroom at Pontiac Gen- eral 1, Information on the education- al program for lidensed prac- tical nurses featuring the course on Materia Medica may be had by calling Mrs. Theo- dore Fox. 5 ley aday HOLLYWOOD 7812 North Saginaw Street Over Bezley's Air Conditioned ALL PERMANENTS ONE PRICE PS COMPLETE WITH CUT and SET NONE HIGHER ‘You Get All This: Carefree Haircut Permanent by an Experi- enced, Licensed Operator Styled Set Our Famous Guarantee: A Complete Wave for $3.75... None Higher SHOP FE 8-3560 BEAUTY a eet a | Members filled out opinionaires| i Thursday evening meeting of Bag-| 7 Discussion leaders were Mrs.|(- Jean Broome, Mrs, Herbert Mullen| 7 Overton was in charge of the pro- - Once ino blue moon | do you get so in- credible o value .. given these precious assures you of style Rare opportunity to sive on exclusive HIGH HEELS! MID HEELS BROWN — SLACK Ber. 03 matching ~ iieard pump bows or duckies $1.50 Ree, $18.95 matehed LIZARD HANDBAGS $11.88 plas tox * sking the cra Genuine LIZARDS $7 28 4 pointed-toe pumps. A famous maker has the label ftsrnanship they deserve euquisite fit. renee mid or high heels. Black or brown. WARNER'S? Reg. 2.50 195 THE SECRET OF THE SHAPE. The cups are stitched and lined to assure you of high uplift beauty, White cotton, 32A - 38C Foundations — Second Floor | ; | . +. it's divinely soft! t’s luxurious! precious COATS BLACK New, darkly gleaming jewel of the m PEARL by Princeton - “110 the gloss and glory of fur, without it’s price. A lustrous, blackened brown that carries off its pretensions magnificently. supreme achievement of the great orlon-and-dynel fur fantasies by Princeton. Misses’ and custom petite sizes: 6 to 16 Coet Saica ~ Second Floor ink-likes: Even for the - _VERY DEAF Am to two is under routine investiga- A New Hearing Miracle Acousticon is happy to an- nounce a new. hearing aid so small — weighs only ', of an ounce — that even a child can wear it with comfort, for it is made to tuck snugly back fof the ear or be worn in the hair. This “mighty-mite” will help a great range of hearing losses, from the very mild to many types of severe loss — either air or bone conduction. We invite you to inspect this new aid, until you hold it in your hand you just won’t be- Neve the wonder Acousticon Research has achieved. There is no obligation and we are still offering— Free Hearing Test and Home Trial Phone for Information FITZPATRICK’S PHARMACY Phone: FE 2-8383 Riker Bidg. 33 W. Huron B the number of Chicago daily news- is . bi THE PONTIAC PRESS: ‘MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 - Migs ig Probe Chicago Paper Merger Combining Sun-Times With Daily News May | Violate Anti-Trust Laws | CHICAGO (AP)—A multimillion ‘dollar transaction which reduced publishing .groups from three 'tion by the government’s Anti- (Trust Division. |” * * * Field Enterprises, Inc., headed by Marshal] Field Jr., editor and publisher of the Chicago Sun-| Times, bought a controlling inter- ‘est Monday in the Chicago Daily News, headed by John S, Knight. * tt The purchase price was not an-| jnounced, but Field offered to buy | iminority holdings at $50 a share, ; 'At that price purchase of all News: stock would cost 24 million dollars. | | Earl A, Jinkinson, chief of the Chicago office of the Department jof Justice Antitrust Division, said) Friday he had requested informa- ‘tion on the details of the transac- ition. He added the request is rou- ‘tine in most cases, tne Im mo cares Purchase details are needed to |determine possible violations of! iSection 7 of the Clayton Act pro- hibiting “acquisition of one com jpany by another when such ac-| “quisition wil] create a monopoly or} ‘tend to lessen competition,” Jin kinson sald DATING ELVIS — Margrit Presley, serving an Army hitch GENEY Cleaning It pays to choose QUAL- ITY CLEANING in money saved on wardrobe replace ment. Call Today Pick-Up and Delivery FE 5-6107 GENEY DRY CLEANERS 12 West Pike Park Near Our Door Municipal Parking Lot ’ * * With the transaction, publication eve an Ice jof Chicago's feur major dailies now is directed by &o organiza tions, The morning. Tribune owns | the afternoon American. The Sun (0 e De ‘Times competes with the Tribune | ‘in the morning field and, through) 5 The News, with The American in! Police, Fire Department, ithe afternoon | Runaway Girl, 15, Said Linked in Scandal | Pollution Threat Ends CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI)—Po-| lranks in a vice scandal allegedly | JONESVILLE «—An_ oll well/involving the police and fire de- which ran out of control and threat. partments and a 15-year-old run-| lened to pollute the St. Joseph away girl | River was capped over the week-| * * | end by conservation officers and! Police Chief Frank Story said | ‘drillers, ihe would consult with the prose- | i State Police said they anticipated | eytor regarding the issuance of ino further double with the well | warrants. He said the investigation The well, on the Fern Housenecht of the girl's story might take sev jfarm north of here, went out offeral days. | control Frida when a control valve broke. ‘apietiered tae cdin | He sald she was unable to give | tryside for nearly hall « mile) 28mes in every case, but was | ‘around the farm with oil, mud) able to give accurate descrip: land water before it was capped| tions of the places where she Saturday | allegedly met members of the | | two departments. Rookie patrolman James W.! Kelly, 24, was stripped of his badge’ as Car Falls Into Creek land jailed after signing a state-| S eeeiererapey . iment admitting he had shared a_ GUNTERSVILLE, Ala. (UPT)— room with the girl last October A woman and her two small sons! Woman, 2 Sone Drown An entire platoon of one fire drowned last night when a blowout (Advertisement) CARBURETOR SAVES oP An victims were identified as GAS BY JET-ING Mrs. Flora Alice Gentry, 28, and) Car owners who are wasting money and not getting proper gas mileage due to over-rich mixtures will be pleased to learn of a Wisconsin inventor who has de- veloped a very clever unit that saves gasoline by “Jet-ing and Vacu-mating.” It is automatic and operates on the supercharge principle. Easily installed in a few minutes. Fits cars, trucks and tractors. The manufacturers, Vacu-matic Carburetor Co, T617 424-U Btate St. Wauwatosa, Wis, +are offering a Varnumatic to any- one who will install it on his car and help introduce it to others Thev will gladly send full free particulars if vouwewrite them or vend your name and on & post card today _ acdress Open an Account in 3 Minutes... by phone, if you wish! — 22-Ballon Poreelain |; Enameled Tub! § the} department engine house was | placed in a lineup for identifica. | tion by the girl. Among those accused were four firemen, three her sona Dalton N. Jr. 2 anc! Patreimen, a elvillan ambulance a suburban police James Davis, 10 months. The wom fan's husband, Dalton N. Gentry, | chief. | “31, managed to free himself from! ‘The girl, from a suburban Euclid the car in 12 feet of water and family, and Carl Galipo, 21, whom oawim ashore [police said admitted acting as the | — jirl’s procurer, told of their activi-| | ° . ies yesterday \Widow Collapses, Dies = ® ®t ‘at Lonely Hearts Party The girl's parents said they had spent $6,000 on medical and psy-| MIAMI, Fla, (AP) — A blonde chiatric care for their daughter widow, waltzing at a lonely hearts /since 1956 They said she had run) party, collapsed in’ her partner's away before but hac not been arms and died minutes later Sun. ;8uilly of such immoral behavior, | day night. | * * * ' ‘Mrs. Mary Micezkowski, 58, of) Inspector Michael Blackwell, in’ Minneapolis, apparently was the charge of the uniformed force, | victim of a heart attack, She was) pledged a full investigation, say- in Miamj on vacation and hadjing, “We don't care who this jsent the family car careening into it creck The | driver and started her off on a new career as a pin-up girl. | | as Oil Well Ca ed lice launched an intensive investi-! pp igation today within their own E shadow of the dam. * 4 AP Wirephote Buergin, 16-year-old Frankfurt salesgirl; has had several dates with American singer Elvis in Germany. The publicity has Sad Dane Asks Space Ride to Cure Woes COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) —A lonely, bitter Copenhagen car- penter, brooding over a broken marriage, says he has applied for a seat on the first manned Soviet space rocket because life on earth has no promise for him. | * * * | “Why not try in space?” Boerge | .. Jensen, 45, asked, | Jerisen said he sent his applica- tion to Moscow a year ago. A reply he said was signed by Premier Nikita Khrushchev ac- knowledged the application but said Soviet citizens would have priority. | Spanish Flood Toll 153, Still Mounting ZAMORA, Spain (AP)—The toll | é6f dead and missing in the Riva-. delago flood has reached 153 and still is not complete, Most of the} victims were old men, women and) children —" a * * | They lost their lives early Fri-| day when a dam on Lake Sana-) bria burst and inundated Rivadel- | ago, a village of 500 just north of} the Portuguese border. | The survivors voted Sunday to rebuild their mountain village, but on higher ground outside the ‘ * | Aid funds and supplies are pour-| ing into the area, in jnorthwest| Spain. All proceeds from a) Spanish-German soccer ‘game in! Madrid Wednesday will go to flood) relief, Cockroaches | Written Guarantee From Houses, Apartments, Groceries, Factories and Restaurants, Remain out only | one hour. No signa used. | | | Rox Ex Company 1018 Pont. St Bk, Bldg. FR 0-538 9 been staying with friends, hurts.” USE OUR FRIENDLIER, EASIER CREDIT To ENJOY the THINGS YOU WANT and NEED... NOW! No Oown Payment Get amoredinte delivery! No Bonk or Finance fompony You cave more moary! 3 Well Worth $119.95... NOW You get so much more— for less! Quality con- struction down to the last detail—top performance — long life — lasting economy. Buy now— WHILE THEY LAST! 108 NORTH Full Fami ly Capacity +.) washes everything cleaner! KiTi Price includes Delivery, Guarantee, 1-Year Service! 