woh j ‘ a +b ae. " eat i 14 * © oM\ r : i Li * ee i : a) ' C iva YEAR: & hk * * * *. " RONTIAG MICHIGAN . FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1956—40 PAGES. 2 Too Busy to Retite_ FORMER PRESIDENT HERBERT HOOVER | Works 12-14 Hours a Day — ‘Keep Busy,’ H oover Warns Oldsters as He Turns 82 SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — Former President Herbert Hoover is 82 years old today but he still works nearly 100 hours a week on a wide variety of projects. In fact, thé elderly statesman says hard work is the gecret of staying young. In line with his belief. —— is the best way to achieve hap- ¥ _piness, Hoover will take little time out from his busy schedule to celebrate his birthday today. He said yesterday in San‘ Francisco he will “probably have din- ner with some old friends’’ and added: “T expect they'll have a cake. ” --He-said he will make-his-“third farewell address” to a Republi- fore considers it “his duty.” - can convention “because the President demanded it” and he there- Besides working on the convention speech, Hoover is 1. ea in_a fund-raising drive for the St os anford Medical School; 2. writing . a history of his work as food administrator during and after World War I; 3. promoting recommendations of the Commission on Reor- ganization of the Federal Government which he headed, and 4. pro- moting the Boys’ Clubs of America. His secretary, Bernice Miller, casi tes Soectes “tte 1k eemwe gvery single day including Sunday” on these myriad tasks. To those “oldsters’’ who have fered this advice: or are about to retire, Hoover of- “There is no joy to be had from retirement except some kind. of productive work. Otherwise you wi ll degenerate into talking to every- body about your pains and pills and income tax. The other oldsters will want to talk about their own pains and pills and income tax. “Any oldster who keeps at even part-time work has something worth talking about, He has a ze st for the morning paper and his three meals ‘a day. The point of all this is not to retire from work or you will shrivel up into a nuisance to all mankind.” --cause—the.-President—“‘feels ‘|veporters at Washington National a Airport before taking off for New Local National Guardsmen Leave Tomorrow for Camp Over two hundred Pontiac National Guardsmen leave Saturday by truck convoy for Camp Grayling to under- go the annual two-week summer training program of the Fifth Army. The group will include 1 10 men and five officers of Company M, 125th Infantry and 97 men and five of- ficers of the 107th Ordinance Company. The local troops will be among some 10,000 Guards- men from every part of Michigan taking part in the —‘*training between Aug. 11 School Board Gives Approval to Construction The schooli administration an- nounced plans at a Board of Edu- cation meeting last night to go 000 elementary school at a site north.of,Kennett..r0ad-and east-of the present Grand Trunk Western Railroad right-of-way. Definite plans for construction had been postponed because of pro- posed new marshalling yards in the area, Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said last night it had beert decided that the yards would not bring about a “noisy and . dangerous’ situation for school children. * The school is part of a $1,800,000 building program to meet 1957 classroom needs and will be lo- cated on @ site now owned by the * board The Board approved picking up an option. to buy five acres of land adjacent to the Willis School on Opdyke road. The price was $1,000 per acre. The space will be used multi-purpose room and for a play area. : 4 For More Fun on Your VACATION |’. Dino em fe and Aug. 25. The camp grind actually gets under way Monday. Highlights of the Guard camp will be Governor's Day on Aug. 18. Governor G. Mennen Williams and President Feels ‘Responsibility,’ Claims Dulles Secretary Sees Nothing} in Situation Needing Special Congress Call WASHINGTON (?i—Sec- retary of State Dulles said today President Eisenhower called a Sunday meeting with congressional leaders en the Suez Canal crisis be- very strongly about shar- ing responsibility with Con- gress, particularly if there should be any risk of hos- tilities.” Dulles said, however, “T don’t see anything in the situation now which would suggest that a special ses- sion of Congress would be required.” | The secretary talked briefly with York to meet with Secretary Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold of the jk. . and U. S. Ambassador Hen- ry Cabot Lodge Jr, The meeting was arranged for a general discussion of Middle Eastern problems including | Egypt's seizure of the suez Ca- nal, Eisenhower yesterday called congressional leaders to meet at the White House Sunday for a re- port on the canal dispute. This stirred speculation about the Possibility of a special session of Congress later on, or at least the The U, S. government, it was learned today, has circulated to the countries which will attend the London conference. a proposal for an international authority with complete control over the use of Commissioners. Discuss Starlings —With ‘Music’ | starlings have again invaded the seems to help. _ a “Thinning the trees seems to/help a little, but then the birds , just start arming the police with shot- kill one, two more come along to something is being done about it,” Rowston a A taraway clamor of starlings was heard briefly at last night's meeting. of the Pontiac City Com- mission, "> The allegorical “chirping” came when City Commissioner Philip E, Rowston told City En- gineer Lewis M. Wrenn, acting city manager, that he hag re- ceived complaints that flocks of city, and asked Wrenn what he intended ‘to do about it. “I don’t know, comnfissioner,” Wrenn sighed. ‘In the past five or six years, we've tried everything| . we could think of. Shotguns, owls in the trees, poison spray — nothing move to another tree. We might guns, but it seems every time you take its place." “Weill, I just wanted. to be sure Moore in Hands PROTECTION Harriman-for-President headquarters in Chicago, ‘Dr. Herman N. Bundersen, president of the Chi- ome mare of Health, administers polio a: to FOR WORKERS — At the Ry JANICE HAYHOW In spite of a downpour which of Circuit Court on the Suez and its development, fees and finances. The key to the success of the whole undertaking is whether Egyptian President Gamal Ab- del Nasser will accept interna- tionalization of the canal opera- tion even though he wot retain ownership, Moscow's acceptance to the con- cy left only Egypt, Greece} Pin to be heard from of the parley, All the others have accept- ain and France lined up for the Accused Slayer: Listens to Witnesses’ Testigony at Examination— Howard W. Moore, 23, was bound over to Circuit Court. this morning for arraignment Tuesday following examination of evidence in the sex, slaying of his Lake Orion neighbor, three-year-old Mar- tha Little. The examination, which begun at 10 a.m. in Clarkston, was high- lighted by the testimony of six witnesses who were questioned by Oakland County Prosecutor Fred- --The arraignment has been pet for 9 a.m. Tuesday before Cir- cuit Judge George B. Hartrick. The examination began before Justice William H. Stamp of In- dependence Township where the child was found dead in a lovers’ lane 11% miles from her home. Moore is accused of luring the girl into hig car after dinner July) 27 ‘and driving ber to the lane/ where he allegedly assaulted and beat her to death. The sister-in-law, Lois Jones, | 18, of Lake Orion, testified she saw Moore with blood on his face and-shirt at “about 11 p.m.” at the Lake Orion drive-in where she is a car hop. “How could I be there at 11 when I was arrested at 10:20?” Moore asked in his only comment closed most activity at the 4-H fair yesterday afternoon, several thou-, sand visitors came. out for the evening session, The Dress Review scheduled last - |night was canceled because be the rain. : The 4-H talent show featuring talent from four counties was held as major eyent at the fair- grounds, Perry Street at Walton Boulevard. - Top winners in the talent show were; Elaine Tulike, baton twirler from. Wayne County, first prize; Carol Schweikle,; Wayne County, Spanish dancer, second; Janet Long of Milford, Oakland County 4H, third; Ruth Scott, tap dancer from Wayne, fourth and Gloria Beck, singer from Wayne, fifth. SHOWMANSHIP Showmanship awards in judging} - yesterday went to Don Bowers of South Lyon, for beef; Dean Rocker of Wixom, ‘swine, and Lee Perry of Clarkston, sheep... Rita Marie Spezia of Leonard won the Grand Champion steer award with her Black Angus. The Oakland County Farm Bu- reau presented awards during the Thursday evening program to the top county 4H fair winners. Receiving trophies- from Mrs. Vernon Hutchings of Ortonville were Rosa Cudnokufsky of Lake Orion; Virginia Guthrie, Gallo- way Lake; Karen Winship of lake Orion; Joan Fodrea of Mahoney, both of South Lyon. 24 nations the United States, Brit- ed. - several other state digni- -}taries_will_be.on hand to re- during the proceedings. view the troops at a parade) Back-to-School Party . scheduled for 2 p.m. The exodus of Guard units from Detroit will hit Oakland County early tomdérrow morning when truck convoys in groups of 15 ‘will pass through Pontiac and head north along US-10 to M-83. The Your Tickets given on request. other features and cartoons. ~|Phil Smith of .South_.Lyon;—Lee- Perry and Bill Brian of Clarkston;} Dean Rocker of Wixom and Allen| Tickets are going — for the big, free back-to-school theater party sponsored by 18 Pontiac merchants. These free tickets are available for school age boys and girls accompanied by a parent. Store managers report that they will be The theater party will be held at the three Pontiac Butterfield Theaters, Strand, Oakland and State, the mornings of Aug. 21 and 22. Top feature is “Chief Crazy Horse,” starring Victor Mature, plus | Tickets are available in the following stoges: Rappy's, Simms, Stapps, a eee ee | Brothers and George’s Newport. Others are The Lion Store, Peggy's, Penney’s, Artnr’s, Walte’s, Sears, Gillies Shoes, Barnett’s and Kresge’s. Ready Now _ More included Don Bowers and Taylor of Lake Orion; Stuart Hutchins of Rochester and Helen Miles of Troy, and Douglas and Janet Long of Milford. HIGHLIGHTS TONIGHT Highlights of tonight's program at the fairgrounds include the ma- chinery' parade at 7:30 and the 4-H Cavalcade of horses slated at 9 p.m, 2 ~ Ask 45 Pct. Fare Hike WASHINGTON « — The New York Central, the Pennsylvaniajof England set records at Bonne- and other Eastern railroads today|Ville Salt Flats. asked the Interstate Commerce Commission for authority to in- crease first class passenger fares 45 ‘per cent, will be dismissed at 3 p.m. Children’ 8 day. is the big special) campaign workers. Chicago health authorities are using every means to prevent the current out- rok Lscanhal from Reach — =e Rain Doesn't Stop Fair Crowds: Horse judging is the main event event for the Saturday program. in tomofrow's program. Exhibits|All rides will be 10c between 10 s AP Wirephote . « at te Hotel, se : and news cover- a.m, and 5 p.m. The carnival will continue tomorrow night. anne anemones anmesmicmstins ‘Truman Urges Using ‘52 Plank on Civil Rights Says He'll Name Man He Hopes Is Nominated by Weekend CHICAGO (INS)—Harry 8. Truman, self-proclaimed “private” of the Denio- cratic Party, seems more like commander - in +-chief for all the ruffles and flour- ishes he has aroused. Holding court in the Presidential Suite of the he got age rivaling his- best days as Chief Executive. Both sides in the” presidential nomination bout sought his favor after he rolled into the convention city yesterday and announced he would seek.