bbe a ook "PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, * "THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1950—60 PAGES Macmillan Flies to Washington ifor Ike Confab -, Will Ask More Flexible Western Policies coal |Minister Macmillan of Britain left here today by Comet IV jetliner for talks with President Eisenhower. His plane departed at 10:12 a.m. (EST) and was due in -|Washington about 11:20 whee a. | Macmillan is expected to ‘urge Eisenhower to join ‘him in working out more | flexible Western policies for ‘forthcoming negotiations ‘|with the Soviet Union. The two will go into their week- TAFT MEMORIAL — Workmen put the final touches on the slim 100-loot pink marble_bell tower — a memorial to the late Sen. Robert A. Taft of — near the U. S. Capitol building. The new monument will be formally dedicated April 14. See story on Page 60. : Crazed Man Kidnaps #3.) 2752s Mother, 3 Children oer at forcing the Western powers out of Berlin, SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A 29-year-old Preparing, for . mother and her three children were captives today of a pressed confidence visits to the _OTTAWA \# — Prime}. a.m. s ON ie: RISING — Dr. Paul Cousino, superintendent of Warren schools, shows future plans for the development of Mich- igan State University Oakland, to members of the MSUO Founda- tion Community Relations Committee. They are (from left, standing) Dr. Roy, Alexander, MSUO director of student services; Public Program Before heading to Washington) . crazed, former convict who said he was only interested trom Ottawa, Macmillan ex-| on MSUO Set in “vengeance.” The gunman threatened to torture and kill the four''™° ©2P!#!/s “will serve to consol- idate and confirm the united will ‘of the Western world.” ‘On-to-College Night’ Eisenhower called Acting Secre- unless authorities released ‘tary of State Christian Herter and _ Meeting Monday Will Explain Curriculum a convict from prison so he , Beaten Woman si sssssc"ae."s could slay the man. save them from certain death, by * Macmillan Facts “Only you have the power to granting my demands,” read the . ° # 5 10 Dies of Injuries ..,..?0,2 note left behind by a man identi- a White House for discussion of the fied as Richard I. Payne, 23. “I den't want money, I want Berlin situation in preparation for j } = The first in a series of special programs presenting a progress re- port on educational development at Michigan State University Oak- Study Plans for MSUO Development | Richard Ernst, president of the Perryberry Royal Oak Tribune editor. Seated (from left) are Lyle Abel, di- ~ | Crisis rector of the Oakland County Cooperative Extension Service, and Fred V. Haggard, president of Council. di A 1 iJ : Pentiae Press Phete Co.; Glenn S. Miller, the Oakland County AFL-CIO r By MAX E. sIMON |, Suspended Police Chief Herbert W. Straley heard himself com- pared to a “thoroughbred race horse carryiig a 300-pound jockey’ last night. The “jockey” giving the chief trouble was the Pontiac Police Of ” y Widow mbs | illan’ land will be held at 8 p.m. ficers Assn. (PPOA) which ‘had vengeance, it Ama i: do , 85, Succur b | Macmillan 8 arrival, a hn. é ér Pp. rome me a on i State police described Payne as in St. Joseph Hospital; actual tatks between fhe twe-|irat suok sok » Patrolman John A. Felts said last an especially dangerous mental. patient He left a notd bebind,in bis #ic-| tim's home, addres: Murder Weapon Found = co Sona, thd.,'¢ cotinael . i retreat about 65 miles Mrs. Mary Douglas, 85, found’ from Washington. beaten in a downtown Mount Clem-' ens apartment Tuesday night, died’ to West Virginia Gov, Cecil H. Underwood. In the rambling, five-page tirade. he named another convict, Burton Junior Post, better known as Jun- ior Starcher. | The note said: - | They said a carpenter's heavy “My purpose is to kill and to tape measure holder, found near take the head of my worst en: ,the woman’s body, apparently was emy, who ts pow out of reach. ‘the death weapon in the mysterious He is in the W. Va. Penitentiary assault. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Police termed her death murder. | ‘ain, France and the Soviet Union \now being worked out. - 8 Mvundovitie.” | One of the differences the two Saihie tae to use his cap- They theorized that the elderty (men face is in their attitude toward tinee'an ae is hace Stench, widow may have been the victim ‘a summit conference. Macrhillan res of a burglar who fied after beat- js ) represented as feeling one is Eee is nihdere™ The niall ing her. , |mecessary, regardless of any re- al "1 lansan hae ‘Ge FBI Mrs. Douglas ‘was found uncon- | Sults of the foreign ministers meet- work on this case.” _ scious on the floor of the apartment bes on the theory that only Soviet Payne entered the home of John % John DuBois, for whom she bent mai ape -— om H. Baldwin, 31, early Wednesday # housekeeper. She lived in another SPeak for his country. night on the pretense of wanting apartment, in the same building. N F h . | to use the telephone. . . .. Then he whipped out a pistol Winds Up Capital Visit HOUSTON, Tex. (® — Pilot Bill Mullen took off today from. and threatened to kill the whole. family, Baldwin told police. _ the Houston International Air- port with hopes of breaking the WASHINGTON « — President | Sean T. O’Kelly of Ireland winds | up his Washingtof visit today with the accent on art and edu- The crazed ex-convict bound | Baldwin, his wife Elma, 29, and | their children, Susan, 5; Danny, | 7, and Kenneth, 10, Methodically | Cation. The 76-year-old visitor yong nenstep Gistence recerd fer he gagged each onc, ie ¥: party then go to New light planes. Mullen is aiming He ignored Mrs. Baldwin's mum-| oe uy. for Rome, 5,698 miles from bled pleas to release the gag, and Houston. GLENDIVE, Mont. ® — Ice | gorges damming the Yellowstone | River today sent flood waters rolling into this oil town. Hun- dreds of Eastern Montana oil- , field workers’ house trailers were hauled to safety on higher ground in a .swiftly organized mass evacuation, composed his wild note addressed Football Strike! to Underwood. ; Then he herded the mother and NORTHFLEET, England (UPI) her three frightened children into) —Two hundred employes building Baldwin's 1955 model car. Baldwin 2 100 million dollar power sta- was left tied up in the family’s tiom went on strike yesterday five-room house. He broke free, When one of them Jim Driscoll, and notified authorities. | Was fired for playing football on “He said he would kill my wife the roof of a power station build- and torture the children if I called) ing. ad Although a joint statement early ~. ; ‘e cy |HEXt week may report generally on at 5:30 a.m, today in Pontiac's St their talks, detailed practical re- jsults of their work may not be dis- \closed officially until the foreign ‘ministers of the United States, Brit- meet this spring. Such a meeting is nity Relations Committee, . and school administrators will be answered, |MSUO student services, said ques-| |tions of a general nature about |college attendance also will be an- swered. FIRST OF KIND Anyone interested in the univer- sity is welcome to attend, he said, pointing out that the meeting will mark the first public discussion of MSUO’s unique curriculum. Chairman of the Corhmunity Re-: lations Committee of the MSUO Foundation is Dr. Paul Cousind. / superintendent. of schools in War-| ; ren, | Similar “On.to-College Night” programs will be held at § p.m. March $1 at the Ferndale Com- munity Center, 400 E. 9-Mile Rd., and at 8 p.m. April 9 at the Bir- mingham Community House, Wil- lits and Bates streets. Chairman. of the ‘‘On-to-College Night”’ programs is Richard Ernst, president of the Perryberry Co. * * * . Answering questions at all ses- sions will be MSUO’ Chancellor D, B. Varner, assisted by Commu- nity Relations Committee members and MSUO administrative officials, police,” Baldwin told authorities., State police Capt. W. R. Callag-! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Ah—Who Said Spring Would Never Come? After a long, hard winter, weath- er in the Pontiac area began warming up for the official arriv- al of spring with the mercury soaring to a season's high of 58 at 1 p.m. today. Lenten Guideposts: ‘Composer By-JIMMIE DODD . : up to then I had spent a lot of Master of Ceremonies time and energy getting nowhere. Mickey Mouse Club “You are a song writer, band Nine years ago I learned what leader. singer, dancer, guitar play- is meant by having to lose your er and actor,” an agent once told life, almost, to gain it. ime, “But what do you want to _ At the time I had a small band|be known as? I can’t sell a grab at the Golden Hotel in Ri . in at 3:55 Sprng will check 0, Nev. |bag.”’ © Fl Soterday — nearly six hours One day I was ° : | I didn't knew how to answer him. later than last year. istricken with a For years, I took whatever job came along, always The Weather Bureau predicted |heart ailment that ; i ‘big break.’ . tonight will be mostly cloudy with 2 PP arently a low of 40 degrees. Today's south. stemmed from an looking for the west winds at 20-40 miles an hour Corer pve: ead 4 I " T d ’ P will diminish tonight. r “d fin 1oaay S rress Friday’s high is expected to, Wher you lie on | iY your back § for SR ee 2 er reach near 48. . «Thirty-two was the lowest re-|Weeks, facing” the corded temperature in downtown |PoSsibility of — Pontiac preceding $ a.m. death, you can cme ee ned : : come es ra 7 Editorials "lecewas seas . 6 Plenty of Incentive erdieve! + | Food Section ...,......, 3238 pen Finally, 1 was allowed to go | Markets _..... oscessiysene; We MONROE, Wis. (UPI) “~~ City | home—skin and bones perhaps— | bituaries ..........c.c..0. ua officials were reported confident | but a mai te whom something | Sports ....... aoagaae vas, OTB today that voters, snowed in | beyond healing had happened. | Theaters gies caus evseteeey a twice this month, would approve | Somewhere in the process 1 | -I'V & Radio Programs. .....59™ purchase of the town’s first snow- | leifrmed what to do with my life. | Wuson, Earl ........ aut plow, © It was about time, too, because | Women’s Pages ,,.,..,. 91-42 : é : \ ~~ ‘ \ Accepts God's Will “itake away His power and presence, -/“Phy will be done” by rote, without |. (Continued on Page 16, Col. 1) || Mow Abont a Rocket to Fit Your With my professional life at a low point, personal disaster also came; Ruth, the wonderful girl from home.who had married me in 1940, developed an inoperable cancer radium treatments, And then I was stricken with my illness, Fi- nancially we were wiped out. Why had it happened? Ruth and I believed in a loving God and the abundant life, as promised by the Lord Christ. Since nothing. could and since the fault could not lie with God nor with Ruth, I ‘con- icluded that there had to be some- thing the, matter with me: my praying » « «Thy living, - What was it? : The first step was facing the fact that I had been trying to run been saying, USaealeies Petsago” 4 ene 4 Dr. Roy Alexander, director of} and began undergoing} night. The Commission is taking testi- the chief. Straley was suspended x * * Hearing Should End in 12 Days Straley’s Attorney Says; He Won't Delay, Cites. Possible ‘Mock Trial’ The Herbert W. Straley hearing should be over within 12 days, in time for the Civil Service Commis- sion to render a decision before the April 6 election, Atty. Clarence L. Smith said today. . But if the decision upholds Stra- ley’s Feb. 9 suspension as, Pontiac police chief, it ‘‘undoubtedly” will be appealed to Circuit Court, Smith added. . * * * Smith, who is Straley’s counsel, gave assurances there was no at- tempt on his part to prolong the hearing past April 6, when voters will pass on repealing civil service for police. “If civil service were repealed before the hearing was over, the Commission’s authority would be terminated and the hearing. would have been, legajly, a mock trial. We don’t want that.” One reason the hearing has tak- en as long as it has, Smith said, is that testimony is being taken before the Civil Service Commis- sion that could be used later in Circuit Court, in case of an appeal. . x * * Stuart A. Austin, chairman of the Civil Service Commission, utged an early end to the hearing, “I've informed all the attorneys we want this hearing cleared up before’ the election. Delay past that date could mean that all Firm Selling Iron Ore at Last Year’s Price ‘ 4 CHICAGO (UPI) ~ Marilyn’ Monroe, here to promote her lat- est film, said dieting isn't neces- sary to maintain her 3744-2314- 36% vital statistics, “‘Activity om care of the poundage,”” she Retarns, 907 Charles B, Harmon Tax Ponline State Bank Bidg, PE 44188) Straley Said Hamstrung by Police Association Straley. He said that ‘“‘not many |Feb. 9 by City