ee eee | glid to a stop at the /side of a = 0 eo ee: i Bd ia : Ae ” = pe: “OS a, a i A tS et Ae Je te ee es ee dine Oe on Bee te Se a SS YS SS ~~ - PO age ie ae ae ee eS a ae rae . e x 4 on DISASTER 8CENE — Ambulances and. emergericy-vehicles terday afternoon. The $3 million building was under construction were in abundance at the scene of the collapsed Consumer Power when. the floors and walls caved in without warning. Building in Jackson where ‘at least 10 people lost their lives yes- ~ Threat of Rain. Postpones 2nd Series Contest NEW YORK (INS)—The sec- ond game of the world series was’ postponed today “by com- Missioner Ford Frick because of ralw threatening weather. The Dodgers, eager to make it two straight on the heels of their opening game 6 to 3 victory yesterday, and their interborough adversaries, the New York Yankees, will play the second game at Ebbets Field to- morrow, weather permitting. The Yankee Stadium opener, originally. scheduled for tomor- row, will be postponed corres- pondingly until Saturday. Frick announced the postpone- ment shortly after 11 a.m. after be and the umpires and man- agers had inspected the field. A light rain, which had fallen most of the morning, had stopped temporarily, but the _ INJDRED IN COLLAPSE — Seriously injured but still alive, an unidentified workman is lifted commissioner said the weather bureau warned jhat more and heavier rain was expected, Indiana Crash } from the ruins of a new office building where he 123 Dig for Cave-In Victim was trapped when a reinforced wall Jackson yesterday. Ten are dead or missing and 15 hurt in the collapse. AP Wirephetos gave way in a Prisoners Show Claims 10 Lives © lvicts who risked their lives trying|even behind prison walls. Nine Muncie Residents Are Killed in Headon' Collision “ | | MUNCIE, Ind. @ — An automo-|they have been barred for‘a period! bile carrying nine Muncie res- idents, eight of them members of they still are not wholly apart and William Kent, 27, of Grand Rap-|14 “yo re ee ne “| “I thought they might need some one family, smashed headon into a| Keystone man's car Wednesday to rescue six men trapped in a collapsed building under construc- tion in Jackson had one main pur- pose behind their heroic action. = * They wanted to show, although of time or-for life from society, During brief rest periods from | digging into the twisted concrete of the collapsed Consumers. Pow- | er Co, structure, these are the ‘comments prisoners from South- | em Michigan State Prison in | dackson made: | nisht, crushing the ute trom a 0 PTOtesters Hear Plans occupants, : | It was believed to be the worst} automobile accident. in Indiana his-) tory. The victims were identified as Freda D. Beal, 32; his sister,. 10- retta Beal; their mother, Mrs, Marie Clark, 66; Beal's wife, Lil- lian, 30; their daughters, Inez, 8, Chestina, 6, Vickie Lynn, 5, and Claudia, 4; Jesse W. Price, 33, all of Muncie, and Thomas B. Burns, 36, Keystone. : The crash occurred six miles west of Muricie on'Ind, 67, Coroner Eugene Eissman said state police told him Beal's car, traveling southwest at high speed, hit Burns’ gar and pushed ‘it 88 feet down the road. - The smashed cars locked grills, Burns’ car turning ovér, as. they curve in the road, } Trooper William Rice /said Burns apparently applied his brakes be- fore the collision. Tire marks showed he had slid 50 feet before the impact, | for Telegraph Intersection _ | Ross McGath, 26, of Benton Har- George M. Foster, chief deputy State Highway Com- missioner, last night disclosed that the relocation of| They Care JACKSON (INS)—The 123 con-jthat there is ‘human goodness—jids, serving 3% to 5. years for ibreaking and entering: | “We heard the news over the radio. I guess some of us are kind jof sentimental, we thought we icould help out, Besides, many peo- jple just think we're no good and lwe wanted to show them we could 'do something.”’ Rollie Bradiey, 33, of Jackson, years for forgery: ihelp. I still got a heart no matter if I done time, These are good guys (prisoners) here and the pub- ilie should know more about the guys in prison.” * * * ‘bor, 3 to 15 years for breaking iand entering: * “Somebody had to do it. We Telegraph road at Orchard Lake avenue was “designed”! owe something to these people to carry combined traffic of Telegraph and the proposed *"7#¥-" north-south expressway through Oakland County. “Wer itinerant sittin tastiest But Foster added: don’t intend to run the ex- pressway through there unless we can’t do any- thing else.” Speaking at a protest meeting of more than 3,000 citizens (see page two) who would be affected by the proposed expressway, Foster said it would be bhilt to carry up to 150,000 cars daily at speeds up to 70 miles an. hot. A traffic count taken two years ago showed Telegraph road carried 14,127 vehicles at a point 300 feet south of the intersection. No contract has yet been awarded for the mile-long re- location of Telegraph road north ‘ and south of Orchard Lake Ave- tue, An overpass to Grehard Lake over the relocation | was started in May, but work has ; been stopped. | | Highway department officials have explained the delay in con- istruction is due to a steel short- lage, which they say is due to the |34-day steel strike this summer. | Completion date for the over- ipass © Griginally was December, '1956. Foster confirmed last night it is now set at June 15, 1957, carry | | Albert Collins; 42, Ft. Wayne, lInd., serving life for second degree imurder: — * | “I figured I should help’ these imen, I made a mistake and I'm itrying to make up for it.” Joseph Carchon, 31, of Detroit, 5 to 15 years for robbery and high- | jacking: “It’s the human thing te do. If family was in here, I would t people to help them too.’ | Lt. Russell Tracy, one of the prison guards, was highly pleased with “his boys,”’ He said: “T was kind of mad at these boys when they had that prison riot a few years back, but this makes up for it.” AN- THURSDAY, Tih, H1y! Fs £ i in 4-Story Ruins; Digging Halted Designed to Withstand A-Bombing, Structure Hurts 15 Builders — JACKSON (?)— Workers broke off rescue operations early today in the shat- tered ruins of a collapsed building, leaving at least six men presumed dead in wreckage that already has yielded four bodies. [Disclose Post Office Plans WestSide Site Option Taken by Summerfield Expect Ground Breaking in 6 Months, Opening Within a Year Pontiac will get a new post office within a year, State Sen. William 8. _ ANNOUNCE POST OFFICE — State Sen, William S. Broomfield the two after they received : (left) announced today he has received a telegram from Postmaster g telegram confirming the | Gen. Arthur E. Summerfield (right) announcing the Post Office Dept. decision from —Pestmaster——__— will open a completely new Pontiac office within the next year. The General Arthur E. Sum- site will be on West Huron Street, between Chippewa Road and Gene- merfield see Avenue. . The task of uncovering tangled tons of concrete) Pro for parcel post and vehicle han- and steel which buried the «oe Slated Tonight dling peg. have been = victims will resume later) AJ . February to include a main office today. Walls that threaten ixon ep0 S 0 a [Of enree: street between Chip. ‘ Genesee avenue. to fall will be knocked yee H. Dean, Ponflac’s acting | down. - | . postmaster, said today he is “ex- The halt in the digging that had On Quiz -| IV tremely gratified” by the plans. continued throughout the night y OW ae: pik ° canceled the last faint hope that some of the trapped workmen would be found alive: John Schweitzer, a construction superintendent directing the res- eve work, said at least six men are still in the wreckage and all i ia ti aE i aog The more than 100 workmen on the project had returned from lunch less than a half hour earlier when the east wing of the 200- by-400 foot ‘building gave way. Concrete was being poured for the fourth floor when the collapse Earlier, Frank Herlihy, the gen- eral contractor, had made an in- spection tour of the building with the plumbing contractor. They found no signs of structural weak- poet, ee = * * Herlihy said there was no indi- cation “green” concrete was ~be- ing used. He said he believed the concrete had been properly cured (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ‘Bank Robbers’ Are Only ‘Shot’ With Cameras In spite of the fact that Walled Lake was swarming with “‘cops”’ the bank robbers got away one day this week, although not on the first attempt. later of course, they for their crime. Unless one noted the cameras and their crews. as he through the city, he might have been worried when he saw the crowds around the Community Na- tional bank and the numbers of state police in evidence. A movie was being made and many drivers and pedestrians were interested in the process. - According to witnesses, (junior high students whose stories were unverified,) the “ * tailed in their first getaway -attempt when the car they were to escape in would not start. The director hurriedly yelled, “Cut”, and the scene had te be shot.again. Atriving, unawares, on the scene late in the afternoon, a Press reporter. was told by a courteous member of the state police that they were assisting the Ford Mo- tor company in making a movie. His manner implied that this was just. routine, And, please, he was busy directing traffic, so would the — please, move along, She t were captured ‘and had to answer) drove|' WASHINGTON (#—Vice President Nixon reports to the nation tonight on his 32-state campaign tour that ended last night in Philadelphia with a blast at what he called Adlai Stevenson's “catastrophic nonsense.” _ The GOP's campaign workhorse will make his first network television appearance (NBC-7:30 p.m. EST) of Hi vi Dean said, announced Third Degree Burns in Bowling Alley Fire | iE é mt gen bomb tests. That, Nixon said in the sharpest campaigning” ahd raises “‘a grave doubt as to whether he (Steven- son) has the judgment, the res- ponsibility and the temperament to lead the United States and the free world in this critical period,” Says Ike Works With ‘Cronies Stevenson Attributes ‘Gross _Misstatement’ to Eisenhower eae ; ! : A i HL . ei + i 3 ri Fair, Cooler Tonight, Says Weatherman The U. S. Weather dicts fair, and cooler fr the Pon standers suffered minor burns not requiring hospital care, Mosher|tiac area tonight with a low of in the public mind as a politician ‘ a capable of- ‘gross misstatement’’|**'4- ~~ "}44 to 48 degrees. and with “cronies” in his Tomorrow will also be fair and government Michigan Color Tour mild with the rising He set the pattern last night in a nationwide CBS television broad- cast from Pittsburgih where he cited case after case in which he contended Eisenhower campaign claims do not square with -the facts. ' Stevenson moved into West Virginia today before flying to Best This Week, Next LANSING #®—This week and the tour of Michigan to see the falljrose to 73 at 1 p.m, . foliage at its best, the State Tour-.|: 4 1s coum mik donee Britain Sets Off Bomb The council a dozens of north " . country areas have wired in that New York City for a series of Slings coleck son aah ae their peak street rallies tonight, : and will hold for: another week In a Pittsburgh television stu-/or two. dio, Stevenson not only accused Eisenhower of making a ‘gross misstatement” of the record but turned on him for claiming the Republican party has ended “‘spe- In Today’s Press County News. .....0ccccee++ 2B cial favoritism, cronyism and lax-| Editorials .........++..-.