* The Weather U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast Three above tonight; Snow flurries (Petal on Page 2) TH ONTIAC PRE! oth YEAR : xekee* “PONTIAC. MICHIGAN; SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1958 —82 PAGES ~ QS = Seard oe ee “ Abandoned for sy VS Space Nose Co Canaveral, problems. Fla., in a study of flight endurance and re-entry ne Type FS ; AP Wirephete MISSILE RIDER — A squirrel monkey like this was fired into space this morning in the nose cone of a Jupiter rocket from Cape Flint Teamster Free onBond in Arson Case By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. FLINT—A Teamsters business agent from Flint was free on bond today, and authorities said they had evidence to put him at the scene of a dry cleaning shop arson job which police say cost Frank Kierdorf his life. But Genesee County Prosecutor Jerome F. O’Rourke wasn’t telling just what this evidence was. “‘This is a Waterford Boy Dies in Crash ’ Killed as Car Hits Tree in West Bloomfield Township A 17-year-old Waterford Town-| ship youth was fatally injured early | this morning when the car in which; he was riding struck a tree in| West Bloomfield Township. His death and that of a Royal Oak woman who died yesterday in William Beaumont Hospital following an auto accident Thurs- day brought the county’s traffic death total to 87 this year. Dead are John Leslie Fromm, 17, of 35 Riviera St., and Mrs. Agnes Hoefer, 51, of 4008 Parkview St. Fromm _ suf- Oakland fered severe head Highway car in which he, Was @ passenger Peery overshot a curve in ’58 on Cooley Lake 8 a road at Hunt road at about 1:30 a.m. today. He was pronounced dead at Pon- tiac General Hospital at 4:05 a.m. by Oakland County Deputy Coro- The driver, Captain Frank Wil- son, 16, of 1043 Boston Ave., was treated for minor scratches and released. Twce other passen- gers were uninjured. ties said the auto was traveling west at an estimated 65 m.p.h. when it struck the tree and spun 45 feet before coming to a gtop. Mrs. Hoefer died of head in- injuries when the Toll and struck a tree ner Dr. Leon Cobb. Oakland County Sheriff's depu- juries. Berkley Police said slippery roads caused her car to skid through: a stop sign at Edwards Street and Coolidge Highway Thursday afternoon. : It collided with a truck driven! by. Herman W. Yentz, 49, of 717 Bacon St., Monroe. Yentz was uninjured. I > Today's Press Guaren NOWS «oc ccessees 14, 15 Comes . 1... cece eee: 26 Eaitorials ... 22.2.5... 006605 6 Home Section ....17, 18, 19, 20 Market 600s jocese seen: 26 Obituaries ..........66.. 0005 26 Sports ...........0sec0005 22, 23. TV & Radio Programas .... 31 Wilson, Karl ..........,..... a Women's Pages ..... fi; 12, 13 , —‘*matter for the courts and | Say was one of Kierdorf’s closest | ‘Adenauer Feels Better we don’t want to try this in the newspapers and prejudice jurors,” he said yesterday. O'Rourke, who was forced to! release Jack D. Thompson, 41, four (Goodfellow Sale Conducted in City Today Selling Rontiac Press to Raise Money for Needy at Christmas Today is Goodfellow day in Pontiac. With a goal of at least $5,000 to help needy chil- dren and their families have a happier and healthier Christmas, the sale of Pontiac Press Good- fellow newspapers got un- der way at noon. It will continue until dark. _ Kicking off the drive was a parade, led by the Waterford Township High School band. * & * Following the band were mem- bers of the Metropolitan Club, made up of police, firemen mailmen and. auxiliary police. ' Also participating in the Good- fellow sale — for the first time — were women from the Gen- eral Motors Giris Club. Assembling at the Public Safety Building, the-line of march pro- ceeded west on Pike street to Sag- inaw, and then over to The Press where the Goodfellows loaded their newspaper bags. As the actual sale got under way, the band stationed itself on the |courthouse steps, playing and sing- ing Christmas caroles. * x * This is the first time since 1926 i'that the sale started with a pa- irade, said Pontiag Police Sgt. Wal- ter A. Baerwolf, drive chairman. Some 75 persons, all of whom are identified by large badges, are selling The Press Goodfellow edi- tions. Money raised through the sale will be used by the Goodfellows to fill Christmas food baskets and to buy clothing. shoes and gifts for underprivileged children. Snowfall Predicted in Pontiac TODAY’S TEMPERATURES 12:30 a.m. 10 8pm. .... 6 Zam. ....9 10 a.m. ,...11 4am. ....8 Noon .......21 6am. .... 6 ipm. ....23 Light snow flurries are expected today and tomor- row as the cold wave grip- ping the Pontiac area enters its ninth day. The mercury possibly could fali to a bone-chilling 5 below tonight, the Weather Bureau A high of 23-is forecast for to- day, with temperatures climbing a bit tomorrow. ‘Tomorrow’s high is expected to be around 25. Westerly winds of 8-13 m.p.h. are expected today. and tonight. In Peliston, which has had the distinction ef being the coldest spot in the state this month, the mercury stood at 12 below. It was 5 below in Sault Ste. Marie and 13 above in Traverse City. A snowfall of from five to eight inches caused extensive slippery sections today in the Ludington, Manistee, Traverse City, Holland and Benton Harbor areas, the State Highway Dept. reports. C of C Says 59 to Be Good Year Predicts 5 Per Cent Rise in Jobs, Income and Production WASHINGTON (®— In a fore- months ago for lack of evidence, rearrested him Friday and charged, him with arson. Thompson, who his associates friends, demanded examination when he appeared in Flint Mu- nicipal’’Court yesterday after- noon. Examination was set for Dec. 18 and Thompson was re- leased on $1,500 bond. ‘Green Empress Starts Monday Tired of Christmas shop- ping? Weary of the season’s hub- bub? Yesterday's arrest reopened the) ‘mysterious human torch death of | ‘Kierdorf, 56, a fellow business | agent of Thompson’s,. Kierdorf succumbed. to head-to-- toe burns, which investigators be- lieve he suffered Aug. 3 as he tried to burn down the Latrielle Clean- ers plant just outside of Flint. Atty. Gen. Paul L, Adams, who directed an earlier two-county in- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) a BONN, German &® — Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer is ex- pected to return to his office next week after recovering from a cold, an official spokesman said * * * If so, try relaxing with the new serial — “The Green Empress’’—all abcut romance and adventure ... starting Monday in The Pontiac Press. Elizabeth Cadell has her hero hired as a liaison officer on a luxury ‘1s traveling from England to Spain. He thinks it will be a most routine job, but one which will allow him to visit some enchanting places. * * * But he falls in love ... and the trip is anything but routine, today. cast built on favorable reports | from seven key segments of | business, the United States | Chamber of Commerce has pre- dicted a 5 per cent rise in jobs, production and income in 1959. x * * Dr. Emerson P. Schmidt, the chamber’s chief economist, fore- saw a gradual rise to a record national output of around 475 bil- lion dollars next year and add- ed: “In 1969 we should, with ease, cross the 500 billion dol- lar mark at today’s prices.” An auto industry spokesman hinted that Detroit shortly will issue a revised 1959 production forecast boosting its present 542 million car estimate — a guess that was made before new mod- els hit the market. ¥* - »* However, two experts spoke of ' a steel work stoppage as possible | next July, and Schmidt voiced concern over the possibility that strikes and labor turbulence gen- erally will increase, ‘“particular- | ly if recovery seems firm.’ | Retents Free Contribution ¥ $100 CLOSER TO GOAL — The first hundred dollars of the Pontiac Goodfellows’ goal of $5,000 Harry Reed (left) is Pontiac Police 5h Fee was presented this morning by The Pontiac Press. Accepting the A. Baerwolf, drive chairman. ip v Pentise Press Photo check from Managing Editor Foreign Envoys Plan Next Move in Berlin PARIS (AP) — Foreign min- isters of the Western Big Three plus West Germany gathéred to- day to plan what to do about So- viet efforts to get them out of West Berlin. Advance -indications were that they would take a firm stand for maintaining Western protection of the anti-Communist city 110 miles behind the Iron Curtain. Secretary of State Dulles flew in from Washington at 9:17 a.m. on the presidential plane Col- umbine Ill. Before leaving the U. 8S. capital he had accused Moscow of going back on its own pledges when Priemer Khrushchev proposed to make West Berlin an unarmed free city. Selwyn Lloyd of Britain, Mau- rice Couve de Murville of France and Heinrich von Brentano of West Germany will meet with Dulles Sunday to begin studying \Khrushchev’s Thanksgiving Day note. Any decisions they reach will be reported to foreign ministers of the other 11 Atlantic Alliance na- tions, who are expected to join in a united front against the Soviet move. The regular December meeting of NATO foreign’ min- isters and other officials opens in Paris Tuesday. - Berlin was not on the official agenda for the NATO meeting but was certain to assume a large place in the discassions. Preliminary talks within NATO have indicated support for a firm stand by the big powers. There was a wide variety of opinion, however, on just how this firmness should be expressed in the formal answer to Khrushchev. Washington, London and Paris have made it plain in their in-| formal comments that they do not intend to be pressured out of Ber- lin, where they have maintained troops since the end of World War II by joint agreements signed by the Russians. Khrushchev gave the West six months to get out of West Berlin. He said if they had not left in that time, he would turn over to Com- munist East Germany contro] of Western access to the city. The West refused to recognize or deal with the Red regime. Variety of Gifts Available If the man for whom him something to casita Open cvenings & Sunday ‘tll Christmas, Newman's Variety, 915, Orchard Lk. \w ' Off to Seek Outer Space Bananas a, JOURNEY’S START — Rising in the nose cone of this Jupiter rocket is a squirrel monkey, off on a voyage through’ space. The ep , -. y AP Wirephote rocket was fired-at Cape Canaveral, Fla., this morning. Hobbyist Easy to Please By JANET ODELL you’re buying a Christmas gift has‘a hobby, you’re in luck. You can always buy this hobby. Does he ice fish? There’s a little red sled called an Ice Pal. It has a raised seat and a deep box for equipment. We think you could put your feet in the box for warmth. If.your husband’s den annoys you with the clutter he keeps around, buy him a barrel labeled ‘junk’? and stop fretting. A com- panion barrel is lettered ‘‘Char- coal” and can be used near the grill, whether it's outside or in- side. Even the least fashion-con- scious man would enjoy wearing — a.red challig vest at holiday time. Firecracker red sheepskin lined slippers will keep his feet cozy warm on nights like we've been having. Handkerchiefs are an ordinary gift, but not when they come in); a plastic box with a set of check- ers, The top hanky is a red and white checkerboard. Automatic stoppers for liquor bottles are la- beled. Gifts In the stocking stuffer class are available. If he hates to lick stamps, get him a squeeze bottle with sponge top for moist- ening stamps. Buy him his own roll of sticky tape, complete with dispenser in the same package. Gardeners will spend happy win- ter hours with the new Ford 1959 ‘East “Germany without the satel- | Foreign Office and U. S. Am- In what has come to be regard- ed as an annual Soviet threaten- ing note just before the NATO meeting, Russia warned Thursday that any Western attempt to cross lite regime’s permission would be Reds Deliver Note MOSCOW \® — The Soviet North Atlantic Alliance members teday a declaration concerning | to the NATO meeting in Paris be- ginning Tuesday. Details of the not were not immediately — able. considered aggression against the entire Soviet bloc. A nuclear war could result, the Soviet news agen- cy Tass said. * * * Dulles left-a hospital bed after a week long bout with inflamma- tion of the lower intestine. One ob- server at the airport when the 70-year-old secretary arrived said he was looking ‘‘as well as I have ever seen him.” Dulles was welcomed by rep- resentatives of the. French bassador Amory Hougton. He did not make a statement at the airport before driving to Houghton’s residence. Before leaving Washington, Dul- les stopped in to see President Eisenhower and then read a state- ment on the Soviet proposal. Monkey Business Important WASHINGTON (UPD — The De- fense Department issued the fol- lowing ‘‘fact sheet’’ on the squirrel monkey launched into space in the nose cone of an army Jupiter mis- sile at Cape Canaveral, Fla., early today: “1. The squirrel monkey is an intelligent monkey native to Cen- tral and’ South America. Although not in any way related to the squirrel, this monkey gets its name from the similarity to the squirrel in size and color of its coat. “It is a small, active tree- hunting, gentle creature with a- long, rather bushy, squirrel-like tail and tufted ears. “2. Physical characteristics, Av- erage length of the head and body is 10 to 15 inches. It's thick, bushy tail is from 14 to 19 inches long and is non-prehensile (not adapted for grasping or holding). “A squirrel monkey has the sam@ anatomical make-up as man and undergoes much the same emotions. “3. Mental characteristics, This monkey is generally considered more intelligent than many other species of monkeys, It can be trained and handled as a pet, but is extremely gregarious and does not like to be separated from oth- Cone of Jupiter Strikes Atlantic After Launching Hoped to Gather Data on Man’s Ability to Survive Flight From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — The 1y announced today that the search for a missile nose cone which carried a small monkey into space has been - called off. Army headquarters here quoted Brig. Gen. J. A. Bar- clay as saying at Cape Ca- naveral, Fla. that “there appears to have been a mis- hap” in the recovery gear which the nose cone of the Jupiter missile carried to assist searchers in locating i. .- “Consequently, the seareh has been discontinued,” oer clay said. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. — The Army sent a mon- key on a whizzing 1,700-mile flight into space today and proved that.a prolonged stay in a gravity-free state does not produce signifi- cant “adverse physiological change.” The little monkey, with a high degree of intelligence, was fired in the.nose cone of a Jupiter intermediate range missile that Slopped into the South Atlantic and was the object of a search by surface craft. What happened when “Little Old Reliable” — the first name given the space simian by the man who Union delivered to embassies of jfound it just that way in pre- flight testing — hit the water had to await word from the recovery But all indications were that “Little Old. Reliable” made its trip into space and back without a bobble. Brig. Gen. J. A. Barclay, com- mander of the U.S. Army Ballis- tie Missile Agency at Huntsville, Ala., on the scene at Cape Ca- naveral for the significant test, said the nose cone of the Jupiter missile landed about 15 minutes after its 4 a.m. blastoff at a spot 1,700 miles down range in the South Atlantic, The Army chose for the new venture into living space flights a dainty, soft-haired little creature. with a gentle family life and much the same anatomical makeup as man. The monkey is regarded as very intelligent. - In a statement released by the Defense Department, Navy Capt. Norman Lee Barr said the monkey's breathing was slower than normal and slightly irregu- lar during the takeoff. Pulse rate picked up as the recket acceler- ated, But Barr said that after the © missile soared beyond the pull of earth's gravity, the monkey’s breathing and pulse rate returned 0 normal. NO SIGNIFICANT CHANGE Barr said the most significant finding from the monkey's flight, recorded through instruments at- tached to the Jittle beast’s body, was that “the prolonged gravity- (Continued on Page 2, Col, 6) 'Florida.C. of C. Workers Wear Overcoats on Job JACKSONVILLE, Fla, ®% — It was quite an indignity to a Florida (land of sunshine) Cham- ber of Commerce. ' Employes of the Jacksonville ‘area C.of C had to work in over- coats Friday when the building’s furnace blew a fuse. The tem- perature reached a high of 50, several degrees below normal. Almanac and Garden Guide. 