‘trespasser, the owner came out of The Weather U.S. Weather -" Forecast Mostly cloudy with occasional snow (Details on Page *) 116th YEAR xkkKkek* / THE PONTIAC PR PONTI AC, MICHIGAN, TU Ee MARCH 11, 1958—28 PAGES ASSOCIATED PR: UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS fERVICE PHOTOS 76 New England Digs Out AP Facsimile THREE WEEKS AFTER BLIZZARD — While Michigan, and ', especially the Pontiac area, has not been too hard hit by snow this winter, other parts of the nation were not so fortunate. This picture today from New Hampshire shows a road near Axworth, just opened three weeks after the big blizzard. - Garaging Gang’ Balloons +] lke Poised | to Ask T ad U.S. Announces Jobless Figures for February Unemployment Now at 5 Million; March May Show More Work retary of Labor Mitchell re- jported today that unem- |ployment reached 5,200,000 in mid-February, up about 700,000 from January. He said a tax cut is “the ing the recession. Mitchell announced the February jobs figure, pre- pared jointly by the Labor and Commerce depart- ments, in a speech to an AFL-CIO economic con- ference. He called for government action ‘to buoy the sagging economy but cautioned against iaction.”’ i as Investigation Continues By DICK SAUNDERS The “garaging gang” of south Oakland County has - -boomed into proportions hardly expected by investi- | gators last week when two Birmingham youths were arrested. = *y Mitchell said it was too easy to recommend “broad and far- reaching money spending” that would not provide jobs needed | right now. “The program must fit the need, and must be designed with the! need Clearly in mind,’ he said. * * He said thei in event the busi-| ‘ness downtown proves more Local Employment Figures, page 2 A week ago today, Oakland County sheriff's detectives cut will be made. estimated that anywhere from 75 to 100 larcenies in the Birmingham area would be solved. The investigation, now being handled by ‘the Birming- | > *ham, Troy and Bloomfield, \Township Police Depart- Policeman Fi inds | ments, show five youths How Signs Read |arrested and five more Really Counts _ * . | Those apprehended have already | Pontiac Police Capt: Oliver admitted to being in on over 800 Lemeaux has positive evidence jobs in little over a year. Of these today that it’s not what signs say, entries, theft was committed in| ow llthey are (mdaread | that| well over half, according to au- snclingid y 'thorities. makes the difference. Their prime objective: * * * ‘and automobiles. Returning from lunch yesterday, The method was fast, quiet and Capt. Lemeaux spotted a private) carried out with calm and ef- car in the lot reserved for police) ficient agro al eee of vehicles adjacent to the Public: me wae Fee crete t ed—the A A, Service Building. As he eyed the) moved quickly to the next house. | Oakland County sheriff's detec- tives found last week that one of the group would drive ‘tly down a residential street while three or four accomplices, on either side Department. I would like to /of the street, would enter garages. ask you a question, Why are you | * x * parked here’ — didn't you see | They would then bring their loot all the signs saying ‘No Park- out and lay it on the curb. The ing, Police Vehicles Only’.” driver, or a helper, would then A * pick up the stolen goods like rub- 'bish collectors, while the others The man gazed at the nearest moved on t> another garage. sign, and his eyes bulged slightly. “T sure owe you an apology, but COLLABORATORS NAMED m I thought those signs said ‘Police} With five members of the ‘“‘e:.- Victims Only’ and I came here to/raging gang” already in custody, pay a traffic ticket.” * ¥ Garages the station and climbed into his car. This was the conversation: “Pardon me, [I'm Capt. Lemeaux of the Pontiac Police Troy-Birmingham .area have been| named and will be picked up for : investigation today. County Balloting ane Results of elections Still two more, believed to be yesterday in Oakland the ring leaders by investigators, are being sought in Georgia and California. According to investigators, “it (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) County area communities and school districts are on Page 15. Couten Meditations J By ROBERT L. DIEFFENBACHER, D.D. Highways are being rebuilt in many parts of the nation.. Superhighways are taking the places of winding, bumpy roads. ~ ' We used to think that these curving thoroughfares were dangerous because there were so many opportunities for landing in the ditch. Narrow roads created the hazard of one’s being side- swiped in the center of the road, Accidents have not - ‘decreased a great deal since high- | ways have been reconstructed. Hew dangers ,have come into being. x * *' Speed now claims the lives of many people and it causes scores of accidents which do not kill people. Although our way through life has been materially much easier and more comfortable in recent years there seems to be many pitfalls and opportunities for sin. Temptation seems to lurk along the level way even more sought as accomplices. three other collaborators in the) than it did along the rugged trails of years gone by. istes Ae : i: \ 4 ri * . Pa . “ ahi - . fe F - 4 : % He said it would be ‘a major and substantial cut in personal and \business taxes." “This action I can assure you,” Mitchell said, “is being fully considered and its details worked out. It is ready for immediate use as an additional stimulus to the economy, and it will be used if necessary. “Certainly this is the next big! step, and is far preferable ta mas- sive new public works spending | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Little Change in Assessments City Reports on Downtown Listing No Higher Than ‘57 Downtown Pontiac commercial assessments were set yesterday): at levels as high or almost as high as last year’s, City Assessor W. Raymond Ransom said today. “We made some cuts, but none to the extent proposed by_ some downtown groups seeking tax re- lief this year,’’ Ransom said. None of the assessments were raised over last vear’s, he added. * * * Ransom said he would attempt! ito meet with State Tax Commission, officials today in Lansing to deter-'Qji Co. employes arriving in Singa- subcommittee was informed White-| mine how the state views the pos-'pore are taking their evacuation' side would be on hand. tomorrow. sible reinstatement of land values) trimmed in appeal last year. The city has asked for the re- instatement te pull all its down- town assessments back into line. “If the assessments lowered. WASHINGTON (?!—Sec- next big step” toward halt-) “ijll-advised|~ — Figures. | Oil Co. UNLOADING OIL — Tankers of the American-owned Caltex are unloaded at the Pakning terminal of the company, | across a narrow strait from Bengkalis, Sumatra on the Siak River. Rebel Troops Poised tor Sumatra Clashes BUKITTINGGI, Central Sumatra (?i—Rebel arye! | waited today in camouflaged positions along Sumatra’s stub., WeSt coast to meet an expected landing of central gov- , born that anticipated, an adminis- ernment troops near Padang. ~| Rebel government leaders said the Jakarta govern- ‘ment probably would follow up minor naval and air iswipes. at Padang yester-* ltrative recommendation for a tax! day with landings 35 miles on either side of the Indian \Ocean port 50 miles trom Bukittinggi, the rebel /mountain capital. | Another 4,000 central government troops were reported ready to fol- llow up the seizure Friday of an lisland off Sumatra’s east coast iwith a landing at the nearby oil! port of Dumai. In Jakarta, the central goverh ment announced capture of the ‘Miami Lawyer Due to Appear Whiteside Reschedules Date With Probers for | Wednesday -east coast islands of Bengkalis | and Tebingtinggi and of Pak- ning, the American oil terminal | _ facing them near the mouth of. | the Siak River. The government claimed they ‘were taken without a fight. | he Jakarta government so far) inad imposed no censorship on cut |xoing news dispatches but was giv-| ine out little information on mili-; ary operations. , * * * However, the central government refused to issue visas to two Amer-| ican newsmen, Greg MacGregor and Harold Martin. The refusal was interpreted in Singapore as an effort to keep the number of foreign correspondents | in Indonesia to a minimum. On advice from Jakarta, the | American Caltex oil Co. halted | Operations at its rich oil field around Pakanbaru, inland be. tween Padang and Pakning. The company sent: 31 women and children—nine of them -Ameri- cans—to Singapore, 125 miles east of the east coast invasion area, The wives and children of Caltex) calmly apparently with little fear for their husbands. Fifty-two women and children, Americans and others, have} [react hed Singapore. | WASHINGTON um — Atty. Thur- jman A. Whiteside is rescheduled | to appear tomorrow before a ‘the backstage maneuvering for | Miami's television Channel] 10. * It was cocci, however, whether Richard A. Mack, who | quit his Federal Communications | Commission job under fire last} jweek, would make a new appear- | ance as earlier announced. hearings were in recess today. Whiteside failed to show up yesterday to answer more ques- tions about his business dealings | The Bengkalis was reportedly captured by regular Indonesian troops after rebel forces withdrew following a clash. | Main Base American - Coltex Oi , © Reported bad rear OF Owned | Compony | : AP Wirephoto ISLAND OF CONFLICT — This is a closeup map of central House subcommittee inv estigating, Sumatra where Indonesian government troops have reportedly be- gun ieee Ce to cm rebel regime entrenched on the island. Garment Workers, Firms Agree on 3-Year Contract NEW YORK (#!\—Negotiators for dress manufacturers jand 105,000 striking garment workers reached agree- ‘ment today on a new three- | Subject to ratification by -year contract. both sides, the pact restores with Mack, who acknowledged peace to the industry—New York city’s largest—after accepting loans and favors from Whiteside. The subcommittee word that Whiteside had been) advised by his lawyer to stay away from the hearings because of a federal grand jury probe of the Miami case. . * * * A few hours later, though, there was a quick turnabout and the received | Another witness scheduled to ‘appear tomorrow is A. Frank Katzentine, a radio station owner who lost out in the bidding for Channel 10. Detroit Firm Gets Big Jet Engine Job DAYTON, Ohio « — Firms in Connecticut, Michigan and Cali- fornia have been awarded con- tracts worth more than 26 million) dollars. The announcement came at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base here today. Continental Aviation and Engi- neering Co., Detroit, $8,352,272 for jet engines for the twin-jet T37 Air Force training plane. from the Air Materiel Command! *the first major walkout in 25 years. The strike started nae Wednesday. David Dubinsky, president of ithe Internaticnal Ladies Garment |Workers Union, said no one would return td work before tomorrow! ‘morning. | Picketing will continue, he said, until the union receives word of employer ratification, expected tonight. Union ‘shop stewards vote today]| on the pact. * * bd Return of the workers in a sev- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Slash Favored Over Massive U.S. Spending President Still Hoping Economy Will Respond to Less Drastic Moves WASHINGTON (® —President Eisenhower ap- parently is poised to pro- pose a down-the-line tax cut if the nation’s economy -}fails to respond soon to less dramatic stimulants. Vice President Nixon obviously supplied the ad- ministration’s answer to huge upsurge in public works when he told report- ers yesterday he would pre- fer a “substantial” tax cut to any “massive” spending program. . x* * * Robert E. Merriam, assistant budget director, testified the: budg- et deficit for the year ending June 30 may run as much as 500 million dollars higher than Eisenhower forecast in January, largely due to heavier spending to combat the re- cession. Secretary of Defense McElroy announced also he will ask at least $1,300,000,000 more than Ei- senhower's original $59,100,000,- 000 budget request for military spending next year. Nixon said he expects gains in _|both business and employment in the near future, but added that if the recession contin¥és, he prefers to “go down the tax-cutting road rather than the spending road’’ to cure it. SOLONS SURPRISED His comment apparently sur- prised Senators Knowland (Calif), the Senate Republican leader, and Bridges (NH), chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Com- mittee. * a * Knowland said he regards a tax reduction as “one of the alterna- tives that should be considered if by summer there is no upturn.”’ Bridges said in a separaie inter- view he is keeping an open mind on the question. NOT COMMITTED “A tax cut would be one way to approach the situation but I am not committed to one at this time,” he said. Democrats made it clear they regarded Nixon’s announcement ‘a8 a move aimed at cutting across their plans to force an immediate increase in spending. Democrats, too, have tax reduc. tion plans in reserve, awaiting a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Cloudiness to Stay; Mercury Constant Pontiac area residents can ex. pect more gray weather, reports the U, S. Weather Bureau. ‘The outlook for tonight and to. lmorrow is partly cloudy to cloudy with little change in temperature, The low tonight will be 24-28 de. grees and the high tomorrow 36-40, The prediction for Thursday is mostly cloudy with the chance of occasional light snow, The lowest temperature in down. town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was (28. At 1 p.m. the mercury stood . lat 32. through appeal remain in effect 600th First-Offender Will Get Second Chance this year, it will mean that our 1958) assessments are not uniform and | open the door to more appeals,” Ransom said. * * Several groups have asked for, tax relief this year. Ransom figured that cuts to pro-| vide relief should be made by the Board of Tax Review, not by his office, “If some distressed businesses need tax cuts, the board can make them on a one-year tem- porary basis without affecting the rest of the tax structure,”’ he ex- plained. Meantime, the board today was able for the first time this year ito give. its full attention to hear- ings on real estate assessnients. | * * * _A total 425 taxpayers who made) appeals for relief on the basis of inability to pay occupied the board last week and yesterday. The real estate hearings, which \normally would have taken place all day yesterday, are scheduled to ‘ (continue through - riday, iCourt reaches a milestone Thurs-| iday in its endeavors to help young, lawbreakers * * * And the man who is most re-, sponsible for achieving this mark) —Chief Assistant Prosecutor) George F. Taylor — has the smile | of a proud father when he looks at this unique court, “Little did we. ever think when | - we started out in 1953 that we | would reach 600 kids,”” exclaimed | Taylor. “When two I7-year-old Royal Oak, ‘youths step before Taylor Thurs-| day they will be numbers 599) and 600 in the flow of boys and) ‘CHANCE’ FOR DELINQUENTS: It was created by Taylor and| _| Prosecutor Frederick | C. Ziem in igirls which have come; before the he’s concerned he’s practically court. ~ itdone for in the years ahead,”’ offered juvenile offenders where in the country. else-' | boys and gitls ranging in age be. | tween 16 and 20 years, are told | the court has no legal jurisdic. | tion, They also learn no record of proceedings are kept. Nor is . there any publicity. But by far the greatest asset! \of the Off-the-Record Court is that, ithese first - time lawbreakers re- | ceive another chance, and will) have no criminal record hanging over their heads. ‘Give a 17-year-old a felony rec-' ord,” said Taylor, ‘‘and as far as! |FIGU RES PROVE sUCCESS Putting the biggest smile on ‘Taylor's. face is the fact that of The parents of the kids, mostly | jclgnt have gone astrav again. * * * Youths may come before the ithe complaining witnesses. All are first . In Today’ Ss Press ee Comics supoomooorehoset.. County. News ..........0005- 15 Editorials ............. wees 4 Markets 2 o6cs665 accuse esas. 22 Obituaties 3 ee 17 to 19 Theaters bs] TV and Radio Programs. .-27 _ Wilson, Eart seis Women's Pages ..... at to 13. jcourt only with the approval of the | arresting police department and breaking and entering, and lar-| time offenders, 998 kids who have been af-| They can have no previous rec- | tion came “‘breaks’’ very seldom|forded this second chance, only | ord. If the crime involves acts | | of violence the offender cannot / come before Taylor's court, Most of their crimes involve! cenies, * The offenders are placed on six- ‘month probation, during which time ithey must report monthly either ito Taylor or to Anthony F. Stiel, chief investigator for the prosecu- *\tor’s office. _ On school nights they must ob. |serve a 9 pm. curfew. ‘SCHOOL WORK IMPROVES "|; When they report after grading ‘periods at their schools the boys ‘and girls must show Taylor their report cards. “Two-thirds of them have improved their grades in one ‘period after they come to us?’ ‘explained ae lor, , County’s Off-the-Record Court at Milestone Oakland County's Off-The-Record | September of 1933. With it’s crea- the Realizing that in many cases there is a definite lack of fami- | ly life, such as attending church together, Taylor asks that_ the family begin this practice, Taylor, who recently was hon- ‘ored by his Sigma Nu Phi legal »* * |fraternity: for his work with this ‘court, receives letters of thanks: from the kids the court has helped with this second chance, ‘The armed forces have . taken 105 of them,” he said, “and nof lone of them has been discharged | dishonorably.”” . So when numbers 599 and: 600 step before Taylor Thursday, an’ opportunity to. forget their past mistakes, and make good with @ too. (2 Jerome “Bright Spot” meed@ ane tars, "54 to ‘b's, Tops, ravens second chance will be “come besaes ‘ Democratic demands for a - Delay Forecast for School Aid Due Saturday, Checks to Districts May Be Some Weeks Late ‘ LANSING W — Delay appeared certain today in paying the $28,- 500,000 state school aid distribution due next Saturday. There were indications the post- ponement might be for a matter of weeks, perhaps requiring some of the smaller school districts relying heavily on state financial support to borrow funds. . x * * State Treasurer Sanford A. Brown was working on the prob- lem, “studying possibly when the payment can go out.’’ So. were finance experts in the Department of Public Instruction. The last school aid distribution, scheduled Jan. 15, was made one month and three days late be- cause of dwindling treasury bal- ances. . Because of the influx after the first of-the year of local property fax revenues, few districts were caused much distress. The state treasury faces two major disbursements this week, one of about six million dollars for the semi-monthly state payroll and the other about $14,500,000 for servicing state debt. Brown indicated yesterday these two obligations would take prior- ity over others coming due. Plan Hospital Addition ' DETROIT — Contracts for a 500-bed, 16-million-dollar addition to. ‘Wayne County General Hospital will be let in April, Dr. Samuel D. Jacobson, medical director, said Monday. Construction will include @ complete general hospital unit, a laundry and a public health build- By E. H. SIMS Can you expect to be hearing thunder and lightning soon? Why do we seldom have thunderheads and thunderstorms in the winter months? You will soon be hearing the fa- spending. ‘MAZEY TESTIFIES — Emil THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAR : t. CH 1, 1958 Mazey, secretary-treasurer of the United Auto Workers Union, is shown before the Senate Rackets ‘ up from witness chair in foreground. His lawyer, Joseph L, Rauh Jr., looks over papers at right of Mazey. . AP Wirephote The unemployed make up 12.2 per cent of the total Pontiac area labor force, figures released today by the local branch of the Michi- gan Employment Security Commis- sion disclose. * * * This compares with 7.9 per cent in January, 4.9 per cent in De- U.S. Will Announce Job Figures Today (Continued From Page One) because it puts money in the hands of consumers and _ inves- tors." * * * Mitchell echoed comments made yesterday by Vice President Committee. Mazey, wearing a dark suit and striped necktie, looks cember and 4.4 per cent in Feb- ruary of a. * * The cena rate of unemploy- ment reflects the downturn in Pon- tiac and neighboring areas, partic- ularly Detroit, the report said. A substantial number of Pontiac area residents who are currently unemployed are laid off from em- ployers whose plants are outside this area, it added. * * * Tell Unemployment Figures days by 600, of which 300 were in retailing, 200 in construction and 100 in transportation. ¥. * In mid-February there were 69,- 300 employed in the Pontiac area, or 6,100 less than the same time ong year ago. tion of figures, manufacturing em- ployment continued to drop with 2,000 more workers laid off in the last two weeks of last month. In the 30 days preceding Feb. the jobless rolls, the figures show. | The largest loss was in manufac- turing with 3,100 laid off, of which 2,700 were from local automotive plants which reduced production. x o* * Non-manufacturing concerns cut employment during the same 30 Nixon on preferring a tax reduc- tion to massive public works MEANY SPEAKS AFL-CIO President George Meany, in an opening address to the AFL-CIO Unemployment Con- ference, recommended a tax cut, increased unemployment benéfits and more defense spending as Belly-Lands Jet 15, 3,700 persons were added to. The office expects a seasonal in- ‘crease in work in the non-manu- facturing area of about 1,000 in ‘the next- two months. x * * Spring gain in retail trades, services, con- struction and other outdoor work, the statement said. Unemployment insurance volume rose sharply in February with pay- ments during the month totaling $643,173, compared with $475,652 in January and $269,601 in February of 1957. Yesterday, Back | on Duty Today OSCODA — Col. T. W. Wilson, 40, commanding officer of nearby Wurtsmith Air Force Base, was back on duty today after a narrow miliar thunder and lightning of spring and summer, if you have not already heard the first rum- bles of thunder which herald the a of 1958's warmer weatb- - gr. « The longer sunlight and greater' - eating resulting from it and the Position of the earth in the coming months causes hot air to rise and form thunderheads. The greater heat and greater volume of rising, warmed air, cause higher clouds and thunder results from the trans- fer of electrical overcharges as the natural balance is restored by lightning strikes. Thunder is the roar created by these electrical discharges just as, a big gun causes its own miniature. thunder at the instant of firing. Wet and Cloudy. Weather Prevails in Broad Areas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wet and cloudy weather covered broad areas of the country today, but there were no severe storms or wintry cold. : - * * * Light snow or flurries continued in sections of the Rockies and cen- tral .part of the nation, with cloudy skies in most areas. The wet belt extended from Montana southward through Colorado and eastward through the Mississippi Valley. Falls ranged up to 2 in- ches in west central Illinois. * * * More snow flurried across the lower Great Lakes region and light rain sprinkled parts of the lower Mississippi Valley. The Weather . Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report Bank Porter Takes ‘land departed with one amounting /a “must” legislation to stop the recession.’ * * * Meany declared that administra- tion short-sightedness and con- gressional delay is to blame for today’s economic crisis. The administration is reported to be looking to the March figures for definite evidence as to what is happening. The March figures will show whether the usual spring pickup in activity is taking hold. * * * If not, there are indications that the administration may back a tax cut to halt the recession. The March report will be issued a month from now. Deposits, Clears Out LOUISVILLE, Ky, ) — A sign on the night depository chute of a branch of the Lincoln Bank & Trust Co, read “Out of order; leave deposit with porter.” ‘brush with death in a jet plane President Poised fo Ask Tax Slash (Continued From Page One) crash. * * * Col. Wilson, of Trinidad, Col., made a belly landing yesterday in a rural area three miles south of Rogers City after an explosion in the plane’s after-burner tore a three-foot hole in the fuselage. The officer said he was forced te stay in the plane, an F102, when the ejector mechanism failed and prevented him from parachuting. The plane was fly- ing at about 40,000 feet when the biast occurred. The jet fighter slid more than 2,000 feet on its belly, crashed through two fences and stopped about 100 yards from the home of a farmer, Otto Altman. Uninjured, Col. Wilson later was picked up by an Air Force helicopter. * * * The colonel’s. plane was in a for- mation of seven returning on a training flight from Kinross Air Force Base near Sault Ste. Marie. “go” signal from House Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex). * * * Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn) said, “We may need a tax cut combind with public works to do the trick.” Sen. Gore (D-Tenn), a mem- ber of the Senate Finance Com- mittee, said a tax cut isn't going to help the unemployed whb will owe no taxes. — “What they need is jobs,” he said. ‘‘Any tax cut for corpora- tions and large taxpayers will find its way into job-making only in! minor part.’ Chairman Byrd (D-Va) of the, Finance Committee said that while he wouldn't oppose a sound tax cut, he believes one now would be likely to bring on a 10- oe dollar defi-) cit: “Then we would have the kind of! inflation that would hurt the little man more in the long run than if! his taxes had not been reduced,” | Byrd said. Face Cool Reception * * * Three after-hours depositors fol- lowed the instructions. And now the FBI is looking for the porter and $1,100. The chute wasn’t out of order at all. * * * Charles E, Weeks, special agent in charge of the FBI office here, gave this account: The porter, Oliver Thomas Guest Sr., 31, Negro, put up the sign while he was waxing floors. * & & After three persons gave him deposits, he left two at the bank to $1,100. * * * “PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly a rm te cloudy tenight and temerrew. Gittle change in temperature. Low might 24-28%. High tomorrow #6-40. Vari- ble winds, mostiy north te northeast at o-i8 miles an hour. Today i in Pontiac = Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. m.* aber velocity 3 m.p.h. te- charging him with violation of the The FBI, listing the porter as a 7ifugitive, obtained a warrant ‘Asia got down to. business today ‘dad Pact in the Middle East. MANILA «®—Diplomatic leaders! of the anti-Communist camp in after opening the fourth annual SEATO foreign ministers’ confer- ence with a round of general oratory. Prime subjects for discussion were appeals for more help for Asian members of thé pact and} Philippine proposal to link the Southeast Asia alliance with two other anti-Communist groups — NATO in Europe and the Bagh- * * * ‘Federal Reserve Bank Act. Both faced a cool reception Ike Appeals to Citizens: 8 a.m.: : Nerthea: its Tuesday, at 6:34 p.m oon rises Wednesday at 1 34 ‘am Fight Death on Highway Downtown tenpersceres ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (AP)—President Eisenhower ap- | pealed for organized citizen support today to help overcome rf ‘the terrible march of death .. . on our public roads.” x * “Action is the answer... Eisenhower said in a filmed keynote message to the first of four citizen leadership confere mittee for Traffic Safety. “If this record is to be impr ceyanined citizen support,” he 6 GM... r0000+- 38 1 G01. creases 0 1a.m..... nescs ae 12 m. % 30 § a.m. rrr... LPM aec.. 32 9 OM..0->....6- 28 10 B.BLw acess oe in y in Pontise hye — ied downtown) Highest temperature ............... 36 Lowest perature , oat Mean temperature ... 218) Weather—Clo | ‘ear Age “Age in secant. hest tem: Lo fan ore a4 WONTO 2... ccccceccenss. 3§ Weather—Rain .72 inch Richest and Lowest Temperatures . Date in Years 3 62 in 1927 16 in 1885 : ie iaecinees z 18° Memphis 48 41 31 ~Miami Tl @ :. Milwa 36 - 28 nevi 78 63. Minneapolis 35 22 ; 26. New Or 67 63 go 3 ONew York 51 35 a 30. 26 ' S 3 ix 62 46 ; : Pittsburgh 34 30 \ 26 Bt; Louis 33 30 ih ‘36 18 Ban Fran, 56 42 40 8. BS Marie 26 23 / -¥ Traverse Ci, 31 17 . / Washington 8 35 } * Beattie . 50: 4 geley 3) 7 7 A recent study, the President stated, showed that as an average the 48 states had applied only 58 per cent of their basic traffic safety programs. local official with responsibility for traffic control must have x k * Other conferences will be held 4 Francisco, April 8-9; and Miami 1 States represented at the two-day Eastern regional con- ference are Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, | Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, =i ane ie Rhode Island and Vermont. Co-operation is the means,” neces of the President’s Com- oved, every state, county and sald. Chicago, April 1-2; San ach, Fla., May 29-3. Maryland, } juriesiat Po Appeals for Help in Asia Open SEATO Meeting from the- American delegation. In- formed sources said Secretary of State Dulles feels this isn't the) time to expand SEATO—militar-| ily, geographically or economical- ly. These sources added Dulles’ has nothing new to propose in the way of economic aid for the Asian members. In the opening session, Following the Feb. 15 compila-| will bring an expected) Beating, Death Will Be Probed Senators to Question Detroit Unionist About ‘Kohler Strike Incident WASHINGTON — Senate rackets probers called Detroit unionist John Gunaca for question- ing today about the beating of a nonstriking Kohler Co. worker who died later of a heart ailment. * * * William Bersch Sr. died 16 months after he suffered multiple injuries in a 1954 fight in a gaso- ‘line filling station. Bersch and his son William Jr. were beaten then by a group which they said in- cluded Gunaca, but Gunaca denies that he was involved. Gunaca has been charged with assault but has never been tried. Michigan Gov. G, Mennen Wil- The Day in Birmingham Police Unfolding ‘Garaging’ Work (Continued From Page One) is difficult to say exactly how many of the jobs involved actual theft, but 60 per cent seems about right at the present time,” “The youths have indicated in questioning that even they are not sure how many jobs they work:d,” explained Bloomfield Township Chief Dehnke. ‘They estimated that they entered an average of 20 garages each night they went out.” * * * He said they admitted going “paraging’’ (-e they called it! “about 10 nights each month since about Nov, 1.” SPECIFIC DUTIES ' “However ‘he operation -- a lesser scale has been going on for just over a year,” according to Dehnke. ‘In fact, in recent mcnths the procedure had been organized to the point that certain meinovrs of the gang had specific jobs.” “One might be a ‘lookout man’ and another a ‘driver’ while others would do the collecting on each occasion,” Dehnke said. The entire chain of events began with the arrest, March 1, of Jack Wells, 20 of 1653 Bates St. and Herbert L. Kannell, 17, of 1172 E. Ruffner S8t., both of Birmingham. Questioning led to the apprehen- sion later of two other Birming- ham youths, Raymond C. Hill, 18, of 708 Davis St. and Allan E. Turner, 18, of 292 Park St., and Gerald Gravlin, 20, of 2754 Hart- line St., Rochester. * x * Kannell, Wells and Gravlin were arraigned in Oakland County Cir- cuit Court yesterday before Judge George B. Hartrick. Entering pleas of guilty on charges of larceny from a motor vehicle were Wells and Gravlin. SENTENCING SET Judge Hartrick set sentencing for March 24.- Wells was released until then on a $500 bond, while Gravlin was remanded to the leounty jail after he failed to post ja $2,000 bond. * * * Kannell stood mute to the same liams has rejected Wisconsin re- quests for extradition of Gunaca, who contended he could not obtain a fair trial on the charges in the Sheboygan, Wis., area affected by the strike. Gunaca Nabbed Here Following the 1954 beating of the non-striker, Gunaca was ap- prehended in Oakland County where he was arraigned as a fugitive from justice before Cir- cuit Judge Frank L, Doty on Sept. 10, 1954. Following eight postponements requested by his attorney, William Mazey, Gun- aca's trial here was postponed without date in October of 1955. The case has been billed as one lof the key issues that led up to ithe Senate Rackets {Committee's investigation of violence in the bitter, marathon strike the United Auto Workers has pressed against ithe Kohler Co. since April 5, 1954.) ‘The firm manufactures bathroom fixtures. Sen. Goldwater (R-Ariz) ciarge. The judge entered a plea of innocent for him. He also was released on a $500 bond. Hill and Turner appeared yes- terday before West Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. Dieterle. Both waived examina- tion. They were returned to the Oak- land County Jail, with bond set on each at $500, to await arraignment in Circuit Court on Monday. * * * Detectives said that no agent to sell the loot had been uncovered in the organization. ‘‘Most of the loot consisted of food-and alcoholic beverages,” said Sheriff's Detec- tive Lee Hazen. * * * “The food and beverages would be used to throw parties with, in many cases,"’ according to detec- tives. ‘‘One of the gang, who came from a very large family, took much of the food home,” they reported, TOOLS, SMALL ITEMS The remaining loot consisted largely of tools and other small items which the youths could use themselves or sell to friends with- out arousing a great deal of sus- a Rackets Committee member, rejected as a publicity ‘“gim- mick” a letter from UAW Pres- ident Walter Reuther suggesting that they invite a panel of cler- gymen to decide whether Gold- water was correct in calling Reu- ther “more dangerous than Sput- nik’? to the American way of life. Emil Masey, UAW secretary - treasurer, denied before the com- mittee that he or the union was condoning violence when he author- ized payment of $100 a week to jthe wife of a union menubar serv- jing a a term. Crash Into Utility Pole Injures Man From Orion the American secretary told his col-| Jamm Rad,, Tysick, 27, of 4884 Orion Township, was Peter E. leagues stepped-up Red propa-' admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hos- iganda blasts against SEATO over the past few days indicated ‘‘there may be new aggressive Commu- “\nist plans for this area.’ Dulles said the Communist word attacks on the alliance are seven times as heavy as those that preceded the meeting last year. * * * pact members are not receiving enough economic aid in the face of recession and aid offers from) the Communists. French Foreign Minister Chris.| tian Pineau also called for bolster- ing the economies of the Asian members of the pact—the Philip-| - pines, Thailand and Pakistan. Woman Hurt in Crash at.Cass and Lawrence A two-car collision at Cass Ave. and W, Lawrence St.- Monday slightly injured a Pontiac woman, Mrs. Adeline M. Helton, 45, of 1053 Stanley Ave., Pontiac Police re- ported. She was treated for minor in- General Hospital and released. Her husband, Clar- — 52, who was driving, and the river of the other bite, Ger. M, Rotsel, 41, of ry uninjured, pital early this morning after be- ing injured in an accident in front of 3191 Joslyn Rd., Pontiac Town- ship, Oakland County Sheriff's Dep- uties reported, Tysick suffered facial cuts and a possible concussion and is reported in fair condition by the hospital. 