“information” on which to announce a choice by saa aaa end ; * * e+ . Most of the callers appeared to _ geet the camp of New York's ov. Averell Harriman, But Adlai Stevenson supporters. mingled among the entourage: It was “Give 'Em Hel? Harry who came to Chicago for the po- litical wars, and he seemed at home in every role—behind the _| scones or in front of them. Was Pontiac Safety Consultant MILWAUKEE—Abner of a-heart attack last night. when he collapsed, He was Noted Auto Racing Driver, Ab Jenkins, Dies Suddenly (Ab) Jenkins, mayor of Salt Lake City and a noted racing driver, died ~ 73, former A hectic arrival at the train nounce he would make a choice and a fiery fling on the Platform 4 the ex-president's official day. SOUTH HAPPY He had attended the twi-night doubleheader between the Milwaukee Braves and the St. Louis Cardinals and was being driven to his hotel from County Stadium pesoemmnces dead on arrival platform seemed literally all over but the shouting.” Proponents and opponents of a stronger plank were to go before the Platform committee today to climax @ week of hearings on the campaign documents, pital. Jenkins was safety con- sultant to Pontiac Motor Division and was in Mil- waukee on Pontiac busi- ness. He was scheduled to attend the Elkhart Lake Road race Saturday and Sunday, and to drive the pace car for the race. Just last Jung the stocky, white- haired driver with help from his son, —— drove a stock mode} cme Pontiac an aver- age of 118.375) miles an hour for! a new 24-hour endurance auto speed record, shattering exist- ing American un- limited and class C stock car standards. -He—-held-— six JENKINS . “speed and endtr- ance marks when he died. Jenking wag born in Spanish Fork, Utah, In 1926 he became in- terested in driving and took a car from New: York to San Francisco in 86 hours and 20 minutes—faster than any train had made the trip at that time. He made the ‘Bonneville Salt Flats west of Salt Lake City the nation’s most famoug _ racing ground, Such noted drivers as Sir Malcolm Campbell and John Cobb His records that ‘still stand are: 200 miles at 196 mph, 1,000 miles at 172 mph; 3,000 miles in excess at County Emergency Hos-?- Phone Service Cut by Crash Driver Unhurt os Truck Rams 3 Poles, Burns; Clarkston ‘Isolated’ A truck loaded with food knocked ‘major telephone and teletype serv- Clarkston by 11 a.m. All tieoming | Pot-0-Gold Shivers :|be restored by noon, down three telephone poles on Dixie Highway north of Waterford Hill early today; snapping three overhead cables and cutting off ice from Detroit and Pontiac to the Flint-Saginaw-Bay City area. Service was to be restored to and outgoing calls Were cut off, leaving the village -isolated. Offi- cials hoped full service north would Some 30 Bell Telephone workers were at the scene and 20 test-men stationed along the route of the major lines to check effectiveness of the repair work, according to Ray Storm, manager of the Pon‘ tiac Bell Office. A semi-trailer driven by James Gramblin, 23, of Detroit, hit the soft shoulder about 2:30 a.m. bounced off a tree, rammed the poles and then burst-into flames from a side gas tank, Gramblin leaped to safety and was not injured. One pole and the truck, owned by the National Food Stores, burned. The entire cab and i of 165 mph. sscuiness en op eco caused lakt night, obtensibly to - - decide what step they should take next in the “controversy.” Northern liberals who had hoped to haye Truman support their fight to specifically endorse the Suprenie Court's antisegrega- tion decision were sadly, if quiet- ly, Genppoleted. Instead, it was the Suutheriers who rejoiced. Truman said he thought the 1952 and 1948 planks were good enough. So did the Southerners. The course the Platform Com- mittee and convention take from ow on as far as civil rights is concerned will pretty well be up to Harriman and Michigan Gov. G, Mennen’ Willlams, Harriman scheduled a news con- ference soon after his arrival in -- Continued. on-Page 2,.Col, 2). as Entry Pile Rises It's been a safe and secure two weeks, but the word this morning is that the Pot-0-Gold’s burden of 400 crisp dollar bills is existing on borrowed time, Entries for Puzzle No. 10 (held over for a week) are to win has been included on Page Two. Look at them, use Pre-Convention Atmosphere Lacks. Winning Tang tonight and tomorrow is mostly |’ tempera- + Toutes leit will be 6 fo. a ae Four years ago Truman knew he 9 was done, The Republicans riddled] a es part of the trailer were destroyed. Democrats N eed Spellbinder to Dispel Gloom Clouds . “4 JOE HAAS - |the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt It wag rescued only through the his administration with charges of| But the vas didn’t ‘want the and according to tradition had a| great oratory of Alben Barkley. (selling the nation down the river./nomination, and the hand of Tru- clear claim to make the run for) It wag dead until he spoke, He |The star of a great military hero/man played the deal, Adlai Steven- a full term on his own. ee nae neh Treuan june Ceighienng Oe pli Ay. ow Ot 0 Oe Oe | But the party was divided. The won the nomination. His name was Ike. : November—Ike was too much, resounded with the cry | Political experts said that night) One week before the Demo- Today Alben Barkley is dead. of “time for a change.” con- | there were only three people in the crats assembled in Chicago for | He is gone when his party needs vention started in the ms. |nation who felt Truman could win| their 1952 convention, That Man {the shot in the arm which he rata nse nadige cere his wife Ike had beea nominated for pres- ‘alone seemed able to administer. i fie and deyghter, Margaret, ident in the saime hall. The | The gloom complex again is n- Today's Press Eut fighthhg Harry made. it a| Democrats again met ina spirit | "pant, a ay em put Bess and Mar-| of gloom. a sews peddeas 4, 15 into it, ‘toured the nation ieee tienes seesicsen @ iets aah ah tics eastetetien Alben Barkley again put the con- Fan te ae, sagt of the cockiness and failure of|Vention on. its ‘feet, Hig talk did Pot-0-Gold sk. ckivcacensc Thomas E Dewey to properly woo/that in the test ovation ever . Sports ...... | Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. /Ger- tection for Wolverine village. Preceding the . ceremonies, the jthe farm and Mrs, Cross makes! laid: E. F . ee A resolution was adopted certi-| WIDE CHOICE OF COLORS. fying the results of the election : Gay pastels or rich jewel tones thot keep thelr : held on Aug. 7 at which time resi-! color for years, Six additional colors especial 4 8 Ll dents approved by a vote of 43 to! formulated for shutter, trim, and trellis work, farm.owners and their families will! h _ Decker can think /of. no “be honored at a Centerfhial Farm|"®? home at 3420 Cambridge injreason for her disappearange. Mrs. dinner at Pine Lake. ° troit, Decker says they have chécked all}~ The Leonard farm was rece ived The Michigan Centennial verte ‘(their friends and relatives, ( ee eraer ere program was inaugurated in 1948 | Gertrude is the third oldest of 5 the extending_of a gas franchise _— TO APPLY—QUICK-DRYING x : oe by the Michigan Historical Com- re» to the city by the Consumers Pow-|- Makes yeur job a cinch, No thinning, easy-worki i Bloodmobile Visit Due mission at he co-sponsored by ti gen gn pe er Co. SS aan se —_ marks. And Volypar House eae IMLAY CITY — The Red Cross} The Detroit Edison and Consum- | complexion, light/ brown hair, After discussion, the council de vases = eae Bloodmobile will visit Imlay City) ¢*’ Pewer Company. blue eyes ®nd/ wears brown jeided to proceed with their plans) — nin ate FECTION AND BEAUTY on Tuesday, Aug. 28, at the Meth-| Under the program. each owner| Mimmed Blanes. to blacktop Decker, Wellsboro, and). fae eo ed Piva ome tear waked ears odist Church between the hours |is presented with a Centennial s/f Ladd roads although no date could chipping, or cracking, Your home is ps a ™ of 12 and 6 p. m. Farm certificate and a plaque. To| “Trudy” waés last Seen wearing oe : be set.when this work can be done protected with Valspar. Get it here. " date 776 awards have been made|a green-and/white polka dot dress,| — MR, AND MRS, ORVILLE WEIR as much ‘preliminary work must The average summer* tempera-| throughout the state. Thirty-seven|white sweater, tan shoes . and ' first be completed. ture ‘in Jerusalem is 74.5 degrees. | are in 1 Oakland County. rrvin | “4 . A special meting was called for, etter oi = t/a aa bandbag. ae C. an rs. IV] e E1T (Tuesday, at 8 p.m, at which time | / , “= = ~ 7 (the council will review. all ap, a : ss ; Reside 1n Pendleton ( alif plications for city manager. A, g ‘ . ie resigned this position hus. 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. : : FE 2-3766 - ROCHESTER. — The Pendleton, )ter’s maid of honor and best man) | nna mene ‘Calif., Marine base was the des-|was Bob Coleman. Seating the, tination of Pfc. and Mrs. Orville'!guests were Keith Summers and £-Weirfoltlowing their-recent-aft-| Bob Coles ernoon wedding at Stone Baptist|: A reception immediately follow ete ‘ othe a maa: 5 Coslomatic : See 3 Church, Auburn Heights, jing the wedding took place. at the | The new Mrs. Weir’ was Patri:|home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto W ager REFR } Costomatic cia Albrecht, daughter of Mr, and/of Crooks road. 2 i 2 Kroger's New Mrs. Theodore Albrecht of Grant s “[erreee Br | cee Holly Ground Broken] MMM RT ERC Raya er “| " for tor wetting Parca wore FOF SChool Addition | R foe “ = nia oem Poe HOLLY ar Ground has been 12 HI FT WITH . $0-LB ZERO FREEZER a tiara-held fingertip, veil, Her ces kav’ a aceis iain s ® s cascade. bouquet was composed woken fOr @ seven-room addition of white roses and carnations. ito the Holly elementary school Chi arlotte Albrec ht was her gis: he lowest bidder was the Wallace -'Construction Co. of Farmington at’ around $130,000 Eye Fire | District :, rn This is about $10,000 in“excess_of A T hi ithe previously allocated amount in von Owns: Ip ifor the entire project. Federal as- (sistance provides about $78,000 for ROCHESTE R — Avon Township the work, the rest to be financed "oni Attorney L. R. Bebout has from the bond issue passed several been authorized to take necessary months ago. | ‘steps for a special election on) | jlevying a special assessment tax. ’ jin Sections 23, 24, 25, 26, 35 and 36) Gitche Gumee’ { the t hip t le fire pro-| tection in = fig “*" Is Camp Goal i * * The area, from Rochester road, of Church Group | ito Dequindre and from South! ‘GINGELLVILLE — A grow of; boulevard to Avon road would be 16 young, people and eight adults’ — as spec ial fire district No. 3. from the. Baptist Church here will ile ave early Saturday for Gitthe Plan September Rite |Gumee Bible Camp on the Kewee- . naw Peninsula, where they will. be} | IMLAY CITY — Mr. and Mrs. until Aug. 18. Howard Booth are announcing =i “Alice told me to tell you,” said the March Hare, “tomarch-right over-hare-— (uh, I mean here) to —/) Regular Price | 419% You Save 151" | YOURS FOR ONLY OPENS 9 A. M., Wednesday, August 15, 750 N. Perry St. Hager BETTER = ra Seyi a for Top Valve Gifts - Upon their return Sunday engagement of their daughter vi Elaine Marvilla, to Lyle io Se-| Aug. 19, they will conduct the | | evening service of the Gingell-- | fe cord, son of Harold Secord, here.