aR OPEN SAFETY DRIVE — The first motor- ist. through the auto safety check lane on Huron at Saginaw this morning was Lym He got a deluxe in- spection and a safety sticker from the committee that planned the four day campaign. From left Ww. Walker, of 921 Argyle St. are Capt. Joseph Koren, police traffic bureau; committee. * Pontiac Press Pheote Harvey Johns, head of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce safety committee; Chief Herbert W. Straley; Robert Oliver, representing Pontiac auto dealers; and Harold Marshall, city person- nel director and chairman of the safety check Baby, Great. -GrandFath er illed in Collisio An equalized valuation of jCounty, to be used for tax was being studied by the Board of Supervisors this morning. rs A ‘58 County Valuation Soars to $1.8 Billion $1,808,669,648 for Oakland levying purposes this year, The valuation total of the 45 cities and townships represents a large $135,356,377 jump over the 1957 valu- Auto Contract Talks Resume UAW, Ford, Chrysler. Meeting Today; Slate, GM Session Tuesday | Nebraska Killer Scrawls Confession on Prison Wall LINCOLN, Neb. (# — Bantam killer Charles R. Stark- weather, after his capture three months ago, inscri bed | a note on a jail cell wall in which he took the blame for nine killings but attributed two to his 14-year-old girl friend, Caril Ann Fugate, his attorneys disclosed today. Starkweather, a 5-foot-5 redhead who once acknow!-| edged he always wanted to* be a criminal, went on trial in Lancaster District Court today for murder in one of a string of late-January killings. | Selection of a jury was expected to, take three days or more. Court-appointed defense attor- we neys said Starkweather’s note was scrawled on the wall of. the cell at the Scottsbiuff County Jali in Gering, Neb, Starkweather was lodged there during an overnight stop while being returned to Lincoln after he and Caril had been captured near Douglas, Wyo., Jan. 29. According to the attorneys, the note read: “Caril is the one who said to go to Washington State. By the time | anybody will read this I will be dead for all the killings, then they eannot give Caril the chair to “From Lincoln, Neb., they got us Jan. 19, 1958. “1958, killed 11 persons. “Charles kill 9, all men. kill 2, all girls. “They have so many cops and people watching us leave I can't adq all of them up.” - The reference to Jan. 19 was not clear, and the count of nine “men” and two “girl” victims was faulty. Of 11 victims in whose slayings Starkweather has admit- ted involvement, and five were female, Conviction would bring a sen-. tence of life imprisonment or death in the electric chair. The jury sets the penalty under Ne- braska law. *~ * * Insanity apparefitly will be the defense plea, although court-ap- pointed defense attorneys have run into reluctance not only from the 19-year-old defendant but from family members as well on aad score. Sell Your var Now to Jerome's “Bright Spot,” FE 8-0488 Cari - six were male: In Today’ Ss ae Expecting Anything Weatherwise Now Almost the only thing predict- able about our weather is that we'll be having it. Following temperatures that ranged to a high of 77 degrees Saturday, the mercury dropped te a low of 34 on Sunday and failed to rise above 47 degrees. * * * . Aceording to the Weather reau, the outlook for Pontiac and) vicinity tonight is fair and cool, with a low near 34 and scattered) light frost. Tuesday should be a’ little warmer, with fair skies and a high near 60. * * * registered a low of 34 degrees and ros to 57 degrees by 1 p.m, Marks Birth of Marx -MOSCOW (iF Pravda marked today the 140th anni- versary of Karl Marx's birth by | proclaiming that Marxism is the “victorious banner of the epoch.” More than 33 million people belong to the Communist party in 75-countries around the world, the Communist party paper Pravda sald, compared to 300 members of the party 11 years ago, ie sees PRS RED RE EEE ADOBE Si SE siewbigss Comies eee ee ee oe ee ed 23 County News... soce 10 Editorials ...........0000.; 6 Markets ..... Spaonsacancac + 24 Obituaries .........00006.., 5 OPN gnc sc cceweecceses 19-21 Thettery. .. 220.6 .5250055.. 22 TV & Radio Programs..... 9 Wilson, Earl............... 29 Women’s Pages...... 13-15 Mayors Tour Pontiac and Its Environs Their honors the Mayors got a iday. Visiting here on Michigan Week’s Mayor Exchange Day were jHarry A. Réiley, president of Bel- laire Village: Emil Geigling, may- ior of Grayling. and Arthur Smith, mayor of Stockbridge. far. look rs Pontiac and environs to-/S@turday and then recessed the) DETROIT — Contract negotia- itions between the United Auto iWorkers Union and two of the auto industry’s big three resume itoday with the union reporting no jprogress toward a settlement thus The UAW bargainers’ were scheduled to meet with the Ford Motor Co. team and with Chrys- ler Corp. negotiators. The union met with General Motors Corp. talks until tomorrow. Leaders of the three UAW bar- gaining teams reported yesterday that no progress was being made in the contract talks. Ken Bannon, the UAW's chief . They are visiting Pontiac, Keego, | Harbor and Sylvan Lake, respec- tively, while the local opposites are away visiting their home- towns, The three visitors this morning toured Pontiac’s mew City Hall, Public Safety Building and the Pontiag Moter Division plant, where they lunched. This afternoon they were sched- uled to tour Sylvan Lake and Keego iHarbor, with a stop at the Oakland ‘head of the union's Chrysler team, negotiator at Ford, Arthur Hughes, and V. §S. Patterson, temporary) head of the UAW’s GM team, spoke on. the union's weekly tele- vision program. - Bannon said ‘‘Ford has listened to our demands, but on the over- all we have made no progress twhatsoever, Patterson said “there has been no real: progress thus far in the GM talks." Hughes said ‘‘we -have yet to tohight at Rotunda Inn, communities today. Michigan Week| Bue- began yesterday. Tuesday is ' ‘Hos-. pitality Day,” ‘Wednesday “Our! |Livelihood Day,’ Thursday, ‘‘Edu-| ication Day,” Friday ‘Our Heri- jtage Day’’ and Saturday “Ne ow | Frontiers Day.’ \Miriani in Columbiaville This morning the thermometer COLUMBIAVILLE (INS) — Mayor. Miriani was in Columbia- ville today to take up duties as president of the Lapeer area village. County Boat Club. They will dine! Similar exchanges were being! observed in some 400 Michigan put things together in the Chrys- jler negotiations. The three union leaders also were agreed that the auto firms were collaborating with each oth-| er in the negotiations. Bannon said the union had no definite proof but added ‘“‘we are certain they are visiting back and forth. : ] ae ‘Summons Big-3 Envoys MOSCOW (INS) — Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko summoned the Western Big Three ambassadors for separate meetings later today at the iwas designed to ation as equalized. That valuation was $1,673,313,- 271. The Equalization Committee of the Board of Supervisors reported on its 1958 valuation which, it said, “produce rela- tively an equal and uniform val- uation of the taxable property in the county." * * * After discussing the report, su- pervisors were scheduled to vote 'on its acceptance. The City of Pontiac received a valuation of $335,048,188, which ig $1,754,230 more than its 1957 valuation of $333,288,968. Twenty-five townships in the county were equalized for $688,114,- 739. Twenty cities amounted to a total 1958 equalized valuation of $1,120,554,909, _* * * Random townships valuations figures are: Southfield, $155,526,- 602; Bloomfield, $96,861,952; Water- ford, $80,867,582; Farmington, $56,- 955,443; and West Bloomfield, $45,- 756,677. Next to Pontiac, the City of Royal Oak received the highest equalized valuation of the 2 cities, It was $185,164,027. Other- city valuations are: Oak Park, $99,620,275; Ferndale, $93,- 769,988; Birmingham, $87,385,725; Madison Heights, $49,287,007; oat $48,414,185; and Blogmfield ills $17,310,568. Brewery Workers Nix < ‘Latest Offer in Detroit DETROIT —A new wage offer by Detroit's five strikebound brew- leries has been rejected by mem- bers of three Brewery Workers Union locals. The offer, made Friday by the Michigan Brewers Assn., inchud- ed a 10-cents-an-hour pay in- crease for each year of a three- year contract and a 20-minute paid lunch period the third year. The union said the proposal was turned down 1,859-640 yesterday. * * * The brewery workers’ went on istrike April 1, seeking a wage in- crease, various fringe benefits and Kremlin. a shorter term contract. Maj. Robert MacVittie Killed in Bomber Crash MacVittie, ifrom Puéblo, day for a Highland pilot who died ‘in a crash into Pike's Peak in| Colorado, | Major Robert J. 35, 134 Center was flying a B25 Colo. back to his home base at Lowry Air Force Base near Denver Tuesday. oe ‘which reduced ‘area was blamed A snowstorm visibility in the i ae MacVITTIE crew members. Rescue party members reached the wreckage 24 hours after the . }erash and brought the bodies down the mountainside. A eareer Air Force officer, | MaeVittie joined: the Army Air He was promoted to major a month ago, and also recently re- ceive da commendation medal for “superior devotion to duty, ex- cellent’ technical ,knowledge, and untiring efforts in establishing im- proved systems and procedures.” During World War II, he had 101 .combat missions, He.. had Force at Selfridge Field in 1939. — Highland AF Pilot Buried A military funeral] was held to- for the crash. Also killed were two;Guinea and participated in the first atomic bomb tests at Bikini. Before his death, McVittie and his four brothers had accumu- lated 37 years of duty in the armed services. He was a grad- uate of Utica High School and had lived in the Utica area prior to his enlistment. Surviving beside his wife Mar- jorie and his three children, Shar- on, 13, Robert, 12, and Cecilia, 6, are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold