The Weather U.S. Weather Burean Forcast 
Sunny, Less Humid - (Details _ 2) > Meg 
           
  “116th YEAR Hf 
Named by Willman 
Former Seattle 
- Police Chief 
in $12,000Job Hopes to Reorganize 
Department Within the 
Next Two Years 
' George D. Sastican. for- 
mer chief of police in 
Seattle, Wash., was ap- 
pointed Public Safety Di- 
rector today by City Mana- 
ger Walter K. Willman. 
Eastman, 46, who has ex- 
tensive background in po- 
lice work, will take over 
direction of the police and 
fire departments sometime, 
between Aug. 25 and Oct. 
10, Willman said. 
The new director has agreed to, 
a $12,000-a-year -salary, Willman | 
told city commissioners, who gave 
their approval of the candidate 
last night. ; 
A private consultant on. admiini- 
tration the past two years, East- 
man has been associated with the 
Public Administration Service of 
Chicago, and Was one of that firm's 
staff members who prepared the 
report on Pontiac Police Depart- 
ment morale and efficiency. 
Major recommendation of the 
report wag that a public safety 
director be hired. to carry out 
extensive reorganization in the 
department. Eastman Was hired 
on the basis of the 
tion, Willman indicated, and said 
‘he thinks he can de this within 
* twe years. 
The new director was considered 
the outstanding candidate among 
17 applicants for the job, Willman 
said. 
In making the appointment, Will- 
man told commissioners that East-    
In City Post 
  GEORGE D. EASTMAN   
Doctor Defends 
Hospital Rules 
Stand as 4 Physicians 
Rest Their Case 
The head of the medical staff at 
. |Pontiac General Hospital testified 
|today that the health and welfare 
of an area would be Brecon veal 
“The health and welfare of the 
. |patient, which is our utmost. con- 
cern, would not be considered 
whatsoever (without regulations) ,”’ 
said Dr. John J. Marra. 
the first defense witness in the 
suit against the city hospital by 
four doctors. 
The four doctors, Leonard 
Blackwell, Douglass A. Haddock, 
man was_‘very desirous of imple-|Roy V. Cooley Jr.._and Maolin 
menting the report that he had a 
part in developing. 
“He has indicated to me that he 
thinks he could accomplish the pur- 
pose end aims of a public safety 
director with respect to the neces- 
sary reorganization of the Police 
Department within two years. 
“He would then be satisfied to 
(Cotitinued gn Page 27, Col. '5) 
Sunny, Less Humid 
Outlook for Weekend 
Motly sunny and less. humid 
weather is in store for the Pon- 
tiac area tonight and tomorrow. 
Fair and cool with a low of 60-64 
is the forecast for tonight. 
Saturday's high will hit 84 to 88 
with the low tomorrow night dip- 
ping to 64 to 68. The outlook for 
pages is partly cloudy and-werm-| 
  — downtown Pontiac the lowest 
reading preceding 8 a.m. was 62 
degrees. At 1 p.m. Oe, fempera- 
_ ture. was 80, Han, claim in the suit that medi- 
cal staff. regulations at Pontiac 
General illegally - prohibit them 
from unrestricted surgical privi- 
leges. 2 
Only the State Board of Regis- 
tration in Medicine has the right 
to control their practices, they 
claim. 
As attorney William J. Beer, 
counsel for the doctors, rested 
his case this morning before 
Judge Clark J. Adams. 
Two of the doctors, Blackwell 
and Cooley, testified to how the 
rules ‘“‘deprived them of income.” 
When the trial opened Tuesday, 
Dr. Blackwell, 36, of 51 Niagara 
Ave., charged that the regulations 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 
Never Too Old to Vote 
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI). — 
Mrs, J. J. Phillips, 85, took her 
mother along when she went to’ 
the polls yesterday in Tennes- 
see’s Democratic primary. The 
mother, Mrs, Flora Witt, is 106 
years old.     
Event: Closes Saturday Nowa   
More Than 3,000 ‘Aiead 
4-H Fair Thursday Night 
More than 3,200 persons attended the 4-H Fair last 
night, largest attendance of 
to around 6,500 for the first the week, bringing the total 
three nights. Final sessions 
of the fair are scheduled tonight and Saturday morning. 
One of the features tonight will be a quiz show. 
4-H members and their leaders will compete against each 
other in a test of their skills 
and knowledge of 4-H work. 
The contest begins at 7:34 p.m. 
at the natural amphitheater of the 
4H Fairgrounds off Pontiac road 
"near Opdyke road. 
Also scheduled for tonight's 
program will be the dress revue 
at 8 pm, and the award presen- 
tation at 9 p.m. 
Tomorrow morning at 9 o’clock 
‘the horses will be judged and the 
exhibits will be dismissed begin- 
. ing at.3 p.m, 
_._.Winners_of . Jast t's pig 
_ geramble contests were Maitin 
~ Sheyer of Oak Park, member of 
the Pontiac Fea +H Club; Cath- 
eryn Van er, of  Rochest ee mem! ea the Jy alr Tallors 4H 
‘A cid 
  
+   
Club and Bob Becker of Rochester, 
member of the 4-H Trailblazers. 
Owners of Holstein cows won the 
first five places in the Senior 
anship contest... They were: 
Middleton, 
first; Douglas Long of Milford, 
second; Larry Middleton of Lake 
Orion, third; Richard Foster ‘of 
Clarkston, 
Brown of Oxford, fifth. 
Douglas Long also captured the 
first spot in the Junior Showman- 
ship contest, 
Other winners in this division 
oe ee ~and—Dennis+- 
Austin, both of Galloway Lake; 
Marvin Sc¥amlin of Holly and Mike | 
ire of Clarteston, respec- tive :     
Dr. Marra took the stand as 
of Lake Orion, |# 
* fourth, and Ronnie Call Emergency 
U.N. Meeting 
on Middle East oe Accepts Terms 
of U.S. for Sweeping 
Discussion in Assembly . 
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 
(UPI) — The 81-member 
United Nations General As- 
sembly, summoned by a 
Security Council, meets in 
emergency session on the 
Middle East. today. 
The council voted 11 to 0 
to call the special assembly 
session after more than six 
hours of debate last night. 
The debate resulted in Rus- 
sia’s acceptance of U.S. 
terms for a sweeping Mid- 
die East discussion after 
itwo amendments designed 
Chief of Stalf’ Takes: to “save face” for the 
Kremlin. . 
The Assembly will convene in 
U. N. headquarters on New York's 
east side this evening for what is 
expected to be a brief and formal 
rangements. It will probably then 
adjourn until Wednesday, as sug- 
gested by Britain, to allow time 
for special representatives to 
governments {6 relay instrictions 
to delegations here. 
Diplomatic authorities in 
Washington were inclined to be- 
lieve President Eisenhower 
would make a personal appear- 
ance at the. Assembly to open 
_the American part of the debate. 
The White House said no deci- 
sion had yet been reached but 
Eisenhowser has said he would 
attend if it appeared “necessary 
and desirable.” - e 
Officials in Washington, while 
noting that the final American 
plans had not yet been resolved, 
indicated the U. S. might seek 
Assembly action somewhat along 
these lines: 
— A resolution calling on U. N.) 
(Continued on Page 27, Col. 6) 
Crash in Storm 
Kills 2 Drivers Holly and Flint Men| 
Die Instantly When 
Cars Meet on. Dixie   
A prominent* Holly real estate | 
and insurance agent and a Flint 
man were killed yesterday in a 
near head-on collision on U. S. 
10 just south of Evans Rd., in 
Holly Township. 
Oakland County Sheriff's Dep- 
uties said both Gordon J. Mc- 
Ginnis, 52, of 5185 Grange Hall 
Rd., and Robert Mayhorn, 2%, 
of 715 Carton St., Flint, were 
killed instantly. 
They were both driving. Injured 
were McGinnis’ wife, Gertrude, 
47, and Lucille Rushing; 
710 Jamieson St., Flint, 
with Mayhorn. 
Mrs. McGinnis has leg, chest and 
head injuries at St. . 
pital in Flint. The other injured 
woman was treated and released. 
Deputies said the accident was 
apparently caused by a driving 
Funeral Home in Holly. 
ee as 
   
   
   
  Leas ag 
poe dl hopes 
torials . 2... iwises 
Farm & Garden ,......... 14 
~ Markets * Pee es eve es eeeee eteene 2 
Obituaries 0.6.6.6. ce cees a © 
Sports, sacasecouse 20-23 
Thontees. .coxcivesss sciences £2) 
TV & Radio on ; 33 
“Witson, Earl >. oe. 
, Women's Pages ........ 16-17 
            
WANTED — 20 Used Tires. Top 
‘PUBIC H9 “ANE paveeeiy $7 7 a       a Sar 
4 sp 
  rare unanimous vote of the| 
session, devoted to procedural ar-) . 
comé to New York and permit) 
BD, OF) iia 
riding |~ 
        
   
    E. Keller (center); 34, of Detroit, 
tective custody and for. questioning regarding the 
fire which caused Frank Kierdort’ 
is shown here in this exclusive Pontiac Press 
photograph between Anthony F.,Stiel (left), chief LAST TO SEE VICTIM'S UNCLE? — Donald is held in pro- _ investigator for 
s death. Keller Atty. Gen, Paul 
  2 
RECOVER CAR IN KIERDORF CASE—This 
four-door black 1956 Cadillac is believed by police 
to be the one involved in the fatal burning of 
Flint Teamster Frank’ Kierdorf Sunday. Atty. 
Gen. Adams reported late Thursday Herman 
Kierdorf, Frank’s uncle, sold the car for $1,700 noon. ». Pontiac Press Phote 
the Oakland County prosecutor's 
office, and Det. Charles Leaf, of the State Police. 
L, Adams said it was Keller who 
was last seen with Frank's uncle, Herman, before 
he vanished Monday. 
Pontiac Press Phote 
to a Royal O&k used car dealer Monday after- 
The title was in the name of a Detroit 
Teamsters local and was signed over to Herman 
by a vice president of the local, Adams said. 
After the sale, Herman disappeared. 
  
  Labor I Leader Tells Probers:   
  fa eh Se 
‘Hoffa Aided Racketeers’ WASHINGTON  — A. Pennsyl- 
a labor leader ‘testified to- 
day. Teamster boss James R. Hof- 
fa helped a group of racketeers get 
a charter to run a hotel and res- 
taurant workers -union local in 
Philadetphia. 4 ie 
HEARD OF THREATS 
The testimony came from Wil- 
liam J. Brennan, a vice president 
of the State Federation of Labor, 
who said he had been threatened 
for leading an unsuccessful fight 
against the racketeers. He said he 
had heard about the’ threats, but 
had received none directly. 
* x 
Brennan told the story before the 
Senate Rackets Investigating Com- 
mittee. 
Hoffa was in the hearing room 
awaiting more quizzing. . ~ 
Chicago gangster Paul (The 
Waiter) Ricca also was on call for 
questioning but was not in the 
hearing room. 
We Live i ina Cool, not related to Owen J. (Bert) Bren- 
nan, international vice president | + 
of the Teamsters and a pal of 
Hoffa. 
GOT CHARTER 
William Brennan said the racke- 
teer group.revolved about Phila-| 
delphia Teamster official Sam 
(Shorty) Feldman. He said it got 
a charter in 1956 to run Local 410 
of the Hotel and Restaurant Work- 
ers Union. 
He said the local prompts be- 
came involved in scandals includ- 
ing charges of intimidation of 
employers, and that its bosses 
~yan the local $23,000 in debt in 
the eight or nite months they 
held command. 
Brennan said they. were fired 
from office in the spring of 1957 
by the union’s international presi- 
dent, who assigned Brennan to 
take over. Brennan said he is pres- 
ident of Philadelphia Local 138 of 
the Hotet and Restaurant Workers, 
  The committee said Brennan is. president of the union’s state coun- 
87, 
      
    Cool Town   Committee Chairman John L. 
McClellan (D-Ark) told Hoffa yes- 
terday reasonable men can only 
with criminals, and that you keep 
them there if you can ch your 
way." 
Hoffa said he ‘plans to clean up 
his union “in due course.” 
8 8. 
The Teamsters Union has pur- 
chased Ricca’s palatial Long 
Beach, Ind., home for about $150,- 
000. with the announced plan to 
use it. as a training school for 
business agents. But it- has been 
unable to get permission from the 
loca} zoning authorities to use the 
(Continued on. Page 2, Col. 2) 
To Head Soviet Group 
LONDON (% — Moscow radio 
said today*Foreign Minister An- 
drei Gromyko will head the So- 
viet delegation to the special 
session of the U.N, General As- 
    sembly on the Middle East 
crisis. conclude “you surround yourself; Report Burned Vicim 
‘onfessed to Arson 
Sale of Black Cadillac 
by: Kierdorf’ s Uncle Is 
Another Clue in Case 
Amid reports that torch victim Frank H. Kierdorf 
may have confessed to arson before his death yester- 
day, officials. today requestioned a material witness in 
hopes of clearing up the arson of a Flint dry cleaning 
shop. 
Being interrogated by Atty. Gen. Paul Adams, 
Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem and other investigators 
 |was Donald Keller 34, of 6512 Lawton Ave., Detroit. 
- Adams said Kierdorf indicated on his deathbed he 
-was turned in the cleaning store fire, but said “we view 
it with considérable skepticism because of his condition ay 
at the time.” 
fired the shop, possibly as 
part of a Teamster terrorist 
move, said Adams. yester- 
day. The Atty. Gen. has already 
‘|linked Kierdorf and his uncle to 
the arson. 
Adams and sveersl other offi- 
elals denied yesterday that Kier- 
dorf, who authorities say was 
accidently 
It has been reported since then, however, -that in the confession 
\ |Kierdorf implicated other Team- 
ster officials. - 
Adams was expected to be avail- 
able for comment Jater today. 
carded this story in favor of the 
arson—theory. 
A secret witness, a ate gs 
a= a black Cadillac figured in 
today’s investigation 
he. stopped his car when he saw 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 
Sewage Bond Issue   
Pontiac will vote in November on abond issue to finance a new) fi 
sewage treatment plant, : 
City commissioners last night in- 
formally approved placing a treat- 
ment plant proposition before vot- 
ers again. City Manager Walter 
K. Willman .was asked to prepare 
details of how much. the bond issue 
would run, and how it would be 
financed. ‘ ; 
A similar proposition, totaling 
$2,700,000, was turned down by vot- 
ers in May last year, when it was 
coupled with two other bond issue 
proposals, which were also defeat- 
ed. es : 
The existing freatment plant has 
been operating at capacity for sev-| . 
eral years, Because of ‘this, it is 
impossible to extend sewers to 
areas in the city that need them, 
    The witness has told police) 
on November Ballot needed Named as the man who last saw Kierdorf’s missing 
uncle, Herman Kierdorf, the unemployed: Keller is sus- 
pected of being the third man in an arson® That 
* 
H oHa | 
Knowledge 
of Fire Case 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Team- 
testified yesterday. that he knows 
  an teal eS rent ee 
  
Water Diversion OK'd 
WASHINGTON (®—A House- 
by a Senate subcommittee today. 
measure to the full Public Works 
Committee, 
Royal Yacht Pogbouiid 
PORTHALLOW, England ® — 
—Queen Elizabeth [1 and her 
family were fogbound in the 
    city officials report. 4 
   royal yacht Britannia. off the 
Cornish coast today, ‘ 
BARRA 
    Some Spots on the Earth Really Sizzle f     
enies 
ster President James R.- Hoffa. - 
The voice vote action sends the 
    
          
= 
c 
  
rainstorm which is believed to)? - 
have obscured the drivers’ vision. |}. 
McGinnis’ body is at the Bendel 
         
  ~ane. 3% - ‘ a 
ele 
  So you think we have a weath- 
er at times? 
Don’t be too loud in your com- 
plaint;. there are hotter’ places. 
Take the town of Azizia, in north- 
western Libya, for instance, The 
mercury bubbled up to 136.4 Fahr- 
enheit in Azizia’s shade on-Sept. 
13, 1922 — highest temperature 
ever recorded under standard con 
ditions, 
The - United States can boast 
(maybe we should say confess) 
temperatures not too far under 
that record. At one time or an- 
_other the-thermometer has climbed 
above 100. in every state _ the 
: -union, 
The ngtiest reading was 134 ing north. degrees in Death Valley, Calif., 
duly 10, 1913. 
These records may soon be brok- 
en, ‘Climatologists report the world 
has been getting warmer over the 
past 40 or 50 years, the National 
Geographic Society says. Scientists 
are not certain what is causing 
the warming, but it may bé part 
of the ice age cycle. 
ICE NOW. RETREATING 
During the history. of the. earth, 
the ice at the poles has advanced 
and retreated a number. of.times. 
At present it is retreating. As.the ¢ . 
“{cecaps melt, the seas aré Tising a 
at the rate of one-eighth of an 
inch a year. Tropical plants and 
animals are, little by little, mov- 
      
  In the sun, thermometers have 
recorded 189 degrees in Iraq—but 
official temperatures are recorded “ 
by ventilated thermometers in 
shaded spots. 
Contrary to popular belief, the . 
temperature of the air is not 
higher in the sun than it is in 
the shade, . 
People think it's warmer be- 
causé’ the sun heats their clothes - 
and skin. The sun also heats the 
glass and mercury in a thermom- 
eter, causing it to record a higher 
temperature than that of the air. 
\ For brief periods, hurnan beings 
can withstand far higher tempera- 
tures than those ever occurring STAND 340 DEGREES* ~~ 4: under normal conditions.. 
A study made by University 
ot California engineers showed 
that an average person can tol- 
erate, for about 23 minutes, a 
temperature of 249 degrees, 
This is: well above the boiling point .of water, and plenty hot 
enough to boil an egg or simmer 
a stew. However, the hot air 
breathed by the subjects was 
cooled as much as 100 degrees by 
the mucous membranes lining the 
nose, mouth, .and ~b pas- 
sages ‘before it reached the lungs. 
Still higher temperatures can be — 
- briefly. 
workers endure ‘temperatures up 
to 3 degrees foe two. oF thee 
minutes at a time.     
    
       
       
    
  
               
           
        
    “A Keego Harbor man is being 
held today by Bloomfield Hills po- 
torted the money from New Center 
Studios, 70 E, Long Lake Rd., by|" 
threatening to turn over pictures of 
the 1959 Dodge t6 General Motors. 
A fe, ok ale * t2 ey ibe. ij    
   bit 
fe 
i | t if “ i 
Be 
i | 8: 
I   & 
In oa a 
St pietand aut br tee iat oo ceiverany greater privileges: House Bill 
jto Up SS 
\Charges Racketeers 
      
   WASHINGTON (AP) == 
  increase the pecan share of pub- 
_jlic assistance funds, 
x * * 
Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. 
Flemming presented the adminis- 
tration’s position to the Senate Fi- 
. Of nance Committee in his first "Imony at the Capitol since he 
joined the Cabinet last Friday. 
Flemming said that. on the 
jwhole he believes the | major 
changes the House approved in 
the Old Age and Survivor Insur- 
ance program “are reasonable 
and desirable and I recommend 
their adoption.” ; 
a * * *~ 
Among the major ,changes: 
1. An increase of OASI insur- 
ante benefits by 7. per cent, with 
a minimum increase of $3. ~ 
2. Broadening of the taxable 
wage base from $4,200 to $4,800 
and an increase in the tax rate 
effective Jan. 1, as well.as a sub- 
stantial speedup of the future tax 
increases already scheduled by 
law. 
* * * ; 
The bill, passed. by the House 
375-2, may hold the key to when 
“ge plans two days of hear- 
  
Helped by Holf 
Michigan 
Teamsters health and welfare fund 
  | 
2H at a racetrack —* 
owned. : 
  
  
  
Storm Kills 2 in Chicago; 
: Twister Nips 
: The Weather 
Fall U. &. Weather Bureau Report 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly 
sunny and less humid today and morrew. Fair and 
or 
  morrew t, tly cloudy and ttle lla iow 64-68. money ame 8 
Teday in Pontiac 
—— temperature preceding 8 a.m. 
8 a.m.: wind velocity 15 mp.h./ Direction — Nort 
Sun sets Friday. ‘at 7:43 p.m | 
Sun rises Saturday at 5:32 a.m. 
Moon sets Friday at 2:12 p.m. i 
Moon riges Seturday at i2:21 a.m. | 
—— Tem es ; 
SEUORIOE 95, 
reat | 
80 
Thursday tn 4n Pontiac 
recorded downtown) 
——— “ape MPO gn ccasqvevecess 3 
— <a sisewse oc.eeee.. 6 
wSwvees eps cee sens 4 
“Gtake ee oA 
One = eee 
en cer sear Age | RotOAACS . Abe 
‘a Clensencees|- 71 
Wea fie . * ee. cbeeeee ** 79 
‘Highest and Lowest Temperatures This! 
7 = 1941 48 in 1884) Leenemmenenedl 
‘Thursday's Tap pereeuee 
tin, $f id # Miami Beach i 8 
  
  Milwaukee 
A belt of lightning struck and 
killed Santo Rizzo, 14, and Mi- 
chael Pohrtes, 6, when they 
ducked under a tree near their 
homes on Chicago’s south side, 
Lightning also irijured 10 persons 
_ a company picnic at Quincy, 
x * 
The Milwaukee twister ripped 
into a business and residential area 
on the city’s northwest side, in- 
juring Michael Friese Egger, 14. 
.Winds up to 70 miles an hour 
preceded the twister, shearing util- 
ity lines and causing 'y dam- 
age. There was no immediate esti- 
‘mate of the damage. 
FLEES WITH CHILDREN 
One mother picked up her. two 
oun (children and fled from a garage 
moments before it collapsed. 
Six divers trying to raise.a sunk- 
fen motorship from the bottom of 
‘Lake Michigan off Milwaukee were 
jhauled aboard a salvage barge 
{shortly before the gale winds hit. 
At Quincy, a violent thunder- 
storm reuted 2,000 persons at- 
tending the anaue! Moorman 
Manufacturing Co. picnic, The in- 
jured, including the wife of the 
| firm’s president, suffered burns 
when lightning hit a tree under 
which they were standing. 
The Ohio storms lashed Zanes- 
74\ ville and London in the central sec- 
tion of the state and the Cleveland 
37 /rea with high winds and drench- 
ing rains. Winds of 50 miles an 
hour disrupted power in London 
iand damaged homes and cars. 
Trees and wires were downed in 
Cleveland and. a number of streets 
‘and basements were flooded. 
* *& *& 4 ed 
aol Showers and thunderstorms were 
predicted for today in the tower 
Mississippi valley and jin most 
areas east of the Mississippi River, 
‘except the Great Lakes region. 
Widely scattered afternoon show- 
ers were expected in the plains, 
      54\the- southern Rockies, the Great 
Basin area and the desert South- v7 The ad- 
  iF   
  
shown here with his son David, 
ing in ceremonies took place    
          
   
             
FATHER DOES HONORS—A Pontiac naval 
officer had the pleasure Wednesday night of 
swearing his son into the Naval Reserve. Lt. 
Cmdr, Edward §. Ladd, of 30 Neome Drive, is 
17. The swear- 
at the regular 1960. Wednesday night meeting at the Pontiac Naval 
Reserve Center, 469 S. East Blvd. David, a 
‘PCH student, will attend the weekly meetings 
until being assigned to active duty in August, < 
Pontiac Press Phote 
  
A Whimper on His Lips   
  $2,000 to pay for storm windows Baby Killer Put to Death ojand other household ooeki: 
hoped to the last minute he would had|Wednesday lost_a two-year court 
battle — including six appeals — 
to escape .execution. 
The father of two young chil- 
dren, he said nothing as he was 
escorted to the chair by the Rev. 
  
