.the strike that has kept in an): emotional state for 47° was 33. The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Report Mostly cloud. rather windy and cold, (Detail Page 2) 116th YEAR kkekke SNS MICHIGAN MONDAY, MABCH 10, 1958—28 PAGES + ASSOCLA ONITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE TED PRESS ‘Shot i in the Arm for Econc omy Ne Quizzing Mazey on Boycofting of Kohler Wares’ Senate Rackets Probers Under .Taft-Hartley Act: Check UAW’s Actions é WASHINGTON (INS)—|_ United Automobile Work-|— - treasurer |” Emil Mazey faced question-| © ers secretary ing by Senate Rackets prob- ers today on a nation-wide boycott instituted against! Kohler plumbing fixture}” products by the UAW. Mazey was slated to re-|~ turn for his third day as a witness in the inquiry into Sheboygan, Wis., | May Be Launched This Week Cs Ee se SS ee ee has LS Nl possibly this week. on ee Se aes SUE months. The committee hoped to deter- x on hand for such an emergency was missing. As mine whether the boycott of Kohler |} prodiicts is a secondary boycott, which’ is i¥egal under the Taft-| Hartley Act, or a legal primary | boycott. It also ap Goldwater ( new blast in his long, bitter feud red likely Sen. Barry! : with UAW President Walter Reu- © ther at the 2 p.m. hearing. Reuther challenged the Arizona Republican on Saturday to prove (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Heavy Coats and Sweaters Back in-Vogue Heavy coats and sweaters will ig be ‘back in style for Pontiac area residents. * * * The U.S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts mostly.cloudy, rather windy and cold weather for tonight and tomorrow. Seattered snow flurries are also expected, . The low tonight will be 24-28 degrees and the’ high tomorrow around 34. The outlook for Wednesday ts mostly cloudy with little change in temperature. The Weather Bureau's five-day forecast predicts temperatures will average around three — be- low the normal high of 42 and normal] low of 26. x. * * Only minor day-to-day tempera- ture changes are expected. There will be snow flurries or rain Wednesday and Thursday and snow flurries Friday. The lowest recorded temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 27. At 1 p.m. the reading -Ariz) might fire a 4 CS oR The crane operator Vanguard C hecked | : CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)—Frustrated by a faulty weather report, a crane operator’s absence at a crucial moment of need, and a series of minor technical breakdowns, the Navy today prepared a new attempt to launch its Vanguard space rocket, x * * A new firing schedule was under discussion in conferences between officials of the Naval Re- search Laboratory_in- Washington, the Martin Co. —builder of the big rocket—in Baltimore, and the Air Force missile test center here.: It was conceivable that a new attempt to fire the three-stage rocket, and possibly to place: % a grapefruit size satellite in an orbit, might - come within a day or two. It might also develop—should the Vanguard experts find that the repeated delays have weak- ened any part of the sensitive vehicle—that there would be a considerable postponement. * * * The Vanguard rocket came within 35 seconds of launching Saturday, shortly after 3 p.m. Then, it was learned from informed sources, the so-called umbilical line—the missile’s last link with the ground—failed to disconnect. . charges against the doctor as part _ of its defense against his $250,000 ~|damage suit. who was to have been a result there was a costly delay. a Similarly, a “hold” or temporary delay in the approaches toward launching time was ordered on the basis of a weather report indicating high ‘ ; winds aloft. Es * At the time the Navy the weather officer said it might be in error. x * received the wind report Vanguard officials could not afford to take a chance. The Vanguard rocket is so tall and slender that winds over menace to it. A “hold” was a long wait. futed the wind forecast.. countdown resumed. “a z May End Within 24 Hours NEW YORK (#—Striking manfacturers have reached and appear headed for a full settlement today or to- morrow. Th ticklish problem of contract enforcement — the other major issue in the six-day-old strike — is still td - Finally a weather balloon was sent aloft. It re- 15 miles an hour are 2 was ordered and there Almost immediately the garment workers and dress agreement on money issues be resolved. + An employer spokesman said last night both sides agreed on a 11% per cent package increase. * * * The spokesman said it includes an 11 per cent boost in base pay and a payroll deduction for sev- erance pay of one half of 1 per cent, Agreement also was reached on overtime for piece workers— 81 per cent of the workers are “Use of Records: _jberger get access to secret ‘Pontiac General Hospital “'records in order to aid his fi against the hospital? gave arguments in Circuit _ Court over this question as » Dr. , counsel, . asked Judge Clark J. Adams -ito order the hospital to »| elesely guarded as evidence to &| *|must be opened. * court today to enlarge Dr. Sullen- “\berger’s original bill of complaint _ to halt by injunction alleged ‘‘in- cheat Strike in Garment Industry ‘in Court Case Ousted Surgeon Seeks Official Data to Aid Him in Legal Action Can Dr. Neil H. Sullen- Attorneys this morning Sullenberger’s legal Harry N. Dell, ‘open the records to him. .| The records involved are those |. on which the hospital has based its To date, the records have been use against Dr. Sullenberger and hospital officials have con- tended to show them to him would be to give away their case in advance. However, City Attorney William A. Ewart, who represents the hos- pital, has said ‘he felt the doctor was entitled to study the records. ‘| But he wanted the court to decide ‘to what extent the hospital files * * * Attorney Dell is also asking the fluence by some -of the -defend- ants’’ to prejudice Dr. Sullenberg- er's reputation by spreading rv- mors and using their influence to block his right to practice at other hospitals. Red Chinese Troops Leaving North Korea HONG KONG w — North Ko- rean soldiers have been taking over from withdrawing Red Chi- nese “‘yolunteers”’ in the past few days, Peiping radio said today. * * * The broadcast said the first Communist Chinese elements will complete their pullout before April 30. The size of the group was ‘not indicated. The Chinese Reds said two weeks ago they would pull back their entire force in North Korea — estimated at 370,000 men — by’ year’s end. They demanded that U.N. trdops do the same in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) South Korea. Work Starts Today on United Fund Building Mie GROUNDBREAKING — Glenn Griffin, chaterion of the Pon tiac Area United Fund building committee, turns the first spadeful : left, are. City Manager Walter K. Willman; Paul A. Kern Jr., representing the builder, Paul A. Kern ©o,, of Birminghani, and on the new Community Chest building. Waiting their bi from ~ William B. Hartman, President ed the PAUF board of trustees. - ‘of earth at’ ceremonies this morni ae f- ing a the groundbreaking © Pontiac Press Phote Looks Like Top Is Coming Off BUT THINGS ARE UNDER CONTROL — At first glance: it looks like the crane at left in this picture from Washington is about to lift the Cap- itol dome but it’s only the unusual camera angle. The crane is being used in pouring concrete into a new foundation outside the old House Office Building, south of the Capitol. ni, AP Wirep’ Federal Moves Give Promise of Job-Making Aid - Government _ Building, Home Loans, Jobless Benefits Explored | By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (P—A de- luge of proposals and some direct administration moves gave promise today of heavier federal spending to provide jobs and help busi- ness. While Democrats and some Republicans clamored |for more, President Eisen- hower ordered a speedup of government construction projects for which money is available. He announced immedi- ate release of 200 million dollars to help make more private loans available for home construction. Eisenhower also proposed that the federal government, for the first time, provide funds to extend the period of jobless benefits to unemployed workers.. Many of these already have ex- hausted their rights under pay- ment schedules fixed by the vari- ous states. Eisenhower also asked Congress to raise the ceiling on highway Service Building on Franklin bou- levard near Orchard Lake avenue. The first spade of earth was Ground-breaking ceremonies atijturned by City Manager Walter K. 10 a.m. today inaugurated con-|Willman; Glenn H. Griffin, chair- istruction of Pontiac’s Community| ‘ed Fund board of trustees, and Community Service Unit Under Way Break Ground for Center man of the United Fund building committee; William B. Hartman, president of the Pontiac Area Unit- Paul A. Kern Jr. of the Paul A. Kern Co., leaseholder, The building will be by the Kern company which will lease it to the Pontiac Commu- nity Chest. However, at the end Command warned it would shoot down any Red plaries deliberately crossing the truce line. Capt. Leon Pfeiffer of Kenosha, Wis., who parachuted from the stricken Sabre Jet into Communist territoy, was being given manitarian treatment,’’ the Com- Wife ‘Very Relieved’ KENOSHA, Wis. w) — Mrs. Joyce Pfeiffer of Kenosha said today she was -‘‘very relieved” to hear that North Korea had agreed to return her husband, Capt. Leon Pfeifetr, whose Sa- bre Jet was shot down over the demilitarized truce zone in Ko- rea last Thursday. “This is really the first news fhat P’ve had that he was alive,” Mrs. Pfeiffer said. munist delegates said. There was no indication whether he was wounded. The U. N, delegate, Gen. Olaf Kyster, admitted that Pfeiffer’s and other American planes had violated the demilitarized zone (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Sia ag A SI Be eee sr Be In Today’ s Press : Jerome “Bright Spot” needs sharp cars. ‘34 to hab Tops, FE Income ‘Tax Returns Prepared North Korea Agrees to Return U.S. Pilot PANMUNJOM, Korea #?—North Korea today agreed to return a US. Air Force pilot shot down over the de- militarized zone last Thursday by Communist gunfire. No date for the release was given. The Communist announcement came at a meeting of the Military Armistice Commission ‘at which the U.N. “hu- - now being paid to house the agen- of 12 years, the Community Chest The new structure was blessed by Dr. William H. Marbach, of the First Presbyterian Church. When completed, about July 15, the building wilt house the Pontiac Area United Fund offices as well as 10 Jocal Community Chest agen- cies, The Community Chest expects its installments on the two-story building will run less than the rent cies separately, Other dignitaries at the ground breaking today included Kari W. Bradiey, PAUF executive direc- tor; members af the building committee Abe Lapides, Harold d. Muldowney, James Corwin and Robert R. Eldred; and exec- utive directors and presidents of Community Chest . a agencies, Also present were Elmer John- son, Waterford Township supervis- or; Robert M. Glenn, chairman the PAUF administrative com- mittee and a Community Chest di- rector; Robert S. Nelson, chair- man of the Community Chest budg- et steering committee and also a director; Fred V. Haggard, PAUF vice president, and Tom Roth of Roth and Sons, Birmingham, which will construct the building. War Criminals Paroled TOKYO «—The United States has paroled three more Japanese war criminal prisoners of World War II. Thirty-seven others are CAPT. LEON PFEIFFER still in Sugamo Prison. Angus Campbell—Tax Accountant Ww. Huron .« Open Eves., FE 2-3615 only the unworthy who fill a x « * They overlook the many who silently follow, the will of God seven days a week. One of the mistakes of many serious Christians is the very silence of their worship. They hide their religion from others. They fail to bear witness for the Master who gives life eternal. * Somehow we must make our loyalties known, We must let others know that God is that we are in constant touch with: \Him, There\are many who will not read\the Bible, but they would read the Gospel According to reflect. God’s. presence. Couten Meditations FY By ROBERT L. DIEFFENBACHER, D.D. When some people are urged to go to church they cast unpleasant glances at the hypocrites who pray on Sunday and who sin against their brothers on Monday. Some see LJ few pews of our churches, guiding our-every deed and You. Our lives must days. — Seek Public Works Aid WASHINGTON @ — Rep. Grif- fiths (D-Mich) and 12 other Dem- Solons Resume Whiteside Quiz Miami Attorney Halts Grand Jury Testimony to Answer Probers WASHINGTON — Miami Jawyer Thurman A, Whiteside interrupts his grand jury appear- ofjances today to undergo more by House probers on - questioning his relationship with former FCC Commissioner. Richard A. Mack. * * * Under a subpoena, Whiteside last Thursday turned over to a federal grand jury records of financial dealings with Mack, who resigned from the Federal Com- munications Commission a week ago under fire. Whjteside then was questioned as a voluntary witness before the grand jury. * * * Both the House investigating subcommittee headed by Rep. Harris (D-Ark) and the grand jury are studying the conduct of Mack in Connection with the FCC’S grant of television Channel 10 in Miami to Public Service Televi- sion, Inc., a subsidiary of Nation- al Airlines, Whiteside at one time pushed the application of Public Service, other applicants. ¥ * * Mack, who voted with the FCC majority in favor of Public Serv- which won the channel over three | ice, acknowledged accepting thou- . Highway Toll 5. iy We . Highest temperature .,....... ure Alpens 28 21 Marqcette 28 22 Baltimore 38 33 Memphis 027 Bismarck 33:22 Miami 82 63 Brownsville 7660 Milwaukee 32 20 Buffalo 26 23 Minneapolis 37 10 Chicago 32 29 New Orleans 68 47 Cincinnat! 36 28 ‘New York 42 32 Cleveland 20 27 Oma! 32 28 Denver 39 15 Phoenix 63 39 Detroit 20 27 a 33 22 - Duluth 28 9 Bt. Lou! 40 4 Port Worth 5244 8. Francisco 657 46 Oo. Ra 4% 20 66.8. je 33 20 Hough’ 2613 Traverse C 29 11 Jackson 8148 Washington 41 32 Kansas City 40 31 ttle «32 Les # Tampa 76 53 No” Deaths Recorded ‘in. Sunday's Traffic as) ‘Dry Weather Prevails | ing By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michigan drivers made it through _ Sunday without a single traffic fa- tality, holding the state's weekend total to a low five dead. Four of the fatalities same Sat- urday, two of them in one car- train collision. Dry highway conditions prevailed all. weekend. The Associated Press weahaed traffic fatality count begins at 6 p.m. Friday and ends Sunday mid- night, - : Lyndon Hazen, 59, Plainwell, was killed Saturday night when struck by a car near his home. Jesse T, Rhew, 27, Three Oaks, By heating the earth (which heats faster than the water area of the earth) the sun causes the thermals that condense inte lon His Way Home THE PONTI AC PRE ss, MONDAY, MARC * H 10, 1958 charges will be filed against Mrs. Norma Shepherd, 22, six weeks ago after five years ‘the divorce Saturday night . Of Jackson, and her sister. [Wounded Girl in Good Condition Abductor of Ex- MASON (AP)—A Gs pearcold unemployed laborer was held on an-open charge today in the abduction of his di- vorced wife and the wounding of her sister. x * * Sheriff Willard Barnes said. he would confer with the ham County prosecutor's office today to determine what The sister, Loma Craft, 17, was reported in good condition at Foote Hospital in Jackson. She was shot and woundéd in the shoulder, wrist and chest. She said that she was going out on her “first date anos house. He argued with her and with her date, Harry Smith x kk * Police said Shepherd fired a .22 caliber rifle at the Craft girl before forcing Mrs. Shepherd into an auto and fleeing. Police found them four hours later at a ife Held Robert Shepherd of Dansville. told police she was aivcrces of marriage. when Shepherd came to her lake six -IShot in the Arm Near) for U.S. Economy ~ (Continued From Page One) buildings and other works proj- ects in labor surplus areas. 2. Eight Republican senators, without criticizing Eisenhower's ing than Eisenhower proposed and called among other things for fed- eral aid to school construction. Many other Republicans issued statements praising Eisenhower's actions. « * * 3. Some House members pro- fessed to see the need for a sec- ond increase this year in the na- last month from 275 to 280 billion dollars — if bad news continues on the “economic front and makes heavy federal spending necessary. 4, Sen. Douglas (D-Ill) and Rep, Simpson (R-Pa) repeated their demands for income and other tax cuts to make more == Dulles Arrives in Manila for SEATO Conference miles away. The woman was unharmed. In. contrast to other ministers here for the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization parley, Dulles de- Captured U.S. Hier reans, McClellan declined to talk here |the about the incident. He ts leaving Tokyo Tuesday. Hammers Mid-Atlantic States Heavy Snow - At 8 amt 5 Wind velocity 10 m‘p.h. Northeast. oun oo Monday at 6:33 p.m. . Tuesday at 6:51 am. | ‘oon sete Tuesday at 10:42 a.m. Tieee Tuesday at 12:44 8m. Dewntewn ; Tomperstares Ga. ll a. m 1 Te, m.. Pe oacoceac 32 Sa. m.... 1 Dp. m.... Bj sit "ge Sh in Pentise Highest —— ANDRA OOOE covers _ temperature ...cse.sceeccnees Man tntelet 2 enenenes |) We y One Yéar Ago in Pontiac Moos, ta en Pair. Sundsy’s Saapaneeue Chart Hits Virginia the date_were reported in: parts western sec- Rockies which dumped up to 8 inches of snow at Lander, Wyo., moved into Montana, the Dako- tas, and southward through Kan- sas. * * * The wet belt. extended into southern Plains, mostly in form of light rain, but heavy warnings were issued for Texas Panhandle. six-hour period in St. bright, warm sun melted snow streets, but blanketed yards drifts remained. icy winds to the Mediterranean Traffic accidents on icy roads caused two deaths in Italy. Rome had its first snow of the winter, and gales battered the -;munist Asked whether he planned to confer with his colleagues on the Soviet Union's latest call for a Moscow radio in an assault ec Garment Strike } May End:in a Day defense organization." High on the agenda is a scheme for linking SEATO with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Baghdad (Middle East) Pact. The Philippines made the propos- al. Britain already is opposed to it. * * * Member nations are the Philip- pines, the United States, Britain, France, Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand and Thailand. North Korea Agrees fo Return U.S. Pilot Kyster protested the shooting was an “unnecessary armed at- tack”’ and warned that Communist fired upon these violations are not due to nav- igational error."’ The North Korean -delegate charged U. N. forces had violated the demilitarized zone 588 times since the 1953 armistice to spy on Communist Paiva : The a oa said Pfeiffer’s Sabre Jet was shot down because the pilot disregarded Com- fire by continuing to “perpetrate hostile acts at low altitude.” Accuse GOP Solons of Cheating Jobless DETROIT (®—The seven Michi, gan regiona] directors of the CIO United Auto Workers have accused Republicang‘in the State Legisla- spending money available. 