a The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Cloudy, colder, (Details Page 2) 116th YEAR xkkkexkr PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TeUssDay uakeH bua PAGES. Skywatch tor Moon Scheduled CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (?) — Moonwatch teams geared themselves today) for a sky’ search for the’ Army’s newly launched and OUT — Into. outer space, and rnysteriously missing satel- Hope Fading for Expl Dressmakers’ Strike Termed mysterious silence, zooms the rocket. lite Explorer II. At the same tirfle the conviction ully Effective 6 grew that the 6-inch metal cyl- { inder, 80 inches long and weighing about 32 pounds, never achieved! an orbit. Officials of the Army Ballis- tie Missile Agency and of the det Propulsion Laboratory, which built the high speed upper stages, were unavailable fof comment. Wernher von Braun, German- born head of the Army space pro- gram, left for Huntsville, Ala., be-| fore reporters could question him! about the launching. * * * Experts said that failure of the final stage to fire. on cue would have meant that the satellite, even of 200 or ‘more miles, would achieve a velocity of only about three miles a second as against the five miles a second needed to maintain an orbit — 10,800 miles an hour instead of -18,000. This in turn could mean that the satellite would tumble into the South Atlantic, or into Afri- ca or the Indian Ocean beyond. The cylinder would have trav-' eled less than halfway around the world before tumbling down through the atmosphere. * * * In Washington last night Dr. Richard Porter, chairman of the’ earth satellite panel of the U.S.| National Committee for the Inter- national Geophysical Year, told newsmen there was ‘“‘some indi- cation that the satellite is not! functioning normally.” | 4th STAGE TROUBLE Porter said there had been indi. cations from the Minitrack radio, tracking station here and at one} other point that the fourth stage did not function. “There is other information, how-. ever, that it probably did and that the difficulty is more probably in the ratio transmission equip-. ment,’’ Porter added. At Pasadena,, Calif., Dr. liam Picketing, head of iy | said there Was every indication | that the satellite was not func- tioning properly and that there was a probability that it was not in orbit. Pickering said it probably would’ take several days to interpret tech-| nical data: sufficiently to find out! what had — GOING—The rocket rises high- er in an apparently successful launching. In- Comment ieee. the Smith- sonian Astrophysical Observatory; said it was alerting Moonwatch teams to be on the lookout for Ex- plorer IT even though it had not, been determined whether it was in| orbit. If in &n orbit, the satellite would not be visible in the United States until next week, the observatory said. * * * At Iowa City, Iowa, Dr. James Van Allen, who directed construc- tion of decoding equipment in the satellite, said there ‘were three pos- sible reasons why the second satel- lite had not been located. though it was at orbital altitude vi oe would not last long. Julius Hochman, general man-| $1 to $18. Over 105,000 Stay Out Expected Soon iment workers entered its second day today, with a ‘union official saying the walkout is 100 per cent ef- fective. Signaling major strike in 25 years, | ‘members of the Interna- tional Ladies Garment Workers Union left their jobs yesterday in nine East- ern states. Sewing machiines disoped whir- ring and scissors stopped snipping, jat exactly 10 a.m. yesterday in |more than 2,000 shops which em-| |ploy workers belonging to the pow- lerful International Ladies Garment! Workers Union. In New York City, thousands of dressmakers, 80 per cent of whom are women, poured into the streets as soon as the strike began. They had received hand. | bills announcing the walkout on arriving at work and sound trucks prowled the cluttered streets advising them to walk | out. The mood of the workers was. Bay: the mood of their leaders! Related Stories | Pages 8, 20 . was defiant. There was a wide-| spread assumption that the strike,| coming as it does on the éve of the pre-Easter dressmaking sea- jager of the union's Dress Joint! Board, said not only was the! strike call 100 per cent ioc (but that dressmakers in 50. no union shops also had joined. *| * *, * Also idled by the strike are| jsome 25,000 workers in such re- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Cs Liability Rates to Rise $4-$11 Here. Passenger car liability insurance jrates will go up in the Pontiac area from $4 to $11, Joseph A. Navarre, state insurance commis- sioner, announced today. * * * The new rates will affect im- mediately all Michigan companies affiliated with the National Bureau of Casualty Underwriters, he said, with actual increases varying in different parts of the state from Other insurance companies are expected to follow suit, he said. in 2nd Day; Settlement, FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES | NEW YORK—The strike} of more than 105,000 gar-|. their first, |distance dialing system will be linto éffect April 20 and’ «ill enable | out Michigan and 23 states, plus Believes Satellite! a Light Snow Adds Beauty to Bare- Trees | | _ Pentiac Press Photo WINTER LINGERS ON — A light snowfall greeted Pontiac area residents this morning, and traced this orchard with an artistic touch of white. The snow made some roads slippery until Long- Distance rin wach of white Calls Explained F orecast Cloudy Tonight, | Phone Customers to Get P I edicted Low 26- 30 Booklet on How to Dial Cloudy tonight and a little colder is the forecast for Direct Across Nation Pontiac by the U.S. Weather Bureau. Tonight's low will be | -| around 26-30. The high tomorrow will be near 35. According to the Oakland County Road Commission roads which were snow covered and slippery this morning are clear and in good condition. Highways in the Upper Peninsula are aan slippery and covered with snow. rr | A booklet explaining Michigan |Bell Telephone’s new direct long-| mailed to all telephone subscribers in the Pontiac district in the next few days. e * * Ww. According to Ray Storm, district ‘manager, the new system will go The lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preced- ing 8 a.m. was 32 degrees. The thermometer registered 40 at 1 pm. North. Koreans Down.Jel: Free 26 on Hijacked Plane OSAN, Korea — Communist ground fire today shot down an jAmerican Sabre Jet near the Ko- rean demilitarized zone. Its pilot was seen parachuting “just over © during the past year! Anion the a side of the line,”’| a new floor was added to Mich-|the Air Force said. igan Bell's local building last sum- x ke ® mer to accommodate the equip- The Sabre was ‘one of two on ment. - ja low-level simulated ground sup- jport training mission, The other plane returned safely. The Air Force withheld the names of both pilots and began an investigation together with the U.N. Command. . local residents to directly dial jphones across the country. | The booklets being mailed give | code numbers for cities through- the District of Columbia and On- tario, Canada. To reach a California number, | ‘for example, a loca] person dials 112, then the code number for the icity, say 414, then the actual phone jnumber he wishes to reach. The new system in no way af- fects local calls, which remain the same as before, * * * The direct dialing is made pos- [able by new equipment installed PANMUNJOM, Korea ® — The North Koreans finally released to- jday 26 passengers and crewmen from a South Korean airliner hi- jacked by the Communists flight Feb. 16. The two American pilots, a West German couple and 22 South Koreans were handed over at the Panmunjom truce head- quarters after several hours de- lay caused by South Korean re- fusal te sign the release receipts provided by the Communists. A representative for the South Korean Red Cross finally signed after a telephone call to Seoul. Representatives of the U.S. Em- bassy and the West German lega- ition signed without any objection. * * * Hard to Track Without Radios Planes from the crashed Sabre's LONDON (INS)—The chief of'base at Osan, where Americans Britain's International Geophysical first clashed. with_ Communists in Year Rocket Section commented ithe Korean War, ‘searched the today that Explorer II will be ex- | southern fringes of the armistice traordinarily hard to spot by visual|/zone from aloft today but failed means unless its radios begin toto spot the lost flier. work. Eight Koreans from the airliner remained in the Communist North. The U.N. Command said they ap- parently were the seven Red An Air Force official said it was| in| Uti lity Workers on Strike Here Moon Missing After Launching From Florida Second Army Satellite May Be Circling Earth With Radios Dead WASHINGTON (INS) — America’s Explorer II satel- lite is still lost and hope that it may have attained an orbit is fading. - It may be days, however, before scientists can find out what happened to the 3142-pound pencil - shaped “moon,” last seen leaving the Cape Canaveral, Fia., (EST) yesterday atop a four-stage Jupiter-C mis- sile, which _ successfully placed America’s first satel- lite into orbit Feb. 1. Scientists were working as rap- lidly as possible to “read” the radio data received from the Consumers Power Co. Pontiac Employes Join) Widespread Walkout Several hundred Consumers Pow- er Co. workers in Pontiac were on | strike today as part of a walkout of 5,400 .company maintenance, construction workers and linemen in 64 Michigan counties. Members of Local 105 of the | Utility Workers of America set up picket lines at ae at the Pon- tiac service ‘buildin Rapid street. Supervisory personnel will be employed where necessary to tiae area, according te Edward L. Karkau, district manager. The union ordered its members out on strike last night after con- jtract talks with the company failed. Company service workers throughout Oakland County this mogning had joined the strike. * * * A company spokesman said nego- jtiations broke down over a union \demand for the right to veto man- ‘agement decisions on changes in joperation methods. The unjén said it broke off talks because the com- pany wanted to ‘‘control job classi- fications already covered by the contract.” “When talks were jacana to resume was not /pedicated by either side. The union also/ bs Seeking a 2- cent hourly pay hike in the new contract. The gid one was to have expired at midnight Friday. It was day. Wants ‘Auto Tax Repeal | extended until midnight _Wednes- aomning to determine if there lwas a malfunction in the satellite vehicle, | ‘There was Indication that something went wrong with the vital final stage of the rocket although officials at the test center said all. — rockets “fired, ” Meanwhile,-.the Army had equip- ment ready to make another at- tempt, probably in a week or two, And the Navy went ahead with preparations for its third attempt to place a satellite into orbit with its Vanguard. on Wegsen - x * * street and at the substation on) There was a slim chance that ithe satellite was circling the earth with its two radios dead. Track- ng stations in the Bahamas picked s minutes after the — vehicle was fired, but the satellite’s radios and the tape recorder were silent after that. DELAYED LAUNCHING Lending some credence to this was the fact that the launching was delayed by 15 minutes be- cause of trouble with the radios and recorder. * * * Another possibility was that the satellite. ¢rashee] into the Atlantic somewhere between the Florida launching site and South Africa. The third possible fate of the satellite was that it smashed through the earth’s gravitational (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) DETROIT (INS)—United Auto Workers delegates representing 149,000 Ford employes have voted to battle for profit-sharing, tem- porarily. sidetracking the 35-hour week demand, in new contract talks this spring. Olympic Hopes Fade LANSING (INS) — Hopes of launching pad at 1:28 p.m. - Ford UAW Votes to Fight — THEY'RE OFF—The Jupiter-C and Explorer II start skyward under thrust of the rocket fuel. , The companies affected today write about 19. per cent of the automobile lability insurance in the state. Discussing the satellite mystery, Prof. Harrie S. Massey noted the possibility that Explorer II con- doubtful the search would con- tinue tomorrow because “‘it's just too close to the line.” agents the South Koreans charged took over the plane and the child of one of them. WASHINGTON, —Rep. Rab- aut (D-Mich) has infroduced a bill to repeal for one year the building’ a $15 million stadium at © the Michigan State Fair Grounds to help attract the 1964 Olympic The rate boost, Navarre. statéd, teflects the continued increase in the cost of medical and hospital care for the injured and the higher cost of repairing today’s more) elaborate cars. | * * * The heaviest increase, he added, | tinued on into space or fell in the ocean instead of going into orbit. Meanwhile, a British expert de- yy-,* ° . clared that Soviet Sputnik launch.| Visits Swedish Princess ings do not prove that Russian STOCKHOLM (INS) — Stock- scientists have mastered the prob-| holm newspapers say handsome lem of controlling intercontinental Englishman Robin Douglas- iballistic missiles. Home is expected to spend con- Sir Bryan Matthew, a Cambridge siderable time at the royal pal- The 22 Koreans—21 passengers released. They walked through a cordon of military - —— || from the Communist bus. The 26 were taken by bus to the! U. N. base camp in the neutral zone for a medical checkup. The and a crewman—were the first | federal excise tax on automo- ‘biles. He said this would “‘stimu- late sales in our first and fore- most eee: a The Metropolitan Affairs Com- mittee, where it is expected to die. Stlenberaar s Attorney Games to Detroit haye faded, _— GOOD START — In Washingto®, Ds Richted W. Poster, _ the U.S. Committee for the International Geophysical Year, poses ‘ with a modelo tthe Jupiter-C rocket as he tells newsmen that the rocket and satellite apparently got off to a good start, involves cars operated by men un-: ‘professor, said hundreds of tra- der 25, while farm cars will get a-jectdries will take a satellite into 30 per cert discount from the regu-|an_ elliptical orbit such as the lar rate, compared with a 20 per|Sputniks follow but only one tra- cent discount under the old sch-|jectory can take an ICBM to its! dule. ichosen _target. ace today in the company of Princess Margaretha. The young couple, whose engagement is ex- pected to be announced soon, spent most of yesterday with her family, two American pilots of the air. jliner, Willis P. Hobbs of vate, LO Ask Hospital Records \Calif., and Air Force Lt. Col. How-| lard W. McClellan of Buchanan, | Mich., appeared in perfect health) and smiled broadly as they! us climbed aboard the U. N. bus. Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams will be asked Monday to order heretofore secret Pontiac General Hospital medi- Remember: Another Job Is Hard. to Find By HAL BOYLE lof how to please his paycheck) NEW YORK (®—The boss is the P#PPY- boss again.” The downturn in jobs ‘has made) this forgotten figurehead of busi- I n Today ' s Press ness a-person of importance once | more, * * It always ha When there more jobs than people, nobody pa\’s much atten- tion to the boss. He tiptoes around the place talking to himself—for fear that if he says something out loud he'll hurt esomebody's feel- ings, and the guy'll quit and go to work for a competitor. ‘ But when there are more people than - — as right now—the' boss becomes ~ industry’ S| Refreshments, sae i ¥ La she Worker then becomes one|sacrszoet Formers *. that way. ee AP Foesimie of, Demonstrations, gifts beats “See It’s Wise to Apple-Polish the Boss So it is time to novice again a | forgotten American art—the art | »| Of apple polishing. . Your older hired hands, who've) survived bad times before, know how to do this instinctively, just as an old boxer never quite for- gets his footwork or how to pro- tect himself in the clinches, It's the young employes, who've nev- ler known a récession, who are likely through pure ignorance to get gored by a rampant boss now, * * * So here are a few tips on how to butter up a boss: 1, First, find out who the boss is. If there is a fellow in your affice who used to sneak out to | around picking up paper clips the public hospital, in six! ‘all times except if the boss tells Ewart, who represents the hos- la joke, In this case laugh first | Pital, said today that he did not “| play golf at 2 p.m. but now goes ical records handed over to legal counsel for Dr. Neil H, [Sulenberger. The records are those upon which the hospital bases te charges that the ousted+ staff surgeon had violated be decided Monday, he stated, professional medical stand- the extent to which the ae ards in 25 of his cases at fiies are to be opened. In new legal moves yesterday, Dell also served notice he would move to enlarge Dr. Sullenberg- off the floor to cut down ex- of which the patient died. | penses, look no farther. Up to now, the records have ‘ been guarded as evidence to use riginal bill of int for 2. Ki your feet off your desk er’s original bil] of compla’ while he is in view. If he speaks 284inst, Dr. Sullenberger during further injunctive relief, this to you, rise to your feet and ad. ‘#! of his $250.00 damage suit time to halt alleged “influence dress him aa\ “air.” a polite term| |against the hospital next month. | by. some of the defendants” to used in aficient times to one’s su-| Dr. Sullenberger’s prejudice Dr. —a* rep- periors. It is not necessary, how-| Harry N. Dell, said he should | Utation. ever, to salute him—not ‘unless | be allowed to study the records — times get really bad - |4n order to prepare the suit for s «£ « | trial. 3. Maintain a serious mien at, City Attorney William A, attorney, of the “influence” brought to bear after Dr. Sullenberger filed his suit against the hospital last De- .