New Suspect 
Being Quizzed Here Today 
uy 13 we te 
cit   : i ay 
j i as ¢ e 
» ze 
ising clués to link the car with 
dry cleaning establishment, and 
that bit of evidence completed a 
picture of what they said was the 
probable explanation for Frank 
Kierdorf's fatal burns: 
After setting a device to explode 
into flames at the Latreille clean- 
ers Sunday night, they said, Kier- 
dor'f dropped ‘his flashlight. While 
he was groping around for it, the 
fire device went off, enveloping 
the ex-convict in flames. 
His companions beat out the 
flaming clothes and took Kierdorf 
to his home in Flint, where they 
tried to treat his burns with a 
salve. Doctors found ointment. on 
his face, neck and shoulders.) 
But Kierdorf’s companions ap- 
parently decided he needed hos- 
pital treatment and drove him 41 
miles to Pontiac, presumably to 
throw investigators off the track. 
On the way he was coached to 
tell a story of being attacked and 
set aflame by two strangers. 
+ *« &* 
The attorney general said that 
Keller was being held in protective 
custody for questioning. Adams 
said Keller drove Herman Kier- 
dorf to the used car lot where the 
Cadillac was sold, He said Keller 
denied being at the scene of the 
Flint fire. 
Herman had described Keller as 
‘fone of my bovs.” 
Both Kierdorfs served time for 
armed robbery and both were re- 
luctant witnesses before the Sen- 
ate Rackets Committee. ~ 
Sale of the Cadillac left investi- 
gators thinking that Hermari may 
have fled the countrv. With a war- 
rant out against him, this would 
be a-federal offense. 
Adams said, jokingly, ‘‘Mexico 
would’ be a nice glace to be right 
now’ for Herman.” 
The sale was made at the 
Detroit Car Co., 1614 N. Wood- 
ward Ave., Royal Oak, The lot 
owner, Parivn Lassiter, of 19690 
 Beverly__Rd.,—_ Southfield, _said_ 
‘| Herman did not appear to be 
nervous during the sale. 
“He acted perfectly okay,” 
Lassiter said.-     ont 
Twest;- 
%       “|Herman had a green and white 
flashlight in the remains of the| 
of -the-tot-said in Flint Fire 
he lot while Lassiter went to 
Detroit headquarters of Local 
(Hoffa’s home local) to have 
. title transferred by a Team- 
ster vice president. — 
x. * * 
It was believed that a third 
man, possibly the third man in the 
arson team, accompanied Herman 
and Keller. Officials would not 
comment on the ty. 
Adams said that Keller and 
late model Ford station wagon 
with them and this was the car 
thag Herman was last seen with. 
It was recalled that a neighbor 
of Frank Kierdorf’s in Flint also 
saw a green and--white station 
wagon pull up to the house the 
night of the fire. 
This same neighbor saw a black 
car—which authorities believe was 
Herman’s Cadillac—pull up a little 
later. But a neighbor of Herman’s 
said last night that he noticed began to 
whimper as he was strapped into 
the device. Executed at 11 p.m., 
he was pronounced dead three 
minutes later. 
* * & 
His wife Donna remained vith 
him in his cell until 9 p.m. The 
doomed man was heard to call 
out occasionally, “Maybe they'll 
save me yet.” 
witz had gone on the air in New 
York av, See nlc 
The Weinbergers suffered 
through a harrowing series of 
ransom notes and telephone calls 
until Aug, 23, 1956, when LaMarca 
was arrested. It was learned then 
that LaMarca, panicking, had left 
the baby to die in a lonely Long 
Island thicket the day after the 
kidnaping. The boy died of star- 
vation and exposure. 
The FBI sifted more than a mil- 
lion court and motor vehicle doc- 
uments, looking for handwriting 
clues in the ransom notes, before 
seizing LaMarca. 
* * * 
At his trial, LaMarca pleaded 
victed him. of first-degree murder 
‘without recommendation of mer- 
cy, Appeals went all the way to 
the U.S. Supreme Court. 
LaMarca ‘ate hearty meals dur- 
ing his last day, In addition to his 
wife, he-wWas visited by his par- 
ents, Vincenzo and Vitina LaMar- 
ca, and his brothers, Anthony and j Sel Voie Hut 
Gov. Williams: 
His attorney David M, Marko-| 
insanity, An all-father jury con-|: 
  Sen. Potter. ‘Interprets 
- of Disenchantment — 
Mennen Williams. 
Potter indicated he was. not 4m- 
pressed by Williams’ ” 
for an unprecedented sixth term or 
by a Democratic yote total almost! #, 
200,000 higher than the Republican 
vote, 
in fact; Potter added, he was 
surprised that the Denrocratic to- 
tal of 451,000 was not much high- 
er. “The Democrats went all out 
to get in a big vote and had con- 
tests up and down the line,” he 
said, “Still in spite of all their 
efforts, they didn’t do very well. 
“YT think it's an indication that 
ed with the boy (Williams).” 
2 OS 
Potter, who faces a stiff fight 
tor re-election this . year but was 
on was regrettable but explain- 
le 
didn't have the Aagesid to put on a 
campaign like the Democrats did,” 
he said. 
Tie'Clasp Is Slide Rule. 
NEW YORK — A New York 
jeweler has marketed a tie clasp 
which is a miniature, precision- 
meade slide rule that really works.   
  Primary Ballot as Sign|ewers constructed in 
: pe test during severe rain 
the people are getting disenchant-|° 
“We had no contests, and wel giving 
It's 2 inches long and comes in/fi |New ‘Sewers 
5 ring fo re % 
storms in the city Wednesday and 
The only places in the city stere 
there was any surface water dur- 
hours all flooded sections had 
  sterling silver or good plate. 
  
Monkey 
  CROSBY, Minn. (UPI)—‘Ma- 
thilda,"’ a 13-pound female mon- 
key, emerged virtually unharmed 
from a fast fall of more than 11 
miles beneath a punctured bal- 
loon. 
The monkey and her fellow 
passengers, a group of frogs, 
flies and gold fish, were sent up 
yesterday an a pressurized gon- 
dola as part of’a series of tests 
on the effects of cosmic rays in 
space travel. 
Their 20-story balleon, 
sored the flight, recovered the 
balloon on a farm about 60 miles 
from its launching site near 
Crosby. It didn’t take long to 
discover that Mathilda had sur- 
vived the fall. 
“Ouch! She tried to bite me!” 
- exclaimed the first medic to stick 
his head into the gondola. 
READY FOR NEXT TRIP 
Mathilda was removed, kick- 
ing and screaming, from the 
gondola and moments later was 
contentedly. munching on a ba- 
nana. A physical examination 
showed Mathilda in good shape 
and ready to lead another. ex- 
ploration into space. 
Air Force spokesmen said 
  Joseph LaMarca. the 650-pound balloon apparent-— 
  
Other Towns Outbreeze Chicago   
Herman's Cadillac in his driveway 
at about 10 p. m. Sunday, about 
45 minutes before the fire took 
place. 
* * *: 
This same neighbor said he 
heard a car door slam in ‘Her- 
man’s driveway “sometime during 
the early hours of Monday. 
Officials wére working to bring 
these various time estimates into 
line with their theory that Frank 
and Herman along with a third 
man, set the blaze, 
The Cadillac was taken into m.p.h. at Atlantic City. 
‘ He said other cities with 
Wash., with 14.2,       County Jail after a state police 
expert from Lansing tested it 
be available in two days said Lt. 
State Police, 
Also occupying . investigators’ 
Herman's Cadillac. 
connected with Frank's burns. 
* * * 
Adams, however, 
comment on the discovery, 
~Meantime, Adams has still to 
question more Oakland County 
Teamster leaders, Yesterday, he 
talked with Leaun Harrelson, local 
614 president; Alvy Bush, vice 
president; Donald Stone, a busi- 
ness agent, and Floyd P. =— 
jsecretary-treasurer. tone oe 
i ® &* 
  tion that was ceo the field 
  custody and held at the Oakland | 
for clues, The test results may | 
Howard Whaley, of the Redford | 
attention is a 24-inch streak on) 
the fabric above the rear seat of |E 
It appears to E 
be a scorch mark and may belE 
Another clue that has turned up 
has been bits of burned flesh & 
found at both the scene of the fire 
and at Frank Kierdorf’s home. E 
has withheld — 
\ | 
Adams said that from. these int 
tion tat he was gaining informa- |B \ ‘Windy City’ 
CHICAGO (UPI)—Chicago will have to relinquish its 
title as “Windy City” to Atlantic City, N.J. 
Weather Bureau forecaster John J. Sullivan said last 
night Chicago’s wind average during the last 15 years was | 
a puny 9.8 m.p.h., as compared with a gusty average of 152 
Buffalo, N. Y., with an average of 14.5, and Tatoosh Island, a Slacker 
a better claim to the title are St urvives 
I1-Mile ‘SpaceFall   
The gondola hit in a swampy 
farm area near Pine City, Minn. 
but did not break open. An Air 
Force tracking plane landed 
nearby and recovered the gon- 
-hours after the launching from 
an open-pit mine. 
The flight was a prelude to ‘in Birmingham 
dola and its cargo about two: : Pass Test 
of Severe. Rainstorms 
Steatford, Ontario, will'ggrive here, 
ee oe 
for short-time parking in the down-., 
town Birmingham area, 74 12-hour 
meters have been moved from Lot 
1 at Pierce and Merrill streets. 
Pepper: eBay ome oe 
Lot 3, Hamilton near 
and Forest streets, 
The majority of the 12-hour me- 
ters are used by drivers working 
in the offices and stores in the busi-- 
ness district, according to Police 
Chief Ralph W, Moxley, 
According to the July report of 
Fire Chief Park Smith, fire losses 
to contents and buildings in Bir- 
mingham last month amounted to 
only $165. 
-The department. answered 26 
calls, including five first-aid runs,- 
Smith reported, «   
Talks Today 
against the big three auto makers 
will be discussed today at a meet- 
ing of the United Auto Workers” 
International Executive Board..: 
UAW members have authorized a’ 
union contract negotiators. 
The 25-man board was‘ to open 
its meeting at 1:30 p.m. It will: 
hear reports from negotiating: 
teams on the status of bargaining - 
with General Motors, Ford and : 
Chrysler. 
Members of the union's FM, | 
meet Saturday. 
expected to come a decision by 
nounce a strike date against one: 
af the big three, and whether to 
. identify which of the auto firms. 
will be the target.   
  
PLUS Extra “Credit” Charges 
BIG DISCOUNTS : 
at SIMMS Small Deposit Holds Any liem 
LAYAWAY 
  next week's strato-lab experi- 
rent in which Air Force om. 
Grove J. Schoock will try t 
100,000 feet in a test of ee 
effects of space cea on a 
human. r 
    
E CANDY DEPT. SPECIALS 
- is 
| Pineapple Slices 
(30 14°. Tasty sugared — Summer 
candy treat. Limit 2 pounds. 
Sugar — Coated 
Cone 
   
          
            
   
       
      i 
‘ 
   
           
    Jumbo 
$37.50 
TABLES 
1   
98 North 
» Saginaw 
| Street 
  : or 8 
   
[Simm3.    
             
      
        
      
      
    
    “ALL METAL—Self-Locking 
GFt. Folding TABLES ~ Maker's List Price $27.95 Value 
ROTARRS) SPECIAL PURCHASE—Choice of 
2 Styles . . . Buy Now at This 
Su Sensational Money-Saving Price! 
@ Felds to 24x30” 
@ Rugged Braced 
@ Carry Handle 
@ For Many Uses 
O. ee Teer   
aR" 
a BUFFETS) 5 
BS x 
  6 
os 
  
X Foet Length 
                     
Legs 
Ti ent eign 
PTETEVETTELTOATITITIVTYET ET ETITTVEV TT TY Ys, 
     
      
    
   
        
      
      
     
       
   
     
     
              
       No. Carry Chasge—No Interest | 
E You owe it to your pocketbook * 
E to always compare prices at” 
E- SIMMS before you buy, 
instructions. 
ELECTRIC-EYE Model 
REVERE 3-Lens Turret 
— Movie Camera 
$169.50 List 
50 
REVERE Model "777" 
i MOVIE PROJECTOR - 
$127,50 List . 
Lifetime 
750 watt, 
reverse. 
  Argus 300—Bell & Howell 303 . 
SLIDE PROJECTORS — 
& 
: “eee rececesececoeoecee. 
: MANSFIELD “Fold-Away” 
Movie Editor and Splicer 
$39 List 
“22       e 400 ft. ca y reels. mm ey ies the easy way, 
PYTTTTTI TTT 
Endalite 2-in-1 Comb. 
34. 95 5 $4 a” 
Pits Kodak, Revere, Bell & Howell, 
Le ge movie cameras. $1 heeds" 
Photo. Flashbulbs 
$1.02 List 
-§ 59° a ee       
PSsimmo ey BROTHERS B 
CAMERAS 
         UAW Strike ' if 
walkout if necessary to back up; 
Brownie Movie Cat Camera ~ 
— 's $29.95 List- 
eo eee | 
ecccccccccccocooseres. 
te oe ee 
Edit & aplice.. 
E Telephoto & Wide-Angle Movie LENS~ In an effort ‘to im pea facilities. 
They now are located at Lot 2, .. 
and Lot &, Brownell 
— 
v 
* 
at Top Level ; DETROIT  — Strike strategy ‘ 
é 
‘ 
& 
Ford and Chrysler councils will ° 
Out of the weekend meetings is - : 
union leaders on whether to an-, 
No Need to Pay “List“ Prices ld, 
- ; Heb aebhbea @ 
give expert- 
* 
Cecccoescecevcocoooes. 
Lens adjust utoma. 
Y tically to ange light condies 
tion. {1.8.  . 
a 
. : case, 11.6 wide-angle» 
- ae pag tad ae 
Both els wutomatic and full 300° 
watts. eG eetunteed both by makeré; 
and Simms. 
+ 
a 
ae 
a 
i ee Th 
: cesreseseoesssesenses 
eh ae 
‘Main Floor ~ & 
    ee ee 
Puly ‘€ — Bo on yaa baiTHE PONTIAC PRESS _ ats eae 5 a 
x + 4 \ 
    
: FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1958 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN,   
Scores, of: Blue Ribbons * 
. Handed Out at 4-H Fair Blue ribbons are usually scarce; 
but due: to the exceptional quality! 
of exhibits and: animals at the 
annual Oakland County 4-H Fair in 
Pontiac this «week, many more 
were presented than last year. 
ts: sf, 
Here are the winners of the 
dairy, food preservation, and eloth- 
ing first-place awards. 
The Ayrshire cow of Helen 
Mites of Birmingham was 
named grand champion over all 
breeds, Reserve grand cham- 
pion was owned by Larry Mid- 
dieton of Lake Orion, 
Miss Miles’ animal placed first 
in the Ayrshire : breed contest, Chile Edwin Binke of Birmingham 
took second, 
The Guernsey cham pion be- 
longed to David Terry. Reserve 
champion in this division was 
owned by Janet Miller, Rochester. 
The cow belonging to Larry 
Middleton of Lake Orion walked 
off with first spet in the Hol- 
stein division, while Richard | 
Foster of Clarkston had -the re- 
serve champion. 
Jersey cows in first place were) 
shown by Rosemary Moran of Lake 
Orion and Gerald Austin, of Pon- 
tiac. Jerry Vantine of, Ortonville 
placed first in the Brown Swiss 
division while his brother Jim's!   cow was named reserve cham- 
ipion, ~ 
Other blue ribbon winners in 
the Holstein division were Doug- 
las and Janet Long, Milford; Bill, 
Larry and Tommy Middleton, Lake 
Orion, and.Marvin Scramlin, Holly. 
Guernsey winners were @&gnald 
Applegate, Clarkston, and. Janet 
Miller, Rochester. Jersey class win- 
iner was Rosemary Maron, Clarks- 
iton, 
Other ‘winner's were Linda Bul- 
man, Northville: Larry Middleton, 
Lake Orion; Richard Foster, 
Clarkston; Dennis Austin, Pon- 
tiac; senior yearling heifers: Mike 
‘Applegate, Clarkston; Larry 
'Scramlin, Holly; Eddie Cogger,   * 
  SHOWMANSHIP CHAMPIONS — Winner of 
the Senior Showmanship contest last night at 
the 18th annual Oakland County-4+-H- Fair, Bill 
Middleton (left) ‘of Lake Orion, poses with his 
Holstein cow, Donna. Douglas Aggie. 
Showmanship 
Long, (right) of division, 
  ‘LET ME AT HIM’ — One feature which ) 
provided fun for both spectators 
at the third night of the 4-H Fair Thursday was and participants the pig scram 
pigs are girls division contestants. Pontiac Press Photo 
Milford, captured two ribbons with his Holstein, 
Douglas won first place in the Junior 
contest and second iri the senior 
# 
é ry ! 4 i= 
Pee ee Se 
Pontiac Press. Phote 
ble.. Shown here chasing greased 
oe -\Earhart, Wall South Lyon; junior yearling heif-|. 
ers: Edwin Behnke, Birmingham; 
Jerry © Vantine, Ortonville; Jim 
Vatine, Ortonville; David Terry, 
Pontiac: Douglas Long, Milford; 
Gretchen Atchison, South Lyon; 
William Sullivan, Ortonville, senior 
heifer calves. 
Junior heifer calf winners 
were Marilyn. Mitchell, Holly; 
Norman Balko, Northville; 
Ronald Brown, Oxford; Rose- 
mary Moran, Clarkston; Tommy 
Cogger, South Lyon, and Gerald 
Austin, Pontiac. 
FOOD PRESERVATION 
Those who received top honors 
for food preservation were: Car- 
men Williams, Pontiac; Janet Ad- 
kins, Ortonville; Christine Ryniak, 
Birmingham; Mike Place, Oxford; 
\Louie Cascadden, Pontiac; Karen 
Saunders, Ortonville; Carolyn 
iSkariott, Milford; Sharon Pemple- 
ton, New Hudson; Cheryl Pemple- 
ton, New Hudson, and Tina Acord) 
of Drayton Plains. 
Others were: Janet Postma, 
Rochester®? Sandra Lee Brown, 
Oxford; Vera Eisenschenk, Bir- 
mingham; Lucille Serbert, Pon- 
tiac; Beth Kretschman, Pontiac; 
Sharon -Pickering, Rochester; 
Virginia Jardine, Birmingham; 
| Sharon Templeton, New Hudson 
and Carolyn Canfield, New Hud- 
son. 
Included in this list of winners 
are:.Carolyn Bowers, Milford; Don- 
neale Finch, Milford; Gloria San- 
ders, Rochester; Carolyn Hillman, 
Pontiac; Diane Cash, Wixom; Car- 
olyn Bowers, Milford; Sally M. Tay- 
lor, Clarkston and Margaret Weg- 
gins, Rochester, 
CLOTHING AWARDS 
Those who were awarded blue 
ribbons in the clothing division 
_ were: Chery! Difloe, Milford; Cyn- 
thia Clark, Rochester; Cheryl De- 
rucha, Rochester; Susan Zimmer- 
mah, Rochester; Rosemary Pan- 
man, Sandra Kniep, Linda Ridge- 
way, Leonard; Mabe} Russell, Ter- 
ry Fountain, Lucy Alix,. Birming- 
ham; Delores Kuyper, Bloomfield 
Hills; Karen Stawie, Orchard Lake, 
and Alice conse and Edna Mae 
Lake. 
Other first place clothing 
‘awards went to Charlene Grif- 
fith,, Drayton Plains; Linda 
Haack, Birmingham; Jean Hor- 
ton Bloomfield Hills; Sue Koen- 
eke, Birmingham ;Linda Dofter, 
Birmingham; Rosemary Moran, 
Diane Elliot, Judy Drum, Dennis 
Atwell, | Righarg Feole, Lynne 
Moere, Sandra -H 
ley, Leonard;” 
ard; Joaw Smith, i ee 
dine, Birmingham; Mary Cum- 
minbs, Rochester; Carole Horn- 
ing, Sue Slump, Ginny Webb 
and Ruth Ann James. . feery Eee {Wolverine Lake 
Hearing Slated | Council to. Submit Costs 
for Repair of Oak Island 
Bridgé to Residents 
WOLVERINE LAKE — A public 
hearing has been scheduled for 
7 p.m. Monday by Wolverine Lake 
Village Council to submit costs f 
the repair of Oak Island bridge to 
the residents of the island. 
kt ek & 
A previous public hearing was 
held to set up a special assessment 
district to defray the cost of the 
bridge repairs. 
If public approval is received 
at the Monday meeting at the 
Village Hall, the council prob- 
ably will let the contract for the 
work as soon as practicable, ac- 
cording to John C. Finlayson, 
village clerk. 
The Oak Island miee 
village landmark. ~ 
* * * 
No further hearings are sched- 
uled for the proposed special as- 
sessment district for the paving of 
Wolverine Drive and Amenia 
Drives since public objections were 
voiced at the last pliblic hearing. is a 
  
