TWISTER ON RAMPAGE — A plle of shat- AP Wirephotes 
tered wood and household effects attests to the house near Roseboro, N. C., killing a woman and 
Sucy f 0. teenete: wise eunens ors ce Oe her four-year-old-son this week. | 
SNOW SCENE — More fitting for December 
than April is this glimpse of a countryside near 
| Clevelafid, Ohio. After days of shoveling from 
. under similar deluges, area residents might be   forgiven if they raised their eyebrows over a 
recent U.S. Weather Bureau statement that 
“this year's spring weather rampage of snow 
«+, is unusual, jad caine tama =   
ae 
  ICEBOUND — Even the ice remains in record quantities. Above 
right, a Coast Guard ice breaker works to free a huge freighter 
(left) in Whitefish Bay, near Duluth, Minn., as a convoy of ships 
moved toward Lake Superior to open the 1957 navigation season 
  
Fear Dems May Dump Key Bills 
Party Heads Advis 
to Fight tor His Pr   
‘Ike 
ram 
to make a personal fight for his legislative program, 
now bogged down in Congress. 
The President was said to have been told at a con- 
ference with the leaders yesterday that unless White 
House pressure is exerted+ 
to speed up action, many, been catght in the budget-cutting of his props may be squeeze. dumped Democratic-| Eisenhower himself has put off 
controlled T eeasinn. pret ae prayer fopmny boyd red 
One of the conferees said Eisen-|5i4" Se ae a ame | aid program. It face: t 
= Shower listened attentively but gave S a tough fight, no indicatién whether he- would) ‘with more than t months act on the advice. In the past % : | of the season gone, only two major '» Eisenhower has shown reluctance) ping have been enacted: The Mi 
| to crack the whip at Congress. ic Linpahere die East resolution and the meas- 
The GOP leaders were repre- ure continuing high business taxes 
omnted os prety eee | until June 30, 1958. 
about the fate of civil rights leg- 
istation still tied up in commit- 
tees. 
The theory is that if a civil 
rights bill is passed by Congress,   
    no successful attempt will be; opimaries .....;.. prendes 5 
made to attach to the school bill) Qounty News ........ 26 
an amendment — such as that) poaitorinis sa asus eciech 6. | which Killed it last _year—to BAT) gooety o...ceesecesssnne SOSA an ‘aid. to segregated districts. | ‘qyesters ............ nieesn By le * * j ® -< ¢ 3 TV & Radia seve 
i \ The bill calls for ah out- Witeve,, art vtvee on aeee 3s. 
\ day of 85 milli ars in the ie Women’s Pages. hvondbe Prd 13-18, 
‘fiscal a! cr begin July Tt has. Pot-0-Gold sesh eee ee “5 votes oe 8 
lof fh a Advise Change 
in Suez Talks British Reportedly Ask ° 
U.S. to Toss Problem 
Back to U.N. 
WASHINGTON @ — Britain is 
reported to be advising the Unit- 
ed States to toss back into the 
United Nations Security Council 
the dispute with Egypt over future 
operation of the Suez Canal. 
* * * 
Several Allied countries, includ- 
jing Britain, are said to feel that 
direct American negotiations are 
making no progress toward get- 
ting any major concessions — in 
Egypt's new operating plan. 
U. S, Ambassador Raymond A. 
Hare met for an hour yesterday 
in Cairo with Egyptian Foreign 
Minister Mahmoud Fawzi in a re- 
sumption of the negotiations which 
had been reported deadlocked af- 
ter four sessions last week. 
If the U. 8.-Egyptian talks 
collapse, raising the problem 
anew in the Security Council 
would keep the argument going 
in the hope-that eventually some 
better protection for users of the 
waterway might be achieved. 
In Cairo, irate Arab states are 
‘reported thinking of protesting to 
WASHINGTON (#!—President Eisenhower reportedly, 
has been advised by Republican congressional leaders Washington because an American 
tanker sailed through the disputed 
Gulf of Aqaba with oil for Israel. 
The semiofficial Middle East 
News Agency said the anti-Israeli 
nations felt the United States had 
violated Arab territory by per- 
mitting the tanker Kern Hills to 
pass through the disputed Tiran 
Strait en route to the southern 
lIsraeli port of Eilat. 
The State Department denied it 
sent out the tanker to demonstrate 
U, S. belief in all nations’ right of 
free passage through the strait. 
But a department spokesman ac- 
knowledged the United States 
cotild have stopped the Kern Hills 
had it wanted to. 
: * * * 
The 10,441-ton tanker. — under 
charter to Israel — went through 
"\the Gulf of Aqaba Saturday tc 
deliver 16,500 tons of crude oil and 
fuel to Eilat, It was the first 
»| cargo! of oil ever brought to the 
Jewish nation through the gulf. 
Mother's Day Boon 
PITTSBURG, Calif. & — The 
an-   
Pittsburg Community Hospital 
nounced it will provide its serv-| 
ices free for the rnather of the 
first baby born here May 12 ~ 
    Metre ey: bony 
  Special Election   
Affects Land Only, Not Buildings   
The major .cutbacks in 
Glenn Co. 92 8S. Saginaw Saginaw Street - 
Assessment Cut Land assessments in Pontiac’s Saginaw central busi- 
ness row were sliced down $337,960 for 1957 due to 
weakening business conditions, City Assessor William 
R. Ransom announced today. 
94 pieces of property were 
generally on the west side of Saginaw from the Stewart- 
north to the county office   
Set for May 20 To Vote on Bond Issue 
for Completing Hospital 
and New Sewage Plant 
e 
The city will vote in a special 
election May 20 on $4,550,900 in 
general obligation bonds for the 
city hospital and a new sewage 
treatment plant. . 
| The date and general form of 
four questions on the ballot were 
set by the City Commission last 
night on. the recommendation of 
'|Claude Stevens, the city’s bond at- torney, 
to .35 mil] for the hospital and 
65 mill for the plant. 
* * * 
If passed, taxes probably will go 
up 1.5 mills, through the levying 
of another half-mill increase ap- 
proved for the hospital in 1954, It 
has never been levied. 
This would mean a total in- 
crease of $1.50 to Pontiac's pres- 
ent $13.70 tax rate for every $1,- 
000 in assessed valuations, 
If the plant bonds pass, the city 
plans to issue another $391,000 in 
revenue bonds to complete new 
construction, add improvements at! de 
the present ‘plant and connect the 
two, . 
* * * 
A maximum interest rate on the 
cent, Other terms of. the bonds, 
however, will remain flexible at 
the time of voting, 
This is because the proposals are 
in the form of city charter amend- 
ments instead of resolutions, that 
would have to spel] out details in, 
advance, explained City Manager 
Walter. K. Willman, 
Mother to Appeal 
for New Trial in 
Custody of Baby 
A British-born mother will re- 
turn to circuit court Monday to 
continue her fight for custody of a 
2i-month-old child she has never 
seen. 
Mrs. Nona Hill, 33, will appeal 
for a new trial that might reverse 
the decision that little Lauren Rae 
Lewis stay with the Berkley couple 
that adopted her. 
The hearing to consider her pe- 
tition will be held by Judge H. 
Russel Holland, who last month 
ruled that the mother had legally 
consented to the adoption at the 
time of the child’s birth.   
  Mrs. Hill, a New York City resi- “building, and on the east 
side from Auburn avenue 
north through Robert Hall 
Clothiers, 200 N, Saginaw 
St. 
} Ransom emphasized that the 
cuts were on land assessments 
only, and did not include buildings 
(personal property), 
The total $337,960 consisted of 
a cutback of $200,260 by Ransom 
and a decrease of $137,700 by 
the city’s Board of Tax Review. 
Harold L. Blackwood, Pontiac 
real estate executive, in February 
recommended to the City Commis- 
sion reductions in this area from 
10 to 50 per cent. He declared: that | 
sive deterioration” of the area. 
Ransom yesterday announced 
that Pontiac’s 1957 assessment 
would total $254,146,600. This is an 
increase of $14,660,325 over the 1956 
total, 
: * * 
The city official attributed the 
hike to a $9,700,000 increase in 
Where the city assessor recom- 
mended from 10 to 20 per cent in- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) 
Louisville Aldermen 
Get Pleasant Surprise 
LOUISVILLE, Ky. ® — Louis- 
ville’s aldermen were dumb- 
founded. They opened a letter and 
found they were being praised 
“for all the things (you) have 
done for us.” 
The letter, signed by four 
= went on to list “the love- 
ly parks and community centers, 
ro ety ample playgrounds, won- 
rful new swimming pools, etc.” 
The aldermen said nothing like it 
had ever happened before. high taxes were causing “‘progres- 
      AP Wirephote 
ENVOY TO IRELAND? — 
McLeod, security chief for the 
State Department, has been 
nominated by President Eisen- 
hower to be ambassador -to: Ire- 
land, | April Showers 
| Pontiac proceeding 8 a.m. was     
Due-Tomorrow, 
With High of 50 The Pontiac area will be a 
little warmer tonight, says the 
weatherman, with the low around 
30-34 degrees. 
* * * 
Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy 
with ‘scattered showers and a little 
warmer, The high will soar to 
near 50. 
Western and Eastern Upper 
Michigan will be cloudy tonight, 
and a little colder Thursday 
with- showers or snow flurries, 
Friday will be generally fair 
and warmer, except in most of 
Upper Michigan where there is a 
chance of snow flurries. 
x *« * 
Lowest temperature in downtown 
26 degrees. The thermometer regis- 
tered 44 at 1 p.m. 
Friday will be a little colder 
but Saturday and Sunday will be 
warm again. Precipitation will total 
around one-fourth inch in showers 
  Thursday and again Monday, 
  
‘No Place to Go but Up’   
State GOP Vetétans Cool 
to Enthusiasm of Freshmen A move yelierday by freakin GOP members of the 
State House of Representatives to revitalize the headless 
Republican party in Michigan was received with little 
‘|apparent enthusiasm today by veteran legislators. 
Iitfuded in the 16 new members who voiced pleas for 
vigorous leadership of the party were Lloyd L. Anderson   
Crash Kills Wife 
of Retired GM Man 
The wife of a retired General); 
Motors executive yesterday died 
in Marietta, Ga., of injuries she 
received in a two-car collision 
there last week as the Birmingham 
month’s vacation in Florida. 
Dead is Mrs. Helen F. Kleist, 63, 
of 2010 Redding Rd. 
Her husband, Clarence, 64, re- 
tired regional manager for Gen- 
eral Motors, received fractured 
ribs in the crash and is still hos- 
pitalized. Mrs. Kleist is survived 
also by two daughters, Mrs, Hu- 
bert Kendall of Detroit, and Mrs. 
  John Vass of Birmingham.   
Dems Oppose More Mail Funds obligation bonds was set at six per|+   
GOP Helps WASHINGTON 
chief resign. 
fiscal year June 30. 
  
  death. 
for a. time and then stopped all 
the chief apostle should be as a 
others. 
’ A n 2:8 
  MEMO TO CAESAR 
2 Swords Are Enough | : (incinets alate teen 
When Pilate had finished speaking, 
resumed his report on events’at the supper... 
As the conversation continued around the 
table, the apostles began to argue over who 
should be leader of the band after the Nazarene’s 
You see, they took his prophecy literally. 
Jesus listened to their quibbling and jealousy 
He looked from one to the other of his abashed _ 
followers / until he came to Sion who is also” 
called Peter and who seems to’ be the most ’ 
epkaureeciee moos, heme et oee i fs Summertield 
(” — Postmaster General Summerfield has 
picked up new Republican support in his demand for another 47 
million dollars from Congress for current postal operations. 
But vocal Democratic opposition to the request continued. 
Rep. Cannon (D-Mo) urged the House yesterday not to be 
“stampeded,” and Rep. Porter (D-Ore) demanded that the postal 
Summerfield_has ordered a drastic reduction in postal services 
beginning Saturday unless Congress indicates the additional money 
is forthcoming for postal operations from now until the end of the 
‘ couple were returning from a! of Waterford Township, 
Donald A. Brown of Royal 
Oak, and Farrell E. Roberts 
of West Bloomfield Town- 
ship. 
ing Democratic victories in the bi- 
ennial. spring .election, and state-| 
ments from a Wayne County Re 
publican official that the Repub- 
lican party “had no place to go 
  but up.” 
Apparently the newcomers felt 
the GOP could fall further, and 
were concerned lest they lose 
the 61-49 grip on the House, 
Yesterday the new members 
called for a “candid, objective 
evaluation of the Republican party 
in Michigan." 
SOUGHT ACTION 
They sought action from Legis- 
lative committee chairmen and 
leaders to draft a new program 
for the party, and urged House 
Speaker George M. Van Peursem 
(R-Zeeland) as “‘the highest elec- 
tive office holder” left in the state, 
to act as chief spokesman for the 
movement, 
Van Peursem agreed to accept 
the job, provided the entire GOP 
membership could be rallied be- 
hind the program. 
Van Peursem yesterday prom- 
ised, within a week, a statement 
of Republican policy outlining “‘ex- Wins Dues Hi : 
The movement followed sweep- 
  Despite Stellato Monthly — Assessments 
Will. Be Increased _.to 
$3 Next June 
FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES 
ATLANTIC: CITY, N.J.— 
The United Auto Workers 
were ready to re-elect Wal- 
ter P. Reuther today as 
president of the million- 
member union. 
Any possibility of a chal- 
lenger vanished last. night 
in a smashing victory by 
Reuther forces over a mi- 
nority faction that opposed 
a 50-cent monthly dues in- 
crease to $3 next June. 
The opposition faction 
was led by Carl Stellato, 
president of the 44,000- 
member Ford River Rouge 
plant local. 
* & * 
The Stellato fattion claimed 
the union’s administration had 
enough money for operating ex- 
penses and salaries and that any 
inerease should be earmarked en- 
tirely for the UAW's 23-million- 
dollar strike fund. 
get a two-cent cost-of-living in- 
crease, 
FIRM CONTROL 
Reuther, as officer, 
kept firm control of the dele- 
gates during the dues 
* *. * 
At one time when booing broke 
out he warned, “I will not toler- 
ate booing at this convention. If 
anyone has such a feeling of con- 
tempt for another delegate’s opin- 
ion, let him keep it inside him.” 
The opposition faded to less 
than 200 delegates when it came 
to a showdown on a demand for 
a roll call vote. The rules re- 
quired 800 to support a roll call. 
The standing vote was over- 
whelmingly in favor of the in- 
crease, 
* * * 
Delegates yesterday approved a 
resolution making “a shorter work 
week with more take-home pay” 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)   actly where the Republican party 
    wants to go” in areas where sub- 
stantial agreement can be reached, 
  