(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) ‘and longest—but don't overdo it./@Mticipate a legal fight to. block (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) nr court order. . : RIGHT TO EXAMINE Thomas Economy Furniture Co. An. “Dr. Sullenberger and hig attor-| Auniversary —— ‘Mversary Open House Tonight. Refresh- ney have.a legal right to examine /freshm ents, dem —_— egmenstrations. ei te, 36 8 records, he said. The question to/** a”. “puraiare cars. "34 to "58's. Tops. FE 8-0688, The notice alleged that beteinad cember, the surgeon. had been de- _ 3 3 = Jerouié” “Bright Spot” needs sharp a eee i 7 ‘ Ld ® need - the Boss's Apple iG. Grovogel, who has been treas-| H F di oke. Speciall t doe rm. Re - the trick, iacnmae 7 urer of Herpolsheimer's in Grand Pittee of cate Canty scone ope q Ing . Rapids for the past several years. | jing to an _announcment by Arthur| Grovogel was previously treas-| 'G. Elliott Jr., county chairman. or Xp orer \urer of the Pontiac store for 10|,, —_ ! flyears prior to going to Grand Ra Van Buren, a Pontiac Motor Di- a pene So ee “r vision employe, will be in charge e2 eng? es . and brought floods to some areas. inches — set at Honolulu’s Fed-|Runyon Rd., Rochester. . toadyism, but it will please your (Continued From Page One) It ‘ian't wise to let the boss know) scared you really are. he is telling you joke is to keep his own spirits | . err = THE PONTI octor's Attorney ito Demand Records (Continued From Page One) nied the right to practice at anoth- er hospital. pOCTOR BARRED It specified that Dr. Sullenberg- er wag barred fom practicing at the Leelanau County Hospital in Northport on Grand Traverse Bay Jan. 1 when he attempted to take 5. When going to the water cool- er, stride up quickly and self-con- fidently—as if you had really) earned the right to a drink—gulp| a fast one, and return to your) desk. Do not linger around the) water cooler to ambush the gig- giing stenographers. Those days are over—for the duration, * * * °6. Around noon go into the, hoss’s office, ask him if you can borrow some salt and pepper, then explain, ‘“‘A little personal thrift doesn’t hurt anyone, chief, I'm bringing my lunch to the of fice now.” 7. Be more helpful in small ways. If you know your boss and his wife are going out for the evening, ask him if you and your wife can’t baby-sit for them— fer fun. This, of course, is dovnright wife to visit the boss's home—and see that his wife is an even lousier housekeeper than she is. * * * 8, Finally, if you are really wor- ried about losing your job, tell your boss, “I want you to be the|: first to congratulate me, chief. My uncle just died and left me $100,000," For some reason every boss hates to fire an employe who has more money than he does. who follows these Announce Transfer. over the practice of a vacationing colleague. ; The Blue Cross Organization, the notice claimed, was “per suaded”’ to tell the Northport hospital it ‘would stop insurance payments if Dr, Sullenberger r were admitted there. The notice further stated that a Chicago insurance company had refused to renew Dr. Sullen- berger’s professional liability pol- i¢y last month, because of influ- ence by some of the defendants./ The defendants include the city, the hospital's trustees, its director, medical staff and two of its com mittees. HOWARD M. VAN DUSEN TAPE RECORDER ABOARD * * The notice did * mot included in Explorer I. ssouns sae | THURSDAY eu Al { x cH 6, 1958 The Day i in Birmingham ~ This is a sketch of a s qaagnede tape recorder installed in Explorer I. It is designed to broadcast information to ground tracking stations, and is a new device not | anyone by name. Dr. Sullenberger, 42, was sus- pended Nov. 13. He brought his suit for reinstatement and dam- ages on grounds that the suspen- sion had been brought about by a “ruling clique’ of doctors, moti- vated by “professional jealousy.” Hospital Director Carl J. Flath charged in turn that Dr, Sullen- Meantime, a group of the doc- tor’s supporters who turned peti- tions bearing 2,100 signatures of |persong calling for his reinstate- ment over to the governor this week, wil] turn its attention to the upcoming Pgntiac City Commission election. CLIFFORD G. GROVOGEL simple rules will weather prac- tically any office economy drive and probably be the first to get a raise when the boom resumes. That is, if the boss doesn’t lose his own job, There's always that;Dusen, president of Waite’'s De- | ijleader of the group, Mrs. Kenneth possibility—and it means a terni- partment Stere, Was announced W. Pawley, of Drayton Plains. above. The device is de- - ble waste of butter, too. today. | . signed to record important He will join the staff of W. E.) data as the satellite orbits and of Waite’s President * “We hope to make the suspen-| sion an election issue on which each commission candidate will be) The transfer of Howard M. Van|! forced to take a stand," said a * ? AP Facsimiles TINY MITE — Size of the magnetic tape recorder in Ex- plorer IJ is shown by the paper clip pictured with a model ‘Area Republicans Name | broadcast the complete record McCormick, vice president of Al-| Smoke Smell Helps Sell lied Stores Corp., of which Waite’s' Information Director is a unit. | HARTFORD, Conn. — One fire- insurance company sells policies to ground stations as it passes within hearing distance of tracking points, ] Edward Van Buren, 27, of 43 * « *, ‘Bloomfield Terrace, has been dé. al ‘Enters Second Day | Angeles, jthe nation began to rush requests Succeeding Van Dusen is Clifford | with literature that smells like inamed director of research and in-' (Continued From Page One) pull and sped unimpeded into | outer space. Satellite experts said this was highly unlikely, of a new information service re- lating to national, state and county levels. 4) |" 7 eather |Eire to Sign-Post _ or thermals are not rising very ‘The Weather _ however, and scotched reports | that the Army actually was at- tempting to hit the moon with the object. Explorer I has an average speed | of 18,500 miles an hour—only 500, m.p.h, faster than needed to get | into orbit. Battle of Boyne DUBLIN — Eire. is aiming to call visitors’ attenflonto its em- battled past by having its Tourist Board sign-post the area where the Battle of the Boyne River was fought on July 1, 1690. Board mem- ibers are making the necessary his- torical research. * * * The battle was in the Drog- heda area on the banks of the Boyne, where the army a William routed that of King James. high before they furn into visible The Tourist Board is also going! moisture droplets. to place signs on places associated énane of rain gre better (from|with Oliver Goldsmith, including undershowers) than if the clouds|“The Deserted Village” — Lissoy, oom at a great height, which will|in County Kilkenny. be an indication that there is not)- Although the village is called as much moisture in the air—since | Auburn in Goldsmith's verse, his: condensation is not taking place |father was pastor in Lissoy, it is. as quickly. 'recalled By E. H. SIMs In summer, what can you learn by noting the height of the eqrly ‘morning clouds? The height of summer canes clouds gives you an important weather clue. In the coming sum- mer months you. might want to take advantage of this weather omen in making the day's plans. If the morning's early clougis are low, that means there is a con-| siderable amount of moisture in the air, because the day's updrafts * * | Explorer II was 10 per cent jheavier and if it reduced the max- imum speed of the rocket by this! margin, it would not attain the speed necessary to get into orbit. CLOUD OF FLAME The 72-foot satellite rocket. twin of the one which successfully | launched America’s first ‘‘moon,”’| left its launching pad in a cloud of flame and smoke and soared into an overcast sky out over the | Atlantic. * to * was planned It announce ANE ELIZABE ERATH . ae od whether it was in orbit about an Records 10.68 Inches in 16 Hours Rains Swamp Hawaii HONOLULU (® — Record break- at Honolulu Airport in 16 hours— ing rains deluged Hawaii's prin-/ breaking a four-year record. cipal island of Oahu last night) yen the 4l-year record of 13 hour and a half later. But the| ‘hours rolled by with no word and. it became evident something hed) gone wrong. Gen. Donald N. Yates, mander of the missile center, summed up the feeling of every- one when informed no trace of the satellite could be found. “I'll be damned,” he was over-, beard to say, Committee Appoints New Area 4-H Agent Oakland County new 4-H agent 52.is Jane Elizabeth Hoerath, 3180; With no relief in sight before ral Building in March 1917—was! Mrs. Hoerath, 23, replaces Sue “this afternoon, the Weather Bu- | threatened. Sturgis Meyer who resigned last reau recorded 10.68 inches of rain’ The ‘storm f1-00ded homes, month. + 7. * forced pggiponement of at least 19, Military Air Transport Service. \frs. Hoerath was * raduated: E. |. Williams Heads flights nd put a big radio sta- from the University of Kansas, tion off the air for 18 hours. (where she received her bachelor’s (| b Two F8U Crusader jets crashed degree in home economics. Bfor' Pontiac Rotary UJ after taking off from the carrier coming to Oakland County, she! * * Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report wT EAS AND VICENTE = Coady Hancock, operating in Hawaiian taught junior and senior high| Pontiac Rotarians today elected | drizzle today, high 36-40. Cloudy to! Waters One pilot was killed: one gchoo} clothing classes in Junction Eq L, Williams president for the partly clevd@y tonight and tomerrew, al rescued Names were withheld City, Kansas and then served AS next fiscal year = hich ‘begins in| little eelder. Lew tenight °%4-20 High tomerrew near 35. Light variable winds Seven Other Hancock pilots landed 4 home demonstration agent in July. fh t t at 6-10 il j ao aes meakeat Pr R-18 naira ae at Navy or Marine air stations on Red lford, Va. * * * i hour this afternoon Oahu ; ig * + * wo * Other officers. and directors are: | Today in Pontiac The staff changes were approved John E, Madole, vice president; | Commercial flights operated or areas,. com. |E “that is fantastic!” (|— ] Dressmaker Strike — (Continued From Page One) | lated fields ag belt-making, em.) broidery and garment trucking. CONFINED TO EAST The dispute over wages and con- tract enforeement affects about 72 per cent of the mation’s dress pro- duction — in New York® state, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Mas- sachusetts, Vermont, Rhode Is- land, Connecticut, Delaware and) Maryland. * * * An estimated 45,000 dressmak- ers in such cities as St. Louis, Los, Chicago and San Fran- cisco were not affected. Louls Meadows, director of the California Sportswear, Dress and — Accessories Association, said the industry had felt an immediate but slight impact from the East- ern walkout. | However, retailers throughout for confirmation of orders placed: with Los Angeles area dress man-| ufacturers. The union struck for a 15 per | jcent wage raise and a 35-hour | work week for piecework dress- makers — wno make up 80 per. cent of the strikers. The employers offered 5 per cent, and overtime after 37% hours. Present wages average $2.10 an. ‘hour here, but are an 50 to 75 cents hour lower in some other! * v | | ‘Praises Rock ‘n’ Roll SPRING VALLEY, Ill. (INS) — Mayor William Savitch praises rock ‘n’ roll music as a deterrent to juvenile delinquency. He rea- | _80ns: out “The kids tire themselves | s0 completely they must | surely have to go home after- | ward.” CAST IRON COOK UTENSILS ‘Guaranteed for Life’ Food Won't Stick, Won't Burn WAGNER CAST IRON Skillets #1053 6'2 Inch #1055 8-In. #1056 9-In. .... #1056 10'2-In. . #1060 113%4-In. Nationally advertised spenrancias for’ ife" skillets by Wagner. Foods won't stick or burn—use on all ranges. SELF-BASTING COVERS 8-Inch Glass Cover... “eee wae Lowest temperature prececing 8 a 32 hed .q recently by the extension commit-|Gerald E. White, secretary: Fran-' : Wind vetocits ah schedule to fhe mainiand United Direction: Folge ee . ' ° : “ of the Oakland County Board|cis F. Miller, treasurer; and. Frank 8 ts Thursday et @€ 28 pr fates Sun rises rFeetae saan The giamorous Waikiki resort ‘ A oe Nacie the sand Mai and George G. Boyd. 10% -Inch Diameter Moon sets Thursday at 7 @1 pit areg Wes a sopping. dismal place. P&drd of Agric ? rectors. Moon rises Fr at 7-48 pt : pping, Pp _ en eae Se nesomeeiosea a sone In the Reef Hotel's basement, Handled Griddle 6a yeecrene 7 Temperataree », Zarage 19 cars were flooded to - wi : 7 om. 3 2 — 38 the headlights r 4 ‘ 474 +1) . if ft ] i ¢ ye pecial s.m.. 13 rs : Neeru . | \ Seam. 4 The Red Cross opened three viol itr al iJ l \ if a | tl aes f Price 10 a.m. 33 storm shelters ~ gpe in Honolulu ; Griddle frying wattage fs polished. Wednesday in Pontiac and two in suburban areas in Raised bottom for perfect circula- (as recorded downtown) , southern Oahu By ROBERT L. DIEFFENBACHER, D.D. tion, Eee secaprstare s 4 8 ; Mean temperature e Houses in the moder Aina: During this Lenten. period many people will express Y — Snow 17 NIS€< 1 hee i a asia a ep bupol had) as hag 1g. thelr faith in Christ. They will renew their fellowship with One Year Ago in Pontiac iina suburb had much as Ag . i ay God. Highest temperature 8 inches of mater on their main; : Lowest rereture’ ee 28.4 floors. Water ‘was waist-high in} The multitudes turn to Jesus during these last few Weather — Fair some Honolulu streets. weeks of His ministry. Yet they deserted Him before the : a - Highest and Lowest od maperateres | end. > ae 67 in Se ee ne OS cers | in iset| haln. Snow and cloudy skies: x * * indoos NSSn — dominate he ti w : . —— Wednesday Tempersiare Chart ominated the nation’s weather’ fvery Christian must set his course during hese weeks Outdoor Alpena 40 30 Memphis 64 31 tOday. Only a few areas appeared | that h in steadfast to the end. =e! = Baltimore. 48 30° Miami 74 out of the path of the extensive) 5° that he will be able to remain s as e Utili G ll a o6 "Minneapolis ae 3% precipitation belt. | We have an advantage over His early followers, We ris Dpastale 2 2 he ooees uf P| 44 Light snow fell in most of the know that He still lives. We know that the Cross was 17x10 Cinetenati 50 43 Omahs 30 23,Great Lakes region during the not to end His existence. . jee 4. 95 GClveland §— 46°35 Pelistor «3-H night. To the south, rain hit areas’ We can follow Him more easily-than did the crowds who , aches foe OS eee 8 CD 3 to ee Texan? entered Jerusalem with Him. There are still questions to |B Grains ort vercase miveed taut Fon Worth $3 408. Prancisco 88°47 through Texas and New Mexico: 16 anewered. |B ‘aited handies. Bim , 30 32.8. Ste Marie 37 s Strong winds lashed parts of east, K $26 Traverse C. 38 30 Texas and Louisiana A small tor-| Do we have the determination to give up éverything for | anges City s 3 eatin ® $s 33 nado struck the Lufkin, Tex. | Him? Do we love Him and our fellow men enough? Have | 3 a8 ‘area. No injuries were reported, We given ourselves =a into His care? IE 98 N. Saginaw —2nd Floor jsubtracted, registration ' convenience, both to the regu- 95° .. 1.508 Boles 1.95) 2.85) . -85¢ Believes Voting Precincts May Need Rearranging BIRMINGHAM — Some re-er-| ranging may-have to be done in Birmingham's voting precincts, City Clerk Irene Hanley said to- day. ‘Three are in danger of ex- ceeding the legal limit of 1,400 per- sons," she said, A study of the precincts in- volved, particularly those in the Chesterfield Fire Station and Holy Name School areas, is be- ing made, Miss Hanley said. However, when cancellations are) in both) ‘may fall within the tesel limit, ‘she added. i Th most pressing problem at! the moment is to find adequate’ housing for voters in the precincts ‘in the southwestern section of the city, Migs Hanley said. The Birmingham YMCA Build- ing ang Pierce School currently are used in these districts. Be- eause of the activities at these places, there is considerable in- lar occupants and to the voters, | the said, lq She also reminded residents of Birmingham that Monday is the deadline for registration. It also is the final date when residents may {notify the clerk of any changes in their addresses, The office. will be open onday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. The monthly fire report for February showed a loss of $11,150. According to Fire Chief Park H. smith, for the second time this year a monthly total ex- ceeded damages for the entire previqus year, Birmingham also recorded its, ) Men of 8500 A. D. May Be Spindly, — Toeless, Bald LOS ANGELES “P— Man 65 centuries from now may have a) hairless head, spindly legs and no toes. A University of Southern Cali- fornia biology professor, Jay M. ‘Savage, said these are ‘‘evolution- ary possibilities’ for around 8500, ‘AD. | * * * | “Not only are toes getting shor t-| jer," he said, ‘but the little toe has practically no function any Primitive man needed toes for! balance, clutching and grasping, he said, but frostbite victims have! demonstrated that modern man' can balance himself with only a prinee oe. Be: Meh. - ere ew big toe. — = q With expanding mechanization, legs will get less use and vould DIMM D iscsi: become spindly, he added. 98 N. Saginaw —d2nd Floor first fire fatality in seyeral years leard party and social hour in the | YMCA March 15. Family, commu- # when Mrs. Loretta Sidney, 39, died in a fire which gutted her Eton road home, The first. 40 persons who make reservations will be guests of the Birmingham Y's Men's Club at nity and civic members of ‘the “Y" are invited to the 8 p.m. party. Mrs, Albert Clouthier Service for Mrs. Albert J. (Eu- lalia) Clouthier, 80, mother of Hugo Clouthier, a Birmingham) electrical contractor, will be held; at 9 a.m. Friday at the St. Col-' Snban Catholie Church, Birming- 1am The rosary will be recited at | 8:45 p.m, tomorrow at the Man- ley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Clouthier, a resident of 23935 Deanhurst, St. Clair Shores, died yesterday at St. Joseph Mer- \cy Hospital, Mt. Clemens. Surviving besides her son are a daughter, Lucille at home; and ‘two brothers, Cyril Donnelly ot Toledo and Gerald of California. | Look ot the Many Uses Holds Fish Tackle, But- tons, Nuts, Bolts, Jewelry, 2S Supplies, Others Cryaal Clear, Rigid Plastic Boxes with Hinged Covers oy 7x3'2x1 3/16 Inches 5 or °3 Compartment Size 8',x4'4xl'4 Inches 6 or 12 Compartment Size. .... 44ax2% Inches 4 or 6 ey 10*,x644..1% Inches, 12 $4 19 Compartment size Molded of poiys these plastic bo Ideal for home, shop, garage, base- srene—hard plastic, s are crystal clear Cut Meets wire FRIDAY and bela SUPER SPECIALS! FOOT door wiring. dealers. UL Mpgectedales Quality 14-2 ROMEX WIRE PER 3 all REA specifications. Continuous ‘not welded). Color coded for all Limit 600 feet. 29c Value TS Romex clamp. 4x 24 inches. 1 — 2-inch deep with | ie 20c Value ‘4-inch box. Less clamps, 1 { | For Dining. Bed & Living Room MODERN SQUARE LIGHT FIXTURE $2.95 Value ] 66 e Large square shade istyled as shown) Pat- terned glass (bulb extra) E Square Fixture with Pull Chain eee bane | Indoor “Rabbit Ears” TV AERIAL | ANTENNAS } 17 Indoor TV antenna | with lead-in wire. Gives good recep- | tion. Limit 1. Large Roll Friction Tape wo 29° Replace ela worn-out 3 ¢ Roll. ¥ or or e wire. - se . there Large roll of black reatant nwulaion 3 enetien: feo. Ket value. & Keyless Receplacle Toggle Switch Plate 7, 39¢ Value 136 F Fits.3% to 4-in. plate at this oe boxes. Porcelain. Plate } i ae | Gal- vanised finish. | tn- | None sold to | 19° 14 maha pole tozale switch in bak- Plish receptacle | te cup. be with nerrow ears. Switch Box ‘Octagon Box as wee = 39c Value be 30¢ Value | | | | “Another Bus Victim Pulled From River PRESTONSBURG, Ky, (INS) ~The body of a 12-year-old girl who died with 2% other children and the driver of a school bus when it plunged into the Big Sandy River near Prestonsbur; has been recovered. & & ® Sorte found the body of doyce McPeak » bring- ing to 20—19 children and the driver—the number ef victims taken from the bus and flood- swollen river. ~*~ * * They continued to hunt for the seven other children who per- ished in the tragedy last Friday. Officials were inspecting the twisted wreckage of the bus to determine whether faulty mecha- nism caused it to crash inte a tow truck and sideswipe a parked automoblie before it tumbled down a 40-foot embankment into the river. The driver, John Derossett, 7 27, was to be buried today. Separate funeral services were conducted for 13 of the dead chil- dren in Baptist churches at Prestonsburg and Cow Creek yesterday. No Need to Poy Full Price PRICES SLASHED on All Famous Brand ELECTRIC RAZORS see You Always SAVE et SIMMS FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Newest Model SCHICK Power Shaver thn a base 50 TRADE. IN 14° | WITHOUT TRADE-IN 16.95 NORELCO Sportsman - Electric Shaver Reg. $24.95 WITH TRADE-IN 7 WITHOUT TRADE-IN 14.95 Famous REMINGTON Rollectric Shaver Rev. aah 50 TRADECIN 1 16" | WITHOUT TRADE-IN 18.95 > Remingten Auto-Home 95 Reg. $31.95. Trade .. 