ASSOCIA The Weath = “uve pane em ee Edition 11éth YEAR kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959-82 PAGES nee ea Plan to Tour United States =! ARGENTINE PRESIDENT DEPARTS—Presi- dent Arturo -Frondizi and his wife, Elena wave from the ramp of a chartered leaving Buenos airliner before + Burglars Sought in $10,750 Theft Jewelry, Cash Taken Argentina fe Av ‘wirephete Aires yesterday for a visit to the United States. The party is scheduled to land in © Charleston, S. C. at 3 p. m. today. President — Flies fo U.S. for Aid BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (P — A crippling wave of. From R. W. Scripps strikes swept Argentina today as President Arturo Home in Birmingham 'Frondizi flew to the United States for help to pull his ‘country out of economic chaos. Birmingham Police are seeking burglars who broke into the home of newspaper executive Robert W. Scripps at 1099 N. Glenhurst Dr. sometime between 5:30 p.m, Sat- urday and 3:50 p.m. Sunday and stole $10,750 in jewelry and cash. ‘ The burgiars made a thorough search of the Scripps residence to} the extent that they removed wall fixtures concealing plumbing fix- tures, - - They a out the jouciry in bedrooms, leaving costume | jewelry behind. Most ef the leot was jewelry, with only about a hundred dollars in cash taken, police said today. ~~ : There were shoe wiley ‘items valued af $1,000 and more. These included a diamond and emerald pin, two diamond and ruby Clips, a diamond and ruby ring, a’ dia- “mond bracelet and a diamond and sapphire bracelet. Another diamond pin and a dia- mond encrusted lady's watch val- ued at $800 also was stolen. Scripps is “a grandson of the founder of the Detroit News and is on the newspaper's board of directors. News Flashes GALVESTON, Tex. (P—At least six-persons were reported killed today in an e€plosion and fire at a home in the resort com- munity of Clear Lake Shores, 35 miles northeast of here. WASHINGTON (#— The Su- preme Court today refused to reconsider its- Dec. 8 dectsion that natural gas pipe line com- panies may raise their rates witheut prior approval by the States. ‘a storehouse of troubles. With die-hard followers lence erupted. With diehard followers of exiled dictator Juan D. of exiled dictator Juan D. officials served notice they would call out troops if we the 24-26 age class to stand by for a call from the army “at any moment.” * * * Frondizi was due in Charieaten, S. C., today to start a two-week aes visit. ington Tuesday to confer with President Eisenhower and other top officials, Left ,at home to direct action Chairman Jose Maria Guido, act- ing president, and Alfredo Vitolo, acting minister of national de- fense and interior minister. Scattered violence Sunday poinfed up the gravity of the situation. * * * One bomb went off in La Plata, 35 miles southeast of the capital; doing about $1,000 in damage to the building housing the U. S. In- ploded in the capital, the home of Rogelio Frigerio, economic adviser to the presi- dent. Frondizi, a stern lawyer with the nickname “El Fiaco’’—the | Thin Man—is the first Argentine president to visit Ge United He leaves behind for two weeks But he has a traveling bag fuli of hopes, and his journey to the United States is a key in his bold pro- grath to tug Argersinn out of Federal Power Commission. chaos. Schedule Wilber. Brucker as Lincoln Day Speaker Principal speaker for the Feb. 9 Lincoln Day banquet will be Wilber M. Brucker, former Governor of Michigan of the Army, according to an an- - nouncement m. e today by Congressman William | 8. - Broomfield (R-Oakland County). Toastmaster for the annual affair for Oakland County and now Sec Republicans has already been announced as Paul D. Bagwell, past candidate for governor. I x The since will be held at ne | Northwoog Inn, Woodward avenue and Catalpa road, in Berkley. Tick- ets for the 6:30 dinner are avail-, able at the GOP headquarters in Birmingham, . N. Woodward Ave. Brucker was named fy Presi- dent to the Secre- tary of post in 1965, He Department of Defense up until appointment tp his present post. Brucker. makes his home in not in Washi? governor of the state in 1990. He served until 19% Thereafter until his appointment He arrives in Wash: | against the strikers were Senate) tasMincreasing monopotization.” Auto Financing to Be Probed Rising Monopolization Fear Aggravated by Ford Re-Entry WASHINGTON \W—A probe will be launched into. automobile sales financing by the Senate because of, concern over what was described chairman of the Senate antitrust and monopoly subcommittee, said. yesterday ‘‘the subcommittee has been concerned about increasing monopolization .in automobile fi- nancing for some -time.” Kefauver added that this concern formation Service. Another ex-/has been aggravated by announce- damaging) ment last week of the Ford Motor | Co.’s intention to establish its own finaneing organization. General Motors Corp. already has a wholly-owned subsidiary, General Motors Acceptance Corp. (GMAC), to handle financing of ear sales, Kefauver recalled that Sen. Jo-| seph C. O’Mahoriey (D-Wyo), as acting chairman of the subcommit- tee in 1956, recommended that Gen- eral Motors be required to eet rid of GMAC. : * * * In an accompanying statement, O'Mahoney renewed that recom-; ‘mendation and urged a law that -|to re-enter the aufo financing field. TV & Radic Saves S would make it illegal for large manufacturers to establish similar inancing subsidiaries, — Such a law, he said, ‘would be a positive stimulus to the expan- sion of free independent enter- prises.” Kefauver said an early meeting of the subcommittee will be held to set =ae se patie hearings. “He said witnesses will include of- ficials of Ford Motor Co., who will be asked to explain their decision Representatives of Chrysler Corp. also will be asked if they have similar plans. Spokesmen for the Jugtice De- partment and the Federal Trade Commission also will be called, Ke- fatwer said, to discuss ‘‘whether GMAC's relationship to General Motors and a financing outlet set up by Ford would violate present law and. if not, what recommenda- tions, if any, they aa have for changes.” In Today's Press : | es velba < ? ° . Comics ; a eionene OS County News _............ sara Saves wsisesiemas ewes 6 Markets ..... iesgececesers 26 ‘Blasts Refusal | partment of continuing the -/Dillon who is in charge of The capital was in a virtual state of siege as orders went out to conscripts int— ‘lover and that trade will expahd.” Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn),| us 2 | At the same time, he has shown Mikoyan x * * * & «& Raps U. S. Po * licy fo Ease Limits on Mutual Trade Says State Department Continues Cold War | With Economic Ideas WASHINGTON (?) — So- viet Députy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan today accused the U.S. State De- cold war by refusing to ase restrictions on Soviet- | Amer{can trade. _Mikoyan delivered his blast after a 134-hour meet- ing with Deputy Under Sec- retary’ ’of State Douglas foreign economic policy. His face grim, Mikoyan told newsmen afterward: “Apparently the State Depart- | ment is not prepared to repeal | those discfiminatory restrictions | which are in the way of expand- _ ing ‘shipment of Soviet goods to | the United States in order that we could place big” orders.” Ambassador Mikhgi a, acted as ‘translator, ean “He’s of the impression the cold war in the State Department ts going on and that it affects foreign trade. + * * x - “We hope the cold war will be Mikoyan had a second trade con-| ference set up for later today with) Secretary of Commerce Lewis Strauss. . Mikoyan’s words were the sharpest and bluntest criticism of American policy which he has made since he arrived in this. country 15 days ago. ' In talks with busifiess legders ‘and others he has put on a cam- paign for trade—with implied em- phasis on Soviet purchases of goods the United States considers strategic. “> * * no’ inclination on the part of the Kremlin: to offer any concessions More Snow Hits Oakland County; Low Tonight 10 - A new blanket of snow covered the Pontiac area today, with both drivers and pedestrians finding the going rough outdoors. Before it stops snowing sometime this afternoon, three to-four inches of new snow will have fallen, ac- cording to the Weather Bureau. The weatherman said it would get colder this afternoon with the lew tonight expected to range frem about 19 in this area to five in the northern part of the state, No imnfediate relict is in sight for shivering citizens. Tempera- tures are expected to be 10-15 de- grees below normal through Thurs- day. A slight warming trend is expected Fri Roads in” Wayne, Oakland, Washtenaw and Macomb coun- ties were reperted hazardous, . The high today was expected around 31 degrees. The lowest temperature recorded ‘in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 cury registered 27. Laws Tumble Virginia Supreme Court Knocks Down,, School Racial Barrier RICHMOND, Va. — The Vir- ginia Supreme Court today struck down the state’s statutes against racial integration which have closed nine schools in Norfolk, Charlottesville and Warren County. The state court's action was disclosed after a three-judge federal court in Norfolk threw out the closure law which has displaced some 10,000 secondary school pupils in the big port city. . But the unappealable state géurt decision had more immedifite ef- fect on the future of Virginia pub- lic school operations. : * * * In a 22-page majority opinion by Chief Justice’ John W. Eggleston, the court rejected a principal con- in the continuing crisis over Ber- lin. < Mikoyan denounced ~American trade policy as he put on his over- coat to head for the National Press Club to make a lunchéon speech and answer questions. a Harriman’ s ‘Had It’ WALLINGFORD, Conn, > — Averell Harriman, recently de- -feated in his try for re-election as governor of New York, says he’s never again — to run for tention of the Almond administra- tion. - This was that when the U. S. Supreme Court knocked out the segregation section of the Vir- ginia constitution it also invali- dated the section requiring the state te provide for a system of public schools, The decision came on a 5 to 2 division. a.m. was 14. At 2 p.m. the mer-|- Anti-Integration Cherry Pie * BAKES TASTIEST OF ALL baked for the Oakland County merce and a traveling bag from Champion 3 el ‘ j Pontiae Press Phote — Cordree Heard, 16, of 3502 Old Plank Rd., Milford Township, proudly holds the cherry pie she Cherry. Pie-Baking Contest Satur-- q day. It looks like the judges really enjoyed this taste-tempting pie ° for it was half gone before Cordree learned she had won. Amofiz her prizes were a trophy from the Pontiac Area Chamber of Com- The Pontiac Press. | ke Budget Calls’ for Hike in Gasoline Tax, Post Asks 4%4-Cent Car Fuel Levy, Nickel Stamp Balanced $77 Billion Fiscal Spending Plan Goes to Congress From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — Presi- dent Eisenhower today sent ‘Congress a precariously bal- ‘anced budget of $77,030,- /000,000 .demanding higher ‘federal gasoline taxes and ‘a new hike in postal rates. ‘in gasoline taxes from 3 Cans to 4'2 cents a gallon and a $350,000,000 boost in postal charges, apparently by instituting a five-cent Stamp for some letters. These proposals, combined with higher taxes on aviation fuel and jeune other tax revisions, would bring in $1,356,000,000 of new rev- enue in fiscal year 1960, which starts this July. ‘No tax cuts were proposed. On the contrary, there was a mild threat of more general tax increases, if the Presirent's goal of. achieving a $70,000,000 sur- plas in the eoming year should fade and“{he government again goes into the red. The current year's “recession-induced” deficit was estimated at $12,900,000,000 Treasury Secretary Robert B. | Anderson told reporters it “might |prove to be necessary” to consider ya general tax hike if the’ Demo- Related Stories on Page 17 | cratic Congress “should” fail to give ' Eisenhower the legislative support morning. Fred Hipp, 21, of 6530 of about a dozen patrons at Amateur Defective Ends Trail for 2 Holdup Men A Clarkston man was credited with leading State Police and Oakland County sheriff's deputies armed bandits less than an hour after they robbed a| Waterford Township tavern of $180 early “Sunday, race into space, Transparent St., was one Mike's Bar, 4800 Dixie High- . ‘Circus Lion Slashes 8-Year-Old Texas Girl ALICE, Tex. &® — Eight-year-old Nikki Knowles of Corpus Christi, Tex., was slashed and painfully bruised by a circus lion here The action of the state court office. - yesterday. brought the probability that som@ Attendants at the winter quarters school integration in Norfolk, Ar- of, Hagen Bros. Circus said the lington, Alexandria and other arerg child, daughter of Mrs. Loraine under federal orders’ would occur | within-a Lamond of a few weeks. Knowles, had ventured too close to the feeding slot of the cage. Could Put Man on Moon — Gently velopment: ous fuels that scientists say will countdowns. etx months.” 400,000-pound thrust of the — a a. * * * * +s 9 all Women’s Pages et eyer anges Compeee ‘Pas Avewnteeh, tn. ‘burned as long as four “Current. missiles - i CHINA LAKE, Calif. ( — The Navy has a new rocket engine. which it says can land man.on the moon — gently — and bring him back alive. The engine was disclosed Sunday by the Naval Ordnanee Test Station here along with another de- a safe new way of packaging danger- Dougias D. Ordah!, head of the station's mis- sile propulsion division, told a news conference “We hope to make a test vehicle within the next During ground tests, the Ghgine has“ddveloped thrusts of up to: 10,000 pounds — — compared with the But Ordahl said, “There is no limit to the ulti- a ake ar ert Bare New Rocket Engine. fer moon — if we eliminate ‘long “We have had engines that could go to the had proper control over them,” he said. “This new engine gives that control. “It means we can change direction and speed in flight, that we can slow down and make a feather-soft landing on the moon or any of the. planets, and take off again. “It also means’we can bring manned satellites back from orbit 4 intercontinental other. without damage by controlling di- rection and speed as they re-enter the atmosphere.” x» * * tiakved of Seabenih aad lieu civ gea. which is hazardous and difficult to store, the engine burns Which ignite on contact with each The fluids are fed through a valve which con- trols the flow into the engine's combustion cham- ber. This enaMes scientis Se of orut produced — ei See: of! ths’ toot engines, Oftihd’ onld, have _ throttled down. up all their fuel in a ay 0a” be fall, “tie all coats dane st to burn al) its fuel at once. It can burn only ——. to reguiate the amount by a hand lever or by +way, when the two men en- |tered the tavern at 12:25, a.m. The ndits were ide nti’ fied by ieee as Robert L. Tate, 26, of 450 Druin St., and Richard. K. Allen, 25, of 7 Short St. Witnesses told police double-barrel shotgun and cov- went to the bar, pointed a pistol at the bartender and told him to hand over all the cash in the eash register. Behind the bar was Vic: Bozzo, manager. Bozzo gave Tate the money and the two men leftr through the front door, police said. * * * . Hipp ran out a back door, got into his car and followed the bandits’ auto severa] miles to the east where they parked.on a side ,toad in Oakland Subdivision. Hipp then returned to the scene of the holdup, told police what-he had done and led them | to the pair, who were still in their car. The money was found in the’ glove compartment of the car. Police said the men had two shot- guns, a pistol, and several ee in the auto. * 8 The pistol Tate used was a capable of shooting only blanks. Police sqid both Affen and Tate have past p% records, | Troopers said Tate just beet | taken off probation and that | Aflen was still on probation for past convictions. Shey Albarn that Allen stood at the door with a | ered the customers while Tate . “starting” gun used in races and, jhe needs to balance the budes. ‘and if business is good. * * * Eisenhower proposed to cut ispending by nearly $3,900,000,000 ibelow this year's figure. He heid ithe defense budget at virtually the | same level as this year — nearly | $41,000,000,000 and ordered big re- | ductions in outlays for agriculture, foreign aid and -housing. Spurred by Soviet satellite and ’to two) Sun rocket triumphs, the admin- istration’s new budget steps up sharply the funds for a UL 8. The budget estimates made pub- lic today would greatly accelerate ‘satellite ventures and lunar and deep space probes. Figures asked ifor the National Aeronautics and Space Administration also would {more than double the spending irate on solid fuel research and on development of a million pound thrust engine and nuclear rocket ‘engines. | By far the biggest chunk of the new budget was $40,945,000,000 for (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Polaris ICBM Flies to Success Navy Missile Soars Over Atlantic in- First Perfect, Test CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. , Prosecutor Jerome F. O'Rourke ; Se ; Unemployment insurance vol. ‘race bookie ring in Pontiac, were) aS ] wa ee state a ‘weekend “tre rae oe ten mney (Continued From Page One} | yume i month was the lowest: (scheduled to be arraigned “today | Said the 41-year-old Thompson | now, O d | | a eT a? cece. : defense, with the accent on missilé| *lnce January, 1958, the MESC before Oakland County Circuit! er stand trial sometime next, was a vast improvement | sek waa caenee, ee an’ and space projects | sald. The December figure of Judge William J. Beer on gambling ‘mon ei a@ «& ; ; ohn Henderwon, (0, and George | R a 'charges By The Associated Pre Wye) tea seins lweekons (6 13cer Ta , | $504,640 wits a sharp drop from Charges. | More snow and cold ars ago when state police records | Washburn, 65, both hotel en | bine nhower gave no precise November's erties " | tk lt Queena Detroit attorney, | Fide lere \ n eeae eC showed 17 lost their lives. kineers. figure, but one source made an : - oc aa ga, Vames E. Haggerty, told Judge wide areas in the eastern half of _ educated guess that space spend. ~ + * Charged with conspiracy to Vio-| John W. Baker that his client the nation todity | Most Michigan roads were clear Hundreds managed to escape ing of all types would hit three. During December, 972 claimants Irte state gambling laws are Basil! would stand mute when asked how The cold ait extended across the jyesterday, except for the south: Some crept down smoke-drenched quarters of a billion dollars. His ¢Xhausted their benefit mghts. |W. Burke, 59, of 29 Salmer Ave../), pleaded to the arson charge Southland, It was freezing in| western portion of the state where corridors to waiting aerial lad space program envisioned pro}- ————— described as the ring’s kingpin, |Thompson's $1,500 bond was sins northern Florida and tempera-j|driving was dangerous because of/ ders Others made their way to ct, ranging iron space weuihes le 4 iformer Deputy: City Treasurer tinued ‘ tures Were in the 408 in the ex-|near blizzard weather | fire esc apes) Many fled wearing stations to anand Al ht to the Youth Revived LaRue FE. Gullett, 41, of 301 Dick treme southern section | * * * | haat night clothing iaaeta B 'Ave.: his wife, Gladys, 35: James| Thompson, described by some * * * | The state's first Sunday traffic i! , From Fumes /“Chinaboy” Pruzor, 34, of 4 §.| a8 Klerdorf’s closest friend, was Cold wave warnings were post-.victim since the weekend before, Eisenhower hiked — prospective Saginaw St, and Charles D. Apley,| bound over to Circuit Court for ed for wide areas in the mid con jChristmas was Mrs. Donald J joutlays for the Atomic Energy in Ice Shanty 44, of the Salmer address. trial following a two-day exami- tinent, hit by severe cold over the ‘Omana, 41, of Pontiac Commission, too, but budgeted | All five were bound over to nation which, according to Flint M eekend A fresh mass of arc tie: August RB Seeley, 55, of Flint; nothing for nuclear weepons: tests) SPRING LAKE um—Richard L..Circuit Coyrt last month following | Municipal Judge Donald R. Free- air from Canada spread south-jwae killed when hie Car ran a redi - for the year starting next July 1 in Matzen, 17, was pecovering today preliminary examination before) ™&". linked Thompson with the ward across the Dakotas and Min liye ‘ht and struck another at a down | hopes “a ban on testing will” be after hisireace trom near asphyxi- Pontiac Municipal Court Judge burning of a dry cleaning estab- nesota into northern parts of lowa. town intersection in Flirt agreed upon This country offered aijion in an ice fishing shanty fire-,Cecil B. McCallum. lishment by means of finger. | i beraies Sor ee ee Robert Gi. Stacks, 27, rural | reat SUSpe ae " ae for a year Ty, Muskegon fishermen, Ralph [pogiro a Nath | totes vor nga Saranac, died when hin car ran ae tall and Harry Hart, investigated -— | me new onslaught of icy mr wae! 2LE 8 Foad near his home and bit | ‘CUT IN AD yesterday when they saw smoke Hearing Scheduled Kierdorf, 36, also a business ' WONTAR ON TOY OI WES oatyert. He outlined a°10 per cent cut in CoMing from a shanty occupied by | ace died -at St. Joseph Mercy expected to cover most of the| . f id f ae .q the Grand Haven High School sen-! ‘Hospital Aug. 7 as the result of: Midwest and plains states by| Stanley Tetuntez, 80, Detroit oreign aid, from an antic ipeted on nearby Lisyd'a B n on Street Project Sune suffered in the fire 1 ? Hl +4 y AC i it -e night, was crossing w city street when he| . ee VILE ARI SEC UD Ae found the youth bilan re lexa| " : * Ay ‘ ‘ans struck and fatally mjured by (0,000 nest Riggest, reduction dangling tt > ULL Ihe 4 It was clear and cold in the At 4 car driven by Paul Mudrak | was a, $462.000,000 drop’in military GAng!ing (rough the hole in the! The only item of business sched- Seine Floods Paris lafitic Coast states. Below zero Mudrak, of Detroit, was not held | jassistance, partly offset by in- ee aA \uled for tonight's Waterford Town- readings were reported in sections; Vincent Nortor, 70, Trenton, was: creases elsewhere Nation we oe We ship Board meeting is another) PARTS (M—The flooding Seine|E of the Northeast. Some warmer killed on US 71 in Wayne County | Placing heavy emphasis on halt reagiealion pian “ arti ue hearing on the controversial Lans- | swelled to the bursting point we\ther was indicated in the north when a car ran inte a diteh | Ber crit apetinn so ie sat alta youth weal hia Aken | be) downe street blacktopping project. through Paris today. In the sub- : andSaiddle Atlantic states as well) Thiallis Kappe, 8 Grand Tapids gard as federat handouts, Eisen- ee ae ae. = mother neal: according to Supervisor Elmer urbs about 1,500 homes have water. vs in fiesgoutheast jflied Ss ti day of injuies suffered hower stepped on many toes by: ; pte a 5 the shanty after| Johnson. r caninelecrosthel Gant land tire- : The mainNarea of wet weather in a head-on collision on M46 six t [ —Proposing to slash the farm) [eComing dizzy, Dut his erent * * + nen are pumping water from some. : ‘ 74 apparently slid a plastic boat cush- ‘men a pumping e covered. by fhe storm extended niles west of Six E ikes : Ps budget from an “to $8 60.00 0 o into contact with ihe open a vat a hearing held two weeks/|Paris basements. ea Nic + Ss Lad 000,000 this vear to $6,450,000 ,006 me ee | ABA eC tc ht te toe, OF 8 Bt gas hener and ae ao: rv owners poeta te] | t deus ; | mt : nleey cos 0 repa rin ne one-m and Indiana and northward 5 MSU Students | vamp, the “largely outmoded mialre: ae ol toed claiming they As ational Auto ee the upper Great Lakes BONNIE M ARLOWE: plice support system. | ; 2 7 . | aca » MARI. -_ paid the Oakland County Road}; WASHINGTON \#—Congress was! paN . Ringe oAReae ana S uf f ef ing Io r om ie —Refusing to okay any new ABP Coffee Prices Cut | Commission for this work two asked today to honor the Ameri-| snow fe ar : “| low-rent public housing projects; — years ago. can automobile by setting. aside om of the wet belt. ee an Antifreeze Binge City Elks Open Way flood control, navigation and ir- jen 3 Premium Brands. F It is expected that engineering jone week each Sear as Maticonl driffing snow was reported to the | rigation progrania or hospitals es Oe W ms north, with driving conditions re Five Michigan State University i Mor war ah less : . | NEW YORK — A&P Food Cost estiniates a Road ented Auto Week: baa hazardous in some areas i. ident§, including. one from Pon-- : : Stores cut prices for three of four mission reports will be present 3 Cutting new spending for local lg le tonight's hearin Falls ranged from one to two inch-lfiac and another from Berktey hospital ” { he: Ith research ta premium coffee brands by four os 8. | 3 es in a six-hour period during the lat we drank antifreeve thinking it ee ee ceritieils . night Iwas homemnde wihe were report A 16 vear-old Pontine tap dancer’ cilities and waste treatment works, Cents a pound as a result of weak! . — —— = ‘edn rand condition im Lansing “Hh eet a shot at the “big time’; And huge as it was. his mili: ness in Brazilian and Columbian Operate on Mario Lanza On Y ar area Peospitials infer this month, thanks to mem lary budget Was onl ¥ $145,000.000 green cotfee markets. ROME i — Sin Mario I wea > Ce-d- e News Travels Fast . ‘ . bere of the Pontiac Flke Lodge More than expected spending this e * . anger oS dvear a (act aure to provake oul-| - underwent minor surgery at a! SAVE BIG NOW = ' ; University officials and Fas “be have voted ber winner of thelr year, a fac oes ‘| The action brought total reduc-'Rome clirii rday. Mrs. I NEWINGTON, Conn (UPD) ~~) ‘ecent amateur sho eries from Congressmen @lamoring ome clini¢e yesterday. Mrs. Lanza of Binoculars . . n | TT wner of the Lansing Police said the students: TC Bek Teds ; tions of these brands during the said her husband was ‘‘feeling fine! postolis Tolis, co-owner ¢ Ronnie Marlowe, of 14) Mohawk. for bigger defefise outlays. neha: Theat wrote police drank the antifreeze at a party ; last five ‘weeks to eight cents a today and. wilt be able to leave the Newington Theater, ole ¥ an ile enrire St. a cute Pontiac Central High! The President said he would ask that he would not pay for the! Satutday night and became sick pound. Unaffected by the cut was clinic tomorrow.” Lanza and his oS) Hicer at the thea. /ith alcohol poisoning yesterday S¢ hool student, was presented with for legislation to “encourage” bicnt O'Clock brand, recently |wife have been Hving in Rome for Dy iceabofanjoticer at tn oe The liquid was ina gallon jug, % $100 check Saturday night at the) | mare private financing of Veterane slashed six cents a pound veral th ter. That night his safe was robbed t . housl ral. electrificat! Wig fo © aS LU z 1 $000 jand was setting on the kitchen | E Aks Temple. pow LP babi telhas rification an ; ue —_ Hable at an apartment occupied by! Donald” Wilson exalted ruler, | te Iephone projects, college housing : : a ; Glenn Scott, 829 F. Grand Raver, Made the presentation. Miss Mar- and maritime mortgages. fi . a : aed (near lowe won all three of the lodge’s, -Fisenhower said in his 78- page. The Weather * * * : imateur shows list fall competing Messave that his austerity-prosper- | 77 : Full | & Weather Burean Forecast One student, William WW Devine agalnnt 1 other contestants By budget s ar peuner ee ® UL AND wie relny ' Ce Yt oof Berkley Was in Lansing ss. The award money will be used to gant” nor “unduly limiting. hie ‘ ‘lowds wht a ew vrrien and rolder s ‘ — . _ ‘ tonight and Tuesday -Winds south 24 4 Spay res vospital Dennis Milesch, pay expenses to New York where It rejects the philosophy that m= , ites a Sie Soancee 6 Sine ties 21 of O99 Granada Di and three she will andition for the Ted Mack the national welfare is best served {iy MORE PRICE CUTS TO - UL * * . ma : per heur and slowls dimint hing north other cree were dao the MSU Show on Jan 27 She will make. by satisfying Py eiy demang for fed- 7 MOVE GOODS FASTER DURING Senta, gee TIGRD, fotos, Student Houlth Center Hheetriny with her mathe eral expenditures.” he-wwid | @ | Or Tedey in Ponting : mw CHANCES SLIM. ; | ——_ . : , home : sam woe t temperature preceding m | Ils chances of keeping the budg- | . i Ditection: Southwest M if d Hi n J t: balanced appeared stim, how-| @ 8 ta Mand 20 pin ve ° gun sets} Monday at 0,29 f te | Or | UN ior ¢ éver, on the basis of Democratic | : DOOR Maun tines MaAayiae TA0NL © | attitudes in Congress, For exam-) @ ONLY Moon sete Tuesday at 4 09 wi de. if Congres i] Sau bale 4 if Congress failev. to approve #™ Dewalewn Temparstares Wi Ch Tj | ithe postal rate hike alone, it would @ JAPANESE faom 1 11a om t EAE Nhe hrow finances into the red. ¥ i: it Je yo ins erry T it e' Both Eisenhower and Secretary @ & FRENCH it a om 5 ye |Anderson painted bright ple rer | : siterasvie Pontine . ‘of the economic outlook. D.. Values fe 4 95) ow - Higherl” ee areata Hosniorn) ee Sisteemsyenr old Cordree Heard. front he S. S. Wresge Co. in Pon * * * 1 Bi lhe ae =. * 5 id Lowent tem carature oe fla Milferd High School-funior, out tiac Anderson said the revenue esti-! cori (St Meri with sal pas Weather Clouce Hse 15 baked 16 other contestants Satur-) Cordvee, wha was beaming with mate of $77,100,000,000 for the com- leather berre!s (Case only $) wi seo tm onic ‘day in the annual Oakland County excitement when she found out her ing fiscal year was based on the fers.) a (anita eae aia [Cherry Pie Baking Contest. iple was declared the winner, said assumption that personal income : monenanenennsnes, Lowest temperature coe TM | She is new preparing to enter) she made four pies last week tn} would climb from $353,500,000,000 Group’ 2 q mee jempqratyre sf SOE +. 5 the state contest Jan. 29-3) ‘in preparation for the contest. in calendar 1858 to $374,000,000,000 r etter ary ay Grand Rapids. : | But she said she had only ex- | this year, and that corporate prof- 34994 B Binoculars GERMAN 7 mga papel edad a Pontiae —o|__Cordree, the daughter of Mr. and/perimented with the crust the night/its would rise from $36,500,000,000 ipa ecctadt Wien eee) eee if ‘Mrs. Andrew Heard, 3502 Old) before and used conféctioner’s sig-/to $47,000,000,000, Weathare rane / cloudy cose | Plank Rd. Milford Township, was) ar. This was pointed out by judges; On_ this basis, government. in- ee Our $100, 000.00 Winter stock sacrificed be- jaw arded the President's Trophy to be one of the main taste features! come was budgeted to rise $9,100, - — Lew Miphert ang Lowest Temperatures cause Easter comes early this year. Buy at cost to tn 1907 ne Date in i Nears ‘from the Pontiac Area Chamber of of the pic > (000,000 over this year, while spend- below cost or slightly obov t Se : row rf an % is Commerce and an overnight travel.| Cordree's expenses and those of ing was eut . : : ontly a e cost... ve on your sae ~ Rochester y Another Death Reported. From Christmas’ Smash on Auburn Road | Nally A Pontiac housewife was killed early Sunday morning when the car in which she. was riding smashed into a tree on M59 in White Bake Township, and a man’ died Sdnday at Pontiae General Hospital from in juries received in an accident) Dec. 5. — : i Dead are Mrs Dorothy Hi Omans, 41. of 30 * Ogemaw St. atid fealph Craig, 25 Oakland of 440 ‘ichelson Highway ™ Toll Mis. Oman > = ee Was a passenger in ‘09 in the car driven by her husband ) Donald J., 42. He oo told Oakland = County Sheriff's. deputies he fell asleep al the wheel Hix wife was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital, The —— accident took place at 2:30 a.m, reported in satis jon at the hospital. Omang was factory eondit Craig had been admitted to the hospital in critical condition after deputies found him lying near his smashed car on Auburn road near Walsh street, Avon Town ship. The car had gone olf the road riking a culvert and-large Craig wag thrown from the atito rock. f & nday's Temperature Chart 16 ‘ipens 1} Marquette . 11) 8, Galtiinore 24-0 Meinphis 45 39) Alemarek vi -11 Mia.nl Beach 466 4a! land injured 14 persons. | of uiore than 420 guests who fled | A desk we : MONDAY, VANUARY 19, 1959 Sar (Tuller Open for Business Blame Match in Hotel Fi ire have | id 1% * ‘ j said) * - : for setting off the fire in the Tuller the clerk. ee ee Hotel which claimed three lives Upstairs the second floor was seorched by flames and blackened ty smoke. Guests were placed higher in the undamaged portions ,of the $00-room, 14-story hostelry, overlooking Detroit's Grand Circus | 10 or 12 people in since the fire,” DE TROIT i — A carelessly d's; ‘About ‘carded match today was blamed) checked Fire Marshal Matthew J. Me theorized a_ match was thrown. into a rubbish container in a hat shop eff athe hotel lobby, | i starting the miltion dollar blaze Park . Saturday Employes toiled, mopping up) : | water-logged floors and burne d| He said Investigations by arson’ yuo. moving out singed furniture, and homicide detectives live ruled picking up soggy chunks of plas- ‘out crimine} intent er i : = | + *+* * Fire inspectors moved about, | The fire-sscarrved hots] once a searching for clues to the cause! downtown shoapiece ovened for of the blaze Eight policemen! business ag i vial fodivy But yore stanoned. at the hotel on . : charred remimders of the fie res ot aoeaimst souvenir hunters AP Wirephotos , ia niained : | ~ A BOMB SCARE — When Cari Hertle (lower right) of Augsburg, 1 Makeshift facilities were set> | Arson squad detectives believed Germany attempted to enter the Russian Embassy yesterday to see Russian Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, He said he wanted to show the visting Russian an invention. Dubious security police confiscated hbhs bulging briefcase, and rushed it to a vacant lot. Above, John Craven of the police bomb squad crouches over the. briefcase, to see if he can hear any tell-tale mechanism. When blackened lobby. The About 250 up in the oder of fire lingered. the blaze was ignited by a cigar ette in a rubbish basket in 4 hat shop on the mezzanine floo: Saturday in numbing 12 cold had returned. degree po eee. . | 6 | Fire Commissioner Paxton | Mendelssohn = said the, flames | clerk spent yesterday’ wpurted out of the hal’chop into finally opened, the cuse contained only papers. _ ; registering incoming guests and the lobby, setting paneled walls — — - ? — faring af his old” counter the! yyg rugs we, The fire shot | flames had igduiced to chareoal 6 Die in ie: Over Weekend String of 3 Deathless Sundays Broken but Toll Is Better Than Year Ago ae Fire inspectors said the 53-year rose A’ bla hh : ;" r up elevator shaits and poured \No Lag Til Mid-k ebruary Fire Marshal Matthew Jo -Mc- | fie estimated the damage at a Alder said his investigators Fimplovment, which hy of increased industrial productiv- ,were trying to determine if the 1100 between Nov. 15 and Dee ity. the transportation industry) | recently with an inflammable : i S| mid-February, the Pontiac branch! fluid. witnesses said fire had ; | The manufecturing employ. : ment increase was 2,800, accord. oe < — curnty Commission said today. ' , would from the wick of a ci ar ette lighter Because of the Christmas season,, reached volume production pairs retall stores added 800 workers and) model changeovers, smoke throughout the building. G & ad pl i million dollars. Fire Chief Josepli! | lobby carpeting had been cleaned 15, should remain steady through added 300 workers, the MESC said. | of the Michigan Employment Se- gushed up from the carpet as it ing to the MESC, as auto plants area post offices another 500 dur- | A seasonal decrease of 300 took family and home’needs . . BE THRIFTY! . . Our loss is your gain! MAKE YOUR The Pontiac Press her 4-H leader, Mrs, Catios Long Budget Director Maurice 1H.) inf: Lake . Sherwood, will’be paid to Stans told newsmen the adminis the Grand Rapids contest tration deliberately held Gown the ing bag from for baking the winning pie trowneville 71 42 Milwaukee 9 © See¢ond place in the county con- = : . _ . ee . aha Tea Buffalo a Minneapolle 28-2) oe went is (new Gannett ol a contest _hetd at Pontiac introduction of new progéams a y DOLLARS DO THE WORK OF Two : Chieago 27 2 New York 22 1 9645 uno Rd., Milford. She rep: orthern High School, Was apon what the President fine called i ines ati - 27 19 Omahe aon ored by the Michigan Canners+breather in expansion “eave 0 2 Phoenix " “ akry ae ues —— “ and Freezer Asan. the Michigan, A White House emissary deliv. GEORG E'S . 9 Detroit io 38 pittepargh = 14s tone) Lal Tella [Cherry Producers Assn. and the ered the budget message to the| Tal ORT S fort aworth 3 % 6 Pangctaes iH ‘ Judy Cudnohutaky of 1940 S. La- Michigan Cherry Commission. \oume and Senate at noon for for-| eee Fe ae 14| Peer Rd., Lake Orion, the 1958 con-| Michigan State University Coop-|mal reading by clerks, The Senate, 74 N. Beginew Street we Give Holden fed Stamps: Jacksonvitie Hi HH Wesnngton gs J8\ test wittner, plaved third. Gwen | erative Extension Seryice, Oakland, in recess today, will receive the ’ ea a eae ee a tos Angeles ao Tampa ve ae and Judy each received _@ Wallet/County, also aided in: the project. message Tuesday. fos ; " - . ~ zy # + # The Day in Birmingham \Commission Ambulance Problem BIRMINGHAM — An extensive| report on how Birmingham may solve the problem of no local am- bulance. service ‘will be presented to the city commission tonight by Asst. City Manager Robert Ken- ning. Several weeks ago Mike O’- Hara, owner of the Birmingham Ambulance Service told the city that unpaid bills amounting to several thousand dollars might put him out of business. Com- missioners, feeling a responsibil- ity to the public, began a study on this service. Kenning has contacted cities in the area on the problems they face with city-owned ambulance serv- ice and its operation. His report shows. the possibility of additional] men being employed by the police department, plus the expense of the vehicles to be a major prob- lem. * * * He also includes reports from cities which subsidize privately Enters Innocent Plea to Arson Arraign ‘Thompson on Charge of Burning in Kierdorf Case javenue at to Consider owned ambulances, He said that License and permit fees. under the newly adopted fire ordinance also will be discussed. Unusual among the courts of honor held by Birmingham Boy Scouts will be that of Troop B-5 John Emmett will receive’ the Eagie award, while Fred Muen- palm Eagle Award and the God and Country award. A Birmingham city employe, Genevieve Wall, 54, of 115 E, Maple Ave. suffered a broken right arm when she was struck by a car yesterday while crossing Maple Woodward avenue. Driver of the car was Geraldine Wedge, 18, of 156 S. Glengary Rd. She was not held. . ee Meeting at the home of Mrs, ‘Samuel Lang, 43 Oxford $t., jsant Ridge, this afternoon, Birm- Plea- ‘ingham Rotary Anns will see the prize-winning operetta ‘Cradle |Song." Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. William Averill, Mrs. Erik Bergis- hagen, Mrs. Lynd, Mrs. C. B. McCormick and Mrs. Lewis Mor- ley. ee the Clinic Room at the Community House. Election-of officers, plans for the new year, committee re- ports and appointment of commit- tee members will be held. Factory Representative Here E WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. | REMINGTON Electric Shever RECONDITIONED Ys =e ew ; — 3 op te & —While You Wait 50 iy 20 y @ OILED say @ ADJUSTED BS e stentizen £/ A fr oo eCLEANED [Ff ‘5 SIMMS P£RVICE—Remin fac- § tory representative will be our of every store every ednesday week. : Electric Shavers —Main Floor Arreverversveeververrerrvivveriververr ery nriv ern ren SIMMS BINOCULAR HEADQUARTERS CLEARANCE “= once a year Simms has a ‘clean-sweep-sale’ ._ all new, plenty of some, few of others. Use our . free layaway to get the Binoculars you want at no extra cost. Choice “ 7% 40 canter: focus a8 x 30 individual focus or 7 50 center focus. iCase-only $1 with. binoculars! Binoculars BUSTER 30 PAIR focus or focus. All y or black th binocu- é ai aes lalla Group 3 /. Pa G GERMAN - 95" Powerhul. 7 x 50 center focus St. Moritz or 830 center focus Wezlar binoculars: (Case only $1 with bincculers.! 2 Styles Your Choice 10% Holds Your Binoculats in Layaway—Mo —_ = = PV . ERS chinger will receive the bronze © Birmingham Democratic Club- jwill meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow in > eet 5 b e Ls a a a eee ee oe > we et » = A nig sik Sod tie ass i) = ba > ~ 2 a ae | Bee ey % a Fe ao ‘ ri : = ge z : bf ae, |Gimore has 126 bottles of beer’ ition in Rochester, Minn., last ‘Idaho reservation. Complete satisfaction guaranteed | com: tried dless how much more you tional convention. It’s still a toss-|{0tball field and wider—300 feet/n0on. A commercial boat tried to/ne collected in 46 states and sev-) samt TET regar : long and 169 feat wide. take Mrs. Evans from the island] o,) 4 lands. He doesn't dri save! up where the Republic ll hold . eral foreign He doesn’t drink |” | theirs ° — al ere rena town, Butithe beverage, though. He | I “TON ITE. and. TU ESDAY RIGHTS RESERVED ° : Los loge: a en - 2,400,000, | V#5 stopper by ie. like the taste. to Limit Quantities Loe Anges wer thevtomitte's hs never hada. major’ national + 8 8 Prices Slashed NOW! s Angeles won the committee S political meetin g. Californis The Coast Guard dispatched a eee —None Sold to Dealers— Bring All Your recommendation Sunday after put- ee “ting up @ $350,000 cash offer. Top’. Prompt in expressing pleas |; | offers also weré made at the com-| ~ ' mittee’s New Orleans meeting by BLACK & WHITE FILMS to Simms” is Finer - Faster Photo Finishing TONITE & TUES. ONLY | Save on B BRAND NAME FWveng BRANDS. @ FIRST-OF-WEEK BABY '@ DAILY DELIVERY to Simms from |gg Eastman or DIRECT - TO - YOUR - i HOME mailing service. washable leather a magnifying mirror on the other 0 to 3. side. Por shaving — and cosmetic make- -up. Playtex. Slight irregu- larities do not aftect wear. (Limit 2). LADIES’ WEAR—Main Floor 10 CLIPand SAVE haz Safe Zipper Top — Wire Style s Rubbish Burners Regular $2.00 Value As shown — volcano’ draft re a” = a a “| . : ZE 100 % 500 : AFTER COLDS, FLU, | f SPECIALS (Mon. Tues) > rove: ize tah SORE THROAT ; TURRET. — ". ACK oe S3 NUTRI TOMIC : ne Ironing Needed With ve ' E Microscope Hume : i a NUTRI TONIC 8 =8=$339 Fou See! tun cows Sasa | i:earee NEXT s. CREME SHAMPOO: PE | ipohf CREASERS TIRED BLOOD’ aor ver. _ |G Pocces Ear a 60c PONDS ANGEL - 4 qe: SO sce. te T k GERITOL Complet ith € = Wh 6¢ to 10c Each? a 2 _SKIN HAND LOTION . mens ota 6 or Zor G3 C ake padi gill pit LIFETIME FADEPROOF = ladies’ stacks = Jive Stronger Fast one sides. 