The Weather Dontinued mostly cloudy and rather old with intermittent — flurries. script enn ( Detelis aes * 116th YEAR walgtees — ‘ * | keane PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958—28 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Te Vanguard Into Orbit From > Wearing the Green on Top GREEN HEADS — Shown are three of the Archie Noon children who dipped food coloring last night and came out green- haired in preparation for today's observance of v House Speeding ‘to Freeze Farm Price Supports Brush Off Veto Threat, Push for Early on Senate-Passed Bill approve today a Senate- passed © would freeze farm price House off the threat of a presi- dential veto to push for, vote on the resolution be-| \fore the end of the week. Despite farm over the proposal, was expected to pass the House by a substantial margin and go/ to President Eisenhower by Thurs- day or Friday. Its fate at the White House was uncertain. - Pentiac Press Photo St. Patrick's day. Susan brushes Ned's hair as Deidre watches. Bridget and Erin, also green- topped were in Ne school. into the green 120,000 Marching n St. Pat Parade | NEW YORK (INS)—Sure here might be a few nippy little clouds over the 120,000 t. Patrick’s Day marchers on New York's Fifth venue evision. oday, but not enough to put the Irish in the st | Not, of course, as if any thing really could” on. ihe: ‘day f days for the Shamrock. In Boston, the first-ef-an antetoated: -200,000 viewers © day braved snow flurries to gain choice viewing spots |; Secretary of Agriculture Benson | jtold newsmen last week he would Green Topknots Distinguish n) in Milford Family \ egislation. Celebrating St. Patrick’s Day in| * * * |true Irish fashion, five of. the ata By holding the level of govern-| INoon chikiren in Milford dyed|Te™, frm. af at 2967 figures. \their hair green last night, as dll pa to drop dairy price supports unsuspecting parents watched tel- April 1 to the legal minimum and ‘to move in the direetion of furth-| support change. His assertion was backed up by some GOP House members who | “stop gap” and the weather man says. Archie Noon’s children, whose er lowering of basic crop sup-' ages range from 15 months to 15 pofts. _years, live ina big house at 405, But the resolution was viewed | His kory St., ene with their as a symbol of de Tienes to Ben- | was born in Dublin, clad The children are not “‘green’’ at yy the annual parade, ighlight of the dual ob- *rvance of St. Patrick's, lay and Evacuation Day. | New York's grand parade in hon-| ‘ of Ireland’s patron saint is ex- cted to be the biggest ever. Tt was scheduled to start mov- ig at noon, sharp, and proceed p Fifth Avnue a_distance of 2% niles with the jast marcher pass. | — ad the finish line about supper me, Ex-Dublin Lord Mayor Robert ‘iscoe will be on the official re- pwing stand, along with the pres- * incumbent, James Carrol. Also ‘hand will-be a couple of Irish- r-a-day, New York Mayor Robert| Wagner and Gov. Averell Har- man, ~*~ * * And they won’t be the only ones, me 800,000 were expected to be t in spring-like fortyish tempera- res to watch the 54-battalion col- an of marchers stride up the enue. Dn the steps of St. Patrick's athedral, Francis Cardinal pellman and other Roman Cath- lic prelates will review the vent, rifth avenue itself has a green ‘ip painted down the middle in nor of the day. | * * -* 3ut the marchers may find one) - ck where the green stripe has on freshly painted over a dif. ent color. That’s the spot where lice officers last night found four lege youths redoing the stripe th ofange paint. olice details worked all night ting out wooden barriers to hold ck the predicted crowd of spec- ors, ) Beaten Irishmen ‘Eat German Fare DETROIT (INS) — Forty irish-| n were scheduled to é@at a-St. trick’s Day meal of pig's knuc- s and sauerkraut with _liver- rst pudding - taday. : ‘he. 40 compose the University Detroit’s tug-of-war team which s defeated in a record 48 sec- ts Saturday by the German m, AG © Recession Nearing End? | end. The metalworking publica. | | ef construction, machine tool or- this stunt, as they did the very, fully for Benson's ouster. ame thing last year. Their moth-| er had warned them not to get into the food coloring again this ye CLEVELAND. (INS) — Stee! (but because “their gramdma came Magazine said today five busi- from Ireland,”’ the fun-loving in- herited eharacteristics won over ness barometers indicate that the [parental discipline = Poccastan ll inay il tallnearane line : | better not drop their nickels in ’ * * the fare box. The DSR points out | All but 15-month-old Brian are bus drivers will have to pay for tion noted that some favorable topped with green. There is Ned, every transfer they give out so signs have appeared in the field 8, Pek. 9, Susan, 11, Erin, 13, patrons mast give their nickels | —— and Bridgett school in Milford. ders, car sales, coal and freight jowns and operate carloadings. DSR Transfer Costs 5c "start paying five cents for DSR bus transfers today but they had i * Their father takenly put their nickels in the S$ an insurance) box can get a refund slip they agency on Main “Bes: ' can use to get a ee back. N O Diet Involved in Slimming & Pontiae Press’ Phote _ SPACE SAVER — How do you reduce the book ‘of records at left ta}the thin packet at rig The aa of. the change shown here by Mrs. Julia Curry, clerk in‘ the Oakland County Register of Deeds office, iis found on page 15 today. DETROIT (INS) — Detreiters | Sukarno s Army (flight. Just before the third stage; nudged) quick and separate action on the the guidance! final) | | recommend the veto of any price ‘had in its oppose the proposal as undesibable | the bill would cancel out Benson's | ito | Sukarno’ s regime. | firmed rebel reports that some of events, |forcements dispatched to the Med-' dan area. |Nesia, ‘TCet-Ventje Sumal, ‘to launch an offensive soon. There lalso were indications the strongly ‘anti-Communist garrison in West Java might join the spreading re- ivolt. +: S-owned Caltex Oi] Co. to re- jsume operations in Sumatran oil fields around Pakan- baru. The company suspended_op- lerations when. the Jakarta, forces F ‘invaded. x * * How Navy Expects Vanguard CAPE guar (Pi—This is the way the Vanguard launched today is programed to operate: The first stage, 44 feet long, was to burn for about two minutes. Designed to provide about 65 per cent of the energy Vote needed to raise the satellite to orbital altitude and 15 |per cent of the required orbital velocity, the first-stage) engine would push the missile to an altitude of 38 miles x k * F inally _ | k ok to Operate WASHINGTON ()—The ‘some 28 miless down the House Agriculture Commit-| missile test range extend-| i'tee, operating under speed- ing up orders, was expected tO the Atlantic. southeastw ard across. Six explosive bolts would sepa-' ‘resolution which rate the first stage from. the sec- ond, and the spent first stage | would fall away and drop into the) supports at last year’s level. Atlantic about leaders brushed Cape Canaveral. 230 «miles from! The second stage contained the guidance ‘brain’ of the Vanguard rocket, a baskétball- completion of. preliminaries sized device containing three | in time for a final House| ‘ltrs-eccurate “fleated’’ gyro- scopes and a maze of electronic devices. This system was to guide the bloc differences | yehicle through the first and sec-! the resolution ond stages of powered flight and, ithe third coasting phase of the’ and its satellite were ahead into an orbit, system would provide a heading control to assure a suc-| cessful orbiting. * The second stage, * and 32 inches in diameter, also nose—within what ac- ‘tually was the nose of the com-| third - stage \posite vehicle—the jrocket and the satellite. Shortly after the second-stage | engine was to take over, an ex- | plosive bolt would release a | spring which would split the nose | cone. The cone, . shielding the | fragile satellite from air-friction | heat of 1,500 degrees, would no longer be needed in the thin at- ' mosphere more than 35 miles above the earth and would fall | away. _The second-stage engine was de-/ for midable bipartisan coalition of} for 2 minutes,; congressional and administration| irebe llious. Midwestern Republicans |poosting the rocket speed to 9,000 leaders who don’t think the auto ‘who have been gunning unsuccess- miles an hour, and would sputter | tax should be treated any differ- at an altitude of about 130, lently than any other tax. ;out miles. After its burnout, the second (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)" Rising in Revolt —att— attending? to the operators. Riders who mis- | Fall of Sumatra’s Port! of Medan May Spread Rebellion in Islands ~* SINGAPORE « — The fall of North Sumatra’s key port, Medan, | a rebellious North Celebes and other island: ‘sectors ‘soon . would join the ‘spreading war against Eresidert | \ The central government con- 2,000 troops under UW-.S.-trained | | Maj. Boyke Nainn Golan had | seized the city of 300,000 — Su- matra's jafgest — yesterday in | the second major development | since the rebellion in the Outer Islands turned into a civil war nearly two weeks ago. i} Obviously alarmed over the turn Sukarno ordered rein- * In North oon in east Indo- the rebel commander, Lt. was expected- Neutral South Sumatra - also ishowed signs of swinging over tO. wiretap charges was postponed | ithe rebels. Sukarno announced - that his forces had captured the town of Siak Sri Indrapura in Central Sumatra, He claimed the seizure consolidated the central] govern: | ment’s control of the east coast of Céntral Sumatra, The rebels still hold the west coast and its biz port, Padang. : «Sukarno also .authorized the the Central | 31 feet long crease in quto prices through army garrison’ ‘touched off speculation today that! ithe week. ' Paul Williams is tied up on an- | during the pre-Easter period. ' conspiring to | the union’ Blow to Hopes for Car Tax Cut Reduction Firmly Tied to General .Levy Slash - Proposal in Washington | WASHINGTON t® — Hopes for) a reduction in the auto excise tax’ appeared firmly tied today to pro- |spects for a general tax cut des- pite efforts of Michigan congréss- men. Futile Michigan | qtempea _ for auto. tax last week left in their} - wake: 1, General belief here that all the conversation about a de- tax reduction will further dis- courage buying at a time that it is needed most. 2. A serious strain in the pre- viously cordial relations between. Sen. Potter (R-Mich) and the White House, Michigan congressmen of both parties have contended that the longtime unemployment situation in Michigan and the automotive) - industry's key position in the econ- jomy makes emergéncy action im- | perative. _— * * * - | | But they have been faced by a. ONLY CHANCE Potter conceded today that the only chance for auto tax relief | | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Winter Won't ‘Ease Grip on Pontiac Area Winter certainly is being per- sistent. The U. S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts continued mostly. cloudy and) ‘rather cold, with’ intermittent snow| ‘flurries tonight and tomorrow. in ithe Pontiac area. * * * j The low tonight will be near 30 degrees and the high tomorrow 36-40. The Weather Bureau's five-day | forecast predicts temperatures will average slightly below the normal high of 45 and normal averal Hurls 2nd U.S. Satellite — ape Ca _ Navy's Rocket. Soars Perfectly ~ foLaunch Moon Ike Reveals Success 2 Hours, 23 Minutes After Blast-Off 4 \ CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (2?) — The Navy's Vanguard rocket hurled the second U. S. satellite into orbit around the earth today. With its back to the wall