| Alle Church. ij ‘ enn 4 Y/ 4 f 'AGeptember wedding is planned. [vane Caer | Mea As Pi 4 Ol Cf AVE. 1 |. The interdenominational camp,] ©! (As Picture 3 * supported by individual contribu- ; To Talk in Waterford. tions, is directed by the Rev. John ' | WATERFORD—The Rev. George Radar. The camp usually accomo-] @ AUTOMATIC DEFROSTING a | Hawke will speak ‘at the 11 a.m. 'dates 100 youngsters, representing | bd and 7:30 p.m, Sunday services of several states, at each one-week No Controls—No Buttons | the Waterford Community Church. | session. so Puch-—dde Pen te Empty! : —_ ) | © MOIST COLD Compartment - Uncovered Foods Stay Flavor Fresh for Days!. with trade BUDGET SPECIAL! NEW 1956 NO MONEY DOWN REFRIGERATOR 24 MONTHS-TO PAY NORGE 0 Cu. Ft. 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Saginaw St Soe ae A & ‘ { * . * : } , Po kes ! eae 2 = “ : 7 : - / ae / ‘ * s f me j a é - “ : ee \ ere Fag “4 | \ > Le aa A : < git ae ed vf / | = | j : ae ee is = aS roe : ee rs | Zt ae \ é x NV { € sks j 3 ee EAA f bl f Z f iy Residents ek | (Court Ruling Questioning Royal Oak) Rezoning for Station) ‘Oo pie a ‘ we Laie! 5 pen Pt, ‘Each prospective kindergarten ducted: the 4 o'clock ceremony in st 4 have a—complete;Sashabaw Presbyterian Church. “owt eae oe ae Marlette Planning “Tou arise, "= Mobile Homes Tract Friday, Aug. 31, all grades, kin- dergarten Groagh | 2 hold regular fiends and family attended the < and Mrs. Walter Schuld Jr. The ception at Highland Golf Club, the MR. AND MRS. WALTER SCHULD JR. Married in Holly St. Rita’ Catholic Church recently were Mr. bride, the former Crystal Julia Royal Oak .schoolteacher, _ |Residential A to Business. With 3 to 2 Vote A. new legal move in the Royal Oak-Huntingten Woods Woodward zoning ite was filed in Oakland County ‘Court yesterday as three Huntington Woods residents filed a_petition’asking the court to rule a recent Royal Oak zoning. ordinance invalid, - The ordinance rezoned two lots| owned by Miss_Emma Doerr, a ribs Miss Doerr sought the change in order to guild a gas station on the property at Lincoln and Woodward. Neighbors Harry 8. Benjamin, '| Dr. Samuel J. Nichamin and Mrs. Lacy Kachigian claim in their petition the ordinance was in- valid, since they protested the change and under Michigan law a protested soning ordinance must be passed by a 4, vote of the city council. qon Three Issues _ jin a special Wolverine Lake village re: ation © Wyide a0 charter to permit levying special ‘Ito Peter H. Kondo Jr., report) Laverdiere, is daughter of Mrs, Julia Laverdiere of Detroit. Attend- ants were Jacqueline-Jane, Sandra and’ ‘Delbert Schuld. After a re- -couplé left on a heneyeenen trip. SSASHABAW PLAINS — Only recent-informal service whictr unit-| ed in marriage Mrs. Ethel Bar- nett and Theodore R. Cleveland here, ; The Rev. F. Robert Willkie con- prior. to Attending the couple were Lil- Man Cleveland, daughter of the as * sf strong - tvice for Jay M. Armstrong, 63, of 607 Monroe St. MARLETTE—At a special meet-| ing of the Village Council attend-| jed by representatives. of the trailer: industries here, an exciusive mo-) bile.home subdivision was proposed | so that eventually all mobile homes. from mg joe pets ~ a can be located either at the Swailes' with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery,,.°*" #"4 Country Mobile’ Park: ‘Mr. Armstrong died this morning|“hac. ans in the prosesed Sub| mont, Mass.; a son, Joseph A. of from St. John’s Lutheran Church six grandchilren and|Will board the buses at the Luther- | three sisters, Mrs, F.C. Witter of/@" School grounds at 6 p.m., to, Detroit, Mrs. L. J. Copeman and|be at the stadium at 7:30 p.m. in| Whetstone, both of/|time for festivities at home plate) * _. Blizabeth Ross, 92, will be at Muir Vetoes Drain Petition at 2:—p.m. She died y. Burial willbe in Lake-|Drain Commissioner met with of- Ontario; Chase basis in the proposed sub- 7 a punty General Hospi- division to be located within the’ | _ —_ limits. a A seumitnes was appointed to) work on the project and report to: d Evelyn the Council as soon as the engi-| . Peering can be accomplished. Rochester Lutherans | Join Fete of Tigers ROCHESTER — Tonight is Lu-| , and|theran Night at Briggs Stadium | .iand a delegation of 90 persons: honoring the Lutheran ~e at| 8 p.m. sharp. . DRYDEN — Oakland county ficials here yesterday, turning) _j\down the proposed cleaning out! ;}and deepening of the Allen Drain.) County Births “wages is reported_.causing cree-|OU ochester a sD Dan > Akers of Rens- ' oe higher or ann ee . fe Tchete Lee. Grand-| 5 ae r. and Mrs. George W. Tlenker road. 2 you in your building problems. For your convenience, we remodeling Plans, boat plans, Popular Yourself plans. . Candy for the Kiddies Do YOU NEED | MORE ROOM... | Roth Lumber will be glad to help free house plans, zine, Free Handyman plans, k, Easi-Bild full size plans arge) and a set of Do-It-Your- clopedia cohtaining thousands iL HELP GIVEN — NO DOWN © FIRST PAYMENT SEPT. Ist L DAY SATURDAY '|Wed in Afternoon Rite bridegroom and Bruce Longmuir, nephew of the bride, who came ‘home from his army station in Edgewood, Md, for the service, The couple will be at home. at 7192 Pine Knob Rd., wedding tour of Northern—Michi- gan. following a The vote. was 3-2. A temporary restraining order will prevent Miss Doerr from de- veloping the property until after a hearing on the case‘ Aug. 20, Her neighbors seek a a in- junction. 4 Reyal Oak refused to consider Huntington Woods’ request for | annexing the two lots this week. A circuit court ruling recently said that a six-foot triangle in- cluded in the land belongs to Huntington Woods, and challenged a boundary-straightening move of several years ago by the two cities that gave it to Royal Oak. BEATRICE FAITH HOFFMAN Announcement has been. made by Mr, and Mrs. George B. Hoft- man of 746 John R. Rd.,. Roches- ter; of the engagement of their daughter, Beatrice Faith Hoffman, son of Mrs. Mae Yamamoto of Los Ange- les, and Peter H. Kondo, Sr. of Abbeyville, Louisiana. Miss Hoff- man is a. June graduate of Mt. Carmel Mercy School of Nursing, Detroit. Her fiance is a senior at Michigan State University: “and a finance improvements. Parents Tell Engagement of Susan Irene Lock LAKE ORION—Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Lock of 1304 Indian Lake Rd, announce the engagement of their daughter, John Wayne Tucker son of Mr. and Mrs. Dola Tucker of Kansas City, Mo, His present residence is with Mr. and Mrs, Dale Tucker of Ox- ford, A September wedding is planned. member of Alpha Chi Sigma Fra- ternity. No plans have been an- nounced for the wedding. KEARNEY, Neb. — There ap- pears to be a brisk demand for used railroad locomotives, the Kearney city council learned. The council asked the Union Pacific Railroad for a retired engine to be placed in one of the city parks. The. railroad replied that because of previous demands from other I Locomotive Demand | | ‘cities, the supply of old | engines is The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac B Compare the Many — Features of Kelvinator ABP ~ \¥ 8 wo % t= NO MONEY DOWN Ue WITH TRADE on the Meter Plan Giant 11 Cubic Foot Kelvinator Refrigerator Regularly $269.95 “199: Across the top freezer that holds many packages of frozen foods safely. Two large vegetable crispers, plenty of convenient shelf space with added storage | on the doors. As Low As 25c Per Day $5.00 down. Stop Mold-Rust and Mildew. Was $129.95. You pay only FREE- HOME TRIAL Kelvinator Dehumidifier $0) 2 ee , Sl —=— ‘51 v. ‘HURON ST. Open Moh. & Fri. ell 9 P.M. ye! timer. | i ae 20s KELVINATOR | = 30 in. Range | Regular a 1892 ‘Compare the sinit-clen oven. 4 fast heating surface units, light and hoe ay NO MONEY DOWN ae HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC | Wolverine Lake to Vote Tuesday WOLVERINE LAKE — Three te sties will be on the ballot lame election from 7 a.m, until 8 p.m. at the Village Hall, 297 Glengary Rd. Registered voters of the village will decide whether the follow- ing items will -be approved: “1. A 3-year Consumers Power Oe iy whceiniia ac nas assessment districts for road im- provements and public necessity. * 3. An amendment to the village charter to permit issuing bonds to Susan Irene, to be A ee $150 Down and $15 Per Month! 85-ft. minimum frontage. Red — Barn Village, located on M-54 - between Oxford and Orion. Representatives will be on sub- division Sunday cea 2 p. m. and 7 p. m. “34 sii [ciallaaieestiiel cae cabbabameien Ne a Adal pind i iam aii RR cee MRS HOWARD T. KEATING Co.’ Ades at Pontiac Trail Rochester, Mich. Phone OLive 1-7811 SLIDES 6' Slides ..... 9.95 . 10’ Slides ..... 26.50 These are of heavy playground BIKES 16" size with training wheels. $20.95 Jom, -BOYS' OR ox GIRLS’ 24” $33.50 © FUN FOR KIDS} WADING POOLS Heavy fabric pools s steel Pipe frames. 4x6 f x6 ft. 12.95 Toco: POWERED ROTARY MOWER stocks of vertised MOTOMOWER $79.50 Value—18" Size $44.88 $125 VALUE : 22" —2Z%2 H. P. $79.95 Shep Here Before You Buy “seay ge iP hat We 5 ng OS igi ag ” HAMMOCKS Round Pools pier agger ior frame for § rit $2.88 Reg. $14.95 7.95 CHAIRS Folding aluminum chairs with heavy Baran webbing. 2 for 14.95 PICNIC U. &. Coast Guard Approved LIFE VESTS BOAT CUSHIONS« You can't afford to take chances. These are thebest: Vests | Cushions Smatt $3.85 | Up to $4.95 Medium $3.95 Larse $4.85 ICE CHESTS Fibergilas§ insulated 4 and sealed to keep foods cold up to 73 hours, $12.95 Value $8.95. " Big = lock WINDOW FAN The hot spell is coming. ALL METAL ---WHEEL- BARROW Better get this now for Pall gardening. SD sists 9695 Get yours while you can. Reg. $49.50 29.95 GENERAL ELECTRIC | TABLEFAN gQRe | Reg. $9.95 Reg. MELMAC DINNERWARE Service for 8 nai, $20.60| PORTABLE STARTER SET 316.95 Brand New Royal TYPEWRITER Just 3 Inches High 8 Lbs. in Weight - ONLY $62.50 $7.95 FAMOUS CAPEHART RADIOS i $29.95 Choose From Such Famous Mokes: Elgin, Gruen, Ham- . _ilton, Benrus, Helbros and Others. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED ‘YOU CAN SAVE “VY, the Cost WATCHES AND DIAMONDS AS MUCH AS REPLACEABLE JAWS "SWIVEL BASE print COMBINATION YY) OUTDOOR-INDOOR | TT) PAINT Regular $10.95 nee FO $449 ca pire INSER TS ii UDED DailySto6 2258 DIXIE HIGHWAY “ ean res soe ee = . 