4 / 4 * ers of its breed.” F a ed 1 Sew SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1958 , tm (Seek Monkey - {host After Trip (Continued From Page One) free. state does not produce sig- nificant adverse physiological 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, : The | Day in Birmingham Three Home Burglaries Now Under Investigation ~ Telep one Book “Type Explained BIRMINGHAM—During the past ® Larger Pontiac ‘Listing says families going on exteided! hange.’ ‘Smaller Print . 48 hours Birmingham police have| trips. should notify the police * Forces “ore . Bell ’ reed Sang evil at started investigation of three home| before leaving. He suggested also Says Michigan Be ins pee es ae burglaries, that they make arrangements for At the M. B. Whittlesey home, Michigan Bell Telephone Co. of- ficials today released a statement concerning the size of the type used in the new Pontiac area tele- phone directory. * * * The firm has received some com- plaints because of adopting a smaller type face. “The type used in the Pontiac Directory was changed from © seven point to six point. Six point type is used and has been used in all metropolitan directories throughout the country where size has to be combated. Six point type has been used in the Detroit directory for over 25 years. “Studies made by the Telephone | Company and studies by outside concerns have shown that six point type is legible and readable. Other types of publications such as dic- tionaries, where size is a problem, use six point and lower. However, | telephone directories use a special type called Bell Gothic developed several years ago for directories. It allows more white space and is more legible than other kinds of type. * * * “We experience some adverse customer reaction whenever this change is made because of the contrast noticeable between the larger type of superseded di- rectory, but our experience has been that later after getting used to six point, little more is heard in the way of adverse criticism. “In connection with the necessity of making the change, growth in and in percentage of families having service, which has gone from sixties into the high eighties percentagewise, necessi- tates continuous attention to the) problem of size of directories, that! ™ is keeping it to a reasonable size for convenience usage.” ° 3Die, 7 Injured in Chicago Fire Flames Race Through 4-Story Apartment as Tenants Flee Into Cold CHICAGO (AP)—Three tenants were killed and seven other per- sons injured early today when a fire raced through the upper floors of a four-story apartment building several blocks northwest of the Loop. * * * Dozens of tenants fled into numbing cold as firemen brought the extra alarm blaze under con- trol in a half hour. Sam Weiss, owner of the build- ing, identified the dead as Frank Jackowski, 45, Miss Julia Rollin- ski, about 70, and Stanley Bedicki, also about 70, Of the injured, Frank Borgatz, 64, was listed in critical condition at Henrotin Hospital. for customer) DOWNTOWN CHRISTMAS Saginaw and Huron streets was the Daniel Whitfield School. Thi CAROLERS — Blending in Christmas song yesterday afternoon at an outdoor stage at this chorus of young voices from is was the first group to sing in Pontiac Press Phote the Christmas concert series sponsored by the Downtown Mer- chants Association. Local school bands and other choir groups are scheduled to perform at the stage throughout the yuletide _ Season. 2 Boys Die at Outario Crossing By TOM DYGARD ESSEX, Ont. W—"'I wish I was dead instead of those two boys,” driver Albert Slock said after his school bus was rammed yesterday by a speeding passenger train at a crossing outside this southern Ontario town. Slock and eight of his young passengers were thrown into a York Central railroad’s crack Detroiter, running at 80 mi. p. h. to make up lost time, slammed into the bus. David Purvis, 11, Bosse, 8, sitting in the rear of the bus, were thrown into a field alongside the tracks and killed. Although the impact ripped the bus’ entire body off its frame and dumped the wreckage with its hu- Related Story on Page 8 man cargo upside down, Slock and the eight surviving children escaped without serious injury. One boy was hospitalized with pos- sible leg injuries. “It was a miracle they weren't all killed.” Those were the words of a priest, an ambulance driver and a doctor who cared for. the jhurt. | Slock, a 25-year-old bachelor, has 'been driving the bus two years. He had about two-thirds of nor- mal load of children for the St. Ignace elementary school of Holy Name Catholic parish when-he ap- proached the tracks. Stomping as usual at the foot | of the incline that leads up to the tracks about five feet above the level of the road, he peered through frosty windows and fog. He saw nothing, so he drove up! jthe incline. “When I saw the train I put on ithe brakes, but it seemed they Investigators said the blaze ap-| jwouldn’t hold and I started to parently originated in a third-floor | apartment and leaped to the up- permost floor, Many of the tenants kept hot-plates in the rooms, po- 7 lice said, * * &, Damage was estimated by fire officials at $3,000. Cause of the blaze was not immediately deter-| mined, Weiss said the building housed 33 tenants, islide,"’ he said. ‘‘When I realized lwhat was happening I gunned Mer land the motor cut out on me.” Even so, Slock said, he thought he had succeeded in escaping the onrushing train by inches. Engineer Louis Jagoé, 52, of St. Thomas, Ont., said hé believed the train was traveling about 80 miles jan hour. | “When IT saw the bbs through | the fog I laid on the whistle and Clamps Headlock on East Icy Weather By The Associated Press A stinging cold wave fastened a frigid headlock over the eastern. two thirds of the nation today as The Weather Full U. 8, Weather. Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and centinued celd with a few light snew flurries today, tonight and te morrow. High today 23. Low ‘tonight 3 above in city te 5 below in rar or ‘hb merce 25. Winds westerly 8 - teday and tonight. Teday in Pontiac sae temperature preceding 8 a.m 8 am.: Wind velocity 5 mph.) Direction: West. Sun sets Saturday at 5 Sun rises Sunday at 1:5. a m. Moon sets Saturday at 8:36 p.m Moon rises Sunday at 10:45 a.m - tumbling to near freezing and into Downtown Temperatures +--+: 00na 6 lfam...... 18 ecoogsee LSP ite be pps some ttl oo---. § 23 S Friday in Pontiac = A Pend recorded downtown) ; ighes mperature ............. ...20 Lowest Gumaretne: Sono nsenboonoooner Mean temperature .............. rece. 14 Weather—@unny One Year Ago i Ago in Pontiac —— cnet cee EE Highest and Lowest Se reneerotores This. Date te in 86 Years 60 in 1881 1 in 1903 aad * Temperature Chart | ts Angeles .79 58) e i Sereunes 19 10) -1 Memphis 34 21] Miami 65S: " Milwaukee 14-3 33. Minneapolis 6 -1 es a Ob 56s te 8. Ste. Marie 14 --5 Traverse City 21 1 Washin = On @ 37 S641) P essay : “ene 2 season—with winter still nine days | Lown, /ford Osterman said he believed a x) 3 Lown's Grips U.S. a slashing snowfall