' “. S. Weather Bureau Forecast , snow flurries (Details en Page 2) fi Nee : 117th YEAR keke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Macmillan Talks With Khrushchev on State MOSCOW (#—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev got down to formal talks in the Kremlin today after a get-acquainted weekend in the country. The opening of the little summit talks in the Kremlin coincided with the 41st ann and navy. The official Communist Party newspaper Pravda used the occasion starting a war. It also criticized the agreement reached on Cyprus last week by Britain, Turkey and Greece. Macmillan, who arrived here Saturday, was the guest of Khrushchev yesterday at Matters iversary of the Soviet army to warn the West against the latter’s dacha, or coun- +try villa, 50 miles southeast Go-Ahead Due on Courthouse County Supervisors Are Expected to OK Start of Planning Authorization is expected to be given tomorrow by the Oakland County Board of Supervisors for the county to proceed’ with plans to build a new courthouse. Plans and money laid aside fpr the $4,500,000 building, to be lo- cated at Telegraph road, northwest of Pontiac, had been held up pend- ing a decision by the Michigan Supreme. Court. This decision came last Thurs- day when the court ruled a $1,666,407 fund to finance the had been collected legal- ly from non-tax or miscellaneous receipts. — The Oakland County Taxpayers, League, which filed suit in 1956 to block the construction, contended the supervisors had violated a law which prohibits counties from levy- tag in any one year more than one- tenth of one mill for the purchase} of lands or construction of publi¢ buildings. * * With the freeing é. the funds, supervisors tomofrow are-expected Courthouse to give a Special Com- mittee the go ahead to sit down with architects to put plans back? into action. Another order of business will be to revise the cost of the pro- posed Farmington interceptor sewer. In a resolution approved at the January meeting,. an in- correct estimate was given, ac- cording to Norman R. Barnard, corporation counsel. Latest developments on a regenctl for a second probate judge for the, county will be aired, too. * * * A recommendation that the va- cant Contagious Hospital not be used entirely for the mentally ill will be given by a special commit- tee looking into futture uses of the 80-bed hospital on Telegraph road. of Moscow. The villa was built for the late Josef Sta- lin and is one of several maintained by the govern- ment, The British and Soviet premiers spent more than three hours in informal talks at the dacha in snow-covered Semonovskaya vill- age, Details of the talks or the subjects covered were not dis- closed. A British spokesman said the two “covered al} subjects of mu: tual interest.” The Tass News Agency said “questions of mutual interest were touched on” dur- ing talks before and after lunch. It was assumed that the topics included the questions of Berlin and Germany. * * Sitting in with Khrushchev at the informal talks were Deputy [Premier Anastas Mikoyan, Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and Am- bassador to London Jacob Malik. 2 WITH MACMILLAN Macmillan was accompanied by, Foreign” Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and Ambassador to Moscow Sir Patrick Reilly. Except for inter- 'preters, no one else was present. The conferes mixed business with pleasure during the informal conversations, Macmillan and Khrushchey listened to a Russian baritone, who sang a Russian folk seng and an English-lan- guage ballad entitled: ‘If 1 Love You,” They watched ice skaters on a nearby lake and went for a sleigh vid. At lunch the chiefs of gov- lernment exchanged toasts and, ac- cording to a British spokesman “traded jokes back and forth.” “The two great men got on well,” he said. “They were very relaxed. | He added that ‘they all laughed a lot.”” Some 40 persons attended the . (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 'Wondet Why These Taxes ‘Wouldn't Pass LOS ANGELES (AP) — The City Council tackles about new taxes on hotel rooms, cigarettes and liquor Tuesday. Here are some taxes, proposed’ ye eee which they won't | Start Driving Series | Traffic accidents killed 37,000 in the U.S. last year. _ Why? Heedless driving prat- —— were at the root of almost \ all highway mishaps. A series of 12 concise “priving Lessons,” each illustrating a common traffic hazard and its remedies begins on Page Two of today’s Pontiac Press. jored tag, to be worn around the * mae ‘tax on each child, ' A weight tax on everyone weigh- ing more than 200 pounds on March 1, A bathing suit tax—with a col- bather’s neck, to prove the tax has been paid. A bridge-crossing tax, collected by making’ every bridge in the city a ie bridge. x * * * * Gu Bg. Ce ee st WE ene carly $700, 000 Huro kon * BATTLE RAGING BLAZE — The west wall (left) of the Huron Bowl is, toppled as tons of water are hosed into the crackling inferno. Billowing, acrid smoke worried dozens of nearby home MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1959--28 PAGES x & * Flames Consume W. Huron Building dwellers and attracted hundred Despite firemen's efforts, the fire ing was gutted. x * * Pontiac Preas Photo is “of early morning motorists. continued to rage until the build- 2 Major Traffic Snarls Reported A heavy, wet snowstorm accom. panied by rain and rising tempera- tures hit the Pontiae a@rea -this morning, creating perilous driving’ conditions for local motorists. The Oakland County Sheriff's Dept. warned drivers of slippery spots on state trunklines, although! ‘most major trunklines have been| sanded and. salted. Two major traffic snarls were | reported this morning. North- | bound lanes on Telegraph road | south of Long Lake road in | Bloomfield Township were | I. blocked when 14 trucks failed to negotiate a hill there. A second jam was reported on M59 between Crescent Lake and Airport roads. East-bound M59 an d, south-bound Crescent Lake traffic’ moved at a snail's pace for three-| quarters of an hour. « k * ; | The storm dumped up to four’ inches of new snow in some parts) of the state, Manistee and Luding- ton were cut off from long distance: telephone service. Two and a half inches of snow! pelted this area overnight. | Temperatures were expected to} climb into the 40s today in Pon- tiac, bringing an end to freezing rain. However, the Weather Bureau said the warming trend would be rt-lived with much cold- A $1,000 tax levied each year against all bachelors. er temperatures and increasing winds forecast for tonight. The Lenten. Guideposts Faith Brought Gospel Singer From Poverty to World Fame By JOHN LEWELLEN The place: Chicago. The time: the 1930s—the depression is still on. The setting: a theater jammed with job-hunters —a WPA dramat- ics project is sereening talent for ‘‘The Hot Mi- kado,”? a musical with an all-Negro cast. In the crowd of applicants is a ; big, vital-looking ‘Negro woman m with an anxious! . face. Her name MAHALIA . is Mahalia Jackson. She is not worried ‘about her singing ability, she is worried)” about being in a theater at all. Since early childhood she has been taught to believe that singing in al” theater or night club is wrong. - But an elemental force has driven her here, against her principles, against her moral. judgment. She is hungry. For months her only income nas: Ea % been from singing gospel songs to, church audiences at 10 cents ad- mission, or ‘pass the plate.’ ; * * * Mahalia is the last to be called and she sings magnificently, her great silver voice full of faith and yearning. Mahalia walks home, She feels sure she has won, but there is. no gladness in her heart. She needs the money. Her husband and her friends need the food it will buy. But she knows, also, that if she accepts, the. part she will be vio- In Today s : Press lating her own principles. “Oh, Lord.” she prays, “help me. If You don’t want me to do this thing, give me a sign, I beg of You.. SIGN FROM LORD When she gets home, her hus- band runs out to meet her, to give her the good news. He has landed a job selling 20-cents-a-week in- surance policies from door to door. But to Mahalia it is more than a job—it is a sign from the Lord, proof that He will take care of those who keep the faith. When the WPA people call to tell her she has won the audition, she astounds them by caste: down the part. . That was a quarter of a cen- tury ago, and although numerous offers have since ran as high as $10,000 a week, Mahalia never yet has sung in a nightclub or in. any place not appropiate for her (Continued on Page 22, Col. 5) “ Lions Club Rummage Sale. Benefit ee ag puaeys Vision Fund, Feb. TV & Radio Programs... m7 Wilson, Harl...,...,........ % Women’s Pages.......... 10-12 ‘ . to 8 p.m.—14 E. Pike St Rummage you want to y ilepeas of, call FE 2-4031. colder temperatures were ex- pected te turn the snow-rain into snow flurries... The mercury wil] |18-25 degree range tonight. South- ierly winds at 12 to J8 m.p.h. will shift to west-northwest at 18 to 25 m.p.h, late this afternoon and to- night. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy land colder with a few flurries, high pf 22 to 28 is expected. over in the Al IScores Search Wet Snow, Rain Perils Area Motorists tures will average near whe normal 136-high. arth 2b Jew. A trend is expected woduadey and Thursday, with temperatures drop- ping again Friday and Saturday. Rain or snow is likely Thursday and Friday. The lowest temperature recorded in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m, was 32. At 1 p. m. the ther- mometer registered 39. Smashups Kill 2 in Lapeer Area Accident Near Davison Claims Life of Woman From Ortonville Two area men were killed Sun-) day in accidents about two hours apart on highways near Lapeer. ; * * * A third weekend traffic victim, was an Ortonville woman who was fatally injured in a two-car crash Saturday on M15, five miles south of Davison, , Dead are George Wood, 31, of Oxford; Alvin R, Johnson, 43, of Lapeer; and Mrs. Joseph (Ilene) French, 38, of Ortonville, The Oxford father was killed and six other persons, including four children, were injured in a two-car crash Sunday afternoon on M21, five miles west of Lapeer. * * * Wood, who lived at 24 Glaspie St., was dead on arrival*at Lapeer County General Hospital. His wife Joyce, 30, suffered facial cuts, and their daughters, Kay, 9, and Susan, 5, had cuts and bruises. Other passengers in Wood’s car were Mrs. Wood’s brother, Her- bert Shaw, 11, of the same ad- dress, who was slightly injured, and a neighbor, 10-year-old Kath- leen Brooks, daughter of Oxford patrolman and Mrs. Chauncey Btooks, She had a broken nose and possible arm injury. All of the injured were ‘admitted to Lapeer County General Hospital, where they were reported in fair to good condition today. x « The driver of the other car was Russell E. Summers, 29, 801. Cor- nelig St., Flint. He suffered a brok- en neck and was transferred to Hurley Hospital, Flint, His wife, a passenger in the car, wasun be h peer County sheriff's deputies nid Wood? s car hit\Summers’ auto broadside as Summers turned into (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Catt “Rocket Ralph’ at Jerome Olde- Cadillac, it dik Angus Cinpedh Tax Accountant, In. a i i Open Eves. FE 2-3616, 905 Dike Dynamited iWater which coverd some 33,000 ihole in the dike Saturday, The “—— Water Flowing Into Wabash After LAWRENCEVILLE, Ill. (AP) — acres of Illinois farm land is draining back into the Wabash River through a dynamited breach in a clay dike. The farm land was flooded |Wednesday when the swollen Wa- bash burst through the levee near Russellville, about 10 miles up- stream. Farmers blasted a 100-foot long breach is on the east side of the river, across the Wabash from Vincennes, Ind. Farmers said the flow from the fields did not raise Mountains for tyrant, and: four other busi- ,|ness concerns, Fire of undetermined or- igin destroyed the $700,000 Huron Bowl building at 1124 W. Huron St., Water- ford Township, early this morning. The one-story steel and cement block structure, which housed one of the largest bowling alleys, the 300 Lounge ,Bar, a restau- were com- pletely gutted. f About 55 firemen from Waterford Township and Pontiac fought the building, he said. Pontiac Assistant Chief James R. White, who arrived with three Missing Doctors BERLIN, N.H. &—Scores of vol-| For the next five days, tempera-| steers today ploughed through deep. snew on the White Moun- ‘tains While spotters flew ovérhead in a search for two doctors miss- ing since last Saturday on a 10- mile mercy flight. x 8 jthe safety of Dr. Ralph E. Miller, They disappeared at 3:30 p.m. Saturday while flying in a single engine plane from Berlin to Leb- anon, They had gone to Berlin to treat a heart patient. temperature Saturday and Sun- day nights was about 15 degrees below sero. Guards posted on Sunday night said they saw no sign of any out- door fires in the mountainous re- gion. Authorities said it would be difficult to survive outdoors for more than 24 hours. * * * Some 40 planes and a helicopter flew over the area near Lebanon and White field. The Dartmouth Outine Club spe- cial resue squad led the ground search, The group is composed of expert skiers and includes two the river level. doctors. Authorities expressed fear for 60, an experienced pilot, and Dr. Robert E. Quinn, 32, both mem- bers of the Dartmouth Medical ‘|$chool faculty, The | city trucks and 15 men about’ 6:45 a.m., sald the fire seemed to bé centered in the middle of the building toward the front. nd smoke from. structure." in front of the blazing structure. Ape! their arrival shortly after 6 a.m, it took about 20 minutes to begin pam water: * Witnesses — Time first sign of the front center of the building. Firemen believe the blaze may have started in th> restaurant in the basement and then spread to the 24-lane bowling alley. “Once they hit those laquered and varnished alleys, the flames spread rapidly to the rear of the building,"’ observed a soot black- ened fireman, Beside the e, restaurant and bowling alley the building housed a snack bar, a barber® (Continued on’ Page 2, Col. 4) Intruders Leave Clues LONDON (UPI) — A squad of policemen arrived too late at a London store to nab some after- hours intruders, hut there were definite clues to their age group — empty ice cream containers, empty ginger pop bottles and sticky little handprints every- where. * smoke and flames at the peak of The Odds Were Too Great BRAVING FLAMES — Closeup photo shows fire. This stalwart pair fought how firemen pitted ‘themselves against deadly © building to play their hose on the Hen Bowl blaze. e Bowling Alley, Lounge 4-Other Concerns Gut Snow Welcome! Close to Blaze “The roof had collapsed in front blaze. Township firefighters were ham- pered by a frozen hydrant directly fire came from the 300 Lounge in h x & &. Houses Get as Downfall Puts: ‘Out Falling Sparks: " For the umteenth time thi ‘win } ter, most people were complaining | about the weather this morning. | But for some folks in’ Waterford blaze in vain. rm — mAs GATIR Meow wes “ vi .* * | Anx! pear ha By the time we arrived the = ae used Bowl tire od the d gotten tao big a start on us, black, billowing watched ‘ said Waterford Township Fire) up trom this ‘fre, Chief Edward Smith. “It had| sending a shower of angry sparks spread throughout the front of the} over the But fresh snow blanketing ¢ gave them protection, The ted flaired out harmlessly. “The snow came at just the right time, as far as“ we're concerned,” said Mrs, Andrew Peekie, 1130 La neighborhood that Mrs. Peekie first thought it was fog. It settled so im the hom of ivan EK. a Wore, 1189 LaSale, in his own house, The Vern Crake family, 1129 Salle, was awakened children pounded on admittance, « i raging in their direction a half- block away, and Mrs, Glenn Auten, 1146 W. Hu. Firemen didnt know caused the fire, but said it wasn’t due to sparks. "The Auten’s are in p pipe on vacation, neighbors . Business Booms. for Merchants on |'Hatchet Days’ Local merchants today reported a large increase in Saturday busi- ness as droves of customers turned out to take advantage of their second annual “Hatchet . Days’. . sales. Sponsored by the Downtown Merchants Assn., the sales are the merchants’ way of paying. tribute to Washington's birthday. Assistant manager of —— Waite's Department Store re- ported its sales at a high for this year and crowds were waiting in front of WKC, Inc., before it opened, Warchie Bastiat: owner of Bar- nett’s Clothes Shop, reported his store had one of its “biggest Sat- chance to from Washtenaw County to show for his etforts. Winners for this first of. two xk * * Board of Governors feel- ing ‘Oakland County had little two local sons on the six-member board. So*Radom <> singled out ag having the best However, after a parliamentary mnjoatp was straightened out and Radom, have had | trict of 2617 Cove Lane,might) had another 119 votes had not the chairman of the 7th Dis- reported the wrong tally of his delegation. A hurried huddle | later ees not a single vote for, * * * There: wil) be two counfy names on the April 6 ballot. They will be! - Republican nominees for two, Su- preme Court justice posts, William ' H. Baldwin, of Bloomfield Town- * oy Court commissioner from Fern- dale. bents Justices George Edwards and John D. Voelker, both re- nominated without opposition Sat-| urday. Former Birmingham resident and now U.S. Senator Philip A. Hart nominated Edwards, whose name has been mentioned in sothe circles as a possible suc- cessor to Gov, Williams, of .writing a book on criminal — “It won't compete with John’s tor the best-seller list’’ — said in accepting the nomina- tion, “I will continue to hold ju- dicial office with complete dedica- tion to that task alone.” * * * ination alluded to Voelker's ‘‘Ana- tomy of a Murder’ novel being) x & * Oakland, State Democrats Pick Slate for April Vote Oakland County and other state | publican choices in the April 6: Démocrats Saturday picked this, slate of nominees to oppose Re- election: | Supreme Court nominees — In-| - Pontiac Division Tonight Honors Top Salesmen Pontiac Motor Division will pay special tribute to members of the Pontiac Master Salesmen's Guild at a banquet tomorrow at Wind- Casino. ‘s Elmwood which 61 Guild members in thé i.e salesmen for 1958 there Weather H its “aeing # the * sou central part of the ® therly winds fanned air into most of the east- the country, cold strong winds also were posted for Midwest section’. lcumbent Justices George Edwards | | and John D, Voelker. *. * * Superintendent of Public Instruc-| tion — Incumbent Lynn M. Bart- ‘\ lett. State Board of Education — _ Mrs. Cornelia A. Robinson, | year-old Kalamazoo civic eae. | State Board of Agriculture (gov- erns Michigan State University)—| Warren M. Huff, 49, Plymouth area) farmer, former Kaiser-Fraiser ex- ecutive, and one-time protege of the late Gov. Frank Murphy; Bari J. Bjornseth, 55, of Perry, an in- dustrial chemist for E. I, Du Pont de Nemours and ‘Co., and former school teacher and administrator. : x * *& University of Michigan regents — Ellis A. Wunsch, 40, Traverse City school teacher and adminis- trator; and William K, MclInally 53, board chairman of the Nationa) Bank of Jackson. Wayne State University Board of Gevernors — Dr, DeWitt T. Burton, 66, Negro surgéon from Detroit; and Clair White, 43, Bay City Junior College instructor | *| (two-year terms), troit, a vice president of the United Auto Workers Union; and Dr. Mi- chael Ference Jr., born, director of Ford Motor Go's. scientific laboratory (four-year terms). Melvin E. Bleich, 38, Detroit advertising executive pnd incum- bent on the present Wayne ap- ‘pointive board; McKee, 33, Grand Rapids attorney and mother of two terms). British-Soviet Talks Get Down to Issues ‘ ‘Today in Pe in Pe ' sets 7 ot 6:34 p.m ‘ +5 y at es nm c sete Tuesday at 7:10 a.m. ceding § a.m. At Bhag = Wind velocity 14 m.p.h west |sador’s (Continued From Page One) lunch around a long, ornate ta- ble in the dacha’s big dining room. y Khrusichey sat on one side, flanked by Reilly and the ambas- wife, Mrs, Khrushchev sat opposite him with Macmillan on one side man Tes Lioyd = the other. When lunch was over, Khrush- chey proposed a champagne toast to the British royal family. Mac- millan responded with a toast for ailing Soviet President Klimenti E. Voroshilov. The Soviet newspapers gave | --- sends. wae ‘A ae wens 4 considerable space to Macmil- Oem... Dpeamls 6. le lan’s visit, They carried the full text