ade | ' 2 taco? HE PONTIAC PRES (V0 Pia The Weather _ U.S, Weather Bureas Forecast | Fair and Warmer. (Details Page 2) : J ‘16th YEAR x* = ns. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1958 —24 PAGES ER SRP ae ca “ Cia ‘Routed by Hotel. Blaze | B- 55 k a L | a ti ' Pontiac Press Photo RUDE AWAKENING — Several residents of a small hotel on the second floor at 87 S. Saginaw St., were awakened by smoke and flames early today. One of the residents, Mrs, Evansta Pello, who fled with her family sits among belongings, holding her baby. The blaze kept firemen busy for almost two hours. Fire inspectors set the damages at about $9,000 to the building and $3,000 to the contents. The blaze, which is reported to have begun in a mat- tress, was confined mostly to the rear portion of the second story, firemen report; No one was injured, Tool, Die Makers Business: Picking Up, Holds Promise WASHINGTON (# — Tool and die makers reported to- day their business is picking up—A good sign, they said that mass production manufacturers are more opti- - mistic about the future. But some said the pickup may develop slowly, and one reported that the backlog of orders is the lowest in five _~years. Toolmakers interviewed at the annual spring meeting _ of the National Tool and Die Manufacturers’ Assn. were GM Corp., Ford Override UAW Make Direct Appeal to Workers for Extension of Present Contract DETROIT (#—Both Gneral Mo-| - tors Corp. ‘and Ford Motor Co, have gone over the heads of the United Auto Workers leadership in direct appeals to rank-and-file UAW members for an understand- ing of management's stand at the - bargaining table, Qn the eve of resuming contract talks with the UAW today, GM yesterday made public a letter sent by President Harlow H. Cur- tice to 350,000 hourly rate em- \. ariel! urging them to study ‘“‘in the light of conditions today'’ the company’s wage formula which - was rejected by UAW negotiators. Curtice told employes prompt acceptance of the company’s of- fer to extend for two years the built-in wage increases in the present contract “would have & most favorable effect on public confidence.” | .GM"s action followed a similar appeal made to Ford’s 140,000 hourly employes by the firm's | president, Henry Rord II. EE. 8. (Pat) Patterson, acting chief ‘of the UAW bargaining team, said, “The corporation’s - proposal was made twice even be- fore negotiations began, and re- _ jected both times.” _ GM, with Ford and Chrysler following suit, has offered to keep {jn fect a fwage ormula which _ gives workers an annual wage in- crease of at least 6 cents an hour. The increase is based on the theory that the nation’s produc- tivity increases at the rate of 214 per cent. Explaining the union's rejec- tion, Patterson said, “GM work- ers are seeking through th UAW to have their current problems met on the basis of an agreement specifically designed to solve those, and not by just continuing the old contract.” Bolivia Asks U. S. Aid LA PAZ, Bolivia ® — Presi- dent Hernan Siles Zuazo has asked the United States for 200 million dollars in aid over the next four years to buy time for Bolivia to solve her economic habs ; ae. Ti Press *tunanimously hopeful that disagreement, however, over the probable timing of a genera! business revival. Officials of companies catering big customers are the Detroit auto makers, - (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Total 391,678 Vehicles Produced Last Month Outpat for 1958 through the - jadmit Hold an in — 5 Jury Deliberates Van Horn Fate in Murder Trial Final Arguments Heard in Attack-Killing of Waterford Woman By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. The innocence or guilt of accused killer Billy Ray Van Horn was up to a Cir- cuit Court jury of six men and six women to decide to- day. The jury, after a three- day recess, returned this morning to Oakland Coun- ty Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty’s courtroom to hear final arguments of Prose- cutor Frederick C. Ziem and court-appointed attor- ney for Van Horn, Sa J. Orr. After the arguments, Judge Doty charged the jury with the possible verdicts in “first-degree murder trial, and then sent the jury out to deliberate, Van Horn, 24, is charged with murdering Mrs. Hazel Murdock, ”!39, of 127 N. Josephine St. Water- ford Township, in the Murdock home Jan. 24. Ziem charges that he brutually attacked Mrs. Murdock after she warned him never to visit the Murdeck home when he had been drinking. Both she and her husband, Drvu- lard B., 55, had sought unsuccess- fully to curb Van Horn’s excessive drinking through Alcoholics Anon- ymous, according to testimony. During four days of testimony last week, .Ziem led 45. witnesses to the stand to re-create the day of Jan. 24 when Mrs. Murdock's battered and beaten body was found #9 her husband sprawled on the kitchen floor. After the state rested its case Friday, Orr began his defense by placing Van Horn on the stand to testify in his own behalf. Under oath, Van Horn, denied he had killed Mrs. Murdock. In his testimony, he accused several interrogation officers of abusing and threatening him into making a confession on Jan. 25. He said the statements that he made that night were ‘‘false’’ and i “mostly lies. ” Ziem than ‘cross-examined the accused killer in an attempt to show that this statement that he raped and killed Mrs. Murdock was true. However, Van Horn only changed his story once. Then it was that his statement to the pro- secutor was given voluntarily, But he never broke down to that he had stabbed, strangled and attacked the woman. Plan Widespread Probe NEW YORK #® — A Senate investigator said today the forth- coming probe of the insurance industry. will be on a broad Guest Officials Shown Area Beauty Spots Discover Cache From §2 Million Ontario Theft Police Probe Possible Tie-In With Montreal Robbery Last January MONTREAL (#}—Further MAYORS VISIT US — The three men standing on the dock at Grayling, and Arthur Smith, mayor of Stockbridge. Greeting thém questioning of a man held pany burglary in Brockville, Ont., was scheduled today as pdlice sought to link the crime with others. The Brockville Trust and Savings Company was the left came a long way to become the top men in Pontiac, Keego Harbor and Sylvan Lake yesterday. Left to right are Harry A. Reiley, president of Bellaire Village; Emil Giegling, mayor of at Oakland County Boat Club during their tour of Pontiac and en- virons is Louis G. Barry, Sylvan Lake city manager. The mayors were here for Mayor Exchange Day, a Michigan Week event. week ending May 3 was esti- mated by the. association at 1,- 897,996 units, money leaders. -scale, including a look at the role insurance companies play as There Is Nothin’ Like a Dame Jobs on South Seas Isle Alluring—but Don't Rush LOS ANGELES (AP)—Like a job on a South Seas Island where they serve food fit for a king, drinks cost 25 cents each, and @ man can bank $10,000 a year? Where living expenses are $1.50 a day and movies and television are free? Such are the inducements that lure men to the tropic isles where the United States tests its most devastating nu- clear devices. If: it sounds like near paradise, it is, with this | trifling exception: there are no women. Operators of this enterprise are Holmes & Narver, Inc., a Los Angeles engineering firm hired by the Atomic Energy Commission in 1948 to turn Eniwetok Atoll into a proving ground, On the tiny coral speck of the atoll’s Parry Island, 5,100 miles from Los Angeles, the company has main- tained an all-male community since 1949, ranging from 500 between tests to the 3,200 now working on the forth- coming test series. Some have been there seven years. Tests are held about every two years. It takes a year to build up for one, about six months to clean up after it. Men are paid the going scale in Los Angeles for their specialty, but guaranteed at least eight hours overtime a week and given a $10-a-week bonus. All they ever see of it is $20 a week, the rest being deposited for them or sént home. If a man stays 18 months his income is considered earned aboard and he pl have to pay income = "- Phere is a full, hienae organized sports grogrt some of the best fishing in the world. A company ve says of the men.on Parry Island: “T think they're as happy as men can be—without women. id ‘and Prediction Ike to Resign WASHINGTON (®—Republicans dismissed today as merely spec- ulation a prediction by Demo- cratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler that President Eisenhower will resign before his term ends. Republican National Chairman Meade Alcorn called it “undi- luted nonsense." Dr. Sullenberger Turns fo Board Seeks Settlement With Pontiac General; but May Appeal Yet With the filing of a final order tossing his dispute with Pontiac General Hospital out of Circuit Court, Dr. Neil H.. Sullenberger. to- day said he planned to turn to the hospital board of trustees for a settlement. * * * “But if a satisfactory settlement cannot be made with the board, I definitely plan to appeal the Circuit Court dismissal to the Michigan Supreme Court,” the 42- year-old Pontiac chest surgeon said. Dr. Sullenberger, who was sus- pended from the hospital medical staff Nov. 13 and sought by ac- tien to gain reinstatement, has 20 days or until] May 25 in which te file his appeal. The next regu- lar hospital board meeting is May 15, also sought $250,000 damages, was dismissed by Circuit Judge Tim- othy C. Quinn, of Caro, on grounds that it was filed prematurely with- out a final hearing by the board of trustees. * * x. . In his final order filed yester- day, Judge Quinri also quashed all restraining orders that halted the board from taking final action on Dr. Sullenberger’s suspension. Fair and Warmer Here Tomorrow Fair and cooler tonight with a low of 35 degrees is the weather prediction for the Pontiac area- Wednesday will be fair and warmer with the high near 64. Temperatures for the next five days will average about four de- grees below the normal of 65 and the normal low of 45. A slow warming trend will be- gin tomorrow or. Thursday reach- ing about normal Saturday. Pre- cipitation will total around one- quarter to one-half inch in show- ers in the latter part of the week. temperature preceding 8 a.m. was 38 degrees. The reading was 57 at m, \ . 1P Vina? Butler said on a recorded radio program last night he would ven- ‘ture to guess that Eisenhower will turn his office over to Vice Pres- ident Nixon because the President will decide “he feels physically un- able to continue to discharge any ‘responsibilities and duties’ of the job.” Sen. Calif), hower weekly, William Knowland (R- who confers with Eisen- said: “The Presi- and he certainly is on the job on a full-time basis. “He certainly doesn’t giye any- one the im that he is even remotely entertaining the idea of resigning.” At the White House, Mrs.. Anne Wheaton, . associate press: secre- tary, said there would be no .com- ment. Butler was asked during the program whether he based his dent shows every sign of vigor Denied by Republicans forecast on some factual knowl- edge or on gossip. x *« * “T would say that this is some thing that is very hard, very dif- ficult to prove,” he replied. ‘But certainly there has been so much talk and conversation about it in official circles, and ly among the Washington press corps, that it would appear that there is some basis for it.” Eisenhower told his news con- ference last week that when he was re-elected, “I took on some- thing that I think is a duty, and I am going to perform that duty as long as I think I am capable of doing it.” -Aleorn said: “The nation .. « is confronted with the necessity of choosing between the Presi- dent's unqualified denial and Mr. Butler’s ridiculous speculation.” In Time for May 14 Festival Tulips Bloom at Holland HOLLAND (AP)—A weekend preview of Holland's famed The suit, in which the surgeon. In downtown Pontiac, the Jowest | tulips, center of attraction for the forthcoming Tulip Time Festival, was offered to tourists today. by festival officials. Sipp Houtman, festival manager, reported after an in- spection trip that 60 per cent of the six miles of tulips along the city streets were in full bloom. Bud color was seen in the remaining 40 per cent. - Houtman said all would be in blossom by the weekend. The colorful festival which pays tribute to Holland’s Old World Dutch background starts May 14. Cancer Society Staying in UF Area Chapter Defies Withdrawal Order } From. Headquarters Yesterday the Southeastern Michigan Chapter of the American Cancer Society vowed to disregard) the national cancer foundation's or- der to drop its connection with UF groups and resolved to remain with the Detroit UF for at least five years. ‘Today Leonard Lewis, president of the Pontiac Area United Fund, aid he would appoint a committee to meet with rpresentatives of the Southeastern Michigan division in hopes of drawing up a similar agreement between them and the Pontiac area fund. North Oakland County Cancer Unit is a part of the Southeastern Michigan division. Karl W. Bradley, executive di- rector of the Pontiac fund said that the recent action yesterday in Detroit indicated that contributors in the Pontiac Area United Fund could be “assured that a separate fund-raising campaign would not be conducted for canter and the group would continue to partici- pate in the UF as in the past.’ The Southeastern Michigan Unit's resolution said in part: ‘‘The board of trustees is convinced that its continued participation in the Unit- ed Foundation is not only justified but indeed is ssential to this com- munity’s complete support of the cancer program.”