4 ,He told deputies that he apparently Commerce Minister’ N.M.A. Qi-, zilbash of Pakistan declared Asian, fell asleep at the wheel and ran off the road, striking a utility pole. picion. * * * Authorities said an accurate esti- mate of the total value of their take would be impossible. The gang covered a wide area including Southfield, West Bloom- field and Bloomfield Townships, Franklin Village, and the cities of Birmingham and Troy, “In one subdivision they admit- ted entering every garage in a three-block area,” said Dehnke. “They confined the majority of their work to new ranch-type homes.” * * * Dehnke stated that the operation wasn't really noticed until the lat- ter part of October last: year, ‘‘It was then that we began to get mass reports of theft in a localized area — sometimes as many as 25 |Attorney for Seeks to Postpone Suit BIRMINGHAM—Edmond Brady, attorney for the Greyhound Bus Corp., again appeared before the City Commission last night with the appeal that the city direct its attorney to seek postponement of a citizen’s suit charging the bus company with maintaining a nui- sance at its Hunter boulevard- Forest street parking lot. Since Greyhound no longer owns the local lines, Brady said he thought the case should be delayed until the new owner is given an opportunity to prove that the nul could be les- sened considerably. Commissioners, pointing out to Brady that they were powerless to ask the postponement, turned the question over to the residents in- volved. _ A spokesman for the group said JOHN 8. CROSS Nominated by President Eisen- hower to succeed Richard A. Mack as a member of the Federal Communications Com- mission, John S. Cross is pic- tured in Washington after the nomination was made public. A Democrat, Cross now is assistant ‘chief of the state department's telecommunications division. Garment Workers Agree on Contract (Continued From Page One) en-state area will permit a start money issyes were settled by negotiators Sunday. The wage agreement includes an 11% per cent package increase, including 8 per cent. for higher on the movement of dresses for the — of the pre-Easter deliv- ery. ese dresses will bear a union label,~said Dubinsky. They will cost more because of higher wages, according to the manufac- ‘turers. x * * The increased labor cost was es- timated at 75 million dollars over the contract term. Hammered out during seven continuous hours of negotiations overnight was the problem of contract enforcement — the last obstacle to agreement after wages and overtime for piece workers after 35 hours a week. Prestrike wages averaged $2.10 an hour in New York City, where 60,000 of the strikers worked, and were 50 to 75 cents an hour less elsewhere. About 80 per cent of the workers are paid on a piece work basis. Most of the workers are women. Fink Evidence Supports is Income Tax Return DALLAS, Tex. (#—An income tax return received at the Inter- nal Revenue Service office had Se evidence, tax employes sa. Attached was.a small, pink card announcing the birth of a daugh- ter last August. The extra exemp- Greyhound they had no intention of dropping the guit. A group of the complaining resi- dents at the meeting told the com- mission this. was not the first time they have appealed for relief, In the past action was taken to allevi- ate or eliminate the fumes and noise and then dropped, they complaining. * * * In other action, the commission referred the request for buffer tree planting bétween Buckingham road and the Grand Trunk railroad to the City Forestry Department. ‘No action was taken on the cre- afion of roles in pav- ing and parking lot assessment districts. At the request of several persons living in the area, the city will study a proposal that the deficiency roles ‘be spread over a longer pay- ment period. Two Birmingham youths have been jailed and three others re- leased to their ‘parents, following "charges by Held are Glenn Orr, 17, of 519 W. Frank S8t., and Ren Morrow, 18, of 1358 Villa Rd, Samuel D. Moray, 17, of 408 Bald- win Rd, and two juveniles are scheduled to appear in court with their parents. Police said the boys are charged with stealing liquor valued at $688 from the George Walker home in Bloomfield Hills. * x There will be an authentic Jap- anese touch to the scene when the Kappa Delta Alumnee of South Oakland meets tonight at the Rob- = ears home, 1723 Bowers t Mrs. Kayoko Sessler, a native of Japan and a newcomer to this country, will prepare the suki- yaki dinner on an authentic hi- bachi. The ancient dish will be served in the traditional style of her homeland, with rice bowls and chopsticks. Low tables, pillows and decora- tions of -rice paper lanterns and Japanese dolls will help transform the Girardin home into the proper setting. Mrs. Girardin, who spent some time in Japan with her husband, will wear a beige silk kimono made for her while there. Slides of Japan, taken by the Girardins, will provide the entertainment. Milward T. Howitt Service for Milward T. Howitt, 73, of 23712 W. 13-Mile Rd., Bir- tomorrow at Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co. Officiating will be the Rev. Dr. Warner Cole of Cov- enant Baptist Church, Detroit, as- sisted by Elder Wilbur Neff of Bay City. Entombment will be in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Howitt died yesterday at William Beaumont Hospital after a short iliness. He had been a consulting engin- eer for Schroeder Machine Co., Detroit, for 12 years. Prior: to that, he had been associated with sev- eral tool firms in the Detroit area since 1907. Surviving ere a daughter, Mrs. Clayton H. Lemon, a son, Clyde M., and a sister, Mrs. Wilbur John- stone, all of Birmingham, and a brother, Richard L. of LaSalle, On- tario. . Mamie Leaves Denver After Visiting Mother DENVER, Colo. ® — Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower took off for Washington today after a two-day visit with her ailing mother, Mrs. Elivera Doud, 79. ; Light snow sifted from gray skies as the President's plane, Columbine ITI, took off from Low- ry Air Force Base, scene of the summer White House during — presidential vacations. It was snowing when Mrs. Ei- tion was not questioned, senhower arrived two days ago. a night in one neighborhood.” “Before that, the outfit would spread their activities from one end of Bloomfield Township to an- other, and limit their take for one evening,” he explained. ® * bd “A large number of the thefts, admitted by the group haven't been | discovered yet or were never’ re-| ported by the property owners,’’) he added. Driver Pulls Pupils From Flames 18 on School Bus Saved AURORA, IIl. (AP)—A young schoolteacher-bus driver rescued 18 pupils from their flaming bus yesterday after it careened into a culvert and ca pupils. ught fire, burning the trapped ®- & © = _ Eight of the children in the 52-passenger bus were reported in serious condition in hospitals. All were fifth “and sixth graders. The bus-driver, James Meredith, 25, an eights-grade jench= i er, said he lost control of the bus when it struck a series of | holes in a. gravel road. Flames burst from a ruptured gas | ~tank, setting the bus on fire. x * * Meredith told newsmen he forced open the tightly sealed front door and rushed to the exit, which also was stuck. He ae flames and smoke. bouad suffered facial came ‘ back to open the emergency supervised the children’s exit So, You Think Sam Benson‘s ‘Prices Are Low... + "You Ai Nothing, Yet!” SAM BENSON’S STORE CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY To get ready for in Our History — ‘until you see the. Ed n't Seen the Greatest Sale Don’t Buy a Thing == terrific values in my Full Page of Bargains in Wedasayy’s Pontioe Press. —__ 7 zi Sam Benson =e _#%.- claimed, after residents stopped mingham, will be held at 3 p.m.. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1958 Budaet Raised for Recreation Waterford. Board OKs Increase of $6,000 for Department An increase of approximately $6,000 in the annual budget has been approved by the Waterford Township Recreation Board. * * * The $31,159 budget was present- ed by Director Tom Belton after it was approved by a committee of the Recreation Board. Last year's department budget was approxi- mately $25,000. Final approval from the Town- ship Beard and the Board of Education, who appropriate the operating funds, is necessary. The major increase. in the bud- get was a request from Belton for a person to be added to the pres- ent staff, who would be known as supervisor of activities. * * * Belton pointed out that by hiring} a full-time supervisor for activities, certain part-time personnel could be eliminated, and funds saved ap- propriated to the new supervisor's salary. “This,” Belton said, “is one of the most significant steps that the Recreation Board has taken in the last five years as it gives the department greater ability to expand much-needed service to the community.” Another reason for the budget increase was that the board plans on extending the summer play- ground program from eight to ten schools in Waterford Township. * * * A new softball activity for adults __known as ‘‘Blooper Ball” was pro- “posed, and a new service providing -a bus with a driver to serve the summer day camp and playground was included in the program. A small salary hike for the two full-time workers of the Recreation Department was also in the tenta- tive budget along with other mis- cellaneous increases for yearly operation of the department. Army Offering College Courses to Re-Enlistees WASHINGTON (INS) — A four-year college education at government expense was of- fered today to qualified Gls who agree to re-enlist for 12 years. The Army said it expects to send 300 enlisted men to college next fall to create ‘‘a hard core of highly trained career specialists and non- commissioned officers." * * * GIs with one year of active duty are eligible but must agree to serve an extra three years for every year of schooling. Training must be completed by the age of 35. The courses, principally in the technical, scientific and managerial fields, will be taken at accredited colleges and universities in the United States. Earthquake Kills Two NAHA, Okinawa W—An earth- quake rocked the Ryukyu Islands today, killing two Okinawans and injuring another. WHAT’S MY LINE? Explains $2 Billion aE: Boe ee, toa: | \Highways Increase oppeors under arrow, reading downward. URUIN Ae be eee cle eo nee WASHINGTON w& — Secretary of Commerce Weeks appears be- fore the Senate Public Roads sub- committee to explain the adminis- tration’s plan to put an additional $2,200,000,000 into the national superhighway network in the next three’ years. A v2 3 Sen. Gore (D-Tenn), the sub- committee chairman, said he was 4 sticking to his own bill introduced 5k: last week as a Democratic plan ' to step up highway spending 1 COFFIE 6 sharply. 2 TLANP * * * 3 CHAMEN| 7 Gore’s bill woud provide 12% 4 FISTH billion dollars of new financing 5 SOLOT over the full span of the program ‘ eevell to cover the 40 billion cost and still complete the interstate net-| Rey wy work in the time originally) Yesterday's answer: aDroit, wise! planned. 3: proPose, skill, pOst, forMal, *treAty, He would do this by taking the o What's My Line, Inc. trusT, other federal-aid road systems — the primary, farm-to-market and Algeria, a part of the French empire in North Africa, includes '850,000 square miles, three times Sahara Desert zone. the size of Texas. Of this area, 724,000 square miles are in the'general tax funds at a cost of urban — out of the highway trust fund and financing them from about 900 million dollars a year. _ drive, turn — the Switch to Three NASCAR economy records! i Rambler : i i Less than I¢ a mile for gas! Switch to the all-time economy champ... Rambler 6 with overdrive holds 3 NASCAR Economy Records, less than‘l¢ a mile for regular grade gas. Rambler's éasiest to , park, tops in resale value. And "only Rambler gives you the best of both: American big car room and comfort plus European small car handling ease and econ- omy. No wonder Rambler sales are up 66%! Come in today! Payments as low as $9.25 a week —Gy AMERICAN MOTORS MEANS MORE FOR AMERICANS PONTIAC: Rogers Sales & Service, 695 Auburn Ave.; @ MILFORD: et Motor Sales, 7422 E. Highland Rd. ommerce Road @® ROCHESTER: Kaverley Rambler, 211 S. 