of his speech at a Kremlin | dinner Saturday night in which Some observers noted that it was the first time in years that the Soviet picture of “the aggressive West"’-had been contradicted so ef- ‘5 fectively in papers reaching mil- lions. of Russians, iship, and Maurice F. Cole, Circuit, "They will be up against incum-| Justice Edwards, in the process, 47, of Dear- and Mrs, Jean (six-year to| | Movement in the front seat: elite hwarted eked’ Slate: : “ton the best-seller list for 56 weeks|- as a qualification, Reve to this, the majority: of| ~ Oakland delegates were scurrying) — about the convention floor \to stir up votes for Radom had been overwhelmingly endorsed jas 1960 presidential timber.» They were no different from the rest of the delegations who hardly gave a spatiering of ap- plause when this plank of the party’s 1969 platform was read, Delegates, 1,605 in number, were | ‘too busy rallying support for their favored candidates to pay mtich attention to a batch of resolutions. Few, if any, delegates realized what resolutions they had endorsed. * x * But they were sure where the ‘party stood on the question of Wil- \liams’ proposed state income tax, ‘They endorsed the plan with no jdiscussion from the floor. When told by a reporter of Wil- Hams’ Richardson, Oakland County Democratic Committee— chair. | man, remarked, “It will go over | big with Oakland Democrats, but...” sShys away from the title of Mr. ination. This was the first actual backing igiven Williams by the party for the Atseconder to Voelker’s re-nom- presidency, although his name has |been mentioned numerous times. Former Waterford Township res- ident Billie S. Farnum, deputy to Secretary of State James M. Hare, said support &f Williams for the president had come about as coun- ties flooded the resolutions com- mittee with similiar endorsements. Oakland Democrats were the ex- ception. — However, the local Democrats had the jump on the rest.of the | state when they favored Williams for the presidency in a resolu- tion adopted last August. Interest among the Oakland dele- gation appeared to dwindle after | adorn’ s setback. During the nom- inations there were but a scatter- ing of about 50 delegates still in \their sent Some ~j a an Yearly exit, weary from the four-hour-long cau- cus they had at the Pantlind Hotel Friday night. Farnum led the cau- )Cus. Major interest during this cau- cus was the election of Mrs, Robert (Harflett) Phillips, a Huntington Woods housewife and supervisor, John Archambault, of Madison Heights, Everett C. Spurlock, of 146 Franklin Blvd., and Mrs. Louis H. Golden, of 2025 N. Lake Angelus Rd., Wa- terford Township, to represent the county on the 72-member State Central Committee, Mrs. Phillips is the only incumbent. Another setback for the Oakland Democrats developed when. the resolutions committee refused a suggestion from county delegate- at-large, Mrs. Irene E. Murphy, | University of Michigan regent from | Birmingham, to have the party Leonard Woodcock, 48, of De-|Support another constitutional re- vision, Mrs. Murphy’s plan, favored by| the local Democrats at their coun- Representatives, split 55-55. bd * ® have selected three 34 senatorial districts. ate. by the committee her proposal of- fered ‘‘nothing new” party’s platform. . A motorist should never be distracted while driving. Children in the front seat can prove extremely bother- some to the driver, and sofe- a seats are oe youngsters to make sure they do not interfere with [the driver's concentration. - Common sense dictates ‘Eihet youtig children should” net be allowed freedom of - white the car is in motion, points out the Chicago Motor Club. At no time should a child be permitted within easy reach of the cor'sdriv- | Ing'mechonisms. iwere unaware that Gov. Willjams , rubber-stamped endorsement, Carlos G. . Willis M, Brewer, who modestly Democrat in the county, pledged his support. should the six-term Michigan governor go for the nom- ty convention in Pontiac, called for an initiative petition action for a constitutional convention based on party strength in the House of Michigan Democrats opposed a similar recommendation last fall, which voters later Killed at the polls in November, which would convention delegates from each of the state’s Democrats said they would have given Republicans an unfair ma- jority in the convention since they have a 22-12 margin in the Sen- Mrs. Murphy said she was told and was therefore rejected as part of the from. seven Oakland County second floor of the home of Mr, C. Edwards Jr, at 2470 Baldwin ‘a blaze Saturday morning which destroyed the OXFORD AREA HOME BURNS — Firemen * ts,battled ‘north of town. and Mrs. Jobn Rd., four miles _— close to $15,000, Pontiac Press Photos Cause of the fire, discovered by a passing motorist, wag still unknown. Damage to the two-story frame home was estimated at Early Morning Fire Razes $700,000 Huron Bowl (Continued From Page One) shop, bowling supply shop, and the Quality Printers. Traffic was blocked off at Tele- graph road and Voorheis road, The west: wall of. the structure crumbled, while other walls of the exterior were buckled by the in- tense heat but remained standing. * * * Every window in the building was broken out. Twisted steel gir- ders around which rubble was piled high on the interior attested to the heat of the blaze, Fireman were also hampered by several barrels of varnish and la- quer, stored at the rear of the bowling alley, which ignited. Dominic Mazza and Joseph Bonfiglio, owners of the buiid- ing, estimated its value at §700,- 000 including the contents and equipment, Automatic pin setters in the bowling alley were valued at $300,000. ‘We only have $250,000 insurance Car Accidents Claim | Lives of 3 in Area (Continued From Page One) a _ driveway west of El Grove jad in Elba Township £ 2 The other area man killed in an actidént near Lapeer was 43- year-old Alvin R. Johnson of the Barrett Hotel, Lapeer. Six other persons were hurt in the two- caf collision at M24 and Mayfield road in Mayfield Township at 5:17 p.m, Sunday. Johnson was a passenger in a car driven by Harold D, Noonan, 48, 448 N. Court St., Lapeer, Noon- an escaped injury in the mishap. Driver of the other car was Lee Stéliker, 34, of Sandusky, who suf- fered chest injuries. es | His wife Perrie, 32, had leg in- | juriés, cuts and briises. One ‘son, |Paul, 8, suffered facial cuts and bruises, and another son, David, 4, also was slightly injured. Stoliker was. reported in fair comiition today at Lapeer County General Hospital where his wife and sons were treated and re- , leased. Othet passengers in the Stoliker car were his father Cyrus, 58, who was taken to Lapeer County Gen- eral Hospital with head injuries, and his mother Myrtle, 54, who had facial lacerations and an injured left leg, ” Sheriff's deputies said the Stoli- ker car hit Noonan's broadside at the intersection. Cause of the ac- cident has not been determined, ‘police said. * * * Mrs. French, of 18 Church St. in Ortonville, was a passenger in the car driven by her husband Jo- iseph, who was critically injured in the accident. The third member of the family, daughter Sandra, 4, was also in ¢ritical condition in Flint's St. Jo- seph Hospital... Witnesses told Flint State Po- lice that French’s car came over the crest of a hill and that he at- tempted to stop when he saw a ear turning ahead of him. ’ His car skidded into the opposite! lane and was hit broadside by an approaching vehicle. * * Driver of the other car was Mrs.! Joe F. Williams, 46, of Davison, who was also taken to St. Joseph's Hospital, Flint, with a bruised jon the building,” said Bonfiglio, * * * “There's nothing left of it,” he a quietly. ‘We've lost $500,000 |just like that.” He and Joe Puertas, who leased ithe bar, were the last to leave .the structure. ‘We closed up the ce and teft at aboat $ a.m. hey morn- ing, > sald “Everything was all right then. There was no sign of fire.” Firemen were not sure who turned in the first alarm. Ivan Herr of 1125 LaSalle St., di- rectly behind the building, reported the fire at about 6 a.m. and said the operator told him the alarm already had been turned in. Mrs. Caroling Gormon, owner of the Personality Beauty Shop, directly across the street at 1123 W. Huron, sald she heard some- one banging on her door at 6 a.m. “A man was standing there and fire across the street and I'd bet- ter call the fire department. “I looked out and could see alley,’ she said. * * * No firemen were reported hurt One man suffered a slight cut or his chin when struck by flhing glass, but no one was overcome by smoke. | Repairmen {fom Consumers Power Company worked in knee- deep mud to reach a gas line in order to cut off the flow of gas into the burning building. x « & One brave worker climbed a tels pole and remained there admist thick, choking black smoke to repair power lines which had snapped. _ Firefighters finally brought the blaze under control at about 8 a.m. but weré at the scene throughout the morning extin- guishing many small fires in dif- ferent parts of the gutted struc- ture, Fire inspectors. will search the rubble this afternoon to find if they can what caused the blaze. No walls were left standing within the building. * * The bowling alley was considered one of the finest in southeastern Michigan, It was the scene two weeks ago of part of the State Match Team Bowling Championships between the Stroh and Pfeiffer tearns, The alleys had also bee used for many area tournaments and chest, leg and ankle injuries. championships in recent years. . ‘or HITE Jheres a “of Black and White QDACOLOR. Sho § “INC. near you PHO Hite T0 Dea fe i shouted to me that there was a smoke and flames leaping from the door to the lounge and bowling MRS. 0, LEO BEAUDETTE Pontiac-Woman' Dies at Home | Church Activities; Member of YWCA Mrs. Oliver Leo (Virena Palmer) | Beaudette of 269 W. Huron St., first president of Pontiac General Hospital Auxiliary, and a director ness. daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. ter of Charles H. Palmer who came here in 1853. pal Church, Mrs. Beatidette had her church since girlhood. Besides her work with the hos- pital auxiliary, Mrs. Beaudette had served as a section presi- dent of the Pontiac Chapter of Needlework Guild of America, Inc., and was a life member of the YWCA, Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Thomas H. @Vilson of Clarkston; two sons, Palmer T. of Santa Yenx, Calif., and Bruce grandchildren. Funeral service will be conduct- ed at 2 p,m. Wednesday at All Saints Episcepal Church with bur- ial in White Chapel Memorial Cem- etery. will be preferred by the family. tT Bring All Your BLACK & WHITE FILMS to Simms - Faster Photo Finishing Finer Developing Service wie Pa A to 10c: Each? LIFETIME FADEPROOF. PHOTO PRINTS Enlarged Cc m every negative. pect | | | | Prominent in Hospital,’ Life of the Oakland County Historical|— 'Foundation, died at her home yes- \terday morning after a brief ill- Born in Pontiac, she was the Clarence Palmer and granddaugh- A member of All Saints Episco- been active in the Altar Guild of T. of Santa Barbara, Calif.; and 13) Memorials to All Saints Church)§ : é (The Day | in Birmingham: moe j Hlance service in Birmingham. .- O'Hara. At that time, commissioners de- cided to open the way for proper service on the basis of competi- tive bids. dios. x * * nel. . Operators will have a choice of maintaining the heavy-type, am bulance or the converted station wagon type providing they meet its present wording. * ot ; * John C. Emery Jr. for a salary ad his associate, In a survey of seven commu- nities in the immediate area, City Clerk Irene Hanley reveals that Birmingham judges have the low- est salaries of any. benefit show April 2, BIRMINGHAM —: After: consid: erable study ard -planning, City Manager L, R.’ Gare tonight will _ [present to city commissioners the specifications for ‘agsuring ambu- Several weeks ago the city was unpaid bills Birmingham Ambulance Service owned and operated here by Mike Specifications will call for prop- | erly trained personnel with two) men to answer ajl calls and fully equipped ambulances to include first-aid kits and resuscitators. It jis also specified that. all vehicles must be equipped with two-way ra- Vehicles will be subject to in- spection by the Police Department at any time, The Fire Department will be in charge of checking the proficiency of ambulance. person- cide whether or not they approve Commissioners also will consider a request from. Municipal Judge justment for his office and that of Members of the Uniformed Fire- men's Assn. are asking permission for a street sale of tickets for a Ta Present S pecifications for Ambulance Service Theater, the show is to raise funds for the association’s family wel- fare and recreation program. Six. hundred petitioners in the Kentmoor Subdivision at Adams and Square Lake roads, Bloomfield Township, have been told there is little hope that the. proposed route of Walter P. Chrysler expressway will be shifted as they are request- ing. The route which cuts acioss the southwest corner of the Charnwood Subdivision in Troy will pass just north of the Kent- moor Subdivision. Arno Hulet, township supervisor said current plans call for a large turn-around at the Square Lake and Adams roads intersection. The expressway will parallel Square Lake road to about one half mile from Opdyke road ‘where it will swing north into Pontiac Township. Walter Wood, 49, of Detroit and Geneva Miller of Ferndalé’ suffered bruises this morning when Wood lost control of his car on . |Woodward avenue near Chester- field road. The vehicle jumped a snowbank and slammed ‘against gid specifications. two trees, The victims were treat- , ed at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Commissioners il review ; , Gare's sample bid tonight to de- Pontiac and released. Mrs. Ethel M. Pollock Service for Mrs. Ethel M. Pol- lock, 69, of 587 Woodland Rd., will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow from -| Holy Name Church. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, The rosary will be. retited at 8:30 tonight in the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Mrs. Pollock, who owned and op- erated a children’s wear shop here for 25 years, died Saturday morn- jing at her home after a brief ill- ness. Shé is survived by two sons, Rob- ert and Philip both of Birmingham, Scheduled at the Birminghamia sister and a brother. SPECIAL SAVINGS E mat ae-Teke, aspici iailets 29° Buy Now—tLimit 1 on FAMOUS BRAND Drugs and Cosmetics TON E and TUESDAY ONLY -Rubber-Tip Bobby Pins nes ? For Ly : Value : Pkg. 60—Buy and Save | | Noxzema Skin Cream Reg. 49c 1 33° ‘A Hoda size of al purpose ~ ee cream. HAZEL BISHOP “Mair | Spray Reg. $1.25 55¢ Lady Esther Liquid Face Cream ee $1.00 Courtley Deodorent Body Powder .... wie 6 6 4 (= 6 ¢: 6 .« 6 0) 6 19° Reg. $1.00 39° 16 ounce = Good for BRO AL 'E B CASTILE SHAMPOO i LANOLIN PLUS aes OL | Reg. $1.00 (ete 39° \ ole a : 29¢ Nestles Super : Set Wave Set-—8-oz. eee Ce ee 98c Toni Hush E Creme ‘Deodorant eee eee Ce Ce $2.01 00 > Shempolr E Shampoo—12-ounce eee E 33c Dura Gloss Nail Polish Remover ... eee ee BARBASOL Presto tt Doct gee A | cleat smooth: sisa | : a Lather ‘@ 7 ert 59 LAR Qc. ee A IMM): Tablet ~~. diabetics Lappengsh people on diet. AC) ROTHERS and DRUGS —Main Floor ‘ > 7 . ; 7 . . THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, VEBRUARY 23, 1959 | } ad “Bob Considine Says: °° Per , rer Bury Republican Dean Hilton’s Bathtubs Have High Mortality Rate] Income Tax! nmr Rep. Daniel A, ‘Reed, was buried! EN ROUTE 36 CAIRO—Libs epiachay than Sam & gomvce ot barase:Sbesigilets sid builters of dip band? ot the Ind structured ima jworking on the: structure certainly Notes ronagy Ayden med horses at Rockingham (or ig itiment for Hilton and the 16,000/some pleasure dome along the Nile, |’ peering ae is now a Meet knew. They scattered to all points More than’ 400 persons, includ- Bowie?) we're off and running een 8 Bs his ae ordered 300 more. This time only/ building in Egypt, jof the compass, and it was not i _ ling @ congressional delegation, at- again. ea « ha. 1200 were mnt damaged Upon ar. “Topping out” normally calls tor _ a Lepanes er Dues put a DO 1 FILE? tended the ral services’ in : vote — rival." a ceremony. There are several|S°P to he war ey all were! Read these instructions and you/Adams Memorial: Unitarian »This is an expedition to inwesti- “The: Bw & A third shipment of 300 ‘somehow theories which attempt to. explain, red back to work. can determine if you have to file} Church in near: Dunkirk. gate one of the profoundest mys-/0 YY ye reached. - onggaa as Notlwhy the Egyptian workers waved| Judging from the pictuPes and an income tax return: Red had represented the 43rd teries of our time, an historic case e, over ‘the years. jeven @ ring i roi and shouted at the planes, then! a model we saw, this is the most | Every citizen of the United|district, a mainly rural area, for of Butter Fingers. Or, more plausibly, they probably| we. learn from ne Becket people|went back to work, glittering of the string of hotels (States, and every alien’ resident|40 years. He died of a heart attack Stevedores and others handling |!St hate bathing, .» » . sa ‘work on the ‘Nile Hilton con-| One is that they thought it was; Hilton is ballding around the jof the United States who is under|/ast Thursday in Washington, D.C. the plumbing that was built to | Anyway, of She-firet 400 tubs jfinued through the air raids that!jqst part of the ceremony, ar| World. ° . 65 years of age and who had gross : into the newly openéd Nile | ordered (from-a firm tn Italy) |were a part of the Israeli-French-/ranged for by the crazy Americans] yet it was built largely by hand,|!ncome of $600 or more. must file] Japanese scientists have made a fittton and broke or | 300 were broken by the time they [British attempt to take the -Suez/who were in charge of the building sometimes in a manner not too|® tax return. specialty of cross-breeding. Japan's chipped 500 bathtubs. Five hun- | reached Cairo... Most ef them Canal away from Nasser. operation, much unlike the building of the x * * goldfish were produced by mating dred! weré sald to have been dropped The worst of the strafing and | A more logical conclusion, how-|/Pyramids visible from its upper If you are 65 or over on Dec, 31,|different species of Japanese carp For all we know this may have ‘front splintering heights by seal | light-bombing attacks came just 7€Ver, is that the poor slobs just|floors and restaurants, you must file an income tax re-|With those introduced from China been a subtle counterattack on the| *oremen in Naples, }.as the building was being “topped {didn't know what was going on. | Excavation of the site was ac-|turn if your gross income was|more than 1,500 years ago. entire institution of the bathtub, . So-o-p, the firm of Welton Becket)’ 9 out,” which is the Loe into The Europeans and Americans complished by thousands of gowned er or more during the taxable) | | Bulletins, © ae Egyptian laborers carrying earth t SHOP os i _ ‘in buckets and other containers.| The fact that you are under 21 LEAN PORK ’ GRADE NO. 1 Cement was carried in arms from| does not exempt you trom filing. TONIGHT .- . we to story. an income tax return if your | and A village of 2,500 persons was) gross income was $600 er more. | jformed to weave the fabrics for the If you had less than $600 of! aerial . 1 |hotel, which includes what may be ; the most luxurious carpeting ever one ee and income tax was jused in a public building, eld from your wages, you | Another village of 3,500 was set) ust file a tax return to get the up to make the fukniture the de-|MOn¢Y net ‘ ors ordered especially built f . oe ee ln souls ahegl he Sling te 4 quirement, call the Internal Rev. These two thriving little places cine’ Garvice. will be retained, and sell their ee a ' ; resultant products elsewhere in . mae - Egypt and through the Arab * 4 1% BLADE CUT FRESH DRESSED TENDER BEEF ff wor. See ver cone The Nile Hilton is the fourth on'Hare Urges Motorists P | i ROUND BEEF RIB STEAKS ORK CHOPS | Pan-Redi Fryers G fell ot pereeegleea| etiey e eae PUD OZLEY Sa 4 ‘which has a Liberty Bell crack in/State James M. Hare has api} - a ae a 9° ‘ * ¢ - 3 ¢ Lb. ¢ it, from an earthquake a year or|pealed to every motorist in Michl- : or ae 84 so ago; the Queen Elizabeth in osha herlgrs aves = fi er eee ~ \Montreal and the Berlin Hilton, a/to e cl if it still is valid. ek 1s x ae tes Tend Sliced “WV ahs ||U[U!}€|!