f cs j The Weather == U. S. Weather Bureas Forecast ‘Partly cloudy and cooler. * (Details Pages) ' 115th YEAR 1958 —26 PAGES Butcher ey er PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST ll, lent About NOT AN ICEBERG IN SIGHT — If you think the days are hot, consider the poor fellow who wears his furs all summer.:.This fellow in a What Do YOU Do in Hot Weather? cool breeze, or Rome Zoo apparently came out looking for a EAR-WASHING — Well, the # ends of the melon section do not quite reach the ears this time but it’s a sure bet that a goodly portion of the lad’s face will be well massaged with the sticky juice. A géod perhaps recalling thé refreshing _ icebergs which he left behind. But he found only a hot, scorching sun. x * * Alert Spécial Lake Deputy|« Saves Life of Woman, 21 One of Oakland County’s special lake deputies reached a drowning woman just in time to save her life Sunday afternoon on Lakeville Lake in Addison Town- ship. . Melvin Pierce, of 376 Rochester Rd., Oakland Town- ship, grabbed the arm of Anita Simon, 21, of 13890 Maine St., Detroit as she+ sank beneath the surface, he reported. ‘The near drowning took place near the middle of the south chan- nel of the lake. Pierce said she Pierce was standing on the shore at the park when he heard her scream and saw her splashing wild- ly in-the water, He jumped into his patrol boat hed the floundering These Fish Got Away! SMETHWICK, England (UPI) A skindiver yesterday solved the mystery of why none of the 7,000 carp and gudgeon dumped into the angling club’s pool here five years ago has never been caught. All the fish had. escaped through an outlet pipe at the bottom. ; McNamara Says Okay WASHINGTON i — Sen. Pat- rick McNamara says that if x members of the Teamsters Union “Don’t rightly know why do it at all,” Fanny says, chuck- ling raucously, ‘‘all the hollerin’ it causes. But I guess it’s a ques- tion of once you got a foot in, you can't tell the kids you're scared,” (One of her pet theories is ‘hat the only reason men swim in cold water after the age of 40 is to defend their honor or saVe a drown- ing blonde.) FIVE TOP TYPES ‘There is scarcely space here to list some 195 of the “p H of potential purple people,’”’ -but g These 5 Die as Trains (Collide Head-On' | i in New York — 25 Injured as ‘Missed Signal’ Causes Crash in Rockland County STERLINGTON, N.Y. —Five persons were killed and at least 25 injured to- day when two Erie Railroad passenger trains crashed head-on as the result of a missed signal. Two of the victims were passengers, a man and woman. Their bodies were cut from the wreckage of the first car on a four-coach commuter train bound from Monroe, N.Y., to Hoboken, N.J. They were identified as Robert Nardo, engineer; Charles G. Mitchell, a brakeman; and Martin 4J, Walsh, a fireman, The two diesel locomotives tel- escoped but neither the locomo- tives nor the cars were de- railed. — Several coachés piled together and some of the wheel trucks lifted off the roadbed, ONLY FEW PASSENGERS the waters here are so frigid that/30 riders on the commuter train almost everybody is purple from) The wreck occurred on the Erie time to time — except, of course,/main line-in a rural section of immediatly after. tunch, when to] Rockland County, about 35 miles plunge in a lake is ay sure northwest of New York City, short- as to plunge in a knife. .. ly before 7 a.m, x k& * "e One of the first rescue squdds pas purple People paychologist| to reach the scene was the Hill- as “Frozen Fanny Jones,” because oe : A number were stretcher cases.” A relay of ambulances vehicles by noon or night with a high of 84-86. . Tomorrow night will be partly cloudy with scattered thunder- showers and a low of 66-70. The outiook for Wednesday is most- ly’ fair -with normal seasonal temperatures, The weather bureau’s five day forecast predicts temperatures will average agound three - degrees above the normal high of 82 and norma] low of 62. * * * It will turn cooler Thursday and warmer again Friday and Satur- >| Sion. Fifth Avenue in New York, COSTLY BREAK — W. F. Stanton, a vice president of the famed Tiffany jewelry store on brooches, each worth $9,000 from display behind ierdorf's hiding | _ Window Was Shatterproof! removes two shattered shatterproof window in the quiet of Sunday’s Fifth Avenue dawn, sledge-hammered two display windows and made off with jems valued at $171,500. - He May Know Whereabouts of (Uncle Herman Ziem Will Ask Detroiter to Take Lie Test as ‘Torch’ Probe Continues By PETE LOCHBILER Myron D. Weiss, a Detroit butcher, may know the hid- ing place of Herman Kier- dorf, 67-year-old uncle of Teamster leader Frank Kierdorf, fatally burned in mm | Oakland County Prosecutor AP Wirephote Sunday. Burglars, Not Proven: WASHINGTON (UPI) This refers to a verdict, Adams Pentagon Influence Say Probers — House military investi- gators reported last night their investigation failed to turn up evidence that Sherman Adams tried to influence a Pentagon board in any Army textile contzact case. Chairman F. Edward Hebert~ (D-La)» of the sub- committee which investigated the case described the ‘| group’s report as a “Scotch verdict.” possible under Scotch crim- inal law, of “not proven,” instead of “not guilty.” It also sive decision’ or ambiguous pronouncement.” Hebert told reporters there was “no doubt” that Adams, by for- Departme the board to reach an early deci- x * * But Hebert and nine other sub- indicated an intent by Mr. Adams or any member of Congress to in- fluence the board.” Adams has denied bringing ‘any improper pressure to bear, either in this case or another involving — manufacturer Bernard Gold- This case involves a World War II contract to Raylaine Worsteds, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Colonel Gets Answer From Office Honeypot DAYTON, Ohio &® — At Wright- Patterson Abt is. defined as “an inconclu-+——— Ford, GM Try Again on Contract Talks DETROIT (UPI)—Negotiators at Ford Motor Co. and General Mo- panies. ~ UAW President Walter P. Reu- action because the “time is not ripe.” * * * z “We decided to give the com- panies one more chance to bar- gain in good faith before calling a strike,” Reuther said. “The time is not ripe now because the in- ‘dustry is not committed to its 1959 To Extend Trade Act _ WASHINGTON (~The ‘Senate / it ERT ing, Ziem reported that “we got ; almost nothing out of him.” s + "Se Thieves Get | 2, si mat. ve woiid ask i $171,500 in Tiffany Job NEW YORK (UPI — A team of daredevil thieves smashed open two display windows at swank Tif- fany’s on Fifth Avenue and lifted out jewels valued at $171,500 yes- terday in one of the city’s most; daylight Fae ve ld. i Z F * i Hi ia i 2, Col. 3) Ypsilanti y Killed by Train. Detroit Resident Killed i Z & as - @ E the windows, which is included in the system,. was not disturbed. Heavy oak paneling and dra- peries back of the windows were \fund drives, the House Veterans Committee said: .* “It is doubtful that Amer- the mails be spent the veter- ans in whose names it is solicited. The report said the DAV, In Today's Press eee spent more than $50,000 from 1950 And the report said the DAV Hott onward, looking back toward | The lowest recorded temperature} Jackson, Miss., “I reckon the Reciprocal Trade Agree- believed to account traffic fa in Oakland County tad, si fhcaemsnre) sp covers’ ths oasis of oe rao was @ The reading at 2 my en lookin’ ‘bactods sion pet lo he ft a = two guards ins Sheriff Dowie reported that . po, re Z la 3 proves, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) 'p.m. was 82. fis mere voted. ce ae ae Oy "| Homer C. Detar, 65, af Ypsilanti, - was killed instantly at about 11 *|Committee Asks Regulations for Gift Collecting “ quae tome homed oe >) ewetes Soe Dee bd e | * % Oakland | deputies t House Group Hints Misuse of Donations to Veterans |t=|= "= : ; Toll | Resort in Indian . > a in ’58 River, was travel- WASHINGTON (AP)—A House; 1, Require that at least 50 perjlarly criticized two—the Disabled] which gets most ‘of its money | William N, Morton of Cincinnati,| It found only occasional fund- mt 555° ee committee wants laws to protect/cent of gross from uner-|American Veterans, a chartered| from selling car key identifica. |Who said he spoke for Cincinnati’s|raising abuses by local American 54. —— the public from what it termed|dered merchandise through! croup, and the now defunct Na-| tion tags, spent $312,000 of its Golegatios, Stil bis\Legion posts and that this was a " |fund raising was deemed limited. buddy, poppy campaign was basi- conducted. * * * The American Veterans of World War II has insufficient na- tional control over fund by state departments, but that the Of the other nonchartered groups, the committee said the Blinded Veterans Assn. and the = Killed in State Traffic, Lake Accidents | | crane —: Jammed Roads (Claim 16 Lives 4 Drownings Add to Toll as Motorists Flock to Country, Beaches By The Associated Press [ptt to pot yg _/ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST/11, 1958 _ Dees 7 oe ae es eu The Day in Birmingham 2 New Streamlined Tickets © to Greet Parking Violators the fine without pen- which to pay ’ BIRMINGHAM — Parking vio- to request a lators in Birmingham soon will be greeted by a brand new, stream-|\ lined ticket, Chief of Police Ralph W. Moxley said today. The new tickets are designed to save hundreds of hours in the Vio- lations Bureau and to make fine paying convenient for motorists. 7 * *« * They will list the types viola- eee we eaten ne Some sak peel " each. Instead of 72 hours, motor- fle sceidents on jammed) Michh\ists now will have five days fn|; E if | | i's} 3 % Ses me ie. fe re : ( 3 i Writes Macmillan’ That Summit. Meeting Plan Wes No Good MOSCOW (UPI — Nikita S. Khrushchev today accused Presi- dent. Eisenhower of blocking an immediate summit conference. The Soviet Premier said he.still wants a meeting and that h A detachable stub, which will serve as @ receipt on payment, further will reduce clerical work. * * a Dunk in Michigan's Four persons died in ene two- Garfield road inary technique, the am | ©. Valades, 21, and Melvin stein- occurred near Sterlington, N. Y. (35 miles northwest of New York City) when one train missed orders to wait for the other to get off its track. : : NEW YORK TRAIN RASH — Diesel locomotives of two Erie Railroad passenger trains are jammed together after a head-on collision killing and injuring a number of persons. The accident Jam Southfield Butcher Silent About Herman Road Hearing - sas ue we dino throw authorities off their trail. Hear Plan for Extending Northwestern Highway in Oakland County Interested citizens packed the ry Lester Bolden, 53, of Detroit, was killed Saturday night when he was struck by a car while walking north of Britton. Beatrice Johnson, 40, of Chicago, killed Saturday night when Wednesday is the deadline for x 3 — “The Tippy-Toe Ladder " These are women .of|Sponsored by the YMCA Young Adults group. They may be made at the “Y” Detroit. John M. Hastings, 64, of Pellston, was injured fatally Saturday night|that is achieved, Their favorite in a two-car collision on U.S. 31 in Little Traverse Township, Emmett County. John King, 22, of Petoskey, was killed Saturday night when his car went out of control and struck a tree on state road in Redmond source said of the reported criti- cism: _ 23 ‘We don’t know a thing about it, We are checking to find out where the statement came from, since it certainly was not au- thorized by State Police head- . State Police don’t have the authority to tell the attorney general what to do.” Ziem supported the attorney gen- eral. “Paul Adams has given no indication that politics is involved at all,” he said. * * * As far as I'm concerned, we've cooperated 100 cent with Adams and Adams has cooperated ' 100 per cent with us.” Ziem said today that Keller (Continued From Page One) Weiss has been held in protective custody along with Donald Keller, 34, of Detroit, who also was with Herman Monday afternoon, : * * * Keller told authorities that after the sale, Herman and Weiss dropped him off and continued on together in a green and white Ford station wagon. The meat company is located near another car Jot where Her- man attempted to sell the car. Herman's son, Jack, of Clawson, is associated with the company. * * * Both Adams and high State Po- lice officials~ issued statements today denying-that a rift has de- veloped in the investigation of the bungled of a Fiint dry cleaning shop, where Frank acci- dentally received his fatal burns. Mrs, William Van Every | Service for Mrs. William (Ade- a thy Lane, Waterford, a former Bir- the| Mingham resident, will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Manicy Bailey Funeral Home with burial a ne Peck Cumeioeee mere) Mrs. Van Every died Saturday tests on clues believed to substan- tiate this theory, Being tested were a flashlight, a five-gallon Army gasoline can and a pair of glasses, all found at the scene of the $14,000 cleaners fire. Frank Kierdorf wore glasses, but none were in his possesison when he stumbled into the hospital. BUR {ED SATURDAY The torch victim was buried Sat- urday in Flint, with the arrange- ments for his funera] being made by Thompson, described as a close friend of the victim. About 49 to 45 friends and curiosity seekers showed up amid the heavy: floPa} displays. Looking for a motive in the ar- i ge ett : § plans for the improvement. of ‘I Northwestern-Highway in Oakland - « iG 1 al it struck a tree. Sterling Green, 53, of Farming- ton, was killed Friday when struck by a car in Farmington Township outside Detroit. Agnes L. West, 58, of rura] Lan- sing, was injured fatally Friday night in a two-car collision at an intersection in Lansing towship, : ay Ee j i : $ +7 Bee o£ 2 Call of Milford; two brothers, | James B. and Russell H, Fisher, iy both Birmingham; and six grand- children also survive i [ ez =f z * | i SUE RL Untare mut ten, waa 3 * Esk which was ft Yi tf 5F i The Weather ee highway federal aid funds are to be used in construction. Also attending today’s hearing were memberes of the Oakland of Supervisors’ Adds Partner, Store Fred J. Niedelson, owner of Won- derland Shop, a children's clothing store at 39 S. Telegraph Rd., in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, has announced a new partner In the Wonderland firm, and expan- sion plans for an additiona] store in Birmingham. Irving J. Gordon, of 37 Bloom- field Terrace, who was manager of children's wear department in a It-has been reported that some State Police: officials had asked Adams to step out of the case, which he entered last Wednesday, two days after Kierdorf, 56-year- old busfiéss agent for Flint Teamsters Local 332, staggered ye |into St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with burns over 85 per cent of his body. \ One official (unidentified) was quoted saying that Adams’ direction of the case has “cre- ated friction and hampered other invesitgaiors,” He was turther quoted as saying Adams had entered the case because this is an election year. “Utterly ridiculous," was Adams’ reaction as he indicated his in- tention to stay in the case today. -* ¥ * 7 Adams denied charges of ‘‘poli- tics,” saying that Gov. Williams ordered him into the case and con- sequently he has had to cancel political appearances. “Tam in this case solely for the purpose of bringing about a speedy solution of the crime and convic- tion of the person or persons who committed it. At this stage of the proceedings, 1 am here for the purpose of coordinating the work of the prosecuting dttorneys.” x * * Adams issued his statement from his Lansing office where he has gone, he said, to study tran- scripts of testimony taken during the first week of investigation. In Flint, a high State Police Se ok about Herman's He said that Keller, a helper at the Detroit meat market, did net ask for police protection after his release. . Weiss’s stationwagon was €X- amined in Detroit, according to State Police Lt, Howard Whaley. It revealed no clues, he said, and ihas not been taken into custody. * * b Discovery of the stationwagon kills the theory that Herman is using it in his flight. | turned up what they say is a new clue. It is a notebook. be- longing te Frank Kierdor!, con- taining a list of names, most of them Flint residents. Although police would not dis- close the identities of the men listed, in the book, a number of them are being questioned today, they said. The questioning is re- ported aimed at discovering the hiding place of ame* Kierdorf. * * 41, also a business agent for local 332, who is suspected to be Her- man's and Frank’s accomplice in the arson attack on the cleaners. Upto the time of his death Thursday, Frank Kierdorf main- tained that he had been turned into a “human torch” by two gunmen, who took him for a ride from, his Flint home, doused him with in- flamahle liquid, ‘and ignited it, / Officials now believe that Kiet- dorf, burned when he’ bungled the arson job, was Held in Flint is Jack Thompson. | son, Adams has said it is not known whether the torch victim was extorting money from Flint cleaners against a promise the shops, or whether be was working for a cleaners’ owner who wanted to reduce competition. CLEARED IN LIE TEST . | Late yesterday, a lie test and “other evidence” cleared Herb Har- rison/ owner of a cleaning shop the street from the Flint arson site, of any apparent con- Officials are still wendering if explosions and fires at Detroitarea auto wash and cleaning firms this year. , Lif In efforts to tie the sault to Teamsters ties, more than a dé ster officials, mostly , land County, have“ tioned. / So far, authorities have given no indication that the questioning has produced any suspicion of an Oak- land County tie-up: in the case. Meantime,’ «authorities away ag Hollywood, Fla., were checking on a possible connection between Frank Kierdorf and an- other bombing. . The operator of a Hollywood Jaundry and dry cleaning plant re- three times, twice in March and ‘again on July 28. On the night of the second bomb- Pon- jing, it was reported that a light- colored Cadillac circled the plant several times and a man of Kier- Teamsters would not organize their there is a connection between the(#'UCk by a train et a crossing Flint blaze and about a dozen{” Woodland Park,°20 miles west as far ported that it had been bombed, John Armstrong, 29, of Detroit, was injured fatally Saturday when his car was struck from behind by another vehicle on a road in Bloomfield Township. + * & Ricky Litchford, 10, of Coloma, was killed Sunday when his bicyele ,was struck by a car on a Berrien County road. Oradunn Ramsey, 26, of Broham, was killed Sunday when he was of Big Rapids. George Williamson of Byron Cen- ter in Kent County, suffered fa- tal injuries Sunday when he was run over by a car backing from a home where his parents were visiting. David Danis, 23, of Laurium, drowned Saturday while swimming in Portage Lake near Houghton. Mrs, Margarite Bart Jr., 22, of East. Detroit, Sunday whole swimming in Bishop Lake State Park in Livingston County. William J. Neilson, 60, of Grand Junction, drowned Saturday when his boat overturned on Saddle Lake near South Haven, Edward L. Hybrowski, 33, of River Rouge, drowned Friday night while fishing in the Detroit River. 5 Killed, 25 Injured Leonard Train Crash Kills Ypsilanti Man §Contitted From Page One) of a Detroiter, John Armstrong, 29, of 17500 Santa Rosa St., accord- ferred there from St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He was one of the driv- ers, The other driver, Gerald Ford, 33, of 28930 Somerset St., Inkster, and a companion, Marjorie Ballen- ger, 21, of 14159 Foch St., Livonia; ——— to St. Joseph Mepty Hospital f She Is reported in poor géndl- tion and Ford’s condition ig listed as fair today. f Also treated for mipor injuries and released was N Henk, 24, of 16204 Dexter Ave‘, Detroit, ek h/t . Police said Armstrong was stopped waiting to make a left turn when the’Ford auto smashed into him from the rear, Ford's car skidded some 180 feet before the Townsend Tells Romance Story; Margaret Hurt LONDON (UPI) — A London newspaper said today group Cap- tain Peter Townsend has lost the of Princess Mar- garet because he helped prepare a forthcoming book about their former romance, “The People” said Townsend met Princess Margaret at Clar- .ence House 10 weéks ago and showed her extracts from the | book inf order to reassure her that it was “i the best possible taste.” fe . * * »- The Princess was not reas- sured, fhe paper said, and de- manded that the book be with- drawn from publication, When this was not done, Margaret de- ided to break off the friend- /ship that replaced their” head- line romance of several years ago, ‘The People” reported. * * The paper said the book, en- titled ‘The Story’of Peter Town- send,” will give an inside ac- count of that’ romance, ing details of intimate conver- sations between the Princess and the suitor’ she renounced, * *&® _ The report said the book was- written by , journalist Norman Bartymaine, a friend of Town- send’s, and that Townsend him- self read and corrected the man- uscript. | Pe ® s * Full 0. S. Weather Bureau Report local store for the past five years, e dorf's general description was seen T C | d geet apd deci cleedy und somewhat cecler tonight, tow iS the new vice president. on foot in front of the building, aS IFains LONIGE —_——- oe Tomorrow a a} Gordon will manage the new Bir- Only three weeks before his : e K.. Sey aed tres regaringham store at 15 W. Maple death, Kierdort had purchased a| | (Comimed From Fase Ome) | Miller’s Annual Summer Vai je winds mostly northerly §-10 miles today becoming te vari- ble tonight. Temerrew night pertly with scattered showers or thun- derstorms, lew 46-79, St., which is scheduled to open Friday, Niedelson, firm president, will continue to manage the Tel- Huron store, which is in its fourth jured to Good Sarharitan Hospital, Suffern, N.Y.; and Tuxedo Hos- pital, Others received first aid at the scene, . home in Hollywood and a light-col- ored Cadillac with Michigan license plates was reportedsseen parkd in Clearance Sale : @ Living Rooms se his driveway. Kierdorf had re shea tenpeine pratense edly beh vacationing in ‘sllpaoed Robert Higgins, one of the less until July 16, when he returned to Michigan. The laundry owner Saturday asked the FBI to join in the in. vestigation, ee. At 8 @. m.} Wind velocity calm. @un sets Monday at 7:39 p. m, t $:35 a, m rat _ |Hot and Humid Sr eattiss= (Sticky Outlook seriously injured, was at work sort- ing mail on one train. “The only warning I got was when the emergency brake went on,” he said, Saree Oe tee eu ® Dining Rooms Dewntewn Temperatures . mi! pam . n Displays His Pistol, jnext thing there was this cras 9 &.M..... eoce,. ta 2 p.m... 83] A ATED PRESS ’ ‘ re ees eee oe Shoots Self by Accident (274) as 00 the for. e Bedrooms More hot and humid weather was the sticky outlook for broad ‘areas of the country today. No general relief was indicated im- “I managed to walk out. Others) with me had to be carried out.” The wreck, according to a spokes- man at Erie railroad headquarters Sanday in” Pontiae (as Pe tg downtown) Cn eee INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—Philip L, Hartmeyer, 26, Kent Village, Md., was practicing whipping his .22- All Quality Furnishings = Magn tamperazare +--+. 78 mediately. : in Hoboken, resulted because a . sccasricnoia ona + + [caliber pistol trom a new holstet|treight train was standing on one Offering You the One Year Age in Pentise ~. he shot himself in the right Highest temperature ..........-.....9 A few areas got some relief dur thigh, Here visiting a friend of the two tracks near the Ster- Lowest tempersture .....0..0.