2 Full Years to Poy Washer ! FEderal 3] hd SAGINAW ¥ H State Planning Groups to Meet Great Lakes Industrial Development Council to Confer at U. of M. ANN ARBOR @®—Some 200 mid- western leaders will gather here of Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and Wisconsin. They are coming to the Univer- sity of Michigan for the seventh annual meeting of the Great Lakes States Industrial Development Council, Delegates include repre- sentatives from industry, trans- portation, utilities, chambers of commerce, banks, industrial real- tors and universities. x * * Dr. Richard J. Lund, of Battelle Memorial Institute at Columbus, Ohio, will deliver the keynote ad- dress. Speakers and panelists will in- clude: Harry A. Williams, managing director of the Automobile Manu- facturers Assn.; Bert Cremers, vice president of Wyandotte Chem- ical Corp.; Don G, Mitchell, chair- man of Sylvania Electric Products, Inc.; George Hitchings, manager of the Ford Motor Co.’s economic analysis department. James 0. Coates, council presi- dent and industrial development engineer for Consumers Power Co.; Paul J, Pfister, vice presi- kins, manager of industrial devel- opment for the Pennsylvania Rail- road; Robert Wolf, director of area Conscientious Store Manager Overdoes It GOLDEN, Colo, (AP) — Night) a store door open and dutifully | called the manager, Ray Starke. Starke checked the store quick- | ly, found nothing amiss and locked | the door, | * * Moments after returning home, | Starke received another call from the an: ‘Would you mind coming back,” Andrews asked, “You locked me in the store.” Reds Make U.S. Books LONDON (UPI)—Moscow radio said: last night that at least 600 American books have been pub- lished in the Soviet Union since World War II, with a total of 50,- . 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558 "siirt,"yn’ CHAIRS as low as $35 | SOFAS as low as $75 DRASTIC YEAR END DISPOSAL . ... 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OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL9 ~~ THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phone Answeing Service Combines Drama, Humor By DICK SAUNDERS There are a number of dedicated) Pontiac women who leave work each day with their bosses’ onders literally “ringing in their ears.’ They get their orders from a tel- ephone. The Pontiac Branch of the Tele- phone Answering Service, Inc., 1544 W. Lawrence St., is where they work, * * * The switchboard lights up on an average of 1,500 times in each 24- hour period, Most of the calls are received during the day, emer- gency calls usually coming at night. This works out to roughly 10,000 or more calls a week for the firm's customers, who number about 200. The customers can be almost anyone. They cover nearly 30 dif- ferent classifications, from con- struction companies to those of- THE LADIES WITH THE SMILES IN THEIR VOICES—This switchboard and file box jooks it and wah operators take the fering services or repair work, hal ne aa [~~ ‘siciak “owned of 17139 Kirkshire St, Birming- ham, is set Up to fit the customers needs, no matter how simple or how complex, * * * Some use the service as a sub- stitute for an expensive rented of- fice and secretarial staff. Their mail is addressed to the office, the operators take all calls as though they were employes of the customer's firm—and in a way they are. In many cases, operators. do more than they're asked or paid to do. One afternoon a light flashed on a Detroit answering board over a jack marked “elevator.” The operator found herself taik- The answering "jand operated by’ John Engerson.h 1 deserted brilding. Taree wom- ing to atterrified man who said ber of the organization could reach:to say we've helped many pro- he was calling from inside a self. bim. ifessional men. live longer by re- service elevator which had | Engerson now has three De. |lieving the strain of phone calls.” stepped between floors in a near- | trelt offices, as well as offices =A night operator who was a 'In Pentiac, Birmingham and | registereqd nurse and a mother Royal Oak. At one time he was | of three once gave instructions en were also in the elevator. | 4 school teacher and real es- | to a frantic husband in Redford “Our men will be there right; tate man. | as his wife gave birth to a baby. away,” said the operator, She} jis idea wasn't due to a brain-- When the doctor, an ambulance flipped a switch, pulled out a file| storm as much as a “rainstorm.” and police arrived moments later card before her, and sent mechan-' when, in 1928, a frozen water pipe there was little for them to do. ies to the rescue. burst in his Detroit home at 3 The baby, mother, husband and For the next hour or so in be-/a.m., the thought came to him operator had survived the ordeal tween other calls she continued to during his frustration of trying to with flying colors. talk to the people in the elevator.'reach a repair man, x * * She offered to relay messages, Te-| The service is made possible! An area doctor's son suffered) — Se through the use of actual exten-|an attack of acute appendicitis at ss at Briggs Stadium, and) sions of the subscribers’ own tele-' school one day hot we doctor ces rend te ween the four’ phone, whether at work or at home, | couldn't be iseated as it was his a 2 eae ee lor both. lday off. The fast working operator = = * \ * * * sent an ambulance to the school An area operator answering for, ‘Our girls are seemingly always to transport the lad to a hospital. Alcoholics Anonymous, a wide user! between life and death situations,”’. She then located another doctor of the service, once held a desper|says Engerson, “Doctors are our listed by the boy’s father, arrang- ate man on the line until a mem biggest customers and I’m glad ing for him to meet the boy at ithe hospital, After trying several a") [places for the father, she found . ihim at a restaurant vere he ani ts ee \his wife frequently dined on his! 7 neem = idav off. The boy’s father didn’t arrive in| |time to perform the appendectomy, ‘but his alternate handled the oper-. | ation successfully and he was wait-| jing for his son when they brought | jhim from the operating room. mage = a argue nee arts be CAKNIVAL RIDE? — No, for entertainment that’s ee ee te ee ‘ of patients. Operators must use tact and many show moments of good hu- mor that catch their customers by surprise and give them an opportunity to relax, its not a device pictured rather a new bed at Pontiac Osteopathic pital designed to promote the health and comfort Operated electrically, bed with its hoop-like frame can adjust itself Pentiac Press Photo demanded by the patient's medical condition, said Harry H. Whit- into virtually any position above, but Hos- low, hospital administrator. Miss Meebe Terry, a hospital employe, demonstrates how the bed the new-type works. The hospital expecter to receive a full supply in the near future. But Experts Don’t Sneer at Folk Lore A fine example of this was an iswamped with expectant mothers| who all decided to have their ba- bies the same day. When the operator made her last have to call to him he was sitting exhaust- January thaw this year ed in hig office. She inormed Bien | Old timers are confident that that another of his patients was on/there will be one. Dr. Jerome) her way to the hospital and he Namias of the weather bureau exploded, chiding the operator for thinks they probably are right — having hounded him all day. but barely “If this goes any further I'll have. * * * to hire an assistant,’ he shouted Namias, chief of the bureau's The operator's small voice replied, extended fore ‘asts section, has pre- “Why, doctor, it seerns you have dicted bone chilling cold for much all the men in the neighborhood of the country during January. WASHINGTON (UPI}—You may look sharp to spot the/ ican bank on a bit of melting weath area operator who had handled calls almost constantly all day for anual dW qa e al 0) 0) an obstetrician who was literally lore is that this year's January thaw probably will be brief. | larity’ im the northern hemi- | sphere. Namias said that in a ' trip abroad he ran across lots of references to the January thaw in the weather lore of Germany, meteorvlogists pooh-pooh Old timers of every generation ‘as far back as weather tales go ‘have believed in the January thaw t sets in earlier some places than others. But generally speakfng vou folk tales about weather Namias, however, thinks there is something to some of them. For example. he Some er in the month's third week said an examination of New Eng- The record appears to confirm , land weather records produced es ee es cost nu te tatistically significant” ‘support a . ‘s slic ‘ ‘ ‘i Namias. The thaw doesn’t come ‘for belief in the January thaw i) Pentiac Press Photo The ladies with the smiles in their voices (from left), Mrs. Carmack Sprouse, Mrs. Norman Mallery and Mrs. Joseph Lorenz, are work- ing on the day shift at Telephone Answering Service, Inc. pretty small when you consider pace oS 200 private secretaries. satin ARRESTING—It’s questionable whether Irene Glachan, 2, will ‘smile so winningly for clients in her new line of work. The top fashion and photographer's mod- el is first woman police officer in Hamilton, Canada. Two Tots Die in House Blaze Ann Arbor Father Tries in Vain to Rescue Girls From Burning Home PINCKNEY uw - Two young sisters playing in the living room of their home died in a fire over the weekend as their father tried, Gages sul ali tde’ Gounpanrs wees GRAND HAVEN @ — An a playing and set the house afire, “70p of food was expected to be made today to a deer reported Bryan said he was asleep in rev opeeleg peal er woh another room in the one-story fice a quarter of a mile off frame house five miles south of (Beach. here when he was awakened by Sheriff's men said the deer has smoke. . been on the floe for three days. A. The father tried to enter the private plane which flew over the blazing living room and rescue the ates Saterday was ‘wiable to find ee te teae ot en ak ae le ae ae ee He ‘aid he then ran sut--was reported off Ottawa Beach Goors and tried to force his way yesterday. ; in through a window but was’ They said dogs probably chased ae Will Hit Small Town Reception FCC Rules Against TV Relay Amplifiers WASHINGTON: ® — Scores ef|to support their own stations