after two highly publicized failures, the Navy launched the Vanguard on one of the most perfect flights ever test center. — Belching fire and smoke, the slender gray-green rocket left its launching pad at 7:16 a.m. Two hours and 23 minutes ia- ter, President Eisenhower told the world the trouble-plagued . Vanguard had succeeded in the was created. His announcement that the Van- guard's tiny ‘moon!’ was circling er I and the Soviet Sputnik Il touched off a pinche temasieel circles here and among personnel of the Martin Co., which built the rocket. x *« * The Army launched Explorer 1 with the Jupiter-C missile here Jan. 31. PERFECT PRECISION In sharp contrast to previous preparation of the rocket went off with perfect precision. : * * * So smoothly did the rocket make its way into space, observers here were certain long before the Presi- dent made it official that the Van- guard had done its job. “John P, Hagen, director of the “ Vanguard project, flashed a broad grin and sighed, after hearing a telephoned description of the Van- ‘ guard’s smooth flight. + * * * launching stand to the cheers of watchers who had seen two pre- vious firings end in flames and discouragement. The launchitig was ‘primarily an experiment in the capability of the three-stage rocket to climb 200 or more miles and then angle into a horizontal course, SHEER PROFIT If it succeeded also in deposit- ing the 6.4-inch sphere in its nose into an 18,000-m.p.h. orbit, this would be sheer profit with the Van. guard satellite joining with ea (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) low of 28. Temperatures are not expected ito vary much from day to day. ‘Daily highs will be mostly in the | [30s and daily lows near 30. Light | isnow flurries ate expected through Reds F ree U. * * * The lowest recorded temperature iin downtown Pontiae preceding 8 a.m. was 29. The reading at 1 ‘p.m. was 38. PANMUNJOM, Korea \# handed back a U.S. jet pilot |of the Korean truce line. S. Jet Pilot Downed in North Korea — The Communists today shot down over the Red side | Capt. Leon Pfeiffer of Kenosha, Wis. appeared nervous and tense but-in good health as he spoke at a s Delay Hoffa Trial brief news conference. for Three Weeks NEW YORK (® — Retrial of dames H. Hoffa, president of | the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, and two others on ‘he said, smiling weakly. “It ‘is.a wonderful feeling. I am very tired.” Pfeiffer parachuted March 6 af-| iter his F86 Sabre Jet was hit by, ‘Red ground fire. He was not hurt and was re turned to U.N. control at a meet- ing of the Military Commission. | Air Force security officers took ‘him to Seoul to question him about his experiences. ee ee Pfeiffer's plane veered over the truce line during maneuvers with the South Korean army on the -\U.N. side of the demilitarized Zone. | today until April 8. The rétrial, set to start today, ! Was put over because U.S. Atty. other and to avoid recesses Hoffa, Owen Bernard Brennan, prisident -of Detroit. Teamsters Local 337; and Bernard Spindel, wiretap expert, are charged with tap telephones in . Their first trial ended in a hung jury Sa A Sabre Jet: flying with Pfeiffer’s as jescaped. income Tax Returns Prepared * x ‘* ty The U. N. Command acknowl \ “I am happy to be back 2 Armistice | > edged that both planes had vio- ‘lated North Korean air uninten- tionally, but it accused the Reds jof making ‘‘an unnecessary armed lattack.”’ | | eee - , ‘ z ' In Today’s Press Comies ......... County News ...... Editorials .......... 6 Markets Root renee eneeneenes 22 Obituaries a 5 Sports Sereh ee teeasetiag 18-19 seeneee TV & Radio nee ce Pag epee ee eee | ee so by seeene eee eeeon Jerome “Bright ‘Spet” needs ctaes cars. ‘54 to ‘88's. Top $. FE 0-488. seen at the nation’s missile | ——— The Vanguard thundered off its Shoiwells Shee Stere New Leos ted in. Aubury, Shopping Center, 636 Auburn, the earth with the Army’s “EXplomey d reel 4 1 - ———— The grocery: reported its safe * poe ® Occur in City -—or-no- oot -taken-in-most ef theni-;- chard Lake Ave., was entéred Sat- . loss has not been made as yet. ___cent tax produced $1,144,000,000 in - tion line Iast week as a result ° -The,Weather ‘Full U8. Weather NTI et oS im 1945 3 Weekend Robberies Net Little or Nothing Here _ for Most Part Five burglaries occurred in ‘Pon- lilac over the weekend with little * * * A grocery store at 48 Putnam St. was entered Saturday through a rear door. Nothing is reported missing, Taylor’s Grocery, 373 S. Pad- dock 8t., also was burglarized Saturday by breaking out a glass pane in the front door, Nothing - is reported missing. The home of Mable Sage, 309 3 ie fo Se eu ee eee Se, as - ce F § EUGENE H. PEARCE é Prospect St., was entered Saturday Dp tia | ’ but —— missing. on | C al 0f S * Bethune School was hit by bur-, office and supply room were ran-/ sacked, but it is not known what! is missing. i * * * Tiny's Service Station, 984 Or-! urday and FEarl’s Market, 701. Orchard Lake, was. burglarized: Sunday. The gas station lost $1 . in pennies and $13 in Canadian coins, forced open, but an inventory of Blow to Hopes here tomorrow. fanaa Coser ieee TOMOFOW Fatally Injured While * * | Kin of Mamie Testifies Today FCC Probers - Argue Over Héw Far to Look Into Moore’s Affairs WASHINGTON Ww — Col. George Gerdon Moore, a_ brother-in-law yf Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower, goes! /ybefore a House subcommittee to- tday amid disagreement’ among its members over how deeply his af- tairg should be probed. * * * Moore volunteered earlier this month to repeat under oath his denial of “wilegations that he ‘played a key role in the Feder- al Communications Commission's laward of a valuable TV hcense lin Miami tu a subsidiary of Na- tional Airlines. | The subcommittee has been in- ivestigating charges: of influence) ion behalf of various applicants for iTV Channel 10. A federal grand ‘ter, and the FCC has moved to ‘reconsider its grant. In a letter to Subcommittee Hitchhicking Home Last citirman Harris (D-Ark), Moore Thursday Night = Last rites for a young Pontiac ailor, fatally injured in a hit-run accident while hitchhiking home on leave Thursday, will be conducted whatever in fact.’ He also said ‘he has ‘‘no interest, financial or Service for Seaman Apprentice. Eugene H. Pearce, 19, will begin) at 1 p.m. at Donelson-Johns Fun-| eral Home with -Dr. Milton H.! Moore’s denial came after A. Bz iChureh, officiating. Burial will be radio station operator who lost his , pastor of Central Methodist) for Car Tax Cuf qe GERD Corae Gi) {Continued From Page One) — igs genera] tax relief. He voiced, hope the auto tax matter would) be discussed at tomorrow's White) House policy conference between President -.Eisenhower and GOP congressiona] leaders. & & & = The Michigan proposal for scéai- = H. Pearce, 61 Vinewood St., Eu- | gene was on 30-day Jeave from | his ship in San Francisco when the accident occured on U.S. 40 | near Collinsville, Ill. east of St. Louis, : Relatives said troopers found his! uniformed body lying along the| ing down the 10 per cent auto,roadside Thursday night. They did: excise tax to 5 per cent would not know who was driving the car.) bring an average reduction of $100 * * * ‘acknowledged a -seeialaequaint-} anceship with G. T. Baker, Na- tional Airlines president. But he said allegations that he engi- neered the award to the National Airlines subsidiary had ‘‘no basis otherwise in that or any other application” before the FCC. * * * Frank Katzentine, a Miami Beach bid for Channel 10, testified a friend told~him Moore arranged LS Son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas the er t to National. But last Thursday Alfred Barton, the conversation. _* * * There. also has been testimony that Moore was associated with two Natidnal Airlines directors in a Dominican Republic shipyard venture in which funds allegedly were furnished by dictator Rafael for a low-priced car if the tax) The Pontiac youth had just com- Trujillo. The two directors were relief is passed along by manu-'pjeted his initial cruise aboard his named as George W. Gibbs Jr., facturers and dealers. The 10 per revenue last year. Potter, a staunch administra- tien supporter who faces a tough re-election fight this year, came out with q sharp anti-administra- of the auto tax battle. - * * * He accused the Eisenhower ad- ministration of “foot dragging’’ on the issue after last Tuesday's GOP policy meeting failed to mention auto tax reduction. Potter said matter would be discussed. 1 jeSe r . ’ . By E. Ht. SIMS _ | Do you know where the ionis-|, phere begins and the stratosphere ends? What is the difference be- County Prosecutor's office has been| accused of stalling in the handling, The ionisphere begins, theoret- of the $15,000 Nephrosis Founda-| tween these two regions? ically, at about 250,000 feet, or 50 t Miles, from the surface of the, earth. The stratosphere begins very near the surface of the earth, | only about eight miles out. or at. about 40,000 feet. .There igs really no good reason for saying that the ionisphere be-| gins at 50 miles out and the strat-| osphere extends out to that point. | In fact, the air is so thin out that |/torney, confessed taking the money Iva, Lak Born July 19, 1938. Eugene was * * * first ship, the aircraft carrier Mid-| Jacksonville, Fla., and John W. way. He joined the Navy in Pon-'Cross of Washington—not the John tiac Dec. 31, 1956 and underwent Cross recently reeruit- es FCC (Hll.) Training Center. x * * During the weekend, Harris and graduated from Webster and Wash-'Rep. Joseph P. O'Hara of Minne- ington Junior High schools and sota, senior Republican on the mi d 0 before enlisting attended Pontiac, vestigating | anguar to perate Central High School through the|they were against eleventh grade. subcommittee, said questioning Moore on this Dominican venture junless it relates to the Channel 10 sage would continue to coast up-' director Ford wanted him on the derly charge, | Besides his father and mother, ©4S¢. Several committee inform- he is survived by Barker, 987! and n Embezzlement DETROIT (INS) — The Weyne ion embezzlement. Officials of the charity organ. | ization charged that Arthur J, | Koscinski, chief assistant pros- ecutor who investigated the case, | refused to prosecute and advised | against a release of ahy pub- | licity. William J. Kronner, Detroit at-| far (50 miles): little difference is|While he was president of the or- noticed over a distance of several ganization’s Michigan chapter. miles. j Koscinski defended his action) In time one of the terms might /y saying it is police policy not to be dropped and everything beyond /Prosecute if restitution is made. | the 40,000-foot altitude might beiKronner returned the money plus, known as the stratosphere or the |$ ionisphere. These names were giv- en the outer spaces before much, was known about conditions in these distant altitudes. j U8. Weather Bureag Forecast ureaw Report PO AC AND VICINITY — Centinerd , mestiy cleudy and rather cold with intermittent snew flurries — and W temerrew, Lew tonight near %4, high v Re-46 12-14) | temorrew . Westeriy winds miles an hour diminishing tonight. Teday im Pontiac oo temperature preceding 8 ® m At 8 a.m: Wind velocity 3 mpt Direétion: West. Sun sets Monday at 641 pir Sun rises Tuesday at 6 19 ar Moot sets Monday at 424 pp: Moon fies Tuesday at 4 oan Dewntown Temperatures t 7 30 liam wd fH ait +4 iv am @m........ 30 12 m OM... 2206. HU + 24 am 33 am 4 ewn 3a Sunday in Pontiac {es recorded downto: Highest temperature . Lowest temperature a fl Mean temperature 1 Weather; Cloudy. Trace of 'sno% One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature . Ae Lowest témpfrature Mean temperature Weathe?: Pair. Highest and Lowest Temperature in 86 Sears —~ 39 5 € This n 1877 % Sunday's Temperature Chart a 381 Memphis | 55 Miami ; 7 OT: Milwaukee Minneapolis 52 8 26 29/5 48+ 8.8C. Marie 34 31.