5. Chairman Blatnik (D-Minn) of the House Public Works Commit- tee said he will introduce legisla- tion to push public works projects for which money is available. The bill is similar, he said, to one being pushed in the Senate by Democrat- ic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, F It was in this field that Eisen- hower directed a speedup of proj- ects where oo con Re Gone. Johnson‘ said he hag. been in- formed that the unexpenfed bal- ances of money Congress has pro- vided for military and civilian con- struction stood at $7,100,000,000 Jan. 1, the last date for which fig- ures are available. Johnson gave no sign that presi dential criticism will deflect him from a determination to set up ajhome Public Works Administration to plan job-giving projects for devel- opment if employment fails to pick up later in the year. (Continued From Page One) employed on this basis—after 35 hours. Union officials declined to con- firm or deny the reported terms, The' dispute, first major strike by the International Ladies Gar- ment Workers Union in 25 years, has affected nine Eastern states and idled 105,000 ILGWU mem- bers. The wage agreement came after two days of intensive mediation by two peacemakers appointed by Mayor Robert F. Wagner—former U.S. Sen. Herbert H. Lehman and Harry Uviller, impartial chairman of the dress industry. The mediators joined with David Dubinsky, president of the union, and employer leaders in expressing confidence that work Will be resumed Wednesday. The industry has complained that nonunion penetration and the union's failure to demand uniform conditions have forced manufac- turers to cut corners as a means of staying in business. Prestrike wages in New York City averaged $2.10 an hour, 530 to 75 cents an hour less elsewhere. Ad Agency Executive 'Dies in Birmingham Carl G. Maier, 53, vice presi- dent of Campbell-Ewald Co., died Sunday at his home, 6105 E. Sur- in 1935, was named vice president four years ago. Surviving are his wile, Marcella; two daughters, Judith arid Susan; two sisters, Mrs. George Beattie and Mrs. Albert J, Berschback, and two brothers, Saiward and Wil- liam. Service will be hed at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the William Vasu Fu- neral Home, Royal Oak. Burial will program, suggested heavier spend- F The Day in Birmingham tional debt limit — boosted only) FRANK M. KNIGHT Newspaperman Dies in Akron Frank Knight Started} Commission e Tree Buffer Line Request | BIRMINGHAM — A request for the planting of trees to serve as a The firm is asking city coopera- in the possible development of street so that 2.8 acres may be sold in smaller lots rather than Departmental reports, including six deficiency roles on completed| city projects, will be received. Building remains slack in the ‘month for construction valued at ’ jalterations, the report stated. * |cussed by Mra H. W. Muenchin- Career at Pontiac Press in 1951 at Age 23 Funeral service will be held Tuesday in Akron, Ohio, for Frank McLain Knight, 30, youngest lisher of Knight Newspapers, Inc., and a former Pontiac Press ad- vertising solicitor. Young Knight died in an Akron hospital yesterday following an operation for-a brain hemorrhage. He had been rushed to the hospital Saturday after he was discovered in a coma in the family’s Akron ‘The young newspaperman, whe worked in the national adver- tising department of the Akron Beacon’. Journal, one of the papers in the Knight organiza- tion, had .been named to the board of directors of the Knight newspapers last fall. ’ The group also. includes the De- troit Free Press,. Chicago Daily News, Miami Herald and Charlotte (N.C.) Observer. * * * Frank Knight began his news- paper career at The Pontiac Press. He worked in the classified): and display advertising depart- ments here from July 1951. to December 1953. From Pontiac, he went to the —— paper, continuing to learn the newspaper business. He worked in almost every department of the Beacon Journal, MANY FRIENDS HERE Frank Knight made many friends in Pontiac. He lived at 34 Semi- nole Ave., and served as president of a YMCA Toastmaster’s Club. Born in. Akron Feb. 9, 1928, he was graduated in 1946 from Culver Military Academy. He attended Cornell University and was grad- uated from the University of Miami in 1951, shortly before he went to work at The Press. Besides his father, Knight is sur- vived by a brother, Landon, a staff member of Life Magazine; an uncle, James L, Knight, general manager of the Miami Herald and publisher of the Charlotte Observ- er; and his grandmother, Mrs. Charles Landon Knight, of Akron. The funeral will be Tuesday aft- ernoon in St. Paul's i a in--Akron. Private burial will be in Rose Hill Cemetery. Stellato Eyes Congress DETROIT (INS)—Car! SteNato, president of United Auto Work- ers Ford Local 600, the world’s largest union local, said today he will give ‘‘very serious consider- ation” to a proposal he run for the U. S. Congress. Prevent Student Riots | be in Acacia Park Cemetery. tare of “‘still trying to cheat job- Quizzing Mazey «'on Kohler Boycott of John S. Knight, editor and pub-} . (Continued From Page One) The union leader said he would exit from the labor movement if Goldwater could prove the accusa- tion made by the senator in a January speech. * * * Reuther, in a public statement, also urged “‘sanity and responsi- bility’ in the Senate hearings, which have been marked by re- peated explosions between Demo- crats and Republicans, as well as between the opposing factions in the Kohler disputes. * * * Reuther said the hearings have been ‘“‘a sad spectacle of recrim- ination by both the company and the union.” The first week and a half of hearings were devoted primarily to charges of violence on both sides. The committee planned some- ‘time this week to summan John Gunaca of Detroit to testify on charges that he broke the neck of an elderly non-striker, William Bersch, in a July 4, 1954 scuffle. Gunaca will come to Washington his extradition to Sheboygan on a felonious assault charge. * * b turned down all attempts by Wis- consin authorities to.extradite the UAW member. * * t Some Republican members of the committee claim Bersch’s death in| October 1955 was the result of the alleged beating, but UAW spokes- men contend he died of a heart ailment. Wish Teacher Smarter, Writes First-Grader WASHINGTON @® — The first-. lof the social hour: | 8 p.m. tonight at Bell Chapel of to Discuss geese arya Md the monthly report. of building Inspector Andrew Butt. 43 Michigan Papers Now on AP News Wire Associated Press and receive the AE. cagpereerey: iayred Seve Only 16 permits were issued last $84,950. Three new buildings are planned, with the rést involving nee The economic and political scene with reference to Amrican Aid to India and Pakistan will be dis- ger at the meeting of Ruth Shain International Relations: Class to- morrow morning“at the Commu- nity House, Mrs. Muenchinger is a member of the group. x * * The meeting is open to the pub- lic, free of charge. The traveling emblem will be presented to Pride of Oakland Rebekah Lodge 445 by Milford Lodge 511 Wednesday evening at the Community House. Noble Grand Alta Leeding will be a special guest at the gather- ing. Ina Nixon will be in charge | ene Mrs. August Larson Requiem Mass will be conducted for Mrs.’ August (Evelyn) Larson, 55, of 31275 Bingham Rd., Birming- ham, at the Holy Name Church at 10 a.m. tomorrow. Officiating will be Msgr. Eugene Paddock with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. x * * Mrs. Larson died Saturday at her home after a long illness. The Rosary will be recited at William R. Hamilton Co, A Birmingham resident 25 years, Mrs. Larson was treasurer of the Larson Clay Pipe Co. of Ohio and a partner of the Larson Co., Build- er and supply firm, Detroit. * * * She was a member of the Hospi- tal Guild, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the Holy Name Altar Society. and was active in a Catholic char- ities. Surviving are her husband; four sons, Edward A., John A., Donald R. and Robert P.: and her mother, DONT MISS QUT! GET TOMORROW'S ELECTRIC Completely NEW neo. $9495 wth ard an ac/Dc ONLY at SIMMS for-—- $7 95 TRADE-IN SHAVER® (Without Trade-in... .$15.95) NEW IMPROVED Features © Excivsive skin-stretcher to up-end every whisker! © Smooth-stroking Rotory Biodes! © More powerful motor! © Fabulous flip-top heed fer eosy cleaning! (*Only standard men's shavers accepted in trade) Mrs. Mary Gearald. Electric Shavers —Main Floor Gov. G. Mennen Williams has| ‘Wednesday’ § Pontiac Press Sam Benson less workers out of meager unemployment compensa- tion checks.” The UAW officials issued a state- Naples harbor. ment over the weekend criticizing |} | provisions of a bill, pending ini 7 the Legislature, which would make | adjustments in the present system of unemployment compensation in Michigan. FRAME ONLY Adjustable to Three Sizes FREE! THIS WEEK ONLY _ OPEN FRIDAY: EVENINGS iller’s - s.. Furnitare ~ ae “Where You 144 Oakland Ave. | x "Gare ine fice Datvry 4 Ly. New — , “MICHIGAN SPECIAL” NON-STOP NEW YORK In just 2 hrs., 15 min. Lv. Flint 9.AM, Ar. New York. 11:15 AM Convenient return service % ’ York 7:45 PM, Ar. Flint 10:25 PM : * : ‘able to get inside the first national educators are expected to attend. Bug: FE 4-3811 Nites FE 4-0445| THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCI 10, 1958 New Counsel Faces Comparison With Schwartz ”~ \ ’ WASHINGTON u—Robert Wil-) Inevitably, when he accepted liam Lishman has taken on morejappointment last Wednesday as) than the job of guiding the ram-jchief counsel to the Legislative! | subcommittee. paging House investigation of gov-|Oversight subcommittee, he set himself up for comparison with The differences are sharp be-| But there are quiet similarities ernment regulatory agencies. | the man catapuled out of the post|tween Lishman, last month after a row with the|pipe-smoking, * * * GETTING A GOOD LOOK — John Sincere seven months, takes a good look through his glasses at a doll almost as big as he is in his Chicago home. His mother, Mrs. Lawrence Hage- mann, says John is pretty good about the glasses now, but he raised a fuss when he was fitted for them about a month ago. Every once in a while, she says, he tries to take them off and play with them, but even if he does get them off he's safe — they’re shatterproof. John was fitted with glasses because his eyes, crossed at birth, were not straightening out satisfactorily. Not a ‘Cat’ in the Joint at Disc Jockey Confab KANSAS CITY @-It's strictly Junior C of C, man. They're cubes man, Not a crazy cat in the whole barnyard. I mean cubes, man. No jazz. It might have been a ‘‘hep” teen-ager talking if he had been convention of radio disc jockeys, held in Kansas City over the week- end. ~ * * * About 800 record-spinners at- tended, and a few of their bosses. A handful of teen-age rock 'n’ rollers‘ did try--in vain—to get in- side the convention hotel to see) the many recording artists who met with the deejays. If they had managed to tune in on the dis- cussions of the disc jockeys, they probably would have been flabber- gasted. * * The disc jockeys looked and acted like junior. executives, eager to swap shop talk, It was strictly a tle-and-suit session. There were no loud shirts, ducktail haircuts or sideburns. The only beard was sported by Bob McGavin of CK- WX, Vancouver, B.C. McGavin ex- plained he sprouted it, for a cen- tennial celebration. ~ * * * All seats were taken at most of the panel discussions. They gen- erally were serious. Few promo- tion gimmicks. No jive talk. The disc jockey was referred to in speeches as a salesman—of his products, his station, of music—of himself. He also was pictured as an entertainer. No one suggested the dis jock- They carefully explored *music trends, trade paper music surveys and the deejay’s responsibility to his audience. Educators to Gather ANN ARBOR (®—A conference of school board members and school officials at University of Michigan March 25 wil discuss the teaching of science and mathe- matics in high schools, Nearly 500 GOT A GAS COMPANY PERMIT?] THEN THIS IS FoR YOU! = GAS HEAT at its best-with Mueller Gimatro type to meet your needs and budget Several suggested less talk and more music on the air. Perhaps they acted like busi- nessmen because many of them fit rather neatly into that category. They range from obscure $50-per- week “record players’’ to $350,000- a-year ‘‘personalities.”” One characteristic marked them all at their first national get-to- gether. They were good listeners. | | General Gruenther Cites Three Soviet Challenges KANSAS CITY. (#%) — The United} Statés will have to meet the Soviet challenge in economics, politics and psychology, Gen. Al- fred M. Gruenther, former NATO commander, said last night. “At the same time,” he added, | the) image we gave after the launch- “we have:to avoid giving ing of the Sputnik — an image of panic and humiliation.” Gen, Gruenther spoke at meet- ing honoring volunter Red Cross Red Cross. a pray-haired, soft-talking New Englander, and Bernard Schwartz a slim, dark, intense New Yorker. —lalso between these two graduates lof Harvard University Law School. At 54, Lishman is some 20 years older than his predecessor. * * * The one remark he volunteered at his first news conference made} it plain he does not plan to en-| gege in such adventures as Schwartz's midnight delivery of subcommittee files to a senator. Schwartz said he feared that the subcommittee that employed him. wanted a whitewash. Lishman said if he hds any differences with the subcommittee, they will be settled in the committee room. Lishman said in an interview that he shied away‘at first when the offer of the counsel’s post was ‘sprung on me.” He changed. his mind and accepted, he said, be- eause ‘‘what this committee is do- ing is so important.” x * + He said he is interested in ‘‘get- ting rid of any rotten apples.’’ But|« he said the basic problem is “more and more interference with is very necessary that such stand- ards be restored. ; * * * as a lobbyist. He said he regis- tered out of “an abundance of caution’’ because he represented a group of stockholders in a reor- ganized railroad and these stock- holders hoped to get help from Congress in a case they twice had lost in the Supreme Court. In his private practice, Lishman /has_ specialized in corporation, banking, agency and commission law. * * bd Lishman said he is withdrawing his lobby registration and dropping all private law practice during his service with the subcommittee. His -|new post pays $14,800 a year. He said he worried about the loss of income, as did his wife, but “I decided we could afford it.” And he said Mrs. Lishman, the former Elinor Hogue of Phila- delphia, needled him by saying: ‘You're always grumbling about! Ld people in government should and purposes as intended by Con-|pehave. Here's your chance ta, do gress, Lishman said he thinks it something about ra * * A native of cou Lishman’s| first venture into public life was Before taking the counsel’s job,/as assistant corporation counsel of public. It is sponsored by the Toy 55th American Toy Fair Opens in New York NEW YORK W—All manner of AFL-CIO Unit to Meet toys and other playthings — from| inexpensive plastic gimmicks to al DETROIT ® — The Michigan $3,000 mink doll carriage ‘for the State AFL-CIO Executive Board, little miss who has everything’’—'elected at a merger meeting in igo On display today at the 55th| ‘Grand Rapids, will hold its first American Toy Fair. | meeting March 18. The meeting is x ok UF ischeduled in Detroit at the Tuller Manufacturers of the U.S.A., Inc, Lishman registered with Congress;New York City in 1934. He has been in and out of pub- lie life since. He said he last reg- istered as a Democrat, ‘but 1, have been completely out of all) political activity for 10 years.”’. A’ Washington resident for that per- iod, he has ‘not been able to vote. Lishman regularly rereads the Federalist Papers on the Consti- tution — ‘‘Everybody ought to” hotels will display toys. ‘tion, toy buyers are expected to visit \day and sailed for Cherbourg, Every room on 44 floors of two Hotel. In addi- they will be shown in hun- dreds of rooms. of two buildings where many toy makers maintain: permanent showrooms. * * * About 16,000 U.S. and foreign| Skate Leaves England | PORTLAND, England # — The American nuclear-powered sub mraine Skate ended a five-day stay at this British naval base to- the show, which is not open to the France. and Washington's Farewell Ad- dress—‘‘This may sound corny, but; it is full of excellent guides for public policy.” * x .* WORRIED OVER DEBTS 74] When he goes back to New Eng-) land-it is to his native Massachv-' setts, or the coast of Maine, or an’ especially favorite place — “New, London, New Hampshire, not Con- necticut — just a quiet town on the border between New Hamp- shire and Vermont.” The cantaloupe was first grown, in southern Asia. \ If you are unable to pay your paymenis, @ or MICHIGAN CKEDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange fer ger dconrs you" aaa afferd, regardiess et how much oe how many you owe. NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY Member Amertcan Acegcietion of Credit. Counsellors “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” Hours: Daily 9 to §. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1 Evenings by App’t MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41% 8. Saginaw Above Oakland Theater these regulatory agencies in the jmatters they are intended to ad- minister.’ Much as Schwartz had told the: subcommittee the agencies had/! ‘slipped from their original stature (Advertisement) Peop le “to 80 Reserve Life Insurance surance policy to help take care of final expenses without, burdening your family. You handle the entire trans- action by mail with OLD) |AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. | en you! today with your name, address and year of birth sel for Old Line Legal If you are under 80, you can; still apply for a $1,000 life in-| No obligation. No one will call, Tear out this ad and mail it to Old, American Insurance Co. 3 worker. He is president of the West 9th, Dept. L3921A, Kan-| | SPARE Blade Cut Fresh PORK LARGER Q: EGGS dor Tender Beef SIRLOIN, swiss “None - STEAKS cio Higher” b. Tender, Sliced PORK LIVER Queen Colby MILD 25%. CHEESE jsas City, Missouri. Tender, Beef POT ROAST 45. THIS VALUABLE COUPON ENTITLES | BEARER TO A 1-LB. LIMIT FRESH GooD c TUES. ib nd BUTTER “” WITH MEAT PURCHASE = PONTIAC SWEEPS NASCAR = DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. Pontiac again proves it is AMERICA’S NUMBER @ ROAD CAR and drivers. Se of ~ LOU JANKA Heating & Air Conditioning | Sales & Service 4 ‘ 177 Edison, Pontiac | Chances are you'll never be up against the precise and exacting: demands that NASCAR puts on test cars But you can put Pontiac through your own everyday driving paces and learn why test drivers call Pontiac ~America’s Number 1 Road Car. : You'll discover that the industry’s hottest team of engineers has created a car so advanced in basic design that it brings with it a totally new kind of driving. Housewife Vicki Wood and her '58 Pontiac taught men drivers a lesson in winning the 50 m.p.h. safe passing event. The elated Mrs. Wood reported, ‘“‘Our new Pontiac handled and performed like a dream . » - 80 smooth and easy I couldn’t believe it’’. 