1 i : { : s ae ; i oa ee } i 3 ‘1 ar ea ‘> Ae mn \" ETS’ NY \ } i ae i¢ ‘Lilies, Shrubs Most Notewerthy > Prize Plants Bloom it _ mmer s. BE oun 7 Be Hel Aug. 25, 26 at bare From the | Garden Editor naa tape the Spi Sa iG proximately half @ block, | sur.” rounding @ circle driveway. e Our: picture - story of Mr, cand Mrs. Ernest Romer's night bloom- The Outstanding By MARTHA LEWIS hogany aré most riking in the| Township who died in 1936 at ing cereus which appears on the BCemsccced Correspondent ng garden, des - ~ the age of 95, Inter’ - Garden Clubs garden page today should have in- RI DING TRACTOR s e- ag blooms and “‘heir-| lilies, Varieties Of/ On. of the plants, a Persian lilac cluded a note about another plant N lily are -grown the madonna, bush, Mr. ‘Saaere obtained from Exhibiting Total of 30 owned by Mrs. Dolly Frick of 201 loom” plants bedeck the garden of Mr. and Mrs. John Waltz, 184 West . Mill 8t., Ortonville. Day’ lilies in seven shades| 5 ranging frorh light lemon te. ma- and plantain lilies. . Waltz calls her for it may be with- one day and the tiger, turk-cap, Kill Mosquitoes and Bugs | While You Mow! white/to deep scarlet. Providing a setting for the lilies and roses as well as many other flywers which bloom throughout spring and shrubs. and non-flowering plants. Two of these plants have a. special distinction — they were planted by Mrs. Waltz's late father, Fred Wilders, the last Civil War veteran in Brandon— “Inually for the ‘past 30 years. summer,— are | a bush his father had. The other plant is a grapevine, planted in 11896 which still bears fruit. Outstanding house plant of the} Waltzes is a three feet wide Christ- _/mas cactus which has bloomed an- In the summer Mrs. Waltz sets the plant out under the shrubs where it “rests.” Waltz has been president of Or- tonville for feur years and was in the grocery business for 21 years before his retirement in 1946. Mrs. Waltz is an active citizen in the community and devotes mich of her time teaching ‘Sunday school at the Baptist Church-in Or-. torville. Q-Why is it that double peonies sometimes turn back to the single peony? My. neighbor had a double ter and looked like a. single peony. A—I suspect that this ig due to some mixup or-erroneous obser- vation, Possibly a young plant of similar color rooted close to the peony. There is, of course, the possi- bility that. the plant has “sport- ed,” but such mutations are un- common in peonies, * * * red peony which got a yellow cen- Quizzing the Gardener | A—It is organic matter dis- tinetly above the class of humus. Sphagnum peat moss is a_ soll medium free from fungi and. weed seeds, highly absorbent and retentive of moisture, rich in car- bon, free from harmful mineral content, s While possessing no fertilizer val-|, no other soil medium may i qualities, Q—A_ reputable local arborist yard last winter and wrapped the trunks and lower branches...with strips of burlap. planted two large maples in our] .- Pontiac Press Phetes “gteen OF THE NIGHT—This appropriately enough is a com- Classes Twenty-three classifications for ‘jflowers and seven for vegetables will proclaim. “Summer's the theme of the Inter - Garden “}Clubs Flower Show to be held Aug. 25-26-at the CAI Building, 5640 Williams Lake Rd. - According to the’ schedule, . from one stalk to five blooms may be exhibited in each flower class, The containers will be furnished, All specimens must have been grown by the exhibitor and should. be in primé condition, The vegetables, too, must have been grown by the—exhibitor. They must be displayed in threes —that is, three beets, three car- rots, ete, Now is the time for gardeners to do some priming on possible and a shot or so from the dust gun or sprayer may be just what those plants need to put them in first class shape. * * * Sponsored by the Dirt Gardenérs and Better Home and Garden Club of Pontiac and the Sylvan and Wa- terford Branches of the: Women’s National Farm and Garden Asso- assigned to the clubs’ members All entries must be in place by 2 noon on the opening day of the show, BURY does not appear for from five to entries, A dose of liquid fertilizer Anyone can enter in all sections |¢ _jexcept the table settings which are Ball St., Orioeville. - Not — — attempt to grow the flower because it is a discouraging “job. - First blossom seven years, In the meantime, the plant may develop shoots. which give it a straggly awkward ad | pearance, * .® For the benefit of Mrs. J. M. Swank of Rochester who inquired about freezing garden roses, we contacted Wayne L. Seifert, assis- tant county agent, who came up with some tips which should prove helpful. A constant temperature of 31 degrees must be kept. Falling be- low that temperature will mean killing the roses. The roses. should be stored dry, wrapped in. wax pa- per and put in a metal can. * * * - Seifert: adds: that the roses he has seen stored were commercially cut roses, and were kept for six months. He believes garden roses, with the proper Scm® SPREADERS these. handy carts. Rub- ‘Turf Builder’ or ‘Scott's Organi ty — Summer lawn keep- ~ ber tires—$7. 9$ $12.85 ing a breeze with one of For Summer ‘nn Feeding ml 1 FEED & LAWN SUPPLY COMPANY A regular weekly one will do for rule-of-thumb, But unusually | hot, dry weather demands a five- | day schedule, especially for the iz RE. ‘ 2 or pears ‘except that-fiwe to eight PONTIAC We Deliver DRAYTON STORE aes newly transplanted specimen, pila il ra petal roan — — branches should be selected with! 28 Jackson St. From Pontiac 4266 Dixie Hwy. mF | For large trees and shrubs, wa-| Caution fo Keep water off the jin, lower branch aboyt 24 to 30 Dial FE 2-0491 Store Only Dial OR 4.2441. foliage as good insurance against the spread of the disease, Plenty. of water together with good mul¢hing is the key to hot weather care. It is not particularly hard nor does it require a great deal of time. For the little effort involved, the rewards are magnifi- cent, inches above the ground, ter should be applied slowly to seep through to the deepest roots. With evergreens, spray the foliage with water, too, any time other than during the heat of the day. * * @ Give Tea Roses Rest Hybrid teas produce better fall bloom if given a mid-summer rest period. Withhold fertijizer and give them a little less water than, usual. OPEN SUNDAYS 9 am. to 4 p.m. DOG FOOD — ”,rorutar BRANDS MEAL—KIBBLES—BISCUITS—CANNED DIAGONAL MEASUREMENT: 261.50 IN, OF PICTURE AREA IT HAS 2 SPEAKERS One on the side—One on the front IT SWIVELS NO MORE CHAIR MOVING— IT TURNS TO FACE YOU!. | Most people water tree trans- plants regularly during the first year or two. The third and fourth ‘years also require watering care. ‘In some cases, the root system is still under-balanced in-relation to) the top growth. The tree them must} supply from too limited a soil mass Trees in drought areas usually | ean be helped by feeding, too, This applies to most woody plants | ei Sa ae: | regardless. of variety or size. |] Don’t es. Selling Price $259.95 wise farsi fmt | ~~ FARMER'S DOG RATION - Experiment! you PAY ONLY : 1 g i : NO MONEY DOWN _ 2 Years to Pay . With established. large trees, let the lawn sprinkler run for several hours in one place to reach the deep roots. WHITE'S | NURSERY | Everything for Landscaping, 20% PROTEIN $ LARGE 25 LB. BAG 19 Stam—62% Horsemeat 3 for 25¢ | | WE HAVE PICKLING SALT Scotts RIDING TRACTOR sae ll zi discs, harrows, bull- dozes .. . full 7 h.p. motor .. . 3 speeds forward, ’ reverse, all gear driven . Full line of tools including 42" rotary mower and large reel type gang mowers. += * @ & ‘ * See thé’ new ‘56 Garden-All Pup with Electric Starter-~—most pow- — ee owes’ and Shrubs’ for” all | DO ferint anata aeTOA] ortu\ senall tractor built. Com- Bes % oes Summer Planting. if ORGANIC.SC Line of Lawn Care ED I 4 . os fore line of, Lawn and ice FREE ESTIMATES C—SCUTL—4XD WEED KILLE | nes , 2 Modalee= Biipes.. : You Can’ t Beat This Deal Anywhere! | HS. Cum Lake Read | wateardcccan ike a Dw ty dart aR nnn. $298.00 Dae Slonk, Govt of, : oe See Them at Oar HARTZ MOUNTAIN PET SUPPLIES New is the time to kill it ui We eo — tha’ fo ia SR eA : i. Terms to Suit! Your Electrical Appliance Specialist oe | | Pomme akeeeeen | || BARBER'S FEED STORE ‘Oecd Fridhy tnd Monday | it Meds “2 FM. if Phone FE 5-6189 | “OR 2.9162 7121 N. Saginaw St. 9665 Highland Rd. (59) Se OCSET PTR ELEDES Robert Woolworth, 24, is the proprietor of Egyptian’ cess, who was the favorite at Goshen in Wednes- vengeance evident in the eyes of the big: BREAKS RECORD — Carin Cone, 16, Ridge- wood, N. J., swam to a new American long course record in the 100-meter backstroke preliminaries * * ® - _* «* here yesterday. Records Fall in Swim Trial: By BILL CORNWELL tremendous abilities of the contes- DETROIT — The United States tants involved Olympic swimming and diving try-| Four more aquatic stars were outs at Rouge Park enter the con-| named to the 1956 squad and cluding phase today and by this; five more records tumbled here t no one watching the final) Thursday as America's young als in Brennan Pools doubts the| Olympic hopefuls continued to \ huh asta w Adio in an attempt to avenge the 30-27 defeat at the hands of the Col: legians last year, .“We won't be as complacent as we were a year ago,” Brown told members. of the press, One person ite Siete been shaken by the raves of strength about the Browns is coach Curly Stars for the year. “We did it before,” said Lam- beau, “and Brown may have his as Players all keyed for , ‘the game, but we can do it again.” Lambeau named ex - Michigan call the: signals for the All-Stars, while the Browns hand the same duties to George Ratterman. , "__|halfback posts. Howard (Hopalong) +Cassady and Don McIihenny, two pad _|Lion draft choices, are listed for with Don Se Hollede Schaefer of Notre Dame set at The Detroit Lions have taken some encouragement from Brown’s choices at the starting opening assignments, fullback. *-* The “service” ends of Ron Bea- gle from Navy and Don Hollender of Army have been given the call to start.” Other prominent from the 1966 college scrapbook, which ‘consists of George Welsh of Navy and Jim Holuska of Wisconsin at quarterback; Bob Pellegrini, center from Maryland; Bob Bur- riss, Oklahoma and Gary Glick of Colorado » halfbacks. . : A crowd of more than 75,000 is — for the game which will Lambeau vis it ci die. All-(nevee jails eadip lated 9 siver- State All-America Eari Morrall to| Expecteé a pe e HH Pilynk Ae 8° Pay ae eee eee ee ae ene v v4: age, Kickoff time is 8:30 p.m. aE ogee rows, int ‘Neilonal "Restbl cievelosd League << ein. m Piace = .ichelt — Approximately 8:30 p.m, EST Rodel erecdecat — ABC Motwor, enn State; Don Kindt, Wisconsin, and Ghock Hatron, Notre Dame. Song Field Opposes ar Wirepheto Her time of 1:14.4 cut a tenth of a second off the former record that she held. ~ Some ‘of the ‘pest illustrious names in Pontiac area golfing circles are entered in the annual City Medal Play Championship, which is scheduled Saturday and Sunday over a—36-hole route at Pontiac Municipal Golf