| Traverse C. 36 31! Washington Brattice ~ $5 40 Tampa M6:8 Weather Gloomy of United States the storms in some serthern fier 44 weckend Sh-were avithout- power as utility| 28 poles snapped in winds up to 70) 35, M.p.h. 26'Maipe, southeastern New Hamp-| - of southern California after five, 250 of his own. a ee ee n Most Sections By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Skies were cleaf in the South- ast today but gloomy weather | ith cloudiness,-snow or rain, pre-| ailed in most other sections of country adter * * * More snow fell in much of the’ In Festivities June 26-28 and central Rockies as snow increased in Kansas | uring the nht while flurries fell 1 a belt eastward across southern! fissouri and into the Ohio Valley * * * Showers spread eastward from: Rockies into Texas. Plains produced zing drizzle through western: nd central Oklahoma. Rain was ie osuthern cSeuthern o indicated through fhe lower Mis-| issipp: Valley and into northern: sections of the Gulf states. i * * --* Mw indé4 and heavy snow | England over the Thousands of homes, Violent truck New Hardest hit were areas in) hire and Massachusetts. Snow in} ome seations measured 15 inches. * * * Loca] flooding hit many sections traight days ef heavy rains. areas, { four |4ts said investigators had not es- hrothers. al kaif brother and! ¢wo tablished a-connection between the Eisenhower had promised him the|*'Sters. They are Robert, William, [fwo matters. oie ‘Russell and Diana Pearce, all .at| home; Leonard G. Berwick Blvd. * * * But Rep. Moulder (D-Mo) said Mrs. Alice the ‘‘understanding’’ while he was Johnson, 2253 Hampton Rd., White subcommittee chairman was that Lake Township. : Accused of Stalling Moore's affairs would be exam- ined more deeply. ‘They | just haven't made any investigation of it,” he said. Income Tax-Fax Information on preparing your ineome tar return, issued by the Internal Reve- nue Depcriment. ~ MORE THAN ONE-HALF SUPPORT In order to claim children as dependents you must provide more than one-half the support of each child claimed. In the event the child was under 19 at the end of 1956, and earned any | amount of money, you can still claim him as a dependent if you + furnished over one-half of his support. For each child under 19 that over one-half support is furn- nished you can claim a $600 exemption deduction. If a child earned $600 or more and provided one-half or more of his support, he is nobody's dependent. If a dependent was born “or died. during the year an exemption deduction of $600 can be claimed if the above tests | are met for that part of the year in which the dependent was alive the full $600 should be claimed. 7 * * It is not necessary that a de- pendent’s income be added to yours—even though you are en- a weekend of titled to the exemption deduction. [ery 90 to 100 minutes. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDA ag Y. MARCH 17, 1958 ~ The cornmected with the existing sew- Pontiac Press Photo IT’S THAT DAY — Two Hollywood Irishmen, Pat O'Brien and Jimmy Gleason, display elfin grins for St. Patrick’s Day. O'Brien | | had harsh words for ‘professional Imshmen.”’ . | ' ‘will be received into the church March 25 and April 1. The Day in Birmingham for the paving of Elm street from Hunter boulevard to Bower street is scheduled to be made at to- night’s City Commission meeting. The project will include proper sewer and drainage construction to er on the West side of Woodward. Commissioners also will con- sider the proposal of the Troy Fire Department to permit the use of Birmingham fire hydrants located near the Watt's Electric Co, on east Maple read. firm so that it might obtain more favorable fire insurance rates, Three classes for prospective members of the Congregational! Church of Birmingham will begin! at 8 p.m. today in the church. ‘Subsequent classes will be held Seventh and eighth grade pu- pils will meet Saturday. morn- ings at 9:30 with the pastor. .New members from these groups Elm Street Assessments for Paving Slated Tonight BIRMINGHAM — Confirmation;Burial will be in Evergreen Cem- of thé special assessment district etery, The request was made by the'fer, and Mrs. nominated to the Begorrah, Indeed, Pat Declares Sure, and O’Brien Slaps sional Irishmen. * * * “the guy creme told a reporter, ‘cries in his green de | His remarks startled his col-| Jeagues on the Columbia sound| Pat also drives a big limousine’ Adam Voelker in Germany. stage where he is making “The painted kelly green but that, he Last Hurrah,” a story of a famedjsaid, is just a coincidence. | “It was the only color in the ers boast such fine Italian names'salesroom when I was ready to as Spencer Tracy, Frank McHugh, buy.” Jimmy Gleason, Edward Brophy, Another O'Brien peeve: whojwho is a rabid follower of Notre ~ Irish political boss. His cowork-| and director John Ford, O'Feeney. How Navy Expects | (Continued From Page One} friend, denied giving Katzentine/menthe the minute a high-pitched Mavourneen, * = : — O'Brien's | 30 irah. | “T spent time in Ire never once heard the word ‘ally, it was invented by an Amer- jican burlesque comic, Pat White.”” Pontiac Géneral Hospital, was ar-) Sean, * * * * biggest pain is th Terry jsuch information. He said Katzen-'whisky tenor breaks into ‘Ireland Kathleen Brigid. His wife picked, MAY. tine misinterpreted a telephone! yyust Be Heaven.’ "' at Professional Irishmen HOLLYWOOD w — Pat O'Prien,'road company of Dublin’s Abbey — that’s right, Pat O’Brien — Players,’ said O'Brien, said today he can't stand profes- still hate professional Irishmen.” Church officiating. O'Brien admitted lection includes a dozen albums of) “You know the kind,” the actor/Irish songs but only “because my| home of his grandparents, Mr. who kids like them.” s . The O'Brien children are named, W. Long Lake Rd., four days and| after his arrival here from Ger- “but his hi-fi col-) the names, O'Brien explained. the guy , changed his name from Sean Dame football although he never, saw or attended the school. “E knew this set-leoks like ‘ e guy ‘who uses expressions like ‘'begor- wna ana Faces Drunk Charge Actu-| at a special service -April. 3. _ . _..._ Frank X. Gross ; Service for Frank X. Gross, 6- {month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. \Franz X, Gross, will be held at ,11:30 tomorrow morning at Man- ie as will be in White Chapel Cemetery, with the Rev, Harold DeWindt - of Kirk. in the Hills Presbyterian The babydied Sunday at the | and Mrs. Geerge A, Gross, 1304 | Other survivors are his mater- nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Byron L. MeNellis Service for Byron L: McNellis, ,.69, a former Birmingham jeweler, now 3 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. } + City Hospital Head Car] I. Flath, 49, As he talked, an assistant di- rested by Orchard Lake Police| ‘ward until it reached orbital alti- set. tude of about 300 miles. This 3'-! lcial one because it was here that, lthe electronic guidance must powerless glide the vehicle's sta-| bility would be controlled by small, ‘jet motors fired by propane gas.) x * | The final stage of a Vanguard rocket must spin in order to have, directional stability. The third: Ww “The back of me hand to him,” minute coasting period was a cru-,said O'Brien. | Flath was held for three hours) at the Oakland County Jail before |being released on a personal bond. Vanguard Launches - 2nd U.S. Satellite er I and with the Soviet Sputnik IT \ley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial|in Jooping the earth. . x * jflame and smoke at 6:16 am, | rick's Day, “They must have fueled it with distilled shamrocks."’. jamazing smoothness, Mr. MeNellis died Saturday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital af- ter a long illness. A native of Ontario, he operated a jewelry store in Birmingham for 22 years. Surviving are his wife, Mary F.; a daughter, Mrs, Charles Wiltiams’ of Milford; a son, Philip J. of, Birmingham; two sisters and aj ‘brother. . % e Pamela Diane Peifer Service for Pamela Diane Pei- 10-year-old daughter of Mr. Albert G. Peifer, 594 Roanoke St., Blomfield Township, , will be held at 8 p.m. tomerrow at Bell Chapel of William R. Ham- | ilton Co. | The body will be taken to De-' catur, Ill., for burial, | Besides her parents, she leaves) i two sisters, Cynthia and Alicia; Ann, and grandparents Mr, and Mrs. H. A. Peifer of Decatur and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fraser of Colorado City, Tex. _ (Continued From Page One) The 72-foot Vanguard started up. from its launching stand, belching | The missile climbed vertically | for more than 10 seconds, a beau- . tiful sight in the morning. sun- | light. . ae The giant rocket put out a trail- er of white smoke and part of the rocket could be seen to break away. _ a This may have been the first Stage falling away from the main part of the rocket. =| The missile then put out a pin! } } trail of vapor. | of Milford, will be held at gyamMmRocK FUEL | Pat- one newsman said, Observing that it was St. | * * * : The count-down proceeded , with even more lrapidly than had been the case |with the Army's much simpler Ju- director’ of piter-C rocket that put Explorer I into the skies. For an hour before the launch- irector interrupted to tell him that early Sunday on a drunk and disor-| Ing the tall gantry crane, or working tower, was rolled away leaving the Vanguard rocket ful- ly exposed to view. Fifteen minutes later the rising His arraignment before West sun highlighted the missile and Americans averaged 238,000,000,|Bloomfield Justice Elmer C. Die-| the frost accumulating on its mid- make sure that the Vanguard WaS phone calls a day in ‘57. And terle is scheduled for Wednesday section, icy cold from its liquid on its proper course. During this). of these, says the Arkansas morning. ; joxygen content. City Traveler, came just as the) Flath's car had left Orchard, 1 family was sitting down to dinner Lake road and smashed through ajweather balloon The rising sun pinpointed a huge 72 feet tall, the de Isn't it amazing how every wooden fence which surrounds the’ same length as the Vanguard rock- generation comes up with a new Pontiac Yacht Club property at'ef, floating at an altitude of about stage was scheduled to start spin-| ning when it was 877 miles east off | Cape Canaveral,. by means of small rockets along the rim of aj spin table. Reverse thrust rockets would slow the second stage so that the final stage could coast! clear. The ‘‘dead’’ second stage. would tumble into the Atlantic about 1,550 miles from Florida. By this time the rocket speed would have slowed to about | 8,500 miles an hour. At this point the third-stage rocket, ignited by a délayedaction ‘fuse, would in 30 seconds double the rocket's | | speed to the 18,000 miles an | hour necessary to maintain an | orbit. This would occur 10 min- - utes after the launching. A spring mechanism was timed, to separate the satellite from the! spent third stage and nudge it! ahead; | With a launching to the east on; an equatorial orbit, the satellite would have an inclination to about ithe latitude of about 35 degrees. This meant it’ would swing as far south as the southern tip of 4 Agrica and about as far north as [Raleigh, N.C. | It was expected to follow an: ‘eliptical course ranging between! ithe altitudes of 300 and 1,500! miles, and to circle the earth ev-| awn cin am wiomne LO Dedicate Straits Span ST. IGNACE (AP)—Michigan wiil dedicate its new 100 dollar