MacVittie. and brothers John and Harold of the Milford area, and Walter, with the Air Force in Germany. aoe in Alaska, Hawaii, New Burial was in Utica Cemetery. BACK IN OFFICE — Colom- bia’s former President Alberto Lleras Camargo was voted back into office yesterday, He had been a favorite under agreement by the two leading political par- ties to back him. Camargo called last week's attempted military coup to prevent the elections an act of lunacy. Dennis Crosby Weds Showgirl Ceremony Sandwiched Between Performances). at Las Vegas Hotel LAS VEGAS, Nev. # — Bing The rites were performed at the Gretna Green W: Chapel by the Rey. Tames Sn tot 4 te Las Vequs Charen of the Nazarene. Dennis is the first of Bing'’s four of 1950. She has a 6-year-old son by her previous marriage. She and the crooner’s son were having dinner at a Mexican res- taurant next door to the chapel when they decided to marry im- mediately, Miss Sheehan said later. * * * She said they wanted a quiet, simple ceremony rater than aj} more elaborate one that had been discussed. After the marriage she made another dancing appearance in her supporting role in the show at the Tropicana Hotel. Best man at the ceremony was Don Williams whose singing group appears in the show. Miss Sheehan was attended by Dotty Harmony and the witnesses were Mary and Marcia Darcy — all showgirls in the act. * * * Miss Sheehan said she and young Crosby had no honeymoon plans and that she might continue appearing at the night club an- other two months. Dennis and Miss Sheehan have been keeping company for several months. Last Feb. 3, spokesmen at their homes said they planned ta be married in the same Las Vegas Catholic Reuther Says His Can't Be Beaten Figures on GM Pay and /or Investing Loosely Used By MERRYLE ‘'S. RUKEYSER INS Economic Writer Walter P. Reuther, president, United Auto Workers Union, in an diagnose the imbalances which led to the recession, contrasted the earnings since 1947 of a General Motors stockholder and those-in the same period of a General Motors rank and file worker. Reuther said challengingly that no one could question the accuracy of his arith- metic. He was testifying before the Kefau- ver Senate Subcommittee on antitrust and monopoly. Reuther’s desttmenty | was that an in- vestment of $52,000 (in the stock mar- ket) early in 1947 would have acquired 1,003 shares of GM stock, which in the subsequent 10 years paid dividends, which he compared with the 10-year full of $46,000. attempt to time ‘earnings of a worker After much palaver, he concluded: x * “I say that there is something wrong with the moral standard when $9,000 gets "you more income than 10 years of hard work. Yet there it is. No one can challenge the arithmetic of that . and say that x wk “Tt am willing to stand before the world something is wrong in our values when we have to fight giant cor- porations who defend this kind of what I t, but $92,000 in think is cockeyed economics and distorted standards of human morality.” Reuther’s arithmetic appears to be he has apparently missed the significance of the figures. His er- rors in interpretation illustrate the dif- ference between a bookkee accountant. The CPA puts figures in perspective, and undertakes to interpret cance and meaning. In relating the $9,000 to ings, Reuther combines dividends with cap- ital gains. In this connection ‘ pointed out that In our profit-and-loss so- ciety, capital gains should be interpreted together with capital losses. * x * Reuther is wrong in harking back to Karl Marx's separation of capital and labor. Capital—savings—accumulates as a result of the thrift of those workers ance who consume each year a little less than they prqduce. General Motors has more shareown- ers than employes, and mahy of the per and an their signifi- human earn- and assume , it should be sions, with forbear- In through 1957 stockholders are workers for this com- - pany and for other employers. Likewise, the customers of General Motors are mainly workers or employes of this and other companies. If Reuther intends to get into the act profit and price tags, then he should be held to the same accountability that busi- ness executives face from law and morals. The SEC, which supervises corporate ac- counts, is highly critical of matetial omis- In his presentation of figures, Reuther has made material omissions. tjacing the relationship from 1947 _ worker, Reuther failed to point out that (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) managerial discretion over x kX between a stockholder and a _| gtace and must be stopped. Swinging Banned in Boston ‘ BOSTON @® — Boston today banned rock 'n’ roll jam sessions from public auditoriums after 15 persons were injured after one at the Boston Arena. Mayor John B. Hynes told a reporter those so-called rock 'n’ roll musical programs are a dis- As far ag he is concerned, Boston has seen the last of them, he said. The mayor also said promoters do not hire enough policemen to take care of the crowds and are not entitled to licenses. No licenses will be issued in the future, the mayor said. ue ee flare-ups kept police turday night and early yesterday after a jam session at the Boston Arena, Manager Paul Brown of the State-operated arena said, “The next rock 'n’ roll show at the arena will be presented over my dead body.” Police reported that gangs of teen-agers left the arena after the jam session and attacked, robbed and" molested passers-by. * * * Albert Raggiani, 19, a Navy man ‘from Stoughton, suffered several deep stab wounds on the chest as he left the arena with two girls. Bus Strike Fails © to Keep Workers From London Five Death Hurt in Crash onU. §. 23 Their Panel Trick Hits Passing Car on Way to Home in Independence An Independence Town- ship man and his great- grandson were killed yesterday when a family of. seven were involved in a traffic accident on U.S. 23 south of Brighton. Fatally injured when the panel truck they were rid- } i F g7. ie eft } i 3 bi LONDON W—More than a mil- lion Britons footslogged, cycled or hitchhiked to work in London today. The city’s mammoth fleet of bright red double . déck buses stayed in the barns, halted by a . * * * Some 50,000 men and women employes in the 2,000-square-mile greater London area stopped work at midnight demanding an in- crease of 10 shillings 6 pence— $1.47 a week. Average weekly pay is $28 to $30:80. Union leader Frank Cousins said it might be a long and bitter struggle. The entire government-run fleet of 8,400 vehicles was idle in 114 darkened garages. For commuters, it. was what British papers called ‘‘thumb-a- lift day” or “the big walk.” The ship I has a capacity of 2,700 QUICK DECISION — Dennis e. | Crosby, twin son of Bing Crosby, and showgirl Pat Sheehan were eating dinner at Las Vegas Sunday when they-suddenly decided to wed immediately to avoid a large formal wedding. So Pat, 26, and Dennis, 23, were married night between Pat's performances at the Tropicana Hotel, _ Es me yi & i ad é “yal oe IN WASHINGTON — These ninth graders place a wreath at Cee a ey < six Lincoln Junior High School the foot of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., during their annual trip last week. Their — school was named after the former president. Left to right are: Edward Christie, 60 Blaine St.; Karen Chester, 253 W. Yale St.; Charlottie Cole, 37 Leheigh Ave. Coigate Ave. e : i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 5, ‘ine i. t 8 / Pentise Press Marsha Deeg, 497 Lowell Tom Eley, 2360 Rosewood ; and Garry Reynolds, 88 W. Two days later the Rt. Rev. he said. Reich is only a shade over 5 feet tall and weighs just 90 But Doubts Growing That Summit Meeting - Will Ever Materialize \City Commission to Eye * * The city has proposed a perma- nent paving from Lincoln avenue to approximately 50 feet south of Melton street. Residents have asked the inclusion of all Shef- field Estate’s properties within the _ {Torry School district. The petition was filed because of the traffic preblem at the _ school. Cars pulling off the pave- ment have created an almost permanent mud hole, residents claim, Commissioners also will consid- er several.Planning Board reports change al Arch Masons; High 12 Club; Charles Edward Post, American Legion; and the American Live of 4851 Inveray Dr., Birmingham, will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Manley Bailey Funeral z | Dreay Weather (Keeps Toll Low} Five Killed as Fewer Motorists Use Michigan Roads During Weekend usual numbers of springtime motorists. Two persons were killed in one * * * The Associated Press weekend traffic fatality count begins at 6 p.m. Friday and ends midnight Sunday. Elias Bliss and his grandson, Roy L. Jackson, both of Pontiac, were killed Sunday in a collision near Brighton. Raymo Morehouse, 13, Ver- montville, was killed Sunday when the bicycle he was riding was struck by a car southwest of Char- lotte. ce 9, : Jack R. Veeker, 19, Mass, was ‘ ee : . | A summary of money-raising| , Bing’s Son Dennis |Ne_Reason, Just Did It’ NATO Ready pages an en pear! 1 Cte Anercn Legon i Dato Man an Ong. os . ae i M presented. this : BL eecnt Hanger ; : Marries Showgirl |Boy, 15, Imprisons Tot for Big Par urea onintratve [Bente ssi afta Haman Soe sd (Continued From Page One) ST, LOUIS Gi The fate of ajnever to tell where Kathy was. Of Ig ar ey canes Gi begga tag : — a church where widewer Bing, 53, |youth who left little Kathy Hamp-} “I had no reason. I just did it,” day afternoon before the Wom- John J. Ryan, pastor of the|juvenile court judge. pounds. Police said he suffered gathering in the church for the church, St. Anne’s, issued this} Robert Martin Reich Jr., 15,/from rheumatic heart disease and auxiliary's 39th annual pet parade statement: “I° wish to make jt|t0ld police step by step how he|Mmissed a lot of school. He attends) COPENHAGEN, Denmark uw —|Saturday, May 24. clear that no such can |Bave the pretty