and,be on high. ground to pick up the ‘small comntunities -|when he hung up. te working for you already." The doc-| pe is not one to sneer at 9! Precisely the same time every) tor was still roaring with laughter weather folk lore, however, and \Y°2!; its duration varies, and there | the lore says to ex arm have © ee res 26 ito detect. spell Jan. 26, give or take a few | j days. All Namias says by way | * * * Operators, too, have ‘favorite’ But it does seem to be a regu -| stories about themselves, They will i meoping So on a par with | larly recurring “weather alage- tell you about one of their fellow, = — /workers who took a call for a pri-| vate family named Smith and was, asked. “How is Danny?” iC ars “Oh, he’s out right now," she| said cheerily, ‘but can I have him call you?” Smash Wreckage in Fog Truck Flip Causes 2 Deaths BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP)—A/the fog. One bus smashed into a' big truck and trailer tipped over halted car ahead. A second bus’ In Detroit a woman told an an-|0M fog-shrouded US. 99 while try-/beered to one side and had its) |swering operator, ‘‘I] want the oil! ing to make a turn. | paint scorched when it braked to ‘burner man who was out here last) Within minutes two persons died a halt next to the burning car. No Friday night." Informed he was and nine others were hurt in this bus passengers were hurt unavailable, she persisted. The split-second chain of events Sun- woman finally explained, ‘Well, he day: * kissed me and I want him back A second treak-trailer hit the Plays Against Orders again tonight.” ifirst. TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI): — Pianist x * * Trucks and cars, blinded by the/Van Cliburn leaves by plane today In one of Broadway's hits last/fog, began smashing into the|f0r a Concert in Atlanta, Ga., de- i spite his dentist's orders against | “If you can,”’ replied the voice, “it will really be something. Danny is the Smith's cocker spaniel.’’ | What's the explanation? One e been years when it was hard| theory is that the January warm | spell is associated with temporary decreases ip the intensity of the | prevailing westerlies — high al- | titude winds constantly blowing from west to east. | | Such subsidences permit ait from warmer regions to work its lay northward | What are the scientific prospec i fur a thaw this January? Well, just so happens, Namias said, hae the velocity of the westerlies has idropped in the past five days in these latitudes from 2 m0) meters iper second vo So Namias thinks there probably iwill be a thaw, however brief. * * * | Actually, a long warm spel] in ‘January is not to be desired — at least not by farmers. It would stimulate unseasonal plant growth. which would be nipped by subse- jquent cold spells, | The National Geographic Society jareas soon must decide whether | ito stop watching television or pay imore for new equipment. | The Federal Communications! ‘Commission says their current TV iset-ups are illegal. * * * Here is how the legal came about: snafu These communities are too small | in remote itoo far from established stations distant station, are known vari- jto get a picture. | To solve the problem, a few | years the ssed the hat, pee ee ‘licensed. They are operated as'| | hired people with electronics | know-how and set up low-power , amplifiers to relay the programs of distant stations into their omes. These amplifiers, which must in Michigan-- LANSING (® — Attorney General] Paul L. Adams says Michigan's notary public law is in need o complete revision. * * * Calling the law shocking and dis- gusting, Adams said Michigan au- thorities have launched an investi- gation of cheating by notaries. The investigation is the result of a probe and prosecution of 23 persons for sales tax evasion, Adams said. He sald many no- | taries notarize documents without the presence of applicants. In at lease one case, Adams Plane Will Drop Food _ to Ice-Stranded Deer Need New Notary Law Adams Said a notary notarized his own, S| signature on a so-called = docu- ment. Adams said he became aware of! what the notaries were doing dur-| ing the investigation of new car, bootlegging. * * * He said auto dealers had evaded the Michigan sales tax by forgini documents to show buyers resided out-of-state and did not have to ipay the three per cent tax. “Cheating notaries naturally fig- ure in preparation of these sales documents,” said Adams, His chief criminal assistant, Jerry 8. Cohen, said the probe of the notary Inw would follow the ee {one year starred Judy Holliday, the plot was) built around the telephone answer- | ‘ing service idea. Miss Holliday hits the nail on the head with one of her lines, “Take Romeo and Juliet, If they had had a telephone answering usly as repeaters, boosters and reflectors. But none of these devices is, ‘nonprofit cooperative community |, ‘enterprises. In most conimuni’ ‘ties, the TV set owners each con year, ‘Bells Are Ringing,”’ which wreckage and into each other. has looked up some old proverbs Manuel Grancha, a_ basketball |fulfilling the engagement. on this score and has come up coach from Hayward, Calif., and > |° one of his players, Eugene Gisler, H iwith: (14, were abped in a car which | French Population Up | “January awarm, the Lord have caught fire, Both burned to death.| PARIS (UPI)—Franee’s popula- mercy!” Two other boys in the car escaped, 'tion has climbed to 44,788,000 with And: but were seriously burned an increase of 460,000 during 1958, ‘If the January calends be sum- tribute around $5 < { ¥' servier, those kids would be alive Seven other persons were in-'the National Institute of Statistics)merly gay, ‘twill be winterly . Se eee LOeer today!” juved as 14 other cars collided in‘said today. RS till the calends a May. tain the unlicensed amplifiers. a ee . ee ee _ 2 ——— e 3 i as al * Last Dec. 31, the FCC said the amplifiers must go before they \interfere with licensed operations by using the same VHF channels as the station sending out the program. VHF channels num- bered 2 to 13, are sometimes called “long distance channels.’ in place of these illegal am- plifiers, the FOO suggested use of a system it authorized in May 1956. Under this program, the commission licenses TV _ translater stations at the top 14 channels of the UHF television band. These are numbered 76 through 83. The FCC-suggested translators |. work like amplifiers but never use the same charmel as the originat- | ing station. : The FCC’s Dec. 31 notice said in effect that past transgressions of regulations will be forgiven if amplifier owners file within 90 days applications for a legal oper. ation such as the UHF translator. It indicated that present opera- tions won't be disturbed while these applications afe being ex- pedited. But, the commission said, if these applications are not made, it will start proceedings to halt the illegal operations. ts + *& These could be of three kinds; (1) An administrative ‘cease and desist’ order. (2). A civil court action for an injunction which, if violated, could; result in contempt ef comm penalties. (3) A criminal court action for | violation of the Communicatiots WA mer. Because the traffic on area and a nel law was gut in effect unit. With the experiment now a eae LAKE. PATROL IN TRAINING—The Onkland County Sheriff's Department already is looking. ahead and training for next sum- this gréup of about 25 men whs deputized as a special lake ptarol is training the lake deputies in advanced skills usually taught to Pontise Prees Photo regular deputies. Members of the lake patrol have been learning the art of self defense via judd Jessons for the past few .months. Shown here, department judo expert Detective Charles Whitlock (not in uniform), demonstrates some basic techniqaes on Deputy Basal Ewell. Sheriff Frank W. Irons (right) expects the advanced training will enable the deputies to handle any concetvalie aiautiae they may encounter on area lakes next sumnter. a : *\ lakes betame an acute problem, to protect boaters last summer, decided success, the department ke | weft THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 Sy9Vd WIA Your PTA Is Planning To See ‘A Desk for Billie’ The showing of “A Desk for Billie,” movie film in color, heads the agenda of the Baldwin Ele. mentary School PTA meeting in Goodison at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the school. Also, the approval of by-law changes will be sought and the election of a nominating commit- 5 Persons Injured in 2-Car Crack-Up FARMINGTON Three teenage girls from here and two women from Royal Oak were slightly injured in an automobile| accident at the intersection of Ink- ster and 10-Mile roads at 4 p.m Sunday, township police reported today, Ice was blamed for causing a car with the three teenagers in it driv en by Mary Oliver, 18, of 33109) Orchard St. to skid into the side of a car driven by Mrs Stannard, 70, of 3102 Gilford St. Royal Oak. Her passenger Mrs. Mary Sullivan, kl, of the same address The other two girls in’ the Oliver car were Mary Keck, 17, of 22591 Tulane St., and Donna Sonnenberg, 17, of 21503 Colling- han St. all taken to William Hospital, Royal Oak, They were Dexaumont where they were treated for con | tusions and lacerations and re- Jcased * * * Township police are investigating! the mishap which almost complete | Iv demolished the Oliver car Dr. Willis Carrier used well wa- der as a cooling source for the first air conditioned office building in the U. S. That was 1912 In Athol, Mane TOWNSHIP —| Lallie: was, tee existing of five persons will be conducted at the meeting. “4 Desk for Billie’ depicts how American schools open their doors to children regardiess of their financial support. It is the true story of Mrs. Billie ‘Davis, a successful educator, writ- er and lecturer who as a migrant fought for an education and found opportunity in various schools across America. * ® * It tells of the people, including a hobo and her teachers who helped and encouraged Billie until she re- ceived her diploma and was pre- pared to leave the migrant trails. | The Baldwin PTA has announced ‘a square dance they are sponsor-) ling Saturday, Jan. 3lst. Details! lare still in the planning