Manager Walter K. | Willman. officers have been dressed down mony on ouster charges against * * * “Whenever the chief issued an order, the PPOA would oppose it,” Felts declared. “While I was in the organiza- I became aware ef a F more than I was by the chief.” Felts, introduced by Straley’s attorney Clarence ‘L. Smith as an li-year Navy veteran of World War II and the Korean War, told) commissioners he disapproved of commanding officers fraternizing One public by the chief. Bureau, said the chief wasn't * * * Meetings of the PPOA were poor- ly attended, Felts charged, and getti much cooperation from Municipal Court judges in bringing in new methdds to prosecute drunk ' He said he had never been pun- ished unjustly or reprimanded in Felts, a former member of the department's now-defunct Traffic of All Nations in German War Similar Proposal Urging 28-Government Parley Rejected in January MOSCOW (7) — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev called one of his rare press conferences fof Western newsmen today. Khrushchev urged a broad-based conference of all nations which took part in the war against Hitler- ism, with the aim of con-' cluding a peace treaty with Germany. He called attention to President The West rejected this; and in turn asked the Soviet Union to take part in a foreign minis- ters conference in Geneva or Vi- enna with both East and West Germans in attendance, to pre- vent the German issues from touching off a new war, * * * Khrushchev this time seemed to Eisen- starting point for a new attempt to make a a “We would like the Western governments, having cAst aside the mad threats of their gen- erals and admirals against our country, to sit down at the con- “If they have sensible proposals to make, we are feady to examine said that often the officers were unable to start on time for lack of Felts told of only two specific a quorum. ‘It took only between 9 and 12/nolicies which the PPOA resisted, men to start a meeting and’some-|one an order which would have time they waited an hour or more rotated days off among the de- for that many to show up,”’ Felts partment's members. said. He said a small band of otticers| = waiens ne = Ara pod appeared at all meetings and! —~ als 4 i ; oti | &dmitted he eae path the organization | Straiey's policy. “It wasn't a | question of right or wrong,” “Wild conversations’ were Felts explained. “I had Sun- common at meetings, Felts said, | days off and wanted te keep with PPOA members drinking them.” alcoholic beverages before and a during eee: He said that the PPOA aided .jan officer against whom Straley “When a small pressure group|brought charges before the Civil made up its mind on what it|Service Commission. “I found it wanted, the debate was over,” distasteful,” Felts said. Felts said. ‘‘No one else could} A former PPOA officer, Sgt. get the floor.” Walter A. Baerwolf, also criticized x *& |PPOA actions. The patrolman denied that he| Baerwolf, a veteran of 34 years had been shown favoritism by (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) drivers. * * * , He Is Ike’s Choice SELECTED — Gen. Lyman. L. Lemnitzer‘ is shown: at his desk after being nominated by President Eisenhower to take over as my Chief of Staff next July 1. Lemnitzer, 59, has been the Army’s Vice Chief of Staff since July, 1957. He will succeed Gen. (Continued on Page 16, Col. 1) N-Bombs Fired at High Altitude U.S. Reveals Testing Three Devices to Form Protective Sheet WASHINGTON #—Three nuclear bombs exploded by the United States beyond the earth's sphere formed an electronic sheet that circled most of the world. A responsible official outside the Defense Department said the tests at tremendous ' altitude were an effort to spread a shield through which missiles could not Defense Department officials- confirmed Wednesday night. that the-blasts had been set off secretly last September, for both military and scientific~ test purposes. But they declined to discuss the mili- tary angles. : TO OFFSET MISSILES? _ Other sources reported, however that the tests explored the pos- sibility .of generating at an alfti- tude of about 300 miles a diffusion of neutrons which would offset the nuclear reaction in missile war- heads. Just how the electronic shield could halt a missile