  HAZEL LEE MILLER 
Mr. and Mrs. Royal McGill of 
4788 Hillcrest Dr., Waterford, 
have announced the engagement 
of their niece, Hazel Lee Miller, 
to. Clyde Kizer, son es and 
“Maynard Kizer* of 80 N.. 
At St; Clarkston. A student at 
East Michigan College, the pro- 
spective bridegroom is a member 
of Sigma Tau Gamma fraternity. 
‘The wedding date hasn't saa! 
set.       
Tire Explodes in Rochester Garage   
ROCHESTER—A Detroit 
= he was putting air into 
Joseph’s Mercy Hospital in 
was described as fair this m 
They believed Lucien may h 
tube. 
day’s rainstorm, sounded like 
bor said.         x * 
The blast, which happened at 3:30 p.m., during yester- Detroiter Seriously Hurt 
man was injured seriously 
yesterday afternoon at the Houghten and Son, Inc., garage, 
528 N. Main St., when the inner tube of a large —— 
exploded. 
x * * 
He is James Lucien, 36, an employe at the garage. 
“was taken to Avon Center Hospital and later moved to St. He 
Pontiac where his’ condition 
orning. . 
Lucien suffered cuts, back and chest. injuries. 
The explosion ‘blew the tire off the rim and split the 
tube all the way down the middie, Rochester Police said. 
ave put too much aif in the 
* 
two trains colliding, a neigh- 
  
  ; } “\ t 
_. TO CONDUCT MEMORIAL RITES IN DETROIT — As the state's top Macca- _, 
~pees-team, -bake-Hive-281-has-been- given-the honor-of_conducting.Memorial Rites __ 
at the 23rd quadrennial Supreme Review Aug. 20 at the Veteran’s Memorial Build- 
ing in Detroit. The group placed) first at the Great'Camp Convention June 13 in 
\othey Michigan teams. The Oxford Hive was second. 
angé:Hel). in Lake. Orion, the Hive now meets at the 
rding to Evelyn Arnold; enamel ‘Referred to as-— - Saginaw in competition w 
- Founded in 1890 at the old ( 
~~ Methodist ‘Church House, a - 
    ' Pontiae fen Photo 
“Ladies of the Maccabees,” the Hive sinters are ( siniiling. from left) Hazel Bond, 
Frances Hunt, Lepha Decker, Ella‘ Lortz, Ruby_Bushman, Della Hull, Ivy-Sweet,—} 
* Sylvia Shafer, Edna Mikesell, Janet Sharrow, Charlotte Lamphier, Pearl Bryant, 
Helen Wesley; Beatrice Raab, Allece Carrothers; (seated, from left) Bobbi-Gunion, 
Mary McMorran, Ethel Schiek, Adelaide Babcock, Myrtle McKenzie, Evelyn Arnold, 
— — _— Baggett, p Aa Clark vand Martha Beppid. —— 
—- 
{ “|members postponed the dedica- 
‘Fire Ordinance ROMEO — At a special meeting 
last night, Romeo School Board 
tion of the new high schoo} from 
Aug. 31, the date they had tenta- 
tively set, to the early part of 
October.. 
Cause of the postponement was 
delay in completion of the gym- 
nasium floor they said. : 
* * * 
T. C.. Filppula assured 
the board, however, the new 
school will be ready for the opening of the fall pie Sept. 4. 
Board members then approved 
the purchase of a number of 
pieces. of equipment, plus sev- 
eral new textbooks. In addition, 
they accepted the low bid of 
$861.40 submitted by Peter 
Hixson of Washington for con- 
struction of sidewalks leading 
te the new high school. 
The board hired three new 
teachers and learned that four 
more “still are needed before 
school starts next month. 
Among the other items of busi- 
ness resolved last night was the 
@greement by board members to 
borrow $50,000 from the American Supt. 
  
Commerce Board 
Plans to Review 
COMMERCE TOW NSHIP — A 
proposed fire ordinance: will be 
studied by the Commerce Town- 
ship Board at its regular meeting 
at 7:30 tonight at the Township 
Hall. 
The ordinance js patterned after 
the Michigan State Fire Marshal’s 
ordinance, according to Supervisor 
Thomas C, Tiley. Board action on 
the matter will probably take place 
at a later meeting, he said. 
Another Subject likely to be dis- 
cussed at the meeting is the pos- 
sibili of transferring respon- 
sibility for township water systems 
to the Oakland County Department 
of Public Works. 
‘There are now six water sys- 
tems either in use or under con- 
striction. in the township. 
  
Two: Women Injured 
in Crash on Auburn ROCHESTER—Two young wom- en were injured slightly yesterday 
iafternoon in a two-car accident on       Romeo Board. Delays 
High School Dedication State Bank in "Lanlek against 
future state aid payments for 
operating expenses during the 
1958-59 school year. 
* * * 
The superintendent's contract 
also was renewed for the coming 
schoo] year with a raise in pay. # 
2 
nN 
a 
Members granted yertiiadion 1s 
the Romeo Rotary. Club to stage. 
ston or oS Se 
“ithe Croswell street school 
perty during the Peach 
Labor: Day weekend, proaeda 
icqnn the reed 9 SE WV Oe 
community = at ,     bs 
  Dise Data and Chatter y 7% SAN 
Music in the 
ent that the bulk 
of LP business 
doesn‘’t lie in the 
hands of teen- 
agers as single 
record sales do. 
While rock ‘n’ 
roll sells big in singles, it’s a 
different story in the slightly more 
expensive bracket. Take the best 
selling LP down Birmingham way 
+-“Stardust’ (Dot 3118) by Pat 
Boone. . 
Boone, the boy-faced halladeer 
in white bucks, is liked by all 
generations it seems. His LPs 
always. sell like the most, but 
Elvis pn f most of his suc- 
cess in the single field. 
Out in the Orchard Lake and 
Walled Lake areas, it’s hard to 
beat Mitch Miller’s LP ‘Sing 
Along With Mitch” (Columbia CL- 
1160): This is. not exactly what) 
the hipsters would cail the rock- 
inest. - 
  in Pontiac shops, proving 
that there are still quite a few 
good old whisky tenors’ in the 
crowd (pass the pitch pipe). — 
In the Bloomfield area it 
seems that. “Taboo” (HI-Fi R- 
906) by Arthur Lyman is still 
tops. This alee mesg Fas 
Hawalian guitars almost 
hula skirts and pineapple 
into your living 
‘n’ roll is not the order Round 
to the cool School, I's a tng 
awaited gas, Both Baker 
Mulligan blow great rings sound 
standards and originals. 
2 ho eS 
Record shelves will. glow with 
this addition, World Pacific has 
done the jazz world a world of good with this one. 
FIVE ACES: Top seller ‘in thé 
Pontiac area this week is “Little 
Star” by The Elegants. “Just a 
Dream” by Jim Clinton is second 
best. . :    
Little Fool” by Ricky Nelsons 
Perez Prado’s goldmine “Pate 
ricia” is in fourth slot. In fifth 
is ‘Western Movies” by thé 
Olympics. < ‘ 
die., We'll tell you why next week, 
Principals on Job 
in Walled Lake   
s They ask new residents 4 
dule changes to stop at the office as... ; * 
Junior high principal 
Adams and his. staff 
— open 8 a.m. to 3 
Friday 1 
f +0   ie   
  
Auburn road: at Robinhood street 
fh Avon Township, | 
Helga Hartung, 19, of 1115 Trv- 
wood Dr., Rochester, told Romeo 
State Police she had stopped ‘her 
car to make a left turn when it; 
was hit from behind by a car driv- 
en by Henri_Bartlett, 18, of 12533 
31-Mile Rd., Romeo. 
Miss Hartung suffered ‘possible; 
néck injuries and was treated by 
her family physician. 
Miss Bartlett was treated at Avon 
Center Hospital for leg cuts, She 
told police she was unable to stop 
because of slippery pavement, 
Slate Public Hearing| 
  LANSING ® — The State High-. 
way Department will hold a public | 
hearing Aug. 19 on a 
32.3 mile relocation of U.S.. 25 
through Macomb and St. Clair| 
counties. 
The hearing will be held at the! 
Roosevelt Civic Auditorium -at) 
Richmond, 
The proposed relocation is part, 
of an interstate highway network 
that, when completed, will provide | 
direct expressway service from) 
the Ohio border to Detroit and 
Port Huron via the Detroit-Toledo 
Expressway in. Detroit and con- 
necting with the Edsel bog Ex- 
pressway north to Port Hi 
  \Loses Control of Truck, 
\It Flips; Drivet Injured 
ARMADA — A Mount Clemens 
man, driving a Macomb County 
Road Commission truck, was in-| 
jured yesterday morning when he| 
lost control of the vehicle and it 
overturned in a ditch. 
The accident oceured on North, 
avenue, a half mile north of 33-| 
Mile road in Armada Township. 
* * ; 
Taken to St. Joseph Hospital, | 
Mount Clemens, with cuts and. 
bruises was David Schwalm, 20, 
of 155 North Ave. 
Romeo State Police ticketed him 
for driving too fast. | 
j 
1 
|   
County Calendar Avon Township = 
Stiles Branch of National 
Parm and Garden Association waa ihaid its annual family potluck. picnic Monde 
= i'p.m. at the hom oat Mrs. Harrisen mberton, 553 W Aub rm Rd. 
“* 
Sunday has been selected as 
.. Rd sem + Heart 
iaeuen sin be tom sivea' ibe then and ita 
ve of the lo A, 
ame Presid 
Holy Name "oon meeting er BS 
held Tuesday at 8 om. at the Parish! 
Hall, 
Rochester 
' Heart of the Hills Grandmother's Club, 
= hold # FB sepia pieni¢ peg at 12: Ba 
the home. 
  hienap, | 136 Griggs ao Rochester. i on Moving U.S. 25 | 
AL BAUER. 
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re ser « 7 
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    "Baseball fans in Pittsburgh have been all aglow 
over the return to the Majors.of Dick Stuart the brash, 
oe slugger who admits to egoism merely by his 
eee ow 
When he came up to the Pirates after hitting 66 
wee homers in the Minors in one season, Bobby Bragan, 
Mee conch of the Bucs, sent him back down with the 
-. ton, telling him, “I see you 
    
| Ps am z 
: <7He PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, auaust 8; 1958 
      
comment, “Don’t think 
‘much of him as ball player,” 
In typical Stuart fashion 
recently, ‘he sent Bragan a 
note to Spokane, Washing- 
are where you belong and 
I’m up here where I be- 
     not “n° £ °e *:. * * 
Milwaukée Ace Nears 20. Mark for 9th Time her Record—Now in 2- s% 
+ 
Wha 
  
, By The Associated Press 
the name of Warren Spahn pops 
to mind, The Milwaukee left-hand- 
ger, now 37, is heading. toward the 
20-mark for the ninth ‘time, If he 
makes it he will set a modern 
major league record for. left-hand- 
ed pitchers, 
is tied with Lefty Grove 
of the old Philadelphia A's among 
the southpaws. He still is way be- 
hind the top right-handers. Cy 
Young won 20 or more 16 times 
over 50 years ago. Christy 
Mathewson did it 13 33 times and 
Walter Johnson 12. 
"At the rate Spahn is going he Think of a 20-game winner and 
long.” 
  ae i with a star. - | ; 
DICK STUART Ko 
clutch department. 
_Foarteen of his first 23 hits have been extra bess 
" hits including six homers, and if you‘ask Pirate fans 
why the sndden jump from the cellar to third place, 
they'll say_ “Stuart is back.” 
‘DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX 
® mistake by changing horses in midstream. 
wile Fae @ 
Bo 
x o* is 
iid shail the ccoeiis the Amacione treck team 
Eis dieting on the Eecnenans tom? Here in the U. S., 
friends and relatives of the participants. 
‘The two meets in Russia and Poland drew over 
, eee fans. 
i poe ae A cre 
lig 
5: 
  ER ball s a 
by writing 
  Pepe spans thom the 1958 school. Actually, since his return 
a few weeks ago to the 
We Gai tart tals been batting only .250 but in 
his first 20 games he batted in 24 runs, and that’s the 
__ Pontiac’s Joy Fair, who last year was Michigan's 
outstanding hard top racer, now realizes he has made 
_Fair hasn’t been in the winner’s circle very often 
- this year and he has now decided to remove the super- 
charger from his car and revert back to the fuel injector 
ne Hie 8 teres the mniswent last 
. the cindermen are lucky enough to draw only the - 
Pm interested in attending the Tigertown base- 
school next January 30 to February 12 may apply 
‘to Ed Katalinas, director of scouts, at Briggs 
| ~The school, . which is limited to 135, requires 
own transportation and $98 tuition. Nine prospect 
  Then Stuart, who used to, . A 
put “66” behind his name 
in honor of those homers 
in one season, signed the 
note to Bragan by dotting 
the “i” in his first name AP Wirephoto 
SETS RECORD—Albert Thom-: 
as, Australian clerk, established 
a new world record for the 
two-mile run Thursday in Dub- 
lin, Ireland, running the dis- 
tance in the — of 8:32.0, 
» will have no trouble making the 
  wits ibe the third 
A three-run straight, year. 
against Bob 
Milwaukee a 3-2 decision over 
Pittsburgh yesterday with Spahn 
scattering seyen hits for his 15th 
victory, Friend who shut out the 
Braves for six innings, also was 
shooting for his P ems Bey 
a * * 
The Braves ee seven full 
games in froht of the San Fran- 
cisco Giants who again ran into 
rough going at St, Louis. The Car- 
dinals scored early and often in 
a 12-1 romp behind Sam Jones. 
Whe Giants have lost nine of their 
last 10 since Casey Stengel, New 
York .Yankee manager,   Friend in the seventh inning gave 
called them a “freak team.” Milwaukee 
has won nine of 10. 
Philadelphia climbed into fourth 
by shading Cincinnati 3-2 behind 
Don Cardwell, Dave Philley’s tri- 
ple and Chico Fernandez’ sacri- 
fice fly broke a 2-2 tie in the 
eighth to beat Bob Purkey. 
Johnny Klippstein saved Sandy 
Koufax in the ninth inning to pro- 
tect a 3-1 Los Angeles victory over 
the Chicago Cubs, Despite the 
sweep of the two-game series, the 
Dodgers headed home for the Col- 
iseum ‘still in last place. 
Friend had a 1-0 lead and a 
two-hit shytout going to the sev- 
énth at Milwaukee. Red .Schoen-   re. rs 
Spahn Chalks Up 15th Win dienst opened with a . single and 
Eddie Mathews hit his -23rd 
home run. A_ single by Hank 
Aaron, a sacrifice and a single 
by Frank Torre added the third| 
run, ; 
* * * 
The revived Cardinals, who 
couldn’t score a run last week, 
battered loser Mike McCormick 
and two others for 13 hits, The 
Cardinals have a total of 33 runs 
and 46 hits in their last three 
games. Stan Musial’s two hits in 
three trips gave him the batting 
lead at .346 to .344 for the Phils’ | 
    
Smaak EK ¢ 
      
  
4 Holes, 560 Yards, Par 11   
  BUDAPEST (# — The Air Free 
golf course on the Hills of Buda is 
probably the only course in the 
world where President Eisenhower 
-Acould break 70. 
It is a four hole, Se0-yard, par 11 
legations of dther Western coun- 
Joe Stammel, a Hungarian who 
calls himself “the poorest golf pro 
on earth,” gives lessons,   up and acts as caddy when some   
Junior Baseball 
  
- Conservation Body Puts 
OK on. Any Deer’ Rules HIGG 
veraial ‘‘any-deer” season   
      en this fall 
Game men described the pro-) 
gram as conservative, . intended, 
. Partly to satisfy widespread oppo- 
sition to shooting of does am 
fawns. 
i cate fer Gh terrence in Os to * & 
U.S. Forestry Service. —jgeasons are needed to reduce a 
"s contro-|surplus of deer in areas of short 
were | food supply where starvation is a 
4 
Support for the. conservation de-| 
partment's recommendations came! 
from James L. Rouman, executive Winning teams following the com-| 
director, of the Michigan United pletion of all the action. 
Conservation Clubs, and H. O. Nix- 
on of Cadillac, representing the Finals Sunday The sponsoring Pontiac airs 
&- Recreation 
moved up the junior baseball 
championship games from Monday 
to Sunday in order to give more 
families an opportunity to see the 
youngsters in action. 
Title contests in all four classes 
—F, -D, Midgets and Widgets. 
Through the cooperation of | the 
Junior Chamber of Commerce, 
plans were completed yesterday to 
have all action at Jaycee Park. 
Such a program will enable 
many area fans to make a com- 
plete day of it by enjoying the 
picnic facilities at the park. The 
finals will start at 1 p.m. The 
big * 
about 3 p.m.   The 
|\Class D, F and Midget winners 
will advance into District playoffs 
here next week. : < 
    
BO MMS MA RIBRS. 
  one, 
Aleigan County, would be concur-. 
rent with the regular Nov. 15-30 
regular buck season. 
Tom Buzzo of Baldwin, execu- 
tive secretary of the Greater Mich- 
igan Conservation League and a 
long-time foe of any-deer seasons, 
vowed he'd carry his fight to the 
joint legislative committee on ad- 
ministrative rules in Lansing later 
this month. The committee has a 
yeto power over any-deer regula- 
tions established by the commis- 
sion, and last year knocked out a 
special season slated for Dickinson 
County. 
Appearing at a stormy four-hour 
hearing on issue, Tom Carnahan, 
representing. the Big Star Lake 
Property Owners Assn., told the 
; commission that supervisors of|! 
os Leelanau, Bezie, Manistee, Wex-|¥ 
. ak Newaygo waeaia counties | 
gd on record nst special) 7 
Michigan ‘ofl. 
ae cS 
OT 
Re 
  
See 
          
  ‘ Hh EL = Sometimes—by chance—the player does get ‘the 
> fight leg back in the original position. 
Dnastenndimalmhedanitonmiad bail. a 
\% But the point is that the right leg needn’ t—and 
ee “ shouldn't move on the backswing. Try to keep it stable 
© —and watch your shots straighten out. 
iat nhie-oad 1958; John F. Dille Co.) 
  RE OE a iceman “T 
Doctoring Your Golf By DR. CARY MIDDLECOFF 
PATIENT'S COMPLAINT: 
DIAGNOSIS: Wobbly Right Knee. 
TREATMENT: Your right leg is the foundation on 
which your golf swing rests on the backswing. 
logical, then, that the cen leg should stay firmly in   
  
: 
           
All Over the Course. 
It’s 
place until the weight is 
shifted back to the left leg 
as the downswing begins. 
Many golfers, particular- 
ly those with long back- 
swings, turn the right knee 
outward and back while 
taking the club back. This 
“changes the position of the 
body with reference to the 
ball, m “it possible to 
hit a straight shot only if 
the right knee is returned 
exactly to its original posi- 
tion.     And occa- 
se Found-—a Course Where 
Ike Can Hit Under 70 
  ‘D” battle is slated to begin 
Trophies will be awarded the| ws 
Sauaa 
Wa) 
Ss 
OURS 
cabs 
RR 
ES 
eee 
eS 
OS 
ENS ZR 
BO 
  ee EAN 
bee] 
     of thats Segotton Veins tira wo’ 
as ae hill — neat kidney-shaped 
po — par 3. 
  
  \Swoon’s Son, 
ie\Round Table in 
Equipose Mile 
Associated Press Sports Writer 
Round Table and Swoon’s Son 
plus others will meet in the $100,- 
000-added Equipoise Mile tomor- 
row at Chicago's Arlington Park, 
and aside from the monetary con- 
siderations it should be quite a 
battle. 
. The Kerr Stable’s Round Table 
packs 131 pounds, and Gay 
Drake’s Swoon’s Son has 129 for 
has|the 18th running of this important 
race named for C, V, Whitney's 
Equipoise. Twenty six years ago 
Equipoise, the famed Chocolate 
Soldier, set Arlington’s mile rec- 
ord of 1:34 2-5, and it still stands. 
Round Table is the world's sec- 
ond leading money winning -horse, 
with earnings of $1,161,014. The 
Table is only. $127,551 behind the 
leader, Nashua, who retired in 
‘1956. If he can win the Equipoise, 
it would take only one more big 
one to put him past Mr. Millions. 
On July 26 Swoon’s Son cap- 
tured the Detroit Sweepstakes, 
boosting his gleanings to $850,929. 
  