18 20” (Without Trade) RONSON Model “66” Electric Shaver Reg. $28.50 eee ee eee ee alee WITH TRADE-IN WITHOUT I re = TRADE-IN “— 10.95 ‘Lady’ SUNBEAM Electric Shaver Reg. $14.95 WITH TRADE-IN 6" WITHOUT TRADE-IN 8.95 LADY RONSON zs a TRADE-IN TRADEN 8.95 LADY SCHICK Reg. $17.50 WITH TRADE-IN *% Standard brands men’s eleetrte _ Tazers ently accepted as trade-ins, Electric Shavers -—Main Floor = i. be rae . 5 Bab Considine Says: Celebrities, Prisoners Taking Same Course BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (INS)} Derne was born tur cold-water- —Split a coffee today with one ofl flat poverty in-New York, never the most intelligent and gifted men’ got beyond the seventh grade, I ae, the artist Al Dorne. i had an unhappy career as a pug, Junior Editors Quiz on- r NATURE QUESTION: Does’ a hippopotamus'| really sweat blood? x « * ANSWER: Next to the elephant, a hippopotamus is the heavi- est of land animals, often weighing more than four tons. Liv- ing.in the swamps and streams of central Africa, it swims a lot! and therefore does not have to work hard to support its great’ weight. It is adapted to marsh life also by having eyes and nogtrils set high- so that it needs lift only a small part of its head out of the water to see and breathe. Its name means “water horse.” Sometimes you hear that a person “sweats blood” when frightened. A hippo actually does sweat a red, olly substance, but it isn’t blood. It’s just reddish prespiration. FOR YOU TO DO: Color this.picture for your animal col, lection and mount it in a scrapbook or a cardboard. If you. earl, visit a zoo and see what this big mouthed animal looks lik4, alive. | xk & * | (Today’s $10 prize goes to Terry Blank of Lake Villa, Ill. Mail your idea on a postcard to Violet Moore Higgins, AP Newsfeatures, in care of this paper. Tomorrow: Are clouds really light?) THRIFTY BUYS That Cave More! French Poodle and 6 MUGS BIG BUY FOR p BAaY/IT'S AMAZING! : Wm. A. ROGERS made by Oneida Ltd SILVERPLATED BABY cUP 3 PC. SILVERPLATED . BABY er Mirror-polished heavy Silver plate on solid Endeorable puttern Base BABY SPOON + BABY FORK Perfect Gift of Long Handled Long- Spoon Lasting GIFT BOXED! JEWELERS ASN. Seginaw , Directly Across from” Nelener’ ner's | R | began his career painting circt- lar black eyebrows just like his own around the eyes of toy dolls, and for a long time has been a $100,000-a- year illustrater, ' Moreover, he started his own Lay, a tow years back and re- mains its president. It is the Famous Artists School of Westport, Conn. It was formed on a simple premise, and that is that almost everybody would like to be able to draw a straight line or paint something, anything. The school has no classrooms or studios. Its instruction is done by mail. ¢ The faculty includes Norman Rockwell, Jon Whitcomb, Stevan Dohanos, Harold Von Schmidt, Al Parker, Bob Fawcett, Fred Lude- with ' could afford the course. Dorne | I can’t make it—I’m all tied up.” Kens, Peter Helck, Austin Briggs,among the ahaa students, alj|S0% Drawings ranging wor thin- John Atherton, Ben Stahl and otherjchecked -.with the wardens and) top commercial artists. rehabilitation. officers, Who takes the courses? Well, undergrads include Charlie Wil- son, former secretary of defense; lnusiness or pleasure takes them C. B. Smith, president of Amert- |oout the country. She can Airlines; Dinah Shore, Red Skelton, Van Johnson, nuns, | Fawcett gave a lecture to stu- bricklayers, big league ballplay- ers, bartenders, Wall Street brokers and inmates of prisons. Seven years ago a man wrote | Fa Dorne from. the clink at Attica, | self behind bars in ball and N.Y., expressing a wish that he the caption, “Sorry sent him a scholarship and art | yyoct popular themes among materials. prisoner-artists: Religious pictures, Now there are 55 priSonersifollowed by light, bright outdoor THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 aconse-—often featuring a blazing sun. The famed faculty members plastic over the original and re-/ meet face to face with their mail|turned, Sometimes a letter informs order Michaelangelos wheneverja student that he has a job. Dorne's next project: An off-beat icorrespondence school in writing. “I never met a guy who didn’t dents when in Detroit not long |think he could write,” he told us, “including ‘you.” ; [Produce Cotton Cloth BOMBAY — Production of mill- made cotton cloth in India in the, first half of 1957 totaled 2,709,000) yards. The comparable 1956 figure was 2,583,000 yards. | THANK YOU, CITIZENS of District 7 for Your Spendid Support! ~ LANDRY ROBERT A. es a Shop with Ease -, Just § Charge Ie * boys’ wool and rayon sport coats Reg. 14.98 9" ¢ Buy now at this low sale price Horry! Choose from an assortaient of splashes, checks and novajty patterns for spring. %, rayon in blues, browns and grays. wrinkle-resistant slacks Regular 4.98" =f 3 with pleated front, zip-fly, self belt. Washable. In gray, black, blue or: brown: Reg. 3.98—Boys’ Sizes 4 to le. . Boys’ Dept. — Sears Main Floor ot . _ Trim rayon, acetate and nylon sheen eae ; es”. aM lal pant suits made to sell at 64.90 SAVE Co: 16.90 548 — Why not be in fashion in one of these luxurious blends of silk and fine worsted. The subdued iridescence adds a refined elegance to your wardrobe. New, lustrous shades for spring in herringbone, subtle stripes, and others. In black. SAVE 99c SAVE 54°" : boys’ ripple soles Low, low price on genuine Ripple® sole oxford. Shoe ab- sorbs 45% of walking SEO Shoe Dept. — Main Floor Children 's Biltwels Save now-on these-good looking, sturdy oxfords with rugged Searofoain soles. comfortable; long wearing and good looking. Sizes 81/, to 3. Come win TODR y! store-wide sale starts today...big bargains SEARS Y yun 10] 4:1 014. @ Vs | SRG OP MA Mane. ©) store-wide Ky savings mean big price cut specials in @ all departments > = ; another special... men’s Shu-lok» Oxford 88 pair Favorite for young men of action. So convenient — so snappy looking. A quick flip, snap, .and you're on your way. Lustrous black leather. Come in Regular 8.98 Wonderfully 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 today} ° = ee SF ee ee es a eee ¥ Pa, eee F ee a Le tae ee See ae ee ae ae a ified ana % hat f ae > . “Se ee: pa PS oe Aue * ¥ = aS , y AN im _THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 6.1958 26 fo ee Man ee © , (ieenecanlelpenipatlonaal 7 7 oS Se | 2 DAYS ONLY! | }ofRed Peril | o . | Philippine Official Says World Communism as Aggressive as Ever * MANILA (# — Philippine For-, eign Minister Felixberto Serrano. today warned military advisers of, ‘the Southeast Asia Treaty Organ-' ization that ‘‘international commu- | nism against which SEATO was primarily conceived remains as ™ active and aggressive as ever.” | + * * ° The foreign secretary urged ‘continued vigilance as the only ‘insurance against Communist en- croachmet, “Weakness — invites es aggression, and peace without : »-* stfength is peace without ease of , “<= ™ mind,’ he said. BY THE DOZEN — The cute — The military leaders of the eight kitty that cuter Kim Novak is 'seaTo nations — the Philippines. cuddling is ‘‘Pyewacket,”” who pakistan, Thailand, Britain has a prominent part in her new France, Australia, New Zealand film ‘Bell, Book and Candle.” |and the United States — opened But “Pyewacket” plays only one- (a three-day meeting to review the twelfth of the role. The script ' status of the free world defenses calls for ‘‘Pyewacket” to do a jn the area. The SEATO foreign lot of tricks. So,‘on the princi- ministers begin their fourth an- ple that you can't teach one cat [nual conference here Tuesday to do 12 tricks but you can teach | x *« * 12 cats to do one trick each. | the rest of the military meet Pyewacket” will have 11 ings will be private. In addition “doubles” in the film. to reviewing joint defense plans, the advisers are expected to plan * joint military exercises for the Birth Control Tablet member nations Sources said there are no plans to discuss the ; formation of any common military on Trial 2 Years — “force sueh as NATO maintains in : Europe. NEW YORK (INS)—The Ameri- —_— ean College of Surgeons was told. ,- today of a new “simple and effec- Airman, Lie Loses Job tive” birtfi control tablet that has‘ hut He’s Not Retiring been on trial at a New York hos- . pital for two years. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. #—Even * * * though they took his job away, Dr. Hilliard Dubrow of Mount the oldest man now on active duty Sinai Hospital said 649 women have in the Air Force still won't retire. used the new preparation success- ry * * fully in tests. Randoph Air Force Base mu- The obstetrician also reported seum will be closed soon, Air that supplies of the tablets, tak- Force officials said, but its 72- en as a suppository, have been year-old custodian, M. Sgt. Horst given to 60 hospitals and |Tittell, will be retained on active planned parenthood clinies across ‘now assigned to the museum will the nation for use during 1958, be reassigned. Tittell is a veteran of 50 years “If the 60 centers find the tablet of Ain — emi. of —_ bo effective = have in the The museum is to be consoli- initial study,” he said, “‘it will dated with Lackland Air Force, probably be marketed early A Ross museum 1959." —_ : Ur. Dubrow discussed the pill at’ the annual sectional meeting of the Youth Swims River, ACS in New York. He said One Way; d : tal dozen of the tablets will cost prob-, Y¥INGS Up in Hospita ably $2. ’ Spico TV Antennas Regular $9.95 Blond Wood Swivel TV Bases Regular $39.95 Service for 8 3 “Golden Willow” DINNERWARE 22k Gold Trim Regular $24.95 *388 Oven - proef, durable dinnerware. 1} set per customer. iC. Furlong, 22, Chicago, a Brown |University senior, swam 100 yards ‘Teachers Elect Negro ‘across the Seekonk River last night—and wound wp in a hospital. TOPEKA, Kan. ® — The To- Furlong was found on his hands peka Teachers Assn. yesterday and knees calling for help efter elected J. B. Holland, 49-year. the swim. old Negro, to become its president Patrolman Walter Cook carried in April 1959. He will be the first him on his back 500 yards, so he of his race to hold the office. Hol-could be treated at a hospital for land teaches the sixth grade. He immersion and another Negro were selected' Police said Furlong apparently recently to teach in schools where swa the river in a dare involv- most of the pupils are white. ing a girl friend. Pica eed " Reg. hs Peed een Wr; © eg. 12 "inger re, BB eed . Whi New Dryer. Reg. 9 Washer ed Qe BE 8. cen Aut . tn Ne : 5. 2 $ °8. 199 95 | Matic $ cam 2 omatic Hite Washer ~ A . gar . e Only | Dryer. Re - POC So New Hopp.: Washer pet De BRAND NAME PAINT SALE PAY LIST PRICE FOR 1 GALLON... SECOND GALLON ONLY Ic... YOUR CHOICE OF @ HOUSE G TRIM @ EX- TERIOR PRIMER @ FLAT @ ENAMEL @ GLOSS ENAMEL @ SEMI-GLOSS @ PRIMER. SEALER UNDERCOAT @ VINYL, WALL BOND (LATEX) in This Week Only! | CEILING CORKTONE TILE ASPHALT $960 TILE 9: Sq Ft. 3 Shades For Case of 80 AROUND TOWN Splatter Asphalt keg . by Gert aie | Ga‘ Each : WALL TILE | W ; IN COLORS “The BAG TILE. OUTLET just got I € Each SRV AN \ Sens Modern $s Sula, $ : 0 ; New eg. 199.95 3 $ "Be. Reg > Chair, pe, 2°¢ Matep, 29.95. 16 Reg. $139 Sti Loung, oer * Only 7 e rere Hide . SO 8 on - -A * as 5 = "* im seme new celers in plastic wall the, so handcuffs are the only way I, can keep the boys here during working Neurs'” WIV, WY Wild Ml solid TO PAY! NO MONEY DOW N FACTORY CLOSEOUT OF | ore INTERNATIONAL SILVER! | ‘4% Values to $2.00 Now Only fF ate: , 8 , Over 5000 Pieces! | ¢c MONDAY 3 Knives, ‘Forks, < | NIGHTS Tile ~~ "Outlet FREE PARKING | reaspcom, ice Toe fe AP iach | TL = ’ a . rhe S , Soup S$ A a : : 1055 W. HURON PONTIAC, MICHIGAN \ in Lot Behind Store] “"°"" “YP °P°°™* | xo tsterr a OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY ‘TIL 6 FREE. - FREE PARKING PARKING _ _ i : " " ’ Ag oe \ : u - Ninth Grade Test Could Tell Do Russian Children Know More? _ By DOUGLAS LARSEN HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — This is a strange dateline for a report on a project which could reveal the harsh facts on just how much more Russian kids might know about science and math American kids, But this watering than hole for shapely dames also happens to be the home of an outfit called eS you do? 1, Pressure is: ; Try Answering These | These seven sample multiple choice questions are com- » parable to the ones in the state-wide test being given to Indiana ninth graders by the California Test Bureau. How well can the California Test Bureau, one of the largest private educational testing organizations in the U. S. Last year more than 18 million U, S. youngsters in 48 states took some type of CTB exam. COMPILES RESULTS lyzing the results of a unique state-wide test it has just given to 60,000 ninth grade pupils in Indiana to determine how much CTB is now compiling and ana-| - || TESTS SUPPLIED these youngsters really know about science and: math. In setting up the test’ for the Hoosier kids CTB also made a spot check of ninth-graders all ever the U. 8, to establish a na- tional average. At the same time it has request- ed an exchange of comparable data with the Russian govern- ment so that a fairly exact com- parison can be made _ between Russian and U. S. ninth-graders’ knowledge of math and science. B—negative jons only A—force C—both positive and nega- B—force due to weight tive ions C—force per unit volume SOG s D—force times an area 5. Y varies as Y’. If X is © E—force per unit area doubled, Y is memrence hy: t ‘ * * * A—4 , __ aa 2, A fossil consists of: B—1 | A—any plant or animal C=? remains whether pre- D—4 served in its original E— * * * state or petrified B—any evidence of life; prehistoric in age C—any evidence of life, either animal or plant, preserved on the earth D—any structure such as bones, shells, ripple marks, or footprints, which is prehistoric in age ° « * 3. An automobile is turning in a circle at constant speed of 20 miles per hour. During the turning, the following quantities remain constant: A—acceleration B—velocity . C—kinetic energy 7. The carbohydrate which ts D—momentum normally present in blood E—weight is: el A—glucose 4. A solution of an acid in wa- B—glycerole ter contains: C—maltose - A+positive ions only B—glycogen 6. A closed loop of wire is near a strong magnet. A current is induced when (more than one answer may be correct): A—the loop is rotated B—the loop is held at rest C—the loop is held at rest and the magnet re- moved | D—the loop is moved away | | from the magnet | E—the loop and magnet are held at rest while 'Russian government similar tests e international comparison. Reports ‘|ington indicate that the Russians will be willing to cooperate on t -|merly with the University of Chi- -| service for CTB, says: | able grade levels and different -,| units of weights and measures as | tion of our tests to Russian chil- | ministrative 'the only suggestion of Hollywood- |type glamour around the office,) CTB has offered to supply the to those given in Indiana for this from the Soviet Embassy in Wash- this subject. Dr. William M. Shanner, for- cago and direetor of professional “Obviously there are difficul- ties with languages and compar- far as giving an exact transla- dren, But they could be adapted which we might get without the (@ specifie permission of Wilbur Young, of Public Instruction in Indiana. vide useful information if the Russians do cooperate." The idea of giving the test to Indiana kids came from a Notre Dame School of Law, Dean Clarence E. Manion. is to determine how we're doing the State Superintendent c. But our own data on the national) aveyage will be sufficient to pro-| /7/ in math and science at the ninth- | sclence-math study conmmission | // headed by former University of | ¥ “The basic purpose of the tests grade level and decide whether) /7} it Says, The Indiana tests are designed below the ninth. And they abilities in these fields they college. and if we get the cooperation we hope to get from Russian educa- tion officials, we will come up with information very valuable to American educators.” Comely June Duran, CTB ad-| vice president and also makes this qualification: * «x “We will not use any results from the Indiana test for any com- ee ele Russian information is necessary to improve the | education in. these fields,’"’ Manion jj “Our purpose is not to set! up a crash program in response {/// CTB is scoring the tests elec. | J tronically and will deliver the (% o alleged Soviet scientific, } achievements,”’ he insists, * * * to disclose any weakness in In- [i diana school curricula in grades! Nid will @ reveal students with outst< anding) } so that. i may be encouraged to spe-; cialize in them in high school and | ¢ 60,000 results to the state some ‘] | Nite Bilt time in March, The results will then permit Indiana education of- ficials to compare local school | districts as to their efficiency in | i teaching these subjects. | ‘ It will also make it a rating of a teachers’ ability to. get across these subjects to the) pupils, another loop of wire carrying a current is brought near * * "V—L Sa ‘dd ‘0 ‘V—9 ‘d—9 ‘0-6 'a—8 (0-3 ‘a1 SSUGUMSNY e= Man Ngmed Smith Plotting Foreign ‘Policy By INTERNATIONAL NEWS A man named Smith, not unusual anywhere, has one of, the most unusual jobs in Washing- ton — idea man in ‘plotting this| country’s course in world politics at the embassies and at the sum- mit. As chief of the State Depart- ment's Policy Planning Staff, As- sistant Secretary of State Gerard C. Smith is responsible for the “egg-head” task of keeping a steady flow of new strategic ideas going to his boss, John Foster Dulles. * * * Smith and his staff, the “ivory "@med assistant secretary for pol- tower boys’ of the State Depart-'icy Planning, a post that carries ment, must take each day’s de-| \with it an influential seat on the ; them ff the National Security Council Planning’ light of current policy and devise | ‘Board — the over-all government | tomongpw’ s actions from them. \coumerpart of his State co velopments, inte One associate remarked that every basic policy document af- fecting foreign affairs has passed at least once through the hands of the youthful—he was born May 14, 1914—Yale-trained faw- yer and has felt his influence, This co-worker described Smith| as a “fine legal mind” ~ “comes up with ideas all over the place.” * * * a name working knowledge of two chief 1 \Island home or to = |observed that Smith has a good lissues before the world today— ‘atomic energy and disarmament. | x ke * From 1950 to 1954, Smith was special assistant to Atomic En- | ergy Commissioner Thomas E. Murray, a post that-led to his 1954 appointment as a special ad- viser to the secretary of state on atomic energy matters. In June of 1957, Smith also took on the job of coordinating — Depart- | ment policy. | 'Fwo months later, Smith was | to serve your needs. 