or keep it from exploding was not ex- plained. The shots were fired from naval craft in the South Atlantie late in September—more: than a month before the United States started a One-year suspension eof nuclear tests pending negotiations with the Soviet Union on halting all such testing. | : LOW IN RADIATION ic Deputy Secretary of Defense Donald Quarles and Dr, Herbert York, director of - Pentagon Te search, gave some details of the test shots after newsmen. learned of them from other sources. __- They said the explosions wefe of very low yield in radiation and would not disclose the altitude at which the tests were made, = ’ Maxwell D. Taylor, who plans to retire when his term expires. F “ Theodore F. Hughes, Merle Ghett Term Vote for Cirewit Judge, © (|) different has been added to this nual Waterford Township Sports & Builders Show to be held this weekend at Activities Center. Instead of the usual ribbon-cut-_ ‘Opes Tomorrow in Waterford PR ting ceremony, year’s fifth an- the Community ToWnship . Supervisor Johnson (center) will saw a board. President of the Township Junior Chamber of Commerce nt ee rd. eed os eee . Set: Sports, Builders Show Final plans are being made for the fifth annual Waterford Town- ship Sports & Builders Show Fri- day, Saturday and Sunday at the Community Activities Center, ac- cording to Chairman William Gou- let, , * * : ~ Sponsored by the Waterford Township Juniér Chamber of Commerce, the show will open. at 6 p.m. Friday with a ‘‘board-saw- ing” ceremony by Township Su- pervisor Elmer Johnson. * Mid-Continent Finds Spring Coming at Last By The Associated Press - Seeg: like weather finally came most of the mid-continent to- warmer air headed into sections in the eastern -jat the door will be donated to show te top Iast year’s record attendance of of 5,000. Exhibits will include the latest methods for home improvements, appliances and the newest type of hi-fi installations. Alson included will be new trends in outdoor sports equipment. x* * * A stage show will be presented during: the weekend, and Water- ford Township’s “most beautiful girl” will be chosen Queen at 9:30 All admission fee proceeds taken community projects by the Jay- * *x * Bloomfield Man Named Library — Week Chairman Auxiliary police will be on hand|¢ -jto direct traffic around the Com- gan State Library in Lansing is munity Center, Police: Chief by Group of (Cantind WuniPres Oued in the department, said he served trom ‘the central plains and Mis- sissippi Valley into the upper Great Lakes .region during the night. Gusty winds reached 30 to 40 m.p.h. in sections from Kan- sas across" Towa into the Great Lakes, Winds were clocked at 5. m.p.h. at Salina, Kan. ’* * °* It was more than 50 degrees warmer in Grand Marais, Mich., where it was a cold 22 below zero Wednesday, Readings were in the 50s as far north as Eastern Ne- braska and southern Iowa. Tem- peratures were in the low 40s at Lone Rock, in southwestern Wis- consin,. compared to below zero marks Wednesday. * * * Dry weather was the rule in most sections, Light rains per- sisted in southern Florida, which has been hit by wet weather for the past several days. Two rivers, the Suwannee, in the northern part of the state, and the Alafia, 170 ‘miles southward, overflowed their banks Wednesday, flooding low- lands and forcing several families to leave their homes. The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureaa Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Partly eleedy and mech warmer today, high 54. Mestly cleady tonight and tomerrew. Seatiered showers tomorrow and a little colder, Low tonight 40. High temorrew %, Winds southwest increasing to 20-46 miles diminishing tenight. | Teday in Pentiac “Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. At 8 a.m.) Wind > emai 15-18 m. ph.) Direction—Southwes . Sum sete Thatedes at 6:43 p.m, Sup rises Friday at 6:5¢ a.m Moon sets Friday at 3:47 a.m. ‘Moon Tises Thursday at 1:20 a.m. sioticystd~ are yi Inances in the ‘city. “They grumbled and called ‘it useless paperwork.” Treat nae tec. Gia men have been running the PPOA for a period of years and “they’re the ones stirring up the trouble now.” * * * He said he had heard officers speak of Straley in vulgar and profane terms. ‘“‘It