“ernors or ‘er is scheduled to arrive within) : \ a j wh , ss 7. ; , : U.S, Weather Bureau Forecast: / Cooler Tomorrow - i ; Details Page 2 114th YEAR * x < * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TU ESDAY, os a ee 26, 1956 —~80 0 PAGES eo + . ASSOCIATED PRESS uF INTERNATIONAL NEWS NITED PRESS. PHOTOS SERVICE Warns Red Po wer ‘Ominous » Gruenther Tells Governors of Undersea Fleet Says Russia Now Has More Submarines Than Nazis Had in ‘39 ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.—. (INS) — The Governors Conference returned to’ “politics as usual” today after being shaken briefly, by Gen. Alfred M. Gruen- ther’s warning of Russian — armed strength. The retiring NATO com- mander warned his Atlantic City audience also that the present Russian leaders are “more clever” than Stalin, and he noted: 1. Russia built between 70 and _ & submarines last year to bring her strength up to an estimated 400 modern undersea’ craft, where- as Hitler féit enough assurance to start World War II with between 60 and 70 u-boats. 2 When hi predecessor. Gen Dwight D. | snhower, was, in charge of N . eighty per cent of the Red ‘Shir, Force was pro- pellor-driven craft. Now, aftér a comparatively few ears, %) per cent of the Soviet's 20.000 planes ave jets and despite much talk of -demobitization the Russian ability ~ to strike aggressively “ominously” INCTeA Ses, 3. Russia is reducing the site ef ber army because she js wn- dergoing a “desperate maapower problem.” She is forced te use 53 per cent of her population to support ber agricultural gram, while the U. &. uses only about 10 per cent. The U.S: sorety ascde her alli- ance with Western Puropean coun- toes and the countries which they, m turn, conthol. Gruenther said Federal aid for schools brought wide divergence of opinion among the goverors.. some warmng that it meant further loss of local con- trol of education: others contended that adequate preparation of sci- entists in the race for world power made federal school ald impera- tive higher education ° . ° The Michigan Democrat said more students would be encour. aged to go to college if: their parents could write off the cost on their income tax returns. NEED ENGINEERS On a panel discussion of grade. and secondary school needs, Wil- liams declared U. S. industry can- pot get enough college graduates, and that Seviet Russia is turning ott awice as many engineers as the United States. “In five years,’ he estimated, “the Soviets will be turning out 85.000 engineers a year as com- paced with 38,000 in the United States."” Adiai Stevenson appears likely to collect more than 468 everpow- ‘ering = presidentia} nominating votes from the 27 Demerratic- _controlied states represented at the conference. On the basis of an Associated Press survey of opinion of the gov- their representatives, from those States which have: Democratic chief executives, Ste- venson has only to break even in 21 GOP-dominated states to wrap up his party's nomination on an early ballot at the Aug. 13 Chicago. convention, On the Republican side, Fred Hall of Kansas started cir-) culating a resolution among the! 21 GOP governors praising Presi-| dent Eisenhower and pledging sup- port for a second term bid. Diver 'o Seek Body =. ST. IGNACE (®—A deep sea div- the next few days to seek to re- cover the body of Robert Koppen, 27, who plunged to his death from a Straits of Mackinac bridge tow- er June 6. He fell 300 feet into_150'national “Girl — i acne feet of watr, a Dies at 115? day, says he was 115, Coroner's deputies, called by his grand- daughter, said he still had his own teeth. Egypt. Desires Cooler Wednesday _* * * * ———— Seo HOT DOG INTERLUDE — Three governors at the national Governors Conference sample Atlan- tic City hot dogs during a lull in the conference sessions as they relax on this resort city’s famed and Gov. boardwalk. From left: Gov. Victor E. Anderson, of Nebraska: Gov. Phil M. Connetty, of Missnuri Probe of Midair Collision Half Complete, Says CAA Official investigation of the triple-fatal midair colli- sion of two private’ planes over Pontiac Municipal! Alipost Saturday evening has proceeded “about half— “Reliable Source’ Avers administration is not doing enough Thomas S. Murphy, Civil Aeronautics Adminis- way,” tration Safety Agent, said today But Murphy said his full report won't be ready for : ‘shipment to Washington for‘another 10 to 15 days, and no public statement of its findings will be. before the second week in August. He said the isvestigation is in tended, * “primarily as a preventive measure.” : Nasser Declares U.S. Friendship CAIRO, Egypt “«? — Gamal Ab ‘del Nasser, on his first day as . president of Egypt. declared his country wants friendly relations with the United States and ‘for my part. I will do all Fican”™ “It's our duty te find out what causes contributed te any air crash,’ Murphy said. “Then, aft- er we find out, we ask if there's anything we can do te prevent simitar accidents—what rules or The newly elected chief execu- trve made his statement in an tn- terview with Alicia Patterson. edi- recommendations we might _ tor and publisher of the Long’ make in the future.” _ Island, N.Y.. newspaper Newsday. According to witnesses, Satur- “We want the American people to understand us.” he said “This 4@Y'§ crash occurred when one of will help. for good relations and three planes flying to Almont from friendship between the peoples of # plane auction in Defiance, Ohio, the United States and the peoples collided with another plane fiving Michigan's Go. Mennen Wil of Egypt in the landing pattern over the hams proposes parents of college> * © e airport students be given income tax credit. - At the same nme. we want to James G. Pickett, 42, of Drayton and that royalties be collected on pe completely independent We Plains. pilot of the local plane. killed in the crash. Dale Egyptians are understand. us.” good people if you Was Mathews, 25 of the second plane of Charlevoix, pilot and his pas- _senger. Jess Trott, 60. of Almont, Showers Indicated, al thed 1m the sec. ‘itnesses ¢stimated the crash cee at an altitude of 800 feet. .Flyers in the two surviving air- planes said their altimeters read Increasing cloudiness jwith scat- 1.000 and 1.200 feet tered showers and thunderstorms Airport Manager Homer D. Hos- is the prediction for the Pontfac kins said vesterday a CAA regula- area tonight. The low will be 64 tion requires planes to. maintain at to least 1.500 feet of. altitude when The forecast for tomorrow 48 flying over ari airport. partly cloudy and aan with a SS aE "The lowest temper Leonard Increases : Margin Over Hogan ~ The lowest temperature devine in downtown Pontiac preced 8 am. was 55 degrees. At 1 pm “the — thertnometer registered Segrere: — Anti- U.S. eae Wins REYKJAVIK .(INS)—A_ coalition of parties favoring U.S. with- drawl from her huge Keflavik Air |Base emerged from national elec- tions today as the strongest politi- cal group in Iceland. Eddie Fisher Now Well — Canada’s Stan Leonard stretched his individual lead over Ben Hogan in the International Golf Championship to two strokes and gave the Canadian team a big lead in the Canada Cup competi- tion today when he shot a 71 on of 207. —— Hogan shot a one-over-par tiring badly on the 2nd nine after HOLLYWOOD wW—Singer Eddie going out in 34. and reached the ‘Fisher was scheduled to go home 54-hole turn in 3rd place with a: iteday after two days’ hospital score. of 209. one stroke behind 72 to be! an ) attack ot —— By JANET ODELL A new town has been born in Pany ot Michigan trenched in 22,- Oakland” County, and telephone |™ feet of cable, This cable car-) operators all over the nation have radio and TV, in addition. to the been alerted to handle calls for it.’ telephone wires. Roundup, Michigan, ‘site’ pf the, All this cable will be: removed | after July 1. = Twenty-four houf service is be- ing maintained by a staff of ex- volunteers. Mrs, Lois Regan of Almont, is chief opera- tor, Mrs. John D, McNeely of 4740 Forest Ave., is one of the staff. Twenty-five. trank / lines for the 3rd round, for a 54-hole total . goodly share of telephones. tong distance calls terminate on Sa teter 0 survien the veleghene! 8 Detwelt beard. The pttier lines uto ire Bad ; . : * AP Wirepheote William G. Stratton, of Illinois. Donnelly gave the New York Gov. paign a sethac former President Harry 8. Truman would not be able to control the Missouri delegation at the Democratic National Convention Averell Harriman cam- k when he said he believed that Report Wilson ls On Way Out Ike Fed Up With Boners + by Defense Secretary “By RUTH MONTGOMER) WASHINGTON (INS? — Presi- dent Eisenhower has definitely de- made termined to run again—barring 7 unforeseen health setback—and. elected. expects to call 'Charies F. Wilson shortly his second term inauguration . - s This is the the President days The source said Ike Is highly -ineensed at Wilson for his two latest public blunders amd ‘would consider his immediate removal, . except for the appreaching. po- litical campaign. during past The offiqgl pointed out that it would also be inconvenient to “break in” a-rew cabinet officer during Ike's current convales- cence IKE WILL RUN : He said Eisenhower expects to spend from one to two weeks al his Gettysburg “dreamhouse” be- ginning this weekend, and will then complete his recuperation at the air-conditioned White House “There is absolutely no ques- tien in Ike's mind but that he will run for re-election,” he said. “Naturally, if anether at- tack s Damon Runyon.,..... Seetes S oe weane eae 6 ae reer 20, 21 Thea eee eee TV &: Programs......29 Wilson, Earl. ...............19 Women’s Pages. ......... 14, 15 * t norks projects r dren's ‘for.the waterfront, the Fifth Army ‘state Public Health department for | | AP Wirephote AWAY FROM IT ALL — Playw right Arthur Miller and actress Marilyn Monroe pose for photographers. at his country place in Con. - necticut, where the couple drove last night from New York City for a vacation before their marriage. Miller's mother said there will he no word for a few days about plans for the wedding since the couple are ‘worn out from a strenuous two weeks.’ # Seek Contagious Hospital as Aid to Children’s Home Use of the Oakland County Contagious Hospital to house the overflow from the Children’s Home was sug- gested yesterday at the County Supervisors’ meeting. A report suggesting the merger of the Contagious. Hospital with the Tuberculosis Sanitorium was received without action by the+- Board of Supervisors, but a committee of the . Board jmight take further action before the Board’s next meeting in September. A resolution by Mrs. Helen Rob- erts of Ferndale, chairman of the Board's Juvenile Committee, advo- cated temporary housing of the overflow from the County Chil- Home the Contagious -Hospital. The resolution was re- ferred to the Board of Auditors for action at their discretion John C. Austin, vice chairman of the Board of Auditors, dis- closed teday that the Beard has met with the Pontiac General Hospital Beard, ‘wee asked a two-year lease on the Contagious Hospital for added bed and stor- age space during construction of the planned addition te Pontiac General Hospital. Willis M. Brewer. chairman of the Pontiac General Hospital Build- ing Committee. said today no fi- nancial offer for -the lease had been made. ! NEXT SESSION IN FALL ; Prospects ef a solution to. the problem before the Supervisors’ next meeting in September now ap- pear dim, although the Board of ‘I'm afraid the ice cream man '(Continued a ed 2. Col. 8) got most ot it,” he added. —~ a. 5h 4y = = = — - To Pay Federal Road Cost Gasoline Price Up a Pyanes LANSING « — Starting probably next Monday, the tax on gas- oline purchased by Michigan motorists will edge higher again, rising to an average of 9.8 cents a gallon : * . * . e . The increase will amount to a penny. It will come about with enactment of the new federal highway program now ready for final action by Congress and the President's signature. The Michigan Petroleum Industries Committee said today the added federal penny will bring to 42 per-cent the total ‘tax paid by Michigan motorists on gasoline purchases. In Michigan, the increase will be fractionally greater because the state then applies the three per cent sales tax on the base, or retail, price and on the federal gas tax as weil. Then-the state applies its own six cents a gallon gas levy, ducing the final tax increment. ° . * * e . Palmer called the impending new tax rate the highest on any | comet commodity in the nation: Miss Brough Takes Wimbledon Opener WIMBLEDON. England Louise Brough, defending cham- pion and top-seeded ‘player. opened women's singles play in the Wim- biedon tennis championships igs’ with a 35-minute. 