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STREET FLOOR < Vd WIA a Gavin o Retire - at3-Star Rank a By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)—It is a for- _ Senate Confirms Ike's Nomination by Giving, Permanent Grade WASHINGTON uP — The Senate has confirmed President Eisen- hower’s nomination giving perma- nent three-star rank to Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin, retiring head of the Army's missile development work. Gavin will retire voluntarily 4 this month. He has said one fac- tor in his decision was- dissatis- faction with the amount of money provided for missile work. . The Senate also confirmed unanimously these other nomina- tions: * > * Dr. Paul Darwin Foote of Wash- ington to be an assistant secre- taary of defense. * * * Raymond A. Hare to be ambas- sador to the United Arab Repub- lic. Homer M. Byington Jr., ambas- tunate aspect of Patti Page's nature that, in the her current wrestle with television “T never had a drivin’ ambition. * * * “In other words, I wasn't brought up to want a career. So it's all unreal anyway. A lotta times, when they write about me, it doesn't seem to be me they're talkin? about. You know?” Miss Page insists she still feels embarrassed when people look at her on the street, or in the NBC-| ratings, she can say with sincerity,|TV theater where she perks up her) show “The Big Record.” “I al-) ways think first, ‘Is my dress too) long?’ And then I say, ‘No, it! must be the rims on my glasses.’ “| et kk & THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1958 the part of the snappy songstress from Claremore, Oklahoma, who is one-eighth Cherokee Indian and seyen-eighths Midwest vital- ity. It is what comes of. being one curvaceous member of a 13- character family circle —a cir- cumstance that calls for toler- ance, amiability and spunk. When the critics blasted the hour- long ‘‘The Big Record" show, Patti took the same attitude she must ‘her show will be cut to a half-hour, Patti Page Wrestles With Television Ratings have taken at home:~ “Well,”’| shrug, ‘“‘you can't please every- body."’ SHOW CUT Last week it was announced that | beginning March 26, and Patti admits she’s disappointed. ‘‘Nat- urally, I would have liked to stay on for an hour, but actually this is no more unhappy feeling than reading what the critics wrote. THE BERRYS This is not false modesty on By Carl Grubert Revocations in Oakland County things that need not have been i\doesn’t believe in movies, even. Granted, they didn't like the show; but some of them were a little unmerciful ‘There were some said. * ~ * “You see, there are so many people involved in this show, but unfortunately one person gets blamed for all the mistakes, and it happens to be me.” To her parents, and her 10 broth- ers and sisters, Patti’s current rate-recession means absolutely nothing. ‘“They’ve’ never been a part of my career—isn’t it great, not having a ‘theater-mother’— and to them, it's just a job. Actu- ally, I think they’d be happy if I weren't in show business.” She smiles wistfully. ‘‘They’re members of the Church of Christ. It's a Protestant church which! “IT guess the only thing that might worry them is the fact that if you’re around people who drink and smoke and play cards, you might be doing it too. New | York’s a corrupt city, you know.” It is generally accepted, even by the critics, that whatever hap- pens to “Record,” Patti Page pleases the people enormously and remains one of the U, S.’s favor-| Gets Prison Sentence for Check-Passing For passing a $97 bad check in Pontiac last month, 21-year-old Charles A. Branson of 585 Hillcliff St!, Waterford Township, was at Jackson. \ ~« * * * The sentence was Mog- day by Circuit Judge George B. ‘Hartrick of Oakland County. tering ‘Branson pleaded guilty to the ut- and publishing charge sentenced to 1 to 14 years in theiFeb. 25. First Really NEW Baby Gift in Years! TINKLING STERLING SILVER . BABY FEEDING SPOON $440 State Prison of Southern Michigan sador to Malaya, to be U.S. reo- Charge PTA Mother resentative to the Economie Cogn-| mission for Asia und the Far East, and the Social Council of the United Nations. * * * The Senate Judiciary Commit- tee approved the nominztion of Malcolm Anderson to be an as- sistant attorney general in charge of the criminal division. He is U.S. , attorney for the Western District ‘of Pennsylvania. HOUSE PLANS ‘OL 1-8200 | \ EM 3-4931 | PHILLIPS’ MILK OF MAGNESIA § | | Custom Drawn |"""™", . , Police said the teacher refused| iry, 9, to enter class until a permit Punched Teacher NEW YORK (# — The presi- dent of the Parent-Teachers Assn. of a Bronx public school was held in $500 bail yesterday on a charge ‘of punching her son's instructress. * * * Mrs. Rose Sceusa, 48, was; charged with assault after alleg- edy hitting Mrs. Anne Weissman, a fourth-grade teacher, during an argument in the school's recrea- to permit Mrs. Sceusa's son Jer- was obtained from the principal. The boy had been absent in the morning. The principal's office filed the assault complaint. A hearing was scheduled for Monday. Reds Claim Sea Photos at Depth of 5’ Miles LONDON \#—Moscow radio said Thirty-three Oakland voked by the Michigan Secretary iof State's office. x Those ordered to furnish financia]| ter F. Sherman J. Holey Jr., Milford and 33 Lose Right to Drive County|Farmington had her license sus-/Sedeay Ruman, Troy, for habitual! residents recently had their/pended for violated license restric-jnegligence and failure to appear driver's iicenses suspended or re-|tion. Wicenses were revoked from Wal- Frame, 2530 Silverside, for re-examination. ite vocalists. Asked to explain this anomaly, she hints that the produc- tion staff of a show like this is even larger than her family, and not nearly as closely knit. * * * “I thought the concept of the show had all the advantages — great stars, great music, great’ Last federal troops were with- drawn from the South in 1877. ! charm. Somehow, and it's too bad, | 16 West Huron St., Pontiac the advantages couldn't be taken! advantage of.” | JEWELERS Also 45 Walnut St., Mt. Clemens FE 2-0294 responsibility for drunk driving are: Arile L. Baker, 5462 Aylesbury Roosevelt W. Bass, 288 Hughes Albert E. Cole, 6509 W. Kennett Benjamin £. Cook, 2247 Oakway Virgti R. Conway, Keego Harbor Ernest F. Duckett, Clarkston Kenneth F. Evans, Walled Lake Benjamin C. Greenless. Lake Orion Lioyd R. Haukedahi, 111 Prospect Clifton E. Herndon, 187 Norton Prank Kerr, 7092 Woodland John T. Krachie, Wixom Kraus, Birmingham Lymon C. Pemberton, 24 E£. New York James Z. Shelton, 730 Sterling Donald C. Smith, 6000 Barnsbury Milton E. Taylor, 2720 Dixie Hwy. James W. Thomson, Rochester Alton C. Wendell, Orchard Lake Jack 8. Wendell, 12 Downing Licenses were suspended from the following for habitual negli- gence: Peter J. Duenas, 118 Hen- derson; Walter Perry, 88 S. Fran- Sancta emades abe aD peste SNL RR a eho yt oe Always lighter, smoother, more refre SO eae ae te today a Soviet scientific expedi-| i, and Elbert C. Whitaker Jr., tion has taken photographs more oy _|1}50 Airport. Ordered to furnish fi- than 5'g miles deep in the south nancial responsibility for un- ern Pacific Ocean. satisfied judgment were: Pearl hipedition leader as saying, “As The pictures were taken in the region of the Tonga Deep, the broadcast said. It quoted the ex- far as I know this is the greatest depth at which a photograph has lever been taken.'’ What the pho- tographs showed was not dis- Moore, 55 Lake, William R. Raper, Farmington and Willie J. Shaw, 55 Lake. * * * J. B. Burrow, Oxford, was or- dered to furnish financial respon- sibility for unlawfully driving away closed. a motor vehicle. Rosemary Curcio, DIEM’S SHOES SAVE UP TO and MORE! Compare! veuse STROH'S is. America’s only fire-brewed beer! beac “= Sremeerey ee wo — Shing... One of the largest selections of Fine Footwear in Michigan. Women's . SHOES Nationally Advertised from 12.95 to 14.95 Gurr G28 938 Women's SHOES Nationally Advertised from 15.95 to 21.95 Our Price Bes And 10% Women's -at SHOES Nationally Advertised - from 22.95 to 34.95 e 9 oes = Diem's ; WOMEN’S SIZES 4 to 11 AAAAA to EEE Shoes MEN'S SIZES 6 to 14 AAA to EEE . . Open Mon. and Fri. ‘til 9 P. M. fo 87 North Saginaw Street s- a\ Famoas for Fit and Quality for Over 18 Years Se GS FAMOUS BRAND SHOES for the ENTIRE FAMILY You Always Save Here’s why Stroh’s has a fine flavor no other American beer can equal! *e@eeeeesepseseeaseseeeesees We take the finest ingredients: top grade barley malt, white rice, cit hop. cd eoeoeeeveeeeeeeeveveees ...then fire-brew at 2000° over direct flame in nineteen gleaming copper kettles . . Fire-brewing brings forth the finest flavor of the finest ingredients, creating a lighter, smoother more refreshing beer... of matchless quality! @eeeenee*eenee#e#e#e*ee#eee#s#*eseee#es#e » ms, On'TV: Red Wing Hockey BR Fh Ch on nd EN - «San Francisco Beat (Mon. 10:30'P * aR s | lighter! » 4 i .7 © The Stroh Brewery Company, Detroit 26, Michigan , | Q . . 4 M, Ch. 7) ... Mastin Kane (Fri. 7:00 PM, Ch. 4) - tase ; NEW YORK — Earth-bound , earth, orbit a while and return _take a couple months and that _of proof is the record of the United _ your place of birth. Some help THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1958 Plane Builder Sees ‘Man on Moon Before 1 978 5 (Alexander Kartveli, au! of gn Stet is a Fp aoe vet- President, Research and } ip sree sien! csevune ‘ Dgvelopment, Republic Aviation mortals will be able to set foot on the*moon in less than 20 years. satellites will leave the safely to terra firma within the next decade. Commercial airplanes ss-crossing the skies at speeds in the range of 2,500 miles ota! within the next 15 yore * * * These are not idle predictions. these are definite possibilities, perfectly conceivable within our present state of engineering knowl- edge. Scientists already are work- ing intensively toward these goals. As a matter of fact, scientifically it is possible with reasonable ad-jionic propulsion, propulsion by yancement of our knowledge to go Mars, provided we retain our en- t!usiasm, enterprise and daring. * * * Within the past two decades, there has been a tremendous in- crease in our knowledge of the natural sciences. Enormous for- ward strides have been made through the aid of modern mathe- matical methods and high-speed electronic computing machines. Astronomical science, with its centuries-old background, also has been mobilized to help extend aero- dynamies into outer space. Of course, as our frontiers of flight are extended, many new problems of aerodynamics, struc-’ ture, propulsion, control and safety must be solved. The science of aerodynamics has become an organized mathematical discipline which can predict phe- ‘nomena in all regions of specd with sufficient engineering accur- acy. Advanced types of propul- sion, such as nuclear generators, electro-magnetic “pinch effect” ALEXANDER KARTVELI The urge to explere universe. being developed and show good promise. bd * * beyond the moon to Venus and and solar energy propulsion are tronic science has emerged to facilitate communication, naviga- tion, stability, guidance, etc. Ad- vances in electronics have made Extensive research and tests are currently being made on ‘man’s ability to withstand the stresses to which he will be subjected, and means are being found to safe- guard him from dangers which exist in high altitude, high speed flight. a we * From its inception, commercial aviation has always developed in the wake of advancement in mili- tary aircraft. If we follow this line of thought, we can expect tre- mendous progress in commercial aviation. Within the next year or two, we will see different types of jet transports flying the airlines at speeds of 550 to 600 m.p.h.