stage. | “Studying Michigan" is the topic ‘chosen for the Brooklands—Avon School District PTA meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Brooklands. School multi- gies room. GOODISON— will be served at Paint Creek ;Church here Wednesday beginning | at O30 pm. Proceeds will go for ichurch projects. The public ited A roast beef supper | is in-| Home Is Looted in Troy Saturday Police Shaking Heads Discovered Missing TROY—Police here are shaking sometime Saturday night. The loot included a camera, case and flash, one end-table, two table lamps, a clock radio, bedding stripped from two beds, including two foam rubber pil- lows, a double-barreled shotgun and case, about a dozen bottles | of liquor and several bottles of soft drinks, a squirrel cape, a smali bank full of pennies, nickels and dimes, and a pound of nut meats. Mr. and Mrs. William Dalr ymple | told police they left their home at | 405 W. Big Beaver road at about | 7M p.m. shortly after house, * * * The thief or the back door to gain entry and left! ithe front door open upon le aving, the premises. Dalrymple estimated the loss at about $935, Dickason-Burt Marriage at Flower-De | ORTONVILLE orated with palms, The altar of the ding of Barbara Marie Burt, Allen Dale Dickason. Bottruff officiated at light ceremony The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Howard Burt, 241 the candle FUEL OIL No Contract Necessary Call Today Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-614] St. The Mr and Mrs. A Thayer Rd For her wedding the bride chose y ballerina length gown of | white satin fajlle with an over | skirt of lace and net, scoop neck | line and long, pointed siceves, A | headpiece of pearls held her fin- | gertip veil, and whe carried a bouquet of red and white carna tions and munw, Carol Burt, sister of the bride PAY CHECK D4 TOO SMALL? e was maid of honer. Bridesmaids Iwere Joan Coventry of Waterford and Lavra Olson of North Branch | Serving as best man was Gerald iMartin of Davison, and seating the \2) guests were Wayne Dickason’ Jand Duane Porfer, both of Orton-! ville * & * The reception was held in th Cy aise parlors after the suptials Following their honeymoon — 11 ORTONVILLE 4 The altar of the red and white carnations and mums for the wed- and The Rev, Roy Mill bridegroom’s parents are PD Dickason, 1502 cked Altar * ue J ey | MES. ALLEN D. DICKASON Coal in Freight Car Burns at Lake Orion « , LAKE ORION—LoeaL firefighters Over Odd Assortment their heads today over the variety| of items stolen from a Troy home' Saturday and returned) midnight to a cold’ thieves had forced’ r | | Norway, journey to Tex The Landrac valued in the ie figure Dallas on the final leg of it Dallas businessman W. | if Erga ever slaughter—t four more than the faces average To Settle Assets in Southfield New City Expected to Pay $3,000 to $4,000 ' to Township SOUTHFIELD Settlement of lall fixed assets with Southfield, Township wi ll be made at tonight's regular council meeting, City Clerk! Patrick Flannery said this morn- ing The expected to pay the Township | between three and four thousand dollars for cars, equipment, ete. | Stilt to be settled is the division of Water Dept. financial matters because of bonds outstanding. | "The \the | Township became itor vor, lenving hfield as on ‘ownship * * * 26'y square-mile section in southern end of Southfield a city last four ACTES of Sep The appointment of A argo WHO'S NOSEY? — Odin Erga, giant 1,000-pound porker from manayes a fat-jowled squint at the end of a five-week bracket, + journey from Norway. . Bridges will get a bargain in spareribs porker. Oh, note is added by Judy Walker, 18. new City of Southfield is | To Build Educational Wing) P2227 at Congregational Church OXFORD — The Board of Trus- tees of Immanuel Congregational Church here is proceeding with plans to borrow the money needed to start construction of a new $69,000 educational wing early next | summer, A total of $43,000 was raised in cash and pledges in a financial drive to support the proposed proj- membership hag voted to borrow the remainder of the money need- ed upon the recommendation of! the Board of Trustees. Faced with the growing need for more space — especially for Sunday School classrooms — the church planning committee began work on an expansion program in the summer of 1957. | ect last June. Now the church quently approved a plan designed’! The church membership eabeee pce by the architectural firm of John NOW : bd Roth and Sons, Inc., Birmingham. ——— May Eliminate |iissrstosor wine eee) IT Meme” (2 to be attached to the west end of sass the church and to extend to the DORIS . “RICHARD Milki Ch south end of the church property. DAY ” WIDMARK | In ore The addition will contain a kitch-| WEL en, all-purpose room, 12 to 14 class-| TUN ok, = . . . rooms and church offices. of LOVE: sf Rigen Mobile Unit Tr aveling The church located at the corner caine ; From Farm to Farm ° Dennison and Hovey streets was CIA SC . ae 5 organized Feb. 27, 1877, and ob- [SASL A. s in Michigan Next? served its 75th anniversary May 3 hina . 18, 1952. SIERRA BARON By United Press International The Rev. Anthony A. Nelson is) the present minister, and at the! rapidly in Europe may some-|recent annual meeting, Jack Val-| day spread to Michigan and elim-|entine was elected moderator and inate the chore of milking for; Louis B. Coryell, re-elected clerk. ' many farmers, | Mrs. Maude Becker is financial Under the system, a mobile milk. Secretary and Mrs. Don Awrey, ight feet long and = unit travels from farm to farm "easurer. | | A trend that is catching on BAS AP Wirephete | | | i e prize hog, et farm was flown from New York to and undertakes the entire milking, | chore. new owner, Its * * * Job's Daughters The idea emerged from Holland! ‘and Germany and is now being Install Officers | | tried on an experimental basi in, : *“in Rochester Sweden. Each bile it Is ul ach mobile unit Is equipped |p OCHESTER—Job’s Daughters | Bethel 51 held installation of new with six milking machines of the | overhead suspension t In ad- ate 7: lofficers Saturday evening at the | Masonic Temple here. | dition, each unit has a washing machine, water tank, water heat- | er and three 160-gallon milk | Judy Anderson of Avondale was | tanka: linstalled as honor queen. Other. new officers are Marcella Reyn- Two men operate a mobile milk- olds, senior princess: Winnie Web-. WASHINGTON «om — The Agri- ing unit and make a trip to each ber, junior princess; Frances Me-| Ycultre Dept. expects the winter farm in the morning, and again |losh, guide; Janet Mather, mar- | wheat crop this year a fall below in the evening. Each unit can shall; Janet Kelly, chaplain; Wan-, the record set by the 1958 crop. handle about 65 cows daily. da Welch, musician; Sandra Mor-| In it Jan. 1 outlook, the depart-' The export publicity department ris, recorder; Rose Marie Arnold, | ;ment said moisture conditions this at Gothenburg, Sweden, says ex- | treasurer; and Susan Rock, librar- are less favorable for winter) periments have proceeded very ian. than they were last year | smoothly and the farms taking | Also installed were Judy Arnold, xs *& ‘part have been relieved of con- first messenger: Ora O’Brien, sec- The department ‘also predicted, siderable work, ond messenger; Karen Sweet, third * breed has 32 ribs, contrasting he Landrace yes—the Winter Wheat Expected to Fall | Short of ‘58 lyear wheal DOORS OPEN 10:45 A.M. A Riotous, Mad-Cap Comedy of the Army! “PRIVATES PROGRESS” that citrus fruits and winter fresh) If the mobile milking system|/messenger: Sharon Toussaint,|/ ivegetables would top last year’s| continues to grow in Europe, it!fourth messenger; and Kitty Hub-| i standards likely will be adopted in the United | bard, fifth messenger. In other parts of the report, States as well. x +* * the department said farm feed Carolyn Dando is the new senior supplies were adequate for live- Rochester Garden Club oe ey Laughlin, junior pe AS stock, milk production was up, * custodian; Joanna Jones, inner : : and egg production was higher. ito Hear Mrs. Garrison Baa and Donna Lawson, outer 1:00 - 3:45 - 6:32 - 9:20 yuare | The department also raised its) ROCHESTER — Mrs. Frederick '® Refreshments w . ; winter potato crop forecast 2 per|G. Garrison of Pontiac, state chair- the araiie ae Wy ate Aes ae The love story of ‘cent from the Dec. 1 prediction.,;man of International Cooperation, |derson, Mrs. Floyd Reynol eu an the white missionary | Farm employment dropped 18)will be the speaker at tomorrow’ sly per cent in December, the depart-|meeting of the Rochester Branch of!” ment said, reflecting the normal the Woman's National Farm and low level of winter ac tivity in agri-| a Assn, to be held at 1: 30; in Avon Public Library. P Hostesses for the afternoon af- Mrs. Charles Neff. To Install Officers Oxford C. of C. culture and the Eurasian soldier! Oakla nell NOW Thru SAT. Pippi | 4 Y J 4 e e ee; e e ® ; in ve alle t Sunday after fair will be Mrs. John Plassey and . ; j northern Michigan, the cone ee ee ha A eed enatie it the Parks and ee Com J n. 19 Deadline Se Mrs. Harry Lang. ® e nee wan i John Brown Unis ing Mr a railroad coal car parked Mission 1s expected tonight, Flan a Tea chairman is Mrs. Norman) OXFOR : ® e pes ‘ a ne Sa CE both on on siding across Atwater st Dery said. Mayor Donald 1. Swan H’Amada. Members of her com-| 7 ur sa) dinner to be served ® sn _ from the Lake Orion Lumber Co Se" has recommended the apport On Voter Registration = mittee are Mrs. James Arcure, e Sue i ARS installation e oe... Lake Orion Police reported today |ment to fll the unexpired tert | Mrs. James Headlee, Mrs. Carl Ger cl Gheureros Ratote ae ’ / : '@- | e e (Runaway Boy Is Foun No damage was done to the car, °f Robert: Ewart. who resigned Ie my_|Oxford Jr., Mrs, Frank Shepard, ; : Sin Lon Uike?y Pheer itwnrs chistn, gle ett = GAMEST, BLOOMPIELD | TOWN e"Sarns string, Ne J on nthe Oxford Veterane in Least Likely Place lcer on duty at the time the fi A Jan. 19 'Rundell, Mrs, George Goble, Mrs. ae . e e : e r field Townsh ve until Jan A. N. Miller and Mra. George John Reid will be installed as. @ If time payments end other @ ALICE, Tex. 9 — When a boy '¥8 discover e Somme Quiz of |to register pr the township A | Mitchell. ipresident; Kerman Whitstack, vice| bills eat away your pay- e runs away from home, where! mary elecifons to be held Feb. 1 | president; Mrs. Robert Langford. | : check, @ Seaboard ‘Peck: would be the least likely place a) oxin s 0 ass | Multiple Fights i) was @hounced today by Frank ; secretary; and Robert Dick, treas- 5 waariaes ; ege Loan” peed help you ® look for him? B g ] p Br Hallett, township clerk, ‘Protest Proves ata urer. | COs tentery fen presents Pratect.gs @ KEEP more of e Police didn’t think tollogk inthe oe Ter ry WAP) The tegistration of voters Is one | Guest speaker of the evening will INGRID BERGMAN @ With our "package Loan” @ school, but that’s where a work in London for Bout sportn editor ig iraueht ap accomplished in the ee ha OSAKA, Japan (UPI)—Taxi driv-;be John W. Hirlinger, manager of é _ j au : 28, y Som- @ You may tie your bills ¢ man found Raul Vela Jr., ia and ihe manager “ the lighter)". 