60, 60 victory over in It was a 2nd round match. Miss Broughgsseeking: her 5th Wimble- don cw title. had drawn a lst round bye. She never was in dan- ger against the 16-year-old Miss Forbes, who won only nine points -in the Ist set and 17 in the 2nd. Mrs. Beverly Baker Fleitz of .Long Beach, Calif.. seeded second, defeated Pilar Barril of Spain. Don’t Blame the Tyke— He Was Being Friendly JACKSONVILLE, Fla. —Four- mother's purse out and passed out $36 i in bills to play- mates. Lorry Lowas, the neighborhood. pro- | on Map: io under her’ direction are the! campment is working with lighting) state Conservation people a jexperts and army engineers. The ion the site, Army will move scenery and Jend -Untit Saturday, “June “30 the jeeps to be fixed up like early Roundup area is closed to thé ded _ American trains and steamships. _ lic. | Mrs, N.S. Baldridge of Cokd-| Military police re stationed at) water, is Health and Safety Chair-the parking lot to tun back visi-| man of the Roundup. A former) member of the national staff in the same field, Mrs. Baldridge co- ordinates the work of the state police, the American Red Cross for the hospital services and the Table Toppers Clam Bake & Chicken Miry, vow Park, — cum 2, he ey protection. Jean Forbes of South Africa.. vear-old Michael Lowas took his in the yard the child's father, said there are a lot of children in. prebably “add a large number Suppor Notice on {ar Makers O’Mahoney - Monroney Bills Seek Retrictions on Auto Sales Methods LANSING (AP) — Offi- cials of the Michigan Auto- mobile Dealers Assn. have have served notice on auto manufacturers that the group will support pending _ ‘federal legislation to cori- trol automotive distribu- tion. Directors and officers of the MADA wired industry officials despite a reported caution from one company that en- of the decision actment of the O’Mahoney or the Monroney bills by “Congress -would bring un- desirable changes in the entire system of merchan- - dising and distribution of automobiles. The O'Mahoney bill would en- able dealers to sue manufacturers for failure to use good faith in termination of contracts’ or for forcing dealers to accept cars thes do not want The Monreney bill, a compan- ion measure, would force manu- facturers te buy back unsold au- tomobiles, The O'Mahoney bill has passed the Senate 75-1. The MADA_ holding its annual convention here. yesterday wired the presidents of suto manufac- turing companies, that the organi- zation is backing the bills. BOTH MAY SUFFER Meanwhile, it was disclosed that % key Ford dealers from through- out the nation came out against the proposed iegislation at a Meet- ing in Dearborn last week At the Dearborn conference, Board Chairman Ernest RK. Breech of Ford reportedly warned that beth dealers and manufacturers might suffer if the legislation passes. A Detroit newspaper said ft learned Breech told the group sweeping changes in merchandis- ing and distribution would result © if the bills were passed. ~The newspaper quoted Breech as saying Ford would be forced to raise car prices if the corporation has to assume the risk of dealer inventories as provided in the . Monroney measure. MAY ADD DEALERS Moreover, according to the De- troit paper, Breech continued. Ford “might be compelled to set up service facilities of our own” the company is required to com: pensate dealers for maintaining. warranty and service facilities. He said, too, that Ford would of dealers and various kinds of ‘Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ~” Twining Views Soviet Bomber Cordial Russian Airmen Answer Questions About Supetsonic Warplane MOSCOW Ww — Gen. Nathan Twining, U.S. Air Force chief of ‘staff, has been given a look at a inew Soviet bomber the Russians say can fly faster than sound. The U.S. Air Force does not yet have such a supersonic bomber. |The speed of sound varies from '760 miles an hour at sea level to jabout 663 miles an hour at alti- tudes above 35,000 feet. The top U.S. airman, a group of his aides and British, French and other foreign military men were shown the new plane during © © a conducted tour of the closely iguarded Kubinka air base, about 40 miles from Moscow. : the visitors were halted — 20 miles outside Moscow, wining acid Setar: ness ial: : onstrated their skills for the visi- off in ge nny SE f < a r fs? + THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JUNE 26. 1956. be BRS SSS ie a ee ee Se PER ae be mee 4 ’ a Pee es SF EE IX ; 4 ‘a Pe a. ae \ - ‘ : Pain ee * es i eee é e z > f + Qakk their meeting i —.proval of the Sanitary Code adopt-; @d by the Board of Health despite’ ome Supervisors’ doubts of its le. . ; 7 * * » i. The codé imposes more strin-> gent regulations than state laws. Supervisers favoring approval ar- gued that the question of legality! * should be‘ decided in the courts, | and this could not be done before) the approval was given. | Wayne, Macomb and‘ Monroe .. Counties have similar codes, . Supervisors also declined to en-, ter the controversy over Wayne) Major and Willow Run airports, by, referring to the Inter-County Com- | mittee a resolution supporting use| of Wayne Major by commercial | airlines, ' LJ * * i ' In a roll call vote, supervisors howed out of the political arena by tabling indefinitely a resolution; which would have established a bi-| ADM. KING DIES — Chief of naval operations during World | War II, Fleet Adm. Ernest J. King died at Portsmouth Naval Hos- partisan committee of the board) pital, N. H. yesterday. He was 77. Cause of death was heart failure _\He Done His Damnedest’ « LONDON @ — ‘Harry Truman visited the tombs of Britain's great “ltoday and ‘said he wanted a short epitaph on ns own poe *, “Yes, sir,” he remarked to re- ‘Name Kalkaska Truman Wants an Epitap a porters, “I want them to put on mine ‘He done his damnedest.’ former U, S. president visited the tombs of the Duke of - Wellington, Adm. Lord Nelson, Charles Dick- floor and commented: “Frankly, I'd rather be under Touring through St. Paul’s Cath tedral and Westminister Abbey, the Riot ‘(The Day in Birmingham rd Reds OpenRiot (ciiccns Seek 2000 Seat | in Guatemala ‘Auditorium Near School -3 Killed, 19 Woundec Po ’ ag ded) an auditorium near the) al Home, before her body i¢ sent as Police Machinegun present high school were revealed : Shouti tudents “lat last night’s commission meet- Shouting Students i ns eee pang -jat the auditorium would feasibly) GUATEMALA \®—Police firing\come out of the 0-acre site that submachineguns and pistols tojth break up a demonstration against for the driver training program’ the government's crackdown on and recreational! use, according to Red agitation killed three univer- city Manager D. C. Egbert. BIRMINGHAM—Citizens efforts one tee a Ee Surviving are her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Fred Eachus, her ‘a Jet Air Base th : sity students and wounded 19 last e ground than under a Btone | ight on Guatemala'’s city’s main :_.. floor like this, It would ‘be a lot Senate Armed Service easier to get oul when the great STC _ Committee Votes Site horn biows.” e . © A | The victims were in a parade of Egbert, whose resignation was accepted with regret at the com- ‘mission meeting, was lauded by ;the present mayor, James Allen, - jand a former mayor, Milton F. |parents, the George Cunninghams, ‘three grandchildren, and four sis- ters, all of Rockwood, another sis- iter in the South, and a brother ie several hundred students march-}Mallender, for his service with the | rmany. ; {Armed Services Committee voted! picke II. A guide explained that/*arm” Instead of Manistee Treman minutes before aq tablet Paul's erected to an American | airman, William Meade Lindsley st ilent] p , ey yee ing toward the government palace to protest curtailment of civil liberties under the of WASHINGTON U—The Senate “state today to build a Michigan jet air) Fiske, serving with the Royal Air|dent Carlos Castillo Armas’ re- basé at Kalkaska instead of in Force, was the first U. S.. officer|®'™®: Manistee County. ‘to lose his life in Britain in World) About * \War II. He was killed Aug. 6, girls. Th Air Force picked Kalkaska: 1940. eee ; One girl was wounded. So was a last year but the House voted April siorted Sie Gay chin , (eecomen . ee 11 to switch the site to Manistee ya, along the River Thames dur-| The state of alarm put: Guate- County. ,ing which not a Londoner recog-|maia under a form of martial law. Thus, if today’s committee action|nized him. “It's inevitable,’’ he The government said it was nec- is upheld by the Senate, a Senate.|!aughed. “They're just forgettingjessary to prevent “‘seditious dis- House conference will have to try|™* | SUPPose.” | | = a ee to settle the two-year-old site con- | pede bed be bein eee half the marchers were t encourage voters to register for | induced -by high blood pressure, from which he suffered for many a a elections. “The vote W8S) years. The body will be flown te Washington today preparatory to sas | burial in the Naval Academy Cemetery at Annapolis Friday. heres In a series of legal moves, su-| Village of Milford. There wag no’ ee testa accimae Heart Attack Takes Lif j Heart Attac akes Ll wood Cet Farm evasion OF Fleet Adm. Ernest King in Farmington Township. : Blanchard, supervisor of Farming-| Ernest J. King, who died yester- heart failure induced by high ton Township for 15 years. 'day at the age of 77, will be held | blood pressure, from which he suf- Horkey, supervisor of Royal Oak academy at Annapolis assin i ri a 3 is. ssing of his old friend with this Township for 17 years, and Elmer) The body will be taken by air seatensent issued at Walter Reed pervisors okayed annexation of 58) = . acres of Milford Township to the Funeral Rite Friday in Capital Aug. 7 was set as election date Jor the village of _ | Supervisors honored two of their) PORTSMOUTH, N.H. uw — Furjof the U.S. Navy died at Ports: colleagues and the late Ernest B. pera! service for F}eet Adm.jmouth Naval Hospital of acute Plaques were presented Blan- Friday at Washington National! fered fer-many years. chard’s successor and George S. Cattiedral with burial at the Naval! president Eisenhower noted the | W. Haack, supervisor from. Bir- to Washington today and will lie Army Hospi lashi . : : : } pital, Washington, where mingham and Southfield Township jn state at the cathedral. committee which would authorize tion about the weather and the hundreds of military construction (‘ver mostly, he said. projects throughout the country | Truman said it was the only | | . __ wall idan An ping egiticinctarekel/ reporter remarked that at 6| (Continued From Page ne) district. of Rep. Ruth Thompson |*:™ ™@ny People don't even rec: dealers in order to maintain the ognize members of their own fam-| yeiume of production and kee | tained in a bill approved by the , the streets of a big eSupport Control Plan isional opposition. ‘BIG HASSLE : The Air Force then picked ‘Kal- | aughingly replied. |kaska in an adjacent district repre- ‘sented by Rep. Knox ‘Rs ine feel Negotiators Not a head turned in his direc-| the government ordered censor- troversy. |sion. After a time he began stop- ship of news dispatches sent "The Michigan base item is con- Ping people and talking to them abroad. , ‘\— “not very profound’’ conversa- ee | which would cost two billion dol- time he could remember not | tars, | Tecognized in regent years (R-Mich) but had to abandon them ;) orene 5 | in the face of local or Congres- ae - : American prices down. ’ | ‘* ¢ _- | Breech predicted such adjust- “Yes, maybe that's it,” Truman ments would result in a reduction of the margin. of. dealer profits. Ford officials declined immediate comment on the newspaper story. |WILES SEES GROWTH \House battle to switch the site|) 4. _e * | Wan L, Wiles, executive vice jback to Manistee County in miss |Hint at Compromise president in charge of General 'Motors dealer relations, said basic Thompson's district. | | Miss Thompson has said former imposed Sunday by Presi-; | nme ere tng Contagious Hospital \ cuaitorumm, woud be eter « (QOUGNE for Children = | auditorium. It would pe either a | Part of the group of buildings | ' on the high school site or as a | (Continued From Page One) } ee eee, ‘a ring, he Auditors could take action on in | epecified. | structions from a : Supervisor | The commissien - authorized the COmcetae. - lease of the land required by Austin :emphasized today ne ithe driver training project for fall) definite imstructions have been |to the school district, and papers| given by Supervisors on merging |will be” prepared and presented) the operations of the TB Sana- ‘for final vote at the next meeting.| torium and the Contagious Hos- | The Recreation Board is stil!) pital. \working On its suggestions for play- | igrounds and other recreational] use| ifor the area. ee ee ee Use of the Contagious Hospital by either Pontiac General Hospital I: . * & ‘or the Children’s Home will hinge | Discussion at the commission °" the merger, he pointed out. ee. which lasted until mid-' TELLS OF CROWDING night, included assessments for syperyi ssterday received a paving Holland Avenue, which bas lucie’ on Prasat pli Arthur |been postponed indefinitely, and of — Moore, detailing the crowded ‘the reserving of a flood plain at conditions at the Children’s Home ithe rear of unplatted parcels on anq setting forth both temporary . — North Woodward Avenue. and long-range plans for solving | For the parcels, rezoning par- the problem. | thilly te terrace with a plain re- | ed | served along-the River Rouge, ‘Thefe are now 137 children | was approved by commissioners, housed in the Children’s ‘Home, ‘Moore said, When built in 1928, bs -the Home was intended to house 80 é | Who then tabled the motion rath- er than [et it go into effect. An | agreement with the preperty owner is sought before its re- lease. In addition, he said, 20 boys are being cared for in Camp Oakland, Hope that the four property own- 22d 36 children are housed in (we ers, one of whom is the city, of CUBES pees on cians (A venee eam ot Moore said authorities at the for 24 years. s = s Petitions for annexation to Royal Oak of a portion of Madison Heights were killed by the Board after its boundaries Committee re- ported the petitions were faulty. Two separate suits involving the petitions have been filed in Oak- land County Circuit Court. Supervisors decided ta proceed with building the new Animal Shelter on the County Service Center site despite an unexpected rise in costs of construction. |” 5 Sai | ~ iried in 1918 ‘to Mrs. Cordelia Jones | Hikes in costs of animal licens- lin Toledo, Ohio. } ing and other services were sug- — to help defray the ex: | Mr. Leckett came to. Pontiac 12 years ago from Okolona where -gun | : y |Portsmouth shipyard as a 17 funy using the word “phony” in his Steel, ; ihe is recovering from an opera- The World War..I] commander tion: ; : | “The nation has lost a great ay . | American and an outstanding