blonde tot a ride special classes for mentally re- NATO Secretary General Paul- = Inned Geeves be approved by the Cine" his bicycle to the ramshackle|tarded children. Henri Spaak said today the 15- Es Cc Church unless, after thorough in-|house 30 blocks from her home * * nation North Atlantic Alliance —" ae oe area —_— vestigation, it is found that the|then tore her dress off and tied| The boy has lived most of his|would present a solidly united|~’ mt te he t., Birming- former marriage of Miss Sheehan|her UP life with his widowed grandmoth-|front if an East-West summit con-|[@™" dpc Sahn’ was not a valid Christian mar- * * * er Mrs. Bessie Dillman, who said:|ference materializes. But convie-| morrow at Bell Chapel of the k ct.” She wriggled free and was “I can’t believe he did it, but ifition grew here that there would be|@™ *- lamilton Co. * 3 4 found scratched and dirty but|M¢. ‘id, he needs psychiatric at-\no top - level parley before next * * * told a newsman that in 1950 she|been sexually . Robert's father, an epileptic, is pel eer Dae ; and George Douglas, then 30 and| The polite, slightly built boy|i@ @ mental institution, His moth-| Spaak opened the three-day for-| Son of a pioneer Oakland Couti- @ representative of the American|told officers he was scared to go“ "8s Temarried. eign ministers’ meeting in Copen-| ty family, he spent his entire | Guild of Variety Artists, were|back The boy's teacher said he had|hagen's Christianborg Palace with) life in this area. He was esse") married at Carson City, Nev., by never been a behavior problem|® W@™ing against Soviet political,) ciated with the Leonard Elec- | a justice of the peace. She said at school, His grandmother said|@Conomic and psychological moves) trie Co. for 35 years and for 10 | later were divorced—in 1953, he was a gentle youth and good|%signed to weaken Western unity.) years was electrical engineer | she thought. to children. Lnimilar cautions were issued by| for the Detroit Edison Co., re- | ~_ ly with his mar. ole ol oe en a On Ratt Cool and Sd me | riage, Dennis disclosed he plans Robert went to police the day|nanish Prime Minister H C. Han- Mr, Groves was a member of) to follow his brother Gary and after Kathy's disappearance with!on host to the conference. thelr father in a. singing career. a story that he had given her a)” + « < bn See tung ever salt” wil” home, where he had last seen her|,, Hansen said NATO would fail in/Playmates Rescue Boy an arranger of Bing’s and willl talking to a man, He ‘admitted| he Tse hocsibllities of tring (SUrIed Under Dirt Pile soon sign an RCA recording con- the abduction three hours after|P!0re All the possibilities of bring- tract in Hollywood. the Gyearold girl was found. |i" about a relaxation of present) DETROIT w®—Joseph Doute, 9,} * ag + .| Kathy was back home with her - Outside the building six aie suburban Wyandotte, has a Gary, a specialist third class, parents and five brothers and Sis-iwere arrested for putting up anti- Eh Sng oe Ses last month completed 17 months} ters a few hours after she WasinaTO posters. ia te we | of Army service in West. Ger} | jexamined at City Hospital. were inmates-of a camp for con-| TWO quick - thinking co-t * * * Mrs. Hampton said, ‘Now - I want the people to know there's jscientious objectors north of enhagen. Cap k * * England. Showers also were re- ported in scattered sections of Florida. The Weather U.S. Weather Bureas Forecast - : Teday in Pontiac : Lowest temperature preceding § a.m. At @ a.m: Wind velocity 20-25 m.p.h. rection: t Di s . period not only continued to provide jobs ; Sun sets Monday at 7:36 p.m. lustration did not receive $46,000, which was | ene ou “ ; Moun sete Tuesday et €:07 «m1 for those employes in 1947, but by expand- the worker's income, but an aggregate for | of Michigan Week s HOSPITALITY DAY - to Honor: Moon rises y at 10:13 p.m. ed capital investment, through retained the group of $522,757 A Downtown T: tur earnings and otherwise, financed job avail- _ Gemecce ifem. $8) ability for many additional workers in Moanwhite, customers got 40 mere | fi Hi Sch B 8 Bm-.-+000----40 1 p.m.....0...-87) each year following 1947. units of product out of this investment | 1. West B oom ield igh ool and eS Seeeeneeeer | xk *« * in 1957 than in 1947. During the period Sunday in Pontiac {as recorded downtown) temperature temperature Mean temperature... 2... ..ccss ces: Weather—Partly cloudy er. ee eee ies One Year Ago in Pontiac auto union in its negotiations with the major auto producers. A spokesman for the IUE said the donation reciprocated help given by UAW during the 156-day West- inghouse strike which ended in county prosecutor, 1946-1947, and an assistant prosecutor, 1939-1946. An Oakland County native, Lodge is a 1930 graduate of University of Michigan Law School. He served as assistant state attorney gen- March 1956. The UAW contrib- uted $860,000 then. - eral in 1936. Lodge is married and lives at 6610 Longworth St. another mother who needs their Meanwhile a group of Senate Democrats planned to meet this week, seeking ways to broaden- ing the bill’s coverage to include those not now covered by state systems, and to provide federal grants rather than advances to meet the cost. ber employed in 1947. Thus in —1957—the total additional income which’ thé investment those who provided the capital — the tools and facilities of production — during that For example, last year there were 200,- 857 additional GM employes over the num- (Continued From Page One) by Reuther, that one year dollar labor tools needed through retained earnings $63,038 was reinvested by the stockholders. Capital is a benefactor in providing the | nee ie: Rukeyser Challenges Reuther's Figures workers serviced by the one block of stock Reuther mentions in his il- } to enable the human worker | The foreign ministers sat in a semicircle in the oak-paneled chamber of ‘Denmark's pariia- ment. near his home. Michael Murray, 8, who was play-| the Great Lakes region, the Ohio In. pe a , 7 = other table in the restaurant, Be Fy ~~ : son, 11, who ‘scraped dirt away Yan ont the mide Misciesipel| accompany them. nefit Extensions [Picks Asian Games Team rm ‘iowph's ince. She and Mi . much as 20 degrees lower than — * *& t seat L, HARVEY LODGE — Bill p 7 Se sy = Japan Track|chael then freed him Here’s just one of over 75 different chairs aes tesuit rentines below freez-| Miss Sheehan have made »°i(ak| d Se f iM DUE In nate a man ond 17 women ‘0 repre-| The horseshoe crab is not af and rockers now on special sale at Miller's. ing, were in the Lake Superior ~toacepionclar oars: to her tate ! an S$ nator WASHINGTON. — Sen Harry — sve. at ic ee — wird but a distant relative off This lovely Early American style platform ae date of the be sei Los Angeles. are objee- fo Seek Re-Election ea pag ore eae mene ees rc Ra iam alien ar rocker with foam rubber seat and back has. te me bie the sulddle Min » oxalate lames 5 ect a date ft rae Repel rich brown maple finish on the solid wood ae ef ie * & Sen: ee today an- =< = to attend the benefits As parts and is available in your choice of ' an nounced_ his for re-elec-|for workers w payments are . : ~ - ae ae ter aie ered el oe is bride prebabiy win(tion this fall as state senator from|exhausted before April 1, 1959. ERIE ‘ STATE COLLEGE many fabrics and colors. Sale price’ yrs soutewerd ae eee hotel show/‘"¢ 12th senatorial district (Oak-| The extended payments would ; 2 Wat only: .... eee eee ee River. Showers and thundershow.|femain | here, The land County). be made from federal funds which : ; a ee ers hit wide areas in the warmer tise said. be hadn't had The Drayton Plains attorney, aithe states would have to repay HAR bg air from Missouri and Kentucky chase ti ‘ame oy edding Republican, said he would circu-|from added taxes or, otherwise, a Open Friday Evenings southward to the Gulf Coast, ; ; “|late petitions to place his name on/four years hence. But Byrd said WILKES-BARRE . More than an inch of rain fell in| the August Republican primary/the states now have nearly eight 2 parts of Kentucky and Arkansas : . ballot. billion dollars of reserve funds. SCRANTON “ @ ; during the night. The rainfall CWS as Lodge, 55, has served one two-| ,, sats un Gis kee . ) ; measuted 1% inches at Tusca- year term as senator, has been| “Before we vote on mal } : * n --lon- Elections and a member of cout ' ol : ‘ 8 ° The rain tapered off in Eastern| national Union of Electrical |the Judiciary and Conservation| the states are not drawing on the for reservations eal! WOodward 5 —— @ sections, but light rain fell in scat-| Workers has handed a check for |Committees. mee. reserve fends to extend . UPrmnhniture tered areas in the mid-Atlantic) $200,000 to the United Auto Work- | He was a state representative — 4 ts,” Byre a me on ARE tbe Coast states and southern New; ers to bolster the finances of the [from Oakland County, 1947-1948: erviow: : Where You Hone stly Save! ; 144 Oakland Ave. Careful Free Delivery § | | THE CITIES OF SYLVAN LAKE—KEEGO HARBOR WALLED LAKE and the Village of WOLVERINE LAKE SALUTES "The Kiwanis of West Bloomfield and Commerce Celebration é 2. Walled Lake High School Band , 3. Community Salute to General Motors 50th Anniversary ‘Golden o Highest temperature... =) of stockhold- to increase his productivity and thus re- . 2 . er: Kies dempertuar® ose" ""ses00 48) ers made possible, amounted in that single ceive more and better things ,in exchange Milestone’ with a Display of the Manufactured Products PRG Sd Sowreet Teeeeretares Thus, while a single employe in 1957 pete! The Date fn 06 Years eis emnploye tn tk 4. Salute to. Bud Harris’ Summer Season of Outdoor Theater safe: Ie oo a make aor a ape Accounting should be a tool to enable _ - d SUNDAY'S TEMPERATURE CHART y ’ men in good faith better to understand the | H ot i te Memphis . iH is : prea a of GM riper _Yealities. When data are twisted, the result Enjoyment. as < her mentions — amounts to js popular confusion and national weak- - meville $868 Milwaukee 58 35 ale 2% Minneapolis $6.41} 12:85 workers receiving $62,050. ‘ness, instead of strength. Tip ee ls : Su Saou oh In January. 