  AMERICAN LEAGUE be Lest Leo ane Behind 
514   
  ease ? * 1s. p.m. 
(11) vs. —_ 
Kansas iid at Cleveland 4 p.m.—Garver 
7 . Grant (9-4). 
Mork, ° sr 
Was’ 
Chicago at Detroit, 1:30 
Kansas sor a Cleveland, 2. 
ONAL LEAGUE 
Won Lest “pam. 
12:30 p.m. 
E 
ct. Behind 
eB 
51 
52 
  $2 
sa saeee 54 f+ sodeen 
id 
YESTERDAY'S Hest Milwaukee 3, Oe 
=P 
8 FP elven at Ss ‘an es, ‘10 mn, jan Fran 
=Gornet ies eet eth, 
_Cincinnat 5 —™ 
hall Ca “va, Fu SEEM 
TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE 
    = be 
io) foul 3:30 oie ; San er va al or 
¥ agers. BUSY DAY FOR UMPS — Never a day 
goes by that the men in blue, the Major League 
umpires, aren't shouted at by players and man- 
Danny Murtaugh, manager of the Pitts- 
burgh Pirates, gives Augie Donatelli a mouthful 
ine ia (it 
         
                   
   
       
               
         
umpiré Jocko 
Murtaugh was * nie 
the plate quite often. 
ager Walt Alston. 
the Dodgers the heave- ho in the game against 
the Cubs yesterday. - Richie Ashburn, 
* * * 
Sonne, whe wndalty bes to era: 
gle along with little Kelp from 
‘Cardinal bats, had an 8-0 lead aft- 
er three innings. He. struck out 
seven and Jost his shutout .in the 
ninth, He leads ‘both majors with 
Barlick when he and Ramon Mon- 
set: objected We 8 call of a third 
ball. a 
: * 
a. wuss bed G40 eter oe 
ing intd the seventh when Bob 
Thurman's third gingle, a single 
by Don Hoak and a two-run dou- 
ble by Bailey evened matters, Ed 
: Bouchee’s single drove in the first 
Phil: run and -Cardwell’s single 
knocked ,in. the second, Ashburn 
had two hits, a double and a sin- 
gle, 
* * * 
Koufax was rolling along with 
a four-hitter when he walked Er- 
and Bobby Thomson 
with one out in the ninth, Klipp- 
stein: got Lee Walls on a game- 
ending double play. Koufax struck 
out 10 for his ninth victory. Los 
Angeles’ winning pair of runs in 
the fifth off Marcelino Solis, the 
southpaw, were un- 
E . Bobby Thomson's 14th 
omer ‘produced the only Cub run. 
THURSDAY'S HOME RUNS 
GUE 
Senators; 
Red Sox. bata 
AP Wirephotes 
ejected a couple days ago and makes the trip to ? 
In the bottom photo, 
Conlon points the way for man- 
‘He gave Johnny Podres of 
  
By The Associated Press 
birthday, Ted Williams For a man closing in‘ on his 40th | 
still 
swings a mean home‘run bat. With 
476 to-his credit, the Boston Red | Sox singeee now seems certain to 
reach his lifetime goal of 500 
home runs, 
* * * ; 
“Wouldn’t that be something?”   
=. -Druggists Pull 3-2 
Upset at Waterford 
test in the 7th inning and Sno-Bol 
Plains. 
error, stole 2nd and 
.|double to give the 
pitcher in a relief role, 
effort.as the Sno- 
Nonne’s | Drive-In a_10-1- drubbing. 
Keith was the starter and wipner. 
  
    om Drayton Drug won a tight con- 
scored a runaway victory in Wa- 
terford American League softball 
games Thursday night at Drayton 
Sid Gregory reached ist. via tallied the 
winning run on Stu Hutchinson's 
32/94 for its fitth straight. victory. nd Pharr: was the only game scheduled |two- 
Fats Keith and Wimpy Johnson 
combined for a three-hit mound 
club handed Ted said before the season start- 
ed. “If I get ‘em (500) I'll have 
to admit I’m a helluva hitter. 
Maybe I'll get ’em too, It means 
playing two or three more years. 
x * &* 
Recently Williams said he would 
be happy to finish the season at 
300, lowering his sights from an 
original forecast of a .330 season 
and about 30 homers. It. is begin- 
ning to look as if Williams was 
right the first time. 
Williams hit his 20th of the year 
in the American League. 
“The two hits edged Williams to 
.311 and an eighth-place tie in the 
batting race. Although he is 24 
points behind _the Jeader,.. team- 
mate Pete Runels, Ted _still must | 
be given a chance of winning his Williams | in Sight of 500 Homers | Yankee Stadium, starting tonight. 
Because the Yanks were idle yes- 
terday, the Sox gained a half 
game and now trail by 1542 
lengths. 
By a. peculiar quirk of the 
schedule, the. Yanks and Red Sox 
have played only eight games 
(New York holds a 6-2 edge). 
They have 14 more to go includ- 
afternoon and a Sunday double- 
header. 
* &e * . 
Williams’ homer at Fenway 
Park was a tape measure job, 
variously estimated at more than 
450 feet, It came on the first 
pitch by Truman Clevenger with 
the bases empty in the sixth in- 
ning and soared some 20 rows in- 
to the collage field bleachers. Ted’s 
came with ‘the 
bases cg ee in the second. 
* * * 
Frank Sullivan won his ninth, 
allowing eight hits\ and fanning 
seven, _He yielded Roy Sievers’ 
31st homer and Jim Lemon's 23rd. 
  
  *   _prvaspay's ._ rion} jeixth batting crown, Jackie Jensen ediay homer lead. 
NORTH ADAMS. Mase --Charile Bow. * 8 a In addition to Will » Dor Bud- 
|e aatd, Mite pee A {iopped Billy) Williams’ hitting ‘= coincides|din also hit a haat agi Clev- 
* Youngstown, Onto, ee Sew yes o Red lenger, Hel, Grig Saedion "tt “Mexico” a Sox-New . York | Yanks series at/his ninth ‘to ree "vetories— 
"4 
  _ {time. ile Ru 
  | Albert Thomas 
‘Is Clocked at 
8:32 in 2-Mile 
to Meet Elliott in 
Mile at Edinburgh 
DUBLIN (» — Australians Herb 
Elliott and Albert Thomas packed 
their record-breaking cleats for 
Edinburgh today. Behind. them 
they left -shattered world records 
for the mile and two mile runs. 
The, glowing hearts of Irishmen 
went with them. 
Elliott Wednesday set a great 
mark of 3:54.5 for the mile on the 
foewly tale, $56,000 Santry Stadium 
yesterday estab- 
the two miles with a $:32 clock- 
ing. They had made the Santry track famous forall time. 
“Now" we go to Edinburgh and 
Scotland,” the 23-year-old Thom- 
as‘ sald. “There, on Saturday, 
we'll compete in a Highland 
games,"* 
Commented Elliott “Pm looking 
forward to Edinburgh, and it’s 
probably the mile’for me.” 
* ¥€ * 
‘Somebody else who is hoping the 
20-year-old Elliott runs-the mile in 
Edinburgh is England’s Derek Ib- 
botson. The 26-year-old Englishman 
had the world’s best time of 3:57.2 
before Elliott's fantastic clocking. 
tailed to hit the peak form that. 
made him the “king of the mil- 
ers” last season, 
But Ibbotson still maintairis he’s 
“the tops.” And he's. entered for 
the mile at Edinburgh, 
x rw’ 
Thomas ,5-5 Australian clerk, 
broke the world two mile record 
last night after Elliott had set the 
pace for the five laps. Thomas 
pushed ahead on the sixth lap and 
then raced away on his own to a 
world standard and a 25 yards 
lead over Elliott. 
Elliott was timed second in 
_| 8:37.6, The listed world mark of 
' 8:38.4 was set by Hungary’s San- 
der tharos in London May 30, 
1955. 
So Elliott repaid the debt he 
owed Thomas for his fantastic mile 
* * * 
In that mile Thomas set the pace 
for the first two laps. Then Merv 
‘Lincoln of Australia took over, fol- 
‘surged ahead to victory and a 
mile time that looks like it'll stand 
for le Thomas finished fifth in 
3:58.6. 
and Thomas moved ahead for the 
kill and the world record. 
  
(BOH Will Hold 
Dressage Test Sept. 20-21 Event Will 
Aid in Selection of 
Olympic Riding ers. 
Competition looking towards se- 
lection of the United States Olym- 
pic equestrian team will take place 
at Bloomfield’ Open Hunt . Club 
Sept. 20-21, Irving A. Duffy, direc- 
tor for the tests here, announced 
this morning. 
“The competition at BOH will 
include only dressage,” Mr. Duffy 
explained. ‘Riders will compete 
for the Col. Hiram E. Tuttle Me- 
morial Trophy, which we have 
named for the former U. 8. Olym- 
pic rider and instructor at Ft. Ri- 
Toss Kans. Col. Tuttle died several 
years ago.” Mr. Duffy is donor of 
the aan Col. Tuttle was a pi- 
oneer in dressage in the United 
States. 
U.S. Equestrian Team, Inc.,: 
non-profit group, sponsors ‘he 
event here. It’s purpose is to de- 
velop U.S, riding teams (three) 
for competition in the Pan-Amer- 
ican and Olympic fields. 
“We expect to have six or nine 
horses from a number of stables 
in the East,” the 1957-58 Detroit 
Horse Show chairman said. Riders 
from this area certainly will be 
Iheaded by Olympian Major Rob- 
ing singles tonight and Saturday ert (Bob) Borg, of Oxford. Other 
area riders include possibly Frank 
Duffy, son of the director (although 
his medical studies at U. of M. 
may preclude his appearance); 
James Jones, Skip Dowd, Chuck 
Grant and Chuck’s wife, Emmy, 
all of whom took part in the dress- 
age events at -BOH, in June. 
Jumping ,phase of the USET 
tests is set "tor Sept. 28-Oct. 5, at 
Fairfield, Conn., when prelims for 
the Prix Sng Nations team will be 
  Netters in Semifinals 
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. (AP) — 'Second-seeded “Paul -Palmer—and— 
Sievers now is tied with Boston's Unranked Bilt—Lenoir,- =both—front- 
Phoenix, Ariz., took on: ‘seeded op- 
ponents here today in junior sin- 
gles semifinals of the fifth annual , 
    loser, |Jaydee. setae tennis tourna- 
—“}ment.— 
eer f f “y Derek Ibbotson: Wants - 
Thomas 
ieee the world’s best time for - 
lowed by the powerful Elliott who 
-Last night Elliott set the pace 
% 3 
ran 
rege  
     
   THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. AUGUST 8.1958. 
  >    
    
Do Ht Yourself: = [ron . 
~ RAILINGS 
  ns ‘Put 0 Full ‘ 
  
SS Southfield Dios 
: nr oaton Tourney 
Opener to Flint 
Southfield . and Lapeer were 
-}matched in a battle of survival to- 
ibe pes day after losing by identical 5-4 
ft |scores yesterday in the opening 
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CARL SHELL 
~ and SONS 4994 Dixie Hwy., 
Drayton Plains 
OR 3-5043 
Open Friday ‘til 9 P.M. 
  rouhd of the Junier Legion District 
Playoffs being held at Clawson and 
Troy. 
The contest was the opener of a 
doubleheader with Thursday  vic- 
tors Flint and Owosso meeting in 
the. other half. The games were 
|postponed from yesterday. after- 
noon due to.heavy rains. Two 
teams will remain after today. 
at state honors, 
Southfield blew a 4-3 lead in bow- 
ing, A single and double in the 
10th defeated Bob Filar. A two- 
run single by Jim McDonald, who 
had two hits, Tom Ridley’s double 
and Len Spicer’s squeeze bunt ac- 
counted for the Southfield runs. 
Butch MeKillen of Lapeer was 
the batting star.of the day with 
three singles and two triples for all) 
his teams rbi's,~Lapeer led 1-0 
early but trailed from the 3rd on. 
Wins Printer’s Event 
SILVER SPRING; Md. (AP) — 
Defending champion Ernie Maw- 
whirter of Calumbus, Ohio, fired 
a five-over-par 77 and captured 
‘|the Union Printcraft International 
Golf tournament Thursday with a       
    
   
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e VACATIONS 
e CAR REPAIRS 
e PAYING A GROUR 
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. 69 West Huren Street      FEderal 3-7181 
     
  They meet Saturday at 9:30 a.m.|, 
for the district crown and’a shot) 
ithe note that All-America John 
with outsta = 4 
Enthusiasm Is 
High as Squad 
Waits for Stars Two Rookies Expected 
Today's Scrimmage 
By BRUNO L. KEARNS 
Sports Editor, Pontiac Press 
A full scale rehearsal for the 
annual football All-Star game one 
week from tonight took place at 
Cranbrook this morning where the 
red jerseys of the Detroit Lions’ 
defensive team bumped heads with 
the white jerseys of the offensive 
unit. 
There was a high note of en- 
thusiasm on the squad as the two 
units tore into each other as if a 
championship was at stake. 
At least two and possibly three 
rookies will be cut after the 
films of today’s scrimmage are 
viewed by the coaches. to Be Cut Following ~ 
CHECK LINEUPS—Hopalong Cassady and 
Darris McCord check the bulletin«board at_the~ 
Cranbrook training camp for 
today’s full scale srunmage which is the last 
  the -word on before next week's 
McCord will be with the red jerseys at de- 
fensive end, while Cassady starts at right half 
on the offensive unit. Pontiac Press Phote 
All-Star game in Chicago. jearsall ° 
  
After - watching 
scrimmage the Bears a couple 
days ago, coach George Wilson the All-Stars * 
52 Crack Par at. Milwaukee   
was especially concerned about 
his offensive anit. 
wk &® * 
‘The. Stars put on a good de- 
fense against the Bears,’”’ said 
Wilson,” @s the Bears scored all 
'their touchdowns through the air.’ 
Bobby Layne started at the 
quarterback. slot this. morning 
with Jim Doran and Steve Junk- 
er at the ends and Hopalong 
Cassady at the flanker half- 
back post. 
Veterans started at every posi- 
tion on both units, but every, 
rookie saw action in the session 
which lasted more than 65 min- 
utes.             x * * 
From the All-Star training camp 
at Northwestern University came 
Crow, fullback from Texas A&M, 
would probably be out of the game 
next week. 
Crow was hospitalized earlier 
thig week and the Stars’ team 
physician said today Crow may 
have mononucleosis and if this 
was the case then “he would 
definitely be out of the game.” 
The All-Stars are well stocked 
ing guards and tack- 
les with- an average weight of 
| 234 pounds among 17 players. 
x *« * 
  
  
SKIS CUSHIONS . ‘SURF: BOARDS 
PONTIAC 
396 ORCHARD 
  “All Boats in Stock 
‘Owen’ s Marine Su Malle: FE 2-8020 LIFE JACKETS 
SKI ROPES 
WATER SAUCERS Hexpected to draw the largest Defensive kingpins are tackle 
Lou Michaels of Kentucky and): 
linebacker Chuck Howley of West 
Virginia. Michigan State’s Dan 
Currie and the Lions’ draft choice 
Wayne Walker are a cotiple ‘out- 
[mending centers on the team. 
Observers however do not feel 
| that the collegiate quarterbacks 
of Jim Ninowski of MSU, King 
| Hill of Rice, Tom Forrestal of | 
| Navy or Ray Brown of Missis- 
sippi can match the ‘passing 
arms of Layne and Tobin Rote. 
The game next Friday night is 
crowd since 1954 when the Lions 
meade their last appearance be- 
fore 90,000 fans. It will be tele- 
vised on ABC, Channel. 7 at 8:30 
p.m. 
Playoffs Delayed Again 
For the second straight day, rain 
and wet grounds postponed the   
  MICHIGAN | 
LAKE AVENUE     |championship ‘finals _ of, ‘the. . City 
iLeague softball playoffs at Beau-| 
‘dette and North Side parks. City! 
i|knocked out. yesterday. ‘Everybody League baseball games wete also 
  will try agaifr today,   
  
  MILWAUKEE (AP)—Paul Har- 
ney and Ernie Vossler, 29-year- 
old pros with only one tourna- 
ment victory between them this) ~ 
year, today carried a thin, one- 
stroke lead into the second round 
of the $35,000 Milwaukee Open 
golf tournament, 
* * * 
They sheared seven strokes off! 
Tripoli Golf Course's tempting, 
35 - 35 — 70 standard for record— 
equaling 63s yesterday in the; 
opening round. But then 50 other 
players in the field of 40 also 
smashed par{ 
* * * 
Seldom has a course been so 
thoroughly tamed as this one, de- 
  
U.S., Britain. 
Begin Cup Play NEWTON, Mass. (AP)—Britain 
opens defense of its Curtis Cup 
golf title today by pitting: an edge |: 
in experience Against American 
youth and weather. 
* * * 
The 10th international women's) 
cup competition at- Brae Burn 
Country “Club. begins with three 
Scotch foursomes playing 36 holes. 
The pairs from each nation take 
turns hitting the ball. 
a victory in each of--the nine 
matches. 
Of the six British women picked 
for today’s play, five are veterans 
of Curtis Cup strife including the 
and Mrs. Angela Bonallack, 
They tee off against the only 
U. §. cup veterans—Polly Riley of 
Fort Worth, Tex., ard Barbara Ro- 
mack of Sacramento, Calif. 
  
Toledo Old-Timers 
Guests of City Nine 
Walt Honchell, manager ,of the 
Pontiac Old-Timers’ baseball club, 
today announced.plans’for a Satur- 
day game with a Toledo Old- 
Timer .outfit. 
Honchell named Herm’ Bishop|N 
ahd Eichorn as his mound choices 
for the 4-p.m. contest at Wisner Harney, Vossler Hit 63s. 
   spite an energy-sapping humidity, 
two heavy rainstorms and a tor- 
nado that cavorted nearby. 
Harney, who comes from Wor- 
cester; Mass., and Vossler, a 
master plumber who plays out of 
Midland, Tex., owed their fine 
rounds to sharp putting. Harney 
needed. only’ 26 strokes on the 
igreens, one more than Vossler. 
They stroked identical rounds of 
31-32 over Tripoli's6,335-yard lay- 
out in the march for the $5,300 
first prize money. 
* kik 
Sharing third place with 64s 
were Brien Charter, 31, pro from 
Janesville, Wis., and Sam Snead, 
46, the slammer from White Sul- 
phur Springs, W. Va, They each 
carded 34-30. 
sewer eee sess ewenes 
Brien Charter 
      Sree         Jack Burke Jr. 
Tom Nieporte .. 
Gi] Cavanaugh . 
Ken- Venturi 
on Wall Jr. 
c. 
Bob Resbore               
    
  Pal 
sae Middiceoft siaalbroieinierore 
Six singles matches follow to-| 
morrow. One point is awarded for:. 
No, 1 tandem of Elizabeth Price, 
MOW...GET ‘Field.. Jim Berg will do the ‘re- 
‘ceiving. The Ohio club's battery-     eeeee ee 
  
      
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              Armstrong, Calhoun 
Collide in TV Bout 
By The Associated Press 
“Ace” Armstrong is getting a lot 
middleweight is only a 6-5 under- 
dog against experienced, powerful 
Rory Calhoun for their 10-round 
N.J.; has won all 14 of his pro 
his last fight. 
€ 8K, 
ae 23, of White Plains; 
, has a 35-41 record, includ- 
most of the leading middleweights 
Rory is stocky and muscular and 
has the punch to go’ with his, NEW. YORK (AP)—For a fellow } 
stepping into fast company, Gene! 
of respect. The rangy .unbeaten|}> 
television scrap at Madison 
Square Gardén tonight. 
* ~~ &* 
Armstrong, 26, of Elizabeth, | 
fights in three years, But he has 
scored only one knockout and his_ 
only victory over a name fighter, 
jwas racked up last Feb, 17 when 
he decisively whipped Charley Jo-| 
seph of New Orleans. That was) Motor Tune-Up $3.95 (Minor Plus Parts) 
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UP               AR 48 knockouts, He has on 
i 
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  "IES COURSE RECORD — 
birdies, 2 eagles and a bogey'and ee 
pro who tied the Tripoli Golf Club’s course record Thursday with a 
dazzling T-under-par 63, drives off the 9th tee in the 1st round of 
the $35,000 Milwaukee Open tournament. He took the lead on the . 
strength of the brilliant 31-32 round in.which he fired 11 pars, 4 ® 
“hp winesiote 
; Paul Harney, Worcester, Mass.,   
ood, |the public is invited, without; 
When cutslee sleced.inet night, 
there were 109 names, in a 
score of events in a half dozen 
divisions, They represented 11 
ie ee ee Wis-     BPE ay 
  needed only 36 putts.” “< 
regltl i! Working Breeds Dominate 
|PKC Fall Show Entries: 
‘Obedience entries are the largest 
in years, says PKC officials, 
“Top dog” for the show will win 
the best-in-show award to be pre- 
sented by The Pontiac Press. Last « By H. GUY MOATS il Lazy Bones (just plain Lazy Bones 
to his owner, Chris Teeter of Bir- ae zt af % i 
i E 
: Sporting dogs—144 (155 in 1957).   
Craft Raps Team for Sagging oa"   
    
We Have One of 
- Gakland County’s 
Largest and Most 
       
     
     
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Glenn Hight 
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RIS. 
‘CARS AVAILABLE 
  
  
  
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“Check t thiiss ak ‘ 
on other sizes! 
6.00 x 16 Fits older models 
of Plymouth,   
  let, Nash and Studebaker. ° . 
1 7.10 x 15 Fits most pre- 
1957 models of Dodge, Buick, 
Nash, Olds, Mercury, Pon- 
tiac and Hudson. 
1485" 7.60 x 15 Fits most ‘recent 
models of Dodge, Buick, 
Nash, Olds, Mercury, Pon- 
tiac, Hudson: 
1625" 
* Blackwall Tube-Type. 
Plus Tax and Recappable Tire, 
Your old tires can be the 
down payment! Ray the 
balance as low as $1.25 
@ week!   | SUPER- CUSHION 
2 abeastean 
NEW LOW PRICE . 6. 70x 15 Fits most 1957 
               
          
      
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@ Pack Froot Wheels (Beg, $3. 
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_ BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL! a | 2° FOR MOST CHEVROLETS, 
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use ouR EASY PAY PLAN!     
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Comparable Low Evices tht Over 
Model Cars 
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-j.in size from three to eight inches. 
  | ‘KANSAS CITY @ — Usually 
ihe had turned the heat on “four 
[or Sve gun. who are jist suing 
During the home stand that end- 
\ed ‘Thursday night the Athletics 
\lost 9 and won 6. 
Craft asked it he could pat his 
on the reason for this, the 
Sree bake mace of te reat 
the team, said the club had    
   