+++ = ity” in Washington, . Food News..........31 thru 41 The facts, Stevenson declared,| Sports ...... «+47, 48, 49, 0, SL “are written otherwise in the| Theaters ..... Jecssanbasivens 2 record of the Dixon-Yates con- tract’ and in the “natural re- sources give-away.” * Pontiac Deaths |Angelo Demchetf : : Angelo Demcheff, 72, ee - eine Dass win Ave., died yester in. ‘Heor ty ‘Say win Mercy Hospital. He had Location for Highway jeen ill for several weeks. Not Definite Yet He came here 43 years ago from 1854. An orderly but hostile crowd of/. Mr. Demeheff had been em- more than 3,000 area residents/ployed by the City of Pontiac in turned out last night to hear'the water works department 12 George M. Foster, chief deputy years, state highway commissioner, tell) Mr. Demcheff's body is at the them they are “unduly excited” |Pursley Funeral Home where serv- Bulgaria where he was born in about the proposed north-south ex- pressway through Oakland County. at a protest meeting: ice will be held at 2 p.m. Friday. The Rev. Paul T. Hart of the iFirst Methodist Church will offici- ‘one by tt Bg anes ¥ High School sponsored ate with burial in Oak Hill Ceme- by the Southfield-Bloomfield Assn.,,'€TY- | a group formed to fight the pro- s . posed read, Foster said he “re-/Dyunnigan Twins grets” publicity which has been ; given a proposed specific route for The twin children of Gerald and Bertha Zumbrunnen Dunnigan of eA ena aed Cas 606 Valencia St., died shortly after . route ts net * jbirth at St, Joseph Mercy Hos- inite,” “preferred,” or “ready (pits) Monday. One child, Gerald for final decisions one way or the ip | tived 31 hours, the other, Greg- other,” Foster said the Highway ory J., lived only nine hours. Department is studying “some | ‘They are survived by their par- three or four” alternates. ‘ents and by a sister Susan Carol He refused to detail the other and two brothers, Michael and routes, saying only they are west Thomas living at home. of thé route which has been pub-' Service was at St. Vincent de licized. Paul Church at 11 a.m, yesterday, The publicized route, part of a/With burial in Mt, Hope Cemetery. superhighway linking Toledo and) Funeral arrangements were by the ———“ttnt-runs from Northwestern| Parsley Funeral Home. Highway north along Southfield : . road to Ten Mile road, veers north- Mrs. Kenneth F. Evans west to @ point just west of) Mrs. Kenneth F. Mile road, cuts Evans, 27, of 252 Preston Ave., tlorthwest to cross Lahser roadjdied yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy | lowered into an area where workmen searched Hospital, She had been ill three! for bodies was a familiar sight throughout the south of Maple road, parallels Doane past North Hills Golf days with bulbar poliomyelitis. Course, and turns northwest again Mrs. Evans was born in Oxford to cross Long Lake road between 0n May 19, 1929, the daughter B. f road and Lahser road.'Marvin and Verta Farr Und de- *Foster said the road wil] be wood. Sie Gas Gurried bare May! signed to carry up to 150,000 cars/29, 148... - a day at speeds up to 70 miles an) Surviving are her husband and hour mother, who Fee} in poe two . department hopes to 50ns, Kim rw a Pp ive wigs ready oe po srethg Franklin Evans, both at home, and| siori to Federal authorities by ‘‘the 4 first of the year,” but said at this of Bloomfield Hills, time alterna’ | “Service will be at 1:30 p:m. Sat-.ner in Bloomfield Township and |tion. the alternate routes are bee) Oe from the Farmer - Snover plans for Bloomfield Plaza, which) But residents of Foxcroft and) Funeral Home with the Rev. Fred will include Wrigley's and Cunning-| other residential areas blocked the | Titfany officiating. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Building Collapses, 10 Workers Killed Leon ‘Moore Leon Moore, 73, of 35 Chamber-' lain St. died early this morning. He had been ill more than a year. Born in Lapeer County on Dee. 6, 1882, he was the son of Wallace “It all happened so fast I didn't and Selma Sharp Moore. to Mr, Moore. had been employed) 64, a carpenter at the Pontiac Motor Division and who was inside the building.|a resident of Pontiac 30 years. “There was a cloud of dust and, He leaves his wife, the former| es was over in about three sec-|Nellie Pierson, four sisters, Mrs. | .. Shortly afterward I could/ Samuel Richards and Mrs. Bava) . ome screams of the men who!Kingsbury, both of Detroit, Mrs. trapped.” Francis Humphrey of Inkster and H, Crowe, a carpenter who Mrs. Lottie Laur of Attica; two, had left the building moments be- brothers, Ivan Moore of North) fore, said “it sounded like a big Branch and John L. Moore of Pon-| bomb waar aael ‘tlac. . | Arrangements will be announced A tense moment came late last |jater by the Donelson-Johns Fu- night when noisy generators and neral Home. rescue machinery were shut off for 10 minutes while a dozen, ; workers went far down into the Joseph Posey debris to listen for moans or a) fFyneral arrangements are pend- sound that would indicate life. ing at Huntoon Funeral Home for But all was silent and the men Joseph Posey, 41, of 1080 Vinewood returned wearily to dig some who died in Pontiac General hos- more. - pital yesterday after six months During the silence, the Rev. of jliness. Francis Desmond, pastor of Jack-- Mr, Posey, Pontiac Motor Divi- son's Queen of the Miraculous. ‘sion employe and resident of the Medal Roman Catholic church, led area for 12 years, was born Jan. 9, the huge crowd of onlookers in 1915, in Tennessee. He married the Lord's Prayer. Arlene Burtz in Alabama Nov. 19, Relatives of missing men stayed 1973, at the scene through the long night) Surviving besides his wife are under the glare of floodlights. five daughters, Mrs. Doris Sim- One wing of the. building, de- mons of Tennessee and JoAnn, | signed to keep power flowing [© Jeannette C., Kathie and Deborah Michigan's mighty industry in the K.; two sons, Kenneth and Doug- event of enemy attack, caved jax: five brothers, Robert, Walter, inward about 1:30 p.m. EST yes- john, Oliver and Otis, all of Ala- terday as -if pulled down by an pama, and two sisters, Mrs, Lizzie invisible force. Doberry and Mrs. Ethel Herston, Its four heavy. floors crumbled also of Alabama. one and telescoped into the basement. About 40 electricians, carpenters and construction men .were work- ing on the floor that gave way. Clinton F. ‘Richards The Rosary 8:30 Thursday will be recited at evening in. the Several were able to leap to 8€c- Honejson-Johns Funeral Home for tions thae remained standing, but Clinton F. more anal a score was trapped. Ad. Richards of 64 Hlinois The funeral service will be at 110 a.m. Friday from St. Benedict's The Weather Catholic Church with Burial in) Full U.S. Weather Bureaa Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—fair and eooler tonight, lew 44-48. Tomorrow felt and mild, high ¢8—77. Seuthwest winds af 16-15 miles an hour shifting te northwest at 15-20 diminishing tonight. . Teday in Pontiac ‘ Lowest temperature preceding § a.m 3 Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Richards, 47, yesterday in his home of a heart! condition. i Alfred E. Stone miles an howr At @ a.m.: Wind velocity 13 -mp.h se — 7 Direction: Westerly , ° Alfred E, ae 65, of 1064 Gun ents Temzeday moe p.m Myrtle Axe.. died yesterday after-}E Moot sets Thursday at 6:11 > ni ;Meon in Ponting General Hospital Moon rises Friday at 6:16 a.m following a Surgical operation, Downtown ‘Temperatures He was be vi in Sussex, England a.m $3 lla TO A 1? Te. mo se im 7g 0n- April 21, 1891. His parents were. ga. ae vt 4 lp. m .73 the late Georg et and Elizabeth Ru-! 0 a. m... 7.67 imens Stone Mr. Stone had lived in the Pon- on tiac area 42 years coming here Highest temperature .. 70 fr ~ . Lowest temperature 44 from Sussex Mean temperature... ... a ’.* 67° A car inspector for. Weather—Sunny Wednesday im Pontiac tAs recorded downtown} the Grand One Year ‘Age | in Puntine ibeen with the company since Jan Highest temperature . . _ Lowest temperature 33 (14, 1918 and was a member of the n temperature 65.5 Brotherh« j peaperare rotherhood of Railroad Carmen. Besides his wife, the former Rose Highest and Lowest Temperatures This. Gr Dav idson whom he married on Dete im @4 Years # In 1951 29 in 1901 Nov. 5, 1938 in Toledo, he leaves a ; “s Semperstare Chars. (52%: George E. Stone, at home.| & 3 Sitemet ; “i 7 Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Sat- 7S 63 New Ovieans 94 ¢9\"Tday from the Donelson-Johns Fu- 2.2 New York %2 69 neral Home with Dr. H. H. Savage E 13 5 of the First, Baptist Church offici-| i. oe 2 sa ating. Byrial will be in White Chap-| i §. Francisco 66 64. a 8 58 Marie 98 5 37el Mepiorial Cemetery. Friends) nG tel chy S vy be ca i at the funeral home after’ Si 65 Washington this’ evening, , : t % . (Peggy Jane) } died suddeniy RESCUER — This picture of a nurse being afternoon and collapse of a concrete office building being built by Consumers Power Co, in Jackson. AP Wirephote evening yesterday following the The Day in Birmingham Bank, Plaza Eye Future in Expansion a sister Mrs. Ward (Phyllis) Ross . BIRMINGHAM — A bank's ar-|of rezoning land. No homes now rival] at the Telegraph-Maple cor-| ham’s stores and eight others, add’ at Telegraph stand'on the area under considera- ‘requested extension of the Bloom-| was visiting their daughter at her, college in Alabama, Living here about 21 years, J came from Auburn, Ala. and was) a manufacturers, representative of! phase heating = gn Mat with a “se —_ in electrical ring | from Auburn, | Surviving are his wife, Annie, | and a daughter and two broth- ers, Nicholas, of Detroit and | Malvern of Clawson, Service will be tonight at 7 at| new vigor to the business outlook field Plaza plans and would prob- Bell Chapel of the William R. Ham- | there, ably block a move of commercial | ilton Co., with interment in Auburn But zoning limits the area and 4 zoning northward as well, officials 0" Saturday, ‘Bloomfield Township official as’ well as a vice president of the cor- ner’s new bank took a dim view today ‘of other expansion after planned units are completed. Arthur J. Howell, vice presi- dent of Manufacturers’ National Bank of Detroit, said his bank holds a twe year lease in the four unit building they opened branch in this -week>—tt-is—on- Maple, east of the corner, “We'll watch the area and pos- | purchase property later,"’ he sibly ‘said. .““Meanwhile .we'll . provide convenient banking for the ac- counts we now have in the area.’ It is the first branch of the bank north of their Pleasant Ridge and Van Dy ke branches, They have 33. However, zoning limits the | @rea’s growth in all directions, | with the exception of some resi- | dentially-roned land just to the north ‘of Franklin Pres« on the northeast corner, on Tceiegraph and a small sector sandwiched between the brick Caldwell home on the southeast corner, on Ma- ple, and the four-unit business | building. A Bloomfield Township official said today that several , possible buyers of land north of Franklin, Press has: talked over possibilities |¢ Professional Quality — Made in GERMANY @ BARBER Two —Main oe ingle or double serrated blades. Pinest hor INGEN German stee] holds keen “- | With Tite-Fit Cover Regular Quality feel. Ground will be broken in the spring for the Plaza stores, and probably for Howard Johnson's restaurant on the northeast cor- ner. A Gulf station is being built on that corner now. * * @«@ Several hundred are expected at | ole Annual Mission Institute of the’ omen tornorrow- \from 10:30 a.m, to 2:30 p.m. at First Methodist Church, Slated are a morning talk by Mrs, William Tighe on Southeast Asians, noon luncheon, and the Rev. Sheldon Rahn's talk on work of the Detroi¢ Council of Churches In social service. Ministers are invited to join the area churchwomen, according to Mrs, Hugh Hemphill, program chairman, Mrs: David Thornberry is in charge of devotions for the meeting, and Mrs. Newell Allen sion. * * «© Hammond D. Baker Hammond D, Baker, 64, 31675, ‘Auburn Dr., Beverly Hills, who was | found in his home Monday, is be-| lieved to have died of a heart condition Saturday, according to Coroner J. A. “Mahoney. His wile | “howe Regular: $2.50 Value THINNNING SHEARS The 39 $3.49 2.57 will conduct a short business Ses- 4 os Nixon Will Visit UP LANSING # — Vice President Nixon will visit the Upper Penin- |sula cities of Negaunee, Ishpeming and Marquette Oct. 12, Republican State Headquarters : said today. SIMMS HAS * Plaid Flannel Lined * Vulcanized Double Knees Reinforced seams, double wear. Sanforized, easy to launder. Sizes 2 to 6x, i 44 F3 Pa i && e 8? H i STAINLESS STEEL Copper-Clad Cookware Genuine . QUART SAUCE PAN. LAST CHANCE—We bought another 288 9 9 9 $3.50 VALUE 7 PIECES—Combination BILLFOLD —Look Whet You Get For— 69 ® Men's Plastic Billfold * Personal Pocket Comb * All Metal Tweezers * Manicure Emery Boards * Finger-Nail Trimmer *% Snap-Button Case now for Christmas 100 for Priday and turday. SUNDRIES Maker's Price-Tag Soys— | end MATCHED SET Ideal for men and boys. Buy ifts. 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Men's Sportawear—Main Floor - long wear. Hollywood style, pleated front. Crease - resistant. Heavy-duty inside trim and pockets, 15% Now suede leather from Morg/ot oor mansy ten seo've ets abl wo Sher Ioe socal Pilgrim Thunderbird shirts /Make no compromize! 1 you ihe heh este, he washings! Here are plaids, stripes ond checks in dazzling colors. Casval ond easy going Conti- nental colors, Trim iy style’ collars. Smortly stitched regular spread collars, All in a wide selec- tion of colors and patterns. Buy them in your choice ae ) i Sg 2 oo - a 2 oes oo a et oe oe eee oa : . * = ¥ 7 c = * = - Je ‘ La + ee acl ae hah Seah ok i Agee es A : : ; (i oe j a rgree regis tf r r=) al H Ad ‘i 4 i z Se Name UF ie , va. Wemtetlinn Addison Township gC : ; : Ef > Dt ae cop 6" 4 | Your PTA Is Planning: ‘Annual Fa t Stiles, Brooks Schools and better” this year according to} ‘ School readying its annual “Pow to be held on the school ree Serta ADDISON TOWNSHIP — Mrs. Melvin Thorman, general chair- man of Uhited Fund for Addison Township, appointed area chair- men At a Tuesday tea given~—in her Leonard home. S Named were: Mrs, Donald A kick-off Aea will,be held on Wednesday ‘at 1:30 p.m., for all volunteer. ‘workers. At this time they .will receive work kits and area assignments, Naomi, Miriam Circles Plan Tuesday Meeting TROY — Naomi and Mariam Circles of Troy Methodist Church will meet at the church Tuesday, at 7 p.m. Mrs, A. A, Tallman and Mrs. James DeVine will be hostesses. ah He vi filell : at ate | a. i 15 She is survived by a son, Mahlon | Stewart of Sault Ste. Marie; a brother, Herbert T. Watson of] Flint and three step - daughters, | Mrs. Clarence Ralph, Pontiac; Hil- | dred of Port Huron and Helen oy Coldwater. Mrs. Alfred Squier IMLAY CITY — Graveside serv- ice was to be held at 3 ‘p.m.