) PONTIAC, DHICHIGAN “TUESDAY. APRIL sated 1957 —32 PAGES DPR th int \ meatal fie \» RE i Vi UU U. of M. Regents Brablec (D) .......35,117 Murphy (D) .......36,334 Connmable (R) ..... 36,515 Watt (R) ........ 36,708 Supt. of Public Instruction | Supreme Court (Full Term) Childs ........ Kavanagh ......... 26, 693 Selth cs sxs . .26,814 O’Hara ........... 22,5 Supreme Court = (Vacancy) Moynihan ......... 20, 642. Voekler cua was view 22,982 * BULLETIN | DETROIT (AP)—Ten persons, including Two real estate men, a truck- ing executive and a for- ° mer Teamster Union official, were named in fedeyal indictments to- ton, 2,937. day/concerning govern- | * * & int- insured Gl homes. % Pontiac Output Second Highest First Quarter Totals in Autos Exceeded Only by 1955 Period output of 114,566 cars was exceeded | only by the record-breaking first quarter of 1955. Preliminary. figures released today revealed that Pontiac was | the only division to top its 1956 first-quarter output.-It built 114,- 406 cars in the latter period. . Total General Motors U. Ma _|——~ } | Constables were: Pontiac's January:through- a Gily Air Air Strip S. ‘pas: Republicans Out by Big Margin After 6 Years Most Smashing Defeat Handed Willis LeFurgy in Justice Race By REBA HEINTZELMAN ef our Waterford Bureau After six years, Water- ferd Township’s ment returned to the Demo- cratic fold in Monday's election. Every Republican ‘elective office of the town- ship went to Democrats by decisive margins. govern- — n Den xk k'* * * Dems Take Over Waterford | ; Pa. , Ni Elected — City Police Win Civil Service by Big Margin Trial Board Law. ELMER R. JOHNSON New Waterford Supervisor Acting Supervisor Louis* G. Barry was defeated by’ ‘Elmer R. Johnsor by 326 votes. Barry’s total was |2. 514 and Johnson, 2,890. oe one defeated Republis Bartlett (D) ....... 36,176. Harden (R) . ai, 346, State Board of Edecativn | Magnusson (D) ..... 35,301, Dean (R) ......... 37, 351, | State Board of Agriculture Stevens (D) ....... 35,702 Vanderploeg (D) .. 34,495 Merriman (R) ...... 37,127 Mueller (R) ....... 36,648 Highway Commissioner Mackie (D) ........ 37,106 Foster (R) ........ 37,629 Peace ‘Willis D. LeF urgy who bowed to Democrat Patrick K. Daly (by 998 votes, 3,189 to 2,191. Acting elerk Ray Harrington | lost to Democrat James E. See Ags gation tte GT Top Party | terlin, 2,329 te 3,052. The cles- est race was for treasurer, where | Dorethy Olson defeated incum- bent treasurer, Dorcas Tibbals, | _|toads, the Republican Party yes-| majorities. 2,812 to 2,584, Both incumbent Republican trus- lear Willard V. Johnson and Os-) car Loomis, Additional Election ~ Returns, Page 23. and more | De mocrats Charles Pappas Richard P. Lamberton, by jthan 500 votes. | Johnson received 2.390; Loomis | |2,421; Pappas 2,969; and Lamber- ton, 2,93 ‘Mortenson, as Highway Commis- sioner, 2.848 to 2,484. Board of Review post went to on M. Hepler, with 2.842 votes’ 2,485 for Newton S. Dempsey. The four winning Democratic John 8, Cole- man, 2,897; Albert Dryden, 2,826; Jess W. McCrary, 2,812; and Wellington A. Stoltenberg, 2,778. Defeated were: Everett Draker’ with 2,436; Lloyd E. i 2,494; Tom Peterson with 2,5 . Of the some 20,000 ee vot-| ers, 5,7% went to the polls in spite ‘of ican weet weather. © First-quarter production of 1957. Pontiacs was the second highest, in the local division's history ac-| cording to General Manager S. E Knudsen, Gets U.S. Boost Federal Agency Allots. | $68,000 for Building at Local Field © * senger auto production for the first quarter of 1957 was 831,811 com- pared to 966,995 for the same peri- od of 1956. Figures for this year's first quar- ter gave Chevrolet a total output of 403,953; Oldsmobile, 130,376; | Buick, 140,232; and Cadillac, 42,- 684, ‘Big Three’ Top ‘56 3-Month Car Output The automakers’ “Big Three” turned out a total of 1,746,686 cars in 1957's first quarter, against, 1,662,213 for the first three months of 1956. Ford built 544,831 autos, com-| pared to 441,168 in .the corres- ponding 1956 period. Chrysler’ s! car production was 370,044, against 254,050 in 1956’s first period. (See GM output in story above). The Ford Division led produc-'e tion with 428,937 cars during the! 1957 quarter, comparéd to 362,- 457 in the like 1956 period, Chev. rolet produced 403,953 in the first quarter, compared to 468,430, while Plymouth was third with 190,142) against rasan for the same period'Gates was sworn ‘in ‘Monday as Jast er Pontiac Municipal Airport's fu- ‘ture plang for an administration ‘building were bolstered yesterday iwhen the U.S. Commerce- ‘Dept. ‘allocated $68,000 in federal aid for the local field, to be made avail- able July 1. Homer D. Hoskins, ‘manager of the airport, said a portion of the money. would be for acquiring land for the administration . building ‘area, but that the building would ‘come at a later date.” He said the remaining money, which is expected to be matched 25 per cent by both the state and -city, would go toward two taxi strips and 314 miles of fenc- ing needed as a safety precau- tion, There are also gee for three “stub’’ taxi strips fa connect with new T-hangars at the field. One of the larger strips will be east-wes} runway. The second will lead ftom the northeast corner of the field to the runway. Sworn In as Navy Head. \ WASHINGTON @ + Thomas S. were defeated by _ | gin, \tiac, | Unofficial final county tallies had ‘proposition — concerning Ask 200 to F di Unis ‘C. Bush defeated Floyd N. 'the seven Republican candidates solve the board and place police sewer bonds—that was re-| oun Ing ‘for partisan state offices leading under a three-man civil service ‘The three Democratic in the central part of the landing) area to serve the new 4,000-foot; GOP in County abandonment of the 25- der civil service. “brother”’ . j undes: the act since 1939. | Of the city’s 44 precints, only fiv | ‘recorded majority. votes agains Holds Balance of Power the change. All five, Precincts 2, Despite Dem Inroads,'3. 34. 37 and 38, are located in. ‘Commissioner Roy V. Cooley's Dis. itrict 1. | but by Slim Margin ; , But a few of the other 39 pre- Despite continued Democratic in-) einets returned overwhelming jterday was able to maintain its, balance of power in Oakland ‘County — but only by a slim mar- jcampaign of the Pontiac Police Of- where approximately 7,600 appointed seven-man trial board. voters gave Democrats winning) * * * ‘margins of about 2,000 votes each. Association members Final rolares Greta all ef the | |Police Chief Herbert W. | county's 257 precincts showed the | 74,700 voters casting ballots were split almost evenly between the | two parties. Straley charges. The -vote will immediately dis- by margins as low as 181 votes commission. It will control the ap- over the nearest Democratic rival. pointment, employment and AH seven candidates were victorious, but as firemen. ‘the victory was one of the closest City Attorney William = A. \in recent years. _ Ewart said the present Firemen’s * * * | Civil) Service Commission—con- On the non-partisan ballot, how-| sisting of Stuart Austin, Gerald jéver, candidates nominated by the’ Guinan, and Theodore Carlson— Democrats topped with’ consider- lable ease the Republican nominees. | nominees iene on to victory in a state. | will serve both forces. Ada R. Evans, the vote city clerk, would remain Commission Thursday night. a* * * av ; Commissioners in December de- Ice-Lock Near Broken waterways except Lake Superior bers, since they appointed them. and the Soo Locks are free of ice.; It was on April ‘7, 1939, ibe opened Tuesday and Superior about April 10, Lake civil service request for firemen. ‘That vote + was 3.990 t to 2,667. Cited by Boys’ Group i “OUTST. ~ Receiving @ trophy as‘outstanding member of the Pontiac: hab last night was Tommy Lufkin, 16, a St. ego High. School sophomore, Executive director Wik: [secretary of. the ~ ow liam V. s-made the award. (See stpry on page 2... NN? 3,357-1,318 ‘Vote OK Dissolves Controversial Pontiac policemen have won their right to come un-) der the State Civil Service| By an unofficial vote of | 3,357 to 1,318, Pontiac vot-| ‘ers yesterday approved the year-old Police Trial Board - and placed 114 officers un- Thus the policemen join their firemen who have been | ficers Assn. to be free from the | This was with no thanks to Pon-| | authority of the City Commission 790 new classrooms in the next two years. charged) pro-| partisarr Republican motion of all policemen, as well said unoffi- jcial until] canvassed by the City | DETROIT & — U. S. mete-!nied an association request: to put jorologist W. W. Oak said that all the vote to the people. They stated |the Great Lakes and connecting| they would back trial board mem-| that He said he expected the locks to Pontiac voters approved’ a similar one-mill tax increase which would ty the Post Office tomorrow after- Win i in State Contests eee mm ei Mackie (left), of Flint, THE VICTORS — John C. State Highway Commissioner in yesterday's election, New Superin- was elected ' tendent of Public Instruction is Dr. Lynn M. Bartlett i. assis- tant Ti element of Grosse Pointe Se ES re —— = ————— Schools May Protest Outcome ‘Detroiters Trounce 3-Mill Tax Increase DETROIT (INS)—A proposal to provide a three-mill tax increase for new schools over a two-year period ‘was soundly trounced by Detroit voters in . the S| | The favorable vote climaxed a Spring election. | Proposition D would have produced $33 million for | Opponents had argued a bond issue could finance ‘the new classroomis. _ A mixup by election workers was discounted as having exercised undue influence over the contributed to the defeat. Some poll workers reportedly jtrial board, and that it lacked rules, ‘instructed lof protedure and discipline of of-| ificers. Board members denied the! voters that only property owners could vote on the school tax issue. ¢——— Actually, it was another owne Stricted to prop erty wners.| More than 200 Pentiac business School Superintendent Dr. Sam- and professional men and women uel M. Brownell, who backed the paye been invited to attend the |proposal, said he would decide to- po-ma} organization meeting to- | day whether to call a special meet-| porrow of the Greater Downtown ing of the board of education to pontiac Assn. The meeting is ‘consider the election outcome. | scheduled pai 12:45 p.m. in the * * * icommission chambers of the City The village of Roseville, near Hall, Mount Clemens, today is Ma- | The association has been formed) comb County's newest and third [for the purpose of promoting. the! largest city. Voters in Erin Town- (welfare of the downtown area. ship, which includes the village, | tae cadre met we Be an at (City Post Office Alters Schedule Roseville. The new city will be- come a home rule city of eight square miles and 39,000 residents | upon adoption of a charter, on Wednesdays One highlight of Macomb voting If you remember a package that) was the rejection of a proposed .hould have been mailed don’t rush. have helped finance a $12 million road-building program the Pontiac! 7. * * |Post Office will close its public. | Detroit voters repudiated, the windows at noon. This policy will {stand of Mayor Albert E. Cobo be followed each Wednesday as an _and Common Council yesterday by economy measure, Acting Post- | passing two proposals benefiting master Leslie H. Dean says. firemen. The proposals, both of The new hours apply to both the which were opposed by the mayor Main Post Office and the Huron (Continued « on Page 2, Col. Dd Gardens Branch. boon, it won't be open. Starting tomorrow, ot Of in "Spring Balloting Road, School Posts Lost by Republicans Gov. Williams’ Candidates . Also Take All 3 Seats on State Supreme Court DETROIT (# — Michigan Democrats scored a clean ‘sweep in Monday's. spring election, raising party in- ifluence in the state government to an all-time high. x « x. They captured all 10 offices at stake, including | those of state highway commissioner and state superin- itendent of public instruction, the last two Republican- ‘held posts in the executive branch. : This meant 100 per cent Democratic control of the eight-man State Administrative Board for the first time since its creation in 1921. And in other partisan contests, the Democrats won two more places on University of Michigan Board of Regents, two more on the State Board of Agriculture and one place on the three-member State Board of Edu- cation, which had been solid Republican. To top off the pefformance, the Democratic nom- inees also took all three seats at stake in non-partisan balloting for the Grete Supe — By taking everything in sight, the Democrats: won a four-four division with Republicans on the Board of Regents, and seized four to two control of the Board of Agriculture, Michigan we sag University governing ea ot . . Gov. Williams, who lft sparked the campaign, saw Fair Tonight; Cloudy, in the outcome a “mandate” of the people for a modern| Warmer Tomorrow highway system and great- . er educational opportuni-| The outlook for Pontiae and ties, and a “rebuke to vicinity is fair, with a low of 33 ‘lack of courage and vision” in these fields. Here was the latest unofficial ltabulation of yesterday's vote: to 37, | Tomorrow will be partly cloudy | and somewhat warmer, high 46 to D. | An extended weather forecast issued yesterday by the VU. S. Weather Bureau predicted showers® for tomorrow night with—a low jnear 35. For state highway commis- sioner: Returns from 5,062 of 5,181 precincts, Democrat John C. Mackie 577,669, Republican George M. Foster 521,473. For state superintendent of pub-| Downtown Pontiac's lowest tem- lic instruction: Returns from 5,- | perature preceding 8 a.m, was 34. 064 precincts, Democrat Lynn M. | |The mercury read = at 1 p.m. |Bartlett 567,248, Republican a _- L. Harden 499,621. Sta Heavy Snow Hits Japan For State Board of aeration: Returns from 5,064 precincts, Dem- ocrat Chris Magnusson 550,226, Re-|, ASAHIGAWA, Japan @®—A 16- publican George W. Dean 504,962. inch snow, the worst April storm For U. of M. regents: Two to in Japan in 68 years, has stalled ibe elected: returns from 5,066| ‘transportation and isolated rural lprecincts, Democrats’ ‘Irene E. jareas in central Hokkaido, Ja- | pan’ 8 a — ‘Murphy 575,986 and Carl Brablec 550,528; Republicans Alfred F. Con-! How State Voted® nable 499,211 and Mrs, Ethel J. (5064 pets. out ef 5,181) —— Watt 492,469. For state board of agriculture: Two to be elected. Returns from) 5,064 precincts, Democrats G. Don! Stevens 561,921 and Don Vander- ploeg 540,120; Republicans Fred- lerick H. Mueller 499,356 and Frank | Merriman 503)374. : ; U. of M. Regents + & * On the non-partisan ballot for Murphy (D) ..... ‘state Supreme Court; three to be elected, Returns from 5,062 pre- ‘cincts, Atty. Gen, Thomas M. Kavanagh 461,919, Justice Talbot Smith* 461,942, Justice John D. \Voelker 440,460, Michael D. O'Hara’ 413,482, Robert E. Childs 270, 736 | and Joseph A. Moynihan 345,236. | Kavanagh and Smith were elect- ' (Continued on Page 25, Col. 5) Brablec (D) .... 550,528 Connable (R) ... 499,211 Watt. (R) ....... 492,469 Supt. of Public Instruction Bartlett (D) .... 567,248 Harden (R) ..... 499,621 Last Precinct Reports at 10:30 P.M. Machines Speed The speed of voting machines | - Precinct 44 workers last night was proved beyond doubt in yes-| beat the rest of the pack in when terday’s election as Pontiac’s 44 they submitted returns at 8:54. precincts submitted total returns) Last ta come in was precinct 2 to the city clerk in one hour and: at 10:38. 44 minutes. | In the case of paper ballots, which were used for the last time ‘into the office so fast that clerks, rted that they _ | general concen is that the) : = ee sede year spo, final a ie . ~ ee are ee anal ts the paw Pret Mackie (D) ..... 577,669 urns sometimes weren't in until) — « | | late the following day. | ae aan : Foster (R) seeree 521,473 a Spaulding, representat ve; “This was certainly a marvel- the Automatic Voti Su Court ” ng Machine preme co oe ey ee ee > In n Today’ s Pr Tess ss for reported a ‘‘very easy day’’ ” (Full Term) Ryate exeleimed. _ 7 —— dad difficulties were experienced), , Mrs, Evans also expressed or, aia owes" game 220 precincts workers| Smith ...... seas 461,942 lure with a turnout of 7,596 voters,| Comties ............c0s0008- 24 |handling .88 machines. Spaulding Kavanagh ceveeee 461,919 which was well above her estimate | County News ¢............. 23 |was tr the city to supervise the 0’H, 413.482 of 6000. “This was a ‘wonderful paitorials ..*......... occ [Use Of the machines. / ms Aincieinsl es os turnout considering the weather M rkets sg ; “Wook ot Childs .......... 270,736 that greeted voters, and the type of “™ aaae ek “= With ix eaten election,” she said. a | Sports eescgesceseesees %, tt 1 ™ city con cece” . . Supreme Court % PCT. OF TOTAL Mt Theaters .......... se pesens +10 Iiproved the p hs atthe met > | (Vacancy) “Still, the total vote was only 20) TV & Radio Programs .... 31 |chines, They had, previously agreed Voekler : 40,4 per cent of the city’s 37,600 regis-| Wilson, Earl .............- 31 |to rent them ona one-yeat trial) ape 4 tered voters, ae: | name ‘Moynihan ..1.... 