1460 Orchard Lake Rd jer Ikuji Kuroda, leaped into a the Pontiac Chamber of Com CURT JURGENS together and have the Saturday after he ran away Fri | lnvelv ed aiw ahew think tos arcu * river during the weekend for what merce. @ advantage of one account @ day because hix parents wouldn't B JOHN FARROW Fentine a. . ae Kee can Registered voters in unineorpo- he called a ‘“midwinter swimming | Dancing will follow the installa- ROBERJ DONAT @ at one place and one con: @ (Jet him watch television. , Associated Press Sports Writer to investigate Lz ar Cli « in 1- ‘rated areas of the township also will demonstration for wageition. e venient, sensible monthly e , N DON +) ‘The an | . ae “ami aks MU | ote on the controversial zoning increases.” He died from a heart) ——— . payment antes’ of the ein Desi Anci un nl: fies wen (tele fights, a. \question affecting property on tne attack just before reaching the) India imports about 5 000 tons THE INN) OF THE ey ee ee : ew Vesign | . the G b il and oil products annual ; @ You should have CASH left- @ 9g ncient | moved in on London -- the scene| But it's about the only point on ieee corner ot oe inter. pprcsitelbenk: . oe aed mut of about can! | SIXTH HAPPINESS @ over, too! @ | WILMINGTON, Del. — A 0 eee asmnighen Picea tee CO ke he can ¢ ‘section, Hallett said. If approved! The Rio Grande serves as the 000,000. The cost to the domestic’ ® Get $25 to $500 One aye ele oe rian London andchallen er Ilen-|demn on an ies on ON" the zoning change would make this! boundary between Texas and Mex- consumer is about twice that much. Cin ; ; preiiced Oy 8) Minimo con ry (oom r , . Ne Mae Mae J ee commercial property, he added. ‘ico for 1,210 miles. ——— = See COLOR by DE LUXE cern is) based on the cunelform In Record Time! ADDED writing of ancient Asevrin One Muman Gibson, president of the never attended a Clark fist! DOORS OPEN 6:45 ° ° tof the world's first alphabets con lnternational Boxing Club. is here * * * aa d H dli COLOR CARTOON sisted) oof cuneiform charters) OO 1s Edie Alvavist) manager) op didn't cover them bee wise Hollywoo eadlines SUNDA FINANCE COMPANY farmed in clay tablets The new Puropeany champion Ingemar ¢ didnt acknow leds D Y- upholstery design uses the tri POR nssen igitimyate fight answe al ae R b t T | Si ( ] ANNY KAYE | ° 1185 N. Perry St. © angular symbols against aback. American promoter Bill Rosen [Miller sporty editor of the Deser O er ay Or 19gNs Pp in "ME and the COLONEL’ Ld No Parking Preblem ground of 12 colors. ee ec iaigas ei ‘et News ai Salt Lake Telegram. | panaieaee s Phone FE 8-9661 . : ane | onengn wepresen oO to Make Picture in Atrica Also: THE LINEUP” * . 1,000 Bias ° Freeze [tative of the IBC, also has a date New Title for Moylan e e at Earls Court the scene of ay . r : e0000006 TAIPET (UP]I)—More than cieal All of them want to see just} TAMPA, Fla. (AP)—Eddie Moy | By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS =n: bat —— it wen't be an | : people have frozen to death in} how good London, second-ranked/lan, 36-year old sporting goods IHOLLYWOOD—The next of our Oscar reported. Floyd Patterson’s/salesman from Trenton, NJ, Hollywood stars to go to Africa’ The Oscar is copyrighted and le Ys China, the Nationalist China cen-| world title, and Cooper, seventh-|added the Dixie International 4 to make a picture is Robert avis ‘cannot be used for purposes other ; a A itral news agency reported from rated challenger, really are, Lon-inis championship to his laurels x we & than the specific award, which of WHITE Hong Kong today. ldon is a slight favorite today, Bob signed a contract late Fri- eourse Mike won for ‘Around the, day with producers Cubby Broccoli World in 80 Days.” ! and Irving Allen to do “Adamson,” —— | FUEL OIL FOR which is based on a novel, “Tales! 1 doubt if any premiere ever PLEASANT of the African Frontier,” by J generated ‘more excitement than WINTER LIVING : _ ‘{“Compulsion” which took place at Hunter and Daniel P. Mannix. Sun Valley. Idaho, when Dick Burns Cleaner Burns Hotter The picture, a Warwick pro- Zanuck showed his picture there duction, will be released by [to the National Convention of Dis- Burns Longer awe) aeawe es ) Columbia, ‘trict Attorneys. Bob leaves here Feb. 16. He will! bel e * Oakiand Fuel & Paint “ Orchard Leke go to London, then to Mobasa, The Two of the legal lights suffered film will be shot in Kenya. injury—one who broke his leg in a E 5-6159 (Advertisement) * * iskiing mishap, and the other (who. Woman Nearly | Communist comunes in North) challenger for Open 10:45 25c to 1 P.M. Hell Below! Havoc Above! NOW! Saye FUEL OM “LA PARISIENNE” COMING SOON “A GIFT-OF LOVE” —— ae — | “PARTY GIRL” "GIGI" | shall be nameless) fell from a bar, | Beb was quite excited at the stool in the Sun Valley Lodge and | ‘chance to see far-away places, | fractured his arm. Well, boys will and he seemed unconcerned at the he boys at convention time, even possibility of having to undergo if they are D.A.'s. the rigors which are said to go with picture-making in Africa. He said he won't be separated long from his wife, Ursula, She is decorating their house now, and will join him as soon as she finishes. “ Snapshots of - Hollywood collected at random: Gene Tierney has an admirer who has made her acai | Aly Khan. She and Aly now are good friends, but no romance. . iE seein ean An A F PONTIAC - y | DRIVE IN ene evrwewe Elizabeth Taylor has indicated) leave Switserland in a few days are, Featere Dist 05-8: 10-8: 15-3: 25-0:98 es 0 ea to close friends that she will be, and are due to arrive in New ane ban EXTRA! aif ed to dea 1h yeorn , {in Chicago on the first anniversary; York on the 17th. In a letter to Wk Tom and jerry | 2. Sport Thriths Fics l head anne te pasctioy of Mike Todd's death. In the Jew-| some friends Erich says Paulette CLOSED TONIGHT Cartoon * Ref’ Now! m hepon se D. Ward of L.A. lish religion that is a sacred time! ts a terrific cook. , ich, rectal ich, chafing. rath ap ocs ween ey monument at the tomb Linda Christian, who was report- OPEN colied LANACAME. This featacting coins [el te ed having herself a ball in Mexico, stain SERIOUS JOB — David Wilson is pnly four well. Not yet a student himself, | bess medicated creme kills harmful ‘i boy stations ; ar nadir ol it fam, terleced and d'aed| years old but he takes his self-employed position —_ himself at a street crossing which Dys no regular eee fas an Tey Srp — Segura rom = cg p thea FRI-SAT.-SUN. healing. Don‘ ‘t vafler another pin os very seriously. The Frankfort, Ind., boy is learn, 5 guard, Mom made the belt and badg ment will be erected to the The Devil's Doll.” No com x : today st all deug mores. | ing his school traffic safety lessons early and | memory of the brilliant show: (Copyright, 1999) =a. \ ca ¢ a a ee eS ee See eg ee _ aa + iam | ¥ op iS. Mgt ae = = = De Sa ae * if ¥ yf ou. € pee tate Lara, ¢ uate a vical ' \ 7 J # / * a | | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 Doesn’t Take from Rich and Give to Poor | RIVETS ¢ é ; e 2 : nilation Is Not a Robin Hood--lke By SAM DAWSON federal, state and local levels — that the President seeks dollar,especially noted last summer AP Business News Analyst and spending beyond the amounts/cutbacks. He mentions in general|when their pay increased. NEW YORK (AP)—The Presi-|*he President says.he will propose|terms the ending of some costly} And a successful @conomy drive dent's sermon. on thrift to the '® Congress. housing, farming and veteran pro-\could dampen some of the ardor Congress and to the American ~ * * grams. sal nor beky- ypc Oo people is based on the practically In dollar volume defense spend- - © wire market has fed on expectations 0 unchallenged thesis: ing would be as high as expected| Those who supply or work for|further inflation from deficit e « ¢ — the President approves a slight|builders could have some of their |SPending and from the wage-price increase in the coming year. The/hopes dashed. Those who sell to/Spiral that it often speeds up. Py nly by ——, Wate eae uncertainty to be dissolved. when|farmers could find some of them! The bulls also have counted tion. But will it try to? the detailed budget and defense|less enthusiastic buyers of goods.’ strongly on a big upsurge in gen- + The rub comes in this: Will the department programs are spelled Veterans benefits have a way of eral business — an upsurge helped Congress, and the people it. rep- out lies in what direction these/ passing quickly through the bene-|along in part by increased govern- nee ace enough about fight- defense dollars will be channeled. /ficiary’s pockets and out into var-| ment spending. ing a future and somewhat nebu-| Switching from one type of fous trade channels. — & kt lous inflation to do without the Weapon to another usually sends} A real economy drive would) Inflation doesn’t hélp the econ- present sugar plums the Presi-|the company with the new con-/mean cutting back the number of| omy really, It.only seems to. But dent’s new economy drive pro-|tract booming and leads to lay-|government workers — a total the thrift that would thwart the poses to withhold? offs in the concern whose contract! that seems to grow year by year.!continuing deterioration of the Su ing the Congress goes |* canceled. Their spending boosts retail vol-| American dollar sometimes tastes ae a the President points It is in other fields than defense} ume across the nation. This was like bitter medicine. out that Congress alone holds the| ) - purse strings — many industries) BOARDING HOUSE they would get trom freer tederall (AMY JL 1NE GOT AN IDEA) THERE'S NOTHING IN spending. The first economy drive IT SAYS HERE THE A tucy q FOR USING OLD Y THE PAPER ABOUT ITAT 4, Vt DONT NEVER STORM || QUBERT SOITHIUHE LIKE TNS, MARS, BUT || TT STORIED, HE: OOS WAST L TRAINK OF TWAT |] ACTU@QIN CUAIK- GN... WAST WAS |] COREANT! VT OAS ' VOWRRIGRT vy v me tw go showed how, [/ 1 INNER TUBES! JA ALL! THE DISCORDANT qackly eureniemarice could be) 7 CITY SKATING POND / Mee } “EVERY OVER- ¥Y BRAVING OF YOU hurt when Uncle Sam tightened [/// |S CLOSED FOR THEY'RE {f WEIGHT SKATER ff BUFFOONS MERELY cee oo ) REPAIRS BIG Y SOING TO) OUGHT TO HANE | DENOTES YOUR LACK x * & 4 ACCIDENT YES-7 START The President offers the classic TERDAY AFTER-) WEIGHING ONE! SUST OF INTELLIGENCE /«~ THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert SWS indictment of government spend- NOON WHEN A THE STRAP ITON WHY DON'T YOU TRY : WHY CANT YOU DO IT I DONT HAVE TO GET UP } | SO JUST SET THE CLOCK ing in excess of income, with the) BLIMP-SiZ SKATERS AND Nou DON'T /| READING A GOOD INSTEAD OF AT il, 3,AND 7 2 UNTIL 7...{D GET AN EXTRA | | BACK AN HOUR...HE WONT end result of whittling away the, “SIZED HANE TO EAT BOOK SO YOU CAN Hee THE BABY —y HOUR OF SLEEP! KNOW THE DIFFERENCE / purchasing power of the dollar: | SKATER FELL NOW, JUST tb SAN coat | es y |] BREAKFAST CONNERSE INA O K AND Inflation is not a Robin Hood, AND CRACKED /{ LIKE THE STANDING CNILIZED | taking from the rich to give to THE ICE LIKE 4} WEIGH THE It 10 1 YOU MANNER 2 y the poor. Rather, it deals most AN ANVIL DROP-)) TRUCKS ON} \ sLips - | cruelly with those who can least PING ON A THE HIGH- y Ze protect themselves. It strikes THREE- WAYS / , = hardest those millions of our citi- MINUTE EG6/) > z = zens whose incomes do not quickly! Ke « rise with the cost of living.” i The proposed economy would) end the federa) deficit financing, which the President lists along with the wage-price spiral as basic causes of inflation. If Congress fools the experts and approves tight budgeting, what would it do to present busi-| ness expectations? | A realistic appraisal of most of} the predictions of good times in a By McEvoy and Strieber — BUT THAT'S NOT YF ia Wi TM HERS; MRS! DUGAN — I HAVE DIXIE DUGAN See yt iF YOURE } aT a a “gto COMING TO PF C.*CHUCK’ ANDERSON — eee TAKE M MY WIFE AND DAUGHTER — Or | = i . L) He's WAY SOLDIER MATERIAL TO 1959 shows that one of the factors = =, | x they strongly count upon is a rise 1) © ; in government spending — at the- ; ie é€e) Din we ah, . ; WY GINING THEMTHE 9 2oAR7 [: \ ews . WAT 4. 1 me Ma rriage License OLD CHILL, MASOR = “© 1980 by NEA Bervice, tno. T.M. Reg. U.8. Pat. OF CRNTS — \h | iy (Ee N . * A - { he é Applications Le Wea In OUT OUR WAY ; “\ \< Za ys HO, FELLERS-- OH, GOSH-- TH’ DUDE! WHERE YA HE BETTER STAY. GOIN' ¢ HOME, WHERE HE WON'T GIT HIS CLO'ES Gar! G Brown, Lake Orion se Betty D. Carter, Lake Orion = = William K. Kinsey, 224 Raeburn — Ruth A. Lafnear, 364 Raeburn —— = William H Stephenson, Walled Lake Joyce BE Barbara, Walled Lake SPOILT-- HE DASSN’T ALLEY OOP . By T. V. Hamlin Robert W. Spencer. Oxford | 1S HE REALLY } YES, ACCORDING TO THEN HE OUGHTA > Aes ee ee na BACK TEN / OUR CALCULATIONS | | BE RUNNING INTO y Tu Be A Alvin Stillwell, Farmington THAT'S QUITE MILLION DY THAT COAL MINE MIRACLE JF T Shirley W. Hawkins, Livonia had FIND ANYTHING ' IN THIS MESS! Es ger A THICKET DOC'S |} YEARS? GOT HIMSELF IN-, TO, ISNT ITP GUY MOST AN Y Bernhard W Vosteen, 608 Kennett TIME NOW, EH? Patricia Y. Nonhof. Lewisburg, Pa. Robert E. Leslie, 37‘ Strathmore Freda J. Pugh, 1151 LaSalle Herman Krause, 7498 Hatchery Emma M. Durston, 1488 Hatchery James L. Mp, a 402 W. Huron Harriett & vens, 402 W. Huron Phillip E. Bernard, Holly Marilyn G. Pieper, Reading, Calif. Thomas P. Caverly. Birmingham Lois A. Cluchey, 3139 W. Huron Walter T. Dayer, Bloomfield Hills Audrey L. Hoaglund, Bloomfield Hills yg Rees S23 ot © 1800 by MEA Servic, tre, TM Beg UA Pun OFS ° Caleb 8. Atwood, Birmingham doen A. Elmblad, Ann Arbor Frank Rochowiek, Wixom Mary J. DeVoll, Holly William A Miller, Port Huron Ann E. Redner, Farmington Billy D, Chastain, Birmingham Helen L. Webb, Ferndale Charles L. Moss, 132 Jackson Marva R. Kell, 185 Fulton Allen D. Dickason, Ortonville Barbara M. Burt, Ortonville Anthony C. Fernandez, 15 Ester Jamie L. Littone, 15 Ester William [f. McLaughlin, Royal Oak Rose M. Evans, Rochester CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner ee MIGHT Nes THE SECRET SERVICE SEARCHED iL———| THIS AREA FOR DAYS... THINKING F THE RED AGENTS MAY HAVE DONE IT] THE MISFIT ; I DARED NOT HAVE MY SHIRT TAIL OUT, NOR BE IN COMFORT OTHER WAYS, LIKE WEARIN’ FATHER'S PANTS, CUT DOWN -« I DIDN'T QUITE FIT IN, THOSE DAYS. ANP NOW THAT I LOVE BAGGY KNEES, AND HATE A RAZOR ON MY CHIN, I FINP NO JOY IN MEETIN’ FOLKS, xR BECAUSE, SOMEHOW, I DON'T FIT IN. CRWILLIAMS © 1959 by NEA Service, Inc TM Reg US Pat OF. alas Gary L Pike, Farmington Veronica G. Knight, Livonia Clarence H. Dachs, 110 W. Pike Clara J. Bilyer, 3 Hovey > DONALD DUCK . i , = By Walt Diente? & NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller (WELL, WELL) a, ( Now, THEN, sTaRT) || Oar, ; — = OIE Sree SN TRE =) AT THE BEGINNING... mele ' : HELLO---WHO IS LISTEN I DON'T ee) ree at ) ch Tew sragy are | (Pes 3 THIS --- TOM OR WANT YOU TO Ww SEN WATS oe) | AT MENT! FOLR a eer ~ ee ‘ INSOMNIA, DOC.) : HAVEN'T RTROUB-EF J SHE BEGANAGS R-RING JOE OR MENTION ANY Ss79 a pa SV BOB @ OTHER BOYS’ Leer iS ee ' 4 Ay: pe THIS IS NAMES --- WEEKS. Rd tee = te one , i 4 SZ - UNDERSTAND 2 Wau | =~ RIE BUS oo «le Sane 1D By Diek Cavalli ONE THING I CAN'T wre et tenon THE SCRIPT You'll Find PROFITABLE | OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Fres Press Wont Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and . Your telling orublems. yas Breet To Place Your . WANT AD Gereoton® sug Genncios® DIAL FE 2-8181 — : “Thank you so much for showing me around. Now I know what * ‘want in the way of a house plant.” . ee ey ee ee ee ee a ee ae Engineers to Hear Atom Scientist Talk Robert F. Mantey of Detroit, a nuclear engineer for Atomic Power Development Associates, Inc., De- troit, will address the Reciprocal lectrical Association of Oakland County meeting in the Pontiac City | Hall at 7:30 Wednesday evening. | His topic will be ‘Atomic Power at Lagoona Beach.” APDA is a nonprofit corpora tion formed by 43 private com- panies pooling money and techni- eal know-how to do the research and design work for the Enrico Fermi nuclear power plant on the shore of Lake Erie about 30 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1959 _- , Lodge Calendar ular pect -Pontiac Shrine No. will eld Wednesday, January 14th a 8 o'clock at Roose- velt Temple. 22 State St. Drill ears practice 6:30. Bernice Cover, aC : News in Brief An unidentified man grabbed $20 from the cash register of the Pon- tiac Stationers Shop, 4 N. Saginaw St., and fled Saturday afternoon. A clerk had opened the register to make change for the thief whom she thought was purchasing a greeting card. Two youths, described ag being 11 and 14 years old, snatched the purse of Helen Kreher, 2955 Ot- miles south of Detroit, Mantey received a BS. degree) from the United States Military, Academy in 1945 and did graduate work at Princeton University earn-| ing a M.S. degree in Nuclear Phys-| ics in 1950. He was employed by the Philadelphia Electric Company in July 1954 and has been on the staff of APDA since August 1956. He is presently working in the Shielding and Health Physics Sec- tion specializing in shielding de- sign for the Enrico Fermi Atomic Power Plant County Real Estate Post Goes to Royal Oak Man Elmer W. Haack, a Royal Oak realtor, has been installed as 1959 president of the Oakland County teal Estate Appraisers Assn. Warren J. Beauchamp of Detroit is the new vice president, and Wil- liam E. Maloney of Farmington, secretary-treasurer. William A. Kennedy and William H. Knudsen, both of Pontiac, and James C. Rogers of Grosse Pointe, were |n- stalled as directors Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN sego St., Waterford Township, in |front of the Greyhound bus station ‘Saturday. It contained $15, a $50 check and miscellaneous papers. New Speed Limits Set for Wixom The Oakland County Road Com- mission has announced that {t will! post ‘speed limit signs on Pontiac| Trail and Wixom road in Wixom. Acting on orders of Michigan State Police Commissioner Joseph A. Childs, a new speed control zone of 45 miles per hour will be posted between the west city limits of Wixom and Orchard Lake road (M-218). It will become effective! Jan. 23, the commission sald. * * * lremained good with steel orders LGoodyear, United Aircraft, Radio Market Edges Latest Record NEW YORK (®—The Stock Mark- et edged above its latest record high in heavy trading early today. Most changes of key stocks were fractional, a few going as high as a point. x *« & Acme Stee] was an exception, jumping 3 points on an openjng block. American Telephone, up a frac- tion at the gtart, erased the gain and dropped about a point. The ticker tape was late in pro- longed period of active dealings. Most steels, motors, coppers, chemicals and airlines went ahead, Oils were unchanged to lower. Rails were mixed. Wall streeters forecast an early challenge to the 600 level in the Dow Jones Industrial Average which closed Friday at a record 595.72, Meanwhile economic news moving at a fast pace and copper demand reported steady, Phelps Dodge, U.S. Rubber, East- man Kodak and Allied Chemical advanced about a point each, x * * Inland Steel, another wide gain- er, rose 5 points on an opening block of 1,500 shares. Fractional gains were made by such assorted stocks as U.S. Steel, Bethlehem, Ford, General Motors, Also, 25 mp.h. signs will be in-| stalled between M-218 and Theo-| dore street, 35 m_p.h. signs between: Theodore street and West maple road, and 45 mph. signs on West! Maple and Potter roads, all in the | city of Wixom. | a a tee Simmons to Get 4 CHICAGO, Jan. 12 /AP) Opening - 5 . ont A mint Service Citation Mee. 181% Mar 6a" Mey cil bese ye ‘for Agriculture | Jiy. . 