" - AP facsimile SPACE FuGHT MODEL — Caption for this drawing taken from ‘Journey Into the Cosmos,” published in Moscow in 1955, is headed “perhaps this is how the first manned artificial earth satellite would look.” It is timely because of reports that Russia has sent a man-carrying rocket 186 miles into the air. Rt consists of jet motor (1); parachute (2) for braking its descent; movable _, wings (3) for gliding; hermetically sealed pilot's cabin (4) made ot synthetic glass and equipped. with metallic blinds to protect pilot from burns by sun's rays; tanks for fuel (5); and oxydizer (6) for operation of jet engine in case of need to increase speed of flight when retarded by air resistance, and also for landing. Soviet Officials Deny Reported Attempt to = Launch Space-Man By INTERNATIONAL NEWS Soviet officials in both Moscow and London today de- nied, indirectly but firmly, unconfirmed reports of a Soviet attempt to launch a man into space. A spokesman for the State Committee on Cultural Rela- tions, which deals with newsmen’s queries in Moscow, said: “If the report’ were true it would be in the Soviet Press.” _ he rumors apparently originated In Moscow diplo- Fuad 8 ano mse up wthin the past Fw" Oa74 a that Ke perachlld safely to eatth. ~~ The Soviet press and radie were silent on the reports ‘and correspondents were barred by censors ve filing lengthy stories. But a spokesman for the Soviet Academy of Science laughed at the rumor and said it must be based on a science- fiction movie now showing in the Soviet aoe RUSSIANS NOT READY In London, Yuri Modif, first secretary of the Soviet Em- bassy, told a delegation of anti-vivisectionists that the Rus- sians were not ready to send a man aloft.. Resulting opinion in informed Western quarters amounts | to this: —The Russians probably are in a position to make an attempt at firing a man-carrying rocket into space if they are Willing to run certain serious risks. * * * —From a scientific viewpoint such an attempt would be the next logical step past known Soviet experiments. -—An irresistible drive te ram home the prestige gained through the Sputnik successes might have pushed the Russians inte making a premature and possibly un- successful effort to shoot man into space. The same sources have this to add: —The few reports reaching the West from heavily censored Moscow not only fail to confirm the rumors but tend strongly to discount them. , x * * In Washington, American experts speculated today . that it is entirely too soon to try rocketing a man to an altitude of 186 miles even though such feats a wil be accomplished. The U.S. experts contend that: —Rockets of sufficient reliability to take the gamble with a human life are not yet available. Missile launch- ing failures are still too common. —The problem of bringing back safely a man who from 186 miles, would strike the lower atmosphere at something between 6,000 and 10,000 miles an hour, is a formidable one ’ ¢hat probably won't be solved until experiments from’ lesser heights have been conducted. ; : {KE DECLINES COMMENT - "/ President Eisenhower declined comment on the ursub- . ames report, but some Democratic Congressmen found : (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ae ket. ~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. JANUARY 7, 1958—26 PAGES Solon Demands Army Reply to. Gavin Statement Johnson Will Question Brucker on Testimony of Promotion Refusal @ WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson | (D-Tex) ‘the Army answer Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin's testimony | that his expected promo-| | tion was sidetracked after "_" |ne criticized Pentagon mis- 'sile policy. Gavim, chief of Army res search and _ development, ee effective March, He said he.wanted to be freer to “recommend, to apply creative thinking to national defense.” * * *® Johmson said the Senate Pre- paredness subcommittee, of which ihe is chairman, will question Sec- retary of the Army Brucker later | ithis week to “establish the facts.) “It is a matter of serious. con- there be even 2 z NO COMMENT Brucker declined direct com-; ment until he has had a further! chance to fakk with Gavin,’ but he| . said through an aide that Gavin! ‘has a brilliant future in the Army and is certainly four-star ma- terial.” Brucker also’ expressed ore that Gavin “will reconsider h thoughts of retirement” and re main in his present post. Meanwhile, Sen. Kefauver {D- Tenn) recommended that the com- mittee urge Brucker not to accept Gavin's request for retirement and that he give Gavin "the a he deserves.”’ REQUESTS TURNED DOWN Appearing before the subcommit-| Nae Dec. 13, Gavin testified that he jhad been turned down repeatedly ion requests for authority to ss a satellite aloft With the Arm Jupiter-C. experimental arte dy And he urged that the Joint Chiefs’ of Staff be abolished in order to increase Pentagon efficiency. © Gavin also testified that if he remained in the Army he would have the task of — parts of the defense budget Presi Eisenhower will submit month.” * * * “fT don’t. want. to defend next year’s fiscal 1959 budget because, I don't believe in next year’s budg-/ et,” he testified under questioning. | He added that insofar as research and development are concerned it) doesn’t. offer a-‘‘significant’’ im-| provement over last yedr “and I was very unhappy with last year's! budget."” “1 don’t want to be a martyr, but. \Congress,”” he said. demanded today disclosed he has asked. re-| _/four-star rank and assignment to} the Continental Army Command.’ this T am not going to mislead. the! j i i ! v a “COME ON, TRY AGADW"--This is the advice given to Mary Lee Tho cry, 132 Norton Ave., (left) by ber big sistgf Julie who is teaching Mary Lee to ice skatg. 1 The ponytailed sisters. are 7” Sil = Osteopathic Hospital Cuts ‘Its Tie With Sullenberger. i Ry PETE LOCHBILER Dr. Neil H. Sullenberger today was left without Pontiac Press Phete | among many who have been taking advantage of the ice skating atmosphere at Hadsell's Pond on Woodward avenue south of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. , low added, “that I have the ‘Sullenberger said, | greatest respect for Dr. Sullen- out in the cold.” , berger’s skill as a surgeon. He Dr. Sullenberger had no hard a Pontiac ‘hos-) has done nothing wrong at our feelings against Pontiac Osteo-' on to practice in. hospital." pee | * + * . | Dr. Sulleriberger, who brought a “They were nice enough to let) | The controversial surgeon's cour- $250,000 damage suit against Pon-/™¢ i” in the first place last sum- tesy staff privileges at ti tiac General Hospital after his sus- . ‘teopathic Hospital wining pen pension there Nov. 13, had been| ~ foreed out of St. Joseph Mercy, ‘tinued yesterday “because of the Hospital in 1952. lrecent unfavorable publicity,” said * a A Setar 0 the hospital's Commenting today that now he was not allowed to practice in any Mer. “T've, been left ¢ Editorial on General Hospital | on Page 4. I imagine that ‘there were “IT want to ee ” Wait of Pontiac's three hospitals, Dr. pressures fo make me get out,” he as said. * * * | Whitlow ‘said that he and Dr old Again Tomorrow, _ sirterser oniered’ ire ,hours yesterday. “We agreed that it would be i Clearing Skies Tonight . | better for the Aospital, in view | of the recent publicity, if Dr. | Strong northwest winds brought icy ‘temperatures; “tueaberser left.” Whitlow said. | Whitlow said that Dr. Salleaber| and snow flurries to Michigan early this morning, but pers) Connection | with itne thoegital the U.S. Weather Bureau predicts snow ;flurries will, ‘began when he was called in as a ‘end tonight as.skies clear. The mercury will fall to a conan in a difficult’ case. Dr. low of. 8-12 degrees. a Sullenberger was granted the : \courtesy staff privileges after that. Tomorrow’s outlook _ is this season with 31 inches of it still, Whitlow said. fair and continued col d, on the ground. | * * * Roads throughout the northem Although a number of medical with a high of 20-25. Thurs- half of lower Michigan are report- doctors Have served as consultants day will be cloudy and cold gq generally slippery today. Theat the osteopathic hospital, Dr.| with a ehance of snow. (Oakland County Road Commission Sullenterger is the only one to! ' * x * reports Pontiac area roads are have actually been granted any Many Upper Peninsula residents slippery in spots from drifting staff privileges in the hospital's were snowbound today as a result snow. ; ‘five-year -history, Whitlow added. ‘ot last night's storm which dumped | Temperatures dropped 10 de-| The American Medical Associa-| up to 10 inches of new snow in grees between 6:30 a.m. and 10: 30;tion does not condoné its members the area within 24 hours. ‘a.m. in downtown Pontiac al (Continued on Page 2 Gt 2) Winds up to 40 miles an hour morning. * SS ‘piled drifts three feet deep in high-| Nineteen was the: lowest record «Wiretapping Retrial “Final Data Goes to Lansing Tomorrov Saginaw Stréet Traffic Plan Ready for State Theodore|line routes ~ Auburn avenue, Or-| “The tratfic 5 profes:! ; 15 INTERSECTIONS INVOLVED, While the same cost formula; The threé defendants are) union subordinates were leaking! | of six children himself. “TPS SIX; FOR SURE — Air Topeka; Kans., was sure that six the Schieres’ sixth. child arrivéed.at Force ‘six was oat 6206 weighing 6 pounds and six ounces, TO Schedule to Be Ready ‘Sometime This Week’ | Construction dates for Oakland County's proposed expressway ‘will Oakland's. Major Road’ ’ missioner 's gram. first five-year pro- * * * The last link, joining these first two sections, is expected to be one of the first projects in his second five-year plan beginning in 1962. By FE. H. SIMS Were the old days really colder than the present? Were winters then more bitter? That depends upon what one means when he says the old days. Records show that we are now in a warm weather period. but we have experienced other such peri- ods. However, if one refers to the 7880's for example, he may be quite right tt was in that period of the nine- teenth century that harbors lakes froz® qver which have not frozen over since. And back.4n 1830 (for those who are 128 yeas old) a dec- ade of extremely cold é&eather ar- rived, during which even New Yo kétFeating at Pontiac General, but) “Ait was a large enough number to’ - keep my two children fed," he ob- ‘ harbor froze over solid. But for the average person, , ing his memory back only ay dec- ade or two. or three, there was not much difference, “cong converiences and com{g@f, ‘ Motorist Rescys Tot GLASTONBURY, Conn., iP — A motorist spoti@f a group of chil- dren beside roaring brook and stopped hy car to warm them Vincent 4 di, 29. found they) fring at a playmate. Jane) tdway. 