SS Ry |. Hoth YEAR ~ Teer a ~~ Tres PONTIAC, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, MAY. 1, 1058 —86 PAGES ASSOCIATED INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVI PRESS UNITED Panes F suas 3 Here’ S Miss Front Page for May Our Miss Front Page for May 1s Pamela Jill Maneck, a Pontiac High School graduate, who lives at 2468 Middlebelt Road, Pontiac. Jill, who is 18, graduated from PCH in June 1957, completing a college preparato ry course. Her.plans have changed a little however, and instead of preparing to enter college she is vie preparing for a September wed- Since graduation she has been employed by the Household Finance Company. Her father is employed by Craftsmen’s Credit Union, troit. While in schoo] Jill was active in the Student Union, and as an ac- complished singer was a member of the Selective Glee Club, Her hobbies include roller and ice skating, and swimming. She is a g. member of Keloa Club. More Than Month Lute’ ~ School Checks i for 6th Term ~ asGovernor Dem Tells Newsmen GOP ‘Tycoons’ All Set, to Ruin State { LANSING aes as a candidate for an un- precedented sixth term. | The Democratic chief executive told newsmen: that while his mind was made up months ago, “I; ment in order to avoid any, possible disturbance to the legislative session.” xx “My decision was made when it became apparent) that everything that we) |have built up here in Michi- gan in the last nine years) down,” he said. Williams, 47, is widely credited \with presidential ambitions in 1960, and Republican critics have freely , predicted he would try to use a sixth term as a stepping stone In a style long familiar to Michigan voters, Williams de- voted his announcement to a | seathing attack on the Michi- in De- ‘Cruel Medical Hoax’ -°Charged in Detroit DETROIT (INS)—A 58-year-old Detroit doctor was accused today of selling worthless cancer remedies, cure-all medicine and “anti-radioactive fallout tablets.” Dr. Leo Donnelly was charged by Wayne County Prosecutor Samuel Olsen with perpetrating “a vicious ee e physician an Ofer oo ad ro fice assistant, Mrs. ye tile — — pills with ica Strach, 36, face seven) Olsen said he had received nu- counts of fraud. merous complaints that Dr. Don- Dr. Donnelly was accused of sell-|nelly had been distributing a news- ing so-called ‘Koch cancer shots” paper called “The Health Advo- for $30 an injection and a cure-all cate’ in which he advertised his type medicine called “Mucorhicin” claims to cure and prevent can- for $10 per two-ounce bottle. cer, | He said an assistant prosecutor neue of ciglt unt uae tae land a policewoman ret the case aplece, guaranteed protection by attending Donnelly’s lectures gan Republican record of recent years, He accused Republicans of kick- ing the economy downhill, turning their backs on the jobless and crippling essentia] state services y ruthless budgeting. “Undoubtedly, if they could find any way to disassemble the Mack- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) "Driver May Face Criminal Charge View Issuing Warrant for Negligent Homicide Cooler Than Normal Is Outlook for May Fair and cooler with a low of %-40 is the forecast for to- night, with Friday partly red and mild in the afternoon a high near . * The weather verean’s 3-day outlook for May calls for tem-| peratures below seasonal normals. over the. northern half of the nation. Above normal temperatures | are indicated for West Coast, | Gulf and Atlantic states, | Preciptation is expected to equal | ley will find that Pontiac, Williams to Try 19 Law Officers Take Stand But Sales Tax to Tell of Van Horn’s Arrest Revenues Take By GEORGE T, TRUMBULL JR. iwhen he returned from a carpentry! ing ill after hours of interroga- | Nineteen police officers trooped, ‘to the witness stand in Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday, re-| lating their part in the arrest of | |Bily Ray Van Horn, killing a Waterford Township | housewife Jan, 24. This parade of prosecution wit- ‘job in Birmingham, Her body was found on the | kitchen floor of the Murdock bun- galow at 127 N. Josephine St. inally attacked. Several officers told yesterday of} finding a pad with ‘Bill Van Horn” tion. He was expected to oppose = ‘mission of the confession before) ithe jury and Judge Frank L. Doty | accused of| Doctors say she had been erim- jae. . TELL -PART IN ARREST Officers from the city of Pontiac, | \Oakland County sheriff's de part- New Nosedive Viewed as Bad Omen for New Fiscal Year Starting July 1 LANSING (#'—A long de- nesses — 39 in the first two days written on it, not too far from’ ment, State Police and Waterford| layed allotment of $28, 147,- |was expected to conclude ‘today, | |with Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem | resting the people's case. EXPECT KEY TESTIMONY Key testimony was expected, from Drulard Murdock, 59, saat lband of the victim, Mrs. Hazel Murdock, Williams today announced |of the first-degree murder trial—the body. * * A confession — -which the 24! year-old unemployed welder gav re! 2”? hours after his arrest — was to: be entered as evidence today, Court-appointed attorney Van Hern, Brakie J. Orr, has °9. Murdock found his) attempted to show that he was delayed a formal announce- wife beater a, stabbed and d strangled! forced into confessing after feel- Exchange Mayor Can F eel va 4 Right at Home in Pontiac When the mayor of tiny Bellaire visits here May 5 he ‘might feel right at home. Bellaire, the county seat of Antrim County on Grand Traverse Bay, has three of ithe latter. Two produce log cabins, the third is a tool and die shop. Village president Harry L. Reil- too, has factories when he arrives on mayor exchange day during the fifth an- nual Michigan Week. * * * As for lakes, Antrfm County has some gems it can compare with Oakland County’s 423 bodies of wa- ter. Besides Lake Michigan and for | Township related to the jury of six| men and six women how they took! part in Van Horn’s arrest. Only one, State Police Det. Charles Leaf, testified that Van Horn admitted killing Mrs. Mur- dock, after having at first de- | nied any part in the crime. ° | On cross-examination by Orr,! _fLeaf denied, warning Van Horn to confess or e others may not treat you so jell.” In a pre- an move by Orr to suppress the confession, Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland ruled ‘third-degree tactics’’ were not lemployed. Van Horn denied knowing any- | | thing about the murder, some Although the little village of 700 is hardly comparable’ officers testified, while others | is in danger of being torn jn size to Pontiac, it boasts of similar things — lakes, land factories. said they never discussed it with him after he was booked at the | | Pontiac police station at 12:25 a.m. dan. 25. | He was taken there shortly after 11 p.m. on the evening of the imurder by a ftiend of his and the Murdocks, Leslie W. Lampi of 394 *Whittemore St. SOUGHT VAN HORN Learning of the murder, Lampi learned from Murdock testified yesterday. “I spotted these two walking set out to find Van Horn when he: that the} note with Van Horn's name on it) had been found in the home, Lampi| '307 in state aid to local ischoo! districts was in the imails today but schoolmen ‘got bad news from another quarter. Louis M. Nims, state rev- ‘enue commissioner, report- ed yesterday that state sales tax collections, the ‘main prop of state finan- cial support for schools, took another nosedive in April, falling $2,762,000 be- hind the same month of 1957. It was a bad omen for the fiscal? year starting July 1, with the istate treasury, already deep in the red, _facing in addition a big (Related Story Page 25) prospectiv ye deficit under the 1958- 39 state budget. Lagging state tax — forced postponement of the aid | distribution new on the way, An Was due March 15, More than | 150 districts had to borrow more than 17 million dollars to tide them over. Stat# Treasurer, Safford A. pore has said outlook is good for prompt disbursement of Traverse Bay, which are only a couple miles west of Bellaire, the northern community claims an ad- ditional 35,000 acres of connected lakes and streams, For example, there’s Lake Bel- laire, on which the town is lo- cated, and Torch Lake, which at - 700 feet is the deepest inland lake in Michigan, Torch Lake is alse known to tourists as one of the prettiest of the finger lakes that stretch east and southward of the bay. Reiley, who is serving his third "HARRY A. REILEY or exceed seasonal normals over, most of the nation. Rainfall will) tota] around one-tenth inch over, the weekend in the Pontiac area., * * out of a traffic accident yesterday, The lowest recording preceding in which a Pontiac father of four} 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was|W4Ss fatally injured. Assistant Pros- in Franklin Road Crash, A criminal charge may develop S4nization term as village president, is man-|5'* grandchildren. _ ; lager of the Michigan Certified Seed| Pontiac's