72 N. Saginaw “DOCTOR As American as pumpkin pie is the phrase, “Doctor knows best.” We all remember this truism from childhood. Yet, in this enlightened day, some people, relatively few in number, attempt to diagnose and treat their own illnesses — a dangerous practice to say the least. Only your physician is qualified to diagnose and prescribe. When medication is required, our prescription department is equipped “Where Quality CLOONAN’S KNOWS BEST...” Counts” FE 2-0161 ment disarmament policy * * | When he gets away from Wash- lington, Smith can to his Long estate on. Maryland's historic Eastern Shore, | jwhere his wife, Bernice, and their | five children live amid a houseful of treasured antiques, who! Obviously, Smith does not try to’ live on his government salary—his father had the foresight many. years ago to be one of the original Another State Department expert investors in General | Motors. CASCO STEAM- DRY IRON Reg. $19.95 COPPER . DEEP FRY Regular $5.52 Gal. Our Reg. $16.95 PAIN T ° Stock Colors SALE of — WALLPAPER LIVING BED KITCHENS ROOM ROOMS Values Values to $1.00 Apes to 60c Single 4g: 0 $0c Rell 3 9 ¢ 29° Single Roll Single Roll Sh pte mow FE co. ° FE 2-7001 | Ey | fen | possible | to compare teaching methods of | "al rural and city schools and give @f 74 NORTH SAGINAW Se g Stamps - 1 Tradin We Give Hold WHAT'S LEFT! AFTER — INVENTORY SALE ALL SALES FINAL No Refunds No Phone Orders No Exchanges of our store. up for now and next year... Buy Quality low cost BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN FRIDAY AT 9:30 A.M. After our Inventory we found many items that must be cleared out Deep cuts were taken to get quick action. Stock goods at cost arid be- SALE!! While Quantity Lasts.., First come, first served. FRI. and SAT. Reg. 1.49 Priced to Clear : 69c Bath 59c Fine FCeawe coma What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. ] CANNON eeneare ILLOW A TOWELS PERCAL 88¢ 77 39c FINE YARD GOODS e 39¢ 29 Just 356 yards gO at this low price Reg. 1.39 4.99 Full Width Come early, it won't last long. $1 Large Out They Go WHITE PRINT BRAID MUSLIN BLANKETS DRAPES RUGS Pillowcases 96s 2.59 What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. 59¢ 29¢ 4.99 Full Size ‘49c Hand 1.99 FIRST QUALITY SHEETS ‘| $5 Full, Twin Reg. 6.99 Ready Made CANNON lust 89 at the re full bed sizes $s - CHENILLE NYLON DRAPES TOWELS Limit 2 to a customer. SPREADS BLANKET 1.99 25¢ 2.88 3.88 What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. 3.99 BETTER BEDSPREADS While 76 fast... Double bed sizes at 1.99. and Sat. single bed sizes. 1 | Only “Rubberized back, Come early and save. What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. 3.99 CARPET REMNANTS 66 at this reduced price. Deep pile th $25 1.88 Cepromeeec emery $1 Only 6 Group of $199 Regular $5 10.99 Ladies’ ee ror eon What's Left After Inventory Sale . . , Fri. and Sat. LADIES’ BETTER DRESSES DRESSES $7 $69 3.99 LADIES’ DRESSES ; 1.99 2.99 : Yes, while they | last, Sanforized mons, AD QD : be Just 4. 29.99 Group of $399 misses: and: ball sizes, ‘Group Better 29.99 Ladies’ LADIES’ Dyed North. Maternity _ BETTER SUITS Back Musk. DRESSES FORMALS $19 $159 What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. 1.88 $5 88. Reg. 50 3.99 Sanforized $25 LADIES’ WINTER COATS Worth to $5 Just 5 16.99 LADIES’ WHITE Buy now for next year, warm suburbans, $ LADIES’ LADIES’ ‘Win. Coats UNIFORMS coat size 10 to 18. HATS Car Coats $5 What's: Left After Inventory. Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. TO 49.99 LADIES’ COATS ad | D> Saving of a lifetime. Sizes 10 to 20. All ‘wool long coats. What's Left After Inventory Sale... DYED PROCESSED $99 MOUTON LAMB COATS We need the room so out go 12. Fri. and Sat, *b9 2.99 Quality Better 3.99 Priced to Clear 4 Ist Quality .1.35 LADIES’ LADIES‘ What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. Perma-Lift Berkshire PURSES SKIRTS :. BRAS NYLONS 69¢ $] 1.99 LADIES’ BLOUSES e 1.88 88 Here’s your chance. to save on San- - ~ Out They Go | Roundup. 14.99 ptzes Sees 32) 80. 4 Real Bargain | Clean Sweep Lapis’ | LADIES!) | (rey = LADIES | Lapirs SKIRTS Car COATS ROBES GOWNS 1.88 6.33 What's Left After Inventory Sale . . . Fri. and Sat. 2.88 99¢ Priced to Clear [Big Saving, 2.99 1.00 NYLON HOSE y Reg. 3.99 Reg. 3.00 LADIES‘ LADIES’ Stock Gp) af these low, (ow ces A ¢€ LADIES’ STRETCH 177 . 249 Beautiful shades, 8'/2 to 1). SWEATERS GIRDLES ; : 1.87 $] . What's Left After Inventory Sale . 1.00 LADIES’ BRAS Sanforized figure flattering bras White circular stitched cup. . Fri, and Sat. » for i | Only save, What's Out They Go Left After Inventory Sale .. .° 1.99 LADIES’ SLIPS 121 at this low price, stock up and white only, Fri. and Sat, b6° Out they go 19¢° TRAINING PANTS 10¢ Reg. 1.99 INFANTS’ TERRY Sets 88s s Out They Go Reg. 29¢ BOYS’ TOTS’ What's Left After Inventory Sale... Fri, and Sat, BOYS’ JACKETS SNOSUITS . ’ ; SOCKS 4.44 | 3.88 [g S25 GIRLS’ COATS, SETS yz] ee ° © Last call for these all wool coats and . Out They Go Reduced! 3.99 Sets, sizes 3) fo 16x: Out they go 69c GIRLS’ GIRLS’ Receiving SWEATERS | Lined Pants BLANKETS 1.66 88> What's Left After Inventory Sale ... Fri, and Sat. 38¢ Out They Go JOut they go 89c 1.79 BOYS’ JEANS 1 AID, GIRLS’ BOYS’ New low price, Sanforized turd ¢€ GIRLS’ SLIPS POLOS blue sesnene co ouishiaere) a BLOUSES 88¢ 48¢ 99¢ 1,99, Size 3 to 6x GIRLS’ DRESSES 88s . Fri, and Sat. cat | hoe What's Left After Inventory Sale . 2.69 BIRDSEYE DIAPERS Save plenty, first: quality 27x27 diapers. 3 dozen, While | What's Left After Inventory Sate .. , Fri, and Sat, 5.99 MEN’S BETTER PANTS they fast. Special group priced to clear, *I Values to 75c Values to 24.99 2.99 75¢ Values MEN’S 5 tan What's Lett After Inventory Sale . .. Fri, and Sat. a MEN’S uburbans , SHIRTS Underwear 33¢ 10.44 MEN’S SPORT SHIRTS § - 1.33 43 . Save on these groups of sport and work . Values fo 3:99 Values to 2.00 sirls: f ; Reg. 5.99 Reg, 14.99 MEN’S MEN’S MEN’S MEN’S PAJAMAS TIES 1 03 ROBES JACKETS 1.88 25¢ What's Left After Inventory Sale... Fri, and Sat. 3.66 . $5 Reg. 24.99 Save On 49.99 49.99 MEN’S SUITS. § 2.99 Men's White Men's Wool MEN’S Don’t miss this group if you want . MEN’S . DRESS ; JACKETS TOPCOATS bargain. NOT IN ALL SIZES. JEANS SHIRTS | 8.77 21.88 1.87 1.88 ll i A A ER a a an a LN eh i a th RN CS oe i \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 7 , told, “It is home, and there is no . a wo ) . 7 . ie . / . “4 No Place Is A Place Se aa ae ’ } } Writer Pulls Cork From Bottle Full of Bees scr mses nd | a ry 1° 4 names — No Place, a hamlet injis worn down about one foot every LOU MOR JEWELERS ’ By PHYLLIS BATTELLE spelied—as in “Your a lousy | to jinks the most important busi. jpot shot at the fashion which lisioned critic put it, am simply|northern England. The origin of|1,000 years by the processes of Bazaar Area MIRACLE MILE NEW YORK (INS) — A writer) ler!” ness in New York?” |would have thought, surely, 90 per|being “preverse.” the name is unknown, but a re-lerosion, according to geological! : : A | ‘ a often is a sensitive soul, possibly] Upon receiving accusations like| Two people wrote to the effect cent of the people this side of (Copyright +968) porter who once stopped there was|surveys. because it is hard to keep the chin/|that, it is the writer's only morale-|that it was about time women had/Paris would deplore. The shape- . ri . r of heir legs “shown off agian.” —_less waist, the taut derriere, the) = — ne where ie ee . Fas he ecpeection Dionne taste “ | An elderly man who professed to| skirt that shinnies o'er the knobby upper lip when you're chewing a He fibula, And he shoutd]/Dave “been threw the mill” oniknee ... and a world of heck- pencil. eS ee latices - » | women's fashions said he didn’t lers supports it. * * al : ; ; ‘mind the de-accentuation of the; The mail may indicate one of Anyway, when a reporter is be-| This week was a particularly |pustiine, in favor of the new three possibilities: sieged with unflattering letters bad one for me in the besiege- “sack” line. “I say,” he said, “if| (anything over three is besiege--ment department, mainly on the | hey put a potato in a sack, they| 1) That —— core) are ment when they're critical), he|subject of the chemise dress, which oan put a tomatoe in a sack just. rejoicing in the opportunity to | feels touchier than the réader|I discussed derogatorialy recently.) ~ | hide their figures in the sack ¥ : . jas easy.” | PR Thight think, “Whom do you think you are?” | * & * | ‘ | The only thing that helps out, | wrote an enraged Seventh Ave- | The surprising partof the criti-| 2) That people remember the on a nasty-mail day, is the fact | nue cutter. “This is the first cism was that, misspelled or un- 1920's fondly and are nostalgically | that virtually all of the really | brake weve had since the new |grammatical, both men and wom- drawn to its wacky styles; | rabid critiques are badly mis- | look and your blasting it. Want jen laid it in to me for taking a| 3) Or that it, as one impas- | THE BERRYS *By Carl Grubert CHILDRENS EYES ARE "MOMMY, ALWAYS TOO BIG WHEN IT || MAY I COMES TO SWEETS... GIVE | | HAVE TWO ALCOHOL RUB 70% == .. I ese ner eee, | Rg a(S] °C. | SUPER ANAHIST™™ . .. . . 698 des,
nervous - aviteble. Nvtritionsl deficiencies geey une yee wor eertba Srnhiandh a Hm A : te be just t00 tired to enjoy life - too much of an effort to wore MOMs Aer tetne se work, he'll have to pay both ; charge for this service. You may i ¥4 Sj ive| Household workers have a big-) his share and yours. | obtain Ray Henry’s new social minutes with a 13-inch locomotive | security handbook by sending 35 » “day Depart ger responsibility than other work- The Social Securit ople uree| yester y at oe ame = Ee ce in making sure their employers, . = y ges ! el cents in coin to this newspaper | —and obviously enjoyed it. : you to check on your Social Se-| POE RSs | , ; jare meeting Social Security re-|ourity g t at least once every| 204 requesting “Se y It was Dulles’ boyhood ambi- jcurity account at lea: ry You” booklets.) tion to run the original of the quirements. ; ithree years. When an error in your model. He told a luncheon on his} The reason is simple: Most/account goes undetected for longer! 7th birthday Feb. 25 that when|household workers—that is, maids,/than three years, it’s usually too Phone Talks Cut Short : ion Cooks, laundresses, gardeners, han- fate to correct it. he was 10 years old his ambition g fate to correc | WHITEFISH, Mont, @ — (Questions on Social Security | Lengthy telephone conversations was not to be secretary of state d4ymen, ete.—work for housewives. | driv ine No. of the|And housewives are usually a lot = leggiaalt Comrsi ihc less familiar with Social Security| Problems may be addressed to are discouraged in Whitefish — : , requirements than other employ-| “‘Secial Security,” care of The |scientifically. A buzzer sounds aft- ers, Thus, there’s a better chance| Pontiac Press. Questions will be er 5% minutes of conversation.’ A Geriatric Formula reach the simplest decisions. VIGORETS supply the essential vitamins end minerals vour svstem needs. FORVOUR HEAL | ESS: . . | Y ease High Potencies! HAVE NO REGRETS |S esee:3% } more of these vita. Daily consumption of vitamins can prevent many common ail- TRY 2 V | R i i mon or munerola ments. All the vitamins sold in the Thrifty Stores are always por oss sold on a money refunded basis if you, the customers, are not For Men and Women who reclize the um * x * | New York Centrak vice presi-|,.", : ; aoed il f the Pon- |The lin a 20 d they'll make errors or fail to re-; @"swe y mail from the Pon- |The line goes dea seconds | dent, L. W. Horning, presented a an employe’s earnings to So- tiac office of the Social Security |later. Of course, you can call t “engineer extraordinary’ Dulles ial Securit Administration. .There is no |back satisfied. One Mineral-Vitamin capsule a day is the same as a fe! MONTHS SUPPLY 3g 95 ouieen | the model of the locomotive, the|“" urny- Sa ee ___ __ premium paid on your “Nutritional Insurance.’ Everybody needs TRIAL SIZE . 00 DAYS $495 8. PAP . edal tender and a picture of the} So, if you're a household work- vitamins. Try a bottle . . . feel much better. original. er, you should try to make sure Dulles said at the luncheon that} your employer meets the Social | No. 999 achieved an unprecedent-| Sécurity requirements so faf as » ed speed of 60 miles an hour in| your Social Security record is ". 1898, when he was 10. The inscrip-| concerned. If she doesn’t, your tion on the picture politely re-| Social Security payments may be | minded him that the famed loco-| smaller. : - motive could do far better than) jus+ what is an employer sup-| that and had reached a speed Of!) seq to do when she hires you as| 12% mph. in 1983. a household worker? ~ | If you receive at least $50 every; “I was apparently lying,” Dul-\three months in wages, she’s sup- les remarked with a broad grin,| posed to deduct 2% per cent from) wearing the gray cap and red your pay, add another 2% per cent! bandana scarf of engineers. Horn-|from her own pocket, and pay the! ing quickly reassured him that 60/total to her District Director of In-| miles was the regular scheduled|ternal Revenue, at the end of each speed of the locomotive and the/calendar quarter of the year. | record was established when Cen-| A calendar quarter is a three-| tral was trying to get a mail con-)month period beginning Jan. 1,| tract. = — ——t April 4, July, -or--6ct1. You employer can get special forms ASTHMANEFRIN. For Quick, Safe ~ ASTHMA RELIEF Wherever you are... Whenever you need if POCKET SIZE NEBULIZER with % et. Selution "A"@ Inholant Automatic Washer and Dryer Repair Service All Makes—Expert Trained Technicians ALL WORK GUARANTEED Complete Line of Automatic Parts All Types of Dryer-Venting Supplies -BUSSARD ELECTRIC Phone FE 2-6445 84 Oakland Avenue — Free Parking osmetic Values a ry a » SAY GOODBYE TO THE ITCHING *® THE SCALES « [ME SORES OF PSORIASIS! Why put up with embarrassing x lesions of shin and scalp? ‘ START HEALING— CLEAR YOUR SKIN WwiTtn ee till White Rain TUSSY Desert Flower Max Factor SHAMPOO Rich Cream DEODORANT | Beauty Bonus 2.00: 1.00 $2.00 25 2 For 89« ar $]00 7° 50¢ Value $] FREE 75¢ Hi-Fi lip- Reg. 60c size. Crystal Mildest of Tussy lub- Modern new cream stick with purchase clear style shampoo ricants for soft, to give you 24-hour of $1.25 Creme Puff for clean hair. smooth skin. Save $1. protection, Save 50c. makeup. Conn Cuts Prices! 8M “a soso SUPER VALUE) a 55¢ JERGEN’S- LOTION All Guaranteed First Quality at Smashing Reduced Prices! USE OUR LAYAWAY — SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS oe *Y) Flannel, Wools, ‘ Sharkskins Values to $50 2" TOPCOATS Gabs, Checks Tweeds, Zip-th ° a . nen at woot MM CU aT aya 544° to 598% Me eee , 100 “Gabe, checks!” = | JACKETS " GELUSIL SPORT SHIRTS Quite ae TABLETS *] 99 for Warmth 3 WOOLS $595 4-— Sanforized Gabs, fl: 1 soort “shirts GABS to button d a colar eal SUEDES $1195 ; medium and 3 : = Also NEW Spring Jackets REDEAT SPECIAL | PANTS... *7™ Lamb's Wool VESTS =| all Wool Charcoal 695 ow $906 Gabardine, 3.95 up Val | eed Men's - Boys’ Dept; 9@ CLOTHES ae: nd ‘inay \.° 4 \ WE GIVE HOLDEN STAMPS 9:30-5:30 daily B 1 N. Saginaw ve Wig as deters tid Qeaeal 9:30-12:30 Wed. 9:30-8:00 Fri - Hi Potency COD ‘LIVER OIL Capsules ; . for reporting your Social Security Bushmen Painted taxes through the nearest Internal) Onl 90) Years Ago It’s not only Important that y : | your employer report your earn- ings, it’s just as important that | JOHANNESBURG — Up to less; he report the right amount. This | than 90-years ago, African Bush-| js because the size of Social Se- carrying on the traditions of thou-) based on your annual earnings. If | sands of years, according to A.| your employer reports earnings | R, Willcox, of Johannesburg. | smaller than those you've actual. | It has long been a question! jy had, your future Social Se- painted after the white men came,) reduced. | says Mr. Willcox, an authority. ; a Studies have showed that the last) There are two ways to make) group of Bushmen in the Drakens-/Sure your employer is doing the) annihilated in 1870 near Barkly If you know your employer is re-) East. | Porting your earnings and you only Until their destruction they had Want to check on whether he's re-| been painting everything they saw Porting the right amounts, all rom mountains, Willcox said. They were letter to: Social Security Adminis- termed ‘‘voel vry,"" which meant/tration, Candler Building, Balti-} that anyone could shoot them with More 2, Maryland. Give your full the same liberty that they could name and address, Social Security tle and sheep thieves. your name in ink the way it ap- s |pears on your Social Security card. ae ‘ | Ask for a statement of wages.) Miriani Not in Harmony If the wage statement-you get from) your own records, get in touch with. DETROIT (INS) — Mayor Louis your nearest Social Security office. : Eu Miriani reportedly has spurned| But suppose your employer is re- “w request from the Detroit Sym- Porting none of your earnings? Ford Auditorium rent-free for the Set directly in touch with your next five years. nearest Social Security office. Ask It was revealed that Symphony for an investigation of your work. ' President John B. Ford made the’ If it turns out that your em. | Ford said the symphony needs earnings under Social Security, | money to pay for a huge wooden! he’ll be forced to do so. What's | shell that is to make music sound) more, if there are any past-due better, | Social Security taxes on your Revenue Office. men were painting on rock faces,| curity payments, are, in general, | whether Bushmen artists still) curity payments may be greatly berg area of South Africa were Tight thing. from their hideouts high in the have to do is drop a post card or shoot vermin, They were great cat-/number, date of birth, and sign) With Symphony Request Social Security doesn’t agree with! phony to permit the greup to use Your best bet in this case is to’ request to the mayor informally.’ pleyer should be reporting your e “4 “50... KINDY GLASSES - , | sG i Style Leaders a Gf wy For 50 Years PRESCRIPTIONS at a Theits _— | LOWEST PRICES AAAS Mela bel é AS ‘~, Me Ha) Bs PRS Pe ES RUE Bi 3 NO. SAGINAW ST. > a — : 5 wes : —? fia : . Lege ‘ 7 ee & ’ ae t a ve | . z oa : + ; 2 Ss shy 4s eR eee es 3 x : A . * * +2 i £ : . ' f ‘ : ft THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 6,-1958 | "T we Ripen rong — TENDER BEEF. g (Slowly Off Tree. eit, 39: BAZLEY| ai 45. : pon po ee AR eS with @ special clipper. Each lemon, 78 NORTH SAGINAW ST. — NEXT TO GEORGES-NEWPORT S STORE — REMEMBER: OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. | apie et Fresh | “YOUR CHOICE” | Tender, Sliced | va tts Ce way ice LARGE EGGS T PORK LIVER : | Since are usually picked, | ; S F A K S : ‘8 to size rather than color; ey _- 5 c _ : “ * they may be when put | é lb. OS eagersiger| of origin, ie teaahy C s s Cc my) jare’held at 55 to 58 degrees i Do -Round- Sirloin | , bb. 7 jand 85 to 90 per cent humidity. fh z. = . Lemons that are’ of proper size and st d : NONE HIGHER dark green color when picked have § - . P ° an wiss the longest storage life. This life| an-Redi . , , Lean, Meaty is one to six months. | F RYERS LEAN, MEATY L M : « * * ean, Meaty 4 RoE SS VEAL | PORK BUTT 4G: SPARE RIBS eS ate 3 9; BREAST b.| ROAST pul. 39; y on 2 carloads ° lb. : 5 SHAMEOCK FRUIT aS ici Day means = ane Sean cable eran SHORT. Cc CHAN x H Cc * , screens oeries Use the cherries to make these Cherry carefully dumped soe —— , Sno-White Veal RIBS bb. H ALF a bb. Sno-White Veal prevent bruising, washed in| St. Patrick’s Day Calls Soa Cea weeoas| Shidt.. Steak |a>-con -| ———__™ | RUMP ROAST for Special Salads —iookon ae I 49: SLICED "2... $7 00) RIB : 69: 49; 18 the tomemaker vin can) shamrock Fra aid jee monte to aly te, ate | AP [BACON WF Hf | STEAKS wie Lo plan on serving foods appropriate} 13 canned pear halves =~ curing to a uniform yellow, lemons} to the various holidays that is 2 cave foo coloring are inspected, sorted and packed, ‘4 teaspoon mint extract dubbed ‘‘the best cook in town.'’| 2 teaspoons dehydrated Parsley flakes Green maraschino cherries Actually, it requires little in the! qint pears to desired shade, us-|Check Pork Appearance | Top Quality way of work, just some i ina-| : = ed magin’*ing food coloring. Drain pears.lin Place of Gradings | When it comes to Saint Patrick's Combine cottage cheese, mint and day what's the first thing you think|Parsley; mix well. Cut one pear ee eee a pork of: Green, of course. And what's half in quarters lengthwise. Ar- ike those oan cn beet? The | green that has a delightful flavor range pears in shape of a sham- (saillireaece inl fimat pork! comnas| ae ce be eae in rock, using lengthwise pieces aSifrom young animals, so aid ; Stems. Garnish with green maara- Green maraschino cherries, of, harris. saan Gar. ness and flavor vary very little. | “course. With one or two bottles If you want the best pork use of green maraschino cherries on 7 *. Patrick’ . aA ainea YOU counter-intelligence _ suggests * hand, you can go to tawn creating} 1 cup flaked | cocomet the MSU Marketing Information | any number of St. Patrick’s Day| ;* 1 ind to otnee iin apricot haives,|ASem- Look for smooth, fine| specialties. « draine "Igrained lean that is grayish-pink * *« * tabtee oh coor) maznechine: chetristlin color, The fat on the outer If you're having the girls in for; Combine pineapple, coconut and|edges should be firm and white a light snack or “coffee and . . .,"|peanuts. Arrange pineapple ‘mix-|rélates Mrs. Lawyer. Notice that) serve -them a Shamrock Fruit) ture in center of serving plate. Sur-|most markets trim off much of Salad. Or you might want to serve|round with apricots and cherries.|the outside fat before putting the! i this St. Patrick's Day Salad, ~ |Serves about six. meat in the counter. Lowest Prices! mn M dime Gold Medal FLOUR 0% 39° Delicious HICKORY SMOKED PICNICS 33’ T-BONE or PORTERHOUSE Steaks “ 89° ALL CHOICE CUTS PINEAPPLE Cc JUICE 46'2%.. 25 ‘RINSO BLUE = 59° VEEL ietercont ca 79° Compare These Low, Low Prices POTATOES........50™$2%9 ! 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We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities — - BORDEN’S | Glacier Club ICE ~ SNIDER’S ~ Old Fashion Flavored CATSUP s wie Ss e i as ie nse ear Fairlane Fresh Frozen ORANGE | | f 66 sc mane £1 yeu Fairlane Fresh Frozen GREEN seis or Match es E z ® me ~ : . ‘ = Phgs. ¢ % ° Faun ~~ o . i | @ Beer © Wine . © Liquor to Take Out . Corner Baldwin Ave. and Walton Blvd. STORE HOURS: Mon., Tues., Wed.,. Thurs. 9 to 9 Phone FE 2.5192 : (Friday 9 to 10; Saturday and Sunday 9 to 9 | oe iS ¢ * & = f ‘ | Some Seem- to Possess Talent for Tactlessness These Women May Intentionally Make Remarks That Destroy Pleasure _- For the Best Fur Repair and Remodeling There Is Little Time Left to Remodel ‘Your Old Fur Coat Into ‘a~ Beautiful | Cape or Stole in Time for Easter Delivery | | ° ey eben wicerr Custom F ur Cleaning | Some women always manage to say the wrong thing— : | Cut your hair, and instead of telling you they like it COLD FUR STORAGE ee 742 W. Huron Pickup and Delivery Service FE 5-124] that way, they wail, “Why did you cut your hair? It looked so lovely long.” (But of course these same women inever told you how much+ | ithey liked it long until you. At least: you won't hear any more had it all chopped off.) |about fading.) T QUIS Beauty Shop . Hang blue. draperies at your Say you have a vacation trip Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. —Hair Cater $1 Piiving room windows and they'll) all planned, and if you intend to ™Ir . Complete With be sure to tell you that they; go by car, they'll tell you that PERMANENTS—$3.50 and UP Haircut and Set hope you haven't made a mistake.) you really ought to fly. (It | FE 5-8000 | since blue fades more easily than doesn’t really matter, since if you No Appointment Necessary 10 W. area 2nd Floor, Next to Buckner Finance (Never mind if they had said you were going to fly too, later on., they would have asked, ‘“‘Why == don’t you drive, sO you can have E ; : ; | your car to use when you get < oe oe | there?’’) most colors get blue draperies Tell them about your son’s new, wonderful job, and instead of say- jing, “You have a right to be aw- |fully proud of him,’’ these wom- len who have a knack for saying the wrong thing immediately start} sympathizing with you because} your son's job is going to take him! to another state. Show them your new camellias. and they're sure to say that they, jused to grow camellias, but found’ them too much trouble. Serve them a good mea] and , they'll wail about their diets un- | til you wonder why you went to all the trouble to set such d licious food in front of them. But I doubt that jnatural lack of tact just a) makes | it’s that thing. I sometimes think they give as much thought to saying the thing 1" nes eI Oe a ee ee * “a SS Se oe — oe oe * sf tS # it — * : Z = + ie £ Hospital Aides i! had a wonderful evening. My) Hear Speaker |these women always say the wrong S tate 'schizophr enic members of Pontiac » THE ; PON'TEAC PRESS, ‘ ¢HURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1058 Picks Hair Off Jacket of Employer jhave been. rinsed away. Add to Last Rinse . FINE | JEWELRY - GIFTS McKim Jewelry 941 Orchard Lake, FE 4-5065 If you use one of the new fab- ric softeners on washday, ad it ta the final clear water after all traces of soap or detergent ‘suds re Thoug ne A ble Makes Boss Act _ Embarrassed By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs. Post: The other day, my employer came over to my desk’ |to discuss something with me. As) _I stood talking to him I noticed | ja hair on the collar of his jacket.’ I reached over and picked it off! thinking that I was doing him a’ , kindness as he is a meticulous ~ . . : person, ERNISTINE WRIGHT | “However, he seemed rather em- ,barrassed at my doing this and I have been wondering ever since jwhether I was wrong. I would Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wright of Marshall, Tex., announce the engagement of their daugh- ter,. Ernistine Wright of Or- (very much appreciate hearing from chard Lake avenue, to the (you on this matter.” Rev. Richard H. Dixon Jr. of Answer: Had you noticed a trace of fresh paint on his sleeve | you would have properly called it to his attention and offered to | remove it with a little cleaning | fluid, but it would have been bet. | ter not to have done anything to show you were aware of the hair on his collar. i West Wilson avenue. He is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Dixon of Buffalo, N. Y. Miss Wright was graduated from Wiley University in Mar- shall, Tex., and her fiance was graduated from Wiley University, American Theo- logical Seminary and Colgate | Seminary. An April 13 wed- | ,. neat Abo Rochond’l ding is planned in Trinity | Dear Mrs) Post. My husbandis , lemployer gave him two tickets to a Baptist Church. LEMmpEe ; : |concert which he could not use. ‘This was a real treat to me and husband thinks I should write a note of thanks to his employer for, he aving given us the tickets. I iwill be glad to do so if you think Dr. Albert W ilson of the Pontiac it is nece ssary. | Hospital the when discussed personality State Hos- Taking it for granted ‘that your husband thanked his lemployer when he received the Answer: that will take away a little of Pital Psychiatric Aide Associ ation tickets, that is all that is necessary. | | FRISKIE GUM-DROPS- The Last Word in LIGHTNESS! STYLE! VALUE! AA and B Sizes 4 to 9 Black, Grey and Vicuna Sizes 4 to 9 AA and B CORRECTIVE STEPS OXFORDS As Pictured White -- Grey Beige -- Brown and- Black All Widths tae. We, BL A ee a SS ge a ser hs rary eS Ses Ee he 95 your pleasure as some women give Met Tuesday evening at the hos- If to saying the thing that will make pital. ja note, he had sent them -to you with: then you would write and buys your choice of these fabulous Spring fashions! Chemise suits of imported tweed Dramatic new har as lh i . 1 ~, | wooi-n yion twee 117 with detachabie wi 2 “+ A ee var An and bow. Misses’ sizes, at . sm artly tail a fab uulous rayon: ed | from “lial y! Black-and-white highlighted linen-lock rayon collar, black grosgrain piping ored in orf x! finishi "Tuxedo Bente | Py ush- i ‘boultant sleeves, s. Lovely in black, navy beige. Misses’ sizes. Luxurious wool-cashmere toppers Rich 90% wool and 10% cashmere whipped up into a creamy-soft fleece that looks like it cost many dollars more. Beautifully styled with multiple stitched yoke, smart turn-back cuffs, soft roll collar. Blue, gray or beige. Misses’ sizes. ? x 200 North Saginow St. — Plenty of Free Parking Use our Convenient No Extra Charge AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN \ |Dept., you feel even more pleased with yourself. Gold Star Mothers Conduct Memorial At the meeting of the American Gold Star Mothers Chapter Nine, held at Chapter 16 of the Disabled American Veterans on Auburn ave- nue, services were conducted in memory of Mrs. Nellie West. Reports were given on the de ipartment board meeting held in‘ Lansing the past week and_at- tended by Mrs. Edna Olmsted, Mrs. Joe Doyle, Mrs. Lola Erb,! Mrs. Lauretta Stockwell, Mrs.' Sybella Stevens and Mrs. Edna! Matheny. si Pa by aura Wheeler Dainty as flowers in spring. Serve elegantly in either of these filet-crochet aprons, or shower a bride with one. Crocheted in No. 30 cotton. Pat- tern 873: Easy-to-follow charts, directions for bib and half-apron. Crochet it_now! Send 35c (coins) for this pattern —add five cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, name, address and zone. As a bonus, two complete pat- terns are printed right in our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. Dozens of other designs you'll want copy | of this book today! _|an Easter bake sale to be held) to order—easy, fascinating hand-, work for yourself, your home, sifts, | bazaar items. Send 25c for your thank him, Of course if you have, ‘occasion to talk to him on the ‘telephone you would certainly tell him how much you enjoyed the, iconcert. | | j wk o* | In the business meeting five! | delegates were nominated to attend (the annual mental health meeting jto be held in Detroit. Present for | ithe March 13 affair will be Mrs.’ Ethel Pettibone, Robert Larson, rs. G. A, Sossadina, Mrs. Geor- FRISKIES Sizes 5 to 10 “Dear Mrs, Post: How s0on after her engagement is an- nounced it Is proper for a young As Pictured gia Meachum and Mrs. Eleanor woman's! friends to give showers White -- Grey , | and other parties in her honor? ° Th s = a | The friend I refer to particularly | Black ~ Beige |The group also made plans for jg not being married for almost and Brown a year, and some of us feel that it is as yet too soon to start | giving parties for her.’’ ‘April 3, at the hospital. | | Answer: A year is much too Executive Meeting ‘Conducted by YTC | soon to start giving parties. When | the w edding date has been set, her | Executive meeting of Ethel E./friends start giving parties for her. Little YTC was held Wednesday jin the Cottage street home of the Opti-Mrs. Gathers | ae Deavers. | Plans were made for YTC Insti-| Opti-Mrs. Club met Tuesday eve- tute to be held March 18 in the ning at the home of Mrs. Harold Deaver home. Plans were also Davis on Berwick boulevard. Fol-: made for YTC Week to be held in! jow; ing a business meeting the eo group sewed on cancer pads. Things Are Happening to Prices they will never be lower! WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE 4 Whatever you need for any room in your home .. . For: Living Room @ Bedroom @ Dihing Room @ Chairs of Every Style © Occasional Tables @ Desks @ Mattresses © Box Springs PLASTIC EYE MONOPLEX =| BUY NOW and SAVE MONEY! Before You Buy Any Furniture Anywhere Check Our Prices! CHARGE IT—30--60--90 DAYS BUDGET TERMS—UP TO 24 MONTHS Cemboiteble—Sete : Durable—Natural Economical Agpetatment at Your Convenience Private Fitting Rooms PHYSICIAN'S OPTICAL SERVICE ‘OPEN baedin, Thursday and Friday ‘til 9 Tq, HI-WAV FURNITURE MART 2 WOODWARD AVE QAI /IN GHA M. M/CA R. D. Higgins 412 Pontiac State Bank Bids. FE 2-2045 THE G2 eee Ee Se Se eee aS ee FE NVER Soe fa DAAC FORTY-THREE LAKELAND, Fla. — “We should be 10 games better this year.” This was Tiger ing. ing the fact that there is a BY BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports: Editor, Pontiac Press é coach Billy Hitchcock talk-| Doesn’t sound like much of a statement but consider- “mum” policy in the Tiger to how the coaching staff feels about its chances. } organization this year, it does give some indication as| | | After all the free talk last year, about the Tigers being ready to push the Yanks, it was generally be- lieved, from the front office down to the clubhouse man, that there was too much optimism and it hurt the team. Neither Tighe nor general manager John McHale or anyone else has even implied where ‘they thought the x * * To finish with 10 more wins this year would mean an 88-66 record. On the basis of last year’s standings it would be good enough to move up only from fourth to third place about 10 games Actually, the Tigers played as good as the second place White Sox at home last year. Both teams were 45-32 on the home field. And this was only | : | the Boys’ Club, three less wins than the Stadium. ‘ The failure then was on the road. The Yanks won 50/0'Dell Ryley and Martin Doyle, indication. and lost 27 away from New York, and the White Sox ;nent trdiners as had the same home and away record 45-32. But the and Ray Arcel. Tigers, they won 33 and Stadium. This was only 6th x * behind the Yankees. Yank record at Yankee | as Baby-Face Jones, O'Neill Bell, Performances last nght were an lost 44 away from Briggs best in the league. * 1 bal i} For the Tigers this was an exact reversal of the 1956 season. That year they won 45 and lost 32 on the road, » but on home cooking they posted a record of 37-40. FOES LIKE BRIGGS STADIUM Unfortunately for Detroit, it seems that every team in JOHNNIE FERRO Mat and Ring Program Added by Boys’ Club | | Tigers would finish this season. | A new, full-time boxing and wrestling program has been added to the Pontiac Boys’ club physical ieducation department, club direc- | ‘tor Mike Fiorillo announced today. In charge will be Johnny Ferro, former boxer, trainer and manager, and former head of the Michigan Managers and Train- ers’ Assn, wrestling or boxing should call Ferro has trained such fighters He has worked with such promi- Whitey Bimstein Hady, Donova Mat Draw Hady In Jim and Red Donovan the league likes the fences at Briggs Stadium better were signed to headline a March (19 wrestling card after battling to than the Tigers. Only team the Tigers Briggs Stadium was Baltimore. nine homers and the Orioles eight in Detroit, vet Baltimore was the only park where they failed to clear the wall last season. ; were able to outslug at The Tigers had a draw ina “grudge’’ match which, ,ended treatment for head injuries at the ‘Pontiac Armory last night. with both boys requiring Each had taken one fal! before a wild final completed the feature iclash. Kansas City thrived on Detroit pitching more than The Masked Mystery Man and any other team. The A’s Stadium and 17 more in the KC. Stadium, while ‘the hit 17 homers. at Briggs Louie Papineau posted victories in fa jearlier matches . le sponsored by the Pontiac National on the program Yanks, Senators and White Sox all rapped out 14 in Guard 107th Ordnance Company. Detroit. * * * A] Warshawski was the MaS&ked |Man’s victim in two of thee falls. - and Papineau whipped Bob Marion | The Tigers could win those 10 more games as Hitchcock two +f three. feels and move up in the standings. More fence power Matchmaker Bert Ruby has also scheduled the Mys- | _itery Man and Warshawski for a from Gus Zernial, Lou Skizas, Bill Taylor and Jim!rematch on the next card Greengrass would help at Briggs Stadium and in parks : in Chicago, Baltimore and slugging was the poorest. But help will also have to come from the pitching Kansas City where Tigers’ Cleveland 3. Springfield 8 Buffalo 4 department, with a few less gopher balls. Bill Hitchcock didn’t say else knows that it will be pretty tough to move up even Tea with 150 homers, if the opposition gets 200. this, but he and every one -Fans-Six in Three-Inning Stint Herb Score Impresses By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS crackling curve before suffering a: last} damaging eye injury early season, is back on the beam and the Indians may. have to be reck-' oned with in this year's pennant) race. * * * In his first appearance under game conditions. since being hit in the right eye by a line drive. off the bat of the Yankees’ Gil Mc- Dougald last May 7, Score struck out six men in a_ three-inning intra-squad stint yesterday. _ _ The 24-year-old lefthander fanned four of the first five batters he faced. He weakened a bit after that and gave up a run on two singles and a pair of walks. In his final inning, Score struck out ’ two more batters and drew warm applause from the crowd of 1,500) as he left the field. Clinton 11 Washington , Miner League Heckey At a Glance WEDNESDAY'’S RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE Hershey 1 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Fort Wayne 5. Clinton 1 EASTERN reacts THURSDAY'S SCHEDULE 8 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE at Louisville at Fort Wayne EASTERN LEAGUE Johnstown at New Haven Boys interested in - me ie a PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 Tighe Sees Open x * * x * x & * Class B Negaunee Falls in Prep Tourney One Defending Champ Exits By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |Class B powerhouses shooting tojrecords stood out as the thriller: ley (14-2) and Inland Lakes (16- One defending champion already replace Negaunee on the throne.jof the night. Harbor Beach (8-9)' 3) taking to the court. has fallen by the wayside as the Troy (17-0), East Lansing (16-0),'squeaked by Ubly (4-13), as Herb! gehoolcraft trounced Martin 75-| state high school basketball tour-/Ludington (15-1), East Grand Rap-|Hebner's shot that was rolling 49° Parma beat Tekonsha 70-33, nament enters its third day of dis-jids (15-2), Holland Christian (16-3),'around the rim at the final buzzer/ang Inland Lakes overwhelmed trict play tonight. ‘Inkster Roosevelt (16-1) and Flint plunked in. Don Zualuf scored 37 Wolverine 61-38. Ashley clobbered Technical (17-1) survived their points, high for the tournament so Carson City St. Mary 75-33. ‘Negaunee, champion last year | : a f in an = wae Sa last night ifirst tests. far, for vanquished Ubley. | The only upset was at Niles, ss B, ‘ ‘ pe * * | in its tournament debut. Calu- | * Class D action for the top |where Dowagiac (6-9) downed St.