oo _ ale : ay a is ng i the Weather G / Pics 8. Weather : ‘Buerau Forecast kk ee RONEIRC. MICHIOR®. MONDAY, — oe 30, 1957 si PAGES i; & ove to Ha lt Teamster Elec Are Our Children - Sickly Weaklings and Cowardly? (EDITOR'S NOTE; This is the firSt of a series-of five articles based on the book “Is Your Child Really Fit?” by Bonnie Prud- den, published by Harper & Bros.) I becanie conscious of physical deterioration among our . youth-a number of years ago. I discdvered it personified in my two daughters—then aged eight and four. . The agé-oid call to childhood from over the hills and far away the minute school. was out had been stilled. Instead, there was a strange narcotic—the comfortable and almost motionless oblivion to be found in the synthetic hills and wrefab adventures of the ‘television screen. * * * My first step was to organize a little group—five neigh- - borhood playmates for each of my daughters. We met for a comparatively brief interval each week for an or- ganized exercise class. The children ran, jumped, __ climbed and did exercises. In short, they moved. Or at least some of them did. One day Dr. Hans Kraus happened to be among a group of physicians invited to watch our group in action. I pointed out the development that impressed me most—the children now could really run!- “Why shouldn't they be able to run?” he said. pear to be normal human beings.” Were there not, I asked, some sort of tests that or be applied to these children that would determine the degree of their improvement over a year? “There are many tests,” he said. “I would suggest you try them out on the minimum tests which we have used to gaugé the very last degree of strength and flexibility neces- sary for healthy living.” * * * what, then, are these tests? What do they actually reveal fn terms of your child—and yourself? They are known as the Hrsue_Webet Tests for Es Muscular Fitness. The tests are simple—so simple that I have seen an undernourished European child accomplish them with ease. So simple that four-year-olds can pass them— and eighty-four-year-olds. The first test determines the condition of the abdominal muscles. -In it, the subject lies flat on his back, legs out- stretched, his hands placed behind his head. The examiner holds the feet to the floor. The subject then is directed to “roll up into a sitting position.” Just sit up once, without using bis hands to help him. In the second, the subject takes the same position, but with. knees bent,. and neon is told to sit up without using his, hands. ‘4 your child fails in either or both of these tests, it meang that the abdominal -musclés are dangerously weak. © Test number three reveals the strength or weakness of the yon ‘abdominals and hip flexors. * * x In this, the subject, again lies flat on his back, legs out- stretched; hands behind his head. Then he is directed to (Continued on Page 2; one 3) “They ap- Captures Top Prize Pottine Press Photo cheubiitet at babe’ tf Rity tomy were Wad tee 0 _ big, juicy bone, chances‘aré that her owner Sharon Motsinger, 14, of 372 Newport Ave., would get her this and anything else she de- sired. For among 42 dogs entered Saturday in the Pontiac Parks - ‘and: Recreation Dept.’s “Pooch Party,” Rinty captured the top “prize as the best all around dog of the show. Two-year-old Rinty also was-judged best trick dog in the senior division. The pet also was awarded prizes for “best pet combination,” and aided Sharon i “best informed owner” prize, The. Pontiac Kennel Club co-sponsored the annual show, =~ ‘ ‘ i { - Little Rock Sees Tension Eased Faubus Threatens Call of State Legislature to Prevent Integration LITTLE ROCK, Ark, — tral High School under lessening tension and con- day. tion’s interest focused on Arkansas Gov. Orval Fau- bus and his apparent in- tention to call a_ special legislative session to revise his state’s school ntegre tion laws. At the same time it was sepatted the Justice Department is con- sidering a move to broaden its court injunction against interfer- ence with integration at Central High. The nine Negro students, brought to the school again in an- - Army station wagon, walked up the long steps into the main en- trance without flanking escort of paratreopers for the first time since the 101st airborne took over last Wednesday, No jeers or catcalls came from a group of about 5Q white students standing along the stairway; Military authorities have indi- cated that “progress” in easing tension and withdrawing military positions gradually around the School is their watchword. * * * Although Faubus was described as on the verge of issuing a special leaders most likely to be advised of such a final decision had re- ceived formal notice. What the 47-year-old Governor decides to do may be affected by what happens tomorrow in Wash- ington when President Elsen- hower confers with a committee of five southern governors on the entire integration issue. Faubus, apparently busy check- ing all possibilities in secret con- ferences, dropped out of sight for hours last night en route from Fayetteville to the state capital. His wife, Mrs. Alva Faubus, pre- ceded him to the executive man- sion and said he could ‘“‘not be reached" during the night. * * * Faubus said last week he had ived numerous requests from legislators for an immediate spe- cial session to consider ways of circumventing the court order for integration. One approach most seriously urged would call for clos- ing Central High and then reopen-|¢ ing it as a privately-run institution. Legal experts then believe fedral troops would have no right to re- main. FAUBUS MAY SUE * The Governor also has said he may file a suit of his own seeking a court injunction ordering with- drawal of the regular Army forces (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Predict Fair, Warm for Next Few Days Spring he rather than Asian Flu may dominate the health pic- The U.S. Weather Bureau predi fair and warm weather for thejmext few days. Tonight will be Yair and warm with the low near 4, degrees. The outlook for Wed y is also generally fair and wakm. ~| The lowest temperature a hae ° in downtown Pontiac precedi a.m. was 44, At 1 p.m. he mere reached 72. at Central High | (INS) — Nine Negro stu-| ’ dents began their second)” week at Little Rock’s Cen-| © tinued troop protection to-) But the city and na-|~ session call, none of the legislative |- French Premier in Showdown Faces Assembly Vote on Algerian Home Rule - Against Extremist Foes PARIS ® — Premier Maurice |Bourges-Maunoury faced up to the opposition of extreme right and left wings of the National As- sembly today as he moved toward a showdown confidence vote on his Algerian home rule bill. - * x * The Radical Socialist Premier's hope of remaining in the office he has held for only 344 mapthe BOURGES-MAUNOURY. . MAUNORY epi primarily on the difficulty he Assembly would have in agree- ing on a successor. Bourges-Maunoury hoped to ral- ly gnough center party votes to. +> was disturbed by the. charge th Local 614 funds went to remodel at $3,300. “Were Teamster unds Used for This? Pentiac Press Phote A + Rank- = File Appeal Made to Top Court Local 614’s Challenge Being Considered by Credentials Unit By ROBERT B: TARR Managing Editor, Pontiac Press off-again, on-again ‘Team- ster election 6f officers may be off again, convention delegates learned this morning as they opened their 17th convention, - And the votes of locals under trusteeships, such as Pontiac’s 614, may swing the balance if and when the election is held, it appeared. In Washington, aftorneys for 13 HOFFA’S HIDEAWAY — James R. Hoffa's Orion Township - cottage (above) is a pleasant place, but its peaceful atmosphere at $14,000 in Pontiac Teamsters. it. The cottage at 1624 Allendale Rd. on Square Lake was — by Hoffa in 1951, now is assessed in Telegraph In answer to complaints today outlined the present Koren Outlines Controls Traffic Snar] about the jammed inter- section of Telegraph and Orchard Lake roads, Capt. Joseph Koren, of the Pontiac Police Traffic Department, traffic controls being used. “We have a traffic light at the intersection and have an officer on duty there, directing traffic, during the and on Sunday afternoons,” "Said Koren. - He stated that the hours during which an officer is at the scene are, usually from abouf"4 to 6:30 p.m. | The officer can speed traffic only by preventing major traffic jams in the heart of the intersection, Koren asserted. “The backing up of vehicles and slowing te a crawl are evils | which can be remedied only by completion of the construction of the underpass,” "he said. He explained ‘that the impossible situation was a- combination of factors. Two lanes_of traffic from| one direction and three fro another are being bottled into a lane, This coupled with bumpy, dirt and gravel temporary lanes of. traffic, are bound to slow vehicles | down and create backing up in’ ‘each direction of travel, he added. New Pot-O-Gold Puzzle to Earn Winner $400 It doesn’t «take long for the ‘money in Pot-O-Gold to‘ mount; and already it's back up to $400 for the peak hours each Sect beat back the combined forces of winner with a perfect sohition. The the Communists on one side and ‘new puzzle starting today on page the Poujadists of the extreme |20 means a new chance to walk . Tomorrow will be fate and warm |’ with the mercury rea right. The vote may be very close. ' In advance of the Assembly ses-| sion, he could ‘count definitely on! about the same number of votes as the opposition, with about 100. more uncommitted. The Assembly was expected to debate at length today and to- night, with the vote coming after midnight. A defeat for the govern- ment would force it to resign. LS In Today's Press na hOOGORS seees coces 96 County News ........c+ss000 2 Editorials ........ssees000. 6 Markets 560 dec evove 28 Obituaries ............ osess 10 Pot-0’-Gold Puzzle ...:..... 20 Sports .... esoses 22 thru 25 TROOGCES qo nesses s cece . 18 TV & Radio Programs .... 33 Wilson, Earl .............. 33 Women’s Pages ... 12 thru 15 ae A Miss Front Page Due Tomorrow \Watch for October Girl ‘With the beginning of will wink out at you from of the world. * of 17 years duration. in her active hours. the fresh young face of another Mi ax & Miss Front Page for October isa Pontiad native A high, school senior, she leads the busy life of a teenager, and sports play a big,s ole You: can try to guess her identity, —— her tomorrow, as Miss Front age for CeeetN mth tomorrow, Front. Page ist the news a new her a am but. wort! ‘he |Jordan Imposes Curfew off with the loot. It takes only a few minutes of your time, and it’s lots of fun besides. Where else can you be paid $400 for having a good time? Just a few right numbers will do it, so get busy. Remember, use only the num- bers on your entries. If the words are written in puzzle blanks, your entry will be disqualified. And be sure to read the rules and clues carefully. It might mean the dif- ference betwe @ n winning and losing. ‘Neighbors’ Mave Twins: SCARSDALE, England uP— Mrs. Joyce Lowe, 29, and Mrs. Peggy Lewe, 26, both had twin boys in adjoining hospital rooms. The midwife who delivered both of babies is is EslsieLow e sets sets of babies is Miss Elsie Lowe, 25. The three women are not re- lated, Neither are th fathers of th four infants. AMMAN, Jordan (INS) — The Jordanian government, féarful of sabotage attempts, today -im- posed an all-night curfew on the areas adjoining ‘the airports in Amman and the Jordanian sector of Jerusalem. Plane Breaks Record LONDON (INS)—Trans World Airlines’ inaugural over-the-pole ;quite came off. | will really complete the rest of ike’s ‘Vacation Comes to End Returns to Washington to Tackle School Issue With Give Governors NEWPORT, R. I. (INS) — Presi- | dent Eisenhower ends today a i“yvacation’ ’that never really was a vacation and flies home to Wash- ‘ington to take up a new phase of the school integration crisis. A delegation of five Southern governors will call at the White House tomorrow to urge withdraw- al of Federal troops from Little Rock at the “earliest possible moment.” i TAKE UP PROBLEM They will find the President iprépared to take up the whole integration problem, with ‘accent ion the necessity for cooperation between federal. and state govern- ments to assure peaceful com- pliance with the order's of U. S. District Courts. Eisenhower, who will celebrate his 67th birthday in two weeks, is burned to a ruddy pink from . the hours on the golf course dur- ing his 27-day stay in Newport and is in what his doctor _con- siders his best physical trim in five years. Yet his vacation in the mansion- studded oceanside resort never CAST SHADOW The Little Rock crisis cast a long shadow over what had been plan- ned as a carefree holiday and kept Eisenhower from getting the re- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Brings Home News to College Students The Pontiac Press brings the complete picture of home which the average college stu- dent wants at college. Letters from mother and dad help, but regular reading of The Press ithe picture, flight. set a new world's record today, 18 hours, 32 mimutes for | the non-stop. journey from Los Angeles to London, . att? Fell From Tree Kills Novi Girl 11-Year-Old Plunges 20 Feet to Her Death While Playing A Novi Township girl died at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital on Sun- day, less than three hours after falling head first from a tree in the yard of her home. Winoa Diane Wegener, 11, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexan- der Wegener, of 317 Elm Crt., was rushed to the hospital after falling jabout 20 feet from the tree in which she was playing. She was admitted to St. Joseph p.m., according to hospital offi- at about 5 p.m., and died at 6:30: rank-and-file members appealed to the Teamster vote, schedule for Thursday, tion is rigged to put vice’ president Jimmy Hoffa in the driver seat of the’ powerful labor force. The move to the Supreme Court was designed to. overthrow an Appeals Court decision Satur- day which set aside a temporary aon holding up the elec- The petition today went to Chief Justice Earl Warren, and union lawyers said they would be ready to file an answer by 3 p.m. today. PONTIAC CHALLENGES _ Challenge of Pontiac Local 614's four delegates was the first to go before the credentials committee in closed session Saturday night. No decision on their status has been reven=e * *. Top ee for the crown of retiring