-0--. sate ing the night after yesterday's : & » be lington freight station, was taken to Community Hospital and reported in fair condition. | He told his friend he had a sim: Mean Temperature pe eee Weather—Mostiy fair. - ee Righest an@ Lowest Temperatures Thi: Date in #0 ¥ oe Sisteamy weather. Showers also brought temporary relief to some sections. “on ws. | Greatest Savings in Our History paggage- senger train, Ne. 53, bound from | ‘You always get the most for your money at Miller's’ 4 i 7 t . - " ; 4 i 99 in 1944 ™ 59 i: 1882] Moist air from the Gulf of Mex- on rye oot piggies oo bypebalg cage _ ‘nena Raters se slot the Rockies land. That time he shot himself| and instructions were sent to hold | Our Lower Overhead, Makes The Difference - Be ms in x M = 2 8 * ¢ in the foot. the commuter train, No, 50, trav- EAS c : os Ay te Milwaukee a 6 Showers which fell across wide : - iad ban the opposite direction, st ASY T RMS, TOO! . . Hy HH New Qrieaas 81 " aces probed piglet ren Car in River, 9 Drown se . — . . | | hte 3 New Yo 83 Tlevening en in. most places dur- Pontiac F ' The order a ntly did not ar- ~ Bo $70 Peliston 90 g3(iNZ the early morning. However, BEING QUESTIONED — Detroit meat dealer Myron D. Welss ORIZABA, Mexico (AP)~A car-|rive in time. — Mil I E ane poe 8 premerch es ie eet Of mowers and Grinder! strempts t his face as he was lead from the Oakland County |'0ad_of pienickers on their way! Among the seriously injured wes ; OMPANY 88 68 Pittsburgh 99 16 on. extended from southern attempts to cover His a y ice Manas ovde onl pis Pho a s , we Bt } ty ORY es stor Jail today to face questioning at the Oakland County Prosecutor's | + — conductor : / “Our 23rd Year et This Seme Location” . ¥ , &., Marte e. Michigan eastward across) : terday and plunged into the swift| Sutton, of Port Jervis, He was ta- | Base SG Urine fh fpiootern Lower Michigan and)’ nce Wt the a0 ‘elias unde, Hecman, frp the ued car |euane7, River, drowning wpe par-[ntn| trunediately tthe | . 144 OAKLAND AVE, oaviié $6 4% Geatte 8 48lnorthern Indiana into northern| Weiss drove Frank Kierdorf’s uncle, Herman, from the used car |sons, The dead included five chil-jroom on arrival at the Suffers | Open Pridey Evenings Closed Wednesday Afterncons fe HE ieee * "3 Ohio and western Pennsylvania, ©| lot where Herman sold his Cadillac and then disappeared. - léren, \ 3 Hospital. - | | ; PON th ig BBA ET 6, EE ecg fag. tame ey f ‘ ° ‘ ‘ ~ be ok : . . ee : = iH * ‘© : THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, August 11, 1958. ~ Deaths i in Ponti and N Nearby pe ALBERT BROYLES Service will be held 2 p. m, Tues- day at Pursley. Funeral Home for Albert C. Broyles, 62,‘ of 165. Rae- burn court, who died suddenly of a heart attack in his home Sunday afternoon, Burial. will. follow in White Chapel Cemetery. Formerly an inspector for General Motors Trucks, he ig survived by his wife,” Pauline, a son, Donald; and a daughter, Mrs. Billy Arnold of Auburn Heights, GEORGE W. GRANT George W. Grant, 81, of 411 Au- burn aevnue, died Saturday eve- ning in Pontiac General Hospital, following an illness of several months, He is survived by one dnt: Mrs, G. H, Williams of Pontiac: one brother, James Grant of Waterford; four sisters, Mrs. Kath- erine Elwell of Pontiac, Mrs. Min- nie Wallace of Whitmore Lake,| - Mrs, Eva Tremper of Walled Lake and Mrs, Alice Strubble of High- Jand. Two granddaughters and five cateeeeee also survive eee service will ‘be held Tuesday from DeWitt C, Davis Funeral Home at 2:30 p.m. with burial following in Four Towns. MRS, PEIRL C, KENT Mrs. Peitl C. (Louise) Kent, of 83 East Sheffield St., died day" following a six weeks illness. Mfs. Kent is survived by her husband. Funeral will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at Voorhees- {Siple Chapel with burial following : |Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Herbert (Lula) Lewis, 79, of 44 E, Washington St., will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in.Clark- ston Cemetery. Mrs, Lewis: died early today at her home after &n illness of one Ti,{month. . Surviving are two sisters, ses, Roy Addis of Clarkston with whom she made her home and Mrs. Clare Swayze of Orchard Lake. ‘BOYD'M, NICHOLSON MILFORD — Service. for Boyd M, Nicholson, 78, of 414 W. Huron St., will be held at 1 p.m, Wednes- day at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Oakgrove Cemetery. Nicholson died early today in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Kent will lie in state at the Voor- hees-Siple Funeral Home. MRS. PETER (CARLOINE) W. MARINGER Rosary will be recited for Mrs. Peter (Carloine) W. Maringer, 71 of 12818 Lauder avenue, Detroit, at 8 p.m. at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in -St. Benedict Church, with burial following in Following a two and a halt months illness, Mrs. Maringer died in Bloomfield . Hospital Sunday morning. She is survived by a sister, two children, Mrs. Allan C. Monteith of Pontiac, and Robert E. Maringer of Columbus, Ohio; and six x eee children years. He was a retired farmer. iio MRS, SAMUEL CHILDS MILFORD — Mrs. , Samuel (Nette) Childs, 87, of 106 Houghton St., “died early wey. The body is. at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Surviving are her oe ‘Mrs. Ruth Pearsall of and a son, Clayton of Milford; six grandchil- dren.and four great-grandchildren. NANCY DRUM LAKE QRION — Nancy Drum, ‘\¥1-year-old daughter of Mr, and Mount Ver- fay Pasa gre oe an Py ohare and two sisters. in Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac.|©ngland Her body is at Allen’s Funeral . Home, Lake Orion. “ of Milford and Joseph of Port Huron, MRS. WILLIAM POTTS ORCHARD LAKE — Service for of 3271 Suteliff St., will be held at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Grif- fin Funeral Chapel. Burial will be in. Commerce Cemetery. She died unexpectedly yester- day at her home. Surviving are two daughters, Grace .of Detroit and Mrs, Albert Sanders of Orchard Lake; three Black Plastic Mulch Tested for Berries MADISON, Wis. (UPI)—A small- fruit specialist at the University of Wisconsin reports that “black plas- tie” used as mulch in strawberry patches will not stand up in se- vere weather, George Klingbell said the plas- tic sheets must be well anchored against the wind.. The sheets are cut so that the plants can be pulled) () i1are. through and cover the ground, smothering weeds and helping to hold moisture. ~ He said that most growers prefer ‘establishing runner plants in a tic. Printer’s Ink Flows" in Veins of Hoveys with the Beverly Times, Carleton B., a third son, with the Times. Lewis R. 2nd, a grandson, with|# Daniel, another grandson, also /# with the Times. California Notes Rise in ‘57 Tourist Business LOS ANGELES — The All-Year|" Club of Southern California re- ports that 4,363,000 tourists visited) > the area in the year ended August| = 31,’ an increase of 1.6 per cent) Goes over the precedimg 12-month a ‘Funeral Home with burial in a also |= MRS. JAMES H. FULLERTON TROY — Service for Mrs. James| H, (Louise) Fullerton, 80, of 1361/5 E. Big Beaver Rd., will’ be held Be at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Price view Cemetery, Royal Oak. f Mrs, Fullerton died yesterd William Beaumont. Hospital,/ bee Oak, after an peo three months. She was a #” member of the Women of the oose, Chap- ter “1323, Royal Surviving are heydaughter, Mrs. | George Stueckle, with whom. she made her homé; one sister, two grandchildren’and six great-grand-|E co LEWIS KSTON — Service for Mrs. $12.95 7 5 5 rT ) Value 4-turret model in hardwood carry- ins case. 6x-10x and 60%-500 Ocu- rs. to 500. Paves ”4-TURRET tisercnas “NOT ‘Frisbee’ © Genuine © SPIN-O | Preside Undisturbed by Search for Smoke ST. CLATRSVILLE, Ohio ww — While the Rev. ‘Mr. J. E. Longs- worth continued his sermon, a quiet search of his church was made for Avtemiie Machine Changes Dollar Bills. rency changer that will return twoja quarters, three dimes, ‘and nickels for a dollar bill—all in seconds—has been invented by| William A. Patzer of Chicago. It will take creased, torn, .rumpled, CHICAGO — Am ‘adtomatic cur-|dirty $1 bills, but will reject foreign and fake money. Modified, it could od change for $2, $5, and $10 in| the source of a wisp of smoke. It cgme- from an. overcoat—in which Clarence Preft had placed == his not-quite-extinguished pipe be- fore entering the church. Independents in Lead NEW YORK—About two thirds.of the 13,000 oil wells drilled annually; in search of new oil deposits are sunk by “independent” operators. These independent wildcatting op- erations uncover most of the near- ly 500,000,000 barrels of new oil reserves discovered. in the. United ae an illness of two and a half’ Surviving are two brothers, Ezra Mrs. William (Gertrude) Potts, 64,! States each ‘year. PYYTTITITIVIT TT TONIGHT & TUESDAY Camera Dept. Specials 2A = NEW SHIPMENT—Repeat of o “Sell-Out”’ iit ~ FOLDING DOORS —— Fits All Dewrways Up. to 32 inches —s* inches —NOW ONLY— Sy * Durable Vinyl Plastic * White or Beige - * Metal: Track—Nylon Glides TT ce eo Lev athe oCenONetttey, UAHAANSLUUUEALGEEUEOOUAUAAY * A pird eek vee net Easy to install’ with only a screwdriver. Wipe with damp cloth to clean:, Only 144 at this sale price. uit It Latest IMPROVED Model ARGUS ‘C-4'. CAMERA, FLASH, CASE POSSHOSSSSEHSSSHSHSSSHOHSHHHSCHOSSSESSOCS rome aren aa $103 List 69” Fine Sond lens . -_ - ast shutter — «,. © Tepid cewind can't gaan. 4 .. . ete. Deluxe leather case, $5 HOLDS. Kodak Brownie -8mm Movie Cameras $20.95 List $22.00 P23. -lens. Roll a = oa to. yl er or ¢, flere Roll $ § SS Indoor or ou 95 t- sh door. Fre stock. Koda- chrome. : Kodak 8mm Color Movie $2.96 List $4 69 8mm Roll : A Smm Mag. All Metal—8mm Size Flying : All Rolls in SAUCERS | "BACK * Spins : F 1 L M Day et Vane 11 A. M. Why Pay &c to 10c Each? LIFETIME FADEPROOF PHOTO PRINTS New, safe, easy-to-use poly- © I- > eythelene flying - saucers for © Enlarged = hours and hours of fun,- Taking © to C @ the country by storm... and © SUPER © Simms has ‘em—NOW! SIZE Automatic ELECTRIC-EYE equip- ment insures BEST possible prints from every negative. . is woes Main and 2nd Floors riod. Total vacation spending in the state during the period climbed - to $608,773,000, a rise of 2.4 per) cent. ~ Greater Boston claims a pop-i— * ulation of 2,370,000. => FOm | foauatouse ” DIRECT by MAIL - Pre-Paid es & sis MOVIES & SLID Factory R tative IE WEDNESDAY 2 te 3:30 P.M. } REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED 3 No Need to Remove Pins! DO-17- YOURSELF Men’s and Ladies’ ‘instant. © eee PY7TYTI TIT irri irri REELS and CANS 200 Feet . P.V.R. is Secret of . Fabulous Formula “99” -HOUSE PAINT NO BLISTER:-NO PEELING! Paint Apy Surface, Anytime, " Any Weather Dries In_ Just Win a Lot. ‘in ALASKA FREE “Get Tickets at ane sia Purchase ial Ry de we iaaaD ‘PRIMROSE’ Made Girdles 59° z 2 for $3.00 — ALL SIZES—Small to Large Choice of white or pink in. panty and regular. styles. Washable, live-elastic for perfect fit and comfort. LIMITED STOCK—buy now. He Should Be Priced at $1.95 to $2.95 Cdevscecesesosonccccccccocosocosososceeoesoes SPENCER “Happy Kids” Sleeveless Undershirts Ir s of - 29c Values launder, extra wearing Quality. savecnececcessosenseoesonssasnsens Full 5 INCH Satin Bound “Baby Blankets esecovoeoe Two-in-One Combination Girl's Blouse & Slip “$1.10 Value 44¢ —for eo Reel & '@ $1.25 Value—300 Fr. So $1.39 Value—400 Fr. .. .69e 16mm Sins—400 Fe. ... . 89 CAMERA’ DEPT. —Main Floor yyy iri TONITE & TUESDAY - Genuine “WAHL” _ Hectric Clipper Tonight & "healer Kitchenware Specials! Latest Model (A-401) PRESTO Pressure Cooker New Automatic Air-Vent $15.95 Full 4-QUART size, ideal for most family meals New im- proved safety valve. Cooks faster and better. Handy, 74- inch Size 2 CUP—PERSONAL Coffee Percolator | COMET ALUMINUM “onl: Pans $1.19 Value sis “J 8 < tehiy ga Hdhe ot ceeen ‘Pour- ing aie’ lip, 7- inch 5 Pc. Tonite and Tuesday Only E Electric Shaver HEADS and ACCESSORIES cnn FLOOR ie a een Electr Shavers ais viel DEX-A-DIET tablets va’ SIMMS CUSTOMER Is Going to WIN Florida Vacation for TWO Just guess nearest to number of No purchase necessary. Enter Contest and Learn All About NEW DEX-A-DIET Ask any salesperson in drug dept. It doesn’t © cost a sifigle penny . ‘ obligation. Everyone has equel chance to win. MEN and WOMEN—Take Off Pounds Whiskaway Quick! Effortiess! Inexpensive! SCHICK Shaver Heads ‘Unconditional money « back 6. ist guarantee assures weight- ne om Ee ey ee control results without @x- , : aly guaran ntecd. ercise or excessive dieting. in glass jar, For Models W - WL -G & GZ ; SUNBEAM : one Heads = 3” For. Models 75. 20 and : cuitersblage te _ ‘com Genuine * REDUCING placement. TABLETS «nO cost... mo © el : Gerber Set Actual pe. 15 List Includes: ‘EB Comple with easy-td-follow in- iz porbertg book for professional E results. Takes the Guesswork noi Bad of Home Hair Clipper Guides i —for Close Cuts) _ SET of 3 | Fit on most make clippers for even cutting and fessional looking haircuts. 67'| ‘NEW. SHIPMENT—Now Sale Priced! ~Wcleome’ : ay Mat 15x22-INCH 18x28-INCH 7éc Value $1.19 Value ‘Tubber fingers to shoes and save ; PYrTiii; tl TT iret irrir eee ete Zipper Top — Raised Bottom Wire Trash Burners Our $1.98 Seller : T 44 Galvanized to resist rust, eiec- eoeepececensecesvcccoscssscecs ae wardoae , Cant lose 20 Gallon GALVANIZED | Garbage Cans $3.29 Quality All metal, galyanized. Complete with cover. ~ aownaamn W . a BARGAI IN Lusterous RAYON — . 4 «te 00 | Sizes | to 6. All. combed cotton, cme Fine Vinyl PLASTIC. ‘DRAPES | Pair ul 54x87-in. panels. All wanted colors in choice of 8 cangre, (Two pairs $1.50). “CANNON — Twin Size Only. Pastel. Bed Sheets $2.98 Quality I 94 72x108-Inch t= ‘ied easat count. Yellow, or blue. bl ile Byy t Dowble Bed Size — 72 x 84 Inch Pastel BLANKETS © I E-Rayon, nylon and cotton E blend for warmth and exe ; tra long wear. 4 colors... 3 Tiree 2 pecesecensooesoc Cceccccccccescvccscoooscoeece: . 4 eo hott wp e gt: ‘ : Ap ee: toe = qe \ aoe re j / | 4 ; oat ; J i i} j : i Mi THE Ponmrac PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 eee “\Khrushchev’ s Flip-Flops Danger to World saben li ts and wanted the meeting] the U.N. Then he rushed off to Peiping, where the Chinese Glass threads are made so fine. pata rasa tt Saath wr edb often hardly visible. “_ “BY James 3 Analyst powrah and’ BY rel Wl ad cies for Bed gob ong wheal Pains ha - as mic help end propaganda, be's| might follow up with conditions he| tne"enunc to meet in/o WASHINGTON (AP)—There Are|made progress where Stalin never| wouldn't or couldn't accept. | “Hie indicated he had second dita ale pe doplowe BE Road own taytinres tal Row now. are at- use a veto— ay pan feed ore dhagrem te Khrushchev's final re-lhe figured to be overwhelmingly Chinese “Iglass containers impulsive—a dangerous ‘lit was a factor. But there bp 3. At a meeting in the Council analyses. in hpeptal laboratories. noes wealmess ina end of state, [AMS ‘An examination .of the/he might have to sit down with). use would cut*down on sterill-| The evidence indicated he agreed peace tg tn reat thagereti Sar veh game hove of ethers sits ation, conte, Allen suggested, . é changes - | whom would a . nm eee eS ee eee hee ee meet: Chiang Kai-shek. |e flip-flopped his way out. ‘On July 29 Khrushchev proposed} a fe Brands Nasser ee & the summit meeting outside the) Chiang’s Natiovalist. Chinese It be can be impulsive on some-| United Nations, On July 22 Presi-jhave a permanent eat on the wouldn't have amounted to much] Some Ky tnnthey tind back ax Chiang, whose seat isclaimed by [ em in gent la ieee et, to eee. oP acceptance the wel day. | Site tittag ‘ain tn aii So ta aes be nant oe Ieee This writer suggests the speed/with Chiang could not help but Jordan's King Husiein a, [EM wie® he atid shoes De Gt shart: Red, Chine. - Tells Countrymen He's “Sali He acndh what thinking} | These gene Sg ya ecdtags ae apc ‘Unshaken by Times’ ‘jhe thought he could get a it; test the W: : consistent in this—and in his _1 He might have guessed Eisen wrote a letter— Hussein of t Jordan glen be “—- : pc gherses aa Bag gt ee od — 4 agent | Khrushchev—except a A ; pe ath om aay og conspir Sere Sve LESTER Nu-Vision’ s Own i akéeatory se Skilled Technicians - - Competent Optometrists Are YOUR GUARANTEE ~ ee eee teres | AEM BETSY ROSS |! ame xs Ra ec men BL GS econ moet bear talk, that he wa] standpoint of the rest f FINE G SSES! Pe we of : a age al “~/ NOW YOU CAN RENT-TO-OWN o LA +”. SIRS restoring 440 million dat| _ 48 be spoke, Jordan's police ac- |, ounced ‘and repudiated $ BRAND-NEW LESTER, $4 4900 = | tars of oe se million eut by eng the Syrian —, abe dictator. Later be took trouble to, | BETSY ROSS SPINETS 10 When you have glasses fitted, it's comforting to know that ‘ the House from new foreign .aid oo ns onteank tale — patch up the old man’s image, He Money paid at rent will be credited your eyes have been thoroughly and scientifically examined e —_ Allen J, Bllender (D-La)| 2208Fd ® United Nations plane in — Pe a softer Soviet foreign eT into hal pd re ae _MOnTELY — and to know that your glasses have been made to your _ said that when the °$3,518,092,500 potoorscagel ; fae Fayeese cuadad bead roads to socialism Mail This Pits Forward Complete Information on Rental Pan exact prescription! You can be sure of this because . money bill —— wp for, Sen) sadeace. - , pened? + Compon bo cas sucedeseesenavonssessesessess: your glasses at NU-VISION are made right in our ston Ra: Nong bogs a es ae us a * hs Today! MMR Aisi + -0rredeoe.ee eens seqdeuseo=. (racers Mere y : laboratories under the careful supervision of your ‘ es were to ae been used to See sil He i his humble P : aa hogpalt SS. papas eee os Sagan eg =f examining Optometrist! You can be sure of the ; : Jordanian develop-|to Y — — : ———— . : - BEST at NU-VISION! _ USED BALDWIN SPINET ; USED STARCK SPINET \ USED GULBRANSEN EBONY SPINET a Srna pce at. ied he Ine. He wad 36 Months to Pay—$25 Down = z i g f fi NU-VISION Optical. Studios ¥ 109 N. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 2-2696 H ; sf called Nasser ‘“‘an im- satellites to expect o Pog op Al por tricks. ay o parang ; Open Mon. & Fri. Until 8:30 P. M, ' SED ph GALLAGHER MUSIC C0. sone ale 28 A 00 200 18 E. Huron FE 4-0566 Pontiac We Are Open Monday and Friday Nights ‘til 9 P.M. 7 bu daring the great FORD Summer Trading onic YOU R SAVINGS Skat EES while selections are complete! modern Six in any car today. There’s Thunderbird GO in every Ford with the mighty — The séoner you come in and trade, the more Thuvatachlrd-powered Vcd et tina: You ena hare ; you save on America’s most beautiful buy! Take up to 800 horsepower-worth of get-up-and-go! your pick of 21 Thunderbird-inspired models, - = ; /inciuding 6 fabulous Ford Station Wagons. Your present car will never-be worth more than it is / Fort peas are lowest to start with. As a matter of Seog oop tary neal hand a oe b : i Srod* : / peeve ' __ lowest ‘priced® of the most “Based om manufacturers’ suggested retail delivered prices Ford costs less to drive and here's why: Lower main. | SIXOrV-8 FORD tenance costs, Fewer oil changes. Up to 15% the savings are great With GENEY | - DRY CLEANING it ¢ to choose QUAL- : man rman ITY CLEANING in money saved on wardrobe replace- . ment. Call Today TWO GREAT TV SHOWS—Wateh ‘hig Ford Show with Ernie Ford, Thurs, 9:30 P.M. EST Channel 4; and Dick Powell’s Zane Grey Theatre, Fri., $:30 P.M. EST. ‘ Pick-Up and Delivery . |. FE 5-6107 i > or: Ge os Seer a ee GENEY | i Bares & | pis Pee SANERS J | SEE YOUR LOCAL AUT HORIZED FORD. DEALER’ es) 1 ce satrene FOR A BETTER BUY IN A USED CAR OR TRUCK, BE SURE" TO SEE OUR won OTHER SELECTIONS OO Ves aera tae : ee ov | oy : ‘ \ : ji ‘| ‘ - ‘, | \ ; ‘ NG , - 2 ' ' \\ Li a pois aT iin _THE. PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. aucust 11,’ 1958 4 Experts ‘Disagree on "Changi Auto’s By ROBERT J. SERLING WASHINGTON (UPI) — When should you change your car's ojl? Automotiye experts are in com- plete, absolute, unshakable agree- ment that it should be changed at regular intervals. They also are in complete, abso- lute, unshakable disagreement on what’ the regular interval should be. The experts questioned by UPI have answers ranging from every 500 miles to as high as 4,000. ’ te * * These are some of their recom- meudations— American Automobile aaeecin| tion: When the bulk of driving is} on paved, dust-free roads at tem-; peratures well above freezing, and is mainly city and suburban driv- ing, every 1,000 miles; when mest|” of the driving is under the same conditions on the open highway, every 2,000. The United States government: Every 4,000 mniiles except in dusty areas when the oil might have to be changed more fre- quently. Automobile manufacturers: Which owner’ 8 manual do you read? Actually, there is a logical rea- son for the difference of opinion. The experts can give only a gen- eralized figure for oil changes. Specific intervals denend on many factors such as weather, road con- ditions, the type of driving you do, whether your car has an oil filter, whether you buy top-grade oil with built-in detergents, etc. The Oldsmobile owner's manual, for example, recommends four dif ferent oil- change periods. It sug- - gests a change every 500 miles if the car is driven in‘cold weather and is used almost exclusively in the city for house-to-house — or'!: oat store-to-store traffic. $,000 miles. Under average. driving condi- tions in the winter (mostly in town with occasional out-of-town sees Olds recommends a 1,000-mile in- terval. But in the summer, the com- pany suggests a change every 3,000 miles, wi takes frequent And when the bulk of driving is ee ee iments an oil change every | But othep General. Motors lines) differ in their oil change recom- mendations. Chevrolet suggests 3| ™S Tecommended. in 2,000-mile interval under normal driving conditions; every month or bi-monthly under adverse condi- tions such as in extremely cold the owner |weather or on dusty ‘roads. And to 4,000 miles if the car is equipped with an oil filter. ‘CREATIVE IMPULSE’ — Spectators view the leaning arrow- like statue in the park of Paris’ Rodin Museum, at exhibition of modern French sculpture. Statue, entitled ‘‘Creative Impulse,” will be erected in Caen, France. months. oil. Pontiac says. its cars can go Ford caljs for, a flat 4,000-mile| ‘minated. change for its entire line, including the high-poweted Thunderbird. But/rosive acids, dirt and dust can/last night when newsmen asked if Mercury and Lincoln recommend|form or get into a crankcase and|he felt snubbed because he had trips. |Chevrolet’s change interval jumps|the 2,000-mile interval or every) harm an engine. Sludge and mois-| 44+ been invited to last week’s|f three months, whichever comesjture are the most frequently-€M-iwhite House ceremony announc- first. Edsel compromises with a|countered enemies. They generally 4,000-mile: change or every ties form more rapidly in coldweather| der-the-North-Pole voyage. The General Services Adminis. * x * tration, which oncrstes the federal government's 20,000 automobiles, drains their crankcases and adds i lfresh oil every 4.000 miles, A GSA} Tae: \official explaincd that all govern- |ment cars use detergent, top-grade IRickover ‘Too Busy’ Oil fo Fret About Snubs break down with inne BOSTON (AP)—Rear Adm. Hy: a use. were the only factor involved, man G, Rickover, known as the what a greedy service station may have told you), oll does not — gram Building , . . world’s first|eastern Pyrenees. The’ all-bronze skyscraper, The 38-story |tivate lands settled by structure on New York City’s Park | Iberians, ‘icia Avenue, is one of the most distinc- | Romans, and pillaged by V tive new additions to the city's}Normans, Saracens: an ever-changing skyline. pirates, F a More than 3,200,000 pounds of, Spain’s Costa Braya—the ‘wild. bronze were used to cover the Sea-|coast”—ties in the shadow of the | ef would’ never have te be (Father of the Atomic Submarine, changed. But oll does get con" says he is ‘‘too busy to worry | : about snubs.’’ That was Rickover’s. answer Sludge, varnish, moigture, cor- the sthmarine Nautilus’ un- under city driving conditions. x *® * Several congressmen said Rick- Experts recommend that when|over should have been there and you take your car in for an oil at least one commented that Rick- first drive around for,over had been slighted repeated- about 20 minutes and get the carjly. . . thoroughly warmed up. Cold oil Rickovr showed a flash of irri- does not drain properly and the/ tation ° when newsmen asked his draining may leave some of the|reaction. He was en route to Contrary to common belief (or | harmful deposits in the crankcase. Washington from Portsmouth, N. H., where he attended builder's Student Jury Stern With Traffic Offender WARREN, Ohio W—A new meth-|ing saddles and making gun hol-| shows that we now have a ship ‘lod of handling juvenile traffic of-|sters for easterners op ‘a Wyatt|that can hide under the ice, And fenses here was introduced when|Earp kick. , . trials of the nuclear-powered sub- e marine Swordfish off the coast of Makes Wild West Items [\aine and New Hampshire. for Fans of Cowboys tk ok * ELIZABETH, N. J. (® — Fredithe roof of the world beneath the Campbell sits in his shop repair-jarctic ice, Rickover said: “It when we get missile subs, like the Of Nautilus’ feat sailing across, Judge Bruce P, Henderson accept- ed recommendations of a jury composed of high school students. Representatives of 10 Trumbull County schools deliberated 20 min- utes, then recommended that a high school freshman from nearby |Southington be fined $20 and costs. They further urged that his dri- He's been doing it for 18 years—,Polaris, anyone who dares attack even gets -orders for hand-tooled|us will inevitably be destroyed.” saddles which he sells for $175 or more, Children are his best cus- tomers for the ‘‘gun”’ holsters. Insurance Loans Drop; Campbell operates a hardware) }¢+ Decline in 5 Years store too, but ig ain’t a six-gun in stock, «| NEW YORK—The nation’s life- insurance companies invested 5.2 days. left the accident scene. ver’s license be suspended for 60 The Ohio Highway Patrol said|pounds of copper and copper base|a drop of 1‘ the youth failed to observe a stop/ alloys according to statistics com-|the 1956 figure. sign, caused a traffic accident and | piled by the Copper & Brass Re-|time in five years that such new- tion, The average 1958 oy passen-|billion dollars in new-mortgage ger automobile has more than 40|loans to property owners in 1957, billion dollars from It avas the first search 4 mortgage investment had declined. me %s +> The Blouson Silhouette 24° So easy to wear i} with its gentle blousing above the waist. In Tal- bott’s fine blend of 80% wool, 20% rabbit's hair, in a rich blaze of colors. Sp iy a Oe Reg. $7.99 Double-Width by 63”, Double-Width by 90”, é Single Width by 63”. Reg. $18.98. . Single-Width by 90", Reg. $10.98... Reg. $24.98... Triple-Width by 90”, Reg. $39.98. . Rich, luxurious draperies that are no-iron, fade, mildew, and fire-resistant. Choose your new draperies i in beautiful —°c. solid colors of nutmeg, pink, gold, and/or sparkling white. Give your windows a new look at savings! Famous ‘Comes “CASCADE” MULTI-WIDTH FIBERGLAS DRAPERIES m4 $15.99 $6.99 728 $17.99 gia $26.99 © —_—_- Complete Selection of DRAPERY HARDWARE For every window size and problem. PLAIDS Made to Sell for $3.99 - wear. SHOP TONIGHT till 9! Meade to Sell for 5.99 $ 2” Yd. Fall’s most beautiful woolen fabrics . . . 54 inches wide. Just arrived... in time for all of your fall sewing . . . school clothes, coats, dresses, sports- Stock up now and use one of Waite’s many 7 credit plans. Waite’s .., Fourth Floor CHECKS © TWEEDS 1.99.. Shop Tonight till 9! Now’s Your Chance to Buy Famous Stocking Colors at Once-a-Year Savings ! ANNUAL SALE 119 3 Pairs $3.45. @ WALKING SHEERS. .. 51-Gauge, 30-Denier @ BUDGET SHEERS. . . 60-Gauge @ SEAMLESS... with Reinforced Toe and Heel @ MESH ... with Demi-Toe Reg. 7 35 we 8S 1,29 ‘ashion Colors $1.50 . | havncat Ceony 3 Pairs $3.75 au 40 Denier . . . with cotton sole Kaos Danity for comfort Perfect. Taupe Spring Taupe Stick, Béiay. REG. ] 3 9 Phuitwood $1.65 e Beautiful Blue 3 P ° airs $4.05 (1) Grey Beauty Sun Bronze - Demi-Toe Seamless, Self-Seam, Dark Antique Gold Seams and Mesh itera: Every pair beauty marked to Gorey guide you in costume color selec- Mossic Sve tion. Come in today and pick a Moss Green wardrobe of famous Phoenix Mulberry * nylons. Waite’s . ... Street Floor TTL ey As advertised in MADEMOISELLE Waite’s ... Third Floors | slimmed from here to here by 7 ounces of supple elastic! “double play". w warner's’ $10.95 LOOK how flat the tummy, how slim the waist, how narrow the figure! Hidden criss-cross elastic doubles tummy control, Tricky rear panelling gives better waistline fit... smoother than you've ever known! Be shaped by > mere ounces of power nef and satin 4 elastic ... . today! A Complete selection. of all the hewest designs in ¢ Warner's girdles for all figure types. - Come in and be fitted by our expert corsefieres, Waite's eee Second Floor Shop Tonight ti OF * ince eee * ie * a Cea ee ees oa ‘’ - J * ARR A ae RMR WN TRS Sh sige aa a iowew’s : | Lt 1 ; it, f, ped al second. clase gpl ds ” Ponte. Sastre ise! Base ae ve Z ‘ "4 1 get | ap Be |. «| i . a ” ee a sae : : poe i i i 2 \ + os g - eae em au 7 sper B PONTIAC PRESS - oe Pr : ed # me : i a Bie ‘Résatal we MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 MEMBER OF THE’ ASSOCIATED PRESS saaeae Dis St ~ State Political Record \ Michigan’ 's unsavory political repu- ~ tation is bringing national disgrace _4’p the Wolverine Commonwealth. Following is a lead editorial in The Chicago Tribune: , * “Ewen before Tuesday's ‘pri- mary, it was a well established fact that Gov Soapy Williams of : Michigan was.a wholly owned sub- sidiary of the union bosses, espe- cially Walter Reuther of the United Auto Workers. Now it turns out that the courts of Wayne county (Detroit) are also -in the bag for the unions, even . the most disreputable of them. . has been hearing the story of how a hoodlum controlled outfit, engaged in providing and laundering uni- forms of business employes, was pirating business from legitimate firms with the backing of Jmmmy as business agent of this body, and this henchman, by threat of picket- ing and boycott, brought pressure on - businesses to throw their uniform requirements to the mob outfit. x %®% * “4 “Two brothers who run separ- ate Detroit automobile agencies told the committee that the courts will not protect honest _ business men from illegal strikes — _and coercive picketing because of “the political situation.” The Sy tie + "brothers, operate service depart- -ments whose mechanics are in uniform. When one refused to transfer his uniform business to the gangsters, the teamsters _ picketed his agency. . When he stood fast, they put another - picket line around the agency of . his brother, who was in no way "involved in the dispute: Denied relief by the courts, he was “forced to give in, pe aie ip wielgii ‘ «Both peothers shiiged ak the ies as Geet ent tne prions _ im Wayne county and will not protect operators and their customers from ‘Michigan citizens can recover i: _ Bearing our humiliation unseen and in silence is plenty. But having it discussed openly about the country is a national disgrace. What Has Become of Our Drizzles? Older residents distinctly recollect . the extended drizzles of rain, which we don’t get any more. x =x * ~The moisture came so slowly . that it was soaked up by the ground as it fell, instead of ruh- ning off and causing floods. Sometimes these drizzles lasted for a couple of days and nights. They were so gentle that hardy souls didn’t raisé an umbrella. They bolstered crop praduction and saved us from _ prolonged drouths. — x * * Sometimes the rains were heavier, ete Een THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by Tat Pontiac Peres Company @ W Huron 6t. Pontiac 12, Michigan Trade Mark Dally Except Sunday Reser: Bass JomN A. RILeY Executive - vice President Assistant Advertising Advertising Director Manager Ean. M Teeaoweri. Circulation Manerer Howees UY. Prreeersty ns. Vice President and Business Manager : G. MatsHats Joan, dour Wo Pirzceratp Local Advertising Secretary and Editor Manager foment Tan Gemot C. in "tistastne Botior Classtfied Eine “The Associated Press ts entitied exciusivel kad =~ for eg gm of all oral pews orint taper &s as al) AP news dispatches aT he ese is delivered by carrier tor 40 cen’ & Serk: ps sand anwar service is ndét srasiaee by mat aaht Siccen Coun Pari ® tear: ra lg “eget eo places fo. the inived Bates ae veer. All maf auberrintions nevehle ‘Stirs Wide U.S, Comment ‘Detroit _ Teamsters joint | council. Horra installed an ex-convict in te pare oe bury an acorn, ay} — * ; «bat ides of our precipitation ‘was in extended drizzles. In recent years nearly all of our rains come in cloudbursts. ek ®t They “usually last only a few minutes, and-the major part of the moisture runs off, causing floods and gulleying the land, drowning out crops on low ground where drainagt systems cannot handle it. They often do-more damage than good. Veteran weather watchers, ¢s- pecially among our farmers who are more, dependent on rainfall condi- tions than the rest of us, agree that the “million dollar drizzle” of a half _ century ago has gradually petered out, and now is almost unknown. x * * The reason for all this is beyond any explanation so far advanced. Have you a theory? eee Asxep what he thought of a new- born nephew, Old Sorehead said, “He looks like any other newborn baby I ever saw — as wrinkled and ugly as a man about 82 or 90 years old. The Man About Town Unusually Large Exceptional Growth and Out of Ordinary Things Women: What men look up to or around at. Green corn that, has three ears on most every stalk is giving Stanley Shadlow of Lake Orion some trouble. It’s so de- licious that he bites his ear lobes. Grown from seed sent him from Italy, Maurice Farrelson of Pontiac Lake is shucking some peas that taste so good that he thinks their general production will cause that vege- table to lose its place as the principal left over at meals. pling now eight feet tall As growing _ Gecayed limb on a willow tree ' Mr. and Mrs. John BR. Coughlin, near Oxford—and it’s an oak sapling. Sunflowers 10 feet high and growing over a foot each week cause Harvey Preswell eS : -. ees Bie Mp ides inlet ee a 3 Te SS ee te a : a sg a a Serer se David Lawrence Save: Nuclear Subs Strong War Deterrent WASHINGTON. =< The United States Navy has done it again. It has revolutionized strategic war- fare in the world today, as it has done several times in Poa pe history. For while the a major deterrent to war itself. Most people who since school This geographical circumstance means that Soviet Russia now is vulnerable to attack by missle- carrying submarines which can fire into her heartland and reach almost any city therein with atom- __ of Rochester to remark that they'll catch _ Jack on the beanstalk by Christmas. Delphinium plants eight | feet tall are reported by Mrs. Vera Ainsworth of Clarkston, some with over 40 blossoms. Ten years ago when she saw a blue jay Mrs, Elmer Briston of Waterford marked the spot. The next spring a two-leaf plant appeared, which now has grown into a young oak tree, five feet tall. A pumpkin vine, already 24 feet long, has crawled out of the garden of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Coleman . of Walled Lake, cut across the corner of a-neighbor’s lot, and now is setting up squatters’ rights on another. Director of the Oakland County Plan- ning Commission, . George N. Skrubb serves on the staff of annual state library summer workshop at Marquette this week. Winner of my subscription to Life Magazine is : Martin Brown of 110 South Tilden St., whose request was the first: Foveived. Prominently mentioned for a place on the Republican state ticket is a former Oakland County resident and my friend since his Boy Scout days, Alfred J. Fortino, a graduate of Holly High School, now in business in Gratiot County. An effort is being made to nominate a list of young men, and Al’s on that slate. Largest rattlesnake to be killed in the Pontiac area this year was dispatched by Edwin Hamnerson near his home in Commerce the other day. It was 33 inches long and mosthy rattles, and was discovered in a tract by the Hanmerson dog. Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. George Mitchell of 68 Oak Hill St.; ninetieth birthday. "Mir. and Mrs. Archie Gorton of Los Angeles, formerly of Pontiac; golden wedding. ® = —Noah’ Pringle of Rochester; eighty-ninth birthday. ic weapons. for the plane-carrying bombs of the U.S. Strategic Air Force that can go across the Arctic directly to Soviet Russia, now becomes The latest exploit by the ‘‘Nau- tilus’’—which cruised submerged from Hawaii by way of the Bering Sea along the coast of Alaska, then traversed the Arctic under the ice to a point beyond Greenland and, still submerged, headed this week for Great Britain—is startling in its military implications, : RICKOVER INTERVIEWED Perhaps the best way to under- stand the tremendous significance militarily of what has just hap- pened is to quote from \a copy- righted interview published recent- ly in “U, §, News & World Report’ —cleared by the Navy Department —in which Rear Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, sometimes called the ‘father of the atomic submarine” said: “A large number of these (mis- sile-carrying nuclear _subma- rines) should be kept continu- ously at sea, submerged any- where we want—many of them hiding under the polar ice-cap. They would constitute q fleet-in- being ready for immediate use at any time. “That means that, if anyone de- clares war on us and actually fires missiles into our country—even if he should manage to destroy the United States—he knows that in- evitably he himself will also be destroyed, because we will. have these submerged missile-launching bases where he cannot prevent them from firing on him. So this missile-carrying submarine may The Country Parson “You can be sure the next generation won’t/be like this one ee -_ - something about missile ~ which we er our allies may have " scienée of the ap- F _ of co =) cooetie turn out to be a real deterrent to war. * * * * Admiral] Rickover then went on to say: “Consider the problem from the enemy’s point of view. He can do bases on jJand. He can sabotage them, or overrun them, or he can fire mis- siles at them. _ ‘OPERATIONAL NOW’ This is a non-air-breathing rocket ‘which ha’ not yet been fully de- x veloped. But the Regulus-type rocket—which is air breathing and can be fired from submarines sur- facing at night—the admiral said, “are operational right now.” America today, by reason of what the “Nautilus”. has accom- plished, is in a position once more to talk from strength, This deter-~ rent power, emerging in an era of irresponsible dictatorships — which overnight might have pushed the world to the brink of war—can be hailed as an epochal occurrence. _ (Copyright, 1958) Dr. William Brady Says: Streng then Weak Heart With "Graduated Exercise Here are two statements con- ness in place of flabbiness. cerning digitalis I find in a maod- ern textbook of plication of reme- dies for diseases: 1. “In consulta- tion work we con- stantly find that in serious cases eardiac de- It “tones” the entire musculature— without inducing hypertrophy or ‘ot muscle. excessive . In the CVD booklet, about heart and artery troubles, pages 26-27, I describe a real heart tonic which gives uniform satisfaction in any case of ‘“‘weak -heart’’ whether the - individual takes digitalis or not. It - js not exercise. It is not medicine. It is food — elements essential for good nutrition. So if it does you Voice of the Pecple _. Motor Boats Endanger 4 r Safety ‘ot Residents - ‘To Resides of Union Lake ‘Boating at Union Lake ont eae Cee according to Jack store for a safe record this season, be good. Prospects are in to the efficiency of our lake +: is extremely hasardous, especially. moter. Patterson’s column, should ones * Because of the abuse of the state fishing site, high powered motor- ‘boats enter Uniot Lake and endanger the safety of the residents, As long as a boat owner has a fishing pole, it is questionable whether he can legally be prohibited from the site. To combat this trouble years ago some people took a Gallup oun of the residents of Union Lake asking for a five and a half horse power limitation on motors. It tailed to meet with approval. Then Bob Gregg, proprietor of a ‘boat livery on Union Lake, a self-supported police patrol. Where his efforts spark: plugged the idea of for commanity wel. fare are concerned, everyone appreciated them. kik * joer ene ta nga arin. | Am a Man’ haves Life it’s ‘pretty confused, too, As far as neighbor being against neighbor — heck, I get along just swell with my neighbors, and everybody else I know does too. Do you? Concerning women or girls be- ing unsafe in shorts or overalls on streets, I bet my pay you don’t have to worry about that, God bless America and all the good people in it. pet f two years and we give as of this Motorboat Man Giving ‘Slightly Jealous’ Advice To Slightly Jealous— Shame on you! Be thankful there are agencies to help those who are in dire need. We, too, are of the ‘working middle class” and are buying a home. We took our boys to the Oakland County Health Department for their polio shots, free of charge. They also have a dental clinic there. A stay of a week or two with friends or relatives on a farm would benefit your children as much or more than time spent at camp. Think it over and hide your head. Mrs, Ward - Smiles Sitting on a park bench the gal friend is fine, but look i for oe orm Sf OY. OS sai etacdties os st their word and then talk too much. U. of M. Survey Shows Nation’s Optimism High ANN ARBOR «® — Families and individuals hit by the nation’s re- A University of Michigan survey research center report says some 25 per cent of American families felt adverse effects from the re- cession, Profs, Wiliam Haber aid Wilbur J.. Cohen conducted a survey of 1,456 adults during May and June when the first signs of an uptutn in the nation’s economy were noted. Jearned that * 12,500,000 families were hit financially by . hopes of purchas Another §,500,000 families next year. Others talked latation) “digital- is is being given in doses that can have no efficacy DR. BRADY whatever.” (That is to say, doses that are too small.) - 2. “Therapeutically it’’ (digital- _is) “enables the damaged heart to do more work with the same ex- penditure of energy.” Unless the physics I learned in high school was wrong, the very, idea that anything can do more work without the expendi- ture of more energy is absurd; and TI challenge any physician, physiologist, physicist, professor of therapeutics or magician to correct me if I’m wrong. If a doctor told me to take digi- talis, I'd take it as ordered — or change doctors. That is, for a reasonable length of time. 1 don’t believe it would do me any good, but on the other hand I don’t be- lieve it would do me any harm. I’d_ probably take it evefy day if the doctor so ordered, provided the doctor observed the effects of the medicine regularly. 2 THINGS NEEDED The natural or spontaneous ca- pacity of the heart to regain com- pensation after heart failure, dilatation or decompensation is net at all dependent on or deter- mined by the use of digitalis, in my judgment. It is really deter- mined by (1) rest, first in bed, later in chair; and (2) graduated exercise. Doctors who dish out digitalis in such cases are inordinately fond of the first facter and too often negligent or maybe ig- norant of the second, Instead of teaching patients the importance of graduated exercise for strenghtening a “weak” or hand- icapped heart, poor souls to walk on eggs. The less a doctor knows about grad- uated exercise for restoring reserve power, the more blindly he or she prescribes digitalis. When all scientific “indications” fail there’s always the old re- liable one — that digitalis is a heart tonic. A tonie is anything that restores or improves gpeetnnme function: Thus, for~most. sedentary people, white collar, professional or cler- ical workers, students and house- wives with servants, the best tonic is two miles of oxygen on, the hoof three times a day or the equiva- lent in any other general exercise. It takes up the slack, gives firm- no good it can do you no harm. * * * Signed letters, not more than one or 100 words long Lagieorss health and — twill im ronments nosis, or treatm Dr. ‘william racy. if a stam : addressed en is sent to tiac ‘Press, Pontiac. Michigan (Copyright 1988), one member out of work at some time between mid-1957 and mid- 1958, Cut-down work weeks affect- Haber and Cohen credited a ’ more significant role of unemploy- ment insurance for the general feeling of optimism. “It is, undoubtedly, also due to le, includ- pression and a other job were good should they "become unemployed,” they. said. among those with family incomes of $5,000 Case Records of a Psychologist: Lists Differences | in Men, Women Remember the rhyme about Jackie Sprat who would eat no fat? Well, that is one of the many: fascinating sex differ- ences which separate males. ‘from females. Scrapbook this case and compare it with the follow-up tomorrow. Poets call women unpredictable but that’s - because poets don’t understand the sex differencés listed below. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case Y-385: Recently I ad- dressed a University Women’s Club. * * * “Dr, Crane,’”’. one of the ladies ' asked during the forum ante they teach the . my talk, “do women like fat 7 meat better than men do?/ P “The (reason 1} ask is ‘that / old 3 nursery ri'yme @ about Jackie Sprat whe would eat no fat while his wife would eat no lean, “Was that said in jest or is there DR, CRANE a germ of truth in it?” SEX DIFFERENCES There is a great deal of truth in that nursery rhyme. For the female body contains a higher per- centage of fat than does the male. That is one reason why women can float on water more easily than men, tk & Their specific gravity is less, so they are more buoyant, for fat tissue is lighter than lean meat, You can realize that truism _ by remembering that the cream or fat part’ of milk is what floats on top, Men thus have a higher percent- age of lean, muscular tissue, so they require more protein to keep it replenished, At the usual dinner table, there- ‘fore, you may have noticed that men trim off the fat edges from their- steak, though their wives relish this, And that is only natural for the . female bodies require a higher percentage of fat to keep them curvacious and attractive, WOMEN’S STRENGTH “But, Dr. Crane,’’ you may log- ically inquire, ‘suppose a woman __ is the same weight as a man. Isn't her ‘strength then the same as that of such a male?” And the answer is “No,” for the male of the same weight has that higher percentage of miscle as mentioned above, The comparison between the * strength of men and women of “equal weight has. been found to bear a 29:18 ratio, or approximate- ly 3:2, so a woman weighing 125 pounds is only 62 per cent as strong as a os of 125 pounds, * * And this same anata holds true of savage races as well as civilized man, for Hrdlicka found that the Indian woman is only about two-thirds as strong as the Indian male, despite her heavier muscular labors, Women also have relatively shorter legs than do men, in con- trast to the Jength of their trunk and head. When a woman walks around barefooted, therefore, she looks more like an ape than does a -man, for her arms hang lower down than do those of the male. That's gne reason why high heels make a woman resemble the bod- ily proportions of the male. For the heels lengthen her legs. , x *« * They also give her a aan shapely calf, and. slenderize her ankles. And they give her a loftier outlook, so she feels'more self- and orge W, Crane © : care of The Pontiac Press, Pont Mient niga, enclosing a was st 4c stamped However, the high heels throw -her body forward, for she is standing on the side of a hill, as it were. To compensate, she arches her spine and thus puts a strain on the muscles in the small of her back. Women routinely complain of backache, which is the price of high heels, PSYCHOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES Women are also more interested in persons (people) than are men. The vg tends to be more pre- occup with things (cars, boats, etc.). me a x & &* ,Women score higher in language tests than do men, while the males excell in mathematics and logical thinking, Women are usually bette “psy: chologists than are men and have greater intuition (subconscious atialysis) than do males, — They also are closer to children, emotionally,, which is one reason why youngsters feel closer to mama than to daddy. Women also cry more easily than do men. x *« * Always write to Dr. George w selfs eneened ed, envelope fap ins bs pevehologtea charts oa, pam- bE ad a ty e THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, ‘auGbsT 11, ‘1958 Weekend Traffic Tis ams No Problem “ for Families Who Visit by Plane By WES COOK Associated Press Writer The Sunday driver who takes his family for a leisurely ride and pic- nic in the country has a counter- part in the air. , * * x From’ California to. New York, private flyers keep’ a close eye on Santhed ehh Sthicatiaai Springfield to Boliver and ssimatte that a sunny, comfortable Sunday wa. **& + is in prospect. Then, weather per- mitting, these weekend flyers, . their families and friends take off; shortly after sunrise en route to a fly-in breakfasts, lunches, air fairs ars. or air tours. WHAT THEY ARE What are fly-ins? They are social-and informative gatherings often held near resort or recreational ateas. Pilots and their families. swim, boat, fish, play games and eat picnic lunches. aviation facilities, promote their development, make better i , / n Monday 2 ! . Friday ‘til 9 P.M. ie & ~ - - * ~ - - Z * HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Along with | coon dog) baying, and.I just got | er | Easy care cotton gingham plaid. Sizes 3. to Ghose cw ie 2.98 Dan_ River trumpet dress. . Sizes 7 to 14.. cae oe ee White frosted evinurs plaid. Sizes 7 to 14. 