ity Police Use Tear Ga to Capture Berserk Youth By HAROLD 8. COHEN A 16-year-old Pontiac boy, he _ police believe went berserk, was! flushed from his home by tear gas/ last night after he bad threatened, a police officer with a loaded shot- . gun. x : ‘State Approves ‘4 The boy is held today in juvenile | ‘home on a charge of felonious as- it. | Police fired several tear gas shells into the basement and first floor of the south side home before * Ihted youth gave up. No shots were Ruther at ADDRESSES DELEGATES — Walter P. Reuther, right, unloads ing UAW special convention today. At left is Emil Mazey, - gecretary-treasurer. Goldwater I‘GOP Stooge, Reufher Tells 4 coer Thé boy had been showing signs of mental disturbance for several weeks, his mother told police, with dizzy spells and an ungovernable temper. Last night, just before 10 p.m., he grabbed a younger sister as she. walked-by his chair in the liv- ing room and twisted her arms. she told police, he began the living room furniture. _ Terrified, the mother herded her two young daughters into the kitch- en, closed the door, and then slipped out the back door. They encountered Officer ny —}mond Dickinson on his way work at 10:05 = and told bine! the story. * * * Dickinson went into the house . and the boy threw a lamp at him. then ran and got a shotgun which he leveled at the officer. Dickinson turned and left the’ house, calling for reinforcement from a neighbor's home. Seven men, led by Lt. Donny had turned out the lights in the open fire. : Several shells and grenades of ment and kitchen. the boy open the front door and “{stightiy open a storm door for air He held a wet handkerchief over his face. As they mounted the porch, the boy closed the storm door, but a : few seconds later apened it again “Nor air and Ashley grabbed rin 73 3958. and wasbeing compared The loaded 410 gauge shotgun was found on a chair by the door AP Facsimile United Auto Workers president, a thick briefcase before address- UAW Convention The boy was turned over to ju Venile officers and booked on a charge of feloniovS assault. He When his mother tried to stop him, smashing! Ashley and Det. Thomas Mitchell answered the call. Tear gas was, immediately sent for since the boy) house and the police felt he might. tear gas were thrown into the base. Ashiey and Mitchell then saw’ 71 Die as Snow Sweens Across Midwest States as Blanket of 15 Inches Smothers All Activity FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES | near blizzard that swept ‘the Midwest causing at least 27 deaths headed briskly for the East Coast inches: of snow are €x- pected in New England. Light flurries swirled in the wake of the snow as it hurried Eastward, leaving Kansas City almost com-, pletely paralyzed under 15 inches of snow—its worst storm in 46 years, Highways in the Kansas City area were blocked and bus and truck traffic in and out was at a | standstill. Nearly 100,000 children got an unexpected vacation from school | | yesterday while the storm oe hol ite height and thousands _ployes were told not to re ~~ come te work. Those whe did were up te four hours late. * The Midwest storm that tied up Kansas City exceeded one that ‘left 12.8 inches of snow there Jan with the city’s record, a 23-inch fall March 28-24, 1912 * * - Drifts mere than 6. feet high were reported in Missouri and Kan- Kansas City Worst Hit : ' CHICAGO — A massive) © today where from 8 to 8 "4 the driver of the car that ki SIGNS STATEMENT — George Wooter, 40- year-old factory worker, signs a statement for Lt. Clayton, Randolph in which he admits being pedestrian last _— an elderly Officers Harry who traced down Wooter’s car from a meager description given by witnesses. Pentiac Press Photo Friday night. Looking on are Duby and Guy White, right, Federal Reserve To Arraign Hit-Runner Cuts Bank Rate Whose Victim Died. Permits Lower Interest Charges by Reducing to 234 Per Cent WASHINGTON W — Financial circles forecast a boost for busi- ispent the night at the Oakland 55. Together with abandoned cars Ness and the stock market as a County Children’s Home. Ike Plans Three Meetings Today on U.S. Detense WASHINGTON (INS)—President iEisenhower, devoting more and ia ime to the nation’s defense | ms, scheduled three impor-| Gee ‘conbnentee on the subject DETROIT (INS)—United Auto Workers President today. Walter P. Reuther fired up the Union’s special conven- He was to meet first with the ‘National Security Council, a ses- that blocked vital roads, the snow result of the Federal Reserve drifts halted access to highways Board's approval of a lower dis- jand even main routes were re- |dticed to one-way traffie, safe only for vehicles equipped with chains lor snow tires. . TRAINS MOVING { Bus and plate traffic stopped in the Kansas City area but trains, | although off ehaaate, reportedly were moving. In Chicago, aig snow and ‘slushy streets caused tieups in i\rush-hour traffic and police said many disgusted motorists aban- doned cars in tha streets. From tion in Detroit today by ripping into Republican Sen. | sion moved up a day to permit the 5 to 12 inches of sndw fell in vari- Barry Goldwater of Arizona. Reuther told the cheering 3,215 delegates that Gold- water was “mentally unbalanced and needéd a pSy- Baghdad Pact nations. chiatrist.” In his kynote address he said: “Goldwater is a stooge for Republican politicians and *big business, undertaking a campaign of slander and smear to weaken Demo- cratic unions everywhere. “On Monday in Detroit top Ford, | ct as i | 4se-heT- ai Motors; Chrysier MT jattendance of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who is flying | Behind the storm, -the Weather pected to request similar reduc- jexecutive Vice president ito Turkey for a meeting of the | Then Eisenhower was to confer | with Lewis Strauss, chairman of | ithe Atomic Energy Commission. It was considered likely that) ous parts of the Clitcago area. Bureay said, ig a mass of cold, | dry air, expected to bring plom- meting temperatures. - Illinois listed eight storm deaths, | Kansas six, Missouri five, Iowa, count rate todav at the Philadel- phia Reserve Bank. * * News of the move, a reduction in the discount) rate trom:3 to 2% per cent for fetch” Property Tax ‘Rate of $13.70. Cooley Objects to OK Without. First Getting” Hospital Figures : City Commissioners {passed a $5,683,595 budget for 1958 last night, and. eyed 2 continued tax rate of $13.70 per $1,000 of valu- ation for the fifth straight year. If the- city’s assessed valuation is boosted this year:to an anticipated $260 million, the general prop- ‘erty tax rate could remain ‘at the $13.70 figure, City \Manager Walter K. Will+ ‘mani said. ; ‘The a&sessed valuations will be set this spring. Included in the budget is $3,562,000 to be raised by taxation, In passing the budgef, Com- missioner Roy ae Cooley observed that the hospital iboard of trustees is required by ordinance to submit its budget for A 40-year-old Pontiac factory worker will be af-|anoroval in December? and “yet raigned in Municipal Court today for leaving the scene it’s always been late since I've of a fatal accident. George Wooter, of 249 Harrison Ave., has admitted Pontiac Bank Adds 2 to Board. ‘Stockholders Elect money-easing 9 *he was the driver of the car that fatally injured Mrs. ‘Annie Gilmore, 67, of 456 ‘Harvey St., Friday night. She died of her injuries Monday /morning. Wooter, a factory worker with| five children, told officers he re- called the accident, but did not ‘think he had hit anyone. ‘that district, raised prices on the Directors, Get Report Me cold be bod bebo cut wih Pacific Coast Stock Exchange in- San Francisco yesterday. The exchange still had 45 min- utes of. trading time remaining when the announcement was issued. of Peak Deposits = | ate chron, who live with his | estranged wife and had returned | to their home, He was drivimg te Two new members were elected! his home when the accident oc- to the Pontiac State Bank Board of curred. Directors at a meeting of the | Wooter stated he saw Mrs. Gil- The Philadelphia district reduc-+bank’s stockhoiders held last night. more and felt a thump but since tion is effective today. The other) Federal Reserve banks are ex- tions shortly. | The discount rate is the inter-; .. est Federal Reserve Banks charge | ‘their’ member banks for borrowed jmoney. * * * ‘Strauss would give the President three, Indiana two and Wisconsin) The eduction will permit cor; a preview of the report the AEC and Britain will make Tuesday on) bomb for peaceful uses. This | afternoon, Eisenhower has i. sehedttied a meeting with Gordon three. Ottumwa, Iowa, measured 12. j1l_ inches and Moline, inches. Iil., 10 deo a doatey en ave tree rare ‘mercial “banks to lower their own! ‘interest _charges—te—_corperations|- progress toward harnessing the H- inches of snow, Milwaukee, Wis..\.4q individuals, thus encouraging ithe financing “of new jlines, Lae oan = — * * * | Elected were Smith Falconer, Hospital Funds % Enables City to Borrow $317,000 as First Step Towards Addition The State Municipal Finance. Commission yesterday approved Pontiac’s bid to borrow $317,000 in tax anticipation notes next month as the first step in borrow-| ing $950,000 to complete the Pon- tiac General Hospital addition. The approval sanctioned the city’s plan to pay the notes back | out of 1958 tax moneys that other- ‘other big corporation leaders in- vited Goldwater here, He provided them a platform fram which to de- liver-a campaign against the UAW. He is the country’s number one tense Mobilization. i i 4 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) ‘Vodka Was aur — pelitical fanatic, peddler of class hatred and union-hater.” Reuther continued: “Goldwater wants te corrupt | the country’s good image of the union and newspapers give him ten times as much space as they give us.” corn. Sen. Goldwater told the Republi- ean group Monday that “Reuther | and the UAW are more dangerous. Sputniks.” Republicans ‘‘caused the depres- | Reuther countered today ‘that! .- of potatoes, sugar and yeast. The old woman tried it. It * wise would have gone into public ‘sion and the Democrats saved the producing? improv: ements, With the approval, City Monaget Walter K. Willman said, the city is now in position to advertise for bids and sell the notes by mid-Feb- ruary. A limit of four per cent has been placed on the interest rate that the notes would carry. * * * The.. -eity plans to ask approval to borrow another $317,000 on 1959 taxes after July 1, and the final $316,000 on. 1960 taxes early next year, he said. These loans also). would be paid back out of public improvement funds for those two years. - Se RE IE ORR = Today's s a Editorials ..4.665% avuseas « 6 Markets ......:. ses cayenne Mystery stale enuneersrene ‘ Obitdaries . 6... 666 ccenes Sports. ....c.cc000 M ais Theaters ......<¢0¢0csse0s . 16 TV & Radio Programs ... 35 Wilson, lesvibin- wae country.” LAUDS WILLIAMS The leader of the 1,400,000-mem- ber Auto Workers Union, with his arms swinging and his face red from shouting, lambasted - Michi- gan Republicans and-hailed Gov. G. Mennen Williams as a “great leader and not a stooge for Gen- ati immediate success, Russian revenooers came and clink. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) pig. An old man came along and suggested: try feeding the pig vodka mash?” Vodka mash is a mixture ‘Mash Fattens (Blind?) Pig MOSCOW (INS)—There was an old woman who had a pig. | But the pig wouldn't eat. anything—carrots, turnips, even © “Why don’t you worked wonderfully. The pig than Soviet Russia and all the | ate and ate,.got fatter and fatter. ~« * But what was the woman to do with the vedka she was She opened d little prtvate-cnterprine ee It was But private enterprise Is banned in the Soviet Union. So hauled the woman off to the * "*.* This modern day fable was published in Soviet newspapers today. None of the stories reported what —_ to the County Plans for ’58 proximately 18 major vit Among them will be: a) New 22-foot pavements on Lake road to the Pontiac city lim- -| to four road from Square) Nor'thv Rochester road (M150) from Main street in Royal Oak to Fourteen a ane a of Royal Oak). (3) Widening of Nine Mile road four lanes from Woodward avenue cast to Hilton siréet (in ‘cooperation with City of Fern- | dale). (4) Relocation of Eight Mite City of its: (2) Widening to four lanes of (5) Concrete recapping and wid- @ ening to 22 feet of Big Beaver road from Rochester road to John R road, and on Fourteen Mile road Sew Recaiter wel ye Reltntes “Completion_of the widening and improvement of the Cass Lake- Elizabeth Lake road intersection also is assured,"’ said Lomerson. a Sof “Most of these projects appear) Gas Manhattan, — said it was cutting its = hes in- iterest_rate — that charged big ‘borrowers with top credit ratings —from 4% to 4 per cent today. Some observers predicted other big quickly. - , * * Wall Street reaction generally | ‘was optimistic. Some sources/ ithere, however, expressed disap-| _pointment because the -rate was not. dropped to 242 per cent, Tooth Decay Drops "jin Two Test Cities BRANTFORD, Ont. @ — Dr. Harry Brown of Ottawa says this city’s tooth decay rate has dropped 66 per cent since he be- gan a 10-year study of school dicate much more traffic there - (Continued ‘on Page 2, Col. 3) 4, institutions would follow ced ; ‘his license was revoked last Sep- ‘tember for drunk driving, he was of the afraid to go back to see if he had hit anyone. |police said, picking up a piece of chrome trim which was jarred free by the accident, and driving off, Police had been searching for en by a passing motorist, Robert—|— Strawder, of 513 Bloomfield Ave. They also had a hood ornament and bits of chrome trim found | THOMAS FALCONER bank, and William D. Thomas Jr., president of Thomas Economy Fur- eiture Co. 3 * * * The election of the two men in- ‘creases the Board of Directors to nine me rs, Re-elected ® ‘by the dockhabders to another year's term on the board) |were John C. Cowe, Milo J. Cross, | Rodger J. Emmert, Judge H. Rus-| sel Holland, Frank A. Mercer, ‘Goodloe H. Rogers and — E. \Whitlield, - Cross, president of the boak, announced that total deposits at,’ the end of 1957 reaciled $27,348,- | 200, the highest in its history. 500 over 1956 deposits, of the year amounted to $164,293.03, or $3.28 per- share, Cross said. After the stockholders’ meeting, directors re-elected all 14 officers of the bank to another term. This was an increase of $2,575,- Earnings after taxes at the end at the scene, About 1:30 p.m. yesterday, offi- cers Guy White and Harry Duby ‘i spetied_a—ear—that—answered—the? description of the sought vehicle parked behirid Wooter’s home, A closer check showed the damage to that which the accident ear should ha@ye had and Wooter's arrest followed. Congressman Collapses WASHINGTON (INS) — Rep. Lawrence H. Smith (R-Wis) col- lapsed of a heart attack today as he walked into the House res- taurant. Dr. George Calver, the | near death. Calver said: “There is no heart beat but he is still slightly.” Smith was to Walter Reed Army Hos- by ambulance. He admitted stopping the car, been on the commission. The beard hopes to have fin- ished its budget preparation next month. It’s chairman, Willis M. Brewer, was in Lansing today and unavailable for comment on . Dr. Cooley's criticism, which was echoed by. several other commissioners, City Manager Walter K, Willman said that although the hospital budget already was too late this year, he would “take steps” to get it tron time next winter. Dr. Cooley observed that the board of trustees’ actions were “too far removed from the public, and perhaps this accounts for some of the hospital's financial trou- bles.” FUND FOR HOSPITAL Included in* last night’s budget was $317,000 in public improvement @S\funds which the commission has promised to spend on the hospital |addition. Left out was an interest pay- ment of approximately $30,000 on 1952. general obligation bonds to build. the addition. The hospital has been paying this interest in the aa but had —— that “Tf the city would pick this in- terest up, the hospital Probably could get out of the red,” meugerealy served, The question of a city appropria- tion covering the bond interest is Following a review of the hos- pital budget by the commission, an appropriation could be made out (Continied on Page 2, Col. 1) Burroughs to Make Atlas Computers DETROIT (INS) — Burroughs Corp. of Detroit anounced today it has Air Force contracts total- Heavy Snow YOU'LL NEVER KNOW........ what people want until you tell your story with a Want To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 ‘Just Ask for the WANT AD DEPT. | ors a high of 21-26 tomor- i I ie the season. The prediction for the Pontiac area tonight and to- in Michigan Fails to. Touch Pontiac | For the second time this week, heavy snineeba for the . ‘Pontiac area failed to rhaterialize, as other sections = ; Michigan were buried under the heaviest 24-hour snow and colder. A low of 24 de- grees is expected tonight tomorrow is snow flurries+— plained that the city was being asked to pers ie for passing first on the hospital — should ‘face the future and get en with the job” of surpassing Russian missile and satellite gains. , * od * Mahon, chairman ef the House Defense Appropriations _ subcom- yuttee, talked with newsmen 26-- the House ealled up for expected unanimeus passage a $1,410,090. 008 money bill to help speed US! defense preparation ~ * * i The total includes the fall $1L- 90.000 000 in new funds asked by. President Eisenhower and au-. thority to transfer another . 150) miflions — $0 milbons more than, kisenhower asked — of available, funds to missiles and other newer! programs. ° [ * * * An agreement to take no reil call votes until Thursday this week de- tayed final House action on a bill: fo raise the national debt limit te “80 billion dollars from the pres, ent 775 bila: — . * * The Hicuse shouted down a move aimed at holding the increase to three bylrons. i Rep. Martin (Mass', House Re- publican leader, urged Repubii-| can Members “not to put our own! administration in. a strait-jacket” | by rejecting the increase * * * We must face the fact that we have realines to consider,” he said in reference to expected increases in defense costs. Rep. Byrnes (R-Wis) contended | the boost would encourage more, axreeing, blamed the high debt) With all the razzle-dazzle andjof the Clinton Valley Boy Scout) Ronald Card, Explorer Scout of level on “both the New Deal electioneering of a full-fledged poli-|Council public relations sect said Troop 29, Wever School, Leading spenders and the Modern Repub- hean spenders.” City Officials Pass $5,683,595 Budget. jat Madison Junior High School as’ (Continued From Page One) of tmappropriated funds, such as the capital improvement budget, | he explained. * * * Included in the budget was $100.