* Little Rock Paper Gets 2 Pulitzer Prizes for Its Stand on School Integration Crisis NEW YORK (®#—The school in- tegration crisis in Little Rock,| 1957, during the integration Ark., set the stage for three of) crisis” at Little Rock’s Central the 1958 Pulitzer Prizes in jour-| High School, nalism. : Two of the prizes, which were announced yesterday, were won by the same newspaper, the Ar- kansas Gazette, of Little Rock. Another was awarde: to Rel- man Pat Morin, an Associated Press reporter, for his coverage of integration violence. For ‘demonstrating the highest qualities of civic leadership, jour- nalistic responsibility and moral courage,’ the Gazette won the prize for meritorious public serv- ice. EDITOR WINS | The newspaper's executive edi-|. tor, Harry S. Ashmore, 41, won a prize “for the forcefulness, dis- pussiontiee analysis and clarity of his editorials’ on the explosivé integration situation. This marked the first time a newspaper captured the public service award while one of its edi tors won the editorial prize for the same news event. Morin, a Pulitzer Prize winner in 1951, was cited for “his dra- matic and incisive eyewitness re- port of mob violence on Sept. 23, Morin, 50, was one of two win- ners this year for national report- ing. The other ae award in this category went to Clark Mol- lenhoff, 37, Washington corres- pondent for the Des Moines Regis- ter and Tribune and the Minne- apolis. Star and Tribune. He was cited for his investigation of labor racketeering. * * * “A Death in the Family,” by the late James Agee, and. “Look Homeward, Angel,” adapted by Ketti Frings from the late Thomas Wolfe's novel, were named the best American novel and play of 1957. The award to Agee, who died three years ago at the age of 45, was the first Pulitzer Prize for fietion to be awarded post-- The novel deals wi family’s reaction to. > » ge ret : i g " g! tik Bae ar -” Primaries Held ‘Teday pal ~ By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Voters cast ballots in three states today in primary elections that involve contests for nomina- tions ranging ‘from governor to offices. diana. Light turnouts were forecast for Ohio and Indiana, but a heavy vote was expected in Alabama where 14 candidates sought the (Continued From Page One) 5 cigfth | te Ht | i : re j ; : E f j i sé : ini E asf ts 9g : Both Cool, Wet, but West Is Dry ge a ike rite; (aye z B ¢ 5 Scattered thundershowers were The Weather ; Weather Bureas & * ‘Leonard. T. Lewis, prominent Pontiac furniture dealer and long- time Pontiac Area United Fund the PAUF at the annua’ meeting yesterday. * * | Lewis, 57, was also reelected to the board of trustees for a three- year term. He has been active in civic affairs for many years and served as president and a director _ {of the Pontiac Community Chest, In 1955, Lewis was elected a directer of the Michigan United Fund. President of Lewis Furniture Corp. which was founded by his father, he has been a Pontiac area resident since 1924. ; * * « Other officers elected were to plan for important changes | lines whereas the Area United Fund) trustee, was elected president of} © Jaycees Slate Reese sevens wih hove Oey term—| pmo one-year ter™! opportunity to show that they can | _ TEENAGE ROAD-E-O — George Stewart, : ; Pontiac Central High School driver's training Henderson. St., as. they prepare to enter the instructor, (right) checks with driver Patty Code, Teenage Road-E-O May 25 sponsored by the 2205 Dexter Ra., (center) and Lynn Carson, 109 Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce. Teenage Road-E-0 Pentine Press Photo the Tel-Huron parking lot begin-|parochial junior and senior high ning at 10 am. May 25. schools as well as the following local firms: * * * Georges - Newports; Outlet Store; C. W. Haskill Stu- Connolly's Jewelers and | Long-Fime Formed Firm Without {sideline contrary icome to light of irregular state jducts. Wallpaper | < =) % y ” 1 ¢ _.__\___THE PONTIAC: PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 6,1958 Highway Dept. Suspends Two Prior Clearance LANSING — Two long time State Highway Department ‘em- ployes were under suspension today for carrying on a private business to department rules, Sidney H. Woolner, deputy com- missioner, identified them as Her- man Preiss, 53, and Barney A. Cyberski, 42, both of Lansing. Preiss came to the department in 1983 and Cyberski was hired in 1936. * * * Without getting prior clearance, Woolner said, they formed the Manbar Manufacturing Co. last year and trafficked in regulator regulations for use at construction sites on all trunklines. About $3,000 worth was sold to contractors, county read com- missions and to the state, he said, Because of their long service in the department, Woolner said, the two will be reinstated if they dis- engage themselves from the busi- ness. * * * Woolner said no evidence had purchasing practices or that the men used their department posi- tions to push sale of Manbar pro- Four Policemen dio; Fred’s Wonderland Shop. Three teens wil] receive trophies f (County Asks State F BE E35 Fé 2 g55 he } s 3 38 J i Pay 50-50 Welfare, *!‘But Don’t Weaken Position’ mnt with the Soviet Union with/ 3. The recent Soviet attitude as reflected in Moscow and in the Push for Summit Meet, NATO Nations Tell Big 3 St ltirst aired before a U. 8. Snat -\states rights stand, was on hand and the District of Columbia. in charge of the contest are: E, W. Watchpocket, general chairman; Bob Weddle, assistant chairman and publicity; Wayne Wilson, scor- ing chairman; vitz, certification * * * National - finalist will be spon- sored by the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Lib- erty Mutual Insurance Company, Association, American Trucking Inc.; Chrysler Corporation and the Pure Oil Company. * &- #: The contest will be judged by members of the Oakland County Sheriff's department and the Pon- tiac Police department as well as members of the Pontiac Jaycees. Attorney Claims . Somebody Owes Him $2,500 (?) A Detroit attorney filed suit in Oakland County Circuit Court yes- terday claiming somebody owes him $2,500 for drawing up a city charter for Southfield. * * * Julius L. Berns says he was S|hired in 1955 by Southfield Town- ship to draw up a charter to in- corporate the entire township into grave doubt whether a summit conference cou'd be successful Tennessee Views — Ouster of Judge NASHVILLE, Tenn. u — The criminal court judge on charges Judg Raulston Schoolfild determined to give his defense, Members of the Pontiac Jaycees| ‘cording to the hospital, to Be Feted in Costa Rica WASHINGTON — One day equipment required by department} The Day in Birmingham _ pita i. Tauton Street Residents Opposed to Paving Road weet Bennington Dr., Bloomfield Hills, was among six key U. S, Air Force d 3 a¥ 5 gek FE &> ‘anada Police Nab Bank Theft Suspect g were advised | [si ag aj #1 F23 : i 53 delayed until the property owners : if ; i ni g Avon Man Burnéd Badly in House Fire An Avon Township man is in critical condition at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital today after he and his wife were trapped for several minutes in their burning home late last night, according to Rochester firemen. Princeton St., Was reported suf- fering from first degree burns of the face, head, arms and back. His wife, Mollie, 68, was treated for minor burns and released, ac- x * * The fire which leveled their home was reported at 10:34 p.m. Little Rock Paper Given Two Pulitzer Awards & “gRie | Syed) ee ails 1 | ink Ht g + q. i Se f but he may get only a spectator’s seat for initial hearings. * * x Speaker James Bomar of the State House of Representatives said the House cannot hear de- fense testimony in deciding wheth- er to vote an impeachment and ~_ the case to the Senate for * * * Gov. Frank Clement called the specia] session after studying a report of the state’s three-month investigatio of Schoolfield activ- ities. The contents of the report a city. When the plan failed in an election last June, there was no city to pay Berns’ bill. ee ee The township said it wasn't re- sponsible, Oakland County refused Southfield is not the same one he worked for. News Flash DETROIT (INS) — The Car- U.N, Security Council raises a have not been made public. penters’ Union District Council 6 Meetings to Decide 1958 Levy Full Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy this fair to partly this af » Little change in temper- ature, high around 57. Fair and » little cooler tonight, lew about 35. Temorrow fair and warmer, high near 64, Winds 1 ortheasteriy at itr bour today diminishing 8% = an is . ir. 4 i % Today in Pontiac ; Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. At 8 a.m: Wind velocity 15-20 m. p. h.| Direction—Northweat. Sun sets Tuesday at 7:37 p.m. Sun rises Wednesdsy «t 6:20 a.m. Moon sets Wednesday at 9:07 a.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 11:07 p.m. Downtown Temperatures See eee eee oe 2, Monday tn Pontiac {As recorded downtown) Highest temperature ............,. Lowest temperature ......+. temperature eather—Sunny. Highest Lewest Temperateres Thi “ete. 99 in t 33 in 1878 Teday’s Temperature Alpena 45 32 Marquette 43 34 ae ee Sonne ea vote = o Buffaie 1 - Minneo Cherieston 43 Tl New nse 64 ’ 3 41) «New York 4 “ $1 4) Omahe a 63 43 Peilston 52 23 S$ Ritwnn 3 2 Barats be MM «Bt. Louts $2 37 Worth 4 80 & Frencisco 50 g. Rapids Hy Fe & @ Marie 29 . Houghton 2 tees oe f ngton — “ 48 Beattie Hy a Angeles SS Tampe @ -. Now that Oakland County has its equalized valuation for levying 1958 taxes, the Tax Allocation Board can go to work and set tax rates. Board Chairman William J. Emerson, has set six meetings for the six-man board at which time rates for the county, town- ships and school districts will be determined. ; * * ¥ At yesterday’s Board of Super- visors meeting, the 1958 valuation was set at $1,808,669,648. Looming today is the possibility that the county tax rate might have to be hiked from its present $5 for every $1,000 of equalized valuation to $6. Whatever the possible increase might be, the Allocation Board must stay within the 15-mill limitation set by law. And this must be divided between the county rate, townships and. school distrets. . iCty taxes, however, do not come under thia 15-mill lintitatjon, al County Faces Tax (15 mills. except for special livies approved by the voters. * * * Under the 1958 valuation, which city at $270,947,200. 1958 represents a $37,967,848 in- equalized *: * Regardless, townships will pay. roughly 38 per cent of the total, though the scholl and county tax |spread n the city cannot exceed will pay 62 per cent, x “ \ Hike Threat The total equalized valuation for} county 1958 tax, while the cities! today set Thursday for a strike that will virtually tie up all house building in the Detroit area. The walkout will affect only 6,000 of the 20,000 area carpenters, but all of the 6,000 are engaged In house building. L. M. Weir, secretary-treasurer of the Council, said the strike is aimed at the Builders Associa- tion of Metropolitan Detroit, The Carpenters’ contract with the As- .| soelation expired May 1. Final rates are expected to be released by the Tax Allocation Board June 2. to pay, and recently-incorporated geographically| according to firemen. NOTICE! STEWART-GLENN COMPANY CLOSED WEDNESDAY | "AFTERNOON Open Friday and Monday Night Till 9 P.M. — Leuvart-Gon Q 92 South. Saginaw Street K stop to - Relax by Viscount to | ~NEW YORK . Fly a swift, smooth Viscount one- New York. Other 4-engine Capitaliner service available to Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Phila- delphia, Washington and Atlanta. Capital AIRLINES iia Sincmmemmenscnaeeant sma gy ee - + . yt FA a RRR or" RRR no é:< i ee poe j a i « nn me pos is : 9 eae :. : k Le ats THE PONTIAC PRESS. romans vay os nt Te Hat Boyle days: og | " REMINGTON | Fail to Ainertda Male... Cherished Assia! | | RECONDITIONED : NEW 6 ER VICE—Rem “ey factory representative will be our store every Wediiesday of every week. SIMMS. Electric Shavers —Main Floor — both run over him, As boy, NEW YORK w — Hail to the American male! __ After a long eclipse, he is again getting some recognition and at- @\tention, Again there ‘is some ad- @ivantage in being a man in this country. = * * Mister, haven't you noticed lately the way the womenfolk @\seemn to appreciate you more? For a whole generation, except = for World War II when he was = found useful for carrying a gun, the American male has been low- rated, both here and abroad. Abroad, he was looked down upon as a henpecked, defrocked ‘rooster, who. spoiled his women and his children and let them a lover the international set ranked him zero. * * * In his homeland the attitude’ wasn’t much better, A man be- came something women took for granted, something they at first demanded equal rights from, then gradually began to feel superior to. « \ ,Women took over men’s hair- cuts, their slacks, jobs, sports, pol- itics, their vocabulary—even their razors. The only place a husband felt himself an equal partner in the home was at the kitchen sink —at dishwashing time. . * * * America became a world in which women did most of the talk- ing, most of the dominating, most of the spending. But, in the midst of their heady power, women made a startling discovery—they also were doing most of the burying. Man, like a isensitive flower deprived of its sun, was dying off. The American male seemed to be going the way of the whooping crane. He may yet. "R= £ : But U. S. women, alarmed by the disclosure that they outnumber U, S, men: by two million, appear to be trying to reyerse this trend. They are belatedly attempting to save the weaker sex from extinc- tion. The idea of having to listen to themselves ina world without men appalls them. And. the American male, single or married, is reaping wondrous benefits, He is being courted and pampered in a way he does not remember. * * * “I know half a dozen fine young| girls under 25 who want to get married, and have come to me) for help,” said a matron. “But! where are the bachelors? I don't know a one to introduce them to.’ A smart boy used to have to sell | magazines to get through college. Now, if he is smart, he can pick and choose between any number of girls, sound of wind and tooth, more than eager to marry him and work his way through school for him. x & kk, Wives also now realize that, if they want their husbands to sur- vive, they’d better not try to work them to dedth around the house as well as in the office. In the suburbs you see more and more wives steering the power mower over the lawn while the old man sits on the front porch, sipping a long cool drink. * 4 * Yep, boys, it's the new heyday iof the American male. Women are |taking better care of us, The rea- son behind it may be a bit hard igoes to Mrs, on our vanity—the fact they've found we're delicate and perish- able and must be handled with care—but so what? If we can't be looked up to, well’ —it’s still nice to be looked after. Art Eisenhower Estate to Pay Out More Alimony KANSAS _ CITY w—A Circuit Court order directing final pay- ment of alimony to Mrs, Alida B. Eisenhower from the Arthur! Eisenhower estate was issued yes- terday. + * The. payment was $5,958, uabout $200 interest. The money sas City banker in 1924. Arthur, brother of President Ei-) senhower, died Jan. 26. His wid-| ow is Mrs. POWER TONIC FOR TODAYS CARS ’ Here’s a new kind of gasoline that has a powerful new way with today’s high-compression engines. It’s SUPER-M —made for Midwest driving, made for you...and the best gasoline Marathon has ever made. Once you get the feel of SuPER-M you'll never settle for less. 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SAGINAW | —Pontiac’s Deep-Cut Discount Store *a Sg ‘ : tae $2 oay ek ‘ ‘ “ ees : x ee e ee ie oe . = Se $ ee * arg Be, ay We og ee _THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1958 ’ a = etter ae * . ee id The town of \Ceniis, Mo, ? = rw - Bs : f . : iy i ee l : : ‘ z , ” : ee ‘ [yoshi Umeki Looks to Find’ Her’ Futures:-ss © My UMEKI LOOKS tO PING’ Mer LP ULUTC [wate rice vs By PHYLLIS BATTELLE go,It's a terrible voice. I have to work| The actress still wears. very |- : REW YORK (INS) —- Myoshi self.” little makeup (‘1 want to be the . wre (“beautiful life”) Ume ki, .the| idle Galant tee en cepted te cash: Grete (Rage Cosarvetantay 48 ai! em tae, nightly now, Myoshi is presenting | 't Bide what men want to see, fee <8) Rae we whee wendy! tegen | et ic Constant Study — beverage Miser 1S ore mann (She has just come to New Vullnashag Aceh palimeencs tal termes ballads. ot ven soe Japan, and her mother and eight Brings to this funeral establishment ; » er 8 singing engagement at &|Sayonara.” thing, all except that oo-co-ah-ah | ters and brother are not hurry- | Cr dks told cca tha beck ‘I never looking adap Hie Pada pte pe Bose ‘The Blue se SS (“Witchdector”). I won't do it | '™S her to come back, ‘amilies we se Rapes ieee. 2 Seah fo — am © About show she took up singing,| because lyrics are too difficult.” | “I’m very close to my mother, in the newer ways in our profession. 7 ae me ne 8 afraid of nothing. fant Tenens Se vane. “S was De When Miss Umeki came to the and she’s just happy. She’s happy Color photos of all the flowers is ois ia wee “I come trom Japan to Amer- |school. Like every school people,/United States a couple of years|any of her children is happy.” tut-ene le ien’t 12” lca the first time to see four |we learn the sorig.” ago she could read and write al Asked if there is diflerence example. , same, cities—New York, Cricage, Wash- | But how did she become profes-|pit of English, but couldn't speak|petween J pPrves Beery ih How many times has she been| ington and Floreeda. 1 get just |sional; did people comment on her|it she still has trouble. “‘I stilllican wives, she replies: “Is all in love? so far as New York, and I spend ? She frowns, thinks. “No,”/get lost in anyplace I am, butisame ‘a sak Sous “This I cannot say. Because if! all my money in clothing shops. |she says finally. “They never has./that’s way to learn better English.|husband to come.” _, | eee ate which pando a * ; » c women are con t home, East German Tax |/ndians Refuse way—t/ these are the first English|Myoahi looks surprised. “That's 2 any ir I learn, It’s fun to get lost when|mistake, isn’t it?” she says Halts Canal Traffic (0 Poy Tolls on snes N. Y. Thruway | eee eee NS seletenrounded| SYRACUSE, N.Y. un — It the Were: Bein sme, 8 8. ene ee ey a ae standstill Monday as an East Ger-ithruway, then he will charge the : man waterways tax went into! wnite man to travel on Indian land, : cous whee the Tuscaroras say. * say, : The Communist tax applies to The Tuscaroras point to an 1803 law they say exempts them ; ae sae a Sel ees oe tase | tag. | Ssied Weot Rerlin wih West" Ger-| Sescanams testes setesed 6 pay Attention: |many. About a third of West Ber-| a $1.75 toll at the thruway inter. lin's supplies from West Germany change here Saturday. They got I via barge. away with it. } a : 9 1 oe fae ge The four were en route here for 7 ‘TAID-OFF WORKERS |fierss= Sscs. Sires Sete =| watch your mail Fn. Saat "evens Seeman, , bier We make cash joans to laid-off workers. No a echaldy to help trochers| a tues poe wk * + for a whale of a buy | principal payment until you are back to work the payments. declan Re : for 30days. onda a CHk Rickard, 34, whe Bes on |eragh Sukarno and other Indone- ? | : ae say the new the tou [San government officia's have : | ar OUR REQUIREMENTS ARE: Mulan i cise seten ot te ims (Saree De US. matomis wnt] © YOUR LAST CHANCE EVER TO G8T [I River, ‘The| 8% stated that Dedinne of the + escapee wre dageataary ane | ®OR ONLY 10% A COPY oe 1 That you own furniture or a cat, — | Re + d ‘THE. PONTIAC. : PRESS, vEspay, MAY 6. 1058. stich Johnson Backs. Bill on Benefits ‘Toynbee thinks the slogan “Give| Toynbee participated in a dis| Knowland Sure Senate) liberty or me death” may|cussion broadcast an Siew * ss ottaaia igh nuclear age.|tional television cae last night.| t0 Go Along With House . on Extending Payments he suggests. | The young of marly all — ; : ayeeene BONG’ We pecennet pro-there deer are spotted at WASHINGTON (Senate Dem- : . ocratic Leader Lyndon B. John- _|son was reported ready today to support a House-passed jobless pay bill President Eisenhower has approved & 7 ae Just in Time for Mother's Day 1 * ta — ra ee chor Giving . . . Our Popular Summer F ; \confident the Senate will go along ii; with the House in voting a meas- i=== |ure designed to extend the period , of —— yr eal ee . STRANGE BIRD — Production model of range detection equipment. The carrier-based deren rights before April 1, 1959. Navy's WF2 Tracer plane is shown on first plane will be used to provide early warning to “I think we are going to have| Might. Saucer on top is radome housing long- fleet units of impending enemy attacks. os it was ote fn the. House," Princess Meg | Author Cabell Parade of Calls That Is Helpful... it is a record of your wishes con- cerning your funeral—and is just as important as records concerning property.. It will be of great help to your loved ones when most needed, BUDGET SHOP SMART DRESSES AT ft costs you nothing —and may * . : prove real ving 1 your fay ds we a mney on ta aia ela aon a is ° we eue classed liberals served 5 2 dice cha Meroe moe, they plat en ert to re[ soc Urn £ are Taken by Death |Wows Non-Buyer i advance of necessity is a real mark oe | elon of a bill de- BELIZE, British Honduras w- Se TTOn, wv As wnt : s behalf of others. <7 Under its terms the federal gov- nw ee ne Stormy Career . Endsitin’s da. = = § § ° ernment would pay for extensionlconch soup, ¢raytish, fried plan-| After More Than Half my = pga greg pochl would go to : eae many workers not covered by i-| sieworks iit up the harbor as| Century of Writing — jhere, and said that he had the feet’ Rooks: Big Selections of FEDERAL Poking surance, as well es those who are. new ‘colored TV set he had or Juniors’, Misses’ and Halt Sixes On Our P, An extra 16 weeks of benefits| Marsaret and leaders of the Brit- dered. Austin hadn't ordered any| WM % Check # Chemise ‘ 4.4511 i Our Premise ld be ded, at a cost es-|8" Colony gathered at Govern-/ RICHMOND, Va. — James|imy 91+ Ginghome Styles 4 ‘ ' ment House for the state dinner,|Branch Cabell, a quiet Virginia : and watched native dancers in alaristocrat who became a stormy Next, a salesman rolled up in ® Everglaze lr agae ' program based on local life and/petrel of American letters ‘with|® mew station wagon and al traditions. his sophisticated novels. of disi}-|Mounced that here. was Austin’s Absent from the royal presenta-|IQsion and escape, died here last ante can. Austin hadn't ordered tion was George Price, a leading|night at 79, : Moe cars cs came, and more sales- ,;campaigner for egg rapa for} A cerebral hemorrhage suffered i : this crown colony. Price was ac-|Sunday afternoon claimed the life Then came a grocery truck— quitted April 25 of charges that/of.the author of “Jurgen” after a and an ambulance. The ambu- he had made seditious statements) writing career that had spanned lance driver said he had: a report dresses from which to choose, against Britain's royal family. Of-|more than half a century. that Mrs. Austin suffered a stroke |ficials said he had been invited to * oe * She hadn't. ate a the banquet. For Cabell, writing was “pure! Fire trucks were next. But the Piss ~ | pleasure seeking.” His desire was|alarm was false. \v y Hoo “to write perfectly of beautiful) — a % Ui ver to Represent happenings." Rage cage a ae a Ik t B ussel F i how wel he net Ye wane soar couldn't remember a . co . | e a f 5 ait as DH. Mosely, Cabell’s tronic . we re novels, preoccupied with sex, Male C: WASHINGTON — Former|were “the tiresome swan song of/!0M Manville’s Sister |President Herbert Hoover, recov- = generation which had as its|Divorces Actor Husband jident Eisenhower's ‘personal rep- blasting of tradition and the exhi-| LAS VEGAS, Nev. (®—Tommy jTesentative for the United States’ /pition of its own shallow clever-|Manville’s sister has divorced her } official days at the Brussels Inter-| ness” actor husband. | national Exposition July 2, 3 and +) eS) 6 Mrs, Lorraine Baxter, 63, yes- ia the White House announced to- terday charged Charles Baxter, da % Drip-Dry —* No-lron * Burlington % Washable Linens Bembergs Please Mother and yourself with several of these wonderful dresses. Over 1,000 ’ The Slip Mother will love... Fi * i iil dinate ee ee ee ee Yet his adimirers were legion. y: Ps . - At the time of his greatest popu- = gabe ir roe with "The | * larity, in the 1920s, he was to Ben- oe SA oe tion. Eisenhower invited Hoover to|jamin de Casseres “‘the Watteau} Wve, Maxtor received an aol. [pee nme president's gall the Spinara nt pened eagle ing mated 10-million-dollar share of | bladder operation prometheus of American Renais-\‘% Manville asbesto. fortune. — | Associate press secretary Anne |sance,"’ aaa _ [eeetee = reporters the Presi-| In all, Cabell wrote 52 books.;seamen Will Give Up | s just received a message |His last. was an autobiography, Eve . from Hoover — his doctors|‘as I remember It,”’ published in Berths ry 210 Days have approved the visit to Bel-|1955. SAN FRANCISCO w — , _* + & ning May 19 Sailors Union ae > Cabell’s first novel, “The Line|Pacific members will A joy of a slip of nylon tricot | Eisenhower was particularly|of Love,” was published in 1905|maximum of 210 days — rather with gracefully non-demanding anxious for Hoover to take the|when he was 26. But he did not/than 360 — aboard the same shi sopectonsegt | nevada terre assignment in view of the former|gain a following until “Jurgen” |before giving up their berth ee president’s popularity in Belgium was published in 1919 and the|fellow member. permenant pleats and fragile | because of his leadership in Euro-|New York Vice Society tried un-| The new measure was voted HOW PENNEY’S i “feoking lace destined to defy ; SIMA AGREE MS Yee, seet actives ftowing|atcenstlly to censor i ne eta sey | courte sate ; | pablished in 1919, and “The ‘sir|days aboard a ship, Weinberger . RS . ‘ver Stallion’ (1926). said, sailors will sign off, take va- MYER’S bua a cation time they have coming and then take their places at the bot- |S ALE! | lo Help P ay the Bill | Dr. Rudolph H. Friedrich came here from Chicago to give about 2,500 dentists at a Missouri-Kan- sas meeting a chance to get their teeth into the idea, ; * & * Under the plan, .you borrow from a bank to pay your dentist, and the dental association has a jreserve fund that guarantees the tings. [} bank won't lose if you fail to re- t * * * The plan is proving successful, jsays Dr, Friedrich , secretary of ithe Council on Dental Health of the American Dental Assn. for Mother's Day giving.. glamorous NAO stockings $yoo. $ys50 Marvelous Mojud Stockings look so co eb feel DENVER (INS) — A Denver city councilman has proposed ordinance to greatly limit the “go- ing out of business sales" by oa ver firms, The ordinance would \require, among other things, a year’s interval between such sales. Explained the councilman: “A lot of guys are making a business Touch? Terrific! Care? Easy! [oof guys are making a, OUR NEW BLEND SLIPS >< TOO LATE? Dacron-nylon-cotton blends, at a price rough to @uplicate if you stormed from store-sale to $ 88 A GREAT MANY PEOPLE SUFFERING FROM RHEUMA- store-sale! They’re cling-free, blotter-absorbent, BUDGET TERMS MYER’S _ JEWELRY SHOP Tel-Huron Shopping Center AVE BECOME DISCOURAGED, AND FEEL THERE NOT MUCH HOPE FOR THEM — THE pects an THA F Hype AND ARTHRITIS FOR A LONG PERIOD OF TIME, ses ro | Pic Boars Gath ene of lace, or stright ant basic _ AGREAT MANY SUFFERERS, AMONG THEM SOME OF |{B so fine, fit smooth os the skin on your legs! And | ae ek Wh a g asic —> THE MOST SEVERE C HAVE TRIED O-J18-WA they come in styles and colors to tempt every y beautiful. Where else would you find them | BITTERS AS A LAST rt SORT, AND TO THEIR HAPPY woman’s good taste—from nearly-nude seamless : in both your dress and budget size! Sizes 32¢ to 40 — SURPRISE, NOW ARE FREE OF PAINFUL AND CRIPPL- to long-wearing Oyoh-bore, Glamour gal or grand- : A ING ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM., ser, we can’t : IF YOUR CASE IS OF LONG STANDING OR JUST os of one woman STARTING, YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER OR MORE own who -wouldn’t love Mojud! This year,’ give Stock- ' ings to every lucky { fashionable on your ss GIFT , . list. BOX ; 4 N. SAGINAW 5ST, 1 ) We Give Helden tomes = CPR PROVEN RESULTS FOR OVER . 