2, who had just fall- 0 the icy water. He pulled the gir!, still conscious, and k her home College 106 Years Old is 196 years old today, just about the same age as the state | to perform difficult operations, | but enly with the hospital's per- STOCKTON, Calif. W—The Col- this brief statement today: lege of the Pacific, California’s) first institution of higher learning, itself. Hundreds Start Back for Homes Credit Union Shortag A full audit of shortages amount. label, officials of ‘ing to $54.13515 at the Chief Pon- were hesitant 4 \tiae Federal Credit Union has been aay of the agitt's details. \finished by the government and, hen aa however, that . 8 " vid | ‘They Hg [ree a cae detverea to the the final gadit had the total short- ; oe ages regthing the amount made credit union and the Federal Bu- public..By the credit union in No- reau of Investigation, which has | been investigating the shortages mber. ‘for evidence of criminal action. RERULTS. NOT TOLD Because of the “confidential” | : “ Harrington replaces Francis H.| UNEMPLOYMENT — With the | One London newspaper interpreted this as an alert. | Schneider, who resigned in October) number of jobless rising, Demo- But it could be taken as an indirect denial saying in effect, erats expect to make strenuqus § <1f we did it we would have told you as we promised.” “ Red Ofticials Deny Report lof trustees, Wayne Weaver, hasigoes before the Senate Agri-/@atellite firings arid orbits as ¢hey have: with Sputnik I , made availa = j hi i Moter Co. in = ; diag ae cae CW today as the result of the walkout str je, state highway commissioner. yesterday of 2,700 workers over a » & manner * * »* pay and job classification cape, / sions | : , When contracts will be let. for _*.* * f mee” with work in Mackie’s first five-year — of the plant, which as- ae highway building program for the sembles Lincolns, d af state will be released at the same and Continentals, were in negotia-| . g ip oe lwho ae . Sie ws ae = ‘pte ee te a, \Local 36, , im an a Bs desta ee . The new U.S. 10 is exp ‘settle the dispute. ok : pone Seve standing cme Mes to rum east of the present U.S. 10 ; ; ; . . VEY CONOVER _ “improperly r conduct t classes (Weedward avenuc) and stretch (OLD WEATHER MOVING IN — Extremels Meanwhile, some 20 sign-carry- HAR nhl parked positions." _ |¥MCA ‘beginning Jan. 20, Classes from U.S. 23 at the southeast | cold weather will move into the Atlantic coast ing pickets circled the plant. . : a eo me ee will be held Mondays from 1 to 3 corner of Flint, past Pontiac te = states from Maine to Florida tonight while the Both management and the union C ’ { G d Fi ds ~ jit tor tractors to be ven rm eaeu ero. the Detroit River. | remainder of the eastern half of the nation will declared the strike was over en 0aS! ual in 5 E pe , fer’ = ing ~* from ol At 10 ¢'clock. 5 It will be a limited access. four "eMain frigid. There will be light snow in many of pay and job classifications. They|,, , wa: Ue ; ah mow : ee a ‘ene expresen o oa < Fad ai parts of the northeast and the Lakes area. Rain : would not elaborate. Dinghy of lost Yawl k aise, co tn ee Mackie’s plans released last year. ~~~ 7 aan * * * ; : will : at a The oo el Two sections of the road. trom! . The workeré walked off their MIAMI, a. ak 4 Wonca gy which pennies sesh e advanced plc ere ates Coe imme Lage en ob Mong aterona120 a UAML St el tras wed ashe Apacs te game Wl =. Edsel “ghee eg i . yi igan yesterday morning, failed. om Ee ee - = the gy pees of oe weight eae up in each division. - expected to be included in the com- 4 The Wixom plant is located pare ol ss mar ead ee : ; Everglades 4 Parachute to Safety; Pilot, One Other Taken to Hospital MIAMI, Fla. w— A KC33 Air Force jet tanker plane crashed in the Everglades today. Four of its crewmen parachuted to safety. Two other crew members were picked up by helicopter and taken to a hospital. The four who parachuted safely the Tamiami Trail which trav- erses the Everglades. : -* * * The Florida Highway Patro? ‘said the plane attempted to land at the Strategic Air Command base at Homestead south of Miami |but was warned away because of train and high winds. | The pilot then tried to reach Miamj International Airport, the patrol said. but had insufficient fuel. A landing was attempted in ithe Everglades to avoid populated areas. ' * * * | The four men who. parachuted \were identified ag Lt. George P. Dédes, copilot; Lt. Ronald S$. Con- ley, navigafor; Sgt. L. R.