. “ Ay 2 = a ——y 4, , a . . \ | . 1 sat MAE PONTIAC. PURSE PAGES U.S, Wegther Bureau Forecast ve a & Partly Cloudy ~ ee ) . y ~ Details page two .~ ——— a De. Ae 114th YEAR ea ee & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, way 21, ie —a9 PAGES | _ABBOCIATED PRESS cones rucTos 7e kt ke kk tk wk ok : th kek k * + ra State Accidents Kill 26 + + Infant Drowns — in County Lake; Youth, 8, Dies Baby Falls Into Water as Motorboat Capsizes During Sharp Turn Soaring to New Mark Wilson fo Enter Service Quarrel in Mediator Role Army, Navy, Air Force Embroiled in Disputes Over Arms for Future A six-weeks-old baby, SHINGTON (INS) —| drowned and another Oak-| WASHINGTON (INS) — ‘Defense Secretary Chas) Concentrated Fury Mounts Sky-High Successful Test Assures World of US. Strength Portable Super-Missile Resembles - Inferno to Newsmen on Ship By BOB CONSIDINE ABOARD USS MT. Mc- KINLEY (INS) — We have provéd to good and waver- ing friends in the world that our military and scien- tific wizards have packaged a hydrogen bomb we can transport anywhere in the world and drop with utterly land County youngster was struck down along an area highway during a weekend that claimed the lives of 24 other Michigan residents in accidents. Firemen and police con- tinued to drag Cass Lake this morning in an effort to recover the body of Donald German Jr. who was thrown from a boat Sunday after-| - noon along with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald German of Keego Harbor, during a pleasure ride. Eight-year-old Andrew W, Myers, of 13470 Dixie Hwy., died early Saturday afternoon after he was struck by an auto when he report edly tried to run across M15 in Groveland Township, The Gernian baby was flipped into 35. feet of water when the light boat capsized while making a sharp turn, The child was wrapped in a bfunket. The par- ents were rescued by other boat- _ men in the area. Diving operations, headed by Thomas W. Jackson of-the Sheriff's} Dept., were carried out into the darkness last night, and were re- sumed this morning. Firemen aS the West Bloomfield Township Dept, and other police units aided | in the operations. TREATED FOR SHOCK Mrs. German was treated for} shock at Pontiac General Hospital following the tragedy, The craft, a, light rowboat, was equipped with a large outboard motor. The Myers boy was struck by a car whose driver was Kenneth L. Clark, 29, of Ida, who told Sher- iff’s officers that the youngster wag accompanied by a small. girl. The two had evidently | crossed the highway’to get some mail from a box when the boy turned and dashed back despite the girl's efforts’ to hold him. H{e"was pronounced dead on ar- rival at Goodrich Hospital in Good- rich. Elsewhere around the state, 22 were killed in traffic accidents and two by drowning: Twelve died within the first ry hours, including five in a two-car, crash near Ann Arbor;--four in a pileup on U.S, 24 outside Detroit, and three in an auto-train collision near Muskegon. Some 12 hours la-, (Continuedion ets os on Page 2, Col. 6) Coed Murdered - by Jilted Suitor Slayer Then Kills Self to Climax a Reportedly’ ‘Unhappy Love Story’ DETROIT (INS) - A pretty 18- year-old Henry Ford College co-ed was shot to death last night in De- trojf by a jilted suitor who alsp took his own life. The murder and suicide cli- maxed what police called an ‘unhappy love story” involving Miss Diane Rider and 28-year- old Henry H. Gales, both of De- trot, Potice report Gales. shot the girl three times before ~ firing a bullet into his head. The ‘bodies were found at the home ‘of a neighbor. Miss Rider and Gales, said the girl's a. mother, Mrs. Dorothy E Ridef, 65, rede to work together. They both were employed at the Radio Reports, Inc., last summer but she matriculated at Ford Col- lege in February. The mother told police Diane continued to accept rides after she, noticed his interest ‘‘only hecause she did not want to hurt his feel- ings.” Friends of the couple said the attractive college freshman ‘refused seyeral marriage pro- pusals” from the man she ‘‘pitled.”’ 'E. Wilson was expected to-) # day to take a direct hand in " attempting to quell the *, \spreading feud between the Army and Air Force ’ Wilson was out of town’ over the weekend, joining | other top Pentagon offi-) j clals and defense leaders in - commemorating Armed aes today. AP Wirephote + Island in the Bikinis rises behind a cloud forma- tion as the stem begins to form on the ht | FIREBALL RISES — The fireball from the recom fires U. S atrborne-H-bornb explos= d ov er Namus Just Better Than Cow Pasture: Now City Airport Was_ Tops Frank Hawks as a starting point Editor's Note: This ts the first in 4 Airmall service by Thompson | } S Meanwhile, + the inter- M ineial caper uae peaiene Aeronautical Corp, had been (for the Cleveland Air Races. | '. \service dispute posed the) picsent, problems end plans tor | started Nov. 27, the first lead | For the first few years after the opening, Pontiac~ Municipal. Atr- | weighing more than 715 pounds, | Outgoing alr mail volume rese te fifth: in the state within a ing industrial, commercial and resi-_ - é ieat that economy-mind- dental development have made fly- { ed congressmen might or-| ne en important business -a bust- that must grow with the port was in the news frequently. Pilots from all over the country were hearing about the fine facili- county - der some cuts in the 35 | month after this service.was in- [w biltion dollar military bud-|By GEORGE rT. TRU MBULL JR. augurated., ties here. get. An airport: that was once the’ The dedication of the airport Because of its high ranking Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, long of the whole country is now was held June 15-16, 1929, and in known in the aviation field, | The feud revolves around the Pride s With it ghastly effects. I still cannot quite be- ‘lieve what I saw. As years roll on I am certain that ithe spirit will lend even less credence to memory. (The monstrous eruption of the super-missile was released from a high-flying B52 intercontinental jet bomber about noon Sunday.) It\ ‘was as if some great knife had split; the black curtain of the Pa- cific , predawn ‘and shown us through that jagged 4ear a cross +seetion of -an inferno. This was Dante in technicolor magnified a billion times. You forget Wat light Is heat and heat is light and they travel hand in hand, and so it was be- wildering and frightening té feel yourself ‘being “a conjunction the: city of itasks and equipment assigned the @ Mere one step better than) 4) = services for defense. Bickering! COW pasture. ‘Pontiae and the Pontiaic Board of —— infamous history of Commerce sponsored the |Michigain air tour, a 1,200 mile trip in, which 46 planes visited 26 |Michigan cities. That's the the Pontiac Municipal Airport, (See Loe r Story Puce 2) Back in 1929, when wide- Pontiac Ptess Photo | BREAKING STATE RECORDS — Pontiac High School track — sensation Hayes Jones is shown here in the process of setting a new jhas een ‘going on for sev -veral awake city fathers eyed the | PPS 5 Fin FOS state high school broad jump record at Ann Arbor Saturday after- | no aviation industry intently, the Heide in & i Reaginiiiel the any noon. The 17-year-old Chief hit a mark of 23'87s"’ to break a record | One issue is whether the | pert was the first in the United pee asus ae seagisl Lovell ant ae which_.had. stood for 20 years. Jones also set a state record in the | Army's anti-aircraft missile, the | States to receive any official rat- high hurdles in a time of 14:4. Pontiac scored 61 points, more than ardent ee — ade- | ing trom the department of Com- the second and third place teams combined, in winning the state | quately defend the nation’s met- | merce. 0 ie ropolitan areas against an ene- | ca tinienittwe t in the my attack. | t this thme i was put in sail ‘highest category possible; A-1-A; track title. (See details on sot page 20.) [= — The Air Force has disputed’ Today, 27 years later, it is placed] ‘claims that the Nike ‘is effective in Class 2, which Homer D. Hos- for Deeds Post ‘against practicalty any type of kins, manager of the airport de- airborne assault. scribes as. slightly better than a’ The Air Force has its own anti- sod field or ‘cow pasture.” Prosecutor aircraft missile, the Talos. * * * Meanwhile, Rep. George Mahon What pushed Pontiac's airport (D-Tex), chairman of the House from a top rating in the country to the low classification it bears Emergency Signal to Warn City of Coming Tornadoes SinlWere auld thane sere atte SGT CAN We. aac | A weather alert to warn 27 Pontiac schools of the ad- warfare . . . is perhaps a healthy, Receives | County Job Le L \ Three County officials who will name a replacement for Register , thing.” installation? What IS bein vance of tornadoes has been added to the Michigan Bell Mahon, interviewed on the TV, pie foward this end? ‘ of Deeds Orrin McQuaid tomorrow Telephone Bell and Lights Air Raid Warning system. contended the roles of the various, saucers et) Ceres) Rca ‘afternoon received five additional or St Sta cf ii ‘4 | ervice be debated | The alert will also be flashed into some 23 other busi- °° sian idole (oct ‘ ReHFGeIsn! Ol ln aingort in tlic ness and industrial plants that have the system in- awareness of the American peo- early part of 1927, as Lindbergh for the post over the weekend. istalled. ple.” made the first solo flight across! A total of 20 persons now have ‘the Ath intic. Air mail service was applied for the appointment, Pros- recommendations and applications The institution of the system was abacciccalibieetin by, Mahon recalled members of just beginning to spread out from|ecutor Frederick C. Ziem said the Pontiac’ Board of Edu-*- ——————, the Joint Chiefs of Staff went to the well established routes today. | Puerte Rico for a secluded dis- 4 $)x0,000 bond issue was passed Ziem, Probate Judge Arthur ication and is aimed as pro- tecting the school children in case of tornadoes, hurri- canes, flood warnings and other emergency cathe: conditions. The emergency weather nent) ‘uses the ‘‘white signal’ of the 3-signal system. The flashing light other city lives. will be accompanied by a steady, Pontiac’s William W ee for 16 seconds, followed Jeft for Portland, and Portland's cussion of “these basic explosive (9, \fay &, 1928 to finance Pontiac's questions which are smoldering first held. In record time, the: in, the Pentagon.” field vis completed to allow the He said he has had no explana: first plane, a Stearman from Flint, gay night tio why a determination of each to land on Oct. 14, 1928. . . All Over State ; | R “service's role in development and Soon after the official opening of The three officials, all Republi- Nearly 400 Michigan mayors left use of weapons has not been made. the field, Nov. 27, the city secured CNS, are seeking a qualified. man their towns today to see how an- te reported: “The sec retary said 80 additional acres to expand the Who will devote full time to the he must have more time.’ original 160-acre site. office. Donaldson — the November elections, they want a strong candidate who will be able to retain the post for the GOP Mayors Switch - | Home Towns | | E. Moore and Clerk Lynn BD, Al- len will «ppoint the successor to McQuiad, who died last Tues- In addition, with an eye to Salon Emilie ¢ soinipletely Sold Out first | Twenty Applications for simultaneously roadsted and blinded (despite the heavy density glasses and the instinctive lower of the head) by happening at that very 'y 40 miles away. I took off my glasses too soon jand the light reflecting from the planned to build an airplane factory next to the pert, | Another aviation pioneer, Eddie | |Stimson, told Nea) Brackstone,| ‘then manager of the port, that it was “undoubtedly one of the fin-| est in the nation." Two fiying schools were using the Pontiac field for ss was So great it was like a sharp — jsome 60 students. The two schools stick in the eyeballs, jalong with the Thompsen Aero- SILENCE PRECEDES. ROAR nautical Corp., also sold planes. looked After its rapid jump to one of pees di aaa dered pares ithe top airports in the country, -@ arrival of the bomb’s roar and be- jcombination of factors pr evented |held a pillar of molten flame like a its from continuing its: prominent) ‘fiery sword rising out of the watery place in aviation. ‘horizon and reaching at least 20,- 000 feet up to its pointed tip top, At what amounted to its handle was a lacy cuff of steaming sea- water and probably crushed cor- al of target island Nanw. The cuff must have extended over several miles, nothing in its folds Eye Thundershowers for Tonight, Tuesday cod eeciaby Bre The U.S. Weather Bureau pre: taking place in the color-and teks |dicts sacttered thundershowers to- of the apparition that writhed be (Next: Why Pontiac's airport toppled from a topnotch rating yw the country, rand what ts being done to improve the jeity facility.) - i Inight. The tow. will be 50- DA. ‘fore us, The sword was suddenly | Seattered thundershowers _ to- sheathed and in its stead the’ fire- morrow, The high will be 72 to| ball which had momentarily been ,16 degrees ‘la blazing helmet lying on the | In downtown Pontiac the low- horizon—a helmet sized four miles est thermometer reading preced- —now climbed dizzily, changing its ing 8 am. was 47 degrees. The color to peach as it cooled off to |mercury, rose to 71 at 1 pm. ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. aL. 5) Town in Idaho Battling Against Threats of Flood BONNERS FERRY, Idaho | — Men and equipment board on which sat my typewriter by a long pause and then repeated. Mayor Charles F. Gilden will tour When alerted, school and ather the Pontiac area, as part of the | establishments have been urged third annual Michigan Week ob- to listen to the radio for further S*™V ance. ¢ J instruction. They should not call Phe mayor exc hange | police or civil defense authorities unless they are reporting weath- er conditions, officials caution. opens. the and cities become better ac- quainted, The week-long obse rvance was 4 week, and is designed to help towns ' . against an expected sharp increase were rushed into this north Idaho town today in an in Democratic interest. can pein etree Roe. ,all-out effort to prevent the rising Kootenai River from Quint Opens Flower Sho Op S p strong contenders for the appoint- SPilling over its dikes onto the town and 36,000 acres of “MONTREAL uv — Marie Dionne’s new flower shop — named ment are County Us putyt Treasur- farmlands along the swollen stream. i M. Sib E t or i dove MU sWiev am Bee The Kootenai, fed by a heavy mountain snow pack, Miller, former ¢ ‘hit investigator funder Ziem. stood at 34.30 feettast. night, more than three feet above Salon Emilie after the dead quint sister — was a sell-out even before its, scheduled opening today ew opening yesterday So many persons flocked to # previ and Sibley, 46, was appointed deputy the 31-foot flood stage, and* According to J. Cecil Cox, assist- planned with the idea “of deve lop-| lant superintendent of: Pontiac ing greater pride in and loyalty to- schools, the decision to alert the Michigan.’ 2 demanded flowers that the shop virtually was cleaned out : iby Treasurer Charles A. Sparks “We had not planned to sell any flowers but se many people in 1951, and had previously been |Pontiac area will rest with the ee, asked for bouquets to take to patients at the three nearby hospitals (supervisor of ; tax accounts for 10, ‘police department, one of two . ‘sof | that we had no alternative,” said Miss Dignne’s assistant, Ellen yeurs. A Clarkston resident, he! Comic. Leaves Hospital ' hus been associated with the send points in the local system. ~~- ' Bourget. Treasurer's offire 1935 [ite other is the Pontiac State HOLLYWOOD i? — Comedian “Our stocks are running out and weye had to send for more” : since ouce Es Jerry Lewis was released from Marie éfitered a convent as a novice twice and left because of il] | Miller, ule pesienedeas int He dey lant “bnown pe bether yany, Mt Sinal Hospital Sunday latin health Hf i the first personal business venture of any of the vestigator in the Prosecutor's of- st, Mp ‘ : E rsoni &s venture 0 : 1alt er shop is the first personar 6 any oO 1 Gce Jaenimonthiehad: held theniah warning for citizens without this series of tests for a possible heart system can be devised as yet. condition. No announcement was Cox. said all school children will made of the results of the tests practice ‘‘‘disaster drill similar; —---—-_-—-- to air raid drills. The sending points will receive AMY, Navy and Air Force Play Cte and ‘Does Inter- Service Squabble Out in Op since 1951, and has been active in Repee ican pata: quints, who came into their million-del lar fortune on their 21st birth- ast May 28 , day | eether bureau, the Red Cross and Ground Observer Corps posts. Holland Jam-Packed HOLLAND (® — The city's 27th- By JAMES MARLOW ments prepared inside the serv. of numbers of men by Maximum stature, the Navy there new annual tulip time festival ended AP News Analyst lees were made available to Use Of sqence carriers and bernbera’ Saturday but Holland police and Associated Press News Analyst jnasmen. This broke into the WHITTLED ARMY Now the Army challenges ihe Ottawa ‘County sheriff's officers WASHINGTON UP — What hap- heat] : ap open a fight which had beem ije has whittled down the size future role of the Alr Force and | reported bumper-to-bumper auto pened to the horse is what the going on for years inside the of the Army while letting the Au rol ni traffic Sunday on roads leading to Army, Navy and Air Force don't Pentagon. Foree and nSsume large tee Navy) FRc Sit Reece) min Navy ‘and from the area's commercial, “h 3 want to happen to them. They're, It might have been thought from = . President’ Eisenhower s stafe- Easier to Shoot ‘Em ‘bloom throaighout the = ; ae —— , ments about the kind of armed war. Each wants to be bigger. ‘force this country needed that the BROADVIEW, Mont. uf — The publié has been told the Rancher Herman Kngbbel burned ‘evelopment of new weapons Is | * * * : Hen \military leaders were In agrer pp buty the liconfict | between ther en ~ fantastic but, for security ‘reasons, ; I skunk pelts before he learned jit. can’ be told in detail about ‘goes deeper than size or money: | were worth $2.50 each on the them As a result it is bewildered mizes the role of the Army and | swipes at the Navy, which swipes . ‘tulip farms. The flowers are ex- in a cat-and-dog fight over the ; | back at the Alr Force. ipected to be at the height of their roles they should play in a future Monacan Royalty Visit GRANADA Spain (INS)—Prince | is) * * LJ they don't agree on what a future: thon Rainier and his bride arrived in : In his budget message ta Con |Ganada after a” visit in Ubeda. eae: ‘e Hed ree ray gress last January kisenhower fur market? Knobble did not com: about the nafure and shape of fu- J 0 ‘vw, s ) n ery ce 3 a F ; They took a three-room suite at the on nin on ve guessing. said he was emphasising ‘air plain, however. He shot the skunks ture wa ” « A m y é it TLE Ss e Bs San Francisco Hotel. Their yacht, , : atomic power, guided muissilé®, re-cafter he found them umder his Judging fom the contradicti ions the Deo’ Juvante, is anchored at Their dispute came to light search and development conti barn but they did mot return thé among the armed services over nearby Port Malaga. over this weekend when docu. nental defense” and a minimizing bre” * the effect.of new weapons on one, ) 5 4 . f fs * . / . ‘ e i i [= 4 me ee SS, t+ 2 i ‘feet. | to prove it. was still rising. Dikes pro- were on the way to Bonners -Fer- tecting the town are ex-'y. From Coeur d'Alene, 21 ipected to hold the river . Br n 0 f e Open den. . a eters * lfective control’ from Brundage by - Service will be at 1:30 p. m.| pt. 305°°~ ‘ tions Commission and Civil Aero where neither will want to hit the} tages an ee at Rev. Louis Karkosky, will officiate saving of $75,000 a year when the resulted {rom revisions by the De- ether with hydrogen bombs since) _— ome Se iDefense Department revised, its fense Department of ils industrial the huge } - range bombers tario. er ere . have?" Service will be Tuesday {rom Tasmania Ave. died suddenly) at CITES RECOMMENDATIONS : officiating, ‘Burial will follow in Born in Clinton, Hoover commission which urged ‘ “ —be small wars, like Korea, pery Mt. Park. | Indiana he was # the President and his executive where the Army will have te do | | Administration Requests proved to meet these changes.'* ; : . ay Mrs. James H. Kilmer. In Sep, ter to Budget Director Perceval | associations to use identical John (Jack) E. Dryden | Born in Galt, Ontario on March iar : | batty of Dexter ova wo bith He asked for a report on prog- port forms used by such regulatory Contin From | ~~ - F 2 . ° ‘ = oe ED Mr. Dryden came to Pontiac (Wednesday from the Farley Ff-/ The White House cited the case nautics Board. retaliation would wipe out the ag-| One sister survives, Mrs. Doug- David N. Runyan forms used in the department's in-|security program. ; \Kirkby Fune Hi 9 pm. the Hurley Hospital in Flint /Sat- In his letter, the President cit- Or will the wars of the future | by gE aneralg ores gies f the son of Mary ‘agencies to “protect the public : the main fighting? The Army ur- May Be Cut Tomorrow “The accuracy of the Nike is ey a i jtember 1947 he married Mary Brundage, called for “increased | forms in preparing trade and in- ” . | aircraft,’ Col Davis concluded. | John (Jack) E, Dryden, 77, of 6, ‘6, 1879 he was the son of Mar- fk a . oF gras © Karocrend John Nite rss and recommendations for “ef-,agencies as the Federal Power ing into a huclear stalemate —| from Detroit and lived here 2 neral Home in Battle Creek. The of one industry which reported a, 5. Defense — savings to industry gressor too—then what place will las Campbell of Kitchener, On- dustrial security program. Ce | David N. Runyan, 45, of 26/N lk Aid Fi ht ne eee with the Rev. Duncan D. McColl urday. ed the recommendation of the, q —because of a nuclear stalemate | | : Vestal and Nor- from unnecessary reporting b argument then requires a bigger, Mrs. Thomas Hallinan March 19, 1929 he | Eisenhower declared that slash-, smalle man Runyan. On dens.” ats e, aruay. | Mrs, Thomas (Mary) Hallinan, ling red tape will not only help the The Air Force plays down the 78, of 84 Auburn Ave. died Sun-| married Sophia ae : role of the Army in the future day at the Sunset Rest Home after) Barnard here in tpublic but alsp “bring about better. Crucial Voti and blasts the Navy with its big @ two months’ illness. | Pontiac. linternal business management” IN Crucial Voting carriers and bombers. | Mrs. Hallinan was born in Spring-| Mr. Runyan throughout government. | The White House, in an ac-~ By RAYMOND WILCOVE — companying statement, said the RUNYAN | budget bureau has made ‘a vig- | 30 years. He, orous effort to cut the paper wor field Township on October 20, 1877) came to Pontiac NAVY GRIPES the daughter of Bridget Gallagher| from Clinton. This argument goes: The carriers and William Baldwin. Ind. and made are sitting ducks for enemy bomb-| She was married to Thomas/his home here {« ers which can spot them hundreds Hallinan St. Vincent De Paul HM iwas the general superintendent of| required’’ in official government of miles away with radar; Navy years ago. Mrs. Hallinan lived her the tool and die dept. at the Fisher! business with the public. bombers are far more limited in entire liie in Pontiac. She belonged| body Plant in Grand Blanc. range than Air Force planes and to Past Regent Daughters of Isa-| surviving begides his wife and : : past cut in military funds could reach only a limited num-|bella, League of Catholic Women, | mother ae sik een Nis “Al oo) ee ee one me seven in| _“m . a “s ‘ber of Soviet targets and then and Royal Neighbors of America. ghaw, Raymond R Runyan, Edna dustry Srpanica ees are helping in only if the carriers could get close Surviving are Sister M. Euphra-|gunyan all pf Pontiac, Mrs. Cas- the search for reducing the paper tomorrow's voting keep President Eisenhower's for- leign aid program largely intact It cited five important improve. 