40 YEARS. AVAILABLE AT ALL DRUG. STORES IN MICHIGAN. _ wl | | -. CESSFUL MEDICINE THAN O-JiB-W | y “Neclead Goblins’ tHE PONTIAC PRESS: ‘TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1958 : v ' Cause Tells of Space Havoc LOS ANGELES ou picture’ nuclear goblins -wreaking havoe-in outer space was drawn today by |2nd y (2) stances : ’ [D)irecnion: (®)iscemnanon: HEAR WITH BOTH EARS With Zenith's at-the-ear hear- ing-aids...you can enjoy the depth of “binaural” or “both- ear” hearing. By wearing an in- strument at each ear, you can better judge the distance and direction of sound—better dis- criminate the sounds you want to hear. Ideal for many people who have a loss in both ears, ®@ 10-Day Money-Back Guarantees © 1-Yeer Warranty @ &-Year After-Purchase Protection Pian FREE DEMONSTRATION! Come in or Call Today WY samme seid 13 N. Saginew : ing utilized by police. theory, that’ the eer tiny bits of energy escaping a the:core of the star and ex: In, the ergptn oy >, Bot tain’ sin Newton's daw of gravitation. , tag fh Uses 14th Amendment” lto Protect His Stomach NEWARK, N. J. @—The i4th amendment to the U. S. Constj- tution has spryapg.‘te the’ aid yof Ronald A. Booker’s stomach. a ee , 30, reghistiatel ‘a fotth Booker. age of heroin March 10 at the]. insistence of East Orange Hospi- tals stomach pump, which was be- x * * ! Essex County Judge James A. Giuliano has acquitted Booker of a narcotics charge, ruling that the |Céristitution makes Booker's right té*the contents of his stomach’ in- sive,”’ Giuliano said. parr cg gpg, wif. moc) had Fa > ie, WHAT'S MY: LINE? Yelertey's' answer: ae, caheak fOve, ee pepper, syRup, rice, " Seaway Poses. be |New Problem As Drawing Cord for More Tourists, . Tighter Security to Be Needed Uk onl Goonte. gave borat the U.S gration Commissioner Joseph M. Swing. Swing, in testimony before a House ‘Appropriations Subcommit- tee recently made public, says in- ternational traffic increased about seven per cent last year and no leveling off is expected. | This is especially true of travel between this country and Canada, the commissioner said. Watch your mail for a whale of a buy “Improvement of highways in Swarming Over Rep. Brown to. Address Local GOP Members Central Arizona epgugh tn set off Air Defense Cam s—are swarming into} . the green,. irrigated areas of cen- tral Arizona. Dawn to dust spraying opera tiorig ate ‘scheduled all week. PL lots expect to spray an estimated 100,000 a¢res. Next we poe fo another (Advertisement (Advertisement) What: Is Wrong When Prayer Fails? * A strange man fh Los Angelés; known. as the “Voice of Two Worlds,” is offering free of charge to the public, an astonishing Booklet which is great step for- to a. prolonged study of all. the great religions. of the. world, unti} at last a surprising new light was thrown upon the entire subject fi prayer. In this new light, even the well known Lord's Prayer 8 astoni new meanings. Hidden. * between the lines aré deep signifi- do appear in words. The free booklet points these out ~ g@nd is entitled “The Magic tween the Lines of ‘oer tara’ Prayer.” “The Voice of Two Worlds,” -a- well known explorer and geogra- pher, tells of a remarkable system. that often leads to almost unbe- lievable improvement of power st achievement - t. He discloses Wow-he learned rare years by the sages, whieh enabled many to perform amazing feats. He maintains that these immense ordinary paver lone. 4 In ils own back to cpiesion'’ Whitn” Stone wealth, too, as well ee wide professional recogni- tion as a leading gedgra map-maker of the Par Bast. He wants to tell the whole world What he learned there, under the er encountered during his twen ge ee 2 many otters: to. experidnoe many greater health and For your free copy of this Ing free booklet. entitled Magic Between the Lines .of Lord's Prayer,” together with free literature regard tharkable system, Stop Pain 1 of of Pile a , Stop tt Today . At Home” OF money ba action stops ‘pai, anesthet re ‘stantly pepe medication goes to work reduelng Ceerenmer esas | ‘“sitories or = PAZO === Hits Schools’ Ban on life, Time Mags Carl J. Megel of Chicago, pres- ident of the AFL-CIO American Federation of Teachers, issued a ,| Statement. in‘ behalf of the union's never been a time when public education and those responsible for it, were in greater need of critical analysis and evaluation. A matter of so much public. con- cern cannot be judged by the pub- lie without complete information -jand discussion. " ’ Forest fires in the U.S.° each , destroy enough usable tim- * For the quolity, durability and economy you wentin @ driveway or parking area, asphalt paving is your best buy — but only when it’s ENGINEERED to your perticuler soil conditions, Need require- ments ond “lay of the land.” WE PROVIDE thet dugloserieg ~~ end § we bait: it up with the best materials; highly-skilled paving crews, ond. the: latest equip- ment for jobs of very size. We've been doing that since 1920, end our asphalt paving meets the standards of the Michigan. State Highway Ws ee ECT THE BES Ar 1936 i0 GET me PHOENIX, Aria @—Clouds of festured yeat, 90 per cent of thenr tman-|°' _ [ber to build approximately 86,000 cam ERED ‘ASPHALT PAVING “+ » for Lasting Satisfaction ‘Republican ticket, will be ‘speaker Thursday night at’a meeting of the North Wood- ward Republican Club. Sidhe: Atak “aningr alway are dental be sabe VOUR LAST CHANCE EVER TO GET (Ig ‘|r District seat in-the Legisia-|tourist attractions. These items FOR ONLY 10¢ A COPY a ro i eee : Who said lady drivers aren’t as good as men?... Meet Nicky Griffen driver in the Mobilgas Economy Run! Nicky Griffen works full time as a switchboard operator in Dearborn, Driving a 1958 Continental — she averaged 17.96 miles per gallon for 1883 rugged — } miles using Mobilgas Special High Energy Gallons! inlermad of ter milongs at £ tn end of the 0g day Run, Nicky chows her delight. The United States Auto Club supervised the Run. This fair lady’s performance in the 1958 Mobilgas Economy Run shoots another big hole in the argument that men are better drivers ' than’ women. Driving a Continental in crowded city traffic and along highways, over freezing mountain passes and burning desert roads, she averaged 17.96 miles per gallon—using Mobilgas Special - high energy gallons! On your hext trip, why not follow the example of the Economy Run drivers to improve your gas mileage? . . . Keep your car in top _ shape—drive carefully—use Mobilgas Special. Its high energy — ‘means top power—top miles per gallon! Ask for Mobilgas Special high energy gallons at your friendly Mobil dealer’s, Nicky crosses the finish line after completing the 1883-mile Run from Los easel to Galveston. FOR TOP MILES PER GALLON-—TOP POWER Youre Miles Ahead with s SOCONY MOBIL Of. COMPANY, INC. Tune in “rnackDown” ctery Friday night~CBS-TV. = ‘New Mobil Sign of Friendly Service—now going up everywhere, i ¢ 1 ‘ t ot, ee:— 4 gat a ee ae = Fe: Fj * ee . j ee « cE ot : P . “ + : PC (TIAC P es are * - . b ae 4 4 ( % THE 7 .— PONTIAG, MICHIGAN TUESDAY; MAY 6, 1958" . é Ae Ee ge eS ee ge oe § : ; We Can Applaud Farmer for Ke eping Michigan on State Can Offer __| At Commerce Drive-In Theater ge s Us ; : eg pes. «Variety of Crops Kiwanis Club Sets Hospifality Program \ Regard Agriculture a COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — The/derived from residing in Oakland)ter, has offered to turn over Tues- } 1 ve a derl r West Bloomfield-Commerce Ki-| County. day night's theater proceeds to the | of Water Wonderian wanis Club pas ones today, A * * a hw aloe . : “Hospitality "* of Michigan special Hospitality underprivileged 3 Leading Industries Week, to attain several objectives. |mittee has arranged for a Te ee / . display cars trucks| Bands Bloomfie' 4 ; As an appropriate part of Mich- ‘trechiing ee the first uM. alled Lake Senior High Schools a f igan Week ceremonies, May 4 Hospitality Day outdoor program will provide music for the occa- ) SS ee a on ee "lin Oakland County at 6 this eve- sion and several prominent citizens | a moment to doff his hat to Mr. ning at the spacious Commerce will speak, : | indus L as Drive-In Theater grounds. , The public is invited. ) | cu is regarded as Purpose of the three- | J of the state’s top three industries, fold: ° event Js | : a Rese 5 Moines — 1. To salute General Motors Cor- F e FI t = | take peide, too, in the wide variety =e eee es orming ee pi Sher states Saige Regd pe 2. To raise money for under- ® | | many different food products from ppeehrmeiehetrte; iof Car Shi s : the farm. 3. To promote hospitality among * * & citizens of the area by familiariz- | Abaut the only items lacking are ing them with the many benefits Cleveland Paper Says | pic) Uhar p Rooney ary Runs Planned Between ) , | yard gardeners growing — M om of Year : Lakes Ports, Cuba MR. AND MRS. DEAN A. WEAVER | mentally, and growing it . wn , | CLEVELAND w= Tue core| Newlyweds Will Return ft me 5 “because we love football. LE wn fa Bon ; i _ i i Ee s fi x i pz iz i m3 +) j g ) z Hi if Fr LE ] H wots Flaherty Fails ‘'to Pass ‘500’ Physical Exam INDIANAPOLIS w—Pat Flaher- ty, hard-driving Chicago Irishman who won the 1956 Indianapolis 500- i Albion 7-17, Mope 1-3 Idaho 5, Washington = 3 Ten Notre Dame 7, wichigan 3 LSU 1. Georgia = ah Kansas 06 1 6, Kansas ~e 47 58 Nebraska 91, lowa State Gelt Notre Dame 13%, dese 13% Notre Dame 24. Ind Wisconsin 17%, Indiana St Lecr: New Hampshire 17, Union 3 mile auto race, failed Monday to pass hig physical examination for ~ big Memorial Day event May x &* * The red-haired racing veteran severely injured his right arm in a 100-mile race at Springfield, I1l., a few weeks after winning the Indianapolis 500 and a rich ago- miler at Milwaukee. * * bd Dr. C. B, Bohner, chief of the Indianapolis Motor Speetiway | medical staff, said Flaherty's arm now is sufficiently recovered for) normal usage but he did not think § it was strong enough yet for the severe strain of the 500-mile race. Seeks 325-Foot Foul Lines NEW YORK (#—Nothing can be|minors in the next four or five done about the Los Angeles Coli-|years. _ 8eum's short left field fence, says' baseball Commissioner Ford Frick, but it shouldn’t happen again. ot * [cbstruction be 250 feet or more. to “We want them to know the ‘minimum distances while they | are still in the blueprint stages." The present rules specify that the distance from home base to the nearest fence, stand or other * * * So the Los Angeles Dodgers, in revamping the Coliseum for base- ball, were able to get by with a 250 foot left field barrier with a 42-foot screen. “I don’t think it is a good situa- tion in Los Angeles,” the commis- sioner said, ‘‘but it 1% a temporary thing until we get a new park.” acare 8 | Detroit : , 8 Boston : : |Only games tonite Detroit at (E Cincinnati Ping \ phat [PM Daniels. (o- ke Dupas Weight Stir Talk uation is no problem — that Du- pas will make the weight easily. But Dupas hasn't gotten onto a scale for anybody to see. * * * Lou Viscusi, manager of Brown, said, however, that he expected Dupas to make the weight and that he knew his’ boy could. “Brown's a natural lightweight and he'll come in about a quarter of a pound under 135,” Viscusi said. Dupas had a hard workout yes- terday and in sparring with his brother, Tony, a middeweight, got a “mouse” under his left eye. It didn't amount to anything. * * * Brown comes in tonight from Camp Holden, 20 miles. north- west of here where he has been training. He has announced he'll go into seclusion yntil the weigh- in. oe * ® Television and radio will pay $30,000 and of the anticipated $90,- 000 Brown will get $36,000 and Dupas $18,000. Falcons Nip Skippers A 42 by Jim Anderson led Farm- ington to a 179 to 185 Inter-Lakes igolf victory over Waterford yes- terday. Doug Hales topped the los- ers with a 4. —————, = BASEBALL Lest ig Behind ‘New fl his Washin acs |. 5 Kanees’ ciy Sooo | Cleveland Baltimore 4' Chie Boston 8. Kansas City Detroit at ao 286 YESTE RDAY's RESULTS Clevel 5 at Ww ashington. altimore ie, te AY'S GAMES Cleveland at New Be 1 1 rain, Kansas City at Baltimore, 7:05 Pm Burnette (1-0) ys. Johnson (1-2) ‘or Portocarrero (0-0). Washington. 7:06 p.m.—Lary (1-2) Sp Griggs (0-0) sell on or Los Chicag 7 Pittsburgh | Milwaukee Bo Cineinnii Duke inte appear ‘ but Devine said: bination at the hands of Joey Giardello in the as Giardello took a unanimous verdict. Martin Lost to Spartans for 1958 but there assuredly is not enoughihope that the speedy gridder could be readied for competition next October. time from now until fall for healing and rehabilitation. "Tam sure the knee will be strong enough in another year for him to play.” Because he normally would be- gin his senior year in September, this meant that Martin has played * * * Before the knee was opened up, Ward's Status NEW YORK’ (®—Harvie Ward Jr. returns to the amateur golf fold today — fully forgiven —with a chance to prove himself the greatest amateur champion since Bob Jones, ; A year’s suspension for expense irregularities was lifted by the U.S. Golf Assn., permitting Ward to point for the National Amateur at San Francisco Sept. 8-13 and the first world championship at St. Andrews, Scotland, a month later. “I'm afraid I've let my game go to pot,”’” the boyish, North Carolinian said in San Francisco upon hearing news of his reinstatement. “I'm going to shackled St. Louis Cardinals, cinnati catcher Smoky Burgess Los Angeles Dodgers. The three’ Red Bird catchers are hitting a combined .104 and the Cards have pushed hard for a Wally Moon-for-Burgess .de al. Burgess hit with power and has a lifetime .299 average. . Reports that the Dodgers would be ges to peddle their hard- injured outfielder, legitimate “I'm scared of that one’ since eg Re sata ——————— Cee sane maaee sacegaegebebonee aeeementey sept soaengl we'd have to give up so — the news, but observed: entirely built around one man. We have several boys capable of a fine job at fullback.” Harvey, who Yeceives $1,000 from the league, polled 153 points of a possible 180. Runnerup was Bill Gadsby of the New York Rangers with 119 points. Harvey, 33, just completed his llth NHL season. During the 1957- 58 regular schedule, he scored nine goals and assisted on 32 others. AAU Puts Ban on ‘Elevator’ Jumping Shoes NEW YORK (#—-The AAU Mon- day joined the NCAA in banning the elevator or so-called Russian jumping shoe in all competitions conducted or sanctioned by the AAU. The announcement was made by Pincus Sober, chairman of the National AAU track and field committee. "y dust two days in advance of Saturday’s contest, Martin, who had been shifted from halfback to fullback during spring train- ing, was voted “most valuable” member of the varsity contin- gent. Daugherty was disheartened by “Michigan State teams. never are * * * He mentioned Don Arend, 200- pound Benton Harbor junior, and Bob Bercich, a 190-pounder from Summit, 1. Daugherty praised Martin as a “tremendous player and a great pacesetter.” An athletic department spokes- ‘man said Martin probably will drop out of school this term, and that chances were good that he will be on hand in the fall of 1959 to play more football and get his diploma. * * * Wearing a shoe with built-up sole, Russia's Yuri Stepanov bet- tered the world record with a leap of 7 feet, 1 inch. Two other: Soviet jumpers cleared better than 7 feet, * * * Stepanov’s leap has not yet been ratified by the International Amateur Athletic Federation. America’s Charles Dumas holds the listed world record of 7-12. 