Mackinac Bridge during three days of million — pageantry and fanfare June Nov. 1. * The three-day celebratoi an air show by the Navy and contest, a parachute drop by the 101st Airborne Division and a major historical pageant. Eighty-three girls, one will vie for the title of Mackinac Bridge queen. A musical concert will be presented by a 200-piece orchestra from the Interlochen National Music Camp. - ~~ Other attractions will be power boat, sailboat and canoe | races, fly and bait casting exhibitions, and a sports show. er xk * - Labor teaders will participate in dedicating a plaque honoring five men who lost their lives in across the Straits of Mackinac. Dedication ceremonies in the center of the bridge June 28 will be telecast through a closed circuit to screens at | either end for Viewing by spectators. . * 26-28. The span was opened * n will include three parades, Air National Guard, a beauty from each Michigan county building the bridge “4 Houten Meditations By ROBERT L. DIEFFENBACHER, D.D. Our failures are very discouraging. They are even more serious when others criticize us and ridicule what we have tried to accomplish. Sneers seem to devastate our whole be- ings. Men are so hard on each other. They look down con- ay to waste its precials youth? Wards Point drive on the outskirts — Earl Wilson of Keego Harbor officers said. Ua | descendingly on their fellow men. , : Failure makes us want to go up or surrender our —-4 ambitions. It makes us want to hide. God is so much more magnanimous than are men. He is more sympathetic. He is completely understanding and patient. God never gives up. He never recognizes defeat. Regardless of how badly we fail, God does not forsake / us. He is ever present to give us another chance. He forgives sins which men hold against their friends through life. God never sees man as worthless. + | ’ He always holds out a helping hand and offers salva- tion. We must be doubly aware of God’s love during Lent, and treat others as God treats us. FEDERAL’ sar CLOSED ALL eo. 40,000 feet. Knight Likely to Win SAN JOSE, Calif. (INS) —_ California Gov. Goodwin J. Knight seemed, assured today of winning the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate in the June pri- mary election. ’ AUTHORS WANTED BY N. Y. PUBLISHER New York, N. Y.—One of the nation's largest book publishers is seeking manu- scripts of all types—fiction, non-fiction, poetry. Special attention to new writers, if your—work 1s ready fer -publication, - send for booklet N-68—it's free. Van- tage Press, 220 8S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 4, I. (Main Office, New York) Simms Has Everything YOU NEED for— BASEBALL Ted Williams Model COWHIDE Big league atyle. Big Selection—FULL SIZE - Baseball Gloves Mickey Mantle — E $6.75 Value - 3.88 Tanned cow- . “hide, full size. ¥ #F857.. Catehors’ Mitts © $5.50 Value Del Cran del ie model. Cowhide, f ~ Deep pocket. ist Basemans’ Mitt ‘ $8 Value 3.88 Git model. sional dize. Baseballs C to $2.39 1° » 2" Assorted models to choose from. Softball Bats 159» 919 Official sizes. Compare Simms Prices Shop Around Before You Buy 98 N. Saginaw —2nd Floor =| Lounge Chair with Old Fashioned Comfort Attractive Gold or Ro ee Se : < i Oakland Ave. FOAM Eeactl RUBBER . $ xactly os CUSHION Pictured 4’ Foam Rubber Reversible Seat Cushion 75 Other Chairs and Rockers to Choose from at Reduced Prices! * _ Open. Friday E venings urmiture | Where You Honestly Savel se Nubby Tweed Cover a AS sa ~y s Ba Sas. Careful Free Delivery | t * a ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCIL 17, 1958 Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas _ IRA L. BUFORD officiating. Burial will be in Sagi- Ira L. Buford, 47, of 443 Harvey|"@”: ness. ae Former Pontiac resident Mrs.|Pontiac, and a sister, Mrs. Nancy | He is survived by his children|William W. (Mary Jane) Cochran, vane Loon Lake, and one John W., of Louisville, Ky.; and/82, of Royal Oak died Saturday|broth@f also survive. Theophilus of Pittsburgh, Pa. after a long iliness. Service will be held at 2, p.m. Service will be held at 2 p.m.| She is survived by her daugh-|Tuesday at the Mercer Mortuary, Tuesday at New Hope Baptist/ters, Mrs. Dorothy Batt, of Bloom-|Phoenix. church with burial in Oak Hill field Hills and Mrs. Margaret By- JAY W. e grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James|ticed law in Omaha for 60 years . , |Apsey, of recien and Mr. and|was closely associated with Bryan| yesterday. He was aneock pro- |Mrs. Lloyd ake of Birmingham. for many years. fessor of Hebrew and other Ori- 4 | She is also survived by her broth. ; ; ° pl bee ‘ers, Robert Lake Jr. and Warren =) * * ental languages at Harvard and, Optical Studio 4 G. Lake, and a sister, Manette) CAMBRIGE, Mass. (# — Prof.|curator of Harvard’s Semitic mu- 109 N. Saginaw : 4 Robert H. Pfeiffer, 66, of Harvard seum since 1931. He had been ay -o Marie Lake, all at home. jMarie Lake, a fe i sey Pontiac, Michigan neral Home until 1 p.m. tomorrow:|thorities on /the Old Testament arvard si ' Her body is at Sparks-Griffin Fu-|College, ong of the world’s au- Burial will be in White Chapel SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9 | Cemetery with Rev. George | Nu-Vision 4 Pas Surviving are his wifé, Donna, and children, Margaret Ann, Nancy Jane and Robert, all at home. His’ field ofifciating. | Deaths Elsewhere | WELLINGTON Cemetery. The Rev. F. B. Reed/ford, of Holt-Norfolk, England. One Will officiate. His body is at Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. | LEVI BUCK Levi Buck, 85, of 58 Norton Ave., sister, of South Wales also” sur- vives. ; ~ Service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday from St. John’s ,Episcopal Church, Royal Oak, with burial at Sunday morning at Grayling Mer- cy Hospital after a brief illness. While in Pontiac, he was em- ployed at Pontiae Motor Div. Former Pontiac resident, Jay W.! _ (Wellington, 51, of levies died MIDDLETON ON SEA, England ~7P—Chartie Kunz, 61, an American who was one of Britain’s best known entertainers for more than j 25 years, died yesterday, Kunz, a died of a heart attack Saturday at/white Chapel Cemetery. The Rev. Hiclbwas Cal Geanelinemine tcl ee was born in Allentown, his heme, lec C Te i Fe a ~ : * a Aa Aan ‘a, A city resident for 50 years, Mr. ae c 1 Willan sullivan os = eo ee oy — JUDITH ANN LAKE x « * Buck bad been in the real estate/ = a ej sia “—. {ol = - oe 5 = — — Eee 5 ents ~ E be . . . . : ‘ : Bonk, * ual an = T = '. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 paresis Most Shillelaghs Coming From Germany if ments, when @ MICHIGAN cuapit OOUNSELLURS ant and arrange Tec papempls en * Miciioa® CxEDIT OOUNSELLURS and areanes fo, pey re ‘ sd ; ; NEW YORK (®—Things a col-|plains why your. “neighbor may are made by pasting together two} That probably the smallest reli- weeds cost the national economy| NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED Second Flier Survives|¥mnist might never know if ‘he prefer to be Known as Smythe. [thin sheets of specially treated|Sious sect in the country is the|five billion dollars a year, or $100 ONE PLACE TQ PAY a : didn’t @pen his mail: Fre * ' Member American Association of Credit Coutisellors Accident 4-Day Trek! That ireland ic That a poll recently shawed the paper. Society of Primitive Friends. It), ¢amiy . ’ at since Ireland lost its great/ average corporation president is << «<< has fewer than a dozen members. - 2 e+ *« * | “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” Through Wilderness oak forests, most shillelaghs now/s9 years old, a college graduate, “That That King Henry II of France . come — . earned $68,000 a year, and his fa- cores Gre a ee i was a real key executive. He} That you're an oldtime movie; MICHIG a CRE Sat. 9 to 1 Evenings by App't CASTI : vorite card game is bridge. Hope ; : ’-|placed three locks on the door of fan if you can remember the} CR DIT cou SELLORS Calif oe eR an ak That there are more than 1%$|they never poll us poker players! _ s count that!one of his mistresses. And his key|name of the first actor to win an 41% &. Saginaw pra Oskiané Theater = crticoled| thecugh wo at we mn fl million people named Smith in the| That the reason playing cards Eo aS a. a black car today/_one of the first know master Oscar. It was Emil -Jannings of cones tox four fae brent High United States, which probably ex-lare called “‘pasteboards” is: They|' A ou m a show-off? keys—~alone would open all three|Germany. f at smoking at one time was locks, t ; ‘ Biases pane crea hed leat nig 2 ae prohibited in New England tav-} * e & Aeani ules Beet ee ory | Kenneth tes rer hae ast e e e - ns. Today ‘it's = you << That if you want to become ’ E E _ Coroner, ut e Vv pneu- o keep some people from t-jrich and famous, here's a way: . monia brought on by the 15mile . . Capi tO Bu | | n ing up in church\ - simply invent a household paint Stole Jailhouse Spoons trek caused the death of Joel \ That — wh .|that will smell pleasant whi fo nat can “a man be pleasant while dry DALLAS (IN. Parker Blair, 19, Lewisburg, Mo. lieve?—there are more than ‘1,000 |ing. mek ieee Ut 9) kesh Footwear for the toe Snedilled an autopay for later B ty S islands in the Thousand Islands.| That Irwin H. Kramer of the for theft in city jal war bang I I , l o ; at eC ]! ) ) ‘And most Panama hats are made|Hotel Edison, after talking to 10,- we ntire Family cll UIs INg - —a S in Ecuador. 000 guests, has reached this con- emai wie Bh ean other charge when a jailer no- Blair and Gail Robert Stiles, 20, x * * clusion: “People will believe any-| 4; We —, Y-| ticed the man’s clothi 20 West Huron St. an airman from Long Beach, , | That Robert Q. Lewis says: “A|thing if you tell them it’s a ru- bulging ‘in strange nee A _ Calif, were flying to visit Stiles’| WASHINGTON «® — The U.S.)would permit consideration of oth-| spinster is a woman who knows|Mor.” inickiig Yeveuted lie twat ear Pontiac — FE 2-3821 father and stepmother at China|Capitol is bursting at the seams,jer plans to add working space to ; z exam : : Lake. Calif, ee hey ‘crashed |but lots of people don’t want tolthe Capitol. end pein nobody asks Algol ion es en to leave with 18 city - owned Jate last Monday on 10,000-foot|let out the waist line. _ ee 2 ee; y. Teaized! spoons. : Slate Mountain 35 miles east of For more than two decades| Backers of the extension say it Porterville, Calif. there have been proposals to ex-jis needed to (1) provide more The two Castle Air Force Base|tend the center section of the 165-)room for Congress, (2) bring the airmen hiked through waist - deep|year-old Capitol’s east front. center section in line with the show down the mouritainside un-| Now, there is a concerted drive|House and Senate wings and (3)| til Friday, when they met a her-|under way to advance the east provide a full base for the great. mit Indian at the Tule Indian|front by 32.6 feet. A commissionjdome whose eastern curvature WKC ~yeserva’ nt and -sharediset-up by cae ress recently gave.juts into space. ee some powdered mi sugar |the go-ahead—over loud and bitter In addition, chunks of the east! =, : ¥ they found ane day before in an|opposition. front’s. sandstone walls have beer bo & Predicts a Life of Clover for You Smart Shoppers abandoned trailer. Architect Frank Lloyd Wright|dropping away. Thus, say the ad- ~ P “For a while it didn’t look like|Said it would be “absolutely pro-|vocates, now would be the best; Who Snap Up Our Cr op of St. Patrick Day Values! We were gonna make it,”’ the two, fane’’ to tamper with the Capitol. |time to undertake one big expan- appearing in good physical condi. x * * sion project. The sandstone would | tion, said after reaching civiliza-) Mrs. Frederick Groves, presi- be replaced with marble. | tion. “We were a little beat and ajdent-general of the Daughters of| All of this would. cost about, little hungry.” the American Revolution, called it/$10.100,000, or so it's figured. ; x *« * “vandalism.”’ However, Sen. Robertson (D-, Stiles was piloting their rented| Historical societies adopted pro- Va) argued it might cost much: single-engine light plane when test resolutions and sent them to SI of 110 millions. | they took off for China Lake. He Washington. x *« said the plane tore into a tree But thus far the stand-patters ' Capitol architects have long ad-. on the peak after bad weather |have been repulsed at every turn.|vocated extending the east front. forced them to a low altitude. The Senate last Tuesday beat back|In 1863, Thomas U. Walter report- a move to hold up the remodel-'ed -to Congress: ing plans temporarily. “The eastern portico of the old County Births + Foes of the project haven't given| building will certainly be taken up. They’re still hopeful. of win-|down at no very distant day, and Following is a list of children|ning passage for a bill by Sen. H.jthe front be exténded eastward.”’ born to Oakland County couples Alexander Smith (R-NJ) that) Little did he know. as recorded in the County Clerk’s : —— | ‘@tfice. Only the father’s name is} ~q@ @@@OOSSSOSSOCOCOHCE e eeoeete, used. You'll Find Impressive Markdowns in Every Dept. Pontiac Alvis U. Cramer, 134 W. Rutgers Joseph A. Alien, 2135 Briggs Staniev C. Allen, 304 Pioneer Frank M. Anderson Jr.. “36 Maple Fred J. Batley. 2373 Oakway Keith A. Baker, 2054 Kohler Robert L. Berry, 716 Coughlan Ronald R. Black, 467 Moore Herbert_Bleck._325 Howard d McNeil] M Bowers, 53 W. Cornell Harold C.. Brodks, 2300 Shimmons - J.’ Short, 117 Center Palmer J. Strang. 909 Arayle Delwyn W. Saiter, 4032 Wenonah Albert A. Hirsch, 347 Irwin “Charies A. Hamiey. 50 Blaine Willte . Manley, 2233-E. Wilson Oscar ©, Halcom, 392 Linda Vista Charles W. Mibner, 131 Cuanonoeque Clarksten eres E.- Puller, 5183 Frankwill Charles P. Gates. 4401 Elmdale Theodore L. Easer, 5550— whet ¢ Brand New 1958 Maytag Wringer Washer Regular $129.95 Now 38 Only NO MONEY DOWN! Our top performer with full family capacity tub and exclusive gyra- foam action, : Charlies 8 Simpwon, 6256 A eeecsen vila William Domin Jr. 4625 Pinedale Drayten Piains Edward D. Allen, 3605 Hatfield Eugene L, Daniel 2245 Fortress James I. Schenck, 4340 Seeden Carman J. Regatz, 3248 Van Campen _ John V. Mourik. 2612 etepiecroe Plea: Kenneth E. Mohiman, 2671 tartiaatan Donald E. Trulu, 3504 Acuarina i orris James J. Sowden, 4688 Walton Bivd. Howard A. VanKleek, 3184 Warren Norman O Wagner. 4618 Meigs an A. Wineearner. 4711 Dixie Hwy. Wilbert C. Glidden. 38@ Dill James M. Puller, 4231 Roseberry Gearid W Freeman, 4760 Syivester John F Hodler, 4123 Lanco James . Hogan, 3999 Letart Wrought Iron SMOKERS With removable ash tray. ‘Only 80--to go! PAY CHECK TOO.SMALL? if time payments and other bills eat away your paycheck, a Seaboard ‘Package Loan’’ may help you KEEP more of it. With our “Package Loan" you may tie your bills together and have the advantage of one account at one place and one convenient, sensible monthly payment instead of the many you may have now. Brand New 1958 Maytag Fully Automatic DRYER ATT Only A gentle circle-of-heat dries clothes safely in only 26 minutes, a A iat TRAINS Train a : ¢ long. eo ] ki track. 58 te Ge So why magnify your aycheck shortage? Ask Seaboard about EXTRA CASH NOW! ries ae ~ SEABORRD Mourne Get $25 to $500 in Record Time! 1185 North Perry Street 2 Miles Northeast of Downtown Pontiac “Now, I don’t want to méntion Next to the New A & P Supermarket any names .. .,”" they both under- Phone FE 8-9661 “Parking No Problem” stand who: she’s gonna talk about.| %@@@@6@0000000609060800000600 —FEarl Wilson. 2 4 ————— tne c, Hinkle, 3860, Sas “Gerald A, Moore, 3976 Ditl Charles 8S. Nichols, 4371 Cheeseman Rov A. Landry. 3388 Cosevburn Joseph H. Belisle, 3652 Lotus Edward J. Boyer, 2277 Pauline Luigi M. Alonzi, 4318 Cheeseman When marriage as last makes a man happy, it’s probably his daughter's . . . By the time a woman says to her phone-pal, Imported From Germany BAVARIAN =—®es- $2.50 FRUIT PLATES 87° 45 to Ge Versatile Hardwood CAMP CHAIR Hardwood frames, durable waters — repellent striped canvas. Brand New 1958 Maytag Fully Automatic WASHER Now $ . ‘Only Trade |. “ All fabric, 2. wash speeds! _— 2 spin speeds! 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Two Ton or More ‘and: Il a c ‘ SAVE a0 Ps : “ La | : tim war | 108 NORTH SAGINAW bane 2 29h erw ee ee to lead a riding horse} Pl THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17,1958 . a rr GOES UP IN FLAMES — Two Romeo volunteer firemen battle to contain fire to barn on Washington Township farm owned by Owen W. Kirkwood. Halt: filled with hay, the structure was a mass Waectacilar Blaze Costs $12,000 see of flames before firemen could ge Pentiae Press Pheto t ts the scene. They concentrated on saving adjacent and nearby buildings. A neighborhood boy ad- mitted accidentally dropping a match, which set off the blaze. ys + oe Barn Set Afire by Youngster ROMEO — A large barn, valued at about $12,000, was destroyed in a spectacular fire in Washington Township Saturday afternoon. The barn belonged to Owen W. Kirk- wood of 11220 30-Mile Rd., two miles south of Romeo. * * * A young boy from a_ neighbor- __ing subdivision admitted setting} the fire accidentally when he half filled the barn, Mrs. Kirk- wood said. The youngster summoned Mrs. Kirkwood when the blaze broke out, then returned to the burning and a pony to safety. In addition to the barn and hey, a garden tractor and saddles were consumed in the blaze. * * * , The fire was out of control be- Library Offering . Teenagers More Books Rent-Free jail on a burglary charge. _ The barn was partially covered by insurance. fore it was reported, so Romeo volunteer firemen concentrated their efforts on saving adjacent out buildings, the garage and|were visible for miles, drawing house. hundreds of spectators to the scene. Son of Madison Heights Mayor MADISON HEIGHTS \? — Ken- 22, neth Ferguson, 19-year-old son of suburban Madison Heights Mayor| Lloyd H. Fergtson, is in the city’s| the youth and Larry Morgan, of 23213 Dequindre, Hazel Park. after the A & M Market, 25402 John R, was robbed of about $200 |worth of cigarettes, beer and gro-| ceries Saturday night. Kenneth is the youngest of seven children. His father was elected mayor when Madison Heights was incorporated as a city in 1955. It has a population of about 30,000. “I don’t know why he did it,” Mayor Ferguson said yesterday. “He didn’t need the money. He had been living at home and there was no reason for it.” The youth has been employed in an auto body shop since. his recent discharge from the Army. * * * * * * Madison Heights police arrested Senator Urges Reviving RFC Must Prevent Any Big: Business From Folding, Fanned by high winds, the flames “the theme, is from March 16-22. WALLED LAKE — In-recognt-| Bridges Specifies tion of ‘National Library Week| _ Walled Lake Community Library WASHINGTON UP—Sen. Bridges “will offer teenagers a wider range|(R-NH) said today he will lay be- | of books without special - rental fore President Eisenhower tomor- shw. a_proposal for revival of the| fees. S * * * Reconstruction Finance Corp. on National Library . Week, with|a standby basis “Wake Up America and Read’’ as * * * Bridgés, who heads’ the Senate On, Tuesday; Community Li- Republican Policy Committee, ex- Morgan is unemployed and the father of four children. Two Hurt Fighting Washington Blaze WASHINGTON -= TWO Washing: ton Township volunteer firemen _|Scholarship Corporation for their Potluck Supper Set at Imlay by Girl Scouts IMLAY CITY — The Intermedi- ate Girl Scouts will have a pot- luck supper in the school gym to- morrow at 6:30 p.m. Their moth- ers will be guests. * * * This is International Friendship Night and costumes and decora- tions will carry out the theme with each patrol representing a foreign country Held for Market Robbery" , , , dropped a match in the hay which) Mrs. Jacob Raila, Mrs. Agnus Klikna and. Mrs. George Shular will wear costumes from their) native country, Lithuania. They will demonstrate how flax is cord- ed, spun, woven and show samples, of woven linen. The Junior High patrol charge of the flag ceremony. Students Gain National Merit | Seniors in High School _at Farmington Score High in Competition has FARMINGTON — Three Far- mington High School students, Alayne Celinske, Patricia John- son and Ronald Rainson, have been) commended by the National Merit outstanding performances. on.a_na- tionwjde college aptitude test. The students were Michigan |Lapeer fires was lifted today with _lthe issuing of a warrant today for _|eause the owher is away. jents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Roberts, made a full confession Saturday | j Lynch. Lapeer Confession Ends Long Mystery LeRoy Roberts to Be Arraigned in Justice. Court Today LAPEER — The mystery sur- rounding the origin of a series of the arrest of a 20-year-old Lapeer youth. LeRoy Roberts Jr., of 1432 N. Saginaw St. was charged with fires, Lapeer Police Chief Mat- thew Dougherty said. * «i * Insurance paid off for five of the fires amounted to $17,383, accord- ing to Dougherty. The sixth blaze destroyed a barn on the farm of C. W. Weiblen, 3355 Newark Rd., in 1957. The insurance amount at that barn could not be learned be- Roberts, who lives with his par- when arfested by Dougherty. He became a prime suspect when it was learned he had been in the immediate vicinity of most of the fires. Dougherty had asked the assist- ance of State Police Arson Detec- tive Donald Hynes of the Flint Post. Saturday, Hynes examined all the data gathered by local po- lice and stated it was sufficient to make the arrest. Roberts is in custody in Lapeer County Jail. According to Dougherty, the youth confessed setting fires to: . 1. His own home, when the fam- ily lived’ at 3376 Newark Rd., on April 9, 1957. 2. The home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James Bird, 1432 N.| Saginaw St., on Jan. 30, 1957. 3. An empty house owned by arson. He has. confessed setting six| © Youth, 20, Charged With Arson in Six Fires + r TO AUCTION CALF IN OXFORD — ‘Beau- a registered Holstein heifer calf, will go on the block Friday at a public auction to be held by Oxford High School Future Farmers of America. Scientifically fed for five months at the M. A. Kamm Feed and Granary, Oxford, she is being donated to the local FFA group by ” tena, ® Pontiac Press Phete her owner, Lionel J. Kamm. Ralph Hickmott Jr. has volunteered his services as auctioneer in the bidding scheduled for 3:30 p. m. at Kamm Mill. Kamm (left), is shown handifg the registration certificate to Richard Daly, faculty adviser, while Wayne Moshier (center), Oxford FFA president, admires calf. John Weir, 1420-N--Saginaw St, on Jan, 16, 1958, : 4. A barn on the Weir farm, 1410 N. Saginaw St., March 4.. 5. An eight-room house, 1564 N. Saginaw St., belonging to Arthur The house was formerly | occupled by Lynch's grandmother, Mrs. .Nicholas Stone, until her death. 