2% Sentiment mounted for a sharp Both sides marshaled forces for in the House She.is survived by her mother, part after 122 years of mingled informants said he quit over po- lost to Hedgman 6-0, 6-0; Phy]lis Mis: ee Bisher A bake Orion history. * © 8 ities oleic: Saganski (Hamt.) def. Saida Tut- ae a Se vs Dee Craduanen ee: Vee at | Rifai took offieg Jan, tle (Pont.) 6-1, 6-0: Saganski def. sane £50 uo us Mo: and Ken- ; rac pe EeEe Ones this aft- month-long riots pretesting -at- «BIGGEST PEACH SUNDAE’ Dariene Gould (Pont.) 60, 61 neth E, Hutchins of Pontiac. jerneon for some 320 Seniors wind, _ 5 vas ) . | Other survivors are four sisters, up business on the campus here pro-Western Baghdad Pact. Other q.., py he McKinley at least iMrs, James Murdick of Lak e‘for the Baptist college, It will re- flag hridge of the McKinley at leas The Weather Orion, Mrs. Don Bivens of Detroit, open for the summer session June Pett U.S. Whether Berens Report Mrs. Vern Pardo of Pohtiac, and 18 on a new campus in Win- PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partiy Fay Fisher of Clarkston_and two ston-Salem, 110 miles to the west. tloudy today threugl. temorres, Chance brothers, Lloyd Fisher of Keego| = ef ao brief shower this morning. scat- ‘ a tered thundershewers tonight and to- Harhor arid George Fisher 6f Lake} “perhaps 10 times the ‘heat’ of the sun's surface. As it rose it sucked up behind it sickly white steam, perhaps a mile wide and thick 8 after encugh ‘to resemble marble. Turkey and Pakistan, * e During Rifai's tenure, British Sir John Bagot Glubh was fired as commander of the. Arab Le- three minutes of the life of Chero- kee a mystery. But a thing like that can't be “Instead of the old saying of no morrow Warme rtoday, high near 34 - c - ~ “1 ; ' = Law tonight) S654) high ‘emerres (7°- Or ion. smoke without fire, our task is to gion, Jordan's British-financed 76. Southerly winds 10-15 miles an Service. will be Wednesday at,;make fire: without smoke.” said army. Hussein reportedly ordered. held in bendage, Soon it: was hour today beceming easterly 5-12 miles an hour tonight and variable scattered 1% p.m. from the Voorhees-Si- Britain's Minister of Housing shewers and mild, low 55. = - oe ———————— Glubb's ouster. | crushing the biggest peach sun- a : | dae in history over the top of the charcoal gray. cloud. The U.S. WEATHER BUREAU © blob rose and rose and the more merce | 4 it rose the wider it spread. { Date From Dept. of Today in Pomtiar owiehe temperature preceding 8 a tr 4 At 8 am: Wine velocity 15 mp} Directioin: Southwest In half an hour it was 100 miles Sun sets Monday at 7°82 pm uy nrises Tuesday at § 04 a: | : ; Moon rises Monday at $-)? pm across the top and moving with om- Beon!/se-e) Tuesiar pat ys 2852) inous majesty to the north and Downtown Temperat ‘the . ApH see o ie Cs oe a . a nortt west, Aree is the Bs | The notes I touchtyped. in dark- ite 208 ee 1pm seal ness lie before me There is a no- loam... 65 | tation of such ominous pre-bomb Qundavlic Peatiac | warnings as “in the event -of no (As recorded downtorn? fons , “ey e goggles Highest temperature £9 ee pe cope goggles Lowest temperature Pes or face to port. Hold pesition until ee ees re b3 further advised.""Thgn, there's a b ——— “space, and these ports: . ne Year Ago’in Pontiac | Highest temperature .. ee) EAT. FLASH. . west temperature WER . 41} cu = ‘ Pr : oy - _Mean temperature... ......... 603 HUGE FLASH, NEW SUN. Weather—Fair. — : SLIM POINTED SWORD. BIG Highest_and Lowest Temperatures Tivit waa el ae . BRIGHT ORANGE, LIGHTED Date in 84 Years b ( fe r A ) T ‘Pp WORLD #1 tn 1034 33 in 1683) ee - ~ | UP oe — apa || -caceaganee —— GOD. Sunday's Temperature Chart | or q 7 45 Memphis 85 67 all pren Night Th, “Sees You make strange notes in the 79-44 -Miami 62 73 ’ ? 5 | 81 44 Minneapolis 80 53 levees Low Temperatures Expected ee! = dark while the whole world seems 4 new Cfo! s . : ito be falling apart and the only 4 #2 Omaha a4 63 vt poe |comfort is a dim feeling, at long tsburgh 63-47 = é , ephote last, man appears to have made a by 3 tan ore WEATHER BUREAU FORECAST — It will be cated for the northern Rockies. Scattered Showers. weapon so peels ee Andicnde: #3 i os Macs Fs 20 warmer tonight east of the Mississippi and in the and thunderstorms will hit widéspread sections of | scribably awful that there caf nev- % 82 Washington ¢8 so} Geep squth, while slightly cooler weather is indi- the nation, 7, 8 | brook Foundation. Dr. Marquis served on the or- | Creek died Saturday in a Kala-|pisenhower has ordered govern-jreport-filling in the last business) | simplified; so also have been re-) tration supporters fought today ‘to: _| Saturday Those favoering a substantial re- ts on the almost |! irs. Collet Hill all of Clinton, | ¥ere consolidated into one, phys- «hree billion. dollars allocated for, A series of | : : all of ©es and forms used by employers incbnclusive votes Friday, when Schutt Funeral Home. Funeral pghtiac, Mrs. John Gamble of Str seeking occupational deferments the 32-member committee took a left the outcome Varieys motions were made at st the closed-door session 4o reduce military aid by sums ranging from Teenage |500 million to to one billion dollars. ‘Mozart—the Hard Way New Regime Formed .\:,":"" sms one be at 4 » Killed in Accidents (Continued From Page One) 1 iter four more were hurt fatally iwhen two cars hit head-on near| | Adrian, ‘FOUR KILLED % iposed budget of $1,495, have a public hearing prec First Public. Hearing | Tonight on City’s Budget . BIRMINGHAM—The city’s pro-| and the car behind it in the 144.55 will! fourth lane was unable to stop. eding| The car’s driver, Marvin Cor- Inelius John Duncos, 57, of 3788 | Earl L, Burwell, 24, and Herbert tonight's commission session. E, Baxter, 23, both of Adrian, and) The \Nola Rohbach, 41, and her hus- ‘band, Leland, 46, both issfield, ' : d, Leland, of ares 41,866 after expenditures. were fatally burt Saturday night; in a two-car, Head-on collisien én! U.S. 223 at Rome Center, nine! imiles northwest. of ,Adrian. | Elten Goldi, 51, of Trenton; hi i7-year-old son, Gary; Carol Mul-' jholland, 20, of Monroe, and Milton 23, of Dearborn, were, ‘Johnson, s considered by killed Saturday in a two-car pileup equipment. ‘on US. 24 in Redford Township)! : outside Detroit. D, Howard Saltzer, 63, of De- troit; his wife, Lena, 58; Keith Ryan, 21, of Toledo, Ohio; Wil- liam B. MeKean Jr., 23, of Par- | ris Island, 8, C., and Nancy Rob- | son, 19, of Pompano, Fla., were killed Friday night in an auto collision on E.S. ber, tween Muskegon “and Grand Rap- jids. -Mrs. Anna Amon, 52, of Capac, her car | 'was killed Saturday when ‘collidéd with another just Yale in St. Clair County. Rosemary Heller, 25, ohns, was hurt ~ fatally west o of St Hillsdale County. A man identified from papers on him as Arthur C. Arneson, 42, died Sunday in Detroit of injuries , suffered Saturday when he was | struck by a taxi, which police said, didn’t stop. ——- % James R. Ware, 23, af Onekema, Commission, Federal Cogimunica- Was killed Sunday when his car. ft a rural road about six miles) | | Police noted the thieves careful- le north of Manistee and hit a tree. 2 near Ann Ar- | Vernon Leroy Gauthier, 25; Dar-| lene Rowe, 16, and Donna Jean) |Hines, 25, all of Muskegon, died when their car and a train. col- ilided Friday night at Ravenna be- Sunday when a car in which she was rid-| ing collided with another on US. 127, two miles north of Hudson in ‘The report of J. H. Purkiss Jr., director of finance, which | accompanies the budget being commissioners and public tonight, says that the preliminary review does not pro- vide for additional personnel or Such increases suggested by de- partment heads would total $58,- |958.28, Purkiss reports. He sug- lges‘s their careful consideration. ‘June 11. Final hearing on the budget is Dredging of Nixon Pond is to be discussed at tonight's session. sidered tonight. handling by the city. t f “ithe traffic ordinance. * * * 15, .1011 Kennesaw, | owner, | ‘The pond’s silt and debris would be removed at the city’s cost, . says the agreement being con- It points up legalities between property own- ers around the pond and cost Putting into operation the new sewage disposal system will make the cleaning of the pond possible, | The attorney is reporting the, proposed swimming pool ordinance | back to the city commission to-| jnight, as well as an amendment to, A fall from a swing at Adams Playground resulted in face and, head abrasions for Nancy Doherty, | yesterday morning. She was taken to William | Beaumont Hospital, where she was! reported in good condition today. * * « Theft of several hundred dol- | _-» lars from the Birmingham Drug | Store safe and cash register was | reported by John Kasnick, | Clarence J. Sanko, 32, of Garden ly replaced beer cases in front of City, was injured fatally Saturday the window they had pushed open when his car went out of control and crawled through, and put back vand struck a tree | Duane C. Bowen, 18, of St. | Johns, was killed Saturday when hit by a car while alighting from a bus on M21 near St, Johns in in Dearborn ‘urday night. | * * _ the crow bar they used to force \locks on a rear door for their exit. | 'The break-in occurred over Sat- Charged with reckless driving is_ Anthony J. Cece III, .3932 Cum- Frank Osterman, 37, of Iron- ming, Berkley, 17, who has been wood, drowned Saturday when his driving eight months. Cece was ar- boat was swamped in rough water rested although his car was un- | Clinton County. | ninsula. Two other men managed) truck and another car. to swim to shore. Thomas: F. MeMillan, 67, of mel troit, drowned Saturday in Hub- bard Lake, 30 miles south of Al- pena, He afd a son-in-law, Robert | WASHINGTON (INS)—Adminis- | C. Becker of Grosse Pointe Woods, were thrown: into the water whe Becker was rescued. their smal] outboard boat capsized. | n on Lake Gogebic in the Upper Pe- scathed in an accident involving a Cece started across Woodward from Bennaville at 3:58 p.m. | | Friday, over ran the stop sign, | decided to back up but by mis- | take was not in reverse gear and shot forward into the third lane of Woodward, A truck approach- | ing in that lane swerved left,.. oe | o | oe | . os x “two | ore ah vad Twi “ITB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MAY 21. io a. 4 ; la, nA GL Codd ALI ie —— — orn AE ia Birmi : Nike ; ! wh a onhad ' 5 26 State Residents The Day in Birmingham ee budget calls for estimated|Garland, Detroit, was cut badly ‘revenue of $1,537,011, which would about the face but was released leave the city with an excess of later from Beaumont Hospital. The jtruck driver was Louis Devoogd, '4084 Junction, Detroit. | Cece is to appear in court Wednesday morning. | s* * 1 | ident, do club ts planning a June 1 ham High Twelve Club was Grand Rapids last weekend. President as the most outstanding state. Set : Newly elected officers of the ‘Supper Club of First Congrega- tional Church are Ted Sura, pres- Isenhart, secretary, and Jim Isham, treasurer. Bill Price is program chairman. The to wind up the season's activities. * * @ Thomas Campbell of Birming- third vice president of the state jorganization at the convention in Harold Gasser ported that the local club was hon- ored also by a plaque citing its weekly bulletin mailed to members justice picnic elected re- in the — $1.29 Value Sturdy steel construction, » dies wont crack inches, bottle extra) 98 N. Saginaw —tnd (—— — TONITE and TUESDAY ONLY!) Full ADULT SIVE LUNCH BOX 88° Holds standard pint bottle in = ld. te or split. l0m7Sau¢be =e han- Fest) fee MAIN FLOOR BARGA Infants’ Soft Flanneletie Gowns or Kimonos 59c Values Your choice, As- Norman Eugene Spencer, 22, of | Owosso, was crushed to death Saturday beneath the tracks of a Leads Police | e rth-mov achine | A 2.7 | Se Se urneas con- on 3 City Chase | struction project on U.S. 127 —Lands in Jail about two miles south of Mason. | Coroner Arthur B, Smith ruled aS! p accidental the strangulation deat of 10-year-old Shuler of Goodells, near Port Ht was playing with a rope on a chicken house caught around. the boy’s throat. Mrs..Margaret Philips, 60. of troit, was injured fatally Sunda ‘when she fell down the basement airs in her home. Pianist Plays | SPRINGFIELD, Vt. ®—Accom- ipanied by the Vermont State O chestra, Stephen Manse, 16, Ben- nington, played a Mozart piano concerto last night—the hard way. | As he was playing m the con- 'cert celebrating the 200th ann _'versary of Mozart's birth yea the rods supporting the foot pedals clanged to the floor. the use of his feet. ‘Admits Drunk Driving Pleading guilty today to a charge tempts to bring Jordan into the’ at that instant, for us on the jof driving while under the influence | | Sam Jones;by Staneslau Salami, before jot liquor, a Detroiter, members are Britain, Iraq, Iran, the curtain was drawn, Between/Jr., 41, of 1256 W. Elizaheth St., us and the conflagration sailed a|paid a $100 fine imposed by Pon-| Township Justice Helmar G. Stana- ‘towering cloud that made the next/tiac Municipal Judge Maruice E.