Junius 
the noise with 
a statement that seemed to stun them... 
He said that whereas kings. exercise author- 
ity and are called benefactors, it would not be 
so with the greatest among his followers. He 
commanded that the greatest act as if he were 
the youngest —- the most in need of training 
and direction, I suppose he meant — and that “Here are 
servant to = 
and keep wat 
‘soldiers. With a kindly smile, Jesus warned Simon 
Peter that he would be an easy prey to tempta- 
tion. He .added that he had prayed for the for- 
mer fisherman, asking that his faith fail not. 
Then he said gently: “When thow art con- 
verted, strengthen thy brethren.” 
At this, Simon Peter fairly bristled. He said: 
“Lord, I am. ready te go with thee, both into 
prison and to death.” 
Patiently Jesus replied: “The cock shall not 
ee ee 
that thou knowest me.” 
stan he: Geel Wis ae ec iae, Gumnastoed 
“Tt is enough,” he answered... ~ 
~ Pilate turned to his agent. “Two swords!” He 
_ exploded. “What can they do. with two swords 
\ against the, rabble and the authorities? Go. out 
With ht he sept orders to alert is x * * 
eninge th, Papen eam 
        
  
  i gli aA A en 
  
plibiliatle ia 
   
      
    
   
   
     
         
   
     
     
   
           
     
     
        i, 8 ao Ki eee flee See ee YS a 
f AL : 
“pe 2 
\ 
1 
    
  
      Community Super Market 
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES    ‘Auburn Heights Next Door te Pontiac State Bank          
      By JAMES MARLOW   
             -CAKE MIX. 
PILLSBURY 
FLOUR $189 25 Lbs. i 
Eisenhower’ s     
    
   EVANS and ROY 
HOME prcoich programs might quence    
        
   JIFFY if he stuck out his jaw more. 
‘to be run over. 
~*~ *« *   dependent mood, Further, 
Associated Press News Anslystiiast-term president, Eisenhower @ny. hard follow-through, 
WASHINGTON ® — President naturally stands to lose some in- 
with Congress, 
have a better chance in Congress! among his own Republicans. 
Sel : a hates But, so far as can be seen, he’s! , 
niess © asserts strong - doi t much what di at 
‘ship in his aetcaal term, he's apt he hohe of his An. paclie how he intended to assert leader- 
Then he seemed 
and was criticized for it—that his *THE/ PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1957 i: | “38 Meas eel oY 
Ike’ s Program Endangered 
Unless He Takes Command   as aimendations to Congress without 
} This year he offered programs 
jin keeping with what he. called) 
eve the New Republicanism, At his 
|Nov. 14 news conference, the first 
after his re-election, he was asked 
‘iship for his modern Republicans. 
He replied: 
“J am not one of the desk-pound- 
ing type that likes to stick out to think — 
  -ranstteneryion aaenenersenaie gigi 
10 J” 59° * PER BOX _ Congress is in a whittling, in- i was simply to make recom- 
  his jaw and look like he is boss- 
     
  sears ASSIGNMENT FOR:        
JUNIOR: EDITORS ing the show .. , I would rather 
try to persuade a man to go) 
along.” 
But some of his most important! 
programs now either are under]     
    attack, even by Républicans, or}     
     Del Monte 
Red Salmon 
19 1-Lb. Can       
   BUTTON 
eta 
           
    
      
       WALLPAPER          Let Wallpaper Work : 
MAGIC | oat in Your | 
« Modernization Plans |   
EMERALD   
  epee Diver 
a, WITMLA 
SINK*STONE” appear to be headed nowhere./ 
.|There even appears to, be lack! 
—f jef coordination — or keadership — 
i within his own administration. 
For example: The confusion 
over his budget. At first he 
seemed to be inviting Congress to 
ie : reduce it, They. got this straight- 
ened out and Eisenhower got 
firmer on his figures. 
a Then Sen. Knowland of Califor- 
nia, the Senate Republican lead- 
er, talked of cutting the budget 
* three billion dollars. Last. week 
: Eisenhower came out against a 
: cut of as much as two billion, And 
on the same day Treasury Under- 
secretary Randolph Burgess said 
he thought it would be fine if the 
budget could be cut two to three 
billion dollars. 
Ace | There's hardly any doubt the 
“Np [budget ‘will be slashed, with 
Eisenhower's Republicans joining 
‘|Democrats to do it. And his four- 
billion-dollar foreign aid program, 
ene of his most important, seems \ ——s 
      
  BIRTHSTONES 
3. Emerald and Peari SALE | | 
  ‘Egyptian queen, looking at her emerald ring. 
The pearl is the birthstone for June. 
form a cultivated stone. 
          ‘WALLPAPER OUTLET picks up oysters from the sea bed.   
      
    We have more than | | The green, transparent emerald is the birthstone for May. In| federal aid to education. Its 
1,000 patterns in ‘beauty and value it is a close rival of the diamond. jane. now look slim. Lag! mal 
stoc k, for you to Ancient emeralds came from ‘Cleopatra's Mines” in Egypt. Al- tke dectes! ee ee 
come in and look ‘most all of the emeralds mined today are from the Colombian Andes) = © + Precideat aaa ci conares: 
ae: jin cee Ane ‘cal leaders to suggest a con- 
| Emeralds were worn by ancient Egyptians in rings or amulets) situtional amendment for clarify- 
to ward off evil and illness. Here is a picture of Cleopatra, the famous; ing the take-over by a vice presi- 
It is made 
formed on the lining of certain shell fish, the best coming from pear!| * * * 
oysters. Today some pearls are cultivated by inserting a tiny bit of 
stone or shell into an oyster. Layers of pearl grow over this bit to things Eisenhower has won from 
The best natural pearls come from the Orient, where they are, 
‘obtained by pearl divers like the one shown here. The diver carries) ™4DY 
‘a “sink stone” to help keep him under water and a basket in which| tinuance of the 
ito put oysters. He remains under water 50 to 80 seconds at a time and| axing 
Eisenhower asked for money for   person for some of the heaviest 
} 
  |dent when a president is disabled. 
up of deposits! That one is dead ‘already. 
About the only two important 
| Congress so far are approval for 
his "Middle East program — after 
weeks of delay — and con- 
excise and cor- 
their higher 
  poration taxes at 
Korean War levels. 
| Eisenhower may. not want to 
      -5811 (Gregory Goodiow of Grand Ledge, Mich., won $10 for this idea. 
OS N. SAGINAW | Open Daily 9 - 5:30 PE 2-58 gory & tick his chin out, but Congress 
. sonia wWKC Mon. and Fri. 9 to 9 FREE PARKING 'Send your suggestions in care of this newspaper. Violet Moore Higgins, tis year shows a willingness to 
7 in Rear AP Newsfeatures. ) belt it even when he keeps it close 
: | Tomorrow: Ruby, Peridot and Sardonyx ito his chest. 
= -anenensam, snoamcenuemmamnnseasasser < igen 
    
    
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   THE PONTIAC-PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10,1957  \ : pos |   
    
  
  
      
    
        
    
        ( ? 
4 a > \ \ ] Hl m * \ 
: Pie ‘ . | ‘Hal Boyle Says: . Marriage License | 
Abolicati | immediate Openings for Qualified Personnel PP Ica 1Ons | 
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INDEPENDENCE, Kan.  —; The story of Dick- Oliver is the|do anything he turned his mind to.)less. I want to move on and try;low curt do — if he really wants) g9ivis"O. iraner Birmingham * Layout Engineers * Project Engineers 
When Dick Oliver has a job he/story of a man who refused to be] He went to the Pacific North- ‘something new. to, Kenneth A. Muma, 86 Cottage 
wants to finish in a real hurry,/handicapped, In 1939 while on west and became a lumberman,| “Right now I'm’ studying civil) “The main thing is for an em-| veveitis Foster, 86 Cottage ALSO OPPORTUNITIES for Experiented or the first thing he does is take offjleave from the naval base a felling the big trees. He worked in|/¢"&imeering, and }- think I'll stay|ployer to give a man a little time| Perey L. Aten, 19 Esth his left arm, Pearl Harbor. he was_playfully|"®™Ing & |with: it, Engineering is something/to work out his own technique of], Maréaret Holtaclaw, 313 Howard Me- Graduate ACCOUNTANTS in: ie 8 & ' | jostling” with some buddies on a)the farm equipment field, with an’ that has a changing problem ev-/handling @ job. Then it will work). . i : 
Although Dick is grateful to the|tallway platform at Topeka. He/auto supply firm, even did a turnjery day.” out all right. Hes © Perea tae Linscin 2 
government for buying him the pac garg eae . sr ong at radio announcing. | Dick, happily settled in his new) “But it is the employer — the| wettson L. Buck. Royal Oak © Credits and Collections 3 
arm, ‘he explained: on om x~ *& * |home with his pretty wife, Lorene,|man who gives the handicapped| Sylvia M. McKee, Birmingham * General Accounting 
“T’ can work faster without it.’ . * “Oh, I've done just about ev-jis now teaching his 10-year-old) fellow a chance ta show what he! ora a Baylis, \334 Portage 
He can, too, The one-armed, 38- . ” erything,”” he said. “Once I find son, Gregg, how to be a baseball can do—who deserves all the cred- SS Roreeasl oo een eet 
year-old Navy veteran has just) “It was on my ag Papen | I can do a thing well I get rest- catcher. , ie ~*, (Advettisement) | If you are interested in permanancy under long range pro- \ 8 completed his third) 82nd some present,” recall “It isn’t a joke to lose an arm * * * grams, recognition of ability, for advancement, \ 7 eae P building “At first I felt lost and useless’ to; or leg, but if anyone who does will! pick, who built his $22,000 MoreComfort Wearing “ excellent wading scadiiter co ocoe benefit programs— \ , Dick, a construction clerk here myself. But after the first shock Picks Targets Well get over his sensitivity and learn) three-bedroom, two-bath home in FALSE TEETH | 4 
for the Universal Atlas Cement/Wore off I realized I was no dif- to treat it as a joke, he'll get/about a year, figures he saved : Write. Visit or Call the - 
Co., a subsidiary of U. S. Steel,|ferent from anyone else. I still had) prrroir w—Jesse W. David- along better,” Dick says. about $8,00 in labor costs by do- wr {eo plesaans ‘way to overcome . 
can also answer the phone, type|@ living to make.” son was given a ticket for reckless haga should — be ing his own work. an lunproved powder, ‘sprinkled of | Salaried Personnel Department 
65 words a minute. He drives his! ~*~ * * _ {driving after he crashed into a/Pathy and never offer help to In one way he feels having only| #PPS? and lower piates holds them / | 
own ear, buttons his clothing, ties} Dick finished high school, and!police car and bounced into an-|handicapped person except when'one arm speeded up the job. freenic:: No gummy, gooey. pasty GMC TRUCK & COACH DIVISION 
his shoes and neckties, and is an perfected his skill at typing with] other police car while driving past|he actually needs it. “I never had to worry about) eet ee Lead — aes || 66 South Bivd., East Pontiac, Michigan Phone FE 5-4115 
expert marksman with ¢ither rifleionly one hand. But felt an odd| the police station. “] just lost con- & *. * smashing a finger driving nails,"’| odor* (denture breath). Get FAS- 
or shotgun. compulsion to prove that he could! trol, " he said. Pca | don't know of anything a fel-| ‘he said, grinning. TEETH today at any drug counter. |             
    
   
     
    
   
    
       HYGRADE AND OTHER POPULAR BRANDS 
FULL SHANK HALF 
moked Ham When shopping for ham be sure of the i= buy pcecible: 
Buy the full shank half and get lots of the choice center 
_ slices that you would not get with the shank portion. 
39 LEAN SUGAR-CURED SMOKED 12-! 3. AVG. GROUND FRESH SEVERAL TIMES DAILY 4 
Whole Hams ... + 49: Ground Beef... 3.5% / 
West Virginia Ham . 79° Chopped Steaks 2 * B9¢ / Hygrade shankless, semi-bonéless, skinless , . ...s... Flav-O-Rich. Quick-frozen , . 
| Pe 
Canned Ham 5 &. $429 Link Sausage . 59 Kingan. No bone, mo waste. . . . . « « Greenfield's fine for breakfast . . . . . % a:s 
SpareRibs x 49s Beer Salami M49: Se meaty Bar-B-Q style . 2... 1. 6 © we wees Hygrade’s rich flavorful . .     
    