- for transcontinental and intercontinent- al service. Progress will not stop here. bd * * Aircraft designers are even now A whole new domain of elec- _—s Security for You Know How fo Get Your Birth Record? By RAY HENRY Your Social Security office isn't going to take your word for your age when you apply for retirement payments. Chances are you're go- ing to have to show some written So, don’t wait until it's time to apply to start hunting for the proof. You may find that the hunt will i your payments are being held up. we -* * The most acceptable proof of your age, of course, is a birth certificate. But, the Social Security offices know that many people applying for payments these days don’t have. official birth certificates. During the 1880s and 1890s birth records weren’t kept as carefully as they are now.: As a result, the Social Security Administration accepts certain oth- er types of proof of age. One of the most reliable sources States Bureau of Census. The bu- reau gets its information about the age of téday’s older people from the forms which were used by census takers every ten years since 1880. On these forms is such in- formation as the names and ages of the children in the families of the late 1800s. * * bi When requested, the Census Bu- reau will provide a transcript show- ing what its records contain. Rare- ly, if ever, does the Social Security Administration turn down such proof of age. All you have to do to get a transcript of what the bureau records show about your age is to. write the Bureau of Census, Washington, D. C.; request form 10-611; fill out and return the form with a $3 or $4 fee. If you want to get the transcript in a hurry you should pay the $4 fee, since the additional dollar gen- erally assures that the transcript will be returned in about. two weeks. A $3 fee gets slowez service usually four to six weeks. ‘ * * Here's a list of other types of proof of age which may -be ac- ceptable and where they might be available; Church record of birth or bap- tism: Write to the church or parish in which you were baptized. Foreign birth records: Write di- rectly to the local government of may also be given to you by the consular offices or embassy repre- senting the country of your birth in the United States. All embas- sies are located in Washington, D. C. Military records: Write to your former branch of service, Wash- ington, D. C. For example; De- partment of the Army, Washing- ton 25, D. C. Naturalization records: Write -to the Immigration and Naturaization Service, ‘Washington, D. C. * bd * Passport records: Write to De- partment of State, Passport. Sec-| tion, Washington, D. C. Hospital] records: Get in touch with the hospital in which you were born or any other hospital which might have some record of your age. Certification on approved form of Bible or other family birth record: Your Social Security office will Q (reamelles FROZEN DISHES MACARONI CHEESE + MACARONI TUNA SPAGHETTI MEAT + MACARONI BEEF ¥ i give you information on getting certifications. Insurance policies: These you should have in your possession. * * * (Questions on Social Security problems may be addressed to answered by mail from the Pon- tiac office of the Social Security Administration. There is no charge for this service. You may obtain Ray Henry's new social security handbook by sending 35 -cents in coin to this newspaper engaged in studies and experi- mentation for supersonic trans- ports of the order of 1,500 m.p.h. Present military experience makes it possible for such airplanes to be successfully designed and econom- ically operated within the next decade. It is perfectly conceivable, therefore, that commercial air-|¢ planes with speeds up to 2,500 m.p.h. may be designed for use within the next 15 years. As the first step in preparation for man’s flight into space, a research plane has already been designed and is being byjilt for flight some time this year at jof the structure of the plane and If this flight is successful, in- valuable data will be collected on the behavior of the human body and its ability to survive such flights, as well as on the ability its intricate mechanisms to with- stand the effects of high speeds and altitudes. s * ® * ’ The earth satellite is already an accomplished fact as a scien- tific enterprise. Scientists are now engaged in the study of larger and more elaborate satellites car- rying a much greater useful load of scientific instrumentation to ex- plore physical properties of space around the earth and ascertain more accurately the geophysical properties of the planet on which we live. Manned satellites technologi- cally and mechanically equipped - for man to return te the earth’s surface may possibly be accom- plished within 10 years. Man’s enterprise does not stop with circling the earth, but urges him on to explore the universe beyond. Nearest @ the earth is the moon. That must our next ob- jective. Unmanned \, orbital flight around the moon scientifically relatively short time, but this will not satisfy human daring. Man wants to go there, put his the moon and see it for be possible to land a crew of men ‘lon the moon, have them stay a certain period of time and return to earth. Our prestige suffered by not launching the first satellite. It is try scientific Jeadership. We must be the first to reach the moon and plant our flag there. Clawson Man to Serve Jackson Prison Term A sentence of 142 to 15 years in prison was imposed upon 22-year- old Gerald G. Norman, of Clawson, yesterday for burglarizing a Bloomfield Township home on Jan. 30. The sentence, to be served in the State Prison of Southern Mich- igan at Jackson, was set by Oak- land County Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick. Norman pleaded and probably technologically and mechanically — feasible within a guilty to the breaking and enter- ing charge Feb. 18. ‘Farmer-Snover FUNERAL HOME 160 W. Huron St. PARKING ON PREMISES FE 2-917] “Social Security,” care of The | 8Rd requesting “Security for | speeds and altitudes never betore So LA) Pontiac Press. Questions will be | You’ booklet.) attained by any plane. 000000000000000000000000000000000C0CCL SCONES: Se, yea a ee - ~~ | | | | \ \ ~ START MY ~ SAVINGS \ WITH A DOLLAR! ; ' \ \ \ | | I H IT CAN BE THE MOST IMPORTANT DOLLAR IN HER LIFE From it can grow all the important things she'll ever want... her college education . .. money for emergencies ... Use a dollar now — start her savings account at Pontiac State Bank during our “Six Weeks drive-in windows or at our 9 to 6 walk-in. You'll be surprised _ savings grow and grow — for Savings” campaign. Once you start it’s easy to add to an account. how Pontiac State Bank pays 244% on . Savings acai YOUR 17th WEEKLY CHRISTMAS CLUB PAYMENT IS DUE THIS WEEK You can even save by mail! Make deposits conveniently by car at our_ PONTIAC STATE BANK Auburn Heights, 1303 nee. Pontiac, ae Plains, Mirecle Mile nranch Member F.D)I1.C. BUY NOW! Easter Just 4 Weeks Away! PROOF YOU SAVE MORE WEDNESDA “ ‘hn i a ee We The fashion rage in beautiful washable quick drying Acrilan, white and v Easter Eee colors. 8-18, Easter Faille Get 240 Stamps Last Coll! WINTER COATS 12 Values to $39.99 iS EE soumnnes 2 Oa i all EASTER CHEMISE DRESSES _ @ Get 180 Stamps The new look in smart high color amd wmnavy_ shades. Junior and misses’ sizes. Get 40 Stamps Easter Size 10-44 LINEN DRESSES Get 60 Stamps Flower Print LADIES’ SKIRTS rt wear © ring styles. oo enane oo Ve MOLD ’N HOLD PLAYTEX GIRDLES Q* © Get 220 Stamps BRAS For figure flattering wear get a new zipper side pleyten. Sizes XS, S, M, for ] Baby Doll Pajamas. 1.99 GEORGE'S - NEWPORT’S fag) ORES. NYLON TOPPERS 99 2 ©Get 120 Stamps fisainson "washable Bises 7 to 14 p) 6.99 pe Dresses 1.99 BOYS’ EASTER SUITS 379 ©Get 180 Stamps Smart twosome lvy League sport coat with contrasting slacks, Sizes 6 to 12. Boys’ Sport Shiets. -1.00 Get 20 Stamps Cotton Cup LADIES’ Get 34 Stamps Reg. 2.69 BIRDSEYE DIAPERS 1* Get 18 Stamps 1.99 Tots’ TERRY SETS Get 80 Stamps Pat Boone eros JACK Get 78 Stamps C Complete size selection of the famous “Levi” Jeans. Sizes 29 to 40 in all lengths. Sport Shirts ...... ' 33 es ee 49c PRINT 80 SQUARE PERCALES Get 40 Stamps 2.98 Muslin CANNON SHEETS Le © Get 6 Sens ae Sew and Save! Fine quality for every type of mam sewing. Limit 16 yards iq Dosbie, 81x00 to customer. . A _ sd hosel boas a © Get 60 Stamps wy Beautiful wavey pattern with fringe edge. Beau-. tiful colory and white. Full and twin sizes. | A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE SPON-$100.), payable to = Michigan Depart- sor or the —— Department of/ment of a ne THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1958 |Aeronautics, as Agent, will be st Rejection of Bids: 4 NASCAR Meet Foreign Corporations: by growers and sold by tion and Securities a d the “a passerby, tried to help coax a big German shepherd dog (Were recorded for 11 Chrysler Proposal No. FM 63-1-C8 = i nnti | ) Top Chrysler M - * i Pontiac Sweeps MARKETS Market Shows * op ys er en airport site on March 13, 1958 from 1:00) The Michigan Department of Aero- peat » | Tussles Wi ig Dog, Pocket $3,552,412 scx thsi Se Mi eal ayiths mate eee renal) Trend | Woman Hurt by Car | ac ne EE Se Soni et to the Farmer's Dwar ren DETROIT w—Salaries, fees and MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT Dood frie, oper bcaing on ta a — ee BA : WHISKEYTOWN, Calif..(AP)— Mrs. Agnes Rogers, 38, {bonuses aggregating $3,522,412) = ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDs _[eduirements of the Michigan Corpora. m esale package lots, Laws of the State of Michiga: Spe | ‘Sate Dr itt Quotations are furnished ty the| NEW YORK WP — The Stock) ° Doty on wagon, CaCI TE Oo Oo en Seas ee iors es ake- ests Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of e' orward irregular year. | a s Ww received by the 7 |Michigan Department of Aeronautics as\f0FM8 for proposal, and other contract Beach Monday. ly in moderately active trading} Mrs. Rogers fell against the automoatic transmission shift a kk |Agent, in the offices of the Department|cocuments, may be obtained at the of- at Daytona eac Produ ce early today. lever pushing it from park to reverse. The total was divided $1,849,112 cere nen = Sschaee ap re ee Aeronautics, Engineering Division, at the Le Fruits re ce bey meee ere foe k ke in salaries and fees and $1,703,300/).m. EST, on March 19, i968 at which Coon *ine payment of a fee ot five eel: Pontiac concluded is ree ot tsps Delicious, ba. oass-evssses ALM inten Paty tera point. Small) The dog slammed a paw down on the accelerator. in awards under 2 corpaentiog’ s opened. and read for ‘ie Medium eRe OE Aetna secur major tt: uring C Peneeenernes ncentive compensatio: e | tens’ & if ast-West unway - ay ty ASCAR phi bevel 4: Apples, Blecle Rod. bu. soos 88 «~ * * The car roomed back. Mrs. Rogers was thrown out) —jaiter are payable in tie auial Bie oe wees es ce oF the allow Ire Rugiseer eel aadiicaatitee ones D a Beach, Fia., by capturing Vegetables Chemicals, oils and utilities were the open front door. The front wheel ran over her. nual installments. Gable Trench 25.720 LF. cyl ones aaa) Fitty cents (63 50) will be ndergroun able I/c, No. “ the Pure Oil safety "and perform-|peets. tov: mainly ahead but strong group ac- The car hit a fence and stopped. The dog disappeared * * * 10.520 LP. jAeronautics if they furnish “Standard . Popped, OY eee ppe - 8 t ance award. eee Biadrd ” wa. 02.000 B ac miatiog, Mien ties Sp. or «kt oe omree Topping the list was L. L. Col ,,UBdersroUNd Cable 1/c, No. # 3KV (Aiport published by, the ci x & ae root (dos } ade, son00nes005 pea nm almost every section bu bert, president, with $250,900 in’ Control Cable, 11/pr. No, 22, Telephone “eronsutics Administration, dated Janu- | : ary 1948, with revist and supple- The award was given Pontiac’ | polo a Pk. basket Sper gains were in the majority. Mrs. Rogers suffered a spinal fracture and a broken leg. salary and fees and $233,000 in in-/Wye P40 LP ments dated August 1981 and June 1086. Mrs. Carrie Murray, the station wagon driver, said the |centive compensation. Salaries and) Vault and Control Equipment L. 8 CBee iE pe EEN dog slipped into her car just after she had parked. In her /fees of other executives ranged| Misicnifintanslig@ hence? short interest were actively trad- documents are available for inspection : Potatoes, fancy. 50-lb. bag ....:... a, : and review at the office of the Airport ing mile speed runs and the|Radishes, hothouseibens) doa»... ed as the shorts nervously cov. | startled leap from the car she left the engine running. nt Se to = while in. Lights Base Mounted $8 Each Manager, | Pontise © Municipal” Alrport. standing star acceleration contest. Rhubarb. notouse ibelis.) doz. .-.. 138) ereg to protect themselves | She was having no luck getting the dog out when Mrs. oe e 2 naias on ranged from Lights Stake Mounted 141 Each. | Robert ©. Peckham, Consulting nginee’. ! L L maaccosconos 22 ,600 400. . ax uldance 8 ry at the ~ * * Turnip topped, bu. ............... 3.