6, The Weiblen barn, also last year. The warrent specifically charges, Roberts with ‘burning the Lynch home, Prosecutor George D. Lutz! ‘As a gneral rule, it has been Salocity of voters in countries (found: that- ‘women constitute ‘the!which grant equal suffrage: Township Body. = fo Study Budget} "y Farmington Board to Hold Special Session Tuesday Evening FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — The Farmington Township Board said. The youth will be arraigned jill meet in special session tomor- | in justice court this afternoon, he;row evening to discuss the budget said. |for the coming year. x & &* When a budget has been agreed Roberts denied any connection|upon by board members, it will with the two barns which burned be published, prior to the April recently in Elba Township. Since 5 annual township meeting. This. jhe doesn't know how to drive a will afford township taxpayers an car, this eliminates. any possibility opportunity to study the proposed of him being implicated, the dis- |budget before it is presented at the brary personnel will remove books which appeal mainly to pressed confidence the economy | were injured slightly fighting a will turn upwards soon. But he fire Saturday Aight at the home teenagers from the rental shelf |@4ded in an interview that the up-'of Michael Cain, 59241 Van Dyke, and place them on regular {rn might be threatened if some Washington. shelves. big business enterprise were to) oo8 «a The library board has granted another special benefit, Saturday as “‘no fine’ day. number of days involved. The volunteer staff is making —an effort to compiie a history of Walled Lake and Commerce Township, . Mrs. Dorothy Meagley, in charge of community relations for the li- brary, asks persons with historical knowledge of the area to contact her at. MA 4-2873. Wolverine Council to Name Candidate WOLVERINE LAKE — A special “meeting of the Wolverine Lake Village Council will be held to- night at the Village Hall to nom- inate an eighth Council candidate to appear on the April 7 election ballot. * * * 7 The village charter states that at least two persons shall run for! each council pesition, according to John Finlayson, village clerk. * bd * ~ Inasmuch as four Council posi- tions will be open, the village must carry ‘at least eight candidates on the ballot. Since only seven village, resident filed nomination petitions, the Council must nominate one! candidate by resolution. : ee Manor Group ~ Will Meet Tonight BLOOMFIELD TOWN- HIP — A special meeting on! sewers ‘and roads has been called for 8 p.m. today at the West Bloom-| noel Township Hall by Stanley, Poag, president of the Syivan Man-' or: ‘Civic. Association. ~At the meeting, open to all resi- dents of the subdivision, the ques-! _tionof which should come first, _ sewer projects or the black-topping of roads, will be discussed. First official ‘United States cen- “eas was — in side i t declaring - * A Per- sons with overdue books normally i pay fines in accordance with the crash financially, He mentioned railroads specifically. Kenneth Buckman, 33, stepped on a nail and Jack Atkins, 35, was hit on the face accidentally by an ax handle. The fire was discovered by 15- “We have established almost every kind of setup needed to step in and help the economy except one to take care of a threatened| year-old Vernon Cain who was crash of a big business, which| sitting with his three younger could have a terrific psychological] brothers and sisters “while his” impact,’ Bridges said parents were in Detroit. * = * Fire Chief Ralph Sheldon said “We have provided for small an overheated. wood stove set fire business, we are stepping up pub-/to the-chimney. Flames destroyed lie works to help provide jobs and/one interior wall, spread to the we are providing for the econo-lattic and partially burned the mies of other nations through | room. Damage was estimated at mutual security about $2,000. ~ * Ft * * * “I™think we should*.revive the oe mehin firefi RFC on-a standby basis and have Peco ee on table, Aenean it ready for action if it is needed. It saved many situations in the past and it could do so again if it hours before bringing it under con- trol. battled the blaze for about three) runners-up in the 1957-58 Merit Scholarship competition. John M. Stalnaker, president of NMSC, believes that the students iwho received the commendation are in the top one or two per cent in ability in the senior classes of their states. “While these students did not quite reach the finals of the com- petition, each of them has demi- | onstrated highly and outstanding promise to ben- efit from college celeing, Stal. naker sald. More than 260,000 outstanding seniors in 14,000 high schools en- tered the competition this year. |Some 7200 students are now in the finalse Over 1,000 tour. year Merit Schol- arships worth anh estimated $5 mil- lion will be awarded about May 1. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon/fi were planted about 600 B.C, jsaid.~ LeRoy is a graduate of Lapeer High School, 1956, with a major in art. He was employed for. a time “nem in a local grocery mar- e He was a good student, particu- ary interested in art, his teachers sa * * * Roberts at first gave what ap-| peared to be an ironclad alibi re- garding his whereabouts when the, fires were investigated. ~The fact that all the places jing. -| Stephenson. This annual township meeting, as provided by law, allows the indi- vidual taxpayer a voice in his local government, he said. If items in the budget dq-not meet with the approval of taxpayers, they can be changed, or other expenditures can! |be added at this meeting, it was’ |pointed out. | The site for this year’s meeting, has not yet been selected, but! board members are expected to |name a site at tomorrow's meet. | aaa ecto Seb tae ee ee ‘3-7 SUPER ( CUSHIONS. | SAVINGS -|tance being. too..great,. Dougherty meeting; eehd- Supervisor Franke 3.74 a 670215 = plus tox ond W 4 recoppable ye we Rock-Bottom Price! ERE Coe man RE c GOODSYEAR | PRICES LOW HIGH {burned were underinsured freed the owners of any suspicion, Dougherty said. "I feel the boy may need psychi- atric treatment,” Dougherty said. “He said he loved his mother dearly and was sorry to cause her’ this unhappiness, - | * * al Deagerh also said the boy ap-) parently had no close friends. Police Sgt. Edward Flynn arrest- ed Roberts at the time of the Lynch , but he said there wasn’t suf- ficient evidence to hold him. became necessary.” * * The RFC officially went out of business June 30 last year, al- though its lending activities were halted Sept. 28 1953. It wag es- tablished in January 1932 during the major depression, From then until jt died: it loaned more than (50 billion dollars to banks, rail-|“aterford Township and one from| roads, factories and most other|Clarkston each received grand kinds of American business. (prizes for the science project they Bria x * * ; entered in the fourth annual Sci- ridges’ proposal topped a aaa ace ow "es deine ence Fajr held Friday and Satur- ito bolster an economy which |many members of Congress were | \saying was fundamentally strong| ibut which needed a stimulus. * * * | Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex), | \who has been active in pushing. |through the Senate a series of| lantirecession measures, told re-| porters he thinks things are took: ing up somewhat. . t -* | Ronald: Hoekman, 1740 Hamilton | ‘I have a great deal more con- Dr. was awarded a grand prize in fidence in the economic outlook! zoology for his project, ““The Evo- ‘now simply because the wheels. lution of the Vetebrate Heart.” have been set in motion and the _* * * jgovernment is actively at work|-- 4 i : ito combat unemployment,” the Bs grand oe ad hare ‘Senate “Democrat serail beadter said. Richatd Serwin, 189 Oneida Rd., |who entred-a project called ‘The | “Ther immediate problem. is 9,200,000 men and women who \Ettects ot; I Rinses fl ineed jobs. We are moving rapid- ily -— in cooperation with the-exec: utive agencies ~ to find ways of [creating thosé jobs.” Area Students Receiv Four Pontiac students, one fom School. * ot x The fair was sponsored. by the [Linnean Society, PCH biology club. Spécial awards were given to three PCH boys for their thor- oughness, accuracy and scientific contributions, instead of present- ing one grand prize in the biology classification, ‘TO RE-DISPLAYED Both projects will be displayed at the Regional § Science Fair Sat- day at Pontiac Central High|- e Awards at Fair Six -Get Science Grand Prizes urday at Bowling Crem State Uni- ‘versity in Ohio along with more than 1,200 other projects, Both projects*also were displayed at a national science meeting in Indi- ana in December. . * * * “The Classification of the Animalijohn Blamy, Kingdom,”" a project entered by John Roush, 326 W. Iroquois Rd., was also granted a special award in the biology division. * * * Reference books were also awarded to the following students for their first-place rating in spe- cific divisions: _ F Linda Ross, 304 8S, Draper Ave., Webster School for the project on rock and minerals in the elementary science division; Frank Spraker of Isaac Crary Junior High School, Waterford Township, for ‘his model of a rocket in the general science division; and Paul Bennett of Clarkston, for the top award In the physics division. Bennett dis- played a telsa coil project. Jon William Gary, 17 Prall St, ef. Grofoot School, also received su- ence division, as did William Bank, 38 Franklin Blvd., of Pontiac Cen- tral, for his project in the chemis- try division. “* * * Superior ratings in the biology division also were awarded to Bruce Berg 1030 James K Bivd.; 358 W. Iroquois Rd: James Chamberlain, 557 Montcalm St., and Tony Jerome, 1140 Ottawa. Dr. They are all Pontiac Central) High School students. Manfred Husacher of Waterford! Township: High School . also re- ceived superior rating in the phys- ics SS perior rating in the elementaty sci- fa First Aid Class Today Imlay Girl Scouts Begin |! IMLAY CITY — The Senior Girl Scouts will begin a first aid class |\today at the Congregational Church lhouse. Mrs. Harold Schonfeld and | Mrs. William Mason will conduct it. The class will be divided into| advanced. This evening the Explor-| er Boy Scout troop will join them to view two Red Cross movies. TRUSSES SACROILIAC relate! SUPPORTS . y properly fitted ® Surgical Belts @ Post Operative Belts @ Elastic Stockings ® Women’s Sport Girdles @ Mole Supports Woman Attendant THRIFTY DRUGS 148 North ¢ c, Saginaw of, SeenON as : Sa ; S Reg. $20.70 | Fe. Trade now and save! Now is your opportunity to save on brand- new tires. Goodyear’s famous Triple-- Tempered 3-T Super-Cushions are priced i way down. Trade now for safer, easier- © riding 3-T Super-Cushions. Extra strength, longer wear, -better traction . . . at an _unbeatable low price. Come in today. Pay as Little as $1 25. a SEs | | “BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL! | 4 2» FOR MOST CHEVROLETS FORDS and PLYMOUTHS Comparable Low Prices for Other Model Cars Use Our Easy Pay Plan mae Tm are ena eemape eo eaed ge EERIE SERVICE SPECIAL |. ~Here’s What We Do: * ‘ | * COMPLETE FRONT END ALIGNMENT (Regular $10.95) “ | BALANCE TWO FRONT WHEELS | x ADJUST BRAKES (Regu | * PACK FRONT WHEELS. | + INSPECT BRAKE LINING _ * INSPECT BRAKE DRUMS (Regular $5. 