- Stall- ings; and Sgt. Robert F. Weisse. , who was A | Spokesmen at Homestead de- ‘clined to say whether the tanker was based there. The plane is of \walked to a cement plant just off — He said, ‘St. Joseph is a damned criminal intent involved in this from the $9.900-a-year job which he| closed shop. If a new doctor is case. I would ce getting prosperous there, guard kicks him out and he has no had I thought so.” eseone O ‘LICENSING AUTHORITY Sosrrr as Se | Flath added that he felt | In reply, the hospital's chief of investigation might determine if there is any evidence ithat a law has been broken, while ithe state “board wil] concentrate rtainly have in- had held since 1949. the old formed the prosecutor long ago| ~ News Flash the | produce staff, Dr. Robert J. Mason, made ‘meaningful information” for the: board of registration, which has! “From 20 to 30 new physicians the power to revoke a doctor's) LANSING (ENS) — A search was under way today for Mrs. ‘have been added to the St. Jo- heense to practice medicine in seph staff in the past fiye years.” Michigan. pipes’ eld = graced Sullenberger’s statement. he said,/ * ‘owas Py oe adel - ee Ziem's investigation will be to, —— tota 000. The woman's disappearance became known when federal authorities disclosed they had clamped a efforts in this field. Ruby Hartsell, proprietor of a | | POSTAL RATES — The Senate may revise a House-approved bill, land increase postage to 4 cents a) lleter after a long wrangle. The’ |House bill would add 52] million! dollars to over-all postal rates. | ; * * * i PAY RAISES — Civil service! land postal employes seem likely) ito get increases approximating the average of $518 qa year for classi- fied employes and $546 for postal workers Eisenhower killed with a Some British scientists preferred to take the note to the | IGY as a routine reminder. They noted the Russians have sent several similarly worded messages to IGY officials. There have been strong expectations the Russians might attempt a manned rocket flight or an unmanned shot at the moon to cap the celebration of the 40th year of the Communist revolution. , * x * It also is being noted the Soviets already have sent a dog 120 miles up and recovered it unharmed. Laika, the dog that died in Sputnik II, went up 1,056 miles. And there have been recent Moscow comments that the pocket veto last September. x & first man into space would be a Soviet citizen, though this * Seas Batter Texas Coast EDINBURG. Tex. .®— Rough “We bope to go back fo our, seas battered the lower Texas home today, said Andres Are-| Gulf Coast today while hundreds velo, 42. a plumber’s helper. He of persons displaced by the worst evacuated his family of 13 when floods in three years started back murky floodwaters began lapping, jon the question o standards, An investigator for the state board, Ray M, Sweet, was sched- uled to arrive in Pontiac today and begin conferring with Ziem on coordination of the two in- { professional, | income taxes and social security taxes. It also was revealed that a Perry auto company. was pre- pared to foreclose a mortgage it holds on the cafe. TOWANDA, Pa. (P—Forty-one lien on her property for back DEBT CEILING — The. admin- ‘istration is trying to avoid asking ifor a temporary increase in the 275-billion-dollar debt ceiling. Be- jcause of the surge for more de- ifense spending, however, Congress [will vote an increase if the need for it is demonstrated. ~*~ * * must be fitted into the pattern of the recent outpouring of Russian space articles delving far into the future with dis- cussions of ipterstellar flight and photon propulsion, If the rumors turn out to be fact, the Soviets have learned how man can survive abrupt changes from bitter cold to burning heat and the terrible changes from gravita- tional pull to weightlessness, a type used to refuel jets in flight, e * * * The airplane went down at 5 a.m. today two miles southwest of the cement plant. |Ducktail Haircuts Get Short Shrift From This Judge | LONG BEACH, Calif. #—Boys _ with ducktai] haircuts—particu- larly if the hair is plated in back —had better steer clear of Mu- nicipal Judge Charies T. Smith. The jurist, who has a crew cut himself, makes no bones about _ the fact that he does not care | for long hair on men. : _ e & * Yesterday, Judge Smith grant- ed probation to 21-year-old Gary T.. Lindsay, but only after he to sodden homes * * * More than 230 persons still were; The children seem to enjoy it, but tion last week and, on the basis displaced by high water here, al though the flood tide from five he said, sipping coffee in a Red enjer it although no official com-| vestigetces: | school children dropped (25 feet at the door of his. home. . | Both Sweet and Ziem had given, to the edge of the frigid Susque- “We have been here two nights. the case a preliminary examina-| hanna River today when a bridge collapsed under their bus — but only one youngster sustained mi- nor cuts, The operator and his - we want to return to our home.” of ‘its importance,” decided to days of heavy rains was slowly Cross shelter at an elementary plaint had been lodged anywhere.' targe truck. also plummeted te receding The Weather Full C & Weather Bureae Report PONTIAC AND VICTINITY—Snew flier * ries ending and clearing tonight, ecsider, lew 8-12. Temorrow fair and continued cold, high 0-24. Westeriy- winds af 1@ 18 miles am hoor becoming northwesterly and at 15-2 miles an heer teday nertherly this evening. 2 ‘Teday im Pentise Lowest temperature preceding 8 school | Ziem said his investigation will, the bank of the swirling river * * * ‘center about the six deaths listed) at Wysox, Bradford County, but The Weather Bureau said tides by Flath in his allegations that) he was rescued without injury. along the lower Gulf Coast would Dr Sullenberger had violated pro-| The bridge was being equipped | ‘be about three feet above normal fessional standards 23 times in the, with a new floor. ‘but winds -that reached 40 m.p.h. past-18 months at Pentiac General. -‘jast night were expected to dimiN-) a NOTHER LAWSUP Soft Seat for Saddle ish slightly today. Small craft : -,were warned to stay in port from As attorneys in the damage suit : a0 ity ‘studied ‘the issues involved, an- Texas — ee 7. ‘other lawsult appeared as a con- i Ms sideration. Dozens of fishermen were ma-, z...