32-year-old | - ‘eee MIBS CHAMP AND RUNNERUP — Ear-to-ear smiles are flashed by Melvin DeWalt (right) and James Clark as they proudly display their Pontiac Press trophies for being champion and run- . nerup, respectively, in the 11th annual city marbles tournament. ~ DeWalt, 12-year-old son of T. P. DeWalt, 360 South Boulevard, . defeated Clark last Saturday in the finals at Oakland Park to capture the title. Clark, 11-yeat-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Clark, a} Henevey stim, 18 6 2ee, a ittier School while DeWalt at- tends School. The Press the tourney in con- . junction th the Pontiac Parks and Recreation ‘Department, ‘| E ei tee SS = ey Ta i i ed A te, ae ‘i | W THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, ‘MAY 6, 1958 Ped > ites Fi By CHUCK ABAIR . sf ; The spring sports season Prep Front is breezing right along for area preps despite the recent cold and rainy weather. There have been very few schools have a rough time later dates. postponements since the trying to play anything at It takes a mighty bad day to call off a sports event due to the re-scheduling problem. Fans who stood around in frigid temperatures at the Pontiac-Flint| Northern track meet here or that PCH baseball game when it snowed can attest to that. The busy slates run through May 27 and there are a scattering of events in all’ four sports through June 7. That leaves little time for adding postponed dates. So it’s play now or else not at all in the majority of cases. Looking over the area baseball situation going into this week’s games, Bay City Central, Milford, Clewson, Berkley and Imlay City, were among the top teams thus far. * * * Bay City tops the Saginaw Valley with 3-1 while Pontiac is in a three-way for 2nd with 2-2 after leading earlier. Milford paces the overall Wayne-Oakland standings with four straight. Bloomfield Hills is Ist in the southern division at 3-1. Several others are strong. Clawson won its first three starts te rank as the Oakland B favorite. Avondale is a strong threat to stay in the running. Berkley has taken an early edge in. the Inter-Lakes but Waterford, Southfield and Farmington are all contenders. Imlay City heads the South Cen- tral with 3-0 featuring a big tri- umph_ over highly-rated Oxford. Royal Oak St. Mary is the, SCL choice to repeat but the Irish have already been beaten so anything can happen there. Orchard Lake St. Mary is among four teams tied at 2-1. New Haven and Brown City sharé the Southern Thumb lead with 2-0 records. SKIPPING AROUND The name of Frank Fink is get- ting to take up a lot of space in the track record books at Walled Lake. He personally holds the 100, 220 and pole vault marks and has played a big role in the records set by the 880 and sprint relay teams ... A tobacco-chewing ball- player is Milford catcher Jim Scheibner. * * * Gene Wright's St. Frederick golfers have a_ well-balanced schedule with schools from five different area leagues included . « « City marbles champ Mel DeWalt is a cousin of ex-PCH star athlete, Willie . . . Holly’s scholar-athletic pair, Art Stone and Hal Haddon, will likely enter Albion next fall. Basketball stars Earl McNeal, jtwo time Pontiac Press All-County)| |selection, Gordon Rowdan and Toy | Palmer and gridder Bob Pferdehirt are pacing Ferndale in track . star the past two season, may land a grid assistant post at Berkley. |He had hopes of getting the Pon- tiac Northern job while student teaching at Central. WEDNESDAY'S SPORTS EVENTS Track as Central League meet at Oxford DRAFTING TRAINEES — ALSO MACHINISTS Ne experience necessary, Veterans —— = ration pa = DD14. Apply ay nite ( 3), @:30-7.90 M. Only. Ne pore! time, Medea Hotel (Mt. Clemens). West Bloomfield and Northville at | Bloomfield Mills Rochester at Romeo Golf Royal Oak Shrine at St. Frederick | Clarkston and Holly at Milford Royal Oak Dondero at Troy Tennis | Dearborn at Cranbrook Perndale at Berkley BEATTY’S TRANSMISSION ‘Complete _ SERVICE NO MONEY DOWN EASY TERMS Service on All Types Transmission! All Work Guaranteed . . . Free Check-Up Service! 47 N. Parke St. uscedus non FE 8-6022 BUREAU r jumped into first place by taking top spot of the Big Ten. ON COLLEGE SCENE — Area boys were on the college golf and ‘baseball scene last weekend at Michigan State University, where the Spartan linksters defeated: Notre Dame and MSU nine a doubleheader from Ohio State. Don Picmann, (left) a pitcher, and outfielder John Fleser, a pair of sophomores from Birmingham have helped the Spartans to the Fleser had five hits in eight trips in the twinbill won by MSU, 14.0 and 7-1. C Pontiac Prets Phetos The MSU-Notre Dame golf match brought together Jack Reynolds of Waterford and Lloyd Syron of Pontiac. Reynolds, 157-162 for 36 holes. of Birmingham, takes his trap shot for the 18th green. 157 for MSU on the rugged course. Chiefs Point for Valley Test | Area Squads With only ‘two track events yes- jterday in the Pontiac area most Class A squads will be pointing ‘for the Monroe relays on Satur- ‘day. One exception is PCH’'s iChiefs who will be in action this ‘week only at the Valley champion-| | ships Friday night in Saginaw. Bir- {mingham | and Farmington wil] do/hurled a 2-hitter for Bloomfield for a double, getting in both the Mon-! Joe Carruthers, Michigan State | roe and Albion invitational tests|won over Brighton in the 3rd W-O Southfield: contest, Saturday. Waterford, will also be at Monroe. * * * South Central league meet at Ox- ford, starting at 4 p.m. is a mid- week feature, Wednesday. Oxford is defending champion of the 5- team loop, Farmington finished 6th in the Redford combined relays yester- day with 17 points. Redford won with 26. Warren Cawley led Far- mington, in four events, many area schools Monday. * * * Results of other tests: Melvindale 67's, W. Bloomfield} 41% (track). ras won two firsts Boss, Players to Pick Coach | MIAMI BEACH, Fla. &#—The| ‘boss and the hired hands are col- laborating here on choice of the | St. Louis Hawks’ next coach. tional Basketball Assn. team, said it seemed like a good idea to con- ‘sult his championship court squad before naming a successor to Alex |Hannum, who resigned. “are looking for a man who can fit in with our style, not somebody , who will change our whole. pat- j tern.” . | Charley Eckman, former Detroit | Pistons head coach, has been named a prospect to succeed Han- ‘num, s when you claim THE WINNERS! Following sales slip numbers are prize winners in our carload Tire Sale Contest — Please bring your sales slip with you your prize. A - 04660 A-04443 A -04351 C -02512 A -04531 C - 02429 C -02619 A - 04601 C - 02673 A-04643 A-04629 A - 04447 A-04290 |$C-02407 C -02580 A -04553 C-02441 A~- 04327 A - 04396 A - 0450? AFTER INVENTORY CLOSE-OUTS — REAL BUYS! BIG SAVINGS! d-6.70n16 3 3 °]2" |7-2.10018 =z 13" 9-T.10x16. es Zz A |3-160x18 222 15" 16.016 39” 4-8.00x14 "35-332" 568" All Prices Are Plus Tax and Your Recappable Tire—Without Trade Adé —— : Golf and baseball also occupied) ~ Ben Kerner, owner of the Na-| Kerner said he and six players, at Monroe Wayne Ross in the 880, and the medley relay team. * * * In baseball, league games were in the majority, Clarkston's Chuck Gaddis missed a no-hitter when Holly had a single in the 7th. He won, 2-1, with-Amos Bradsher giv- ling up 4 hits for Holly. John Dixon a 3-2 win over Keego, and Milford 7-2, to hold the league) lead 5-0. OL St. Mary’s freshman} Stan Krogulecki, won a SCL tilt over St. Clement, 6-1, at Orchard Lake, Eaglets’ 3rd victory, OLSM now shares the loop lead with ROSM (3-1). * * * | | Millington (So. Cent.) lost to Ox-| ‘ford 10-1 after leading 6 frames.) Oxford got 8 hits for 10 rung in| the 7th. Romeo won, 15-5 over Al- mont for its 8th straight, on War-} ren Calhoun's }-hitter, Holly won a golf (W-O) tri- angular 190, over Northville 192, Clarkston 198, at Meadowbrook. Glen Grommett, Helly, was med- alist with 44, Chuck Hancock had | 48 for Clarkston. Milford beat Bloomfield Hills 169-179, led by medalist Grant Reed's 39, Hills’ Bud Badger had 40. Walled Lake won over eke in I-L golf, 182-183 for its 4th) straight. Web Wood, 5th man broke a tie with his 47 for the win. Cochran of Berkley was med- alist with 40. Ordinary Living Seen for Campy Doctors Doubtful That Paralyzed Catcher Will Make Total Recovery NEW YORK 1#—Doctors today | expressed hope that Roya Campa- 'geles Dodger catcher, would /make sufficient progress for ‘‘or- idinary living’ but expressed idoubt that he will ever make a total recovery. The statements were made by | both Dr. Howard Rusk, head of ‘the Rusk Institute of the New York Medical and Rehabilitation center, where Campanella was transferred yesteday, and by Dr. Robert W. Sengstaken, who per- formed the laminectomy (neck fracture operation) on Roy three months ago. “Campanila is still a quadri- iplegic, meaning he is paralyzed from the. shoulders down,” said | Dr. Sengstaken. “He can use his | shoulders and bend his wrists ivery weakly, There is no muscle function below the shoulders and he has intermittent feelings down to the groin.” Dr. Sengstaken added that Cam- ipanella has shown some improve- | ment during the last 30 days but |he indicated the progress was not as rapid as he had hoped. 'No Changes for ABC SYRACU, N. Y. (® — Action /was routine Monday in + minor ievents of the American Bowling Congress Tournament with no changes in the singles, doubles ‘and all-events standings. US.ROYAL TIRES The Best Place in Town to Buy Tires? DON R. McDONALD, Inc. 370 S. Saginaw Street FE 5-6136 ' Serving Pontiac Aree for Over bh Years Just ike neue c MEN’S - LADIES’ vmZ— man THE HATTER 12 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7514 Kubek Tries New Position NEW YORK (#—Tony Kubek goes into the Army before the baseball season ends, but at the moment, the 22-year-old New York Yankee jack-of-all-trades has oth- ‘ler things on his mind. His main concern is where he’s going to play in Manager Casey Stengel's scheme of things: Once the Professor starts working on his line-up, Kubek has to sit tight. Tony was down to replace Hank Bauer in right field game with the Cleveland Indians— a position almost completely for- eign to him—but then you never know. In ’57 when he was voted the Rookie of the Year, Kubek per- formed at second base, shorfstop; third base, center field and left field. Kubek, who made a quickie trip in today’s) MSU won but Syron took his match from In the bottom photo, Tim Baldwin He shot terday to enlist in the Army’s six- month reserve program—he must join within 120 days which would be a couple of weeks before the| end of the season—has been at bat just four times this season, Irish Snap ‘M’ Streak SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Michi- ‘gan’s four-year dual tennis win-| halt at 47 The Wolverines were outstroked | yesterday by Notre Dame 7-2. The| last time the NCAA champions lost jn—dual competition was in 1954 when Michigan State turned the’ trick. It was the Fighting Irish’s| 15th straight triumph. In Fine Whiskey ISCHMANN'S FULL PINT $248 Code $261 Available Fleischmann’s 90 Proo’ THE FLEISCHMANN DISTILLING IS THE BLY 8. 0. D."s and State Stores 90 PROOF is WHY! Only Fleischmann’s has more Proof —90 Proof—as compared with all other leading blends. They are only 86 Froof. means more flavor—more enjoyment —more satisfaction. And—Fleischmano’s surprising mild- ness and exceptional smoothness tell you that you're getting the highest quality in every bottle. That's why Fleischmann’s offers you so much more than any whiskey in America. BLENDED WHISKEY + 90 PROOF « pelSCHMAN 90 PROOF y*, cs at all 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS CORPORATION, NEW YORK CITY to Milwaukee, his home town yes- | ning streak has: come to an ony ONDAY'’S FIGHTS . . y By + Associated Press York, L aed ol SAN FRANCISCO + Joey Giardello,| ne hw Onteaie os 159%, Rosedale, N.