%8| against the rising trend, Rogers volunteered to help. * « 3% Pontine | Menicina! Sireert located in 202 MAC Ave., Byrnes Building, East ; ; {Oakland County, Michigan, or more Pontiac also, on the last day, Notable among these were Lor- The figures were published in| speeificany ledated vel” miles west of for overall performance in the safe! Partie), Rovt, toebs) doz. v0... Stocks which had aheavy driving tests, the straightaway fly-|Persnips. bu... cee eeeee Underground Electrical Duct 758 L. F. 5s 66 om ay mebessonone Beusty asses Lansing, Michigan. MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT : ; : Ponting. kdiohags: OP AERONAUTICS won the 160-mile grand national Poultry ilard, up 1% at 46% on eo . . shareholders for the annual meet-| Certified or Cashier's Check: Dated Feb. 21, 1958. te ce, pereorr rourrey [on 2100; and Polaroid of ts at ing Scheduled for April 15, |, BCD ied Did shall be accompanies By b, C_ANDRENS. This was on top of its earlier DETROIT, March 10 (AP) — Prices ou Ay, an o HAS : PUBLIC SALE_1087 CHEVY woron|® 84m which js not less than ten per March 7 11, 58. triumphs In taking the frat seven ae pint eh qn ie 0% on 3.00 pga RB A, Sao, MOTO ft Cu oe fa epee eee - ‘ places in the flying mile runs and poultry ea hens 36-37: 1 light type hens, es * bie Sela aperte itp epee poe ar eee revs State Bank Building. peewee. Mich. 15-16; heavy type broilers fryera| F of tax cuts b Vice | eight of the first 10 places in |i$16; heavy type broilers, and trvers) Favoring s by Mar. 11, 12, ‘58. 8 s the acceleration competition, plus | ettes over 5 pounds 30-32, President Nixon as the next step Soe re s winning the safe driving passing | prrnorr’ March 10 (AP) — Eggs, 0 deal with the recession was f In 0 0 .) ef al In No. 0815234 F58Z 4 ES Bale to ee tests. fod. Detroit, cases included, federal-|a bullish element, as were a re- 10:30 A.M., March 14, 1958 at 601 Pon- _ | State arades: bound in plywood prices and an : tiac State Bank ae aar ke ise. None of the cars entered this), memes: (cetsnted duerece ‘sd; latne upturn in steel industry product$on | ee large 64-55 weighted average 55; large . , ft ear money is the new catch j i PUBLIC SALE—1951 FORD, MOTOR year in NASCAR events were from 7 wtd. avg. 62%; medium. rr Off a bit were Texas Co., US. ward Mow much eackey hoy Tee as tight money might be cramp-' Me HIDAlIeI=G Disa acon Bare cote the manufacturers, who have with-/ jd. Sve 43 jsmall 3643. wid avg. followiig, first in a sertes of three jing business activity. There are. . fai mrade B large 49-60. wid. avg Steel, Goodyear, International Har-| follow a > Sock rf y. e jheld 10:30 A.M. March 14, 1968 at 601 - drawn their participation in speed “Frown: Orcas ki dete lesen veuter, United Aircraft and Amer fae pee ere ae woe ines /tew signs yet that this has h ad Pontiac State Bank Building, Pontiac, races, but all ee cars| Checks 33 _ ican Smelting aie DAWSO much effect. entered by dealers and other pri- Comercially graded: . By SAM DAWSON | 2. To furnish the base for a) Sao aera Whites : : gor) 2A A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE SPON- vate citizens. SoBe Marae aboot. meeaeee a NEW YORK (—About the only quick pickup when business activ- x or the Michigan Department of Browns Grade A jumbo 51-62; extra New York Stocks thing the recession _ is being ity starts up again of its own ac- soconnesion ae /Aeset sil) oy ips ae praised for today is that it ended/cord or from other stimulants.|p.m. to 2:00 p.m. EST, to show YOUR PLANS FOR THE FUTURE SHOULD Start Now! Mar, 11, 12, ‘68, * * bod large 49-50; large 47-49; medium 43-454); In the 160-mile classic on the| «de B large 41-44. last day, the winning Pontiac was IAte"Nedue “ccc! 81 tnt shee’. / 3t(the tight money. policy that many|Bankers think this aim will be| Prospective bidders over the site and Many well selected com- entered by Jim Stephens, Daytona livestock Allied Sire 22: agg int Silver | 2¢1/complained was cramping their/the chief producer of results. aaah rEROORAM and mon stocks are excellent Beach Pontiac dealer, and driven ivestoc Allis Chal .°°.' 24.5 jonns Man .. 38.2) Style. x e * OP AERONAUTICS investments right now, as- | iv Paul Gol { s DETROIT LIVESTOCK ayum Ltd ..... 30% jones & L ... 394! From all corners of the country, nd ; ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS ,oOn \ Ae : ig dsmith of St. Clair) pernorr March 18. (AP) - (USDA) Ul O05 qemey Hay |. 323 ia.|__When business again is ready to Proposal No. FM 1 \ well as being ideal to in- ' : a re “Aritn 222 17) but with the usual regional varia- P ercen re: : } 8 : Shores... = Cattle. saiable i600 Bulk carly ~ SUP lim Can nae Kennecott - “3 r expand, the greater availability of; an Prospective Bidders: clude in your plans for the & ; 8: % sos. 429 ; : : : : Goldsmith set a new qualifying |Peiters; juality of fed steers somewhal |A™ Cvan 417 aroger . 684 tions, coe ese jtepors credit and the lower costs of bor-| Besicq bids) will be received by the aa ~_ ——=-|1 ¢ : below ‘ast week, predomination of A™Gas& El .. 423 a4| ‘It's easier now to find money F uture. Investment can be ; record of 140.570 miles per hour. ; : On iam Mé& Fdy | 38 Lib McN@&L .. 8. § : rowing could be a major factor in| Michigan Department of Aeronautics as Fer : . : rood to ‘ow choice steers: cows com-!/ & My .. 682 . | your FREE copy of this inform- d hl f in- H He took the lead at the start of jprise arou 20 per cent receipts: early /4m Metal ..... 201 Ligg re y a if you need to borrow than it was making up executives’ minds and, Agent, in the offices of the Department . made monthly out of in : the race and never relinquished |ifve® tulv So cents husnersscows cares am NGas |. si)? Loew's"... 138/at the start of the year. For many starting things rolling vy {of Aeronautics at the Capital City’ A12;/ ative booklet and prospectus on en |] come, if you wish. Write or i during the entire contest scfive, fully $0 cents higher: few cariy /Am haa ae Lone 8 Cem -- 46ikinds of loans the interest charges ma ». -m. EST, on March 19, 1988 at which @pproech to common stock investing phone for free list of ; , - oy vl 46. ps : are choleg "1050 Ib. yearling steers 29. ;/Am 417 Lou & Nash .. 58 /are smaller now than just a few Tomorrow: What’s the outlook (0 ned am Teaa tec Fencing. Consisttaig for income and possible growth, suggested stocks. ks *& * yearling average to hign chole ads absent; |Am fel ke Tel i721 Manning .... 24 ths back The re ayment of the following major 1 The race was a thriller, how-|F%. “ce mizeq” losds wood and iow|Am Viscose 26, Martin Co. . 22.4 e a “0 sorne loans i less Resse neerepancs? ft. Fence, Chain Link, Class “E ae y { % ere mentee erms on § e ere ever, as Curtis Tuner in a Ford |choice | steers “Ti goat to wilty | and lAnaconde ... 433 Mergen Line 31 | a neome.* 24 ft. Double Driveway Gate 3 Each.’ WRITE followed Goldsmith by 15 seconds fow “choice be: ‘se: "good to|Armou 3 Merr Ch & 8 184 ms 16 ft. Double Driveway Gate 1 Each. ‘ right down to the finish, ne tomar poe 06. utility Le remengil Co. 24 an pope et * * * | N Bri f at the Pontiac Munteipal Airport located WATLI N G, : The Pontiac's average speed for hfe, Gamers ana quiere area, (AMT matin ...” HE Meaten.Ce 32) The movement started in the) OWS in Brief i Ssciee Sot Attest serv: C. J. Nephler Co. LERCHEN ealers. salable arly tiavco Mig... See ast and has yet to make muc Pontiac, Michigan. / the race was 101.36 m.p.h. vealers moderately active. fully steady: |Balt & Ohio .. 24. Mot Wheel .... i4 , Certified = niess Chock a stand and "ecod 20,0037 00: (5.08 Renae Ay 82 Nat Blsc |. 461 /0f a dent in the West Coast’s anti-| Wayne Morgan, 2, of 710 E. omach sealed, bid shall check ted 818 Comm. Nat'l Bk. Bldg. |. A et @) vseee | is , L. rT heck . * . s Hoss. “ sglabie” 1.900 900 Es trade [beth Steel... Ss Nat Deity Fo eee policy. ‘ Grand Traverse St., Milford, plead sum which is not less naa teaiper ‘cent | . Business Notes puteners 25 afte’. tigher: sows under sey Hel 25) Mas Lead ..... 90.4 The switch from tight money to} eq guilty to a charge of drunk (0%) of the aectegate mount of ote) Pontiac Michigan | : 3S cents hinhes: mince fots 0 §. Ne pp clad hf cc bel NY Central. 142 easier credit in most as 'S anidriving, Monday, before West oSvanie tothe Michigan Ropercmant of . Member New York Stock Exchange and? La a butchers rele Budd Co... 163 hs he fe roe attempt to cushion the slump in Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer ee ‘saias and other leading exchanges - ; | ure bot 0 : ing and to pep up\C. Dieterle. and paid a fine of $90, Relection of Bids; 0 © | Mgmme ec cen cece ccceeeeccsceccccuceee S| Promotion of Carl F. Sibbe, of 21%) {a mostly No. } 201 Bs. 240: iCn' Dry. any Nor Pac .’'.. 374/manufacturing and to pep UDIC. Dieterle, and paid a fine of $90; TelecUen of Bide: ot kere.) Name i \ ‘ ‘iCdn Pac... .. 24. home <~| plus costs was enc Nautics reserves the right to waive! nl 341 Wimbleton Dr., Birmingham, mixed ‘grades 160-180 | Ios. 19 58-30.00; Capital Atrl 163 Ohio Ot o vee 318 batiding Almost as 8 ie plus $10 ts and seteericed an eg eae 7 n ry t ject] FN 4 TG ORG ROUSUGSE DOS OeNSE Ss 716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. , all 176 wm everanes nostiy No. i setae (Cannes 367 Owens I! Gi... “se line it includes perking up con-ito serve 4 days in the Oakland, lany or all bids, or Waccept ‘tne sweai| eee” “ FE 4-2895 9.50-20 25: No 1. 2 3. 300-400 Ib. Gace ot. BA per te”. 40.3|Sumer borrowing. County Jail. |responsible bid. sows | Hob 00; No. 2 and 3 400-600 | Sater Trac... 69.6 Param Pict... 341 + n * | Foreign Corporations: (920000 | ete etter e tence econ ee cnten eee eene | tb. aneep 1), —s Barty a Pc oles a ad As an a 3 a 7 h John H. Engle 19. of 676 Rog di sereign ee ane oe i slaughter lambe Masady: slaughter sheep |@ities Ave so. penne? arty ut the money managers have z ssc a Brounen SS SE _ wooled ‘ambs 100-111" Tbs. ate % yo edged saa Pe cake a 33.5 been moving cautiously. Prices t ke St., peoré pene pleaded al poration andi Secures (Oomainees yor good wooled lambs 22.13; around |Co) Brd A... 25.5 oe oo: $}3\are still high, and they don't|'” to a druni ving charge the laws of the ee Michigan. , > lambs No na at ° sae Some ma Ha Balice Co Hlwant to start inflation boiling|f0F€ Orion Township Justice Hel-| {Mae ant Sree sing, 1 See U Ss Now s en et Sacks A Satene 2 pus HE oa So een eee eee hens Hil. Sees SEs pe oe aun 2, pit Plate G.. 733| The cautious moves of the Fed- 0 any fail. | tte, of, the Michigan Department of | Ll Re, se ; P| g a ont on oe a" trot a G .... 04\eral Reserve Board have affected the Oakland County after fai oreo Eacincet na] Division, at the) Protect ail norniust Cont OH «18. RCA ee 3 chiefly the business borrower. |'"& bag fod SI a upen ‘the pa ment —s tee ot five fo: part of your property We Oder i aC ’ cost . are ‘ee Tor ns, pro iY nd) * Grain Pri : Corn Pa. 3T Reyne Mer... 41 $|Let’s look at these first. contract dccuments shall be made pay-| furnish complete theft in- i rain Frices cs iad WE 465 Rey Tod B ... 684! The moves: cutting the discount; Pontiac Police teported yester. ible, to Rob G. Peckham, Consulting { \ j CHICAGO GRAIN Det Oe re ees a 24s \rate, lowering bank reserve re-|day that someone had broken into|dollars. and tity cente, (83.50) will te! ¢ piney Or everything ae oa te with a degree in nee March 1@ (AP) — Opening| Dow’ chem |. .577 Bt Rox Pape... 903(quirements, and furnishing more|adkin's Service station, at 446 caareet Te eee Own: urniture, clothes, glasses, boats, furs, jewel- . ; gradua’ Wheat— Oats— Du Pont ....179@ Seab A} RR 22.5 money by buying government se- N. Perry St., through a window on [Specifications for the Construction of: ry, cameras, Gutomebiles Don't delay « « - S$C@ US | mechanical engineering and a)... 279% Mar coy, [East Air L ... 963 Shell Ol ...... $64) ie talrports” as published by the Civil! ber of the bar in Michigan/May ‘).... | 220% May ©1111). eaig|East Kod ....106 Sinclair ...... 50.4 Kies. the south side of the building and /deronautics Administration, dated Janu. | tOday. member July o...... 298% | Rye E) Auto L ....27.4 ny -..°: $88) The effects: short-term interest 15\ary 1948, with revisions and su ements | . . ! ! 73 Southern Co . 