|!COTttS:t*S remarkable reminder that the West; ‘‘We estimate that about one out ue oa ee. pe encer ice , THE BEA + ALB Mure ee ‘plans to stay in Berlin. of every five drivers is blissfully/} » PORK , Good Lb ; C On this trip, the chartered TWA/and epmertalet, Sib telepind a ry 4 ; Cc \Jetstream scheduled a stop at Ath-|on an expired license,'’ Hare said.|| & “ : REMU S = ens, so that Hilton could lay the ie ' LIVER lb. BUTTER Wed. : cornerstone of the coming Athens} The eight jet engines of the B32] ) seece WITH MEAT PURCHASE Hilton, American ingenuity's an-jcan develop a “thrust” of nearly} 0° ~~ swer to the Acropolis. 100,000 pounds. IST BEAUTII ug lula -hoop-wide doors and head room aplen|y | woe a, % Be 4 oo pom a % ee : “uae A i Youll love the full six- passenger comfort | in the cars i : | 0) holto m Ott oller BUILT FOR PEOPLEL.” = BUILT FOR SAVINGS! .... Just one standard was used by Ford in designing its Sayings start the moment you buy a Ford. A price tag 1959 car—people! First, Ford created bepiitiful Thun- comparison with major conipetitive cars will prove it! derbird styling. that appeals to more people. Then —_And then you go right on saving, With Ford’s standard they made the door openings wider, so it's easierto Six or Thunderbird V-8 engines that thrive on regular get in and out. Next they made sare that six big people gas, you save a dollar each tankful. Ford's Full-Flow —not just four or five~could stretch out-on seats that il Filter means oil changes only each 4000 miles. are padded their full width. Result? More room for Ford's standard new aluminized mufflers last twice as everybody's legs, elbows, hips and bey «-etnore solid long as the ordinary kind. And new Diamond Lustre comfort than ever before. Finish never needs waxing! Floral Pinwheel Print Spans the seasons—spares the iron in wrinkle-shedding nylon jersey | 12.98 134 Meet one of the most delightful dresses you can own. | Soft to the touch... pleasing to the eye... flatter- © ing to the figure. . Two miniature pockets decorate the blouse . . . two full side skirt pockets serve a - | practical purpose. At home-or on, the go, you ‘Ih find ‘ it offers unlimited wear, reciiitiws minimum care. i. Washes easily, drips dry, sheds =e needs little or no ironing! xs KEEP YOUR FORD ALL FORD WITH GENUINE FORD PARTS The Ford Custom 300 Fordor is the : - eet buy of thé year. Combines beautiful Blue Green Lilee. ‘oral proportions with beautiful savings. “Sizes. 10-26, ee Gaal t Phone FE 425i _ Charge Yours \ ~» THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1959 x s Ais ts MAR BA tic, ' Kennedy Confident ‘lof Labor Bills’ OK 3 “i Rocket « on Back Rain Queen, Mod jaji Hl Dies um “Most of what he said is classified, but ng amy en ona special clothing protects | the Army did disclose a few things. Vidlen ob Veg: Si Rarfiey Sas kk oF The space-age soldier probably will teav- el in an airjeep, a saucer-like vehicle which can move in any direction or hover motionless in one place, Gen Johnson said, When he has time, he will eat a tasty meal of irradiated food which he will ‘ in a small flat pack similar to to- * : ¢ supergun with 150 vanind shee leaders, is needed because the! 10 these forests, tod are the re- ‘ day's frozen f AFL-CIO “ t a i ; é weapon of expulsion”! sing of past rain queens, buried A as He will carry a tiny radio with an effec- haid failed ‘to solve the corruption upright with heads above A tive range of well over 1,000 yards, The problem. pn _ their ‘ ‘This isn’t ‘we product of & science fiction “radio will be contained in a helmet ‘which * ~ *£ & ' writer. It comes from the Army's chief of will protect him against chemical, biolog- | Kennedy said that, like the ad-| ‘The rain queens in former times ~ combat developments, 4 f :. 2 |. And these things will begin to take shape * gbout 1970, Maj ical and radiological attack. | x *« * A small pencil-shaped detonator which | of Paul Bunyan being erected to mark 125th an- niversary of Bangor, Maine. SCALED TO SIZE — Two youngsters almost disappear into big boots, first section of. statue ‘can quickly blast foxholes will be standard equipment. ministration, he favored fontrols grank from a poison cup when on “blackmail picketing’’ and sec- | they became too old to rule. But ondary boycotts but felt such Modjaji abolished this rite after changes should be made in a Taft- she became a.Christian, Reports Hartley amendment bill to follow|from ber forest domain said she the union reform measure. died peacefully of old age. a =e anne taal a thd ee ee ee Monday Night and Tuesday Downtownk: 3 dy on | 6) Siecind “PARK FREE DOWNTOWN Drive your car into any of the convenient downtown parking lots. Patronize your favorite store identified by the Park and Shop emblem shown in this ad. Free parking with minimum purchase of *2.00 or more! fg Look for This PARK and Lee, | ART 2 L ! : 1] 7 CD SHOP Seal at Your Favorite uC SHg HUR % a Store Downtown! WET] “FASHION FEATURE! aa eee souacy aioe GIRLS’ BETTER DRESSES 166 2.66 3 to 6x 7 to 12 Imported Cashmere COATS Values to 99.00 Pure, luxurious cashmere in elegantly styled coats at Arthur's special two-day price! Softly styled with the added feature of season + to sseagon, milium linings. Black, : grey, nude, blue) bamboo, in'sites 8 to 18 and petite sizes 6 to 16. $89 Coats Second Floor Here is special Arthur value .. . our = Cashmeres specially priced for New For Easter! Boys’ : Fashions - Low Priced USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN! Crease and Spot Resistant | BOYS SUITS Get Ready for Spring and Easter $ Up To $ Sizes Wash ’n wear! Little or no ironing! Dan Rivers, 6-12 Stevens, other top fabrics in darling styles. Spring. dined Jocket Two-Pair designs and colors. Hurry to Downtown Penney’s Trousers A budget buy! Just $12.00 for this suit that’s cleverly designed. A trim, for these. flannel-finished rayon jacket, fully ined two pairs of slacks, one solid-tone —one tweed—textured, and a vest... all four pieces — $12.00, $8. KRESGE’S Downtown Store Only DEN NE Y = oe ee — 17-19 SOUTH SAGINAW “GUARANTEED HOTEL TYPE Innerspring Mattress } Berer-rer ... It’s Cold Outside! But You‘re Snug and Warm Under Your Nylon Bound RAYON and ORLON “ANDES” BLANKET oe ‘5h : Washable . . OUR FINAL OFFER! 13 TONIGHT AND TUESDAY ONLY! oe # wz 2 wn I ° £3 oO > = (7) = 3 a @ = ea < @e ae, = | a @ —> mf GOTHAM 18 QUART : ' : ; | . preshrunk, ~ @ Turquoise : mothproof and colorfast eG Urility Basket | MODER N AGE Ak rome ina eae quality blanket. @ Pink @ Gold Waite’s .. . Fourth Floor _WAITTES i FURNITURE 15 East Pike St. — %4 Block Off Saginaw nT eat pret Fe we Reg. Cc ed $2.49 = OT & ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2 23, 1950 _ AMERICAN MARIETTA ~ LIQUID GRANITE VARNISH $ y] 5 SATIN FINISH $m 45 oot oh $ Reg. $7.45 gel THE NAME TELLS THE STORY: © Crystol Clear © Hard As a Rock © Withstands Scuffing © Long Wearing ® Brush or Spray ® Tack Free 2 Hours SAVE DOLLARS ON SPRING REFINISHING | OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150 Dropleaf “Table and Upholstered Chairs COMPLETE AT %$Bq95 Top quality wood grain, bronzetone, marproof top, dropleaf table. Two upholstered chairs with box seats. SAVE $20 THIS WK. AT METRO FURNITURE EASY TO PAY TERMS NO FINANCE CO. METRO Furniture Co. New Address: 88 South Saginaw at Auburn Open Friday and Monday ‘til 9 P. M. FE 2-0179 | oo SSRIS SMEARS ee aeran tiene GRAS Have You Tried This? Le const anaes et | Teenage Cook ‘Chéases Red Devils Food ‘Cake By JANET ODELL ‘Pontiac Press Home Editor Toady'’s cook is a seventeen “© year old senior at St. Fred- © erick High School. Dianne “© Needle is the school's winner - of the Betty Crocker Home- making Contest. We called her for her favorite recipe. * * * Dianne is interested in swim- ming and other sports. She has not decided what her fu- ture plans are but is consider- i ing practical nursing. PS SCRE SORES SOR Praise Gets Results, 3 gpg sii RED DEVILS FOOD CAKE By Dianne Needle 194 cups sifted cake flour 1% cups sugar 1% teaspoons soda 1 teaspoon salt ‘4 cup cocoa \y cup shortening 1 cup milk 2 eggs § 1 teaspoon vanilla S Sift dry ingredients. Add = shortening and 2/3 cup milk, © Beat 2 minutes. Add 1/3 cup © milk, eggs and vanilla. Beat another 2 minutes. Pour into two 8-inch greased layer pans. Bake 35 to 40 min- utes at 350 degrees. Frost and fill as desired. Criticism Doesn't By RUTH MILLETT Is the average wife too critical of her husband? A male reader claims that if men went around talking about their wives’ faults as much as women do about their husbands’ | shortcomings the men would be eonsidered cads. * * * There’s at least some truth in! what he says. Even a columnist} gets far more letters from wives complaining about their husbands than praising them. Maybe it would be a good idea for every wife to make a list now and then under the head. ing “What I like best about my husband.”” Never mind what he does wrong, What does he do right? Whether the list is long or short, just acknowledging his good quali- ties ought to start a wife thinking) along the right lines. | * * * While a wife is thinking about} what's right with her husband she) isn't brooding about the ways in which she would like to change him. And if she thinks about his good qualities now and then, she might even be tempted to let him know that she appreciates them. < Inever do . prise him with an occasional sen- The bra that does more for you because... under cup elastic stitching ‘ formfit Expert corsetieres to advise and help you to a proper fit. The use of elastic thréad fo stitch the undercup section of this new Rave bra means the cup actually “gives” to give perfect fit. In addition, this elastic stitching permits the front band fo stay firmly anchored, always comfort- able. When you examine this bra, pull the cup section away from the band and see the elastic stitching in action. Rave No. 589 in machine washable white cotton broadcloth. 32A to 38C. All these other important features, too... @ Elastic around the cup for snug fit! © Circle-stitched cups for uplift and shaping! © Extra low-cut back for fashion and firm anchorage! @ Extra low-cut underarm for freedom of movement! © All elastic back for breathing, moving comfort! Charge Accounts Invited ' Bobette Corset Shop 14 North Seginow Street FE. 2-6921. praise instead of to criticize, 'a far-from-perfect husband might'r i SPI wee my nm PRICE RANGE Waga 7 TE WAS HERS AND DRYERS Then instead of telling him “I wish you wouldn't . . .’ she might sur- tence beginning, ‘‘You're so good about...” or ‘I’m glad you...” * * * And once his wife begins to fe or “You} try a little harder to please his wife and even to comment on the things she does well, instead of the things she neglects to do. Sylvan Shores ‘Club Meets Mrs. Fran Salents showed films on alcoholism, sponsored by the Alcoholism Information Center at the meeting of Sylvan Shores Women's Club. The meeting was} jheld Wednesday evening at the Woodbine drive home of Mrs, Clare Graham. Cohostesses were Mrs. John Paddock, Mrs. Gordon Hayter, Mrs. Russell Grover and Mrs. Ronel White. Plans were made for a money making project. At the next meet- ing, members will sew cancer pads | for the American Cancer Society. All Saints Guild 6 Plans March Dinner Seventeen members of Guild 6 of All Saints Episcopal Church met Thursday evening in Stevens Hall. Hostesses were Mrs. Arnold Thingstad and Mrs. W. L. Thomas, Mrs. Harry Griffith gave a report on the annual diocesan convention, held in Detroit. Members also discussed plans for the general parish dinner in March. Mrs. William S. Igrigg also took part in the program. even narrower and deeper in the brim. Discipline Yourpelf Marathon Victors Share: Report ‘tun, than you may have had for “self-addressed cavelope with some time. -thon booklets. If you missed Marathon and would like to join, This is the last call for Mara- your request for one. Address Josephine Lowman al care of this newspaper. as Tomorrow: “ “Dog Collar’ Neck- wear Coming Up for Spring.” CHICAGO—New spring hats for| men are lower in the crown and| individual. Next summer I will send 10 cents and a stamped, eee and looking trim while they're at it because they've been on the Eight- ~~ Week Marathon. There still is time if you'd like one “1h: 2 Furniture Makers of the 10-cent booklets. William Wrigh and Upholsterers i By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN | Marathon winners, not using || 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558 — Dp att This is the eighth week since| ames, More women are exercising So soe this | WING SOFA eee is the was that Wright Order Now CUSTOM BUILDS or FOR Pre-Easter ONLY 169 Delivery WING CHAIR, only ........ Choice of 2 or 3 cushion style! Choice of foam-rubber or type cushions! Choice of man. materials and workmanship , All Workmanship Guaranteed § Years! nroughout, beautiful cover fabrics! ane publishing my 8-Week Self-Im-| provement Marathon in January. ‘up and down on a see-saw but it's Thousands and thousands of you| ino lark when at mid-life you are lhave joined to see how much you ‘on the lose weight — gain weight | | y \can improve your appearance dur- 'see- -saw. So, why not remember | jing eight weeks. I already am re- ithe things you learned during | ceiving letters from some of you! ‘your eight weeks of diet and exer- telling me the happy news! \eiegs | Many of you have a few more | iweeks to go before YOUR er Surely you with a few luscious! weeks is over because you had to tidbits ONCE IN A WHILE — but lee said saat he arate nescreie ithink of Marathon as a way of eee avolde life to a certain extent. of the size of the mail. give yourset| me! While it is not obligatory to| Eat more of the health building write to me telling me how you foods and less of the calorie-, got along, I would love to hear|packed devitalized items. from you. .When I taught classes | tinue to discipline yourself in reg- I could see the results with my ular care of your skin, hair and own eyes and it was so exciting. ‘posture. Don't lose the wonderful | BUT, you are so far away from by-products which exercise and here! You seem very real to me, |correct weight have brought you; | though. more energy and less fatigue, like te more self-confidence and more izest for life and people and ac- complishments and clothes and I especially would know how the change in your appearance is affecting your life and personality and your feeling of personal identity as an Mrs. James Hosts Sylvan Garden Club _pebteh a oited of the letters from “4 Me Mrs. Harold K. James of Syl- van Village was hostess at her home to the Sylvan lake Branch of Woman's National Farm and Garden Association Thursday. Co-hostesses for the day were Mrs. G. R.. Jarvis, Mrs. Earle D. Knapp and Mrs. H, J. Green, Mrs. Walter Lange, a native of Estonia, gave a talk on her It may be fun as a child to ol Please do share the fun with MORE HEALTH FOODS Con- | HOLLYWOOD 782 North Saginaw Street Styled Set ALL PERMANENTS ONE PRICE Ps hs COMPLETE WITH CUT and SET NONE HIGHER You Get All This: Corefree Haircut Permanent by an Experi- enced, Licensed Operator Our Famous Guarantee: A Complete Wave for $3.75 .. . None Higher BEAUTY SHOP = 2. country and custome Over Basley’s FE 8-3560 Guests were Mrs. Proctor G. Air Conditioned Coates and Mrs. John Beaudin. C0 NTROL THOSE CURY ES | AT HOUSE OF VENUS EXPANSION WE ARE OPENING ELEVEN NEW BY INDEPENDENT SPECIAL LOCATIONS IN MICHIGAN AND NEED 100 Research Organizations FIRST 8 ONLY NEW CHARTER MEMBERS © Best Features | _——, e Best Performance $ 00° xeap the right weight in the right places through ‘248. in Washabili: guaranteed spot reducing ... slenderizing . ... or st- 0 Best inW ty monet pervised weight gaining programs of House of ae "isi d for your convenience, —— ° » Individual! Venus. Visits arrange —— —,| Less Big een See eS ‘ j=. = = 6 Sw ernest | Trade-in The Famous HOUSE OF VENUS Guaran ‘3 MONTHS FREE | .nmsur Allowances If we fall to get the following results GooD in 60 days: ' COAST TO 1 OVERWEIGHT: UNDERWEIGHT , COAST ; Lose 15 Pounds — ada @ cho an ' oO , three inches off Hips _4 boades Paaan and , and Waist — take repropertion Body x, o H ' one inch off Ankles. measurements. ' Sus ‘ == 2 ele ote ne mr ey Some nee gure a “ - N Py N o own Ni (fal eeimen. ° D 0 For Free wy, Ad Figure Jom: i Analysis, Call FE 4-9582-3 $ 2. week f ENJOY TOP QUALITY PERFORMANCE ; : | + House of Venus , Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 7 a 3 ] 121 Ns Saginaw St.’ Hania Jagt, FE 5-6189 || Miracle Mile Shopping Center, $. Telegraph at { : \ ' : . \ i Loge » oe LC fi NV \ SATIN FINISH 45 Reg. $7.45 gel. $ © Crystal Clear ® Hard As a Rock © Withstands Scuffing © Long Wearing ® Brush or Sproy ® Tack Free 2 Hours SAVE DOLLARS ON SPRING REFINISHING | OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT 436 Orchard Leke Ave. FE 5-6150 Have You Tried se 4 Discipline Yourself By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor Toady’s cook is a seventeen year old senior at St. Fred- erick: High School, Dianne Needle is the school’s winner _ of the Betty Crocker Home- | making Contest. We called her for her favorite recipe. * * * Dianne is interested in swim- / ming and other sports. She > has not decided what her fu- _ ture plans are but is consider- — ing practical nursing. Ree ee ica: arora | | Dropleaf Table — d Upholstered Chairs COMPLETE AT SB q}95 Top quality wood grain, bronzetone, marproof Loe» i a table. Two upholstered chairs with x sea SAVE $20 THIS WK. AT METRO FURNITURE EASY TO PAY TERMS NO FINANCE CO. METRO Furniture Co. New Address: 88 South Saginaw at Auburn Open Friday and Monday ‘til 9 P. M. FE 2-0179 By RUTH MILLETT Is the average wife too critical) of her husband? A male reader claims that if men went around talking about} their wives’ faults as much as! women do about their husbands’ shortcomings the men would be eonsidered cads. x * * There's at least some truth in| what he says. Even a columnist gets far more letters from wives complaining about their husbands than praising them. Maybe it would be a good idea for every wife to make a list now and then under the head. “ing “‘What I like best about my husband,.”” Never mind what he does wrong, What does he do right? Whether the list is long or short, just acknowledging his good quali-| ties ought to_start a wife thinking along the right lines. * * * While a wife is thinking about) what's right with her husband she| isn’t brooding about the ways in which she would like to change him. | And if she thinks about his good qualities now and then, she might even be tempted to let him know that she appreciates them, The bra that does more for you because... under ¢ elastic stitching . accent : : OWVAC i ' ¥C Cup tai i a acetal am De Ci e ‘ formfit Expert corsetieres to advise and ‘help you to a proper fit. The use of elastic thread to stitch the undercup section of this new Rave bro means the cup actually “gives” to Be . give perfect fit. In addition, this elastic stitching permits hy Ahe front band to stay firmly anchored, always comfort- & able. When you exomine this bra, pull the cup section | away from the band and see the elastic stitching in action. Rave No, 589 in machine washable white cotton broadcloth. 