Course. *Headed by defending champion Eddie Wasik, an all-star lineup of} amateur shotmakers will parade to the Ist tee in quest of the 1956 city title. The 2-man field is slated for 18 holes each day, start- ing at 12 noon. Four past champions, including * * * give convincing proof that Uncle ; Sam will be well represented in the November games at Mel- | bourne, The eventual 46-member team. mounted .in strength yesterday when Yoshi Oyakawa, Frank Mce- Kinney, Al. Wiggins and Bob Hughes were added to the growing roster, bringing to 25 the number . jof members chosen. The remaining 21 will be selected from today’s T-event windup, * * @ A rain-soaked, gloomy 3rd day failed to dampen Oyakawa, Ohio P. ’s Hambletonian until Intruder won the annual . Woolworth is also part owner of the Detroit, . In fact he was listed as a mystery man in the dicate headed by Fred Knorr, a one-time $27.50 a disc jockey. c * ees . oolworth, of course, is no mystery man but he does ®resent a certain trend in modern sports operations. [@tiay we function in a world of capital gains in which hing ball club like the Yankees, for example, ifds it necessary to sell its own stadium right out from under the spikes of its own ball club and pay the new deductible rental. Woolworth has dime-story family interests and Ponds available for investment. Like Jim” Norris,” _ Tom Yawkey_ and P. K. Wrigley he has a vast, ‘enthusiasm for more than one sport or hobby. Woolworth has just been cleared by the Frick screen- ‘ing process. This in itself represents a new policy. “In the days of the rather pompous and overl¥ theatrical Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis it was State's ex-Big 10 champion and inow a lieutenant in the Air Force. Oyakawa splashed to victory in the 100-meter backstroke final to learn his trip to Australia. His \time of 1:05.2 bettered by two- jtenths of a second the Olympic ‘record he set himself in 1952. Oyakawa joined fellow Hawall- an Bilt Woolsey and diver Bob Clotworthy as the only men's survivors of the 1952 team, Mc- Kinney of Indianapolis and Hig- gins of Pittsburgh, who finished tnd and 3rd in the backstroke, joined Ovyakawa on the squad. John Smith, former Detroit MacKenzie star, just missed an Olympic backstroke berth by coming in 4th, Hughes, of Santa Monica, Calif., Handed a-spot-on-the 4eum-by-pro-tmen's- +,500-meter. -freestyle, - 200- viding the day's major_upset. Hughes beat out Dick Fadgen, North Carolina State sensation, in the finals of the 200-meter breast- stroke to win the lone Olympic po- sition awarded for the event. His Allen Well Received - Sunderstood that a man with heavy horse racing “investments would get into baseball only over the - judge’s moribund body. Today we have Woolworth, sitting in a box in Briggs Stadium of which he is part owner, watching his Tigers take a soggy Sunday contest from the Yankées. Then we see him appear in his box at.Goshen waiting for the Hambletonian favorite to pull her sulky out onto the) track. It is quite possible that on some lucky distant year Woolworth could win the World Series of baseball - and the “World Series” of the harness circuit. And who _is to say it is an evil rage for either sport? * * Those tremendous crowds at Jersey City didn’t hap- pen through accident. Behind it all is the hard selling of Irv Rudd, a steady plugger who knows the value of get- ting out and contacting the public. Attendance at Jer- sey City is well over 100,000 for five games. This is far above the average at Ebbets Field in a heavily congested boro: The day of opening the door, and enjoying a ticket ndised, packaged attractively and sold in ey for the entertainment dollar. tk * £: clowning at Casey Stengel’s birthday parties id over the better part of a week, there t references to his “genius badge.” What § the heartwarming fact that. when | Married Edna Lawson on Aug. the most excellent judgement. If marriage anywhere in our » 8 a thing of the past. The product must be) Tells Solons Stanley (Stag) Allen, former box- er, currently heading the Nephro- sis Foundation campaign, appeared before the . Michigan Legislature yesterday, to tell about his fight State Deer Hunters Given 2 Extra Days ROSCOMMON (INS)—The Michi- gan Conservation Commission was expected to wind up its two-day Meeting at Higgins Lake Training Center today by unanimously ac- cepting the game division's recom- mendations giving Michigan deer hunters two days of extra shooting in a special season, * * * The commission will take official action today té enact recommenda- tions from game chief H Ruhl which-set up a. special season cov- ering bucks, does and fawns to fol- low the regular Nov. 15 to 30 sea- son, Riverama Opens Aug. 17); a pair of 3-time winners, will be vey, Pee at AT? on ers for a repeat. Mike Andonian, who fred a four-under-par 65 at Municipal last/t Saturday for the exercise, wan the’ crown three ‘straight years ~(1951- '53). Glenn Harding annexed’ the trophy twice in succession (1947-48) | and again in _ ®o: ae Paul Beda, 1954 winner ; and Stan Savage round out the. dist, of] ex-titleholders testing Wasik. this 'weekend, but the 1955 champion's opposition does not stop there. Leading the ssl ad “outsiders” is Jim Pettiford, last Saturday's! final qualifying’ medalist ‘wit time was 2: 44.4 and hi? last-instant | ipush tripped Fadgen. Fadgen had broken the Ameri- can 200-meter mark in the after- noon preliminaries with an effort lof 2:44 flat, which chipped 1.7 sec- onds off the record. Sylvia Ruuska, a 14-year-old from Berkeley, Calif., stroked to a new American record in the 400-meter freestyle preliminaries. Her clocking of 5:10.7 bettered Nancy Simons’ time of 5:13 and also- ‘easily topped the Olympic mark of 5:21.1. Carin Cone —" her own ;record in the 100-meter backstroke. Her reading of 1:14.4 broke by a tenth of a second her previous American mark. The 16-year-old swimmer hails from Ridgewood, N. J. America's phenomenal distance swimmer, George Breen of Buffalo, and Hawati’s George Onekea both broke 19 minutes in the qualifying heats of the men’s gruelling 1,500- meter freestyle. Shelley Mann of the Walter Reed Swim Club, Washington, D. C., gave a dazzling performance ‘in the women’s 100-meter butter- fly, Miss Many streaked through the preliminary trial in the time of 1:12.4, - Seven finals will climax today's last round. Final events include meter freestyle and platform div- ing and women's 100-meter back- stroke, 100-meter butterfly, 400-me- ter freestyle and platform diving. Two preliminaries are also pat of the program. of N ephrosis. against the insidious disease that has taken one of his sons, and is what -he declares a menace to many other youngsters. Allen was delighted and thrilled the state capitol. He sald be be- lieved he had made a good im- pression, and had accomplished: something good towards the campaign. Pontiac's representative Leslie Hudson presented Stag to the House members. He spoke there for 10 minutes, then moved over to the Senate when he wag intro- duced by Frank Andrews of Hill- man, an old-time friend of Allen’s father. * * Highlight of the capitol visit, Al- len said this morning, was a 15- minute chat with Governor Mennen Willams,.The executive, Stag re-|_ ported, congratulated Aim on his campaign, and expressed interest! in it. : Carlson Datos Title at his fine, warm reception at [Wash Other dangerous threats saajug Lloyd Syron, Bob Gaines, Char Barker, Bill Pembroke, 2 wg ei ‘and perennial conten ‘Cooper, to name a few. Wasik, Bada and Andonian are scheduled te tee off at 12:48 pan, and this pairing ieee "e gallery attraction. H paired with Joe Burgdorf it derry Lampson at 12:40 while Savage, Pettiford and Barker, get. under way at 12:56. Trophies will be awarded to the champion and runner-up while go balls go to 3rd, 4th, Sth and- places. The city tournament com; pletes the Pontiac Parks and Rec- reation Department's summer golf program at the Municipal links. ie * - Pairings and tee-off times: burton 00-—Bob Martin, Lloyd Syron, C. wr 2:08—rv Richards, Marley Myatt, Buell Smith 12:16—Gienn Vallance, Walt Latozas, R. Murphy. 12:24-—Butler Cooper, Harold Daniels, Ron Rothbarth, 12:32-—Bot Gaines, Joe Adameoysk, Bill Pembroke. 12: a Harding, Joe Burgdorf, sae!” Ph mpson, 2:48--2d Wasik, Paul Bada, Mike An- enn Jan. 12: 44—Btan en. Jim Pettiford, Charles Barke’ 1:04—Bill Stoftett, Andy Lindsay, Al Papazian. Dixie Golfer {st Among Lefties Tennessean--—Triumphs! With 3-Under to Take U.S. Southpaw Title HICKORY, N.C. @#—The pres- sure of holding the lead from the start didn't bother Harry Shoe- maker, the nation’s new champion Jeft-handed ow. > enmaher és Florida State Mountain, Tenn., closed out the 72-hole grind yesterday with a two under par 70 for a four-day total of 285, ssc cea ee mie * * * Walters won ‘the tournament three years ago and came up with four successive 73s for a 292. The event is run by. the National Assn. of Left-handed Golfers, Miami fo Drop $12,500 Open MIAML- {INS)}—The city of Mi- ami has week its The city’s shoman pubtcty ad runs into the John Wettiaufer, . University senior from Signal): | sponsorship tournament. UF gs. -zuupay. ‘avaubt 10, 1956 At ‘Coach Off er Uniform Recruit ing Code CHICAGO. a ekckaie of the American Football Coaches’ Assn. wants uniform recruiting and sub- sidizing rules for college athletes, unlike the “unworkable and un- realistic’ code of the harassed Pa- cific Coast Conference, Jess Neely of Rice Institute. told the American Assn. of Sports Mantle to Face Baltimore Jinx Yank Slugger 11 Games Ahead of Ruth’s Pace After Hitting No. 39 _ NEW YORK W—Mickey Mantle Baltimore “‘jinx”’ again tonight in his pursuit of :|Babe Ruth's elusive 60 home run H record. * * ae _The 24-year-old New York Yank- ee center fielder has 39 homers in the bag thus far, putting him 11 games ahead of Ruth’s tremen- dous- 1927 pace—but the Mick hasn't been able to tag one off) Baltimore pitching yet this sea- on. 5 2] * * * In fact, Mantle hasn't walloped: one against the Oricles—who open a four-game series at Yankee Sta- dium tonight—since Aug. 21 of last year, It will be game No. 108 for Man- tle, who has socked homers against every. other American League club. Ruth, the old Bronx) Bofnber, had only 35 homers at i$ Stage in 1927. He didn't get “$9th until the 118th game, add- ing his 40th two games later. * ca » Maittle got No. 39 yesterday in New York’ s 15-7 victory at Wash- ington.’ Tt’ was his eighth against ithe Senators and his fifth for the imonthy ef August. “idaeitia # °° ® * Rath’ it only nine in August— but then went on a 17-homer tear in. eaeremnbey hitting No, 60 on the + dey of, the season. London ‘Oldtimers’ 9 | ‘Appears Here Sunday - Followers of the Pontiac Inter- national Oldtimers Baseball . loop get their first glimpse of London, Ont., Oldtimers this kend. The Canadians, who beat, ledo last weekend will play Pon- | Wisner Stadium, Sunday, ing at 3 p.m. m’'t know who the Londons have a strong mound staff and good club,” says Manager Bud Leslie of the Pontiac nine. Leslie! hadn't made up his mind about his, own starter. He requested that, Pontiac team members report at the ong not later than 2 p.m. ljpitch here, but they are said| J 4 s | ye han of the New York State Har Hambletonian Society after they 5 Grid Cure: Publicity Directors yester- day that “coaches and athletic directors are the only ones whe ean directly solve the ills of col- on 654 lege football,” 69 : 9 i ‘6 3M OB Neely criticized the “Dartmouth|bewelo* aero amendment” accepted by the Na- Raltimere ie oe ae tional Collegiate Athletic . Assn.