00) P lar $1.7 fy ites sa. 00) ‘i = 5995 - "PAY AS LOW-AS $1.25 A: WEEK! * INSPECT WHEEL CYLINDERS eee oe # ee EIGHTEEN =< ita ia as % = Elie * ie 5 as is S yews se gt os: ak = i THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 K earns Goes Out on \ All four should be abies: i‘ eome back and hit .300 or ib. Sees Tigers in.2nd oie ging. three st ECE Pamert cs home, of names, yet, how can it be famed that the Tigers will do | ° of 54 wins among them. “Morgan, Hoeft, Shaw, McDermott, ia Fa seas Hee f ye ue better in the victory column? close to it. All four are capable of hitting over 20 homers. | Aguirre and Sleater should be able to add 36 and these 90 - Lonsve ere ts the way @ race. Ab | Frank Bolling can add 20, Zernial if he gets the chance | wins should be good enough for second place. other question being asked is—will Jim aoe re- EN | ROUTE TO bed the Tigers to finish | peat as a 20-game winner this year? Most likely answer | ¢a™ set another 20 and Skizas is capable of 20. Several Of course as was mentioned, help must and should | anywhere higher than Sth place would be to admit that the | 4, no, ~ are capable of more. come from teams like Kansas City, Cleveland and Balti- -trades with Kansas City and Cleveland were good enough *~ « * The big flaw_statistically last year was in the RBI| more. The White Sox claim one of the best balanced to strengthen Detroit to win 15 or 18 more games this sea- This answer again does not support an upward move by | column. The Tigers failed in the clutch, they were 6th in | pitching staffs in the league, yet not good enough to. son. : the Tigers. Then how can the Tigers hope to move up? the league in runs-batted-in. | handlé the Yanks.-Big_key_on the Chisox staff besides =? At least this is what it would take to go as high as sec- We see Detroit making its move on the basis of two x *& * Billy Pierce is Dick Donovan whose 16-6 record last year ~ on place ahead of the White Sox and the Red Sox behind | ‘factors: Zernial, Jim Greengrass, John Groth ana Gail Harris | was instrumental to Chicago’s position. = : i ala aaa ~ ek k 1. Recovery of form of players like Al Kaline, | Should give Detroit better plate strength as pinch hitters The White Sox expect big things from pitcher Early = vey. having //a) comparison (ofithe batting averages of the Harvey Kuenn, Frank Lary. and Paul Foytack; a pert aaa to Porter, aoe or Dave Philley or as Wynn and Kalamazoo's Ron Jackson at first base this year. ff traded players doesn’t actually support the Tigers’ jump stronger fist for manager Jack Tighe and a bet- There is great doubt in this corner that 38-year-old Wynn. — from fourth place to a contender ter bench at the plate. _ Bunning surprised even himself in winning 20 games, | will compensate for the loss of Minnie Minoso's bat in the = . 2. Better balance in the American - League with while Lary was having more tough luck than a black cat trade with Cleveland. J Kansas City got Bill-Tuttle (.251), Jim Small (.214), Kansas City and Cleveland winning a few more on 13th street. I doubt that Bunning will repeat with x * * “ Frank House (.259), Kent Hadley (.279 at Augusta) along from the Yanks and White Sox, with pitching - 20 because Lary and Foytack should be able to win more. The Athletics appear headed for the first division sin: > with pitcher Duke — ann nae — their only asset. | Tom Morgan should beable to win 10 in relief and as an the Indians are ran taking a few more queues from (.236), Lou Skizas ‘(.245), Billy , omp- occasional starter, and rookie Bob Shaw could do like- Chicago and New Yo year. eG son (.204) along with pitchers Mickey McDermott (1-4) The Tigers have always beeit rough with the Yanks. be wees Tf Ted Wiltiame has @ bad year (which appeers: nlikely) and Tom Morgan (9-1). year, unlike last season, it appears that Detroit may be able . Boston could fall from third place to rock athens Bad as : ; to scrape up a few more wins with the Jong ball in Boston, Billy Hoeft should not be expected to get more than Yank ots cay it’s just habit. The Yankees will % Cleveland got J. W. Porter (250) and Hal Woodeshick | Cjeveland, Kansas City and Baltimore. 10 or 12 wins. The big lefthander will have to get more | fr the soot y (0-0), while the Tigers got Jim Hegan (.216) and lefthander * * serious to do better or equal his 1956 record of 20-14. The win again. Hank Aguirre (0-1). | _ «potential” is the key word in the 1958 season. The Tig- | “gopher ball” has always been Hoeft’s fault. Even Tiger Here's how we see the 1958 American League race: \ x * * ers proved their potential on the team in 1956 with Kaline, | rookies in training camp have thrived with Hoeft on the 1. (NEW YORK—Another year and another fogkie One thing is almost certain, Kansas City will do well as Kuenn, Maxwell and Boone all hitting over .300. Last year the | mound. find for the Yanks. Add Norm Siebern to poral 2 a result of the trade. same potential was there, but it failed. It could fail again, . xk « x of-the-year, rey ae. along with, There are no lusty bats enone among the new but this is where we feel the success lies. In supposition, Lary, Foytack and Bunning are capable peasy eae ay Ao Se SS rama F : = Hank Bauer, along with ‘seven pitchers in double figures of victories, and it looks like the pénnant’ - is safe on Yankee Stadium’s flag pole. 5 - 2. DETROIT—This is the time for the 300 hitters 7 ~ and 20 game winners of 1956 to join ‘hatids with Jim Bunning of 1957 and some plate . for ‘| 1958. Hegan needs only to hit .250 but ri- ence in catching such greats as Bob Feller, Bob 7 Leman sud Harty Wyan may brath s(t on the = Nal Chie — * —— a s. GHICAGO—Disappointment is in ytote for Al : 3 667" X ° os ppe en' n or 3; Local Regional Champs a Flint Tech Wednesday Lopez and’ the Chisox. Billy Pierce still hasn't . 4 =| d N t t ft aro enath 3 ite ne her } 4 00 just aren’t enough .300 hitters on, the club te : SLEAGS NalS 10 sy be fast thiry axe bees withoct Maedhy = , 3 #(() V t See crac ci anata tae 4 800 “U. iC ory ably hit better than any Tiger catcher, J Small ; ae By CHUCK ABAIR strong threat to ‘keep right on { fense did the rest. The= Colts jcomfortable edge from late in the will have his best year and Bill Tu save : $ 375 . The unbeaten Troy Colts were] Telling. had Brighton acering ace Brian |period until. the final whistle. .. whet of with his ball h } ‘ 30) Foytak Rapped Hard; "0° Watson and his mates pp 2 —— awiting. 4 MONDAYS GAMES oct ; ctories away from becom-| Coach Peyton Goodwin has com.| Watson and lis mates oe _ | _Fighey’s 2. gave him 36 in two 5. BOSTON—Still no infield in Beantown. Pitching a Cuetnnatt vs. Washington at Orlando, Fa! Griffith Wants Detroit|ing Oakland County's Ist statejiin.g his high-scoring pair and| jn. y regional starts. Booth added 12. ealy fair, but the Sex alwa ~ “There's always ap end to all seuhanes Reigns 1h Muse Te [Taye ge —Piews BF —Flarvon, Yost! Troy stars Dick Booth (14) and Wayne Figley ~ ris (17). cagers posted two weekend vic.\™ - — = (oben ated py ee tories in the double elimination ’ after her club dropped’ heart Holland Christian, 49; Allegan 45 B tournament. heaker, Sunday ‘a Tieltadt Baas Bast Lapatng Sf. Greenville 6 erra, Mantle Start Hittin. * * * , seme Mamiramer st, Fgrian ne Scoring sprees by Mel Taylor| remained 3-0 until the final stan- Soon i ape a os Harper Woods 62 sparked both triumphs. Sunday) 2a. Fleming carrey dh Jotiany Metropolitan area title, The Pon- Troy 51, Brighton 36 Taylor pumped in 33 points as the| Pierson and Buddy Bone scored, tiac girls had been unbeaten in at Cadiliae Alpena Ca! poet 60, — 61 Marquette mesa Lan Enpeming CLASS leading|ball struck him in the eye, Score|Kubek and Jerry Lumpe. Dou oe ‘ H Faatigs Guasal Wawa fae ee eee Eleven suffered an ankle sprain early in|by Gil McDougald and Mantle and] ‘There will be new champions in N L Standings . sin Wi be tas hak te A dprrel Grits thcing Gr oe ere with = spring training, A 20-game-winner|4 -Single by Berra. accounted thf very division -of the 25th annual gan Recreation Association Class| winner et 0 tlin 1956, the youtg Cleveland fast-| 5 gy Alo bier ewe Beeveshin rae Suenameat Be see). SE, te 97 Qala district tourney tonight and Tues-|" oy baller gave up two runs a Damen save en when the titles-are decided this|New York {0::°11/.' 3 3 12 2 io iss |day. The winner of the four-team - ea hits in a three-inning stint as the/‘Sl¥, wilt-pitching-it across-in thelweekend at: Huron Bow, ee pemersos + dled IS laistrict earns a trip to the state hii is Peta’ hope in the kc the|Indians bowed to San Francisco . That ‘became a certainty Satur-|Toronte | 272.0721..2.. aM i $3 184 295 |finals at Ypsilanti. tourney thet J day” and Sunday as all the’ 1957|\lesso 7 Si 147 187 . Hamtramck High School b Ee Mantle .Stroked two doubles, scoring twice and accounting for one run driven in. Berra slashed a double, added a single and picked bed two RBIs, * * * Cleveland's Indians also got a _|boost when ace pitcher Herb Score i|finally made his exhibition debut. Sidelined last year when a batted. nings, and Chieago’s White Sox clubbed Kansas City 8-2. Chicago's out, x *« * A crowd of 7,872 watched the Yankee sluggers go to work early. Berra doubled Cubs and Baltimore were rainediry. Yankee Bombers Find Range highlighting a five run eighth, brought the Cardinals their victo- Veteran Hal Jeffcoat was the victim. of the Redbird blasting. New Champs Assured win City Keg Tourney | champs handed Local 653 No. 1 a 67-51 trouncing. He made 21 points on Saturday to pace a 69-58 win for the Bruins inthe finale. The injory-riddied Montreal Ca- ~~ several years and were =e West Side titlists. over Local 596 No, 1. ae * * * The ‘653’' No. 1 team chalked up a 62-47 victory over the ‘653"’ No. 2 unit Saturday behind Chuck Franklin’: 8 19 points. In yesterday’s other game, Local 653-No. 2 was eliminated by Local 596. No. 1 as Jim Pembroke tallied 19. points to lead a 97-52 win. Three Pontiac basketball cham- pions—Lakeside Royals in Class A, Griff’s Grill in Class B and Au- burn 5 & 10 in Class D—will rep- resent this city in state recreation cage tournaments starting tonight. City Champs in Tourneys collide Tuesday at 8 for district Griff's enters the Class B Inter- City tournament at Detroit’s Lasky Recreation Center, 13200 Fenelon, - Score picked up = loss Po Mics Bide nn = ena ~Reseville, Mt. |gym. ' : + an Cleveland as the Gjants stayed on|inated from contention. - _,| Montreat ime Yorn Clemens and the Royals com- {field with Auburn meeting High- along the-Grapetratt |top-of the-standings-with a 51-ree-}~-Twin-Pines-of Pontiac= ei Toronig 2. - | prise the “A” field. at POH. The |land_Park at-8:30- . Cactus trail, St. Louis de-jord, Johnny Antonelli started for|Huron’ Bowl No. 3 as the team SATURDAY’S RESULTS Royals will meet are slated Thursday night at 7:30. " feated Cincinati 6-3; Los Angeles Mew York 4 Boston 0 Playoffs in all classes are 1 vleg sackonad smal a Pew dbing —homeri- leader with a 3072 total although soos § Chicago 1 TUESDAY ‘GAMES » Toronto at: Detroit + S 0 DVN Le PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 i = a ee ee Ee ee ~ Texas Areage - Gun - Toting Woman Pitches Tent, Prepares to Fight for Land WALLER, Tex. i? — Mrs. Irene Cliett, 59, remained in her tent today with a loaded shotgun, ready to shoo away anyone who tried to move her from 350 acres. She has said she will not give up the 350 acres which the federa) court in Houstoh has ruled does not belong to her. * * * She pitched a tent and moved _ in some household goods. Some ~ neighbors have said they would Tight beside her. - Mrs, Cliett said she provided for an old family friend, George Scott, from 1920 until he died in 1933. She said Scott was just a ~. family friend but the courts have ruled he was a partner and his heirs, who-sued, were entitled to half of the 73 acres Mrs. Cliett owned. * * * Mrs, Cliett disagreed. Mrs. Kathryn Matthews, chief clerk of the U.S. marshal's office, said the marshal could take no action until yequested to do so om the court, ’ Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (% — This is an ABC on jobless pay — unemploy-| ment compensation (UC) — and how it started and where it is. There'll be plenty of talk about it in “the next few weeks. UC is not a dole. The federal government puts no money into it. Neither do the states. The money ployers, based. on their payrolls, and-in a few states a tax on em- ployes too. * * * The money goes into a fund ad- ministered by the federal