mayor, William W. ‘Potato Growers Assn., Inc., an or- ‘Donaldson, is scheduled to go to in northern Michigan ‘Bellaire the same day to serve and the e Upper Peninsula. He is is there as honorary village president. {No More Night Buses | married and has three sons and; south on Oakland avenue. I saw | another 55 million dollars in pay- one of them was Billy,” Lampi ments to grade and high schools said. ‘coming due later this month, “ ‘ pped he rol sak on veh ol series ition profits tax, the business ac- ‘ tivities tax and the sales tax tem- signa that 1 wanted to talk porarily are easing the treasury pinch, Brown said. “what the devil have you been’ Nims said combined sales and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | use tax collections Jast month came to $2.710,000 as compared with $26,472,000 in April, 1957, April col- lections reflect business activity in March. Nims said about $1,200,000 of the comparative decline was attribu- jtable to slow automobile sales, and $1,500,000 to slumping business in other fields, Although revenue ylelds from (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) KALAMAZOO ® — Night bus service will end here Saturday. Sunday bus service was discon- tinned last month, Kalamazoo City Lines, Inc. said night serv- ice had averaged less than one | paying passenger Loail _. from “any injury from radiation and burns of an atomic explosion, and television tube irritability.” Olsen, two assistant prosecutors, 11 policemen, a policewoman and two U. S. food and drug inspectors raided Dr. Donnelly’s office last night armed with e warrant for his arrest, Six persons, including Mrs. Strach, were in the office awaiting a scheduled ‘golden rule health- wealth lecture’ when the raiders arrived. Police carted nearly a truck- load of medicines, pills and sacks of epsom salts from the office. Authorities said analysis showed and making purchases of his med- icine, 42 degrees. The registered 69 at 1 p.m. Ground Breaking Friday to Launch MSU-Oakland Michigan State University Oakland will officially come into being Friday afternoon when President John A. Hannah turns a spade of sod for the first building. The ceremony is in the hands of the Advisory Coun- cil of MSUO. Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson will speak briefly as will Sen. George Steeh of Macomb County and Sen. L. Harvey Lodge of Oak-* thermometer ecutor Paul M. Mandel said a Pontiac Businessmen Meet With. Congressman warrant charging negligent homi- ‘cide is under consideration *, * * Tt would be sought against Ed- ward F. Petsch, 59, of 8662 Beech- dale, Detroit, a salesman whose ear collided with an auto-wrecker being driven by the victim, An- thony Grassi, 40, of 27 Edna St., a gas Station employe. The accident occurred yester- day morning ay Petsch drove north on Franklin road and Gras- si headed west on Square Lake road. Petsch told Mandel he had stopped at the intersection and was then proceeding to cross it when Grassi’s track smashed most of the “medicine’’ was dis- Meee eee ot In Today’ s Press eee land County. President John -A. Hannah will de- liver a short address fol- »|lowed by the ground break- ing ceremony. Administrative Board ef Michi- gan State University, The Reverend William H. Mar- Father Michae] J. O'Reilly the benediction. The 2:30 ceremonies will be open After the formal program, Presi- dent Hannah, Vice President. D. B. Varner and a group of East Lan- sing officials will go to Rochester |were they will take part in a ‘cer emony at the City Hall honoring school pupils. who have written Michigan State’s en- Comics renee ee ee 42 * * “te alters ng. | The MUO Advisory Councit win|" he, Mublic FeOd ooeeccccessseseeee, 2987 [DOld a business meeting in Mead- Markets .............c00... 49 owbrook Hall at 11:30, and then Obituaries waueueceees 7 (attend a luncheon for the members, Sports .......,.. cesses their wives and husbands. ( Theaters ........ ee slenis'e 26 Members of the Michigan Leg: TV & Ratio iregsecas velesie _ 55 | islature from Oakland and Ma- Wilson, Eari..... anc .. 565 | comb counties will be invited ‘to (essays on Women’s Pages........, 38-41 | the luncheon in addition to the itrance into local educational fields. bach will ask the invocation and. into the right side of his car. Mandel said the charge would be on grounds Petsch failed to lyield right-of-way, * * * Petsch, treated at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital for iinor injuries, made a statement yesterday and was released. Grassi was dead on arrival at St, Joseph Mércy Hos- pital. Hear Evangelist Max Cohn Apri. 30 to May 11, 7:30 p.m., Columbia Baptist Church. Sel! Your Car Now te Jerome's “Bright Spot,” FE 68-0408 ON WASHINGTON TRIP — ington this week for the annual m ber of Commerce, conferred Riley, president of the Pontiac field; and John W. Hirlinger, Pontiac: businessmen, in Wash- eeting of the United States Cham- with Congressman William S. Broomfield. Shown are (left to right) H. Wayne Gabert; John A. Chamber of Commerce; Broom- secretary of the local chamber. Standing are William Belaney (lef tiac Chamber, and Stuart E. Wh t), assistant manager of the Pon- itfield, treasurer. The group dis- cussed drban rehabilitation, airline service and Pontiac’s new Post Office with the congressman. Pontiac delegation also had luncheon with Postmaster General Arthur FE. New Barrier Thrown Up to Rocket Travel Explorer Satellites Discover Dangerous Radiation ‘WASHINGTON (INS) — America’s earth satellites have discovered an outer space zone of unknown but dangerous radiation that throws up a new barrier to space travel. Existence of the hitherto unsuspected radiation was dis- closed, along with other new information on outer space, by US. scientists today in their first report on data onetned, by the satellites. * «* Information radioed back by Explorers I and III, still orbiting the earth, shows that the radiation is “hundreds of times greater than. expected” more ar 1,000 miles out in space. The scientists teld a meeting, of the National Academy of Sciences’ that the presence of the radiation — suggests there may be a space zone “only a few hundred or thousand miles deep” where the “potentially danger- ous” rays exist. They warned that this will make it more difficult to build a space ship where man can survive for any length of time without succumbing to deadly radiation. ‘ Dr. James A. Van Allen, 43-year-old University of Iowa physicist, reported radiation within the Satellites reached an intensity of 0.06 roentgens pet hour — so powerful it knocked out the moons’ cosmic ray counters. About five hours of such exposure {s equivalent, he . explained, to the maximum weekly dosage recommended for workers in industry. _ Explorers He added: “This could mean it would not be safe fora human be- ing to remain more than 1,000 miles out in space for- more than five hours, unless he could adequately be shielded with lead or enough mass and density to block such dangerous quantities of penetrating invisible light known as X-radia- tion.” * * * Dr. Van Allen said the radiation encountered was so in- tense that it “overwhelmed” papers, reported: I and III. Other scientists, cosmic, ray counters aboard in their technical —Density of the atmosphere about 230 miles up is’, 14 times greater than that which had been predicted in | ‘ am = 4 ; ; ° > t Summerfield. no me in Outer Space pre-satellite days “in one of the most careful and rea- sonable studies ever made in this field, by the U.S, Alr Force.” At heights of 625 miles there is still more atmosphere, —Data radioed- back from the Explorers may provide new “tnformation about the earth’s equatorial bulge and deviations in the earth’s gravity, * * ‘Man's ability to control *& temperature within a satele lite “has been confirmed ... It is now a very simple prob- lem,’ —Explorer I was hit by seven micrometeorites but net (Contittued on Page 2, Col. \ 7 \ Receipts from the state corpora . * aly ~Lisad Pontiac public. ais officially Sues itis wwe today. All the recreation areas have been spruced up, and there's been some expansion and new planting, the Parks and Recreation Department said. Picnicking, fishing, boating, Facilities at Pontiac ihe are all free, though it's best to sched- ule baseball games in advance with the parks department if you wish to play at a popular playing field. There are almest 300 picnic tables with outdoor grills scat- tered throughout the city's seven developed parks. Comfort station facilities are located at the five larger ones. By mid-summer, the department hopes to add comfort stations at the two smaller neigh- berhood parks, The big five are Beaudette, north of Orchard Lake road between N. Telegraph road and: W, Walton boulevard, and Jaycee, on W. Wal- ton off Joslyn road, avenues, and Rotary, on Wessen street between Branch and Walnut streets. In addition, there’s Wilson seemed to glisten in the sunshine,” : Pere | Up Ci ity Parks Ready Murphy