| Kansas jo a se eet several years ago which he said/ yy yor is’ wine “had driven us outside for funds.” Rosten 4 Balsmore ep Neely said the Southwest Con-|Kansas city 5, Deitolt 2 4ference, of which Rice is a. mem- 0 at Deiroll, oe x Cham ber, felt all thetic. tunds_ should = be administered by the schools. “Until. the Dartmouth amend- ment was passed that Was our, (15-4) practice,” said the veteran coach, Cleveland a “Now, we are forced to solicit funds from our alumni and friends for the purpose of financing visits c of prospective students to our campus,"” Neely said if other conferences 2 adopted a similar, ‘not neces- sarily identical’’ code, “it would or Donovan (-7) vs. Foylack at New York, 7:15 p.m, ~— oore (8-6) vs. Ford (14-4) Boston a her ton, 7 p.m.-—-Brewer NATIONAL L LEAGUE mean the end of much subterfuge muwaukee : 4. 6 and deceit, but best of all, the re- —*. as as 3 om sponsibility of adhering to them/st. Louis ........:53 $3 ‘500 11 would rest diréctly on coaches and nce eae Hy 30 ‘ 1H ‘athletic directors, where it - be-/Cileege GM SMe longs. : THURSDAY'S RESULTS : Miwaukee 41, St. Louis 1-5 (twi-night) Brooklyn 7, Pittsburgh 3 THURSDAY'S STARS Cincinnati 5, Chicago-< (10 innings) _ By The Associated Press ae we ‘ropa iadelbaia 2 PITCHING — Taylor Phiilips, Times Eastern Standard Coe at "uilwaukee, 9 p.m—Jangen vs, Crone (96) Philadetphis at ace a 7 p.m.—Meyer ‘ at ago, 1:30 p.m.—Schmid: (57) Ws, aches (2-10) New York at yg 7318 be preceded by completion =. — Littlefield .83 vs. fit SATURD AY’s i eval Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 9 Philadelptifa at Brooklyn, i am Louls at Chicago,.1:3 p.m Braves, the young southpaw who gave just three hits, walked only ‘two _and struck out six while beat- ing Cardinals 4-1 in first major league start in important opener 6! .twi-night doubleheader; Cards took nightcap 5-1, HITTING — Gus Bell, Redlegs, smacked his. 22nd home run, with New York at Pultsburgh, 12:39 lman.on base, to beat Cubs 53. ‘ : in “10 ‘innings “and hoist Redlegs |Patladelphia' at. Drockiys, _ a to within two games of first place. See tek ot Pea a en mn, (to July 1 Friend % Big Booster in Tighe 'Foytack to Repay Coach DETROIT (—The fellow whose encouragement and patience kept a pitcher from calling it quits at the age of 24 says the kid can pay him’ back tonight. : “If he can win tonight."’ said}; coach Jack Tighe, “he will have shown ,everyone that he has be-|. come just half as good as he could ibe. ” Tighe, of course, was - talking about righthander Paul Foytack who will face the Chicago White : Sox tonight. Foytack _* the Detroit Tigers last season and because of it. Now he has won 9 games and jlost 8.- Tighe says he’s capable of becoming a 20-game winner, “maybe, even by next year.” It was all a matter of gaining ° confidence and developing a rhythm to his pitching delivery, isays the Detroit coach. Now Foy- itack is the club’s strikeout leader iwith 118 whiffs in 162 innings. Racing Chief Blasted Hambletonian Transferred NEW YORK ® — A showdown|trotters, raced for the 31st time between the U.S, Trotting Assn. | Hast Wednesday with The Intruder i winning, was awarded to DuQuoin by the director of the and Commissioner George Mona- iness Racing Commission over the’ control of the sport in New York 'was seen today in the transfer of ithe Hambletonian Stakes from Goshen, N.Y, to DuQuoin, Ml E. Roland Harriman, president * of the society, ‘said in a statement the directors agreed the proper place for the Hambletonian is had criticized the administration of the sport in New York State. * * * The rich stake tor 3-year-old LANSING w — Fishing without own as the favorite sport-of Mich-| igan's outdoor lawbreakers. * * = * The’ state conservation depart- ment says prosperity hasn't made the tiniest dent in the number of who refuse to buy a dollar and a half ticket for a ride on the right side of the law. the number of convictions for unlicensed fishing ts“increasing =~ a license is more than holding its, In fact, says the department, ilicense for eight years,” says Ev- [erett Tucker, aS Goshen, where it has been raced Fishing Without a License “si ie tues down the pro Is Top Outdoor Violation posal of the seven New York trot- ting tracks te continue the race at Goshen because of ‘‘the unsatis- factory conditions under which | mainly because of the rise in [harness racing jis being adminis- population. tered in New /York state at the- | In a-typical month—May of this Present time.” year — 147 fishermen were con-) victed of fishing without a.license, nearly half of the convictions for all types of, ——— RP! Has Co-Captains Johnny Fisher of Pa., Glenshaw, and Dave Brunell of Floral “The puzzling thing is that these people don’t seem to realize their) jfines would buy them . a fishing captains of the 1957 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute lacrosse team. Fisher scored 24 goals for the Engineers this year. Brunell is . the ar ee ‘tender son of Muskegon will be defending 's Riverama begins next [champion in the annual Northern Friday August 17th and cont! Michigan Open Gof | tournament th September 1st the jhere Aug. 26. Carlson set a nine- r Cup, Gold Cup and Harms- jhole course record of 30 in the 1955 worth trophies featured in the [meet when he was a pro at SEASON’S OPENER — Co-captains Earl Mo~ = i rall, left,.and Bob Pellegrini lead College All-. Stars into unofficial football season opener to- night. re ge o-alaatet ada etazeennces eomocn AP Wirephote Field. Morrall is the former Mi State quar. terback, and Arne ais is _— 's last great” center. Wen Lost Pet, Behind guy who couldn't win for. the . who. almost gave up the game ~ Park, N.Y., have been elected co. * Se Hl. h) | Fi y eke : = ae. ‘ ve? oF J ' ( ? a . ie 4 ‘ ? i y, ve . “yf ‘ : + iW a : * Vt it PR! PONTIAC PRESS, ‘BRIDAY, ALGUST 0, 1 oie‘ ee ON A i lee Ste Pe es (+ ww oe i » hs hs ea, ee . } ; , ea my es if ee 24 ‘ey in fo : f 4] , 4 a Pye ake APE od r st sara ee wth ep on aa anomie Une. a Pat to Set a cl "MILWAUKEE ~ pronounced dead of a heart auto and record, He did it, with only opponent Ab jenn Fat heed gh gre at County Emergency Hos- somé help from his son Marvin. feared, caught mp with the old/pital, . 4 Driving a stock model Pontiac, speed king late last night. - * + 8 he averaged 118.375 miles an hour, The T3-year-o! {former mayor p he ealled a pojice arfbulance, Jenkins, a stocky, wiite-haired was ret in an automo-jnis keen blue eyes, set his first bile to his ho’ i from a Milwaukee! world record in 1926. é At his death, he still held half arke,.a Milwaukee dozen speed and endurance iz marks. ‘ a nearby /service station and * * * He! On July 420, 1951, when, he was only three BRinutes away fram set- ting a new one-hour-record on the Bonneville salt flats, he skidded into a course marker and dam- aged the radiator of his famous 4Mormon Meteor, it was his last race. “At 68 I've outworn the car," he said. Salt Lake City|man who only recently had. to flied last night He collapsed asistart wearing glasses over his Climbing out of the car, he said h smashing all exjsting American unlimited and. Class C stock car records. ; It was -Jenkins who made the Bonneville salt flats west of Salt Lake City the nation’s most fa- mous racing ground. With. his as- saults on records there, he aroused the interest of such great drivers as England’s Sir Malcolm Campbell and John Cobb, and swung them away from Daytona Beach, Fla. Among Jenkins’ still stand are these: 200 miles at 196 miles per hour. 1,000 miles at 172 miles per our, 3,000 miles at more than 175 miles per hour. records that -\Senators Club “Tries Gimmicks | to Lure Fans | WASHINGTON (— Hungry. toe | customers, the front office bosses | of the seventh-place Washington | Senators have. turned away trom| a sedate past and launched a cam) paign of gimmicks. * * : A variety of stunts are planned) for the remainer‘of-the season to! try to lure capital citizens through | the turnstiles at the ball. park, . * se * ‘The reason for all this is simple} —last year the Senators finished jin the cellar in attendance as well, jas in the American League stand-| ings.. They lured only 425,238 to| Griffith Stadium, ‘Through the | comparable period this year, the | figure is 10,676 less. i Manager Bobby Bresee of the. Pittsburgh Pirates wears the num- ber two on his uniform. &ins, 73-year-old race driver and BAT rte ~ dicap. AP Wirephote RACE DRIVER DIES — Ab Jen- former mayor of Salt Lake City, died of a heart attack in Milwau-) kee last night. He collapsed in a) car--as he-was- returning to his* Court a: hotel from a Milwaukee-St. Louis baseball game. rd E ‘ Nashua Heads Field * YY," ry - : in $100,000 ‘Cap ATLANTICCITY,N. J. (#—Nashua, the Rockefeller of the race track, heads a field of nine horses who compete tomorrow in the inaugural running of the $100,- 000 Atlantic City Invitational Han- Nashua will be shooting for $65,- 000 first money in an effort to boost his earnings of $1,236,965 to $1,301,965. With exercise boy Bill McCleary in the saddle, Nashua did a mile in 1,41 flat on the track in the only extended test by an. entrant, so far. : The handicap is at a mile and ai~ furlong. Other entrants in the race in- clude Jet Action, Mister Gus and ‘Davis Cup Trip But last June he went out to es-! tablish a new 24-hour endurance | Looms for ‘Ham’ Win Over Ken Rosewall Would Clinch Place for Richardson SOUTH ORANGE, NJ. WwW — Ham Richardson, the prime can- didate to join Vic Seixas on the U.S. Davis Cup team, can virtu- ally clinch a trip to Australia with a win over the Aussies’. Ken Rose- wall today in the Eastern Grass * * R heed and Seixas were the only top-rated Americans in the quarter-finals as three - Aussies, headed by Rosewall, and Paul ‘Remy. of France, wiped out four American. Davis Cup candidates in yesterday's third round at arrow LiguEuRs Corr, DETROIT 7, MICH, © 80 AND 100 PROOF, DISTILLED FROM GRAIN® | “ne Discover VODKA- The Modern Drink Sensation. Discover why . j|ARROW VODKA sales increased 273% in 1955 in Michigan over the previous record-breaking year. Delightful as Martini, | Screwdriver, Bloody Mary, Collins, with Tonic or Straight. Your Breath Never Tells the |... * - Orange Lawn Tennis Club. Rosewall crushed Herb Flam, Beverly Hills, Calif., the eighth- ranking U.S. player, 6-1, 6-2. Neale Fraser of Australia whipped de-) fending champion, Sam Giammal- va, Houston, 6-2, 6-4, and Ashley Cooper, another Aussie, bounced out Grant —, Chicago, 6-2, 6-2.' ; In the women's section, ing | seeded Louise Brough, Beverly Hills, Calif., meets Janet Hopps, | Seattle, and second-seeded Althea | Gibson, New York, opposes Mrs. Betty Pratt, Madison,:'N.J., in to-, day's quarter-finals. Shirley Bloomer, ‘of England, | the second-seeded foreign woman, | triumphed over Lois Felix, Meri-| den, Conn., and will face Darlene} Wise Margin, ~* Hard, Montebello, Calif. | SPORT COATS... $1988 _ Reg. to $30 All Woot Doctoring Your Golf Game By DR. CARY MIDDLECOFF PATIENT'S COMPLAINT: Shoulder_too high. DIAGNOSIS: Quick club pickup TREATMENT: The difference between powerful and accurate wooden club and long iron shots, | and just average distance, is meas- ured by pivot. That's why I em- |phasize the importance of initiating | the backswing in ‘one-piece’ mo-| tion—taking the club straight back, | | | Reg. to $10 Scomanee SLACKS .... $488. $688 Reg. to $5 Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS §2*’. $347 low along the turf, with no imme- diate break in the wrists. tain a straight line from the club- head up through the left shoulder, allow the left side (shoulder, hip, and you'll get into the power Main-| and knee) to follow around easily, | | 5 North Saginaw St. MALLOY'S FE 41198 t = pcre THE CRY SPARE They'll Help You Get. the Most Out of Your Dollar and There'l Be 4 | 1954 Ford Tudor.._................... $ 699 1954 Pontiac 2 Door ............. 