4-door gee Give the nod to its Tempest 395 V-8 with power trimmed precisely to your wish. Corner it, park it, maneuver it to the point of abuse and you marvel at PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION - RETAIL STORE General. Motors Corporation 1 ae | North Main a a “68 Mt. Clemens St., Pontiac 15, Michigan JACK Ww, HAUPT PONTIAC SALES & SERVICE — Clarkston, Michigan SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, Inc. your absolute command in every driving situation. Even when faced with an unexpected stop, you pull to a smooth, confident halt. Every mile is a constant reassurance of the ability of this remarkable car. Come in—drive and safety-test America’s Number 1 Road Car—the biggest money’s worth on the market! merce Oct OCT SAFETY HIGHWAY PASSING TESTS! the year’s toughest test of SAFETY, HANDLING and PERFORMANCE! Winner of the 30 m.p.h. passing event and high over-all winner of the safety tests with his standard Pontiac Catalina, magazine auto expert Jim | McMichael cracked, “‘I could have told them before the tests started—this ’58 Pontiac is in a class by itself’’. Seance ceeeaeiderae NASCAR President Bill France congratu- . ‘ lates winners. Events were jointly sponsored | by Pure Oil Company and the Florida State Highway Patrol. : 3080 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor, Michigan RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 51 N Broadway, Lake Orion, aitieine # * 5 ines COMMUNITY MOTOR SALES, | Inc. 223 Main Streed, Rochester, Michigan | : ‘HOMER HIGHT MOTOR, Ing 160 8. Washington Street, Oxford, —— SS Ses ee \ . iB Burglaries Reported i in City All’ Saints Episcopal : Church Victimized for, 3rd Time in 2 Weeks Seven burglaries, including the third one in the past two wecks of All Saints Church, were reported to Pontiac Episcopal over the weekend. All Saints, 171 W. Pike St., was entered Sunday afternoon throuzh an unlocked door and 42 cents stolen. Three offices were ran- sacked by the thief who removed , a small pane of glass from an! office door and reached in to un-! lock it. | * * * | Thieves took $3 from the First, Church of the Nazarene, 60 State St. They broke a basement win- dow to gain entrance. Gas stations were a prime target for burglars during the weekend. The Gulf station at 59 Auburn Ave. was entered, but nothing is reported missing. Another Gulf station at 208 N. Paddock St., reported a window) broken, but it was not certain whether entry was gained. * * * Two juveniles were apprehended by Patrolman Medford Pittman and admitted entering a gas sta- lof De nile police | TITE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1958 2 of 4 Florida Prisoners at Large Escape From 23rd Floor of Jail MIAMI, Fla, “—Four prisoners last nig ‘limbed out a 23rd-story windew made County's skyscraper jail] Norman rht ‘and crept down a rope ot! mattress ticking. J. Mackiewiez, 34 , New Britain, Conn., accused murderer ola policeman, and Howard Bart- lett Piccott, 40, charged with rap- jing a child, made good their es- cape. A statewide alarm was broadcast. * x * Roger Wayne Carter, 18, Chi- cago, charged with slaying a bar worker, and Edward L. Wille, 27, held on a federal car theft charge, were collared in the jail-court- house within an hour of the dar- ing escape bid at 7:42 p.m. * * * Investigators said the quartet sawed out a bar of a window with a smuggled hacksaw blade, made fast a rope of torn-up mattress ticks and inched down the north- east corner of the 26-story build- ing in downtown Miami, * * * Carter kicked in a window pane at 19th floor level, possibly in a building after women employes after about an hour. * * * break. Officers said Mackiewicz and Piccott, wearing civilian clothes as prisoners awaiting trial, ap- parently mingled with street floor passers-by and vanished. They and Find 17 Bodies of Air Victims have been recovered from the wreckage of two U.S. Marine planes which collided Friday night off southern Okinawa. abandoned for nine men. still missing. misstep while ‘‘walking’’ down the/@ircraft and tugs continued the side of the building, and got into|Search for the nine missing, who the County Criminal Investigation;are considered dead, the spokes- Bureau laboratory. He hid in the)/man said. who heard the crash of glass sum-|a crew of six were aboard a moned help, and gave himself up|Marine R4Q flying boxcar trans- port and a single pilot aboard a Marine AD5 fighter bomber which Kille was captured souresire |collided three miles off Naha. The Philippines to Japan. Two From Michigan Among 26 Marines on Death List TOKYO uw — Seventeen bodies Hope was * * * Two were from Michigan. A U.S. Marine spokesman said today 13 bodies were recovered Sunday. Search parties combing the water off Naha had recov- ered four Saturday. U.S. military helicopters, small FLUFF-DRY SERVICE Make Mondays Sunny-days What a relief to send all your family wash to Pontiac Laundry! Oceans of gentle suds and many rinsings make it oh-so-bright! Clothes and towels are fluffy dried and folded. Then when Careful Dan returns them there's almost nothing left to do. Wouldn't you like this service? Free Plastic Bag with Dry Cleaning DRY CLEANERS 7-Hour Service at Our 3 Locations $40 S. Tele Rd. 2682 West 12 Mile — Berkley 933 8. Hunter—Birmingham Laundry Nineteen Marine passengers and Among the 17 dead is T. Sgt. Ernest A. Sohn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Sohn of Saginaw. He was the husband of Mrs. Kathlee F. Sohn of Anaheim, ) are masks ot transparent leather trimmed with FOR FLIRTATIONS — Leather is the novel Kille appeared to have descended Bod Nee aki Ve | material utilized by Parisian coiffeur Fernand jewels; green and black leather; and white and jon their makeshift rope to the 17th Calif. ‘ 4 Pittman spotted the boys run- Aubry for feminine masqueraders. Left to right pink leather with pearl pendants. story, wriggled in a window, and * * * ning on W. Huron and gave |———-————-_____ a ee walked down stairways to the sec-) Among 9 reported missing is obese: Be comet coe bey ond floor and slid down to theisgt. Kenneth D. Alpine, son of Mr. street on a roller towel they found|and Mrs. DeVerne T. Alpine of in a second-floor washroom. Flint. * * * Police quoted Piccott as brag- Register Handles 10,979 Transactions ging that he escaped from a jaij/-+aunch Church Rocket at Hanover, Pa., while being —Shooting for Heaven The Oakland County Register of|booked there last April 19. ‘Deeds office handled 10,979 papers| . BALTIMORE &—After a count- PAY CHECK TOO SMALL? if time payments and other bills eat away your paycheck, a Seaboard ‘‘Package Loan’’ may help you KEEP more of it. With our ‘‘Package Loan’’ you may tie your bills ne boy | eae © Ok Bnet week cigar: | Army Told to Halt Airy Call to WRACs ettes and other items taken from British Whistling in Dark? the gas station. His companion was later arrested at home. NEWCASTLE-UNDER-LYME, England (AP)—Men of the royal artillery unit here have been ordered to quit whistling Mickey's Bar, 338 Franklin Rd., was looted by thieves who opened a steel door at the rear. Change} was taken from coin machines! and an unknown amount of liquor at girl soldiers. itotali 15,032.75 during last down of the Ten Commandments, stolen. = te tk sonth. cosrdie * Daniel 7 Lost St. Bernard Goes a “rocket” blasted off on a string) together and have the advantage of one account ~ s % | , |Back to Marine Gro of rubber bands to the ceiling of at one place and one convenient, sensible monthly The local unit includes 51 men and 25 memoers of the |Murphy r., register. - cK to mn r oP Baltimore's St, Mary's Episcopal payment instead of the many you may have now. A single dollar bill was stolen) Women’s Royal Army Corps. s et CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. up|Church yesterday. from Eakle Cleaners, 131 Oakland There were four new plats re-)|- The 7th Marine Regiment was x * 8 So why magnify your paycheck shortage? Ask Ave. The dollar was taken from| - “Whistling at WRAC members,” the order read, “will a cash register. “ cease.” Failure to comply will involve “disciplinary ac- Corded during February by the of-|happy to get George back and so} All eyes were solemn. Seaboard about EXTRA CASH NOW! Burglars attempted to enter the tion.” fice. was Ten Eee Gee . — ee) Ae he Coarehaik’ bese © ~ FINANCE McKenna Hardware, 900 Joslyn The February 1958 total, com.|tef at nearby Oceanside. smoke at takeoff because of dry ae ol Capt. N. Cameron Smith, the company commander who pares to $15,476.80 worth of 10,756 * * * ice dropped into water, the Rev. COMPANY Rd., by prying the front door lock, | but were unable to open the door. George, a 150-pound St. Bernard & ephe Fecterd txt tie 0c: and quite a chow hound, went “Confirmation launches us_ into AWOL to explore the town and the flight of life and the fuel is was picked up by the pound man.|Holy Communion. He had eaten everything in sight, x & ® including scraps from the city jail} The eight-foot, silver-colored by the time Marines located him|cardboard rocket had three or- and took him back to his regi-jange fins. It bore an orange cross ment. and the word ‘'‘soul.” posted the order, said he acted on instructions from higher | authority. , papers transacted during February the previous year. * * * Last month’s business included: 2,123 deeds recorded worth $3,456; 1,056 mortgages, $3,560; 2,032 mis- cellaneous transactions, $2,958; 1,- 594 photos, $884, and 4,174 chattel transactions totaling $4,173. Get $25 to $500 in Record Time! 1185 North ‘Perry Street 2 Miles Northeast of Downtown Pontiac Next to the New A & P Supermarket Phone FE 8-966] ‘Parking No Problem” ©C0o00eee0e eee eee eeeee eee x * Capt. Joyce Roberts, the trim, 35-year-old commander of the WRAC’S, said she had filed a complaint because “the Jewel Theft Suspect _ . whistling upset the girls and I had to do something about it.” ! Hunted Across Nation Commented Pvt. Edna Russell, 18: “I like the whistles. | | They make a woman feel womanly.” MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (INS)—A| former member of New York's no-| torious “Matinee Gang’ was the object of a nationwide alert today in connection with a $160,000 jewel - robbery in Miami Beach. * * * The jewels were stolen last Sun- day from entertainer Arthur God- frey’s apartment penthouse in the plush Kenilworth Hotel at Bal Har- bor, Fla., occupied by Chicago in- dustrialist Titus Haffa and his wife. Authorities in Miami Beach re- ported yesterday they want, to question Albert Abrahamson about the afternoon theft, remi- niscent of daylight house rob- beries by the “Matinee Gang.” ©0000 00O00O000OO000000000H0H0O00O8COCe FCC OCOCOOOEO OOOO OOOOOCECHOOOCHOOCOOOTETEEEO® Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday Abrahamson, according to au- thorities, also is wanted in Cali- fornia for jewel thefts * * * Also known as Abrams, Abra hamson served almost four years in Sing Sing Prison for his part in a $23,000 robbery. He also served part of a 10-year term for a Mimai Beach theft in 1940 and 13 years later was identified as the gun- man who broke into the home of a wealthy Florida couple. Regular *9.95 List He fied Florida and later was arrested in Beverly Hills, Caif. for burglary Colorful indoor antenna, with a special . Plastic Film Produces oye . . 6 position ct itch. | Drawings for Blind Position beam selector switch EACH WHILE SUPPLY LASTS. | \ - WOODSIDE, N.Y. — An effec- tive drawing kit for the blind, developed by a Woodside concern produces ratsed lines on thin plas J) | tic film by the use of a ballpoint en and a special writing board - , Weng on hea Im pk oS over VI or € Y the rubber-surf: we pad produces | a series of tiny bumps. which ap-| pear as raised lines on the upper, surface of the film, easily traced| with the fingertips. Set Medical Seminar | . i 1 SDETROMT w= The neers 00 ot wy! FRESH LARGE GOLDEN : SPECIAL 10c OFF LABEL the Michigan State Medical Assn.| will sponsor a. seminar for 200 m« 4 i Pp m ke i state March 19m Detrat hout the Butter Bea ns 300 10: ste 300 10: ; ou d Ca Ocean Perch merican Beauty - 6 « «6 <= « Special budget value. Reg. € Fres-Shore fresh frozen. i 14 maRAT goLD p nt & B V b| Save 10c. Sine Kroger special low low price. a te : | Matche or eans & 10° egetables MIXED 20 4)\c — ) | = WEDDING RINGS Clover Valley Brand . , eee beni oc S55 10 t " : ° om *. ; ee Reg. I i x se Tomato a ve 10: Vegetable Soup "10°: 5 American Beauty Lo. American Beauty . . \ KROGER SMOOTH DELICIOUS , EATMORE GOLDEN NUTRITIOUS I af - Geam Gam os ane Cui Red Beets: mc: Peanut Butter Margarine ; BOTH Packer's Lat Sen Avondale brand i | ac WER 6 6 46 6 4 we vondale bran e 6 H ns —— sS beter eutriious, rich ts. : Save now, at this t-Lb. iu, 5 : ‘T 2” : | ior Roger a i = ipeihel Ventas { phe Black Pepper 10: Pineapple suite 120. > 10° ! - am i "Dole, Lo see t - S = Georges-Newports ham eke : ) ; | Ss ™ m has mae $f. | | | \ We € reserve t the right to limit aad Prices effective through ee Mate b 15, 1938, unless otberwite indicated = ti TR : : ‘ " bi 7 ' ye et eee wee “4% . 5 7 3° SNe , a hs, |. a ee a Twelve Area Men Enlist in Marines - The Pontiac Marine Corps Re- cruiting Substation has announced that 12 area men enlisted in the U.S. Marines during the month of February, ° Ot the dozen enlistees, seven were Pontiac men. They were: Stephen L. Cundiff: of 229 E. Walton Bivd.; James £. Garris, of 341 Amberwood St.; Dennis R. Gillespie, 29 N. Francis 8t.; Michael J. Lyons, of 179 Beach St.; Gary M. Van Ryzin, of 132 Wenonah Dr.; Allien J. Watts, of 34 «Cross St.; and Sherman 8, Weakley Jdr., of 258 State St. * Other area enlistees were: Her- mington; James F. Mitchell, of Utica. ‘ Named at Gar Wood Co. and Joseph R. Hager Jr. have been elected to the board of directors of Gar Wood Industries Inc. O’Brien is vice president and director of engineering, Hager is vice presi- dent and director of manufactur- ing. The company makes truck equipment, construction machinery and road building equipment. . 4. WV a ‘ , j % dbert D. Behrend, of Commerce, Township; Virgil D. Butler, of Far- Rochester; and Archie.. Thompson and Richard Heidelberg, both of The enlistees have been flown WAYNE — Angus J. O’Brien I’M RIDING , AGAIN © “BIG SAVINGS” | To Bring You MARCH DISCOUNTS. Introducing MAGI-LUX PAINT Reg. $6.95 Gal. SPECIAL $2 Gat LATEX Reg. $5.95 Now is the time to buy paint PAINT Now §$ 2” WALL TILE COVERING ~ @ 54” High, Special Price 23° Run. Ft. WROUGHT IRON LEGS Wooden Legs, Steel Tubular ‘2” Set eee Up Legs,6" Up........ 9x12 FELT Reg. $5.95 DO IT YOURSELF Open Tues., Wed., Thurs. and Sat.—9 to 6 Monday & Friday—9 - 9 256 So. SAGINAW f BASE RUG $ 4” NOW MART Plenty of Free Parking FEderal 2-1026 ito have none at all. he’d like a summit meeting to) to San Diego, Calif., for 12 weeks|- | of recruit training. i By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON W® — It looks like an egg-throwing contest — with old eggs. Both sides are splattered in the high-level] Amer- ican-Soviet discussions%jn how to hold a summit meeting. Premier Bulganin has written President Eisenhower four letters since December. Eisenhower has replied with three. Both agree peace is wonderful. Each uses a lot of paper blaming the other side for the mess the world’s in. * * * Others heaved eggs of their own frem the sidelines: Secretary of State- Dulles, Communist party boss Khrushchev, the State De- partment, the Soviet Foreign Of- fice. So, while both sides talk of the summit, both are using the ex- changes for propaganda. This may be the diplomats’ idea of how to arrange a meeting. To a) layman it may seem the best way | * * * : Bulganin, sandwiching in topics) discuss, has: charged the United States with war preparations; taken a crack at Dulles by brush- ing off the idea that foreign min- isters should meet to arrange a! summit conference; accused peo-, a preventive war; blamed. this them. , That’s just a briefed down ver- sion of all he said. He got under Eisenhower's skin. The President, knowing the whole world was reading his correspondence with Bulganin, went to great lengths to defend this country and blast the Soviet Union. Sprayed by Oil B Off Plane Wing B ing establishments—already busy polishing up dinner clothes for functions during the meeting here —reaped another bonanzo today with the arrival of U. S. Secre- tary of State Dulles. Just as Dulles walked down the ramp from his plane, a sud- den gust of wimd blew a spray of oil from the. wing and en- gines over the large and im- pressive greeting party. Ambassador Charles Bohlen and Adm. Felix Stump, the U. S. Pacific commander, were among those doused. The large préss corps on hand also got a good soaking. The oil shower missed Dulles. ple in this country of calling for) government for not squelching| | Dulles Greeters | MANILA (—Manila dry clean- | of the SEATO foreign: ministers | THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCI 10, 1958 Proposals About Summit Conference — Resemble Old-Egg Throwing Contest He blamed the “cold war’’ onjellite, ridiculed Eisenhower and communism; accused the Soviets|Dulles, and blistered the ‘‘West- of running out on promises tojern imperialiNts’’ who wanted to help unify Germany and let the|preserve a war atmosphere satellites hold free elections; con-jorder to make money. a , : In short order, dermining nations with its 82/nartment issued a statement tear- ing into Khrushchev for” spread- ing a ‘distorted view of United He needled Bulganin for being|States policies and motivations.” demned the Soviet Union for un- vetoes in the United Nations. * * * too werdy in his letters; blamed the Soviet Union for the arms race * * * country’s efforts to launch a sat-lity to make preparations for a the Soviet Foreign and wanting to overthrow other|Office in a note to this country — governments; and he told Bul- called by diplomats an aide me- ganin one of his letters was just’ moire — suggested that maybe, a mild rehash of a “bitter speech’’| after all, by Khrushchev before a bunch of/could meet to arrange a summit farmers in Minsk last Jan, 22. conference. But, upon analysis, all the Sov- While Bulggnin was writing/iets were suggesting was that the about peace and ‘togetherness, |foreign ministers act like a bunch Khrushchev at Minsk belittled thisjof booking agents without author- 'U. of M. Opens Galleries the foreign ministers Memorial Hall will be re - opened summit meeting that might ac- complish something. x © * That was what the State De- partment fired back in an aide memoire of its own. What it meant in nondiplomatic language was: Whom are you kidding? What gt actually said: Do you want a worthwhile summit meeting or a ‘*spectacle’’? ANN ARBOR w — Renovated galleries of the University of Mich- igan Museum of Art in Alumni today. Prof. Charles H, Sawyer, museum director, said reconstruc- tion will increase space for ex- hibits. (Advertisement) Science Shrinks Piles (Advertisement) New Way Without Surgery: Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain, Stops Itching as it Shrinks Hemorrhoids pe New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itch- ing, and relieve pain— without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another,“very striking imprové- ment” was reported and veri- fied by doctors’ observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or re- traction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all — this improvement was main- tained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state- ments as “Piles have ceased to be * a problem!” And among these, sufferers were a very wide va-* riety of hemorrhoid conditions, ” some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. = All this, without the use of = narcotics, anesthetics or astrin-» gents of any kind. The secret is ~ a new healing substance (Bio-. Dyne*) —the discovery of a world-famous research institu-— tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in» wide use for healing injured * tissue on all parts of the body... This new healing substance~ is offered in suppository or oint~ , ment form ealled Preparation « H.* Ask for individually sealed ~ conveniént Preparation H sup- * positories or Preparation H~* ointment with special gare - cator. Preparation H is sold at = all drug counters. Satisfaction | guaranteed or money refunded. « *Reg. U. 8. Pat Off. - — ile i Metal | Ironing | Board | representatives. Our PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS open end conventional Mortgages include in their monthly payment: Interest, Princi- pal, Taxes and Insurance. Each time you make a payment your equity in your property incfeases in value. Each monthly payment is a sound ipvest- ment in your family’s future. Home ownership is the American way of life. Over 70% of the people of Michigan are now home- owners. We can make it easy for you too, to own your home . . come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS CURRENT > ‘jo All Savings Accounts Insured up to $10,000 by_an Agency of the U. S. Government WE PURCHASE LAND CONTRACTS Pontiac Federal Savings Home Office: 761 W. Huron Street 3 Pg * Rochester Branch: 4¥ =. ~Ss« 407 - Main St. Downtown Braneh; 16 E. Lawrence St. PAYING for a MORTGAGE | Is EASIER Than Paying RENT! | RATE ON SAVINGS 7 Iron § YOU GET ALL THIS: Speed Queen Wringer Washer... . $119.95 i Speed Queen Metal Wash Tub..... Speed Queen Ironing Board ....... Famous Automatic Iron TOTAL PRICE... ee i ne) «SAVE 5 935 : “On This Brand New 1958 SPEED QUEEN HOME LAUNDRY OUTFIT! 4 $9Q» Our most popular washer with maximum guarantee. Safety wringer, 20-gallon tub, Gyra- foam action, : NO MONEY DOWN oy is oe nal iia: / 3-Pc. Crystal SALAD SET Reg. 2.50 ec Beautifully etched crystal bowl, salad fork and ‘spoon. | per customer. Hand Painted SPAGHETTI — BOWL Reg. $1.50 39 Extra large, . Ovenproof. 1,000 uses. A) - Beautiful, durable, satin-smooth maple. You get panel bed, single dresser, matching chest for $54. Other open stock pieces _ at proportionate savings. | 108 N.SAGINAW... $ . 3 PIECES FOR ONLY | 4 No z 3-71 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1958 j ’ PRESS BOX Local district “B” winner Rochester and Lake Orion both used their five starters all the way Satufday, Orchard Lake also pulled the iron-man stunt in the “C” final. * * * Avondale skipper Dick Bye was pleased to learn Richmond had upset Imlay City. . Dick taught many of the present play- ers while teaching there. One of them was Ted Gundlach, the, fellow who made the winning points Saturday. “I remember Ted. 1 talked him into going out for basketball,”” commented Bye. : *.