buffeted scat- tered areas from the Central Plains into Dixie. * * The widespread cold onslatight, an icy prewinter hand, ‘sent early morning temperatures ‘the 20s as far south as the Gulf tier of states. Across the Northern Plains through the Midwest and into the § Atlantic seaboard, it was even ‘colder. Subzero readings were lcommon from the Dakotas into ‘the Great Lakes region. Arctic- cooled International Falls, Minn. ‘reported an early 419. _* x * The Weather Bureau issued cold wave warnings for most of Texas with heavy snow forecasts in the isame state and Arkansas. | * * * | fn the Central Plains region, Ok-| lahoma’s worst snowstorm of the| jaway on the - calendar—punished \the state with a pileup as high as seven inches in some areas. . & Man Perishes as Fire Destroys 2-Room House and. Paul _|good, faith during involved nego- ‘fused a request by the union to ‘| Wish | Was Dead, Says | Driver in School Bus Crash threw the emergency stop,” he said. But the diesel-powered train roared into the bus and sheared off about the last six feet. “It seemed like a dream,” said Bernice Rivest, 11, who escaped along with her younger brother and sister with only scratches and bumps. “It sounded like nothing I ever heard before. We rolled over and everybody fell on the ceiling. “I was quite scared,” she érying. I guess I was crying a little.” Slock, his right arm injured and bleeding, helped the children out of the wreckage of the 54-seat bus. “We all walked over to a farm house,” he said. ‘‘The kids were crying and trembling but they seemed all right. We called the ambulance and police.” Then he counted noses. “I realized two of the boys were missing so I went back,’’ Sloch said. DICK MINEWEASER said, “but I don’t think I | screamed. I don’t remember anybody screaming. Some were “There, sprawled face up in the snow, he found David and Paul. “They were dead,” Slock said. (Continued From Page One) | vestigation which sputtered out for lack of evidence, said: ~ “We are convinced as a result of the investigation that arson was committed by Jack Thomp- son and Frank Kierdorf who sub- | sequently died of burns received during the commission of the crime.” | However, no murder charge is} being contemplated against Thomp- | 5 json, O'Rourke said, even though’ iit would be possible under a ae gan law because Kierdorf died dur- | ing perpetration of arson, a felony. | The Genesee County prosecutor | repeatedly refused to disclose to! newsmen 4what evidence prompted | Thompson’s arrest. Neither would | he say whether it Was new evi- dence or old. »| ‘Maybe it’s not new evidence,” he declared. “Maybe we've just. taken the old evidence and reap- praised it and | come up with something new.’ | In explaining his refusal to re- veal the evidence, O’Rourke im- | plied it was “simple enough” \ that knowledge of it by reporters | would be too revealing before | the trial. | After the fire police found | Thompson's fingerprints in a sta- tion wagon they said was used in the arson. come from Oakland County or) sources here was also a well-kept. secret of O'Rourke's Oakland County Prosecutor Fred-! erick C. Ziem said he was aware of the evidence and Thompson's pending arrest, but refused to di- vulge what he knew. Oakland was drawn into the Kier- dorf case when he staggered into St. Joseph Mercy Hospital several | Judge Lifts Ban on Pilot Strike American Airline Union Says It Has No Plans for Walkout : NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge has lifted a temporary strike ban against pilots for American Airlines, but the union says it has no immédiate plans for | a walkout. Judge Frederick Van Pelt Bryan Friday refused to renew a temporary injunction obtained by American, and at the same time denied the company a perma- nent stay. Bryan ruled that the Airline Pi- lots Assn, had been bargaining in tiations that began more than a year ago. At the same time, the judge re- dismiss a $540,00@damage suit KALAMAZO — Jesse C. 72, burned to death yester- against it. American contends it has suffered financially because of the pilots’ strike threats. day in a fire that destroyed: the two-room house where he lived alone near here. Texas Township Fire Chief Clif- Both sides were optimistic about the situation, At present Eastern Air Lines is the ‘only major airline shut down by a strike which began Nov. 24. bottled Ras unit exploded in Workshop adjoining the| jhouse and set off the fire. Both the International Machinists Union and Flight Engineers are striking against Eggtern. { idied Aug, 7, taking the facts of his ‘|fatal burns to his grave. |vious story of his that on the night ‘that’s not my theory,” O'Rourke Whether the evidence might have ¢¥idence very wa ” the prosecu- | \fused to see reporters. A recep- iat the union hall, 116 E. Pasadena Installation Set hours after the Flint fire. Kierdorf Kierdorf Link Free ae by Kiwanis Club North Pontiac Group Names ‘as President Police put little weight to a pre- of the fire two men, supposedly | wanting to talk union business, took him from his Flint home on |Stewart .street, drove him to a jlonely road west of Pontiac, doused him with a fluid, set him afire, and | The North Pontiac Kiwanis Club will install Richard Mineweaser, of 2285 St. Joseph St., as its new! | president tonight at the group's later returned to drive him to the | annual installation and Christmas Pontiac hospital, more than 30 party. Mineweaser | Army doctors said the passen- ger was a male ‘squirrel -‘moneky, a small intelligent creature which “has the same anatomical makeup as a man and much the same emotions. Barclay said the mission involved testing an inertial guidance sys- tem, protection of the warhead on the nose cone, and functioning of the Army system for nuclear attack. * * * But interest at the Cape centered around ‘‘Little Old Reliable’ and the chance that, if recovered, he would help pave the way for manned space travel. The Army Jupiter. blasted off at 4 a.m. (EST) and climbed smooth- ly into a crisp, starry sky. The 50-ton rocket roared into white flame and smoke. The Army kept a tight cloak of security around the big project un- til several minutes after launch- ing when it announced simply that “the nose cone of this missile con- tained a primate on a biomedical experiment.’’ MADE COMFORTABLE It wa believed the monkey was made quite comfortable for his hec- | tic space flight more than 600 miles above the earth. A team of top biomedical spe- cialists were waiting at the Cape for word of the monkey’s fate. The monkey, unofficially dubbed “Gordo” after a comic strip character, probably had an adequate oxygen supply and some type of food included in his tight space chamber. In Washington, the Army said ithe Navy was assigned to try to locate the cone and it monkey passenger at sea. This was the 12th time a Jupiter | has been launched since March 1957, * * * shortly after launching on the last shoot on Oct. 9. In addition to the explosion, there have been six launchirigs considered completely successful and four partial suc- cesses. Today, the launching appeared perfect. The missile rose straight up, pouring out a huge tail of white flame, . After about 75 seconds it curved, high in the Florida sky, and roared eastward until engine burnout oc- curred after about three minutes and it disappeared. miles away, *« *« * The police version of the fire was that Kierdorf was burned as he spread gasoline on the floor of the cleaning pick-up station and that it ignited prematurely Gov. stallation officer at the ceremonies | ‘at the Edgewood Country Club. Other officers to be installed are. from a spark from an electric | James Mann, first vice president; | heater. | Les Stanley, second vice president: | Joseph Dunseith, treasurer; and A passerby at the time told |lice he saw two men running trom | GR Tash Latin iy, the shop, and heard anguished en ‘screams of