na- Pontiac Deaths vat‘stncer ; ‘As commander in chief of our . , naval forces. and as chief of naval Henderson Lockett operations during World War II Henderson Lockett, 36, of 469 Adm. King carried his heavy re- Fildew St., died Saturday evening sponsibilities with courage, brilli- ‘in. Pontiac General Hospital. He ance and continued devotion to had been ill 18 months. duty. . He was born in Okolona, Miss.! Mrs. Eisenhower joins me in |June 5, 1900, the son of Hence aa) anges =e sympathies iv | is family. Vasana Hooks Lockett, and mar-) thet liissuners (of) condolence were received by King's family from many parts of the world. | | he was a member of the Easterm |sajute boomed while King’s ‘body On His Way Out Marines lined the mall of the! | NEW YORK -w—Company and ee signs point to continued Eton can agree on payments for a : union have hinted they both might long range growth of the automo- ) ted pavi mhonet ec [promised her the base, then went | he ready to give an inch or two in bile business with ‘substantial en a! peving Progect == ‘back on his word by moving the |). : comremensine’* for the mothe kee ener The Hol- \ ise to Kalleneka their deadlocked negotiations for Couragement” for the months IM- jing hearing was continued on the * ¢, 8 * |a new contract in the steel indus- mediately ahead. complaint of two owners | The Air Force has withdrawn a ey: Wilkes) scttceerd) 8) Unies Few mplaints on the water | The negotiators meet again to- Meeting at the annual .convention ant — request for m bez - A ; : ; ned | struction ot rege lags the fiscal | day in an effort to head off a of the dealers. Se semstisaare eequcted Sy ie. lyear beginning July 1 because of strike of 650,000 members of the “We have three basic condi- pert, None of the complaints ; United Steel Workers of America| : " : : the site dispute. | idnight Sa ; “ tions constantly exerting their in: | were of major status, he says. at midnight Saturday, contract €X- fluences on the long range |Piration time. growth of the automobile -busé- Report Sec. Wilson | wees wes no official shift | ness.” Wiles said. He listed these | | yesterday in-the positions taken~ as increased productivity, a Home believe that over a five to ten-year period, the Home will need facilities to care for 350 chil- dren. or a minimum added sleep- \Seeretary of the Air Force Talbott classrooms and other facilities. Income Norm in ‘79 ‘With the rainfall over the week- end, consumption dropped from six. Forecast at $12,000 ‘to two million a day, with a mil- lion gallons coming from Detroit.) EAST LANSING u—By 1979, a *. * «. Purdue University economist says. Mrs. Earl Bond ‘Americans will have an average eS ors income of $12:000, after taxes. Mrs, Ear! Bond, 1552 E. Rulfner, The fi was given M 7 vy died this morning at St. Joseph's oe we — Hospital, Pontiac Dr. Emanuel Weiler in a talk to an the 33rd annual National Institue by both sides. But there were | broadening market and popula- indications that a change may | tion growth, (Continued From Page One). | >¢ im the offing. ready incurred Ike's annoyance “There is ng evidence,’ he noted, The “big three’ producers—U_S. ‘‘that any of these factors are like- Bethlehem and Republic— ly to lessen in importance in the of Senate attempts to\@ve insisted on a five-year no- foreseeable future.” ing capacity for 128 in addition to. A lease was granted Michigan’ g1./ yuicsion Baptist Church. He | Portsmouth funeral |“ State Police for land on cha : |was taken to a antangraan linerease the Air Force budg Wey _ had been employed at Pontiac jome last night before transfer to . et. la five-y Se i | : ; | year agreement is too long. rvice Center site, and the old’ niger Division. “Tke now agrees with some of | . ¢ ® ‘strike contract. The union says) — oe . * | As for the short range. he said, “we should derive substantial en- Service will be at 8 p.m. this for. Organizational Management, meeting here. With King-at the time of his Ern- ‘ Funds were appropriated for hir- _ : i x additional em in the daughter, Mrs..Mary Lee Jones of death was his son, Lt. Cmdr. <= —— one brother, Joe Bates est J ironies - ment Equalization depart-|Lockett; three sisters, Mrs. Clara’ King t over es‘ commander ae and the ‘Bates of Chicago, Ill, Lenora in chief two weeks after the Japa- lease wag cancelled. ee | Besides his wife, he leaves a Oakland County Sheriff's depart-| Pontiac, Frederick Sayles | ' % * LJ * 2 * Gillespie of Okolona and Mrs. Pear- nese sneak attack on Pearl Har- | Board Chairman Delos Hamlin lina’ Wicks %f Cheftvilie, Ala. ~~ Tber_Dec. 7, 1941, and as chief of ‘of Farmington agreed to appoint! Mr. Lockett's body will.be at the naval operations only th ree an extra man to the five - man Frank Carruthers Funeral Home months later.. He was the first Inter-County Committee to act as from & p.m. Wednésday until] 10)man to hold beth ranks at the alternate for regular members. (P-m. Thursday when it wiff be sent same time. ee ito the Sykes haigiber eng in| : . iOkolona for service at 1 ‘p.m. Sun-| Hells Canyon Dam Bill \day. The Rev. E. A. Booze, pastor ‘Ready for House Debate lof his church, will officiate with! ‘burial in Red Bird Cemetery: ~ | “WASHINGTON — The House; a Interior Committee-teday approved Mrs legislation to authorize the contro-, S versial federal Hells Canyon dam) Mrs. Frederick (Mary) Sayles.’ _in the Snake River between Idaho 72, of 527 N. East Blvd., died) ~~ and Oregon. yesterday in Pontiac General) ° : Hospital after a two year illness. ; The committee vote, 15-13 clears. She was born in Finland March | the bill for debate in the House 2 1884, the daughter of Herman and what is expected to be a full- and Justina Hahka and married!. scale attack on the Eisenhower ad- May 15, 1916 in Newberry. | ministration’é power policies : we lige } Pontiac frem Newberry more Washington today. | Kansas Police Kill Man Weiler said the economic | |that Ike does not want him in his set to start cooling their blast fur-|Marshall, NAACP special counsel ~ top advisers that Charlie | John Morse, Bethlehem lawyer,!couragement, I think “from the be- lisen’s usefulness is at an end,” | said yesterday the industry is havior of the economy generally.” Upset Over Divorce : : a tf be ak ‘ Pe du- —_ wee this writer. “The anil on C. Sie agreement. ae ee Oe SILAND. | ‘e te tes " Ss! ) . ‘ . He : dustry's “present position. Hrs onvention riod said a depression could nature, and he simply can't un- cers as distraught over his wife's pe expected at some point along | Morse and other company rep- | : | Opens on Coast. growth of the next quarter cen- | derstand how a man can pull as divorce action, was shot and killed) ge tine. many boners and wound as | resentatives did not rule out a in a gun battle with police last . many feelings as the Defense | change in their stand if the union | night . Weiler said government controls | Seeretary has managed to do.” = was Fred Heber- tend to disturb the normal, eco- modified Ks demands. SAN FRAN ~ The dead man was Fred ie | The Defense Secreta ino trod] . SA! RA} CISCO # — In the ng. 50, owner of a cafe nomic cycle, and that stror lcm ee" fi 7 arti ' On the union side, a greyp of spotlight of election year politics Mrs Heberti od Sled wait for trols deny the rights of mi ties ‘ne es baie irst love when he 5,000 steelworkers in Pittsburgh the National Assn. for the Ad- ee and ean a court order re- and must be considered undenio- \morders th 7 epee ggricsey oh el Need Preside David J vencememt of Colored | Feopie adel him from bothering her. cratic. | milit = ~ hee? id to “try for a good three- opened its {ith annual convention -n) stosting took place inside About 400 executives of cham- tia anid apie to buy large| year settlement. here today with nearly 1.000 dele; 1. cafe. where deputies had gone bers of commerce and trade and peas pay Hides incom Sci lcotneae = = pe am meant .. “to investigate reports Heberling professional associations are at - Ss. | 0 a -year contrac ; . ; - tes S - tend nétitute sessions at Kel- | An official source said Wilson with a 20 cent-an-hour package Formal opening tonight will in- was threatening to shoot any oe vex: Onmeer speeches and a cer on sight. address by Thurgood New. Rail Yard Studied lis “safe"’ for the- time being, unless increase in the first year. clude welcotne jhe himself decides to resign, but) Meanwhile. some steel firms got keynote potential. second-term cabinet. |naces tomorrow night in prepara- who l¢d the successful legal bat- wt ition for a possible strike. ‘tle for racial desegregation in U.S. . He confided that Ike, who as a The union ordered placards for schools. political novice four years ago felt pickets and arranged for soup * 2 ® by Ci ty Commissioner Ss businessmen would make the best! kitchens. Association leaders already have; government executives, is now be-| = |made it clear they consider this ginning to doubt his own . . ja “crucial year” in-their fight to still isn't argu- European Moths Hit The Pontiac City Commission |alfernate to the city’s plan. That s|lumbia Avenue. to the northwest convinced that Grand is to substitute extension of Co- e | Mes. Sayles was a member of | ments | obtal . = ; : obn’s Lutheran. Charc “nek ge obtain what they call “full free- Trunke Western Railroad officials oes woot, cee) tases S ap It pe cares She came | “Bnei ._. * | Young Michigan Pines. - \dom’’ for their race in integrated request ‘for a $700,000 industrial through to Telegraph instead = pro-public power forces: in Con-| 1" Sault Ste. Marte. Business executives simpl¥|\ rast LANSING UA—The Euro. S | WHO COUNTS? style of residential addresses— | i In 1953 Wisconsin produced 11% million: cases of evaporated milk. | Tore. ary S09 members. Pareat-Tencher tocletiee in Tess, ENROLL FOR doggedly resisting this” alarmingly | where elderly housewives still toss] : “SUMMER SCHOOL— | | Progress has dictated that these. streets are now listed on the city map as East 4th or South 18th— but who came? * *. In these eee they have not heard — or pretend not to have, heard — that Caracas is a boom! ‘town, fast bec: oming the super-city jot South America. | But they must ‘know soon. Progress and the Public Works | Department are going to Itift | them off Misery corner and put them in a 2%0-story. apartment | | house and give them new wordly outlooks. ~ Whether | like filet mignon or not. they GREGG SPEED-WRITING SHORTHAND —_ BOOKKEEPING _ TYPEWRITING = CALCULATOR | | ACCOUNTING. . COMPTOMETER in the. i i Personal Typing | } HOURS: Morning 8:00 to 10:45 — Afternoon 11:00 to 1:30 - Evening 6:30 to 9:00 (Monday and Thursday) | and Other Subjects Are Available VETERAN APPROVED The Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence Street, Pontiac Phone FE 2-3551 Call in person or return this Ad for Bulletin ice ae ee ce ee ce ae ec ee ie Optometrist 7 North Saginaw. Street | Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things in Sight” Open Friday Evenings LALLA APL OL Ped Closed Wedreetoy Afternoons > With « up ‘to 225 Thunderbird horsepower; plus the Thunderbird's “let's - linea, Ford brings j you ms — a vail | There's no vacation like a FORD vacation Thunderbird performance made it the world’s largest- selling V-8 “The following Life Underwriters who ore quolified to use this As you nidge the gas pedal, your Thunderbird V-8 engine takes over—fast! And it’s merely a hint of the performance that makes Ford the best-selling eight in the world today! What a performer your Ford is as you settle down for the long trip ahead! How much more won over all, Class Economy Run. And oh! What fun it is to arrive in the “kissin’ cousin” of the Thunderbird! For those Thunder- bird-inspired lines draw crowds everywhere you “A” Cars in the Mobilgas go. And they're lines that will stay in yi tool Why not recapture the fun of driving on your vacation . . . and all through the year! 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Ball- s wis «4:6 endand lard V0 etgtia—00 Wencetuy 6 ®, ) Ovwald Burke Richard V. Klenonins Clarence Shelton | Joint Suspension is quietly leveling the bumps _* sight In the world c,leotene point « White side. © ° - Robert aan Re aeally~at ey bee vl . making even the smoothest roads smoother. Seeeeemeess Windshield washer one Pat'how oi thers Gi bom * C. Burton Clark Herold W. hacen fori F. Seolaer ‘And steering’s up to 15% easier. : Pe ia + yon oid ams bt of Gvorene vate p oad ° ‘ Joe Corniuk Olin LaBarge Rebert Vance Ford’s.a star performer in the savings depart- hen toahssan) Gauges Ser ees ak tedinel tomes ° pm papell race! —- a : | —t Cover — eS ment, too. It doesn’t take Jong to see why Ford + ESET TB ay carenting Citas , tet , ‘ee FP 8 William A. Graves _ — _— Rebert Zimmerman u | ne "a7 South Saginaw Street, we “Phone FE 5-4101 on = : t eee : , “s . Published for tie — Lite eerie | | ey = . | om . “ . \ ; - Seer pare ax cod ————— NOW! A FORD WITH AIR CONDITIONING COSTS LESS THAN ‘MANY MEDIUM-PRICED CARS WITHOUT IT! TRY ONE TODAY] <———-~ ; = 4 i Pa $ + Saeed re } = f Po° j 4 = cee on i ' Fj : « / . \ ff | : a a a / / ¥ NM ‘ i 4 } . ty | ; ' ff r { | 7 I ¢ eer Wee bes pact ie es sips i en i gy ag t Se ree a ee ee POR 9 ies pie: Ae fics . * ee ee ee yhe —- Se sae a0 age or al ie hn A eg eee Rr oe ,*# palin dele ipnag igiicpaarcck osama eerie api ale ply J ee Bick J —— ‘@ ; :2 . -, » i Y F F j 4 } - 5 ¥ } i & - | f ‘ ‘ < ‘ ¥ ‘ (=. THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1056 Aa \ a a a ~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, | “s 2 4 > : = : Ja ee a i ee nsung Heroes an eroines Waging ‘Hot War mame . The adage that péople are apt to be loquacious but|City youngsters*as they dance through the stream of 4 —_— ineffective when it comes to the weather ain’t neces- water given off by an opened fire hydrant. sarily so... not when the mercury soars into the 90's, » * x -* is anyway. a : But not nearly'as puzzled are l0cal office workers: at * * x ithe prospect of a pair of Bermuda shorts op two mark- , Ingenious Americans go to great lengths to be com- UP girls in the staid offices of a stock brokerage firm, ____ : dite And many a.secretary might feel envious at the scene ee ae eee and the mn beats of the Fort Wayne, Ind., young lady who donned a cruelly down on hedd and rooftop. It's a pastime that/natning suit and walked off to sit a-spell in a local ice has earned its own slogan (“beat the heat’’), has earned house. millions for air conditioner makers, and which makes'- _ © °* * resort-owners smile widely indeed. | _ It’s all’a part of keeping cool in the “good old summer- ts t ‘time”"—and it’ll be with us for a long time, uhless some * , poor fugitive from the heat figures out a way to move Oaklandites, with their wealth of lakes, may look in|\Oakland County” next to the North Pole for three wonder at the picture of a crowd of happy New York;months oj the year. —_ a SPRAY ONE WAY — ‘Big Ruth and “Little Ellen,” star attrac- AP Wirephote thons-at the Little Rock, Ark.. Zoo, are without air-conditioning, this young protege, “A little water spray heips.’ It was 92 degrees in the summer. But. as the more experienced. Ruth doubtlessly told her «shade when the cameraman came upon thik scene : CHALK ONE FOR THE GIRLS — Board mark-up giris at the AP Wirephete Des Mouhes, Ia. brokerage office-ef Merrill. Lynch, Plerce, Fenner of the chalked-up figures getting smeared as_is the case when they @ Beane have. adopted the Bermuda shorts style for hot surfimer wear dresses. Although their male countefparts in the office haven't days. Carolyn Waldron, ™, and Madeline Kieler, 17) gay the shorts 9 gone so far as to adopt the pants, soiné have joined other “‘emanci- Kive them greater treedom of movement and do not result in some . pated” mensn discarding shirts and ties for sportshirts. att as we EG : United Press Phote ees OR Z ° : ROYALTY TOPS HEAT— ee ‘ er Jtalian Princess Doris Pignate!!l UNDERWATER CLASSROOM — Students at Uaites Frese Enete cruises to a stop on water skis | thé University of Michigan nevér skip classes to instructor: wearing a white T-short, briefs his stu- ynite sen ing ag’ a member of ; get in a swim. They just have to drop into the dents from -the university's department of fish her country’s team in a match ~ school's swimming pool and they're in class. The eries on the do's and don't's of skin-diving beiween Italy and Great Britain. ¢ MISS CALIFORNIA ‘ : A ’ BEAUTY QUEENS—No sum: < 1 : Ee are mér heat wave can be expe- < 2 as 4. United Press Phote ee COOLEST BOOTH — “Air conditioned” on by g combination of telephone and television. The fenced ‘0 wt othe tan ¢ : e three sides is this ultra-modern telephone booth in bootir was developed by a student at the Illinois pear ie p Tete tha: elite this year —— : , — a : which users can talk while the breeze goes by. Institute “of Technology. The enclosed ‘structure > a6 Joan Beckett (top), ‘Mist ICT HOUSE BLUES—Estelle Dana, pretty office’ secretary from ‘ ‘5 | AOalted Press Phote Actually, the unit is a “phonevision’’ booth in above was byilt especially for parks and wooded California,” and Beverly Cass, Fort ‘Wayne, Ind., decided recently that if'was tod darned hot to room. The ice inthe background is real and oh,. 80 cool. Outside it which the caller can watch to.whom he is talking. “areas, 4 ol ok A Miss New Jersey work, .so she went to a local ice factory and took over the storage was 93 degrees — inside it was B.C ‘ “ie age ae ‘ panes : — oe : i 2 aa : ’ eer ee, Py \ oN See ) a { & po : j - ; ; A lt \ f ; dd . | | u seutionagal sash x Ob Nee a ces < day night at Wisner Field. met ~~ do we have a .300 hitter on the = 84 OS COG7 ET Pw ee ee Ck, kind aoe Me 'reaeer . bets Field cubicle ‘today and be- - would indicate we need pitching David Bauer, father of two of the great names in women's golf, Alice and Marlene, has found a new pro- tege for the game. . He started Alice in golf at the age of 11-and then put a club in Marlene’s-hand at three. His newest star-to-be % a 3 ae ne yy 2 SS Se SS Ee Poe ee ee ee ee ee ee ee eee + St Se ae. Tae es Se ST Se = ES ER TE Re ee ee Shy — ae the Fa eg ee ee a RP ae re 3 : 5 * “ue * e? ‘ ¥ 7? * y : - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, J UNE 26. 1056_ | : is 19-month-old Heidi Bauer Hagge, Alice's daughter. Grandfather Bauer has cut a club down to fit Heidi's swing and he predicts the best of Bauer family golfing girls is yet to come, in about 12 years. “She is learning fast,” said Bauer “and by the time she is four she will probably be doing better than Mar- - 27s lene at that age.” * Marlene, the younger of the sisters, was hitting the ball 35 yards when she was four, according to Bauer, and at 15 she was shooting men’s par on some of the tougher courses around Los Angeles. At the course in Los Angeles where she won the women's golf cham- pionship there was a _ sign that read “Chil- dren Under 14 Not Allowed.” She was 13 at the time. The elder Bauer com- pared the games of Alice and Marlene and at the Forest Lake Country Club here we had occasion to talk with him, he pointed to at the University of Southern Cali- x * HEIDI | reason’s for Marlene’s recent surge in the LPGA. “Actually Alice has more of the better strokes than Marlene,” he said, “but Alice becomes nervously excited over her shots. “One thing I can truthfully say Sauer is that Mar- lene’s chipping is definitely her strong point.” fact she can chip better than many of the men Pros I know,” he added. * * In her chipping~Marilene has a tendency x be cautious to a point where her ball is always short, he “Pj n pointed out, so now “I've been trying to get her to shoot’ for a spot just to the other side of the cup.” Bauer at this time actually called Marlene’s way to victory in the Forest Lake tourney. “If she wins, . I think it will be because she will put herself in position with a good chip shot.” - That's just what happened in the sudden death play- off .Marlene put a beautiful chip within a foot of the/old cup, then dropped it to defeat Patty Berg. Explaining Marlene’'s red hot streak in winning four veteran Eldon Nelson by just/in thé. ninth inning to beat the Kansas City $3 and take a: 1*3- of the last six LPGA tournaments, Bauer said, “it was three firsts. just the matter of getting tournament-tough.” x * * hard to live up to those press stories,” he said. “Now she is more relaxed, although the publicity on the marriage has not tally,” he figured. aes the situation men- Bauer had little to say about Marlene’ 8 marriage to her sister’s ex-husband and it was evident during the stay here that he had little to say to Hagge as well. It seemed apparent that Bauer was willing to forget he had a son-in-law by the name of Hagge, but he read-. ily pointed out that there were still two Bauer girls, Alice and Marlene and a Bauer grandchild, Heidi. Alston Needs Plenty Help BROOKLYN #— Manager Walt Alston of the world champion Brooklyn Dodgers sat in his - Eb- gan thinking out loud, “Let's see,” he murmured, haven't had a starting puecher 4 ‘fin | ish a game in the last 18. That help badly. But, on the. other hand, neither club, and everyone said we were loaded with power.” s a Last shh: tor example, the Brooks pulled one out of the first in Jersey City, their home away from home,,.when they edged the Chicago > Cubs, 3-2, Until Junior Gi sib Union 9 Trims Griff's Grill The CIO Local 594 with a 13-hit attack’ against. two hurlers to chalk up qa 10-6 victory over Griff's Grill in a Class A City Baseball League game Mon- Third baseman Hal Trott made Allen; , Jones, lashed out]. liam hit a triple in the eighth in- ning between two Cubs’ errors, the Dodgers couldn't touch young Don Kaiser. . * * Ld] As it turned out, they collected, just four hits. Carl Erskine, who Select a Drink upset Louie’s Tav- hadn't finished a game since his no-hitter on May 12, went eight innings. He has made seven starts since. Coast Trials |he said. ,|said. The Coliseum commission, “In | ’““When she ‘first turr.ed pro amidst all the publicity|an his earnings over $50 a week! the girls were getting, she was tight and she tried too|Will be banked. fo Give Boost 'to Games Fund. ‘Expect From $100,000 $150,000 to Come ‘From Finals | _LOS-ANGELES #—The U. s. Olympic Fund will get a boost of $100,000 to $150,000 from the final! track and field trials here, Bill ‘Nicholas predicts. * <6 * : Nicholas is general manager of the Los Angeles Memorial Coli- seum where the business of select- ing the Olympic team will be run off Friday night and Saturday aft- ernoon. - He foresees a crowd of 55,000 for Friday night and 45,000 for Satur- day. He expects few, if any, re- served seats will be left by Fri- day, 32,000 reserved places al- ready having been sold for each of the programs. *. “It's the os advance sale we've ever had for a track meet,” * * * Nicholas said that as of yester- day ticket buyers had contributed | $2,200 to the fund in addition to the admission price. : * * ®& ‘Everything above actual ex- penses goes to the fund, Nicholas he added, is charging no rent and, furthermore, guaranteed the fund $50,000 or the net if that’s bigger as it appears certain to be. * * = The brilliant array of talent is ;on hand, for the most part, work- jing out. The Coliseum ‘will be open ‘to them again today, then will be closed until meet time. Most com- 'petitors will finish their training ‘fornia a —— * | Olympic Coach Jim Kelly of |Minnesota says the team selected here—the first three finishers and the fourth as an alternate in each levent— will be in excellent condi- | tion. | There will be a series of sum- '— §tan_ Leonard of LaChuteQue- ‘Golf Tournament today. iSam Snead at the same stage in played concurrently. 4 c enone VIRGINIA WATER, England Canada's two-man team of Leo- ‘nard and Al Balding held a five stroke margin over Hogan’ and round, ‘the 50th of the tournament, Leonard had the Canada Cup competition, away from the Snead continued to play badly, Hogan, one stroke behind Leo- nard at the start of today’ s final ‘ill After 14 holes of the morning. Hogan appeared to be tiring rap-) idly and Leonard showed no signs stretched his lead} * * & over Hogan to two strokes and the Canadian team continued to pull Americans _ as Hogan and Leonard both shot — SAFE ON PICKOFF TRY — Earl Torgeson, Detroit Tigers first baseman gets back to the bag in time on a pickoff attenipt by Washington pitch- in Detroit. mer meets to keep the men in| shape. Jockey Given Money’ : From Purses 2 AP Wirepheto — er Camilo Pascual to Washington first baseman _storming Althea Gibson her ~ Roy Sievers in the 4th inning of Monday's 8 game The Associated Press fopportunist. It pore paid 17-year-olds in the/one and there are-“two more to'unearned runs to overhaul Chi- country, | spending —— ® * Young eae son of 39-year But no matter how many races be wins, his parents won't let him jockey Ralph (Buddy) Root, is turn last night, dropping a squeeze the second leading rider at Dela- | bunt that got the winning -run ware Park with 19 wins: to trail, ‘home as the Braves scored three hits, including 4 home runs, to beat : Philadelphia | Phill ies $5. gets $50 a week for take his place. The Braves simply|cago’s Cubs hoe lhave a new hero everyday. 7 ¢ the —— an League, ~The It was catcher Del Crandall’s;New York Yankees buried their ~ four-game losing streak wunder 14 * * * In Shutouts Mark City Play ‘men's City Softball League action’ -hitter as Bicmar Inn whitewashed , hurled Monday night to highlight | ‘Harris. at Beaudette and North Side parks. Bicmas Hank Dudzinski tossed a three- and Bud Sam Bensoh, 22), in an American Walled Lake division game at Beaudette. Dick \schmict. Cork also gave up only three hits, ( letoatam but two came in the 4th inning’ giks also retained the! Picking the big guy in Milwau- Braves two-gamb lead ag second ‘kee's slightly fantastic comeback | place Cincinnati STANTON, Del. —Apprentice in the National League pennant Pittsburgh into fifth place 2-1 and s| Jockey Reggie Root. one of the chase is like stepping on ants. Tag third-place. Brooklyn scored two rallied to drop game edge over Chicago, the. idle, runner-up. Washington added to Del Crandall Braves’ New Hero twice for the Yanks, who aia had homers from Hank Bauer and Joe ra ended an 0-for-23 slump with a double while Mickey Mantle went 4for-5, including a_ perfect 2-for-2: against the shift devised by! A's ‘Manager in Boudreau. oné-under-par 34s on the front ‘nine, Balding had a 36 and Snead 67 yesterday, took a one-stroke a 38. This added two more strokes to the Canadians’ lead in the ag- igregate_ scoring for the Canada Collins as Johnny Kucks won hfs‘ 10th with a nine-hitter. Yogi Ber-; Six Americans jbec, led Ber’ Hogan of Fort Worth,| three 'Tex., by one stroke at the 45hole| behind again at the Tth hole of \P&” “ree, but he bo vd the m2 tuin of the International Individual] the morning round. two and Leonard -went ahead | \a par four at the lith. At the 13th/tion, in which teams from 20 rounds in 3rd place at 138, over the Wentworth Club's the lead orl a hy yesterday. |United States. A stiff wind was blowing and the weather was cool as the Americans and Canadians, paired together in the last four- some of a 20-team field, began play in the 3rd round. \putt for a par four on the 3rd. saved him from further trouble. Hogan knocked in a 20 - foot putt for a birdie three on the 3rd. Hogan and Snead both took bo- gey fives at the 505-yard 4th hole) while Leonard and Balding had ‘par fours. Both Americans were Hbunkered on their 2nd shots. Snead | ‘blasted out 12 feet past the hole ‘and just missed his putt. Hogan. ‘came out to within four feet and ‘also missed. Van Donck started the last two Hogan shot the Ist three holes “Bur- ma