| back t6 a charge of driving while | Finnegan. Samuel on. Smith said Samuel apparently a beam when he, slipped and one end of the rope h y police sav. | BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Paul obinson Wenz, 24, 731 Spencer, Ferndale, is spending 30 days in j County Jail. He was given the jail sentence and fined $100 plus $25 in court costs by Justice of the Peace Alva Richardson Saturday. | He led police in such’.a long jhigh-speed race. Friday that the _ engine of his three-week-old auto- mobile burned cut and stopped, Bloomfield Hills police, who fol- lowed .him at speeds up to 110 miles an hour, from Hickory Grove road on Woodward Avenue through Bloomfield Hills, Birmingham- and Troy streets for over half an hour were Sgt. Ted Banks anfi Patrol- man Leslie Irvin. “We couldn't said. “He wound Le i- tr when his keep up,’ around ‘northwest section of Birmingham for ten minutes with his lights off, and at 44 to 60 miles an hour.” Troy Police, who captured Wenz car stopped,. plan to ’ Irvin in the charge: him with reckless driving | He continued the piece without when he is. released from county |jail. Bloomfield Hills had charged ‘him with felonious driving. ; Pays Fine of $50 who pleaded guilty A $50 fine was paid Saturday of Milford, | Orion _'under the influence of liquor. ese. i= PARRAKEET «= “-« ie Jor the new PCL OWNEL for the | Canary | owner = At Your Pet Counter Kellogg's Fine Foods for Fine Birds are Distributed by er again be another great war. | HERMAN BROS., 302 Central Ave., Detroit, Mich. | sorted colors, con- trasting trims, Very soft material. yo, Ss y FULL DOZEN Suner-soft diapers, easi- er to wash faster to dry First quality diapers. Upholstered Seat & B a | ‘ Pai * in ech chro Save | $2.89 Value 1.59 Sizes 7 to 14 No-lroning cottons. Short sleeve shirt with matching peda) pushers ‘ool for summer Wear, ~ Lined Poplin colors & BABY NEEDS —Main TONITE G&G TUESDAY PRICES ~{nfants’ and Children’s Needs 4A: Regular $3.95 Value ‘CURITY’ Diapers 2 - Youth Chair Oisiec! $10.95 Value “6.88 Ts! er Chrome or As pictured, Youth Chair painted frames ded seat and back in choice of colors and Tuesday, - Jacket Size 2-6X SiMmM3..* ee — INS ° ack inted olce of me or Pad- tonight y 3° stylea, Floor ‘ Sparks-Griffin | : FUNERAL HOME.” *“Thought{ul_ Service” 46. Williams St. Phone 'FE 2-5842 24-Hour Ambulance Service ~ YOU SAVE °91.95! Automatic EE eee * “You Can't Beat ' This Deal Anywhere” Shop - Tonight = ‘all 9 p.m, ae Model AW-400 ' @ NORGE SUDS- SAVER— Saves hot sudsy water for re-use on second Price $27995 TO PAY! >] 3 33 ‘2 YEARS =‘ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! Wayne Gaber Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121. N. Saginaw St. OPN Sp we” «FE 5-6189 Nights ‘ti! 9 PM J HOME OWNERS! Ask us about: The NEW type of home owners’ insurance. policies in one with only one expiration date! FIRE—WIND—THEFT—LIABILITY—ETC. DWELLING AND FURNISHINGS SAVE UP TO 25% See or Call ‘MAYNARD JOHNSON GENERAL INSURANCE> 807 Community: Nat'l Bank Phone FE 4-4523 All your ‘shipping operations headed back toward normal now after settle THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 21, Jose TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR EDITORS Seen Se i tae JUNIOR EDITORS’ ORCHESTRA—1 : The Violin _This week we are going to bring you an orchestra a six Junior * when, Editors. They all wear red coats and caps tnitialed “J. E.’ they give concerts, and they sit in front of a musical decoration. They will help you to know their instruments. First here is Molly, violins belong to the section called “strings,” instruments played with a bow, -such as violins, violas, doublebasses, or with the hands, as a harp is. Violins were first made in Cremona, a little town in Northern Italy, in the 17th Century. “Among the great violin makers of the past, whose violins are very precious today, Guarieri. ‘ Color this picture with crayons, parts carefully. Fold back the ends of the base on the dotted line §0 Molly will Attach her right arm to her shoulder through the Then Molly can sit up straight. hole indicated with a brass fastener or bent pin. raise her bow and bring it down across the strings. Save the cutout for an orchestra collection. (This idea was first submitted by Betsy Helf, Little Chute, Wis. H you have an idea for Junior Editors send it in care of this newspaper and it may win you $10. Violet Moore Higgins; AP Newsfeatures). Tomorrow: The Harp. = ——————S Propaganda Leader Resigns His Position WASHINGTON (INS)—The U.S Information Agency has announced @ltitude of Blacksburg. the resignation of J. R. Poppele| ‘About as head of the Voice of America. | Vocchia. * The USIA said that Poppele, 58 is quitting effective July 15 to) “No, only 2.000." return to private practice as a radio consultant in New York. wrong with my _cake.” Poppele joined VOA two years ~ = ago after more than 30 years of association with radio station WOR ® in New York and then running his ewn radio consultation firm His service was praised in a ; letter accepting his resignation by Theedore C. Streibert. head of USIA Poppele said he was Icaving be-/} cause he felt that the objectives outlined by Streibert two years ago have been * eccompliahed”” ‘Did You Make an Error? BLACKSBURG, Va. lad , 5,000. feet?” she asked. Lake Shipping ‘Normal’ MONTREAL WW — Great Lakes” which on the ment of wage disputes. threatened to halt traffic inland- waterways Food-O-MAT 740 cori 69. TALL CAN PET MILK It re LYW-O-P°°4 =~ as Pauley’s Light Meat é TUNA §& Lad Cans $ oi Only 1 Ay | SUPER-MARKET U. S Choice ‘ Lb. Cc é SIRLOIN STEAK | 69 S : . - Bem T-Bone 3 , Lb. c eq STEAK ....... 19 : a Porterhouse m + STEAK....... PARD DRY DOG MEAL A Ib. 29: pkg. LINUVW-YIdNS who plays the violin. In an orchestra the consisting of stringed) cellos, and) were Stradivari, Amati, and remembering to make Molly's! coat and cap red, and then paste it down on cardboard. Cut out the | Come Now, Good Lady— uw — The. y who called down manager - Bill Lavoechia wanted to know the 2,000 feet, " replied La- “Are you sure it-isn't close to V More fine car buyers are changing to Caught i in the Till hand in the till by IRON RIVER — An unem- penski, Getting married? | A successful marriage should begin on a sound financial basis. As your married friends will tell you, it is equally important that it should sfay on such a basis, | Of course, you have probably given a lot of thought-to the cost of furnishing and maintaining a home . . . and to food and clothing costs. Have you also given thought to insurance protection for your wife? “You will find that Life insurance is a very flexible means to provide such protection and also to help achieve financial security. As your Metropolitan Representative insurance to fit the requiremerits you may have now and in the future .. . for family protection, for Mortgage. coverage and for Retirement funds. You will also want to have Hospitalization and Surgical insurance to help will be glad to explain, there are various types of Life’ | the 17th century. \ \ tavern owner| iyear. Kopenski said he, had en-| The first Dutch Fair ever held Alvin Dominici and Police Chief tered the tavern several times by in New Zealand has been staged Ralph Larock. The trap was ar- | jimmying a\ window. ployed grocery clerk, Louis T. Kolranged by Dominici who has lost ; ae icharge with: breaking and entering|false fronts for Dutch houses. 23, was caught with hisi$1,000 to a sneak theif i in the pasti at hight, \ . He was/in Wellington, complete with Ru i pay medical expenses for you and your wile. Insurance service, the Metropolitan way, will help you to develop an insurance program tailored to your particular needs. Moreover, your Metropolitan Repre- sentative knows that even the most carefully planned programs need constant review and revision to keep pace* as your family needs change. Call your Metropolitan Representative today and let him help you start your marriage on a sound financial basis. Remember... * Metropolitan service is as local as Main Street... as close as your phone | 1 Medison Avenve 1007 West Huron St. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN DISTRICT Mr. Lou Vincler, Manager SCOPT RIGHT 1000— METROPOLITAN LIFE IN@QuMaNcE courany METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY (A MUTUAL COMPANY) — _ New York 10, New York : FEderal 5-9491 “Then something else must be! praise this car's other fine qualities. new styling. But after owning Lincoln, they LINCOLN The longest, lowest, most powerful Lincoln ever built FE agg WR a ts seman People who know fine cars are changing to Lincoln mission can be so smooth... . and those who take long trips say that this Lincoln makes the 2 Center Slice o* HAM...... ee. 50 Ft. Plastic $479 7 = $100 Garden Hose Hart Brand Foods Lawn Seed 1 PEAS APPLE SAUCE : » CUT.GREEN BEANS New Golden _ KIDNEY BEANS Vivoro a $98 LIMA BEANS © CRZAM CORN gordo. = : Food-O-MAT 74 SUPER-MARKET Lincoln-this year than ever before in Linc oln’s entire history —because they recognize that this longest, lowest, most powerful Lincoln of all tine ts unmistakably . the finest-in the fine car field. Naturally, most of these people are turning to Lincoln because of its fresh, trend-setting 40 West Pike St. They tell us—time and time again—about Lincoln’s exceptional handling ease. They're surprised that such a big, roomy car can be so effortless to drive—and that wives actually prefer this Lincoln over the family’s smaller car. ‘They tell us’ about Lincoln's outstanding performance, too—in dozens of ways. Those | who have never experienced Turbo-Drive are astonished to find that an automatic trans- ride seem so much shorter. And they tell us about roadability. They like the way Lincoln rides so firmly through a curve—and the freedom of taking any road they choose .. . instead of avoiding the bad ones. If You've been thinking this is your kind of fine car, stop in and see us. We'll put a new Lincoln at your disposal any time you say. CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, INC. - Phone FE 2-9167 Ve Pa ner pein iecerarnret = tap ha, « ve “ex . ae a ee Lay) UVG ¢ Unig Livi - “THE! PONTIAC PRES : Pontiac 1, Mich! j Trade Mark Defy Except Sunday 3° Published yest en Powsuc Passs Building ° FPrrgcgsaLp preaisen ‘nua Publisher Howar Brovr o H. Serge i, eet si Frosicen Viee ” Presid ent @ « end Advertising areetas Business Manaeer ‘ Roeser) Se Cireulation Director ‘Treasurer General yon Rr, r) edie gap eel promotion Manager onm W. Frrec : Pr. Secretary and Editor Retati yceoruine “Mer. ‘Tank, Groacs C Ipman, Pee cag miter Classified Manager Entered ‘at Post Office, Pontiac, as second class matter MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoc: ri ts entitled exclusively to the use for ee a vr local news printed in this news- paper as well as all AP news dispatches a ~ Tue Pontiac Pesss is delivered by carrier ‘for 40 cents ts not avallable by mall peer and MEMBER R OF oF AUDIT BUREAU oF CIRCULATIONS MONDAY, MAY 21, 1956 Personal Message to | Two Michigan Editors Among former Press associates are one Epwarp HayHow and a certain, Date Starrorp. The former is the publisher of The Hillsdele Daily News and the latter of The Green- ville News, stout Michigan publica- tions made immeasurably stronger by forceful leadership. * * * However, Messrs. Hayhow and Stafford share one glaring, in- controvertible weakness, When it comes to football, they are mutually blinded, bigoted, opin- ionated and prejudiced as far as the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor is concerned. * * * They attended MSU. Or was it MSC? Mebbe MAC. kt ke They have a well defined, care- fully nurtured and full-flowering aversion for the University of Michigan on the football field. Otherwise they can take the place or leave it alone with manly for- bearance. The pair works rapidly from a slow, even burn to com- plete explosion on East Lansing- Ann Arbor gridiron activities. * * x ‘Therefore, The Pontiac. Press, which looks upon them both fondly and with an affectionate eye is happy to reprint an Editorial from the Omaha World Herald, one of our great American newspapers. We re- produce these comments, in part, on “the University of Michigan (The University, that is, at Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County) purely for the enlightenment, education and con- sideration of Mr. HayHow and Mr. STAFFORD, “The Michigan Alumnus maga- zine told recently what happened to the members of the powerful outfit that finished first in the nation in 1248, Thirty-four footballers won let- ters. All of them graduated. Six went on to earn advanced degrees. Two \ studied in England and one went on \to an Eastern law school. “The two platoon system was op- erating, so the magazine traced the careers of the 22 top players. Here's what they are doing now: “Three are doctors of medicine, all specialists. A fourth is half way through medical school. “Two are architects and both have won distinction. Two are lawyers. Six dre in the automobile business, two in real estate, three ‘in various busi- ness enterprises.’