* rooned at scattered points along) his is one in whigh four general 1 5 ste “At @ am: Wind velochy 20 mpb the Texas and upper Mexico pj actitioners at Pontiac Genera} Built-in ‘oath rubber seats. Direction—North Sun sets Tuesday at 6:16 pm Bun rises Wednesday at $01 am. Moon sete Wednesday ee eg a.m, Moon rises Tuesday at pm. DBewntewn Temperatures SS al mm. 24 il am... its et Fee \7 warm sun broke thropgh leaden Gam. 16 “skies yesterday and began méelit-| —_ ” ling heavy snow that drifted as, ‘Monday in Pontine ‘much as three feet deep in places. | (As recorded downtown) t t ne aaeees 38 tower temperature LOUTIIA 24 500 travelers for a time before’ te a veces cartes acon | White te: Mean temperature 6.0... .sseeeee i . i : sd . . 5 Weather—Fair, ©), snow, jros@e eae e | or whether this is a power of the | Walk more, eat less, get Fae | state only. i es , Highest cempeniue ss... | In-.the Corpus Christi area.| ye | was at 25 and watch your fat intake. ho weerene rir 3s floods eased after driving hun-| A dale is expected 10 be set, athe advice iven to 500 members of the Massa- Westhere3 in of snow.” (dreds from their homes over the 800m for trial of the suit by the - wee fven eS Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date te 04 Years { . 16 Upstate in .northwest Texas. 8 strictediy. ifrom Yoakum, Tex., is displaying i i ware Assn. show a 1S ales! hanes executive secretary. colortul ,Western saddles ~— with | LOST CAUSES — Any final ac-| tion now appears unlikely on ctvil rights, election law reforms, ex-: Music Tops Baseball “Americans spend $200,000,000 ‘on; & | recorded music,”" Mrs. Thompson ‘coast. Fishing vessels. caught {7 are suing the hospital, charging jthe open seas faced & rugged buf- that certain of its rules. are dis-! ‘feting. A |criminatory .and contrary ta their; «- To Live Longer After 25: ‘right to practice medicine ‘unre- Some of the! issues in the two “omzacionm tse Walk More One question raised in both suits | is whether lecal hospital, have | ‘The snow stranded an estimated: ~ ‘weekend. ahs | A cold wave numbed parts of !8 so near, it is expected that no “Health of the Dentist.” i BOSTON (INS)—Massachusetts dentists today pondered _ the advice of. noted heart specialist Dr. Paul Dudley (four doctors. Since the trial date chusetts Dental Society and guests at a symposium on the Trim Weight your weight back to what it had taken him into his cham- bers and measured his hair with a ruler, to determine if it had been cit to the proper length, as ordered. * * * The youth had appeared before Judge Smith last. week on a mis- Bi demeanor charge of carrying an illegal weapon, a six-inch switch- blade knife. At that time the judge said he would let the youth off with a $25 fine and a year’s proba- tion if he would out his hair short, “no single hair to be more than 11% inches long.” 6 tm 1907. -$ 1» 19 the nation’s midsection today and|action will be taken by Circuit x « * ; the extremely long hair are. in Monday's Temperatere Chart jereed eastward toward the A es Ge uae at fal pool Dr. White, who said his advice was not intended just eee some nefarious activity Alpena 34 1} Margurtte 3 It Temperatures slid below. rero|Pital is asked to show cause why) for dentists but for everyone, said: “ pany: goats have borne ee ee am ee 32 17 in the eastern Dakotas and Min-|@ temporary fnjunction should not! “A five-mile walk is better for tired, harassed business- | ' ay . a 41°31 Minneapolis 35 -2 wescta and dipped into the teens be issued restraining the hospital men than all the medicines, but don’t try to do that much i ; E Fails Ghatiesion $1 41 New Oriente Mf 4 a6 far south as northern Missouri ‘0m enforcing the disputed rules right away. Start off with one mile. Then work up. unger: Excuse Fai Cineioneti «43 15 Omahe 31 1 and’ central Hlihois. and regulations. is ; : ng Ip a Kaas # . ' ferent oye Priston 33 4: ‘Rain pelted most of the eastern ne 2 “Eat less. After the age. of 25 you should not gain — : : a8 | AP Pacstmite Pome ETROIT — ice were un- oe -~ SR eee OG if and south Atlantic region., The show cause hearing has been weight, Get back to that weight by dieting. You'll live — MAN'S RACE INTO OUTER SPACE — Reports that Russia — told his James mg ame #6 ee 3 Sobre oe coe! seers ae oo he ee | SORR Bbe etee mee aks Samieae pe bases tid cane : 7 = Bley gl ed Pat stat s region with the suit was 1. Origi-| ’ -.* eos “. isons of hei y be : a Jatksonvifie Fe “ panel a ‘: 5, flurries ‘extending southward tojnally, six doctors were in the suit, * “Watch your fat intake. We haven't reached any con Russians previously claimed they had sent dogs, and monkeys up’ tl dl oa “A foe ot to & Bes ‘; 2 West Virginia and northern Ken-/but two of them subsequently with-| clusion about the role of fat in coronaries yet, but research | 130 miles. The United States has sent mice and monkeys 36 miles |five dollars and costs pee Los Angeles erie itucky. ee \drew, | now going on suggests there may be some connection.” up in aerobee rockets afid they lived, «ss os i, cia rer Fe Pale f.. i ‘ j i aa - 4 b be wg « / ey oe | a ae ole Cee > | f ; ¥ i r — : } ra dis A ; ‘ : nN , 4 i ; \ fe sale : ' : . ee ' \ 4 j x he a Ae : e i : sf 4 z a ee s p = ofa *) a \ % * a . et 4 E ae. 2 ve Ae a eo Ae i: Bae =\.. 