¥., outpointed Rory abi Nex New Orleans, Calhoun, 158%, White Plains, N.Y. . oe $2.00 Per $100 for One Year! . $5.40 Per $100 for Three Years! Just Phone Us’ for Immediate Coverage Be Sure You Are Well Insured Kenneth G, HEMPSTEAD i INSURANCE 102 E. Huron St. FE 4-8284 NOW... You Can Get a Complete ALIGNMENT for a a | MARKET TIRE Co. 17 W. Huron St. THEN SEE US! FE 8-0424 | Don't forget to have your car checked during Safety Week! 504 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. @ FE 5-8172 CAMERA SHOP Bill Nicholai, Owner See Your Pictures Sooner! BRING YOUR FILM;TO US FOR és FAST PROCESSING SERVICE. >} 1032. WEST HURON FE 5-8753 1% Blocks West of Telegraph Road Paddock h rw TwwwTwewyeyTeTe eee} wf ALL 3 SERVICES ONE LOW PRICE REG. 17.00 VALUE HERE’S WHAT WE DO: BRAKE RECONDITIONING REG. 3.50 VALUE @ Remove front wheels and tn- spect brake drums & lining. @ Inspect grease seals. @ Check and add brake fluid, “if needed, @ Adjust brake shoes to secure full contact with drums, > @ Carefully’ test brakes. WHEEL BALANCE _ Both Front Wheels Reg. 4.00 Value @ Precision Dynamic Balance @ Precision Static Balance @ install Necessory Weights | ALIGNMENT . Regular 9.50 Value @ Correct Caster @ Correct Camber @ Correct Toe-in and Toe-out ' (Abeve ere chief causes of tire weer) @ inspect Steoring DON’T TAKE CHANCES All materials used in Firestone Service is guaranteed to be equal or better than original equipment. Tre | STORES i f to $205,459,000 — down $241,151,000 from a top 6f $446,610,000 in 1953. * * * . ward Breez, 37, who fled the ‘didn't fire the pistol. Remains Unsettled - ed, They asked for a 25-cent hour- st ® y , € zi Wels ,« + Mek o, . ¢ # ’ a cia tt rs a 1 eo a / he 5 _-_ TUESDAY, MAY 07 1058, THE = \ Down to $205.5 Million From $464 Million in '53 ment Fund Shrinks tate Unemploy DETROIT W — Michigan's un-cent to one-half of t pet cent of an employment trust fund has shrunk Senator Harry F. Byrd (D-Va) said in Washington Monday he wants to find out why states haven't dipped- deeper into their unemployment compensation re- serves before the Senate votes on advancing federal funds to extend payments to the jobless. A Michigan Employment 8e- curity Commission spokesman said whether this state digs deeper depends upon two things: 1. The rate of outgoing payments ‘and income taxes, and 2. Wheth- er the Legislature extends the number of weeks one may draw unemployment compensation, there is no tax increase and that federal advances have to be repaid. The $205,459,000 mark was hit last Wednesday. The $446,610,000 balance was hit Oct. 31, 1953. Michigan's basic unemployment rates vary according to an em- ployer’s constancy of employment. A so-called special emergency rate employer’s total payroll is provided when outgo drops below intake. : * * * Whenever outgo overbalances re- ceipts by 26 million dollars or more over a year, the maximum one- half of one per cent goes on top of all.basic assessments. The maxi- munt went into effect in Michigan last year. It still is in effect. Michigan law limits payments to 26 weeks. The lowest jobless benefit is $10 a week, payable to a single worker who made $15.01 to $16.50 a week; the maximum, $55 a week to a man with five dependents who earned at least $108 a week. Under a House-passed bill now in Byrd’s Senate Finance Commit- tee extended state payments would be made from federal funds which the states would have to repay from added taxes upon employers or otherwise within four years. * * * The state legislature currently has a bill in the House Ways and tend state benefits for 13. weeks. The -bill was shelved there until the legislature returns in the ranging from one-tenth of 1 per middle of May in hopes that Con- Berserk Janitor Shoots 6 Children and 3 Adults. SAN FRANCISCO (®—A beserk janitor poured shotgun fire into a neighbor’s crowded apartment night, wounding three adults and six children. One of the chi'dren was hurt critically. “I was out of my mind. | didn't mean to. do it, but they vexed me so had,” cried William Ed- scene but called police 45 minutes later to come and get him. * * * He was booked for investigation of a charge of assault with intent to commit murder. The shooting climaxed a long- standing neighborhood feud in the Potrero Hill Negro housing devel- opment. Police racing to the scene found Breeze’s wife Mary, 29, weeping in her apartment. Witnesses said she_ held a revolver at one win- dow of the apartment of Mrs. Aline Herbert while Breeze fired a 12-gauge automatic shotgun four times through another window. * * * Mrs. Breeze, questioned but not held, told police the Herberts had been bothering her family of five boys and a girl for months and “jit went too far.’’ She. said her 10-year-old daughter Bobbie had been “jumped on” at play by Kirty Mae Young, 10. _ “We figured we had enough, so! we went over there next door to get it settled,’ the woman was quoted as saying. * * * after preliminary in- said she apparently Officers, vestigation, Kirty Mae, visiting at the Her- bert place, was shot in the back and critically injured. The others wounded: Mrs. Aline Herbert, 29. Her children Betty, 9, Clara, 8, and James, 7. John Bowens, 37, a visitor in the Herbert apartment. * * * Mrs. Olive Gay, 36, and her daughter Lavahn, 14, neighbors who were on the sidewalk outside the apartment. Strike in Hawaii HONOLULU (®—Haewaii’s strik- ing sugar workrs apparently are turning down a,, 15-cent hourly wage increase offer by manage- ment. * * * Reports from one of the 26 big plantations affected said the ear- ly voting by union members yes- terday was going against the of- fer, which leaders of | Herry Bridges’ International Longshore- men’s and Warehousemen’s Union recommended be rejected. * * * About 13,000 workers are affect- ly wage increase and said they'd take. something less although no|. exact figure ever was released. Ten grades of workers have been getting from $1.12 to $1.79 an hour, A local lush claims he’s all set for a summer at the beach. He bought a fifth of suntan lotion .. . The phrase ‘In God We Trust” on pennies is put there for the benefit of people who use the coins as fuses. — Ear] Wilson. Cynthia Roberts, 5, another neighbor child visiting at the Her- bert home. Her wounds were de- scribed as serious. Three ambulancs took the vic- tims to Mission Emergency Hos- pital. * * * Four other children of Mrs. Herbert and Mrs. Beatrice Finch, 56, who is Kirty May Young’s grandmother, escaped from the crowded two-room apartment un- hurt. Breeze offered no resistance when police arrested him. Means Committee that would ex: gress would come through with \federal assistance. ‘Under the Michigan bill* those collecting benefits would have te work 20 weeks before they would be eligible. The present requir- ment is 15 weeks. : “Our operating fund will be be- low 200 million dollars by June 30 for the first time in the past 10 years, I believe,’’ said the MESC spokesman. “It will depend on the first quarter tax collections, but it may go down to 180 million.” *: * * The official said he believed that before the legislature should ex- tend jobless pay time 13 weeks by deflating the fund, a study should be made to find ways to bring in ‘as much money as is paid out by increased taxes and other means. Asked what advantage Michigan PONTIAC PRESS, - { be ‘ * 4 a4 would have by borrowing federal funds to,increase jobless benefits when they would have to be paid back within four years, he said: “I can’t answer that. That's up to legislature. I'd have to read the actual bill when it passes Congress to know if there are any advantages and, if there ; are, whether they would be strong enough to warrant the borrowing.” From Jan. 1 to April 15 the i\MESC said 440,000 workers had ex- hausted unemployment benefits. As of April 15, 465,000 workers or 15.9 per cent of the state's total labor force were unemployed. Of ithese, 275,000 or 18 per cent were lin the Detroit area. * * * Unemployment checks being paid as of April 17 totaled 363,460. THE GIRLS by Franklin Folger / iZ 8 : Cael ry} “What gets me is why the nations of the world WANT to live together like one big family.” BOARDING HOUSE a a aZ y VES. Dak Is TWIGGS, IF THAT Jsices che YE atueis Aaent or She ENA , j E EMBALME OF THE SPOOKS YA NION —AAY SPECIALTY IS TO EN— WHO HADNT THIS HODSE THAT I'VE }/ COURAGE FOLKS To INA BARREL fw INTERESTED 2 OVER NIAGARA FALLS 60 WATCH, MA--WATCH/ MMU THE AID TO MORE AID ) GIVE ME THOSE, I CN GO CLEAN OVER! AND I'LL TRY TO WHY, THESE THINGS ER GET YOU A LION A LOTTA FUN! I'LL LEARN \\_ ‘TO PLAY WITH! A LOTTA TRICKS ON YOU'LL GET THESE FORE I'M WELL SOONER! a “MUM © 1988 by NEA Service, ins, TM. Nine _ — TFRwn S-b K : . US Pe - HALF ACRE CASTLE ~ John Morris BooTs SAME TE! ors AND HER BUDDIES hake. MAKES AMA FEEL WROPPING SMALL... ET THE BWe.. .AWP i © 1968 by NEA Service, ne. TM. U.S. Pet. OF, Ce ed ae ial By Carl Grubert MORE IRON IN HIS SYSTEM! ste Ae A A ae € a" x f > ' » . . iJ LOOK---1 GOT A NEW SPACE HELMET OFF ME~* TAKE IT ca VA O.K,,GRANDOMA, I'LL BE OVER FOR A REGULAR CREW ae \ a < oy) By Walt Disney @, & . a 4a AT TH { vee A STATION ‘Deas duaed by THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY. 6, 1958 i MARKETS Socks Clini Dennis Crosbys | Newsin iil ; —. The following ire top prices cov) ' a el sales of locally grown pro- _ {Civil Ceremony on ingen tals Sarees We © ; duce brought to the Farmer's ~epgypn aay —— he sport ah a ees Market by growers and sold by LAS VEGAS, Nev. ®—Thé Det| 1 stely. $8 taken from an heaton’ OF Re 1B") CHICAGO Wh — The May wheat| Dem in Wholesale package lots. EW aa dtr hn Sick: Mec. ee ne ey Sar cach register, cucenat ‘wos tem bel Sane OM are: oe 5 "SNe von’ n—me fc 5 aan Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of new high/forming their hurry-up marriage.| Louis Tanuta, of 200 N, Saginaw other grain futures ran toward Monday. ground for 1958 in active trading; They thought they were getting/st reported to Pontiac Police Mon- weakness in early Board of Trade early today. a_ civil ceremony. day that someone had stolen a dealings today, | Produce Leading issues rose fractions to * * & power mower and fertilizer spread- x * * around a point, Dennis, 23, a Catholic and son/er, valued at about $40, from his The light demand for May wheat FRUITS The ticker tape once again W@S/o¢ Bing Crosby, said -last night| garage. was mainly from short interests /Appiee Delicious, pu. .......-.-.-.-$4%8|late for @. short while under the/that his marriage to dancer Pat and did not indicate any particular] Apples. Steele Reds, bu. ............ 475, Tush of opening blocks. The ris¢/cneehan was hastily arranged Get your —_ = —_ ‘commercial business, traders said. VEGETABLES was not concentrated in any Spe-|sunday night. He explained thatlenct Bestose Book rors. 19 E. Lawrence. | at oa * oun whe sents (behs.) don. .seveesoss 2.00 oe ue A number of selected /nis bride had ae back to her — adv. saad vontatae Fe at wes Wis bc ccstsesessvans 6 7% es show at the Tropicana Hotel. 1, cent a bushel higher on the ley “rs «eevee oe te Lorillard and Republic Avia- | The ceremony was performed in goto May th i, 1:30 ba p.m, “Cain May delivery to % lower on the eae gi, si tion were each ahea’ around a ja wedding chapel by the Rev. new crop contracts, May $2.1T%; |Oatons, ary’ SE bag point. The latter is rehiring 1,000 [James A. Herndon, pastor of the ent - sie me a ee may |pesaing ei ein) oe werkers ths month. Lakens Steel |Las Vegas Church of the Naz Pri. Ma: fate, till 9:30 PM. pt oats made a similar gain, rene, . May 9, sake anus 1% lower, = Radibes i dos... American Motors, yesterday's *.* * any, May $2.26%: lard 3 to 5 cents|7@™*. — heneeneineame nis, ¢ jjmost active stock, again was The bride and groom said they]. , sammege 8 ale, Theory. Maz § S eaked peas —— were deeply disturbed when they] 9 287 8. Woodward (a a hundred pounds higher, July aeaait luaas briskly traded. After a slight open- ee fap emt a Pectan: Humphrey) Birmingham. Free ime x * * cases Included, t settal-etate. ‘eredee: pases: - ~ os tant clergy had officiated. . “ sa Wats: rade A, jumbo, 47; extra . They mistook him for a justice There was a rather marked bear-|ierge 42-45%; weighted averaged 43\4:| The market background includ- . ar la note among many traders on//*78*, $1:42%; fe are ais: ed: eda 2 moar ee ee a4 — ese ‘old di- Edison Declares Dividend | wheat, corn and soybeans. ¥e oe : ye ~~ vorcee who is the mother of a 6 | = 3 grads| U. &, Steel rose a major frac- ee who is the mother of & © | NEW YORK #.— Detroit Edi. ee : ; checks! tom and Youngstown Sheet about ee y, P-|son Co. has declared a dividend of it 2 scopalian. ts a share, payable July 15 | NFERENCE | aa imbo 1-42: ox entre : pau. “We feel terrible about it. But - cecil of es co Saree Ta~40%4; General Motors and Chrysler|what can we do? Se ort it i rade A, itt: ame |tiewed Mithe change Smal gaina| VE much in love ’s ROOM iaree, cages large 31-385 savas medium 31-| were made by Goodrich, Interna-|that,” the couple said in a joint) 19s no Betial ie. acility | Se es Foie BLE ary ‘ a | o a .* oreo hea oy At, tating ih eet — ater, or tee roulray New York Stocks that after a civil ceremony he|_ moticc ls here hereby fe pee 1th de of May, at 10:00 a.m., the und roe. I Detroit for “Nod (Late Morning Quotations) cg acne (ne Marriage With) Ae ketene Sit Bude fo Hea hens type |» amires ; r | mite RNa Ha Ds Admiral +4 8 Momeste- ... $2 | «7 will see if they will remarry|No ospiiiis00, at 11 E. tre, Pon: — Alte as ee asec 2)-t)us in the church,” he said. “If tee, ? Michigan. | Ooi A poe said Alls vene dl ye 133 not—"’ and he threw up his hands. | address. eee fon Auris "*s:<: 114 at Bes Mei 36h ie f am Cyan... 48.6 Int Wick |... a M SS De h N i 464 ee Hem 2 Slump Missin ath Notices Am 1 eee for Your Sales wd op 9+ glans 3% is Crk Coal. 34 . Bre Oe: Coneybure, Drayton Ee a E.. 2/Photo Business | Gaertn: Meeting . | Am Smelt... + Soe Oe: Es hy IR By ge is pee a 8. Ta Ry yg Gt - : | im Tob ....... a eon a 2 PHONE FE 5-9224 [| pros’ te iow choice seers 9.00-3750: few am Vineaee 4 Kresge 8s .°-: da3) Executives Say Sales ance Nes sbeld, today si wan ® F313] Are on Increase) Tatttes Ctmetery. Clartsion 44 i Se ee A Puneral arrangements by the ae By Baas . be . Harry Veal, Mrs, Roy eee | 1 Stree f : goods say sales rose 25 per cent Mrs. Paul Burby, Arthur, Emil | NEW YORK ® — The steel in- ie ‘ - #filast year to around 7% million and Charles Keehn. Puneral sery- }dustry, a major barometer of the men.) ‘3 \* ldollars. German photo sales| st § am. from 8t. Michael's | . raised its production ieee Bal gained 10 per cent to hit 12 mil-| fous Gemeitry "Mechtanon at the jlast week for the first time since/ Seton Mix ’::: 42. ‘++ HY |lion dollars. Rosary ‘will be Wednesday gt 7:39 — a wee Se Mus + 44) Sales of all photo equipment _Fiome. "ge | jes ma wee nee hi --+ 12-¢)the United States topped a billion LER, MAY 6 inet, MARTIN |The American Iron, & Steel In- belo aH #MMidoliars last year, Severaj firms] eloved son of ptt. Soeesh Miner: ! wa 5 «se 20.5 now on ays z es i setae eee EY Re Blom rice aeg| SE : . Mot...) 38.1 | turning out 1,289,000 tons of ingots ots ‘° é sivear may approach 1% billion. From ‘Pursiey Pos me with jand castings. This compared with) Gardner Den | 37. -. #73) Both manufacturers and retail-| Bev. Pe Hart officiating. |the output of 1,270,000 tons or 47.1 BT Up Ges Cp'.': 3131S say sales are on the up-| tery. Mr. Miller will [le tn state peg I ee SN elo = a a eee SED, Ae, BARRE : on. a Gee » — Motion cture velyn, 4451 Oak |, It was the first week to week Ht me: it Ward Be Pt. #2 4|Polls and slide projectors Eas Naty, Paared eof lend March Sh Sti me SN a ee acts amateer| rT as ele Se _ ; Goebel Br... 3 white Mot... : says Beds p nae cael 7 eA Wilson ht photographers ve pred 240 day, Mav 6 a Tes 1 pm. from Conts Gt No Ry ...36 Yale & Tow .. 