3 $246 i — reve: wea Ml thru 13 At one time returns were coming) State Board of Education Magnusson (D) ... 550,226 ‘Dean (R) .. 504,962 State Board of Agriculture ove ee Returns | Mrs. Evans said one reason for Stevens (D) . . 561,921 ithe speedy returns was that there Vanderploeg (D) . iwere few absentee ballots which, Merriman (R) . ‘must be recorded in the machines jafter polls close at 8 p.m. It was the third time Pontiac voters used the machines, The . 503,374 Mueller (R) ..... 499,356 Highway Commissioner h bof 515, $00 540,120 | POMC a ee i Tie Pate Wr, ep eT ene eR ee yn, Sak! Coane ee te oa Sere ath the month-old gasol the union, said: the|States — with ardent help from wage under the old contract ranged | housewives. . : from $2.57 to. $2.66 an hour. The| The FTC investigation is not in om [ : union wants a 25-cent hourly wage|aimed at the basic legality of sav- . increase. ings stamps. : The ing complaints are ur DETROIT — Negotiations in} ine strike in! *. southeast Michigan have been ad- Bee 4 ‘ as 4 Fobce | * st \ SA es kK THOMAS M. KAVANAGH Supreme Court Justice TALBOT SMITH Supreme Court Justice FTC Threatens Action on Trading Stamp Abuse WASHINGTON ®—-The Federal/area the exclusive right to offer a Trade Commission may crack certain company’s stamps, Z * * * Whether any stamp company has discriminated,. in- setting a price on its stamps, between one store and another. The use of the word “free” in. describing premiums reportedly has been questioned by some of- They would mean new head- ficialg on grounds that the house- aches to a booming 600-million- wife actually pays for the stamps dollar business already fighting in added cost of merchandise. restrictive legislation in several : Complaints lations are awaiting action. by the five-man commission which po- lices business practices, officials said, * *£ «© _ state ballot was as follows: U. of M. Regents Murphy (D) ........4,56 Brablec (D) ........4,532 Watt (R) ..........2,709 Conmable (R) .....-.2,583 Supt. of Public Instruction Bartlett (D) ........4,575 Harden (R) ........2,587 State Board of Education Magnusson (D) .... .4,501 Dean (R) os. 2... 2,627 Killed in Crash Falls at Virginia Base; 6 Die in Air Mishap in Tennessee derstood to be directed at specific practices of some of the estimated 400° companies which sell stamps to storekeepers and, after house- wives have pasted them in little books, provide merchandise “pre- miums” in exchange. poems | E * * FTC THREATENS—17 ' CHINCOTEAGUE, Va. ® — A “\sters Union President Dave Beck, already ousted as vice president of the AFL-CIO, may be having. trouble with some top officials. of| his own union, largest union slipped back - into Washington over the weekend and one source in a position to know said flatly that Beck ‘ conferred secretly yesterday with his 13-man general executive board. ‘proached on the matter. | of the giant 1,500,000-member in- FTC spokesmen have not di- miums has. been misleading. Whether “unfair methods vulged the charges, but the com- mission's bureaus of investigation and litigation are known to have been exploring such questions as Whether the advertising of pre- of competition’ have been used — Navy twin-engine propeller bomb- er plunged to earth shortly after taking off from the Chincoteague Naval Air Station today, killing 11 members of its crew. Identification was withheld pend- ing notification of kin, A Navy spokesman said the Neptune long - range bomber such as giving one store in an Southwest Civic Unit crashed in an open field. near Atlantic, -Va., on the Eastern Shore just south of the Maryland line, The spokesman said personnel at the base reported hearing an) Reorganizing Tonight . The Southwest Civie Association of Pontiac, an organization char- tered more than three years ago, tonight will hold a reorganizational State Board of Agriculture ee aes me Menibe hye esse Mueller (R) ........2,579 Highway Commissioner Mackie (D) ........4,667 Foster (R) .........2,589 Supreme Court (Full Term) . meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Cooley Building, 159 Wesson St. “The association has still main- tained its membership of 236," said President Morton Harshaw, “and we are ready to go again after more than a year of inactivity.” In the past, the association has set up scholarships for youngsters, jas worked on projects in conjunc- sponsored recreation programs and tion with the board of education and the department of parks and exp! and seeing a ball of fire a mifute after the bomber was airborne. STATIONED THERE The land-based plane was sta- tioned at Chincoteague, And in Tennessee, investigators from nearby Sewart Air Force Base are pouring over scattered wreckage of a Memphis-bound B25 from Langley Field, Va., which crashed near this middle Tennes- see town, late yesterday. Six per- sons were killed. Four survived. Late last night Sewart prob- ers said there was no clue as to why the revamped World War Iy bomber suddenly went out of control and plunged from about 8,000 feet. _The Air Force listed the dead as Col. Theodore R. Wright Jr., 36, Hampton, Va., chief of the Air Lift Division in the Tactical Air Com- Treasurer Won't Honor Teamster Funds - WASHINGTON (INS) — Team- The fiery boss of the nation’s The board consists of Beck, the 11 Teamster vice presidents — including dames Hoffa and Frank Brewster, both under in- dictment on charges connected with the Senate investigation of the union — and secretary. treasurer John English. | English has announced that he wil] not honor vouchers drawn, against funds of the international union to finance the million-dol- lar public relations campaign which Beck said he will launch to tell the union side of the story of alleged racketeering brought out by a Senate committee. | GROWS ANGRY The oval-faced Teamsters boss grew @ when informed that English had balked at the scheme. Beck insisted the plan had been approved by the executive board in a telephone poll, but English said the board had not consented and that he was not even ap- A meeting of the general board thas presumably would result in a showdown on whether money ternational union would be used for such a public relations cam- paign. John L, McClellan (D-Ark.) said ges’ AC PRESS, ‘- Vouchers Drawn on) High School sophomore, was named 500. SDAY, TUE ce eS APRIL 2, eo oi IRENE E, MURPHY CARL BRABLEC University of Michigan University of Michigan Regent Regent Pontiac Boys’ Club Names Tommy Lutkin for Honors Tommy Lufkin, St. Frederick |Coulacos, before an audience of * Other awards went to Roger Tate, 10, library work; John Cos- grove, 9, junior games room; Lenny Sharp, print shop; Don Wood, wood shop. ; ‘Also receiving awards were Gor- die Clayton, Chuck Mcllireth, Dave Marino, Terry Houston, Danny Kimmel, . National Boys’ Club week cur- rently is being marked in Pon- tiae by the local club: Also scheduled for this week is the, outstanding member of the Pontiac Boys’ Club for the past year at a Father and Son banquet held last night. Sixteen - year - old Tommy was praised for his outstanding attitude by executive director William V. Upper Peninsula Adopts Motto to Attract Business MARQUETTE w — The U per Peninsula Development Bureau's new industrial divi- sion has adopted as a summer promotion theme: ‘“‘new fron- tier for industria} expansion.” The themé will be carried out at the first annual indus- trial development conference to be held at Houghton April test, on Wednesday evening, and a carnival Friday night. Boy, 2, Falls From Car as Door Opens in Turn S| x C = : ae é \ ‘ The Day in Birmingham \Charles ‘Delbridge lowed je Wins Contest for Commission . | er tion on Adams road just north of | the |honors by editors of the school rene Murphy, another Birmingham s woman who received 626 on the Democratic ticket. Locally the city had: just ome |: Local non-partisan candidates for commissioner are Florence H. Wil- lett with 2552; William E. Roberts, 2512 and F. William Hutchinson with 2455. Members of the Library Board will be Dorothy W. Rodger: with 2,225 and Harry Allen with 2,200. ; * * * E Harlan who “made the | a able to the district at a special ce, According to the designer, Harlan ing including furnishing al] the landscaping, a contest for play- ground development and providing pee in the architectural field. an appropriate mural for the main lobby. An as yet uncompleted school this week won its third important * * * After more than ten years as rector of St. James Episcopal Church here the Rev. Harold Towne has announced his resigna- tion. He has accepted a call from the Community Episcopal Church, Fox Chapel, -in the Pittsburgh, Ike's Vote Led House Members by Seven Million WASHINGTON « — President Eisenhower ran nearly seven mil- lion votes ahead of his party's srt Mets Eee 9 Pennsylvania diocese, Since he came toe St. James in December 1946 the parish has 'sentatives last November. They in |turn trailed Democratic opponents ‘by 1,134,000. the annual Miss Boys’ Club con-| (er, polled 2,958,000 more votes ithan Adlai E. Stevenson, Demo- icratic presidential nominee, A two-year-old boy was injured did Eisenhower trail the combined yesterday when he fell out of a car his mother was driving when ning from the state-at-large, not|Practices in the School” may do so seen remarkable growth and with 3,600 members is among the largest in the Michigan diocese, A fire during a reconstruction program several years ago resulted in the erection of a completely new church, parish house, and office wing. St. James also is the leader of two area missions established during Towne’s pastorate. x & * Birmingham residents interested in joining the Michigan State |University Classes, ‘‘Guidance candidates for the House of Repre- GOP House candidates, howev- These statistics were made pub- lic today in an official compila- tion by the clerk of the House. In only one state, North Dakota, ‘Republican House vote. However, ‘the two House nominees were run- 18-19 and at the Milwaukee convention of the National Jun- ior Chamber of Commerce, at which the bureau will be an today that Walter Reuther and some other labor leaders used Teamster President Dave Btck’s “purchasing agent’’ to buy house- hold goods, but not with union funds. * * *, The chairman of the Senate La- bor Rackets Committee said he saw “no significance’ in the evi- dence that Reuther and three other top union officials made purchas- es througt Nathan W. Shefferman, bough diapers, nylons and golf balls for Beck. McClellan explained: ‘There is nothing in the files at present to for out of any union funds.” indicate these purchases were paid Cats No. 1 Pets Kavanagh .. shee esee .2,62 gy earner for new officers Bb +o +251 GATS Be cometnd at OND moet cK spn eceedsdgb ae . Cade oe Goat 1 M2 Bloomfield Hills Gets (Vacancy) All Unopposed Slate Voekler Vivosse «vou tagseee BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Unop- Moynihan ..........1,437)posed non-partisan candidates re- Civil Service’ sulted as follows in yesterday's ere PU ieacea¢ssnscnsecdgthO structor-pilot of the flight; Lt.. Col. Alan D. Moore, 47, ‘Hampton, Va., Col, Wright's assis- tant and pilot of the plane; Lt. Col. Jacob R. Hamilton, 38, War- wick, Va., copilot; Lt. Col, Harlan C, Buttrili, 42, Hampton, Va.; Maj. John W. Browe, 41, Hampton, Va.; and A.1.C. Ernest Chandler, 22, election: Commissioners, John §. Bugas 242, Dominick Vettraino 222, and Lyman J. Craig 208; Justice of the Peace Alva J. Richardson mand Doctrine Directorate and pation compared to 22 million dogs. 228; Homer J, Humphrey 229, Ne Canvass Votes Tonight . |constable. ‘Hampton, Va., crew chief. at Waterford Meeting At tonight’s regular Waterford Township Board meeting, at 7:30 p.m, members will officially can- vass yesterday's votes and declare the winners, _ Several real.estate plats will be up for disctission regarding storm sewers and water supply systems. . The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report .- PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly tloudy with occasional rain this mern- ing, clearing this afternoon, high 43 te 43. Fair cloudy tenight, lew 33 te 33. Partly : tomorrow, high 46 to . North- erly winds at 15 to 2% miles an hour, fer temeorrew night, increasing » low mear 5, | 2 Today in Pontiac ] Lowest température preceding 8 a.m. j ee JAN B. VANDERPLOEG State Board of Agriculture At 6 a.m.: Wind. velocity 25 mp.h, Dorection: Northeast Sun sets Tuesday at 6:59 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 6:12 am. Moon sets Tuesday at 9:37 pm Moon rises Wednesday at 7.49 a.m. Monday tn Pontiac Highest temperature : , Lowest temperature ....... Mean temperature Weather: Rain, (33-inch. ease oF bs eeeee .. 4 : Aluminum Used in rn DON STEVENS State Board of Agriculture Unique Ad One Year Ago in Po Highest temperature Lowest temperature . Mean tempefature G Weather: in, #@5-inch. * seeeeneeers Highest and Lowest “Temperatures This 74 th 1946 —— flash through newspaper presses tions of the Milwaukee Sentinel. 17 in 1872 35 17 re ‘Monday's Temperature Chart a Alpen: 44 2% Marquette 42 A Baltimore 53. 48 Memphis 68 52) ‘42 18 Miami 15 65) $3 ai Minneapolia $2.28 ’ neapolis ; ss 46 36 N. Orleans 83 63) ‘wo regular pages, ready $6 58 New York 56 48) \ i. 60 “38 Omaha 80 39) 4a 7 Phoenix 69 50; 83 Pittsburgh 57 49! Sere. oS a neisco i { ; $1.35 88. Marie 43 20 Project. 37 18 Traverse C.- 42 28! : ey ba Washi 54° 82) | 47 Seattle 55 43) +4 3 Tampe - me 60 = Paper to Have Foil Page MILWAUKEE \ — Eighty-five miles of aluminum fo# will and become part of today’s edi- The Sentinel reports it will be the first time “pages” of aluminum foil — the kind used in homes for wrapping and cooking — have been made a part of & newspaper. The foil, manufactured into special rolls ‘for the project, will run through the fast presses along with the regular newsprint. . However the foil will not be inked or printed. It.will lie between to be pulled out and used in the * The pages on eithér side of the foil ‘page’ will carry advertis- ing of an aluminum company, ALCOA, sponsors of the unusual home. * ; F _ The company manufactured the 48| special rolls of foil. and developed cores needed to be sure the foil would feed through the ) presses, which turn dut up to 45,600 papers # : b. ¥ r oy but Can Carry Many Diseases EAST LANSING (INS) — Move over Rover, your old enemy the cat appears to be the number one household pet in the United States these days. Dr. James H. Steele of the U. S. Public Health Service disclosed in an address at Michigan State Uni- versity that there are an estimat- ed list of 26 million pet cats in the) There are 19 million pet birds. 34th annual Post-Graduate Con- cautioned that cas can carry a number of diseases communica- ble to man. He pointed out that felines can carry rabies, ringworm, tapeworm, cat scratch fever and other dis- Elvis Topic of Debate eases and declared the public should strive to maintain a healthy pet industry. Cats account for almost five per ieent of the rabies reported in the U. S., Dr. Steele asserted, and are ferocious animals when _ rabid. They will attack man and other animals, He added that ringworm is very prevalent among cats, with kit- tens and young children especial- ly susceptible to the fungus infec- tion. Social Security ‘Old’ security system was in Germany 75 years ago. Its purpose at first was to protect persons with low incomes. At present about 80 per cent of West Germans pay social-insurance fees. Try Vinegar on Oranges TAIPEI—Oranges are eaten with vinegar and salt on Formosa. Oné as large as a grapefruit and its fine flavor is enhanced by.a dash of vinegar and_a sprinkling of salt. th ATLANTA (® — Georgia Tech's devating team will take the af- firmative in ‘its annual debate here Thursday with Harvard. The subject: ‘“Resolved, that Elvis Presley deserves an athletic scholarship” durance. «@ entos Petroleos Fiscales (YPF) to carry out the Government's $250,- || Buenos’ Aires. the labor relations counselor who/| exhibitor. In addition, the “New Frontier” motto will be featured on 30,000 table place cards to be placed in Upper Peninsula Ho- tels, motels and restau- Gerald 0. Dagenais, man- at a recent bureau mting ager of the bureau's resort and travel division, reported at a recent bureau meeting that the Upper Peninsula had enjoyed ‘‘the greatest winter sports season in its history,” crediting a concentrated pro- motion campaign with building Ave. onto Nelson St. left turn. Young Mrs. Sally Gregory, 30, of 106 | she turned left from Glenwood from separate districts, and nei-| ther received as many votes as 'the President. | The President's to Glenwood Ave., told police her your wns’ Hated | Aa hl gael son, John Jr., fell out of the car about 57 per cent of the 62,027,040 and struck his head on the pave-|pallots cast for president. Steven-. Ge ment when the door suddenly} son polled 25,758,765 votes. The re- administrators, flew open as she was making @ mainder went to minority party and teachers. ° Gregory was candidates. | taken to Pontiac General Hospital. polled 28,697,321 votes, almost 49 ‘per cent. Democrats polled 29,831,- 608 for a net gain of two seats. They retained contro] of the House 234-201. of Killed in Car Crash Near Imlay City Republican House candidates, ‘at the first session tomorrow, Classes are from 7 to 10 p.m. in \the High School. Brought here by ‘request classes will carry credit for three term hours for graduate or undergraduate work. It is de- signed to give practical help to councilors Institute Holds Photo Exhibition on Conservation “This is the American Earth’ }s the theme of the exhibition which opened yesterday at the Cranbrook Institute of Science and continues daily through April 22, 2 to 3 p.m. return to areas possessing win- ter sports facilities and ac- comodations." Plans No Big Shakeup FLINT W — State Highway Commissoner-elect John C, Mackie said today he will make “no, drastic shakeups’’ among the high- way department's 3,300 employes when he takes office July 1. Westport, Eire, can't afford to have a fire just now. Its Fire Bri- gade resigned because of criticism and the town of 20,000 is without | protection, & JOHN D. VOEKLER Supreme Court Justice * * * Edward John Sikorski, 55, of) The exhibition consists of 3 | 3 .more 15250 Carlisle St., Detroit, was than 100 - pata photographs of the prob- killed in an auto accident last jems and accomplishments of the — race ae "tans sd fy|United States Department of Con- cco eer County = : : . ounty|servation. It has been organized Sheriff W. J. Porter, Sikorski was py photographer Ansel Adams and. driving alone when his car ap- writer-researcher Nancy Newhall, |parently left the road and hit 4 who presents a running commen- tree. itary. The body is at the Lester Smith Funeral Home in Imlay City at) present, * * * The Smithsonian Institution-. in |Washington, D.C., is circulating ithe exhibitions, which includes the Shoppers enter a new store in works of photographers Edward Kingston, England, through a Weston, Margaret Bourke-White, “curtain” of warm air which Werner Bischof, Henri Cartier- ikeeps out dust as well as cold.