- 000 for the annual payment on the! They also nominated two candi- | bond issue principal. The budget was $245,064 higher | than last year’s, principally be- cause operating costs and wages have increased, Willman said. It is based on the assumption that $1,721,595 will be raised this year from such sources as sales, fines and licenses, * ¥ * In addition to the general prop- erty taxation, another $274,672 is to be raised through voted millage for garbage collection and dis- ma By F. H. sIMs Does the supply of oxygen thin out in the upper atmosphere. No, the ratio of oxygen in the air remains fairly constant as we move into higher and higher alti- tudes, The difference is a difference in sure, or density, which presses oxygen into our blood stream at lower altitudes, not the greater ra- tio of oxygen to nitrogen and other gases. (Nitrogen makes up T8 per cent of the air.) When one becomes intoxicated, what Is happening is that alcohol is blocking the tissues so as to pre- lieve headlines which say there is. vent them from receiving oxygen, “hich pressure constantly forces” into the tissues The Weather lrun for Pontiac city offices next week a Church; Gene’ Bolyea of Troop Scouts Get Set to Take Over City’s O tical convention, Pontiac * * * Two opposing slates o: 10 boys were whipped together last night 'Scouts renewed their ‘‘Mayor-for- a-Day” citizenship project for the first time since 1954. | The Pontiac Scputs have chos- | en to make the post of gity man- | ager their top elective office. | dates for each of seven City | Commission seats and the two municipal judgeships., Citywide balloting on the nomi- inees will be heid next week at iregular Scout meetings. The win- ‘ners will ‘take over’ the offices ‘Feb. 11° and appoint 22 other Scouts to head the various mu- nicipal departments. — x + | City Manager Walter K. Willman has pledged the support of all mu- 'nicipal officials in conducting the iprogram and has offered to pre- jpare an agenda for a mock City Commission .meeting. HOPES FOR SUCCESS William J. DeGrace, chairman ‘Goldwater Is Stooge for GOP’—Reuther | (Continued From Page One) ‘eral Motors like other Michigan) governors were.” Reuther stated any Democrat- _ fe anion “such as the UAW Is beund to _hay grecments.” He assured the delegates, obvious reference to Carl Stel- late, Local 600 president, and his | opposition te Reuther’s share- | thé-profits plan, the UAW would go to the bargaining table united | and strong.” | He told the delegates not to be- a rebellion within the union. Meanwhile, campaigners for the “)-hour week with 40-hours pay, ied by Stellato, passed out litera- ‘ture and campaign. signs at the entrance of the Masonic Temple in . | Detroit _Folt U. §. Weather Bortan Report PONTIAC flurries and ‘colder tonight and to. merrew. Lew tonight 24. High temer- rew @1-94. Gentle to moderate westerly winds ¢ Tedar tn Pontiae Lowest temperature preceding &@ a t Ht At @ am: Wind Velociie 19 mph Direetter Northwest Sun seria Wednesday 1803 T+ pn Sif Tise® | Tadiat et 7°54 8h “ioon se\# Wedresday at FOUf pm Mocn rises Thurscay at 6 28 a m. Dewntewn Temperratores - ti 1a : 4am 31 ™ 30 OCU Senceroed i i2 m 28 $6: Me. 50 ‘lpm JQ $eaom iG 2p om 30 18 &@. om Teesday in Pontiac fas recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature ... A lea temperature i Weather—Ciaus: 1¢é. melted ence One Year Age in Pontiae Highest temperature Lowest temptrature . Mean temperature Weather—Rain 38 ‘1 Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 86 Years + 62 in Ieee -~# in 1924 Toreday's Temperature Chart Ly 30 3h Marquette 2 «(13 Memphis $6 23 : : 16 5 . snow 2 inches baent 7 Mitwaukee 31024 Minneapotia 23 12 | New Orieans -56 38 Kew ork 6% 2 Cmahe 31 #2 Peliston 27° «15 Phonts 61 1 Pittsburgh 42 35 @. Leonie 41 25 &. Francisco B Ste. Marie 8 16 ‘Traverse C, 638 aeiegion “ is 6a AND VICINITY — Snow * * x Local 600, backed by several other locals, seemed determined to make a fight of it on the conven- tion floor The “rebel group is opposed te Renther and the union execu- five board's recommendations for a “share the profits plan” and the “basic economic de- mands” for the 1,400,000 union members. . Meanwhile the union is waiting for a _reply_from_ Harlow H. Cur-| hice, president of General Motors, who was asked to address the con- vention to help delegates draft de- 30 mands'they will male on the auto/work on 39 miles of primary ® industry this year. * ae * Curtice was expected to decline *! the invitation. | The GM chief has already la- | beled the UAW's “share the prof- its” plan as “extravagant” and | Saereag’ Ge tke ecocene of is | American free enterprise sys- i fem." as give overwhelming support of the proposed demands for a profit- sharing plan, large pay boosts, im- proved supplemental unemploy- q ment benefits and better pensions. They will also discusg a special dues assessment which would dou- { bie the union's present strike = attempt, to create an artificial | moon, ‘ef about $25 million. CONVENTION SCENE — Pictured above dur- ing the mock political convention of Pontiac Boy Scouts last night are (left to right) James Coad, a delegate from Troop 7; Bethany Baptist Boyiand director of the project, said | Scouts and Explorers last night/he hoped the program this year) is Ray Smith, an Explorer Scout ‘nominated 20 of their members fo could be as successful as it was in| ef Treop 244, Grace Lutherag | if ners h. aaa. . = 7 = 4 aes = eo = as 7 es 26 = Wever School, They are members of buster Party, which later nominated run for city manager, e 244, Grace Lu- flices After ‘Election’ the Logrollers for the same post eensorship prevailed, The U. S: State Department ‘land U.S, investments there total workers’ area of Caracas yester- day. They said 1,000 persons were arrested after the clash. Strict said there were no reports of any Americans being injured or Amer- ican property damaged. About 40,- 000 Americans live in Venezuela about three billion dollars. x* * * : ‘The strike was called by under- ground opponents of President Marcos Perez Jimenez, who three weeks ago survived a_ short-lived revolt by the Air Force and some Army units. Sinee then Caracas has been in a continual state of tension. The Interior Ministry claimed the people had not responded to the general strike call. In a na- tionwide broadcast the ministry conceded there had been ‘‘disor- ders and offenses” in Caracas and disturbances in Los Teques, Val- encia and Pueblo Nuevo but said the rest of the nation was normal. lke Requests 1953 and 1954. __| Church. . * * Despite the realism of the con- “We believe this is a good way Vvention—with its vote trading, cau- ito give the boys first-hand expe-|cuses and demonstrations — there irience of city government and elec- Was no basic rivalry. tions,” he said. * * * The candidates were nominat- | The delegates, elected from all ed by two opposing “politieal ithe city's Scout troops, were split parties,” called the Filibusters into the two parties solely on the and the Logrollers. On the Fili- basis of the initial letters of their buster slate for city manager is last names — Pentagon Changes Promised Senate Missile Probers Will Quiz McElroy Again || WASHINGTON (INS) — Defense|inessman who was a member of |Secretary Neil H. McElroy goes! the Rockefeller Committee whi@h ‘behind Closed doots with Senate,recommended Pentagon reorgani- imissile probers today after giving zation. [top priority to -reorganizing the! gon ‘peverett Saltonstall (R- |Pentagon for the space age. “| Mass), a member of the subcom- | Members of the Senate Prepared-| mittee, sgid in an interview to- ‘ness subcommittee, who are try-| day that he opposed any “rev- ‘ing to assess America’s defense; ojytionary” shakeup in the de- capabilities in the light of Russia's’ fense organization which would ‘missile and satellite cecumplish-| put a-singte y commander |ments, are interested im the “‘tar-| over all the armed forces. iget date’’ McElroy said he set for) ; ‘producing a final feorganizaticn | He thus aligned himself with Sen- plan. |ate Armed Services Chairman |Richard. B. Russell (D-Ga) and The defense secretary who dis- |House Armed Services Chairman cussed the matter with President (Carl Vinson (D-Ga). Eisenhower yesterday in an hour- | ’ * * long conference, would say. only | that it would be a matter of | “several weeks.” i It is considered unlikely that the administration would propose any testify on security matters but re-committees which would organization questions may be put its to him. Deputy Defense Secretary. tions reorganization recomimenda-'_, Over $2 Billion for Pin First Pensioner Succumbs at 93 Charles Highfield Was Pontiac Motor’s Initial Paid Retiree Charles A, Highfield, the first man to retire from Pontiac Motor Division under the pension. plan, died yesterday at the age of 93 in his home, 29 Riker St. x * * A farmer most of hie life,. Mr. Highfield did not enter the employ of Pontia¢e Motor until he was 61 years of age. A lifelong resident of Oakland County, he was the son of Alfred and Catherine Johnson Highfield, an early pioneer family. * * * | Besides his wife, Euthema, he leaves five children, Mrs. Edna Greiner of Birmingham, Mrs. Eva Hosney, Mrs. Olive Manley, Mrs. ' Wants the Bulk of 1958 . Supplemental Fund for _ Commodity Credit WASHINGTON (INS)—President ‘Eisenhower asked Congress today }fer—suppiemental 1958 appropria- tions totaling more than $2,800,- 000,000, largely for the Commodity Credit Corp. - * * * | The White House said that the ‘sums had been outlined in Eisen- |hower’s budget for the fiscal year |Starting next July 1 and are about \54 million dollars below the budget estimates. | It added that the $2,806,234,968 supplemental appropriations sub- mitted teday ..‘will not result in any increase in 1958 expenditures or in new obligational authority over the totals for 1958 in the 1969 budget document.’ The largest request included about $2,200,000,000 for the CCC. iof which $1,725,000,000 would be for the surplus commodity disposal program and 489 million for the soil bank. | | Other requests included: | —288 millions for veteraris pen- ‘sions and benefits. | | 170 millions for public assist-| jance grants to states. | 57 millions to help local school \districts construct buildings in areas feeling the impact of federal activities, -o —i6 millions for Labor Depart- such radica] shakeup in view of ment administrative costs for McElroy had been recalled to the strong objections of the very, various programs. 8s on) tor. —11.8 millions in new < ‘Elizabeth Beamer and Robert’ {Highfield all of Pontiac, ; * * * | Mr. Highfield’s body will be at ‘the Huntoon Funeral Home _ this evening. On Thursday morning i will be taken to his home where ‘service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Friday, with the Rev. James W. ‘Deeg officiating. Burial will be in, the Rose Center Cemetery. Two Tots Find Strange ‘Milk’ Quite Delightful [that they would check the addition- information tracting. : He said the saving of approxi- mately $6,700 on the difference be- tween the two bids éasily could be canceled in city engineering ex- penses or faulty work. * *r * Serenbetz and City Manager L. R. Gare told the Haze] Park firm Clit a & Le t = Captains named for the Jan. 23 Mothers’ March of Dimes are Mrs. Arthur Otis Jr., Mrs. Roger Brown, | Two West Bloomfield Township tots — with questionable taste’ buds and cast iron stomachs = Tuesday took time out for a sip, of milk that would send shivers through the most hardened drinker, : 2 & What they thought was milk was actually turpentine! One of the tots, Ricky Camp- bell, 20-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Keith Campbell, 2468 Littletell Rd., calls almost every- thing liquid, “milk.” He was playing with David Law- rence, 14month-old son’ of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Lawrence, 2474 Littletell, at the Lawrence home. * * * When Mrs. Lawrence was called! to the phone for a moment, Ricky discovered a closed can of tur-| pentine in a bedroom cabinet. He’ —eathority for National Ad- na : és also was re- (De 55) miissie (progress. | lem and make individual recom- Chairman Lyndon B. Johnson) mendations to him. He named (D-Tex) hopes to wind up the cur-) topmer Assistant Defense Secre- rent hearings tomorrow. The last} tary Charles A, Coolidge as co- witness is to be retired Army Gen.| ordinator of the study ‘Lucius Clay, now a New York bus-) . | | After reporting to the President ‘on his action, he said he thought Eisenhower “actually would like ‘to have things moving faster.” But County Road Plans ‘'McEjiroy said he personally feels 1S ‘visory Committee on Aeronautics |to expand research involving mis- siles, space vehicles and other sim- ilar projects. —10 million dollars for expansion of research and other activities of the National Science Foundation. White House News Secretary James C. Hagerty said the amounts would be chargeable against the current budget rather than the record peacetime budget jot $73,900,000,000 for the 1959 fiscal year. : ; fluid and offered some to his buddy. ; . When Mrs. Lawrence found them, they smiled and said, “Look, milk!” State troopers were called to the scene and took both boys to William Beau- mont Hospital where their stom- achs were pumped, . Mrs. Lawrence reported today that the two will have to do most of their drinking standing up for ithe next few days due to a pair lof well-placed penicillin shots. Will Total $1,127,000 ““""""s" | (Continued From Page One) The cormmission’s share of the state gas and weight taxes pro- vides the money for these con- struction projects. What improvements will be done- sie ce . Bee ; in 1958 on the county’s many miles LANSING — Gov. Williams ments between the county and !Mtangibles tax increase plan townships, The townships must uched off a torrent of criticism according to a new state law put ‘0rs—some scolding, some _scald- Hinnte-etfect-taxt—year—————- 48. Last year, the commission did| It was as though GP lawmakers $1,210,000 worth of construction thought the Democratic governor and led with his chin,~ and they ilocal streets. # swarmed over one another—partic- Also included in this year's-work|“@tly in the Senate—to land their will be blacktopping of sections of Punches. —— Farmington, Baldwin and Fenton prRivE OUT CAPITAL roads. “We are impressed with the Some 73° miles of subdivision streets in the county will get a Dessibility that the governor, whose layer of Laing this year, Lomer- son predicted. Developers or prop- = erty owners pay this bill, dustrial growth, is now recom- | serve. to drive ‘capital out state as well.” __ of the Fla... That was the way ' | Speaker George M. Van sem and Sen. Frank Beadle, Senate caucus chairman, reacted in a joint statement yesterday. They said industrial good will CAPE CANAVERAL, (INS)—A 72-foot Vanguard satel- lite rocket was reported ready today for its scheduled firing this week in the second U. 5. bY of local roads will depend on agree. i"st full dress statement of his pay one-half the cost of this work from majority Republican legisla- ne srg“ Republicans Flay Plan to Hike Intangibles Tax to send abroad might fing them- selves. ‘attempting to bring jobs to Michigan without having Michigan capital to assist in creating such jobs.” * * * “A close approach to a general personal income tax.’’ That was how Rep. Rollo G. Conlin (R- Tipton), House Taxation Commit- tee chairman, sized up the gov- ernor’s explanation of his pro- Conlin said legislators need to | have the complete. pian before them in bill form to “bring some reason out of the mass of con- fusion.” He and others called for extensive legislative hearings. |troit, ~ Sen. Carlton H: Morris, (R-Kal- amazoo), Taxation Committee “graduated income tax on intan- gibles,"" in part a reference to the exemption and tax credit features. x ¢€ #8 . He said the governor was trying to “condition” the state for an income tax, “ambassadors” Williams proposes! Morris, Sen, L. Harvey Lodge ~~ wv chairman, called the proposal a), . (R-Drayton Plains) and Sen. Charles O. Feenstra (R-Grand Rapids) all drummed on the theme that state government expense cut- ting rather than more taxes is the present need, DISMISS BOARDS ‘We've got a lot of boards and departments we probably couiti get we could get rid of too,” said. _ Democratic followers of the governor sought to steni the tide of criticism, but merely succeed. ed in punctuating it, ; * FF © _ Sen. Basil W. Brown (D-Detroit) ‘the plan last year that added teated they are “able and willing” a_half-cup—of the. rid of and a lot of state employes. chided Republicans for initiating able 2 Bos per) Finds Hospital . Rayn Paralyzes Midwest (Continued From Pege One) grees at 7 a.m. after the tempera- ture reached 52 an hour earlier, Tt is foggy in the nation’s city after a_night-of-_rain.__- FLIGHTS DISRUPTED | Fog and rain disrupted flight operations today at Idlewild Air- port and La Guardia Field. * * * Phares wore verted fe Mowerk . J., Washington, Boston an adelphia No further accumulation of snow men, Lester St, Antoine, and Oscar was expected in much of the re- gion from the Ohio Valley. up through the Great Lakes as the ‘spent Midwest disturbance ad- vanced to the Atlantic coast. * * * “ It left a blanket of wet snow in ana and southern lower Michigan as it headed eastward The worst snowstorm in five years roared into southeast Wis- consin ‘yesterday, leaving three At the U.S. Weather Station at Mitchell Field airport, 8 inches of new snow was measured officially and, added to a 3inch accumula- for Mentally Il Oakland tocates Three Out-County Institutions. to Provide Care Oakland County has found three | out-county hospitals whith will) provide emergency care for the. mentally ill, in order that such) patients no longer must be housed | in the county jail. * * * The hospitals which have indi- to take such patients are the Mercywood Hospital near Ann Ar- bor, Glen Eden Hospital in War- ren, and Hurley Hospital in Flint. ‘ Board of Supervisors will pro- pose at the board’s Friday meet- ing that the offer of the three institutions be accepted, and that the Ways and Means Committee make a study of the costs in, housing these patients at each. ' Based on éstimated per day costs of $20 at the Mercywood and Glen Eden Hospitals, and $235. per day at Hurley, it was esti- mated the county might pay $40,000 annually to care for the mentally ill. * * * Eliminated after a study by the County Health Dept. as to what hospitals might take patients from in Rochester and the Bloomfield Hospital in Bloomfield Township. LACKING. IN ROOM , Authorities at the sanatorium said théy didn't have the room. while the Bloomfield Hospital said it ‘wasn't interested,” i to Dr, John S. Lambie, health co- ordinator for Oakland County. * * * Use of the former Contagious Hospital Annex, is slowed by the fact that the city might continue a lease there well into 1959, Health officials then turned their attention to hospitals which could take patients immediately. Dr, Lambie, who received the be used for “ Tne Headey Committee -ot the if hast Un Weighted by Senate here were the Haven Sanatorium} Hospital, now the Pontiac General |! tion from Monday, left: a total of at least 11 inches on the ground. ™ * * The heart attack victims were all Milwaukeeans who died after shoveling the wet, heavy snow last night. The Racine and Kenosha areas also were hit hard by the storm, which stalled two buses filled with school children, . One of the buses was caught in heavy drifts on the south side of Milwaukee. Motorists rescued the youngsters and took them to their homes. * *. * The other bogged down near Sturdevant in Racine County, and . the young passengers were shelter- ed at a nearby farmhouse.‘ The state senate took under con- sideration today a bill that would allocate $835,000 to 22 state air- ports, including $50,000 for Pon- tiac’s airfield, * * * : The sum is part of a $1,032,000 airport construction budget ap- proved by the state aeronautics commission this month, ; + * * The $835,000 is earmarked to come from the state general fund, with the rest of the budget com- ing from state aeronautics funds, federal and local funds. . *- * * The bill would appropriate $200,- 000 to Wayne Major airport; $105.