| ace for 3 Tiger Jobs Ist Intra-Squad | Tilt Gives Boss. Line on Players Kuenn’s Play in Center Field Provides a Happy Note for Detroit By BRUNO KEARNS Pontiac Press Sports Editor met (13-5) whipped the defend. | A nip-and-tuck affair between, teams was light with only School- |Joseph (11-5), 60-56, in a Class B ing kings, 57-52 ltwo Class C clubs with mediocr¢| craft (17-0), Parma (15-1), Ash- ‘encounter. Lakeview, the reigning Class C, champ, came through with a vic-' LAKELAND, Fla. The battle \for positions has just begun as far ias Detroit Tiger manager Jack | Tighe is concerned. ‘tory as did all the other strong contenders. Lakeview had an easy time with Kent City in its opener, winning 74-34. i ine * * * Other defending champions were [ * * * | After trying for four straight iday, the Tigers finally played | their first intra-squad game and ‘the Hitchcock’s defeated the Lund’s 19-5 in a ‘seven inning contest at idle last night. Muskegon Heights, (Class A) and Hermansville (Class | S E) still were awaiting their first! tournament action. Chassell (Class -D) won its 58th in a row Tuesday. * * * i | Lakeview will have tough sled- ding in its quest for a second con-| secutive championship if Class C Pigeon (17-0), Flint Holy Re- | deemer (18-0), Bay City St. Stan- _ islaus (16-0), Ffint Utley (17-0), Grosse Pointe St. Paul (16-1), Caledonia (16-1) and Shepherd (15-2) all won handily in their initial outings. Only Shepherd had any trouble, being forced into. overtime before downing stubborn Merrill, 52-49. It was the same story among Toronto Rallies to Down Hawks | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | The Toronto Maple Leafs. still) ce an uphill battle in their bid to qualify for the National Hockey | League’s Stanley Cup playoffs But they have shown’ they can come from behind. * * * The Leafs did it last night, yielding two rapid-fire goals early in the first period and then rally-' ing to defeat the Chicago. Black | Associated Press Pheto . Skizas, Mickey McDermott, Tim Thompson, Billy Martin, Gus Zernial and Tom Morgan. Standing, from left: Jim Hegan, Hank Aguirre, John Drake and Gail Harris. NEW TIGERS—New members of the Detroit y Tigers, acquired in trades or newly signed, pose for the photographer at the Tiger training camp in Lakeland, Fla. Kneeling, from left: Lou |Henley Field, and as result Tighe sees a wide open race for the jobs ‘in left field, third base and be- \hind the plate. The game also had a strong Kansas City flaver as big Gus Zernial, Billy Martin and Lou Skizas al] made good showings in their initial appearances. Zernial got three for three as he lined out a trio of hard singles, driving in two runs, scoring tice plus a beautiful shoestring stab of a low liner in left field. x * * Martin’ scored twicé with a sin- field wall which cleared the 350 foot marker. Among the other hit- ters for the Hitchcock squad were in three trips, and Reno Bertoia’s double, triple and a walk. Skizas was on third for the Lund team and drove out a long single in his first trip, but hit the ball hard in flying out. Charley Lau’s three- run homer and a single in three ‘trips was the best effort for the losing side. : Big Ronnie Rozman, former U. of D. hurler who had a 15-1 record at Augusta last year, started for the Hitchcock team and was the victim of Lau’s long blast over the right field fence: The happy note for the Tigers was Kuenn’s defensive work in cen- terfield. “We were worried that we might have to move Kaline to center and push Kuenn to right,” isaid Tighe, ‘but he sure did a fine |job in the middle field today.” * * * Cincy All-America Nears Scoring Crown Hawks 3-? The triumph enabled Toronto to move to within six points of the fourth-place Boston Bruins. Each club has nine games left to play. | Ted Lindsay and Ron Murphy) ‘sent the tailend Hawks into a 2-0) lead, But the Leafs pecked away | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rocky Mountain Conference; The Bonnies, seeded third for and finally moved ahead of Chi-| Cincinnati's Oscar Robertson, /champs, had won an earlier meet- cago on Ron Stewart's goal at |who makes it look easy when he Sing from Seattle, 71-68 in overtime. '6:28 of the second period, George |°" the basketball court, may have, Except for the Séattle-Idaho Armstrong and Dick Duff got Tor. clinched the season scoring title State game, most of last night's onto’s first two goals while Barry 20g Major college players last activity was in the East with next week's National Invitation Tournament at New York earlier in the day, fell behing by nine points at halftime and never threatened the Dukes, only 10-1) _ On the first play of the game, | Johnny Groth drove a high, long fly toward the right center wall. |Kuenn raced back and made a ‘great catch right near the fence, He had three putouts in center. _ “Really gave you a baptism right at the start,” Tighe said to Kuenn after the first inning following Groth’s drive. Phil Regan of Wayland, Mich., and Tim Shepherd followed Rot- man on the hill, while Wyman Carey, Fred Gladding of Fiat gle and a homer over the right. Al Kaline with a triple and single - Cullen and Tod Sloan drilled home "ht without lifting a_ finger. | much-thumped Duquesne furnish- ing the highlight with a 77-54 jupset of a St. Bonaventure team for the Lund’s. ‘that had won 15 in a row. iJack Sauer with 17. Gladding, who had a 16-8 record jo Ss at Valdosta last year, showed good : speed and control. He had six in- field putouts in two innings. Another intra-squad game today and one on Friday will get the Ti- the last two. Caqe Results MICHIGAN SCORFBOARD COLLEGE BASKETBALL Aquinas 16, Muskegon JC 56 Wat. JC Ath. Assn. Region 12 at Benton “I felt great, Score said later. game. The veteran was ordered to "No ienal JC Athletic Asan. Region 12 Cleveland’s Herb Score, who!“Had a little trouble getting my a hospital. befuddled American League bats-|curve over, but my fastball was! men with his blinding fastball and good and I was throwing as hard as I could.” | If the Indians are to improve on their sixth place finish of last sea- son and make a success of Bobby Bragan's first year as an Ameri- can League manager, Score is the guy who'll have to carry most of the pitching load. * * * ‘Herb won 16 games in his first big league campaign in 1955 and) followed it with a 20-9 perform- ance in 1956. He led the league in strikeouts in both seasons. Score’s apparent reeovery tem- pered the rather gloomy reports that emanated from some of the other major league camps. * *® Outfielder Irv Noren sustained a possible fractured rib when he! crashed into a grandstand wall in) - a St. Louis Cardinals’ pepper, New Orleans Threat of Ra NEW ORLEANS W — Cloudy skies and wet fairways awaited @ field of 150 today as the $20,000 New .Orleans Open got underway with youthful Ken Venturi still tabbed as the man to beat. Heavy afternoon rains pelted for Venturi and his: fellow touri PGA prof . : @-* -*& Venturi won the $15,000 Baton Open Faces in Today 1948 when big Bob Hamilton took top honors. City Park No, 1 course’ will again be the site, but host/ professional Henry Thomas said the visitors will find the 6,600: yard layout a good deal more difficult. * * : Freddie Haas of New Orleans, fourth-place finisher in the Baton Rouge Open, has the advantage of knowing the course better than anyone else, And his game And outfielder’ Duke Snider, pitcher Johnny Podres and_ in- fielder Don Zimmer were injured when an automobile driven by Snider was in an accident. Snider re-injured his left knee, operated ion last December. Podres hurt his neck and Zimmer came out of it with a bruised forehead. % THIS IS BASKETBALL? — “|. the picture above, you'd think wrestling brawl. Pontiac's Dick at Benton Harber Vincennes tind.) 72. Benton H bor 54 COLLEGE HOCKEY Denver 4, North Dakota 2 COLLEGE BASKETBALL RESULTS Seattle U. 73 Idaho State 60 Niagera 78, Syracuse 63 Villanova 61, Muhlenberg 73 Dartmonth #1, Brown 79 Yale 195, Harvard 87 Lafayette 109, Wilkes 56 Pordham 197, Rutgers 78 Duquesne 77. 8t. Bonaventure 54 LaSalle 80. Seton Hall Princeton 59. Penn $5 Columbia 8, Cornell 65 St. Joseph's 69, Lemoyne 68 Boston U. 93, Boston College 76 Pontiac Press Piiote If it wasn't for the basketball in this was an Australian tag-team Whitmer (30) has an arm-lock on _|_ one of his teammates as well as Southfield’s Jim McDotmld (35) and another Southfield player fretaliates’by sticking his hand in Whitmer’s face. ‘The Chiefs drubbed Southfield, 68-26, in their Class A district tournament opener last night. -¥ \ ~ \ While All-America Oscar was idlin’, All-America Elgin Baylor of Seattle was hitting one of his sea- son low marks, scoring a mere 21 points in a 73-60 vietory over Idaho State Now, with each assured of two more games depending on how their teams go in the NCAA tour- jnament, Robertson leads Baylor Ry eight-tenths of a point with a 34.76 average to the Seattle ace’s 34.96 _ Broken down on the basis of two more starts for each hotshot, it means Baylor would have tp outscore Osear by 20 points to top the amazing Bearcat sophomore Robertson closes his regular season against Xavier of Ohio - Saturday night before moving into ithe NCAA regional at Lawrence, \Kan.. on March 14. Baylor has a. pre-NCAA date with Bradley next Monday. The 6-5 Seattle junior ‘hit on nine ‘field goals and three of seven free | throws last night before “fouling jout with 5'3 minutes left. Idaho ‘State, in the NCAA tourney as Jones, Beach Oppose Bronco Tra Murchison © Two former Pontiac Centra] high sprint stars will battle each other, and Western Michigan's star, Ira ;Murehison at the Central Collegi- vate Conference meet, Saturday, at Kalamazoo. Aubrey Lewis of Notre Dame is another star in what is rated as the nation’s best 60-yard field. Both Hayes Jones of Eastern | Michigan and W-it Beach of Cen- | tral Michigan have been close to | world marks in the event, a favorite with Murchison. Hayes “also runs in the high hurdles, Beach, late in rejoining the Chip ‘squad, only last week donned a ‘track uniform, but did well in a quadrangular meet. He was a sur-| prise entry for the CCC, Chips’, Lyle Bennett said today. ‘said. “It would be an act of God) but the pain became so severe if you could swing a hat Proper- that his hitting suffered and he ly.” ' \finished the season with a subpar bench where the. writers wére sit- * * * 227 batting average. .iting and said to publicity man Six months before, Hamner had’ Still he refused to admit defeat. | Doe Fenkell, “hey Doc, don’t for- jammed his left shoulder diving During the past winter he took a get toy save Me a couple tickets jfor a ball, He ripped a tendon job as coach of the paraplegic for the World Series. I want te jrighit next to an old injury — an- basketball team at McGuire Vet: Zive them to Mickey Maritle so ‘other torn tendon — that still had/erans Hospital in his home town that he can watch us when we inot fully healed after an opera-jof Richmond. ~ play in Milwaukee," Louisiana Derby Ends: | NEW ORLEANS uh—It's not a inovel. situation, but horses from Florida are early favorites for the $40,000-added Louisiana. Derby Saturday when the Fair Grounds |brings its 83-day winter meeting to ia close, for the season. Bernie Matthews’ 21 points led Duquesne while Fritz Binder chipped in with 18 and Rock, and Jerry Thomas pitched | | | gers ready for Saturday's clash at Henley Field with the world cham- pion Milwaukee Braves. . | Frank Bolling finally returned to the squad after being out with the flu for six days, He came back about 10 pounds lighter, and one of the players ribbed him, saying he would have to take the thin. man honors away from Inman Veal, the stringbean shortstop. * * * Harvey Hansen, president of the Tigers, watched yesterday’s intra. squad game wearing a warmup jacket. Hansen, who was in Puerto Rico during the Caribbean “world = series,” sajd, “if I had known it was so damp. and chilly here, I might have stayed in Puerto Rico.” | n Associated Press Phote THIRD BASE CANDIDATES — Reno Bertoia (left) and Lou Skizas smile for the cameraman at the Detroit Tiger training camp in Lakeland, Fla. Skizas, normally an outfielder, may battle Reno for the regular third base job with the Tigers this season. ko ok of Ronnie Rozman passed Charley. Hamner Making Baseball] 2%," 22" g ‘marked, “thanks roommate, for ‘who rooms with Rozman in Lake- aand, hit a three-run homer off the CLEARWATER, Fla. (® — Only tion. More than a year of sheer, - * * 15 months ago Granny Hamner torture followed. | Louw Skizas, who had/ tape on never play baseball again. Today, to give up. He tried to start all) ters, let out. with an ouch every the veteran Phillie infielder is over again as a pitcher. It didn’t} time he fouled the ball, After. 1958 season’ at second base. | When the Phillies ran into trou-| the leg ‘with a pitch and he let “Only a miracle would enable /ble at second, he stepped in and| Wt with such a loud ouch, he Lau when he walked off the mound Comeback With Phillies | che ticket back to Augusta.” Lau, : Tighthander was advised by a doctor he would) But. the gritty Virginian refused) bis hands because of some blis- practically a cinch to open the pan out. ' | three or four fouls he was hit in you to play again,” the doctor did a satisfactory job for a time "ad alt the fans roaring. ~*~ * -* Billy Martin walked over to the \ 3 , \ ( # Ay gy SO , THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 == ==Pontiac Massacres. elpless Jas, 68-267 tribute to good judgment! a 12 Cagers Score | 24s. ¢Foot ots Bloomfield Wins in Overtime, Holly Bows . ; Spin Cast Rod | | Ip vse jasChiefs Claim | %s. s5s Clarkston, Troy 'B’ Victors }..., Opener | FREE xk we we x wk * x * * nat a! . pena tp 1St period lead and increased it to; rons rallied to gain a regulation led 19 for the losers who made 19 Side S S Porritt 1 Sherman 218 35-24 at halftime but a heavy load game tie in the last 49 seconds (of their total on free throws. ebco o in vee = 875 Rean’® 3 8° of personal fouls against Clarkston of play and then dominated the | Brighton ended Milford’s season in Battles Farmington Cc : R ce “s Roles : in heres i : j|changed the complexion of the / extra period, a a 63-60 triumph and North- W Final Saturday; | ast ee eg. \J. Parks 0 4 4 Griswold 0 0 6 game in the last half. » 58 *#* ville whipped Flat Rock, 70-53, in _ Detroit Wins $12. 95, Complete 19 20 58 22 11 85: Bob Elston paced the comeback, other games. Ralph Stowe caged | Fred Wells, who topped alt | With 100 Yds. #6 Clarkston ***%* by oe 11 12~58| the scorers with 27, led Durand’s |made the tying point and led the, 24 and Terry Hoy 20 for Milford. ° Durand .......,. .....12 12 16 15-55! pany with 19 in the last two scoring with 16. Mike Detmer tal-| Brian Watson hit 22 for Brighton. By BILL conswEs# Test Line. HOLLY ih ip GRAND BLANC | periods. Leroy Parks hit 21 for | Bob Burtch, Farmington High ‘ Haddon 6 8 Robinson | $1 the victors before fouling out. 9 ‘BR? School's genial basketball coach, is) All for eines ia: ore } ‘a Bill Noles added 15 despite sitting | 2‘B Games Tonight 5 not looking forward to Saturday . | McDaniel 16 133 Guzak 1 0 2 out part of a quarter with four night one little bit. . |Pretener yt oe i 4 4 fouls. That's the night his Faleons, ] ) 95 ucl ? 2 Buc 218 , = = - Grand Blanc also came on with F Qe S C have to play Pontiac Central in! 27 8 63 arte 62 oe in ‘he. Laat he Bereds, th in a | { Win () ener ithe final game of the Southfield Score by Quarters aa 9-83 nipping Holly 65-63 with three play- | Class A district tournament. The liy Arles, 16 1 Gren4 Blanc ,. 16 13 ae totaling 55 points. way the Chiefs massacred their, / Two of Oakland County's top. : * By H. GUY MoATS | the 17-point rally. North-Siders hosts a night, you can’t blame; SPORT SHOP threats for state prep honors ad-| Holly ail led a the way before, suffered a relapse, however, in him at vanced into the championship: falling behind by five with two Opening gun was fired last night! the Srd period and were chilled The Chiefs didn’t even work ‘ rounds of different Class B dis-'minutes remaining. The margin ‘in the MHSAA district Class C; off to a bare five points. up a sweat while perpetrating a 16 $.Cess FE 2-7621 trict tournaments with victories'was too much to overcome as| ‘basketball tournament in Pontiac’ , savage 68-26 scalping of help- last night, Grand Blane held the ball. ‘Central High gymnasium, with Or- In other Class C games involv- less Southfield in the opening Clarkston, champion of the. chard Luke St. Mary’s club bom- ing area clubs RO St. Mary de-| tusste of the five-game tourney. George McDaniel was the scor- ; Wayne-Oakland League, took a at cine of the night with 33, >@rding a hard-trying St. Michael feated Mt. Clemens St. Louis, 46-36, | 7 * in Center Line’s tourney opener.| There were a dozen Pontiac C AMER A hard-earned 58-55 decision over! Holly made one more field goal five, 59-39. \A Eee oe foe Sha CG an ees Oe = surprisingly tough Durand at but was beaten on free throws. | x *« (Belocelihel Sanllaliwae (oak G B w : DS a ee cea. Win after RO trailed up to that, belo y| iaey ne tile: unbeaten ee | Troy had no trouble with Claw. Victory was the 13th of the sea- ite Bill Crawford's 24 was tops Was finished, all‘of them saw ac-| : id opm ison for Rev. John Rakoczy's high- ‘for game, and winners. Mary’s,tion and each one entered the , flying Eaglets, against five defeats. plays Sacred Heart of Ros edale scoring column. 