1947 the investment in tools. Accordingly, {t is desirable to audit the : Be Sure to Bring Your Family to i «GS-42 Peliston 45 22| represented by 1,003 shares provided facili- loose talk and the loose use of figures by : } | 75 42 Phoenix 94 65 , . ‘ * e i : i «HM Bieyurgn 4 47) tes to employ 652 employes who were paid adventurous phrasemakers. To fail to hold the Commerce Drive-in Theater wth 4444 Gan Francisco 40 45] 925-850, not merely facilities, for one work-.' the loose talkers to an accounting is \to yates ae ei i. spids $839 8S. Marie 30 36] er at $3,034 as indicated in Reuther’s ex- participate—passively at least—in the con- - s Tuesda M : 6 | 6 Pp M ™ bg sepe Cc: 41% ; : Y, ay , a ° ille a pone Fe ample, ‘ f spiracy to pull the wool over the eyes of pe gh ol oe 4 a8 4 Temps pe 70 ‘Thus, for the 11-year period ape ‘he so-called common man. | or ee | jibtattaainnitiitisitigdits ms } « \ J i i , j he ' j ‘ \ - an r ( mw i tae : foe fone oe » Ase — ee sn Pe pate ¥ Bie A ee oe | Se. WE ee ee OY jn Se aoe 3 se ee ae Se: : : ; Co ee : ; a ae : : coe : | ‘ ie ; : : ? at Bey eee ee ne | Pe pier: PONTIAC-PRESS, wONDAY WAY 4 1 Pe eee a D, Hazel Park Police Station Shaken Perform ‘Hansel and Grete? at Romeo Beekeepers in| R Divorced Mate ue ininleyCiy eas === Bomb Cut-Rate Barbershop Beware the Witch's Oven |.” jit “ pMLAY erry — Cattle rontiors Boy, 2Ya, Kills ‘Thing’; Ses ee was two broken | ROMEO—The, music department|parts. Ellen’ Mosher will ‘be the onies of bees. were at work Saturday night at a/It‘s a Rattlesnake! angst? ARK gratin a 2 oo the réar of the (°f the Romeo Elementary Schoo) assiatant nccompenia. ‘ Modis Hei h M farm southeast of Imlay City,! trerue ROCK, Ark. # — Mrs.|the rear of a Hazel Park barber-| barber shop and another in an |Will present an adaptation off = = * adison Heights Man Romeo State Police said today. lw. ¢. Almond returned home|shop, next door to the city’s Po-| adjacent store. Humpherdinck’s familiar operetta sf ty sine Douce was construct:| Seriously Wounded in - A 10-month-old bull was found |from a visit to a neighbor and/jlice Station. The large barber shop, located|“Hansel and“Gretel”’ at 8 p.m. \to- missing “by its owner, Mile |her 2%-year-old son, Jimmy, told} Someone apparently attempted in the old Hazel Park Post Office|morrow in the auditorium. in Ro- - Belzake of 7809 Rider Rd., Im- [her he had killed “‘a thing’ with|to toss it through the rear window juiiding, is owned by Adam Boch- isigned and built the stage setting Stomach; Hospitalized for the Rgmeo Players’ produc- meo High School. ition last th. 7 } is of Adam’s Barbership, 23100 John : a MADISON HEIGHTS — Shot in tay City. Cy ae hoe, or sand Yooking|R-. according to ple Lt. Har- — of Fairies Lalo Grade School Vocal Music Direc-| “Omer Walters will have charge! ,, aN by’ the divorced hus- eammant trade wach ted hen g* at ‘ws, We aids like the ay jt old J. Hill of the Hazel Park|,, senile poe $1.25 ‘on Satur- tor Miss Marguerite Crawford has of the lighting. band of the woman he was visit- ‘the head and entrails 500 feet|was acting, so I killed it with age a It fell about| aay. Th shop stays open Wednes-|Charge of the production. Her as.| ing, Allen Klee, 34, of 27733 Town- ne, Fag ee ive fest : days when most other shops are/sistants include fourth, fifth and Pri ncess A nne closed awa from his pastures. : | 4 imeciontne officer _—— The ‘‘thing’” was a rattlesnake. Sgt. Charis W. Young said . sixth grade teachers whose stu-| ly St., Madison Heights, gal = the blast shook the station and | Bochinski said’ a brick was| nts 135 strong, are members of ‘Mendi ng After rious condition today in “nearly knocked me off my |thrown through a front window the chores , Beaumont Hospital. chair.” No one was injured and |three weeks ago. * . * Tonsillectomy + « « ; fs a A010) ae) 0) ad od Nd ae ; Madison Heights Police are hold- es ¢ ° The leading roles of Hansel and) ,ONDON uw — Seven-year-old|ing Tony Caruso, 51, of 8734 Hupp 4s Bringing Cheer to Romeo Gretel will be played by Cary Kil- Princess Anne. lost her tonsils and|St., Warren, for investigation of id Rt LE ENTRY CARDS } ner and Vera Kiriczenke with Su-| adenoids today. assault with a deadly weapon. Get more style - |san McGuire as the witch. The operation was performed at| airs, gieener Carwe, 9m, of fo r your money Grand ma Tatt, 98. Marie Ojala and Brian Rees |the Hospital for Sick Children and! go335 ‘Townley, told police she s will portray the mother and fa- (a communique announced the con-| ang Klee were sitting in the Co me in "ter ther. dition of Queen Elizabeth's daugh-| yitehen of her home yesterday 4 | : ter immediately after the surgery toon her f hae Forty-one other grade school pu- , ae a evening when her former hus: ‘ on er F eet A dl Nn pils will be eatered in stiller WO ae) Cea band walked into the house. He xs * & pulled out a .32 caliber pistol, : Anne's governess Mabel Ander-| struck her in the head with the Dell ROMEO—Miss Malvina Taft, whojlodge whom she keeps amused with| es son brought her to the hospital) batt of it and then shot Klee in will be 99 years old next Septem-|per ga yrepartee. And she has twol oe Flips in Commerce, [jast night and spent the night in| the stomach, she said. s] 0 0 0 0 j i Spi a separate room. ‘oli ae up and walking around|couiar visitors every Sunday—|YOuth in Hospital Here Queen Elizabeth, who had been}, Mrs Camuso | — oe police She broke her hip about five her minister, the Rev. Vernon Bos-| Robert R, Darmody, 17, of Lin-|staying at Windsor Castle just bust Dery Mile Begge a. rosds.| ait months ago, and, although handi-|hart of the Free Methodist Church|coin Park, was admitted to Pon-|outside London, came back to re-|"" (nico told police he wasn’t sor- capped by advanced age, “Grand-|in Romeo, and a longtime friend,|tiac General Hospital yesterday/main at Buckingham Palace Bist). aia it, He said he pays his nus a Ss: ma” Taft—as she is affectionately|60-year-old Clarence’ Edgerton,|when his car ran off the road and| night. ex-wife. $40 a week to care for called—was determined to walkjicaretaker of Miss Sarah Van Hoos-/overturned. . in : ud their four small children and she again, All her friends and thelen Jones’ farm in Rochester. «x . Nine-year-old Prince Charles’ spends it on drinks, For persons who are distressed - tonsils and adenoids were re- - « + | in mind, Sammond recommends a Darmody was driving on Union moved almost a year ago. That Pal i “ nno S talk with this delightful old lady|L#ke road, near N. Cooley Lake|time the doctors came to Buck-| ie Werner, SUTRY | to cheer them up. “She's a tonic|T°#4, Commerce Township, when|ingham Palace to do the job, {night for removal of ¢ : ~ for anyone,” he said. the accident occurred. He was un- Jewelers able to tell Sheriff's deputies what De ; ae | 5 Even when she was flat on her Long in Private Hands Turks Consume Alcohol 16 W. HURON ST. back for so many weeks, Miss Mal-|happened lie never complained, her nurses| Darmody suffered a-possible con-| LONDON — The Bank of Eng-| ANKARA — Alcoholic FE 2-0294 said. Her prime concern in life is|cussion and a broken finger. His|land was organized in 169 and/sold in Turkey ir. fiscal 1957 totaled ; a to cause no extra trouble and to|condition today is satisfactory, the remained in private hands until|8,125,000 gallons, nearly double the Also 45 Walnut St, bring joy wherever she can. hospital reports, it was nationalized in 1945. sales of 4,302,000 gallons in 1949. - Mt. Clemens e e “7 can help you save gasoline and get back iz 20 to 30 horsepower stolen by Spark Plug Miss”’ ES By LEE WINBORN Romeo Correspondent y y ; Never pessimistic, Miss Mallie ys E oy a\ has a wonderful philsophy of life that is a constant source of strength to all those who come in ; contact with her, says lodge own- thin heel LIFTS er ween “] get my greatest joy from = oS treading the Bibje,” Miss Taft — . sald, “and I my prayers answered, The smallest part of your shoes plays a big part in 2 ee reste keeping them smart! Avoid the slipshod look, the foot Ce a Ge ne and posture troubles run-down heels can cause. Ask as keen as ever, making her your Shoe Repairer for Cat's Paw . . . America’s largest-selling completely aware of all that goes thin heel lifts. They fit any heel size or shape . .. give long, non- a Gaiekd haw: __ marking, non-slip wear . . . can't shift, chip or spread. Miss Mallie, oldest of eight chil- j And for pertect comtort, get new Microlite hattor MJ {Gren, still has a brother and sister oth full soles . .. lighter than leather, lighter_than -tnap Se ality pl rubber . . - good-looking always! bers of the family are noted for LOOK FOR BOTH FAMOUS NAMES ON THE |their longevity—one brother died BOTTOMS OF THE NEW SHOES YOU BUY. recently at the age of 97. The Taft farm is located four miles south of Romeo and has been the lifetime residence of the whole family. While still. at home and al- -lready over 90, Miss Mallie used to accompany her sister Mae on @ | On microlite ¥ =~" le. : ' When told she was going to be . the subject of a story, Grandma SOLES ve a ip a bt ] e rought g of WORTH MUCH MORE... COST NO MORE! dettght tren her. three a, mates. She never wants for cccupanion ship with so many friends at the *M NOT: JUST TALKING off the top of __ lem. But in today’s modern engines, anti- my cap when I tell you’that spark — knock alone isn’t ehough. . plug ‘miss’ is today’s greatest cause of» That’s why Super Shell adds anti-miss power loss, a threat to 30 million cars. to anti-knock. Super Shell, with its ex- Yours is probably one. And I have the — clusive TCP additive, stops spark plug Watch your mail for a whale of a buy remedy for spark plug ‘miss’ in