- 000 to Lansing Capital City air- port; $79,000 to Willow Run air- port, and $57,000 to Menominee airport. . tN ee = Pontiac, Kalamazoo and Jackson Lak # a 30 the industry produced 35,( * Gano Beer Output ~ Rises 12 Per cent BERLIN — —— Germany hea 32,008) breweries, of which 29.158. or! breweries. The others are trade breweries, fmore-than in prewar years, = There is a trend to breweries) | rels a* year, while those with o barrels are declining. “|than in 1955-56 and 30 per ‘eent|_ ‘Producing more than 100,000 bar-/ put between 1,000 and ‘sm 223 JANUARY 22, 1958 Set Pe | Ruth Nichols, 56, Flies | Air Force Jet Faster FA nous . A sPeciais Week Ending Jan. 11 ) TROUSERS . 49° ~~ PLAIN | c Than 1,000 M.P.H. SUFFOLK COUNTY AIR FORCE BASE, N.Y. wm — Ruth Nichols, 56, pioneer woman. flier, flew an Air Force jet yesterday faster than 1,000 miles an hour at ‘an altitude of 51,000 feet. The flight was reported to have set women's records for speed and altitude. * * * Miss Nichols and Col. Fred D. Hook Jr.. commanding: officer of SPORT SHIRTS | , 4 ede’ a pyres yy bm ag al ee $ P A L$ = om packaged? | 1.29 f BLOUSES _ «= 49¢ | SWEATERS 7 49: Cleaned and Blocked—Individually Packaged in Plastic ; this Air Force base on Long Is- _jland. flew in a two-seated trainer] version of the F102 Delta Dagger, ‘a supersonic fighter-interceptor, | plane. M They were in the air about 50 minutes, according to. Hook, and), took off and landed at the base. x * & Air Force officials said the pre-| vious records were set in 1956 by) ae _ JAMES al ADAMS — 30 Vilors of Advertising — 1 TIES..33 SF amour Y cleaner: res ve TEX CLEAN OPEN FRI SAT rik 9 POM NC PROCESS 822 NORTH PERRY AT EAST BOULEVARD GEORGE’S-NEWPORT'S STORE CLOSED at 4 O'Clock TO REPRICE, MARK DOWN GOODS, REARRANGE OUR STORE FOR OUR BIG $200,000 STOCK Pepe SALE! WATCH THURSDAY'S AD FOR BIG BARGAINS GEORGE’S - NEWPORT'S 74 North Saginaw St. \Reflected in New Book ——— — Facqueine — “—when —she- flew a Canadian F86 Sabre Jet 754 miles an hour at 48,069 feet. Hook said Miss Nichols, who be- \gan flying in 1919, was at the con- believe, .be it a motorcar or a ‘trols except during takeoff and |sparkplug, a grand piano or a landing and when the plane was Sparks Off My Anvil by James R, Adams = BET. SINE 'pound of coffee. 1ecid. wag olsen The flight, he Herewith is a little book by And much of the multi-mi. | “2° Ws cleared with Air Force James R. Adams, published post-| ons of dollars euteusted to big CUCals at the Pentagon. humously, because the author died | | stewardship went ‘into newspa: | x * * | in November 1956. The foreword is| pers ‘for Jim liked to talk di- | “It .was simply wonderful, by “Chuck’’ Adams, his son and 4) peetly to the people and felt that bead Nichols said on . landing. | “= [Aga of MacManus, John was the best place to do it, ‘ine atk cae ich Poors fi cradle elt absolute : The uit are interesting to ie fester backed his feeling nothing except my own cacite people in advertising and sales, iwith dollars—that an honest news-| ment and emotion at having made seecuuashsccescesss ite the public for the insight it iW, | in novels, plays and movies, He “21° in his life. ibusiness . . . tae eres, feat “et "in Louisville Trialf °~ BLAKE That cer Sor se awe LOUISVILLE, Ky.» — Hieht RADIO TV iter living it would be hard to dis-' me: “*:\paper advertisement started on! the flight.” but also—to a degree—interesting second base, so to speak, because| A lieutenant colonel in the Civil, of the instinctive belief built up) Air Patrol, she has piloted more’ lover generations in everything anjthan 149 types of aircraft, jhonest paper prints. Jim didn’t aT *~ * * ‘worry much over whether the read- Jim Adams was co-founder of er was in a position to buy a MacManus, John and Adams with Cadillac or Pontiac motorcar at A. P. John and the late T. F.\that very moment. He was inter- ,MacManus. He was a huge man ested in planting the desire to own ‘but his stature in advertising was lone, knowing personally that the far greater than tis physical bulk.'wheel of fortune continually spins. Jim was about as far as you | x~ * * can get — and I can't get far | And spin it did for Jim Adasib—| enough—from the Madison Ave- from a boyhood of wrenching pov-| nue type of adman so popular erty on a backwoods Indiana farm) ito professional honor, wealth and / owned no gray flannel suit, a baronial manor of stone and scorned Martinis, was never in |giass in Rathmor road, Bloomfield! ' |Hills, a few hundred yards from | *’* «+ & ithe magnificent agency building in’ This small volume—published by Bloomfield Center which bears his} Harper & Brothers—is the -distil-/P@me. His book is on the same late of 30 years in the advertising Plane. thirty years during Cwm which Jim Adams wrote over & 8 Slot Machines © to Face Charges | Necavnesdescessecinean gives into the psychology of ad-| vertising. Qne judge says he's never tried mixed drinks, because he's tried so many men who have . . . Most; wives, says Jack Herbert, know. how to whine their husbands ‘around their tittie = Earl | Wilson. i j i © Tape Recorders ® Record Players ‘quarter billion dollars worth of ad-| vertising laboriously scrawled on yellow scratch paper with the soft: ® PLA. Systems slot machines go on trial Monday’ ‘en charges.ol being used for gam-| ing. First Asst. County Atty, Sal Pin-| ( to sued the machines under a statute which says if a. jury finds |. ter life to people through bestir-/ ring their innate instincts for bet-: 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 pute. For Adams would not touch a product in which he ia pot * et ae “NAS e on a THE PREFERRED BOURBON OF HENRY CLAY! Senator Henry Clay knew and prized the hospitable qualities of Old Crow. His friend, Dr. James Crow, shipped it by the berrel to his home in Washington, D.C. regularly.: a a i si aie ai ae ea a ee ta ee E the machines used or in- “were Node ae aa ie oe pa “THURSDAY ONLY SALE | @ ‘of gambling, they shall be con- idemnedand forfeited.” Men’ s S9c Seller * * * , Areyle Socks | Asked if the machines had em- Iployed counsel Pinto replied: | “Rather than take advantage of — ithe machines, I have brought in * the owners to represent the ma- chines.” : Two Veterans of Foreign W ars” posts were named codefendants. ONES ONES TS, cea Saacheieseedsseiccace Centenarian Succumbs; é —— left oe | Trujillo, who ears had been out-) A AA Sizes 10% to 13 i Sit WR ee rg fo naa NNN nN get ee Nel ee | _ " Just try this lighter, milder . 86 Proof Old Crow and see why more people ask for it than any other wscsceba st has made it Americas preferred bourbon! ee ieee eel et Side Colorado, died in a hospftal last night just two weeks after her 101st birthday. She suffered extensive burns — over her body when kerosene she ~~ was using to fuel a fire exploded The blaze in the kitchen of her) - New spring shades in assorted patterns, nylon reinforced heel & toe. All cotton argyles at this low = price No timit | attend. reeently warned that America must, Slate Conference ap ; tera ba ee ee "on Education at | ate flast June, charging cruelty, Lansing‘s Center |eron sitchen St pay his es ‘A dove tree becomes peotitable LANSING (4 — - More then 12.000) cod wile SAN) ps a a ane after o invitations have, been sent out for POraty mont agreement years, . the 19th annual Citizens Confer-| on 8 preety oe ae entethine n Education, scheduled, for| yesterda: will rec »iE saa ner Pe at the Lansing civic center. pasion é pe herself . | . — Thurs., Fri., Set. “It's the biggest thing we've|Monthly for their four ever attempted,” said Dr. Lynn M. Bartlett, state superintendent of public instruction. “We are in- volving every possible segment of the community.” One of the unusual fentgres of the conference, Bartlett said, is that top high school and college students have been invited to Principal speaker will be Dr.) Eric _A. Walker, president_of Pehn-) sylvania -State University, who, * sc RABBLE Save 60c This Weekend On catch up with Russia in the next) 10 ‘years or. decline into a colony || status. Dr. Walker is vice chair-| man of the President's committee | ‘on scientists and engineers. Irish potatoes originally came from North Carolina. :| PYYTTITII Tit 11) eee $ How Can You ee “ —) § ~~ S = nm ecccccsce at Simms: ou can buy a: blouse for only— y —eand you can even save more by buying 2 fer $1.25 coovccccccccccs Coeeooesessorece :eaeabtaed end a 52.98 38. —— Seller & 2 : ba 4 $4 38 3 For 2 to 4 ‘ ; players. e % Youths and ¢ __ adults, too. : te : Popular’ ex ond SellGame GZ Wilkes te Head MO POLY : : Oadeen \, $2.98 Value * Easy to Install ~~" 88 = * Ideal for Gilt ~~ Tells outdoog, in- : oO we di door tem: ture eee at the same Hme, Dependable read- ings —- precision. made by Chaney. Ideal for gift giv- ing. ee es = $8.N. Saginaw —Z2nd Floor 9 98 N. Saginaw. —2nd Floor eZ. IIII OCC Cee Le Le We Purchased 200 of These So We Could Offer This LOWEST-EVER Price COMFORT Eno Simms pass maker's price concession on to you. An- other typical super- special for thrifty cus- tomers, * Warm-as-toast COMFORTER in lustrous rayon filled with 100% wool batting for light We Know Irs Hard to Belfeve @ but Come & See for Yourself e : : s home was quickly extinguished. 84 and ' @O PROOF + KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY & 00 Pt 8 71 45 Or. , Cede #921 Code #920 ® 100 Proof Boted in oh learn © : THE OLD CROW oisriuutey C0, FRANKFORT, KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL bistiutens prooucrs CORPS CLEARANCE SALE — Just 3 Popular Styles | Draw DRAPES Rayon and Barkcioth Materials Only 100 pairs go on sale! Rayon pinch . pleats in leaf abstract on white or color- ful plaids in 48x48-inches — valanced bark- cloths. in floral design on. white, 72x72- ‘hes. a t | ; } 72-Inch Lengths | [+ i $3.99 value BROTHERS bdadadidie de dado dade dA hed kth DALI L D dd dade dedededtndedindintind: etna dtidia din SPECIALLY BOYS’ Matching Style Se eee Shirt and Pants Sets Spring & Summer Styles et . Worth $1.29 to $2.49 $f Regular $3.98 s *Broadcloth Blouses 66¢ $ Fine, durable twill pants x e lined with warm flannel Drip-Dry Blouses . . 66¢ ° wy ploids thet metch tu ‘© *Scoop-Neck Styles .66¢ $ shirts. Grey pants with * . matching yellow or. red ipper-Side Blouses 66¢ ¢ shirts. All wedheble, nen« All are sleeveless . . . san- $ shrink sanforized. Sizes forized or pre-shrunk ...e 8 only. slipover and button fronts... ® -eii-iet ~y-v—v-ll-sises-24 | eeearececcsccooooooocess eoeo : == °] Prints—Stripes—Solid Red—Ivy PyYif‘iiititii iit tii £F |x ‘wera yng weight. Choice of colors. Sale priced for weekend. Bedding Dept. —Basement Seller Phd di dodo diode dididedide dele ni A \ Ny \ Y \ \ By N \ \ \ NE N \ \ N N \ \ ar, THURSDAY ONLY — Special Selling! Famous BLUE-BELL — First Quality - Boys’ Flannel Shirts ie i Fes? Sanforized and colorfast shirté with 2- way collars, in or out bottoms. ‘Sizes 4 4 to 12. = * SST , THURSDAY ONLY SPECIAL PRICES! * 1B:nch — Carpe Textured RUBBER (oN Limited Color Selections —Bargain Basement i FOAM RUBBER BACKING — Carpet Textured 30x30" LANDING MATS. CREE EK KK KK KK HM HM eh AMM EKER KKH HH HY i "EACH HALVE? | DEL MONTE SLICED OR HALVES ciefaartaan as QD Re bc or dinner. Chunk Tuna 3 79 Fres-Shore finest quality . Tomato Juice 3 279° 10: Peas or Corn? Packer's Label sweet peas or cream corn . FRESHLIKE SALE! GOLDEN CORN CREAM CORN 7% ee $400 SWEET PEAS 6 — $] 00 GREEN BEANS” DELICIOUS BREAKFAST TREAT Jelly Rolls Wheat Bread 2 3, 35> Cracked, Kroger sliced . Glazed Donuts Raised, zed baked... 0... — 39 Kroger Coffee QA: Drip or Regular 5c off label . , . You get Free Top Value Stamps with all bakery purchases at Kroger. Armour's Treet Hormel Spam Kroger low price. * Kroger low price. 12-00 47 12-08. 47: Cantonese Dinner Crystal Gems _Chun King Frozen _ , 13.0» 95+ ee 29 We reserve the —* to limit canton Independent Biscuit Co. ete K est in shopping conveniences, ont even greater. Kroger values to let you buy more and wt still go home with . savings jingling in your pocketbook. But one thing hasn't cha friendliness at Kroger and the spirit of service. That is Krogering—the — happy way to shop. DELICIOUS CHICKEN PARTS Legs, Thighs & Breasts =. 53° w 29% —§s—19¢ Get the chicken parts that you . like best and save at this spe- cial low Kroger price. Chicken Wings os . Heart-O-Ham Cry-O-Vac wrapped, sugar-cured . .. Sliced Bolog ae AY: Klien's. special low ogna seo OG coco A oe 4% $139 Hot Dogs mm 3m Slab Bacon Sugar cured, 6-10 pound average ott AY BANQUET FRESH-FROZEN Dinners Just the thing for those quick easy meals. Your 11-0. 49: choice of beef, chicken or Pkg. turkey, _ Pineapple - ws AQe Cottage Cheese oy Borden's good with pineapple salads CHEESE SPREAD Lb. Cc Pasteurized process imitation 2 aed 49 Water Chestnuts Fresh Jumbo 8 size 19 Lawndale LeChey. Keeper iow price. Kroger low price. ° oes . a or Als 3%. 83: LP. Hi-Fi Records . All Detergent Buretts Vanila fa, Rengatn and Matera HER, af poi tae be = Kroger low price "Rock N' Roll." 10 & #2” it 18° pein bs Prices ellective at Kroger ‘thra Sun. Jen. 26, Ledll All Detergent ~ US, NO. | MICHIGAN | Pota toes Good — 50: 37 69 All rye: U.S. No. 1 All-purpose . 5s 99: Broccoli "25 Delicious covered with Cheez Whiz ; Cheez Whiz 16-02 47 Kraft’s zesty cheese spread . . . . " ANOTHER KROGER Beant | Potatoes ™ MAINE ‘$3.98 Value era. i n pretense of playing golf. Luty searches for’ the body and finds a piece = Hn a bush below -the railroad tracks. In a barn Lucy pries open a sarcophagus and finds the body ef a murdered woman. Mr Wimborne, Crackenthorpe's attorney, tells Emma the murdered woman was probably a foreigner and Emma asks it she was Prench. Mrs. MeGiillicuddy identities the picture of the murdered womag as that of the woman she saw im the train, CHAPTER 138 “Tt is unwise to tell strangers. all these things about your father,”’. _ ried, Cedric, ¥ really am werried. | 1 don’t know what I ought to | de.” . ily. “Keep your meuth shut, Em-| WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1958 * mouth shut, It's up to the police) “The police think that this wom- an who was killed — was French.” “They do; do they? She looked more of an. English type te me, itred.—aise.—_But_#’m_wer— but one can’t really judge. What's ae ‘ : “worrying you—-then, is that just | possibly the dead woman might oOuninoacce Th ~ _ Copyright oo DY A ERE Sip senna eae re z = : ae = 5 y oe fave Sa & a = a tooo en a mnape bund in | “Now don't you go complicating = trp te vst filticuady, on a things, sis, by -bringing up a lot i. 7 res with a of irrelevant stuff that has nothing ee en ane 8 stranging "= {to do with all this. I was’ never Seni anise, semana tet tt very convinced about that letter figures the dy mist have been |ffom Martine, anyway.” Serta ect ‘et sacdereg | “T was.” built by Mr. Crackenthorpe, rich : ma afacturer, She asks Lect apse: eae EE od barrow. beiiant young women who ‘You've always been good at retaking temporsr; sneee' oz |believing impossible things before households and running them lke (breakfast, old girl, My advice to Rutherford Hall tami efi you is sit tight ‘and keep your therpe’s daughter, engages her, and ; : 3 Miss Marple is installed in the neigh- borhood as Luey’s aunt to identify their precious corpse. ‘And I bet Harold would say the same.” “Oh, I know Harold would, | “Nothing,” said Cedric prompt-, ma, Never go half way to meet trouble; that’s my motto.”> cad = be your brother's girl?” “Yes.” “I think it's most unlikely, Dr. Quimper, adding: “But all the same I understand what you feel."| - ” sa Gas Explodes, Twelve Injured |, 70 Cars Start Through ia, Fumes in New Mexico | at Time of Blast he was riding ran down into the Set Hall-of-Fame Game gas in the depression and stalled. shoved that car and two: others ‘out. and then signaled the other ~|How to Rinse Away By CLAIRE HOFFMAN a New York, N. Y.—A leading skin doctor today showed an strated how you may rinse’ away externally caused black- i i ‘He said he and the. others in it “COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. «—The tions. Washington Senators and the Phil- adelphia Phillies will meet here. ears to stop on the plant side of ‘the- depression: | A spokesman for the company having the plant built said some-' - E ; Bust at South Lyon ‘one left a valve opep on a liquified 'gas line leading from the plant, ‘and the gas leaked out to the jow, He blamed.a spark from. a ‘car for the explosion. jor League” basetall HAI-orFame Monday, Aug. 4, in the annual Ma- heads, whiteheads and dry up. adolescent pjmply skin erup- Before our very eves the doctor woman wi ‘blackheads around her nose, audience of men, women and skin-troubled teenagers how to clean oily skin and shrink enlarged home medical treatment he has pe # a S@-sear-old typically oily shin. This woman had | en- | ¢ res with a 10-minute ected. Then he demon- ‘hardened oils even blackheads and whiteheads that have resisted‘ re- moval for months. : After 10 minutes rinse the mask away. Het or cold water makes no difference. It dissolves in a second, Your skin feels clean, refreshed, sparkling, smoother! Like velvet! But wait...you haven't finished -your first treatment-yet! game. hol-, South Lyon High School will have; lits ‘football banquet tonight with larged pores and whiteheads visible to the naked eye. To this woman’s| Now Apply Step 3 of Your face the doctor applied a cream. yJ,eqg¢ment...The Astringent Within apart a into a. - plastie-like mask. Next he sprin-| This is not merely a perfum kled her face with water, and handed | gicohol that tickles your skin for a her an ordinary washcloth to rinse | few seconds. It’s medicated. It pen- __ Miller said there were’ no cars Lucy said. < Emma Crackenthorpe sighed. ; ems F : _ : : “I'm wondering if I ought’ not ———*Why? Are you a police spy?"/She went slowly back to the saith Wig Cedric asked. “L might be." “]T don't think so. You were here slaving away before the police __began to take an interest in us. I should say—" He broke off as his sister Em- ma came through the door of the kitchen garden, “Hullo, Em? You're looking very perturbed about something.”’ “IT am, I want to talk to you, Cedric.” “I must get back to the house,’’ said Lucy, tactfull) *~* .* * “Don't go," said Cedric. “Mur- der has made you practically one of the family.” “I've got a lot to do,”’ said Lucy “Tl only-eame out to get some parsley.” i * * * She beat a rapid retreat to the kitchen garden. Cedric’s eyes fol- lowed her. “Good Jooking girl,’ he said “Who is she really?” “Oh, she's quite well known,” said Emma, ‘She's made a spe- cialty of this kind of thing, But never mind Lacy Eyelesbarrow. Cedric, I'm terribly worried. Ap- house uneasy in her mind. As she came into the. drive, Dector Quimper emerged from the house and opened the door of his battered Austin car, He paused when he saw her, then leaving the car he came towards her. . . “Well, Emma,” he said. “Your father’s in splendid shape. Murder suits him. It’s given him an inter- est in life. I must recommend it for more of my patients.” Emma smiled mechanically. Dr. Quimper was always quick to no- tice reactions. “Anything particular the mat- ter?” he asked Emma looked up at him, She had come to rely a let en the kindliness and sympathy of the doctor. He had become a friend en whem fo lean, not only a | medicat-attendant. His calculated brusqueness did net deceive her | — she knew the kindness that... dear — and let the rest of the family go hang. I'd back your “I am worried, yes,” she ad- judgment against the lot of them, lay behind it. mitted “Care to tell me? Don't if you ‘don't want to."’ “I'd like to tell you. Seme of it 1 don't-know what te do.”’ _* * * to tell the police about — about) it all. Cedric and the others say) ssary. What do it's quite’ unnece you think?” * * * “tim.”’ Dr. Quimper purged his’ was silent for a moment 1 thought. Then he. unwillingly, of course, if you I can understand) She ‘dips. He or two, deep in ‘said, almost imuch simpler, isay nothing. ‘what your brothers |All the same—” | “Yes?” Quimper he looked at in them. | | Emma flushed a little. | "Perhaps I’m foolish.” any day.” * * * “Girl’ You girl! Come in here.” Lucy turned her head, surprised. vou know already. The point is Old Mr. Crackenthorpe was beck- fiercely from just) oning to her inside _a_ door, oy “Pda go ahead and tell vem,” | he said. “You'll ge on worrying | if you don't. I know you.” “You do what you want to do, “It’s.4 His eyes had an affectionate twinkle: FARMINGTON, N.M. ® — Gas, a low mn rge ‘tatural-depression,—exploded yesterday as a string of about 70 cars started through it. Twelve ‘persons wWeye injured, seven seri- ously. The three-acre area. * *.* ‘miles ‘southeast of here. late blast knocked June Gor- | ham, Farmington, frem her car as a sheet of flame flashed oyer was among: 130 construction | fee| about it. Company employes leaving a plant | being built on the desert about 30 Paul Miller, 50, Denver, a safety engineer for the company building | ithe plant, said the car in which ‘in the gas when it exploded. ~ and present coach guest speaker. — i L. F. W. S. - Fanious Brand Appliances Lower Than Ever Prices” Saves You Money! See Color Ad on Page 18 at = you lavish more care on your face parently the police think that this girl was a foreigner, perhaps French. Cedric, you don't think that she could possibly< be — Martine?” For a moment er two Cedric stared at her as though uncom- prehending. “Martine? But who on earth — oh. you mean Martine?” “Yes Do you think —” * * * “Why on earth should it be Mar- tine"* “Well, her sending that telegram was odd when you come to think of it. It must have been roughly about the same time ... Do you think that she may, after all, have come down here and—” “Nonsense, Why should Mar- tine come down here and find her | way into the Long Barn? What | for? It seems wildly unlikely te me.** “You don't think, perhaps, that 1 ought to tell Inspector Bacon— or the other one?” “Tell him what?" “Well — about Martine About “IT should say vour judgment was usually most reliable. What's the trouble?” “You remember — or perhaps you don't — what I ence told you was killed in the war?” — a French girl? Something of that kind?” tually, was her Christian narne. labout a month ago just before Christmas." * * * “I remember. You got a letter. ‘didn't you?" “Yes. Saying she was. in Ene- see us. It was all arranged and expectedly to France.” “You want thorpe?” “Don't talk here.” he said. Lucy looked around her. They “Yes, Almost immediately after were in a small room evidently | I got that letter, he was killed. designed to’ be used‘as a study. We never heard anything of or but equally evidently. not used as about the girl. All we know, ac- such for a very lon were piles of dusty * * * * “Do you want me to clean this room?” she asked. Qld Mr. Crackenthorpe shook his head fiercely “No. you don't! to fiddle about specimens.” I keep land and would like to come and room Iotked up. Emma would like in here, but I then, at the last minute, she sent don't Jet her. It's my room, See’ a wire that she had to re_urn,un-ithese stones? They're geological me, Mr. Cracken- so much, Come in Lucy obeyed the imperative | about my brother — the one who finger. Old Mr, Crackentherpe / took hold of her arm and pulled “You mean about hic having | her inside the door and shut it. married — or wanting to marry = “\Vant to show you something." g time, There papers on the We always expected her to write desk and cobwebs festooned from or to turn up, but she didn’t. We the corners of the ceiling. The. never heard -arything — unti].air smelled damn and musty. this _At Last... the revolutionary scientific reducing discovery you've waited for! Not just a new product, but an entirely new, different NO- PILL, NO-DIET way to drink away « pounds of ugly fat easily, quickly, (ooxeire WORKS ON THREE MREE GREAT REDUCING PRINCIPLES - pleasantly! . Yes, you actually «+ See * drink your ta away. Tesults start from the . watch as day-by-day, . = You lose as much weight as you want to Jose. It’s entirely up to you thanks to fabu- lous new LOOK-RITE Reducing Cocktail! _ Imagine! iis, HO Capsules, WO star- vation’ diets, po plans, regirhens or fou- tines! 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' i : { 51 West Huron Street one woster 6 riser‘ $40, Gerry Jones, former MSU gridder|the mask from her skin. To her | etrates into your pore openings. at Redford, 4s utter astonishment, clinging to the | {j/|x bacteria. lurking there. And = washeloth were not only grimy | even e_impor _jeaves an | streaks of dirt... but several black- | invisible germ-destroying film on heads which had marred her beauty | your skin thatkills germs for hours. | cee seared ot the woabetoth | As we stared at the washcloth in disbelief, the doctor’s assistant | New Look Into Your Mirror! | turned to us and said: “You have | just seen what looks like a miracle. | Yet, what has just been done for ‘this woman’s skin, you can do at. home just as easily. But to under- 'stand how this formula acts to help clear skin troubles you must first knock out of your head some isilly notions most people have about their complexions.” . Some of your blackheads should be gone with the very first treat- ‘ment! Look for softened pimples and whitehgads that may break or be drawn out in your next treat- ment or two. Look at the corners of the nose, afound your mouth, your cheekbones! See how your en- arged pores have tightened! Your skin will feel alive! And you will be amazed to see minor wrinkles | softened — almost ironed out! And | this fresh, buoyant, youthful effect | will last for hours. The Truth About Cosmetics Has it ever eccurred to you th ‘Is This For Normal Skin, Too? Certainly. Simply because this is a doctor’s formula doesn’t mean that you have to have a “sick skin” to use it. You may be a woman past 30 who has never had a really seri- ous skin problem, but who suspects that your skin is not as beautiful and freshlooking as it could be... but your. ee ee can't so? Shocking as | £i¥e it to you. In that case...we it seems if nature gave you either | think you'll be thrilled by the sheer, a normal or oily skin, your face is | Smooth, silken beauty that one or always dirty! Why? Because 24/ two treatments can give you. hours a day your face isalwaysex-| On the other hand...if you have _ posed to soot, smoke, factory dirt,-| ®" adolescent, broken-out skin; if car exhaust, coal dust, noxious | You are a man who is troubled by fumes and other germ-laden dirt | blemishes or a “sandpaper skin th Urs into the air. It clings tw eh es pie enough net te the cataeal oils of your skin. | be ashamed to use a so-called Your pores become choked and “Woman's treatment” in the pri- clogged. Your natural oils are V8 of your own home...or if you stopped up and hardened into) 4ré & Woman who has abused her blackheads or pimples. They try to | complexion with improper and in- push out, forcing your pores to | adequate cosmetic preparations... open wider and wider. Once this | then this is vital. condition starts (especially during | We promise you dramatic im- adolescence, when glandular dis-| Provement with your first 15-min- ‘turbances make your skin extra | Ute home treatment. Your mirror oily) the condition usually grows will show it to you, and we promise than any other part of your body ...yet isn’t that where you find the most pimples, blackheads, blem- ishes and enlarged pores? So what do you do about it? Nine out of 10 women simply don’t or won't understand that if they have oily skins, blackheads, pimples or enlarged pores, they may not only have a cosmetic prob- lem...but a medical problem as well, Now why is this | worse and worse as you grow older. | YoU further rapid improvement for OUR \ | And when this happens...isn’t it) the next 14 days. a obvious that it may become impos-| After 14 days, you will discover SALE sible to correct unless you start to Whether you have to keep using all : ‘change your complexion care im- | 0 part of the treatment every day, PRICE ‘mediately? once a week, or once a month, de- t i ponding on how fast your complex- , Do This for A Cleaner Skin | '°" "esis to clear. | Try This Skin Treatment In Your Own Home Without Risking A Penny! The name of this 3-day doctor's formula is the Queen Helene Skin Treatment. It is named in honor of the nurse who worked at the doc- tor’s side for 15 years while this formula was being developed. Your Queen Helene 3-way formula, enough for 33 home treatments, in- cludes your scientific cleansing cream, your medicated mask cream and your medicated’ pore astrin- gent. The cost is $3.98...less than 13 cents a treatment. Yes, less than 13 cents for a skin specialist's 3-way skin and beauty treatment. ollow your daily progress in- your mirror and after each treat- ment, if your Queen Helene treat- ment does not do for your skin | If you want to rid vour face of ugly blackheads, enlarged pores and externally caused skin erup-— tions, these are the three things you | must do: i First you must soften the hard- | | ened dirt and oils that may have accumulated in your pore open-/ ings! Second, you must remove that dirt. (But don’t squeeze it out. Squeezing only forces part of the dirt deeper into your skin.) And - third, you must try te tighten your skin with shrinking and antiseptic. agents, not only for beauty, but to guard you against reinfection! And unless you are prepared to do all three things, it’s likely you will go on wasting your time and your money the rest of your life looking for “miracle cures!” What Happens When You 5 ‘i An 0 treatment we are going to soften | 40" © See a Tu -and loosen the buried dirt ce- : mented into your pores. The scien- | tific pore cleanser which is Part ' One of this famous skin doctor’s |: treatment is unlike any other| 'eleanser you have ever used in ‘your life, regardless of how much : Vo n afford to p And here i jow you can prove it on your skin. Apply the doctor’s scientific pore cleanser. Tissue it off ! Now look at the tissue! : When yon see the gray streaks of | dirt that come off —even after hav- ing creamed your face with any | other cleanser—then will you begin to understand why you need a drastic change in complexion care. |. (2) The second part of your doc- | , tor’s treatment is a medicated | | masque which you apply. |. Apply it to your face with your | fingertips as you would any cream. | | A little thicker around the “danger 'area”..,namely around the nose, aeres and cheeks. © first 3 or 4 minutes you will ‘feel a strong stimulation. This is real ingredients going to work on _Your skin. Your face will feel alter- ‘nately hot and cold. You will like ‘ite Your skin will feel refreshed. It | is like a massage without irritation, , bringing fresh, purifying blood to : your full purchase price. But act today! The longer you wait the worse it is bound to get. And like any other condition, the determined to help yourself, send coupon today! (Laboratories Established 1930). - Copyright, 1955, Para Labs. Gates Carp. pecececenavevesesconscceces Mail No-Risk, Free Trial Coupon Today Or Phone : ' FE 4.2511 Waite’s Saginaw ot Huron Pontiac, Mich. Please rush me by return matl my com. Queen Helene Doctor's Skin Treat- « ment, including: estas eset eee ee ’ ie ' plete ‘ 1. SCIENTIFIC CLEANSER : é If I don't see dramatic improvement in my skin after just one 16-minute treat- ment—if Queen Helene doesn’t do for my skin everything you heave led. me to believe it will do, I will return unused portion for my meney back, your face to draw off. the blemish causing wastes in your | After a few minutes this hot and L eold action goes away and a won- Complete Queen Helene Treatment. Only $3.98 (Plus 100% Fed. tax) “smh alas Ditech OOharee Ocon.} bij Pet eeeeeeeanneeane a ee eh a ae ee a ae ae ae ee oe ae ae ee oe ee igs ae Charge Yours at Waile's .. . Street Floor s ape See eters 18 ~ x we have ied you to bes ieve it will do. If you don’t see 2 Way Formula dramatic improvement after just > preps one 15-minute treatment, if you eee enone genes awwnd ms — Ea = ee , | Worse it gets, the longer it takes to. ; get well. Ss right now, while you're BAROLD aA, lesctende Dy ‘ : "Editorial Page WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22. 168 — ogre crmnrecen ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS” eS ete oF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS nn New Leader Elected by Canada’s Liberals Canada’s former Secretary of Ex- ternal Affairs, popular and abie Lester Bowes “Mike” Pearson, is the newly elected leader of the Lib- eral Party to succeed retiring former Prime Minister St. Laurent. * * * Last vears Nobel Peace Prize ¥in- and World War I veteran gave- ner i a teaching career at the Ur niver- sity of Toronte to enter government - and was ambassador tq Washington in 1945 and 1946. He was active in organizing the United Nations and also as a delegate and president of the General Assembly. It was at Mr. PEARSON'S urging that the U N Emergency Force took over in Egypt last fall and he has been working to NATO an Atlantic Union in military aspect * * * The 60 year old opposition leader won a three to one victory at the na- tional convention in Ottawa over former Minister of Health Pact Martin. There is every possibility of a new general election soon as the jast nationwide vote did not give the Conservatives, led by JoHn DrEren- BAKER, a Clear majority. Prime Min- ister DIEFENBAKER was able to form a ‘government with the support of two splinter parties The Liberal strategy will be to bring on an early election by a no confidence” vote in the present Conservative government, which has been in power only since last June. With 106 of the 265 seats in the House of Com- mons, | to 113 held by the Con- servatives, the Liberals have to pick up support from the 46 seats held by minor parties. x «© * Current unemployment, as high as in depression days, and difficulties because of US. wheat “dumping” and oil embargo, is causing the Diefenbaker Government some anx- iety. Although hardly to blame for the situation the Conservatives nat- urally are bearing the brunt of the —eHiticism == — Should the Liberals win in the next general election, as seems probable, make other than os Mr. PEARSON would become Prime Minister of Canada. | REA Interest Rate May Be Increased When the Rural Electrification Administration was established in 1935, the interest rate on Government money borrowed by the agency was fixed at two per cent. But. for. the.past 15 years the Government has had to pay more than that in interest on money it borrowed to pass on to REA. Last year it was suggested that the rate be raiséd and President EIsENHOWER'S recent budget message recommends an increase and also a shift where possible from Government private loans insured by the Govern- ment * * *” “However, as the latter sugges- tion, it should be borne in mind that REA was created becduse plivate capital was not interested electrification. At the lume the agency was set up only 11 per cent of American farms in rural were electrified. Today the per- centage is 90 as a direct result _ - D RESS JMmpaAny PONTING riat Press Cr TH ; Tre Pe 48 Wo Narot Fontlec 12. Michigan Sie Mare jailiy Except Bunda tis ¥ Hans der A Winey __Brecuiive Vise Presiiert Assist tising ond Acver # inreci Manages Heowtes HP iectce om. Rapt M. Teeaowerr Circulation Manager OG MarSuain Jotpar, Local Advertising Manager donee Wo Prreresie Secretary and fei tor ON ese © Yesees Roeser BT: mi Classi tog Manager Managing ne ier Fatered at Poet Office Pontiac, at second ciase mutta? oc The Associated Press is entitied *vneiunielly to the ase for republicetion of all local news printed tm thts eeeepeaper ts well as ail AP pews dispatches - Tae Powgiec Press is delivered we cartier for 40 cet a week: where garrier Service ts hot avaliable ke nal in Gakiand, Ciehesee, Livingston Macon Boety at Gasmienew ‘Coention # je $1200 w Prar + ls@ehere Michican ~ al gr ether pincer tn the Crotea fiate tal « Pe ist eviipesrtplion? pal @hie if atiant+ Prone hy wv fp eee cere meager te MEMBER or AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS 2 a oi re ae { 4 i Fi a ee a ef 2511 Auburn Roa: of Government loans to supply a growing market. - * * * According to the Department of Agriculture which supervises REA, rural electric systems are planning projects costing $967 million. It would be difficult to get much of this huge sum from private lending agencies, ’ The Department aiso. estumates that in the next 20 years. these projects will create new n varkets. for electric appianees and ae to the total of $24 billion. As President ElstnHowER pointed out the REA already has ‘done. much the Jives of our rural families and contributed greatly to the advance- ment of our country’s * But unless reasons to * * there are the contrary, the Government should charge in- terest on the money it lends REA at least equal to the interest on the money it is borrowing. streng “AMERICANS are enjoying living more than ever before.” says a col- umnist. No doubt. Americans in- variably get a big kick out of doing something that is terribly expensive. The Man About Town It Only Seems So Argument That Winters Are Not Becoming Milder Conquer: Sometimes what she dupes to. “On hand with fils annual quite ton- vincing proof that our winters are not getting milder, as many suppose, ts Ambrose Petherbridge of Birmingham. He says we had a num- ber of winters 30 odd years ago that were as mild as the present one through their first half. “But we got- paid for it—with compound interest—in the second hatft, he asserts Better ways of combating the cold, bet- ter health, better ;means of transporta- tion, better heating facilities, improved methods of fighting that once everybody's trouble (the common cold!. better means of transportation, better ways of clearing the jee and snow. and more home attrac- tions. like the phone. radio and TV, all combine to make our winters seem more agreeable, contends Mr Petherbridge _ ‘My Bradenton, Fla.. lookout sends word that the frigid weather there caused al- most a complete cessation of real estate dealings. and thé appearance of so many ‘For Sale” signs that a loyal resident posted a blg one: “This Place NOT for Sale.” Another addition comes froin “Keego Harbor Booster, to the list that shows why our neighbor- ing city is so well taken care of, profes- —sionally—it has its own optician. - When you want to check on an auto driver, remember that Oak- land County's 1958 plates are let- tered between GA and HH, with aur neighboring counties as fol- lows: Wayne, AA-FZ; Genesee, KA-KZ; Macomb, MA-MT; La- peer, TN-TP; Livingston, VK-VL, am enaw, There's something to ponder upon in a sentiment expressed by a recent con- tributor to Voice of the People, appearing each day on informed of the death of somebody, first thought usually is “Which way did he go?” this page. When the Notice of the Pontiac City Club's com- ing Stag Night says the price is “Five Depreciating Dollars.” __ and that it is for the bene it of shut in you go away hungry t Sia once that you cannot blame it en youn wife A letter just received from Mrs. Blanch Hetherington of Rochester says her 12-year-old son aiways belteves what he reads in this cot- umn, and quotes one of its ttems in trying to convince his playmates that they sheuld keep off the ice tn the Clinton River. V erbal Orchids to- Miss Anna O'Riley ninetiét» birthday. f irs. Thomas Harland Allison St.: éightieth birthday. Eben Thoreau Plains; eighty-fourth birth- of Drayton day Mrs. Abagail Skidmore of, Rochester; eighty-third birthday, z 4 to enrich ‘economy generally." ; 3 Dressed to Kill David Lawrence Says: Need ‘Univac’ in Today’ S Business WASHINGTON — What's going en in the national economy at this particular moment is perhaps the biggest single preoccupation in the minds of someone could invent a “uni- vac” to assemble the facts about business fluctua- tions concurrent- ly—not just ret- rospectively over _the last menth or the last quarter LAWRENCE or the last year—it would be easier to know what the actual trend is today For just at the moment the country is being told that a ‘‘reces- sion” is under way. Actually, there were signs of a readjustment a year ago when national production began to slide. But nobody knew whether the shde was temporary. Also. there were conflicting factors at work. Thus, “hard goods’’ began to slip downward, but ‘soft goods” stayed up till the last quarter of 1957 Yet today, looking back to what was happening in January, Feb- ruary and March of 1957, it is evident that the first big blow the national economy began te feel was of a psychological sort. The fuss over the size of the budget caused hesitation in govern- ment spending. Defense contractors began to be worried. There was even a delay in paying for work in process> and soon many com- panies had to start borrowing money they otherwise would have received currently from the gov- ernment Talk began to be heard, too, of a deadline—June 50. which is the end of the government's fiscal year —and of attempts to make a better showing on the budget. Government payments were delayed for H variety Of good Teasoris.