4 loop rival Clawson 55-28. |son after breezing to a 25-6 half- ad , time advantage. The Colts, now el age Pee ae a C RDER = CLEAR HEADS AGREE | xhsvictsdaticcnsttte ariteet ough Rn Gok 50 atte‘ wm a Pm ey ‘cv cts oa “RECO Northville and Clarenceville wer€ | Shrine-Romeo victor for i Troy ;/ onuac parochials during the win- | L ‘ac have a single player with more) - z - other w-0 quintets to come out district crown Saturday, Way ne ‘ter. | ST. aaa pis Bo ST. MI rn than 10 points. Roosevelt Alex-' = a vert IS BETTER on top as Holly, Milford and Oak Figiey'’s 20 points paced the tri-| By virtue of its successful start M'rus'o 7 2-216 Mine’sr Khe ‘ander and Dick Whitmer were! ~ Park were among the area umph, in District 38, Eagiets move into Goisti 3 4.8 20 Dabls 2 2-3 gtoPs with 10 apiece, Bill Hayward Celebrating? See why clear-headed men get together on | *chools eliminated “B” play. eo OY a semifinal bracket on Friday piiys 1 09 a Rok «48 jy allied ine and jsrrison Munson, . Clarkston had to hold off a big| Bloomfield Hills moved into a) against Farmington’s Our Lady Wioo'ski 4 2-610 steinr 2 3-4 °7im Skinner and Jerry Williams = Calvert Reserve with confidence. Try Calvert yourself! | jas: half comeback by Durand to| Friday semi-final at Oak Park by, of Sorrows, at 8:30 p.m. Almont (Wol'o: ¢ 1:2 | mK had eight. - “ » $20 $965 downing the host school 43-37 in (14-3) and Pontiac St. Frederick Din'akwi 1 0-0 2 Words can’t describe how un-; Above all others... .right for you! Stay in the running and gain the — — — believably lopsided this contest . 4/5 Qt. Pt. right to meet host Grand Blanc in 0Vertime after Clarenceville had Yil-4) collide in a 7 o'clock con- 28 9-16 50 13 13-22 3 reall was. Whitmer scored the! © 1958 CALVERT DIST, CO., WLY.C. + 86 PROOF + 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS + BLENDED WHISKEY \a Friday final. jtrounced Lutheran West 55-34. | test and winners of these will _ Seore By Quarters y re | The Wolv 99.19) | battle it out in the 7 p.m. finale 5. Mery ‘OL) .. 1123 11 14—89;first six points for Pontiac, Mun- \__ es romped to a 22-12] _Traliling all the way, the ca én) Saterday. St. Michael ......... 617 5 11~38'son contributed the next four and ser: : —, + ; een |the Chiefs were off and running to! ; maa SRIE ere is no “C’’ action tonight, their easiest win of the season RENT ALS = Awe: jp MR Ee eat | ° “ You Can Pay More —and Get Less! Ju! Class B teams take over with Despite the efforts of coach ‘z Oxford (0-16) against Rochester! 1 Unmatched Value _ (12-5) at 7 o'clock, and Lake Oriort s 68 a : : (12-4) vs Avondale (8-8) at 8:30) 4 p.m. Class B will be idle Friday. Rock- Bottom Price! GIVES THE DEALS! ioe * e _ Finals in both classes are set a ee for Saturday, Class B at 8:30. | That Other s Talk About Shamrocks were never in con- Art Van Ryzin to hold down the slaughter, the Chiefs continued to mount their superiority. Pon- tiac had quarterly leads of n4 | 37-12 and 51-21. Nine points in the 3rd quarter, 9 was Southfield's’ best output and ithe Jays were held scoreless dur-' ing a four-minute stretch in the, period. Bob Filar paced the feeble attack with nine points. CAMERA SHOP The Southfield tournament re- | 57 -W. Huron St. SEDY aE hh) itention. Their shoéting, most of the 1958 FORD C 300 9 Dr 6 PASS. [f/game, was colder than the weather bo ‘outside, while Eaglets were doing = SEDAN’ TD riuch better trom the floor. In the 3rd period Mikes bagged a lone basket, (by Tom Dabbs) after all | sumes Friday evening with | ; | POINTERS ON POINTS 1 ‘but 1% minutes had elapsed, and) vita ate, cecios ‘en etliege anal Walled Lake tackling Detroit | FE 5-6615 alter 20 futile tries. |petigctisces Cece’ uaa) cooetsc met Cathelsa Ceatrall af 4:50! and | | Art Goisdzinski and Stan Moni-| ‘Written for NEA Service and the Pontiac! Bentley engaging Redford Union . 'suzko set the scoring pace for the| By CARL BRAUN in the 9 o'clock nightcap. The | ‘Eaglets. Art, Eaglet center and New a Malcheshechare winner of each game also quali- LPPOOe ass biggest player, was the key man./ ° fies for the regionals. i ‘He and Monisuzko controlled the! The two-handed over-head set BASEBALL Art was top point-maker with 20, I'll pass to him (No. 1), then| iseph. Offensive stars Gary Ball- SUPPLI ES points. Stan collected 16. Art Ro-/80 behind him (dark line) for a/man and Ron Emerick were miss- 1958 boards all the time they were in Shot is my bread and butter) Fast Detroit opened its Class A . bak, Mikes’ freshman ace, was Tetum pass (No. 2. Then I'll shoot. jing due to injury and illness and’ \ $2 4 5 00 Down $ 4 8° Per good for 12 to lead the losers. |If the defender fights through, the |five sophomores were pressed into N Rawlings Gloves PRICES LOW SAVINGS ‘HIGH Turn Indicators district tourney last night with a’ action, accounting for most of the 40d it is most effective off a pick tise ad Title '43 rebounds credited to St. Mary.|Using the corner man. 96-48 victory over Detroit St. Jo- Month | corner man usually will rolf out duty. Don Petroff made 14 points anon ' | Eaglets hit the first five tries (toward the basket and r'll feed | ‘for the winners, on cians "III LILI Ia SS 22a a. 34,000 MILE WARRANTY ALL NEW CARS | at the hoops for a 10-0 count be- jhim for a layup. ; Duke Snid fore Shamrocks got a single | | never had the set until 1 came |, ropa FT TP rOvTREME | And ‘Many others — EDDIE STEELE FORD | pont. St. Mary hit 10 bankots In lio the Krickerbockers, I always|Beutn’ $ $3 $ Scud £1} nt Misr Olher plus tox ond | . . s pe was a pivot man in coege. But! Whitmer 3. 4- on ee 8 ee eee ee las 2705 ORCHARD LAKE RD. KEEGO HARBOR J spturge that produced 23 count: \f tag ty have an ounce tt Stites $21 § Seen 12 7 jl Baseball and Track Shoes “Out of the High ers. This frame also saw St. istick with the pros. I'm 6-5 and | fie™%e" : ae se Phone FE 5-9204 Overhead Area.” Michael's best performance, |most players guarding me are smith toe 3 kus’ ti :\ WELDEN Tra d e now J when six players contributed to ‘smaller. By shooting off the head ses 13 i Younes i 0-4 3 2 “gal it makes it almost impossible for\Recn ¢ 9:3 § Den 6 Gl 8 \) Sperting Goods ‘ and save! a A LLE ae ey ey wid leap! Tel 3 = ees co 0 oat de QQ OT ME Clemens rE s-0211 ~~ : i yw core by rters - Sih | ORTONVILL ‘I can drive around them. - Boutntield 2s. le 78's tage NOM LMI DS DM _- new tires. Goodyear’s famous Triple- | __ Tempered 3-T Super-Cushions are priced | e way down. Trade now for safer, easier- | riding 3-T Supr-Cushions. Extra strength + longer wear, better traction... at an un- ' beatable low price. Come in today. ~— &§ ‘Pay as Little as $1.25 a Week! Ge: 19S a BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL! $ 95° For Most Chevrolets. ] 2 Fords and Plymouths Comparable Low Prices for Other Model Cars Use Our Easy Pay Plan 2nd Annual All Family AT BOAT “ve Get -Value ‘for Your $$$ | ° March 7 thru 16 Bring the whole gang to this exciting Boat Show. AT THE | wena ees — ae ; / | iss . AN . You — HOW @ | (Wyre “= is co 10 Oe Seon I . _ 0} Tete hedeom st Dea Stamps . | m |] Cee eee SERVICE SPECIAL || S2t2'27ss. (crate otc FREE! 5@O FREE! OO val Here’s What We Do: with plenty. of opportunity for Boat-talk with your . . friends and Bob. Make a date. It’s all family fun. ee | & COMPLETE FRONT END ALIGNMENT Wholesome recreation for everyone. HOLDENS RED STAMPS HOLDENS RED STAMPS WITH PURCHASE OF IVY LEAGUE SPORT SHIRTS Latest Styles and Colors. Just the Shirt for Spring. (Regular 10.95) _ %* BALANCE TWO F i EELS ec al SEE the NEW ‘58 BOATS NOW *% ADJUST BRAKES (Regular 1.75) . NO HUSTLE AND BUSTLE > 4 PACK FRONT WHEELS WITH PURCHASE OF MEN’S FELT HATS New Spring Colors. Lt. Blue, oy Grey, ernen. B4 (Regular 3:00) # INSPECT BRAKE LINING | FRANCHISED DEALER TERMS $ 3 5 0 © % INSPECT BRAKE DRUMS : t Johnson Outboard Motos de en ‘5 e ©, & INSPECT WHEEL CYLINDERS * Glaatgn Boste Craivers Ine 2 lume Craft BUDGETS 1 Beka Sires Merch 17 | ‘hes * Po etform wen Cruisers i if ) , SrAounG | Sea WE GIVE —— Aa Re 20. 70 oe NOW $ 5 oe | * “Gator” Boat Trailers a : i > WE GIVE mi HOLDEN . 9. § ~ 9.9 Bring the Family and the Gang to Visit One of | ‘HOLDENS RED D STAMPS. ) Re BED STAMPS a; as Low as 2 25 a Week! ta Open 7 Days | Michigan's Most Complete Marine Shopping Centers. wt Mek BOB WHYTE'S OR TONVILLE = sg0mfiean, |S" | OUTBOARD MARINE 4 30S. Cass FE 5-6123 cena * | 384.M-15 HIEWAY National 7-3185 ~ of MetingP Plan Tests Soviet Intentions by Proposal to Confer With Disarmament Unit WASHINGTON w — The United States has advised the Soviet Union that the Western powers intend to ask for a meet: ing of the United Nations Disarm- ament Commission this month. The move is designed to test| Ses the Soviet Union’s declared inten- tion of boycotting the commission. If the Soviets refuse to cooper-|Heers. (hchs.) doz. ...... cresceees 2G ate, the Western powers then will Parsley, bry, 80 doa. 32002 138 take the issue of d t ne-| Petatcos tates, zi, a rerseens OM gotiations into the United Nations| Radishes, fey Alliage doz. +e. 1.50 Rhubarb, ho (behs.) dos. . vo Lab Security = Geuieh: Wavbard: bec ¥ * Turnips, topped, bu. ..........0. eee 2.95 The rae was developed in coh- —_— sultation with NATO allies. It was Poultry put in final form in Paris last week. DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, March § (AP)—Prices paid The Western. governments de-jper pound for nee 1 top quality live cided that the whole operation should be handled in a friendly manner so the Soviets would have evidence that the Western powers were not simply trying to embar- rass them. * * * e The 25-member U.N. Disarma-) ment Commission was created by| the General Assembly late last year after the final breakdown of disarmament talks in a U.N. sub- committee made up of the Soviet Union, the United States, Britain, «France and Canada. The Soviets wanted a commit- tee composed of the whole United Nations membership of 82 nations. They opposed the 25-member commission from the first. — 2 Drivers Die onCounty Roads: Detroiter Killed as Car Skids Into Truck’s Path on Slippery Pavement Two drivers died on Oakland se County roads in trafficy accidents during the past 24 hours. The latest victim, a Detroiter, was fatally injured shortly before 8 a.m, today when he lost con- trol of -his car on slippery pave- ment and skidded into the path of an oncoming gravel truck on 32 Mile road, one mile east of Rochester road. * * * He was identified as Ralph G. Sepulveda, 34, of 8450 Pierson St. He was apparently killed instantly, State Police said when he was thrown from his car onto the pave- ment. The truck driver, uninjured, was not held. Lamont Haverkate, 63, of 21301 Telegraph Rd, Southfield Town- ship, crashed inte an abutment at the Eight Mile . Telegraph road viaduct early yesterday afternoon, Haverkate, a Ford Motor Co. tool cribgattendant, was driving south on Telegraph and apparently lost control about 50 feet north of the Wayne County line, state police said, They are investigating to deter- mine if he may have suffered a heart attack, causing him to lose control of the car. Electric Company Meter Aids Market ANADARKO, Okla. ( — When the electric bill of a big super- market fell off drastically for six months, the municipal power de- partment got to checking. It found that a new electric meter had ben hooked up wrong, ’ and the store owed the city about $600 based on previous bills. Em- bartassed by it all, City Manager Joe Parris. wrote the company a letter and asked if the super- market would consider a late bill. The city got a check back for $600. Unlicensed Barber Trimmed in Court An unlicensed barber's activities got trimmed in municipal court today when he pleaded guilty. * * * Ralph W. Kitchen, 47, of 469 Montcalm St., was placed on six months probation by Judge Cecil B. McCallum, F He was also ordered by the court to dispose of a barber's chair he owns and to confine his hair cutting to his own family. The court also ordered Kitchen to give access to his home to Robert Scott, state barber ex- aminer, who will make periodic checks. Hair-Spray ‘Bomb’ Sales Hit 80 Million this property off the lake and THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 them in wholesale Svar gr Quotations are furnished b; Detroit Bureau of Markets, a Monday. ‘Produce ‘ Delic &, HOU, DU. ..essecehe os $4.78 ’ Jonathan, ee aoe sseeale eee 3 OUNIIINY 6/90 bu. Red, bu = SP eeereerseeee 2.00 todd bu... o> 8: Carrota, MS gare ag bu. ‘elery, roo ceelemece Horseradish, ~ basket ree Leeks, (bchs.) ttt cary - to ns Heavy type bens, “26-28; light type hens, Ys-18. heavy eS ge pro re and tryers, 2%-3% Ibs. whites, 34-25, barred Rocks, 27; caponettes, iden ‘ibs, 26, 5-5% Ibs., 31-32; ducklings, 3 ; DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, March 5 (AP)—Eggs, f. 0. b. Detroit, cases included, foderal-state| grades: > rey 44-45; browns, grade'4grade Whites, grade A, extra large, 55; large, 50-53, weighted average, 53; medium, 61; grade B, large, 50; browns grade A, extra large, 58; large. 49%: medjum, 48's; grade B, large, %: checks. aa Commercially graded: Whites, grade A, extra large, 51; large, 47%-50; medium, 44-45; browns, grade A, extra large, 50; large, 4719-49; medium, 45-4549. - Livestock [Market Seeks = Shag Win} “NEW YORK @® — Steels were The market was riding a four- day winning streak and trying to make it five. ; * * * Key issues rose fractionally, Quite a few were unchanged. A few losers appeared. ; Motors, coppers, chemicals, oils and rails were narrowly ahead. Airlines were easy. The ability of rails to join the industrials in the rise was an en- couraging technical sign. Further 93 (reassurance that the administration plans to fight. the recession and news of higher copper prices abroad also helped. * * * Bethléhem, Republic Steel and Youngstown Sheet rose fraction- ally. U.S. Steel was firm. Chrysler erased a small early loss and added another fraction to ~|its 56 rise of yesterday when its Jupiter-C missile fired another in- tended satellite skyward. General Motors and Ford were steady. * * * United Aircraft was down around a point on profit taking after its two-point rise yesterday in antici- pation of record earnings. ~ New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) High court justices have affirmed a 1956 decision of Oakland County Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland that some 25 owners of lots not on the lake might use it and a boat basin. * * * Members of the Harbor Hills|#, Assn., property owners jin a sub- division by that name on the lake, had argued these back-lot owners had no legal right to lake priv-| ileges. The C.-E. Summers of 3850 The ‘Summers had subdivided claimed the buyers had access to Cass Lake. x * Some 45 families .in the associa- Supreme Court ruled otherwise. Merchant Almost Loses His Prize to Customer ‘DETROIT uw — Ward's Automo- tive Reports says ‘a tense situa- tion is developing that promises The trade publication continued: “American Motors Corp. and Summit Choice Up to Russians U. S. Officials Declare; *™ons Key Point in Diplomatic Maneuvering at Hand WASHINGTON (INS)—U. S. offi- cials said today the decision on whether there will be a new East- West “summit’’ conference is now squarely up to the Soviet Union. : * *x-* Officials said the lengthy diplo- matic maneuvering between Mos- cow and Washington has now ar- rived at this point: —If the Kremlin agrees to U. 8. insistence that “real progress”’ toward world peace must first be made at a foreign ministers’ meeting, then there will. be a top-level parley, —But, if the Soviets stick to their present position that they be given a blank check to dic- tate what world problems can and cannot be discussed, as .34.5| will be no conference. The consensus is that Ruséia’ s “:'s1.2\leaders are so desirous of a sum- mit conference—to take the Rus- sian people’s minds off troubles at home and to gain a big propa- ganda victory in Asia and Africa " oH —that they probably will soon 2 relent and accept Western condi- ‘tions. x * * ‘State Department officials were speech by Soviet Ambassador Mik- hail Menshikov for a_ possible answer to what the Kremlin's lead- ling they want so badly, hand-shaking marathon with U. S. 1 p.m. (EST). : Dog Attacks Three, 3'Killed by Neighbor to pet the animal. daughter, Kathryn, and his father, ‘58 Called Decisive Year for Foreign Car Market | to make 1958 a year of decision ,|for the imported car.” ‘latter group’s modest volume load looking today to a scheduled ‘ers intend doing about the meet- Mensikov, who has been on a! officials since his arrival in Wash- 34 |ington last month, will address a at National Press Club luncheon at FLINT (#—A boxer dog savagely attacked a man, the man’s 1l-year- old daughter and 76-year-old father Wednesday as the child attempted State Police said .Clayton New- ton, 43, of Geneseeville is in good condition at a Flint hospital today suffering bites of the left leg, right ankle and multiple body cuts. His : .». 65.5 Int Tel & Tel 31 DETROIT LIVESTOCK Allied eh 33" M82 Iu Crk Coal” DETROIT, March 5 ‘AP)—Cattle,| Allis Chal. 24.2 Johns Man 38 salable, 600. Early trade slaughter steers, a Ltd ..... foe! Jones & L ,...30.6 active, strong to 60 cents higher: cows a Aire it Kennecott «80.1 |mocerately active, steady; other classes, eee noose Ul Kimb Clk iscarce, unchanged; few early sales low, Cyan OC IODD 40.7 Kresge, 6S .,..26.2 to average choice 1090-1220 tb. steers an, Gas a& Ei 41.6 MtOBer .---.--- 68 27.50-29.25: good to low choice steersiamMa& Fdy .. 38.3 LOF Glass 71.6 24.50-27.00; utility and standard steers am Metal ..... 193 Ligg & My .. he 19.50-24.50: utility cows 16.00-17.50; can-\am Motors... 8.4 poke h = oer ners and cutters 13.00-16.00. mNGas .... 585 Conherd oh Vealers, salable, 75. Only few prime Am News ..... 241 Vou & Nash vealers sold up to 33.00, these strong. |AmRad ...... 13.2 yeaee grk | Sheep, salable, 300. Slaughter lambs Am Smelt - Ald Fi ou =a moderately active, tends, other classes Am Tel & Tel “1703 Mead Cp : 35 searce, unchan two loads mostly Am Tob ....... BS Merr Ch & 8. 182 choice wooled slaughter lambs 95-99 lbs. ree Moaragy tee aa Mpls Hon .... 82.6 24.00-25.00; two loads good wooled lambs reer th ** 497 «Minn M ... 78.2 73 lbs.‘and 90 Ibs 22.75 and 23.00; load Armour & Co. 13.5 Minn acl, ... 20.5 prime shorn. with end of choice No. pesos Ck * 95g Monsan Ch .. 32.2 \2 pelts 99 lbs. 24.25; two loads cholce|atchison ...... 184 Mont Ward ... 33.6 ‘shorn No, 2 pelts 99 Ib. and 108 Jb./ati Refin |... 36 «(Nat Bise ...,. 3° lembe 23.00-23.50: 108 Ib. averages at Avco Mig ||... 6.2 nee oor a joad good shorn lambs No. 2 pelts Balt & Ohio .. 24.6 Y .-0e 41. io one 22 50. [Bendix Av .... 48.6 Net Ope -..- oc Hogs, salable. 400. Butchers moderately Benquet Brio, atl | NY Central * 136; active, steady to strong: sows steady to Beth Steel .... 39.7. Nia M P ny i 25 x lover: weights over 600 oy = = r at No Am Av... v3 lower; most mixed “No. 2 | OO EAE PIT Paescoo EE and 3, 160-240 Ib. butchers 20.25-20.80;) selgpen ne #93 Oliver Cp '!':: (85 few lots mixed No. 1 and 2, mostly No. Capital int 1). vg Owens ong, ooe 39.2 2 20.75; no straight No, 1 early supply; Carrie : 545 cae . 53 No. 2 and 3 240-300 Ibs. 18.78-19.75;' Case "lit ggg Pan A W Alr . 