* * Among the. spectators at the; Pontiac Central finals was dis- appointed Clarkston mentor Dom Mauti. ‘We played good ball at, Grand Blanc but couldn't hit,” said Dom about the Wolves’ elimination, * * * The Hamtramck Citizen is $ponsoring its 8th annual men’s singles bowling tourney starting March 15. the New York Knickerbockers at | q AP Facsimile REBOUNDERS — Neil Johnston, left, and Joe Graboski of the Philadelphia Warriors are both off the floor for a rebound against Madison Square Garden Sunday. The Knicks won, 123-81, to prevent the Warriors from clinching 3rd place in the Eastern. Division of the National Basketball Association. New York players are Guy Sparrow (5) and Ray Felix (19). This | action took place in the 2nd period. x *k * Bengals Renewing Thei x « * Have Scored 1 Runi in Last 29 Innings Could the proud New York Yan- kees be turning into a bunch of hitless wonders—and not so’ won- derful, at that. The Yanks wound up their 1957 business by going 11 scoreless in- nings against the Milwaukee the World Series. * * bd They opened their exhibition sea- son Saturday by being shut out by the St. Louis Cardinals. Yesterday, they finally scored a run, but it wasn't enough, and the Cards won the ball game at St. Petersburg, Fla., 2-1. Yank Manager Casey Stengel is on record as saying, among other |in the Bomber lineup. Yet, Yor all his woes, Stengel can take a measure of solace in the performance of 19- year - old Deron Johnson who could wind up making a serious pitch for a regu- lar job. SPORES * *® * { ‘last year, and was held over from age and lack of experience are known to overjook such shortcom- Hoosiers NCAA Darkhorse By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Teams participating in the NCAA of its 12-10 record. basketball tournament probably . * * * The Hoosiers lost 10 times, but 9 of those defeats came in the ~ first 14 games and coach Branch ot a CSU 1S McCracken’s crew climaxed a tre- = mendous comeback by whipping| 4 : Michigan State, 75-72, at East Lan- : i eee ta ane sing for the Big Ten champion- 2 Indiana gg - =H meg eyed 72 apa 5 my q j a Michigan 95, lowe 33 ° | That’s quite an accomplish. j Bradley 68, Detroit 77 | Flint JC 68, Grand Rapids JC 58 (Ne-| Ment im itself, and can be veri- tional ac tournament, Region 12 champ-| jonship) Wheaton 104 Ho 93 ‘(Great Lakes Region NCAA smal ootiegs champion- | ship) | Dame or any of six Sig | teams which were victimized at East Lansing. The quick-moving, hard-hitting] [Big Ten champions apparently) idon’t scare easily. They trailed| Michigan State only once in Satur-. day's title battle. That was 1-0. Track Central Collegiate Conference Indoor pwned Western Michigan 53%: Notre 62's; Marquette, 4574; Drake, 12; pom of megs y 8; Bradley, 644: | Central 1, ‘Ten Seaner treck and field champ- tonships: Ilinots, 41%; Ohio State, “39; | Indiana, 35; Purdue, ; Michigan a ie: Towa, 17: Braet 16%; Michigan : Wisconsin, 11; Northwestern, 6. * * * i . 4 Eastern Michigan 68, Chicago 36 rot Gels | (9-5). Northwestern defeated TIIli- College Hockey | Once in fron je Hoosiers! nois 88-72, for an 8-6 mark and { oo Gite Gwamaling ; stayed there. They led by 16 points} , fourth place tie with Ohio State.) Big Ten swimming championships: at one time only to see their lead ws! ming P Ete | Iowa lost to Michigan, 95-92, and 4 Michigan, 112, Michigan State, 76: Ohio cyt to one point. But they didn't! ; hes ’ oe i State 62; lowa 46, [llinois 34, Indiana, had to settle for sixth. place with 3042: Wisconsin 13's; Minnesota, 12,/panic even though the parti). 77 mark Michigan (68) fi : Purdue, 8: Northwestern 1 ‘san crowd of 12,350 was howling | ‘ = deed ee aaaetnwe Central Michig sen tor MSU. < lished seventh, Illinois and Minne- uther: inois, 44: Tl} N : : P zt. ‘Western mew ee ‘sota tied for eighth with 95 rec- meinnatl $4, Wayne State 32 | rith- | ; 1 Wi si ri ; epmromatg chpmplanshipe peareerel | When the Spartans came with- ‘ords and Wisconsin (3-11) was last. 70: Bay City. 62°54; Grand Rapids, 39% Highland Park, 2 Big Ten championships: lowa, $1, Tl-| linots, 48: Michigan State, 44. Minnesota 36: Indiana, 28, Michigan. 28. Purdue, | 22; Ohio State, 15; Wisconsin, 4; | western, 3 PP mca championships: ig" “Banegahal Binet. | ' Southern THinols, 64-- 33: Central Michigan, 29; yponssety inet 19; Eastern Michigan. 10. Saturday's Majer College Basketball lom NS aments Allantic Coast Sperone Maryland 86, North Carolina 76 | UrCuanginaip at. Huron Bow! No, 3 took the team = Mrs. Steward had the high | . West wea a’ : uliam- Mar) 8 lead and Mary Steward of Roches- | actual series of 577 and took the ig Zan iter was the outstanding individual) lead in singles with 685. Opal Wheaton der j N } gay ere crates Wy Leeeeclae cone during the Ist weekend of Ward rolled a 245 for the high Americen U. 72 ner 65 the 25th annual Women’s City) actual game. Huron Bow! No. 1 Grambling #8 ty Carolina Aat 73 | Tournament at Huron Bowl. | topped the teams in actual series we: issourt egis 65 ‘ Chapman §2. Fresno, tate #9 The Huron team; captained by; with 2268 yet failed to make the + teeta ee uc ee ins Pat Boyer, rolled a 1051 game and| Ist ten on the board. ate ander mith Northern | Tliinois eb aerbert 70 "3048 total to set the early pace. | The combination of Gerry Web- tate le 5 1 0 Gustavus Adolpbus 73 jer and Phyllis Shaul became the Reendets , Binks ti, Centenary 0 —_ jeniee leaders with 1286. Minnie Buffalo 77, Phila. Textile 73 NB A Standin S Bird's 1563 actual total placed her Indiana . wichigan State, 12 g as place in all events. aneas : ansas ate ™ P fe ines: Idaho 62, Oregon State 55 EASTERN vam Lest Pet.| team standings: pom gare lonelier gach eed Boston a 2 686 Huron Bow! Ne. 3 : t rit) and eae ” Syracuse 40 31 563' Nicholle ins. Pontia ae ob, M 5. wa 92 Philadelphia 6 Ro 514; Bunn's Shell Service. * Rochester . Tem 91. Bt. Jo hs. Pa 77 |New York xu % , Staman Drug, Wailed Lake : Syracuse 75, Connecticut 70, overtime | WESTERN eevereort | Saya) Sap car Pee ke 4 c 54, Nebraska 52 a Pet. Northwest Propane, Walled Lake 308 | Oklahoma . State 74, Wichita 50 |St. Lonis fe 586/Hi-Land Manor Milf 2903 2 : s Rhode a 67 obo a1 is pe Kool Kats, Pontiac 2808 ig ey 88, | lm - ‘ | i | 1 Me 1 Vil - | Stine. _ 53 28) Main Cleaners, Pontiac 3008 | ; St. Prancis, Pa. 91, Saguemne 77 MONDAT'S Games | ! a * 79, Mahienberg 71 st. Louis at Cincinnat! ! St. Louis 83, Houston SUNDAYS RESULTS Ad Denver 74, ‘Utah State ] ~ New York 123, Philadel % 1 ura e rul cores ; bs western Xe a for. Onto 68 | Mineapel ior a La Louie 9 ine! av’ ’ is . . | am — oa New Mexico 55 adoeomar ny i AMERICAN earl UCLA 89, | TU RDAY'S “RESULTS Pet. Manhetran “os. % oes 67 Boston wae ye rott 103 Kansas City ‘= 0 1.000 New Mexico A&M 71, Texas Western bed St. Louis 126, Minneapolis 123 Peodaa : 6 1.000 . : Detroit 1 : ites fetes food ie! 1 00 ew York : 2 é Enter the hot stove league and play [Cleveland er) altimore 6 2 A100 ’ CG R P NATIONAL LEAGUE YOU'RE THE MANAGER F=\egq | wo tt ra — a San Francisco ater af 8 1.000 al oa St. Louis aries “5/2 | ® 1.000 (First of @ series; Chicago 2 8 1.000 oon oA? 1 500 ey Cinna ‘ 5 By BEN OLAN Phiiadeiphi 1 ob Sel 5 A ; ngeles 1 Od) For his fine performance in his Pittsburen ; H 4 first season with the Chicago White Sox last vear, Al Lopez was named American League Manager of the Year. Here’s an opportunity to match wits with the veteran pilot, In the following situation, Lopez had to make a split-second decision. He made the right one. What would you have done? The White Sox and Kansas City are tied 0-0 in the last of the 10th at Chicago. Tom Morgan (R) is on the mound for the A's, Jim .Rivera opens the frame with a double. Jim Landis is purposely passed and Fred Hatfield singles, filling. the bases, with none out. AL LOPEZ next pitch (not to swing)? b. Let him swing away at = next pitch? on Lollar goes to three balls and|P seven walks in 9'4 innings.) ishouldn't sell Indiana short because | Chic: Detr Ben Francisco (nN Ron Northey's grounder for oot Ss, , /. Rivera at the plate. Sherman Lol-| _& ~ , oe squeeze Fae Le ve 4 lar (R) is sent up to pinch hit bunt on the nex Gevelsna vs, Baltimore at Scottsdale, Fis ( pitcher Jim Wilson. The pl (Other data: Morgan has given $a Vicacetphia at Cleerenten Indiana Wins Title in one point with 7:14 to play | and the score 63-62. Big Archie Dees gave his team breathing | room with a basket. Twice Michigan State came back to within one basket of tying the) game and twice Indiana steadied| itself and pulled ahewg * * | | | | Dees is the Hoosiers’ big gun! CHICAGO (INS)—Retired heavy- | jbut this is no one-man team. Dees, 16 feet 8, scored 560 points for the ings as witness Tony Kubek. The Yanks managed to collect only seven hits and two were long Rocky Rejects $1% Million Bid | He's Retired, Period, | Says Marciano; Kearns | Makes Offer Ree boxing champion Rocky) |Marciano has flatly rejected aj season and had 362 in conference}$1,250,000 offer by veteran promot- Big Ten scoring title. State and was outscored by Bob Wilkenson who had 18 and Sam- my Gee who finished with 17. Michigan State, an eight-point fa-| vorite over Indiana, dropped into B second place tie with Purdue fer was voiced Sunday Louisville, Ky. The proposed bout prompted thoughts of a possible six million dollar total gate. igreat Jack Dempsey, ‘a reality, saw theater or paid tele- |Handicap tomorrow at Santa Ani- fied by Butler, Colorado, Notre {play to win his second straightier Jack Kearns to return to the! ring and fight titlist Floyd Patter- Kft . Dard hit only 14 against Michigan [507 Marciano said he was “flattered land grateful’ buts ‘‘I have retired, period, I have no desire to can to boxing." The retired champ added that he had refused a similar offer of three million dollars “seme time ago.” He did not elaborate. night Kearns, one-time manager of the who helped make the first million dollar gate! vision as the biggest factor in es- tablishing a record financial figure for a fight between the undefeated eee and Patterson. ‘Round Table Will Not Run in Roch Race ARCADIA, Calif. (P—The $100,- 000-added San Juan Capistrano ta will be run without Round Ta- ble, who is fast climbing toward the distinction of being the great- est money winner of the turf, MONDATY'S GAMES Cincinnati vs. Kansas City at Tampa, Fla. sesoles vi. Miami, | Philadeiptia vs. St. Louis at Clearwater, Pittsburgh vs. Washington at Oriando, Fis. Boston vs. New York at St Petersburg, Fla Cateago (A) ¥s. Detroit at Lakeland, Fle. ee pene egret . RESULTS « Angeles liadelphia 4, 11 innin Cincinnati 5, Chicago re = Milwaukee 4, Detroit 3 St. Louls 2, New York 1 fosg (N) 5, Baltimore 4 |San Francisco 5, Cleveland 1 Milwaukee at 2951; because he Round Table’s owner, Oklahoma ‘oil man Travis M. Kerr, said he |will reserve the horse for the Gulf- stream Handicap in Florida, March 22, He said Round Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Braves in the final two games of, things, that more power is needed i This lad was with Binghamton! Prof, Stengel’s rookie school, His | | against him, But Stengel has been others ‘battled their way into this ‘Sareiana refusal of Kearns’ of- weekend's state finals at Lansing) in, as the Pontiac Central wrestling. team turned in an outstanding per- formance in the regional tourna-| doubles by Johnson. So you might say the cloudy day had a silver ‘lining for Stengel. Not to be outdone, the Cards produced a slick looking rookie, too, in Jim Frey, who is getting a look-see after hitting .336 at Tul- sa last year. Frey not only. snatched a bid for extra bases from Elston How- Are Yanks Losing Touch? ard in the fifth with a fine catch, | but also scored the winning run after leading off with a double in the ninth. Another rookie, Benny Valenzu- ela, a citizen from Mexico who has his eyes on the third-base job, accounted for the other Card run with a sixth inning home run off In other games, the Cincinnati Redlegs defeated the Chicago White Sox, 5-4, at Tampa; the San Francisco Giants’ whipped the Cleveland Indians, 5-1, at Phoe- nix; the Chicago Cubs licked the Baltimore Orioles, 5-4, at Mesa, and the Log Angeles Dodgers Sewell, center, 19-year-old son | legs vice president FOLLOWING DAD'S PROFESSION left, puts his signature on a Cincinnati Redlegs baseball contract at the club's Plant Field spring training camp in Tampa, Fla. Gabe Paul, and general | watches. Sewell was signed to a bonus pact. Johnny Kucks — Jim of Rip Sewell, pitcher like his Red- manager, A league career, rates. Rip was with the Redlegs at their early camp before he was signed. His dad won 179 games in his big Sewells live in nearby Plant City. 5-4, at Miami. AP Facsimile father, he had’ been working out mostly with the Pittsburgh Pi- noted for his “blooper ball.’’ The Two Others Qualify for State 2 Chiefs Mat C hamps Dave Payne and Mel Nosan-| chuk won championships and two) ment at Berkley over the weekend. | The Chiefs wound up 4th in a field of 18 teams and just missed finishing even higher. Waterford: was llth and Walled Lake 12th. Haze] Park easily won the team championship with points. Fling Northern was run- nerup with 75, Berkley had 68, | Pontiac 58, surprising Royal Oak | Kimball 54, Farmington, Flint | Central and Southfield tied with | 34, Fitzgerald had 28, Port Hu- ron 23, Davison 19, Royal Oak | Dondero 13, Waterford 10, Walled | “Lake 8, Oak Park 7, Flint Tech and Birmingham 1 apiece, Van | eee oe is passing up tomorrow's race, not was assigned 134 | pounds, but because te ask him to jrun a mile and three quarters now imight dull his speed for later races. : * * w Ekaba and Promised Land now become the top horses for the San Juan Capistrano. Tomorrow's rac- ing program closes the season at HAPPY CHAMPS — Press down their post-game celebration long enough to get this group shot of the happy Rochester Falcons Saturday night following the Class B district title contest at Pontiac Orion 61-47 to move into the PCH Santa Anita. Bruce Ennis and Chuck Ebersole. who played all the way in the big win are-shown kneeling in front. They are, left to right, Gene Hohf, Gene Lothery, Carl Montross, Pontiac Press Phote photographer Tom Gerls calmed Central. Rochester whipped Lake regional this week. The five boys 108 | Jimpressive list Saturday night in edged the Philadelphia Phillies, | Detroit Divides Weekend Pair. With Milwaukee Tigers Drop 4-3 Tussle ‘to Braves Sunday After Winning Saturday, 9-8 By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press BRADENTON, Fla. — Theré’s something familiar about the way the Detroit Tigers have started their 1958 ,exhibition season. Tw Grapefruit circuit games have been played and both have ended as one run decisions. Saturday afternoon at Henley Field, before one of the largest exhibition crowds in Lakeland his- tory, the Tigers blasted the Mil- waukee Braves for 17 hits to take a 9-8 decision in 10, innings. Yester- day, on a muddy ‘field in Braden- ton, the Braves evened the two ‘|game series by taking a 4-3 vic- tory. During the regular season in 1957, the Tigers played 55 one run games and came out on the winning end 26 times. Outstanding pitching perform- ances in the two weekend games for ‘the Tigers came from rookie Bob Shaw and veteran Frank Lary. * * * Lary started yesterday's game and in three innings he struck out five batters without allowing a run, walk or hit. The Braves started their scor- _ ing off pitcher Tom Morgan in the 5th inning when Mel Roach: singled, Warren Spahn singled and John Demerit hit a sacrifice fly. In the 6th inning Earl Hersh teed off on one of Morgan's fast balls and sent the ball over the right fence 400 feet away. * * * The Tigers got their first run in the 7th inning on an error, but the Braves came back in the bot- tom half to score twice when De- merit drove in‘Roach and Al Span- Dyke was the only team which failed to score, . Payne, last year’s Saginaw Val- ‘ley champ, took the honors in the! |127-pound division while Nosanchuk( ‘was the 133-pound winner, Others ‘to make the state meet were semi-| ifinal losers Jack Keller, 103, and, jsophomore Erasme Trevine, 138. | * *« * | Waterford and Walled Lake failed to gain a 1st place. Farming- ton had one in 120-pounder Jim Marsh. Big Dave March of South- field took heavyweight honors. Hazel Park had a total of four Ists, Berkley and Flint Northern two each. The team trophy was presented) to Hazel Park and medals went to the top individual performers following the tournament. The four highest finishers in. each weight class will compete in the state finals. Jones Sets KC Hurdle Record Pontiac track flash Hayes Jones added more. laurels to an already the Knights of Columbus games at Madison Square Garden in New —— * * * The Eastern Michigan College sophomore set a new meet record in the 60-yard high hurdles with a By THE ASSOCIATED DRESS renty-two college basketball cena survivors of more than 800) that started scampering up and down the hardwood floors some four months ago, swing into action this week in quest of four major | post season titles. * * * _ The big plum is the NCAA title | for major schools starting Tues- day with 24 entries. The NCAA small college division tournament, its ranks reduced from 32 to | Boston vs. Pittsburgh, rain Washington vs, Kansas aid rain Cincinnati “B” 6, Chicago “B" 4 SATURDAY'S mri LTs ‘o Bo 6, Cincinnat Milwaukee &, ‘e innings eye 3 hee Nee. Gort . Since: “euy : Washin -Baltimore .|York’s M&dison. Square Garden r, join the pees. line Would you ‘Order 1 ‘i to “take” the jaar ‘s]PUw'y] Suysovs ‘“pleyjseyu—9 94 Aly @oqpsowe © nity paw Mond ixeu ” oq 78 mas) wo. —- @ “ie hay t+ 1 @a sop, New York vs. Cimctonatt att a qT Kansas re s:.. | webetil Puisbnogh ae Pt. Myers, eight, settles the issue at Evans- ville, Ind., starting Wednesday. The National Assn. of Intercol- Jegiate Athletics tournament’ gets underway today at Kansas City with 32 entries. And on Thursday the first of the 12 teams invited to the National Invitation Tournament at New x Actually ‘ schools still are run- ning for the big NCAA affair since two conferences ended ih a sansey \ % t F \ 4 Chicago CN) vs. San Francisco at Mesa, # ri x \ tie. Oregon State and’ California, ;mine which one will carry the cof ‘Shreveport, La., Tuesday. ‘be College Powers Begin Cage Playofls who ended Pacific Coast Confer- ence play with 12-4 records, meet jat Eugene, Ore., tonight to deter- into tournament piay. Arkansas. and Southern) Methodist determine the South- west Conference representative at ference banner * * * - Here is the tournament picture at a glance: NCAA UNIVERSITY—Field will reduced to 16 by Wednesday fer regional tournaments _ this weekend at Charlotte, Lexington, Ky., Lawrence, Kan., and San Francisco, : - * * NCAA SMALL COLLEGE Wheaton opens defense of its title against Chapman. of California, Other -first round games: St. Michaels, Vt., vs, Grambling, La.; Southwest Missouri’ vs. South Da-|, kota; Evansville vs, American University. . * nvis, winner of 23, is seeded No. 1 and defending champion Tennes- dee State (25-3) No, 3, Portland, Ore., (18-10) is No. 2, Tennessee State meet Northern Michigan tonight. Western Illinois swings in- to action tomorrow against Geog- ia Teachers. * * * NIT Dayton and Bradley, seeded No, 1 and 2, respectively do not play until next Tuesday. First round games Thursday are: St. John's, N.Y, vs. Butler sand St, Joseph's, Pa., vs: St. Peter's, N.J. Four games are scheduled Saturday with play continuing March 18, March 20 and finals the afternoon of March 22. DiBiase Fights Schmidt By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . Tony DiBiase, the fighting geol-|cillo, ba) Top Star for ACC's Tourney nan of North Carolina heads the all-tournament teath selected by), Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Assn. members covering the ACC bas- ketball tournament here over the weekend. _* Brennan, Brooklyn, N, Y., was-a unanimous |" first team selection, * * ogy student, returns to action to- night against Peter Schmidt in_ah all-New York wel it W- rounder at New York's St. Nicholas/Charlie NAIA — Unbeatén Western’ Mli- ‘ i ¥ ' Fromm Kearns, North RALEIGH, N. C. (®—Pete Bren-|D 5. 2B—Lary, Skizas. JB-Demerit. a 66 senior from|te gler, who had singled, with a three- (run triple. In the 9th inning the Tigers scored twice amid some confu- sien. After singles by Charley Maxwell, Lou Skizas and Tom Yewcic filled the bases, Mickey | MeDermott batted for Don Lee. McDermott’s ground ball went to second basemen Roach. He ithrew to shortstop Morgan et sec- ond and Morgan fired to first for \what was presumed to be a double play. * * * The second base umpire, how- ever, said that Morgan had pulled his foot off the bag, and while the umpires were busily clearing the field of the Milwaukee players who thought the game had ended, Skiz- as stayed on the base paths and scored. Since time was not called. the run counted and Yewcic was on third. Steve Boros, however, flied to center field to end the game. Morgan, the losing pitcher, al- lowed three hits and two runs, while Lee, who worked the last two innings, permitted two runs, two hits and a wal® Saturday afternoon a crowd of 3,720 watched as Charley Max- well clouted a homer in the bot- tom of the 9th to tie the score at 8-8. In the 10th Bill Taylor lashed out his second hit of the game to drive in the winning run. The attendance for the opening game did not reach the 3,900 fans who watched the 1956 exhibition opener in Lakeland when the Brooklyn Dodgers were the foes. For this afternoon’s. fame against the Chicago White Sox, manager Jack. Tighe has named Jim Bun- ning, Bob Bruce and’Bob Rozman to share the mound duties. Tomorrow the Tigers mieet the Philadelphia Phillies in Clearwater. time of 7:1 a tenth/of a second off, "= "St MRwaUEES the world indoor mark. Boros, 2b s 0 0 De'erit, ef-If 3 0 , ri . Martin, ss o1J rgan, ss The victory was the 2nd in suc-/Tiomas, ss 100 Mathews, 30 40 1° cession for Jones over Olympic Kueon, st ox 3 M'tille, = 10 = j Groth, ¢ aron, r 20 performer Elias Gilbert. The pair Kaline, rf 2.0 0 Maye, rf 200 had also met in the AAU finals,|W. T’lor, :f 1 0 0 Adcock, 1b 2 0 0 Walters, if 2 0 0 Hersh, 1b 211 x & &* Maxwell, if 2 1 1 Scheaer, If 390 t 5 F Osborne, Ib 4 1 Roh'son, p 0 0 Ron Delaney won his 22nd|stisas.' 