The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Cloudy, cooler; chance of showers = (Detatis on Page 2) 116th YEAR “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1958 —28 PAGES. ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Je + Eisenhower Sails Into Dems, Asks for Party Unity LOS ANGELES (President Eisenhower lambasted Democrats last night as political radicals, He called for an end to Republican “family bickering” in the party drive to capture control of Congress. The President flies north to San Francisco today for, ‘two more campaign addresses. His speech last night was perhaps the hardest hitting one of his political career | ; ___j@nd was made to a cheer-| Area Men jing ‘crowd of about 6,500) ware workers im Los An- igeles’ Shrine Auditorium. ie rae a peppery, fighting mood for j in Plane sei first time On this coast-to- |coast- tour, Eisenhower sailed into \the Democrats as a party “‘hope- Smashup. 2". He touched off a round of laugh- Two Oakland County residents! iter im saying: they have. political were injured early Monday eve- schizophrenia, or split personality. ning when a single-engine plane} “The opposition record,” said they were in crashed on Detroit's Eisenhower, “is one of ever high- -East Side. er taxes—of dollars worth 50 Most seriously injured was Ar-\cents—of sky high prices—of an thur W. Bull, 38, of 278 Bradway |economy harassed into producing . Blvd., Bloomfield Village, execu-|fewer jobs, chronic upemployment, tive vice president of the.Michigan|labor strife and fear of the a Wire Cloth. Co, in Detroit. He isiture.” ~ listed in critical condition at Sara-| The President said pe record) toga General Hospital. of the administration on the other] hand is one that justifies support! for Republican candidates, from) j Berkiey, an IBM saleaman and (froign policy, defense, agricul- brother-in-law of Bull; and the (tyrq,- the nation’s economy, pilot, Charles §, Wolf, 31, a De ang others. troit businessman, were in ser- | » *. @ fous condition, Eisenhewer was Se bad applause 35 times at the pa { The three men were returning | rally where pearly every x qh id! | from kend of hunting near Port aie when the plane's en- the auditorium was filled. The big-/ . ttered conk near Sest round came when he said Deals Ge eee. = | that under this administration: - Wolf had been cleared to land engine failed. He decided to land) every day.” — ogy split’ right down the mid- Pentise Press Phote for The Pontiac pean! Dr. Crane is in the city ‘WELCOMED AT-CITY HALL — Dr. George W. Crane (left), noted psychologist, lecturer, author, and columnist was welcomed to Pontiac by John A. Riley, assistant mil manager to deliver two lectures today, one at 2 and an- other at 8 p. m., at the Fontiac Central High School auditorium. - “Ladies and genilemen, things |¢table cloudiness tonight, with the and was circling the field when the are good, and getting better jjow about 55. -Cloudy and Coo City Students Hear" "Chance of Showers D r. Th weainerman predicts cc ened. Tomorrow will be mostly clou in unlighted Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Eisenhower came to California) and cooler with a ehance of some @ wise one, Dr..George W. Crane warned a large crowd at 6 Mile Rd. and Van Dyke, rather’ mainly to boost the candidacy of|light showers. Tomorrow's than the well lit, paved area of/t; ¢ Sen. William’F. Knowland in| will be near 70. the low 48 Six Mile road. ithe race for the governorship, and| high of high school students this afternoon. For the next five days tempera- Crane’s Warning When you select an older person to imitate as you in Kierdorf's defense today. The ay Move up the ladder to adulthood, be sure your choice is second was the “device” police say The noted psychologist related some of the hundreds covering most of his body. Another Kierdorf — ‘Device’ By PETE LOCHBILER More Teamster officials: ‘and another “device” ap- peared today in the Circuit Spurs Area Court trial of Herman Kier-. “Adams were Edw agents for Detroit Teamsters Union Local 376. | Kierdorf, a former business agent | of the Teamsters Joint Council in Detroit, possessing a silencer for a pistol. | Kierdorf's attorneys began the idefense by arguing that the “ ivice’’ in question is really |muffler which Herman made his own power mower. | Both Petroff and Mott said | they were acquainted with Her- | | man and knew he had been | “tinkering’’ with mufflers tor | some time. | | The defense asked Petroff to examine the second “device,” al]- ‘most identical to the one vwehich Oakland County authorities intro- duced earlier in the trial as a silencer. ‘HOW IT WORKS Testifying he had seen both ‘‘de- \vices’’ in Herman’s possession over the past 18 months, Petroff showed |jurors how one of them’ worked iby fitting it en to the power mower. | | He tried to screw on the other ' one also, but if wouldn't work. “It's too small,” .Petroff ad- mitted. : The first “device’’ Petfoff dem- onstrated was the one introduced they confiscated Aug. 4, the day Frank Kierdorf staggered into St Joseph Hospital with fatal burns Police Chief Madison Heights “I didn’t want to smash up the bid for GOP Gov. Goodwin J.|tures will average riear the normal Of questions directed to him’ from Aeenagers across the popert E. Richardson has testified any of those cars, so 1 took it |Knight for Knowland’s Senate seat) high of 69 and normal low of 4} country, inte the cemetery,” he said te- |—and to try to heal a party split.|Thursday will continue a_ little The split is over Knowland moév-| warmer, but temperatures will be ling into the gubernatorial contest | colder Friday and Saturday. The lowest recording in down and town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was of Pontiac Central High seniors: championship of a/48 degrees. 168 at 2°p.m. day. The plane struck some e high trees 'arter Knight had announced he in. and one wing hit a tombstone 88 tended to seck re-election, it came in for the landing. The} +Knowland's plane flipped over on its back but (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) did not catch on fire. and advised why’? so-many start up the ladder on the wrong foot. He addressed a capacity crowd, gist,’’ appears dally on the edi- torial page of The Press. Following tonight's lecture, The mercury rose to ‘schools in the Central High audi-| — Dr. Crane. Announce Belle Isle Meeting Hours Switched | |torium. - Crane holds degrees as a was the first of two which The © to Be Missile Base DETROIT (UPI) — Belle Isle in the Detroit River - will be O turned into a new Nike Hercules missile base and armed with atomic warhead rockets, accord- ing to an announcement yester- day from Army Secretary Wilber M. Brucker. Brucker, who was touring the Chrysler Corp. missile plant in Sterling Township, said Belle Isle would be armed with the atomic weapons within five weeks. The Hercules is known to have a range of 75 miles and is cap- able of carrying more explosive force. Ee —- x * Body returns. local issues since Oct. 2. Pontiac Workers to Vote With meeting hours switched approximately 7,500 Pon- tiac Motor Division UAW employes were to vote today on ratification of new local agreements ending the 20-day strike Local 653 production workers are to vote on the pact at 5 p.m. in Wisner Stadttfm..Skilled workers are to vote there at 8 p.m. This is a reversal of the meeting times listed in yesterday afternoon's announcement in. The Pontiac Press. x * * If the pact is approved, it was expected that some workers would begin returning to the plants tonight and temorrew, with full production expected when Fisher | No change was reported in the status of negotiations at | Fisher Body Division, which also has been closed down over Pontiac Press is sponsoring to- | day. was entitled ‘‘Be a Good Ape.” Tonight at 8 he will, talk on Just @ Little Twisted “Sex Problems in Marriage” pe fore another expected capacity| KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI). — crowd in the school auditorium.| Coyrt officials had to change the There will be no adngission charge. | wording of a. warrant under and people ae urged to arrit which Doyle Dixon wae arrested. early as there will be na reserved The warrant accused him of be- SHES. | ing “dumb to cruel animals.” icine, and is ized- as one ol His talk to the students jin America Yoday. * Parking will be available in the’ playfield area of Crofoot School ‘Capital still Grounded to the west of the high school on . West Huron street. WASHINGTON (U PIi—A fed- eral mediator repotts no settle- Readers of The -Press_ will ‘have their first opportunity to | hear the man whose column, | “Case Record of. a Psycholo- planes. which is designed for adults, cards ‘will be distributed to those in the| and representatives of other area audience who have questions to |the most outsyanding psychologists; Detroit. ment is in sight ih a dispute that | has grounded all Capital Airlines | ’ and a pistol | Vel discovered the ‘silencer’ German P-38 automatic which fitted it together in a brief-\of Malinovka near: Kursk last Fri-;p ease which Kierdorf-allegedly had delivered for safekeeping to neigh- bors of his in. Madisen Heights early in July, before he was to} testify before the Senate Rackets Committee in Washington. Dr. Crane’s talk, this afternoon Decor ot. Philosophy and Medi. ‘HAD EXPERIMENTED’ of 18489 Moreland St.. said Kierdorf had been “experimenting on a cheap, sim- | ple muffler for his powermower.” Mott, a Southfield mechanic, said) that the so-called silencer is built: (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Petroff, oa ae { tA In Today's Press Comics seG OLIsOn OOO ao S1 County NGWS 9. -- 3.7) eee 15 Fditorials .2.c2<55:-ss505 6 Markets (2: 53..25:60605- =: 4a Obituaries ................... 3 Sports anog@inagoodonagn 17-19 Theaters wsace 20 TV & Radio Eeoerene Ueielee 5 27 Wilson,, Earl... 2... ...c000:. 27 Women's Pages........... 11-13 is charged with illegally, ciety.” dorf, uncle of “human ~ ‘torch” victim Frank Kier-, - idorf. or $501,000 Goal Torch- Lighting Opens Tenth Fund Appeal Gala Kickoff Show Here Volunteers on 3-Week Campaign Touched off by the traditional torch lighting cere- .mony and a two-hour variety show, this year’s tenth aires Grea today ‘with: _ __ Testifying at the opening of Kier: anniversary Pontiac Area United Fund appeal moved - dort'’s defense before Circuit i 7 an iGlark J. Petroff and Wilfred Mott, busines ss collecting this year’s $501,000 goal. anf, For the tenth consecutive year, the charitable volun- we \ N if teers are calling on the_residents and workers in the Pontiac-Waterford area to give all they can for the upport of the Fund’s 55 community service agen- ciés. This single campaign enables these agencies to continue caring for the crippled, diseased, mental- ly ill, orphaned or destitute in our community. The torch was ignited by 13-year-s old Jacquelyn Morris, a .Camp Fire Girl with -the ‘assistance of Philip J. Monaghan, campaign chairmark and Lenard Lewis, pres- ident of tNe local fund. Jacquelyn has been in the Camp Khrushchev | on Drinking: Nyet! Nyet! 4Fire Girls for six years. She lives at 260 W. Longfellow and is an eighth grader at Linebin Junior High School. The Gala Kickoff Show, held in \the auditorium of Pontiac Central |High School and sponsored by Com- imunity National Bank, followed the | traditional torch lighting eeremony.. The volunteer workers attending LONDON (AP)—Soviet Premier|the show were entertained by vo- Nikita Khrushchev, for his tippling at diplomatic re- himself noted: iealist Fred Kendall, Miss Paddy |Beach who. mixed comedy with magic, Warney Ruhl with his 11- ceptions, has warned Russians the piece orchestra and featured sing- government is planning a crack- down on drinks and. moonshiners. - * * * “We must proclaim the sternest struggle against. drunkenness and | ’ he told a ‘put an end to this evil, ‘group. ff farmers at the village iday. Moscow radio broadcast the speech today. * * * “Drunkenness is antisocial] and, ‘profoundly alien to our. order and, times,” he said. “One cannot shut, ,one’s eyes to the fact that in our ‘society there still are _ drunkards, | thieves and swindiers. “Drunkenness saps health. The drunkard disfigures family life and damages so- tk ok Khrushchev said the Soviet gov- ernment is working out a“bill to provide sterner action drunkards and “those tribute to drunkenness.’’ One law ‘will limit restaurant customers to! ‘one glass of vodka or other spirits. | * * * “If there are people who like itheir five “tots, they will have to, go to five restaurants,” Khrush- | chev told the farmers. ‘They will ‘sober up as they go from one to| sthe other." man’s } against} who con-| er Patti Brown ; Victor Hoerath, a Commercial | Division cochairman, welcomed the volunteers participating in this year’s humanitarian cause, and introduced Warne¥ Ruhl to open the show. John Hirlinger, manager of the ontiac Chamber of Commerce, |was the featured speaker for the lev ening. He appealed to the volun- teers! who will sacrifice time and 'shoe leather during the next three (Continued on Page 2,-Col. 6) ) | \. Pontiac Press Phote TORCH LIGHTER—Camp Fire Girl Jacquelyn. Morris, 13, light- ed the United Fund torch last night prior to the kickoff cere- | monies. Peripatetic Reporter Writes of First Flight on New Jet By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD _Publisher, The Pontiac Press Some four dozen hardy souls are home today after a meteoric, world’s record breaking clipper flight to Brussels. Within three days, we spanned the Atlantic, visited the World’s Fair, attended numerous receptions, luncheons and formal din- ners; flew to [celand for an hour’s visit, skirted Greenland and landed back in New oe » x *« * The Baltimore to Brussels record-shattering time was.seven hours and 14 minutes and in the jargon of the ring “in this corner we have the winnah — and new champion — Pan American.” The flight also set a record for. congeniality. There wasn’t even an unkind thought. a ae | The event was off to a “flying start” when Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower christened the huge ship the “America” at a colorful ceremony in Washington. The bottle contained water from the seven seas, in- ‘eluding melted. snow from both: poles. But the crew a decided on Baltimore's 9,600 foot air strip for the takeoff as they wanted to “play it cosy.’ So, the loaded departure was moved from Washington. * * * The powerful sleek craft poised at one end of the long runway as a big crowd watched from the Baltimore observation tower. For a long 40 seconds, we raced down the concrete runway ining speed steadily and at last the pilot let €. come off. Inside the great, luxurious liner, the entire assembly cut loose with a spontaneous whoop and roar. . We were air borne. ; The huge, deluxe airplane was officially “in action.” Triumph. * x «© * I was sitting with Norman ‘Chandler, publisher of the Los Angeles Times during the take-off. “I’m the most thrilled man aboard,” I said excitedly. He shook his head. “I am.” “Nope, me,” I insisted. “But I’m a director of Pan American,” said Nor- man and I lost the first argument of the trip. never entered. * a * Juan T. Trippe, president of Pan, was the spark plug of this tremendous event, aided and abetted by the finest flight crew ever assembled. They were strictly All-American. I'd gamble the man at the controls could have flown that gigantic and luxurious jet deal the last half of the jour- ney, purely on savvy arid experience, minus fuel. The hostesses were hand picked from 1,300 Pan Am beauties and if that Joan Schroeder isn't Miss America, it just means one thing — she Shortly, guests began wandering around the big aircraft. She can handle around 165 passengers, but at the moment thé Number One Model is set up for 86; and we had approximately half that number aboard, so everyone was free to visit with neighbors and.congratulate our host on Trigpe’s Tremendous * x This airplane is larger and more powerful than any other jet in service today. It cracked England's Atlantic record with aplomb—and even disdain. ! 4 We flew 3,900 miles non-stop {rom Baltimore and ~ averaged more than 550 miles an hour. Just a week — before I flew to New York from Buenos Aires. (ap- ° proximately 6,700 miles) in about 25 hours and that ~ flight was a de luxe deal, * * but with piston engines. * After the early excitement died down, thé crew many, many courses 1 “announced dinner” which proved to be including caviar, cham- pagne, filet mignon and crepe suzettes. The meal was “by Maxim’s” of Paris and par for all the courses was about 4,000 calories. * xk We climbed to 20,000 feet, to 30,000 and then to 38,000. We were told that if the oxygen supply ever became insufficient, individual tubes would auto- - matically lower in front of our seats. (Who says we can’t get to the moon?). tain announced that. our In mid-Atlantic, ‘the cap- Speed was just under six hundred miles an hour. Boys and girls, that’s knock- ing ’em off. (Continued on Page 2, Col. i). ae “engaged ins % sa cipo lly Papen tie sd ge ae agg Lie RS , ; THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY.. OCTOBER 21, 1958. to ge ie a 2. ae eh ee 4 ee = Sah ee, pea ie wes = Fa Re ee ee oe ee a sea Beery f wie SORORS tig LEE EE ES RS Our Peripatetic ‘Vaeuier The Weather Fall U. 8. Weather Bureau Beport - PONTIAC li windy and warm teday. bigh 74 je: stann Cons Tomerrow mostly cloudy and turning! cooler with a chance of some light shewers High temperature Wednesday | near 70. Southerly winds increasing to 25 miles per hour teday and tonicht. becoming westerly 16 20 miles per hear @ PECC nd tomerrow. 15 - Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m | 8 Sun sets Tuesday at $:41 pm Sun rises Wednesday at 6 53 a m Moon sets Wednesday at 2:05 a m Moon rises Tuesday at 2:47 p.m Highest temperature lowest temperature temperature Weather— Sunn Mean } Highest temperature ‘ f Lowest tenfferature .....-66 eee -- a Mean temperature noo somes f5 Weat) er—Ciear, m! nile : Highest and Lowest “‘Temperat . This | in 86 Years — ; - a a1 in 1920 C : 23 in ibss 1 i - OUTS. “nearly as 33353 Writes of Jet Liner Flight ‘Continued From Page One) ¢ I know that speed is pos- sible fora tiny Ait Force jet, but it seems fantastie and incredible to summon suffi- cient power to hurl this great 250,000 pound craft through the skies and at any such rate. Why, it’s 144 feet long and the tail is four stories high. In fact, to a dull, non- comprekending lay man like your peripatetic reporter, get- ting it off the ground at all comes under the head of a major miraclé. There was no sense of great speed. There was no great noise. There was no confusion and there wasn’t enough vibration to tinkle the ice against the glasses in the- er-Coca-Cola. * * * Finally, some of the boys set- tled down to catch forty winks as Brussels was operating on a time schedule five hours ahead of Unchanged watches still showed 12:30, but shortly the ~$un began to dawn in a gorgeous ~ crimson sky and suddenly Old Sol broke through and we were facing the beginning of an un- expected tomorrow. xi * Somewhere along the line, a. few of us glimpsed London under the left wing, but London didn’t look as large as Clarkston — or important. Oh, she looked well enough in her stolid, stodgy middle class British way, but we’ were in the midst of glamour, excitement, world rec- ords and just the Dawn of To- morrow was infinitely more im- portant. x & * By this time, those who had sneaked a dash of sleep were awake with the new ex- _ citement and we began to descend. DeWitt Wallace. publisher of The Reader's Digest looked around with an easy smile. “This is the first reception I ever attended that lasted seven hours,” said he. Finally, the giant craft lev- eled out and everyone sat up expectantly, until the wheels - brushed Belgian soil. Another spontaneous cheer arose from 40 tired but excited pas- ‘sengers. . We were there. We were “in.” : * x * The record was now a fait ac- compli and we all shook hands amid good will and general ex- t - citement. A dozen limousines met us in the early morning of beautiful Brussels and the next two days were a round of éntertainment, receptions, dinners and visits to the Fair. * | *. * Sunday, we headed for home. And new surprises were in store. High winds suggested one stop for refuel- ing and Mr. Trippe — what a man — had elected Iceland. Yes, I mean Iceland. So-o-0-0-0, our big glamour baby headed northward across England and Scotland and like a frightened shadow. a AND VICINITY — Mostly rable cloudiness tonight, low 55 | een erating Today in Pontiac * Downtown Temperatures $5 68 * 515 alone 1950, ;3 the end July 1 One Year Age in Pontiac * A Of 45 0 O00 will he Monday in Pontiae fas recorded downtown! P in trees ; 7 bevan Mm ida used *. ore outside Near $306 Million CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla '—The Air Force expects to spend total of $305,886.000 op the missile during the fiscal year 1959. * when the Cape opened, of fiscal year 1959, which ward, * the alall for 1959, about $93.-! we sped over those Nordic . lands to ea ae the {gozen north. . kk It wasn’t long before the Cap- tain told us in dolorous tones that we weren’t even averaging 500 M P.H. as the headwinds had increased to “an amazing 110 ‘miles a hour; and it was 60 be- low zero. But even such titanic _and gla¢ial blasts—straight from the Big Deep Freeze of the frozen north are just trivia in.the life of this new jet air liner. We headed into the teeth of the op- position and in an_ incredibly short time were. advised that Iceland was directly ahead; and we’d circle to show us the coun- try and show us to the country. * * * Don't bail out over Iceland. That’s a friendly and ear- nest tip from old Uncle Harold. The land of big ice - and formidable snow didmt, earn its name through whim- - s¥ or geographic caprice. It’s really ice lang. _ And how! x *« * The country is mountainous and even those big hounds with > a iseason Monday. \40 woundings of hunters, none ser- | Crandall apparently had reached . _ to the back of his wagon to get ~ his shotgun and the weapon dis- & | charged. The charge entered his [ It was presumed that Crandell : took the gun in the wagon with } | One of the injured Monday was -# || were removed. ‘ Mrs. Mae Marquand, 55, of su- the little casks under their floppy © ears would never negotiate the deep snows and the frightening declivities. Marshall Field of Chicago, called it yesterday’s “baked Alaska.” * x * We spent an hour there—just a goodwill visit — and our boy scouts bought souvenirs like all get out. . “How,” someone asks, ‘‘can you land in Iceland when you can’t take off from Washington, Die The answer is simple. The U.S. Air Force has pre- pared facilities in Iceland that leave Washington runways look- bs {Armed Forces might be interested | ing like a half mile dirt track at a county fair. * ok Fk When we left Keflavk, Iceland, we took a cozy little swing across part of the ice cap of Greenland (courtesy of the man- agement) and then headed for Montreal, pany and New York City, It was a great cruise. No one will ever forget it. If they let you sit down in a quiet corner for an hour’s earn- est contemplation of what you want in the way of a 72 hour trip, who could conjure a more thrill- ing deak ae this? Echo answers, “No one.” * * * We saw the Fair, we were > dined and entertained and~ last night at home I looked around absent-mindedly for the caviar and assorted. hors d’oeuvres before our simple Pontiac repast. _ Cinderella, the gong has sounded. Back to your corner into sack cloth and ashes. The glorious and golden hour is over. . But what a ball! If Juan Trippe runs a flight to the moon, count me in. ae (AP) test * isevere storms. * | across the Plaits, * a tH Cape Canaveral Cost Cooler Air Fans Eastward Across | | Rockies, Plains By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cooler air from the West spread. center south and eastward into sections, of the Southwest and mid-conti,, nent today but generally mild au-| Officials announced that aboutjtumn weather prevailed in the |1% million dollars will be expend- Eastern third of the country. ied in Brevard County and central | |Florida and about $31,600,000 in! ‘ported across the nation, on no} 30: other sections of the state. * Only a few wet spots were re- The cool air that chilled the The air force will have spent) Rockies and Plateau region dipped million dollars on payrolls southward to the Mexican border Brevard County from) ‘in Arizona and New Mexico dur- to, ing the night. As it advanced east- temperatures dropped! Minnesota, | western Iowa and most of Kansas. | Lowest readings were in the cen- e spent in sections of|tral and northern sections of the the United States other than Flor- Rockies and Plateau stat and another six million will|were mostly in the 30s, wi the United States.jareas colder. t es./ They ae : (Owosso Hunter | Shot fo Death .| ‘State Police reported at least » 1t-year-old Diane Wilson of Dear- “born, A hunter’s buckshot struck *'was not seriously , hurt. Bring New ‘Device’ At Least 40 Woundings _. Reported by Troopers on Opening Day By The Associated Pree Michigan’s small game hunting * * * ious, by accidental gunfire. The tarmer victim: was Albert | Crandall, 42, father of two chil- dren who was found shot and killed in his corn wagon. “right hand and abdomen. * * * * him in order to fire at birds while picking corn. A son, Rodney, 10, found his father’s body upon returning @) home from school at Chesaning. a her in the legs. A total of 78 pellets »..burban Flint, was struck by buck- ‘‘shot while in her backyard. She “Into Kierdorf.Case -| (Continued From Page, One) according to the same -principles "as an automobile muffler. Attorney Erick Zisman said the defense hoped to show more than that Kierdorf simply was “a *. good neighbor who was appre- J hensive about disturbing his neighbors in the epriy morning | with his powermower. He told the jury that a Marine » One gunshot death, that of an/| = Owosso area hunter in his own Ieee yard marred the start of BLOOMFIELD ‘HILLS — Home mail delivery will begin Nov. {5-in Bloomfield Hills, Postmaster Wayne Mortimer announced today, Three rural routes are being replaced by four vehicle delivery routes, which will bring mail di- rectly to home mail boxes, __The rural pattern of clustered — maliboxes will be eliminated en- tirely, Mortimer said. The Bloomfield Post Office staft will be increased to 12 to 14 full- time workers, Carriers will go on a fiveday week. They presently work six days. Mortimer said Civil Service ex- aminations for the additional help will not be completed in time to meet the immediate needs, and that temporary Ea will be hired. * x * , to secure extra trucks, clerks processing of parcel post probably will be set up in the former Kings- ley Inn building, - A comparison betweeri educa- 'tiona] systems in the United States land those of Western Europe and Russia will be the subject of a talk. at 8 tonight by George A. Roeper, headmaster of City and Country Day School, at the school’s PTA meeting. Roeper recently returned from a tour of nations in Western Eu- rope and the Soviet Union. The meeting willbe preceded by an open house. Refreshments will be served, : The Women's Society of Redeem- er Lutheran Church will hold its fall rummage sale Thursday and Friday in the church basement. _ {Hours will be Thursday from 8 a.m, to 5 p.m.; and Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., according to Mrs. R. K. Lewis, genera] chairman. The first edition ‘of the Bloom- field Hills High School newspaper will be published Friday, accord- ing to Donald Gregory, journalism instructor. A temporary staff is headed by Marty Cole, editor in chief, with Nancy Sharp and Dan McClellan, assisting. Chris Newman is busi- ness manager. The paper has not _ Corps veteran had advised Kier- *\aorf to patent his device, since the a ‘in it as a weapons’ silencer. ‘NO PATENT FILED | The defense contended that Kier- dorf gave this ex-serviceman $200 : ito get the patents started. But : it was admitted that the service- ‘man never filed apy official papers # with the Patent Office and has ~ since died. Zisman said he had other wit- nesses to call as the trial con- 'tinues, some of them not connected officially with the Teamsters! *, Union. Earlier, the prosecution con- | eluded its case by demonstrating | the pistol and silencer. Two shots were fired from the pistol without the silencer screwed onto its barrel tip, and three were «| fired with the silencer attached. see: ge it Assistant Oakland County Prose-. “=< cutor Jerome K. Barry Jr. con-; tended that with the device at- tached, the noise of three shots was reduced. . With the pipe contraption off, >itwo shots made about twice the “\amount of noise, Barry told the ‘jury. | durors assembled at the old ~~’ Pontiac Police pistol range off ‘| Oakland avenue to watch Chief ;| Richardson fire five shots from | the pistol into a five-gallon ice cream-can stuffed with cotton | waste. ** While Richardson was demon- - strating the alleged ‘silencer today, | .,|Kierdorf stood off to one as : aiid disinterested. Find ngrcized Loot i 4 LONDON ~| loot on their hands. The truck contained men’s clothing that in- .| cluded trousers with 56-inch , Waistlines and size 60 coats. (UPI\—Thieves who , | hijacked a truck have king-sized | been named yet. * * * A Birmingham Chamber of Com- imerce suggestion that temporary stores be barred from the city dur- ing the Christmas season was re- ferred last night to City Attorney James Howlett by the City Com- mission. Charles Mortensen, “manager, asked that the Commis- sion adopt an ordinance to this ef- fect, pointing out that these tem- porary merchants hurt which operate the year-round. * * * City Manager L. R. Gare, Major Carl Ingraham and City Engineer Grover Serenbetz asked commis- stoners to attend a meeting with ithem next Tuesday in Lansing to ldiscuss access drives with Howard 'E. Hill, deputy commissioner of lengineering for the State Highway Department, About a year ago, commission- . ers notified all business places on U.S, 10 that they must have access drives installed within a period of two years, At the time, the State Highway Department had considered these drives a necessity. Plans already are under way, he | and carriers to handle the Christ-/ _|mas mail rush, Extra space for the chamber | stores | | THE EASY WAY to get cash for things around your home that you are ne longer using is to place a quick action Pontiac Press Want Ad. The cost is small, | results are big. This little ad brought a buyer right away. 2 GIRLS’ Ss : WINTER enats, 3-pe. set, size 3, 2-pe. __Set, size 6, 8 $10 e each. _ OR 3-TT1- To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 Just ask for the | WANT AD. DEPT. Bloomfield Hills to. Start. f e Ro Home Delivery of Mail J receniruling by the state, how. ever, has in effect banned ¢on- struct af these: drive; accord- ing to Gare. Ingrahare stated that.the access drive is a necessity from the point of safety, Correspondence with the state and the request it rescind its ban brought a statement from Hill other lane to U.S, 10 made the access drives impractical, United Fund Opens Annual‘Campaign (Continued From Page One) weeks, to make this year’s drive the most successful in the fund's history. x * ~ An evening kickoff featuring en- tertainment was a United Fund in- novation this year. It was a fine show and'a fine tribute to the men year to make the Torch Drive a. success, Monaghan said, Its theme was built around this year’s cam- paign slogan, “Care Enough to GIVE Enough.” More than 12,000 businesses pro- duce oi] in. the United State, and the largest of these doesn't pro- duce as much as 6 per cent of the nation’s total output. Wants Party Unity \highly (Continued From Page One) which would bar” the proposal” which ~|union ‘shop in Califprnia. cratic opponent, Edmund G. (Pat) Brown, - With Knowland and Kaight side by side on the speakers’ plat- form with him in an outward show of harmony, Eisenhower told his applauding audience: “Lets have no more family bick- ering — fancied or real. It just helps defeat what we want." Knowland and Knight joined the prolonged applause. A bit later the President said the “have had our family spats."”” But he went‘on to say at that point that the Democrats are and women who work so hard each worse gff—that they are hopelessly : split. ’ Eisenhower picked Vice Presi- dent Nixen’s home state to say : Nixon is “one of i t ‘i ae g i an appearance Executive had arrived when they heard loud shouts of feminine joy. Rushing out the room, re-_ porters saw a large crowd of women hovering around actor — Glark Gable. Dr. George W. Crane Pontiac Press Editorial Page Feature writer of “Case Records of a Psychologist.” Councilor to thousands on a variety of problems from personal to community. Read his column daily and hear him Tuesday, in his... Personal Appearance Due to the Sudden Death ot Our Yard Foreman, CARL SHORE, the Yard and Office of ROTH LUMBER COMPANY Will Be Closed All Day, Wednesday, Oct. 22nd- TONIGHT Lecture ' and Question and Answer Program ¥ — 8 P.M. — | Pontiac Central High School ailitericn Public Invited - - Free Admission a . Parking Available on Crofoot School Athletic Field Presented as a public service by THE PONTIAC PRESS” sf i is 5 a ey. 5 7 oe Se ee et ee eee A FAS Bee x OB. Sie mae ee PR a ie ee ‘ AS Gee : ‘*. eet 3 Se : ad Sar ra , . oy » ® s 4 Ss 4 ; ei roo 8 é ‘ ase | : oo. . HE PONTIAC. PRESS, TUESDAY, “ocropen-1 1958 Re. Ree) Se aie eee SE * “NOTICE ‘Pontiac Motor SSO UAW Local 653 A meeting will be held at Wisner JOuN cc ANDEMBON John C. Anderson, 72, of 106 S. Anderson St. died at his residence! Sunday night after a long iliness. He was a retired employe of te a her home after an Ill- ness of several weeks. . ‘She was a member of the Sev- enth Day Adventist Church. Besides her husband, Mrs. ealhs in Pontiac and Ney Areas day. Home fee! some success from |will be in Marble Park Memorial | ‘Wynn of North Branch, Mrs. Em- if these efforts. We -giso pants fee] | Cemetery. jery Haskill of Lapeer and Mrs. e that we have done something to jj | 5 ape = Walter McCoy of Elba; two sis- 8 make you our friend. Be assured ¢ u ss aes By tas ters, Mrs. Bene Weir of jateer that our ev tan ; { | rs. Frank (Lu ) Hoimes,|and Mrs. Russell Yager of Tampa ob thie Pmind. Gcliand service hos VU \79, of 431 S. Telegraph Rd. died | Fia., and two brothers, William! % a ° jearly this morning of a heart ail-|in Iowa and Lewis of North Branch. L lment after an illness of five|Five grandchildren and six great- Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 grandchildren also survive. ALLIE M. BRABB IMLAY CITY — Service for Mrs. | months. Surviving are four sons, William: iB. of Pontiac Lake, Walter J. of; iDearborn, Archie of Detroit and/ Frank of San Pedro, Calif.; 10) Allie M. Brabb, 85, of 250 N. Al Parking i On Our Premises ns Si= vie | ib == grandchildren; two great- _grand-| mont Ave., will be held at 2 p.m. 0 y25 = sod children; and a sister. |Wednesday at the Lester Smith \l | Mrs. Holmes’ body is at the and Son Funeral Home with burial Farmer-Snover Funeral Home. jin Romeo Cemetery. She died _ | Sunday. y MRS. CASH KOOGLER Surviving are two sons, Dr. C. Mrs. Cash (Ethel E.) Koogler.'E. Brabb, Imlay City, and J. M. 70, of 267 Prospect St. died this Brabb of Swartz Creek; seven Presbyterian Church. j Besides her husband, she leaves|Northville following a three-year] © Y If \N . Y ; Le | >= — lington St. will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Coats Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crescent Hill Cemetery. Mr. Shore died unexpectedly Monday at his home. He. was a member of the Faith Baptist Church and was employed as a ee foreman at the Roth Lumber ‘0 Surviving are his wie, Margaret; his mother, Mrs. Allie Shore of Clarkston; four sons, Kenneth, ‘Carl, William and James, ail of ‘Drayton Plains; a daughter, Mrs. | ‘Shirley Wagner of Drayton Plains; a brother, Thomas of Clarkston, | ‘and a sister, Mrs. Gladys Beaver é to the Walker Funeral Home jn}of Drayton Plains. Chesaning for service and burial. ROBERT STREETER MILFORD — Service for Robert Mrs, Charles (Anna M.) Shoe-; | Streeter, 54, of 124 W. Huron St.,| maker, 73, of 71 S. East Blvd., ‘will be held at 1 p.m. Wedrieadas)| : at the Richardson-Bird Funeral : |Home with burial in Oak Grove,~ |Cemetery. Mr. Streeter died Sanday in| illness. Surviving are two brothers, Case of Pontiac and Frank of Bay City p.m. and two: sisters, Mrs. Clarence! Beagle of Milford and Mrs. Amos) ‘Preston of ay City. Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Cecil H. Driver, 58, Yale Univer- | |sity political science professor and a British scholar, died Sunday. He ‘ had been on the Yale faculty since | /1935. He was borr in Bedfordshire, England. * * * CHICAGO (AP) — John P. Jur-| | gatis, 43,-a vice president of Swift |; & Co., died Monday of a stroke. |’ .. He joined the meat-packing firm in St, Paul, Minn., in 1938 and in| 1955 became one of the company’s youngest vice presidents. He was born in Racine, Wis : * * t : MADISON, Wis, (AP) — Henry L. (Hank) Casserly, 66, sports edi- ‘tor of the Madison Capital Times for more than So years, died Mon- NEED, SPI SPACE 2 day. Will Dedicate Library KALAMAZOO 7 — The 1%4- million-dollar Dwight B. Waldo library at Westegn Michigan Uni- dor will be — week- en BEEBE ORD, 1 Weduesday Only Sale | Girls’ 71014 of E - Flannel Lined 4 _ Slacks " $1.98 Value 2 fer $3.00 + Poplin siacks with |® boxer waist, one PA back pocket. ; Completely wash- le: ee oes popular BLUE BEL “Jeonies” Fa Capri Slacks $3.95 Value sia Sizes 10 te 20 Poplins and Cordn- & roys. Sanforized and washable. Assorted colors, ivy buckle in © ig (@ & 3 lined. - 4 & back. Plannel || ‘y Hottest Portable Stove Ever Designed! * Burns Wood, Charcoal or Coal * Adjustable Draft Controls * Heavy Gauge—All Stee! * Use for Heating or Cooking “>, - $12.95 List 88 | New SPORTSMAN’S STOVE for hunting, camping, ice fishing, boar’ fishing, ice skating, etc. SIMMS) SPORTS DEPT. —2nd Floor LS Mary makes things grow. A full genera- tion ago she planted love in a young man’s heart - nourished it . . . watched it bloom through shrill and quiet years alike. And Alec knows—a love like this deserves security. Blue Cross-Blue Shield health care helps provide it—even after ae ea it'll never be can- . : ate ( . it's wonderful to feel cared for! celed because of old age or long illness. What's more, Alec and Mary are protected against un- expected hospital or medical expenses. But then, perhaps you and your family are pro- tected by Blue Cross-Blue Shield, too. If not, ask aboutit.. - especially the new “‘M-75” medical plan. For a free set of David Stone Martin's dewin write Biue Cross-Blue Shield, 1054 West , suitable for framing, uron Street, Pontiac. MICHIGAN BLUE CROSS. BLUE SHIELD NEW-at Simms | \ : ij Add EXTRA -storage aeeee Fim your Present shelves . upboard cabinet, pantry, ete. Pull” 20-inch © length. Folds when not in use. NEW swere, spices. Houseweres peo XIBA-SHELF too for canned —2nd Floor ee a i eepeccccccccccccccccces — THIS WEEK ONLY — Combination | BEAUTY Special Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. 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Official figures show that 3.3 million persons left) the farm inthe last four years of the Truman administration while only 1.8 million left in the past and ‘hever lifted a hand against) labor violence. in Michigan. The state's senior senator spoke at a dinner in the Masonic-Temple which was attended by 175 persons communist had a majority in both and enjoyed the power to block legislation or delay. needed by & modern a does not support China's admittance. * * * Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson carried the Republican By The Associated Press The beating of the campaign drums grew louder jn both of Mich- fgan’s Democratic and Republican camps yesterday. Hotiees |a fifth “Bagwell whos ook” at caulag af ot opens nf alors me Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minn) blasted the Eiserfftower ad- ministration on various issues be- fore an Ann Arbor audience. He blamed the GOP for failing to turn the Formosa crisis over to the) United Nations and also said the current recession was planned by deliberate Republican design. “Stubborn John Foster Dulles will have to go to the United Na. tions and when he does he'll be as popular as a case of diph- theria,” Humphrey said at a campaign dinner for Democrats from Michigan's Second Congres- sional District. The Minnesota senator said that there is great need for another Asian power on the UN Security| Council bgfore there is any discus- sion about admitting Red China to the group. But Humphrey said he piek up. some congressional seats istates. standard into Detroit and Grand Rapids. He told his audiences he is looking to the farm states to bolster Republican strength in the Nov. 4 election, saying, ‘I can’t believe the Republican Party won't ministration.” x * « in the farm states.” He said he based his optimism on farmer talk he heard during his travels through the farm belt Reuther. He seoffed at Hart's “The farmers have an ideal | combination,’’ Benson said, men- tioning ‘‘abundant production, | good prices and stable costs.” been in the Senate and that i “Pure demagoguery’” was his an- swer to a recent claim by Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass) that fam- ily farms have dwindled by four million under the Republicans. “It is not true,’ Benson said. Hart's statements bor Rackets Committee, five years of the Republican ad- At Flint, U.S. Sen. Charles Pot- ter (R-Mich) told @ dinner group his Democratic rival, Lt. Gov. Phil- ip A. Hart, was a pawn of United Auto Worker President Walter P. assertion Saturday that he would have sup- | ported the Kennedy-Ives Bill to curb labor racketeering had he elected he probably would vote for successor legislation in 1959. were dis- ‘missed as ‘‘a pre-election. switch. Potter said Hart criticized rec- ommendations of the McClellan La- followed ithe UAW pattern of ‘‘misinforma- “The facts are available from the|tion” as to Potter's voting record, and later. briefly appeared. before an audience of about 100 assembled at the Dom Polski Club to hear a talk on behind the scenes poli- ticking in labor unions. x ww * Big businessmen are rallying around Potter and other Republi- cans in an eleventh hour move to stave off defeat in the Nov. 4 elec- tion, Lt. Gov. Hart asserted last night in Lansing. Hart, Democratic candidate for ‘the U.S, Senate, assailed Potter in} la television talk as ‘‘the voice of big business bosses.”’ Those same men will donate | $300,000 at a $100-a-plate dinner ‘\honoring Vice President Nixon next Monday in Flint, he said. Earlier, he predicted Michigan Republicans “will cut loose a Y the Republican monopoly in the the Legislature. “Michigan's biggest governmen- tal problem is the two decades of foot-dragging we have had to un- dergo while Republicans held un- broken one party control of both Houses of the Legislature,’ Wil- liams told a Democratic dinner group here. Williams said that for more than a century the Republican Party has had legislative control. “For.20 years without interup- if Williams urged voters to break up million doliar slush fund’ in the | tion,” he said, “Republicans have “Tt doesn't ‘athe sense," he said, “for a state which is heavily Dem- ocratic, people want to see a forward-looking Dem- Bagwell, Republican candidate tor governor, visioned Michigan as a future center for Polar route flights, Bagwell proposed that the state start a study te determine the feasibility of optioning from 3,000 to 5,000 acres of land in the center ef Michigan to be held for a jet age. intercontinental air field. to take advantage of Michigan's “|deal geographic location’ with the respect to Polar flight. The proposal was spelled out in| | 40 Million Visitors See Brussels World's Fair BRUSSELS (UPI) — The World’s Fair, which attracted more than 40 million visitors in six months, ended- with a blaze of fireworks here last Sunday. The last day broke all atten-| dance records as thousands) jammed into the 500-acre fair-| ground for a last look at the 116 pavilions representing the balance, sheet of progress for 46 nations. | People arriving. by streetcar, | auto, bus and on foot easily ‘surpassed the May Day record crowd of more than 700,000, Their upturned faces mirrored a rain- bow of color as aeria] bombs and rockets burst overhead. At the U.S. Pavilion, commis-| sioner-general Howard S. Cullman, lowered the Stars and Stripes that had fluttered in front of the build- ing since April 17 “TI believe the United States par-| ticipation has been a_ success,” said Cullman. ‘Judging from what) we read and hear, our pavilion and exhibits were liked by visitors and we hope that they went away with more knowledge and a better un-| derstanding of the United States than when they arrived.” SEEN BY 15 MILLION Officials estimated that some 13) million visitors had passed through | the U.S. pavilion. They included) ee Governor's Wife Set to Leave Hospital LANSING (UPI)—There’s some doubt as to whether Gov. G. Men-; nen Williams will have his wife Nancy at his side election night. Dr. Kenneth Johnson, the Wil- liams’ family physician, said yes- is about ready to be discharged from Lan- Sparrow Hospital where she has been recovering from a mus- cular ailment brought on by a) terday Mrs. Williams sing’s virus infection. : But Johnson said s The physician said she needs rest.) Mrs. Wil- liams still has difficulty * walking always sleep and that she ‘“‘doesn’t well at night.” ‘However, she is doing real well and I gon’t anticipate anything ‘Kut complete recovery.” |about 50,000 persons from Iron Cur-| sians. jtain countries, 5,000 of them Rus-| | The 360-degree ‘Circarama” movie theater, built with a grant from the Ford Foundation, was jammed for every performance. Officials said about 1,800,000 per- sons saw the movie, “This Is America.” About the same num- | ber passed through the color | television studio in the pavilion. The performing arts theater at- itracted about 175,000 persons, and ‘the voting machines, put in at the request of President Eisenhower, | were used by 200,000. More than a million maps show- jing the spread of different na- \tionalities and regional products were snapped up by visitors. * * The fate of the six-million-dollar U.S. Pavilion was uncertain. Along ‘with its modern theater, it has | been offered as a gift to the City’ of Brussels, but the City Council! SIZE TEST — Pvt. Elvis Bresiey erstwhile rock 'n’ roll star, looks puzzled as he tries on helmet upon arrival at German base where he'll serve as tank crewman. * Be | / LONDON (AP) — A mynah who couldn’t keep his mouth shut has been convicted of being a major nuisance, The Magistrate’s Court at near- iby Kingston-on-Thames was told ~ ithe talking bird-made-a-noise like jsquealing brakes, sang ‘“‘Pop Goes the Weasel’’ and other ditties and whistled at the girls. In the respectable suburb of Esher, on London's southern fringe, that was too much for the ‘neighbors. * * * lived in an aviary with 21 other tropical birds at the bottom of po- tato merchant a) Luttmer’s gar- den. The bird was at brought to court, but to the stand came neighbors to imitate its cries. “Middle-aged John Puddy—‘a bird lover all my life’’—described the mynah eall as ‘Ou ow, ow, decidedly raucous, * * * Mrs, Doreefi’ Corderoy thought The mynah, a type of starling,| - London Court Verdict: Muttle That Mynah! it went “Ack, ack, ack.” The bird also whistled at the girls and sang “All the Nice Girls Love a Sailor,” she testified. t ke Mrs. Eliza Riley likened the noise which bothered her to ‘the scratching of knives on plates.” The mynah had its friends in|. . court. Ex-Detective Charles Vanstone said he had spent several week- ends with the Luttmers and the bird was “not an atom of trou- ble.” ~ * * * Luttmer himself claimed his my- nah was popular with most peo- ple. “Everybody is very intrigued with him,” he said. ‘They enjoy) his conversation and his cute- ness."’ After a six-hour hearing the court ruled against the bird, Lutt- *|mer was fined 2 pounds ($5.60), ordered to pay 42 pounds ($117) court costs and told: “‘Muffle the mynah.” Location— Ours is ideal—in the center of ... the Pontiac area. ‘Easily acces- sible for friends to call from — any part of the city and space for parking 75 cars on our own property. “Thoughtful Service” Two Locations to Serve You: Pn 46 Wittioms St. Pontiag FE 2.5841. 3530 Auburn Road Auburn Heights _ FE 4-1579 _ . o +. DONT ELAY, CONVENIENT CREDIT! the CREDIT 9:-30-5. 30 daily 3 NO. SAGINAW ST. 30-12.30 Wed.9 30-8 OOFri ff has not yet accepted the offer. Detroit Orchestra Well Received ‘at Worcester | WORCESTER, Mass. A first night audience of 2,200 applauded the Detroit Symphony Orchestra last night in its debut perform- jance at the 99-year-old Worcester |Music Festival in the Worcester Municipa) Auditorium. The ‘‘pianist’s night’: program featured Gyorgy Cziffra in the Lizst Concerto No. 1. in E Fiat Major. * we * i 3 Also featured was the Worcester Festival chorus, conducted by T. Charles Lee, in several selections. Corlductor Paul Paray ted the orchestra in a performance of Rimsky - Korsakov’s Cappriccio Espagnol. The performance marked the ‘first appearance of the Detroit Symphony in the annual Worcester Festival, which began in 1858. The orchestra played two en- cores after the regular program: Schubert’s ‘““Moment Musicale” ,;and Wagner’s prelude to the third act of Lohengrin. PRESCRIPTIONS p RESURIPTIONS ROFESSIONALLY ERFECT PERRY DRUGS ROPERLY East Bivd.. Cor Perry FE 2-0859 { Spectacular Stunt Fails to Win Detroiter Job DETROIT (AP)—Charles Ham- ilton, 37, is an unemployed ma- chine repairman who wants a job. So he tried to get one by push- NOTICE! WATERFORD MEN’S STORE Waterford, Mich. will be CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY to mark down clothing prices for their great GOING OUT of BUSINESS SALE OPEN THURSDAY MORNING AT 10 A.M. ing a seven-foot wooden signboard on rollers up and down the streets of downtown Detroit, It said: “First class all-around man wants |job, Phone Olive 1-6531."" Yamin said he got 10 calls. ree of them were from guys who thought I was offering them a job,” he said. “Seven people ‘asked if it was just a stunt or if I really meant - it.” He plans to keep trying. Bagwell Reports Tour ‘Hard on Haberdashery’ LANSING — Hopping around the state in a political campaign is hard on the haberdashery — at least in the case of Paul D. Bag- well, Republican gubernatorial nominee. Bagwell says“ that in six wéeks of stumping’he has lost four hats and three topcoats, not to mention a sizable number of shirts, shorts and socks. ruin your engine | The first balloon ascension in the eed States took place at Phila- delphia in 1793. from the first fall ORRIEDO if aa] are onable fo St yer HIGAN breath oO a! Member American Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and MICHIGAN CRED 718 Pontiae State Bank Bidg StaderioKs ord regardiess ef how much or hew many vee NO SECURITY oR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE. PLACE Association of Credit Counsellors “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You" Guaranteed A VER DEBTS ments, debte.or bills when due, see and erraces for payments you can owe. inspection before TO PAY Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't. IT COUNSELLORS FE 8-0456 ! fy Don’t gamble with fall’s first freeze. 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Then give this cou- pon to your Marathon dealer for your free ear muffs. SMILE-maker SERVICE is a service mark used and owned by The Ohio Of1 Ca : Se th OCTOBER 21,1958 ‘NEW YORK — In the ra headlines, 4 . _ among: other things; charm. ~ ‘Then came Rosselini with those seemed relatively norma] and cool in this hotbed of ladies’ men. Finally, last week, along came the most inexperienced interna- tional playboy of them alli — Francisco (Baby) Pignatari — @ man whe comes by»his title naturally. He lavishes jewels oa girls, and he is an acquaint. ance of Zsa Zsa Gabor... “Baby” is a Brazilian” aire and thus can _ alfon 4 “you Might say, to make a Sook’ et him-) self. And he has dope exactly’ that, in the eyes ofthe. conserva-| ee tive sane, several 4imes. His big-| _THE. PONTIAC saul ‘TUESDAY, Sail Official iin Wayne Probe LANSING W — Detroit atior. ,, ney Louis Weehsler was | ed as’‘a Wayne _ Apaablie administrator yeste by the State Attorney < Ss Office. ' Atty. Gen. Paul & Adams said the action was ordered after a report was made to. him by Wayne Cousify Prosecutor Sam- - a four-month investi- alleged irregularities nty morgue. , One of the county's ‘public administrators, figured Yan the case in connection with “ alleged kickbacks to morgue em- | ployes’ in return for Susiness directed to certain attorneys and funeral directors, seis reer Detroit Reports Total gest experimefit into foolishness: of 598 Polio Cases occurred Rio de “spring in his native! giro when he hired! DETROIT (AP)—One new case pickets Me strike actress Linda|°! Polio was reported in Detroit suspend: | celebrities showed up at-a coek- cident, ’s hotel bearing the al vigk “Linda Go Home.’ Monday to bring the city’s total for the year to 598 with 19 deaths. Wayne County, outside Detroit, Nearby Macomb "County record- ‘ed its second polio fatality in two) days, The victim was Roy Tobbe, |30. of suburban St. Clair Shores, who died. less than 12 hours after fi them—separated the combatants. - |his wife gave birth to their third) child. “ |median Milton Berle sponsore’t}. Breaks Up Party for Poet (Gary Crosby Has Tussle HOLLYWOOD (AP)—A flock af tail party for poet Carl Sandburg Monday night, but most of them wnissed the thrilling last -act= - A wrestling mateh between. Bing Crosby’s son Gary. and a cheese company ‘executive twice his age. John Geiger, 48, West Coast head of a cheese firm that-used to sponsor .Bing's radio show, said he walked up to young Crosby—|- and: — * 86* * “I told him who I was and want- ed to introduce my wife to him.| But all of a sudden we were on the floor wrestling. He ‘insulted my wife.’ Said 24-year-old ‘Gary: “still don’t know what happened. This fellow just came up to me and the first thing I know I'm wrestl- ing on the floor with him.” The match had been in progress less than a minute when bystand- ers — actor James Mason among Neither was hurt, but Geiger lost his tie. * * The husky Crosby boy shook! hands with his taller but more slender adversary before leavirig. The ‘cheese company and co- * with antique satin. wide panel. Best of all, they're fading! Waite's . es estes 2 WSS a SE Drip-dry . iron broadcloth curtains! kle to your home now! Prettily accent your kitchen or utility room with. these soft, luxurious; no- Permanent color. Choose white, white with red or beige with brown. 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I'm alive. * * * ; “The worse thing a woman can: sessions will begin at 7:30 tonight, iki a man’s personality.” To Give Up Hunting? OWOSSO (AP) — Victor |Moiles went pheasant hunting. His wife remained at home. | Moiles returned home empty- handed. His. wife had a pheasant. She said thé bird had flown into) itself. eal Using Nations :to Train Men U.S:, Britain Go After|| out of a couch and put on your|- ., clothes; you’ve got to shav e. “TV and frightened women can; “Small Asian Countries United States and Britain are urg- * * * Conference of Colombo Pian Na- tions swung into its second day. The Colombo Plan is an 18-na- tion organization designed to co- operate on economic development programs. out that a new era of loan re- sources will soon be realized. * * + This was one of the results. of decisions reached by directors of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund who met earlier this month in New Delhi. The di- rectors approved énlarging up to, 50 per cent the capital available) for development and stabilization} loans. ; In addition, the U.S, Export- fo Prepare ‘Technicians|f SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) — Thelf] tog standards in their coun- i USS, officials made this known|[ yitoday as the 10th ‘Consultative |} Official sources stressing the need for more technicians pointed). Import Bank has’ increased its capital ‘two: billion dojlars to a} total of seven billion as a result) cuss CD measures in case of an| the side of their house and killed | of congressional action last sum- mer. _ |to- Cologne can now ride over ‘the Rhine River‘on table cr coinage ethedr. ut ot Onsscserig 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842° Things in Sight” Friday Evenings “Better mr ane A VERY SMOOTH WHISKY, INDEED! ‘ ’ 1s at least 8 years old! 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So if that new car bug is bothering you, make YOU NEED MONTHLY PAYMENTS : 24MOS. 1@ MOS. 15 OS. 12 MOS, 500 23.00 30.00 35.00 44.00 1,000 46.00 60.00 71.00 87.50 , 1,200 55.00 72.00 85.00 105.00 1,500 69.00 90.00 106.00 131.00 1,800 + 82.00 107.00 127.00 157.00 2,000 92.00 119.00 142.00 175.00 insurance can 3 {3 he Fees SUV Pel thik odd il dtd crysta oatal Goa glassware with heavy bottoms, practicaily impossible ‘to accidentally tip over, : " Waite’s ... : Filth Floor IMPORTANT: Auto liability and property damage be included in your payments Ask about it! a STATE BANK _ Every depositor insured to $10,000 by _ Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation = 9 i Caoladee Ofices : f ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. ~ fe HAROLD A. FITZGERALD President and Publisher Editorial Page * ewer oF rae Owned and Published: Locally — ASSOCIATED PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958 ? comin Voters Must Decide on Constitution Michigan voters will be asked to decide at the Nov. 4 election whether or not to call a convention to revise or rewrite the state’s constitution. x * * Michigan has had three state con- stitutions: 1835, 1850 and 1908. The first was the shortest and most flex- ible. The present constitution, a much more detailed one, has been amended 63 times. If the vote in November is favorable, a special. constitutional convention of 102 delegates will be™ called to consider what can be done about this patch-work docu- ment: whether it should be furth- er revised or entirely rewritten. Whatever their recommendations, these must have final approval by =F gerated. Instruments showed that Roentgen doses would be encoun- tered exceeding the levels permit- ted for atomie workers but below some accidentally experienced without serious effects. Heavy radiation would have interposed a serious barrier to man’s flight into space. : x « * Scientists from other lands co- operated in the close watch of the rocket’s flight. Britain’s giant radio telescope at Jodrell Bank made no worthy contributions. ‘This inte’ indicates the importance of the te to the whole world. The success of Pioneer I also will do much to nullify Soviet propa- ganda. Ever since the Russians an- nounced their successful ICBM test in August, 1957, and launched their first Sputnik, the United States has ee ee ee ee his HE ‘Happy: Policemen ; Do Better Jobs’ .. i ‘Condoning Rowdies Bad for Teenagers’ been at a propaganda disadvantage. voters of the state before they could replace the present constitution. wk & * ee cane Gat ce aor badge. police and officers are their friends. x *« * : . After a year of limited achieve- . . pot camel taaaal ead Sh talk. olngre the oat cepa = ° S , * : ”_ . children are The work of such a convention, if ment and =n disappointments, Roar Ing Right Past the Stopped Bus The head of the department an eye on them and their parents. approved by the voters when com- We can take pride in the ramark- agreed to an investigation and 1 feel sorry for such children: : . able performance of the Pioneer. ° oe then insulted the man who did it. They're headed for jail, for sure. pleted, would have far reaching in- _ Th SS ARE David Lawrence Says: . They knew he was only 28 before Confidential fluence on the political and economic — thrilling forward stride merit the 1e060Umetmrmrttrt~Ctti‘itQSOSOS . \~ — renga Me ne alla nr ai ue of this state for many yea thanksand ie eonertuatons ot © Hopes Stirring in Republican Camp "Sr ime: Teachers Are Our Some of the topics which undoubtedly nll Aasonionna Y , man with 33 years experience Most Prized Asset’ would come in for prime considera- caine WASHINGTO a | _? — palais nea 7 eb eexetas Sees 1F : INGTON — Reports.that in the small towns and rural forcing them to give up the off- grea Pontiac can ul, Pontiac citizens. tion include: eachers most valu- 0 8 The Man About Town the Democratic Party leaders are areas and persuade large mum- shore islands. ’ er ui conte —_— 8 - predate ‘nr. gue ~via Should the office of governor beginning to revise downward their bers of the apathetic or indiffer- The whole issue is one that is bosses. They have a full time they ‘really could enjoy teaching be granted more power? Belated Returns previous estimates about a “‘land- ent voters to go to the polls to — beginning to be understood by keeping law and order and they your children if the children are How about reapportionment for slide” victory in offset the city votes of the Demo- = the American people. The off- can't do gg = ap clean = taught respect for teachers and the Legislature? ; . the ,coming con- cats, Republican chances will be shore islands are a symbol of °¥7 house. Let's all make up and schools. Should judges continue to be- poptinued woe nN ather tions are unwit, !mmeasurably improved in state- freedom. ere rene as./ este mat Guna kp reside, polos soo a napa elected, or should they be ap- TINgS onal News tingly a stimulus ar —— = erigrakete is retreating and ‘Partment pF peg Notes ee pointed? Married man: One who feels in 2 ~ Paneges oP ee tat a thw commgatgn uo surrendering. — People. -The writer request What about county home rule? his pockets when he sees a mail workers. that the Red Chinese have resumed The obvious purpose of the on- Members of Baha’i that his name be withheld if the Cities and villages already have it. Bex For until re- their shelling of the offshore again-off-again tactics of the Com- letter is not of a critical nature, g 5 Finally, revision of Michigan's cently the tend- islands. Those Democrats who have munists is to produce. if possible, Support UN Day byt _name and address. of the Y> revis ° : “You closed your 1958 big production i been advocating a species of sur. some embarrassment for wee wan eceompesy = complicated tax structure is an marathon too aes eg a . poate Seley renihen! are cnonenertng a senhower administration during _‘In anticipation of United Nations letters.) - absolute must, according to many Mrs. Eleanor McKennon cana)wed (0) Bey rote eee eee i joie prea taprige nme ce World Faith wan pollo wn © AD letters for Voice of the People cconomists: . of Waterford, who raised a cabbage that pou President er iat behind the President and those few accord with the assemblage work- the writer This “Information “will. be ese are only some of the major weighed 42 ds, yhi . Th try i inning to un- Democratic spokesmen who want ing for peace withheld upom request if the letter ts y ] weig pounds, from which she made | 5 ident Nixon started to do e country is beginning to Pe can aiiisaic Misaa of wai: Rape eS of s critical nature, Letters must issues which such a convention would face. Many others will appear if a convention is called. x .+—K§ * The Press is currently publishing a series of ten articles which discuss the proposal of a constitutional con- vention. They are written by Dr. ARTHUR W. Bromace, of the Univer- sity of Michigan, and are designed to help voters decide whether or not this is the proper time for a complete overhauling of Michigan’s Constitu- tion. 7 x *§ * Every voter, regardless of his pres- ent convictions, should read these articles. The issue deserves a careful and intelligent decision. Pioneer Rocket Flight Thrilling Achievement Soaring 79,000 miles into space, the greatest distance over the earth ever pierced by man, the Pioneer rocket’s remarkable performance has convinced Air Force officials that the moon can be reached before long. The rocket didn’t circle the earth or come close to it. Except for a slight error in trajectory and the lack of a little more thrust, it might have gone all the way. However, the Pioneer _ carried important recording. instru- ments and perhaps its most impor- tant accomplishment, apart from the fields of commuincation and weather reporting, was information on radia- tion. x *« * The data received indicates that the intensity of the radiation belt stretching thousands of miles above the earth, has been exag- THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by Tuz Powriac Press Company 48 W. Hupon St. Pontiee, Michigan Trade Mark Daily Except Sunday RUSSELL Basser, Executive Vice President and Advertising Director Joun A, Rite, Assistant Advertising Manager ~ 4 dowsen H. Prrecenate @, Eant, M. TReanwett, Vice President and Circulation Manager Business Manager i ® G Mansmare Jonpan, foun W. ji Local Advertising Secretary and Editor Manager Rost B. T Grosez C. lean, Managing Editor Clacs.fied Manager aT. Press ts entitied exclusively to the “an tn republiration of ei}. locaj news printed tn this newspaper as well as al) AP news dispatches The Powrise Pures te delivered by carrier for 40 cents rriér service is not available by mai) and, ynesee, Livingston, Macomb Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties it ts $12.00 a year; elsewhere in Michigan and all other places in e United States $20.00 a year. All maf) subscriptions payable tn advance. Entered as second class matter at Pontiac of ABC, Phone Pontiac 2-181. a week; ca in Oak! Ge Y a year’s supply of sauer kraut for a family of four. My North Branch scout sends word that at the county corn day at the . Simmons Brothers’ farm a- yield of 136 bushels of shelled corn per acre was reported. A tomato that weighed four pounds, grown by Mrs. Artemus Penrod of Auburn Heights, filled two quart cans when put up for winter. A eherry tree tn the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Mixter of Birmingham, is bearing ripened fruit for the second time this year. An apple of the Wolf River variety, from a tree of a ‘ James LaCoy of Sylvan Lake, weighs just under two pounds, and is “half as large as a bas- ketball.” And the family cat of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Valkner of Walled Lake, had a litter of eight kit- tens, seven of them males. In Pontiac today for two appearances is g Dr. George W. Crane whose daily column is my neighbor. He’s a good scout. Better meet him. In Dallas, Texas, for a few days are Mr. and Mrs. Walter K: Willman, where he is at the annual meeting of the International City Managers Assn. A connoisseur on apples, Mrs. Alvin Grinde of 1595 East Auburn Road, has discov- cred a MacIntosh variety that wins her heart. After reading the Press editorial Thurs- day on the slump in voter registration, * Mrs. Anna Kastner of Birmingham phones that it creates an apprehensive and dangerous situation, citing the truism that bad officials are elected by good citizens who don’t vote. A Pontiac area historical echo comes ffom the recent death of Mrs. Agnes Livernois at Ypsilanti atethe age of 102. One of our main highways was named for her late husband whom she married 85 years ago. accennmeanil ne ‘Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Honorah Bromlee of Auburn Heights; 90th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Porter _of Lapeer; golden wedding. Mrs. Andrew Klam of Columbiaville; 94th birthday. Mr. and Mrs, Roy Veness of Alfiont; golden wedding. Mr. and ‘Mrs. Hyman Winegarden of Flint, golden wedding. Mr, and Mrs. Ray Wiltse of Clifford; golden wedding. Les some campaigning, defeatism was really rampant among the Repub- licans. * * * What then has prompted. the Democratic leaders to grow a little less confident than they were a few weeks ago? One thing undoubtedly has been the healthy sentiment geperally about an upturn in busi- ness. Ecoriontic conditions are im- proving right along and business- men exude a feeling of confidence that, so far as recession is con- cerned, the worst is over and a boom is in sight already. * * * : Politically speaking, the Republi- cans have improved their chances of winning back many congres- sional seats they lost in 1956 by reason of the drop in farm income. Most of these districts are in the West. Incidentally, the Repub- lican congressmen in the agricul- tural areas who were defeated lost by narrow margins. It is conceiv- able that these seats will be re- gained by them. Where the Demo- crats had hoped to pick up seats in the Middle West and Far West, they may not make as many gains. This probably is the real reason for the revision of their estimates. As economic conditions im- prove, the city vote of the Repub- licans should also show less of a deviation from normal. This, to- gether with Republican strength in rural areas, should enhance the position of Republican candi- dates for} the Senate such states as New York Wis- consin. There are strenuous efforts being made by Republican organizations to win back disgruntled Republi- cans, and on the. success of this effort is dependent whether the Democrats are going to gain the seats they have for several months been looking forward to capturing. * * * The Democrats have the advan- tage of the big labor union organ+ izations on their side. The precinct workers of the labor groups are so numerous that no regular political party organization can match them. Their only handicap is that they are concentrated in the cities. kt ok oe It the Republicans work hard The Country Parson \\ “There’s nothing fike the sp scrubbed faces of youngsters in Sunday | School class to give a man faith in our future.” . many people, par- derstand how dangerous it would be to accept the advice of those Democrats who want America to betray the Nationalist Chinese by national nature kept out of the campaign. (Copyright, 1958) Dr. William Brady Says; . Iodin Ration, Riboflavin Help Many Stay Young A Michigan lady says she has been on iodin’ ration now for a year. It has been just what she needed. Site is. 42 buf feels as if she were 21 again. This, she adds, is just one of the many benefits. A suitable in- take of iodin, es- sential for every child, _ youth or adult, fas some such effect on ticularly people who live in the Great Lakes Ba- sin where the soil, : water and locally DR, BRADY “grown food is deficient in iodin. Remember, we are talking about nutrition, The daily ration of iodin 1 recommend is not medicine. If you are con- fused about it, send me a stamped, self-addressed envel- ope for the free pamphlet “The Fodin Ration.” It was not iodin but riboflavin (formerly called vitamin B-2 or vitamin G) to which a great nu- trition authority, McCallum, as- cribed preservation of the charac- teristics of youth. * * * The daily minimum requirement of riboflavin (the least that will prevent manifestations of nutri- tional deficiency) recommended by the Food and Nutrition Board of the National “Research Council, is 2 milligrams (about 1/30th of a grain). Four glasses (a quart) of milk would contain about 2 milli- grams. Milk is the best food source of riboflavin. FOOD SOURCES Other good food sources of ribo- flavin are cheese, eggs, plain wheat as it comes from the thresh- er, dried alfalfa, treens, liver, sardines, fish roe, broccoli, nuts. I am reminded of the lowa who told me that when weary he had himself a alfalfa tea and tly went prancing back to work} “Young In the-tree pamphlet Folks“and Old Folks” (for which 4 stamped, self-addressed en- velope) I recommend a daily sup- plement for the ordinary diet— it supplies endugh of the three vitamins and three minerals to make up for the deficiency of these essentials in the average dict. In the booklet Chronic Joint De- ficiency, which deals with rheurma- tiz, er, as .you poor misguided creatures call it, ‘‘arthritis,”’ (35c and stamped, self-addressed envelope), I recommend as a daily, year-rpund routine, what I a Pi have only just realized are more liberal allowances of the same three vitamins and three minerals. I can’t’ explain it. Maybe it's just the way the ball bounces. On the other hand maybe I’m in a rut. Anyway you're the doctor — you decide for yourself whether’ my teachings make sense or nonsense. * * * Signed letters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hy not dt stamped self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac : In these troubled times we hope _ Spiritual brotherhood, which unites nations and removes the cause of warfare and strife, may be achieved and continually practiced in the U.N. Yvonne Duffy THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Te an inheritance incorrupti- ble, and undefiled, and that fa1- eth not away, reserved in heaven | for you. — 1 Peter 1:4. * * * Heaven does not make holiness, but holiness makes heaven.