didn’t make In the basement of the old police headquarters on Perry street, he said, he heard officers vow to “get even” and “get rid all wolf admitted that be had once been demoted for having an in- terest in an outside business when such a practice was against de-if partment rules. He complained that Public Safety Director George D. East- man refused“ to approve funds for him to attend a weights and Flint, Baerwolf is in charge of enfore- ing weights and measures ordi- An earlier statement by Eastman ithat improper statistics were re- sponsible for the city winring National Safety Council awards in 1957 was challenged by the chair- man of the Traffic and Safety Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce for 1956-57. 6 a.m. 33 eee er $2 TUM. cssccses % i WA uceitexeere 55 BB.Misscecees. 35 2 PM... csreees.s 58: 9 O.0).. costes. 0 @m...........48 | Wednesday in Pontiac . we recorded downtown} a emperature west temperature moe temperature eer ueay. gpeeeteretea cet eee eee eee “Age fh im Pontiac eee er WeatherPartly oi tloudy. Date ta a 4 in 1885 - Wednesday's Temperature Chart emphi jumn inches for 1957. Highest and Lowest ad Gapueteres This! , Figures submitted to the Safety Council on local traffic safety publicity claimed 5,000 col- * *« & The Safety Council calls 1,800 Tl 2 M 6 62 42 722 Miami Beach 72 68 _ 82 27 Milwauk 4 37) willé 65 53 Mi iis 44 37 26 20 New Orleans 62 54 53 43 New York § 26 30 “6 ha a8 Hi Phoes tt oenix 68 nu 1 3 2 } St. Louis 4 “68 61 9 Worth 46 °°. Ble. Marie 29 20 31 Trav. City 7] 2@ ‘42° MW Wrehington 42 27 on v 89 Seattle 0 O07 ‘ansaa City 72 44 Tampa 60 rquet a i Press alone,’ column inches in The Pontiac * |meetings I overlooked earlies,” ‘| from the mire by a farmer. “But in 1958, there were 3,288) Hampered Officers He also disputeq Eastman’s charge that only 35 to 40 traffic safety meetings were held in Pon- tiac during 1957, insteaq of the 409 claimed. * kk &t “T've checked and found 400 Haskill said. On the stand when the hearing adjourned was Mrs. Eloise Young, the department’; chief She said the records system um- der Straley was the same as that used by the FBI. “Some improvements on the FBI system. were made by the chief,” she said. Mrs. Young will resume her testimony at the next Commission * ii- . because of other commitments he | tAh, Spring! Ah, Men! Thought Here Already — 3 for /13-pint size cone If tainers with tite-fit | slip in to legs, let ne ironing Portec EAST. ER GIFT for ‘Lil: Girly r Dollyanna HI-HEEL 10'/2-Inch DOLLS | with 3 COSTUMES plans as well as with other as- pects of library administration. »* * * Dr, Tfreland has announced that will not seek reelection next R245 a gf BLONDES—BRUNETTES—PLATINUMS 7 € __ © Wedding Gown - -@ Formal Gown © Summer Outtit © Fur Stole 101%4 - inch doll with a soft life- like plastic face, and close Brand New. Model peeps od session set for 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Man Won't Clog His Dialogue With Wordy Fog NORFOLK, Va. #—Ralph Pool of the Virginia-Pilot, a reporter in North Carolina when autos were a novelty, had his model-T bog down one day and was pulled The farmer gave him. cool water from a well near his un- "4 50 Trees = 16" N IN \ N N \ \ \) \ N FRIDAY and SATURDAY “What is it built from?” “Logs.” “Any animals hereabouts?” “Frogs.” “What sort of soil do you have?” — How about the climate?” “What go you live on mostly?” oe bass around?” + , 3 Children- * he said, thorities in six nearby states also jwere alerted, | E All Metal—Lock & Ke Documents : "Porta-File’ ; File Chest | re i ctured—26 all metal file hh oarry ag ay handles, fle chat 5 u customer « . tor ans Ne Sal | $8 N. 