       KROGER TENDERAY BEEF 
teen! EED TENDER EVERY TIME 
> The Kroger Tenderay Method 
makes top grades of grain-fat- 
tened beef tender without age- 
ing, without the loss of natural 
juices and flavor. Try Tenderay. 
U.S. Gov't. Graded ‘Choice’. . 
Guaranteed tender 10 times [i stor i teoaih URES 
out of 10. : } | ) ie a o Bae a ei S Saber       
             
ee a 
    
      
Kraft Caramels 
Chewey, delicious caremeis 
rks. 39 
All Purpose Oil 
Kroft’s oil _with meny uses 
      . MICHIGAN ‘Potatoes | = 37 2a | A ave y + Good solid keepers. Wonderful for mashing or . : french fries. Kroger low price. 
50:1" FRESH, CRISP, CALIFORNIA 1 Anj OUuS Pears 6 For 49: Sweet joe Large 100 size .... 
Head | Lettuce Citrus Salad | s 59> Cypress Gardens orange and grapefruit .... 
i . lusei ~ : 
jbo 24 we BOS Diamond Walnuts: u 49> _ ‘Size heads Whole, unshelled. Low price 5 6 :   1000 Island Dressing 
Duncon Hines 
famous salad dressing 
| ne SHOULDER, RUMP OR LOIN c Fels Naptha Soap 
| Se OFF regular price VEAL 
4 om 34. Roast Fels Naptha Instant Sere 
23¢ OFF reguier pride Kroger gives you the best value 
Gient $127 in milk-fed veal. Young, tender, € 
Pkg. 1 _ delicious. Serve a Veal Roast for Lb. 
Sunday dinner.   
. . 
      
  Towne House Crackers f 
Hekmon Biscuit Co. Veal Chop S a Lb. 39: \ NEVER BURNS LAWNS MELLOW SWEET GOLDEN RIPE 
Golden Vigoro * ‘2 Bananas ...2 “ 29: ‘ 2 
       
       a 55. Snow White OP et i ss \ 
\ All Advertised | . Leg O’ Veal Roast is 2 5 \ Prices Effective gure Shur Good Eclairs Tender delicious milk fed . . . caw ss \ Only at the 
it Stores = ‘ 
Oe Bee Veal Chop $ » SF capes THIS SPRING MAKE KROGER YOUR GARDEN HEADQUARTERS Pkg. 29: Tender loin cut P Pas ets es ‘ 
    
Green Thumb Grass Seed 
Lawn Seed ed pe a ee ee Green Thumb, Everyday low price      
  Argo Gloss Starch “#8 net 29° Wishbone Dressing 8 35° wg everyday low, low price . . For a delicious salad 
~- Argo Corn Starch” 2s ‘i 27° Dole Peaches et For w: g¢ sauces and gravies . . Sliced, yellow cling |. . . 
24-0x. ra 
he: 39° : Puttin Biscuits 2 em 25¢ Laundry Starch. Grass : Seed Kroger everyday low, low 5 a poly bag 
| SHOP — COMPARE — REMEMBER, ‘IT’S THE “TOTAL YOU SAVE THAT COUNTS! | sided papain aa aaa M azola Oil frying needs 273 Pudding s they good . . . 3 re 24 : 
            soils, folioge plants and” acces- 
Lawn Seed "Bp $689 wee Green —_ For sun or shade              
         seed is @ high quelity mixture, 
5s ot $479 ue nae ;      
           
          
               
                   
  
    
  | | 4 
} : } 
APRIL 10, 1957 \ - sy : t J   a   sai Right Numbers. 
Can Make You 
$300 Richer Now that ye getting accustomed to the new Pot-O-Gold * 
set-up, the judges are expecting you to come up with more 
and more winning solutions. If you pick the right numbers 
for this one, it will be worth $300 providing there isn't a win- 
ner for last ‘week's puzzle. Just remember to write in the 
numbers, not the wards, and get the answers‘in on time and 
on @ posicard. 
a The new LL yerws suuneins a series a. ay rape which are 
tically lettered and a corresponding list of sentences. 
re words, Each of the words is numbered, The 
object is to select the word which you think best fits the clue 
sentence. You then place the number of that word im the 
square which has the same letter as the clue sentence. 
In other words, you will read the clue labeled A and 
decide which of the two words makes the most sense in the 
sentence. You then write the number of that word in the 
puzzle square marked A. 
Do the same with all other squares. Read all the clues 
  
  
    
    
      
        carefully and be sure the right numbers ate in the right 
- Squares. . 
' PUZZLE NO. 45 4 ‘ Sta B c D r i | ® e | 
a ' 8 GENS ' 
oc. - 8 a IE F G Hi . 
: : 5 5 ; : 
5 : ‘ 
ef J K ; cL H 5 Hs : a. 
ry Bae has ‘ 2 - Se: . 
; [A 'IN ° P ‘ ' ; | r | 
1 e ’ 5 
5 R Ss T | a i | 
a. ' 5 i | 
r r] a i | 
; NAME +aeSEPRnnresdncce oe aneceesewe cecnpeccaetacoeses ~ 
a i | 
' STREET ADDRRESS ................... bespescacens - . 
s 5 ORY ........ sasidtect PHONE NO. a A 
ccauunblinmuaanusibendunessanecwe 
Clip Along Dotted Line and Mail 
SOLUTION CLUES 
can best handle a A. A wise teacher 
FROWARD; (2) FORWARD. 
B. This be called a characteristic of teena 3) IM- 
PUDENCE: (4) IMPRUDENCE. =o, 
C. The male St ee is such that they prefer 
———,_ (5) AN + (6) UNANIMITY. 
D. This can be a thing to those whe to 
digziness. (7) VERTEX: (a) VORTEX. oo 
E. Tactful ~~ of their friends’ 
opinions. DEPRECATION. (10) DEPRECIATION. . 
F. A factory worker who continually does thi is 
Ho to be dismissed. ab REEDLESSLY: NEED- 
G5 sepoes in genie conermned chow bis seng's ge———— 
(13) VENDITION; (14) RENDITION. child. (1)   
  
  
  H. This becomes with repetition. (15) COM- 
MUTING;: (16) C a = 
L Despite the of an invention, a persever- apparent 
ing scientist will continue working at it. (17) UTILITY 
(18) FUTILITY. “ , 
e > Rags Sasa ip doctrine Was promulgated — 
communism y East. (1 . EMERGENCY: (20) EMERGENCE. ° ad 
This brings with it a f t happi 21 
BEATIFICATION: (22) BEAUTIFICATION. ns L. The captain of a schooner would feel apprehensive if he 
    should see hts the 3 (24) BERT lig = horizon. (23) VERY; 
M. Knowing thet his bills be subject to these. a con- 
scientious legislator word th fully. 
(25) CATCHALLS; (2%) CATCALLS. — N. The extent of which « man is 
— barbed criticism. determines his re- 
(27) IMPERVIOUS; (26) IM- 
(29) 
  ©. Often a deed done ———— i : 
UNWITTINGLY; (30) UNWauNGLY. “© P. A good cook find this useful in his work. (31) CYL-— 
INDER; (32) COLANDER. — GD 
Q. Strangers on a long traiii ride often find each other's con- 
. versation —————.__ (33) CONFINING: (34) CONFIDING. 
The length of time in ——_—_—— depends ircum- 
stances. (35) CELEBRATING; (36) CEREBRATING. 8. Unfortun » tmelicious gossip is by nature, 
(38) RESOUNDING. 
student   
(37) REDO ; 
TA requires more than iclency to be 
come outstanding in his field. (39) PCOLLAGE,” (40) 
COLLEGE. of 
  OFFICIAL CONTEST RULES 
_. 1. Anyone is elegible fo enter the POT-O-GOLD contest 
with the exception of Pontiac Press employes or their immedi- 
ate families. 
2. A contestant may submit as many entries as he or she 
wishes but they must be on official entry blanks printed in this 
newspaper. 
To submit an entry the contestant must print his an- 
swers in the proper spaces, cut out the area enclosed by dotted 
lines and attach it securely to a 2-cent postcard. No entries 
- “will be accepted if they are in envelopes. Entries for Puzzle 
No. 45 must bear a Tuesday, April 16 postmark (or before). No 
entries received after that time whether mailed or delivered 
by hand, will be declared eligible. The Press is not responsible 
for entries lost or delayed in the mail 
4. Sorry, telephone calls or mail concerning details of the 
contest cannot be answered or acknowledged. 
5. The Pontiac Press will award a cash prize of $100 a 
week to the winner of each weekly POT-O-GOLD contest. I 
more than one winning answer is received the prize will 
divided equally among the ‘winners. lf any week or weeks 
should pass without any winners, the prize will be added 
weekly until @ winning sclution is submitted 
6. Winners will be owarded an extra cash bonus of £25 
each if they are Pontiac Press subscribers of record on the day 
winners are announced. Only one such bonus can be award- ed to each prite-winner ‘no matter how many weekly prizes mey occumulote. 
7. Each week's purzle will be published Morday Wednes- day and Friday until the contest's end. Either or all will be considered as official entry blanks 
9. There is only.one cetrect solution to the POT-O-GOLD puzzle, ond only that correct answer can win. The decision of the judges is final and all contestants agree to abide by the udges’ decision. All entries becoming the property bf The tiae ' and none can he returned. . , 3 
Ip. ¢ eted puzzles must be oddressed to. POT/O-GOLD, BOX $8: Pontiog Michigan Winneds ‘will be ' 
  by felephorie rf in the mails 
es se i Fe fj PY : i Hollywood Headlines THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, 
Tranquilizing Drugs 4 / 
  
Dana Andrews Retu 
to Two- Fisted Character 
BY LOUELLA 0. PARSONS 
| HOLLYWOOD (INS) — When 
May 6th comes around, the start- 
ing date of ‘Zero Hour," the first 
Bartlett-Champion movie, Dana 
Andrews will answer. the roll call. 
He’s the very first star cast in 
‘this very new “company, and his 
lrole returns him to the hard- 
‘driving, two-fisted character which 
‘won him his place in the movie 
sun, : 
  Rita Moreno is back on the 
20th Century-Fox lot with a new 
contract in her hand and an in- 
vitation to stay at home a while. 
| She hasn't made a picture at 
20th since “The King and I,” 
| but she hasn't been exactly idle. 
| Now Jerry Wald wants her for 
“Holiday in Monaco” and she'll 
unpack her suitcase and go to 
work. “Holiday in Monaco” is a 
comedy with accent on music. 
' Rita, by the way, has been doing 
a lot of TV and during the past   Japan where she saw her one-time 
boy friend Marlin Brando. Now 
Buddy Bregman puts Marion “in 
the second choice category. 
DATE WITH STORK 
A happy Richard Burton’ ‘sends 
riage he and Sybil have dated the 
stork for July. He doesn’t care 
whether it’s a boy or girl, just so 
it’s a healthy baby. 
He’d announced earlier that he 
is going to live in Switzerland, so 
I assume that the Burton heir will 
be born there. 
  Jimmiy Stewart called trom New Orleans and said: ‘This. is the 
since we started barnstorming for r ning | 
word that after eight years of mar-| . Give Notable Results been cut down from 140 @ month! 
said, and pre- he Michigan Is 6th Best 
COLUMBUS, Orio w —' Michi- 
  
    = | and TONIT 
  
  
  
      
    
| ‘ TODAY EXCLUSIVE FIRST-RUN SHOWINGS I. 
  | At Your Buttertield Theaters | 
  
first decent weather we've run into s * Every Nite of the Week 
’ g ‘LITTLE WORDS” 
  
  rw ewe 
cis [== 3 
p 3412 Oinle Mey. oR 35-9754 
BANQUETS ond PARTIES   
    
    few months she made a trip to 
sua unaneanwaa ews 
Wonderlul. Food     
     
  ‘Spirit of St, Louis.’ It's been awful, 
eve: ng from blizzards to tor- 
nadoes. ; : * 
“We've been doing something a 
    
  
     
           
      
  
    
    
  
            
      
   * :   
NOW! 1:25 = 3:20 - 5:20-7:15 - 9:15 
    
  PORKY P IG STARTS SUNDAY 
KY PIG | AN “BIG LAND”     
  
       
SHOW STARTS 6:45 
       
     
         
    
   
     
                         
     
    
    
  
  
  
     
     
    
      
  
  
        
    
     
     IBERTY QL 
\ COCKTAIL 
LOUNGE 
85 North Saginaw 
Maa aa aa. 
aaa 
  
IN   
Overlooking 
Beautiful Pine Lake 
  Open to the Public Every Day 
in the Year 
COCKTAIL LOUNGE is now , 
OPEN DAILY from 
12 Noon until 12 Midnight 
Serving Your Favorite 
Beverage 
SPECIAL 
COCKTAIL HOUR 
3 until 6 P.M. 
“hors d'ceuvres and between 
meal snacks 
Meet your friends in the 
Orleans Lounge befere dinner. 
Michigan’s Most Fabulous 
SMORGASBORD 
BUFFET   
       