4 s PHOTO PRINTS 7 ante - 69° - ™ HOUSEWARES—2nd Floor S in just 7 days—or money back! : -~< soe c : eS Ee . = a =a S-INCH, HAND or STAND 9M es 4. a ese MOE HAIR $109 { CLIP and SAVE Hh) oY Bab Shoes Deable- Side -@m-. SIZE Hl — Sa ea) sPmay | 7 : y. M i. Automatic ELECTRIC - EYE: equip- gy) Fi Sizes (Extra Small to Extra Large Reg PSS eee ED ee ag) Ol in ‘ mY a 429 = SGbr Won CREME RINSE (16-0z.). oy: “Playtex Girdles SAVE E White shoes sith moc-toes perfor- ; dx, a DEVELOPED > Th $1.75 HOOPERS TT° =| i Oe a Me nee maune cease MIE A regular mirror on one side, ana gM : HOMOGENIZED CREAM. ff f R | *Due to iron deficiency anemia | SIMM).8. $8 N. Saginaw —Main Floor 60c TONI DEEP MAGIC ¢€ CLEANSING LOTION __. 3 9: 98¢ TONI HUSH <. CREAM DEODORANT |. 39 59c HELENE CURTIS ¢ SUAVE HAIR DRESS . 39 " $1 VETO CREAM DEODORANT ........ 3 9 f : SIMMS. OTHERS 4 98 N inaw —Main Floor - trier tt ote ‘ 4 a ATTENTION: i YOU'RE Leaking let the . ® LOWEST Prices—Look Here No need to run from store to store, you're sure to find what you-@) need at Simms and at Jowest prices, too! Tonite and Tuesday DEM MD secrsiss | €: - 98 :N. Saginaw —Main Floor é he md id baad Its. to $5.95 Value eo bee Fabtined girdtes by 44 pd sea nd | Mg a on Tonite and Tues. Specials in SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS TRUMAID Springy Action E54 md 4 ound mt sea 7-Iach Spool—Hi-Pi’ ‘ ‘ RCA Baby Play Chair ond a k@\@)’) SPECIALS |e 3 PONDS COLD bettoay Galvanized, large — RECORDING TAPES | , i" i s | caowit,..Uuinit 40. 1200 FEET: $7385 544 Easy to Apply W =iket OU ie y an VO gmp EE ie Bo AN INN "HARDWARE DEPT.—2nd Floor Washable plastic cover:8e in red or- white colors hite enamel frame and base. with six vegetable rin, gat care 39° | RIE on KEM-TONE ack COAT $1.75 HUDNUT ¢ SEAMLESS in HiShades ep sie ee CREME SHAMPOO | Ladies’ NYLONS = eee ri ? 99 i ~baaies > Fos INDOOR or OUTDOOR oe mG 7 Regular $1.29 Pair onal PER e ) Pea Vaal » FIRST QUALITY in 4 FAMOUS WALZ GALLON BROTHERS | soreene! in ai 3 Pr. 1" = M . M WH rinest interior wall paint in choice of white COSMETICS—Main Floor rif Sizes BYy 1 nee “and colors. Alf first quality ‘Super Kem-Tone’ ss ; cesscsmns an a (Limit 6): , ovie | eters ts funy wesnene: jong lasting. { 8 2% a ewes Bese , HOSIERY DEPT.—Main Floor s Reg. $5.95 | 4 | zi || 1-49 Goce Door Mats 7‘ || YOU'LL Find More of What YOU Want | CLIP and SAVE iff Long-Lasting BABY soe ee Se in SIMMS at the LOWEST P RICES! Steel Frame — Padded Seat =e (Case Extra) 15¢ Flashlight Batteries - 3 for rl ys fF. cn ems | Cosco Hi-Chair 15 Flashlight Batte — TONITE and’ TUESDAY SUPER SPECIALS — @ FOLDING CH AIRS = toward your _fublect and read direct, Reg. 88 3 flashlights. Famous Power Chief (limit 6). 5 | ra: - _ ate P& 0 a BARGAIN BASEMENT | | = “ATED wer EO ~ Tresh's Aire’ Fan Forced 1 E a5 Reveler 52-95 Veixe 22 = | vill] j nM All steel. folding bridge chairs Just Point SF castoal ietce. cesses oat i Electric Heaters ALL FIRST QUALITY with padded seats, (Limit 4). and Read — ee Genuine CANNON $10.95 Value Boys’ Broadcloth Front oS : * HOUSEWARES—2nd Floor gacz | eee | (Ee 7.4 | TOWELS: : flet SS 2 que Re CLIPand SAVE iat a — — Portable room heater with shut-off switen. us 837. a rctines et trrournont entire room 20x40-Inch 3 0° 798 Mlustrated-Pages!-New With Neck Cord Bath Towels W bst Ye Di ti y ie n Nica 1 49 Plastic Pail - 12 Ot. 69° Matching Hand Towels ...... 28c e er $ ¢ lonar Seta vl Seat op Peete Rat BSc Mayu ‘ll Matching Wash Cloths... 15¢ | Bold readable. ty 9 er by. G Fly front. | Guaranteed w ec thirsty Cannon Terrycloth towels in 3 Authoritative self - pro- “ Cc Soe a ee ee a choice of 4 colors in attractive plaids. Bu : ARGUS L3 METERE PORE : 1.00 Rubber Utility Mat - 2 tor 00 ; now to save! ’ oo ae eines oer a Regular 3 oe foe Suk coe ecw. “Limit 4 @ mOte. nw ccsccccsee : . 3 ‘BUTTERFLY’ TOWELS (Limit omer DEPT —Mcin Floor aes ; * $18.50 . 20x40 Inches. Bright C | sae ‘butterfly’ tt , ter- Py 13” : HOUSEWARES eee eo CLIP and SAVE i222 se tht meter : | 100K WHAT 88c BUYS AT. SIMMS! neces Hond Towels... 2 fer $1 Generous 4-Ounce Jars of ona with slow or fast Sean: ij atching Wash Cloths. . We 4 A aa emears, With Add Extra Storage Space with GAY 90's TOWELS Noxzema Skin Cream veng? incident light at- tachment. for fleod photos ee te oe ee owe oe ee ee : a 24x46 Inches. Gay 90's Regular 67c Value imprint 6n Cannon ter- : ; tycioth towels. Save 19° LMC Ra OD C famous skin cream. eee Extra Shelves For Porches, Stairways, Etc ‘ACCURA’ Risomatic ————, , now. . Save 4 fy CAMERA TRIPODS EXPANDING per Original Cc Matched Hand Towel... .39¢ ‘Matched Wash Cloth ....19¢ 3 en eet ’ , : ° iE Just a few of the many towels found here at Simms. And at the : = Baby Gates NEW | Seiler Bie lowest prices . . . compare before you buy. ff he 3 COSMETICS—Main Floor faafull 20-inch length shelves add Regular $19.95 : Save Nearly $10 3-Foot extra space on to your présent shelves — in cupboards, cabinets 412 ok os. a leeaaame pantries, etc. Folding all metal, ay eat fete with HER Case _ . ’ ” 2+ 1 Obs ; i m- inch met siecs opens to 060 ees ee on. | 1.00 FLOUR, Si ER : eply Hpac ad teleseopte legs, non- |i Polding style gate is ate be. install. F GY L: : Locks securely. Smooth hardwood. - slip. Chrome plated. : S Use one hand to sift flour, 3-cup siee, 1 seres. All metal, decorated... o* Fully Washable - = = Sine ail | . NX /}/ CLIP and SAVE h? Pleated FAILLE Drapes a. y 59 2 Pair 5.00 EPA... = E 48 inches wide by 81 inghes long. “Washable E pleated drapes in choice of solid colors. Wrin- Lo resistant. Combed Cotton Yarn—White MEN’S BRIEFS Reg. 59c Value Elastic waist. ny- , : Hee 39° | cae Pe, : : sizes. for 4 aes Dacron nor | | ae WEAR—Basement reer Tailored 4 _e ” | Maen | "| CLIPand SAVE i urtains FREE Hair Brash Wu [ls3.98 Velie Pepsodent Toothpaste §82x54-in.—Pair .. 1.57 " Reguler $1.19 Value c 49 Val : B R onorny size of Se Tees saree Ad 98 Velue ar2-tn Pair. 1D = paren —Main F leer 98 N. Saginew 15-inch diameter, S-inches deep. Wondersoft will not mar or scratech.i......... | 1.98 PLASTIC DISH-PAN ~ 88° Camera Dept. == Floor ‘Cashion Solt PLASTIC 5%, fi Silverware ene Regular $1.00 ee penis Cc ; trays to sete oem Hl coon eed YOU Are Guaranteed to SAVE MORE Than 12 on This Tonight & Tues. Special ) No Pin Holes—No Rust Marks FULLY PINLESS Curtain Stretcher ‘/; yas aMrteD mowly SAWTES Regular : 1.16 METAL CAKE PANS YG | Hose ot ro teenth 3 $7.95 . irre Aluminum, fixTeI¥s laches. Perfect for eakes, corn- 5 = G$5.29 Vatue v ee ivis * “Value a — : : | ™82x81-in.—Poir . . 2.17 Tokes Curtains up to 54x 100" , 1.00 } Refrigerator Set - - Pc. “8 8° I 3 voyage Aeon lasahy sanscne Coupons Good January 19 & 20 Only All metal stretchers—aluminized, rust-resistant, Four rods stretch vars 4 ak. Bane | ne faa =_— : : off white color for any room in the house. Washes and dries quickly, cutains uniformly, no pin holes, rust marks; etc, Compact, set up : agywhere, easy to take down, Only 100 at this price. ; Sete Simm). 0. . Sen ae BROTH EDS : pSIMmM).: # | _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1 19, 1089 shew i AUBURN HEIGHTS—St. Vincent jde Paul Church, Pontiac, was the setting for the Saturday morning wedding of Patricia Arlene Nichol- son of Auburn Heights and Frank A. Marvin of Detroit. Rev. Fabian Weber performed the ceremony. * * * . The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Howard Nicholson, 2634 |bridegrogm’ s parents are Mr. and Mrs Detroit. SANDRA SUE BUCK Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Buck of 3731 Navarra St., Davisburg, announce .the engagement of their daughter, Sandra Sue, to Lawrence F. Williams. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Wil- liams of 3520 Woodland Dr., Mil- ford. No date has been set for the wedding met One-Price Milk Area. Gets More Support LANSING (UPli—P roc es sors and milk producers testifying dur-| ing a two-week hearing on es- tablishing a federal milk marketing] area in Centra] Michigan were in} favor of the move, federal officials | sald today. The US. Department of Agricul- {ure official s moved on to similar; hearings in Cleveland. If established Jn Michigan, the| area would be similar to ones now set up in Muskegon, Benton Harbor and Detroit areas in the; southern part of the state. If established, the area would come under uniform prices for) milk, set by the USDA. It was} expec ted the move might be made about mid summer St. Philip Vestry | Names Officers, Gives Awards ROCHESTER — New officers of; the yestry of St. Philip Episcopal Church here are Frank Chapman, senior warden; Paul ‘T, Williams, junior warden: and Thomas Sev- erance, secretary. Re-elected to the post of treasurer was Harold Shuartt , During the recent annual meet Ing the Rev. edgar A. Lucas pre- sented St. Philip Church awards to) four church members for outstand. | ing service during the -past year Recipients were Mrs. Frederick: Riley, retired president of the - Woman's Atxiliary; Mrs. David “Hoffman, a member of the Altar Guild; Howard McKenzie, head usher; and Philip Hohl, retiring senior warden A brief report was given of the! progrets being made on the church's new educational wing. | Ground was broken for the addi tion on Jan. 10, MARY CATHERINE HOTCHKISS A Feb. 14 wedding in the Bap- fist Church at Hyden, Ky., is planned by newly-engaged Mary Catherine Hotchkiss of Lake Orion and Eddie J. Hensen of Carthage, Mo. ‘Their betrothrhtl was announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hotchkiss of Lake Orion. The fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elms Ifen- | Junior Women iMrs, James Reynolds, Mrs. Charles| i Hart, | Richard i four Alsdorf, Auburn Heights. The Frank A. Marvin, Sr., For her wedding the bride chose- a floorJength, princess- style gown of bombazine with a rosepointe lace bodice, square neckline and long, tapered sleeves. A pillbox hat of silk filusion embroidered with pearis held her fingertip veil. She carried a white prayer book topped with a spray of white ca- melias and stephanotis. * Mary Colleen mingham was a * Barnett of Bir maid of of: Monroe and Estella Marvin of | Detroit, sister of the bridegroom. \ Thomas FE. Marvin served hisir jbrother as best man. Seating the | iguests were Charles W. Cheng of | Ypsilanti, Leonard Rabert rt Wood, Mo, ‘Install Fourteen at Rochester ROCHESTER — Fourteen Rochester women were’ installed as new members of the Rochester Junior Woman's Club during a meeting held Friday in the Wood- ;ward Memorial Library. Welcomed as new members were Maish, Mrs. I:imory Munn, Mrs Fred Sargent, Mrs. Robert Conred, Mrs, Kenneth Hlock Mrs. Warren Lepp, Mrs. Manley Wilson and Mrs. James Foust Mra Otia Hopper, Mrs. David Milne Others were Mrs. Lloyd Lake Mrs. R. FP Michnay and Mrs Robert Allured Total membership jn the club now ja &5 Hostess for the afternoon meet ing was Mrs. David Harkness Her co-hostesses were Mrs Fred Case Mrs. O. L. Dallas, Mrs. Donald Mrs. Fred Hugger, Mrs Justice, Mrs. Murland Pearsall, Mrs. Richard Seitz and Mrs. John Toski Petitions Must Be Filed in Rochester by Saturday ROCHESTER—The deadline for- filing nominating petitions for the | positions open on the Ro- chester Village «Counell is noon Saturday, Maxine Ross, village | clerk announced today, ‘ Council members whose terms) expire this year are Frank Re- wold, William Chapman, Clarence Burr and James Hill.” If no more than nine candidates | file nominating petitions, there) will be no primary, and the voting | will take place during the reg- ular spring election March 9, the Clerk said | | Romas Baptist Pastor | Resigns Effective April 1 | ROMEO — Rev. E. E. Redman! has resigned ag pastor of the First | Baptist Church here, his resigna-| tion to become effective April 1. | Revs,Redman became minister | of the local churchlin June, 1954. | He said his hew assignment will) be to organize churches in Rose | City, Mio, Hemlock near Owosso) and other small communities under | the General Assn. of Regular) Baptists Township Tax Deadline | Extended to Feb. 20 | WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN SHIP — Residents of West Bloom: | ifield Township have until Feb, 20) to pay their 1958 taxes, according to Frank Hallett, township clerk. The deadline has been extended ifrom the original date, Tuesday. | The taxes are to be paid at the | township hall, 4460 Orchard Lake. sen, also of Carthage. He is a teacher and Mary a hurse in Hyden. Rd, Begins at 7 Tonight Child Psychology Course Being Offered at MSUO A course in child psychology for graduate nurses, teachers and homemakers interested in child training and development is being offered by Michigan State Univer- sity at the Michigan Sfate Univer- sity Oakland campus. * * * The course, which carries three term hours of graduate or under- graddate credit, is meeting Mon- days from 7 to 10 p.m. at the ’ MSUO Continuing Education Cen- ter, Adams and Butler roads, “This course Is important th the graduate.nurse working on at a bachelor of stience degree pro- Uogram because it Is a degree re- quiregnent,”* Florence Kempf, di- ' rector of the MSU Bohol = Nurs- “Tag, said, “It would also in value oe pital, in the community or in the! home,” she added * * * . Parents and other residents with | a general psychology background | would find the course of interest, according to Miss Kempf, Teaching the course ts Dr. Wil. liam Mahon Jr., an educational psychologist with the Ferndale school system, “The class will discuss the physical, psychological and social development of the child and the relation of his environment to his} development," Dr. Mahon pointed | out. ? | * * * “Spettal problenis of child train. ing in~the family and of social adjustment at school will be tackled,” he adds, ’ “the: nurse in whatever field she/ a Oe en in the how Interested adults cay stil opt at the second class session tonight. ' e ” A =: Lt ® ~*~ of in of Patricia Nicholson Marries at St. Vincent's in Pontiac MRS. FRANK A. MARVIN | Doc Ring of Royal Oak and Don R. \Cameron of Ypsilanti, * The newlyweds greeted Pontiac, after the nuptials. , Following a week-long honeymoon} pm, in the Mason Building, Lans- they will! ing, northern Michigan, eside in Lake Orion Both the bride and bride ROOM | ke “present the group, Veighey said jare graduates of Eastern Michigan | Richard Tunison of Ft. College and are teachers in Lake 0. (Orion, CATHERINE MAY GORANG Mr. and Mrs of 3843 Alida St, Itochester, an- | nounce the engncr(urnt of their CatherineMay, to Pfr Larry J. LaForge of the U Marine Corps, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George LaForge 230 Squirrel Rd, Auburn Heights, and is currently sta- tioned at San Diego, Calif. No daughter, Boosters Club to Meet Frank Gorang | Ss. | Drain Protesters Set Mass Meet Sewer Area Expected to Attend SOUTHFIELD — A group of citi- zens, called the 8-Mile Road Storm Drain District Taxpaying Assn., road drain, will hold a mass méet- ing at 7:30 p.m, Saturday at the Lederle Junior High School. “Spokesman for the group, Stan- ley E. Veighey, said this morning that at least 1.000 residents in the affected area are expected to at- tend. | The group is protesting a spe- cial assessment already approved by the Oakland County Drain Commission which would cost the average fomeowner in the area an aCditional $460 per year in taxes or the next 30 years. A Juan. 27 hearing has been | scheuled by members of the group hora th 1¢ir and representatives of the Oak- Bridesmaids were Mrs, Don Cam iguests at a reception in Amvet8 land C eron of Ypsianti, Nancy Roeder | jHall, ‘ounty Drain Commission. will be held at 1:30 The meeting | Attorney Daniel Hodgman will Transportation is being provided free of charge for those in the area Wishing to go to the hearing. A house-to-house campaign has been going on for the past six weeks, conducted by the associa- tion, Veighey said. The purpose of. this, he explained, was to get petitions signed protesting the spe- cial assessment and to solicit con- tributions to defray legal and pro- fessional costs in the fight against the assessment,” As of today, $5,234.30 has been contributed to the group. AVONDALE The Avondale} Band Boosters Club will hold its jmonthly meeting 7:30 p.m. Tues- jday at Stone School on Adams read. Special music will be fur- nished by high school soloists and ensembtes preparing for the Michigan School ._Band and Or- chestra Festival to be held in Red- ford Feb. 6 and 7. Refreshments jwill be served at the close of the | seSsion. ‘To Address Wixom PTA: WALLED LAKE —Mrs. Myrtle |Dierenga, a consultant for men- itally handicapped children in the Walled Lake School District, will speak at a meeting of the Wixom Elementary School PTA at 8 p.m. 1,000 in 8-Mile Storm toda ' |protesting the “out of line appor-| tionment’”’ of the proposed 8-Mile | Notre Dame Mission B sold in the U. S. increased from 54 million in 1947 to 270 million in $1, 000 Goes to Boys AUBURN HEIGHTS—The Au- Twe checks were presented to burn Heights branch of the Boys! club officials Friday night —one Club of America is $1,000 richer! for $856.08 from the ‘Auburn a at & y. COMPLETE MERGER — With the presenta? tion of a check from the Auburn Heights Parents Club, the organization completes the Auburn Heights branch of the Boys Club of The boys club treasury was, also boosted with a check from the Auburn Heights Teen Club, from the club's proceeds from on America. ceremony Were, its merger with ficials Harold Heights. David E. Andrews, treasurer. place at the Pontiac State Bank branch in Auburn - other amounting to $143.50 from the local Teen Club. The check presentation at the Pontiac State Bank building here _ Pontiac Press Pholo “th the past year. Participating in the Friday from left, Mrs. Donald F. Burt, Parents Club representative, and Boys Club of- C. Newingham, president, and The event took ot. iit ’ + Conducting Mission at White lake Now Mystery Blasts Reported WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — A| A number of area police depart- Hills, Brooklands Nand - Rochester. mission for women and high school| girls is being conducted at St.i | Patrick Church, Union Lake and! Hutthins Rds., through Jan. 25. Two Masses are being ce lebrated each week day during the mission. Evening services are at 8 p.m. The Rev. Daniel Coughlin and the Rev. Richard J. Collentine of the Holy Ghost Fathers of the tre are conducting the Dame, Ind., mission, A timilar mission for men and high schoo] boys will be held Jan. 25 to Feb, 1. The public is invited to attend the services. ~~ . ' Khe number of juvenile books ‘in Birmingham, Troy, Bloomfield | Over Wide Area Sunday — ments received numerous telephone calls both yesterday and today »| from residents asking what caused the explosions they heard from 2:30 a.m, to 12:30 p.m. Sunday. *® * *® The calls came from homeowners XN Community Chest Sets West Bloomfield Meet | WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP — The annual meeting of the 4West Bloomfield Community Chest Iwill be held 8 p. m. Tuesday at the township hall, 4460 Orchard Lake Rd. All contributors are invited. to attend and hear a report of the They complained mainly of the noise and broken dishes, Several residents said they either saw or heard planes overhead at the time of the @xplosions. Police checked with Selfridge Air Force Base where officials denied any of their planes were in the ~Boys’ Club,” 3 lub i in Area by the Parents’ Club eqnpletes its consolidation with the Boys’ Club— a move which was approved at a recent meeting of the two organi- zations. Parents,club money was raised by club projects last year which in- cluded the annual summer carni- val, a candy sale, dance, picnic and pancake supper, - * * ‘The check from the teen club represented the proceeds from the teenage dances held regularly throughout 1958. The merger of the Boys’ Club and its affiliated group, the Par- ents’ Club, is designed to ‘‘promote efficiency and understanding in dealing with the problems of the Mrs. Donald Burt, publicity chairman, said today. Newly elected officers are Har- old Newingham, president; Don- ald Burt, vice president; Frank Veen, secretary, and David FE. Meetings are held at 8 p.m. the first Wednesday of every month at the Community House on Squirrel Road. The membership now totals over 200. x & & The new group’s first objective is to continue its efforts to obtain a practical building site for a club house. The club now owns prop- erty on the Clinton River, which was a: gift. However, that site proved unsuitable for building be- - cause of the drainage problem, Mrs. Burt said. She added that it could be used = a playground. . Newingham- last “night “ex: ~ y 1 eresed his thanks to the mer- chants_and other clubs in Auburn Keights for their contributions w and help in the past. He added that the Boys’ Club “hopes to merit their continued support for the coming year in working for the same purpose— community betterment.” MSU Appoints Prof to Do Dairy Research - LANSING—Michigan State Uni- versity has ‘announced the appoint- area at the time the blasts were+ment of Dr. Harold D. Hafs as reported. Residents and ealice suspected jets planes breaking the sound bar- rier caused the disturbances. To Show Cancer Film ROCHESTER — A timely cancer film ‘will be shown at tomorrow night’s meeting of the Avon Center Hospital Guild to be held at the Avon Public Library here. The session is scheduled to start at 8 assistant. professor in the Dairy Department to do research work on dairy cattle reproduction. He succeeds the late Dr. Elwin Willett. Dr. Hafs, a native of Wisconsin, has written a number of articles on_animal reproduction. He received a bachelor’s degree in dairy farming at the University of Wisconsin in 1953 and master's and doctor’s degrees from Cornell University in 1957 = 1958, re wedding date has been set yet. | Thursday. a 1957. a __ TIS collections. p.m, __ spectively. = ; . x =~ | Tuesday, January 20. = FRERICKS BROS. In Starting their 14th year of business in Pontiac, Kaufman Restaurant General Coutractors Michigan, Faye and Elden Kilgore celebrate this week ) Mss ee by opening their new modern Restaurant. They Supply Company aout wring. 4 LAKE ROAD cordially invite all of their friends and customers 2139 GRAND RIVER ©. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN to visit with them in their new ‘restaurant. “DETROIT, MICHIGAN | . FRED W.MOOTE | -Hours 6:45 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Daily-—-Closed Sundays | H.H. STANTON ELECTRICAL, Inc. icon ani , Plumbing & Heatin g , gis w RON Eris CORNER AUBURN AND PERRY STREETS | us team dened PONTIAC MICHIGAN ___J Architects — EROH & FRIEDMAN, 1715 S. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac, Mich. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN fy oo : . . | | -a ae Coroner’ s Jury Clears Hospital ‘No Cause for Action’ in Traverse City Death of Patient TRAVERSE CITY w—A finding of “no cause for action” has been returned by the coroner’s jury : holding an inquest into the death of i. the arena since nightfall a-Traverse_ City State-Hospital pa- tient. a The finding was returned Satur- 137 Arrested. POUND, Va. (®—-Statée — fighting arena in a dense, 000 worth of game birds were con- fiscated. been Saturday. day when the jury completed a Br onze B ust two-day inquest that heard testi-) mony from 30 witnesses, including | 20 from the hospital. Dr. William Fishbeck, Grand ‘Traverse County Coroner, said the purpose of the inquest was to make public the circumstances of the death of Eldon Mason, 39, of Lake City. Mason died at the hospital Jan. for 3 Days NEW YORK (AP)—A 125-pound bronze bust is on the way back ‘to the New York University Hall of Fame after a mysterious three- 1 after undergoing surgery for a|44¥ abserice, ruptured intestine. Gov. Williams ordered an investi- gation into the death after Mason’s relatives charged he was mistreat- ed by hogpital attendants. Fishbeck\and Stuart Hubbell, county prosecutor, made a state- ment earlier which absolved the hospital and its employes of blame in Mason’s death. It said he suffered the intestinal injury be Dec. 18. The inquest was ordered to make public the facts turned up| by the Fishbeck-Hubbel] investiga- tion. To Speak at Boys Club KEEGO HARBOR — Raymond Bodgen, Mississippi regional dis- _ trict representative of Boys Clubs, entering the hospital The bust of James Kent, a chief justice of the State Supreme Court in the early 19th century, was tak- en from the hall Thursday night. _ An usher at a Bronx church found it Sunday on the sidewalk in front of the church, some three miles away. It was in good con- dition, Police and school officials blamed the disappearance on prankish students or fraternity pledges. Bill Asks Fair Prices for Independent Stores WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Alvin M. Bentley (R-Mich) intro- duced a bill today which would require mamufactuters to sell their products to independent mer- will be the guest speaker at the|chants at the same price they annual Boys Club district meeting here at 8 p.m. Tuesday. “ The meeting will be held in the _ clubrooms adjacent to the Roose-! ‘velt School. All area boys and| their parents are invited. charge their own retail _outlets.. Bentley also offered a resolu- tion calling on the House Judiciary | |Committee to launch an investiga-| tion of possible monopoly prac: | tices by large companies. Police swooped dewn on a large cock- wooded Four troopers out of uniform and two state agents reportedly had] ingling with the crowd of Atter Raid on Cockfighting Arena state policemen and Police said the owner of the ‘arena, Roy Lee Branham, 34, of Burpo, Ky., was charged on four counts—contributing to the de- linquency of miners, operating a lottery, engaging in rooster fight. ing, and operating a restaurant without a license. The other 36 persons arrested, including three women, | fighting. They had come from Ken- Goes AWOL tucky, Texas, Michigan and West{ block hangar before it was put Virginia—besides: Virginia. ae Branham was released under $3,- 000 bond for a hearing* in’ Wise Cdunty court Jan. 30. The other posted $300 to $500 bonds for hear-| ings on the same date. Found in special pens which lined the cinder block structure were 100 game birds, 15 of which had died from fighting wounds. The arena was located in the Bold Camp section, five miles from Pound and near the Kentucky bor- der. Shortly after pepe 4 other injured and two airrlanes destroyed: a force from : yesterday in a fire which pony area of Wise County early Sunday] building. and arrested 37 people. Some $10,- were Cessna planes, charged with engaging in rooster;}were destroyed ahd considerable | “two Planes Burned in Blaze at Sparta SPARTA (UPI)—One man was) 000 and £50,000. Aviation ‘Service, started while mechanics were re.) pairing a fuel line of an airplane. Splashing gasoline came in’ con- tact with a hot light bulb, starting the fire. Hareld Nagel, a pilot, suffered, minor burns. Two single-engine valued at $11,000 damage wasCaused to the cement out by firemen from Comstock Park and Rockford. Solon to Avoid Strain of Eyes by Quitting Job LANDER, Wyo. % — State Rep. A. J. Hardendorf, Republican, said | he is not going to run for re-| election this year. | ‘The’ reason, he said: ‘‘It's téo read the big stack of bills.”’ Fully Guaranteed Included Attachments $1.25 Week “We Sell What SPECIAL RECON pinlOn ED Free Home Demonstration—OR 3-9702 “Complete Parts and Repair Service on All Cleaners! | ; We Advertise! j CURT’S APPLIANCES 6183 Jameson The whopping total shown on the cash register tape above is the % . “households, according to a recent study. As long as someone's here & and all the other costs of daily living—if the breadwinner’s gone? | There’s a modern Prudential Insurance Plan that will help answer that question. It provides a guaranteed income for your family if something should happen to you. See Your PRUDENTIAL Agent (.. .and ask him about Pru’s remarkable new “Split-level”’ Premium Policy) ° Find your friendly Prudential Agent listed below: PONTIAC DISTRICT AGENCIES OFFICE 1350 West Huron St. _ Pontiac, Michigary C. £. MAISON, C.L.U. District Manager 2 Marshall Morse pelt (oe SS cost of a year’s groceries per family for millions of American. to pay it, things are fine. But who'll pay for the groceries— William Bonni Lee Shou Herbert Buchanan Staff Manager ake Orion Herman Kunze Percy Latimer Robert Eisele, Staff Manager Glenn Harding Chester Welch Homer Allen—Rochester Charles Fitzpatrick Rochester Associated With : -Agency, ution ’ John Eliason, Staff Lyle DeWitt—Royal Oak Robert Bevier—Birmingham Derwood Lemke—Birmingham Leo Linebaugh : James King—Romeo Hubert Wright 11—Clawson George Gran, Staff Manager Royal Oak anager Thornas. Anderson =k john Carbonare ; Robert Proctor bd Howard Hofiowell Walter Swiatek Earl Steiner, a 4 : t ]. Brooke Bennett ¥ f much of a strain on my eyes to‘ ' & blend your own shade Harotd Schneider, Staff Manager Joseph Mayes—Walled Lake Joseph Winkler—Walled Lake George Maltby—Milford Owen Stansell-—Fenton Robert Longstreth—Holly “~ Joseph Brenkert Birmingham Ordinary Office 2480 West Maple Rd Floyd T.- Pierce, Div. Mer. james Laidig Noel Reed Clair 1. Johnson Earl Swain Associated With » & CLEARANCE! Oe. : o SHOP TONIGHT ‘and FRIDAY NIGHT ‘til 9 O'CLOCK FAMOUS MAKE JUNIOR COATS 100°, wool plaids, tweeds and solids. Sizes 5-15. 26 only. p Petite, misses G women's coats including Shagmoor ~ G Dianes. Many styles, ~~ 6-20. V3 to V2 OFF ci FAMOUS MAKE WOMEN’S COATS Vs to 2 OFF Ls FAMOUS MAKE CAR COATS arts Vy to Yo OFF iiss and JUNIOR SUITS F isaie'seanets Va to Vo OFF Quality Seldom Found in a 3.99 Dress! WOVEN PLAID WASH ‘n’ WEAR COTTON *3.99 The quality of a much higher priced dress for only 3.99! Flattering woven plaid cotton that needs little if any ironing. Coat style, buttons to hem, self belt. Choose green or blue plaid, sizes 12-20, eat brie Also in a no-collar tab style in pink or blue. Waite'’s Daytime Dresses . . . Third Floor — Meet Miss Barbora Smith CHacles re) the Ra Beauty Consultant Drop in ‘for an in- ee dividual beauty -con- sultation. Have her -of made-to-order tace powder, loose or pressed in a compact, ad as you receive her beauty guidance Waile's Cosmetics . . Street Floor MATCH ACPA grag Gok 7 AP Vig Shee ee & e a 22% FAMOUS SCHRANK SCIENTIFICALLY TESTED LIKE A DOCTOR'S here from New York Today and Tomorrow NO-IRON ee > PAJAMAS IN COTTON PLISSE _«< hs b Uy i ia Ce “ha | Ni y \ =: : \ 7S . \\ , Ja ? i %e STETHOSCOPE-ON YOUR WATCH No haphazard watch repairing here! We don't hang ’ your watch on,a board for a week or two to check it. No, indeed! When you bring your watch in, we put it on the WatchMaster and this amazing elec- telling us exactly “tronic instrument prints a record what is wrong (see the “dad-ot”, above). We can then estimate proper charges, immediately, adding nothing by guess-work. When your watch if repaired, we check it again, assuring you ol “proven” efficiency of our work. —fasier, too! DEMAND THAT YOUR WATCH REPAIRS BE CHECKED ON A Watch —s tes ay » Neti een ed ES Master . Street. Floor Waite's Watch Repair. . e ironing comfort 32 to 40. Waite's Lingerie ; ..« Second Floor igimerons: Coote oma ae see “ tee il : i Special Purchase *2.99 Tailored style guaran- teed washable gayly striped cotton plisse pajamas that need no Elasticized sides for snug fit and Choose blue, pink, red or mint green stripes on white, sizes Reg. je $ t H AI! solid brass pull chain screen with ‘hanging brush and poker. Add new ac- cent to your fireplace now and save! FIREPLACE ACCESSORIES in Wood and Coal Grates. . || Bross Wood Bosket...°......... 9.98, _ Realistic Electric Firelogs 4.98 to 19.98 omnes ENSEMBLES, = $29.95 : | Waite’s Houseweres ... Fitth Floor ..2.98 to 9.98 i THE PONTIAC PRESS BAROLD A. PITZGERALD President and P Editorial Page pusher © Owned and Published Locally MEMBER or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 Dulles’ One-Man Show Unfair to Him, Country Over the past six years no one man has been as controversial a figure as Secretary of State JOHN FOSTER Duties. He has been attacked bit- terly by Democrats and Republicans alike. * * * Two counts stand out when the subject of his attacks is men- tioned. First it is the Secretary's concept of foreign policy and his ‘implementation of that policy; second his driving desire for try- ing to go everywhere, do every- thing and make all the important decisions himself. * * * Dropping the first count on over- all policy, consider the second and luis penchant for operating a one- man department. The Secretary of State is six years older and has been in rather poor health of late To date he has not had to cut back drastically on his globe circling schedule, which would tire most men 30 years his junior. It is reasonable to believe that any day now he will have to curb his energies. : * * Whe that time comes, (maybe tomorrow) what will happen in a Department of State geared to a system in which so much depends on the Secretary's personal atten- tion? Could private business oper- ate this way? The question is one that must be considered, how- — ever high one’s regard for Dulles may be. The Secretary states that he plans to remain as long as the President wants him. President EISENHOWER ts ~ noncommital. Perhaps the President should yield to some of the pressure and institute some sort of a change. * * * One rumor is that Tom Dewey may soon replace Dulles. Age would certainly be in his favor. At least it would seem to make sense if ethers in the State De- partment were delegated some of the tasks. ee, It is not fair to the man to expect him to keep up the harrowing pace that he has maintained over the years. Let's not push our luck by clinging to a system that makes DULLEs personally responsible for so much of the State Department's activities. - Riots in Leopoldville Shake Belgian Rule Recent uncontrolled rioting among the 400,000 Africans who live in Leopetdville, Belgian Congo, caused as much by hunger as by rigid police control, has stirred the Belgian Government. x + * Out of a total Congo population of about 13 million (one per cent European), 1.2- million Africans are wage earners. At the present time some 50,000 are unemployed, 25,000 in) Leopoldville. Belgian authorities refuse to give any public assistance to these unem- ployed but did offer to send them back (to their villages. Few ac- cepted as most had lost touch with their tribal past. Looking toward future independ- ence, the paternalistic Belgian authoritieSphave allowed African participation in govgrnment in the communes into which cities and towns are divided. Mayors in 10 THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by THe Powrssc Bares Company some 48 W. Huron Bt. Pontine, Michigan Trade Mark Datiy Except Sunday Russert Basser, Jonn Ao RI Executive Vice President Aasistant Advertising and Advertising Director Manager Howasrp A Prreoerarp 11, Warn Me ‘Teeapwrne. Vice President and Business Manager Jounw W. Pireoeraio Secretary ae Kditor Cireulalion Manager GO Manemare Jonna, Local Advertising Manager danny J. Ree RED. Geoase C Inman Managing Editor Classified Manager The Associated Presa is entiti¢ed exclusively to the use for republication of all toca! newa ‘printed in thts hewspaper as, well as all AP news dispatches The mT1s6 Press \s delivered by cartier for 40 cents a week: where carrier service is not Available “hy mail in Oskiand, Genesee, Livin pe Meeonb: Lapeer end Washtenaw Counties ft ta eAr: elsewhere (n Michigan and al) her plane i‘ he United States #20 00 a year. All mati Lge rpg ®yable in advance: has been ‘ons at ane nd clase rate at Pontiac, Michigaa. Member of of the 13 communes in Leopoldville are African. * * + An on the spot staff correspondent of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Don- ALD GRANT, reports that just’ before the trouble started one of these African mayors returned from a visit . to Belgium and was to attend a pub- lic meeting in the YMCA. However, required official persission for tke gathering had not been obtained from the Belgian authorities. The Congolese had their meeting anyway, the police arrived and the rioting started. kok ok By central African standards, the Belgian Congo is a favored place for natives. It has a high, standard of living from uranium, copper, cobalt and diamond indus- tries, About 42 per cent of its African population is literate com- pared with less than 10 per cent in French Equatorial Africa. Natives hold many jobs which are closed to them elsewhere and they can have voeational training. Many are shopkeepers, tech- nicians and ‘professional people * * ~ The Congolese have everything but political freedom which Belgium feels should come in about 10 years. It. may be much sooner but let’s hope that in the meantime the administra- tion, which. has had unysually good relations with the natives, eases un- necessary police restrictions and that when freedom is achieved, it will not | be abused. . » The Man About Town Ice Is Too Thick Would Have Hurt Winter Industry Fifty Years Ago. Glasses: What can change the personality of a driver — especially if emptied too often. “Fifty years ago a winter like the present would have been a near calamity to what then was an Important Industry In the Pontiac area,” writes George Spellman of Waterford, In those days thousands of tons of ice were harvested each winter on our lakes, to furnish refrigeration for Pontiac, Detroit and other cities Hundreds of carloads were shipped dally, and much more was packed away later ship- top Indus- in sawdust In ice houses, for ment. It ranked among the tries locally. The ideal thickness for lce was 15° to 18 inches Any that was thicker than that was difficult to cut and handle. The present ice on most of those, same lakes is so thick that tts harvest would be prac- tically impossible. Since the advent of artifical refrigera- tion, the business of harvesting natural ice has joined the historica] horse and buggy. A oN J A muskrat that entered the cellar of Mr. and Mrs, Burton Smith at 5865 Crescent Road, a few evenings ago was given an apple, which {ft ate and de- parted. It has since been returning every evening for more food, and now stands 1 good chance of adgptlan My good scout over at Fl um, Barney McAra, sends word that the first allewoman jury In Michigan's history was on duty_in that city 40 vears-ago today A special note just received from Terrill D. Stevens, . of the Forestry Departnient of Michigan State University, urges all growers of Christmas trees in the Pontiac area (and there now are many of them) to attend the annual meeting of thegstate growers association at Kellogg Center, East Lansing, on Feb 3 Bird feeding gives a great opportunity to study the characteristics of our feath- ered friends, and compare them to human beings we know, according to Mrs. Laura Neifert of Waterford. She says the blue jays are the biggest bluffers and the robins the most easily bluffed. With the outdoor temperature hovering around 10 above, Mrs. Herman Harshfield | of Walled Lake saw a brilllant butterfly hatch from a cocoon which she plucked ~ from a bush in her yard last fall and has since kept Indoors. a Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Shaver of Sylvan Lake; golden wedding. Ulysses 8. G_ Polance of Keego Harbor; 87th birthday. lad Frank Russell =. 2 of Lapeer; 80th' birthday. 2 oe » 7S of re POLICE: There’ Nos Do You Follow Him? oan ING as f ty Reina! “4 ; st, | ou R CADE * : : é - %, COU yy, TION we meee IMTIME o ", "we a? . ro SRE Fag ye < David Lawrence Asks: What Is Behind Warren’s Action? WASHINGTON—Chief Justice Earl Warren has resigned as a member of the American Bar As- sociation—but how he did it and why | something of a mystery. He says he wrote a letter of resig- autumn of 1957, The association's secretary Says no-such-letter was received. Only when a bill for current dues * was pre- sented to’the Chief Justice did the association learn that he wanted to resign. To clarify the matter, the Justice now has written a formal letter of resignation, but he does not give any reasons. Rumors have been current here for some dime, however, that the Chief Justice was with- drawing from the American Bar Association. They were heard more often just after the Con- ference of State Chief Justices adopted last August, by a vote of 36 to 8, a report critical of various decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. LAWRENCE It has Been widely reported that ‘thief Justice Warren was,not only ae at the 1957 actidt’ bit was yp ticularly disturbed when a speech criticizing Supreme Court decisions was delivered on Aug. wo, 1958, hy Chief Justice John R. Dethmers of Michigan, chairman of the Conference of State Chief Justices. This was at the annual dinner in honor of the judiciary given by the -American Bar Association's sec- tion of judicial administration. Besides’ Chief Justice Warren, Justices Clark and Brennan of the Supreme Court of the United States were present and heard the Michi- gan Chief Justice say: “The conference report, so far from attacking the court, expresses only its concern with certain of the decisions... The power of the court to uphold and preserve human Hberty and the rights of the people must not be crippled, curbed or destroyed. The confer- ence report would have none of this “It concludes, therefore, in most respectful and temperate terms, and with extreme restraint, to urge upon the court, that, particu. larly in the field of determining federal and state powers and reta- tionships, YW exercise that greatest of all judicial powers, the power of judicial sélf-vestraint, by con- stant recognition and giving effect to the vital difference between what, en the one hand, the Con- stitution prescribes or permits and that which, on the other, may, from time to time, to the majority of the court, seem desirable or undesirable, and by adhering firm- ly te its tremendous, strictly ju- dicial powers and eschewing so far as possible the exercise of essen- tially legislative powers, contenting - itself with use of the policy-making role, where at all necessary, with only-the utmost care and modera- tion, The Country Parson > We 1-19 G “1 gteas we want God to pro. — tect us from harm but not pre: vent us from exposing =e to i.” nation in the- Chief 7 tors,” “Such Is Me general tenor of the report, offered in a spirit of good will and’ cooperation in the public * interest. If, perchance, it should come t6 the attention of the = esteemed members of the court~ it is our fervent wish and hope that it will be received and con-_ sidered in like fashion.” . But evidently it wasn't. The comment among members of the bar around Washington was that not onty was -Chief-dustice War—. ren annoyed but that so were the other two members of the Su- preme Court who were present. It seems incredible, however, that any members of the federal judiciary—particularly those who are so quick fo crack down on the Intolerance of school boards or state bar associations when they frown upon teachers or applicants with a Communist background— would be intolerant about speeches or criticisms Dy fellow members of the legal profession, especially state jurists. (Copyrtght, 1959) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Wherefore, beloved, seeing that ye took for such things, be dili-- gent that ye may found of him in peace, without spot, and blameless.