— ~ The talk also was of changes in the amount of spending. The taik, furthermore, was of anti- inflation measures and tighter credit, and this, of course, caused many a‘company to defer its expansion plins till it could _borrew fonds more cheaply. Billions of dollars’ worth of pri- What did all these . influences mean to the psychology of the final quarter of 19577 How much were they responsible for the tendency to look upon the year 1957 as a whole’ as likely to-be one of decline and perhaps serious readjustment? By the time the final quarter's operations were about to be en- visaged during the summer months of 1957. the fear of readjustment had grown sizable and began to appear in a tangible form in the cutdown of spending by companies engaged in heavy goods, such as machinery and equipment. Enen- ployment began to rise. What had seemed.-at first like a good: profit year in 1957 turned out in the end to be adversely affected by the decline in the last quarter. It was not enough of a decline to The Country Parson businessmen. If * make 1957 appear. relatively speak- ing, as a very bad year on profits, but it gave its own warning of the effect of the profit squeeze —high costs and a diminishing volume of sales. _ Today many of the labor leaders are reluctant to take too seriously the idea of a “recession.” Others accept it and urge tax reduction and deflationary remedies. They concede a readjustment ix in progress but they do not feel it will be prolonged and are relying on the forecasts now being made _about an ‘‘upturn in the second half of 1958." Consequently they are thinking in terms of “wage increases as usual.” This could bieck an up- tura in business and shake public confidence. Eisenhower, in his Economic Report to Gonaresi: warns against increases in wages or prices—which is what he did a year ago—but the economic forces of the country do not seem to respond to exhortation. They re- spond only to grim facts corre: 1958) Looking Back 15 Years Age BRITISH OCCUPY burning port of Tripel REQUEST MORE volunteers for Civilian Defense here. 20 Years Ago JURY CONVICTS oi firms of price fixing. JAPS REVEAL plan for lengthy China war to achieve goals. Dr. William Brady Says: Real ‘Chicken’ Is Youth Who's" Seared to Say ‘No’ 1. A boy being aueatcl by his parents has no right to squander money on smoking. If his parents are overburdenet] with if, the sur- plus should be used to help some less fortunate per- son. 2 Athletic coaches do not sanction smoking _by boys in train- ing. Even though may not serious- DR. BRADY ly harm the health or the wind of a boy over 18 there is no reason to think it can do a boy any good. al Saying ‘No, thank ou 1 dant moderate smoking - sihircoaed envelope, for the book- let CVD, which deals with heart and artery troubles in a sane, sci- emific way—im spite of the manu- facturers of ethical nostrums. th ¢ trick specialists and the ‘clinic’ racketeers.) * * * ned letters, mot more than ere page or words jong pertaining to persona} health amd hygiene, not disease diag- nosis, of treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady, if a stamped self- addressed envelope is sent to The Pon- tine Press. Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright, 1958) —— EERE shuts bach uo ds Wikia Niki! Re whe MAA the Veterans’ Trust Fand is of vital interest to every vet in the state. One must be destitute to qualify for this aid, but last year 13,289 vet- evans qualified, so you can see how many have been helped during its 32 year operation. They say needy veterans are scarce, cat is bo bce lew Good times are gone and there will be an increasing number of needy . veterans befere laber and management agree. Legislators who want As a member of DAY, auotien Lagoa, 990 wad i to the Oakland County Council of Veterans, I can see the veteran has let his guard drop. It's up to the veteran and his dependents to show these legislators that we still have some fighting spirit. If all veterans watch the men in office and refuse to support those that advocate dissolving . the Veterans’ Trust Fund, we can win without a fight. 2628 Lapeer Rd. You bet the politicians are afraid . to tap the Veterans’ Trust Fund.” and they'd better keep that scare in their minds if they want to be elected again. And let’s not call it a “bipartisan” move. I talked to our representative, Les Hudson, before the story went to press, and he assured me he isn't in accord Republican representatives on this move and I know most Demo- crats are of the same accord. That money was appropriated for veterans and that's where it will stay, as far as every vet- eran organization in Michigan is concerned. We're all lined up to fight this move with more fight than we had “over there.” A good place to get money to get the state out of financial trou- ble would be through a corpora- tions profits tax. After all, they were the ones making the money while we were over there saving their hidesy, George W. Smith Lather J. Keys Former Peliceman to Continue Fight In regards to my unsuccessful fight for re-instatement, I intend to continue in a higher court. It seems . that everyone. including City Com- missioners, has become a human puppet. The police investigation of _ our city is a farce. 132 Prospect ‘She Failed to Keep Control of Herself’ God made man master of him- self, and failure to do so was quite obvious in Sarah Churchill. We are a Christian nation. We love and appreciate her for her talents and potentialities to serve mankind, but please withhold such unlovely thoughts. Only one real master over man was ever designed. Christian Many Enter in Argument. on Joint Chiefs of Staff By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (F — President Eisenhower has talked three times recently about reorganizing the Defense Department. It's still not clear what he intends to do. He talked speed, then seemed not to be talking speed, and now talks speed again. * * * It's not clear what anyone else, including Congress. intends to do about it, either. One thing is sure the department has been under blazing attack for red tape, dow- bletalk, delay, and interservice rivalry. In particular the joint chiefs of staff «JCS) system has heen at- tacked — and defended. Gen. Na- than F. Twining, appointed by F:i- senhower, is chairman of the JCS, which is made up of the heads of each of the three armed services * * * The four chiefs usualty reach agreement by compromise, with Twining not voting. This is the main complaint against the sys- tem: It has a built-in method for each of the chiefS to angle and wangle for his own branch of the service. The result: various proposals to abolish the JCS and_ substitute either a single military boss or perhaps a general staff of top officers who would be divorced from their indiwdual branches of the armed forces. There's mixed feeling in Con- gress about (A) scrapping the JCS, (B) setting up a single mili- tary chief, (C) making changes and (D) not making changes. And military men themselves disagree ~ on what to do, if anything. Twining says he wants to keep an open mind about changes in the present system. Adm, Ar- leigh Burke, chief of naval opera tions and therefore a member of the JCS. defends the present ar- rangement and opposes the idea of a single commander for all three services. * * * Yet Lt. Gen. James Gavin, the Army's missile bass who's quit- ‘ting the service for various rea- sons, wants the JCS funked and an advisory general staff of top offi- cers substituted for it. Eisenhower himself in 1947 pro posed a single chief of staff but Congress preferred the JCS Where he stands now he hasn't said The present clamor for a shake- up seems to be part of the “let's get going” feeling that started aft- er the Russians hoisted their Sput- niks. But two groups of private citizens, who had been investigat- ing the defense arrangements be- fore the Sputniks, have called for changes. Case Records of a Psychologist: Unfaithful Wife May Feel Inferior. smoke" is good character develop- ment for a boy. A boy doesn't take his first drink because he “craves” it, but generally be- cause he hasn't sufficient charac- . ter to decline—he’s afraid some- one will eall him “chicken.” The **‘needs"’ user who - make him. forget for a while ‘how weak, wretched, inferior or unfaith- ful he is. The narcotic—whether it be morphine,—herem, alcohol— benumbs higher brain centers. dulls conscience. impairs judg- ment. Free from these controis he is likely to do something which will bring shame and sorrow to his family, his friends or himself. NEVER HELPS Alcohol never acts as a frue stimulant to the brain, the spinai cord or the nerves. Scientific study has proved that alcohol is in NO sense a true’ stimulant. It does NOT exalts a person to wold out Rive a ere courage to face up to-danger__It does NOT help one to ward off fatigue or exhaustion. Only in 19th century novels and elderly movies on TV does the brandy flask heal the wounded, re- store the sick or revive the dead “4 real test of brotherly love is your ability fo show a man he’s wrong without making him. mad at you.” r In the gay . P took their booze under the name of Peruna, Celery Compound, Jlostetter’s Bitters, Damiana Bit- ters, Mayer's Sarsaparilla, Duf- fy’s Corn Juice or the like, and detendea their drinking by quot- ing their accommodating medi- cal advisers who cailed liquor “stimulants.” Their delicate cénstifution re- “then quired a shot several times a day just as some poor souls under ques- tionable medical care today re- quire a dose of digitalis every day to keep the heart beating = If some charlatan ‘hag given you the “Weak heart’ ‘complex, © you” had better send ~ in care of this paper, 35 cents and 1 stamped, self- “needs” or ‘and she became a _ devote Donna was goaded into un- faithfulness to her husband because she suffered from a sexual inferiority compler. Her affairs were- not due to any greqt physical passion but to her need for a cosmetic tonic for her ego. When her husband used the data tn the sex book- let below, he restored her ego faithful wife. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case X — 309: Donna P., aged 27, has been married for 5 years. * * * “But I've finally decided to di- vorce her,’ her worried husband confessed. "Actually, I should have done it three yars ago. But ft felt she was emotionally or mentally sick, so I forgave her. “But she has affairs with other men. oe Conor: ating. She seems to have a mania for affairs. I've caught her in sev- eral of thent. “She always DR. CRANE cries and begs me takes place again within a few months. What else can I do?" SEX MANIACS In this column I have reiterated the statement that women are com- paratively frigid as measured by . the sexual masculine standard “Dr. or aogy how do you explain a case like Donna's?” you may ~fogicatty” * * * “And what about other women ‘With a mania for sex, such as nym- phomaniacs?” - Well, in my extensive practice for over 30 years, I have en- countered maty ‘supposedly sex mad’ women. on eno = statherin rid of = so they have referred them to me for consultation. And I have never encounteréd a sex mad woman who was really passionate. They have always been goaded imo multiple affairs by some psychological complex, such as an amputated breast er other nor but looming very large to’ their distorted perspective. Donna is a classical example. When I interviewed her, I asked why she was so inconsiderate of her devoted husband. * * * ‘ “Oh, I think he just sticks to ‘me because of a sensé of henor.” she admitted, “for 1 don’t believe he can really love me for myseif alone.” SEX INFERIORITY — = - Then she admitted that she was sterile. She could never have a coma for her Fallopian tubes had “Dr. Crane, 1 get panicky at times,’’ she confessec, “‘for when I see other wives with babies, ! feel desolate. “Then I wonder if I am on, ‘the I wonder if T have what it takes to interest a man. “This drives me into a frenzy — and I havd an affair just to prove to myself that I can attract ° man. * * * “Then I may remain satisfied for a manth or two, but ultimately - ‘and ally removed when she countered a supposedly sex mad woman who didn’t have the same attitude as Donna. - Divorce is not the proper answer to psychological problems, so I urged Donna and her husband to remove her feeling of inferiority. Piainly I pointed out that she was simply afraid of herself, and craved two things to correct mat- ters. * * * One was children, which she'd have to adopt, since she could never bear any of her own. The other was complete physi- cal satisfaction, which she had never obtained despite her num- _erous affairs with different mivn. _ Her husband agreed to stay - with her-for six months more and try to rebuild their happi- ness, ~ For she no longer was goaded — by an undiagnosed urge. After six. months of proper marriage, they finally located a baby for adop- tion and now are a happy family. ~ * &* _ drops to sad e oe —¥ Tn “addition to- the” Hot charge, ‘cents a a “serving. : ... Deserves Modern F inancing! = 9} ~~ Come in and talk over your home loan business in private with—eyr—— home loan specialists. Our conven- ient home financing features month- pb ly rent-size payments that are budg- . eted to steadily reduce both principal and interest. Ponti a . *) ’ Federal Savings Lk , HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St. Se ie ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. PONTIAC: 16 E. Levieass i St. ¢ * Sie wit ts AIR SUSPENSI i i nn aa PLU % TON LESS CURB WEIGHT | Pe 1958" No other line of trucks has such brilliant features: TRUCK AIR SUSPENSION | _SUPER-ECONOMY DIESELS a” HE MIGHTY HAULER above—typical of the new 1958 heavy-duty GMC’s—is built and equipped to force the greatest possible profit out of any haul. New MONEY-MAKER engines bring horse sense to horsepower—down-rate big power plants to easy- . stroking, unstraining output. | Curb weights have been cut as much as % ton to let you pack payload instead of dead weight. AIR SUSPENSION models float a bounce-free Joad in damage-proofed smoothness, ending life-short- TORQMATIC DRIVE See your suthorized dealer fo AMERICAS ABLEST TRUCKS: IC Money Meher from ¥ to 45 tne 4 * TORQMATIC DRIVE models put gear ratios where power just overmatches load, no more and no less ~where engine and transmission become downhill “brakes” on thei | | a _ HORSEPOWER with HORSE SENSE These GMC’s are designed for Gparsterk who believe in spending an extra dollar to get back two. For nothing has been spared to make these 1958 GMC’s the most able and the longest-lived trucks ever turned out, Check this for yourself. * ROBERT A. CLELAND | a member < Ss for. Robert A. of God in Christ.’ . TI, of 24 S. Jessie St. will be Pag ens are, Keys. Carl B Mrs, William (Annie) Gilmore. burn Heights and LeRoy of Cedar Keys and two sisters. Service and burial were in Cedar CARL B. GIFFORD \ cs, rs, Ester Bryant of P< liam A. Harty, 70, died unexpect- - edly Monday at his home in Dex- "Tle hed retined from Pontiac Mo: . Gifford of 29 Lexington| tor | WILLIAM GILMORE H. MacDERMID It will then beip.m, Friday at Richardson-Bird Trail near Ann Arbor. He ig survived by his. parents, Mr, and Mrs» Charlies S. ‘Thomp- son of Walled Lake; four brothers, Tom, John, Larry and Brian; and two sisters, Anne and Coralie, all at a =e sDAY, JANUARY 29, 1050 day morning in St. Paul Church, with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. _ . Architect-Designer, Lyle F. Zisler Dies Save now on famous-make laundry needs! | MONE ‘ — NY () ORCHARD LAKE — Lyle F. Zis- ler, 48, owner of the Lyle F. Zisler and Associates architectural firm in Detroit, died in Pontiacg General Hospital yesterday following a heart attack. Zisler, who lived at ‘5300 Pontiac Trail, Orchard Lake, was a de- 67, of 456 Harvey St. who was in. jured in an automibile accident died Monday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Bazley’s Thursday | SUPER SPECIALS! Mrs.- James H. (Mabel) . MacDermid, 72, of 104 Dwight St. will be at 2 p.m. Fri- Stoney Creek Cemetery. day ffom the Farmer - wad 9 yesterday in avon Ff iday-Niters Club a nioce = vers! cousins on Kets: Audition: Dance a niece. ; The Pontiac YMCA's Friday- ALBERT 0. LE GRANDE TROY — Service for Albert Ol-'Niters Club will hold an audition .}at home. Westinghouse washer | 9 8 ‘signer of aircraft and guided mis- —— siles for Byrne Engineers, Inc., of ve v be 249.95 re Detroit, during World War II. oe | £4 7° Ving agitator | HOTPOINT Reg. 299.95. gi |iver Le Grande, 88, who died yes-' dance at 9 p.m. during its meet- au Hotpoi f 78 North Saginaw ~ [terday at the home of his son. ing Friday at the YMCA. | He was a graduate of the Uni- par hoas matic ate Mild Cured ‘ . | Edwin A., 6089 Montclair St., will) The dance, featuring the Ray versity of Michigan, a member sinses hethes all. lain el . be held at 1:30 p.m. at Price Fu-/seaif Band, will be followed by of-Alpha Rho Chi fraternity, the Bead Go dy’ eat in- ibs. neral Home. Officiating will be the — swim in the Y pool at 10 p.m. | American Institute of Architects self pans it Th ifti out! |Rev. J. Douglas Parker of St. Paul) Membershjp in the club is open| and was president of the Walled BY hvedic Look-in +hriftivator ‘ for Methodist Church, Rochester. 