a third person from in-| Honored guest for the evening ‘side the building. | will be R. F. ‘Dutch’ Thalner, of, “Could well have been three but | | There will be dancing from 9 to 12 p.m. Flint Bus System System Stopped by Strike said yesterday. He wouldn't elab- orate, Still the biggest missing link is’ ‘the motive for the arson, Investigation into the weird case| has continued relentlessly since the | ‘fire, O'Rourke said. ‘‘These fel-| lows, state police in general, have been scratching for every bit of and maintenance men of Flint | City Coach Lines struck at 6 a.m. today, leaving Michigan's tor said. He said he: “ai not contemplate | jany other arrests at this time. Thompson, married and the fa-| Service. ‘ther of a daughter,*has a juvenile x * * record for burglary, served 65 days in the Flint jail for cd¥ theft in 1935, and was sentenced to from 4 to 25 years in prison two years later for armed robbery. He was paroled in 1941. Reporters sought to interview Thompson at his modest frame home late last night, only to have the door slammed in their faces by his wife. Not too far away, at the home of- Kier- dorf’s widow, newsmen got the same treatment. The bus drivers and mechan- ics struck in support of new contract demands, which includ- ed a 10-cent hourly pay increase and six paid holidays. They re- jected a last-minute Gompany offer of a three-cent hourly wage boost. The operators and maintenance men are members of Local 170 of the Transport Workers of Ameriica. They turned down the Company's three-cent offer at a 3 a.m. mémbership metting and picketing started: three hours la- ter, The Company, which contends that it faces a $50,000 loss this year, previously had -offered on- ly to extend the 1957-58 contract which expired last Oct. $1. A visit to Thompson and Kier- dorf's Teamsters Local, 332 hall, lo- cated next to a cleaners, proved just as futile. Claude Sutton, sec- retary-treasurer of the local, re; tionist said Thompson wasn’t in the hall. second largest city without bus | Michigan Kiwanis, District Lt.| Lauren White will be the in-| The 68-foot Jupiter also provid- ied the booster power for the first} Army space probe which sped so '§6,000 miles into space before plum- | meting back to earth after a spec- |tucular launching a week ago. Decoration Entries to Be Flint, Michigan District governor | i FLINT (® — The 123 drivers , Midnight Thursday, in by Dec. 18 away, members of the Pontiac) /Area Junior Chamber of Commerce | are ee to encourage more | home owfters in the city to enter, ‘their Christmas home-decorating | contest, Entries in the annual contest | must be postmarked no later than Dec. 18. | They should be mailed to Tom | Forgette, contest chairman, at 436 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac. ners on the city’s east and west sides, besides a grand prize for the top decorating project. This latter winner will be Pontiac's entry in a nationwide decorating contest sponsored by General Electric Corp. Pontiac displays will be judged the evening of Dec. 23. Winners wil be announced Dec. 24, For- gette said, . ed * * In order to encourage more en- tries—there have been but three to date—Forgette said some Jaycees will visit homes already decorated jand ask the family to enter the contest. Residents seeing a poten- tial entry are asked to advise the family to submit an entry also, he said. About one-third of rural roads in the-U.S.’are sufaced. Thompson spat at a news pho- tographer as he left Flint Mu- nicipal Court following his arraign- 4 ment. He was arrested in his office by Flint State Police Detec- Ralph Baney, Donald Hynes and Jasper Brouers. Baney said he offered no re- sistance. but asked to read the warrant on the way to the elty jail where he was held before his arraignment. O'Rourke indicated he saw no reason for a grand jury investiga- tion. Such an investigation was turned down by four Oakland Coun- ty circuit judges in, September, which brought what most believed was a halt to the investigation. However, three State Police de- tectives, including Charles A. Leaf of the Pontiac Post, moved ahead saw. with their investigation of the . case which led to Thompson's ar- rest. Leaf was in Texas and could) not be reached for comment yes-) terday. | “Life Size.” 549 N. Saginaw St. Full Color Christmas Decorations for YOUR LAWN or ROOF DISPLAY Made of Plywood 6 ¥t.. Long Sleigh BUY THESE READY-MADE DECORATIONS for your home. Nothing to build, paint or M. A. BENSON CO., Inc. FE 4-2525 the starlit sky amid billows o 1383 Washington Blvd., packages wrapped for Christmas giv- ing were taken. They included three electric blankets, two plain blankets and a portable radio, The Whittleseys, police said, are in Florida. The theft was discov- ered Thursday night by police, A safe was removed from the Edward C, Faulkner home, 1611 Yorkshire Drive, The safe and a number of valuable papers were reeovered yesterday near Dear- bern by Wayne County Sheriff's Patrol, The occurred sometime in the 48-hour period. Birmingham police said they are unable to tell what may have been taken from the safe until they of town, * * * . The Fred A. Temple residence, 640 Suffield Rd., was broken into and $200 in cash and three cases of whisky were removed from the premises last night, Detective Lt, Merlin Holmquist Judge Calls Minister It blew up for the first time) With the deadline just six days} Prizes wil] be awarded to win-| Pious Traitor ‘CINCINNATI (AP) — Stung by a scath denunciation of their client by a federal judge, attor- neys for a pacifist minister were their disciple of civil disobediance likes it or not. * * * The attack on the Rev, Maurice F,. McCrackin by Judge John H. Druffel came between the time a} jury convicted the minister and ithe judge sentenced him to six mgnths in a federal prison and fined him $250. Rev. McCrackin was convicted Friday of refusing to answer an internal Revenue Service summons to discuss his | refusal to pay federal income | taxes, Judge Druffel told the 53-year- | old bachelor minister — still gaunt from a 15-day jail-cell fast: “Your pious attitude is more or less of a false face.” | ~ * Then, after accusing Rev. Mc- Crackin of being a ‘‘pacifist agi- | tator’’ and of associating ‘‘with those of overwhelming Soviet | sympathies,” the judge added: | “I don't know of any more pious | traitor than that.’’ | De Gaulle Will Run | PARIS (#—Premier de Gaulle announced today he will ran for | president of the Fifth French | Republic. Everyone had as- | sumed he would run and be elected. contact Faulkner who is also out) ready today to fight on — whether |" In addition he asks residents to immediately report any suspicious persons or cars in their neighbor- hood, He pointed out that the three homes were thoroughly ransacked and that cars or trucks were need- ed to carry off bulky items. * * * A report to the police could pos- sibly have resulted in the appre- hension of the burglars and cer- tainly would have prevented the crime, Holmquist said, Under the sponsorship of the Uni- tarian Women's Alliance, four area homes will be opened to the publie Dee. 17 for a Christmas tour, The first is that of Mrs, Elweod P. Engel, 5263 Franklin Rd, Oth- ers include the Brooks Marshall home, 1040 Gordon Lane, the Har- old Roehm home, 970 W. Lone Pine Rd., and the ‘Edward Rainey home, 25129 Roy Ct., Huntington Woods, The homes are showing special Christmas decorations, adapted te the architectural style and geo- graphic setting of the homes. Tickets may be purchased at the doors. ; Mrs. Ernest Burtraw Service for Mrs. Ernest (Mar- guerite Wooster) Burtraw, 65, 247 Oakland Ave., will be at 1 p.m. Monday from’ the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. al will be in the Roseland Park Cemetery, Roy- al Oak. * * * Mrs, Burtraw died Friday morn- ing in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, after