|Bresson and Ansel Adams. Dr. Steele, in a talk before the — ference for Veterinarians at MSU | | MEMO TO CAESAR Jesus Enters . (Another in a Lenten Series) Jerusalem in Triumph They stripped palm branches from the trees along the way, MUNICH—A compulsory social-) s introduced | native species of orange grows) because of his shifty hips and en- Argentina -has formed Yacimi-| . Pontius Pilate to Tiberius Caesar. August Caesar, Greeting: As usual, my wife Claudia was right in her information. Jesus has entered Jerusalem.*And the motley rabble gave him a triumphal ovation. Junius has given me the details as follows. ee The Nazarene and his followers passed through Jericho and came to a place called the Mount of Olives close to Bethpage and Bethany. There Jesus stopped. He sent two of his disciples into the village to get a colt that had never before been ridden. They found the animal just where he said they would and as they started to untie it the owner asked why they were doing so. * * * They replied, as they had been told to, ‘‘Because the Lord hath | need of him.” The man made no more objection and the disciples | led the beast up to the Mount of Olives. Word had gone ahead to Jerusalem that the great preacher was | coming. . | As Jesus began to descend the hill astride the colt a hug | throng of people swarmed out to meet him. Junius says, and strewed them on the road like a royal carpet of green. ‘ Then the crowd began to chant, ‘Blessed be the king that cometh in the name of the Lord.” Some of the more sober-minded citizens attracted to the scene by the clamor cautioned Jesus that he should rebuke his disciples and the crowd for calling him a king, since it was obviously treason- ous, * * * : But, Junius, reports, Jesus simply answered — as in a voice of destiny — that if the people were quiet the stones along the road would cry out. — ae And the triumphal procession continued. toward Jerusalem. When the walls and towers came in view, the Nazarene began to weep. He prophesied that. the city would one day: be leveled to the ground with not one stone left upon another. This, his enemies immediately seized upoh to spread a story that the Nazarene was entering the city to become king and destroy it. a \ Bear with me a little, and I will tell you what I make of it... , | 1 000,000 oil developmerit projéct in S" ; 5 Bae CHARLES PAPPAS } Trustee ; : - Democrats Sweep Top Offices in Waterford Te ee ee re Mr. and-Mrs. James Spence (center couple) and Mr. and Mrs, Robert Glenn shared tables at the gathering of Pontiac City Club members Saturday Photographed as they arrived were Mr. and Mrs, Palmer ae of an Fontiac Press Photos night. The group later attinted a abet9ea of “My Fair tod es Waiting for their table when the photographer arrived were Mr. and J'rs. Louis Cole Jr. of Old Orchard drive. Mrs. Harold B. Euler of Ottawa drive came in right behind them. Shower Given for Bride-Elect Joann Whisnant Joann Whisnant was the honoree at a miscellaneous shower given) by Mrs. Harry Morris of Gerdon avenue Sunday afternoon. Joann is. the bride-elect of David Stewart.' * * * The couple plans a May 18 wed- ding. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Whis- nant of Gerdon avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Clinton R.. Stewart of| Davison are parents of the couple. Attending were Mrs. Whisnant, Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Carl Buckner, Mrs, Albert Campbell, Mrs. John Tuson, Mrs, Leonard Grairtt, Mrs. Gabriel Blasky, Mrs. Roy Hurd, Virginia Hard, Mrs. Sam Johnson and Mrs. Bill Morris. Also invited were Mrs. Winford| Bottom, Mrs. Chuck Buell, Mrs. Claude Lessel, Mrs. David Cobb, Mrs. John Bottom, Mrs. Ted Buck- ner and Mrs. William Phillips. * * * Completing the guest list were Mrs. William Weishaor, Bobbie Christian, Mrs. Harold Johnson and Dianne Madsen. Ladies Aid Holds Luncheon Meeting Twenty members were present for the luncheon méeting of the Ladies Aid of St. John Lutheran Church held in the church parlors. Hostesses were Mrs. John Eng- lund, Mrs, Oscar Bloomquist and Mrs. ‘Ruth Olson. Mrs. Kenneth Anderson was a guest at the Thursday meeting. New Cottons May Stay Stiff Without Starch DALLAS (®— Changing the chemical] element of fibers in cotton materials makes pos- sible shirts that remain stiff without starch, says George Pfeiffenberger of Lubbock, ex- ecutive vice president of the Plains Cotton Growers. He told the Texas Cotton Ginners Assn. that it also has made possible dresses that cannot be stained by coffee, tea or ink and slacks that will not wrinkle. - He said the new. seocenses. ‘| qualities whi last as if _— i ce "My Fair Lady’ Receives Flip-Tops Applause All Over Nation Dress Up By JOAN HANAUER | NEW YORK (INS)—The na- | tional company of “My Fair Lady’ has proved that the rest of the nation is every bit as willing to part with its | money as the New York The- ater-going crowd, * * * The Julie Andrews and Rex Harrison roles are being played on the road by Anne Rogers and Brian Aherne, but the script, songs and standing- room-only audiences remain the same. Take Memphis, where the show is due to open Sept. 30. The only bailyhoo has been 4 newspaper announcement, arid already the happy manage- ment has received $50,000 in checks by way of mail order sales. MANY SUBSCRIBERS “My Fair Lady” is due in Los Angeles on April 27 for 10 weeks, followed by six weeks in San Francisco, in each case under the auspices of the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera Company. In both West Coast cities the production will be part of the light opera season and tickets are being sold on a subscription basis. * * * The Light Opera Company has guaranteed the national company one million dollars, ‘and subscriptions are currently well over that figure. It is the: Light Opera Company's largest subscription in its his- tory, Only a few of the cheaper seats remain on sale, The national company of ““My Fair Lady" opened its country- wide tour on March 18 in Rochester, N.Y, It was sold out by mail order before the theater box office had a chance to open its money window. That means $92,600 worth of advance sale checks. Detroit was the second stop, for a three-week run. The first night in the Motor City was one of the most exclusive New York opening where just _ anybody could get in, BUYS OUT HOUSE The _ultra-exclusive Detroit Athletic Club bought out, the house, and strict instructions aa tnt t - were a. nust,/ were left that tickets were not <|' The Detroit ticket situation was no easier that that on Broadway—the house was al- most nine-tenths sold out by mail order before tickets went on sale at the box office. Detroit also marked what the producers of “My Fair Lady” believe to be the largest _ single mail order in the his- tory of the theater. A single check arrived for $13,200 to buy 3,000 balcony seats, spread over 10 performances, for fac- ulty, alumni and students of New Frocks NEW YORK (INS) — Girls as well as cigarettes will be package | “flip-top’’ style this summer, | Designer Hannah Troy has added) |“‘flip-tops’’ to some of her summer frocks—and the result is one of those firm, round, fully packed sil- houettes. Mrs. Troy adds little black *“flip-tops” to cool summer dresses. The tops are actually tiny fake jacket fronts, cut te Lawrence Institute of Tech- just under the bust and curving nology. up in the center to meet shallow x * V necklines, Just for the record, the New York company of “‘My Fair Lady”’ is still playing to stand- ing room only. Not a single seat. or standing room space has gone unsold since the show opened March 15, 1956. The show is completely sold out through September, con- tinues to have a_ $2,500,000 advance sale, and tickets are currently being mailed out for next November and December. The tops are left loose at bottom but attached at shoulder and seams so that you appear to be wearing a jacket but actually have the coolness of a dress alone. The ‘‘flip-tops” make the bust look fuller, and the midriff and waistline appear cigarette - slim. Like real cigarette ‘flip - top” boxes, these tops never leave the package but go up and down with) each breath. One black “flip-top” was shown on a black dress of silk tweed, Fashion Hint | accented by white lace cap | sleeves. That one inch too short hemline’ Another dress added a top of. ean easily date you so why not black silk-and-cotton to a random add a tunic petticoat skirt when! print of black-and-white cotton. now you are able to face the dras- ‘Both. dresses accented their slim’ tic change to a longer hemline? | midriffs with belts at the natural Skirts for spring are all at Jeast| waistline, about 4 inches under the one inch longer. “‘flip-tops.”” Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Oldberg of Birmingham announce the engagement of their daughter, «Karin, and Peter Bernard ’ Shaw, son of | Mr. and Mrs. John P. Shaw of Enfield, Conn. A June wedding is planned. tly enough—evening clothes algo ¥ | KARIN OLDBERG. |Mrs. Harry S. Pearce on Garland \Norma Kirchmeyer, Mrs. |sociation’s spring meeting in Fern- ‘dale April 11, with Mrs, Clarence April 6 by the library and liter- ‘Refuge Church, Orchard Lake. VFW Auxiliary Conducts Installation of New Slate ‘stalled as president of the Ladies Members of Pontiac City Club and their wives headed for the where everything looked so ® TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1957 opt Mrs. T. J. Whitfield (left) helps Mr. and Mrs. Norman Pattison to some of the food. buffet table » good. Here Women’s Section PAGES 11-13 PEO Holds China-Style Gathering Members of Chapter AW of PEO Sisterhood were hostesses to Chap- ter CL at a Chinese dinner meeting Monday evening in Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building. * * * Guests were seated at tables, decorated in the Chinese theme with ming trees, miniature um- brellas, Chinese fans and | sticks. * * * Committee members in charge of arrangements included Mrs. Ashton Emery, Marian Emery and Mrs, George Reed. The next .meet- ing will be held at the home of avenue. Cards Received at OES Meeting Members receiving proficiency cards at the Monday meeting of the Areme Chapter, OES, at Roose-' velt Temple, include Mrs. Clarence Rush, Mrs. John Flock, Mrs, Wil- ford Robinson, Mrs, Russell Bunker, Mrs. James Reinert, Mrs. Foster Creech and Mrs. Byron Rogers. * * * Mrs. Harry Eaton and Mrs. Wil- liam Cox were selected as co- editors for the monthly paper. Mrs. Eugene Perkio, worthy matron, announced the Oakland County As- Crawley taking reservations. ‘Meeting Conducted by Catholic Women Mrs. Arthur Crawford reported on the NCCW convention held last week in Detroit when the League of Catholic Women met in the League Building Monday evening. ‘The membership drive now in pro- igress will close with the annual May Breakfast May 26. A meeting to promote the sale: of decent literature will be held ature committee, and the Arch- diocese State League meeting will be held April 25 at Our Lady of e Personal N ews of Interest Betsy Comps, daughter of Mr., birth of a daughter, jand Mrs. Theodore Comps of Pamela Marie, March 29, at St. Joseph Myrtle avenue, spent the week-| Mercy Hospital, end in South Bend, Ind., where . she attended the annual Pan- M Grandparents of the infant are r. and Mrs. Sam Ranzilla of American Conference at Notre : SOE Dame University. Betsy is a stu- Voorheis road and Mr. and Mrs. dent at Nazareth College in Naza- ewe Spadafore of Hickory Grove a , * * *& - * * Mr. and Mrs. John Sandberg Harold R. Titus, son of Mr. and of Roseville are the proud parents Mrs. H. R. Titus of Nelson street, lof a daughter, Kristen Anne, born jis spending his spring vacation in’ March 30 in St. John Hospital, |Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He is a petroit. jjunior at Michigan State Univer-| Grandparents of the infant are sity. Mr, and Mrs, Albert Mineweaser * * lof Osceola Mills, Pa., and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. 8. W. Barnes \|Mrs. Harvey Sandberg of Spokane of Chippewa road have jVilla. turned to their home jihawhng a two-week vacation in Miami and Deerfield Beach, Fia. Patricia Murphy Oa the tetas trip they stopped! Lists Attendants in Nashville, Tenn., where they)! visited relatives for several] days. Patricia) Ann Murphy, _ bride- * * * elect of Cliff McDermott, an-| Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jacobson "0unced her bridal attendants at a. entertained at a buffet supper in/Tecent shower given by Mrs. Har- their home on Silver Circle drive ld L. Welch of Green Lake. Miss Sunday, Honored were bride-elect Murphy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sheila Loper and her fiance, Robert Murphy of Elizabeth Lake, Robert Jacobson, son of the hosts. |Will marry Cliff McDermott, son of, Guests included Mr. and Mrs. the William McDermotts of Clarks- Matthew Loper, Mr. and Mrs.\(on, in a May 2 ceremony.’ Gregory Raft, Mr. and Mrs, Wil-| Bridal attendants include Linda liam Jacobson and son, Danny,|Murphy, Mrs. Robert Lewis, Mrs. Thomas Jacobson, Raymond Bank ‘Russell Curl, Sharon McDermott, and Robert Gustavson. Evelyn Cook and Patricia McGinty, * * * Mrs. Harold See, was cohostess at Al $.0. Dale Morrill, son the shower attended by 28 guests, ot hiaien een me en Marto! Health Film of Cheltingham drive, has been : spending @ leave from Sheppard ito Be Seen Tonight “Someone Who Cares"’ is the title of the mental! health film Tex., with his parents, Dale will leave Saturday even- being ‘shown tonight at 8:15 in the Pontiac State Hospital ing for New’ York and assignment auditorium. in France. Prior to hig departure Mr. and Mrs. Morrill are enter- taining at an open house, « Plans to assist with Mental ** *« * Health Week will be outlined Susan Lovell, daughter of Mr,| .