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Morrice. were made and directors Mil iad men are directors,. with ad- coming year chosen Same Tn paont banks directors met dition of H.C. Diehl. fellowing the stockholders’ mect Almont ing and elected officers Almont Savings Bank: _prest Aust —withent exception, the dent Mantel DaSilda:—sice— poesia = eustomary dividends were de- édent, Clinton Scully: cashier, L. A clared. Reports indicated a Rechicl: Girecions DaSiida. Bock " general increase in resources bn tol, E. R. Bristol, H. A. McCor- | and deposits, as well as in sur- plus and undivided profits, rick, Joseph Jacquin, A. West-| Some increases in capital stock veld,. Russell Lovell and George were made during the year. Usu- Yoshihara. ally this was done to provide ad. ‘anmada : ditional funds for further develop- | Keenan (Sake Bank Chairman oan gt Ga aan Orvy Hulet: president, James E. | | REFLECTS Bt SENEAS Neely: vice president, A. B. | CONDITIONS Fee caue (ClA. Piste: A reflection of fhe conditions : ; vole ue in amv section 1< found in the directors Hulet, Neely, Bower, L statement made by its bank n Joseph Miller and E. A. Morri- this general area this is quite son | consistently good Brighton * *. * Brighton State Bank: sigs nt, The physical setup of a number Ff. Rp of the banks was enhanced during Keehn Hyne. vice president, Emil executive vice president, | the vear by new building con- R. 0. Newcombe; cashier, W. R | struction for their places of busi- Kimble: directors, Hyne, New- ness. and in new equipment to combe, Kimble, Charles Van- furnish better service for their'Winkle, E. R. Keehn, F. J. Hyne chentele, jand. A. C, Park. As has been the case in a | . Metamora ey number of banks in recent years, | Crate Savings Bank: president some of the banks in the area and cashier, Fred Donner: vice have been absorbed by nearby | president, Russell Evarts; di- city banks, and now are eper- rectors, Donner, Evarts, George ated as branches, This was \fathews, Leon Bishop and Ellery done to provide more funds and | aidiaw. better facilities for both, Seuth Lyon The latest of these is the con- eo on - golidation of the First State and as — Leow Bott Savings Bank of Holly with the ‘Long: executive vite president, Citizens Commercial and Savings R. H. Orr: cashier, Norman Com- Bank of Flint. The fermer now fort: directors, Miles, Long, Orr, ig, operated as a branch of thein 11. Roberts, A. L. Lukeche and later. F. J. Wooster North Branch Pioneer Bank: president, F. €.- vice president, H. H. cashier, directors, Ballard, Harper, F. J. * * * In the banks still being operated | under their same charter as a year ago there were few changes Ballard; in the personnel of stockholders Harper, or directors in Tuesday's annual GTOW: Jections, the results of which DeGrow, Raymond Bail, odiewr ~ _— ° . ‘Barbour, D. S, Orr, Joe Harper . ‘Jr. and C. W. Ballard. Clarkston i Clarkston State Bank: chairman. | Romeo Thomas J, Foley; president, Guy, Romeo Savings Bank: president, A, Walter; executive vice presi- L. M. Kelly; vice president, R. M. dent and cashier, Robert L. Jones: Howland; vice president and cash- vice president, John L. Estes; di- ier. K. D. Mosher; directors, rectors, Foley, Walter, Jones, Fs. Kelly, E. J. Chamberlain, E. B. tes, Roy A. Alger and C, W. Emmett, H. H. Gray, J. E. Martin, _Robinson. . H: D. Palmer, D..S. Seaman, F, P. Oxford Smith, L. J. Wilbur and J. IL Oxford Savings Bank: president STS G. B. Tunstead: vice president and. Cass City cashier, H. A. Pickford: vice Cass City State Bank: president, # presidents, R. E. Allen and J. H x7 B Auten; vice president, F. B. Achten; directors. Tunstead. quten; vice president and cashier Pickford, Allen, Achten, M. G ¢ M Wallace: directors, M. 3 Dunlap. ©. M. Sutheriand and Auten, F. B. Auten, John Sandham. | Warren Smith C. R. Hunt, C. M. Wallace and Ortonville B. F. Benkelman ‘Onenw ile State Bank: president, * * * Frank D Brigham; vice president, New Pinney State Bank: presi Duane E. Schulz. executive vice dent, F. H. Pinney; vice presi- president and cashier. Edna Pro- dent, Dorus Benkelman; cashiér, frock: directors, Brigham, Schulz, R. H. Keating; directors, Pinney, | Profock, Linford Owen. D ter of Mrs, Hildred Squier, of -Peuding Couples Maynard De-’ ‘condition with a fractured skull,’ s Sign Is Solved L. Benkelman, Keating, Mrs. Edward bound and southbound vehicles tic} Oakland County superv Hamilton, John Waltzz and David Pinney, H. M. Bulen and W. g, Up traffic and make the intersec-| such action in May of 1952. : : Not coming under the require-| ment is the city of Pontiac, which! MARION M. SQUIER Announcement has been -made of the engagement of Marion M. Squier to Russel] F. Neddermey- er. The bride-elect is the daugh- | JANICE SUE CHAMBERS — The engagement of Janice Sue Chambers to Jerome C, Ku- baski has been announced by her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Samuel A, Chambers, of Case- mere road,. Lake Orion. The spective bridegroom is the son | prospective bridegroom is the of Mr. and Mrs. William Ned- | son of Mr. and Mrs. George dermeyer, of Tillson St., Romeo. | Tehringer of Orchard street, A March 29 wedding is being | Lake Orion. The wedding date planned ' hasn't been set. Deputy Fights Dog Vaccination 262 Atwater St., Lake Orion, and the late Warren Squier. The pro- Three Carlouds of Deputies Part It took three carloads of Oaklane 1 County sheriff's deputies te halt! a battle between two families last! night as they brawled at the inter-| section of Opdyke and Pontiac Rds. | * * * | | The two pugilistic teams were! made up of Gerald Duggan, 73, and} his wife Classitta, 32, on one side| be vaccinated against rabies prior and James B. Davis, 29, and his\to issuance of licenses is being wife Jo Nell, 25, on the other.. | tested in an appeal placed on the The Duggans, who live at 2037 Walnut St., and their neighbors | the Davises, of 2027 Walnut St., arrived at the scene in their re- spective autos, Ignoring County Ruling on Rabies Shots Appealing a jury trial, convic- ‘tion in Lake Orion Justice Court | Jan. 7 is Robert C. Porritt, 31, of 13340 Silver Bell Rd. | Porritt, a sheriff's deputy, con- tends_the. law —is discriminatory in that it is not countywide, and he also claims that the rabies vaccine sometimes Causes pa- ralysig.in the dogs. Authorities say this-‘is the first ime the local rule has been tested in Circuit Court. “This dog law is so messed up.” They piled out of them, and pro-j ceeded to settle what they called’ a long-standing. grudge, with alito| jacks, tire irons and black pepper. The majot casualties were Dug- gan, who is in Pontiac General) Hospital reported in satisiactory | ¢4 and Mrs. Davis who was treated for scratches and bruises of the, face and pepper in her eyes — Porritt, ‘that one can in- lterpret it so many ways that we Davis was booked at the Oaktand’ decided ibe best thing is to get County Jail on a charge of investi-! a ruler = gation of felonious assault. Depu- ad ~ ties hope td gain a clearer picture DOGS UNLICENSED For not having his two be marie hunting dogs, Paddy and Peppie, | licensed, iJustice Helmar G. Stanaback by, |Dr. Frank R. Bates, county dog, warden “The boys down at the Oakland County Sportsmen's Club decided that if one ef us eyerget hauled in on this ruling we would fight it,” Porritt explained. of the fight through further ques- tioning today. Case of Missing No Left Turn’ The case of the missing ‘‘no left turn sign at Dixie Highway and Williams Lake road and Walton - A state statute provides that boulevard has been solved, to the county supervisors can by reso- rehef of county officials, police, lution require the rabies shot to and left-furning drivers. be taken anytime within a year Because the left turns by north- preceding granting of the license. isors took |tion a high accident corner, plans| ~ \pils| as an intensive werkshop for Appeals Conviction for A county mandate requiring dogs. ‘Circuit Court calendar this week.| Porritt was taken before Plan Intense Workshop| for Teachers; to Be Held) in High School | 1 Snare wit ts Se bed co tt day for Waterford Township pu- the 365 teachers in the school sys- ‘tem gets under way. at the high school . * * | : ‘The request for the workshop) . was presented to the administra-| — tion through committees and fac- ulty groups already at work on - * : A picture of curriculum prob- lems and-possibilities for a total {school program, prompted the one- ANNE MARIE SHARPE Announcement has been made | | Of the engagement of Anne Ma- rie Sharpe to A3-C Ervin J. Thorp Jr. The bride-elect is the * Parents and the Primary pro- | gram will be under the direction of three instructors on Primary Prob- \lems, and they wil] discuss De- termining the Readines for Vari- ous Kinds of Learning." Plymouth Studies daughter of Mrs. Charles Sharpe | Same ea and ert jobs... in one handy kit...all “at one thrifty low price. Yi, inch drill with accessories. for polishing, sanding, ete. BUY NOW — PAY LATER _ W.T Grant “Charge-It’’ Plan No down payment. Months to pay. W. T. GRANT CO. Michigan Miracle Mile 2135 S. Telegraph Rd. CRICKET ROCKER Authentic Colonial styling ... rich finish $1477 1.25 WEEK ~ Expertly crafted; hand- rubbed, lacquered finish for lasting beauty. Grace- fully turned legs. Revers- ible cushion seat & back. W.T. Grant ‘‘Charge-It"’ Plan No down payment. Months to pay. W. T. GRANT CO. Mickie Miracle Mile \ 2135 S. Telegraph Rd. day workshop and contact among teachers from different schools. will help unify the entire system, ac- eee superintendent ot Ki ngston road, White Lake ; Township, and the late Mr. Interested groups - with mem- | Sharpe. Her fiance is the son | bership from’ alt grade levels of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin J, Thorp | will meet together, and , speaker Sr of Bonnie Briar Rd., White will present problems and con- | Lake Towpship. A March wed- cepts for discussion. | ding is planned. ? Professors and teachers have been scheduled to ‘conduct the| workshop, and among the subjects. Sui f 125, 000° 'to be presented are Science, Lan-| uing or guage Arts, gos Reading and in lls nd Thinking Ski n Local Accident A 1956 automobile accident, which happened near New Hudson ‘in. Oakland County, is the basis for a $125,000 damage suit pres- ently being tried in Wayne County ‘Circuit Court. . Sophia Glinski, Italian film actress and singer, and her hus- | band Matteo, 64, beth of Detroit, 48 | are seeking the damages for in- Property Valuation eric strc starch tt 1386 i two-car collision on Pontiac PLYMOUTH — City commission- Tra ers of Plymouth are studying the, The couple is results of a reassessment of-prop- Szylling, Ann Arbor artist, erty in the city that would raise!whom the assesséd valuation of real when his car struck gow driven, with property here about $7,000,000 over by Conrad Goode, 26, of 203 Cher- ‘the 1957 figure. The reassessment okee Dr. job was done by the Wayne County) ~ e& *® Bureau of Taxation. | Mrs. Glinski has to undergo a The bureau informed commis- {fifth plastic surgery operation be } ‘eause of facial cuts resulting from sioners that Plymouth has land and buildings with a market value of $44,274,560. It recom- mended that the city assess land © at 40 per cent of its estimated: fore he apparently lost control on ' value and buildings at 42 per le uve. cent, The recommendation, if.adopted.-Oxford Church Women /would result in an @ssessed valua- tion of $18,611,670 on real property Plan Meeting on Japan in the city compared to the state's’ evaluation of $11,668,680 made last year, 5 Admit Loitering - in Gambling House - Five men arrested last Friday night for loitering in a gambling house pleaded guilty today and were fined $15 or three days in jail by Municipal] Court Judge Mau- rice E. Finnegan. : ° French Up Price to Die ithe head-on collision. The Glinskis icharge Szylling with net heeding 4 iying Japan will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Oxford Meth- ae Church with members of the __.Oxford —_and Thomas Methodist: ichurches discussing the schools, art and culture of Japan. Featured will be a one-act play, row.” Roles will be taken by Bar- bara and Kenneth Mapley, neane Collier, Kristy Pearson, Jane! Langley and Martha Kamm. * * * suing Joseph’ the Glinskis were riding. — their warning to drive slower be-| OXFORD — The third meeting: ,of Oxford area church women stud-|. “Between Yesterday and Tomor-!... ‘ Ge.) = are nearly completed to construct! jcut- offs this spring to carry the Arrested in a,raid on the Big issues its own tags as a home Six Republican Chib, 9 Bagley ‘|turning traffic to Walton and Wil- rule city. It is believed to be the) St , the five are: PARIS (#—The upward march of prices in France hit coffins E. Pence. Profit. Fenton Lapeer Fenton State Savings Bank: First National Bank: directors chairman, G, W. Pellett; presi. C. A. Laesch, H. M. Myers, L, T. dent, E. C. Reid; vice presidents, ‘Bishop, R. [tn Evarts, ; George = —_}}_ W Hitehesak RFS Mathews WA] Myere and f+ Last liams Lake Rds. saeek « Open Every Evening ‘til 9 P.M, FE 8-9522 Loceted B een ee ee ee ee Le. phone—today if you wish. ASSOCIATES J. C. PENNEY CO. 2185 S. TELEGRAPH RD. LOAN COMPANY Miracle Mile Shopping Center 3 Michigan Miracle Shopping Center OPEN EVERY EVENING ‘TIL 9 P.M. «225 5 S. Telegraph FE 8-9641 SPECIAL This Week Say ! IMPORTED MULTI-COLORED CO, | a ~ “and — " WITH THIS AD ONLY i ae F “BLACK al WHITE FM i “127 = 120 - 620 4 Bright gay colors to - help excite your pleasure or to help decorate - any collection you may have. Holds 12 full ounces of liquid. CRAIG'S £6 Open 11 A.M. to 9 P. M. Deily Be Sure to ieee In and Visit Our Valentine Card taeel Reg. $1.20 a c KINSEL 3 eistakis } STORE _S. ‘Ss. KRESGE'S Open Every Evening ‘til 9 Listed tn Telephane Book Under SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO. i. Located in |, C. army er and Notion Dept. . FE 8-935 Price Available , | Only at Your * Mivicla Mile All Wool Imported : Topcoats — Tweeds, Flannels, Checks ~ , “Choice of the House”’ , Regular to $75 | : mF Our expert craftsmen will com pletely clean, adjust and tim your watch. 69° Ib. STEAK --69'Ib. _ Large “Grade A _ EGGS 3 Dozen = $42 29 is | ‘ Come in and get your free tickets for. Qa Pontiac Station Wagon to be given away free April 5th plus many other prizes to be given away thru ‘July 13th. SHINNER'S MARKET MIRACLE MILE Mon., Tues., Wed. 12 to 9 — Thars., Fri., Sat. 9 to J - or Keepsake > $f 14 Ket Gold, a8 low a8 $24.95 | MIRACLE MILE—In the Bezecr Areo ALSO 45 SOUTH SAGINAW ST. FOURTEEN __of the passage of time than hav-' 4 : 5 = : = se : 2% . | \ + 2 Hal Boyle Says: lives in our house. | Nothing makes you more aware knot behind her back. = | “What's the point’ in that?" 1 ing a child in your home. On one asked. i. day you have to do everything for|a bow standing on her head?” it, and it seems almost the very) ‘‘Listen, Rover," said Frances, next day it won't let you do any-,“don't you realize that from the) thing for it at all. itime a girl puts on her first kitch- len apron she has to tie a bow be. “Why not teach her to tie’ ing het father, but the other day ‘she boldly asked Mark Stumpf, a 6-year-old playmate down the hall, “Would you like fo marry. me?” Mark showed little enthasiasm THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1958 _ “Why not?" Hogs : like “Cause I'm growing up, but x * eg eer {Ee ; Our daughter, Tracy Ann, now hind her back every day of her 20 : oe pes ig 2 ) ; 4% years old, has reached this life?” : 4S j = : ee j 4 Sed - eet] tage | * * * : j A 3 ;: do . it - all - by-- herself stage <. 3 z Ten times a day she utters her) Well isnt that just Hike a Wort - 5 — Ff — ae Bee clamerous inde. an—ask her a silly question and _ om, oo oe | pendence ny’ help she gives jul a serious arse ¢! / ; — " ” eres 8 eevee: iene ee s Her statement af to every. Moment +s fearning t Lane ; : i ; # : : : thing from going 1 e bat! ABC's, for stand the ’ f we ' : to buttoning her t ight she is ur » read As ; hlewing ber nose fo stam > on a matter of fat he little hypo- : : Q : : tiptoe to push the elevator button. crite—she won't admit she : : ; ; E : : ’ > * * can't. And she is gaining—when a ‘eS ae ee ee Tae ee Looking in littered she pretends to be readit ¢g. she : = : 2 : ss . room the other das wemarked: ‘new holds the book right side up : * ” “Tf vou can do % h, why! .Tracy isnt s atished Wit Ue NO ‘ an't vou manage ti pick up your hundreds of th masands of words ae een eee __ clothes 4nd keep your room/already available in Eneitsh. She- = = " neat?" bends the alphabet to her own : : : o CREDIT * * r small, needs to make new words — : : Vel]. after all, I itthe * * * 2.8 - : : 2 a — P S2id c I can't What s this w daddy?” : PROBLEM a | vermthine at once re she aske t. pointing at a note- : eae ie ' _ a le f ‘confidence book page 1» which she had 3 aah Gay : t } De ‘ r wee scrawled in big ramblng letters : ‘a terribl t ’ fin p-b-f-1 . L med to fumble a mbbon into al “That ntaw Tt doesn’t a f 4 1 acy 6T ¢ i = nal - ab r T y it does, tex said — : ~ - - ; * : : tees i * * * Wh ; . : 3 4 Each ess she bring® to me “Well-ll.’ she hesnated, studied YMmeclluwon]|mHM]!!!“s Y)JV(- Yi —_______{ur_approval_The-other night she the letters then announced tri- 3 Wild ated , é : es a~s : uddenly pressed -her ches It means an alligator : i *~ f gainst mine and eX l 2 ime d im A is ? } as the } mpire S) ate Bulld- PLATFORM We Carry Our kind of ecstasy: “Oh, daddy, isr n : + fun to tie b ; vn independence ROCKER Own Accounts! : — a No Bank or p be f 0) *~ Court Decides Rooster $ 00 Loan Company! [0 IS 0 UIZ Not Guilty of Assault | 6 ALICE, Tex. W — A rooster ai : was entered in evidence yester- Upholstered in either usie ICIAIS icy in the aesravared ascaut piste rng wre trial of Edward Cox, %, Pre your choice. Senate Rackets Unit to jofence attorney J. Farl Barn INNERSPRING ry Ask Pair About Hidden house told the court the rooster, MATTRESS . fitted with razor sharp gaffs Profits on Land Deal itered = freelocall etal and 3 “4 nflicted the injumes hig —ehent —_—— — WASHINGTON W—Two ‘ste ised of causing . e Wash Storm Jr. found officials of the O ating Engi Cox giultv of simple assault and . ~ neers Union go before Senate fineq him $25 and ensts et rackets probers today for ques- —=—=<—<—$—$———— = tioning about testimom linking Most Prepack Meat ea ang acc 2 ~ them to $59,955.76 of “hidden prof-; or full size. . NEW YORK—A recent national its” on.a union land deal : ” * survey shows that Ti per cent of * * * th ountry’'< “market np. he country supermarkets pre Rebert F. Kennedy, « unsel to package meats, mainly on their CHOICE OF the special Senate committee, own premises - : : -