32A to 38C. All these other important features, too... “© Elastic around the cup for snug fit! e ee os aren and shaping! PON Nica eds > poate Shop ~-FE-2-6921 wish you wouldn't...” inever do . prise him with an occasional sen-| Then instead of telling him ‘‘I) or “You Ae she might sur- tence beginning, ‘‘You're so good ” i about...” or “I’m ™ you... x * And once his wile begins to} Teenage Cook Chooses Red Devils Food Cake Praise Gets Results, Criticism Doesn't RED DEVILS FOOD CAKE By Dianne Needle g 1% cups sifted cake flour ye 1'% cups sugar @ 1% teaspoons soda 4 1 teaspoon salt ia 4 cup cocoa 4 % cup shortening % jae 1 teaspoon vanille a | Sift dry ingredients. Add | shortening and 2/3 cup milk. 7 Beat 2 minutes, Add 1/3 cup © milk, eggs and vanilla. Beat ~ another 2 minutes. Pour into ‘two 8-inch greased layer pans. Bake 35 to 40 min- utes at 350 degrees. Frost and fill as desired. ERE AENEID SE IGE BE CE Ei es try a little harder to please his wife and even to comment on the things she does well, instead of the things she neglects to do. Sylvan Shores Club Meets -Mrs. Fran Salents showed films on alcoholism, sponsored by the Alcoholism Information Center at the meeting of Sytvan Shores Women's Club. The meeting was’ held Wednesday evening at the Woodbine drive home of Mrs, Clare Graham. Cohostesses were Mrs. Paddock, Mrs. _ Gordon while they're at it because Week Marathon. There sti of the 10-cent booklets. By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN This is the eighth week since publishing my 8-Week Self-Im- Waee| provement Marathon in January. | Mrs. Russell Grover and Mrs,| Thousands and thousands of you) Ronel White. [have joined to see how much you Plans were made for a money can improve your appearance dur- | making project. At the next meet-|ing eight weeks. I already am re- ing, members will sew cancer pads ceiving letters from some of you for the American Cancer Society. ltelling me the happy news! weeks to go before YOUR eight | All Saints Guild 6 weeks is over because you had to March Dinner |wait for your Marathon booklet Plans gre |This could not be avoided because lof the size of the mail. Seventeen.members of Guild | 6 of All Saints Episcopal Church met Thursday evening in Stevens Hall. Hostesses were me! While it is not obligatory to) ‘write to me telling me how you! got along, I would love to hear More «women are exercising and looking trim your eight weeks of diet and exer- | Many of you have a few more jet Please do share the fun with MORE HEALTH FOODS /Marathon. Victors Share « A Meports some time. they’ve been on the Eight- ll is time if you'd like one Marathon winners, not = | names. , «this is the WING SOFA... . » « that Wright el Now CUSTOM BUILDS or FOR Pre-Easter ONLY 169 Delivery WING CHAIR, only ........ Choice of 2 or 3 cushion style! Choice of foam-rubber or = type cushions! Choice of beautiful cover fabrics! Quality materials and workmanship ughout. All Workmanship Guaranteed $ Years! William Wrigh 270 Orchard Lake Ave. and Upholsterers Serving Pontiac Over Se Years FE 4-0558 Furniture Makers It may be fun as a child to zo | up and down on a see-saw but it’s no lark when at mid-life you are lon the lose weight — gain weight | See-saw. So, why not remember | ithe things you learned during ° Surely you can give yourself more leeway with a few luscious ' \tidbits ONCE IN A WHILE — but | think of Marathon as a way of life to a certain extent. Eat more of the health building jfoods and .less of the calorie-, packed devitalized items. Con. Mrs. Arnold Thingstad and Mrs. W. L. Thomas. Mrs. Harry Griffith gave a report on the annual diocesan convention, held in Detroit. Members also discussed plans for the general parish dinner in March. Mrs. William S. Igrigg also took part in the program. from you. When I taught eeaeea| I could see the results with my) own eyes and it was so exciting. 'BUT, you are so far away from |here! You seem very real to me, | though. I especially would like to | | know how the change in your appearance is affecting your life and personality and your CHICAGO—New spring hats for| feeling of personal identity as an | , praise instead of to criticize, even|men are jower in the crown and| individual. Next summer I will a far-from-perfect husband ‘might!narrower and deeper in the brim. publish a few baal the letters frem | — W 0 fee Swig4 Fo - WASHERS AND DRYERS ee | 59...IN EVERY PRICE RANGE | | | = "248 Wayne Ca bert Your Electrical Appliance Specialist Ls 121 N. 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House of Veni FE 4-9682 FE 4.9683 Tomorrow: “‘ ‘Dog Collar’ Neck- wear Coming Up. for Spring.” People 60. 60 to 80 Wow uat wvex_7 on Negro Vote - complete information about) Macon County Policies But the real point of the hear Charges Color Line inj surface ship soon will be ready to} ‘Two reactors suffice to meet ing is to determine at whom any — counties to throw ‘away question- Start Hearings eants who were later rejected. ble to- vote, ‘ * x how won cen can apply Pa a $1000 | . A D f Tee ee Pe totces withour Of Registration Dye for injunction would be — directed. burdening your: family. Probe by Judge All you need to do is give us Macon registrars, E. P. Living- our permission. You can handle} WONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — ss — Rep, ate Sore SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) with OLD AMERICAN of KAN-|Federal charges of long standing | orefore there is no one to issue|—AFL-CIO leaders today tumed CO beat transaction by mail SAS CITY. No. obligation of any /anti-Negro voting policies in rural kind. No one will call pO a court order against. ° cal on you. | Macon County get their first court xz * * 1A. pew state law authorizes all ; nairés filled out by voter appli- AF LCI0 Hears The questionnaires are used . toa , determine if applicants are eligi- NAACP BI ast ’ : State attorneys say the last two| Asks Decisive Action < ’ ek oe. __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. (Atomic Surface Ship ‘Set Soon, Reds Say LONDON (AP)—The Soviet Un- ion says the world’s first atomic) porsepower. Unions and. Locals; to a series of new charges of ra- cial discrimination in labor un- put to sea. Moscow radio gave some de- tails of the 16,000-ton icebreaker broadcast added. FEBRUARY 23, 1959 1 WAAL OVER T. Lenin which was launched at Len. cin tre that do cut ieecae ie ni Michigan Industry ei faa The broadcast said the Lenin,*© Help Lure: Vacationers | yichigan which is completing dockside tests} LANSING ®— The: Michigan Seite P| m8 is powered by three atomic rea¢-|Tourist Council has made @ plea| forts, tors which - can develop 44,000|t0 the state's industry to help lure vacationers ee Michigan. sd - lana theee ieee ae is kept as an auxiliary unit,” the/ecutive secretary, said yesterday|650 million dollars here, he has written to a group of Michi-! said. i i M all the needs of the ship and one Robert J. Furlong, council ex-|gan. Tourists annually spend about a working wife speaks... me Tear out this ad and mail it/airing in a hearing today. But federal attorneys named today with your name, address| U.S. Dist. Judge Frank M. JohmjLivingston and Rodgers as de = + Wa Sn Det, son Jr.'s ruling may determine|fendants, contending they cannot ing. LG221A, Bele erty, ‘Mistourt. whether the Justice Departmentlegally resign, until their succes-| Herbert Hill, labor secretary of lean proceed with its suit to en-|sors have been appointed. the National Association for the o, am a a Bice gh pastinsde ou cal Advancement of Colored People, | LITTLE AD scrimination agains jers ran vingston are has filed a series of complaints| d be & a : $ pla \ BIG DEAL |:%. possession of the files ani can alleging the color line in specific | "My Gas Clothes Dryer igroe ELLIS INC. i * * ordered to keep them for the ® GARAGES Since 1945 i The heari ur is on a‘government trial, a unions and union locals. © PORUUES. ‘motion to forbid Maton County The state claims no one can be se : Pree Estimates. Posticials from destroying old vot- told what to do with the question-| What is needed ftom the AFL er registration records, which fed-|naires until new registrars are CIO now, the NAACP said, “‘is @AapDy . TIONS * £- FE 2 2671 not more ‘pious resolutions or pub- ee p eral attorneys ‘want. for evidence.|named. | 3 } Se a lic relations but rather decisive a action.” . Hill has written a series of let- } : Six reasons why - ters to AFL-CIO President George i @ sondage Meany and oher federation lead- ers urging action. _| During a weekend recess the la- bor chiefs were guests on the U.S missile-firing cruiser Boston for a cruise off Puerto Rico and at a ‘Ireception given by famed cellist Pablo Cael Miller S you more Furniture gives * Casals, a self-exile from his na- tive Spain, spoke of the Franco regime’s oppression in his home- land, The AFL-CIO council issued a. Btatement urging the Spanish people to continue their efforts to overthrow the Spanish dictator- ship. . Un inion officials indicated the fed- Mrs. Rita Doran eration was planning a mass dem- . ~ onstration of union officials in| - 170 8 3 Eg ° Av enue East Detroit ocation and ia. i avles u o offer better quality Washington this spring to urge Congress to adopt programs [q aid the unemployed, This would be a watered down version of the mass march of jobless on the cap- . ital proposed by President Walter Michigan z Reuther of the United Auto Work- ers. x * . Some union leaders said pri- vately they were refusing to help in the Democratic party's fund- raising efforts because they feel the Senate. labor-management in- vestigation is stacked against or- ganized labor. Supreme Court Probe os Begins on Trombly MOUNT CLEMENS uw — An in- vestigation ordered by the State Supreme Court geet cad handling of cases by the tomb County probate court’s juvenile division began this weekend, Meredith: Doyle, the high court's Busy women like Mrs.-Doran find they can eliminate hours of drudgery each week by usin an Automatic Gas Dryer. In fact, what coul be simp}er than tossing a load of wet wash into the Gas Dryer and turning a dial? What could be nicer than having stack of ot fluffy sweet- “Could bp mor only a short time tater? ‘It’s so convenient to dry clothes with my Gas Dryer. While my wash is being dried I can catch up on other things that have to be done. In our home, any- thing that saves me time ADD - INaYole),' 9x12 ———a a ie __ “OTE : Ace cana is needed. Our Gas Dryerisa | What could be more welcome than: clothes i The investigation was ordered time-saver I wouldn’t want dried so smoo th and {ran free that they ' $ 5 9 5 after the Macomb County Bar to do without.”’ need little or no ironing? Yee, this is a conven- Assn. and the County Board of ience no busy homemaker should be without. Supervisors questioned the way Excluding Cement ~the case§ were being handled by esetete Judge Joseph V. Trom- | y- Trombly, who hag not held court A GAS CLOTHES DRYER IS THE _ is aut since Jan. 22, igned from the SOLUTION TO WASHDAY DRUDGERY Zs bench for ‘‘médical reasons” but Ca | later withdrew his resignation. ty , . ¢ Breezeways * ;fa@ _{Boy, 11, Buried in Sand; Ask Vour Neighbor Who Uses One ) ‘fe P ’ Rec. Rooms p Dies Soon After Rescue , Zz sand collapsed on a boy playing| - Kitchens § Porches in a pit Sunday and buried him for 25 minutes, Rescuers pulled Baths Attics Pe-O- 0070-88 oe GAS DRYER dealer NO PAYMENT ‘TIL MAY him out alive but he died soon after in a hospital. The boy, Randolph L. Ford, 11, lof Washington, had been playing cowboys With a friend, Doctors said Randolph apparently died of suffocation. ‘| | FE 3.7833 For a Free Estimate PUBLISHED IN COOPERATE WITH BY CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY The Army has developed a cam- j Ji era which requires no light but Bl 92 Wo HURON ST, PONTIAC depends solely on heat radiation). yas Pe’ wee from the person or object being photographed. ‘ OPEN TONIGHT es AVINGS Worth (roing After! Thrifty Shoppers Look!.... "3 || are || are | on RCA WHIRLPOOL | sed MS 9 ea AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER | We Carry Sandran, One of the World's Most Beautiful Floor Coverings! 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SS oe : ah : a * id - bol ar! « THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1950 _ s Finally Sign Ford By United ing his actions off the field, How- , with the Yankees. He has won |the Tigers with a .319 batting av- Now that they have finally cor-| ever, the Yankees insisted only | 104. games and lost only 40 (in: jerage last season, has been of- selied thelr best eniper — Whitey that Ford make an honest effort | cluding = 14-7 mark last year), fered a raise. He thinks it isn't Ford — the New York Yankees| this year to adhere to a strict [ giving him a winning percent: | big enough. today turned their attention to the| diet, which is supposed to pre- | age of .724 — the highest career | At Bradenton, Fla., general man- ae oe ee | Cieries that have bothense tm mark in baseball history. ager John McHale of the Mil- threatened earlier with aj milseries that have bothered him | 11.1 a. in camp Thursday| Waukee Braves said he hoped to pay cut, was given a $3,000 raise) the past. when the Yankees will launch full-|®cTuire some infield help this week Ri when he signed his 1959 centract ‘The diet, prescribed by doctors| sale drills. However, he has in-|{uring a tour of other National #/ for an estimated $35,000 yesterday|at the Mayo Clinic, prohibits the| dicated he won't leave for Florida|_apik E Coach Art Van Ryzin's cagers| ptayed the leading role at the clinched a ‘Valley cochampionship American Bowling Congress tour- Oo ea tae oe ee ememall-events lead with a score that ’ their 2nd undisputed confer-|nos earmarks of on 0 ia Ice ence title in three years. Warren Lutz, who couldn't re- The Chiefs now boast a glitter-)cal hitting 1,800 in eight previous SE a eee ane ee ax |ABC_tourneys, came up mith Detroit Takes to Road wins came at the expense of other 643-692-612—1,947, This ; : ranked quintets. dumped Ed McHenry of Decatur, Five Points Away From Fourth ranked a TmaTC was | Til aay 1,888 Friday, into NHL Playoff Berth | Im ad@ition, they defeated 6th- | Yesterday's only score that re- oe ee ore Acari amy colsagr—| ern Othe ee oe Central, Highland Park ‘s was @ ngs will have ght their way 1 sel Ford. by James Poelking of Dayton, into the Stanley Cup playoffs in Royal Oak Dondero was voted Ohio. Schwartzle is from Decatur, 5 aes hostile territory if they’re to make 12th best until the Oaks took, a/ ‘a asad a el roar on eaaaln id from the Chiefs, Kappler Memorials Wirephoto traigh : ; pote pee Ler ight, Pontiac Cen-| Phila made a run for the open} MUSCLES — Parry O’Brien | And the prospect is glum, es- oe aus loss was @ 53-52 over.|a™ lead yesterday, After rolling) has plenty of muscle to put into /pecially the way the Wings played time heartbreaker in a return|**1 &”d 1,009, the Pennsylvanians) the 16-pound shot he heaved 62 /last night in losing to the Boston match with Flint Central at Fiint.|2tmbled to $22 and got second) feet 1% indhes to beat his own Bruing here 4-1. The Chiets are idle until Friday’s| "ce with 3,012. Another Philadel- world indoor record in the AAU The defeat nad phia club, Pepsi-Cola, leads with| meet in Madison Square Garden en can 1958-59 season closer at Saginaw, |, oi¢ Seturd three of its last four games and but several other schools in Oak-|_ aa thre of its last four games and land County and area will see ac- was closing in on the New York tion Tuesday night, As oe Rangers for the final playoff z me ie pan tat Pa Jones M area schedule is a return duel be- But the Rangers picked last ones ISseS ' tween Pontiac Northern and Ro- night to emerge from a seven- chester, this time on the Northern game winless streak and wallop ' - Chester early this season in the th 5-1. The two valuable points put a lona “aor.= 2 at Daytona Speedway =" games are troit. i ’ | ; Gemens St. Mary against St. h ok * - Mixup in Schedules Micheal in the ell sm, Avoa- Now the Wings must play six Eliminates Local Boy; \ ford, West Bivomfletd at Chaw. | (Special te The Pentinc Press) [exchanged leads and they were|™ (Ne nea. Seve Remies On Ue) PICK OF THE OROP — The Kansas City Ath- AP wirepee | © World Records Set son, Walled Lake at Milford and | DAYTONA BEACH, Fia.—Day-|never more than a few feet apart.) 0 i Olympia. letics started training camp for its pitching staf! Howard Reed, Tom Gorman, Bob Grim and Cranbrook at Bieomfield Hills. ies new international speedway! Pontiac automobiles took third | The Rangers finally snapped out; in West Palm Beach, Fla., yesterday and first Jack Urban. Full squads at all camps report NEW YORK —. Hayes Jones of All except the Remeo-Aveadale |had a photo finish champion in its) and fourth places. Charlie Grif- [of their lor slump in three| on hand to get the pick of pitchers gloves are _ this week. Pontiac, Mich., and Eastern Mich- event. ltd scrap are return matehes, first-major ot fith of Chattanooga, Tenn., took |years by beating Montreal at their igan College failed to compete in in the Eastern and South.|!0 agg en Poor Po ton Owens of Spartanburgh, 8.C.,:| The Canadiens boast the most 8 ships at Madison Square Garden ; ern Thumb The EML| ied Thunderbird, cli tee “tee was next in a 1968 Pontiac. awesome power play in the Na- Saturday night due to a mixup : slate sends Mt. Clemens to Birm-|., day speed carnival But six| Fireball Roberts of Daytona|tional Hockey League but the nl | ' in schedules. ingham, Royal -Oak Kimball to}, ours after the finish, the official|Beach, driving a 1959 Pontiac, took |Rangers used this maneuver to 7 The hurdle star became ineli- : Foe a ee temnua irs|tesult:was declared, unofficial. the lead as was expected after he|score three goals. gible.to take part when he failed to ‘ Almont ptr te stg Bill France, President of on away ch heavy ee oe ces by Ted = By The Associated Press never headed. Paul Benes and | faded. Dick Grock was high = the Pro Ramenn dy Selig 4 Armada, Brown City at Anchor NASCAR, said that after a hear. Roberts set a sizzling pace and! to a 8-1 Lonergan a Hope College continued its dom-| Warren Vanderhill paced Hope | scorer with 20 points for Olivet. | understanding that all competition Bay and Capac at New Haven. | ing ss to the winner end until |.n2- 40 laps his average speed/ Leats. ination of Michigan Intercollegiate| With 21 points each. Don Bo- | ‘ont state and Western Michigan|would be at night after failing to Orchard Lake ‘St. Mary tunes| photos and movies are checked, |... 143.08. He then moved to the Athletic Assn. play and Wayne! hannon led Hillsdale with 13 |..-nanged the lead nine times in|feceive an event time schedule, oo he Ops the. efficial winner would be |i: with a broken piston and after| Detroit didn’t come to life until|State turned in a big upset inj Points. the first half before the Ohio/reported to have been sent to him. a pill Detroit St, Hed.| mede known. : losing 15 laps he eventually re- the final period last night. By Presidents Athletic _ Conference Winfield Henry piled up 24 points|school forged ahead for a 46-26|' a, setting ef five world : wig Tuesday. The Eaglets finished| Lee Petty of Randleman, N.C.,|turned to the race but it was too|‘hen it was too late. They fired 18\competition in highlights of alas Wayne State won its first PAC/intermission lead. Western Mich+| records featured the big meet 7th in the Catholic League tourney a 1959. Oldsmobile, was)jate to catch up. shots at Bruin goalie Don Sim-|heavy weekend schedule on the!game’this season. The Tartars took|igan’s Ed Blair and Kent State's! po» Delaney ran the ae in ‘ by defeating All Saints, S141, injriled to have “‘peen beaten by Only $8 of the 08 starters were mons in the last stanza ahd found|Michigan small college basketball'an early lead and built it up Chuck Boikin shared scoring honors 4:02.5 and John Thomas, the 000 spectators. ° H 1 A vi led 31-23 at half time. : y a en ‘rs cee ~ «kt The race. was run at the aston-j/by Simmons with a 25-foot screen jj, 1D frich gel ogee pele “6s ° “ + . . s Eastern itinots relied to a 41-34 wwe af Paya eee on Farmington. | For the last 15 laps, the two cars |ishing average of 135.521 miles anjshot in the first period. decision over Hillsdale, Wayne halftime lead over Eastern Michi- : hour, only eight seconds slower} Larry Leach and Jerry Toppaz-|State stopped Case Tech, the PAC’s| Fordham closed out its home| _ a, in 9 battle between IIAC also-| Big Party O’Brien, the Los : than that of the record pace atizini sandwiched Boston goals|No. 1 team 72-47 Wayne is last |8¢2800 with an’ easy conquest of a . Angeles banker who holds every . Indianapolis set by Sam Hafiks injaround Delvetchio’s. Vic Stasiuklin conference standings. Detroit. It was Detroit's 11th loss|" Ten MacKenzie was high for|$hot put mark in the book, bettered | \ 7 _— ; 1957, and Guy Gendron tallied the last in 22 starts. Larry Hughes paced!p. stern Michigan with 14 igh f0rlnis own indoor record for the 16- ‘ al e a les two Bruin goals in the third period Hal Megpaaged Pee the Titans with 24 points. Ford-| "Captain Seymour Bryson col Pound ball with a 62-1% heave. : Cr awford May jot the yesnre. “ me come pater oe Intersectional | atma held a slim 35-84 eae tos ae Air becca aa sine Sede seeais 1 3 D B omer Detroit lost its 29th game of the inertial mniee 8 ta) Now neaeed Gated ntrennloatt et pa EPR Sa ES Mich /otf the 3-mile standard in 13:37 : 8 Trop DOoxIng ae matched = year's . WIAA atma| it_the_second innit (Pasi Otkves|ligha scorers| wiki? polls: = Backus shattered his own ee equalled e| In another game, Alma ~ pound weight throw . b In Ou 0 X- a CS for Painting Detroit number of defeats. routed Olivet 94.57; Kent State of - reaching 66-2%. aie & Jud 5 wey Cre Ohio stopped Western Michigan 71- " / Be ; ; ETROIT (#—Mickey wiord, 61 in a Mid-America Conference ) ) ee. 7 =“ Associated Fries | 190.00 and Boston Gefented Gm |, Saginaw welterweight, is think- Defending Skate contest; Eastern Mlinois trounced Cooper Nets $5 000 | ais Iemiain at yoo -. | Yardley played 27 minutes and a Scans het “7 one car Tas Tateniec aa: ) | l ) : : ; ley uy gloves to de ime to hang- ern [Illinois defeated Central 4 : ed sparked the hot-shooting Nats, who|ing up paintings. - Cham Dethroned Michigan 94-67 in Interstate Inter- ' on Caribbean Tour a veteran of six years in the Na- root ge id Geceicumedn ser esislvoae ie fighter ervacuael P apeirss Tech romped Rivet] BETROIT CATHOLIC TOURNAMENT, | Kent st. (Ohio) 11. West Michigan 61 tional Basketball Assn., was trad- the Pistons as did Dolph Schayes|to take an indefinite vacation from DETROIT ™ — Little Kathy Ferris Institute 95-53. St. Florian 42 (obamplonship) — Almna 94, Olivet 7 you KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — ed by the Detroit Pistons to Syra-jang Johnny Kerr for the Nats. the ring. It’s uncertain whether Sullivan, a 12-year-old lass from Detroit St. Thomas 39, Detroit st,| Fordham 93, Detroit 13 Pete Cooper, 43-year-old Lakeland cuse for the younger Ed Conlin! The Knicks remained 4% games|Crawford will retum to boxing.