25 |Mmillion dollars sales Drayton avith Rev, Time to Get Boat and Motor ‘| Spark Plug Division Head |Si7"cur¢ - -:,/$3 Youns saw: 27-4/of 798 million dollars last year.| ©. Andrews » Exton: 3 aks Songs ty EReeOR eT: ae soaks for a good year in'1ase| Rattan, Whee Geeta enh PROTECT ION Now GM Vice President Holland FP... 10.5 with the business slump playing aoe pe Fg ye A. _ 7 ___|little part. James,’ 38, Davidson “8t., Oxford For a Few Pennies Per Dey! Pad ca pal a a ye (Compliea So Fie neat press) | Bell & Howell's sales last year) eT nar brother “ted rant Call us tow for informe- Spark Plug Division of General Indust Ralls Vil Stocks rose to 52 million dollars and it| Eunice Fora, ‘Puneral service vl tion on how to protect Motors Corp., has been named alWeek ego "1001. oe 88 se iggis aiming at 57 million dollars this! p'm. “trom the lunerfelt Funeral 'GM vice president by the firm’s|Month ago... 82.3 77.5 160.3, Year. Perr wih Rev, Hart, and, your boat and motors for © Fear age 1244 158 1813) Polaroid says its sales should Cemete: arlette, Mich. aval avout of ‘board of directors. ieee high 926 80.0 168.9 \ et Bir Se eer ‘the in state at the : 9 1366. 5 . Flumerfelt Home, Oxford. avery amount o Anderson will continue as head! it <* 80.9 729 1366 rise by at least 15 per cent Puners! Home, Ox! money. lof the AC division with headquar-|195! q high .-..0. "83 Gea. 1s8$| Keystone Camera of Boston pre- VATLUANCOURT, MAY 3, 1008. : ~ ters at Flint, Mich. AC also has petnorr srocks ats similar mee. # brother of Rarver ae + a \plants at Milwaukee, J. Nephier Co.) 3 sev. H.W. HUTTENLOGHER Agency |." ct imine, sic, rms sO CORT STARR Tae gu Divino spain] EATS ri Anderson joined AC in 1924 and Allen Riec. te Wa = - a 13:8| Electric Products believes sales} Wednesday. May 1. at 10, 8.m. H. W. Huttenlocher Max £. Kerns. || was appointed general manager in|Ross Gear Co. .........: ° 269 27.9|Should go higher than that. from gt. Vincent de Paul —— - 306-320 Riker Bidg. FE 4-155) | 1953. Si Sie Getta ai ip Tn makers — Westing-| officiating. In im Mi Hope . |) Peningular Met. Pd. Os... 87 87 st/house Electric, General Electric, Rouary will ‘be at 8 p.m. today Rudy Manufact. eres - 71 73|Sylvania and others—sold a record) = ff, OMI ncourt will ie inustate ‘ | YOUR NS FOR ee Jateon, 08. . vent 141 13 See units last year and £3 the DeWitt C. Davis , | PLA She cals: sta ana ached. a to 625 million this. | Sales. of projectors rose to 600,-| Card of Thanks i. 000 units last year, four times| we, : | THE FUTURE SHOULD Business Not Qs [what they were 10 years ago. The see Pe Papnea 78 A Anaco Division of General Aniline ness during-the jingse and death 4 Film says boom is still go- our father, John Denman. Start Jackie Rae Voorhees, owner of ing strong, helped by pushing in-| ig wirl SINCERE APPRECE 3 the Jackie Rae Dance Studio, 944) stallment buying. Other suppliers) tion we, acknowledge the sym- ‘ _. |Voorheis Rd., will teach.ballet and/include Revere Camera, East-| by tr cade And De ghbors during NOW! re TE wont] ELE See ic evieve Nelson, Speci s is @ iat Alma College June 22.27 She aa eS extended to Rev. Jo = is a specialist in as Fairchild Camera & Instru- a his comforting words Many well selected com- line numbers corps work ments reports operating at a ‘oss Home| for their special services . ‘ for the first three months of this} *?4 I _donors of floral trib- mon stocks are excellent utes. ‘The Nelson family. : ; year but sees better days ahead, O h investments right now, as largely helped by onek Ga Funeral Directors 4 ur home loans are well as being ideal to in- Goodyear Reports Drop |tracts. “—s | 7a ROARS AFG EASY-TO-LIVE-WITH! || ‘cre Sennen :'ts [Mn Net income, Soles {Feat cies not meet "| EUNERAL HOME, : | made moni out of in- mngrap elo) (INS)—Goodyear| Peerlss Camera Store in New D el h come, if you wish. Write or re & Ru Company reported| York looks for a record year. An- - Monthly payments, like rent, bring | Phone for free tise of quart of 1958 qepped A palnee. “ef - OT ae pe . ' ' suggested stocks. ar -1 per ; ; cent from the same period last debt-free home ownership to you = while sales were off 12.7 per ; V ee ie : : 2 2 00 cater safely, quickly and economically. 8 ha | Gee riod this year at $10,857,506 as| Retail outlets are growing, FUNERAL HOME . Bale 1c with $17,265,055 last/reaching 5,700 in 1957, compared or Motor HEWN com-|with 5,200 in 1956. Druggists ‘ , 5 Loan Assoc, (A See ee | eee] " rst : ae on ot York Stock Exchonge eemgae Lavyie nny in the cunper- GM Sets Usual Dividend ethic rg following ‘Established 1890 — ee boxes Res w. rt SP +16 pil ss Banh ig.) |e me Sram 3, shee Mew TOME Seserel| 5.6 5 deen eal : an s. | /88_ also t 5 has the ‘ uron St., ontiac FE 4-0561 Ft 4-2895 \'leapital expenditures for 1958 are| usual dividend of 50 cents on a ao. in oe 7 st ina ah We namerdiien won| eee at toad tee oh , 81, 4. ‘|pared ' million during. holders of record May 15. ee Help Wented ‘Male 6 one, aa Bmaeane Gs iat Mas | 5 A Sionty Job AD BOOK MAT ES DRAPTING TRAINEES — 37 soon © SPORT SECTION. WE Tere Real tate salesman with license. se apmane fe Live WiRE ——_* “Wm. A. Kennedy Hu 3101 W. Huron " a wae. Gilssrs: eaners, Lake Orion. AN WA : Y © N, Paddock between 8:30 and 9 a.m, MAN DO IONE SUR- sr, Se Ss Sia "arate: must have Food” telephone voice, Ca, . . WA > WITH “MECHANT. her Suaity Direct s tw sell Bal Wonda-Chairs. Car nec- essary earning potential See Mr. Brunelle “Groveland on the J. ¢ we eo Tanta ae Pontiac and Fiint. 1, 4 REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Corner Williams Lk. Rd. & M30 OR 35-1235 After 6 OR 3-6203 SINGLE YOUNG MEN earning Ow 2 ee. ‘Trepepeseten tu med cash drawing te eouat. For interview: “Apply Mr. Hud- ay | Em wets oe Wayne ap um. oe 3 Thursday only. SALESMEN BUSINESS MACHINES who is aggressive jelent and would like Géential, Write Press Box SALESMEN Aguas” So vasciter's sell emergency service, FE 8-2041. TORY GN, Lan OL parent Agencies ss EVELYN EDWARDS _ VOCATION. NSELING $i CO ant BANE BLDG. RECPT" tatters. who ¢ te ‘heat “ead. ike Instructions 9 I8 REVOLUTIONIZING INDUSTRY scaceeaneety ne lined men 18-55 = 2 BIG PAY ea ra to instail, Bg and main- tain all types of Diesel 1 Engi Write ‘tor PRE mes. 3] “Ear Pewer in Digedt. ia Utilities Diesel Training, 2, Pontiac a Ag MOTEL TRAIN- ‘ar 3, Pontiac Press. PIANO, VIOLIN AND VOICE, EX- pertly ¢: _ FE 4-8407. ® WANTED Men, F -W omen — immedisie training AIRLINE SNES On the Ground . . In the Alr eS cost your training by arranging budg- et‘terms. For pe inter- catlent il coupon’ ahd“MAIL 8 cou A TODAY! a * Write AIRLINE CAREER vee Dept. A5-119 Box 12, . Press to paneer Sneconeneanigeanccec. Address p's Rcsleeinsisine sieaces ee . vee te ‘‘feducation . Hrs. worked. from. ..... ee WANTED — WOMEN FOR AIR- line Training. pee our adv, under Classification = TO LIVE IN POR A FEW $35 wk. Must have ref- . OR 3-065. a Sales Representative TITS “ilo RAR boRATT AN EXP’D 5A AN TO Soe TACT TRUCK INDUSTRIAL AC NESS ‘ANTIAL CH. JOHN. SHERATON - CADILLAC Bat WrepnesDay. PHUREDAY —APTER § AM. SINGLE EXPERIENCED M AX for Be i farming, Cart Dobat Supplement Income ; neat, car . Call PE ee ae Py 8-0565 for appt. only. p.m. WANTED — MEN FOR AIRLINE Gases 6. gee our Adv, under WHOLESALE AND ND RETAIL ALES personnel wanted. Part e start. er nec a FE $-0124 from 9 to 7 p.m. ‘Help Wanted Female 7 AMBITIOUS WOMAN ee ae oe Samm ne’ moos as" 6108 pet pe: eg rT call FE vee Li ie teedie BAR MAID. and 6 p.m. 4 phone ~4 al ey's Golf nion Lake Rd. BABYSITTING AND SEWORK. References Responsble and live 4p Box 113 Pontiac Press. Pn rn Nn wet Bie’ spe dl Rep — shop. OA _ 8-2008 after 5 BOARD < ROOM WITH PV, EXx- be ay 2 for help with ‘children. COMBINATION WAIT AND en helper, Semi-religious ne if it eam. Write Pontiac ee an es Pat 8 to Py reek Breas tia tes. a Drags. cosmetics, ¢ igers, ite Pai * e' rt Dru Wondward a , Ricplarnam brag gg ON ¢ erences A 6-1281. ‘ayton Pisins P.O. FASHION ce ee ag WOMAN aah — Pte while earn- For, a i achaoe ae ‘show Ya Now. ~ ‘Gan FB FF own transportation, SSE WOR panes mimes at eoitt ee Fer 0. Ge wing for ReLPEN A one 6 p.m, No oon Lion Lake RD. MIDDLEAGED Lane Bs rO CARE beariert, "pe. pier aor call OAk- to live r call before ra No * to 2 yo ro 33,0 8 YOUNG GIRL TO DO HOUSE- work on Commerce Rd. Live in. EM 3.3685. . —_—— Work Wanted Male 10 CEMENT WORE OF ALL KINDS. OR 3-5741 CARFEN tara cabinets "apecaly FE cabinets specialty, FE EMneat MAN WOULD LIKE part-time fulltime job as gar- dener or ¢ a care premises. FE 83245 pot MEAT Lieven oe SERVICE Fw oe market Pay “e, Would oe area, EM 43-4078 TXPERTENCED GA RDENER wants work 1 Throws a “ore weekly. 10 hrs. a.da h the whole summer, eae after 6:00 p.m. GAR: iG AND LAWN oe reasonable. OR 3-5479, oe OF Die ober — ae WOULD LIKE ODD with own trans FE 8-3423. wey MAN. LET ME H.ELP ou do not have | , will work. ge te Last by OR « EXTERIOR PAINT- i timates, Reasonable. 33752 or. OR. peu 17. kh fishing. “Wapctosnee. FE baie. MAN WANTs CEM OR BLOCK WORK __work, Any ty 40619. MAN. %.. WOULD LIKE 5 eee mechanical kind. exp, OR 3-88 FE 44822. R ELIAS CARPENTER NEEDS Biprice is right. FE §-8325. fi nee REMOVAL TRIMMING & lots cleared, Free estimate. FE 5802, lawns. Cut grass and weeds, and sell Bleek soil by bushel, hand diggi and light haul in ie ce ts. MY 3-1198 or FE YOUNG MAN, WANTS TRUCK- ing or any erat of construction work. EM 3-0161, Work Wanted Female 11 1 2.DAY SERVICE ee — fine page oo meee © wading spt -gteam pressing se Pick and —— FE 43841, ree eet WT TROMING. ty a Pick up and deliver. i =N WANT WALL WAGH- ‘ housecleaning. FE 3-1581, EXP. GIRL . WOULD like cleanthg and ironing, ;3 ‘5 week, Own transporta' LS get ae “ear -- Today’ Ss. Television ‘Proteus _: -- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel &—-WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 89—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS rades quiz. Jack (Maverick) (4) Romper Room. Kelly, Peggy King, guests. (7) Our Friend Harry, 6:00 (7) Mr. Danger. (9) Theater (cont.). (9) Popeye, (4) Bob Cummings. Comedy: /9:40 (9) Billboards. (4) News: Williams. Grandpa sidetracks Bob’ 8 ro- Ss (2) Racket Squad. mance, 10:00 (2) Garry Moore. (2) Red Skelton. Comedy: (4) Dough ReMi. 6:15 (4) Weather: Eliot. Mona Freeman, singer Ran- (9) Movie. a dy Sparks, San . Fernando 6:20 (4) Box Four. (Red) spoof rock ‘n’ roll. [10:30 (2) Halls of Ivy. (4) Treasure Hunt. 6:30 (7). Annie Oakley. 10:00 (7) West Point. Adventure: (9) M. Rooney Show. Academy fails to impress|11;99 (2) Arthur Godfrey (4) Up For Appeal. Motor- visiting beauty. (4) Price Is Right. ists’ problems. (9) News. (2) News: LeGoff. (4) Californians. Adventure: |.4;2, (7) News. ‘ Marshal Wayne prevents 6:40 (2) Weather: Phelps. tragic injustice in “Second 13;39.(2) Dotto. Trial. . (4) Truth or Consequences. 6:45 (2) Néws: Edwards. | (2) $64,000 Question. (1) Rickey the Clown. - 7:00 (7) Sports Parade. 10:15 (9) Weather. Gee ° (9) Sta r. en- : Comics. rll ~ ine Adv: ™|10:20 (9) Film Fare. 11:45 (7) Noontime trooper. (4) Casey Jones. 1¢:38 (7) Youth Bureau. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON (2) Follow That Man. Adven- () Starlight Theater. ture series, Ralph Bellamy. a ete Tt’ S©ltz:00 (2) Love of Lite. 1:15. (7) Sports: Wattrick (4) Dr. Hudson. JA Se)) Sad lo en 715 (7) News: 5 : 7 ews: Daly 11:00 (7) Soupy's On. 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. ; (9) Theater (cont.) (4) It Could Be You. 7:30 (7) Cheyenne, .Western: eee : (7) The Erwina. Cheyenne tangles with vi- (4) News: W’Kamp. (9) Myrt and Doris. outiew wee plans 16 11:15 (4) Weather burn Mexican village. ; . . ‘ (9) Million Dollar Movie. a eet i < 18:46 2) Guiding Light cli #4 eee - * = aoe Taylor, “Cyatne dress at dinner honoring the | 1:00 . a Day. Republican members of Con- ° 1 None Thet Tee gress. (7) My Little Margie. =” . (9) Movie. : 11:20 (4) Sperts. $:60 (1) Cheyene (cont.) 1:30 (2) As the World Turns. (9) Movie (cont.) : ()T (4) (color) Fisher, Gobel, |#1:30 iD Saga a it oad soe eat dabei mae (4) Jack Paar. Singer Pat 2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks. caloni, comedian Tom d’An- Suzuki, comedians Dave (7) Lady of Charm. drea, sisters. Gardner, Dan Duryea, : (2) oe paiceas eae Homer and Jethro. 2:25 (4) Faye Elizabeth. edy: Howard, Eve find out (2) Eisenhower (cont.) stars of silent screen days 2:30 Be a roe take ove t y Foyle. aoe sone Pinay Woe WEDNESDAY MORNING a ter Bridget Duff stars ; ews. Young a Pickford. = 6:50 (2) Meditations, 3:00 (2) Big Payoff. 8:30 (7) Wyatt Earp. Western: |6:55 (2) On the Farm Front. (4) (color), Matinee Theater. Doc Holliday rewrites his- (7) American Bandstand. tory. 7:00 (2) TV College. (9) Movie: (9) Movie (cont.) (4) Today. . : (4) Gobel (cont.) 3:30 (2) Vertiict Is Yours. (2) Wingo. Quiz. 7:30 (2) Cartoon Frolic. (7) Do You Trust Your Wife? 9:00 (7) Broken Arrow. Western: |8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo. 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. Prospector who tangles with (7) Cartoon Carnival. (4) Queen ior a Day. Cochise returns to reserva- (7) American Bandstand. tion to mine gold. 8:30 (7) Big Show. (9) Theater. “Chain Re- 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. action.” 8:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. (4) McGraw Adv. Adventure: 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. McGraw hunts for research-|9:00 (4) Amos 'n’ Andy. (9) Laff Time. er’s missing se . (2) To Tell Truth. 9:25 (2) News. 4:45 (4) Modern Romances. - 9:30 (7) Pantomime Quiz. Cha-'9:30 (2) Beat the Clock. 5:00 (2) Detroit Bandstand. (4) Blondie (7) Wild Bill Hickok. ACROSS + og Barly ex- (9) Looney Tunes. = . 