3.98 3.98 @eevete ew ee ne eawRenas: : * Cee dik hd sisi oe Gres Digna Caton. : Sizes 3:40 Gx... vanes 298 See67 714 cide fee 37 Galey & Lord Woven Gingham. Sizes 7-14 3. 98 oe ee eaeee ere eAbw REED Ca * | rer id a ak aoe = > or. ee OPEN -END. MORTGAGE We are Secu to offer these truly open end mortgages . ane is what they provide: @ You may pay up-the mortgage at any time without advance. notice and without penalty @ Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. @ You may pay.any additional amount at ante: or penalty... ... . “eonvenience, e Werks on our cumbia open end mortgage of.our friendly, courteous representatives. Home Office 761 Sechietts Branch . 407 Main St. + ee any time without , @ You may pay interest and iene in advance at your e Mouthly payments include Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance, We. have cash available today ... for these attractive open end mortgages. Come in and talk with one WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS Pontiac Federal Savings up to 25 years. RATE ~ on SAVINGS All Savings Accounts Insured to $10,000 by an Agency of the U. $. Government LOANS hide Huron Street Downtown Branch 16 BE, Lawrence 1 *« ei hy es Ma , dee Bile hyo Gs Ah te i Rw a Sf EN a erg ea seNEenen> sec esonveEneeD ere Cotton gingham check chemise. Sizes 3 to 6x,... 2.98 Easy - care cotton gingham plaid. Lucina cotton broadcloth: sailor Sizes 7 to 14. 3.98 dress. Sizes 7 to 14,... 3.98 ge eee e ee Oe oe hoe Tie a ee ee Me Mee ke oe * WOVEN GINGHAM PLAIDS, AND CHECKS * SOLIDS EASY CARE COTTONS « CLASSICS + CHEMISES ° SWEATER DRESSES ° Make Penney’s your first stop for everything in school dresses! Savings are the greatest in many a year. Penney’s bought big, got big savings from manufacturers, gives you these savings. The selection is big! The pretty and practical styles are all made to Penney’s hard and fast specifications for good fabrics, sturdy seams, deep hems. The colors and are the loveliest in many a year. Take advantage of all the extras Penney’s puts in school dresses. Come in today. USE PENNEY’S CONVENIENT LAYAWAY! Sem ah oe tt de ae * | PENNEY’S DOWNTOWN OPEN MONDAY, FRIDAY ‘til 9 OTHER DAYS: 9:30 to 5:30 OPEN EVERY NIGHT. “til 9 MONDAY Thru SATURDAY si as ite SELLE LUE RE RIE sHcm ere ceecnteset THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 eg 2 ‘Feit #ii3 {AOE i Hd : iF “§ rE i aad Have Your Present ms Ge w, Lawrence St, PONTIAC Adjusted — No Charge! r Optical C Co. 86% N. Saginaw Acréss. from Above Haig's Shoe FE 8-4331 : : ‘ouRs sa. ee (NO APPOINTMENT NECESS CLOSED WEDNESDA’ . ele i : 2 i if a 5 True Life Adventures © 1958 _ Walt Peete g World Me ie 1 Tie RACCOON-COATED LOOK 16 FINE FOR TEEN-AGE KING PENGUINS. - ‘pany, 1 W. Walton Bivd.; ds site of the new post office contract station, according to Robert C. Mil- ler, acting postmaster. Donald Hick, secretary-treasur- er of the lumber company, has been designated as clerk in charge of the station which opened this week, ~ Miller ‘explains that a contract station such as this is not operated| by the post office department. "| Money orders, stamps, regis- ‘tered mail, parce] post as well as letter business can be transacted at this station, Le stations do not distribute mail. Marriage License Applications ? Charlies G. Haren, Permineton, Patricia J. Gorman, Detroit. Clasteh L,. Metor, set 0 Oak Knoll, : W. Cort, 9825 A ¢ L. Mobre, Hazel Park, Mavitve J. Rill, Troy. Giovanni T. Leone, 285 A auburn, -. Thereasa D. Landry. 236 Cottage. Norman C, Cluff, Hamtramck, Joyce A. Tucker, 6460 Williams Lake. Theodore W. Elwood, 1055 Tecumseh, Marjorie J. O’Brien, 37 North Edit Robert P. Potere. Rochester. Sharon L. Blanchard, Rochester. Clavin c. rg ip Garden City, Patricia A. nw il. 240 Gouth Edith. bay or M, cates 102 Draper, . Joy A Quinn, 480 Maxwell. Daniel mmiham, Novi, ~ Daniel L oe Taylor. Walled Lake. Shirley aes Cross, yr my Helente Bees, soe he Shannon, Birmingham, G, Bvans, Pernd A. 2. Bosdwihet ‘00 Lakevi ew William , Pitepatrick, 104 West That says: NEW YORK (AP) — icolumnist might never know if he Shek Gh tevoriny Dower ‘of tantt convicts is the rose, “Whenever you hear some guy claim he can read women like tree's x“. -”% * bandleader Sammy Save ‘But this. is no problem in. New tog old to starts brary.” g bdo on ph sven Bag em is, a pene ee ice t cue es cer ae the ‘&. Pont Olfice han-|ment store. e ~ | That the average annual among British for which an apparently innocent|n"™* dies more than three billion post- a9 8 _ jeal bill of Americans enced to hws who edllect old picture postcards|her baby until it is 1% to 3 years| ‘That comedian George de. Witt/an over-sized A @0-year-old Jefferson _mer- are called de ts. After all, lold, - tells of the fellow who visited a 2 & 2S chant, Charlie Drake, was shot to jee a Nig cs remem That President Taylor|prison and asked to see convict; That studies. at Northwestern Elvis Presley. Lucky That true storks, the kind that are supposed to. bring babies, aren't found in the United States. j Mis wife, Helene Margaret, 20. He said Jesse Lester Burger, 42, The 5-month-old boy, a . drew, was placed in Juvenile Shelter. Couple Admits Trading Baby for Pickup: Truck TULSA, Okla, (AP)—A dual Read- * 2 = jaw. *|how the baby would be better off stopped “lin a pickup. truck 10 miles from Mrs, Readdy was quoted as say. ing: “He (Burger) kept saying ‘with them than with us, I-didn’t want to.do it. I gave in first.” Jp ® * =: Police exhibited a hastily scrib- bled bill of sale which Burger said Readdy demanded to make the In Tulsa Burger’s sister Mrs. Tulsa|/Giadys Prather notified police, iS in their legs who then went to her home. and arrested. Burger and picked up the baby. The Readdys were here; The record speed for a railroad THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, ‘AUGUST 11, 1058,’ busy defines a bachelor as ‘‘a man who looks before he doesn't leap.” - idicing. hen ‘laid only 200 eggs a year, Today her great-great-great- igreat - great - great granddaugh- ter lays som liners hold 15,448 gallons of fuel, mus sweats blood. Actually it’s oil. death’ during, a 1956 robbery at- eel j eee ; : ‘James ‘Fulton Foster, a 40-year- old Greer, S. C., house painter, era might well remember this| was convicted in the’ case, He was counsel by Sir William Osler:|saved from the — chair by ‘One of the first duties of the phy-|the confession - sician is to educate the masses not to take medicine.” fighting. That disc jockey Norm Stevens tered guard. ign: number! ** * * That if only Po per cent of. the six to eight: million cubic miles of|‘ ice at the Antarctic were to melt, it would lift the level of the world’s That 30 years ago a good pro- la former Cairo, Ill. policeman chil for each mother — all gicls, of'1,. Pa. Both women gave bith: to Charles P. (Rocky) giheres bye a ‘girls, making it the fourth x * ccmsumeaammasmessseamecnaesone - That some of the big new jet-| — : : a a Best Food Buys @ This Week skin, viens, and arteries. But : “4 <5 te ei 83 3 oF _ CLOSED SUNDAY. AS USUAL... That legend says the hippopota- ‘SLICED Beef Liver “SUPER-RIGHT’ ALLGOOD BRAND Sliced | That camels aren't the only ani- tain sheep, wild cattle, and locomotive is still held by a stéam| oun 2eP. . engine—127.1. mil house. (ree marta ; cording to a mark which was set| GET “SPITTING MAD’ : ; ~ | ‘ : ‘ : = MON..-TUES. 7 Cc MON.-TUES. ia ;~ SPECIAL ~ "3 SPECIAL PKG. : : Fd : “SUPER-RIGHT"—COUNTRY STYLE “SUPER-RIGHT"—FANCY Thick:Sliced Bacon 2.3.1 23 _ Sliced Bacon: = 65¢ | BIG $s 0 oeOS tains; S197 Avaton, Farm Fresh Large 49; py 4 BRICK 62 FT. RANCH HOME Tomato: Catsup Cream Style ts. , 1602. CaN Whole Kernel Corn «=» | Mon m. ‘MIXor We, Tey 4 2 BATHS * ATTACHED GARAGE Garden Peas ..... ren pee . * FUNCTIONAL FAMILY ROOM i 1. 3. Bedrooms : 8. No. 1 Beth, Colored Fisteres Ww . ok bis : 2. All (Glazed) pn x ee poe ve = eee oe ax Beans oes eo 48 oo ' dhe geape hina Entry, Into 10. Private Bath, and : > 4. Slated Center Entrance Hall 11. Ceramic Shower Stall, Plus ~ Shellie Beans | acm 0 0 olf OF San | 5. Living Reom 275 Sq. Ft. with 12. snag Does sa ser: | t 6. 16-Ft. Vented Picture Window 13. Birch Kitchen Cebinets, 4 , 7. Alumi Windows, Storms and 14. Formica Counter and Back Ct Gre Bea 16-02. CAN i | Serco “15. Full Basement , en mS .. . A : Many other wanted features found only iri custom’ built homes. Such as: marble . window sills — copper plumbing — completely decorated Also included: Lot * completely graded — well and pump allowance — septic and draififield — com- VAN CAMP’S . pleted driveway and sidewalks — plus numerous other feautres , Kid B 18 99 0: Red Kidney Beans = ~ , lor Vos eee : ’ = | Pork ‘n Beans .. . «ore ) Exchange | 752 W. Huron 313 W. Huren DORRIS and SON EVAg3 CASH MARKET FE 5-9447 942 Joslyn Mild ard No Down Payment If Your = Lot Is Free and Clear Easy FHA PAYMENTS , or Conventional we Terms VAN W. SCHRAM / _ FE4-1557 311 W. Sth, Rochester OL 62037! | JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS MAURICE WATSON Fresh Dressed Pan-Redi RYERS. YOUR Tiliats apie, CHOICE: Ping onan ite ' WE 5.9471 2 MARVEL VANILLA OR NEAPOLITAN Fresh Pies Ice (Cream at |. 59° JANE PARKER: PINEAPPLE OR LEMON REGULAR HALF.GAL. 55¢ VALUE CARTON Lean, Meaty es Fresh: Blueberries vom com ss... 29: gs 45% | liced a ay t This Valuable’ Goupon Entitles the Lapa to a 2 Lb. Limit Fresh ' Head Lettuce soit tzu. | Miracle Whip. su oxime _ SUNNYBROOK—MEDIUM SIZE Ce || cfisigeaeas JAR 49e All prices effective through Tuesday, August Lm c es 5 4 EGGS acs AT at, Aruantic « Pacir wi. oe “Al. © DEPENDABLE FOOD RETAILERS SINCE With Mest Purchase t ag ge ae ge a Eee f Bice ge ga ER EP re ee oe * £25) ’ : - ’ 2 Wipe fe Fi ee go te + AUTOMATICALLY FILLS! AUTOMATICALLY WASHES! oa eS EM is te i i ee ee s PLAYTEX GIRDLES HOLD THEIR SHAPE / 3? | Girdle or panty Playtex Magic Controller girdle gives you a firm, unbroken line from waist to thigh. Holds its shape {and yours) even after 6 months . long altel ordinary girdles become limp and _ shapeless. Magic “finger” panels. White, pink. : "Mold ‘ n’ Hold” zipper a Rontsayalsbseckorcs 10.95 Extra ares “Mold ‘ni’ Hold"... LMS Let our expert corsetieres fit you correctly for menetet, tesinidd . Enthusiastic spectators: at the Suberbon Inter- Club Swimming Association’s championship finals, held at Bloomfield Open’Hunt Club Friday and Sat- urday, were Mrs. Colin H. John of Birmingham and her chililgon (left. to right ) Rtsicr aim ¢ <— ; How to Load Dryer Here's an_easy rule of thumb remember | . | 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 Quality Cleaning Since 1929 COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE Fee cream cones were the order of the day at the swimming meet. ing “Daddy” present awards are Mrs. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 " pentiss Press Photos Fora The finals secluded the summer’s swimming competition between Pine Lake, Orchard Lake, Forest Lake, Meadowbrook and Birmingham Country Clubs : | and the Bloomfield Open Hunt Club. W atch- don, represe Debbie and Patty. Mr. and Mrs. Gor- nting Forest Lake Country Club, were in charge of awards. \ could see Did You" ‘Read Her | Cards? By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs..Post: During my visit with a relative recently I went out to the mail box on oc- casion and brought in the ‘mail. I usually looked through the mail on my way to the house to see if there was any- thing for me. My. cousin hap- pened to see me do this one day and said that she did not like people looking through her mail. “I was embarrassed and rather hurt over this as I nothing wrong in Load I did. However, it has been bothering me and just to ease my mind I would like-to ‘ know if I was wrong to co) whet 1 care Answer: Few fo nel object to your running quickly through the mail to catch anything @d- - @ressed to you, but if you ex- ~ “amined each letter to see _ where it came from and per- “haps' even read some of the postcards, your. cousin had every right to criticize you. -Give ‘Em a Tumble For fluffing woolen blankets or airing feather pillows give them a.tumbling in the auto- matic clothes dryer for three. or four minutes. gee |40 Astent Dinner. : ‘lof Colonial Group - Mrs. D. R. wilson was host- ess at her sumnier “home on | Watkins Lake to the Colopial Group of First t TRIFARI ‘Friday evening. “’ LUNCHEONS . Sealtest Ice Cream Popular Prices RIKER FOUNTAIN - Riker Building Lobby WILLIAMK. COWIE Custom Upholstery 25 Yrs. of Practical Experience 252 -S. Telegraph th Block South of Veorkels Florence an Wed. [to K. W. Sharpley | Florence Grooms and Kenneth} the feathered and forward cut What could be a more exciting way to look different and glamorous during this Summer. Get the newest hairshape at no extra chap with a Hollywood permanent. ALL PERMANENTS °37> NONE HIGHER YOU GET ALL THIS: % Wash and Wear Haircut * Permanent by an Experienced Licensed Operator i. * Styled Set Fast... New Pee % A Complete Wave for $3 5— $u Servi peat :. None Higher No Appointment Necessary BEAUTY HOLLYWOOD stor 78 ern Saginaw ‘St. FE 86-3560 | OVER BAZLEY’S | AIR CONDITIONED . : W. Sterling Gordon’ and daughters Wayne Sharpley were married July 19 at Calvary Baptist Church, Columbia, S.C. « Parents of. the couple are Mr. and Mrs, J. P. Hopkins of Harts- ville, S.C., and Mr, and; Mrs. R.)_ iW, Sharpley of Kenilworth avenue. ‘Following a visit to Pontiac this week, the couple will live in Co- lumbia, King Family Reunion Held at Davisburg Eighty-one members of the King family met Sunday for their annual ireunion at Davisburg Park, Davis- burg fi James King was re-elected presi- dent, Mrs. James King was elected as secretary ' King, treasurer. The next reunion will be held at Davisburg Park on the- second. Sunday in August. and “Mrs. iby Frances Cashin Attendants at the Aug. 23 , wedding of Frances Cashin and Edmund C. White will be Peggy Eagle, maid of. honor and Sara Cashin, junior brides- maid, Jane Hoffman, Charlotte Mc- Manus, Shdron Savedge and Alice Rice of Kalamazoo will be bridesmaids, grandchildren. Attendants Named } Mark 65 Years Wed Mr, and Mrs, Glenn Perkins of _\Bluebird drive, Commerce Lake,|J - celebrated their 65th wedding anni-| iversary at a family gathering Sun- Robert/day at their home, The Perkins have seven children, |[ 11 grandchildren and 16. great: - Special Permanent Other Machine, Machineless and Cold Waves . Styled Hair Cutting from $1.50 enjoy a care-free bs VACATION 6}, with an “® Annaliese ‘Amnalfese Beauty Shop ) {Over Tasty Bakery) | Open 86% N, Saginaw St., Friday Evenings, FE 2-5600 §5 FE 4-2857 * “Girl Friday” SHEER SEAMLESS °¢ patr «Dress Sheer *-Reinforced Heel and toe | SALE of all SUMMERWEAR in Our Juvenile Department 82 N. = $950 ' AIR CONDITIONED oe) ‘TUES., WED., - THURS. ONLY! LOUIS "EP" PERMANENTS lete with Haircut and Set pp’t iW tron FE 5-8000 You Have a Vacuum Sweeper Problem ~ See Us for Paper Bags, Cloth Bags — Tank or Upright. Sweeper Brushes, Cords, Armatures. Also Factory Rebuilt Sweepers $16.95 up. One Year Guarantee. OVER 50,000 PARTS IN STOCK THYLE ELECTRIC OPEN 8 AM-8 P.M. Corner.N.. Johnson and Howard Netumode Hosiery Shop __ FE 2-7730 $950 tnd Fleer Next te Buckner Finance Hoses, Switches, FE 4-5169 i Value to * pe equal this in our shop! With ‘'magic scissors’ our stylists. will produce for you a hairdo chic as it is cool! @ Haircut | @ Fingerwave @ Creme Shampoo Glamour Spray ALL FOR 39% Appoiniments Not Always Needed! , ~ Lovely, Soft Permenents, $5.25. ‘up—Complete ~ with yi ees he NEISN ER’'S iy Phone ‘Flderal 81343 42 W. Saginaw = i: a ¢ “TON a? ne Ee epi dowiridc wiliae! MONDAY, ‘AUGUST n, 1958 \ IS HERE AGAIN! Let Us Make Their Clothes Fresh and New | Again with Expert Dry Cleaning Father & Son Dry Cleaners 941 Joslyn at ‘Mansfield St. FE 2-6424 Open 7 A. M. to 6 P. M. Personal News of Interest Mr, and Mrs. Donald Pierce left for their home in Alton, eu ci Pierce's mother, Mrs. L, Doyon of Coen erent ‘* * Home trem Marion College, Marion, Ind., for a week’s va- cation is Mary Catherine Kent, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,. Ralph Kent of West Rutgers avenue, She is in her third year at Marion. * * * Mr. and Mrs, William H. Truettner (nee Josephine Roth- man) of Ann Arbor announce the birth of a daughter, Laura Elizabeth, born Aug. 10 at St. Joseph. Mercy Hospital, Grand- parents are Mr, and Mrs. Wal- ter J. Truettner of Bloomfield Hills and Mr. and Mrs, Edward E. Rothman of ‘Bloomfield Hills. - . x * & * Mr. and Mrs, Donald Porter of Clarkston (nee Jane Flynn) ‘announce the birth of a son, . _ David Alan, born Aug. 3; Grandparents are the Loren Flynns of Roxie drive, Thom- as Porter of Willard street and (Charm ‘Orne Your Coif by Rowena Wilson Hair is especially important because people notice hair first. By proper aire wena: you can make yourself. shorter, taller or slimmer. For a it shiny and well- : brushed. So many g styles are now possible that you can choose the one suited to your face A flick of the comb changes a casua) wave into a smooth and flattering hairdo. Leclgges to ite your genera a rag Pontiac, FE 5-3735. Mrs, Mary Earle of North Sag- inaw street, . ® * * Elder James O. Cunning- ton, pastor of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, is among more than 300 ministers, assist- ing at the annual Adventist Camp Meeting at Grand Ledge. The conclave will run through Aug. 16. * * * Mr, and Mrs. Floyd M. Parks of Lowell street attended the graduation exercises of the General Motors Institute, held in Flint at the Atwood Sta- dium. Their son, mechanical engineering, Hugh is a member of the Alpha Gam- ma Upsilon Fraternity, and for the past four years has been associated with the Fisher Body Plant in Pontiac. Dear Abby » spectable girl. ' She went on a * vacation with another girl who also taught school When they came back, my daughter had a man with her and they said they were married, They said they were married by a CAPTAIN of a ship. Now tell me, Miss Abby, are they mar- ried in the eyes of God and man? I doubt it.” CONCERNED MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: A captain of @ ship is authorized to per- form civil marriage . cere- monies. Call your clergyman and ask HIM if YOUR church HONORS this marriage. * * ~ “DEAR ABBY: What has happened to the old family closeness? The only time we see our children is when they ' bring their children to our house (for us to tend) while they go off for an evening somewhere. They have noth- ing to say to us except what to feed the children and what time to get them in bed. ““We have to be invited to ABBY if we come when they are having other company they act all embarrassed and we feel like we butted in. Are parents strangers who don't fit in with their children any more or am I getting childish in my old age? I am 58,” WONDERING DEAR WONDERING: I think you ought to change our children’s homes because . ‘By RUTH good wives and mothers, too Final Summer Clearance all SPORTSWEAR BLOUSES SKIRTS PEDAL PUSHERS SHORTS Values to 5.98 , 9 Boperte SHop 14 N. Saginaw St. | | Cub Scouts and Brownies. ‘side activities or a high-*- ested in the world outside ber’ ‘powered career of her own Two-Job Woman Has to Slight One of ‘Em MILLETT “It gives me an inferiority complex,” writes a moth- er of three, “to keep reading about women who do ten times more outside their homes than I do, and yet are “It takes all my time, strength and energy just to be a good wife and mother and to take part in the activities I feel are absolute ‘musts,’ such as church worker, PTA, “How in the world can a woman have a string of out- and yet never neglect her family?” Stop feeling frustrated, The an- swer is, she can’t, There are only so many hours in the day, and if a woman fills most lof them with club meetings, com- munity work and so on, ei er someone else is looking after children and running her home 7 her children are looking after them selves. Sure, these superbu ume ‘claim their husbands always come first, despite on ae the other things they do, But if the husband and chil- dren were doing the you would probably hear a side of the story. While Mama is as Madame President, the kids are coming home to an empty house when they get out of school, ad Pop -and the kids are scrambling meéajs te- gether. And probably some good-natured neighbor is mothering the brood whose own mother is more inter- of her own, Trick for Short Gal A short, long-waisted girl who finds the shorter skirt look ungraceful on her-can “trick the eye” by raising the waist- line of her dresses, wearing her skirts a bit longer than the fashion, and never wearing them skin tight. z 2 3 Fy z : 5 5 rjor a full-time, demanding career your attitude, If you are not treated with affection and re- spect by your own children, don’t allow them to ‘‘deposit”’ “DEAR ABBY: I am 122 years old and have a 10-year- old sister. We share one bed- room so half of it is hers. We are supposed to keep it in or- der. I keep my half in order but you should see HER half! It is very hard for me to clean MY half without clean- ing ber half and sometimes when I clean MY half you can’t even notice it because HER, half is so messy. Can you tell me what I can do with her? I am not allowed to hit her. Thank you.” NEAT SISTER This Marriage Shipshape? | DEAR NEAT; “Draft’’ your little sister to help you tidy up tidy up her half. Many hands make light work. x« * * CONFIDENTIAL TO DE- BATING PARENTS: Let the boy invite his own friends, Your plans sound like more BAR than MITZVAH, * kk a For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this paper. Enclose a_ self-ad- dressed, stamped — your half, and you help her - ener venue “Contact Lenses. VISION ¥ DR. B. R. Tere: Optometris 17 N, Saginaw FE 4-7071|"" it oh-so-bright! nothing left to do. LOL PL PLL PPL | FLUFF-DRY SERVICE Make. Mondays Sunny-days What a relief to send all your family wash to 5 Pontiac Laundry! Oceans of gentle suds Clothes and towels are fluff folded. Then when Careful Dan returns them Wouldn't you like this service? Sake s make ed and re's almost d man | Free Plastic Bag with Dry Cleaning | DRY CLEANERS 7-Hour Service at Our 3 Locations $40 S. Tel Rd. 2682 West 12 Mile—Berkley $33 S. Hunte | in TASTE TREATS ~ Stop at WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. . { Lake Ps } we re on vacation is - a ‘een M WILL BE. OPEN MONDAY, AUGUST 18th . refreshed and ready to build fine new furniture or’ re-upholster the old! S W right str Me cal FE 4.0558" Deer Dee 7 Year eae BRA Reg. 2.50. ¢ Your Fashion Store Sale! WARNERS’ white cotton “ee *® © @ eo oe ee @ 1.98 Sizes 32 to 38 in A, B and C cups. White only, GIRDLES AND PANTY GIRDLES Reg. 7.50.................. 