7 ae i ‘ Ceeee ae ep ge ese “= - hag ae ore — ——e ae er ited vo aieeiaennrerten iit a gee ipa se Opp et ae Ae IG rns SOE isa mas a ‘ ‘ A ¥: JANUARY. 4 1938 _ an@’she answered the call: tala and strange ‘monkey been ill about a ’ She was a meinber of St indies Paul Church. firs. thers and three sistets. 3 her daughter, Sylvia, at 464 Wh < ‘oe Ee .= rv we oy * cooperative supper | ait Rockefeller He often dines on a common fare solely for presentation to the S&H planned. os oF x * ¢ lorganiser behind At. . och os a haniverger end Ghee elem. fe Serene OF See Beginning at 8 members | The wees of the New Hudson Meth-| Several congressmen _ already milk, doesn’t smoke, chandise. : ot the Lambert Scheel P.T.A. wil Thursday. at 13:30 pm for a luncheon |have called €or qutbes-combdare-jasounty 6 the 0. Chk Oy G0) Se Secor oak te abe reer tingss lint ag —- . tion of the report. which urBes an| oor ——— Rees gene — speak on the subject, “Enrich: lechoc! gymnacum st ‘ims Thuedey gram as essential to U.S. defense. Children’s Reading Exper: | ethodist wecs = pole , te Marian eutheroy ‘Thursday e!| Rockefeller, an energetic, Sees Soviet Trick in Polish Plan An informal will fol-| ks ke warm-natured man brimming with — neyo ee ee ed at eee eD. OCD bunk. . be a social, sermon, the mandi, gc0.eny ideas, has been an, acive t¥'Gen. Schuyler Debunks coffee hour. Priday even’ at the it Yuca . * * * L rhey wi meet at 7:15 p.m. at the SCeMe for the past 17 years—in ather, Sonor Daughter Night,|zeor= a ren under 3/addition to helping administer Neutral Europe Proposal eames red gy - ye |More Plumbing Colored before|pulley and they couldn't get down.| CHICAGO — The ratio of colored| lower| All they had to eat was a can of|plumbing “fixtures to white has beans and some cookies. ' “almost doubled in the last four "8 & ‘years, Aceording to the Plumb- : could) Lt. Howard A. Kendall of the|ing and Heating Industries Bureau, _Con-|Army Aviation Service rescuedjonly 15.53 per cent of all fixtures likeli-|them on separate fights in his|sold in 1953 were colored, while ” sd By JOHN H. MARTIN ly, It is a Soviet idea merely American military planners in| aro cite of government the Atlantic Alliance now are €X-| meeting in Paris. pressing alarm over reaction to : the Polish proposal for a denu-|, But it found a ready Tesponse clearized _ eee Hog yo hep a ae ee ee cme : str, St a toa it 8 me omc a . the ofa , Lauris Norstid, supreme com- ~ : mander, ; objected to the! usemeaged zone” comprising the plan in an interview with Interna-|;ermauce: , Poland. Coechoslovae : ze 7S His idea was the foreign forces The Polish Communist gov- |would withdraw and then a “ma ernment proposed the idea of |tual security pact’ underwritten banning nuclear . weapons » ee ene ee SS tents fe aera ‘ Beco e Pi AB gg Bogor : pressed interest in the Polish plan, and Indian Prime Minister Jawa- New Books Listed _esi.tten Prime, sinister Jove by Pontiac Library |r canes swten t aero ry A strange switch tn develop- the iden of a neu is the 7 3, weuseese 1.60) -) dos, 1.58) Seo — He (bet) 6 aweeee 3.98, re Reduc .... a4 Kre hes AG #3 Collard, bu, Oe OFC HO CHRO RHEE EE 75 «etee ‘s 7. “ ee @ Kale, bu. PAREN E NE enenswesens sence . iain chet .o:. ie db —— ee ye |Alum Lid ..,.. 28 ye Aire . 4 iAleom-....,.:-. @4 Bours ee, 18.2 Poultry [am Airlim ...+. 11 pone 8 Cem . 28.6 a oe doesces Pg Meck Trk ... 22.7 DETROIT POULTRY [Am Gas a gis: eS Mannie «308 DETROIT, Jar. @ (AP) — Prices paid’ 2™ Mitel .”’ ing May D Strs .. 36 for Ne. 1 ym y UP tolam Motors’... 85 Mead Cp .-.. 361) 10 am, FOB. : |Am N Gas ,,... 53 a eee 39.4) Heavy type hens, 24-28: Nght type./Am Rad ...... 123 Merr Ch & & 165 12-13; - heavy broilers and fryers.|Am Smelt ..... 381 Minn M& 75.4 2%-3— tbs, 32; Caponetts. un- am Tel & Tel .1666 Nipis Hon 82 Ger & Ibs.. 21-32, over 5 ~~ 24-276: | Am Tod .....+- 1.6 Mont Ward .. 30.4 tarkers, honey type, hens, vy(Aneconda .... 41.2 -yrot Wheel ... 15 trpe, tema, lArmco Btl ,... 43 yet Bise 4 |aArmour & Ce. Monsen Ch 36.5 DETROIT EGGS |atenioee Woy Net Cosh R.. 828 Jan. @ (AP) — Bee, FOB. AU Mae ----: 9G* Nat Dalry... 3, Detroit, cases federal stateinan & 24. = redey a ey rf is coco 4te Ce “ o Whites, grade A jumbo, 52; extra sera Bef : $3 Net Tea ... rw —— ted averages. | Boeing Air ..,, 384 NY Central .. e. 45, wid. ave. 425%; smali|Bohn Alum ... 164 Nie M Pow .- 3035 37-38, whd, "5; 38%; grade large, 43-/ d Btrs .... 145 Mo Am Av .. 3 44. wid. avg. 2%: browns, grade A, ex--Borg Warn...) 28 Nor Pac. +. | tre le 48: large. 45; medium, 43; Briggs Mf... 61 Nor Sta Pw ,, 16 checks, . wed, svg. 33%. . [Brist My ..... $4 Nwest Ajrlin . 112 : Commercially greded) Whites, grade A/Brun Balke... 342 onio Of .... 203 fumbe, 67; extre large. 43: large, 40-42; Budd Co ..... 146 Owens Cng .. $05 37-40: browns, grade A jumbo, Burrevghs .... 30.3 Owens 12 Gi . 