—Phil- lips Brooks. the right to edit all Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Good -thoughts are. healthy for the mind . . . And for the body too ... . They guarantee good will to all .. . And happiness for you ... They are your messengers of hope ... And faith and courage strong . . . And each is like a song... are really good .. . Your thinking must be right .. . And so each day in every way ... You reach a greater height . . . Your friend- ships bloom and multiply . . . With Tove and sympathy . . . The bread you cast upon the waves... Drifts back across the sea... Good thoughts will hetp you over- ccme ... All evil. fear and strife . . To ever- lasting life. (Copyright, 1958) (Copyright 1958) Case Records of a Psychologist: ‘ Good Samaritan Attitude Pays Off -You’ve heard the poem about the house beside the road. Well, Hazel operates a cozy eating house beside Route 136 in Indiana and tries to be a motherly soul who be-friends many homesick truck drivers. and other lonely travelers. She employs the Good Samaritan technique, as do théusands of other kindly restaurant folks. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE Z - 350: Mrs. Hazel Small, aged 58, operates a neat little roadside restaurant on U. S. 136, just east of , Waynetown, Indi- ana. On our way to Indianapolis re- cently, Mrs. Crane and | stopped for a bite to eat. Mrs. Smal] is a motherly type who is a superb applied psychole- gist, plus a whiz of a cook, for we DR. CRANE . have sampled her food many times. ; “Dr. Crane, I try to create a homey atmosphere,” she began, “for I find that many truck drivers .get lonesome while on the road, “The other night; for example, I was sitting in this same booth where you and Mrs. Crane now are. : x *& * er on a stool when a large group arrived and needed his stool. “Since all the other booths were occupied, I asked the young truck driver if he wouldn’t like to join me at my booth while I had my cup of coffee, ‘He gladly accepted, and we talked for almost an hour. I told him about our town and the in- teresting people in it, while he soon informed me about his fam- ily. “As he left, he thanked me very “sincerely and added that he had been so homesick he felt he could hardly go on with his truck, for he was 1,000 miles from home and overwhelmed with loneliness. _ “But his talk with me had been a tonic to him so he felt as if he had had a visit with his moth- er. “Well, that compliment was good for my soul and I guess I helped lighten. his journey, too. * * * ° _ “In fact, I find that operating a roadside eating place gives me many chances to practice the Good Samaritan principle. . , GOOD SAMARITAN ."Five boys stopped here last week, One was about 21 but ‘the others were youngsters of 10 or 12. “They ordered milk and pie. But when they were ready to : pay their bill, | saw that they pooled all their money and had ‘nothing left, ; “When I asked them if they were still hungry, the youngest, boy nodded but said he didn’t have another cent. ~ a 2. ee “Well, I had just prepared sev- eral banana cream pies. But when nan _ I poured the filling into the first “A young man was at the count- pie, the crust crumbled, so it was bonus, They devoured it with shin- ing eyes. and thanked me. ‘ & @ * “AS they went out the door, the youngest boy called back: ‘I’lt nev- er forget this place.’” GOD IN RESTAURANTS —Most of us think of God as being_in_our churches, but you will find God in Mrs. Small’s res- taurant and in a lot of other eat- ing places, for kindness probably shows up as often along otrr high- Ways as in formal religious edi- - fices. Pve known Mrs, Small: for ten years, She is a kindly person HEAR DR. CRANE . TONIGHT Pontiac Central High School PERSONAL APPEARANCE Lecture and Question Program ’ ADMISSION FREE . i toeeimenmmamememmel with a plump, ddecaqeita figure ‘which accomplishes more than — not very attractive to place on . the counter. _ “On the spur of the moment, “T-decided 1d surprise these boys. I Weilt out into the kitchen and cut that fresh pie into five pieces, after Which } set a piece’ in front Of @ach one, “Then I told them it \was a” “tn care two ordinary people get done. She keeps her roadside restau- rant open on Sunday so she prob- ably gets to church rather seldom. © But she applies the Good Sa- maritan technique many times. If. Christ were walking along Route 136, I imagine He would enjoy sitting in her restatirant as much as in many churches. Always write to Dr, George W. 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Children with a supervised place bad PFO y e Medical research aimed at eliminating the many dreaded and erippling diseases like Cancer, Polio, Heart Disease, Epilepsy, Nephrosis, Cerebral Palsy, Multiple Sclerosis, Arthritis and Rheumatism are financed by United Fund dollars. ‘Pontiac Area United Fund Agencies Provide ... . wn Pentiac, the city with a nearel heed not let this forgotten younger generation. A WELL BALANCED COMMUNITY By --- Pressing the Fight Against Crippling Diseases Finding Happy Homes for Orphans Build ing Better: Citizens Through Youth Services Offering Family Counseling Services Making Life Pleasant for SeniorCitizens Working for Better Mental Health Giving Medical Assistance to Those in Need Planning for a Better Community Do You... CARE ENOUGH TO GIVE ENOUGH Cancer kills one man,- woman, or child every twe minutes in our nation. Fight this dreaded disease by pledging generously to the Pontiac Area United ‘Fund. The South Eastern Michigan Division of the American Cancer Society is included in our drive. child sy mboljize its, 1 Helping — mend their family or e ined thera working agencies of our r United Fund, 4 These boys are on their wa te becoming better Proreschtgs ro tomorrow through their par- ticipation in the Boy Scouts. ; ihe Sight for the sightless—and a mew lease on life is LsAiayen for the blind at Rochester's Leader Dogs for the Blind, ene of the 55 comnmrunit i | official crew mascot. 4 L 4 a ¢ & ( 2 (Next—What Abeut = Record?) | tater, still | inless. eT eer old girls have awful long arms.” to ms ty “1 think with luck she'll a be able to overeeme the handicap friendly, Tracy. She quickly became an un- « * * One night at dinner she gravely Y confided to staff Capt: Robert H. Bradsell: “are all captains. There's you, and y’ Johnny and three others.” “My five best friends Investigation disclosed Johnny ¥iand the other three “captains” ;\ were all bellboys, To Tracy there ) was no distinction, She still ranks ’ people by the way they smile S\rather than by the gold braid they | wear, From the first day she took to the children’s swimming pool like 7\a porpoise, and her nose sprouted -\a-new freckle an hour under_the 7 hot southern sun as she struggled * ‘valiantly to swim. She was absolutely heedless of ‘ithe danger of drowping, but the pool guard said: “The less afraid they are of the water, the quicker © they start swimming.”’ One afternoon she simply pushed ®| away from the pool wall and set) = «mit for the other. side, her small paws flailing the water like those of a skinned poodle. * | She made the other side and é ‘turned — a woman flushed with pith exultation of a major triumph _ — and immediately swam back. : © | She swallowed less than half the ‘/contents of the pool on the way. || Watching fromx. an upper deck, I) didn't know whether to laugh or lery, It was a landmark mement | for daddy-o, too. _iswimming race for beginners ahd won over a 10-year-old opponent. “That wasn’t. easy,” she said “Ten-year- Stamps on Sale Mark Period . Without Pope stamps marking the Vatican's pe- riod without a pope went on sale today. between the death of Pope Pius XII-and the flection of his.suecessor. They show the-crossed keys of St. Peter and the canopy of a cardinal’s throne. “Sede Vacante’’ and the year 1958 in Roman nu- merals. a yellow one worth 15 lire (2.5 cents),: a white one for 25 lire (4 cents) and a violet one for 60 lire 4-H Alumni in Oakland Asked to Aid Camp Fund | Pa Oakland County are being asked Roll Call’ now goitg on to help raise funds for Camp Kett, the new state 4H training center. The next day: she enteréd a, VATICAN CITY (AP) — New The stamps are issued a They carry the inscription, (Seat Vacant) kt we Three stamps have been issued: (10 cents). * Former 4-H club members living to participate in the 4-H “Alumni Chairmen for the county’s drive are Jim Reid, 5400 Cedar Island Rd., Milford, and “Mrs. Stuart Braid, 2331 Lake George Rd., Lake eee The campaign will run; _} St Parents ) i i i Eg fs fled their homes as a chaiamaanal __lary-measure. ——~— ¥ 2 * Dam. John Selleck, chief hydrog- "| rapher for “the IBWC said, “Things are a lot brighter now. then you, can ‘begin to see day- on the other end.” x * * uated at one time from lion dollars every year in the United States. It also takes about 500 lives. i t i blocked again. No flooding was re- However, the river continued its) slow fall at the upper end of this flooded section, just below Falcon When it starts to drop on one end ‘light and determine what to do! Towns on the Mexjcan side were hit hardest, with abdut 8,000 evac- Cmargo. Lightning destroys ahout 20 mil- worth of property| TOWSON, Md. (AP)—The fresh- i part of @ posture program at Tow- son Staté Teachers College — re- Dr, Hawkins i “the dan- ger of misunderstanding” the pro- gram, But he made clear that: The girls stand disrobed for only a moment. A female gym teacher takes and develops the photos. x * * 4 locked file to which no one has access except the teacher and the department, head, also a woman. It’s impossible for an observer ‘4to determine the identity of the subject from the silhouette. part, they can decide for them- selves whether to disrobe com- pletely. The teacher says only without garmefits can a true sil- houette be obtained. Dr, Hawkins said corrective ex- ercises are prescribed after the posture —— are studied. * * aah -beys. participate—tee? The staff isn’t large enough to handle them, said Dr. Hawkins. Developed prints: are kept in aj. “Although all girls ~ must take} ~~ $568 4/5 Q. Code #580 Transistor Price Dips in the United States. The average per ‘cent lower than in 1956. Dr. NEW YORK — More than 28,000,- 000 transistors were sold last year price was $2.40, which was 20 | NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO., NEW YORK. BLENDED WHISKEY. 86 PROOF. 65x GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS | November 15. cated to training youth lead-| ers, the $300,000 state training cen- ter will be located on a 140-acre tract owned by the 4-H Club Foun- dation of Michigan on Center Lake "lin Osceola County. ‘NOW! THE COMPACT 1959 RAMBLER’ IS SETTING NEW SALES RECORDS! Only Rambler Gives . ' The Best Of Both : L BIG CAR ROOM 2. SMALL CAR ECONOMY Yes—Rambler, the sales success of 1958, continues to reach new . popularity heights with its new- - 1959 models. For the recognized economy leader gives even more . mn miles per pallor in '59, thanks to ~ new advanced carburetion. Only Rambler. offers Personalized Comfort—luxury the costliest cars can’t match. Only Rambler has the compact size that makes it easiest of all American-built cars to handle, park and garage’ . . yet has full six-passenger room, See Rambler’s smart new - style and beauty . ... at your Rambler Dealer’s today! ioosr BIG BUY IN SMALL CARS «3; ; HERE BY POPULAR DEMAND! New 100 Inch Wheelbase RAMBLER AMERICAN People come’in differ- ent sizes. Mr. Smith is o six-footer, his wife is o _ petite five feet two. an ordinary cor World’s Personalized Comfort! . When Mrs. Smith drove . brought the front seat forward, Mr. Smith had no room for his legs. — Only Car With Then the Smiths discov- ered Rambler Personal- ized Comfort... sec- tional sofa front seats that glide backward... and y. | - . .. or forward. indi- $1835 a vidually ‘to allow just . . the right legroom for ra and front-seat “Low’et-first cost, lowest operating cost! cet : Suggested delivered price at factory, Kenosha, ing. federal taxes for 2-door Flash-0-Matic equipment extra. PONTIAC - Bill Spence Rambler. Sales °& Service, 211 So. Saginaw St. Rogers Sales & Service . 695 Auburn Ave. Wilson Auto Seles, Inc., 105 M-59. ay . HIGHLAND’ ~ ‘ * ROCHESTER , Korey Rambler, . #0 ain he ' be i UTICA Anderson Rambler, « 1554 Auburn Rd. 51 N. Broadw You don't. know whot travel comfort can mean ‘fil ’ you've experienced Rambler Personalized Comfort. lndividval sectional sofa front seats . . . adjustable headrests. . . Airliner Reclining Seats . . . Twin Travel’Beds. Drive the new '59 Rambler tnd see! See Your RAMBLER Dealer WALLED LAKE R & C Motor Sales, 8145 Commerce ne Rt. No. 5. Lye 2 | LAKE ORION Russ Johnson Motor Sales, ce ae Time for baby’s feeding with this miniature set. Bottles, soap, brush. Penney’s small scale models of ’58 cars. Friction motors in - Electric quiz games light up, flash _answers. Group of 12. - Afternoon Musicale to- day with violin, banjo, uke. Colorful plastic. Model with Play-Doh in 4 different colors. Leaves no stains. Church Offers Plan for Peace Christian Sect Urges Birth Control, Admission of Red China to U.N. ST. LOUIS (AP)—The Interna-| tional Convention of Christian Churches. acts teday on a fervent- ly stated plan for world peace. It excited more discussion than anything to come before the 8,500 ministers and laymen attending the six-day convention. The practicaP steps it suggests contemplate birth control educa- tion in overpopulated areas of the world and admission of Commu- nist China to the United Nations. * * * Both these ideas were attacked when the 13-page document was processed by the convention's Committee on Recommendations. This panel of 201 men and women elected by State conventions of Christian Churches, and by pro- vincial conventions jn Canada, re- sisted efforts to fone down the resolution, It was passed on to the convention's General Assem- bly as a statement of ’ position. Some sought to label it merely a document for study. x xk 6k “What is needed today,” it says “is the moral-and ethical leader- ship which should be coming from an informed Christian commun- ity.”’ The statement urges universal disarmament under a United Na- tions inspection system, It calls for a suspension of nuclear weap- ons tests. It urges limits..on_the|-——— production and storage of long-, range missiles, international con- trol of the production of nuclear materials and U.N. control of space exploration. = * * Several of its proposals are de- signed to strengthen the United Nations — ‘‘The world’s greatest political hope for peace.” To build the foundations of peace, the plan suggests: equality of opportunity for the races, free- dom of communications, free in- ternational trade, financial and technical help for have-not na- tions and independence for colo- nies and satellite.nations. Coins were used in China as AP Wirephote BRIGHT EYES — Her name is Lynette Hopkitls and she comes from an aboriginal family in the Warburton Ranges of inland Australia. But that’s about all that is known at Princess Margaret Hospital in Perth of the girl with the big, flower-adorned bandage and big, bright -eyes. Lynette is recovering after under- going surgery for removal of small tumor from her forehead. ./ Z . | premises to offer welcome relief. -day at 6 a.m. when he is expected “THE PONTIAC PRESS, Bob Considine Says:: : ‘\Nixon Mast Fi ‘NEW YORK — People . .’. places Vice President Nixon's campaign for the White House in 1960 ap- pears based on the following phi- losophy: Use Harry 8. Truman as a model of how NOT to.run for office but with one ex Harry did in '48. Nineteen sixty’s campsign ‘to political buffs who like a good ripsnorting fight. The years with Dwight David Eisenhower, who abhors politics and sincerely be- lieves it demeans a gentleman to- engage in same, have been a steady diet of pablum to those ception—win against overwhelming odds as old! ze | * TUESDAY, OCTOBER: 21, 1958 eae eme a ee osively are being “fellow pros who are pretty doggone able char- acter assassins themselves. If he tries to fight this one with kid gloves, in his role as the “new Nixon,” he’s going to get clobbered. Wonder how Mr. Dulles is going to say it to Chiang Kai-shek? What the necretary of state ail Senate Candidate Hart to Tour County Friday — United States Senate candidate Philip A. Hart has planned a dawn-| to-dusk campaign tour of Oakland County Friday. : Lt. Gov. Hart will kickoff a busy to meet factory workers at local plants with Fred V. Haggard, Oak- land County CIO Cetncil president. Later in the miorning Hart will move to tiac Central High where he l be asked questions by civics’ ‘toate A similar Ro- hestey” High School government 8 will question the Democratic cortaidate at 1 p.m. William K. Benson, Democratic candidate for county treasurer, will accomparty First Social Register TORONTO, Ont. {AP) — Some ‘people have taken an antisocial attitude toward Canada's first So- cial Register, its publisher reports. David B. Crombie said he had received some two dozen telephone calls accusing him of ‘‘trying to foment a class war in Canada” by listing 40,000 elite in his Blue Book, published last Friday, - Crombie said the callers ex- pressed ‘‘a lot of hostility’and they said nasty things I wouldn't care 'to repeat.’ He conférred with a Irks Many Canadians: > private detective agency about possible protection byt did not complain: to police. _ Taking a stoic stance, Crombie tommented: “It’is the same in any case of “trying to pioneer something néw in a country.” Calls on Doctors Noted ‘NEW YORK — Persons living on farms see their doctors about 3.6 times a year compared with 5.1 times a year for city residents, according to a study by the Na- tional Health Survey. For the rural nonfarm population the rate of doctor visoits per persons per year was found to be 4.5. Hart-te-the. Rochester. scheol.- Hart will take part in, the dedica- tion ceremonies of the’ new Com- munity Hospital near Romeo from 2:30 tod p.m. ~- Pontiac precinct delegates will hold a dinner at the Roosevelt Ho- tel in the evening, from which the candidate will move over to Madi- son Junior High for a Pontiac Junior Chamber of Corimerce can- didates rally, ‘ Held for Counterfeiting TORONTO, Ont. (AP) — Sage searched a house and garage in suburban Weston Monday and found 309 bogus American $20 bills. Donald Lloyd,- 35, was ar- rested and charged with pos- early as 1091 B.C. sessing counterfeit money. ’ ~ Barefoot Origi DeLiso Debs - oe Fortunet -- “Made .to Sell for $24.95 Jolene Joy Many Other Famous Brand sqe to Logro ers ce! = Sandlers 47 N..SAGINAW FE 2-8406 “THE HOUSE OF VALUES” = t ket for similar borrowings. ; night} | State Office Building Plan: Remains Alive LANSING # — Attempts to start construction ofa 10-million-dollar state office building in Lansing got another lease on life from the State Administrative Board yesterday. * ** * The all-Democratic board’ offered run State Office Building Commit- thorize construction of the 14-story building. The ad board renewed an offer to finance the project from the state employes retirement fund at a 3.95 per cent interest rate— the going rate on’ the bond mar- It also, agreed ‘to accept the legis- lative committee’s 3.08 per cent! offer on the loan provided the legis- lature will appropriate funds- which tirement fund “actuarily sound.” The ad board eartier rejected the lower offer, saying that as trustees of the fund ‘they were responsibje for obtaining the highest interest rate possible. two alternatives-te the Republican-* baat, might be needed to’ keep the re-| well (the’secretary will say) that'll be different. He probably won't in. (Shot. They've probably all since been + eee The finest restraint of the New York race has been '|demonstrated by Republican candi-|- date Nelson Rockefeller. When he expresses his appreci- ation fof some favor given, or vote offered, he grins like a Scliegtbey and says, “Thanks a numbskull had only one 1 oe oe Fellow named Field Marshal Mont. lleft to his own. have ‘ended the war’ in the ‘first youd Ke : spell out_just how it will be differ- ent,. just what we would be pre- pared to do, how far we'd go to-} ward the ultimate. war: ——— The story: of the crush of that of a trip Bill Hearst, Frank. Con- niff and I took on orie like it~ if not the sameone—a year ago. It’s a good airplane, the TU104, it as his standard carrier. ° Aeroflot, the Soviet airline ‘system, is under no compulsion to make money jin order to stay in business. Its jet operation is for prestige primarily. What BOAC -and Pan American graceful, comfortable, though ; it probably would financially break f t j tee, the group empowered to au- adh ree enterprise operator who have done over the past couple of | ---weeks-was inaugurated -by the Ris: sians, in effect, in September of| 1956. The TU104 we rode from) Prague to Moscow in stopped there | just long epough to gas up and | then flew on to Omsk, Irkutsk: and | Peiping. Routine. : We were three Americans among! 70. Communist leaders and dele-| gates from a dozen lands. There _iwere cheers at lunchtime when a down across Outer Mongolia to|_ 1 LEAVES You - BREATHLESS! $0 & 100 Proof. Distilled from grain. Ste. Pierre Smirnelt Fis. (Biv. of Heublein), Hertford, Cons. ~_— 3 ty, , \/ CREDIT = GAS RANGE Special REGULAR LIST NOW as: ‘Chrome-Jet Master” oven, give you years of while the special 43 INSTALLED FREE One of the most amazing offers ever made on a modern Gas range! It has loads of quality features such free cooking service. PRICE $16495 ONLY 95 WITH TRADE | Model 132€72 “ gutomatic light- ing top burners, giant 25-in. “Bake “Jet Speed” auto- matic oven and broiler lighting, “Silent-Roll!’ smokeless broiler, easy to clean construction. Built to. dependable, care- Hurry now offer is good! . e ag TRADE-IN YOUR OLD | STOVE TODAY WHILE IT STILL HAS REAL re "EASY VALUE... HURRY, TH THIS OFFER Is LIMITED! | | + ae PONTIAC. PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER He 1958 in 80 Musical Ways: Se ies ciletnen Mentity " pli ie & Marios tip arcend the world — in 80 ways though ~- not days — for the public attending the fifth annual. Hi Fever Follies... ‘The production, sponsored by. the Women's Auxiliéry to Pon- tiac General Hospital, will’ be ‘presented Nov. 5 ‘and 6 in Central High School auditorium for the’ benefit of Pontiac Gen- eral —— —— * * This year’ $ = production “Around “tha World in . 80 Ways,” is the story of two , Mabel ta see the celebrated fi1m, “Around the World in 80. Days,”’ and discover, too late, — that the tickets they purchase from a sidewalk barker dre not for a. film, but for a world” FLOAT. AWAY quartette boasts of what it can do with “A Little Bit of —-The two teachers and the audience — will see highland flings in Scotland and the lush plete without a look at Paris —and Mabel and Gertrude stay on the beaten track to hear a glamorous chanteuse and watch a lively can-can dance. Bride-to-Be Announces Attendants Joan Wyzgoski was honored t a personal shower Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. dames Bendig of Clarkston. Miss Wyzgoski announced -her attendants. They will be her sister, Mrs. George Sulli- van, matron of honor; and bridesmaids Mrs. Bendig, Mrs. Lorin Goodwin and Frances Kline, sister of the bridegroom. Pamela Stockman, the bride's niece, will be flower girl. * * * Guests were’ Mrs. Joseph Bildstein, Mrs. John De- schaine, Mrs. John Annis, Mrs. David Kline, Mrs. Ray- mond Valentine, Mrs. Frank Spadafore, Mrs. Richard Cour- teau, Mrs. Frances Guellec, Mrs. Francis O'Connor, Mrs. Jerry Mancuso, Mrs. Theodore Gross, Mrs. Robert Phillips Jr., Mrs. Thomas Rehwoldt, Lorene Rossman and Margaret Graham. ; * * * Miss Wyzgoski will become the bride of James P. Kline Dec. 27 at St. Vincent de Paul - Church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. John Wyz- goski of Middlebelt road and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kline of Dearborn. Four local students are among 172 -members of the famed University of : Michigan Marching Band. above, they are (left to right) John Howell of Judson street, William Scribner of Augusta street, Harold Jones of Thorpe street, James Shaw of school and. Gértrude, who. are on their way - historical A huge Venetian carnival brings the first act to a bright ending with the ‘Italian Street Song.’" . SEE JUNGLE CHINA In act two, the teachers stop off in the jungle, land of gyp- sies, China, the South Seas, and Hawaii, where they see an exhibition of hula dancing by earnest male members of the company rigged out in - wigs and grass skirts. _~ . * ~ * ‘* A critical glance is given all those South American dances -, which have invaded the home- over’the past decade or ‘0 and the-wild West is also a -brought to life on the- stage. A stop in Chicago is hilar- jously punctuated by. an added (and hysterical) note: ‘the’ time is - 1925, the settiig is a speakeasy, hide- put of Chicago’s most notorious gangsters. A gu m-chewing Charleston is one of the high ‘points of the scene. * * * The world tour ends in a New York night club where Gertrude and Mabel hear the blues sung and watch some ro jazz and jitterbug danc- Style Show Set by Figure Club — Fashion Your Figure Club will hold a style show Nov. 6 at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building, < Models will be Mrs. Ray- . mond Gartley, Dorthea Camp- bell, Mrs, Harry Wallace, Mrs. Gerald Ellis, Mrs. John Lutz- kiw, Mrs. Wallace Rauch, Mrs. Joseph McLeod, Mrs. Thomas Johnson, Mary McAboy, Mrs. Clarence Mahaffey and Mrs. Edward Flood. Tickets may be purchased from club members. ~ & eo ‘d MR. and 1 MRS. LEE M. HATHAWAY Hathaway-Barber Vows | Spoken in Church Rite . White chrysanthemums and white gladioli banked the altar of First Congregational Church for the Saturday evening wed- ding of Gail Mary Barber and Lee Milton Hathaway. The Rev. Malcolm Burton and the Rev. Karl Ostberg officiated at the ceremony before 250 guests. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Wilson.H. Barber of Cherokee road and Dr. and Mrs. F. Milton Hathaway of East Iroquois road. IN SILK AND LACE The bride wore a floor-length ; of silk bombazine and tilly lace. Sequins and seed pearls accented the scal- loped lace portrait neckline, and a lace Juliet cap trimmed with seed pearis secured her veil of illusion. The full skirt of her gown featured a panel of lace that formed a full chapel train. She carried a bou- quet of white roses, feathered carnations and ivy. Mrs. Kurt E. Bemman Jr. Personal News of Interest Marion Emery of Dixie high- way is spending a week visiting college friends in Bridgefield, Pa. * * * House guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. Douglas Jilbert of Judson street is Mrs. John Keys of Londonderry, Ireland. She was here for the wed- ding of her son, William J., to Rosemary Ann Jilbert. * * * Spending several weeks in New York City is Harry Bree- den of Barrington road. He left Sunday, * * * William J. Freegard of North Saginaw street has been award- ed a graduate assistantship in education by Marquette Uni- versity, Milwaukee, Wis., the 1958-59 academic year. He will assist the Education De- partment in research. * * * Pat Dunaway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dunaway, of Beechrgont avenue, was se- lected as Homecoming Queen . at Eastern Michigan College. Pictured for . Miss Dunaway is a sophomore enrolled in the junior-senior curriculum. A Birmingham girl, Andrea Tibble, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Tibble, was a mem- ber of ber court for the home- coming events held Nov. 18. Miss Tibble is-a sophomore ma- joring in physical education. * * * Elected vice president of the _ Second class at Culver Military Academy, Culver, Ind., is Mi- chaet James Handren, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Handren of Birmingham. « ** * Allen Lee Hackney of East Rutgers avenue is attending In- diana State Teachers College. He is a sophomore. * * * Announcing the birth of a son, Robert Alan, born Oct. 15 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bell (nee Joan Frederiksen) of Monrovia street. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Frederiksen of Bald- win avenue and the G. E. Bells of Flushing. () Auburn avenue, with George R. Cav- ender, assistant } conductor of bands. _ Men from 26 states are represented in the precision marching band, which has“ earned a reputation of being one of the finest in the nation. — : a was her sister’s matron of . honor, and Sue Ann Hathaway, the bridegroom's sister, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids ‘ were Beth Tenny, Patricia Campbell of Onaway and Mary Orr of Detroit. All wore blue lace and chif- fon dresses and carried cas- cade bouquets of white and blue carnations. .__ * * * Best man was Richard,Hath- away, the bridegroom's broth- er. Ushers were Kurt Bemman, - Julian Baker, Arnold Simson, and Wayne Pyke. MICHIGAN HONEYMOON When the couple left for a honeymoon to northern Michi- gan following a reception held in the church parlors, the bride . 4 was wearing a navy blue wool . jersey dress with matching: -° accessories and the rose cor- sage from her bridal bouquet. The couple will live on Dwight — - avenue. The bride is a graduate of Grace Hospital School of Nurs- ing and her husband is attend- ing Wayne State University. * * * Mrs. Barber wore a_ tur- quoise Chantilly lace dress with pink accessories and a pink orchid corsage for her daugh- tér’s wedding. Mrs. Hathaway wore a topaz beige lace dress accented with satin and match- ing accessories. Her corsage was of bronze orchids. Frederika Arrives Today NEW YORK (UPI)—Greece's vivacious Queen Frederika ar- rives today with two of her children for a 40-day coast-to- coast private tour that will in- clude lunching with President Eisenhower and launching the world’s largest cargo vessel. It is the Queen’s second visit to the United States and her children’s first. The 41-year-old Frederika was accompanied by 18-year- eld Crown Prince Constantine, a lieutenant in the Greek Army, and her elder daughter, Princess Sophie, who will cele- brate her 20th birthday in Salt Lake City, Nov. 2. The prin- cess is a carbon copy of her curly-haired mother. ON SEPARATE TOUR Constantine, who bears the ‘classic title of Duke of Sparta, has been invited to tour im- portant U.S. continental de- fense installations by Secretary of Defense Neil H. McElroy, and will travel separately from his mother and sister. The royal ladies will visit 13 cities, visiting friends, in- specting social service institu- tions, sightseeing and taking part in a few social functions. * * * Details of the Queen’s visit have been kept very hush-hush due to her desire for privacy. The Queen felt that the glitter and formafity of her state visit with her husband, King Paul I, in 1953, kept her from really getting acquainted with Ameri- ca. She will tcavel very simply, accompanied by only one lady- {n-waiting. TO LUNCH WITH IKE The royal party will goThurs- day to Washington. President _ and Mrs. Eisenhower will en- tertain them at lunch and the Queen will play lunch hostess to Secretary of State and Mrs. John Foster Dulles at the Greek embassy, where she will stay. She will visit the Ameri- can Red Cross headquarters, the Atomic Energy Commis- sion, and attend a press Tee tion in her honor.’ ~*~ &* & Mayor and Mrs. Robert F. Wagner of New York will fete the Queen at & reception for : 2,500 business and social lead- ers and U.N. diplomats at the Waldort-Astria: gran d ball- room Oct. 29.. * “never got an Dear Abby... i* By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: There are two fellows I am in love with. They both play football for the reemenedge rq One plays the rea athar plays right tackle. I wrote. to them, but answer from -” either one of them, I tried to. call them on the phone, but couldn't get them. , ABBY — daa! cow it they are ote Sa Please tell me-how I cah meet them?” “FOR THE EAGLES ‘DEAR FOR: ‘You may pe “for the Eagles,’ but your be- havior is for the birds. If you -want td store, you will have _to let the fellows make the - "passes... f a “DEAR ABBY: I am a 15- ° year-old girl and my problem _is I want my own bedroom. "| am expected to shart a bed- - | reom with my brother. who is 12. It isn’t ‘because we don’t have a-big house, either, be- eause we have. My mother has .. two extra bedrooms. One ‘is tull of old furniture and piled to the ceiling with empty boxes . and junk but she is too lazy “to clean it out. The other one « see uses, for a sewihg room but .she never sews. Can you tell me. if I-am wrong in com- ‘plaining?