         
IIPIPFAAIPALAALALZAAZALGLALAL 
A 
    {little different on this trip,” -he a 
k ame Ae @ went on. “We go into a town about HURON 
' e ee e 
: . have severed | 18 towns in 18 days— TONITE & TH spite weather.” : r) LH | | 
E g_auaewas te ate eo ters ere Done ae 1 AA k MM EN Her, Jimmy and his entourage have 
iH * ; oe ha on style, Tey 
are t vate plane 
a JUST tthe present of United Airlines, and it is a sister ship to President 
; it WON DERFUL a nhower’s famed Columbine. 
a " TEXAS HEIRESS 
: FOOD S| Sanpahots of | Hollywood collected rn . fiat ¢ attractive -red- 
1 ive, Lottere, Oneonta ey tack Damen te a Prime Beet, St ’ k ds Merry-Go-Round Cafe was heiress 
is me, » Steaks an Marilyn Lindsay of Texas, where 
iH Chops, Duck, Turkey, - the oil flows. 
iH Game Dinners. 1 
r 8} Leif Erickson has entered Good 
't | Four Private Dining Rooms | Samaritan Hospital for his second 
4 For Your Banquets "hospitalization since the first of 
' con eats France maine while on loca’ 
|) WINE CELLAR Vintage.” c r | 
rm Wines, Beers and Ales {| Sylvania Rampanini, Italian | 
iL From All Over the World - ‘star, will marry Rome reporter 
) Vittorio Foshini in June. The 
i pes t) romance started when he went to ls pen Every Day g| Capri to interview her. 
| PHONE: OR 3-1907 Pretty Carole Michelson, chosen H suaeenenanans | ‘Miss National Press Photograph-|- | 
er of 1957,” will test at Columbia. | 
\) WHERE with her mother and father, who Golden \ look like teenagers themselves. Drumstick 
\ GOOD : Any day, Jean Pierre Aumont] go, Dinners Now Delivered \ FRIENDS and Marisa Pavan return from|} piping Hot to Your Home from 
Europe. Marisa will stay here|l Neon te Midnight Daily. 
\ MEET pinereereen “| Call FE 8-0483 i | Alan Lemer leaves tomorrow for] Brieg Chicken—Shrimp London to confer with Caron 
\ and Cecil Beaton on “Gigi.” Bea-| Fish—Drumburgers 
\ ton, who designed the costumes! PIZZA 
ifor “My Fair Lady,” will also do) 
’ lthem for “Gigi.” | 
‘ @ BEER r = : =< = 
\ @ WINE MA 4-215] 
IS @ CHOICE DOORS OPEN 6:45 N LIQUORS TONICHT 
\ @ DELICIOUS 
‘ COCKTAILS     
    
    
  LAST | DOORS OPEN 
2 DAYS 10:45 A. M. 
    
STARTS SATURDAY   
    | -. Voodoo! Hoodoo! 
| ZOMBIE LOVE! ¢: 
. ZOMBIES ° of MORA 
  
    Twin Shock Hits! 
a ma 
  FEATURES \f AT 
    
          COMMERCE 
at Haggerty Road. EM 3-0661 
ELIA KAZAN'S prooucnion oF 
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS. 
  
    
  
    
     PONTIAC 
500 FE 5-4 
Dixie ral (US-10) 1 
: of Telegraph Road 
  
        
         
x * 
» 
Len 
    Exclusive FIRST-RUN SHOWINGS 
at Your Butterfield Theaters! 
W Heaven Knows. 
     
         
      
FEATURES AT 1:25 — 3:22 — 5:19 — 7:15 — 9:15 
STARTS SUNDAY x * 
12:45 P.M. 
An emotional masterpiece . . , the story of Marine Corporal 
Allison and Sister Angela . . . alone on a war-torn island! 
ryrrvrvWwveerrerervrerevwe'Tt'TvrTrtTTT TTT * 
rv: 
    
  
    
    
  
  
  : KEVTH 
      
   We 9 ODay ft» Sw sae emi RP & 
| a j ral    
      AND HIS ORCHESTRA “       é TS “FREDDIE MARTIN      
  out 
life 
  vl 
ng 
Co : i a 
14 ii OVEIOY 
WERRERT SWORE Lifted alive and 
pulsating 
of 
'$ ~ Light . Anta thi dnte 4 4 _errvrvrveeveveeveeererrererrerrrrrrrrerrrrrreTreTY 
itself! 4 
fmetie te te eee feretel y 
k. - PHILIP DUNNE 
ee, 
A STARTS 
TODAY 
  deat a j ae ers 
    
    
      
i) [7 ge EN / 
          
    fy val     
  
    
  FRIDAY 
| APRIL 
12th Watch for Program Ad 
In This Column 
WATERFORD 
Corner WILLIAMS LAKE       
       ACADEMY AWARD WINNER 
Best Actress of the Year 
“ INGRID 
BERGMAN    
     
     
    End of South Union Lake Road 
    
       
  
        YUL 
BRYNNER 
Helen Hayes 
“Anastasia” 
© ALSO ©   
   
      ” Foreign Intriguo 
   
    
          2150 Opdyke Road 
Phone FE 4-4611 
“Baby Doll” 
& 
“Magnificent 
~ Roughnecks”   a 
= a STARTS TONIGHT . 
  | 
|!      
  | ' THE PONTIAC PRE SS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1957 
  
—— 
Beliveau u 
  inteal |- 0   
Victory 
    
    , “Ken Bartholomew, speed skating champ who has kkk kok ok rae a re kok oO | Hi Ind P iod 3 ease 
shattered more records in 26 years of competition than . ' , BOX 
any other male American skater, has had it ... “Under /!ay 5 Times on Trip North IS ef PRESS | 
» Our unrealistic amateur rules, harsher than any other 
- nations, I’d starve to death. can’t put any more money 
into the sport, or take any more time off frorn Work. 
Avery Brundage would not be so much against expense 
payments for amateurs if he.had to live on the pay- 
checks we receive and support a wife and five daugh- 
ters!” Bartholomew is a telephone lineman at Minne-. Tigers-Pirates ATLANTA, Ga. (# — The Detroit|13 
Tigers are out of Florida and play-|.326 last year, 
ing their way north with only a 
Lee, a rookie with one year of Doug Ford, newly crowned 
Masters champion, will be among — 
the participants in the Flint Open - 
June 20-23 at the Flint Golf Club, 
The tourney carries a $37,000 alos 
list. Goal Puts Habs 
2-Up on Bruins Plante Blanks Boston 
in Stanley Cup Feud; B ai | S ri 
looked good, but that was no {finish in the American League’ 
surprise after he was the Ameri- after a slow start. The Tigers won| 
can League’s leading winner last seven and lost 11 in Florida in 
year. Billy Hoeft saw only sparse | 1955. x * 
Central Michigan's freshman 
shortstop, Tom Tresh, is the son 
of former big league catcher, of the Tigers’ 23 games. He hit 
* * * 
  applis. 
Skiers are holding raffles to aid Jack Bye in a Bur- 
lington, Vt., hospital, paralyzed from the neck down 
after a Stowe accident. . . 
Cal Keyler at Brown, Bill Lenskold at Manhattan, 
Len Dramis at Syracuse, and Tom Moritz at Cornell, 
have been starring on the winter boards and have made 
their old coach, Pete Wilson, very proud. At one time the few reasons for optimism about 
the coming American League minor league pitching behind him, 
season. looked strong in the midst of a 
The possessors of a dismal 8-15 host. of pitching shortcomings. His 
record in Florida, including 10 earned run average of 2.37 during 
losses by one run, the Tigers swing|the Florida season probably was 
today in a five-game series with/enough to sew up a berth with the 
the Pittsburgh Pirates. The first)Tigers. 
game on the trip home is sched- , 
uled for Atlanta. ‘ wees pl pare sree lraears 
The Florida phase of the | an exhibition game. Frank Lary action because of arm trouble. x ke 
Paul Foytack had trouble get- | [n their 23 gamés the Tigers 
ting opposing batters out. Jim [pit 279, the same figure that put 
Bunning and Duke Maas were ithem atop the American League 
erratic. in team batting last season. 
The Tigers, with 29 players on 
the roster, will play the Pirates at 
ida almost matched last spring’s)/Augusta tomorrow; at Charlotte, 
Florida mark of 8-16. Thé team/N.C., Friday, and at Charleston, 
went™from there to a Sth-place|W. Va., Saturday and Sunday, a 
e w 
The Tigers’ 8-15 record in Flor- 
      champions, Mike Tresh, now of Allen Park. 
Tom is a switch hitter. 
. * * * 
MONTREAL (® — Montreal's) A sister-act in bowling, Mrs. Eva 
Flying Frenchmen, defending | Miller and Mrs. Olive Bogard of 
today were prohibi-/Pontiac, turned in a fine perform- 
tive favorites to capture their)ance last week in the state tourney 
ninth trophy after all but crushing}at Flint. They bowled an 1197 
the Cinderella hopes of the un- series. 
derdog Boston Bruins. x * * ‘Bruins Try Home Ice 
  * * * qUartet-was rated No. 2 in the scholastic nationals. 
x * & 
Best way to get a Hot Stove debate rolling is to ask: 
Were the hitters of ’29 better than they are today? In   X 29 the Cubs had Rogers Hornsby hitting .380, Riggs 
Stephenson, .362; Kiki Cuyler, 360, and Hack Wilson, 
.345. They were only four of 34 National Leaguers who 
batted over .300 in 100 games or more. Hank Aaron won Tigers’ training season showed a 
lack of pitching strength and the 
inability to get the one run 
needed to knot up a close game. 
hitting of Charley Maxwell and the 
pitching of Don Lee. On the brighter side was the 
be ee 
‘Maxwell, an outfielder who ap- Al Bates of Birmingham, head 
of the state. Babe Ruth League 
organization, is meeting this 
evening at Birmingham Country 
Club with top officials of the 
league to set up the plans’ for A Bernie (Boom. Boom) Geoff- 
rion pass, and a deceptive piece of 
stick work by Jean Beliveau ac- 
counted for the only goal last 
night as the Canadiens defeated 
the Bruins 1-0 to teéke a substan-| the Babe Rath World Series to 
{tial 2-0 lead in the best-of-7 final| be held at Ann Arbor Aug. 18. 
National Hockey League playoff x * * 
series. re Rochester tallied 944 points in 
a Aaa 
the 1956 batting championship with .328. In 1929, 17. 
players hit more than .328! 
FRISCH INDORSES NEW UNIFORMS peared in 141 games last year, led 
the Tiger hitters in spring training 
hitting with a .467 average. Recur- 
ring attacks of boils troubled him, 
however, and he appeared in only   the Central Michigan College Re- 
lays last Saturday at Mt. Pleasant 
and Dave Eldred and Dave Peters 
did all the- scoring. Eldred won The scene shits to Boston 
Thursday for the third game with 
the Bruins who hope they will re- 
    Frank Frisch says so far as he personally is con-, 
cerned the greatest improvement in baseball is not the! 
air conditioned dugouts and streamlined equipment, 
but the new lightweight uniforms scientifically tailored 
. . « “When I was playing we wore heavy flannel that 
was usually weighed down with dirt and mud from slid- 
ing. Why if I hadn’t had to carry around those heavily 
embroidered redbirds on my heavy suits with the Cards} Chance to Score 
Fight Tonight bound on home ice. The fourth the shot t with he; 
game also will be played in Bos- feet 5 fess while Peters yen ton cena Ist in the high jump with a leap x *& * of six feet even. The Falcons 
Beston Coach Milt Schmidt 
stated the plight of his Bruins| schools. 
simply. “We lost because we) So 
couldn't get a rag bes said. Bob Hutchings of Ortonville, 
John Ribner of North Branch, 
Duane Roggentine of Millington 
and Larry Dorow and Jack placed 5th in a field of 34 Class B 
It was Montreal goalie Jacques 
Plante who accomplished the feat 
of shutting out the Bruins for! 
  