>y President Don Harrower, and the counselor of the group, ‘and Mrs. Robert Lovell of Bloom- Ted Panaretos, will narrate field Villge, has been-elected presi- Dad Plans \Grand Trip — to Sweden Taking 68 Al Salute to the Way of Life By JOHN BARROW INS Staff Writer That big trip Dad has been plan- ning for a lifetime is finally taking place, but for Ragnar Benson it's more than a sentimental journey, * * * It's a salute to the American way-of life, and a $50,000 “thank you" for everything Benson con- aes valuable, In appreciation of the people whe helped him rise as a Swe- dish immigrant from a $6-a-week bricklayer’s apprentice te head ot an $80 million firm, Benson is packing his family and co-work- ers, 68 strong, aboard a Scandi- navian Airlines plane for a char- tered flight to Sweden, When the 57-year-old Benson takes off from Chicago April 14, 23 of the passengers. will be chil- dren—six of them, his — dren, S * * * . The 20-day junket makes its first Swedish stop in Malmo, 75 miles from Benson's hometown of Alm- hult—the place where 47 years ago his dream of America began, THREEFOLD STRUGGLE The fourth oldest of 10 children, Benson was only 12 and spoke only |Swedish when he crossed the At- lantic to make his own home, * * * Parents facing today’s problems of making their way can appre- fitting Into America, succeeding in business and raising a family. Elsa, a 32-year-old son, six grandchildren and two dozen kin- folk, Benson’s ~“overdeveloped paternalism” extends te his co- workers. He is taking 33 of them to Sweden. While Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago praises Benson's unique trip as something that ‘should pro- mote goodwill between the United States and Scandinavian coun tries,” Benson himself says: “For many years it has been my dream that some day I would be able to show my gratitude to the people who were so kind to me. The time has come." Flexibility Is Key to Good Looks as Years Pass Your concept of your own good looks should adjust with the passing years. What was a very acceptable standard of beauty for you when you were 20 is not the best stand- ard for the thirties. Each period offers its own good looks, its own handsome way of dressing, its own charm. Difficulty enters in only when ithe design for the twenties is | Superimposed on the thirties. The color you wore as a girl may not be becoming to you in the |mature years. Why worry? There iare other and newer colors that are every bit as flattering. Perhaps you regret the loss of color in your hair. Don't. You can change your fashions to enhance the present color of your hair, Or you can look into the hair tint matter and pick your hair color. Just so it harmonizes with your skin, you may choosé any hair color you like. And you may change it as you do your make- up. The key to retaining good looks all your life is flexibility. Bridge Winners Told North-South winners in the Mon- day, meeting of the Pontiac Dupli- Clark and John B. Burnham Jr. East-West winners were Mr. and dent of the Student Council at| the film. Mrs. George Reutter. Centenary College for Women, Hackettstown. By virture of her office she will be a member of Phi Iota, an honorary society composed of stu- dent leaders who: meet for the discussion of campus affairs with Dr. Edward W. Seay, president of the college. * * * Mr. and Mrs, Robert J, Ran- tilla (nee Rose Marie Spadafore) of Parcells circle announce the Mrs. Hegtor McCleHan was in- Auxiliary to VFW Post 1370 in installation services held Sunday. * « & Others serving are Mrs. Edward Steadman, senior vice president; Mrs. Myra Ostrander, junior . vice president; Mrs. Kenneth Parsons, secretary; Mrs, Leo Wittkoff, treasurer, and Mrs. Otto Zander, chaplain * Mrs, Hazel Burns is, conduc. _ tress and Mrs, Mildred Kirkham, | — Mrs, Richard Lange. Mrs. Wassell, Mrs, Richard Robinsen, Mrs. Glenn Mason and Mrs. Bertram Barber are colorbearers, Also instilled were Lila Harring- ton, banner-bearer; William Vande«| car, historian; Mrs, Clarence Kit- son, pattiotie instructor, and Mrs. Richard Lange, musician. * * * ‘ _ Installing officer for the occasion| was Mrs, Clarence Kitson, assisted hy Mrs. Lange, Mrs, Hazel Burns \ and Mrs, Glenn Mason, \ Mr. and Mrs, Thomas E. Tracy of West Bloomfield Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Nancy Jane, to James H. Vhay, son of Mrs. Joan Russell of Bloomfield Hills. Cadet Vhay is stationed at Hondo Air Force Base, Hbndo,| Tex. — cate Bridge Club were Edwin | ciate Benson's threefold struggle of Now surrounded by his wife, | ie ‘hich PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL, 2 1937 ‘The only thing | you'll ike better than $ WHISKEY hte GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. naaaben net nmeenpe —— me 7 Rodin. Glowing : Deep-Tone Colors in * : Insure With Agencies: | Displaying This Emblem J. Clifford Metty Frank A. Anderson Agency Daniels Agency , Donaldson.Fuller Agency, Ine. |W, Huttenlocher Agenety Maynard Johnson Lazelle Agency . Inc. ‘ amen. Thatcher-Patterson Wernet ‘W. A. Pollock Noyee W. Strait Wilkinson Agency J. L. VanWagoner Agency, Inc. 10-Year Record Bhows Gains oll: }) pump.” J} have __|mies fal} back to the jsland of| ne Sete Foreign Aid Leaves Much Unanswered ‘By RELMAN WASHINGTON hel 10 slowly, the people there might lyears ago this envied. Amerien| have chosen. not to sas the Reds. istepped into ‘the shoes. of Atlas,|Who can say? the strong man who holds, the’ Whatever the answer, the ‘ree- world on his shoulders, ord is clear, Western Europe to- The aim was to lift the non-Com- day is in alliance against them. munist world out of reach of Rus-| The NATO nations today pay 85 sia. per cent of their defense costs. A decade has passed since this The United States and Canada began. . supply the rest. < & ot Analysts frequently cite Iran as Today, the total American out-\a nation that definitely was kept lay depends on which set of books| out of Communist hands by Amer-| worth? you examine. It is at least be-)iean aid. All that exists is the record — tween 50 and 69 billion dollars.| Korea and Formosa, each main- | and that can be interpreted ac- taining 20 army divisions, receive! cording to different lights. And the end is not in sight, President Eisenhower has asked| ll over a billion dollars a year. | Next: How the ICA Works.) f id, Even though recovering 1 more Withoist this support, it is’ ques- | tionable whether, economically. they would last long. “What's the alternative?” UW. s. ‘officials ask. “To keep that money , people and the real estate?” By no means every project has been successful. Critics — charge places. Few people any think you can buy trietids or al- Congress for $4,400,000,000 to con- Se tinue the foreign aid programs. | But today, for various reasons, WH AT'S MY LI N EZ. ‘many people are seriously ques- itioning the foreign aid program. | INSTRUCTIONS: Each word is related to my work. | scramble os few os possible to guess my line, pts iCongressmen are #etting thow-) 7s under etrew, reading downward. _ sands of letters asking, in effect,| oppee , 9 |*“What did we get for all that! 1 MAKE’, ee. © e ee eg _'money? When does this thing “ * > | stop?” NOW Is ' | * © + | | THE Time 2 | By contrast, surveys taken re- : cently by researchers at the aS FOR ALL 3 versity of {hicago showed a ma- 4 | jority of people questioned ap-| GoD MEN 4 | prove the foreign aid programs, | ; TO ins 5 pretty much as they stand. | 6 In any case; Congress is now. 1 Teel casting up a balance sheet, re-| 2 PYTE 7 | viewing the record, trying to eval-, 3 CAPSE ‘ uate the results of a spectacular) 4 LEPLS 10 years. : on 9 Let's trace the record in out-| - line. ort 10 "| First, in March 1947, Greece and doll 9 LARCE 1 = Turkey receive 400 million dollars. 10 GARMIN farmed Communists are looking: 11 POST BER I {down their throats. Yesterday's answer: Fit, molAr, drill, { * * * toolS, powder, pivol, plate. enamel, Then the Marshall Plan, In 198, ) nee ; _ tooth, Heat. ithe outlay is 5% billion, It a | sth a peak in the next year, $6,100, : 000,000. E During this period, the empha sis is on European recovery. on Marriage License | Applications the theory that “poverty breeds, | i | ign R Hagner 125 Waterly | Davi@ A. Briggs, 832 Ledyard Sharon I. Beatty. 1947 Myrtle James P Syooete 4059 Lotus Dr, Shirley A. Jenks, Clarksten David P Chariick. Milford communism,”’ the U.S, effort is Micky A. McDermott, Milford Charigtte A eener, 1700 Opdyke to reconstruct a shattered — | ildi ‘oads omy. That means rebuilding ro a Robert E. Senger, 33 soerens and communications, providing) » hs Betty J. Sherk. 100 W. Colgate ‘ ss Hubert E Carison, irmingham machinery and tools, “priming the) T'3.\°5 Bertolet. Roval Oak ~ Donald A, McNett, Keego Harbor | Margaret A Hicks, Berkley Robert J. Holley, Birmingham Donna P. Wort. Royal Oak 192 canes Joe Woods Jr 990. Fire the sky dramatical- re dois ‘ i ; Shawlene Staniey. 176 De Brownell Talks on Succession and let the Commies have the! waste’ and ihefficiency. in many) longer |’ ceonunans Claims Vice President | . for the Week! Has Power to Decide; geg Amendment Necessary wabianoron un — Atty. Gen, | This *Colati Worth 50c on Purchase of Any $2 Home lies, Did we get our money's the president is so disabled as to) Permanent Kit. gape, Yesonge eye ante _*& WITH THIS COUPON x BABY FOOD SIMILAC 9}: Liquid “ 4 o be incapable of handling the duties) of his office. Brownell said he believes to that the vice president “could not constitutionally be divested of this power without a_ constitutional) amendment.” The attorney general was be- fore a House Judiciary Commit: | tee, presenting the administra- | ‘tion's. recommendations for a | constitutional amendment deal- ing with. the question of “‘tem- porary presidency.” The administration proposes an; amendment under which, if the became unable to act. s * : ¥ . MONEY ORDERS HERE PTrti tii iii tii irri Cosmetics Drugs, Hospital. Needs, Complete Line of Toys, Sundries, Fountain Service, TV Tube Tester Available SDD Retail Package Liquor Dealer clare him disabled and: authorize the vice-president to become act- ing president for the duration of the disability. There have been moves in Con- gress to deal with the question by legislation, rather than a constitu- tional amendment. This was linked with President Eisenhower's .twe serious illness- es of recent years in remarks ut the hearing by Rep. Celler, (D- NY), the subcommittee chair- man. Celler told Brownell he feels theer is “a degree of emergency” which. should call for faster ac- ition than the long process of! amending the Constitution. * * * “T mean nothing personal," ler said. | Brownell said he “would not iagree that there is any present) emergency.” [atte to Good peel Se our were FLAVOR Process Ceil- Iceland's poptilation now is 159, | 330, | You cannot buy a Better | Tasting Canned Potato! Anthony Renne. 645 Fourth ly changes the character of the! \ | Geraldine Townsend. Detroit iAmerican programs * * * War flares in Korea, Then in) Indo-china, Meanwhile, the Reds everrun China: their ene- Todd 8. Brackett. 4905 Elizabeth Lake | Janet H Hints 100 Oliver j Walter E. Larson. Rochester Barbara A. Souie. Rochester Manely L. Morgan, Clarkston Beverly A. Green. Drayton Plains ia : ‘ EA rt omnene inning cag 79 Oakland Avenue FE 2-0189 Member of National Selected Morticians Orrin Huntoen, Jr. Formosa, Most important, 4M) gruce L Ballard. 249 Calgary atomic blant in Siberia warns that} Rachael P. Yerxa. Rochester ithe secrets of nuclear energy no) Derell T Healey, Drayton Plains * jan r jlonger belong to the United States . . lone John A. Milotte, Birmingham | aigne. i k Jean M. Stock, Birmingham c es! | Immediately, military aid ta Bd 9 A Pa tanks., — for air- allies precedence cuNns, Marsha L. Orvis, 626 Emerson planes, “hardware” (and hoped-for allies. | 1953. Soviet Russia, still warn- ing and seoffing at the U.S, pro-| | gram, suddenly steps out with one| Feo rib pugs. meade ek - jof its own, It offers both military| ee land econofic aid. The drive ap- gue Tires. ial ‘pears to be aimed primarily at) nesken Corinthia B Gray. 181 8 Bivd Ethel Y. Tavier, 0 § Johnson George Tuturea. 154 Rutgers onna M_. Cooley, Milferd George Zelong | India and the Middle East. Hester E. Gillespie, $43 N. Perry | That's the record, Was the! Ciittord Morte 4 Yen: ce Rennie, 1651 Playsted imoney well spent? Nobody will ever know whether | Western Europe would have “gone | Communist” but for American} Coral M Clark, Milford Judith A’ Mitchell, Millora Dwight W. McBride. Milford Treva E. Gerke, Walied Lake There's nothing like it to givel you a lift. Who’s at the other end of the line this time? Your kid? _ . brother, who’s doing so Well in that new out-of- .tewn job, or that swell guy you met on your vacation. The one who /was with you when yout ean We ; % Efe -Have yourself a wonderful time-— with Long Distance I ee MICHIGAN BELL 1 Ist PRIZE... 3rd PRIZE... 4th PRIZE.. landed that fighting five-pounder. Sure, they both et live halfway across the country. But tonight ot , any time Sunday a ‘three-minute call that far costs about a dollar. Isn't that a fair price for a million- dollar feeling? 1 ( - l i ‘ | } { KLEPHONE COMPANY __' | —~ 2nd PRIZE......$100 CASH The Detroit ee PHONE: In Pontiac — R. Long, FEderal 2.0921. You've seen these two “look- alike’ cartoon characters on De- troit News billboards and in De- troit News ads. Now, The News wants names for them. Here's your chance to win cash and have ” fun. 49 cash prizes (as listed below) will be given to those who send in the best names for both. Make them funny or clever, if you wish. Make them rhyme, if you want. Fro xeample, their names might be ‘’‘Nosey One and Nosey Two’ “Jack and Mack.” | Send as many names as you wish. Contest is open to everyone .ex- | cept .employees of The News, members of their families, and its advertising agency.. Use the Entry Blank in the Detroit ss —or a facsimile. é Entries must be postmarked no later than Saturday, April. 27, - 1957. One prize per family. De- cision of the judges will be final, All entries become the property of The Detroit News. Copyright, The Detroit News, 1057 ... $150 CASH Plus 45 Other Prizes: 5 Prizes of $25 EACH 10 Prizes of $10 EACH 30 Prizes of $5 EACH . $75 CASH .... $50 CASH FOR HOME DELIVERY (Outside Pontiac ~— ¥. Strassburg, FEderal 5-9698 anes Mel Ne Ras * ort RRR rH rename Wilson WwW. Bowdert Jr KEEGO HARBOR ~~ Service for Tr IF PON Aa IAC yg rast TUESDAY, APRIL. 2, nag page he Rd., who infant ‘Wilson W. Bowden Jr. who |: p.m, Wednesday with burial died at birth in St, Joseph Mercy or greg Friday, etek Margaret Anne Bowden, is sur- vived also by three sisters, Bon- nie, Sandra Lee and Kathy and Lrging-snsoesaepany mame deen all. ot home; ies: Alva R. Culver OXFORD — Service for Mrs. Alva R. (Vera Cody) Culver, 78, of 588 S. Lapeer Rd., who died Sunday in Arizona, will be held from the Flumerfelt Funeral Home on Thursday at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Lapeer, _ Bésides her husband, Mrs. Cul- on is survived by one sister, Mrs. Lea Past of Flint. Ernest J. Godfrey Ernest J. Godfrey, 61, of 721 Clara St. died yesterday at the Veterans Hospital, Dearborn fol- lowing a long illness. He was a member of the Chris- tian Temple and the American Legion, Chief Pontiac Post. « Surviving besides his wife, Irene, and mother, Mrs. Daniel J. God- frey of Pontiac are two daughters, Mrs, Twilah Wallace of Pontiac, and Mrs. Faith Hall of Garden City. Three. sisters, Mrs. Mary Turton and Mrs. Lily Reagan, both of Auburn Heights; Mrs. Evelyn Sin- dledecker of Newton Falls, Ohio; and two brothers, Murle Godfrey of. Warren Ohio, and Harry God- frey of Troy also survive. «Service will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Christian Temple with Rev. Luther Sheffield’ and Rev. Lucy Eski-Dean of Anchor Bay Bible Institute officiating. Bur- jal will be at Perry Mt. Park Cem- etery. Henry (Brody) Janczarek An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 7:30 tonight in the Pursley Funeral Home for Henry John (Brody) Janczarek, 38, of 31 Charlotte St. The Parish Rosary will be recited immediately follow- ing at 8, and at 9 p.m. the Knights of Columbus will say the Rosary. - Prayers will be offered at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the funeral home with a Military Graveside service in White Chapel, Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Janczarek was dead on arrival Sunday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, ‘George C. Johnson c MILFORD Service for ". Johnson, 68, of 3 Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “PARIS (®—Gheorghe Tatarescu, 65, twice premier of Romania, be- tween 1934 and 1937 and again in 1940, reported by Romanian emi- ere circles to have died last week in Bucharest. NEW ORLEANS t® — Robert Tallant, 47, #uthor and creator of “Mrs. Candy,” heroine of several of his novels, died yesterday. WOOSTER, Ohio “® — Manuel Claparols, 63, internationally known businessman, and art col- lector , consulting engineer and associated in many local manu- facturing companies in Madrid, 5 and Caracas, Venezuela, ed Saturday. He was born in Barcelona, Spain. ——o ‘ . PORTLAND, Maine uw — Dr. homas Tetreau, 88, who as akima (Wash.) County health officer in the early 1900s was the nation's first full-time county public healt® officer, and former Portland health officer, died yes- tprday, He was born in Franklin, ‘Milford, and one granddaughter. John Marvin John Marvin, a retired farmer, of 2200 N. Telegraph Rd. died Sunday after an illness of several lyears. He was 62." He was a member of St, Bene- dict’s Catholic Church. - The Rosary will be recited at 9 this evening in- Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Service will be at Seals Go South —Like Humans Protected Since 1911, They Always Return WASHINGTON — Fur seals of the North Pacific always winter in the south and go home for the summer. Therein lies a story tragedy, This homing instinct makes things so easy for fur- hunters that the seals would be as dead as dodos were it not for a historic: pact that has been new- ly revised. Top-hatted diplomats of ie United States, Russia, Japan, an Great Britain (representing can da) took the seals’ plight to hea in 1911, and four-power guardian- ship stopped their relentlesss slaughter, Now the four protec- tive powers have signed a new agreement. It reapportions each nation’s share of the limited an- nual harvest and provides for a broad new study of seal life fi- nanced from revenue. ; * * * Northern fur seals are known to science as Callorhinus ursinus, ‘the National Geographic Society says. These warm-blooded crea- tures have milk glands and lungs, but they are champion swimmers capable of staying at sea ail win- ter and migrating 5,000 miles. Since time unknown, the seals of their birth to breed. converge on the Pribilofs (U. S.) in the Bering Sea, Smaller populations summer = on Commander Islands (Russia) and Robben Island, Japanese- held until the end of World War = it George, z2 E. Commerce | mer, silver-brown cows, young conceived year. Each’ \waiting bull rounds up the largest possible harem: the biggest and’ \bravest may win a hundred ‘wives’ Weak males and those too young to mate gather in forlorn bands. The bulls? Harassed, beyond reason. heavy all the ‘ ithey have time neither ‘to\ feed! nor sleep. At summer's end} they are nervous wrecks, rib- leap: and combet-ecarred. Texas Vote to Decide his{iD a.2n. Walnkiey tress ‘oon home, will be held from: ‘he'dict's Church with byriat in Mt. |. Hoos stiHope Cothetery ‘Really Speedy - A Pig Can Beat a Man, to Breeding Grounds — of near- have flocked back to the isles | Most | the | Ther, as spring turns to sum-) each day brings waves of| with; Canadian porker derby in 1 Ontario. blue and Colomal yellow for the the island since the days when. the crevious| Nature's Derby Gazelle Has Endurance, but the Cheetah Wins WASHINGTON — Ever since the and after each other. The odds haven’t improved. One 1 H Nearby Areas) dawn of the human race, men and) animals have been running from of man’s finest achievements en than four minutes, an ompared to the grand champions) of track and field, Homo sapiens| ing_line. The cheetah, or hunting leop. ard, accelerates to a speed of 45 miles in two seconds — a feat that man can scareely match in his fastest racing car. And when the cheetah really goes into high gear, it proceeds lenient patroimen modern | expressways. on extreme Explorer gazelle combine with endurance. hour in the Gobi. by car for 20 minutes at an av- erage pace of 40 mph. “Then he quit because he was) so darned surprised that any ae on earth could keep up with him.’ Dr. Andrews said. reached him he was squatting flat on the sand waiting, not winded a particle.” Numerous speedsters have been, similarly clocked. black- (American champion), the range from 60 to 40 foot is running the mile in less. average | speed of about 15 miles an hour, C hardly gets away from the start-| kwe EPING DETECTION — Another step forward in td S. mili- tary defense is this new Jeep- -mounted mine detector, being checked sialist Edménd Kulanski, o Army researchers by § veloped by Southern Belle at some 70 mph — a speed that | would interest all but the most | Such sprinters as the Mongolian look at the speed Bateman, Roy) Chapman Andrews reported clock-| ing these gazelles at 60 miles an mother One was tailed’ sonally “When we! Among the top| runners are pronghorned antelope | handle -buck, -springbok, lon, wildebeest., | car. ‘penter, plasteret tun the bome’s claim to ancient vin-| Had the Knack of Making Home COLUMBUS, Ae (INS? — ple whe want to see what an a pre-Civil War southern mansion looks like might join the crowd and home of Mrs. T. D * * * This combination -artist. grand- and do-it-vourseller per- supervised the restoration of the house which is now part of the pilgrimage ta Ante Bellum ‘homes in Columbus, which runs ifrom April 2 to 7. * * * “T had worlds to do,” Carolina ‘soythern belle’ the South recalled. “The brick foundation of the house ons to be reworked—even the chimne Ws * * * Of course, Mrs. Bateman didn’t, those ehores herself—but) supe rvise sail and brnickma- | she did personally Thomson's gazelle, race horse,/son she hia ‘ed to rebuild the then| American elk, red fox, kangaroo,| crumbling manse jack rabbit, wild) ass, coyote.| * * * hartebeest. zebra, greyhound, and| A brick dated 1848 and dis- spotted hyena. Their speeds covered during the restoring backs at search head on the device can be ¢ontrolled by the driver. locates a buried mine, it automatically stops the vehicle. { Shaker-Heights, Ohio. It was de- Fort Belvoir, Va. The movable When it Sardinia Today Goes Forward utes ‘and Power Improve Malaria Under Control WASHINGTON — Occupied over) - the centuries by many nations, the island of Sarlinia has found its most recent For many years a. fever-ridden, depressed area, this rectangle of land in the Mediterranean Sea today is a focus of long-range economic projects, tourism, and a winning struggle of man cao disease. Capital and fechnetegy have moved inte Sardinia's moun- tainous southwest corner to build an project. Financed in part by a recent loan of $25,465,000 from the World Bank, two dams are under construction and a_ third is planned to gather the heavy winter flow of the Flumendosa River and its tributaries. pee Will Aid ‘thelp the U. N. Emergency sary. Agriculture; “invasions'' beneficial. | irrigation and water- “power | UNEF in Gaza To prevent’ Infiltration of Arab Refugees Over Israeli Border UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. i®— Secretary General Dag Hammar- skjold says Egypt has agreed to Force prevent Arab infiltration from the Gaza Strip into Israel, * * * Hammarskjold said he received this promise after he notified Cai- ro that the. U. N. Advisory Com- mittee on UNEF hoped Egypt would cooperate in stopping raids into Israel. The Egyptian reply said: ‘1, Egypt is making known ef- fectively to the refugees and oth- er inhabitants of the strip that it is, Egyptian policy to prevent infil- tration across the demarcation line, and this will be re-empha- sized from time to time as neces- * * The Egyptian regulations against infiltration, which include penalties; are being again put into force. The role of UNEF in assist- ing in the prevention of infiltra- tion will. be made clearly known to the population of the Gaza Strip * ony «. Egyptian authorities, iwhile. ~protested to the U.N. Mixed Armistice Commission that Israeli forces crossed the frontier south of Gaza March 31, fired on Arabs and stole 86 sheep, No casualties were reported. ; * * * But in a major indication that the danger of another Middle East ‘outbreak has abated for the pres- ‘ent, the U, S. State Department announced that it has lifted its five-month-old ban on travel by Americans to Egypt, Israel, Syria and Jordan. “iby appropriate authorities.” | mean. ere M ace Lockwood were united in marriage at the White Lake Presbyterian Chureh on March 22. The double ring ceremony was {performed by Rev. Robert Oeyen in the presence of the immedi- ate families, Margaret is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Sherston of Hartland and Kenneth is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Galea Lockwood also of Hartland, formerly of White Lake, . ' The bride were a blue suit and SHIP’ — carnations. ent enpeeranet esnnn eee SeyecHone Vacation Ideas for Busy Mom NEW YORK (INS) should have a vacation, if she never leaves home, self during her at-home “vacation” household tissue firm. * Facial tissues, for instance, | dered. , perfectly disposable. | The more liquids the drinks in hot sun weather, days. Twenty |posters in a competition in New ‘of 12 per cent from the previous | ambulances, ination’ sc ivilian defense authorities. Delhi, India. All plans for a service station on the Caribou Inn site in Clarkston: ‘ have been abandoned, and applica-| Instead of escaping southeast to tion for a hamburger stand has| ‘year's co gee land for the station. All but twe of the property Kenneth) had a corsage of pink roses and Ellen Cottréll was | the maid of Mother foo, even She can make life easier for her- by replacing many an item with disposable paper substitutes, ac- cording to the researchers for a can take ‘the place of cloth handker- chiefs, and they needn't be laun- Paper plates are good for warm weather parties and picnics since they are sturdy, easily packed and family the ‘handier paper cups become. Paper napkins for luncheon and dinner save time and laundering trouble, and they come in a wide assort- ment of colors and designs these Mexico produced an estimated 225,000 short tons of vegetable fats - six countries entered and oils during 1955, an increase easily be converted into emergency st White Lake\ Trocke of Lake | road, will make their home ‘in Saline. Barbed Wire ~~ Changed History of U.S. West LARAMIE, Wyo. (INS) -— The story of barbed wire, the spikey strands of metal that changed the American West's course of history has found an archive. The records of the Isaac L. Ell- wood Barbed Wire Mig. Co. have been given to the Western History Department of the University of Wyoming by Mrs. E. P. Eliwood of DeKalb, IU. Archivist Gene Gresley termed it one of the most important collec- tions ever received, by the school. |He added it would be hard to ex- aggerate the effect barbed wire had upon the American West and the cattle industry. Once cattlemen accepted the ‘spiked wire, there was a great rush to fence the open range. Barbed wire production jumped from five tons in 1874 to 200,000 tons in 1900, - ; The change from an open to a closed range prompted a revolu- tion in the social and economic structure of the West. Conflicts erupted between cowmen and set- ‘tlers, and the cattlemen conducted their own fencing feuds. ' The appearance of the ‘‘wire™ signaled the disappearance of the cattle kingdoms and stock farming ame the dominant occupation. sresiey said the Ellwood firm's role in the changing of the West is recorded in 125 letter file boxes, 7 letter press books, 60 ledgers and a large amount of unclassi- fied correspondence. New trackless trolleys and buses are being designed so they ean according to the Hamburg Stand to Replace Inn ing him permission to lease the As soon as Felice receives the unecessary permits, he said he plang idismantling the old landmark im- ee Rett, « ; mes eas a owners’ signatures were pro- |mediately. Even the African elephant can tage. It has 17 reems and a six-COl-'the sea, the water will be forced been filed, according to Inn owner| cured, However at the last Zon- ~*« * charge through the bush at 15-25 umned-portico in a mixture of| oathwest through the mountains Ernest Felice. ing, Board ‘of Appeals meeting, ; lat oc and sous Revival _/in tunnels and canals. It will be) * * * Milton Cooney, village attorney, According to the zoning ordi- The clumsy rhinoceros, an un | Lig aa it ce ene used to irrigate 123.500 acres of the | The historic old inn has been in| found a discrepancy in the peti een — eae mo eo ak | likely contender for a speed oe ' \Campidano of- Cagliari, a plain the jimelight for almost a year as) “ms, and they were invalidated. mon ws scaanarclat pein | title, has been clocked at 28. x * that provided wheat for ancient)4 controversial issue, as towns-| In his report, to be presented) | ants on the Cartan Inn corner, As the rhino makes fierce, un The remodeled Interior boasts Ome: The area is expected t0| people objected to the erection of/at tonight’s board meeting, Felice “ A ms Pe ; predictable charges, 28 is ao Tem AR mirrored double par. provide agricultural jobs for 17,000 g gas station on the Caribou prem- states that the Caribou Inn, in his dangerous speed. lore which reflect endioss versions IC™: and increase the income of ises. opinion, “is a fire hazard, and Félice said that the proposed ree The giraffe can travel at 28 to of two crystal chandeliers: marble the region by $30,000,000. | * * * * furthermore, cannot be operated|freshment stand, with low main- *) ye ; mantle rare tor huge oO Felice was required by law to profitably because of the tremen- tenance costs, could be a profit- 32 mph although its long neck Manties, oversized blinds for huge: CONTROL DISEASE is a speed handicap. windows: and such colors as warm. : have the signatures of 80 per cent|}dous maintenance costs required able business, and that he will nd Lt P Rhian soa Before these and other projects of abutting property ¢ owners, giv-| due to the age of the structure.’ operate it on a 24-hour basis, Not long ago. a pig dashed 199, Tose and ivory for the brary, rich equid begin, malaria had to be = a — — yards in 74 seconds to win a geld for the double parlors and| brought under contol. A scourge of] : N Patrolman Keeps Word OKLAHOMA CITY w&® — Patrol- iman Henry McMullen, |Oklahoma City efficer, retired aft- A week before his retirement, a, ‘culprit. Just an hour before he was to haul : begin his retirement, \a suspect and got the TV set back ~—— Majority By MARSHALL COMERER DALLAS, Tex. — Texans vote | in a special election today for a U. S. senator with control of the! Senate riding on the result, Seventeen Democrats and two) terim Sen. William A. Blakley (D- Tex), who was appointed Jan.. 15: by Gov. Allan Shivers to” serve system of the ‘Corporal’ rocket at the U. a nel Ordiaden Oadéd RIDING HIGH — Two students get a big lift in what GI's call ‘@ “cherry picker,” 4 huge boom which provides access to the control Missile School, Fort Bliss, Tex. -” _ one aemeer ( tor (center) stands the rocket . Republicans seek the place of in-) Sen. now The juntil a wins bane to iDanie] (D-Tex), |nor, could be elke ‘ted. 70-year-old, LONDON ‘The job of guarding 4/purgiar stole a television set from, plied by huge ee home on his beat, and he prom- caste r, for Hong Kong. The Taikoo) bears witness to the program’s ® ised the owner he would get the Dockyard and Engineering Co, of continuing effectiveness—a_ sten- showing he arrested on to, shipways Price John White, gover-ia term vigorous critic of Republican farm! per cent over 1954 and almost 6! stately dining room. Rope 13 Inches Thick UP—A wire rope feet long and 13'2 inches in diam- CG 34 years on a note of success.|eter. believed to be the largest of the is being sup-| Malarial mosquito has been almost Don-| Wiped out. Each Sardinian dwelling | its kind ever made sritish Repes of Hong Keng will use the rope to ships fie up to 4,000 gross tons The rope has a breaking strength of 760 tons Senate. Control at Stake staunch party loyalist and a lexpires in Januar}, 1959. Blakley policies. did not enter the rac e. The high man wins the election. There will be no runoff, Democrats now control the Sen- ate 49-47. If Texans elect.a Re ipublican, the GOP could, with his “|vote and that of Vice President casual interest among voters. Po- ‘litical observers predict a_ slight and a close race among five Democrats and one Republican. A total of 1,827,922 yotes were c last Rovere. The kadin?’ Candidates are: State Sen. Searcy Bracewell, 3° ‘Democrat now serving his second term as congressman-at-large. * * * James Hart, 52, Austin lawyer, ia liberal Democrat, former jus- tice of the State Supreme Court versity of Texas. a * That Hutcheson, 41, torney, Republican, * making his state Republican organization, Ralph. Yarborough, 53, Austin. attorney, liberal Democrat ©, -|staunch advocate of party loyalty, who made three, unsuccessful campaigns for the Democratic gu-. of ljabor: 7” ee ah Richard Nixon, reorganize the Senate, . | * * * The campaign generated only a, turrtout of 700,000 to 800,000 vates: a conservative Democrat from! Houston, Rep. Martin Dies, 56, Blufkin and former chancellor of the Uni-. Houston at. first bid for public office. He has the endorsement of. President Ei-. senhower and the backing of the. bernatorial nomination. He is gen- erally: regarded to.have the sup-. L —_ a yf State * Agricylture Riel! \ 1656 32, Wichita Falls, also! ‘Roman emperors sent politica enemies to Sardinia to die, disease formerly struck one o each ten inhabitants every year. * * * Since 1944, under the guidance o Rockefeller Foundation. ciled date on the wall, |when it was last insecticide. | Tourists have . discovered ‘picturesque island, and a jinvasion is under way. its growing influence is a pair of, sprayed with new ‘on the run between the Italian) ‘mainland and the island. The pres- | lent ships are simply too crowded. | Belgium's milk production in ‘1955 set a new record of 8,283,- | 200,000 pounds, an increase of 1's | per cent over 1953 output. XTRA-MILEAGE | NEW TREADS + GOODFYEAR for about ONE HALF the cost of new tires _ 6.00x16 | $25.95"_| IN SETS" } 6.70x15_—$32.95°_| IN SETS OF FOUR _ _7.10x15 | $35.95" IN SETS OF FOUR 7.60x15 $39.95" IN, SETS OF FOUR — “Pies Tax & Exchange Casing Applied to Sound Tire Bodies or to Your Own , Tires $4 Down for 4—$1.25 Weekly! Y , FREE PARKING ee: Wilt MMU UM) GOODSYEAR SERVICE .STORE You Can Cherge At, SS MSG WON at Goodyear ve 5-012 the the A sign of | inew ships to replace smaller ferries| 1 the f f j Where did you first meet your new car? Was it in an advertisement? So often the first meeting is...and how much it means to you and your family now. But it means even more to coun depend on car sales. When you buy a car, you hel tless others, whose jobs p to pay the salaries of your local dealer's salesmen. Part of your money went into their bank accounts, to their grocers, to other sup- pliers here in town. The circle goes on widening to in- clude literally thousands all over America...all kinds of people in all kinds of jobs. They buy cars, too, and millions of other items every day. Many of these sales began w ith advertising on news- paper pages like this, country-wide. So you can say, truthfully, tha t every time advertising helps to make a sale, your own paycheck and your family’s way of living are just that much more secure. hs Advertising Benefits You! uiahiiisiia cing - ‘. oe THE RONT IAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL, 2 1957. LAS VEGAS, Nev, “—Manager a slow burn this spring over in- pat Rigney has been registering/ sinuations his New Like fine whiskey?