3b 4 13 Roach, 2% 323 straight mile race in a feature of Wilson. e 3 ° . Rh ° 3 ° 8 Yeweic, c : aylor, ¢ the program. a) 101 Rush, p. 000 * T. Morgan p10 0 A-S' mld nst 1060 0 -Lau 100 Spahn, p10 1 Lee, p 6 0 0 Spangler, cf 0 1 6 rennan Named [iievero 105 | Total 363 8 Totals 314 8 A-Grounded out for Rush in third. B-Safe on error for T. Morgan in sev- enth. C-Grounded out for Lee in Seventh, ETROIT . Ca pew 000 102-3 MILWAUKEE . +000 O11 20x-—4 E-J, Morgan, Roach. PO-A—Detroit 24- Milwaukee 27-14. DP—Mathews, Roach LOB—Detroit 7, gi ye Ce ae ane Hersh, Hersh. SP-—Demerit. IP Pitcher H R ER BB WP i? te Rn peCUnnoe 3 0 0 0 ae 2 e 6 1 T, Morgan. iL) 3 3 2 2 0 ved 2:8 -6:..4 Peryrre re 2 ; “3 1 saa 5: 0. ‘ik H THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1958 BSS 4 —_— = PCH Tankers Finish 5th, AH Wins 8th SVC Title Arthur Hill’s all-winning Saginaw Valley swimming team. practically swamped al) other opposition (as was expected) in Saturday’s SVC championship meet in Flint North- ern’s pool, Dave Gainey's club piled up a 5l-point edge on Sagi- naw, the Lumberjacks’ closest competitor and left all otner Valley teams far back in the wash, Pon- tiac finished 5th. Results of the meet: Arthur Hill 114; Saginaw High 63; Flint Central 47; Bay City Central 32;°-Pontiac Central 21, and “Flint Northern 9. Hillites captured five firsts, plus a heavy percentage of 2nd places, in chalking up their 8th ‘straight Valley championship. _ They have been out of the title Wheel Alignment— Steering Check FREE BRAKES Most Cars $14.95 inc. labor & parts MOTOR MART SAFETY. CENTER| 121-123 E. Montcalm FE 4-8230 wt INSTALLATION ’ yHILe YOU WAIT New Anti-Rust Degign HERCULES MUFFLER — une in GET A They last longer—and they'll conditionally writing. National Muffler Ford-Chev’s 5cle Priced ‘49 to ‘53. 45 aoe extra Others Prepertionately Low DON R. MacDONALD, Inc. Plenty of a Parking FE 5-6136 370 S. Sess st. guarantee them WANTED! b West Side + & Storage (Formerty Smith Bering Ce.) W. Huren &t. FE 4-4064 401 Your Moving Job Efficient. Low Cost. Sate Moving. Local or Long Distance Agent Red Ball Transit Co. DON’T SAY Muffler SAY MIDAS See King’s ad on Television Page 3s 2 = . Pa oe Lal a: = Bs 58 a® ° = z e Hy < < > ea: - Pol fat 8 . eo ries - slowed Patty Berg's golf game Bay City won, in 1950. In two other years Pontiac shared the title (1948) and Bay City tied in 1952. Two meet ay were set: 100- yard back stroke by Ron Gage (AH) 1:00.4) and 150-yard medley by Bill Darnton (FC) 1:35.5. Eight pool marks also were eclipsed. ‘Jacks won the 200-yard medley relay, the 106-yard butterfly (Paul Nieman), and 200-yard freestyle relay. Only two Chiefs qualified for the finals, Saturday, Duke Cummins was 3rd in 50-yard freestyle finals at 25.7 and Gideon Robage’ was 4th in 100-yard, orthodox breast- stroke at. 1:18.1. The PCH 200- yard Medley team was 3rd at 2:00.0. Swimmers were Jim Gibbs, Robarge, Jerry Powers, Cummins, and the” 200-yard freestyle team (Denny Roberts, Jim Ruth, Rollie Tollefson and Barry Horst) was | also 3rd at 1:47.0, rated excellent | time, Boyce will take Rpbarge and |Cummins to the state meet Satur- day at Ann Arbor. They were the only qualifiers, District Results FINAL DISTRICT SCORES CLASS A ' Dearborn 53, Lincoln Park 46 Wyandotte 41, Allen Park 38 Waterford 62, Utica 57 'y Grosse Pointe 65, Roseville Lah Detroit Sop Gy 14, East Detro Muskeg 69, Grand Rapids Catholic 57 Masbenen Hts. 89, Gr. Rapids South $8 Alpena 70, sage oe .ASS B River Rouge st Weerss 38 E rey | 68, Lansing Resurrection 52 W. Bloomfield 44, Bloomfield Hills 33 Harper Woods 72, Lake Shore 48 Warren 57, Detroit Fitzgerald 48 Troy 80, Romeo 53 r 61, “Take Orion 47 39 ndle 40 ndrew 65, Det. Visitation 56 ne City 54, Vassar 7 CLASS iter L 40, Wrsneone St. Pat. 37 ree Be basi a St. Sena 46 Lut Ha en S38 B58 ofr; rye i535 eS “< 23 Det. St. Casmir 41, Det nes 31 mere 61, New batteners ra Mary 34 Flint Hoover 45, Flint 8. Heart 40 (ot) Brimley 50, Pickford 47 Powers 49, Rock Gwinn 60, Ewen Chassell 46, Mareniecs < CLAS: Nahma 57, Sectacasvilte 50 Frustration Fail fo Halt Miss Berg JACKSONVILLE, Fila. of (P—A se- third-round frustrations but she still was two strokes ahead at 223 today going into the final round of the $5,000 Jackson- ville Women's Open. Two strokes back at 225 after 54 holes were Marlene Hagge of Del- |ray Beach, Fla., and veteran Bet- sy Rawls of Spartanburg, S. C. The amateur contingent was paced by Nan Berry of Quincy, Ill., who added ah 80 to her earii- er rounds of 82 and 80 for 242. only once in the last 14 years. | the diving (Pete Cox)| Red ] ' | | Star as Detroit Halts NY Streak Boston Keeps Battling Redshirts for 3rd \Spot With 7-0 Victory. The Boston Bruins and the De- intriguing struggle for third place in the National Hockey League with) the victors hardly getting the spoils in this instance. The team which finishes third in the regular season race receives more money for its efforts, but faces the unenviable task of meet- ing the champion Montreal Canadi- ens in the first roufd of the Stanley Cup playoffs. The club which ends up fourth plays the second-place team. The New York Rangers cur- rently are second, holding a five- point advantage over the Bruins. Boston is third with 62 points and Detroit fourth with 61. The Bruins and Red Wings kept pace with each other last night. Boston blanked the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-0 and Detroit turned back the Rangers 4-2. In the other game the powerful Canadiens whipped the tailend Chicago Black Hawks 4-1 to boost their first-place ad- vantage over New York to 21 points. * * * The Wings have a game in hand over Boston. Detroit hae seven games left and the Bruins have six remaining. The Rangers have sev- en to go. Goalie Don Simmons, only Bruins since suffering a shoulder separation in December, turned in his fifth shutout as Boston posted! its third victory over Toronto. Don McKenney sparked the Bruins with) two goals and two assists and line-| mate Flemng. Mackell collected! one goal and three assists. | _ Third-period tallies by Gordie Howe and Bob Bailey—his sec ond of the game—gave the Red Wings their triumph and snapped the Rangers’ nine-game unbeaten streak. New York’s An- dy Bathgate tied the score 2-2 early in the. third stanza after setting up Camille Henry's 31st goal earlier. playing | | Dickie Moore, the league's lead- ing scorer and Jean. Beliveau eaged a pair of goals apiece to pace Montreal. Moore's goals were his. 38rd and 34th and 11 of them have come against Chicago. Eric Nesterenko averted the Hawk's shutout with a last-period tally. Chicago won a nationally tele- vised game from Detroit 4-3 Sat- urday afternoon. At night New York nipped Montreal 3-2 while Boston and Toronto a to a 3-3 tie. Soviets OK Housing Plan LAHTI. Finland #® — The Rus- sians have lowered their own bar- riers and agreed to house their 1960 Olympic team with the other competing athletes at Squaw Val- ley, Calif., it was learned today. * * * Konstantin Adrianov, president of the Soviet Sports Federation and top Russian Olympic official, agreed to the plan after a confer- ence with Alan Bartholemy, Amer- ican technical director of the Squaw Valley winter games. y, Adrianov. and. his staff p lied REAL ESTATE To BUY or SELL | Reptesenting Joe Leonard, a Californiaconstruc-| BaileyandHowe Yardley Tan 2, 000 troit Red Wings are engaged in an his second game with the! | 4 | 4 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Balding George Yardley, the prolific scoring ace of the Detroit Pistons, today was virtually a stranger in paradise.. As his club battles to maintain second place in the Western Divi- Assn., Yardey scores almost at als, * * * | Yardley notched 26 points yes- terday as the Pistons vowed to ‘Syracuse 111-90 and lost an oppor- tunity to clinch second place, But the versatile Yardley accounted for his 2,001 point this season— the first player in NBA history to enter the charmed circle. The loss left Detroit in second sion of the National Basketball / piace, a game in front of the Roy- who moved up by crushing By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS wae in winning and losing causes. ‘Boston 121-107. Cincinnati needs victories in its two games to gain a tie for the run- ner-up spot, remai ning ‘who had 7 a * New York remained in conten. tion for the Eastern Division's last playoff berth by thumping third- place Philadelphia, 123-81. The ‘Knicks must win both their re- maining games while the Warriors lose a pair to gain a tie. In the other game yesterday, Minneapolis defeated St. “Louis 107-99, The Nats had six men in double figures—ineluding Dolph Schayes 23. Wings $1 p Rangers, A.D Detralt aid New York 2 + Terento @ heoneredt 4, Chic TURD. New York’ 3, Montre: Chicago 4, Detroit ‘a ton 3, _ Toronto a te Meets Deteotiie Chea KANSAS CITY w@ — ‘Northern Nel Standings a 14 1 ‘w'271 129 | Michigan College drew defending "24 26 14 62 173 179 [Champion Tennessee State as its’ OE SAD $3 Hoe ge | rst round: tonight in the cues 2136 7 49 141 178 | Nationa] Intercollegiate (NAIA) RESULTS basketbal] tournament here. | Tie Michigan team had:a 13-7 record in regular season play, = ogg Tennessee toam had @ 2 i Dhr's RESULTS \ MEN WANTED | To Train for High Salory Position in Electronics,” Radio & Television. Day and Evening Clesses Allow You to Remain Fully Employed While Training. pel na looms! (0. 2-5660 Electronics Institute :'».<:-"*- ee ean sh sectocly Approved. 3-10 Natbe: ccicceesescsecwensswsewieuseseveceses sees Phone Receercarederecccors MGMCONE iio osicisiencirn Urine sinlnencwinel see eeeeae'e ot. Cit silencio elsie ® eerceresee Electrentes Institute brings you, Fiction” Sunday on CKLW-TY. braided P.M. BLADE LOCKS SAFELY Bartholemy with a host of tech-{ nical questions and After he was | told that . the Olympic village | would be “‘for al/‘the athletes’ .the Russian official commented; fe o* “The plans for the village are fine and/we like them. Yes, our team will live there.” * * * rianov said also they did not mind if other teams are quartered with them in the same building. It is the first time the Soviets have not insisted on being off by themselves. : : Coast Rider Wins 2nd 200-Mile Race ’ DAYTONA BEACH, Fila. (mh — , bas won his. sec- mile American Mo- The 25-year-old motorcycle jock- ey averaged 99.86 miles an hour in winning yesterday on his Harley- Davidson, eclipsing the record he set at 98.52 last year. MARCH Fordomatic SPECIAL Converter “ Linkage 6. Road Tost Car FORD we Eamennr Your Cer may save costly repair bills. 1. Drain ‘Transmission and Torque l3, Clean Out Pan and Screen | 4, Refill with New Fordomatic Fluid Your Ford-O-Matic, like other functional parts, needs preventative attention. You Have your Ford-O-Matic serviced now. Regular Price *1895 2. Adjust Transmission Bands and * DRIVE IN TODAY! CY OWENS, INC. 147 $. ‘SAGINAW ST. Ask About Our No Down Payment Fare Plan May Need—With peed — With This Ad MARCH ONLY 4° Includes Labor, Fluid, | oe FORD FEderal 5-4101 . NO CASH DOWN | SAFETY GUARDS SHIELD CORNERS EVERSHARP Schick Inject 0.0 WN PLACE AUTOMATICALLY EXCLUSIVE AUTOMATIC SAFETY INJECTOR = >~ NEW AUTOMATIC SAFETY CLEANING LEVER THE REAL SAFETY, SAFETY RAZOR! 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Everybody wins a prize worth at least #1,anda_ chance to win one of these special bonus gifts: A RESORT BUSINESS OR $25,000 IN CASH A BLUE-CHIP STOCK, PORTFOLIO A DELTA POWER- TOOL WORKSHOP 9 RCA VICTOR HI-FI SETS 50 RCA VICTOR — PORTABLE TV SETS When buying your Eversharp-Schick look for this display. Your store has your official entry blank. Use up one clip of 24 blades. Completely fill out entry blank and finish this statement in 25 words or less: “I like shaving Aha an Eversharp-Schick Injector Razor because........ ” Mail your completed entry blank, plus the empty blade injector, to Eversharp, Inc., Post Office Box #9, Brook- lyn, N. Y., before Midnight, July 31, 1968. Judging for the 58 major prizes will be based on orig- inality, interest, sincerity and aptness of thought. This contest is subject to all Federal, state and local laws and regulations. Complete details with each entry blank. Limit of one entry per family address 14 Binns Catholic churches in the Chicago area last night, The talks, a series of six run- ning through Lent and getting down to such facts of life as sex, CHICAGO (—How will you know when you meet the right one? That’s one of the questions THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1958 The Rev. Walter Imbiorski, as- sistant director of the organiza- tion, said you will know that you have met the right one, boys and girls, if you can say “yes” to the following queries; Will I Love Her When She’s30-lbs. “2 Will he—or she—see my faults and weaknesses and still ove me? bitions and dreams and still be desired? “3. Can I reveal my fears, am- | Heavier? we met—more thoughtful, selfish? “T, Am I proud of the partner I have chosen? Do | enjoy intro- ducing her—or him—to my friends?" less Hollywood Headlines Patti. Page Considering | Starring Role in Musical - By LOUVELLA 0. PARSONS | eaapaboes of Hollywood collected HOLLYWOOD (INS) — After @t Tandom: Lauren Bacall is back her show Wednesday night Patti 2nd Frank Sinatra’s got her! iPage flies to Los Angeles to. keep ‘They've been together every night Christening in Maine High on Precedent BRUNSWICK, ‘Maine ) — Dex- ter Alden Gagne is too young to know it, but he set up quite a record when christened in St. John's Church, The son of-Mr. and Mrs. Doue \A. Gagne, he is the 10th child in his family to have the initials D.A.G, He is the 32nd grandchild to be ee eae ¢ figure in discussions of is rbage, are conduct- “ iy , pa dating and marriage that ai be “the scala Cumtacaten of “1. Can I find happiness mak. | a o~ j "ae wet ne Father Imbiorski said the a date = negeld wet a) red since she returned. poiirsd PBF mgiay Pid a J ; ! s m, “AIT Y- : ) oO as she ’ 4 drew hundreds of teenagers to | Chicago. — _ “ ing the other’ Lathes happy? ing out the garbage for her 365 eel gren bine from the ae es in ‘is “Student | Rumors from New York are Gagne, who has missed the bap-- 4 7 — days a year for 50 years? ’ ee Body,” a musical by Sammy Fain ~ Marilyn Monroe is expecting tism of only one of her grand- 4 ° 2° . ° “5 Wi 1 leve hee when Cana conferences — the name and Paul Francis Webster. a baby again. Let's hope it's true. |children. t 4 . A 5 beovier. or is derived from the biblical mar- a tertvune te us ; There's one day's work for Bob|., 4 is the 4ist infant to wear : pound . riage feast—are aimed generally m verifying the story, Jerry, the traditiona]: christening gar- Wagner in Phoenix on ‘“‘The Hunt- ers,’ so: Natalie Wood will make it a sentimental journey and ac- company him. They were married there Dec. 27. I hepe Tony Bennett’s opening at the Cocoanut Grove March 26 will be postponed. It’s unfair to him to have it Academy night. Buddy Adler is giving a dinner dance after the awards and there are many other parties that night. Kay and Clark Gable and Bill WA WOR - love him when he’s bald? “6. Am I a better person since Police in Cuba on Special Alert 29,700 Set for Action if Castro Rebels Call who is up to his eyebrows in the | Academy Awards show, said Fain and Webster had brought him the story of ‘Student Body” which they wrote together. - It’s about a top TV singer (Patti) who makes a guest appearance at a college and stays on to enroll as a student. Before I hung up Jerry put Harold Lloyd, who was in his office, on the phone. Jerry has sweet- talked Harold into appearing in the Academy Awards show. ments that have been in the fam- ity for 47 years. at making good marriages and protecting them. Liz Taylor Says ‘98 Probably Her Last Movie Year HOLLYWOOD (# — Elizabeth Taylor, a top contender for this year’s Oscar as best actress, said . “No trouble at all, Joe. I have a phone right here today that 1958 will probably be * * * Periberg will be guests of Chicago erntu ’ General Strike Today. her last year as a movie queen. | Tyrone Power, who had no im.|®ttorney Sid Korshak at a big press if WANS , . 99 . s & ® * mediate movie plans when he left |Party at the Chez Paree kicking wtih LiL Lt he bedroom HAVANA, Cuba @ — Contin-| wis, husband (Mike Todd) |here and didn’t seen too interested |Off the opening of “Teacher’s}| 9 gents of heavily armed national in making any, put his signature |Pet.” Governor Stratton of Hlinois | coven un OSLO se Bt BO doesn't. want me to be an. act- ress,”’ she told a reporter. ‘‘And I don't want it either.” She curreritly is making “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” at MGM, the studio where she made her first picture in 1942—‘‘Lassie, jand Mayor Daley of Chicago have accepted the date for March 31. That’s all today. See you to- morrow. on a deal (with his partner Ted ce saan 9 WHAT ACER oman K wATE Oh Richmond) to buy “Showdown in the Sun.’ “It's by Will Guelick who wrote Jimmy Stewart's picture “‘Bend | of the River’ and it must be good to lure Ty away from his stage kick. police stood special alert duty to- day with orders to act decisively if Fidel Castro's rebels use their “ultimate weapon’' — a general strike call. * * * The 7,700 policemen and 22,000- man armed forces were ordered Flemish in the northern prov- inces and French in the southern| \provinces are the two official lan-| guates of Belgium, . CORNELL BORCHERS © * we MICHEL RAY 0 nessom maar? -smuoma woont “D to take “‘whatever steps neces- Conse: Monae: Right now he’s on tour in the sary’ to break a strike and crush Only 26, she-has spent 16 of (Ea res ie | : spen ast in “Back to Methusalah, ; any outbreaks ig elegans that} those years working in front of |which I hear is going very w ell.| | SUN. - MON. = TUES. might develop on this. sixth anni-| cameras. Another angle that interests Ty, | MArket 4-2151 versary of President Fulgencio * x * Batista’s last military coup. ° Batista canceled all celebra- tions except for a radio speech from a nearby military garrison, where he is protected by thou- sands of troops. who has the wanderlust fever, is. that “Showdown” has a Spanish) locale. Sarita Montiel would be excellent for the lead, and she’ s the girl being sought. The script | is by Ed Worth who did the iscreenplay of ‘‘Cowboy.”’ Her contract winds up with “Cat.’’ She's also committed to work for her husband in ‘‘Don Quixote,’’ the picture that may be her farewell performance. * x .