\One is a radio and TV sports director and two, -includ- ing Pete Ettiorr of Nebraska, are football coaches. “Not a ‘football bum’ in the lot. Not one who isn’t doing well socially and financially. Not one who isn’t a good citizen. The Michigan Alumnus is understandably proud of the rec- . ord. _ \- “Nebraskans will be interested be- cause Mr. Evtiott is now in charge'of the university football team. He has certain definite ideas about the kind of boys who should play on his team and ‘the football bum’ is not among them.” * * * Hillsdale and Greenville — please copy. Let’s Also Make It Oakland County Week This week is to be observed as Michigan Week, when we are urged to do a little extra boosting for our state. . It Is suggested that we take this " eccasion to do some boosting for our « ~ t reason to boost. | Among our state’s 83 counties, § own county. No other area has more there is none that has more of the essentials to make its resi- dents prideful of the place where they live than has our own Oak- land County. Even away back in Indian times ‘the Orchard Lake warriors had an expression to cover the matter. Ww > * * * It as “‘Des-kre-shos-kre,” and it meant “Everything is here.” Over a century later, during which time the world made more progress than in all its previous history, the wisdom of those red men now is ap- preciated more than ever before. here.” residents or within its-borders. Located in the very heart of the greatest industrial area in the entire — There is no other section In ournarea today “everything is of of our state that has such an appealing lure, either to its own to the visitors world, we still are unspoiled as a residential section. * * * We have schools, churches, cul- tural atmosphere, civic bodies and everything else ideal living. No other area in the entire that approaches nation has the lakes, wooded hills, . appealing landscapes and entranc- ing vistas that nature has be- stowed upon us. - Our industry has made us great, but has not encroached upon our natural blessings. Michigan ranks near the top ‘among the tourist states, and none of its 83 counties has done more to place it in that posi Hon than has Oakland.” If, as the state slogan for this week says, “It’s a great to live in Michigan,” we have every reason to add, ‘Especially in Oakland County.” If each. of us would just writ ~ one friend and tell them about what a great place Oakland County is to live in, that would make it a real “Oakland County Week.” World's Papers Survey Shows Magnitude of Their Present Circulation hasn't a daily paper. ' Safety belt: What a gal gives an eager beaver. A recent survey shows that the world’s circulation of newspapers has reached 255 million copies. Our own nation, with 55 million for dailles and 25 million for week- lies, accounts for a large share. Today in Africa, where total illiteracy prevailed only a few years ago, there now are many dally and weekly newspapers. But the lately made famous ‘country of Monaco The muskrat > houses and blackb nests, according to Gerry Manford irds’ of Pontiac Lake, have been flooded out “by the high waters. : Living beside Waterford, Perry Frankfort the Clinton. River in phones that he now keeps a boat tied _to his front porch. of their Methodist church Our idea of real service is that rendered by some women at a Pontiac church. A woman phoned them to go to her home near the church and see if she had forgot- ten to turn off the heat on her oven in which she feared two cakes would be ae She hadn't. My Clarkston scout sends word that the Rev. Robert M. Atkins is ret after many years in the ministry, of which was with Pontiac Central. on Michigan’s auto - Sign noticed in a publie park: “A litter'bug, a fire bug or a van- “dal bug is a bugaboo.” ‘ ~ coment ring part Thanks for the numerous phone calls and letters poking fun at the “Water Wonderland” license (plates. “A Birmingham epistle suggests that a life preserver also be pictured on them: Verbal Orchids to— of 9 Cooley St.; Mrs. Mary J. Groher eighty-sixth birth Mrs. Milan Vliet of Clarkston: eighty-first birthday. Claud L. Kinney of Milford; ninetieth birthday. ¥ of Fenton; golden. wedding. & Mr. and Mrs. Georj;: Anglen Mrs. Margaret Wilson of Walled Lake; eightieth birthday. day. “hag been conquered almost antl inning . ee wiES mores Still i in the Wind. Tunnel David Lawrence Says: . U. N. Fails to Secure Moral Support From Nations Recognizing Red China WASHINGTON — Egypt is the first member of the United Nations to recognize the government of Red China since the Korean War. This simple fact tells the tragic story of how the United Nations has failed to secure even among its own members acceptance of the moral principle that a gov- ernment, which is an aggressor must atone for its crime or show in some way its repentance for an evil deed. For unless mora] law can pre- vail, nations will inevitably resort again to military Yorce to deal with aggressors. Today the extension of recogni- tion to Red China is a violation of the principle that the aggressor must not be given moral support. The record showg that any gov- ernment. this side of the Iron Cur- tain which recognized Red China did so late in 1949 or early in 1950— the last being Indonesia on April 13, 1950—but all of them before the aggression in Korea and be- fore Chinese Communist interven- tion occurred in the later months of 1950. Among the governments which had previously intended rec- ognition are Great Britain, Israel, the Scandinavian countries, the Netherlands, Switzerland and eight other free nations. “. Press, Bontia told in nar- © hour hand that moves ~ ties the wheat in the - Mountaineer—C it-yourself fan. A HEARING AID fithout CORDS ‘no one-else to do it for him. MIRACLE-EAR BY DAHLBERG USES THIS TINY BATTERY FOR Hear at Ear Level. U POWER pl ry i? A. in p ' i. g and movement. No cords on the neck or body. No clothes noise. Women can wear low neck- lines—men can wear sport shirts. There is no tell-tale _ dangling cord. ; Comfortable, easy to wear. the small three transistor Miracle-Ear weights one-half eo he ounce. ‘ e MIRACLE-EAR is the answer for the many who need hearing help but have been reluctant to wear a hearing aid... or it can bring new freedom to the experienced user. . HEAR ACAIN! SEE IT! TRY IT! THERE 1S NO OBLICATION Phone for Appointment in Your Hame or at Our Otfice™ FITZPATRICK PHARMACY — TWO STORES | 33 W. Huron—Ph. FE 2-8383 of 302 State Bank Bidg. FE 3-717) S. W. Williamson. Hearing Aid Specialist ~ C. e % ; ‘ 5 , . : ! ‘ CK riginal Vo-it- Yourself Man %,! é a Cs 2 HAWK, N. C. Ww — The moun-; He had to be. If he couldn't} The tradition that he can do any-/pretty rocks” again—rough smalljthan 30 stubborn years, he is rec- taineer ig’ America’s’ original do+|do a thing for himself, there was thing he sets his mind to — all besa and by himself—is still bone- deep in the Southern highlander,| | whose greatest pride is his rugged) |independence. be * s | Such a man is Roby M. Buchan-| ‘an, the self-taught Tiffany of the hills, All alone and by himself he ‘became the greatest jewel crafts-| man of the Blue Ridge Mountains. | ‘His gems are prized by collectors jfrom New York City to India. | During the summer about 1,000 |visitors a month come to his rude itar papef workshop shack — it’s “20 miles up a dead end road"'— |to watch Roby cut and polish the ‘gem rocks he bulldozes himself (Out of the hills. SALES ARE SECONDARY It is a matter of complete in- difference to Roby whether they buy or not, here and sit and talk while I ble marketing the 500 to 600 rings, bracelets, pins and brooches he ‘makes each year, all done by; hand. He isn't interested in large! scale production, “Tm not trying to run Tiffany from what they do," Roby, whose keen blue eyes at TORNADO as this word becomes more common and well known in our area, it becomes increasingly apparent that there is . . . --No Tornado-Proof Area-- they can hit anywhere and there {s nothing you can do to prevent them . you can only: © Protect your family @ Insure Your Home ¢ Insure Your Furnishings Don't Wait Until Too Late 51 outmatch the faded blue in his overalls, fell in love as a boy with “the pretty ‘tains here. , « * * \ “My father—and his father be- fore him—was a mica miner,"’ he said. “Often they'd bring home ‘pretty pebbles they found in the mines, and I loved to study them." Roby finished only the eighth grade in school. At 15 he ran away and lived three years in the West. ia “IT just like to have ‘em come! work,” said he, Roby has no ines Ld ® or anybody else out of business” (3 Ou Fj htin eee) eet = joins abies he said. “‘What I do is different! There are about 350 varieties of Senate Body Seeking | stones and minerals in the moun- I Federal, v cease 21, eke | "Freed Soviet POWs Seek Entry-to US. NEW YORK ®—The New York) Times said today that Poles and| Balts long prisoners in Soviet la-| He was paid $20 for the first/bor camps have written to rela-| 20 other kinds of gems. igem he succeeded in cutting. To-|tives in the United States that they, * * «@ lday he gets up to $2,300 for aihave been released and may be In his mind's eye he could see|brooch. Sometimes, when heturns @ble to emigtate to the United the imprisoned beauty | S : THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDA chunks of sapphire, moonstone, amethyst, ruby, aquamarine, and ognized as a master lapidary. glowing out a fine stone that catches his States. deep within the rough stones —jown eye, he refuses to sell it at| . * * ; | stones that had to be cut and pat-jany price, | A Washington dispatch to the terned and polished to set that) «; ,; TA F newspaper also said: hidden beauty free. Roby mmade| a, ROTEL detec asincetel State Department officials who up his mind he had to learn the has built up a personal collection | Teported the development said’ art of doing this or life wouldn't that would make the eyes of a about a dozen letters from tor be right for him. _ |Texas multimillionaire’s wife bug| Me" Prisoners had come to their I wrote away to 50 jewelers in out in emerald envy. attention. The writers were) said big cities and asked them what Roby lives simply in a neat to have explained that =e United to do,” Roby recalled. “TheYiwhite cottage in the nearby hills, ape visas emigration was pos wrote back that, considering/ang money doesn’t ride his mind.|"!¢: : where I was, I'd have to learn. toi Two signs in his small workshop do it on my own. by a bubbling creek tell his phil- ‘LICKED THE ROCKS’ osophy. Fe fants Roby did. He was so ignorant, ean = Seen and bees at first that he tried “to lick the) One sign says, “We lick POCKS, 1g, he ee gees fe Usnedl rocks,” as he calls it, by holding,W€ buy rocks, we sell rocks, es : : stone in one hand while at-/“e don't throw rocks.” - ‘tempting to cut it with a chisel) The other sign is a quotation: | held in the other, * “He who works with his hands At Long Last ‘said the Soviet Union and its Sat- jellites had already permitted some * Ld * but’ Stat |mented with crude tools, home- But he who works with his hands,|of patient waiting, has a post on made techniques. Now, after more! his head, and his heart—is an art-|the powerful Senate Finance Com-| ist.’ mittee today, filling the vacancy Few would deny that Roby Bue- |left by the death of Sen. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky, Lewd Writings | The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP PONTIAC rocks" he found. State Laws. on Licentious Literature. WASHINGTON \W—A coomen'| tion of federal and state laws is! t called for by Senate investigators to combat a 300-million-dollar-a-| year racket they say has been) The State Department officials actual. reduction or retraction He read every book he could a laborer. He who works with his| WASHINGTON (INS!—Sen. Paul: find on the subject. He experi-/hands and his head, is an artisan.! Douglas (D-Ill), after several years | The “mercy seat" was a golden | Clement 'C. Moore wrote his plate resting on the Ark of the poem, “The Night Before ‘Christ- ovenant on which blood of sac- man,” as a Christmas present for rificial animals: was sprinkled. {his two daughters. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Does Both— Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N. Y, (Special) — | problem!” And among these suf- For the first time science has | ferets were a very wide variety found a new healing substance | of hemorrhoid conditions, some of with the astonishing ability to 10 to 20 years’ standing. shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve All this, without the use of pain-—without surgery. narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- In one hemorrhoid case after | gents of any kind. The secret is another, “very striking improve- | a new healing substance (Bio- ment” was reported and verified | Dyne*)—thediscovery ofa world- by doctors’ observations. famous research institution. Al- Pain Was relieved promptly. ready, Bio-Dyne is in wide use And, while gently relieving pain, ( Advertisement ) for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in suppository or ointment form called Preparation H.