{ THE ONLY THING YOU'LL LIKE BETTER THAN 9 PM's “QUALITY Is ITS PRICE! NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP., N. Y. » BLENDED WHISKEY + 86 PROOF + G5% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS ee * vinced that the Giants will have Mueller. York Giants \can’t improve, or even hold, their isixth-place National League finish ‘of 1956, Rigney, starting his second sea-| son at the Giant helm, had little to say when Manager Bobby |Bragan of the Pittsburgh Pirates’ | asserted this spring the Giants, ‘were destined ‘to finish last. i “Bragan has his hands ful! with ~ Pirates,”’ was Rigney’s main j ‘SARASOTA, Fla, W—Ted Willi- ams of the Boston Red Sox fol- lowed up his blast at the Marine Corps, the late Sen, Robert A. Taft and “all those other phony | politicians” today with a slap at the U.S. government for its treat- ment of Joe Louis, former heavy- weight champion. * * * credit to his race and his Sountry and look at the treatment he's getting,” he said. “I think it's a shame the way he’s being hounded for the payment of ‘his back income taxes, ‘ t : * * * “He'll never be able to pay all that money he owes the govern- ment, He's stuck for life. The in- ew Ton mee by T and, there isn't a damn thing he can do about it. ; one: * * “why doesn't the government make some sort of a settlement with him? Or better yet wipe out the entire debt, If some big-shot phony politician was_in. the game predicament, they'd allow him to settle it by paying twd cents on “Here' s a guy whe has been | a terest keeps climbing every day the dollar.” rome Plans No Changes uttal, \" t & But when Rigney now guiding the- Giants on their exhibition j swing back home, saw a West) {Coast headline advising that *’The ‘Giants are doomed," he com- jmented angrily: | “That headline writer should’ drop dead, becatise we're going to) make some people eat their) words.’ The bespectacled Rigney is con- | more to offer than just heralded Willie Mays, 20-game winner Johnny Antorelli, reliable .Red Schoendienst' and consistent Don Bengals Given Respite Today After Rain-Out Monday's Game Called in 2nd With ~Detroit Ahead 1-0 LAKELAND, Fla. (® — Manager) Jack Tighe is giving the Detroit Tigers a day off from spring training games* today and the weatherman gave them most of the day off yesterday. Tigers were leading the .world champion New York Yankees 1-0 when rain ended the game mid-| way through the 2nd inning. | Duke Maas, assigned by Tighe | _«~First Quality Oviginal Equipment Quality eee MUFFLERS | fa ais enced bia Heer (6-cyl.) meron ‘54 MARKET TIRE CO. . Open 9 to 9 71 W. Geren St - FE 8-012 Turley, will meet the St. iin two games, at 5St. ‘tomorrow and at Lakeland Thurs- | to go the full nine innings for | | the Ist time this spring if pos- sible, was doing a masterful Honors for a Wings . Line fo Face Same Defense BOSTON Uf — Coach Milt;to shuffle his lines according to : dp the job I want done." ‘ Schmidt, whose Bruins are a game! rumors but naturally planned to ; ‘up on Qetroit, promised more ofjkeep his super-stars — Gordie Howe collected 44 goals, Lind- ithe same for the Red Wings’ bril-/ Howe, Ted Lindsay and Norm Ull-|say 30 and Uliman 16 dufng the ‘liant first line tonight as Boston man — together. jregular. NHL campaign, ‘sought the “‘eripple’ victory in} “1 don't care what he does with * * * itheir semifinal Stanley Cup hockey! ‘his first one. We'll keep Don Me-| But the fiercely checking’ Boston) playoffs. . iKenney, Leo Labine and Real defenders have held the feared) \Chevrefils on them. Howe to two and Lindsay and UlI-; “They've been with them all/man to one each. in the three! games to date. Beston leads the best-of-seven series, 2-1, after Sunday's 4-3 tri- ‘}umph, The Bruins can send league! champion Detroit home almost . |hopelessiy behind by winning to- night, * * * Detroit's Jim Skinner threatened, | * * * | A Red Wing triumph would knot the competition again. “We're in a good spot now, Schmidt admitted, ‘“‘but we can't! let up a bit. We've got the cushion, | but we can't afford to lose any! home games.’ Schmidt, whose team suddenly | finds itself a-surprising 7-5 favor: ite to eliminate the Wings, ed about costly mistakes and penal-| ties, Detroit's vaunted power play) and forward Fleming Mackell’s 24- hour flu. * * * * Detroit was grimly confident of making a comeback. “That Sunday game was a big, one,’ Skinner acknowledg-d. “I thought both teams played well, but both made mistakes, The dif-| MEMORIAL—First award of the Charles Irish Memorial Trophy for Boys’ Club outstanding baseball activity, was made at the club's annual Father and Son party, last night. At left (above) Irish pre- |ference was we lost. Now, we'll! sents the award to Danny Kimmel. Trophy is a memorial to the | just have to try twice as hard.’ donor's parents. ; . | The fifth game will be played)} 2 Detroit Thursday night. job with the Yankees, He faced only six batters in two innings. Tony Kubek, Yankee rookie, got | a single but he .was thrown out | | trying to steal second. The Tigers got their run in the first inning when Bill Tuttle led off with a triple and romped home on Harvey Kuenn's sacrifice fly. The Yankee victim was Bob) After the open date, the Tigers Louis Cardinals | Petersburg | s i day. | Tighe added two players and, dropped one. He said outfielder Mel) ‘Clark and pitcher Pete Wojey will, ‘be retained by the Tigers. Pite er | INSTALLED FREE z | MUFFLER _ * Tail Pipes ® Airplane Type Shock Absorbers © Starters—Generetors © Carburetors—Fuel Pumps =| Max Simmons was optioned to |Augusta of the Sally League. Wojey, a 34-year-old righthander, | spent last season with Toronto of | ‘the International League. He has not been scored on in his last) three outings with the Tigers. Clark, 30, a former Philadelphia) Phillie, is the Tiger's leading hit- ter of the exhibition season, His: average | is .429 on 28 Lis At regular or list prices or, it you preter to do your own installing, we will give you a 20% discount. HOLLERBACK 340 — 3 Heri Injunction Against Probe Is Requested NEW ORLEANS # — A request jcame up in Civil District Court jtoday for an injunction to prevent ithe Louisiana State Athletic Com- mission from making further in- [quiries into the racial background lof Ralph Dupas, New Orleans — lightweight. SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS HARDWARE 498 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-817 Promoter Heard Ragas who asked for the injunction, also re- quested that the commission be prevented from withdrawing its approval of the bout here April 8 ‘between Dupas and Vinee Marti- nez, welterweight from Paterson, N.J, . | urday ‘champion New York Giants, Oct. | shortened quoted by Crozet Duplantir, exee- leans States, as blasting S. Truman and the entire U.S. government. * * * =: oe The controversial star — reaf- firmied he had told the New Or- leans newsman he had no use for the Marine Corps, and that he jad referred to Sen. Taft as a “phony | politician.” He denied criticizing Mr. Tru. | man and the government. * ? x “Sure I said I had no use for the Marine Corps,” the 38-year-. old former Marine captain said. | “I felt that way when they called me back into the service for the second time ih 1952 and that's the way I feel now, I resented the way they singled me out because I was in the public eye, I'd have had no squawk if they had called baek | every reserve officer in the same category, *.% * | “T'll tell you why they called a: |Jot of us back. They wanted an | appropr’ jation of $450,000 from the government for airplanes and they needéd pilots to fly them, So they. recalled 1,100 pilots who hadn't’ flown planes for 11 years. “As for Taft, I used to think he | 'was a wonderful ‘man. . But I found out he was no different than’ "| the other phony politicans, j x * * | “A friend of mine, without my | knowledge, went to see him about. igetting my release, Taft told him) if it were anybody else he would) ‘help him, but he couldn't touch) i me. I was too big. I never asked | for any special treatment, but | that’s a heck of a way to! aad ate.” Spartans Drop Tilt Shortened by Rain \ WINTER PARK, Fla. (#—Mich-: igan State took a dose of April Monday—stormy weather and a 12-) 6 pasting from a _ power- -hitting | |Alabama baseball team in a rain- contest, Sophomore pitchers started for both teams. St a ors Club Pant a Boys’ Club athletes did quite; Club baseball player. Award 7 - | | Ed Murray, ace weightlifter for well by themselves as they re-} In memory of his parents. e g sca four Gd Oe 16 awards pre | Danny Kimmel, 14-year-old Lin-| the Pontiac YMCA Barbell Club,) concen awards Pre- coin Junior High School student! fini 2nd in the 132-pound class isented last night at the club'$ received the coveted award for 4t the state ‘Y’ weightlifting meet) annual -Father and Son Banquet) his stellar performances last sum- ene weekend at the Northeastern! where 500 father's and sons were) mer as a member of Boys’ Club's YMCA in Detroit, present. Class F city champions and state| Murray totaled Highlighting the awards was finalists. His ability to make the Mio ees the presentation of the first an- most of his slight stature on the snatch isd akong — or nual outstanding basepall player | ‘diamond was inspirational to both! winner with lifts nay pa aay award presented by Charles | ithe team and other, boys who} (145. 130 190). ng 9 poung Trinh te the outstanding Boys’ | watched him play. | Other "Pontia “" —| Chuck Mclireth received the’ out- a | standing athlete award. Chuck is| i | H li a 17-year-old junior at Pontiac *Ple a ae big andj ag es ave 10ns hon School. He received the| snectively in the 148-pound class. onor for his skill and attitude! yj... Copeman finished 7th in the | while playing for Boys’ Club ath- on Home Schedule letic teams, Chuck is presently yor aviation, third baseman for Pontiac High PHILADELPHIA t#—The -. Phila-: School's nine delphia Eagles’ today announced; Dave Marino was honored as their six home game 1957 National! the most improved athlete at the! Football League schedule, featur- Boys’ Club while Terry Houston. Mexican Seeking Shot at Top Featherweights : SAN FRANCISCO — Mexico ing a visit by the Detroit Lions Pontiac High School senior, was City’s skageiae Ricardo Moreno on Nov. 10 honored as the outstanding cager.| seeks top name featherweights. The Eagles will play one Sat- Terry was'a member of the Boys’ lafter pounding Italy's Gaetano An- night contest. with the Club Class D city league cham- /naloro into submission in the fifth | aon. [round last night. and one afternoon contest, | ————— ——— —~——- a SS against the Chicago Cardinals in the final game, Dec. 14, The schedule: Jet Action Wins Handicap Oct. 5 New York (N); 20. Cleveland; Nov. 10, Detolts Net | 24, Washington: Dec. 1, Pitts) NEW YORK (#—Several 3-year-/Derby - Preakness - Belmont burgh; Dec. 14, Chicago C ardinals. | Old candidates for the Kentucky /|triple crown, 2 Oe |Derby sneaked into the act at Ja-| ~) * + i. MONDAY'S FIGHTS |maica yesterday, although the! while Jet Action, the Maine | ° 3 Se NEW YORK — Willie Besmanoff, 194%, Spotlight wags to have been cen-. ‘Chance Farm 6-year-old speed Height Germany, outpointed Beb Baker. 214%. 4, >. . “0 Spee Adjustments Pitsburgh, 10 tered on the $23,100 Paumonok | |demon, was whipping eight rivals ees nxew ks ans “asoped aor none | Handicap won by Jet Action, lin the 48th running of the Pau e “Suction Lift’ : a, stopped } - = . me. cUrucn Ri —Oene Buller. 162% * x * 'monok, Clem, Double X.,.and Cutting Action jene Bu . , . : . - oes on * * Boston. stopped Frankie Ryff. 139% New Jamaica, Which traditionally Decorate were busy taking care © New, Smoother “Suction Lift’ Cutting Action rk : , : > NEW BRITAIN. Conn steve Ware, Opens the six-month New York of three other events on the pro- 8. Metchevier, dew. conan Heimes. thoroughbred season on Apriligram. All three are eligible for Eddie Demars.| Fool's day, always stresses stakes the $125,000-added Kentucky Der- ee OKE, Mass 72 tela, M tpointed Joln- ; Soctig Pees ees. epee eo for «horses eying the _Kentue ky! y y May 4, 435 pounds for the three Olympic. lifts (press 130, contenders | ‘failed to place, but gave credit-! Michigan State’s lfield had no better luck, giving up ifive runs, including two homers, lin the next three stanzas_ before /high winds and torrential rain end- led proceedings. The big Spartan blow home run by Frank Palamara in the 4th with a mate aboard. The two teams meet again today von the Rollins College field. | | i 4 by fegfoar CU sd pipe. s oi Pike Drug Store: 100K ! NO HANDS / Ail 10018 SQUIRT THE OUL ON! Modernize Your Home — Now Repairs It’s the biggest value in power drives on the market! Vise Stand converts hand die-stocks, cutters and reamers to ‘power tools’ -—~speeds up threading from two to five times faster than you can do it Easily portable, sets up in two minutes. ING TOOLS and SUPPLIES Mill Supplies for Industry Plenty of Parking ~GEM OF THE WEEK= A telephone with @ business Repainting All Available on UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY! The New "AUTO. GRIP” aeutomati¢ gripping front chuck. Monthly Payment Plan | Lightweight, but built for rugged service. —10x1.75 In. semi-pneumatic and balanced Lawn SPREADER Spreads seeds and fertilizes evenly at ALUMINUM LAWN EDGING Neatly edges trees, 79 | Keéps grass from 3 spreading. - tires. Braced 16 Inch Spread 5 88 controlled rate. bushes, walks, etc. 40 Ft. Roll Select Your Needs Now— @ Lumber @ Wall Boards @ Ceiling Tile * @ Paints @ Acoustical Tile @ Plywoods e Insulation of All Types The Oster Power Range with ore shaft, FE 2-0108 -DONALDSON LUMBER CO. | in REAR FE a attached, Williams’. criticism came less | ‘ithan 24 hours after he had been! utive sports editor of the New Or-'f Marine Corps, the late Sen, Talt\I of Ohio, former President Harry f 1211 North Perry St. . FE 3-9557 ‘eu weer ee ETT eee eee ee When you examine our fine ready-made suits—when you see and feel the many -luxurious imported woolens—when you try them on and dppreciate the excellent style and fit that only superb workmanship and hand detailing can give, when the price tags say only Only Harwood Can Do 2 and Harwood Has Done It! MAKE A DATE — COME IN TODAY! You'll see why we're selling as many suits 2 and 3 per customer as we are just one YES, SIR! in Pontiac ae Custom Tailors & Clothiers ALL 1957 CARS Radios—Heaters Automatic Tranmission DISCOUNT? CALL IT WHAT YOU LIKE! $4975 and $00 Then You Know That RANDOLPH ARWOOD'*™." 908 W. Huron ot Telegraph One of the Biggest. Suit Values Alterations Pontiac Car & Truck Rentals SAUNDER Drive-It-Yourself SYSTEM VANS—STAKES— LIFT GATES—PADS Rates for an hour, day, week or month or year—whether a new car or truck you only pay for what you actually use! For information, reservations or free local delivery call FE 8-6811. Operated Locally by MAZZA’s MOBIL SERVICE Paddock and Pike Streets FE 8-6811 | (UTALES by by KING EDWARD AMERICA’S LARGEST spur) BECAUSE SMOKERS KNOW QUALITY Bob Rabias: lasted two two innings, giving up — lecveri runs. Reliefer Bill Mans-; was a Good quality mixed formula 5 Lb. Bag J & R AUTO STORES | 115 N. SAGINAW - FREE. PARKING Noah told us to go forth hey must be good More of ' and multiply, but we them are smoked than any cant...we're adders! yourself! other cigar. Try em PA KING | EDWARD CIGARS Got © Toll Tale? Send it to King Edword, may win « pst Lleckionville, Horde. You © Safety Blade Mounting — Permits Blade To Slip Then Re-engage After Hitting Obstructions ey A “top” Brigg & Strahon 4 Cycle Engine Trimmer with Front Discharge 18 in DELUXE [one [rrF" REGOIL STARTER value in it's size! Not a strip down model — but a DELUXE mower with 14 ga. steel body and many “extra” construction features —! 19 In. fexelr | New! Different! Deluxe in design — de! ~—déluxe in construction.’Patented “ feature makes it as easy to start as © Steggered Wheels prevent | @ LEAF MULCHER © 9” rhegey ° uxe in power. ‘STEP START’ a car! See it! Steel Housing 6” Front wheels © Side © 2 Pec. Safety Hondie COME IN-TRY IT! 3 me No more Pulling to stoo ing ~just step on the starter” and away you go! less TRADE-IN $79.95 Value I zo esnert Lake, Ave. } as | iy me, cia - pointed by Gov.