Road"’ course in 4-3-3 while | Leonard took 6-3-4. Leonard started today’s 36-hole final with a one stroke edge over Hogan, taking The conan a contest for the Canada Cup, which is played concurrently, remained close al- (though Hogan’s good start picked ‘up a couple of strokes for the af Sunningdale. Today’s Winners in British Amateur SUNNINGDALE, England ww — Jane Nelson of Indianapolis, run- ner-up for the American Women's championship last year, turned back Ireland's Philomena Garvey 1-up in a 20-hole struggle today to lead a steady American advance into the 2nd round of the British Women's Amateur Golf champion- ship.: It wag the ist match involving members of the U.S. and British Curtis Cup teams. Miss Garvey, twice runner-up for the British yomen's title, and Miss Nelson, who lost te Pat Lesser in the 1955 U.S, Women’s final, beth lest their singles matches in the cup series. can Curtis Cup player and the 6th American golfer to win her Ist | round match this morning, One- ‘Curtis cupper, Mrs. Philip Cudone Leonard was in the rough on the of Montclair, N. J., was eliminated. ‘ist and 3rd holes and only a long’ American winners included Mar- igaret (Wiffi) Smith of St. Clair, Mich., Polly Riley of Fort Worth, Tex., Barbara Romack of Sacra-* mento, Calif.. Mary Ann Downey of Baltimore and Marv Patton Janssen of Charlottesville, Va. Miss Janssen is the only one who is not a member of the Curtis Cup ‘team. Miss Romack easily defeated Mrs. Frank Stranahan of Toledo, 8 and 7, in the only all-American match of the Ist. round. , Brough Seeks Fifth Crown WIMBLEDON, England, June 26 ww — Louise Brough, four. times ‘Wimbledon tennis winner, started ‘her quest for her fifth women’s isingles crown today with barn- main stumbling block. Althea, seeded fourth, already jhas beaten top seeded Louise once this season—in three sets at Man- chester earlier this month. She comes te Wimbiedon with 18 European and British tourna- ment trophies in her grip and she’s determined to become first Negro to win world’s premier tennis crown. It was a mixed bag of women's singles and men's doubles today with none of the seeds liable to run into much trouble. Second seeded Mrs. Beverley Baker Fleitz of Long Bes ac ch, ss Fist round of play in the Wom- Ce LeClair, Wilson Share Lead the lead with 84 at Knollwood CC. last year’s runnerup, goes up against unknown Spani: ard Mrs. P Barril. Shirley Fry of St. Petersburg Fla., who didn't play here last year and comes back this tim: ranked fifth. met Belgium’s Chris- tiane Mercelix: First No-Hitter CROWLEY, La. —George Bru- net pitched the first no-hitter of the Class C Evangeline League season Monday night as the Crow- lev Millers defeated the Alexan- dria Ace -3-0. Sports fade TODAY Rasebalt CLASS A--GQriff's Orill vs Elks No 723, 5 30 p.m, at Wisner CLASS E—hlets vs Oxford Wildcats a -Coulmbia-Josiyn south Pontia BGs ub vs Auburn Hetehts Boys Club a! Columble-~Joslyn nerth and , American Legion va. Pontiac Police at | Washing on, all games at 3:30 p.m Softball MEN'S Prankin eee s *8 North Side Merchants 7 ; n cTTy en's District Golf Assn. medal-play amid were two strokes ahead of bow Pavilion vs. Lunstera Marker ana a. That ess it ‘u in a row for the Tigers’ tailspin, handing De- championship, yesterday found MTS: Janet Laboskey. All played'*' CITY GILB—GMC we. Pulver Tire. 1 |handle the sudden flood of money. | Milwaukee under Manager Fred troit its ninth straight. defeat 53 4) o.i4 LeClair and Mrs. Betty in last week’s Wolverine Open. wate ee eee Haney, who either fs the manag- in the only other AL game sched- Championship flight cards for the ,, > ‘Emmaneul Daptint “. a —— ler of the year or a whale ot an /uled. Jane Wilson of Ann Arbor ‘Sharing; first round: Brayton Drug ve. Drayton Drug. 8 20. at = — * ¢ 8 ~ Mrs. Susie LeCair + 6a“ The Redlegs stayed in second Ife | i be oi fan iio $0083 eg tnescbal Mra. danet La: ey... “- CLASS A— And a ler with their third straight victory, MSU Go er Rodewa d Pay feral ge ao ia Pine Foods. 3:30 ry 2g ts Fes “ne scoring ‘twice in the seventh as One Stroke Off Pace Mrs. Hilot Payson... 3-44-88 ance at Columble-Joslyn south and Ov. Kluszewski hammered his Mareie wine SAE tora wideats ve. Gingelivtie at Cotum- Two sparkling shutouts were ited to four hits by pitcher Bob, bd home run and Ray Jablonski COLUMBUS W— Ken Rodewald srs‘ c W Smead a S48 ar. nerth, both games at 5=0 hit a sacrifice fly. of Michigan State University shot ese Oriana pen veeesc ot: +48 CLASS F North Side Kiwanis = 0-9 3 * 8 @ a 36-37—T73,-one over par and a Mrs. T. 0 Mcleughiin .-...°. 48-47—62 ee ek nm eat, Boos "TUTE 009 200 22 38. Don Kaiser, who two-hit the Stroke off the lead, in the Ist of Mrs 3 6 ftepepinanes ...... $4-48-—92 ggg Sl arti on Wolves. 1 e Cork gee r Overcashier; Dedstashs| iE igers three weeks ago, gave. two qualifying rounds for the Na- ‘Mrs Vincent Stace : too. 44-41-93 eum shee Arectg cogs) uate ween e-3 6% ‘Brooklyn only four hits in his 7 1-3 tional Intercollegiate Golf Tourna- Mrs, a, Beth Stricker se 2-43-68 tombie Joslyn north. clus we oom s Sremace Oe 2 u Jo i il yaete | Tigers’ best pitcher walked seven ¥ RARE S. ‘big Fun the ah ‘inning. =F : FREATMENT: Ain severat- “arti-/ One-piece backswing, straight jover White Brothers ina of Trenton entered the quarte- Fy Washington batters yest epday, a nai went out of Briggs Stadium and But that was all the Bengals got cles 1 concentrated on the import- from the ball, to the pull-down of ford League softball game Monday y the aes Cla Ee . 5 * 7 ’ i : i i : + ) r 7} Carves 2.41 Mark. at|three of them scored to help the traveled at least 300 feet. The off Pascual and his successor,/8ce of the left arm pull-down to/the left arm and on and gut after night at Drayton Plains. final round of the Easte “i iy “5 Nats toa 53 triumph *}one Courtney hit popped into the lefty Dean Ston?@. Nats, mean. Keep the swing grooved and to in- the ball. It’s got to be free, natural,| Dick Cooper picked up three hits Court Tennis Championship joday Halfway Point; Sent to : right field stands at the 325-foot while, scored twice in the 7th while SUre transferring the weight to the No tenseness, ___/tin four times at bat, one a triple. after two easy wins yesterday. , | Orioles in 1955 A bome rum that manager mark, just over the screen. But taking advantage of Hoeft's wild. left leg. Let me give you a little tip 40 and Chuck Cooper and Troyer each actin Wee io i Bucky Harris called “wn tong lit did just as much damage “as eeaey Se | Let me add this significant point: eliminate any tendency to tigbten made two safeties to spafk the “The late Charlie slg ey i ; . ; as the one Mantle hit” was the Mantle’s, picking away a possible —— 7 With the pull-down, let the right UP or freeze the body action with Lakeland attack. two Chesapeake Stakes at Laure’ ; NEW YORK — Baltimore's) “limeher, though. Clint Courmey Tiger victory before only 3,281 | _ A single by Eddie Fitzgerald 3 de nip ithe the pull-down, As sketch shows,, Sid Gregory and St. Amour gar- He scored with Anchors Aweigh George Zuverink, a relief special- belted a two-run homer as a disgusted fans. | preceded Courtney's deciding | y side Bo into the kink the right knee inward or for-|nered two hits apiece for the losers. in 1931 and with War Admiral ! oe ke ‘ * ke th pinch hitter in the 8th inning to ' In their biggest inning since their home rum in the 8th, and another | K-\ / swing, or you'll’ yong with the pull-down, and youl on Herr and Daniels pitehed for,in 1937. po ! ae anremh “6 “a Page : ba , 7 — | _* single and an error by | Aig kill power at the automatically get the right side | — - ee ene i “lev , Cincinnati. and) : substitute 3rd baseman Bob Ken- ball started into action so that the right gms + | ¢ both : i | Detroif, has carved out the lowest . nedy brought home the 5th score. — You can pull hand. applies its full power at the : ae . - ) earned-run average in the major! | Paul Foytack gets a chance to down with the Pay down tkeete ihe right First Quality Original Equipment Quality leag : ‘night to even his record at 5-5 and. : e pull-down "keeps e ng Qe { the ais ‘. he season ee ap the club vot al nes left arm and still'arm in proper position. close to the eo : | . ‘slump since 1953. He will be be locked at im: side of the body, to move in past opposed by the Nat's - Bunky. The 29-year-old righthander has, | Stewart allowedg15 earned runs in 56 in- pact to. retard the hip. Kinking the right knee is ‘lube: q 2 key movement. Work on it. _| . CubRead speed. Copyright 1955, John F. Dille Co.) ——— nings for a 2.41 ERA, best in the) =” eae PETROL. You may sense —___ secede st tee cw cae sig mentee Os (heal as 105 Bul _ 4g All Fords thru 1954 (6 appea in games—all relief Ee i Megtenge LN 0) i ee erry a j __ @ppearances. His won-lost record : ° 3 4 c2 pie .4 ; 7 ~ Bell Overtakes Also TAIL PIPES and Cyl.) and All Studebsker ' is 4.2. eal $ © 0 Kenned;. 3b 2 0 1 M d 1H EXHAUST PIPES thru “54 (6-Cyl.) Statistics compiled by The As-| § 61 Tuttle. ef ‘ ° i eda Onors — . sociated Press also disclose today Port t feats 3 33Ein ft ~ aan j — eae ses Sitare Sot seme” PEt Rea 3 8¢Up tor Grabs niderin Po INSTALLED heads the National League Magen pees j ‘at Ohio State 75 19 33 3 1 “ aes ; ; : : | Courtney homered for Pascual ia ath COLUMBUS, Ohio @—A wide. NEW YORK \#—Gus Bell, one FREE earned-run listings with a 2.45 mark. Figures include games : through Monday afternoon. lwomtanon = ae for rae on 08 open race for medal honors was of Cincinnati:s homer-bustrn’ Red- : > ¢ # j Detrets 000 300 0003 ON today in the second round of legs, has taken over the National : . { - ined RBI—Si ‘ PLOY » 50 latinna . ao ~oiate ce - . 0 | Zuverink, who went to the Ori- lcecriney 2 Menten Ticks “ae® the 59h National Intercollegiate League's center-field spot from Open ‘9 to 9” FE 8-0424 ' oles on waivers from the Tigers in July 1955, is hoping to become the second relief hurler to cap- Ga DP—-Vaidivielso and Sievers Golf Championship qualifier, with Brgoklyn'’s Duke Snider in the LB—Washington 12, Detro#t 9. BB — . hen pre ee ; : : . .* |Pascual §, Stone 1 Hoel, 7 SOQ-—Pas- 28 Sharp-shooting students brack- ext-to-last tally of the fans’ All- errr — . cual 2, Stone 2, Hoeft 10. Masterson 2 eted within three strokes at the Star Game balloting i i ; 'HO—Pascual 5 in 7. Stone 2 in 2 ture the earned-run title. Hoyt (Hoeft 10'in 7%). Maas 0 in 's, Masterson top of the heap — = = 2° Wilhelm of the New York Giants! Se ee Fe cheno 4 Ohio State University’s old man Bell now tops Snider in the vot- S Don't take your life was the only other bullpen artist (|WP—Pascual W--Pascual (3-1)- L - par—he's 7/—had a Jot of fun with ing by 56.602 to 53.668 : top. +++ in your hands on to turn the trick when he topped. | Boot ie pee peer heel ag nha McKip- the field of 246 in yesterday's Final results in the vole for : opening 18-hole jaunt. allowing the July 10 game at WasfRington your vacation this year. Save Time. Trouble and Cash Too. Trade your a . only two of the aspirants to break probably will be released Friday even by the office of Commissioner tires now for the best allowance in @d ine xe - * ss Ford Frick. which is tabulating town. Out front as thes swung into tO the vote this season ° U. S. Royal — Mebile Tires the National League in 1952. ; * *« ® } Cleveland's Herb Score ranks third with a 2.76. { ee ne . : — _ day's play were Rudy Boyd, North- a e. DOUBLE STAMPS [ western senior from Laporte. Ind. There were no other changes =) WEDNESDAY L Or Inancing and Bill Redding. Purdue junior among the leaders 3 : - ~ from Logansport, Ind Mickey Mantle, a cinch in cen- “mee 9 cma ler Beld fer the AL, probably wal — Soucy’s LOS ANGELES \®—The Cleve- . . finish with more than 100,000 a* 3 = Sarr : : Only Fish a Big One votes. The Yankee slugger leads land organizing committee ,for the . : ~ As far as Verne Eisenhardt the individual vote with 94.278. Right behind is Pittsburgh first baseman Dale Long. who tops the Pan-American Games scheduled in Cleveland in 1959 has until Aug SHAVE | / { | re : : s : __ a4 4 ¢ ; Douglas F_ Roby of Detroit. ex- ounce bronzeback. about 21 inches 7 . : WHISKERS ecutive committee chairman. said long ~ -Moore Fighting Parker * : the committee approved a pro- The husky bass was the only fish : " é for Crown, Pilot Says ; “MUTT AND JEFF" CHAMPIONS — Henry Beam (right) of ee Sei. dollar site in Fast ae ant da aaa " ~ etsy ‘ton | Birmingham towers above diminutive Gerry Bunce of Pontiac as they Cleveland but set the finance.plan. brother-in-law, Floyd Sultz. also of, TORONTO um — Charléy John-] . . : : Fad ae ae ea ether nite sec: E . deadline in vesterday’s meeting. Rochester. took that night ston, manager of light-heavyweight AS ELECTRONICS TECHNICIANS | Chamber of Cx : championships Sa : “In the event of failure to give : - = boxing champion Archie Moore, — mber of Commerce tennis c pi ps Saturday in the annual the necessary guarantee by that ‘Shoe’ Meeting Tonight said today Moore's fight. against Wages $100 and up per week paid qualified personnel. No ex- Rochester. was concerned Friday 1211 North Perry St. ~ ¢ there we S : : - 15 to submit a financing plan to night here was only one bass 1D National League balloting with Vie Soucy FE 3-9557 i: . ; Lakeville Lake. And that one was 90.039 the Games exec 5 - E c c . € Eames executive commiltee a mighty fine one, a 4-pound-+ _ _ aoe Sees Sa SSeS | Wagea See aeE ene SSS SS EE tournament at Oakland Park. Beam won the Junior division title gate. the %rd Pan - American James J. Parker next. month perience necessary, Applicants must be willing to enroll in an me | while Bunce annexed the Boys’ division crown. The two boys proudly (Games will be withdrawn and re-| All men horseshoe pitching en- definitely will be for the vagant inexpensive training .pregram covering RADIO-TELEVISION, > a | display their trophies. , J awarded to some other city in the thusiasts who desire to enter the world heavyweight title “COLOR TV, ELECTRONICS, AUTOMATION, etc. Training . . = —— . . Western Hemisphere,” Roby said. 1996 Waterford Township Horse-. Johnston said Moore would sicn WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRESENT EMPLOYMENT, 2s Hot Finish! | The Cleveland City Council is shoe League ore) mvnes to meet today for the July 25 15-nound and will quelify you for entrance into this highly professional e far from agreement on the site.at the Drayton Plains Ball Park bout. And he said if will have to field. For further particulars—no obligation—write name, age and the financing tonight at 7 o'clock. Pitching com- be recognized as a world title and address to MASS. TRADES SCHOOL, Box 19, The Pentiac petition and discussion of league scrap because ‘These are the only Wetllaufer Wins Playoff sed Poessit @2 = oe EES a . : Ss 4 | Straight - shooting and sharp-| had tied at 74 te pace the quali- in NCAA Net Tests : F | F q _ ‘ * putting little Johnny Wettlaufer of fiers fer the Waterfard Junior : : : wy . . . . i Waterford High yesterday walked Chamber of Commerce ird an- Ala AN as I h ! \* \off with medalist honors in a golf sual event. eee ices eit wee tne U think this survey > tourney this year for the 2nd time, — * ARS ‘ ° ° : _ c Other qualifiers for the state today as the second round of. the e . ee plavott tourney at Kalamazoo were NCAA Tennis Tournament got un- will interest any took the extra hole at . . ~ der way at Kalamazoo College . | Pontiac Country Club. with a par hips Gees a a ts ne wih < cursor in the sincles every car owner. te step Ed Tokarsky of Milford tord with €1: Cleiend Charhonean competition . ‘ whe had a begey 6. The beys MW Waterkat wih © é Ratend _Braal's Jose Agus ro. ce fending . It tells which 8 “s 1 Harms of Waterford was the NC oe ae : om u i fret li * : 4 lternz seede sO git «pas the ifs 3 ; £674 OCBS Members See“ e sais taciuies 20 piaseen “RE or 8 e : BaSOMne ie . LE field included 20 plasers The only seeded player exténded & g e . and the cards ranged from the was Jot Lesch of UCLA former pre erre ry t e j | medalist 74 down to a 126 for the weep ee ee SOEMET ' | 7 = $s us ie | m ie * National Jumor and Boys cham- : Ls ute, 6e ’ 18 holes. > h d + lt. ; pion. John Powless, 6-4, entry men WNno esign : June membership gathering of ,, ma from Murray State) Ky..-carried . . gf Oaktand couny Sportsmen's cob. Lightburn Victor ets tee os befor tons _ and build ; ‘Wednesday at 8 pm. in the club- oh eee es > : 9 ‘house, Waterford is “dedicated to 0 J k J da $s neW cars io fesegr uae ver Jake Josato SANDERS today aries | A special program, featuring : ‘ . ’ y : .{“Let Go Fishing,” an all color) NEW YORK. uw — Lightweight FOR RENT Wilton. iC Dalia B fil will be presented by Charles contender Ludwig Lightburn of mi“ @ Helin, inventor and manufacturer British Honduras, planned a box- TRAVIS Edit r sriaoeaeceD lof the famous “‘flatfish.”’ The filming tour of the Orient today fol- HARDWARE . ‘ 1tO : |will show bass fishing as well as lowing his victory over Jake Josa- | * Oretard Lake Ave. FE 8-8774 Y pt 4 = ” muskie fishing in Lake St. Clair, to last right. le ee nS = £S Lee . 1 we pike and walleye fishing in| The 22-year-old Lightburn, sev-| ! - aE : ve : te at Ma _ . ‘ northern Ontario. : jenth-ranked among the 135-pound NIGHT RACING . . d € President Lloyd Sibley will an- contenders, had to go all out to} Pontiac M-59 Speedway “3 ‘ | | ‘inounce -plans for the July 21-22 gain a split verdict in 10 rounds: mmewe we ! . , : > s . t. ‘Chief Pontiac Open Skeet Shoot, the over the unknown but potent Phil- | SUNDAY & WEDNESDAY ; : u Ye | Aug. 5 annual OCSC family picnic. adelphia at St. Nicholas Arena. me Trial — 7 P. 8 ; : _ jand relate highlights of the recent The bruising bout - was telecast Pet Pee , : : /MUCC convention ever a network : , . : ae Mire j 3 Exclusive guide bar of | - . stretches skin tight... , = , . stops blade bit! over all. omer premiu ompined — 2 L » & a — BS vorizontal : . a , iontal-grip guide bar smooths . wash ITS PREMIUM IN EVERY WAY... COMPARISON CHART shin down — / eae : o> . . pons wbahrs wt NO \\ [arena) STILL AT REGULAR GAS PRICE This ia what automotive engineers reported af ee 7 oe be eee EES . * .. Rae Cleans Se oe We invited a large group of automotive engineers to premium-priced gasolines in their own cars ' automatically ee ‘ ee 99 try Blue Sunoco, boosted in octane, in their own cars = say Blue Sunece -, Say Sie Senece 4 with a flip | e t e eer atient and give us their reactions. The results of this survey, _ Matches er excels 2 matches or excels of this lever. : , compiled by an independent firm of certified public ac- cae gir Georas eel ¢ , - countants, make New Blue Sunoco the favorite. Performance . ; @ Be slow. Be sure. Never hurry... . never rush. That's the ' 43% already are users of Blue Sunoco % pooh nea eee tes mpg . - n oon apowedl age-old standard for brewing National Bohemian Beer. Of the 1,166 engineers who réported on '56 Blue Sunoco, 85 premium-priced 86 premium-priced — and travel jan V, It’s a tradition beer. Brewed to a critical formila. 43% told us they were already users of our gasoline. re, brands fer anti- . ——— only : -. : Ay This was a far greater number than reported using all Wiech portermense 5 gues "$489 _. Aged naturally. No one taste predominates. Light and other premium gasdlines combined—perhaps the great- . =F a f mellow. Deeply satisfying flavor. Zs = 7 est testimonial any gasoline ever had! ; | Sanne Ct Ge pric. — i re G. : — ©) Rlue Sunoco is recommended for the newest high- ae B ™ : : 7 : oe compression cars when owners’ manuals specify a pre- p an : Seta et mium gasoline \ alah. 3 ) | Cc 4 ee U p again in octane | = : . : ren Ls , ’ Blue Sunoco is the only gasoline that meets the new bees | =” Light, mellow. Naturally brewed . . . for satisfying flavor. a ‘ : Hy od eal aie pee higher premium octane standards and sells at regular ’ a ee SCHICK The National Brewing Co. Detroit, Mich. Baltimore, Md. Orlando, Fle. 2 “gas price. Follow the lead of automotive engineers. elo wews a ie “ : ie . Make your own 10 5 hy ao “s Ll mu a Val A 2S at t vi i > } wi: Lo > r= = = — = Y sg om . / - ‘ue = Cw . . Si GUSAIAV/LA LE Pad Oe Le 0 4 | ~ . , 5 iN) Mt" ) Wom CAPTAIN EASY . i By Leslie Turner ——_— \ / yo SEEN)» NONE OF EM ARE PERFECT.J[ YOU'RE JUDGING \ WELL, GOOD LUCK, FORGET THAT COLLEGE \ i EASY! MAYBE SHES A SLOPPY|| HER FROM THE KINO \PAL! 1 HOPE A KIND BUT.MY PHYSICS \ NONSENSE, ROGER: Tr NEW RITAS NOT JUST \\ HOUSEKEEPER, WITH A YEN] | YOU'VE MET, SON! IM /PR TEACHER SAYS LCAN \ IT'S TIME YOU GO To BUTE womsrcstne ne: \ eats peso Ser on | pei neg git : TES a y SHE'S ABLE.LOVAL. | REFORMING A MAN! b-26 198 oy eta Sones, a1 Bog VS Pot Om UNSELFISH...WITH PLENTY ) \ O' BRAINS! THE KIND A \ MAN WOULD ALWAYS OUT OUR WAY WE HAVEN'T’ WE'RE JUST CARRYING OURS SO BUSY LOOKIN’ FOR SNAKES IN OURS, HE’LL KETCH UP WITH US/ 2 ; eae j By Edgar Martin @€S FAST AS 1 OW, TAAT'S BEE GOING |] WELL,WELL, ALBERT, QUITE & RAND. COOK AN’ BAKE OW EVER SINCE REMINDS ME OF A SQUALL 1 : TINGS, TREY CONSTRUCTION DP AN’ UNAPPEAR! || STARTED ON THE NEW | YORNPIKE. DAVEW'S SF, OUR Mean! | L ig ) ~ phy yi 4 ii e tri > 52 em rod) we. ' “tm \ Peta a UN ashen a IVD . aA Saree NEA Service, ine. T.M. Rog. U.S. Pat orf (E} | Octet ee MORTY MEEKLE| , By Dick Cavalli THE SETBACK gent mmeean ot 6-26 can = = DIXIE DUGAN | By McEvoy and Strieber aa OF SPace TO LOOK FOR A GUY — ' 1A. VALLEY ‘S Biegatrorwy— |”. iN J GRANDMA By Charles Kuhn BUT, GRANDMA, | |...1F YOU'RE JUST GOIN’ WELL; WHEN I WALK UP T* ...1 FIND IT SURE DOES SAVE WHY TH’ DOWNTOWN T' EXCHANGE | | TH’ INT DEPARTMENT | [ME AH ‘ ARGUIN'.// ROLLIN’ PIN... | [A FEW PURC Pp WITH OL SY IN MY HAND oan tonthe po ES Wal hu \C THIS -A-WAY... PROFITABLE ee OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Teke advantage of this easy way to sulve eff your buying end seil- DIAL FE 2-818) x oe =% ie . To Place Your i; > a =| HALF ACRE CASTLE WANT AD ~ Say, 1 JUST GOT ASWELL Rew 57 OF CLPPERS. You CAN BORROW ANY TIME / ee | whit A 4 t a ,/A/T cr Livi THE \ ‘wih wie le Ww the * her) TWENTY-THREE Stock Market Moves Upward Slow Trading, ‘Grains Lower MARKETS a ict aiet e P+ 4 | AP)—The — : [Beet a y No 2 kee em %, at he? ‘oa, PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 2 26, 1956 ‘State Dems Object ‘ito Kavanagh Choice | - WASHINGTON. @—Rep. Mach- ee (D-Mich) says Democratic! 7 Ito chief engineer of the Detroit) | Broach & Machine Co. was an- George Ludwig, manager of Michi- nounced today by Gustav von Reis, gan Consolidated Gas Co., Muske-— ‘|State Chairman Neil Staébler President of the Rochester manu- £0n, vice president; and Milton G. \ |te new president of the Michigan: Gas Assn, Other officers samed at” ‘ group's annual convention were’ | Business Notes ‘Promotion of Joseph 'P. Chayka — J ' ‘Air Force base here, was return- St., told officers his car had been Henry Donofsky, 35, all of Detroit.' 10' = British scientists estimate that ing from a routine training mis- ‘aalecioad! ford, was fined $30 and paid $10 ¢ a jet engine make the “noise sion when it apparently exploded, | A, IBM Military Products Div., Kingston, New York They were arrested last April. ” iM . ew . se ” Kendrick, Michigan Consolidated, ” CHICAGO w — Mild selling pres- ‘givers NEW YORK (#—Thie Stock Mar- wants the “help and advice’ of facturing orm: . pany re sent-grains down for small - at ba: met erters Spy. (on cet inched upward in slow early Michigan's seven Democratic con- . rbor, se pie: {= on the Board of Trade lO Siosle's taney, 6:00 bu; No 1, 3.%-/trading today. a gressmen in finding a new national Chayka became associated with) Carlyon succeeds Rol: R. ts day. Trading was slow although it|{j5, 4... eit Pase SHS) Gains of fractions to around a committeeman. . ithe company in 1954 as machine lel - Detroit, a Me president of i d 1.25- wel istered b; igan — ee vssatn, Seo Pere ef $e, |Daet ot beet were regs d Machrowics said he learned in a and fixture engineer. | Conall * (Sebbega, ctentned’ seleoies IS” i sl ; weekend telephone talk with Staeb-| “es oe There again wasn't much MEWS 2.59 ‘bu. Cauliflower, No’ 1, 280 dos.) U- S. Steet and Bethlehem im- ler that the selection of State Atty.| Before a recent title change, the| Dividends to influence the market, and_par-| Celery. Mo |, 3.008.509 ees behs. “fot: |proved fractionally as reports came Gen, Thomas Kavanagh “is not as firm was known as the Detroit ticularly: not much to inspire buy-| 1.00 | ane Horseradish. ‘No'1, 1.50-/that each side gave indications fi . rs believed be.” (Broach Co., Inc. ST. LOUIS (INS) — Hydraulic Press 2.00 Mohiract No 1. 135-1 80 ; in rm as it was believed to |Brick Co. today declared a 20 per cent ing. Wheat was being harvested | 208 a ee No 1. 1.78-2.35 ta they might give a bit a ground ; so cal e ¢ il ph $0 4eet: ganee and the outlook for autumn crops’ bens. Onions. green, No 1. 90-100, dos the deadlocked steel labor negotia- Machrowicz, who said he spoke) oem ac ISLAND U—W illiam! {etly cash dividend. | President rs. i onions, sets, No 1. 1.80-1.75 32-Ib/,. for the seven Democratic House’ AC. the stock dividend was made was considered very good. But pa," y. curly, No-2. 1.00-1.25 doz, tions. t Michi _R. Carlyon, manager of Consumers Selous c 26 per cent gain in earn- neitber fact created aggressive |be cot Re, tt Oth as doe} Motors were firm but rails and members from Michigan, accused Power Co.'s Lansing Division, is "8 = ¢ first five months of this : | behs. jot Fee pe Radishes, , Gov. G. Mennen Williams and Syer ; selling. | red, taney go des behs: a 1, oo des} oils were mixed. Siactler lax k of “handpick- 4 . . ec ¥ b Wheat near the end of the first Bens: padishes, wontte, fepey. 200 def U. S. Steel opened on 3.000 pies weer 0 P : s hour was %4 to % lower, July $2.07-| gutdoor, No }. 73°88 dos bens. Squash. shares, up 4 at 55. but later ing” Kavanagh for natiopal com- 7s; corn % to 1% lower, July|Summer No 1. ek \y bu. Toma.|Shaded this gain. mitteeman. . . 3, y, . sare OL. "2'0-328 4-0 “i bskt.| Other opening blocks intcluded | The congressman and his col- $1.48%; oats % to 3s lower, July rg mothe: Mee eo [ 6612;- rye % lower to % higher, | Lettuce and salad creens: Endive wo Socony up % at 57% on 2,400 leagues objected that Kavanagh's ee $1.24%4: soybeans’] to 2% low. |}. 200 be: eae eet =a ratte Let-' shares, Royal Dutch off ‘4 at 1033s | responsibilities as committeeman e e . July $2.97; lard 5 to 10 cents) |guce, Butter, io lo, 1,3. 18-3-08 bu: lettuce. on 1,300, General Motors un- | would be incompatible with his Building for a “ hanared lbs. lower, September | No 1 335- ay ” doz crate: lettuce, leat Changed at 44% on snl jduties as attorney general and de-' $11.50. hen 16. bu ba: orecs.Ressaise: Be American Telephone up *s at 179% 4 manded a voice in selection of the Harvesting of red wheat was Greens’ Ca No 1.00-1.50 bu. OF 1,000. 4 s _committeeman. - h F getting under way in Southern Illi- colar, m a oe ro eas: | American Telephone later added ee | Since the Kavanagh boom was t e utu re pois sind Indiana. It was said yields) 130 os won 100-130 ba =| Seater 10. es advance: ‘started at the recent state Demo- . ; were very large. Israel purchased ™™> %° + ; Santa Fe continued its advance AP Wirephote |cratic convention in Grand Rapids, “ ' three cargoes of hard wheat over: _ CHICAGO POTATOES of cag my aa arid a | |! BRASS TACK ADVICE — Kentucky Gov. Albert “Happy” Chan- National Committeeman Earnest ) night. | CHICAGO, June 25 ‘AP)--Potatoes: Old poin "| dler, lef 1 edl ‘favorite son’’ candidate for the Lacey of Detroit has announced he : ae | } , er, left, himself reportedly a “‘favorite ) : Visible supply of weeat at Chi- Sick arrivals 3, on trace, ae toe ag erm Railway lost fractionally. | ae Mines (ck) willl not’ seek re-election! One of the most rewarding of humon activities is y P | idential tion its a hand on t are : ‘ote:| Motion picture stocks improved.