—IL Peter 8:14. * * * The expectations of Jife depend upon diligence: and the mechanic that would perfect his work, must first sharpen his toels.—Confucius. Dr. William Brady Says: Consult Family Physician — Before Hunting Specialis From a city the size of Portland, for a specialist's counsel himself San Diego, Louisville, Rochester er Atlanta comes a story which, these days, is only too likely. Putfing on her makeup, a wom- an applying mas- cara to her eye- lashes got one of the hairs from the mascara brush in her eye. Her husband called 17 eye specialists, most of whom did not answer the phone. Those DR. BRADY who did answer would not see her until the next the . office. morning at * ##* * There was a doctors’ convertion in town, and the man and his ‘wife went to the hotel where many of the doctors were reveling and -le- nanded to see one of them. After 30 minutes one of the, doctors looked at the eve, re- moved the hair and charged $50. I'm astonished to know that there are 17 eye specialists in a- city of 300,000 population. But then, so-called specialists are a dime a dozen these days—in the country as a whole they nearly, if not quite, outnumber general practitioners or “ordinary ~ doc- as you credulous customers call ‘em. Ordinary doctors or “these doctors around here.” SERVED ‘EM RIGHT! . a The doctor who unreveled for five minutes fo pluck the hair from the woman's eye should have charged a larger fee. People who go to such extremes to keep up with the Joneses ought to pay, sub- stantially for their snobbery, Any ordinary doctor, “any of these doctors around here, could remove a foreign body from, the eye as well as could. the most eminent specialist. If these people had less money and more brains they'd call their family physician in’ such an. emergency. But that's -just the trouble. Family doctors are ordinary doctors, these doctors around here. In an emergency it ts comforting to know . one, ‘still more so to know the doctor who knows you. The $50 snobs never get to know the doctor very well. They run- or herself. There is a significant point here which I am afraid the cred- ulous customers of “clinic” rack- eteers and trick specialists do not get—namely, that when the fam- ily physician refers patients to a specialist he chooses a real spe- clalist, not one of the dime-a- dozen kind te whom ninnyham- mers run with all their everyday ailments. © Bigned letters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by. Dr. William Brady, if a stamped self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Press. Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1958) grew up,” $ Voice of. the People So Much Cheating in Class Has. Serious I mplications’ rrancliety ssid (ea basen casket oboat lating stutents get gway, wih Ravers 4 ta ee " cheating in school. If there were strict punishment for those who cheat, x * It might not seer important to you, or you thick % Gesen't cur cern you, but it does. Probably 75 per cent of kids in school have cheated once or more on tests. Would you like to go te a doctor that got his degree by cheating, or a teacher training your child if he had te cheat to become a teacher? * * This really is ‘serious. Something should be done if we want to keep a strong America. _ ‘We'd Like More Action, Less Talk’ Why should Pontiac taxpayers pay Mr. Eastman $12,000 a year to do the same job the Police Officers’ . Association has been doing for free? I believe the game was called ‘“‘Down With Straley - So We Can Be Chief.” For a city that’s so full of vicegjone or two raids cleaned it up. Boy, taxpayers, it would almost be cheaper to let the vice go on as to pay $6,000 to Eastman to play general.on two raids. I don't think we, the people, a are ». getting our money’s worth. Why not more action and less talk? Mrs. Taxpayer ‘Here’s Easier Way to Influence People’ Someone’ wrote a book and got rich on ‘‘How to Win Friends and Influence People.'’ I can explain it all in one sentence instead of a few hundred pages: Just Keep Your Big Mouth Shut Most of tHe Time. - Jacob Stillman Carol Schults ‘Teens Would Be _ Arrested for It? I read the article about ridding Oakland County of stray dogs, and I give that woman three big cheers. I live in Waterford where” dogs run in packs and it «isn’t even safe to put your child outside to play. If a teenager caused as much trouble as some dogs do, he'd be arrested, but a dog can ruin your property and endanger your child and yourself, and nothing can be done about it. Mrs. Don Kitchin 9560 Berkley St. “Why Hasn't Soapy ‘Thought of This?’ Here is a solution to Williams” dilemma, Maybe his pal Reuther will come to his rescue and put the strike fund he has built up at the Governor's disposal. Better to use it that way than fer strikes to forge more indus- tries to leave this State of Con- fusion, Funny Williams hasn't thought. of that instead of the Veterans’ Fund. Wonderin’ Grammar Commission Sawt to Aid Spelling WASHINGTON (AP)—It_ wil b “les trublsum tu spel things rite if Rep. Harlan Hagen (D-Calif) has his' way. .Hagen has introduced a bill to establish a National Grammar Commission to reform the spell- ing of English words and to pub- lish an official U.S. dictionary. “Our language is In a constant state of change anyway, and we might as well do it scientifically,” he said in an interview. It isn’t that Hagen himself is a poor speller, .“T used to win auiike contests back in North Dakota where I he said. * * * It’s just that the cies, vagaries, and vaciilations” of spelling are so JEN he said. The idea he is plugging was de- veloped by Homer W. Wood, pub- lisher of The Porterville Daily Re- porter in Hagen’s California dis- trict, Hagen has no specific recom- mendations for spelling revision. He'd leave that up to the Gram- mar Commission. He mentioned such things as ‘‘fotograf’’ and “thru'’—spellings which he noted are now used by some news- papers, “A complete phonetic spelling looks ridiculous — that isn’t my idea," he said. “I contemplate adoption of a phoneticism that “inconsisten- would be completely acceptable. The idea is to make spelling easy and also to shorten it.” Hagen introduced his bill in the last session of Congress but didn't press it, This year, he said, he intends to ask for a hearing be- fore the House Education Com- mittee, “I'm not so naive as to believe we could put this over without some sort of mass support from over the country,” he said. . * * * He said he has received a flood of letters about the idea, mostly favorable. Support has come, Hagen said, from newspaper publishers, edu- cators, and others who said it would simplify the process of reading and ease the difficulties of teaching. Hagen doesn’t have any chil- dren and said he doesn't know how much time the average school child spends on spelling lessons. “But if you could shorten that time, they could devote it to other studies,’ he said. Not all Hagen’s mail on the sub- ject has been favorable. There were, for example, the three per- sons who wrote him: * * * “The government which governs least. governs best." “This, .of cors, wud b a boon for 5th graders.” “Let natcher tak its cors.” Case Records of a Psychologist: Calls Paper ‘University in Print’ Ogden Reid has offered a for- mula for a topnotch newspaper which mogt ed&tors subscribe to. And the unique example helps corroborate what Mr. Reid has in ‘mind. For editors are prezies of vast “Universities in Print” and every college tries to -be a “steerer.” not a “mir- rér,” of civilization. . By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE A - 431: Ogden R. Reid, aged about 31, is a former publish- er in New York. * *® * “A good newspaper should Eels said Mr. Reid, as he opposed the view that says a § newspaper should simply reflect the life in its com- munity, , Many leading & editors and pub- lishers agree with Mr. Reid. They fee] that a good newspaper should be a “steerer” of current. civilj- ORANE zation instead of merely a ‘‘mir- ror’ thereof. This is much the difference be- tween 9 photograph versus an ar- tist’s picture. . The camera. takes everything within the range of its lens. But aroung from specialist to special> & good artist highlights certain ist find, eut of office hours, their specialists hardly kngw them. . * * * Occasionally it may be necessary to consult a specialist without you™ 4 physician's knowledge or advice, but one who had a good family doctor need never hesitate to tell the doctor he wants to do x0. Moreover a good family doctor wants patients to do so whenever they wish, and indeed often asks elements to create a definite ef- fect = * * * An editor doesn't need to. take partisan view or inject bias in jer to steer the’ neni of his area S He operates a great woh iversity in Print,” and all col- leges try to steer our thinking eee ring atenm oSenere outlook, For example, newspapers are noted for ferreting out hidden crimes and discovering embezzle- ment even in school funds. But an Indianapolis paper recent- ly added a new twist to the way in which newspapers cooperate -with the police. . * *« * Several unsolved murders had occurred in that big city. So the paper offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to’ the arrest and conviction of the killer in each case. Since many people are afraid to report information, lest the underworld or the killer’s friends will waylay them, the paper used a novel plan which all newspa- pers might profitably imitate, It asked any reader with in- formation about one of the mur-- ders, to send the tip or clue in an unsigned letter. “Put a number at the top of the page,"’ it urged, ‘‘and then put the same number at the bot- tom, — x* * * “Tear off the bottom part of the page and keep it. The humber thereon and the jagged edges will later identify you." This ingenious method thus pro- tected the identity of the per- son offering the tip. For he diin’t heed to reveal his identity til the rer was tried and in prison. Furthermore, if such a person didn't want to claim the reward, even then he could easily hand his half of the page to his favorite charity, or to a church, YMCA, Scout Troop, ete” FEAR OF REPRISAL- now , Many intelligent Americans aré- afraid of reprisals from the - ~ lawless elements if they try to help the police. And that fear isn’t unfounded, either, for here in Chicago we have had vital witnesses slain be- fore the trial occurred where they were to testify. * * So the method so ably spon- sored by the Indianapolis paper meets a long overdue need in America. I have cited this instance to show a specific example in sup- - port of Ogden Reid's motto for a good newspaper. © You readers should thus be grateful that you have such de- fenders of our liberties and ex- posers of corruption as the news- paper. Its daily price would be | cheap even if it cost us % cents a peg fee Dr aware © te George W_ Crane bee nig en, exclosing” ‘eres uatate | c ing 8 stam ~edareeed cad See te cover tots when you send charta and na (Copyright, aed ‘ | 4% ae [ : a y : * 2 i \ * nautical Society - panions, _ with a sweeping white mustache, says with a chuckle: one told thém I wasn't, and they| _ decided to present me with this. Of course, it won’t make any dif- _ ference to me at my time of life. I will just go on _pottering about _ in my workshop, the way I always have done.” , Girls Frolicking Sixteen terrified teen - age girls _ they went sliding dizzily down an _ ice-glazed ski trail on 3,000-foot high Cranmore Mountain Sunda}, * * * - Mood the girls decided to try slid-' ing. thrown against trees, brush and rocks as they plumimietted 100 of snow. . i t | about the trail, bruised and bleed: Di Spirito, 16, who suffered pelvic. ' and lumbar spinal fractures and | held at Memorial Hospital for less serious injuries, oy SEVEN BELLY LANDING—A New York- to-Texas Eastern Air Lines -DC7 rests close to a clump of trees after a belly landing at Moisant International Airport. A fire truck stands by after extinguishing ie in both port engines) — plane made the emergency landing Britain's F light’ Pioneer | Found Living, Honored LONDON W®—The Royal Aero.| has discovered. with some astonishment, that the man who designed Britain's first/T. C. Moore-Brabazon, now Lord successful airplane engine 50 years ago is still active. He is Gustavus Green, 93. In belated recognition of his contri- bution to aviation the society has made him oe of its sonceary com- * * & Green, a spruce, erect figure “They thought I was dead. Some- Green, like the Wright broth. ers, started out’ in a bicycle shop. Unlike the Wrigh{ broth- ers, he never wanted to fly like a bf¥d. But he got interested more than a half céntury ago in creating reliable engines for men who did have that dream. Turns to Agony 16 Teenagers Injured. in Dizzy Slide Down Ice-Glazed Ski Trail NORTH CONWAY, N.J. (AP)— were injured, one seriously, when The trail had been closed to ski- ing as hazardous. In a frolicsome | Almost instantly their speed was beyond their control and they were yards down the steep, icy trail. About an inch of glare ice, left) by freezing rain, encrusted a foot | * + * When found, they were strewn, ing, some unable to stand. Most, seriously injured was Carol) bladder injury. Five girls were Ten others were treated at the hospital and re- leased. The girls were among about 200, members of St. Patrick's Catholic’ Youth Organization of Lawrence, Mass., who went to the ski resort on the parish's second annua] win- ing year it powered the biplane Brabazon,’ used fof the first cir- cular one-mile flight ever accom- plished in this country. 7 x « * Green has been off the ground only one. In 1913 he made a brief pioneer, Col. F. B. Cody, the Next| day Cody was killed in the same aircraft. “That was. enough for mez’ saiq ~ Green. During World War I Green turned his engineering talents té lightweight engines for motor torpedo beats and submarine chasers. When the war ended his dector told him he had been working too hard. Green took | ‘Search for Saginaw Boy, . tin Statewide Alert | land state police continued a search Noday for’a 16-year-old rural Sagi- | He perfected his first engine. of naw youth who has been missing|inches tall, '60 horsepower in 1908. The follow-|ince last Wedneniey. * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 when the pilot saw he was missing the runway at the fog-shrouded None of the 50 passengers or five crew members was airport. injured. AP Wirephote Department | SAGINAW \®-—-Sheriff’s deputies | | pounds. * The Sayinew County issued a _ state-wide lalert yesterday for Roy Pepin. Deputies ‘said Pepin failed to, return home after visiting a friend | : ithe night of Jan. 14, Pepin was described as 5 feet 3 weighing about 130 He has brown hair and ee and was wearing dungarees, a |- Sheriff’s|sports shirt and a leather jacket. the doctor's advice to retire. Since then his hobby has been} making has about 150 in his Twickenham home. Recently, while cleaning out his| coal cellar, he found one of his original 1908 engines. He is re- storing it to workable condition. It probably will wind up in the British National Aeronautical Mu- seum. s See... see EON CONV Mic Get Plane and Steamship Space...Use AAA’s Complete TRAVEL BUREAU SERVICE Agents for all Air & Ship Lines NO EXTRA COST TO YOU Also headquarters for: © Foreign Documents and - Road Guides. e Auto Shipments, rentals and purchase. © Guided and Independent -Foreign Tours &. Cruises. 76 Willianed’ Street FEderal 5-1451 FLY TODAY] clocks an watches. He} ter sports Logit Ses Re age ‘ ne ee aaaye dept. stores | SAVE! MONDAY | AND TUESDAY ONLY P33 prone ose ese ao ape, dh teaiacciad Limited quantities! On sale while they last! Hurry! . Reg. 29.98-$33 flannelette pj's coats for women. for women in popular styles 1.66 18.88 Charge It Charge It For gals of all ages! Clutch, slim line, tra- Man-tailored, mandar- pee Flannels, ips iti or Peter Pancollars. Many pile lined. cE Prints or stripes. Sizes in all sizes—Rush int 34 to 40 in group. Free Alterations! Rog. 2.29 2-pe. sharge it i" ; harge it Fill Your |; " solids, ie Closet. vest towe] | Ctheloth; «29° - 6/$) 99° Special! Two styles in cotton bras Circular stitched, white. 32 to 40. 2 89° Reg. 23.98. Genuine Meimac dinnerware _Prolon service for 8. With 45 pieces! 18.87 Reg. 29.98. Deluxe stroller-sleeper Padded canopy. Rubber tires. Guard. 19.99 Not at Drayton Plains Reg. 3.98, 42x84” pinch pleat drapes ulst quality cotton-rayon prints, now ». 2.99 Reg. 2.95. 21x27” downey bed pillows 25% crushed turkey, 75% chicken feathers. 1 67 - Reg. 5.98. 80x90” warm blankets Seal of Quality rayon-nylon blends. 4.88 Sale! Yaptiy steal gym set for kids “Trapeze, air glide, rings and swings. - 16.88 Downtown AND Drayton Pleins. EIGHT. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY,. JANUARY 19, 1959 Deaths in Pontiac. and Newby Areas MICHAEL T, ANGEL Service for Michael T. Angel, four-month-old son of Mr. Robert Angel, of 80 W. Longfellow Ave., Tuesday at neral Hill Cemetery. The infant was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital Satur- dav morning. Surviving besides his parents is; a brother, Robert J. at home RALPH CRAIG Palph Craig> 34, of 440 Michael- Donelson-Johns will be held at 1:30 pm.” Fu-! Home, with burial in Oak; (a farmer, came here from Flint. He leaves a brother, Horace A. and Mrs, Cooper of Pontiac. The .body is at the Pursley Fu- neral Home. MRS. ERNEST McMICHAEL | Mrs. Ernest (Isabell) McMichael, '67, of 308 Fourth Ave. died of a! stroke at Pontiac General Hospital| She had been Cemetery, Imlay City. Sunday afternoon. in ill health for four years. Mrs. McMichael,~ who came to, ber of the Dames of Malta. ne besid son Rd., Avon Twp., ¢ied Sunday 8Pe 5% sais Mrs. Pauline merning at Pontiac General How Frey of Fort Werth, Tex. Mrs pital of injuries sustained in an [Dorothy Alnugs, . vitamobile accident Dec, 25 Mrs. Marlene McCracken, Mrs. An emplove of the O ikland Coun ty Stainless Ware Co Lake, he was a Oakland Coynty his -wife Isa Mrs Ida Bar- Surviving besides bell, and his mother ren of Pontiac Johnnie, Rose Marie, Judy Diane Jack, Gladys, and [ aiph BE. Cri ig all at home. He also leaves 2 Jr Walled member of the p Sportsmen's Club |p ¢ 5 Virginia McDonald and Mrs. Carol Frasier all of Pontiac: and two ns, Charles and James, both of A brother, Ellis Kase) ,ontiac also survives. Service will be held at 1 p.m, |Wednesday from the futon Fu- ontiac. are six chi ldres ne ral Home. MES. DONALD J. OMANS ’ The Rosary will be recited at six brothers, Ottis, William, Elmer,'g pm. Tuesday at the Huntoon Chester, Lloyd, and Josept y Craig, | Funeral Home for Mrs. Donald. and five sisters Mrs Gladys’ (Derothy K.) Omans, 41, of 30 Thompson Atrs. Trene McFarlen, Ogemaw Rd., who died Sunday Mrs Margaret Hill, Mrs, Ruth | morning of injuri ies suffered in an. auto accident. Service will be held) are two sons, Paul J. and Re- | Walker, and Mrs. Mary Jane Da- ill of Pontiac ie body is at the neral Home oul Huntoon Fu- JOSEPH COOPER Joseph Cooper, 89. of 139 Rae hurn’St., died Sunday afternoon, following ay: iliness of #wo years. Mir Cooper, who last worked Aas © NOTICE © | Que to the recent death of Mrs Mary Shéck we will be closed all day Tues- day FLORIDA- BAR r “§2aS, Saginaw e * ote ats S EREGGR BE aan frig Ee Ee at 10 a.m. Michael Catholic .Church, with: burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Omans, who cime * here from Lima, Ohio, is survived by her husband; her mother, Mrs George Pickering of Lima, and a son, Michael, at home : JOHN ARNN ROMEO — Service for John Arnn, 73, 234 Hart St, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Roth's with bur | died! ‘Home for Funerals here, la) in Rorfieo Cemetery He af his home Saturday after “a long iliness member of io 4), b&w AM He leaves his wife, Ora; four daughters, Mrs. Mary Simms and Mre. Dorothy Hill, both of Ro. meo, Mre, Helen Meadows of Royal Oak and Mrs. Sarah Albrit- ten of Higbland Park. = a Mr. Arnn Romeo Lodge WAS A i ee NOW OPEN... 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Our huge floor SIMMOr 4S, BERNE, this new compare the price and « space displays the famous DAYSTROM. with tags showing just how much you save by shopping at 5,6 Warehouse Furniture Sales and suiper market method makes of furniture REMBRANDT, STANLEY; cary’ home the Savi ings | | hildren and 2 great- grandchildren, 3. Lula Corelett, |“? . o* . | life-saving medal, Dr. M. C. Mad-| ‘| Gates, ‘the class of 1959- Four sisters, one brother, seven grandchildren and two great-grand- be staged in the summer. of ~1960.- {can ands Medical Assn., died Sun- children also are among survivors. JOHN PANDUREN OXFORD — Service for John Panduren, 81, 816 Glaspie Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Bossardet- Reid Funeral] Home here with burial in Sacred Heart Surviving are four daughters, Mrs, Pauline Polly, Mrs. Lillian Pontiac from Dlinois, was a mem. | Hauxwell, Mrs,. Georgina Schultz, ‘all of Oxford, and Mrs. Katherine her husband |! Densmore of Plymouth: three sons, Nichojai and Charles, both of Ox- ford, and Carl of Dryden: 22 grand- MRS. CONR AD UR. THIBODEAU FRANKLIN VILLAGE — A Re quiem Mass for Mrs. Conrad R (Agnes G.) Thibodeau, 61, 24 Tudor Lane, will be held at Bitmingham. Burial will) be im Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Detroit. She died at her home Sunday. Mrs. Thibodeau: had lived in the area for 30 years. Her husband is; a production manager with Ford | Motor Co, Surviving besides her husband Wednesday at St. | -bert E., three daughters, Mrs. Yvonne Marks, Mrs. Kita Brown and Mirxs. Ann Wolford, and four grandchildren, The body will lie in state at the William Vasu Funeral Home in Royal Oak, unti? the service. Plan Supessonic Rings for AF Academy Class DENVER, Colo. ) — Rings to be presented to the first gradu ating class of cadets from the Air Force Academy ‘have been flown through the sound barrici ceremonies over eastern in sonie Colorado An F86 Sabrejet carry the more than 200) class rings which will be presented to The ring aft annual af- core mony wtll- become i fair fyr all graduating classes SEALY, etc Come in, looke around at the territic buys—~There'll be sales people to help you, but you'll have. all the opportunity in the world to compare the quality, FE 5-9279 A nominal charge is This policy passes on one of our greatest savings to you. @ No special discounts to any groups or individuals. Everyone pays the i such names as KROEHLER All plainly priced Save Money on Every Purchase Whether It Is a Single Unit or a Complete House Full of Nationally Known Furniture! All the Famous Names Are Here! 90 Days Same as Cash-—-Bank Terms Available of 12 t0 24 Month Payments. Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday Nights—Closed All Day day. 20 Franklin Rd. Just Off S, Saginaw. s- Gi TERMS: CPE DP t WAREHOUSE URNITURE SALES o ms, Wipdnes- Oberammergau. Plans Passion Play for 1960 OBERAMMERGAU, Bavaria — Oberammergau is preparing for its next Passion. Play, which will A fund hag been established for expanding and -improving facil- ities for accommodating travelers who will come to see the 300-year- old play. which ig given ry 10 years. The village has decided not to let movies be made of the play. Boys Saves Mom’s Life NORFOLK, Va. uP--Jesse Couch learned how to apply a tourniquet by watching télevision programs 10° a.m. Wednesday at Holy Name | | Church | was used to and the result may be a Boy Scout drey says the 10-year-old boy's ac tion in applying a tourniquet on) his mother’s arm after an automo- bile accident saved her life. doctor is signing a certificate that effect. to ‘Macomb Attorney Dies. DETROIT (UPI) — Raymond \Grubba, 31, a prominent Macomb’ ‘County attorney, died Saturday in|~ He had peace in \Henry Ferd Hospital. been justiée of the 'Ce anter Line | 2 Ny Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CHICAGO (AP) — Dr, Ernest E. Irons, 81, widely known physi- cian and a former presiden’ of the. day of a heart attack. ‘Dr. Irons, a general practitioner for more than 50 years, was former dean jof the Rush Medical College in ithe Institute of Medicine in Chi- cago. He was born in Council Bluffs, lowa. * * * ST. CHARLES, Il (AP) — Col. Edward J. Baker, 90, Philanthro- pist and sportsman owner of Grey- hound, the famous trotter, died Saturday, Baker acquired the 38- The| ier-in-law, John W. (Bet a Million) Chicago financial tycoon, in 1918 after the death of Gates’ iwife. * *® * CLEVELAND, (AP) — William iA. Stinchcomb, 80, who is given | major credit for greater Cleve- land’s “emerald necklace’ of parks, died Saturday. He was ;named in 1921 as first director of the Metropolitan Park System and| K served until his retirement in 1957. * * * GROTON, Conn. (AP) — Capt. George W. Nelson, 54, command- ‘ing officer of the Coast Guard In- all © For GOODNESS SAKE... Chicago and one-time president of} million-dollar fortune of his broth-! sss: sue ts unre, had Sem day of pneumonia. Ex-Charlevoix Publisher, Mayor Dies in Milford MILFORD-#—Will-E--Hampton, | 7-" former newspaper publisher and mayor of Charlevoix, died yester- day in a convalescent home here. He was 94. A native of Harbor Springs, Hampton started his newspaper career on his brother's paper, The Harbor ,Springs Indepefident. In 1890 he owner and editor of the Charlevoix Courier and , owner and publisher of the Niles Daily Sun. He served as Charlevoix's mayor for two terms and as an alderman, eity postmaster and president of Charlevoix School Board. the Bury Ist Parkway Toll ‘in Chest at Dedication J. & — There's: treasure buried at Telegraph Hill) HOLMDEL, N, Park off the Garden State Park- way here. But it’s not the loot local legend says was buried by Captain Kidd. It's a quarter, which was buried in a_ chest when the park was dedicated in 1954. the. first toll | ever collected on the parkway,) Rail Executive Dies in Detroit Hospital, q DETROIT (UPI) ~ Howard In- Ingalls was an assistant vice- president of the New York Central system. His father, George H. In- Central, and his grandfather, - ville E. Ingalls, was president of several midwestern railroads. galls, was a vice-president of the) FUEL OIL No Contract Necessary Call Today Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Bivd. _ Phone FE 5-6141 m2 SAVE — 10% Make your selection now for delivery this spring prior to Memorial Day. May 30th. A small deposit will hold any order. A Telephone Call Will Bring a Courteous Salesman to Discuss Your Needs Telephone FE 56931 WINTER DISCOUNT SALE —! INCH MEMORIALS, INC. erry Street 864 N. P shop here for food value ! PORK SHOULDER Waxw . S. No. 1 michigan! £ RED ROSE. PORK & BEANS POTATOES: 50 OZ. FAMILY Size - CAN aye pet > - a> BLUE ACOFFEE RIBBON MARGARINE C ff 2135 Dixie Highway at Telegraph Rd. Open Weekdays 9:00 A. M,-to 9:00 P.M. » Open Saturdays 8:00 As-M, to 9:00 P2AM. _ CLOSED SUNDAY 7580 HIGHLAND RD.” {mes Williams Lake R Open Weekday 9:00 A. M. te 5:00 a CLOSED SUNDAY . Always Plenty of Free Parking at All Food Town Mabkets 3 * ~ a\ 1200 Baldwin Ave. at Columbia Open. Weekdays 9:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. _OPEN SUNDAY 9. A.M. to 6 P.M. te. =~ tX%. . _____._THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 NINE = ad Bob Considine Says: ees — La a | a nea Pilot Gives $5,000 Bonus to Advance U. N.Y NEW YORK — United Air Lines -genior pilot Charles Dent was given a $5,000 bonus by United's president, Pat Patterson, for mak- ing a beaut of a wheels-up landing at Los Angeles Internationa] Air- port in October 1957. : He promptly gave the money to the United States Committee for the United Nations, a non-partisan ‘group whose aim in life is to get OPEN TONIGHT SUPER BARGAINS at B & G ALL PLASTIC] . ‘ALL PAINT WALL TILE 40% OFF 90% OFF |: ‘our Misiones bas Wrought sntehd |. sorrow to mankind. . . ete.” nt is sure that Abraham Lin- “The world knows we do know! “Other means may succeed; this how to save it; we — even wejcould not fail. The way is plain, ihere — hold the power and bear peaceful, generous, just — a way Rumbough Jr.,. president of the American Totalisator Company, Inc., and chairman of the U.S. Committee for the UrN. * * * Dent’s specialty since then has been industry interested in stamping its wares with the stand- ard U.N. world-map and laure! aoe Hae Ss nem “We De ve,’’ anoure TOWN coln, speaking of an issue of his the responsibility. We shall nobly which, if followed, the world will) own day, held the dream of U.N.ease or meanly lose the last best|forever applaud and God must for- : ever bless.” a when he said: hope of earth. more Americans interested in the} “Men and women have lived e Viny! rE 4 - b ee eee Reg. Ac, Now 2c fy ae ae | of a briefing with maps and ‘ e Ma Paint Rome (et) Capt Deets) ores | charts. “There is comfort in the Reg. 6c, Now 2kc “Yep, felka . . . she: grew another Masonry was surprised. The good-looking recégnition of a trade-mark. a = ao Aa eer pers! @ Latex Wall Bond i & n @ ie a T- ont weeney cers: ee S Think of what the star of David, Reg. 6c, Now 3c LET to se their fine selection of | @ Flat Enamel Undercoat University, has (ees all-out. for rege la have : _. : thi rk for ~ long time. In ; . . . we 2 : fact he's just about its foremost | “We may not make the U.N. wing! Plastic AS SEEN ON TV CEILING TILE SPAT I ER - ‘symbol as known as they, of course, ve ti . eave but it seems to me we can make iny! Fiastic | New Armstrong |. Fix Up That ASPHALT it her pece mere uN OWN the people as familiar with it as, TILE Excelon Tile Recreation Room TILE airline erase the U.N. SyM-\say the little listening to His -_ . bol it bad place on its ate after Master's rete fe shape of s Lifetime Guarantee (Metallic. Series) — 8s Sq. Ft. a consistent campaign by is0la-|:coke’ bottle: tionist and anti-U.N. groups, one) Did you know that one of the 3° Ea. ‘ peter pee: 16x32” Size Ae an of which objected because the|thngs that delayed the U.N. ob- presence of the design on _ the side of an airliner meant that, while in flight, “it would be dis- servation team that went to the border in the Lebanon crisis was SPECIAL that its cars and trucks were _ played above the American flags|stopped every now and then by COUNTER TOPS, Mica, Vinyl, Sondran............. Y% OFF | on the ground befow.” guards who had never seen the | _ Dent’s conversion to U.N. work'U.N. insignia?” SPATTER LINOLEUM TILE ............. S55056 : 7c EA. | emerged from a)bull session with * * * other pilots and/crew members| pent reports progress. Gim- If You Don’t Buy Your Tile From Us We Both Lose Money a few years The general|pei’s and Macy’s here in. New| “theme of the gab was that our York, an = seal cpuiiean Gn Thar Men | leaders are less than gifted. their ads and stores. The Na-| @) FREE urs., Fri. Somebody finally asked, “Okay, |tiona] Retail Merchants Associa-) “~ til 9 let's say they’re disappointing |tion has backed the identification in a lot of ways, but what are jidea and urged it upon their Ap Weephete PARKING OUTLET 10,000 stores and foreign affiliates. class carrier to bolster Naval forces in the West- : Tues., Wed., we doing to help them .. . to back them up?’ It set Dent to thinking, and his thoughts and activities (over and beyond his piloting duties) in time led to U.N. INTO PEARL HARBOR — Making a Striking picture, the USS Ranger, largest ship ever to sail the Pacific, enters the channel at Pearl Har- bor, Hawaii. The Ranger is the first ue — The Airline Pilots Association con- tains many spreaders of the gos- pel. ern Pacific. - The 60,000-ton ship will ine Hawaiian waters for several weeks of traih ing, pore sailing for she Far East. FE oi7%t ba 23.3055 W. Huron St:, Pontiac fate —— Te i ae ————~ — — —— Sat. ‘til 6 _ * * x A man named. Olaf Anson, who makes jewelry in Providence, R.I., has become a kind of Paul in the crusade, content that as time goes on the U.N. symbol will become a kind of open sesame to better un- lderstanding among the peoplés of 'the world, all of whom, presum- jabi ly, will then know by heart the — eA = :. ~ WANT MORE? Wait till you see Penney’s NEW LOW PRICES during JANUARY WHITE GOODS! | * x * Mary Lord, of the U.S. delega- tion to U.N., steered him toward | the crusading path he has since been trodding. They met accident- - ally along the Hungarian border at atime when Mrs. Lord was helping - compile U N.’s White Paper indict- ment of Soviet Russia's suppres-|!0fy prose of the Charter’s pre- I sion of the Hungarian rebellion, ewe - and Dent was a curious bystander.|. ‘‘We the pedples of the United | _ His interest in wanting to aid) Nrtions, determined to save suc- ' the cause of U.N. was such that, ceeding generations from the | Mrs. Lord sent sent him to- Stanley M. scourge of war, which twice in PONTIAC AREA t by RAY STORM, District Manager ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL “was deeply interested in the hard-of-hearing. And so is the company that bears his name. That's why we're so pleased that a : _ a telephone company invention, the tran- a sistor, has had such a beneficial effect in ae the manufacture of hearing aids. For the d a 3 % ; same reason, we don't charge the hard- 7 *. } , 54 ¢ Be ; 3 of-hearing for the installation of special phones. And, to make by y } : ql : iN ae quite sure that an instrument really does make a customer's ; 4 Lr 4 | 3 i | ‘ 7 telephoning pleasant and easy, we allow a free trial period ef ; , al monthly rental i é ; 4. 52x45 3.95... 76x90 . 9.95 CddddddddssdrddtoddIKdddddIddesEodse | i} a . ; ' , # Soa : _- 7 Famous Fiberglas—you wash, never iron, hang in 7 minutes! For shiianiak me aoe | i ae you ata Stans Penne y price in jerious 8 nin colors—all with The day was chill and windy. , ta A y } g 8 8] g .™ golden glints!' Compare each 25-inch panel in a 52-inch pair is a triple-crown pleated from full 45-inch fabric! Same.ample use of fabric in all width. Generous 3-inch hems, See how many pinch pleats to the pair, too! — The man on the street tried, - four times, to light his ciga- rette ... no luck, Then he 4 © noticed a public phone booth a few yards away. He stepped inside, shut the door and achieved success with his next | attempt. Then he went his way —and we like to think that he carried with him some small feeling of gratitude to the Michigan Bell Telephone _ Company, for placing at his disposal a really storm-proof - cigarette lighter. . mo] put them up - in 7 minutes! * Dawe Bem, Man st =e ae" t =~ Vl. f J BEESHEBEBHSEHHSESSHBSEEHHEESESEEEESSS | epee ene CORDS GET PERMANENTS. “Spring” type telephone cords * || —the kind that can’t twist and catch on things —eventually lose their neat tight curls, just like a lady's hair. When this happens, they're not thrown away. Liké a lady's hair they 4 get a permanent wave. (They get it when the telephones come in for repair.) Around one million cords get the full beauty treatment each year—washing, rewinding and heat setting. $400,000 is saved by this agnually. It helps keep down telephone costs. | i ' COMBED YARN _ PERCALES fe ae PTTTITITELII TIT — THE FOLLOWING STORY is vouched for by » highly respected %, : : COME OUT OF TUMBLE _pewspape. mf en ae ‘COLOR-SEALED ACETATE NEW 2 FACED CAFES DRYER READY TO USE Jerry, a me an ‘ Gian" top unt reached Shaw- . RAYON. BOUCLE DRAPES © LEAD A DOUBLE LIFE Only Penney’s has them at 49 mahi ee found bins We guarantee these frosty 106k ~~ on i = ee eitiogg Lane rn cnet on qos ak prices! oe yA 12 by 108 4 hat to do next B- mawow and acetat fe drat 95 ave i omorrow flip to a 98 ‘wrinkles in your tumble dry- a when Terry chirped up loud sad re gues tka roe 5 | eordinated solid, Really 2 cafes rh er, on beds, too! Cut down swim a gg.

“More: quality in their 7 | permanent Everglaze finish. -. , ei work, “en bills! Flat or tel) saat ifitteat pair egy else, dialed trifn tailoring, decorator colors. 50 by 90 inches - Colors: Red, Pink, Brown. a fitted! cases 2 fer 1.49 the said number. cage ake ; but the person * ay. | _PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS PENNEY'’S DOWNTOWN STORE, HOURS none ‘other than ary Nea a Open Every Week Day, Monday thra . Open Mondey end Fridey 9:30 A.M. to 9:00P.M. > = rao hirer sha _ All Other. Week Doys 9:30 A.M. te 5:30 P.M. . F aii a bead . a ¥ + ap : i vs sof. * . “f . TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 4 . . | ~ ee L Abed) two million school chil-| afflicted fail in their school work| Horned toads are protected in| cies is subject to a fine @ Pore : ave dren in the U. S. have impaired] four times as often es normal chil-| New Mexico ap@ anyone who kills, an alternative of up to e500 hearing. Figures show children so| dren. |sells or transports one of the spe-! jail. wee 2 From Ship 3 ” —- in Storm _—_[ RANBEEF AB LEAN, MEATY * | ee : PORK BIZE RTE, Tunisia (AP)—Thirty- | seven crewmen from the Ameri- Ie ve MARKET HOCKS can freighter Valiant Effort are’ 78 DB) SAGINAW : PONTIAC safe after their vessel ran aground | off the northwest Tunisian eat jin a violent storm. * * The crewmen were taken from) lifeboats Sunday by the Preach jaircraft carrier Arromanches, | which answered an SPS, Two of | the sailors were injured slightly e aed hospitalized (Bicone, TENDER, SLICED LEAN, MEATY aan NO. 1 ete TPORK « | PORK RING ~The Valant Effort was reported Cc Cc damaged and sinking, It was \ - b tenet oS LIVERY. b. | STEAKS b. | BOLOGNA Ww. Calcutta, India, with a cargo of : : : seeseuses 1.000 tons of wheat. Its master) 5 - — \seeeeeee ee was identified as Andrew Vapka | » MILD CURED This Valuable Coupon Entitles the O of Gal eston, ; : LBS. 00: g Bearer to a J-Lb. Limit Fresh c a : GOQOD | : | 9) seem Geet SLICED (& rox !REMUS =f tb WIN, PLACE, AND BEAK — There's no - UP! Phote (15 per cent of the total population, and * ° felling where those Hialeah flamingos will turn racing Bist: Sut: popped one of Hialeah 8 | but they earn only five. per cent) BACON : BU | | ER wed ° up. Painter Obie Tomlin thought he was all flamingos which evidently got separ ated from ‘| of the gross U. S. national income, a gi With) Meat Pveckase alone as he was putting a fresh coat on the tote the flock living in the infie Id lake of the Florida jac ‘cording iS government reports. 'Z — < board in preparation for the opening. of they track. - ee —— _ _| 7 - — c= neh ; : - = ima Icicle’ Reports: DURING OUR ‘Whisky, Steam Baths Saved Me’ JANUARY SALE SAULT STR MARIE (CPi: possibility and held to the ‘iew Korpi expressed interest in the - “Human iciele William Korpreleven though he joshed vf might theory that the whisky had shored sald today he oved his life to ger him “unto trouble’ with the him up against the cold. He said Finnish baths and the wintering, medical profession and organiza-|he probably would be “on the ra effect of “a couple gaHons” of! tions “like the WCTU pwagon™ for Pwhile, But he doesmt pT MAYTAG whisky, A (ficexe docter who dechtted Roe) a ne sug Olle be } : ° Korps, D4, was asteep in ; sos fo (he identified: disagreed. He ‘een fs ee fe aetna ne | Automatic _. bank when two surveyors ehaners wall the alcohol probably acted “— . nad ee upon him Friday on Drummond more as an anesthetic. He said eres Island at the tip of the eastern! ae “tea : i : _ the narcosis effect of alcohol McNamara Asks Bill ee 4 und of Michigan's Upper Penin-| does permit the heart to stand * k . sula : | low temperatures without quiver- to eb Lakes Basin FREE He was “stiff as a board” after | ing of the muscles, WA , $4 SHINGTON (UP Sen. Px : 16 hours of exposure to tere et that he had stoked 4 c Pli—Sen. Pat Delivery! erence SUL 1 a : “ MeNamara’ (D-Mich) said he will — Uae . cup on “a couple of gallons” of introduce today om tall te Fe Installation! With “Tm Finnish,” Korpt said today whisky. Ele said he had been cf as , Rist ~ Servi rede: "We can take the cold” visting a friend and started home COnkressional Diessing to the Great ‘Year S ice * * - with two bottles of whisky in Lakes basin compact > Model 5 7X. Installed : , Korpi was born in this country his pocket, He stopped for “a The compact is desizned to *- and delivered free. G , | El t i but his father. Otte, immigrated plivate party with the rabbits "study ways of developing the re al. . > a ‘ enera ectric from Finland before the turn of fle started to “lake a snuose” jn sources of the Great takes basin, rane ~. . : NO MONEY DOWN THamcentiinn ‘the snowbank abiligin: the water level, fight- PE ; “Ml i * * * ing pollution, halting beach ero- 3\ | e said his victory over the | oo — : sion, making: fishing rules uniform ~ : mn elements) might be Awe: partly to Wie he oa ; ah “ . Me and developing nydrnelectrie pow Enterprise 30 ° 3 his practice of taking Finnish | RCS EER NG nee Ct . : Out Front Speaker baths . asked for a cigarette and some SPEE . : Built Like a Console , water. Later, he couldn't remem 7 : ; : Electric Ran He eed it “takes some doing’ per asking : la * Rock Bottom Price . agreed | A BR ber asking for the water Car Crushes State Man . ‘ to jump into a snow drift after, Korpi a bachelor odd jobs man, WASHER ~ 9 =. 155 Sq. In. Viewable sitting e a “an Rae alongs said he doesn’t mind cold weather, PORT HURON uw — Lee Voght, Regular $249.99 y Area : some hot rocks. “But there's a)" That's for sure That's when you 14, of Port Huron, was crushed to ‘ bath tat coe me 7 foi Mork the bed" But he ad ‘death Sunday when a car slpped Deluxe Wringer 00 oo ir tam oF. Mertaugh, at nated his Jatest experience started off. a yack and fell on him *olice ) - £1,90905 ‘ 4, WwW. h m ‘ ri ig fending physician sud that wherchimy thinking about mowing to a said Voxht had been working on Regular $1599» f ; y 4 5 as pe eture hy nore was admitted to War Meo yarmer clinvate the car's bumper _ : norial Hospital th Sault Niarie, g ; « $ 00 Eas utomatic his hady temperature rany ted from a A 93 degrees at the neck to 39 at! With Plus two wash and spin the ankles and “probably near) ORRIED OVER DEB i S = T 4 speeds. freezing” at the toes eee 209 O35 He said Kerpis chances for re} Double insulated ait a dogo j Regular $399.95 covery were good But he added bie "I AN CaRDIT Sundett Jak cea octene re pba able apace been coy wee eT . it would he several days before afford Coeds ae Hew much ot haw many you ens yermects yeu =e nism... Free delivery and | year; r. $ 00 it would be known whether’ gan PS — sce . grene had set in, necessitating am NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED NO MONEY DOWN 3 putation : ONE PLACE TO PAY M f rhe * r : sella Korpl was up and walking a rmber Ame Roe le ene! et cedlts Cons iter 5 WITH TRADE around at the hospital the day “Let ¥ Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” 4 ae sae abe and today he Hours: Daily 9 to § Wed. and Sat. 9 to | Evenings by Appt dismissed “a little numbness’ in his feet ag “nothing to worry MICHIGAN . CREDIT pe Nels b so WHIRLPOOL a . . T14 Pontiae State Rank Aldg FE a 04 about Bactors disagreed asx to whether Automatic the Jarge amotint of aleohol 1p) -scm__—_ : yf. Korpi's blood had actually served = Washer as antifreeze, keeping his blood bod from icing and bursting: the blood All fabric washer with ad- . mw veunela athe cold. For a BETTER DEAL on 59 Dodge ; justable water temperature Enterprise 30 + oe Dodge, Plymouth, Chrysler, Imperial, Dodge Truck control nye ve . = a ty ic e a ' = a Dro Mertungh stiggested that L100) MAIN ST. ROCHESTER OL 2-9111 10 tbe Regular $279.95 GAS RANGE: : oe Cnr $ 95 Regular $159.95 a . | |DETOUR} $ 00 Ad » b] | WITH FRADE ; 0 Narrow-gauge Cal | | Built in “Lint Filter” | | : | ‘ il Big 14 Cu. Ft. 21 7 EKEVISION i = Ld Automatic Defrost Lean, Clean, Mirror-Sharp TV with . 