*G. Mennen Wil- _ man's Compensation Commission ’ George Convis’ bid for a fifth ter = Detroiters jnaes 3-Mill Tax Increase sCuutineed Poa Pai tos * 4 and Council, reduce firemen's work) *. week from 63 to 56 hours and pro- ‘judgeship last January to fill a vide ee & Six ‘ion oak yo ap- liams won approval from the vot- enport, ‘ Detroit Common Councilman James H, Lincoln, Ira G. Kaufman, Traffic Referee John M. Wise and) James N. McNally trailed the vic- torious circuit judges. Boehm defeated D. Patrick O’Brien and Davenport won out over Charles Kaufman, * * * ¢ New mayors were elected in the Wayne County communities of River Rouge, Wyandotte and Lin- coln Park, Highland Park Mayor Paul V. Winkler lost his bid to unseat Mu- nicipal Judge Gavin D. Smith. Winkler's term as mayor expires in 1959... Rouge marae M. Warren Dun- can, under grand jury indictment, was defeated by Louis Deutsch, a retired coa] dealer. Wyandotte Councilman John E. McCauley became the new ma- yor by defeating Stanley Ratyn- ski, Incumbent Mayor William E. Kreger resigned to accept a po- sition as Wayne County road commissioner, Incumbent Lincoln Park Mayor George Barber was beaten by for- mer Mayor Jack Johns. Melvindale voters approved a general. charter revision while large bond issues were defated in Grosse Pointe Woods and Harper Woods. * * * Voters at Jackson approved a two-million-dollar expansion pro- gram for Foote Hospital. The bond issue passed by a vote of 2,346 to 1,126. At Bad Axe, Matthew McIntyre won the race for justice of the peace, He pulled 329 votes in win- ning the post formerly held by the late John Kavanagh. Emmett L. Raven got 235 votes, Michae] Alex- ande® 220, John Carstensen 46, Voters at Grand Haven turned down a proposed new city char- ter that would have strength- ened the power of the city man- ager. The vote was 2,398 to 614. They also turned down a pro- posed $1,300,000 storm sewer bond issue. The program needed 1,615 votes to pass and received only 1,379, * * * Lansing Mayor Ralph Gregi pulled through a squeaker against Gov, Williams’ former legislative secretary, Fred Tripp, for re-elec- tion, He defeated Tripp 12,681 to 12,- 092, for a four-year term under a new charter adopted last fall. Tripp did not say whether he will ask for a recount. * * * In the only election for state! senator, the 14th District in Ing- ham County gave Republican Paul C. Younger; a former county pros- ecutor, a 6,000-vote margin over! Democratic Negro attorney Stuart. Dunnings with scattered out-county | returns still to come, Younger is a former Ingham County prosecu- tor, The senatorial election was to fill a post vacated by Sen. Harry Hittle, who died early this year following a delicate brain opera tion, x * * A Williams’ appointee to the Ing- was soundly’ beaten by former Lansing Mayor Samuel Street Hughes, a Republican, 23,226 to 13,590 for cir- cuit judge, Ryan, a former Work- chairman, was appointed to the retirement by Republican Charles H, Hayden. * * * Ann Arbor Mayor William E. . Brown Jr., in office 12 years, was beaten by Democrat Sam- uel J, Eldersyeld. The vote was 5,196 to 4,685. At Hillsdale, Democrat Herb Fowle beat Republican incumbent The vote was 763 to 671. Democrat A, G, Phillips rolled over Republican Donald France in the race for mayor of St. Ignace in Mackinac. County. The vote was 728 to 345, Republican John Don- nelly did not seek re-election. “= 2 * * Owosso voters rejected a city charter amendment to clange from a council to city manager form of government. The vote against was 2,827 to 1,433 for the amendment, At Reed City at new home_rule charter setting up a city manager form of government was approve 369-211, The Osceola -County town formeftly operated as a fourth-class city under a state act of 1895, + Grain Prices 3 CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, April 1 (AP) — Optn to- Officers Chosen by Traffic Club Motor Division, J. Basil Meidlein, president of the Pontiac Traffic Club, it was announced today. ger, general manager of Contract ed were Andrew C. Yakuber of J. BASIL MEIDLEIN— Presidency ‘Is Assured by J. Basil Meidlein of Pontiac Motor ‘Traffic director of the Pontiaé 47T Lowell St., has been elected’ * we ck Meidlein succeeds Leon H. Big-| Starting with Pontiac Motor in 1934 as a rate clerk, Meidlein was promoted to his‘present posi- tion in 1952. His experience in- cludes 15 years with the Grand Trunk Western & Pere Mar- quette Railroads. | nt sar _ .. but in Fractions. <2 Checks “28, ave S [Prices Go Up, Jumbo, 40-45, medium ttl NEW YORK\@® — The stock avg 41%: tree Mak wed are iat — oo ee * :"small 30. Grade B large |2tly trading today. but volume failed to pick up from recent low levels. Advances in key stocks ranged umbe 37 37; extra large medium 26-29. —_ sdiums 26- from fractions to about a point. ’ Sesvapee years ago, and lost by less than . os Craig ‘National Bank ‘Bide. FE 2-9119 Grade B large 26-27. : Butler and paid $69.30 in and 000 votes te Clair L, Taylor : A few small losses were scattered/court costs. * tonematiant oie tae HOURS: 9 to 5 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS stocks Repablican i thatal HCAG, aor AP Sutter | Uroushout the list of major Curtis Watson, 22, of 203 S. Main,| tiring, fas | ag Re vecare ka so,| Copper shares did well, Kenne- | Rochester, paid $104.30 in fines and| po4, Mackie and Bartlett will be score AA 59; tA Ae? 90 RF, 58 be) 58; cone 90 B saad: receipts 23.400; wholesale unchanged to \% ety: ony or. better A white mixed 20; Vga 25: checks 24%; ‘crrat receipts sales of copper at 1% to % cents higher prices than last Friday. Steels were uniformly up @ little enact ‘age i ee fal US. a on ran up a point j Sey it each eer mae en ir; mar sbour steady; Idaho Rus-| while in“the rubber group Good- 3.35; ae oe Fentines Ls-3.08, aol rich continued under pressure as a rriy ; ; su e demand dew: market cull: no track (result Of a strike at some of its sales reported. plants. ’ * * *. group Zenith wasting space. Poultry are wappiveyy of ae erevions April 5th, 1:00, —Adv_|©™n dedication to the tasks which | —— DETROIT POULTRY session, running up more than a . | the people have chosen us to carry | : prod BB! ba Etc point. Other stocks in this section [ate aace eet GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING — live poultry up to 10 a avy type hens 21-23; (4 ib average) 23; (5-6 Ibs) ve steady. Receipts sederate and — to a normal early week demand = ly for butcher trade needs. did nothing, - . Opening blocks included aa ‘shares of Royal Dutch at 47, up Ye, 3,400 shares of Sears, Roebuck at 27, down % and 1,500 shares |« of U. S. Steel at 59%, up %. © gaponertes CHICAGO POULTRY _ CHICAGO, April 1 (AP) — Live try steady: receipts 925 coops: (Friday 96 coops; lbs.) P.O.B. pay! nee ee Bel FOS. paying New York Stocks v¥ ~18, cies 14'%-16-" pa Foosers 12-13; capon- 23%4-27%4; et ak (Late Morning. Quotations) Named vice president at the re-| cent club elections was N. N. Card er A gpg be steers 17.06- 19.50; utility of the Grand Trunk Railroad. Jo-, seph L. Fourn of General Motors) Truck & Coach Division was elected) Calves — Salable 350. secretary-treasurer,. | * * * Executive board members elect- Kramer Bros. Freight Lines, Inc.,! and Joseph J. Lewis of the Doug- las Trucking, Inc. Report Premier of Iran Resigns Replacement by Eghbal to Give Greater Power Against em resigned ean s in a Cabinet shuf- fle resulting from the murder of three Americans by Iranian ban- dits. * * * The sources said Ala, who is 74, will be replaced by Dr. Manouch- ehr Eghbal, energetic 49-year-old court minister to Shah Moham- med Reza Pahlevi. said the change would give the government .a stronger hand in dealing with banditry and tribal defiance. Announcement of Ala's resigna-| tion is expected tomorrow, after a final meeting with his Cabinet; or possibly Thursday. He will re- iplace his successor as court min-| ister. * * * The government meanwhile stepped up its search for Dadshah, the desert outlaw blamed for the ambush killing in: southeast Iran of U.S. Point Sra official Kevin Carroll; his wife; and Brewster Wilson, a development specialist forthe Near East Foundation. Rainy-Day Loan Shows Women Can't Be Trusted? PHILADELPHIA (®—Can you trust a woman farther than a man with an umbrella? Or do men Informants °° : _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL. 2, 1957 ran stadia goods toons the B & M Recreation Center, 496 N, /Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake, after breaking into the window, Police Chief James Decker reported today, court. costs yesterday after plead- ing guilty to drunk driving before Green. Rummage. household articles. 115. Barrington Rd. FE 5-5663. Pour basement, 9:30 a. m.-5 p. m. Pub- lic invited. Any donations of cloth- ing prmeydates. Elizabeth Russell Rummage copal Church, 171 W. Pike, Priday, Dems Scoré Sweep in Top State Posts ed to full eight-year terms, Voelk- er won the right to serve out an _ News in Brief _tmieves es took more than $100 in machines and other ee j Bartlett, 52, pledged as state su- perintendent of public instruction to work for increased state finan- place through a second story|cial aid to local school district, sworn into office on July 1, Mackie | poss = = for a four-year term and Bartlett] pe : for two years. They will get the benefit of a salary raise voted by the legisla- tion only last week, receiving $17,- 500 a year as against ,the $12,500 paid their predecessors, * * * There was a sober note in the governor's victory statement. “Fot the Democratic Party,” he said, “this is not a time for self| congratulation but a time for sol-. Avon Township Justice Luther SAW! WANT TO ‘Children’s clothing, WITHO SACRIFICING EFFICIENCY —Adv. : Sale, Sat. April 6, Towns Methodist Church Now you can enjoy the convenience of automatic oil-fired 7 winter air - condi-_ BUY an ARMSTRONG Steet Oil-Fired Hi-Boy | Winter Air-Conditioner Adv. tioning without Sale, All Saints Epis- 3401 W. Huron (Corner of Elizabeth Lake Rd.) FE 2-7849 “With God's help, we will do our best to be worthy of the people’s confidence.” _| THRUST BY LABOR | A sidelight on the election was: the thrust of union labor in land-| ing two of its representatives on) boards controlling higher education! INVESTMENT Require $15,000 Working Capital in a Well Estab- Jished Retail Business. Loan secured by Tangible Assets of $60,000. Willing to pay rsa pditowas than. (Continued From Page One) A oh te simply hate to be seen with an umbrella? Or are men _ panty- waists and feel they =m stay in when it rains? The suburban fakin Bank tions in an informa] survey of why a good-will idea might run into quite a lot of money. . x * * A while back the bank started an umbrella-lending service for its customers. It set out 25 um- brellas, 15 for women and 10 for men, with tags reading: “A loan for a rainy day.’ Now all the women's umbrellas are gone, whereas only eight of the others are missing. - The bank is not giving up. A fresh stock has been ordered for lending in expectation of spring rains, Dearborn Kills Proposal for Village in Florida and Trust Co. is asking such ques- | Stocks? Seasoned investors know the solid investment value of owning good common stocks over the long pull. How- ever, to minimize the risk that is necessarily assumed in owning securities, experienced investors review their holdings periodically. If you are in need of investment information, call us at FEderal 4-2895. You can be sure your request for help will receive our courteous ond thoughtful attention. vacation village in Florida. . lish a city-owned retirement and WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. paigehen Girardi mains. ier aad PONTIAC: 716 Peritisc State Bank Bldg Feder 4-2895 - — ge Floor Ford — 2-5525 |! ‘yore | %o : Is Best in Listening With 4 fi MUSIC — NEWS — SPORTS Dividends 18 HOURS A DAY Due to the extraordinary growth of WPON’s listening area, our representatives cannot possibly communicate with all businessmen who might profit from purchases of time on WPON. Hence, businessmen hitherto not called on are invited to call General Manager Russ Gohring at FE 8-0444. This is not a recent~ change in dividend ‘policy, but has con- tinued for the post 25 years, r Red ...,.. 52.2 Int Tel & Tel .31.6 institutions, Allied Ch 11". M64 jacobs..." ¢4)unexpired term ending Dec. 31,| Don Stevens, 42, of Grand Rap-| Average Interest and will reduce principal p oii. 44 Johns Man |. 47 age Interest and w uce p Livestock Allis Chal Bs jones 3 ate _ - The three were nominees of ids, who won a seat on the board} {ionately every month for completion within "18 t te ' Amvairin’ 7.44 Kimb cig ...'431)the Democratic State Convention. of agriculture, is education director] 24 months. If truly interested write Box 32, Pontiac { cresge, 5S 26 DETROIT LIVESTOCK Am Bok oe

’ other: mite ry ou ‘ ‘ . é “ * , hi hs “90200 ‘to butchers IT 40-11 TS: (che Seay". $84 Paige Dt 18 | campaign was a test of his pop- Brablec, her running te at Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance iieede below 17.50; most 206-260 lb around |Ginnastte”... e0e Phitip Mor “1.2 43 been superintendent of schools ati 4 ataey | Bonds—All Types 17.50; with few selected lots 1-2 these Coca Cola 101.4 Phill Pet ..... 45.1) ularity. Roseville the last 10 years. He is urgiary insurance weights to 17.60; several lots 1-3 190- Col Brd A .... 33.6 Pillsby Mills ,. 42.2 | : . | T t > Policies . 17. 75-18-00: few ots Ded oar ice Dee... 3 erect ae hws mH A little over two Sears ago, be- 8. : enants Foc l~ mw sive wce 3 weigh volume 2-3 2706300 Ib 17.00-11.40: = K Ges a 8 ee as fore the 1954 general election, only ~*~ * * ler lous mixed te ome Yb ame os on BH Ges ... 4 Reve Be .... sc weiitme of the 35 offices filled by Vanderploeg, the second Demo-. "A mon never sevoete his ~~ “ae aes = i alabie cattle 18,000; calves 300; C + Pt (4¥ar O7.4- aebihnde B .... ft statewide vote were in Democratic ‘cratic winner for state board of ag-. vividly than wheh portraying creee. compared as ut con: Seat Sn.) se3 Reval Dut... aeqjhands, | ccctane ig Shand « Weck Mos of another.” —lean Paul Richter—1803 ron a t t ow ou i | ‘eat Miction "an kings grading averane copper Rae «.. 324 Gufowat 8°". $81) Largely by dint of Williams’ ef-|kegon landscape architect | choice and better: cows slow, about |COrD ak 1426 8t Reg Pap .. 392/forts, the number will il 3 4 pe . : steady with last week's low close; bulls Curtiss Wr ... 2. Bt Reg top .. 23 , will swell to 23) two Republican incumbents fell - — ', eer one mT mainly steady: vealers fully steady: | we 9p MRE 303 On g12|When candidates elected yesterday . j ' svockers and feeders _utsad. tee londs Dis Coosa | 58 Maciair ¢1.3lare sworn into office : by the wayside in gerard snd pot = Doug Aire .... 766 Soc sericce A loti Frederick H. Mueller a , ar ite Meee, ep cee! etelDee chem <2... Soe hy 43| * * * fied yams Now You Can Save Money When i 3 } 25.75: .--+¢-180.1 Sperry .. 20. p : : choice “steers 30°18°23.00;" good to low [Ee Aisq’"\"" ge.e Std ON Cu. g#,|, Al that remains in Republican) tuetter, 63, a Grand Rapids bus- You Buy Home Insurance! ce 16.00-20.50; few loads mostlyipia Mus... 4 Sia On Ned .. ana /hands are four places on the U. of inessman now serving in Washing- : | standard grade Holsteins 16.25-17.00; emer Rad .... 5.7 g:4 Oil Oh | $17/M. regents, three state Supreme | an : nf | mostly good and chotce heifers 18.00- frie RR 1... 19 Stevens JP | 205/c,, . : ton as a assistant secretary of Seve Up to 22.00; few loads and lots prime 22,25- Paird Mor .... 56.4 gicg Pack ||. 71 \CoUurt seats, two places apiece on has been on the board : 23.00; standard heifers down to 16.00: |pirestone ..:.. 46 gun o.... 76 |the state board of agriculture and| Commerce. Das Deen 25% " imost utility and commercial cows 12.75-|Pood Mach MS ain a ce (MBA er and of agriculture since 1945, gaining] N in O ; 14.90; canners and cutters 10.50-12.60:|Ford Mot ....66.2 gY ‘gr pa °° 49 |State board of education and oné ¢ and then! ow in Une 5 utility and commercial bulls 15.00-16.75;| Preept Sul ...102.4 Tones Co... 63.6|seat in the United Stal his seat by appointment a Palicee= : — som oar Fore vealers 22.00- Prueh Tra ... _ Tex G Sul $o1| erat #m the United States Senate. winning a six-year term in 1951. B y PE ew eu oO 0.00; few good “and chotce sis-000 st Sen Miee..te3 Smee 11 FLINT SURVEYOR by election. A me one , Sf ohaiee 450 I cease calves 329 6. ics Ler apo qréas| W aw 1*$| The new state highway commis-| Connable, 53, a Kalamazoo ine. * tee: martes 5 Feo Mower “ca ‘aii O@M Shoe .... 265 Twent Cen ... 25¢/sioner, Mackie, is a 35-year old|vestment counselor, has been on , You receive protection for your Home, the 4 classes; prime wooled epee oe co eee roe 6 Flint surveyor and businessman, a the board’of regents since 1941. - Contents, Theft and Personal Liability. ; pd es 0-208 73 wiih Rh mostly 1-3 Gillette .ss448 Un Pac. 3 political unknown outside Genesee | ' skine 21-5653.00; small lot geod and | Ostayesr 1. va Uni a a 2 County where he thrice was eléct-| q plan to buy small ships to any H. W. HUT TENLOCHER Agency : 26.00: cull te choice wooled slaughter/Grah Paige ... 1.4 we ol ed county surveyor. [salve the banana transport prob- H. W. Hattenlocher Max E. Kerns , Sees famaay, “hole Morn Meughter| Oo on.” 1st US Rub... 40 | In the campaign he promised to jem is under study by the Haitian ome) 4H. W. Nuttesloche "1551 .. ‘re Hersh Choc ...49.7 US Steel ......595 accelerate linking of major cities) Government, Port - au - Prince) 318 Riker Bidg. FE 4-155 ; Netlend P ... 