59-4 45; extra large, large, 40-41; Calum & HK... 93 pac G -# medium, 31-40; grade B large, 33%. Teng: Appa os re Pan AW AI us Carrier Cp sag Spa Bul .---- 31.3 : Stier tise oye PE et ae Livestock ee a. 624 Pa RR ...... 125 yeler .. 555 Peps! Cole 19.6 DETROMT LIVESTOCK Cities Gye . es Sieead oars or DETROIT Jan. # (AP)—Cattie. Salabie pom -.-- 33 tine... 131 9200. Bulk early supply uter st®ersiCoiam Gas ... 16.2 Mor 4 end heifers, qualit over last ue cece ae ho ie <« 82 week, good and predominating; Con Edis .... 4-3 pilisoy Mills . 43 cows comprise & percent ré- Con N Gas... 422 py Plate G ee hie be ae obe Pw... @1 proct & G en Tun; openi trade steers Cont Can ..... 26 pure Oi po od modera active, strong th 50) Cont Mot . RCA .. higher: ance on — — o1l . 334 Repub st! a3 g steady. . ae ..c ges choice steers 26.00-27.80;| Curtis Pub cel wool ol ae two loads high choice to prime 1035-1080) Det Els .--- 7. Rey Tod B .. 64.4 Th. steers 28.00; 23. head prime yearling pees £ ~ "gg Rock Sug .... 24 steers 1060 Ib. 28.00; good to low choice) Dos o* 177.6 Roval Dut . steers 23.50-25.50; several loads mixed) sai: air 32 «Gateway St .. high good and low choice steers 25.50- * 96.3 St Jos Lead .. 236 26:00: stand to steers 20°25- Auto L 712 Bt Rex Pao .. 272 33.00; utility steers 17.50-20.25: few loads| em & Mus | 37 Sesb AI RR . 22-4 choice heifers 2450-3600; to low! Erie RR . 16 Bears Reed .. 75.1 choice heifers 23.00.2450; utility and! Ex-Cell-O 1 she Of .... 6 standerd heifers 11.58-23.00: utility cows! Fairb Mor @ Sinelair ...... 44.2) 15.§0-16.75; few up te 17.00; canners and Firestone ..... 93 Soconr . at cutters 12.00-16.00 Ford Mot... 392 gouthern Co . 25 2| Vealers — Sajabie 250. Vealers Gora) Oe Sul ... 7 goyu Pac ..... 36.2 ing active, strong with last weeks high Fruen_ Tre ... 101 gov Ry ...... 30.8) tt choire and prime 29.00-38.00:|Gen Bak - 95 goerry Ra ... 19 lew choice 25.00-29.00; utility} Gem Dynam .. 622 gi4 on Cal .. 45.8) and, standard 16.00-90.90; culls 10.00-| Sen Kise oo2 Std Of Ind .. 387) ’ | a." Std O11 XJ .., Hogs — Salable 1200. Barty sales Ge? Mills... S'S sia Of On .. 4 | butchers under 249 Ibs. active. 50-T5¢/ Gen Tel ..... 6 Stevens. JP .. If «| Bayoer: over 240 Ibs. not fully esteb-| Gen Time 18 «Stud “Pack .. 74) ished; sows not establiehed. early sales Gen Tire |. 286 Sun Ol). .... 8% ‘| mized no. 2 and 3 190-240 Ibs, 19.26-\Gerder Prod . 45.2 Suther Pap .. 3) | 19.50; mixed No. 1 and 19. T5-19.05; Gillette ... 38.3 Swift & Co .. 333 ene load mostly No. 1 216 Ibs. 20.00;|Goebel Br ... 24 Syiv El Pd .. 44 mixed grades 160-190 ibs. 18.25-19.25, | Good _| $1.2 Texas Co ..., 61.2 Balabie 1500. Slaughter|Goodyear |... 812 Tex @ Sul ... 16.1| lambs very active, strong to Sc r;|Ot No Ry .... 316 Textron ..... 14 cholee and prime wooled la ‘ 5o- | G 146 themp Pd .. 88.5 24.50; lots choice to mostly prime | Gul --. 1066 Twenty Cen .. 23.3 wooled lambs 24.75; small lot up te|/Molland F ... ¥€ wnderwd .... 13.6 25.00; and choice lota 2150-2350;| Hooker Hl -... 25-5 of Carbide .. 95.4 load choice to rime shorn lambs| i! i wes 4 Pec....... 8B No 2 polis 23:38: load cholce | te neee rt? -: ogg Unit Alr Lin 92.7 118 Tbs. 23.50 on bought-to-arrive basis; ' Bt on 4 Unit Aire . 64. calls to choice slaughter sheep 6.00- * “"* gaa Unit oe oat 10.06, these steady. to am Un Gas Cp .. 274 int Bus Mch 3006 US Lines ... 24.4 Marv . 29.2 Us Rub ..... 33.4 int Nick ..... 72. US Stee] ..... $3 6 Tob ..... 204 on S U nt Stiver “2 West Un Tel 16 int Tel & Tel 30 ete A 4 - a Cre -- 2 weste El .... 61.1 . Jacobs oe OF Johns Man .. 384 Wilson & Co , 163 in Caribou Inn Case (issue. 8) Fokyat Kennecott ~.. 815 Yale & Tow . 263 Kimb Cik 466 Yngst Gh & T 72.6 Clarkston Village Attorney Mil- STOCK AVERAGES ' “ (Compiled by The Associated Press) ton F. Cooney filed a petition yes- cere 3 terday to have the Oakland County Indust Rafls Uttl Stocks Circuit © 7 |Prev. day ..... 2376 83.8 72.9 158.3 mat Cont ingen 2 dary solic at Bt He Bt ; ago ...... determine the necessity of an off-|Year ago |... 23 1340 25 1812 street parking program on the con- pegr-s8 pign ... See Wei Oe ae troversial Caribou Inn property. | 1956 pigh ane 3703 381 3s its nl 1986 low :...... y J The petition was filed pursuant to the resolution of the Clarkston. per STOCKS ’ tC, J. Nephier Co.) Village Council at the regular|Figeres after decimal points are cighths meeting Dec. 9. & Equip Papo ryt hear First hearing date has been set| Baldwin Rubber, Ca.*..... 136 13.6 gel Liao Spear 2S, Ch . | How . . Co, 4 al fair a val Peninsular Prod. Coil 11 ou mine a fa chaps ma et value |The Prophet Oe. deaecees 38 oe the udy B®. CO.°....cc0e-s E of Labers ne = said. Teiedo Batson Co... 128 128 128 Wayne 8 - GO «.