* But what of an exceptional 7. * x | Castro has threatened a gener-| script — the lure that has al strike at any moment. The| brought many an actress out One of my favorite people, Deb-, orah Kerr, got away to Austria) ‘before I had a chance to say au revoir. On the way to Vienna, where | rebel mountain guerrillas are re-| of announced retirement? ported running short of arms, and Castro has declared that a gen- eral strike would be hig last blow — and the one sure to topple Ba- STARTING WED. “There's no script good enough ~“TEN to get me back once I quit— ACADEMY AWARDS and that time is no more than tista two—at the most, three — pic- nw Tdi di is _* het a oar hota reel : ‘ away. wi rynner, e an u mene = Bb t jarion Gra Leaders of 60.000 high school nines ~~ * * stopped in Paris where Debbie comers WAHT RAGE ene ww .) —NO ADVANCE IN PRICEs— and university students, already says she was a guest of honor at ——___- — ——EEE a party hosted by Ken eneen | TODAY “I am just too busy otherwise.” She has three children, two by her previous husband, Michael Wilding, and one by Todd. That's what she means by ‘‘too busy otherwise.” Liz, despite publicity to the contrary, is less actressy than most movie stars, To intimates, she seemed more thrilled about being a Connecti- cut housewife than anything else. on ‘strike against the arrest of fellow students, announced they would support any walkout to oust Batista. “PURSUIT OF THE GRAF SPEE” Also “BLACK SCORPION” TUESDAY, lel ond Ue and Rex Harrison. One hundred and seventy news- | paper, radio and TV correspondents and interviewers will talk to them) in Vienna. Anatole Litvak, who is, making ‘The Journey”’ in conjunc- tion with Yul Brynner for GMG, will act as interpreter. You can bet all the tea in China and more tnat these two popular people, Debbie * * * But the powerful Cuban Confed- eration of Labor said its 1,200,000 workers would stay on the job. Batista recently decree wage boosts for them. Castro, however,. claimed se- cretly organized support among the workers. and Yul, won't sound off with any * * * silly comments. She admits her favorite role is |———— — Clubwomen to Convene | mrs. Mike Todd but adds: | “It's really more of an occupa- DOORS.OPEN 6:45 | tional disease than a role.” — i EAST LANSING #®#—The Michi- gan State Federation of Women’s Clubs will hold its annual conven- tion at Kellogg Center March 11-13. Mrs, John Ritsema of Sebewaing Ingrid to Spend : will side, Extension phones make your home more comfortable. in = __—_ Summer oe | sle For example, a bedside phone means a lot of step-saving With Millionaire — = — = DOES ETTING GOTEBORG, Sweden — In- convenience. Your wife would probably like it in color, including adjustable loud-soft bell. Extension phones cost only about a dollar a month after a small one-time installation charge. Extra one-time charge for color. Call the Business Office to order yours. grid Bergman and Swedish mil-| lionaire Lars Schmidt say they will spend the summer together on a small island off Sweden's. a Saree west coast. But they wont talk. feeling ld. tired, eremen neg, escepe about wedding plans. from ing sles sleep and worrying about * * * Ray and iachtne urination, be Wet: Standing with Ingrid in the ting, Get = - ! ! Clouay Urine gue te’ amen Kune ot courtyard of his big estate, the =a Irritations, which often result 45-year-old play producer told’ newsmen he recently bought a house on the island in the Swe- | . Backache, Headache and Nervewenees In such cases New Improved dish Archipelago. ‘Get * * * all ick, cal \- let by combating Frritating perme in bead ““T love that little istand,”’ inter-/ reliel, Overs bunea OYeTee take pa tafe Lrewips and success. Certified posed Ingrid, 40, whose romance jwith her now-estranged husband, ‘Italian movie director Roberto ‘Rossellini, developed on the vol- ‘eanic isle of Stromboli. Rossellini seeks an annulment in Italy | their Mexican marriage by proxy.| IGHTS MAKE EYOU FEEL OLD to new, ial ‘ae y ucaeiiee. thou- KIM NOVAK JEFF CHANDLER | MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY CYSTEX ist poe See how much better orrow. Money pase eerentes: . ADDED | “BLUE MEN of MOROCCO” Plus: DISNEY CARTOON Matinee 65c — Evenings 90c Children 40c All Times! NEXT ATTRACTION!!! Prices for this attraction Pi Liar eee Eu gs 0; “ry Glad We Heated ; ar TUES.—WED.—THURS. | Our H ome With _ ate Braile system, by which eke a lil >» M-G-M’s TREMENDOUS PRODUCTION : | gia ace heel sare » |p OF THE PRIZE-WINNING NOVEL! man. are Te) bart e Cay DRUEVE-IN PE 58500 a} Theat € ~~ TP In the great tradition of Civil War romance! 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The New York Yankees didn’t have a single casualty yesterday. Today they have three, ~ In the space of a few hours, here} - is what happened: ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1958 _ | | | | x * * x * * Tey W. Bloomfield Also Gain — sis oe ee a pe E ' test ryt ary coe: ~~ > County A’ Quintets Aces PCH, Skippers * + x * son game for Baylor before the| 1. Joe Collins banged himself on | Chieftains enter the NCAA tourna-|the foot with a foul during batting inter ion a ¢ ment. Robertson has finished reg-/| practice. ; ular season play but will also see) 2. Tony Kubek pulled a muscle ' action in the NCAA event where|in his left thigh. ) ov scoring counts toward the in-| 3. Norm Siebern was sent to bed q rat ent e in the scoring finished, with 16 ‘by scoring ace John jaeaaam with vidual title. with a fever. Fa ‘ROCHESTER _ LAKE ORION : : De Ls ; ony enowini | . - coer m a a cee ; A ¥ apiece and Montross contributed (19 points and a strong showing by 4 ; a rilts 2-3 6 : olf Gordhammer. } Dales, Berkley, Oaks fathery 4 0:1 's Callison ¢ ot 5| 13 Walle doing a good defensive Rolf Gordhammes ; Montross 6 1-113 Cromwell 2 0-3 4 job on Neira forcing the county x * * t Move Into Birmingham | Hohf 8 — sworg| orins champ te hurry most of*/ Wayne Figley hit the hoop for : Class A Tourney , ae ns y Quarters ~ eal crag aka had 15 and Drake |29 and Dick Booth had 23 for Troy ' Rochester > 14 for the rs. ‘to almost match Romeo's total to- |Lake Orion 13 ll 13 10-—47 Lowest-Price Pontiac Press Photo ; , WE | . West Bloomfield defeated Bloom- gether. Bill Redman’s 12 topped 5 agon 2 | BILL CORNWELL es g | SCOTSMAN Qasr Wenen BIG OCCASION — Saturday night was a momentous occasion sit CORNWELI ROG FT TP PG FY Tr field Hills for the 3rd time paced the Bulldogs. é ; for head basketball coach Gerry Wallace and his Waterford Skippers. |, The first Class A high school’ Redman 4 ¢ 13 Harris 2 8 ‘| | Sas ; © Higher mileage on regular gas Exclusive Twin Traction available’ The Skippers defeated Utica, 62-57, to gain a spot in this week's os res an state bene! tourna Waterson 4 9 8 Booth 1 1 33 : © 93 cubic feet of cargo space =e pre sodechy with optional Class A regional at Bentley and Wallace is shown here accepting | | boards aan five See oe fee ks nea s © 10 5 ° Hideawa i = = - = 7 Pi 3 les 1 | : © Price includes heater/ Ii} the Southfield district championship trophy from tournament chair- | schools are still in (helrunning: cetera ‘ 3 i) Littleson es BEATTY S TR ANSMISSION eit \ detroster, directionals. man Monte Charles. It was Waterford’s first tournament victory in Ritter 1 0 2 ' — : the school’s history and also the Skippers’ first basketball trophy Pontiac Central, Waterford, 2111 5 "376 80 ' . s =< Ferndale, Berkley and Royal Oak | Beare by Quarters Dondero survived district play Lee es and wade into this week’s region- al action at two area sites. | By CHUCK ABAIR The Chiefs probably had the eas-- Three Oakland County teams will iest trip to the regionals of the, be among the five entries in (the eos PCH drubbed Southfield by Class B regional to ba played at) a 68-26 margin in its district open- ante Central “this. week with, er. then coasted to a leisurely 65-51 | 4 trip to Lansing hanging 2 ‘the! triumph over outclassed Farming-' palance. ton Saturday night in the finals) NO MONEY DOWN EASY TERMS oe OL St. Mary, St. Ben Daas es ‘in Class C Recional In Ulass U Kegiona mt in | | Orchard Lake St. Mary is the vented the champions from pulling | « * | Waterford didn't have it so easy. | pressive fashion and noW will be) only Class C team in “Oakland away early by a wide margin. | = » (County still in the running for state! * * x The Skippers, required to play only competing here for higher stakes! honors ‘as the post-season playoffs) Wlodkowski topped all the scor-/one game at Southfield, were hap-' along with Marysville. and Brigh-| : move into the regionals this week./ers with 17 digits hitting 7 of 11,PY 'o stop there after fighting ton, i | » Got the cash you bed se The Eaglets advanced to the Bir-| shots. Stan Moniuszko rung up 16, furiously for a 62-57 conquest of, pay off leftover seasonal bills. j mingham regional by sidetracking) half of the total on fouls, as he and Utica. | Then make only one monthly Almont 52-490 Saturday night at!Goisdzinski combined to hit only) : payment here instead of sev- Pontiac Central. 8 of 39 shots. Hartway scored 14) | eral... have more cash left over at end of the month. || - GET A FRESH START Thousands of people have gotten a Fresh Start in their family budg- eting with a Bill Clean-Up Loan at BENEFICIAL. You can do the . same! Get your loan in a single trip to the office when you phone -_* * and Eschenburg’s 10, all in the’ along with Detroit Catholic Cen. Area power Highland Park St.|last period | tral and host Bentley, the other | _ BENEFICIAL first. Or, if more convenient, write or come in. You will find BENEFICIAL likes to say “Yes! when you ask for a loan! Rochester, Troy and West Boon i fie ‘Id all won their district cham-| Complete Service on All Types Transmission ! All Work Guaranteed... Free Check-Up Service ! 47 N. Parke St. FE 8-6022 Rochester started early and kept) the throttle out most of the way in 'trouncing Lake Orion 61-47 at PCH getting revenge for an earlier set-, back. | Troy, now 18-0, broke up a | = | close tussle with a big last half | | » Y aterford's victory marked up! to wallop Romeo 80-53 while West | the 2nd round at Birmingham by/championship for OLSM coach. two milestones for the Skippers. | = oleg lst was eliminating DAYTON’S downing Roseville Sacred Heart/Rev. John Rakoczy, two each in It was their first tournament win Bloomfield Hills 44-33. Fitzgerald $4 2" plus tax Pontiac and Waterford enter NEXT TO regional play at Livonia Bentley, LICENSE BUREAU Benedict, Orchard Lake's Suburban * * * | Southfield district winners, Catholic League foe, also gained! [t was the 4th straight district) w ae ae ee City va Se Class B and C. ‘in the schoot's history and the} lost out in a ‘B’ final at Center- ping a 9-47 verdict to Richmgn te ichampionship trophy they received) line, 57-48. in other “C’’ finals. Imlay bowed in the last 27 sec- after beating Utica Saturday was) Leans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car Rochester skipper Gene Konley * * * \Gunat wpen picheoed ri Ted their first basketball award. Sabiy the best Nt . 2 St. Mary had more trouble with' Gundlach sunk two free throws jd * * t \got probably the best overa eam 5 ‘ Hata EAwnee bet peso foet Almont than it should have had|break a tie. Jim Ward tallied 2 Ferndale, Eastern Michigan owe of the season out of his} @ 100% Cold Rubber OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS due to some inferior shooting andamd Chuck Vlieg 14 in a detent ‘League co-champion this season charges in completely dominating Construction ‘ Loans made to reiidents of all surrounding towns the losers’ agressiveness. enach snapped a li-game win) with East Detroit and a strong|2" exPe cted thriller. | Orch: aa Lake connected on only, streak. “ A lcounty favorite, toyed with out-, * * * @ All Electork Rayon Cord | two of 23 1st period shots from the! * ‘manned Van Dyke Lincoln Satur-| The Falcons, with cool floor gen- floor and missed five of eight fouls| Memphis stayed in the running day night for an easy 59-32 win eral Carl Montross in charge, had © Silent Tread — Sure to trail 9-7, Chet Wlodkowski hit/in Class D wi hipping New Balti- and a berth in this week’s Bir ming. the upper hand right from the: start Traction |The Dragons outscored RHS 10-2 to conclude. the 3rd quarter nine jdown at 46-37 led by scoring spe-| j 'cialists Jim Drake and Nick Neira’ | but it was all in vain. ~ * * * The Falcons wrapped up the out- come early in the 4th with ’a string of seven successive points and-held on through the final minutes with | Montross spending most of the time ‘dribbling through, around and away from the frustrated Dragons. ' Ennis and Hohf, not usually up | the first half, led the Skippers to | | their hard-earned win over Utica. | | The game was closely contested | | all the way with seyen points the widest lead ever attained, Herrington’s scoring spree tied | the school single game record set by himself against Farmington! ,during the regular season. Jim! Cole starred for Utica with 21) points. Pontiac led Farmington at the half, 35-21, and 56-32 entering the| 4th period as coach Art Van Ryzin| emptied the bench. Harrison Mun- p= son with 15 points and Charley. _Barge with 14 were tops for the Chiefs while Harvey Chapman had ‘14 for Farmington. . | Drawings for regional tourna-| ment pairings will be held today. | three successive fields to put the|more St: Mary 5T- 1-34 to move into ham regional. with Bruce Ennis and Gene Hohf Red and White gers ahead to 2 F . swishing the nets consistentl * ° 4 Sa en aon _dusfed for resunal acai, Me Pam ht ee the at a cote ff © Lifetime Guarantee yh é . _ ‘OL ST, MARY ALMONT : = nnis hit on five of six shots : x & FGPTTP Emery 1 0-0 2 Oaks made the grade in compara-| jn one spree and Hohf tallied five | Against Defects Black) ls It was 18-14 at halftime and the Wroaski. 7 ‘3-6 17 Hartway 6 23 14/tively easy fashion by dumping! straight to spark a 50 per cent | locals kept getting better as the/Goisd’skt 4 0-2 8 MeAlvey 3 ot 6;weak Royal Oak Kimball while) 1s¢ half shooting performance | 7 . : game progressed as their shooting|Wiktor,, 9 3:2 1 Eschen'g § 0-2 "}| Berkley, the Inter-Lakes champion,| and a 40-24 Jead. ste | te oe ; we eee See : i luck changed. Only some excellent Bishop 0 1-3 1 earned additional tournament. priv-| ae = See ee . 3rd quarter shooting by Almont's| Aa 17 6-18 40. lileges by thrashing Birmingham. ern oo beans is can ad 6. 70x15) “$12. 77 ae $16. 95. “$15. 26 i $18.49 football great Frank Hartway and peoce) By Gesriate A 31-point perfo: Las) als eS sibel rare st y 18—52 performance by Wa- ee BRAKES @ BALANCING e ALIGNMENT a big 4th for Don _Eschenburg pre-|imont ean o ‘ it i549 terford’s John Herrington, 22 in of the night to make a battle of it. 7. 10x15, $14. 77 AM $19. 49 | $16. 18 | “$20.49 | 7.60x15 $17.42 | $21. “58 | $21.83 | $22.49 Repeated by Popular Demand! | BRAND NAME PAINT SALE PAY REGULAR PRICE OF $5.95 FOR 1 (a Just. Say “Charge It Please” PHONE IN YOUR CREDIT APPLICATION MARKET Rost co.| 77 W. Huron St. FE 8-0424 ALL 3 SERVICES ONE LOW PRICE REG. 17.00 VALUE HERE’S WHAT WE DO: GALLON . . . SECOND GALLON ONLY Ic... YOUR CHOICE OF @ HOUSE & TRIM @ EXTERIOR PRIMER @ FLAT @ ENAMEL @ GLOSS ENAMEL @ SEMI GLoss @ PRIMER SEALER UNDERCOAT @ VINYL, WALL BOND) SAYER: Real BRAKE RECONDITIONING REG. 3.50 VALUE @ Remove front wheels and in- spect brake drums & lining. AROUND TOWN | @ Inspect grease seals. by G The Bentley regional draw was @ Check and add brake field ! y Gert scheduled at 4 o'clock this after- mee CORK TILE! noon @ Adjust brake shoes to secure | full ‘contact with drums. PONTIAC FARMINGTON - € Each Paes rorttr 1 @ HOLDENS a STAMPS HOLDENS RED STAMPS - @ Carefully test brakes. Williams 4 1-1 9 Chapman 7 0-1 14 i , 7 ree 1 a Ge , , 4 . yw - yarry 2 2-3 6 Munson 6 3-315 Cather'n 6 0-1 12 WITH PURCHASE OF WITH PURCHASE OF 4 WHEEL BALANCE Beautiful F Finish fwhimer 323 @ Mens Tate 3 ‘ | mer - Vichols 8 3) , " | eautiful Factory Fini smith 1 oe 4 Machan 1 0-0 2. M 9 ) Se uti oe en’s Work Pan > Both Front Wheels ‘Bare 5 4514 , ‘| [Totals 24 17-23 65 Totals 22 7-19 51 ; Reg. 4.00 Value. Splatter Asphalt Wa « eg. ; ee ee NAVY--GREEN--BLUE NAVY--GREEN--BLUE @ Precision Dynamic Balance Poceena ee es 1 is=s . > se WATERFORD UTICA | $ $ ; @ Precision Static Balance Ai ' SGPT YP Rohskons 11-2 9) 49 ae r owen 0 6-7 6 Bar 3 0-1 ow. | @ install Necessary Weights : | Campbeli 8 0-110 Cole 6 9-12 21 {age | , = Mitchell © 2-2 2Thompson 1 1-2 3 | i hep | on * 2 4 ¢€ Each Her'ton ik o-14 31 Have 2 36 7 : ts ‘ : ; “You win, dear . . . gimme back wine = jortman 6 4-6 16 Expires March 22nd Expires March 22n Sees = —— the tickets for the rassling match, pate, i is 3 Schneider 0 1-1 1, 4 ” oF - — and I'll order you some ijnoleum ~ nck, eee! —_ . — . ALIGNMENT 4 cece on a O Ema Our: ‘Totals 21 20-29 62 Totals 19 19-34 57 WE GIVE . Seore by Quarters : | Waterford 2100««12”2~=C*d'S”Ssan 2 HOLDENS RED STAMPS, « .) Regular 9.50 Value PLASTIC [Utica 0. 20 TB © Correct Caster ‘ © arrect Comber WALL TILE | CORKTONE @ Correct Toe-in and Tee-ou (Abeve are chief covses of tire weer) @ inspect Steering IN COLORS | he ASPHALT TILE ‘5° WE INSTALL 3 Shades For Case of 80 AUTO MUFFLERS = “HOLDENS — STAMPS (i HOLDENS RED STAMPS AT THESE LOW PRI ces Counter Tops Vint 1 / 3 off WITH PURCHASE OF WITH PURCHASE OF (eee) at 5-Pc. DeLuxe Bath Fixture Set aa | DRESS SOX DRESS SLACKS i ag 95 | BEAUTIFUL BLACK CHINA $39 5 | ivy artes $m! $= Seem = complete. Set , TOR MART | T > *598 Thru ‘56 - 13 121-123 £. Montcalm i i All Models... 025... eseeeececeeees: ae i “oO Expires March 22nd FE 4.8230 12 Years of Dependable | Service at the Same - | Location | DON’T TAKE CHANCES! : All material used in Firestone Service is guaranteed to be equal or better than original equipment! I Firestone Wf me STORES 146 West Huron St. << ~ OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY. FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY ‘TIL:6 FREE - PARKING WE GIVE HOLDENS RED STAMPS FREE PARKING . 15 MINUTE SERVICE > While you relax in our com- fortable waiting room to your favorite Hi-Fi Music! Outlet PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Tile 1055 W. HURON Next to 5 ars 58 N. Saginaw bs hi t nA Vive | THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10,1958 Dg asco MARKETS Mate Eases Given $30,000 Engineers Consider Relocating Motor Study Ways to Rid Car of Hump in. Floor move the transmission to the rear Time to Get Chest X-Ray ering sales of locally grown el duce brought to the Farmer’s( Markets by growers and sold by ema of eal re iN) Quiet Start By DAVID J. WILKIE commenting on the possibilities of of the rear-end transmission or into here, But it takes 20 hours, and judging by the results of the Possibly the biggest surprise ecmes in the. variety of the cul- tures. The Eskimos, for exams, worked out clothes that not only are warm but also are extremely attractive. INSTITUTE GAYER The northwest Indians went in for fancy masks, and the Smith-) sonian, which seems to get gayer. as it grows older, has arranged a spectacular display of them. | Lights have been put inside the, masks, and as they glower, or, worse, grin from a darkened dis- play it certainly is effective enough to scare off any evil spirit. And. that goes double for the mask representing a monstrous bird that ate human brains. Some of the Indians had habits ‘that weren't exactly attractive. | The Jivaro Indians of Ecuador thought that after you captured an enemy you ought to be able to prove it. So why not whack off his head and shrink it for evidence? "The Smithsonian, ever thorough going, has dug up the recipe for head-shrinking; which we won't go on display, is scarcely worth the effort. SUMMER CAMPERS Wf you want to work up a ful admitted to Pontiac General Hos- pital with a dislocated foot and broken leg, and is reported in satis- factory condition today. Donna J. McCarty, 24, one of the ‘drivers, and Amelia M. Sever, 27, both of 2115 Watkins Lake Rd., were treated and released. The other driver, Conway Gist, 29, of Flint, was uninjured, said deputies. Sees Business Rise (P? — Milton 0. Cross Jr., president of the Cross Co., said Saturday, “Our new orders for the first two months of 1958 are above those for the entire fourth quarter of last year and | believe they will continue jn this direction.” The company makes machine tools, DETROIT Architects to Gather DETROIT #® — The Michigan) Society of Architects will hold its annual convention in Detroit March| « 12-14 with 500 delegates attending. L. Morgan Yost-of Evanston, Il, chairman of the American Insti- tute of Architects’ national com- mittee on the ,home building in- dustry, will report on trends in residential architecturé. The-Four Horsemen of the Apoc- : alypse represent Conquest, Death, portion of envy, consider the Famine ang saci “\It completely disappears from Oc- \Joperating concern, Control Systems die” has a bladder in the form of two shapely legs, which when that can be heard some distance above the water. * * * Researcher Victor G. Springer at the Marine Institute reports he has counted as many as 700 lights on a single Midshipman. They axe termed photophores and are vir- tually unknown among. shaljlow- water fish, though luminescence is common to deep-water fish. Springer says nothing is known about the chemistry of the Mid- shipman’s cold light that is a soft white in color. * .