and Oakland have balis'| and bats on hand. There are also two hardball fields at Jaycee Park. Beaudette’s séftball field is lighted tor night playing. Beau- Gette also has tennis courts, and there’s some fishing in the Daw- son Mill Pond, There's fishing in Upper Silver boat landing. Lake at Hawthorne Park and a qv. - x gt ss fa as «. ‘rie * ] All the a have playground facilities. Murphy and Oakland ‘have additional facilities such as | shuffleboard, badminton and horse- Shoes. Oakland also has volley ball and they're planning a horseshoe ‘court at Beaudette. * * * ent for all.these games ble free from caretakers | Equj is avi stationed at the comfort stations. | Existing in Outer Space (Continued From Page One) damaged. Knowledge of the density of micrometeorites is necessary before a manned space ship is launched. Announcement of the discoveries was regarded as a propaganda victory for Americans working on the satellite programs of the International Geophysical Year (IGY). Dr. Van Allen said earlier the reports represent “full dis- closures” of what the U.S. had found so far, and that they proved this country’s peaceful intentions in space explora- tion. * * * Every nation participating in the IGY will be given. the findings, he said. Russia, a participant in the IGY program, has yet to report any information from its Sputniks I and II. Sputnik I had a lifetime of 92 days and Sputnik II, with the Laika dog aboard, lasted about five months. On the basis of new calculations in the reports today, it was esti- mated that Explorer I launched Jan. 31, would last three to five years and Explorer III, put in the sky March 26, would stay in orbit for five or 10 years. x * * The reports today did not cover findings from the U.S. Vanguard I, launched March 17. It caused a big sensation later when it was announced it would stay up more than 200 years. Dr. Van Allen said scientists were perplexed when the unidentified radiation knocked out the Explorers’ cosmic ray counters when the twe earth satellites got more than 1,000 miles out into space. “It took some detective work to find out what was go- ing on,” he remarked, * * * Dr. Van Allen and his fellow physicists had a ‘spare’ Explorer brought*to Iowa University from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Pasadena,.Calif. It was then irradiated or bombarded with X-rays and it was found that equipment aboard the skyborne Explorers was not malfunctioning but GM and UAW Tension Eases ‘Constructive Proposal’ Ready, Says Auto Firm Relations Director DETROIT (7 — Smiling and casual, negotiators for General Motors and the United Auto Workers re- turned to the bargaining Pind Dangerous Radiation Dr. Edward Manring, of the satellites. that it could be overwhelmed by intense radiation. Chief source of the new discoveries, Dr. Van Alien declared, is the tape recorder or “magnetic memory” aboard Explorer III, which on radio command, sends tape information back te earth. , Scientists who joined Dr. Van Allen in presenting the re- ports were Dr. A. R. Hibbs, of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory; Cambridge Research Center; and Drs. Joseph W. Siry and G. F. Shilling, who tracked the Two Persons Drowned as. Motorboat Capsizes Cea eatwe persian, « - a 5-yeai-old boy, drowned when small motorboat capsized ad sah under the buffeting of high waves! in the Detroit River yesterday. * *® * The victims were Gilbert Bry- fant, 26, and Larry Burr, both of suburban River Rouge. *x* *« * Four other occupants of the 14- foot craft were rescued near Zug Island by two men who threw life preservers from a dock a few min- utes after the boat sank, Order South Dallas Evacuated Police ordered some 2,500 per- eons evacuated from south Dallas * The Weather x +f ‘Fall U.S. Weather Bareaa Report AND VICINITY — So high last night, but all but a few dozen families refused to move. The Trinity hit 33.7 feet this morning and continued to rise slow- ly. That was 3.7 feet above flood|« stage but well below the ape flood stage of 38 feet. Schools-were closed in several east Texas areas and some oper- ators abandoned their oil wells. The mayor at Atlanta, Tex., M. P. Ellis, declared his east Texas town a disaster area. He said he ‘did it as a precautionary measure | * * cloudy mild teday, 60-64. _* i ~ Re peeves; ing, “You must get. out! You must cooler it, " ve re yaeeree get out! Your lives are in dan- igh near 6. Southwest winds increas. ST, the police loud-speakers iE Eo RR Be Rg ‘squalled through the threatened ing and variable tonight |Dallas area. Today in Pi in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding ¢ a.m. At 8 am.: =e velocity 25-35 m.p. b ection—W Moon es Thureday a 5:38 o= Downtown Tem soeweere 6 a.m. ..44 llem....... 7 a.m..,.. Stig we 48 iz 2 ea slew eee - : 8 O.M....-02600- 53 1 p.m BP a.m....+e. ae. 58 10 a.m. oe. 64 Wednesday in Pentiac (As recorded Sorsiere) ceceaancwecentucs 38 nm temperature Weather—Sunny. ee ee Pr ee ee ee ee ee and Tocan = This. Date in 06 96 Years Willis Gray, a service station at- tendant and his wife grimly Williams Jumps . Into Governor Race: (Continued From Page One) inac Bridge and go back to the ae ee of Republican jeaders to control of the party by a group of “re- tired tycoons, who contro] its purse strings and dictate its policies. ” Williams declared that in the face. of GOP opposition he had led Democrats to a ‘tremendous progress” since 1949, “We were able to realize such great accomplishments as _ the | Mackinac Bridge, the traffic safety the great new mental | program, jhospital system, a fair employment law and many other said ngered. ; Williams was elected to his first term in 1948, defeating Republi- can Kim. Sigler, in a try for re- election, His margin was about 161,000 votes, In 1950, running against form. er Gov. F. Kelly, he had a slim maargin of 1,100 votes and a recount was necessary. Williams slipped through by an- other narrow margin in 1952, of about 8,000 votes, against Fred M. * Alger. In 1954 he trounced Donald S. Leonard and swept in his entire state ticket with him. In 1956, former Detroit Mayor Albert E. Cobo was defeated by a similar Democrat landslide. Aides have long had nominating petitions in readiness, just waiting stacked furniture. “We're going tonight,”’ he said, “but we're coming back, We're coming back and maybe some- day Dallas will lick this thing.’” | The area also was flooded last * year. * * ® | _A small tornado whipped across Ship to Honor Chairman | | ‘Henderson, in east Texas, during ‘a thunderstorm last night. No one} was injured but there was wide- spread minor damage. Severe hailstorms, high winds and cloudburst rains swept from” icentral Texas eastward. Pittsburgh in east Texas had the word from their chief to put: ‘them in circulation, His probable Republican oppon-| ‘ent this time will be-Paul D. ~~ well, versity professor and the poten with the most solid party backing. DETROIT (®—The largest ship| on the Great Lakes will be named) the Edmund Fitzgerald after the, new board chairman of the North-, western Mutual Life Insurance Co. ‘of Milwaukee, The 729-foot vessel is being built in River Rouge at the iGreat Lakes Enginerering Works. 28 in 1903! about 20 inches of rain since Fri- iIt will be christened and launched) “Wednesday's Temperature Chart day night. ‘in August as a part of the Colum- : Baltinore 3 ° Merspbis. 34 3 Oil companies abandoned dozens; bia Transportation Fleet of Ogle- og ; leston 81 65 New Orleans 85 69) Celenes @ ‘* New Tort a 0 47 deep in the east Texas ofl fields. Box Yields Securities mien «9 i Paleton i) || DETROIT A safety deposit : oo tree “Well, Why Not? ‘box belonging to ‘the late Mrs. Port Werth 64 51 8. Frapcioce 13 50. ‘Henry B. Joy was found to con- owanten eH Fe ce 3] 3). MONROVIA, Calif. uP— Sign in, a $3,357,000 in stocks and bonds : e & = em = e/a. liquot store: ‘“‘Wine Not Buy when it was opened at the city! ionsae Chg 7 pa a $3! Now id bank. 3 / oY oe a He laid “irresponsible” conduct former Michigan State on Jobless Relief table today and the union said it has almost complet- ed presentation of its de- mands. The negotiators are under pres sure to reach a settlement ti the next 29 days. But as they went into the con- ference room on the fifth floor of the huge GM office building they looked anything but men in a hurry. “It's a fine day,” said UAW Vice President Leonard Woodcock with a smile. * * * Company men looked happy and carefree, too. Earl R. Bramblett, GM’s direc- ‘tor of labor relations, said ‘‘we've .|got a constructive proposal for agreement on the table.’ At the same time he indicated the company is standing pat on its suggestion to renew the wage terms of the present contract. GM called Tuesday for a show- down this month by serving no- tice on the union of termination of contract. This amounted to a challenge to the union to make GM a strike target rather than Ford or Chrys- ler, whose contracts run out June 1. * * * In Washington yesterday, UAW President Walter P. Reuther was asked what he plans to do next in view of the auto industry's re- jection of his bid for a_ three- ‘!months extension of contracts. “We're going to get there any- way,” Reuther replied. “They can’t make us strike. They’re trying to take advantage. of us at the bargaining table, but we're not going to be lured into any trap." * * * _— The UAW has rejected offers \from GM, Ford and Chrysler to jrenew present contracts, which contain built-in annual increases of at least 6 cents per hour plus cost of living allowances. is profit sharing, has put no esti- mate on his demands for basic) wage increases and more fringe benefits. GM and Ford say they come to more than 7 cents an - |hour, not counting profit sharing. The union denies this. The average wage in the auto exclusive of fringe benefits. School Districts Get Overdue Checks auto ‘sales have been running behing in recent months, income business hereto- from “normal” fore had held nearly steady, Nims said that if May and June sales tax income matched the cor- responding 1957 months the total yield for the fiscal year would come to about 303 million dollars, or nearly six millions behind fis- cal 1956-57 and about 45 millions below the original estimate for 1957-58, * * * The commissioner reported a gain in state intangibles tax col- lections, largely through addition of more than 8,000 new persons to the tax rolls. Last spring, Gov. Williams pro- mised amnesty to delinquent tax- payers, proclaiming no attempt would be made te collect penal- ties if they came forward promptly: — Nims said some of the returns covered tax liability back as far $800,000 in ‘‘new” revenue. Overall, intangibles tax income Receipts last year were up about two million dollars over the pre- vious year. House to Vote Today WASHINGTON (~The House | starts voting today on a bill for emergency unemployment relief with many Southern Democrats | lining up behind the Eisenhower administration program. Emergence of a coalition of Re- publicans and Southern Demo- cratic conservatives against the broader Democratic plan for fed- eral relief grants raised the hope of GOP. leaders of winning the crucial] test, possibly late today. The showdown comes when Re- publican leaders put up the Ei- senhower bill as a substitute for the measure sent to the House by Ways and Means Committee Democrats, Democratic leaders discounted the strength of the coalition, how- ever, and predicted their bill | | would win on a roti call vate. a “THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, MAY: 11958 a |The Day in Birmingham | es Slated for completion in Septem- ber, all that remains to be done ‘on the new building is interior fin- ishing. begin at 4 pm. On hand will be W. Ralph Hile- man, general secretary of the Met- _lropolitan Detreit YMCA; William C. Gordon and William Roberts, co-chairmen of the Permanent Building Committee of the Bir- mingham “Y"; George E. Gullen Rep. Roberts Intends fo Seek Re-Election Rep. Farrell E. Roberts, of West | Bloomfield Township today an-| nounced his intention to seek re- election this fall as state repre- sentative from the county's third legislative district. * * * Roberts, a Republican who was elected to his first term two years ago, said he planned to circulate petitions to place his name on the August Republican primary ballot. - Roberts, 36, of 2486 Lafay St. is a graduate of the U-S. Naval Academy and the University of Michigan Law School. He served in the Pacific during World War Ti and the Korean conflict and maintains private practice in Keego Harbor. He is a former | assistant prosecutor. The third district embraces Avon, Bloomfield, West Bloomfield, Com-| merce and Milford Townships plus ‘the communities of Milford, Wol- — Lake, Walled Lake, Orchard Lake, Keego Harbor, Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Westchester and Lay Cornerstone Sirrieley for N ew YMCA Branch Eero Saarinen, Bloomfield Hills architect, will design the terminal building, control tower and service building of Washington’s new In- _jternational Airport at Chantilly, | Va. He will be associated. with Am- imann & Whitney, New York en- gineering firm which will do the civil. engineering work. Construction of the 8,000-acre air- port, 27 miles west of Washington, will begin this summer. Completion is scheduled for late 1960 or early Lights . F @ Exactly as Pictured Cor Lighter a or, 2 VOLTS . ‘Trouble Reg. age Value ew & Uritity ! Morin & Uni Trucks @ Swivel Hook for Easy ‘Attaching to Work Gor wate with electric cord that will reach 4 rt of the car. pm ~ all cigar ready for A ci s bright red warning 10-20-30-40 SAE GRADES 100% PURE e Motor Oil $1.50 Value——-2 GALLONS ete, Choice of one | 19 : 40 ‘grades. Limit 4 gallons. a 98 North Saginaw — Floor Por cars, trucks, tractors, Ave., Birmingham, Miss Loeding of 1038 Bird St. is in charge of the Sale, Proceeds will be used to send a bey or girl te summer camp, Oakland County PEO Coopera- tive will meet at 10:30 a.m. Mon- day for a business session and brunch at the Birmingham Com- munity House. Reservations must be made by tomorrow with Mrs, P. C. Satterth- waith ‘of 1347 Yorkshire Dr., Bir- mingham. Chapter BA of Royal Oak will be hostess to the gather- Troy. ing. FRI. and SAT. “BABY WEEK” SPEOIALS Reuther predicted, ‘‘We're going jto get a wage boost.” Reuther, whose main demand | industry is about $2.40 an hour,, as 1945, They brought in about at $21,527,000 for the year.to date |E was running about $2,300,000 ahead of the corresponding 1957 period. | 98¢ VALUE 98c VALUE Johnson & Johnson Johnson & Johnson | Ee) BABY |\eY BABY iol Z a Sale! BABY NEEDS t Save More on Respected “JOHNSON & JOHNSON” Large Size BABY PRODUCTS 2 IT} — Just the thing for your baby, or at dig Everything needed in | G | Baby Needs. Johnson & Johnson Baby Gift Set 144 $1.85 Value 98c VALUE 59c VALUE Johnson & Johnson Johnson & Johnson — BABY. BABY i SHAMPOO POWDER ozs, ak "]. era At 59¢ VALUE NURSING UNITS Infants’ - EVENFLO ‘ ; atm 39c Value by jories ree. 2s 24° 271 ¢ oe = bot tie — j with baby, Plugs Into Car Cigarette Lighter Bottle Warmer! 34| 2°" AUTO BABY i As shown, hang-up ‘style bottle | warmer for use when travelling in automobile. Reg. $2.95 Hankscraft 27¢ VALUE MEAD’S Poly-Vi-Sol Drops $3.59 Value 21 ZBT conaiennena ff ta Ie o4 98 North iE Saginew Street ' Baby Powder at SIMM): FRIDAY, SATURDAY ONLY! BIG 20 GALLON SIZE Garbage Can ef , a i 4 , With COVER | | $3.27 Value ane ibeES Galvanized to resist 27 { ti 2 - rust. Standard size 1} ' : garbage can with if ia cover. Ample size aa for family use. mit 2. : Heavy Gauge GALVANIZED Rubbish Burner With Cover 366 Complete perforated burner and cover. Stands on legs for complete BZ burning of trash. Limit 2 mated] = wy, z =| $5.00 Value i a ) “ * een eo See | ———— Ai a 98 North E @ Solid Colors E @ Linens = @ Gabardines ROTHERS be Simm. FRIDAY & MEN’S & BOYS’ WEAR SPECIAL’ airaaeay BARGAIN BASEMENT Original to $6 Genuine Broadcloth—1st Quality Men‘s SHORT woaly Y Sanforited, washable sport shirts in popular short sleeves. Wide va- riety of colors and pat- | SPECIAL PURCHASE! SPORT p ts press fF all Value 2 _@ Splash Weaves Tremendous values! Styles, colors, pat- terns, designs, all at this one low price . stock up now for summer - wear in these sport and dress Ceo eereccvcccececcescccscccccsccscesocsocoees MEN'S and BOYS’. Famous ‘ENDICOTT-JOHNSON’ Canvas OXFORDS Men’ s OXFORDS Boys’ Sizes to 6 : P Selection Patterns and Colors terns. Colorfast shirts @ Ivy Leagues styles. Alterations extra. All Men's Sizes to 12 - - Regular $1.98 Value 9 7 in sizes 8-M-L. No limit. @ Wash ‘n Wear sizes 28 to 42, ~ ’ ha Choice of dress an Assorted styles in Crusader or End- =: bran soar by Tndiocth-Sohnsen. PTITTITITITTTTT TTT TTT Te Elastic Tops—COTTON Zipper Front Boys’ Estron B ° ys’ SOCKS Jackets : Pista Variety of Colors Prstety<¢ to 39c 1 lb on ry 10 1" Hes Sere Sises 13 to 16. limited colores / selection. K@ BROTHERS Aas aeriet:tie a ae ae THE PON Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas AUDYE 7, AHMET : Funeral service for Audye T. Ahmet, 60, of 144 S. Parke St., will be held at 3 p.m, Saturday : Funeral Home, Mrs. Earl C. (Margaret M.) Meyer, 74, of 42 Exmoore St., Wa- - terford Township, died today at Pontiac General Hospital after a three-month illness, Mrs. Meyer is survived by her husband; son, William of Pontiac; _ daughter, Genevieve at home; and - three grandchildren, ‘The body will be at the Donelson- | Johns Funeral Home. - LEOCADIO NAVA Prayers were offered at 10 this morning in the Pursley Funeral - Home for Leocadio Nava, infant son of Jose and Valeria Casttro Nava of 38 E. Ypsilanti Ave. Bur- ja} was in Mt. Hope Cemetery. ' Surviving besides the parents are a sister and two brothers, Suzanne, | Aaron and Jose, all at home. The 11-monthold baby was dead on arrival Tuesday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. HORACE G. WARING | Horace C. Waring, 70, of 51 Sum- - mit St., was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital yester- - day. He died of a heart attack. A retired Pontiac Motor Divi- sion employe, he was a member of the Baldwin Avenue Evangelical - and United Brethren Church, the ' ‘Masonic Moshannon Lodge No. 391 of Philipsburg, Pa. and the Knights of Malta of Pontiac. Surviving are fis wife Odessa, sons Robert and Frank of Water- - ford, Lloyd of Philipsburg, Mrs. _ Marion Narman of Ortonville, Mrs. Cemetery, following 1:30 p.m. Sat- jjurday service at Hunton Funeral Home, CLARENCE W. BAIR FRANKLIN--Private ‘service for|°"* Clarence W. Bair, 75, of 25360 Dev- on Rd., was held today in Bell Chapel of the William R, Hamilton Co, Burial was in Woodlawn Ceme- tery, Detroit, — Mr. Bair was owner of the. Na- tional Varnish Co. of Detroit, which he established in 1912. He had nosEnt HEACOCK ALMONT — Service for Robert Heacock, 77, of = N. Main &t., pital of a heart attack, The body is at Muir Brothers Fu- neral Home, Almont, Surviving are his wife, Viola; one Oak, Willis of Pontiac, Norman and Charles of Imlay City; three Grace of Birmingham, Mrs. Sarah Taggert of Pontiac; two brothers, Luther of Birmingham and Arthur _ lof Detroit; eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren, ROSSA MACCO AVON TOWNSHIP — Requiem mass will be sung for Rossa Mac- _ Deaths Elsewhere NEW YORK w@ — Charles Ful- ler Stoddard, .81, an inventor who developed an improved player piano and many automatic cook- ing devices, died Tuesday of a stroke. He was associated with the American Piano Co. for many years, * * ke. NEW YORK — Matthew ‘Matty’ W. Satosk, 51, race handi- capper and selector for The As- sociated Press for several years, died yesterday of coronary thrombosis. He joined The AP in 1928 as a telegraph operator and later became a traffic department supervisor in. the AP’s New York office. He wag born in New York. co, 68, of 3888 Samuel St., at 10 ‘ja.m, Saturday at St. Church, Rochester, with burial at Garnet, Mich, Mr. Macco, who died yesterday after a long illness, had been a resident of Oakland County for eight years, He had made his home with Mr. and Mrs. John Garavaglia. Potere Funeral Home, S. Sutton, 61, of 2077 N. Elba Rd., who died unexpectedly yesterday morning at Lapeer eral Hospital, Memorial Park Cemetery. The body will be at Baird Fu-|t 3 Shades “TILE $560 BOX OF 80 Spatter Asphalt TILE 4% Genuine, First Quality a LIFETIME GUARANTEED Never Needs Waxing! ee eee Vinyl Plastic Floor TILE Ea. 6 | Ce -Brand Name PAINT SALE || Still in Progress! Pay Regular Price of $5.95 for 1 Gallon am. f° GALLON FOR ONLY Includes All Types of | Exterior & Interior Paint Flame-Resistant CEILING TILE g ‘SQUARE Factory Finish White a £ Tile de. 1055 W. HURON e ‘Open Monday, Thursday; Friday ‘til 9 Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday ‘til 6 PONTIAC @ “FE esny daughter, Mrs. Winifred Brockway) © of Troy; four sons, Donald of Royal} sisters, Mrs. Alta Green and Miss) ° Andrew: The Rosary will be recited at)’ 8:30 p.m, tomorrow st William R. County Gen- will be héld at 10 a. m. Saturday at Elba Methodist Church. Burial will be in Flint|| Jane Perkins and Joseph and Wik|eral Home until Saturday morn bur, all of Pontiac, Mrs. Audrey|ing. Ann; three a Mrs. Rob- ert _ Johnson Pontiac; Mrs. James Thom of caaubierile and Mrs. Richard Parkhurst of Lapeer; one sister, Mrs. Louis Zymbach of Flint, and five grandchildren. MRS, MOSES McCASLAND HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — Serv- ice for Mrs. Dr., will be held at 1:30 p.m. to- Bird Fu- She died yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital, - A resident of Oakland County for 2 years, Mrs, McCasland leaves her husband and a sister, Mrs. Bgssie Powers in Arizona. ANTHONY GRASSI Service for Anthony Grassi, 40, of 27 Edna St. will be at 10 a.m. pendey from the Donelson-Johns ss Funeral Home. be recited in the funeral home at p.th. Friday. He was a serv- ice station attend- GRASSI his mother Mrs. Alex Grassi of Masontown, Pa.; four children, Evelyn, Anthony, Gene and James, all at home; three sisters and three brothers, Mrs. Thelma Temperio, Mrs. Sophia Valeri and James Grassi, all of Masontown; Mrs. Mary DeMazzo of West Berlin, N. J., Joseph and Car] Grassi, both of Pontiac. Mr. Grassi died after a two-car | ‘Nagging Wite Greater Peril - Than Hard Job LONDOY w@®~A nagging wife can wear a man down faster than bad working conditions or fours, the senior psychiatrist at Lon- don’s St. George — said today. * * * In considering individual breakdowns, Dr. Desmond Cur- ran told a ‘medical congress, - problem mothers-in-law also have to be taken into account. thinks, * * * Thus people may think it fash- fonable to have this or that dis- ease, he said, and they soon talk themselves into all the major sumptoms. * A recent study of a New York firm, Curran added, showed that 75 per cent of all absences due to sickness in one year was regis- tered by the same one quarter of the firm’s employes. People in this group, he said, were un- -| happy, hard to get along with, .| and difficult to supervise. The healthy group, however, were the exact opposite, ~*~ * * . “The lesson seems to be,” said the doctor, “that you should not employ, if you can help it, any- body with a poor sickness record on the job—no matter what the -| cause of the illness.” Sunday School .. . Yes! HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Jane Russell, actress and mother of three, advises early church train- ing: ‘‘All kids should have it. Of course, they usually reach the where they say it's all rot, [Police Seeking IFidgety Bandits Believe Warren Bank Robbers Also Pulled 2 Detroit Holdups DETROIT uw — Two fidgety rob-| up two Detroit-area banks in re- cent months, were sought today) as the pair who escaped police bulelts with $6,350 from the sub- urban Warren Bank yesterday. * Those holdups were at the De- troit Bank & Trust Co.’s Far- mington Branch ang the Manu. | facturers National Bank of De- troit. The robbers, wearing sun) the car, The robbers did not return| fire Parks lost the bandits following an eight-bolck chase. Euvrope-Bound Airliner Forced Back by Fire NEW YORK #—Fire in an en-| gine of a Europe-bound Belgian airliner forced the plane to return} to Idlewild Airport last night. The fire in one of the four en- gines was extinguished quickly by carbon dioxide released within the engine by the pilot. ~The plane landed safely with its 28 passengers and crew of eight. The passengers had remained calm. sir KNOWLEDGE TE by RL. p De you Ras at 3. Are you quality 4. Are you tired of hi-pressure salesmen and their methods? [} 2S Would you like to shop ot your leisure and price? [1] If you’re honest and scored on all 5, you qualify to shop us last satisfaction. 1 An ye in the market to buy but meed g Bs, Roebuck (Himself) least 3 stores before b ? and price casedioudl wo and have quality and price — JUMBO—ALL-FOAM NATIONALLY MATTRESS or BOX SPRINGS ADV. POSTURE-FIRM-DELUXE PILLOWS © HUNDREDS OF COILS oon wee Rew. $2.35 © SMOOTH-TOP oe. 9 — ° = SATISFAC- $ 50, sreciat 99'~ + |S VENTED For AiR a 24 ae oo IN SETS HURRY! _ NATIONAL ADV. 4-PC. WEDGEWOOD GRAY LOOK! ALCOA-ALUMINUM BEDROOM SUITES | “sexavite LAN : © LARCE DOUBLE DRESSER Reg. $179.95 IRONING POARD © LARGE CHEST © LARGE BOOKCASE BED Disc. 95 PAD & COVER SET © DOVETAILED Spec, $ | Reg. $4.95 © RESISTANT TO HEAT Disc. Ci“ WATER AND MARRING 5 Left : 89° Hollywood Adjustable | HIDE-A-WAY BEDS CLOSEOUT ahh REYES TAME COVERS and STYLES. . @ SEALY - oe ST to $359.59 gi. $495 | sito - $1499 _ Cosh & Cary © OTHER FAMOUS BRANDS HURRY! uP Trundle & Bunk Beds | 6 VEAR CRIB | 6-Yr. Crib Mattress ise. ey $69.95 50 Hn $] 6” ais Reg. $255 Spec. 37 | ____HuRRY! se. 96 BUY MODERN SLEEP SHOP. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ______In Exclusive Bazaar Area — Next to Pontiac State Bank OPEN DAILY 12 TO 9—SATURDAY 10 TO 9 Call Now — FE 8-9551 — Call Now — FE 8-9551 s «6 : Heavy Duty | 4 ‘Cycle ROTARY Compare at $69.95 2 H.P. SALE! Save *20.00 On This New 8-Play Heavy-Duty SAFETY ENGINEERED {| PLAY GYM # $2.99 fun long. NO DOWN PAYMENT! Monthly! every feature spells Pay 3 NEW! Swinging ladder for new and excitement! Here's the happiest surprise for children .. . safety ... . and hours of funl Worry-free hours for Mom, too, to know the kids are safe in their own back y ground is the best ever built’ for outdoor playing! Compare all of the features... then have yours de~ —_} livered tomorrow! Size: Top bar 8'3" long, legs 7’4” Get Th irs at Waite’s... a and This massive play- NO PUSHING! JUST WALK ALONG! Deluxe SELF-PROPELLED | ROTARY MOWER | BIG MOWER SALE! From Waite’s Mower Headquarters... Downstairs! No Money Down——Pay 3 Monthly! Big 18-Inch REE Compare at $89.95 e2 L MOWER *68 @ 6-fi. slide with 3-1. railed catwalk - Swings @ Swinging Ladder @ Trapeze Bar @ Flying Rings @ Giant Skyride @ Chinning Bars SS at ee ee aS fee ee eee ee ; - ‘ oe a ; pe j ee ee : | % 2 ; we : y A — 2 ) iu , : a: / : oo os . ami yl ee pee =: “er oT : co 2, ae ieee | CO EGE a ie Mai aegis a ome us ‘i es 7 \] - i ON . a. or . | a we Ae a ; zo / a= Ree THE, PONTIAC PRESS”: THURSDAY, MAY 3; 1058 of dee - ay 3 ‘NINETEEN | | | _ | WHAT‘’S MY LINE? ile TL sei oe || +. 