    
‘nake-Like the motions, so to speak.” 
  sn ie beak gale Sere A's Coach Fuming. Hounds—72 (74 in 1957). 
Working dogs—144 (186 in 1957). 
. Terriers—55 (43 in 1957). 
Toys—43 (57 in 1957). 
: Non-sporting—64 (61 in 1957). 
“And I assure you," Craft con- this season, ue tae pol Eyal ago, peels 
ified on this road trip or you are |t am going to do that job to the This fall’s show, like all other 
not going to find some of those |hest of my ability because sever-) PKC outdoor events, will be an 
boys playing.” al managers have been given/ali-breed affair, in which club 
x * * votes of confidence this season| members will not be permitted to 
He emphasized he did not meanjand I don’t want to be one of/enter any of their dogs. It is an 
there is dissension on the club. them, to be frank with you.” unkenched show, under license by 
-— ae sonstidna Kiet Ca.   
STOCKHOLM (AP)—The Amer- 
ican pistol and rifle team finally 
received word from Soviet author- 
ities Thursday that the visas for 
—> anger nena deta yr 
Friday morning 
The team has-been stalled here 
for several days while awaiting U.S. Shooters Get Visas 
Ito Moscow World Meet 
  
Lady Golfers: 
Name Promoter 
NEW YORK (AP) — Eileen 
Stulb of Augusta, Ga., has. been   
Oriental F jah, 
Found in County 
A queer little character isgthe 
bwentherfish. 
This snake-like, whisker-wearing 
joriental (Jaban) fish was discov- 
ered July 15, “living it up” iri a 
private pond near Holly. Pond’s 
owner wanted it chemically treat- 
ied to eliminate undesirable species, 
and: the. resultant treatment by 
conservation men brought the       
   
              
    
    
   
         bushels of him). 
Now, the conservation. men 
‘below the pond, and other negr- 
| by streams and ponds for 
possible infiltration of the 
weatherfish in other waters. A 
survey party from the Institute 
of Fisheries Research at Ann 
- Arbor will come here’ in the 
next few weeks to make this 
check, says Wayne Tody of the 
state conservation staff. 
“The fish is: not parasitic. It 
idoes not attack other fish, but 
lits bottom-feeding habits oil 
iwaters and ruin other fish habl- 
‘tats. It’s strictly an undesirable 
lfish to have in public waters,” 
(Tody says. 
| Weatherfish are frequently kept 
in home acquariums. They range want to check the stream system - named promotional director of the 
Ladies Professional Golfers Assn., 
Fred Corcoran, LPGA business 
manager said Thursday. 
Miss Stulb, who directs the 
Women’s Titleholders Tournament 
at Augusta, will set a promo- 
tional bureau there. Her ‘duties 
will include keeping tournarnent 
records and providing promotion- 
al material for tournament spon- 
sors, 
| * & * ‘ 
Corcoran also announced plans 
for the selectioh of an annual 
LPGA. team, which eventually 
  may engage in international com- 
matches for men professionals. 
Bia Rapids-Archer _   
Bob Bitner of Big Rapids, Mich., 
became the National Target Arch- 
ery Champion Thirsday as James 
Casper’s spectacular. record - 
breaking performance tell short, 
* * * 
Caspers, of Racine, Wis... —s 
three records and advanced from ; 
fourth place to the runner up spot. | 
3,417, Caspers had 3,387 and Er- 
  nest Henkel, Minneapolis, was 
third with 3,325.   
  
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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Young 
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AUBURN. LINDE 0. I 70 et idasean RD. 
a SOT ; a Oa amen tee es 
Ld * 
e4t \ charge. Sunday's program also 
begins at,7 a.m. runs to ‘late 
afternoon. * 
year’s winner was a splendid Bas-| 
set .hound, Ch. Siefenjajenheim) 
|zoo, Jim Hubbara of Macatawt 
   
     
   
          
    Aereas 2 slew Sater. the Ala-| 
  nipane HEIGHTS - Sat Aug. 2 29 TV Bout’ z NEW YORK (AP)—Lightweight 
ane Don Jordan of’ Los Angeles -and 
; z|Labounst Goud of Paris Tors 
  
  most important water-ski  com-|== 
among the men, Wom- |= 
en and juniors for the nationals. ati==s 
Shipley, Ga, Aug. 23-24-25. ~*~ => 
Chairman Dwight Holton an- 
nounced thfs - morning that fwoj== 
of the country’s best boat drivers 
would handle that chore for the 
Regionals. They are American 
Water Ski Assn., champion driver, 
Fred Wiley of Manistee, Mich., 
and Ward Veen of Lake Sherwood. 
Fans will again see the 
tastic stunts by world champlo 
   e Complete | 
Lub. job 
Wig FREE TIRE 
ROTATION With- 
THIS SPECIAL! 
ELIZABETH 
LAKE 
CITIES SERVICE 4494 Elizabeth Lake Road 
Federal 8-9288 . 
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Judges were also named today 
for the Regionals. They are chief 
judge Dave Thompson of Kalama- 
Park, (Holland), Sandy. Lecklider 
of Birmingham, Joe Grimaldi: of 
Detroit, Laurie Feeley of Lansing 
ne Jack Maurer of Syracuse, 
Ind. ee   oth   
The modern drinker prefers a light drink . 
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  Rifle Assn., cabled Russian bama righthander had won only 
“ft tec ir mr ee mien Fan (learance Sale| » fing that all trav iplanie were iniyears ago when -he finished with 
jeopardy. In a Tew hours the Rus-/a°21-14 record. Again last season) 
— poco porigg visas would/his best showing was late in the 50% OFF ON ALL FANS - 
i MecgeoneAa en eM ty Gen. irritated! ary will be after his 1ith 3 
because he said the Russians had/ victory against 10 losses tonight | @ $39.95 20” Window fans . now $19.95 
ago at Bucharest, sana as eptory Redo gar hn e — $19.95 
Page! nations ~~ Chicago White Sox. $39.95. 46 Oscillating fans now ° 
au tak ut ae ht past Chicago manager Al Lopez has es 6.95 8 Fans ........ now $ 3.45 
medal in the 1956 Olympics, but|Picked Early Wynn to start for 28 = 
Parks said he is confident the tbe Wety im third place behind ©@ $29.95 16” Windows fans . now $14.95 
team better Moscow Currently 
tuneup matches, the Ameri-ithe league - leading New -York 
cot ona tee Germans, Anne Yankee, the White So, ke he 25% Off on Toro, Eclipse and + Venezuelans “Sw — 
Packet ot Deming. N. M., set{tations so far this season. Lawn Boy power mowers used — 
a world record in the running deer ‘ je Re mpeg et ee i as demonstrators. Porter Cable ~ 
shooting in Sweden this : 
— a the club traded off Minnie Minoso | Power Tools. 
ee * and Lary Doby. But the strategy | 
Other top members of the team|was to “single” the opponents to) ! 
woes Mieae tat fm we ooan at en bo = A EELY'S HARDWA pitching staff 
8804 AUBURN at ADAMS, Auburn Heights _ FE 2-88]! 
    
Open Sal." 6:00 P. M me 
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i on ii c¥ a4 Ths pear" a cme Ls omasinmpudenanushinmmsatemasiaell™    ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1958 >   
~ Only about. 42 percent of the| North. Carolina was the last of/ Hollywood Headlines But the results are worth allof a series ‘for himself, 1 P nee | Ae jel 
   
          
        
    
  | ning = mt seh hes acta ene io ae He the trials, “Cat” is a masterpiece| guest shots only. , the ‘woeli's talsegk 500. Maik —. 
= cima of sustained dramatics, and Ljz| Dore Schary has ‘lauinched his   
Hearts,” but he won't .tie” himself 
£. es down to Hollywood. As ‘soon as he 
STARTING _ day! = = fol Mourning Over Mike | sobre Hear is ot ral ces Oe cme Jom, el ‘a ne € LS By BOB THOMAS since her early‘ years at MGM. ngs Mel Ferrer for the first time Guild. ieee Pag c pages’ LOVE HAS CROSSED ye AP Motion Picture Writer | And Liz has indicated that she will/im “Green Mansions.” After all, ther ‘picture, probably the _ _. BEFORE —. BUT at ay ir Tas Liz Taylor Coming Out jac trim." "serio sect WOW E OAKLAND 
      
   
      
      HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Notes and|be available for film’ roles that she argues, they have appeared) version of his Broadway hit, 
  
         
  comment on the Hollywood scene—|appeal to her. : atte vi a Rigo i hig Sen rise at Campobello.” © wen REIS ; ; 
Elizabeth Taylor is coming out Ni and on TV (‘Mayerling”). a   
          GAVE HER 
BVERVTHING “| Exclusive Py. : : “ of her bereavement over the death| “After nae s death, she didn’t “Marriage is a pretty complex 
Py : ae of Mike Todd. She is often dating!care if she worked or not,” saidjrelationship,” she says. “If Mel 10; AB to 1:00 25 M. 
Drive In Arthur. Loew Jr., scion of thelpinard Brooks, who directed her|2"d I can live together, we cer- A < : 
Showing.       
   
        
        
            
    
   
    
   
     
   
       
         
        
  show business family and a friend in “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.” “She ee to be’ able to work 
finished the picture only because + eo ae, 
Mike was so hepped upon it. Now| Gary Crosby's comment re Pa- 
‘she wants te work some more.” pa Bing’s TV deal with ABC: “I 
* * & understand he makes some aah Greatest 
nies Event     
         mm HOST Tn mo | 
  FRANK Saar Tony Corns: sient Woe 
    
        
          
           
     
  
         
   
      
      
    
   
        
  
             
    
    
        
                  
  
      
           
     
                  
     
  
  
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~TONIGHT THRU Ar :   
      
  
   
          
“Female Animal” at 8:20-12:50 1 
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Will i Success 
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— . If] OF THE YEAR: — Shows Start 2 HURRY! LAST 2 NIGHTS ¢ ‘ \ terrorize 3 . | Winner of 7 ; Hedy ~ Friday 7 :00 & 9 :40 
SENN vera Sf | Wie . LAMARR_|']] : Negba Set, 13:40-6:45-9:45       “ PRICES—THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY: é "es » a - 1 Awards | George 
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STARTING SATURDAY, AUG. “a WE ARE PROUD TO PRESENT THIS INSPIRING. PROGRAM 
“THE BIBLE LIVES AGAIN! | THE GREATEST STORY OF ALL TIMEL           
     
   
        
     
    
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
    
    dd ccecee: “Surpasses 
      
          
     
            
      
  oaaal -. rT 
FP everything of | - See! sab adi 
eee : : ail y its kind ever sa a eae 000 Se! ~ “ et 
yes = ; given tothe | Spel... m the Mount! ‘rhe Crucifixion.---0-7 
Most diving Hell- ~— That Ever alee All Manin! ' cinema before!” «calling Of ert: hy “and the Resurrect ~ 
      
    See! rn Tweive p Apontiest    — N.Y. Daily News 
eoeeet 
c ANI" THE cm MONSTER P . || wa See PP 2, 
ty TEHMICOLOR nemcemmes Ll I hy SO GTTSS \scuebhremeagen           
    
      
      
DRIVEN BY DESIRES THEY NE VE R KNEW THE ¥ HAD! 
  
      
    A CENTURY Fits pRogucTiOn in GLORIOUS COLOR * 
ad ad THE 1000 THAT DESTROYED THE woRD! sna £. “ . omecrep sy SPECIAL ADAPTATION By LEE J. COBB - Robert WILSOK - =a RT and JOANNE ED. me 1 
IN FLAMING EASTMAN colOR = ACUI ASNT Uae WIGHAEL CURTIZ ~ ROBERT YOUNGSON gee FROM THE § ) PEN OF FRANK & GHIER     
   ‘Walt Disney Present | “THIS PROGRAM WILL BE SHOWN AT... 
ee emer. t SUNG adits SOUTH ON FiRsT SHOW ONLY! 4 ;, | peniatibone ae   
  
      
  
   
              
    =. Bet »s ebay nevi feuee ithe ‘~ - Ff ‘ge ie °c ee ot HSMN east die . : ea , : diets we Le Dares fh iy. 
i ee ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1958 , ws ian 
PR RS eh Ca ae oe Boots AND WRG BUDDING 5 By Edgar Martin 
Provide Answer , Se ‘   
  | PRREECTI set PERFECT! [~"" #   
       
     
    
“A straw bat,” said -meteorolo- 
Weather Bureau, “provides weath er control for a man's wane: a gee ety Yor a whole build- 
ing.” “On a somewhat larger scale, rries On fo “ty ‘man does learn how to 
| eentrol the weather, he will 
have to be mighty careful what |. 
he does,” sald Hagen, “It Is 
change. But you have to think 
‘| about all the side-effects too.” 
There’s another way in which) 
space vehicles might be used to 
alter the weather. They could 
materials to create a sort of 
screen that would reduce the 
amount of sunlight falling on a 
particular part of the earth's sur- 
face. This technique could be used 
benignly to modify the hot climate 
of the tropics, or maliciously to 
{destroy the agriculture of an 
enemy, country. fairly to compate the jm- 
| mediate effect of @ particular |*ifficu Control Weather sa, 
also put Times Square into com-| ‘Some large-scale weather  con-, 
seatter particles of light-absorbing} the Aleutians. 
warm current running beneath it, 
this ice ‘park would eventually; | 
melt. - 
This might make Alaska a com- 
  petitor for Flotida’s tourist trade. pA es albgeaanieage oP a:b ancy aay petition with Venice for the go 
Weather bureau studies show 
feet ne subtropical waters where most 
of our hurricanes are born? 
Hagen. “It might work if you did it on) 
tly large scale,"’ said 
    But as mentioned earlier, it might mess of i “But it would certainly take al — 
icebergs.”     
  
  
THE BERRYS 
ee 
    MORE COFFEE, PETER @ 
—,         
     Per 
    
      dé. 
* : a    
       
             
      BOARDING HOUSE ey ey 
Z4 AND SO, MWY DEAR COGSWELL, Yj P”"”— I SIMRLY HADTOINSISTON IP“ BEPANING THE LUNCH YO) PAID FOR WHEN, 
Up “4 1 DISCONERED MY POCKET HAD BEEN PICKED Su ¥ 
A WAK-KAFE/F NOT ONLY DID L RECOVER THE LION'S SHARE OF MY MONEY, BLT IT SEEMS THE PICKPOCKET WAS A Yi 
NOTORIOUS CHARACTER AND THERE (5S A #200 REWARD \7 FOR HIS CAPTURE WHICH T SHALL COLLECT! EGAD, A JOST TRIUMPHANT CONCLUSION TO AN AFFAIR. THAT AD SUCH A TRAGIC. - BEGINNING/   
     
    
       
           Me 
      
  
      (         ‘we 
  
    By T. V.-Hamlin ~~ = = ALLEY OPP : 
: UH-HUH! THATS NOW LOOK! OOOLA AN’ ME'S 
LONG     
     
    
          
           
OKAY! IF HER PROBLEM 1S ‘YOUR 
       it   \ lth Mi “F a ® G: 
  
            
    
       
         
              ban : COGSWELL HASN'T BEEN 
the Ni g he ABLE TOGET AWORD 
a hand be v pease 1988 by NEA Tim Rog. US. Pat. OF IN EDGEWISE = . 
1 ot _.QUT OUR WAY ‘°° ~~ , 
srele, f—j— ttf THE ONLY THING , “\ IN MODERN   
  
  
  
          
HE THINKS - 
THEY'RE GIRLISH! 
  
          LD 1958 by NEA Service, ine. TM, Rag sh somus 
By Ernie Bushmiller   
  
  
               
    = “AWFUL == 
How's Sy cues BUSINES     
  
-MISTER 
see   
  
       
  
      
     
        mm ERE 
BUSHM IAL EFA 
Tan, fog. U.S Per OM, = A rig mneeved? 
L Cope, 195007 Unned Fostern tyatiewe, ne. AUG. -B-     
        T.R.WILLIAMS ‘TM. Rog, U.S, Pot, OFF, e-s 
© 1958 by NEA Service, ine. beta   
THE BIG INFLUENCE         
  
    MORTY MEEKLE ' 
«‘~ John Morris rn I DON'T LIKE IT-~. THAT GUY'S GOTA 
ON YOU.’ 
     
      
    
    
    
                         
     
    
bat ote ) ZF | oe Ss CLIFTON, Nod, FO 8-8 —] [6.196 by Wer sorvion, me. TM Ang U8 Pat OW 
\ 
By Charles Kuhn               
ee : GRANDMA ys   
  
e THE GIRLS GiL7 YOU'VE BEEN HERE BEFORE,SO YOU ; WHAT T’ DO.WITH THIG/   
  
        You'll Find | 
PROFITABLE 
OPPORTUNITIES 
Every Day in the Pontiac 
Press Want Ad Section - 
Take advantage of this easy way 
to solve all your buying and 
selling problems. — 
             
   
       
          
     
    
          
    
DONALD DUCK. - By Walt Disney 
| To Place Your 
WANT AD | DIAL FE 2-818] % 
WELL, TOOTS... HOW DO Y’ LiKe ITP?   
7             
    
    
  
CoH wors!)} 
           
          4 
i 
~ gum you like but chew I 
~ while you drive: Nat- ; 
-urally, we # refreshing, delicious. fi 
di Bo Spearmint x 
Gum-—for lively, satis- 4] 
      
                   fying flavor and real 
brand of -. showing enjoyment. ll 7 
: : i mada Let tcvapttacanak : “Oh dear! Isn't he the one who wanted to win-for his mother?” |   
  
  pa { . 
 ? 
av ea 
4 
UST 8, 1958 PRIDAY, AUG AC PRESS, F ‘THE PONTI   
  
  
  
      
  
  
    
  
  
    
| Markel Shows: MARKETS Grain Futures 
  
    
    
  
  
  
  
    
      
  
  
          
  
    
       
  
            
     
       
    
  
         
    
      
  
   
                 
              
    
  
  
  
        
  
      
    
     
         
             
             
    
             
   
     
    
    
   
           
   
     
         
    
    
    
    
   
          
        
            