a brief illness, She was a member of. Birming- ham Chapter 220 OES, Past Ma- trons’ Club, and St. James Episco- pal Church. She is survived by a son, James W. of Jacksonville, Fla.; daughters Mrs, Robert Mackenzie of Yonkers, N. Y. and Mrs, Gladden W, Red- fern of St. John's, Mich.; and two grandchildren. CORRECTION The Cuddle Lounge Chairs featured in our advertise- ment Friday, December 12 should have been $29.95 each, 2 for $59. We regret this error and any incon- venience it may cause our customers. THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 361 South Saginaw St. 9451 MODERN and SQUARE DANCING HARMONY JACKS 1PLAN YOUR Banquets - Oxbow Pavilion. JEFF'S Dixieland. Modern and Square Dance Band GLENN EASTMAN calling SQUARE DANCE CLUBS INVITED meetings - club parties receptions, etc., at beautiful Elizabeth Lake Rd. Tn a . because we are Pon our neighbors and cus assistonce in making an OPEN OPEN Yo Clip this adv. and “X”" y to any employee or m . Dec: 20 We Sincerely Appreci Se TT TTT TT department store and we cherish the goodwill Shall SIMMS Stay SUNDAY (December 21st) ° P) You Name It— We'll Do It! Check Choice as convenient. Majority decision to be announced in Sat, SIM M38) SUUAUNUUUNVHUUUGNOUUUNONOUAGAUNEUAGAEOGGGAUEUAEAEEOTAEAUA EAGAN We Need Your Help— tiac’s only locally-owned of tomers, we ask YOUR important decision: Next CLOSED ur our preference .. . give ail to Simms as soon paper. ate Your Cooperation —08 North —— St. UT SIMI mt tt mt mm tm ttt: 900 Salute GOP Nominee at Dinper % ‘By BOGER LANE LANSiNG (#+--Republiean Paul D, Bagwell last night beckoned his party td regain leadership in the state and retain it in the na- tion by harnessing moral and spiritual forces, The defeated GOP governor nominee left 908 persons as- ous concept 1s a hard one to shake.” As an answer, he proposed a “new, clear cut and honest ap- peal” to the electoxate based on the needs and aspirations of the many. Specifically, he called for: advantages of the nuclear age, 2. Seizing opportutiities offered by opening next year of the St. Lawrence Seaway. He likened its potential impact to that of , maritime commerce on Mediter- ranean nations in the distant — past, ‘sembled for a statewide “Salute 1. Standing ready to exploit the 3. Increased job opportunities, x 4, Strengthening the state ed- ucational system. - 5. A constructive program for providing jet airport facilities. 6. Safeguarding Michigan cities, against further deteriora- tion, 7. Provision for orderly growth in our “exploding suburbs,” where he‘said 49 per cent of the to Bagwell’’ dinner in doubt as to 1960 intentions, saying only: “I hope to serve these prin- One Gunman Killed, 2 Riddled ciples in serving the Republican Party — and to this service I shall give my full strength.” * bi * He laid out some immediate objectives for Michigan Repub- licans, but urged them to re- member that factories, scheols and reads are merely means to an end, WASHINGTON (AP)—Four gun-| ‘men, one of them disguised as a priest, stormed the home of a . well-to-do building contractor Fri- “It is by our high purposes that |day night. They ran into a police we shall build or fail to build a jambush aot a barrage of bullets. monument to our era,” he said. x * He said that the present gen- | One gunman was killed. Two, eration can give or deny to the jothers, their bodies practically rid- next dignity, hope or even free. jdled, were wounded critically. The dom itself. : fourth escaped. “We as a people shall prevail | Deputy Police Chief Edgar Scott or perish not by the force of |jsaid the four men had intended nuclear energy but by the force jto kidnap Felix Marchegiani, 61. of moral energy that we can /A tip from the FBI foiled the bring to bear upon the prob- plot. lems that confront us,” he said. Marchegiani was shot in the x *'% * shoulder one hoa gunfire se ; = -almost wrecked the living room o pc artansed icietieee oil lle his fashionable home in northeast Vice President Nixon whose con |Washington. The wound was not gratulations on the occasion were considered serious. fed through amplifiers for all in | Scott ae this - the Lansing Civic Center throng to hear. Nixon read a message from President Eisenhower praising About 6: i p.m. the FBI tipped police that a gang would try to kidnap Marchegiani. Without elab orating or revealing the scource Bullets Foil Kidnap Plot the gang planned to take the con- to open his safe. Scott promptly sent a squad of detectives and patrolmen to the | Marchegiani home. * * Two detectives took Marchegi- ani's wife and the couple’s only child, Antoinette, 19, upstairs and then hid in a bedroom. Three other detectives crouched behind living room furniture. Four pairolmen were deployed in scout cars near the house. — Almost four hours slipped by and nothing happened. * ® * “We were about to believe .the plans had been called off,’’ Scott said, “‘when the kidnapers showed up in two cars. They circled the block a couple of times before parking their cars in front of the home." Four men walked up to the front porch. Two carried pistols, Bagwell for the vigor of his cam- paign in losing to Democratic Gov. Williams by 147,000 votes. of the information, the FBI said the other two sawed-off shotguns. tractor to his office in suburtfan|knocked on the door. Marchegiani Coral Hills, Md., and -force him|opened it. i The Eisenhower theme echoed earlier remarks made in person by U. S. Sen. Charles E. Potter, like nee. beaten on Nov. 4, and Rep. Gerald F. Fard Jr., of Grand Rapids, who won reelec- tion, Bagwell said a bitter lesson of the campaign was that the voters “do not have a sharp, compre- hensible image of what the Re- publican Party stands for.” * * * The 45-year-old titular head of the GOP in Michigan, who re- turns this month to the Michigan State University faculty as direc- tor of scholarships, declared: “Too many people think of it aus a tool of big business, an enemy of labor, unsympathetic to the ordinary man and the prob lems of minority groups. “Nothing could be further from the truth, but this errone- x *& * x * * Mother, 4 Children Slain by Youth They Befriended EL CAJON, Calif. (AP) — A identified a5 Charles Harrison of| homeless youth the family had Rochester, ._Y., had disappeared. befriended was sought today for Saint an aircraft worker, slashing four children to death and 'gaiq Harrison was waiting for him} shooting their mother. ‘outside the house when he arrived r * Li jhome from work. The 6-foot 4 inch The bodies of Mrs. Lois Pender-'youth aimed a .22 rifle at him gast, 37, and her children were ‘and said: | discovered in’ their home Friday’ {| have a cop tied up in the night. The children’s throats had house. You’ re going to drive me been cut and their abdomens oyt of here.” slashed. | Pendergast drove at gunpoint A widespread search waS toward San Diego, 10 miles away. —_ —___—_ Farm Group Meets, Elects President EAST LANSING & — Warren Phillips of Blissfield was elected president of the Michigan Agricul- launched throughout Southern On the outskirts of the city the California for a towering teenazer| youth ordered him into a service who had been living with the Pen-| station rest room so they could dergasts for the past few weeks exchange clothing. The man doing odd jobs around the house.|crabbed the gun away from Har- Thick fog hampered the search-| 'rison, but the youth slipped out- ers. tsidé and disappeared down an al- Thomas J. Pendergast dis-, ‘ley. covered the bodies of his wife and| * * ® Pendergast then drove home and 'found his family slain. His wife's children, but not before the youth, A gunman dressed as a priest| ing point, : .