* * The species has been spotted along the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts from South Carolina to Argentina. tober to the next April, and biolo- gists believe it spends that period in deep water, returning in the spring to spawn in the shallow waters. Announces New Firm JACKSON — Hancock Indus- tries Vice president and general manager, Fred C, Hanke has an- nounced establishment of a new Co. The division will take over de- velopment and marketing of an electro-mechanical control and monitoring system. ‘Robert A. Magowan, Safeway Stores, Oakland, Cal. He cites reduced sales volumes cities hit by output cutbacks in metals. and lumber, “Nothing that has happened so far has been a deterrent to our expansion program, and we will open a minimum of 150 new stores this year.” Kroger Co., chain will go ahead ‘with new dis- tributing centers, bakeries and stores as planned. The chain's sales are running 12 per cent ahead of last year. < through the second-half of the) vibrated, emit a croaking sound |¥3!: “Sales thus far this year have been encouraging,” says Hanford Main, president of Sunshine Bis- cuits, Long Island City, N.Y. He says industry sales should rise to 79 billion dollars. x * * Some setbacks are noted by president of in but adds: Hall, president of Cincinnati, says his Joseph B, * x * George H. Coppers, president. ot} ; National Biscuit of New York, re- ports the industry is incteasing| -|research expenditures and devel- opment of new products. DEMAND FOR QUALITY An demand for high _An expanding quality foods ig foreseen by Port- er M. Jarvis, president of Swift, Chicago meat The’ nation oop erates its diet, says Charles H. Bell, president of General Mills have been alcoholics, Royal Society of Medicine. Dr. V. B. Green-Armytage a study of genius showed: height. stinct. Schiller and Shelley. “months before they died.” As for his conclusion that have babies.” alcohol or. narcotics for the a attain a “ ond” personal nongeniuses. * in conquering’ _LOS ANGELES (AP)--Almost all the world’s geniuses narcotic addicts, tuberculars or mentally unstable, says a former president of the British said in an interview while here to address the International Congress of Surgeons Uist “Practically all geniuses were under 5 feet 3 inches in “Nearly all were either impotent or had little sex in- “Almost none produced offspring of genius stature. “There have been no women geniuses. “There is no doubt that defective parentage has some- thing to do with the creation of genius.” ‘ He said short-statured geniuses included Lord Nelson, Shakespeare, Picasso and Einstein, and among tubercular geniuses were Voltaire, Chopin, Moliere, Euclid, Raphael, “It is interesting,” Dr. Green-Armytage said, “that most tubercular geniuses produced their best work about six there have been no classic examples of women geniuses, he said: “God or patch asp eeta ‘provides women with one factor of creative genius: to - Dr.\Green-Armytage said geniuses possibly: resort to stimulus it gives them to which is unattainable in aon ‘that medical science is making great strides ease, Dr. Green-Armytage sald: quantity of: génius is bound to deteriorate or aa ad “The \ (Forn: eee i a aes age, | OAKLAND COUNTY'S newest, most ‘ beautiful cocktail lounge ‘Businessmen’ s Luncheons 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. — Located. in Michigan’s Newest Shopping Center Miracle -Mile Shopping Center COCKTAILS—LUNCHEONS—DINNERS Telegraph at Square Lake Road “Eo || Henry’s Miracle Lounge |- | !y Henry’s Bloomfield Inn) The specialty of the house is an ‘atmosphere of complete relaxation, cocktails the way you like them, and a luncheon and dinner menu to please the most discriminating palate. —< | ins. dinette ke them wholesal ckage lots. “ aes Sa ae ° Award for “Research pele See by ‘the! NEW YORK (n — The stock mar- omy ae ae of the differential. - lredesign, says: Lagan g? will Be Serthsconstag. : TB Detection Project . j “TR (i — American car) ‘ ; e next four or five years. The . . Earned by Teacher in| Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Ket eased in quiet trading early makers are becoming aes Obviously there are problems in-| «The trend toward lower rear trade paper's pegineritg editor Opens Today in Pontiac; Friday. today. volved in such a drastic change of} geck lids further complicates the |) M Call Gs : pes U. of M. Med School: Most leading stocks were frac-/@bout that steadily growing hump design, Many smaller foreign-built! situation, and in station wecone (oeeen ne Cauahan, says: Free to All Adults —s- 3 | Produce tionally lower, but many were un-|in the floor Pil sany 8 sutomsonly. cars have engines in the rear but tear SL SRLS wml sete ‘“Whenever the transaxle ar- ANN ARBOR (# — Dr. Harold Apples, Delicious, bu. «..++...+40+0.9498 Sapa es was @ scatter- Rompe! experts) cay, the) bums. the pare soe a greater impossible. Independent rear | Tives, it will produce a revolu- Beginning today through April 11, F. Hardman, instructor in |Appies, Mcintosh, bas 1.20 248 covering the drive shaft and rising magnitude when principles of small) springing, in view of weight con- | tionary change in the typical |Pontiac adults have the opportunity 1 sosesene a * * * car design are applied to standard ” American chassis, It will require |to have the yearly free chest X- } t University of |AbPICe Steele Red, bu. .......... 6.00 aa) hela ol the car | hen lees . siderations, would be a must. yearly chest 2 7 prvsentg ogy at University o ee The generally lower tone was es- \ = h d . f size American-made cars. ; a new transmission, a new pro- |rays, recommended by tuberculosis scene OEE ctl, OOS acts! oped te __.... g35/|tablished in the opening which was) CWeTe¢, * ine ‘our-passen-| Fither in the front or rear of} Automotive News, analyzing the) peter shaft, a new independent |officials. : been awarded $30,000 by the Cabbage, Stadrd bu. ......s./.-. 300/moderately active. Then turnover ee ves a i SIX-Passengel ithe car the engine requires space./Same situation, says that in addi-| pear suspension, a new rear axle | The chest X-ray mobile unit will a Markle Foundation for research Solute reek dene cc: 18 slowed. VemCIeS OF cartier, years. It might be that moving the engine tion to the rear engine installa-| assembly and possibly inboard be set up on the north side of Huron : work over a five-year period. Horseradish. a ee zat Steels, motors, rails and oils) Engineers are studying the (to the rear would almost eliminate tion, consideration has been given) brakes.” street, between Saginaw and oy x ®* ® Onions Dry, socib. veseees:+ 3.09 Showed small minus signs mostly.) possibility of relocating the en- |the conventional luggage compart-|to the front wheel drive and the Most ideas advanced for elimina-|¥@yne streets, today through j Dr. Hardman will use the |Parssive “oo” cnr beets 129 Nonferrous metals, chemicals and, gine, transmission - differential |ment and possibly sharply reduce rear-end transmission with front- tion of the “hump” down the center |March 25, Mondays through Fri- e money for any purpose relat. | Potstoes. fancy. 50-lb. bag to res were irregular and pro-| and sus pension components. |the space available for rear seat engine. __ lof the car floor have been tried|4@Y8. according to A. R. Musson, y ing to his professional work, | Rhubarb. hothouse (bchs.) doz. = 12 | duced some gainers. Various suggestions have been |installation. It. adds, however, that a solution in some form or other. This is /©%cutive secretary of the Oakland including salary, travel and ans eee — is! Du Pont and Polaroid were) advanced. Some engineers would | Ward's Automotive Re ports,/probably based on the adoption of trait trontdcive vehicles as wel] County Tuberculosis Association, e equipment, His professional Pee Gane obit as of the so-called transaxle. Of} Residents will be able to get et fain Gare Geese Poultry heed aes W estinghouse the latter proposal, Callahan says: | X-rayed between 9 a.m, and 5 ee : :. : 4 a “Some top drive-line engineers; p.m. March 11, 12, 14, 19, 21, and ' Fl raat ee apoB TBE a Teoma oni | (OMY Eigneys True Life Adventures fet ht US trams ru | #8 The wat lb open tom : The award is one of 20 made |Pet pound for No. 1 top quality live 7: “ a much better job of reducing the| noon until 8 p.m. a. 13, 1%, by : poultry up to 10 a.m. Losses were taken by U.S. Steel, - areually ty Ge Sundatoa 0 sie, PLease uretats sed five Gi Bethlehem, Chrysler, Ford, New $ eo gre Figen helageverat: oe aoe E encourage promising young med- |10°" nites 24-25, Barred Rocks 27-28;/York Central, Baltimore & Ohio, Icy MBS s by tilting the engine more! from March 26 through April ical faculty members to stay in |caponettes (over 5 lbs.) 30-32. a ; e and By making use of some of the}3)_ ond hecuch Friday. the : DETROIT EGG Illinois Central, American Smelting : , Mondays throug y, the - ai of teaching. rials DETROIT, March 1 (AP)—Eees, f.0.»./and Union Carbide. GS HICKEN L E's 4 angus ale iit agli unit will be located at the Tel- ; giey, now associate pro- Detroit, cases included, federal-state ] KE mM CRY F. -|three- ( s i recent | turon Shopping Center. It will be 4 fessor of radiology at the U. of |"Wiites—crade A extra large 55-56 “THE SKY IS FALLING /* = Jar. open from noon to 8 p.m. on March ~ |-- M., won the prize in 1948. Whites—Grade A extra large 58-86%, New York Stocks Y . “They feel that with these steps,|27, 31, April 1, 3, 8, and 10 2 wid. vere: 5549; large beat §3, es avg Is A& i, 1 ee aN Sc Ha telat! . ote BE Regt tnd ae rane gata ONLY TOO APT ge ce eee ey ice eae ea 2 tN Dr. A. C. Furstenberg, the Browns—Grade A extra large 85, ITE A. Reauc 58) tat Tel & Te a5 AT TIMES ° & t Lee. d we = aa : t 5 ¥ Rea a 3 medical school’s dean, said Dr. Seal weakly recetpts of government- IAllied gtr aa S Jacotsl .: HAI LSTON ES ’ ae back pa ees m pet , The eental pcoeeim is ‘sponsored Hardman was selected by fac- [graded eggs March 1-7 were 9,087 cases. quis Chal...) 246 Jo0n® Man .. 382 . Z' . ae “ulty members to be the uni- Mateo babes wc Whites—Grade A ae Lid .... 301 peeled a pee WEIGHING OVER . f ; * * * by the Southeastern Michigan Tu- versity’s entry in the nation- Weesese Greasy Anlacee ates. medium Aico mite "(OS Kresge 88... 262 if Just to keep the record straight,|berculosis Detection Project, the wide competition. ais Aroma ft Geir“ FOUR POUNDS ¢ ce ashanti ot that tie te roenld ancl ihe coun Te ae } ; * ry x S- Dr. Hardman received his doc- , i Meta a ibe ee i «0 3 EACH HAVE BEEN _ ae titot chenpueteiyiane ihc sociation: ss tor af philosophy degree from Masons in GM Plant AMNGas’ ..). $03 Cone ® Cem'.. 336 on current cars. It was used brietl : 95 t : S. y It is approved by the Oakland * the U. of M. in 1954. He will Amued 2 1st Ga eae on the 1919 Studebaker, but dis-| County Medical Society, Musson 2 receive his doctor of medicine Prese f T k H Ae Geert n° Piper carded. said. s degree in June. n ruc er e ree pl) we eye Strs.. 301 The transaxle gets it designation} He added that TB is more com- 4 a er a Am Viscose ae Mergen Line. 304 from the combination of transmis-|mon in men over 40 year's of age S A group of 270 Master Masons/Armco St! .. 441 met pe & 8. 184 sion and axle in the rear. In the in-|and women over 30. re ® Pcvaioecsin peeageed employed by General Motors Truck |armst Ce °°.) 38 Minn M&M | “8 board braking idea, the decelerat-| ‘There are no symptoms in the Uni "it ae master of [Md Coach Division: presented a/Aii"est’ tine | 312 Mont Ward 33 ing pressure is applied to the axle/early stages of TB so all adults 18 ib ” Nene y = abs ae ee GMC pickup truck to the Michigan |AUl Refin 311 Mot Prod.” 38 shaft rather than to the conven-| and over should want to make sure of Mlinois. He was born in Masonic Home during a program/Bai a Ohio’ 28¢ wat Bec? ”. 33" tional brake drums. they don't have it. They might be ea held Saturday at Roosevelt Lodge |Bem@!* Nat Cash R .. 57.4 infecting their family frierids Bloomfield, N.J. Benquet 1 Nat Dairy 42.2 i 0 i Pemple, 3 State St Reine Air oo ng Met Gren lodge Calendar SE . . ok The gift and a check for the) (S068 2s at Nat oe 40 . ~ ; City Driver Hospitalized; | Masonic Home Endowment Fund orden. °°. 632 NY Central .. 143 Pontiac White Shrine No. 22 will & "| 3 Cc | T were made possible through the [prist My 1). 572 No Am Av ., 282 hold its annual meeting and elec- ____ Ran Car Into Tree cooperation and voluntary contri. [B:un Balke 306 Nor Fac). 31 nt 8:00 at: Roosevelt Temole, : BuUrlrouUsgis Me * ; } i at = a peeve og B k| Ch le : A 2%-year-old Pontiac man, who Detens ef the) tecal sanseen: Campo Boup = 38 One on: sa State St. Potluck dinner at 6:30. ac 0g at rys if a police believe may have fallen) Raymond M. Douglas, of Alpena,/C8P Boy 3°: 3) 4 Siser eel oon 0 Bernice Cover, scribe. Adv, q asleep at the wheel, ran his car Grand Master of Masons in Mich-|Cavital Ail .. 164 pac G « Bl 52 : DETROIT (INS) — Chrysler . into a tree and was admitted to/igan, and other state dignitaries Carer Trac ... £96 mn ly Ae a News in Brief Corp. announced today it entered the Pontiac General Hospital Sat- pode Present at ied ade ini ™ Chrysler. "' $2.4 Berks De... 06 1958 with a backlog of $300 million urday. : ruck was presen o Douglas by |Cin 3. : ' ‘tin defense orders for missile sys- Vernon B. Locke, of 591 Mon-|Frank A. Lane, past master of the lark Eeulo 4 Papel Cola. a J. EF. Carroll, 32, of 5218 Eliza- tems, tanks, trucks and other mil- tana Ave., is in satisfactorily con-|Pontiac Brotherhood Lodge. Cole Palm 398 Phelps D 42 beth Lake Rd., Waterford Town- | itary equipment. _ dition today with possible chest ~ * * Golem Oss 11) Pais Mac ee ship, pleaded guilty to a charge of} ‘This ig three times the amount and internal injuries. There were approximately 75|Gon “Edis | | 403 Phitl Pet” i = 381 pba chin neers ee of orders | in possession at the be- His car ran off the road and hit men present representing some 50/Co® N Gas. 48 pit plate G | 14 rion Township Justice Helmar G.| ginning of last year. - the tree on Motor street, near Michigan Lodges and 27 Lodges in Cont can 3 Aiba &o : 32 : Starepee ana pablia fine!at si Cc , ti ° id South boulevard 12 other states Sar ie. SOA plus $7 costs. Jocperetion Eremece, : = : Cont Oi] ||. 45 . Repub Sti 43.5 Colbert said in the 1957 annual cous has 4 een The Oakland County Sheriff's, report now being mailed to ; P, . Deere ...... 29.3 Rey Tob B .. 684 Department reported Sunday that; shareholders, military product Our Leisure Their Livelihood Bis os Seae 7 Roval Dut, ‘06 poaneone Bad Decken 19 tere =e last year: accounted ee oe ; Dow Chem 57.7 Satleway 88 tage o rro ane, a ip-; million, or 3.5 per cent o e ; Lo the Wealth Ind 1 a n! bon hea is* Scovil Mt : 2 poorwil] Dr., Commerce Township,| firm’s total business. | e me : el] Oi ..... s ; . o . | Erie RR .... 73 Sinclair ...... 50 eave would be much greater when he , W ish W e H ad It S O Good Firsrtope, «34 Bet co’: $13] Industry Foresees $4 Billion Increase 1... Tevealed production of the Army's . _ | Sul +++ $04 Bou Pac ...... 38.6 ; Judges Wanted but Jupiter and Redstone missile sys- | = \ Roh free pet + Pruer Tre 111g ptt He . ’ tems “is proceeding on schedule.”’ | yy ARTHUR EDSO) rizzly ar Indians. ey also Gardner Den Btd Oll Cal... 48 . ' 5 irst U. rth iitelwas | terme wane (swine teneme, wa Ge Pak aE xpects Record Sales in Food Don't Advertise tt umcsssemcemie: WASHINGTON — Curious cae oe oor ene tice Mills: 68.4 pies ep ae . tion of the Redstone and Jupiter os Phan sae contempt [is ie the radical ark ae ee Gen Tite. 285 griv wipe. a ; 7 ; JORHAT, India — A suggestion Missiles. for the alleged savage Indian and/"ame. Giletin ie 31 hg 131 py BAM DAWSON rats eter ipuerticct cel col oni ss ‘ a oe at eee oat —— a his ways. Now a word about the Indians’ |Gosdric | § Thomp Pd |... 427) NEW YORK wW — You have tol ee Kan., wholesaler . F. Straub, |dia, advertise in the newspaper: ° b ] jt , Goodyear 142 ‘Transamer ... 37 venience and variety and isn’t like for applicants for three important e Language nas happened? religious beliefs. went? tleat. You like to e. ell. That is! ‘president of a Chicago special : Yet what has happe’ Grab Page sh Twenty Cen ae 31 eat. You like at w S'ly to change his ways in a mild vacant judicial posts was spurned e We now have reached a spot in} The Hopi snake dance is a |Gi west '§ Pf 1 197.4 Un Carbide "!5 924,Why, recession or no, leaders in| -acession. food manufacturer; C. Clyde Lof- predalaialoata te iiemereenitedl sor- Being Updated bod Peicigaemey — lignes, prayer for rain, and the Smith. |Grsyhond = 3 ¢ On Pac... 287 /the food industry say ty they eS tis, president of Kraft Foods divi-|hat reports ’ ike is, we may able to set! sonian di in which the Nemeutk 384 Unit Pruit ©... 43 jexpect to set new sales records Dele : : : . aside enough so that in our leisure =a aoe whooping it: (iemgink! BS NE Geeev-: Wslihis year -and to beat or equal| Lyle C. Roll, president ow Kel- oe See Dairy Products,| The posts of District and Ses. In England we can do what the Indians did can " Indust Ray . 16 U8 Tod 22 |past profit levels. : logg Co., Battle Creek, Mich.,“Mcago; {nharles G. Mortimer, 'sions Judge and of two additional full time: Go bunting. fishing and up. One — has a rattlesnake Ing Rand .... $93 West Un Tel 167 ;* says Americans will continue to|Ptesident of General Foods, White Session Judges had become va-| OXFORD, England — In a camping. ms ‘ tne is Wests - 426) g companies look for as|SPend a substantial portion of Plains, N.Y.; and Jerome S. Neu-|cant through resignations and the small house here Professor C. H. This is well illustrated today in| The Smithsonian has a note say-jint ary... 308 Woolworth... aft much as a 25 per cent gain initheir income for food. His firm|™&n, President of Joseph Martin-| High Court recommended men for Dodd has been at work for 10 years Smithsonian |! no one is sure why the Indians /|'™' Nick - 168 Yale & Tow .. 36.8/MNC) as | Loe 88 plans to build a new plant this 5°: New York, who thinks his|the positions. But the Government|on the project of giving the Eng- a new exhibit at the Smit an weren't bitten more.often, but that (nt Sra : = Youns = 184 ; sales volume. The industry as a ; in M his land other coffee companies will of the State rejected the nomina-|lish-speaking world a new Bible sag ae ees a two theories have been advanced are = ' whole talks of a four billion dollar) Year in “emp ts: be helped by the possibility oftions. It was then that the Govern-| The present Bible, known as the of the American Eskimo and In- saab pat ~ | food sales increase over last INCLUDES LUXURIES low ff i isi i apis ' ee Seine tar edition = dian from the far north to the tip '@2y rattlesnakes, or was the poison r’s 75 billi _ [tower collee prices raising CON-| ment sugested that the High Court|Authorized Version, is. written in of South America. milked out before the dance began? What H as H orn, os ‘ an Re) ey aed A frozen food processor, Earl)sumption. ~ advertise for judges, the language of over 300 years ago, % Anyway, no one believes in this . eal ae cee aa os Y oaiR. French, vice president of Red xt ke This unprecedented suggestion|as it was in the days of King DEPICTS THEIR LIFE sort of thing any more. But a Lights, Tail-fins Who say they are cing ahead L. Foods Corp., Great Neck, N.Y., Other optimists: Ernest Gallo,|was turned down, as the Govern-| James I. It was the work of a team : One can see, as he drifts among |curious thing did happen. The dis- esl ae ie sang) and ems unabated the public’s! president of a Modesto, Calif.,/ment would not yield and appoint|of translators and was published the exhibits, many of them life/play was opened—and it rained but No Wheels? kaaising reesarch: jwillingness to purchase food, winery; W. F. Dietrich, president the men recommended, the judicial |in 1611. size and astonishingly |i felike,|steadily here for three days. — : P Other & commardes wiiee (pro ‘even those which to some ar€iof Green Giant Co., Le Suer,!posts remain’ vacant. Meanwhile; Dr. Dodd is not trying to replace what the Indians wore, what they PORT ARANSAS, Tex. (INS)—laucts are ks by or sold in gro- \considered luxuries. Minn.; A. E, Staley Jr., president cases are piling up and the litigant |the great classic, he says. But he ate, how they worshipped, what . ° The University of Texas Marine t see wine! cleans. ~*~ * * of A. E, Staley Manufacturing Co.| public is suffering hardship. and his associates want to produce kind of a life they lived. Three Women Injured Institute at Port Aransas has cap- por alee locke Ge “inercases . Sales gains are predicted also|Decatur, Ill.; A. M. Ghormley, ~ a Bible in the language of our One reporter's viewpoint: Itlin Collision on U.S. 10 tured and is studying a little. ge « vw °|hy: Daniel F. Gerber, president/president of Carnation Co, Los}, ., |. own ne: | wasn't bad. ~ ccGaw fiak that hes lis) own lights! . of Gerber Products,’ Fremont, |Angeles. Building Contracts Drop | It will be a long time before this Apparently that’s what the Smith-| Two Waterford Township women ney ae “| Current tonnage figures are run- : team of British scholars finishes sonian experts think, too. One/and a Flint woman were injured in and “born: ining well above those of peak ee DETROIT « — F. W. Dodge/the entire work, but Dr. Dodd is placard says: a two-car collision Sunday on U.S.