| today at Imlay City Cemetery, for Mrs. Alfred (Helen) Squier, 59, of Ypsilanti, She died Monday, Her funeral will be at Stevens and Bush Funeral Home, Ypsilanti, She is a | turer Imlay resident, . Surviving are her mother, Mrs. | "Ella Dawson, Imlay City, a daugh-| ter, Mrs, Guy Miller, ‘Ypsilanti, and three grandchildren, Wilfred E. Barbeau BERKLEY—Service for Wilfred Edward Barbeau, at 11 a.m. Friday at Sawyer Fu- neral Home, Berkley. Interment will be in Roseland Park Ceme- Nearby Communities .|Schools Board of Education to re- »idesign plans for the new high 48, of 5980) Clarkston Rd., Clarkston, will be, land eiay pioneer family and niece of the late Mark Brewer of Pontiac, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday from the Wilbur Funeral Homie, Mrs. +tiouse and midway, irs. Saturday General Chairman Elmer Engle- hart, will feature pony rides and games for the youngsters. Also planned are an old fash- ioned auction, a cake walk, spook Refresh- ments will be served from the “Snack Bar. ” Booths are being prepared by the 4H clubs, Explorers Post and’ Extension groups. Milford , Lee Brooks PTA members have ‘slated their annual fair to be held at the school on Hill road Saturday. A dinner will be served at 5 Mrs, George Korte. Committee leaders are Mrs. Fel- ton Agee; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greer and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martin; Delor Markel; Gerald Bouck; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Goodell; George Wright; Mrs. Grace Reddeman; Everett Gillow: Lewis Tamblyn, and Mrs. Jack Gillow; Mrs. Gertrude Dean and Mrs. Marge Rogers; Mrs. Edwin Kropp; Joan Kapun, Agnes Mac- Callum, Anna Hogan and Mae Markel, Fair features include; Hayride, pony rides, game room, movies, country store and a hall of fame. Rochester The Woodward PTA will meet in the kindergarten room of Wood- ward School, Monday at 8 p.m The introduction of the teachers to parents will be featured. Mrs. Franklin Sherer, . dent, wil] speak on “The Aims and Functions of The PTA.” Committee chairmen will also ex- plain their duties also. Refreshments will be served by fourth grade room mothers, Mrs. Lawrence Myers and Mrs, - Fred- erick Mull, Lake Orion Webber School PTA will meet tonight at 8 for a discussion pro- gram moderated by Mrs. Donald Weston. Participating will be six sixth- grade students; Randalj Davis, MeClard, Carol Hennis, Brewer of Remest «© Alto, Calit., and Jessie Brewer of Pontiac dudy Nelson, Mary Amedilj and Leanie Dionne. topic, “Student Problems’'| explored. Program booklets will be’ dis- trai Bianan Set Open House | p-m., under the chairmanship of | Pontiac Township's 3 Stations Observe Fire Prevention ‘Week . PONTSAC TOWNSHIP—The fire department here will hold open house at all three fire stations 7 until 9 p.m. * * * servance of Fire Prevention Week. The fire halls are located: On Auburn road ip Auburn Heights; one at Opdyke and Pontiac roads and another at Joslyn and Vine- wood. > * * .* Firemen will welcome visitors all week, “Fire Chiet Carl Shingeck an- nounced today. On-Job Accidents Cost U.S. 29 Million CHICAGO — The Civil Service _| Assembly reports that in 1955 one ih every 28 civilian employees of the Federal Government had on- the-job accidents that disabled the victim in nearly half the cases. * * a The cost of the Government-was $26,000,000. in payments to the in- jured and nearly $3,000,000 in lost workdays, Major causes of accidents were listed as falls in offices because of slippery floors or misplaced equipment. OK $69,000 Bonds LANSING @® — Approval of the $69,000 bond issue for a special assessment street paving project in Farmington was approved yes- terday by the Municipal Finance Commission. Lake Council Meeting WALLED LAKE — City Council here is holding a specia] meeting tonight at 8 to consider special assessment rolls for blacktopping projects under consideration. Coun- cil will set a date for public hear- itributed at this meeting. : ing on this project. ROMEO—Architects of the firm Jensen and Keough, Detroit, were sent back to their drawing boards Tuesday by the Romeo Community’ school by Oct. 23. At the same time, bids, lowest of which totaled $898,000 to the $600,000 designated for building and equipment, were rejected and the The $750,000 bend issue, passed in April by aeone-vote margin, also covered site acquisition, architects’ fees, legal fees, and other contingencies. September, 1958, is predicted) now by school officials as date the} school is ready for occupancy. If) the next plans were approved, bids’ accepted and construction started shortly thereafter, the opening date) “good faith” checks returned. i | ' 1 | | | i e s } | | | possibly could be moved up to the | optimistic. Re-Plan Romeo _ School*** beginning of the second semester in February, officials said today, but added that they were not during the week of Oct. 7-13, from| The event-is being held in ob- the Homecoming here Friday, Brandon Township High will also dedicate the new lights on its foot- ball field at the half, in the game \between Oxford and Ortonville, Oxford's 55-piece band, directed by conductor Gordon Marthey, will play, as will the Ortonville Band. Oxford will also march in the Or- tonville parade which starts at 7 p.m. at the high school, Merchants will have floats in the parade as well as some of the churches and the four high school grades, Persons with Minoru Yahmasaki fo Talk at Troy Event TROY — Annual family night) has been slated for Troy Methodist Church goers here, The event will feature Minoru Yahmasaki, nationally known architect, “Church Architecture.” A potluck dinner is planned for 6:30 p.m. Junior and senior youth groups wil! be hosts. ‘ County Births Lake Orten Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Templeton an- nounce the birth of a daughter, Pamela! Ann. They live at-4002 Mill Lake Rd. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sanders of Mili Lake Rad. are the parents of a new son, Kenneth Lee. ‘Nerth Branch to Mr. and ne (Daniel Orr of 3344 North White Lake Township Mr. and Mrs. James Stidham announce the birth of a daughter, Ranae Kay. ag _seenryecents are Mr. and Mrs Dr. and Mrs. William A. Doerner of) Wilmington, Del., are the parents of a/ Speantes: Sharon Elaine, born Oct. 1. Mr. and Mrs, Bert A. McKeachie are The educators had originally set September. 1957 as opening | date. Architects explained the cost dif- ference as a change in their organ- ‘izational personnel in the midst of | the project. SAVE TO 50 SUI COMPARISON PROVES! YOU SAVE AT CONN’‘S! WORSTEDS GABARDINES ALL-WOOL SUITS @ EVERY SUIT EXPERTLY TAILORED BY LEADING STYLISTS, SOLD AT CONN’S LOW, LOW PRICES! EXPERT ALTERATIONS FREE! TO PCOATS in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Il GABARDINES WEA’ , . ey ensiel of Michigan Bell's | IMPORTED 5 EATERS Pontiac branch, he i survived by gly TWEEDS —§ © V-Neck | C. of Encino, Cali; a daughter, | eae @ Many g 5 . Nadia re da | COATS p $39. 95 | neg. 9.95 & $5.95 LAPEER. Service for Raymond gl FLANNELS er < | se % —MEN’S ; i | Se ' i 1 Hi y . t if : ii : ' Orlon LEVI’S PEG KHAKIS All Colors Sizes 12-20, 26-36 wv. @ MEN'S DRESS PANT SPECIALS im °7.95 Gabardine Pants. . now °4.99 i °9.96 Sharkskin Pants. . now 6.99 CONN’ Quilt Lined Jackets S95 _ S795 _ SQ96 Fall and Winter Jockets CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw maternal grandparents. ORTONVILLE — Preparing for -who will speak on | A Sarg Kimberly Laura, was born]. —_ horses and bikes are invited to participate in the “show.” Homecoming queen will be’chos- Orion Library Exhibit Readied for. Schools | LAKE ORION — A library ex- |hibit of .over ‘250 books, covering al! phases of reading from kinder- garten through the eighth grades, is being set up in each of the Lake ‘Oeion Community Schools this month, for one day in each, so that teachers can make selections they would like for their own individual classes, * ” & Vena Kirkpatrick, administrative hibit, feels this new method of iselection will be more satisfactory ito teachers. Ag Exports Zooming | WASHIN GTON (INS) — UV. S.! | agricultural exports in July and |August are estimated at 585 million) \dollars, 22 per cent above the fig-| jure for the corresponding months: jin 155. ‘Slate Supper Party |. NEW HUDSON — The Macca-} bees will have a co-operative sup-| per and card party at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at their hall here, for! matnbers and friends. Plan Square Dance NEW HUDSON — The sdturday| night Square Dance Club has |planned its first dance for Satur-| iday evening at the school gymna- Orio on. with Herman Scheel as call-| \ing adult education, call FE 43733, tt assistant who is setting up the ex-). nasium following the game. will be picked from the 9th to 12th grade representatives, Kay Uloth, Delores Arcand, Beverly ‘!Bailey and Veachel Bilyen. Two queens will be present from Oxford to be a part of the queen's court, Brenda Miller, Brandon stu- new Brandon queen. She} BRANDON QUEENS — Four pretty teens have been named Brandon Township High Homecoming Friday. They are (1 to r) by their respective grades 9 to“12, as queen candidates for the Kay Vem, Deleres Ascend, Reve: ey ae Sens aye. Brandon Homecoming, Lights Dedication Friday: sa ar the ues ck Oa ke Float judges will be Mrs. Zada Newton, Mrs, Clara Sadler and Mrs. Allen Stevens, while Ralph dent-council head,wili-crown-the|Curtis, Robert Bower and H. B. \Johnson will judge the queen, Tell Schedule of Adult Study Set Eight-Week Classes in. Waterford Township Starting Tuesday WATERFORD. TOWNSHIP |Classes in Adult Education will be- lgin Oct. 9 and will be held for leight weeks. | Registration will be taken at!) | Waterford Township High School office beginning at 6:30 p.m. Tues- iday. Classes will meet each Tues- lday from 7 to 9:30. The registration fee will be five) dollars per course and is payable| jat the time of registration. No re-| funds can be made after the second! eeting. The following courses will be! given if sufficient enrollment is obtained: Mech Auto Sewing — simple séwing co ——— Advanced Bewing—tailored aac eet and finishing Typing. Advance Typing, Office Machines, Shorthand—| a brush-up course, Bookkeeping—per- sonal records, budgeting, simple beok- keeping; Public Speaking—parilamentary procedure, preparing a talk, practice be- fore a group; Fine Arts Appreciation— fre be ge to the aiatery, of fine arte jincluding architecture, sculpture, paint- "y and music For further information regard- tor Wayne McMeans, director. Polio Victim - Cited by BPW as Civic Pride LAPEER. — Mrs. Martha East- iman, polio victim who does her housework from a wheel chair and who operates a telephone answer- ing service for Lapeer firms, has been cited by the BPW group here. The Business and Professional Women gave tribute te Mrs, Eastman “in recognition of her cheerfulness, initiative and ag- gressiveness in establishing a business in spite of great person- al handicaps.” They added that she is a tre- mendous credit to herself and the BPW of the world in her devotion \to duty and ability to make a con- lcrete contribution to fife in the |Lapeer community, Church Supper Tonight IMLAY CITY — The Congrega- tional Church Fellowship will hold potluck supper at the Parish | House tonight at 6:30. County Calendar Lake Orien m Chapter No, 340, OES, will have meeting Friday at 8 p.m. at the jc Temple. Installation of officers asonic _will be ane . aie nn —— . Platform ROCKER 12” Reg. 21.95 Value SWIVEL ROCKER 3 9” Reg. 69.95 Value Fleor Sample Boudoir CHAIR ] 2” Reg. 19.95 Value Hideaway 139” Reg. 249.95 Value Toastmaster TOASTER 11” ~ Reg. 17.95 Value Automatic Deep Fat Fryer 7 : Reg. 19.95 Value. 2-Pc. Sectional 199” Reg. $349.50 Value Floor Sample Reg. 15.95 Value 5-Pc. DINETTE 3 4° Reg. 69.95 Value FREE PARKING NEXT TO STORE ‘BUDGET TERMS BEDROOM _3-Pc. Set. T 99” Reg. 299.95 Value ORCHAR 9x12 Rug 3 9” Good Wearing Quality Reg. 79.95 Value Lane Cedar Chest . 39” Reg. 5295 Value Phone FE 58ll¢ URNITURE COMPANY D* . 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE + PONTIAC. 1“ \ j tome cemnmentetrs i fs I PONTIAC PRESS, “THURSDAY: OCTOBER 41956 stir and cook until smooth — stir in the vinegar and then the _ PEOPLE'S CHOICE... 