ee —————— ———_— Gist Sol Se ; . / eee _a j : r ‘ : a \ ze = ee a 7 . ee Se ee, i + “ a8 — : { | : ie: z ase x Ae Sie n e Pa: ap : x US. Westhe? furese Forecast - Thunderstorms, : —— | iM i pon ee ~ ee 3 rea a : : Q @ ie a 5 Si i i i i : as : = aay io = F » is x 2 P 5 ‘ : 3 ee seater? eae aes mrs S Es = : ; : ae ; : eo eRe eke oer eee amen Se a * f me Be! s ace! eo * ‘3 Pi J a iit YEAR CAR RK PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1957-40 PAGES “ERI WP — toBe Lower. | Than Estimates: |; Firms Bid $3,025,000 —_—- te Build Upper: Grade Structure in City” “The new. Pontiac high school will cost about $3,- 025,000, three per cent less - than the architect’s esti-| mates on the basis of bids| | ~ opened last night. The figures will be presented to the Board of Education to- morrow night, -— Eight firms bid on the]. general trades portion of) ‘the building with the low/ _ \bid of $2,043,000 submitted ‘by Spence. Bros. of Sagi- naw, — [ and Detwiler, of Detroit, $2,047,055. - The low bidders’ prices on | four alternates to basic specifi- cations were as follows: Alternate 1 (steel sash instead} of aluminum), $8,000 more, | _ Whopper for Scotty. a to End Trusteeship |Local 614 here. John F. English, secretary- treasurer of the huge union, of “passing the buck” to Dave Beck, Team- sters’ president. Toes English wired a rank- jand-file committee: “Trus- general secretary-treasurer. thereto must ee “34 eeeertteedenre & . aedaes BY RERS, a oe ed ‘ ’ a Comics eee Py) J bos MW ‘ ee ee Geer 3 4 > i SnubbedinBid | till Time to Guess Weather | Again to Hear Cheasty Testify. | Snubbed in Bid {to Oust Chieftain Insurgents Vow They'll Continue Their Fight Q _| An officer of the Teanmy|= — sters International has|> snubbed a faction of Pon-)~ tiac Teamsters in their)” campaign to.end James R.|~ ‘Hoffa’s trusteeship over)” A spokesman for the in- £ surgent group accussed|”........ teeships of local unions are} . | jnot the jurisdiction of the| Any decision with respect come from the office of the general) x .% & You have until 2 p.m. this Hear ye, Hear ye, all the local gentry! It's still not too late to submit that entry for the hottest moment-in July contest. mail or' to deliver in person your forecast of the month’s top mercury reading. P. 0. Box’ 40 Saturday to about 30 seconds to try for a high, It’s easy and exciting! . x * & and forecast, a.m. or p.m., high on a post card. * * *& & 8 e take in this suspenseful guessing © ‘game is a bona fide $100 savings bond, and what one of us wouldn't sacrifice All we need. ig your’ name, address, | County Children ~ be split. . stake that : scorchers: Even a wild guess, and you just might nail the hot spot dn the nose, Who knows? of the July wallet, Pay Visit wit apna tag Se to Pontiac, Michigan. Remember, only one entry per person. 3 ’ In the unlikely case of a tie the prize will ~ In case you've forgotten, the address ts: Weather Man . Pontiac ‘Press Most of us ‘have experienced enough Michigan summers to have some idea of .the temperatures recorded on July's That $100 Government Bond is just wait- ing to be eased into some lucky winner's Zoo © as : “Fey | Union Boss Accused of Planting Spy to Get SenateUnit’s Secrets WASHINGTON (#—Law-. _ |yer-investigator John Cye || Cheasty, the chief prosecu- ;\tion witness, “(istand for the second day — “\today in the conspiracy takes the “trial of No. 2 Teamsters . Union Chieftain James R. . Hoffa; Hoffa's. federal court jury has received testimony the Midwest Teamster boss wanted checks made on his own lawyer and public re- lations adviser as well as investigating senators. Hoffa and Hyman I. Fisch bach, Miami attorney, are ac- cused: in the back its secrets, particularly what {might be dug up on the Teamsters ———_ Union. Se A ‘Audrey’ Menaces Louisiana, Texas —V mae Res |. eas “4 g a A hurricane watch) was ordered | Hurricane Moving North 2 = 1 ; eo porathe 9. (terrazzo corridor ee eteies dé Rais testified . yesterday “floors instead of asphalt tile), $29,- omg ole (gi leader of the anti- that he and Fischbach went to . 000 more, Ne Hoffa ‘fight, said he believed ac- Detroit to see Hotta last Feb. 13... tot), $26,000, mon as cording # the International Con- He said Hoffa agreed to pay 1 nin stitution ‘has jurisdiction. Cheasty $18,000 to gethired as a ( accoustical corrt- i a let | staff tor of the te dor ceilings), $0,500 more. Pte Byam hoch smetin- Bs committee and slip Hotfa what he Bryant and Detwiler’s bids on the sald. “And he’s pass- could find out. same alternates were: 1. $9,622; ing the buck right back to the CHECK UF 2. $23,402; 3. $26,154; 4. $8,090. man we're trying to get around.” Among other assignments -he Eleven bidders sought the me- Leaders of the move charge got from Hoffa, Cheasty related, seg Py Bh pe international ethicars 0s far back was to “check up” on Edward $582,200 coming ; as with refusing to sympai Cheyfitz, a lawyer-public rel Brodell Plumbing and Heating Co., ; with their grievances Thay .sbek man. Cheyfitz is associated with —, mA an election from among Williams, Hoffa's the firm'd price-for Alternate 3 se a8 rank - and - file number. attorney at the present — was $4,230. = —— * * * handied public . ont bids with the low one of 1 «AP Wirephote | Saag gg 0 fag panes Se Teamsters . $333,194 offered by Maralll Elec. NOTHING TO IT — Scott Albers, 4, of Battle Creek, caught | president of the Joint Council of hic & -Castely hae trie Cay 0f - Fer siter- | this seven pound, one ounce beauty in Pleasant Lake. Scotty, who |the AFL-CIO, hee him to find oat “what nate $ fie firmt asked $4,000 | stands a mere 40 inches and weighs 37 pounds, had a ten minute