¢ population will be living in @ few years, _* * * Michigan, he said, is at a turn- Its past has been great but its future is not as- sured. Decisions. that lie ahead will determine whether it con- tinues to stand in the vanguard or deteriorates — into a “has been.” * * * He called for ‘‘determination, imagination and hard work" to realize the possibilities of the future, Bagwell was profuse in his recognitions of aid from various quarters in the recent campaign, and said it was a “humbling’”’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1958 r j experience to attract more than Bagwell Urges Republicafts to Regain. Leadership one million votes—even in los- ing. the dinner from a post election vacation in Bermuda. All de-, feated GOP candidates for state- wide office save John V. Clem- ents of L’Anse attended the af- fair. ; Potter credited Bagwell’s strong Republican race for gov- ernor with ruining Democratic Gov. Williams’ presidential chances. ~ _ Potter said: “Paul, maybe we couldn’t save Michigan from G. Mennen Wil- liams, but we certainly saved the nation from him. The forty- . seven other states indeed are in- beted to you for it.” “This is a holdup,”’ the intruier| said, “Where is your money?” Jabbing his gun in Marchegi-| ani's back, the hoodlum and a companion- marched the contrac- tor up the stairs and into the bed- room where Mrs. Marchegiani andthe daughter had been sent— hiding, * *® * The officers, fearing they might hit opened fire, remained hidden. The gunmen ofdered Marche- giani’s wife and daughter to lie on a bed. “I'd hate to shoot your heads off,”” one said. At that moment, one of the two gunmen remaining downstairs spotted detettive Sgt. Leonard Kragh crouching behind living room furniture. He fired at Kragh. As Kragh and the other officers began shooting, all four gunmen dashed for the door.‘ Police bul- lets dropped three of them. The fourth, an unidentified Negro, escaped. ° The dead hoodlum was _ identi- fied as Raleigh Morton, a Negro, of Washington. * * * The injured were identifed at and where the two detectives were! one of the family if they): -|Lodge Eiécts Stoughton Chief. MILFORD — Newly elected Chief of Chippewa Lodge No. 29, Order of the Arrow, is J. Edward Stoughton of 1736 Pettibone Lake Road, E Other officers elected at. the Ledge’s recent annual dinner meeting were Mike Russell, 527 Harrison Road, Rechester, "vice chief in charge of chapter oper- ations; Willam Poffenberger, 408 Fernberry Drive, Pontiac, sec retary; Fred Heil, 524 General “Romeo Boy y 15, James Eldred Knocked Off Bicycle by Car on City Street | boy was critically injured last ‘Inight when he was knocked off his bicycle by a car in front of the Motors Road. Milford, treasurer; [Romeo cemetery on W. St. Clair and Larry Elzerman of Mount (street. Clemens, vice chief in charge of x * * operations. James Eldred, son of Mr. and George F. Taylor, chief assistant ae Pek Eldred, oe nae Oakland County prosecutor, spoke | 11) ervuens 10 | Electrical ie 3 WARRANTY Sprprereepece mrt * See This Amazing Softener Today at H. H. STANTON Heating & Plumbing : Contractor 103 State FE §-1683 CONTRACTOR State and City Licensed © Commercial © Industrial © Commercial Maintenance © Residentia) Wirtne Installations Over 25 Years in Pontiac 845 West Huron St. FE 2-3924 & FE 2-4008 leaves and twigs clogging your ~ cent in January and February, 25} BATEMAN-KAMPSEN REALTY CO. TO BUY OR SELL LAND CONTRACTS = A082 bik tv TOM BATIMAN IT PLEASES US TO PLEASE YOU and cracks: that go into the wood ROY ANNETT, Ine. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 8-0466 COMPLETE REALTY SERVICE itself can be filled with plastic wood, building it up slightly high- er than the surrounding surface. When the plastic wood has hard- ened, sand it flush and smooth. Then go over the whole surface with fine sandpaper. Enamel can give you a handsome and durable finish in either gloss or semi gloss, but before you ap- ply the enamel seal-the wood by brushing on a half-and-half mix- ture of shellac and denatured al- When dry, smooth lightly with medium-fine steel wool. Don't use sandpaper; shellac will clog it. Now your piece is ready for the undercoat consisting of three parts white enamel under-! body sand one part enamel of the; final color. Let dry at least 86, hours. Then smooth lightly with! medium-fine sandpaper and wipe | 'with a turpentine-moistened rag iFinish by applving a coat of enam- el of the final color Householders’ Friend There are more ways to use putty than fastening In your win- ldow frames. A goodly supply of putty on hand at all times is the householders best friend. 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La! “AP Al, af OR 3-5619 ee re cect ag Ae cea em er ee came chee MOR clin, seemless elses coe ceeccaicahmmlacen ani OR il ec a FHA TERMS Up to 5 Years to Pay FREE Estimates at No Obligation NO MONEY DOWN Pedy -Bilt Garage Co. 7722 Austere, Waterford ; 'f No Answer, Call OR 3-2360 4 Fa fe Sa ee SS 5 -_ > @wy & F ! \ ee i a THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1958 ee Se BNE eer nrc htt nr penetra enn fitment As she emotes nightly with Cyril Ritchard, Cornelia Otis — - . $ Skinner, Walter Abel and | ote) Re T U A Cc . Charles Ruggles, and recalis by the composers of "MY FAIR LADY” LAST TIMES TONIGHT “’China Doll” & “The Blob"’ . — — , 3 erences: gt by Walt Disney; Disney featur- lake c- Walled babe ute Tae oft sa elaotapte Deine ah ‘Es WY ees < : . me Pontiac Theaters ettes: ‘Paul Bunyon,” “The True pS — ae “china Dalle” "victor Mature Totus Het: Some om Sip Peter Van aS . z Sun.Tues.: “Tunnel at, La Doris | Cex! Mohner; “The na," eet ee y | y b. : . ” +e é@yck 7 | == ECW 1 l Eagle Story of Mother Goose” and “The | pay, Richard Widn wiamerk; joung As Fae 2150 OPDYKE RD. ae . 4 | Sat.; “It Came From Beneath Gond Soout” . ge miitor¢ | Moon i George Sander Band “i — FE 4.4611 EM|| Says Chivalry’s Dead |uc'se'"ssrmn "tomy, "iit Tm st: tome Betore| us aoe Soa ee. ets ale a SIE ; . ' .WIsland Earth,’ ” Jeff Morrow Dark,” Jean Simmons co ae poo ” 7 | nest sf a Sun.-Tues.: “Harry Black and, : : > ° NEW YORK ier our Yeas irl Dol H ie Tee ree pak ane . 4 ; — LAST TIME TONIGHT E —When our new glamour girl Dolores Hart|Once Upon a Horse,” Dan Rowan C Th . ispoke to me of “your New York gentlemen” there was sarcasm| Wed.-Fri.: “Twilight for the ommunity eaters K E E GO DEFIANT. ONES” in her voice. ‘|Gods,” Rock Hudson; “Devil’s| Civic — Farmington oo ~eny “WIND ACROSS | : kk wk General,”” Curt Jergens ~ pala ares the Battanders," Alas SUNDA per the EVERGLADES® “I missed three cabs on the way over, Huron aus, thang, ovatus Halu 4 DabY: 1:45 which were taken away from me by your New| Sat.: ‘‘The Big Country,” Greg- ons Hot Tin Root,” color, Elisabeth ARTIES TOWN York gentlemen,” she said ever so coolly. ory Peck, Burl Ives ee in “Tasca Fight’ ter Lite= boats MEET HER AT THE ROUGHEST P. 2 “I waved two cabs down and I had |_ Sun.-Tues.: “The Defiant Ones,” | Trails” color. Audie Murphy, Gia Seals them,” she comp lained, “and Gen 2 ese Ean ee and the pao Sat.: : ine ae ae Wade, " Rob- BLOATED WITH THE BLOOD OF ITS VICTIMS! jumped in from the other side. But your Wo4ryi This Happy Feel-|fil.""Jons erek Maine Stewart , New York gentlemen are very chivalrous, ing,” Debbie Reynolds; “The Lady wtih Wea. “The Key,”* William "Holden, she added with a tight smile. Takes A Flyer,” Lana ‘Turner, Jeff 1 thts Bat “Wild Harvest.’ ‘Dorethy TTA FAN INFAMOUS CRIME AT SEA “They got out and gave you the cab?”)|Chandler Geerge Montgomery sl a eal . c! he Deck ks Rar R 2 D I asked. Oakland Holly . z “Oh, no! But they said they would be glad; Sat.: “The Camp on Blood Is- em Joseph Cotten, Debra, P Se ANIEC NIN 1] 1) ik WILSON to take me wherever I was going!” land” and ‘The Snorkel” i anes eae ANIL HAQUTE UURU TT She shrugged and laughed. “And I,” she said, “am no match| Sun.: “Gigi,” Leslie Caron, Mau- Keego for Brigitte Bardot. The girls who are more happily endowed |"® Chevalier, Louis Jordan, color sidney, Pele Wie Aniecs ths Maen | and have more impressive numbers on their figures must have Strand Lp sag tea =o ” Gye Charles, | to run for,it from your New York gentlemen.” Sat.