  when I was a young squirt, I'd have stolen 80 bases a! 
season!” MIAMI, Fla. & — Television 
viewers across the country may 
, |be able to keep an official round-   
Green Bay 
Big Trade Is MILWAUKEE if — Lisle “Liz” 
Blackbourn, coach of the Green 
Bay Packers, said last night there 
is a trade in the wind “probably 
as sensational as any ever com- 
pleted in the National Football 
League.” 
He told more than 200 members 
of ‘Second Guessers, - Inc." a 
men’s group, that the deal may 
have been all but completed by 
now. The coach said -he expected 
an announcement would be made 
in about two weeks. 
He declined to reveal any Of 
the involved, but it was 
learned that two Packers, line- 
backer Roger Zatkoff and quar- 
terback Bobby Garrett, probably 
figured in the trade. 
_ Zatkoff, former University of 
Old MSU Stars 
in Grid Classic Pro Talent, Spartans 
Collide on May 4 at 
Macklin Stadium 
EAST LANSING (®—Some of the 
State’s football past will make a 
playing appearance again the first 
Saturday in May. a 
The occasion will be the 1st 
annual ojd timers classic scheduled 
for Macklin Stadium on May 4. 
Michigan State’s top varsity 
talent, hardened and sharpened 
by four weeks of spring drills, 
will go against a squad of for- 
mer Spartan players, including 
many big-money pro stars. 
Some of the pro players already 
signed up include Al Dorow, quar- 
terback for the Washington Red- 
skins; Earl Morrall, quarterback 
for the San Francisco 49’ers; Lynn 
Chandnois, halfback with the 
Pittsburgh Steelers, and Dorne 
Dibble, Detroit Lions end, 
One of the first worries for pro- 
moters was insuring the several 
hundred thousand dollars worth of 
talent that will be appearing. ~*~ 
Lloyd’s of London, the outfit that 
wilt gamble on almost anything, 
finally agreed to underwrite the: 
insurance, Sq if a pro passer 
breaks his arm or an out-of-shape 
old timer gets knocked into a 
wheel chair, the hospital bills will 
be paid. 
Lions Schedule 
Cleveland Game 
for Exhibition DETROIT @ — The Detroit 
Lions, runnersup in the - Western 
Conference of the National Foot- 
ball League last season, will play 
Cleveland Browns in a fre. 
season game at Cleveland’s Mu- 
nicipal Stadium Sept, 14.’ 
The Lions have won 10 of their 
12   
  by-round tab tonight on progress 
of the Davey Moore-Gil Cadilli 
featherweight bout in Miami's Bis- 
Coach Sa .) cayne Arena. The seventh-ranked 
Cadilli is a 9-5 favorite. 
/ 
| Wi d 
, didn’t object. IBC director Harry 
ween player, who has “re-| 'Markson in New York said the 
tired” and now is working in De-' jmatter was up to the ‘Miami 
treit, is said to be interested jn board, Use of the scores, if wie * * * 
The Miami Boxing Commission 
playing for the Lions. Garrett is|Plied, would be optional with 
one of four quarterbacks available| broadcasters and sponsors.   _said it would make round-by-round 
| scores available to broadcasters 
if .the International Boxing Club 
to the Packers this year and could x *& * 
be used as trading material. The 10-round bout at 10 p.m., 
x *« * |EST, carried over ABC television 
Blackbourn denied printed re-|and radio networks, will be the 
ports that the Cleveland Browns first TV action for Moore who 
have made an offer for Tobin Rote,|/ turned pro affer winning the 1952, 
the Packers veteran signal caller, National AAU title and qualified) FELLED BY PITCH — Luis 
stop of the Chicago White Sox,   Hoeksema of Imlay City have 
been named to the South Central 
Conference all-star basketball the first time since Chicago man- 
aged it Oct. 30, 1956. 
x * * team. Oxford's Carl Roland and Plante turned aside 24 shots and) Ortonville’s Chuck Graves were 
Coach Toe Blake was loud in) honored on the 2nd team. praise of his netminder, especially A s 2 
on a save against Cal Gardner in ‘ 
the third period that prevented ing. tor Class A, aa mec grend 
the Bruins from tying the score. ee men’ t wil be City 
“Gardner faked to the outside | —— see held |tonight “at 7:30 in the Pontiac about 15 feet out,” said Plante.| d Parks and Recreation Department “J didn't move, then he shot from) ottice, City Hall. 
Detroit Team     
Plante eu Ke emit “any 
more nervous towards the end of 
the game than I was at the start. 
I'll admit I was looking at the     clock during stops in play. Our   AP Wirephote 
neck by a pitch thrown by Sad Sam Jones~of * 
the St. Louis Cardinals. The injury was not 
serious. The White Sox won, 6-5. Aparicio, short- 
lies stunned on 
the ground after he was hit in the back of the 
  
who has said that he is retiring, 
but is having trouble cony incing | 
the Packers that he means it. 
“There is no deal underway at 
the present time involving Rote,” 
Blackbourn said, 
If the Packers do make a deal 
it will be to strengthen their de- 
fensive platoon, 
Sparrow Seeks 
Position on 
U.S. Cage Team 
Guy Sparrow of Pontiac is one 
of the 22 outstanding ex-college | 
payers who is.a candidate for a 
position with the Army peerage 
team in Wiesbaden, Germany. 
team will be selected to play in 
an Armed Forces Int tional 
tourney to be held April 20-28 
at Istanbul, Turkey. 
Other nations participating in 
the tourney known as the Con- 
sell International du Sport Mil- 
itaire, are Belgium, France, Lux- 
embourg, Netherlands, Sweden, 
Italy, Argentina, Egypt, Greece, Turkey, Spain and Norway. 
Competing for positions on the 
U. S. team are such names as 
Frank Selvy, Bob Patterson, Bill 
Hull, Charles Kraak, Jerry Mullen, 
Bill Warden and other prominent 
ex-collegians. ‘for the Olympics. 
  
  Greensboro Links 
GREENSBORO, N.-C. (#—Doug 
Ford, the new Masters champ, 
planned to get in a practice round] Who's going to play second base| 
here today in preparation for a) for Brooklyn? Third base for the) 
stab at Sam Snead's stranglehold| Boston Red Sox and Cleveland In-| 
on the greater Greensboro open 'dians? First base for Detroit? golf title. Catch for the Chicago Cubs? 
| * * Probably never have so many) 
Ford, Snead and a field of more| Major league clubs closeg in on 
than 100, including the nation's top baseball's opening day with as, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
  hole grind over the 6,720-yard| | At least 10 managers will have to) 
Sedgefield Country Club course;Come up 
Thursday for $15,000 in prize; Wraps are taken off the 1957 cam- 
p= paign next week. 
Junior Gilliam, Brooklyn's reg- 
ular second baseman last season, 
is a cinch to be in the opening 
Albion High Names. in Bow-Arrow Champs 
Waterford Recreation Associa-; 
tion archers are looking forward 
to an active and interesting sum- 
mer period, now that the indoor 
season has ended. Schedule will be 
announced soon. 
Indoor champions for WAL are   Ford ries Ow Vacancies Abound as Opener Nears 
pros, will start the three-day, 72-/Many vacancies still to be filled. | 
with decisions before the| 
linto the final frame trailing 4-1 [aay line-up, But he may start at/on balls was followed by Neal's 
|third base with Charley Neal at) winning two-bagger. 
isecond and Gino’ Cimoli in left * * * 
    téam usually plays offensive hock- 
ey. This: time we played more de- 
fensive."’ Hits 2nd Spot Stroh’s 3119 Is Lead 
by Fazio With a 677 
Individual, in ABC 
FORT WORTH, Tex. (® — A De- 
troit team rammed into second 
place in the open division stand- 
ings last night in the American 
Bowling Congress tournament and 
two other teams moved into the * * * 
Rookie Boston goalie Don Sim- 
mons turned in a neat perform- 
ance for the Bruins and forced the 
Canadiens to abandon their force- 
ful offense for a deliberate de- 
fense, but Beliveau slipped 
through for the clincher. 
Telling about the goal in the 
happy Montreal dressing room, 
the mers Beliveau said: 
  field, Neeman and righthanded pitch- 
+. *« * er Moe Drabowsky combined to! 
i Nealf in his second season with'jead the Cubs to an 8-3 triumph) 
the Dodgers, and Neeman, the No. over Baltimore. Neeman knocked! 
‘1 choice on last fall's draft list.!in four runs with a home run and 
did themselves the most good in two doubles, Drabowsky went the 
\yesterday’s exhibition games. distance and permitted only five. 
* * * singles. The game was called after| 
Neal slapped a two-run double eight innings to allow the clubs to 
off Corky Valentine with one out)catch a train. 
in the ninth inning to give the * * * 
Dodgers a 5-4 victory over the! the New York Giants evened 
|Milwaukee Braves. Brooklyn went! ineir series against Cleveland aft- 
er 16 games by producing a 42 
itriumph behind the combined five- 
hit hurling of Allan Worthington 
and Je Margoneiri. Indian re- 
lief ace Ray Narleski made his 
first appearance since breaking a 
finger four weeks ago and held the| 
Giants hitless over the last two! 
innings. when Gilliam and PeeWee Reese 
each walked. Cimoli’s single load- 
ed the bases and brought in Val- 
entine in relief of Carlton Willey. 
A sacrifice fly by Carl Furillo and 
Roy Campanella’s single sent 
home two runs and another base       
  New Football Coach the Sheriffs fam (compiled 36 
Richard Bentley “high for season '$| Anderson, ‘assistant coach at Al 
instinctive, with 258; William Giles bion High School since 1951, has, 
top free-style with 247; high in-/been named head football coach. | 
stinctive, for women, Joan Law-| we succeeds Dan Goldsmith, 
son, 128; Dorothy France, free-| who resigned to take the job of 
style, 156. There were 10 teams in) backfield coach at Hillsdale   * * * 
The Cincinnati Redlegs powered 
five home runs to down the Wash- 
ington Senators 9-7. Wally Post) 
|had two of the Redlegs’ circuits 
iwith Ted Kluszewski, Gus Bell 
land Jerry Lynch = getting one) John Holman Beats 
Huge Heavyweight 
PORTLAND, Ore. H — Johnny |yard course yesterday to lead the         * * top 10, 
“When j started in on the ~ * * 
|Boomer’s (Geoffrion’s) pass, I) Strohs Beer rolled a three-game 
was going to shoot. But Simmonsjtotal of 3119, only seven ping short 
|moved out to meet me and then | of the 3126 posted March 18 by 
moved back again. I knew I had|the open division leader, Peter 
him beat. Then he moved to my|Hand Reserve Beer of Chicago. 
right and I put the puck in on} Team captain Buzz Fazio paced 
|his right.” the team to games of 1088, 1022 
  The goal came at 2: Ja) of the|and 1009, He shot a 677 individual 
second period. series, 
* * * 
*eee . The Hesperia team of Los An- Wiffi Cards 13 in geles, Calif., swept into third 
place with 3087. The California 
team had 1034, 1074 and 979. 
Helin Tackle of Detroit took 
eighth place with 3049, 
Stan Williams of Dayton, Ohio, Tuneup at Dallas 
DALLAS (# — Most of the na- 
tion’s top lady professionals, Shot a 299 game earlier yesterday, 
toured the Glen Lakes Country | the highest single game in the 
‘Club course here today in a pro-|ABC since Myron Erickson, Ra- 
amateur meet as a tuneup for the cine, Wis., shot a perfect 300 in 
|$7,500 Dallas open woreen’s golf) the 1955 tourney. 
tournament starting tomorrow. After piling up 11 straight 
+ * strikes Williams left the five pin 
on his last roll. He had a 621 se- 
ries,     
Wiffie Smith of Orange, Tex., 
fired a 2-over-par 73 on the 6,200 
  
  \practice rounds. Others in the 
‘field include Louise Suggs, Mickey) 
Faye Crocker and Betty   the adult league. 
  
0 
splitting around 
ree eee 
  been changed : Sunday, 
1, to Saturday: ht, “Aug. Pl College. Anderson, 40, is a grad- |Holman found an open path to 
and coached at Scottsville. High |and pounded out a unanimous 10- 
from 1941 to 1951. lround decision over the huge’ 
Albion high still is seeking a new ‘South African heavyweight fight-. 
head basketball coach to succeed |“ here last night. 
Basil Mason, head coach since | * * * 
1951. He is leaving the job to The 7-foot, 3-inch Potgieter 
devote full time to his duties as Weighed 325 pounds. Holman, who 
junior high school principal. jfights out of Chieago, tipped the 
iscales at 203, 
* © * 
Ortiz TKO’ $s Filippo There were no knockdowns, but 
HOLLYWOOD ® — New gork’ S| Holman staggered Potgieter in the 
Carlos Ortiz, who stopped Lou Fi-/first round with a sharp right to 
lippo on a foul last month, scored'the head. Potgieter stumbled 
again last night with a seventh-| backward several steps, spun to) 
round technical knockout over the’ the right and half fell over the     41, veteran University of Michigan! 
‘hockey coach, today announced his, « 
resignation. 
private business in Colorado 
Springs, Colo. 
* apiece. Eddie Yost homered for | Wright, 
uate of Eastern Michigan College Ewart Potgieter’s ample stomach the Senators. Jameson, 
  
M Hockey Coach Quits ANN ARBOR (# — Vic Heyliger, } 
Heyliger said he was entering | 
* * u 
During his 13 years as hockey   
    
  
   
    Club \in Chicago ‘in tién for his , 
ro ce gamhe Los Angeles boxer in a! 
scheduled 10-rounder. Ortiz’ 
weighed 137%, Filippo 139, \ ‘ropes. But he recovered and the coach, Michigan teams participat- 
two fighters clinched the rest of ed in all 10 NCAA playoffs, win-/ 
the round. ining the NCAA title six times. 
  