3 = SAINS an} t , > SST ES . : eee * 2 . "35 = me : ~ Corer & Mote Arcee ie cee, velar fexke at ‘Cass ROCHESTER a : “a New Car [sade-lns |S) Ope ces) CONVERT | BLK Coe near eS = 8 Sa — t+ ten e—$1000-00 OF F carne: oS nance csr RHR EEN FURY — 2 FONE ‘ s ‘, $100 equity. & take over pay- Ave FE 45740: . : “e ins sae oY ES Bob Hutchir we Vea ; paint. Power brakes and steering For Sale Cars ol For Sale Cars A) | *30 Chevs $35* ments. EMpire 33382 Si ZA 8 ct UB : — Ais PA Sa ee 5 Arar — | Cc $195 | $3 PLYMOUTH PLAZA . sieere the price but tops them on-Wili PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR R&H. Easy-Eye glass. Like new.) ~~ paaeeeene oe | os cere $285 | 1954 OLDSMOBILE 88.2. DR, HOL- 2¢d_2 tone blue R&H W-Walls rae ee oe ia ee baakes $2650 FE 2-800) 34 CHEVY 4 DR. POW ERGLIDE ‘31 FORD 9 PASSENGER WAGON ay Clese $395 | iday. 2 tone blue and white. Hy-; 27.000 mules $130 aown gomery at Edcie Steele Pord. 2705 $3 (SUCK Mor UNor ane | Pere Wisteria, = Fore Fo Veraemetic BS ht Powe: ever | os Cheve SMR] dra.) RWH power steering Low Braid Motor Sates : a : See : PENNY DOWN PAYMENT Eddie! low down payment or older car ing Many sain _ 30.009 miles ‘$5 Chevs sent nillésge “Towner, Birmingham $ 388 00 ne iafd Lake Kea E 22966 : Steeie Ford FE 2-2 \ Bo eM ee auy one of these Perfect cond, FE 35-7666 _ 368 Chevs $79 trade-in. Fully guaranteed FE 2-0186 65 MT CLEMENS ST. trees 00 WED USED a JURRED CARS AN OR | QUALITY | USED cae Ca =. 38 FORD C o2DR Ran FOM ~ $QQ5 | 57 BEY 7 DR, Ras EXC COND FE 3-7117 | 2388.1 bey ane EAs ks eH ¥ > FRO Ss at NE, a - j = a ji 4 re fw —— 2700 bo from 6 8m to 2 pm FES sre) AL HANOUTE CHEV-BUICK - | Cl OSING. : | or | _dte_ Steeie Ford. FE 2-2566 i : | 37 PLYMOUTH 2 DR, HARD. peuine re Post ne ‘ @ bevoom : e1ies oo WANTED a ee KAISER FOR LAKE ORION, MICH . MY 2-2411 PERS SPRING | 1993 FORD, -CUSTOMLINE. 8) as Down FULL PRICE | top, 2 tone Dowder blue, & mee hee : tse Barts O 4845 i * iN $45 MONTHLY/| Comp'etely equipped with ar ee reed ae uses ||| ANID REAL BARGAINS AT aust vel eres below whole. | tee Gua Gat ae eo mee Sybur ne = | cetrantets ner Hecht nd 0] PONTTAG, RAH RYDRA HO TF ze “ an sae o u i power rakes acrince we ba pedhjom " $4188 00 106 ene CARS Many cers finllsick’l can! bendic/| Paces mom waale i ( } 1EeV rolet | t b b M rE Uicoent Saies, 6818 Cooley Lake Rd. EM : be . $3888 06 ap PAY ; : " - iscoun ; . : vee 88 To 1 Dollar X1OPr irs. wits) eel rages sown TALES i arge selection of '54- a OLDS DEALER "24 Oakland R MOTORS F ne “eo vONTIAE aise eee ial . tection | of iate as 2 _ 619 8. Lapeer 560 Auburn Ave FE 5-3401 | *3§ ¢ he vrolets and 1p or ds Nereuen AT 8 WOODWARD _ |. 565 8 Woodward, Birmingham 6 PLYMOUTH” BELVEDE RE, aI Je we cons us EB ee Lk : Aa nevane — _ sate 7 alets a RMIN : _YMOL 2 : poet = = ———- - | 53 CHEWY 150 TWO DR RAH | : i [ee = : “ww SOR: t : trata, Be : a YEs vob i SAE gee! 24 8 Saginaw FE 47371 | Dependable, NOf ONE PENNY DOWN NEED. | Tay lor Chevrolet R Sale~ . | 3a FORD CUSTOM 2 DR, WW. TOP STATION WAGON. POWER Ivory & black 19 000 males 5.205 32 NTI DOOR HYDR E = eds oh ee Grive wtb ele "CARS ‘49 THRU : o ne ed ‘Eddie Steele Ford PE 2-2566 i VW * t Lake \I \ 4 13 te Ro & H. 1 owner $795 STEERING. POWER BRAKES - down ta P LAC ae 00R DRA. i eu Serer oo a ‘ Tota ate ~ Cheap Transportation : alled Take. | “130 KR & R MOTORS ss R&H, WHITE WALL TIRES - - liar xt Dale A re ownes BOB HUTCH o> at RT ee | erp) 724 Oakiand d FE 43529) $2595 tranl Motor Sales # Anytime _ ; \OEURN MOLORS EXCHANGE PRIV SHARP, ONE-OWNER, | ana peater OF SONOS Bags — FE 2.0185 31 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN ¢ DR Mobile Homes Sa , Ine. “i A 4 LOW AS $5 DN oe . : =a 2 =oNe and beater : $900 < SER TOs4 . . t . . soe = Sn Hardtos R&H, Standard trans sobie te CORNER pee & EAST BLVD (31 Mere MOM _ $95 Tow Mileage Trade-Ins! . 7 KAISER Rammler - Dallas. Inc TWO BRAND NEW 1937 PI ¥ ow mileage OR 318 4761 Dine micheal sl Kaiser Good running $i ‘ . You ji be pleased as pene with Ree = : MOUTH 4 DR HARD TOPS - Drayton Plains Jee Used Truck | Parts 89) ‘51 Bord 2 ar $195 36 Olds 08 Holidar 1956 Chevrolet deiuse =-Dr, Radio this down to earth price tag on DODGE nAMPE wa FOR A GOOD DEAL FolnewiaGn 030 cee NEW Open 1 Dare @ wok: RAR iat Le osereee ‘ $19. | 56 Buick Century H_ top Heater Overdrive. bts this extra sharp car as vedic 1001 N MAIN KOC -HESTER 1425 or best offer FE 8-012. E 51 Chevy CC. Sharp .. $205 65 Oldg 2 dr : new 5 95 «6and heater. white tires. overdrive S a VE N N 5 — OXFORD TRAILE Ro Ay u SEO TRUCK Pants 51 Ponttac @ ‘Nice $295 $5 Bultk sper a top TOMER TLGEEE MTRS and supercharged. Ne rust, rE MeNE AL, 5 Ege Nirredrar eget —S ’ SALES ¥. HEIGHTS MOTOR SALES | Buck Very mood ak oe oe Old< 98 n ; Minutes From Pontiac ~ in S ari Ga We Only $595 7953 “OLDS 63h 8 Woodward d an MI 42042 is Les 5 ‘ = Ss! F 2 utes vba pANUARE UseD. TRAILER sar Ages Auburn Ave PE 466321 -(-, NOMY L t: 6 1D Cc ARS I Oe ‘orien Naan SON = ee OA 82328 MOTORS DODGE- PLYMOUTH DEALER Glenn’ S Kes 35. For Sal T fi - 90, 131! : : FORD NOT ONE o \ ya _Birminguam 88 2-Dr Sedan Mechanically coot ‘94 PLYMOUTH PLAZA, HEATER 1996 — 44 it 2 ‘ar Genera] .. $1385. fF sate’ Trucks’ 22 Auburn off Saginaw FE 42131) YOUR FRIENDLY OLDSMOBILE | PEN NY DOWN Sivan ED- ENGLISH MORRIS 1952 SEDAN Boay sound zac igland: beater & directional signals, $400 < on es Hee ees ee ees "36 CHEVY STATION WAGON R ne teuee DEALER die Steele Ford. FE 2-2566 So mii gal. Exe coma. $390 $2230 per mo will handie 82919 after 6 pm ~ | : —- oa os : é LB ee uae = P 5 SSR Moe licen treet” eee ewe nace: alee. powerblign Excellent com. .s0™GuR FOREIGN CARS 36 FORD V-8 2>DR MUST SELL | FF >2726 _ _—— XO MONEY DOWN PONTIAC ¢ DOOR SEDAM otor a eS © Se 2 BR Paiace | $1765 pay MM@AIs Contact George Million TOM BOHR INC Jaguar. Austin, Healy, Morrse {| Bert offer over $859 FE 5-1819 mre UTE! V NO MONEY JIMMY DF ROSE MOTOR S4LEs | Hyarameuc ROK : > ott Seg) 7 oo aerate . a Haroli@purner Ferd 11 9-4000 130 8 Main Miltord MU_ 45155 M Sha Nia nGewesree 1! 4 I ( RD AT CLORIN Re seams payments of 6221 | 3140 i) Lone i ile Ww. ut i VOR HALP Vol AN TEL ae 1 BR. Ne& Moon § 90s ATO Dane WE CAN REDUCE YOUR CAR OL 1-6761 Tis is a real sharp one with) mo Cail Crete Mgt Mr Parks) og yay oe Rei PONTE M \I Gi 7 1sbe—71- ft H BR Pontiac $1085 p & W 1] Ss NL rr ; “PA c 8 E x aU 1 1. : 1D. al p 1] VE hoger esl ol veer be ce _at Ml ¢7500 Harold Turner Ford 13 RAS OrELY No MONEY DN Cactksise Mich MAple $3566 ; , \ (yl \ NC | 1954—28-t 1 BR Genera sis, «MIS. ORT BL ontige ommunity K | & drive this one Youll lke i! ‘$7 Me 5 [> aan es : 33 pontiac ¢ pr sepan Hy. PIIALT Gl ENN S CARS ft 1a $1195 _ — : . Finance Co Pi. 8-Gt21 SALES & SERVICE PROPLE S$ ALTO SALES Grcury ca ee d-a RAH Sbarp' ; > TOP USED SMALL TRAILERS 6 PICK-UP V-8 ‘Beat the hipy cost of driving. ¢§ Oakla FE 2-235! 2 {1 47500 t Fora “Jack Haupt Pontiac RiS Ors 1-f United Gals $ 795 LA OR 3-8007 HUR¢ \ NI [OTOR ce Niles Seats fir over 40 miles... a IRrRTBE eet 1995 ; in PLYMOU nt Lee ciuB Clarkstes, Mich MApie 5 5588 IN OUALITY AND 1i-ft. Tini-Home 8 3h é i ; = bei ny © = c 7 fap) Suto) trans tite ONTIAC 52 2 DR VERY GOOD ~ sks 14'y-at_ Tour-Home 4 76 oe WAYS a S000 SELECTION oF : aris CULEE UU be aS ae! - as e ed to $985 F raneportat 36 Arthurs Auto Sale. DIP PRICES Ninle is-ft Wa-ka-chun-ette 879 UST hee Foster's Imported’ Autos. CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES “M 36101 oo a i7-f{ Generai : $ 785 Oot we HERO! ee get Aubutr ne FF 32-9145 SY" OWENS FORD ( ele imo PANEL CK & 1ps0 PON LONER OO) oft oH BUD SHELTON . oe an => LORD, Schutz Motors Bt ue A Nideeneie Gl Pour ore HT «Dr sis9s : ST . ot ; treet ord V nD : ul 6 IYDRA” tot ‘c NE PENNY DN 2 DOOR 12.8. Woodward, Birmingham one $4 - M a cc eer Myie Pants mile e of Lake ; _f ee ERs E. idie Steele Ford FE 2.2566 S16! ee 1957 N d — D>) - oa A 5 bees HT $1495 4 a rs ; : = . 5 Fe aerate ee ga s Cuev V-8 Cony 1295 eurice iY rT” CRESTLINE R $696 “ns : 5 ‘ 40 He eee 2 “MY 48982 ALPINE a Oma te Lake : ror Mant sive —— 54 ? rd s 8 ¢Or oD $125 i) atem eens Ke. cant Bn od : or Seal ie : Lake om Motor Sates 53 Port V8 Vi giles 7 Sl eee, NT a: Se aes _ cine Oe ore Gee $1995 ease A cetesrosyen ete a BB | 8-3871 : oe ~ Ss Ford Victoria “Fordomatic $1245! in Ae e139 FORD — MERC RY MY 2-2611 Bs Ses Rat .. *- FURNISHES) MO BTL HOMES : Or oe eo Cane Hee) ANIL ACCEPT - | en een et hoe ev &Dr P-Giide RAH, § 985 : : $2075 HE ACCE ina seca Power eqalped’ <1) 000 or P-Giide RAH. Availabe op rental oayment ba = * Rui hardice $1095) outt Ss h M : miles FE 7-837 E Le: i bea i = 2 : ve motors, boats H- a vibe E Z 4 : id TRAIL ER EXCHANGE | vrolet 2 cr a $1085 | onibes guns patel ering | UO) BEC) $4101 | S utz otors af PONTIAC ¢-DK R&H NOT 64 bees! ; oo ~ @ 8 Telegraph rE. 3200 e V TO et 34 , f-door Sige : ei t payment no ee good Used car, | © _ > ' $12 6 Woodward. Birmingham . F ONE PENNY CASH dsl ED- Like new $8 395 ha" HOS | i sv te 7 ’ . . ~ aa Btee é r 2A SBS ; WE ARE 801 OUT oF eet D ‘54 Fors Fordomatlc 6735) a“ rt SPE \ CE NASH” 1955" RAMBLER CROSS (ce sees ones Eee Ete ees 5 ws ; travets We need your trailer HUNTER AT 8 weer yee 85 Buic fdtop $1485 ALL, if a ‘ ; country wagon. R&H. overdrive | 1952 PONTIAC CAT Wvpae P&H -D $ 505 4 We will seil it for 16 per cent BIRMINGHAM MI Mh 9°52 t uta (3 44, USFD CARS . _OR 3-2092 e ABSOLUTE1Y NO MONEY Dr Hs por 7 or eur, tot. Ho uy aerine Cone, rr FORD 6 evi NDE R. a Toe Portia. ys “3 7) 62 Oakland Ave. _ FE 3-267 RAMBLER: © AMIRASSADORS - ue ee ae on! ee S SEES AW ME! 7 = wsllity (box Beas (olfer) (Call) MN ol Nerd (2 dom $ 345) 1952 CHRYSLER SEDAN ° AlU'FO : ised cars Repait work redit Met Mr Par : : —MEtrose 467110 0 re - “49 Buick 4 eae. Dynafiow 2g 1% R&H ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY ENGLE NASH BAI Fs CLEAR | af MI 7300 Hareld Turnes 45771 ‘ _ _ . 62 FORD CURRIER 2232 PER ‘49 Ford 2 door - (¢ 175 DOWN Assume payments of $8 65 M39 A Porter Ra EM 3-40€6 ; For ate : ' r . mo “Ne money down Assume . She} \ NS < mo Call Credit Mgt Mr Parks | . 1957 OLDS 98 HOLIDAY cou PE i H = _ Rent Trailer Space _ ” pay Poetiks Contact ote es ites | an ‘ an elcew ae ; at MT 4- 7300 Harold Turner -Ford a ‘ Full power c E : ! a : : . darcld Turner Ford * "36 DGE GOOD CONDITION sidewalls 1 owne PK cond s2 MOBILHOME ESTATES MODERN — = -— — = —— | '$4 BELAIR CHEVRO WER.- i ral ew ey Terms 7 rpanged. No de Neds . e ! _ 3061, front and piaygroun 4. EM OS6 glide Loe wails aes are 5 nie pion i Ban CLEAN ers ME enitt das : 4) MELr Me MAGUIRE Ke a tad fot t; Ohi Orrec nswer a —, Tye $600 FE 215390 0 a uy Pe Oe i #0332 ever Ll. pring onlin Z Wnt ARK AT | PARQHURST Hon Me . 96 CHEV 210 TWO DOOR, MoT! ft’ Ri raeataal ‘ ° mo ee ay Dedye © Dr N50 REM Gish 7 Ollie SS HO THIS OUESTION Jevely acres Includes a private S205 sory pent) gown pannel: Edd ls Deban «DR, GOOD COND bie and tvory No rust. $10 down, | RaH Hydra at power Supe: NY SAU YT fie: SSO: Steele Ford FE 21-2566 lary ‘ ne cH. - : \ cM ea! Lb lace With go0od swimming. go xi 2 5 ae a = 4396 - i ae p me ot $5 83 iD Ue as Specia! 31.977 E ayes Pe rey ren nee : LARRY vec ATR | 5: ‘DODGE VERY CLEAN. LOW, hing’ teotone thie is pice | 734 caxiigt = MOTORK, |, ie an i in - Pr : A : \ a : a pineae Li 2 ad : F ty . _ ie. Also eee spies Base rate LEROALE havior Chevrolet les eee ia eee : ee punning | cag” witha) shiny ec: = _ — : Sect QU. pea wernt (1 o¢ dipee- 0 Phone - ~ area Fe ens + ; -S ; ——— - < : . — —- ROCHFSTE® FORD DEALER Ate WY a nia: ee a Oe a ieay ail Mlct sac onlinererontl a oot Sl) do tiem Stes ten atic x eemetmi tac __ Auto | Accessories _ _8O _ . OL 1-OTI1 = eas dd a ke 1X tol y ] | white One oar 37,000 mitre 3) Pontiac 4-Dr Std a) re c nde Sar it BS SMe l t a - : 7 “ son should ‘53 CHEVIE TON PICKUP PONTIAC $235 down mies $13 69 per month | $10 tows Jerol | Le es me en a , SOW POWN AND DRIVE s!OWLY Past: EDMUNDS DUAL Cana Masi... HAM seodcoud WO FES 2% eG rp rand Motor Sales eas te aa a 1 ioe ee cae wo: fold. chrome, O7* Linkage fui 30 FORD F 4 LEXPRE SS $201, 1 1O BROKE KS FE 2-018 Veer die: mom eee S PaO SD Pas Block. $25. “48 throug) 533 Ford per me Noe money down Acsume 4 Baik Century wagon gi mes . ; . nace b per a 4 ‘1 " : and Merc V8 FE 5-319) sanientel(oatact George Mille Oc) eldils Gan ich Neel sais OO TIBESWER Di 4001 Bight aa Lil a farcid Turner Ford 3.1 @460e 0 55 Buick &pe 4 dr H1 S128 Posteerine Radio. 3.000 miles — &E ski 1 7, aed 4 INSTALLED FREE hae Be cat UIs 132 DEMO $400 down Neat pow Teas ary wered ee Steet pipe startet gee lumouth HI __.- $798. See Fes ‘ 1 _ ; se oes atin ( : Ets ta PONTIAC'S 350i 0 Pp TB aifaecg sie” RIPMESSTRT DER | ous caput ee ee es Gah wbaces AUTO Pants 3 a y's Baer PBy oe zee ENCLETART 1 ' 4 HN. .* esti Caw Gee heal bu ° es 40 Baldwin - FE 8-143) - FE 30477 TRUCK CENTEt | 33 Chery Convert = $585) [dE SOAs a 8 "Saginaw FE 29131 i a peasies Tato neat ee MOTORS 5051 FORD. 50-51 CHEV lg Greve HE vewes ton) «We have w really fine car tn thic HAWE TH Riik OF WAY? Hee area §1-52 Plymoutt : Si Buick HT $ 295 £ on abd Nise H ure we nae FOR ORIGINAL ONF _OWNER ; F _Dodge 197 § _Johnson_ | 82 Piymouth 4dr R&H S isp Sone Jade Green paint net oft by CARS SEE YOUK NEW CAR Approaching velucie og with For Salet Tires SOA — = . $3 Willys 2 dr $ 195 Owy whi “ wall tire< s i _ DEALER proae hy We ve nie stron erthe rection ___ For sale Tire RETAIL RRANCH +4260,N Perty-Madison Fr #¢too- atone a1 mileage car anc priced | 545 { WHUAL come to a complete step! 2 3 Ail USED TIRES $350 UP Oakland at Cass 92, CHEV HARDTOP | POWER: CHI 17 MOTORS | _°36 Ford V-8 Customiine 2 dr se- so) 6 CNereae 0 a PE oes? 31 FORD DUMP $2725 PER MO.;| paint. Good cond Maske reason- | (912 §_ Woodward, Birmingham | t : - ' i. gan jredio) & heater, AT BE AS ee ay DED” DR INER AND ee i » money down Assume pay- able offer O.t | 3-2841 eS — eS STATE TIRF SALES pom Contact George Mal ton | tos2 CHEVY CONVERT PG RE ib ARG i AINS il | Cc u Zz O Ors é \ OW, as A 8s ALE IB HE C kK a " Cc AR 00D - cs : d 52 NVE RAH | | ’ \ X FROM Oe Vee cheese ee Haroid Turner Ford LI $4000 | ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DN |! eee Bere ai | 912 S Woodward Birmingham | C evaliable i 14° ‘Tecaps €701) WRECKER CORNER OF AUBURN = (Une DArninis i eee rks at a Willye station (wast "$03 5 T 7 BIRD PERFECT, °55 p} "MATTHEWS. HARGREAVES eWirwate | ois hone tex he | SAvsiun Malad gamer Pare || uee Saal é ue ae CONDIT Tor FE _ 40526 235 Plymoyth 2-Dr. Sedan | VY a Pui b ¢ ~ i. ole urne or Lover ale Service _ kb ceed) on us fees nr For Sale a OL : NOMAD STATION WAQ- ' 695 a b me : i FR 2.9555 36 FORD. €DR CU STOM LINED’ | ”: ’ le . 4 2 S2E0= ws ca ee en pee. Satety. equipment _ Hi 1 33 Buick er tte as Pow- 38) 38 ENGI id ae iL FORD ‘SZ CHEVROLET == =! = py SI ae also Dena. aoe ed ES STANDARL BRAND NFW TIRF: / | ower eite MEN SE hesotO FIREDGME 4 DOOR 31438 i flow = STATION WAGON traded ir on Genera} Safety Torr- | extras Sce tits one owner beaut Alto tran® One owner, Ver ‘ i "<7 ny ROLE $1995 —_— wir ee oF tecay Jus sour car doer Gean $145 dawn, _ Easy Ed Jones - ore Po mts CNT AC . heel \l ines SS = + j Ae ts \ F PD. WILLIAMS H = ‘h Brand Avon: =. ae ie 1 / “iS Saginaw at Raeburn Gs kins eve 2 FE 20188 © 2. fle Workingman’s Friend i i Buick sy wey 41: "s7 CHE \ ROLE] earthed . —_ ; -Auto Service 8l Can 7 675] Dixie Highwar at <0 li-sc) FO) POR4 Petter (ars tor Texs Hardt, RO acral nines : ‘BR AIR 2-DOOR Sy LEV ROF L DARA a a a eROL Chen Nie= a“ y Bee es a aulppe sab 115 & Sagi aw __USED CARS : S46 Buick Super 4 dr Sedan ~tany wee ar STATION WAGON CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE 31 CHEVROLET BEL AIR HARD. Powerfite radig and heates eats THUNDERBIRD “87. ALL BLACK | equipped and Drnafiow toc [EVROLI-1 & PASSENGER: r. Cylinders revored k Ma 1 Hie eres Es lire. Vers low tatieage and iv s| Uke new low mileage §2.700 4 Me DOOR se re at : * Bhop 23 Mood ene FE ae } ee eS Ae ceeeH 1 : 1 | WErmont 5-4103, Detroit . z ae ay \OLRSWAE EN 5 CURY = rarnn JOE 3% W Monteaim FE 5-6456 Priced nent os { sour oid car g | . $1248 ' | Aa ede la A pyee \ebeiee | Creieece es ve-BFL ate) CORP i var ate eg en pore aan - » “52 IDK SUR ROOr = ‘Sale Motorcycles Bo weratel windows (seals Pia) wir,| CDR Sedan (Hea hexc: % SCHL IZ “Mi LORS | pet an Re. ae — | RTATION WAGGA . ea) conditioning Walls Powergide Real clean Stes wooicaen Birmingham i 3 | “36 Olds 98 Tloliday 4-1) ore a” =) CHEV REO -T : . 36 LINCOLN €DR PREMIER $2145 9 Owner EMpire 3-4285 : ; oe BOHN $2195. ROLET. « oo ARTE SEE ye Witte and (black Powge steering % - 4 92 FDSEL CONVERTIBLE PACER | 1950 FORD STATION | WAGON ball oo “x CHEN ROL i Ban Or ‘ ae $395 Also sine car i274 Fas brakes aera A Mcas om SANE IWIN, ho it? a (eet _acnomeier: 2 tone 34 00G miles MI 17-0252 . oF aes Specie 2 dr. secan stan. a GriGd net s $1405 eee a ¥ 2 5 2 c shift. iso radio & -heat! ; . FOR PAUTS & SERVICE ON 53BLICK HARDTOP $1095 DODO ARS = GCs) Agus — ae ie FORD a +DOOR 710 hopDGy scur: Harley David:« see Harley Dyna Fio Blu i AND Ty RI = | < [24 Oakland : FE. 4-3526 $1305 CONVERTIBLE Daxidsen Sales Co. re yry 's Sax 57 MERCU RY ‘ DR ir $1895 Nl ‘ a7 FORD TOWN “SEDAN. GOOD: "55 CHEVROL] $45 ee Posh buon race & heater Like ~STATT’ S oe oe All N "" RTATION wacon , -> CHEVROLET __ Boats & Accessories 85 pe ice ar FORD 4 DOOR FAIRLANE NEW | “BEE i 5 is ig hres FE 2.342 ? Th % iA meee 19s centbey BOATS 36 PONTIAC 4-DR sus + MOTOR SALES re ae ie "86 Ford Fairlane 2-D of Buick Super 2 dr Hardtop ¢ ae FOR 4» VOLKSWAGEN CHET CADILLAC ALUM Radio (& jheate Real ciean || ag ze MY 22150 Tae Oven - FORT) 1950 ; . poerriend Dynstiow iss Ga $1395 ; ea ERO UTSOLED OM Morro faa Cees ane 54 CHEV BA get PG LIDE A Fatrlane Club Sedan that-rou | : By, venribia =) PONTIAC aa 2 > OLDSMGBILE. TDF 195 OT ONE DOWN ant in your garage As scOn as wee ; : . AX = ee pene - fz CLDSMGBILE 1DR 885 Gi _mecle Ford FE. 2-208 you ate i! Has radio and heate: HE a5 CHEN ROLE ships Yh * een em = ve sea 5 = a = orpimmatic ite 3: ¢ he ne Pa. BS 4-319) 3197 W. Here PP 26122 oes ree Aone ee Renee = ht ONO ATIC. Ie Thunderbird engine oe Paint : , 3795 4 FORD x zl é oe . matching in ee! urry, | "S44 CHEVROLET $605 6 FT REBEL SLOOP, SAILS & Nice | _ UP TO 28 MILES A GALLON ve taeiilinia lat Lee Pa : RO) Fe sds eee traier com piet 3810 E Com. ** MERCL RY ¢DR HT $1575 Studebaker Scotsman Cit 1 Z Wa ‘ 1 "OR < i 36 Pontiac Starchiel B AIR 4+DOOR a3 NASH] an cres UGS Mi tore) wesicnieen Sc ies Oram i aat 6 passenger, full size. full powered ss C ti ] < Pe: “ 7 Haon. Tame my beste? Hea as 7 :— EVINRUDE MOTORS. CRESTIIN- pu, eee oF Be late to mee sedaris and station wagons, from | a : Woodward. Birmingham | ataina ardtop | mat 53 PONTIAC - oe ; er boats Gator trailers. Early 56 FORD 2DR $1175 ° $1705 including heater. defroster. “93 FORD VICTORIA CUSTOM. | eS" : : SAR WG season, special, 14 Ft delure Fordomatic. Redio & heater Fair-| turn signals, spare tire, service | ized. Full Olds engine, LaSalle | $495 HARDT : restiiner boat _ Lite sf $700 with 25, tane ; | polley end jpueraneee Com- trans OL 2-360! t . }---—- "Sy CHEVROLET aed oP electric evingude Both Lor 5 CADILLAC Fleetwood 1 700 pletely winterized ~ Sa ae . $396 Kelly's Hardware Mae ALF poe Ue cee pe | Mazurek Mator Sales i IEVROLET born a Adams Auburn Hee FR Fort ) os AGON S184 : ee OR A os a : : i : f 3 PACK ARD “05 248 P zo & brakes rare | OF at i c ees : \ 4 : Feat INS eh ee in ae Ram toe® pm_ E, | GSN Fé Se wD : rdtop, CLIPPE UXE aN , _ JOHNSON MOTORS se'Forn wacon $1205 ANE 4 Old. &8 Super 2-Dr. " Dinatios Pa aere hence TPE BET : RE! An neaDrar™ 5 Reece Bed & ". kave . $594 a t BA RDTOe ) CHEVEOLET £25 --37 Piymouth 2 dr R&H. 2-tone cor- i ’ NS MARTI + Ply MOUTH oe ml O} / No Monev | al & beive W-Walls & discs $1495 ‘FORD “) Mr ; aC URY 304 orekara Lk Ave H $19 “ "$7 Fora aahetd Sei R&H. Aut S445 MUST SACRIFIC Sen yore Pin Ne IM, trans See this beauty. Your bi <2 Dan ae éroplane aa maces aa i NCTN , Down ‘+57 Plymouth 2 dr. In new cop- WwW PONTIAC =2 ih INTIAC impiete OR 36374 after € pr MAK SPECIALTY . rou ve Ren pce ites al ” HARDTOP” — 2 ee - = ue eat : ° ‘or 4 : rdomatic | r F $s = “yr 5 bp 2 ‘ See Our New [ine of : St Chevrolet | added Mish Beat tele sia) 2 Chevrolet Dk 2Dr crown V8. radio & heat. 31 CHEVROLET $205 . Al . Ss en . 