* Ask (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all —this ‘improvement was maintained in cases where doctors’ observations ' were continued over a period of [many months! ~ In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to | makesuch astonishing statements as ‘Piles have ceased to be a Pp DOCTORS PRESCRIBE SPECIAL. LAXATIVE TO EASE e@We PAINFUL ELIMINATION WHILE SHRINKING PILES The makers of Preparation H also make Petro-Sylliunr®, a special type laxative prescribed by doctors for hemorrhoid sufferers. Softens hard dry stool and assures easy elimination without pain. Ask for etro-Syllium, Preparation H suppositories or Preparation H ointment with spe- cial applicator. Preparation H is soldatall drugstores. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. “Keg. UR. Pet. ort, A Sample of the Savings REDUCED °61” for individually sealed convenient . Then the memories of his native mountains called him home to, Stay. | He got a job in a grist mill.’ ~ H.R. Nicholie INSURANCE AGENCY 49 Mt. Clemens Phone FE 2-1372 MELEWIS... fine furniture hands, and he began studying ‘the ooo ooo — ee eee Ml IRON 5-Pc. DINETTE SETS Your Choice a $4.00 Down * LEWIS... fine fuenitur ~ ||| @ 28% 42" Top—Height 2912” © Choice Limed Oak or Walnut Grained Tops r : With al @ No-Scuft Tipped Feet aa) veneered REGULAR °49.95 SAVE *12” | @ Undertrame Construction for Strength | x @ Textured Plastic Seats—Wipes Clean | @ Choice of Colors | WITH WIRE BACK CHAIRS The subcommittee, headed by | Sen’ Kefauver (D-Tenn), said) | built up by “loathsome and lech- erous purveyors of. pornography.” | In a Tl-page report on a na-/ tionwide investigation, the Senate) Time ofteri hung heavy on his| Juvenile Delinquency subcommit- |tee said last night “a very large ipercentage’’ of this pornographic | output is reaching teen-agers. | * * * much of ‘it is distributed by ‘smut | peddlers” lurking around schools. | It called on the federal govern- ment to halt importation of sala- cious material and to block its \distribution through the mails and its transportation in interstate jcommerce. ' It urged both stafe and federal governments to enact laws provid- ing stiffer jail sentences and fines. The subcommittee reported: a relationship between what it jcalled the “almost unbelievable rapidity” with which sex crimes ihave increased and ‘‘a mushroom | ‘ing growth in the production, dis- itribution and sale of pornographic ;materials.”” | |INSIDIOUS EFFECT f Its report said that ‘the most} jinsidious effect of present-day |pornographic materials is the por- trayal of abnormal sexual behav- ‘ior as being normal. Perversion ‘for profit thus wrecks the chances. of the impressionable adolescent, ito achieve a normal healthy re-| lationship upon reaching matur-) " * *« @ i | “The quantity and quality of the! jmaterial beggars description." the, jsubcommittee said. “It is pees \depraved, nauseating, despicable, | demoralizing, destructive and ca-| pable. of poisoning any mind at) any age.” he subcommittee proposed the establishment of a national advis-: Chairs ——ory crime commission as a clear-| jing house of information on por: ‘nography, narcotics and other law violations : Artificial Insemination | ‘Condemned by the Pope ROME (INS) — Pope Pius XII has condemned.-artlficial insémina- |tion as “intmoral and absolutely ilicit.”" « : The Pontiff made thé pronounce- .'ment in reply to a question for guidance on the matter of tes jtube babies put forward by the ‘world congress of fertility and ster- lity. The scientists, who have been meeting in Naples. traveled to Rome to hear the Pope speak. Settles Out of Court ESCANABA ) — A ssotoo0 out of court settlement was made to Mrs. Gildo F. Meni; 33, of Ne- - gaunee, in her suit for damages against the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Railroad, Mrs. Meni's husband, 34, was killed Jan. 6 when his car collided with a DSS&A train west of Michigamme. Mrs. Meni as seriously injured in the crash, . VISIT of CALL MICHIGAN FIRST AID - for a | SICK ROOM and INVALID BEDS — MEDICAL and FIRST AID SUPPLIES im Uf 2-3027 JO 4-6847 - | 1621 S. Weedward Ave. " ‘3 Doers North of. 10-Mile Royal Oak | Park Mice | Free | | Rear Pay Only | i of 10% Store Down Brand New 1956 Model 10 Cu. Ft. PHILCO REFRIGERATO A) As Little as 25¢ » © 88 WITH @ TRADE a Day on Our Meter Plan! © 15.7 Sq. Ft. Shelf Area | NO Full 5-Year Warranty poised Giant Freezer Holds 45 Lbs OOW New Philco Long-Door Design Full Width Chill Drawer Free Delivery and Installation . 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AY 21, road all Nol inishes Talk With Reds Take off those , : French Premier Silent. ee ) 99 S About Soviet Rebuffs on Algerian Proposals Back home from Moscow talks, Premier Guy Mol- let had nothing to say publicly, ‘today about Soviet rebuffs to his. jovertures on the Algerian crisis. | ‘He planned to make a detailed| ireport to President Coty and the: Ic ‘abinet. I. | Ld Ld * i | “Such trips are useful for peace,”’ Mollet said on his return. He added that they “aid in mak- ing disap pear the climate of mis-, (trust | The PARIS (fH — Algerian’ bloodshed c6nt in- IDISCOUN OPEN MONDAY [and FRIDAY NIGHT | 5-Pe. Sectional Outfit HOUSE OPEN TONIGHT Lasko Automatic TOASTER oe eee $435 Whistling 5 c FREE! TEA KETTLE with every Sectionat | 16-Pe. Pyrex DINNERWARE .. $1” power mowrn 93 7 Outtit! road. Better take it easy—enjoy all the scenery, aboard a smooth-riding Greyhound. You'll see more—save money, often get there sooner than any other way! For example; . . pans one Way Bowed ‘Trip | g Louisville, Ky, . . . . « . 9 $ 9.65 $17.40 Toronto, Ont. ese ete S ices 13.05 Memphis, Tenn. . . . . . 5 16.35 24.95 Bay City, Mich. . . . . 14 2.30 4.15 P Winston-Salem, N.C... 2 . 6 16.70 30.10 New York, N.Y. . . .. . Ii 16.35 29.45 Fares do not include U S$. Tar. Greyhound Travel! Extras: VACATION PLANNING SERVICE INDIVIDUAL—ESCORTED TOURS DEPENDABLE CHARTER SERVICE LOW COST PACKAGE SHIPPING GREYHOUND TERMINAL 124 N. Perry St. FE 4-2595 Travel Bureau FE 4-2596 —or see Your Independent Travel Agent ANDO OF COURSE (7 COSTS LESS BY GREYHOUND. Genuine Conventional WASHER a Now Only... ued without letup. In Algiers, : French vt “ah " ae qd rae Children's Wood 3] 95 alist THIGerS Kile our en, $i acta, women and seven children all ROCKER Seeage Arabs—sesterday in one village They also told of finding the bod Sunbeam $! 95 ies of 20 -young French soldiers STEAM IRON — Jambushed 25 miles outside Algiers. | on The four days of Moseow talks) a = . jended Saturday on a jarring note, | ‘ : re Plastic Covered 9 Cc caused largely by conflicting views ‘ 4 ; HASSOCK SOs 2B ] lon Algeria. | . , . | zs i" * mmmarizing! Lawson arm 2-pc. sectional 8-Cup West Bend $4195 : e i communique summarizing, y fn ae : ; E : = Keep Your Eyes on the Scenery Instead of the Road the talks was delayed four hours!, MNIGHE SHIR —The armored fin sturdy eee eee $ COFFEE MAKER ts by wrangling. The communique ne : ial bs — * < é The only way to really see America is close-up . . .. along our = iise|fiaaid tiovoutstanaiag (problems job than most, but that wasn't the G matching cocktail table, Arthur Godfre “ reason for his appearance The | beautiful lam 0 y ; magnificent highways, over the “Main Streets” of our small were solved, Mollet failed to Win (nicht clanked through Minne- plus a beautiful lamp. $9.37 DOWN and CBS invites you to pick Soviet support for the French caum- erie ade . i * : sek towns, the lovely residential boulevards of our great cities. But [Sovie dace oh ek dadigeler apolis Hone yw U's plant to drama- FREE! up your FREE Sortilege per- - you miss it all when you're forced to keep your eyes on the independence itize National Job Safety Week, 5-Pc. Breakfast Set fome. At a Kremlin. reception closing ; the visit, Communist party chief He Stole the Mailbox,’ Khrushchev proposed a_ toast to — Post Office Knows |the Arabs and all people strug- ghng for independence” Premier) pATERSON, N.J. (—The case lof the mailbox has been Bulganin joined in the toast. * «* solved. MERCHANDISE SURPLU ' GRAVE MARKERS | MONUMENTS 20% to 40% OFF “stolen” It was found in the post ® | Even the Soviet and French ver- ‘sions of the communique dealing offite. } with Algeria differed. The French! A resident had translation said the Russian ex- ; i that semeone in a’car had stopped pressed hope that France “in the be Ppe liberal spirit which guides it’? 4nd taken the mailbox. He noted could selve the Algerian problem. the Ticense number. The Soviet version expressed hope’ Police learned the box was for a solution by France ‘acting picked up to be replaced by a in a liberal spirit.” inew red, white and blue job phoned _ police Here’s One for the Birds || — They’ll Stay in Nest | LITTLE FALLS, NJ. -| |Here’s one for the birds. ~ i) | Construction has been held up|} ‘on the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben- | oie Yuppa because three smail |]| birds afe nesting in a window frame } ; The birds woyld be bric ked in if | the mason didn’t stop, Benedict's bird loving papa. | Vincent, ordered the work halted The elder Yuppa can make the order stick because his son-in-law, | Salvatore Colletti, ‘contractor erecUPE Passaic, is the | the house. ON ALL Quality Granite MEMORIALS : — seme NO MONEY 3eautiful, enduring Northern Granite . .. Polished finish front, back and top. Lettered and carved. Full 5-ft. size. A memorial of distinction. § 8() WITH | NO MONEY | Tw! } per Month DOWN | BIG SIZE 4-FT., 4-IN. 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All com- - pletely sound and flawless. ts COMPANION MARKER Guaranteed eer lanting Gea F | ; weather-resistant... | | 36” Long, 10” Wide, 16” High z cl You'd expect to pay $160.00 31 cnves _ |ROEBUCK Come in and SAVE $32.00 REMEMBER-—Sale Ends MEMORIAL DAY, g I 28 May 30th Others as Low as $60.00 ° court House—>L_] | Office and Plant Open Daily 8 A. M. io 8 P. M. — Sunday 1 to 5 P. M. PONTIAC GRANITE & MARBLE CO. G.E. SLONARER 2 SON | you PAY ONLY Phone «0 ) FEderal 3-7114 MURON STREET FE 2-1800 Pe pc es em ee cai ii a ia ak Nil i a a # y Vd had been Washington's for a scant a ~ | | } | ' TWENTY-TWO. _THE PONTIAC EarsS MONDAY. MAY’ 21,: Tose ' . | e Ma 5 Pi h Get wW ‘A , Only Redlegs—Phillies& Split —. 7 Thy - W 6 ouble Winners i in Maj ors } ASSOCIA 7 00p ( ion ne ef dy By THE TED PRESS i in for a pon lg and Rey oR a total of 54 for the year, twice, 6-1 and 51 Jc Bob Lemon | Bobby /Bragan’s upstarts from his average to second only while splitting a pair at Philadel- 'winnin his sixth straight complete * After Mayor William W. Donald-; Singles by Fletcher Davis and) Pittsburgh, with-Dale Long hitting to St. Louis’ Rip Repulski. phia. The Redlegs won the first ame ie Mike at th are son pitched a perfect strike to/Cecil Kaiser, along with an error, the long ball, have revived sag-- Bob Friend and Ronnie Kline for Art Fowler 51 and the Phillies 8 “ * Towing Charley Irish, General Motors and|gacrifice, stolen base, and field-| ging Forbes Field attendance and. " * « |Squared matters 6-4 on homers by & four-hitter in the second game. | Elks No. 723 hung up victories as/er’s choice, produced two runs for ecramy ed the National League put the Braves through their paces Del Ennis, Willie Jones and Andy|Bobby Avila and Vic Wertz hit Pontiac's Class A City Baseball/the Jets in the Ist frame. race. ; . |with a pair of coniplete games. It Sano Se SA S ‘home runs. League got under way Sunday aft-' nine men batted for the Elks I -_. |was the sixth victory for Friend, eeW tork rankees beat’ Boston went hit crazy at Chi- ernoon at Wisner Field. in their fruitfull 4th inning, The. Pirates drew their largestjtabbed by many baseball men as the Kansas City Athletics 42 with cago, bombing, the White Sox with The Mayor and Irish, president) waich broke a 1-1 tle and put the crowd in five years Sunday when,‘'the best pitcher in the majors"’ noes Carey driving in three runs 45 hits in the 12-5 opener and then of the Pontiac Baseball Federa- cai at alder the andea 32,346 turned out to watch them and the third for Kline. with a homer and double. Johnny, squeezing past Bob Keegan by a tion, formed the first battery to of- ~_ The ClO bounced back with triy the league-leading Milwaukee! St. Louis lost a chance to take Kucks had a shutout until the o1 margin in the second game. ficially open the 1956 season. five runs in the 6th, but the yi in a doubleheader 6-3 and'the lead by dropping two to New ee phen noe ee finally ned 28 kie Jensen hit a homer in each |York'2-0 and 5-2. Brooklyn made 'Cued him after two runs scored. game, winning the second with a aga Pemaga dy GMC ca aus en poop — /Long hit two home runs, his up for lost time by winning two !!ank Bauer also homered. ninth-inning smash for Ike De- ee te ee the Z ne ¢ighth and ninth of the year, took from last place Chicago, both by| hehe ‘lock's first victory. = ing to pos oe . tog dal Roneodaires ca baa bee — e ; pver the lea lead with seven runs b bat- 53 scores. Cincinnati hit four home Clev eland bumped off Baltimore | * # «@ | of the doubleheader and the Elks |Woodmore, Herb Huston and Ern- | a - , Although Kansas City's crowd of enjoyed a six-run éth Inning as jest Nelson each made two safe-| ij U L A ‘B h a’ f 3 32,457 was tops for a day in which | they whipped the CIO Local 504 |ties in their 10-hit attack. Ron | as Ud 1h ed C enc e OL Jia total of 190.128 fans saw major | club, 9-6. Rogers was the losing pitcher for sp oe ori aes af rnee re ( : ttshurgh e Pirates, shaking Jim Thomas of the Jets had a pales tia 000 $4 Years by oast League off the cellar blues after four | nifty shutout going until the roof jes 00002001)" oa 0s 3 i ami S qa straight years in last place, ngw | ' fell in on him in the final stanza. _busion. Sane Roberis: thomas, Rains VICTORIA, B.C. — The ath-'season game until its sentence is have won seven of their last nipe, * ¢ & io Seceesi se cteee daeiege ee 4 } a world was as blue as their, \up» The terms start before a See j= Herman Bishop, veteran hurler, Roberts, Sage and Allen; Thomas and Saturday Camden Win famous. sky:hued uniforms today re-opens next fall. who went the distance for the “R4y- Bri His Wi for the powerful Bruins of UCLA, | Specifically, UCLA was charged) PLYMOUTH Coachers, started the uprising with! rings Fis INNINGS tO who were thrown for ‘a $95,000 loss'with condoning the payments of. a single. Pinch hitter Bob Swindell Follow Old Pattern $1,100,365 ‘and “‘benched’’ for three years $40 per month to its own athletes! OWN ERS! --lashed out with a double, sending DETROIT # — Detroit’s Tigers . |Saturday by the Pacific Coast Con- land some still in junior college. It, = A if was accused of refusing to co-op- Bishop to 3rd. . are starting off the 1956 season NEW YORK W-—Nashua, the AA ‘erate with the planar ee of | What's the best buy in low priced Eugene Cox was safe on Ist/against Washington in the same); world's most famous and expen- \conference—Victor O, Schmidt—in' | ¢"—Plymouth, Rambler, Chevy, baseman Bob Johnson's error asifashion as last year. The Bengals % Ae «5 sive thoroughbred, may have been | Champions in football, basket-|) sleuthing activities. Ford? 1956 Low-Priced Car X-Ray Bishop scbred and Swindeli-tallied| heat the Nats nine of the first 10 Reet Ye a clown a year ago, but he’s the Dall and track, the Bruins also) An outright fine of $15,000 was. | Gives the real facts. 36 poges. I's the tying run when Cox was forced|times in 1955, An Re ed jMost solid citizen in the financial Were crowned champions of the assessed against the school be-| | PREE- Ask for it. | at 2nd on Les Stone's bounder. . circles of horsedom today. Cee ee Ee te Oe eras | ts) chancellor De) Ray. FREE Terry Thomas smashed a triple to . * ae) rene: Ld Fee chase home Stone, then scored Hurons Win IAC Title hones Press Phote strapping y 4year-ol | Hewes B. Allen—denied - Schmidt 1086 X-RA Y ar . | colt is Mr. Moneyb: hi lf— ity t nduct an in- himself. on Jerry Doerr's single.| MT. PLEASANT i — Michigan A NEW PHS RECORD — Bill Douglas sets another Pontiac: High s OF ags himse he opportunity to conduct a CAR your | , ] : | two weeks. if | The conference put Washington| . 5 School record in the 880-yard by crossing the finisW line in 1:59.7, the ‘the biggest money-winning horse’ vestigation of the financial aid)|] MAS DEALE Vernon Rains relieved Thomas on|Normal upset Illinois Normal: 2042-; Sra tans & Pontiac Se h ie > has si 760 anita |i history. Further, he's one of ‘on probation for two years for let- | giv en to athletes.”” H ‘ R the mound and caused Judge|15%, to take the conference tennis! aoe Retake tise ihitke hina a cae = sport's greatest attractions, a col-|tiNg alumni slip money to athletes The rest of the approximately ROGERS SALES Booker to bang into a double play.|crown. Douglas rst in visiory of the event. lortul and powerful running ma-| “under the table.” UCLA drew a] s95 009 will be in lost Rose Bowl . ; jchine who has rivaled the turf pop-|three-year term. Neither school a4 television receipts, while the & SERVICE 3 ‘ularity of such recent stars as Cj-/can win ee ok play in a post- school is on probation. 605 Auburn Avenue : 'tation and Native Dancer. — —_____ FEdeyal 5-619! His victory in the Camden Han-| | oe == ir ‘earnings to $1,100,365 — $14, 605| A new football coach has been handed / Fenton the Clarkston ' : \more than Citation, whose mark) named at Troy High School to. suc-| Merchants their 2nd straight loss INDIANAPOLIS wo —_ Twenty-|all ‘old hands at getting around; The old mark also was een bashain, Albany, Calif., Me. 069; | he had been chasing. The race, at ceed Bob Nyquist, resigned. Joe Sunday in a Tri-County League five veterans and four newcomers|the i. turns on = ga -mile by Pat O'Connor, North Vernon, aera Seater a mile and Qne-eighth, was worth’ Bechard, former MSU athlete, has|baseball game at Fenton. Jack today held down all but four spots ‘ack. They were helped by @ new tng 144.980; Dick Rathmann, y only $22,750 to Nashua—not much been appointed head grid coach. Zelch hurled.afour-hitter for Fen- ic in the 500-mile auto race starting “#PhAlt surface. | | Jim's brother of Trenton, N.J., ee a ee, beerd these days—but it pulled him past) Bechard has coached the Troy jay-|ton and the host club banged out | field May 30, and all ran over 140| Jim poten of. Miami, Fia.. [Pati and Tony Bettenhausen, ‘and Bob Sweikert of Indianapolis. | \Citation. The Camden was Nash-|vées for the last two years and his|nine safeties off Bill Dunston to : miles an hour in weekend qualifi-|held the record briefly Saturday at! Tinley Park, I. ‘last year's winner 143, p33. ua’ 2 24th h start and his 19th vietory. — bod! —— eo __ leain : 2 — ode sresmeie seen incnebaoearcm 4 Cations. 145.120 in a car rebuilt from the It was also exceeded by Johnnie Other first-time qualifiers were ee» : ;wreck in which Bill Vukovich died Parsons, Sherman Oaks, Calif.. the Bob Veith, Oakland, Calif.; and : The trials will continue next|!m the 1955 race. 1950 winner, 144.144; Fred Aga- Bill Garrett, Burbank, Calif. i Saturday and Sunday. _ | After the 33-car field ts filled s * * | ; next weekend, a dri til) can The Indianapolis Motor Speed-! Out of Big 10 Race , get his car ee ‘as ascap by way record for the 10-mile qualifi-| qualifying faster than the slow- cations passed 140 only four years) est car-in the field, ago, and it was boosted to 145.596; INeS min ed Speedway officials, who don't Saturday by red-haired George fica on said F Patrick (Pat) Flaherty of| disclose attendance figures, rancis Patric a aherty o the weekend crowd set a record for Chicago. | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS phers whipped Michigan at Min- \Speedway qualifications. It was Johnny Thomson, another | Both Michigan and Michigan neapolis, 7-6 and 6-5, although the estimated from 80,000 to 120,000 speedway veteran from Spring- State are out. of the running in the Wolverines managed to hang on Saturday but was smaller yester- | field, Mass., was close to the Big Ten baseball race today. But ‘until the 10th inning in the second. day. new record ‘yesterday at 145.549 | ver Ghout/a) car's iemgis alower either still might wind up with a Jerry Thomas of Minnesota for 10 miles, y maccesatil aa this weekend. Pe garcia Sonmpan tl Charles Meets | They close out, thelr Big Ten pitched the nine- -Inning opener The 1955 record of 142.580, set \e ~-| and the last 3 1-3 innings of the by the late Jack McGrath, also) “@™Palgns with ‘three aS | Friday at East, second. Gopher batsmen clout- ® | was beaten by 11 other drivers— pened Saturday at Aha ARLE A 2 ‘a total of six home runs, five Bethea Toni ht | Be p would make ‘either one in the nightcap. Michigan hit for : DAYTON’'S | Decoration Day TIRE SALE! BLACK sipewaus 2nd TIRE Pre Calendar mighty happy and give either a | [Paptind three times, all in the p _ | better than .500 conference mark. slays te now is LA onter. BY THE ASSOCIATED PREss | ‘ ‘in Trike — ak Minnesota's pennant hopeful Go-| or s 11-1 in co . Hise ct _ 2 ee a aes play and needs to win only Euan Boas ~) tl at Pontiac at Piint Central one of three this weekend to cinch heavyweight crown hack in 1951, _ 6 70 5 $24, 90 Clarkston at Clarenceville the championship. Michigan is 44 fights again tonight against young x 7. lox15 | $27.55 — , : 7. 60x15 | $30.15 Ravesious at Wyandotte Michigan State, despite three-rin'by either man would put him in : rack homes in each, lost to Iowa, 5-3 the thick of the scrambel for Rocky Bertley at Ferndale at ‘ansas l ‘and 8-3, and skidded to 7th place Marciano’s discarded crown. Inter-Lakes Conference meet ét mn lin the Big Ten standings with a) Charles has scored 41 knockouts | yes field at North Brighton at Miltera Winin ‘a f Wins land in 4th place. Wayne Bethea, and the division Rosevile aj ustiand * ‘is in such a state that a “big'’ win mo 0 SS— | Rovel Oak st Monroe 3-5, recard. Iowa is only 4:7. and has been stopped four times | ¢$ Southtieid at Berkley | Re 2-Under in Final Michigan coach Ray Fisher, eae we ae te es ‘four: “8 00x15 . 33. 75 oy Cay Si veya neetie catcher Gene Snider and_ pitcher e been: sige Tpeseseu Round to Finish With Don Roloskey all were chased out kayoed himself. a Port Huron at Ferndale Fisher protested a seventh inning ‘!8ion_ in some sections of the’ Van Dyke at Waterford Walled Lake at Southfield. double by. Jack McCarten of Min- commnthy: Birmingham at East Detroit | 273 Total by the'.umpires at Minneapolis The bout will be seen on tele-, FIRST LINE, FIRST QUALITY Farmington at Berkle | KANSAS CITY W — Two short | nesota wal’ (foal! i McGarten! late sao - is fake Oricn ai Cesen, ue but difficult putts for birdies won |was driven in with what proved to, WHITE SIDEW ALLS - St. Rita a! Royal Oak Bt. Mary. the Kansas City Open for Bo Win- 46 the winning ean) | FORD Saginaw Valley Conference Undergrad- inger yesterday after his early: Ee : ee Mate meetiat Pint € al lead melted away. SIZE FIRST TIRE OWNERS! ne Michael vs. ‘ “Vrederiek at Wisner Tiel Oblahiornan (scrambled tier Finals of ABC Tourney Southfleld at Thurston South Central Conference meet at Im- ‘a two-under-par 70 in the final SINGLES ; 6.00x16 29 50 lay City seit ‘round to emerge with a 273—15 Te ‘ie Oblo is sone a era oe a a) ary — ea Bloomfield Mills_at Catholle Central. ‘under| par and one stroke’ better Tony Specends teco Park NY... 719 uO Ml tia 6.70x15 | $30.50 ennis th Bob Rosbe { Sa Fran. ene GE YOUNGS DETROIT . 696 | Get the Free book that rates all —_— a = see De Se Nasel Park Gr Persaeeen = ee Fred Ha kins of Eller Roteerae: touunile Ky” 692 T the low-priced cars. 36 poges! 7.10x15 $33.75 | ane e East Detroit at Mount Clemens jciace an m eerie = oat Chicago . 3092 | Authentic! Ask for it today! S x ji sree i Clarenceville at Southfield Paso. Tex. mi ae Aes par onr te Spee ch a - 7 +t e ee —— vet ool of Fort Lauderate Airtio Minneapolis 20S". ane | FREE 1956 CAR X-RAY 7,60x15 $36.95 All Prices Plus Fed. Tax. Exchange. a., was fourth with a an NT eens. 2087 ——— A a ~ Casin , BUICK Ititth’ place was*shared at 278 by|™Me?rsn's Mpokaes, YO 2 AT YOUR 8.00x15 $40.25 Stree counts Gene Liter of Singing Hills, Cat @ aren ove tae oo | PO DBALER | : rod ERS | Stan Leonard of LeChute, Canada, z aaa J) Priyon Toledo 1292 = eMunyon Grable, Mansfield 1284 ry and Dow Finsterwald of Bedford } WMunyor B Barkor ee 1384 ROGERS SALES Heights, Ohio. LL EVENTS . ’ compo: Wininger's $4,300 victory at nite (BUL tears. (chicago Sate & SERVICE ALL NYLON Att t T k ! wale year Oia ea Gabe {burn Country Club, his first since Georae See ee cee 605 Auburn Avenue = en (on, ruc ers: amazing new Free 44-page book the lala re aod last | Gees 0 Olson, 'alinneapotis s.r. 1917 FEderal 5-610! ; 7G 00x 16 6- Pi with all the facts on allleading cats. | | Year. 8 Winnings 40| — Bi k S y. ) reding cate | 86, | ‘DlacK videwalis Finsterwald, who won the St.| ' : J ; FREE : \Louis Open a week earlier and, e FIRST LINE TIRES @ g “Dayton Thorobred 1956 CAR X-RAY AT YOUR} started the final round here only) = NASH DEALER |two strokes back, salvaged some-| thing from the tournament despite | soaring to a 73 yesterday. His’ ROGERS SALES share of the $22,500 pot boosted es asec TIRES & SERVICE his earnings to $13,061.84 and put. athe $2 00 605 Auburn Avenue him on top of the pro heap, $202. 41 shew ee e : FEderal 5-619! ahead of Mike Souchak. . WHILE THEY LAST! ; QUALITY TOOLS| Plus Fed. Tax save “OD M 977° r Plus Fed. 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PROMIA, HLL (Corner of Cass) FE 8-0424 DAILY 8 te 6 — SATURDAY 8 te 5:00 “ AL 4 | ‘ _THE_ PONTIAC PRESS. MON ‘DAY. MAY 21, T0s6_ Hubbard Jumps Bond ~~ in Visit'to Escanaba -ESCANABA (INS) — The Mayor of Dearborn, Orville Hubbard, ex- seasd the tats of jail bond to- day when he traveled to Escanaba in the Upper Peninsula for the an-' Produce DETROIT PRODUCE IT, May 19 poe eorex & salen ot ers Sey s +» door, No 1 hothouse, No 1, 2 Greens—Sorrel No te ey ULE b canaba is right in Wayne County 3.00 6-1b bekt oe « 1 178-200 bu Spinach, MARKETS Market Shows AP) —The en reus| “Sruite—a ples. vettnarn 8pr. nge mayors. 