general president Dave Beck in pre-convention maneuver- ing have been: cials. Deputy Coroner E, F. Col- lins, listed the cause of death as a severe concussion. Thunder Over Frisco From Storm, Not Jets SAN FRANCISCO — A rare thunderstorm cracked and rum- bled over the Bay area yester- day—causing hundreds of star- tied residents to report that jet planes ‘were creating sonic booms, The Weather Bureau said It was only the third electrical last 30 years. A sudden down- pour accompanied the roiling thunder. Libel Jury Deliberates LOS ANGELES (® — Delibera- tions will be resumed today by storm in San Francisco in the } James R. Hoffa, 44, who got’ his start in labor affairs at 17 as a warehouse unloader in Detroit and rose to power through activi- ties in Detroit and the Midwest. Thomas J. Haggerty, 53 who car- ried his first union card at 14 while working on a _ horse-drawn milk wagon, and rose to prominence through Chicago labor circles and the International Dairy Union, William A. Lee, also of Chicago and president of the Chicago Fed- eration of Labor threw his hat into the ring late Sunday. xr * * At stake is control of the largest and most powerful segment of or- ganized labor, a far-flung empire America’s daily life: 1% MILLION.. MEMBERS - The teamsters Union has more than a million. and a half mem- the six men and six women of the Confidential jury after a day of rest. The jury began delibera- tions Sept. 17. bers. (Locals paid per capita tax to the International on 1,589,850.) The IBT (International Brother- (Continued on Page, 2, Col. 6) -MIAMI BEACH — The, the U.S. Supreme Court to block © The attorneys charge the ehee , Eleanor Back Home From Visit to Russia NEW YORK (AP)—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt says mili- tary might alone will not defeat the Soviet Union. x * * é The United States can beat the Russians only by being “far better than they are,” she said. as she returned here by plane yesterday from a 25-day visit to the Soviet Union, x *&* * To make a successful appeal to the world against per- sistent and carefully conducted Russian diplomacy, Amerl- cans need greater knowledge and understanding of that country’s background and motives, Mrs. Roosevelt declared. She advised students of Russian affairs to “study history as you have never studied it before.” Mrs. Roosevelt described Communist party leader Nikita 8. Khrushchev, whom she met in a 234-hour interview, as a “strong personality, an articulate person, a worker, and one who genuinely feels that communism is the wave of the future,” * * * During her talk with Khrushchev, Mrs. Roosevelt ‘sald, they agreed that the‘world wants peace. — Khrushchev accused her, she said, of hating Com- munists. To this she reported replying: “Oh no, I don’t hate anybody. I don’t believe in communism as an ideo- _ logical way of life.” The Little Rock, Ark., school situation, she sald, “was the ~ only piece of world news that appeared in the Communist newspapers.” . “ x *« * Asked what comment the Russians made on it, Mrs. Roose- velt replied; “They saidexactly what happened. There was ele -no comment of any kind.” 9 ee a a \ é leg : : a ee ee eee en ee eee touching about every phase of "burned to death and at least 50 usually has little to do with the THR, , PONTIAC PRE Aa! ‘J | Ss, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 10s Va in in Train Wreck - Fifty Persons Injured as Freight, Passenger Cars Collide i in: Pakistan KARACHI, - Pakistan w—Thirty- three persons were reported injured last night when a pas- “senger train Sy into a freight in West Pakistan. , * * & Reports reaching Karachi said the engine and five cars of the passenger -train were wrecked. The freight was stopped at Gam- bar station, 18 miles from Mont- gomery. km The passefiger train” Was en route from Karachi to Lahore. The. cause of the collision was not immediately known. 4 LONDON @ — At least 20 per- . sons were killed and 112 injured yesterday when-a West African railroad train plunged into a flood- ing river in Nigeria. Official re-| ‘ ports’ radioed to London said a bridge collapsed as flood waters battered at the embankments of a small river 18 miles north of Thadan. Symington = Ike Upset Disarmament KANSAS CITY, @ — Sen. Sym- ington (D-Mo) charged today the Eisenhower administration “pulled the rug out from under our nego- tiators” and wrecked the recent London disarmament conference. * * * In a speech prepared for a dis- trict Kiwanis convention, Syming- ton said the announcement of a 100,000-man cutback in armed forces by Secretary of Defense Wilson in July “was tragic in view of the disarmament conten: ence then in session.” * * * He said Secretary Wilson’s an- nouncement Sept. 19 of another 190,000-man reduction in -the armed ‘forces was the latest act in this confused and tragic effort of unilateral n a > Erect Garage Building for Road Commission - Work was to proceed this week center. General contractors for the proj- - ga the most new Pontiac ers ‘and Franklin Crawford (right), Township, won these bicycles. iP WINNERS IN PRESS CONTEST — For ring a recent contest among 800 Press car- riers, Melvin Williams (left), of 183 Norton Ave., prizes was Duane Hyatt, a member of The Press Pontiae Press Phote circulation denaxtment. Jackets were awarded to David Bahrke, of 3526 W. Walton Blvd., and Phillip Whitehouse, of Holly, fer-adding the -sec- ond highest number of subscribers. Third prize winners of binoculars were Lee Graham of 454 N. Saginaw St. and Frank Murbach, of Bloom- field Hills. Press subscrib- of Commerce Presenting the Mar Autumn By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The autumn weekend: was marred by the accidental deaths of nine persons tn Michigan. Six were killed in traffic, two drowned and a girl fell from a tree- and died. A Charlevoix high school snior drowned Sunday after saving the life of a girl friend who was with him when their outboard motor- Little Rock Tension Eases; Faubus Waits (Continued From Page One) ect are Wadkins & Wise Co., of De- _ troit. The project is scheduled for com- pletion Feb. 15. When :the new headquarters is finished, it will “have cost more than $800,000. By E. H. SIMS Is fit true that the higher the clouds, the harder the rain — as the old saying-goes? The height of the clouds above rainfall at a certain point below. In summer clouds usually build up to great heights. At the Equator, they are higher than at the poles. The thunderstorm, which is a high cloud, often produces very fieavy rain, whereas the lower stratus, which are typical of a cold winter warm front, more often prodace a lengthy rain, perhaps extending for several days. - However, the highest clouds are ice clouds, the cirrus clouds. And they produce little or no precipita- tion. So, the old saving does not hold true as a weather clue. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Generally fair and somewhat warmer tonight and). tomerrew. High near 74, low tonight near 46, high temerrow 74-80. Seuth te southwest winds aft 8-13 miles‘an hour tonight, Teday in Pontiac sent in when President Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas National Guard last wek. ~Enlargement of the scope of the existing federal court injunction is but one legal approach being con- sidered by the Justice Department. It would be aimed at future pro- tection of court-ordered integration) at Central High, the order’ which both: Faubus and a segregationist|: mob have challenged in different ways. Federal prosecution of agita- tors who led last Monday’s mob outside the high school Is now regarded as a_ certainty, The only question is whether the crackdown will come by process of indictment and trial, or through contempt of court pro- ceedings, FBI agents have been questioning witnesses and assem- bling evidence the past week. Faubus himself is named in the present preliminary. injunction is- sued by Federal Judge Ronald Davies on Sept. 20. Three hours after it was handed down the Gov- ernor withdrew the state militia he had assigned-to prevent Negro stu- dents from entering Central High. There is thought now that a broad- ened injunction, naming others who constitute a threat to peaceful inte- gration, along with their potential agents, is needed for the future. * * * In Washington, Rep. Adam Clay- iton Powell has served notice he iwill ask President Eisenhower to call a special session of Congress on the integration issue when the chief executive meets with Negro leaders soon. | A special session, Faubus said, could legally wipe out the state public school system, Presumably the schools would be Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m 44 . At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity calm to 3 m.p.h, Direction: South. Sun sets Monday at6:16 p.m. Sun rises Tuesday at 6:29 a.m. Moon sets Moriday at 8:56 p.m. Moon rises’Tuesday at 11°45 a.m. Downtown Temperatures 6 am. cea 60 UO ae snosioa 69 TOM ccccs ss 68 iim ae S$ a.m... 5282 ipm “72 Oam........ 58 10 a.m.........65 Sunday tn Pontiac Highest temperature ...... Lowest temperature .... 40. -cue- ee Mean temperature ........,..... - 35 Weather: Fair. One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature .... Lo vest temperkture Mean: temperature , Weather: Warm eee eweeee TO 40 Ce Highest and ao Temperature This Date Im 85 Years B8 in 1905 > 31 in 1899. Sunday's Temperature Chart A} a 66 45 Farquete ™ &6 fialtimore 60 54° Memphis _ Ti. 56 Bismarck #4-44 Miami 84° 72 Brownsville 85 64 Milwaukee | 66 48 Ruffalo . 4 Minneapolis 78 63 Chicago 47=ON. Orilear, 65 61 Cincinnati 71 56 New Yorke 63° 55 Cleveland 70 80 Omaha 5 48 Denver (87 53 Pittsburgh 68 re Detroit 68 A? ard 68 Dutalth 72° 34 Louls 73 43. 7. 43 s- Prancises 732. s9 OG. Rapids 70 40 8.8. Marie 65 , Kaneas CC. 7 4) Traverse C. T) 50 Lansing 7, 42 Washington 60 57 Angeles | #7 @4 Beattle 72S 7 Tampa ei 70 { \ 2 : \ i “7.4 * night at 8 p.m. taken over by private groups on ithe theory the federal government ~Lwould have no control over them land. would therefore remove the ' soldiers, i Another proposal is to withdraw state financial aid from schools which integrate. : 2 a Westwood Charter Unit Ist Meeting Tonight SOUTHFIEL D—Charter commis- sioners for the village of Westwood |’ ,will hold their first. meeting to- in the Fire Hall at Thfiteen-Mile- and Southfield road. Charter commissioners of both the City of Southfield and the ' Village of Westwood have decid- ed to hold weekly meetings until their separate charters are ready ' for the approval of Gov. wil- liams. $s; City.commissioners have 90 days from Sept. 16, the date the area voted to incorporate to submit a charter. Village. commissioners have 60:days to do“the same. ES ‘Nine Accidental Deaths 55 Cheat Death l. Weekend boat éapsized on the south arm of, Lake Charlevoix, 100 feet from | shore. ‘in Plane Crash _Japanese Craft Hits Rice Field, Burns After Takeoff ITAMI, Japan — Fifty-five passengers and crew members aboard a Japan Air Lines ‘plane were reported to have escaped alive ‘as the plane crash-landed and burned in a rice field today, an airlines spokesman said. * * 2 - The crash occurred shortly after takeoff from Itami. The DC4, flying from Osaka to) Tokyo, was carrying’ 51 passen-' gers and four crew members, the airline said. Three of those aboard were non- Japanese and believed to be Amer- icans. Five passengers, including one non-Japanese woman, were reported injured. , * *« * National police said the plane ‘struck a power line as it was try- Flint ing to gain altitude, and sat down = in a paddy field about half a mile Ross Ringley, 34, Jackson, was from the airport. killed Saturday in a three-vehicle| | * x * accident near Bay City on U.S. 23.|/ Itami is about 10 miles outside s * * saka, a major city in southern’ Herman R. Gendron, 36, of Honshu, 250 miles southwest of Brownston Township, was killed, Tokyo. Saturday when his car collided} with a parked truck trailer in Lin, coln Park. William E. Hubbard, 25, nel « * x * The boy, 17-year-old Larry"Lam- bert, held up his girl friend Pauline Chew, 16, of Charlevoix, until res- cue boats from shore reached her. The girl was pulled to safety, but before rescuers could grab the boy) he sank and disappeared in 60 feet of water. Solomon C, Whitaker, 33, Tren- ton, was killed Siinday in the collision of his carzand a New York Central ger train at a railroad c in Trenton, Winoa Diane Wogener, 11, Walled Lake, was killed Sunday when she fell 20 feet from a tree. * * * Harvey Baird, 37, Albion, drowned Saturday night when his aluminum fishing boat capsized on Morrow Lake near Comstock. Delia Kehoe, 78, Grand Bianc | Township, was fatally injured | Saturday when the car in which | -she was riding hit a treé near /To Plan Sales Boosts | td Be Finished ‘ Durin Week © Itiac to MSU. football games this fall - 116 will be completed this week. 1 Ike's ‘Vacation’ Washington, twice |James C. Hagerty gave an icy re- itwice during her vacation, both DETROIT w — James J. Nance,| Howell Bypass - Are you a Michigan State Uni- versity football fan? You'll be happy to hear that it will be easier to drive from Pon- State Highway Commissioner John C, Mackie announced that the M59 bypass of Howell to U.S. The 2.67 miles of new pavement with one railroad and one culvert bridge cost $368,017. Its com tion will allow motdrists on M59 to avoid going ‘into Howell and then backtracking on U.S. 16. Comes to End ‘(Continued From Page One) wearing grind of the White House. He had to interrupt his vaca- ‘tion three times te fly back to New Move to Halt: 3 Teamster Election. €-'ualized by- a look at the 16 trade laxation he sought from the nerve-| (Coniinued doen Page One) 892 local unions, comprising 46) joint councils and “4 aréa .confer-|. ences. The International's treasury shows a current balance of more than §33 million dollars, ‘an in- crease of about $11 .million in“ the past 5 years, The scopé of this million-and-a- half army of workers can be vis- divisions which comprise the In- ternational, They, are: Automotive, petroleum and al- lied. trades; Bakery workers; Brewery and soft drink workers; Building material and construc- tion drivers; Cannery workers; Chauffeurs and taxicab drivers; National dairy division; employes; Federal, state, municipal public service employes; and ‘of | the integration crisis. . There was hardly a day during; his stay in. Newport that he wasn't cussing the Little Rock situation. RESPONSE ICY White House | News Secretary sponse to talk of a “‘deal’’ be- tween the President and. Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas in the Little Rock dispute. Asked whether he knew any- thing about reports of a com- promise under which the gover- nor would agree to enforce school integration if Federal troops: were withdrawn, Hagerty Teplied: “I most certainly do not.” The President obviously was in no mood to talk compromise to Faubus, whom he accused Satur- day of encouraging mob véolence by his open defiance of the fed-! eral courts. S x «* * The first lady returns to Wash- ington without getting in the sight- seeing she had hoped in Newport. Still convalescing from her Aug. 6 operation, she went out only times for cruises in Narragansett Bay. Hagerty reported that Mrs. El- senhower was “getting along fine,”” however, despite her rela- tively Inactive stay in Newport. The Eisenhowers expected . to leave the Newport naval base at about 2:30 p.m. (EDT) and arrive back in Washington on the Colum-. bine III. dround 5 p.m. Says Newspapers Must Boost Prices HARRISBURG, Pa. (# — A news- paper circulation expert said today that newspapers generally will have to boost their prices as well as their circulation to maintain a sound profit margin. * * * “Possibly the biggest question (newspaper) ‘circulators are asking themselves—and their publishers— today, is not should we raise our prices, but how much we should raise our prices,” said George W. Hicks of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette. He made the statement in an address prepared for delivery at troit, was «illed Friday night Ford Motor Co. vice president and when his car hit a concrete wall igeneral manager ‘of the Lincoln in southeast Detroit. , "land Mercury Division, will discuss Francis Hudson, 50, Detroit, was merchandising and marketing, killed Friday night in a two-car'plans at meetings with division erash in Detroit. - leaders in five cities next.month- Are Our Kids Cowards? — (Continued From Page One) raise his feet, keeping his legs straight, about ten inches. He must hold the position for a ten-second count. To get a fairly accurate count, add the word “chimpanzee” after each count. kok o* Failure in this test shows deficiency in the hip flexors. These are the muscles used for running, jumping, even standing erect. _ Test number four shows the strength of the upper back muscles. The subject lies prone. A pillow is placed directly under the hips, forming a sort of teeter-totter. With his feet held down, the subject is directed to ‘raise his trunk and hold steady for ten seconds. In number five the subject, still in prone, position, raises his legs, keeping his knees straight, and holds for, ten sec- onds, while the. examiner holds the upper body down. 8 - In the tast of the six tests, the subject performs the old and simple (if you can do it) floor touch. He bends from the hips, with knees straight and feet together, and touches finger tips to the floor. To pass, he must keep them there for a count of three. I have tested seven-year-old young- -stets who came short of the floor by seventeen inches! - Using these six .tests, then, any parent can measure the ability of a human body to meet the minimum physical demands that will be made of it. _If by age six the child has acquired the. necessary mini- muni of physical ability, he can hold on to. it throughout life fairly easily—with a reasonable amount of exercise. Yr ¥* *. If he does not have it by age ten, acquiring it at all be- comes more difficult. If he does not have it.by age sixteen, the chances are great that he will never acquire it. He—or she—will by then have taken on the contous,of a depot stove or of & tension-ridden scarecrow. He will be burdened with a body, rather than blessed with one—a permanent member of the rapidly growing tribe of the phyhicalty unfit, \ (in tie o setond article of .this olan ae eeaine tomorrow, Miss Prudden tells why. most American chil dren are inéapabile of pass- ing the simplest physical tests.) | * os the 33rd annual convention of the Pennsylvania Newspaper Puhlish- ers Assn. which closes here today. : . “Practically every other item! sold to the public has been. in- creased over and over again,” said Hicks, who also serves as presi- ident of the International Circula- ‘tion Managers” Assn. * wk oe * He said that 37 per cent of America's daily newspapers “today charge more than five cents for a single copy,”’ but he declared ‘‘the overall affect (of the boost) was [ Laundry, linen ‘snd ary clean- on the telephone to Washington dis- | ‘than 100 locals. (with 179 votes) ‘to be -seated in the convention:) Fresh fruit, vegetable and pro- iduce industry; ‘|pletion of the alley. She points out Interstate conference of dairy) — The Day in Birminghara |Sched ule Hearihg Tonight | jon Controversial Alley hood of Teamsters) is made up of! . BIRMINGHAM ~ The ‘gutvosacd rom pe semagas Alley is scheduled another ic hearing ~~ ’ Since its last appearance on commission agenda, additional studies have been made to evalu- ate the possibility of more partici- pation by taninets houses. Tonight, comamalsaleners. will have an even balance—for and against—the-alley in communica- tions, Mrs, Alma Schoeffel has asked! that action be taken for the com- sion to arrive ata “no-necessity”’ decision. Moore says “There is no public the/necessity for the proposed alley and the’ construction of such an = = al —_ Mayor William Roberts offici- -ated this morning at the formal opening of Niagara of Birming- ham, at 323 East Maplé Ave. Operated by Mr. and Mrs. Don- ald Duey, the new éstablishment carries a line of “health equip- ment” home furnishings. Common- ly-used home items do double serv- ice through the media of built-in massage mechanisms. that it should be. considered a_nec- essity on the basis of the general health, safety and welfare of the city. On the other hand, Eugene ‘A. Moore, another abutting property owner, is requesting the commis- A group of five Birmingham ju-. veniles have received. six months probation before movnteld Hills: authorities. One of the youths bas 5 six. .months driving suspension while a second has an eight-months Seek to Solve. ing-girivers; Miscellaneous division; - Newspapers and magazine driv- ers, handlers, circulation employes, studio, film theatrical, radio, tele- vision, and(@jund truck chauffeurs division; National over-the-road division; National truckaway~“and drive- away division; | National warehouse division. Later this. week, the- approxi- mately 1,850 delegates are sched- uled select officers for this giant labor organization. The federal court injunction of last Friday blocking the scheduled vote’ was lifted late Saturday by the U. S. Court of Appeals. But all is not yet clear sailing. The Appeals Court order stipu- lated that the election can proceed only with delegates selected in accordance with the Teamsters’ constitution. This stipulation apparently adds strength to Haggerty’s challenge of the right of delegates from more UNDER QUESTION Challenged are the so-called “trustee” locals and a number of “paper” locals in the New York area. (A “trustee” local is one in in which the local’s affairs have been removed from control of local membership and placed by Internationa] in the hands of a trustee. Pontiac Local 614 is one of these; Hoffa is its trustee. A “paper” local is one for which a charter has been authorized, but for which there is as yet no actual membership roll. Delegates had been listed for a number of such “non-existent” membership groups.) . Z The Pontiac delegates are Leaun Harrelson, Floyd Harmon, Alvy Bush and Frank Orsini. It has been charged in the challenge that these delegates’ credentials are signed by Hoffa, as truste, in direct violation of the International| constitution. The Pontiac delegates were not available for comment. BIG ISSUE ** Whether such delegates are the choice of and speak for the rank- and-file members, or are hand- bus and safety problems existing here. Community. Activities Center yes- terday under the leadership of solution. PICKETING STOPS of the building all last week. | PTAs formed. a study commit- terested vatsaes and to come up) suspension. A 9 p.m. curfew hour for school — an 1] p.m. for weekends as set. In addition, each is to make a monthly report to Sgt. Robert Schaule, youth. officer of the Birmingham Police Dept. Bus Problem 3 Groups in Waterford Start Action fo-Remedy School Safety Troubles 7 _ . |, NEW — Now at Simms At least three ‘different organ izations in Waterford Township & have started actioh to solye: school : ¢ 4474 Se ‘Some 75 residents met at. the Ralph Blair to ty to reach some All picketing has stopped at the board of education office and bus garage. Parents marched in front Another group, under the diree- tion of Thomas Peterson, 6140 Andersonville Rd., organized Fri- day night at the bdéard of educa- tien office and representatives — from 19 Waterford Township tee. The group's primary concern is ito review the safety’ of children’ walking to schodl on narrow, =) traveled roads. * * * A meeting will be held at 8 o'clock tonight. at the board bod education and each representative | is to report on what he feels is a critical area in his school district. They hope to obtain adequate help jn surveying areas from in- I F | with some answers. Peterson said: “The township and school board cannot solve all of our problems alone. Tewn- 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS Advertised on TV — But Not- at SIMMS “*Cut-Price’ ship residents. working in har-- | : /SARAN’ mony with | groups should | RAP be able to /up with some . type of solutipn.” - yh Supervisor Elmer Johnson met with. a group) of Elizabeth Lake ‘road residents ‘Friday night to dis- cuss ‘tentative’ plans to -build a picked by Hoffa, to assure Hoffa's election is one of the.issues facing theeredential committee, and _per-| haps the convention itself. © In addition to Pontiac 614, other locals from the same area whose delegates are challenged are al 247, covering Wayne, Macomb and | Washtenaw Counties; and Detryit Local 902. . With 179 votes at stake ruling Gi the disputed delegates. may ‘decide the election. There are actually five possible candidates for the presidency: Hof- fa, Haggerty,-Thomas L. Hickey of New York, Lee, of Chicago, and John F: Shelley of California ‘ Lee’s formal announcement that he was in the race did not come until late Sunday afternoon and when it did, brought new cSHiphbat! tions to the race,//His campaign stronger newspapers—not weaker newspapers.” may rob Hagg rty of some strength, : walking path dn the south side of | & Elizabeth Lake road for school, * Re-Usable children. \ | * Moisture Final plans ‘will be made fori} Proof this project at 8 p.m. .tomofrow * Self- when the group —— meets at Sealing Wrap meats, sandwiches, vege- tables, etc. to seal-in flavor and odors. Clear as glass vialbility, easy to handle. the town hall. « Looks for Maahepoms, Falls on Hunting Knife It took 40 stitches to close al stab wound suffered by a Ham- tramack man, Saturday, when he E fell: on his- hunting knife while, seeking mushrooms near Buno and) Childs Lake —_ in — Townshi —Znd Floor. $8 N. Saginaw rial Clinie, in Walled Lake, he was treated by Dr. H.L. son, nk told police he had been . hunting with «two Andrew Babak and John 7 el also of Hamtramack, — en he tripped over a stick and fell on his own — FIRST QUALITY PLAID Sheet Blanket. Our $1.69 Sellers — “haa ,72280-Inch Double Bed Size | ened — aS ay %: Choice of wanted jaids colors in FASTEST TO WASHING ONLY 2 HRS. NO CHANGE OF PLANE NO OTHER US, ‘aime CAN OFFER /YOU THE INCOMPARABLE PEACE AND QUIET OF JET-PROP FLYING, ‘ , 20 MIN. Cepital ‘BEACON ‘Stuart’ PLAID. RAYON G ORLON | | 72x84” Blanket Regular $5.95 Value egg pacesate’ binding. esl, gran or Set oS aa AIRLIMES Accept Decree . Little Rock Editor Says} | ~ White Cities Trouble . Unnecessary; Politically Motivated WASHINGTON «®—An Arkansas editor says most white citizens of Little Rock, although opposed to racial: integration, are willing to school integration decree. ; Harry Ashmore, executive edi- tor of Little Rock's Arkansas Ga- zette, said yesterday on a TV in-| terview that ‘‘we could have .done so «without trouble” were it not re the actions of Gov. Orval Fau- bus, Ashmore said the governor's). moves in the Little Rock school crisis were politically motivated, The editor said it was a ‘‘dread- ful” possibility. that the Arkansas. Legislature might close Central High School, center of the inte-|° gration row in Little Rock, Fau- “comply with the Supreme Court’st- lay % \Border. Blocked § (by Mad Farmer . }sides of the U.S.