There will be an extra added at- 
traction Thursday night at South- 
field High School when the touring 
Japanese wrestling team faces the 
Michigan All-Stars in a dual meet. 
Besides the scheduléd Olympic 
ffee-style bouts between the Jap 
sieve and a handpicked group of 
the Japs have 
Rom   "AP Wirephote i 
nt champion Gene Fullmer |reativ 
his ‘training headquarters at the | The Ford grapplers    
        |Ford Club Joins Mat Show Michigan finished second in 
this year’s tournament and sec- 
ond in the 1956-57 Western Inter- 
collegiate Hockey League race. 
Heyliger won three letters in 
collegiate hockey at Michigan in. 
1935-36-37. He played. professional | 
hockey with the Chicago Black-|   Leading the Ford team is 160- 
pound Khalil Taha, who took 2nd 
place in the 1952 Olympic Games for his native Lebanon, He came hawks of the National Hockey 
to the United States’ in 1955 and/<ague. 
climaxed his career by winning * * * 
He was instrumental in the for- 
festern Intercol- 
and in the the National AAU title last week. 
Other star members of the Dear. ation of the 
born ‘squad are Frank Szeczi, q|!egiate hockey le cart *\tormation of the NCAA champion-     
    weit Fen Marin Stseath ail ‘series. 
se ann ar geen stay tema 
ie Une WB piney | SRS Yuseye ¢ 7 if . | ee af [ . . ie | ae dlorado Springs, Colo, His 
teams, won. the —- tithe six 
‘tires.’ line f STANDINGS 
AMERICAN LEAGUE 
Won Lest Pet, Cleveland : s 571 
New York rete - 6 13 552 
Chicago diese 33 8 Aba 
Boston Sencnocaues 1 th 44 
Paltimore * oi WW 393 
|Kansas City : il 17 393 
Washington 1 #617 393 
Detroit : 6) 360 
| NATIONAL LEAGUE 
Pittsburgh 17 8 680 
| Milwaukee -. LJ 879 
' Cincinnati ne 7 «12 586 
ew York . oi? 8 586 
Philadelphia 16 12 71 
it. uis .. meee i§ 16 4B 
Brooklyn : ~ cM 483 
| Chicago . 4 1 483 
weee ress S SCHEDULE 
| Dodger ers gis. Braves Wichita 
|Cubs vs, Oriol rs char 
Redlegs vs fenalers ——_ w.¥a. 
Giants vs. Indians, Miam ht 
Phillies vs. Red Sox, Snthas, 8.C, 
Pirates vs. Tigers, Atlanta 
Cardinals ys hite Sox, Knoxville 
A’s vs. Birmingham, SAL, Montgomery 
Yankees vs. Savannah, SAL, Savannah 
a 
TUESDAY'S RESULTS 
Dodgers 5, Braves 4 
Cubs 8, Orioles 3, 8 mation. time limit 
Giants 4, Indians 2 
| White Sox 6. Cardinals 5 
| Redlegs 9, Benator: Yankees 5, dechsenvile, sar ¢ 
Little Rock, SA 5, Athletic   QUITS AT “M”-Veteran Uni- 
versity of Michigan hockey 
coach, Vic Heyliger, today an- 
om is resignation after 13 
to enter. private ‘business’ THURSDAY'S ULE 
Betotes vs. a. Kansas Cit 
. Oriole: ay ’ 
    
  
  
        
    
    
  
      
    
      
                  
    
  
ee NCAGO @ — Grain futures| 
a little lower teday in. fea- 
~ A ee ag Chicago 
a 
ie *  * 
* Most of the selling was by local) 
: and apparently was profit 
because of the good price 
satvannes ta the ‘previous scasion. t 
— the winter wheat estimate 
be considerably higher . than, 
625 million bushels estimated \N 
Dec. 1, 
* * 
of the first hour 
io’ ty lower, May 
% to % lower he, 
| grades: 
Grain Prices 
  
    
  + 3 00.2 56 
|| ge 34-35, wtd avg 35.   
nd 
the 
  j},50-2.00 bu. Cabbage, standard variety, ‘Ne, 1, 200-250 bu. Carrots, 
No. 1, War sta bos bu. Celery, reot, No. 1. 
‘4a bu. Chives, No: 1, 1.26-1.50 
Horse radish, No.. 1, 1.50-2.00 pk. 
1.26-1.78 “4 
eurly, a ‘. 
ley, No, , 
Soret “No. 1, a 3s: 1.75 4 = Pota atoes, 
130-1, 50-Ib Radish 
"No. Hage : 
vorentl No. 1, ; 
Rhubarb, hothouse, 
box: No. 1. 60-.80 5-Ib. 
hothoiise, Prva 7 cies doz, behs: No. 1. 
Squash, Eaeaiovs, 
10: 2.00 ee: Pn aang Hubbard 
. 1.50-2.00 bu. Turnips, topped, No. 
75 bu. 
a= ane SALAD   DETROIT EGGS 
Detroit, April 9 {AP) — 
Detroit, cases included, 
hites: Grade A, 
weighted average 44/5: jumbo 41-45, 
; Grade , B. 
  
  
  Eges. FOB 
federal-state. NEW YORK (®—Steels contin- 
ta Shon, to, vosions ued to forge ahead in an active and 
Apples, fancy, é. . rns, — higher stock market early today. 
Tha "has na feat te Jonathon, fansy, The high-speed ticker tape fell 
ee early, taney. 3.80 bs i we, l.ibehind floor transactions in the 
iz: s bu: No, 2. 75-3.25 ba y fancy, initial burst of orders as the mar- 
[Steele "Bed We. ‘L, 4.00-4. ; ket followed-through from __ its 
No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Cabbage, curly, No |Strength | before the close yester- 
‘1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Cabbage, Red, No. 1.\ gay. 
Leading issues advanced from 
fractions to around a point and 
some gains went well beyond that. 
Lukens Steel, yesterday's most 
active stock, was up 5\ at 8itg on 
ian opening block of 20,000 shares. 
It rose 8 points yesterday on good 
news about earnings and dividends, 
It pared this gin in gyrations 
following the first sale. 
Bethlehem Stéel, which spurred oe 
“ithe steel group yesterday on re- 
ports of its capacity operations and 
%5-\excellent backlog, was up % at 
oz. 45% on a huge opening block, of 
150,000 shareg This gain also was 
tiimmed later. 
New York Stocks 
fLate Morning Quotations) 
  
  
    
        
    
      
ANN ARBOR—Is lettuce a worth- 
arranging these bits of greenery | Sr 
into a salad, thinking that we shall/snd 
ourselves . with soon be filling 
thealth’’? 
= + a & 
“A University of Michigan dietitian 
offers some answers to these ques- 
lions. Miss Leila Presson, a mem- 
ber of University Hospital's 
tion Clinic says, ‘Lettuce should 
he considered a worthwhile addition 
to the diet for its value in adding 
1 the taste and decorative appeal |! 
of salads and for the roughage 
one needs each day. 
ee -on the richness of | 
the soil on which it is grown, | 
lettuce does contain traces of | 
*ealcium, phosphorus, and iron. | 
, Such small amounts of these min- 
-erals are supplied, however, that 
Jettace can hardly be considered | 
an important source. 
“Vitamin A is the most important, 
nutritive contribution of lettuce. In   
ome average serving of leaf lettuce, type hens and fryers. Demand generally | 
about three leaves, we will receive © 
about 1Q per cent of the vitamin: 
A we need each day. One green /f, 
leaf of leaf lettuce will contain 
twice as much vitamin A as one) 
leat of head Iettuce from’ the 
inner section. 
z x & & :. 
“Since green vegetables are im- 
portant sources. of vitamin A, it 
is of great advantage to serve 
the green outer leaves of lettuce: 
__ Since they have a more abundant’ 
supply of this vitamin. 
Safe Drivers ‘Scarce   
—, The 
§ Ford. to find a nominee J 
tre a sate’ arivirig award. After! 
(BO tries, they. chope ye Mrs. Pauline 
5 of driv- Nutri-/§ 
iper pound   
other slaughter classes and vealers un- 
changed; stockers and feeders 
about Lo ape supply prime steer meager 
ra load of high choice and 
7 vane .13; most 
yearlings 22.00-23.50; 
i ew tility and stand- 
7.00; few load of choice 
3 most 
choice 
utility and commercial bulls 14 75-16 50. j 
14.75-16.50; 
good and choice —, 
standard 15.00-21.00 ulls 
load of choice so1. ib 
several other jowd 
22.00-22.50; hoice | 
‘ fairly active 
Slaughter ewes) 
wooled cutter bulls bull« 
13.50-14.75; 
22.00-27.00: 
down to 10.00: 
stock steers 23.5; cutter 
Balable j sheep © 
lambs mostly 50 higher: 
only steady; good to 
lambs 99-108 Ib. 23.00-25.00; good to 
rime shorn jambs 96-103 Ib. mostly No 
We 22.00-24.00; 1 load weighing 110. 
23.80; cull es choice wooled slaugh- 
ewes 5.50 Patel cull and utility 
ishern ewes 4 0. 45 ———— 
Peony 
DETROIT POULTRY 
DETROTT, April 9 (AP) — Ericrs, pala, 
F.O.B. Detroit for 
quality live poultry up to re am 
Heavy hens Frade 23, most! 22: 
itype 13-14., Heavy ereficrs 
(3-4 Tosi: Whites 23-24. 
es aus oe funder 5 Ibs! 30431. 
$8 tbs) 22-33). Ducklings 31. 
ircader turkeys, heavy type hens 30 
Market full steady. Arrivals heavy 
consisting mostiy of caponettes, heavy ee 
er 
(28. 
good but very selective as to weight) 
‘and quality. Supplies of heavier weight 
bime Sea | barely ample to short of | 
eeds, Offefings of fryers Tully ample, 
for the ane te fair demand. 
  