2? DR i ‘57 Rambler Custom wagon esl) : ° B’/AIR &DOOR bl “32 PONTIAC ASUTMINUME ttt “S] Plymouth R&H Std trans. DEMO Your bid $1795 . De Real quality et s savings! eM | i ~ et iAe ean MECHANICS SPECIAL $198 eng un ; : 4 Dt sedans—Two of them PRICE PREMIUMS 70 ; 23 CHEVROLET ; 8145 Layaway Pian | | " 1 | (SL Ford Victorias NO CASH WEEDED | EXTRA SHARP CARS | STATION WAGON 33 CHEVROLET _ . ja 8 TWO OF THEM = ; = Fare ~ | at At ve : 4 Rambler wagon ce 2 i ce —— oe ATION WA 51 Pontiac 32 Rambler wagon H 3 385 TO CHOOSE FROM | 55 CHEVROLET NOMAD. MODED ~ YOUR EVINRUDE DF ALE nN 2 DR 62 Dodge Cl D Cpe. Excelient $ 305 | Buick Special 4 ar aten, radio $905 $1705 Harrington Boat Works . 31) Buick Special A. "8, ash ‘Statewman 4 ar. te 4 COURTEOUS is heater, Dynafiow too '52 CHEVROLET ‘S1 FORD PE 2-803) Open Sunda: Linc : ~ : FNS IN ~ ! . “ = c — i INCOLN- MERCURY DEALER HARDTOP 52 Ambassador, Cust. A real : $205 : VICTORIA Transport ation Off 280 Hunter Blvd (By-Pass Aroud [= “53 Chevrot beaut <8 M8 | SALESMEN - Ah Transports a on. fered 87 Kam | i Chevrolet 48 Pontiac. a body. "54 “Vy ¢ = FLY ¢ ENGINE AIRLINER 16 Fe open i gM SO y on wn i, Gupen ‘st s"Ambes dor HT. ren neary MANY TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS Nines " % See aus y as ] wc uper mbessador ITN f » —- ano: Hewel, $10 it BUICK ¢ DR NICE Cutan LOW Ag ee sa OPEN TILL 10 P.M. From $95 to $245 — YOUR TE RMS. aee ine, 7 $1254 car No money down bucks Auto so pce al ee $ 495- | as Pontiac & cylinder convertible, “RUCK OOING NORTH. PART Sales 103 8 Saginaw pe “$0 Buick Super HT $ 105° radio & heater, Hyiramatic too A Phone Call Brings a Courtesy Gs ioac Either vay FE 51908 $6 BUICK HARDTOP spFeia: - OST OF THESE CARS Have | 4, Rambler Cust Sed R&H. Rear arto pas Door CARs F “FO! Crabs worn WASH. 2-tone req & white P Hrake- & : NADIO AND HEATER ALL ARE. “ire mount, Your bid : an omh Carolina steering Ear ‘ By cane: A We —— _ Gas allowance PE 2-321 Reasdiable FFE : at i WHILE THEY Lt — ee euvnn. . ° ah tehtnomn ai & . UU I V MATTHEWS. HARGR EAVES igs oid TO Saf “MIR. 95 ee ee Oe ee Tae $149 AT Bright Spot tr ae evening et 256 a wer $1350 FR 8.3130 > ° : mes fet ; NMMY DE ROSE MOTOR SALES. Bi : h - “Your CHEVRO! LET De ] " _ Wanted Used Cars 88 4 noice coxy sion mans NORTH 7” * "iiece™ © DIrFmingnam |. y “Buice i Vedler Seip a oo Ch a Ee jo | ‘our Olds-Catittac-Breate ey T Ai PRICES FOR SCRAP & oD ORL 34653 ck | Your OldsCadith r 631 Oak! land Ave. ears. OR 3-6015 ips ~ ~ st per} poor CHEVROLET . We as Orchard. Lake at Cass | , BE MH Ke 5 FOR FU AWD Mercy T wie ereen, Pow | comprar i pRoaarers FE 8.0188. . -| 210 Orchard Lake Ave. » FE 4 45 . 1 3-2066 Gays or sisering afd brakes HO& H §1_, UNTER AT 8. WOODWARD ‘ COMPLETE PAR SERVICE a a * FE 2-910] oO Ev : j . . / eed j 67624 BIRMINGHAM Ml 47735 i; » MIE 6-1900 JQ 46790 : : , ide! Upen £.ves. i. ; ) F - ‘ ns 5 . mma / ‘ ‘ ; ' 8, : ; , i t . * ’ > . . f f ue ; : . 1S . . EY 4 ; , a 7 f ; . : a ‘ os : a we ' \ Ny \ A | wee & at ‘ Ls ts eee ee | ji@- x a ee He = ale a +3. + : ¥ = \ ve fo ey ae 6:00 (7) Mr. 4 aes PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY. Ey 1958 b: = 3 Ar pr or C ) e a eee Toa a A. oo 7:36—WWd, 3 r Sxtra WXYZ, M Griffin c ter, hiusie ‘andy | WW,: . Country Roundup Boe a. Agriel Ss Py ipo bee 3 wea ee ron, comm me. cs sp ow tart tae, uae “22h0— WIR, Brady Warre Warren wax, fers. aaa : aman oe Next Door 3 One Man's Family CELW, News. Sows, Shucieeeah | WPRON. 3:40 vi gerne jen ‘Trent WWJ. 5-Star Matinee wy3 McKenate’s Matinee WBE, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Page &:30—WIR, House— Party — a Not Securities. Neither Are Box Tops, Street Car Tokens Nor Theater Tickets WASHINGTON «® — Trading Stamps redeemable for cash or t regulation. * *:-* Ses commaleiiin veleated « pe. Ject' to - {tition of the Foed Industry Alli anee that SEC consider trading! stamps to be securities like stocks or bonds and bring them under the registration rules which gov- _|merchandise.are no, more securi-| 1 ties than are street car tokens). ; or ‘box tops,’ the Securities aml | End In-Law va | With This Suggestion NEW YORK—Roz Russell’s husband, Fred Brisson, offered “Auntie Mame.” But Roz said, “Why go? You've already seen me?” I decided to send my mother and Gorgeous Mother-in-Law. And. would you believe this? The Gorgeous Mother- in-Law said, “This is the greatest present you could have given me!” So, to keep your mother-in-law happy, boys, get her. tickets to senile ame” Ga which Greer Carpe is me tickets to Roz’s closing in hanes pa Ann Bancro ing of “Two WILSON Going on 26, very big on TV under the name of Anna Mario, she was also a glamour doll in Hollywood in “Don't she?” ern stock issues. _ oun —— WXYZ News, McKensie ews, chen | 5aBK, Go 11:98—WIR. Time for Muse | CKLW. News, Chase N. Sariy Bird Ciud CKLW. Hurley, Dav es’ 4:00—WJIR. Band Parade (ca: Wave weiner MeKeosi \ etiricl eRe 2 THURSDAY AFTERNOON ° win. . News, Godfrey a ie gh News, Wells we ne Ww W. Grant. Livestock :20—WJR. Music: Hal wank. News, Reid ~ WWJ, News, Deland ~ . WCAR, Néwa, WXYZ, News, McKenzie: CKLW, ODell, WPON. News, MacKinnon | CKLW. News. Chase -$:00—WJR, Philip Leohart CAR, N go ‘Time- tr alpen WWJ, News, Deland WXYZ, News, Winter | WXYZ, Wattrick. McKenzie #28 IR_Mtoste sald CEL. Bows. Reaee CKLW. Sports, Chase CKLW, News, knowles CKLW Sews, David WAR. Sruce ee on Bs Nees, 1 ; Sports WJBK.. News, George 1:00-—WJR, Peter L. Hayes odfrey bad Fle a wet WCAR. Sports, sheridan WWJ. News, Maxwell WPON. Music with oo WXYZ, Surreil 9:00— WIR; News, Mrs. Page WXYZ, Jim Reeves een, ‘Music CKLW, News, Knowles WWJ. Faye — =: = — ane ae Metiensie WwJB News, Bellboy WXYZ, Breakfast ub E . News, rm. 5 CKLW, News, David WCAR, ews, 6. Martyn. WJBK, Spits. McLeod WCAR, News --Today's Television Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change withont notice, | 4 Channel 2—-WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 89—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 5 t Danger. (% Popeye. (4) News: Wiliams, - - (2) Racket Squad. ~ 6:15 (4) Weather, Eliot. a 6:20 (4) Box Four. . (4) TV Theater (color). Happy - go- lucky patrolman 6:30 (7) Topper. Comedy. _ Pat O'Brien's fearful dream (9) Charter Boat. —Adver-} ‘in-which he is-cornered by ture: Forest Tucker, =| fleeing criminal comes true. (4) Parade of Stars. Sus- Fay Wray, Rip Torn co- pense: Ruth Roman, “into star the Night.” ! (2) Millionaire. Drama: (2) News: LeGeff. Money leads to murder mee = when art gallery owner 6:40 (2 2) Weather: Pheips. uses million dollars -to set up artist's colony. John Bar- 6:45 (2) News: Edwards | agrey, Gloria Talbott, * } ~ ~ 7:00 (7) Sports Focus. 9:39 (7) Date With Angels. Com- . (9) Cochise Sheriff. Western edy: Angels get into neigh- (4) Amos ‘n’ Andy. Comedy borhood squabble over muiss- (2) Ameche Playhouse ing dog. “Ship's Captain.” (2) I've Got a Secret. Elsa’ Maxwell. 7:10 (7) Sports. ee eee 10:00 (7) Boxing. Holly Mims, 7:15 (7) News: Daly. Bobby Boyd, muddieweight = ‘ — : bo out 7:30 (7) Disneyland. Drama of This Is Your Life. “th and aoa — Circle Theater. Riddle’ itlaw 7 : | foie | ances: (9) Million $ Movie. William F ne oer sot Poecil Hedy Lamarr ed In @ctua : : oe 2) 4ng pilot. professor, officers | fe ere Weetern-+ confected with 1987 flying Scheming gambler Cesar saucer - LSP | R tricks Ward Bond. — ee ames wagon train 10:30 14) Studio 57, Drama: Eng-| F] over an extra day. lish gardener’s life is turned | (2) I Love Lucy. Comedy: upside down when Nazi pilot Mertes, Ricardos attic. ‘makes emergency landing. over “Home Movies.” in neighboring pasture. Cecil Kellaway. 8:00 (2).High Advent. (color). | Lowell Thomas in Atrica.| 16:45 (7) Sports. Timbuktu, desert patrol out-) posts” of sorte camel 41:00-47) Soupy's On. troopers, Belgian Congo ~ (9) National News. witehcraft, big game coun- (4) News. try of Kenya, Madagascar (2) News: LeGoff. = . 11:15 (9) Weather. 8:30 (7) Tombstone Terr. West- (4) Weather. deputy. @ , Hhemapad atte Rest. 11:20 (9) Starlight Theater. Joe! MacCrea, Veronica’ Lake. | Comedy: hy’ biogra . eo — ld ssi *‘Ramrod,” (47), (4) — Parker. Staps Heart Gas) 3 a 3 Times Faster : SELL-AMS of father proves he’s “square-sided fellow.’ iT) Ozzie, Harriet, Comedy: Picture of unidentified pret- ty girl in Rick's book puzzles Nelsons. ; (9) Theater. Steve Cochran, “Shark River” (33). 9:00 41: 2% (2) Nightwatch Th. Maurec n O'Hara, can Met in Ar- gentina.” (‘41). _ |91:30 (7) Night Court. (4) Tonight, Comedian Ron- Special This Month Antenna §$ 50/ Installed . . ose < Bloomfield Electronics tS (2) Meditations, 7 nie —— . THURSDAY MORNING (2} On the Farm Front. w. ot (2) Cartoon Frolic. (2) Captain Kangaroo. _ <0 Cartoon Carnival. (0 Big Show. (4) Romper Room. (2) News. |9:30 (2) Ladies Day. - ___ (4) Amos 'n’ fame, (7) Our r Friend Harry. 19:55 (8) ‘Billboard. 10:00 (2) Garry M Moore 4) Arlene’ Fh Francis. *), Movie. Cocoa Beach, Florida _ the chased. a speeding motorist. (1) Robim and Ricky. (9) Howdy Doody. 11:45 (7) Noontime Comics. THURSDAY AFTERNOON Hotel, Cosmopolitan. Tic Tac - Dough. - Fables of La Fontaine 12:00 (2) (4) (3) 12:15 (2) Love of Life. 14:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. imeal ‘numerous to mention, The largest . stamp ~ company, is contested | ‘the proposal and won a favorable ruling from 8 genéral ecoun- sel. The commission today con- cures in dts lawyer's finding. 2 + er who may redeem it for mer- ehandise or cash, is an evidence! of indebtedness made subject to regulation by the Securifies and \Exchange Act. “The same argument could be Meoce as the street car tokens,! ickets, Christmas gift’ cer- box tops, railroad or tickets and others too " the SEC) said in dismissing the claim. * * * “The legislative history and! other provisions of the statute indicate that the Congress did not intend to include such items with- tificates. theater in the scope of the statute.’ ‘Second Singer her contact lenses out. * Such a , how! -of protest was raised by the underwear in- | Phe-aitiance contended that a @UStyY when Garry Moore, Bil] ltrading stamp, given to a custom. Cullen, Henry Morgan and ‘others on “I’ve Got a Secret” confessed they didn’t undershirts that Mark Good- son, one of the ewners—e A ‘show, wrote back and told the industry, “I would like you to ‘know that undershirt does not constitute a pornographic ' act.” Mike Todd wanted his blo in two volumes: publisher said nope ... Visitors are barred from Sid Caesar’s TV rehear- isals. Ronald Coleman's ailing, may go to Johns Hopkins for treatment Fonda—and lots of people asked, Bother to Knock,” “Tonight We Sing,” “Nightfall,” and “New York Confidential.” She was so humorous and yet ‘her-Btway-debet-that_sis_B. W.-slmest_ofled — wear not wearing an Trouble’ pet loud bravos at the open- for the Seesaw”—with Henry. “Who IS * , i i iyou see with your eyes is different {from the music you hear with your ears, al to the > = Conductor Tells His Discoveries Leading Orchestra on’ Radio-Video Show By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK w — “The music " says Howard Barlow. * * * i hace | a “Ke $7 Compass point 10 Kind of light 3 Roscoe! Pai baltic (9) Favorit pass ind ight 3 Concernin, =a patty no apologies, that the fuss * Feminine bow It Eternities - 38 City in ‘ a a overt i appellation 1 Body pert 17 Each ~ He, personally, never appears on ww 12) Vaee ls Yer — & personal matter between «t Insect —# Sustest 19 Walk ee withine\ee {camera for more than one minute| (7) Do You Trust Your Wife.|* two singers ist 5S eae 0) pacaeens 41 anoint of his 30-minute show. (9) Movie. | * * * 49 Change places instance 24 Sharpen 2 Pack s « «& i The first walkout of the Rome ym nll ‘ poe ee HH peace 2 ateane _— He has an interesting theory of ; 9) Bri iseason was staged by soprano 33 Masculine 8 “A bird in ceremony 46 eon ; 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. P * 97 Greek what makes popular singers so Maria Callas, who broke up the ja 7 ee : ge __ (4) Queen for a Day. i up 34 Tel ". Z § Ascended PER] ser comer gg {Suttix successful: “Their utter sincerity. (7) American’ Bandstand. & pp Nisa! pe elapmenay of Bel) 83 Spicers traps & Carries (coll) 29 —— majesty | 48 Woody. plant |The most popular are those who |. ini’s “Norma” after the == act.'s¢ Destroy - © Medley 31 Singing voices 50. Through believe utterly in the songs they’ 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. singing (Okan when a 7cleeeiel ia: . inging. mn, when a | , singer does a popular song, his l4:30 (2) Edge of Night. For Cruelty to Navy Prisoners Prisoners. He was convicted oN scorn for it comes through.” | counts that included hitting pris-/ An outstanding _ says }4:45 (4) Modern Romances. | : be : | ep oners_in the stomach, slapping Barlow, is Patrice Munsel. ” a a - 0 = faces and drawing a a : (2) Susie. net across one seaman’s stoma: (4) Dear Phoebe. ' The six-foot: Leatherneck admit- (7) Woody Woodpecker oo ; ited only an occasional “‘slap here (9) Looney Tunes. YOKOSUKA, Japan W—A ser the sentence was read. As theand there to enforce discipline.” . tence of two years imprisonment oe thor gggulere he poets — ee tieemeiveetme uM «2) Beat the Clock. iat hard la was en toda to and muttering, t’s u r () Mr. and Mrs. North. Marine Pong = * ww - a wt lievable, it's unbelievable.” It has been since 1898 that Cuba; (7) Mickey Mouse Club. | Philadelphia, Pa., for cruelty and. —. yr be reviewrd |e an taee capo prea ) Seri } au seine by higher naval au-|*™. ‘ (9) Serial Theater, a against U.S. Navy, prison-|' y reveals that ft is paying 16 * & & McLane's was the iast tril, onlin dolars in pensions annually Set See a ee hour. : 2 sami Armed Army ‘Copters, Display | Combat Ability | Electro-Voiee 12TRX - tegrated 3-Way Systems. the phenomenal bass, full 12-in. In- CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS co. ou nbint ~ OR 38-9700 - Come In & See Our New Disptays "NATIONALLY ADVERTISED Seno _ Winter Prices. Now in Effect! © KITCHENS @ ATTICS @ RECREATION ROOMS © BATHROOMS _ PLUMBING — HEATING — SHEET METAL WORK - ogee Service ee ee ee Sunday 12-4 P ANY TYPE of WORK 7 TRS. ‘HOUSE RATSING FOUNDATIONS. TTT 4 * EF ‘we - THIRTY.STX rs, On Visiting Soviet Reslanchers WASHINGTON @ — A scientific chusetts Institute of Technology in leader today described some U.S. Cambridge, Mass., with its vast restrictions on visiting Red sci- store of important scientific activ. mee “silly little international, lities, but cannot go to the Harvard Dr. Warren Weaver, vice presi- @ent of the Rockefeller Founda- across the line in Boston and Bos- tion, said the United States has 4 ton has been ruled out of bounds.” ““queer and unbelievable” policy on ¢ * « — oe makes the nation 2. A US, government-approved: * i: 1959 meeting of the International) His comments were contained in Congress of Astronomy here. Now, testimony prepared for the Hous? he said, U.S. officials are debat- t Information subcom- j,g whether astronomers from the mittee's inquiry into the govern Chinese’ mainland should be al- ment role in science. lowed to attend. The State Department has re- as stricted visits of Communist sci- Exceptions to. the usual re-| entists on diplomatic and security grictions have | cranted in| Scientist Hits Restrictions! : |Medical School “because that is. ‘invitation was issued in 1955 for a} ——groumis and aise fotiows a _tit-for involving cartoonists - and! tat policy on restrictions Russia athletes, but U.S. places on U.S. scientists. isin: Weaver, a board member of the . iontists. government's National Science ‘* * A Foundation and a past president of the American Assn. for the Ad- vancement of Science, hsted these examples in saying US. policy Standards of hurts needed exchange of scientif- Weaver said, ic’ data: Cases Olympic ‘This sort of petty retaliation raises questions concerning national dignity,’’ offi-| continue to be sticky about | our! 1A re can via Massa- Chicken Pox Cases Increase in Oakland GOT A GAS | COMPANY PERMIT? THEN THIS I$ throughout the when 122 cases | compared to three the previous | week, according to Dr. John D. | |Monroe, health director | A wave of chicken pox broke out) county last week were reported | at = wee = AP Facsimile POLIO MOTHER OF YEAR — Mrs. Virginia Huston, Belling- ham, Wash., mother whose first child was born while she was an | iron lung patient, holds her nine-month-old second son, Jonathan, during ceremonies in New York naming her 1958 National Polio * * * Mumps also increased ing the same period and the num- ber of scarlet fever cases grew from one to eight. GAS HEAT at its best-with | The meine i . breakdown | of the communicable diseases re- -ported to the .-city—and county; health departments last week. Mueller PONTIAC Past Prev. Year | Week Week Ago Chicken pox ., 1 4 “§ '@ Mumps seers © 10 Rubella csceee © 1 0 Seariet fever 1 0 2 Whooping cough 6 0 1 OAKLAND COUNTY . Past Prev. Year There is a size and Week Weeh Age : Cmceee pox weccstes ] “4 Measles cunesee 66 4 4 type to meet your \Pneumonia ....... a 0 2 Scarlet fever . 8 1 14 needs and budget ces cough oe a : 203 9 in the) county from 89 to 203 cases dur- | Call Officer Outstanding | Mother of the Year. Mrs. Huston, who suffered paralytic polio in | 1952, a month before her first son was born, now-ruris her home from a wheel chair and participates in a full program of family and community activities jf scared into good driving, nor 'will they react to vague appeals. They must really want to behave in-a—mature, responsible manner behind the wheel.” The GM official said such a re- LANSING ww — A General | search program would utilize the resources of national safety | Motors executive has called for | groups, colleges and other re- la national research program into search agencies | ‘human attitudes and behaviors” as a means of reducing the traffic | ideath rate. | William F. Hufstader, vice ipresident in charge of GM's dis- ltribution staff, told the Greater Lansing Safety Council yesterday that the highway safety problem) | “is a symptom . . . of moral and ibehavior weaknesses that under- llie most of the social problems confronting us.”’ Urges Research to Help Reduce Highway Deaths | No Special Election fo Fill Senate Seat LANSING \f — There will be no special election called to fill the Senate seat left vacant by the- death of Sen. Bert J. Storey (R- Belding), Gov. Williams has an- Som /{—— LOU JANKA Heating & Air Conditioning | DETROIT (®—Patrolman Avery iJackson, 33, a Negro, has been inamed by the Detroit Junior Board ‘of Commerce as its outstanding: “We must recognize haman at- titudes and behavior as the key factors demanding our atten- + fon,” -he declared. “‘And we must nounced. Williams said that the three Re- publican state representatives and the four Republican county clerks © Seles_and Service 177 Edison, Pontiac Bus. FE é-2811 Nites FE 4-0445 young man of 1957. The board cited! Avery, a member of the Police ‘Department's Youth Bureau, | delinquency. recognize that these factors can- (from the district involved reported for} ___ his efforts in combating juvenile) not be successfully dealt with by trick solutions. or half-hearted measures,”*! Hufstader said: “People won't) local sentiment against a Special = ‘election. Local Democrats agreed) ihe said. | The governor — that the i Nac tse JUST LIKE 2 WASHERS IN ONE. Regular speed washing and spin-dry with seven ® complete rinses for al] your regular washing. Slow speed washing and spin-dry with five com- © plete rinses for all your dainty fabrics. Appliance Dept. Sears Basement BS DOES SNOW OR ICE STOP YOU? | TOTS PS o , In =| Silvertone Economy. Portable — a [ TV with New, Big 17-in. Screen (overall diagonal) 119°" _New-tube_design-increases.the. picture_atea from. 143 in. to 155 sq, in. of perfect contrast viewing. Yet the cab- inet is no larger! 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