202) Mar 134% Lod & ae 18448 May soe 130 | . Jorn (new) sank ay ce Tas A Pontiac resident is among the Mey cccccc. 118) tard (drums) ithree Michigan agricultural lead.’ TY. cvvvere 116% ad i ea ers who will be presented a cita-| _ : ‘ | ton for distinguished service to — agriculture A Bridge for a Bridge ha is Howard F, Simmons of 13% E. Iroquois Rd, recently re- From Artist to Dentist itired manager of the Michigan Milk CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa U—When P Poducers )Assn the late Grant Wood was strug Andrew G. Lohman, secretary gling to get a start ax an artist, jmanager of the Mailton Farm Bu. | he went to the office of Dr. B. H ena, Herpets | Van anen, Eslon MecKeet aenitat Rapids dairy and poultry farm op- DUE oe Hi fo LW AL e erator, and Simmons will receive, He explained he needed some |the citations Feb 4 at Michigan: dental work done but had no cash available. He offered in payment a painting of a brige he had made in Paris. The said he guessed that would do. “Okay,” said Wood, ‘‘it’s a deal, a bridge for a bridge.” Dr. McKeeby later model for the farmer in Grant's! painting, American Gothic Preacher Chases Hat Into Whirling Propeller HENDERSON Ky, (®—The Rev George Wood, slated to conduct a funeral here, showed up with} nine stitches in his nose. He col-! lided with an ariplaine The ministers hat blew off earli- er while he was at the airport. Mr. Wood darted after it, right into a whirling propeller. Loss of engineering and science talent at a senior level has reached, serious proportions, reports Presi- dent John T. Rettalita of the TU. nois Institute of Technology. became! Week | ‘Man Owns 500 Pipes and Smokes Them All PONCA CITY, Okla. up Ray- mond Brierly, 60-year-old) lumber company sales manager, has col lected more than 500 pipes — and. he smokes them all. cases of pipes in all rooms in his) home. And, Brierly notes with! pride, he still has the first pipe he ths. Boy Uses City Baths —Has 3 Older Sisters! JERSEY CITY, N.J. —A young boy who frequents the city baths says he has no choice. | He has three older sisters at home and by the time it's his turn! for the tub, all the hot water is So he pays 15 cents for a} gone. ‘hath at the city-run spa. INVIGORATING, NO? — Broad-bottomed Anatole, polar bear at the Paris Zoo, hauls himself from his private pool after a stimulating dip. The tolder the better tor Anatole—it reminds him of home. State University during Farmers’ C® The collection is so large he has 5) used when he started smoking at E nt 1 & Tel 62 a| Crk Coal 3 } na Man § #2 Corp., Anaconda, Kennecott, Penn- sylvania Railroad, American Air-| lines and Pfizer ‘ New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) W774 OLD GLORY’S EVOLUTION—The American flag has been studded with pine trees, carried stars in many patterns, and featured variations of the Union Jack. Some of the milestones in the progress of the banner to its present 49star design are depicted above. The New England flag, upper left, designed @ around 1700 and carried at the battle of Bunker Hill, featured a pine tree insigne. Predating the Revolution by two years was the Liberty flag, hoisted over the green at Taunton, Mass. The Grand Union flag, feaguring 13 red and white stripes, one for each colony, was carried in 1776 by the newly formed Continental army. In 1777, almost a year after the Declaration of Independence, the Continental Congress adopted the “Betsy Ross’’ banner with its 13 stars and stripes. Honoring the admission of Vermont and Kentucky, two more stripes were added in 1795. The practice of adding stripes was soon discontinued, and the flag reverted to 13 bars. A star continued to be added for each new state. The 48- star field came into being with the admission of Arizona in 1912. It remained unchanged until Alaska’s formal entry into the Union this year. — op -+} Queens, Forrestal Figures after decima! point are elahth: Y Yrgst anaT . AMT Zenith Rad ...198 Admiral ...,.. 107 Kelsey May . Ae] 4 [Air Redue a4 nnecott ‘4 ; Allied Ch... 046 Kimb Cik 6 Allied Stra ..., £32 Bresce. 68 33) Ajlle Chal ... 206 Lor al i lum Lita wae Libb Mena 13 | lations cesees OF Vockh Alre 84 we Am Airlin .... 964 [oew's amCan ...6. $92 [one B Gas 4261 Pia m i a Pay oe +4 a ei eal ~ ba 5 «pu as i lam Motore” 409 Mock Tre 3 am N Gas . 66.6 Manning a Am News 34.7 artin Co 2 3 Am Tel & Tel 2306 Mav D Anaconda es) Mead C “ HI Armeo tl 604 eee. line 1 . 4 7 gent. Ae, we ee, Marr Chas M4 Mple Hon ie Aveo Mf 126 f Minn M&M Ine | SoH & Onlo 463 wMonsan Ch 2 Beth Steel 82) Mont Ward 424) ‘Boeing Alr re | Motorola o Bohn Alum 29) Mueiler Brass Bond Airs 206 Murray CP 06 | Bore oun bea Nat Cash Ro 762 oes ; t . Brun Balke... 835 Nat rege . : Budd Co 203 wy Central Sal Burroughs 986 Mort & Wert | Calum & H i No Am Ay 44.7) (Searcy Soup $11 Nor Pac 406. ¢ 201 Nor sta Pw .. 23 | £ tdin Pac + 2904 Ohio on Japiteal Airl ., 184 dy t € etrier Cp 497 Owens Cng . 63 . 4 "998 eee oO _ 647 Cater Trac agg Pan A Air 262) Ches & Ohio 694 Panh Epl . 665) Chrysler aye Parm Pict 464) Icitles five él Parke 1 a1 [Clark Equip . 458 Penney Jc 1044 Coca Cola 1aa@ Pa R «+ 10 Colg Palm .., 92 Pepa C Jo +. 206 Colum Cas 237 Pfiser vee 100 Con #dls fo, Phelps pb ween 08 Con N Gas 615 Philco caees a0 Consum Pw Ata Phill Pet ,, 402 Cont Bak 4683 Pure Oil oe. Cent Can 677 RCA sss 474 Cont COPAA 127 Repub em .. 7K Cont Meter 114 Rex Drug 342 Cont Ol! ,. 674 Reyn Mot 136 Copper Rog 994 Rey Tob B... 04 Odrn Pd .. 647 Roval Dut 472 Curtte Pub... as eslowes at... 411 Noes t Re Det Edis . . 439 Scoville ue i se | Dia C Beag ... 141 aearas Roeb .. 401 Doug Airc... 874 shell on a4 Du Pont 2196 @immone |) 474 Bast Alr Lb... 38 Ginclatr ae Fast Kod 1907 sgcony he Ae aton Mix 868 acy Pac... 84 Bl Auto L 6. 367 sou my os. 88 Bl & Muse ..... 119 @perry Rd ae 24 Emer Rad... 147 a4 on Cal #0) Erle » WD aa on - x-Cel)-O 40 : Ind 404 ‘ord Mot 66.7 td OF ND AAS rueh 1 ta. 03 Sieone et pa n ere, d = tA? lean *e Stud Pack » 47 a) ote 4 Gun Ot 626 ue Y Bare en Mille nf see a 0 HH on = ae Oe aviv BI Pa 60.1 ale ? 5 Texas Co 44 Time ah° tex O Bul || 996 Tir aay Textron ., 206 se bet Brod #4 Tim R Rear aay Ohilette 474 Trane W Air 182 QGoebe) Ur 12 Transamer WwW Goodrich aE rwent Cen 125 Qoedvear 1107 oOnderwed 314 MG fa a4 Ty Carbide 194 Qt No Ry ) eeritree me Greshound a ? ne mallee An ay 244 : Home &tk 4ag6 (Unit Fruit 1 | Hooker Ch 7 Un Cee ce 493 nduat Ray 29 US Lines 9 ne Rand o¢2 US Rub. 49 niand At) o 4 US Ateel O84 naplr Co: 405 18 ‘Tob 98 nterlak if 7 Van Raal 14 nt Bus Mech 833) welgreen 48 n ary 414 w . ? q ne tek Hy eat Un Tel . 323 nt Paver i504 Weat A Bk 32.6 nt Bios 364 Weate Ft . nt Silver “4 Wilson @& Co , 343 T i Woolworth ie | 4 DETROIT ATOCKA iC. J. Nephier Co} Figures after decttmal pointa are eighths High Low Noon Alien Elec & Equip Co® .. 21 Baldwin Rubber Co* oo» 04 1 Rosa Oear Co* 30 3 ot Lk Ol & Chem Cc* . 14 Howell Eler Motor Co* Pen Met Prod Co* The Prephet Co* Rudy Mfg Co Toledo Edison Co "No sale bid and asked @-O.12 a & -108 Ce re Dee 13 14 First Commencement Is Held Under 4 Moons TUCSAN, Ariz. We — College graduates are really going out in- to a unique world — thanks to the earth satellites. Addressing the University of Arizonia's 1958 graduating class, Dr. Alan T. Waterman, director: of the National Science Foun-| dation, noted: “It is safe to say this year's commencement is the first to be held beneath four different moons —one placed there by nature and three by man." Learn from other people's mis- takes — you can't possibly live long enough to make them all yourself . A tourist is a guy (relates D, iJ, Zerbe) who travels hundreds of miles in order to get j valing great ocean liners in size, tia special | Members, three of them from the 3 tail that wagged the dog is ridicu- |would be borne by persons in the ‘flat rate tax of 3% per cent which also will outweigh the super-car- rier U.S.S, Forrestal, The tanker will be christened by Queen Frederika of Greece, after whose oldest daughter the vessel is named, The ship will fly the Greek! flag. A spokesman for the Stavros §.| Niarchos fieet, owners of the Prin-| |cess Sophie, said the tanker will) | operate between the deep-water NEW YORK (UPI)—The biggest} | merchant ship ever built in the) Western Hemisphere will be a| a waif in most parts of the| a 70,100-deadweight-ton Prin- cess Sophie, a giant oi] tanker ri- will find few deep water ports ca- | pable of handling her when fully loaded . * * ports of the Persian Gulf and Cali- This behemoth of the seas, sched-' fornia. uled to be launched Nov. 15 at! x « Bethlehem Steel's Quincy (Mass.), shipyard, can carry in one trip the! Pp equivalent of one day's crude oil- | production in Oklahoma, Her carrying capacity also Is! equal to approximately 27 million) gallons of gasoline, or enough to! ‘drive an automobile to the moon' The 12,000-mile run from ersian Gulf, through the Indian Ocean and across the Pacific to California, is said to be the only wite that can accommodate a ‘fully loaded ship this size. In order to enter major East ; iCoast refining centers, the Princess and back 1.100 times. |Sophie would have to pump part et we lof her cargo into barges and When fully loaded, the 20 mil- lighters before entering, This in- lion-dollar vessel will weigh about (cludes such important refinery 100,000 long tons, This will make | areas as New York and Philadel- her heavier than any passenger | phia ship in existente, including Brit- | Since the end of World War II, aln's Queen Mary and Queen |the oi] industry has been going Kilzabeth, The Princess Sophie in for: ‘bigger and bigger tankers, Chairman Conlin Says Tax Plan Not UAW's LANSING \®—An assertion that paid out in taxes, whereas It's only ithe United Auto Workers Union'6 per cent on a $6,000 income.” dictated a graduated income tax) Conlin said the state deficit last 8 plan urged by the Citizens’ Advis-| June 