™ FIFTEEN ote xe DEAR FIFTEEN: -You are definitely NOT wrong. You a bedroom with your 12-year- old brother. Offer to help your © mother clean out the room full of junk (and I'll bet your broth- er would help, too} and enlist the support of your father on the project. SS a se “DEAR ABBY: I am one.of. those foolish ‘women you read about” who, let a man waste eight years of her life before she found out that he was mar- ried. I have no intention of get- ting roped in on a deal like that again, but here is my problem. I have been going with this man for six months and he “swears up and down that he is divorced. J. want to make ab- solutely sure before I spend any more time on him, How . can I go. about it without in- * sulting the man?” MAKING SURE DEAR MAKING: Ask to see his divorce papers. If he has them he will not be insulted. If he hasn’t—he deserves to be, “DEAR ABBY: A while back you printed a letter from a lady who had trouble with her bhus- band who was a photography © bug. It was my story to a T except we don’t have any cats. (My husband’ thought I. put that in to throw him off.) My husband always develops his prints in my bathtub and uses my hair dryer to dry his nega- * tivés. My problem is how to- turn HIS dark reom back into MY. kitchen again. - “He keeps developing trays . on the washing machine ‘and timing lights are attached to - the dish cabinet. One of these ' days someone will fracture his skull getting up from the table too quickly, Is there any help for us photography widows?” VOICE OF EXPERIENCE DEAR VOICE: Every hub- by should Have a hobby, but it - shouldn't take over the whole house. Be positive about his . negatives and see what devel- Ops, ” ‘should not be expected to share — Only Brides’ Pictures to Be Printed in Press Once again The Pontiac Press Women's department is reminding brides of our new policy regarding wedding pictures. After Oct. 31 we will be unable to use pictures with beth bride and bridegroom. We will accept only ‘portraits of the bride. The Press can not. publish every. picture submitted, but will attempt to use as many as space allows. Remember, we can not assume responsibility for loss or damage to photographs, and only those which have names and addresses printed ‘clearly on the back will be returned. Judith M. Hurley and _ Kenneth L. ' Carlson were married Friday evening at First Presbyterian Church. Parents of the couple, - are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn H. Hurley and Mr. and Mrs. Lester K. Carlson. MR. and MRS. KENNEPH CARLSON Judith Hurley Becomes - Bride of Kenneth Carlson White chrysanthemums and white snapdragons banked the altar of First Presbyterian Church for the Friday evening wedding of Judith M. Hurley and Kenneth L. Carlson. The Rev. William H. Marbach offi- ciated at the ceremony before 125 guests. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn H.-Hurley of Forest avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Lester K. Carlson of Grayton street. : The bride wore a satin ‘faf- feta gown with chapel length train and a lace bodice. Her fingertip veil 6f nylon tulle was held by a jeweled tiara. On a Bible, she carried: & cascade ‘bouquet of ivy centered Ie white orchid = “ ATTEND BRIDE Mrs. Nancy Wern was ma- tron of horior.-Her dress was © of pink lace.-Bridesmaids were _ Lois Carlson and Carol Mc- - no idea it Was so expensive, . Cullough. Their dresses were deep pink ‘with velveteen bod- ices, Sabrina necklines and . chiffon skirts. All wore-crowns . of velveteen flowers. i. The matron of honor carried a cagcinde. bouquet of crimson carnations” arid ‘the bridesmaids bouquets were * pink carnations. *. * * Best man was Walter Stone- house with ushers Glenn H. Hurley and, Roger Moore. The bride changed to a pink sweater dress when the couple left for a honeymoon to Macki- naw following a reception: in the. church parlors. Mrs. Hurley wore a royal ble sheath. dress and an or- chid corsage for her daughter's wedding. Mrs. Carlson wore a “deep blue’ crepe sheath with, matching hat and an orchid corsage. All the. rage with ‘the ‘choo! set this year are these. suede “oxfords with ribbed: foam- -rubber soles. They come in beige, black, red, gray and white buck and match up perfectly with. ever popular. ribbed. -wool knee. socks and plaid skirts. \ * = » * 7 You May Get Her Substitute . By EMILY POST ’ “Dear Mrs. Post: I asked a relative who is soon to be mar- ried what she would like for a wedding. present. She men- tioned a particular article and I said that J] would get it for her. I had no idea this item was so expensive until I shopped around for it and it is really much more than I can afford to spend. “Having mentioned that I would get it for her, am I obliged to do so, or may I quite properly send her some- thing else? I would appreciate your help in this matter.” Answer: You can certainly tell her that when you said you would give her what she said she would like you had and that you are sorry but you will have to give her some- thing more within your means. “Dear Mrs. Post: I was in- ~ vited to a wedding anniversary reception last week. Affer all the guests were received, the wife opened the presents and . .° announced the name of each _giver. Several of the guests brought money instead of pre- sents and. when she opened these envelopes” she announced the namie of the giver and also the amount each gave. I thought this was in very bad taste. Will you please give me your opinion?” :: Answer: I agree with you. ° ‘ She should have said, generous sum of money (or .. “A very check) from Uncle John.” “Dear Mrs. Post: My fa- thur’s sudden death canceled my European trip. I had been - given quite a number of going- still . away presents which I have. Should turned?”’ these be re- Answer: cumstances you would keep them in the hope of going oft the journey in.the not-too-dis- tant future. On the other hand, if the plants of your ever going © are very slim, you retiirn any- thing ‘ of intrinsic value. Under ordinary cir- “DEAR ABBY: I am four- teen years old and am in high school. I like a boy but h DEAR. LIKING: You don’t have to quit LIKING him—just quit letting other people (and him), know about it. x. * &* CONFIDENTIAL TO : You are absolutely fire you, he would respect you as a-man who knows-he has a drinking problem and is sin- cere in his- determination, to : lick it. Good luck! x &© & “DEAR ABBY: I am 13, al- most 14, My best girl friend has the most wonderful broth- er, He' is 16 and goes to the same high school We some- times walk together, the three of us, I know he likes me but he is -too brotherly. I -don’t want this. brothers, I would give anything if he liked me like T like him. How can I get him as a ped friend?’ SINCERELY, ‘ DEAR ANN: Be cvauanue but” not aggressive . . be sweet, but not sugary. Let him ‘know that you like him— but don’t let him know how. much. Good luck! x «* apes DIANE: You are wasting your time. Your boy friend has Anns in his plans! Changing H eel Height Brings Foot Comfort If you wear high heels all day long, switch to perfectly flat slippers when you reach home at night. This gives your leg muscles a chance to stretch and adjust. But it does something else. It helps to strengthen weak arches and thus may be of aid in eliminating those un- pleasant cramps in ‘the feet that many women have at night when they're trying to sleep. Changing heel heights often is a good idea, anyway. If you wear high heels one day, try to wear a medium or low heel th next. PEO Group Tours County Youth Home - -AW Chapter of PEO visited the Oakland County Youth ~ Home Monday, Following the tour, the group returned to the Motorway drive road home of Mrs. C. W. Oliver for a meet- ing. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs, Norman Allen of Newberry street. ELOISE. M. LARSON Mr. and Mrs. Alester. Larson of Rochester announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Eloise ‘Marie, to Marvin Hen- nin, son of Mr. and. Mrs. Wil- lard Hennin of Midvale street. ' No wedding date has been set. Fete Williams Here Oct. 29 Governor’ S Luncheon Set Gov. G. Mennen W iIName will be guest of honor at a buffet luncheon, to be sponsored by the Oakland County Federation ~ of Democratic Women at 2 p.m. Oct. 29 in -the Pontiac | Federal] Savings and. “Lean Building 2 ~~ : fe) & Res Everyone, including children, is invited. For jnformation- re- garding tickets call Mrs, Rob- >." ert P. Scott or Mrs. Morris: ‘Armowitz. s ¢ Chairmen on committees are - “ ote Fred Feichelte and Mrs. . Jerry Sickles, hostess;. Mrs. Ralph Dalton and Mrs. Zig- mund; Niparko, decorations; Mrs, Peter Slabinski and Mrs. Stanley Jaruzel,, arrangements; | Mrs. Isabelle Selden and Mrs. Conrad - Beaubien, Frank. Stephenson and Mrs. Raygrrond Alt, telephone; -and- ~ Mrs, Walter Klerkx-and Mrs. . Janes Clarkson, new membet- ship, . 2 89 t* 4 Z ae ' I have my own . receiving; — ‘Mrs. Jack Moskowitz and Mrs. Joseph McCall; publicity; Mrs. Juliet Scores Zero ce sehetlSy ‘ Fs _TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER, 2. Ce Se Ea ae ~ “na Helima Society held Friday at Hotel Dinner Meeting Held/ma Sec! by Teachers’ Socie Mrs. Clarence Hall, second vice y ty president of Alpha Iota state was Mary Dixon, president of Alpha ispecial guest. Iota State was guest speaker at In Vienna’ It’s Done’ See a Let’s Bring Back Patient in Hospital Mrs, Charlés A, Hubbard of Syl- van Shores is a patient at Pontiac General Hospital. an? . : va oy . ee : ; = “ Ses, More Walking’ Add flavor to swordfish or A well-sudsed -brush is the a tees s ; ma chapter of Delta Kappa Gam- the dinner meeting of Alpha Gam- other broiled fish steaks with a sprinkling of chili powder. best grooming aid for neglect- ed hands and nails. 7 By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN . Today I want to relate more of my- observations while visiting in Vienna recently, One thing of interest is the way they can eat! [I simply do not know why the Viennese are not all Perhaps the ict silhouette here is slightly plumper than ours| 4nd but I am not sure, I think one rea- son that their weight does not seem: val to keep up with their eating is because of their habit. of walking. equipped to walk comfortably -\think what a shame it is that this wonderful most discarded in countries where When I think of the walking hab-| its of the Viennese, it makes me exercise has been al- ae et tomobiles, Even teenagers may) - feel imposed upon if they have to walk 10 blocks, Yet every physician will tell you that this is one of the finest of all exercises, that it builds health and good looks, and that it is one ex- ercise which can be indulged in at any age unless there is some spe-|. cial condition, and even then a certain amount is sometimes pre- scribed. With wonderful fall weather upon | us let us leave our cars at home and indulge in some self propul- sion. Walking does not cost any money or require any special |’ equipment except a good pair of walking shoes. Once you form the habit you will enjoy it, and you certainly will profit by it. There are as many or more _* « * motorcycles than there are cars. | Tomorrow; “Many Mental| They zoom past you with a ter- |Breakdowns Might Have Been Pre-| rific noise, vented.”’ huge because they eat all day long. @@% They have breakfast and luncheon and a late dinner. In between these they usually have two leisurely breaks for coffee, almost always with pastry and often with whipped cream on it. to physical activity. Then, too, there are so many: with miles of walking bqrdered by marvelous trees, NO RIGHTS The pedestrians have absolutely no rights, No car slows up for you, Jay walking in New York City is child’s play compared to crossing a street in Vienna, The curving narrow streets and many courts and plaza$ add much to the beauty and picturesque quality -of this city, but not to the safety of the man or woman on foot! There are some places in the center of Vienna where cars and, bicycles and motorcycles come at you from four or five angles. Roger a Gershwin. on KAPP "STEREO _ records Your BReversible Skirt f?» _ Leads a double life. One side predominant- ly light colors, the other side dark. Made of washable lorette. a i Michigan's largest selection of . * stereophonic records 27 S. Saginaw St. Dacron and Pima BLOUSES *4.95 fa Baby Doll or Roll-up sleeves. SS White or colors. Alvi HURON at TELEGRAPH tbe = This girl let the bus pass her by and walked to an appointment. She knows she will profit by form- ing the walking habit. You will, too. Vea EME Zeca 10% Discount if : OFFICE EQUIPMENT C co. This Month 123 North Saginaw St “plot FEZAS3) Brides, Take ‘Stock’, - 7 Plan Good Future By RUTH MILLETT ;ward. Such steadying, constructive Memo to last summer's brides: /f0als as a home of your own, a Now that the honeymoon is be-/Plan for your husband's career, a * “thind you and a lifetime of mar- ‘place in your community. | riage ahead, here is an important) And as a housewife your most point for you to consider. important job will be to make Having each other isn't enough; whatever place you are living to 5 to make a happy and lasting mar-| in, however temporary it may riage. So before any of the ro-| seem at the moment, into a real we mantic glow begins to fade, you) |should begin to build toward the; | proud to share with your friends, | future. | In that future friends will be | a place that expresses the per- 10-9 Mon., Thurs. and Fri. Tues., Wed. and Sat. 10-6 © Sunday 2 eager to return to, that you are important—friends you both en- | joy. Start making them right | | away, for good friends are sure | to enrich your life together. sonalities of its master and mis- tregs. © e | home. One that your husband is | | | And since, ;you two have brought two fam- by your marriage,/ | lilies together, jt is important that} | you both do all in your power to! lof fun and anticipation for tomor-) ake the oe ties cal and hap- | ‘row. Whether or not a married PY Ones. euyeet t manage couple shares many interests de-| tote ee ca — the other's ‘pends more on the wife than on “@™»Y 4S his 0 \the husband. In most marriages’ x ke ishareq interests means that the! Marriage never stands still. Nor) lwife shares her husband's, rather Should you want or expect it to. | than the other way around. | If you realize from the start, | You'll need__goals to work to-| that marriage is ever-changing, | DR | PERIES | jthen you will be ready to see} =—jthat the changes are ones of jgrowth and development, instead | You’ve never seen their | equal — they wash and | |. | | You'll néed common interests: 'too, to keep your life together: ful AT ‘Sy VISION ‘Contact Tenses iof trusting to luck that your mar- oe iriage will be a happy and lasting hang dry in minutes as beautiful as ever without * at your one. even a touch of an iron. | Gail Arthurs Honor Guest They never shrink, never WN Sagingw at Shower stretch, and . absolutely will not fade. What is | A miscellaneous shower was held | Saturday at the Dover road home| more, they NEVER SUN- | of Mrs. Douglas Arthurs for Gail ROT, NEVER MILDEW. Try them in your most Arthurs who will become the bride of Robert L. Pearce Oct. 25. difficult windows, you'll just love them. oR. B. R. BERMAN Optometrist FE 4.7071 MARY KING SALON No sooner said than done --PY TELEPHONE Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs, Everett B. Arthurs of Glendale avenue, Mrs. Iva Pearce | of Vinewood avenue and Howard} Pearce of Parkhurst street. Guests were Mrs. Everett Ar | 1 Width |_1', Width _|__2 Widths | 3 Widths. |. 2) | haa = Bex phe oie ae ve . " a - | ; j : : ; Se ve a == a | : ~ OBRECHT see Malls, Me MIS ton Suddenly your TV set goes on the blink. Not exactly a crisis, Isc SCL la IZINg Mrs. James Holtom, Susan Wood- —_ gr 8.50) 14.50 19.50 ah | in rin, Mrs! Lefnal tielton) and Kay but ae seen don’t want to miss their favorite programs 72”, | «8.00. 13.50) «18.50 29.00 | cet Siting, Christopherson Mee. Donald James neither do you. 63”) «8.00 13.00 | «NO0 | «8.00 | and rermanents of Flint, Mrs. Robert Blanchard r phone and call 4” | 7.50) «212.00 17.00 T= 26.50 | Complete: Bema. Service of Rayal Oak, ‘and Mrs. Cecil Ar Soni ficial base ‘dear i wer oe : ON rg ee | ie FY ‘jof Roya , an rs. Cecil Ar- ° 47 | 6.50 | «2.00 =| ~=«s16.00 | «25.00 | 152 N. Perry FE 2-3053 thurs, Mrs, Robert Debusk and | 36”) 6.00- |) 10.50 ~«*215.00 | 24.00 | SEIN NOI) Sa eT tines Sot Trento It’s good to know, isn’t it, that any one—or anything— ; a . you want is just a telephone call away. GORGEOUS PRINTS—6 Different Patterns in Several Colors Dr Stanley W Black Use’ sour islephonaitto Vontvoue ay tony cerraia , | SOLID EOLORS—Glowing New Decorator Shades from . . / % ae . Sy yn eo OPTOMETRIST— plan good times, keep you ih touch with acta Cn and friends. ~. | _ Prices Vary Slightly According to Pattern Now Located at There’s just no end'to its usefulness. Z Delivery in 10 Days on Any Size, a and Pattern 35 (3 ELIZABETH ' AKE RD. 1 Block West of M-59 | ‘MICHIGAN : BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY oo. P. rk Righ - M W/E Draperies al OVER MAC’S DRUG STORE sony of the human cence 7 t o igre at O Ss Floor Coverings Formerly of Rochester i ° " anne! 4 1) Fron Door ering . the t Doo Bedspreads | EVENINGS BY .APPOINTMENT Gateways (1 the Mind vanueant 1666 South Telegraph FE 4-0516 | Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wednesday Cn ee ce . A t , - _ fo | | * . i f oat 4 a c : i Group, ‘ots beled tan, totale 2 Seetere Hog,” bd omni: Ma toleten ted Hemtnalalaabends Stirdy at Owen Sa was Fred Sharron. "Kho Foote Wed Pre-School to Meet To ight — |: te * ‘Old-Timers’ ae in Double-Ring COLERIGIY) er seoes marie Sans Lepper omer «Sigs te eine wee Me be ee i da ninkion "es of you! aaa Dressed in a -white slipper satin ea wl be gust eer at thew ea gustan and answer ween «Pate aE gown with 9 chap tenis, Gucvad mosting of Wover Proithed Dance Club Callers for the were |t “| ad (Higgh) OR SF | ge Tous lesiog ee ite ot Moty' period. Hooters. Syeare evening = ian EVERY til 9-SATU po ST ARTS TOMORROW! The kind of sale you'd expect af Y scutes ae -at-Bloomfield Fashion Shop ae 162 5. Talegephina Po —— BIG! EXCITING! THRILLING! x *® * zu ee oo Seno S| m- | Wertz. of Auburn Heights. ‘The bridal gown featured a nylon yoke and lace-trimmed | Bertha collar. The long sleeves came to points at the wrist and were edged with matching lace. A duliet cap held the bride’s “ fingertip illusion veil, and she carried a semi-cascade bouquet of . phaclaneopsis, orchids and ae ia : ! stephanotis. f < | ==) ANNIVERSARY SALE MRS. WILLIAM H. WERTZ ald Strozeski, and ushers were Gerald Crossman, and Wayne Connon. Areme Unit of OES Has * * * Following a reception held at. Elks temple, the bride changed to a tweed suit with red accessories Installation —szttte cress trom ber briaa M L t Ol couple will live on Baldwin ave-| rs. ester es nue. - | Mrs. Foote wore a dress of blue Ta kes Heise as lace over taffeta with white acces- sories for her daughter's wedding, | Worthy atron ‘and Mrs. Mahaffy was. dressed in’ Mrs. Lester Oles was installed'a pink satin gown with brown ac- as worthy matron when Areme'cessories. Both wore gardenia Chapter No. 503, OFS, held its in-| corsages. stallation of officers Monday eve-' | ning at Roosevelt Temple. we Installed ag worthy patron was} Eugene Perkins. Others taking the oath included Mrs. Victor Bodamer, associate) matron; Harry Eaton, associate patron; Mrs. Royal Clark, sec- retary; Mrs. Robert Davis, treas-| ‘ urer; Mrs. Robert Scharf, conduct- ress; Mrs. Harry Lunsford, asso- ciate conductress: Mrs. Lyle Ven- ner, chaplain: Mrs. Wilford Rob- inson, marshal: and Mrs Claude | Kimler, organist. Star points installed were Mrs. rt Edward, Mary Trask, | Mrs. Byron Rogers, Mrs. James Rienert and Mrs. Clarence Craw: | ley. Mrs, Allan Hersee was in- | _ stalled as warden and Mrs. J. B. | Wilder as sentinel. Officers exemplifying the color | degree were Mrs. William Cox, Mrs. Eugene Elmer, Mrs. Melvin’ Patterson, Mrs. Plezzy Newing-| ham, Norma Kirchmeyer_ and Mrs. | Danial Peterson. Flag bearers in-| stalled were Clarence Rush, Melvin} Patterson and Mr. Newingham. : * * * Past matrons of the chapter con- ducted the installation, with Mrs. Sidney Fellows as mistress of cer- emonies; Mrs. Grover Remley, in- stalling officer; Mrs. Theron Tay- lor, chaplain; and Mrs. Eugene Perkio, marshal. Past matrons and past pétrons presented Mrs. William C. Pfahl- Robert Longe, Promenaders ‘Dance Held nce Held =| FALL DRESSES held its second dance of the sea-| sor’ Saturday evening at Hawthorn School auditorium. Callers were Albert Aderholdt, Warren Allen and Robert Cram. New members are Mr. and Mrs. Glen Crimshaw. Guests of the evening were Mr. and Mrs. Everett Parker, Mr. and ‘Mrs. Warmer Wasmuth, Mr. and |Mrs. Merle Malone, Mr. and Mrs. |Robert Newill, Mr. and Mrs. Bert) Jackson and Mrs. Stuart Totty. | coordinates. Our Own 17-Jewel Waterproof. Watches $22.50 FE 2-5812 (] N. Ne FREE LIMITED TIME ONLY! ert and Norton R. Graham with “DAUGHTER-SIZE” 22%, Values to 59.95 Values to 89. 95 Values to 39.95 Smart wools, jerseys, tweeds. piece Merino Knits. Flannel, mohairs, silk and orlon. Two and three piece Sizes 8 to 18. 1 and 2 14 BETTER DRESSES 33 °48 DESIGNER hina *58 | to 28 Fines Bard! 74 | BARDLEY Suits - Coats inimitable Bardley manner. styles and colors. Famous Make 69.95 Values 59.95 Values “40 t tweeds and flannels tailored in the Bardley fit and Wonderful selection of Sizes 8 to 18. » ey fabrics. their jewels. | Included are our famous label dresses by David 89.95 Designer Suits \ rree in One-Wipe Participating in the musical por-| 7 tion of the program were Marilyn, — \MOTHER- DAUGHTER” Vernon, Gwen Vernon and Ralph Bergman. | . Officers of the International Or-. ee der of Job’s Daughters honored Mrs, Oles. Members of the De-- 7% Molay honored Mr. Perkio. * * * On Nov. 3,.a schoo] of instruction’ will be held at Roosevelt Temple, with the meeting ‘to be held at 4:30 p.m. and a cooperative dinner ' Finest -woolen fabrics, elegantly Crystal, Arkin, A. Schrader, Carlye, Lanz, Mr. Mort, | styled in browns and blacks. Sizes $7 8 Clare McCardell, Harmay. Beautiful wool costumes 12 to 18, brief sizes, too. jacket dresses. Silks, print wools, imports, daytime dresses and for after five. Misses’ 10 to 20. Junior 7 to 15 — Briefs. For. Your CHRISTMAS KNITTING | Serbin Cotton Dresses Close-out of all dark cottons, shirtwaist styles: were 13.95, now 9 planned for 6 p.m. MOHAIR YARN 1 Plenty of size 8 and 10 and others to size 16. ‘ TOP KNOT HAT KITS Signs of Age (for cheerleaders) “ Show Quickly KNITTING BASKETS Camelhair Boy Coats were 39.95, now $ . O H a SEWING BASKETS 25% camelhair and 75% wool. All In ur manas The Knitting Needle | milium lined, pearl buttons. Junior sizes 7 to 13. i Because your hands are lit- 452 W. Huron FE 5-1330 i] | erally thin-skinned and eee | they are so much expo to | . . soap, water and elements they jy B | Finest tailored Flannel Blazers were 16.95, now $ are quick to show age. The agic eauty | - Crest pocket and gold penton best way to keep them young | «ny-pPace.” No discomfort! Face | . on fine flannel in navy, red, grey, white. looking is to cream them faith- |] i¢ting and 1 Cosmetic and | “ fully each night, wear rubber i] beauty adviser to Hollywood | as | on gloves for dishes and house- jf Stars for 40 years. work and regulate the temper- Stockholm Grad. Specialist : : — ature of the water into which Cc AROLYN NILSON == See yoo. thrust ‘them. Salon 772 E. Maple, B’ham 1 : Remember that dishwater MI 6-7373. Mail Orders. need not be nearly boiling to a | do an efficient job. Have it | a SKI RTS a) comfortably warm, Use plenty An Invitation famous make | of wep ans _fimme ithe fishes t 79.95 Coe | with “boiling hot water. They gleam and your hands won't he the a 69 95 Coats 16 95 Values $ start looking dried out. ovember q When veins stand out on the it’ For the Pre-School Miss t , it’s usu- : : } Ale Sdn ini Hold in rod uel ory benno f wane $ Imported tweeds, plains and domestic wools } them straight up in the air and € year old children. in beautifully designed styles. | d shake them exibly as : ‘ se | Sante. The veins will vanish Miss Dolores Ruhl i] | | in seconds and your hands will on the premises | : : ok both smoother and young” | Viti ace NURSERY SCHOOL | : iy) Ten op OI on | Imported tweeds, black wetseals, looped i . £4hi § Use old nylon’hose for stor- | fabrics, Warren of Staffords, with new ‘ ail’ _. ing flower bulbs such as glad- —, : i} eeeael “oli:-Just place them in the | collars, new back detail. The most sig- 4) ees! | Reet ore Bang Geta? gomne- Plant Now | nificant. fashion coats. In misses sizes ia - aD ; a | TULIP BULBS | and briefs included. , i Were 10.95 Were 14.95 Were 17.95 : Hi GETTING MARRIED? || °. one ~ | 33 1 O nd | 2 HG Ill) xen soestettate tm Formas Won: 39 Varieties | , a . HY a ain, rou are 4 ° i , : r f t the G and his men will f $ : ~ S ‘ : Se corvettty Grosse sae = k S d 99.95 to 119 Designer Coats _ Slip-on styles and cardigans in fine wool ~ ae the finest @ Tas er s ee $ | Finest Stroock and $3 8 ity “Yermeend wool with mohair in fall colors. * . - a HARWOOD CUSTOM | 63 W. Huron St. | Panamora Tweeds : TAILORS | FE 5-6261 if | 008 W. HURON AT TELEGRAPB is % _Army general court-martial board FOURTEEN ae ih i i ee & é ‘ * * Defense Opens in Army Trial Ft. Jackson Sergeant Accused of Mistreating | 20 Recruits FT. JACKSON, S.C. (AP)—Did M. Sgt. George Sovie abuse his power in punishing recruits — or were his disciplinary measures simply the justified efforts of a battle-hardened veteran trying to toughen trainees for combat? That question may go before an today after the defense offers its testimony. ° > | x * * { The prosecution finished _ its; presentation of witnesses Monday. A string of some 2 recruits testi- fied to manhandling and unusual punishment meted out by Sovie} for violations of orders The 30-year-old Ogdensburg, N.Y., sergeant is charged with assault and battery and with mal- treatment of recruits subject to his orders in Company B, 4th Bat- talion, 1st Training Regiment at this Army infantry training post. One trainee told of being dunked! head first into the scum of a mess' hall grease trap. Several told of being forced to wade waist-deep| in the slimy mixture. Two recruits| said they were made to “tear up| and eat’ dollar bills. * * * | Others testified they were, cuffed, slapped or kicked by So-| vie. The prosecution sought to show that Sovie forced trainees to § NEW YORK (AP) — Policeman James McDermott was barred for obnoxious behavior. six months _|ago from the restaurant on Broad- way where he shot four mien to death. His murderous outburst. oc- curred on his first visit to the Pic-a-Rib Restaurant. since then, owner Lou-Qlman told police. Nel o& ~& & Detectives in search of clues to a motive for- the killings early Sunday also learned that McDer- mott had been seen drinking in at least three bar® before going ber- serk and that he knew three of his -vietims—one a convicted loan shark and two othérs with. minor police records. But detectives insisted they still lacked enough evidence to pin- point a reasen for McDermott's action. * * * McDermott, 34, remained in critical condition, unable to speak, in Roosevelt Hospital. He was re- ported improving slightly from gunshot wounds suffered as he dueled with pursuing policemen on ° |his flight from the restaurant. McDermott, described by shocked neighbors Sunday as having given up drink five years ‘ago, had been ordered out of the Pic-a-Rib after he made himself obnoxious with loud, boisterous | behavior, |Frederick Lussen. * x -* Detectives who tried to retrace McDermott’s steps from the time he left his home ‘to the time he _THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21.1958 “Berserk Policeman Had Been Barred ’|glary charge and Davion had been Oiman told Inspector 4 Cronin, 60, Jersey City, N.J., was described as just a “jolly fellow” who stopped in the restaurant bar and offered to buy drinks forthe other three. . , x ok * : Leahy recently. completed a prison sentence for. usury, O'Hare had once been acquitted of a bur- convicted of bookmaking. - ... =. INC. f 370 S. SAGINAW ST. FE 5-6136 \ - ) ’ pat | | | i | | BLENDED WHISKEY + 90 PROOF + 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS |five games. ‘mar four, Arizona State of Fiagstaff is rated third, Willamette, Ore., ‘fourth and Central Michigan fifth. ‘The Flagstaff and Michigan teams have won. six. games. without a loss and Willamette is undefeated in ST. LOUIS“ — The St. Louis, Hawks of the National Basketball Assn. have leased a 23-passenger| DC-3 airplane and will use it “for| at least 73 per cent of our road) games,” owner Ben Kerner an-| nounced today. os In Fine Whiskey... _ FLEISCHMANN’S is the BIG buy! 90 PROOF is why? g wo Ee i x 5 g “Most Modern” in the Business! — KLEEN-AIR ~ FURNACE CLEANERS 7 _GAS-OIL-COAL BOILERS & COMMERCIAL * Work Guaranteed Trained Men Call OR 3-0100 JIM LONIE: 1702 Alma St. , STRIKES AND SPARES By Joe Wilman I've discussed two ways to roll a hook, using nothing but finger lift. Below are two additional meth- ods: L p beck: with rere it fhe bow! er turns his wrist from right to left just as he delivers the ball. This similar right-to-left spinning mo- | tion to the ball, which will cause it |to break to the left when it nears ‘the pins: We depict this wrist.turn jin today’s drawing. The spinning ‘motion won't take effect until the ball is further down the alley. | Then, the spinning - action over- ‘comes the ball’s momentum and causes the ball to hook. Be sure you turn only the wrist — not the whole arm or shoulder. 2. The fourth way to roll a hook | ball is through a combination fin- iger-lift and wrist-turn. The thumb | is in the 12 o'clock position, and the fingers are at 6 o'clock. The palm lis directly behind the ball. Just |as the ball passes the left foot in idelivery, the fingers apply lift, ithen the wrist turns from right to left. Because this combination lift and turn requires a delicate touch, I don't recommend it for any ex- cept the advanced bowler, or the ‘Tl bowler who does a lot of practicing. (Copyright 1958, John F. Dille Co. djleast penalized in the National | turning of the wrist will give a o- ; i . by a clipping om. seems rae se = Kuharich’s fo Aoidess ied Np iog aly game one. : on dr seasons 1 to play, . yo _ = z La ig nest won-lost record in his time here was 84 in 1955. Two pro coaches, Sid Gillman of the Los Angeles Rams and Frankie Albert of the San Francisco ers, * Officiating also has caused 4 small tempest in college football's Big. Ten. Coach Woody Hayes of Ohio State stomped ‘out on the field last Saturday to protest a decision. Earlier he had charged officials were allowing the defense to get away with dirty football but punishing the offense. Big Ten Commissioner Kenneth L, “Tug” Wilson retortea that Hayes was.doing college foot- ball a fisservice, Kuharich skirted both controver- sies, ‘but said the caliber of officiat- ing is sometimes crucial to winning| g or losing. * * x. Pro teams are so evenly bal- anced, he said, that “the three) most important factors in deter- mining the outcome of a game ‘are fumbles, interceptions and of- fictals’ decisions.’ For example: *. ® * . “Say a back gets away for 30 or 40 yards and the play is nullified Success Attends icaaiat Onenion By. H GUY MOATS réws in the Pontiac area yesterday, limit bags were reported. * x Conditions afield were fine. entry in the 1958 “pheasant derby” still held up today as the leader. However, among the many en- tries for the longest bird, the lead changed so swiftly that a 36-inch bird was left far in the ruck. Leader, as of this morning, was the 3-pound, 33-inch beautifully colored rooster taken by Ray- mond McCoy, 1006 Owona, Royal Oak, yesterday, while hunting at Peck, entrants: Heaviest bird so far, 3-pounds, -|12-ounces. Longest bird, 38 inches (tip of beak to tip of tail) longést. record in pro margin for a total of 265 points. Fewer hunters than were e¢x- pected took to the fields and fence- but the hunting was excellent, and more than the usual number of Monday marked the opening of the general Michigan pheasant and ‘Ismieall game season. First report of success to reach The Pontiac Press, and the first were one and the same. Eugene Cox, 15, 2360 Joy road, on his first pheasant hunt bagged a three and three-qyarter pound rooster, which For the benefit of prospective Rewards for final winners: a $50 U.S. Bond for heaviest bird, $25 for New York and St. Louis set a scoring basketball when St. Louis won by a 137-128 | Dueck and goose hunters .also were doing all right in the area, conservation.men report. Latest was a big Canada taken in the sanctuary area north of Holly. Several queries have been made to this observer regarding hunting on state-owned lands in townships where hunting is banned, such as Waterford. An answer to the ques- tion was provided by Michigan Conservation officer Harold Stoll, at Fenton, Stoll explained: “As far as 1 know, there is no bar Bill Bull's 763 © Paces Calbi Five to 3266 Series It's getting so the sky's the limit) for bowlers competing weekly in the Huron Classic. The latest meeting produced an all-time high series of 3266 by the Calbi Music team, a 299 game for Ron Rothbarth and a 763 series by Bill Bull among many highlights. Bull hit 379-215-269 to pace Calbi followed b¥ Joe Foster’s 671. Bull had the first nine strikes: in ~his first game, and the first eight in the final, Paul Karas fired a 752 series as West Side totaled 3259. A balky eight pin on the last ball | prevented Rothbarth from rolling the first area 300 of the season. jerry Jordan, 145, Chicago, a anes Jackson, 145, eee ee Boom Lester, 16.| I Md 182, New York, jbagged a 37-inch 3-pounder. -tsentences from the officials. Still_he insists: , i nee Se Beye ‘lly one other club drew. heayier “With a ieee of penalties, fone West ° * Auto Sue ‘Man PLYMOUTH - DODGE CHRYSLER DEALER mA 6-it Maple Walled, Lake = # ae 3 ef Hunler Find Plenty Birds i in Area to hunters taking game on state lands, whether or not located in otherwise barred areas, unless the }- state specifically bars such hunt- ing. There is some state land in Waterford, and I presume that would come under this provision. ‘However, hunters should be cer- tain of their rights to hunt on such lands and should check with town- ship officials first.’* Yesterday merning, north bound roads in this area were carrying heavy concentrations of ebviously—hunting bound motor- ists, the majority of whom were headed for the Thumb area. Some of the successful. pheasant hunters yesterday were: Gary Cotter of Howell, who * * * Dorsey Chambers of 205- East ‘HUNTERS INSURANCE. Accident © Policy Covers You Only as Long as You. Need It! For Small or Large Game EXAMPLE: For two weeks hunting insurance protection with $5,000 Accident Death and’$5,000 Medical Blanket Policy costs you as little as $3.85. See us for your need of hunters’ insurance. BUD NICHOLIE INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE Phone FEderal 2-2326 49 Mount Glemens - Pontiac, Mich. i. Shadbolt, Lake Orion, who took his limit, along with his partner, Jim Raab of Orion, shooting in the | Orion area. Ore of Chambers’ birds, was 34 inches long. The pair, hunt- ing with a dog, saw “‘lots of birds,” mostly young roosters, splendidly | colored.” Chuck Portell, 317 Third street, Rochester, hunting alone on Silver Bell road, downed a 36-incher, on| opening —— SANDERS] FOR RENT | TRAVIS , HARDWARE 453 .Orebard Lake Ave. FE 6-812 BONDED BRAKES @ LABOR and MATERIAL e RE-PACK FRONT. WHEELS 5 1 ? 