-Canadian border “j¢laims the U.S. goverpment has U. S.Canada a “RICHFORD, Vt. @—While mo- torists fumed, an irate Vermont farmer ‘confounded police on both with a barbed wire ‘roadblock across°a U.S, highway in Canada. farmer, A. H. DePalio,) never paid him for a 200-foot stretch of U.S. Highway 105 he says crossed his property. rf x* * * nisi ‘at: inRouge River. * DETROIT i—The _ mystery. c MO~| the missing statue of author John Burroughs was cleared up yester- day when skindivers found it in the Rouge River near the Fairlane estate of the late Henry Ford. * = * The heavy bronze likenéss, val- ued at about $20,000, apparently had been rolled from its pedestal who were unable to remove it. The road connects Richford_and| North Troy, Vt., and the stretch ‘|DePalio -is bitter about swings across the border into Canada. “Taking matters into his own) hands, the farmer built a fence, of .pests and barbed wire across the Saturday afternoon. Some 80 motorists were held up. Vermont. state police said they couldn't move across the: border to open the road. Quebec provin- cial police decided they couldn't! US. highway. Residents on both sides of the remove .an. obstruction trém a. (Spccouay TN * * * The 3%-foet statue was sculp- jtured by C. S- Pietro, and was| | purchased by Ford in 1919, Bur- ‘roughs, a writer and naturalist, was a. close . friend of Ford. A. Fairlane spokesman said the statue will be cleaned and put back | on the pedestal today. l enti’ j ST at Fairlane by-would-be thieves} | l | “ll [ ‘ ! “ll — eet se ret re i | i = \f My Li ome a | ‘OPEN TONIGHT OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 “TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, ‘SATURDAY TIL 6 Plastic Wall TILE This Week’‘s Special “All colors in tile and trim” Large Selections WERE | 2¢ 4&£s 2 of VINYL TILE fd * litetime guarantee national brand ms “Never Needs Waxing” SPATTER ASPHALT : ‘TILE © » ' - 9x9xVg For Tile Buys That Save You. l= we See ee tI _— (efi = } Ea. As FUEL OIL oe Ay Money, See ‘B&G’ | bus has said he is considering | - as soon as possible. asking the Legislature to take such a step. - a Federal troops now. are on duty at Centra] High to enforce court orders requiring .amission of Ne- gro pupils, The paratroopers were ordered to LittlesRock after mob} @ violence by segregationists, Ashmore said he believes ‘‘the first reaction of Little Rock to the q appearance of federa. troops was “ohe of relief’ after More than three weeks of tension and some; =. diserders. But he added that “now, since order has been re stored, we look out and see fed- eral troops ... on ouir-Streets— it’s an incredible sight." He~-said the troops should be withdrawn As for future government moves in the Little Rock situation, Ash- more said, ‘““My guess is that the federal. government will move now through court actions in the next few days against leaders of the| mob .. around Central High! School.” He. did not say what. form he thought those court ac-| tions would take: ' a. pertes: finally got together and _ \day. “afternoon. Traffic -|poute Jast night. ‘Coal Miners on Strike ripped dewn the barricade yester- flowed again along ’ the well-traveled _ “It's jnow a matter for Ottawa and Washington,"’ said Don Hutch- ison, ‘chairman of the Richford Board of Selectmen, ‘There's nothing we can do." a» * TOKYO w—Some 146,000 coal miners today ignored a govern- ment warning and went on a 24- hour stympathy strike in support of 4,300 striking miners in Kyushu who. are demanding a 25,000-yen 430 Orchard Lake . FE 5-6159 | COUNTER TOPPING mica, vinyl, linoleum _] and sandran V3 LINOLEUM TICE First quality Free Parking | ee ee _ WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC i= ie Py Pontiac Press Phote TREE. TOMATO Greg ‘Morgan, of 2202 Briggs Rd., Water- ford ;Township, had to climb a ladder to reach the top of his grandmother's treé-tomato which is eight feet, two inches tall. The tree-témato,: belonging to. Mrs. Odell Lippard, “@f 18 Victory Ct.,.is_a South American shrub with fragrant pinkish flowers. The tree is usually grown in greenhouses in the north but Mrs. Lippard seems to have had unusual luck for this part of the country. 5 ro ? iz : ¥ s! oe . ° P, E ep ie 1 : Brings | DUO-THERM "PRICES. BEGIN AS vow as87 4195 $5 Delivers Your Duo-Therm Be warm this winter with a model of the world’s best selling oil Models for every size home. heater. 1957 Keep warm from the floor up. Use Duo-Therm. FREE! ‘14° Thermostat Included with Each Duo-Therm MODEL PICTURED $159.95 NEW 1957 MODEL WITH POWER FAN *154 $5 Delivers to Your. Home! A big powerful heater with electric power blower to heat a 3. & 4 room home. In hand- some Sandalwood finish to harmonize with your furniture. DUO-THERM COMPLETE| ($69.44) bonus. It’s what happens to you as a person that’s the newest thing of all in a new Plymouth, Dodge, De Soto, Chrysler or Imperial. ~ Slip in behind the wheel, and you know right away that you’re somewhere exciting where you've never been hefore. Through the big wifidshield you feel yourself the master of all you survey. o And then you start . . hours or five years, you ride and drive as you have neyer done before. Not just your muscles ' but i inner self enjoys a new experience. . for five minutes, five Don‘t miss TV’s number one dramatic hour week—Thursday, 7:30 P.M., Channel 2. PLYMOUTH - “CLIMAX!” —"Live’ from Hollywood; new show, star casts each sébde:. You discover yourself as the boss-man of a live and willing partner in your travel. The ear seems almost thoughtful, mood as well as your command. responsive to your What used to be problems now become little pleasures and-points of new pride . . . parking, steering, handling your way in tight traffic. Through full-time power steering, you feel the road in a new, and wonderfully confident way. Touch the brakes, and you suddenly know how to. stop in a sure, self-confident new way: Touch a button and that’s all he “gear-shifting” there CHRYSLER DE SOTO « CHRYSLER FUN IS BACK IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT! is in your life. Turn a curve, you take it flat. Encounter a grade crossing, nary a dip or jounce. For your ride is Torsion-Aire—the engi- neering advance of the year. Found only in the cars of The Forward Look, suspension system levels the road . . . controls the ride as nothing else can! Yes, the biggest news of all in the newest cars on the road is what happens to you. And there’s a Forward Look car, in its*dramatic and funce- tional years-ahead styling, ready and milling to make it happen. Look AHEAD ss BUY AHEAD ... own more of the future right now... in any of the 5 cars’of >> THE FORWARD LOOK CORPORATION ae ons o~- Torsion-Aire sone taoot at your dealer's,’ IMPERIAL | “Be “~ \may be a long one for the team| BALTIMORE w — Unless the Detroit Lions show rapid improve- ment on several fronts, the 1957) National Football League season’ that was picked as one of the | favorites in the Western Division’ $s championship race. + Seldom in recent years has a Lions squad been beaten as de- cisively as Detroit was yesterday when it went down to a 34-14 de- TRIBE BOSS — Bobby Bragan, eusted in mid-season as Jy as 3 er, was named day to replace Kerby Farrell as head man at Cleveland next year following the Tribe’s Ist 2nd division finish in ll years. ~ Farrell Fired ‘After 1 Season ‘by Greenberg ‘ second floor. . Ex-Pirate Manager Gets to * : : + Pat O'Connor set a world record One-Year Contract to des a co oe Manage Indians 100-mile race as he won the In- 3 Sy ena i — Brash Bobby tional Speedway cs * baseball field and offered a sip off --* * *® i 7 i i i i iE i i L t z E played his cotiegiate bal] at the Spearheaded by a young quar- terback picked up from the Pitts- burgh sandiots. the Colts did everything right and forced the - Lions to do about everything wrong before 40,112 partisan fans in Memorial Stadium. ack John Unitas, who University of Louisville and then failed to make the grade in his) first Crack at the professional ranks, fired four touchdown passes e Colts gained 241 yards in’ Probably the biggest disappoint- + Detroit runners gained 142 yards against the world champion New York Giants, who had the best defense in the league last year, but yesterday netted a meager 23 yards in 24 rushing at- tempts ‘compared to 151 for Balti- Despite the fact that the Lions have a veteran team, there is little doubt that the coaching. staff will stress basic fundamentals—block-|; ing and tackling — in workouts kok (ols Pasir 34 Los on i iad feat before the aroused Baltimore Colts. prior to’ next Sunday’s game with the Green Bay Packers. Wilson says he will witheld final judgment on the Lion's per- formance until he has had & Wilson criticized a lack of block- ing in both the line and backfield, commenting: didn't have John. Powers’ models are com- peting for the title of Miss Thor- _joeeaared of Detroit for 1958 this jweek at the Detroit Race Course, Racing fans will vote during the week at the track. “the Coach Jesse MacLeay will be on Lt = F é : i ‘ i E iti judgment. “T understand that he has a de- lightful sense of humor, too. _, That three days after the orange pop incident, which occurred at a night game in Milwaukee. Greenberg hired Bragan by phone Satufday. Bragan’ is in Cuba, managing the Almendares club in the Cuban Winter League. He and Greenberg will meet to- morrow in New York and will at- tend the World Series. Farrell succeeded Al Lopez as Indians’ manager after the 1956 season. The 44-year-old Tennes- seean had piloted the Indian- apolis American Assn. club, then a Tribe farm, to victory in the ' Little World Series. “I think Farrell did a good job,” said Greenberg, ‘‘and a lot of cir- cumstances beyond his control had some effect on the team’s per- ~ formance.” Williams Oldest ‘Player Ever to Win Batting Title By INTERNATIONAL NEWS If there was any doubt about it before, Ted Williams’ tre- mendous 1957 season’ must rank* him among the great hitters of all time. , Boston's splendid splinter, now * 39, captured the American . League batting title with an average of .388, which also was tops in the majors. He was the oldest member of j— Mis league ever to take a batting: crown, It was his fifth such title. The first was in 1941, when he . hit .406. No one has broken .400 His outburst this year also lifted his lifetime Amark to pre- “cisely .350. Williams belted 3% homers this —_——— his major . total to 456. He still is led “e ss, Babe Ruth (714), Jimmy Foxx (534), Mel Ott (311) and eo * * i x despite a gallant last half rally by the Rams. “We didn’t look any- thing like we did in our opener,” been hard to match, Gene. Robertson, DeWitt Star BIG GAIN — Baltimore Colt Ameche picked up 15 yards before being brought ° fullback Alan morial Stadium. aoeeaby s game at Baltimore. Colts won the NFL. game 34-14 before a crowd of 40,000 in Me- ~ AP Wirephote ~|_ Touchdown: Reichow (32, pess from Rete). 7 out of- 12 for 90 yards and one touchdown. Layne set up Detroit's first touchdown in the 1st quarter with a 58-yard pass play on which end Dave Middleton romped to the Colts’ three. Halfback Howard (Hopalong) Cassady scored his first touchdown on a wide end sweep. The last Detroit marker came in the last quarter when Rote pitched the ball 33 yards to end Jerry Reichow. While the rugged Colts defense was stopping the Lions on the ground, quarterback Unitas rid- died the air with touchdown passes that added 44, 35, 3 and 35 yards, It was only the and time in 10 games since 1950 that Baltimore was able to defeat Detroit. Last time was in 1955 when the Colts won 28-13, Reichow played the entire -game with a pulled leg muscle while fullback Tom Tracy suffered a con- cussion early in the first half. Oth- er injured Detroit players were Middleton who injured his knee, end Dorne Dibble who injured his fingers and guard Jim Martin who pinched the nerves in his right arm. i Liens - Colts Statistics ¢ downs ........ ore ee AO emer e een nane re ee ee owns: Cassady (1, Prun); Conver- sions: Layne — 2. Colts Seoring Unitas); Du nn Oe on po tas = = Unites); Berry (38, . Conversions —, Pield foals — Rechichar “DETROIT ™ — The Detroit Tigers joined the elite foursome of first-division finishers and Jim Bunning sneaked in his 20th pitch- ing victory yesterday when they de- feated the Kansas City Athletics, 7-4, to wind up their 1957 season. The Bengals hold on 4th place in the American League ended six years of wandering in the wilder- ness of the 2nd division. “— The game also marked the ful- down by Detroit Lion halfback Jack Christiansen Tigers Wind Up in 4th Spots: fillment of Bunning’s efforts to become a 20-game winner. The hero in yesterday's contest was shortstop Harvey Kuenn whose two-run homer into the nearly empty bleachers at Briggs Sta- dium broke up 2 4-4 tie in the 6th inning. Bunning went into the game [ the 3rd inning after the Athletics’ Woody Held’ smashed a two-run homer off starter Duke Maas. The | slender righthander blanked the Athletics until the sixth when he was replaced by Billy Hoeft. Kansas City got six of its eight hits and scored all its runs against Maas. Tigers raked three Athletics moundsmen for a total df 16 hits, ’ linciuding three doubles in addition to Kuenn’s ninth home run of the year. Tigers got their first two runs jin the first inning when Kuenn Ea Dick Robertson and Dick DeWitt, both frorn Pontiac, won the Davis- burg Golf Club best ball tourna- ment Saturday with a nine-under- par 63. Bill Davenport and Bill Morris of Flint shot 64 for runner- ne honors while the team of Dr. . E. LeCroix and Jim Smith took | played in the tourney. Kimball 20, Berkley 0 Royal Oak Kimball was stamped as a future power of the Eastern Michigan following a 20-0 blanking of a strong Berkley eleven Satur- day. John Holbrook tallied on scores of 19 and 33 to-pace the win. The stopping of Bear ace Franz Neubrecht was a key factor tin the Knights’ win. = with 65. Forty-two teams. Lose Polo Grounds Finale | Giants Bow in Last Tilt NEW YORK team, stay!" That was the chant put up yes- terday by thousands of diehard fans who crowdéd beneath the New York Giants’ clubhouse after lost, their last game of all time as New York's own. But with the 9-1 defeat by Pittsburgh in the books and the team once again buried in 6th . AL CHAMP SIGNS*— / AP wale Ted Williams, who at the/ age of 39 won the Major League batting championship, signs a hatid ‘painted por- traitof himself by Paul Hedlund, Worcester, Mass, Williams won hi 17-year-old high \school artist of s fifth crown with a 388 mark as his teammates béat the Yanks, 3-2, Ea (INS) — me the Polo grotnders played, and! to Pirates in Gotham place, the fans ferecd their af- tention elsewhere, | Soon they were chanting, “Wel want Stoneham, we want Stone- ham — with. a. rope around his neck.” Giant president Hersee Stone- ham, largely instrumental in mov- ing the New Yorkers to San Fran- cisco for the 1958 season, did not acknowledge the salutation. Before the game,,-attended by 11,606 senti:néntalists, many old- time and current Giant stars were Duster also madg the last out. Carl Hubbell, Sal Maglie and Wil- lie Mays. * * * The “‘say hey” kid had two singles and threw a Pirate runner out at home but had no part in ‘|New York's only run, Dusty Rhodes - |delivered Don Mueller with a sacri- fice fly in the first inning. The Duster also made the last out, grounding out to short to end the game. The Giants managed six hits off Bob Friend, but the Pirates rapped Johnny Antonelli and four relievers for 17. : Troy 59-0 Winners Rolling to a 25-0 Ist quarter lead’ Troy went on'‘to pile up a 59-0 victory over L’Anse Creuse in a Saturday non-league game in which the entire squad got into the act. Reserve Dave Stokes tallied 20 points and antl Littleson 18 to pace. saad a paraded out. to take a bow. The) Cranes Victors af Grid, Soccer Defeats Saturday at Cranbrook Cranbrook school engaged Chi- cago’s Lake Forest Academy in two kinds of football games Satur- day at the Cranes’ home fields, rand won both. ‘Crane soccer squad shut out the Chicagoans 4-0 in the morn- ing then the gridders went out ‘in the afternoon to trample their visitors in a runaway contest 32-7. Victery for the soccer club was its third straight and the football win was the Crane's second in a row. : opening period was a 40-yard gal-| 7 ilop and the Cranes sewed the win upon Pete Turner’s 38-yard sprint | after picking up a Lake Forest fumble a few minutes later. All scoring was in the first half, as the Chicagoans stiffened their de-|, fenses in the later part of the game. Lake Forest scored -in the ist period on a 67-yard run by Les Turner. Other Cranbrook ‘scores, all in the 2nd period, were made by Stu Clark on a-6-yard plunge, after Ozzie Jacobsen ran 28 yards to the six. Noteware went over again after a 50-yard over ;iend, and Ed Mearian talliéd’6n a S-yard buck. Clark kicked both Cranbrook extra’. points, Cranbrook soccer -goals were! scored by Pete King, Lou O’Con- nor, Sam Chinchuria and John JHartman, | Tom Noteware's first TD in the Br doubled, Kaline beat out an infield and Charley Maxwell each had to each Tiger player; that is the a KANSQS rr oIry | ABR ABR AE Power,ib, 4 } 1 Tuttle, ef 6 @ 1 Graff,3> | 4 2 Pinigan,3b 4 0 3 Zernial, if 4 0 9 Kuenn,ss § 2 Held, cf 4 11 Kaline,rf 5 1 i Martin.ss 4 © 1 Maxwell, i 4 @ Lopes, 3b 4 @ 1 Groth, | oo0e Martyn,rf 3 0 1 Philley, ib 4 0 2 D—Cerv 1006 son, 40686 (Smith, ¢ 4 0 © Bolling,2b 4 1 é Gorman,p-1 1 1 Maas, p 1906 Terry, p @ 0 © Bunning,p 1 1 1 c. jizas 61 0 «© @ A—Taylor 1 I ¢ Brunet,.p © 0 @ 1 @1 ——-<— Hoeft, p 1141 T 3444 8 Totals 37 716 a gied for B in 6th. B—Ran for Taylor in 6th ( ed out on strikes for Terry in 7th Popped out for Martyn in 9th Kansas City ...... oo4 re? 00 0—4 Detroit ......06.