- LT 2.Y LY bid and asked. For the past year the century- old_inn, located in the heart of Clarkston, has been a bone of con- tention between owner Ernie Fe- lice and townspeople. The council's resolution was to condemn the property for possible; for off-street parking. The had been considering this for more than six months, Largest potash deposits in the U, S. are located in western Ne- and Loan Association Pontiac, Miehiran December 2., 1067 ernization Loans (PHA MUO OY eee idenc ees wees 22,078, 05 Leens on Savings Accounts 69,396.77 Real Estate tn Judgment 4,541.08 Stock in Federal Home Loan Agee Sou. anon 240,000.00 US. Government Securities - 228,502.21 Cash on Mand and in Banke 1,941, 701.22 Land and Office Building flese sccumulated depre- . cepa 380,980.98 45,788.33 - 167 AAA KE 6.368 04 ‘20,417.13; Son swseeed seenee 905,278.00 carnation Vice JAMES CLARKBON, Executive Vice President en¢é sworn to before me « this @th dey of Janu- Pontiac Federal Savings| (Late Morning Quotations) .: eee 8 SEOUL (INS)—America’is tu tual GI's in aes Gluck Up to Date on Names Now i i libraries fs stocked with “War and Peace." “For a while it was the most “Actually the classies and non- fiction, like history, are the ‘best sellers’ with the men up here.” SP3 Malcom’ Browne, 26, of Brooklyn, N. Y., is brushing up on jhis philosophy in the evenings in an isolated quonset hut that serves $ as a library only a few miles from the muzzles of Communist guns across the demilitarized zone. He said: “Lately I've been reading Schepenhaner and a book en- titled, ‘The Rise of The Modern Physics’ by D’Abro.” - . Browne js also a member of a small] combat zone debating club, jwhich has locked horns on such = Biltopics as “Materialism vs. Ideal- tees bo ism in Korean Life.” “22 |GLASSICAL MUSIC LEADS Library director Stewart said classical music has forged into the ‘’ 38.2\lead in popularity among troops 24-7\ who trundle from sleeping bags in the frozen field to warm library buildings. “Beethoven and Mozart among the favorites,"’ he said. Chess clubs have also blos- somed with tournaments held bunker to bunker. Seme even are Lot Tougher iat, summer o miltionaire ‘nom. poeta 2 tee of ion's Selpe’” minlater. more 4 than me ce ‘mon Kere ts how he's By a mentee aed The soft-spoken New York’ mil- as U.S. ambassador to Ceylon Sept. 15. Since then he has been a 6 a.m. riser, already at work at the embassy at 7:45. * * * “Tt hadn't worked a full schedule like this for years,” the trim 58- year-old ambassador says. Gluck, head of a 140-store enterprise, get more than the usual amount of publicity when he was approved for the amtbas- * * ® Later he explained that he actu- ally knew the name, but hesitated to pronounce it because_ of the A few days after arriving here, Cluck called on the prime minister, hailing him by his full name:} Solomen West Ridgeway Daiz The ambassador took another bit Usited States by mail. play friends back in jof rough treatment when the Cey- Of Treason, Conspiracy Charges Promote Hedgecock scree 17 Yo Consumers Post eo jren County court . * ® BOWLING GREEN, Ky. ® — Three Confederate generale—one them a former vice president of lof the United States—were cleared of %6- in 1862. They popped up last No- vember wedged in a cranny be- hind an old filing cabinet men were moving out of the War- * The Indictments named Lt. Gen. ‘3|Simon Boliver Buckner, who la- iter became Kentucky governor; ‘5|Maj. Gen. John Hunt Morgan, “\leader of Morgan's Raiders and Maj. Gen. John C. Breckinridge, elected vice president in 1856 un- der James Buchanan. He was the Clear 3 Rebel Generals Finds Ambassador's Job Than Stores| declined to see him, then finally bran =f i Hy ; | : it age oe get e* : lt elect! country may slide all the into communism. Gluck’s day is filled with paper work, conferences with his staff and with éther diplomats and Cey-| lonese ‘officials, The ambassador and Mrs. aubaru-haired way : if z : sador held a reception for 250 persons at his 19-room_resitience Saturday night, cut the cake the istration officers at 9 a.m. Monday. * * * The ambassador's living costs,), missed indictments against a * & *, Commonwealth's Atty. J. David Francis said the indictments were youngest vice president in the na- tion’s history, elected at 35. ing his salary ahd allowances of $16,300. But he prefers not to say how much he is digging into his own pocket. “We would be entertaining any- pway in New York,” Mrs. Gluck ss scial tema Sea Soe AE er Pan Be to force her to unite! it 1 for the United States as well ee a ce In his quiet mannered way Gluck ae paren aan possession arren County andjis making his presence felt. He , pes confiscating céurt records to pre-|says: Available Now vent the administration of law.” | ‘All Murial (Mrs. Gluck) and I sk w@nt to do here is a good job for THE 1958 Warren Circuit Court also dis-|the U be Picture Look at Stock Marke STANDARD & POOR'S INDEX» Yislas OF SO INDUSTRIAL STOCKS Are Above Stock Yields 1941-43= (First Time Sinee 1937) | 54 Ee 52 — 50 vA a based here From 3% to 341% wt || Baker FORECAST & att ay : é oe | Our Stature Is Measured «In Part By The Reverence .. .S o : 28S er ot Cp poi Sots noe a8 PERS ee 2 es gf ee i : z ry 0e be (Sc tooctnoc t= C Mo : values to 17.98 . . rs. TROYLINGS | values to 18.95 $ 88 AVONETTES values to 24.95 10 , MARTINIQUE , values to ais $ | O 83 - MADEMOISELLE values to 21.95 vy | ANDREW SELLER _ calues 0 26.95 § | Biss MATRIX values to 25.95 _. I. MILLER values.to 26.95 PALLIZZIO -- values to 36.95 148 JARMAN BATES MANSFIELD EDGERTON _Many Other Famous Names MEN'S — Children’s Famous Brand Shoes “%% . . : tae sqee OVER 5,000 PAIRS | . FAMOUS BRAND SHOES — Women’s—Men’s—Children’s - in This Sale WOMEN’S SIZES 314-11 - AAAA to EEE MEN’S SIZES 6 to.14 AAA to EEE. Children’s 8 - 6, 6% - & 84: 12, 124-3 $30 A.M. Wednead | aed