39 e RE-ADJUST BRAKES Boe _ @ INSPECT WHEEL CYLINDERS CHEVROLET - PLYMOUTH MARKET TIRE Co. 77 W. Huron St. FE 8-0424 & 2m ate et. " ALL RISKS INSURANCE 1 on Your . GU NS. "and Other Sports Equipment eh * 102 £. Huron I Covers.theft, fire, accidental damages, and most, other hunting hazards. 85c per $100 for one 4} year; minimum premium $4.25. Kenneth G. HEMPST INSURANCE Ph. FE 4-8284 ACCIDENT INSURANCE - is new available | EAD then In home after home there's a new electric water heater. ae i atg) ee " let W Only electric water heaters give you all these important advantages! And the families in these homes enjoy all the hot water they want. per month. You can be confident that an electric water heater, plus Edison’s new Super Supply Plan, will provide round-the- clock hot water for all your family’s needs, too. Then you “can plan your day more efficiently—do the laundry, wash dishes, schedule showers when you want to. Here's the most convenient, modern way to GET IT HOT . +. GET A LOT for an operating cost as low as $3.88 See your plumber or appliance dele i XK nearac XK Efficient— the water Install anywhere—need not be K Automatic—all the time Lorig life—meet Edison's rigid standards X DETROIT EDISON SERVES SOUTHEASTERN MICHIGAN Teo ale the heat goes into Xd v= himney Fast—new, more efficient heat- ing units putel shell—cool to the touch all over & Safe—clean—quiet—modern Edison maintains electrical parts without charge in home afer home aftr home... ler Way 4,- pom, aes i , = (a “ * S° 3 eee or FS SS M % EY Wy pe eee ee 3 Be ee bees ° “s re fe ae er TWENTY | (_ THE-PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958 | _ = : ‘Physician Heads Private School Setup i Eyatn nave |Hollywood.Headlines © ae | ea 3 Engineers Test otecentieecinee a coca | -~" JGary Cooper Mounts Up BAC POPULAR DEMAND Now! Thru Thurs. The Town- The People- Everyone's Talking About! COLOR by OF LUXE CinemaScoPE |Believes He's Qualified - ‘By PHIL NEWMAN United Press International a physician most of his life, but he comes from a family of edu- cators.. That plus the fact he believes strongly .in states’ rights, racial segregation and “getting our chil- dren back in school,” are, he be- lieves, qualifications enough for his new job. * oe * ° The riew job is president of the Little Rock, Ark., private school corporation, which is trying to provide a-segregated education out of. reach of the U.S. Supreme Court's integration order for more ithan 3,000 Little Rock high schoo] students. Raney is not exactly a stranger to the teaching business. He has a brother on the board of Hen- | drix College at Conway, Ark., and another who serves on the board of trustees of the Univer- sity of Arkansas. Still another relative is the Parkin, Ark., superintendent of schools. Buf it’s not primarily a love for the field of education that prompted the soft-spoken, slightly balding doctor to head the private-schools- on-private-property effort. STATES’ RIGHTS BELIEVER “I am, above all, interested in school,” he saide “You can say that’s why I'm doing what I’m doing.” is Does he believe in state's rights? “Of course I do,” Raney said. “Doesn't everyone in the South? | Let me correct that. I meant | don’t most people in the country | favor states’ rights?’’ As for segregation, ‘““We've been ithrough all that before,’’ he says, FAMILY NIGHT “WEDNESDAY” dh Per Person ALL YOU CAN EAT 5:30 to 9:30 MANNY’S Huron at Elizabeth Lake Rd. looking down at one of the light- ‘colored neckties he habitually |wears. “You know I am for it. It’s ithe only way educatien can be ihandled here.” * x Raney, who looks older than his '45 years, has two sons in public | Schools here. They are Jeff—‘‘his real name is T. J. Raney ITI"— who is 14, and Glenn, 10. Glenn is in grade school and | Jeff is in junior high. Jeff will go to Hall High School next year, Dr. T. J. Raney may have been} getting all these children back inj Faubus to keep them from being integrated. Raney, a native of the northern} Arkansas hill country town /of Newark, shares a medical clini¢e with Dr. B. T. Kolb. They have a suite of offices not far from the Arkansas state capitol, in a resi- dential district. The two doctors rent the upper floor of their build- ing to two other physicians. ALREADY TOO SMALL “We turned our apothecary room into headquarters for the private school corporation,’" Raney said. “But it's already too small and we will just have to find bigger quarters.””— Four secretaries work full time in the oe office, which opens into Raney’s medical office. “‘We don’t have to hire a soul,” Raney explained. “We get mere offers- from folks who want te do secretarial work than we can use. People want to help this thing to work.” Raney tries to forget the turmoil connected with the integration battle by going out to his showy, saddle horse breeding farm near Little Rock. He enters stock in horse shows throughout the country. tk * * Does Raney think the private school plan will succeed? “I'm convinced it will,” he says resolutely, .“‘because the people are behind it.”’ ; Park Dedicates Bench | to Bernard M. Baruch NEW YORK (AP)—It’s official now. The bench in Central Park long used by Bernard M. Baruch as his informal headquarters has ‘been formally dedicated to the 88- lyear-old adviser to presidents. | The Park Department placed a plaque beneath the bench. It reads “Elder Statesman’s Bench — Re- served for Bernard M, Baruch.” Baruch said he will welcome others to his private bench. 'German President Gives | British Cathedral Funds LONDON (AP) — Visiting Pre- | if it-is open. It is one of four high schools closed by Gov. Orval ident Theodor Heuss-of West Ger- Mow} AAS “A MAN CALLED PETER” SHOWN AT 8:45 ONLY entry 5,000 pounds ($14,000) to help rebuild their cathedral, de- stroyed during World War II. Heuss also laid a wreath on the tomb of the British Unknown Sol- dier during the first day of his four-day visit. He arrived Monday as the first German head of state Chemical Fuel - chemical substitute for motor fuel which could double the power out- put of automobiles and aircraft engines being investigated here. mean engines that would be less present engines but have as much est S, Starkman, who heads the|try like this.” One thing he i ject. learned: ‘never.trust a horse. Newcomers might find profit in testing — . . a . y : : at might ae Cooper's amazing three decades many has given the people of Cov-| 3 Again to ‘Make Western: | Mixture May. Replace cure May Keplace| = ___ By BOB THOMAS “largely ¢ Gasoline, Double Power] AP Motion Picture Writer.....jof Cooper and five: others across the Mexican Output of Motors ST. GEORGE, Utah (AP)—“The horse is a highly overrated ani- mal. They're’ dumb. as hell, and you can't trust them one_bit.”’ Heresy, you say? Perhaps, but). our @uthority is none other than Gary Cooper, one of the few stars}, with an ‘authenti¢ Western back- ground, By RENNIE TAYLOR Associated Press Science Writer BERKELEY, -Calif.. (AP) A * * * “The rangy Montanan gazed upjand J never had a scratch. ‘ at the red bluffs of this southern) «py: 4 did a lot of skiing after} Utah wilderness and reflected: t's what banged “When I was 14 or 15, I used tole qu’ and Ghats, See Tide alone for days through coun- Development of a successful fuel from these compounds could than half the size and weight of power as present ones, said Ert- * eo Starkman is an associate’ pro-] Contrarily, he has learned atlas a‘ star: “J always made it al} fessor of aeronautical engineering|other axiom in more than 30 yeafs|point to do at least one Western at the University of California. He 'of loping through’ the movie scene: |eyery two years. In years when I announced results of initial tests|always trust a horse opera. did four pictures, usually one of showing the energy output of the) yup ole Coop is. back in the|them would be a Western.” compounds compared with CON-|caddie again after ventures into ventional gasolines. sports cars and limousines. After The compounds are known in/two middling films, “Love in the chemistry as nitro-paraffins. They|Afternoon” and ‘1§ North Fred-) are made “by mixing * methane, |erick,”’ he has done three horse-|f propane, butane and other petro-|back pictures in. a row. leim products with nitric acid. xk *- * These compounds are relatively; His latest, “They Came to Cor-| expensfve, Starkman said, but if/dura,” is being filmed here. It’s) produced in quantity the fuel/technically not a Western, but could be made economically. there are plenty of horses. Pro- x * * ducer William Goetz assembled i i 300 horses. and riders to re-create isin we cele @ Gee ithe last U. S. cavalry change dur opinion among authorities, Prof.|imé Gen. Pershing’s invasion of Starkman said he did not consider |Mexico in 1916. The rest of the) them any more dangerous than gasoline. Hot-rodders sometimes mix them with gasoline to. in- crease the power output of their engines. ° One of the problems, the engi- neer. said, is preignition—when an re ov: ue own JOHN HUSTON CSrencSecce 2:0 - 6:15 - 90 —=—= 2nd FEATURE overheated engine causes prema- ture explosion of the compressed fuel and air mixture. Starkman said, however, that present en- gine¢ probably could be modified to use the compounds without pre- ‘ignition trouble. : a“ *% * The nitroparaffins might be es- pecially useful in diesel engines, Starkman said, because preigni- tion there is an advantage. They also could help to reduce diesel} ‘smoke, he added. | é Atom Tests Set Today ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. (AP) |< If weather permits, three dtomic/$ devices suspended from balloons will be detonated today over the desert. ito visit Britain since Before World War I, = Oklahoma has 27 Indian reser- vations. . MARKET SHINNER’S 2 N. Saginaw St. 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 OPEN 6:30 P.M. SHINNER’S q q 4 q 4 4 4 . 4 , L. 3[ TONIGHT ” WE HAVE THE Miracle Mile THURSDAY In-Car-Heaters We will live Free! Live Hereford Steer Nothing to buy, just come in and register, either at Miracle Mile or the Downtown Tue Steer can be seen at Miracle Mile store Winner will have choice of Steer Register Early at Both Stores 3 store 1 Gallon Carton MILK CA TO 9: Oct. 21st to Oct: 29. Drawing be held. or processed. TASTY SLAB BACON 39: Freel On the Wouse—a cold glass of milk and a generous slice of birthday cake. ALSO FREE BALLOONS FOR THE KIDDIES! KE ‘n’ MILK EVERY SHOPPER H 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 q 4 tL q 4 4 O88 ct "Street of Sinners” a STARTING TOMORROW | DOES THIS BEAUTIFUL FRENCH GIRL WANT HER BABY BORN THIS ADDED FEATURE. KEITH LARSEN, JIM DAVIS “APACHE WARRIOR” At 12:25-3:15-6:05-8:55 eer - Shown at 11 - 1:45 - 4:35 ~ 7:25 - 10:15 — } » Served While. «You Shop! 4 4 4 q 4 = MICHIGAN MILK FED VEAL SALE VEAL LEG AND SHOULDER CHOPS ROAST 39. C $10,000,000 GOLD HAUL FRESH, MEATY aM FRESH DRESSED NTEWING CHICKENS aveladitare, ‘ele ae “PLUNDER ROAD : lb. 2 N. SAGINAW SHINNER’S MARKET ST. and OPEN DAILY 9 to DOWNTOWN PONTIAC t 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ms } MIRACLE MILE 6-FRIDAY’9 to 9 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 r 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 q q 4 4 4 L 4 q 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 r 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Wayne Morris Gene Raymond @ Jeanne Cooper © ee wrrrerereeerereeeerr eee eee ‘ewer. . ——ADDED—— BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER Opdyke Rd FE 4.46)! EXCLUSIVE! “SAMOA” . ge. IN , TECHNICOLOR® /ON EXTENDED PLAYING TIME! OAKLAND " ‘NOW! ‘COUNTY PARISIENNE” Shows-at “hes & 7:00 -- 9:30 OWNS! | BUT! IF. YOU: NEED ONE We Have the Very | LATEST and FINEST. ~ “wwererwrrerererrrveeerrrrereerrrrerrerrrrrrrrrrrrerre ee a @ Ree M a : ay Be Sey G * ‘ vie * ie THE PONTIAC. PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958 __ TWENTY-ONR,_ - By . re M ti Pmke } ATE ed “BUDDIES “ey ) |} | BAST,ORZ BUDD, bY L Bang — )_ BOORS AND HER 2S * rs : cee = x ae ~ fox i 2 ies My FS f ‘ ee eae eee ae - ‘i 4 eee cus Curiosi y, Hustle Airlines Banking on U. 5 Mee t g & A A RE RR a a mean ia, aE (Second of two ites = : s f33008 . But while the public is expected take’ evasive action in time to : 23850 Ob0Ge oe ss pag, a a to welcome jet travel, there are avoid an approaching plane. acknowledged headaches. Moreover, the new passenger Putting it bluntly, some people (jets will ite largely at an alti-| 1, pr wr gg mage or ont : high, too fast. - which-is the prime training ground an even fiercer on their for thousands of military jet fight- : in A recent survey of 3,000 adults, and bombers conducted by the University of = : eee Mithigan, disclosed: JET SKYWAY POSSIBLE i. ¢ 1. Among persons who had flown| To solve that problem, the Civil] ), at least 100 miles in the last year,| Aeronautics Administration (CAA) 80 per cent said they wouldimay set up a jet-age super sky- welcome jet travel; 20 per cent|way, perhaps from 25,000 to 40,000 expressed doubt. feet, and keep military jets either 4. Among those who. traveled |higher or away from the airline onty lie grind car, 50 per |cotridor,- cent said they didn’t think they! . would fly in jets. a billion-dollar five-year program * * rol ese Meso to meet: the In the unfavorable category, : —f- nearly halt said they didn’t like |G Of the Jet 'age, but some fiying at all. One in four said the jets are too fast. One in 10 said|¢ !sumediate future jet flying is dangerous. Experts say jet engine flame- outs—when the burning. kerosene fuel goes out like a snuffed candle —are rare, Moreover, tests have shown that a jet with a flame-out can swiftly descend to lower alti- tude and relight the engine. John G. Borger, Pan Ameri- : 7 can’s chief projects engineer, |What happened to Britain's ill-fated says every precaution has been Comets, the world’s first jet air- tdken to. guard against explosive . decompression in high - flying pressurized jet cabins. i They have double windows for, Births Recent births in the Pontiac area recorded in the County Clerk's of- fice are listed below by the name of the father. Pontiac’ Barry N. Dibble, 2300 Shimmons Paul A. May, 2620 E. Walton George R. Purvis, 101 W. Pairmont Cleo Price, 724 Vaught James F. Quinn, 140 Exmore y WY ML, NNSTAH MASOR, MIZ HOOPLE SENT et ee arn ZING LWP THE BME 10 SET YOU UR BUT YOU BEEN witingin Rees “ir BE inam.| Uf ZUG TANKS BOONTON, RQABLINKIN' YO" EYES LIKE A BULL- Batts aoe See cae (5 THAT YOU, JASON ZI WAS PERG PA OOO HOStLe. CL E ae ae 4 K | Other plagued by the tooth-rattiing in a ready room, protected ‘ HE WAS FURIOUS ! I GAINED 2 POUNDS! By Carl Grubert ‘OH! OH! WATCH IT, DEAR. + rae * | BUT I CANT HELP IT, IM HUNGRY ALL THE TIME! ge Fe = 3 : i E i | - DIXIE DUGAN By McKvoy and Strieber Fs ALLEY OOP WHAT'S ALL THIS \ THIS'IN'S ABOUT TH’ FIFTH OR SIXTH ONE TFLY OVER IN TH’ LAST THEY'RE GIVIN' FOLKS $e ub EaTE taney ganetie fash BEeny | YU) DREAMING! ~~ ZOUNDS,L A. Bens UO BUSTER V-Z Denver J. Rome, 1176 Lynn Sue | fF, : eee eee I | ee eee nee COU ARE NUMAN s TT Rete E nsccs wl Granace | | \ THE NERY FUTURE OF THE Se = COMMUNITY'S CULTURE , f By Leslie Turner ; : io My | WHAT HAPPENED TO THE \ ILL SEARCH THE THAT S A FRESH GKAVE... PERHAPS ee on = —a PASSENGERS? NOT EVEN ) ISLAND WHILE YOU ONLY HOURS OLD! BUT WHERE |S AraEt SEARCHING THE GULF FROM TERREBONNE ES AROUND! DEFLATE IT AND THE MAN WHO DUG IT? BAY TO SUCATAN'S NEAREST POINT, A PATROL Bh - —s \ pur iT ABOARD! 4 PLANE IS HEADING HOME AT DUSK, WHEN .... . a ‘e Robert H. Shotwell, $4 Myra Lewis R. Spence, 242 Clayburn Prank J. Spadafore, 3994 Beachgrove Guy G. Spedafore, 1705 Winthrop Earl V. Smith, 3121 Hazelmary a H. Shipman Jr, 2461 Oill-/ am Jghn Simeneth, 31 Cooper : | Arvin W. Summers, 0455 Buckingham Walter K. Bummers, 402] Lanette Roy L. Smith, 61 Mechanic Newton 6Gkillman Jr. 12330 Lake An- g¢clus Ghores Alexander Stuve. 14 Rosshire Praank P. Spadafore. 671 Homestead Ea John M. Smith Jr. 180 Dellwood Philip H. Avery, 326 Linwood Donald H, Bentley. 475 8. Livernois Gerald C. Birdwell, 2881 Cooperstone Gerald W. Boudeau, 1307 N. Oak 7 Charles A Brand. 3413, Cone John D. Christianson, 3564 Alide Bruce H. Daje. 2972 Longview Patrick O Daugherty, 2030 Grace Harry 2 Howard, 3048 Melvin hy, Geraid L. Hill, 1435 Courtland U7, S —=== Marvin J, Jacopec, 1970 Ferry : PT f > Junior L. Kildow, 3267 Crooks ' Russell A. Kutthunn, 280 E. Tienken i. §¢a9 ¢ By Ernie Kusnminer ~-ER-A--ER-- PRR, $ i Arthur L. Lisete, 3728 Hazelton Richard FP. tucas, 465 Thalia Louis N. Moberly Jr., 105 Lesdale Grorge A, Martin Jr. 240 Thalta aymond G. Moore. 3196 Harrison John Prieto, 322 Albertson Edward R. Kanke, 342 Winry Robert A. Sherman, 1629 Auburn Myron Sanders, 3524 Hazelton Charies P. Schoch, 145 Nevada MTT erecrt B. Unayperd. $35, Willerd , eC 0... en | Prank A. Sinacola, 2810 Walbridge OUT OUR WAY YAIS, THET OL’ FELLER IS TH COOK! AFTER YUH BEEN OUT IN THIS HEAH COUNTRY FER YEARS, LIKE ME AN! TH’ REST O' TH’ BOYS HEV, YUH GET HARDENED AN’... WELL, YA KIN STAND JUST ABOUT ANY THIN'/ Edgar J. Geist Jr, 1473 Pontiac Harlod G. Grider, 1671 Auburn Charles E. Grusnick, 1268 Cambray Virgil D Gunnarson, 2064 Grace Donald E Fulmer, 2600 Norton Lawn Donald R. Punck, 3330 Crooks Allen B Cross, 3545 Hazelton Royal Oak Firm to Build > The State Highway Dept. has an- nounced that the Oak Construction | 4 Tm fog & Pet OR — Ad rights cenereed = = Cope. 1958 by Unned Fretere thyndicate, tne OKT -Zi- , MORTY MEEKLE . oe : By Dick Cavalli HI, THERE, ( wHaT's THE MATTER WHAT ID YOU DO CINDY. Hi, \ WITHCINDY? TO MAKE HER MAD? WINTHROP? ee?) noo ts ( LCALLEOHER | Ermey) NOW DON'T YOU START TO WORRYIN'! YOU'LL BE EATIN’ UP AT TH’ HOUSE WITH TH MISSUS/ + (Co, of Royal Oak was the low bid- der ($30,792) for construction of a crossover for southbound Adams road traffic onto U.S. 10 (Wood- ward avenue) in Birmingham. The work, expected to be com- pleted by June 30 next year, in- cludes construction of a concrete divider strip. f 1958 by NEA Se eine TM Bog US Pat Of By Charles ‘Kahn THEY FROWN ON US} | | BESIDES, YOU’D HAVE T’ GOLLY, GRANOMA IS MAIL BOYS CARRYIN’ PUT IT INANICE BIG BOx,| | SO BULLHEADED // THINGS FOR FREE, ; ADORESS IT, AN’... YA a / a ° an" 2 . Marriage License Applications Billy E. Walling, Keego Harbor Suzanne M. Gough, Oxford Charles W. Liskey, Drayton Plains Joyce E. Patterson, Drayton Plains BUT,GRANDMA, I CAN'T DELIVER YOu! ey Walter A. Preiburger, Milford , June C. Brown, Milford Theodore Camilori, Perndale Cecelia E. McArthur, Holly Bert B. Stricklin Jr., 1980 Hillside Patricia E. Fisher, Lake Orion The average life span of Ameri- " E | Z Rw LLIAMSs aS Mg 16 eats Oxie vee earns FOOD FOR THOUGHT bath ramen. 10-21 the past 20 years. ! _ HALF ACRE CASTLE | CE nt aE (AH, JO... THE BEALITY—THESE TREES PAINTED BY THE DELICATE TE Way lates Spetenia, ee Wadd gee ere DONALD DUCK EVERY LEAF 16 TOUCHED BY HER MAGIC BRUSH STROKES WITH PRIGTOUS BEAUITY:/ NO! NO! KEEP YOUR HEAD DOWN, COME BACK ores ¢ 1908 Disney He World Rights Reserved Wa oa: 9 ee eek oo) i 6 ~ ~ Stock Market | Lj Turns Mixed icovering sales of locally grown 17] produce brought to the Farmer's} ; a : i : = “3 i 4 je ESS - / i. A ; . > : THE. PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958 See MARKETS [Scattered Sales The following are top prices): Mayket by growers and sold by NEW YORK t®—The stock mar- et tried to muster a rally today aut turned mixed in early trading. Monday. Changes were mosly narrow ex- ‘cpt for coppers which were bol- stered by higher prices. Anaconda and Magma Copper featured this, group with gains beyond a point Some of the recent lower priced favorites .again were active and higher. . Trading followed closely the pat- tern of recent sessions. There were, numerous big opening blocks and) the ticker tape lagged behind trans- actions for a six minute period! shoftly after the start. Some observers saw bearish | signs in the fact that short inter- | est declined 10.9 per cent during | the past month. This, they rea- | nical props to the market. Short interest refers to stock) which is borrowed, then sold in the, expectation it can be bought back later at a lower price. | Avco Manufacturing, yesterday 's| third most active stock, led the) opening block parade on 30,000 shares, up 13 at 9%. Avco con-! tinued active and widened its gain. | Loew's opened on a 15,000 share! bleek,- up 4 and Studebaker-Pack- ; Celery canoes: ard on 10,000 shares, up %. Stude-/Escarole. bleached bu. baker later turned to the down-| side. : | American Motors, higher in re- | cent sessions, was off more than a point. {Peppers red sweet. bu soned, weakens one of the tech- Potatoes ‘bag: 60 Ibs 'Pumpkina bv Wheat Today Quotations are furnished by the) CHICAGO um — Prices for grain Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of futures were mostly mixed in rath- ‘ jer light transactions on the Board jot Trade today. | There was scattered commission| _ |house selling of wheat early in the isession and a small amount of Detroit Produce FRUITS Appies McIntosh tancy ov .... §2.75| is - Apple cider «case: 4 BAY, Fe aiee 2.50 commercial buying. There was no Grapes foes (bake PK esecce 128 |big export demand in sight, al- Quince, bu “den soe 4.00\though India and Greece are due SOIC RE 2 #08 to make substantial purchases of VEGETABLES bread grain under government au- Beets. toppea ou vo RMT wee 150 thorizations. TOCCON i1bCHE OB . fireceressess 2.25 . Carrots topped bu y vee - 135) Near the end of the first hour Chullflower, doz. A Ane eu r A Celery doz stalks 1.90, wheat was % higher to % lower, Corn sweet 5 de 1.60) Dall (bene dan 75, Dec. $1.95; corn unchanged to Begpvant. Pe, z : 113 3s lower, old style Dec. $1.10%; orser tah, o Di eee meerenee oe < © ~ . Kohirabs (chs! doz ewes -. 1:38 oats unchanged to Ye lower, Dec. Leeks ‘behs + doz oe Onions. dry, ( » 60 Ib ., Parsley Root sbchs» doz Parsnips ‘% bu 150644%4; rye % to % lower, Dec. - . 149) $1.29; and soybeans \% to 5¢ higher, A DRAW — Dr. Joseph I. Ch seaee Red (ibchs.) doz wn pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, declared a draw last night after some of his congregation apman (center), (left), Staebler, the issues in the Nov. 4 election. Republican state chairman, and Neil Democratic state chairman, debate bd ! Reccnee ee ane cee Grain Prices and visitors listened to Lawrence B. Lindemer balay ee ban seatatotatatecotsie mal CHICAGO GRAIN CTR OCS ENO ee eee CHICAGO, Oct. 20 (AP) — Opening '. A Turnips topped. bu 2.25 rf 4ces: cnerns oe pea........ ws barty Chairmen Agree on One Point Cabbage > bu. we 1.00 Mar ee Me Collards bu 1.25) May , Kale bu 1 25/ July i St t Mustard bu 1.25) Se ad US O Sorrel. on 150 orn (old)— Spinach, bu bob. cGonboacnsoondcactke 5 Gwiss (chard) bu) --..--) -eeere-- 1.25 Mar. aA 1.18 . eae ieee a ae ele . State party chairmen Lawrence|torium of the church to see Linde- CES 50 onesncesnd ay . Lindemer and Neil Staebler d ac : JULY coeees mer and Staebler off. ive, dleached, bu. oases . ert ee ot Ha Ye eepctes _ Tait Tight-that-the ndmber}-— ; 2 ad amine 6 ee 1) AvAsked. BBid Jone issue in the Nov. 4 election omaine, ! ee eee oe ei 4 | * ’ is the status of the state's indus-| Both men had promised church . | try. That was the last agreement|pastor Dr. Joseph I. Chapman that Livestock ire Dpd la us of the evening debate. no mention would be made of can- | : didates. They held to the stipula- Lindemer, Kepublican state STROIT LIVESTOCK } OIT, Oct. ndustry Main Issue. priations for the Economic De- velopment Commission. exercised a “penny wise, dollar foolish” economy. He said his | party never offered a program of state improvement without an tion carefully until some of the) 8ccompanying tax program to if you can’t! FE 4-2541 15 W. Lawrence, Pontiac “ANSWERING SERVICE DETR - 1 5 | ' “ ; | Small gainers included Sears|anie 0 saLisuited “supply of food and - chairman, sais eee — has spectators started asking questions.) fimance it. | . whe . o( oi et et r ver ive, industries ; : Roe buck, Woolworth, Allied Chemi-|S0o* | See cents miguers laces Praaal| | § C e U Minasa /enltue) 16-year) retan ot Dr. Chapman had to break up This remark prompted Lindemer “al, € elps .t e @ Steady . fe, & , . Oo rem a aL Sea Pais (Est I: (a one terror imposed by Gov. Wil- | an exchange between Lindemer 0 remind the audience that the L Internationa! Nickel |sales good to average choice steers| 6. || ; t and a woman who charged the Democrats in their state conven- 25.25-27.50, few loads average to high) Waterford Township | liams’ attitude of antagonism of ion adopted latform “the likes! N Y k St k |lchoice steers 27.75-28.00; utility and job- ucing industries.’ R p hil 2 inated Legisla- tion op’ ap s| ew Yor OCKS jstandard mixed offerings 2000-25.00:/ Committee Draws U prod: ture was responsibie for the (of which you've never seen.” “And ete Morting Gectatinnel jutility cows 1800-1950 few up to 20.00 P| De ti tate chairman 4 ae Figures after decima! point are eighths canners and cutters 14.5018.00. wee 5 mocra ic id a e mé state’s fiscal ills, and not the where will the money come from? | Hogs—Salable $00. Butchers not fully! New Specifications ; Staebler said Michigan's troubles! | \vernor he asked. “From the sweat of Admiral 148 Int Silver 364 established, but few early sales fully bi ; ; { go . | . ie i hate 25 cents higher, instances 50 cents were “attributable to the difficulty - ; men's brows. aye as 5 fe ‘ rp tle Coal! ‘16 higher; sows under 350 Ibs. 25 eal ; ionally.”” But the 3i-year-old Lindemer ited C x Si E ‘O1 fo a mi 4 > : } * * Allied Strs 495 Jacobs 8 higher, weights over 380 lbs. steady: few) New and separate bids for a fire| “© 9° having neGgnaily: 'still managed to sneak in the only| Staebler said other issues in- is fast becoming Allis Chal 275 Johns Man 45.7 mixed No. 2 and 3 butchers 190-240 Ibs./ ae anl | iw ery si | : i q Alum Ute 351 Jones & L 55.5 1900-19.25; lot mostly No. 1 217 Ib.jtruck chassis and apparatus will) Five out of every six cars jplug for his party when he said cluded Michigan's Federal Em.) PONTIACS Alcoa + 1190 Eeiuceatt 1002 Ibs 1800-1815. mixed grades sows 300-/D€ Opened by the Waterford Town-| we make here are sold outstate,” /there would be “a day of new light/ployment Practices Commission. . RaiGaniee sag RimOnCIE: 624 400 Ibs. 16.75-17.75; No. 2 and 3 400- ship board at 8 p.m. Nov. 24. This) declared Staebler. “And if they |jn Michigan after January first.”"|(FEPC) laws, mental health, help’ | se > Kresxe. SS 297 600 Ibs 15.78-16.50 : ; : | ’ ’ ” j HOME An M & Pay . me Rroser Fr ae Vealers- Salable 300, Steady sacholee| Was decided at last gight’s regular don’t buy, we don’t make. x * * for the aged, and education. Mm ot ” ; § a } 7 : i . i AmNGas.. 625 Henne na and good 3600-3300. cull and utility township board meeting. | se Staebler echoed his party stand-| His counterpart said too strong! . FOR : Am News 30 Ligg & My. 77.9) 16.00-26.00 - ; P f Previous bids on firefighting | Their debate over the majorjard bearer’s claim that industries|government control and fiscal re- Am Tel & Tel 1944 Lockh Airc 52 Sheep—Salable 700. All classes steady: 7 : . : 2 . bili the jor m Tob 90 oew's 99:7/¢5 : | ’ . ; Am To} 204 I choice to prime wooled slaughter lambs) equipment had been opened and issues in next month’s election was/are coming, not leaving Michigan, sponsibility are other major; RETI RED FOLK S pcmcoratl esa om «35S 2425. good to choice wooled 21 50-23 00 discarded because of indefinite Bethany Baptist Church. A groupjas Republicans say. He criticised|issues which voters will pass on ™ ean as L i 79 l ch laugh s 600-10 50 : | : i : Armour‘& Co. 185 Lou & Nash .. 3 cull, “to soles) sauet ier eu ee lambs | specifications. A complete set of jof about 75 gathered in the audi-ithe Legislature for cutting appro-'two weeks | Folks) appreciate our Avco Mfg 96 Martin) Co 33.1 2100-22 50 specifications has been compiled | homelike accommodations Beth Steel $21 Mead Co 433 by a special committee and are | Baqwell Jalo | . l with the convenience of erc . - | | | Eomiatin Hy Hitec, Be Poultry and Eggs | new rey for contract bids, eae PY J ALea DISPUTES | Eins att downtown | Bore Warn... 352 Mpls Hon 975) DETROIT POULTRY |_ On Nov. 3 bids for sale of bonds} U es, | n Running Afoul | where things are happen- Bree Me «1-82 Monsan ch 319/ DETROIT, Oct. 20. (AP) —Prices paid’ totaling $35,000 will be asked by| : f D | ing. No need % travel tor Balke.” Mont Ward ... 391) per pound. lo Detroit, for No. 1 aual|the township board for constuction 7 Brun Balke... 66.4 Mor wheel |” ia dilty lve poultry: P ‘ O etroit Law | entertainment. j Budd Co {.-... 16 , 47: | r i Biougne he Meet, Sil Peaues, matt aes, Teeera| ot & wale? Maino, be. installed | Nd fOr Why don't you stop in Calum &H... 175 Nat Bisc 48.2| Ibs) 19-20. Heavy type turkeys, hens 27,\along Cass Lake road from Lin-| Paul D. Bagwell’s 1908 jalopy, : y dont you Pp our : : Campb Soup. 465 Nat Cash R194 toms 23, | eclnshi venue- to the Venice of ee veg ir - conditioned atmos- SEB Tea Rat atte” —_— thei Lakeeaiaivicions | was dealt a blow yesterday when! Leaving Total of 72,000} phere, have a look at one Capt i Nat T, [ : _ . . i John D.| *% u | peek (GR Go! BR Rares West re Z1 dS DETROT. Ont m2 (AP/—Eaeea.tgh A benefit charge for connection] Communist Guns Rack wore said it belonged ina mu:| Still on Strike, With} our spacious rooms, Cater trac. 838 Nor Pac... s23|erades: “yo 4: extral (© the new main will be made] Off.Shore . Islands for scum and not on the streets ‘ ' then ask and be amazed Gen TET 004 Oblo cu 2G |large 61-54, wid, avg. ‘S2iy. large ap-s1,|'0 Cah Of the 100 property owners| 3 . | The judge found Donald E. Bar- 203,226 Back on Job by our down-to-earth down- | Chrysier ...... 562 Owens Cng 83 2) . ave 40's, =edium 32-38. wtd aie-|to defray construction costs and) 2nd Day, Only Lighter %. of White a Townshi town prices for retired . Cin Mil M... 41.6 Owens IN Of . 19.6) 326: omen aT rede Brene c. ierecithe bond will be payable over al ae oe e: ‘ a Citles Sve 39 Pac G & Ei . $6.6) wid. avg. 46% Browns: G a eres pay: 'guil { chauff Bagwell J folk. Clark Equip. 554 Pan A W Alr 90.5) 49: medium 33; small 37. Checks 2832./seven year period. | TAIPEI, Formosa ian aso) ty he attinue car acbihies , ae a intial OlXS. “luett Pea 3 an Epl 5351S Commercially (graded | * ry * tary of State Dulles and President}! round ors announ ay tha ree} $ Ceca Cola ....116 Pars on i i . ae ove : : ; For furt information, phone Cele Paim Tia Parke Da 1024 atte sage hrge‘wlstmetticn Jess" _ In other business board members Chiang Kai-shek opened their con- let off too much smoke. the judge !more United Auto Workers local| er federal 6-812 Suc ose benney. JC a7 i smau 221424 Browns’ Grade A. jumbo! approved the Furler-Crest Haven ference today against a backdrop = . He suspel rher’s sen- bargaining units have come to Con Edis $85. Pepsi Cola. | 234) medium 29'1-30's, small 3225", "plat located on Cooley Lake road of renewed Red cannonading of oa ow « sire ay disputes leaving | soneum™Pw ss 7) RAIzer 927 \after- devel ted revision Quemoy. ; on workers still on Con Pw. 557 preps Db Gait : after developers presented revision fas ‘ 4a, i . Che tien sce Philco i | . lin lot sizes. | a ex ky, ; les incnacan Grats aera ree strike. cm I Gout nay 431 Phill Pet |... 45 + A request from the Ideal Country; After a 22-hour meeting be-)” : : ont Can 57.5 Prott & G 4 try | D ; nan = Eon COPAS 124 Pure on. 3et Tell of Breakin |Club Assn. for a street light to'be|tween Dulles and Chiang, . ae pete ekcees on the jalopy in| 4 spokesman for the firm said cont Mot .... 11 4 “ 4 : linstalled at their beach park was|Department spokesman said that . 87 units hay hed Cont Oi) 566 Repub Stl .... 63 ins p 3 so far 87 local ve reached | Copper Rng .. 323 Rex Drug _.. 25 lalso approved by the board. |“Mr. Dulles is not here to twist) Jason L. Honigman, Republican|acreement and 203,226 workers. Corn Pd... 148 Revn Met .. 674] : “ ee body’ ly any heat|candidate for attorney general, de- ? Curtis Pub ||. 147 Rey Tob B. 87 | | The Detroit Edison Co. will in-janybody's arm or apply any are » “““lwere back on the job today. Det’ wens 50 ‘Purse Snatching jstall the light and association|°T pressure."’ fended Barber. easeesetes ee @eee eves Be ede RE Baan BS, . [members will be charged for the| While the talks progressed, the at Buick and Oldemobiie and at 4 Doug Airc 594% scovill ME” 2 | Wepen : iChinese Communists put their nic! a Dow Chem sy 24 s electricity. ] ff re . Du Poft pins Sears Roeb | . 337) Pharmacy, Gas Station, * * * jshore gitns into action for the sec- Ni B f a few other Buick-Oldsmobile- . “a@ Shell Oil . #24 ; . 5 rea ae Sere -14 Looted Pontiac Women| Three bids for blacktopping ond gay but on a much lighter ews if L ie Pontiac piaute. The spokesman zeten is .? ae d | Landsdowne avenue and three for scaJé. The Defense Ministry said) 7 4 _ ,| sald ‘We don’t know how long Fl & Mus | + 7, Lose Handbags 'Camiey street were opened and re- Up’ to noon only 362 shells had hit ree kiddie concession rides = our materials will hold out. When | : 512 | : ; front of the Kres; t nd th r mer Rad & igen BE a ; ferred to township enginees John- )Quemoy, compared with more| of the Aresge store ar © they expire the plants will] have pio it Std Brand 6 2 Pontiac Police reported several son and Anderson for analysis and than 11,500 Monday. |Federal Department store in the te close again, unless the other Firestone 1026 ae o ca a8 oreakins ane . eon of purse, recommendation. - | But there was no doubt Le ee se peing oe strikes are settied.” 5 8td Oi] N 58 5 sna ching incidents Monday. A low bid of 43.048 for Lands- abru t Red decision to end the Wwe Pp open and an undeter- , 7 ! g72 Std Ol On . $52! Thieves broke a 24 by 50-inch dow , : i ist-i ed cease-fire had/ Mined amount of money was taken| GM — a a pooecticg tn 2 Stevens. JP 265/ jowne avenue was submitted by|Communist-imposed cease-fire ha . lyesterday in five of .its 22 as- an Stud Pack 14 «| Plate glass window from the front the Detroit Concrete Products Co,|an important bearing on the Dul- sometime last night, -according Le plants tor the first time| 20 Saige fos OE door of the J. is V. Pharmacy, and the Ann Arbor Arbor Construc-|!es-Chiang discussions. |Waterford Township police. le inet 2 Fae Swift & Co 31 89S. Saginaw St and crawled tion Co, submitted a low bid of} Joseph Greene, special assistant Mrs. James Miller of 7790 Gale, wk os oe aes timuen: |$6,657 for Camley stregt. jfogtpulles yonid | Dulles) rst coo | all waterford iomtahin, |renceied || CrRe AW ional 49 3 Tex G Sul... 236 Missing were five cartons of * * jference with Chiang was ‘‘a stock. i lice that i t a ted The inferna tual office ae 25 A ree rie lclganciicamvelued 2 An ne : ‘taking of the present situation.”/'0 Police that approximately $1/\nounced that the GM-UAW national | 392 Fhomp Pd 616 cigarett valu at $20, two Christmas shopping ‘by selling A. Taylor, 56 Gillespie. FE 3- = Be ee W APT FURNISHED 3300 to earth. og Cape bd ne ance ae Box Replies 4) ares nationally » “aaverises “on ar / migee Mt UPPLIES — 138) S a "Bleabetn Lane. Rd Hoy eee : . é : r sets - for ormation phon: come nee: rs allace. WANT GOOD INCOME H E|NICE 3 8M WASHER PARK- Brig. Gen, Donald D. Flickin- oa ae Frances | ‘aul bpd erm At 10 a.m. toda: there y FE 44508 or write aes 5-7805 from owner. Must be sae |e ing lot Close in 00 Cottage FE ger, Air Force ‘director of life| Bailey: dear sister of Eva Mor-|, ere ceplies af the Press pie ¥ a ne —.