the white —_ misfiring caused by harmful combustion Use b pump.” deposits. TCP neutralizes them, restores Regular Grade? It’s Super Shell with TCP*. It adds 20 to 30 lost horsepower! ariti-miss to anti-knock, which means You'll save gasoline, too—because the Get the one you get across-the-board protection —_ extra combustion energy of the aromat- withTCP . from Super Shell. icé in Super Shell converts automatically You get protection against knock be- ‘ to give you extra mileage! Get your Now Shell Regular cause Super Shell has higher octane, so” car's full power the way thousands of Gasoline gives you the benefits of . TCP, plus higher octane than the finest premiums of ce Super Shell with TCP. \2="". } : The most powerful gasoline any car can use—Plus TCP for Anti-Miss = a a _ | : 7 . | ps eM . that engine kndck is no longer a prob- —_ other motorists do. See your Shell Dealer. Shell's Trademark for thie ung 1 gaeoling additive developed by Sheil Research atte: ina Ses ie | Your pie 7 CHANCE EVER TO oer Ty FOR ONLY 10¢ A COPY > _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY ue oo | oe ae = ba! NAG i a RRR IRR eo 7 aa AR RS ee ee % REN Na James Heath — 4 attended Michigan State Uni- Milford. versity. | m He is the weadinn Carlet chores fi ro \ \ IGGS ie f Cranbrook with a reception to be held at Kingsley Inn, Mr. and Mrs, Harold Cole Miss Duke Florentine Spoons of Clearwater, bd onored of Sterling Silver Fla., and Sh Imported from Italy Drummond at ower Island. | SET OF 6 $2.95 SYLVIA L. de STEIGER Engagement Revealed At a cocktail party in the home of her parents a Miss de Steiger and Mr. Cole received guests before the mantel which was banked with white stock, snapdragons and sweetheart roses in shades of pink and yellow, The engage- ment ring theme was curried out in decorations - throughout the de Steiger home. For the occasion, the bride- BIRMINGHAM — Guests’ at a cocktail party Sunday after- noon learned of the engage- _ment of Mary Jo Sipe and Humbert A. Mularoni. Hosting the party were Mary Jo's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward P, Sipe. The prospective bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Humbert M. Mularoni of Clzrendon road, was graduated from the University of Detroit. Mary Jo ’Phyllis Marie Duke, -daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, John L. Duke of Glenwood avenue, was feted at a bridal shower Sat- urday evening, Hostess was Mrs, Donald Lumsden of Ayon- lea drive. The honoree will become the bride of Gregory T. Walker of | Melbourne, Australia, May 10 at St. Michael Church. Attending the affair were | Phyllis Horton, Christine Zaf- fina, Marilyn Sondgareth, An- nabelle Lobziene, Mrs. Donald Moore, Mrs. Charles Hotchkiss and Mrs. Richard Barcome. Others were Georgine Cam- s pus, Mrs, Jack Chappell, Mrs. and = ea agen oe elect chose a talisman de soie or e, Mrs. Wiliam Mrs. Harold D. Cole of Clear- John d@ Steiger of St. Clair Earle, » Waller tasch water, Fla., and Drummond Shores is to be ringbearer. and Mrs. Donald Wurst. 4 PLAQUE TELLS NEWS Miss de Steiger as grad- LUNCHEONS : A plaque with the inscrip- | wated from Michigan State Sealtest ice Cream 4 fon, “Milestones in Sylvia's | University, and her fiance is Saiaies ibibo a Life” revealed the announce- a graduate of Michigan Col- opu S . ment in the de Steiger home. A | lege of Mining and Technology RIKER FOUNTAIN : floral afrangement in the | Where he was a member of Riker Building Lobby cies ins SIN a UN, tne Te re = : Youth Tour Pictures sO- > S$ \s! FW ——— Hospital Tour| will spend Wednesday at Battle’ Veterans Administration’ patio and recreation room which! the auxiliary endowed this year. | If you want a friend to fill in | at a bridge party for a guest | who cannot come, explain the | ‘situation when you invite her. > > Charm Chats By Rowena Wilson | Ma ry Si pe. | Watermelon = poe oh ap ea eat Honored at Shower. prey on Food 2 , iO) ; by a designer which features ree , to Marry Fashions Due | Yvtie est wensied ator |,.tny, Mie Suman, twte| Help Dieters | sem aerua.ot main oo. Wa' weather is due | with black watermelon seeds. ert Are you balancing your cal- | cheese, 1 ounce cottage cheese, in Au ust | ae deen oo eke oie Soh nner vay peiw ninae oe ee oties against these nasty | (2 tablespoons) or 1 ounce : a o ? : : 3 g a feast of watermelon fashions. printed on the back Gampann ‘en. Pioneer. drive. ing # hnlor. tutriton expert. Orne eet eae ae GIFTS mother will love Charming little spoons for use on the table or to display in a spoon rack. . , hand- _ Grafted of sterling silver by Italian artisans. English Bone China CUP and SAUCER > Always a delightful gift for Mother. Choose from our wide selection of beautiful shapes and colors in tine English Bone. Priced From $150 te $950 Bird Cage Planter of Gleaming Brass *4.95 » FREE Gift Package of 4 Exclusive French Perfumes A JUST COME IN NO OBLIGATION ww | Ironrile AUTOMATIC IRONER Regular Price 319.95 . MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL PRICE 2 YEARS TO PAY! No Ppyments ‘til June Attractive planter for any room in the home... polished brass cage with jet black flower. pot. Includes bracket for hanging. Bathroom Accessories in Gold-Flecked, Colorful Tole _ Three Piece Set — Specially Priced $695 Waste Basklet Tissue Holder Water Tumbler Choice of White with Pink, Gold, Black, or Aqua stripes . . . richly flecked in Gold. The same set also available in Quilted or Fleur-de-Lis design, Plastic Place Mats | in Linen Texture setor4 $3.00 Mother is sure to love these gay, colorful, laundry- saving ‘mats for the table! Linen-like surface wipes ¢lean with a damp cloth. -has so many wonderful SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL9 P.M. C * PRPS LES cad wens fet ne een eer’ WIGGS og ¢ REN A AY RR Gs 1 S58 Seenes . . Q itz i: > ors: 2 SE: ; ring no : “4 6 oa : ~ gifts from which to select the “perfect gift’ for Mother! SPECIAL featuring Franciscan - and other famous brands e Y, bi” s Especially for You | PU stags . BUY 3... GET 1 FREE! There is nothing more important AR RRR é ;_ = stass thes; batrdo that lo becem-| OTHER Deluxe f Buy Three 5-Piece Place Settings ing and fatier- |: ERONRITE + i Get the 4th Place Setting FREE! panes ssa MODELS me Mos mae | y Choose from over 50 open stock patterns, from leading makers of tine your individual @ | from frome in tt Give" Mother a 4 china—both imported and American. pe tence 2 Mine - ! $ 95 a | WiGés Girt CERTIFICATE _ OLE EE OE IE LORIE LRRD EE ‘ oe eatteé S “ip q 199 World. |} od Ley ier oe THE GIFT SHE a ES sora es ‘ current fash- foes ‘ \ ! jon trends. Most | : SEE THE women can wear 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH any number ri hair arrange- F R E E a oaaelicrnuction MODEL HOME ments but there is one —eomeny) ° COLOR-COORDINATED for you. We have a permanent especially for you, regardless of your type of hair. Our suggestion is a practical ume. Give Mother a gift of beauty for her special day. How about a new permanent for Mother's cag “You'll make her so happy with 4! at bt? Beauty Salon, : ace Highway, Drayton OR oe} 14 So. Main, 6-1 » »» 4008 ae. 300 ss 1-YEAR SERVICE Get Our Deal Before You Buy WAYNE GABERT Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121 N. Saginaw St. O'Shea See _FE 5-6189 Open Monday and Friday Evenings and FURNISHED r < e by | WIGGS “The Bradford” —24.W~. HURON STREET CORNER of WEST MAPLE and | WESTBOURNE in WESTCHESTER VILLAGE, BIRMINGHAM * a i Re eS a rea oo ¥ THE PONTIAC PRESS _ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN MONDAY, MAY 5, 1958 © By SYLVIA de STEIGER History will again be made by the Pontiac high school band rext week when it presents the 3lst. and final Spring Band Concert. This year’s performance will be a milestone for the band since it will be the last time students of high school age throughout the city will have the opportunity to play together as members of one band. JOIN NEW GROUP = In September, when the new $3 million high school named Pontiac Northern opens, at least 15 of the present band members will have to join the band organized at the new schoo] since they will live in its area. A conductor for the new band has not been appointed to date. The band, which today consists of 80 teenage musicians, has been kno wn throughout Michigan and the Midwest for the first place ratings it has received in the dist rict and state class “A” high school band competition. For 27 consecutive years of the 31 it has been formally organized as a part of the student curric- ulum, first place trophies, plaques and certificates have been awarded to this band. TIMPANI TIME — Terry Wilkins; a sophomore, of 66 Waldo St., looks as if Ke is sneaking up the kettle drum. This percussion selection, on this timpani drum nicknamed instrument will be featured in the “Pontiac Fanfare’ next week at the Pontiac Central High School band’s spring concert. : House to Be Public Shrine BEDFORD VILLAGE, N. Y. @® —Bedford House, for 30 years the |t home of John Jay, first chief jus- tice of- the United States, is to become a public shrine, Edwin G. Michaelian, Westches- ter County executive, helps save the 30-acre site from house-wreck- ers today as he asks the West- | City Naval Center Sponsors ‘Ham’ Club By DICK SAUNDERS The Pontiac Naval Reserve - Training Center has formed a non- military alliance with area civil- ians. The center recently sponsored a new club designed to offer aid and instruction to the area's ham radio operators and those inter- ested in amateur radio operating as a hobby. At present they refer to them- HELLO, CALIFORNIA © Michigan Six-Meter Network, Center surrounded by equior:en _ The ham oa the other on ‘\ot the networs revori.n si yl 4 ‘weather pekmitting, someone, oh the wesi coas x chester Board of Supervisors to ake the first fiscal step toward buying the property for $136,000. The county then will give the lproperty” to