2 oe oe ee 2 ' ’ eS ened and smooth — then G it J “ceed anno mayan || Heres Grapefruit Juice bacon. ‘ ae greens, then pour dressing over VQ while still hot,.toas well, and serve ey : mes capa || so TreeSweet |neeswe#/ 1 erisp greens : . = {tran Baste With Olive Oil cert “ aely m onion and juice : } “ 1 salt vor, Use the oil, g wi d wed 2 tablespoons cicer vinegar minced parsley, for basting a broil you ont need sugar | : can ery ba pepper and simmer 15) 1 cup soured ing — Or SS nas aan ee SSR Se - ter than now to take a Cover . minutes. Drain through.a colander.; Wash and thoroughly dry the/ (dipped in seaso' our) in a) * oe 1t-e} =~ ic 3 Isck at the ‘poultry. department| AS s00n as steaming point is|" | Im the kettle, heat the vinegar |greens. Tear into small pieces and|little olive oil, then use the drip-| 7 WA tad OAC Sy ESE ghusre INSTO. The top grades of beef are -high,|Feached, reduce heat to slow sim- Bot ae | and add sugar, salt, celery seed, [Place in a bowl. Saute the bacon/Pings in the pan for a mushroom) x) PAVE (SS VAC process 1 but there is plenty of chicken and/mer. About 15 minutes before) 7 grees het peppers white nwustard seed, and let come juntil nicely crisped, and remove 8T@vy. >} MOTHER! “ws \ URE, naturel : turkey to ease the strain on the|feady to serve, remove herd bou- > to a good boll, Add drained |bacon, leaving drippings in skillet. - oy ns ey om meat budget. quet, add noodles, and simmer un-| [* Beck jatge suect onions, cooked vegetables and the green Separate yolk from white of egg) Pour tomato aspic into a ring ¥ /) i Koay AO Not only is there a record ove » about 35 malnuies. Pisce fails wate past | peppers. Boll 10 minutes and (and chop each fine. mold. Unmold and fill the center \ “ as) a : d on hot platter and sur-| ; gallon vinegar add the horseradish and diced } flour in with the bacon |with canned drained whole-kernel FW VAIN , amount of broilers-fryers in the pence we 3 Fiend n AY} « =* | etches ncirted, tat thle © an ee ee heel on ay , fat and stir and cook over low |corn mixed with French dressing.| Wa "es OA KAP aN | the time when retired layers be- | yor sw ne liquid ee es ee Make a paste of the dry mus-| heat until smooth. Stir in sugar, (Surround the aspic with a pretty, . A , é he all. Serve at once. Serves 5-6.! 2 Dotties prepared horseradish tard and turmeric with @ little wa-! salt, pepper and egg yolk, and ‘green—water cress or chicory. : come stewers. Both are being of : : WORE Ine ee ee i fered at the lowest prices yet U this fall. | enty-six million more tur- d 4 | a mation Agent, Mrs. Josephine Law- yer, reminds shoppers that all after purchase. Cooked poultry 7 _should be used within 2 to 3 days ‘4 also. 4 Cattle that have been feeding (Fresh — am grassy ranges are starting to . ii Pi ly grade U. S. Standard or U.S. Good quality. This is the cue for Economical the wise shopper—moisture and Choice and U.S. Prime quality is slow cooking are needed to tender- : ize the meat. Roasts, short ribs,| a and other cuts which can be braised are good protein eating at low cost. Grain fed beef of US. — , ; e@eeee {ee now 10 to 20 cents more per pound é for the same cuts. Borden s * * * | | q EGGS—Supplies of medium size eggs are increasing. Medium-size eggs weighing 21 ounces per dozen are now selling at 45 to 57 cents. Large eggs wéighing only three ounces more per dozen are 65 to 71 cents. Plate Six small, five medium, or 4 ! During October apples have their i * best flavor and appearance. ¥ large size eggs equal one cup. FRUIT — Apples capture the votes at the fruit counter. The best : Michigan crop in 10 to 15 years . is a challénge to all to use apples. ee @ 6 come in from the pasture for the : f winter. Sore head directly to ; ay market without further fatten- |. f ing. ee i This tender range beef will usual- e SCUITS ....can 4 For a good all purpose apple there are heavy supplies of the “Wirintost: -variety. Even though it Is now priced at a low of 8% to 10 cents per pound when bought in a three pound bag, | those with storage, facilities can week will about finish the harvest of green beans, peppers and to- matoes. Of all the vegetables, Michigan potatoes should be in the lime- light. Not only‘do they wear slight- ly lower price tags again, but in many cases they are less than buy apples more economically by _ the bushel. | VEGETABLES—Michigan grown. vegetables are still news. This 10* FRESH PRODUCE BUYS! Louisiana Red Yam Delicious Red c ONLY 10: ¥¥ ¥ H ¥ Cc «10: TOKAY GRAPE * basic requirement of a good diet. | half the cost of those being shipped a a from out-of-state. Petal Soft, Colored Rol { T O* Tidy Home ° ‘wuncu Bacs «7% 10°. One medium size potafo con: | tains about 100 calories. | Celery, cabbage, beef, squash and cauliflower rate more than second glances for the current market list. : ‘ ; CANNED FOOD—Be alert to the i » Many canned vegetables and fruits j - now featured. Check labels care- } fully for can size and number of . servings. A number 303 can holds 2 cups, a number 2 can, 244 cups. STEWED CHICKEN, NOODLES | 4to 4% pounds plump hen 4 cups boiling water ns 3 Conveniently Located Tasty Bakeries } A serving of potato daily is one | TOILET TISSUE FRENCH’S MUSTARD... <2 10° Wher SPAGHETTI... 10° CHOCOLATE DRINK ‘=: 10° PEA : ss ED MEAT. FRESH FROM §| PET THE OVEN BUBBL This Week's Special || Decne Die” "70" polite.» " ° 2 man, 2S q izers of their own. ei. Wikon = 1 0 8 1 If Walt Kowalczyk is not ‘up to par it will hurt : : ory rei f State, but along with Clarence Peaks, Dennis in as a d more |O%Seiea'n.a 6 8 8 4 Mendyk and Don Gilbert there’s plenty of help from 2 + uae hee : | Bob Handloser, Don Arend and Jim Wulff. | epee om ek ‘ak * Wilson, struck, out fir Mord te ah. Q . ; : . . — , g iit or and PR ni og tg age og gen Dg in ems - sna of te Deteal Uieak wl tiruck cut for Carey In, Sie ichigan, 4 Pace an erry arr § Layne, will face one of the Na- po ag tadveonsrare ony SSS HB tional Football League’s finest young stars, George Shaw, when the Detroit Lions and Baltimore |"! Colts meet Saturday night in Bal- timore’s Memorial Stadium. Both quarterbacks played key roles in their team’s victories in league openers last week. Shaw . was the big gun as the Colts around, things should be interesting. * * * | End play should get plenty of attention with Ron Kramer and Dave Kaiser shooting for honors. Both | do the placement kicking for their teams and both are highly touted receivers and defensive men. Put it on paper and it points to State. We want to put to the toes, however, that is, the kicking toes of Kramer and Kaiser. So let’s venture to say, Kramer’s toe by two—21-19 for Michigan. DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX Looks like the Tigers may get a new publicity director Robin~ Amoros, Thumb League Elects "<0 — World Series opener against the Yanks at Ebbets to go with their new regime. tion recently with Jim Snyder of THE BIG POKE — Brooklyn Dodger first INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Holly- | We hear that Neal “Doc” Fenkell is leaving and that|5row City chosen president. Bil baseman Gil Hodges starts around the bases as Field. The blast scored Peewee Rees® and Duke lwooq Park this season offered the | a radioman, Bob Richards, connected with a station! dent psa dor meme tb naal ys his big three-run homer heads toward the left Snider and PS ae a rege eal vat aegest horse racing purses on reo in Bellaire, Ohio will be his successor. a+ eeseblinay anak Seake Sobae, AP field seats in the third inning of yesterday's which proved to margin in winning, 6-3. lord, the management Nothing héard from the Tiger front office as yet|™Ais js eaters of the 1955 on the matter. All Sports trophy. See Tighe. as Tiger B 10C Suspends Anti-Pro Pledge Olympic Body Decides to Return to Old Vow on Amateurism LAUSANNE, Switzerland # — The controversial anti-profession- al pledge, which had threatened to split Olympic ranks, has been suspended for the Melbourne Games. * * * The IOC executive board last night decided after a three-hour session to return to the old Olym- pic vow which requires only that each athlete declare he is an am- ateur, The words “and to remain” (an amateur) were suppressed at), least as far as the Melbourne Games ate concerned, * * * Avery Brundage of Chicago, president of the IOC and leader of the fight for the new rule, ex- pressed satisfaction over the com- mittee’s action. ae * * “The spirit remains,” said Brundage. “What we want is to keep the Olympic Games pure and honest. That is all that mat- * * * The board said its action in re- turning to the pledge used, during the: 1952 games at Helsinki was motivated by insufficient notice of the new pledge, which first ap- peared in the Olympic rules pub- lished in July. 2 Chiets Place in Top Eight, but PHS Loses Cy AP Wirephote MAGLIE PULLS THROUGH — Old pitching master, Sal Maglie, had a few rough moments against the Yanks yesterday but "The Barber” of Brooklyn managed to stick in there amd score a 6-3 victory of the Yankees. He had two-run homer. 10 strikeouts after giving up an early 2-0 lead to New York in the first inning on Mickey Mantle’s Beat Calgary, 5-1 CALGARY — The Detroit Red Wings completed a triumphant ex- when they defeated the Calgary Wings Keep hibition tour of Alberta last night! Victory Pace ahead at the five-minute mark of the first period when he took a pass - out from Ferguson and drilled one behind Edwards, The available for major action, but Coach Buddy Parker expects Leon Hart will have sufficiently recov- | NEW YORK # — Kerby Farrell, who led the Indianapolis Indians to an American Assn. pennant and little world series victory this sea- son, will succeed Al Lopez as man- ager of the Cleveland Indians, the Associated Press learned last night. At the same time, the AP also Olson-Walker Bout Off gloves. Retirement of the former mid- dleweight boxing champion was announced by his manager, Sid Flaherty, on the eve of his sched- uled 10-round main event bout with Sammy Walker here tonight. * ie * “Hig reflexes are too slow and he hasn't felt like his old self,” Flaherty said of the once tireless- punching, durable Olson, who is a. * * * The manager said he would try to establish Olson in business in their home city, San Francisco, The two left for there after the announcement. Tommy Moyer, Portland pro- moter, cancelled his entire fight eard and began making ticket re- funds. = me Flaherty said * * * the decision was land physicians. * * * “We dislike very. much,” he said, “‘to call off the Walker bout on such short notice, but I would never permit a fighter of mine to enter the ring uniess he was_ab- Bobo (uits Fight Business PORTLAND, Ore. #—Carl'9, 1955, by knocking out Olson in (Bobo) Olson is hanging up his'two rounds. made after consultation with Port] Olson, beset by domestic diffi- culties, tried again but Robinson duplicated the knockout last spring. No Offer Made, Says Tighe in Regard to Job SPRING LAKE, Mich (INS)— Jack Tighe, a®* veteran member of the Detroit Tigers, said last night that he has not been ap- proached by anyone with an of- fer to take over as the Tiger manager in 1957, It was reported that the 42- year-old baseball veteran was the “first and only choice of executive vice - president Spike Briggs, Jr., and the Tigers’ new owners to replace Bucky Harris as manager,” new club. owner who took over with his 1l-man syndicate Mon- announce the Harris replacement after the world series in New York, » Briggs and Fred Knorr, the | day, said at that time they would |- learned that Jack Tighe, coach of the Detroit Tigers, will be elevated to the manager's post, a job recent- ly vacated by Bucky Harris.* & * * Both announcements are expect- ed to be made either during the world series or soon after. Farrell, a former Major and is regarded as a~ capable field strategist and han- dier of men. *® * * * Farrell succeeded Birdie Teb- betts and led the Indianapolis club to a pennant in 1954, his first year helm, but lost out in the playoffs. This year he won the pennant and playoffs, leading the Indians to. a four-game sweep over Rochester in the Little World International League in 1953 before coming up to the Tigers as coach, He has been a member of troit organization since 1936. “We haven't talked to McHale's statement Midget Football All-Star Night, an activity of the Parks and Ree- and Recreation Department's an- lnual six-week football instuction| program. Fifth and 6th graders will. open} the show at 7 o'clock with two games played simultaneously, each using half of the field. After two quarters of action, the next two Midget Football Program Slated Oct. 27 at Wisner games will start and activity will continue on an alternating basis, |Utley of the Pontiac Jaycees is ticket chairman. Red Wings went ahead 2. 