944 1955 Buick Super... 1999 1952 Plymoyth 2 Door ......... 444 1955 Mercury 2 door... «sis. 1499 1952 Ford Ranch Wagon .......... 699 1954 Chevrolet 4 Door. ........... 799 1954 Buick Super... sss... 1599 41953 Oldsmobile 88 Super. eee eee 999 1952 Ford Tudor ................. 444 1953 Hudson Hornet .............. 799 1953 Chevrolet Hardtop .......... 899 1954 Plymouth 2 Door............... 744 - 1953 Pontiac Hardtop .......... 899 1952 Dodge Club Coupe .......... A499 1953 Ford Ranch Wagon ......... 899. 1952 Chevrolet 2 Door ........... 499 ROLD TURNER “FORD Bur RTS piivim@imeny tia : Samay, 1953 Plymouth 4 Door. ........... $ 599 1955 Ford Tudor. ............... ... 1099 1951 Chevrolet 2 Door ......... . 299 1955 Ford Hardtop ... _......... . 1799 - 1952 DeSoto Club Coupe ........ .. 299 1953 Ford Tudor ................ 644.5 1952 Buick 2Door.............. . 499 1953 Chevrolet Station Wagon ..... 844 1951 Plymouth 4Door........... . 299 1954 Ford Ranch Wagon ......... . 1099 1955 Plymouth Savoy ......... ... 1244 1953 Ford ‘Hardtop Lee enees 1... 899 1953 Chevrolet 2 Door ..... tqeante 1952 Mercury 2Door....... apices eo 1953 Buick Hardtop ......... .... 1044 1951 Ford Tudor .... ieee oe 1953 Pontiac “8 2 Door . vaeenscaus 799 position pictured in the sketch. in simple sequence: The head hasn't moved. The. left shoulder is, under the chin, not high up, to af-| ford a clear view of the ball. The left hip and knee are turned fully) so that the weight has been trans- ferred entirely to the right leg. The left heel is off the ground. This is the important thing to) develop in practice: When the) ‘GOLF CLUBS} 7 = «New & Used {\arms have been fully extended in We Carry a sweep straight back from the ball, iE | Notice these things, which — I the---backswing; --ecompleting... the.}- "SUNDAY TWILIGHT RACING MODIFIED HARD TOPS Qualifying Race, 5:30 P. M.—First Race, 7:00 P.M. | Children. Admission—Adults..... . $1.25 | l PONTIAC M-5 9 Ewa 3 Miles West of Je: on M-59 ey pronate (roll) naturally as Select Line of ~ the body pivots or winds up. Be relaxed when you address the ball. The grip must be firm, not} tight. BAGS and Equipment let the body turn without restraint. Don't worry about cocking the wrists, going up or Coming down. That'll come of its own accord. | (Copyright 1956) GOLF BALLS REASONABLY PRICED RAY BELL'S Golf Supplies rigs FE 5-8318 PI o 4-115 ipen 9 Ly ¢—Friy 8 Sat. one om? 3152 West Huron St. Pontiac, Mich. i [Rodeo Funds Provide Camping Trip for 200 ‘As a result of the 1956 rodeo at) Hazel Park race track on July 29, $6,000 to send underprivileged’ children to the Recreation Camp jat Brighton for two weeks. More) than 200 boys and girls will leave Olympia Stadium at noon next Monday (Aug. 13) for camp. SRCIEL . Ford, -Chevrolet, Ply- COMPLE‘ JOB "mouth ... complete @ 14°: | y brake relining. First : es Fally stele x COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE * ‘MARKET TIRE CO. . Open "9 to 9” FE 8.0424 Get & feeling of looseness) in the body, from head to toe, and | | Ss the Sports Guild will spend nearly | PITTSBURGH HOUSE PAINT More on a na colors to choose from: mixed and Maestro un-Proof ill ki | exciting — 5 69 | Ready- ° cation | (White & Reg. Colors) i EXCLUSIVE WIT with Vitolized Oils actually ‘expands weather changes! flexibility retards peeling. * SUN-PROOF! — | Sun-Proof is the only house paint film live, tough and elastic... . It H PITTSBURGH || to keep the paint and contracts as This. amazing checking and — a 23 Ww. Lawrence St. - —__WE DELIVER a PONTIAC GLASS co. ‘ Pittsburgh Paints Keep That Just Painted Look — . Phone FE 5-6441. =a GET THIS VALUE PACKED REPACK SPECIAL L. REPACK FRONT — HEARINGS .. , Clean ae, | inspeet brake Mning . . . i ee te eheck front end fer wear {needed cach 10,000 miles) 2.REPACK UNIVERSAL —-SOINTR (Needed exch 15,000 miles) ° (which improves ride and corrects rear end sag) WARD McDONALD Our Service Mor, Says: The above items are mbst “Often” neglected opérstions on your car, resulting in costly repairs. HAVE YOU NEQLECTED vouRs? 8. REPACK REAR SPRINGS | d it ra 10 DOWN DELIVERS Any ‘of the Below Listed Cars 1952 Buick 2 De 1951 Nash 4 Dr. 1951 Ford Regch 1950 Ford V2 ite Ton Pickup — ea 952 D 1952 Plymouth _ Ce pe 2 Dr. } RVERTIBLES. 4 Ford Convertible 949 Packard Convertible 1955 Ford Convertible 1953 Chevrolet Convertible 1953 Ford Convertible 1953 Oldsmobile — INCLUDES LABOR AND MATERIALS HAROLD TURNER FORD in Birmingham 464 S. Woodward, Birmingham Sg95 MI 4-7500 TRUCKS 1952 Dodge 2 Ton Dump 1951 Ford 2 Ton Dump 1951 Ford 2 Ton Pickup 1950 Ford 2 Ton Pickup 1950 Ford 3% Ton Pickup Ha old Turner-F in BIRMINGHAM 464 S. ceidiesad: Birmingham ae a PHONE CALL WILL START COURTE 5 7 CAR! 1952 Ford F-8 Tractor : ~ Phone MI 47500 ae — is Ad iy . | =a MARKETS Pes Lower 2200 Stock Market io secidanhess amount of $1 were from the cash) y burglary of a “ yf at 608-W. Huron St. y night, Pontiac “police /Sebes* Mhe store was entered oy fan unlocked amr. $45 bicycle was nebeiea “ge Wednesday - from the 4H ener Son steers and ate ec: ost 0, - Fairgrounds on_N. Perry ern , Pontiac police said, 1 00-15 te Rummage sale, tional 9'00.13 50: half 10 cents per hundred ee ° \ cheek Pi, ang i 0a. m-T p. ; bull chot nds ‘ 'm..and Sat, 8-10 a. m. Nothing oo", ¢ cay «30-200. ra, 19.00- ag ner — “a cucumbe nae fod taoll eee ee Punerst ann Ney} } over 25¢. Clearance of 200 dresses, 20.00. & “¢ Pri $50 bu; ¢ . 325/4Md Royal Dutch sank three at : | 0 blouses, shoes. etc, wd, | CUrer SI 38 Tedag’s um market we-| rain Prices des ome aig Oe |shares, U.S, Steel off at 64%) "s lueher, Yan Nuys, Calif, for- Ql S _ ' ‘a cH iy -bu:ion 2,000, International Nickel off merly o m; widow of ; Af Your friend's in jail and meeds|is! te. Prime Bay tg 1 eS e CRICARG. Leak! |1 at 108% on 1,200 and New York| dst.snd Glenn t and Prederick | : bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031./or more lower; bulk and low choice ses: . io i, 1 Dry,|Central off % ; A. Voorheis; sister of Dr. Pred- | Ste vealers and pod Ba 19.00. 28.00: high choice Whest-— Deo is-+.++5 16%) No i 3.75-4. Teen, at. 39 be 2,400, Prod hese Geis a ee eSl ners apy *, and prime searce, 27.00-32.00; utilit Gent sorsveee 2IT Mar ..,....., T1e|No 1, 18-85 doz behs, ly, No| Most leading rails showed slight} Batley, ral Home, 163 Osk- g commercial mostiy 15.00-20.00; cull and trassees Be ag Se 16% |, Sie doz behs; parsley, . No land. Birmingham, Sunday. Se : i ; _. jutility unevenly 8.00-16.60, Mey coh aves eta y oi 100.1. doz behs. Peppers, Cayenne, fractional losses on profit-taking side servies Bi jonday, 2 p. te a ete ood Kelsey-Hayes to Expand cont oaceabi uly cots ROM Doe rane wed aM, bee peonerh Ney, Sweet, pes se 3 robias adnan $f yee. Card of Thanks : ; ar... 4 0 bu: », $.00-8. ; uminums small DETROIT um - Kelsey-Hayes! cmicaao, Aug. 8 (AP)—Suleble Sent 1 147% May Lis “|new, No 1°2.80°3.00 0-10 A. deizgtees Saar following Al pomted . ‘Wheel Co. of Detroit today an-|7,000: fairly active; generally steady ee Le elem Sener. 100 408 bebe: Ho 1. 1 coa’s price boost} 1 GE TO THANE My MANY i ee ay sito utehers and sows; occasional Me «:+::+-- 143 Baer ©... behs: radishes. 1.09| at the conclusion. of its labo ir ; |nounced it will build a plant ona sales bot h classes as much os 25 higher; we Pe 1.40% at Bptaneres io pe or, Me fae dos chs. ibar’, ment. : $s ir agree- rrnpaty a during | re Oe iliness and FOR RESEARCH AND o tear eeee utdoor . aad be uae li, /newly purchased site at Falsing: fee Joo “in ib 16-45-14 a8; * moat jote at 12. ees... IH ° ho ito {00-4.30 bu; squash, Talian, * * Barnefieid, “22F peaultul att flowers ; ton, Pa. The company sald Cony e oe e Me ane tetae ts house, Ng 2.00298 at baktertome:| Steels declined with two point Funeral’ one and DEVELOP ENGINEER- struction will start immediately. |17:25-17.5@; 43 bead lot No 1 200 Ib 17.60: d toes, fancy, .3.00 pk bakt: toma-|losses taken by Bethleherr 7 eens ser God . bless ail a cea A weights over 260 Ib scarce: few No 2) °° * Far toes, outdoor, No {, 200-250 pk t. y hem and Husband, te Barnsfieid é —_—_—— meena 3 200 Fo00D Lo assle TG: fey ona nings Turnape, Nok: 1.00140 don behs:' turnips Youngstown Sheet & Tube. Motors| ~~ In Memoriam 2 | ING OF AUTOMATIC <8 ‘ 160-198 Ib 18.00-16.75; larger lot sows oe Pertuce AND, SALAD; Gk mn-| Were mixed. Aircrafts lost ground ~~ Serving Good Food Since 1929! 400 Ib und lighter 1480-16-00: “severall sew yoRs (iNg)—3. C. Penney Co, Give, Ko a au: cagive, bineched, with Douglas a one-point loser, IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR | ° . Ib 13.60.14 26. ; ou - nationwide le department store chain, te: 2.00 bu: escarole, “bleached "No iz 3s. pees gd Ebey, who seed MACHINES. Breakfasts—Luncheons ; |) Salable cattle salable catves PS{, *2Bounced record sales for the first|2.76 bu. Lettuce, Bibb, No 1, 1.00-1.50 N York k Ten re SOP Wee. Anon |200! receipts will fall short of the moras halt of of Gi ee period of Y Netlbu: etiuee Mesd” wen. 3.66-f ie oe on oe Stoc S | His memory ts as dear today, RIKER FOUNTAIN =| 2225 205 el Soe See ae ih Pal ce aaah, Wah Le hr) inte men coum | Beha ait Sty ‘ oe fully 25 maepeti Tower | Pe ao M7 aa att for rom tuce, Romaine, No }, 1.50- 200° bu, |Admiral.....,. 17.7 Kennecott «+ 136.1) Daddy. — = Lobby of Riker Bidg. : Steady 0" a3 ht fers "cows pag J fompany sai id the lower earnings resulted) __ Allied ch “tanp Rimb Cix, --- $33) IN LOVING-MEMORY OF HENRY : : steady to 38 higher: veatere’ eteude from lee advertising and promo- DETROIT EGGS aited bare ie Kresge, 8S .. 28.7) Galtarde who passed away Aug. ; sa 5 stockers oSveraae te iteady to strong; pre os gp ediation salary cosis and petrol cases 9 {AP Eggs, f0b./ Allis Chal .... 