New York state for operation ag a public shrine. Gov. Averell Harriman recently signed a bill permitting the state to ac- “lcept the the Property. |selves- as the Pontiac Amateur| Code Group No. 1,-but as new ing interested parties, members flow in, the organization: groups. . Forming the code group with cooperation of the Michigan six- Meter Network, the center offers ‘competent instruction in the vari- ous stages of ham operating while offering its $50,000 worth of Frank (ore. ry sicent ct the is at the Poi“: .cval Reserve ial a “= cere tor ‘ th : Str, lopen to the public. ito join is to attend one of - the graduate to the ij lings at 2 p.m, at the center, 469 S. His toric Concert Set. * by Pontiac High Band It is the only Michigan class “A” high school band to have received unanimous first division ratings in state competition from judges of both concert playing and sight reading during this same period. Dale C. Harris, supervisor of instrumental music for Pontiac schools, has be m the conduc- tor of the band since it was otganized in 1927. Besides the annual spring concert, bandsmen have performed for school activities including foot- ball and basketball games as well as assemblies. x * * Since the present high school has been renamed . from Pontiac High School to Pontiac Central High School, this will be the first concert presented under the new name. The program will be held May 16 beginning at 8:15 p.m. in the high school audi- torium. Guest. conductor for the special event wil) be Richard F. Goldman, internationally known com- poser, conductor, teacher, lecturer and author of music texts. Goldman, who will conduct the second half of the concert, is chairman of the Department of Literature and Materials of Music, Julliard School of Music in New York City. * x * Michigan State University’s professor of music and band director, Leonard Falcone, will play two euphonium (baritone) solos for the occasion. LAST TRY — Head band manager John How- ell, senior clarinetist, of 243 Judson St., (left) assists Linda Stoner, another senior clarinetist, _ty on her ie Jacket for size since — is transmitting equipment in train- tests for higher licenses There are no fees. The group is: is expected to add. several more not affiliated with any one ham| ¥-©-C. aw‘horities in Detroit. Members start with a “novice’ - idarn. pote they EMERGENCY SYSTEM “technician” clas-| club or group. It’s a civie project All ome needs license. As they’ weekly Saturday aiternoon meet-, the last time both will perform in the high school band’s concert. Cornetist Charles Laverque, an- other senior, 172 S. of = uniforms somumittee. . | theory’ behind microphone work {sification and finally to the | and transmission, they are given | leral” by | Seat *3 %.*% eh. *% WAS 45h) yeh AY eee tee eee ea) ee eee eee eit = eeeee tees BABY AND PAPA — Nancy MacAfee, a sophomore, Thorpe St., band, the piccolo while Jim Williams, a junior, », of 110 plays the baby of the woodwind instruments of the 321 -Dick Ave., includes _ NEWCOMER LEAVES — Linda McGlothin, a sophomore, of 491 First St.. (right) is practicing with a mute on her c si for the first and last _ concert she will par in with the Central Band. Next fall she wal join the Pontiac North- Jessie St., (right) is the head icipate ‘‘gen-lout that beside being an enjoyable CINAW @ — Roval Oak W oe ho} -ensed he ‘adigo opera-| SAGIN im — Roval Oak Wom- class. With a “general’ 1i- hobby. = ore ham radig opera ° ors M AY a maior Tro — they are free to transmit ee bay A play ; i i , é re a from their own set at. home. (eset oes ”, iam : lisaster which may sirike community, as an emergericy com- i Authorities are quick to poift Munications system. Pontiac Press Photes ios the bassoon, the largest of the woodwind instruments. The two are practicing portions of Kallinikow’s “Symphony I’ which concentration on this section in-the concert. Two Women’ 5 C abs “ontest Winners: Clubs community achie ——— con. | by Ed Vanderworp ern High School band at the new school. Delmar Benson, a senior, ¢ _few complicated bars in “Carousel,” for the mute in the brass section. of 18 Newton St., points out a which calls- ‘clubs with 75 members or under, The Greenville Federation of Wom- ‘en's Clubs was runnerup ‘to Royal Oak. Baldwin Women’s Club was | second to Rochester. The contest ~—'one is held in in eom- en's Club and the Rochester Junior each state — was sponsored by man-made Women's Club have been namedithe General Federation of Wom- their. inners of first prizes in the Mich-'en's Clubs and the Sears Roebuck ican State Federation of Women’s’ Foundation. A national achievement award ‘will be presented at the General Re yal Oak won for clubs over Foundation’s annual convention in ‘East Bivd. <-* 7 members and Rochester for’ Detroit next month. Co-sponsors and leaders of the a praaeaenat ar grte ae rer am movement ars Cant Mare: Pe -* fe %, % 1e¢ ee didman 2.0, 2d Joe Smo 4 We Victvea” 1" OW? I : " lace’ ham - tor : proket kas 70 AY’S N 1 VALUE! The project has bes aide 0. ‘reatly by the heln'nt hand of Frank Prano, 6198 Snow Anple O Dr., Clarkston, who is or°sident 1 (@] of the Michigan S'x-Meter Net : . ror. EXTRUDED Tho eurrent member 4) m: po’ men from Pe-'-- ALUMINUM tova' Oak, Werren Wal’ 7 Lak: Ferndele, and Haze! Park - mon: STORM ther communities “We believe we ota th f WINDOWS val. groin in “hy we of th mean = sA05 = th apes 9 ivpiteae ‘ ey? ail P , i Warce th's."" seys Mandal’ 6 or More ee “VERAL AMs $ Ac™ rding to ‘dahl, the grow Less Than 6 (ee 21 95 Ea. as several alre=, Vinet is to stip, i Completely “SELF-STORING" vs EWN © =e nteres with Fiberglas Screen. + Oc seu fs : at ak? We oe 1 NO GIMMICKS ysis’ members in ob*s’inie FLCC amatcu™ licenses, Fivallv ther . Phone FE 4-6089 By Pr “bom “one to form a close re'taych'n ee be vey the Naval Resery> rei Sis0wid EQUIPMEN) — From left to right,’ part of some $50,000 worth of eqti sarin being ALL AWNING and STORM WINDOW SALES tes and eawiorte ¥ tpelecuwerk fe Ie'e+ Bas ¢ . Jig trol 4sed by he prators joining. the civilian code 7 san “rr Per ‘cf... of 8889 E. Verhor ¥ i hway, Detroit, Ged a oom oining : sti rete 228 S.. Telegraph Rd., Facing Rath St Pentiae r aa | an Smeets. of 475 Heistead Rd., Walled _ SFP at = Nawal Reserve Training Cent sina 7: 1a a — a va ‘ mw fm t sl ao: x equ ee ne S:.0own S. East Blvd Zi sisal \ uf 4 pibsitin BED: : ee tors such hs Morse code and the them by Radioman 2.C. Carl Mandahl. This. is : \ rg } J E ‘ \ i =e one. 3 : ES i 2 A ™ J Par = do Be nage 8 2 * pare hee i * eas | i 4 : cis >. ~~ t $ ts eo } E pate | * ; ; * = : aoe i ee ae | ee: 288 ] : ' ers 4 oe t : : . es oa ie eG | 3 . , i \ : go hae es sf s : a - r + # : | ope . i es re : 5 ‘ei ; Lg Se : ‘ ° ; | : . 1 . ‘ : . ‘ Me wie : . |: j ; Joao i ‘ t : é \ -* : 3 rf a | : ; Le . i & ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 5,.1958 | ® { Pins * . 4 ee ea ee eee he ee ee ee ee ee Te eT ere eee eee sengers into her over-taxed trans- portation facilities every day. Vehicles are so packed that a local wag Says pick-pockets can no longer make a living on trolleys and buses, For Tokyo’s city fathers, how- ever, the problem is no joke, Fa- cilities are taxed three or four times beyond their capacity, par- ticularly at peak traffic hours. * * * Biggest headache is surface transport, More than 1,000 trolleys and 3,000 buses toil along Tokyo's teeming, serpentine streets carry- ing a staggering four million per- NARROW ROUTES CLOG They follow routes no wider than alleyways or main avenues clogged with weaving taxis, bicycles. and three-wheeled trucks. Also above ground are 11 elec- trie lines that haul seven million passengers a day. During rush- hour, some lines have trains run- ning every 110 seconds. Shinjuku Station, a major con- nection for several surface lines, sees 650,000 persons pass through it in a single day Tokyo Station in the heart of the city’s business district handles a half-million pas- sengers every 24 hours. *«* ** Underground, two subway lines running 13.5 miles under major shopping and business areas carry more than one million customers a day. RUSH HOUR FIERCE Tokyo’s rush - hour {is fierce enough to make the most hard- ened New York strap - hanger cringe. Senators Resume Teamster Hearings WASHINGTON W—A _ special Senate committee resumes hear- ings today in its investigation of Teamsters Union activities in the Philadelphia area, He said the committee will look into the activities of Benja-| ” min Lapensohn, a former busi- Ness agent of 107 in Philadelphia, tion with his past operation of two publications, the Pennsyl- vania Federationist and the New York Federationist. Kennedy said that Lapensohn is|_ reported to be out of the country. No One's Celebrating About These Fireworks DAYTON, Ohio @® — An aerial fireworks display which lit up southwest Dayton gave . firemen and the United Fireworks Manu- facturing Co. no cause to cele- celebrate. The company’s president, Wal- ter Bachler, estimated damage toj| _a two-story display building at about $70,000. Lightning hit the building, used to show fireworks to wholesale sellers and customers generally watches two or three he jockeys up to an entrance. Once at the door, he crouches like a Notre Dame tackle and hurls himself into a car that already has too many passengers, Chivalry is not only dead at these times but also foolhardy. ‘Women rate no priority and ask no quarter. 