6 a minute later when Delvecchio beat the goalie from close range after ‘being set up by Gordie Howe. Although two PHS harriers fin-, ished in the top. eight, in this week's 2nd regulir cross-country match, Chiefs came out on the ' loser’s end of a 21-37 (ow score Stampeders of the Western Hockey League 5 - 1 before 7,619 fans. The National Hockey League club, which Tuesday night beat its WHL farm club, Edmonton Flyers solutely sound. * * * * Olson's career, which started as a 15-year-old preliminary boy in Hawaii, reached his peak Oct. 21, Record Annual Sale POSSIBILITY—Jack Tighe, De- troit Tiger coach, has been men- tioned as the new successor to Bucky Harris. No official con- Charles Is Fined wins) count against Royal Oak. *- * *. Acorns’ Evans Webb was first home (at Royal Oak) with 9:58, 6-1, led 3-1 at the end of the first period and held a 5 - 1 bulge at the end of the second. The Stam- peders, however, outshot- the Red The Stamps got on the score- board midway in the period when ‘and deflected it past Glenn Hall. ‘Scott picked one out of the air 1953, when he battered out a de- cision over Randy Turpin of Eng- land to win the world title. * * * by British Board ‘LONDON (INS)—Former heavy- weight champion Ezzard Charles firmation has been made by Ti- ger owners, | of Harness Horses LEXINGTON, Ky. (INS) — Tat- tersall's annual sale of harness Olsen then defended his cham- pionship successfully three times and won seven other fights before challenging light-heavyweight king Archie Moore in June, 1955. Moore knocked out Olson in the third round, and he has been on the downgrade since. i? ” He looked unimpressive in non- tifle victories over Jimmy Mar- tinez and Joey Giambra, Then Robinson, whose vacated chamip- Lexington| aking $1,050,- i 900 last night as 56 head brought $113,400. ; The previous record was $944,- $00 set last year. With a final followed by teammate Jerry Keyes (10:02). Rog Coats (10:03) was close on Keyes’ heels, with another PHS runner, Pete Cox next (10:29), Chiefs’ Don Evans, Charley Johnson and Tom Sampey finished 9-10-11. * Wings 27 - 19. Tempers were on edge through- out and referee Merv Duffey was kept busy while handing out 16 — penalties—nine to the Red Wings. Norm Uliman, Billy McNeil, Alex Delvecchio, Lorne Ferguson and. Metro Prystai each scored once for Detroit, Archie Scott, injured in the final period when hit in the face by a flying puck, scored the/neq Wings four goals ahead when Calgary goal. ihe came down the centre and drovejonship Olson won during Ray's _Prystill shot the Red Wings in an eight-footer, « retirement, regained the title Dec. ng Jp _ oe The Wings regained their two-goal lead late in the session when Me- Neil slid one behind Edwards after’ taking a two-way relay from Mar-| cel Pronovost and Ullman. * * + Ferguson scored at the three minute marke of the final frame when he sifted in from the side and blasted one into the far ‘corner, Late in the period Ullman put the has been fined $560 by the British Lucky Goose Hunter Board of Boxing Control for a,” bout Tuesday in which he was dis-| Clvin Campbell, 57 Fernberry qualified for “persistent halding.” |road. Pontiac, took one shot at * * * la low-fl Canada goose When Charles’ opponent, Dick |today, rey got his first eae Richardson, was awarded the fight|\Campbell and his companion, Tom the crowd at Harringay Arena/Rives of Maybee road, were hunt- booed the decision. jing ear a lake in the area of * * * Sashabaw and Maybee roads when The fine wasii taken out of they got the 13-pound-12-ounce Charles’ purse of $8,400 and will Canada, They saw only three other be donated by the board to a birds, but didn’t get a shot at charity. ' ithem, x | j Lire e.* ee, Coach Mike Andonian’s harriers will not be seen in action on the horne course, until Oct. 18 when the Saginaw Valley meet takes place, at the Beaudette Park lay- out. F pa eee ee Se Men's Moccasin Toe Locter 43 North Saginaw St. : football club's | FRONT LINER — A steady, el- ifeetive defensive unit in the PHS front line has been 'Bob Kelly (above). Bob gets the eall for® the left guard spot, posite Bay City’s “import,” 185- 'Valley Conference opener here! | Friday night. pound Tom Holly, in Friday's: big-score victories. They possess what is believed in the upstate elty prebably as good or better club than the 1955 outfit that dumped the Chiefs In Bay City last fall, 33-7. Off the club‘s record they're Tivored to win. Eo SES 26th time Bay City and Pontiac have met on the gridiron. The balance of wins has been about op-ieven, with the Wolves holding a one-victory edge over the years. Chiefs won 12, lost 13 and tied one (66 in 1942). Chiefs hold the big- gest score, a 46-6 win in 1950, but CREW NECK nm $495 ae wnbhe ee 4 Ua BAKER'S STAG SHOP 29 S. Saginaw St. Open Mon, & Pri. “til 9 —— DRASTIC REDUCTION! Barrel—All Gauges ENS isto Double Barrel—All Gouges STEVENS ,, Double Borrel—12, 16, vo Go. FOX i, ‘675 WINCHESTER tx, 90” $ 8 8 10 Model 99F, 300 Cal. SAVAGE iiss 85" $ 8 7 83 Model 99EG, 300 Cal. SAVAGE $5 87° sg 2! 9 Model 775—12, 16 Gouge $ 3 95 SAVAGE stitse $16” Scorlet, Insuloted Model 77SC—12, 20 Gouge HUNTING GOATS °1O”> $] 9» slot 85 Reg. $74.50 Model 11-48 or 48 12, 16, 20-Gauge REMINGTON GUN CASES Scarlet, Insulated HUNTING PANTS Reg. $117.10 Reg. $5.00 ‘> 3% STEVENS SHELLS -- SHELLS High by be 2-% Inch $978 Velocity Magnums Standard $929 : Inch 8 Load 2 Magnums 3 ’ Hunting Coats ....... fs 55.95 Hunting Pants ....... *** 56.50 100% Wool Shirts .........°7.95 Flannel Shirts .......... Scarlet Sweat Shirts - Scarlet, Hooded Sweat Shirts ....... ee) | Thermo-Cel UNDERWEAR suiT °] 3% UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY HAWN’S | SPORTS SHOP 16 $, Coss fil. FE 2.7621 \ LSA Suspends Lane Probes ‘Runout' on Dupas Ike Jests Wi th Dodgers southpaw last July, : ; out of the every coach since the All-State and 185 pounds. Both are said to be very fast for such big lads, Syring is a SVS all-Valley se- lection in 1955, while Holly was all-conference in the Fox River Valley conference in Wisconsin. BIG WOLVES — Rated as the best guard . combination at Bay City Central High School in the last decade are senior Wolves, (left) Tom Holly, 59 and 185 pounds and Dick Syring,. 6-1 ‘at < | es : for 76 yards and 4.2 average. Probable starting lineups for the game, beginning at 8 p.m. in Wisner Stadium: nasal ue TT an Geliewey uT Wore a hit S cuares Cramps a ae eniiegs bd “Foul gtan ay RH Koka: ‘Stop Wilson’ Cries Heard at Avondale” This week the problem lies: on the doorstep of Frank Crowell, a football coach at Avondale, How to bottle up Tom Wilson has been a perplexing problem for halfback started lugging the pig skin for Lapeer High School nd years ago this fall. , said both Lane and stn 5 pe pe fiscal NBA el “were suspended by the Placed Denleg Aten foc faihare|@er suspension pexding completion a contract calling for|of the investigation of the com Lane to meet Ralph Dupas, sixth- arrangements. contender from New Or-| Since his victory over Dupas in : July, Lane also decisioned ninth- Dupas had been/ranked Ludwig Lightburn to step meet here Mondayjhigh in division ratings. Dupas) . Petrosky signedihas won two mat since his staged by Promot- loss to Lane, both by kayo route. (Advertisement) By DICK DUNKEL Barly leaders im the national college) football race will have ample oppor- tunity this week to prove that they! belong. Both Mississipp! and Michigan—rank- img one-two in the Power Index at) this premature stage will have to) beware of ambush next Saturday Ole Miss (113.5) will visit ends Houston VU." (85.2). er. F re is 28 points in the Rebels’ i But Houston showed promise in licking Miss. State, 16-7 last Saturday. Michigan's task appears much tougher. | The Wolverines have to tackle their. ancient rivals, the Michigan State, Spartans, at Ann Arbor. The Power Index, now based on only one game, | shows Michigan as five ints the stronger. But this battle, which looms as & contest between veteran Wolverine. line apd hard-charging Spartan backs, could certainly go either way their own ratings without the use of an ‘s guesswork. Thus, it is primar- fly @ past performance summary, rather | ‘than a forecast. MSU AMBUSH ... Dunkel However, as a forecast, it hee indicated the winners in 76 per jcent of 436 untied games covered to Rating differences in the week's other — games are Saturday—Colgate 21 over Holy |Cross, Delaware 7 over Lafayette, Dart- mouth 13 over Penn, Penn State 3 over ary, Princeton 28 over Columbia, | Midwest, Saturday —- Iowa 17 over }@regon State, Minnesota 13 over Purdue, |Ohio State 14 over Stanfords So, Call- fornia 7 over Wisconsin, 23 Cover Missouri, Tulane 14 — orthwestern, [N Notre me 17 over South, Friday night—-Miam!, Pia., 11 over Boston College. Saturday- Auburn 19 over Purman, Clemson 12 over WN. C, State, Florida 2 over Kentucky, Georgia 14 over Miss. State, 8 over Rice, Maryland 5 over Baylor, South Carolina 20 over North Carolina, Texas A & M 31 ower Texas Tech, TCU 10 over Ar- i~w-- Vanderbilt 27 over Alabama, Va. Tech 5 over Florida State, Wake The Power Index allows teams to eet Forest 98 over Virginia, West Virginia | T over Texas. Power Index pairings for all of the, week-end's games follow: Deanhel s CUE Power Index rot Exompte: @, 500 feo, hon stronger, per eco’ cutee. hos been hy ne scaring parts the Jacket mentor is not noe Hees A. GAMES OF THE WEEK ENDING OCT, 6, 1956 yrs AMONG 1 TOP 150 ! FRIDAY. OCTOBER 5 | Denver .. °64.6 ( @) Montana Ue] | G.Wash'ton *70.8 ( 0) Hardn Sim's 79.6 | Miami,Pla, °97.1 (11) Bosten Coll 85.7 Oregon —.. 44.8 ( 4) U.CLL.A. . "911 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6 | i Arizona cane (18) Wish State . 62.3 | Auburn .. °62.7 on... 63.2 | Bowl'Green 61.6 (aa) Drake .... *50.9 | Brown ... 145 (5) Yale WW *60.3 ee * “3 pF —- - 62.0 | Cha maneee (14) MemphirSt, *60.3 | Clemson ... 88.3 (12) N.C, State °76.6 te .... 04,1 (21) Holy 72.6 | Col, “89.3 (21) Cincinnati . 66.9 | Dartmouth 72.0 (13) Penn . *§9.0 | Deleware _ *79.3 ( 7) Lafayette _ 71.9 Florida .. *93.7 ( 7) ky 1.8 Georgia —. *90.8 (14) Miss State _ 76.5 | Harvard —. *67.7 (11) Tufts 87.1 Thinols . 95.9 (11) Washington *35.2 Towa *106.6 (17) Oregon St. . 68.6 Kansas *83.2 ( 0) Colorado 3.1 | Kent State *74.1 (42) Waynesburg 31.9 L8.U, a» %4.6 1 9) Rice "85.4 lie *68.7 (35) Evansville _ 33.6 | McNeese St. 69.3 (10) La, Tech... *54.9 | Maine _.. 80.8 (43) ¥: em 871 | Maryland °96.2 ( 5) Baylor "99.4 | Miami, ©. . 83.7 (96) *$7.3 | Michigan #113.0 ( 5) sen . State 107.7 | Minnesota *102.9 (12) Pur: Lower | Reter — ¥ Ww 195.1 (27) Alabama Tech 74.8 ( 5) Florida St. Wie Forest 03,7 (28) Virginia — | Wash. State 61.8 (12) Ida on © Xavier, OL *TS.3 (23) Ohio U, —. OTHER MIDWESTERN | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4 Bradley .. *53.8 ( 0) So, Hiinols . 53.7 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5 CulStockt'n *30.6 ( 1) Carthage — 30.0 | E.C.Okla, .. *26.5 (21) Hendrix .... 5.2 mporia St. 43.6 ( 9) Washburn *34.1 Ft. Mays St.. 40.7 (23) S'westn,.K. °17.7 fePhersom °32.4 (13) Baker . . 19.2 Ottawa *22.4 ( 4) Bethe! 18.5 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6 Navy ~~ 90.8 (234) Cornell Nebraska *T7.1 (1) Iowa State 16.3 Not, Dame °96.7 (17) Indiana .. 7@ OhioState *104.2 (14) Stanford . A&M 88.6 (21) Wichita _ | Penn State 93.0 (3) Army | Pittsburgh . 105.7 (20) California *82.2 (28) Columbia . eee 3 = s <: Fk 3” x dedesedizesdiectiiee wwe OOK HK SO S42 Ow FHINNNSS - = = a et es ee | TexasAGM ‘968 (21) Texas Tech | TCU *107.2 (10) Arkansas . | Tex.West'n *84.1 (19) N. Mexico ~ 91.1 (14) N'wetern . Adrian —.. "25.4 (34) Alma . 19 Akron *48.2 (10) Otterbein _. 35.9 Anderson .. 72.0 (13) Taylo *18.8 Ark. Tech _ 47.0 ( 2) 8 Somos “4.7 A burg 39.2 ( 5}. Hamline "M4 B-Wallace 53.8 (26) Oberlin *%6.1 Beloit a4 (25) Ind. Central 19.2 Pemidj! Bt. 36.6 ( 3) NM. Michigan 33.9 luffton . m8 (20) ©, Northern °1.0 Butler _.. *57.3 (22) Indiena St. 35.5 Capitel —.. *39.0 (11) Hiram s78 a ayn 43.9 ™ Til, Wesi'n . 23.3 Case "6.9 ( 9) Pg Uv 28.0 Cent. Mich. 40.4 (31) N. ‘Tlinois | *38.9 ColEmporla *36.3 (35) Bethany one 3 Coe *58.9 (37) Ripon 22.1 Cornell, Ia, 36.4 (21) Monmouth . 15.2 Denison ... *50.1 (28) Kenyon 25.6 DePauw 38.5 ( 5) Ball St. "33.6 E. Michigan *54.4 ( 5) W. Tilinois _ 40.7 | Franklin . °212 ed Eartham .. 1.0 Findlay . °26.4 (27) Defiance ... 9.4 | Grinnell .. 38.8 ( 1) Lawrence .. 48 | Hanover *23.1 (23) Geo'town 108 | Meidelberg . 68.6 (13) Wittenberg *55.3 | j Ti.Normal . 46.1 (20) BE. Diinois . "258 | Towa Trs, . 54.3 (21) NE.Mo.St, _ 333 | | J, Carroll . *39.4 ( 3) Geneva . 33 | | Kan, Wsi'n 33.9 (41) Friends . 22.8 LakeForeet *34.4 (15) No, Central 334 Millikin * 32.1 (91) Eimburst — *1.0 Muskingum °49.6 (36) Marietta -. 13.7 | Navy Pier _ 30.6 ( 9) Manchster °21.3 NE.Okla “31.5 ( 4) SE.Okle 47.7 Pitteb’¢ St, 40.9 ( ©) St.Benedict *40.2 | St. John €0.0 (14) GC Adoletus *46 0 St. Joseph . 67.3 ar Yalpareteo *43.3 ba “40.0 ( 4) Wash’n, Mo. 43.2 Reserve 48 8) Mt. Union *40.9 Wheaton wn 3B 6 9 © (17) Auguttana *19.1 | 4 it) RW Mo St. “as | | Tulsa .. *66.6 ( 2) Marquette Wm. Jewell 4, | Utah .. 90.4 (27) Brig. Young *63. | Wilmington *30.9 ( 3) Ashiand 4 # THIS WEEK'S LEADERS | Mississippi 113.5 Gate, State .104.2/ Texas ASM .. 96.8! Penn State .. 99.6 | Michigan 113.0/ Ga. Tech ..103.89 | Minois ~- 93.8) Kentucky ola | Tennessee —_1'05| Minnesota —.102.8| Notre Lava oo 96.7 | Texas ...... 91.2 i Oklahoma ...100 | Syracuse 102.3) Oregon . 94.8 | Tulane o.1 | So. Calif 107.4,8. M. U sone BOM 1| Va. Tech —... MA) UL C. ww PL Mich. State —.197.7| Wiseonsin . 1008 L. &. U. ~. 94.6 |. Georgia ~ a T. c. U. awl ¥t43 | Maryland _ 90.2) Colgate 4.1 | Stanford 90.6 Pittsburgh 108.7) W. Virginia rit | Florida 93.7| Tempe State . 90.6 iowa 1% 4) Miami, Fla. . | Wake Forest . 