- 3 103 01 6 7 E—Lopes, Kuenn. RBI—Graff, Yernial wert 3, Taaxwell, Pinigan, Taylor, Kuenn Kuenn scored on Lopes" error in ist). ab “Lopes Graff, Kuenn, Maxwell. Lor Held uenn. DP—Martin, Graff and Power; Kuenn, — ne Philley. Left —Kansas City 4, it 9. BB—Brunet 1. Bunning 1. Bunning 2, Hoeft 3. HO—Go: ‘aced batter in 6th), ‘Terry 2 in jorman 4 Terry ‘2- 3, ag 1-1 0-0, Hoeft 0-0 wet wo eeantn PALS “boar, eae, McKin Tabacchi, T— 2:38. pelts Bears Retain Status in Ae Gridiron Play a high-scoring contest Satur- Reg ‘Dove’ Club Bears retained their leadership and unbe at en status in the club league. Bears defeated Packers 72-48. Packers are in second place. oa Joe Doyan again shone as Bears’ with seven touchdowns. the clib’s other contest, with Jerry and Don Swain leading the winners’ offense. Current standings—B e ars 32; * Lions defeated the Eagles 42-0 in|’ As ait name been expecte big Saturday. ness of predictions that they reckoned with. the quartet, beating Southern ‘ learned less about their basic meet have wished. scoring habit, of course. ing opponents of comparabice impressed by the balance of Texas squad, are coming on. surprised by the speed with which it has developed. nent putting the ball in play. Nothing in football is mo inte scores. the emotional desire is determined mental attitude. Lou Little | Calls: ‘em. more clearly ih the gridiron’s mid-western sector than in other parts of the country%as a result: of the season's first d, things began. to take shape Michigan State, Iowa ae Minnesota donee the sound- will be in the middle of the fighting for big Ten honors, with Michigan also to be ' In a sense, Michigan had perhaps the most ubeful day of California, 16-6, because this was a real test. The others, running up large totals, perhaps strengths than their coaches x * * ‘When you're scoring 54 points, as MicHigan State did on Indiaria; 70 points, as Iowa did on Utah State, and 46, as Minnesota did on Washington, you are ‘Peveloping a useful But the invaluable development which comes from play- strength is not there. When you're running rough-shed you're not learning too much. Nevertheless, all. three teams showed strong attacks and sound defenses built on good personnel, I was especially ‘the Minnesota offense, as the Gophers gained 389 yards on the ground and 162 in the air against Washington. That’s a good proportion. ‘ xk * * avery section has its leaders, however—teams strong enough. to indicate this early that the national football picture is per- haps the strongest we have ever seen. In the Southwest, Oklahoma, which didn’t play Satur- day; Texas A&M, Baylor and in increasingly impressive In the South,’ Duke, Auburn, Georgia Tech, despite its tie with SMU, and that good North Carolina State outfit, stand out. It was known that N. C. State was strong but it has x k& * Perhaps you noticed the manner of N.C. State's victory over Maryland, and how its scores were set up—on intercepted passes, on kick returns, on plays which began: with the oppo- re valuable than the quality . of opportunism, the ability to turn the opponent's mistakes N.C. State, led by two fine backs in Dick Christy and Dick Hunter, did that. The Notre Dame win over Purdue shows that in foo still an important factor. team many thought to be a year away, certainly not so early in this season. But the Irish took into the game a all a gady Here When you have this désire, along with’ some ability, you’re a tough team to beat. ALL OUTDOORS (INS) — Michi- The game law digest also shows black squirrels in the Lower Pe- City Golfers Win Elks Inter-Club Tournament yesterday at Pontiac Country Chub. Thirteen clubs from this area ege in the tourney, ‘with Royal 2nd place and Port aon finishing 3rd. Ed Wasik was medalist among -|the’ 100 golises with a Sotr-onder: par 69, Other Pontiac scores were Dick DeWitt, Stan Savage and. Carl Bob Gaines ont _ Steinhelper, 79. open season after 6 a.m. Tuesday |70 Hunting Begins Tuesday A veteran. Monroe duck hunter called to report early movements of wild ducks on the marshes of Pointé Mouillee. Local ducks—those which remain in the area all year—will bear the jbrunt of early season shooting. DDGA Golfers. Whip Publinx Michigan Publinx ‘Golf Association, 36%-3544, in their annual challenge “meet Sunda y at Edgewood Coun try Club. Perry Byard’s 20-feot putt on «| the 18th green im the final match won honors for the DDGA, which now hoids an 8-4 ledd.th the se- ries, Doug Wilson of the Publinx team was the individual medalist with a two-under‘par 69, followed by the DDGA's Bob Babbish, who shot a s Orioles Ask Waivers | _ion Ex-Tiger Trout BALTIMORE \# — The Balil- . more Orioles yesterday asked for waivers on Paul (Dizzy) Trout, 42-year-old ex-Detroit Tiger pitcher, Trout, oldest hurler in the ¢|major leagues, wa’ signed to a Varicouver contract in August and was brought up to the Orioles Sept. 1. He appeared in two games, pitching one-third of an inning and giving up four earned runs. Orioles also sought waivers on Eddie Robinson who was signed as a batting coach in June and put on the active list Sept. 1. Leaghe Baseball Piayofis SUNDAY'S a Ww Series (best of 7) Denver &, Butate 1 cbenver wins +1, . et pocnre Aa se hata ats : Club 15 Club Standings + DAN New = ans vi 13 4 bah aad Pg , 40 beens a. : tose , ae | eee ee weeans so=— mM 12 M4 i i 0-8 3 es - Sonton qeihants af t= uO OM 9 * 2. 16 Detroit ........ oes 0 -U Bs 3 8 UBT «06 30 **.Baltimore ...... ¢ 10 8 &§ —= 8 6 15 % 500 FH *Cleveland .....06 9 & 1 tL w= Ih B % 497 21% - ° Oy 28 6 Mb On 1 Me 38% ¥ gee iJ } 5 s ® q oe | a wo. ¥, ay: One eanceled i : ‘ : to 3 é _ |__. NATIONAL TAAGUE ha, bn OT BRN ON Fa RY Cat FOR w iL PCT. BAD, Milwaukee ..c008 == oH! 3 2 BR 13 13- 16 86 ge. 7 = St. comes Mo = @ B48 ee Bt ery ehigesvns 12 = 1 9 19°17 19) 4 7] B88 vitesse #8 10 = 16-512 16 14 80 4 OSI8 SER Ee SEAS Dee Gnego 8 B) ® ee a as 8 nittabureh - © 6B: 8 8 IF 10 — 63 02 403 33 ; “ e “ ) ae \ a] 177 Edison, Pontiac ° Shs as oe i “s (ne ven emee = Th 4 ans eS t Pe ae * ss : - Rees ot tga oe NA ‘ta LEAGUE Pittsburgh 9, New Philadelphia 2, Chicago 8, oe Louis 3 a H Spartan Tutors a ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, mNBAY, sie tt 9st!” | /olverines Do! at (e . Count Blessings After. 54-0 Win - State’s: Vast Manpower Routs Indiana; Several Questions Answered EAST LANSING (® — Michigan) State football coaches were count- ing their blessings this weekend after the stunning 44-0 shutout - of Wea Lost Pet. Behind Milwaukee ...... % 59 17 — St. Louis .....,.. a7) G6? 565 «8 Brooklyn ..,.... 84 7 8345 «0 Cincinnati ...... oo | 860674 51 15 Phil ia 7 WW 50°18 New York ...... 69 65 48 6 Chicago —.. 4555 62 bs 3 see Pittsburgh ...... 62 Pe 403 = 33 N BIG TE Towa 70, Utah State 14 “Michigan State 54, Fa cae 0 jsteme ae ~ Usc innesomw 46 GE L ilisdale 3. ane Michigan 14 — 26, Olivet i < © Alma 14, Hope is” a Perris In. re Illinois (Chicago Ext.) 7 esger iy Univ. 41, Northern Michigan 12 Miami (Ohio) 20, Western Michigan 0 Albion , —— 13 OTHERS Heidelberg 21, Onde Wes. 14 Hiram 13, Oberlin 7 Kansas State 36, — Young 7 Missouri 34, Arizona } -Notre Dame 12, veaces 0 raiso 26, Bali State 26 erst 33, se yam 14 rmy 42, Nebraska pesten Gniversity 0, Semeschreestts 6 iby 6 Brandeis 14, Boston Col : “20, —— State . Buffalo 14, Carnegie Tech. 9 Colgate 14, Cornell ‘13 Columbia 33, Brown 20 Dartmouth 27, N. =seenire 6 Holy Cross 21, VMI Lehigh 19, Selaceet 14 Navy 33, William & Mary 6 Penn State 19, Penn 14 Princeton 7, Rutgers 0 Rhode Island 25, Maine 7 Syracuse 7, lowa State 7 Vermont 26, Union 6 Villanova 20, Furman 6 Williams 24, Trinity 6 Wake rot 9 Georgia Tech, 0 pi ‘Tacha aut Memphis Btate 6 : State 48, Maryland 1) ‘ N. Caroline 26, Clemson @ ‘ West Virginia 14, Washington State ~ Calitorete uJ Wyoming 20, Montana 6 Air Porce 40, Occidental 6 Arkansas 41, Tulsa 14 Colorado 30, Utah 24 Gettysburg 19. Bucknell 0 : Marshall 21, Morehead (Ky) 6 Louisiana State 28, Alabama 6 Mississippi 15, Kentucky 0 South Carolina 26, Wofford 0 Davidson 19, Bast Carolina 6 Lenoir Rhyne 0, Presbyterian 0 (tie) Marviand State 34, Virginia State 14 Murray (Ky.) 7, Plorence (Ala.) 6 Western Kentucky 10, East Terinessee 6 Tampa $3, Troy (Ala.) 7 Miss. Southern 13, Trinity (Tex.) 6 Cincinnati 19, Wichita 13 Baylor 14, Houston wy Selahems A&M ty North Texas 19 Texas 20, Tulan: —_ Col. 13. Corpus Christi U. 7 a State {Tempe} 19, Idaho 7 Te Texed@vesters 20, Weat Texas 12 Arkansas A&M 7, Ark. State Tehre 6 Ariz. State (Plagstaff) 16, Redlands 6 Pitt 6, Oregon 3 College of Pacific 34, — State 12 Idaho State 40, Nevad Eastern New Mexico 3, lomaaae Col. 7 New Mexico 30, Colorado State Univ. 7 San Diego n Francisco St. 13 Montana State 13, Cen. Washington 7 Chico State 19, Pepperdine 13 NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE EASTERN weer T Pet _ oo Cleveland t ‘i ‘ 1.000 3 Chicago Cards 1 0 61.000 A bi Pittsburgh 1 @ 61000 @ 7 Washington 6 1 6 «£00 7 @ New York 61 0 0 3 6 dancer o 10 08 LD WW ESTERN DIVISION ~ W_L T Pet. Pts OP -- Los Angeles 1 6 61000 7 13) Baltimore 1 @ 61000 «6M iM Green Bay ...... 16 61000 21 #617 Chicaso ars 8 16 oO 7 M7 Detroit seme 9 16 680 14 OM San Francisco 91s oo Ww ac SUNDAY'S RESULTS | Cleveland § New York 3 Pittsburgh 28, Washington 7 Baltimore 34. Detroit 4 A : Green Bay 21, Chicago Bears 17 | Chie Card 2, San Francisco 10° es mnaeten 17, gee 13 THIS WEEK‘S SCHEDUL * SATURDAY Chicago Bears at Baltimore, night Cieveland at Pittsburgh, t nig New York at UNoay night at ee pal Los Angeles at San Francisco Seongue at Chicago © Cardinals _ GOT A GAS PANY PERMIT? THEN THIS IS COM For YOU! Aw GAS HEAT at its best-with There is a size ond type to meet your needs and budget Lou Janka Heating, Air Conditioning Sales & Service tines Business FE 4-3811 ‘Nite Service FE 4-0445 Fr The Spartans figured to be splen- asa this fall but there was still questions to be answered in the ‘proving ground. of actual play. The squad came up with all the right answers in their initial test Saturday. There was the question of quar- terbacking. Jim Ninowski and Mike -Panitch answered that .one. Ninowski sent the first team in for ‘two fast touchdowns in the open- ing quarter. Panitch matched him by directing the second eleven to two more ‘markers in the second periad, There was the worty about back- field power. Walt Kowalczyk was running at top form at right half again and started the scoring by going over from the six yard line after straight - arming a pair of Hoosiers, Blanche Martin proved a spec: tacular replacement for Clarence Peaks at jeft half with an aver- age of siX yards per carry. Mar- tin was the only one of the seven players in the scoring act to col- lect two touchdowns. The Spartan passing power had) been questioned, especially after, Ninowski didn’t try a single throw during the last intra-squad game. The MSU quarterbacks hit their first 11 pass tries Saturday. Nin- owski connected with six of six and Panitch with four of four. The reshuffled line belted the Indiana forward wall off its feet. And the replacements—the sopho- mores from the fifth and sixth! teams—were causing the Hoosiers | NEW YOR almost as much trouble. as the ball wash: regulars. dale teammates Doug Maison. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marching along under a heavy aerial bombardment, Hillsdale Col- lege swept to its 27th straight! football victory, 35-14, in a long| awaited clash against -Central, Michigan over the weekend. It was a battle of schools gen-' erally regarded as the top small! college football powers in Michi-' gan. pews Malem, a 6-foot-4 wealer | of Colleges a“ u—Monday’s foot- Who writes the script for Colum- As another reassuring’ touch, |}i,7 Buff Donelli debuts as coach, ‘end Dave Kaiser connected with | five straight extra points and of a poor pass grom center. It was Michigan State’s deep re- serves of manpower that impressed | most of the 52,162 fans in the re-| built Spartan Stadium. Cardinals Sign Fred Hutchinson ST. LOUIS ws — Former De- troit Tiger manager Fred Hutch- inson, who managed’ the St. Louis Cardinals from fourth place into contention. for the National League pennant this season, will pilot the team again in 1958. He signed a new one-year con- tract Saturday. The terms weren't disclosed but his salary this year was thought to be $30,000 and he is | | | believed -to have gotten a $5,000 raise. his son Dick throws two touch-; down passes plays a great game at quartefback and an un- gung, Rudy Pegoraro, kicks a- 24 yard last period field goal to aipset. Brown 23-20 ... . But Jimmy~Shof-| ner of Texas Christian did almost , as much-by himself in upsetting | Ohio State 18-14. He returned al punt 90 yards for a touchdown, gained 7 other yards, did the team's punting, recovered a fum- ble and stopped an Ohio State m touchdown in the game's final min- ures with a shoestring tackle . Another one - man show: Wray | Carlton of Duke. He scored 26 of his team’s 40 points, a conference record, in 40-0 victory over Vir-. ginia . . . He scored four touch-' downs and converted twice. ~ EX-CHIEF SCAMPERS \— Former, Pontiac High gridder Walt Poe (13) scampers upfield for a ll yard gain against Central Michigan as Hills- . |) It was a good day for sopho- Trippett (65) e well (43). Hillsdale won its 27th game in a row, 35-14, as Central.fell for the third straight time. (20) and Dave Hillsdale King 0 State Small Colleges quarterback, passed for one touchdown and scored two others | in short crashes through center. | His accurate passing also set up four of the five —_ scores, Central launched the season vic- ‘torious in its last 15 games. Hills- dale had won 2 straight when ithe fall footbal] curtain rang up. * * * was the" _ Chippewas’) _ The loss i Weekend Grid Activity: lige his three touchdowns. Then Maryland’s Howie Dare matched him.with a return of 90 yards. . _...Wash-| | | i { | | \ | ' Packaged excitement . ington’s Jimmy ‘‘Jet’’ the same with a 91-yard second ‘half kickoff although his team lost ‘to Minnesota 46-7., . But for a ' poal- Cinderella twist take the case of Rene Ramirez of Texas. Rene was so low down on the Texas roster that he wasn't even listed in the brochure. But he came off] ane lthe bench Saturday to spark two ‘touchdown drives in Texas’ 20-6 verdict over Tulane . . . Now some more printing will have to be done. ‘mores . Billy_Cannon, Louisiana | State soph, shook loose on touch-) down runs of 53 and 73 yards in 'the 28-0 rout of Alabama. Navy has a halfback named {Dick Dagampat. Sounds like mild| The most exciting play in foot- | profanity but the only profanity is | ball is the kickoff runback for a touchdown, and fans at College | Park, Md., were treated to not one but two of them . . . Dick Christy of N. C. State hauled back a ktek 96 7“ —: one o AP Wirephote FISHED OUT — After the disaster, Miss Thriftway, is lifted out of the Ohio River by a crane. The craft was moving at 160 miles per hour when it hit a wave ‘and was wrecked. Bill Muncey suffered _ shoulder bruises and shock. Another driver dived in to help him. jplanes in the Madison Regatta on provoked by the opposition . . iMr. Dagampat scored two touch- jdowns in Navy's 33-6 victory over | William & Mary. “Seattle Driver Wins Hydro Title MADISON, Ind. (# — Jack Regas of Seattle piloted favored Hawaii Kai III to victory Sunday in the Governor's Cup race for hydro- the Ohio River. The victory assured. Hawaii Kal Ill of first place in the national | hydroplane championship stand- ings this year. Sunday’s 400 points gave it enough of a lead | to survive the last race, even if it shouldn’t race. The boat also captured this year’s President's Cup and Silver Cup. The annual race for the airplane | @ engine-powered boats was run Sun- day before an estimated 25,000 persons. Another Seattle hydro, trial heat. Pilot Bill Muncey es-| caped with a bruised shoulder when hts speeding craft struck a wave, catapulted into the air and then slapped down hard on the water. The boat disintegrated and crewmen said the boat, a two-time \Gold ; Cup champion, was beyond irepair. | 6:00-16 ioc "$ 8.95 TAOS ......... $10.95 JOIN 1 THE SAFE cia LEAGUE 7:60-15 8:00-15 95. 6.70-15 sig . : plus tex 1 25 Week & TREADS retresdable tire fe .00 0 Down @ Guaranteed to give you fF thousands more miles on ' cts = aes te-usab' oat ‘new safety tread de- @ Bone 00 kT “$11.95 ce pnevce SlaGe mah N. PERRY FE 2-021 Jones did! -| up three of his team’s Miss | Thriftway, was wrecked during af liminated Central's Russ South- ithird straight this season. The Chips have been beaten by Bradley and Western Michigan. Hillsdale bounced Lakeland in its opener a week ago. Coach + Muddy Waters crew hasn't been whipped since Eastern Michigan | best them early in the 1954 sea- | son, The Dales scoredin each’ period, |notching a pair of touchdowns in to.Shine While ifar Michigan will travel this sea- _;Son in the Big 10 depends on the improvement the Wolverines make Michigan Fails. Beating Irojans Bennie’s Gridders Take 16-6 Struggle; Big Ten’ Chances in Doubt LOS ANGELES, Calif. — How in, the next two weeks. 2 Michigan, as it played here, against Southern California, would offer little resistance to ‘powerful Michigan State. The traditional rivals come face to ‘face in Ann Arbor Oct. 12. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan was far. from content with his club's performance Saturday against the Trojans. What was billed as a Michigan cake walk developed into a rugged struggle before the Wolverines won 16-6. . tol gemtelaes 'od |: “We're certalfily not as far ad- ‘vanced as we were last year al \this time,” Oosterbaan said. ‘‘Our tempo has been slowed by injuries, so we- have to make marked, pro- gress before we get inte our own . LOOK, IT’S LOOK — Michigan State sophomore Dean Look‘is hit by several Indiana players after a nice gain Saturday afternoon, Look was impressive in his first game with MSU as the Spartans ‘FOGG CA hi Mh LEE WEE a romped over the Hoosiers, 54-0. FE 2-5921 154 Orchard Lake Road A OIE YT EE TI pa GEORGE MILLER, SHELTON = BODY SERVICE ea BUMPING - —_ PAINTING ARC and CAS WELDING FRONT END ALIGN- MENT — FRAME STRAIGHTENING—ALL OVER PAINT JOBS. All Work Guaranteed See Geo. Miller ? conference schedule.”’ ; The Wolverines will yo into that game in full strength bar- ring practice injuries this week. | There were a few bumps and bruises reminding the Wolver- | ithe final quarter. * * * Meanwhile, Alma Hope played| a thriller opening theif MIAA/ seasons, with Alma winning 14-13 with seconds seid maining, U nee paige scored on a se pass pattern, Left end Bill Klen | skirted into the backfield took a handoff and threw 4 -30-yard pass to Leonard Fase in the end zone. Ron Murray booted the extra point that won the game. | Hope drew first blood in the opening minutes, capitalizing on an. Alma fumbie, Jerry Hendrick- son finally carried over from the! five. . * * * A Hope bobble of the second | half kickoff led score, with Pat Brady plunging over from the 1. Hope bounced back in the third period to go ahead once more on a short plunge. | However, this time Alma blocked, Bill Huibregtse’sextra-point kick. In another MIAA Albion upset Kalamazoo College 27-13, Kalmazoo scored first but couldn’t stand up against the accurate passing: of Albion quar- terback Bob Gamble, who set downs with passes, In other games: Adrian overwhelmed-Olivet, 26-0; .| Ferris defeated University of Tir’ nois (Chicago Extension) ,13-7; Cap- ital University bounced Northern, | Michigan, 41-12: and Miami of Ohio | ishut out Western Michigan, 20-0. | ‘American Assn. Club ‘Wins Junior Series BUFFALO, N_LY. (# — The power- | ful Denver Bears reign today as’ the Junior World Series baseball kings. The Bears’ 8-1 victory over But- falo yesterday sewed up the best- of-seven series and gave the Amer- ican Assn. its fourth straight tri-, umph, 4-1, over the International League. The Internationals have not won since 198% when Montreal defeated |Kansas City. | all minor. jafter a second-period march Wolverines added two points when | Alex i to Alma’s first| j \ opener, | touch- ‘ ines of their tough clash here. But Oosterbaan considered them Making its initial start, Michi- = Jooked ragged much of the time. Two sustained drives pro | duced touchdowns. Jim Pace flew over the goal line from the one of |] ‘Sl soyards. Seconds later the Callahan trapped Trojan quarterback Jim Conroy in_ his own end zone ae a | EES Watch this advertisement for weekly winners. *150°° I l t | I ! | ! ! | 1 ! ! I I | ! 1 | 1 1 li. | I | 1 ! “Modern Bowling at Its Best” The All New “Lakewood Lanes” 14 All New Brunswick Alleys with Automatic Pinsetters + @ A Modern Lunch Room at Your Convenience , SOME TEAM OPENINGS ‘STILL AVAILABLE WOMEN TUES. 9 P. M.— MEN FRI. 9 P, M. | LAKEWOOD LANES 3121 W. Huron (M-59) After 5:30 P.M. — FE 2-7448 FE 4-7943 in cash prizes Can you predict week's games? If you pick the most winners, you will win $50... there are twelve other prizes, too... — each week. Guess the final scores of each game. In case of ties, the con- ENTER THE [-ckrich FRANKFURT FOOTBALL SCORING CONTEST the winners of this and WEEKLY PRIZES First Prize: $50.00 Second Prize: $35.00 Third Prize: $15.00 Plus 10 other prizes eac h we ek testant with {he closest scores wins! of $5.00 each! FOLLOW THESE EASY RULES: WRITE IN YOUR SCORING GUESSES FOR ALL 10 GAMES: 1. Mail this entry, along with an Eckrich Frankfurt package label or ~ _- Frankfurt band,*or a reasonable facsimile of the Eckrich trademark | Games of Saturday, Oct. 5 illustrated above, to Peter Eckrich & Sons, Inc; P. 0. Box 299, Fort Wayne, Indiana. NotreDame ( ) vs. Indiana ( ) 2. Additional entry blanks may be obtained at your dealer's. ichigan ( -). vs. Georgia ( ) 3. Send in as many entries as you like. Be sure to send an Eckrich Michigan State ( +) vs. California ( ) label, or reasonable facsimile, with each entry! Albion ( ) vs. Adrian ( ) 4. Be sure to include your dealer's name below. , 5. All €Atnes.must be- Postmarked no later than midnight Friday of | 'Hinois (+) vs. Colgate ( ) each contest week. Purdue ( __) vs. Minnesota ( ) Name \ Army (+) vs. Penn. State = ( ) Sues Detroit 4 ) ws. AirForceAcad. ( =) Ci Western Mich. (|) vs. Marshall () ity and Zone State Hope ( ) WS. Northern Mich. ( ) My Dealer's Name and Address CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS Outside White Eagle. Brand—Reg. $4.95 1 PAINT SALE HOUSE PAINT Gal. PLASTIC UPHOLSTERING © MATERIAL — -Reg.-$1.69 yd. Yé 59° _USE OUR LAYAWAY 5 GALLON §$ CAN MASTER PAINTERS’ BARN PAINT RED OXIDE 116 Le. Ock, Brown, Tile Green, Red DUO WEAR ‘Porch & Deck | Gal. ‘I 98 SANTA FE BROWN CARLSBAD BLUE SARATOGA RED SUN VALLEY GRAY Reg. $5.95 Special _ LATEX PAINT ‘3 ROGERS ‘MASONRY FINISH Reg. $6.49 — Special “$ 3 98 ROGERS MASONRY FINISH \O (256. S. Sa R LET US DO IT! aginay St. ~ FE: 2-1026 | ‘ i. eeeendc DO IT YOURSELF MAR a Formerly Mac’s Paint & Tile Penetrating Sealer 0 Qt. 79¢ Qts. 97¢ Reg. $4.55 — Special $3 ; HOURS: 4 hy jerome Open Tues., Wed., Thurs. and Sat. 9 to 6; Mon., Fri. 9 to 9 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING | Minoso, RUNS BATTED IN. Canadian Open can » played at Edmonton Aug. 20-23 STOLEN York, 34; Wertz, Sedan. 28; Zernial Call FRASER To BUY or SELL REAL ESTATE | Representing Bateman & Kampsen Realty FE 40528 The ‘ton, 1M; Wertz, Clev i oaaee stu genves in part as a qualify. nt Jensen, Boston and Mi rd T pee ay ing tournament er the World Invi- Hris—Fox, Chicago, 1 196: aateong Bos. ! : Mage Rew Tek. Ass Saree. tational, will be played July 24-21. 1. | Setrétt and Mantle, New York. Me eel Groat. Pittsburgh. 33 or te * * J DOUBL — GardnerBallimore and! Breer Milwaukee, 118; Banks, : Minese, Chicago, 36; Malzone, Boston, 31; Chicago, .113; Mays, oe York, 132: J. Edwin Carter, PGA tourna- Kuenn, Detroit, 30: Jensen, Boston, 29. Mathews,” Milwaukee * Blasingame, : . i IPLES — Bauer, ald jas. Lacie. 108, ment bureau manager, said May ..’ ~ zor, 3: Sea clanere! RUNS BATTED a Aaron, Milwau had agreed to move up the dates land Box, ‘kee, 132; Ennis, Louis. 105; Banks, of his two tournaments so the |, HOME RUNS. a * sievers Bok gg ad ete — Musial ‘st. Louis, 102; Hodg- oir i ae fal) ~ Schoedienst. Biwaukee, 200; 1 TOLEN BABES—Aparicio, Chicago, 28: cinnatl, 197: Ma rs New York, 195; Ash- ih j ~ Cadillac Demos Choice of 8 Colors—None Over 200 Miles : THE POPULAR HARDTOP-(COUPES and SEDANS) » EQUIPPED WITH . . -- Lights, Directional Signal Light, Gleve Bex (autematic) Light, Luggage Compartment (autematie) Signal Seeking Pre-Selector Radie Electrically Operated Antenna Cadillac Heating System White Sidewall Tires ed Alr Cleaner—Oil Bath Type Filp Type Arm Rest, center rear oil Filter Pewer Brakes «, Outside Mirrer, left side, Cadiflac Power Steering eontret Cigarette Lighters, rans (twe) Pai: twe-tone * Cleck, electric Parking Brake warning signal Hydramatic Transmission Viser Vanity Mirrer Visors, | san Lights, front ash receivers Wheel Discs (set of four) Lights, Back-Up (dual) Light, Ceertesy or Map (automatic) oor 1195 $839” Per Month Why Settle for Less— Drive a Bargain JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC » 280 South Saginaw St. Mirfer, ree Rear View, ° re mote Windshield Washer & Coordinator Down High Trade-In Allowance—Your Car Should Moke It FE 4-3566 INS Picks Top 10 _and point totals, as voted this week ‘by International News Service: iSs— Wynn, Cleveland, ' 184: 182; Johnson, Baltimore. oe ms Turley, New Ret ia Mil urn, Philadelph DOU Hoak, Cincinnati, 39; “Mu- al, es ia. .38; Bouchee. Philadel- ja, 35; Banks, Chicago. Sa; Moryn, icago, i TRIPLES — Mays, New. York, 20; Vir- don, Pittsburgh, 11; Mathews and Bru- ton, Milwaukee. 8, Schoendienst and Co- -Vington, Milwaukee, Ashburn and ar chee, Phil fa and Dark, St. Louis. HOME RUNS -- Aaron, Milwaukee, Banks, Chicago. 4; Snider. Brooklyn eS New York, 35; Mathews, kee, STOLEN ay oe — Mays, 38;, Gilllam, Broo! : Blasingame. St. Louis, 21; Cincinnati, 19; Pernandez, Philadelphia. 