75 Lb. True Zero S 00 Freezer Regular $299.95 1 ) Compare the Size! . ; One touch on-off controls. Balanced fidelity. Compare the Features: = FM sound. 262 sq. in. screen viewable area. Gibson Gives the . Biggest Value of All | REGINA . _The wheels are moved out 5 inches ° , o for the widest, steadiest stance in America. |. Regular $399.95 See UaRER | | and SCRU . . - | Waxes, polishes and oad-test the only car with Wide-Track Wheels Sf butts, — ; - «=. Regular $66.50 ; Driving like this was never before possible, . | 95 | With the widest stance on the American road, = \ / } Pontiac reduces away and lean to an absolute WITH TRADE are . : te * minimum ... hugs the curves like magie . . . | t takes the- bumps and the corners with Bane , pre mg see “unbelievable ease. In only a few minutes you'll discover the most beautiful road: ability M N EY Di IWIN in the whole wide world! ee eee ES ee + _. a" { . . : * aa? i Alr-Cooled True-Contour Brakes a 4 America S Number (1) Road Car! have heavier drums, thicker of PONTIAC ; l . for tonge “He DRIVE IT AND YOU'LL BUY IT! Shee ing ier eon SERVICE AFTER THE SALE ; ¢ 7 ; 4 : — Open Monday and Friday ‘til 9 P.M. SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER . “— : Cc | = 4 ce 3 “90 Days for Cash . 51 West Huron Street-: FE 4.1555 a tpt ~ —” ae * - *. 2 = 5 : 7 a a ee : omen . - - 2 - . : ; a0 4 : : ‘2 Ry d , . : . ’ \* * . * +. i : { : . = _« & + . f . : +. TA b% ry, 8 oN ‘ - ® . & : ‘ . ”- a < r a & . . , * 4 “a & . a > os a ; i F : E " : ae /-_— § and other WATCHES | 17 JEWELS Regular Stock DISCOUNT 3 oO % TUES. and O we. ONLY FRED N. PAULI CO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store ® 28 W. Huron St. FE 2.7257 & % : IN THE HEART oF m . | » 23 N. SAGINAW chelator 37 NORTH SAGINAW STREET 77 & ALL OTHER DAYS 9:30 TO 5:30 PSALEL mH cias }f BUTTON-FREE 1} | DENNEY | RB Children’s & Women's Women White "] eoniae M ATTRESS A¢ ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! & © House Slippers | TENNIS SHOES ® ¢ LOWEST PRICE EVER! » @ DOWNTOWN PENNEY’S AF $1.00 $490 1. $900 8g te ee SAGINAW “The Store Where Quality Counts” ° + Children’s wm DRESSES © Sizes 3 to 6x 7 ty PRICE Colorful cotton wash dresses. #7 @ INFANTS’ - TODDLERS’ PLAY Lone _ CLOTHES Y Pa The MARGARET ANN ¥ 37 W. Huron St. _ SHOP : i , SENSATIONAL 100,000 STOCK DISPOSAL SALE! ere Is a Typical Value — “29 5 LADIES COATS Choose from beautiful | 10 to 18. the talk of the town. Tonight and Tuesday Only -, 9 88 ie EVEN AT OUR LOW, LOW PRICES YOU CAN “CHARGE itr _NEWPORT'S 10 74 No. SAGINAW | ST. Give BU LO V ra _ nT still Here. . Same Discounts § . ) B STILL the MOST COMPLETE % % Warm? You Bet! ELGIN m ih Values to $4.00 a . One Lot of Children’s One Lot of Children’s | " EZ Ly e "@ ee 100% WOOL long wool coats or short | ‘ Mi wool suburbans in sizes % WA [/ TOPCOATS. SPORT SHIRTS AND MANY OTHER ITEMS! 77 These are coats taken @ Ff ' from our regular stock @ ¥ that have been selling at 77 @ $25.00 — and are but one @ of the outstanding values ® & _ which will make this sale w iy |GEORGE’'S MONDAY NIGHT AND TUESDAY —hwwuilll buy more MONDAY NIGHT and : TUESDAY i in chalet schol Deen ) | Sam Benson Says: TOY SELECTION | My Reg. $12.95 Boys’ & we i @y ALWAYS FIRST ¢ QUALITY! ZIPPEES ~ 4 } : . SPECIAL! REDUCED! ». song =) @.@ 8 MACHINE WASHABLE } BEGINNER'S | 9 rutsoar AA ae G PD - BOYS’ WARM — : Mm = ONL f “Es | 7 ICE SKATES | if Knitted collar, wind breaker kn ined : 4 le ih S Wi nter ARKAS } $3.00 $ 49 QS Ea . : CELACLOUD LININGS . ae . Wi ~ 22K GOLD PLATED T Goins eee | AS PH Shisdeie UE DOUBLE RUNNERS Gea 7 .\ anne | ; Ries (NSA) h} _ 5.88 TOYTOWN DF SAM BENSON $4 . DON TOWN PENNEY'S OPEN MONDAY G&G FRIDAYS 9:30 TO 9:00 Downtown Specials $8 BUTTON-FREE $} Reg. $69.50 Me Z SD Y SPECIAL! REDUCED! SHOES RUBBERS =} Susi @ «WOMEN'S SUBURBANS $ 4 4 ¢ fae beled as Seal y, Ser- TS 2 , dis ” ; : : I e 4 ; : 9 ta, Simmons, Restonic, Rest- . “SS 7” © @ Knitted or Mouton Collars . Reg. $3 to $4 Value Reg. $2.50, Value A | Gaey I MONE Sa, | 7] - ©®@ Alpaca or Insulated Linings ine, etc., all at ames See ; ® All Wool Fabrics prices. z ~ owl he - — Pt @ Sizes 10 to 18 | Twin or Full Size—Box Springs Available - ] 5 8 8 : DOWNTOWN PENNEY'S Mas c.pice /@ U OPEN MONDAY G FRIDAYS 9:30 TO 9:00 | Piya block off Sagioew/ @ WH «ALL OTHER DAYS 9:30 TO 5:30 an ALL NEW + OPEN TONIGHT ‘til 9 4 RAYON CORD TIRE " 1g?! Te a .§ Plastic Wall Tile ¢ Plain and French Cuffs. Sizes 14 to 172 — 32 to 35 Sleeve ¢ All Colors _ Easy to Clean ¥ kg Long Life : y Buy enough . ” , TILE and ; . Lengths MASTIC | ‘ te cover a } 5‘x7’ Bath 4° High 70 Sq. Fe. for only b : ‘ 5° ® oe | Go forse to elsner's Famous Make COLORED “K-\ ARROW SHIRTS eink 2.85 2% a7 | $5.00 Values to $5.00 Stripes, Pastels, Madras Prints, i) THE HUB’S GREAT JANUARY SALE IS STILL IN PROGRESS: FEATURING SPECIAL PRICES ON SUITS, SPORT COATS, 7 . ‘Open Tonight ‘til 9 P. M.. “4 18 N. Saginaw (Downtown Pontiac) /7 = Hour Free Parking in Hubbard Garage With Any Purchase EXTRA Special Robbins FIRST TIME Robinette—Rubber | Spatter tntald Reg. 10¢ TILE | TILE 642° jesse: 19° We Have Just Received ied GI Us & : 7.10-15 a Mill Run of 8 First Quality 929 I price. 9x9 \th , ' ’ CORK-TONE LINOLEUM oF RNTEE rim ih OR Prices Plus Tax “CANNON ASPHALT RUGS Gv MILEAGE LIMIT | And Recappable Exchange saree, = $560 912 $495 _ BLANKETS COTTON RUGS INLAIG. TILE . ENDS at e 9212 $1895 eel f MILL COST | ac Ea. i iy nen FREE While It Lasts! © COLD RUBBER TREAD © SKID ARRESTOR TREAD DESIGN onds.”’ Priced for your | selection. PARKING | MICA 97 Te $457 « Bach FREE: We Loon You Ve i Tools and Tile Sq. Cutters! Ft. limited quantity , . K R Ye E'S The Floor Shop 99-101 South Saginaw St. > Free Parking Rear of Store. the family's choice Open Mon. and Fri.-’til.9 P. M. ' _ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE ONLY —_ ff MARKET TIRE CO. * | es annie —= ’ : . , | } : | oo — —_ 2 . | : . TWELVE : | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JANUARY 19, 1959 | . 4 About. 50 railroads in the United, ‘Hal Royle Says: C | | : - ~ - ee ; : . ; 7 Dizzy Dean's 17 strikeouts in one , a a are now en- game is still a record, eet owas Gu pigey- School Counci (Advertisement) — Kim Novak Searching for the Right Mate Gassy? ---Calling Seeks Money Ml | NEW YORK (AP)—Hollywood's;realiy—worried about that. It will! Seated on a chaise lounge g | “It's either in you or it isn't.|I hope not, anyway.” Saoiets comtraite Se ‘6 many leading 1 Adapts Major Financial most eligible —— _£41 is happen, I feel sure And mean-|pink dressing room in the ape can dress up glamour or ad A big star, Kim Novak, and also sizes tablets. pan goog P| -- | eM ‘ready to say “I | wepile it's a nice life, being aistudio of her latest. film, Paddy|to it, but you can’t take it awayja nice kid looking for truth in a paallpacer ol ry ae ee ee Y Proposals, Asks More put the seagreen eyes of Kim|bachelor.” Chayetsky’s “Middle of the Night,”|or cover it up if it’s really there.|world of glitter. tor lineral tree sample. | Home Owners FOR ONLY Aid for Poor Districts Nowak still haven't sighted the | Actually, Kim gives the impres- costarring Fredric March, she) sion of being somewhat lonely and| talked of her troubles. | right guy on the porta , ; ~ * I « & . “DAN 2APIDS _ , inot sure whom she can trust. In 4, $ 3 3 GRAND RAPIDS eeveral| “I'd like to be fulfilled AS al ‘five years and 10 pictures the} «J pave a feeling this is going to! eo: ALUMINI SIDER LG Nov 18 but continued to publish = . S = iwith supervisory and nonunion © ” o aS ee LOE IPAs eEL@INiee employes until last Friday when Q en a eC I f : : Soe _parinere DrtcacctCio ees tne 3 ) , “ they “suspended publication after) Ve a oh OQJ2 : . : we REMODELING Inegotiations with the Tru broke | : f \ ee EFS Se ALTERATIONS (oun, | fo, . . . . | . | ; Se Lovers of Symphony » Poe ald 2 BOSTON (®—Seldom has man’s; ; : er 4 22 he oe love of good music been put to se) —" : trvingg a fest . N an S : ; ' 2S FREE ESTIMATES’ During a concert under the stars, - ; i jee oe a ; at the fisplanade oon Boston's ; | ae CALL FE 3 7\A) Charles Raver the audience was pee eee ee ae ied : THAME Dt DUA TEE ec bed_by a torrential downpour | Te Ee ' The conductor considered calling = ‘ De ee ee. vo eS — off the concert but some 3,000 lis: | SIX BIG REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD SS i ey 2 gs a}, | ; (Adverticenentt teners held their ground . @ : 2 * por i 3 . . . 4 : MoreComfortWearing the music tovers were put te BUY Mechsaseaatove a 7 E TEETH still another fest. Brahams First! = - aoe 2 FALS Symphony—against a backdrop of . ' : : — , Here ian piersant waytoovercome (thunder and lightning—took on an only es i ts Sree aa pews a sean ne ; ak unfamiliar Wagnerian touch, 1. QUICK RECOVERY! Exceptionally fast hot water i ' ppe 1 lowe atem olde ther as 5 | : ; Ao ee er chev tea cies cm | ee with new, more efficient heating units . .: thick Fiberglas | . . ; a fortable. No gummy, Kovey_ pasty | The Wnretrieved kill of ducks and . insulation. = . > tante or feeling Ie alkaline (nen- | geese totaled more than 3,000,000 : ete I t no Checks “pinte | i 5 = : : Sfor breath’ ee PANTRITH today iduring 1957, or more than 20 per 2. FULLY AUTOMATIC! et { letel to FOR 52 GALLON MODEL . - at drug counters everywhere ‘cent of the national bag . Quie , Sate, compietely auto- , : . » matic operation... . install it forget it.” 3. INSTALL ANYWHERE! Round or table-top models can ~ be installed in kitchen, utility, basement or closet... DETROIT EDISON'S SUPER SUPPLY PLAN... need not be near a chimney. 4. DEPENDABLE! Long lasting Kelvinator electric water makes Kelvinator electric water heaters even more efficient. You'll have all the hot water 2 . h ve { « | t h Tae OD ht ‘§ - heaton. Gila By prea ters Pulitaito sEdiecnis speci you want for all the family's needs, 24 hours a = day, for an operating cost as low as $3.88 a &. ECONOMICALI Electricity costs so little... you heat month. Ask Edison how this new water heating service, combined with a new Kelvinator elec- =. . You're always welcome at BENEFICIAL water for just pennies a day. or lwater beat : 4 Yer, you get a “royal welcome” at RENEFICIAL when Lie wea ee Denies CON tree Teh Wek Beery ENE ant cash to payoff piled up billa! Just phone 6. CLEAN and COOLI As clean as an electric light bulb round the clock. GET IT WOT... GET A tor! 3ENEFICFAL for a Bill Clean-Up Loan! Then, make only eal mantily payment (rateadiot several Gan vditave and its outer shell is cool to the touch all over. RRR IORI more cash left over each month, Remember: it's just like ~ 1-2-3 to call up... come in... and pick up your loan]! , Nake Phone or come in toduy! . : . = ; —— Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car i ros : ‘ : : 7 WEST LAWRENCE STREET, PONTIAC | [lis lq and sold hy UI wr . - . 2nd Floor, Lawrence Bidg. + Phone: Federal 2-9249 « | OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVENING MOURS ie : - _— ' Loans mode te residents af all surrounding towns “ : eee eer __| . KELVINATOR DEALER | DETROIT EDISO | . BEN ° : et Congas N- + . , * 5 eo ‘ 4 , Woo. 4 _ A - F * Z . a ae i = iH é \ f f a THE PONTIAC PRESS; MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 day -* THIRTEEN. | ‘Serves as Accurate Barometer for 2 Years _ January Forecasts Normal Year : More persons out of ban than ‘last fall although industrial output Js up. Many wage scales higher but take home pay for most work- ers down because of the increased withholding for higher social se- curity taxes, Debt conscious -eAmericahs trying to clear up their Christmas bills and still take ad- ‘vantage of the clearance sales. « The .tise in unemployment in December and January is unpleas- ‘ant but expected — and largely ‘seasonal. It comes from the nor- mal drop in outdoor work — ag- gravated this time by bad weather in many sections. Factory employ- ment, particularly in nondurables, is holding up well, and foretelling better days ahead when outdoor jobs open up again. After their biggest Christmas, 1|demand and might peter out about now, leaving the economy in the- “iness, but having January back to Construction, in spite of the weather, continues to be a shining star in the economy. Housing starts to continue to increase, in contrast to a year ago when the home building industry was grog- gy. Construction contract awards’ foreshadow greater activity in the spring. | oF * * = Mostly, though, January is shap- ing up as being neither very good or very bad for bysiness. On the one hand, this has al- layed some of the fears that a runaway boom, egged on by the stock market's enthusiasm, might lead to a bust, On the other, it has allayed fears that the vigor of the recovery in its early stages Vets’ Fund LANSING (AP) — Because of shrinkage in market value, each $1,000 bond in the state Veterans Trust Fund would support an aver- age loan of only $750 from a bank. * * * Thus, if they were pledged as collateral for borrowing as pro- posed by Gov. Williams, the 50 Worth Less iE only about 38 or 39 million dollars in cash. The present market value of the entire bond nest egg would be just under 43 million dollars. These facts were explained by the governor Friday at his meet- ing with leaders of state veterans organizations in an attempt to sell them on his plan for meeting the million dollar fund would yield state’s cash emergency. Low-cost tlding doors made a vertical mahogany slats laced to- sare balag-teeaciehers- bys: Forvsppeereece and dutability of fold- maica concern. The company says|ing doors costing up to four times ee ee a might be borrowing frora future doldrums. The stock market and inter- national affairs have furnished the month with most of its financial headlines ’e *® * February and March could he more decisive months for busi- being its normal self again augurs well. Gas Routs 3 Families MELVINDALE « -- Three fam- ilies were evacuated from their |. homes in this suburban Detroit community Sunday because of gas escaping. through a storm sewer, -No one was injured. The gas leak was repaired in about six hours and the. families” returned to their homes. Seeks U. of M. Post ANN ARBOR uw — Ted Kennedy Jr, wWice president and general manager of Trenton Corp., says he will be a candidate for the Uni- versity of Michigan Board of Regents on the Republican ticket. | Kennedy is a Michigan alumnus — ‘and has been active in university | affairs. YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG AS THIS FELLOW AND MAD ASORE THROAT/\--. \DUE To CoLDs}.|4 ee A THE gether with nylon-reinforced tape NEW iN a ven SHOULD QUICKLY. RELIEVE GF hates Special Carload Purchase Brings You a Special Low Price on This Beautiful MAYTAG Automatic Washer and Dryer 0000000000000 08008000S50080800O000OHS0H088SEOCE BOTH - @ iter rr TT TT IIIIiiiiririrrrrrrrirriririirirririr iri Regularly Sell for More Than $400 74 NO MONEY DOWN — 2 Years to Pay! $ of 108 svencebensencsnessonvsnsonsaguabonsonsnosssensenssssssassasenooesenes ~ NORTH SAGINAW Phone FF deral 37114 BO 9000000000000 00 0.998 0090H 008509 0S8800SS0905SS289 8895888000009 090F000080800008) 0 RapapudicesVlccnddaconencecens of heat—ends overdrying! HALO OF HEAT DRYER NO HOT SPOTS! Exclusive new drying principle surrounds clothes with a safe, gentle circle ae ee ‘OTHER DRYERS — TOO HOT IN ONE SPOT trated heat as high as 200°. Result; Overdrying is common. New! Push this button fer automatic De-Wrin- kling. Special “Wash 'n Wear” Setting removes wear wrinkles, saves troning. i 5 oa ee. NEW MAYTAG DRYER -GENTLE, EVEN Clothes come in contact with concen- __ New! Ory your clothes in filter-cieaned air. Special Filter removes dirt from all incoming -eir, keeps clothes clean. * (GAS OR ELECTRIC) enti HEAT SURROUNDS CLOTHES Regular loads dry at 105 to 115". Ends __ overdrying, yet dries clothes as fast as you can wash them. New! Dynamic Dige Lint ls ltht ditectly out of dryer. Snaps out for easy cleaning. - SPECIAL) I Liked It T Bought It -both raglan and set-in sleeve ia Automatic Washer y Dryer | & ‘Wayne Gabort Appliance 121 N. Seginew St. Pontiac, Mich. Thomas-Economy Furniture Co. 361 S. Saginaw St Pontiac, Mich, siiiliinemiaian aa ee | Good Housekeeping Shop | '" @f PONTIAC | 51 West Huron St. Pontiac, Mich. —WKG, Ine. 108 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac, Mich. I Saw It at OSMUN’S Great January Clearance Hundreds of top quality suits, topcoats, outerwear and sportswear . . . Reduced in this our greatest January Event Yet! SUITS & TOPCOATS : ‘49 focad Sell for and $75 Famous Martinelli and rial Worsted Suits — Some Botony 500s included! Hand- some Imported Tweed and Velour Topcoats by Glenwood, models. 2 Trouser MARTINELLI SUITS. A group of such tremendous oppeal and value that we must $ respectfully ask that you do not delay in making your se- lection—Hard finish worsted and sharkskin in regulars, shorts, long’, extra longs and portlys. Sizes 35 to 50 Usually Sell for $71.50 Imported Fabric SPORTCOATS i 2 Values to $37.50 A big selection of patterns —colors—sizes. Famous Make SPORT SHIRTS Long sleeve, colorful plaids, Ivy button $ 99 downs , ribs, plains. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Usually Sell to $6.95 Famous Make SUBURBAN COATS . : ’ E McGregor Lakeland, mee Field & Stream, wool trim- med and water repellent styles, _ BETTER SLACKS — 1500 Pairs — REDUCED 20" Usually $10.95 to $29.95 Worsted flannels, gabs., imported Daks, dacron blends, in fact, every- thing. _ Plus Many Other Items on Sale at Big Savings During Osmun’s Great January Clearance. “Shop the Stores That Never, Compromise on Quality” Downtown Pontiac -Tel-Huron Center i Both Stores Open Tonight "tl 9 P. M. ia sw s Tt fey 2 hw SSE ES ss: eee FOURTEEN : $ 3 And Budget-Wise, Too - Furs Are Rich The Young Besigner Collec- tion of 12 spring furs showr to visiting fashion editors in New pork are not ‘flights of fancy” urs. but are’ sensible and practical Six young non-fur designers, turned loose to work with, fur for this group retailing fox’ “3000 or less, are Luis Estevey. Jeanne Campbell, Donald Brooks, Jeanne Carr, Eloise Curtis and John We itz, These designers insisted th finished 5; luxuriolis furs, As rreh ip pock- afford their designs be other thes wanted won festion taste but poor an ethooks to be able to them The group was commissioned to make furs appealing to teen- agers. the. college girl, the career woman and the young- marrieds Marcee Hill ls Honored at Shower Marcee Jill, brideelect of Frank Kurkowski, was honored at a shower Sunday afternoon at the Boyd street hirley Palmer Parents of Mr. and Mrs. John Chamberlain street and Mrs. Frank P of Rochester A ding is planned * * * Guests at the shower Mrs James Glynn, Mrs Kurkowski, Mrs. lor, Jean Widdis’ Geraldine Ko han ery the couple are Hill of and Mr. Kurkowski Jan 31 wed were Carl redy, Patricia] McMahon, Pa- trica Thitler, Mrs. Thomas Flanigan. Roberta Laveque, Mrs Wilham Bowes, Mrs. Ger ald Fritz, Mrs. Harvey Dennis Jr and Mrs James Demski * * * Others were Joanne Healan- der, Mary Catherine Donohue, Mrs. Elden Goemaere, Mrs Kennith Lucas, Mrs Jack Hutchinson, Mary Carol Tru dell, Barbara Trudell, Barbara Kurkowski, Mrs. Paul Keste- loot, Mrs. Carl Olson, Barbara Hessler, Jeanette Hessler, Pa- tricia Dalton, Mrs. James Bois- seau and Marsha Borre- home of James Nay-. ats one of the ain Jalen PTA Sees Film on Teaching Teachers at Baildwine School had charge of the PTA meet ing held Thursday evening Elected to the nominating committee were D. A. Rofe; chairman, Mrs. ©. A, Fetter and Mrs. B. A. Barner Alu ilm, shown to emphasize happens when a teacher foo many students to teach what has Crowded Out ~ ais - ° t little White for bands a bla “Shrug a-la Mode” furs Cc which bhow-ties front. This is one of the young furs which sells for $250 hy Luis Estevez for spring. ch moire ribbon Phyllis Smith Draws Crowd at PCH Recital z ‘Singe rR BOBETTE SPECIAL CLOSE-OUT Discontinued Numbers of 4 . Famous Brand Bras Assorted Sizes and Styles. ecaplures City Audience “ x Ky EORUE A. PUTNAM another noted culttiral event tists have cansistently used In “Fhe voice recital by Phytlo The large crowd that listened Concert halls provided variety Smith Sunday evening in Pon so attentively it its A to the next group. Vocal lit tac, Central a hool au Botiat sa dtm AMENERS lo. type pode ditortum provided online with Ory Ata XINe Ser as sev ing of the singer. The audience 4 dence that our community en especially enjoyed the “Laugh joys good musi ingg Song” from_ ‘The Bat!’ by HAS CHARM, POISE Strauss. Other selections were ‘Little Shepherd Song’ hy Miss Goth, a graduate of Whtts and “Slave Song’ by SAVE UP TO 60% OFF Graduate Corsetieres te Advise and Help You to a Proper Fit. Charge Accounts Invited Bobette Corset Shop 11 North Saginaw Street a °% : - : : . Since 1929 > be smart-look a | es Ae Pa KI 4 2-692 TO LOOK AT- KEEPS HER WARDROBE COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 Quality Cleaning be smart-look smart High rently enrolled in the New Eing- Pontiac Sehool and cut Del. Riego. HIGH POINT OF PROGRAM | The high point of the eve ning was Miss Smith's singing land Conservatory in’ Boston isan aspiring winger with much charm and poise. Her manner of “Swing Low Sweet Char completely captivated her au iot * At this time the audience dience throughout the evening and singer were held in a deep- ly reverent mood, as this spir- itual was sung without accom- paniment in clear, true, bell- like tones, The, program opened with a * group of Ifallan compositions, two by Scarlotti aud’ an aria, “Porgi Amor’ from Mozart’ Style “Marriage of, Figaro.” The After three contrasting spir- - Pergolist “Se Tua Mami, Se itials, Miss Smith responded Sospiri’ received the polished ~ with “He's Got the Whole treatment of a veteran singer World in His Hands The Halian diction was cline Gladys Manning, a Pontiac fully handled and gave Miss pianist and organist, provided 1 Smith opportunity to demon exeellent. accompaniment strate same very fine fain throughout the program, She INE was alsa heand as soloist: in The seeond group of Ger Leeumona’s “Molaguena.” “ man lieder consisted of three To present a program of this songs by Schubert, Here again scope is a great undertaking. ‘the versatility of the singer However, the coneert-goers left gave an exeeptionally fine the auditomum knowing . that our-city has young artists who add greatly to our musical Life. treatment to these art songs Three songs that great ar BOLT-ENDS SPECIAL at WRIGHT'S | CHAIRS as low as $35 | SOFAS as low as $75 | DRASTIC YEAR END DISPOSAL... We have many rolls of fine fabrics such as Nylon Frieze, Matalasse, Tapestry, Wool Fabrics and others. You are now able to-have your sofa or chair covered at a saving you can't afford to mils Fasy ‘Budget Terms ~Choose From Our New or 90 Days Cash . ~ ine of Fabrics Wi illiam Wright Makers. and Upholsterers 270 Grebard Lake Ave. FE t 0558 Serving Ponting = Over 22 Years ‘ceremonies at The fashion mobile, “hug-me-tight” ‘Jonathan Loyan is in brown -squirrel. A it can be worn buttoned down the bolero by Jeanne Carr of modern back or buttoned down the front. Style Steppers Visit Promenaders Hold Dance Warren Allen was master the oly Saturday: - evening dance of Promenaders Square Dance (lub held Hawthorne School ts * * - Visiting from Steppers Mr Mr couples were lock, and Mrs. Ray and Mrs. at the of Rochester Sul- Harold Ann Arbor Girl to Wed Local Man Mr. and Mrs se ph Francis, Jo Miley ef Ann Arbor an- nounce the engagement_of their daughter, Priscilla May, to Thomas Hammond Adams Jr. He is the son of Mr. Thomas H. road. A graduate University -where he and Mrs. Adams of Puritan of Denison was a member of Delta Upsilon Fra- ternity, Tom is attending the University of Michigan Law School . * * * “The bride-elect Is a trad: uate.of U. of M° and is affil tated with Kappa Delta So- rorily. ° tk An Easter wedding is being planned, den _ Mazza, Frase, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Van- Orsdale, Mre and: Mrs. Lionel 3aril, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Farr and Mr, and Mrs. Ran- dall May, Other guests included Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Aumann, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Price, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hemmerly, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Callahan. . a a New members introduced were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Had- and Mr. and Mrs. Jack E-chlin. : ‘ The’ Promenaders will visit the Style Steppers Jan, 31 for iis anniversary dance. The next meeting of the Pyomendaders will be“Feb, 7: Epsilon Sigma Members Meet at Hasse Home Mr “and Mrs. Cute Hasse of Uplong drive were “hosts” Saturday evening to members , of Alpha Alpha Chapter of Ep- sition Sigma Sorority. A buffet, supper was served. after ice skating, tobogganing and dancing. ; Assisting Mrs. Hasse were Mrs. Keith Clauser, Mrs. Rudy’ Mrs. Ben Sweeney, Don Murphy, Betty ,De- and Mrs. Ralph Wilson. Mrs Groot But Who Raised Him, Ma?— Abby Dena G. Anastos Weds Athan E. Yeotis of Flint Dena G. Anastos of Michi- gan avenue ‘was married to Athan E. Yeotis of Flint Sun- day afternoon at St. George Gréek Orthodox Church. The , Rev. Achilles S. Siagris offi- ciated at the ceremony before 200 sts. * * Uk . _family - Lustig, The bride wore a gown of rose point lace and nylon net over satin, featuring a fitted bodice and long pointed sleeves. The full skirt fell into a train. A seed pearl tiara held her fingertip veil and she carried a cascade bouquet of white tea roses, stephanotis and ivy centered by a white orchid corsage. ATTENDS BRIDE Betty Yeotis of Flint was maid of honor. She wore a dark green chiffon dress and carried a cascade bouquet of pink tea roses and ivy. Zoe Elene Pappas was flower girl. Her dress was white or- gandy and she wore a wreath of orange blossoms accented with holly and berries. In her basket were pink baby roses, ivy and petals. ** -« * Best man. was * Nicholas Georgiou. Ushers were George T. Pappas and Peter Siavra- kas, with Nicholas Siavrakas as stephana bearer and Daniel Chinonas of Flint as ring- bearer..- RECEPTION HELD After qa reception at Hellenic ~ - Hall, the bride changed to a red taffeta sheath dress with black accessories, qa matching hat and the corsage from her bridal bouquet. The couple left for a honeymoon to Cana- da, They will.live in Flint. * * * For her sister’s wedding Mrs. Nick Phillips wore a turquois sheath dress with matching hat and a white orchid corsage. A ‘Charming’ Idea Ever wonder what to do with odd earrings, lockets and other heirlooms? Have them put on a charm bracelet. It makes a handsome piece of jewelry. BARBARA J, LUSTIG The approaching marriage of their daughter, Barbara Jean is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Zumbrunnen of Joslyn road, Miss Lustig’s fiance is Eugene Franzel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Franzel of Rochester. The ceremony will take place Feb. 14. & = ‘MRS. ATHAN E. YEOTIS . Square Set Club Fetes Presidents The Square Set Club held its annual ‘Presidents Ball” Sat- urday at Herrington School, ~ : A : + Presidents and. their wives visiting from other clubs were Mr, and Mrs, Wiliam Toll of Merry Makers Club, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ralph of Hill Hop- pers Club, Mr, and. Mrs. Har- old Hawkins, of Style Steppers Club, Mr. and Mrs, Norman Hill of Merry Mixers, Mr. and Mrs. John DePauw of Elks Sashay.and Mr. and Mrs. Ro- bert Newell of Do-C-Do Club. - Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. James Ludwick, Mr. and Mrs. Roy MacAfee, Mr. and Mrs, Roy McCarty and Mr. and Mrs, Robert Schneider. Master of ceremonies was James Thompson assisted by Russell Williams, Ralph Price, Peter Messeman, Arthur Yar- ger, Sidney Olson, Samue] Hea- lander and all guest presidents. t Latest in Lace Has Durability Plus Fragility A new type of lace combines the fragile look with durability. The lace is made. of soft yarns and ranges from cobweb-thin to heavier, casual weights. Fabric retains the softness of regular lace, but is stronger, easier to care for, and more easily draped. Designers show it in a thea- ter gown and matching reversi- ble lace raincoat, a tennis dress, swim suit, and at-home costume. , Cup Death Grip Not Necessary | It is not necessary to give a death grip to a coffee cup. If your liptick has been blotted and_still comes off on the china this is probably what you've been doing. Delicacy and just enough contact to keep the coffee from dribbling -is what you need, not: lookifig as if you ara go- ing to take a bite out ofjthe - _. crockery, Blames Son’s Actions on ‘Stuck-Up’ Wife By ABIGATT, v - BU Lian “DEAR ABBY: mechanic in a garage married the daughter man who owas the ga- rage. I calhed him. up this morning and asked him if he would come. with his ear and drive me to the cdoc- tor’s. | have to have shots for my nerves.* He said you walk, Ma? do you good.’ office is a good and ‘Why two “My son is a he of the ABBY don't The walk will The doctor's miles from my house and he knows it, Do you think it is fault or that stuck-up girl marmied? | MRS DEAR MRS. L..: his he L The gir! , didn't rajse. him — she only married him ~ * * * “DEAR ABBY. My husband was engaged to another girl before he married me ang she had this child) I knew all about this before I married him and accepted the fact Naturally IT wasn't thrilleal with the idea of his having to Pay Mt se mich every week for child support, but I loved him, so what could I do* My problem is that my hus- band keeps wanting to go see the child. I am not jealous, but I know the mother of his “child would stop at nothing to get him back and I am sure she tries to vamp him when he-comes to see the baby. 1 den’t feel right asking him not toa see his own child. Please tell me what to do.” BEWILDERED — hy DEAR BEWILDERED: You ean't deny him the right to see his own child . . but there is nothing to stop you from going with him. ~ *) * * “DEAR ABBY: I am to be married soon and the man I am marrying doesn't "want my family to attend the wedding The reason. is because he is ashamed for his peopl®@ to meet my people. “‘e thinks they are crude and downright trash I will admit they are poorly educated but they are hard working people and = never asked anybody for anything. Should I have them) anyway, or forget-about it and always feel bad secretly?” HURT DEAR HURT: Do you think you could live happily with a husband who is “ashamed” ~ of your family for their lack The “Different”? Look for you... PERMANENTS $5 - $6 - $7.50 $1.50 ANNALIESE BE. AUTY SHOP (Over Tasty Bakery) Complete Roted Hair Cetting: from. 801, N. Saginaw St. © FE 2-5600 of education? INVITE them. but I suggest that first you take a long look at the man you intend to marry. By all means,, “DEAR ABBY: ried to a man years and was proud to bear his’ name. He died and he wasn't even buried yet when I started receiving sympathy cards with my given name instead of his. Why? For % years I was ‘MRS. JOHN I was mar- for over 25 “™=DOE’ and I want to remain . ‘MRS. JOHN DOF — not ‘MRS. JANE DOF even after he is gone. Am I going against proper etiquette?." *. MRS. JOHN DOE DEAR MRS. JOHN DOE: _ ‘You are correct. Those who address you as “MRS. JANE DOE” are in error. * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO NICK AT THE BAKERY Cast some of shat bread on the waters, * * * For a personal reply, write to ABBY. in ‘care of this paper, Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope, ud Re RG Suk a 4 , i ed Mon Tue s Thr ATR Appornt rn: ee ee a j ? | at © enn! his | id IiverogupeRafPeeceaeetetesee2 gan ALL PERMANENTS | ONE PRICE S275 COMPLETE. WITH CUT and SET ce NONE ee >, HIGHER ~ you Get All This: Coretree Haircut * es _——_. "_-_THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 19 1959 Married Saturday «| evening were Judith C. Wood and — George R. Lembke. - Parents of the couple are Mr, and Mrs. Harold He Wood of West Huron street and Vr. and Mrs. Bes George W. fr? Lembke of q3 ys r. & i) | Stanle) ‘a “Fe i fe e avenue. c 14 8 rhe ' MRS. GEORGE R. LEMBKE Judith C. Wood Becomes | Bride of George Lembke- HOLLYWOOD BP AUTY Permanent by an Experi- enced, Licensed Operator Styled Set Our Famous Guarantee: A Complete Wave for $3.75... None Higher Wearing a full-length white ‘man. ‘Ushers were -G M. Wal- ag : taffeta gown, Judith Carreen lace, N.G. Avran of Birming 78! North Saginaw Street Wood became the bride otf -ham and G. D. Barnett of = . | George Robert Lembke Sat- | Jackson. Over Bazley's FE 8-3560 | urday evening at Lutheran * x * ; Ait Conditioned , Church of the Ascension. The | Mrs. Wood wore a slate blue | Rev, William LaFountain offi- | lace dress with white accésso- =— —— -$ ciated at the candlelight cere- ries and white cymbidium or- | a ‘ : : 4 mony in the presence of 200 chids for her daughter's. wed- | j "9 ne Ss ~l guests, ; _ - ding Mrs. Lembdke wore a <2 oe ae. a Mg The bride is the daughter of printed sheer gown fashioned 5 Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Wood | With a boat neckline and full : of West Huron street. Parents | skirt in. tones of beige and of the bridegroom are Mr. = brown. Her corsage was of ‘ Mrs. George. W. Lembke © green cymbidium orchids s Stanley avenue Following a reception, the Pontiac Press Phete tani ws new NG emte Gareiic . Ploning club or or- a brown and black tweed suit with rust and brown acceso- Dressed in his very best riding suit, Greg Alan month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Baker of a ; hell neck! Chantill thunders along on his trusty steed. He is the 19.- Bratton street. Ait diate grey Preiapson lace with seed and drop pearl . trim accented the bride's gown. ana . A Juliet cap secured her fin- Lipstick First gertip veil of silk illusion, and she carried a white orchid sur- rounded by stephanotis in a ee a . Beauty Aids Are Accepted Slowly MTIEAD BRE Pontiac Artists . call us for information about our special party : Mrs. Delmonto Manganello of Name Officers, | menus and private dining facilities. ; genization perties ries for a skiing trip to north. | - ‘ tor the holidays? ern Miehigan The bridegroom is a grad- uate of the University of Mich- igan. : Auburn Heights was matron By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN did not know HOW common they! clevators, restaurants, stores and and self-conscious about this. Ex-) of honor, dressed in a bronze S how Painti ngs P e reek é “4 | auic ; taffeta gown featuring a boat I knew that many women have become until I spent a week at the theater. Being of a curious perts advised women who were) - : , in New York City recently. |turn of mind I dropped by The) : . _| neckline and tiara headpiece. ce ap false eyelashes so) however, I y going to dye their hair to do so) Teri Gowers | ware (tanmcrine Officers were elected when the | - It was as though Nature sudden-| Eddie Senz’ Salon to query him as, ly fad blossomed forth in’ new to WHY this sudden false eyelash When they first started getting grey; carnations in a semi-cascade | Pontiac Society of Artists met Jee 9 MEET for LUNCH glory. I noticed lovely lashes in) boom. so that thefPtriends, and = arrangement, day at Adah Shelly Library. . | 4 ee Eddie is make-up consultant and) their husbands, would not know the| Junior bridesmaid Judith Named president of the group RIKER FOUNTAIN M R atte for many of Broadway's) difference. Lembke, sister of the bride- | wags Mrs. C. K. Naumann. Others A Sealtest lee Cream rs. Kammes . |top shows as well as for movies|) These same experts ‘even left | groom, and bridesmaids Carol | elected were Mrs. Cecil Dumbrigue : _ |and television. He has changed! . few grey hairs so that the) Chaffin and Judith Wieber, both Popular Prices ‘Enter tains |many an ugly duckling into a swan} gefect Ae ke catecall today of Lansing, wore beige gowns, vice president; Mrs. Adell Paine, Riker Building Lobby land started her e way te led identically to that of the |Secretary,; Mrs. Russell Foukes PRIVATE DINING ROOMS - eee (50 rden Club and Started her on her way (© the trend is much different, lai ae oe treasurer; and Mrs, Herbert Swin . DIN ae $end BANQUETS i | | ; ae . j x - : | H : . “ity a : ee ' ! eee at semenitarine ame | If you would like to have my, saturn carnations. gle, publicity, FE 4-66 Be Lovelier and Free From |) Mrs. J. A. Rammes of Rosedale, He Is also a rian apd leaflet which gives you many] Revag ees ec eed ese re ‘ : Flower girl Sandra Hopp was 2 : : Of 7 . . avenue, Sylvan Lake, was hostess) Works with paychiatrists to help muife-up tricks send a stamped,} ~ «pale vella andy Lola Strom and Don Bego. . LA Z ~~ Social Handicap for the Thursday meeting of: the, Testore wilting egos-through im: |W addressed envelope with your ee palin ae rese petals Portrait painting, landscapes and WOODWARD of SQUARE KE ROAD Vowant air ‘Sylvan Lake branch of National! Provement in appearance or by eles ape reat request for leflet No. 50, “What's figure paintings were shown. : . Farm and Garden Association. camouflaging physical defects. Going On?" to Josephine Lowman) _ IE . is . Electrolysis Centre | Mrs, John Huston showed slides Eddie's idea is this. The use of in care of this newspaper. . BROTHER FAKES PART Martha H. Wilder, R. E. ,and spoke on “Our Common Mich-| make-up has*had a gradual growth. | Tomorrow: “‘Mofe apdvut _, hair | The bridegroom's brother, W. OR 3-2895 ‘igan Wild Flowers’ which she First came the Apstick The pio- dyeing and fatse eyelashes. J. Lembke, attended as best grows in her garden. Mrs. Earl neers in its use were considered ————————— —— OPEN EVERY NICHT TO 9 ===, Bartlett reviewed the cardinal and ‘‘fast’’ or at least bold, by the 1 WILLIAMK: COWIE its habits. |conservative part of the popula- | = Nenday throogh Saterday | % | Hostesses for the day were Mrs. yi spay see peat feel un é NMir< A. Gressed without [ip coloring A Custom Upholstery - oe MMs ConA \Dahtgren those who do not use it (if there | dept. stores 25 Yrs. of Practical Experience } ang Mrs. S. J. Velkoft. are any) look anemic among the ; 205 Voorheis Rd. FE 4-2857 |} (oie were Mra. Ralph Beebe ruddy lips of their contemporaries ates ane re ~ Bet T z . eL_ eee Se im oe“ eet vlan le next .cos | = = . erie - . . INE fas a, COS- ure and aay: i\Undergoes Surgery metic to take over. Its use became ea pean Dreyton Pleins . | We Buy All Types of |! almost. universal in a compara- ih figure magic with — pt WASTEPAPER | Mrs. Gilbert E. Brown of Bar-|tively short time. Then came hair ine) eaten es _ - NEWSPAPERS 75¢ 100# ‘rington road is a patient in Henry dyeing. For a long while women: ee . : ‘oe t coenuaaien had 100# | Ford Hospital Tollowing surgery. as a whole were extremely fearful a ae. : a8. seen on new underliff panels Pontiac Waste Material Co. | | oo Si + ET ae etirhaliag TV that stay firm, yet 135 Branch . FE 2-0209 J}, es RE OS — Sh Y irm, sO TW 3-4 la a Tho An ape your 1 | : r Have You Tried This? : * soft, washing, after Band Instrument fs T f | FI i C th m -_ REPAIR ._ 1ang o emon avors . urves tne 7 washing, after washing! © Pactry iG d Carrot Relish | ! | Factory ie . gt We Ground Carrot Relis House of “ 2. ‘ ©The Right ' By JANET ODELL curtailed some these days by | | te ‘© Pontiac Press Home Editor _ illness in her home. She be- * Venus Wa ! | | it : 5 barh % Y: ! S verrautect *™ .We have, just heard about le oe : 5 Hbecegalicales AT: + | et yacresting t ve one of Guild Ten of her church. § Keep hive — weight In » similar to cranberry-orange ; asypy 5 the right places through . mm | ARR -LISH CALBI Music Co. - L relish. We car trace this B iyeeey ae . - » Slenderizing . .. or 119. N. Saginaw «FE 5-822 AS hurt = y, Mrs. ney Silkey supervised weight gaining . aoe : : recipe eK tO a CHUTCN Stuy | package carrots (6-8 carrots) guaranteed «not reducing Membership 7 ob |4 per in another town, but our 1 lemon programs of Flouse of Geet — wom, « local cook is Mrs. Rodney 1 nec vareat ced ie Venus. Visite arranged Grek 4 s iq Silkey. Her daughter gave her 980 Carrots and lemon for your convenience. |g the recipe Put through the food grinder, Coast i Add sugar. Let stand a few Grand Opening ie -_ * * hours before serving. This’ will Special b < ie ‘s activities are keep in the refrigerator. Phone CUSTOM CUT I" Mrs. Silkey's activities ar eep in the refrigerator ora 3 Wael Gene Ripgolh ] i - 2 at eet = ed Paid OOS Be : FE 4-9583 CUT {L— en yi Rowena Wilson 1 TO PLEASE A MAN, | Per Month Don’t belittle the necessity of | For « Course Individually , a : © professionst haireut. Your?! GALL CAREFUL DAN Designed for YOU! ~ ia Socios etry) eae ee i] The Famous House of Venus Guarantee! * ay I ei] FOR FLAWLESS _ , an experienced ‘| ; 3 MONTHS FREE «} technician to cre- DRY CLEANING If we fail to’ get the following results in 60 days | ate the effect you OVERWEIGHT: UNDERWEIGHT or Aver- age: want. Have one of Not only his valuable Lose 15 Pounds Add 2 Inches to Bust clothes but the whole 5 Inches Off and Waist U™Prove Posture and Re- family’s deserve Pontiac i Hips ; proportion Body Measure- . : — ee No Extra Charge for-Sun Room, Steam Cabinets, Mechanical iad Eergelancy irl j Massage. Studio Luxuriously Decorated in have , cleaning. . ~ : ants Ps ° oe oo "s — Mirrors, Chrome and Carpeting. The new youthful uplift that’s built-in to this bra will add . ‘PE 2-8101. — jf 7 magic to everything you wear. The secret’s in the revolutignary a Enjoy Insured Moth fina FREE Ouse. fe) : enus ae new underlift panels, made of laminated cotton, that stay firm, joy insure proofing | | yet soft . . . even after 65 machine washings. New mold-to- . DRY CLEANERS F; Salons shoulder straps always lie flat. White, in sires 32 A-40C. . ?-Beer Service of Our : ISure bith : _ Federa)’s expert corsetieres will fit you ; 4 J Locations gz Mirecle Mile Shopping Center correctly for comfort and figure flattery. : ‘ e Telegraph Read - , ; -, “saad woe U2 Mite—Berkley : . $. Telegraph at Square Leke Rd. ce BE oe : 93 &. A FEderel 4-9582 or FEderal 4-9583 . . i 4 . a ; 2 : E Aaa fk — ‘i; os ge: ‘ ‘ - ! : = ™ i ~ = ” a 5) “ ° "3 7. Cd % mn \ ah THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 |GOP Senators Open Key Battle Dirksen Seeks to End Committee Posts WASHINGTON (AP) — A battle by Republican senators for choice /committee spots offered a test to- | Dirksen of Illinois, | In hopes of ironing out a dead- lock among individual Republicans | | Deadlock Over Top. | day or GOP Leader Everett M Dirksen asked several of them to .