6.9 OF Te ...--- ats b 7 | ; : I Cent ..... 548 Warn B Pie .. 33.8) jin the state by four-lane, divided jearns. | — ————— ‘ Bloomfield Candidates Indust Ray :..362 Weng of a <== , . vert Wilson & Co m4 ¥ Were All Republican = 2; Cor «---$84 vale @ Tow | 283 | . Int Nick ..... 104.5 tyenith Rad 108.6 | . : In Bloomfield Township, al] I>t Paper ..... 98 ° Serber Prod . 54.2. é This Announcement Is an Offer ; jcandidates were Republican. aut Ghee <<: me NOT ; Votes polled were: Supervisor, STOCK AVERAGES sa licitation ee és H. Dudley 1297; treasurer, Homer 3 6158) 158 60 W. Case 1312; trustee for a f0Ur-|previous Day .ni’st Rell Uull Stocks of an Offer to Buy Said Time ) Week Ago ....252.0 1208 13.5 173.6 120 and trustee for a two yeur Ma aot oct Hae EB ' bed eae f a \ F term, Mark R. Kraus 1288. Justice|#81 Mien <0 31 ner ee tl TE NOT , ¢ of the peace is William R. Rudell,|1956 -tigh [..(276.3 155.1 76.9 191.5 | , ; with 1291 votes, and highway com-|1986 Low .°*: 244.0 1262 69.6 1716 missioner is Jasper B, Reid Jr. pernorr sTocKs s oO | 1296 votes. Nephier Co. : Oo * * Figures a ccumunt pointe are —— WPON jew Allen Elec, & Co." 35 28 it be Howard T. Keating, Jr ae"Seter ee HE = ids a : by GL. Oil & Chem, Co * 22 23 PONTIAC’S ONLY STATION with a vote totaling 1300. Con-\ficen Bec. Mo Co... * 684 6 A . stables are Maurice S. Morey 1283, Fesineular Met. Pa. Co. “49° 3 A | woos Russell W. C, Pickering 1289, Karl Rudy Manufact. Co. _.. . © 7 2a i - . - a . E. Rhodes 1282 and Edward N. va Raison Co oi 138 138 i Offering Choice Availabilities in Top Quarter Hours Schneider 1278. Cpl ag Age PO aan 1 | | % | Throughout the Day M| oD | | Do You Own | ana WPON C4 eR OR ORES Cay vO UOT ae TN Toney Ranier EER Re TR AIH Oe ONO TAM RA RN, SORE AE . : i T he, PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1957 | . French Buiders Designers _ of “Spec cial Continental Cars owl Develop Sport Model something they hope will be the next aufumn. . Many Europeans regard the body designing that Loewr, did for Stu- Gebaker as about the best that has come from the United States since the war. They have deplored prac- tically every departure from ‘Loewy’s original lines. The twe youthful Frenchmen, Bernard Pichon and Andre Parat in the past few years have won a fine automo- The salesman’s basic gasoline ration is 300 miles a month, which is only 100 miles more than that allotted to private mo- ctorists and not enough to keep the average commercial travel- er on the road more than one day a week, . The result is that traveling sales- men are joining the jobless queues at’ their lo¢al employment ex- reputation among bile “fans’ in. Rance with the (tt, thelr logal racy special bedies they have of French cars, Not all commercial travelers designed and built for a number have thrown in the sponge, how- ever. One was overheard in a road- At the last. Paris Auto Show,/side cafe explaining how he ex- which he visited, Loewy paused a/pected to get to a town 18 miles long time in front of the Pichon-|distant with a half-gallon of gas in Parat stand, admiring a coupe body his tank. the two Frenchmen had built for a agile little Renault “4CV.” At the show, Loewy reportedly confided to Pichon that he planned to design a car with the “lines of The latter went back: to his body shot at Sens, south of Paris, and to make a trip to New York, “I get up a bit of speed, then Simea, and a black and white cab-|I freewheel,” he declared listlessly. ‘nolet they put together for the mo-|‘"It is dreadfully depressing, but . tor and mechanical parts of the!I do get there if 1 am lucky,” Independent taxi-drivers have also been hard hit, Cabbies now ‘pick and choose their customers, ‘ turning down alf long hauls (they cannot afford to travel long dis- tances. with gasoline .20 cents a galion dearer), The big cab companies for their _ thought it over, and recently sent| part, on caukae the radios out a letter to Loewy in New York. On/o¢ their cabs in order to discour- reply came a cable asking Pichon/ase drivers from cruising for “fares, and thus wasting precious According to reports in Paris, petrol. Loewy still hasn't fully made up road-clinging and spcrty vehicle. Champs Also Grow in Redwood Forests SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — The redwood empire, California's land of giant trees, also is the site of many a professional fighter’s train- ing camp. ; _ Gentleman . Jim ‘Corbett, who Hardest hit by the fuel drouth is iis mind what chassis he wants to'the motorcar industry, Two-thirds use for Maybe |of the 35,000 workers to the Ford Jaguar, Maybe BMW Either one,/plant in Dagenham started work- with the type of body Pichon-Parat ing a three-day week on Dec, 31 like to make, would be a fast,/in order to Australia has received more than wrested the heavyweight cham- 6,000 applications and inquiries pionship from John L. Sullivan in} Gncerning : : : ng emigration since the New Orleans, was one of the ~ end of Novembér, with the number} to establish headquarters in tha stepped up sharply since the start part of the country. He chose Saus-|4¢ the gas ration on Dec, 17. alito, the durable Dane. Canada House reports that the has been a_favorite, 88 mow of emigration inquiries is now has San Rafael, where lightweight/four or five times what it was apion Joe Gans trained for two! a+ this time last year, while the of his fights with Battling Nelson, | number of applications in Novem- ber to emigrate to New Zealand More recently such fighters @8|was double that in October.” Rocky Castellani, Paddy De Marco, re- , avoid mass layoffs. Other nS cccigtiiies have cut back their production schedules and are putting workers on short time, A “dangerous crisis’’ is fore- cast for the British motor.industry by Lord Tedder, Chairman of the Standard Motor Co. Meanwhile, gasoline rationing has started a stampede of Bri- tons desiring to emigrate to Com- monwealth Joey Maxim and Don Cockell San Rafael, Cali , is trained at on Rate aite PoaxyiRead and Knead: M: icked for his 1955 bout ee Cote O-1t-Y ourself Lake County, to the north, was a favorite training place for retired Hawaiian P oi middleweight champion Carl (Bo- bo} Olson. Woman Saves Pennies — as Meter Clicks Away say a housewife wil! drive miles to Save a few pennies shopping. Here's proof. ing the meter running. HONOLULU, Hawaii (INS) —The ‘ “do-it-yourself” madness has even extended to poi, the native Hawai- ian dish that all newcomers must try at least once. The Hawaii Visitors Bureau in- ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ®—They sists ‘you, cah “roll your own,” even in the swank rooms of such hotels as the Moana, Princess Kai- ulani, the Surfrider and the Royal An elderly couple riding in a Hawaiian. All you need is a bag of taxi stopped at the Disabled Amer- fresh poi, purchased at any Ha- jean Veterans store in Albuquer-|Waiian grocery, a bowl (wash- que and the woman got out, leav-/basin will do) and some water. Unless you like a lot of salt in After fifteen minutes the woman your poi, use fresh instead of sea came out with her purchases—two| Water. 35 cent slips, The taxi pulled off— the meter still ticking away, the bowl, Slide the poi from the bag into If it doesn't want to emerge, run a little water into the ‘plastic bag to encourage it. Then The number of State-park areas squeeze like crazy, in the nation has risen 18 per) LEGAL NOTICE A public hearing will be held April 8 1957 at 830 p.m. In the Springfield to consider changes in and to the After the poi is in the bowl or cent since 1950 from 1,725 to 2,030. basin, fill the empty bag with wa- In the same period, park acreage ter to measure the right amount, has climbed 9 per cent and now then start slowly rolling and knead- totals more than 5,000,000, ling the water into the poi until it |becomes a thick gray paste. After about half an hour of Township Hall. Davisburg, Michigan by| Kneading, twirl a few fingers into the Springfield Township Zoning Board ithe poi and sample your hotel- Springfield Township Rural Zoning made poi, Ordinance and Map. Tentative text and maps may be examined Monday through Friday of any week between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. at the clerk's‘ of-| fice, 162 Broadway CEiceet, Davisburg, Michigan. K, L. VANNATTA, Chairman April 2, "67. curbing A meeting of Fiji chiefs may be called at Bau to consider means of increasing drunkenness among Fijians, Suva learns. - | HANDBOOK - ~ ‘This miditwe 'b edition a the ara Mobémn-; “ medan holy book, is the smallést volume turned out by a Vimperk,4 4.) Publishing house which specializes in’ tiny books. bei Boat piers nets sa, come Curiously enough, very few Bri- tons want to go to the United States. ; : * * Gasoline rationing has also brought back the “‘Spiv,” the black market dealer who is the product of World War II. Spivs can be found in all parts of London “‘flog- ging’ gas ration coupons at any- thing from 25 to 50 cents apiece. The Spivs have had plenty of time to set themselves yp in the — gas racket, => - gov- 8 Gas Rationing i in 1 England i Spells Death for Traveling Salesmen LONDON (NEA)—“Death of a raion has been lifted out of he theater to: become-a-grim PARIS (INS)—Raymond Loewy, ality for thousands of Britons, For famed American designer, and two the traveling salesman is the first progressive young French automo- victim of Britain's gasoline ration- bile body builders are cooking up ing. ; : Immediate cause of death: ‘sensation of the Paris Auto Show! rye} starvation complicated by a blockage of the Suez Canal. ernment signalled its intention to |tained only a skeleton staff to deal institute rationing weeks in ad- (with these special requests. Today, the Ministry of Fuel is swamped with requests for supple- So far gasoline rationing has|méntal gas. Some 1,750,000 motor- been what an Irishman would call|ists, or more than one-third of all the users’ of private cars and mo- torcycles, think they -hould have ‘vance of the actual rationing op- eration, ‘glorious confusion.” * * * Private motorists were given an|™ore gas. over-generous basic gas allowance Each case will be considered on of 200 miles a month im thejits merits, with essentiality the hopes that there would be no re-jcriterion, but it will be weeks be- quests for a supplementary ra-jfore the Ministry of Fuel gets the tion, The Ministry of Fuel re-|muddle sorted out, Monks Build Rocky Recluse Lay Stone Foundation for Large Monastery in Colorado that will form a huge monastery, 300 feet long and 75 feet wide. the United States by the Cister- cian order of La Trappe. Since 1098 members of the order have turned their baek to the: lux- servitude. The monastery will be ready sometime this year to provide austere accommodations for 170 men. SNOWMASS,.Colo, @ — In a mountain rimmed valley high in the Colorado Rockies, 20 monks are laying the bricks and stones The massive structure is the Wth monastery to be-founded in uries of the world to live a life; of contemplation, silence and’ NEW SENATE OFFICE BUILDING — No stenos in the closets. Building Will Give Nixon Much-Needed Office Space. tery lands, at altitudes from 7,500 to 8,000 feet, will be beef cattle. OWNER RETAINED The owner of one of the ranches, | Gordon Lamoy, has been retained to teach them how to punch cattle, cut alfalfa, operate irrigation ranching. undertaking for the Trappists who vow never to eat flesh — proceeds from the marketing of their cattle to purchase the nec- ; provisions for their mon- astic existence. Lady of Snowmass Monastery, a it has been named, was reach Spencer, Mass, lives of silence, prayer, labor, penance and solitude. vide initial funds to put Snowmass self-sufficient. Rules of Foresight Qutwit Pickpockets. CHICAGO (INS) — Want to out- wit pickpockets ,in a crowd? Thomas J, Rolfs, manufacturer of billfolds, suggests you follow these rules: Carry no more money than you need. If you must take large sums, buy travelers checks. Using credit cards has foiled many a “dip.” Do not carry important papers about unnecessarily. Do carry papers like your driv- er’s license, identification informa- tion and information concerning health problems, such as diabetes. ‘If your wallet is missing, wheth- er lost or stolen, inform police im- mediately. Also inform those -es- tablishments to which you carry credit cards, Keep your wallet as thin as pos- sible. ‘The best place for men to carry a wallet is securely buttoned in the left hip pocket. Women should keep them in their purses with a hand on the purse elosure in public. La Bananas Harbor Snake f Oak ; (Park received a snake that ‘arrived in. a‘ bunch of babanas; atemala, ong from the svelte is called g) Tiree snake. | It’s about 45 inches | long with a) * te ta at its rr pomt. of ‘ - _ an inch. * The Trappists acqtired 3,800 President acres by purchasing ‘three|have solved his over-crowded do-/office space. ranches from private @tockmen. | i— The major product of the monas-| ° Trinidad Exults ditches’ and other chores of Raising cattle is an . unusual 4 meat, fish or fowl. They will use | The decision to establish Our) nl ‘British West Indies Federation. at the Trappist monastery at It had become! doggerel, the calypso exults in overcrowded with men seeking] Trinidad’s triumph over rivals The Spencer monastery will pro- on its feet. Once in operation, the) Colorado monastery must become PEORIA, Ill. ®—The zoo at Glen Sugar production comes next in) WASHINGTON (NEA) — Vice;mestic condition with a 21-room Richard Nixon: may house, but he’s still cramped for construction, Capital Choice Colorful, New Federation WASHINGTON—Trinidad, home of calfpso singers and steel bands has a new theme song. Chanted by celebrating throngs CRAMPED AREA in the ‘streets of Port of Spain! Nixon's present quarters in the recently, it hails the island’s choice’ ‘old Senate Office Building consist 3/88 capital of the forthcoming|of four rooms which are “terribly cramped,” according to one of his 13 staffers. He would actually hire more help if he had~the space. Covering half a city block, the marble-faced structure will give many solons a chance to let their As administrative center of the, secretaries out of closets, thanks ‘Caribbean federation, Trinidad will) te well - ‘head a chain of British islands’ suites. stretching in a 675-mile arc from Nearly 200 cars will be able to park in the two stories below street level. A basement in the igymnasium will also allow legis- jlators to flex their muscles, play or receive rubdowns. ‘During the summer they can bask | jon a special senatorial sun-deck, In typically gay and impudent Barbados and Jamaica, the Virgin Islands to the coast of Venezuela, says the National Geographic Society. The group in- cludes Barbados and the Leeward and Windward Islands, along with) Trinidad’s next-door neighbor,’ jhandball Tobago. Jamaica, ee member Ot cans, Poor OMITTED . Original plans INTERNATIONAL MIXING BOWL swimming pool were thrown out Trinidad ranks next to Jamaica for economy reasons. in size. Southernmost of the British * * ‘islands, and situated just off the! South American coast, it already) room fer senators, \is one of the Caribbean’s busiest|. will seat 70@.people at a time crossroads—and a’ mixing bowl) and take care of more than 2,000 of you have pe ¥ & poter? on yen ve $ hrs. a day? Nationally known Co. needs ambi, tious women a.) you who want to earn as as $500-$400 ino, Car Tecatwery.1F ror inte rvi . call 30035 1) p.m, inf ohone,/ f t mation over i) i | ee & WOMEN, FULL OR PART tkins ra ad- qut ‘ed ee he 8 red. y 5 to 10 am” ~ MOTEL MANAGER Exc. oppor. for couple who are not afraid to work. . furn, Write Pontiac Press Box 463. —_— == B, ——y ee a: om w home in Pontiac, Waterford ao Utes Realty . KEn REAL ESTATE SALESMEN ENE R- GETIC PERSON TO SELL EAL ESTATE, EX! LENT OPPORTUNITY FOR RIGHT PERSO E MENT. SALESMAN AT ONCE P. W. DINNAN *6 W_ HURON Employment Agencies 8A Bookkeeper $425 CLERK TYPIST $229 Personable young girl who likes to work in fri office, and can type and do some filing, See Bar- bara at Career — ‘B-l Riker Bidg, FE 8-0416 Graebner’s JOBS FOR | Men & Girls GIRLS RECEPTIONIST SECRETARY $300 Experienced girl for dottors office, close to down town. RECEPTIONIST TYPIST 6200 Attractive girl who es to meet people. Car preferred. FIGURE CLERK $200 Prefer mature woman with good typing skills. : RR SECRETARY 6220 Young executive will train high school Grad. who knows typing and shorthand. ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER $250 OFFICE TRAINEE $190 High school graduate with good typing skills needs no = to start immediately. TYPIST. 60 W. P.M. ....0+.9240 TYPIST, 50 W. gi = excess 9290 pate. ay 40 W. P aceets' TYPIST, 30 W. P. M. Seeeee $190 Rasta Nu mesa ranked 2 dl is girl with good skills for. 7 small 5 - MEN 3 ; Accountant trainee (3171). . Rood fice. manager, trainees (309 $350 Inside “collections, ‘for credit firm 89) $300 ere eee ee heer ee Graebner's Ss “MICHIGAN'S , ~._ LARGEST’ ; 313 ies ee ik Bide, EACH CASH 7 CUS: : ' TOMERS through Classi- fied Ads. Call FEE 28181.