355 Lop’ Gisas <:. one “wet dead,_but eee = 3 hg ra ie i wrades ices 8. HS it stents “S188 Socket eee tet} 9 of | prime ete. Lat 00 a and das 38; port Stat hie fa bs Baer ar aes Pelent-|Am Airiin .-.. 346 Lockh Airey: 49.4 at" uneto niheres > : i ‘ . wt vee a + ene ne A to, ag Baca MY fisndards |e Sh 11 © commen shate, and si jerede B large 44-47, wed ave ity pan lan Gan -..:: Bo Tons 6 Com’ £631 |. etollens and’ sisters. oe ee EXCELLENT: WORKING CONDE ~ Oren use. rance met end “ise ‘ib heifers 28.75 and Feast ‘sn a Year ago. Bales and operating! Browne-—Crade A jumbo 1.52 ta avg A OME SE! 2. Matk Tre’... 313| DXLOVING MEMORY OF HENRY ona aiyv ae - . Boe cates to prime heifers 31-$0-/Fevenue in the first half reached a rect tll; letge 48: medium’ 43, amet ati en” et Watts, GT; . 368 —— a we a : A + ‘fi Vv , 1 | peat commer core toas-13 $0 =< = #300. 308,008, 000, 11 per cent above the cone — sree Hi erede So ‘are a 33-35, Aim pee 283 gam = Arwondertul i husband, man and ‘PAID LIPE INSURANCE. clal and standar - ” ' ing.... 30. aoe oR a erriric Vaiue. 13.50; “canners an re 850-10.%5;| jew y, ae Ganmeremty graded: Am Smelt... 95.7 Merck ....... +22 One who was better, God never SR Sa sae eS ett a lacs la nae eet ee owl Be St Hee | Saal cer wren | MPRRTAL AND AORDNCAL, mam a wl * L |cholee 20.00-33.00; most cull to commer- |"? . ae six months sotated $5,001,000,| Browns—Grade A extra larce 44, Jarge/Am Tob .. 78 Mpls Hon ... 84 : . : pooh Sa ney on iJ Last, Long ” ‘oiad 13.00-10-00: “= loads 833 ib feed.|¢04"! to $2.40 & common share, includ-|42, medium 38, small 27%-28'%. Am AS 35.2 Minn M&M . 71.6 One in 8 million, that husband B ling steers 19.46; some and. ing nen eeeaee rofit of $1.28 @ share enicitassbooees Anaconda .-.. 81 Ch 43.1 Was you RETIREME : bs andes i featiion stor’ “ieeers oek: on sais of flint ahorts and cartoons. Al eae POTATOES Anac W & C.. 746 Mont Ward |. 425 Just in your judgment, always aE ae 42", 72" PI ‘Shel yong lo lambs So50 avemacs, hn SONH PAIGE SN, Or oes: ig (AP)—Potatoes new | Armen ot co. . os Boner Wheel oS |: saieiet ena ares right. | ao =. x astic |steady a : ower yearlings an sheep stock arrivals 8 track het: _ ‘rma Ck met —— _— a mS & by y {our, friends, ps par f prime spring lam 5 Be of mand moderat kc h es chison oe MU r ers td - - [food 1086-1600. tea “torte ees County Deaths ask: "rade Battech sg Ee gs Se —, sr nmnt: ay. Sew OWIMMING Psi: ah conga a wathnga Cong AGT Ql =< Rat aus HA) Yi aR mined wy a MA 41586. - -Orecan Round |e) @ OO .... | . pee 4 ‘cul to choice shorn slaughter ewes Ne. Willlam 8. Rose ~ Wives oan. Wes ee Cree Poe pendis Av .... 51.6 Nat Oypa aes 3 . ke - ORTONVILLE — Prayer service|**: Neereske Round Reds 5.40-5.50. oy ES ge Flowers 2. é si es y quenatnanindiniios hy oan ‘ see he ' — to be held for William S. Rose, CHICAGO BUTTER AND E end ae 147 wie re. “ey 313 DUNSTAN'S FLOWERS GOOD FUTURE et 80, 3770 Seymibur Lake Rd.. at 1/,,CHICAGO. Aus. 10 (AP) Butter torden ... 62 Norf & West '70.2| 3484 W. Huron FE 2-830! Intere outside work, in Oak- Desire to rent location [i p.m. today, trom the C. Sherman|chansea "receipts ebaying prices un-| Borg Ware ---- {14 No am Av... 023 ne tor tar inrve nationsl an” Me oe. ee ’ ! ‘ ; me oe oe ae Pas 41 8 a Me ~ 92'A 58; 90'B S7; 89 C 85%: cary 9 H|Budd Co... 183 Nor ge Pw ies]? umeral_ Directors 4 4 = ~ in downto Funeral Home here. Mr. Rose’s|514: 89° ¢ 66 Burroughs |. > 43.2 ~ 22 to 28 and high school gradu. Maiteble for, Men's, [220, tilbe sent to the Willa]. ily mn om naneatel Stars HS sete” Hi] ame gammmanee onan, | Brahh bar Sra a ON STEEL FRAME WITH CORNER SEATS eurrente ve ens Bermbesle Funeral Home at Pat- cont A a mixed 3. mediums Be: Can a4 aesuse 308 Owens Til ts m8 Sen a rene o-sat8 of after $:00 and Sat. FE &t j ' Clothing Business. reaps d. Lod service there Mon.|{ienderds 33: dirties 26i4; checks 26%; Capital iri’! 324 Pan Aw air 163] Dragtne Sins = Watertord ‘Twp. | ee ee eee ; iday, at Paterson. Mr. Case, JT. /5) 134 BSDh Epi O83]. enrtee Pains : ing Banker's Lite & Casualty Co. These swimming pools ill of . — Rose died yesterday. P , tet Trac .... 92.4 Parke. De. .7.408 Donelson oh OnE Ware sid . 211 49.6 - ns . wee selling at Will also consider pur He is survived by his wife, Jose- ; prreee mean Chee & Oh... abt pune, #C ... ois FUNERAL -Jo : THE OSPTTALIZATION , a 5 ae \ sunigr Ml H ' chase of established [i phine, and two sisters of Oakland,} perrom Aug. 9 (AP)—Pricés paid Sim hat od", 98 Pepsi Cola"... 21-4 ~DEATONED aR ot ag INCOME TRSURANCH steadin ° per pound, f.0.b., Detroit, for No, seca 0. 1 - 41 RESORIFPIN CHAPEL 4 emt GS brings you a urry business now selling 9: 2: | uatity poultry up’ 10-30 amt” ‘lGtarke-Bauip..: eg Phebe DB Serres. FB _Saoet ‘The fastest growing health pro- : : real bargain. ical 's . Dale F. Lewan Ses : on heavy prot nea on type pens Sent Soe Sear Hw wa ee V h Si ] tection plan in existence. No pre- Lee 3 : . . rg MILFORD — Service for Dale pounds) : Gray Crosses 21, Barred Rocks Cole Palm Thi) 83.6 5 wll ES $24 OOrMnees- ipie Pooce WO 21698, Ask for Mr: You Ulwevi Pay Les aL @S men’s ond women’s @ Frederick Lewan Jr. three-| Marke ome aeete etiaht Gate Od wed A... igs Pit Plate G .. 92 - FUNERAL HOME. poy og Fads B. Jeftee y Y “ess 4 v combined ‘months-vdld son of Mr. and Mrs. peeping. y Mee EA —_ Se ie” Pullman a: coe] Ambetanes OE Sayin Motor bal 2 ' * i < yers o weiss * PUEMON ...6. a a FURNITURE: SALES preterick Lewan of 250 Devistal £6 Meal cies cemoe. O tat carpe. G. Beha cucs at pablte "ski Rochester, od | . ; _ JB Dr., Duck Lane, will be Saturday) Arrivals. of yo tng STgnt’ but surs.(Comt Bak... 318 Repub Sul’... 61.4 Cemetery Lots 5 ae eg 1 Mile Cootiet Averett, TN pre pa) Poca in Spey Gewtey Tee| coer ca Eee Bi) amour. cence noe | me mu a icnne, st of Auburn H . | Daria! in ary ery CHICAGO POULTRY “Ii1336°° «Reck Spg ..! 31. for Serave, lot or 9125 single | necessary. Wi in you. © : "DAILY 9 TO. 9 — SUNDAY 12.5 fn Pontiac Press Bibaby died yesterday in St, Joseph} CMICAGO. auc. (AP!—Live pouliry: |Sopper Rig... st Royal But | .1be@| = #04ce. PE. 2.0000, “Call even N. Telegraph PE 435%,” : penrees OS 2-700 Mercy Hospital and his body is at| sock, “steady on capeneties: receipts Setel wi” 34a be detkaen., ae eal ah graves, 4180, six for azo | MACHINISTS. EXP. ONLY. SMALL ; ; wane es +s is. six for fon . Wi aren. : j 852 . (Wednesday 847 120,000 Deere ........ 28 «(St 0 : : | ee ere Hone Beare cee aero Be Eee eH) Boat uf “18; 8 ves SE «re 38. Surviving are his parents: grand- = fry: roosters 15-16; ag Aire.... 844 ee | f ~ . pons over 44%; 27-28; under 442, 25-26 Ta 97 | \parents, Mr. and Mrs. William : : 7 ‘Brinkman —and—Mr.and Mrs, STOCK AVERAGES me 67 . ‘Frederick Lewan Sr., all of Mil-|en yong ress: a en OF se 81 | ford, and his great-grandparents, a ee nm ie ° ° \Mr.° and Mrs. Jim Lisuvvo, of previous day sue tans 16.8" 1908 - ee ‘+e a . Ri ht Now , Week vee 38.9 142-7 16.7 isn on “* e 3, 4, 5, + . § Is the Best Time Dearborn. Month sgo 2115 1414 747 18781 Pood Mach... oe. Bid Ol NJ-.:: S14] 15, 16, 20, 22, 23, 25, 26, NEEDED . ear . Sere eee eee - oe é 1 \ ;' CLARKSTON — Serice he Wik SE HE Aad faa Hes tale ee i, oo BY ee 4 > E —~ Service for Wik-\t9ss high......3578 1424 187 1813lace Bek... Sun On... 68, 1, 13, 1%, 7, %, - to : fove Up to Cadillac foam be at 2 80, . 1985 lows.) 3034 1189) 67d 1488 Gen Dyna 1 Suther Pap... ce 84, 88, 113, : 2 at 2 p.m. Saturday from eC. . 2... GB. > a. 2 machine repair men, one plan- ‘ Gen Fds...... 49.4 Sylv El Pd.....53.3 : : Donelson - Johns Funeral Home, C ; Lj M Di Gen Motors... 48 - Texas Co..... 62°] . on Bins tee ‘ ; operator (largé planer), twe Pontiac, with burial in Per G@Mer Line Man Dies|gs: si": Bz es 3) Help Wanted Male ‘6 . \Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Beach, Gen Tire...... 55.6 Thomp Pa.... 646) > poe elders, (medium & large werk), | ‘ a lifelong resident of Oakland From Lightning Bolt Goedr Oe ieee een ‘grees. “Apply Et ltt SPT {REFER one assistant chief inspector, sal- sues Transamer ... 38.5 4 }County, died yriay at: ie . Grek’ Paige... Lf Twent Cem... 383 ACCOUNTANTS AUDITORS) _Vi- aried, (should be familiar with a te | rvived by his wite, Net-| Lightning struck and killed alot West'S..: 303 Un Caride...1314 Sates odlaes ole toe, sear tooth), Nomenclature. Over- o is SU y his le, Net- I es aig 2 = peantes i x i " : \tle Robinson Beach; two sons, Jo- Center Line man, yesterday after- poe Pot cee 138 t mit Ate i ¥ wo of educe and experience. ‘Sb time. High hourly rete, all fringe |seph of Pontiac and Russel]|noon at the site of the new Lincoln som f eke 2 Unit Pruit.... 493 Kom nearest Michigan Employ- benefits. Modern plant, Detroit JEROME Oldsmobile-Cadill Seebie, tae tion Bann al "Gia lr Geede OF Hooker i. 413 Uz Gen F.--- | Eeehigan Civ service, Lancing | Breach & Machine Co ac daughter, Mrs. Harold Peltier, of| Chief Ogee; Indust Ray... $03 Ug Stee! wocws ee | eV . ‘Drayton Plains. Township ice sail ‘orrest S./Ing Ren... .. oats soy $ : r, OLive. 1-071. 380, S. Saginaw | ; Paes FE 4-3566 je . Jones, 25, was standing next to his Inland ae we Were 'B Pic... # A FEW Baldwin Lo ms .*, car with a friend- Earl Carie-of |Interiak Ir... Were a eee 5 ey 8 a __ Bal win Local Plans Picnic) vo Doe when the = it, cane of Bee, oe. en Oe .iteresteg, in ptter nag. “ere a os Members of Baldwin Rubber Lo-|was given first aid and released.|f5t BiCK’:---T08 5 woolworth .... 41. hours. Call meres "| : per... ..138.2 . Call 1064 W. : Z - ————s ~o cal 25 (AFL-CIO) will gather. at}. Jones was pronounced ee byfint Telartel -. 338 tere ae 8 10:30 and 12:00, rare : ' |Walled Lake Amusement Park to-|Deputy, county coroner, Dr. P. W.\jinns Man... 552 ¥ngat she T 100. avi iy pr AINTER. ER. “COLLISION ae _ morrow for the organization’s an-|Ports of Farmington. Kelsey “Way a 3 ies Body, South Blvd, and . . nual family picnic, Lt. Governor} Both men were employed by the ho Seren a z “I’m late!” said the White Rabbit te cond, acnaning te bank at eater, seamcoes oe Os I eRe en j : o af : ‘“ ae | cials. Lincoin plant: os for a very important date! , . : “Oh yes. Alice told me to tell you to be sure to visit | ey . Kroger’s New | -\ WONDERLAND | QF FoOoD” OPENS 9 A. M., Wednesday, SAVE WASTE PAPER! ice: e2 26 = We Are Now Paying : jurisdiction of this- * p _ the NEWSPAPERS .. 2.5¢ per 100 Lbs. ‘MAGAZINES ..50¢ Scrap tron—Juak Cars—Structural Steel Beyven STEEL 00.)2 SF c= canal ieee “FE 4.9582 _ Fe og coumiy, tle Sh, car) pay Mine, 8 cot, clan, Ave 3 = 135 Branch St. across from American Forging & Socket 3°t: nomena uae® Be.| Experimental Mechanic = : , | emer, Sveae Biviiee.| OPENING FOR MAN Death Not , “WITH CREATIVE eath Notices ABILITY, CAPABLE ' Tool & Die I wish to take this op- noo, wk uaa | OF MAKING TEST _pottunity to express my Mega Windiate Dr Beg | MODELS, ASSEMBLY : Makers . _ gratitude ‘to the .many “voters and. friends ‘who | have chosen me to/repre- ne them for, the Eg f of Democrat tie enna” "etait, a ‘ strona? AND TESTING OF MA- | St Year Around Job : CHINERY vingt Benefits : . Bill Weightmian : 5. : LAB = Franklin Bem Products ae = = Co. oe ed MA M1586 - | mm oncuayp tare mo