3.98 ° The wonderful Warner's quality you depend on, White only. Sizes small, medium and large. Pa Foundations — Secoad Floor 420% Holds Your Sweaters in Leyeway for school . * - for you. «5 and for gifting Coat Selon — Second Floot SPECIAL PURCHASE c; [3.90 16. 90 = spectacular sale of cashmeres! a SALE Classic and Dressmoker | be CASHMERE =; SWEATERS = vont & 24.98 to 29.98 CREREROPRER ESHER DOT DY Eo iy # Styles Include ‘dressmaker, | cardigans, detailed pullovers .in 7 ~ Shop Mon. end Fri, Nites ‘til 9 P.M. e + quality cashmere . . . coats of lightweight Na warmth that you'll wear three seasons : bamboo, blue, red or black, Sizes 8-18. In September these coats will sell for $99 pee An event specielly planned to bring you these NEW 100% Cashmere Coets ot this low August sale price! 3 beautiful shades in 2 distinctive new styles Not Just cashmere... but Arthur’s out of the yeor. In nude, \ t i _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST uy 1058 +* 2 Hotels Ele to Join Em Re 5 feces Mos Stay namny jin Canada Today _ HALIFAX, N.S, (UPI) — Prin- 1989 totaled approximately’ 13, NEW YORK (UPI)—The nomads " a 500,” 2 ! He-said World War IL, with its factory than $5 billion is invested in nearly 160,000 motels, some of them rang- ing in size eet = , ge ‘The Princess arrived in Halifax|tels has more than tripled the past » 2 With more and more people stay- ts ay where she drew the big years new nes are Mel] day, Brener estimated, melita cies bene Br danced gest crowd of her Canadian tour t a ns . —— hotel room, the big hotel chains Dfficial sources in Taipei said|/ when she appeared at an open-air) Each night, industry sources {such as Hilton, Sheraton and 3 ‘hoops, tanks and anti-aircraft ar-|Atlantic port city’s historic Citadel] and into the nearly 60,009 motels, Orifall Of a Uriver toll au tan coatratie of ice. P into positions opposite Que-| Hill. motor hotels and motor inns dot- : ury motor hotels, Bey. The Comments already] Officials etated the, ant. | Cot organs me Mee * ‘Prone to Accidents ber and fight- California. Right now, motel development built up jet hombe ence at between 30,000 to 50, eu Rags areund airports ta beouing. In ba 000, . These travel spend c —- = BOSTON UPI)—Recognize him?| dustry spokesmen explain that , ‘G Despite the he, Fh awnig a A slight mixup occurred when earece tad Led in motels Festa aaan : people arriving at airports late j ; - of the U.S, Sev- [the Princess arrived at a, small agewapeer Has to be leader of @ group or at night 46 not feel like travel- : railway just ou : he quits, ing into cities for a place to | Hieet, ool We Mary bs o> Motels have been around in one of “maintaining peace” in |“itY- ) e Shifts from one job to another. | Sleep. | 100-mille wide Formosa Strait | THe royal train oyershot the red/form or another ever since MAD) ‘Talks superficially on many sub-| While motels have built up their despite the |C2tPet for the first time of the/began roaming the countryside for| ;.-+5, trade ‘by catering to. travelers ; East, tour, and the engineer had difficul-|the fun of it. Centuries ago they , were simple, utilitarian scarce,” he said.“But by 1935, they had grown to 10,000 and in Aug. 11thtoAug.13th, YAY _ Monday Thru Wed. _WITH THIS COUPON “ws yp SALES DATES: ~—LINIT or EASY MONDAY AAAAS \( CLIP THIS VALUABLE COUPON. )) LINIT or EASY MONDAY LIQUID STARCH ED me COUPON EXPIRES AUG. 13TH : . 7 3 * 4 2 a a> s es gy : = — ~, — — Z 5 a ———, — an, . i) ) iia ee. . q cur THis VALUABLE COUPON )) i 2 te ( SUPER VALUE i BREAD - mre 2 20-0z 29 . : Loaves Saiven EXPIRES AUG. 13TH shes 8 02 BRECK SHAMPOO ' Beantiful Heir ‘BRECK BRECK CREME RINSE Breck Creme Rinse is used 5 ~ after the shampoo to add softness, lustre and manage- ability to your hair. A 2% oz. bottle of Breck Creme Rinse is now available in combina- tion with each $1.00 bottle of Breck Shampoo... both for $1.00 plus 3¢ federal tax. LIPTON'S TEA Yo Lb. 87° Pkg. 48 Count Tea pets 67c a ike Street C ford Street Ph. FE2-1298 w DE 2 =MADKET, rnher Auburn Ave. Ph. 5-831] dé Motel “Business — ‘ont: ‘Ahead theabe sicibititen 86 cllbieibicily We. Dining rooms are open to local residents and rooms are avail-| - .|able for private parties, meetings and other local activities. * + _ But the picture is not all rosy. built, ‘lente them stranded high and dry. It’s already happened. Car-Washing Finances ; |Girls’ Glee Club Trips LAWTON, Okla. —Members of the girls’ glee club at Lawton High School are learning to sing while they work. They are washing cars for a dol- (Advertisement) (abvertionment) Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery. Stops Itch—Relieves Pain New York, N. ¥. ( !* And nd tor Ariel, Statlts | uictirt ay are found « new Gnalies riety et hemorsheld cond > _ with the eptontshing Sbility to some of 10 to 20 years st g, - shrink pameriseds. stop itch- All this, without Lh of’ ing, and relieve pain — without | narcotics, anesthetics or surgery. pa of; oc Bos kind. The. mace or ie mame i —_ Dyne* the ne Sorte pn a ve- pons Doggie mgd ad cae world- do an research institu- Already, Bio-Dyne is in wis use rs healing i — tissue on all vee of the fied by doctors’ Peaceccations aba while ails telerine nd, while gently relieving pain, actual Sacciea or re- | This aes = caketanes erty Sarperien he ayo ment form oa led etory olen tain lcronened was main- | H.* Ask for individually sealed ‘tained in cases where doctors’ | convenient Preparation "a sup- observations were continued | positories or vepasetion over a iod of many months! | ointment with special a Fe In fact, results were so thor- | cator. Preparation H is all drug counters. Rosetuetion guaranteed or money refunded. to such astonishing state- inance trips to Jar each. The maney gras to contests, ough that sufferers were able make ments as “Piles have ceased to be #Reg. U. &. Pat. Of. REDUCED Br N ewest Model @ Full-width freezer with aluminum liner » @ Full-width chiller tray @ Deep-door shelves ‘.@ Tall bottle zone Super Stor New 58 Refrigerator "bd NO MONEY DOWN OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY | NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P. M. inten ile Washer ao and Rinse. Temperature © Built-in Lint Remover © Free — Regular $279.95—Now . 198: Fully flexible—so that you can choose the water temperatures at which you wish to wash or rinse — to safely launder all fabrics, natural or man-made. Free delivery —Installation! With Trade REDUCED SG New Speed Queen With Bié 20 Gallon Tub ‘88 With Trade @ Agitator washing action @ 8-position wringer - @ Porcelain enamel tub | @ Delivered! Guaran- - teed! Serviced! Ph one f ‘a d PRG / 2 7G 108 NORTH SAGINAW THE PONTIAC PRESS BON DAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 PORE AC. MICH oe hoo 2 Fair Horse Contest Honors 80 Boys, Girls Eighty Oakland County boys and girls received top honors in the « horse contest Saturday during the fifth and final day of the 18th an- nual Oakland County Fair.. Grand champion of halter horses| was the one owned by Ralph Cur-| 8* tis of Oxford. The horse of John Braid of Pontiac won the grand championship in the English divi- sion and western horse grand champion. was shown by Ronnie Almas: of Rochester. * * * Halter horse reserve grand champion was owned by Charles Lameraux of South Lyon; west- ern. reserve grand champion, Rich- ~ ard Eggert of South Lyon; and English reserve grand champion, Jill Greenwald of Rochester. Miss Greenwald also took the English horsemanship. trophy. Horsemanship honors for mem-| bers 14 to 15 years old went to|7) Sandy Wells, Troy; Ronnie and Diana Almas of Rochester; Jac- queline George and Joan Taylor, Carole Jablinskey and Patricia Jablinskey, all of Birmingham. * *x* * Sherri Lowther, Richard Eggert, &Charles Lameraux, all of South Lyon: Robert Becker of Rochester and Calvin Vooheis of White Lake received western horsemanship|E% . a first place awards in the com- petition for members 16 years of age and older. Other first place winners in- cluded: ganas “Georee. neck de and ard Becker of ones en Wells, Toy: Al ‘Alan Curtis, 0 d Sandra bresdmare—Alan, Curt’ "Galea Tom Wells, Troy; and Sandra Pegg, Birming- x * * Qne-year-old—Larry Scamlin, and Gandra, George, Northville. ‘ Two-year-ol ard Becker, Roches- | jter,\and Calvin in Voorheis, White Lake. ‘Western hree years and elichearabian, Bob Becker, Bochester, ol Dan Branson, Bloomfleld Town- Guarter—Charles Lameraux and Shir- oy Lowther, both of South Lyon; Nancy Hitchins .and Diana A both of Rochester; and Li Lingle, cde! Ae Grade—Susan — and viet! Ba Dakheua, 8, both vf = h. Lyon; and Joan Taylor. Ni x * * Pony—-Dary!_ Hopper, Northville; Rob- ert sa Troy; and Daye Bronson, ‘Western pleasere, junior nary peal ‘unior eae , both = my ot and pel Kloka, mi fou Pony plessure—Prank Jablinskey Jr., Birmin, Schutter, ig H aboian-McTavish Vows Spoken at Christ Church OXFORD — On a three-week _ honeymoon to Mexico are newly- wed Mr. and Mrs. John Haboian, who were married Saturday: eve-jaw ning at Christ Church, Cranbroak, if in Bloomfield Hills. The. former Marion McTavish, the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William McTavish of 14 Dennison St., Oxford. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Martin Haboian of Pinehurst St., Detroit. The bride wore & gown of silk She chose Mrs. Harry Haboian, the bridegroom’s sister-in-law, as her matron of honor. Maid of honor was Ann Waldo, and brides- maids were- Nancy Hague and Kay Jean La Douceur. - ASSIST BRIDEGROOM — Harry Haboian served as best Gambling Probe Opensin Indiana Silent Witnesses Face Contempt Citations, District Attorney Warns INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) — Witnesses were to be summoned before a special grand jury today in an investigation touched off when federal agents raided a syn- dicate-operated gambling head- quafters at Terre Haute. : * * * U.S. District Attorney Don A. Dino Savio, Rueben Stephanian and Edward Hagopian. Cass Haboian was ringbearer and Karen Haboian and Beverly Allen were flower girls. A reception was held at Cran- brook Church House following the ceremony. * * * The bride is a senior at Eastern Michigan College, from which her husband was graduated. The two ' |will make their home in Ypsilanti. ‘Two Motors, Rowboat Stolen at Waterford Two motors and a rowboat were stolen from Waterford Township residents sometime last night, ac- cording to the township police re- Tabbert said he would seek con-|Ports tempt citations against any wit- ness who declined to answer ques- = °" Nine Terre Haute residents and nine U. §, treasury agents were scheduled to-testify today. A to- tal of 180 witnesses from through- out the nation were expected te be called on succeeding days of the two-week court session. _Persons summoned included H. L. Hunt, a Texas oil tycoon, and Zeppo Marx of the famed Marx brothers comedy team. * * * The witnesses included persons who allegedly placed large bets with’ the syndicate headquarters which operated for 10 weeks until Federal agents moved in last No- vember, Most of the betting, Tabbert said, was on football games, Make Cornucopias for Easy Patio Meal NEW YORK (UPI) — Patio cornucopias are as easy to make as they are easy on your budget. Chop a No. 2 can sauerkraut, and mix thoroughly with 2 table- Spoons brown sugar, 1 clove garlic minced, 1 large onion, chopped, 1 apple, peeled, cored and chopped, salt, a dash of pepper, 30 crumbled snack crackers or about 2 cups of crumbs, Spoon onto 6 thick ‘Slices of bo- A 10-horsepower motor, owned by Richard Lynd of 3736 Mariner St., and a 5-horsepower motor owned by his next door neighbor, Donald Peider of 3734 Mariner, were stolen off their respective boats. _ A 14-foot wooden rowboat valued at $50 also wax reported stolen from Charles Perkins of 3117 Whitfield Ave., sometime after 11 p.m. am. costume and knitting classes, ’ Holly, La! - }Robin Garsline, Bennie Rose, brie a a and Pa tte Curt! is, Birmingham; |Lorenz. Joan Braid, ; and Jill Greenwald Western junior horsemanship [7c tman-for-his-brother. Ushers were?m Here is a list of the winners in the photography, home improve- ment, electricity, tractor, poultry, rabbit, crafts, bird study, wild- flower study, gun safety, conser- vation, . entomology, bee, food preparation, clothing, complete Photography Awards First year photography awards went to Audrey Kriebel, Milford; Donealle Finch, Rue Heard, all of Milford; Linda Saunders, Orchard Lake; Eugene cadden, Pontiac; Virginia. Gu tiac; Gerald Pelkey, Bruce Peavey, Chery! Luce, Barbara Romer, Beverly Adams, Dick Bezdecriy, Carolyn Sue Kennedy, Marianne Kennedy, Jane Pas- chal, all of Ortonville, Others were Betty Wilkins, Ronald Perkuchin, Eddie Theriot, all of Holly; Sam Chapin, Steve Chapin, Karen ¥|Roetther, Jan Harper, Janie Vailien- Judith Brown, Janet Lessiter, Strakirch, all of Lake Orion; Ladden, Dennis Waite Second phy awards went, hon Carol Eemba Bil —_ Judy Nord-| Birmingham Shirley Devine, Evelyn Nice, Lucille. Betbert, Ff of Pon- tiac; J Brown, Lake Orion; Richard Kaleec, Marvin McLachlan, Mary Law- rence, Maurine Haas, Marilyn Duncan, Caroline Canfield, New Peacock, Robin Gros- Hammond, Lake were Dale nhotography Judy Cudnohufsky, - Rochester; Judy Perkuchin, all of Holly: Hitehcock, Ortonville; Lo: ore seen Sarah Snyder, Christine Simon- Stephen Alix and Jeanne Mott, all eo Bloomfield Township. Advanced photography winners , were Karen Bush, Rochester: Richard Foster, all of Lake Home ———— blue ribbon win- ners were Davis, Troy; Audrey ‘Walker, Clarkston; Betty p=& White Lake; . Lucille Seibert, Electrical Competition Thos who recetved first place positions in the electrical competition — John Cascadden, Ronnie Palmgren, Ken Palm- gren, Matt Esvo, Jerry Austin, — Austin, a'l of Pontiac; Pee hg vis, Sandv Wells, Jim Hammond, v The Bloomfield tractor group was lawarded the tractor maintenance ribbon. al} old Barnard, Troy: Hopper, Richard Griffin, Mananne Rek- dorf, William Taylor and Lora Guthrie. ag Bury Pred Bish ett 1| Bridges Robert Sherwood, W Mike Wixom Linde Bulmon" irene Enee Linda Lawrence. Tom Davis. oon ig B first winners we ert te a Wiggins. oe “Blanchard. Rob- e Spi Terbureh. Da Wille: Katie. Heddon. pe a Wiggins, Milford received blue arstiowe r study. awards we —" = Devs all jhe “Hol- 8 Dick onal ¢ Township. taal “pest bee ice. and loom field ‘ood Winners of blue Prenaraton ibbons in the food reparation division were: Chery] Rahn, Clarks : Margaret Fetorson. Vas ie neste Rs na | Rochester: oengey Se ons meter Clarkston” eye Milford: Di- ane Bronson, pockmtn, “ane were: ede , ti. ae ee: Lols So Donna Pon- Diana Covert. Davisbure: “Mtariiva Wentz Clarkston: Leslie Carmean, tonville: Louise Sexton, and Rosemary The ol both of Clarkston: Susan aa ouah. Helly: Cyathia Gionowski. Lake rion’ Pamela Mirakier, and Alic Shageseta, both of Lake on. “othing winners were ‘en Bennett, Milford: “Bue oe. rochester: * Shirley nn Nevine tminghem: Judy Sprine- . Milford: Soles Wilkinson, Leonard: T, re Carote Klasser. Bar- ican) =6 Bremer. bert jeihert Pontiac: Mar reinia Guthrie. anne Hillock Sherwood, Lucille the Halsey and COMPLETE COSTUMES u — costume fret tandnce spots to 8h : Jane e@ Sandison, ik. Troy: Di- ie. ing son blue Tibbons were Susan B rT, Lake Orion: toe mela Ch: ouher. Lak Orion; yone Mi er Lake rol Navarre, ake : Carolyn e a ; Rochester: Debbie Mac- Judy e . arkston: Ardis one} Jane Vaillencow Lake Hudson; John| * Holly. Awarded top positions in third year : Orion; David Bezdecny, Shirley Ow m4 of. the club’s Ways and. .|TO INTRODUCE WINNER rig am:/ and Mrs. Thomas son.| 17728 22-Mile Rd., Washington, | meo High School. Her scholar- :| te major in home economics or xsion, They include: Kay Anderson, Bon- ren|nie Pettibone, Joan Ellis, Linda FASHION SHOW MODELS “ some of the fashions that will be ROMEO — The beautiful gardens of the Jack Frost Fruit Farm in Washington wil-lbe the setting Thursday for the second annual Scholarship Tea sponsored by the Washington will be the setting Farm and Garden Assn. x *& * Highlight of the afternoon affair will be a fall fashion ‘show to be} ” staged by Perkins Dress Shop of Romeo. Mrs, James H. Winborn will be the commentator. x ©. * Another feature of the benefit will be a country fair with many colorful booths from which bou- tiques, homemade baked goods, plants and planters will be sold. Mrs. Hildur Swanson of Rochester will display Swedish glassware, and Mrs, Walter Park of Brighton will give a pin-point painting dem- onstration. The program will open at 1 p.m. with refreshments to be served by a committee of Mrs. George Waschall, Mrs. Judson Corby, Mrs. Elmer Alftz, Mrs. Fred Wililamson, Mrs. Har- ry Hawes and Mrs. John Si- munic, General chairman of this year’s event is Mrs. Harry head eans Committee. Prior to the fashion show, club president Mrs, Fred Braun, will introduce Monica Butkovish, win- ner of the scholarship made pos- sible by last year’s tea, * * * Monica is the daughter of Mr. Butkovich, and a dune graduate of Ro- ship, valued at $250, is given an- ‘Mually to the student who plans agriculture in college. Seventeen area girls and women will mode] .in the fashion show. Wiskip, ¥ a Srton and we; i Loune- bury, Clar' Fetter, Ellen Heideman and Fran- — Looking over style show highlighting Thursday’s Scholarship Tea at the Jack Frost Fruit Farm in Washing- ton are (from left) Mrs. Donald Markus of 880 modeled at the Nicholas St., Pontiac; Mrs. Carl Doepfer and Bonnie Pettibone, both of Romeo. The affair is being sponsored by the Washington Branch of the Women’s National Farm and Garden Assn. Jack Frost Fruit Farm Scene jof 2nd Annual Scholarship Tea! ces Mary Castellucci, all of Ro-|Mrs, Carl Doepfer, Mrs.’ James moe, and Jill Trask of Washington.|Hough, Mrs. H. Q. .Evans Jr., Others are Mrs. Louis R. New-|Mrs. Joseph C. Jelsch, and Mrs. lin, Mrs. Ralph J. Toles, Mrs.|Stuart L. Card, all of Romeo and Wayne Kasuri, Mrs, P. G, Horler,,;Mrs. Donald Markus of Pontiac. Pontiac Press Photo at Shrine of BERKLEY—Marriage vows were exchanged Saturday morning™ at Shrine of the Little Flower Church in Royal Oak by Carol Ann Bene- duci and Thomas H. Sweetman. Performing the double-ring rite was the Rev. Walter D. Bracken. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Beneduci of 1889 Earlmont St., Berkley. Par- ents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. J. Raymond Sweetman of 4391 Forest St., Watkins Lake. * * * . For her wedding the bride chose a gown of “I Do” taffeta with a bodice of Alencon lace trimmed with sequins and pearls. It fea- tured a Sabrina neckline and a flowed into a sweep length train. held her fingertip veil and she and ivy. Matron of honor was Mrs. Homer Harrison of Pontiac, sister = ine bridegroom. Joanne Bene- _ of--Brockton, Mass., the ie $ cousin, and Florence Flan- nigan of Detroit were bridesmaids. x* *« * Best. man was James Bale of Pontiac, uncle of the bridegroom. Ushers were Homer Harrison of Pontiac, Tullio Beneduci Jr. of Hingham, Mass,,; the bride’s uncle; John Powe of Pontiac and Rich- ard Johnson.of Farmington. — Breakfast was served at Devon Gables for the wedding party immediately following the cere- mony. The reception was held Exchange. Marriage Vows Little Flower, bustle bow at the back. The waist - A crown of sequins and pearls - carried a bouquet of stephanotis _ DIANN R. ‘THYBAULT CLARKSTON — First Methodist Church in Clarkston was the scene Saturday evening of the marriage of Cherie Nan Littleson to James W. Kesterke, Performing the rite was the Rev. William Richards. * * * . Mr. and Mrs. Guy R. Littleson of 6171 South Main St., Clarkston. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Kesterke of St. Joseph. For her wedding the new Mrs. ice lace in_a petal motif out- short sleeves. Her bouffant skirt extended into a court train. She carried a cas- lilies of the valley, . oe The bride is the daughter of Kesterke chose a of crystal white duchess ih att with an empress ihe. Point Ven- — lined the portrait neckline and * cade bouquet of moth orchids and _ ‘Couple United in Clarkston Rite * | _ Wanghi of. Buffalo, N.Y, Ring- the maid of honor and bridesmaids were Dally Giacobone of Detroit, Ann Morrow of Royal Oak, Mrs. James Dale of Clarkston, Mary Kay Henry of Holly and Mary Jo Hawkins of Bloomfield Hills. Margaret. Lynn Hawkins, the bride’s cousin, was flower girl. - Richard Kesterke of Chicago served his brother as best man. Ushers were Robert Metzger of Buchanan, Charles Pavelka of New York, Paul Klann and Dale Schwerd of St. Joseph and Peter bearer was George Bennett of Clarkston, ie The reception was y held -tn the Hillside Room and garden at Devon ~k& ot * : Following their honeymoon at MRS. THOMAS H. SWEETMAN ' in the afternoon at the home of the bride’s parents, Following a 10-day honeymoon at Cape Cod and New York City, the couple will make their home in Detroit. The bride, who is a graduate of Marygrove College, is a teacher at Chaney Elementary School in Detroit. Her husband attended Ferris Institute. j Mulched Soil Adds fo Bean Yield ATLANTA—Mulching straw dur-|° ing grain harvests in the South is heping prevent forest fires and improve the soil, Farmers who have used chop- ping devices and straw spreaders| on their combines have found that the mulched soil puts more beans in the bin when they planted soy- beans in the stubble field. This practice eliminates stubble fires that may spread to buildings or woods, Danish TV Quiz Show Makes Theaters Close COPENHAGEN—Interest in tele-| © vision, which was slow to develop in Denmark—there were only 1,000 reteivers in 1956—has surged reé-| / cently and now more than 100,000 are paying theif yearly a fee of $7.50, The state operates the TV, which has no commercials. Interest ina Sunday night quiz telecast has be- Mackinaw Island, the newlyweds will’ make their home in ‘Royal S Oak, Both are June graduates of/porarily abandoned evening Judy Walker of Clarkston, was Mae, salthe W. cuerena Michigan State University, : . come so great that eight of Co- ’s 10 theaters have tem- JASPER, Alta. (#—Laboratory workers today checked for rabies the remains of a 400-pound black bear that killed a T-year-old girl here last week after wrestling the child away from her mother. However, national park wardens said they doubted rabies would be just as healthy as the many bears frequenting the tourist camp grounds where the youngster was mauled, k & * The bear, about four years old, was no stranger to the Sunwapta Falls cabins grounds 30 miles south of here. Like other bears, it had often foraged the camp, looking for tourists’ food handouts. Camp workers called the bear Vic- tor. When Victor emerged from the bush in his last- visit Friday, Barbara Coates, 7, of Calgary and her five-year-old sister Alli- son were behind their parents’ rented cabin picking strawber- ries. Both screamed and Alli- GREENSBORO, .N,C, (AP) — A’ if La : > ae & siz > gatty and Vaio ac Te Bes rH the woods before the«latter was forced to release her grip. wide publicity be given to the dent, the first fatal accident with bears in Jasper National Park's mneey. Ex-Policeman Mute on Larceny Charge Grief-Stricken | “eS Father in U.S. . [se SS mi eta nie 8 At Injured Daughter's Greed iter” Anes ile tes Bedside as Wife’ Lies SF Near Death in Sweden |Biackett and +3 Wheat Handout From U.S. Starts — in Lebanon Today formances on Sundays, oe rae ‘ 2 = THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST: 1958 trying for the double play. Billy ONE DOWN — ‘Earl Torgeson, White. Sox first baseman, is forced out at second base by Frank Bolling who gets the ball away ar , wirephote Goodman was safe at first. The a ee eee 4:3. Z nage e538 il as : i 5 : fi tee & tha a nua: ah RAH tn : : z 2 i; g & 3 | Ve ii 1. | le SAVE PLENTY... ‘ON QUALITY FAMOUS Da yton Thorobreds. ™ | NYLON or AS a 14". 