09.7) Nevy 905. Vanderbilt 105.1) Arkatiees He H ' Baylor 93.4) Utah wantin, SEA * Mome Teom & Roting Unevaiieabie Copyright 1956. by Dunkel Sports Research Service Watch for these weekly iaary Pyperty-e~S ponsaned 4 in the Press by OLIVER Buicx 210 Orchard Lake Ave. : MOTOR “SALES Phone FE 2-9101 ithe task. “As far as I'm concerned, Wil- son is the best back ih the state,” Crowell said. “It's a pleasure to watch him run.” Wilson, now playing! ite tesl season to the heartfelt oo | of all rival coaches, and his Pan- ther teammates nen | arenren Sew Se on aor ee the top. independent clashes in | the Oakland County area, j Crowell, ‘who observed Wilson when the Waterford Skippers hand- ed Lapeer a 20-13 setback two weeks ago, considers the deceptive | halfback a constant two-way threat, | Avondale’s- chances for victory H \tomorrow night hinge on the abili- | ty to stop the Lapeer demon. “If, we can contain Wilson with any) degree of success, we'll give them all they can handle.” Crowell! opined. Lapeer handed Class A Owos- | ‘go a 20-7 shellacking last Friday Come (N Two cotoR PHASa&S$— BeTH cocoRs caw APPEAR (N Game NE i : Low Overhead LOCATION GUARANTEED USED TIRES , Tit, $350 up TIRES Tread Blemish BIG SAVINGS! te avenge the only blot on its | 1955 record Avondale wer its last week with a 27-7 triumph 481 N. Perry St. SERVICE TIRE and TREADING CO. Locally Owned and Operated FE 5-0649 i over Madison. Both teams have 2-1 records. Fullback Ron Elmy and half- | bac kSven Blomberg are doubtful starters for the Jackets because of leg injuries. Their replacements | will come from Duane Lau, Bill Gerber and Larry Douglas. Guard Dick Freeland will get the | starting call in place of Chuck) Nurek, who has been ill with a virus cold. Otherwise, the Avon lineup will remain the same. | ‘100 Grand Races Grow | NEW YORK # — Five stakes joined the roster of 100 grand thor- oughbred races in 1956. Bowie; raised the John B, Campbell Mem-' orial from $75,000; Hollywood doubled the added value of the American Handicap; Atlantic City inaugurated an invitation event, ‘the Atlantic City Handicap, and. ae Peet See ae LEGAL GAME — Black squirrels, which aioe are dark- colored gray squirrels, are legal game this fall — along with their gray relatives — throughout most of Michigan. ARMY JOE'S sv: SURPLUS 32 S. Saginaw St FE 2-0022 TARPAULINS $3.50 9x12 $4.20 10x12 $5.40 12x15 $7.20 12x18 $10.80 $12.00 $18.00 $21.60 5x7 6x7 6x9 8x9 51 Mt. Clemens King Louie Bowling Shirts Bowling Plaques (Ome Week Service) Do oneiieemememmninemnedll Bowling Shoes (Men's and Ladies’) Bowling Bags All Star Converse Shoes DEM Award Sweaters Football Shoes Waterford School Jackets WELDEN Sporting Goods FE 4-6211 iraised the United Nations Handi-™ $8.00 Hue « I Size M Order Manila Rope, *: te ft--? eo” 4c It. HUNTING COATS and PANTS 8x10 creased the Washington Interna- itional. | Jim Houston finished his Bran- deis University basketball caree? with eight records and 1,588, $30.00 ines to $100,000 and Laurel in-] Sundays Motor Inn Recreation 18 S. Perry FE 5-6032 BOWLERS League Openings Available “American Field’’ quality COATS—Heavy duck, rub- berized game ket, and shell oo an e $595 pr PANTS — Double seat and knee, knit or $695 straight leg .... Shell Belts .... .$1.19 2.39 Shell Vests ..... Game. Bags 3.98 $1.79 Sweat Shirts ..... Wool Socks .........59e Flannel Shirts ..... $1.95 CAMOUFLAGE HUNTING SUITS Cotton Twill—No Rustling Noises JACKETS. . $4.95 PANTS. . .$4.95 COVERALLS... $8.95 $995 CAMOUFLAGE—NYLON RAIN SUIT, JACKET and PANTS insulated Boots..$9.95 Up Leather Boots....$8.95 Up, om Rubber Saree; 95 We Rent Tents ARMY JOE’S i SURPLUS 32 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-0022 ee eee FRIDAY AND SATURDAY $4 ge on Any Man’s SUIT in the store! NO ‘EXCEPTIONS! Alterations at Cost! Cherges and Layaways Accepted! Pik or egle ee ae eS Se “=r AY ae ee ‘7 | NOTHING RESERVED 4utice. £2. dbtiaio.d. 2 sk bik Ae REDUCTION ‘ i on SB Di De a. ei & BD Be Bee git. | : : : nu oe Cee een eee SOR ee een ee ee deka es f PERS CRESS CEH RAEE + ‘Fiduae pe ee . ee e Central es ae Cbaied ~~ al J _ eeeee | 16 a5 + | = Bast Detroit wiecaasnasene® ie - jay acy «| he yi sentersees wee. Te Bgl am wet o a8 ve 3¢€ 32) iu a3 All i o-ronoed WLT wW Lake Orion . eteeee wa 8 30 o 31 6 i4 io a1 11 #02 1a @32 -020 123 WAYNE-OAKLAND au League Games gnton Sue 318 faitfeed 201 301 +0 O1 1h L110 1270 +010 O26 oO TO e370 O10 0386 SOUTHERN THUMB an League Games| - WLT WLT ae Seis eves secat te 200 300 200 2090 101 161 OooO1\ 201 «O10 O38 20 620 2006430 All League Games wl een ror errr 31 Srtenvitie 30 Imlay City ..... 21 North ogg 03 Millingto’ O1 03 “SUBURBAN “CATHOLIC p* League Games w wh 20 31 30 21 21 03 03 03 All Games 30 WL 30 21 12 62 20 @3 “OTHER AREA RECORDS i WLTt Romeo 300 Rochester 200 uth 200 Marilet eas 201) Bloom field 2106 Lapeer 210 Cranbrook 118 Royal 110 Shrine 120) Oak Park 021 Long Shots Pay Off JACKSON uw — Two longshots, Lady Jayne in the first race and Adrian Express in the second, com- bined last night for a $445.20 daily double payoff, biggest of the Jack- son Harness Raceway's current meetings. Lady Jayne paid $21.60 to win and Adrian Express $30.80. TOR 6 and 12-VOLT ccm Our Staff of Trained Mechanics Gladly Install Any of These Items FREE. WOHLFEIL D will FE 2-4907 2274 &. TELEGRAPH "noth ‘teome are physically sound, Pontiage Press Phete EQUALLY GOOD — Johnny Walker, powering fullback at Walled Lake who also does as well playing basketball as he does football, will be a key to the Viking running attack in the big game with Southfield Friday night. Walker is a 175-pound senior. ‘ Myrt Power Pleased With Brooklyn‘s Win Mrs. Myrt Power, the Tl-year-old (Old. Tourney New One Set on Saturday Abandoned, ~~ By H. GUY MOATS the Pontiac area has taken a new lease on life, adopted a new title and has a brand new, handsome trophy for the contestants to shoot at. The venerable (since 1941) Irving Babcock Industrial Cham- pionship will officially pass out of the Pontiac links picture this weekend, In its place will bloom a new event—but one that car- ries on the dition of the old. Tourney will be ‘over the Pontiac Country Club cptrse, at 18 holes of medal play . New title isthe Philip J. Mon- aghan Industrial Trophy cham- pionship. Mr. Monaghan, GM - « « I felt sure Sal Maglie would stop the Yanks in the Dodgers’ home park, and know something? I me he will come back and win a sec: ond game. I said before the series began that I believed Magtie would win twe games and Carl Erskine and Den Newcombe one apiece, I saw nothing in the first game which would cause me to change my mind. baseball expert who attracted na- tional attention on “The $64,000 Question,” is covering the World Series for International News Service. In the following article, dyed-in-the wool Dodger fan Myrt predicts that her favorites will make it two straight over the Yankees, By MYRT POWER NEW YORK (INS) — Well, I feel very good about the Dodgers’ victory over the Yankees in the first game of the World Series. It turned out about as I expected. : + AUTO PAINTING cate eg omen td og Expert Body and Fender Repair on All nae vad Cors Infra-Red Insurance Companies Ultra Modern Building for Collision and Painting ROCHESTER FORD DEALER—OL 1-9711 LARRY JEROME EZ? I think Don Newcombe will beat gm Don Larsen today, not because @ the better pitcher. | | Some people have asked me if I think the Dodgers will win four Truck & Coach general manager’ ‘is the trophy donor, The big Bab- cock trophy has been retired. 11 One of the golfing institutions of| was won three times by GM shot- makers, and is now in permanent possession of the Coach plant. Last jtourney 4-man team total of 286, a 10-under par (for Pontiac CC) effort. Six teams are entered for Satur- day’s test. They include GM Truck & Coach, Pontiac Motor, Bell Tele- phone Co., Baldwin Rubber, Fisher Body and American Forge & Socket. Pairings and starting times (which must be adhered to strict- x are as follows: (Beld), Stan Sar- Bergdor. age tah Chuck a (QM Truck), ee Hyatt Se a Sports Briefs Ted Kroll ran his golf earnings for 1956 to $72,855 following his $50,000 victory in the Tam O’Shanter world championship in Chicago. * * Success against the eunetighis Phillies helpéd the Pittsburgh 15 times in 22 meetings. * * ¥ a istraight games, and I say “‘no.’ miThe Yanks will be harder to! M@ beat when they get back to Yankee | I think Whitey Ford, who was) Dodgers, and I think my friend,) Tommy Byrne, also will win one’ from the Brooklyn club. just have to stop two men —| ‘Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra — to wrap up another world: series.) That Mickey has so much power | it looks as if he could bunt a home) run. No pitcher can afford. to) make a mistake with him or Berra. OD PLACE TO BUY Syracuse and Penn State began | football competition in 1922 and | |have met every fall except in 1944 @ Stadium. [when Syracuse suspended football ‘because of the war. knocked out yesterday, will come| *. * ¢ back to take one game from the} During preseason football prac- ‘tice at the University of Washing- lton, new coach Darrel] Royal put ‘his squad through. morning work- ‘The way I see it, the Dodgers | outs beginning at 6:30. * * * . Beginning early in 1958 Baseball 'Writers’ Assn. of America mem- ‘bers of 10 years’ standing will select former players for Base- [ball’s Hall of Fame. Previously | ‘elections were held annually. # FEDERAL a, a a ne ome ——— . ee FO FERS GReEEE. saciemamintt gh 5-shot pump with solid frame and cross bolt safety. Walnut stock, pistol grip. 12, 16-ga. ceonmnarenseescemnipemaneneee ne ae Sn ccaean ermine > ihn nninint a Featherlight. safety. Walnut pistol grip, bottom P ‘ an Remington 3 to 5 shot. Take-down model w safety. Walnut; checkered pistol pt le MER EE St SSS es ee 5 A SERS: dsp t. stores Open Mon., Thurs., Fri., Take-down model with cross bolt i IATL iS a eras gcse os Gun eae ace ‘ "Noble Pump Shotgun 5 rs A Ithaca Pump Shotgun * ¥ ejection. 89” Automatic ith cross bolt grip, forearm. 117°. Cees ated wv SHOTGUN SHELLS | Lohman Duck or Crow Call............2,00 | Shell belt ..:.........., Sortie aan OO. f 12 gouge 66 | Rubber Recoil Pad.........cse.0eceeeee129 |p = cae Pe L Handy-Pac eS ae 11 9BE F SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC Sat. Nights to 9 Pirates during 1956. The Pirates ,beat their Keystone State rivals | ™. ’ sdisesrssvabetseee a | | | Koskela Hamm (Beil) Was Latozas ‘o . * pai Halver- 1:40—D. | ne gg (Porge), i (Pisher), D. DeLong ine C. Oesch (Bald). 1:45—Ed Wasik (PMC), Paul Bada (omc), Novak (Bell), Ron Roth- barth (Pisher), 1: rlack (Bell), Larry rapplin (Raidwin}, W. Bowers (Forge). Lyle a . 1 ic, Merle _ (PM or ‘ee Chuck Barker (GMC), year the GMC team set a new) $926 Code Neo. bat if you-tike fine things (AND MAVE A KEEN SENSE OF VaiveE) If you are value-wise as well as quality-wise, choose today’s greatest whiskey value: famous, high-quality PM! — 4/5 Qt. Code Ne. 160 is today’ % aronter®. whiskey value! NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK « 86 PROOF + 65x GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS ee ‘Comfort comes. naturally i in an cll-wool PENDLETON! a Ask the hunter who spends any part of his shooting day on the open water about the ideal shirt to wear, and he'll invariably answer “Make mire a Pendleton”. This is no ‘accident. No shirt has a softness, the rich colorings, the natural comfort of a virgin wool Pendleton. Here is nature’s living fiber, wool, at its tailored best. See the sportsman’s collection of famous Pendleton plaids and tartans in our store now while sizes and colors are complete, Pendleton Sport Shirt in nese fancy éheck plaid pattern. S-M4-Xb. 3c, vedeees 912,95 OPEN FRIDAY - NIGHT ‘TIL 9 bs _ Grain Prices Fags a mt di a * #3, ro ~~. oes cod fancy, 2.00 coli, No. 1, Curly, No. 1, pip #33 Pte » GLADYS V. wast ee s V. Whar, po Reese Maggot Co., Michigan My expires May 2, 1954. : _ Ot 42 "ee JAMES H, GRAHAM ‘Appoint Executive to Pontiac Account 12:00. —Adv, Saints Episcopal Church, Ex- change St. entrance. 7 to 9 p. m. —Adv. Rummage sale: Youth Center, Lake Orion. Fri. and Sat. —Ady. If your frtend’s in jail and needs. tall, FRR or MA §-AeRl, naw, next to Jacobsen’s Flowers. —Adv * Rummage sale Sat., Oct. 6 at 23 Pine St., garage. Adv Rummage sale, 8 a. m. Sat. First Methodist Church, Judson at Sag- inaw. —Ad Ri sale, Sat. Oct. 6th, 8:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. 128 W. Pike St. —Adv. Rummage sale Sat., Oct. 6, First Presbyterian Church. 9 a. m. — Adv. Name New Manager Russell Gohring, vice president and general manager of WOHO, Toledo, Ohio, is the new general Rummage sale, Grace Luthéran| -_ |Church, 8. Geneste St., Oct. 5, 9| m. to 9 p. m. Oct. 6, 9 a. m, to) Rummage sale Fri, Oct. 5, All| — f COLLAPSE — This crumbled section of. new building being constructed in Jackson was only _ part of 6,000 tons of debris which buried at least two score workmen Wednesday. Nearly 100 men naw. Held by B'nai Ismmel. —Ady.'