17 = PITCHING (15 decisions) — Buhl, Mil- waukee, 18-7, .720; Sanford, eames (19-8, .704; Acker, Cincinnati, 16-5, 'Spahn, Milwaukee, 21-11, 656; Dry ae ‘Brooklyn and Burdette, seaeaukee, 17-9, rex EOUTS — Sanford. Philadelphia,| Brett and Drabowsky. Chicago 170; Jone, St. Louis, 154; nae Brooklyn. if Milwau- Mew York, sone Ee NEW YORK (INS) — Here- are the country’s top 10 college foot- ball teams, with won-lost records Tea Okishoma (1-0) cir bieiceinleweie . Michigan State (1-0) ones Michigan (1-0) Minnesota (1-0) Baylor (2-0) . ¢-sapecee Texas A&M (2-0)... Iowa (1-0) Oregon State (2- “oy Atiod Navy (2-0) see Duke (2-0) .. orses 5 The INS el of experte consists of \East-West Shrine game scouts Bernie Bierman, _Andy _ Kerr _ and Francis J. Powers; INS Bob © di and INS sports pre pees Barrington. . Voting Pts. twee Al geeree x Sepravevy- SUNDAY'S HOME RUNS Phillies; Thomas, Bouchee, Re oe Coenen: ¥ Held, Athletics; anhees; Tigers; Long, Morgan, Cubs. his side but not lady luck as b John Barnum, won ‘the Michigan PGA golf championship Sunday at Birmingham Country Club. - Ray Maguire had the gallery on thome folks, was defeated by the hong-hitting Grand Rapids profes- sional on the 1st hole of a sudden- death playoff after the two p title by defeating Maguire, the host pro, on the 1st hole of a sudden-death playoff held in semi- darkness. The two golfers were tied after the regulation 36 holes with even par 144’s. CHAMPION AND ‘RUNNERUP — John Bar- num (left) of Grand Rapids receives congratula- tions from Ray Maguire after winning the Michigan PGA golf championship Sunday at Bir- mingham Country Club. Barnum won the state * Maguire; naying in fhend ob theta the, regulation 36 “ade, sr with even par 144s," ‘The playott began at 6:35 p.m. and darkness Was closing in so NR tet Od Septerett Me fy MEN WANTED To Train for High Salary Radio & Television. Day and Evening Classes Allow . You to Remain Fully Employed While Training, Mail Coupon or Call for Complete Information. No Obligation. : — ecironics insiiiuie : Tere ee eee eee e ee eer ee ee) i woeieen Aeneesee ede | weight match that ‘Should produce Phone be ‘fiery action. eeeee SPR set eee PePeeeeeeereree De Cola. will be going after his DeColo, Archer Fight Tonight at New York By The Ass0ciated Press Tony De Cola of Brooklyn and) Jimmy Archer- of New York’s Bronx give ancient St. Nicholas Arena another all-New York card) ‘Monday in a 10-round_ welter- Positions in Electronics, wo 2-5660 —. Weodward ee Bldg.) Blecks Nerth of Fou Theater. Korea: seventh straight victory in 1957, in his second 10-rounder. The Brook- lyn boy who will be 21 on Thurs- day was supposed to have fought) Archer June 17 but injuries forced: Archer out -of action, Instead, De Cola met Felix Chioca and won a | decision. Archer's last appearance in mid-May resylted in a spectacular upset over Tony DiBiase in his first 10-rounder. The 22-year-old Archer has a 12-1 record to De Cola’s 24-7-1, Both are former . |lost to Wally Burkemo in @ playoff off by shooting regulation par golf NE s Champions | |Head forN.Y., : .. and Big: Series the: first World Series - game at th eBtadinn Wednesday afternoon. © A crowd of 45,000 fans saw the Braves edge the Cincinnati Red- legs yesterday, 4-2° in their final game: of the regular season. This . raised the club's new National League home. attendance mark to 2,215,404. : The old league record ‘set by the Braves in 1954 was 2,131,388. ‘It was the Ist state PGA crown tor Barnum in three attempts. He fo? the title two years ago at Owosso. Country Club. Burkemo wound up 3rd yesterday with 145. Maguire, Birmingham's silver- haired pro, shot a 74 in the morning, then closed with a strong 70 over the par 36-36—T72 layout to start his enthusiastic well-wishers making hurried plans: for a. celebration. But they forgot to make allow- ances for Barnum, another “old pro” on the -tournament trail. Barnum had a steady 72 on the morning round and went but in 35 in the afternoon. could have avoided the play- Maxwell's All-Stars on Barnstorming Tour DETROIT — The Charlie Max- well All-Stafs, made up of major league baseball players from the nesuiyiay! a National leagues, : a the rest of the way, but he had|Oct. 12. ee oe trouble with his putter and bogied The team is scheduled’ to open . Nos. 14 and 15. in Douglas, Mich. Other Michigan *& &-& . “errr include Grand Rapids, ‘“Big John": went all out “on the|Oct J cogermegee Oct. 14; Che- - 585-yard 18th hole and -made t|boygal . 15, and Durand, Sai POA Scores. tie Maguire, Barnum unloaded two tremendous wood shots to nearly carry the green, pitched to within five feet of the cup and dropped Jehan Barnum 273144 his putt. Ray Ma wire : j S Hetemiee T em q : Barnum's victory in the semi. | Eidon a ae tenia darkness playoff followed and his Ron LaParl '.,... 11119 ax VOM sarees < financial reward was worth $350. |Msx Evans ...... beat ame] Maguire pocketed $250 for 2nd [Tom Cosm 13-19—152 ; 7 Fred “Chailen 74-T8—152 place. Jack Pleck ...... 16-16—152 ie se . 16. ae the veteran Franklin Tom reikinton ; : b1s—its m Johnson .... 1-713—153 ay pro, opened the day with a/ xe, Ba cscs: 11-T1—154 and seemed headed for the title. Be Gaunt eto 78-16—154 A - i But he soared to a disastrous 41 xt Wate Troe going out on the final round and| Larry Pentiuk ... rs c ae = ye th 75 for 3rd place) po 8 Bob Bolom see 15-81-16 ary @ PIT R aes \- 1 Lou P 14-83—156 Jimmy Johnson of Farmington, oe Thacker mn io-te 188 m richton . 19-T9-—158 last year’s state PGA champion, Joe Beffore 15-83—158 fired 81-72—153 to finish far down we Gon ba = by hannon nal 169 the list of contenders. John Dalrymple 33-8118 Pronk — ‘ ae Ge o4 orden Car 5 - Gi Fi Ca Elmer Prieskorn .. 79-8: —ieo irst Cage Drill John Carsok ...... 18-82-1609 —1¢1 batagd seal Orlick .. aoeees .and prospective mem- Chick Rutan... #0-41— rs of Shaw’s Jewelry basketball | Po" Ferme. - 7 ~ club will hold their first practice Bob Dushane oh 23-45—168 Y EMORY ... i veces = 19 of the 1957-58 season Tuesday| “witnares. after first roun¢ —- red Roy 83, Alex Sinclair 93, Tony Janis, night. Players are requested to re- port at Lincoln Junior High School gymnasium at 7 o'clock. Shaw’s| *igsp.Waun ©. Ba torte them, & will be a city league Class A entry | Conroy, Nick Bersan, | Emile Beck. maine ? Golden Glove champions. this winter.. . Midge Cova, Lorin Shook, Jack aati ern “say et ER Bill Toone, will install your muffler in 15 minutes while you wait at ease in our new iil wee Customer Waiting Room:” The New Safety Center, Built to Give Greater Service. 721-123 Ez MONTCALM, Ss AUTO WASH with EACH MUFFLER PURCHASE or _ WHEEL ALIGNMENT... DURING ee L. ta. Rea William (Bill) Toone, Muffler Specialist; Maurice (Red) Sasser, Parts Mngr.;- Fred Gaukler, Owner; Ronald Hargraves, Wheel Alignment; Specialist; Herman Byrd, Parts Salesman, a in Mind. OPENING * AUTO 121-123 E. Montcalm, Pontiac AUTO SAFETY CENTE Our Brand Newi1988 “Visualiner” Wheel Alignment —— = We at the Motor Mart Have Long Deemed It a » Necessity to Have a Place Where You, the Public Could Bring Your Autos to Have Them SAFETY _ Inspected and Repaired, to “Greaten Your Safety ~ on the Highway. "It Has Now Become Possible for _ Us to Build Just Such.a Place... We Are Prepared to Inspect and Repair All the Safety Points on Your Auto With the Latest Modern Equipment, and With Conscientious Workmen Who Have Your Safety _ See Us for @ A Complete Line of .. Auto Parts ~ © Brake Relining... (Bonded Shoe) Low as $14.95 © Front End Aligning and Balancing © Complete Exhaust Systems ~ . @ Steering Mechanism - Adjustment Our. “Auto Wash” handles “A Car a Minute” .. You'll be amazed and pleased at the glistening-clean appear- a oe ance of your auto when our : - | wesh-men finish with it. ty ETY CE NTER, : " FE 4-£230 | Ge ener palcig * * a oe ‘and sold by steck mar-|Markets ores ; : a @—The- in become er to the, NEW YORK lower im activelthem ‘abies < — whether that will give way 0 the! N trading today. from es hs eaten oak turn? aaa eS tomic age, na per ind a point. T es eel rot! ssia’ is talking ail iat ? fractions to arou of. gainers in those * holding those who do, R i t that “mneans is its|lot of ~ * * ».|Was a scattering i wa bir gaan Cat ae eae atic biryanelieektenm- Aly ‘the long rim|about the same range. : : into lear. Some corporate lis haye run * * = ee : coir nooo Oo : \eitect on ‘m the Middle and Far| The Bul mie a sit wen bes th te terest eo. en m.333.era.89 tis \ es Oc laelneo ne. how|—but these are the =| a es ores Pane: dees: goer ae : 528.90 Uncertainty aes Be 5 is| difler we caps wal Bears concentrate on re Sosa Spare Plums, re ar ae ee ne : of = around just pork soon the piston-propeller apparent a_ this progressed. / : : 23,837. . wi plenty business a pronounced as trading ) i i. is the general — Dro s Ol (New pgp aide 2 Note: . continued A PRS AR Topped bu. “ -& 70,144.42 * . Owners ° . : a fraction te Carrots,: re ee og A =a : ht. | Friday's news that i planned 8 den ES, 1,377.81 Pro ; nlg . Friday's rter of a bile |Colery ters doz, : 6.25 - of * t Deadline 0. ‘ n U ures issue at least « ae common |Corn, sweet, 5 mar 38.98. 068,178.01 year’s low * R fal : Hen dollars more Friday. 2 150 Pecescsse. ~ a _ ihees of the market eg IS ry tiac property owners i ther| Shares. It lest 24% dropped a = to : rman eae ° oaaged number “ — nalth: ght at 8 is the deadline 98 bowplia Peamprmatng ffice |. CHICAGO ®—Favorable wea ng) Royal Sas Texas Co. real at gee « a» EA ey dun't all be -bat ex-| Tonigh in the Oct. t the clerk's o over the nation’s grain pr fu-| fraction, { Oil was ahe 338 . of Property...... (Cafe- __104, 168.35 6 _ 196,264.35 don't these for az vote. tha 8 to over lower and Gul oo 3.38 Revolving, Pun di _ 97,362, 443.4 ae ees at course < © a Ada R. pe ae me = ais areas ona pala nae of trade — a point. shaded i ont Peas, : Fe ‘sotel om tomeane Beers - | |perts oft. is. That ‘Hall will re: e of addresse , [tures oe : eens enerally try. | pee ‘28 vs "1 Mooelpts “vee scce esse : 1.341,470-48 |any individual exchange In| in the City tions and any chang owners only today. was most appa ue ‘Prospects in the gee 13s Grand ; 8 have a stock ew registra’ property arishness beans |the foggy Republic Rad 0 ot Generel Pund Re- ments * a place. ann October vote is pace igo ‘persons can say Risolger —_ ; dames U. & See Peso * Bethlehem tas «Total = Semee ow Disburse the * (Tne only. s bonds.) in ear ; down _ ‘.. = = "rte ** aera! Pund x * of| ( stipulates bligation ning most andi were sl se ie : ents law neral o decli turing corn : vreeseesersee Be * : ‘ TE ee oe ey as the state pality can issue ge to furnish and ies veer Se oe and| eased. Motors Was off-a- bit. /Tomatocs, 14-Ibe, wm Aqalarles ef Superintenden Ignoring t’s look only whether a munici 000 issue eral bean harvest is fa-| General Motors gain. 2.00 Salaries ry be ges yrs the Bulls, le fick today. will be on a $950, Pontiac Gen the , Outlook also posted a small. 1.18 Salaries of Rusinans em : — syp-toat el epreang ara apogee The vote here. dollar addition “to - |the long-range. tte, Caned @ he leek 1s ministrators oe elecern 10,871.17 Some say that s recent. switch four -million - ~ ew.” —_ivorable. dropped back) aircrafts 4 Goodyear, Bos- ise Clerical tive supplies sae ae relicting to the from a be- pa Are tions havé been “very f : Most wheat car on a little Gainers included papal ee iS ————— ow 19,047. e are °. istra y at ge and 2.50 | gp ee 1,533.73 in business psychology of the ‘Hospi said late reg fractionall: cage eee ee siaips Dodge can Can, Census reneaareneneeees . fall resumption t the} urs. Evans sentence = selling. The wheat /'"6. were Ameri lad Greens 2.5 At eenente ice $112.33 lief in a view tha focal salt by lower Among losers Iting, Common- “Lettuce & Sa sovsesreeee 2 ne istidscivs te. $ 145,001.96 boom to a cautious the business : Sines ak manean Cine erican Sme thern Rail- ; bu. ease eee * ey ~~ Other: Administ ee A . ‘dowdvon ma in the : let f prices at Kansas hour, |4 ™ Edison and Sou — Oieaened. ba. . "te é ag : _ a present +the first wealth | an doz. » a agndaierepen enalge 196.88 is likely Head 0 Near the end of % to to ey Gen-| Escarole, ee renee By ry bursements .... %. M, pace ; le wheat was was %|W8Y blocks included: Lettuce . nese down before new sty Opening 40% on 2,000 esses s ate cen, me NCO lovee, See sia tars seal Meta tt at 4 Us! Death Notices ~ Agsistants of ‘Teachers & 146,730.06 engeillvaad egescige Te quarter Asks esis a aes to % lower, Dec. pied - a 56 on 3,000; do. * ea _ Balarie SA SEOUR EEE 2 ness < ra 6 lower, , — Glerteal py me SE 137,197.91 ly bird reports on | ind |rve_ was 2k Se ee % to 1 Stel oo acta) on HARRY COCKERLINE Hares” Hansel sé = tes although Swi ert Calls Dema \s1 26%; Nov. $2.26%; and lard |’ ks dee Service for : tein Frultion “pais Gna : 12,288.78 wear tt avibcad oormuaies io On 9 k Week |cent lower, Nov. pounds | York Stoc WAREN 31649 _Ecks gapped Child) ..........-. 97,938.08 stad 08 ie cast your for Shorter Work W + Iwas 2 to 20 conte 0 hundred * New Yor! Quotations) Cockerline, 74, of Saturday . eS, : : ft ° $1 (Late ment hr ho died suddenly 2 p.m. School Ex 23,248.53 ¢2 |running ahead . ‘ * for Overtime lower, Oct. : Erie RR .. 35.1'St,, w e, will be at Sem oe: are 94,773,618. A Device ) dmirel .:.... 92 Erle RR 1 lee tas keane le Elliott Total inatruction o sizable number .feel = that . Swi- in Prices Air ed Jo es eee $i |Wednesday trom wren.’ The Rev. sasemnypn | ES = aguaian ees Sacha os ental amr aioe al Grain ied Stee SS 24 Pires Mot... $3| OOS) ome, Sil fficite and : ; nan f ccee Ba eee =: nes of Beil employes : 3a-s00.31 ral soaring Labora discounted gert, — pe said to- . een. 30 CaP — Opening a os —— 3 Pre bd “ tis Melvin = ne Greenwood © meee enperee corpora’ : ; . of Manufact ne will cutbaco %4 | Aleoa | Lice Bak .. \burials ; Semutng Weseas & bs: 31,000.43 many Assn , | makers price Les Sere Am asruin <2.) 38.5 Gen Ba . ot rmingham. Bay Genin me sas sb laa, "Tey Bl tht ngs and bring cn what he termed "the Mook Me OR RE ge Ee By Cemetert RENE f Opera caaaceee 935,629. fore e bring inflation & Ghheceno te y am re Gen lis” + Mr. , rs and Jesainanisive . while befor of ine BATYg Rye tat ee Ge a < go =: Bi . for 26 yea Sis “aati : dient catch "ih hey vio Water P Rewer oy. BR OS Bh a comer Buigions Gams Sus sere Schoo! Plant * area high values and mak : bid ry et 5 ete work Dees nse. rer a es 1.13 jam N Gee .... it —~ ae oa) ® aux talpecier at jariaederd “tain of Bufldings = te * * AutolMey oc. dame = oie pe es We HAE Geegrten ..'. a8 ran sea A Lele eS 16,987 = lined to hold ident of the United. the aly, prea ES iat [Am Smelt. 4ae Grek Paige ‘fe | several om Birmingham O44 M nes Sao ” ag's97.87 is inc The_pres: has given Mar. ree Wee No Ry ... of charter & tenance : 1.01 | This school , Union BlDec, ...:.... ee ee RS oo st S .. 20.| grand also a a : OO 481,61 t maybe it's The Workers k, coupled with ee tes os Oe --: 138-4) sellews he was Fire Maintenance dts - pee to take a breather shorter work —_ increase, 0p f Mil ieacone 81 Homestk ae member of the Birmingh: & a * a.neie about the debt load carried priority in the dem 4 Buon le Armour & Co’. 123 inure Ray 181) Dey vived by three_ sone, aa espe . + - Se eas eagaratinn aad on the aute companies areal Ce os RY tneee ad x | He is surviv of Warren Interest or hort — 328.22 12,801.33 |government, corpora * — * Retin 22. nS 244 /Clifford and Oe a one aces aes eae 831.33 . A becca — Raymond . Se i cans | w? | sere ‘son si Hi-Mill Firm Names. In a speech ro Der Bwt 0) fice Bere ty Seer oe daughter, Mrs. End rene Cocker rr eee ne eo appear > H nd Economic Club of Dens gue tL 13 Int k oc. lag : ers, Irene Auxiiary Services o 28,883 - Some the . administra a . ida { said the shorter work isit Bete Steel 225 dime on > Fslren and two sist and Della of es ee aac continuing attack on. the é New Vice Presiden Sn spy secs te sce Constituents May Visit eee 2 i favo lie and. Warren — a 28 continuing 7 fear , . : iy oO «Ssegee t Tel & i E 31,836 In . 