6.76-15 RAYON Unheralded Pitchers Have Profitable Sunday === the opener. But for six innings he|* held the Athletics without a hit and it wasn’t until the ninth that ee Washington relief expert..Dick Hyde, overshadowed by Rine Du- ren’s spectacular rescue gee with the Yankees, achieved his 16th save in the Senators’ first game 6-2 triumph over Balti- more. He made his 40th aprear- ance with two runners on base in the ninth and secured Pedro Ra- mos’ a sige? ie ns re straight batters, Baltimore took the second game 6-1. Dick Tomanek, a _non-distin- spectacular for Kansas City, He relieved Tom Gorman with the bases full, no- body out and the score tied 2-2 in the bottom of the ninth, and * 2) «x: Braves Collect 33 Blows, Dump Phillies Twice a cox * ” * the Sunday fireworks eee en ty ee Meyene ‘Bloomfield Shooter *\Shotgun Champion will forget the Braves, Those 33 Milwaukee hits in the game series total to 112,107 spec- tators. ~ Pittsburgh's fast moving Pirates completed a four-game sweep of) Cincinnati; winning both ends of the Pirates win the opener on Dick Stuart’s 10th inning sacrifice fly, and the second game on an oes chen Sree sy Relief Poe enter Robin- son shared the Spotlight with DAVISON (UPI)—Paul Pace of Bloomfield Hills took the fourth- annual Michigan all-eround shot- AMERIC Sal LEAGUE Lost Pet, Bebind moneed 72 | 435 Apodanicod 56 53 414 15% wees 5 54 505 16% , 5S 55 00 «17 apnsceeo 52 $5 486 «18% 49 #57 863.462 21 | Kansas City 2 88 43 2 | Washington 1 47) «664i Ass H%G SATURDAY’S RESELTS: i Beston ew York 6 Baitimore 12, Washington 5 Chics 0 8 Beles it 3 A TIRE cO Chi wang when aie = 4. ots 3, 12 innings 2nd game alt 2. Ist game SIZE | Sonera: 6, Washington 1, 2nd game eee ae — ; TUBE-TYPE » BLACKWALL stern anda: me 6.70-15 14.9 16.9 eekinorss “and New York, 2, 1 p.m. 7) 95 95 p.m Harshamn (8-10) J 7.10-18 17.95 19.95 fon and Rucks 7.60-15 19.95 21.95 | Boston at Washin pm Mon TUBE-TYPE » WHITEWALL | botiquette (1-2) vs 4a entinetti (1 ay. 6.70-15 18.95 20.95 Chicago at Cleveland 7 p.m. — Pierce . . i 11-8) vs. Nerleski (11-9). « 7.10-15 21.95 23.95 | Kansas City at Detroit 6:15 p.m. —Grim 23.95 26 95 | (3) ve. pir (#7). 7,60-15 . W'S SCHEDULE 6.70 15 1195. ines | Raneas ay ia Detrot 8 5 p= Salts =e y | Baltimore at New Y. 1 p.m. 7.10-15 19.95 20.95 \Chicago ‘at Cleveland. J p.m. 7,60 -18 21.95 22.95 | NATIONAL LEAGUE : TUBELESS » WHITEWALL L a Wen oo fant ee Pet. Behind 7 ge 20.95 22.98 s Pane i: Sa “Sa te | is * 4 , Pittsbur; 56 52 4 7 ; : at. Louis 53 55 d 10 5 7.60-15 26.95 27.95 © |Pinadelphia Si 84 a 10% | P : Chicago $3 59 .473 «12 es : Votess vias tas one sotneatne ee ol Cincinnati 50 88463 3 "<6 e-veaies Pownee Los Angeles 50 58 = B s ase ~ @S UTTLE AS “Tern -SATURDAY'’S RESULTS Fa : «,. 1F YOU HAVE San Franc 6, Los Matos night | © sein rere cen, 1.25, week aod Philadelphia, $, Heuwaukee 4, te | , ic be: Bt 'Louls 3. Chicago 2, 10 innings Q ; YESTERDAY'S ULTS | Milwaukee - 7 ist yoreeed | Milwaukee - ikon, Ane é. m4 | San franc Chicago 9%, s ‘ee Louis, Chicage} 4 | Pittsburgh $. Cineinnatt, | putdburgh 4, Cineinhatt 3. Ind game Fagg Bo GAMES ro b seems ) | Cincinnati oi ie iphia 7 p.m.—Pur- | 1 Sey an reves ron Gap ee vs. Friend “¢ tal. os sonpbuied. eae. gg A at eee 4 Los Eis » 9 Ths ist ; champion went to Robert of Minneapolis, who shot 70 out of 73. Ready, Aim, Fire! CAMP PERRY, Ohio, (AP) — The month-long "National Pistol and Rifle Championship races start here tomorrow, with the’ pis- tol competition lasting through Friday. - The small bore (. 29-caliber) rifle title chase will be held Aug. 17-22, followed by the high-power (.30- (Torre in Milwaukee's first game ee ns ete 3 innings | .|three defeats, Richie Ashburn’s Milwaukee Has Hit Parade ves|with Los Angeles, Roman wage for four runs as eet cae en Reece nlc third on Roberto Clemente’s double and scored Pittsburgh's winning run on Stuart’s long fly. three reliefers for 19 hits, includ- ing seven doubles, three triples and two home runs, Rookie Carle- ton Willey won his seventli against 15-game hitting streak was snap- ped in the nightcap and the Phila- delphia outfielder fell behind Stan Musial in Ge batting title race, ® Ae double loss dropped the Redlegs into a last place tie Ted Kluszewski walked, Bob Skin- ner singled his pinch runner, ed in the tenth, advanced to With the score tied 33 in the eighth inning of the second game, Dick Schofield, to third, and Scho- field scored when when Frank Thomas forced Skiner at second, Bill Mazeroski homered in each game for the winners, weekend at Cleveland for the trophy is«awarded to the team NATIONAL HONORS — This is the trium- phant Pontiac Roller Skating team which took the high-point trophy in the American meet last 4th time. The with the most __ tins. points covering all divisions of skating. The Pon- tiac team took six first places and five seconds. In the picture are (left to right) Louis Parker, - Mary Clouse, Sylvia Ritchie, Marcia Muthum, David Marchewka, Sue Welch and Ricky Mar- Swi Pitre for'60 Obmpis ih INDIANAPOLIS Ind. #—Amer jca’s young swimmers didn't chal- lenge Australian and Japanese records in the AAU National cham- pionships over the weekend, but they will be contenders = Rome in 1960. That is how the U.S. swimming situation was sized up by such veteran coaches as Bob Kiphuth, in his 42nd year at Yale, and Mike Peppe, 28 years at Ohio State. “If the Olympics were today,” would beat us. By 1960, these strong teen-agers can challenge anybody.” caliber) rifl “Fie from Aug. 28 to Sept. 6. By DR. CARY * putt!” 73% eweeer Midis, Segoe abe ic " eee rangle daa PATIENT'S COMPLAINT: DIAGNOSIS: Half-hearted Attempts. TREATMENT: I’ve heard many golfers bemoan the fact that they “never” hole a long putt. This complaint _|# is generally accompanied by a further. complaint that »% their opponents sink a lot of “lucky” putts. I figured who have three - quarters ww that long putts seldom The Indianapolis Athletic Club) Your Golf MIDDLECOFF eee ee “I Never Sink a Long this out a long time ago. The ones who don’t ever get a long one are the ones given up before they even hit the putt. They know ony give it the old college try. | edge of the green. It’s that simple. «= drop, so they just don’t ee bother to REALLY TRY. know that chances are against sinking a long putt, but they gét down and level on ‘em anyway. They So every once in a while they drop a whepyes shine the (Copyright. 1958, John F. Dille ~~ They just make a half- hearted pass at the ball, vaguely hoping to get somewhere close. The “lucky” ones try for everything. They alse Fd ’ Peppe said, ‘Australia and Japan: “lhe swam for Athletic Club, is a product of a -|publie parks age group’ ‘swimming | program, Such programs, Coach Peppe told newsmen after the - |meet, is the way the United States “ican overcome government-subsi- | \dized swimming programs of /|some other countries Es own successfully defended its team | championship with a young crop of native Americans. The team Jon Henricks and Murray Rose, Australians borrowed from the University of Southern California by the Los Angeles Athletic Club. were as terrific as expected—but they couldn’t push their team higher than second, 83 points to} the IAC’s 93. : * * * Frank McKinney Jr. of Indi-| anapolis, 19-year son of the for- mer Democratic National Chair- man, successfully defended both hie 100 and 200-meter backstroke championships, setting an Ameri- can and AAU record of 2:20.8 in the 200. He was pushed to the limit in the 100 by Cleveland’s Louis Schaefer, the national high school champion, and tied his own AAU record of 1:04.5. : The Indianapolis team uncorked a couple of real surprises in Mike Troy, a June high school graduate who tied the AAU record of 1:02.8 in winning the 100-meter butterfly; ©\and Allen Somers, who still has ©~ a year of high school but finished ‘ia stout third in the punishing 1500- |P ®|meter freestyle. e * * * The 17-year old Troy, although the Indianapolis Rose, the blond who “!won the 400 and 1500-meter free- E\istyle events, also was surprised by the American youngsters in his | \first AAU outdoor meet, He was) especially impressed by Somers. _ Rose’s 4:25.5 time in the 400- ‘'Pee Wee Grid Clinics : Will Start Tomorrow Registrations and weigh-ins will . start the-Tuesday and Friday clin- “ics of the Pee Wee football Leagues _ tomorrow. All boys 55 to 110 pounds at- : tending the clinic at 3:30 pim, at Whitfield School must bring their helmets and shoes. The twi weekly clinics will con- ahd \ ‘leg of the 400-meter medley relay. meter freestyle was an American or AAU record and better than his accepted world record, but he has had a slightly better time not yet accepted. Henricks won the 100 and 200- meter freestyles in meet record times of 55.8 seconds and 2:05.2, the later also an American rec- ord; swam on Los Angeles’ win- ‘ning 800-meter freestyle relay| team, and beat Indianapolis’ young Bill Cass in a sizzling final Junior Baseball Champs Settled Cranbrook, . Boys Club, Yanks Take City Titles in Sunday's Finals Cranbrook in Class D, Pontiac Boys Club in Class F and the Midg- et division and the Yanks in the Widget group are the 1958 cham- pions of the City Junior Baseball | Martin’s Injury Dims Tigers’ Split Bertoia s Bunt Gains 12-Inning: Nightcap, 4-3 Attempted Steal Home Sidelines Martin for Possibly 3 Weeks DETROIT w — Third baseman Billy Martin may be lost to the Detroit Tigers for as long as three weeks. The injury to the aggressive lit- tle infielder dimmed Detroit jubi- lation over a come-from-behind 43 triumph over the Chicago White Sox in the second game of a long doubleheader yesterday, Chicago won the opener 5-2 on a three-hitter by Ray Moore and Early Wynn, Martin was injured in the fourth inning of the nightcap when he collided with White Sox eatcher Earl Battey on an un- successful] attempt to steal home. Not only did Martin suffer torn ligaments. about hig ribs—but the out helped kill off a budding De- troit rally. ‘But by a strange quirk, the in- jury got Reno Bertoia into the con- test. It was Bertoia’s squeeze bunt in the bottom of the 12th inning that scored the. deciding run after the Tigers loaded bases on a single and two w with one out, Bertoia, once the club's regular third baseman but benched for a couple of months—except for oc- casional duty—because of light hit- ting, bunted safely near the mound. The hit scored Frank Bolling, who left. Martin was taken to a Detroit ‘hospital and X-rays showed there were no ribs broken. But the in- fielder explained after the contest that the doctor had told him ‘It would be better if they were broken.” Martin could not stand erectly and it pained him to talk above a whisper. Manager Bill Norman did not order a steal of home, The Ti- gers had scored Once in the in- ning on Charlie Maxwell's eighth home run that trimmed the Chi- cago edge to 2-1. With one out, Martin singled to the right and the bases became loaded when Red Wilson singled and Coot Veal walked. “T wasn’t even thinking about stealing,” Martin explained. “I was just trying to bluff the pitcher (ex-Tiger Bob Shaw.) But when I noticed he was taking an extra long windup I decided to try it.” Starting pitcher Bill Hoeft ended the threat by out, The third Detroit pitcher, George Susee, pitched two-hit relief ball over the last four innings and got credit for the victory, his fourth against one loss. Jim Wilson hit a wild streak after a heavy rain de- layed play 20 minutes halfway through the 12th inning, Until then he faced the minimum nine batters in three innings of relief work. He was the fifth Chicago hurler, The Sox wrapped up the first game early for Moore, who owns a 10-2 lifetime mark against the Tigers. Four singles produced a pair of second inning runs and Jim Rivera homered for two more in the fourth. He drove in another with an eighth inning sacrifice fly. Ex-Yankee Bob Grim was to op- pose the Tigers’ Jim Bunning today as the Kansas City Athletics came to town to close the home stand. Bunning has failed to win since his no-hit effort against Boston July 20. a—Walked for Aguirre in 6th; b—ra for Goodman in 8t —— ‘for Fischer in 8th.. ahs SreAreck out tee Chicago Detron ialsieigielerwie ale sine ea5 Hye bora PO-A—Chica 7-12, DP—Goodman, cago 27-14, Detroit Lc a ee i es League. ee Fox and Torgeson. The four teams wrapped up their] un—nivess. Cr divisional crowns Sunday in the neoe IP H-R ER BR SO finals of the annual playoffs at Jay- Wyan’ Dee aay | iH 3 ~ H 5 3 cee Park. Class D, F and Midget |Fortack’ (1, 8:i0)3%464 4 1 4 winners will now enter the districtl¢here 000": ieee ets tournaments, There is no further Pesca 6 nO Ws Se elee ais 1 06 H 5 ° play for the Widget champion. tare batters ot ie sare uk mn do [ant EF MH jon when Tom Zink pitched a (cy; SECOND G no-hit, no-run game over Aparicio 3h eon ef 3 8 B&B Cleaners, 1-0, Rudy Ranson [fanaie ct {$9 Bolling > 4913 hurled an ill-fated three-hitter for |B°0r* 1> Phd Barrie th 611 the -egpeige pre up the |Gooaman 3» 4 0 & boroth if i} game’s only run in the 6th in- [pa2c!° rtin 3b 2 03 ‘ning. Zink’s masterpiece featured Phillips if $ H Fie ees H ? st tanmene fica sistem, HE Creabwodk tlllad soce &: tee ecgl Rte § Ty & wee 1 of the 8th for a 7-6 extrainning/Sser > 9008 Hot p 390 win over Lytell & Colgrove to take Wilson. p 00 Morvan D ) $ the “‘D” title. Tom Demrick hom- oe ered for the winners. eVirat 3 9000. Totals | 46302 Totals 46413 4 In the Class F final, the Boys Club hammered out 13 hits. while ; crushing the Auburn Heights Boys Club, 22-4, Bob Rabaja-made four ? FIRST GAME CHICAGO . DETROIT abrh bi . abrh bi Aparicio ss 6010 Kuenn ef 4020 Fox 2b $0610 Martin 3b 3001 Landis cf 5010 Kaline rf 4000 Lollar c 4000 Harris Ib 3000 Torg'on 1b 2210 Maxwell if 3000 joone ib ©6000 Bolling 2 3000 Goodmn 3b 4220 Lau c 3110 bEspo’to 3b 0000, Veal ss 3000 Rivera lf 3124 Foytack p 1000 Mueller rf 3011 Aguirre p 0000 oe p 4010 aFrancona 010 Wynn p 0000 Cleotte p 0000 Fischer p 000 g. pedo 100 000 Totals 355103 Totals ? 223 t _ Seceo~ornganeooc® led off the inning with a single to i ¥ a + aa ti] oY” chaiepe. five tries for the mm, Chit = 900 190 000 900—3 © The Yanks r. Harris, Be mie» acre, Yani, coleced 10 hits and ok baa Eo tabeaias for @ 10-2 rout of the Little Braves! "ake tanais R- in the Widget, title game, John Maxwell, SB-Rivers. ‘dm a: ine, Krause and ve Burhans both! gst ce, Esposito. : homered - the Yanks, \eere’” T-3: “Runge, Tapactni, Paperella \ ‘ SKI EXPERTS — Handsome in more ways than just water-ski performing, were thése fem- inine experts who took part in the two-day Mid- west Regional Water-Ski Championships at Lake Sherwood. ‘Tops among’ the quintet was tiny, 16- year-old Norine Bardill (center) of Evanston, Ind. who compiled a MRC fecord 1,250 points + bd Qualify 3 for’ Nationals State Skiers Do 0K | in Midwest les! ccmaiidars,. Paul Boel, captured |t the senior men's jumping ¢rown with a 70 foot leap, for a Midwest record. ° By H. GUY MOATS Michigan's water skiers per- formed very well ip the big week- end 11-state Midwest Regional Championships at Lake Sherwood, near Milford, where 21 champions, were named in seven divisions. These top performers all qualified for the Nationals (American Water ski Assn.) in September, at Pine Mt., Ga. Other Michigan skiers in the title-winning list included Bud Warren of Wolf Lake club, Jack- son, in the senior slalom, and Bill Willis, also of Wolf Lake, in the junior slalom. te Rs Oakland county landed one cham-/t pionship. Cass . Lake Ski Club's Class A Loop Schedule Ends Union, Jets Win Final Season Games; Playoffs Stapt Thursday * CLASS A BASEBALL Final Standings woo Shaw's Jewelers ..sevecereererces 16 ClO’ Local G04... se.eeees sans---38 4 Our Jets... scesenee aiicesccey 200 ee Grlff's Grill .....0. seer ceeee ees 6-15 CIO Local 594 swept a double- header from Griff's Grill, 5-4 and 3-1, and. Our Jets defeated cham- pion Shaw’s Jewelers -in a single game, -4-2, as the Class A City Basebéll League’s regular, season came to an end Sunday oterpees at Wisner Field. The annual Class A playotts be- gin thursday at Wisnes with the runnerup CIO meeting the Jets in|’ a best-of-three series with the win- ner facing Shaw's fpr the city title and the right to enter the state. tournamient at Battle Creek, men’s finale for the Midwest Re- gional Championships at Lake Sherwood, was Phil Bradley (above). Bradley of Ft. Wayne, 3 Ind., leaped 105 feet ‘off the 10- tot incline to pace a strong Seld. for junior trick riding. She also won the slalom and jumping for a junior women’s sweep. Others are: (left) Joan Spalding, Joanne Burgié, both of Tolede; right of Norine are Sue Maurer of South Bend, Ind., and Susie Morganthaler of Ft. Wayne. Sue Maurer won the women’s slalom. Probably “the most outstanding Y|51 feet in the jump. She is a ever, continue competition. Pontise Press Photo the way” in the girls (17 and un- der) division, for a- Midwest Re- gional Assn. record point tota] of 1250, for tricks. Norine also shared the mixed doubles title with Joe Grimaldi, Ny * * * ‘The 5-foot tall, 88-pound blonde grabbed all three titles in her division, leading the slalom cor- tenders with 30 and the jumpers with 50. Norine’s red suit flashed l| Evansville High and Ft. Lauder- dale, Fla. high (in the winter) senior this fall. Norine has been water-skiing only two years and is rated by Midwest veterans as a potent prospect for the. national junior trick crown now held by Vicki Van Hook of Florida, = Severa] thousand water-ski fans jammed the Lake Sherwood shore- line along the course where the two day long competition took place. Midwest-officials acclaimed the meet as one of “the best the regional has enjoyed in years. On- ly one casualty was reported. Char- lene Moorehouse ‘of Elkhart, . 3rd place winner in the girls’ division tricks, suffered a slight concussion Sunday when she hit the water, upended, after a jump. Charlene later returned to the meet after treatment at St. Joseph's i $e te Area skiers who. placed. in the event included Ken Obert (Cass The final results: Senior Wolf jot: Pe (10) feet . Bill Smith Col eeee », Paul 4 Warten, ¢ Pitcher.Jim Addis was touched ae F for 11 hits by Griff’s, but he was effective in the clutch as the Union Club won the 5-4 opener, Russ Lothery’s home run ol tured Griff’s three-run rally in the 7th which fell one short of A 7th-inning homer by Jerry Val- lad ruined Ted Reaver’s shutout at- tempt in the 3-1 nightcap. Reaver allowed the Grill team five hits, |™@@ three in the 7th. stanza. Three runs in the 6th inning gave the Jets their victory over the league champs. Joe Soto hulréd the distance for the Jets while Don Picman and’Dave Gaddis shared Miss Faulk Wins Macktown Tourney * Miss mound duties for the Jewelers with Ziske had vd oie de em = Sak. Hort pe, Bardi’ 3 Vicki 600, Gale VI. 525 and Miss Burien| Picman the starter and loser. Tied f with Miss Ziske iSpaiding, “Toledo; jumping ti tation |and Miss Spokane 450 each. The ied for second @|Bardill;, 2, Soaiding: 3, Joan Bu urele.|Kai got 400 for each victoty, 400 bow 90010304 ¢ 3\was Mrs, Marlene Bauer Hagge. ‘Devils Lats. Mich cig: 1 Baral 2 for the fastest heat and 400 more Se and’ eo Bates: “Pioman’ Geaais|Miss Faulk picked up the firstitar Ind. ‘ ree for the best total time. Mt had and Staniek place prize of $1,010. Top ama-|, iced souls — } Dartil Grimaldi: lect the old race record at 101.978 Mere TSE SETAE Hteurs sharing in the $500 mer-|more take: J, Joan and Dick Burgle,|[oc year at — and Crowley; Kruskie, Caswell|chandise prize were Lois Drafke |E'*b=tt CH ee ok eee. 0090030-3 8 o/of La Grange, Ill, with a 232 and gms ag Griff's .....002.. ©00000 1—1 Reaver and — Caswell Berg. 5 and Tl., with 233. Faulk rallied to defeat|2, 4 Joyce Ziske of Milwaukee on the 18th hole, She finished with a 216 par over. the 54 holes while Miss ®|Mrs. ‘Paul Dommers, Belvidere, . (meet's oldest ie, eet): 1, Phi apeenes. Wayne, pic : pi eet. Wis,; 2, Bin V ,. Indiana; dat o Junior slalom , 3. Carter, Senior women — 1, Marian Bikhart: 2. Sr, pa Bg Cass ace Regs Triumphs |Miles Per Hour 4 divisions. Sherwood, 3rd'in Men's jumping: jexactly twice the total of Coral Sibhe Picked by 13 Points at Record 103 * By BRUNO L, KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press On paper, the College All-Stars appear to have’the horses to give the World pion Detrojt Lions a rousing battle, but by the stand- ards of. pro and college football, the Lions should make it>as easy as eating pie. ‘ Bill Muncey Injured as Thriftway_ Sinks: to Bottom of Lake SEATTLE (®—A ‘blushing pink giant fresh from the mothballs, Hawaii Kai III thundered to vic- The oddsmakers have picked the Lions by 13 points over the col- legians coached by ex-pro Otto Graham. Uniess Graham does a com- plete tumabout from. his pro experiences with the Cleveland oe his style of football tory yesterday in the Sist Gold Cup speedboat race at a record pace of 103.481 miles per hour. Coral Reef of Tacoma, Wash., was second in the 90-mile classic. Gale V of Detroit placed third. Maverick, from Lake Mead,’ fin- ished fourth in the overall - point standings although the Bill Stead- driven hydro did not get out of the pits for the final race, Gale VI of Detroit took fifth. Miss Burien of Seattle and Miss Spokane tied for seventh, . The defending champion, Miss Thriftway, finished her race on the Beaudette Park. The Union Club: spotted Sta- dium a 1-0 lead in the 2nd in- ning, then scored once in the CIO. Wins Class B Title; District Tourneys. Next CIO “Local 594 cmpiene the list of 1958 City League. seftball champions Saturday night by nos- ‘ling out Stadium Inn, 2-1, in the finals of the Class B playoffs at tiac's softball kings this year. In Women’s League softball activity last night at North Side Park, the All-Stars clubbed 17 1960 Bow! Tearg PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) 2A when Miss Thriftway lst her rudder, Municey fought the wheel to Oregonian said today. * *. * not named. x we kk boats was ready to answer the starter’s gun. To accommodate : Tournament of Roses @Assn., the them, heat 1 was split into three * * Little Jack Regas set the stage for eventual triumph by driving the Kai to victory in heat 1A at an average 108.734 miles per hour. Miss Pay ’N’ Save, another home- the other team to the New Year’ Day classic at*Pasadena, Calif. Dallas Wants Big Ten — The ‘athletic directors of the recently dissolved Pacific Coast Confer- ence will select the west coast |& entry for the 1960 Rose Bowl, the The newspaper said it got this jinformation from a reliable but unofficial source, The source was The proposed arrangement, the Oregonian said, will not receive official recognition until confirma- tion is given by other parties to the. Rose Bowl contract — pres National Broadcasting Co. and the Big Ten Conference, which sends DALLAS ®—The Cotton Bowl is interested in a tieup with the Lakeside Royals, 7, and Ejks No. of Europe, 8:30, Shifty Breezes Keep WLYA Sailors Alert the regular Wa ing Assn, races a for the club’s fleet, 5 | thistles, Nelson, * * €y District tournaments are next for the newly-crowned city champions. The CIO joins Elks, No. 810 (Class A), Pontiac Police (Class C) and Post Office (Class D) as Pon- " Beaudette—CIO Local. 