| | out ar PAT Tar tome SS 58 fin apr roR TOG ‘ ; AN — our dream come true. Now outlined that service's) "fat survived by two grand-|{ office ip the tollowing . ‘ ? children. < for Some housework &; : can lose weight easil ena 3 persons 49 Orchard ueks Rd. plans in the .Air r- wil : an ced boxes: | i irosing. FE 40271 after 4:30. guiekiy” In feagine tos foto 10 sa ? |wen will furp $12 week - parks - Griffin Pune i - rt days. Lose ugly poun WwW Ss 11? me ce ND ATH P terly Review, published at Max-) Mrs copie wit hee cts ens |b _ & 10,12, 11, 27, 28, 31, FENN GS OCT. 27 god inches the very ‘minute vob ant to el be . p.m. t 8 - = women with bition, - e, scientific reducing well Air Force Base, Ala. letersi toe Soerks- Griftia be ta eeiae MM, MT eon car. Career or’ part, 7 procram. ‘Make today your lucky TRY LaBELLE \westaipe cour OR SINGER He said: the attempt would be N. OCT vi 1960, an. | 85-104, 120, 117. eee ee ; PE asin. oY ( Sppointment. BUYERS WAITING epi Air conditioned All util, turn. made provided techniques for the! brotner Funrtt Bi; A6e 8h dest | 2 | ROOM AND BOARD In x Work Wanted Fer Female 11 | Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 4 FoR 3&4 BEDROOM HOMES | TRosm i's Tera also survi seve 5 Vie I D b PAG | recovery of the space capsule and {ng sutvived [by se: vervice wil a fe OO FS oy ae MIMEOORAPHING. TYPI TYPING SEC | DRESSMAKING TAILORING AND n Debt: SMALL ACREAGE & its occupant are satisfactorily de-| be at the ow Puneral Home, Pentlac © "ime, in stationary - exp’ Aariy — wena! gervice, MAS 39008, __ | sieryuome re Bode FE) ff vos sre having trouble meeting LaBelle Real Estate ‘Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 le ped, ort : bs a istermen The Pontiac Press open holi- RSES LAB RING AL on : ve * *« a = prachl Sy . dopa. © to 3 on Suny inns Mind bonded. Postise and Oekisnd | ORESS TA A MicmiGAN “C CREDIT Counsel: ress tare Re OR ita BEDROOM APT FOR LEASE Sunertt Bowe. by the Hunteon | FOR WANT ADS Own trans. Write Pgfitiac Press} County Nurses Registry. FE! ‘" Drapes & formals dove rad aa 16 | Fos Der mo Adults 130 Sem The experiment would be made @AUNDERS. OCT ip.” i0s8 BEN- Bway Bor Oe es [eee PUR CEP at GND TittORING _bisis_Baok_pidg” FE bows Fr | Role “Beiair’ Manor” PE +1880 . 19, 1968, BEN- WITH | AIR AND TAILORING. SAPELY AND ECO- particularly in connection with a| #™2,H. 1703 Auburn Ra: age DIAL FE 2-818t 4 | eeanhon exper! delesladies | PONTIAC, Lee hbo pay SUREAU | Alterations for ladies: and men’s| nomically with newly released| “Anoee terme rate piceny Tae! Spare Latefront Apts. on seine, wed: son of Mrs. May Cox: s ; | Lice and Drivers 63 clothes. Edna Warner, FE 2-7972| Das A-Diet tablets, 98 cents at! land cont ; Buyers w hieg v7 study of the effects of,weightless- bveioved husband of Mrs. Alma C mre ier on haakee a witeng suiee cor eer Roots aiore (OM | SIMMS and contracts. Buyers waiting | BEDRM. 3 RM APT NEAR ‘ness on animals and buman be-| Ciiford ireim Mee Kets Dao Free Cam to pm. to _work a ceakiee wate! Css ose ee | ‘ineerence A ion 17a, BOOKING HAY RIDES |Paul M. Jones, Real al Est. ees ae sais or im, Mrs. Ke ud - . “| e genc Te 832 W Huron ings, ley. Mrs Milton Longstaf!. Robert | pia Dipo ov fofyberlig gogpidding is wun ee Rides we 2 NEW, MODERN APTS HEATED | a Lee aanine oka TRONINGS ALSO NEED GOOD, 2 a 3 BED-| BE and Ggt Benjamin R. Seun- | ail _errere, chonié| be re 1 ew ols, Detroit, Michi: FOR GOOD INSURANCE CALL h in Watert | $40 & $50, on M-59 & lake EM Flickinger said consideration | Sri aise carviced by 13) erent | 0 ee ene en gan.” ; ees et DANIELS AGE ‘ox he Tee TE) area, Fee nate waking to ben, | 33066 of MU 46-4296 mh an Trea ichil- | *o 6@45uUMes HO reennn — “ Ey a—r s being given to various methods of! aren. Puneral service will be held| { stbility for A 8 TO ¢ PM WOMAN WANTS EMPLOYMENT. 2a FE on sponsibie for eny debts contrac” Give us a call for prompt ap-/J TBORM Dx DUWNSTAIRS GARAGE. putting laboratory animals, and| Wednesday. Oct. 22. p.m | than to cancel the charges 3517_ Eliz. Le an Own transportation. O ge by 5 any eer yselt, | __Erares | SeBeariRepeel Sez ect later sani linc @ Weemiballisiic! Goue wr cacesaca siicuenss| | ecouss Oe mec cenence’ “Sotereup, 016 Oakland. | (ee mall PE rE 5.2082 Wonk Of ___Laundry Service 18 few went" dip Frannie’ Ra. IF’, C. Wood © * ranch ype Oe Ree ’ , i e€ . af + = ae state at Sparks-Griff F yo nd carpeting 9991 Dixie High- _ flight _ which would provide. Home. eR eet yeh [ptetees aan S te tee ee ser wt, ens DONE IN MY HOME. FOR FAMILY LACMDRY & SERV. ‘Wed. Children to to Board 26) Corner Williams: Lake road) 8 2 __way _Ma&pie $1183 “ : six to eight mehoates of weightless- SHOEMAKER. ¢ OCT. 20. 1958. ANNA | | @troY When ‘cancefiations ser et adie ————— ———— one BEDROOM DUPLEX NEAR igh i 71 Bast Blvd 8; age 73. be- § sre made be sure to get } belt FE cane | WANTED TRONINGS _S uel ne BOARDING ROME BY DAY |” prayton Plains. Children welcome. ness. | area wife of Charies Shoemaker: vour “ki} number” We __ vee CALL PE 48-8650 LACE RTA t™ or week. Li 'R iA F i hed rey appotnitment call MA 5-2452. * A, * | dear mother of Wayne Albers: | adjustm wil! he giver op toe “GIRL POR, GENERAL Pal | ee ee ter Pootias VScibaas Sa roe | _Rent Apts. Furnished 33 ROOMS 12 STOWELL FE “at weighticenfily groves to be! ix. Earnie, Sane a tiie ier merit’ Mu Rete’) Building Services 12, —H#sslsl. Feons PE 2#iel “iv Piernma tome, PR caw 6Y FIQOR WESTSIDE S 2M 0 ; Jim Leslie. Puneral service will e er ; _ Sakon ighland, ao i oe an ;_§-5416. | 3 LOVELY ROOMS WITH PRI- a limiting fact space flight, be held Thursdav, Oct 23 at 230) ments eontaining type sizes | WANTED. CAPABLE AND RELI- 4-1) QOMPLETE BUILDING SERV- Landscaping 18A Wtd. Household Goods 27) asian E SRTTCR ERE Te $10, VATE BATH AND CNTRANCE we are faced with an engineering pm. from the Moore Chapel of ‘arger than regular ecate able woman to care for two chil- ice Quality a Wpaeqed Bow: eek _230_ 8. Park) FE 61738. | GROUND FLOOR CONVEN- _ Sparks-Griffin Puneral Home, § type 1s 12 o'clock noon the dren. Live in Must like children ker, MA 42253 or PE 53608 |) aCE TREE SERVICE RE (CASH FOR USED TV'S. FORNI-|1 J “END 2 BEDROOM PARTLY; [ENTL ao peer problem of some magnitude to pro-| Auburn ara Heights. with oe Wiltam| | | Ses] previa) te weheetion _ Call after 7 pm. FE 64-7530. AAA “Weer Sand a ean ding > 7 | moval ano trimming Get our bid _ture & misc FE 2-0367. [aoe su Leketrent (Apla OWNSO188 | | SIN OU Ce he ea vide a of artificia) gravit peecbece _attictet re || |WANTED: RECEPTIONIST. GOOD ane FE 21188 FE ¢ CASH. FOR SMATL RA i Son 2 ROOM UPPER. AD ADULTS mnie a degree . 1 gra y peneeec ota peated ake | ; Want a may typist with knowled of payroll! Floor Laying —- Mora CUSTOM BULLDOZING 5. YARD & working or not FE pene | utilities furn. 258 Orchard Lak |! as any wre _— Lhe during orbital coast,” he said rerio i ry Sperec csr oe — po phe veal se bel pemmh seeing: jppmctagtnrine c_BUD BILLS 2050 | “driveway agtading Back filling | URNITURFE NEEDED | 2™ KITCHENETTE apr Ci | _month. | jp ie00 or EM 3-2544 o miles West om- ALL KINDS CEMENT WORK. | Terms EM 3-3623 furn Pontiac Lk M39 OR ; : eg. rome An aaa tne first nse tiac. "Write Box 117 Pontiac Press | reasonabie’ — PE 2-2340 EXPERT TREE TRTMMIN o. AND Entire some oy odd lets. Get the| { BEDRIZ- Stee = oe | Y GPrEs ‘ ae a aig sro a : P | 4-1 SAND & PINISH FE 58-3722 removal Ph FE OR r Will buy outright or) Mother Gets 10 Days 2838 (Mariington. Drayton Plains: CASH WANT AD RATES Help Wanted 8 Pontiac Hardwood Ploor serv. | _3-2000 | seit tor rou. B & Communit = ilies decorated Close| location wn, Uneoin Zz Hi Margaret, Sadler) Shore’ dear § Lines 1-Day +Days 6Daye Tiare YOU WANTING WORK OR A-A TRENCHING eee TREE SERVICE = none ae M BACHELOR APT. $9. WK. _©3523 or PE 61172 _ — father of Mrs Shirley Wagner. 2 $150 $186 $278 looking oping vou don't find tt? Footings Septic ieee om remove ee surg Safaris BUY — ALL TYPES _ 89 State St. FE 2-0566 7 RMS AND BATH. PVT ENT. Kenneth. Cari Willism and James 3 1.50 2.70 3.96 ave opening ter wen or woman P 30666 _tand id clearing wa 2003 urniture Ph. PE 32-5823. |) BEDROOM APT FOR LEASE, } blocks 'rom Pontiac General 0 j ing rinci Shore dear brother of | Mrs ¢ Bo «348 B08 Cab Geka abeve arersce ware A&B TRENCHING | . senere tantecisind — ANTIQUE DISHES AN- $100 Der mo Adulte 130 geminale Hospits) Cali after, § pm. or a! patter repeat § PR GR Sf) Sie Ree Ti ee ogy eae taee tate ume | Reenter cea” Ob My ane Mme ervere | belly Mater Pea eong-e ger sabe WEL , z CARETAKER TEN APTS GAS FE : | moval, power brush cutting = 2 { |} ROOMS & BATH BABY WEL- MONROE (UPn SA owns Saree Sea Sees) 2 po ie A} Rested Udg 940 apt for services. aNY THE OF _GOUSE, PLANS attedls WANTED’ 2 BURNER OIL SPACE || B rEEORM *UPER Ux et TER |” come FE S-0086 Rev. A Kasten (officiating $ deste) 9a «69 | Mrimtenance knowledge. refer- custom drawn ees a | UA MNS VACUUM CLEANED, _hester_FE 31936 adise Priv entr & shower } ROOMS IN BASEMENT” UTILI- who slapped her son's school Interment im Crescent ill Ceme_. | emees required Louis Zeff. 251% 3493) | lea@®s naule. away or muiched Ww d I ewular dollhouse for newlyweds | ties and heat furn Private en- rinci = di tery Mr. Shore will WB in state : Cadillac Tower Det 2% — = = 75 i tor flower 8 td. - Miscellaneous — 28 2 Garage houses Nice vard. Wel- trance, $45 month FE 8-2284 principal in a dispute about dis- {Coats Puncral Home. Drayton =e 3ARGAIN — $57 | MERE paneee Sneen ot ened, SANS fare leccerted” Deby’ wexcme) EE is ROOMS AND (BATHE UTILITIES ciplinary methods today was serv- _ Pains TD Dp Gar MERIAN BLUE SOD—25e¢ & i5¢ WANTED B BIG, OLD TANDEM §-2706_or FE 2-8756 | eps A y rv- _? . WINDOW TRIMMEI arage beat old map sccor | furnished Adults 114 Oakland : A ‘STREETER OCT 19. 1958. ROBERT Help Wanted Male 6 he - IX This price ‘or Pontiac cexidents || sq. yd. é5¢ delivered. 2601 Crooks housetrailer EM 3-4827 ROOM KITCHENETTE & PVT ave ing a 10-day jail sentence. aw Marca Miterd: age 840 occ 2 DAYS WEEKLY | ony Terms PES-0122 or PE| _R4., north of Auburn. TW 2117 TYPEWRITERS. WILL PAY UP, beth 2 employed girls or cou iT ROOMS’ PARTLY FURN PVT. Mrs. Temple Owens. 36, - Lasalle dear brother Mrs. rs | Small Ticket Sign Work | 5-4469 |NEW LaWN BUILT ~ Finisa to = Any model or condition | Lar ere only N Pad bath and entrance 684 Auburn : ' Beagle. Mrs. Amog Preston, Case | | PE 43557 BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT| gtadinzg Backfield top PE FE 68-4642 rta_Apt er ee ent was sentenced by Justice Tedd te vill be cba bcos Leddy A MAN - _—,' work sey meer No job too nee REWUSVING AND TRI | __ Wanted to Rent 29 lst 5 Rms. & Bath | wk or $40 @ month. FE 3-T373. Dickerson after she s}ty held” . large esidential and commer- | : pleaded guilty Bird Puneral ae wires mth warted for outside employment Employment Agencies 8A csi Guaranteed work Ph. MY ming Reasonable rates FE 1-8010 eeanpedad enamel 2 ai = se Rough finish 2 young men 12 = LR 1AC MOTOR FROM sa) ————— ee wean ite teks 0 Fit. eae RELAT IONS ears exp Home remodeling from } = jemovNoe Sea | Sais in rare Be district. We 30 2 Rooms: PRIVATE BATH Myo. as Tes eats Pet Sd dee creating a dist against | Help Wantec Femair . Attractive young lady to do rep- asement to attic alum siding. | Reasonable FE 5-3458- FE P = —_ ‘| drinkers, 93 Union St . ° er baby welcome. 473 E. Mans- itr’ Owens” bashant rt. 3%, Held, Wantes BRANCH MAN AGE ROS resantadre sok for firm of con- fooms acces. ideas Also mae ae | MAGIeReducedeR , Sen Fishicks PUT hr _ O ml oe 4 ity ve Employment Amencies Freter pereon) exp” baler sia: ame pte bearer cee money on|labd and materisi The || 4c ee os uced | mics 'Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 32.) cu turn $12 30 wk R 3-7206_ 4 7 ROOM Pe ee ded . ep P o e 8 f good ta. b iv Large WPL OOOO oes eS side ric odern eat Work Wanteoc tnt FE 2.7911 month to eee “Midwest Employ __Yerv best of references RE 96521) pick FE 44864 3 AND )3 ROOMS PVT ae F AND! : other.son, James, 47, was charged wort Wanted Pemate consider training. FE 27011 0: ‘tent 406. Pontiac State Bank CEMENT WORK WANTED. REA: ayoiinG-~ Roneisi —WAWE ATTENTION!!! | bath 1) N Greiegreeni only FEC sass SACU with assault and battery Ae fq ont & =o ’ cenit TT REALTOR Bidg ae ,_sonable rates FE 8-3687 your price Any time PE 8000s SE, NEED YOUR LAND CON. 3 7 ROOMS & PVT BA BATH, 285 OAK. ¢ COZY ROOMS “AND BATH. A Z Cc SCHUETT I S ie ‘CARPENTER WORK HOUSE GA- ;_!s neatec a: Ot ane vt entr awaiting arrajgpment. (Geonies tesetie ae ENERGETIC MAN TO SELL For. Mak tee na ots 2 years rent or repair FE a a ot 4 ASK REASONABLE RISCOUNTS a Room APARTMENTS PRI- on Marwiak Fe 7 —— —-——— ‘Busines Servie>. 13. eign cars ral co ssion eeilegelacm elaclencelbecks rind CUSTOM HOMES BY LICENS anvtime OBLIGATION | vate bath and private entrance 34 women Ta IDs i eneeepe Bee centers Mipsuinnwent MA 1331 fer Sa Sears sales experience. $5400 er re semeees OL JIMS MOVING & TRUCKING , wen AYOEN Realtor _1¢ Squirre: Rd FE 2003 __|5 ROOM UPPER FLAT HEAT & Oakland ity, Michigan. SS Poot Specialist 154 EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY IN furnished 3 setae yD: Bec eacen = a | Cheaper FE $324 FE $1040 & © _Walton, ___FE 6041/2 synooms eee ete | Gee tike ver) got cand a8 Jed bids for’ 1 story High Dressmaking & Tatiorine 16 “sales work Opportunity to ad- $06 Pontiac State Bank FE 5.0227 CEMENT & BLOCK [paces oe BEAVY TRUCKING PTET, coovract or Ok FLOUR 7 BEDROOM APT. UTILITIES —Rovelawn, ‘ ragiition of approximately 16,500 a news — Pe vance if you can close Top com- SS ES WORK FE 56-0782 | i yarn nd boron ee 20803 | finance your lnc coat ract “By mn! furnished Both on Ist floor. Also ® ROOMS AND BATH DOWN. 3 ‘be received to: N Income Tax Service... --0. i, tar Gall PE @asté for appomt- SECRETARY SE funsam MAND WITHLS TOR TRUCK Gongase | 15 ROOM ABTA zeny Non General Heepnon rar ccaiee! ovember 10, ine 7 5 1 or appot Aged 25-35. With good skills For _Floors basements EM 34879 : ‘4 | mortgage j |p Nea: Genera! Hospital FE 5-€766. 1 p-Mf. Eastern Standard Time ineurance Agencies - 1A ment local executive. Midwest Empio So wants work Cail) anytime 2 ROOM APT ALL PRIVATE piel —_— ———— rite kh Ottice of | the Superintendent. paagere berwsce - 22 FULL OR PART TIME MAN FA. ment 406. Pontiac State mploy’ CERAMIC TILE - c CE JOHN | EEDROSMyAeTTONial 1 Soe Ne cerns Teas. x: e Consolidated Schools. 615 miliar with managing sales help _ Bldg FE 5-927 |. PREE ESTIMATES — TERMS O'DELL CARTA 2 BEDROOM APT ON WALTER'S) ‘Adult $65_FE_ 2-596 : Pontise Trail, Walled Lake, Michigan Mov'ng A Trurting. o Neat ance nec 2 | Lake Extra nice, garage. MA) —ocults. , A aisha they wil be publicly Phat wy Accessories 3) 330 ‘or eat sae Instructions 9 concRETE WORKTiceNsen | “ct SB, pfltitgga, ovina NZ Pee Sane tn feopened and read. Physio-Therany 21A GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL, anJ insured Residential. commer- l Cr | |2 ROOMS KITCHENETTE, PVT. | amen << , Access to Plans: Office of the Super- Television Service 7 around baker with cake cecorat-’ PIANO cia. Raymond W Com mins OL _bdath & ent. State St. FE 4-6950./5 RMs WEST SIDE “UPPER & ™ os of 615 No. Pontiac| Typewriter Service 22A ne experience. AD ly in person, Faia. 1-O772 TUCKS to ent 7&3 LARGE RM BRICK APART | —£8{Bke $75 mo FE 8-9806 Hag idncety Ceres Michigan, Office of, “photsterine 23 %ZIhomas Bakery, 1_W.-Huron Popular - Classical ~ Harmony /ORY WALL TAPING AND FIN- 870 W. Huron st Ph FE easzs| ments down town locatten, prt RM NR. GENERAL HOSPT- T. Anicka & Associates, | aterford Township Area | S. TRACTORS OP ent & bath, everything furntshed tal Clean jower heat garage & Maps oeeeae: Ann Arbor, Michigan, | | eee HAVE OPENINO FOR ONE OR Children and adults - ‘PS Wars Setiniates ir ese) ee Breen aa itis mt ENREVENINGS Inquire 22 Auburn, office in rear _fenced yard. FE 4-4954 0 t ch.| Cost & Found) |... 2-22... on Pic _Ingutre 22 | office in_r rE 4-49: nl Se Griese Gee bee |Hegbles & Supplies .......... ry Pepe etd tae) CE tourette Baer___OR 24008 SrECTRICIAN WELL INSTALL loge: son Semi-Traiiers C ASH 2 BoE Ta CLEAN & close 5 ee ee CPPER. ¥B igan. rsonaln ......... ot water heaters and electric , a Plans and Specifications may be se-|TRAVe! Awencier oe. 254' GOOD OPPORTUNITY: my oska wanted yy Male 10 aryers, te: Free estimate, Li ' ponte Tract ie AVATLABLE POR LAND CON- \a AND 3 ROOM pyr 5 os foe “LOWER IN cured of the Architect or the Super- WANTED tense. OR 3-47 = ndustrial Tractor Co. ACTS AND HOME EQUI- _ baths 31 Stowell “FE 42190 Wpintendent of Achools upon deposit of Wit Children to Board . _ 26 Wm. AK I: 41 PAINTING AND DECORATING ELECT CONTRACTOR — RES! iN WOCOF TIES. NO OBLIGATION. CALL ae EM APT DOWNTOWN. 912° RM APT REFRIO AND STOVB IS Ae Dollars ($20.00: which will be Wid Househol. Goods n m. enneas OR 38117 ;_dent, comm. free est FE 8-6364 \2 © Daily fneludine. Sunday. 6 $cer week Inauire x3 au) (fur Apply ei) 19) Bicomsela| Tee crea an cgee concn en) aanen to wanccanl 2A 3101 wo Huron’ ore 4.3sco 4) CARPENTER WORK NEW-/ [ELECTRICAL, AL, SERVICES ne "FE | ON ae os O nson| 2M ae pine Lo ee : ntrac "AC ron -335 | estimates artney ectric R IRST FL a re Architectural Trades Wanted *o Rent ; Open Evecings tl @ 0 eel ae One aaret TARRICLES PICKED : Car ana soe FLOOR POF #) CADILLAC MODERN « ROOM. B”—Mechanicai Trades Share Livin Quarters AVAILABLE NOW CARPENTER ppp TFs 0 R REstrOR FE 4.2533] Small chile welcome Gingellvilie, _°@‘h, gas ceat. $65 FE 42-6521. “C"—Electrieal ‘Trades [Wid Transportation 5 and ener ee pO oe oe pee rat ES ON = 1704 8 Telegraph Rd | 90 OAKLAND — bids must be aceompanied by a . racts| Mtgs. : past urdock, FE 2-78 ers FE 3-843) R 8 Munro Elec Painting & Decorating 20 ia Soon: ae BAT 23. 4 room apartments Reason- Bid pene Cashier's Check or a Certi- Voter Ree Estate “aA Man for circulation work. GarRPENTER WORK WANTED. trie Co, 1067 W_ Huron | g setld. ST CA$H | Utiities turn. ak Neu Fe able rent. See caretaker Per Gent (6%) of ee oe RENTA!> OFFERED includes all pha TES Of Be Joe (co sree’ er smell FE GUARANTEED | ROOFS — ALL| 1ST CLASS PAINTING AND DEC.| ie | #338 (340 E BLVD yarERRACE “FOR made a aot he B submitted.' sent Apts Furnished 3 Abil- Est i918 Hugus Marsh 353, ofating Cash or terms FE: WE NEED ‘7 RMS PVT BATH & ENT. LG rent 61 Marty Payable to the Board of Budca-; Rent Apts Unfurnished - sooner 34 Carrier supervision. yl- CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN- N_ Cass, FE 2-302 $ 5-9580 LAND CONT |_closets. nr downtown FE 81497 AVAILABLE = NOW 1. 2 RMS, Gers pinuanend specifications meen wey acct Rous oe eea seo eeee - ity to w rite promotion fis pi Kitchens « specialty rE ZOUSEMOVING FULLY ist CLASS INT ExT ae) athe i RACTS re ROOMS PRIVATE ENT. $8 PER ui chenetre Beth Cie eee sce returned at time {dding Con-:Rem Lake Cottages : = | _equippe: A_ Young ecorating 2860 A bas bee | BC < tractor. shall identify with his name For Rent Rooms desirable. Excellent op- CARPENTRY "30 YEAR EXP. |Gome GARAGE, CABINS, ADDI- oe PAINTING PAPER HANG iy eee ee |\7 RMS AND PYT EnTRaNcE | ouE Fure. or ‘unturn ¥B each plan and specification. which will tooms With Board t itv for v = | tions Licensed | builder PHA | Paper removed FE 46918 | ! 319 E. Pike = eee ee ee be used as a basis of signed contract Convalescen’ Homes portunity for young man) map’ lett eutiees DORM Y 324 |_terms FE 4-69 a PAINTING AND PAPERING | FE T ROOMS [LWEAT. SIDR CHANDLER AVE (00ST PLOON set. No Bid will be accepted from any Hote! Rooms. with good ideas. [| - -ARPENTER Seine ROUGH AND BaTCH PLASTERING NO JOB) Mason Thompson, +8364 Nicholle & Harger Co. _ployed iady FE 2-6524 ~ flat Basement parking $35 mo, og paced ae ae ee Rem Office Space a | finish Free estimates FE 40447 |“ too large or too small. Very | 1 PAINTING INTERIOR & EX 20_W. HURON FE 58183 7 ATTRACTIVE ROOMS. ADULTS COLORED — APT FOR RENT. ject nay ana aH ties ane 16 pane re- Rent, Lease Bus Prop. 418 PERE axonx after cane a or FE. §-00 terior 10 per cent-dise for cash ‘CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. only FE 8-3473 pee ae irregularities. when in the. opinian at/Rent_ Farm Property 4B App eta eee ren ais FE 8049 mo ENGST REPAIR REAS | Guaranteed Free est. PE 4.6205 H J. VanWelt 4540 Dinte Hwy J ROOM PRIVATE ENTRANCE, DUPLEX IST FLOOR. 3 ROOMS wr. ‘ Fac Linq aaa a e - oO A ; ali ft all utilittes mat close the Owner such action will serve the pest "0" Per’. M ° Circulation Department |EXPERIENCED | DRUMMER Rg 6 SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING ao EAN TING 18 DECORATING a AN ullities tarnistied. $18 Or Teed syicecomoromny lcd) (Center gana sar © nee meee District ieee ESTATE ed THE PONTI Ne PRESS sy uebie. for Leet a nights @ “sanding and finishing Phone FE} Free estimates. Phone FE 4-0950 | IMMEDIA Take FE 2375 euare’ _2-2390 a wn after closing time rok ale Houser 4 = : é “SS wee a _3-5434 after 5 p.m §-$592 | ae | . ~~ wk © ni ah lester ialerace tape Teeired to For Bale Lake Proverte al | NSID™ «| OUTSIDE PAINTING | a ROOF REPAIRS EAD TEE On peconaren | neve CAND, BATH VrEER 4 a rn a ue HD ns furnish One Hundred Per Cent (100%)|For Sale Resu~ Property eee 4A Sap) Blasterboard tepair. plastering & EAVESTROUGHING FE 4.0944 PAPERHANGING — PAINTING | CTION Pris eptr. | utll.. Weatside 02 Syl Frigidaire and stove also furn. Performance, Labor and Material Bonds Suburban Property ....... 454 MARRIED MAN. RETIRED OR! plumbing. FE Pea 8 Plaster Rev Stephen Navarre van Ct, inquire 57 Edwards FE if desired For info phone FB DwioE Ce WigRMAN, oo etadaal erm. “co wae) ereeter cere Mi | aan i) GOULD Eine” WORE OP “Atlan ALOE MNES | gre east onl Ge We Sua Se es sa e bi er eenees { seaso § i Roardior Facation Bet Sale Acreage ceeeseae 47 Joos Re arences Write FO Box| _A5y_kind. No selling, FE_#008/.| M Building servies Wi 57606 or eee HANGING | Isfactory Inspection. of “poe sar 3 BMS. TEND) BATE ENTE FOR RENT SMAI J APARTMENT: Oc n, \For Sale Farms .....++ BO60r é oom fie 3 eh. MIDDLE AGED MAN WISHES —¢¥¢s ! and title. Ask Ken Templeton. | FE 37373. I . Bees : = #18 Sale Business Property .......-. 49 REAI ESTATE SALESMEN OR| work of any kind. EM” 3-679. TRENCHING EXCAVATING FOR PAINTING ~ eee : Commerce and Unton Lake area. ‘Por ae or Exchange ......... 50| wii trai person living in vicin- RELIABLE CARPENTE | tle tanks Field tile, footings ALLS CLEA empleton, Realtor (3° : ROOMS. BARGAIN ATTRAC-) Reasonable rent Write Box 115, To the ee LECTION | pina | tty of Ortonville. Clarkston Ox. work. Prices RENN Pa 5.d NEEDS) pethes & post wells OL 1-863, | TOPPER __ FOR. 3-708) 2139 Orchard Lake Ra FE ¢- ne pteder BPE 75002. Sunday, pen! —Fontise Fee 8 Notice is hereby given, that a General: gusiaese Op muse si ford or Holly area Draw against Watt WASHING AND WINDOW] WE BUILD BASEMENTS UNDER Television Service 22 ‘Ready, Willing and Able |_¢ay ana after 530 pm.’ » HOLLYWOOD SS y Election will be held in the Township Sale Land Contracts ...... . 53; Realtor Ortonville. NA 7-281 cleaping Reasonable. Free estt-| eee Block & cement work Cash buyers waiting for your land 3 ROOMS, PVT BATH. STEAM Furnished or unfinished, & 3 of Pontiac, State of Michigan. at: [Mones to Loan... .. Yee pe ee 3-3796_& FE 5-0084 ALL TV SERVICE CAL an | contract, Call Realtor Partridge. | heat, day. workers, no drinking | Heceriae Fels Cars ne ct No. 1—2060 Opdyke Roa poooe _ WANT JOB DRIVING SMALL swered prompt! pays oh aight 3581. E_2-9054 401 N. Paddock. _ SOM ALORS tees America’s most profitable business, i. 3.a ic } AND 2 BM. Poses obs eas apa Hae MERCHANDISE home water sonaiioners Car nec.| Pick up, FE 4799 Business Services 13 RAFAL ye sn | SHOP. aRcure THEN SEE us 3 RMS & BATH STOVE. RE- lene ‘ Be a aaae ya Pye Precinct No. 42338) Joalyn Road gwate ceveseseseees. 55) essary, experience in direct sales) WILL DO WORK "OF ANY KIND 5 oa land contract |. frigerator. gas & Nghts furn. | lenala! 2018 8s - Precinct a.)4=9210/ Joslyn red 7 (eames peerdeddaee soo breferred ~All leads fuppished. FE 55381 MEE ONSET "DAY OR \NIOHT TV SERVICE | Rai Sones & LOAN CO, |Syivan Lake 4 rm. Until May Ist an Precinct No. 6—2060 Opdyke Road Bel ee This ad may change your entire RELIABLE \7 4 per mon ss within said Township on Tuesday. No- Valentine Gitte Goose ees ea "MA" 62356, _Work Wanted Female WV Foret esp iestia aes CEE MADie MF STR AKA, | Wanted Real Estate 32A, Russell A. Nott, Realtor |¥4F GF. stuDI0 Arete bath, vember 4, 1958, for the purpose of Xmas Gifts ...... iii] §9 SALES MANAGER FOR LEADING i aaa 21206 Nore EMSA): vNGENS V,,APTERNOOR AND AAA 110 W, Pike FE 6-5008, neat eights stove. refri electing the following officers, viz: [Christmas Trees... ......- 59A | mater cohen pl ee dale DAY IRONING SERVICE. $3) ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS | ——— ——_- | CASH enecue PRIVATE BATH & PRI-| « $53 Per Mo or $15 per ek State—Governor, Lieutenant Governor, |For Sale Miscellaneous .... 60) tv oor ee en 1 4-3573; pusbet oick mp and delivery FE! repaired by factory trained man Upbolstering 23 gate ent 7” E aa 82 days: after Call PAUL A KERN Inc. Secretary of State, Attorney General, Machinery me OR goa _for appointment. 5-147] | at our office Geosrall Crentina & ee Ces FoR oun AOME on equiry | pm FE 5-2 for appointment FE 2-9200 State Treasurer, Auditor General. Be curse! : Co at SOLICITOR MUST HAVE OWN/1 pay fRONTHO SERVICE” $3 BT | Office Supply Co Law| mAKLE’s CUSTOM UPHOLSTER: bver! our) orapettel tor) a) cash) ROOMS)CALL OTT ILITIES LAUN ss | — Congressional—United States Senator,! Cameras tA oe Benuoce o* car Peat weekly wage, tus | | Tence St Phone rE. 30138. ing aris Cooley Lake EM > sale In many casec we can Ret dry rooms neat clean. well fur: MODERN 6 ROOM APT. OIL nPgisativer state Sertor, Representa. sfusical Instruction. ..cccc1! @4A| ike Press stating name, address, 7 GraMEN rag oT SARIN ti faunas Maakeres Ws) | Eaurugh Maan SlverS ermal ocly'ih elnegrove "PMS" Slt Site Trogais 20 tive |Sale Office Equipment .. 63° phone Peat house cleaning FE 3 ieinwrecsieoman THOMAS GPHOLETESING = [mp cauities gee sie inc; ne res Ouyets for adults only, 16 Pinegrove _ pauire | 10S Ee toguots one. | 362 W Gaatstrmcuuny auoroen, spe GA Macon oo H wanted RLDEREY War 70)" OIE TA of ade wove ef GANG, RUE sayy | TT PD STE A as omy Me Bone hae Aa OFF MERE fini Seat erk an egister o! eeds. | trunti A A on farm ve enant | ti F iv akland 2-402) | 44813 Ask for Mr ark c FOSS net a , County Treasurer, Auditor in Counties Hunting Accommodations nl GREE yiiss Hurd Ra. Oxford. ton Pe aie MIGETY BONE _BULLDOZING # TREE CUTTING | ___ Lost & Found ead pyrocus we uf ATE Fe coy a Kasra batragor, ana gen ther officers ahrs) OSS WELL KNOWN GALES ORGANIZA.| —Reas Pick up > del, FE at | EE 20063 or FE 41878 | ey LADY ® BLACK FRAME, Emergency Singer . ee oe ELIEARETE LAKE. YEAR TO caaas at that time. Prants. Series 64| tian ean use 2 men in Pontiac|BABY SITTING DAY OR NIGHT BLOOMFIELD WALL ‘Reasonable bifoca) glasses on Main nr. | 7 |} ROOM APTS CLEAN ROOMY | are pleasant for eo: -Partisan Election for the purpose! ror Sale 60 arya 1 x Walled Lake Estab-| Loving care FE 2-1730 > Fp Heatd FE 2.1631 __post office in Clarkston, Se 3-9663, elling out my homes es vt For couples Utilitie. furn | _ple No drinkers. FE 2-4160 one ~ irotien ing officers, viz: Hunting Do a gus shea ; Ls = wy eee per week DAY WORK WANTED. CALL AFT- mere a ee SERVICE RE LOST: LADY'S BENRUS WRIST. nat LP bal tere sy ie $100_monthis _FE ee | ORCHARD CT. APTS, re’ ‘ou! ‘om missioners. Dogs Pathan’ Boarded arenes sta rf essentia 5 p.m. FE 4 watch, Witoat band. Reward.! UNCH” | APT SLEEPING we © A - = pa & re winding 218 EB Pike CH" speak for themselves. ? AIR CONDITIONED did te vote on the foligwing Constita-) | say wire HARDISS To ne Press xP GIRL wines GENERAL FE $398) len aac latipes want elquech raleiteri your] fOrittee aduite FEL 47090 Pontiac's most exclusive west hs Mel ig to cou. (Gay. Grain 6 Peedi cecores. Ti) cones TO WORK IN FU-| housework or child care. Wil! Ronan CLEANED ANb | LOST: BLACK DACHSHUND, IN| house or anythin ng in real estate; | side apartment dexrticoment rent- sider Revisio Amendment of the\Por Sate Livestock \ agceconee | Can be Hetuacd or an aopomntice. eta some nights. CoA. TRNACES, L. Nelson, FE sizes, | Vicinity, of Ra Biease and me phone me immediately - PLEASE : eooms ERIVATE BATH AND) ing fast, only six 1 and 2 bed- ~. tec. Livestoe ecuwseccnes XP. IN CHI ACARE. CLEAN- ‘ ‘ e a es fur-| room apts. ieft Balcony. one. in- tution for subsequent) a, § Give previous employment, age LD GAS AND OIL FURNACES. 8ER RV- __3-4666. | h #or Sai» itr SANE TL 4 cook JOLL REALTY nished 616 weekly One ee fe dividual entrances, uti- bpsodage separ) tnd loan the Rrocters/ ot this St® gals, Farm roduce ..ssesccs 1, qunrters furnished, ont Living| traueportalions @1 $135 he EM 3.4070 fee Bil makes’, Free ‘estimates | Lost: PLACK PURSE IN KRES. | 2536 pike Hwy FE 4561) baby welcome Anpiv | ful iitchens ‘eh stove and refrig. P Sale Parm Bau'pment seauccone 18 ed. Pontiac Press =; eae 2456. ge'’s infants ,wear. Reward. FE) CasH FoR YOUR HOUSE — we “'S"? furnished. Auto heat and Qot Also any additional amendments OF) Anetion Sa'e " 0. OR UNDERGRADUATES AND Top > SD EE 5-4870 } | HOUSE — WE wate also tacnoheds Aduie Propositions that may be submitted. mene re cess = practiac) nurses Call FE 28402; INSTALLED FREE | _2:4870. wate D SMALL HOMES. UP TO). Sanne _ alec (mize tatalsnrd kduite) ceey. cme reiative te opening ‘end ckca=t we bee Me od i * cha a . Poe ilsbice te ee Mufflers & tail pipes. cee kgie. Vice Hemi k Mae $000 orn SECT ES burn GIANG AH TOWER AC. Ger |e touch eile wanker, of t Hs. far Bar setraiier® .....6.-- ange cense: and bonded ea . >. i) ver-, FE 4-5203 t ; a : ith th iy Election 1 law, Act 116, P.A. 1954. Rent Trailer ‘Bomce cee... ee . HOUSEKEEPER FOR Mornen. [follerback Auto Parts | _ nots. OLive 1-1325. |HAVE BUYERS FOR LAND cow FE 200010. MT Gardiner at 18 Balmer 8t. On the day of any elec: Autp Accessortae BP eee nN RENT IT FAST! ‘ess home. or 3-36 |340 Baldwin, FE 8-1431 or FE 3-9477 LOST: SNAPSHOTS VICINITY OF ‘racts and home equities Rea 4 ROOM FURNISHED APART. EE 8 6018 tion the. pelle shall be” opened 1| Pop Sele fires =... bo acca ePee aa NES work |LET US ESTIMATE YOUR DRIVE. Waltes and Kresge’s, Please rel ee’ Soman! SPC leromor teG ee 3 hed oh lta toler | Lotti shall bel Sa’ Mets: beockers wy throw! Rent Ads! Room Can. tive, in References Write, pact aoprkine bots, ete (Weliheip Sum ERE Ss0el. , Cee ALL & SUNDAY tfternoan tod opén until bo clock in the Por ‘Maca Mcharavetes : | ieee Burl > LOST HALF - GROWN BLACK. | GEORGE BLAIR \¢ pr ereemee LOWER “HEATED. 10 AM THROUGH 9 PM @ no longer. Every qua 1 I A: ving white & yellow kitten, vic. Cla REALTOR a ‘the i Gebers ane hate arg | pedbheoten : a gs house apartment,—any- AGanstierd Fr eo ie e urke aspuele Paving | ian kland FE 4-730}, Rewaet | 4338 ORLY LOR et, OR 41251 4 one. ea BATH evr ENTR- Ls Tor sair Airpianes : 6 , : CADY Wises PR. PERSCRIPTION | AINS) estside Inquiry 95 Dwight , i to vote. transportation ered 8? ‘ G shout, fete Ee BE, AN ORNAMENTAL AND GENER? L rae oe Montcalm, near N | Sves OR 31708 |4 ROOMS AND BATH “GROUAD NEI D A FINA NCE. che ot aid election will be opeM Wan.ed User Cars / aa thing ; ~— Want Ads give Pp masonry small medium or jarze Baginaw. F E 4-4385. ~ | fioor Nicely furnished and d ae ee My 7, efclock, a.m. wand oa Soke Wanted Used Trucks vv... oad Mio Aner GENERAL OF OFFICE commeretsl or residential Reve. | Ost. IN VICINITY OF “Manta. | rated 11 chikd welcome re FIXER? Order Classified clock = p.m. teeeenense experience | of Columbus—8, Saginaw. 17 roll ’ 9 after 4 p.m . . ction, ave x, | Atte Bieatee Stic Usen Trucks ........ ‘ee you ACTION... Dial FE/a ATURE, COMPANION NORGE Fly ‘PLASTERING - w OR eam of him, § Boxes of slides. Blue om non oo SH IN A= RM MATN “Gas BEAT Fe “48 to sell, rent, find a. eee ov. for. care whi bre basi - oye fit good 28 ~. ; ognly fe mit Foreign “h ‘Bpe Sports C Gant i555: oon n/2-8181. invalig or som! invaita Write Pon aah mT ae fore 1 anket and other pare) fa! = sr | things} 2 ui Le S__Pa <= a job. FE 181 is sb seceseeep ess Box No. 65. Manley Leach 10 Bagley St. one Reward. FE 8-000. r ugh assified Ads. |° gsun rbaddeek FE 2-1720. ithe Want is ee THE PONTIAC ‘PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, ocToBER 21, 1958 4) Help Wanted Female 7{5LICES OF HAM: ea FUNERAL HOME FUNERAL HOME nbulance Serv , Donelson-lohns | __*Dianed fot Faerie _ Voorhees Siple| Service.Piane or Motor 2-A9T® PN AE Me at eden -~ see oer A Cemetery Lots 5 “I¢ Raye & Lor. NO NO. * soutniea ee wiper ne oe ENERAL HOUSEWORK. ¢ BAYS. COMPLETE COLD ' 7 50 - Derothy’s 600 Pers. FE AEROTREDS KNAPP SHOES EVERYONE'S DUTY — Hfting, a piockhol & Lage g BACHELOR Fooms ang Perey. : corse Apts. GLEAN. : Pred 4 OR 3-1602 5 2 Soe ET ae EP fo CaaS EY he ol ae Army. HAVE CASH WILL FOR COLORED BEAUTY IS 3 rooms and bath All utilities TRAVEL We qil! travei to see vou show vou how to get cash furn. Located on the south e of town on Prosnect street, Riley Real Estate, 4-4621 and for . ot “LAKE ORION. ~< Bed- TWENTY-FOUR For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 42 Rent Houses Unfurn. - 36 PARTLY FURNISHED 2 BEDRM} FOR RENT ‘OR SALE 5 ROOMS fiat with garage, clean, pleasant., and bath, garage attached, wall- On Duck Lake road near M59.| to-wall carpeting, acre la Box 133 Garden City, Michigan. y : close to schools an “churches on PARTLY "FURN 2 RMS & BATH lars street at Auburn Hgts. no SMALL H HOME, oF’ OWNER. move in, = gt 8 eee 3-2681 oF. LOW DOWN bees '. ment. Bacrifice for for cash. 141 " 04-6388. Util furn. 109 Williams. FE _8-0784 _ — GOOD RENTALS ‘Frame 5 rm Garage, $69.50, Brick 6 room. Bungalow § rooms. Trans. $75 Gerry Van Real Estate OA 8-1160. HOUSE FOR RENT. UNFUR- _nished. 2585 Dixie Hwy. “UNION COURT Are you looking for a clean at- tractive apartment where the peo- ple are quiet yet friendly? These 3 room & bath apts. rent for $49 per month Nice and warm. S 7 BEDROOM “HOME BY OWNER, small down a pays . EM 3-5522. Exceptions SpE soos — throughout. Ni rooms. Full and extra toilet. Pull basement. ayy heat New garage. $1500 down mailer home as part 452. Adults only in this building. K.G. Tem teee 2 E. Huron St.|LARGE 6 ROOM BRICK DUPLEX. pay aeat FE 2-5 FE 48284 or after 5 FE 5-7871| Gas heat. Newly decorated. Adults | aope NEAR R “UTILITIES! 762 W. Huron FE 8-3338. u bs PER 4 ROOMS ish ‘children welcome. | | MODERN 1 BEDROOM, 8 MILES 473 | west of Pontiac, $55 @ month. WEST SIDE WEBSTER AND _ FE 5-4324 Washington Jr High area — 6 NEW 2 BEDROOM HOME ON E rooms, gas heat $90 mo Long Lake. Phone FE 5-1958. 2 bedrooms upper apt. Wisner anc | NewLY REMODELED 5 ROOMS | Lincoln Jr Higb area §55 m and bath on 1 acre of land. Be- Ca. before 5° FE 4-2521 or after 5/ tween Oxford and Metamora, $65 FE 5-1172 per month. H. P. Holmes, Inc. \ i> ROCHESTER. 2 bedrm 23 ft. livingrm., diningrm., carpeted, basement, ‘turnace — verge caress. Lovely older home. $13, — $4,000 down. OL 1-3466. 1-3466. 