| Democratic presidential nomination, pu Id for future. W It defini . cago decreased 538,000 bushels Sumdey: supplies insufficient to, quote: P 0c P | ; : : 5 ee building the e. We all get a definite sense © carlot track rae —— arrives’ Johns-Manville, General Electric!) New York Gov. Averell Harriman, announced candidate, as Chan- during the past week, leaving a 258. on track 383: itberal: nal G nference. Chan- ae of accomplishment from making progress towards a total of only 1.611.000, Most of this Tang fui mare beta seedy. cariot and International Paper lost bit dler spoke to him during the natio serene con rand Kapids outh | defini ially @ financial goal is owned or controlled by the Com- long whites €.05-1.08; Californie, round of ground. | dler was quoted as saying he gave Harriman ‘‘some brass tacks — ite gool—especially a ncial goal. madity Credle Corp: which ‘means reds 775, Arizona round reds . The market went through a advice.” Killed b Stov Blast If you wish to invest for above-average income that . that Chicago is almost bare of Poultr ‘ eee ceciiee yesterday. The As: ; — | y e will bring you closer to your goal, we invite you to wheat at the moment. y sociated Press average of 60 stocks i oh R . ; .. . : DETROIT POULTRY dropped 80 cents to $181.20. On First Private F 1g t to Russia GRAND RAPIDS we — A 14 make our Pontiac office your "investment headquorters. Grain Prices pee heuer toe *Detzost The nea ‘year-old Grand Rapids boy died in We offer a complete service — from up-to-date informa- » . : CHICAGO GRAIX quality Uve poultry: nent type 18- New York Stocks Sli ts Iron ( ‘urtain an explosion last night at a Pres- tion and quotations to expert handling of orders. CCAGG; sane 8 AF) — nen ee ney Use eu 20-2 ‘or ‘Trpere 13's. (Late Morniig Quotations) cla r 'byterian Church camp on Kimball ~ — Raley 6624 3'» Ibsr Barred Rocks 24-38; Caponettes- Aamival 034 iav FeiaTai G16 Lake, two miles northwest of Ne- Why not phone or stop in to see us soon? a oo mii bx os) (08 5 (ie ei ee ie Allied ‘Chem. ig he (Cont ss | SRERI. IN w—William P. Lear, his wife. They plan to remain in waygo, A hot water heater fired ; eee bd 2 eee 4 oe rope Tee en) boat ss CHICAGO \GO POULERY Aue nteues oS Johns Man”. 41.8 wealthy U. S. aviation equipment Moscow until Friday, then return by bottle- eas biew up. . ; ; ove “ ‘en ers Jones & L 43 Berlin. Corn July ves 124% CHICAGO, June 3% (AP)—Live poultry Alum Ltd 1264 manufacturer, made air history to rho i= ea sencen Ate capauetice sad young. aoe pomp a res oe igs Se apo crg eg 138! today by taking off for Moscow ee The victim was Roma Ter. WATLING, LERCHEN & co. Dee 1.1L 130% Bep as | peeps 1344 (Prides 061 coope, 108. feery/Am Cen... gaa Gime Ch 9) in a private plane. Before boarding his twin-engine maat, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Members New York Stock Exchange ond’ Other Leading Exchanges Oats bee hee t 155 ae — Bt be tects aa cyan ees oe As is? It was the first time the Rus- Cessna 310 Lear declared: Termaat of Grand Rapids. PONTIAC: 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg.—FEderal 4-2895 Se aaa ‘ ettes over @%s 27-38: under é's 28-255 4m M & Pay. 393 = MeN & L 384 sians have permitted any Nee “It's a great experience. fol ee yas Wickes lees a DETROIT: 3rd Floor Ford Building—WOodward 2-5525 : am N Gas 642 447 ner to fly behind the Iron Curtain like going off into the unknown. Camp Henry as Ae. a DETROIT EGGS News 36 ait , re had gone to adjust the heater in a 1916 © “erty Years of Serving Michigen Investors 2 1956 DETROIT. June 25 ‘AP)—Eges foo A™ Looe mats Loew's nem 4 sto Moseow in such a plane The fact that ce Rumeiane 4 e ipa icine: ea eS s “ri: a Detroit, cases included. federal-state am ameit $06 Lorillard 184 fear. who hves in Geneva, permitting this flight is an indica- r 0 ernie: Am Tol & Tel 179.6 Meee TG a Switzerland, was accompanied by tion of things to come. In about the evening meal. He was in the Whites—Grade A jumbo 47-49. Wid am Tob 78.6 Martin Gl bed *-20 foot build rhen the ex- Avg 47's = entre ieowe ieee ee Am Viscose M4 Ms) S Bir ws two years, anybody nar Piel able ee pa ia when the ex- UPR - 7 ere Ze 4 be te H _ — ese — ees SS that outdates small 30. Grade B large 37-00 td avg Armco sti 38 Mpls dw”. 146 Ee ee -ked and N ll other calculators | Meuctapescthie a ekerapeear ethane ORE Titled Italians e Lear was diaappointed in ony sya Cray Cone Far ae c 38, grad 159 at Ps 33 ar was waygo County Coroner Ha Me- a re 1S lasge 30; geade C inrge 21. checks Att Cat Line se Mover__Wheel m1, respect. He made a last Kinley said Termaat died of a Our loan plan ty u Refin 0. orol 3 ee : + Commaseiaits graded Pilate bey are roy as Morray Cp a in Narcotics Charges i2 minute decision 2 take a Lei! skull injury. . Se ee ee ee ewe ey ete et grapher, but the Russians deni Several persons in the dining hall will help you “Browns rade A extra, large 30-<0. Brotts av ---- 4 met Dey . 83 ROME wh — Police today an- "it request. = -c - escaped injury, but had the explo- eg ees Beth Bteel 1667 Nat Leac 98 pounced the filing of narcotics Lear, accompanied by a RUus- sion happened earlier it might own a home 2 pene Aten 2) as Net Thee - 117 charges against 21 persons, includ- sian navigator, planned to arrive pave caught 73 boys in the vicinity, . CNCAGO SCTTER AND ECGS Bond Sirs = .. 146 i, M Pow . 306 ing four titled men prominent in in Moscow after a refueling stop .7 the heater room. in the CHICAGO. June 28 ‘AP)—Chicago Mer- Borg Warner’ 34 Noir a west 190.3 ne leading in Vilna. The distance is just cantile Exchange Butter steady, whole- Bris My. a allkan Ay 73 Italian high society and a leading ——— hort t eate baying prices unchanged: recetats Budd Co. 414 Nor Pac . 13 actor under 1,000 miles. ‘ological Stati $ i+} 1.000.000, $3 AA score $875. 92 A $8.13 Camp Soup: Sa" Nwst Airline ” 163 o elle , ned tt coul UM Biological Station as sess en =: ty) Gucetalen 90) “aiupellciaresd with) ucingl drieslnaet aiieetreceaty @ Genesee Opens for Summer possible time gs steady, receipts 16.900:- wholessie Can Ad 313 Ok EI “os se charg wi ment plant recently in neva ec, R buying prices unchanged. 60-699 per Capita! Air! . 31 oe Ow alr 194 were Prince Giuseppe (Pepito) ig chairman of the board of Lear eee eae eee eee ne Pann Epi. 2 Pignatelli, 25, well known about Inc. -which has headquarters in CHEBOYGAN i — A branch of oe: corti ete 2 Cre Gmc! 4) Perse. Da... 486 Rome but officially a résident of genta Monica, Calif., and aviation the University of Michigan whic . Z _ Chrysler - £3 Penney. JC. 84 Mexico City; Duke Lodovico Lante equipment plants at Grand is vacant and silent for 10 months . . Vi t A : ti Livestock Sumner was ce Pepsi Cola 236 delia Rovere, 25, a member of the Rapids, Mich., and Elyria, Ohio. of the year come & ate yesterday. Your home-financing $ uto Seractr tivesrers Cpla_Peim 336 Phas D . 61 SMe ancestral family as 16th cen- | DETROM June 25 ‘AP»—The Detroit Col Brd A .... 227 Phil “ st Pope Julius Il: Marquis / It is the teen s biological h C | Printing Calculator | "<8: ee By BE ee SE ee goat, ormer India Rumor Claims sation a Doulas Lake and at uys more here. Come { g ao tala 1.008 Market ot ene Con Bits. $6, Piteny Mule $54 war hero and Sicilian aristocrat: opened for its annual eight-week ; ‘ d let He tell oy ; Ste h t ; bs ni) Plate . g ’ } = 1 saves you costly man-hours wentin satehte 78 memnatet seers ConsumPow ca Proct &@ G 42 Duke Augusto Torloma,. 32, sary : Fun. a _ in an y mogetarengane crontiy seedy. instanens strong te"bieh- Cont Bex <---- 24g Pullman, 2) of one of: Italy's weokhien! & an | There are 115 students and in- I | t . C =e pe = pol Rg grt small lot 108% Ib Niet <— = nie RA a lies; Carlo Croccolo, be . _ Vestigators attending and working a about our lOW-COS 4 more accurate to use! crageer nb prone phy Maer y eng ei (oS 297 Ree rug .. 93 Italy's best known ae . NEW DELHI, India uw — The jx 16 different laboratories. : . -,. ee ee st ondi bal uence erie Bere’ wr dl Rey Met 4 screen comics; and four other political correspondent of a news-| * 2 * } ara Tatfers 18 0-17 90. few wepaty tiene. Det EA 8 Baleway st | $2 men and three women paper close to the Indian Foreign pr. Alfred Henry Stockard, di- HO ME i AN ' eight steers and heifers 1400-1600: DS C Bee -- 20 sc Jos Lead... 446 _* 8 Office expressed doubt today that rector, said many of the students. cri nh diet cimesers Sevpaer™ ag} Sonik Aly 20 Of ths aroun only, Prince Pt prime Minster, Nehru will meet are. high ,schol_ teachers doin cutters 909-1156 few lightwe'rht shelly etast Air L 464 Sead Al 3 natelli Vike . resiagen wisenhower at a u graduate work. Several private re- Hy 1 R .. 30.35 canners 800 Ibe down to 800. acs east Kod | St ¢ Sears Rose “e¢ Marquis de Seta were arrester ing the Indian leader's current poarch projects are being carried Capitol Savings Loan dr Capos otal watr ee 2e — a Shecny bet 31, But the eatiad als — Up TOUT’ visit to the . es - on by investigators not working to- stockers an r mt § Emer Rad ... 82 ' - er men ac- . : s good and choice 1856-"N.O about so 1 ~Beu Pac $01 doctors an ive o Fadil. teeters ced. tesserae soe ace -eet0 : re ce, 1a Sf} cused of peddling drugs. Nehru now is in London for the ward | conete < <2 75 W. Huron St. — FE 4-0561 Calves salable rately active, Pgird ‘or : y t 243 , 4 . : : s - a7 Sid Brand 395 Commonwealth Prime Ministers pra me ly “rT c0-f3 0" few prime” up cook mech we ga On Cans ae U er Peninsula Conference. A White House an- Studeboker- Packard _—_————— t : ¢ mercia - cs -§ : , ; a Saat os eet, eee BY ge Soe Bt APP ‘nouncement yesterday said his Laying Off Workers = > salable - Fre rs. ¥ : ‘meeting wi b} | Ly aay 9 = . L ov JP. 216 Come in or call for a ma, are efter se Be ts See . ne Forest Is Cleared meer , = July 7-10, had been DETROIT (INS) — Studebaker- 714 Community Nat'l a nd Cs et ee aun) Sie pe peered doy Ip ] Ai { Postponed at Nehru's suggestion Packard Corp. today laid off * ee Free Demonstration CHICAGO LIVESTOCK — em Mit 68 Texas + for oca IT por because of Eisenhower's health. 200 workers at the Conner Body Bank Building 4 ex ee 4 EB <8: . we ne |, ICACS, June 22 (APL —Galahie mows Sen ‘Shor... 382 Thomo Fi $16 NEGAUNEE Ut—The oldest for- The political correspondent of Piant and sai@ additional layoffs 4 . 7.800: active 23 to 75 higher on butchers: Sen Tire ... 85% P Savct War. 2 1 the Upper Penin- the New Delhi and Calcutta States- at the Utica éngine plant will Phene FE 4-1568°9 SPECIAL GESCOUNTS OM Frit Sere Nance, oey recty Te Reman, "°° hg fremsemer. 02 ¢%t Plantation in the “pps Nehru, shortly bring the total to 7.500. . showing most advance. sows mostly 28 rich... T2.6 srescomer 23 sula is being cleared to make way man, who is accompanying Nehru, 4 ADDING MACHINES eee ne tats: covers ler Be” 1 Span’ Paige nG Underwoed - 313 tor the jet air age wrote from London: An S-P spokesman said the lay- c 3 ini Ment) ene) 3 Wes ie at y 12 og 73 4 bd ‘ Benroees TRATORS 17.00: around 7S heed No | and 2 1: ot west 8 0s Unt ate Lin : Logging has started at the Bald- “Alth ike at } announce- OEE ee ee on ike / While They Last bulk No 2 and 3270-209 ' 1878-1840 Grecnound 182° Unit -Airc 66 tablished in __“'thoush ictal a of production: schedules ‘on the E . — fot’ 160-190. 1480-1880) larger dats Out, OW 721 Un oer € St ae pagh dagmssininys Gifts ine describes it only as post- 1956 model. About 2.500 erhployes : UL ‘ pa ots 7 " i) Sy ( AL = ‘ ISDALE 18 00 hg ee nce me wand Homestk on 331 us Rubver roel by we ee ‘iret sep ponement, Nehru's \v Asa to rded working on defense contracts were . ; = | rear vate, po jevker El .., 424 US Stee 0. as com United States may rega . ; ‘ent 09-380 ib 11 78- 8 ‘ not affected by the lay-off. . a sas PARTS SS bam Get way a Warn B Pic, 3 toward. industrial forestry. ene RS SE / Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen le 1.700: salable: calves Gov “nn (2 = i coe M hi Anecal and hasan plore} olew: "harks : ‘and rs cee oe woe aks Rt Clearing of the site three ‘miles . — Thor Takes Over Plant Res. FE 5-3793 ; Res. FE 2-5513 Urrice acnines now fairly sctive, steady to $9 higher interlak Ir... 28 rip 442 northeast of Negaunee was made City Woman Injured | : : ; - sircng "compared to” lant week’ Clow Int Nick .c1 gs waren Ace 3 T pecessary by relocation of the Accid | KALAMAZOO — Thor Corp. | Accident Insurance Fire Insurance by : 460 Ww. Huron FE 5-1 1 1 1 ones Fo higher "then ‘fast Friday, - i oni . i 5 bes w 3 : civilian airport at Marquette to in Auto ACCi ent of aise 2 = leaged * Regis | Automobile Insurance Life Insurance ~ ealers about steady: stockers en ro , s ant mi or oper- . : G cra alow: w few tro seietticedr See NEW YORK June 26 Compiled by th RS eae Dh Bec hee eo ne ne na by Thor's. Allied Paper | Liability Insurance | Plate Glass Insurance —Coi ile ¥ © a OS apace te cea teams, 10 th. Asoucioted Pree ™e ~ 1) be built on the treatment for * atneions ir the Division. The lease includes anf Burglary Insurance Bonds—aAll Types e Electronic technicians... @ 2075 tond crade 1750-1925. two loads chaet Rati hn e airport will be wrt, chest yesterday after being in- option to buy the property. The. . @ 1086 Th Holstein 148° aon ghaice and pier aay ...... 