7 In fact, two loop line conductors recently complained in a letter to a Tokyo newspaper that young bulging eight-car trains pass while expensive route in town costs 15 for 5.5 cents and about the most cents, City planners think they can ease the transportation problem by scrapping the trolleys, ex- panding the subways and instal- ling a monorailabove the streets. But that’s strictly a long-range solution, A test monorail was in- stalled only recently in Tokyo's Ueno Park and it is doubtful that a fully operational system is pos- sible within the next decade. fraternity’s annual picnic, * * * Twenty-six miles, later, at Has- tings-on-Hudson, the fog was thick the vessel tied up and the picnic was called off. Back to Manhattan went the teen-agers, a five-piece band and much: of the hardboiled eggs, fried chicken, pickled herrings veal and peppers. Chittagong is the principal port of East Pakistan. Yy, Uj y 7 Ye. NOTICE YOU'NE SS LOOK ANY MORE MILITARY THAN A CAP PISTOL / RETIRED, MASOR—~ YOU NENER LIFTA FINGER EXCEPT, TO BRUSH OFFA FLY/+~ \SURELY YOU DIDN'T RETIRE FROM THE ARMY «~~ YOU DON'T BOARDING HOUSE | ¥ + ]; Y Y ENS SS NOW, PONDERING ANTIDOTE FOR RETIREMENT<~ HAR-RUMPH f a) PESKY ie howd . a, L MIGHT REWARD YOUR CURIOSITY, MRS. GALL,WITH THE STIRRING CHRONICLES OF THE WORCESTER- SHIRE FUSILEERS ~~ BLT I'M BUSY RADIATION /<— YOUR GUESS MIS- FIRED «AS A SCIENTIST, INVENTOR AND PLAYWRIGHT, MY LABORS CANNOT: BE DEFINED AS A THERAPEUTIC A-6BOMB * and set off the fire. — TH TRIGGER--I-1~UH~ GULP- I THOUGHT (T WAS A STARVIN’ WALRUS I WAS A-GOW' TO PUT IT OUT OF ITS MISERY! OUR COOK HOW COULD I HALF ACRE CASTLE MEA Gorvies, ine. T.M. U.S. Pet. OF, John Morris eo 2 ae {OH STEVE...IM SORRY I'M GO LATE GETTING HOME ,7 WE JUST FINISHED THE LAST HANO.Y Fa ! i Tonig i ht... by chewing on a smooth, satisfying piece of En COULO WE EAT OuT...['M DEAD TIRED AFTER THAT LONG / » Youll Find. PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section . Take advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and sell-_ ing problems. To Place Your THE GIRLS WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 “You and f i 4 by Franklin Folger. Taltiwalie® eaters satel Atiteiw'atete’e qenteratera ta eters 4 s im me, both!” | THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert WE | AND FRIDAY... TODAY IS MONDAY, TO BE | SE Rea eRe ERE LUCKY, THURSDAY mY! YOURE A BRILLIANT CONVERSATIONALIST/ DIXIE DUGAN r- === = ¢ O58 by | Xe THIS IS MY MASTERPIECE @. ~ GRANDMA —_——s = 1) 1958 by. NEA Gervice. ine. TM Mag. UB Pai. OFF By Charles Kuhn GEE, IF VYOU"RE GONNA RAISE THINGS THAT NEED CARE AN’ HOEIN’. SOMETHIN’ GOOD T’ .. WHY NOT MAKE IT LU EAT ?"... DONALD DUCK SOMETHIN’ LIKE..., | WATERMELONS! SAY,FOR INSTANCE, 6URE FULL. =~ OF ROCKS/ ; Ven THERE'S ANOTRER ONE! 12 Milli ph Dail _ : , gd . BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES : Me Million Riders Daily . po) ee oes Picnickers, Goodies Le 52 ted) a SASH ' \ : aun. _ §6EE ses ok Tokyo Transport Clogged umd bac tog vl ~ ot Gg oe . ‘ NEW YORK w—Fog close d in 2,24 : yesterday on a lot of hardboiled “2. + TOKYO (INS) — Imagine every, On the city’s 21.5-mile electric|girls were getting too rough in the|eggs, fried chicken, pickled her- : person from the state of Cali-ltrain “loop” line that circles cen-jrace for seats, They noted, with|"ings and veal and peppers. c fornia jamming the buses, trains!) Tokyo, it often takes 10 min-|some distaste, that on many rush- * *. * © 5 and trolleys of a single city in a The food embarked with teen- 0° 4 single day, and you havé a picture utes to get from the fare box to|hour cars there actually were see tnaiahers of ta Alcba Pos sar ? of Tokyo's current plight. ile copia ——. - — more totes svated bor men. Onsegs fraternity of the Polytech- : F ns sedan st city|evening ayemeey The only bright feature is the saidiorscgr allt ‘ pomag del Gye . . sgaaaiioa more oan million herd _* & price. You a go pica cag! end! Mountain, 46 miles and two hours 503 1958 by NEA Service, he. TM, Reg, US. Pat. OFF : On the platform, the passenger|°f sprawling Tokyo to the other!r., Manhattan. Occasion: the ° ee oe’ ee eee ee ee eee eee oe oe ee ee ee ek os * * = le + ee ge ee i] we 2 seeewresere |. OPT EeT HOOT weT eee EN Tee er re 47% eo 4 ' Peep “Fe eas “ap f¥t%% ORE SPOOL GE EPH Mes Peta FEELS PLES eFr ee erer eet THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, =, 5, 1958 e » | MARKETS Stocks ec = Saas ae) : CHICAGO u—Early dealings area peetggr od by the| NEW YORK ~The stock mar- grain futures were rather slow|petroit Bureau of Markets, ‘as ‘as of|Ket turned mixed in quiet trading Ww early today after a slightly higher and light et prices steady to weak : par today on the Board of Trade. Produce Most key stocks coed frac- pc sch lll tional gains or losses. The ticker Milling and export business were yeews sa|tape was Inte briefly in the inital and dealers said there ap-/20pies, Melitosh. bu. .....c..ss0s.- 380) to be a tendency in the/appies steele Reda, bu. ............ “7 * * await some developmentts. VEGETABLES © | Lorillard continued strong, ris- had firmed up somewhat! asparagus, (ochs.) dot. sve .. 200/ing more than a point in active toward the end of the first hour. | Bests, opped. bu. 0.040000: -": 148 | turnover. Douglas Aircraft rose , - + * 2 Splery wot” (dos: Eesapconene FT around a point in fairly brisk deal le See teh re ees Se ae eo : i to Ye cent a be ~ ponctecees « May $2.17; corn % higher to % Parsley Root (bebe oo iy production of the Thor missile. tom lowets May 2: rye 2 coments acta ie S| eet We arene “Metre higher to % lower, May $1.33%4; |Rhubare hotneuss, (behs.) dos. ---- 23| showed little change. Steels, oils soybeans % higher to % lower, aoe and chemicals were spotty. DETROIT, May, uP Bees, t.o.».| Market background included re- Detroit, cases included, federalstate| ports of @ rise in construction out- © Fnitée—Crade gree o43|lays in April and of a slight lift in ae Ae svg. 41:/steel demand due to increased July yersrets $0, |" Stown—tirade A. ex pete = hai’ wid. (building activity. The market was yt i: ee os lays. 6, Taree *’s: 3:/fluctuating near its newest high Teer st May tas 5 w m jfor' 1958 reached Friday. ieee 8 evseser ee graded egs, April 2, were 1,800 * : - hd HOPSCOTCH QUEEN — Candy Love, 12, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Lloyd Love, 218 Oliver St.,proudly holds the trophy she won: Saturday for first place in the first citywide hopscotch tournament. The contest, open to all gifls in the fifth and sixth grades, was con- ducted by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department. Candy is a sixth grader at McCarroll Elementary School. ' Moi: in Paraguay. El Avie Te cee ae Has 7 Entries 18 7. . 28 .. 1 . . : . 3 ' oon © . M4 as ee a New York Stocks [iS Bt it op News in Brief ie Law 7103308 Ma aa: vores SE Gillett +.» 381 cello * “+ my, prt ghb Goebel ae *:: Sh Pesta. | Baty t Keon, fi. ot 200 Mos Cousy’s Long Shot. ee Me tae iprech Tre fos ihe “< 423\drunk driving. Municipal Judge Ce- Beats Western Club Se!) yar ls og eee ia cil B. McCallum fined him $100 srae 46 $2 ,|Qen Dynem .. $8 Bo: 8 or 20 days in jail. NEW ORLEANS — Bob 03 Gsn Pas: Ad Be Ra ie Rammage Sale, Men Cousy’s long field goal with less SLAF /GSR Motors 's: 318 Roti ar”. <: ib” children nousenold than a minute to play Sunday put Balen fee gees ad Rp Fs come eh Se reg the National Basketball Assn.’s ay ee | Mon. Aaa 1 pm. Tues Eastern All Stars out in front for ; ’ through . good and enabed them to carry ‘31iChamps’ Tourney} ce Get_ your Mothers wary ag Sr bas * now Back- ee eee lgt Waterford enstose Book Store. 19 E. Lawrence. i tedliat - Selleebd _-— feount, pag heal * = East to _— :! 86] ‘The Waterford Township Tourna- 1 : ass --+ 183 weekend has seven entries thus far ec ain IGOUN | 4 Pbk lee" Liters arewing 4 aes t re a 3 OAKLAND COUNTY’S newest, most Eg Eom Bt breomer tld Tosay a 1 : i tee t Dixie Recrea beautiful cocktail lounge : Sah} Raat Bat™") £4)? Green Tavern (Pontiac Motor Ot- A : a Martin’ce"":: grater League at Land-O-Lakes), : ae May D Strs ... 41 | Drewry's (La Henry’ s Miracle Lounge |; Gs Bei uc” {]Nwhr Howe Leng), Drayton : | oe. Hon .. a74| (Wednesday night a Formerly H. s Bloom ield Inn) 3 MBs Mau’: $64!Pontiac Pistons (Huron Bowl “B”) eek anc ‘ 8. Monsen ch :.. 3ogjand and McCallum & Dean (Ivy League The specialty of the house is an atmosphere of com- -F Far aed |<. Wetite ameeere Sue Hie tenaes teen plete relaxation, cocktails the way you like them. and siitatag Metetele, +. 3 — wy & luncheon and dinner menu to please the most dis- {fj Cole,ta" ---: ee Nat Blac Oo.ss 47 FE woth gree ngeminar oo Com -ertminating palate. le eS an j|merce, pg en Pcie maa | pcih ar! Nat s+: SS-glot leagues at Township alleys, _ (COCKTAILS —LUNCHEONS—DINNERS H Senet Pe ss: Sy NY General": 189 [gent Baw sess 4 mie Cy ial : Open 11 A.M. to 2 A.M. ylSest fee“: i. sr See nw: gjoouthern Racers Win Cases fae Tet. Gomes vem: ’s Newest Sh. Center sosee 5 a. , Va, el of a — Ih i pee hee 342 3|Greensboro and Joe Weatherly of Miracle Mile Shopping Center | sa Norfolk, Va.,_ finished | one-two- i] ty 4) three a National es Telegraph at Square Lake Road | See at #} race Sunday, but the results were a)\Eaton Mig’... 42.6 unofficial "ANNUAL SPRING 20% to Sale Priced at $295 MONUMENTS LOW AS $165,00 e ROSRET NESTED oo ues —s 1926 1098 —« 1048 36” LONG, 10” WIDE, 16" HIGH Regularly Priced at $160.00 REDUCED TO $128.00 269 Oakland Avenue 40% DISCOUNT on the PURCHASE of YOUR CEMETERY MEMORIAL! One of Pontiac's Leading Memorial Companies Offer This Opportunity Until May 30th. Prices Include Lettering, Floral Carving and Delivery to Your Cemetery Lot. Add Foundation Cost Only. MARK EVERY GRAVE 5 Monuments 250 Grave Markers Your Satistaction Guaranteed by Over 25 Years Experience » ACT NOW Make your selection while display is complete and Memorial Day erec- tion is assured. All our finest granite ‘memorials in Barre, Wausaw Red, Salisbury Pink, Dakota Mahogany, plus a brilliant colored Northern.Granite. All stock completely sound and flawless. Guaranteed everlasting and weather resistant. OFFICE AND PLANT OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M.