- STARTS THIS WEEK Day, Half-Day and Evening Gregg Shorthand — Typewriting Speedwriting Shorthand Business Administration Higher Accounting Professional Accounting Executive” Secretarial Clerk-Typist Comptometer — Calculator ‘drop by for chats in his new ofice ag Republican floor leader, | * * * Two lengihy closed-door sessions and appeals by Senate GOP chietf- tains aid not solve the intraparty contests Saturday. Assignment to the 17 Republigan ivacancies on Senate legislative |committees is handled by a group | known as the Committee on Coim- imittees and headed by Sén. An- VETERAN APPROVED The Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac. Phéne FEderal 2-3551 A Demonstration Clais in Speedwriting (the ABC «J being planes iter to ht, Monda pan. 19, at 7:00, The public is invi Call in Person or Return This Ad for 1959 Bulletin , "of a New Conveniently Located OGG CLEANERS yp. - || 269 North Perry Street. iP Ca deers F. Schoeppel (R-Kan). _& *) i t ‘ be p ; <5 = P id dispute bas een ae ey LIFE AND man Sheet Donna Anderson‘ takes a - efforts to give at least one major ba in Hollywood, Calif., wher he: t ie Woes Wels alefple vin lee) a'pielclss eec/ecicicealsrs c(cleisleiy< esieiss)s (eis secenvece committee assignment to the three ugh in Hollyw where's ‘6 on her. way to ~/ Name 5 = Address stardom. The Gunnison, Colo, native had _Planned a dancing [ene rove osite Voorhees-Si le Funeral Home freshmen Republican senators —| _ : Corner Fairg ove, Opp Pp : Kenneth B. Keating of New York,| CaTeer_before-she was “discovered. . : . : | Hugh Sc ua Pennsylvania and —. Pre ; Winston L. uy of Vermont. | enin | * lg ! Celebrating Our Op 6 Th is bi 1iffer- eeaitiaaly senators with the, 72 ar Specials ere Q gc longest - service or- seniority get ° with Janu y Out lets ence in clothes cleaned first choice at a committee va cancy. ; at all Ogg Cleaner u and faultlessly renewed Senate Democratic Leader Lyn-| P by Ogg. Our careful, ‘don B. Johnson of Texas has par- | 77> a ' AIN SKIRT Cc i 1 hod ‘tally jomked this idea within his 7 : PL : t oroug metho re- /party in recent years by getting mn DRY CLEANED" moves every. particle of each freshman Democrat at least ~7' " . PRESSED one major committee place | ee ‘ AND dirt and dust, renews Democratic committee assign. 4 the original beaut ments already have been made) g : ; ary and and approved by the Senate. 2-Pt 2-Pt. lustre restoring the | * * bg . or 3 | Reoublics ac nor | smartness of your ' Republicans- at the close-door B Pl in DRESS | y session said Dirksen even offerec a : garment. to give up his seat on the Appro- : priations Committee if this would énd the deadlock, However, sev- eral Republic ans with two or more years’ setwice said they woulc claim it. So his compromise offer | . Oo’ iwas withdrawn, f Sy OO | ~CLEANERS State Clergy Hold Meet | . ; ANN ARBOR up — The 20th an- | > nual Michigan pastors’ conference {7 269 N. PERRY . | 368 AUBURN 523 NORTH PONT. TRAIL started here Monday with hundreds || 7. F PIKE Dat RGN AT WALLED LAKE | of Protestant clergymen from aiP ETRE = - 448) W. HURON 430 ORCHARD LK. AVE. throughout the state in attendance. # : The group is expected to re-elect!” , FOR PICK UP ANP DELIVERY CALL FE 4-9593 Bishop Marshall R. Reed, Bishop _ ™ : . : = . of the Methodist Church in Mich.) } : i igan, as president during Its, 7 = : — —— = ithree-day meeting. \¥ FR FE FUREKA = a A Comp lete Stock Must Be sold : ~ Roto- Matic Vacuum Cleaner —, . ' ith Excl Attach : LADIES GIRLS MA — usive Attach-O-Matic Clip on Tools! reg to5200 tadier” Jewelry ooo... 2 fer $ 1.00 + bbc Gd’ y a g Jewelry . < $ Reg 39¢ & 49c Girls’ Anklets .............. OUTS Absolutely Free With Purchase of . 3 Rooms sof Carpeting, 30 Sq. Yds. or More Reg to $7 98 Ladies’ Sweaters ............ tees s- $ 3.99 . _ — | Reg. to $1498 Ladies’ Sweaters ........... 1 $ 7.99 Remo 7c © 17<) Gictel Underweee 7. 4 Reg. to $7 98 Ladies’ Blouses .............. 2 for $ 5.00. Reg. 59c Girls’ Underwear ...... 6 _ Reg 49c Ladies’ Rayon Panties . toe 2252.3 fer $1.00 A A Reg to $2295 All Weather Coats .......... $13.99 Reg 40S1695 Gite (Cer) Conte cect ase , Reg $1.00 Silk Squares . Leen see eee eee $ 49 Reg $16.95 Children’s SnoSwits ................ e ae oe aise st rasa yo Reg $3.98 Girls’ Dresses ............. = =6Reg. $5 adies et PoP eLo Sanita orecrore cic i - ae . Reg. $1098 Ladies’ Skirts... eee $ 5.90 ; Reg $5.98 Girls’ Dresses... 2-2... cee eee eee Reg $598 Usdies’ Nylon Slips ............... $ 3.99 Regto $15 73) Cuts | Dresces ' Reg. $3.98 Ladies’ Nylon Half Slips ....... :~ 2 tor $ 4.00 Reg. $4.98 G $5.98 Girls’ Skirts ........... ‘eo06c = mf : Reg. to $8.95 Ladies’ Besttorm Girdles ....... ..$ 3.99 Reg. $5.98 Sub Teen Skirts .. 0.0.0.2... 205.0000. bike ae : ’ Reg. $7 ae Ladies’ Wool Flannel Slacks .......... $ 4.99 Reg. 59c Infants’ E-Z Vests ................... a 4 a Reg to 7 Z Ladies Winter Coats y 5 oe ped $38.00 Reg $2 98. Girls’ Sleepers coe Reg to $5.98 Ladies’ Blouses ’ 2 tor $ 4.00 _. Reg. $1798 Ladies’ Winter Storm Coats ..... $ 9.88 Reg $6.98 Sub Toon Bulky Sweater Reg to $1298 Ladies’ Bulky Sweaters ......... $ 5.99 Reg. to $29.95 Girls’ Winter Coats ............ .. Reg to $8.95 Ladies’ Millinery . eee eae $1 and $2 Reg. $5.98 Girls’ Bulky Sweaters . WALL -TO-WALL. Installed| Nationally Famous Brands of Shoes and Clothing me td li SAVE NOW BUT HURRY! nae - | your pedreen, Hviagroem, stairway or ily 0! Pi ij] ypu 1 ' rj 4 OFF ae Reg $50 G $55 Men's All Wool Topcoats $33.00 Mee a en eee $14.99 _~ Reg. $65 Men's Imported Tweed Topcoats ........ $44.00 os ie iar and Seberbens: siso 225% 1c? Reg $75 Men's Cashmere Blend Topcoats ........ $51.00 as $14 a =e = > oe ness $16.90 Reg. $24.95 Men's Sporteoats ..................$17.00 wie Wa Spent COM eat nee ee $ 9.99 ~ NO MONEY DOWN, Reg. $29.95 Men's Sporteoats . 2.26... eee. $22.00 Reg. 39c G 49c Boys’ Socks ................3 for $ 1.00 ve 50 WEEKLY! wnat Reg. $39.95 G $45 Men's Sportcoats ............. $31.00 - Reg. 75¢ G 19 Boys, &- Z Underwear ssrsee+.B foe$ 2.09 Reg-$4G $5 Van Heusen Colored ‘Shirts ...... T.0.$ 339+ - 4-- Reg. $I. eyian ae Pare sees reseree $99 OG a aR oF LS Reg. $4.00 Van Heusen White Dress Shirts ........ $ 3.49 ne e ae “a ashe aoe eee nip 5 WE is, wh od . ® a's ’ we va XE. Reg. $5.00 Van Heusen White Dress-Shirts ...... ..$-4.39 +. Re S 3 98 ra Ora Re ie pe + Ai, ’ } ‘ eg. fells) + 0)\e)'« (nilsl el allele) =! 6) e . ~ Se cigiaey | Minette ty ary 4 Reg. $2.50 Men's Ties...) oo tees cee tee scenes $1.99 hen 10 $3.98 Boys’ Sport Shirts $199 ee MEASURE ty pat. oft ee Se. | *e # fete yds ‘ 4 Reg. 31.50 Men's Pioneer Belts ................ $ 1.49 R ; $3 98 8 e 5 Ces nee le . oy iT! : \a Aly Q : vi Y ‘ : bens 2 fade cane Aur Reg $895 Men's Dress Slacks ae 5 6.90 ba to ae it — Soe eo oer esa eee $ 2.99 cs —— ah, Vy a a Te, te t tk Aah’ at Reg. $9 95 G $10 98 Men's Dress Slacks ......... $ 7.90 el re ae $ eee eres: $, 3.99 > [pe nee WON bel PET a(R RL th at BUNA ON a ate Reg $1095 Men’s Knox and Mallory Mats .... 2... $ 8.99 #8. t0 O78 Rweenerks yr 89 ; ‘f., te, ee A Gan = — ee Reg $15.00 Men's Knox and Mallory Hats ...... $12.99 * WE bal ern ghee "KC price includes ne en - A Reg $1695 Men's Winter Jackets 0 <6... $ 7.99 SHOES r me SEW t: " mT has : ise adding and labor tor Mie orks! ey! Reg &5c Men's Socks © aa ees $ .68 Reg to $17.95 Men's Porto Ped-Shoes .. oe ) al carpeting. re ad hall! The whole a yi! Reg. $1.50G $195 Men's Socks ........... 3 for $ “4.00 Reg. to $!4.95 Men's Portage Shoes . dining °° «aiden tweed carpe be “pew! ‘ i Reg $4.00 Men's Sport Shirts 2.0.0.0... -0 80005, $ 2.90 Reg. to $14.95 Men's Jarman Shoes .. Loner iter, Padeet Lapeer wit wrart. oatprins %, Reg $5.00 Men's Sport Shirts .........-00055 ...$ 3.90 ° Reg. to $19.95 Porto-Ped Shoes ...... hy Der ey cnrg* ting toe “cee es ih be} Reg to $7.95 Men's Sport Shirts ..... Gisele a slelerel $ 4.90 Reg. $10.95 Men’s Low Work Shoes ... ha, . atl sit remem pmeeiation wih me wi Reg. to $16.95 Men’s Suiting Slacks ..... ceteacr.. 8 9.90 Reg. $14.95 Men’s Porto-Ped Work Shoes . of} : " Reg. $50 & $55 Men‘s Clipper Craft Suits. .... Some $35.90 Reg. $18.95 Porte-Ped Police Shoes ...... . v* - . Re. $15.95 Men's Ripple Soles ...... seb we tas i Mie ' . Reg. $9.95 American Girl Dress Shoes . Kl oe 2 Reg. $13.95 Naturalisers ...........,.. we Lee re o. Reg. $11.95. Enna jettich Shoes . : a ia Use a Lion Charge Reg. $10.95 Ladies’ White Nurses’ Oxfords... § 6:90 ; Reg. $9.95 Ladies’ Loafers, Saddles. Oxfords & Casuals $ 6.99 ; * . 7 Children’ se With Convenient Option Terms nee 1 aren ten SO ‘ etna amd s : FE deal _ Reg..$7.95 Children’s Scamperoos | . oe $ 3.99 - P 4 All Sales Final—No Exchenges—Ne Refunds | Reg. to $12.95 Jarman & Portage Men's Shoes... $ 6.99 ; 3-7 114 Reg. $8.95 Ladies’ Sport Oxfords... ... $299 MM. $2.95 Mens’ Felt Slippers... a = 108 NORTH SAGINAW MIRACLE MILE Open Every Night Until 9 P.M. a eeu i DOWNTOWN Open Monday & Friday Until 9 P.M.. . _ past... Ea THE PONTIAC ‘PRESS: MONDAY, JANUARY: 19, 1959 : “PONTI AC, M ICHIG SEVENTEEN Here’ ‘s Text of Fisenh WASHINGTON —Following is Budget message of the President to the Congress of the United States: The situation we face today.as a nation differs significantly from that a year ago. We are now enter- ing a period of national prosperity and high employment. This is a time for the government to con- duct itself so as best to help the nation’ move forward strongly and confidently in economic and social progress’ at home, while fulfilling our résponsibilities abroad. The budget of the United States for the’ fiscal year 1960, transmitted here- with, will effectively and respon- sibly carry out the government's role in dealing with the problems and the opportunities of the period ahead... .. This budget abhor to in- to enhance domestic well being, to help friendly nations to foster their development, to preserve fiscal soundness, and to encour- age economic growth and sta- | bility, not only in the fiscal year . 1960 but in the years beyond. ’ And it clearly shows that these things can be done within our, income. xk *« . ‘We cannot, of course, undertake to satisty all proposals for gqvern- ment spending. But as we choose which ones the government should accept, we must always remember that freedom and the long-run strength ef our economy are pre- requisite to attainment of our na- tional goals. Otherwise, we can- not, for long, meet the imperatives of individual freedom, national security, and the many other nec- essary responsibilities of govern- ment. In short, this budget fits the conditions of today because: ~ 1. It is a balanted budget.—Mf recommendations call for an ap- proximate equality between reve- nues and expenditures, with a small surplus. 2. isa iget.— By avoiding a will help prevent. further increases in the cost of living and the hidden and unfair tax that inflation.imposes on personal savings and incomes. 3. It is a confident budget.— It anticipates, in a rapidly ad- vancing economy, increases in revenues without new general taxes, and counts upon the unity and good judgment of the Amer: ican people in supporting a level of government activity which sich revenues will make pos-. sible. 4. It is a eaatliee budget. — It responds to national needs, with due regard to urgencies and priorities, without being either extravagant or unduly limiting. 5. It is an attainable budget.— . 25 proposals are realistic and canbe achieved with the cooper- ation of Congress. . .. Growth of revenues — Our na- tion’s population and labor force will continue to increase. The out- put per hour of work on our farms and in our factories can also be expected to grow as jt has in the on x « Economic growth generates high- er personal incomes and business profits. Wnder our graduated in- come tax’system, with present tax rates, budget receipts: should’ grow even faster than national inconfe, although the rise in receipts cer- tainly will not be uniform from year to year. Also, some tax re- forms and downward tax adjust- ments will be essential in future years to help maintain and strengthen the incentives for con- tinued economic growth. With a ‘balance in -our finances in 1960, we can.look forward to tax peduc- tion in the reasonably foreseeable . future . Fiscal soundness and progress. ; | taws. hope that the committees of the Congress will work with the Treasury Department in. pre- paring further adjustments of our tax laws for the future... . Other changes in tax rates.—In order to make highway-related taxes support our vast highway expenditures, excises on motor fuels need to be increased 114 cents a gallon to 442 cents. These re- jceipts will go into the highway trust fund an dpreserve the pay- as-we-go principle, so that contri- butions from general tax funds to build federal-aid highways will not be necessary... . * * * Revenues. — The resurgence of our economy has been stronger than was assumed in the budget estimates that were published last September. Consequently, budget receipts for the fiscal year 1959 are now expected to total $68 bil- lion instead of the $67 billion esti- mated at that time. .The estimate of $77.1 billion in receipts for 1960 is contingent on enactment of the tax recommenda- tions mentioned’ earlier. . , . MAJOR NATIONAL SECURITY The changes in emphasis in the four major national security pro- grams for the fiscal year re- flect the growing armed~strength of the United States and its allies of defense methods. The Depart- ment of Defense will significanffy| increase expenditures for procure- |ment. of missiles and for develop- ment and evaluation of new wea- ‘pons, while reducing expenditures for other procurement and for con- struction. The Atomic Energy Commis- sion is advancing all phases of its programs, particularly re- search in the peaceful uses of atomic energy. Our allies’ prog- ress in equipping their armed forces and the deliveries under military assistance in 1958 and prior years permit a reduction in military assistance . expendi- tures. Expenditures for stock- piling and expansion of defense production “will be reduced be- cause basic stockpiling objectives for most materials are now ful- fied and because many defense production expansion contracts | have already been completed. Total expenditures for major national security programs in fis- cal 1960 are estimated to $45.8 billion. Department of Defense—military ‘functions.—-The defense program for 1960 calls for new appropria- tions of $40,850 million. This is. $288 million less than the appropri- | ations estimated for 1959. How- ever, approximately $0.7 billion of the funds appropriated by. the Con- gress for 1959 in excess of the amourtts recommended will be added to the 1960 program. - Expenditures in 1960 are estimat- ed at $40,945 million, which is $145 million more than in 1959 and about $1.9 billion more than the ‘amount spent in 1953—continuing the upward trend which began in a is i is i E Fi ee 3 E : i z ; i | and the continuing modernization. agreement, of course, is but a first . step toward reducing the grave threat of nuclear warfare, This ad- ministration intends to explore all possible means of attaining arma- ment control under adequate in- spection guaranties despite the re- cent suspension of negotiations on means of avoiding surprise attack. I hope that we shal] succeed, Un- til an acceptable agreement is reached, however, financial ea thorizations must be provi continue development and seed duction of nuclear weapons at current high levels to meet a va- riety of military needs . . Mutual Security Program. —. The Mutual Security Program is designed to help strengthen the ‘defense and bolster the political and economic stability of the free world. Through it the United States shares in worldwide efforts . to meet the Communist threat and to help improve the standard “of living ef people in less devel- oped nations. For the fiscal year 1960, I am recommending new obligational authority of y$3,930 million for the Mutual Security mated to be . $3,498 million,- which is $383 million less than in fiscal 19569... The estimate of new oblizational authority for military assistance in the fiscal year 1960 is $1,600 mil- lion. . * * * ‘Highways. — The comprehensive highway program enacted in 1956 established the principle that high- way users, rather than the gen- eral taxpayers, should pay the cost of federal-aid highways. The larg- er contract authority enacted in 1958, however, will create a cumu- lative deficit in the highway trust million by the end of the fiscal year 1960, and about $2.2 billion by the end of 1962. MORE self-supporting basis, I am recom- mending a temporary ‘increase of 1% cents in highway fuel taxes, to become effective July 1, 1959, and to remain in effect through the fiscal year 1964. This increase of the entire 1961 and 1962 federal- aid highway authorizations with- jout waiving provisions in the basic legislation which limit ex- penditures to the amounts avail- able in the trust fund. a” * * * Postal Service.—Since 1953 this administration has been using every available method to improve the efficiency of the postal service, and to place its operations on a self-supporting basis, except for a few subsidized uses authorized by law. In the last session the Con- gress took an important step by enacting the first compfehensive increases in postal rates in a quarter century. The increases, however, “were considerably short of the minimum necessary amounts which I had requested and were made more inadequate by pay increases for postal em- ployes for which no additional financing was provided. , . Fur- ther revisions in rates should be enacted adequate to provide at least $350 million of additional revenues in 1960. Legislation for this purpose will be proposed in the near future. ly upon four major revisions in the, ‘urban renewal laws: (One change follows): -(A) Assure the states and cities of continuing federal support for, urban renewal by authorizing cap ital grants of $1,350 million for the next 6 years. For each of the first, 3 years, 1960-62, $250 million should be authorized, with $200 million annually for 1963-65. This forward authorization, together with ad- ministrative steps already taken community-wide plan which may then be. financed in realistic an- nual installments. * * Area Assistance.—In disapprov- ing the area redevelopment legisla- ,|tion enacted in the closing,days of the last Congress, I expressed the 1 bape Get Ge net Oe promptly pass a more soundly con- ceived program. The revised leg- --|islation which this administration comparable pro- 4 by certain states should be ade. Giake dia tee Solara are Sir ‘redevelopment of all areas expect- fund under present law. of $241/. To maintain the trust fund on al is necessary to assure availability | .. ; ~ The Congress should act prompt-. | F yar to a further revisions in the price support elaasioa Recom- mendations will be in a agricultural trade development and assistance act of 1954 (Public Law 480) and the sugar act, major changes in the rural e¢redit pro- grams and a reduction in the ad- vance authorization for the agri- cultural conservation program. * * Estimated expenditures for agri- cultural programs in fiscal year 1960 are $6 billion, which is $779) “| million less than the estimate for the current year, but $1.6 billion more than was actually- spent in); 1958. The main part of the de- crease expected in 1960, is in the jat.the end of the 1958 crop year ; NATURAL RESOURCES : ’ Expenditures for the develop- ment and conservation of natural resources, are estimated at $1,7 billion in 1960, approximately the same as in 1959, which itself will be higher than any previous year. x * * ‘Individual _ Income Tones. — we * * WASHINGTON 591g cents out of each dollar in the new budget will.go into na- tional security — military costs here and abroad, atomic energy and stockpiling. The next biggest share 101g the record federal debt. * * * jinto these slites: Traffic- Dodging Man This. is ceoe the buiter Nets Wrong License HOLLYWOOD (®—John Broberg, plate while driving on a freeway. sadly home. Next day at the same spot, lo. . fie was lighter so he turned off. circled, and parked at freeway’s edge. Dashing daringly between cars he grabbed ithe plate, crushed it to his breast, and like a half- back threaded his way back to his car. — wasn't his. - Chiari Flies to — to Be With Ava Gardner | MELBOURNE, Australia » — ‘Italin film actor Walter Chiari ar- i" Governor Plays It Safe When He Goes Skiing ~ SPRINGFIELD, tl. (UPI) When [lincis Gov. William G. \Stratton left Saturday for a week ™ 1960, the circumstances, ed to. qualify under the proposed of skiing at Sun Valley, Idaho, he testing grounds in Nevada and the|legisiation . . * \took his’ physician, Dr. Kenneth Pacific will be kept on a standby AGRICULTURE AND =i with him—jost in case. A satistactory ‘test suspension). Legislation is urgently needed! said Stratton. : } 1 @ . ue : * . , le ~ Reg. $65 Men's Imported Tweed Topcoats .:...... $44.00 Res oa ia Boys Jackets and Suburbans . gy... ... $16.99 Reg $75 Men's Cashmere Blend Topcoats ........ $51.00 a cial mill = Coats. eee Sass 4 . , Reg. $2495 Men's Sportcoats ........... Aube 208 $17.00 — ; 1a Rasta! each = NO MONEY DOWN, “ati Reg. $2995 Men's Sporteosts .............. = | $2200 Reg. 39c & 49¢ n Socks ......... seeees3 for$ 1.00 Pr AAL cae , se gee " Reg. 75¢ G 79¢ Boys’ E-Z Underwear ........ 3 for $ 2.09 $2.50 WEEKLY! . 8, ‘ Reg. $39.95 G $45 Men’s Sportcoats ........ ~e ee $31.00 . : j ° fey Reg $4& $5 Van Heusen Colored Shirts ......... ‘s339 | | Ree eee ca ee TOSCO Cy 4 Reg. $4.00 Van Heusen White Dress Shirts ........ $3.49 Pe one eee pene ascEas sy : NaN ot * Reg. $5.00 Von Heusen White Dress Shirts ..... $439 eg. to $5.98 Boys’ Dress Slacks ............. veo $ 3.99 ak WE it 4 3% Giagit ha: Reg $2.50 Men's Ties .... 0... cee cece eee eee $ 1.99 Recto 57 38 “th Dress Slacks... Tenses 4 ed Vy MEASURE B ts Hala, ia | i ars 44) Reg $150 Men’s Pioneer Belts ............... $ 1.19 - ne 2 nee Sport Shirts 0... $ 1.99 , iT! : vs L'ahh ie ind a oa} : Reg $895 Men's Dress Slacks... .... $ 6.90 st to coos. Boys’ Sweeters oc oes ek cnc seaes. $ 2.99 ;* . re tls, War eitayved “3 Wik yigd iP ri By Reg $995 G $1095 Men's Dress Slacks .......... $ 7.90 Ste fo? ae Sweaters ....... 02.62... see. $ 3.99 a Vite 4 Wh: aL 7p, ee, re aw tye ~ ee ne F fn : Reg $1095 Men's Knox and Mallory Hats ........ $ 8.99 ~ Reese yi aa Sweeters ................... $ 5.99 é ’ eth «*, x Reg. to $16.95 Men’s Suiting Slacks .......+++.+- $ 9.90 ‘Reg. $14.95 Men's Potte-Ped Work Shoes . ...$ 9.99. Mad * Reg. $50 G $55 Men's Clipper Craft Suits...... e+ $35.90 Reg. $18.95 Porto-Ped Police Shoes ....... veces $14.88 FS _ Rg. $15.95 Men's Ripple Soles ...... sacle ges $1288 . Reg. $9.95 American Girl Dress Shoes ./..........$ 4.69 é ‘ * le Reg $13.95 Noaturalizers “oe Soe Saha ona aeee $ 7.90 ~ Reg. $11.95 Enna jettich Shoes. -........ ...$ 6.85 hh Use a Lion Charge Reg. $10.95 Ladies’ White Nurses’ Oxfords... $ 8.90 ; hha ey. sire | Reg. ss Ladies’ Loafers, Saddles, ns 6.99 f és Ra With Convenient Option Terms Reg. 37.95 Chiidven's Poll-Parvet Shoes $4.99 , . <4 ret i if 'e . FEderal P Reg. $7.95 Children’s-Scamperces_. Pea oe “$3 3.99 Soy All Sales Final—No Exchanges—No Refunds Reg. to $12.95 Jarman & Portage Men's Shoow seen $ 6.99 3-7 114 Reg. $8.95 Ladies’ Sport Oxfords .... 00... >. +... $ 3.99 $2.95 Pessoa’ : OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 PM MIRACLE MILE Open Every Night Until 9 P.M. | $0 $25 Mew’ Fat Shppere 0000... ae allie ees; NORTH SAGINA DOWNTOWN M & Frida PM. eg. $5. aL. DUONG COO Bonn ae $4.89 Open Monday my bai 8 Reg. $3.95 Ladies’ Slippers ....... secon Ld ~ duct itself so as best to help the _ induced deficit of $12.9 billion in 2 THE PONTIAC ‘PRESS: MONDAY, J AN NUARY 19, 1959 PONTI AC, M ICHIG SEVENTEEN, WASHINGTON (#—Following is a partial text of the budget mes- i Budget message of the President to the Congress of the United States: The situation we face today as a nation differs significantly from that a year ago. We are now. enter- ing a period of national prosperity and high employment. This is a time for the government to con- nation move forward strongly and confidently in economic and: social ~ progress at home, while fulfilling our responsibilities abroad. The budget of the United States for the fiscal year 1960, transmitted here-.| with, will effectively and respon- sibly carry out the government's role in dealing with the problems and the oppextussiies of the period ahead. This budget ptoposes fo in- crease our military effectiveness, to enhance domestic well-being, to help friendly nations to foster their development, to preserve _fiscal soundness, and to encour- ‘age economic growth and sta- bility, not only in the fiscal year 1960 but in the years beyond. And it clearly shows that these things can_be done within our income, : : * * x We cannot, of course, undertake to satisfy all proposals for govern- ment spending. But as we choose which ones the government should accept, we must always rerié@mber that freedom and the long-run strength of our economy, are pre- requisite to attainment of our na- tional goals. Otherwise, we can- not, for long. meet the imperatives of individual. freedom, national security, and the many other nec- _essary responsibilities of govern- ent. In short, this budget fits the conditions of today because: 1. It is a balanced budget.—My ~ recommendations call for an ap- proximate equality between reve- nues and empeamneree: with a small surplus. 2. Itisa responsible budget.— By avoiding a deficit, it will help prevent further increases in the cost of living and the hidden and unfair tax that inflation imposes personal savings and incomes. * It is a confident budget.— Tt anticipates, in a rapidly ad- vancing economy, increases in revenues. without new general _taxes, and counts upon the unity and good judgment of the Amer- ican people in supporting a level of government activity which ‘ such revenues will make pos- sible. 4. It is a positive budget. — It responds to national needs, with due regard to urgencies and priorities, without being either extravagant or unduly litniting. 5. It is an attainable budget.— Its proposals are realistic and - can be achieved with the ee —— of Congress. . - . ‘Growth of revenues — Our na- tion’s population and labor force e will continue to increase. The out- put per hour of work on our farms and in our factories. can also be Ti to -grow as it a in the past . * & Economic growth generates high- er personal incomes and business _ profits. Under our graduated in- come tax system, with present tax rates, budget receipts should grow even faster-than national income, although the rise in receipts cer- tainly will not be uniform from year to year. Also, some tax re- forms: and downward fax adjust- ments will be essential in future yearsto help maintain and | strengthen the incentives for con- finued economic growth. With a balance in our finances‘ in 1960, we can look forward fo tax reduc- tion in the reasonably foreseeable fotere : ’ Fiscal soundness and progress. —Both domestic and defense needs? require that we keep our financiat house in order. This means that we must adhere to two policies: First, we must review all gov- ernment activities as a part of the continuing budgetary process from year to year. . . Second, we must,.examine new programs and proposals with a critical eye. Desirability alone is not a sound criterion for adding to federal responsibilities. The im- pact today and tomorrow on the ‘entire ration must be carefully assessed... . BUDGET TOTALS Budget expenditures are Pro-\ the Atomic ee —_ to be held to $77 billion in fiscal 1960, which is $8.9 billion less than the estimated 1959 level of $80.9 billion. ‘qos a very modest surptus of Gout $0.1 billion ‘is estimated for 1960, compared with a recession- the current fiscal year. This esti- mated balance assures enactment of recommendations for extending lere s :|about $1.9 billion more than the| authorization, Maga -spent in 1958—continuing | ministrative makes it essential to extend pres- ent tax rates on corporation profits and certain excise taxes another year beyond their present expira- tion date of June 30, 1959. Development of a moré equi- table tax system.—Considerable and hardships from the tax laws. Continued attention is necessary in this area. As the budget per- mits, additional reforms should be undertaken to increase the fairness of the tax system, to re- duce the tax restraints on in- centives to work and invest, and wherever feasible to simplify the laws. I hope that the committees of the Congress will work with the Treasury Department in pre- paring further «adjustments *of our tax laws for the future... . Other changes in tax rates.—In order to make highway-related taxes support our vast highway expenditures, excises on motor fuels need to be increased 114 cents a gallon to 442 cents. These re- ceipts will go into the highway trust fund an dpreserve the pay- as-we-go principle, so that contri- butions from general tax funds to build federal-aid highways will not be necessary. * + * Revenues. — The resurgence of our economy, has been stronger than was assumed in the budget September. receipts for the fiscal year 1959 are now expectéd to total $68 bil- lion instead of the $67 billion esti-' mated at that time. The estimate of $77.1 billion in| receipts for 1960 is contingent on enactment of the tax recommenda- tions mentioned earlier... . MAJOR NATIONAL SECURITY The changes in emphasis in the four majer national security pro- grams for the fiscal year 1960 re- ‘lflect the growing armed strength of the United States and its allies and the continuing modernizgtion of defense methods. The Depart- increase expenditures for procure- ment of missiles and for. develop-, ment and évaluation of new wea- pons, while reducing expenditures fer other procurement and for con- struction. The Atomic Energy Commis- sion is advancing all phases of its » particularly re- ‘search in the peaceful uses of atomic energy. Our allies’ prog- ress in equipping their armed forces and the deliveries under military assistance in 1958 and |. > prior years permit a reduction in military assistance tures. Expenditures for stock- piling and expansion of defense cause basic stockpiling objectives for most materials sre now ful- filled and because many defense production expansion contracts have already been completed. - Total expenditures for major national security programs in fis- cal 1960 are estimated to $45.8 billion. Department of Defense—military functioris—The defense program for 1960 calls for new appropria- tions of $40,850 million. This is. $288 million less than the appropri- ations estimated ‘for 1959. How- ever, approximately $0.7 billion of | the funds appropriated by the Con- gress for 1959 in excess of the amounts recommended will be, added to the 1960 program. ed at $40,945 million, which is $145 million more than in 1959 and the upward trend which began in 1956. Over the S-year period from az Development atomic energy —Expenditures by Ae | ~os a i ? 3 ZF . i i i in ip z ‘ "Text of estimates that were published last) Consequently, budget, ment of Defense will significantly) production will be reduced be- | Expenditures in 1960 are estimat-|3 agreement, of course, is but a frst step toward reducing the grave threat of nuclear warfare. This ministration intends to explore all possible means of attaining arma- ment control under adequate in- .|spection guaranties despite the re- cent suspension of negotiations on means of avoiding surprise attack. I hope that we shall succeed. Un- til. an acceptable nent is reached, however, fant au- thorizations must be provided to continue development and produc- ‘duction of nuclear weapons at current high levels to meet a va- riety of military needs . . . Mutual Security Program. — The Mutual Security Program is designed to help strengthen the defense and bolster the political and economic stability ef the free world. Through it the United States shares in worldwide efforts to meet the Communist threat and to help improve the standard of living of people in less devel- oped nations. For the fiscal year 1960, I am recommending new obligational authority of §3,930 million for the Mutual Security Program. Expenditures are esti- mat be $3,498 million, which is $383 ae less than in fiscal 1959 . The eerie of new obligational authority for military assistance in the fiscal year 1960 is $1,600. mil- lion... * * * ‘Highways. — The comprehensive highway program enacted in 1956 Jestablished the principle that high- Way users, rather than the gen- eral taxpayers, should pay the cost of federal-aid highways. The larg: er contract authority enacted in |1958, however, will create a cumu- lative deficit in the highway trust fund under present law of $241 million by the end of the fiscal jyear 1960, and about $2. 2 billion by ithe end of 1962. MORE | To maintain the trust fund on & |self-supporting basis, I am’ recom- 1%g cents in highway fuel taxes, to become effective July I, 1959, the fiscal year 1964. This increase is necessary to Assure availability of the entire 1961 and 1962 federal- aid highway authorizations with- lout waiving provisions in the penditures to the amounts avail- able in the trust fund, * * * administration has been using every available method to improve the efficiency of the postal service. and to place its operations on a self-supporting basis, except for a few subsidized uses authorized by law, In the last session the Con. gress took an important step by ‘enacting the first comprehensive increases in postal rates in a | quarter century. The increases, however, were considerably | short of the minimum necessary amounts which I had requested and were made more inadequate by pay increases for postal em- ployes for which no additional financing; was provided. . . Fur- ther revisions in rates should be enacted adequate to provide at least $350 million of additional revenues in 1960. Legislation for this purpose will be proposed in the near future. The Congress should act prompt- ‘ly upon four major revisions in the ‘urban renewal laws: (One change’ ‘follows: (A) Assure the states and cities of continuing federat support for) jurban renewal by authorizing c cap-| ‘ital grants of $1,350 million for the next 6 years. For each of the first to allocate the available funds equitably, should enable each com- munity to develop a long-term community-wide plan which may then be financed in realistic an- nual —, on Area isles 3s disapprov- ing the area redevelopment legisia- tion enacted in the closing days = 3 isen mending a temporary increase of | | and to remain in effect through basic legislation which limit ex™ Postal Service —Since 1953 this|_ Chiari Flies to Australia - \TivedSin Melbourne yesterday to the price support program. Recom- ad-|mendations will be sent to the Congress in a special message on agriculture. In this budget I am agricultural trade development and assistance act of 1954 (Public Law 480) ‘and the sugar act, major changes in the rural credit pro- grams and a reduction in the ad- vance authorization for the agri- cultural conservation program. * * * - Estimated expenditures for agri- cultural programs in fiscal year 1960 are $6 billion, which is $779 million less than the estimate for the current year, but $1.6 billion more than was actually spént in) 1958. The main part of the de crease expected in 1960 is in the’ soil bank program, because the acreage reserve portion terminated at the end of the 1958 crop year... NATURAL RESOURCES Expenditures for the develop- ment and conservation of natural resources are estimated at $1.7 billion in 1960, approximately the same as in 1959, which itself will be higher than any previous year. x k * y individual Income Taxes. x * * ‘Goes for N ati WASHINGTON (AP) — About the new budget will go into na- and stockpiling. cents, will be paid as interest on the record: ame debt. * * into these slices: | Traffic-Dodging Man Nets Wrong License * HOLLYWOOD w—John Broberg. TV station employe, lost his license plate while driving on a freeway.|- He heard it fall,.but couldn't stop in the rush of traffic. So he drove sadly home. Next day at the same spot, lo. . license plate on the freeway, Trat fic was lighter so he turned off, circled, and parked at freeway’s edge, Dashing daringly between ears he grabbed the plate, crushed it to his breast, and like a half- back threaded his way back to his car. Glancing down, he saw the plate wasn't his. ‘ to Be With Ava Gardner M URNE, Australia ) — Italindilm actor Walter Chiari ar- visit Ava Gardner after a 13,000- tion. She and Chiari have been going together for months, _ comparable pro. grams conducted by certain sta’ semitone nr A satisfactory test’ suspension recommending extension of the | | | The revinilne 30 cents is cut) About two-thirds of the expendi-' velopment of water resources , no funds are provided in the 1960 budget for starting construction of new water resources projects .. Labor and manpower — This budget provides $329 million of appropriations fer grants to states for administration of em- ployment service and unemploy- ment insurance offices . . . Our unemployment compensation system has again demonstrated its! importance in providing income for the unemployed and thereby sup- porting the economy while alleviat- lance of the kind provided by the ‘temporary unemployment compen-| sation act of 1958 is in no sense a, substitute for widening th: coyer- ‘age of unemployment compensa- tion and extending the duration of benefits and increasing benefit amounts under the federal-state system. I have many times urged such action. I urge it again now with added conviction as a result. of last year’s experience. T am again urging prompt en- x k * WHERE TAXES GO — Bureau of Budget chart illustrates the estimated sources and dis- _bursals of the tax dollar for the 1960 fiscal year. x k & onal Security 8 cents for farm price supports 5914 cents out of each dollar in and other farm programs. 7 cents for veterans. tional security — military costs} 5 cents for relief, Beale educa- here and abroad, atomic energy tion and welfare. 3 cents for commerce and hous- The next biggest share 10's ing. * * * 3 cents for international affairs ‘and finance. 2 cents for water, power ‘other resources, 2 cents for general government costs, * * * This is where the budget dollar ‘comes from: 53 cents from the in- ‘dividual income taxpayer, _cents from the corporation tax; 1, customs and other receipts. tures in 1960 will be fore the de-| ing hardship. Temporary assist- and actment of effective statutory protection for workers and the public from the racketeering, corruption and abuse of demo- eratic processes which have been disclosed in the field of labor- | management relations will like- wise be proposed to promote equity and stability in the rela- tiens among workers, unions. and employers. I shall make specific preposals in a special «message on labor affairs ,.. ; -* * * | Public Health—Expenditures by the Departnient of Health, Educa- | P tion and Welfare for health pro-| including those for re-| Alaska—I am highly gratified to follow. grams, search and construction of health ‘facilities in fiscal 1960 are esti-. ‘mated at $675 million—more than, lduble Tie amount five years’ earlier. VETERANS’ SERVICES AND BENEFITS Pensions—We. must continue vet- erans’ pensions and increase pen- sion rates for those who are with- they have families. accordingly , we x «* * MY iP AP Wirepheto x *& &* fo $431 Per Person WASHINGTON (AP) — The ad- ministration’s new spending budg- r fiscal] 1960 adds up to $431 5 every man, woman and child in the country, * * * This compares with estimated current fiscal year, — * * * President Eisenhower said he expects the national debt to be 285 billion ‘dollars, Baséd on official estimates the population will total) per capita spending of $460 in the oa at verare affairs to pre- ‘sent to the Congress legislation iboth to provide more equitable) jtreatment of needy veterans and ‘to modernize the veterans’ pension ‘program in the light of social de-' ivelopments and changes . . . hower’s s Budget Message to make further revisions in| rules, and policies as are applic- able to other states . ;CONCLUSION This budget is designed to serve ithe needs of the nation as a whole as effectively as possible. It re- jects the philosophy that the na- Statehood for Hawaii and home rule fer District of Columbia—I again recommend that the Con- gress enact legislation to admit Hawaii into the Union as a state, and to grant home rule to*the | District of Columbia. It would be unconscionable if either of | these actions were delayed any _ longer. -be.the first presidént in 47 years to have had the privilege of wel-| coming.a new state into the Union. | Alaska takes its place as the equal, that go with, statehood. Recom-| mendations will be transmitted to: the Congress concerning certain: x & * (in millions of dollars): DESCRIPTION Legislative Branch The Judiciary ...... Executive Office of the President pe eee eee eens Independent Offices: Veterans Administration Other —.....- 3... : General Serviges Administration ~-Housing, Home Finance Agency Department of Agriculture .... Department of Commerce Department of Defense — Military Functions Civil Funetions . Department of the Interior Department of Justice .. Department of Labor .... Post Office Department ... Department of State .......... Treasury Departinent ..... District of Colymbia . aeeee eee wenee oeneee Allowance for Contingencies .... Budget Expenditures fewer eee ca Atomic Energy Commission ... eee mene whens Dept. Health, eaeceiod Welfare 4 ee ee tional welfare is best served by ‘satisfying every demand for fed- eral expenditures. Our objective, as a free nation, imust be to prepare for the mo- mentous decade ahead by entering ‘the fiscal year 1960 with a world at peace, and with a strong and ‘free economy as the prerequisite for healthy growth in the years to This can be achieved through government actions which help foster private economic re- covery and development, and w hich restrain the forces that would drive prices higher, and of the other 48 states with both ‘thereby cheapen our money and the privileges and responsibilities erode our personal savings. The first step is to avoid a budget deficit by having the government live within its means, especially changes needed in federal law as during prosperous, peacetime out other resources, particularly ifa result of Alaska’s admission to’ periods. . I have, the Union in order to apply to! The 1960 budget reflects our de- asked the "adminis. Alaska the same general laws,'termination to do this. x * * Lookina Ahead-and Back HINGTON w os ‘The following official table summarizes oy government subdivisions the manner in which President Eisen- hower’s budget projects the spending of $77,030,000,000 in the fiscal year 1960, beginning next July 1, as compared with figures for the current fiscal year (1959) and the year ended June 30, 1958 Funds Appropriated to the President Mutual Security ........ee00... 