4] ANSTRUCTIONS: “fech word is related to my work. Un- | | seremble as few as possible to| guess my fine. Answer. | @ppeors under ofrow, reading downward. — PURINA, eee te AE Sa 1 CHULN aes 2 RYTA > 3 FEEFOC - 4 NINRED a oe § TOOPAT — 6 PREPUS 9 i. 7 REDSETS ’ 8 DRINK 9 TEMA Yesterdey's answer: ciaSs, Teach, stUdy, graDe, subjEct, learN, Test. hemises take their shapes e ‘Whet's My Line, inc ae nme ene nee re —_— a | Quiet Lady Barbers Keep Russian Beards Trimmed | MOSCOW (#—Beards and spmad whiskers run for years. All he raunists—often in conjunctibn—cur- TT. The reason for the popularity of ether near his left-bip, Communists is that they own the An imminent chemical scientist _ joint. Much of the popularity of favors letting his chin be covered __ beards, however, is because of the completely with a growth shaped bartering. ‘like the blade of a bulldozer. This CUT BY WOMEN type of thing makes for a forceful Most Moscow beards and prac. | ®Ppearance and in‘some cases has tically all heads are taken to bar- been known to camouflage a re- ber shops for trimming. Lady bar-|°*ing chin. A pemeethar Shear nd _ * * & 20 cents per beard, 20 cents| Many members of the govern- per head and they use meticulous ment and Communist party favor care. seme sort of face hair, either a bit on the lip or the full works. ; in on To curb wawanted growth bar- Gerky Street. You sit facing the | beresses have various size spe- : your to- | celal scissors with curv d cutting | ee eo blades. They nip smoothly | the emporium is still and quict. | around the edges of the beard on | 4 the Uzbekstan collective farmer | The lady barbers seldom talk: 4 onthe mustache of the Turk- second division ™®* steppe vider. ; Like many other things in Rus- sia. barber shops look ‘like their counterparts of 25 years ago in the United States. | . * * About 25 years also have passed since ‘you could get a decent hair- cut in the United States for 25 cents. ; i Stupid Tourists , Need Teaching, | Says Official from Paris to make you look like a million! senceniineainel KRUGER PARK,"S. A. — What | |Krager National Park needs is ' more rangers and stricter enforce- B ment of penalties for breach of . 95 95 i the regulations, says Harold J. 1 | Laite, an official of South Africa's ii big wild game reserve. a to : 1 | He cites these examples of if thoughtless and stupid tourists : PE : Children leaning out of cars to cease beeli competion: Th iting fashion word £ : amuse his fe companions, re- | e most exciting fashion word from - many goals Alexei Alexan-|_-.04 his engine in low gear to : & . ; frighten giraffes about to drink; Paris in many a Summer is chemise! people in cars feeding hyenas; =. ee os | It takes many graceful shapes, dried grass; a car stationary with- , smart fabrics and details to make For pl - nodr Mer garden gp you look like a million. Summer elephant down the road. | fashion bonus: the incredible comfort One warden cam ss a tour- ° jone@ lilac water, a adeg iy ta oar facet of these dresses in warm weather! Moscow barberesses get a = mews + — wi ‘four Come see these and many more at ir — (cubs, 12 feet away. Yan out , 5 . See ed teas Waleed pene (ot danger the touret said: “You Penney's Summer Dress Carnival and possibly the world. mean to say these lions aren't now. You'll find slim, flattering Bes age of goatees come in torn" chemises that drop from the shoulder, Plore ie! stat devotee ‘ot the Silkworms En Route break-front chemises, bloused Sulh pe gon wage Broving ™s! to Dearborn Museum chemises, every imaginable chemise “Cult of the Personality.” | TOKYO ®—Sixty thousand silk- designed by leading manufacturers. DEAD FOR YEARS ro eggs left Japan by plane to: And, you'll be amazed at the savings ian jday to rejuvenat xhibit i 7 ete at ac aan Bi veers the Henry Ford Museum at Dear. . _ Penney’s fashion experts have shovel shaped turfs of hair on the en » Mic b. . discovered for you. chirs and the blob on the upper lip ,. ne museum had notified the which ee favored _U. S. Embassy in Tokyo that the ins ef thé floviet Uniee’ top lace id eae, BL a e) Goley'end Lord nubby woven cotton. } s were ‘de erating”’ $ nuclear scientists has let his chin lor etlateaeus ng’ and asked Sizes 5 to 15. $10.50 . ie a ee b) cotton and cupioni-rayon. Sizes 10 to 16. $10.95 i s . : . : 50% Off on All Diamond Rings o serena apie caper eae? % 18 Your Money Buys More at Park Jewelers , 1 4 d) printed cotton broadcloth. Sizes 8 te 16. Discounts on All Merchandise $12.95 Diamond Bridal Rings with Cross Designs “Regular Price . $250 SET OF 3 DISCOUNT PENNEY’S SUMMER DRESS CARNIVAL CONVENIENT . : —_— CREDIT TERMS . | cor taree aciees | | , | SHOP PENNEY’S . . . you'll live betier, you'll sovel —— rings today. ’ : - ; 4 a TOWN CTOAPR \¢@ ‘ R , } i; DOWNTOWN STORE HOURS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS }'|> ery . ft \ i = Open Monday and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. _ || Now! Open Every Week Day ; ‘ ; All Other Days 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. tle = 10 A.M. to 9 PM. e eee 5 : rere =) = 7 ee — a «arn a iT j a“ | 7 ve } TWENTY: Noncommittal Pedestrian| Whena motorist stopped his car Refuses to Assist Cars ‘lon West North Ave, to ask dirée- tions, the man he \asked refused BALTIMORE #—He may have to oblige. been a frustrated hitchhiker, fed up with ‘no rider” signs, “ “I'm a pedestrian,” he said; “I don't help cars.” , Attention: LAID-OFF WORKERS: We make cash loans to laid-off workers. No principal payment until you are back to work for 30 days. OUR REQUIREMENTS ARE: That you own furniture or a-car. That you are a permanent resident. That you had a good work and a good pared | record before becoming unem- ploye If you owe bills and are being pressed for payment, come to see us at once and be relieved of worry. We have confidence in you and in our community. LOANS TO $500. MADE QUICKLY. You will-always receive pleasant, courteous, con- siderate and friendly treatment at any one of our offices. (See phone directory for addresses.) BUCKNER FINANCE CO. Pontiac Drayton Plains Walled Lake Science, Technology ‘|Books Available — Pontiac City Library has ‘ an- and technological bocks are avail- able for circulation at the main | library: | “Althouse, Modern Refrigeration & Air Conditioning: Buitenkant, How to Select & Use Your Tape | Recorder; Canby, Home Music Systems-How to Build & Enjoy Them; Coblenz, Transistors-Theo- ry & Applications; Crouch, Guide to Technica} Writing; Crowther, |Discoveries & Inventions of the 20th Century: Graham, Audels Ma- chinists & Tool Makers Handy Book; Kissinger, Nuclear Weapocs & Foreign Policy. Others are: Kiver, Transistors in Radio & TV; Knoerr, Prospec- bred for Atomic: Minerals; Korol, Soviet Education for Science & alow The Lewellen, Helicopters — How They Work; Mayer, Hi-Fi; | Parson, Guided Missiles in War }& Peace; Rolfe, Airplanes of the World; Ross, Young People’s Bk. of Jet Propulsion; Van Sickle, Mod- ern Airmanship; Vinal, Storage Batteries. $2,350 Jewelry Theft Reported by Store Ladies’ jewelry valued at $2,350 was stolen from the Thomas | Jewelry Co,,.29 E. Lawrence St., | Saturday morning, it was report- ed to police yesterday, store, told police he had gone to ithe sack room in the back of the |store for several minutes to get some merchandise for a custom- | Reported. missing was. a wrist watch, and three rings, i $1,240, $685 and $145, Gilbert Owen, manager of the! Mrs. Charles T. Quinn, of Old so attached to Captain Midnight, eat unless they eat with him. BARNYARD BUDDIES — “Mares eat oats, and does eat oats | ...” and so, it seers, do rabbits. Chilli, a horse belonging to | of long-eared pals he shares his meals with. Chilli has become | Westbury, N.Y., has a couple | left, and Captain Hook, he won't Heading Municipal Employes Group uel A, Baker, an employe Pontiac Department of Pub- dent of the American Federatien of State, County arid Municipal Employes Local 100 (AFL-CIO). Helen Nabarrette was elected > eee er ye LUXURIOUS GOLD TONED UPHOLSTERED GOSSIP BENCH + 13) GES ag ——~s UPHOLSTERED IN OYSTER WHITE WITH GOLD SWIRL! e WASHABLE VIRGIN PLASTIC! *GOLD & BLACK TRIM! _ / Ke) (e | OVERALL! LARGE. COMFY | \ SEAT 20x17) | ele] Gem fe)Sia8) FERRULES! More Beauty anc More Utility in On Piece of Furniture Than Ever Before! DIAMOND, WATCHES, and seweny ‘ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE J ITED QUANTITY G FORMIGR TA e STAIN-PRO —~ © 18x 5 ; *\\ r | \ | lic Works, has been elected presi-| |vice president; Dorothy Dunavin, ‘financial secretary; Bernice Car- penter, recording secretary; Cashious Roberts, trustg®; Cecil Clemence, sergeant-at-arms, and Willie Dinkins, guide. The local represents several groups of Pontiac city workers, including non-professional help at Pontiac General Hospital. In the animal world only the mammals have hair, i i SENSATIONAL ¥ Te =) SO) OF @# MAR-PROOF for \ TELEPHONE | BOOKS Mey !