30 would have been $60,000,-| ory Committee hag been labeled 000 instead of $21,000,000, but for "ridiculous," by Rep. Rollo G I fiscal manipulations by the 1958 Conlin. |legislature which cannot be repeat- Conlin, Republican chairman of ed legislative committee’ With others, he has estimated the which received the citizens’ group State's deficit by mid-year w ill rise recommendations, commented yes. to $100,000,000 or more. ferday ee Gray's Anatomy, a known to every English-speaking UAW, There were many Fs medical student, einige ges lished 100 years ago. from business and industry fully |” “There were 2% committee Giant New Oil Tanker Rivals \in an effort to combat rising oper- ‘of most nations consisted almost the! textbook | was first pub-} Next Move Up in Weight to Dixie Judge U.S. Civil Rights Agents Arrive With Order for Voter Records CLAYTON, Ala. (AP)—Renewed solely of 17,000-deadweight-ton T-2/ rebellion, submission to a federal tankers. They had a capacity of mandate, or more legal maneuver- |about 122,000 barrels of crude oil,| ing? | compared with more than 625,000, It was anybody’s guess which barrels for the Princess Sophie, | reaction would greet U.S. Civil x & & | Rights Commission agents arriv- In the last decade, supertankers ing today for a court - ordered of more than 30,000 and 40,000- ating eosts. During and immediately after World War II, the tanker fleets appointment to see voter registra-| Nab 7 for Thefts in Southfield to Solve Many Cases Over Past Year SOUTHFIELD — With the ar- rest this weekend of three adults and four juveniles, Southfield po- lice believe they have broken up a gang that has been stealing from homes in the Southfield area during the past year. The arrests came after the home of William Bertera, 21751 Midway Rd., was broken into Jan. 4. A 12-gauge shotgun, a 22-gauge rifle, a 38&caliber revolver, a strongbox and a small amount of money were taken while te family was away, Police are holding Leslie Lah- mer, 18, 17645 Cooley St., and Frank Thomasich, 18, 15106 Chat- ham St., both of Detroit, and dames Remosier, 18, 20298 West- ever Rd., Southfield. The four juveniles are petitioned to ap- pear in Oakland Juvenile Court in the near future, police said. Detective Sgt. Edward Ritenour said one of the juveniles, in trying to get the gun back to its owner discussed the problem with his counselor at the Lederle Junior High School. The youth took the guns to the school and placed them in the counselor's room. Assistant Principal Joseph Dunham, in checking the rooms at 9:30 that night found the weapons and called the police. Upon questioning, the boy ad- mitted the burglary and implicated the others. The three adults were scheduled to appear before Judge Clarence A. Reid in Municipal Court, South- field, at 11 a.m. today. . New Yorkers now are able to buy peaches picked in California only 24 hours before. They are being shipped from the West Coast by air freight in new-type plastic trays said to minimize the danger of shipping damage. Charter No, 13739 Reserve District No. 7 REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE Community National Bank of Pontiac, in _ the Looe be Michigan, at the ciose of au; 1958. Published in leepouss "se call made by compres . the Currency, under Section 5211, U. 8. Revised Statutes. ASS. Cash, balances with other banks, including core deadweight tons have become com- monplace. There presently are two! lock counties. foreign-built tankers of 85,000-dead- ~*~ «© * weight tons in service and one of! The records needed in the com- more than 100,000 tons now build- piletion probe into alleged denial, ing in Japan. Although many of these giants are limited as to the ports they can use, the oil industry has been forced by economics to re- |8&te his court. place Its smaller tankers with | x %, *® the supers, | Judge George C, Wallace, run- Frank R. Markley, vice president n¢rup in the Alabama governor's in charge of transportation for|T@ce last year, has resisted on Sun Oil Co.,:said the bigger ves-|gTounds of immunity every com- sels carry more cargo per trip mission move to examine the without proportionately. increasing| "esistration records impounded in costs, such as crew wages, food or His circuit court. F The agents come today with a rt s. Th sult is oe are. aoe thet per federal court order which Wallace An official of Transoceanic Ma- inn a appeal, or risk a rine, Inc., agents for the Niarchos | POSS! le jail term for contempt. : The jurist would give no indica- fleet, said the Princess Sophie will ion that (he would abide by th deliver Middle East crude oil at| “0 is at A would anat wienee the West Coast for less than two| Mandate. eis 7 “1 igher cents a gallon. This is half the Courts was hinted by his lawyers. cost of, 10 years ago despite the 5 penaes ve es ™ Tool and Die Peace The supertnkers mot onl» are After Sunday Talks once threaten eral agent senile to investi-| penses, jbig, they also are plush. The Prin- cess Sophie, for example, will have individual staterooms for each of DETROIT —The Detroit Auto- its 60-man crew. The living and Motive Tool and Die Manufacturers recreational quarters will be com-| Assn. has reached a new contract pletely air-conditioned, ;agreement with the United Auto Construction of this mighty tank-/ Workers Union. er, according to a Bethlehem Stee! The agreement, made yesterday ispokesman, made work for facto- ries, mines and transportation fa- cilities in some 40 states In addition, the vessel will spend! another $500,000 a year on the West Coast for supplies and services. sion, covers 7,500 workers in shops. Details of the contract will be withheld until ratification by the union membership, said state labor mediator Walter Quillico. A rati- as competent as any from the | UAW. "To say that these three were the lous,” A Detroit report said the éontro- versial tax proposal was ‘‘written| in Solidarity House,’ and emerged) as a committee recommedation with little change. * * & Under the graduated tax—with rates ranging from three to eight per cent, the heaviest burden $8,000 to $20,000 brackets. Wage earners in the lowest brackets would incur little or no liability. The report said the UAW offered its plan after spokesmen on the citizens’ committee objected to a earlier had ben under considera- tion, Asked about the report, Centia ; said the story was “possibly an attempt at influence’ — presum. ably to scare away potential non- union support for the proposal. Without expressly endorsing it, Conlin defended another controver-, sial feature of the citizens’ tax package—a recommendation for a) $9 a person annual rebate of state. salea tax, the estimated portion critic's assertion the device was a lollipop to make the entire tax package more palatable, | * *® * ‘Lam impressed by the fact that of undetermined a photo of himself standing by his automoile. — Earl Wilson, under the efisting tax structure) 20. per cent of a $2,000 income is! BLAZE DESTROYS SCHOOL — The Wellford schook near Spartanburg, S.C., was consumed by flames yesterday in a blaze in. Damage was estimated at $250,000. one was injured. Some school equipment was salvaged. fication meeting has been sched- uled for next Sunday. Versatile Man Works Both Sides of the Street a guy working both sides of the street. His classified ad read: “Private Detective, shadowing, suspicions verified. Also marriage | counselor. ”” tion records of Barbour and Bul-) after a 20%4-hour bargaining ses-' 75. for other SALT LAKE CITY W — Here's|**. balance, and cash item in process of collection i\United States Government | obligations, direct and guaranteed .. 24,979.050.55 Obligations of States and political subdivisions 19,925, 778.35 hegre mds, notes, and * 16,251,150 29 3,405,972 76 | Corporate stocks - Sig rs $165,000.00 stoc - 1 Reserve Sank) spoon 165,000.00 jLoans and discounts (in- eluding salads so over- drafts) . 28,179,782 08 | Bank premises owned $1,520, 566.54 furniture and nzverec: 266,228.51 1,785,795 05 Real estate owned other than bank premises . 182,628.92 Other assets ..... cecons. 495,006.96 Total Assets ee . $05,462,054 96 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of in- dividuals, partnerships, and corporations $37, 104,044.87 Time deposits of individuals, parenetenine. and cor- porations 35,264,207 17 Deposits of “United States Government eee postal savings) 2,221,951 84 posits of States ‘and po- litieal subdivisions ... Deposits of ba: . 12,406,978.45 nks 5,000 00 Other deposits (certified and cashier's checks, etc.) 635,518.17 Total Deposits $87,937, 697, 50 Land Contract or other liens ...... $9,608.04 on bank premises......... 9,698.04 [Other liabilities -«:» 1,460,840 26 Total Liabilities |... $80,417,238 80 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital Stock: Common Stock, total per vs $2. o,000.00 2.700.000 “ Surplus ... we 3,7 Undivided | rofite 300, ory 00 Reserves (and retifement account for preferred stock) Se 5 oe : < 344,819.16 Total Capital Accounts. ...$ 6,044,619.16 Total Liabilities and Cap- ital Accounts MEMORANDA |Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and purposes Loans as shown above are after deduction of re- serves of Securities an shown above are after deduction of reserves of : 303.140 67 I. W.A. Taylor. Vice-President and Cashier of the above-named bank. do solemniy swear that the above state- ment is true to the beat of my knowle edge and belief. W. A. TAYLOR, Vice-President & Cashier Correct—Attest: HAROLD ©. HOWLETT L H. COLE A. C. GIRARD State of Michigan, County a "Scxland. Sworn to and subscribed before me this Sth day of Jonuary, 1969. and I hereby certify that T am not an officer of director of this bank. 8. TENNEY McGRAW. | Notary Public, | veld commission expires November 20, Jan. 12, 58, $95,462,054 06 $ 2.600.000 00 545.889 33 tn Basen dl iby te Phone or come in AP Wirephois No 1 welcome” 1-2-8 to call up... come in... and teday! ~~ at BENEFICIAL when bills! i t BENEFICIAL fo 5 amy a Bin i Gean-Up Loan Th oats only one monthi yment instead of Seal casa ten more cash over é¢ach month. Remember: it’s just like up your loan! Loans $25 to $080 on Signature, Furniture or Car i i | ‘ / ; ; = ;