1958 1959 1960 ACTUAL ESTIMATE ESTIMATE $6 99 $ 119 $ 152 44 19 31 ri) 70 72 3,611 3,881 3,498 470 Sil 247 2,268 2 630 2745 5,098 5, 286 5,168 1,194 - 1,540 1,531 435 428 411 199 1,064 318 4,875 7341 6,450 327 418 476 39.062 40,800 10 945 Bs 769 833 2 bo 3.04 - 3.140 5 666 809 Tor 229 2 259 . S67 1,007 62 . 674 T32 109 - 206. Pai 243 . 8,446 9,778 8,900 pease 2 38 42 _—- 200 100 . 71,936 , $0,871 77,030 (Columns do not necessarily add to totals shown because of Nearly 60 Cents in Dollar Budget Averages Out, ane ctrmsst tenn London Pictorial | to Halt Series on Queen’s Life LONDON (AP)—The mass cir- culation Sunday Pictorial says it will publish no more chapters in its latest backstairs series about Queen Elizabeth's home life. The tabloid came out last week with the first installment in a se- ‘nine years superintendent of Wind- sor Castle. It was billed as an in- ‘formal and affectionate account of the roval “family’s life. * * * 2oval Court though other- The iSouthern Illinois University. |from breaking the pledge now re- quired of all palace employes that lthey will not write about the royal family after leaving its employ. Prisoners Can Study. CARBONDALE, Ill. (UPI)—In- mates at Menard State Pen- itentiary have been offered an ex- tension course in philosophy by The ries by William Charles Ellis, for’ eourse is entitled, “Ideas of Good and Evil.” - Big Money for Pakistan L. KARACHI - uw — Pakistan may get about $226,850.000 in grants and ~ 178,700,000 in fiscal 1960, the Per wise. Last Thursday a temporary, ‘loans from the United States dur Ison. cents from excises; 8 cents from/Capita debt would be $1,594 a per- jinjunction was issued on the ing 1959, official sources said to- iQueen’ 8 behalf. It restrained Ellis day. The marr in. white turned his head afid said, fanomnsar| : —— . Md Well, it may be a bit exagerated but this was almost the way a band got its start one morning in surgery at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. It all took place en years ago and today the PohCats, as they call themselves, are a solid- ly knit group still bouncing along at a sprightly tempo. The band is not officially con- nected with the hospital adminis- tration, It is made up mainly of staff members at the hospital as an activity. , * '* The man who sparked the whole idea was Dr. Ben Dickinson. While prepgring for. an operation that & Governor Plays It Safe When: He Goes Skiing SPRINGFIELD, fl. (UPD — er morning, he mentioned to Dr. Audrey Lintz that he'd just ‘bought a new trumpet. Dr. ‘Lintz was astounded. She ant nae ee “4 haven't played tor years,” said Dr, Lints, << ee “book.” Dickinson responded with, ‘Oh? You play a musical instrument?" ‘Well, I used to play piano,”’ she said modestly. . x * * And thus began a discussion about music which, interrupted only | by the operation at hand, last-) led the lunch hour. At lunch, another staff doctor. | Donald E. Fraser, heard them and, horn out of the attic since my bien Liste ad be vation Gal, with that statement, he had just be- come the first member of the sax section. The idea began to blossom. Word got around that there was music in the air—even if it was a little rusty at first, Other doctors be- came interested and the band grew into an orchestra. * * * Most of the members had a com-' mon interest in jazz, so it was only, natural that their first output of tunes fell into. that field. Gradually the band has grown to. 4 10-piece dance orchestra with a. already mentioned, the lineup in- cludes Dr. Douglas Hackett, sax and clarinet; Dr. R. Mark Todd, violin and baritone hern; and Dr.- dack Leve, drums. Drs. Jerry Margolis and Walt Bradley, interns at the hospital, handle trombone and electric gui- ‘tar duties, respectively. Frank Whitlow, the hospital's purchasing nostalgicly said, “I haven't had my agent, is a cornetist with the group to up-tempo numbers like ‘ and Dr. Bud Yonkin, of Mt. Clem-| ens, the only non-local member, | rounds out the trombone section. The group is non-union. ‘We're professionals only in the medical sense,” says Dr, Dickinson. * *. *® “In a way we have a gréat ad- vantage over professional mu- sicians. Everyone is here for fun, we all know each other's limita- tions and if someone hits a sour note we laugh and forget about it.” The band has never charged a leent for its services. It plays al-|* most exclusively. for charity fune- tions. Sometimes it may have sev- ~~yeral- jovs~a week, and often it won't have an engagement for a ‘fnonth- or more. easel is no set Fi pattern. Hep Doctors Happily Mix SS senbiato and Jazz Beats ——— Its book no longer jazz material, al- group ~ occasionally with a few hot num- bers, . The theme song is ‘Melody Of Love” played in a Wayne King style that is far from jazz. During an evening the band will cover all types of music, from waltzes ‘Two O'clock Jump.” - The outfit also makes an effort to keep up-to-date by including many pop songs currently on — seller lists. * * * Tt keeps in shape with weekly a) sessions at one of the One, for example, is the famous Jams trempeter Jiramy MePartiotsl, a elose friend of Dr, Dickinson, who alter sitting in with the group one _ afternoon ‘exclaimed, “Man, poly cats really” haye .a_swingia! outfit. I had a ball.” McPartland batt ee & * ne pares iz \ Be — . ne 7 Sf ge EG) id i i rit ey % / . ae = ; ee +. Ao z . 3 =< : a 2 . + t q bee et EIGHTEEN | ae ; . s , : Ee er : THE PONTI 7 | | i | 3 LE PONTIAC PRESS - = _ ! 4 ’ MON r ATTY | - . “ : 8 — - ; + DAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 . . : f , : 4 F ck ‘. * - x Detr oiters Now a oil kok ‘Royals Beat I : ~** Only One Point pe yore rain ~. etn! PD: PRESS BOX , EVEN — R ' + rom B ‘ usin Al Laurin of Battle Cree k has taken over first place in singles of . CINCINNATI ¢ 7 . - t Eagles Rangers Triumph, 4-2 gatherioge tl i ~ oes family son to Philadelphia | Saturday at half foe aa ep tae aes . e i ye Detroit Pist vee 1K 104-4 = ' at halftime é j B Before Booing Crowd Pen holding Palos oon 06 104-and yesterday to the Royals. interr ne arid added to it after control until the fourth * Ps #008 eal at Olympi had much effect on ie Cina t| “About the only positive: result chan ae Only in the fourth Then Cincinnati's Warne : sartonad t . ympia nat) cous Cln- from the team huddles j - juarter, after the game was o had bri i wok rey The New Yo Ae. Cousins. : é nuddies had been of reach, could the Pi out rief skirmishes with Duke che rk Rangers or i The Pistons fad foundlCincinnatl ine gradual return to form of score thelr revived 2 Pistons out- and Shellie McMillon. ae cemas Gar Red Wing de- | Wings cl ate Detroit Red real friendly this season Snine otal MOREE The National od Opecaene: i ts * for his Gus Mortson Saturday | eke 1ampions of the National 8X Of the first seven eel g basketball Assn 's slumping 1958 Walt Dukes topped the Piston’s | Detroit stayed) il" games behi ir $15,000 waiver price. | | ey League eight times in the But yesterday the Royals dade eee leader put two productive scoring with 26 points. Yardley the St. Louis’ Hawks, lea ning ereen ne ee ee : ast 10 seasons, are battling the on their larmentors Roy turned games back-to-back for the first and Phil Jordon, with 12 points, {te Western Division, readers ot list with intentions of going to at aA in the club's long’ The defeat k on 107-48. time in several weeks. | were the only other Detreliers idefeated 139-117 by Rckig Picked pes y as replacement for Gor- id storied history > defeat kept the Pistons wi , 5 to hit double fi Celtics ston Strate =a lens’ since coach s win Yardley Yallied 26 point | gures. The Royals, |Celtics. leaders of the E Abe 30 bad,"’ sald Coach Sid called ina ie Ked Kocha Cincinnati adter eng phar | in contrast, had seven men with |vision. Bill Sharman h Ppoyie ne a Ae Ave a we al even plsine! (cain) iueeting he trans put against Philadelphia ut- re a er more points headed by i“ Boston. points Michigan State gymnasts defeat fle on bad juck. We're ni ednesday ny, 2 . ‘hie Dees with 18. | In other NBA ed Southern Ilinoi . ust ees THAT ught to tron gut cl ‘eultles The Koyals, out. ae la in ue games yeste rm Illinois, 64-48, " st lousy that’s how simple jt! gi... put club CRUST ee pani Whine teal 2 avenge a 32-| Fighting almost broke out eee York beat Syracuse ae Spartan swimmers whipped on Pes “ Soa hak lost two started - quite kl ’ a . om the second period when play be ee Penecesea ln headed by Elgin| cis swimming food SES | The —— ames — its ’ ; - ent vy yesterday. They:came tig a or’ y Eten , . N mm Red Wings bowed to the irst game this sea-jheld a commanding 17 ney came tight under the baskets. But q de s 30 points, whipped Phila-| LOTS OF HELP — Charlie C ; AP Wirephete Gay. That York Rangers 42 last night. i 1T-point leadithe officials had matters under ie 88. | pion, squats to line u arlie Coe, National Amateur Golf Cham- x oe of at makes it ni ; : a 1e = Pistons ~~ { : p a putt on the 6th gree ; gaiuee si ne straight lWednesday w are idle unti) Yesterday's final round of the © green a! Feuthe Beach ie Three Michigan prep gridders, hout a victory for the mer when they play at Pro partner, th e Crosby tournament. Art Wall, his S¢FTyY Gross, Bay Cit Cent once-mighty Detroiters, whe hav ,Philadelphia , the tournament champion is on the an NS | quarterback, y ral Saiy cae arlonie ite Pees a is | inca Gs Foe ' some support. green to give Coe — a ack, Ken Mike of Detroit rem meee SF coum | |2= ae ‘Holup 12:3 4 Teym 6-9 18) ’ re the Only one point separates Detroit roe poate. 3 5941 1958 Scholastic magazine all- _ from the last-plf¥e Toronto Maple Dukes 00-12 26 Polmer 40.8 ‘ ; ears. , 7 aya | or 4.4 : 6- | . Leals and for the first time in 17 .. = j Maule 82.3 13 bry tt “ 2k seasons the Red Wings are inane = = oble 22-5 6 earenaen 1-1 9 Th oe gee of not mmeking the alanie dan Shue ive peters $23 121 wy e 87th title regatta of amateur playofté Stanley Cap [toni ae 32een flak Wes ce i , ~ Tens ee hosted by the De- |Cmetnnatt + otals 38 31-44 107} roit Boat Club Aug. 8-9 * iu 25 3; " 1 i ¢ g. and the “For a while tk . | — a 4 20. i 86 ae it Scholastic cham- 7 a while there,” said Abel, NBA STAN pionships will be h yi 7 we were making little mechanical KASTERN DIVIsION dotte Boat Club ae at the Wyan- * erpors, and the puck really wasn't! ee . : on Lost Pet. x , Y year’s leading money winner. | In the pro-amateur, Fred Kam- Armand Savoie of Montreal an. ston 139, Bt Louis 117 but he didn’t look th ‘mer Jr. of G fights Gene Gresha Weve tried ext S | Rew. York 120, Syracuse 118 day on th at way yester- | rosse Pointe, Mich., m Tuesday weve tried rest és noe | Kiimoeapotue 118° Phas hole a) final nine of thes: Panes with Gardner Dickinson of night in the Graystone Ballroom in f] " ne en Lee 5 ? i “ tried to tall an a | reneseipaie 8 extravaganza played over anama City, Fla., for an eigh | Detroit. 4 1 tk and pleag with them MONDAY'S SCHEDULE three courses ‘place finish at 67-64-65-67 gn + ve played so fat j , | | No gan : : aie — ES * ee ge ieee bad hockey in mea scheduled . « * & William Ford of Grosse Pointe and! All city league basketball ae / rs) but this one realy Vall carded a final nine of 41 George Fazio of Flourtown, Pa scheduleq for Jefferson wi games aS stumped," he said | Baseball] P while Gene Littler was closing combined for a 268 in the me) “| be played at Madi m will now ’~ * * | arty fast. Only a shot hooked into the teur and John Miles of Soares Madison Junior High. a nomereind at Olympia Stadium| a Big Succ Pacific’ Ocean on the J8th rec (oe of Shreveport, Le ree , : oe is good when the Ked Wings | ess | moved the San Diego battler from ished with a 269. . La., fin- are hanes if . i contention, waning Ae a new the fans are) CHICAGO (AP) — An ov | en : ewan Ge Gass. unior 0C e Ing. the players and some are! erownllotl nm overflow! He was nine down and tn third Ado $4,000 publlely criticiz : | ore than 900 1 ir o Manor, Pa 69-65-70- : ager Jacl clean abies including numerous ieee inal when the pair started the| Mismeshe Lake "N ma . ager Jack Adi i : " ; esha La 7, s : Toaeviwe dame for trading so nitaries Sunday night all dig nal eight holes, By the 18th he | one Littler, ium N.Y. 74-67-70-73—281 emany player lek annual Cain turned the was only one down 00 Dieay allt. 73-67-70-T1—281 an Os ‘ ly : cago Baseball; Littler car | ire, 61,300 a Let fem yell. Adana always Writers’ diamond dinner int vard r came to the par five 540- John “MeMultin. $1 LE nad fires bach. “We'l) be t of the! most : o one ¥ hole with Wall anything but’ Snat 500 heen = me Wn SF ae mecca in history sharp. He had three Babee Don January, $1 250 se7371.1-m, Rochester vs. Spencer - resident Will Har- the 16 = ° y Rastland, Tex 70- , Leading: \bomtreal alse fel ia but a al ridge of the American ree is 16th and 17th. ag Bbets River, Fia > renee Team Which Won 2 frustrated today after aa bn els |President Warren Giles of the Na A with: a national television ei lpaettahe $1.023 73-7 4-68-70—285 Over W k ' two thes in its weekend ees ‘neers hee puss Set Man drive. th a a eee sat ror rum. Sere Le ee ae ~ The Canadie to START TOURN Ap : agers Frank ee » then hooked his second s 3 alley Ceiit 93-71 j : e , anadiens played ab 3 atand op jack Tot RNAMENT Mis. Helen Lavey George Wel bane Cleveland. into the ocean, He si + pond ho” ta eee es — The Roch i off with Boston Saturday and then Jackson, Presidentaef the Michigan State E . Puntias Presa Phate | ¥ ss of the New York pressing said he was not jack Fleck Tees 60-77-67: 73-286 c ochester Royals and 4 _a 1-1. deadlock with the Chieago Ladies Bowling Assocfation and otis st lke MIG GUITIATCTION Gali matenlccd . | ankees and Gabe Paul of Cin Cereus he was trying for vont mnridce “Calit wansses = ee Floor Covering meet to- “Black Hawks las , K° Philip R oma s | Pontiw® Mayor Also in the a. al odge 819. cinnath were on hand ie a good approach ee ae : 5-69-73-49— 286 night to decide Thu x Keatnat ini p Rosvston, far right, rolled the Ist balls to the G we photo are Frank Mitzel, secretary of | However, there wi The TV program time ran out rystel River Fie 66-78-73:71—287 A finalist which Sees . a * * ry officially open the 2nd Elks | ; Z ie Greater Detroit Bowling Associati loond ' as no business before the an out Pon va Ee : c I! oppose the Fcnicage) cat inel Heneere “ ks Ladies Nagional In and Don Wilson. Exalted Association, far left, | nducted in the line of possible ers mise Cage putted but view.) Seorge Fasio $712 73-72.-72-70—287 Fisher Hill Merchants in one of Saturday while the Red Wines « te M v8 » Exalted Ruler of Lodge 810. vrades win st have known who would Gardner! Dickinson, $712 7-70-71-71—200 oat of championship games in : er » . — ee a . r . ose to Toronto 2-1. Boston eat men k ail to Place at State Tourney — Wall todk a six and won with Jay Hebert. #72 . Sigacignapaed anand Hockey tournament. Toronto 4-4 in Sunday night's othe: A total 279 after shooting ais phe hese pees 71-797-76—200| man's are pacorele B and Bul- AUP iva panel e . oe OY. Littler and Jimmy 2Mp Boron, a0 72-71-72:74-28/B crown. for' the Class J Ce Di - fe a ee had a busy Weekend See en second ace ted toe the day in| Vic Ghessi, “3590. a Ba ated Spencer gained z of ties but a partisan oe at : men with 281 anal 5 ae place sim Ferree. pe .......7274-70-74—290) tithe with & an at the Ni. j = os eOh whe ec n : i! | successive vee ago last night almost brought) ; eC ad er Fo es . Pau Qtbeary 30 70-48-77-75—290 Saturday and Sunday ha saan ‘ jew ihe house as Black Hawks Two Pontiac teams were leading , Wall won $4,000 for the individ Bo winmeer, ea 69-76-71-74—290, Shut out Sylvan Lake 6-0 and ea nes nn Hall stopped $0 Mont (he way in that department t i mR is the Men s State Elks event yot)all-events actual scor . jual pro and $2,000 for low <4 eggs ed 53 69-72-79-72—292 | held Standard Forge to one goal ae! tie. Mit : epi vent but vis- under way at Ann Arbor be scores with 1556. aver led a Ponti ‘amateur score—252—with pt San Antonio. Tex. a | in an 8-1 contest as Jim Dick ~ * * : | ing keglers held the edge in every a ’ v. | Evelyn Jacob of the same city bor with 2739 pa trio at Ann Ar- amateur champ Gan. Fomgors an meipesei = ; 282° scored a hat trick each day The | ealvle = e Qu 2739. “Cap” , | es jt- soean Royal ° : met otis wore lien third ae eae today following the and ADE ae hit 2927 jcompiled the best handicap total and over unit rolled ee poe tier added $1,200 to his Oe at Pre Pato ‘ter pneaaienen Sa ed to Fisher Hill hag . Montreal lost. Mau-|'a! Weekend of activity In the 2 . tars to Of, 1852. ielson & J m-he and Art And Jack Burke Jee gag 0 a, Saturday 2-1 in rice Richard in the f elke Ladies N : "nd head the team thet whic re ohn totaled 2587 . . erson of Hoally-| Kiamesha 1 - ae : overtime as Jim iret 8 = “dies National Hani toni ich had two- : wood ind i | a Lake. N.Y. 78-71-71- | Atkinson sae an ankle injury of "deta Bow ting anennieenl being ay ee city entries among the top en abs had been one of the | ee Huck and Bill Rick com. |“‘th Spee itd an the pro-am "ail ei. car 71 vance ner’s a ET wi mined consequence here women's contingents j Key fixures in the opening pre- ned for the best dou "| The bi Pasay ected lw ~ Forge , E ; : \. Ps yon , Boston took a 2-0 dead in the | Meanwhile, three- Pontiac ann Mrs Helen Lavey, of Jack ey tal genet when ar of 1132 followed by Pattee De on aie is een $9,970, Bud Ward. ahs cece en (ST4-OO73-—293 Bole over Huron Valley irst period on gonts Be Nes failed ta place + ‘ x . Y, Jackson, | ac Mayor Philip Row: | Coleman ° “ S$ year. | Wal ateo, Calif. . T1-70-73-79—293 . : y Vie Stasink place among the leaders President of the Mie : | ston . P we | 1106, He said, howev +| Walter Burkemo. $164.55 upel with defensenimiy. Tine Hor fon Elks Ladies naling Ate os pass latch gripe balls, Exalted | Rick had the best sing! ried about his shal celal WOE | Tommy. Jacobs, pl64-58, - 10-77-70-76—288 Bact moved into the “inals " " penalty has Toranta alse” ; and her sister Aire Bos ‘* “ oN ditector Don Lome, Pant bantted 601, Frank Conden a pa ote finished second at Los Ae ee oe _ 73.73. 72-T3—203 eatery. ab bale Thunderbirds added a goal oun the Gist perio ' Detroit toame es . . Past Exalted Keller 582 Mt ond, Carl and tled for 12 vat Tite S| LeMont, M1. 7 cea eer ender’s two thea wedled) until the Sinioe ' : ; fandings ‘nana ue " take ine early wee Thomas Gillotte, Frank “ vn Unk? | Asked ea yee a pena reir i 55 i Wendell Oak's work in ets 0) Sie) eae wal \. : . Kith oa S46 total el, secretary of the Great * * af . s feelings when Frank 8t ville, NJ 74-74-73-72—203 | HEC the way. The Th nes e wood decd bebo com é sparked dao the 4 A Delrolt Bow Sass FE jtfler shot into the dr tay! Tol —— oo ‘ha underbirds “imge tas Vif : wot 1 Pte «it op iane af 43} oWling Assoctation, and erndale bowlers stole ti ide)” : e drink, Wall’ ger aces: Obie _. , 677-74-73—293 | d advanced by nippi oa . CE nA * officers of the P dk nike oe ie sti SAM 7 dearn ch Ce Jerry Barber. $164.55 7473-293) 5 ; oe pping J:m's Nata ecanen : fo es A ” ; . * * of the Pontiac. Women'- ) the Men's Sate sine oy ts a wo Man any ae Angeles ee ; fardware 4-3 in a / j . “point and De ‘Ste i. CT TSS are The nn to0 jae Allee Hasrnek of Royal. Oak ted Bowling Association and ee Market became te cals Arce ha Hues but it made me feel "orwesa Ore iT t21¢-@ time eantier ah Tate over teact wah “un . wail added the Be te te ian “4 tzu V0 ne singles with a sparkling: 704 dies Association also took carl pacesetter with 243 hav , ae er, Nett Coles, vs ss 75-70-75-73—293 hero. Jim Dawson the feonds Peni per rant a Da Sl feat i“ et : : : : «335, Ray Buckner reybridge. Eng une : TINE. “roronte oon ot 120 fen uM ae a big 273 game. Dorothy The tournament, which v and Larry Montage bowled 1278 fe : : eS 77 12h viach of Battle Creek tops the inated by local eect was dom Ist in doubles and Dick ee a . | H ‘ iy \ st sea- captured } aé alle ope H; ol. . son, will continue for thre | d the lead in all-events wit! 48 I as 7-() Mark in MEAA “weekends ¢ more 1666, Owosso's Mary Wietzke hy uinie essen H . | a | oe. % ‘tops in singles at 659. “| Tam a am é ; A team made up of 1 -| There are eight mor / p | ) eee " nen 65 and'go at A re weeks to | Sa aaaiaeaneetemeen TAMPA, Fla ; i . (AP)—Ruthie J : ! | sen of Seattle, W es Seattle, Wash., credit : advice "2 S the g BY The Assoctated Prees | MIAN victory 1 ; me = ith of a friend and a lot of luck Michigan's. 1 victors The dutch ; ‘ Ne | with ending three y gis small college tenms! their fl : utchmen used ern ¢ Py 7 - | three years of frustra- petite : ims their first unit les ‘ and Tech were tied. 27-27 E ee yn tion and givi h Alta tence cuiferice ban ean exs than half the the half. T ad. 27-27 at . Q { | ving her a professional ketball compe m oatie MPAA scorinsg de: ’ alf. The victory was Tech's | golf championshi : petition over the week Be yo odeader Paul eighth in 10s q ech s A> i ‘ Ip, end. enes. with an averse of 231 * sus | Th ee ee ' In fo eae points in league play, collecte : +. * * { e 22-year-old i | Ms ay Michigan Intercollegiate eight for Ho 2 ta collected onty Traverse City defeated E MICHIGAN COULFOE & : steady three-over- blonde shot a ' Athletic Assn. games, Hope routed contest. H ‘ n the one-sided, Creek 72.66 ( d Battle sien Bashettall | Florida State 93, M day? to wi erpst 6 yore Olive She in a" ext. He played only cig ies : in a Community C chigan Brate 63 | Penn te 93. Miami Fla 69 ~ (day® to win the 72, sia eet Pee downed | ules d only eight min- lege gee and Michigan Aes Mtchiaan AS Timers 8@ fot: lea — Nien State 79 Women's Open ey oe Baie ay $57, Alma stopped Fer with an off night iv Big T Stqte.| waranail 9) Western Bich ke ne 62 Miss J , » ot cd ris 73-51: and Adrie \ * *. * : ght tin Rig Ten play Hope 100 Western Michigan 68 klaborma 45. Kansas 38 essen's slice of the on : an edged Albion! ; stopped 2 . ~* Northerr Olivet 34 Notre Dame 88, Loyola, tse $7,500 19-77. lon Kalaniacno held Hilleduie ¢© iver . - pe anes MSL Rother Mie Digas 82, Detroit Tech 46 einen * Drake 4 Chicago 61 can en ved $1,247, nearly one- 5 | five point : i . : a rertime, | Bastern Michigan 7 Ny shades . Louteville @@ u as she Mic . points in the | 1 | : gan 70. © ebraska §2. won durin nae tl FA ames aplit in inter | tes Ina comeback en a ou | woe rine | Paccinecn *: Cent “Michigan 75. Eee eee vi Neoneelecn aT yer women's pro tour ‘ios ercolleg inte Athletic coms} Dalen .heldm-5: Hory. The ope To 1000 Kar we pet, Astimptton (Ont ott Queene (Op te) (Miami, Otlo 0." Bor _ erence play with Eastern Michi | the edad fongeana'. el ot ee Se N16 Willedaie 24 38h Adrian WW Albion gy) ome 80) te _ 7%, Bowling Green 68, over e ' defeating Eastern Miinots 7 nd were held (4a Td Albion 16 LayeSQltanova 7 “as Wem owe ‘| : ; ™- | to two field drian 3-3 BOO Olver As Nova 75 Loyola. Md bite 91, Tulsa 71 ‘ 65 and Southern Ullnolg stop. throw hy i, ; coals and y free | : ve an oy er NY oF. Jooegtt — Ghirans cil) $4. Houston 67 ‘Weekend Basketball ping Centra): Michigan 92-75 s alamaroo's defense, Ob di (Nianare a1. wniase isc ti ? 5 St Louls 32, Missour! Mines i “YMCA COMM nfo ‘ Tom Mackenzie + edience T ink | backs BS. Mobart 49) hs ; SOUTHWEST | MUNITY LEAGUE ones downed Western Michi lin Rawtern Muh, mt for 40 points St ; raining ane iz Pit a — Wena A Christian 37 | peweaes aie 3 First Baptist 38 Bs foe oon in a Mid-American con-| over Eastern esl i SES arts This Week Ppa 2, Nermont be feng ee Ariaone. Sate Cotees as! Pans) Baptio Osx res 0 : ‘eé game and = in non-con-/ern Mic ; 8. It was East-| Bint eee 0 State 61, Hardin-simmons 4! Standin , ‘ . : ieee ite iw on’ #6, “Commell 5 a PAR WE: a = ference play Northern Mich ae AED conference-trt-| With only one demonstration left ‘ene ees ine es ees. Washington. Ciel ‘mv naets SO 7 i to igan umph since Feb. 28, 1 : ifer ne ; , Mubienberg 92, Laf \Colo. State Coll e $3 | | Rochest 0 HI-Y Piston stopped Detroit Tech 52-46. now fi 28, 1957, Eastern 0 Nt Monday, Jan. 26, South tact tac California 67, pow, ole qitame State 76 jgochester 4 1 Oak. ave, nr 3 it * * * ern Hino 1-4 league record. East Mas higan Obedience Southern ef Franc, Fe Geneva 73 rn ten me Clee PARKS AXD ac sar oe cana Vines Giles connected : ois now is 2-3 in con-|‘ asses Were ready to go this week | Dartmouth @, Mehnetten ‘ Brigham boon agg ak fae v.77 Guutanslat 1ON GAMES points in -Adri eek fed) for 33) [orence/comipeltion ‘and next... 7 en Nee Nace —<— CLA be bene Mexico. " : (pope ; : an's close victory a) * * | : PY d | oa rh ire 71, ‘Northeastern 66 Peterado wthern California 63 s ere 32 2 : ae a © ¢ é i ome 16 ek, anon. Giles scored eight Seymour Bryson poured in 09 | The last soleceat ‘i i geinipiee teak ao fake Wealern busy, ‘Coe, 8 Prlcone it Wier k give haces a hare a my toe Sie ed peaitnets Litinotal het at Ridomfield Tin ene Rernard "it: Livingston at 5 a Saescte State #8, Los” Angeles Stale 78. i wis €2. dota ie . ‘ ne rrow lead it never !0 ls HAC victory . , School, Trait : BY. Portland e. Quincy 68 Pepperdine i? ooks 34, Miller’ relinquished Mict etary over Central « _ Training there begins Fet id 70, Gonrage 06 porec ne Tees! Diego 6 (Jen ips ; \igan. Garv Lee was 2) Bar registrail ‘kins Feb aoUTn eatlie 14, Hickam AFB G2. Panthers 11. Dea at Lincein) ia ts ‘ ; hig gistrations. at a Kentocky 79. Tennessee 3 | a : 4 Byes & : | Alma held a 34-23 halftime fead eorer for Central with 21 orate dog owners should pees ‘i Navy [ Maryland 6s Machines font a ‘Dakota 2 Comets is wildense’ of - its rout of Ferris tnstitute It was Central's ninth defeat -in Thornton, MI 70155 ( folly Nec Ape Viale Orie st chigan Tech 5 Minessote y > ¢ Gherovs vi, Nat Rods ’ _for its 10th victory in 16 5 ly starte thi : foes : * : ee Gengin Tech Oo Vanderbit | lowa IT Mict an & : ere ia 3 + : tarts x yen? * * Tennessee 8 gerbiit 6} an Sate 0 ; ‘s Five 4, Bi'k this year. Ferris Saxton had 20 + + & Classes begin at Wate “AY punens a Mary 39 Wee hs Michigen Sta’ ea beuttern Siinetn ¢ a Spartans #1 Coenen. oe . points for the winners, George Albeck and Dave Jhtard wi Wednesday Jan 7) at Pe ine Cuadel =. nn oc “4 pic bigan een : inols @ 1 Globetrotters 18. Critica 1 ‘ he ? pace ive Shard, Whitfic gee et, f anie] Richmond 88. F yidson 72 2 overtines Yotholt Tech TA it a : meme rcs ae . fe jurgped to a 19-0 lead over eo oo Mil Ss Michigan to its ds " if hool on Thursday Jan pores _Alabarna ry 5 Baldwin Wallace te : ee Ex-Ch — “4 t i ing a onferendce victor oP ae ‘registrati - : ae i State #7. Mississippi s . ! - ‘ Ae ‘ in posting its 7th straight) Tech with nie ame pa pit mond.at OR 3 +810 woe eae Wainpden-Sydney 7 MoNewe ts | WOCRAT PP & ObbEre & FALL INTO SPACE — Se AP Wirephot iivaiaah aida Quitting : * : ‘ac jorth- . ee | or Water | M hh al. Wess rgmia Military 6 NDAY'S t a SPACE — Seven- , _— ’ wy . ford, Reg Armstrong, FE 2-7749 F sob oom Bas eae | minigan “ ary 68 toc eves Sapowal f wd | Pistons falls backward to the see lies Dukes of the Detroit ke PARIS (AP) — Charles Hum eae . ‘ 7) evertimes : . Ry: 1, 8 few Torn « Been a. tries to ge may oat. ; his opponents former European : ez, ‘s 1 ! . Boston Tordate 3 | Cinci get away a shot. Applying pressure is Jim Pal Sas he boxing titlist an mid@eweight . : | incinhati Royals. The Pistons lost, 107-88 to the Ri almer of the (quitting the ri said Sunday -he is . ; . 5 he Royals. i ring for private aa : : : * . ; = i A ek “ . ' . foe at Ff eee Sees "THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 BEST-IN-SHOW — Top dog at the winter all- breed show held Sunday by Pontiac Kennel Club, is the handsome English springer spaniel, Sali-- lyn's MacDuff, owned by Mrs, F. H. Gasow of Two Best-in-Shows in Two Days By H. GUY MOATS Four-year-old Salilyn’ ‘s MacDuff, handsome English springer spaniel went best-in-show yesterday at the “winter show held by Pontiac Ken- nel Club, Mrs. F. H. Gasow of Birmingham, MacDuff's owner, was doubly proud of her fine spaniels victory for it was the 2nd best-in-show in two days. Mac- Duff also took top honors in the Detroit Progressive Dog Club's show on Saturday, and competed again Sunday, against most of the | same top dogs. He won The Press| best-in-show trophy. Salilyn’s MacDuff was handled | beth days by Dick Cooper who | oe him along to the coun- ldo he had ever judged. “‘It was | pug try's top breed winner in his ‘a difficult job, with the fine Kerry) at the PKC all-breed show at the group during the last year and in 1957, He scored five “bests” and 31 groups last year. Mrs. Gasow was very proud of her dog's wins, and remarked when she received The Press- trophy “I'm delighted to get this fine award. It'll go along with a num- ber of other Press awards our dogs have won in other years.” * * bg The Birmingham entry, one of 488 dogs in the show, at the Pon-| tiac Retail Store, had to beat off iSomesiee from five other group! winners, characterized by best-in- show judge, Dr. A. A. Mitten of) Rockhall, Md. as some of the fine: st Pontiac Freee Phote GROUP WINNER — One of two area , dogs taking group honors Pontiac Retail Store, Sunday was ~ a French bulldog, being shown above during the judging. Ch. Ber- neil’s Jeeper's Jackie was handled by his owner, Mrs. Ralph West of Livonia, Jeepers won the non-sporting group. No More ‘Incidents’ Assured Lakers’ Boss By sim KLOBUCHAR Associated Press ‘Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS (AP)—The Min- neapolis Laker management promised Negro ace Elgin Baylor today there would be no repetition of a racial incident in Charleston, W.Va. as long as the Lakers have any voice in the matter. * *« * Baylor got back into uniform yesterday and gave fresh evidence Raps Royals “tneapotis played at Charleston. He) said the Royals gave him their assurance there would +e no prob-| lem over ségregation in Charles- ton, : Because there was, Short wants! ithe National Basketball Agsn, to! declare the game ‘‘no contest.” Cincinnati says jt doesn’t follow, Short’s reasoning and doesn't see| any reasoh why the game shouldn't count. of his value to an otherwise punch- |. Birmingham, wie eccopied The Pontiac Press | trophy, from The Press’ H. Guy Moats. The vic- | tory was Salilyn’s 2nd best-in-show in two days. | would be my third baseman and | Pentiac Press Photo | iBlue terrier a very close next ichoice.”’ and an obedience trial provided added interest for the large gallery that witnessed the day-long judg- ing in the unbenched show. PKC officials gaid it was a ‘‘very suc- cessful’ event. Group winners included: Sporting breeds — Salilyn’s MacDuff) ae Gasow) unds — Sandlari's Randver, Nor- [wean elkhound (Richard Sanderson, Lansing): Basset, Ch. Biefenjagenheim |Lazy Bones (Chris Teeter, Birmingham) Shetland sheepdog, Working group —- |Thistlerose Arcwood Alladin (John Pa- jczscla: Hay, White Bear Lake, Minn.!; Ken Ho Lady of Velvet. rc. collie (Ken- jneth Howling, Ypsilanti) Terriers — Kerry blue. Taifltean’s No | Regret (Mr. Eileen McEachren, Ontarto) Toys — Ch. Blaylock's Mar-Ma-Duke, ‘Gordon Winders, Skokie, IIl.}. reals sober — Ch. MeNeils Jeeper'! | Jackie, French bulldog (Mrs. Ralph west: | Livenia). Homer Bowler Leads in State DETROIT (#—Bruce Nichols of State bowling tournament ended its first weekend of competition. Nichols rolled a 724 in the singles and a 2,103 in the all-events yester- day. Dale Glensing and Dick Rodgers of Kalamazoo took over top spot in the doubles with a 1,389, The tourney continues weekend through May 10. The first week standings: every DOUBLES . aeany Gilénaing and Dick Rodgers, Kala- pxanaeth Weller and Dempsey Baker, eld 1,349 Party Deigert and Robert Kameauer, Homer, 1,348 Richard Weaver and Jim Robinson, Homer, 1,31 Leo Summerville and Herb Peeples, East Jordon, 1,311 SINGLES Bruce Nichols, Homer, 724 Warren Loeder, Boughton Lake, 708 Pred Kraus, Albion Kenneth Weiler, Belding, 689 Culfford McArthur. Jac'son, 68! ALL EVENTS Junior showmanship competition | —e / [Norman Evaluates Tigers of 1959 Stronger Relief. Pitching Seen as Big Factor Bengal Manager Hopes Help Will Come From Promising Youngsters By BILL NORMAN Manager, Detroit Tigers ST. LOUIS (UPI) — You have to crawl before you. walk; you have to walk before you run. And the Tigers will have to get into the first division before they can challenge the New York Yankees for the pennant. It isn't going to be easy because | ithe Cleveland Indians, who edged ‘us for the fourth slot last season, ‘will ‘be an improved ball club. iHerb Score holds the key to their) success. yo ba * * I think the acquisition of Ray | Narleski and Don Mossi, a >air _of fine reliefers, will give our bullpen needed depth. Eddie Yost- and Rocky Bridges, whom we also received in trades, shortstop respectively if I had te name a lineup for a game tomor- row. Bolling on second, Harvey Kuenn and Al Kaline in two outfield spots jand Charley Maxwell, Johnny 'Francona or Gus Zernial in the) Our catcher would be Bob} ether: Wilson, Charley Lau or Lou Ber- ret. xr * * Punch, or the lack of it, was! one of our biggest problems last year. We were second in the league in singles - hitters. Another league- ‘leading shows we lost 30 games! by one run. double-plays, a pretty good in- dication that our pitchers had to | rely almost entirely on their own arms to get out of jams. Our bright spot last season, in- work by Jim Bunning, Paul Foy- tack, Frank Lary and Billy Hoeft jas we finished, With Narle&ki and iMossi we'll be in 4 far better sit- juation as far as relief help ‘concerned.- What we really need is an im-| proved defense and a big bat. | Nobody on our club drove in as imany as 90 runs last year. Homer led in both the singles and we That big bat might well come | -lall events as the men's Michigan ftom some of the promising ‘youngsters we'll have in training camp. Kids like Steve Demeter, a third baseman, and outfielders. Larry Osborrie and Ken Walters © might make the big jump to the Majors. Knicks Recall Brennan NEW YORK — The New York Knickerbockers of the Basketball Assn. Sunday placed recalled former North Carolina of the Eastern League. The rest of that lineup would. pave Gail Harris on first, Frank Birmingham Dog Wins Press Award hitting, but we were! We were third in the league tn | pitching but we were last in | cidentally, was our pitching. Fine | ‘\kept us as far up in the standings |), is National | .Ron Sobie on the injured list and) star Pete Brennan from Allentown) x ke & x * * ye) * * * ‘St. John’s, Kentucky, Cincinnati Roll Along By U inited Press International | St. John's of New York, respond-. ing once again to the magic touch | of old-Celtic Joe Lapchick, has raised New York City basketball | prestige to its highest level since | the college scandals of 1952. A smashing 97-72 victory over St. Joseph's at Philadelphia Saturday, night wiped out all doubts of St. John’s right to a national ranking. | St. John's victory was easily the | most significant of a Saturday’ ‘night program on which six of the | jseven teams rated among the top |10 won. The lone loser was ninth- | ranked Northwestern, which bowed! to Ohio State 88-72 in a typical Big | Ten conference upset. Kentucky beat Tennessee 79-58, | burn shaded Alabama [sree to 22 games—11 this season | Alan Seiden led St.. John's scor-' second-ranked North Carolina State tepped Wake Forest 64-59, third-ranked Kansas State de- feated Missour{ 75-60, fifth. ranked Cincinnati whipped Drake 97-60, and seventh-ranked Au- 57-55 in other games involving the top 10." | Kentucky's 14th victory in 15) igames this season also marked the 598th win of coach Adolph and Auburn's win extended the longest major college unbeaten and 11 last season. St. Bonaven- lture, the only other major un- beaten, downed Canisius 86-79. * * * ling with 31 points and sophomore Bluth Compiles Record, but Welu Wins All-Star BUFFALO, N.Y. tough one to lose. Ray Bluth fired a record aver- lage of 214.56 for 100 games ‘in the | jgrueling All - Star bowling tourna- ment. He set pinfall records for ithe qualifier and the final. * * * But when they handed out the _championship trophy and the $5,- 000 cash prize for first place last night, it was Billy Welu, the tower- ‘ing transplanted Texan, who | stepped forward to accept the awards. Bluth was second. The match-game tournament, ‘puts a premium on clutch bowling and Welu, 26, was tough when it counted. (AP)—It was a * * Although Bluth, 31, spilled a. rec- ord 13,726 pins in the 64-game fi- inal, while Welu had 13,448, Welu, ,won the 18th annual tournament ‘by the simple process of winning | games. The pressure was on full force iwhen he outscored Bluth, 210-197, | jin the final game of the tourna- |ment. te.cut. short Bluth’s.late ral- Ee * * * | Going into the last game, Welu had a slim, nine pin = margin. | Splits put him in trouble in the ‘second and third frames but with his back to the wall — he ‘hammered five consecutive strikes |to win the game and the cham- ipionship. * * Welu, a member of the St, Louis ’ |Falstaff's finished with 311-48 Pet- ersen points, winnig 43 games iwhile losing 21, Bluth had 310-26) points as he compiled a 36-28 rec- lord. Bluth is also from St. Louis. | The defending champion, Don Carter of St. Louis, was fourth | with 307-05 points. Lou Campi of, Dumont, N.J., was third with 310-07. * * * Under the Petersen point sys- tem, each bowler got one point for every game he won plus one point for every 50 pins he knocked YMCA Swim Bruce Nichols. Homer, 2.163 John Martin, West Branch, 1.967 Donald Dennis. Rockford, 1.964 Harvey Sparr i-chern 194 ad EVENT Drewrys, Homer. 3.165 9 City Bus, Port Huron, 3,154 Clair Hotel, Barnia, Ont.. 3.132 Club Jules, Saginaw, 3,126 Hankard Service, Chelsea, 3.102 hree Skaters Tie in Gold Cup Meet WYANDOTTE --Young: Terry iMeDermott of Bay City finished! ‘in’a three-way tie. ers, Bobby Snyde Browne, yesterday. ae two Detroit. dnd Terr y| in the senior) . Ge 's A division of the Wyandotte \Gold Cup ice skating competition, | - Each piled up 11 points. Snyder (i had won the title at the Blue Water lopen championships Saturday at. |Marine City. { | N, CLASS A~Terry Browne / BENTO! | Detroit Terry sucDermett Bay City, by Snyder, Detroit, 11, Mike Detroit. 7; Ralph Plasta, Detroit, 3; here Detroit. 1. ENIOR MEN, CLASS aoe. Dries, iDetreds and Pre | Bob Ba . | Stieton LA WOMEN-—Jos nme Bpeckin, De-/ | ry Shomo. less basketball club, The big! rookie hit 30 points in the Lakers’ §- 119-98 conquest of Philadelphia | * & to it this never happens again,’ President on waeipat THROUGH said Laker Short. | centered on |President Tom Grace of the vith Cincinnati Royals, the team Min- F esas ures #8 BIG DEAL |) (Hoare @ Alem 4 - 1” ataine pane dporely © Meret (REE ESTIMATES Sie” _* | FE. 2-2671 ee eert ‘= SKI EQUIPMENT POOLE HARDWARE “33° all hasnt canniee SATURDAY ONLY! A.M: t09 P.M. ee troft. 15; vMary — Windsor, 11; Bev- | | Pontiac YMCA swimmers w: | off with all three divisions in their ‘meet at the Port Haron YMCA | Saturday, In the prep division the Pontiac tankers won 53-33 and in the junior division the-tocals won 46-22. With- out opposition in the midget di- vision it was 26-0. Tom McKinnon took first in the 80-yard individual medley and a? second in the backstroke of the junior division. PREP DIVISION RESULTS avers AP tage ta )fa je (PH), 30- ane butterfly (13.6: Dick Ries (P), Broadstone (PH) 20-yard backstroke: Well] Hollewstead | pall 18.4; Bruce Weber (Pi. Art Poste’ fd freestyle: Doug a 20.0. Richard Miller (Pi, Robert Lamb) King i Robbie Powers (Pi. \ (ook i ee alked’ Doug Wintfleld ) PH) | (PH), Rebuilt Automatic Transmissions ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Teams Win 20-vard Pi 176 (PH: Diving Biaviock Tom King breaststroke: Dave Martin chaies Ries (P}. stone | 80-yard ind mediey: Skip Ervin iP), 1092 Rich Ries (P), Mires (PH: 80-yard medley relay Pontiac R: Edgipton, Bruce apn Skip Ervin, Lynn Niggeman) 16 86-yard shecatrie relay: Pontiae “A” (Bob Lamb, Rich Miller, Robbie Powers, Doug Winfield) 505 JUNTOR DIVISION RESULTS ae yard freestyle: Bob —— ym) Bill Main (Pi, Dave Regner do-yard butterfly: Tom wurpageen Ps 25.9: Don Wesse) (PH) 40-yard backstroke: Phil Cashin (P) poe Tom McKinnon (P), Chuck Marris le0- yard freestyle: Bob Butler (Pi 1:08; Weeee] (PH, Dave Regner (Pi @-yard breaststroke: Jim Velzy Andy Broad. 1984. Den Mitchell (PH | rn Bill Main /P}. { wr : 160-vard mediey relay’ Pontia (Cashin, _Velay. Harrington, Butler) \ ay ard ind medley 04 HYDRAMATIC ‘48 to ‘50... $33.50 55 aad 56 $55. 00 "50 to.’52 ..... .$35 "53 ond ‘54... $45 "55 to ‘57 . . $55 RRS apa se ance enw. Ree just OFF ‘“ Piece flees Apply When Instelled by hog $ oe Service Ford & Merc-0-Matic ‘50 to ‘52... ...$35 ‘53 ond 54... $45 ‘55 and ‘56... $55. ¥ o ot Avenve ~ British Columbia iP) Tom Kenney! Tom McKinnon down. Half-points were given for ities. | * x * Rapids, Mich.. won her seventh championship in the women’s di- ‘vision. She averages 20) for 32) |games and scored 149-33 Petersen | | points. Donna Zimmermann of Akron, | Ohio, was second with 143-00, * Four sitaigen. sivas were in| the money. They were Joe Joseph; lot Lansing, whose 5th place finish was worth $800; Bob Hitt of Li-| vonia, who tied for 8th and won| 110th and ae and Fred Riceillt jof Detroit, 13th and $530. | Three other Michigan women fin- | ished in the money. Marge Merrick of Detroit was 8th and won $275; | |Elvira Toepfer of Detroit finished]. 11th, winning $230; and Eloise Van-) / ' fest of Grand Rapids was 15th, and/ won $205. Ottawa ‘Swaps’ perecal | The Ouawa Rig Four} the OTTAWA (‘AP) ‘Rough Riders of ‘Football Union traded nbgotiation’ rights for lowa Ali America quarterback Randy Duncan to the Lions of Western Interprovincial Football Union, Ottawa will get a British) Columbia Canadian College draft choice, and if Duncan signs with the Lions, an undisclosed amount! jof money and perhaps another player. isensation Tony Jackson added 28. iSt. John’s was ahead 50-38 at haif-| time and never seriously threaten- ied in the second half. i dohn Richter's upp), one Mrs, Marion Ladewig of Grand | > $612 30: Robert Kwiecien of Fraser, : the’ Sid Cohen, an import from Brooklyn, scored 14 points in the | second half to lead Kentucky; 138 points led North Carolina State, vuich did not take command against Wake Forest until the last seven min- utes; sparked Kansas State and Oscar Robertson connected for 40 points | as Cincinnati romped against | Drake. Robertson tallied on 17 of 26 field goal tries and has scored 390 points in 12 games for a 32.5 average. Here’s the situation in various major conferences: SOUTHEASTERN: Auburn 4-0 after squeaker with Alabama; Ken- | tucky and Mississippi State tied for second place at 41 epe h. Championship race is between lat- ter pair because Auburn is ™ ‘jeligible. SOUTHERN: West Virginia | with 6-0 league mark and 13-3 overall. Virginia Tech is 41 in league and 9-3 overall. ATLANTIC COAST: North Care idle Saturday, still leads at | 0 with North Carolina State séc-_| ‘ond with 6-1 record, ile Sue ro- | i is 10-1 overall while Syfe te is! 12. Spor Calendar ee me! Lea A er CLASS A-K o rts Bhop.