. . . : ieaisige’ wale es te tn RS, OTOL and Sat. 9 to 12 noon. 103 N. Sagi- * estate left by their mother, Mrs. John D. Anderson, widow of one /128,000 was approved after a has- Brother, Sister Split $8 Million A Lake Orion brother and sister will divide the eight-million-dollar b Instrument Boss af Grinnell Store 204 Exmore St. as. manager of the band instrument department of the\Military Academy band. Grinnell Bros. store was anpounced yesterday. - : Hagood held a similar position with the Toledo Grinnell store be- fore coming to Pontiac. He served % years with the Army and played with the U. S, Appointment of Rex Hagood of of Henry Ford’s ‘original backers. Suzanne A, Gardber were named as heirs after a tax settlement Wednesday in the U.S. Tax Court at Washington. A settlement of $1,- sle. The Internal Revenue Service originally filed a claim for $2,- 820,491. manager of Radio Station WPON, it was announced today by James the Gerity Broadcasting Co-——— The new general manager will speed and piloted the tra'n anoth-. er six miles until it reached Lyd-, ose da. LARSEN ningham ‘group, Drug Co. Cleveland, an affilidte of the Cm § Le 2—Layaway. assume his duties Nov. 1. : & Gerity Jr., president and owner of 900 The compromise was worked out iby government counsel and at- Wendell W. Anderson and Mrs. §- |torneys for the estate. Some $500,-. was allocated for special be-| quests to. i Mrs, Anderson died in 1951. Her a Five Common Stocks Attractive For Capital Growth U.S. STEEL DOW CHEMICAL STANDARD OIL of NEW JERSEY GENERAL ELECTRIC U.S. RUBBER -For more information without obligation—call C. J. Nephier Co. 618-Community National Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 ihusband died in 1945. 3 WAYS TO BUY: * OPEN FRIDAY WHITES * 3—No money down, as low as $1.25 weekly! eee We Sell What We Advertise No switching . . no gim- micks! Just honest - to - goodness values! Our business has continued to expand over the years because we have ad- hered to the policy of honest values and hon- est advertising, Big 21432 Inch Reg. $69.95 “A” Grade, not crate marred, Compare this value! BIG 30-GAL, GAS HOT WATER HEATER *54” SINKS $2395 2.commartuent ¢ PUMP Shallow Well “$p $7495 || ly With Tank WHILE THEY LAST! BIG 52-1NCH 3-UNIT KITCHEN 30-Gal. Water Heater || WALL CABINETS ro : . $25.50 Value = eo a Glass $ 95 Sturdy, all steel construc- Reg _ 4 Lined 69 gurtan “dots tents Bb $49 -PC. WHITE tractive styling.- f HOT wv ATER WwW ASH 2 Compartment Cement BASINS DRY REG. $134.50 VALUE TRAYS Includes §-ft. tub, wash basjn and closet. HEATER With triple tated ip We urge you to cOmpare this outstanding ) 3 chrome. feucets, AS vanessa Youmne. Crete PP nee - ¢€ ' ' Ce eas OMPLETE WITH plete, Factory “warranty. *719” mare Soe roe vn and “Alt A-GRADE S$ 95 ; "i 2 " H mae I] me 718 " FITTINGS : 225 4 : €HICAGO GRAIN ‘aney, CHICAGO, Oct. ¢ (AP)—Opening: 30.2 00 staged an impressive) James H. Graham has been ap- oe ce Ge Ak 1-25-1.78 pointed assistant account executive) © Mar <..... 233% Mar ......- 1 alt Bo. 9 on the Pontiac account at Mac-\F. Fi Sieg »--cie:. Fe Bae te.’ Yaa ae Opening blocks included Douglas|Manus, John & Adams, Inc. Pres- a imo 100 down % at 85 on 1100\ident Ernest A. Jones announced Be ee ie SE , Ford up % at 61% at 1300,|today. Graham was formerly ad- Mag es--- BAM Dee 2-9) 1B dos. \% at 59% on 2,000 and/vertising mahager of the Buick Di- ee rd pesca FB Scanian at 67% on ai vision of General Motors. Mal. .csis +s: ; sa shares. ed Motors off % at Graham, presently a. resident ' General | f % Sti ot wiint, joined the Buick Divi b % at / ‘ on 3000, Gulf Oil up % at! sion in October, 1950 as district on 1500 and Bethlehem Steel) snager in the Kansas City nei ad 0gh Zone, transferring to the Buick Central Office in August, 1952. Yesterday the market was high-| ; ; second day in a row,| At MacManus, John & Adams, wt De Sttock {he will be assistant to Hovey H lwith the Associated Press 60-stock 0 — ey = average up $2 at $176.70, reins oe a — on th ; jac int al agency's headquarters in Bloomfield Hills. New York Stocks 7 tate Moraine corte) Insists Hare-Repa Air escee 434 Bel Crk -- 04 , , . ry. See 96.4 Jacobs ...... o» $5 eas Hy | Man... 451 * . Ate eat se 22 gems 3 inted Donation Sees Bek... 31. Brose, 88 «+ 273) GRAND HAVEN — Repub- 8 ~~ Seale LO Olas -: @ |fiean John B, Martin Jr., of Grand am Gomi.” 38 MCNSL 4 18 | Panic ing f : of Am M&Pdy.... 4 2 iy... Ba hagie, summing for secretary ‘Am Motors. 63 pOerh Aire «+» 7 \state, demanded today his Am N Gas.... 0 Lone 8. Com .. 8¢ient, James M, Hare, re a = Beating. Fad oy q ™ Ee 43 3\campaign contribution of $400 he jn i send Mack THe ..-. 38tisaid might have come from state An a D Sirs = 38 1 )tax money. An 4 Mead Cp «.... 348 In a speech prepared for a Re- areee 44 ey ss" as publican meeting here, Martin dis- Armo' 176 pls Hon ».7¢-S1cussed a contribution made to the rmst 32.2 P| j ma oy WY ‘s 36 | Democratic party by Mrs. Anne "4 50-4 Miter Pa... sa; Thorpe, a department of State 63 Wheel . Ze branch manager at St. Clair Shores $2 \iucller Br’... 326; who allegedly absconded last spring 1.6 Murray Cp... 324) with about $80,000, tay Nat Cash R.. M6 $3.4 Mat Dairy .... 383] Martin said the cokntribution was : tha a4 — + sell drawn on an account in which 88.5 Ny Central!’ 375|Mrs. Thorpe co-mingled state and fea Mis OC Pe +: 202 )personal funds. 344 No Am Ay.... 421) « jo No Am Av .... 2 3| “I demand that the secretary of 38, Nor Sia Fw .. 168 state repay the state this $400 at 13.8 Obie as, ct $Rdlonee with. hie personal’ check, and At : expl conce ‘334 pee Oem. al pds Satie erry a 26 M6 oe LYTTROTT. Oct. 4 (AB) (USDA) ~< s ou * $i¢|months,” Martin said. —Salabie 100. Not enough offered . 6 i. = = “> .. . 444 “08 4 4 2 5 5 "song Phill Pet... @ ‘"9@ Pilleby Mills . “99 «Pit Plate © .. 81. af -- Of 1, 405 . &: .. 4 Pure Of ...-. 3 me rif “o : : 7. oe: : we - Be Ib. heife -26.00 64 108. ~ 2 fous 00-26.00: uritity stan 116.2 © MBO | $203,004.52 1,380,070.81|12-00-16.50; late bulk Utility cows 11.00- 44 3 ‘owned other- ——s—«; «| $2-50; CAmners and cutters mostly 8.50- . 288 Ld premises... 180,000.00 | 11.00; most utility and commercial bulls + S17 38. 486 493.05 | 12.00-14.00; load Ib. - B4 p48 eT short, searing stoekers 3338: bulk Ma n 3 a a : : ~ 2 Bnel OU. .6 0+ . $96,388, 286.65 food snd ” choice a0 to siockers Be to 1—Cash. ib. feeders 19 00-20 60, 2 Wi a " Calves—Galable 25. Today's market ’ fo 47.7 : —_ a ‘ : 388 bi 21x32-Inch : ee 48. (OSS ee e — em few : a . $82 DOUBLE BOWL . e; good 2 : . fineluding ae ow vealars ane siaugnter calves 26,0- : + ag i i. i I Pets eet ie . ost AF * 14.00. Meh SG PO on a0 eae Due cull Lad low “utility 19.00. - =" a” Sta niess ee '170.153,34| Sheep—Salable 25. Today's market HM : ra she 3 nominally unchanged: compared last oF 4 Steel #72,296.62| Thursday: trading more active. Improved "39 Syly Ei Pd.... 48 * . {spring demand; slaughter lambs uneven, |G 724 Teens co. 8 ES _ $80, 806,465.96 gs ge Bang oth ck nee :. 88.3 Tex G Sul.’ ', 20. . ae ‘ catiplincintss . er Monday; ulk good * ag 7 ’ Land Contracts . 912.401 07 # |and choice wooled slaughter lambs 19.00-/Gen wine 97" eee a & Kitchen Sink on bank prem- eH _ os fae gaa prime lots 22.00- =* we ane, TA. . + , $50,000. . best Tate ; eull to good 13.00- “" 4b "ae \ oo other real Gsiate.. 92.401 Hi pate or ut ude nee “MG Twent Geno! Baa Other liabilities... ¢. 1.293,509.97 choice slaughter sheep '3.00-6.80. good {48.2 Underwa 2... 35.1 ; e slaughter sheep 2,00-6.80: good <6 ead OB arty Total Linbiities _.... pai daa ze7o0| "D4 Choice feeder inmbs 18.00-19 o* Br sve Bl Ge Comets CAPITAL ACCOUNTS es aes Goodyear ...) 322 Unit Alp Ein., 37.5 Capital — ‘ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Grah Paige ,, 1.6 Unit Cire ., 75.7 total par. .$2, 150,000.00 $ 2,150,000.00 sajanie hogs ° 16.000. benerey earket Gt Wes 8 7. 182 Un Gas Cpl. 308. = se 2,150,000.00 rather slow, butcher fully 25-35 lower +146 US Lines..,.. 30 atan te coe eeasine se 461,923.15 shan Tuesday's average; sows mainly 25 Gull er a . - ower; 8 % a « fi count for preferred stock) 401,806.50 butchers 1600-16 25° toud 291 Fes warmers * by -» 182) 7 ———. |Included at 1625: butcher: 240 Ib. ve 58. . 26.5, : ; Total Capital Accounts. .$ 5,163,729 | mainis sn several te No ni *e +i es Beautiful MIRROR Total Liabilities and = [900 head in smalier tote sorted fe * gaa Rak : Capital —_——- 4, eaes.ag 65 welght. ‘and ‘grade 16 s0-16 08" lew lots tye ol He gf aiea 28 BRITE Finish Assets pledged or assigned mixed erade 300.580 Ib. sows 1425-18-78, on 344 Woolworth --. 447 Re \ to secure Habilities and Salable cattle 16,000; calves 400; steers ++.102.2 Yale & Tow .. 29.7 ¢- $ 95 for other purposes ......§ 3,760,000.00 stading average choice and better steady 113.4 Young 8 & W 431.5 $69.95 See Gee Stace lets nti coe Sli eiee BY feo aE. POW es | ry : : rattle OT sas on se F oe ee istill & ’ | 3 Sesuttite as shown above 334,536 10 bids: heen no nein wuss i Bee Se | Less Fittt are after deduction of re- ..__ [3,06 lower: other Glasses steady to weak: | mes * c eTs nh reecera § : 4 j a wine heeds hea 331,001.87 high prime 1951 be nore 3400, P a een Avena i a ye yg ngs jloads 1238-1350 Ib. welehts 33.75: around] .\niated Press. o-Ceneten Sy Oe: NEI of the National Hous) ta Sg-33 okie. eee ee ee Big 21x32-Inch toned ase ‘ ‘ 324,652.21 1051 ‘>, and up 27.00-32.50: hich choice Indust. Rails Util. Stocks | ee Brine tec /900 Ib. weights down to 26.00; good to|Net change ...—1 —4 .... : 2 Compartment tion—insured or amen. average choice '9.50-26.90; standard Noon, today....267.7 130.8 70.5 1765 fe pe teed portions only. 288 969.53 steers down te 45.50: high choice and Previous day,...256.8 131.3 70.5 176.7 Sederal Hoentng ‘Adetsistre- eeane, ete bart gee ener (weer, ween ee tet Bt ee SINKS $6 tion Title If repair and ard 1150-1780: utility and commercial ar ae - oS fata one ved Scan Ue: et oe cows 925-1350: canners and cutters!1956 high.......276.3 1551 76.9 191. ne, e extent cov. (7.50-10.00: utility and commercial bulls| 1966 low... 40 1262 69.6 gun by insurance reserves 2.760,790.52 *2.75-14.00: good and choice vealers 18.00-|1955 high...... 257.8 142.4 8.7 y Every one a real buy! Hurry, Reguistion Vv icans ee |Sreese on x anpderd 820-8 Joad | 1958 low...:....203.1 1149 67.2 select yours today. Slight im- - JB We. ranteed Fa yearlings RY 80: medium 850 tb gertections. rve . i feedin steers 18 35 nks of agencies of the Salable sheen 2.500: fe be States Government 111,343.16 | Slaughter tambs steady af Some on B in ———.—_ | the top 80 hieher than Tuesday: but Total Amount ot Loans, jmarket now slow with sales mainly Certificates ad agg hme | 50 lower: sheep about steady; most sales eet | . i} good to oled . ’ , which oes fuly we: ifew tots ‘prime 3300) early’ culi to low, Ches B, Larsen has been elected ’ ully or wood lambs 12.00-17.00: ; * t insured by agencies of the (91 tb. shorm lambs with No teste ara0, {20 the presidency of the Cunning- Ceited Stores Dovernment cull to good shorn ewes 4.50-4.75, ham Drug Co., Board Chairman’ Government ions, : — . sx» Nate S, Shapero “~*~ @itect and guaranteed") — 3,485,663.36 * . : ¢ iced this. 1 W: A. . vice president Tr who 4‘ mee nn = ipresigent ana) Train Is Fired Upon | vk, solemnity r that t abo tat t ~ tc roe , $e true to the best of my knowiedge and| JERUSALEM ® — Israeli offi- _ Formerly ene: | — t Ww. A Tavtor, (“l4ls said the crowded Haifa- : utive vice. pfesi- | Corcect pitt: View Pres. & Cashier Jerusalem passenger train was at- = dent of the firm, | AS o. aurrantocune tacked last night by rifle and ma- Larsen joined) . A. C. GIRARD seit chinegun fire-from across the Jor-|« Cunningham in FREE ; State f Michigan, ‘County of oax./480 border. The engineer was the 1921 as a store! PARKING miver te and inte glee , manager. He is| “On Wes ie 2nd day of 0: per, 1986 ant The wounded man, hit in the leg also president of | — oO ong Bet a» offieer'by a ricochetirg bullet, put on full (the Marshall: Street Side LOWEST PRICES ON @1-FOOT ¥-in. Galvanized $2.65 34-in, Galvanized $3.44 l-inch Galvanized $4.90 ON STEEL PIPE LENGTHS Ve ni ; styled. Well a 1 i in. Galvanized $6.52 Bf trhac a: Lowest. 112-in. Galvanized $7.70 9 Prices. 