govern- ment which invests it in interest- bearing bonds. Each state has its own account in this fund and draws from it as it needs to. The fund now has about 842 bil- cession years — more money is taken out than is put in. In the 1954 recession year the fund col-| lected $1,136,000, and put out just over two billion dollars. NOW OVER $1 BILLION In the present recession, with} unemployment climbing, the fund ment forces a_ state to. exhai its part of the fund, the govern- ment can lend it money. unemployed. Over three million Cockroaches One Full Year Gucrantee Gro- Re- No From Houses, Apartments, cery Stores and Restaurants. main out only one hour. signs used. Rox Ex one 1014 Pontiac St. Bk. Bidg. FE 4-9462 || jare drawing UC. But many work- ers have used up already all the 'UC payments for which they were eligible and now are entitled to jnothing. No HELP TO SOME About 43 milion workers are leovered by UC, But millions of working people are not. And,- if fithey lose their jobs, these people cannot turn to UC for help. For example: excluded are farm comes entirely from a tax on em-' lion dollars. In bad years — re-| has put out over a billion dollars}. since September. When ei the home. workers, self-employed, domestics and émployes of nonprofit organ-| Tzations. : a * * * The UC system was created by Congress in 1935 as part of the Seeial Security program, with the understanding all states would take part in it. All now do. But éach state is allowed to make its own laws for handling UC. “Therefore, there’s a wide varia- tion among, states on how much a jobless man can get and for how long. minimum of $3 a week in Missis- sippi to a maximum of $41 in Wyoming and $45 in Alaska, The average UC payment is $30 a week. A few states give additional amiounts té jobless men with de- pendents. Benefit payments range from a : [ABCs on Jobless Pay: Where It Stands Currently The length of time a jobless man can draw UC varies too, Thirty-one states have a maxi- mum of 26 weeks, Pennsylvania is the highest with 30. Florida has 16 weeks. Organized labor some members of Congress call for 39 weeks for all ‘states, Jinxed Home iof Detroiters Finally Struck DETROIT (# — Michael Payne, 63, and his wife Evelyn, 60, don’t have to wait any longer. they feared for many years would |happen has happened. Sn ee The Paynes live on a jog in a ae street. Between their house nd the street is an mpty - lot. Four years ago, a car ran across the lot and hung itself on a fence. Then a car tipped over and landed four feet from the lhouse. A year ago, a car rammed jinto the Payne garage. Saturday night, a car_smashed x “I thought it was the ura Ce jexploding,"’ Payne said. Right now there are 5,200,000) No one was injured. No qekeu! were issued. The driver of the car said she swerved to avoid an oncoming truck. The Paynes are tleaning up. , Company Tools Used cracked the safe of the Southern| Refrigeration Corp. here used the! company’s own tools to do the job. What - iment. ROANOKE, Va. (?—Thieves who) However, they didn’t take the tools) away with them. \t Dies as Bus, Car Collide in California SAN DIEGO, Calif. w» —~ A bus and a car collided in a_ rain storm a few miles north of San Diego yesterday, throwing the bus to the edge of a 40-foot embank- .* * * The bus’ 30 passengers escaped while the vehicle teetered on the edge of the embankment. * * * On person riding in the car was killed and four. others were 1n- jured in the céllision on Highway 101 north of Solana Beach. Two of the injured were aboard the bus Dead is Stanley B, Rossi, 31, Long Beach, Calif. * Ohic Air Squadron Has Outclassed Itself COLUMBUS,: Ohio W—The 166th fighter squadron will not join other INSTRUCTIONS: Each word scramble as few as xe ef # @ & @ WHAT’S MY ana sible to guess pos doneoace rd appears under arrow, reading | RAISE . is related to Lee @# “ - ooooo * on owen WY Nn =. 5 LITRE 6 TITWIRE 7 LEYWOL 8 STORO 2 3-/7 | : Seturdey's. answer: nolve, fuNny, comeDy, © Whats My Line. Ine. chAtter. quiz, mAster, uNiquvue, tam Herb Shriner. al Ohio Air National Guard units for Hollywood Headlines - training at Phelps Collins Field near Alpena, Mich., next summer Squadron leaders say the Alpena) base's runway is not long enough for the unit's new F84F jets. The 166th will re main at its home sta- tion,’ Lockbourne Air Force Base near Columbus. ‘Name King Vidor Director: Caen: of oars: of ‘Joseph and Brethren’ and|that tax for various reasons. Now .jpay. And the percentage varies jdid not say for how long. He may. By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS {King Vidor will also direct “The | HOLLYWOOD (INS) — The top,Number One” for George Sidney's of the morning to you, and I:havejown company with a Columbia re- | —BRING the Fie | —FOR LAFFS OF A LIFETIME —EVERY WONDERFUL MOMENT —EXCITING PLEASURE —IN GLORIOUS. COLOR The tax.on an employer started| out to be 3 per cent on the first} $3,000 of each employe’s pay. But} the government lets states lower average of about 1.2 per cent on the first $3,000 of payroll, though in some states and on some ih- dustries the tax going into the States’ funds ranges as high as ‘2.7 ‘per cent. Another three tenths of 1 per cent goes to the federal govern- ment to cover the cost of admin- istering the fund. es ees ee So a jobless man who may | have earned $5,000 or more year does not get UC which is percentage of $5,000 or more, His UC will be ay nd * 35 average choice steers iee-1178 lb, steers) D ‘47 ost Reg Pan .. 30 28.00-29.50: load average choice 955 1b. "37,7 Scovill Mf _. 22 yearlings steers included at 29.50: aver- "104 Seab Al RR . 22 age to high choice loads absent; tn- 43.4 Sears Roeb .. 27 dividual average choice steers up to) :. 315 ‘gnen oll ’ 68 30.00: standard steers 21.60-24.50; few) @ . $1 Sinclatt 50 ldads good. yearlings steers at 25.00-25.50) & . 04 ay “1 carried ‘end standard; utility steers/ E: =3* Bouthorn Co... 38 19.50-21.50: boad choice around 900 Ib./! 3% sou Ry 04s. heifers. 27.00: few lots low choice with, =’ 40.1 Sperry Rad... 18. end good at 26.09-26.40; utility and stend- “412 gta o1 Can). 48 ard hetfers 19-00-34 00: atility cows 107 gtd Ol Ind.. 39. 16 50-13.00 imcluded at. 18.00 was toad | $74 gta Of NJ Pa 1390 Ib. Holstein cows; canners‘and_ cut- - O14 Stevens J P.. 20 ters 13.50-16.50; utility bulls 20.00-22.00; - 683 stud Pack .. 3. cutter bulls 17.00-20.00. . a gun Ol... 65 Vealers—Salable 35, Not enough to test “""" 963 guther Pap 24 prices, unchanged. Compared last week: 482 Swift & Co....34. Trade active 1.00-2.00 higher, full ad- | 384 syl El Pd.... 35 vance on poet grade and down; most 5 2.7 Texas Co . 61 choice and prime veslers . 98.00-33 50. }Goodrich ..... ei Tex G Bul.... 17 individual prime — up to 34.00; “ 12 ‘homp 46 standard and good 22.00-28.00; cull and ang Timk R Bear. 35 utility 11.00-22.00. Pet 3 es a = Sheep—Salable 200. Hundred and forty- - 14 . six head choice to mostly prime shorn “106.4 haga oe : oo lambs number 1 pelts 97 Ib. 24.00, these a Un Carbide ** 94 steady with late decline. ot ake. 7 Compared last week: Trade active, 32.2 Unit Air Lin. 26.5 early trade steady, late trade 50 cents i - Unit -Alrer... 87 ++ lower; slaughter sheep steady; most 33 Unit Prat 1 4rs choice and prime wooled lambs under|Interiak Ir 21. : 105 Ib. sold early in week 24.00-25.00;/Int Bus. Mach 37 28 none avatlable late to test trade; good|Int Hary .. 33 lambs 22.00-24.00; most choice and prime shorn lambs 95-103 Ib. mostly number 1 24.75-25.00 early; t €.00-1 12.00. mostly No. 1 209 Ibs. weights 21.50, 2 end 3 quoted 19.50-20.25: mixed grades 160- 180 Ibs. quoted 19.25-20.00: sows 300-600 Ibs. mixed grades 17.00-19.00. Com om er last week barrows and gilts most on weights over 260 Ibs.; sows under 400 Ibs. steady; over 400 Ibs. 25 cents higher. Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, March 14. (AP) — Prices paid per pound for No. 1 quality live poultry up to 10 a.m. Heavy type hens 26-28. a few 30: light ytpe 15-16: heavy broilers or fry- ers (3-4 Ibs.) whites 24-26. barred rocks 15-16: heavy broilers or Sree (3-4 Ibs.) whites 24-26, barred rocks 26-27; capon- ettes (over § Ibs.) 30-32. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT. March 14 (AP) — Eges, fob. Detroit. cases included ou grade A extra large 85; large) 48',-53 wid ave SO: — 464)- 50. wtd eve. 46%: grade: large 60. Browns. grade A large 4. w coecke 32. Total weekly receipts of government araded exas March 8-14 were 7.700 cases. Commerrtallv graded — whites, grade A large 46'%%-50's; medium 46-46. Browns grade A large 43‘«-49; me- dium 45-46. « Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN Ch ::: [ering sales of locally grown ‘pro- Allied irs vs: be q ¢ P| f aceaceesecsces 4 Ly ners and cutters 13.50-16.50; few lots C pelts 23.00-24.80; few loads prime number/int Tel & Te Hogs—Salable 100. Butchers and sows jets No.2 snd 3180-340) - tb. butchers quoted 20.75-21.00; small lot cents higher, instances 50 cents higher Go an SeUre.28_' 3 BW Wiedsieee bere nais Hie e rene Ineo. tae - Philip Mor . Phill Pet ‘ Pillsby Mills . Plate uo eene stg El Wilson & Co .. Woolworth .... Young S&aW .. ee -snsre-aeth Mee Oates W STOCKHOLM _ As no one can i exblore Venice without drifting up § the Grand Canal in a gondola, no one can view all the charms of 4 Stockholm without a boat ride ‘through Lake Malar. The Swedish apital, like Venice, is a city of lands,-bridges and witerways, a ity of ancient stones, sea gulls and fish nets. Tourists launch for, BES EE board a motor tour of this watery The fare is a 1760, Among apartments open to the metropolis at the Royal Gardens: matter of a few cents for an afternoon’ s cruise un- der the bridges and around the islands of the archipelago. * CL? wis Across the rushing channel from the boat pier stands Royal Palace, a massive s with hundreds of rooms, completed in the lavish. royal ig the Hall of State, which con- tains the king's silver throne. The king occupies this throne once each year when he addresses the opening session of parliament. This cere- mony, an affair of great pomp and tradition, takes aan on Janu- ary 11. NO ROYAL GUARD Meath another ritual, the front of the palace, Unlike the sol- diers in other kingdoms of Europe, the Swedish guards wear field in- stead of dress uniforms and carry pistols instead of swords, The king himself, by the way, moves about Stockholm without any guard what- soever. The late Gustav V was once asked where his were. “Look around you,” he said, en million of them.” public ct a WutDtsxeys True Life uate: “STOCKS (C.J. Nephier Co.) Pigures after decimal penne are eighths High Low Noon Allen Elec. & Equip. Co. Pat) 3 Baldwin Rubber Co. -... * 130 140 | Ross ar Co. °* 25.2 26.0 L. Ot] & Chem. Co * 13 #14 Howell Elec. Mo. Co °* 84 61 Peninsular ypay Pd. Co. * 94 97 The Prophet . © FS 16 Rudy Manufert., Co. . * 79 84k Toledo Edison Co. 13:3) 13:3 133 Wayne Ccrew ~*°* 127 2.0 Pd. *No sale; bid and Soxee. News in Brief Wallace Trego, of 1927 Grand- view Rd., Orion Township, report- ed to Oakland County Sheriff's |Deputies Saturday that someone had broken into his garage and stolen three auto batteries worth an estimated $30. A two-car collision on Elizabeth |; Lake Rd. near Lockhaven Rd., Waterford Township, Saturday, slightly injured Shirley Bitler, 8, daughter of Mrs. Maxine Bitler, 28, of 7145 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford Township. West Side Van & Storage. FE CHICAGO, March 1} (AP) — Opening grain prices: Wheat— May ..ceo» ea, Mar. oe. 2.96% Sulv © .....-. 62%. May wos 222% Sep. ....00 64% July coors 104% Rre— {@ep. ...coe-. 1.97% Mar. ....c000 1.36% ‘Dee. ..°..... 2.03 May ........ 133% Corn— July pee sees 1.20%