5:30 (2) Susie. —__ Ericson, she” (4) It's Great World. ves on ex- (7) Mickey Mouse Club, 12 Opera by ? ty (9) Serial Theater. Verdi Me : 13 Before ty . ° ; . 14 Trieste wine a a Y Irked Housewives 16 River barrier ty Py 17 Coffin stand a MA 18 He ees ea ay ag Blockading Dump —— explorer - ; Oise ge of Greenland ‘ti = means EE Z DETROIT (—Irked at the ripe 2 Suffix Ye, smell coming from a smoldering a “os Ye trash heap at a nearby refuse - 94 Build dump, housewives in suburban 7 Thoroughfares Warten took what a spokesman 32 Merriment coin called “‘direct action” yesterday. 4 Bietieed x * & 33 = . The ladies, about a dozen in all, 3 wi ualsive 4 set up a row of chairs across the : 1 Easter. (ab.) “i paar e day, ov po- 2 fe = 5 Gosauany it Evade * Viner isan lice eet and the coaxing of 2 3 Notion. Property item | would- ump users. “ so «beamed ' Spodremmgere ac fa Arthurt Haid % ae tea s x *« * 48 Abstract being — @ Age ated 29 Erece of baked - 45 Midd - | A group leader said previous ef- 82 Alowenss for 8 Sleving lobes 30 Female saints coochatin | forts to control fires at the dump 53 reat : discord ‘ so Me es dine Mountains had failed and when one kept 54 Departed 10 Arrow poison of the —— of 49 New (comb, burning for four days in a row she te Smell child ib Type of boat a 61 Bepte ber and her neighbors decided to do Pillip - 21 Unusual 35 Range. ‘ab something about it. = Today's Radio Programs - - - WIR, (740) CKLW, (800) - WW3, (950) WCAR, (1180 WXYZ, (1270) WPON, (1460) WJBK, (1490) TONIGHT WXYZ, surrell CKLW, News, David 4) WWJ, Maxwell * CKI.W. News, Knowles Wax. News, Reid | WXYZ, News, M. Shorr 6:00—WIR, News WCAR, News, Mart CKLW. News, Davi WSBK, News, Bellboy WPON News Gwe sited “ ww. wien — "WD, Seve, weber seau WEYZ Curl a cme” 25 3. Daly wxya Wolf CKLW News, Mary Morgan W eect Chase WJBK, News, Reid WJBK, Stereophonic . CKLW. Rooster Club PON America to Knees WCAR, Page’ WIBK, Tom George 1@:30—WWJ, Don Ameche WPON. Music With Mason | WCAR, News, Shoridan CKLW, News, Davies aos, Baseball WPON, Country Roundup WPON, Chuck Lewis "wd on tema 6:30-—WJR, Agriculture 11:00—WJR, Whis ring Sts. WXYZ, Mor Gaur gutejoww or. | SRue Saas Weta Seta “inres WCAR. Patrick WPON Sporta McKinnon | Sine one, Saviee bis i, ? xtra T:0—WIK, Dan Kirby peat News, B. imrtve tn nl wath nome on (ise wae, Time pagel _— CKLW. News, Toby David | CKLW. News, Davies ‘JBK News, George: WPON. News. Sports (2:00—WJIR, News, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 2:00-—WJIR, Right Happiness 11:30—WJR, Music 9:30—-WIR, Jack Harris WWJ, News, Confession WPON, Mason Music CKLW. News. M Labbitt | CKLW Anstin Grant, Davies WEDNESDAY MUKNING | 19:00—WJR, Arthur Godtrey| WIBK: News. Reid 2!30—WJR, Cpl. Next Door WWJ. One Man's Pamily WXYZ, News, M. Shorr CKLW, News, Shiftbreak WPON, Don Zee Show 3:09%—WJIR, Helen Trent WWJ, 6-Star Matinee . WXYZ, News, McKenzie — WCAR, News, Bennett 8: ae. House Party ww Hee. were, News, McKenzie CKLW News. Eddie (nase WJBK, News, McLeod 4;00—WJIR. Bands, Ans, Man land Wells WCAR. News, Bennett 4, News, Maxwell 4:30—WJK, Music Mat SRL t Livestock | “Wawa ‘News, Memensi WHY2, M. short GE a Si * WCAR, News, «ike Thomas| *?8™- p+: WPON. News, MacKinnon be ag = —_ ite-WIR Time for Music! wx, wait Kenzie WEYZ, News, Shorr oe a 7 ‘54 hese CKLW News,’ Davies weak job Th ees ‘wa. ty Maen ; Music With Mason ews, ries Be. News, Rea ge WYR, Rove M'Knse a od WILSON you’re seeing a B’way show or in a TV audience. “There was this one star comedian who had such a wall built up between him and the audience before he ever went out there,” said vivacious Vivian. the background.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... a hospital with a the millinery industry . except her age. salon .. innings on a L.A. station .. the moon. lll. That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1958) | How Is Your Rating as Part of Audience? By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—You're quick to rate the stars—but did you jever rate yourself as an audience? (No? That’s fortunate.) Vivien a the slim but sultry red-haired beauty seen on TV and in “Say, Darling,” informed me as I stood on her terrace overlooking the East River that some audiences get such a low Trendex from the stars that they should have their options dropped. “But you just roll with them—you don’t freeze, don’t fight, don’t clam up,” added the 96-pound doll who was the doll in “Guys and Dolls.” Probably you don’t know that some- times you scare some of the stars because you're slow to laugh or applayd when * * * The happy ending: It’s simply this .. $5,000 for an engagement she pays through her pretty nose to various agents and agencies, until she accumulates & fat $1,900 for herself. Love, it's wonderful. ——d Danny Thomas is working nights in - / Las Vegas, spending each afternoon in back ailment... Ex-Queen Soraya has a job offer from . Zpa Zsa Gabor filled in the publicity question- naire for her show, “Rules of the Game,” Prince Rainier bought a Paris dress | . Adele Mara’s making her first 24 western. Nat (King) Cole, a hot Dodger fan, is announcing the scores between will probably be our main tracking sta- tion when the U.S. shoots a rocket to ; WISH I'D SAID THAT: A lady is a- woman who makes it easy for a man to be a gentleman.—Joe Lauth, Oak Park, “He would pace back and forth. “He would say ‘Those ——-! I know they’re not going to like me.’ And they wouldn’t because he was fighting them.” * * * “I got myself into the same state,” confessed Vivian. wanted to be back in Hollywood but I was playing state as where the rain was pouring down and pigs were honking in “y Vivian told herself, “You're in it — you’re making good money — if you only want to be in it half way, you'd better get out.” And thus Vivian became adorable. She wooed audiences, she prayed a little, she threw love across the footlights and into the TV camera. She became a great hit ... and several managers wanted to advance her career. “I loved agents and managers, too,” says Vivian—who wound up giving 40 per cent of her earnings to them. . when Vivian gets . Hawall - Ernie Ford's | Show Purrin’ Right Along NEW YORK (#—Some time ago somebody suggested calling meeting to discuss changes in the Ernie Ford Show, “Change what?” asked Ford mildly. “You want to fire me?” Good heavens, no! “You want to fire the choir?” Of course not! “Then what's this meeting for?" asked Ford. “We're gonna sing and I'm gonna talk and we're gonna sell cars and try to make people laugh.” ; *® * * The meeting was not held. Of the innumerable futile meetings constantly held in the television industry it would be difficult to think of a more useless conclave. For the Tennessee Ernie Ford Show (NBC-TV, Thursdays) is purring along in its second sea- son of being one of the most pop- ular nighttime programs on tele- vision, Its formula? “We ain't got one,” said Ford, who takes as dim a view of words like formula as he does of calling meetings. He sings, he talks, he sells cars and he definitely makes people laugh. * * * The quality of Ford’s humor is elusive, It’s not the old “Hey, Rube!" brand, and it’s more so-|ni phisticated than Ford either real- izes or would admit, Like all good wit it packs some wisdom. On the other hand, nobody — including ee '|Ford—exactly ‘knows why he can bring the house down with a re- mark. like “It's too wet for plow- ing."’ Apart from the fact that Ford is a superb singer of ballads, he speaks a language of vivid and homely imagery, ‘‘As nervous as a long-tailed cat in. a room full of rocking chairs’ is the kind of line he tosses off casually, » * * When a man asked him why he came East from Hollywood to do a couple of shows from New York, he replied, “You set fishin in one place for a long time and you'll find yourself gettin’ up and goin’ to another place for a spell.. The fish ain’t bigger over there. It’s just that the change is rest- ful.” . * * * Personally Ford is ag relaxed as a well-fed cat on a sunny porch, Athough he’d like. more time for fishing and golfing, he thoroughly -enjoys what he’s do- ing and has —v to be trying something else. ne Narva ents fred trem eusea a a a. | | | i Study of Police to Get Airing Long-Awaited Report to Be Made Public by City Tonight - The long-awaited study of Pon- tiac Police Department efficiency and morale will be made public tonight by the nad adminnistra- tion. Willman said the report was de- livered to Pontiac late last week but its general publication was postponed until Commissioners. got to look at it at one of their regular meetings. Commissioners dered the re- port prepared last Sept. 12 after It is not expected that am sioners will take any action on iene report's. ab Saxeeerererpnai i ght. “The Sel date Gon te eect Willman believed, Also scheduled are six ey pared for public improvements thi! year. Included are repaving and widening of Opdyke road,- Square Lake to Walton; paving of Taylor street, Oak Hill to Ellwood; and inole avenue, Menominee to Al- nue extension, Perry to Linda Vis- High stret about 500 feet south; and in front of thre lots on the east side of N. Jessie street. ing from public nuisance regula- tions. TYPED AS ADOLESCENT — Singer Eddie Fisher is having a hard time winning recognition as still tends to regard Eddie, shown here with his wife, movie actress Debbie Reynolds, as a Eddie and George Gobel alternate as stars of an NBC-TV variety show Tuesdays at 8 p.m. a mature entertainer. The public bashful boy with a cute voice. Not Convinced on Small Cars Automotive News Says Auto Makers Believe Big Vehicles Favored still are not convinced the ameri- can public wants anything besides a big,. high-powered, luxurious ve- hicle. So says Automotive News in a . comprehensive analysis of the small car appeal in the United States. Robert M. Lienert, asso- ciated editor of the trade paper, writes that sales e xecutives are not particularly impressed by sur- veys showing 60 to 70 per cent of persons polled saying they would buy a small car. * * * “They are impressed, however,"’ he adds, ‘“‘when 200,000 Americans per year go out and put down the hard cash to buy a small car—at about the same price they would pa y for a ‘standard’ version of a big U. S.-built auto. big U. S.-built auto. “This is also considered as an indication that price alone no longer is a determining factor in the fate of the U.S.-built small car. In the past, the question of price has almost always led te the ultimate decision against the small car on the part of the. big three.’ The analysis notes that General prod Motors had a smaller car ready for production in 1947 and that Ford had a small car division set up in 1946. Both projects were called of f before’ a car was. ne duced. * * * The appearance of several small- ¢ rs that did not fare so well The appearance of s everal sma er cars that did not fare so well is mentioned, like the Hudson Jet, the Henry J and Crosley — de- scribed as having “led to ruin.” Also cited. are about a score of other smaller vehicles built with- out the backing of a major auto maker. At a recent stockholders meet- ing, Chrysler President L. L. Col- bert predicted no U. 8S, manu- facturer could tool up for a small car, although he said smaller, more economical Ford, Chevro- let or Plymouth cars might loom in the future, Concluding, the analysis says: “The recession may yet swing buyers toward a small car econ- omy. But the auto makers are smart enough to know that the American public has the habit of buying the biggest package it ean. its buying habits because anyone thinks it ought to, “Most Ameriéans turn to small- er cars? Get the answer to thht and you have the key to the fate f the smaller car in America.” Queen Elizabeth Not Shaken Up by Naughty Word LONDON «®—Queen Elizabeth HI saw “My Fair Lady” last night, heard the naughty four-letter word Queen blushed delicately tered her program when the Cock- ney heroine implored her horse to Move its “arse’’ over. Her hus- Mostly the Queen laughed and applauded as delighted'y as the “Furthermore it does not change, He's Grown Up - Singer’s New Maturity and Better TV Shows Are ‘Undiscovered’ 7 By JANET KERN. International News Service Next to having been a success- ful child star trying te make a comeback, the greatest handicap for a performer in show business is to have been a “Jack Arm- hero—and ~ |strong”’ type adolescent to try to keep working once man- hood has set in. millions as a fresh-faced, bashful Army enlisted man with a cute singing voice. Nowadays, Fisher is a man—a civilian, with a well-publicized wife and two headlined children, He's the star of his own alter- nate Tuesday NBC-TV hour—one ot the best hours on the TV clock. He has become extremely good wo en Ser personality | quired polish with maturity. Wore he still awaiting discovery, Mr. at brregie RE : rest. of the gala charity-benefit audience which ‘ ( U D 0 | to congratulate the cast. There had been some talk: of! ‘Twenty-One’ Winner Now Has $156,000 last night to her previous winnings of $146,000 by defeating Lindesay| She thén played a tie game with Warren Springer, a Schenectady, N.Y., post office clerk. Miss Von Nardoff was leading 100 in a second game when time ran out. They will continue the contest next the royal couple went backstage | Miss Von Nardoff added $10,500; Parrott Jr. 21-0 at $500 a point.’ fled SER vi oe er FE 4-1515 C & V ELECTRO MART Open Daily 9 to.9 CA Col L O R TY § RADIO-TV week, before evaluating its contents, | hearings ‘on assessment rolls pre- sidewalks on the west side of Sem- gonquin; ast side of Joslyn ave-| ta; east side of Blaine street, from’ Also to be offered is one or-| dinance change eliminating daily) $2 fees for scrap gatherers and/ another that exempts pigeon rais-| | THIS WEEK--SPECIAL PRICES “ON GARAGES-ROOFING | Call Today f Take Advantage of Our Offer FE TO 2-7004_ NO MONEY DOWN _F.H.A. TERMS 7 YEARS TO PAY * FREE ESTIMATES ~~ All Work. 100% Guaranteed © ROOFING © MICHIGAN BASEMENTS | DEM Buining Sense 2256 E. Walton Blvd. | EVE. and SUN. © ADD-A-ROOM = © ALL CONCRETE WORK] | _©@ ALUMINUM SIDINGS & STONE} | CALL NOW! 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