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(UPD Howard Hardaway of Louisville, y., wants tovntatch his great- grandfather's feat: of walking __\_- THE PONTIAG-PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1959 > : =e peers ee ee er a a = oe psi 7 Seite. e “7 : a Bs 5 sae 4 2 Gasoline Suppliers Hike Prices 1.8Cents 5 i oh e "Two major avea gasoline bup- prices to stations by 1.8 cents a | The increase, announced by. Sor cony Mobil Of Co, and Pure Oi} Products Co., followed a similar price increase yesterday by Stan- ‘dard Oil Co, : Other. major distributors were with similar price hikes. ; . ee Gasoline prices in thé Pontiag area went up 1.1 cents a gallon 48 few weeks ago. The new in crease will raise the average price of regular to 31.9 cents,a gallon There are about 219.800 miles of railway line -in_contiriental United States on a point to point basis. This figure does not include paral- lel tracks, al and Ind asking for the best foot route across the state r) hor yard tracks and sidings. oF H g yj son. said, “‘no comment.” restaurant adjoining Latreille's sta-| it will be interesting to see how| : Besides Ketzler, Kierdgorf’s son, tion. Par Republicaris vote.” Frank Jr., and George W. La- ti f — treilie, operator of the cleaners, t a jeatified. Latvelile sit tanned im, | Would Sabotage Golf [Lost in the Maze NON epi aistcc MWOL eile ian uci Mae TEN all over to : of 1. women and three men. baud ‘ } tug trom. the dairy . |: COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)— |’ COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPD — ¥ is * SWORN STATEMENT : 74 te’ | State Rep. Richart Metcalf | State Rep. Charles £. Hoffman. One morning I read in Billboard) At first Ketzler said he would| -Ketzler, in leaving the court- asked that caddies be exempted got lost yesterday in a tangle of amendments and questions about a measure being voted on and é - responded when polled on a roll k Sd cite Soltek the golf by speeding it up,” he ex-.| call: “Yes, on whatever we're ained. voting on.” time like criticizing firemen for . = attempting to save the cleaners.|9 . . * SCREWDRIVER VODKA GIMLET? Harrison is expected to tell his story either today or tomorrow, according to Jerome F. O'Rourke, Maybe you like your vodka in orange jvice...and she prefers a Gimlet (1 part Rose's Lime Juice to 3 or 4 parts Smirnoff}. Just be sure you both use smooth Smirnoff...and have it your own woyl house, . disclosed to the same 2|reporter that, ‘I guess I shouldn't have told about the remark in the first place." from a $1 hourly minimum wage bill during hearings dn.the meas- ure, ‘It would ruin the game of There,” and 11 different people recorded it. I hadn’t knocked on Genesee County. prosecutor. At the pretrial examination of Thompson in December, it was brought out in testimony that Har- rison and his wife visited 'Thomp- son at his Grayling cottage the day . before the. fire. 8s ils ment he gave Aug. 7, in which he didn’t include Harrison as one of his visitors. Asked later why he hadn't men- ¢ i | ei | 1 j i EF 7 are it : g : g day O’Rourke.had called 13 of a possible 92 witnesses, Included in the long list are the dead Kier- “needling” him about/dorf’s uncle, Herman of Madison Heights, and Leaun Harrelson, . president of Pontiac Teamsters Lo-! Under cross examination by Hag-'cal 614, ” gerty, Ketzler test: he can sell it sa a I $44,000 on the ren ms d oid Ss TREATED FRANK KIERDORF Also testifying yesterday after- 4 Bg g&@ iH di: ; Fa i i s | H i E. FREE rocers 59-Pc. Silverware Set Includes mahogany drawer is. yours with any diamond purchase of pice you'd expat fe hogy St ee st $99 chest, The entire set or more ing. fos noon were Mrs. Anna Mae Mullins He said he had $6,300 in fire |of Port Huron, who, as a nurse at e hisurance on the building itself, the Pontiac hospital, was one of approach to life, to take his advice, AS THs LIFE ADIES HOME Sr i ; as bei ~ ioe BREAK-PROOFG EL IVICIC pinner serviced " f 5 iad oa ‘oniplete Service for : Lh : * fe li r + af ti H 5 3 : f ' ii & : j 4 LE WKC’s EXCLUSIVE * . , The Biggest Set ever at the Low Price! 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Power to make the talks a suc- cess.” _ * © Pe The Soviet Union’s only purpose, | he asserted, is “‘to see to it that the dark clouds of a new war should forever disappear from the intérnational horizon.” Khrushchev promised that if ‘the West was “seriously ready for talks,” the Seviet Union would “not hold up matters.” . “We shall do everything depend- ent on ‘us to make the talks a ) Sperkling 8-Diamond Bridal Set Bridal Set Miracle Diamonds * » (Sagas omit one was en 4159 3199 $259 1s” r $ ee $3.00 Week! $3.50 Week! Mok a: ailiea Wink 10 tin Wek The Entire 61 —— m7 a The floviet Union said not betil § > . ee NO MONEY DOWN Samsonite country or to harm anyone's in- , Z — 3 = . d ~ terests,