4\%-Ft. and 5-Ft. 2-in. Galvanized $10.32 CASH AND CARRY ONLY “The Store That Values Built” SAVE Full Stock of Soil Pipe and Fittings — Everything in Plumbing Supplies PLUMBING SUPPLY CO. PHONES: FE 4-1516 and FE 5-2100 172 S: SAGINAW STREET | TOILETS Here's value, plus! Mod- COLORED BATH SETS $9995 $7995 Crate Marred Free Standing Includes tub, wash bastn, closet : complete with all A-GRADE fittings BATH TUBS Steel and Cast Iron $18.95 Less Seat ‘\ Ye ne: FREE - DELIVERY » Except on Cash "Live Coral Displayed Aquarium gaid to that bad IMENT —— PHONE FOR EVE esis enh ot all woreunting tenet pur veyor Ss unusual brain coral. a gallon,-It went to in and to $9 in 1943, Congress year promised that the $3 would be removed six months the end of hostilities. \ noted that If war shortages had not put a crimp on such things as copper and sugar the $9 bite on whisky would generate count- less \ bootleggers. But the levy never was removed. When the Korean War broke an-' other $1.50-was added. It, too, was | a “temporary measure, It is still there, and the illicit still operators’ never had it better, | * * * : Some of the top Prohibition mob fellows who went into seemly busi- néas, With their dough when repeat intruded are now going back to’ their first and most or love. : FEWER AGENTS | The Treasury Department's a cohol Tax Unit investigators. num- bered 1,022 in 1946, Now there are = — Sa Tey inked ct the cre | OED 0] MYATT MAY ZoLo) | ble number of 23,714 out-ol-bounds stills last year, ‘ — —.. ¥ * - = —_ wis WiTOn carpet 117 per cent in seizures in the past! : 10 years, Treasury figures show af ‘ 15.9 per cent increase this year over last. The inference is that) with limited enforcement, m ore! and more stills go unnoticed and) unchallenged than are. smashed. Judges show comparatively lit- tle interest in sentencing faceless employes brought to court after tongs TCT chief revenooer of the govern- y a ° - » matek; ‘Gig petttened ‘Wenders Made exclusively for Sears with his midget army. . The public still: thinks of the! moonshiner as: one of those beard-| ed mountaineer characters out of Esquire. It should know that most! of the moonshining now is done > DELUXE Sane QUALITY Reduced 151 for This Salet ___—___}2,95 Square Yard Regularly @ 9,12 and 15-ft. widths e : ye . ' t : aa Reg. 9.49 1'A-qt. 1A , r eaeee 6.88 ® Multi-level needlepoint effec Pg) Reg. 9.98 5%-qt. dutch oven'........7.33 Extra heavy, densely woven pile 7 Reg. 7.98 9%-in. covered skillet .... .5.88 seizure. The b > hard Taal Ye , omi-laaia= , ; ce tae, Benes andere - imported wools for long service SQ YD Reg. 6.98 3-qt. saucepan Seay pun ogee | ° . Flootcoverings Teakettle .. 4.98 Combination Cooker .~ 7.49 —Second Floor Honor 2-1 Sancopan a at 5.95 Reg. 9.49 10%-in. chicken fryer .... .6.88 Copper bottoms cook favorite foods quicker, make them taste better. New flavor seal rim helps lock in vitamins, Copper bottom gives you more even distribution. Easy-grip handles with ring. Household Department—Basement Stevenson Rooter Drives Ike Aides to Distraction WASHINGTON (INS) — A brief flurry of consternation swept through the White House yester-| day when a car was ‘seen parked in the driveway with an ostenta- tious Stevenson sticker on the windshield. | = ae we Some of those around the White House who noticed the car won-' dered if Stevénson forces were moving in before the election. | Investigation, however, revealed the driver was Miss Alla Clary, | secretary to Speaker Sam Ray-) burn (D-Tex), -a staunch Steven-| son supporter. 4 She was there to escort some! guests on a_ sightseeing tour through the White House. Sheer Draperies in Allover / PHILLIPS’ Print With Gold Cover MILE OEHUGHES | ° tite 4-in. buckram tops 3 77 © Pinch-pleated! Unlined! @ Sale Priced at Sears 46x90 Fro e your windows with these cool-looking printed shé — draperies. Beautifully tailored in 3 patterns. Gold color :zint on 9 Harmony House colors. Washable. In’, 90-inch lengths. Save at Sears! Draperies—Main Floor Sialiiofaciion Coe first at Sears...in white and pastels... cotton ‘sanforized fitted sheet blanket ‘exclusive at Sears—twin size fitted - Yes, a fine sheet blanket woven of staple cotton yarns, that will keep its original size. *Maximum shrinkage 1% compared to 8% to 10% shrinkage ~ for ordinary blankets. Choose white,gyellow, pink, blue, orchid, or green. (ee eee 80x95 Flat, Full Size. .3.59 Domestic Dept. —Main Floor ancinertimminad Fa i a * ‘ ae $ { 3 # } eae WPON, (1460) WiBK, (iene) ‘ warren i 93m, Wendy : : ‘jot 15 TV musicals sponsored by : the National Guatd. It’s called ; 3 Z last -_* * beeline gears get — Southern Mission io ont @ her dreams — plays “The Fifth Baptist -{Wealthiest Woman in the won ac ao tar con Oet, 12 on NBC’ Matinee Thea-|were a sit Big ae. ter, Philip Reed i her unhappy) Telephone | that — ber h WPON. Club 1460 2 ca haa mn nen ae | Prsintes Ww he o- ns 5 3 ware. Mary Martin has recorded the Drunken Robins Cavort song she'll sing in “Born Yester- day” Oct, 28 on NBC's Hat of |Around Cherry Tree 5:0—WIR, Music Hall Fame . . .It's “Boy Wanted,” by Wav, "Hews MeKenzie ay's Talavisiont. Brogramns -- -- makes CYCLONE FENCE : mea es cea Acme ons sedi mae £ citnd Neat, 2 meds! Better buy than ever! iz nt” due Oct. Il on " ahead of | Gael wom ~ Channel —WWa-TV Caneel FWRI Tv “Playhouse 90” will have a tragic, Ed Lee, an assistant brewmas-|‘y" snes heer through « beach Now Cycianegives Gas ihe bese Sees ees teh, wad < x itch its prizefighter|ter at a local beer company, says had tied his safety locking. Smet gut perp ern‘design. Get Cyclone now 4 ; = : switch when its former ion at telen cael to which he ket to go with a. protect your home: And re- \ monsc People’s Choice. SEARS takes to wrestling as an inglorious : ” rope. ee quality = enn member—it costs no more to tl Tv a ; climax Familiar? Jack|might be the answer. Down went the branch, Harold new gate has heavy frame, ad- have the best. eo a Kukla, Fran and Ollie.|8:30—(4) Tennessee Ernie Ford. 56—(4) Faye Elizabeth. "s fies mv , + (2) Playhouse 90.|10:00~(4¥ Home. Fulaney We earnest hero and all. Dial Operator and Ask for: ENterprise 6642 (No toll charge) Code 3, “Rookie Sheriff.|10:25—(4) Window in Home. caught in this tragic story. Almost _ 125,000 are; He suffered cuts in the 2-foot 1925 E. Hancock Ave., Detroit 7, Michigan (9) Motion Picture A¢ y. (4)/10:30—-(2) Strike. It Rich. ()\pEVOTED TO ‘NOAH’ =~ 2 a we 2 Swe- fall. RS 1 Clfice Open Setueday Mornings olor) Vide ; Home. Jack Webb knocked off this full Seay 0 seking ant nepal! Ciiclile incident. ~~ : Weatherman. 9:30—(T) Hot Rod Races, 16:55—(7) News. =. Tic Season's “Dragnet” weeks ‘ Gvecribed the [quay serra staves sree, coronation manvracronss crcuoes vance : Peete Renee: (6) Dinabisnte—14) MiAigan Ouidiors. one ee SMe Lady. -(4) Ticlago to concentrate on “Noah’s a | | Shore.” (@) Sgt. Preston of the| Dr, Christian. Premiere. ey ee Ark.” pase: = ‘Yau 18:36—(7) Public Defender. (4)/#1#@6—-(9) Experimental —_—_ 1 =— Rogers . B ains! Television ! Juvenile Court. (2) Do You H:15—(2) Love .of Life. “Oh, Susanna” is Gale Storm’s| 5 piminutive : uper arg s Your Wife? . ~ SrSe-(> Hews, placid new so-called comedy eatch-| . of arthur | i 1 | 11:05<(7) Boupy’s 6a. @) Ne 11:39—(2) Search for Tomorrow. |31 whose finest asset is its amet i Rept. oof ELECT RIC . | News. (4) News. (2) News. (4) Tt Could Be You, (7) Robin directly following Gleason . . .Its|}# Palsehood | Pa 4-2525 11:15—(7) Studio A. (9) Film The-| 8nd Ricky. assembly-line amusement — like its of Mindanee | 825 W. Huren ater. (4) The Little Show, (2)|11:4—~(2) oie yee ee ol [area laughter — has a fine grasp|"* Brien ie i | sof) Lon Poul & Mary Ford. tea sree Mid-day Movie. «o|™ adhen ft High care a , —_ — — 1:35) Nightwatch Theater, Series. (7) 12 o'clock! Mary Stuart's role in CBS’ |30 Prous: : os . “Search for Tomor- [24 Sea (Fr) ae 126-0) Billboard. row” will be written ut while [28 Osrurrences | -MORE FRIDAY MORNING 12:30-(2) Ladies Day. (7) The! she awaits the baby, . . So Important | a Erwins. : * {33 Unit of weight en ge Ee wane gos we ie ECD | TV BARGAINS 6:55~(2) On the Farm Front, 1:00—(4) Hollywood Story. (7)'with CBS to keep its plane pas-° > 4, —— 7:00—(2) Capt. Kangaroo. (4) To- Lady of Charm. (9) News. sengers posted on World ‘Series|37 Breity : :06—(9) Shoppers Show. inning-to-inning activity . . . but 39 sewing t W A TON TV anial Shien t:35-—(2) News. og House Party, NEC WM all other air righis. [a uname a L . 130 ‘ Frontiers of :30—(2) Linkletter’s House Party. appellation aa = of (®) Going Our Way. “The Arthur Godfrey. Show” is|** Faint * ] | 68 Used TV Sets 7:85—(4) News. Our Way. Ah the same lineup of the great man’s ‘* Scorn | ) ‘ | 2;00—(2) Big Payoff. (7) Afternoon singing acts, a veritable radio show 47 Aches : 7 = : woe By, gus @) Tofay. Film Festival. with TV cameras peeking in... 3¢ Socal insect ‘ ntion men: Get one of these ne DP for '$:25—(4) News . |, Film Festival. SERIAL THRILLERS Fey EI EES the basement so you can watch the foo games : $:30~( 4% Today (T) Wixie’s Won-|*230—-@) Bob Crosby. (9) Friday! The Hitchcock TV series will |0 Employ 4 Sesat pe Enveer to Ceetiene Peace le the -wife-and kids-wetch-their programs upstairs.—# L destand, | Matinee. iswitch occasionally to serials ~¢! Put! up 9% Grafted (her) $9 95 : A :45—(2) News, Weather. %:00—-(2) Brighter Day. (4) Queen a three-part cliffhanger is coming ® Gibbon 90 Grteng wind 10-In, RCA oe er rn ee . | 2 , For a Day. up -, SGentury sap.) 29 Alware , a = 10-1 Bendix .................., 9.95 }9:00—(2) Of All Things. (4) Romp- $:15—~(2) Secret Storm. DOWN 34 Mawatien bird afer ries ret Tried | a ar i 14.95 er Room. $:25—(9) News. , Bridegroom Guy Mitchell inter- i ears Sere by aoe oat c ae 72 te} i jal 1302 12-In. y' ans 19.95 : os rae eee ee ey, Bernas —— to Sty im from) 5 Ferg ot Mine °C Serene (EIEN LAMM SIL | 12-In. Sporton ................4.. io : e* Ss Doody. Yakima, Wash., to star on NBC's! | —— acy 44 Franklin's -12-In. Emerson .................. ‘ +e ”” 1 ickname a : eg. oD hie Geeenel ee ee ‘ite gh i2-in. Demon? 19.95 4:00—(2) Movie. (4) Comedy Time. 7 Sufti Han . | / *e (7) Margie. (9) Justice Colt. Lyn Duddy’s fine producing-di- | * Reticulated _ Pang age A isiainiais] | 12-In. Zenith ................... 19.95 : BYy:! bare 4:30—(2) As World Turns. (4) Cac-) recting on the best summer sub [10 Oriental f 83 Yein of ore Caan GI Ie 12-In. Arvin Geet 24.95 , | e |. tus Dan. (7) Jungle Jim. of all, “The Jaye P. Morgan |!) Gol! mounds \ 8 Sir Anthony 12-In. RCA 29.95 Bi v# . “ e 5:00--(2), The wet Show. (7)| Show,” won him the producer's HI Boy's name hee" 1240, GE . 7. eee eee eee ee 29 95 | : oe : e Mickey Mouse Club. (9) Dance) chair on “The Most Beautiful |}; \rece n. PREPARES ee eee cee te 8d , ” lnaeoth me Coco ~ = 12-In. Phileo bebe e cece eee eees 29.95 | oe eee “ N4-in. Grinnell 29.95 : 16-In. Emerson ................. » 19.95 | - College Professor | 3- ROOK ets. RCA Von ares as - n, ee . 4/5 QUART PINT e | $366 $oN.- Learns Own Name V6-ln. Crosley 34.95 ‘ 4 i ais Se n. ONG 2 wee eens . Naya SALEM, Va, (® — A Roanoke "’ sing | i 1J.ln, Ambassoder ............... 34.95. | Code No. 770 Code No. 771, e college professor was somewhat. iy 17-1 Silv rtone 39.95 | < stunned when he noted the name | \ oi $e Sa 39.95 = . \ on his birth certificate was William 17-In. Traveler rare arenes are a re ‘ | 35% STRAIGHT WHISKEY, 6 YEARS | Huper Harbaugh, Hooker. For 35 17-In. Motorola ................. . 49.95 OLD, GLENDED WITH 69% FINE GRAIN =| 3PH7%, e'd Boon using the ‘name I7-In. RCA ........0...0000. 49.95 fe SPIRITS. GOODERHAM a\ of Zebulon Vance Hooker IE, 17-In pyreray 49.95 \ A Roanok County Cireuit « MOMITGE 2.6 ee ee WORTS, LID., PEORIA, ILLINOIS. tate ete Gh. Gee enmned 17-In. Westinghouse .............. 49.95 straight, making the name Hook. 19-In. Zenith ........ eyes ene keay . 49.95 er had used. through the years 2 mt ee ec en A ; ie official name. | 7 24 2 agg boeeseeaneee : aa A t ti W be nd \ Hooker attributed the mixup to “in, ma UU 59.95 uromaftic -yv¥asner a fact his father, Zebulon Vance 1 20-In. Phileo .................... ‘ zi D R * S . Woker, died shortly after his H : What 20-In. Muntz ...........:........ yace . “bith, Since then, he's gone under | ere's at iral oo we eee ‘ . Zs 3s I y er epai r ervice | the name Zebulon Vance. He didn't | You Get a ng sr on . 59.95 | discove th til h | oc —. “Im. AMDGSSGGOr .... 1. www wcwaee . All Makes—Expert Trained Technicians Bi ceived ine ceriticate trom the Ba, 9-Pc, Living Room 21-In. Motorola .................. 59.95 3 : ‘Teau of\, Vital Statistics in Rich.| . - <9 See ‘ 6 * 5 * ‘ALL WORK GUARANTEED *« / Mond. \ A jus urlous sofe end ma tebing at "9 “op agi oe ara 79 95 eee eee nema Pee Se C red ‘Unie ion D | rag —— ‘21 -In. Pockard Bell... 79.95 : All Types of Dryer Venting Supplies sets Credit Union Day | c 33 OTHER FINE SETS . i peoith oP — Gov. Williams 9-Pc, Bedroom .. s prod aimed \Thersday, Oct. 18 | ie Dress and book- ff BUSSARD ELECTRIC Qeeiniiriciriscce 2 meen se rt 00.1T-YOURSELF ; 644 called tor recognition of the ‘ser ‘anérepring mattress, 2 decorator 84 Oidiced Avene . Pao Parking ‘Woes peribrmmed by credit unions. Bke’vaiows nies UH F . Conversi sion Kit Po apeaeed —_—_— eer meme: | s 4 * + i « for Detroit Channel Member Oakland County Electronic-TV Service Association uD Enrollment at Peak 23-Pc, Dinette 56—_—fi a ‘all suis $29» z i A lovely S-pe. dinette, with Hem rertstant i ! os og DETROIT — A five per cent pe daherwane cee Aine & Besta 1 . jump in enrollment to a peacetime C ; I t O ] in : . record of 9,544 students, was an- a | nounced by University of Detroit Oimprece Wnly | age. x ¥: 30-Day Exchange Privilege ee | S$ | tire i; TERMS—Available SERVICE SPECIAL A | \ ae ye 3 2 EASY 4 mo. ey “a Nard s s We Give Holdens Stamps se . ANTENNA {f- OD terms! fo'ran | ‘With very Purchase § Year Unconditional ee REP AIR : iT : a Guarantee ‘ All Defective Parts Replaced! ‘ F U 4 NT U R E Commercial Repair Service—Fiat Roots Our Epecialty Mi : bio nig rBaog Leck—No Root Too - TE 5 7387 » Call for Price Wa ton a i0- : Large ot Too Small” : = 7 |P —‘ aliteratters Sales & Service A Pi D [| A NC E | : ! 4 OPEN 9 TO 9 i Welto | Sheldon Root Spraying Co. ¢)} : : : 1430 Joslyn—Cirner Walton c te gh Boa ’ OBEL Radio & TV 78 S. Saginaw FE ‘ E 22 5 ey " » 3990 Elieabeth Lake Rd. FE 44045 het Jikd