| MAGAZINES % | STATIONERY ADDS BEAUT AND UTILITY O ANY ROOM! * MODERN DECORATOR HARD WOOD LEGS * 5 uses int! 1. PHONE 2. READ 3. WRITE 4. STORAGE 5. LAMP Quantity Limited! Get Yours NOW anwJ SAVE DURING SALE! A Terrific Bargain! FE 2-2400 Send me the Gold Toned Gossip Bench as edvertised. tam | enclosing $1 and will pay balance $1 a week. tee PEER OO REM OR HO ae te toe terre eeeowee LASTS! +. Wife's ROM. ctcsweresne Ff eeeeeee eo Poe ccévceteuseses Me om om oe eee cee eee Gee Gee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee oe —— om a oe oe oe It's Amazing! For Mother's Day! So Much Beauty . . . So Much Utility okuston RAIN BOW | Compare with Paints Selling for *7” Gal. JOHNSTON RAINBOW is your best buy today in quality house-paint! See for yourself an actual Labora- tory comparison test... See the whiteness of Rainbow -Fabric. Plastic Reg. $1 Easy to Clean, Textured Like Easy to Drape. 2 ir $1.29 Bamboo Roll-Up Shades Cottage cn All 6 Foot Lengths, 2Y, ... See its smooth gloss surface compared to the gritty surface of other paints! And you'll choose Rainbow for its wonderful hiding power ... SAVE UP TO $2.50 PER GALLON when you buy RAINBOW now! FREE! SPECIAL 4” NYLON BRUSH with Every Order of 10 Gallons or More BIG 12 OT. SIZE PLASTIC BUCKET Reg. 1.98 Value Will not dent, chip, or rust. Can't mar sink, tub, floor or furniture, Use for water, hand grip. Colors: yellow, turquoise. 69's Ft. to 8 Ft. Width (2% ft. bell CHAIR . $100 COUCH: $199 RUBBER = Flat Wall Paint 54 Gal. for $3.49 o ROSENBERGER'S 98 RGal. WALLPAPER CO, 134 S. Saginaw FE 2-7001 ici iim iI a i ae ll abl TC Af F dF nT ii Ta <3 Sing oy Bene ee the ordina send eee comets Double Deck Fruit Torte. A genero x rr: cocktail-ice pugar vai” ‘Packed) em SERGE Wis ticks and tity, For that you've been planning, why not pre-land 14 cup of the walnuts. Pour Eas ee eae Ss ve: c rs ae kitchen, ‘The combination vo Fige = “grading ms -eanned fruit cocktail and nuts in) {a0 degrees appara the torte layers with ice cream as| Sven (i —_— : the filling makes a dessert long| “*% ogee ane remembered, eran a on reese ; Rheoe" iptgactat — one layer on serving plate se seams Games and cover ‘with scoops of ice Sonapeene oodles. Sprinkle with reserved % —Ss siete 4ruit cocktail and cover with Meat Prices Visty Little, _ Vegetables Are Cheaper ig oh 1 Hi ig i sEEa i } ‘Three or four warm days in a row are your cue to look for Michi- are week as larger supplies start to market, Fresh pineapple continues to be a reasonable fruit buy. The large No, 8 size can be found for as little as three for a dollar. A few fresh strawberries go a “Jong way when you combine them with fresh pineapple and ba on baking || MEAT ON TH® MENU — Al- sheet, Cut each cooky in halfte { ithough there have been some form rectangles; separate slight declines and fluctuations in cookies 1 inch apart. Beat 1 | |the wholesale meat market during ar ae ba ue a the past week, few changes are beush over: . ith | found in retail prices. [t will pay to study available price informa- tion before making a list of meal for your next week's meals. It will pay to make comparisons at the store. A * YOu sHouw xnow THIS * ASOUT BAKING If you are trying to cut meat : costs, you might consider Michi- it's the balance of ingredients in (gan smelt, some varieties of froz- baking powder that governs its en fish, ground beef, liver and oth- leavening action. Only when er variety meats. these are scientifically balanced eon yeu bo eurbet unitorm action Have you noticed that some bn the mixing bow! plusthatfina!, | “t0res are offering meat features | balanced rise to light and flutty on Mondays and Tuesdays? If texture in the oven. you buy meat twiee a week, this may be of some help. Remember that fish and poultry are the most pe | fresh meats, Fresh pork should be ased more quickly than beet, veal or lamb, - Méat that is ground or cut in small pieces is best if used the day it is bought, = EGGS IN THE DIET—Two large size eggs will cost between 10 cents in most stores this For the same protein“in Servings you would “chicken broth. Heat remaining and add sugar gradually, beating between additions. Sift together ur, soda and salt; add to egg wf. a @ * i P 1 a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1958 Developed especially for ‘gala af- fairs in. any season is a tempting}. recipe, Shrimp Aspic Canapes. New in form and flavor, the ca- napes are a dream for any hostess. Behold shrimp, molded in flavor- some gelatine, so that each par- ticular shrimp reclines handsome- ly in its own transparent round. Make these canapes hours ahead, store in refrigerator, unmold on toast at serving time. Shrimp Aspic Conepes envelope unflavored gelatin 1% cups chicken broth or consemme l cup Rhine wine Dash Tabasco « 44 teaspoon Worcestershire “Se tenspees ss salt 30 small shrimp, cooked or canned 3¢ Melba toast rounds Mayonnaise Soften gelatine in ‘4 cup cold broth; add to gelatine, stir until often confused, They are similar in both shape and flavor, but pic- while ham comes from. the hind . The price for a picnic is lower two servings from each pound. A whole ham will yield three serv- ings per pound. SF Top Toast With Shrimp Molded i in Aspic dissolved. Cool; add wine, ‘Tabas- co, Worcestershire and salt, Ham Has Less. Waste Than Smoked Picnic Smoked picnic. and smoked ham are two cuts of meat that. are nic comes from the front leg leg of a hog. than for a ham, states the Mar- keting Information Agent. There is no’ more waste in bone and fat in a picnic. The picnic will yield Two Fruit Shortcake brings the meal to a sweet close. One-inch slices of pound cake are covered with banana slices, and topped with crushed red raspber- Ties to be half hidden under a frost of sweetened whipped cream, cheese sauce and strips of bacon for a fine luncheon dish. Olt 30 small steal cups (1'4- inches bottom diameter). Place Unmold. Spread toast rounds with mayonnaise; top with shrimp in aspic. Makea 9 cements. Banana - Raspberry Shortcake Serve broiled tomatoes with and mix with beans, juice, and onion, Place in rectangular baking and bean mixture, 3 Favarites Join Forces in Casserole Lovers of frankfurter and baked bean dishes will like this version|) of their favorite with its crunchy corn bread topping. Slices of ten- der, Juicy franks are cooked with well seasoned baked beans to make | good! this a quick and easy main course. 2 ‘% cup temato juice l small onion, diced i*package corn bread mix or 1 standard recipe for corn bread Cut frankfurters in 4% inch pieces dish, * * * Prepare corn bread batter ac- cording to recipe instructions, and drop by darge spoonfuls over frank f Bake in ‘a 425. degree F. ‘125 minutes or until corn is browned. 6 servings. Cabbage Slaw Good Different sandwich filling and a 1 cup ry 4 4 teas sauce and salad dressing adding salt and pepper to taste. Use as filling, with sliced tongue, in Tongue Sandwich | easpoons in cup mayonmalse-type salad el good), peanuts, for sandwiches of buttered bread.|drained Potato Candy Calls for Long Chilling Makes 4 hearty sandwiches. A More, Eggs are one of the easiest foods to use, By lves or combined in other f eggs have a place in the diet.” / we Eating Fun from A to Z! ; Here’s a cereal with fun and goodness from A to Z! It’s made /ot healthful oats, one of the best sources of high-quality cereal protein. And Post Alpha-Bits are sugar-sparkled—help give children / the quick and lasting energy they need. / So, for real eating fun—fill the family bowls with this delicious, crispy new cereal in alphabet form. New Post Alpha-Bits... they're p:B € bhai Bee ‘It’s Post Alpha-Bits, the new alphabet cereal! Made from oats into nourishing, crispy letters — your family will love to eat! = igo j } ba neigis Nth 28 oii YHE PONTIAC PRESS. HURSDAY, MAY 1 1958 SALE DATES — Thurs., Fri. Sal. and Sun... . May 1, as 3, and 4 HILLS BROS. or BEECH NUT Cee : REGULAR — © _ DRIP | -. POUND , VAC. CAN PETER’S Grade No. SPECIAL LOW PRICE! OCA: CO LA. afte DIXIE SALAD DRESSING PINE-ORA = le-Orang ge Di BLUE RIBBON ~TOWNSOUARE FROZEN | k ie or “Chen Pies Es - SALTINE CRACKERS ie cc DOT PIES~-19' | co LARGE FCS 45° U.S. No. 1 ALL PURPOSE ; NEW. ERA Home Style . ¢C LARGE : 7k Lb. — No. yitte PO apes 10 x 09 | PEACHES Ng 19° eis IT SALES DAYS THURSDAY, MAY 1 Host ees’ 7580 HIGH LAND RD. “vas Ke ~ One Mile West of City Airport i NEN SUNDAY STORE HOURS 9 AM. to-6 PM Mi. Sundey 3 af mw eh ee a — i ; A aX i \ \. \ \ . ¢€ * j Sad = | wre sowie eee nin: MAY * Ae ee oe oy . fee iii Powder Adds Zest Sle egelable Meat Pie | SBE Eis (Condi ils Aad | | * od Fo lee he -.. New Note fo Salad a ie | Chili powder is the ‘spice ‘that;tur of the century saul prectiesh jgives the true_ Texas chili, ory all homemakers began develop- “cowboy’s stew,” its brawn, “nUS-|ing their own récipes for using it— cle and flavor. It's also the flavor |in degrees of intensity tailored to heart of many subtly elegant. ver-|the individual family’s taste, In re- sions of this spiced meat stew cent years chili cookery has soared (with or without beans) that are jn popularity and today there are now served on the swanky réstau-|as many versions as there » are jrant circuit—at gold-plated-c hil ilcooks who make them. bowl prices, - 4 mspoons salt z : ‘4g teaspoon prepared horseradish However, the most important) Chill powder ts not a single one = pepper (400 degrees F.) 10 minutes. Re- If you like homemade tomato. —— factor in America’s love affair! ao noe cavaine paste wel eit |,,taunee ean Spanish style’ tomate|duce heat to moderate (350 degrees|soup of the cream - sauce Combine bam, pickle and celery. come 3 | » © * tid + | sauce mayonnaise, mustard can word and an*American institu Some blonds also add cloves, | Putty tr «2 cra ote oie.” /F.) and coatinue baking 49 mimutes/S05 00, want it to Cr, ee teat taht with bene tion — is what homemakers, spice and black pepper. Saute green pepper and celery|!onger or until crust is brown, Cut! 