594. vs.) 810 vs, Birmingham, 8:30; North| homa, Side—Franklin Products vs. Griff’s : Grill, 7, and Sports Shop vs. Autos "Sunday's shifty breezes made Lake Yacht- al challenge Frank and Joanne Fleck led the|' snipe division with Chuck and Car- ol Morris edging Ray Frankell and nephew Allen Frankell. Harm Gil- len and Paul Saghy were firsts in with Don Zannoth and| Phyllis Seabaldt 2nd, ahead of Ed Jack Berlein’s new lightning, | with Gene Morris and Beb Hag- gard his crew, led the way homie, followed by Bruce Brede, Fred Sr. lof plans for the annual, colorful | Name pissodecsenseesscesesne Stars Good on 1 Paper ‘should follow the pattern of his ‘ex-coach Paul Brown. games against, Detroit. * * *. locks and 15 pro victories. The All-Star game , will be played undef professional rules, entailing offensive and defensive platooning. This, of course, pre- eludes any demonstration of-the new collegiate two-point con- version rule. This fall, the col- legiate grid forces will be able te Kick for one extra-point, or run or pass for two points after a touchdown. Lions rests -on bottom of Lake Washington, her| 3rd and tallied the winning ‘run | hits, including four home runs, S i. Seteert ea ie be tyre cr | Conary a as (oi ee Para coe loot coast guard pa hitter to get: the best of Verle | drubbing. Nancy, am . of Missis- | eg Po a : " she rammed and sank. Sheldon who allowed six safe- ed twe homers. while Marlene 4 as Ray Ss ae ; Texas Sailor n- Finals = ay x © * ties, Sternberger and Margaret Liddy | "~ PY ee ee ae * ‘TAMPA, Fla, iAP) - — Bot Driver Bill Muncey ahd five each socked ome round:tripper The All-Star backs need no in- \Mosbacher of Houston con coast guardsmen were injured in| Four exhibition games.are sched-| troduction to college football jhis International st sailba : one of the most spectacular acci- Coast Athletic uled tonight on the Baeudette and! fang ; the nation. |ahead on the next-to-last lap - dents in Gold Cup history, none North Side diamonds: to initiate a| They include Jim Pace of , seriously, Five howling unlimited Heads to Select week of jam-packed softball ac-/ gan, Bobby Mitchell of Mlinois, |the Mallory Cup hydroplanes had jammed into the tivity. Dick ‘Christy of North Carolina | The first turn after’ the start of heat Tonight’s games: State, Walt Kowalezyk of Michi- |and his The Brown style however has not been too. effective against the Lions since the Cleveland pros have won only three times in 17 The All-Stars are never given the favorite’s role in the game although they have managed to win seven times against two dead- The burden of qutsmarting the ‘Jim arseghian, coach, all of whom, have "Manel pro: ball. “We may be olaying by mem- ory come Friday night,” said Gra- we know what to for igh Grays Pace-Setfers.. : for PYC’s Sailors The Alton Gray family crew. set the winning pace for Pontiac Yacht Club's fleet of lightnings, for the 4Sunday morning races on Cass Jerry was the skipper. His dad “Al” and sister, Joan, were Jerry's crew, Andre Roualet Jr., skippered the 2nd place finisher, with Ted Flack - and Ron Callahan as his ciew. . Third boat home was Claud Ben- anett, with daughter, Claudia, and Pat McIntosh his. crew. Brisk winds made the “uwioe ; around” race an interesting test. ee ave Rd ed a ddadt dial ceseteceonneness nog in hent 3A at] 5 20 Preiitont dest oat and Fred Jr. who slid past Glen Seas’ it" beats ae Noting that the P tee Wheeler — Conference, which has a contract a gg Reged ig see with the Big Ten for appearance WLYA held a further dicussion start, Miss Bardahi, Thriftway | i, ime Rose Bowl, had dissolved, |° , ps ape Fe racoeet of: the home | effective June 30, 1959, Lowe de- Venetian Night,” now set for Sat- ‘Sea Cit. eeehen * With clared that “we'd be very inter- ed mechanical aches. Miss Spokane eeney, Se aeneing ‘sich 8 ey: tit a Sb0ebleng: inle-tg her fee we Ge By 1 ftern, memento of 9 too-close . The Southwest Conference foot- turn ahead of Detroiter Bill, Can- | >*ll champlon ts host tean: in the trell' in Gale V. arog Capel: the rom a | The Maverick, a red hot contend-| large. A er from Lake Mead, never got out of the pits for the final 30-mile chase. Gale VI blew a supercharg- er on the first turn, Hawaii Kai won: the heat at 96.273, with Coral Reef in Close but futile pursuit Hawaii Kai earned 2,000 ® |. SAFETY CENTER | TIRE and SERVICE SPECIALS, 2 Russian Stars ‘Purged’. MOSCOW (AP) — The Russian track and field squad continued its workouts for the -Eurppean Championships Aug. 18 at Stock- holm, but minus two of its stars who were “‘purged” yesterday. Nina Ponomareva, the Soviet woinan discug champion who pro- voked an international controver-! wi sy two years ago when accused of shoplifting, and world record shotputter Miss Galina Zynina were both drepped from the Rus- sian coreg 5 Tamara kevitch, Soviet and Olympic champion shetputter, lost all the medals she won at a re- cent. Soviet track meet but re- ninined on the squad. Field Committee said the and unsportsmanlike behavior.’ with ethics of Soviét sport.” * *& & lang 99.32 for the hats andj Nina's on ee The all-Union Soviet Track pe women were dropped “‘for aise The newspaper Soviet Sport said Miss Zynina and. Miss Tishkevich|# were further charged with “be-/¢ having in a manner incompatible Niha is better.known as the girl who filched five hats valued at $2.50 from a London hatshop in September, “1956, and then . was hidden for 44 days in the Soviet embassy until: the matter. was sees? in court. It cost the Rus- Ld (Reg. $10.95) a $20.70 Valtie for Only Before You Start on Your | oom WEI SERVICE SPECIAL! Here’s What We Do! Complete Front End Alignment i Balance 2 Front Wheels (Reg. $5.00) Be Pack Front Wheels (Re t+ Adjust Brakes (Reg. $1 Inspect ae anne « Inspect Wheel Cylinders WEEKDAYS ONLY A B. F.. 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Reg. os” oe aa ee, \ 1, Precision dynamic balance 2, Precision static balance’ : 3, Install weights as needed OR awe ek ee ae a eg. g°° z enw Most Fords, 30 South ‘BRAKE SPECIAL! _ “Chevies, Plymouths YOU CAN CHARGE IT AT YOUR FGOODFYEAR | _FE 5-6123 pate 12% S Blow-Out Proof Miffler - Written Lifetime: Guarentee Free Installation age : 3. Rpt et @ WHEEL ALIGNMENT 1, Correct caster and camber 2. Correct toe-in, toe-out — - & nen. 7 “ALL OF. THIS SERVICE e 95 ‘SERVICE STORE Cass Ave: Motor 3 Mar i felts Center FE (4.8230 * ake - AlpetResde-—B Office Opens 7:15PM. M. HELD OVER! THE NOW! , THURSDAY tEST PICTURE ween) NO INCREASE -r OF | IN PRICES AcAgemy Awards ra y/) : WILLIAM HOLDEN PNGaGmeClElININ : I ‘wD ALEC GUI INR NESS — ON THE NOW! SERTIEU OVER JACK HAWKINS ; Sears RIVER KWAL " 7:00, Adults ...... 1.906 Children . eens 206. FRI Gary Cooper “SGT. YORK” NBs Glenn. Ford “THE Cow wy’ JAC “K HA VIVA QIN KS tae ‘I Aoday's ‘autompliiles may: have “QLBAR SAILING — Arms of Tower Bridge owner is novelist Ernest K. Gann. She crossed AC \V a dozen electric motors. open to allow brigatine Albatross ‘to make her Atlantic from U.S. carrying first completed copy ; yoo = way up Thames on arriving in London. Vesse]'s of film based on one of Gann’'s books. THE BRIDGE | Spee = — . >I an YW SHOWING Awarded Gold Troph SS || eS Yvonne DeCarlo Raising ipa ad Go AS: Bs Ss i | | HOLLYWOOD (AP) — No bud- The” pressures of Ho life the annual film festival hete. |ding delinquents are the Neh pias of Halywd i | lof, Yvonne De Carlo, who believes | daugh' : pra : lin, old-style, Canadian-type. disci |eut peo ee aparing how “nate Pop Bottles by Billions this town the _ over- oe ae | privileged, iudhartoves nlite cx LOCARNO, ‘Switzerland (AP)— No Budding Delinquent |e ety om ors novel of the same name, was By BOB THOMAS _ diaciptine there’ aisd ta | can|awarded the gold trophy last night } AP Motion Picture Writer’ — |help in bringing up n.”. {for the best picture presented at} pline, servants they had with those of Hers is a pr ogy attitude 4n her friends. a ee ean te Po a os States sell about 114 billion a year. | the famous grow up to make the We have no servants, Yvonne|This is about 7.6 per cent of all “T’ve seen it happen again and/of the private schoqls catering to jagain in Hollywood,’* Yvonné ob-jthe children of movie stars. iserved, ‘The kids are given every-| “I wonder just how much kids thing they want, as long as they|learn in those schools. Or is life “out of the way, They're|there made as easy as possible) Porouht up by strangers, because|s0 the children will tell their mavmma eam Pd | et, the parents are too busy to devote|parents that they ‘love _ the} Z © any time to their own children.” schools?” q x * * is *. 2: ¥ ’ war tr Tim ete i “" 7 1 PES mi ine long-time bachelor ~ girl, ’ ¥vonne was poised to leave for Yvonne now finds herself with a|Rome, where she will play the title] - — two sons, one 2/Tole in “Mary Magdalene” for’ an} ** Ilyears and the other 8 months old,|!talian company, | band Bob Morgan. And when she’s|Bing’s Son Named |" cOunEN Ace | work,” she admitted. “That means lbeen named Harry Lillis Crosby] COMEDY = Mm VLo\w you have to have help in rearing|III after his celebrated father .and| *TAUGUST 17th Walt Disney's at kes “We have people to help the containers sold annually: wen narra AO and ‘their !us in iets, Wa so. tte: wanlan ty casien, pares warner put on this earth to serve us.” PARENTS TOO BUSY Yvonne said she is wary of some “PETER PAN” __ LAKE THEATER. Walled Lake — MA 4-2151 —_ A TEACHER'S NIGHTMARE! ANTHONY. : A TSEN-AOS JUNGLE! Coen rcTUNS , ‘ | ‘ , ' HEN Lake Superior Depth | ~~... BLUE SKY 2150 OPDYKE RD. FE 4-461] Exceeds Chart Info ———$—=—$—_—__— DETROIT (—Underwater sound that Lake! rE err Ye ee 5 @ A new depth of 1,333 feet was discovered by a lake survey hydro- graphic .party, according to the U.S, Army Corps of Engineers. Col. Edmund H. Lang, district /$ Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. North of Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4500 vey, sak ) é ®* STARTS x $ —— EXCLUSIVE —— WED DRIVE-IN SHOWING IN THIS ENTIRE COUNTY! OF ALL TIME... navigation charts, | Location of the three + quarter- imile-wide hole in the lake bottom ee Gee oe was placed in American waters ~ off Marquette and aang Mich., THE SUPREME HU | — now © eo ye «|| BEAUTIFUL BUT pole ccubment.'|$ THE — MOT abi ring EVER MADE! | Te TEN (COMMANDMENTS. * oe ce | Caribou Island, COLOR by DE LUX VITTORIO.GASSMAN ROBERT ALDA | MARIO DEL MONACO Mh Cenciet 10:45 to =— P.M. ADULTS’ 25¢ “AND “CHECK cae STARTS WEDNESDAY THE GREATEST EVENT'IN MOTION PictuRE HisToRy! ‘CHARLTON | HESTON: si BATER EDWARD G ei be CARLO STARTING WED. “Attack of the _ Pappet People” MARTHA VINCENT SCOTT* : ANDERSON: PRICE », aahthe ook by ACNEAS MACKENZIE JESSE |. LASKY, JR + JACK GARISS « FREDRIC FRANK Boned wpon the HOLY SCRIPTURES sed other secinat ond areders ovtngn * Pradveed by Maton Peter Aeceoten, boa ove | ad THE ME FOO TT DESTROYED THE WORLD! | DARRYL E ZANUCK * MICHAEL: GURTIZ SONG OFTHE aESOUTR H | on ‘COMMERCE rm-0661 INTHE DRIVE-IN THEATER / OPEN PONTIAC. © South End of Union Lake Road 7: 00 P. M. AREA HELD OVER! ‘THE BIBLE LIVES AGAIN! : y *Surpemen everything ot ro. — its kind ever given to the » cinema before!” ~ N. Y. Daily Now ~ OECTEO BY SPECIAL ADAPTATION By bie YOUNGSON THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD: THE ieee OF CHRIST "A CENTURY FILMS PRODUCTION | 4 in GLORIOL US COL LOR Starring LEE“A, COBB + Robert WILSON « lames GRIFFITH ane JOANNE ORY win MAGDALENE “and a ate supporting cast! Coter by EASTMAN « Processed by PATHE LAB. AND - - Walt Disney ! TECHN = é ODA MS PEEP RE IE BE ee # THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 ww i 3 ; ae ee st : a ae _., BOOTS ‘AND HER BUDDIES _ | . ; i. Ticket Punch Belongs H al h ' r , (ibe one prevailing in capitalis : : re Stillborn Baby (cence fcc (Health System Petit cen w secs) Wi sean OR es, get a salary from the govern- ment. Patients pay for health service in the form. of social in- _CHICAGO—Once a railroad is- sues a ticket punch to a conductor, POSSIBLE CHANCE FOR ‘Use Pondered Bone Marrow From Aborted Infants May Curb Radiation Effects . BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP)—Still- born, aborted babies may help save living children and adults ‘from damaging effects of atomic radiation, a government nuclear ‘scientist says. Dr. Alexander Hollaender said that some scientists have pro- duced what looks like very prom- ising evidence that bone. marrow from aborted mouse embryos is safer to use for treating the ef- fects of radiation t bone mar- .TOw derived from fully developed ‘mice. x ® ~The inference is that the same it is his as long as he remains with the road, Many have used their punches as long as a half century and then passed it on to a son who followd in the father’s footsteps. Sometimes a railroad lets a conductor keep his punch when he retires as a memento of his career, One conductor became so attached to his punch he was buried with it in his hand, Biblical Manna Story Backed Up by Facts TEL AVIV—It is recognized in Israel that the facts back up the Biblical story of. manna being pro- vided for the Israelites. In Sinai in the summertime. scale insects se- crete a sweet and nourishing sub- stance in droplets that seem to ap- pear mysteriously on bushes. Irks Hungary Finds. Socialized Plan Works ‘About Same as in Capitalist World BUDAPEST (AP) — Hungary's Communist government is com- plaining about the Way its system of socialized medicine is working this country’s 10 million people are still outside it, A Minister Frigyes Doleschall, ‘are forced to buy back their health from the doctors and in case of more serious illness, must pay for hospital treatment. In other words they must obtain medical care in a manner that hardly differs from —partly because over a ‘third of oy ‘far better treatment and many “These people,” says Health’ surance fees deducted from their salaries, é There are complaints that .doc- tors neglect their insured patients in favor of private patients who pay directly. Sometimes insured patients also, pay their. doctors on the: side. Some doctors live as well or better than the best-paid people in Hungary. “In practice,’’, Dr. Doleschall wrote in the monthly Belpolitikai Szemle (Review of Domestic Poli- ti “this means that the old capitalist aysfem exists and that those who pay their doctors get| more: advantages than those who go to them merely within the framework of the health insurance system.” Dr. Doleschall suggests that a special code qf regulations should/- be drawn up and a doctors’ ethi-| cal committee should be formed.! - @WR SrupP-yp) THE BERRYS - fo 1908 by wea serene. Tak tag U8 Pat. Off. By Carl Grubert om Far Enterge exp. bee Alt nights reeanred Reg US. Pat. Ost, UPHEAVALS IN CUBA, Sl [IF YOU THINK l SATELLITES, SHOTS AT THE MOON, ATOMIC BOMBS THE WORLDS Ja PRUS, ALGERIA, TRIPOLI, D FORMOSA WHATS || IN AN AWFUL AN WHATS, THE WORLD COMING TO#, may be true for man, he indi- % cated. . Injected bone marrow has been used in animals to stimulate -foxmation has been impaired by ‘fdfmation has beeh impared by! | ‘radiation exposure. Dr. Hollaender said the marrow from fully-developed animals can cause undesirable side reactions. This appears to be lessened in marrow from mice taken by abor- tion, he said. * * x The scientist told about it in out- lining some of the reports to be made at the world's first Interna- tional Congress on Radiation Re- ‘search, opening today at the Uni- Versity of Vermont. Hollaender. is chairman of the! organizing committee for the con- gress, at which reports on radia- gion research will be made by scientists from both sides of the Iron Curtain. Seven Soviet scien- tists are listed to give papers. Noise Tests Slated — for British Jet Airliner NEW Comet ‘BOARDING HOUSE BLISTER / CLYDE! MACK! EGAD, YOU'RE THE MOST WELCOME SIGHT SINCE £ THE FAMOUS RELIEF & EXPEDITION REACHED BESIEGED MAFEKING IN & THE BOER WAR!» COME, \ YOU MUST BE AWN GOESTS AT) DINNER AND LT WILL A TALE UNFOLD, AS THE POET PUT IT law YOU'LL BE j iat AMAZED: WHO COULD F& By McEvoy and Strieber _ Hi 25 : AGO2Z WE CAME/ WIPE OUT (@ HERE TOBAIL 47 THE YOU OUT OF <¢ ~| NATIONAL YOUR HOTEL, FIGURING THEY WERE HOLDING YOU FOR _\ RANSOM! — = —, YORK IV jet streaked here on its first trans- (AP)—A_ British airliner, which Atlantic flight, is at Idlewild Air- =H \_° . port for noise tests. 4°. BRAUCHER | ~ ae : The plane, the first four-engine: 5 Attra «|. commercial jet to land at the Z| eRaucner Gee WON aS xs field, is equipped with noise sup- — : Nee kk . _ OUT OUR WAY mena? PSEA The .tests, starting today, are| Saf YUH COULD O CALLED | nm ee aimed at determining whether the f ME, IF YUH DION’ KNOW | i be each Wd plane meets noise limitations set for the field. The Port of New York Authority, which operates Idlewild, gave permission for the Comet IV to visit the field. Four-| - engine jet planes without silencers have been banned at the field to lessen the noise nuisance to resi- dential areas nearby, The jet landed at Idlewild yes- terday after a 10%-hour flight from England, including a 14-hour HOW TO SHET IT OFF’ >. =: stopover at Gander, Nfld, ( \ eee The Comet carried 22 persons, it 2d mn be including the crew. It was piloted He rally | | ga | by group Capt. John Cunningham, t if | | 4 Pr 41, chief test pilot for the De Havi | | |i | fr , land Aircraft Co., manufacturer o Vw Ye the plane. Cunningham said the silencers | were effective on the ocean flight and did not cut the plane’s power - materially. What, No Bullets? SACRAMENTO. (AP)—Bartend- er Dale L. Davenport emptied the cash register while ‘the gunman nervously waved his revolver, The gun fell open. Davenport leaped across the bar and, with the help of a patron,. subdued the bandit. Davenport explained that when the gun flipped open, he saw only a cap compartment where the bul- lets should have been. ¢ MOY iM BLAH NANCY . ALN ALTT ATH Bm hog 0 8 Pe OR. a8 sigan peered Keer HEME ty Unmed Femmes Hpndieate, fe eee ee wees TRWwinttams Bit, ©. 1998 by WEA Servic, ine. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. OF. BY REQUEST — HALF ACRE CASTLE John Morris ea ee rar ae ee POOR JERRY/ WHAT A WIFE HES GOT/...SHE COULO WRITE A ee A ie Ee Somes 5 sete AN’ TLL BET I KNOW “y WHO THAT BELONGS TO/ THE GIRLS ponesthiiineeemmatemeen You'll Find _ PROFITABLE — OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and selling. problems, To Place Your WANT AD ‘DIAL FE 2-8181 . | | $ey, 2 oe es 7 50°F er (_* | ee ie “And just look at the-dirt on her window.” ) ! ae j — , a | Pee SEE ens THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST i, 1958 POCO COOTER EER EE eee eenee need ee es peo * *& ot seeeweeee trading for three minutes in down around a point. a so eanane Ras * otaeeee eee noes Gainers = ‘0|& Myers. and Johns scene ee oeee o* pho gee ia New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) d ins Int an St Ok » 7 Jacobs ween Zz geonneee 9 Be es i 4 Phone FEderal 2-2326 49 Mount Clemens mn Pontiac, If you‘are... We will Quality. If you want friendly and courteous treat- © ment, you will get it at our office. BUD NICHOLIE (CE AND REAL: ESTATE - Greenwich. . ~*~ * & Several friends called at Greenwich home to pay their {Tea Trade Is Ancient Mich. in the . Fifth Century A.D. The first trade in this commodity was|m Sover land routes, cates Join included General tors, U.S. Rubber? International Messages from around the world continued to pile up at .Hoover’s apartment in the Waldorf-Astoria here, and others were mconvet at HONG KONG — Tea was first You Can Stretch Cash, Make Bigger Profit—If You're Lucky } ran between terest payments to your loans — Buying . S tocks on Margin Has Advan tage when the ‘broker will tap you on the shoulder to put up more money you're unlucky. Tia ober words, dcx gwar ge First, there are some do's and pe ulcers. “Tere look at bow margin frad-|buying of stocks or bonds on’ mat-| more i? what it will cost, andi gin the trader must put up 70 per i esem: teral and The ticker ran behind floor the Douglas was up over a point in a firm aircraft group. United ical section. Steels and Motors i * Union. Carbide, a good gainer Friday, was down about a point, Blea an was heavily traded, Mo- Anaconda, Kennecott, Illinois Central, Texas Co., Liggett Manville. "| Pigures co decimal point are eighths WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen., Jobn 32.5) Di weeeue anew the re- Car Plunges 30 Feet Onto Ford Expressway DETROIT (#—A car ran off a sharp curve, crashed through a wound rail and plunged 30 feet on the Ford E. today, A passenger, Julia , 26, was critically injured. The driver, |’ .tAmond McBride, was not hurt. Miss Scott was thrown out when the car landed. The car remained in an upright position and ‘contin- ued over the opposite lane until it hit an embankment. reached the an hour. A 20- on the over- = been adequately *demonstrat- Miller spoke for the American Life Convention, the Life Insur- ance Assn. of America and the |Health. Insurance Assn. of Amer- ica. he (grants to the states to aid needy in'children of a father who is un- employed. He said present law re- Proposes 8 Per Cent Hike’ in Social Security Benefits . In separate prepared testimony, for insurance groups opposed the biJl and asked for further congressional study of the need for increased Social _ rity benefits. John H. — vice vice president of Monarch Life Springfield, Mass,, said: “in the tinal analysis we are to DR, SPENCER OATES Optical Firm Marks 50th Anniversary Dow Co. (aw, at $1. 18 Per Share 4 MIDLAND (UPD — Dow Chemi- “ leal Co. toddy reported sales of} $636,201,143 and earnings after’ taxes Poms for: the fiscal May 31. figures, however, also rep- from the vA year when adjusted for the income jot the Dobeckmun Co., which be- came a part of the: Dow organiza- tion during the year. Holders of the 25,877,131 shares of Dow stock outstanding, received a net amount of $1.78 per share, according to the firm. President Leland I. Doan said were “particularly disap- reduced levels of operation and the continued pressure on prcfits in- herent in the cost-price squeeze.” The company also bore heavy startup expenses at its new plant) con in Louisiana and its new dagen fibers plant in Virginia, he said. earnings pointing due to a combination of that the broker m charge no less than i call money rate — a call loan, usuelly for carrying or purchasing stocks, is one that either the borrower or lender can Sanne any time. |o per cent for the money they lend charge more than that — if the account is so inactive as to be unprofitable, if the trader’s credit isn’t: top-drawer, “or if the stocks he insists on trading are too speculative. The stock exchange’s rule on when more - must be called works like this: -If a trader The exchange polices its rules by annual audits of member's books by outside accountants, and occasional spot checks if market conditions. call for them. Bank bag or ai M waiAWzY. scien’ gho cures sneak, 4a margin traders. But they CaMigesi PP sag oe chil ae wr eet 7" ' peid ie ap a County oe ee vision. f the petition eoncern- Fin ra Beg = heveote this sea and shall be ght by pu re i< The Pontiac ress. ee printed ness, orable. Arthur £. heb Sage ot apg cour Court, in the City of Pontiac e me a , this Sth day = fo. ARTHUR A. MOORE, A true COPY are y. Oh of i Probate Register, Juvenile Division, August 11, 1958 MICHIGAN, In the Probate Pails = County of Oakland, Juve- ber ae rage use No. Bn ie ces Tia: e Ri ae father of said.. Wiliam Ric f cy petition concern- rrison, minor. child. ——e ally at sal oor Maing ie impractical t make personal tail b ed my publication of: os pop nod gg I to hearing in The Pontiac Press, & KB prin an4 ctroniened in said ow ' wit — ou Honorab. oe tlac 4 any) a ‘this th day lat August, A.D.. re a ‘ee J. VASCA Probate Register, Juvenile ——— August 11, Pigs MICHIGAN — In the of Oak- STATE OF Probate Court fer the County land “Juvenile Division, Cause No 13 In the matter of the yptetien con- Robert Carr. mino “a see rion har Carr, father. “of said been filed im this present where- having thet the xbouts the Ping of sai ° —) (NIE Fisher) of: " time edvertise- Waterford, fgg A ae containing type sizes ham, Wife of bes iam W. Van Lye tegtilar agate Every; mother Mrs. Richard twpe ‘is 12 o'clock noon the Hart, Mrs. William Stapp, and| {78% ore * to nublication William R. Van Every: of) 5. eo Edwin Colby. Mrs. 8, L. ie : o oor Z . James B. and Russel } eanrelied 0:30 8 pen, —— ser 1 bel f a oe ou cation cher id Wednesda Aurust 13, at ; ogi ag dg oo Monge on CASH WANT AD RATES — Liner i Dare 6p +m - 4 Card ot Thanks 1/f § te hte : e bt cine tardy 4 is ' 88 | 60 oa fs \ os Be ‘ \ } \ \ 4 \ 5 “tal ah e yeeke . day work Only. 28 7 tstics, ist have ‘eon ee 2 ) crevlials Seat “ie T Kr, WRITE BOX asi oa shone oth A : 14 tne “t nae x August 11. 