” cHICAGo POULTRY 
CHICAGO, April 6 (AP) — Live poultry 
{fully steady on wapomettes and hens 
isteady on the balance: recejpis 1.033 
Proce ivesterday 908 coops: 105,000 
. paying prices unchanged: Nesey 
neg “14%-18, mostly 144-16; light hens 
13; old roosters 12-13: caponettes | 
oleate 4% th 23%4-25; over 44 lb 28- 
32; ducklings 27-28. 
‘Adlai Accepts Position 
  as Film Board Head 
CHICAGO (INS) — Adlai 
| Stevenson, twice defeated Demo- 
‘cratic candidate for president, has 
-| accepted the chairmanship of the 
Sa isory board of Encyclopaedia 
‘ar Firms, Inc., tect: 
| * ~~ * 
He said yesterday he took the 
most of the| iposition because ‘it offers unusual! as. county agnictiltural agent. He! 
‘themselves: “opportunities to Jend his influence has been an 
to the rapid growth of afdio-visual 
ieducation in the-country's gchools., : a. rime 1 100- | CHICAGO GRAIN Browns: Grade A, large 34-37, wtd : 2 CHICAGO, April 10 (AP) — Ovening avg M's; medium 33. Grade’ B,’ large| Admiral «0. 1) | Tal Crk Coat a3 at cae: 
» July vee OPlg] Checks: 2644-28 wid avg 25. Ailted Ree Kelsey Snay ‘0 May 3.20% Bept.".....: 67%,| Commercially graded: Allis Chal .... 35.1. ut 1.2 July eee 216 Ce . ou Whites’ Grade A, extra large 35'%- a ..-- 1968 Mimb Cik | 45.2 
ma ..... 218% cae 36%; large 32-38%; medium 30 Ale -.<::014 Eresge, 8S 
ay 2.22% May 1.32%4| Brow A. extra large 34:/ Am Airlin -.--18-1. Kroger oer} ‘orn — ; duty... .....1.88% tarae Hae "medium 26°-29. Grade B, Am Coe... 434 Lenn & P..... 23.2 May jar “sf 7 
July -... 09 133% ad ee Sted ge atesdy to frm. co a! am Mk Pay a i siete ne 
Ge. mY tn grades and sizes uncha o cents orice? 
— us Dee: i May sti _.,.14.98 higher. Arrivals of eggs from local areas se N plete ‘7 is nF 4 413 a sa EE 3 ck asecs 15.00 continue heavy, however, large whites) 25: eS ieeek sc. iat 
4 me. 2 RS Sn os. 5 14.95 of needs’ with mediums and wha Am Pw “ Tei 103 Lone 8 43 
see se + midwest points _ heavier rie ~ supplies bone! ees" y Mack rk “ 29.1 ample for current trade Armco Bu . 87.7 martin® Glo... 42.1 
ee eee Sree & Co. Br May D Stre .. 36.4 
Israeli Takes. Rest, CHICAGO BUTTER ANDEGGS = Au) Cet Line ag Sees... 3 CHICAGO, April 8 (AP) — Butter|All Refin .. 453 Yeas Po. cee steady; receipts 1,200,000: wholesale buy-| Aveo M - 8 Sire Ch & & 268 ing prices unchanged: 83 score AA S8: $2 alt & Oh Poperr set’ 27 
* War Rumors Fade eaneeesee Seevetee As de Bab S Baga. siendy to firm: receipts 2 1,600, etn Stee! 1 Monsan Ch .. 36.3 
- buying prices unchanged to 1) mesine Air ....00% + Ward... 302 cent higher: 65 cent or better a| Borden S6$ Mueller Br... 30 JERUSALEM @—Prime Minis- Shien ata: snined 31 mediums TM dors Warn. 41.3 Net Bisc 38.2 
at rds irties ¢ s f see STD 
‘ter David Ben-Gurion began today pone a ee ate vist My $82 Nat Gyps 2°) 376 
acation id run Balke Nat Lead 120.4 
oF 2 ¥ rai en hd 303 NY Central .. 29. appearances general rela CHICAGO POTATOES smn Soup 46 Nis M Pw... 307 tion ‘of the atmosphere in Israel AgRicaES, April & (AP) —- Potatoes old: | Can Drv Bde Aa Ae ee r trac tota ship- 4 : al 
as it prepared for the Passovet mente Priday 138: Saturday 617: Sun-/Capitel “Airt . ip7 Nor Ste Pw .. 171) holidays. day “14; supplies moderate; demand Case. JI bad arabs Atrlin hh oe ee moderate: mareet about steady: pigahe| Se Cater an «683 _ Ba A Ose -~ ee —— . 50. = ee Bora 734 Owens Ul Gi 62 ‘ Red River Valley Pontiacs 1,80-2.10; This news tended to dissipate ru- 309. “SS Sivais 78. track "BS: fupplies (Am Mil MWY) Pac O & RL. 4 
mors, printed abroad, which until moderate: demand slow; AAR OND; | Koon Gain 56 beac Ca ee Plorida Round Reds 1 ar quip .. 2 ‘aram Lo 
yesterday were picturing Israel as Climax Mo .. 706 Parke Da 50.2 : - Colg Palm ... 444 Pa RR +.» 963 
,ready to begin an attack on her -j/@ol Brd A |. 352 Pepsi Cola... 227 
Arab neighbor, Jordan, , Livestock 4 Ce Gs... It eee _ s i " Comw ‘ . CO since 15 
* ef: ¢@ . ca Edison ac 8 rate Mor SS 
Ben-Gurion, oo SEEESORS.  otig AE : 7 il take | acral ned a= Bn —(eaenme BE ned a ably two weeks of rest in an UN-|seisbie 100, Openin trade on butchers toes Gon... OT wen he. 3 
disclosed retreat, me De Oey ee ee che tae (cent Mot <:.. 74 Pullman .....- 6 
240 th 18.00-18.26: mixed number 1 and/Com OP - S68 pure OW ws ee 
eo sundown |?- ra 2 yn mumber|Corn Pd... 30.6 Repub stl... 3.7 
Monday. Apparently he felt the and PY serene. leorise Ih mixed | Curtiss Wr .. 43.5 Rex Drug .... 103 crisis has. eased enpugh for bim)#*ades 1675-17:50: ne early sale s0¥s Det Edison .. 394 Rey Tob B |. 55.4 
interests not in trade: few early sales | Po ae mem mee aa! 
| ard and ~~. bay seat Dow Chem $9 Safewar St... 69.3 a ny AIS Sek ted moteeri ae [185 «Bt Jos Lead .) 41 
cows er Probe ter sales fully Best Air b... 312 pote | i aes Por 
steady; bulls steady; nothing done |», a: sy = Goad AL RR |. 77 
stockers and ; few small lots Ri & Mus ay at Bears Roeb a o 
‘ayerage choice \ fed steers 22.50+23.00 “| Rmer ** 59 Shell Ot 84.2 
few sales utility and prentecs steers) : Sinclair «. 627 hs Ex-Cell-O . 4601 
The fees iReer SO, SE SUT COR Paar mee «2 oat Remon 13.50-15.00; — an cutters i a Pee os... 
Coast Guard searched today for a 13.00; commercial bulls up to 16.50. ee Sou Ry 11) 46 
Ziyear-old father of four, missing), G'S ju Sele thoice and prime vent-\Fo%@ Mot... S71 Reg Brand... 29 since Friday on a 12-mile boat er 2 40.00-38'00; standard and good 16.00- Frach 3 Tre Tgee SO cel. on 
ride from Mackinac Island to his| — Selable 1508. Bulk supply ee at Btd Onl NI : 88.2 _ A slat ter lambs about steady but Mar-/ ,. Snes : 2 
home op Bois Blanc Island. ao lambs; few eariy sales shorn oS an ae Stevens. JP... 21.3| He is Harry Feely, a carpenter |xe: not fully established; some pide Gen tor | et Soa ail 
on the Moral Re-Armament build- |i0¥S"' (sy, 52's Shotee JA", Prime shorn ‘Gen Shoe mt Reine co oH : e ex ICING 64 
ing project on Mackinac, He set == Gen Time... 286@ Tex G Sul. 296) off in. foggy, windy weather in his CHICAGO LIVESTOCK [Gen Tire .... 72 Textron — 1. 13.9/C 
14foot outboard motorboat for a), CHICAGO. “April | \#)—Salavie hoes Goodrich 0) 44 Time R Bear. o4 | weekend at home. te Mk eons on Uanabare, Ceighis around | Gr No Ry bey Trenmmer -.: 338 
A Coast plane ruined | eer; By stendy. io "weak fair ship. |Ot West 8 ... 203 Un Cured ne over the water today but found no/|ping demand: No. 2-3 190-230 Ib. buteh- Grarmaund cc ig® on Pac... ste 
trace of Feely. Boats also patrolled |e. 3; STEM er aspen 10.28 oly omesty <'ihq Pats Ale Lin 7a the area. ‘sorted for grade 18.50-18.75 pay alae any Toit Pree. . acs 
BPs round, ee. 2.3 240-280, ae Patty leas mane? 38 bees woke few lots No J-2 240-250 Ib. 1810-1815; 10h gar, “oo ggg US Steel a8, . small yolume No. 3 290-320 Ib. he tui C 2 us Tob ital ttuce rings 17.75; larger lots mixed grade 375-350|;rr, OO? --- $78 Van Real |...) 972, Th.- sows 35.80-16.75; Httle below 15.75 . 29.7) Wests 71 673 
few head around 330-360 lb. to 17 00 tat Fay em SS | White Mel... 47.8] 
Glue to Diet in | Meaietie “eater, enon sno: IR Bey Ot Mites RCo 14 sie iter steers slow, unevenly steady |!" ; 1 Woolworth £34) 
o 38 lower than Monday's average. © iz jane aay e< Vale & Tow 208) 
Taste Rou ha e full, 50 —— confined to steers choice nt aices . 5 Youne 8aW 4 
- better and weighing about 1,200 Ib: lint T May 8 2 Ynest 8h&T 111 heifers fairly active and fully steady: Ms el 33.1 Zenith Rad . 1146 
aie | 1 
STOCK AVERAGES 
(Compiled by The Associated Press) 
30 1§ 1 a Indust Rails Util Stocks WeV. GOP wuss 288.3 1224 «74.3 177 Week ago 285.7 1226 %4.6 175. 4 Month ago 261.5 1205 40 17236 Year ago 2796 1445 74.4 189. 1957 high 75.1 134.7 746 189.0 1987 low ‘ 2496 118.4 79.2 168.0 1956 hich 276.3. 186.1 769 1915 2 se Wc 244.0 1262 69.6 171.6) 
DETROIT STOCKS 
(C. J. Nephier Co: 
[Figures after decimal points are eighths | 
High Low Noon |   tAllen Elec. & Equip. Co. ' * 968 3 a 
{Baldwin Rubber Co, . * 1523 163 
|Ross Gear Co ° 234 24 
iG.L. Of & Chem Co id 2 2.3 
|Howell Elec Mo Co... * 86 = § 
|Peninsular Met’ Pd. Co = 8.7 30 a 
|The Prophet Co : * 194 f1 
iRudy Manufact Co. * 14 ey 
loueee Edison Co * 134 136 
avne Screw Pd. Co oie a et 
| *Ne ante; Ad feces Sole 
New Baltimore C Gets 
‘Its City Manager 
NEW BALTIMORE 
southeast Michigan town, 
mayor and city council waived 
itheir salaries to help pay a city 
‘manager, has got one now. 
: * * * 
Warren Millard, 34, of White 
Pine, will take over as water plant 
'strperintendent May | at a salary of 
($7,500 a year. July 1 he will com- 
bine the city manager's job with 
the water plant superintendent! 
post at a salary of $8,500. He was’ 
‘hired Monday night. 
* * * 
| Mayor John F. Paul, who gets 
,a city salary of-$250 a year, and 
he Six city councilmen, who each 
get $200 a year, voted last fall to! ryer si 
Barred ne Ks 
provide $2,900 to help defray the 
expenses of a city manager, 
  
Farm Agent Named 
BAD AXE i* 7 The , Huron 
County Board of Supervisors ,Tues-     nw — val 
whose | 
igs 
‘Lodge Calendar’ Special Cedar} 
fe et 60, F. & A, M., Clarks- 
ton, ‘in EA. deeee i, hay m. 
Work in E. , Jesse 
man, W. Ms: ’ v. — 
= 
‘News in Brief 
W vous ttanie tor $60 nnd needs ball, Ph 6-9424, C. A. Medel 
Pevgy Local 33 Rummage Sale 
Sat., April 13. U. R. W. Hall, 128 
W. Pike St., 8 a. m, Adv. 
Clarkston Rotary Anns’ Rum- 
mage Sale will be held April 12 
and 13, at Community Center, Fri., 
9 a. m. to 9 p. m., Sat. 9 a. m. to 
noon. Adv, 
Rummage Sale, Fri. April 12, 
9 a. m 303 E. Maple; B"ham, by 
Metropolitan Aux. 9. Adv. 
Sale, Lake Orion 
Youth Center, Pri. & Sat. April 12 
and 13th. | Adv. 
Rummage Sale every Thurs, cor- 
ner of N. Baldwin and siananurep 
_~ Ady, 
Fish Dinner. Fresh fish from 
Lake Si r. Roosevelt Temple. 
22 State St., Fri. the 12th. Serving 
from 5 to 8. p.m a — Adv. 
Williams Seeks | Hike 
in Unemployment Aid 
WASHINGTON, D, C, ih — Gov. 
Williams today called for liberal- 
ization of provisions under which 
an area could seek federal aid be- 
cause ‘of unemployment. 
The governor's plea was con- 
tained in testimony prepared for 
presentation before the production 
and stabilization sub-committee of 
the Senate Committee on Banging 
and Currency. 
As it now. stands, In order to 
‘receive federal assistance an area 
would have to have not less than 
12 per cent unemployment for not 
less than one year, eight per cent     junemployment during’ 15 months of 
ithe last 18 months or six per cent 
unemployment during at least 
preceding years. 
The governor cites as examples 
how Muskegeon, Port Huron, Mon- 
roe and Detroit would be affected 
by the cia of the = mee 
Student Acquitted 
of Acid Throwing 
FORT WAYNE, Ind. w — A 
23-year-old former. Indiana Tech- 
‘nical College student was acquit- 
ted yesterday of charges of throw- 
ing acid on a Michigan girl who 
had spurned him, 
Cireuit Judge William H. Schan- 
nen found James W. Sprouse, 23, 
innocent after three psychiatrists 
testified he was ‘‘mentally incom- 
petent"’ at the time of the offense   He ordered Sprouse confined to 
Beatty State Hospital because of) 
yhat he terms-‘‘A se 
ing acid on two 18-year-old. wait- 
iresses, Carol Ann Clark of Read- 
ing, Mich. and Constance Moore 
jot Camden, Mich. He told authori-, 
, /attentions, 
Van Doren Doesn't 
Always Clean Up 
WASHINGTON (#—Charles Van 
|Doren, Columbia University Eng-   
os itish instructor who cleaned up in| 
la big way on television quiz show, 
didn’t do so well in a brief stint 
as a federal employe. 
* * * 
Van Doren won $129,000 on tel- 
evision, but for writing an article 
lon “What Is American Culture?’ 
‘for the United States Information 
,Agency he was paid only $75 in 
|January 1956: 
| * * * 
“| The payment was one of hun- 
dreds, ranging from $5 to $600,! 
}| made by USIA for free-lance serv- 
ices. 
| A list of the payments was giv- 
‘en to the House Appropriations 
| Committee during hearings on the 
= USIA budget. The committee 
j mace them public today. 
} cee een 
New Model Fiat Cars. 
nvade U.S. Market 
| NEW YORK (INS) — The great Italian Fiat works invaded the 
American automobile market to- 
day with a flashing display of 
economy-sized cars. 
The spring line of automobile | 
at a reception and luncheon for a 
select audience of 450 persons at 
the Waldorf-Astoria “Hotel in New 
York.     
Newspaper Editor Dies 
Following Long Illness 
| ogres N.Y. w — Clar- 
exe E. » Manus, 66, a retired 
Inewspaperman, died at St. Mary’s 
E. forega salaries for two years to'Hospital here yesterday after a 
long illness, 
Mc Manus, a newsman for near- 
‘ly 40 years, was news and tele- 
graph editor of the Batavia (N.Y.) 
Daily News when he retired in 
1945. 4. 
He was onetime news "editor of 
  day chose\ Leland “ Warschefsky 
assistant ‘in Huron 
July, 1955. He’ will) 
A County since 
take over May 1, the defunct Cleveland Times and 
later worked Qn newspapers in 
\Lima and Conneaut, Ohio, and De- 
itroit. He was a. native of Mead- 
iville, = : ijthe case 
‘eight months in each of the two! 
ties Miss Clark had ignored his) > THE, PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIT: 10, aber 
[Steels =F On | 
lower Trend Police, Firemen 
‘Under One L law ‘Pontiac City Off 
- Refuse’ Police rere 
Plea for Own Board 
City firemen and policemen 
V-| should exist under the same civil 
le| Service board, despite objections 
by Police Chief Herbert W. Straley, 
the City Commission heard last 
night, ~ 
The issug came, ip as a result 
ot the recent eléction placing 
policemen, including Straley, under 
the civil service laws that have 
governed firemen 16 years. 
- * * 
‘Straley, who opposed civil ser- 
vice, argued that the three in- 
cumbent civil service commission- 
ers on the fire board should not 
take over governing of the police! 
department, but that a separate 
police board should be established. 
A, Ewart, however, stated there 
is no provision in the law for two 
separate boards, and added that 
“one, unified board is the only 
logical course the city can fol- 
low.” 
Commissioners heard Ewart's 
explanation and took no action on 
Straley’s objections. 
* * * 
They then passed a_ resolution 
commending the trial board that 
had governed policemen up to the 
April 1 election. 
The resolution cited the ‘‘gra- 
tuitous services and te long 
hours given” by the seven 
board members, 
Hoffa Saves Cas Case 
‘for the Courtroom’ 
CHICAGO (# — James F. Hoffa, 
a vice president of the Teamsters 
Union under indictment on charges 
of conspiracy and bribery, says 
“is for the courtroom, 
not a matter of public debate.” 
* * * 
Hoffa, of Detroit, discussed the 
charges in a speech yesterday 
before the union’s Chicago Joint 
Council No. 25. He was indicted 
recently by a federal grand jury 
in Washington, accused of bribery 
and conspiracy after he allegedly 
attempted to buy secret papers 
and records of a Senate subcom- 
mittee investigating labor racke- 
teering, 
Hoffa was joined by William A.| 
Lee of Chicago, also a Teamster 
vice president, in declaring the 
union will fight efforts to kick the 
Teamsters out of the AFL-CIO. 
* * * 
The AFL-CIO Ethical Practices 
Committee has ordered a hearing 
May 6 of charges the Teamsters 
are ‘‘dominated, controlled or 
substantially influenced by corrupt 
influences.”’ 
r-oe Kavanagh to Stay 
‘as Attorney General 
LANSING w — Atty, Gen. Thom- 
las M, Kavanagh, who was elected 
‘April 1 as a state Supreme Court 
justice, says he expects to serve 
out the remainder of 1957 as at-   
    fashions from Italy was unveiled torney general. 
| Kavanagh, a Democrat, will not 
\take his seat on the high court 
juntil the end of this year. He was 
re-elected to a two-year term as 
,attorney general last November, 
| “I certainly expect to. I see no) © 
|reason for anything else."’ Kava- 
inagh said in response to a re- 
porter's question. 
* * * 
Rep. George W, Sallade (R-Ann 
Arbor) in a pre-election letter had 
questioned the advisability of Kav- 
anagh’s staying on in his present 
post, assuming his election as a City Attorney William | 
Wright, son of Lester L. Wright of 
ja Marine Corps school,   
Nor did last night’s spectacular 
river bank pageantry, fireworks 
and. parties all over town = the 
visiting British monarch’s 
keep the Parisians in bed rer 
  Paris’ gayest 
* * * 
The evening-gowned Queen, 
Philip arid President Rene Coty   morning, ‘The crowds again were 
  Two Pontiac men recently com- 
pleted training at the Marine Corps 
Recruit Depot, San Diego, Calif. 
Completing the 11-week course 
including instruction in basic mili- 
tary jects and the firing of 
basic infantry weapons were, Ver- 
nor S. Hooper, Jr., son of Mr. and 
Mis. Vernor S. Hooper of 208 Crys- 
tal Lake Dr.; and William L. 
76 Fairgrove Ave. 
They will be assigned to a unit 
for further infantry training or to 
* * * 
Navy Ens. Duncan M. Laidlaw, 
son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. 
Laidlaw of 704 Tottenham Rd; Bir- 
mingham, recently received 
“Wings of ‘Gold’ 2 
of a Naval Avi 
ator at the Naval 
Air Station, Cor--. 
pus Christi, Tex. 
He received 
wings under a 
new program in 
which cadets 
now are commis- 
sioned and desig- 
nated Naval Avi- 
ators after 10    LAIDLOW 
weeks of advanced training and 
200 hours of flight time. The old 
program required completion of 
the entire flight training program 
before receiving wings and com-| 
missions.   * * 
Navy — Cmdr. 
Armin A. Darm- 
staetter, Jr.,| 
Medical Corps, 
USN, son of Mrs. 
Priscilla §&,| 
Darmstaetter of 
30 Cranbrook 
Rd., Bloomfield 
Hills, is serving 
at the Nava] Hos- 
= pital, Charleston, 
Darmstaetter S.C. 
Before entering the service in 
May, 1955, he graduated from the 
University of Michigan Medical 
School.   
    * * News of Service Personnel 
‘| cently completed 
: |million, Wilson Marine Transit Co. 
| |bought the three largest ones, 
- jwhich until last Friday was 
. |known as Wilson Transit Co., 
; jtimated in its announcement of the | 
ithe three which are being pur- Pvt. Gary CS Mackay, son ‘of 
William D. Mac- 
-kay of 9050 Mari- — 
lyn Terrace, 
Walled Lake, re- 
a three week 
basic airborne } 
course at the {% 
W0ist Airborne 
Division School, 
Fort Campbell, 
Ky. and was 
awarded the sil- 
  MACKAY 
The three weeks were spent in 
physical conditioning, group in- 
struction, and five parachute 
jumps, made i? the final week of 
training. 
Steamship Co. Sells 
Entire Freighter Fleet 
CLEVELAND \ — Great Lakes 
Steamship Co. yesterday sold its 
entire fleet of 16 iron ore and 
coal freighters for more than $17   
of Cleveland bought.13 and North- 
western Mutual Life Insurance Co. 
Wilson Marine Transit Co., 
  purchase that it was about to sell! 
10 of its enlarged &6@t to other’ 
interests. 
* * * 
This further sale presumably , 
would include at least some of the 
Great Lakes steamship vessels, To! 
organizations were reported to be 
negotiating for the 10. 
Wilson Marine Transit has been 
operating 14 vessels, all of which 
it owns. It said it would operate 
chased by Northwestern Mutual. | 
The combined fleets of 30 vessels| 
soon will be cut to 20 by “‘nego-| 
tiations currently under way,” the | 
announcement case 
Boy Vocalist's 
Aged Grandma 
Is Penniless 
ALBANY, N. Y. (#—The 70-year, 
old grandmother of the boy who 
popularized the song, ‘‘I'm Gettin’ 
Nuttin’ for Christmas,” has been. 
getting almost nothing, herself, 
for a long time.   
    Recently completing basic mili- 
tary training at Lackiand Air 
Antonio, Tex., 
was Gerald E.| 
Lane, son of 
George Lane of! 
3936 Maybee Rd. 
His program 
included aptitude | 
testing, physical - 
conditioning, sir | 
| vival and weap- 
ons training, and 
classroom _ stud- 
  LANE. 
ies ranging from citizenship to mil- 
itary qistoms.and courtesies. 
  