    
      to Climb es Prices ng Caus Argue Deficit Spending if ti n O ned ver nmer if Purists aming Intic me Fel, Reng ys ne wy he a smite 
armen 
| ve é 
* government can keep it oney to lend sup ‘ *. 8 The following are hs grown Prices Lower LAST IN SERIES care — are increasing the money Colicenr ele a cut back ‘a0 proauce brought to the Farmer's fessor ta SAM DAWSON f Current deficit buildup Sputjpty. + see eet ae I Plenty of Lip 
el and sold by CHICAGO wm slightly pola . ped dees Nees dente back to a asia oe trig: The added Treasury rded | Passed i Bh RO dy ofl 
R (p—The stock 
are furnished by in early 
past - government waves of|gered a qu The recession has|the banks take on them to ex- ic thought w won't 
- NEW YORK in cary Quotations at Matt, fc dealin ly light and) ame the postwar wa spending plans, Se ae ht peackak i 7 ony | ooetary mesures” alone” ui 
. xienty om gains|Detroit Bureau 
Activity was unusua: were | spending for makes __ balancing back on ‘corpora make mere eretit ’ |monetary . ket showed: 
transactions — that budg-!cut cm pele en an tte eek. 
» x today wi Wednesday. 
said 
inflation family to some exten’ relief 
off on work eo trading , Samal divi- 
dealers of a technical 
your today. |and with tax business taking 
: . ecene 
imb_ ‘ through 
e 
entirely hedge 
et so tough nes, Even Treasury toot uch ists, and 
Sales Clim : sprinkled | 
‘ Produc ra character such as my 
fear that|incom the window, Tr tionary toot. of too m These econom that the! pambler spread- 
They 
out 
classic case chase |. ontend. “gone key Siectain’ shomavele, re ra, Mp nt lO -yyp ir ee on kente: re ore Beane oe oe coe sanetaningy dor gine pot DETROIT @ — July St oe two in m: and}. fancy, 16 gis. ...... 6.25 Mill buyers art. 
building up : se spend- will ears, |Zove te direct . cars were | ae point or nts, tobaccos Apples, tons icrate eee 3./9| ing. very little p 
cues 
defense after goods twar y to reinsta’ thelof Rambler deliveries of impleme! 
Sapeoee cnr ace - 425\ were taking % cents a be the cai bine more and you the early pos N be too) powers t—such as setting bove total a farm ae seaerns te vaceate ~eaaneere” 
t was % to the 
getting into| Com less tax revenue as in e there wi over credi ents andthe] cent a Motors Corp. drugs. 4% Peaches, Red Haven. bu. so. P Aucetet wake dee the tae at rs cen teu lg wits ie fast. a Oe eT ahaa eens jount of down paym ee eee ‘ * * 
Peaches. © Mb crane 
bushel lower 
$1.84%; 
en a Ug into red ink 
only 
pac-| am tracts. for) Pears. suga 
September 
ev go that Treasury, goods it overca of con 
-jalso announced June by 19 per trailed trading en. 4uimen hor September 
The classic wey Sat Teeny bove the presen a er peed ee : The hieher the start. After 
ee yeeves 2. 
56 lower, 
tock mar- 
ing leads 
rise a 
. 
; 
ing spree| month near 
We Se eae fpvases 1.50 % to ¥% higher, 
The stoc ‘ t financ 
cost produce, 
and spending 
sold mong a“ continued at a brisk Beets, Loom ° de ES on = 31.27%: come an ha 1 cent ket has been toot — its woes of a a ollar,|ity to pr a. . - eis im be pga inflation is only a oe Ramblers hat ws that, .turnov 
Seaktowen ate Or Senet ber 63%; . 
the warning 
srinking ; governm 
a probability irst seven mon ts Wopbed. wa esses 1.25 | Septem ber $1.24%; soy 
ing in-|of living 
The federal 
perhaps ty—not even i be-lin the f t 1957. pace, _ koe 
Sareea stalks... see coc *"* eo lower, Septem’ September 
horn of new this: 
billion dol- into the economy than it |possibili the stock market during, all o: Kk & |Celery, 4 
% to % lower, ts 
so loudly |is the 10 to 12 putting dollars as yet~but 
than 
“ tantial bloc 
beans. %4 hanged to 5 cen N  flation To raise the Treasury billion more taxes, State ’s coming, Some subs early pile- 
%8|$2.25%: lard unchang tember} DAWSO. Reserve Board of new money this fis-|12 out in arejlives it's hands in the . 
15} $2. Ibs, higher, Sep ‘the Federal what it/lars it must have will be taking ents also 
IGE changed hans in the early ple Wecee nan Bown is white on what lars of ne pM ae K perp clng: tank 
TIONED OF up of overnigh: bullish, Gaiona, dry ibaa) 60 16. 2100000000 yo! $12.70, 
has Lgsevie be stock price cal year, it apparen commercial wing to spend. by the final 
AIR CONDI 
. news was fairly on a 12,000 selene, 45 me we 1: in Prices fears, couk . wy from the. @ a estimate that by lev- 
RENT— Mohasco opened 
Parsiey Root “thag) 60 Ibs. oats Grain 
ion. ~ , hat ‘the! borro 
Some ar the three i. 
—FOR share block yar ges pa Radishes, ‘Ted (behs. doz. sek. ; 1 CHICAGO GRAIN -  Aeaiacn he Gootsnel Goals 
a pegs i 6 See ve will be nearly 
: 
we evel, 
-|Radishes, wi hs.) doz, Tht 200 . 
aoe 126% 
. 
0 
te o 
: bere ap cone gpd ori miubar "summer Lo we cee 
ie 
Willman Appoints ing at an annual ‘or 6% peyrel Taser In New Building eo 7 terday when it Tobe 8 pola ae ey eo Be a Bo BR l an Held eh CAC fore tn a year ago, ach of he enn sis0 om, tee ‘ 
GREENS 
4.00] Mar nee 1.04% Rye . ) Mi QI S 
. Saf ty H mo will be on 
g ft. + ee ea Pub 
cai at New York Stocks Cohtards bu. Se ee "born icia) ae Bee 0 Tae 
u lic eC - | flationary ery is enough 
per month. Avail 
: Se 
ra Teac eee Ee) pep A a 
Th ft soe dagel Gonea iad seg sags ate earnings sub- 
able now. 
te |Mustard sacessednogancntessnees® 
ad | YA 26% Lar : 
Contin’ 
«corpor 
rake |i F ewes 
‘ ne Admiral ...... 10-6 Johns Map . ze Sorrel, a be a eeeen bee seas Mar ican b 28% gen. Face zo Or R qa pe, e ( the position to be rr to aren bey Trpsmiry wal zeke 
, ae r 5 97 
E ce Aled Ch... 863 Kelsey Hay | LAD GREENS 2.50 pe ated oy 
give up else, should the eure and cut its de 
ar Allied 2. eae 45.2 eres +.» 88.5) 5A bu. 5 eH nesosonosos 250/>° 
: 
of by someone it necessary.’ in more thusiastic business 
5 Bt Aled ee on Oe | mueive. beached SA be - 32 
Night 
ission deem 
If an overenthus tion, the Sits 
_ : i4 oe 78 leach 
dar 
En comm 
specula 
ener Alum Ltd ee FH ee ‘0 32.6 pve as er (ec Soy 1 vaeewen 1.60 Lodge Calen te] al Arrests 
Near 
*~ * * with all recovery 8 Board could turn nuane? 
Lees Assn. ~~" a hag avila 2 33 igen lions ee | tention, alt Masons, annual Terror and Chase A re ee ween yy rooney. to ght ‘of the| Sapitol Savings & FE 4-0561 
be A Gihey EUs ay d Eggs Sue samen rth, Avon wt City Se Seen a tad ned OY ey eas mech of : - Huron St. ! , am — 83 an ae Ad Poultry ang tg —-= > rald L. "Moors, Ww Traverse 
said, Eastman has and’ better'and try to -money in the com 75 W 
i m 
. 
» 
2 i 
ae, Am N aa ‘ins rir sh. 134 DETROIT Ts fe pels vee apo rage — ee CITY, iP ‘—_ —— wor Souaee gent ee ee, as pans ae ar. 
; Am Tel +. 534 Lou Kk”... 30.6 orr, Aug. it. for No. a 
d os TRA f rape, arm morale 
hip” wou 
boosted stoc Armco Stl, 86.8 Mack Tr -: 26] | DETR f.0.b.  Detrol 
p.m. to atten vestigation 6 ‘0 mi- tent leadersh: interest/it has way of the spec-| 
: arco Si SM ince"... Set lpe pel gy oa pce Heh tee pene) nor (ogg 9,1 Brother, |for in uto theft, tw compet to the better to make the 
a Aeieea. ..-s d Martin ms Bal” eee ate — "125 ata -23:|neral of = Inte o 
bbery and ai re captured initely react tiac.”” ge hard 
spend- 
: fa sy ho yd = pod Mend Cn se faa Marve 4 4 od Raat a2! 1B Clifford W: —FPrank Vargo, W. M, oe farm ee ee without of the penta seas Eastman ulator aaa government 
rn Boeing Air... 413 Mergen Lind .. 398 a — 
ienic at OES|today in nearby A ee Public schoo 
- 
ts oohe Alum Sth Merr , ae 98.2/26; ducklings 
a Areme a an mm ieee te 0, Mem- a fight. aid an alert deputy graduated . with three children, 
r i 
wi Bond “a we ven ; cope 
pernon ayaa: 2 2. Willa, Adrian t meet at, temple 9 am Lohan, A pees of terror and chase there. ora bachelor’s degr 2 
N Meeting 
co Warnes .= in h ... 334 Aug. 7 car **'bers mee 
slended a ni Léwer Penin- receiv 
Washingto' : U 
: Brisk My oa son werd : 381 port Ont, ae aN ube — iown va ome a € * the northwestern 
mee the Uni Seas é bh and . Urgent thee 
2 Badd Ce a: 34 ae Wheel 12, 18.7 CrWhites: Grade A 2 48-80, wid. Meat Sec. 
at 4:15, a.m. 
litical sc New Yor . 
= ae aT Mot Wh vel’ 404 Bate: ae oe, dita me Crawley 
. sula ¢ * +| 2 Po s degree from caine M d | ay 
" se Seth as ae ota is dss ike ht it News in Brief Robert Lee Belcher Jr wae er {University fs ‘also bolds apiomas|ON Mideast sa 
“| Comee One --: at isc... ae td. ave. grade 
27-34. 
; 
. 
; 
He 
rth-|: 
* 
* Ca oe Oe a ale jum 38. Chee! 
nd Rapids, rbor, were | this. year. Institute at No tinued From Page 
a coital Atri |. .174 Net Dairy. belt wid & ave. 4 med 
: of | Gra! , of Benton Ha: ard| from the Traffic the Na-| (Con Hammar- se Bt BS Fi vi dl tte arent SARE | Approximately 010 worth ot mare pays Troopers Etward western se pee activity i 
~ ‘a 
Wes' ites: 
Pd me- as port 
e 
A > Ac 
to increase 
Se ton 100 Norf&West Pf 22.6 : large 42-43; medium 42-4240: ipment w Company Goss and Chest r, held up! tional re 
skjold it withdraw 
oe Con TH et he Ape 0. abl a3: ot eee le S — Allied Trucking ( Rd.,| v= stole a car, and| Washington, D.C. 
mn and permi there 
, ms 53.7. Nor . 21 ‘Grade eae. grade 
from the Telegraph Rd., miitting they woman Wa: 
lice ca- | Lebano 
troops 
a ate aed Ohio Ol She ¢ dium 34 a , {field mir. on a “Sp Waterford a soca, abtacted out, Id inj Eastman began an ladder, | the 14,300 — 8 to make 
2 up +. wi oe 94, 
TOCK AVERA oy : Pon Lak 
‘a car’s head 
ttom 
Seat- 
wor 
tish 
a Cluett Pee 41 Pac Gael... 28:4 lied by the Associated Press, (RE sory navacpens vette Po \eher and Smith were “9 ae ek ae ae pra af ti engin ye 
st Colg Palm $85 Fan Eph “ 0.2) Comp Indust, Rails ie {Oakland County She: 
ca ue Traverse Coun 
in aaa He worked his troops from J U. s ean rally 
: benee n yl) 42 
. 273.6 ‘ ‘3 183. 
Bald e 
tle x lhe department 
> Colum Gas are aPram Daw. : segierey, dex... a3 tors ne ia Bernard Burch, of 164 Police here. Woodman | up to the npg ot ot chief from coupled, if eg aoree form ef 
‘é Gon W Gas’. saa Berke, PS “Hee Month "Sao "2: gone. 18h ‘Bt isa ported to Pontiac Kalkaska deputy ir | and hela the pees Reape rtnadnwys Pyicet 
| 
” el De Pa RR “o: 34 ios Meh me th 8 ise -siAve., re that someone had —_ the widely gy eal gpd 1946 to 1952. National| Assembly e a pata troops to 
with Wheels °39°° 4 “aw ...190.8 Free Cola. 1 |ies8 low. sce. 20) 1947 718 ip yesterday at $69, from 4! spotted car broke 
ined the Na action 
| 
Pushmobile 
ft - Se? oR Philco ...... 12 ise7 high “2°22. 0 782 662 6 atch, valued Foodtown! stter their riff Rupert Then he jo 6f|can banon’s independence 
al hasan 
Height 2 Cont Bak .....37 Pit Pinte G ..12 195 iw. 226. 
his w ar of the 
street. She: cal: il as the director protect Le 
= above Rey 
Width, 28 inches; t-Can .... 
aC. 1957 
3 
if at the Tre 
a Kalkaska 
by We Safety Counce 
year and 
= recommenda 
| 
4 th 6 ft, 
steel mgs 4 ost Mats... By Eros & @ - 33.4 TOCKS Market, 1200 Baldwin Ave. et ea eas scams An ey ea fications: i preumat tp Beye motor “ Cooper ie fe per Dea atter decimal pointe oe eseauty ‘Shop. aut Voorhels with drawn guns. The two sur coment wis the UE. EST hg ns] Se at men errand Load weight 250 x bed re Sedo Sao le re ie 4 Rey Too BS. 27 | migures rat ae Meauty 
- red meekly. . From 1955- to seck some | 
be used wee $. Rey 32 » 43.7 
Equip. Co: 13.4 14.4 2-0598. 
n| rende: 
in their car. partment. 
lice for the East 
against “in 
can 
: e Det Edis ““""" 597 Ro a St .. 31-7) sen Elec. uber mee. 2% 427. \FE 
— Newma stol was found 
et tendent of po! 
rantee the area the | The Pashmobile 
: 
: = 4 Aire 1 Safewty - 38.7 ee 
1.6 2.1 
Sauareey, pi 
Herbert Seo’ superin 
‘ork Authority. 
gua: 
” which — 
OPEN Dis C Seag | Fe St Reg yd * 947 fees ar Co. Coe 61 65 Rammege fale Ave., 
Police said 
m rt of New Y 
recent direct aggression’ 
practiced 
3= 
™. wpe: tT Seortll pb 1. 308 G. L. Ol & Chem, “Co 9 ©1'onurch, A 
State picker from} po with his States claims is. e 
Nites ‘til 9:00 ?. = > ig cs 03.416 De, Co.* 2 92 n. 
itinerant fruit he and) 14 connection Eastman haS} waited and the Unit- | 
Pie? 
c ’ irl... 
Oil 9 How Prod . a. 8-12 noo 
an ‘ them 
tant, ¥ Union 
5 See Et Air eS? ghell (0 ms 40.2 Peninsular Mt Gor ete wo | 
° Hammond, La:, ae were walk- ue as —— of ‘police or os dies magus 
Open Sunday 
ee" E] auto & |. a i | — ge Ruay on “evil 45 215 
bless ~ This wife Mildred, i when they prepared Rochelle, New ed Aral 
all U.N J 
WARE 
tT 00 PM it - Emer Rad <<: 13 Sou Ry sees 02 wayne & eb asked Number Of JO Se ee sak tear Piemunt "ie eS A rissa gee 
aay 9:00 A.M. to - Exel . : oe S FS m4 3; °° i ; ane July t said he was made te lie = ie authored . special } lectur- cgmnasunt aul in sedan 
cooks Rds. 
- . pred oh Ba std oh NJ .. 33 Grain Pr ce Drops During 
z down in. the road by a pete it cles and _ training programs at die East while for stabil-| _ and 1 Toles 
ee "a -. the Tra... iss = Oil SP a CHICAGO GRAIN sine 
— The who got out of a ee wait. He \er in bgt iversities. 
Ford-|tries to work out plans to the 
j i Gen Denar. 1T stugePack [56 AGO, Aug..7 (AP) ~ Opening gr WASHINGTON bei today the | passed them and gate Tee i tigen fociede —— and the a Pe big powers 
CA. ea Sa te a | Bhat 
A Sate * 63% ent report Amef- |-<aid the gunman 
y ne, Northweste Arab states said that 
5 Ae? foes Gen Bice .... 669 Suther + 35.6). wHEa 485 ep. s..----- $4 governm mployed Am sa but found no mone ham, Hamline, Washington 
officials 
ere a gen Ee BP eye oe --° aia yA ~SaabeaaS 67% ber of une in July | pis pockets 
to ac- Universities, 
sities} Washington 
dU. S, eco 
a: . i - Sylv El Pd 93-4 ee $50% Mar ......... 65%) num by 143,000 
forced his wife to | . |Rutgers the Universi se8 of increase 
: ; Lom Gen Shoe... 333 SUE Et Fog |Mar. ssse. 185% Mar RYE icans dropped 
and then ae, eee |e College, and Wash-|promises of i be 
| Gen Shoe 33 oe Oo Sel... y deamon & 77-5 ate is 000. 
him, The and | State ¢ Louisville and 
aid could cal -sta- 
wonderful 
ce Gen Tel -. 19 Geen STB iy a oo. Te to 5,294, ormally drops company » the gunman f California, , 
nomic 
of politi 
the: 
i i Ee pion ela SE : SE P 43.1] ©” CORN (old) Dec... 131% ployment n e of picked up 
= 
-| satisfactory degree 
vote g ven os : Gerber Prod . $7 pee See scceree SER BB ese aee 131%| Unem t this tim ing, tu ; ington. 
part-time lec assured in the 
rt an 
‘ : tines @ YS WwW Alr .. ee wemeses 1.1% May ....... 
sharply a 
woman. 
tt. has been a and | bility is : 
po 
a Ss a3 Goebel ar... e Franeamer at Mar. are 1263s Oe ..:----- 1338 na 
by 198,000 to A motorist was haled De wave Loe py York Ps ae East, . Council met last 
me in ai 
| ee yet a. a1. Underwd ie Me CORN = Hie Rev sisseases HE DO © a rose by ee anal give ages! out one Brooklyn College = tn Seattle. Airy foyer to the wen ten 
election was ee ce we ie... ang US rate Bin’ 2730 POE cee EE PT reeseaees 65,179,000. 
when a buille 
ctor five ye Pocatello, | night in after Soviet 
ing. 
as | Gt No Ry ... 15.6.0 it Air Lin Pe Mar. 
usual for July. it up ts. 
instru w lives in of Soviet Russia 
spiked 
gratify 
- 
~ Greyhound "349 —o Airc ..... —* 
as great as asonal factors of his headligh 
Eastman no Isabelle, and/of 
S. Khrushchey 
to” wr 4 Holland F... 11g Nalt Aire, .....68 
taking se m- * * his wife, 14.|mier Nikita mit-council 
| continue xt a7... Be Pen eT . 
After of une * Ida. with Anne, 
a summi 
all ¢ 
; “Ht Gent 202 Ba Om Cp et Livestock “into account, aril ggie’ Com- @ wornan was released a short dunghace. ec tuaine soe preenle te expres oe 
I sh ate my ‘office in- ing Rand ami 98 Een’ ae us bETRort ame Horlamges ee) sae ae werk laconic “the ‘capture, upward of| They Tee’ estan bev ‘orsign Salts kad betoos pee sen 
gat nner that’! am 4 n - ; i oS 
t _ 
the 
: Pp iy 
States 
a 
= e Inept Cop... 384 35 tehers 98e. “lower sews! merce cent ‘of Before the ca deputies who is an the United of 
rit your tid Interlak Ir . 340 West. Un Tel . 23 dD 106- s No. 2 and 3 203 said 1.3 per last month 
lice sheriff's 
George, 23, 
21, who is a pecial session 
re “will me 
s 2 a dy eel | wens ABE .. #1 diablo ne long monty Me, 5 ne ? ie was jobless t in |50 State Police, ned the, search. Navy, and John, ing for a s ; 
su 
idence. - ee ay ore 1 BS Wilson 08: 38 ip.” Buishers Ey Sumber scent me os with 68 per cen as sea goed thrown up "ste at Rutgers University, sembly. Ue: cee | 
continued conf a te oe 34 ae Se ee Pars Sue 100. 
as |Roadb area. : 
r the modified U.S, re 
: oo oy Int giver... 392 Yee 35" 3 upe 
June. ion rate w the area 
Afte the Soviets | 
4. be Int Stiver Tei 303 ¥ att a aT 103-211 early er. on ivan 3.0083 21 28-33.50 The peak cee 
throughout 
meen iS tion was gate which 
DANI 
oe n 14 
butchers 
oted f 
t 
. 
* thelr 
4 Isle Crk = 64 2 190 Ib. und cows qu 
™ per cen 
. 
withdrew 
to discuss 
Jr. Jacobs .... 
s 300-600 
Trade a Lge nd 
e 
n ur 
Ned for the session wal” of | 
URPHY, 
=: 
: DETROIT STOCKS Caitle—daladle 200. Trade, 9, cles 
f V 
calle withdra 
M er dena Ps ctl neta ae aap 
s True LI CF Sa U.S. and Bro force from 1 | REGISTER OF DEEDS : a 
2. 
BO: 
: : si, tag co 3 |hatdoltng ro ees: ey (Wat Disneys , 
tee oo uk Ambas-| 
blican Candidate for a Baldwin be neg] el mS aa Tas choice 030 oe “eo 
' Following the vote, tidal al 
Reps Clik ot ,0H,& Chemo e288 tETL sit “toad < a weights 
YY BI JMPER — 
sador Henry Cabot to carry the 
coaster ees: Howell Elec. Prod, Co.° 84 } laughter wore detvline o strong: 
lenged the 
bi ses-| ie 
: Sratoemes Be: are 72° T4ls lower, steady good ene 
f the Assembly Ry IE CO og yh 4s Ss Sh, eri ae ee, Sata = 
tion to the peoples behind the 
Will Be. Appre na Toledo Edison ets Co? 
bu ee ee Paste naa 
sion to “to It them judge 
d pee Weqet Sink Wen ame naked. 38.500" et hate, wade 3 oe ont 
Curtain by aye bad re He Fan —_ ° AGES ly in 
One 
true facts 
Soviet | 
. 
es DRuke Compiled by the. As son raring en, ates rly at 
|g tant the people of the seatl- 
as x ; cintea. Prosi ee. fond Gulity and STAR acter ty Be 
Union and the east ager sides | "=a twrrtT fq ae es ae wl oi "heiters foot hign cholee As 
lites be beams g tan S aviine the | AT Bae 
.. eves SB +). 82. “| 800. 
iT 2 
ues ” : 
: : : vom oe RB ale rc ent lt nde ane 
wort jut your view." . ee 3! [se bgp £5 Danae 270. 82. 4 | virty 19.50- . g stron 
— hn, 
: 
hd a Lees ; O07 j ia heifers md 
inte 
oe 
dio | : 
PTEMBER Month ae aoa 134.7 ia 165.8 i650 Pils “er wee naers a, oat a 
nae — 
FOR e noted that western ra MOND AY, SE a BRO .sevee cs a 
x 
fe 
e i eo Bt il Di MME aes a, Ea ot WHALE, wir A TASTE FoR, Koay “and “Soviet newsper Day, Half-Day and Evening iy Rien Sage 
te 3a; 
rR S PREY ‘S —_|commun 
ay, 
and = ieet ow 2 sie Le eeee oe KILLE 
S HI ER re censored . A ge Shorthand | | RENCE iceer ae. om. rene IN RUS, SEE ITS MOTH pers a sador Arkady 
Gregg ! een _ Seat” ox heties™ Sapott compel WAL! NG ON VES Soviet. Ambas ate Ae» [] 
: NF ERENCE ]| sith tinct rex: trade slow prime, deniers YOUNG WA BY CLIMB) PROBLEM. HE Yi é Sobolev retorted en ieceune Came. (] Professional ("]Speedwriting 
: me ROOM sabitay Syeseet ee We Senoueh TO igs ag ir He ie No Fi MOTHER WALRLIS Sato wah Oe ee ¢ FI Higher Account- = rypewriting : 3. and lam pared 
TH TH 
“Who tries” was er cco 
e : . Sheep trad 100 higher BACK 
BENEA 
f 
in what coun said: (1) Hig 
ic | a Fg fo Pe COMES UP IOR OFF. 
how council, he_said:| 
Bookkeeping . dded Facility |}f0'sx ine iene aie ae D BUMPS JUN Zoe tn Washington, President let ius fees: CI eter and |: An A ; Ios. 794.30 zo, agiter sheep —_ 
oo. 
: today endorsed the/f [~] Business 
[_]Comptom 
2 "cof the i ig 
; rata — proceedings *] om Calculator - 5 ; 
4.40-10.50. 
neral Assembly 
ia 
2 ~ : Bac 
s C, Hagerty ased”’ by. 
= demand for w 
ent »- a EL 10. 7 
onegpal aay Pe odge for! There is alway -* rtunities for peipicorws : é 
kers 
the challenge arry the Assem. help. Many good ho are well qualif a or 
Russians to ¢ iron 
or those who a nd | 100,000 Te 
oe dings behind the ] are available fo above which interests ~ . im : DETROIT a to their jobs 
curtain. 
. 2 Check f advertisement 
to us today. 
: plans to oe weaxty rated workers 
Mercury Hits New High uy mail this our Bulletin — 
3 Reserve : a ’ | pt Ne 
f ‘ Last Part of “ J send-you 
ite “8 | tice to have 325, 
reached in. the 
Pontia 
eo = 5. 4 hl company expects in its domes- 
last Seer Ford Motor. my 7 West Lawrence, 
VETERANS - FE 922 hourly-rated workers id-November. 
of July, 
“APPROVED FOR Ss. Telegraph Rd. Recalls will vie oa Motor 
| 
a 
‘ AS pees ss a “te 120 ]|starting with in 10 days, he 
en en adie al pain OT alll TE Division in Flint, 
ay ‘ew cars in July, making it ae Name Se bccxk TES “said. omotive divisions will 
oo aes month since last] . ROOM RA Other ait hourly . workers as 
the | best__ sal | Double $9 fllrecal eels ek suanguaer 
October. . Single AE ins $11 | urs ee cage: ig. 4 — Catttornta Kitchenette $ = Ah “Yoseatae waley ‘Yosemi TY | as named in 1 t 2 
Mt rodian tribe. Te 
In 
| Wy pee         f x    
  \ et 
           