2 BEDROOM HOME, HARDWOOD floors, large rooms, lake priv. $1000 down. Terms. PE 8-1178. BY OWNER EAST SIDE. MOD- ern 24famiw or 4 bedrm., 2 tiled pees and kitchens. Garage. FE 66 OW. Huron OWER ™m modern, auto, hee 4 take. privileg beach. ipke, orien grt TH PONTIAC 6 ra. —— Make an offer, q in Auburn Heights. Trade possession. Price $1 4,000, terms. PE. 5-2443. - WATERFORD APTS. \N. JOHNSON 3 BEDROOMS COM- 3 cave, unturn. §65 per mo. | pletely remodeled, gas heat, $75 HITE BROS. | a mo. Also 4 bedrooms on State OR 3-1295 . | St. newly decorated $70. FE 7260 $660 Dixie Hwy eli : Open Eves ul @. Sun 10 “tt! Ey Tick 4 BEDRM HOME. I's YEAR ROUND 2 BEDRM WOL- baths Northside. FE 5-2487 Lk front MA 4 43173 RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY ss ne 1 ee Newly remodeled 4 rooms and base- ment on Hopkins St. §75 monthly. E rnished 35 4 Rooms 1 acre. Near Waterford Rent Houses _ BE Ca High School, $55 month: Rest applied on price of property BEDROOM SPOTLESS! ALT" No down payment, FE 45203. grocery FE 2-4855..SAM WARRICK HAS 2 US brick in Sy'van Lake ev- 2 BEDRM. WALLED LAKE i, e:'y Gas heat. unfinished attic, Close to city Reas MA € car port carpet. take priv., im- 7 BEDROOM. EAST SIDE. AUTO ! mediate possession. $105 lease. washer @ ryer FE 46225 FR 4-5000 or FE 2-2105. 2 BEDROC ODERN WITH GA- SILVERCREST SUBDIVIBION, 2- rage. Auto oi] furnace $75 Until bedroom, modern. MI. 6-3263 May Ist Deposit required. 6797 Sart HOUSE. 3 ROOM WITH = rabeth Lake _ ee 2 BEDROOM MODERN HOU mr Pontiac §70 monthly. 3-4322 ee } BEDROOM HOUSE. VERY MOD- ern, Walled Lake area. KEnwood, Lf THO 3 ) BEDROOM | FULLY EQUIPPED | _ parking, near os FE 4-7059 SYLVAN LA 3 rooms and bath, fu a basement: $40 monthly. FE 4-6089. UNION LAKE Cozy 1 bedroom home, stove and refrigerator furnished. Lake privi- EM for ® inte Chiidr+,) welcome. OR leges. $65 month, EMpire 3-6515. 3416 ________ss WEST SIDE TERRACE, COM- 3 errr & BATH VERY NICE , letely remodeled entirely new FE 44419 ee itchen newly decorated, gas PARTLY FURN AT heat. no children, $99 per mo -8159 years old. auto Cai] TOwnsend 1 BE HHeOM P Ls ut OEMs For Rent Rooms 37 BEDROOM HOt ALL UTILITIES FURNISHED, COL- Lake MA 4-3408 A 3 ROOMS AND BATH _ CROOKS: thes pocly Lahti § am an Rd. adu FE ¢ ROOM CorTAGE: ie r wictians *T, BUS gTUR. IN Rice ROME R ren w cf mouth Inquire 478] Dixie Hwy. BUS STOP COOKING & ae Sat or S _dry pvt. ent.. 499 W_ Huron. Rk OOMS — RAD y BATH COMBINA-|NICE ROOM MEALS IF DESIRED For a ree home Very reas. an sun porch-utility room| = = ae Core ty ¥ nes EE BAAgO,.. FE 2-8006 NICE QUIET HOME Bus oe 46 ROOM | HOUSE “IN KEEGO| door laundry. Breakfast if de- Siar joe 41039 | sired. Near Tel-Huron, 762 W. 5 RMS & BATH, FULL BASE-|_ Huron FE _8-3338 oe ment. gas beat, garage Adults, EEE ASE NT ROOM FOR BUSINESS he dy. FE 44323 or FE 2-3876. __breterred al Warbongfellow | ‘BATH. BASEMENT, $70,RM FOR REFINED LADY. HOME Twin Beach EM 32532 privii, OR 3-2966, before 1 p.m. 5 RMS, KEEGO $40 GAS s HEAT. \SINGLE ROOM. REFRIGERATOR. ma 3 welcome. 1 8-349: Pvt ent Parking lot 88 wk 980 89 | Cottage. FE 8-277 LL RENTAL NEEDS SATISFIED SLEEPING ROOMS BOARD IF | are & apartments furnished! desired. 355 Baldwip Ave. FE | or unfurnished ail areas & price) 4-1039 ranges | WEST SIDE ROOM, FOR BUSI- ARRO RLTY girls. kitchen & laundry 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Rd 5-6666 5 RMS ness beth FE_5-3030 $-3030 privileges FE 2-0015 or FE CASS LAKEFRONT — NEW AND Rooms With Board 38 RS CO IE very modern 3 bedroom $90 per, month ti! June, 1959 Deposit re- quirea Aliso one $4875 $55 Call Jack LST FLOOR, COMFORTABLE room witb or without board. FE 8-0427 _toveland, | FE 2- FIVE ROQM FURN HOUSE, . MOD. | ern Will rent te quiet couple AND ROOM with References for the winter Pasa posry * only) in Near Fisher Body. Write Pontiac large lovely home near Pontiac Wi!l have transportation to church and shopping g OR 3-1943 _ Press Box WO LAKE ORION 6 RMS AND BATH | | ' | Electric stove oil heat. Furn_ or GENTLEMEN — Good FOOD, a Call afler 4 pm MY “clean modern home FE 2-0318. 278i) __C_____C_m—m__~—C ROOM FOR TWO MEN. TWIN LOTUS LAKE WATERFORD beds. Large closet. Meals as de- | Smal] modern 1 bedroom. partly « a furn Couple or with one child sired FE 23420 OR 3-5929 SOMETHING [REAL NICE, come = aT & see 1 atthews "MACEDAY LAKEFRONT HOME. INE EE Ss meee 3 bedroom. year around, ol] heat VACANCY FOR ELDERLY PER- fireplace stal] shower, etc $100) sons, bedridden or ambulatory. mo OR 3-2577 _FE > 8371 MODERN F.OUSE $65 MONTH ul val scent Homes | (38A Elgin 3-0788 or EM_ 3-002]. Con valescent H NEAR UNION LAKE ? BEDRMS.|y,ve VACANCIES MEN OR circulatore heat full bath, elec women Bed or ambulatory pa- store. $50 mo. OR 3-8725 ss tients accepted Eagy rates Rose OXBOW LAKE : FRONT ne hiscde _lLane Rest Home, t room modern nicely nishe | pocm) moder ean Cold A | MOPENING SOON Taylor, Realtor, OR 40306 | Glen-Acres Nursing Home Now @MALL HOUSES FOR RENT IN accepting applications For in- uire at 1676 Taylor Rd, ask formation cal! FE 8-8013 a for Lonnie Weaver ®E 42031 | = SMALL 3 ROOM HOUSE ON CASS- Hotel Rooms 3 _ Eliz Rd. $53_per_mo_ _FE_ 4-2252 aaa ia HOTEL AUBURIN Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 by Day or Week | Stekine Sag? retrigersbon, units “aan and refrigeration un 2 OR DIT TERRACE, $75 A Mo. aban 2-6239 3 BEDROOMS RAMON A TER Rent Office Space 41 _ #155 4% BLOCK FROM SEARS ON Oakland — 2 large rooms. heated FE 3-9826 J BEDROOM HOME FULL BASE.| ment Near schools On busiine | Children welcome FE 8-2267. aft-' er 5 pm 800 SQ FT GROUND FLR. PARK- 2 BEDROOM “MODERN i SMALL. iMg.-gas heat 2 Lavatories. W. H. Knudsen: FE 4-451 quiet family References. No pets. 4-4 ia 343 month OLive 1-4034 _| "WALLED LK 2 | NEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL FOR business or professional men. 640 BEDRM one to clty Reas MA fgets fa ft. Ae Parking. Reas. J FAMILY 335 LIBERTY STREET — fS°*-_ au 5 and Ans lower. 4 and bath, SMALL OFFICE FOR RENT ON _upper. FE 2-8616 after 5 30 pm first floor in good business area. Taam OL_1-1112, 3 RMS AND BATH a PER MO. FE 8-06 43 For Sale Houses For Colored 3 ROOMS & BATH, \ Sees | tor & stove room for 1 baby | Exc. OR 34587 mo. 7612 Gale} a xo A 3 BEDROOMS. CHILDREN WEL-' come. gas heat. FE 80784. 649 Here 13 the best value ever. __Lounsbury Vacant and redecorated like new 3 BEDROOMS AND BATH, GAS 2 bedrooms and bath dewn_and heat, ciose in $55 FE 2-4777 2 bedrooms Up. Oi] heat. Price } BEDRM MODERN, 865 A MO $11.500, and only $500 down. 8 room ideal large family home Full price $5,000, only $800 down. To settie estate 2 bedrm.. modern $55 a month Cc PANGUS _ REALTOR NA 71-2815 } BEDROOM HOME $100 PER MO bee Mrs Howard, 18 Gillespie ‘Call FE 43894 or Phone FE 2-6412. John 3 ROOM HOUSE WITH BATH, $50 Kinsler Realtor, 670 W Huron St month 10 Buffalo, Clarkston §uMMER COTTAGE. SUITABLE 3 BEDROU.f MODERN. YEAR for couple ose round. $3,500 arcund Ful basement Central terms or §3,000 cash, OR 3-2860. _heat, 885 1 month EM_3-3630 ~ Immediate Possession | Jwner retiring to Florida. Will sell 3 bedroom modern home 2' lots. Garage, basement awnings. TE RECOM FLAT UNFURN. 1 EM 2 3 AND 5 RM HOUSES INQUIRE _22_ Auburn, off Saginaw _ Beautiful arivate yard. $8500 — 4 ROOM HOUSE ape ‘MONTH = Terms - _ FE 5-1 a 4RM HOUSE & oot NO BASE- OR F ment Will accept 2 small chil- attraciiye bene clean end mee dren WN inking References ex- ern, with plenty of wife appea changed Crane ya CITE RS $500 down, $8,500 total. ¢ ROOM HOUSE $40 PER 2 MONTH ALSO _180 Raeburn FE 8-286 Tri-level startér home on paved 4 ROOM HOUSE. PARTLY (FUR road. Wil) duplicate. $6450, Noth- hished $50 nto. EM 3-4 ing down. ¢ ROOMS. OF DOUBLE nOu Usk, OAKLAND COUNTY REALTY furnace firepiace, all modern 2614 UNION LK. RD. 855 9 FE 5-006 EM 3-4164 or EM 3-2411 after 6 p.m. 4 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITY $450 DOWN _toom FE 2-6332 or FE 2-578 NO MORTGAGE COST @ ROOM HOME FOR RENT. 1018 3 bedrm brick Frame & tri- _Premont «rear! Huron Gardens level Full basement tee pee 4 ROOM “MODERN COTTAGE. (ake privileges Waterfora Twp. aGOIG BGRONIICA noscae Geyde We © WaT 1S NEN 602 Mt Clemens ___ FE 5-9: = 3} BEDRM. HOME NEARLY “NEW . (MOB RMS Ba i — ae Carport & garage. Workshop. R144 “ Lovely tot, plenty e shrebpery. 5 ROOM HOUSE COLD AND HOT any erect oe water bath Watkins Lk. subdi- “a STARTER HOME a! inns ne CATE crown, —Fisttley. builder EM _3.0082__ st } I ot water $50 month | WALLED LAKE CITY rone FE 4-4388° 3 bedrm. a2-story home, Full OME TO RENT AVAIL-. bath full basement,, all nice once $50 mo 916 Pre-: large rms Auto. oil furnace. hot lone Mr Gilford, FE, water heater. very comfortable ek eee, arena lot ose schools an shopping ROOM Peat F BIVD | -center $750 down. very Bay oe | term< on baia EWLY DECORATED, MUTART. REALTY E ban near airpert. $ * 2410 S| Commerce MA 4-2391 amo FRE @2pey SALE BY OWNER [(MMEDIATE | » RMS cenit RATH 2337 PINE possession Elizabeth Lk. Estates Lax» Ave Keeen Harbor $63 mo > rooms 2 bedrooms, ful}-tase- LI 90658 ment Gas heat $11.500 Cash to 5 ROOM EAST BLVD TERRACE mortgage. FE 35-4651 or OR 3-0337 Cran FE 22048 esiie to asians ae eet @ poo MODERN REWLDEC. (4 REAL BARGAIN, 3 BEDRM Corts r fome 6 rms. & bath. Den, 1% ated. Gas heat FE 4-6754 after bo isan ThaaSibal ts Tociween 6 RMS & BATH CLOSE TO: Pike & Auburn. $8. 150. Small-dn. schools. churches, stores 1 block payment. FE 5. as Saginaw Ing ulre 25 E How. ar & ROOM WEST SIDE HOME. COM. pletely remodeled #75 per mo _Call Resitor Partridge FE 43581 @ RMS. NEWLY DECORATED PAYMENT ol heat Near schools §75 mo 2.0788. — 2 of 3 bedroom starter homes, With full basement and rough wir- 10 RM HOUSE. FE 39243 Ine ee rout jot or will bulld on _$!8 PER MO 4 RM HOUSE CHIL. oUF Io bel tol smail down pay dren 2685 Orchard Lk Ave po ele as a han elk 1238 A LOVELY “2 BEDROOM HOUSE aAfter-6. OR 3-1038 Large tack porch fenced yard ol References FE 8-3320 . it GRACE 7 BUNGALOW — west side KEAR. OAVE ENERGY, USE oe Hurer ideal for working f i. WANT ADS! To find a s heat. newly aes ee dining room tehen | . ¢ Rareesidp coca nets: (jou, place to live or 2 1e1] W Huron, Ask for Mr. er good used car, see Classi- i Ne lfied NOW DOURLE HOUSE FOR RENT, Fw|'ICd NU NY ! 5 | REALTOR NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY BEFORE THE SHIFT BUYER'S MARKET TO A SELLER‘S MARKET EAST SUBURBAN Attractive, Adams Road on quiet street. Priced for quick sale — §7,300 LAKE FRONT—WEST SUBURBAN House and arage, attractive & neighborhood. Will sacrifice for * EAST sIDE Nice 5-room bungalow with fire- lace. Price $9500. HIS ONE! Smith- Wideman REAL ESTATE OPEN EVES 412 W. HURON FE 4-4526 KNUDSEN North Side Take a look at this lovely 2 bedroom ranch home. Family sized kitchen with eating space and picture window overlooking a well- landscaped fenced yard, Ce- ramic tile bath. Full base- ment, gas heat. 1'g-car ga- Hi near bus and stores. FHA terms HURRY ON Indian Village 3 Bedroom brick near Web- ster School. Carpeted living room dining room and den. Ceramic tile bath, fireplace and many other features. Also # garage and well land- scaped yard, Call us now. WM. H. KNUDSEN 244 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 44516 Evening No. FE 2-8503 SYLVAN LAKE Sam Warwick has new 3 bedrm. brick tri-level. High basement, lake ovrivileges Lm Sherw FE 2-2105 Open Sunday Dorris & Son COLONIAL HOME 4 Bedrooms $14,975 . Ideal family home, spacious and very livable throughout. gleaming oak floors, and plastered walls modern kitchen with formica top counters, and built in break- fast nook, one bedroom and half. bath down three ex- ceptiona] bedrooms and bath up, full basement, recreation room, fenced lot. privileges on Elizabeth Lake FHA Terms Gl SPECIAL 81X ROOMS $7,950 We invite comparison we feel this ig the best house for the Maney on the mark- et today, bsm’t., new Tim- ken oil furnace gps porch, 2 car gare pave st. Webster school district. $375 should handle : FHA SPECIAL $8,950 with Fireplace 24x36 bungalow, plus large front and rear porch, base- ment, oil heat, oak floors, plastered walls, colored bath fixtures nice kitchen, good residential location, and car garage. $750 should han- dle. DORRIS & SON REALTORS WE TRADE 752 W Huron 2-bedroom home off OWNER LEAVING 8TA TE, WILL sacrifice my 1954 custom built Ottawa Drive home, Or exchange for CHICAGO suburban, Immed- late possession. FE 45002, BALDWIN-WALTON AREA 190 W. Columbia. Room: room frame. Built 1946, lastered walls, utility ee: auto fence, Only No 2 og If no ans. vz Piet Immediate Occupancy ALL BRICK FULL BASEMENT 44-FT. RANCH CITY SEWER & WATER $13,990 INCLUDES LARGE LOT BUILT-IN OVEN & RANGE CARPETING COLORED PLUMBING CAN 5040" INn- SEE THIS BEAUTIFUL RI RANCH TODAY! You'll love the 24 ft. kitch- en, complete with built-ins. Locate new subdivision adjoining Isaac Crary and Eliza Leggit schools. Unusu- al opportunity. See Miss Becker at 3564 Mark Rd. 1 block north M59 and Cass Lake Rds. OPEN 1-8 P.M. WEEKENDS OPEN 3-8 P.M. WEEKDAYS FEDERAL HOMES CORP. FE 8-8623 PHONE FE 41557 STOUT'S Best Buys Today hr BIRD HUNTERS Would you like to walk out the back door to Rood hunt- Then investigate this and bath charmer in Orion Twp. Hillside ‘leca- tion with partially exposed basement, hot water heat. family room. $11,900 with 3 large bedrooms. paneled terms GO HOME To tunch if you work at Pontiac Engineering. This 3 bedroom ranch is just 5 minutes away Featuring oil heat, oak floors, handy util- room, 1'2 car garage with paved drive. $1,250 dawn. FHA FALT FISHING Is best at Sugden Lake, and you'll have Lake privi- leges With the purchase of this 6 room and bath home built for living. Just 5 years young with fencing and land- scaping. Full basement, plas- tered walls, storms and screens Carpeting and drapes included. $11,000 with terms. $500 DOWN 8 rooms and 2 baths with room for In-Laws. Needs some completion work but priced way below market al $7,500. Call now. BUILDING SITE 745x154 in Bensons Old Or- chard Sub. Within walking distance to Waterford finest schools. $500 down. Kdw. M. Stout, Realtor 71 N. Saginaw St. Open till 6:00 pm. Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE W. Side, 4 Bedrooms Here's a charming older home on Henry Clay Ave close to Cen- ‘tral High and Crofoot schools and stores. Hag aluminum siding, full basement with of] heat, Jear ga- rage with concrete drive. Spacious room and kitcn- rm., dinin, rea} family home value at only $10,450 with $1,800 down. See It today' No better buy any- where! Cass Lk. Brick —$950 Dn. Privileges dn both Cass and Eliz- abeth Lakes Cass-Eliz pavemen: A most attractive 2-bedroom brick bungalow for only $0,850 with $950 down plus mtge. ‘costs on FHA mtge. There's a fire- place. entrance closét full insulat. ed and on a big ft. wide lot See it today — like it REALTOR PARTRIDGE FE 4.3581 1050 W. HURON youl) MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICH , i FE 5-8165 UN 4-3100 SUBURBAN BEAUTIES WILLIAMS LAKE AREA de- signed for suburban at its best 4 bedrooms, family rooms, formal vin Tm and di shaped kitchen. 1 ruil and part baths. 4 fireplaces, 2% car garage. Lot 225x400 beautiful v landscaped. Han- ‘dy to schools. Priced to sell quick at $25,000 — terms. Phone OR 4-0306 for appoint- OXBOW LAKE ESTAT — Handy to M5® 4 yoareom brick with 2 full tile baths plus powder room. 2 fire- Places, paneled family and paereaucn rooms etting high with beautiful view. This home has any desirable features to te- scribe in an ad. Priced at $30,000 with favorable terms. Phone OR 3-1340 for appointment reat SSTATE. & INSURANCE 7132 HIGHL AND RD. (M59) ASSOCIAT ; BROKERS INVESTM FE 8-9663 { Prospect Street | 1% STORY FRAME. gas heat. 1 car garage. Priced to sell. 443 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. BROWN $350 DOWN —Modern to the min- ute and only 3 yrs. old. 5 bungalow with oak floors. basement Alum. storms and screens Paved street. Newly dec- oratec. Real value at poly $10,- 750, 5 per cent interest. $13,000 FULL PRICE—Large 3 bee room brick bungalow. Modern in cre war Paved street. Only co. bungalow wit bath. Beautiful lot. Home pres some finishing. Only $450 own $1,500 DOWN — Located St. Mi- chael’s School district. Large 6 Tm. bungalow Basement. Paved street nclosed porc Good, clean home. Priced: at only $7,950. MENT OTHERS—to choose from. e have over 200 photo listings. viett our office Pie inspect them. You'll save time LIST—with us for ae & atticheat merce WE BUY, SEL & ADE. Open 9-9. L.H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 Multiple Listing Service WHITE $40 per month Yes Sir, that's what the monthly ayments are on this 2 bedroom ome. Just 1 block from a good beach on Maceday Lake. It has a 13 x 24 ft. living reom with fireplace plus a ®@ x 17 ft. en- closed porch. This home is clean & well built. Situated on a large shaded & fenced in lot. Full rice $7.900. It's vacant — we ave the key! Williams Lk. Privileges Comfortable 2 bed frame home. Has plastered walls, large living room, Youngstown kitchen, large utility m, attached ga- rage. Fully ulated. Complete with storms & screens. Built in 1952. Full price $11,900. Small down payment, Better see this one today! | WHITE BROS. REAL ESTATE OR 3-1295 5660 Dixie Hwy. Open Eves, ‘til 9; Sunday 1 ‘til 3 Kenilworth, 694 $95 DOWN Or will rent with option to buy. Lovely 3 bedrooms, tiled features, automatic heat, “dou ble closets, large kitchen only 2 years a i Mr. Young REALTY: NORTHWEST. OFFICE 13420 vw. 7 Mile Rd Templeton Sashabaw Road Zoned commercial, smal] home asement very neat peti or small business. . down. “ei mS mast Lana Realtor 2339 Mtoe ’ 4-456) \Tizzy 4 OLBmMmAA © 1958 dy NEA Bervica, ine. ‘Tid Rag. U8. Pat. OFF “We are temporarily discontinuing the picture due to unfinished homework!” For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 HAYDEN price $5,000. 2 | Saar stove, North) $900 Down. i ished. side location. home. Berean St om Ese garage. i DOWN. Bal, month. 3 at 2-car garage. Imm “ sebools. tery home. 3 4 nace. Garage. $10,500, $1,200 DOWN Bal. month. This 2 bedroo: nace. Paved drive. J) G HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton ia 2, bed- Good Taded Commercial ji htures : bedroom Gardens. » SBadoment. ot by tuFon sion... - public ond peroehiai+ = is pe Open _Eves. Sun. "te to 2 $200 DOW N COLORED SPECIAL. NEWLY TED 4 BEDROOM HOME WITH FULL BASE- THIS WON'T LAST. CALL ‘TODAY FOR DETAILS. . APPROX. $250 DOWN 3 BEDROOM RANCH TYPE ON LARGE ONE-HALF ACRE LOT. CLARKSTON AREA, : JIM WRIGHT tote 345 OAKLAND AVE. FE OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:30 MULTIPLE, LISTING SERVICE AS TEMS WITH Bata” LOT big iad Dorothy y Sider Lavender | § kM 3. — MU +0417 tsodsrs, 38.000" wit gi.30) geen down. FE COMPARE THIS m vuilt 1.200 Custom t., room brick rane, nos “) Lt basem places am « aPCoramie le astered walls por garage Al lot DONT A PE silss TRADE ¥' ies peer 3 anya brick, ved street, Storms sereens, incinerator, ti th. ‘Low down payment, Read: to move in. Gerry Van Real Es- tate, OA €-1160 after 6 p.m | . LUMBER ' PRICES 4’x g’ x 34” PL: \STER BO: ARD - $1.25 4’ x® x eae THIS WEEK ONLY $4.95 ROCKLATH BUNDLE 98c = V-grooved ash 2:9 x 6:8 sash ‘100 nl ox: 8 Flusb ar. with lig’ Alum comb dr. mp _MATT THICK INSULATION $29.95 PER 1,000 FT. ~ Burmeister’s Northern Lumber Co. 7940 Cooley Lake Rd EM _ 3-417} Open 8 am to 8 pm. daily Sunday ow s 10 "ti 2 5 CAMPING OR UTILITY TRAILER. M tinememsethnicne> POA AAL LUMBER CO. WERT? Eels SRL” SOLITAIRE DIAMOND RING. Never wore Ori; _ value $325 wil sell for $ EM 3-282 ore ‘ STALL pee OWERS — een} and curtain, $60.50 Lavatories complete with eaming chrome fau $24.50 $49.50 valued al teen are factory seconds. Michigan _—e scent 383 Or- chard Lake Ave. — 39. SPECIALS as water heater. 30 gal Es water heater. 52 gal . Mo space heaters ioe! Logi gl Ue Re NE LUMBER 420 8. Paddocs PE 20784 SAVE UP TO 50% On house tertor mal Gee $3.95 eles s pson. mile west of Airpert TALBOTT LUMBER orm doors and windows, wood or aluminum. Giass out tp vour sash 1035 Oakland Ave rE THE SAI-VATION ARMY R SHIELD STORE Eve — meet your needs. rnita. A re. ances 118 WEST LAWRENCE UNIFLOW DEEPWELL PUMP. OR 3-1966 after 4. USED EVANS OIL FURNACES. PE 8-378 and PE 4-0032. Wood Closet Doors Closing out. Birch mahogany & pomveres byfold type doors. 48 BERRY DOOR SALES 371_8_ Paddock WOOD AND SroWNOW¢ nation doors and windows. PE 4-2521 BENSON LUMBER Sey WwoOoD & Se. sed ot} ton tsa 2-0203 3700 Sashabaw—Drayton—OR 37407 | | CIRCULATING OIL _ faa cond. 6006 Colony Drive on Middle Straits: Lk. EM 3-3218 CLEAN, USED LUMBER. TAKE | all reas. MArket 4-063. < CL fe pianos: Fully reconditioned, GALL: AGHER’S 18 F* Huro Pr 4-0566 PAN AMERICAN: CLARINET, very 89 good condition, includes case. Sarl Gee condition. Maytair 65120. "36 Walnut Lake Road PIANO TUNING—O8CAR SCHMIDT E 2-5217 SLIGHTLY USED SPINET WITH A large discount. Looks like new. GALLAGHER'’S 18 E. Huron FE 40566 Watch for the New 50 ea pepe Electronic ee ad ode! left, reasona MORRIS MUS Tc 34 8, Telegra Rd. FE 2-0567 across from Tel-Huron WTD.: HAMMOND SPINET OR-°* gan. MAple 5-6046. Sale Office Equipment 63 LARGE (30x60) ASE ALL-STEEL 6-drawer desk. Inlaid top, enam- eled stee] finish leveling feet, pop-out reererrae Panay t Like new cond. Matc ing ASE secre- terial chair Bown or only $150, Phone MAple aan after 5 p.m. OFFICE FURN RE - TWO ee new reotoiarins Gesks (Art Metal) used executive desks and chairs, drafting board table and stool and straight oak chairs. Bids will be taken through tober 27, 1958. FE 5-3220 or see furniture at 535 Branch St. TYPEWRITERS, SMITH - CORONA portable 1 yr. old stock, $45; Underw a rE 8-4642. TYPEWRITERS UNDERW' pe $30 Remingtor portable . FB _ 8-4642. USED OFFICE FURNITURE FOR sale. Dial FE 4-0588 Sale Store Equipment 64 Se fatale aa lee iinet en nail bin & scale $65. CON Di | a ORT NEW Sale Sporting Goods 65 12 GAUGE SAVAGE AUTO. SHOT- FE 5-2393 <<. Ae ARCHERY EQUIPMENT. ALL kinds Selling out hobby, 150 items Make = ia "Maple 5-1954 or OR JUNS oun © WE HAVE A COM ei She all ow po of mg work a Nine potyebot Try be- TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY. OcroBER 21, 19 Sale Sporting Goods — 65 Hunting Dogs - 69A ‘For Sale Housetrailers 78 GUNS — BUY — TRADE Manley Leach 10 B GUN SALE Bhot $15. ap guns = _sifies ; Gun Re '& Scope Mountin BURR-SH i. S13 8. aoa HUNTING SALE Shells, field ae BnOrS $225 box Heavy loads $2.79 box Blue rocks ‘g229 carton 25 per cent ot ‘on ail hunting coats & pant. Browning Shotguns, See the new 20 gauge 10 per cent down — Easy terms on gi Trade. in poe old cun Used gu Enter belie big pheasant contest be-! fore season opels Kelly's Hardware 3004 AED UE at! Adams s Auburn Hets 1 FE 2 B11 HUNTING TRAILER. 4 FOOT, ; sleeps 4. reps 4. FE 8- 8-8284 KNOTTY P! PINE GUN | CABINETS | Wor Sel 721 REM 30-30 Savage | 270 CAL BRAND DNER 340 with 2'2 | Weaver scope. | Ph FE 8.0056 ; LARGE SEtECTION USED SHOT guns & rifles Ben's Loan 4 Patterson. FE 45141 RELOADING COMPONENTS _ USED GUNS SLAYBAUGH'S 630 Oaklano FE 8-045. STEVENS 12 | GAUGE PUMP, RE- col] pad super choke & case — Like new $50 FE resid Shotgun sehelis maa load — 12-16-20 | $2 66 7 x 35 *Binoculare. reg $50 cow PHILIPS SPORTING eoons 79 N Saginaw 5-1401 TAXIDERMIST. ALL WORE Gian: anteed FE 2-4867, if no ans®er call FE 32-9471 Hunting Accomo. 65A ~~ * MODERN FURNISHED CABINS, near Lewiston FE 2-073). ‘Bait, t, Minnows, Etc. ic. 65B. i ee ES NITE CRAWLERS 2 DZ FOR 4c RED WOR 100 for “Be 389 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE . _Open 3 24 hours, 7 days _Sand, Gravel &0 Dirt 66 OR MORE YARDS OF PEAT) humus. loaded 7 days a week | 689 Lochaven Rd FE §-1413 OR MORE LOADS TOP ‘SOIL, | piack dirt & peat ey san ciay and | gravel OI OR 3-7549. \2-3 OP MORE LOADS TOP SOIL or black dirt. Loaded or deliv-| ered. Field office. FE 5-5643 FE8-6642 ee 7 OR MORE YDS. OF, PEAT humus, waded 7 Hedy a week 639 Locnaven. FE 5-1413. 24, YNS BLACK DIRT OR PEAT | _ prompt deltvery, OR 35-0644, oF BLACK DIRT 89, \ i 3 YARDS Sad & gravel. EM 3-068) | _ 5 YARDS OF SHREDDED a _ humus $15. FE 17-0245. A-) BLACK DIRT. FARM TOP soll, $950 FE 5-4758 “ ‘ee SOIL, CRUSHED STONE. f'r ra Ao el. peek fill Earl _Howar EM_ 3-05; | A- 4 A-1 TOP aoe as “AND, eee il) & blac ravating basements. OR ne S-eo32 A-) TOP SOIL—BLK. DIRT SAND) & gravel FE 4-3058 or FE oT | 4-1 TOP SOIL CRUSHED STON Sand, Gravel. Fill ae Conklin FE 86-1112 or FE 2-8572. ’ American | Stone Products) 190A stone 1.15 per yd Pea rock 90 per yd Oversized stone $1.25 per yd irt = r load Beach sand ...... oT r yd Delivery extra MA 5-216! 6335 SASHABAW RD BLACK AND FILL DIRT BEACH sand Road gravel Vicinity Talon | Lake 3-2403. FREE MANURE TO ONE WILL- ing to clean cow barn daily. MA 4-1039 FARM TOP SOIL AND| GooD black dirt, 5% vds. $9 delivered FE 4-6588 \ doa: ROAD GRAVEL 5 ¥D8. O87 00 Delivered 46588. PREPARED RIVEWAY GRAVEL 4-326: 2 or FE 2.1466) | APPLES 6 YEAR OLD ENGLISH POINT- er, retriever and obedience Oxford Trailer Sales. trained. FE 6-0079. - STEWART, CEREBRAL ee Sad sd hata ad hl re Se AKC BEAGLE, GOOD pings GREA LAKES PAi ‘ stock, all ages, MA 5-007 14 to 8 to WW wide used AKC REGISTERED B OE E | ° tratlers Bottle gas & pecensories, pups. 3 months old fr = field| For variety slsee price & bes winning hound. FE 5-5977. terms = cannot be aten oe AKC IRISH SETTER, MALE. 5 fei braid ated at monibs inoculate ex t. 37 MOBILE HOME nae 51.27 ft. ek ee bea Gaya. all ay Travelo 61.795, 53-33 ft Crestline Ueccuress and Sunda AKC REG. BEAGLES ND - springers FE 8-6178 4020 aay __dee_Rd AKL REG COCKER PUBPIES. 8.so older Cockers. OR / AKC REG BLACK awa aN male coop pound 17 months old. $65. Call cH 2-0329 '@EAGLES POINTERS & COON dogs Trial given. 3001 Rockhaven, oft Auburn ; | ENGVISH POINTER PUPS. FE 8-6460 45 W. Fairmount. IRISH SI ah (ALE, HUNTED 2 ¥?s C956 PUREBRED “BEKULE 1 YR. OLD All ready to run | Ph. FE 40795. * Dogs 1 Trained, Boarded 70 DOGS OR CATS BOARDED IN rivate home Good care, Reas. cM | 39-0295 evenings LOGS. C118 BOARDED — FE 2-4108 Burr-Sheil 75 8. Tele- graph. Hay, Grain & Fe Feed 71 71 eee 1ST AND 2ND HAY $17 AND UP Straw & twine Phone MA 5-0666 ALL TYPES OF HAY STRAW. Corn Also mulcb hav Will de- _liver OA 4-2178 STRAW 7760 8S WILLIAMS LK. _Rd. _EM 3.8939 For Sale Live Livestock 72 ‘FOR SALE OR TRADE: GOOD saddle mares, 3 yearling colts, one 2 yr. old colt. and burro 585 Granger Ra. Oxford OA 68-2666. GENTLE RIDING MARE, SADDLE _and_ bridie._ $125 FE 8-8779 For Sale Poutry 74 ee a WHITE LEGHORN HENS _ 5c ach or all for ($35. MY 89-1807. __ Sale Farm Produce 75 75 ante PPLES. WALNUT GLEN FRUIT farms. 4670 Middlebelt Rd ‘APPLES NORTHERN SPY. PICK them yourself M58, 3 miles west of Highland 415 Tipsico Lake Rd_ MUtual 4-4166 “APPLES PEARS CIDE HONE. Kingsbury's 2330 Clarkston Rd Lake Orion DELICIOURS ORCHARD at 691 N Squirrel) Rd. Auburn Heights Gerees PICK YOUR OWN. 60c bu. 3985 N Rochester Rd. APPLES & SWEET CIDER HOME- steed Orchards 5460 Orchard Lk | CHOICE BARTLETT PEARS ; AR o aple Rad De Conick Bros Orchards MAy- fair 6-2106_ DELICIOUS APPLES. $250 A BU Pick your own, bring bu: also for sale Jonathan, Northern Spy. Melntosh, Wealthy. Cooley Lake to Lockhaven to West- phalia GLACKEMORE FARMS 2150 E 8IL- verbell Rd Canning apples OL _1-6489 GET YOUR APPLES AT belie Orgbers 625 E Buell Rd. Rochester Whole ie “or retail $2 bu & up | MOLILHOME ESTATES Moon dealer PARKHURST TRAILER SALES TRAILER EXCHANGE _New Andersons We buy, sell and trade. Used 8-10 Wides USED TRAILERS ON RENTAL PAYMENT PLAN Bottle Gas Parts and Supplies 60 8 AN pony Sali FE Sees Open 8 to 6° Closed Sunda SHORT OF MONEY? Let us se!l your trailer from our large tot We will pick up your trailer wdvertise. demonstrate, and arrange for financing. so you receive cash immediately 10 per cent. We bave so ary and Holl arine MEl- phone or come out Coach Sales 15210 Hollv rose 46771 Holly VACATION TRAILERS FOR SALE or rent, 5685 Williams Lk. OR 3-2638. WANTED housetrailer BIG. OLD TANDEM EM 3-4827. Rent Tre Trailer Space 79 AUBURN GTS. MOBILE VIL- lage The finest % mile SE Pon- tiac. 170 N. Opdyke FE 5-3361 INSIDE CITY LIMIT 2 BLOCKS from bus stop, Pontiag Trailer _Coach Park 5-9 OXFORr MOBILE MANOR FOR those whe want the best 40x30 foot iots, 16x40 cement Sidewalk room for garden ‘on each spyt 36 ft streets. Storm shelter © mi east of Oxford On _Lakeville Rd Ph. OA 86-3022 MODERN EM lakefront and olayground dS TRAILER SPOTS pe PONTIAC Lake Shore Kids & pets OK. $25 er mo. 3-8031 call - after p.m YOU'VE sEEN THE REST, NOW see the best Square Lake ‘Trailer Park FE 2-5295 Auto Accessories 80 ‘$1 RAMBLER _parts FE 8-070. 55 PONTIAC. V-8 ENGINE AND _Hycr. transmission. OR 3-4662. MODEL A FORD OTOR, LESS transmission, good condition. $20 _OR 31843 STATION WAGON For Sale Tires 80A , poWer-grip tires & 3 750x18 Firestone 1 new, 2 used, 2 tubes, $50. _ OR 3-7843 A-) USED CIRES $300 UP WE buy sell Also whitewalls. STATE TIRE SALES $03_. Saginaw St. FE 40687 STANDARD BRAND, NEW TIRES waded tn on Genera! Safety Tires (GET YOUR APPLES & POTATOES t Sutton’s Orchard 324 N Dekel Ange elus Rd Open Tues.. Thurs. t vate to Ane per cent off Black or bo “WILLIAMS 8 Saginaw at Raeburn erties WINTER POTATOES 0 per bu. 3356 F Bald Mt. Rd 1.40 os Farm Equipment 76 1 ROW NEW IDEA CORN PICKER In good shape 3985 N Rochester _Rad OL 2-4703 CHAIN SAWS 3 HP SAWS ALL sitions Reg price $16950 Our | price $119 50 Ail tractors and mowers greatly reduced. Lee’s Sales & Service |) TERMS 921 Mt. Clemens fARM MACHINERY — NEW AND used Proux Oliver Sales on M24 Just north Oxford. SS PEAT HUMUS, 2' yards, delivered within 5 miles $850 Call FE 5-5086. WELL ROTTED MANURE BEST) of farm top soll. MY 3-1232. read & DRIVEWAY GRADING. ton soil gravel fill. etc. §-3552 Wood, Coal & Fuel FIREPLACE CANNEL COAL—ALL SiZES OF FURNACE & ALL 43 ORCHARD LAKE. FE 5-6159 | GOOD DRY OAK WOOD DELIV eved, FE ¢6229 SHOP LOADS $6.18 A LOAD. LUM | ber, cut w OR 3-6022. SLABWOOD BONE BIRCH FIREPLACE WOOD, FE. 2-5474. Plants, Trees, Shrubs 68 A-1 BPRUCE, PINE, JUNIPERS ir Arborvitae and Yews. Shade trees—Maple Oak etc. Dig your ewn Bring tools & burla Sleeth Rd, 3 miles west of Com- merce Village. 1% miles east of FE '890_ Crooks Rd _ _| MeCulloch Chain 67. 2 2922) HAY TOOLS — NEW USED AND rebuilt Davie Machinery Co Ph | NA 17-3292 ohn re New Idea _at Ortonville " McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS | Rentals Parts & Repairs MI_6-0446 aw + Headquarters OME_IN ANID HAVE A CUP OF COFFER AND LOOK THE NEW 39 MODELS OVE | & COMPLETE LINE OF CHAIN 5 SAWS ON DISPLAY. WE TAKE ! TAPES CREDIT TERMS G EROS. PONTIAC RD AT OPDYKE FE 40734 or FE 41112 OCTOBER SALES Tractors, .jliers & mowers. New & used Wil consider any rea- sonablg offer over cost to reduce 6307 DIXIE HWY. 5-7878 or OR 3-7924 | SEE NEW IDEA 1& row corn pleker FASY CREDIT TERMS Hou GHTEN & SON ls I Case & New Idea Dealer Rochester OL 1-9761 SPECIAL Farmal! Cub tractor with 12 Inch plow With hydraulic starter and tmtersection wf Duck Lk. & lights, n FE 29in die Steele Ford FE _5-9204 1953 Fora, 2 dr, REPOSSESSION 4 DR | nate | $3 Perfect engine No rust, white, wall tires R&H & tut Payments 1 $16 50 No eash needed. Mr Bell Oreat “Lakes | 1952 FORD ¥-8 REPOSSESSION price Payments onty! 1090 month Perfect engine. iy and tires Radio and Mr Beil. Great Lakes. 6-0402 1955 Ford Customline 2-Dr. YLINDER. T™ ANSMISSION $895 is Larry Jerome Fee STIOL 107 cone DEALER 971) 1956 F RORDy 2D COUNTRY SEDAN F a & whites $1,295. Eddie _Buecle "ora FE 5-9204 10 P.M. FOR YOUR SHOPPING Convenience "53 Chevrolet BEL AIR HARDTOP WITH POWERGLIDE, RADIO. HEAT- ER A GOOD ONE FOR ONLY $000.00 DOWN $ *S4 Olds 2-Dr. 88 ...$ 795 | ROCKET SEDAN WITH HYDRA- MATIC. RADIO HEATER AND ONLY $145 DOWN *S5 Ford 2- Dr 5 595 V- SEDAN WITH RADIO. HEAT. ER ECONOMY SPECIAL. $03 DOWN, 56 Dodge ......... $1195 CONVERTIBLE. BLACK AND WHITE .FINISH, PRACTICALLY NEW TOP, ONLY $245 DOWN. "56 Mercury . .$1295 MONTCLAIR” HARDTOP. MER- COMATIC. ALL VINYL INTE- RIOR. GOOD RUBBER. $195 DN 54 Buick 4-Dr. $ 795 SUPER SEDAN. A NICE 1.00K- FOR ONLY $125 DOWN. ‘55 Qlds 4-Dr. 88 .. $1095 HOLIDAY SEDAN WE DELIGHT IN OFFERING THIS IN A NEW LOW PRICE WITH JUST $175 DOWN. 56 Olds 4-Dr. ......$1395 AN 88 HOLIDAY. EXCEPTION. ALLY BEAUTIFUL | TU-TON LEY AND A NEW LOW PRICE. $215 DOWN’ _ $ 495 "54 Ford V-8 ...... CUSTOMLINE, RADIO, HEATER, HITE TIRES, SPOTLESS AND NO RUST NO DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED. "54 Chevrolet 2. ae $ 595 SEDAN WITH POWERGLIDE, _ GOOD TIRES. Drive AND COM: PARE. 895 DOW WE HAVE 15 TRANSPOR- TATION CIALS THAT BE R $95 FULL PRICE. ALL HAVE ADIO GooD ATTERI ND START AND STOP GOOD. YOUR CHOICE... FINANCING AVAILABLE, TEROME “Bright Spot” _ Olds-Cadiltac Dealer Orchard: Lake at Cass_ FE 8-0488 Open till 10; ‘ | | AUTOMATIC - | | i | “BUICK Better Buy Used Cats ‘HUNTERS | ‘| Transportation Specials sp | 12 ® Woodward ME 6-5302 Sas © ited Gis a; See ee tide One Pontiac ........... $129) “apgor. NO MONEY Pe ng eal eel Me = re re er Ford 1967 BUICK 210-Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 Open Eves. Clarkston Motor Sales” CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Clart rkston. Mich. 141 tess PONTIAC, DRS PF, hall ully equipped, MI 60219 after 5:30 p.m. . PONTIAC 35 4 DR STARCHIEF. BUY & SAVE HOUGHTEN & SON YOUR FPRIENDLY OLDS DEALER FOREIGN CAR SALES AND SERVICE 528 N Main. Rochester OL 1-976! 33. JEEP apa benrh Wacon. PE 4-343}, clean sell or eves MAN? 82 53 # MAKES AND _ op hang « cut & m ever! Auburn Motor Sales CORNER PIKE & E BLVD. _ "$3 MERCURY 4 #DR_ SHARP $5. Take on pmts See a Murphy, Bham-Rembier. 66f &, Woodward __MI 6-3900 ‘3 MERCURY. BEAUTIFUL CON- $45 dn. See a ar Dhaai-tomseer. 666 ward LE 6-3900. $2. NASH « OR EXCELLENT transportation. $125 FE 2-0535, _ Roger's Sales 4 Service 35 ~ NASH CUSTOM 6 CROSS country |} owner new car trade- ip 26,000 actual miles. automatic transmission. Yeelining seats, a be seen to appreciate $1085 % 2-9555. Roger's Sales & Serv- ‘57 RAMBLER SEDAN. LIKE NEW. $99 dn. Low monthly payments. See Mr Murphy B’ham-Rambier, 8. Woodward. MI 6-3900 ~ Get Wise, Economize RAMBLER "BILL SPENCE windshield washer, 4-285. Goop ee .. PONTIAC, $166. PE 51340. ipsa PONTIAC SATION WAGON, Hydrematic,, Ouwell 11a, ee Week Eee White Steen. 3 Ra- dio, heater wa $900. F ibss = ie Bik Beauty. bi ; Very small down payments — We py llg Ra a aligt LUCKY AUTO. SALES ___ FE + wae or E $1008 % PONTIAC STATION “WAGON. bee Mr Mur wanes Larios) 468s woodeara. MI 63800. - 3 PONTIAG xc CONVERT. Saf ag PRICE NEW TIKES. AUTO TRANS. RUss gHNtow’ MTR, BALES. MY 1953 PONTIAC St cheat AEXCEP- tionally clean dra Pow- aoe 496. wo ee Plains. OR 2000 TODAY’S SPECIAL Matthews-Hargreaves 54 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN DELUXE Radio & heater. Hydramatic _ $545 The BIG, BIG Lot 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 46-4547 198 PONTIAC 2 DOOR CEL RAMBLER SALES & SERVICE 211_8. Saginaw PE 8-4541 33 NASH RAMBLER HARDTOP Best offer FE &-1008 - i ‘$ NASH AMBASSADOR $59 DN | Take over pmits. See Mr Murphy, et pe ester 666 8. Woodward R &C Rambler OUR SLOGA WE CAN BEAT ANY DEAL COMPLETE SERVICE. EM 3-4155 1956 NASH 4 DR. HT. 6 CYLIN- der No money down Eddie Steele - 68 Oakian E 22351 Ford FE 5-204 | 3 FO:D a CUSTOM LiKe SE- $5 RAMBLER CROSS COUNTRY dan Fordomatic R&H Wil}! Wagon $39 dn Assume pmits 8-e trade South Blvd. st Sagi. | Mr Murphy Bham-Rambler 66 naw FE S Woodward MI 63900 _ 1951 FORD WITH 1953 MOTOR Wy DSMOBILE. ‘53 SUPER 88 $265 OR 3-3264 hardtop, pycemeve hew trans- 1955 FO! cH | | mission ust sel] Going in serv- nieces au ten gas ba | ety Beet flr “inca Ea a —er@pmo i es $6 OLDS 2 DR HARDTOP SUPFR 8&8 Hydramatic, wer brakes R&H like po after 6 & week. ends FE 8-00: OLDS 88 i ‘SEDAN EXC | condition Straight shift $305. FE $-2171 i953 OLDS: 1SEDA® HYDRA R&H | LUTELY NO MONEY nown Assume. parments§ of | $1427 mo Call Credit Mgr Mr ; er Ford MI 4-7500 Haroid Tura- ‘0 er EX LENT MECHANICAL CONDI- TION. CLEAN. $150. OR 3-408 1954 PONTIAC 4 DR NO MONEY eed Eddie Steele Ford. PF i955 PONTIAC HARDTOP RADIO. beater. Hydramatic Priced cheap- er thas « Chevrolet hard Our stack No 6554 Yours for ony North Chev. Hunter Bivd at 8. Woodward Hea Birmingham MI ¢27735 1967 VOLKSWAGEN SUNROOP. biack. white wall tires, RAH Ex- cellent condition Also 1954 Olds- mobiie Holiday blue and cream. White watt tires. radio & heater, power brakes. Excellent condition _OA 82100 VOLKSWAGEN, 1957 “HEY THERE''* Econ mom F without parallel is this [ittle buff colored Club Sedan You wl ners buy more for oniy SCHUTZ DESOTO-PLYMOUTH | 912 5 W oodward MI 6-5302 SOME SOME WHAT YOU RE ‘S8 PONTIAC . matic, Air ‘07 BUICK . Dynafilow 'S7 PONTIAC . CATALINA COUPE — 4 ‘07 HILLMAN MINX 4 DOOR Radio Tone Grey. Sharp! ‘96 PONTIAC . 