|Cheyboygan, has become the aed Gregory 30, (third place) cor a,| Soutnera liltoels 94, Cont. Michigen ot |FlA., golf pro, found a four-week Bet Yardley, after @° tew [in front of Syracuse in the East|The Saginaw fighter rose quickly|Youngest speed skater to win the jAduinas of Grand Rapids stopped|meman 90 fifth place)" Oshkosh (Wis:) 66, Nori. Michigan 6g |fOUr Of the Caribbean quite profit- ta which he acclimated [as they made nearly 50 per cent|to stardom last year, but has been|G0ld Skates derby yesterday on eee TE and) Gams 4 divente pice ee ‘ean decker able. Tt added.some $5,000 to his which Indiana Tech edged with “the. Natp..otfemse, jot thelr shots in downing the War-jbeaten decisively in his last two ice ra mauahy by abovesreeant as 9 5 nom sefeenee yas. == wn QMIOHIGAN COLLEGE sconES Were ature 1a — ee eee AB gap EE a riors arriors threatened ts. . 2 chigan State 94, Purdue 87 yne a aqpesenty Sag sppened So wack the Airy sctiea pulling to arg Crawford has gained consider-|_ Detroit's Bob Snyder won the; Hope jumped into an early Hope si, Blades Tech (Ohio) 47 | hllnots Ye Betron tt Cooper didn’t take the Jamaica which ma league’s ahs 220-yard and three-quarter mile| lead against Hillsdal Detroit Tech 95, Ferris Institute 53 Detroit 19, Buffalo 8 Open yesterday but he finished in ine points, but an 1i-point New renown for his handiwork with gainst le and was | fast. rilinois 91, East. Michigan 59 Notre Dame 20, Michigan State 7 : York spree put it out of reach.|@ paintbrush as a commercial art- Sen etas take meen hie : Ohio Btate id, Michigan Brave 9 . for fourth ate, Oliver , ist. titis for senior men's A mid- . Denver carried rs Leah's Pe Arizin topped west championship. Junior Medley T , Western Michigan 92, Michigan State|with g course record 1-under-par scorers points. Richie SENIOR MEN A — Boy Snycer, pe-(VUNIOF NMediey Leam Wins Central Michigan 65%, Detroit 24%,|277 for 72 holes. The tie plu: game 38 8) Guerin had 22 for the — Pancho Whips Anderson |tot. 18: terry, Browne, Detroit, 16; McMagters (Canada) 31%, WA7™4|Cooper'g victories in the Panama came against] + League scoring leader a ro ‘ e ; : Puert came at] aaded to with %¢ points|for 3rd Straight Win |,seiok MEN aoe ener. De DO tiac Y Tanke rs 3rd arvion 46, onie Hecate «3 in tes Veoocele areca one for the 6-9 Pettit also Lask, Saginaw, 10; Ken Renshaw, Sagi- West. Michigan 48, Ball 6t. (Ind.) 37 enezuela tournament gave par LOS ANGELES TAP)—Richard|"*¥,, ¢. “ Central Michigan é9, Wayne State 37 /him the most points the 30 4% ‘ ound cred- 5 SENIOR WOMEN = Jeanne Omelen- Michigen 66, Wisconsin Gar (Pancho) Gonzales tore Mal An-j|chuk, Detroit, 20; Nancy Renshaw,| Pontiac YMCA took third placejin the 25-yard breaststroke in 19.0,| Minnesote ?, Michigan's : touring pros and a bonus of $1,400 net defense to sheds. and|Sesiney, 9: Mary ‘Beth Terrell, Lake-|._ atten * ; the Northeastern-District swim-| The ,junior medley team was| Ball state 64%, Cent. Michigan 47% , ° a eee ete, 2 tae Ee OEE alti, "BC|ming championships held at Sag\-|%84¢ i of Phil Cashin, Jim Very,| Richie EASGE Egy Grandelius Picks Aide bere laa night. cintrannnasty gin uemenaw Arto Hil poo! Saturday. "Cashin besten in the SOyard| MAMEINAR Pion gy | » / 4 A a, * ‘ ? bs roe fl pesy caer ely Ohio, 12; Norma Honan, Detroti 6. Pontiac’s midget division entries| backstroke, won the event in :33.3, ae (eva inet ye Everett (Sonny) Grandelius has gave victory JONIOR BOYS — y, Midiand.|swam against stop watches in an|while Velzy did the 50-yard breast.| Seen Staté at Navy, cancelled reached into the Big Ten for his row op his tour with Jack/if,.“Mpcsia tages so” °* *'luncontested meet, while the med-|stroke in : aA defensive football coach + pros. Gonzales plays pJuMIon Olas om Loretto Cnspmen.iley relay team of the junior divi- Bill brlgeteds the diving event “ne te University of Colorado. _ Lew Hoad tonight. . ay a i, Alpena, 4. |Sion continued its unbeaten streak. | with 25. points. meres gee = The Buffalo mentor yesterday kaa Hoad downed Ahsley|, 30¥: ae Cpe 5 Murphy.| In the prep division Skip Ervin) |. Paer DIVISION RESULTS lows $1. Ohio, State 19 named Charles (Chuck) Boerio, ; “year’s Wimbledon|Migi*3¢, 11: He putivan took second in the 25-yard butter- clty 19 and Bort Huron 12 7 | Michigan State 4 87 who has coached centers and line- champion, | JUVENILE -|fly in :16.9 and Dick Ries was Divi the backers at Illinois the past three . ~ : <: . 4 4 = » ¥ Tie Americah men's SION AOE scvevivese Pe 3 : . tCheboygan, 18; Bonnie Franz, Alpena, BSagin: Flint Pontiac 47. eosseersoer dl : 63. } Karen Walden, Detroit, 6. nudged by Tim Gohm of Saginaw icity $i and Fort Huron 32 rey Marquette 79, Xavier, Obio 70 seasons, \ tue PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY. 23, 1950. a "Erickson: n- Jumps 273 Feet State Skier U, S. Cha 2 LEAVENWORTH, Wash, ) — : fe ae ; Willie Erickson, an Iron Mountain, |'with 196.4 points. | goes : Mich., cutlery salesman, knifed) Ralph Bietila, also of Ishpeming, today *4 and Whe \ ans Cdl) tar through the crisp air here|jumped 237 and 233 feet and had Pnight’s 3 se! at yesterday and became the new Na-|ished 15th with brave bloke, indeed, ' 3 a tional] Ski Jumping champion. _ Dave Stork of ve : ge *:. 8 By’ with jumps P seeds waft eres against uraue 10 arm Y } And right behind him in second | 19.3 points. « x Olmedo, the Davis Cup ace, 6 3 was another Upper Peninsula 6 6 place was in the final after each swept : @ os ski r, R Maki of through his semifinal with al $3 fomoes, Rinty Mast of Teepe. alte cases eee Share of Ci tt ee rae Se, HIS ap ures.” Olmedo was far the more im- : are 0 rown ; 3 « Ketokson jumped 273 and 28 + pressive in chopping down Davis \ By. BEN OLAN i 8 a od peony pong Maki, who . = ee ea ant ae An injury to a‘ pitcher often State Cagers Get Help longer Poeedlig rel yrae goat Texas omy | Kay of Dayton, Ohio, 6-2, 6, 6-4.|results in @ considerable delay in) on Saturday as Iilini “ hag groonk —— t Savitt ousted teenager Earl Buch- : > p. He a holz of St Louis +4. 64, 63. a Upset Indiana 276 feet for 217 points. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. mare pas Here is a simulated instance in Billy Olson, the 4 ing cham Ellis Jr. slogged through the mud which a pitcher is hurt at the start By The Associated Press ea trom Ea ote nd Wis. -fine to a 4under-par 67 for a 276 total of a game. This isa good oppor- P —— to win first money in the $20,000|) orts a en ar ity. find out h wate as), eee oe: soe cana sini he Texus Open’ Golf t tb ape a mae io jtory to clinch its first undisputed ee *,, \atuntaa aseball expert. _ \Big Ten basketball championship, Three other Michigan skiers} 4 double bogey pa the last hol City, Leave Bes Bask Ralph Terry of the Kansas City/sits back tonight to see how many Placed in the top 20. Allen Chap- cost defend ‘ch " ‘Bit Pru : CLASS A—sports “Bhop. vs. "exhibition |A’s is the pitcher. It's the top ofjof the teams with a chance for a man of Ish me Saree ; opponent, 8:30 p.m., at Pontiac Central : an of Ishpeming, combined leaps) ston’ of Provo Utah, the crown, |] OF BBocth Homes, vs, Pield's|the first inning at Kansas City and'title tie will be eliminated. iN ceeg = ’ ae oneofth ‘CLASS D—Coce, Sa a Don Buddin of the Boston Red Sox| No less than six clubs have a) WIN CAPTAIN-SPONSOR There were no lead changes dur- Phone pinged ig hgciteing-ce ' tian’ (National. 1 pm. Boys Clublis the game’s opening batter. The|mathematical chance of sharing) Bowling on their home alleys, ing the 6th of nine weekends. = nish in a seven-way va. ‘nesin ‘Jets (American), 6:15 p.m.. count goes to one ball and two/the crown with the Spartans and/sponsor John Wozniak and captain| weney “Ee” oer imnere: ar $500 ; oo! Swimming strikes. On the next pitch, Terry|five of them will be in action to|Fran Wright of the Wozniak &| LADIES TITLE SETTLED age @su S Aldereress, Node. 66-71-72-67— 4 | aed Raa lands heavily on his left leg after, Might. Sons team of Highland won the an-| The All-Events actual champion- : Oe ere ts ! ab : Rochester’at Pontisc Northern following through with his delivery.| Indiana, Purdue, Mlinois and (nual Captain-Sponsor championship|ship of the Elks Ladies National WEEKEND, BASKETBALL Tom, Nieporie, $1,690 ; OL St. Mary at Detroit st elt PCH |The pitch is wide. Terry apparently| lowa are locked in second place |With a 1199 total at East Highland] Invitational tourney held here re-| Denver, 97, wichita, sa Tom Jacobs, $119 | Birmingham at Mt, Clemens has pulled a muscle and cannot| With identical 6-5 records, MSU |Recreation Saturday. cently was settled in a rolloff yes-| fkrot, it, Sealtie 98 svi #8 a TE T168-73— 200 | ay as bes at a — work with rules the roost with a 9-2 mark | Bill Kuklinski took high manj|terday. Betzi Waisanen of Pon- Orossinger, soc T866-71-73—~201 RO Ki rida: rk without pain. SATURDAYS SCORES ~ Fred Hawk wane. of we oe lerfora . and three games to play. Minne- |sponsor honors with 565. Frances|tiac ran into four splits in the last NFERENCES Bi Peso, ex. . West Bloomfield at Clawso Do you think that: sota and Michigan, both 6-5, also |Spencer was the high lady sponsor|game to bow to Royal Oak's Alice .,, A dou Cy Coat, ‘overtume|“' Saerenagn Conade All Parts and Accessories Cranbrook at Bloomfield Hills a. Terry’ cannot be relieved | have a chance, at 445, Tom Mayes rolled the high|Havranek, The final. split occurred Brrtang te, Ror, “Eirslina $1 * | Chandler " Marper &, ” L:Anse Creuse at Madison until he hag finished pitch- | Northwestern (5-6), Ohio State|Sore for captains with 602 while/in the 10th frame resulting in a weet “Virginie. ee ee wesntaatan 00 ee eine che We Service Everything Mayville at Imlay City » ing to Buddin? (4.6) and Wisconsin (1-9) are out a erg ee tee 523 to 514 final score, __| Newt vw winery Mary te | soe Sinenen., 8 an We Sell pal . He can be relieved immedi- .jcaptains @ a e — 80! s : Manhattan, Kan Al t Me: of the running but both Northwest Deyden #4 Armada ¥ ately?. ern and Ohio State have hopes of /S@me among the women with 242./CITY WOMAN 3RD AT JACKSON faa | % ‘Alabeina 98 bat hesidre Cat, TETIAT-T-2T Goodyear and : : Bret, cz. Anchor Bey ees men belt lemet emt) tasting, ta the irke alvin: |) Ag semen er ie Weenak || Sores en of Peto need (eae Ten, Grog a eezeere, AY... mremanll ROL Tires... $1.98 South Lyon at Howell more pitch? * & & team tithe was a sparkling 275 We, 3rd place state toes at the | Tule rapt Misaise scene ugg Hae Ry 17971-71285 ¥ , mphere et Oak Park While Michigan State continues| &&me turned In by Wright as one | Women’s Elks. State tournament B..—y! —, =< (Over 400 in ; 3 we ee Seam wey te SER tmp over| of the fates of te event. | at dachom ever the weaken. SESE SS MEET" "a A io aap tack) nes S1IOL Walled Lake at eal Wrestling, Purdue which insured the Spartans} a1) received awards at a ban-| SM* ee nome VALLEY Fuld Pine ih a 1-71 ates ” ‘ RO Kimball at Parmington of at least-a title tie, eight teams |quet following the action at Water- ’ Bradley * Bem Ureetia, Midd“ : | 20 x 24” Saddles only 88. q CLASS CoVikings var Pontise Police, swing into action tonight, North-|ford’s Old Mill Tavern. Emily) STATE TEAM BPAA CHAMPS Cincinnatt ee Wiebe 1 #0, overtime | Don Whitt Haak ad oo TTD TOT B08 ; 1 a, and Town Sountry, vs. Wingle- western plays at Minnesota, Ohi O/prives wag presented the big spon-} With a 12-game total Of 10,905, | Houston “an * Lay ee ie ‘Serrant sorings eo" ro7e-r1-11~-2008 V2 Ve Chains .... Te a. CLASS D-“Lakeside | Royals vs. Weld- State at Indiana, Purdue at Iowa) sor of the year trophy. She spon-|the Steelcasé Majors of Grand | powting Green 8, Ohio U. 67 = Fag es. I... .7279-74-06—206 : oo” gactaide “abopplag’” (Nationals, oi and Wisconsin at Michigan. sors Woodfill Market. Bert Wed-|Rapids Sunday won the team title Kent iiae 71. West Michigan ‘i Dave Ragan, M310 aap _oe Where You Get More , Dm. At Lice og Reskeiboll The actual clinching of the |dle and Bill Gohl, each 64, and|in the Bowling Proprietors Assn.| | vi Sri Bu “Collins, 4s ssesens for Your Money CLASS A—Rocco's Restaurant vs. Lake- crown could come Saturday when |Adéline Lehnan, 52, were honored|of America tournament at Cleve- og egal bo Hane ok teal rey ccna: es MSU invades Indiana in a re- |as the @ldest participants. land. Despite the absence of star|ftrverd a. ‘Penn, #0. Jerry Barver, ee ea WARDEN pm., at Crary Junior High. ‘aue8 aq) oUF 1yMeIg eq 03 seyourd | gionally televised matinee. If the “ *® * Marion Ladewig, the Majors won mn mo Angelgn ossses. PLTRIDTI SOT} f =e a eeeoy “in teuitoen ae conray oa | Spartans fail in Bloomington, by 208-pin margin, PAC Ast he, ves 72-72-72-71—87 CYCLE SALES i Sommeee fuy Highland Township. supervisor lternia 4. 7 1 A You're alwoys seu tru “pueq “weap a 1 ‘wud .. eur et eee — Louis Oldenberg and Clark Balch, be 64, afi _ neha one 60 7214-73-67— 208 4755. Dixie Hwy. qenw Jayoud yiete ¥ ‘djeveypeurayy up Monda ne i ; 3-68-2008 Plei : i 0 N T | M E isin clench aid last-place Wisconsin in East Lan- Soe eel Sas io Speed Skating Mark an ee Tawelteny ° b Rieery River” arene 1-208 Drey Mich. sing. MSU finishes out the sea- ee . anens ouae . Oat , 7 ‘ NBA STANDINGS 5 Another highlight of the banquet Rice 34, Baylor 48 Doug . $116.67 Open 9-9 Every Day SSIs don .. bens ! —_— wen Lost Pet. Behind : at home against lowa, March |was the awarding af savings bonds Broken b M'De tt Ord. Te 2 lle -|" > atisay TT 7O7e-OT het North and aeress from AGP s sont COTS! Ti en ..........2. 7 . for five high games in area league y rmo oreh OA ew Gene - eS OR 83-2460 = New York 28 eee Me Michigan State needed, and re-|play in recent months. Jim Czis- : Denver 1, i ontaae ee plate a) | aoemnnuise - Philadelphia". 26 36 41920 a sienies in agi madia and Bob Gormong naga SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. (AP)—| Dish state fe oming 6 7? ii n i itself of a piece of the crown. Illi-|ceived $50 bonds for 300s, Jim|Don McDermott bettered the BOce . st Louts 3 “thot — em aes arma Bnd la anes and Ron Rothbarth at] American speed skating record KGaine Biate ti. ‘Cole. 81. Coll, ¢o REBUILT AUTOMATIC aoe nner polis ..+.6. ; : pt. er Taylor's basket with|299 and Lyle Hook who had for 500 meters yesterday, just as ‘udes uildin ation, Labor: : GUARANTEED cei on a oe #3115 seconds to play and Northwest-|earned 4 bonds, . = the boss man : ee ew, Mesieo Ble, oY ‘risona’ 6h “ Incl Reb g Install ' and Lubricant i ati rtt ants ern whipped Michigan 8784 “ potter ie’ could US. Olympic fain Simmene rw. dyses mate DYNAFLOW HYDRAMATIC , New York lll, Philade ” : WATCH REPAIRS er sees a ° sk * PONTIAC PAIR LEAD SBATE x * gen Prancice”@. Le 4g hn: A ‘48 to '52........$ 75 1°48 te ‘50 ........ $65 Syracuse 139, pee = ae mpay ccletore Seger keg oe =o heDemat 29 = - y= ° heal a esa sendies- ‘Ss fa ae 4° ae cess ee 10 tate - a nneso barth eorge cov pu ewood oeeeeen-« Oss oaecees Nee drove Wisconsin deeper into the| together @ 1261 to take over the |Clocked by four timers in 40.5 sec-| Eenisius = Dee Tw 55 $150 | ‘55 end ‘56 ....... .$90 MEN WAN ! E cela 0.59, Wrecnen we holy] Gute arent as Oo Ml cece tak, Eee tee POWER GLIDE E Me-o-mane | home team to lose. gan State Men's event being held ~ = ., are Rulgere POWER GLIDE Ford Mere All ten teams will play Satur- »_ * * . Zoseme. 70S me p ’ To “Tete bee’ High Salary Pos iS ghectiGeica;C]iday. Aside ee haat at Deine abe provions © | 1. holds the American record x ye ol : aq sag eae Ba nally - eas : Radio & Television. Day and Evening Classes Allow |)St@te-Indiana encounter, Illinois x * * of 42.6. His new mark won't £0|Buien Malm Georgeionn ©. overtime 29 ONE 54 ....., among ¢ Y plays at lowa, Michigan at Ohio into the books, however, as it was/St. Francis, Pa. 91, Youngsto 55 end ‘56 .......$90 | 'S5 and ‘56 .......$90 You fo Remain Fully Employed While Training : There were no other Ist place souTH i : State, Minnesota at Purcdue and! anges The meet runs through not in competition. Evgenij Gris- Novy 00. Pitt 38 Complete Power Steering BL | MS CSE WO 245660 |Portivcnterne'viscmin “canes un ble te Or a oe Sogo ute” | CRONEY'S ON SERVICE . ° ~? : 40.2 set in 2956 at Cortina, Italy. merican U. TRANSMISSI ' an te Northwestern. La. 68 ’ . 457 2 Weedward (Denevan Bidg.) NHL 5 di ELKS FALTER AT ANN ARBOR a 38, Day Le Blocks North of Fox Theater : . ir 60, Washington st. L. 4 296 W. Montcalm 2 Doors trom Ogkiend FE 8.3044 Electronics Institute i:m2,s23 :-rn ets: faNgingS ae ee eee Ist ‘59 Victory Pat 2 Decrs trom Onhlend PF 1304 io = = least one 1st place in the Elks eee Sa wang S. , othme THE pce eee eee e reer ee Pe eee HOHE eeHEEHeeneeenaoes- OMG. ceenereeeeereeesens Montreal State at Ann Arbor fell far short for Betsy Rawls rambi 1b Texan Southern y AGMresn .......ccceenie seeeccceceoscocesee sees: sss OMFecocecccescees eeeee * wore gd 169 in every division but there were Fectiead . & Mog rae | 4 = ed _— 4] some impressive showings. LAKE WORTH, Fla. (AP)—By ios Aner, Sate Chie Preano State nn Barnett’s No, 1 team took 14th {a lone stroke, Betsy Rawls won CeRbAr'y & RESULT at 2044 and Barnett’s No. 3 |the Lake Worth Women's Open j New York 5, Montreal 1 grabbed 15th with 2936 in team |and $1,247 in her first golf tourna- WEEKEND yeluTs ; eee ‘a standings. Club 99 hit an even a pend of ve bake sat cereus, SH Cot. = Pals ea , MERICAN LEacur 2900, “e partanourg, 5.C., links vet- ily Peacoc 6 Los Angeles, ’ od i Butialo @, eran had to stave off Louise Suggs|® : dence 3, Hershey 2, Gerald Fredericks led the singles| < 01" tstand. Ga., yesterday during , EASTERN LEAGUE entries with 676 for 10th followed Sipten egaaaloan 4 yar “Guba. stopped doe Mice ; Charlotte 5. New Haven 2 ‘ the 72-hole medal grind’s final ro x My, rt, [ Jobnstown 12, z Washington 2 by Harold Gamester’s 671 for 13th. stages. Both were shootin, bogeys i ompers F 1 lead the list of counties containing Hot Rods 2, Globetrotters 0 een) Big, /. E | ‘ie aa jlaboe: larcuetta, with peggy Heald 3 ats Bebe eS pone compa ehyaeg aren ; BRAK & FRONT END 4 the largest land area, also con-| Little Beggars 30. Right malts slip on all types of roads. ‘ tains the most lakes, 835. Next is 4 EASTERN “Plus tax and retrendable tire s PECI AL 2 S41 As Luce with 571, and Iron with 528,| Panthers 27, Trotters 7° 2 7 | \Oakland County is near the top,| Falcons 48, Aces 19 uarantée E ignme " oe Ps Ai Fes with more than 300. Seema ee aitiars 28 Brake Relinin 9 Wheel Al nt a = aa = 10-1 | | { 9. 9 5 Adjust Brakes ALL. THIS ; Prices Plus Tax 95 2. Add necessary . | : 2 ‘ And Recappable Exchange Just say dt ) Brake:Fl wid vik FOR ONLY fo : — —_ — . sale 1958 electronic equip- 3. Repack Front | LOOK at THESE FEATURES < High quality lining, 1,000 | ment. Factory trained ex-| Wheel Bearings vi sicome Ot if, mile leet: As low | perts. Correct camber, 4. Balance Both . ou're always w as $1.25 a week. caster, toe-in, toe-out. @ RAYON ELECTRONI-CORD BODY | ,, BE Ni EFICIA L $ : oar ha : oi 2. Re-align e COLD RUBBER TREAD . Blow-Out Proot omy The home of BILL CLEAN-UP LOANS Blow roo Monroe Shocks . Front End- P ff iled-up. bill ith a BENEFICIAL : @ SKID ARREST OR TREAD DESIGN Bill Clean-Up Loan! Then, pote caly ond monthly Muffler 15,000 Miles Guarantee . : payment instead of several... and have more cash left ' nr Ag _ ‘700 Vehy each month! — i> just Bee bee Written As Little AS] Ride Now fave no tire exchange add 9 mein... énd pick up your-loan a Lifetime $ 15: $ 95 ‘ameletele |: | 5 ns per, tite @ 41.00 per tire pk = . BENEFICIAL! Phone today! Guarantee | Somplotely : + dremel 1 Asian Loans $25 te $600 on Signature, Furniture or Car suchas a | 7, WEST LAWRENCE STREET, PONTIAC Lawrence Bidg. + Phone: FEderal 2-$249 2nd Fleer, OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT .— PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS Louns mode te residents of ofl surrounding tower © 1989, BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. i MARKET TIRE CO. oot : Open 9 to 9 | 77 West Huron St. FE 8-0424- | = , SS Se SP See ee eee woe heyy i li will be served at 6:30 p.m, Bev- TUESDAY . February 24, 1959 Carl H. Thomsen ldren will be entertained with a speak. “Wonders of Alaska” . If Waht to add to your! know of your reniyen Misco state, | Carl vide that in bis — on ibe wworbders of Alaska” five years to produce.” You will ‘see and hear what! a filled with huge stranded icebergs. There are interesting camera shots showing Sitka, Juneau, Na-| tional Parks, a selmon run, forest fires, seals, sea lions, and king- | sized crabs five feet in diameter.’ Carl Thomsen won the Ver Halen Ra ef as the first award in an in tional contest of 262) motion Nothing could be as timely this | year as a travelogue on our 49th) state, Alaska. Crefoot School Athletic Field . Open for Parking Neo tickets sold at the deer, If you can- not gee your tickets te your : Real fi cided by voters ata special elec- *“.i2 * A family-style, potluck dinner pro. vided. Parents of the different grads will bring a varity of dishes. * x * Following the dinner, the chil movie, “The Life Cycle of the Cot-|°" tontai] Rabbit,’ furnished by the State Conservation Department, while the parents hear Smart Four-Time Loser Gets Fifth Prize From Stork PITTSBURGH (AP)—Mrs, Thel- ma Lippert has a poor record in races with the stork. But she al- ways gets the prize. An £ 2-ounce girl was ed to born Sunday to Mrs. Lippert -be-;—— L; L. Colbert, president of Chrys- ler, is scheduled to testify on Thursday, and Theodore O. Yn- tema, Ford, the following day. Church Asks Parents fo Stay at Home fore she could leave home for the hospital. She has won only one of five races with the stork. SAVE 5Is CLIP THIS COUPON (rrmwwres ewes ces cecscsewurey | COUPON | 99° With this coupon, Mon., Tues., Wed. and Thurs. LONG BEACH, Calif. | The Unitarian Church's parent-ed- | ucation meeting scheduled for to- night has been cancelled. The reason, as given in the ‘church newsletter: “All Unitarians who have dren want to be better pa |They join PTA groups, enroll r jnight classes in child psychology, | work in cooperative nurseries and Hei Car. inancing Set 2 ‘Bills Would Prohibit Retail Credit Programs| by Auto Makers WASHINGTON # — The Senate} antitrust and monopoly subeommit-| tee starts public hearings tomor-| | row on legislation to bar automo-| © bile manufacturers from financing retail car sales. The proposal also would prohibit them from engaging in the insur- ance of cars. x &* &* Chairman Estes Kefauver (D- Tenn) said officials of the Federal Trade Commission, Ford Motor Co,, Chrysler Corp., and independ- be t finance companies will among the witnesses, * * * He said General Motors Corp., which has an auto financing sub- sidiary, and American Motors Corp. declined invitations to tes- tify but added that General Mo- tors will file a statement, Separate bills have been intro- duced by Kefauver and by Sen. Jo- seph C. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo), subcommittee member. They act- after reports that Ford intends enter the car financing field. ~ * finance vice president of (AP) — ~*~ * * eg | Cub Scouts. Regeiet $] 50 “One way or another they go to meetings, meetings, meetings. PALACE AUTO WASH 92 BALDWIN to J - ec a ize— Leurel and Hardy— JU 8-3977 for Information TONIGHT — ONLY MICHIGAN —— CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN “THE GREAT With Paulette: Goddard — Jack Oskie Buster Keaton——"BLUE BLAZES” “A PERFECT DAY” CLAWSON PLAYHOUSE rte rani 14 Mile Road, 2 Miles East of Woodward Avenue the v. er Fa DICTATOR” he i i Ai Mi in ln hin ln Ml ln Alaa Al Al linn tnt Q the POON NY ppp hana nh hte >| onl Smoking Section > 4 dent occurred Feb. 7. Police said Cramer, standing in y{back to avoid a northbound car $| southbound auto, He was in Colum- >i bus visiting a niece. Maybe, too many meetings. Per- haps the best way to learn how be a good is to parent stay home and practice. x ww * “Anyway, that's what we are advocating. We ask that all par- ents stay home with their children evening of Feb. 23 and glory in family joy. Pop corn, read sto- ries, play games, love one anoth- more than usual.” * Ohio Accident Injuries tal to Michigan Man COLUMBUS, Ohio #—Herbert C. Cramer, 70, of New Boston, Mich., died Saturday in Grant Hospital here of injuries he received when was struck by a car. The acci- middle of a_ street, stepped y to move into the path of a bariessers and BOX SPRINGS © GROYP #1 Deep tufted ‘innierspring mattress or years of service. BOX SPRINGS Samie Low Price Full, Twin or % Size FREE 2 GROUP #2 Smooth top mattress—firm sup- Bo .. port for oa of comfort. Full, Twin or &% Size Full, Twin or % Sixe 100% Dacron Comforter MATTRESSES [7-< - & BOX SPRINGS | er 19° 29° 10-Year Gwara 100% Dacron E eaters GROUP #3 % ~ GROUP #3 Regular $79.50 - Tuftless MdateroeeEatra Firm ; Orthopedic Type Unit. $ 95 ‘Some tow. Kaeo matching 10-Year Guara | Bed Frames. Regular, $8.95. WN GROUP #1 Regular $39.50 Years of comfort GROUP #2 Regular $59.50 3 +) ntee 4 a| Rep Leonard G. Wolf (D-Iowa). om. PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. FEBRUARY és, 1 1950 : p , t I () AP Wirephote of what she’s paid,’ says Wolf, a new member of the House. At least six of the 82 new House members have their wives on their office payrolls. STILL A TEAM—Mrs. Marilyn Wolf earns $13,344 a year. She works for her husband. He's “We've always been a team and my wife is earning every penny Congressmen Hire Relatives ae Expect Stiff ke Fight ion Foreign Aid Plan’ = WASHINGTON (AP)—President Eisenhower is reported ready to make an even stronger fight than last year for support of his $3,930,- 000,000 foreign aid request. any bill which cut deeply into the program he proposed. ~*~", Democratic leaders have _ indi- cated they may slice the mutual assistance program to offset in- creases in other outlays above the president's requests in his 77-bil- lion-dollar budget. With this in mind, Baekower reportedly has told associates he fears the United States might eventually be pushed back into a! garrisoned hemisphere unless for- eigh military and economic aid is carried on at a high level. ! Janet Blair, Dick Mayo v Sea’ for Resivete, 65 8 See and as a means of 6 wed as » mam Pintouw’ Chub Cheice ie eat “So ware Becomes = BIG ictare with KEEGO SINNERS and SAINTS — All the Loving, ae. 2 Guaty, Beouting. im ‘the mest colorful and ao fitonn A of the "Dest 5 Delbere. KEEGO Pat O'Brien, James Gleason, Basil thbone, Jane Darwell, Donald Crisp, Ricarde Cortes, Jeffrey Hunter, Edward Leen: Diane Foster, Frank McHt KEEGO at the head of them all, that un- rgettable man ameng men NCER TRACY as ets Skef- finglon—whe made'a city and a tate his own... KEECO “CAMP ON BLOOD ISLAND" bares the stark ase truth about a desperate fight for ee survival after the end of World War I in Malaya, Have First Child, a Son HOLLYWOOD (AP) — It’s a) baby girl for actress Janet Blair! and her husband, producer Nick; Mayo. The baby weighed in Sunday at) eight pounds. She is the couple's: he child. Miss Blair is.38, Mayo! t —| There’s Gold in the U.S. House WASHINGTON (AP) — As it) does almost every year, nepotism | toay attracted a spotlight on Cap-| jtol Hill. The ancient political practice of; giving government -jobs to rela- tives receives attention annually when the House of Representa- tives reveals its office payroll. _ This year’s records show that | at least six of the 82 new House | members have. their wives on the) payrolls. The wives’ salaries| range from $4,047 to $13,344 a) year. In addition, Rep. Steven V. Car-| ter (D-Iowa), a freshman con- | gressman, hired his 19-year-old son, a freshman college student, as an $11.000-a-year assistant. The Senate refuses to open its; payroll records to public scrutiny. Any nepotism there usually is a secret. “We have always been a team,'’! Rep. Leonard G, Wolf (D-Iowa)| said, explaining why his wife,! Marilyn, is on the payroll for| $1,637.91 a month. i “I'm actually working,” said [3s ‘til 1:00 P. M. Steven A. Carter, the son of Rep. Carter, ‘‘and don't give the mon-| ey back to him. It’s all mine and I plan to use it to complete my| education.” g The five other new congress-| men with wives on the payroll were: Rep. Robert W. Levering (D- “ Ohio) (Wife Eileen, $12,527 . AP Wirephoto , - a. HEART.TO-HEART TALK — Tony Chapelle, of New York, a ees 7 fee Cask). whose heart has stopped beating six times in the last three weeks, Rep; Ralph Rivers (D-Alaska) 1 holds talk over the machine which has helped his heart back into (Wife Martha, $4,800). | action, With him is Mrs. Marty Lieto, another heart disease Rep. ndall S. Harmon (D-| victim. Chapelle, 58, is connected by a 20-foot electrical cable to Ind), (Wile Mary, $4,424). the machine. When his heart stops, an alarm rings, and his wife Rep. William. H. Meyer (D-Vt) | starts the machine. An electrical -shock reactivates his heart. (Wife Bertha, $4,047). —______.. | Congress authorizes $35,000 a year to each House member for. his office payroll. He may hire eight clerks, none of whom may| earn. more than $14,344 a year, | Man Fixing His Auto Gets Taken for a Rides DOORS OPEN 6:45 Army Developing 2 New Tanks for Present, Future | DETROIT (AP) — Early Brad.' DETROIT (UPIJ—The Army is ford’s troubles only started when developing two new tanks — one/pis car stalled. to be introduced, the other still on| Bradford, 33, reached into the the drawing boards—it was dis-)motor Sunday. His hand became cloed Saturday. trapped, The car roared into life! Py. aha announcement Is expect-jand, dragging Bradford along, it) wn i} soon on the new conventional crashed through a wire fence, hit ou tank—to be known as the M60, re-|q parked car, went through a ga- TUNNEL OF LO placing the M48 of Korean Warjrage and another fence and final- “DECKS RAN RED” fame. The M60 will have a 105-|ly stopped when it hit a tree. mm gun in place of the original}! Bradford was hospitalized in se- 90-mm gun. rious condition, TUES., WED., THURS. eae eceeeaallcimmeusnte “FROM HERE TO , HURON _ THEATER ssncsneeibeanamtsiccaeanaa = - | LAST TIMES TONITE Isvae] and Cuba have signed, PONTIAC HIGH SCHOOL GYM 3 BIG SHOWS 3-7-9 P.M. ADULTS—$1.50 CHILDREN—90c COUNTRY FEB. 28th | ROSALIND RUSSELL NOW SHOWING AVNTIE MAME’ STARRING TECHNIRAMA® ~~ TECHNICOLOR® Features, At 1:25, 4:00, co-starring FORREST TUCKER: comm srowne - Feo cure ADDED Bugs Bunny Cartoon Prices for This Attraction Mat. 90c, Eve. $1.25, Child 25¢ COMING TONY CURTIS JANET LEIGH IN “The Perfect Furlough” MUSIC Hit Parade Jamboree 20—Great Stars—20: Direct from Nashville, Tenn. MORE STARS 1 | LStrand | Double-Barreled Fun Show Open 10:48—280 to 1 P.M. LAST 2 DAYS A HUGE eoueey CAST OF NETWORK | SINGING TV STARS | Than Any ON STAGE Comnter Music IN PERSON | Road Show ; FERLIN HUSKEY | STAR OF i) GRAND OLE OPRY | HOMER ‘and JETHRO of Radio, TV and Motion Picture Fame , would be able to trave! 30 | their first commercial trade agree- | “u ig cent farther’ thay the M43. | ment. It will run through 1959. | ETERNITY Production of the tank will be speeded because many parts will remain identical with the M48, COMING SOON The “dream” tank, not yet in the project stage, would have radi- cally different methods of defense rand could carry nuclear weapons, either in the form of shell or mis- siles. It is under development at the: Detroit Arsenal and is several) years off at least, A unique and top secret feature | of the vehicle is a device to | tect the tank against guided mis- siles or artillery. fire. | “THE HORSES MOUTH” “HOME BEFORE DARK" “ITH VOYAGE SINBAD" “LAST HURRAH” : “THE HOUSEBOAT” | “IT WANT TO LIVE” | | | “SOME CAME RUNNING” | | : erent TONIGHT — OPEN - FRIDAY . SATURDAY SUNDAY | “OLD MAN OF THE SEA” | niee Mom Says | Please Hect Us At (eds! ~-Xou hear it more often every day.«s. . “and one reason is the very special Children’s Menu designed for fellows like the one on: the phone . . . See YOU soon, at Ted’s. For Party or Group Reservations - Dial FE 4-6630 TED’S RESTAURAN T , | “ gp pee, Ginger | DONNY Hal Willis | , YOUNG eee arene > peapeterg BUDDY SPIKER World’s Champion Fiddle Player S 2S are Little | Goober on Lennie Buchanan Jubitiers Country F ord Music's TV Tennessee's Favorite Favorites Funny from cos. ian Missourt RCA Recording Artist Bennie - HOWARD Williams Dot Recording ot an ely Artist Simon The Lee Crumm | Original ; George “Country Lonzo RCA Music of Recording Lis Artist te Stay” and = Oscar — A STACE FULL OF COUNTRY MUSIC. ARTISTS IN COMPETITION FOR GRAND OLE OPRY RECOGNITION @ SAYE. MONEY Get tickets In a x Pontiac. Sponsored by + 'Fratetnal Ordér of Police | Lodge No. 132 PLUS The en Round-Up in Yeass! STARTS WEDNESDAY There Never Was a Play—-A Woman—or Picture Like Re Blistering Sto bt mad lh pg Bare tne tt of a Tramp ° AND DRIVE-IN’ woonwakp AVE—JUST SOUTH OF PONTIAC Poe pip Sc ke ‘the Ex-Cell-O Corp, has ended with . Florida, where a disease caiis- _ing citrus trees to go into a de-’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, Ey-Cell-0 Strike Es With Pac Mass Meeting of Local 49 After Negotiation DETROIT. i) .- A {four-month strike at three Detroit plants of the ratification of a three-year con- tract. The contract was ratified yester- day at a mass meeting of mem- bers of United Auto Workers local 49.’ Union officials brought the new contract to the meeting just min- utes after they ended negotiations with the corporation. Ex-Cel]-O had been on strike’ since Oct. 20. Willard Milic, local. president sald the contract was patterned after those signed last year be- tween the UAW and the auto in- dustry. The Ex-Coll-O agreement runs until March $1, 1962. Senator Want MARKETS Dulles to Stay crsersctseetatl Foe covering gales of locally . grown Secretary Has Parleys produce brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale packrge lots. . . Quotations are furnished by the With Nixon, Brother petroit Bureau of Markets, as of Between Treatments Friday. WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre-| Detroit Produce Ex-Cell-O said it would notify the workers by telegram when to report to their jobs. “This is a good settlement atter| a bitter struggle,” Emil Mazey. | UAW secretary-treasurer, told the! . workers. ‘The only one to suffer’ if this strike continues will be the worker,” _* * * The new contract calls for an an- nual improvement factor increase of six cents an hour or 24% per cent, whichever is greater, retro- active to Sept. 1, when the old con- tract expired. It also includes in- creases of up to eight cents an, hour for skilled workers, and con- tinuation of the cost-of-living clauses. Average wage scale for the company’s 3.500 employes was not available. The company has plants in Detroit, Traverse City and three Ohio cities and the un- jon originally demanded a con- tinuation of a national agreement were disagreeing with a sugges- tion that the secretary resign. * x * Poultry and Eggs “Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) parnorr rOuttay made the suggestion Saturday in} peseore pep, 29 (AP)—Prices paid St, Louis, He said he didn’t think | pe: per pound, Rout Detroit, for No. 1 ¥ ‘u mend tram a bowplisl. igi? sing weer mat leh ym ene - eavy mace broilers, 3-4 s But Sen. Mie Mansfield of Mon-|Whites 21; Barred Rocks 26-27; ca- tana, assistant Democratic floor |" over © is. 25-27. Jeader, said he regards Dulles as DETROIT EGGs almost indispensable at this time.| DETROIT, Peb. 20 (APi—Eges. f.0.b. Sen. Homer Capehart (R-Ind) pecliohy in case lots, federal-state said Symington was carrying par- euaiue Grade A extra large 42: large tisan politics too far, He called |‘ : artim ae, pein B large 37. rowns: Grade extra large 42; large Symington's suggestion very cruel - Checks 36. ; otal weekly reeeip and unwarranted. graded eggs, feb, 14-20, * * * Commercially graded: te of government) were 8.285 cases. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) Piette ae. A extra srehed aul ‘orets| said it would be unfair to ask Dul- a Bo iy ek 37-374: : lerse 3844-3744; les to quit now. a~ rade arge Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala) °. said he saw no need for making a Livestock replacement. He said Dulles ‘“‘may DETROIT LIVESTOCK , ETROIT, Feb. 1 P IDA) Lemire iif anyone can, I be- or Jf ce) = week sei Vmited Sen. Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb) said)® bs. 16-1 = covering them all, However, loca] settlements were | reached earlier this year ending plants. cancer patients doing a great job. pose } supply: ee 60-1 00 et al Dems Back Income Tax Plan steers 28 ; few loads aver- more than 15,000 gallons of eel ® EE 2150-1978 Ib steers 27 50. lto feed thirsty bombers aloft. ellie’ abuts a6 G33 Se) eae 26-08; low choice BE vlog 3450-268 0: ke. rots | choice heifers 2650-2700: utility and sranwere heifers 20 00-24 28: Deeded ra 18 50-2000; canne oan 18.59; utility bulls 23 o: tow ‘om mercial buile up to hy a State Solons to F ind Cash Crisis ‘Cure: From Our News Wires LANSING—Michigan was run. ning out of money, time and ex- cuses today as lawmakers found themselves with just five days to decide on a cure for the worst cash crisis in state history. After a long weekend of politick-|, ing, Democratic lawmakers re- turned from the party’s state con- vention with a clear mandate from the delegates to help put over Gov. Williams’ income and corporate tax program. With equal firmness, the con- | vention platform sounded the | death knell for a four cent sales | tax, urging unmoving resistance to Republican attempts to put the proposition on the April 6 ballot. Democrats in the evenly divided house beat the sales tax propo- sition Jast week. Republican stra- tegists promised to try for another vote tomorrow, but stood virtually no chance of getting the two-thirds vote they needed. Once the proposition dies, Re- publican legislators can write their own tax program, without concern for a party platform. The GOP convention earlier this month went no further than endorsing a public vote on the sales tax With fate of the proposal vir- tually a feregone conclusion, GOP moves for a second House vote were seen by some observ- ers as little more that a ma- neuver to bring public attention to the party’s stand. Labor Force, Jobless Rolls Both Up in State EAST LANSING (#—Michigan’s labor force increased by about 14,000 between December 1957 and December 1958, Michigan State University’s _Bureau of Business and Economic Research said to- day. Gains were reported in Detroit, Bay City, Saginaw, Kalamazoo and the Upper Peninsula. But the board, in its publica- tion Michigan Economic Board, said unemployment grew at a fast- er clip at the same time. It said Michigan’s unemployment climbed from 90,000 in December 1957 to 321,000 in December 1958. The board cited Jackson and Battle Creek as the only éxcep- tions to the unemployment trend. It also reported a drop in retail sales from November 1957 to No- vember ~1958 in evéry Michigan city except Kalamazoo, Kalamazoo recorded a gain from 170.6 to 170.7 in the retail sales index. Oh, How Humiliating! RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UPI)— Florida oranges soon may be Cal- - ifornia oranges. The citrus ex- periment station of the Univer- sity of California said today it would send 50,006 citrus seeds to | cline, age ae ae ee ee ee ee ee Se eee meen! Vealers—Salable 25. Nominally steady today. Compared last week vealers 1.00- 400 lower, full decline on choice rime vealers: ‘ower grades around 1. Have 5 Days sgt 3850; standard and good 2 and utility 16 00-25 | Sheep and ee — 100. Nom- jinally steadv today. Compared last week | slaughter jambs mostly 25 cents lower, A House vote also was likely | aaa cour Denes: fee ee ae tomorrow on another constitutional woaied d, slaug ler ene 110 Ibs. down amendment to boost the state's around 9p Ib moot inne a1 Oe ene borrowing power from $250,000 to! pe nog embe pee ee: a ood ise c ce shorn lsembs 0 to 50 million dollars. \108 Ibs. down 1780-19 $0: few lots ap, Democratic sponsored, the idea } . = cull to cholee slaughter eyes 5.00- ‘negs—Selable 200. Butchers mostly 25 so far has roused little enthusiasm |, nis ewer, teiaanons 6 chee een from Republicans whose eee sows 25 cents an election ballot. * * * | 300 = 50. Compared last With March 2 the deadline for Tek Carfoms and giite 18-15 cents low- getting constitutional amendments | on the ballot, the decision dead- line is fast approaching. \Vienna’s Dogs Smart ‘When Crossing Street Perfect Circle to Close VIENNA (AP) — Most of Vien- na’s dogs are “traffic - minded” Foundry at Muskegon and know their way when cross- MUSKEGON (#—Some 100 work- jing a street, a locat investigation ers will lose their jobs when Per- revealed. fect Circle Corp, closes its Mus-| The survey, conducted by Dr. kegon foundry about Aug. 1. [Ferdinand Brunner of Vienna’s|P Perfect Circle officials said over | Veterinary College, showed that the weekend the jobs will be elim- only 14 per cent of the dogs walk- inated and the foundry closed after ing thé streets unleashed proved| the firm consolidates its sleever| to have poor traffic sense. casting production at its Richmond,| The rest were able to cross the Ind. plant. busiest intersections by careful Perfect Circle makes piston rings listening to any approaching for autos, |noise, the expert says. % . AP Wirephote BIG TRUCK LITTLE BRIDGE—When Lloyd Stone of Indian- apolis drove a truck loaded with 14 tons of crushed rock across a covered wooden bridge with a five ton load limit, near Arlington, Ind., the bridge floor gave way, putting the truck into the Little Blue River. Stone broke a window and scrambled to safety, and was arrested. Authorities said the bridge was damaged beyond ower; closing trade on choice and prime vealers 33.00-28 00, "good 28.08:33 00; ‘s cull ‘Stock Exchange Closed The New York Stock Exchange is closed today because of the Michigan Phone Workers Picket tary of State John Foster Dulles FRUITS Union Employes Off Job gets his third X-ray treatment for | Apples, Delicious, bu. ............. $4.25 . ~ icancer today after a respite dur- VEGETABLES at Saginaw, Bay City On world ettaire ns [ Barre Roppcg bu. IIS : 133) as Contract Expires elery, dog. stalks » 1.85 While Dulles was talking about Horectedish No. 1. pk. ++ 3,00 . the international situation Sunday | GC{5%, (bebs.) Gos. ++ 290) DETROIT W — Supervisory per- with Vice President Richard M, Parsley Roots (behs.) doz. .....,.,. 