   
           
     
   
   
    
    
                         
    
      
              
   
    
   
    
    j = Sage? of Thanks eee eee teeane 4 in 
eee eeeeteeoe sa ’ al 7 
- Ancor riam .. 2 met 698 Kinney; beloved infant gs Gripes tad wann ss? son of Vernon and _Bellia J. 
Funeral Directors ..../.. 4 Sante) heleree sraangen Se 
Monuments .....:..00+0000.4A]. sad Mrs. Harlen Hughes; dear 
Cemetery Lots eh eneeaseves services be faa poten 
eit “et 10:30 om. at 2 
   
  
      
  
  
     
  
      EMPLOYMENT 
Help Wanted Male ......... 6 
Help Wanted Female 
      Employment Agencies ....8A 
Instructions ...........s00. Funeral arrangements by Sparks- ie aslo AND EQUIP Oe OE AN HOOMS UTILITIES 
bed wasted Lea issesce NO NOTE, 1968 ) eth ——\toep ‘erocks Wein, Stakes ey Van Welt” Te Hwy. PA ty wee 
emale ...-.11) Sits Menter Maye, Joseph Mays, NTER WORK, HOUSES. Pontiac Farm and oe STEN GEE Ua|’ Coax “country stmosphi aa i SHOP wei IND. THEN SHE US| clean, country atmosphere. 
The . “garages. oF repair PE 4010 Industrial Tractor Co. To sell your land contract 3768. 
; ¥ 4 CEMENT axD CARPENTER WOODWARD oe lh GS & LOAN G9. 7 RM. APT. CHILDREN  WEL- 
‘ Funeral service will held Mon- CEMENT WORK. a ROTRING FOS 706 a Daily ® Including eed FE 4-056 fare ‘sgcepted, Fi mo. 100 
SERVICES OFFERED uy x, See pm. ot large oF small. Commercial a Clark Real estate, “igen Huron. rucoas. wie BATH UP- 
ness and Professional Women’s ps S. M. Edwards officiating. Inter- Free estimates ‘shone Of 3 rience. P nting 2 & Decorating 20) FE 4402 or FE 44813. Ask f0F/" per. Small baby welcome. 49 §. 
Ctubs. 2 Building Service gaacbdvecsle ment in k Hill Cemetery. Mrs pe ee ae = 18T CLA PAINTIN ND DEC. * wen ‘asmania or or @_ OR 3-605 
Building Supplies 2A Aggy Rages cag 4 CEMENT WORK WANTED. B. heag.| 8F _ GLAse PAINTING © aca Tk IRM. APTS. and PVT. BATH, 
seenegeee rank Carruthers Punerel Home aon ER $0580." iad CASH 31 Stowell. FE 4-2190 
Business Services ....++.+. was tor 3 p.m. Of LA CEMENT AND MASON |isr ciass Int. — EXT. PAINT- UNLIM 3 NR. A 
Bookkeeping & Taxes .....14)NORRIS. AUGUST @ 1958. SLENN | vp Work done expertly. Free, esth| Ing. Decorating. Ress. FE 5-260. IMITED ' Hospital, 154 Lincoln. OR_3-0522. 
Chiropodists J P eights, mate 16 yrs exp. OR 3.0402. |A-) PAINTING. PAPER HANG-| For land contracts, new or tet- 
ee OR eee eee eeee age $7; beloved h husband of of Mrs. 5 oy CENSED pe soned Lowest esitie dl it, ROOMS emryate BATH AND 
Fae t5a| gels, Norris, beloved. son CUSTOM HOMES BY LICENSED) ing. Peper removes, SERING| 29, ob! ation. e £30i4 oF|” ent Heat & utilities  fur- 
Specialist ........... Norris: “dear father of Marvin i iii Free estimates. OL|1 PAINTING AND PAPERING | FE 50915 or Ted Me sled “hg weekly, One child oF 
Dressmaking . Drs. taser Awe. ‘ 
& Tailoring...16; [22 Sod. Mrs, Joe’ Schutz; dear Help Wanted Male _ 6 Help Wanted Female CEMENT 1s OUR SPECIALTY. |A-1 P oie rai R & EX- " ARROR ae welcome Apply’ 60s = 
Furniture ‘Refinishing ooo 216A bees of Maye, Goonas ems: | ~~ 37 ote pavements. Eel sete. hcee’ 48 oer cans aise. for cash, 5143 Bee weavets, Rd. i 
Garden Plowing ..........16B| dren. Funeral ai ments will Mechanic ‘Wanted. WANTED: P | ah ope iene Teareation. room, ~Guareo- ricaDy Meet anion SRROR aOR : . ee “safer Auto, heat, Cou 16 
Income Tax Service ......17| Be, Snnounced, later | by Must have own tools, exp, on ge b cook or. gg PF iga teed work “by builder.” Call OR Teenie FE 80343 ater colttemens Bt FE 41971, 
ci of the Sparks-Griffin mane a ‘ie ee ee = 
Ingyrance Agencies ......-17A| Funeral Home. Heia meee ace Wereice, "at waeeg: OLDER " WOMAN FOR PAPERHANGING. PATN TINO. 3 ee) = BATE. PRIVATE. rang 
Leteidiry Service ..ccss:s.18|. ey weet Chtel ae the Reartes| Seamant Ba. (dso) ‘Across from | CAFC Of baby, 4 Sere CEMENT & BILOCK | _ Paster reper. FE og C ASH ore ee 
Landscaping | ook Gritfn Funeral Home, Aub 3 | eee tion and references FE 8- WORK. FE 6-0783 PAINTING & PAPER —_— : 3 ROOMS, PVT. VT BATH | NF. 
| eeeceeeeeeee aa WANTED it DRIVEWAYS AND GA 25_yrs, a FE 56-0937. ROO! & . 
Moving & Trucking .......19! wart AUGUST 6 60. NT a Nal ar BE i 4 ar pee eames TE oe RAGES | saren Hanno ew PANTS! . [NT A- FLASH “150-8, Marsball. oe Bb Maree 
& Decora’ : clerk. One yr. or more exp. in| — son, hi y FREE ESTIMATES OU per removea by seam. PE a al \ -.|9 NICE AN, COL- 
Painting ting ... 3381 . Oxford, age . White Swan _Brivean, N WERING,| PORT Torey sie ored compe. MY 3-164, 12 to 
Ay 53; beloved usband « of Mrs. Laurs _this type of work, FE 81431, | and Pontiac Lake ~ water master, 5 Munro & Fe Pp AINTING W ON SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS m:; : 
Photos & “Accessories ......21| Wait; dear father of George A./MECHANIC WANTED. MULBER- hers fp a CLEANING. : 
ihe a . Wait; also by 4 grand- 9-0877. 15 Mile & John R. _____Nelp ostce 8 frie Co., 1060 war _Rates now reduced. FE _5-( 3 NICE BI Bis CLEAN 
agence gnc a1 will be | — GUARANTEED ROOFS -— ALL PAINTING — PAPERHANGING nN nN $38 => Chamberiaia. ra 
pontine ems gi Au %. — “Gull ia person, Mira OVER bas ARE YOU WANTING WORK OR pe ol iy » ages Marsh. Marsh. TUPPER WALLS R 3-706) O SO 3 NI ¥ FUR. 
behead- eewrer iar oeese ne ie Pune: on Miracle Lounge, ‘ou don't find it? , i Suitab: 
i Home with Rev. Pred Clark of- _Stiracle Eile Shopping Center. Have Spening fer man oF woman. mogsemoyino,-, Out “5 OLLY Physio-Ther Z1A | fee eis ee le for 
j 93| ficiating. Interment in Ridge| RELIABLE MEN pped, FE 4 wee. : 
teresseneceeseds) tae Cemetery, » rents eee, Walon wholescic. food | _150°N. Per save, auerage wae. apu ee RAISING. ous | SATSICAL THERAPY 4070 DIXIE 1704 S. Telegraph * |; ROOM AND BATH, BABY WEL- 
Rh ae ag Pras ve ie founding in fpontioc, 4 wnish | COUPLE, HONEST & EFFICIENT ICIENT. oe tek stons| Hwy. OR 3-5651, 1 till 5 p.m. FE 4-2533 come. In Pontiac. Phone MYrtle 
d. Mr, Wait will ile in state Mf a tgiTHOry rg ordinary. | complete 2, ot tevely Brae work. move (Pu. y iepaie, — Re 7 ROOMS, PRIVATE OATH 6 ENT 
. ae Reid & yard, No chitdren salary Ellison, Television Service 22 eady, Willing.and Able |3 tg BATE & ENT. 
4 the co egy eral efer men with "Girect sales ’ heated. #. 8. Fark 
: ee ca aie CL experiente appearance, personal | eee re TV city Tek der an GARAGE, GABING. ADDE|ALL TY SERVICE CALLE contract, uvere gpoiting for goer lends ROOM APART aL 
* Ww AUG 1958, ° Be eg erences. MI 64351. _ 5 ensed but Ider swered prom day or night ridge.|" path and e, Bast wee cole 
nets sdennae seh + aie gg ml n| Earnings: $630 per mony duron | HED RASPBERRY PI terms PE ooo ST RAYAL, BLBCTHO — | -attce Roos ieee 
, 3 wat Le ee. Dad’ tioor between ‘3 p.m Mondays, Wedmesdays ‘and Pri:| WASHINGS © TRONINGS as. W ATER-| ve 408 nvIGE- 7 NICE ROOMS. ALSO 3 NICE 
seecee MG sear father of Mrs, Avdrey and 5 p.m, Saturday A days. "t come before 8 a.m.| ford nee DAY OR ne TV SERVICE rooms, lower. FE 44-4686. 
afro id F REE Al Johnston Northwest corner of| 5; as7are nity. OB 33588. ___ FE 5-1296 §-8390 . r FURN., 
® Porter, Mrs. Ruth K. Har CAREER PLASTERING 7 BIG "ROOMS, HEAT FURN- 
Mrs. Patricia J” Rock-| 0 ths OPPORTUNITY saymant Rd. Sashabaw. NEW AND RE- iP “STRAKA ent., 14 he 
4 ee, ee . Roe eo . Yern Keller, PE 6-7329. prt, vig bot 19 Beac 
~ Harold Wood, and Lt. J. iP YOU AREA GOOD TALKER eas “Typewriter Service 22A\ - nd, Near Cass Lake Rd. 
G. Cuttord R, Wood. Jr USN) Teeter, URGENTLY NEED-| 1 I gt eg Fe Sparen REAS THOUSANDS OF DotaRs ro|é RMS 6 BATH. EAST SIDE. 
ood: also am a by 13 grand-| ED by Soe kl & very good {ncome. You must |Pi es WORK, D.| MACHINE REPAIRING apping| 1 rELOSING < aig Ti _$H8 me ea ai 7 PVT 
‘Puneral will be eds of posi open due to| be between 25 and 55 years of} Meyers. eM 0 MPT | RM. mi FURN APT WIT 3 F work. General Printing and Of-| ACTION. WE ALO EQUI- 
: turday, August 8, at 2 p.m, at; heavy retirement and age, willing to work at least 4.8 G SNYDER, a SORT AYING ZYING | _fice y Co., 11 W, Lawrence. : entrances, downstairs, $60 mo. 67 
6 Chriss Dutheran & os 4 Airport! tions. No experience ne ry| hours either daytime or evening| sanding and finishing. Phone FE —e a ; Matthews. Inquire 777 E. Walton 
Goods snd Willams Lake Rd. Interment] {0° sine months | to undertake, tlt | —Yieegraph Read and owns, car. | one a ~ Upholstering 23) J.J. JOLL, REALTY ra ae D FLOOR NO DRINK: 
cote oii. 2e| MescMeeds Tae, eet] pent site| Pletteremiact mi satus || ROOF REPAIRS: |PARGRS COStoM, SPMQISTER, ju DIME wr. __Fe eat) Stare San eee: 2 . GHING FE Pg, . (NICE R LIGHT & HEAT. 
avapences baw Rd. Drayton Plains, Mich.| ‘to . No physi- EAVES ce TIOHE, 
a2 is ab Tham: then vill clea efects, necensary ay oat Employment Agencies 8A “eo ept — ang pe Ceon| son Gas Gp mOLaTER DS i are) RB ROOM cROETAG 
; | to He in e from 1:00 . Placement assured in -this or es & boat wells. 1.0853 —_ | Ave PE 23408 oF 
eens time of service at. 2 p.m.| omer states. If sincerely interest- WE' DIG NTS UNDER i ROOMS ree 8. 
mice St] Setenegeeaed | Same Me tees smeg| EVELYN EDWARDS |"FovpiaDir te fat) "| poe Lot & Found Dette eae im , Migs... .... M_| p.m.‘and Wed. “ill noon, Ma rh ut: eee ete ~XQUA BLUE & WHITE # ROOMS Live “Lassies 6 
eee aa] gremeat Obectors <4) Be oat Be Speers |e como feFY fart sino |_Bustneee Services__12 Sassth, ecbuck rvs] Tere ero tant Conc) Goeawn torre 
; = by rent. G.I. approved _ weekly Cal aiken 
; woes. :. euilameagell under P cay LAB TECH tgp oer omeig tory trained’ man Geib 6s eel Edw. ML. . Stout, Realtor o ROOMS, eA ae 
x — TO man . urn., 1 
: . . at our office. General Printing &| Tutery’ lease returti purse and 7 RMS IN PONTIAC. CHILD WEL- 
FUNERAL HOME __| Setence neiptult bur ay aR ene 9 Gon tt W. Law.| papers PE TR. gacioat Bt poles | cs — 
“oR g1nsi| Essential "We wil train you. Out | sautvaient™ in ‘experience.’ MID-| ~~ “APPLIANCE ie sais. i IG gs ER og RE baba - 70-MOHAWKE 
ie ’ ; ; average camueas Ww ou 406 Pon-| we wereiee al! makes af orth r| needs treatmt. " Rewe * FE 6-220. 
; ione!ison-jONNS| ‘tear oe eh jank Bidg. FE $0277. and Cauiomatio washers. 30 yrs |LOST: BROWN BILLFOLD _ IN mag gt pe ge ie g 
Mr. Foster at_ Cy in Pontiac. : vicinity of “HD Con- 12-8681 
eo ee eg Owens Ford. 147°. Saxinaw, Pon- CECT TY ar : Ou FE 2-4021.| tains etunple peer. rater. Com] Wanted Real Estate 32A jg corraak 817 & Y RM APTS. 
s Unfurnished 36! - TWO, OUTSTANDING. TOP QUAT- Between the ages of 25-35 with ALT PAVING ‘izoat: Baik Op GLARED” BLACE newly decorated, everytaing _in- 
Cottages ...36A/ > 7. salesmen needed. Persoaalty, ike workin ———— iat 4 estimate your driveway ST: PAIR OF = ASGES, S. BLACK . cluded, e. caretaker, Apt. B-1, 
‘Rooms ........37 Voorhees Sivle| & oot a prelerred po mpi Fae and have, initiative. Hours WE ror pela i fe gap St rs $ CASH $ APT. FOR 2 LADIES. 2 BEDRMS. 
owes NERAL HOM ree . ' ! Be ready for hi is te brs, for, for munch. Dennen Asphat Paving he eal Ave. Between ‘enc tenn 48 HOURS Uri es, ded 4 fete a a 
a ‘FU E. Ser ie =. ~ salsr west Employment op BR _ Mkt. Reward. PE 5-0167. _ : : SiARTHENTA 
Homes soso eTBA Ambulspes Service—Plane or Motor| Plan.” fringe panels. igh ‘com: | I ae Bias.| ASPHALT PAVING _ |¥08T; MANSFIELD ‘toor1s TRATL- ants Coatnnce “rma. unfurD, Tee ee abie to! x nt 
ee ener eeeneeee 23-8378 sions paig for me * —FE_ 50227 RELIABLE as yton arty or 
rE them, Ask ‘for Drivew ig lots F Plains. OR 3-8881. Reward Be 
Serecccaseosy ae Cemetery Lots 5 "ine Et or phone| Work Wanted ‘Male 10 eet MA bias, FE 6868" |LOST: PARAKEET. e ROO! 
seee eees ‘; \ 5 ke 5 : GREEN AND a 
Space .........4 me for an appointment. On FEd- | 2°“ Coe NTER WORK. NI BULLDOZING AND qlee. Teeny of Bawia and Wright & Valuet QLONED *] M APT “ca 
ea S WE 55000. TONG” MARRIED — Ae 201 ARLAN 
renin iar een | ety “aka a x{*tagreerstEIFTENED sagquines wie Car RAAT BERET, Bae ee ae Crm cd, eat wate 
Z ves $100 or 6 graves $215. z -| Wall and windows. Re b in a be Plains. HA CA [2 rm. util, turn. A 1 at or ware 
cb ee | Pe 4ose2. ee _ | iy avecage wee ine Ret | ae oO a we ete ony —— VE CASH WILL | ave get oer 
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 3—Six grave Mot, yr aun'| Bontiac Press, Box 103 Cad © ay atting. Tate | pow 1¥ be made into ‘inte modern. ‘ealor| “‘'ae TRAVEL CLEAN 7 To = 
re ite” 4-6021. _Poatiac Press Box 103. | __ painting & lawn cutting. PE 40234 ~ ful fiberg! ae saute 8, 3. Hobbies & Su pplies 24A om _‘wavel fe see yon Smt a ws 
nay : ; KINDS LOCK ergias awnings, EM 3-335 aoe a APT. BATH 
For Sale Houses. peigeves sel Help Wanted Female 7 —. pane OR B' CARPET REPAIRING. REWEAY. PAINT BY N your Sane. pred -~ dong a pvt. at On Nerten, FE bast, 
Income Property ........43A BOX REPLIES ~ a “4 ae paren ne CARPENTER | _1-Si22. acum = sereuhis omen Backenstose serves No char for 9 oem Close ts dewmown shopping center 
For Sale Lake Property ...44 euiis tg, Saiee_ Manager, Bastering egbingt york, 2e¥ pant it |COMBINING, “MOWING. BAUING |~Notices & Personals 25| °° RILEY, Broker sod teanapartnugn Fenes tht, 
For Sale Resort Property.44A/4 1, s, 10, 15, 28, 32, 55, 56, }| 7 Fao, win abuso forse ab 5 handle ance CARPENTRY AND CE are 6-2143. —. TORS Eevee rs Elizabeth Lake Rd ne atiora. cceneréietl, attractive 
Suburban Property. -......54 Pentisi. Repl patine ies CABINET MAKER AND CARPER. Wie, takaete Fa 630 ‘ON c i | keene Both front and. reer wine 
winia |... ie  e plies ential. Write | OA |" tehing, “Pres, eeuimates. FE S40]] = MASON SHOES GI AND FHA frost and reer, wine 
eagsneveene- xp. Mr. mi,| Mp, Kitebens 8 specialty. _or COMPE CASH FOR dows give cool reese ventilation 
S Industrial Prop seme bd _ sires Sek. Semis, CARPENTER YRS. 5 | psig SoD ae oe cuyburn 8 PE ¢-2000 [swan oa cal your ame ior tained. “Guiet “trendy “aelanbore, 
eeeeerens 1 ] ANY GTI GIt A es a pay-) Ad on. Ahi: wild: . 
For Sale Acreage .....++.: for my ime sales indies. 8. 8. —— a specialty. Repairs, eS hie a tt LOR N a ed us for er informa- pong By fel “heat het fas 
For Sale Farms Seg " Kres North Plaza, NCE. MATERIAL AND INGTAL. bia Confidential. The Salvation| “ut ,40,ne8 ‘eel We! cold waiter. K. G. Hempstead. 102 
|Rent Farm Property ...». The Pontiac Presa } |sany SITTER « DAYS WE. CARPENTER WO cabinet and|Geeere See SE DTTCE! ¢ ig eg Fg EE eS or afer 
2 T we: 60h to. Perish Sale Rostenns Pomel “ ke’ 4, ghd 5 yrs. aft. 6. od a or OR pp eg pF LARLY CHARLES CHESTER net Cu ot he : “ Fitac FLSORT 7 RMS. PVT. ENT, 
: T an ili Rent, Lease Bus, Prop.  .49/ FOR WANT ADS j|/-~3F A HOSTESS Fou i OF i wicHIGan ee Rochester. 2 BUR COSHIONED sHO} WE TRADE, WE BUILD a decorated. 221 
. | ii kers Collide|ror Sale or Exchange ...50 oa BGAN Bpn ent | — a wane TAKE CLEANING |COLD_WAVE SPECIAL #510 OF- 
; . = DIAL FE 2-8181 Free Toys & Gifts _ mates Phone OR 30687. Weeds & pepe Gmaras “en. Thue Dorothy: sae bib, OF parent a ecmegay” Mg FOR COLORE ED 
i in ‘Newport Harbor : Call io Doar party date and| ORADUATE CIVIL apg =| _mates. ORlando 36126. at! Sorry ye. Dorothy's $60 M./183_W. Buren Phone FE _¢18!) Very aicve 3 & 3 apts, 
: Ja) bonus. (Ht ls for a years exper ypes'T VICKERY, AINTY UPPLIES —- : =. = Prospect 
: From 8 a.m. to § p.m. _fimited time. ring const, Comm... Brid mL pty a Tg TAR, \R ROOFING DAINTY MATD, SUPP Lies — Ti| LISTINGS WANTED Pe 4482 
| | NEWPORT, RI. oe FINANCIAL | ar eines CAPABLE WOMAN. LIVE IN GER-| _MAvie ARTS, cult thee past Lawn Mower sharpening Seiery Wald SUPPLIES Bs ahow "Yuu Nw TO FoR. 3, SE ee. OR 