—SUN, 1 TO 3 P.M. PONTIAC GRANITE & MARBLE CO. GEO. “E. SLONAKER & SONS Pontiac 17, Mich. 24” long, 12” wide, 4” high. Regular $55 value. SALE PRICED et.. 24” long, 12” wide, 6” high. Regular $65 value. SALE PRICED at.. i $39” 54g Phone FE 2-4800 Touring Germans Win NEW YORK (#—The Offenbach club of Germany opened its six game American tour Sunday by downing the German - American Soccer League All-Stars 4-2, be- fore 14,762, rain soaked fans at ries: Stadium, The visitors led 41, at halftime. Umpire Dies in Crash PHILADELPHIA (#—Harry H. King, a former American Assn. jumpire and before that a well- known player in semi-pro baseball leagues, was killed early Sunday when his automobile crashed into a stone wall in Fairmount Park. He was -55. Fur seals of the North Pacific always winter in the south and return home for the summer, - ia'to May it pty. on Baptist urch, — adv)” i " ASUN ION, Paraguay (Vice President Nixon says the United States doesn't want to meddle in the affairs of other nations but is pleased to hear that Paraguay in- tends “to move toward a more democratic system.” — * * * Nixon spoke to the one-party President Eulogio Estigarribia predicted that soon “P: ! ‘will live without restriction. President Alfredo Stroassner, a military dictator, and his Colorado party now rule Paraguay. In one of his bluntest warnings against communism since he be- gan his Latin-American tour, Nix- on also declared that the West must take the offensive against the Reds, x * * “We must find ways to attack problems on which the Commu- nists attack us," Nixon said. ‘It is quite right to say our system is better, but we must prove by ac- tions plus words that it is better resounding welcome from the little country as he arrived yesterday for an 18- hour tour and visit with Stroess- dents shouting ‘ ‘Long live liberty,” which Stroessner told newsmen was a Communist slogan, The pudents. were later released, * * * Nixon. conferred for an hour last night with the President on a possible six-million-dollar bank loan to complete a highway to Nixon leaves today for Bolivia. Giardello, Calhoun Collide in Rematch By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An interesting middleweight match far from the TV cables finds Joey Giarde of Philadelphia meeting Rory Cal- houn of White Plains, N.Y. at the Cow Palace in San Francisco tonight. Giardello won r decision vy challenger, senight Of St. Dlieheinn deena i -iNew York. His , Art Mil ler of Gastonia, C. is an un- known with only 11 pro fights. Benington Gets St. Louis U. Job ST. LOUIS —John Benington, Fromhart to Speak af St. Fred Banquet University of Detroit football ally and girls’ teams. Athletic directors and coaches from other neighboring high Trapshooter Hits 1 RENO, Nev. #—W. C. Smith of California hit 100 clay targets” 00 0. trapshooting tournament. Seeks Cage Mentor DES MOINES i# — Drake Uni- versity President Dr. Henry G. Harmon named a five-man com- mittee Sunday to select a suc- cessor to John Benington as bask- ‘etball coach. head basketball coach at Drake University, has been hired to coach the St. Louis University bas- ketball team. Benington, 36, Eddie Hickey, who quit last month to the coaching job at Mar- quette University. St, Louis did not disclose Benington's salary. -\Death Takes Joe Maul Old-Time Phil Hurler — PHILADELPHIA (#—Albert Jo- Italian Fiat Cars Arrive Aboard Ocean Ferry NEW YORK (®—A large ship- ment of Italian-made Fiat automo- biles has arrived aboard an ocean-|"° to Comm , Retiring Captain’ s (Cheers Shift to Democracy Final Voyage Proves Exciting GLOUCESTER, Mass, (®—Capt. Irving Johnson; who chose the sea over a farm life in South Hadley, has just completed his seventh — and last — sailing trip with 21 passengers, who paid $5,- 000 each, . tk o® The trip was highlighted by a romance, discovery of an anchor which may be from the famous ship Bounty near Pitcairn Island and what Johnson termed a ver- itable Shangri-la. During the long voyage Dr. N. Alice Strahan, 30, Maplewood, N. J., and Christopher Sheldon, 32, South Norwalk, Conn., fell in Jove. x * * They became engaged at a big party in Capetown, South Africa, and plan to be married in Maple- ‘wood May 24, The 53-year-old skipper said the Shangri-la he and the crew dis- covered was a spot in the Mar- quesas Islands, He described it as “the cutest valley you ever saw protected by sheer solid rock which made the harbor dangerous and discouraging to enter.” : * * * Johnson said an anchor purport- edly from the Bounty wag re- turned to Pitcairn Island, where it will be kept with other relics from the famous English vessel. There was no sign of a reces- sion in the South Sea Islands, he = / reported, “except where a guy ig / too lazy —— = = ' f Johnson has sold the Yankee to Reed Whitney of Wilmette, Ill., a former Navy commander who plans to continue the global voy- ages with paying customers from Gloucester, PUB! A public hea 2965 NOTICE m will be held at the City Hall, Orchard Lake Road, sty Sess ribed as “Lot n n° 13. 14 of Sawvers Keego Subdivs ‘sion, Residential No, 1 ‘Mavens. poe any objections may appear at that time. EILEEN B. VAN HORN, oe City of Keego Harbor Michigan May 5, ‘58. PUBLIC i. * Pontiac State Ban . May 3, 5, "58. NOTICE OF PUBLIC GALE 1957 Pontiac 4 Dr. Catalina, Serial No, STSTST104. Public sale to be held rm at 28 MN. Sagin 5, Hi te aw, Room tiac State Bank Bide. at 11: a Sone May 3, &, ‘58. NOTICE oP. adiliee Coupe Motor sre tists Puhite wale to be held at . Beetinaw Bt State Bank Bidg., Pontiac, tac igan, ‘ICE OF PUBLIC ismohile 4 door ae T™: —_ sale to be May 15, 1958, a Saginaw 6t., 601 Pontiac State Bonk Bias. 10:30 a.m. ©. ZIMMERMANN ASSOCS.. §3 W. Huron St.. Pontiae taking bids for Central. Mish Room a 2:00 p.m., ” May May 3, 5, "68. Home, ments na Puneral) BIPCE MAY LF 1006, AUDE Oxford; a All errors should edict's ay B ers also Da of George E i an Dwight” Dp. are sera Isabelle. "Phe lanl . Theobdold, From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. immediately. " fe fos Sg age Unilinited earnings, Death Notices In Memoriam 2|. Cemetery Lots 5| Help Wanted Male 6 : OAKLAND MEMORIAL I LOVING MEMORY OF OR. pa Ee rietea MEN'S Ct esi IN. mimbe, pasted away qilay 8. 1984. Four graves DU _¢-1231 aT aa Robert ai = e reary w. Marvierite mae acto na sot wan eer pat og A od Pe oe ral pomp Lyf sor ip Meise ite = Of an ever God; WHITE CHAPEL-TWO GRAVES, “Tk iene You s bave’ a wold betore, : r, Mrs. Russell Fisher, Lewis Mz, ¢#rlings miss you $128, Bix, $900. Lr 22167 or Li ws ae ee Sime ees are pall oo, is | Saver tren ts be nesday a m, ; * indes rom the Manley you by my Home. 183 Oakisnd, Birminghem. Badly ssteese by Mom and Dad. Help Wanted Male 6 pendent a ome town, - ry. ae ee ee Fu P- al Di ectors 4 : Bs A H Cana. oo coon for oat business wits ade VAL COURT. MAY” 3, 1088, |“A HOMELIRE ATMOSPHERE” Flence necessary. Must be am-| yertising specialt 1 pails. 2F Seove $1: ors ot re COATS aR oP GO’ A : r. 7 stocking. ave Vaillancourt, Mrs. Gladys FUNERAL HOME Roosevelt. 1 p.m. only.| mo overhead or capital invest an rs. rl Paik. Pu ment Exclusive = te es, es ; Reral service wili be held Wednes-|Drayton Plaine A St fel b tablished nts, frequent re- : iat ae te Satish Sues] Donel hee ey sha" ajoy eons ith Rev. Thom Marcero one. aac} s! for a good steady womne. Appear. increas eae ia earnings 1” officiating. Intermen in Mt. NERAL HOME ance, reference mechanical you for Cemetery, tation of the «Bon t ere ability App 1064 W. Is. Advertisers lishing Co, Rosary will =. ueoday. ois & ike ae Purerais” ae :30_to 10: “nm Sood Ann Arbor, Michigan, : Davis ‘Punerel ome’ where Mr. Thoughtful Serv* o-5061 | *GTOA non ¥ear putfut-Servirg Pl 80 To $15, 000 Tra- | Vaillancourt will le in state. vel. Paid Write’ only serine SALESMEN . : a Ea 3 Voorhees-Sipie | il gener ‘pore "et"ie' sits) ages ay or over no comact aman , beloved husband of Letha Gingle- FUNERAL HOME ~ BARBER sell emergency service. PE 86-2041 ton; dear father 8. — ¢ | Rea Str Reteron Maint: Ambumnee eprieggrgin of Meter) Putt ume. 354 3,20" Sen) Supplement’ Income Conley Singleton and Mrs. Tennis 2 Must be neat. od Joyner. Service was held at t ANGE NOW — REAL ESTATE| 5 cessary. $1.98 per hr. ‘Call F Church of Christ at 2 p.m. Sun- BOX REPLIFS ATE where have e of- 8-9565 fo r appt. only, jay. Mr. Singleton was then taken ce, am parking ideal loca- EPH OLICITIN the Rants ae oa. At 10 a.m. today there ) and ¢ to ‘share in ex- Men a - ps to san tree Searcy, Ark., for service and in- ‘ t tra Pramas B aon wmf. CALL Fw 5-618 ® to 2:30 or 3:30 to 9, No tment, in Roosevelt, Cemetery,| | were replies at the Press ine 6 successl future. expe Bi igh Dee =~ adhealemidel| [gd meena Oba mo lillie | My Oh MILLER, MAY & 1958, hey a4 DRAFTING wanINEES 2 PM, AD Ae eT ay | 1, 6, 8, 18, 23, 26, 28, 30, FOSAY'S SORT 1 OUR AD IN WANTED — MEN FOR AIRLINE beloved son of Mrs. caroline Mit: 32, 34, 36, 38, 42, 45, 56, AY'S & SECT Training. “or our Adv, under Frederick Miller and Mrs. Louise| j 57, 74, 76, 77, 81, 96, 112, EXPERIENCED AFFLIGNCE WANTED — 9 REAL ESTATE Hoids. le ne range a caneen So 22 the 1138. 4 sereemen, Good’ pre is reposition {gr re gelesmen Be ng Ea or West ‘Pursiey Puneral Home. iene ‘man. ” ‘Bootes ae ES. BR a NiCHO MAY 3, 1958, BABY BOY, 2300 Shimmong’ Rd. beloved a -| Help Wanted Female 7 ox Graven de 2 service ve mi through Cussifed Ick og lg a Information | 53 — AVERAGE 00 M 8 afternoon @# a "4020 s seer. _puneees pkreaprnene Yes, whatever it is—dial| prt, ete: gamed oe 7, wre: Pam camp. _ rks-Griffin Funeral Home. ph pad abi N May 3, 1086 BABY STx.|FE 2-8181 for an ad- MAN comin hen Paul. 431\ Washington 8t..| writer and it! te“ ‘= AMBITI su {AN Mutitord: beloved infant. son of| Writer and get it sion & car allowance, Only . interes’ in permanent posi! it you — tha 34 hours — Mr. and Mrs. Walter Madison: d or nent enings & wish dear brother of Linda Marie and |, need a fo bh i $100 bos Lori Kay Madison: beloved erand- ' Singer Sewi ing Cente _tall Ph 3-6668 or PE Care” son of Mr. snd Mrs. Thomas m5, = | ae Madison and Mr and Mrs. Wil-|§'- The Pontiac Press SABYEITYING