2582 72% 1813 Site of the old county § airpor | Rryant mill produces | Beck aad : ° WHERE ARE pokes roan’ pees te low’ chotee| Week sae anes 1408 pf 180.8 where runways had to be extended jyred in a two-car accident in wad 8 = . , . ° : © heifers 17.98-19 0: utitity’ end standard Your ee? +: 3388 189 Ft 1799 into the forest plantation to pro. Waterford Township. She was ated Pape “Opinion has cdused more trouble on this — earth : YOU HEADED? ; mal toes ints. 1300 "a tee Standard and 198 pon aan jee i290 Rs ite vide room for modern high speed treated and released by St. iceern Sh then plogues or carthquahes.: oe . e rs 132 y ¢ 244 ee rs — . e ater age 1) 8 Mitr uae temaeecint toon = ar Aas ns sp planes. ; Mercy Hospital. Vote Furniture ow ; ot yes ate oo nen Ps pen peyeied, (oe pr Laponl manna ergy bel en Timber from the 35-acre Cleve- Township ~ police said Mrs. GRAND RAPIDS i — Directors nicion ... with ot lnast 8 two- @ 15.06: two loads cond and choice 469 Ib perigee — land Cliffs Plantation is ear-|Lamphier was the driver of a car of the Grand Rapids Furniture - a - = = = anne EERE © year technical school back- stock. steer calves 20 2: Rephier Co: hich skidded he of t ground owe « Salable sheep 1,000. spring mambe so Figures shee ‘dectmal porate Ha ii bros marked fo ra Marquette | sawmilE Ww ich SK into t rear an- _Exposition have voted to stage a e aan hi @ . to 1.00 lower: shorn old Pop lambs 9nd aie mec & Equi So. es) Ya and a Munising pulp wood plant. other when it stopped for a traf- fall market show Oct. 18-25. The e atte Sean job. meg | 2100" lower: staubter Sheep steady. purk Baldwin Rul po adapads s2 ‘4, 383 The trees were planted to study fic light on Elizabeth Lake Rd., fall market was inaugurated last e ron e end tHoice native spring tame Gt Lakes Ol! & Chem Co* 1@ 2 uses of pruning and controlled near M 59. ‘year to supplement regular sum- : If you think you have the 9 00- 71.00; a small packace prime lambs Howell Elec Moter Co* 464647 . *. know-how to take advantage ° lg hole ‘ Patty sethotpeorcl Lae Penin Meta! Prod Co* 24 93 planting. The plantation was a The other vehicle inv alved was Mer and winter shows. ® of the most unique opportunity e lanibe: ao vearlings No 1 and 2 pelt Resy be ron Coe a, a4 i ae work area for Civilian Conserva- ‘operated by Richard F. Johnson, | nn © in the electronics field today... © 34,90, 1680: cull to choice shorn ewes | eeeee Bison Co, coe 4 ML MAE tion Corps (CCC) crews in the 21, of 87 Murphy Street | ews in rie e . e > ayne Screw Pr: 1930's. | Then you'll be headed in the | -*No sale: bid adn asked. = e* hateles ister right direceion f you write wa Sentence Men Toda | | eee az fue nome netacowe 3 Dead in Bomber stot Clete, tonket {2° Devei sank Froud tit Me - We'll tell you about a new g ANN ARBOR «®—The University Fr Packed A or roit Bank Frau jsmith St., Bloomfield Township, , $ program—in a company world of Michigan will have a record en- rom Parked Auto DETROIT — Three principals W@8 sentenced to 30 days in the You receive protection for your Home, the . @ famous for stability, growth | ‘rollment of 22.600 students next Ex losion i in Kansas | Clothing and a blanket of un- in an alleged $66,000 bank fraud O@*!and County Jail Monday aft- Contents, Theft and Persona! Liability. i and leadership. You'll havea | Presi ‘er pleading guilty to driving with- © cesais te pac whee this peek. © TAH ident Harlan Hatcher said) determined value was taken from awaited sentence today. They" P . . we He was H WwW HUTTENLOGHER © ect offers you in ‘growth pos- @ in his annual report to the alumni. SALINA, ‘Kan. —A B47 bomb-.a car parked at the corner of pleaded guilty in Federal Court isl inl Rag HAS ® = Agency @ sibilities, salary and company- @ The semester figure will top the 4, crashed and burned in a wheat Osmun and O'Riley Streets late yesterday. Justice ileiiac Stenbeck: H. W. Huttenlocher Mex. E. Kerns @ paid benefits. ° @ previous high of 21,363 set in the fieig near Saling today, killing a last night, Pontiac Police reported ; * * @ e * : 318 Riker B FE 4-1551 ® Write, giving age, education © fall of 1948 by the return to school three-man crew. today. __The three are Acey A. Easton, Pleading ruiliy io reckless Criv- ’ id g- ; @ and experience to: © of World War II veterans. | The plane, out of Smoky Hill) Owner John Damon, of 93 Osmun 47; Benjamin Greenbaum, 39, and jing, Russell T. Allen, 52, of Mil- ®@ Nelson 0. Heyer, Dept, 900 © * * * e e ~ STOCKS — BONDS. ‘equivalent to that of fifteen ‘hun-| mij thoriti id. Wreck BP es “pott i Cl charged with before Milford Justice James Van ae military. aw es sal reck- ilking t' ity Bank and Leuven. e oa THINATIONAL | dred million people all «talking Ol cos es battered a wile: le Rope Mochine Bucket. Naland Wak of Deen an a . | “a once, Names of the dead were with- rted en scheme in-whi i Reckless ving /cost a Holly BA CORPORATION ina peuding ‘wetilicaian of neat" iS remnp divi dortiferechalres MONEE SE Consult Us for First Hand Information of kin. One body and parts of om Pontiac police today were Jin-| ae banks to cover withdrawals and 4 ° TA PROCESS! e . < “Ont Glkcrme Treewnrrem ‘ Ear nings ~ other were found near the Spee oy : repented lhesiad . necessary deposits. oot Rasy Sacre , guilty _— in Stock and Bonds _ : Sesceanreeccnens g einen, Gp of Amerie topo oe * Several caren of when stubble ood - oj firm. The bucket is then manager of City|C@tl We maintain a direct line to a member of all} . : Parton ae she eer coms aire tenedl ae — ine ek. tian ‘pants G s Oak vice branch, and Do- Hall employe had Principal exchanges with ae Ne ee aT etn Met semesitelephone lines were re jowher of the company, told in- a es ‘let rade ing $14 in cash stolen: quotation service available at all times, 139, ; ate yesterday afternoon, Pontiac | $4,304,000,000 in the latest. period damaged. Vamuators the loss was only 'e-lbaum in his manipulations. tie + ted je ot Premant Mich. rep red earn-| A. U.S. Air Force jet fighter-isiceny was believed to have taken! The impressive capitol at San’! % Union St., issued C. J. Nephler Co, |the year ended March 31. compared -to|1 off northern Japan, in the|place in mid-May. Juan, Puerto Rico, is made of|P#int. Tie ‘company, which eeedvors oak same area where Russian Migs| white marble from Georgia, ‘with! t¢ your friend’s in jall #18 Community National Bank Bldg. s foods, reported cet" eg 8 Tt | shot down an American B29 19/About 1.3 million Americans play (the interior decorated with Tep-|bail, Ph. FE 5-942 or MA Howe: 8:30 to 4:30 ver the previous year 1238) months ago. | ‘the accordion. nessee and Italian marbles. “ “ - . sal 3 x + aed 4 i (ph } id oo ‘ wes Fd H , ey a . a — Dnt Dies Et w ai a <= oe “ t wt neo q eget — the i Pe pers ’ 32 = ri day. car coal So Fr ie = me Ft os a | : e < the ared” sald an —— i aa ster: : = a ro i ntur oe - ] ur ee ah eS es , m cashed ch att by Berk = Hones ome Segoe ae, in to = aig ne T the os . | = ea oi 2 him bat ing of i olmad i ‘ta a oe in on Sek a rea bec racket ic ion t ard asked mi a woul ae : hi e _— t m t w h to to ma ed t' ioe aa ate nad fol. a? saving P = ml ares —— OO nti e. bedi cig Co is as a F rh ee. iac moe Rew " FUNERAL ‘ as 3 ana a Mary Hin ema s-S 4 Vehi oman name 2 ica 2a : ani nite ' pont F ct Incr icles Hurt : = ea = a Th { ’ and ta U metery Lots Elm two preg suffered Be Pee bacco on pounds Cana On, eet in ¢ y Lo +1882 = there M) N Plteet R m ae¥ Oak its ection of 8 N 2 1086 = and . von °y Loc M an caieae : R =) tat “C s seses i tn a 108 ot 8 Ea = " ee age ING et ae a dried a eon ar ae . driv oe iden so B eee pan ro Font ity fre e in bade oes 4 _Sagine for her oa t . , DI PU Fa pie Pet at foe sree ra s << eee I ae REC Wh z tert, Coun Hh, . at Im ° ¥ =. : — red A Ga even the E ’ stributed pat Wirt ZH tosh - = jt — MBit ; mS AL Net) eH an cee a Han AR cone r A SL is S a mPa eet he |e ee Barons opera 65, aby ‘3 «| c ter on ; King Feat iD N 60 iT oe ure ay te iat _ es re were a REPLIES _— for een meron me ge oa ts. R. tor al a the ai S sees BS INA) N iT ’ Ce al r ection pre ichigan, tehig sca replies fe eeneral D Utte oe A = Ave aoe ILLAC Syndicate E Sw 6 Se eee Toda eee nit ~ ay rts ( ji once. H LE FO = Sica x Elect in ety in i * Soe heer eo un al on ee FTL 5 OF oF x. al eta +e =e “ atthe Pres he rue, ois ioe The dri snl _ . RN Oo requla ay = mary “ing 1 ‘ phd wtb .. U te Me v 8 te while ae P ver j= ry a ~ pases x: a == — ~~ tollowing csp. vie | Btperbea Expe ote ry. train you Street ae Pai at El Auburn | = . ae Ss re - rie CH em na the = Petes coe 7 Eat . erste = ES yA, The attem he eras, the ot Gas mt Te th S LO ee DoT D = alg A Phon I rgd apd see a oe im Set She res on be - da Sf. | D | UN G6 . ee esate vinta how ter — * mG tat he y FE. a2 ee br [AN :. A im Rap F mene free ie fe h w CONE E Oe ny tree See res te is g sas: a : with pact edly ‘orce sai ffe he prolong 7 alt © qu tion r Regist giv welaee so H . ‘st ce ite g F 71 R- AN soa to r Wat Dio LE ion ae Posse is ~ not N (0) 70. H VF tree, the. alg a e ee in & se O Die Pr Er theretor: te ° fg be- elp W , fim — fan —_ aa Em ae fa) ae . — set ea! jin tight shorty afte sed mone R I Rights Reve eae pred re are La jon. ai naaatse Sas fora 1 fod i ploy es — RD will estig: pee ¢ aver of y af — bs e Force t O E dp oeniaery pest pblingeor ig peoee ~ Sa anted SSasS r ttion us ¢ 3 to 38 me: + and off the m) Ca an of site te ber sites I e, finally : ; rved . to reels of = ae 80 Some: aos tg ~~ M H info haces ~ B nt nee: : if ators and ié = one 7 | dis sis * [6-24] Ese eo . - he et ‘ “ou Male 6 pee rma tre i le ~ . ys e then Gan ho Fac to! ne: the istric rh wee mini | 1 . id - aie 2 elp att ¢ train trata you Im N gencle 15 sa usa - Id 7 Soni! =~ oche wie red ate e_recin uch aay paeaey caves a, Ww on poe oe O {I bed am id. am a | paign So he’ In Ai ore = aa \j pg “ait : recinet act Said gellin ential ceded _- 6 BEA p Wan he at NG : Cj es aie te — apa Cadillac to ne ae aleve —— the" coe = ae oe See actr ory nted fe ES = FEERINGS s 8A Cited = ars “tne boy hen ve AF iss Thompe = — ae al ol eooeee ae Fema ie NGS A : Eig fo gi V' ha the istee Fo ill en t ae ee 00 prosres trai pelesg ou acece anole le oor: a P or A r ive $s t m re a o ne AD. eaeid of ont ) acne in pee Ne 6 ~ b feneral oa : int 7 re a yo in| u w e s pson's oe N STR A resident, Cc y ssi Ho ca es FS Bu ac —— w otk B ed ral A s cortifct ‘ . k in ur you I ti- en Aaice 8 gong Nn Giese J R- onl 147 YO on country Ae Ou ri d aren ED ws? RA malin * Bee neice deni vi or Se ite a a nte aa oe et: rote = Le oe igs : oe iy aS Wee a : : pee ‘| é 1 — " : on “ nt ce on ah a ae nc contra ee tie ae eke rr a my eat O uit poo var co ei ctlase the i M e Fli m9 oe ae ee sie e en Poe —_ ao TI R’ =F ” | & i “information - Dr eae prod ue por And on int : eee a fe ke ae - aatEN AC 2 1 ae mane th ; “tin ote : Ti Tee | pre ry ds yon are a P 7) ae aa - ea oa were” wen “, Sin an eg = ear aa ee ee saat Reyes og Bue W pondint mes RL at | af id ans him. t spe Ma . May ead - | p.m 4 pee ee ELiow oy ITT Srna e — EAUTY pooed ml BET W ry-° REC MA al oO M beac et t cae leas: 00 S te a = OOD w w poets ~~ R Cn seca cha bere td ott Peay * ming cn ‘om vont il ec: Sok ia =| nee ti re a = tae Nees paar chairman : _ = ed ng it so a icid it 42, red een wn eal saa ENE > AGES ne apie, | a ik Bes ea end 423 Bis Pos? TM 2671 eit so ot F y of before 1 a EN iN ae < ere 1h J fe) ? =o 5-5, sy the offer ules 0 the i ed Ube = a Fl wate Siow ae wit free ho pate en ee ae recertions ar aa mse eer Ser Saal “nl is = s ~~ in- ae to nt es t 15 t int! reg ct Bloo rested feel open a Bes ion B PER to vod bes oe as. ST PB exp 8 wie e fe the w Ac: n pri aby ae ion } rcui J six wa ke 0 — : ae Ase Lees 5-281 avs TI O. a PR tr ATOR wan B we iSct a : Ow my 500 céces ata — as Sil at a 7 i mor “caller hai last eres cine t [States * fee t saat ae me, & — \NTED. rein E Se: ” oo = = a Sees sin nse oe ; =) ay #| te ae oan =i ae 8 Ae a om I a ps rmpove "ade we = mee a ehagee a nie ot Cert vate ee =e g pel : ic A Thonn, it ame es w. Ve wen B la 8- oe oid fave prier ta TOM » = ponte awa A v eT ER. #80 eS ull Dr mi = the diz! ae = arog ion). r i . er at aitin »_Waterk | County oo xon ROB: on efiater. tee wv Aeapieet ences, or re Wait pple an ve “ = a its re ac te anes pso hi a he Wi g hale ‘ord rtri ty era cE ER h stir soy enced. ro ur grer" ane afTR RET pales yping ibe had B ae Mise Tt selecti le the chain Mam i a . heer re Nat a ster be Be an — FER ESEES. ore citer .. war _ = oe al er car vn ae ee : lat es fara a a x Fi Be mi of Seen « © me Déarb r aki . e hay picked G re : . G D C c. i ship. Hal t mt pod A an +> Seon eet 218 U ae E Lond Priv Pst ll 70 the w w Prsbat in [nahi aniston, im all acti we Lak li Ga all 1 HAMPTON ny Ha toe an — U emp uM wee: ae « R ate __ Obes. PRivae. | Bee ‘ — gise oa ld eal = Mt is subj Thee the mediat ion er oe saps nf e sete a hel "Suly'4, te M so. Sar : WARNE B Gil ae TYPIsT =a as : pe were breakin ios ion | Katha is sub : Dow Pa drove ce Staab U. 0 Hea re Px ‘the Bo =. a “rk and” “= ian | ow a arash reer Tyrie BER a tion land in n \~ ona! ka. att Tat ne Boar ef 10 ved Th S | ee sattet 0 56 ee aoe sé! ZS TI nt: “Good j wana WANTED 2 ns He Se tat : : bod B sent Ma polhr ety 1 dis te is " e ‘tlects ot a a — ‘ord 8 bas ard ae a Lin M appt. sare " E te arn : i ne P AR = 300 pa! y t t is in aed 8 s rt in At m camel Dube : Ma ay Sh tte in r me uA a | Coma an to R rola | Poop ay Pg TARY. a $ Al ity ys Bd ole ‘Se trict. the Tha oS ope the land alrece 0 pt 1S bd eat e ab =| tee ps mee Morey TENC PA RS Moe a Se “All were voted were nte The He : « {Ti hree fein fel noe ea un on. | Section ne a y inehaa 968 | Bau aa = Mr ores asi CE NG ore ay hate cet $325 ets eons =r ) im Tes Sa " ae iar aes aie ERs ge fete eS Rac ‘yan and c Judge sto ce Howse, aftr ! eB " ane tor actrn meriee a ee oy ee ants tenn va a ee meat a= or "GRA apes eet s poco and Oo vi ake eee rg ilfo . af "f 0 ter é 4 lcheeta ected Vv As of [ | Waterto ear = iss tt ‘GAG Bie ts aeeriee aise L 313 1OR ACD —_ Sane Benj costs. n | e rd ear | m gh ted Pp cunt the ic oe roy nit rd oe int nty. cA ron erty Es. atetore od a : a Ph and isn int LEAT tty mac Sate ar VF _ Satine vot fe nee ia ri gat OMAR, ve aie oe . w rs na — 2. 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