6.00: Rot, 318-428 be “7 pies. (in early Stock Market trading to- nual excha ceed y Steels er Red. faa 6.00 bu; Ms: "| day. 4 ' [ : jegetables. misc.—Asparagus, No 1,, Gains a ses on pivotal stocks Dearborn fonts ~ Le Fish) | eter cea Bests: tom a. Wo ac oo ioe a np Brags ; had won a $7,500 libel judgment, 1303 2.00 bu Carrots: topped: Ke ma 100 ere ¢ Y n frac ne a ; Ceiery fr . against the mayor. This is the third pon. et chives ho gh 18 ia doe bens. ett Saeed om a point ear Hubbard has left Wayne pecs et © Z Leeks, No 1. 200-250 doa behs Onions.) Afier a moderately active start, County, violating terms of a peace a wo 1, %$-128 8)-Ib bag: onions, d. No i. 80.85 dos behs onion sets. volume fell away and trading was bon for. 160-178 32-tb dag | Potatoes, NO oe uiet, 2 bb} - adishes. o He said, however, that it if “all }.70° 329) ast don bch Rhy. «© * : ho! y x Nol ‘right because of an old northwest D*"¢, | a pists) fuard. hothouse, Steels and rails were down al- territory ordinance which says Es-No 1. 100-10 doa behs: rhubarb. out: most unanimously. The motors, og Mined Prices NEW YORK Ww — Prices were mixed with a tilt to the downside rubber, and oil divisions also were generally off. Airlines and mail or- _|Resumes. Production “DETROIT (INS)—Work resumed today at the U. S. Rubber plant in Detroit when 6,000 union mem- bers returned to their jobs. The workmen returned after a mass meeting yesterday where |“ Ronald Lashbrook, president, and Pete Bommarito, vice president of Local 101, of the Rubber ‘Workers, urged members to go back. The leaders sae their walkout “jeopardized the life of their con- tract.” They told the meeting they would sit down with management in an attempt to iron out the dif- ferences. =e The plant was struck when the company ordered that 1,000 work- ers bethanded three-day disciplin- oi at T WE NTY-FIVE. Hid r\ r-Old Girl Istruck Down by Car An 8-year-old girl, struck down by an auto Sunday in a side street next to her home, was admitted to Pontiac General Hospital for tréatment of a fractured skull. Terri -Lee McLain, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Gordon McLain, 46 N. Ardmore Ave. is listed in good condition. The driver, John M. Weber, 57,’ of 79 N, Francis St. told Pontiac police the girl dated out from in front of cars parked on Lois St. at about 11:30 a.m. ~~ Detroit Edison Employes Awarded Raise in Pay DETROIT W — The 11,000 em- ployes of Detroit Edison Co. will get a 2% per cent increase in The traveling mayor said “If you want to live beyond the atomic circle, I can't think of a better place than Escanaba.” ider stocks leaned to the upside. | Bethlehem Steel was off a full, point on an opening block but trimmed this loss a bit. Kennecott! Copper gained more than a point. Biggest opening block was 12,000 S ukarno no Visits Jefferson Grave Detroit Officers Hurt as unlgemge critically, when their scout car @ was struck broadside during a fractional loss, his own county s freedom. e 6 base pay starting June 4. The powerhouse employes re-| The increase, announced by the turned last night to -prepare the/company yesterday, is provided plant for today’s operation. They |for in contracts Edison signed with were followed by electricians and the Utility Workers Union and the: steannfitters. |Interwational Brotherhood of Elec- ‘ary layofts. Columbia Swaps Russian Works -New York Stocks sin books and papers with Rocke-; i” - — the prize not only for {ts bundle|Svesi'te 11 cents 6 common share. THis peck ieee a Tet . 4.3' -The others were taken to St. Jo. Fodndation funds, was. known in two hemi- eq e ) tal n F y were. (cue of votes but for its possible ef. Compared with 9s. BSC O04, ae Tel camte: « Chrysler e «3 Foaney Jc seph Hospital in Flint. They were: ; Named to Staff Post seueres for the brilliant character, fect on the California presidential year. Sales increased to. $22,008 fde/Clark Eauip... 834 prlaer Helen) Manatiesd 50 ete ‘of his footlight offerings in the, primary & week after Florida's from 303.379 in the inittal sadn Climax Mo 69 4 ree D a2 contusions of the right thigh; Jud-| Walled lake Man 11920s and 30s and later attained, apLal ENCOURAG fe aay loses cota ine Phiico 373 ith Mansfield, 14, St. Charles, abra- The promotion of John C. Ja- a reputation as a pioneer of radio| ED PHILADELPHIA +INS) — Pennsyivanis Cols Palm ,, $64 pri” prt * sions of both.legs:; Mary Printz, mieson to executive assistant to , l atirené = re Phill Pet 97 . . musical reveues. | Stevenson returned to Florida— four monthe ended. April 30 of rast ots reed oles td G02 Ft Puledy Mills. 482/53, of Flint, contusions of the right Dies at County Jail be general manager 2 ore re- —eE— N oO Contract a familiar campaign field now for Tis “lompared. with 811182 506, oF €5. Con eae $33 Prot & GO “104 shin; and rene Goodroe, 22, of ations was announced today ’ Former Jud | | | | e Dies ecessar t both aspirants — encouraged by cents @ common share, in the same|Con N Ges .... 37} Pullman . , Flint, contusions of the scalp. Teiienate! R. M. Critchfield, general man- 9 an 85 victory over Ketauver in|Sretsea ‘te 25 lia.00t from sssets22ie Comyn Et, ase RCA 333, _Chase was one of the drivers. 4 Paar Caen oat omm, at iaget of the Pontiac Motor Division.” GRAND RAPIDS un — Glenwood | Call Today "s write-in contest for 16) Side mens smouten to oni isiicen ee BS A Bee 5 The others were Harold J. Church, jail this morning, it was re-|—Jemieton, who lives at 1497 Pil- C. Fuller, retired Grand Rapids! convention delegates’ support. He ** sesinst 04.0708 @ year ago |Cont Mot |. @7 Rey Met ne 44, of St. Charles, and Eugene ine d by the Sheriff's Department. igrm St., Birmingham, had been an attorney and former Circuit Court! Gregory Oil Co. undertook a busy program of hand-|_ NEW YORK (INS'—emith-Dougiass Co Cont Oil... 1224 Key Tod B46) Condroe, 29. of Mt. Morris. ; assistant general sales manager judge, died Saturday night in the | Bok ves 088 a ee iT Jim W. Brown, 33, of Walled! 94 East Walton Bivd shaking in = Miami area today. Inc: reported net income for the cuareg Curtiss Wr.... 33$ Safeway st .. 92.4; Oakland County deputies invest} since 1993. \Masonic home at Alma where he, : . sears Puaicoeeaca with Rervuai oo ine . 464 cating at the scene ‘said the Chase. Lake, was found lying on his on | . * «@ jhad lived the past two years. He Phone FE 5-614) Ketauver i an “Ortando a. tet one. red oe yeer Gales decreased DUC Sree... 38 St Rea Pep $44 car skidded and struck the Church | 2ortly after he entered the room.| Prior to joining General Mo was 74. see luncheon date after his Florida ‘e 0 Bib 518.008 4.008 trom 916.T14.648 in Dee Chen ee gecwlal na a S\car head-on which caused Chyirch Another, nme tried ee TeS- tors, the new appointee was a re- oo -arrival oa. Lage contenders will |! . Fast i bi eh une OL” me to be hit from the rear by_ the ee on the man without suc- tai] paeana desicrstip sales ° campaign in the state through May Kod ..... 90 Simmons $42 Vehicle operated by Goodroe/ manager for years. He came to 28. ‘Begins 30-Day Sentence i “ute tite eh) | goatee ie ne i a le aaa Acting Oakland County ‘coroner pontiac Motor as a district: man- : * * @ 9 y tnee Mned .. isa bo bas ; Dr. Isaac Prevete pronounced the ager in 1953. DESIRABLE COMMERCIAL The hourlong political joust be-| Pes fo jail siecle ape Erie RR”. 21¢ peer Wand bs 6 , Cypriots Bomb British |man dead and said it was ap-| 4,) making the announcement, PROPERTY FOR SALE tween the Tennessee senator and =“turday for LeRoy Collins, of pairy mor 396 ec cone cant ina t Gi ls’ D ti parently due to ‘a coronary throm-, n at Girls emonstya ion \Critchfield said: “This new posi- . the former Illinois governor is Highland Township, who failed to Poe cr aq Std Ol Ind $76 lbosis since it was so sudden. He’ é scheduled to be moderat pay a $100 fine imposed by Spring- Fora Mot 55 x 3 bed toa! NICOSIA, Cyprus yp. — Bombs reported the man had been feelin tion "on my siafl bes) Deen creeied This desirable commercial property located in the City of rated by Freeport Sul . 896 S to give Pontiac dealers a direct property d c Quincy Howe of ABC. field Township Justice Emmett J. prey tra. 033 Stee" TP) fy were thrown at Bfitish troops in good health previously. Dr. Pre- jine of communication to the top Bay City known as Washington Park is 300 ft. x 500 ft. in The Aime of broadcast is 9 p.m.,\L¢i>. Collins had pleaded guilty to Gen Ra 92 fun Onl 132 called to disperse s hoolgirls dem- vette said he was undecided about management of the division.” size, is zoned heavy commercial and will be sold in. one parcel. ja charge of driving while under the Gen Eiec 39 Syiy El Pa 526 Onstrating in Nicogia today. One whether an autopsy would be pre- ———— This Park property is excepted from off-street parking linfluence of liquor. leer re A Tero cr ae British soldier ana a police offi- formed. Y th, 16, Sh S. Hf requirements established for other areas around the EAST SIDE Eastern Ad it Kid Gen Motors 42 eee be | ae d'cer were wound¢d. | Brown was awaiting tral after os oots 2e comnlons Cusine) ection. end Is were cn lones site aya 'Gen 8 5 m ea 7 , a : ers Admit Ki nap Clean fel ies a ly +» * having pleaded pot guilty to a dis in Hand With .22 Rifle me , oe KO ry H ‘ : Gen Tel 442 Trent Cen 234, It was the sqcond day of school-' rde . The City of Bay City, Michigan will receive sealed bids for ie] orm ife in Dakota Und { 384 rderly charge. He was arrested! TEMMON TUCSON, Ariz. W—Nine months Gaetelt Br ue ‘ Un Carbide 18 girl demonstrations May 11 | . Eugene Feret, 16, of Detroit, suf- a Facil mart eens ncaa oe Se eeranin ao) cM) , 8,D. (INS)— ‘n'g Goodric pg U8 Fac 2 : a fer i / un ) 8,D. (INS\—Two men after eee pairs of J. P. Brown's hesleee eos unit Atr Lin wi Troops wre rushed into the ‘fered minor flesh wounds of the 1066 at which time will be opened and publicly read aloud. ho adm bids who admitted the kidnaping and shoes were stolen from his car he Gran Paige ae us bie, $7 jtown after / ‘the police officer and are left hand after accidentally shoot- ; robbery of a 56-year-old farm wife spotted someone walking down the om ae : os tn Oar Cp 24,3 ,twa., bystanders were wounded by Dog Flees After Killing jing himself Sunday. He was treat- th Aa bons or Certified check in ite amount. of ee of C were held by authorities here for street with shoes that looked Sreynound 157 US Rubber #24aN exploding bomb. Demonstrat- Nine Chickens in C ‘ed for wound of the thumb and i ell accompany esch proposal. Proposals shall be arrai t tod: GHtieOu we Ge be a 1 oop : : plainly marked “Proposals for Purchasing City-owned Prop gnmen ay. familiar. The man said he bought GY) Oi ah thy bee ia) ors_alsa/ set fire to a vehicle. Two j finger by a Lake Orion doctor. <§ erty.” The City reserves the right to reject any or all bids and The woman, Mrs. Mabel Gallan, them second-hand, and poiice ar- Hometk 381 Van Raal 30 |more A>wombs and a barrage of A dog of unknown ownership es- * * * to waive any informalities in bids and to hold proposals for a | was left bound, gagged and tied rested.the dealer on a charge oon ane Weer a Pica stones were thrown at the soldiers Caped from a Highland Township| The incident occurred after the period of ninety (90) days, during which time bidders may 1 to a windmill, miles from her petty theft. Brown is now looking tndust Ray. 4¢7 WON "Patt 3 292 before the demonstr: tors. broke farm after killing nine young youth had finished a target shoot. "°t Withdraw their proposals. hdme, on a lonely prairie for 10.for the other pair. rh aro a° Wet FI a * chickens early this Morning, the/ing session on State land in Orion For further information regarding the sale of this property, hairs before she was rescued Sat-| Tee fal cin Pale Getrenies _ ty wees Commercial Repair Service—Flat Roots Our Specialty oll he a = 'met two other ao For Houses, Apartments, . Gro- « - . We Stop Any Leak—No Root Too FE 5-7387 : THT KARL F AP Wirephoto a = cery Stores and Restoran Large.of Too Smeal - ba ees R’ Be af a Mon Little freckled Gordon Jones, | According to ae the three P Remain out ae'y ‘one hour. No digtlaye ve Fees ee ot b won him the Oregon Mi jumped him when they left »the } signs used’ SHELDON ROOF SPRAYING C0. j. g gS; : vitte Steer. 4 * over BO other marksmen °C cond tavern. : i : Hh ! nd i) ib, sue Hct Cee reported Goomel was oS Rox Ex Company ) COMMERCIAL—INDUSTRIAL—RESIDENTIAL—APARTMENT BA] ceca nici tai og . wit, ; Cory wee nvae nat voce ae 1014 Pont. st Bk. Bide FE 4-482 ‘ ' : < nie Mighway OR 3-1295 + i : ‘ : — , di : . s . a Fg emcee.