1.80/Sonnel manned switchboards for Nixon and later with his brother, | Potetoss’ (bag) 80 Ibs. vrs: 118) Michigan Bell Telephone Co. at Allen W: Dulles, several senators | Radishes. hothouse tens.) doz. ... 160 Saginaw and Bay City today after ‘ [Furatps =. ‘+ 178/the Gommunications Workers Un- ion began picketing the company’s | central office buildings. The company said a few pickets | showed up in both cities. The com- |pany’s garage also was picketed at Bay City. & the union expired at midnight. Negotiations on a new contract were scheduled to resume in De- troit today. Bargaining sessions ran until -2, 30 a.m. No strike vote has been taken among the some 17,000 union em- |ployes represented by the CWA. One union spokesman said: | “We are hopeful, but we aren't moving very fast. There are a whole lot :of problems.’’ The company said it has made two offers to the union, both of which were rejected as ‘‘inade- quate.” Terms of the offers were not disclosed. The union said it is seeking a substantial wage increase and im- proved pensions, vacation, sickne ‘ibenefits and union security provi- sions. Indiana Mayor Police Lack Motive in Attack by 3 Thugs on Respected Official GREENSBURG, Ind, ‘thugs who Mayor Sheldon Smith said lured him to his private of- fice and slashed his face, hands and body. * * *® The mayor, 39, was in fair con- idition at Greensburg Memorial Hospital with ‘‘innumerable super- ficial cuts and a strained neck and back."’ Officers said the mayor's spot- |less reputation weakened any per- sonal revenge motive. Smith, who also serves as judge of the Greensburg city court, said the man who did the slashing Sat- urday night, snarled: ‘‘You sent up my buddy and you're going to pay for it."’ * * * “We can't come up with any leads until we get some reason for the attack,’’ said Police Chief a blank wall.” Smith, mayor for 10 years, said the three men were strangers, but said he had seen the razor ade wielder Saturday noon in Greenburg. restaurant. He sald the ‘thugs also had ‘broken glass and a hatchet. * * * The company’s contract with | 5$| minister on> Sunday. Slashed in Office Warren Melick. ‘‘We're up against} tracks at St. Ignace. off track when the freight moved out. MONDAY, FEBRUARY. 23, 1959 ‘, Xe! a ee LOOSE CABOOSE — Perfect balance was achieved by a loose caboose when it left the Trainmen believe it was right, At the two railroaders appear to hold it off the ground with little effort, although it balanced there without their assistance. 4 AP Wirephote (Continued From Page One) sacred music. And she has never been hungry, either. The career of the world's great- est gospel singer, as the critics 47 years ago on a Mississippi leveé near New Orleans. * * * Her father was a dock worker and a barber who served as a Mahalia's mother died when she was four and from then on she was raised by her uncle and aunt, who were childless. * * * grade and go to work. When she was 16 she moved to the Sout Salem Baptist Church, and prompt-| toured the a quintet which churches throughout convention, Mahalia says, “Even when (AP)—Po-|was just a little kid you could| d/lice officers said today they were hear my voice up and down the! rr jat a loss for the motive of three |levee!”’ KNEW HARD TIMES She knew hard times in Chicago, working as a hotel maid, and later| | packing dates in a factory for $7. | a week. * * Slowly, her reputation grew. There began to be times when she made as much as $25 on a Sunday. Accustomed to little, she saved much, and soon owned her own beauty and flower shops, ° She was asked to make record- ings, and one of her first discs, a gospel song she wrote herself, called “I Will Move On Up A Little Higher,’’ sold over two million records, Another, “Even Me,” sold ever a million. Critics recognized instantly that she had the greatest jazz voice |since the incomparable Bessie Smith, but Mahalia stuck resofutely to her gospel songs. She refused, Bertrand Russell Predicts Death, The mayor told police one of the men enticed him to his private tax accountant’s office by tele- phone, saying he wanted help in) preparing an income tax return. Burglars Get $8,000 in Roof-Entry Theft Burglars who believe in working their way from the top down were being. sought today by Ferndale Police following an $8,000 theft! from a market safe over the week- end. Thieves used -a sledge-hammer to pound their way through the roof of the State Fair’ Market, 726 Hilton St., Ferndale, owned by Sam Wolfe of 15341 Park St., Oak Park. Police recovered the sledge- hammer which was left at the scene. About $8,000 in cash, bills and checks was,removed from the safe. The Ainctig thieves drop- - ped a bundle containing $140 in- bills in the alley as they fled. The same method of operation was used in the burglarizing of a westside Detroit market over the weekend when an estimated $18,000 was removed from a safe. John L. Lewis Goes Home, Condition Said Excellent WASHINGTON t®#—John L, Lew- is is in excellent condition. after three weeks in Georgetown Univer- héart attack and pneumonia, his physician said today. , Lewis, president of the United Mine. Workers, entered the hospital Jan, 30 and checked out Eriday. He now is at his home in Alexan- repair, ag eer ee, Sas ee ee er dria, Va. sity Hospital recuperating from a’ Writes Obituary LONDON (AP)—Bertrand Rus- sell said today he expects to die on June 1, 1962. Lord Russell, who will be 87 on May 18, will read his own obituary on. a television interview program next month. * * * The aged Nobel Prize winner, who has been married four times, ‘wrote the obituary in 1937. “Why June 1, 1962? Well, I will be just past 90 then and it seems a suitable age to die,” he said. “I must confess | am becoming a little nervous as the time ap- proaches.” t | Lodge Calendar Pontiac White Shrine No. 22 annual memorial and ceremonial, Wednesday, February 25 at 8 o'clock. Roosevelt Temple, 22 State 8t. Bernice Cover, Scrib adv. News in Brief Burglars took an undetermined amount of money from three {amusement machines in the W. /Walton Dairy Bar, 228 W. Walton Blvd., it was reported to police Sunday, An undetermined amount of change was taken by burglars who broke into the Idle Time Bar, 262 E, Pike St., it was reported to police Sunday. her home at 18. Lull St. was re- ported to Pontiac Police over the ‘weekend by Bessie Jones. Thieves took $200 in §1 bills from the Northside Auto. Supply offices, 739 N. Perry St., it was Faith Brought Singer From Poverty to Fame call her, began obscurely enough! Economic necessity made Maha- le lia leave school after the eighth | came to know Mahalia, and f rom| ithe start I was impressed not only} Side of Chicago, joined the Greater ly became the featured singer in, various | Baptist 4 ’ literally and figuratively, to sing the blues. ‘SANG GOD'S MUSIC’ “When I was a girl,” she said to one interviewer, ‘'I washed dishes, jtub to keep my family alive. I knew the blues, but there's de- spair in the blues. T sang God's music because it gave me hope. I still need the hope and happiness God's musle brings. I find it a per- sonal triumph over every handi- cap, a solution to every problem, a path to peace.” nd television producer that iby her wonderful musical gift, but by the warmth and depth o iher religious faith. * * * surgery within a matter of hours. | She was extremely frightened, | as almost anyone would have been, jand asked to be Jeft alone for a| ‘little while. Then she took her) Eddy Liquia, 8, Otisville, died Bible, and re-read the 27th Psalm: | ‘The Lord ts the | salvation; | The Lord is the strenght of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” until she regained her faith, She recovered quickly, believing sincerely that God had given her a better and stronger body with which to carry on her mission of singing the gospel. (Copyright 1959 by Guideposts) strength of my Brazil Approves Mrs. Luce as Envoy practically official now: Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce is the new U. S. Am- bassador to Brazil. A foreign office announced — today government, responding to an in- quiry from Washington, cabled its agreement over the weekend to appointment of the petite author- diplomat, The White House customarily’ awaits such a response before an- nouncing the appointment of a new ambassador. Mrs. Luce is to waceeed Ellis O. Briggs, a career diplomat who has been ambassador to Traffic Weekend scrubbed floors, bent over a wash-/! It was in my capacity as a radio| | TY saw that faith in action when| Mahalia was hospitalized and was'| I told that she must undergo major| whom shall I fear? | RIO de JANEIRO w — It’s spokesman | the Brafilian Worst of Year 9 Die as Unseasonably Warm Weather Draws Crowds to Highways By The Associated Press Nay Be Head - Hoffman Would Get House Group to Hear. Yankus’ Complaints DOWAGIAC (UPT)—Cass County poultry farmer Stanley Yankus Jr., may havé hig day before the House Agriculture Committee, but there is no telling whether hi¢ appear- ance will prompt him to change his mind about leaving the country. Rep. Clare E, Hoffman (R-Mich) hearing for Yankus, but the Alle- gan lawmaker said he didn’t think it would do much good because “the law is the Jaw," Yankus, an independent-mind- ed chicken farmer last week posted a. “for sale’ sign on his 100-acre farm near here because “the government won't let me farm as I see fit.” Hoffman said Yankus’ case proved “this country is not the citadel of freedom we thought it was,’ and showed how a “good- citizen can be driven out of the country if he has enough inde- pendence.”’ The federa] government levied jfines on Yankus because he eX« ceeded his quota of wheat plant- ‘ings. He continued his fight since 1954 but last week announced plans to sell his farm and move to Aus- tralia. Hoffman praised Yankus for his spirited battle and said the situ- ation was not Yankus’ fault, ‘It is ours.” “People who came to this coun- jtry thought they would be free to work and live as they please so long as they didn't hurt anybody,” he said. ‘This shows how the fed- eral government has moved in on Four persons died in accidents Sunday on crowded state high- end traffic fatality toll to nine — highest of any weekend this year. * * State Police said unseasonably warm weather in the southern part) of the state brought heavy traffic’ ito most trunklines Sunday for the! first time this year. The state's highway death toll, however, still remains far below the count at this time last year. Revised State Police figures show 114 persons have died in traffic accidents thus far this year compared to 167 traffic deaths reported at this time last year, {| |fatality count started at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight * * Saturday when his sled was struck by a car near his home. Mrs. Ilene French, 38, Orton- ville, was killed Saturday in a collision east of Flint. Merlin F, Hopkins, 45, Stock- bridge, died Saturday when his car was struck by a train south. west of Brighton. Donald Witter, 16, Le Roy, died Friday night when the car in which he was riding struck the rear of a snow plow near Le Roy. Larry Kuehnlein, 19, Monroe, was killed Saturday, when the car in which he was riding collided with a tractor-trailer near Monroe. George E. Wood, 31, Oxford, was killed Sunday when his car and another collided west of Lapeer. Alvin E, Johnson, 43, Lapeer, died Sunday in a collision north of Lapeer. Mrs. Rose M. Polly, 28, Wick- liffe, Ohio, died Sunday when the car in which she was riding struck a tractor-trailer at Devils Lake. Willie H. Griffin, 44, Inkster, was ‘killed Sunday when his car and another auto collided head-on in | Dearborn Township. The Associated Press weekend ‘every part of our life.” Hoffman said Yankus was “just ways, boosting Michigan's week- jold fashioned—he wants to run his own: business.’ " New Radio Item Enables Constant Tracking of Moon CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Collins Radio Co. said today that for the first time in history the moon has been tracked continu- ously through the use of a new precision radio sextant. x * * Since the moon gives off ex- tremely weak radio waves, the company said in a statement, the feat of developing a sextant to track the moon accurately is a “major breakthrough in naviga- tional systems." * * * The company said the radio sex- tant functions as a precise com- pass, with more than 10 times the accuracy of present marine com- passes, Wallets Holding $125 Stolen From Home Waterford Township police this morning recovered two wallets stolen from Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gregory of 1026 Premont St., but $125 was missing from the wallets. Thieves entered the unlocked house sometime after the couple went to bed at 11 last night and took Mrs. Gregory's purse and her husband's trousers containing the wallet. The theft was discovered when the Gregory’s daughter Sharon came home and found the front door wide open. The trousers and purse were stolen from a chair beside the Gregory’s bed. Former Detroit Paper Ad Manager Dies DETROIT w — Funeral serv- Brazil since duly 1956. There jces. for Ralph Horton, former was no indication where he might | classified advertising manager of be reassigned. ithe Detroit News, will be held here The theft of a clock-radio from). Mrs. Luce is the wife of maga-' zine publisher Henry R. Luce. | She was ambassador to Italy from) April 1953 to November 1956, She | has since represented President Eisenhower at two Vatican cere-| monies, the funeral of Pope Pius. XII and the coronation of Pope! John XXIII. | Williams Trails in Poll of Presidential Likelies WASHINGTON &® — A magazine survey of political leaders rates Vice President Nixon far out in front for the Republican presiden- tial nomination. Among Democrats, it says sentiment now favors Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri or Adlai E, Stevenson. A conyrighted article in U. S. News & World Report also lists Sens, John F. Kennedy of Massa- chusetts and Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas as Democratic contenders. Trailing them are Sen. Hubert Humohrey of Minnesota and Gove. G. Mennen Williams of Michigan and Robert B. Meyner of New Jer- sey, Remember the man who could sell refrigerators to Eskimos? Well, a recent “job wanted’’ ad rockets to the Russians” Manhattan hosiery company foe its stockings are for ‘contented reported to police Sunday, |ager for 15 years when he retired boasted the writer could "= | Wednesday. Horton died Saturday at the age of 71. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Horton came to Detroit in 1932 to take an advertising job with the De- troit Free Press. He moved to the ‘News display advertising depart- ‘ment the following year. He had been classified advertising man- in 1953. Horton formerly was with Curtis Publishing Co., Philadelphia; the Cleveland Plain Dealer; the New York Herald Tribune; the Cincin- nati Enquirer and the Columbus, Ohio, Dispatch, Police are investigating the case, Oakland Fuel & Paint 430 Orchard Lake FE 5-6159 =< bt te ee fo we (Clip and meil tedey) ~ aes ss - Leave Them a Home, Not a Mortgage! sete to you. DANIELS INS. AGENCY —s Modern Woodmen of AaiaiNed 563 W. Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan : 1 am interested in your Mertgoge Condslotion Plot. Wealdn’t you ike so calves.” —Earl Wilson. Mame J. Di Addrews” : City cee ee ° * t q * ee said he would try to arrange a . + The new contract calls for an an- nual improvement factor increase of six cents an hour or 2% per cent, whichever ig greater, retro- “=== Dulles to Stay. ),imade the suggestion Saturday in’ »iment from a Header, said he regards Dulles as ‘and unwarranted, r q « Ve La v sWant [MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale packrge lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. Secretary Has Parleys With Nixon, Brother Between Treatments Detroit Produce FRUITS WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles| were disagreeing with a sugges- tion that the secretary resign. x *« * Stuart Symington Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Feb. 20 (AP)—Prices paid per pound, f.0.b. Detroit, for No. 1 quality live poultry: Heavy type fens. 29-24: light » hee hens 12-13; heavy type broilers, -4 Ibs., whites 21; Barred Rocks 26-327; ponettes over 6 lbs. 25-27. (D-Mo) | | Sen. St, Louis, He said he didn't think Dulles could run the State Depart- hospital, But Sen. Mie Mansfield of Mon- tana, assistant Democratic floor ca- DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, Feb, 20 (AP)—Kggs, f. 0. b. Detroit, in case lots, federal-state grades: Whites: Grade A extra large 42; large 40; medium 36. Grade B large 31. Browns: Grade A extra large 42; large 40, Checks 30. Total weekly reseipte of government graded eggs, feb, 14-20, were 8,285 cases. Commercially graded: Whites’ Grade A extra large 37%; large almost indispensable at this time. Sen. Homer Capehart (R-Ind) said Symington was carrying par- tisan politics too far, He called Symington’s suggestion very cruel * * * tinuat the -living| Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) | 55/374"° me a ; aes j ad “en said it would be unfair to ask Dul- = “extra Intye B23 ee bya les to quit now. 5 a, rade arge “30. Average wage scale for the | Sen John Sparkman. (D-Ala) said he saw no need for making a replacement, He said Dulles ‘‘may ‘Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK plants in Detroit, Traverse bounce back, If anyone can, I be-|_OZTROIT, Feb. 19 (AP) (USDA) — and three Ohio cities and the un- [jjeyve he will.”’ ony Gunaneea hes ere yo enited fon originally demanded a con- | Sen, Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb) sald) Bb, sholee yearnings 1080 fo, down tinaation of a national agreement (there are many examples of cured |50 cents lower; lower «rades .75-1.28 | covering them all, cancer patients doing a great job. sore bom yiscowe BX co Pray EE However, loca] settlements were choice’ steers T1178 Ios. aot lew reached earlier this year ending) The KC135 jet tanker carries|{¢%, josds average to high chotce 1000- : the strikes at all but three Detroit more than 15,000 gallons of fuel age choice iipentats Ib. steers 7150-40 b4, plants, lto feed thirsty bombers aloft. pp Oe eB cae id — low choice heifers 2450-2650" few lo chok, heifers 26.50-27.00; utility an i siandaed ‘heifers ado te bead dp pg i 789, , Cl a n cutters ao. Dems Back Ineome Tax Plan 18.0; uti ‘bully 23.90.2450; (ww com-| State Solons Have 5 Days to Find Cash From Our News Wires | Vealers—Salable 25. Nominally steady teday. Compared last week vealers 1.00. | 4.00 lowrr, full dectine on choice and) rime vealers: ‘ower grades around 1.00) wer; closing trade on choice and prime yealers 33.00-28 00, individual prime up to Cri Si S C LITO ei tien ests end good 28:00-23.00; cull and utility 16 00-25 Bheep and |jambs—Salable 100. Nom- Inally steedv today. Compared last week slaughter lambs mostiy 25 cents lower, w jinstances 50 cents lower; slaughter ewes A House vote also os likely | earce, steady; m and choice Stock Exchange Closed , The New York Stock Exchange is closed today because of the holiday. Michigan Phone Workers Picket Union Employes Off Job gets his third X-ray treatment for | Apples, Delicious, bu. ............ 