| j7 pm. and La Yenide a mace 6 30. jet Pontiac Sag GMC MCA Basketball Engineering, 8 pm, — oo Biue Chips / vs Paicons vs Bull Dogs is Tech Cyab 9 p.m Runners. lf pm City Junter Heckey Tournament CLASS /A Rochester Royals vs. Spen- eer Piogt Covering, 7 om. at Northside High Scheel Swimmin Pon/iac mornare at Southfield / VESDAY f High Schoo! Basketball roy at Rochester / irmingham at Perndale / Hansel Park at Port Huron Orchard Lake St Mary at 8t Saginaw at Bay City Handy Cranbrook at Kennedy Roseville at Romec Brighton at Bouth Lyon East Detroit at Hamtramck Madison at Royal Oak St Mary Ortonrille at Mt. Morris Memphis at Almont Anchor Bay at Brown City New Haven at Capac Armada at Dryden bere at Country Day werk Branch at Bad Axe Praser at os Royal Oak Shrine at Bt. Patrick High Schoo! Swimming Ferndale at Birmingham High Scheel Wrestling Garden City at Parmington puseres at Hagel Park ity League Basketball - € -Town & Country vs Buick pm, end Holly. va Polies. Fy 3% p.m. at Madison Junior High! Waterford Basketball League CLASS A—White Swan vs Lytell Soest — 718 p.m., and Drayton pty Jones | facet nd Pharmacy. 630 pm, at Isaac \Soaeee Junior High apa Benedict Big 10 Cage anes (CONFERENCE) (ALL GAMES) w- bk pPcT. PTS gr w L PCT. PTSs- 0 Michigan 3 1 130 323 306 i) 2 H18 a8 nols 3 i Bt. 1467 336 8 3 127 $05 ses State 2 1 66 244 253 8 3 400 iid innesota 2 1 067 202 it 5 6 45 7237 Indiana 3 2 600 71 364 6 6 i 674 North western 2 2 600 joo 219 » 3 [780 OTT owe 2 2 500 342 120 5 q Alt bd = State 1 2 333 242 24 & 6 455 863 rdue i 3 : 2000 284 8 4 667 «895 Wisconsin o 4 00 253 4 3 10 : _-let sm | | Radio & Television. Day Information. No obligation MAME «oc cecesescnccons oeeee L Address .... MEN WANTED | To Train for High Selary Position in Electronics, — You to Remain Fully Employed While Training. Mail Coupon or Call for Complete 4357 Electronics lnstitate essere aa att and Evening Classes Allow WO 2-5660 (PDenevan Bldg.) Blocks North of Fox corte Weoedward ! BIG TEN: Bob Boozer’s 30 points — Hasse s vs Road Oliver) Pontiac | x *&* * Redmen’ Back in Limelight — Michigan and Illinois tied at 3-1 and there'll be a four- ‘way tie for the lead if Michigan iState beats Ohio State and Minne- |sota beats Northwestern tonight. .MISSOURI VALLEY: Cincinnati 5-0 after smashing victory over ‘Drake; Bradley, idle Saturday, is ‘3-1 and St. Louis is 2-1. Overall jrecords of three teams are 10-2, ‘11-2 and 10-2 respectively. BIG EIGHT: Kansas State's \69 win over Missourj gave Tigers 40 league record. Nebraska ‘and ;Oklahoma tied for second at 3-1 leach. g SOUTHWEST: Texas Christian 'suffered first conference loss. 61-57, to Texas Tech Saturday but still leads with 41 mark. Texas A&M, 'Texas Tech and Baylor are tied for second place at 3-2 each. PACIFIC COAST: CLA now 5-2 after 65-63 victory over Southern tie ‘California. California is 4-2 and ‘Stanford 43. * i : ° PER- FORM- ANCE PLUS —that’s what the new DELCO DC-7 | _ means to you. It's a dry charge battery that | sleeps until it’s sold and saves its power for you. 45" 6-volt. exchange ASK YOUR ‘SERVICE DEALER SPECIAL A MONEY-SAVING CAR-SAVING BUDGET-SAVING SERVICE DEAL!! GET ALL THIS— CORRECT Complete Alignm ‘58 Rlecteonie | “pli Mechanics. Front End SPECIAL Used. Factory Trained ent *59 DEPENDABLE MUFFLER SERVICE Blowout Proof Written Lifetime Guarantee. Free Instellation 15 Minute Service *g'5 Gloss Packed . _ Motor Mart Safety Center GUARANTEED BRAKE RELINING MOST CARS 12° Incl. Lebor & Parts BONDED, HEAVY DUTY SHOES ‘ 1 Free Adjustment FE 4-8230 121-123 E. Montcalm Wheel Aligument FRONT Wheel Balance CAREFUL Brake Adjustment REPACK FRONT Wheel ee eee 2: SQ95 Easy Budget Terms US ROYAL Don R. MacDonald, Inc. 370 S. Seginew St. "Pontiac — _FE 5.6136 $1 +5 50 Value Only Z oa % et a a od Cie "TWENTY: e Frontier J ustice Unique in American Rebellions ‘War Crime’ Trials New in Latin Revolutions The rise and fall of Latin American dictatorships in recent years has nm splotched with bloodshed but the mass ‘war crimes” trials and executions in post-Batista, Cuba are without pretedent in the Western Hemis- phere. * * Personal vendettas, party slay- ings, lynchings and stabbings and shootings by mobs, looting and pillage by conquerers, legal and iNegal seizing of opposition prop- erty = all have had their place in Latin American revolutions, n lombia an estimated 150,000! to 200,000 persons have met violent| + death sinee 1949. And today, 20 onthe have the overthrew of Die- ator Gusavo Rojas Pinilla, the killing still ig going on in a larget:. section of the country. , es * * But the “frontier justice’ heing dispatched by Fidel Castro's revolutionaries in Cuba {is unique in modern American rebellions, In the first place, the trials and executions are being held in the full glare of werldwide publicity, Castro and his cohorts, far from attempting to hide them, have permitted newsmen, photographers and television and movie camera- men to witness them. Secondly, Castro wasted no time meting out his revolution: ary punishment, President Ful- gencio Batista’s government fell Jan. 1. tn two weeks the con firmed number of executed Batista men topped the 900 mark. Third, the trial courts are com- posed of Castro's revolutionary soldiers. Many are young men For most of them, little is known when Juan D. Peron was creaned in 1955.in Argentina, wher Jacobo Arbenz Guzman was defeated in|country from 1925 to 1933. Guatemala in 1954, Pinilla was felled in 1957 in Colom: Da. cedent in previous Cuban revolu- tions. when Rojas * * * *® * anything like Batista'’s power was Gerardo Machade who ruled the He was ousted by a military coup in the middle of a two year period --]932-34—in which there was more In fact, there is not even @ Pre-lgnapehy than Jaw and order. Law- leas mobs held great areas of the Castro's pevolutionaries attempt to island while army mutineers held draw betaces tis Cuban isiile ‘The last Cuban dictator who had'the capital. THE TOnTAG Yuma MONDAY; JANUARY 19, 1959 Oldtimers in Cuba sey the kill- ings that followed Machado's + downfall were far greater in nymber — were accomplished without triaia — than ox: ecutions being conducted by .the Castro regime, Legal sources contest the parallel trials and the Nuremburg trials of of theie judielal experience or ability j * * * All of thia wag missing when | Marcos Pereg Jiminey was over thrown in Vene “7uela Jast January, | AP Wirephote t—And you take it from there as Zsa Zsa Gabor holds up her hand te show the huge one she's “DIAMONDS ARE wearing. It is from builder Ha] B. Hayes who smiles beside her as they leave the 21 Club in New York after junch, Zsa Zea, who has been married three times, will wed Hayes, of Beverly Hills, Calif., “in about three months.” ~— _—— —~ + —— ; War IL German war crimineis after World They point out that the Nurem- burg trials were conducted by legal |. and judicial experts, months and even years after the war, and on the basis of cagafully easembled evidence and witnesses, Castro defenders give two prime reasons for fthe_ and speed of the Cuban ‘‘war crimes" trials. es *hlUt First, they say, Batista's army and secret police repressed opposi- tion with such savagery — much worse than dictators of other Latin American countries — that if the revolutionary courts did not con- demn them the people might take matters into their own hands and this would breed anarchy. Secondly, it has te be done speedily, they say, before the exiled Patiotn has an opportunity to rally his forces and attempt a comeback. * + * “Raul Castro contended in an in- terview in Bantiago with United Press International this week that mass graves heing discovered by the rebels were yjelding hundreds of corpses of Batista enemies, some mutilated. 10,000 BLLAIN He estimated 10,000 persons had been slain by Batista men ginee Batist: ousted President Carlos Prio Sacarras ‘in 1992. There was ne such parallel af slayings in Guatemala under Ar- benz Guzman or in Venezuela un nn ne without it,’’ “With my Gas Dryer I can just sit back and relax on washday. Hanging up and taking down clothes used to take up so much time. It’s so con- venient now to dry clothes quickly, regardless of tlie weather. I really love my Gas Dryer and would never want to go through washdays again Modern Grandmothers like Markos find after years of old-fashioned washdays that an meee Dryer A GAS CLOTHES onvin 1S THE SOLUTION TO WASHDAY DRUDGERY Ask Your Neighbor Who Uses One « modern grandmother speaks... — "[ dreaded the thoughts of washday until we got anew Gas Dryer : aes - ther Phd Qe eine x fh cite Toate Mrs. Steve Markos 2813 Jefferson Ave., Bay City Mrs. is a real time and work saver. With the simple turn of a dial you can change a load of wet wash into a stack of fluffy, perfectly dried clothes. The time you'd ordinarily spend hauling and hanging and taking down your clothes can be used for better things, You never fret and stew about the weather or the soot or the amoke. Yes, washday convenience begins when a wonderful Gas Dryer comes into your home, ae ie _ - rO-0-0006-08 GAS DRYER deote: + => PUBLISHED reRATION WH I 4 Fy Fa * of % under Peron. In Colombia, oné of the most. Democratic and taw-abiding |. countries in Latin America up to 1949, Rojas Pinillas new has been charged with crimes he allegedly committed during his regime and This could lead to trials for other Rojas Pinillas henchmen, But there * will be po executions, The death penalty is outlawed in Colombia. One of the factors common to deaths of 40 of them and shortly Venezuela, Colombia and Argen- | tina that prevented immediate, re-|as president last. year about 600 taliatory retribution was the fact/Peronista union leaders were ar- that military men who had served rested for troublemaking, under the dietators took over the; But there was nothing on the governments in each case, Since, scale of the Cuban revolutionary all three have had free, democratic | reaction, elections, ~ * * In Guatemala, Carlos Castille Armas also had been a leading military figure before he fied inte exile and then returned @3 @ con-| jn q : gz a recent In Cuba, an attempt to set up a! three Hopi villages, A short while military junta failed and the rebels! after the rites ended, rain began and|moeved into power immediately, to fall at all three villages, Potent Rainmakers jor RESERVATION, Ariz, -- Hopi rain dancers batted 1,000 dur- der Perez Jimenez or in Argentina preventing any transitional power aceeptance, + * Booklet will be mailed in a The contract agreement was envelope, e | fixet reached last Wednesday by wo Hien. iter oF nego union On vida io, AW Mary a ee, vester Coune 5 i MA locals at 15 Lavpaaal plants andi] . pH AR MACY 10 proved i warehouses, &pe| Harvester Co, | DEAF? Resumes Work. [Then You Must Read 67. Doy Strike Ends) as UAW Members OK) 3-Year Contract " resume operations today, marking | the end of a 67-day strike by some! 37,000 United Aute Workers pasa the big farm implement * * formally ending the long and costly strike, true 6 t Lear, the tr 1 Seay shout i] Nerve Deaf ‘eat. || comes 80 ieedoally “that ots er department, sald the voting ty] St dur anderen ng of tpeeh members of 33 | is lost ‘showed about 90 per cent favored jem yey a ripe wee ie than fear a SHOP - PEOPLE’S Super Markets ... SHAFER’S CLIP THIS VALUABLE COUPON . Super Value With Coupon MI FOOD-0-MAT BONUS COUPON 4 SHAFER’S SUPER VALUE CLIP THIS HAMILTON VALUABLE COUPON me . — me I IN EIEN GRADE “A” EGCS Banquet ‘Frozen DINNERS Your Choice ® Chicken © Turkey ' | © Beef C @ Salisbury 2 for 8 Gg ® Steak HORMEL’S FINEST DAIRY BRAND SLICED BACON 49. Pillsbury DRYER DEALER’ | C LARGE 3 9 por BISCUITS FOOD-O-MAT BONUS COUPON ¢ HAMILTON GRADE “A” Large EGGS See 39° LIMIT 2 FOOD-O-MAT BONUS COUPON FREE 50 Extra Gold Bell Gift Stamps WITH Rie PURCHASE OF Vo Gal, fcr", loe Cream 680 COUPON EXPIRES JAN. 2)8T HORMEL'S PURE PORK SAUSAGE me 10° Be . Da Miblat lh los Pike Street 700 | Sunt sUrN a | | Hos Ma treet Cel [te a THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY) a8 1959 Ld The Boston. Braves moved their ' — to einteeere in 1953. or eeccccces, |. $ PAY CHECK ° e TOO SMALL? $ e e if time payments and other bills eat away your pay- age rps F ele ac n” ma ‘KEEP more of it to With our “Package Loan” you may tie your bills together and have the advantage of one account at one place and one con- venient, sensible monthly payment instead of the many you may have now. SEABORAD: FINANCE COMPANY In Record Time! No Parking Problem Phone FE 8-9661 Pcoccccccec® (Copyright 1988) cuaPren XXX —_ walked to the top of the steps and watched them as they settled themselves. Mr. . Zoller handed his wife in, waited to count the pieces. of luggage and tip the boys, and then got into the car beside his wife. He raised a hand in farewell and then they had gone. Angus turned and wenf into the office: It did not take long to con- firm what he knew already; no message had come to the hotel since the day before. There was no possibility that Mr. Zoller had met and bribed a mem- ber of the taff. Breakfast had been taken to his room at an early Get $25 to $500 . hour and the maid had remained ito help Mrs. Zoller with her pack- ing. Neither Mr. nor Mrs. Zoller | The Green Empress |had left their room until they went! ‘downstairs to the car. Angus walked thoughtfully up- stairs and. entered the room they occupied, Maids were at work clearing the beds, and. he walked out on to the wide baleony and stood trying to guess what had made husband and wife depart so abruptly. He waited for ideas, and none came, If anybody needed a detec- tive’s stooge, he thought morosely. |he could give an entirely natural | 1185 N. Perry St. bs ' performance. The sun slanted on to the bal- @ cony. On one side of the law divid- @ ing wall was the balcony of Miss j,5ve fast." she commented, and @ . Seton's .room, on the other, Mr. ‘quoted softly: | | ‘How is it you're so early of| Greece. He was there for a month) ‘late? You used to be behind be- ;—not on a one-day thing like this. 'Holt’s. No sound came from Miss Seton’s side, but the clink of cups | suggested that Mr. Holt was having | Cockroaches : Written Guarantee From Houses, Apartments. Groceries, Factories and Restaurants. Remain out only one hour. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 1014 Pont. St Ak, Bidg FE #4558 his coffee. For a moment, Angus thought of ,going in to see him. Here was an- other inexplicable incident, per- ‘haps Mr, Holt would see the con- necting thread running through this one too, * * * Instead of going to Mr. Holt’s ‘room, he went to Angela's, She | was not there, and he went in search of her and found her at) PONTIAG'S * FRAME ; Choose from an unlimited selection of frames to im- prove your ap- - COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE ey It’s NU-VISION in PONTIAC for BETTER SIGHT You can be sure of the best at Nu-Vision! We maintain our own laber- atory insuring fine qual- ity “and expert werk- manship under the con- stant supervision of trained technicians. For minor repairs, new glasses er contact lenses, you'll get fast, courteous service at NU-VISION! SEE NU- ; VeERON & SEE BETTER DR. E. CHORYAN, Optometrist Offices in Principal Michigan Cities NU-VISION Optical Studios 109 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 2- 2895 4 . by Elizabeth Cadell last in the small, wall-enclosed gar- den: He took her wrists, holding her prisoner, and bent and put his lips on hers. The gartien was coo! and deserted and peaceful, and the wor- ry in his mind died away, leaving him calm and at ease. She drew away at last, took a deep breath and looked at him. “Your breakfast must have agreed with you,” she said. “Tell me what it was, and P’'ll have it on your plate every morning when we're married.” He looked down at her, his ex- pression sober. “T love you,” he said. “I don’t care whether it’s madness or not, or whether it’s taking advantage ‘ef your kindness of heart or not. I love you, I don’t know anything about Canada, but if you're there, it'll be all right. If we're poor, | we're poor, ' “If I’m taking you from a gold-| plated past to a tin-plated future, I'll try to make it up to you. I'll work for you, I'll love y my life. I'll take eare of you. Tl be a good father to our children, land to the end of my days ! ‘remember that it was your courage | 1 e be married?” him when he doesn't know (= ivou're looking, you see that ‘YOU MOVE FAST’ lhe’'s...” . “When you start moving, you| x * but now you're first, | fore, last.’ “When will you marry me. “Now, There's just one thing 9 ry _— “Well?’ “You won't get any silly ideas about leaving me behind while you make a home for me over there? I couldn't bear it eS you went off and—"" He frowned. = “That reminds me.” “Of what?” “The Zollers. They went off.” “Went off where?” “They hired a car and left for Lisbon. He said he'd been sent for in a hurry. He said something about an urgent message, but it was a lie. I checked. I came ‘down just in time to see them going off. He'd made all the ar-| rangements, and there was noth-! ‘ing for me to do but stand there | jlike a fool and wave them good-, by. “They plaints?” didn’t make anv com-, “None. He even went so far as | | to say he’d be making the return | | trip in an Empress, but .. .” “But what?’ “I don't know, I feel that if only) \I could see it, this would be tied! up with all the other things that) ‘have happened on the trip. Holt. | savs there's a connecting link.” She led him to a bench and drew him down beside her. | “Sort it out," she suggested. | “Begin at the beginning and then | perhaps it'll clear itself up as you |talk, My father says that articula- tion leads to clarification. Say it iall, just as though | weren't a pas | senger.”’ “You won't discuss it with any of the others?” “Cut my throat.” | *THERE’S A CONNECTION’ “Well, it’s all completely unre-| |lated, as far as I can see, but I’m) coming round to Holt's idea. There | must be some sort of connection. | It can’t just be a series of mis- | ne Le t We're Playing Santa Claus All Winter Long HOLDEN ‘RED GIVEN WITH ALL FUEL OIL and COAL ORDERS! These stamps’ redeemable for valuable premiums et no extra charge! | adventures.”’ “Where do you think it began?” “The night Miss Seton got a tele- ‘phone message. Not night, early morning, about two. I took her down to the phone and waited for her while she took the call. It was had news, but T didn't know what! kind."" “Is that why quiet?” “Yes. Then somebody tried to get into the garage; you and the | Admiral came along just as Fer- she turned so STAMPS. - COAL and oiL co | pany. ii _ dy was telling me about it. Then | | Tarrant tried to climb through | | the garage window.” { | “Maurice did?” ; “Yes, Ferdy tried to catch him, \but all he succeeded in doing was) hitting him on the wrist with a torch—and that's how I found out it was Tarrant. I saw the mark on i his wrist.” “Then?” | “Then the dispatch case disap- peared—and was pushed into your father’s room, Then-Tarrant’s: lug-| | Rage. went. Somebody put a note | on my table—unsigned—telling me. | where to find it. It's hopeless to try! ‘to get anything out of Tarrant, but Holt seems to know something, and /won't tell me what it is, because I'd have to report it to the com- “He said, in effect, that I wasn't! that) | ~~ Bipecial: ; slentits ianorateey tormelauon, thon: : i a women now i |) feeling old, tired. irritable and aeorenaee | a 9 and werrring about | vdy Urine, due to common K ations, which offen pol 4 sueas it—and then Mr. Zotler ‘talked to me about changing his room, and this morning made up a * * * “It can’t just be one damned thing after another, They’re aot isolated incidents, they’re con. nected, They’re related.’ .. There was silence. : “It’s easy,’ said Angela slowly at last, ‘‘to let one’s imagination run away. Mine did at the begin- ning of the trip. when I couldn't ..» Well, to work out of it and tell myself that if I could do anything, he'd tell me— and unti lhe said something, it was useless to imagine this and that, And I think the same goes discover what was making my fa- ‘ ther so depressed. I found that [| ‘e A United Netioun survey, cov. -| people oyer 15 years of age — or; a total of 700,000,000 — are still|the world’s population, the United illiterate. ering 65 countries, indicates that about 44 per cent of the world’s With only about six per cent ofjcent of fhe world’s total motor’ ve, hicles, | esa to industrial rec- States has an estimated 75 perjords, TWENTY-ONE ‘|. WAYNE GABERT’S for you. Don't try to fit the pieces Don't make them your Msiness un- less or until you have to.” about your father?’ j= ;pletely unlike himself. As a rule): i/he’s—he’s amusing, and interesting, — . jand tremendous fun to be with.) — ou all But now .. Where by himself. He broods near- ‘yjjhe loses the thread of what he’s: LS saying. I wouldn't mind that, if he. that brought us together. When can| didn't look so unhappy. If you look | ia at) present job, but a long and | think | much more important mission.’ strain?" perfectly all right for a time—and| then just before we came on this, j trip, he seemed to get miserable! again.’ le Tiny Electronic Tuner May Find Many Uses jications systems. rom ne sive Bladder § Weakness” — too frequent, | itebing urinetion, Bed Wet- i tine, Getting Up Nighis—or Ley 2 together. Do as Mr. Holt said: He frowned. a “Did you really worry seriously) x * & ‘Yes. He was—and still is—com-| — he’s gone off some-|« y all the time. He dreams, and’ . “How long has he been like this?” i “Since he came home from b “Couldn't he be suffering = “IT thought so, but he seemed) \ (Continued Tomorrow) LOS ANGELES—A Los ‘Angeles firm has introduced a tiny elec- tronic component no bigger than) * a teardrop, that can do a‘job sim ilar to that of one tuning capaci tator used in AM and FM re- em ceivers. In one application, used with a resistor anid a mica capac- tion as 24 other parts. * * * Because it saves so much space, it is expected to find wide use in, tuning and modulation of frequen. ~ cies in FM receivers and trans- | mitters, telemetering. missle con-| trol, and miniaturized commun- ; Payment ——— a —— = AT PONTIAC'S NORGE HEADQUARTERS 3-WAY FILTERING AUTOMATIC WASHER Gives you more features... more valve. Exclusive J-way Ritering inclydes lint-filter agi- tater... over-flow rinse... ond casement ejector. Ss to NORGE 4-WAY.: .4-HEAT AUTOMATIC DRYER Big 6 cu. ft. cylinder holds full 9 Ib. load. Gives you most in features, valve and evtomatic satety controls. * Suring to NORGE * Refrigerator- Freeser MODEL D-911 Big . .. roomy . . . handsomet Has Dairy keeper... hondi-dor storage .. . egg shelf plus full . width«chill troy, freerer and huge-copacity crisper. Siingts NORGE ures $2 WE FREE DELIVERY — FREE 1-YEAR SERVICE — FREE ‘NORMAL INSTALLATION sed ij } h = itator, it performed the same func- | ME D own Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121 N. Saginaw St. OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P. M. WAYNE GABERT'S po cane ae AR. 2 Years to Pay 90 Days Same FE 5-6189 as Cash Every Pair Must Go! _ of Selling Be at 26 W. Huron St. at 9:30 A. M. Tuesday LAST 5 DAYS S$ - O E S$ in This Pocation Entire Stock WOMEN’S FLATS @ JR. HEELS @ LOAFERS © GUM DROPS @ DRESS FLATS @ WHITE BUCKS Values to $8.95 _ WOMEN’S DESERT BOOTS $288 ‘3.88 Children’s SNOW BOOTS Leather Fleece Lined Children’s Entire Stock Galoshes Ladies’ and Children's SLIPPERS Entire Stock HOUSE $ FE 2-7440 CHILDREN’S SHOES SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Play Poise American Jr. Step Master Many Others Serving Pontiac in Children's Shoes for 26 Years . , on, |. SHOE STORE . Ss. Entire Stock AA OFF All Sizes All Widths All Regular Stock BUY NOW AND SAVE oo D6 W. Huron‘ TWENTY-TWO | _ ___'THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 et | : ; _ : re] CARPET 3 ROOMS. WALL - TO-WALL § CUSHION INCLUDED 1 ALG ‘ * * eo 3 *, © ——, | ae ; a Ee, a a . , : : AP Wirepheoto | STORM DAMAGE—This home of Robert high wind and fell across the roof. Henderson, [| Henderson, left, of Atlanta, Ga., lies partially | his wife and their five children were asleep in | wrecked under a tree which toppled over in a the house, but all escaped injury : _ No Smog Device Needed in L. A. j DETROIT (UPI) — Los Angeles) duce gasoline economy, — they Gir a well-maintained large car residents don't need a special de-| sald, might emit a smaller volume ot! vice to cut down the amount of | * * i exhaust than a smaller one and og-caus me : : therefore, be less of a hazard than Amog causing eleme Bo emitted in Although proper maintenance “ae d the exhaust from their cars, three the smaller car. Chrysler Corp. engineers said to-|™4Y hot reduce smog as much a» | day. ; i specially-designed devices which Ww S| Faricy MV Sink and € lburn up gasoline vastes in the ex “ ie ag oy / Sink and C.|haust system, it is an extremely f arg | go altd +e “ho eee ‘i earvey Aitke ch practical ans of getting at the ~ pines. problem, they sald . i of rane mainiona re e on The engineering trio suggested, . thee of eas in the procedures they used in their naust fumes, sald Los Angeles .,.. : survey might be used by Los residents. could cut down on the Angeles officials to Inspect fumes and save gas at the sane V.jicjes driven in the area in an, time ( : ; qd effect to control exhaust fumes un as PIN! e All they have to do, the en. til a better method can be de- gincers sald, is to keep their veloped for practical use. cars in good cunning condition. | * * GEN EY The Chrysler engineers sub-| ‘The methods used could be de . stituted ignition. parts from a new veloped into a rapid and practica Cleaning car for those of an older car used means of inspecting vehicles to in their test. The result) was alascertain car condition and to dee] |t pays to choose QUAL- ureatly reduced amount of smog termine whether maintenance t< 1 | TY CLEANING in money causing elements flowing from the required to reduce emissions, covediontwordrove replace- : os exhaust pipe of the car, they gald.|tk-y said ment o * * : The methods used included A wide range of emissions re- | comparing data from test cars C il T d sult from modification of the car : ‘ a oda buretor idle adjustment,” they| Te aineice Neat ot coripany said. “Cars which had the car-| : Pick-Up and Delivery | vehicles, buretor Idle adjusted properly, emitted far less névous fumes The volume of exhaust emitted FE 5 6107 = than those which hadnt been the engineers said, determines the riaintained properts : imount af pollution emusedl byw the = eS A - = jcar This means, they said, a - he Aol . MANTENANCE IMPORTANT itn ge cay will generally catise more - o- . - Proper maintenance will net only pollution than a small one ne . oO Lit | 7 Se |= a a} ( © Three Toned “Tweeds ® Latex Coated Back ® Rug Pag Included reduce emission of the smog caus ing elements in exhaust fimes but DRY CLEANERS will give the car far better gasoline economy, thev said 12 West Pike Park Near Our Door Municipal Parking Lot Factories on Easy Street | Fouled spark plugs and valves NEWARK, Ohio UP No one | } also cause greater emission of |lives on Ieasy Street here. Fac- smog-causing elements and re- ‘tories, not houses, line its curbs. | e : , : isin Beige Coloring ; Ooped Surface Yarns Rug Pad Included Last Month Over Two Hundred Families Opened Savings Accounts at, ‘ _ . PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS Here are the services they have found available: Money Orders Save by Mail Christmas Clubs Night Depository Travelers’ Checks Construction Loans Land Contracts Purchased FHA Home Imprdévement Loans Land Contract Collecting Service Mortgages on Business and Commercial Buildings Pontiac Federal Savings’ True Open End Mortgages Savings Accounts Earning Three Per Cent Semi-Annually Customers may transact their business at any of our four offices Ample Free Parking at Rear of Our Main Office and New Drayton Plains Branch. Free Counseling Service and Building Plans for Those Who Contemplate Building-New Homes. If friendly, efficient service appeals to you, come in wa and open a Savings Account today Remember, 5 . ar money received up to the 10th of the month earns * We Will Cut, Measure and Install Any Carpet from the first. And every account is insured up to | You Choose to Your Complete Satisfaction $10,000 by an agency of the U. S. Government. See Our Large Selection of Lees, Firth and + ; . ’ Gulistan Carpeting we Current Vo Rate Easy Credit Terms .. . Ample Free Parking adh tome Pontiac — | Federal Savings “/i<“ TAY \ | ¥ Wes | ; ; : ——— ang gent HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St. qo7ow = eanes | ) (fi . f ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. — PONTIAC: 16 E. Lawrence St. —— ——— fF .. 261 SOUTH SAGINAW sTeEtT + PONTIAC * 4416 Dixie H’'way — Drayton Plains . THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 19. 1939 _ __ TWENTY-THREE ULLAL UNH — ‘ | : : ., AMERICA'S a : . | “SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY—Cut from Tender, Young Porkers FULL f | 7-RIB PORTION BIRTH DAY 1859-1959 MOTT’S FANCY swe Apple Sauce . ; . a MASCULINE MASQUERADE—These not too dainty damsels Loin Portion Pork Loins LB. Cc | togged out in high styles of the 1920's have good reason for looking . , : > | warily at the camera. Beneath their feminine disguise, they are ; ; really actors Jack Lemmon (left) and Tony Curtis made up for 25-OZ. C roles in the United Artists comedy “Some Like It Hot.” JARS Center Cut Por ops LB. C Suit's Suit {lop Virginia Court : “SUPER-RIGHT"—MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY Suits Judge _‘toRule on Integration s | , . . pa R | ee eseeeea ds 7 ets erie me eee wen ayaa - Potato Sa eC Spare Ribs : teuitlacn in fie peblic sckosls teced “SUPER-RIGHT”"—MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY MUSKEGON (UPI) — A circuit/tion in its public schools faced judge has denied a motion to dis-|another test today. e miss a $2,500 damage suit by a x *« * p k T d | LB. 69 Muskegon housewife who claims; The Virginia Supreme Court of MICHIG AN ¢ or en er ons ss ¢ her new bathing suit became trans-|Appeals was to hand down a de- : : she rent the first time she wore it in|cision on the validity of the - s 1. the water. j state's anti-integration laws. The U. S. No. 1 GRADE SUPER-RIGHT"—MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY x * * ruling will help determine Virgin- : , Circuit Judge Noel P. Fox ruledia’s future. course in the school roun ee ailelailaials LB. C a suit filed by Mrs. Donna Dibble, ee isis, 25, against a dress shop indicat-| A three-judge federal court at ed a “valid breach of warranty” | Norfolk was to disclose its ruling MAINE and contained ‘ ‘suficient evidence | ‘in a test of the law under which of invasion of privacy.’ isix white high and junior high In her law suit, the 6-foot-2 |Schools were closed in Norfolk U. S. No. 1 GRADE or blonde said she was “humiliated, last September, idling 10,000 stu- embarrassed and publicly dis- |S. yw | ’ i A a, rh ag cee ee About a fourth of America’s li-, Michigan July 19 1957. censed fishing enthusiasts are. women. Mrs. Dibble contends the suit be- | - came transparent as soon as it got| ¥ PAPAL APPPPPP PPP LSPA. B&W OR ACE HIGH BRAND FROZEN ee eee } MIMEOGRAPHING ; . . 6-OZ. 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FAST SERVICE! q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 * * * > q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 q ll tl i i hi Mi i he hh i i The average American eats ’ Christian Literature Sales ys ln il le in ln ti hi Mi tp Ln tin hn i Min i i ti i hr a Oy, ALL PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU TUESDAY, JAN. 20th THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY si ibis 20 PAD PKG. Se ee ae 18 E. Huron St. . FE4-0566 Pontiac. TWENTY-FOUR 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1950 / Curb Eyeglass Sales . LONDON — A new: British law) prohiffits the sale of ready-made corrective eyeglasses over~ the, counter, so that anyone who wants visual correction must now con- sult an eyesight specialist. Only four or five states in the United States | have similar laws. poons OPEN 6 45 Benedict BOGEAUS presents jos. COTTEN, Geo. SANDERS | Debra PAFET JULES VERNES From the Earth to the Moon Distributed by Warner Bros. —COMING SOON— “ONIONHEAD” “PARTY GIRL” "GIGI" “Ith VOYAGE of SINBAD” DOORS OPEN 10:45 A.M. we feet Croc uit MGM Pomvees AA ARCOLA PRODUC THOM tagroag ALAN ERNEST LADD - BORGNINE THE BADLANDERS “ATTILLA” Anthony QUINN NOW thru THURSDAY! At — 2:50 — 6:22 — 9:55 A GREAT NEW KAYE IS DAWNING! Ws great fun all the way! om eens eek DANNY CuRT KAYE :-JURGENS vical’ MAUREY E AND THE COLONEL CO-FEATURE sized killer-hunt that The saga panicked San Francisco and shocked the nation , now hecomes the first full-length story of “The Lineup!” THEA im CLincue EL WALA ia At 1:25 = 4:55 —- 8:30 Open 10:45 25¢ to 1 P.M. NOW! 2 BIG HITS! SUSPENSE MYSTERY THRILLER JACK PALANCE 3 ANITA EKBERG NIGEL PATRICK | = $2 s F] 2 ‘the ispecimens and etches on their beb| 'twenty says Arizona Director Brands Rattlers Tests to Learn Habits, Check Homing Instinct, of Diamondbacks | TEMPE, Ariz. w® Desert trek- kers who come across curious! zona, Arthur E Dammann, ducting a unique experiment. He ‘tattoos a number on a rattlesnake -and then paints the same number above the rattler’s den. the rattier has a homing instinct lifetime to the den in which it was born. He believes his ex- periments can prove beneficial to science and help dispe! some aversion toward the critters, Damman has spent three years testing his theory. He studied the ancient Polynesian skin-art to learn: ‘how to etch identifying marks on snakes’ bellies in a way that sould not wear off Forty miles east of Phoe nix, Damman selects several rock piles ‘where the diamond-backs congre- gate, Outside den entrances he, paints large white numbers. In summer he selects oe bel lies the number of the den. In winters he has found, so far, that snake number 10 returns to den T number 10, Several years of check. ing will be required to establish scientifically the homing instinc! theary, While carrying out the ‘brand ing.’ Damman also collects rattle- snake venom and returns It to the, college lab for use in making ser um, He collects materials from | the snake's mouth and tests It for disease So far the seclentist’s work i unique, No one seems anxious to compete with him in this particu lar field Remove Old Paint Before Refinishing Many a householder is occupied, these early winter days, with a re doing project on certain pieces of, treasured furniture. It's Important, In such jobs to know the value of | the proper use of paint and var msh remover When the old paint coating has become thick or rough you can apply the remover to a small urea ‘at atime and let it stand until the old coating hag softened —- about minutes In most cases, Then do your scraping with a putty knife and steel wool, * * * When all the old coating has been removed, wash the piece with mineral spirits or turpentine to take off any vestiges of wax that, might possibly be left from the: paint and varnish remover. surface dry thoroughly, then apply your priming coat and finally your Holshing coat Credit for No Absence Given to Older Sister CONNERSVILLE, Ind um Sarah Riley refused to take all the | credit for attending school fer 12 years without missing a single dav of clans “T owe fer she said ‘She Vesa all the childhood diseases /me, 80 there wes worhing left [bt 'me fo have after [started school.’ home te Retired Man, 64, Asks Return to Job—No Pay HILO, Hawaii oP Walter A, Todd, 64, can't give up working Todd reti red in March as head of Hawail County automotive and equipment division after working |shot in terrific heat, and that didn't for the county for 44 vears Now, he offers to work without pay if! the county will give him back his job “You have to Todd, but do something,” “T enjoy fishing and hunting, there's; a limit) to that.” Tn the last eight years the portion of the average Frenchman's budg- let spent on health cand medical care has increased from 9.1 per cent to 7 per cent. numbered rocks around here would) ‘do well to approach with caution. ‘Chances are they are the sites of the wierdest roundup and branding’ operations i} the history of Ari-| assistant director of the poisonous animals: ‘research laboratory State College at Tempe, is con-, at Arizona! His purpose is to find out Wf | which brings it back through Its | Let the, je Ried comedy, It all to my older’ sis. : "Wut Disneys True Life Adventures Modern Flagpole Sitter World Rights Reserved Seeks Title in Comfort & f - ; CHICAGO (UPD — A flagpole 2 Tet. maker recalled with nostalgia to- day the zany “good old days’ when| a Fran- flagpole sitters really sat—because ciseo pole, His mark was topped that wag all they had room to do.| in Ralph Watkins said present-day| s sifters are “a bunch of pikers”’ DO NOT DISTURB & atone tor the world’s sins by stay- ing aloft. compared to such old masters as Shipwreck’ Kelly and “Hold Enr Joe’ Powers. * * * Back in the roaring 20's, Watkins reminisced, Kelly and Powers clung to bosun's chairs or equally skimpy perches while they waged) their famous battle for the world sitting championship, (Advertisement) Are You So Run-Down You Watkins couldn't get excited’ How tragic when a woman feels about the efforts of Mauri Rose Cd penile cts and Acetaritalg! be Kirby, 17-year-old. girl who en-| Luckily, it's roped sconced herself with books, radio| Hungry Blood” (*simple iron de- and telephone Aug. 16 in a little ency anemia). Then it’s need- less for those women er hut atep a utility pole in Indiana-| polis and announced she wowd try | to crack the modern sitting record| can help relieve this condit : THE ASIATIC ‘of 169 days aloft. eee our, vitalit ! its WATER Lis) “The sitters today are a bunch | iron tonic made especially for is NOT ONE 70 BE TERRORIZED BY THE TIGER. | of pikers,”* said Watkins, whose | yomen! Rich in ton. rengthen | = HE HAS BEEN KNOWN TO paaenarss douse oe oldest | “Iron-Hungry Blood” in one day! (Advertisement) IS “IRON-HUNGRY BLOOD” MAKING YOU ONLY “HALF” A WOMAN? Can't Give Your Husband and Family Real Companionship? Then Discover The Wonderful Blood-Strengthening Action of This Special iron Tonic for Women! Thus quickly help build rich, red blood .. tore strength and ene! so you feel fine again fast ula can also bring blessed relief from cacao dota | monthly and “Hot Flashes” of chats ot-titel No wonder so many women use Pinkham's Tablets all through Meted lives! “Tron-H Blood” roy Then see if you don’t frugeists “all” woman again! United States. “They practically | live in houses with all the com- | forts of home.” VANQUISH THE FIERCE CAT. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. FOR FEMALE AILMENTS! Doctors’ tests prove famous Lydia R. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound (liquid) also brings quick relief from discomforts of monthly pain and change-of-life. | Powers touched off the see- saws [IBVEN cae with Kelly by sitting for 16: days and two hours on the flag THE LORDLY pole atop the 42-story Morrison’ - ELEPHANT [aexormeee ent) | Hotel in Chicago. | Kelly came right back by roost- /ing on a pole atop a Newark, N. J., |hotel for 18 days—and incidentally earning. up to. $500 a day while ac- quiring a callous and a suntan. The pair kept right on whorhp- ing each other until] Powers beat Kelly, 52 days to 51, aboard a building on Chicago's Northwest Side. STANDING RECORD Kelly, not to be outdone, shin-| nied right back up and became, the champion flagpole STANDER| with @ nine hour and 47 minute) stint above the Hotel Belvedere in| New York. “Every generation has a bunch) of idiots, Watkins philosophized.| After World War II a new gen-' leration took up flagpole sitting ¥ \ibn fil ow: if { ae (Me ee nee + \ i ‘ye Bye ah a3 ’ ‘ + New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itch- ing, and relieve pain — without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another,“very striking improve- ment” was reported and veri- fied by doctors’ observations, Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or re- traction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all — this improvement was main- tained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued en ee rt i a Hollywood Headlines Bird Dog Has Litter, | 6 Pups White, 1 Green “Gazebo Sold to MGM — HARRISBURG, Ht w — John for Quarter of Million ‘Jones had something to talk about iwhen his bird dog gave birth to a By LOUFRLLA 0, litter of pups — one of them green. All six other pups are white. VAKSONS butcher knife. was dining on the (Advertisement) Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain a problem!” And among these sufferers were a very wide va- riety of hemorrhoid. conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne*)—the discovery of a world-famous research institu- tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in suppository or oint- ment form ealled Preparation H.* Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation oi uy: positories or Preparation H ointment with special appl cator. Preparation H is sold at all drug counters. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. *Reg_ U.S. Pet Of — HOLLYWOOD -Freddie Brisson, Star On The Roof with—-Tom, A Marion doctor said an infec- Qzzie Hamilton Osborne _ slid over @ beried of many months! busking om sunshine in Palm Chamalea! jtion in the mother may have down a Long Beach, Calif., flag- eugh Fee ere able Springs, took time out to close a perethy Towne (the former caused the aren lo ars of “ pole in September 1948 with a new to make such astonishing state- deal to well “Gazebo” to MGM itt) (fen, dack Webb) has it bad fer |PUP but whether it will remain that mark of 52 days, 13 hours and 58° ments as“Piles have ceased to be a price of ulmost 1 quarter of & Cubby Broccoll, She's leaving in |Y8Y 18 net known. eae jaullion: dollars, Lawrence Wein fs irten’s: Avon Productions ets | this plunt. Larry hos assigned Gairee Were to write the saath and Wells (goes to New York to see the play and to discuss if with playwright |Alec Coppel | In the Broadway play Walter Slezak and Jayne Meadows have won praise from the crities, and it's possible that the Broadway actors will star in the motion pic- ture. a week on a safari for Africa | with Mrs. Johnny Meyer. Cubby has a picture to make in Africa | starting In February. t Jennifer Jones and David Selz- inick, who have been in Switzerland for su long, return here Tuesday They were delayed in New York juntil daughter Mary Jennifer re- covered from mumps. Is there a fend on between Alexis Smith and Lola Albright, who is lappearing in the “Peter Gunn” TV ‘Tt eannot) be made until July, series with Alexis’ husband, Craig 1960, but Lary has a couple of Stevens? other important pictures to do, so he won't be idle. This “Cat On A Hot Tin Roof’ is MGM's 8 Bristlecone. Pine Is pooner ale 1 Oldest Living Thing so Fr Gfle's doing okay | es OPEN MON. & FRI. ‘til 9 isold “Pleasure Of [lis Company’ | WASHINGTON — Methuselah to Paramount which of course. Walk and the surrounding area in jwill star Dolores Hart, Hal Wills’ 4. Wiote Mountains of Inve Coun pride and joy ty, California, which contain. bris- * = * tlecone-pine trees — the oldest Buddy Adler tells me {and he jiviny things on earth — have been ought to know, he’s boss of 20th) Gegionated the Ancient Bristlecone that “Oh. Mistress Mine,” the Lunt, Pine Forest, according to the For- and. Fontaine stage hit, goes before aor service. the cameras in April. Phoebe and | The botanical area includes 27,- Henry Ephron are putting the final’ 000 acres of Inyo National Forest. poten on the script of the sophist yyy hin it are 100 bristlecone pines | aver 4,000 vears old and thousandg ; “And no matter what you have in the 3,000-t0-4,000-year bracket. heard or read elsewhere— Deborah Kerr ig the only star signed,” said | Ruddy, Tt will be good news to the Trailer Family Keeps 20th studio workers that Deborah wil} he hack on the lot) She's al- Three Bears, Baboon with no tempera. | . cand heya, DALLAS —- | | wars so friendly Vrs ment and from the Joe Fain and clear up to the front offiee the ver Irs Jean Wilkey called police, “diet ia “she's: a doll fo report three bears chained to * t * a tree Police found the three ’ } y ; | | ‘The temperature of 100 degrees bears, allright, plus a baboon lin Melootiae Australia, may be They said they could do nothing partly responsible for Ava Gard. junless the animals escaped or ner's disposition, and her dislike Made a fuss for newapaper people. Tam told | The animals belonged to a fare. ithat a'jlove scene between Ava and ily living in a nearby trailer Gregory Peck on the first day's | house. shooting of “On The Beach" Was 20% to 50% OFF ALL PRICES REDUCED Bedroom Suites Dining Room and Dinette Sets ' Carpeting, Rugs Bedding, Bunk Beds improve Ava’s disposition, Soldier Roams Post Whatever has happened to the ‘Carrying Butterfly Net nice girl who used to come and see me and tell me all her troubles? ‘Ava hasn't taken her success [00) well, and even though it’s nothing: new for her to be snobbish to the ‘American press, she should use more tact in another country * * * Bright and early came the cheer- ful volee of an old) friend, Fddie: FORT KNOX, Ky. —Pfe., Rob- | ert Naylor wanders around this! military post with a buterfly net, Naylor, assigned to the post's Preventive Medicine Laboratory, has orders to catch all bugs he lean find. They re classified, mounted, and, PONTIAC: i) DRIVEIN: ? HEATTE ‘pking CLOSE TONIGHT OPEN Fri. - Sat. - Sun. Lowe, to tell me he's signed for sont to 1 Mes Army Headquar- | an “actos dream part with so ters at Ft, Meade, Md., for study Stratolounger Reclining Chair aphia Loren in “Heller With A ee ; Lamps, Tables Living Room Suites }Gun." Stationary Road Test | Said Eddie: “It's a poor man's DETROIT | Edwin Booth role and gives me | Automobiles ean now take road tests at speeds up | the chayee to chew up the scen = ; “ery to my heart's desire.” H's to Sy mph. while standing still S | “nleo the biggest part Eddie's The tests, run in a special elec: ectiona s | taken on in monthe—although | fonic laboratory, can pinpoint told him I see him a tot oftener |faulty vibrations as small as .0001. than he sees me—his old pictures Of 8" neh. _. 90 Days Same as Cash are on TV mo all the time, | Free Parking Snapshots. ot Hollywood collec Aa end LAKE OPEN at random: 6:45 Helen O'Connell, who at Pho ne FE 58] 14-5 M-G-M presents charged in court that her husband | Glenn FORD FURNITURE iTom Chamales chased her with al Emest BORGNINE ! 204i KEEGO “WILLIAM THE BRID “STARTS FRIDAY “THE BUCCANEER” Yul Brynner—Ohariton Heston a_—ene reoeoen’, avec GUINNESS + cx HAWKINS RIVER KWAI ents PE CINEMARCOPE | ORCHARD TONIGHT OPEN 7:15 af PATURE 8:00 P..M. ONLY COMPANY HOLDEN ! GE ON THE 24 MONTHS TO PAY SAVE ON LIVING ROOM SUITES AND SECTIONALS 3-PC. SECTIONALS FOAM RUBBER CUSHIONS NYLON COVERS ON ALL LIVING ROOM SUITES and SECTIONALS LEADING MAKES Admiral Bassett Hooker Howard Parlor Chas. Schneider Monarch Sealy Restokraft Artistic ond Many Others FOAM RUBBER BED PILLOWSHis Work Is All-Play Meet Mikoya 4 i j f .% a TWENTY-FIVE ? By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON — If the Soviet Union had free enterprise, a cer- tain young Ryssian could un- doubtedly turn out a best-seller en- titled: “I was fhe mouthpiece for Mickey.”’- Probably the only man in America who has talked more than Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. In the: combined roles of expert, advisor and interpreter, he also attended the 1954 foreign ministers meeting on Berlin and the Geneva': conference on Asia. IN SPOTLIGHT Young Troyanovsky first cap- tured the international spotlight when he served as interpreter for the Pulitzer prize-winning inter- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19,1950 Zaroubin in their conferences with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Oleg’s voice flooded American television sets in 1957 when he | interpreted fer Khrushchev in a featured film interview on “Face the Nation.” n’s U. S. Mouthpiece. ‘sweet nothings into the shell-like, ears of Hollywood movie stars, he, Eisenhower to translate his boss's secret utterances on Berlin and! the state of the world. Monday, after a talkathon stint | as Mikoyan’s mouthpiece at the drew up a chair beside President - -Mikoyan these past two weeks is Oleg Troyanovsky, who not only must translate What the junketing Red says to Americans, but what our big and little shots reply in kind, For Oleg, this work is all play. Quaker-educated in America while his father was Soviet am- bassador here, he won a prize as the most outstanding boy in his class when he graduated from views conducted by the Hearst task force with Red boss Nikita Khrushchev and other Kremlin leaders in 1955. s * x * He accompanied those gay jun- keteers — Khrushchev and Nikoli Bulganin — to England in 1956, but was in considerable more morose company when he came to Wash- ington the next year to translate for Andrei Gromyko and Georgi Make no mistake about it, this National Press Club, he will father of one son gets around. His again serve as go-between while increased trade from right-wing vs. Communist dictatorship are as Lewis mysterious as the Kremlin towers.| Commerce —_ Secretary But should he someday become) Strauss. | ambassador to Washington, it) What a book Oleg could write! | would be the first time that local The one-time editor of Sidwell’s. gentry could be moved to say of jiterary “quarterly” could even ‘a Communist: “Home town boy dispense with the services of a makes good.” . ‘translator, while. equaling fellow-| This week provided dazzling new) Russian Pasternak’s accomplish-| own views on American democracy the Ne. 2 Red tries to wheedle - heights for the Quaker-educated,;ment on the best-seller lists of — ‘Red. After whispering Mikoyan's! America. Sidwell Friends School in 1987. | ———- -——- oe Hie Washington senonlnatce Fe: | BOARDING HOUSE member him well. Distinguished ini pp LOOIO7, _ = — brent a | Lcd cdle/f WN GRANC YOSEAR'S|ONE HORE Y// se blicationl belonged to the drama! Uf ADMIRING THE FAINT-— y, THIS Kcaume A OE THAT Yi club, student council, soccer and y ING, L SEE/EGAD, FF BIRD'ISA Y a e's Y BOTILE Y/, tennis oe tain election as VA COUSIN OXFORD, CHAMP/ Yj ANDTHE Yj senior class president. ou ARE A TRUE THAT , 4 Uy % ; H, nee oe aa || SORE od (Rae Mane neta! Dati NR he Soviet Embassy which provided) [/{ HIC“S= - | Uf a cozy glimpse of life with Alexan-/ | SCAPE WAS PAINTED) {A BEST SELLER )/ ONE OF MY. [ANCESTORS] CLAIM der Troyanovsky, the first Russian IN 1180 BYA DIS- 7 SIN THE DIME envoy to be admitted to our diplo’ 1 \TINGUISHED FORE; stone ALONG Hee matic circles since the Bolshevist BEAR OF MINE WITH SEPTEM- : OUR NEW | tevolution nearly two decades be- B. AINS BOROUGH BER GHT CALENDAR L fore. oe BAN eee TNC Maeni'y WRESTLING JI fT) Gelome \ WHISKED HOME = BE Hic/< pega a, TO KING “agaly GEN fy Oleg, who had previously studied > & HENRY THE at an English language school in Tokyo, proceeded from Sidwell to) Swarthmore College, but after a year was whisked back to the state university in Moscow. Rumor has it that Daddy Alex thought Oleg was becoming too ragtime Ameri- canized. ' * x * Be that as it may, the 39-year- old interpreter has seen plently of the English-speaking world in the . years between. His first diplo- matic posts were as attache and: third secretary at the Soviet Em- bassy in London from 1944 to 1946. | Soon he was back in America \ d ~—s LT as an interpreter to the Russian delegation at the U.N. General Assembly, a chore which he has skillfully repeated almost yearly since. ANCESTORS, , TOO! THE "1 be fee A ONE MORE S1P AND HE WENT TO SLEEP= oo 4 rrp oad Lf © 1989 by NEA Servicn, nc. TM. Reg. US. Pat. Off. OUT OUR WAY Just Wasn't This Fellow’'s Day to Win PHOENIX, Ariz., (AP) — It was a poor day for business for Ear] Welk, 30, Santa Clara, Calif. who) flew to Phoenix Sunday to buy | some used TV sets from a motel. He lost his return ticket and fi- nally had to buy another. * * * ~He rented a car to go to. the race track—and lost $200 on the horses. Coming back, he got in the wrong traffic lane and drew a ci- tation. That was $5. * * * Then he found the TV sets were 17-inchers, He cancelled the order because he needed bigger ones. Tito Sails for Ceylon. After Visit to India MADRAS, India (AP) — Presi- dent Tito and ‘his wife sailed to- day for Ceylon after a six-day! visit to India, * * * / The Yugoslav president is visit- ing governments in Asia which, like his, profess a _ neutralist policy in the cold war. He pre-| OH, THEM --WHY, THEM'S LITTLE SIDE TRACKS SO ONE PERSON KIN STEP ASIDE AN' LET ANOTHER | I WANT IT DONE! ek He ONG -LANE HIGHWAY — YES? WELL GO AND GET THE SHOVEL AGAIN! TLL - thee O—-- . : Se rd ON : : t ms . A viously visited Indonesia and’ Ea. tag, US. Pot OF, Pop oii Burma. ——+ DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney i | | i | WS OR (ie ae aera a oe UPWUEY! OBWEyY! LOUIE! SUPPERTIME! i rc You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Press Wont Ad Section Take advantage of this easy wey to solve aff your buvirig end telling orobiems. Every Day in the Pontiac | - To Plece Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 } . ‘ \ ¢ RIVETS as _ By George Sixta peume: mae ry See Baath. Ors RETURNING P HOME GRID FONG 30 DG OF AS OTE RL ALBERT \G RATURALN CURIOUS THE , / ieee Sldcadaaad Wwe / a's: § = 4S\ al Perry Cw By Edgar Martin WO NOTE! NO WSTHING! DMERE COXD SHE ” SHE WS USUALR SO Eg FUSRY , CREXROD Ca... TSK TWAS QSRASTOA WN WER BEY QUIOR PETTERN \S COST PERPLEXING| MOTAER-rert Vo e By Carl Grubert BERRYS hg & DIXIE DUGAN DOUBLE-CROSSED GO AROUND L LIKE THIS ? AKE THIS ING OFF- By T. V. Hamlin ZS —~ ar Yl ul a [o> 2 2) 6 WN Pe aa ty ye Sethe aS, ; * HELLO, EVERYBODY! : LOOK, YOU FELLAS, ee STEP UP AND MEET Oxy TWENTY FOUR’ = ° # a | © 190P by MEA Gervine, tre: TM Rag US Pea OF oe ee Cage HPN ty eed Peemcon thpmitemnk tn: os FR Fey we eg ven eee, @ By Charles Kuhn / OH, 1 SUPPOSE MY ADULT ACCURACY AND NEATNESS TIP HER OFF’ ? ,' ' NO/SHE SAYS IT’S BECAUSE TH ANSWERS ARE USUALLY «AN THERE’S ALWAYS JELLY AN'CAKE CRUMBS) ON TH" PAPERS. a rR ‘a * : , % TWENTY-SIX 2 Police Units Await Answers Minor Traffic Violation: Links Madison™ Man to Check Burglary William R. Williams, 23, 30524 Palmer St., Madison Heights, has) ~ to answer ‘charges in two police’ departments today — and all be- cause he had defective lights on | his car. * * * | Williams was stopped by Romeo State Police Saturday night for, this minor traffic violation. Then! upon further investigation, offic ers, found beer in his car. He was: taken to Oakland County jail where he was booked for furnishing in- toxicants to gninors. State troopers then looked | through Williams’ wallet and found a $509 check payable to Utilities Construction Co,, Madi- | son Heights, They called the | owner of the firm, Thomas B. Connolly, Charnwood, Birming- ham. Connolly said he did not realize the check was missing and went down to his company offices and found they had been broken into. The check was all that was miss- ing, police said : * * Now Williams will be turned over! to Madison Heights authorities to answer charges of breaking and entering, State Police said. Wheat Futures Feel Pressure CHICAGO ww — Wheat futures iwere under moderately heavy sell- ‘ing pressure today in early activity on the Board of Trade while soy- beans attracted fairly general] sup- ITT. Weakness in wheat was altribut- ‘ed in part to the government re- port on stocks in government loan, ‘and also to failure of expected ex- ‘port business to develop over the ~ if MARKETS | ' The following are top ps| covering sales of locally grown) produce brought to the Farmer's, ‘Market by growers and sold by. them in wholesale package lots.’ Quotations are furnished by the) Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday | | Detroit Produce | FRUITS weekend Some of the soybean demand was linked with reports that Tur- key has begun negotiations with the United States for a good vol- ume of soybean oil. Other grains held generally with-| in narrow ranges both above and below Friday's: closes hour. March $1.95'3;. corn un changed to ‘4 higher, March old! type contract $1.14'4; oats '¢ lower, to ‘se higher, March 66%: rye ‘5. to ', lower, March $1.357s; beans s higher to \%& lower, uary $2.1745. Jan Castro Invites 350 fo Rally Wants U.S. Newsmen ™“ to See That People Support Executions HAVANA, Cuba (AP) Fidel Castro said today he has invited 250 newsmen and commentators from the United States and Latin’ America to attend a giant rally: called in Havana Wednesday to show support for his speedy trial) and execution of Batista hench-) men The revolutionary chief said he also had invited US. congressmen) who “in recent days have severely! eriticized the executions of war criminals by the revolutionary army" * * * A statement from Castro's press headquarters said personal ‘invita- crease had been accepted by the 3400 Utility 21 009600, cull quoted down! Ford tions had gone out to the foreign! journalists. A spokesman said five planes would-be sent to Miami to pick up those wishing to attend) and another plane might go on to Washington * * * “We have extended the invita- tion’ Castro's statement said, ‘so that the truth of what is happening in Cuba may be told to all citizens: of every country in America. We believe that if the truth is known any misunderstanding that has oc- curred in recent days regarding the situation in our country will disappear.” * * * Castro has called for a half mil- lion Havana residents to turn out Wednesday to back his regime's rejection of foreign criticism of the speedy execution of those con- victed of killing opponents of ex- dictator Fulgencio Batista. The auxiliary Roman Catholic bishop of Havana, Msgr. “Alfredo Muller, Sunday night endorsed the executions, reported to have reached 216 PERT OUE Cuba. Goldfish Pord Creates Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN lower near the end .of the first! sOy-) Appies, Delicious, bu . $485 VEGETABLES Beetse topped bu 118 |Carrota, topped, bu 2.00 Celery, doz. slaiks io 1.25 Horseradisli, No. 1 pk. me er) Leeks (behe.. doz news Onions dry (bags) 60-lb ee |Parsley Roots ibcns) dos. . + gl 50! ‘Parsnips, '% bu 178° /Potatoes (bag: 50 Ibs one ‘Radishes, hothouse ‘bcha.) dos |... (Squash, Delictous, bu | Tomatoes, Hothse, No. 1 8-lb. bekt 2.75) ' | Turnips, topped, bu 1 90 Wheat was ‘4 to % cent a bushel, Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Jan i@ ‘AP'—Prices paid |per poun fob Detroit, for No J} | quality live poultry Heavy type hens 16-20 10-11. caponettes 46 |b 21 1 i light type hens, -33 i DETROIT EGOS | DETROIT, Jan 10 (AP: Egees tob/! Detroit, in case lots federal state! | Grade A jumbo 48; extra large 44 large 42-43, wid avg 4249 grades Whites | medium 31-38, wid ave 37 Grade B jlarge 40, browns —grade A extra large! CHICAGO, Jan 10 (AP) Opening 44. large 41-43 wid ave 42, medium 3 rain prices: jgrade C large 38. Checka W' 9-38, Wh Oats— per J Mar jsneecs O55 Mar 06", | Qocimereialty graded i\May ..ees 191%, May .....0e. 64% Whites Grade A jumbo 41-44, exéra) July 1i4% July ...+. 61 |large 30',-41. targe 38-41, medium 35-36, Sep. ...... 183% Rye- jamal) JO browns—grade A extra large) Der oa’, Mar tia (3640, laree 36-30) medium 1849-)4'y “ee fold) May 13)'s emali 26-30, grade B La 4 116% July -o...96. 1 30's = eae | Corn (new) * .. 120%, x ie 4 14", Lord (drumes | Li t k = sewn 15% Ma 967 | July ia July 9oT | ives oc | Bep 114% Bep to 0a DETROIT LIVESTOCK | DETROIT Jan 18 ‘APs Cattle sal | . able 2200 Bulk early supply goed to low tholee slaughter steers and heifers | Business Notes: ke hoice yearlings rather scarce cows | lsieera around 30 per cent of run, - ateers and helfers steady to $0 cents r . ‘higher full advance of yearling steers W.) Charles Perkins, of 3385 good and choice 900-1100 |b steers 26 25- : ' oT wood and choice $00-110 Ib steers 26 25- Norris St, Waterford Townahip,| 1950 joad high chelce and prime 1145, has joined ‘the sales staff of Roy) tb steers 2075, jot high choice and jprime (010 ib yearling steers 3028 annelt, Inc. Realtors, 28 FO Huron) j small let high chotee to Union Accepts Offer = . in Sinclair Talks KANSAS CITY (—The Sinclair (Oil Co. announced today its offer! of a general five per cent wage in- }Oul, Chemical and Atomic Wor kers| Union, | Millard E. Stone, vice president and director of industrial relations | for Sinclair, said the offer was ac- cepted late last night. The increase will be made effec- tive as of Jan. 18, he said, pro-| vided the union's membership rati- fies the settlement within the next 30 days, "Korean Pickets |! the White House to Protest Law WASHINGTON (AP) — A lone Korean in a black homburg pick- eted the White House today in pro- test against what he termed the ‘dictatorship of South Korean Pres- ident Syngman Rhee The picket, Byung Choll Koh, marched in 20 degree weather with a sign saying: “S O. S. Res- cue Korean civil liberties, Down with dictator ship and commu: nism.” Koh said he was protesting passage of a new national security) law in Korea That statute, the) Problem for Firemen picket added, denies Koreans any : right to erlticize their govern PORPSMEPH, Ohio 0 One ment of the biggest problems for fire men at the Gallia Street station heie tromeally, water Hes in the stations goldfish pond and if creates a problem hecarse | ef what goes into yt Firemen say the most frequent visitors are (1) 18, Belote Trim Shop Fire Causes $250 Damage A fire of tinknown origin caused | ‘an oestimated $250 damages to ‘Belote’s Auto Glass & Trim Shop high school students pushed in) 206 S Saginaw St. Sunday after: by companions, 12) cats trying to) joan get fo the goldfish, and (3) lar Wiremen battled the blaze for ger—and hungry—fish put in by almost oan hour before it) was pranksters. brought under control. ‘Payless Paydays Loom Within Weeks’ — Williams LANSING Um = (Gov in a new appraisal of ng state's: cash emergency, says: “The only reason were stil in businens is * that the state universities are op- crating themselves." “We are getting to the where payless paydays are some- thing we will have to wrestle with- in a matter of weeks,” he told a Democratic State Central Commit- tee meeting yesterday. In an unexpected appearance at the party gathering, Willlams spent a half hour reviewing the grayity of the state's financtal situation, Once again, he said, the 50-mil- lion-dollar Veterans’ Trust Fund is) the only stitable source of avail.) able funds to meet the immediate problem. i * point) Blamed on Chimneys standard to low goed steers 3400-26 24 | uttlity steers 2100-72400 good to aver- lage choice 180-000 ib heifers 26 00-28 00; prime around In helfers 2850, utility and standard heifers 2100-2406 wllllty cows 1900. ane rantiers and cutters 15 00-18.00 saiable 7460 Putchers 26 centa a* hi a sows not established) most U& | No 2 and 3 180-2390 Ih butchers 17 24- 1730 mised No | and 2 17 75-18 00 numerous sales 17 85-17 90, load sorted Ho 1 228 Jbs 1825 No 2 and 3 230-260 ba apse 1706, No } 260-300 Iba ibae e2 Veslers salable 17§ Bleady, choice and prime 1600-4100 High prime veal ers absent early standard afd good 26 00.) to 16 00 | Sheep salable 2000 Siaughter jambs ‘on cents to moatly 60 cents lower, sleugh-! jler ewea strong to © cents higher most | good aod choice wooled sisughter lamhs 110 ibs and down 1800-2190. load prime |around 106 ib wooled lambe 21.50, utll- jity to good lamba 1500-1800 good and choice shorn lambs mostly No 1 pelts 04 Ibe J 75 ewes 650-12 25 2 City Men to Get WSU Certificates Two Pontiac men are. among 57 who will be awarded certificates of attalnment by Wayne State Uni-| versity’s Materials Management Center at exercises Thursday in. the Rackham Memorial Building * * * George Romney, president of American Motors Corp., will be the! 22" principal speaker at the seventh annual Management and Technol-| ogy Night exercises, He will speak! on "Economic Opportunity and! Preparation for It." | kt *« + Honored from this area will be Karol Staszkiewicz, 451 S. Jessie! St, and Robert Vo Gallo, 307 Ss) Winding Dr Both will receive minor certificates * * * Established at the request of in! dustry, the center provides a prac- tical blend of education and train. jing in the ficlds of management, [sete Habher (Cos science and technology 2 Waterford Fires Waterford Township firemen an- swered two calls yesterday for fires which started in the chimneys of homes, The first blaze, at the home of the Milton Green family at 3320 Lexington Ave., was blamed on a faulty fireplace. Green smelled smoke and roused his sleeping Williams, | the State Supreme Court says that! this was state money and not ear- marked for retirement.” he said. ‘We have a moral obligation to! keep that fund inviolate.”’ * * * He pointed out that a large gh of the employes’ fund was contributed: through payroll de- ductions by individual workers to help provide for their own pen- salons, } Many Republican-legisiators and heads of organized veterans groups have frowned on the governor's proposal to hand over the bulk of Veterans’ Fund securities to the University of Michigan and Michi-: gan State University to use as col- lateral for borrowing. * * * _Williams repeated that he op- |poses outright liquidation of the. | Hampton He again rejected use of the 70-\ state veterans’ fund and said that! daine family Trading Heavy; after the opening as some excep- 5 4 point and Crucible a fraction. | Pigures after decimal point are eighths cull to choice ann Market Mixed NEW YORK W — The stock market milled irregularly in heavy ‘trading early today. Leading stocks showed gains or losses running from fractions to, about a point. The ticker tape ran late soon tionally big blocks were traded Many pivotal issues were un- ‘changer. , | * * * Plus and minus signs were scat- tered indiscriminately throughout most major groups. > The big three motors were easy while American Motors advanc ed) ‘makers were little changed. Youngstown Sheet was ahead about. | New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) | DETROIT STOCKS tC oF Nephter Ca) Figures after decimal points are eightha High Low Noon 22 2 ‘day released a nine-page report on ‘SEND OUT ALARM County Plans to Avert - THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1959 Tax Losses A special committee of three Oakland County officials has come up with a plan which should lessen somewhat the drain on county funds should a proposed new taxing program for Michigan be adopted. Norman R. Barnard, corporation counsel, William J, Emerson, sup- erintendent of public schools and chairman of the Tax Allocation Board, and Robert E. Lilly, secre- tary of the Board of Auditors, to- which is being distributed to county supervisors. In it the three have come up with three major recommenda. tiens to supervisors: 1. That a formula of state sub- sidy be devised to make up for the) annual tax loss to the county, should a recommended exemption, taxing personal property be | adopted in the new program. 2. That supervisors urge the’ ‘to underwrite 80 per cent of the cost of child care, welfare relief, ‘medical care and hospitalization, and 50 per cent of Board of Educa- tion costs. 3. Find a solution to meet in- creasing county needs even should these increases in state aids be| be hard-hit should factory ma- chinery, such as dies and presses, be exempted from tax- ation, with the exception of inven- tories ie “This is but a factual guide for supervisors and is not intended to be a stand of the county either favoring or opposing the Conlin plan,’ Barnard emphasized. * * * However, it appeared evident from the statistical report that Oakland's fiscal future will not be too rosy under the Conlin plan, which contemplates a net gain in state revenues of 137.7 million dol- lars. “Oakland County taxpayers ' would pay $33 million in state income tax’ under the proposal, the report points out, “The state tax revision proposal _ 110 about a point. Most leading steel-, Legislature to pass laws designed now before the Legislature will produce an additional $137.7 mil- lion, none of which is earmarked for Oakland County after 1959,” was another point contained in the study. * * * Helping Barnard, Emerson and Lilly prepare the study were the County Planning Commission, the Equalization Department, and Dr. Robert Pealy, professor of politi- cal science at the University of| Michigan. Major drawback of the Conlin plan, which presently is being put inte bill form for presenta- tion to lawmakers in Lansing, would be the drain on county Admiral : 182 Kimb Clk 634 Air Reduce oe e Kroner 963. considered favorably. Allied oa ous ape stale 1}3 * « * no ld. 322 peckn. Aire 612 The three officials were author- €C [Alcoa iat f) , Lone 8 Gas 436 ized by the Supervisors Ways and Am Can 47 et tre ti Means Committee last month to Am Cyan r iz Y am Ma Pay. 515 Mack Trk . #4 look into what effect the proposed Am Motors ve Mey, Date 48 |Conlin Tax Study would have on Am N one : ne Mead ; viand t | Am New 66 Merek H {Oa land County. (Am Tel & 1 “3g3 4 Merr Ch 20.1) is a wis Mina MeM ea This was prompted when Em- rmco . i} on H | Atchison 30.4 Monken Ch 414) erson had learned that indus- Avco Mfg .iNS6 ont Ward 425 |Beth Steel .... 524 Mot Prod 142 |Boeing Air 436 Mueller Brass 306 | Bohs Alum 242 Murray 29 org Warn 47.7 Nat Blac . @T | Briggs Mi 103 Nat Cash R .. 74 Brist My 913 Nat Deiry 482 \Brun Balke 843 Nat Gyps. ... 616| Budd Co 207 Nat Lead 1142, |Bas coves 417 NY Central 264) Calum & H 18 Nerf & West 902, Can ry 216 No Am Av 407 Cdn Pac 106 Nor Pac we. S14] Capital Air! 222 Nor Sta Pw 294) Carrier Cp 484 Ohlo O11 . 402) Case, JT 234 Owens Cng 647 Cater Trac §64 Owens [li Gl ai 4) |\Ches & Ohio 117 Pac G&El 63 ll "Chrysler 52 Pan AW Air 27 | ‘tn Mil M 192 Panh Epi $82 Cithes Bve 601 Param Piet 44 iGoca Cola 127 Parke Da | Colum Gas 231 Penney JC 161 6 (Con Edis 655 Pa RR 18 |Consaum Pw 582) Pepri Cola 284 Cont Can .. $12 Pfiner ..1016 Cont Ot . 672 Phelps D ,.. 644 Corn Pd. 464 Philco 234 Curtis Pub .... 184 Phill Pet 487 Deere. : $13 Prot & G.... 172 Dia C Seag . 387 Pure OU. .... 5 [Doug Aire .... S71 RCA co | Dow Chem . 49 Repub Bt! ., 14 2) 'Du Pont 212 Rex Drug 346 Fast Alr L 187 Reyn Met .... 712 Fast Kod . 1442 Rev Tob B ... 076 Baton Mfg . 872 Royal Dut . 461 El Auto L.. 313 Safeway 8 41 5| Fid& Mus. .. 81 St Reg Pap 444 LS oe be ete on DARLENE GRANGOOD |Erle RR . 124 Sears Roeb | 412, /Ex-Cell-O 407 Shell Oil a4 | Firestone 1394 Simmons 403 Food Mach 446 Binclair ...... 633 8 ‘ Mot $56 Bocony ....... 48 Freepot Bul 102 Sou Pac ...... 68 Fruen Ttre 192 Rou Ry . 60 (Gen Bak 136 Sperry Rd .. 238 Qen Dynam 614 gia Ol Cal. 594) Gen FE 182 gta Ol Ind ... 485 : Oen Fads 183 wa ON)... 86? Qen Mills o7 Btevens. JP 261 Gen Motors 408 giug Pack .... 148. BLE peed oy sun on 1... 632, Gen Time 476 quines a4 wiih a 4 Ittver"Proa $43 Sri" LFS. #3! Darlene G d, 14, Gerber Pr a : oti 4) vesu Bt oe ie ee eee Choebe r Goodyear 1293 Textron .... 211 Left Home to Ice Skate aren reise Aly prone Ww Alc : ue Ct rf rensamer . Gt Nowy tse Temt'cen | aoe] oOturday Afternoon Greyhound 18) Underwd Pi} Gail hee A Uta a, folland 33 gt At tin ga) A Waterford Township mother twoker "Ch oe Cac ue 431) and lather waited with fear and lt Cont | ndust Ray 363 US Lines 334, worry in their eyes today as a peed es ne Meret $! 3) police throughout Oakland County nian . nepir Cop $1 us Tab ei 384 searched for their 14-year-old nteria r est Un Te 33 ; nt Hary 424 West A Bk 07 daughter who has been missing Be) bgt 90! Westg El 76 |since Saturday afternoon. mt Paper 1a4 White Mot 16 itp ofan 61 witson & Co . 346] Blonde, blue eyed Darlene Gran- = oe ett) Voolworth = 37 ,| good, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- aly oa : Johns Man $45 Ynest sn. 13¢ | win Grangood of 6701 Lanman St., ones en * Kennecott 1037 ee ee pots “ss 3 pm. ‘ Saturday. She ha shoes, on STOCK AVERAGES y ne y NEW YORK —(Compiled by the As- her skates, when she left home, sociated Presa); 10 ts 1s *o her parents said. Indust. Ralls Ul Stocks) She hasn't been heard from Net change 4 -9 Noon Mon nel 10 ° 979 2190, Since. (Prev day 65 1437 gal 218, arenes ago Dees : ate The, frantic parents said this anth ago 0 1321 928 2092 Year age 08 #72 tht ietal Morning that Darlene, an eighth 1988-88 high 165 1442 987 219% gerade student at John D. Plerce 1958-59 low 2147 800 179 1866 1PAT high ano 1147 778 taan dunior High School, had no Stiles 2260 182 662 1509 ateady boy friends and had never | been out on a date, State police and sheriff's bulle- Allen) Elec & Rqulp Com a ne tins today said the girl is possibly saa Clear Cot _ 10 ©«=6o33—S ‘being held against her will in a BS Lk oO ( tne 4 L] Haerl Kies Miele ca ae ae ej inelel Or hotel in Wayne or Oak- Pen Metal Product Co® . a -86 land County.’ The Prophet Cot 1H A 12 Rudy Mig Cot 127 124) Toledo Edison Co 167 187. The Grangood bossy sy cn Wile a7 “No sale DIA and asked 4-Month-Old Baby Suffocates in Crib A four-month-old baby suffocated in his crib Saturday afternoon and was dead on arrival at Pontiac The fire was quickly extinguished by firemen, ‘age aft $300 Z At 11:30 any yesterday a fire | causing $2,000 damage at the home | lof Walter Rohphi at 3932 Oaknoll! St, was attributed to faulty chimney in the attic 2 a Budget Figure § Set LANSING uf — Gov. Williams‘ general fund budget for 1959-60 probably will total between 420 and 430 million dollars and will call for new taxes to be spelled out later, it was reported today. Ex-Cop Now Minister NEW YORK (UPD — The Rev.| | Walter Wellington Pitt) Jr. of, ays, N. Y.. who was or- million-dollar state employes’ re-| mortgaging it would give added/ of te New York East Methodist. tirement fund as a pagsible key to,protection and put it beyond the) Conference, once served as a mom- Dartmouth College was so finan- ing units rose to $100,000,000 in Nelson A. Rockefeller, who re- | Legislature's present power of|ber of the Nassau County Poelice|cially pinched that if had to bor- | 1997 compared with $62, 500,000 the signed from the committee on. ‘becoming governor of New York. | the situation. cd "It was shocking to find out that liquidation. oy 4 ‘ ‘ By tg : va . ci : 7 5 . - “a a ee a ey ee ee ee ee er ee a ee ae eee a oe ee ee eee ee Department, Q Se ek oe oe tha oo oS who estimated dam-- liams Lake. Darlene teft to skate on the lake at 3.20 p.m. Her moth- er, Violet, told her to be home in time to help with supper. 'Dartene sald, “All right, I'll take my watch and be back be- fore 5:30 to help,” according to her mother. Whén she didn't re- turn, her parents began making inquires and her father and brother, Wayne, 16, searched the | General Hospital. Jake and surrounding area until | A Pontiac Fire Dept. inhalator, after 1 a.m. Sunday. squad rushed the infant, Michael, Her mother called the Oakland! T. Angel, RO Longfellow St. to the County Sheriff's Department a hospital, but attempts to revive 19 pm Saturday to report her ‘the baby failed missing Michael was the son of Mr and Mrs. Robert Angel Announce Classes for Dancers Here ithey saw Darlene get into a car on The Department of Parks & Rec-! | Reports by younger children in ‘the area who said they thought Lansdowne street near the lake, were checked this morning - but could not be confirmed by police. Police plan to question her jwith each passing year,” Party Lines Fix Reaction Over Budget Pi income as the result of the ex- emption of ..tangible personal The county received $916,000 from this source last year, the report says. Although under the Conlin rec- ommendation it is proposed that this amount be paid back to counties for the first year, no def- inite recommendation is made on how the counties could regain this loss in revenue in years to come. * * * So supervisors have been asked by the three men to “take the po- sition that the state each year pay to the County of Oakland an amount equal to 2.72 per cent of the state income collected in this) county. “The property tax collection on Conlin exempted items in 1958 was 2.72 per cent of the estimat- ed income tax collection as of | this year. County government should expect that the state re- turn to Oakland County an equal percentage of income tax collect- ed here each year in the future,” the study stresses, The recommendation that the State increase its share of costs for child care, relief, medica) care and education is hard to assume in the light of the cash crisis now confronting Michigan. * * * But Barnard explains this rec- ommendation was made on the assumption that the Conlin report would be adopted, thus bringing into the state treasury increased taxes, Oakland now receives state subsidies in the amount of $1,- 800,000. Under the new increased subsidy Suggestion, this would produce in| 1959 $3,600,000, the report details, and, assuming an annual increase of 14.7 per cent increase (the av- erage tax levy increase over the | past 10 years) per year, this would WASHINGTON (AP) — Cone ‘produce $6,300,000 in 1963. isional reaction to President Eisen-' budget tions receive favorable attention, hower’s 77-billion-dollar Should these two recommenda- presented today generally followed Oakland would stil] face the con- the usual party pattern. | tinuing problem of pulling in more Most Democrats were doubtful) income to meet a growing popula- * * bd ‘or critical, Republicans +hailed the tion. leffort to hold down spending. “By 1963, $5,281,000 of this new /_money must be found or the coun- House Speaker Sam Rayburn ‘Y Of Oakland will find itself in (D-Tex) said “I hope we can bal-|the same position as Wayne—run- ance the budget but I don’t see Ning an unmanageable deficit," the much chance for it under the Pres- "ePort concludes. ident's proposals."’ He said also that Congress is not likely to grant Eisenhower's request for authority to veto or ‘ to reduce individual items in au- thorization and appropriation bills, : House Minority Leader Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind) said the budg- et, as it stands, will provide for a strong defense. for progress in meeting human needs, and for a ‘prosperous and expanding econ- i omy. DEM PRESSURE FEARED Halleck said ‘‘all indications are that the pressure from the Demo- crat majorities in both the House and Senate will be. to throw the new budget way out of bal- ance, with increased spending pro- grams all up and down the line.’ * * * The Senate’s assistant Republi- can leader, Sen. Thomas Kuchel of California, said the budget lays down a splendid formula for de- fense. But he said he does not agree with the President that there can be a breathing spell in asking new public works Projects, “The water problems of my own ‘California grow | more pressing Kuchel said, * * * Rep. Clarence E. Cannon (D- Mo). chairman of the House Ap-, ‘propriations Committee, said ‘‘this| is a political budget based on con- | tingencies which no one expects to. materialize.” “Cannon said the budget is "‘so) precarious as to be wholly imprac- tical . . . IT am afraid there are! some miscalculations.” Rep. John Taber (R-NY), rank- ing Republican on the Appropria- tions Committee, said he would try to keep the appropriations within the budget. * r * Rep. George Mahon (D-Tex) chairman of the House Defense Appropriations subcommittee, said he feels “that in the interest of} 'reduced spending, a laudable aim, | the defense budget may have been shaved too close in the light of the sustained challenge of the /US.S.R." (CALLS IT UNREALISTIC Sen. John Sparkman ‘called the budget unrealistic be-, cause, he said, it is hard to be lieve Congress will increase gaso- line taxes or postage rates. * 22 * (D- Ala), i ;| Boardman, lafter a high school game Friday night. Oakland County sheriff's deputies Saturday how caused him to lose the wheels on Warned today. Youth to Stand Trial. in Chain-Beating DETROIT ww — An 18-year-old youth has been ordered to stand| trial on assault charges in the | chain-beating of another teenager | basketball | Police said today Kenneth E. Hansen, of Warren, has admitted striking Bruce Boardman, 18, of Grosse Pointe Woods, with a 15- inch chain after a basketball game between Grosse Pointe and High- land Park High Schools. Hansen told police he struck Boardman because he had heard a freshman at the University of Michigan, had land Park high schools. School girls. Blames Ice for Loss of Car’s Wheels, Tires A Commerce Township man told the snow and ice | his car. William J. Hosmans of 7530 Barnsbury Rd_ told deputies his | | street was so slippery that he had to park his car on Keith road at |Barnsbury ‘walk to his house. They were valued at an estimated $250. Friday evening and When he retur Saturday, he. said, he found his car up on blocks with all four wheels and tires gone. | Ports Set Ship Record AUCKLAND — A record num- ber of 900 ships docked at New, Zealand ports from overseas dur-| ing 1957, an increase of 76 over | the year before. Imported cargo, totaled 4,562,000 tons, about 340,000 tons more than in 1956. deal worth about $3 Locals May Skip Merger Parley County Building Trade Groups Ponder Stand on AFL-CIO The building trade may stay away from the merger convention of Oakland County AFL and ClO unions in Pontiac Saturday. One local has voted nét to send delegates and the four others in the county haven't made up their minds yet, said Grady Penner, former president of the Oakland County Federation of Labor. Voting against attending was Carpenter’s Local 998, of which Penner js business manager. Penner said his local had de- cided on a “wait and see’! policy, dependent on the outcome of a dispute over industrial job rates which is up before the building trades international at this time. The building trades also stayed away from the recent AFL-CIO merger in Wayne County. * * * But today the UAW and the De. troit Building Trades Council an- nounced agreement on a formula ito cover organizational and juris- dictional problems. The agreement also covers Oak- land and Macomb county locals, which belong to the Detroit coun- cil. While not necessarily paving the way for the building trades to enter into merger, the agree- ment provides machinery through which the two groups can imple- ment at the local level, the UAW said. TheseAtre agreements between the AFL-CIO industrial union department and the build- ing and construction trades, Approximately 300 delegates are expected to be on hand when the ‘convention opens at 9:30 a.m. Saturday at the headquarters hall of Pontiac Motor Division Local 653, UAW. * * * Delegates will be asked to con- sider a constitution and a merger agreement drafted by representa- tives from both unions. County mergers were ordered at the national merger convention of the AFL and CIO in 1955, News in Brief Oakland The Avenue Bar, 137 | Ave.. was burglarized over the | weekend, Thieves took 219 cases of whisky valued at $150 and three | Cases of beer, it was reported to | Pontiac Police. An undetermined amount of cig- arettes, two cases of oi] and seven boxes of sparkplugs were reported stolen by thieves in a burglary at 'the Barefoot gas station, 714 Bald- win Ave. A canvas bag containing $108.13 was stolen in a break-in at the L & S gas station, 644 Oakland Ave., it was reported to Pontiae Police yesterday: Burglars broke into an outside eoal vending machine of the Webb Coal Co., 351 S. Paddock St., over the weekend and took $75, it was reported to Pontiac Police. Primary Voters Must Register by 8 Tonight Eight tonight is the deadline-for voter registrations for the Feb. 16 primary, City Clerk Ada R. Evans It's also the deadline, she said, to register changes of address since the last election x * All pefsons in Jine at City Hall at deadline time will be allowed fo register, Mrs. Evans said. The primary runoff will nomi- inate candidates to run for the offica of circuit court judge in the spring ‘election, April 6. U.S. in Barter Deal JOHANNESBURG uf — A barter 920.000 between the United States and South Africa is about to be completed. The United States will provide |South Africa with 60,000 tons of wheat in exchange for chrome, ferrochrome Ce asbestos. VOLUME RETAIL LOCATION NEXT to SEARS -ROEBUCK 19’x103’, With Full Basement DOWNTOWN PONTIAC PLENTY of PARKING CALL WO 1-6810 1 elder at the 1958 session, ) reation announced that registra- friends at school this afternoon to tions are being accepted for eight: 8 if anyone ever heard Dariene week classes in beginners’ square | S8Y anything about leaving home. dancing, novelty, round and ball-| Darlene was wearing blue room dancing. | jeans, a red sweater, rust Scheduling of the two-hour ses- colored car coat and g—babush. sions wil} te arranged as soon as ka. She was agrcbagpes as being Class qvotas are filled. said John stightly over 5 feet tall, weigh. | A. Stnfit, assistant director. | ing 110 pounds. Fees of $2 a couple will be! “She was a good ekater and chatged Pontiac residents and $4 a couple for outside residents. me nines. bey iather) sald Darlene is one of six children, Instead of paying President John Wheelock his salary of $912 in 1814, Sales of automobile air-condition. | row money from him. ‘year before. . “Tt will also be difficult to put out nearly four billion dollars in foreign aid while we are asking our people at home to put off nec-: essary public works and other omc, ’ Sparkman added, hieselieetesatnten- coma ae TTI COMCO TWO- MOBILE RADIO. AY 399 #582 VM