58 PONTIAC . ‘06 PONTIAC Heater, Hvdramatic. '56 PONTIAC . Hydramatic, ‘55 OLDSMOBI ‘55 PONTIAC . rakes. ‘55 BUICK .... CENTURY Hr RDTOP: — ‘90 PONTIAC . 4 ——- - ee & Heate PON RETAIL “GOODWIBL 65 MT. CLEMENS.ST. (BEHIND THE Low Mileage No Mi NO MATTER NO MATTER WHAT THE PRICE RANGE ~ We Have A Car for, You CHIEFTAIN CATALINA COUPE: - _ Radic i Heater, 58 PONTIAC .......... $3395 DOOR R adta Conditioning Full Pe: SPECIAL 2 DOOR HARDTOP — Radio and CATALINA COUPE 860 — pian, & nee 4 DOOR 870 HARDTOP — Radio & Heater, Yvdra- matic. lee CATALINA COUPE Eeus? Brake STARCHIEP CONVERTIBL®: Power Brakes HOLIDAY SUPER 88 HARDTOP — 4 Do i & fleater Hydramatic, Power steering 0 ocee 4 DOOR 870 — Radlo & Heater Hydramate, Power Rad Power Brakes, Beautiful Metanic Green Pals 2 DOOR 860 — Radio & Heater, Power ateertes ‘54 CHEVROLET .......$ 695 -PACTORY BRANCH USED CARS" HAVE HAVE ileage LOOKING FOR $2695 . and Heater, wer. Joe... 01995 leater, - $1995 Door: Hy dramatic & Heater Whitewais " Hydra- ooo... $1495 ws gy (81595 = 2 Door Radio . $1495 "Red jo & meats Green & White Saint, LE .......$1395 ¥; See. $1195 soos... $1295 Oo & Heater, Tacsee: $9954 * © « tT: TIA STORE r FE 3-7117 POST OFFICE) _THE, | PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958, oe -- sth Television Programs -- > , Channel scion . Channel 4--WW4-TY Channel 1—WEYZ-TV Channel 9 CKLW-TV TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS ° 6:00 (7) Cyrtain Time. Comedy. (9) Popeye. (4) News: Williams. (2) Racket Squad. 6-10 (4) Weather, Eliot. 6:15 (4) Box Four. (7) Comedy (cont.) (9) Woody Woodpkr. (4) Life of Riley. Comedy. (2) News: LeGoff. 6:30 ; (2) Weather. (2) News. 6 740 6:45 e 7:00 (7) American Legend. (9) Brave Eagle. (4) Afthur Murray. Dance- Variety. (2) (color) 5-Star Feat. Vera) Ellen, “Happy Go Lovely.” | _ | 110: 45 Marguerite Pizza, Jack, 10:15 (9) Weather. 10:26 (9) Little Theater. 10:30 (7) News: Daly. (9) Presents. Murder of the past preys on mind of retired Canadian Mountie. Frances Hyland, Douglas Rain. (4) Dr. Hudson. Ambulance driver is ashamed of his plain-Jane wife. (2) Moore (cont.) (2) Sports. 10:55 (7) Weather. '11:00 (7) Soupy’s On. (9) Presents (cont.) (4) News: W’Kamp. ) News: LeGoff. |19:15 (9) 10:15 (7) Lady of Charm. 10:30 (2) Play Your Hunch. (4) Treasure Hunt. 10:55 (7) News. 11:00 (2) Arthur Godfrey. (4) Price Is Right. (1) Day in Court. 11:15 (9) Nursery Schooltime. 11:36 (2) Top Dollar. (4) Concentration. (7) Peter Lind Hayes. (9) Howdy Doody. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:06 (2, Love of Life. (4) Tie Tac Dough. (9) Children’s Nev’sreels. Plays IV Role Opposite Mineo. Carol Lynley, Pert 16, Anxious to End Career by Time She’s 21 HOLLYWOOD — Carol Lynley. who plays Sal Mineo’s romantic vis-a-vis in ‘The Vengeance,” premiete presentation of the “‘Pur- suit’ series, tomorrow night on CBS Television Network, is a ded- icated actress at an age when most of her contemporaries are absorbed in such ephemeral sub- jects as ‘hot fudge sundaes, high- school proms, and rock ’n’ roll cacophony. At 16, the blonde and beautiful Miss Lynley can look back on a thespian career that has included Broadway roles in “Anniversary Waltz” and in the Graham Greene drama ‘‘The Potting Shed,"’ in ad- dition to such television produc- Rope Around the Sun |The Light In the Forest,” be an actress. | but I | P'm 21 — I intend to quit, marry ' and bring up a family.” tions as.,‘Junior Miss’ and *‘Al- fred Hitchcock Presents.” | * * * She accredited herself with sig- nal success in her screen debut, | playing opposite James MacArthur | and Fess Parker in Walt Disney’s| and her career as a model is almost |legendary. Carol was only 10 when she got | her start in the New York | medeling marts ef Madison Avenue, and several hundred | shutter clicks latgr she was to command as high as $35 an | hour for lending her photo- * | “4 graphic presence to the sale of such various and sundry pro- | ducts as nail polish and oranges. | Looking back to that period in| ‘her precocious career, Carol gives I ‘a succinct reason for switching| ~ her ambitions to the arena of the |stage and screen. ‘‘Modeling.”’ says, “is ‘iffy’, It was all right | for me when I was younger. but | I feel I was definitely destined to| * an “T think I've done all right so 'far,"’ she adds (probably the un- “and I want to take advantage of what} opportunities are available | derstatement of the vear), “Being an actress is fun, of | course, as well as profitable, feel that my time is limited. I give myself just five more years, After that — when *The frenetic pace she sets for herself doesn’t leave Carol much ‘time for the luxury of contempia- tion. Too busy to attend school, ishe has a private tutor attend her at home: She spends at feast to hours ‘a day in keeping her skin looking fresh and youthful, and repairing ithe ravages of constant applica- tion of theatrical makeup. * * * | | | Then there’s the matter of figure 'problems. In order to ward off un- ‘toward pounds (she leans to avoirdupois), Carol Sticks to a diet regimen that calls for only two jmeals a day — tea and grapes ‘for breakfast, and steak or fish, NEWBERRY ( — The shot- ice cream and more grapés for make a TV pilot film with his wife and dinner. She says she puts on two pounds just by looking at a choco-| late eclair. Additionally, she stud- ies modern dancing in order to keep her figure firm and trim. * * * Although she sets a daily pace for herself that would try the stamina of Floyd Patterson, young Miss Lynley is seldom ii] and seems able to get by with a mini- ‘mum of relaxation, Veteran performers in the cast of “Pursuit’’ were amazed at her constant enthusiasm and drive. ‘then killed herself with a second With only five years to go before | State police went ce the cottage, liymey i is making the most of every + jealling it a career, young Carol located in Mackinac County, Gar-|opportunity before calling it quits. 7:30 (7) Cheyenne. Bronco saves 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. gun-slinger from death by 11:15 (4) Weather. (4) (color) It Could Be You. | snakebite. (2) Weather. (7) Mother's Day. (9) Million Dollar Movie. (9) Myrt & Doris. Lignel Barrymore, “A Fam- 11:20 (4) Sports. ily Affair.’ (‘37.) (2) Sports. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. (4) Dragnet. Police try to help boy with fatal illness. [11:25 (2) Nightwatch Th. Robert!{:00 (2) Ladies Day. (2) Movie (cont.) Young, “Those Endearing (4) Amos 'n’ Andy | Young Charms.” ('45.) (7) Liberace. i 8:00 (7) Cheyenne (‘cont.) i (9) Movie. ~*9) Movie (cont.)° ~ 11:38 (7) Night Court. (4) (color) George Gobel (9) Starlight. Forrest Tuck-'1:3@ (2) As the World Turns. Singer Gogi Grant, comedian er, “Night Freight.” | (1) Margie. Phil Harris, Vaughn Monroe (4) Jack Paar. Florence, (4) E.T.V. Digest. and The Goofers, Henderson, Cliff Arquette, (2) Movie (cont.) Elsa Maxwell, Joey Bishop, 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. & | Alice Ghostley. 8:30 (7) Wyatt Earp. Earp sym- (2) N’watch (cont.) 2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks. pathizes with Indians. (4)Truth or Consequences (9) First Performance. Awk- A (7) Chance for Romance. ward man is victim of chil- WEDNESDAY MORNING dren's pranks. | 2:30 (2) House Party. (4) Gobel (cont.) ‘6:30 (4) Continental Classroom. (4) (color) Haggis Baggis. (2) To Tell Truth. Quiz (7) People’s Choice. 6:5 (2) Meditations. 9:00 (7) Rifleman. McCain helps) (2:50 (9) News. old marsha] against outlaws. 6:55 .(2) On the Farm Front. (9) Perform (cont.) 13:00 (2) Big Payoff. (4) George Burns. Burns in'7:00 (2) TV College. (4) Today Is Ours. new comedy series. (4) Today. (7) Beat the Clock. j (2) Arthur Godfrey. Singer! (7) Big Show. (9) Hour of Stars. Roberta Sherwood 2 7:38 (2) Cartoon Frolics. 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. 9:30 (7) Naked City. Old man {7) Breakfast Time. (1) Who Do You Trust? who earns living frshing for (4) From These Roots. coins in subway gates tries 8:06 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. to adopt child 1:00 (2) Brighter Day. a (9) Perform. icont.) 8:36 (7) Our Friend Harry. (4) Queen for a Day. (4) Bob Cummings. Gag (7) American Bandstand. backfires when Bob tries to 8:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. (9) Big Rascals. show henpeckeq Harvey it’s ty. a man's world. 9:00 (4 1 Married Joan 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. (2} Red Skelton. Guests Ann >. Rutherford, Slapsie Maxie 4:30 2) Edge of Night. Rosenbloom. 9:25 (2) News. (4) County Fair : ; | (9) Sherwood Forest. 10:00 (7) Play of Week. “Port of 9:30 (2) Jimmy Dean. Call, Victor McLaglen (4) Romper Room. ‘5:00 (2) Susie. (9) News. (4) It’s Great Life. (4) Californians. Matt sus- 9:33 (9) Billboard. (9) Looney Tunes. pects fraud when couple try . | to raise cash for questionable 10:00 (2) For Love or Money. 3:30 (2) Bandstand. mining scheme. (4), Dough Re Mi. | (4) (color) George’ Pierrot (2) Garry Moore. Opera star (9)*Movie | Presents, — { (7) Mickey Mouse Club. 1 Maidens i 2s 4 é iT 10 foal, - Couple Found Shot pre of oleic fe. OF r to Death in Cott oa 3 {fo Death in Cotfage worship lie i] ee ANY 16 Rifle Y 1] War god fq i is sea tor : cuted bodies of a St. Johns funtime 4 couple were found today in a cot- 3s take taco, tage on the Lake Michigan shore fot padres a ‘near here. Ap naros 31 State police of the Newberry 28 Adverbial * |post said the deaths of James) oe ben (canis iy YA Mitchell, 45, and his wife, Lois, ai weorel 39 i] 42, apparently were a murder and 32 Hartened - ‘ — suicide. 3s Wher: of milk 4 y Gym They said Mrs. Mitchell appar- ro erie, @ ently shot her husband as he slept. 42 Communists : and then turned the shotgun on Pe Mischievous 4 wee s 7 ch icers ecrized the woman Py eroauive oie u ‘i 2| shot and wounded herself once and 50 Whole 63 Cubic meters 54 Sailed upward 6 Exclamation 21 Lymphoid 35 Cathedral ; ‘blast. 55 Sailor's tales of disgust tissue of chureh Party —— 7 Indonesian of throat 37 Withdraw 1 Bat greedily a a 23 Oninis ame 38 lacie raid v7 3 Intestinal r) Agreement ai Periods of 30 Small ineser field Township, when an unidenti- 3 Coarulsting 12 Redact 29 Scores > 43 Plants” fied friend of Mitchell's called 4 patie coin leereamaneed 8 eee enition mt aiene bow! them and asked them to look in on 5 Sainte (ab) _ fabric | 34 More torrid §2 Sailor the couple. - Today's Radic Programs ai has iwi Wi cei woe Gu wxve com ; steady with beautiful American- month tardy. uled to open Sept. 15. Ed § lli y P| es : : =| BON Creme) IER. (teen) born Lady Beatty, and London’ About 300 white seniors regis- A reported possibility that two U | an anning ‘seas newspapers suggested today a tered Monday for classes in the Negro colleges would establish HT li: :00—WJR. News.» CKLW, Rows Daria . 2: 00 WIR, Right Happiness wedding is coming up. inew high school operated by the|high school classes for displaced Film Trek {o India 6:00—WJR, News WXYZ surrell WCAR. News Martyn CRLW. Austin Grant. Davies} ‘‘Sinatra will wed Lady Beafty,"’, Little Rock Private School Corp.|Little Rock Negro students was _ WW3, News © CAEN News > Ruewies PON, News. Lark WOES GEE proclaimed The Daily Mail. It A legal challenge to the new) squelched WRYZ Wattrick. McKensle teen Srereee onic omen Jack Harris : yma ae : : f : oy ; NEW YORK (API—Fd Sulliv. CKLW News Chese | oe usis LW News, M. Labbitt "Two one Cpl Next Door isaid the 36-year-old beauty’s school’s operation was immediate-| The Rev. Roland Smith, chair- ,.~ IRR (AP I—Ed sullivan Woanl Senn ipencs 11:30—WIR. ‘Muste. 10: 10:00 WIR arthur Loatrey WXYZ, News M. Shorr |friends indicated that “the only ly promised by the National Assn./man of the board of Arkansas ae Re to India fate in Jan: WPON News Gee — “WXYZ Curtain: Calls WPON wie questiogs to be answered were for the Advancement of Colored Baptist College, said if his institu- uary to film a one-hour television :30—WJR, Dinner Date CKLW News ary Morgan al iwhen and where.” People fon laeciaeal Gal che higheechon be shown on the CBS WWJ B Maxwell WEDNESDAY MORNING + WPON ates orp Awe ore : . ion decided on the high school) otwork ale (ete "chase dee Wik.. tows Arvieutone ae ae WWJ, News, Matinee i kt & Another 407 students of all high undertaking, it would be after fed-, > rn a e = * | Foe ‘ i Tato eg WCAR Page's Part ww, News, Roberts 10: 80 WIR, Don Ameche waee Mews. McKensie =| “Frankie's out again with Lady School grades registered at the/eral courts act further on the is-; jie will use Indian talent, in- WEON ‘Sports | Candielight Cin ai boeuter clas WPON Chuck Lewis WCAR News Bennett _Beatty,”’ headlined The Daily Second Baptist Church for classes/sue of white private schools. Auding: dancers, singers and tk 100—WJR Guest House WJBK. Tom George . eo WPON Jim Ameche iSketch which will start next Monday at) Dean B. F. Lever of Shorter strumentalists. . were acres bart Dolo WCAR News Sheridan wwe ioe whispering Sts. na, Baptist High School, a branchicojlege at North Little Rock eal strumentalists. CKLW Fulton Lewls Jr. WPON ob Wesley WXYs. Paul Winter 5:20 WIE. fouse Party When the companionship of a facility aed by Ouachita Ba Be ut ‘ a a: WCAR. Patrick CKLW News Davies WJ, Woman in House like Sinat ad a beauty|{2Cully opened 0) chita Bap-the college -president, Dr. A. O.| 5 WJBK tack Bellboy ccatw Ge iNanal. sable Sobel 5 | GKLW News. Eddie Ci Tike Lady Beatty b cones ‘a ily tist College. These classes will be Wilson, had decided that i te erence and | best ews, Eddie Chase/]i ai ea ecomes a dai ae: | a < ave > , 1:30—WWy 3-Star Extra WIBK. News, George WEON Chuck tewis WIGK MeLeon ine. 1 4 ; ", held in education buildings of the wouldn't set up a high school benves) here! Wedoemiay fr ate Ste Bueht Crain _WPON Sports Wesley . routine, it also becomes news,”| <. ong Baptist and two other Bap-|echoo} aa . 2 a. aT nl ‘other trip to Alaska, where he is wean News eed LS ol tend NORLW Mews erin UNC] Ww. News Deland apologized The Daily Express byiict churches. A tuition of $20 per' a i am. Pecording “a television Show itor im Casey Bye eee oe WXYZ. Wattrick, McKenzie way’ of explaining its daily picture is charged Ge Bent build ine PETOe ary presentation from here Dec. 7. a WJR, Amos "n’ Andy CKLW News, Toby David | WEDNESD4SY AFTERNOON | CKLW News. ‘lof the couple. | saaicrad iat ; — WWJ, George Gobel. WIBK. News, Georre 12:00-WJR News, Wells WsaK News, nett : a % The corporation school is free. Ww t fc d Vi il PT A weak. eel WPON Bob Lark ww News. erwel WPON Don MacKinnon * ii if iW. C. Brashears, principal, said atertor lage 2 New TV Classes WJBK. Jack, Bellboy 1:30—WJK, Music Hall CELW Grant Livestou Lady Beatty was divorce meine corporation would have no Schedules Parents’ Night $:30—WJR, Answer Please Oatw: eens bana wave aan “ww, Jim Deland William O'Connor of California in ‘space for 10th and llth. graders) DETROIT ii — Two more tele- : bs) re i 9;00—WJR World Tonight WJBK. News. ead add WCAR, News. Purse oxuw add pene 1949. Ear] Beatty, son of the Brif- ‘until Nov. 1, when it will get other) Parents Night is the theme for vision classes, offering six hours, Wws Nightline wae ee ee -MPOR News: Lewis” BK, Sports McLeod ish naval hero of World Wer’ I, quarters at an urldisclosed loca- the Waterford Village PTA meeting of college credit, will be given by, WPON Carey show Swap coe deere | ark eee ne soon divorced her last June, charging’ tign, ‘on Thursday, at 8 p.m. in school. Wayne State University beginning, 9:30-—-WJR, Political Baw Oba tbe CKLW. News, Davies WW) Hews Delage (adultery with a man identified’ The senior high 1s holding class-/ Following a short business meet- Oct. 27 over Detroit station WJBK-| ete Alas Ces WJBK. News, George JER Ree WXYZ. Wattrick Dee only as George Henry Lane. es in a 32-room building formerly ing the film ‘'Skippy and the Three! TV (Channel 2). They will be) ton mgm fotametn WEON News, Lark "CRLW. News Davies -WIBK, Meleod “"**? Sinatra is in town to attend a, \used by the University of Arkan-| R's" will be shown. After the film) humanities and the contefporary| CRLW. Let Fs pala $:20-—WsR. Muste Nal WWJ, “ews, Maxwell ror ba tine movie premier .next week. Hejsas Graduate Center. I the parents will go to their child's novel. A three-hour graduate, WPON Casey | CKLW News, Toby David w Bob Lark has been escorfing her ladyship | An estimated 3,700 high se hoo] room where the teacher will con-, course in atomic age physics il 10:30—WJR. :00.WJIR, News 1;30— WIR, et eas — §:30—WXYZ, News, M’Raze around town until the early hours | [atudents; including those at Hor-!duct a discussion, on the year's teachers is carried on WWJ- TV) Was ewe "inte Nea. Fr Eucabein | ANZ. Nowe 1 \ GP oae Sports =. eee { the mornin ‘ace Mann, @ Negr institution,| work. i (Channel 4) — | wpa, Bound oft _ WXYZ, Breakfast Club CKLW, News, Devie i WPON, . 0 e morning. ; gro € \ ‘ . Frank Sinatra and Lady Beatty ‘Going Steady’ > LONDON (AP)—Frank Sinatra spent the past two days going Ly eS l Star Be * 6 a a | RISING YOUNG STARS — Carol Lynley and Sal Mineo carry on a teenage romance in ‘‘The Vengeance,” premiere presentation | | of the = “Pursuit” series tomorrow night. Society of Comedians One Big Helptul F apa: By EARL WILSON she |g ' “Do you know why comics help each other?” Jan Murray: asked across a table. “But they're always feuding,” I said. { “Despite that, they help each other out | go sympathy. Nobody else but a comedian * knows the bleeding a comedian goes throvgh,” Jan said. “They all helped me . Jolson, Berle, the Ritz Brothers, Jack Benny... “When I was a kid working in a little Miami saloon called Kitty Davis’ Airliner, Jol-, son and Ben Bernie walked in in turtleneck: sweaters and ordered ice cream. “Jolson sent me a note asking me to come. ad i WILSON see him at his cabana at the Lord Tarleton. He told me things I did wrong. He gave me one great piece of advice. | “He said, ‘Fight like hell for money and billing, but if. it means the jeb, sacrifice both. Because no act ever im- proved and no act ever was seen while it was laying off in a hotel room!’” Later in Miami Beach, Jan's opposition “across the street” were the Ritz Brothers and Jan remembers, “We were dying.” x * * “I happened to see Harry Ritz and told him, ‘It “was my) \luck to draw you guys as competition.’ “The next night I hear this hubbub in the audience. These three guys run 6ut on my stage and stay for an hour. They did it every night. Our : joint started to jump. Later I asked Harry Ritz why they helped me. He said, ‘There’s enough business for everybody.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Rocky Marciano’s loss in the Florida potato failure is guessed af $50,000 . Linda Cristal is a hit in the Tony Curtis comedy, “Perfect Furlough.” Gary Cros- by, who got a bundle for working on the Phil Silvers show, lost most of it to Phil, betting on the Braves ... Actor Roddy MacDowall will open a photo-— ‘graphic studio ... Gerdon MacRae wil! Ponce) “oh four kids... EARL’S PEARLS: We marvel at ‘Daniel Boone, who was able to live a lifetime in the wilderness with about a tenth of the equipment we need to cook a few hamburgers in the back yard.—H. C. Diefenbach. TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: “My great grandfather had a motto, ‘If you want to keep your money, lose your friends.”’ —by Howard Teichmann . . That's earl, brother. TERE 1958) a LINDA At Private School Seniors to Start Classes in Little Rock Today LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — A were shut out when Gov. Orval portion. of Littl Rock’s high E. Faubus closed the city’s four school student population will high schools Sept. 12 to block in- start school today—more than a tegration. The schools were sched- France Rejects | iBritish-Soviet agreement to sus- pend \chances of the Geneva arms talks iown tests. ‘ment’s claim that they are behind ‘in inceme tax payments. ‘back tax claim of $117,497, and |Alexander Carson, husband . of comedienne Carol Channing. * * * Also on the docket today are ‘claims against the estate of the’ | late actor Louis | against former producer Z. Wayne i pected Test Ban Plan, Serves Notice in U.N. Against Participation in Any Pact at Geneva UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —France’s blunt warning that she will not feel bound by any U-.S.- tests nuclear weapon eI _ monn ren ne eninenrecmniared Mowe thon €000 tone af suse shell were harvested from the_ "Tennessee River last year, shipped to Muscatine, Iowa, and processed into fresh water pearl buttons. nMiaee NS #208 VAs SICA ASL a Se eh] ely x ‘bal Rie PRT A, _i>jAy mit! Mi Au aroused fears today for the opening Oct, 31. Diplomats wondered whether the Soviet Union — which was quick to blast the French position —might use it as an excuse to re-| fuse agreement and continue ber | * * *& ; French disarmament expert) Jules Moch caused a stir in the |U.N.’s 81-nation Political Commit-. tee Monday by serving notice that | any agreement reached at Geneva’ would be ‘drawn up without the. ; participation of France and not. ‘applying to her.” France’s government has been. pressing to develop its own atomic bomb so that France can join the | nuclear-weapon club. . * * * Moch made plain that’ France, would call off its plan for nuclear | weapons tests only if the Geneva! talks produced agreement on {1} control over cessation of tests, (2) controlled reduction of atomic | stockpiles and (3) a controlled end (to production of atomic weapons. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin said he interpreted |Moch’s statement to mean France “does not intend to contribute to the reduction of the atomic threat or take any concrete steps in the|] field of disarmament.”’ * * * Some diplomats felt Zorin might try to depict the French position as evidence of Western bad faith on the eve of the Geneva talks. The French will not take part in the talks, but they usually work | closely with the other two Western | powers on such questions. MacRae, Fabray Set | for Hearing Today LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Singer Gordoe MacRae and_ television) actress _ Nanette Fabray were scheduled to appear in federal court today to contest the govern- * * * Judge Bruce M. Forrester con- Q. As an electrician, I do a lot of close work above my head. Because I have te look it gets mighty holding my ead way back in erder te. see. Do yow have any sugges- tions that would help me? E. F.C. bifocals, A. There are several types of occupational bif s that are designed for people, like your- self, who do quite a bit of over- head work. At the time of your trist and ili, suggest best stvle bifocal for your needs. Q. My mether, who is 59 years eld, has had cataracts re- moved from each eye. She now has to wear glasses that are so heavy that she has terrible sores on each side of he? nose where the glasses rest. Does she have te wear such heavy lenses? L.M_J. A. Removal of cataracts means taking out the lens of the eyes which have become cloudy thus interfering with vision. removed lenses had a lot of power and this lost power must be substituted with high power optical lenses which of course are quite thick and heavy. There is a way of elim- inating these heavy glasses. however, and that is through the use of contact lens. Not only are they more comfortable to wear but they give better natural vision than regular eye glasses. Q. My eyelashes are always touching the lenses of my glasses. Can this be cerrected? B. M. C. A. There are several ways to correct this annoying occur- rence such as being fitted with a different style of frame that isn't so close to the eyes or by having the iens ground so it curves far enough away from the lashes without touching.. H You Have Any Questions You'd Like Answered Mail or Bring to. .-. PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER A. A. Miles, Dr. P. C. Feinberg FE 2-0291 — FE 2-2912 OPTOMETRISTS Dr. tinued a case yesterday against actor Van Johnson involving a settled a claim of $15,260 aaginst New York Yankee co-owner Del, /Webb and one of $40,609 against Calhern and | Griffin, Actor Clark Gable was ex- to appear to testify on Griffin's behalf. | Comes Through Trying Moments | With Dexterity DALLAS (AP)—The hotel desk clerk, busy assigning rooms for the International City Manager's. Assn. convention, looked blankly Fuse Arrived 1959 TV's * ADMIRAL * GENERAL ELECTRIC * RCA VICTOR * EMERSON * PHILCO * MOTOROLA Note: Bargains in 1958 TV's While They Last! HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC at the man standing before the 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 idesk. | “You are- Rene Labrosse, city: manager from Pointe Claire, Que- bec?” he repeated, “And you wish! ‘your wife, Mrs. Labrosse, to be ‘put into the double room with the | Pointe Cl aire mayor, and you take the single? | The visitor nodded. The clerk | nervously drummed his fingers. i Finally the clerk asked: ‘‘The' mayor—it is a woman mayor?” “Of course,” answered the visi- tor, MUNTZ TV Member of Electronics Association C & V ELECTRO MART 158 Oakland Open Daily ‘til 7 Mon. and Fri. "til 9 RCA Color TV Sales and Service CONDON'S TV 36 S. Telegraph FE 4-9786 Across from Tel-Huren eee Complete + MODERNIZATION No Job Too Big or Too Small Call BIG BEAR FE 8-6593 BA FREE ESTIMATES PYoy Wee)e) Waa Sales and Service SWEET’S RADIO-TV Open Mow, & Fr 422 W. Huron Night FE 4.1133 f = | TWENTY-EIGH T THE PON TIAC. PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, eal Pope's Doctor to Face Inquiry Rome Medical Group Will Look Into Articles Describing Pius’ Death ' ROME (AP)—The Rome Medi- cal Assn. will conduct a formal inquiry to determine if the per- sonal physician of Pope Pius XII) violated his professional obliga- tions by selling articles describ- ing the pontiff's last illness and death agonies. * The inquiry * * on Prof. Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi, the Pope's personal physician for 19 years, will take about three weeks. A finding of guilty could result in a re reprimand. FE 4-1584 | “STA-CLEAN” HEATING OILS * 24-Hour Emergency Service * Use Your Standard Credit Card for Home Heating Oil Purchases suspension for ‘a time or even ‘ouster from the jmedical profes- ision. l. The association's Seay) council voted the inquiry Monday inight at an urgent meeting to con-; |sider a storm of public demands | ‘that Galeazzi-Lisi_be_disciplined. 1 The Roman Catholic Church's College of Cardinals had earlier | accepted Galeaxzi-Lisi’s resigna-! ion as Vatican Health Services director: x * * Galeazzi-Lisi has contended that. his articles betrayed no profes- sional secrets because his obliga- tion of secrecy ended with his pa- tient’s death. He attributed the criticism to jealousy of doctors who were not called to treat the Pope before he died Oct. 9. * * * Articles signed by the doctor were sold to a number of Italian and foreign publications, but some Italian newspapers decided they’ were too explicit for publication. Rome papers also raised pointed questions about published photo- graphs of the dying pontiff Bata with a miniature camera. by Prosecutors Here James P. Lawson, Democratic candidate for Oakland County prosecutor, charged last night the county has at least six unsolved murders because the present prose- cutor's staff is not working fulltime in solving them. 95 West Pike St. SWEETEN A Sour STOMACH (Advertisement) Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger Thousands of couples are weak, worn-out, exhausted because body lacks iron. For new younger feeling after 40, try Ostrer Tonic Tablets. Contain iron for new pep, vim, phis high- potency dose Vitamin Bi. In a oe day, Ostrex he as much iron as 16 doz raw oysters, 4 Ibs. of liver, 16 Ibs. of beet 3-day ““get-acquainted” save ra 69¢. get Economy size, save $1 67. All druggists & ithe Peace, “Perhaps some of the _ inef- ficiency that we've seen during the Republican dominated scene lies in the fact that we have only part- time prosecutors,’’ said Lawson. Farmington Township Justice of in a press conference lin Berkley. * * * “Pick up a copy of the Oakland County Legal News and see for ‘yourself the names of assistant ‘prosecutors, including the chief trial lawyer, who appear as coun- sel in private law cases,"’ Lawson added. Lawson, who said he wasn’t cri- ticizing his opponent, Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem, but rather the county for not appropriating more funds and assistants, said murder- ‘ers picked this county for dumping their victims, believing they could \get away with the crime in Oak- ‘land County * * * Lawson did criticize Ziem how- ever when he rebuked his oppo- nent’s alleged statement that the prosecutor's office wasn’t an_ in- 'vestigating agency. The first concrete effort to change the status of Hawaii from that of territory to a state was a bill introduced in Congress in 1937. ‘Living on iSecial Security Charges Inefficiency. Hsing Problem A er 65 nee _By RAY HENRY oe ” Asostiniad Press Writer === > It’s almost inevitable that many retired people wind up in homes far bigger than they need, can afford or take care of. In fact, this is the dilemma many of them face today. The government figures about one out of three people 65 or older live in households with six of more rooms—obvi- ously more space than most need or even want. \ What can you do if you’re faced with this problem? {rel J, Artist Suapected of Setting Fires; ‘l Had to Do It’ PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) —- Of course, you can sell your home and buy a smaller one. The government has made this easier recently by setting up some special financing arrangements for people 60 or ol You can get the details on this from any Federal Housing Ad- ministration (FHA) office. der. charge, Or, you may want to ‘sell your hone 4 and rent an apart- to do it.” ment where you'll have no upkeep costs or maintenance re- sponsibilities. On the other hand, you may not want to sell your home. The memories and attachments are too strong. Be- ing in familiar surroundings may mean too much to you. You may want to keep the home so you'll have a place where your children ean come to visit. If keeping your home is your preference, you may paral the alternative of dividing it and turning the extra space into an apartment you can rent. But, before you go too far with such plans, you should find out from the city zoning authorities if apartment dwellings are okay in your area. They may not be. | If they are, your next step should be to check with a real | Dar- _Roesbery, whe paints on I'd make sure the building was empty first. I didn't Want * ste anyo: ne, te he said. = ss s S Se * ee He also said he would get se- 'yere headaches before touching off: the fires by wadding up. news-} papers *and lighting them with matches. ot M. Regent ia otal ct 3 Dem Clubs Here igan regent, will. ‘be guest speaker Sunday at three Democratic club meetings in the Pontiac area. aS sma Ret Hoa seeeeeeeoeoeoeoes velvet with water colors for re-|~ Police-said-he-tola.them he had! 0. ier" “rend m. vere ay laxation, tried~today. to explain serious family. difficulties. He is ae is" ot “Beane why he set B fires in the past) separated from his wife and two ol pg tag Sat ag gfe tnree monthS which did some|young children. cratic Clab, meeting at 10070 Devel ee Guickiy ge ge ets $200,000 worth of damage. His landlady, Mrs. Edna Peters, isburg Rd., Davisburg, and finally| {nus.be°and sounder sleep. Get Labo- The 32-year-old tire repairman said Roesbery was “a wonderful to the Venice Spragg Ladies Dem-' * ed MENDACO.at surrendered to police Monday aft- boy, om We're all just damb- er he had been placed under sur-| founded.” sec ccorcgvcccccooocccsooosoosoosssooseoeleenees veillance as a suspect. *--*« ¢ : Established in 1898 « ; ~ * * His’ employer, Robert Elliott,/e ; n his jail cell, where he was said that Roesbery was a good E mM 5 ‘held for $10,000 bai] on an arson’ worker and came highly recom-| ar er nover Roesbery told reporters mended. . : ithat although be didn't know why) Roesbery is proud of his paint-\e F U NERAL HOME jhe had done it, — the fires|ing. ‘My latest. is on velvet, aig ; 2-917) “seemed just natural. ai had | watercolor. It's the face of a tiger. ° 160 W. Huron St. Fe : ‘I bought oils once and I tried to’ S : ISE “I'd go out and drink beer. I'd paint on canvas. But I wanted/s Pact & Enever : PARKING ON PREMIS 5 get to a certain point—feel tired.'something unusual,” he said. FOO ese e eee ESSE EOS SOHOHEHEOEESSHO SSH ESSE SE OOOES! SEARS estate agency abqut your chances of renting the apartment,. how much rent you can collect. You could—if you’re not careful—find yourself with a big building expense and a vacant apartment or one that’s losing money for you. If you decide to go further, you should next call in an architect or building contractor to figure out how—and at what cost—you can build an apartment. You may even want to call in several to try to get the best deal. The next move—if you don’t have the cash to build the apartment—is to write or visit the nearest FHA of- fice. This agency is permitted by law to stand back of a “modernization” loan up to $3,600 you get from a private loan agency. With this backing, a bank, building and loan association or other lending agency is more likely to make you a loan be- cause it doesn’t take any serious gamble on you defaulting on the loan. You don’t have to use FHA help, however. The financins is up to you and your lending agency. If you can get the fi- nancing, your next step is to give a contractor the job. After the apartment is built, you may want to arrange with your tenant to take care of some or all of the upkeep and maintenance duties. For this you could offer lower rent. | Here’s one caution: Don't expect to get rich by renting an apartment in your home. Chances are you'll get little more than enough to offset the payments for building the apa.tment and the heating and upkeep costs. But, if you handle it right, you'll be money ahead, have the advantage of living where you want to, and perhaps have none of the burden of outside household chores and responsibilities. Driving yourself was never like this! 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