27.7 escaped with an estimated $15) ppl ; and the District of Columbia. Gem ns $8 Mar... 13 ere ER sata Sen Par 2. walrates have dropped sharply; bond! worth of merchandise. [dated August set i 1956, HO) Corn— July ........ 1.18% Pood Mach . 5323 ate PY NG wave ae prices, both government and cor- | Plans, specifications, and contract] . H. W, Huttenlocher Agency ; : Two local companies have been = 5 sore 1 18% Sep. vanes piims) Pere et, . a Seerry ne sail coraie (have xisen and yields fall! Eugene McEnery, of 56 E, Col- |dzcaments! are available for tspection| ~ 7 pane ig orcontoren Me raed (Ine re 12.45 Pruch Tre 0113 std Ou ftg | 4ogien: bank charges for business|gate St., reported to Pontiac Police |widucert* Foutiss ttnideas Arcee .* sdependest H.W. Huttenlocker Max E. Kerns achievement following a nation) yigy en Bak ....102 Std Ol NJ .. 41.1/loans have slipped slightly; and yesterday that someone had broken Pontiac, Michigan, and the oftice of [| /ssrem 318 Riker Bldg FE 4-1551 wale canest held by te ean oe Pre a slaves On P8lthe banks can make about three into his gas station at 1460 Baldwin. wer uae ‘Ave. Byrnes Builing. Bast) | ee peers : | of Scrap Iron and Steel, Inc. The Gen Fes ......§8.7 Stud ack --- 43 /billion dollars more in loans than|Ave., escaping with $7 in change. |\#5sing. Michigan. ———————————————— — companies are Oaxiand tron andl] ] Chrysler Leaders [2 fii of! Sine co 23/a mont ago EE Basen i Metal Co., - an . Gen Shoe ....22.6 Texas Co . + * “ Cc R ° U s : ss| : Gen Tel ......426 Tex G Sul ... 16 \Car Repossessions Up By L. C_ ANDREWS. Cd * 7) Allen and Son Inc., 22 Congre: A Gen Time ....211 phar Ane _ Results are mixed. Total bank 12P Fi £1958 et, eainees 714 Community Nat'l St. ’ 1 JY Server Prod” 38.3 Transamer - 374 )loans to business haven't risen. ct. First o == as Bank Bld | Gillette ...... 38.2 Twenty Cen .. 24. A REPRESENTATIVE OP THE SPON- : Former Pontiac resident James DETROIT (INS)—Eleven Chrvs Goodrich aeoor as Undered ves eH an oe as Piven ars LANSING (—Car repossessions. sor or the Michigan Oy IME TO of, YO — on ag S)—E V5- ro... -- §5-91U.8. : > al ! P. Cuthbertson, executive repre- ler Corp. officers and directors ran” Paige oe 331 Unit Aire . ie ceca ie Geerer interest rates during the first two months of port "site on Ohareh 13. i986 “tom a “ i. i : Phone FE 4-1568-9 di ‘ o* I 0° Ee teas . ~ m t : “eave seare f sentative fe Oe ee were awarded bonus payments of Greyhound... 184 Unit Frait ... 4 than a few months back. 1958 totaled more than 12 per cent prospective bidders over the site shew sae AE All ~ a| Lansi seeeainy qualified for sec-|,1;.03-300 following the company’s |itersn Choc .. 864 US Ru . 336] The Treasury has been able tojabove the figure for January and “*U* ‘he Proposed work. . _ H nd pe embership in the) Comeback that saw sales zoom |Homestk..... 385 US Steel ..-.. 9-4/ stretch out the federal debt a lit- February last year, the Secretary | MICHIGAN | DEPARTMENT }, N/ ol year m P to an all-time high of more than|iy ‘cent "||| 31.4 West Un Tel . 17 [tle by finding markets for long- , Apven Let alt ESE l f Stat ffi ted tod TISEMENT FOR BIDS Million Dollar Round Table, in-\s35 pinion Indust Ray |. 16 Westg A BE .. 213/+0rm bonds, This halted the de-|° ate's — . tomy: Proposal No. FM 63-1-Ci0 5 | dustry-wide organization of out- p ee rene ee eee ce. sy tli sere All Prospective Bidders: 4 We Ison & Co . 191 r - . ; f standing life underwriters selling ** * inland gi”. $8 Wilson & Co - 19 I|cline in long-term corporate inter Repossessions sere to 4,049) Bids: Richard H. DeWit Donald E. Hansen ife { The bonuses were over and above interiak Jr” 213 Young 8&W 27 7/est rates and for a few days last|s i) the first 60 d f 1957, cctled, bids will be received by the tenar . DeWitt onata £. fans : within a year Cuthbertson is" the|the $1.894.112 paid to the same men|tst Ret Me™ 2484 Fmt SRS TH62iweek money was anything but|{U"iné the first 60 days of 1957, vichigan (Department "of Aeronautics | eg. PE 5-379 Res. FE 2-5513 | within a year. Cuthbertson is the/the $ hs 2p Pr to the mice men int Hare... 28.6 Zenith Red 1376 cacy Sar Gaw Corporate| levure compared with 4,643 during a like Mate*tr Rerciacti ae. tre conn q son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cuth- in saaries and fees, and boosted |int Nick ..... * |period this year, the report showed. |City Airport, Lansing 2, Michigan, up pI the total remuneration of the offi- PETROIT STOCKS * * * to 2:00 p.m. EST, on March 19, 1958: » ici y ere EE mere St cers and directors to $2,522.41 (erg nephien Co The sharp drop in short-term in- pubicly"opened' and Tend for the Grats | 4 06 ee he tee { . ‘ |Pigures after decimal point are eighths Treas, Kentucky Workers Idled [re Breface “pivine’ fora Ort-'| = Accident Insurance Fire Insurance 500 Workers at Dodge Chrysler President L, L. Col- Allen Elec. Bquip. Co.* h arty re terest rates has brought the as Taxiways. Consisting 7 the following) Automobile Insurance Life Insurance 7 * . hrvsl bert was top man in the group, {Baldwin Rubber Co.*.. in) [7 DS rate Bom of oer oot LOUISVILLE, Ky. ® — Auto/"Unciassified Excavation 16066 C. Y. if Laid Off by Chrysler receiving $238,000 under the “in. [Ros Gear Co #3 |1% per cent in four months. This! assembly operations at the Ford| Watering per 100 Gal, Unt 20 Geis] Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance i, centive compensation plan” in | Coe. ........ 72 14\could weaken further the ratesintotor Co. plant here will remain| ',eh,cotrussted Metal Pipe (00 LF! Burglary Insurance Bonds — All Types 7 DETROIT w—Chrysler Corp. has ddition to gala nd tf of | Howell Flec, Motor Co° $4 §86/that banks charge their business, . L. F. Corruga | pe i ' Se ries and fees Peninsular Metal closed until Monday. A Ford Tenants’ Policies laid off 500 Dodge Division work- $250,900 for a total of $488,900 Prod on. 9s ¢.2/customers with the top credit rat- spokesman said the object was to| 12, inch Corrugated Metal Pipe 1,105) nan 0 t ler Divi- eee. iru, Prepnel Go v 1¢ 16ling— bankers call the prime} ; : ti ton "eg ares of adjumed ca, 18 158, mas payments were Regie", gf) 2 mt, Stat Mame cal Pagel vere Io in| Ek RS ME", | assembly schedules. made because Chrysler's earnings | wayne Berew For the individual depositor|™’ es. 500 of 3, Adjusting, Catch Basins 5 Each. :| The ner schedules, which went|failed to reach the minimum re-| Trot it wd snd ssxea. | 7” |there ig a threat to this. Tt the employes were idled when the} sii Cement Dase Course” 72.38) sy. The best carpenters make the fewest chips. into effect yesterday, stem from/Wired under the compensation vensies banks get less for their loans, Shutdown began yesterday. 1 fituminous Prime "(AE-2) 4.800. Gal. , Gorman) Proverb a March 3 agreement between|Plan. ‘Compleat Oy he Associated Press) there's little chance of any further . B | orspoete piece eed rae . - Chrysler and the United Auto se Indust Rails Uti Stocks|increase in the interest they will) Porcupines are devastating men-|aal. , f ’, = s a ' — —_< = 1 Ker: | Workers Union to provide 40-hour} The figures were revealed today | Nt change... 2 4 tei 1622\P8Y on savings accounts. If any-jaces to tree farmers for porcu- Serface Trestaeat Pee 6 work weeks for high seniority em-|with the mailing of the corpora-|Prev. day 17-280 659 161 Jezeithing they're more likely to lower/pines’ favorite dessert is to chew a Sater hggieeats 30 Ton | ployes. i tion's proxy Serene fafa das Month ‘go non pee Ae aes 1613 i Th a - [up a healthy (ected tree. Mor- Rlectrs Duct Bi b. P. ‘ig * The company did not indicatejshareholders that Chrysler's an-|frat geo... 2801 1203 738 1725 e serve moves over, reports one Oregon tree farm-| | Turfing 19.80 Acres, at the re eet whether other workers will be af-|nual meeting will be hed in De-/1957-$6 low ../ 2269 782 442 180S/have had two aims: er, they will eat anything, inclyd- Conn Miike tes “apecifically| fected. troit April 15. 1956 low... 2440 i262 696 i716 1. To brake the recession insofar ing dynamite. laut miles west of Pontiac, Foch. socked) tid uballl belaccompanted asl, et es ee a ee PERNT Ea ee eee Ee Te ae ee ee Ren AT ee iby ia Certified or Cashier'a Check in s Fs ‘sum which fs not less than ten per cent (10%) of the aggregate amount of the bid (to the nearest multiple of $100.),. payable to the Michigan partment of Aeronautics, Rejection of Bids: The Michigan Department of Aero- nautics reserves the right to waive any) | Miormadty in any bid, to reject ang or all bids, or accept the lowest re- sponsible bid. Foreign Corporstions: Any foreign corporation bidding on aratersapeneans gam Knife Mom Got arm, handed it to another boy and struck me in the mouth with his stabs Boy With OWNED KNIFE The trouble at Westport started KANSAS CITY w — James Wil- Friday. West said he accidental. liam West Jr. went for the slick ee Q STABBED IN SIDE “He took me down to a store “He told me he'd whip me if pocket of his blue jeans for his ; documents, may be obtained at the office) ' sky-high damages modern juries award in law- e James Gait.» iT-yoar-cid school: and showed me the knives and I didn’t apologize. I told him if knife. . || Soutien, Dagtteatene totaeee. ot te, suits due to auto accidents. And after you run a _ year Se said that people that didn't have he wanted to fight, okay, but I “I don’t remember trying to stab = |Capital City Airport, —— Michigan, through the limits on your policy, your pocket- fs mate, is in fair condition in Gen- them might get beat up,” said wouldn't fight in school. him,” Jimmie said. “He m. ay have — Fo fora . a ie of five dole bok cotues wend i eral Hospital after six hours of Jimmie’s mother, YOUTH BUMPED got stabbed as he attempted to and contract, documents shall be Extra protection costs little and is worth eve = surgery on a deep stab wound in “I bought it for him for his pro- At time i base hit me.” . An additional ” fee of P bs we Y es : noontime in a basement cor- * & & conte (69.99) will cont. It might be wise to give us a calll his lower left side. 4 =| knife his mother had bought him é when he got into a scuffle at West- port High School yesterday. Jimmie West, 15, is held at the some and acted like a 6-year-old. ‘He was transferred trom North- east High to Westport three weeks ago, mostly to get-him away from the crowd he'd been running With. \ | He had the knife at Northeast, one of the main trouble spots in a recent outbreak of rowdyism in the Kansas City schools. _ tection after school. He promised me he wouldn't pull it out in school. He's the only kid we got and we . hoped he'd try to be something.” The knife has a four-inch blade which slips inside the steel handle. ' You press a button and flip your , wrist and the blade clicks into place. It was supposed to be a German paratrooper knife and cost $6. ly bumped into Gant, who is two inches taller but almost 100 pounds lighter. “He followed me,"’ West said. ridor West passed by a line of pupils waiting at the cafeteria, This time Gant bumped into him. “1 sald: ‘Lay off, will you,’ ” West related. He said: ‘Now you're getting tough, huh?’ . “T told him: ‘You can call it that if you want to.’ * * * “He pulled a wrist “ee - MOOR See PEO BS: fist. In fact, he hit me several times and knocked me up against the lockers.” West reached in the left front Police questioned two other boys in the corridor crowd and they told substantially the same story. West's father is a feed loader at a milling company, Intelli- gence tests rated-the boy among the upper fourth of his class at Northeast, Dr, Richard Ball,<-Westport pin. cipal, said neither of the boys was a discipline. problem. pines Aree EI \ SPR AAT ERE rged by the of Agrewavties if they furnish * benderd Specifications for the : OF A Dated Feb. aD ee ae ee ee ah Rize ee Spares this work must comply with any and all requirements of the Michigan Corpora-' tion and Sécurities Commission an laws of the State of Michigan. Plans and Specifications: A complete set of plans, specifications, | forms for proposal, and other contract: a i Byrnes Consulting Bn Basi ‘ “| i { By L Cc: ANDREWS. Chief Engineer March 4% 11, ‘38 HEMPSTEAD “It’s Got Company up there in the stratosphere... and that Is the Be Sure You Are Well Insured! Kenneth G INSURANCE