toll in be eee oe 1) tee ieee HANDY MAN AT ANY KIND ‘AT eS os FO! the better ones, Couple or riris. 
death ; ; Frese _Wi mees. ELgin 6-2732. ork. Carpenter. remodelin _A. Taylor, 56 Gillespie. FE _3-7293. A R YOUR 
‘of two tankers in vad a Harbor Opportunities pansal astumes a” reece psn Cc. MUST BE ABLE TO cating on when have you.. WHITE'S *S NURSERY DAMAGED HAIR? SHA eas J BRO? Bates wa Pe ae. 
; with death Sle Land Contracts ..... ten ie - type, “References required ss, t0 6. _|11_8, Cass Lk. Ra Pe sa71| 3 ,° ol] treatment $2.50. . HOLLYWOOD APTS. 
| rose to 16 today the ; fran to i fe previousemployment em-| HAVE TRICK. WILL Cold waves $6.50 up. Haircuts $1. Furnish untu 
Sr Samuel Wiliams of Port Ar-|MOUey to Loan ....:+vs-+-58] {Stern vat ne drertoe § | Brn. Wr Glaatins HAVE, TRICE RiUL 0 LiGHt| PLASTERING NEW OF REPAIR | 6k STILE RHE, On 22th), Leslie R. Middleton | rar- bath. “uth fara. the B. How: 
‘thur, Tex., at Newport Hospital. Mortgage Loans ......++++ bow has been ren Press INTERIOR & EXTERIOR _PAINT- a SAWS, MACHINE D £._ | SROEER Tay) ard Fe ee 
me : : , red va fens taremah, te rei tle. Free Est. Leach Go LARGE ROOM, KITCHENETTE 
Twenty-four crewmen were in- mid CAS NO or OR ‘817. ORDER. Wa 19 Bagiey St In Debt?. ~ Sell Us Your Equity and bath adults. 402.W, Huron. 
jured, several critically. Two oth- S 3a are made. be sure te ret ods PO x Telegraph re MARRIED MAN. 24 WANT S|SERVI "ATER WEED, CUTTING Mt you are having trouble meet Don't lose your home-eash walt, _ FE 5.7584. 
‘ers. were not accounted for. MERCHANDISE edjustments wil! be iver bine. aa Ld Weems. Phone PE 8100. Fee tia) Sis? W. Huron Pa s-iz9 hic ments see us Sonar | ustnes, Ol ett fans, (268 Ditie|"“Srated ) rms bal Late 
~ <* * ) DEMONSTRATE TOYS REE REMOVAL. TRIMMING, | Bookkeeping & Taxes 14) ARE screened porch. Gas heat. Bvt. 
All of the aa cance ‘toruibers Swaps 2 55 Clostne time for edvertixe wan ue os oS ELA Seccauer. Ae etd Free estimates. FE PPA AAA iors Oakland Theater, . TRY US! Sas very nice, Reasonable. MY 
3 li of the dead were Members| ealo & eee one eee eee eeee m cont ini st: em 5 
: of the crew of the Gulfoil, a 10,- rhe Sale Clothing .......56| j lareer. than remuler acute onl Earnings. | TON Ye STAKE TRUCK MAN) loo ree 2 tor Peo, Wil take cou: KNAPP SHOES For the sale of your home, CAROE 3 vé% & BATH GARAGE, RE 
| 340-ton 1 which out-|Scrap & Iron ....... 1000 0SBAl | SL9" crevtzes to notiestion sory ToUNG. San WAN Sls teen, cco ie airport rae en ia rie Bo land contract, LARGE fi iD 
vesse! was Re 0 “Banas BELPER ou WANTS ODD JOBS, includes monthly sales 22" R 3-1502| We need listings. 00M AND KITCHEN- 
_bound and empty. ° Sale Household Goods ....57 Opportunity for Adva any kind of work. FE 5-6436. tax, yearly income tax also pay-/|LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY & ECO. ette, private entrance. FE 4-0122. 
Transient Want Ad neement | ——- | rolls. Sin 
Mri Neher Killed were Capt.| Valentine Gifts ...........58) pertanceliee upto $30 am | “!"Sivai-c uvupens co.” | Work Wanted Female Ut spe game oe corse torr oe) ey Glas Oh ecieetls en eee Myton see Avalavie now. 
«Montreville Eden, and: his second |Christmas Gifts ............59 tne first ofvouprcation after }|2323 E 7th Bt, Clevelend 4, Ohio! }~pay~ IRONING SERVICH. | Dressmaking, Tailoring 1 oe ERS 1 ae ee iD SALIFIED BUYERS ONDOW Pakek WONOME 
officer, Raymond C. Day, both of "or Sale Miscellaneous... EXPERIENCED SALESLADY FOR} _pushel, FP_6-1¢71. g. oring 160N AND AFTER THIS DATE, |" waitin * mm > BUYERS OXBOW LAKE & WOXOM. T BED- 
mr Do It Yourself CASB WANT AD RATES new women's apparel shop. soon|/{ DAY IRONING SERVICE. #3|/DRESSMAKING, TAILORING At- August Tip 1958. I will not be re:| tes, thems’ and na aareoge Aiphone = se, Schneider. MAT 
Port Arthur. . eoeccesesess cote open at Drayton or! pushei FE 2-24 ¢ terations. i-oos3| >Y. an myself. call will “give you "immedia ac-INEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL, 
* *% #* Cameras & Equipment ...61A| § Lines 1-Day 3-Days tDers Fabstantial inowied ace ust have | 7 WOMEN ean WALL WASH- peeteint— "pee guatr Ince Grosineky. — "Qste of “ate lek ag gy one age 
198 ig all types |DRESSM. UALITY tie flat. furnished, ee garage. 
Those in hospital juri Sale Musical Goods .......62|}$ 3 1-38 ‘s Wie Bee | “ing, and housecleaning. FE 3-7%581,| materials in my home Fe 52543 cs ROY KNAUF _References_ FE 
rengieg-trom critical oe S| Sale Office Equipment ...63|$ ise Hf. Elden, 50°W at 8 Wichols ‘Rd. De-| cate vin Pontiac ares,” Phone G, TAILGRING. ale REDUCE ON WREBeY Ont ya ptm ORR 2 Ae oe ‘ Apr. 
is § . 2.25 is 6.00 troit 3, . Pf formals. dove iO pounds in six | WILL BUY OR LIST YOUR LAKE Private bath & 
The second tanker involved was — Store Equipment ....64 $ 2 7% 44860 7:20 a: ROnEAT iN HELP Bo $9308. Ae for Freda, ey bee Call e. Call tte as as 81.00 a ‘iat ee, Ft property. Purchasers wat waiting. et entrance. 4145 Clintonville Rd. OR 
the §. E. Graham, a 250-foot le Sporting Goods .......65 1 3 3% ta TAIN HELP | |ive im. et “aim ie 00 TH CHILD! Garden Plo er a fet ones. $660 Commerce Ra. | STUDIO Weehic. PRIVATE EN 
motor ship inbound with over half Hunting Accommodations 65A 6 608 7.29 10.80 aoe T f rer _xeneral. Call +4049, Soorsa fue Shan o cone _day, FE 44 Ph. PONTIAC, EM 3.3311 Fe tian: side. Newly AJecoraved. 
v " @ million gallons of gasoline in her = iat hae coves 06 re thes onan Ev gen Day WORK, OWN TRANGPORTA: grading. Anywhere. Call ORiando| Wtd. Children to Board 26 Rent Apts. Untu rhished 34 
a tanks. . Coal el ........67 aw R UNDERGRADUATES & Tis & A GOOD HOME BY DAY OR 
AR A Plants, Trees, Shrubs ... 68 ~~~! Help Wanted Male 6 mostest Taking carty antes “up mp | __prnetenl “parece PE 2-5492 Insurance Agencies 17A * week, Fe sau.) CAF OF Kovt ote. si occaoern 18T 4 ROOMS 
Today sh? was’ stit puring fur|FOF Sale Pets... +000. 69)1 BM CORTAGE, RENT IW EXC|— SYR }IRONINGS. 69 PER BUSHEL FE/NQ INCREASE IN AUTO RATRG| Yor PE aiion > “ND CARED|! ente Grotmg.fonr. Adulte, Reat| god bey Vatzoeete RSM a 
iously and Coast Guard officers Dogs Trained, Boarded ...70 day Pr ise Couple Re, fae You_can work 3-4 hours a day or ane $3 PER BUSHEL. FE pattists. in INSURANCE ch AGENCY Wtd. Household Goods 27 sa chia i weloome, 1c, FE bas _tearon" wie “gtr at mad 
predicted the fire would rage for | on. early evening, you can eatn a8 | onmos $278 2 ron EBT | annnnnnrrrrnrernrrnrrmnrmrw ottives. = 
: h ONINGS. $275 BU Vic. OF i. RM. BACHELOR, $9 WK, & 2 BEDRM. APTS. T ° 
| at least five days unless the ship "hoot ner need Vuk & 6 Gar ecessary y cprertunity Adame _& Auburn, Px 6-800. | Laundry Service 18] °Worsing or not FE 54755. © |, TMs. $19 Wk, M8 Stéte_ FE Zsises.|_ for Colored. MY 20181. RENT 
Z ambler mmerce Rd. rm extra money ITTIN' ATERFORD ®-/ FO R. ADU 1 BE . 
could be. torpedoed. | FARM MERCHANDISE as Seat tor interview Ved eS Se Agia "ice FAMILY LAUMDRE SERY FURNITURE NEEDED) only. Otitities turn 258 Orebard bape Sd Adulte, 130 Sem 
| bility f Mee ee ae bene | Ex-Army and =a eatcs for ae (Ce — te A CARE nl LICE icRNsED ant oe 1 FOR a Fr00. iol top. dolar wi ~~ waiia on 1 Tice CLEAN APT 2 eA eee: As. 
. vi j . } = y m : ousework. Pont. . = — ue ur APT. 
¥ oB 1 was an imme-|Hay, Grain & Feed  .....71) ambulance work, Must be expe-| Box 5. ree cay “WITH EXPERIENCE a4 race cai sare al RUF | sell it for you aB Communi ‘ed ast tag ot bale, ait as od 1 ES Pee BED OOM on Rat 
an diate explosion. Many of the dead|For Sale Livestock ........72) RSad°" pontiac 487, eae Lake AID — LIVE IN. ONE WHO | sites housework, FE_ 47316. ed gg a ee on 3311 cluding soft _water,” FE 5-6i71.” |i ROOM. “KITCHENETTE AND 
men were trapped below decks. |Wanted Livestock .........73) From_9 a.m hee ome Tear ee 8 a ln tg may PING. SEC Landscapin 18A r Dee ate from tee On bam| bot beth’ stove. refrig.. heat. 
| For Sale Poultry 74 BARBER WANTED: — FULL On| Pine’ Take “eres, Must have reer ee M_3-2842._ WANTED i ae ee aS only oN “Paddock. “Alberta 
: . ° = part time FE 5-3331 or 286 State| References LI 17-0430 No calis| MIDDLE AGED wow DESIRES|4 « 1 ACE TREE SERVICE. RE- i pri oat, temp ARE Apts if _ 
Catholic Encyclopedia - Ae Dabees osese. 10) Bt. after 3 p.m. =] ee day. evening, oF) re erie FE oT Get our bid. Fruit W d pai nis a eg, girly or ae -_ 
e Farm ment ....76 BOYS WANTED. 17 TO i0, RES- MANICURIST WANT 0 ats : dock, Al ; 
to Include 150 Volumes | Auction Sal — 16 Be curent, work.. Bitf's. Grill, 875 mii for pr atch Welee iNTER- LAKES TREE SERVICE, i 00 r CLEA aber RMS, NICELY ivan, 3 wi. 38 S ein, 
OS cc cesacsecs: mee Blvd. Birmingham. graph an cad. Maple Road area, Call “ao és RE FOR 8M LE Pile 2 é remove, soe, Ss Spinet furn. Washine priv, FE 5- = dea went. fened Sera ful ee 
= CANVASSERS & ERS FOR CHILD AYS ONLY FE eas 2? RMS, & KITCHENETTE 0 ment, FE 4.6641 
NEW YORK—A New York firm * moseraenises) seis res ee NEEDED NOW +6097 rs evel LA BUILDING floor. “Baby welcome. 194 Going|? BDRM. LOWER. $48 175 NORTH 
has acquired world English - lan- one solicitors ee veling. AY Seeding & Sod- St., corner -of itte 
an < FE 23-8245 10 housewives and young ladies, PRACTICAL ! NURSE AVAILABLE. beth Must be in good condition. Phone | -——— ore. Shore Dr., Lake Outen 
guage rights to a 150-volume Ro-; AUTOMOTIVE EXPE! RIENCED FV SNR Vick ©. [ee oe ee ver war. spe Risndo 3.3004. _ Swaps, Str toe - a ie arate ah 7 RM. APT. ti0; & SLEEPI 
man 4-2525. Hampton Elec- i survey Wo ase TA A eaavattre BUREAU| dri n-| _rm., ¥ 19. Saginaw. 
man’ Cathglic encyclopedia being | 5. cate Housetrail gg) ities #38. Huron. ampton Elec Good starting. salary and only | Licensed and bonded at evens 0 driveway ereging. mnaek fille’ | WANTED TO BUY - ate TYPES _trance_iderly couple."ss, Auburn.|j~ OR 3 ROOMS, ea ian 
published in France. Publication in ers EXPERIENCED BUSINESS "OF. 1 a apply. FE | cents ver br Adult sitters. OR Swi SARE GUARANTEED) —% furniture, Ph FE 2.8523, _ |? EMS. & KITCKENETTE, UPPER| refrg. furnished. 
the United States and Canada will Rent Trailer Space .....79 =~ TUNITY - Salesman needed NIGHT “SHIFT COOK APPLY P.O. inte ev oe early mornings of} work. Free estimates, FE 86-1950. WTD, ANTIQUE DISHES, AN- wisases. it Hod, Ly st. bath, GLOR PTS 
begin in mid-1958 and will continue|4U*© Accessories 80) § eto taking over Detrat branch |™ son gpg XPERT TREE TRIMING AND| WY"2.i5 lamps. Antique furaiture. |) pooM CABIN ch WE |1#0 8. } man FE. 4-4226 
continue j _. es cicensee nvestigate our commission set-up. Naa NINGS | removal Ph FE $6593. or ROOM CABIN $iC PER WEEK. Cokie ON WEST Bib 
for six years at the rate of two|for Sale Tires ...........80A See Mr, Charles, Statewide. 171 RELIABLE, CAPABLE WOMAN i) 3-200 Wtd. “Mi Haneo Huron Theater, FE 229189 "|" Ne _ Nie Sto 
volumes Auto Service ‘ _8. Tele: 40521. sj to care for 2 children & house-| WASHINGS AND TRONINGS. #8 E. awh x re e sce us 28) Huron Theater, FE 2-2015. Newly decasete Utilities furn, 
a month. The general title sessccoecesess8] (EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESMEN | ork. Live in. FE 47530. 9. FE 4.7818, L ting M INTEN sere co OT. LARGE) WHEEL TRICTOLE |? EMS. EVERYTHING FURN. 193 _Ref. Write Pontiac Press. Box 91, 
will be “The 20th Century Encyclo- — Motor Scooters ....v-82 al i My ait at Lake |TOY, DEMONSTRATORS vest pany WORK WA ae iG epriying, af eo eer ances |_Chain driven. OAkiand 8.2080. ei Beet Bow. aie ee 
pedia of Catholicism.” or Sale Motorcycles veseu ee EXPER FOR RY plan. Start earning your hetsen a able. PE #97 é nal SteRiAn BLUE SOD-3e 50 : town Eve: ‘thin, + 8T. . ‘N- ‘ , * 
ne For Sale Bicycles ........84|  slessing, joule aA a ecerer | Seta thr Coin | aN Pio | “tse teuyerea_ 00) eroeh ¥2|__ Wanted to Rent 29], eons Fe flea eac : 
ery . a ; ~ - 8. PVT. ; , 
nie Relires + gags tg ar in eos = TRAINED, CXURSERY SCHGOC” | iL tL BO. oy Et La om. aoe Ci ae Pitta MERAGER OF pecan oe j beth any Ra, ae rit Us a DON’T WISH FOR 
Airplanes ..-.+--88/ win uain ant finance Andustrious| FOr new int in Pontiac : si. meen Recktels we sol VE a'mile radius of Pontiac’|? ;ROOMS, LAKEFRONT. IDEAL) a 
Transportation Off vaol| mastied wan With car, for saies| 8e8° Rochester, Must drive. i -_ | PE 8-3787. or bachelor ee & wa ¢ F 
DETROIT ® — Robert F. G.|Wanted Used Cars ........88 and “delivery. work. 1000" estate| MIS Gormaine, LI 146053 or. “| ~~ Building Services __12|—4 M ing & Truckini 9 | SMALL URPURS ERED HOUSE fn y around. MY MONEY! Make it easily 
i Copeland, former Detroit new: Wanted . lished_customers. For appointment 4-650. ALL KINDS OF NT WORK ha ruc = t. Wlderh Reasonable 9 yyy i RaT ee . 
rd, spa- Used Trucks  ...-.89| call PE. 22318. ‘TWO ONEMCUMBERED WOMEN | “'Brick & block eee? eal as movine BALING: erly couple. Reliable ten- ORD ae 
perman afid-a-FordMotor Co. ad-|For Sale Used Trucks .....90 FACTORY | scan HOW AC. for pot se yeat No smok fe "eo “OR 35680 east VENT GER po Ponte Press Box 10, | S0OF utilives paid Washing | through Classified Ads. Fo 
vertising man for the past ~dé-}Auto-insuranee............90A ie Huron betwee 0 ear —_ vbeastifa ee | A aun Bone ane StS PE EAE FE 2am Share Living Quarters 3 he ATH WEST Sipe | ee 
wade, has retired, He is a former|For Sale Used Cars .......91| inten OPERATORS Li | ary pits garde and. ‘and " t| AA-1 Re Rates| | osa Rese «NEWLY Di Bn. ag DART) 
preident Of the Adcraft Club of vvoee 93 | ae Be PERATORS care won| Sf r smith Moving | Lares van \or|/RENT, FREE TO COUPLE oni eet NEWLY DECORATED .|Sell, rent, buy, swap, hire, 
; e el tractors only | General com-| oF call Starr Pe olaen ht rie middiee a es hats Mage va a Pits. \s 
4 (. | fodity aivision” appfy at 267 6.| pion, Michigan MOVING “— a vant 18 for or age second drinkers. 164 
‘\ T Bivd. EB, Pontise, iach 9-3: ’ anytime. FE $4316 of FE 6-660. Wider amare Tit ie Pe Eases, em SO Widial PE 2 
' nate Werle Sue! 8 pm. PE al FE 2-8181.. 
& + — ‘ & e - * 
      
  
aeeee 
HOt eeeeeeeneee   
Cette ee 
  
Haa rar 
of Pamela Haaseth, 
of Mr. and Mrs. 
oa. “Hiaaseth and Mi: Mrs. Lorraine eside service will 
rence at 3:30     
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B LA’ : “i CE- ment work. s ie 5. * 
SRICk BL D 
  
    
  
  re oR 
‘free of ec. §-4638. 
ee CARTAGE |     
    Local and, lone oe di moving. 
TRUCKING & HAULING. RUB- 
__bish, Anytime, Cheap. FE 41820. 
Trucks to Rent 
  
  
  
      
    
soustey 
= xT RIDE. 
ce 
      WANTED, RID To Trevetes © City or Le 
er be ol veces 
Om VICINITY OF 
bd ait eee? WTD.; RID Fri. night oe a t. morn. PE 8-3 
Wtd, Contracts, itea a2   
fstacto 
and title 
Bor Orcha: IMMEDIATE 
ACTION o a, good land contract. New seasoned. Your cast upon a 
Ken Templeton. 
KL. Teman eton, Realtor FE 44563) - 
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
      
  
  
  
            
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
  
      
  
    
  
  
  
    
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    
  ote aera Sis"6 Paddoc oer    
2Rms., F iv. Bath, Clean a8 we tro 
E 4-2! 
T3 . BATH. ‘in, 23 8. Paddock. FE 
ik , RIT 
it eo: 8 1 eh a 
desirable counts. ‘Small wele . come, Located near General Hos- 
pital on West H St. 6226 or FE a 
F) ROO bath, La mei —_— ge ag ron g00 Nortie 
3 NICE FLOO 
Pvt. ent, All Gaitities. $16. Fi 
8-1298 after 6. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
  
      
  
    
  
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