-Wed.: ‘White Wilderness” 'Rog*"" James" Mason, Broderick Crawford | * * * | = Yes, chivalry is‘dead in New York, particularly during the Starts Sunday [rush hour, but Chicago-born, LAKE THEATER — 40c to 6 P. M. Sat-Sun. l AST TIMES TODAY \Los Angeles- reared Dolores ate a " | art soon will be ring onl Ki © THE CAMP ON BLOOD ISLAND ‘limousines, anyway. 6 : — | Just 20, she's in the snwmnaierae |B ALSO: “Phe SNORKEL” Broadway hit, “The Pleas- DORIS | "RICHARD - e : | ure of His Company,” and DAY * WIDMARK - | appears with Montgomery " . IN-A-CAR Tur rintst HEATERS | ieaeenmeeshemrncens The TUNNEL v4 TOMORROW “A THE FINEST | the new movie, “Lonely- | pove ot hoh SiranyenlPvaccass | hearts,” and has appeared of bY ane ee As Voorn | . with Elvis Presley in two | GIG YOUNG i’ 4 2 “ td ” 2 A -§ TONITE & :| Opens 6:00 P. M. SUN. ONLY—Open | pictures, “Loving You” and PB crewescon We | THE NEW SCREEN MUSICAL SATURDAY | Starts 6:30 P.M. |5: i P.M., Starts 6 P.M. |) “Kins Creole. As | IN GORGEOUS COLOR | | | ¥ a i - DOLORES | “It’s only a year and a half ago that I was in college,” she | TONIGHT ¢ SUNDAY | SSS SUNDAY COME EARLY—BE HOME EARLY! ATTEND OUR e EARLY BIRD SHOW e Open 5:30 P. M. Show Starts 6:00 P. M. 3 BIG FEATURES 3 > . | At a school dance she met a young man who had left a | monastery because of ill health and was attending Loyola in a > California. | He persuaded her to do a school play, “Joan of Lorraine,”| »iwhich was so good it was then done on TV—and then wrote || to Hal Wallis, enclosing her picture, “probably the worst pic- |, ‘ture ever sent into any studio.” “The next thing I knew, I was going through the ‘fish- } Hox & Hounds Iun M-G-M ed | AN ARTHUR FREED ! PRODUCTION | bowl routine’ at the studio—trying out in a cage, three sides | ; . . ae LESEIE CARO N wood, one side glass, with people looking in that I couldn't Woodward Avenue in Bloomfield Hills see.” | i MA | LUNCHEONS and DINNERS |f 0 Guicuguroane | It all happened swiftly after that—last summer she found! ea p=wtyY*" wvwvwvVvVVVTYeYreYrYrrre,,Y rhe __—wrrrwrvrvVvwVwveYVYVVYYrevrvrvevrrrrreTrrerrerTrVrrrVrVeeevn >i herself auditioning for ‘““Lonelyhearts” and for the Broadwa > cies tne camel day “ena late oe Bett. ABUE ¥']| DINNERS: Monday thru Saturday 5:30 to 11 P.M. HERMIONE GINGOLD - EVA GABOR y TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle decided on the ideal | BO bonne ‘RS: from 1:30 P.M.to9 P.M. if NOLES BERGERAC - ISABEL JEANS $ gift for her idk friend, who's a hypochondriac—a credit card || S: Served Daily 12 Noon to 2:30 | sow" Al AN JAY LERNER - ™= FREDERICK LOEWE Pq for Blue Cross ... That’s earl, brother. i! Phone MI 4-4800 for Reservations { swell Giessen ious © Nensines " 3 (Copyright, 1958) i ervatio | ~ coum cca Wa S amee 2 _ eile ee vil recon 3 | VINCENTE MINNELLI z 2| | | . ceaees GIG YOUNG $' Hollywood Headlines } “IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA" Features Sun,.—Mon.—Tues. iif mamic VAN DOREN $7 1. NOW! “EHTS ISLAND EARTH” |} At 1:00, 3:07. §:10, 7:20, 9:50 "' :‘Peter Gunn’ Slick Twist | Phun sobiniood wine $ . . - olor Cartoon of Private Eye Gimmick | $s ee > l tarts 5 | Y SHON ING | pew EXTRA — ADDED ATTRACTION ,~~ $] ony peal coum | OUN. = | $ ty poe eailsiss ibrutality than most Westerns. | WC SmiTH CHRCUT PONTIAC | ON OUR SUN. -- MON. -- TUES. $ ales cr Maybe it’s the way we show it. | | STAGE! AT 9:20 P.M. ONLY! 2 HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Peter You seldom see actual blows being | —_——— ° _ _ $\Gunn, the new TV show they're janded. A fist will | > | . A fist will come right at _ $ talking about in Hollywood, is a the camera, then we'll cut and NEVER SUCH ADVENTURE ERIC NORRIS @\slick reworking of the old private | you ‘ll hear the sound. Perhaps it) 3} $ eye gimmick. seems worse that way. S Baa || } INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN ORGANIST . . . "oF 3 fee fh ‘ ictins { ' aeoy t. be ou th inece oe ahi t BAK. THE | WHO HAS PERFORMED IN THE LARGEST THEATERS > 4 ve heard predictions from in-| e ay i}. E ; AS | P< $ siders that Gunn will shoot down With violence. After all, a private 6 JUNGLES i OMRON AND EAS > 4 his opposition (except on the West eye lives in a world of crime. He) Sy oe | Currently Heard Over Canadian Broadcast Chain $ 2 Coast), high-riding. Danny Thom-| ;comes as contact with camiinals) OF Playing the World's "Greatest Voice in Music” 2 Zlas. I've heard raves about ‘the every day. $ 2 originality of the show, also com-| ® * * so INDIA! THE HAMMOND. ORGAN 2 $| plats about the amount of bru-| Edwards is one of the brightest | PeTUUCCCCCU > 3 tality, So it was time for a chat YOUNE talents in theatrical movies | $ f oa 2 | ith the show’s papa, a bright (py Be ees hs hit comedy, XC GUNELY A scaie Q : os ; fil : ; F erfec urlough,”” coming out | . 2 EXTRA—TONIGHT The Very Finest 3 a my inahee pamed Buse and on Jan, 12 starts another with $ 2 ke *« Cary Grant and Tony Curtis 4 : : ' $ 7 IN-CAR — $ “Yes, I've heard it said that we) Operation Petticoat.” So why L 2 ¥ have too much brutality in ‘the;does he dip into TV? > H A R 3 show,”’ said handsome, créwcut | x * * —— $ > Edwards. ‘We're re-evaluating | “For the money,”’ he was frank ; . j > 2 our scripts with that in mind.. to admit. “I don't make any now, AGAINST at NOW! EXTRA LATE 2 To ‘Keep You Warm! $ * * * because the show is too expensive 2 e OPEN 12:45 HOW TONITE | AAAANAIIAAPADA ADP PIDAD PPP. “But I think \ we have 3 a lot less) to make. But if I ever sell out, e g MAN! ae pees e Es acid) aie a ood Gehl on ro te SUNDAY SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7 & 9 P.M. ‘capital gain. . . TONIGHT—Last Complete Show Starts 10 P.M. Chay ct at dae-ine ieseatiie | | Grand, New 4-Unit Walt Disney Show GREGORY PECK “THE BIG COUNTRY” CHARLTON HESTON fherty it afforded. I can try new | things in a. TV series that would} For the Whole Family to Enjoy! Starts SUNDAY A ie . be impossible in a movie.” FROM THE TOP OF THE WORLD , | starts... | Sheree North STEWART GRANGER ... A New World Of Wonders! en to Marry Her | BARBARA RUSH. Land of Adventure and Mystery. of awsome sights and legendary Psychoanalyst | ANTHONY STEELin oe | cee HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Actress Sheree North will marry her psy- chiatrist next Wednesday. some savage .«-» The Adventurous Life Story of HARRY BLACK some + «Dr. Gerhardt Sommer has been) . hilarious her psychoanalyst and physician | . since they met about a year ago. AND THE TIGER all éxeitiag! “It will be just a quiet little , -ceremony,’’ beamed the ' voluptu- E é ” | ‘ous blonde Friday. athens pee PLUS Se | , | It will be the first marriage for ‘ ; . |the 30-year-old psychoanalyst. ¢ a | |Miss North, 26, has been married TVW's , | twice previously. She was di- ‘ ~ 'vorced from architect Fred Bes- LAFF-FAMED f EXTRA: DISNEY FEATURETTES FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT isire in 1953 and recording execu- FUNSTERS a tive John Freeman in 1956, She Also WALT DISNEY’S ) ‘and Bessire have a daughter, “The Truth About Dawn, $. Mother Goose” a | Telephones .have been installed, Feateretrejsej Cote ( ~ atop Fujiyama in Japan. The | TONY CURTIS - SIDNEY POITIER —— ‘mountain is 12,425 feet high. And... Walt Disney p @) o 3 = \ _cattoon in Color suse > EFIANT NES | ‘oe | NOW OPEN @ SE | “THE Goop scout” |. 4 ~ ED SMITH at ————— en. ; | . me It's the Most Fun You and Your Family Have Had in a the CONN URO wage Rolladium Skating Rink seen ; Theater in a Long, Loig Time! Electronic Organ! THEATER ] | ADMISSION 60c INCL. SKATES || a, ERICKSON: MI (NT = Wea aise - PICTURE || Starts Thursday: JEAN SIMMONS in “HOME BEFORE DARK” 7 : 4475 W. Huron ‘FE 5-677 JOHN McGIVER and PAUL ANDERSON +A UNIVERSALINTERNATIONAL PICTU | : : P : = : ae . -, Be ; « 4 - = : a % 2 Ps