'eream sauce and then slowly stir mixture; chill, Spoon txts lettuc throughout the land have done with) The legend is that back in the|iM bacon fat. Add ground beef and in wedges and serve with Savory the puree into the sauce. : : : chili powder in homemade chili early 19th century a San Antonio/brown, stirring frequently, Add in- Vegetable Sauce. Yield: 4 to ad * & “ dishes _ |Settler of English descent ran out/stant minced onion, salt, ground 5¢rvings. The fresh tart flavor of fresh ie : + * ‘ot curry’ powder. A resourceful/black pepper, chili powder and x~ *® orange segments tastes good with| Cut bananas in half lengthwise, No sooner had the exciting redichap, he improvised an American|tomato sauce, Simmer 12 to 15 Savery Vegetable Sauce a pineapple and cottage-cheese|then “in half crosswise. igen stuff been ‘‘put. up'’ commercially/equivalent from flavorful plants)minutes or until] mixture has thick- 2 (apteopeens butter or margarine - salad. Serve for lumch with crisp|2 banana quarters around ham by spice companies around the'such as peppers, oregano and gar-lened, Cool. ive: co beet stock or chicken broth Teens and salad dressing. salad. Makes 4 servings. with sugar and salt. Mix flour and cinnamon; cut in butter until WH | p Tops Pudding oe eh —* " BeEcsepr TOPPING MIX. , Rated as one of America’s) Sprinkle crumb mixture over ~ appl apples and press down firmly. -cepnigphemcanie mare © Powe Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) | in an endless number of recipes. And they're easy to prepare with crear mabsutes. ues sno bal canned ready-to-use apple products. ~—- pager apple slices take ~ lead in Candy Crisp. It’s. a Ste H i ideals ew tee Stew Becomes Meat Pie apples with a crunchy mixture) A good stew is no hardship to| bf cinnamon, butter and peanut prepare. To dress up this prac- brittle, and you havea taste'tical and economical dish, simply treat your family won't forget. change it to a meat pie. How? ust the stew with a biscuit saucepan Blend in a ee in Ham Salad takes on a new note stock or chicken broth. Cook'when prepared with candied < dill until medium” thickness, stirring/ strips. constantly, Add remaining ingredi- Ham Salad ents and heat. Serve over Chili) 3 cups ew shopped sania’ dill strt * * & Pie, Yield; Approxi 4 cap ehepeea eck pe ‘mately 2% cups. : } cup mayoanane te salad qvreing 2 a 2 teaspoons prepared mtistard & repeats APPLE CANDY CRISP — For an extra bonus of good eating, serve Apple Candy Crisp to your family. They’ll like the crunchiness and flavor of the cinnamon-peanut brittle topping. Little time is | spent in the preparation of thiy dessert for it’s made with canned | ready-to-use apples, a add water to make 1/3 cup; add eanut ritt é lemon juice. Put apples and . liquid in baking dish. Sprinkle) a Apple Canily Crisp Just top can (1 ib, 4 02.) sliced apples had mage Bg «gael — ol water iation, ew wi a i 1 tablespoon jemon juice layer of corn bread batter. & % Somagnen salt ote rent Good vegetable. combination: 2 lt oa Grene peppers, cut in wide strips, |_ Tide ascent ar top mak cooked in butter with sliced mush- Drain syrup. from apples and|rooms. Nice with veal. = BRIOCHE — There's a hint of foreign intrigue in these yeast | ' yolls. An Americanized version of an old French recipe, this | recipe contains some corn meal. The golden crown on top of each roll is what makes it a Brioche. Crown on Roll.Top | Means It's Brioche What an air of elegance a basket] Punch down; cover and let rest of Brioche lends to a dinner meal! 19 minutes, Divide dough into four Just for a moment, close your|parts. Using 1 part, form into eyes and imagine a basket of these|24 little balls, Using the other 3 fragrant, golden brown rolls on parts, form into 24 larger balls. your ee “Impossible,” you SaY. piace large balls in greased mut- ad me tees pair kitchen fin cups. Cut slit in top of each & « & jlarge ball with scissors; place. ; ‘small ball in slit.: Brush beaten Bini’ = fate tion 4 oe egg white over top of rolls. Cover; B 5 of us are familiar with cloverieaf,|!t Tise until rolls are double in : eS : crescent, fan tan and Parker House — =x 100 piece Bake in 2 rolls, but Brioche is a bread that. -— egrees F.) 15 t & a : oO ee eee NOow-en joy IUSCIOUS whipped topping plus tne convenience of a mix Americanized version made with) enriched corn meal. The crunchy | e Now from a magical mix—rich, velvety, ¢ Enjoy all you want! DREAM WHIP is so delicious whipped topping to serve on your ow in calories—only 15 calories in a table- corn meal gives a delightful tex- complete until you have added this favorite desserts! - spoonful. DREAM WHIP is thrifty too! ture to can buttery erod rolls. * 4 1 ' : co UC "i ivr iS __ @ You can fix DREAM WHIP ahead of time. It So convenient! DREAM WHIP package | “~~~ stays perfect in your refrigerator! needs no refrigeration. You'll find it in your Besides "hein easy to make, | Brioche these Brioche take honors in the | beauty department, too. The golden @ Refreshing milk dessert! | 1 pack 1 caki 1 eed d ; e pocises 4/1 sn eourres or | @ Not a‘ cake of pie, not = gelatin e DREAM WHIP n't wilt, won't separate grocers packaged dessert section. crown atop each roll makes them mighty easy on the eyes. Your fuk +4 i ” 1 cup scaled milk , = es.) see creamy You can serve any left-over the next day! © Get some today You'll love it! baking experience simply isn’t \% cup melted shortening | Tennet-custard! % cup sugar ' Seeuwt « ” F ’ . ; M% agus salt /@ Easy! Junket” Custard in a min- | 3 to 3% cups sifted enriched flour | ute ‘cause there's rennet in it! 1 ege. beaten i + . % cup enriched gorn meal | @ 7 soda fountain flavors! Vanilla, or raspberry chocolate erage lem one package makes about a pint 1 egg white, slightly beaten 1 On, strawberry, maple. & Soften yeast in lukewarm water. 4 a (Use warm water for dry yeast.), - JUNKET Pour scalded milk and melted, shortening over sugar and salt) RENNET-CUSTARD Cool. to lukewarm. Stir in 1 cup flour and egg; add softened yeast! and corn meal. Stir ‘in enough more flour to make a soft dough Turn out on lightly floured board or canvas; knead until satiny, about 10 minutes. Round dough into ball; place in greased bowl; brush lightly. with melted shorten-| j wonderful , low pricel 2. Makes 2 cups of thick, perfect ’ 1. Just edd milk and vanilla to ing. © and let rise in warm cory ian vs Sot ORS ies wate Dream Whip. (Chill miztere if _ topping. Dream Whip tastes every ansen's ioe until double in ‘size, ace, fet and thet lood product weather is hot.) Then whip. bit as luscious as it looks. | | ) : oe oe Nae \ hour, ‘ : \ 4 ' so it ' a hs Ye . \ r . / \/ 5 sia oS - 2s THE PONTIAC. PRESS, "THURSDAY, MAY. 1, 1958 _ — i i. : in FI Pick your flavor favor ites — enjoy t new ones, too! FRUIT COCKTAIL 2 SPINACH x 49° HALVES or SLICED \S\au re, PEACHES LARGE 22 CANS ye * cs seem | GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS TALL No, 303 —_ TALL 00 aoe ( (aero elon) 5 TCANS. | Pineapple Grapefruit’: iiecy 2s ra < ai , J DEL MONTE, CUT . ear s Green Beans J. BDel-Monte Red Sockeye 1-LB. ¢ SALMON. = 79 Only at P, sople’s Food-0.m, e's NO CASH. Vay at and Super Marker PIs Ny wy — Sear ‘MAY g SWEET PEAS Whole Kernel CORN Cream Style CORN Your Choice DEL MONTE a = CATSUP) ss Fai HYGRADE HONEY - BRAND SMOKED. HAMS PRE-COOKED Shank DEL MONTE CHILI SAUCE =* 29° ASPARAGUS 9 22 $1 Pineapple O22 (9° ———— PRUNE Juice Sox. *T Prunes” = 2x 4§° = yy, Half u 5O¢ Center Slices “ 99° -PRESSEL’S HOT DOGS 3 a $100 Del Monte 99° 9 Dogs per Pkg. RAISINS , Be sae sneer Eni MEN GN GE N am » GRAPE 6, ann ys ) mem | UW ED TIME ONLY! POL ig § CHOCOLATE BARS i PRICE | PLAIN—ALMOND—CRUNCH KING SIZE