  Supreme Court justice. 
He said that as attorney gen- 
‘eral Kavanagh probably would be_ 
lruling on issues that later would « 
‘come before him on the high 
‘court, thus making it necessary 
‘for Kavanagh to disqualify him- 
|self from considering them,   
Probe to Spotlight 
Strong-Arm Tactics | WASHINGTON w — Chairman 
iMcClellan (D-Ark) says the Sen- 
jate Rackets Investigating Com- 
mittee will hold hearings for 
about three days, beginning next 
Tuesday, on practices in the 
Scranton, Pa., area. a 
McClellan, in announcing the 
starting date yesterday, did not 
indicate the matters to be taken 
up, nor would he name witnesses 
to be called. Earlier, committee 
sources had said the inquiry 
would go into alleged ‘“‘strong 
arm” tactics by some unions, 
The committee has indicated its 
staff was looking into affairs of 
isome_ building trades unions 
and the Teamsters Union, 
Wolverine Tube to Build 
New Research Center 
DETROIT (AP)—The Wolverine 
Tube division of Calumet & Hecla 
Ine., broke ground yesterady for 
a $600,000 suburban administrative 
and research center. 
The Wolverine. Tube Division ex- 
pects to move from Detroit offices 
to the Allen. Park center next 
January.| The center, at Southfield 
  and Willow Run Expressway, will’ 
eniploy 150. 
  J Antonio, Tex,   Less Americans 
Now Employed 
in Foreign Plants 
NEW YORK (INS)—A Dun's Re- 
iview and Modern Industry Survey 
jof 93 U. S. companies with a 
| $3,800,000,000 overseas plant in-' 
vestment showed that fewer Amer- 
icans and more foreign personnel 
are staffing overseas plants than 
ever before. 
The 93 firms have a total over- 
seas payroll of 614,973 (including 
only 4,955 Americans) in 70 com- 
panies. The ratio of foreign 
nationals over Americans managers 
and technicians is 125 to 1.. 
* * * 
The survey also showed that 
more than 41 per cent of the com- 
panies realized from 1 to 10 per 
cent of their net profit from over- 
seas operations;: more than 13 
per cent got 11 to 20 per cent of! 
net profit; and 17 per cent, more 
than 75 per cent of their net profit. 
GMC Heads Confer 
With Truck Dealers 
GMC truck dealers in 19 cities 
will be visited in a current tour 
by top. executiv@s of the GMC 
Truck & Coach Division, headed 
by General Manager Philip J. 
Monaghan. — 
Purpose of the series of meetings 
is to “emphasize Ww. sales op- 
portunites in the division's 119 
sales ‘zones."* 
“Areas covered this week include 
Charlotte, “N. C; Atlanta, Ga.   
  Whalen said letters werk’ written 
ito Mrs. Gordon about her! ‘mother | Mrs. Celia Swartz, grandmother | 
of singer Barry Gordon, 
_Department said today. 
* * * motorists, 
parties” 
™ | visit. 
injury 
a ; is on re-| 
Force Base, San let, the Albany County Weltane| of * 
  of the city, Five thousand search- 
lights along the river. banks 
turned the pageant route into a 
brilliant path of color. 
Unfolded before the waterborne 
guests was a display. of French 
life down through history. In the 
background, the 985-foot-high Eif- 
fel Tower, flying the British dnd 
French flags, 
against the Faotineg blue sky. - was floodlighted 
- * + 
\The river ga glided past Par- 
is’ famed landmarks — 
d'Orsay, the National Parliament, 
the Louvre, Notre Dame. . . the Quai 
* * 
At Notre Dame, where soft light 
During the 
; * 
The final 
* 
A “moment 
Cows Showered 
With Radiation 
Free of Cancer streamed through the stained 
glass windows, hundreds of white- 
robed choirboys sang a medieval 
chant, 
As the boats .moved on, 
Queen saw French folklore 
groups jugglers, and peasants 
from the marshy lands dancing on 
stilts. 
trip back up the 
Seine, a display of fireworks that 
the French claimed was the big- 
gest ever seen anywhere erupted 
against the sky. 
* 
salute * 
came from 
massed barges moored near the 
river bank starting point. 
Signal, the barges sounded their 
fog horns in one deafening roar. At a 
* * 
later the roar was 
taken up ashore. Thousands of 
caught in one of the 
\worst traffic jams the city has 
ever known, leaned on their horns 
to“ vent their impatience. 
After the boat ride, 
party went to a gala reception 
at the British Embassy. All over 
town Parisians danced and# drank 
until the early hours.at “Queen's 
celebrating Elizabeth's the royal 
  WASHINGTON (# — An Army 
scientist said 
cancer has yet shown up in some 
Alamogordo, N.M., 
tally showered with fall-out from 
the world’s first atomie explosion 
12 years ago. 
* 
And the fac 
,are nearing the end of their nor- 
mal life 
signs of span 
malignancy 
heavy doses of radiation — is a 
reassuring development, —Col. Car! 
|Tessmer told the annual mee 
of the International Acade 
Pathology in a prepared report. today no sign of 
cows acciden- 
* * 
t that the cows now 
without showing 
— despite 
ing 
y of 
Tessmer is chief of the radiation 
* 
He said 
loss section 
|Forces Institute of Pathology. 
the cattle 
heav; y doses of beta radiation be- 
cause their presence in the con- 
taminated area was not known in 
time to wash the fall-out particles 
their bodies. 
greying, 
sores and prominent overgrowths 
of their hides, Tessmer said, of the Armed 
* * 
received 
suffered 
unsightly They 
of hair, 
but 
The department said it had been added that no evidence of cancer 
seeking Barry’s mother, 
Samuel Gordon of Hollywood, for, 
months. The department wants to! 
compel her to contribute to her| 
| mother’ s support, officials said. 
Cammissioner Robert P, Whalen 
said the county would bring pia 
action against Mrs. Gordon, 
he said, is legally required to c se 
tribute to her mother’s support if 
financially capable, 
* * * 
Barry's father is listed as Sam- 
uel Gordon, formerly a disc jockey 
here. Department: records show 
‘him last employed in Jersey City 
vat $66 a week. 
  on July 3, July 24 and Ott. 1 in, 
'1956, and on March 19 this year. 
Mrs. Swartz’ life that the depart- bration at 
ianniversary, He said one of the letters con- wachier. cerned life insurance policies on) ‘Huron Merchants Asan. Mrs.|has yet been seen in any instance.   
An outdoor Tel-Huron Features 
Outdoor Boat Show 
boat show will high- 
light a five-day anniversary ‘cele- 
Tel-Huron, currently 
observing the third year of its 
founding. 
The show, whose exhibits will be 
furnished by 
dealers, 
through Monday night in the shop- 
ping centers parking lot. will several area boat 
last from tomorrow 
Sixteen merchants will partict- 
president jpate in observances marking the 
according to Norman 
of ‘the Tel- 
  
ment said were held by the! 
daughter, 
* 4 * * 
ceived one answer from Mrs, Gor- | 
don, in which she denied holding | 
the policies. 
Mrs, Swartz, who lives in Al-) 
ibany, has beon receiving old-age) 
‘help from the department for! 
several years. 
  
Kaiser Steel Doubles 
Capacity. in Plate, Sheet | 
NEW YORK (INS)—Kaiser Steel | Corp. has announced it will in-| 
crease its -current 
al $81,000,000. The entire —— 
will boost Kaiser Steel's ingot: 
capacity from 1,536,000 tons to; 
approximately 3,000,000 tons an-/ 
nually, virtually doubling its on | 
pacity. | Principal increases in terms of, 
finished products will be. in plate, | 
sheet, tin plate and pipe—products ' 
in the greatest demand in the. 
west. . ~ 
  
Double Trouble Day . 
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. ®‘°— Tt’ 
was a bad day for Chester Hill. 
He was standing in line to pay § 
his state income tay when a pick-     Memphis, Tenn.;/ Dallas and San, 
4 pocket robbed him of his wallet $13,000,000 
expansion program by an addition-_     
  The department said it had re-| Som 
WAIT UNTIL 
ATS ce 
TOO LATE! 
  INSURE NOW WITH... 
‘CRAWFORD | 
DAWE-GROVE |. 710 Pontiae State Bank Bldg. |” FE 2-8357 1 hae i 
    cueing ‘$12, fi f Aw the = a Nt