| The fish is called the Midship-|year 1957, according to the trade Noted British Doctor Sa 0 Corp., marketing specialists, re-|putting the finishing touches on : . j S. ) siness, It ys: he New T ; 10 at Walton boulevard in Waterman, so named because of the|publication, Food Business, ported Saturday January contracts|the New. Testament. thin bevad baton oy AL OO pat elma ines tales Sy acs es 9) shiny buttons such as|looks for new sales records in the a . . ‘ for future construction in Michi-| He and his colleagues hope that Pang a “tn wing the te land. County sheriff's eerie found on sailors’ uniforms, that|/next three months, on ed et e ; gan amounted to $66,456,000, or 34)the new wording will prove to be wu = ; iu . “ an indystry poll. Some leaders fee per cent below January a year|‘'as graceful and lovable as the sourees of their environment.” | Vesta B. Gist, 53, of Flint was giow in the dark. And the “‘mid- sure ‘es momentum will carry ago. old.” THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 10. 1958 , TV Executive nae. Livingston Sees + - - Today's Radio Programs - WJBK. News, Bellboy WCAR, News, Patrick a: mad a Lon! arg cae ve $:00—WJR, Amos ‘n’ Andy ww, = Your Life w. Shorr CKLW, Foostes WJBK, News, Bellboy 8: WWI Night Answer Please ww htline wx M. Shorr CKLW, Harry Lime WJB. Bellboy 9:00—WJR, Weather ww, pee Time WCAR, New fecha wa Music Nightline * True Detective WIBK; Sound Off 10:00—WJR, Symphony . WWJ, News, Music WJBK, News,: Stero Sounds 10:36—WW4J, Guest Star WJBK, Bellboy WCAR, News Nes 6:00—WJR, News, Roundup WJBK, WWJ, News, H. Roberts WwxyYzZ, Ww 6: ee on Voice of Agricit. . Nunn, T, David WPON, Spts., Mackinnon 7:00—WJIR, News WWJ, News, H. Roberts WXYZ, News, Wolf CKLW, Toby David George PON, Early Bird Club 7:30—WJR, Music Hall WXYZ, News, Wolf CKLW, Sports, David WJBK, News, George $:00—WJR, News, B. Guest oberts WJBK, News, George WPON, News, MacKinnon 8:30—WJR, Music Hall. ~ CKLW, News, David WJBK, News, George 9:00—WJR, News, Mrs. Page WWJ, News, F. Elizabeth News, Mary Morgan Reid News, WPON America to Knees we WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW. News, betes Ford WCAR, News, B. Martyn WXYZ, News, McKenzie WPON. Don MacKinnon 11:30—WJR, Time for Music News, Davies TUESDAY AFTERNOON (2:00—WJR, News, Wells WJ, News, Maxwell W, Grant, Livestock WCAR, News, Thomas WJBK, News, Reid WPON, News, MacKinnon 12:830—WJR, Time Out, Music WXYZ, News, Winter CKLW, News, Davies 1:00—WJ", Peter L. Hayes wwy, News, Maxwell CKLW. News, Davies WXYZ, Merv Griffir WJBK, News, Reid CKLW, Shiftbreak, Davies ON. Don Zee Show Fred Wolf Rooste: 3:00—WJR, Helen Trent WB: Tom 7 bcoed 10:30—WWJ, Don Ameche WWJ. Vews, Mati cam Here onaetan, | IE TT Sto | SAME BRD 1 . orksho real avies WECM, Comatey’ Bounéup , WJBK, News, McLeod 11:00—WWJ, News, Wood WCAR, News, Page 3:30—-WJR, House Party .WWJ, Woman in House CKLW, News, Chase WXYZ, News, McKenzie 4:00—WJR, Parade of Bands WWJ, News, Deland WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenztle. CKLW. News, Godfrey WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Page 4:30—WJR, Music WWJ, Jim Deland CKLW, News, Chase 5:00—WJR, Philip Lenhart o WCAR, Arthur Godfrey WPON, Music With Mason ‘| 6:30—WJR. Music Hall WXYZ, News, McKenzie CKLW, News, Chase WCAR, Sports WPON, Sports Slants --Today’'s Television Programs - - Channel) 2—~WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS edy: Guest star Ed Wynnj11:00 (4) Price Is. Right. ~ © * Morse a “political evangelist,” Morse (°° se the CAUSE. Bs _ ape ‘ tries to prov he's tall . “What is needed,’’ said Liv- retorted, “Then there must be a few ae = oa ene, h ave been ses 6:00.(7) Mr. Danger. enough to play Lincoln—with/ 11:25 (7) News. ingston, whose wife, Betty Hutton, d.” We Ea Oy ee ne ; political. devils aroun sonal — a deputy sheriff is bound (3) Popeye. help from Lily. is a cemedienne of no small talent, , iso SEVEN STAR near i Se nes Morse claims that when he got kicked /to make enemies. I just don’t _~(4) News: Williams. | 11:30 (2) Dotto. “is more sophistication. We've got } J ta d| Ik ww toe wie wn, Gb? ox (2) Racket Squad. 10:00 (9) Lone Wolf. (4) Truth or Consequences. [to go beyond the trite situation in the jaw bya horse, Jenner went aroun | " er I ‘es earch of the b (4) Suspicion. Myste ey | (7) Robin and Ricky. comedies, which have worn them- taking up a collection. “We want to buy a) G 1B e i Site fe Fl (Mende Whashe, 6:15 (4) Weather: Eliot. Friends, relatives _ think (9) Howdy Doody. selves out to the extent that no nice present,” Jenner explained sympathetic-, deputies: wer pe Sit Wis school teacher is a bigamist. one thinks they're funny any ally to Senatorial colleagues, “for the horse. 2 ile — : e P ~ 2QPROOL 6:20 (4) Box four, Janice Rule stars. \11:45 (7) Noontime Comics. longer. . ~ 6:30. (7) Three venture. (9) Foreign Legion. (4) Frontier. Western: Pret- Musketeers. Ad- (2) Studio One. Suspense: Gig Young stars in ‘‘A Dead Ringer.”” Husband (Young) devises unique plot to murder’ his socialite wife (Marguerite|L::00 TUESDAY AFTERNOON (2) Hotei Cosmopolitan. HOLLYWOOD (INS) — One of Videoville’s top television execu- tives glanced into his crystal ball today and predicted that viewers can expect’ more westerns, a re- surgence of situation comedy and fewer musicals on screens next season. * * » The forecast, said Alan Livings- ton, thoughtful young vice presi- dent in charge of network pro- grams for NBC-TV’s Pacific Divi- sion, is based upon the bitter and the sweet experiences of the cur- rent season, in which musical shows avalanched into the TV market—and right out the bottom. Westerns, on the othe: hand, continued te score heavily in range riders of the previous of gun-toting semester. “strangers” this Situation comedy, rather a neg- lected format this season, will return in force next fall, Livingston said, but not in the slapstick, flicker-witted form that proved so successful for such pioneers shows s “I Love Lucy.” MOST SUCCESSFUL “I look for a return to situation comedy—of a sophistitated nature —because there’s been a dearth of it this season and because when their home) terms of audience popularity, he | pointed out, although the reigning | season were chalfenged by dozens ' WINTER’S WIRE WHEEL—Old Man Winter was the mechan- ic who worked on the wheel of this car to give it the wire-spoked effect. Spotted by a winter-conscious photographer at Scottsbluff, Neb., both front wheels of an auto, driven to town by a’ salesman, sported the snazzy sports car look. The rear wheels featured noth- haven't caught them yet. But we! will, W6é won't quit until we do.” So said Polk County Sheriff Bud Payne of the ambush slayers of two of his deputies. * * * Payne said he had several leads to the Saturday night shotgun killings of Louis Wright, 49, and R. A. (Bob) Rogers, 65, but not enough evidence to make any ar- rests. “So far we've had to confine a lot of our investigation to ques- tioning persons who were in the ing but the usual road dirt. | Even Men in Congress Resort to ‘Horse Play’ By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Feuds, feuds, feuds! = I'm glad I’m so peace-loving. Senators Wayne Morse and Wm. E. Jenner have a playful little feud. When Jenner called x * * WILSON the Crosby kids confided to a pal, “Daddy’s become a young Winchell to patch up their feud ... One of; lion— he’s let Kathy’s condition go to his- head” . . . Bob beer tavern when the deputies) were ambushed outside,’’ Payne! isaid. I * * * Wright and Rogers, the father} of 10 children, were killed as they | stepped from their patrol car on a routine check of the tavern located on State Highway 68 about ‘six miles north of here. | The probability that politics may have entered into the slay- ing was voiced by Copperhill Mayor Emil Greene. - “I think it was politics,’’ Greene said, ‘‘and most of those with whom I have talked agree.” * * * Payne said he was uncertain As usual, and masses of flowers. : ‘ ce, ee “| ] , ) ti Famous Flower Show , redicts: Iren WO DEpUTIeS opens in New York Wi8, Oe OCKLW, (800 Www, (o6e) WOAR, (1130) WXYZ, (1270) WPON, (1460) WIBK, (1490) - | ; . NEW YORK —The 4ist Inter. XYZ, cl f N national Flower Sov an . TONIGHT 11:00—WJR, News WXYZ, Breakfast Club | 1:30—WJR, Dr. Malone Or QX eason | e in mM us of beauty and educational ¢ s et en wave Remy eure, | WARK ewe George | CLM Metin, Dav : on hortieulture—is on at the New WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenzie * dewa, Saino cee oe 2 ane ae . _ . York Coliseum. CKLW, News, Chase wean News pews See, meee Estee | Siow crew Viewers Can Expect Sheriff Hunts Killers ‘The show, which opened yester ° McLeod ews, _ Ww Ww ‘ . . ; WCAR News Page |. ‘wre, asics 9:30WJR, Jack Harris “wwa) News “Contesstons” Revival of Comedies, Who Waylaid Men enya : ae Garden"® : . Merv. Griffin : eam, Dinner Date | WIDE. 0. of D. Mas CEN: Rew BE Eee | CKLW, News, Davies Decline of Musicals Checking Tavern is the theme of this year’s show. win oe ss 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WJBK, News, Reid , Among) he features) are plants WOAR. Page's Part } WZ, Jim Backus | 2:30 or iI parts of the world. WCAR Pages Party = | rurspay mornina «=| W212 jim Backus WWJ. One Man's Family. By CHARLES DENTON COPPERHILL, Tenn, w—"We fom all paris o there are spring gar~ dens, with running brooks, trees 7 In 1832~ 71 years before the Airplane -G&W began distilling fine whiskey We now expect Ed Sullivan and Walter! Returns to Cage, Clawed Trainer SEVEN ty girl becomes gambler. Chapman) when he meets a! (4) Tic Tac Dough. VO creo ves : : Hope couldn’t get his Russian visa and is flying back to pre-| © . (2) News: LeGoff. man who's a ‘‘dead ringer’’ (9) King’s Cupboard ee eee ats cai miere “Paris Holiday” in Miami with Anita Ekberg. Hope Bests Lioness STAR 6:40 (2) Weather: for him. > ; ; that success is a little harder to| finally gave up hopé on Russia. KANSAS CITY —Pat Anthony : eather: Phelps. 12:15 (2) Love of Life. achieve in situation comedy.” * * * returned to hi circus lion taming ED WHISKEY, 90. PROOF, 6:ay @) News: Fa 10:30 (7) San Francisco. * * st Sabrina, the beautiful, busty English star who came here/act yesterday and faced down the Se STRAT WHISKEY 6 YEARS 745 (2) News: wards. (9) City Detective. 12:30 0 Fearn ene: Livingston agreed with the mna-|for the Steve Allen show, told lioness who sent him to the hos- OR MORE 62% % GRAIN 7:00 (7) Sports Focus 11:00 (7): Soupy’s On | The Erwins. Sg atics Bat coos cis vou her boson Asura nce pital Briley REUTRAL Sra, Godot anal t . , ae _ a just about every singer who ever|with Lloyds of London. Lloyds by x *® * - (9) Gangbuster 3. (9) National News. _ (9) Mary Morgan. made @ hit record into the video: Ortmann inant ado leriones (4) Death Valley. Adventure: (4) News: Westerkamp. “ "",|bets her that she'll never be 9 : Man b : ABB ve channels this season was ‘a corel size 40 and if she is to close the fang and claw wounds =i uys a hearse to honor (2) News: LeGoff. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. mistake.” u ao a one on his left arm. The arm still was | © lete Componer ent Hi-Fi “I e on anniversary. . ; ; . The ences art be charged they'll pay her about $15,000 in a sling and practically useless omp (eet ject & Dee) 11:16 (9) Weather: me 3208 (2) Susie. ain A SL inch—a year. Right now when he returned. to the cage aft- |] Custom Intercom, Hi-Fi Systems (4) Weather: Eliot. (4) Movie. & , ’ Ishe’s a size 411. That, it seems, er missing three performances. © We Repate AB Models 7:10 (7) Sports: Wattrick (2) Weather (7) My Little Margi he insisted, but against those | - as © pe eceeen? . : ee : (9) cal are. who actually decide what will be | Makes her healthier by a half- Tension mounted at the point in Free Estimates Wiovie. ’ , , ‘ tronics 7:15 (7) News: Daly. 11:20. (9) Theater. Phyllis Calvert seen on television—the advertis- inch than Jayne Mansfield. ed pail eae ne aurpoeed ‘Bloomfield Elec +30 (1) OSS “Golden Madonna” ('49). 1:30 (2) As The World Turns. re aga Wey paenese ener s 54 nea Cons eae to leave her perch and join five —— 30 | 5:55 Adventure: Agent (4) Sports: Parker. (7) Topper. : ; other big cats in a line lying on parachutes into Germany to (2) Sports. “I really don’t know what started| heard her rich boy friend the floor. blow up research lab. 2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks. the trend toward musicals exact-| has a secret gal stashed x « & (9) Million Doliar Movie. |11:25 (2) Nightwatch Thea ter. (7) Movie. ly,"” he said dubiously. “The people vin Rio. She plans to force Anthony cracked his whip and Gene Kelly, Living in a Big Charles McGraw. Road- who buy shows just started buying *a showdown and maybe shouted. The lioness lunged off the a Ma R a TE) BOD EO 1 ETE thet ba mir: bead eae the call off the marriage in perch toward him. He dropped his . ce Is Right (color). ae netwo xe ad avoided for years) | aunes ... Jack Paar whip, flipped a white barrel on cubes ol Wiscktion Aone: (2) Robin Hood. Adventure: 11:30 (7) Night “Court. Re-enact- 2:30 (2) House Party. because they're the toughest kind . its side and rolled it toward her, FE 4-1515 Fortune hunting sheriff trails, ment of court, cases. (4) Kitty Foyle. of shows to do. decent barete yet puce! took up his whip again, snapped C & V ELECTRO MART man who finds Roman gold. (4) Jack Paar. Japanese jazz “There's only so much you can} Goodman EVER under her it at her and shouted some more. 158 Oakland ‘ , singer Pat Suzuki. © (2:50 (9) News. - do with them, which means that) new contract. Depends on The lioness wheeled and ran to|[y Oe® Mee there, Fri & Set 8:00 sO lave a Jill. comedy: | : | pen F wink hd a A aa “attitude.” her place, still snarling, , e 13: 3 'g é . 5 are plana tig ae TUESDATIMORNING — ia k= difficult to sell next season.” Paulette Goddard was a Anth Se he der-aged model back to hill- (7) American Bandstand. : Ziegfeld Girl at 10! Whatta- 4 aoe er! apy pial ee RCA COLOR TY billy father. 6:50 (2) Meditatiors. EY OSCE TER: : | ai yamean) tmpossible? Wocne SABRINA ._|Morton show sponsored annually Sales and Service (4) Restless Gun. Western: ¢:5§ (2) On The Farm Front. . n onesid ere | got married she gave her age by the Kansas City Police Depart- , Young sheriff searches for 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. as 42. She was in the 1926 Follies. That made her 10. Simple| ment. SWEET’S RADIO-TV pee father Gone 7:00 (2) TV Collere. 1 vy Trust Your Wife? arithmetic—that’s all. I don't oe = ty me — Open Mon. & Fi urns, Allen. Comedy: : 9) Movie. ; _ more trouble,”. he said. ‘She’ pen, men. © Fan club member gets date () Today oer to death of that barrel *| ao : ; ; . 0 nvad @ S an Lawrence Tierney will make his comeback in a TV series,,” ‘ . ab with Ronnie. 3:30 (2) Cartuon Frolic 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. - ; ; é ° (4) Queen for a Day. - “Civil Air Patrol . Sponsors of Polly Bergen’s TV show went Ball iile f T k 8:30 (7) Bold Journey. Adven-|g.99 (2) Captain Kangaroo. (7) Bandstand. Seekin g Reb el Leaders into a big huddle... Porfirio Rubirosa’s wife wants him to e aves tor |oxyo | DO-IT-YOURSELF ture: Ethiopian tribesmen. (7) Cartoon Carnivaa. bow out of the Sebring auto races March 22... Ed Sullivan) jew york iw — Sixty-seven TU BE TESTER (4) Wells Fargo. Western: 4:15. (2) Secret Storm. on Sumatra; Warns Off jdenies reports that he'll quit TV... Ray Anthony was rushed! members of the New York City "Oven Eves. til 9 - Kidnaper poses as agent to 8:20 (7) Big Show. ‘ All Foreign Planes into “High School Confidential,” first film he’s made With his! ballet company left here by plane pen a pi safe. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. wife, Mamie Van Doren . . . Gambler Meyer Lansky came up|today for San Francisco en route HAMPTOH. ELECTRIC (2) Talent Scouts. |8:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. (9) Laff Time. . JAKARTA. Indonesia — The|{f0m Cuba to have his ulcers treated, but the sour reception eo ey Far Es ‘ five-month] g25 w. Huron FE 4-2525. ; _- ; ; . ) e Far Eas s¥00 (7) Voice. Concert soprano 9:00 (4) Romper Room 4:45 (4) Modern Romances. Jndonesian air force today said it/®e got just made ‘em worse. ee aa a Elaine Malbin. : had “intensified operations” TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: A local woman tells of her busy (9) Town Mayor. 9:25 (2) News. 5:00 (2) Band Stand. against the rebels in Central Su-|day: “I left the house five minutes after Dave Garroway and ; , , > nee ci Comedy: |e: iy i Married Joan. aaa od ora berauecics a het didn’t get back till 15 minutes after Jack Paar.” S prin ot ime is the iomas. Comedy: 9:30 (2) Ladies Day. () Superman. ° That’s earl, brother. . . . explosive Danny disturbs the (4) Amos 'n’ Andy. L (9) Looney Tunes moment. (Copyright 1957) ri ght time to insta {| household when he suddenly (7) Our Friend Harry. A report from Padang, the rebel g becomes meek and mild. - 5:30 (2) Beat the Clock. center in Sonat, said bide ° a Safe, silent 9:55 (9) Billboard (4) Files of Jeffrey Jones. jtroops were keeping a rp . ; . ; ; ; op? 9:30 (7) Lawrence Walk. - - (7) Mickey Mouse Club. watch on the Central Sumatran Tri al b Ordeal muabvi tree. Tribal lore has it that) . (9) Front Page. ~° 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (9) Serial Theater. coast and leaders there expected y when the liquor is drunk to separ-| zz (4) Turn of Fate. Drama: : . a landing attempt in the next few Kill 2 W late guilty from innocent parties Jewel thief Charles Bover (oy pose reMe j days. IS omen |the innocent ones always escape oii Gers G heme (9) isfovie. ‘Actor John Conte, Wife t+ ok in Deep Africa __°Y, throu the poison, But the tential victims. 10:30 (2) Arthur Godfrey. Have First Child—a Boy | «Maybe four forces haxe landed Ie jeunes weithe| iy agony’ and) (2) December Bride. Com- (4) Treasure Hunt or maybe they're about to land,”| ZOMBA, S. A. — Trail by ordeal < . : ALS. A: 5 al| * + * BEVERLY nts, Calif, WA said Air Force Capt. Agus Soero-|has resulted in two deaths in. vo. one 6-pound boy, their first child, was to. He added that the rebel lead-in b In this case the grandmother — ACROSS s bern to actor John Conte and his| or. would be the targets -of the Nyasaland, Zomba reports. [perhaps to show her faith in the. 4 Traffic sign my i ] | wife, Ruth, in Doctors Hospital |janding forces and “we will scrup- — jinstrument of justice also drank ‘ 8 Rock and —— last night. : ulously try to avoid inflicting cas-| After a child’s sudden death its the poison, as did her daughters. | 3 Conscrected ( The baby, John Charles, and his ualties on civilian populations.”’ mother accused her own sister of The grandmother and the aunt) ‘ pereule solo actress mother were reported do-| he central government in Ja-| having planted a spell on the baby. died but the child's mother sur-) 16 Western ing fine. karta, meanwhile, ordered all for-|T® find the culprit, the child’s vived. : | Hemisphere (e nte, th h st of “NBC Mat- ’ : ‘ d th: esorted to the trad- . * * * { residents Se NDE PO eign planes to keep out of air|randmother r | | ’ Ae as inee Theater,” a daytime TVijsnes around the Indonesian is-|itional justice and prepared cups Now she is being prosecuted, | eee 2 it Painting drama, said his part in today’sijands forcing airline operators to|/of muabvi, a poison distilled from because trials by ordeal have been “GUARANTEE ‘eh Greta UY Yy show ae aie Oe eae suspend or re-route a number of|bark of the swamp - growing’ outlawed. |= ere con i: 24 Stock room ital so he : ; ——— ———— || <3 26 Precini ation Z Yy Stay with his wife and the new Nights a and from Singapore. a foes oy iS GUARANTEED 27 Tangle ; nder at the Sing- southward i toward 3 iosen ” of Labor and Industrial Relations) Action will sponsor the 11th annual M cC ALLU M.- & DE AN MIDAS Midés -Muffler Service ; rs ann tke «a iene a / be Semered side ole of the University of Michigan and) Roosevelt Day dinner in Detroit MUFFLER 256 S. Saginaw FE 2-1010 '.” @istinetion Laundry * 31 Mexican dish 46 Net Wayne State University. Prof. Ray-|next Saturday, Speakers will in- 409 E. Maple, Birmingham Mi 4-5230 SHOPS (Next to Jerome Olds) . \ 5. Minera eity aa 19 es pin th > —— mond C, Miller of Wayne State and clude Thomas Finletter,; former s . , Open! Silday Geoning 1 9 Open Monday thru Thursday ‘tt 5:90 5 ft ‘oe ‘ B ~ 38 Group of animals ‘ |Prof. Sidney Fine of the U. of M.jretary of the air in the Truman sant Gene Packs R 4 Store | ce Friday "WS S—Saterday! tH &\ j 5 Pr 94 Cup: rer __seven- $0 North by East Convenient Free Parking at Rear o i 6 Russian city 2% @hacial sidges 4 Is overfond (ab) were named to the, faculty council. administration. Ah ef > , ‘ Bo * ij ‘ 4 ‘ : \ ' .