145 mixed grades 160-180 Ibs. 18.75-19.50: Cater Trac ‘g Param Pict mixed grades sows 300-400 To. 1775-1875: Gen'init Pt 100, Parke Da: No. 2 and 3 400-600 Ib. sows 16.50-17.28. Ches & Oh .... 49 Penney. - mtr : : Chrysler .... $1 7 Pa Pliser) 5. ...... : a0) Cities Bvc .... $8.2 Phelps D ....; 14! =" Clark Equip.. 42-4 pniico .....° 1. 146 Grain Prices Cluett Pea .. 408 Philip mee ie CHICAGO GRAIN Pg wan a over to ‘wits we niin anions: March 6 (AP) Opening Colum. Ges.. 17 Pure Sar Rs Wheat— May .. 63% Come Ed .. 443 RCA _..... Bi / 23% July cioceeee 61%g Con Edis .v., 49.2 Repub Bt .... 4 May ;....., 2191) Bep. 2 sss. th Consum Pw .. 49.4 Rex Deve... as Duly... ose. 1.4 Cont ah owe a ee pee cace a yt.) = Sees oe Mot .... a Rey Fey 8 cae ‘2 Cora— *"" July ......0. 1.17% Copper Rn “" 18.8 eway St ... 28. Mar 1.15% Sep. ‘20% Gorn Pa... 37.1 St 208 34 May o- 1.17% Dee. ........ : 124% is Pub ve 92 Bi er oe A July 1.20% eo es ME Slay ACO IN pS vi eee «- 5 Bee RS ag Bie BSE SNE Be 7 SEED uly ..seee ae sept res 2 AG gia eo Bea ‘ enna : Du Pont .. 4 Socony ...... . MAP. 2.26. <0 6% ~ were. 1200 Fast Air Lb .. 36.7 Southern Co . ro Fmer Rad ... 45 Sou Pac ..... r Erie RR ...... ME ld x] Ex-Cell-O .... 31.1 gPrrty id °° agg Fairb Mor ... 385 iq of Cal |. 45.3 Pord Mot |... 396 $9 Si Inq .. 30 Gen Dynam .. 59.7. gtd O11 NJ ., 50.2 Gen Elec .... 62 gtd OH Oh... 44.1 Gen Fds .... 544 gtevens, JP .. EY : Gen Mills .... 67.4 =r" See ee Gen Motors .. 34.3 Swift & Co .. 32.4 Gen Shoe .,. 225 Texas Co ... mle Gen 1 . 43 Tex G oe 16. Gillette ...38.3 Textr ae Goebel Br +428 | Leeda aaa! ras ° woodyear ...... : Supreme Court Ruling Gram ITT a Carvtae "go : “374 Unit Air ee 26.2 Backs Judge Holland 9 wees Pt sta Dat A tin ee ) Gulf OW ..... 107.4 Unit Fruit. ... 43. 2) on Non-Water Homes [ters 648 Un Gas cp 201 Homestk vee 383 US Rud _ 326 i Oat oe we ("un Tel ca Are Cent +303 ‘en Many families in the vicinity of|tnaust Ray‘! 148 Westg A Bk .. 201 Cass Lake can look forward to a Soli eer coot Beale Wes bee ot summer of using the lake for the Interiak Ir |...21.4 Woolworth | . 42 first time because of a Supreme| iat Bary MOM 3B) Fen geeg 2) Court ruling recently handed down.|Int Nick ......75.2 th 140 y Int Paper......88.2 DETROIT STOCKS Charles, were treated and released with less severe bites. Police said the Newton family bought the boxer from the Genesee County Humane Society Saturday and were told by Mrs. Grace Smith, manager, that the dog would not 1ake to children of any age. insisted on buying the year-and-a- half-old male. * * * Officers said the dog bit Kathryn, in the elbow when she tried to, pet it. Her screams brought = ‘|father who wrestled around the! yard with the animal. His father was bitten when he tried to inter- vene. A neighbor, Ronald Kelsey, Mrs. Smith said the family| (C. J. Nephier Co.) Pigures after decimal points are eighths. # High Low Noon Ellen Elec. & Equip. Ge. 27° #2.7 #27 Baldwin Rubber - Co." 13. («4 Cork Co. 244 * . L. Ol & Co* 13 Howell Elect. fotor Co* 54 Peninsular M. Prod. Co.* . 9.2 HE e Prophet Co * 72 #76 Rudy ck Co.* ul 912 Toledo Edison Co. 13. «#13 13 Wayne 8. Products Co.‘ 17 3 *No sale; bid and — Area Lakes Ice Called Unsate at Present Time “Ice on Oakland County lakes is unsafe at the present time.” This warning came from Jack Weiler of the Michigan State Con- servation Department, who said, * was 18 inches of solid, thick ice ZI. finally killed the dog with a shotgun. ‘Ford Races to Meet Thunderbird Orders DEARBORN (INS) — Ford Motor Co. said today it is produc- ing its new four-passenger Thun derbird on a heavy overtime schedule in an effort to meet the demand for the new car, _ J. O. Wright, Ford vice president and Ford Division general mana- ger, said the demand for the car is represented by a backlog of 5,000 advance orders. “We are doing everthing we can to increase our production to meeting the’ demand,” Wright added, “and our hopes are to be producing about twice as many Thunderbirds in April as we did in February.” Wright said the only limiting fac- : tor at present is the availability of parts. The current production rate is slightly over 100 a day. The four-passenger T-bird was jintroduced by Ford Dealers three weeks ago. | Door Lock Expert Aids Wife's Cause DUBOIS, Pa. ® — A local house- preter of Iceland are-.largely|: - jot . Some : also live op this Are- tic. Circle island, wife asked Sgt. Joe Dussia, com- mander of the local Pennsylvania State Police substation and a * jocks altered. Her ‘husband gave’ him the phoned Dussia to report that his ny — work, — ‘that night when he tele-. Studebaker-Packard Corp. by their own declarations, have regrouped their product lineups and are de- pending almost entirely upon the small-car market for survival. WIDENS BITE ‘In this respect, the foreign car is steadily widening i 5 bite of U.S. auto sales. While this gain is com- ing at the expense of both the big three and the independents, the makes it vulnerable to sales pres- sure. American Motors Corp., of course, is showing new strength. “Thus any unusual reversals among the ts this year could dictate imposition of limits restricting importation of foreign cars, 206,827 (units), up 110.6 per cent from 98,187 posted in 1956. The independents, at the same time, fell 18 per cent last year, to’ Sine 622, from 216,534 a year. €arlier. Year 1957, in fact, marked the first time the imports topped the independents in ae sales vol- ume.’ * * * The trade publication reports that imported cars accounted for 3.4 per cent of overall sales last year while the so-called U. S, inde- pendents took 3.0 per cent of the total. In December alone, it said, imports amounted to 4.2 per cent while ‘the independents’ share was’ 2.9 per cent, © Included in the imported cars were American Motors’ Metro- politan line, built in England. The independents include all car makers outside the big three of General Motors, Ford and Chrys- ler. Emphasizing the extent to which imported cars have cut into the U. S. market, Ward’s shows that in 1953 they accounted for one-half of one per cent of total sales while the independents shared a total of nine per cent, * * * The independents at that time, of .course, were building a sub- stantial volume of larger cars, like Hudson, Nash, Packard and Stude- baker. Woman Collects for Her Injury on Coffee Break BOSTON (®—The Massachu- setts. Supreme Court has ruled ‘that injuries a worker suffers dur- ing a coffee break can be con- sidered as occurring on the job. “In 1957 import auto sales totaled |’ — Legislators Hold Bill-Killing Orgy 400 Proposals Die in Advance of Deadline to Clear Committees LANSING U—An orgy of bill- killing to keep pace with the legis- 4 lative timetable left Michigan law- makers today with a deflated work About 400 bitis died yesterday in advance of the deadline for favor- ably reporting bills from commit- tee in thé house of origin. i &® & * Only measures before the tax and, appropriations committees wete excluded—under joint legisla- tive rules—from the wholesale slaughter. When the dust cleared, a few more than half of the 900-plus bills filed during the early weeks of the legislative session were still alive, Among about 90 proposals kicked out of committee at the last min- ute was Gov. Williams’ bill for creation of a state building au- thority to undertake a recom- mended 55 million dollar construc- tion program. * * bd sent to the floor a right-to-know bill already approved by the Senate. A broader proposal in the same killed. under strict lease arrangements. He Denies Role Mamie’s Relati in House Quiz * * * The court ruled yesterday in the case of Mrs. Phyllis A. Clifford, 46, Worcester, an employe of the Worcester Mutua] Fire Insurance Co. She was awarded $1,860 against the insurer, the Aetna Insurance Co., for attorney's and doctor's fees, costs and compensation. * * * Mrs. Clifford fell downstairs |while going for a coffee break in 1952. She lost no time from work, although badly bruised. In 1955, she stopped work be- cause of trouble with her back. A month later she underwent a fusion of her spine. 8 Per Cent in Sweden Have Housing Problem STOCKHOLM — About 8 per, ‘cent af the Swedish people are still wrestling with some housing | problem although housing construc- tion this year is expected to set an all-ttme record of 62,000 new dwelling units completed. A public-opinion poll shows that have no dwelling of their own and! another fourth find their homes too small. Airlines subsidiary headed by G. T. Baker, a. friend of his. But The House state affairs group field backed by the governor was Another 11th hour survivor would clear the way for relief of local bus systems from state gas and weight taxes provided their opera- tions are tightly controlled by cities in FCC (ase Opportunity to Testify WASHINGTON «—Col. George Gordon Moore, a brother-in-law of Mrs. Eisenhower, will be given a chance to testify in a House inves- tigation of alleged influence in the! . grant of a _ lucrative television license in Miami. * * & Moore denied that he had any- thing to do with the Federal Com- munications Commission's gfant of TV Channel! 10 to a National last night he was too late for serv- ‘ice, the man smashed in the front his shoulder and drove off, Wright told Pontiac police. Baldwin Service Station, 128 Baldwin Ave., was entered by burglars yesterday who took $8 in change from a soft drink machine and from an open cash register. at the Baldwin Fish supper at ee UB. Church a 210 Bald- door window of the station with|"* Serving 5-8. Adults, $1.00, . ‘The ard of Lodge Calendar Townehi, | dy County, Michigns 1958, at 7:30 P.M. at the ‘rownabip Hall communication of Pon. lowing changes tn _ ig Dis- tiac ge No. 21, F.&A.M., Pri- tects: day, March 1. 7:30 pm. Gerald L. om SF to M- Moors, W.M. T. 4 N., ~ E., oat na ae ; 68.79 ft, tom 9 Ww. of 8 thence N.88° 26° 50” B. 112615 tt., “pene ‘ . N.1° 23° 43" E. ft., thence N.2° 33° ews in rie 30” E. 476.19 ft., thence N.4° 24° 46° EB, 100 ft., thence N.70° G3 05” W. 1170.55 ft. to W. sec, line, thence. S. 3° 17° 26” When Joseph S. Wright, owner Guero ‘< ns yo ieee 2 : z . ” Ti of Marathon Service Station, 240/go0gis Bd, woceted Nae IT E. Wilson Ave., told a motorist from 8.W. corner of Section 31, thence N.85° 26° 50" EB. 335 ft., thence 'N.4* 23° 10" W. 130 ft., 335 . thence 8.85° 26 60” W. one B.4° 37 10” E, 130 ft. to -to Mr2 T. 4N., R. 9 E., Section 31. p Definning ot at an iron peaks N.2°17 rom 8.W. corner of 8 % thence 8.40" oa" 08" = “i038, ‘. iron stake in White Road, Rummage Sale: Trabe, 128 W. Pike, Friday, March 7. 4:30. Ra —Adv. Rummage sale. Sat. 8. 10 to 6. K of C Hall, St. Patricks Church. ' Rummage sale, youth center, Lake Oren: Fri. and Sat. — adv. — 2012 Cass Lk. Rd., Rw Fri. 9 to 5. Sat: 9 to 1. —Adv. Wants Inquiry McNamara Cites Use by Kohler as Violation of Taft-Hartley Act By G, MILTON KELLY mara (D-Mich) toda demanded vigorous inquiry as to whether it was legal for the Kohler Co, to hire detectives to check on strik- ing union pickets. : xk * * Lyman C. Conger, chief attor- ney for the Wisconsin plumbing fixtures firm, testified the com- pany hired private detectives ‘‘to * * * “Spying on union gatherings ts bor relations) Act,” said. As a nonlawyer, he added, he isn’t sure yet whether to direct Relations Board or to the Justice Department. * * * Moore wrote Rep. Harris (D-Ark), chairman of the investigating sub- repeat his denial under oath. “Of course the committee will give him that opportunity,’’ Har- ris told newsmen. He said no def- inite arrangements have been made, ; * x * The subcommittee hearings were in recess unti] Monday when Thurman A. Whiteside, Florida attorney, is expected back to fin- ish testimony about his role in the Miami case and his~ financial favors to Richard A. Mack, one resigned under fire as an commissioner earlier this Mok A. Frank Katzentine, a Miami radio station owner who lost in a bid for Channel 10, has aargrn before the subcommittee tha heard Moore ‘‘engineered”’ - ee sion, Inc., the Nationa] Airlines subsidiary. * * ‘pressure was exerted by Katzen-| tine and others on Katzentine’s ‘behalf. from Illinois residents. reading about my last party. cares.” He said last Grace, 19, about last Sunday's party. He said he has checked cuses, ing up—because It was in the He added: + ¥ x * Dougherty, reduced to tears last Sunday night when he finally realized none of his guests was going to appear, sald “And you can bet I'm not going to ask any of those. I'm thinking of inviting people who have written me since He said his present financial condition prevents him _ from trying before next summer. In addition to his win- dow washing business, Dougherty draws a disability pension from the government. ay’s party cost him and his wife, In addition he said publicity over the failure of invited guests to show up for the party has cost ‘him four of his 16 window 4 customers. * On the brighter side, - ppt said a service company refunded the $5 he paid to rent an extra large table for who didn’t show up and has received all kinds of ex- “Most of them seem to take it as a joke—their not show- ‘It seems like some ould cocioeie but none did.” | No One Came to Party but Vet May Try Again DETROIT (AP) — Eugene Dougherty whose birthday party last Suhday gained nationwide attention when 40 in- vited guests failed to show up, said today he’s thinking of , trying again next August on his first wedding anniversary. The 23-year-old Korean war veteran who works as a sympathizing over the last party. And he said the Chicago Post Office called him saying it was holding some letters * It's nice to know somebody * about all of the 40 guests “paper.” Lig ‘ \ i '|Products Co, Wednesday declared The Michigan Senator's state- pared to explore the beating of a Kohler nonstriker by William Vin- Son, an official of the United Auto Yorkers, Vinson was convicted of the assault and sent to prison. * * * nedy said witnesses would include Vinson, an international represen- tative ‘of the UAW from Detroit, and Willard Van Ouwerkerk of Sheboygan Falls, Wis., whose in- juries included a broken neck. «- Bakery Union Says It Has Cleaned Up CINCINNATI ( — The scandal- award to Public Service Televi-|torn Bakery Workers Union says it has cleaned house in a special congress. here after handing a modest vote of confidence to its'J. Baker has denied getting any |most controversial figure—Presi-|* one fourth of those with’ problems help from Moore and has said gent James G. wil Cross. * * * The union delegates shut down the convention yesterday after di- recting officers to seek ways to comply with rulings by the AFL-/i C1lO—which kicked out the bakers several months ago on charges of corrupt leadership, * * * ‘ But the convention attached a agreement with must be in accord with the Bakery Workers Union constitution. Kenyon, Eckhardt Gets About Detectives = : WASHINGTON (#—Sen. McNa-|{h® get information about violence.” Holle a vidlation of the Taft-Hartley ‘(la-| “Rp McNamara his demand to the National Labor |fhe ment to newsmen came as the Fiagre committee, that he is willing to/Senate Rackets Committee pre- Chief counsel Robert F. Ken- n jLuettke, Chester R. 8n proviso saying that any peace| fd the AFL-CIO)}x istant N.1° Ls E Children, 50c, 4y corner on 8, section line, thence N.1° ) i870 Lard ny” de white Lat These: © Ely « e e s Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Berortey thence 8.25° 198 ft., thence N. one URW Hail, er ceniusie Sts oe Mae OTn pain the URW 128 W. Pike trom 7 fa : thence N.80° 08’ E. 507.70 ft. to Siy 8:00 a.m. to noon, March 8. Aa GTRR R/W.. thence SEly along pay. ed rt line 261.39 ft te center e t. to center Rummage Sale, March 8th, 9:30- of road, 7 oti 8.78* 44° 40” WW. 316.19 3:30, Four Towns Methodist. pas pol aggroling Tee ce eee eg ving ra Chureh, Cooley Lk. Rd. — adv. 1313.74 ft., dist. 159.80 ft.’ thence’ 8.70° 48° 40" W. 639.49 ft.. thence aod curve jto right, having radius 746.45 f a a is A thence 8.84° 20° 40” wo 579.30 © beginning, except that part lyin Wily. of White Lake abs — . E. 150 ft., except a strip of land 300 wide, of equal width, along the soutnects line thereof, From R-1 to C-1. Commencing in the center of Ander- sonville — in the 8.E. a Section 31, T.4N., 9 E., Michigan to a ‘From R-1 to _C-1. ommencing at a point in the center- line of Andersonville Road at the point of intersection of said centerline the centerline of Nelsey Road projected, nm the 8.W. % Section 31, T. qn. R. 9 E., Michigan, thence Norther: pagpebed boundary of sent C- - ing classification 300 ; wae sane easterly parallel to centerline of Ander- = en mak o a distance of equal & pol: and ion Ma Son a % on the North or us 150 ft section line rm S the N. and 8. M-2 classification as extended to the center of Anderson- ville Road; thence Southwester) iterline of And ville point of beginning = on cen- to the Independence : re. . Zoning Fon qe seein epic? mae ee ttrect, w? Surtees course cn Go vee Tri bie, * Stelle a2 fear Tah anne cere r; arry Vernon, Herman ck. Jennie Heenke, Marion Ho Pa Parks, Mrs. rile bare. Harola Be pa ie 7 LY Roy Chenhalls, "E ‘bone, Benjamin 0. Cot ich. ie, R ich, Qssessment, Peer asd “ne al ane Rv March’ 6, 1958 place o persons interested rch §, 7267 1951 Olds, Serial ie ; id 10:30 a.m., r 601 Satine State Bank Bidg., Pon- CE OF . Tootncs ‘seamen Pingree Street. Green, ny By Louise Tatu Herold Pe =u. ‘a j,Burl Weds, a. L. Paul Mutt foseph Deloria, - lam A. M meu E Nowman, obo . L ford, < of the ‘ommission at part ded «' \ sae borne by special assesam construction of two-inch as: crete, sartace course an on in my ott i Lincoln, Continental Ads paar 2p erat ine eet in DETROIT » — Selection of Ken- ‘Chamber ‘in 'uaig “City, on “tne. Tita day yon & Eckhardt, Inc, to handle. ‘of March aD i958 ai 8 p.m. to review said assess ance 7 “which tim place copertanity vin be given al advertising for the Lincoln and ies ied Mareh fst 195 Continental car lines of Ford Mo- tor Co. was announced today. The company also has the Mercury ac- count. ADA R. on Clerk Mar ren 6, 1988 The advertising firm formerly had the Lincoln account from Jan- "1948, bara uary, 1948, until introduction of the Mt," iad, “he Two-t wai toe ene surface course on %. Aros. a Randall, ca 1956 model in September 1955, KS Flossie Bot Beat it s td Selection of Kenyon & Eckhardt Fe is Part of the general shift in ad- vertising accounts by various auto », rust (hare companies that began with the ter- Mr ‘Gem mination of Buick’s 24 million dol- lar contract with the Kudner Agen-|T cy, Ine. Dividend Announced DETROIT w~American Metal a quarterly dividend of 4 cents a share of common stock, payable March 31 to wiockhobders, of| rec- ret _jord March 14 company. last | Novernber increaded ‘4he~ annual} ‘dividend rate from, $150 to ara | per common, share. Kent, Wilbut Me Mr. Staley, Mr, Bluemer, gt Goa, Tae Richard Bow: Ay . Fern Clark, en Astor Street so Rast is also he Seas ee ist Ponting im the chamet i i S00 ati 4 eral tat mien f WS te a / : is / : ADA wr - f Maren's. ~ Bagel