04 Revolving Fund Ee « more inflation. They f aimed | at ot i W.| more overtime. a ~ islator at Royal Oak, borg Ware «... a Isl Crk Coal 4 Detroit. - HENOSTEBECK A Activi- money polic) stave ict “to a@ group ma d Leg . : wy |... ohns Man .. MRS. SYL’ — Service Scheel Recreational Activi- 2.38 - the boom to : and name ; industrialists an Trailer ee eT eee LAKE 139 eeesenesee:- Expense, 30,933. 7 | checking too well ‘Beard, of 2245 apg Man- t's top A : Orion, or in Brun = ceoves pee mnecott , .. 91.2 WALLED ebeck, 71, of Other “4 Quards) Rt bust might work al- of the Hi trees Swigert said: / Burroughs "1... 388 Kime Clk - $3 Sylvia Hengst 10 am. (Including Service ft ‘recession—although vice-president Milford, has been), ines men, + (R-[eertguese ---: S Pee: $¢-¢| Mrs. will be: at 1 Fee omen es + 96,462,323.39 | rigger a if it comes it will ufacturing Co., in Beard, com- * to the illiam S. Broomfield + ag u. Ge os : 34) Wellare St., the Richardson- a: ting) ~ - “2 |most: all think = by R. F. ve almost come Rep. Wi announced the|fsum & M ..- tna LO? Gas .. 13 Wednesday from here. Burial Zotel Canvent (Opereting? and brief. hits | announced “We have Detroit goes, so Oak) today Oakland|can ‘bry ....:: 29.4 isd Funeral Home morial is Saree ; $ 4148.08 be mild spending president. the firm! that ‘as go- Royal of a new South Can hg Ee 143 h Aire a 18.4 Bird kland Hills Me ber ~~ saad -0- Cuts in military pany has been with be in|Point tion.’ What are you opening set oS. a en es 29-4| will be in Oa Rev. John Bulaings 1.200000" . 2 _* years. He will —— RE es a ies © time|Cerries CP... Oe Loriiierd 34:8 ardens, with the Hengste- Paraitore ut j Saeed 4,020.96 ‘ B ief for of all operations at port ing to do good to write — Broomfield at the bli trailer-|Gater Tree 22 3 Lou & Nash 84 sabia ee Ee ee Gunes” Conta Outiay , __139, 101.96 News n if . — lant, upon assuming —— economic unwisdom time said that his a he = Peotian Chee & OB sso Be Martin, Ol at beck died in Livo , Total Capital ee es 94,00).815.35 = Manufacturing Co. | Prov Shorter work week at pond office made gi visit is con-/Chrysier ...-- io! May ead Cp. 32.1 Hospital ye ved by a daughter, bursements ts 2 608 W. Huron St. Po Ice Cream, | produces . fabric: ai tioning, a strike.” templated. - ee F Minn Mat ’.. ona{ Mrs. thers and four grand = & 98c; Borden : tion, to face ER echeduled now to \cumes Ne ae oe Al eins: tae tee to Buildi — rm . No. 1, seed=| to. refrigera DANG traller is Cole : Ch... 32-6) Lake; # 12,800 Us : fruit, large ive use. N GREATEST The rth ef Pon- [Coca -+++ @. Monsen 34.5) Site Pund or om oe "1% gal. 60c; Grape: T-bone, sir- and automot INFLATIO® that every { communities no Cole Paim ++: 382 Mont Ward |. 44.6) children. ~ paca id” Disburee-, 213,606.31 30c tioz.; Steaks, pan wes is one thing visit the Congress- |Co} ae SI Se IL §. LOTHER ing Puad less, . Fryers, ° “If there lic! see but before Oak- {coi Gas *! 387 lier Br - PAUL §. =< ——— = meen 2a | ady, fresh dressed, 1c ibe. US. Nash, Hudson to Vanish segment of the aE = Swigert man’s two-month eel hol te Con edison"... ie Nat aie " ina peat = Moors Royal S bursements..... ee: —————" jready, f 10c, Potatoes, 10 ; 80c,| Nash, nd Hud-\is agreed upon inflation is our land County is over, again. veedaling doe = Nat arrt! ee Ns Lother, 76, of 2075 from Total Supplemental ayes $6,882,030.59 | rots, pkg. Hot dogs, 3 lbs. for 4 IT @ — Nash a in|, “it is that spiral back to Pontiac C Pw Pt (4%e) 904 ot veces 39.38. 1 m. Wednesday bursements ...... mv $666,890.09 | no, 1, 280. 2c. This a DETRO names ir ’ . The vicious .| get visited cont Bak. 0s 3 oe. --4+> $9 slwill be at 1 p. Funeral Home, eitiot a rv Ree a ee lt ee ee a S| eee eee See ee ees ~ @ash on Hand June $7,341,470.48 | good Open 9 p. m. to *—Adv.|U.S. mo American Motors ; higher prices, w ’t needithe trailer of people in-|Cont anaes $32 west Un x. 33.3\with metery. meats. plus Balance June 4s aesigts 1 days. = myracecl the Nash Pi a The a wages, etc., doesn't that Aen Ge. el, govern- ot wee oe 33 wat ee $03 grgepeea is ‘survived ~ 30, 1987 ............ Building. ond Site Pen oe ~ $153,578.81 ning mater-|!8 mes on its 1958 line: lany: elaboration. terestes id. ates We ..- Be whine & Co... 141) wir ‘daughters, ma . . t £ brand na bear an equal- any: ” he t, said Broomfie Deere ...... "3 Wilson "405 Rose; two = ese day tee iat center eS Sheek a new| Company's cars will name—Ram-| “And it is quite true ot (men se ft is de-| Det goes 3 Yue & Tow 393 panies end Mire, Dorey an. an a ir will era “ nem =... OF. You: r 4 Roven x sate ad ad ae) rns yous ‘High iin “Road lly venerable brand padded, “that met ine ie The rambling trailer efice 1 con-| Dow’ wat atte xe cet & _ of Detroit, and a sister, a all Tax POE 28.34 pred ard echest 3 ae CN . some inter-national cause. But signed to make it eas ssional| De,, Pent 4 preoedlgg Sieg 14 Emil Rudick. ~ In on — ‘ eed ce 531.90 an Se pence yar rors adestatetre- tina normally exports ape greatest ~~ ho law that stituents of the 18th problems to: oe L o 4 Saanaing Mam 37 : ss baby Texes ...... te Fund as changes ened | Argen other country mber there sontract Tict to take their El é 83 ; that one B and so ee 4 -0 on tue Gaal instrue- than any is only} reme sign a Dist Emer Rad .., stimated fever Property Tax 38.15 tive and strengthen personnel serv-icorn its total annual crop 1) says you must tion inevitable Broomfield. = It is e from malaria Gran ts : —= eit —. “|though its om that prod that makes inflati nm into the ffice at 2300 N. Wood- J. Nephier gpths| out of two dies fro ; nomadic Bale of ee i: “Re 661,487.83 iene and coum .. L. SCHILLER | about ly in the, aetoan or that ~~ of a union shop. rte cae at £3 Date rend, Pigures attr decimal pointe segs 3.0 among ie et through Paces To te VERN . annual : ward ’ rs ° 2. y ds wa ean Puna (ws. Treas- 2,020, 883.79. “wa aa Gept. 30, °57 aaa TT} a penarecnge poe ae of one company is a ens peg om Allen Elec. de Baul. Co. - ies a3 <= re and Syria, - Other . ~ 33360 e dren en dary E ‘ presi ‘ only 9 a.m, as FCO... eee toe 8 88 , Pro- a aaa ek Bite REPORT 7 itotls to tenabuns’ Wee 40 46 a te-| “The ntly: ‘The from mp opps als Cones Log 84 84 GAN — In the Pro- Total Bufiding oe . : Disbursements FINA o] District by|of pupils 1956, an Fvods te four said to me recen : go broke through Friday. GL, 2 Mo. “© 106 11.0 ATE OF — County of Oakla: Pund Receipts ; and Bite Fund Avon the 7 be; In June and add : = is whether we or 's- second Oak- Howe! r Met. a to, i: * @6 06 oops for the con- uilding 01 value of ted zs was construe stion mands, Broomfield’s ll-| Peninsula: Co. * 10.6 12.0\pate vision. petition $ , 168,883. big Boon Rulings $1 buildings ‘ere under ee eee eee in to wage de * It} It is and the fulfi ee eee Oe a 1 13.1) Juvenile D ance Cause ee ee ne Aséon.c0 the = $00,000. 120,000. be additions include ts, and addition by giving a strike. ’ County office Rudy Manufact. 19.1 134 23] tn- the th Aen Tipe, eee —_ 2 es. €9 clase rooms| new spe eorge Ll ngqeee te Heme broke by taking with land of his campaign ee ee es ae cerning Judi arents of utidin pmen 2.0.00 11 |["anere are six’ buildings. 68 ‘aust Sail bepeee on See new construction will g° he might win ment, he. said, convenient:| Tne screw tne esked Nero John and Phyllis Tips, p (Furniture a ‘sin $2,061,286: acer rooms but er oe rooms A ar renee on theiseems to me 't possibly win by|m ise to have offices south “No - bid To — filed ‘in this dis- (999.87 = 1 there “me fire on Jan- be used. f Leaf + a precrems that we strike but can Jation| promi or both north and said — having been present whore Totel Capital Outlay : —— ERE tember ts srereres there| rooms. iris rented reoms|® ing the slow stranguis ly Menten unty voters. Associated Press) | *Peti lleging. that the, pre ees Other her Bulla aha "“site ake $2,002, ett wa - schoo! ot Ae poet tor ~~. wit o eons = ane : oles Protest power. Oakland ermacits office is in (Compited by ie a stocks Stouts of “anknewn ‘and tor “fupport yas Otte -- 388, were 90 10.00, medium 2,536 chil-'in the-m 1cT ‘ : x *« * The other — 103.9 70.7 ime dependent aa child sheald ke a ea oo ERR I Re See el ae Hes ete aRE RY ae ie See eed ee a investments "(OB Treast dnt Bante ‘OENERAL PUND same ere stom eossbenke and poiith U.S. Hands Counti Yearaae aaa aed Toe ject] gt, fey eos fouse in ine bt eee cs site * $3,338,461, , f oe .. bg apricoan oounSocMintioo con: a des es aed “é, immensely « s 1987 = ieereeer od, 7H 76.9 a notified ve at use eu Oeest = ran arming | st ment Fund Receipts | 8.780.923 | ash Baishee, eet ne pers oe 4 cal power has g year. He : U Roa S 1956 hig ee Mee 126.2 69.6 Ny tO aber ae you are balance on June bt_Retirs 7 9 3 RECEIPTS a Se pet on 1-433.98 in the past an Indian U 1986 low Feo pepe dng me —— personally Devt —— Pund Bal- ——2mn Gen ue — eas cee is eon ace cree 163,301.78 asicited political sactories.. Soe eee oF — por , r [nerd commences ‘be ‘sake: pezeonsl ance July (U8, Treasuary 2 ee Other Revenue Recelsts c.. se tisettnens ae ized labor. in , WASHINGTON 7 — = teed — Auto Safety ene “i beine. cot) this summons tion ‘of ae ee nd Rochen es 770004 ” u hereo biica : bills) .... July eee 1986 . nenee ey Receipts ....... sebenes ae Sicnadticd ud i acne i take about vik of all Indian percrr in Michi- . rt shail be” week previous to nee corn | ah aueteger e : es Total Gene ste and.Cash Balance of July 1, be por) “This Se ee ter — “pron accomplished, we pens at Motor q in the Pontiac ‘in sald "Count “Arthur &. erty Tax Tax Collections : . . * 1,628,940. Total of Rece: J , oiled, gan the Interior aes, and circu the Honora in the City Curren Goliections 1.93 571.90 = being tuned up, election, | ®° ‘ment of | Witness, { said Court, this 27th” Delinquent on Deling ‘ + ‘. > aed ee asec is effective in every Depart . Center,”"| score, Judge © aid County, ~— aad ee bate 4 . Administration eee more pecceny Gee rete aeced tolay. * tomobile ‘‘Safety »jof Pentise in .aid County. gE, rs events —— $2,058,800.31 8. Operation of ~s ool Plants... lend —— re ‘exception. If in ; . wes the transfer of ccteeed the only one Mat ane day oe ae as iudas of Prabate Retire . Maintenanet of School Pla ” ther t¢ s late as windup . Res- t Motor ' true copy IENA R ter, Total ash D. satares cae seteeesatee ra en as The L’anse today a (A GEORG Regis ' Fund ee ade” bet Retirement Pund Disbursements F. huritie rp nares: bie eedeaudcces see 774.98/1960, or 1964, or ev presidential 18.3 miles serving sonal Indian | opened cate een: Probate Re ston oom ey — 133,213.23 Q. Capitas rental vteeeesenes Sane. 1968, a gringo the White| vation and — Menominee | E. cosets to Fred Enea iit Sept. Principe on Debts . a cite creneecseette si00030| comida my pees sented) polinada gpa 2 oe ee intro Seat ativan 1,013,80 TOES? cenl Generel Fjune 30. 1987 ene ee a se, ton. Pd co House, we mere «am a Counties, the ignbioone Sept. 20,/er ig enspes business ari ed the : CHEONS _| aul Dat “Retirement A $47,907.89 a means and Cash Balance, June cous $218,311.17 ernment. Lodi gorpngibe otis al pcahere eee doubled its ro Sere spe- arnt lee Cream (eee cneninpamasrentbeaggeenet te VICE FUND is pa brings " ipmen' Disburse Fund or 199.28 saree aoe prin et s bureau ahd-|latest equip altes ities crate (pa ae PEI er Business Notes serving Inne ty nad caster whee atenment. | Saaltest | UNTAIN Total ment: ..... 287.81 x... SSR AABRE Ae EE 3,457.07 96 hen turns Brakes, safety fac- FO | : Punt Disburee 1987 4, eat ‘on Bayings Depowiie oc... receenss 2,970.11 ards and t countiés. - tems and other safet; ER Cash on hand 2 Tre sand $2,058,600.31 pores = eta Receipts or ; - le that a tenane soe nad = second po poseghy be checked: and oe RIKI er Building Lobby bille ....... ‘s eters 4 Pane” _ 1986-8 Receipts ...:...... trast say 1 0 $358, It Ses een omen ohn JA. Michigan ae han affected suc mes - trained men, | : Teel Debt — and balances rary 1985-56 ‘ 1 300,000.00 Total Debt Pund & Cash Balance Rochester catiggyr moe js, of 332 noel ees same eames all by : ‘4 ; : 000. . - “7. said. | Eetimated* Valve of Schoo! sees oo‘ gonna "00.0.0 |otay, acs hom oe. pened in Towa about five is ri utorship— y Sites LITT, 14,000: 00 250,900 30 : has ‘ Di t i F . pattatags cteowsessccapsce WOORUOR - 603 : 158,222.64 /pointed = to =~ V | e REET sate Wa z # ™ | sete coun Site « = l6c5 Headquarters, | . walua IN THE STATE | Number ot Caras ” 8 RS lca Panag Mea ct on ‘ peer : - ane mmggail the neg to Birmingham CHOICE AREA. IGAN Num! 2,000.00 "ana an |Cash Balance $ 9,235 ~ nection ng Mo ‘ : j $ 300.00 ts & Cath FUND Buildi blican H | s +8 3,700.00 §. 700.08 se Disbursemen 2 ee ee, . 1957 < ty Republ MIC | Berson 8,300.00 4800.00 Total Debt possaenrrid pe wala oh Ex County. to- 0 ; coe tbse.00 $ 4,400.00 “galy 1, 1966 eee $872,723.01 4 Products be| Oakland leave Pontiac ings. RH ae 100.00 $.$00.00 ee eee 072,723.01 psition, to ee a ce patmoul : te of earn neers agbis”” rae | FlClCUfm 6,500.09 | Cash Fg rrr ee = Philadel-/headq a new, bt | high ra ith . ter’s = reer eres $,800.00 $,900.00 ci ai ue $981,956.20 held in - |jmorrow for Ma * xceptiona 20 ears W AE Serial 800.00 on Receipts ........ ee Nov, 47. Birmingham. Pontiac] With e over bi | | Maximum .. 5, BE 11,939 | Tota! Building @ Site July \ 1988.. . yg J fhe ager in “years in the A business aeggeatisarta il $8, 500-$12, — a Me none tal & Cash 1 00 an Af Building « headq oF me : “pone 6.580 ue ppl ssn “ae hea. owde m being’ eoweed to a more central 200,000 users. Prom, Box 25. « | 6,568 bes nase : Sunaings qiipmient "°°. teeewe La Gh eR 44M, neiae Coal Co., in Rocher is location, said oa cha Write Pontiac ress, none ae ; Furniture & tq ee ; i 196.33] Lumber and disussion of Eliot. Jr.-. i roe (0) Bond Bxpense, sevensneeereeeeres Sete aia ie eet a pant 6 ahd gel oe se Ea =: 7. 30 nnd -maatetael Bullding & Site Dibbjireement an haneanedansens ani, ot roblems involved baaher The new venue. and better the" various Balance, sfhaswaete i 20, 1987. retary ° the | - N, Woodward 4 , and eltminate sub-| Cash & Cash Betnee hw ED, TURNER, Sec rey dealer, e104 ? ; |Total Disbursementé 5 Board of Dustriet 987 i : ; ‘ \ sant = rey “thorugh windy ancl é . Avon Schoo Sept. i ‘. bg i ‘- x; va, i “ uf : wi et te * \ t { 5 é Son Scie on oe ' a aan Pees yee Als hee | \ ! 4 i : . ee 4 | le if fae | | ‘ % ; t \ i ie \ . Ds | AG ap 2 2 ‘Current 98 ee ue 1057 . | PTEMBER 1 dee TAC PRESS. : y THE poi re i