4.98 . i cancer today after a respite dur- VEGETABLES at, Saginaw, Bay City ing. which he had two discussions Beets ped OH sosesnenenansens 11 as Contract Expires “wine Dulles was talking aboot endiedis Set, pa cc Ae ¥ * . » eaee . a! ; the international situation Sunday |Kefks, (beds) dos. fo .---+-s+++ 388) DETROIT WM — Supervisory per- with Vice President Richard M., Parsley cote (bebs.) dos. . - 10 sonnel manned switchboards for Nixon and later with his brother, | Potatoes’ (bag) 80 Ibs. 1... 116|Michigan Bell Telephone Co. at Allen W. Dulles. several senators | Radishes, hothouse ibehs.) doz, ... 1.50 Saginaw and Bay City today after ‘ Turnips, topped, bu. .... ...-..6-+. 1.18 the Communications Workers Un- ion began picketing the company's central office buildings. The company said a few pickets showed up in both cities. The com- |pany’s garage also was picketed at Bay City. The company’s contract with the union expired at midnight. Negotiations on a new contract were scheduled to resume in De- troit today. Bargaining sessions ran until 1:30 a.m. No strike vote has beén-taken among the some 17,000 union em- ployes represented by the CWA. One union spokesman said: “We are hopeful, but we aren't moving very fast. There are a whole lot of problems.’ The company said it has made two offers to the union, both of Which were rejected as ‘“‘inadge- quate.” Terms of the offers wére not disclosed. The union said it is seeking a substantial wage increase and im- proved pensions, vacation, sickness benefits and union security provi- sions. ‘Indiana Mayor Slashed in Office Police Lack Motive in Attack by 3 Thugs on Respected Official i tracks at St. Ignace. Trainmen THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1059 off track when the freight moved out. LOOSE CABOOSE — Perfect balance was achieved by a loose caboose when it left the believe it was At the bo: ay AP Wirephote right, two railroaders appear to hold it off the ground with little effort, although it balanced there without their assistance. (Continued From Page One) sacred music. And she has never been htingry, either. The career of the world’s great- est gospel singer, as the critics cal] her, began obscurely enough 47 years ago on a Mississippi leveé near New Orleans. * * * Her father was a dock worker and a barber who served as a minister on Sunday. Mahalia’s mother died when she was four and from then on she was raised by her uncle and aunt, who were childless. ; . ® * * Economic necessity made Maha- lia leave school after the eighth Faith Brought Singer From Poverty to Fame ‘ literally and figuratively, to sing the blues. H“8ANG GOD'S MUSIC’ ‘‘When I was a girl,’’ she said to one interviewer, ‘I washed dishes, scrubbed floors, bent over a wash- tub to keep my family alive. I knew the blues, but there's de- spair in the blues. I sang God’s music because it gave me hope. I still need the hope and happiness God’s musle brings. I find it a per- sonal triumph over every handi- cap, a solution to every problem, a path to peace.” It was in my capacity as a radio} and television producer that grade and go to work. When she was 16 she moved to the South Side of Chicago, joined the Greater Salem Baptist Church, and prompt- ly became the featured singer in a quintet which toured various churches throughout the Baptist convention. | | | ! came to know Mahalia, and from| the start I was impressed not only} by her wonderful musical gift, but by the warmth and depth of! her religious faith. * * * T saw that faith in action when) Mahalia was hospitalized and was| told that she must undergo major| Traffic Weekend Worst of Year 9 Die as Unseasonably Warm Weather Draws Crowds to Highways By The Associated Press Four persons died in accidents Sunday on crowded state high- ways, boosting Michigan’s week- end traffic fatality toll to nine — highest of any weekend this year. * ° State Police said unseasonably warm weather in the southern part of the state brought heavy traffic first time this year. The state’s highway death toll, however, still remains far below the count at this time last year. Revised State Police figures show 114 persons have died in traffic accidents thus far this year compared to 167 traffic deaths reported at this time last year, Rebel Farmer: May Be Heard Hoffman Would Get. House Group to Hear Yankus’ Complaints DOWAGIAC (UPI)—Cass County poultry farmer Stanley Yankus Jr., may have hig day before the House Agriculture Committee, but there is no telling whether. his appear- ance will prompt him to change his mind about leaving the country. Rep. Clare EF. Hoffman (R-Mich) suid he would try to arrange a hearing for Yankus, but the Alle- gan lawmaker said he didn’t think it would do much good because “the law is the law.” Yankus, an independent-mind- ed chicken farmer last week posted a “for sale’’ sign on his 100-acre farm near here because “the government won’t let me farm 4s I see fit.” Hoffman said Yankus’ case proved “this country is not the citadel of freedom we thought it was,” and showed how a ‘‘good citizen can be driven out of the country if he has enough inde- pendence."’ The federa] government levied fines on Yankus because he ex- ceeded his quota of wheat plant- ings. He continued his fight since 1954 but last week announced plans to sell his farm and move to Aus- tralia. Hoffman praised Yankus for his spirited battle and said the situ- ation was not Yankus’ fault, ‘‘It is ours.” “People who came to this coun- try thought they would be free to work and live as they please so long as they didn’t hurt anybody,” he said. ‘‘This shows how the tfed- eral government has moved in on every part of our life.” Hoffman said Yankus was “‘just old fashioned—he wants to run his own business.” New Radio Item : Enables Constant to most trunklinés Sunday for the Tracking of Moon CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Collings Radio Co. said today that for the first time in history the moon has been tracked continu- ously through the use of a new precision radio sextant. * * * Since the moon gives off ex- tremely weak radio waves, the Mahalia says, ‘‘Even when I GREENSBURG, Ind, (AP)—Po-|was just a little kid you could} hear my voice up and down the! a ost good LANSING—Michigan was run. |tomorrow on another constitutional | wooied slaughter lambs 110 Ibs. down ace ssocis Press w |compe id ji ning out of money, time and ex amendment to boost the state's 18 %- See Ib high choice to prime surgery within a matter of hours. | The “Associated “Press weekend | company said in a statement, the : ', - =| aroun woo ; jfatality count started at 6 p.m.|feat of developing a sextant to She was extremely frightened, Friday and ended at midnight|track the moon accurately is a led lambs 2100; utility lambs 16 00-18 00, most cuses today as lawmakers found|borrowing power from $250,000 to|t? Hood poe and shorn lambs No. 1 2 pelts \lice officers said today they were hemaetves to|to 50 million dollars. 108 Ibs. down 1780-19 50: few lots up to|at a loss for the motive of three |levee!” as almost anyone would have been,| sunday. “major breakthrough in naviga- rasren§ on ae bo cee Democratic. sponsored, the idea iT 00 a) ad hatha! CA) Poe" thugs who Mayor Sheldon Smith| iwiew HARD TIMES sea ert to be left alone for aj x tional systems.” cash crisis in state history. so far has roused little enthusiasm |, Hoes—Salable 200. Butchers mostly 28 said lured him to his private of- k Ve Bee wile: vhen 3 took fad Eddy Liquia, 8, Otisville, died a a ee After a long weekend of politick- from Republicans whose backing sowe 2$ cents off: mixed No. 2 and 3 fice and slashed his face, hands| She knew hard times in Chicago, e, and re-read the 27th Psalm: | Saturday when his sled was struck! The company said the radio sex: ig needed to put it on the spring 3°),732 /0%,,18,00-18.28: mixed No. 1 and/and body. working as a hotel maid, and later! phe Lord is the strength of my by a car near his home. tant functions as a precise com- , Democratic lawmakers re- turned from the party's state con- . vention with a clear mandate from election ballot. * With March 2 the deadline for * * |2 18 40-15 50: loa 210 Iba 15 60; N | page 00-600 : . ; week barrows and gilts %*-75 cents low- x « The mayor, 39, was in fair con- dition at Greensburg Memorial packing dates in a factory-for $7.50! a week. * & * salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strenght of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” Mrs. Ilene French, 38, Orton- ville, was killed Saturday in a collision east of F lint. pass, with more than 10 times the laccuracy of present marine com- |passes. Gov er; sows 25 cents lower. , the delegates sad icy pated rate Setting constitutional amendments Hospital with “innumerable super-|_ Slowly. her reputation grew.| unt she regained her faith, Merlin F, Hopkins, 45, Stock- | ; Williams’ income rporate|on the ballot, the decision dead-\.,. ; ficial cuts and a strained neck and| There began to be times when she ; _, _| bridge, died Saturday when his W | t H ld 125 tax program. line is fast approaching. Vienna's Dogs Smart back.” made as much as $25 on a Sunday.| She recovered quickly, believing| gap was struck by a train south- a e S 0 Ing With equal firmness, the con- - _ .|When Crossing Street |, Diticers said the mayor's spot-|Accistomed to litle, ‘she saved aren ger body write] West ot Brighton. | ! - -|much, and soon owned her own stronger body wi di § | F H vention platform sounded the | Perfect Circle to Close less reputation weakened any per ed which t carry on her mission of| Donald Witter, 16, Le Roy, hich fo en [ om ome \Foundry at Muskegon VIENNA (AP) — Most of Vien- na's dogs are ‘“‘traffic - minded” sonal revenge motive. Smith, who also serves as judge of the Greensburg city court, said beauty and flower shops, She was asked to make record- singing the gospel. (Copyright 1959 by Guideposts) Friday night when the car in which he was riding struck the rear of Waterford Township police this to Republican attempts to put the and know their way when cross- - a snow: plow near Le Roy. : . on the ¢ haniet. MUSKEGON (#—Some 100 work-|ing a street, a local investigation|the man who did the slashing Sat- ings, and one of her first discs, eb eratl 19 cs Monroe,|™Om™ming recovered two wallets April a h Larry . ; teq|*T, Will lose their jobs when Per- revealed. urday night, snarled: “You sent) & fowPel Sang she wrove hersell . was killed Saturday, when the car| "oer from Min and Mis. Clyde Democrats in the evenly divided|tect Circle Corp, closes its Mus-|" The survey, conducted by Dr./up my buddy and you're going to| Called “I Will Move On Up A |Brazil fA roves in which he was riding collided| Cre#ory Of 1026 Premont St... but house beat the ‘sales tax propo-/kegon foundry about Aug. 1. Ferdinand Brunner of Vienna’s|pay for it. mill soit oer oer ee with a tractor-trailer near Monroe. |*1-> ¥8 missing from the wallets. sition Jast weék. Republican stra-| Perfect Circle officials said over | Veterinary College, showed that * * M. = LAR hepa Ceenteoel nih M [ George E. Wood, 31, Oxford, was Thieves entered the ee tegists promised to try for another|the weekend the jobs will be elim-/only 14 per cent of the dogs walk-| ‘We can’t come up with any) "#¢ ever a million. f 5. uce as nvoy killed Sunday when his car and house sometime after the couple vote tomorrow, but stood virtually|inated and the foundry closed after ing the streets unleashed proved|leads until we get some reason! Critics recognized instantly that another collided west of Lapeer.|Went to bed at 11 last night and no chance of getting the two-thirds|the firm consolidates its sleever|to have poor traffic sense. _ . for the attack,’ said Police Chief)sne had the greatest jazz voice) RIO de JANEIRO # — It's| Alvin E. Johnson, 43, Lapeer, |‘ Mrs. Gregory's purse and vote they needed. casting production at its Richmond,| The rest were able to cross the/Warren Melick. We're up against since the incomparable Bessie; practically official now: Mrs. Clare} died Sunday in a collision north Der Busband.s trousers containing , Once the proposition dies, Re- ge my | [busiest intersections by careful|@ blank wan 40 years. said |S™ith, but Mahalia stuck resolutely|Boothe Luce is the new U. S. Am-| of Lapeer. the wallet. ; publican legislators can write their Pie a makes piston singe Sevening to any approaching a tree = pe were strangers, but to her gospel songs. She refused,|bassador to Brazil. Mrs. Rose M. Polly, 28. Wick-| The theft was discovered when own tax program, without concern aurO8, » Inoise, the expert says. ania hee bad the Sade A foreign office spokesman liffe, Ohio, died Sunday when the! the Gregory’s daughter Sharon for « party platform, The. GOP : wader Seterde . reg ira announced today the Brazilian Car in which she was riding struck} came home and found the front { convention earlier this month went G restaurant. He said! Bertran d Ru sse ll government, responding to an in- 4 tractor-trailer at Devils Lake.| door wide open. no further than endorsing a public the thugs also had ‘broken glass quiry from Washington, cabled its! awittie Hi. Griffin, 41 Inkster, Was) The trousers and purse were vote on the sales tax. and a hatchet | : agreement over the weekend {o Killed Sunday when his car and} i i a : irpre iIcts eat : ‘ {| : ._|Sstolen from a chair beside the With fate of the proposal vir- x * * ’ appointment of the petite caren eee au Sada head-on in Gregory’s| bed tually ‘a foregone conclusic The mayor told police one of! 7 : diplomat. |) Peskborn Stow ienip: Police are investigati se | GOP moves tor second House the men enticed him to his rte Wr ites Obituar Y | The White House customarily ; ee rveniente the cost. 2 . ‘ tax accountant's office by tele- awaits such a response before anf p) p pag + seen by pee pgoets phone, saying he wanted help in di ai woe Rus nouncing the appointment of a new: ormer etroit aper Pea Soo i wu Reng pes ae preparing an income tax return.| ©" oo ik Ms e expects to dle ambassador. A o to the party's stand. Lord Russell, who will be 87 on| Mrs. Luce is to succeed Ellis Ad Manager Dies Labor Force, Jobless Rolls Both Up in State ? - AP Wirephoto BIG TRUCK, LITTLE BRIDGE—When Lioyd Stone of Indian- apolis drove a truck loaded with 14 tons of crushed rock across a covered wooden bridge with a five ton oad limit, near Arlington, Burglars Get $8,000 in Roof-Entry Theft _Burglars who believe in working their way from the top down were being sought today by Ferndale Police following an $8,000 theft from a market safe over the week- end. Thieves used a sledge-hammer to pound their way through the roof of the State Fair Market, 726 Hilton St., Ferndale, owned - by Sam Wolfe of 15341 Park St., Oak Park. Police recovered the sledge- hammer which was left at the scene. About $8,000 in cash, bills and checks was removed from the safe, The escaping thieves drop- ped a bundle containing $140 in bills in the alley as they fled. The same method of operation was used in the burglarizing of a westside - Detroit market over the- weekend when an estimated $18,000 was removed from a safe. John L. Lewis Goes Home, Condition Said Excellent WASHINGTON (#—John L. Lew- is is in excellent condition after three weeks in Georgetown Univer- sity Hospital recuperating from a heart attack and pneumonia, his Physician said today. dria, Va. ‘ May 18, will read his own obituary on a television interview program next month. * * * The aged Nobel. Prize winner, who has been married four times, wrote the obituary in 1937. “Why June 1, 1962? Well, I will be just past 90 then and it seems a suitable age to dié, he said. “TI must confess I am becoming a little nervous as the time ap- proaches.”’ 1 Lodge Calendar Pontiac White Shrine No. 22 annual memorial and ceremonial, Wednesday, February 25 at 8 o'clock. Roosevelt Temple, 22 State St. Bernice Cover, Scrib adv. News in Brief O. Briggs, a career diplomat who has been ambassador to Brazil since duly 1956. There was no indication where he might be reassigned. Mrs. Luce is the wife of maga- zine publisher Henry R. Luce. She was ambassador to Italy from April 1953 to November 1956. She has since represented President Eisenhower at two Vatican cere-| monies, the funeral of Pope Pius’ XII and the coronation of Pope! John XXIII. | Williams Trails in Poll of Presidential Likelies WASHINGTON (® — A magazine survey of political leaders rates Vice President Nixon far out in front for the Republican presiden- tial nomination. Among Democrats, it says sentiment now favors Sen. Burglars took an undetermined amount of money from three amusement machines in the W. Walton Dairy Bar, 228 W. Walton Bivd., it was reported to police Sunday, | i An ‘undetermined amount of change was taken by burglars who broke into the Idle Time Bar, 262 E, Pike St., it was reported to police Sunday. The theft of a clock-radio from her home at 18 Lull St. was re- ported to Pontiac Police over the weekend by Bessie Jones. reported to police Sunday. ’ Stuart Symington of Missouri or Adlai E, Stevenson. A conyriehted article in U. S., News & World Report also lists Sens. John F. Kennedy of Massa- chusetts and Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas as Democratic contenders. Trailing them are Sen. Hubert Humohrey of Minnesota and Govs. G, Mennen Williams of. Michigan a Robert B, Meyner of New Jer- DETROIT (® — Funeral serv- ices for Ralph Horton, former classified advertising manager of the Detroit News, will be held here Wednesday. Horton died Saturday at the age of 71. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Horton came to Detroit in 1932 to take an advertising job with the De- troit Free Press. He moved to the News display advertising depart- ment the following year. He had been classified advertising man- ager for 15 years when he retired in 1953. Horton formerly was with Curtis Publishing Co., Philadelphia; the Cleveland Plain Dealer; the New York Herald Tribune;. the Cincin- nati Enquirer and the Columbus, Ohio, Dispatch, WHITE SEAL FUEL OIL FOR FUFL OW pie tne tee ee urns Cleane) urns Hatter mtmantumeiness See See eee A Rh Rn RH Oakland Fuel & P 430 Orchard Loke FE 5-6159 YC eee # (Clip and meil today) ite ? Leave Them a Home, Not a Mortgage! Suppose something happened to you. DANIELS INS. AGENCY Modern Woodmen of America Remember the man who could sell refrigerators to Eskimos? Well, a recent “job wanted" ad calves.” ~Earl Wilson. 563 W. Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan 1 am interested in your Mortgoge Cancellation Plon. ‘ a Wouldn't you like to leave your home mortgage free? For as little as 1 per cent you can buy Modern Woodmen’s Mort- oy ; : Lewis, president of the United . |boasted the writer could ‘‘sell| = Meme 4 : = gpm béldge fede taal patting the styck Sie the Little Mine Workers, entered the hospital) Thieves took $200 in §1 billsjrockets to the Russians” . . . A/ = padres ne Blue River . Stone broke a window and scrambled to safety, and {jan 30 and checked out Friday.|from the Northside Auto. Supply|Manhattan hosiery company says & “SH P ae arrested. re faid the bridge was damaged beyond |He now is at his home ip Alexan-| offices, 739 N. Perry St., it waslits stockings are for “contented — "Gee bee