12, 1966 |t that ‘said child should be ed under wens Kind tical Co., 13 N. Saginaw ° ° risdiction of this Cou pee 7 st tolay ig marking the 60th an-|'sraeli’s Goldo Meir Somce of OF HEARING Pia the name of ‘people of the tat Pa ’ y is ng normal level rf waters of an, You are hereby notif‘e1 a niversary of the company’s found-lin London With Lloyd — |Waterfore “rowash tp ‘tnd Indepe in ltoet laos tho Ganland County worvien = fg on Avg, 1, 1808, according tO torent) Foreign RE oe, ae, ee a [Gos Sere Be ie “i . Spencer es, manager. N (&P)— Foreign nae Mt -| Biv e City © n said ‘Bes ee Poca ogrige ety Ee ig the Ph The firm was’ founded by W. H.|London today for talks about the|who are tntesned ta tenon fat nal a |mmanged TD ted Bnet ay A 9 =f ~ Kindy in St. Paul, Minn., and now! Middle East with British Foreign|Pursuant’ to the may level @ & nis aes aN eseresiiaal te mabe serves 14 communities in upper,Secretary Selwyn Lloyd. Lloyd Pupiie Acts of 1930 ag amended: sonal te cervice Mherect, this vammons ‘end federal|midwestern states. cele, ber, at the airport land County Board of (ULAR yrone week -previou to anid During firm's years of} One of the main topics. for dis- is Court @ petition pray-|hearing in The Pontiac a news- 4] business, some 3,000,000 pairs of|cussion between Lloyd and Mrs. jot’the normal level of Oukiand Lake and het and circulated in said eas f glasses have been provided, it is|Meir is expected to be Israel’s| W°gi%ull Lake. said lakes being Witness, | the | Hono orable Arthur z agF estimated, han em the airlift evar Tarncll Ger-ltovrstn, ana baetcne bP ekd Thealitte of Pentas ta mcig treats, tape at ~ s+ 6 ritory to supply British troops in|uegrterd Township, Oakland County,/Sth day of August '. =o j! aoe his father, Dr. Phip-| Jordan. Because of the ban, sup- me further Sotitiog that ie, Tolae at Poaats a | $3 Sues j Bi rth d - Kindy Fea president a - bog d ys Le 7” si Sas by so, Pride arf for the "Go County ida _. “provate Res rater, ; re S| firm since . ay qa -D, 1968, at the opening of at toon at on — rer] 39.2° 4 | ay OW August 11, 1958 rhe. } . 30 2 2 and Mi5,| ne ea . . 8 Memoriam _2|_ Help Wanted Male 6; Help Wanted Male 6 mobail ol ‘28! Big Dealer Conclave eath ofice ne RAN | mr NN Sheriff's ‘ Kal . a AD BOOK MATCHES |MEN bushel, rr bien — © appreciates me. 2 . Bine ta M Se Must eA so LI 17-0430 ea! NEEDED NOW : housewives and young Mare and over, for “pleasent pert tine fo gee S survey work, and on! vee workers 7 apply. re Pieris ME MONEY? BECOM r Lo ® dealer L Oakland Coun! experience nec- essary, “aformation call sere 1» eee RELIABLE WHITE WOMAN TO care ee 1 child & housework. Live in. eet ORIiando 3-9696 6 pm . ioe Se 1N aay = id as a g ices Trends. back Eble. Fe Drayton Siains. EE Rochester. ear. Huet tea ws: OLDER WOMAN FOR are of baby a ay for $12 a wk trans _ tation and pronten | WOMAN WANTED FOR CARE OF ‘P while mother works. onday, or "evenings after a = = 7% Help War Wanted PBPPBPLD LOL A Ow RE, YOU _WANTIN 2, WORK, OR ae Bs or conan mk Wee. wage COUPL. “HONEST ey no. No abiaren m, tovely he salar a a __erences. iv You ARE re and can handle a leckons well, I og show you hi 25 and 55 ce? work at least 4 aytime or evenin live West o! car. Ez * e Can ae 150 N. 35-4196 DNUSUAL OP i a ‘be 5 3 ony ‘us! under oars ae 8 ae = and reside road ration ton Mrs. gnece 34736. peed s ip easy.” styles, for. a my eam. ore ong Phew ce catalog. eAWrtte TANNERS Sn Brook Employment Agencies 8A) > SEC'TY paris sits Pata e 316X, ton. ple and ee . - 5 with 1% hrs for nd no et cellent start- bs “Balad tse Bale ae FE é 3} ATTENTION, MEN = easily & quickly for big) — Kot pe arte EN, RAY OTR ¥oL eo pis eee F Tuure., August zip in Mebiase, eee an MEN JET TRAINING *Turbo Jet *Mechanics *Turbo Prop *Technicians *Gas Turbine *Specialists y begin your TRAINING wi sSitat Way ve, ee tbe tae a for ow yume TODAY —. Full in —— corded. Four ings ae = ace | Nornwest ee Dept. J8-95 Box 16, Pontiae Press ae an .. | TRENCING Work Wanted Male 10 PPLRAPRALPA AAPL L PS Aa . NEW ae ve eae oe A-l ED) —— vr Ya cabinets eben ladies,| ry FE . a py BE! . bbe 7 App y in ine Urive-ta 59 NEEDS yr. old \feomen 4 WORK WANTED BY HOUR OR hic Ee __mates. : ‘pepe | fT WOMEN WANT wath it _ing, and housesioaning ba cae 581. So P & L Statement. coron _general, Call 63 FOR UND a RGRA ee ER BUSHEL. Fa | bushe: FE 32488. “ BOOKEEEPIN - or in my je Pu’ change ORED LADY, 30, WITH CHILD Ma ony her, imple cooking eee & DAY WORK. TPXSERIENCED RIENCED IN _references.- F £2-2870. & practical nurses ¥ Aerts 8S $3 sea YETiNG WATERFORD — Drayton Plains area. OR 3-3952. HOME FOR 1 CHILD refer pre-school age. FE 5-7490, LADY WITH EXPERIENCE DE- sires Msires housework. _FE 7378. FADY Y WANTS BABYSITTING & oe housework. 5 days. FE MIM MEOGRAPHIN @ TYPING SEG retarial service. EM 3-2842. _ 4 ‘4 BR WOULD LIKE TO CARE Aa LL CHILD onty” rE PRAGTICAT wonax ~AVATLABLE | COM! PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE. _Experienced. ORia ndo 33084. PART TIME OR SHORT HOURS. ipo office experience, PONTIAr C BABYEITTERS Mewes Dri vers oR voce 7 per hr aul sitters. Cell mornings evenin as OX & TRONINGS CALL FE 50734 ___ WASHINGS & TRONINGS, WATER- ford vicinity, OR 3-3588. ASHINGS AND ROW IOS aE _Lonafellow. PE ¢- WOMAN WANTS oan OF ANY kind, Go home nights. 5 days wk. PE 8-108]. WOMA early la — . 4 WANTS WORK AS secoptoniat or general office. Ref. rtation, Rei- _Sronces coaioune: ple FE 8-0708 8-9796. WILL DO TYPING AT HOME. Call after 6. FE 4-5521. Building Services 12 errr ? aLL KINDS OF P CEMENT WORK, Brick & bloc’ ed OR ensed & bond- RF |" peeeat rae, so resent home House ¢| Gnderptnnins Complets “es. of masonry FE 6-8044 i ality . Feel vy lee u. xen ow ie eas or FES 5008. a WOREMANGHIF. BRIC k & stone, vio Insko 12 BR Ww need “irepiaces_ MA MA $0378 ~ AAA Floor Sanding Pesta BB siding, ~— and doors. Ellison. FE garages or repair. MENT 1 . NOTHING - . Wome Commercia] or ential. Pree ores years % wrt Phone 72. CE : A eas rates, FE 368 K. OR 3-5741, ill Sigal AND MASON mo od Fo pga "rnp. OR. 3-002 esti- palider Free estimates “OL 1-3461 = ener basemen! th pee teed wor by yg BES Call OR est = BL OCK 5-0592 ~~ ROOF REPAIRS FE 4-0444 ING, EXCAVATING | FOR | SIX. “Tee & 28 eer wells ae | WH peseey, soba ris S008 peat = aus eae al? 96 Oakland PE 92-4021. , a Classi- 2-8181. R A TOMERS th fied Ads. Call Dump ~ AS a PAVING BLE ‘ Dreasmaking, Tailoring 16 DRESSMAKING, TAILORING, | AL- terations. Mrs, Bode 4-0053. DRESSMAKING. BUY A ‘¥ iBAY IRONING SERVICE. © ern gy may BOY ey at Sgro ni eID ag a pod ie On; rapes rm in my home. Call FE ae Garden Plowin 16B PAP BLPL LOLOL ALOLO LD CUSTOM PLOW DRAG. ‘& LIGHT grading, Anywhere: Call ‘ORIando Insurance Agencies 17A bas INCREASE IN ee surance rite ay ret 'iNeRANCE A AGE eu eed sae POR “FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV ice phone Pontiag Laundry, FE LACE CURTAIN: rR uF. eo Beau fully finished” Phone —__ Landscaping 184 A -1 ACE TREE SERVICE. moval and trimming Get our. tid FE oe PE 8-973 isn ui Ch apacinn. Seeding & Sod: TER Trim remove cour oon anD ova). Ph PE 56-6593 or OR N cur. repair Weed LA A = Oe Re na arses 8 Ap i Fe North NEW ciwN “3o Freie Backfield ton soll. FE SPRAYING Commercial or residential Dutch Elm & pest control Roto-Mist_ or ey tronma Harry White & Sons, Inc. 151_8. Cass Lake .Ré. Moving & ‘Truckin 1% TON STAKB TRUCK WANTS work, OR 3-3603, “oxCEr Bae Reasonab 63468 — FE) 2.2000 ~ AA-1 Reduced Rates _ , Smith Moving re Large van of O'DE \RTAGE Loca) long Gietanes moving. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. > as 1 wOfechading Sundar | free Painting & Decorating 20 ST CLASS PAINTING "AND = orating. Cash or terms ing. Decorating. Reas. a 5-2860. A-l) PA PA * HANG. ing Paper remoy 4-6918. A-l PAINTING AND: PAPERING Mason Thom FR . A] PA & EX- riar. Te reg PAINTING & WA NO. Rates now 4, ss. PAINTRG =? ao G, meee — 3.7061 Physio- Therapy 21A Piney. OF Sesh 1 eet ALL CALLE AN- 8 | eres day or nieht RA Ai, BLEGTRONICS DA Typewriter Service 22A U holsterin EAKLE'S UPHOLSTER- Phat sigs ev Lake Rd EM UPHOLSTER iG ___FE 5-888 24 107 _N. a Per Lost ri Found LOST: — FOLDING POCKET- hook _ Oakland ve. Keep “Hobbies & 224A PAINT ay remer Bacenstoss DON’T “ I SH yreH FOR MONEY! Make it a through Classified Ads. | sell, rent, buy, swap, hire, E |dial FE 2:8181. isT CLASS INT. — EXT. PAINT- Ee a Television Service 22 | CARNIVAL: by Dick Turner | TM, Reg. US. Pas, Off, © 1958 by MEA Service, ine. “Nonsense! If it is as sma working 8-11 rt as all that how come it’s HERE?” Notices & Personals 25 AUTHORIZED MASON SHOES. on ame J. COMPEAU 289 rn St FE 8-3900 ANY G rR L, OR WOMAN NEED. ing a friendly adviser 122 Confidentia\, The ds _ Army. “CHARLES CHESTER | r Perry. +4 Dd. 2 MAID UPRLTES - sonantnes Mrs wi e FE 56-7805 Sauery, MAD TOPE Mas. In Debt? Tf you are — trouble - mocing peri ayments see is ay. CHIGAN ‘ Tene a _Above Oakland Theater. FE 8-0456 ~ KNAPP SS Herm 2020 Airport ° a 21002 wefan’ part new! ce Pome let ‘t tablets abr” | cents at SIMMS ; PUBLIC NOTI HEREBY August FY in the following areas: The City of Sylvan. La! Lake Oakland twain Subdivision, and Pleasant bdivision. REDUCE NOW 10 powndg in six short days. little as ry 00 Lay — on att a Call" ~ S pocart a mes or cl, Se ee ECIAL FOR AUGUST. cob omplete, Tintia Wtd. Children to Board 26 A ME BY DAY ‘OR week. ac08 ROME GHILDREN LOV! VED ARG CARED _tor, FE 23-1730, ‘| Wtd. Household Goods 27 i|/ CASH FOR 8M. RADIOS. Wi or 56-8755. FURNITURE NEEDED st the Eth ee AND ne = Fruit Wood Spinet peret be te ses sondnten. feeee ° Leslie R. Middleton Sell our Equity. |! e- Gor aee Sa Wtd. Miscellaneous 28 iA a paper aes 2 ae eal gaan f eat wil D aive 9 you! ereage, ft Doone (@) NAUF Wentet to Sow it 29), «ROY K MANAGER OF [0c or . WANTED: TMMEDTAT EL, oa 4, "alle tees ot Pontiac. bow gages terme, } Fl es Wtd. Mi aalcceata 31 GIRL WA ford or phot me ee Sort Hours 00° to 5:00. "| WANT RIDE FROM Vict Tete ken ate 5. Wed. Contracts, Mtgs. 32 IMMEDIATE ACTION > ee Dp KL. Tem leton, aac 39 Orcha Sae3 waren : os" Ios wee 1363 W Huron. 8? 8: PARKE st. FE or FE 44613. Ask for Mr a Adults. Close in. Ref, PE 2-1425. rr EW 3 BEDRM. WITH CASH FOR, LAND, RACTS. built in ranae and oven. “Ca arpet OR $4080. Ask for ke Wideman. |? ROOM APARTMENT F for peo- trance, atk . “ se <. mith _8. Tasmania. 8. P 41738 AVATLA a BLY. S - TRMS. & 7 RMs.. ING. S Fox ist floor Prt bath, | ut.” adults. ait “Auburn Pe| Ble, °F, eouple eb é __Teferences, 261 State 8-6079, FE 2-7236, after 5:30 p.m. nd. Leke Orion. Wideman: | #5 ree a “test BA 2 |e BARONE sia rie tore eee tei £G3s0. Shot “onavte “ka: ONLY §75 A MONTH REA OPEN EVES.| tow ve fu: id 3 $BEDRMS.,| Year old 3 bedrm., brick. Larre FE si PO au eg _felcome Fer | os \oedem ie Toh, me new school aear by. OR “ENT. 2275 ELIZA- . a dang contrac ‘co, ? peth Lake Ra. PE 2.1908. of _ Buclid | street. "Oe | sEAUTIFOL B : ern steels Bihigg, [staan tar’ soe eer | tee ee tn en ee eee eh 2 ae : bath & ent. For 2 men or couple. ss B ab, a OR. UNFUR RMS. acres of 1a raise} oh te Newly Géeorated PE. 5-8239, Dein end ent, Laundry priv. | [ou eee eee orse: Sis per we. |. fireplace. Cateful plenn 7 ROOM | LAKEFRONT. IDEAL Gur veted “aher t pim. Pinca best moa bxce for bong ae Hl villities ; 3 ROO _ 16562. helps make =— home — eround MY Tel ou a ms Pe ebe" mo. iW DRAYTON AREA, NEW 3 BED- wroprrty. os = ag w.| yoom house, garare, reasonable, RTH SIDE excellent 6 3 Was ; ae at aye ni Oreos | Pvt. ent. rNear Be “Bastern Jr. FE ease Lincoln 80, - room ome. ¢ Carpeted am? & Begone | ROOM” AND BATH STOVE ed or u hed, 240 \ Bt, Grapes jneluted,. be baits OWE ALSO Brie! ang retrigeraigr fara. Palm Vile ott Sonia Also on Taylor Ra, | Kitchen, master bedroom 14230 ft. A 3 AP. ee 8 i ‘- | T Rooms & Bari ON WARE | 0 Se tn -JOLL, REALTY = Ay TORS FE 4-0528 eae oem dn. Pa. 7 od 5 rem garege, larce SYLVAN $16,500. For information inquire RF; ORS - ay , beautifully linthoon aped lot. A beautiful ranch type home com-| _&t 709 Squire Iane, Milford. : ee $14, terms. ete 3 bedrooms SALE BY OWNER 3 BEDRMS. | 577 8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Naan SLARKSTON—Near. pate, Enehen ballets, tril base fam] & beth. Liv rm. dining rm. 5s room 5 ern = = rm ——— DRAYTON WOODS SPENCE STREET retreat on a beautiful wood. win’ complete. ‘ree. ew ot turnsce, 2 car gerege. | LITTLE STINKERS RA ; lish ed 3 acres. Words won't 2 car attached plastered garage cement drive. Located beau-| 3 rooms, in city of Pontiac, now ‘ f, il ane tonne ann describe it. . no sure to . Call for information. tiful fenced, shaded landscaped | vacant. Located at 1262 Clover- ait of ¢ most beautiful streets See it. $21,000—early 2 EAST sIDE _ te ar see to Bg are A lawn. Look it over and make an re] france with tds floors teas =| HP. HOLMES, INC. | Attractive. 2 tna igs. Com: | SaeaGue Angeles Be WACANT 15x24 . r= “BRICK, FULL BASE- ne ace, full Vues 2531 8. Lapeer Rd. FE 5-2953 Days plete ‘with, Fy lots van ay Sores Weis room ra room, frame bungalow at 2198 le bath, den or bed- C . Jot, close to school, Off Crescent ar Rd. Located off Hatchery room, cheerful new 7 Temod- L AR K John K. Irwin & Sons Lake Rd. Térms me. bomeaue Real Weterford Township. eled kitcheu w a Realtors : Pf your own down Payment. gr of “test workmanship. $975 DOWN, $10,000, FULL PRICE 313 Wot Mune Street TO SET TLE ESTATE Payments $50 per m C a love- Phon 5-044 o houses van ly full ce- bedroom bunga: to 1088. ores . axe 28 (home’ & me), small down F. C. “Wood Co. CE OPEN 9 to 8 Conan Willems Lake Rd. & M59 OR 3-1235 ; ‘ . 6old at once. Make me ffer. Saas Oy son | ea e autom 7 for this 2 bedrm 95 D WN seat tock Hop street. A) Sith stairway to. partly Ne Bede pee on_ your dorm: attic Which could be 2) jo¢ $6.995. Full price. Wood floors. 1,360 DOWN. 4 BED additional bedrooms. Has ure ; 1 bath. Ctility Wiser bosons. Large cor-| TSsren Rh ARIE REALTOR complete, Interior Fond. iu cnr ‘garage "Bhie Rowse on petty op at tina fo woman has 5 rooms down 2 We have lots available also. bedrooms . 3 pe bath sep. MIDDLETON ip AYDEN kitchen, full basement, ofl a Realtor matic ‘heat. 39.250. Full price. MBO Toad. foot, me 86'E_ Walton FE. 8-044) UITY. 8 water and se feat ton Sone ree tneoase 4: oan car garage. 2% acres of & bath for owner plus ame land. DORRIS from 2 apartments with separa . : baths, basement, gtoter ted re ae R. Middleton full “pries $11,600. " **"*8* | BROKE 188. N JOHNSON | & SON FE 6-721 — OR 33022 — FE 8-6003 | CLARK REAL ESTATE. core cole GE nf ERLE Hu Open 9 te MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | G.E, ig mre DOWN A 5 3 bedroom family hom “sox18 living room 12x13 din ning room. 9x12 — plus a 6x12 sun ‘Pull basement with oil Meat, 1% baths, Located st side of town CUSTOM BUILDING George R. Irwin fst 2 locke rom tone ic! Clo: only will move youn..." | REALTOR 208, BALDWIN’ AVE, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ing room & kitchen cambiseg DRAYTON woo large living roo 3 bedroom a type bangsiov | shower, oak floo: . pisstered walls am large living roo: full basement, oft ‘antomatic heat, | kitchen and > oy room. "pituated lot 60 x 161 feet FAA Terms. eon nice w d lot with flowers and shrubs. Has plastered walls, oak floors, tile bath and vesti- bule entrance. Can be bought on FHA terms. We build bedroom homes for as little Oy $9,000. Will build ce- dar shake, brick or aluminum Siding. Full basements with rec- reation space. automatic hea t, plastered walls, oak floors and good closet 5 Wo: ip of the bes’ ANOTHER GI BUY A2 eattesen bung+low with expansion attic for the 3rd . we ating nee aren y 4 ea! space, aths, Full ement with tile floor and one agat All of this for only $10. $1,000 DOWN A large 3 bedroom ranch with 11x20 living room, 10x12 kitchen. Gas forced air heat, Priced at only $8,750. IVAN SCHRAM 942 JOSLYN. COR MANSFIEI. OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS” MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ Partridge “BIRD” NEW BRICK RANCH A_ very attractive brand brick 5 m ranch home. Bea = tiful kitchen with built-in grill and oven with rotisserie, Unusual corner fireplace between dining lity oak firs. and living room. Quali ana plas Ea 7 Js. Heated ga- rage joy i te of a new home now t's ready and Phone for you. Just $14,200 on Ti RADE YOUR HOUSE | you’ ce lookin: ho | that . sae a REALTOR PARTRIDGE L ATE & peti wr ub Bk Bis : cose pes an fea and s my included 2 00, ofa _— me a 404. A Roy, Annet, Inc. ANNETT'S VALUES INCOME OR HOME—Near Cen- boty | High School, 9 rooms, 2 8, lot, beautiful LAKE FRONT FOUR BEDROOMS A wonderful 8 room family home, situated on a beautiful lake front “ Ya spreading shade trees, ach, Pontiac School oietrine ayy or soe siting, gleam- LAWRENCY W. (saylord A WORD TO THE WISE Women usually know roe that is why we like to show ou this home located about 5 minutes from Pontiac. 27 . living room with beau- tiful bi fireplace. Cus- tom planned kitchen, 3 Log oversize plaster garage Feral drive. Half acre of nicely landscaped grovads, In tne $28,500 class. Cal) for ap- pointment to see today. A BARGAIN - _— country next to a bi 2 bedrooms. Ful ing Oak floors throughout, car- Cesena. Large lot, $6,100 peting, full bath pepe A’ | bath, total price with only $600 and many outstanding selling ap- down. —_ | TWO ACRES G.I. SPECIALS i Gives you lots of room for a fa) 23x34 spacious bungalow with | ha eon Lots of fruit trees, oak floors = chee rries, grapes: 6 room aluminum ei and zanenet serage and breeze- nae on e ~9 Ms privileges” $8. 950, way and three bedrooms. 1 he All this for $13,500 with easy terms. Vacan' (bo) Attractive frame five room ves you immediate ponsasite 4 pooped — paneled family and two large BUILDING SITE finished ¢ dormito Ty bedroom, base- — — oll heat, 2 car garage, large Five acres with a view. - $10,975, $400 will haniile, you'll a be ae Call iW pr ai, ips for wh = price of mem Urneet, ve 38 eure: a dy five room | 136 EB, PIKE _OPEN EVES. bu: alow | and a he*t, clean, mod. ern three room home on rear of FE 4-9584 swimming beach Multiple Listing Service across road. 152 W. Huron PHONE FE 4-1557 DORRIS & SON REALTORS new gas furnace. Upstairs apartment now rented for $65 a month $11,750, terms. DRAYTON WOODS Pontiac in good eeatica a room ranch home built in Ise. 2 fireplaces, 2 — more heat, attached 2 garage. Wooded lot 120x127 $22. 1800. terms. ROCHESTER -— Located in Paint Creek Valley, scenic 3 acres with creek on property, ranch home with beamed Teel ng and famil room 3 or 4 bed- adiant floor ft. a living area. 3 is ogee a heat. * 2400 = $32,000, term GREEN LAKE on ae of ex- genome beac! porch. heat. 2 car garage $45. 000, 4 ACRES LAKE FRONT—Newer otal 3 vbl-level ranch, 150 feet of ndy beach Large living yooen, redwood | soqgiees family ‘room; built ar. recreation room, in attractive kitchen and breakfast s. 3% baths screened , pe ith tatteres grill, be tronic sorens door, zon LY tga, fenced, _tand- EALTORS enings and \ 1023 rel 8-0466 y 1-4 135 UNLIMITED FUNDS FOR OUR CUSTOMERS FHA, GI & LIBERAL CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES This new service makes it easier‘ ‘to sell vour home with cash to BROWN $330 DOWN—Lovely modern bunga- low with basement, Oak C furn. Aluminum & sarees Tile bath, Re- cently” de decorates Paved street. .A re $15,500 SELL OR TRADE — Lake front. Beautiful 3 through: ag iin room, Call MO 4 Cioss or Eaton rer : land, jovel 2% foee hen a , ents Sees Sotho. terms,*MU_ 4- Milford, 6 roorn, 2 level home, und gas furnace, gias: cane} front with hake an: Call MU 42045 collect, down, thn ranch an te home a room coed Ata ea Ah ou. And also helps in the pur- edroom bunga- Thasing of a home with a chink Pireplace net, a on =. oa! mum down payment. & doc beach ‘will ‘accept “frep lake, 5 ge : t, per home in trade. re ~ arage, lovely view beach, only $12,500 $15.9%5 Petey LIVING—at rms, Call ‘MU — just _ reduced $3,000 EM foe frei sale Pron. trades, yanee. deal. Large - rs renee window. rge iW. ad Petes "Yiving room, pay den. 7x17 birch kitenen Two car garage Ten « of land. Behoot bus a ana fe ie Oakland County. oe $1,500 DOWN—Income special, Over $100 per income it a i. genes ist down- saintes. See this one. atc real valug.”* L. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. ad ~*~ wen 2-4810 ‘Income Property 43A ag sours afeste Ti, MACEDAY LAKE een ee hen BAC at $9,900, OR 3-8073. i A BARGAIN fie tet ota large’ wens. i eles. Rar! tengo ‘ot. = heme oot sale. Owner fr and leavin a re BS handle, 2410 8, Commerce Rd. MA 4-2301 COTTAGE i) va GE teened wer _Biraits. Lake. FE zet 46, ont MPARE ot Gert an OTHERS ON THE MARKET. BUY NOW, WH PRICES DOWN! Seymour Lake 100 ft. ...... $ 2,950 Lecford Hii as ae $ S300 ake At $10,000 ake WHIT 1 E BROS. 1 = REAL ESTATE te) it he Open Eves, ag a ry 9; sunday 1 10 “tll 5 LAKEFRONT HOME ‘rm maar) oe ine ‘e rms yo hn <3 condition wae REALTOR FE 45905 Dunham Lake Frontage CHAPIN BeALTORS ‘OR 3-8983 BEAUTIFUL 14 ‘OG CABIN STY TYLED Stan @. oy Lake fon. Call MY LAKE, sealagt Haat Stat roun le $4,000 terms. MI 4.0158 LAKEFRONT LOT OF _Lake FE 23-6373 or MY sian ~~ Middle iddle Straits Lake bt rooms full basement, high eoded jot. sand be: boat dock Will take smaller iake home PA = as down payment. _RILEY MACEDAY —i A beautiful lot ca Spe S eetaiion house. . New $1, Blectrically wired. BUILDING SITE — Priced xe on terms, WALTERS LAKE FRONT — a $2,200 full price Ternrs available. There is perfect sand for swimming. An excellent for that WALTERS LAKE COTTAGE — A pine constructed ne e in ex- tellent area. Only $ 750" do wn, Cass — 7 ft of a ioe f a area. munity wate:. erred at $5 950 with $1,500 d sandy ike frontage A-l area. Communiiy op meres at $5,950 with $1.500 do WALTERS LAKEFRONT — 70 ft of frontage with perfect sand beach basement already on prop- erty. $5,900 on terms. SYLVAN LAKE FRONT — Right = —— Ne Bivd 7 tetas rontage In are: $75,000. homes Priced at $9,950 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. PE 4-11557 PE 4-4821 TO SETTLE ESTATE Sylvan Lake, income), small down payments & E-% terms Must be ous st anes. Make me an offer. TRIPP INT. Exclusive iaxer Ricee’ A site; 145x450’. Superb sand beach a R. Tripp, Realtor 1 W. Huron Street FE 5-8161 UNION LAKE 6 lots oe, 1 block 31. 00 nc lock from lake, ach. No money down. OR UNION LAKE FRONT EM ues bedroom cottage, $14,500 8 ACRE FARM WITH LK. FRONT- pony MA Si. cherry For Sale Resort Prop, 444A es \caan Ga ca ACRES DEER HUNTING LAND undo 3-4367 its 1 Cabin, $3,500 ~ AU SABLE RIVER ER Exrojehed —— $2500 and mz land c Luzerne & Red Sera tone ale, BUSINESS im or near’ Mio Roseuren ore So te MIO CABIN FOR RENT. SLEEPS” 7. = pst week. Hillman; Michigan. onal LAKE NEW CABIN. Lar sot. Center resort of adjo Ane, state forest. ing. fishing. $1,095. wie Jerry Morro (Skeelsy Mich. h. GArden NEAR ROSCOM MON Toom cabin. Fireplace. Biectrie pump. Purni: G hunting and fishing Mo- F NORTHERN PROPERTY. house 125 ft. frontage = bg. 2t Just a fade ft. to Stu ver. _Reas, for cash PH. 93982. sacinaw feet a Heteente tena Bal For Sale Lots 46 , % ACRE WOODED LOT 5 nison Acr. “he ha Meet t Auburn Rds , 200, Geers. haweas _ MEADOW LAWN ft yooaee on T li - mercial or resident: al. PE «i016. BY ie oe pi] "cada WwOOoDs oa ok sas ery reasonable. LARGE LAKE 3,000" cent lake down Gah ON whit 25 aH Haat rae lots. $2,000, . sul for wit bas y terme. he or EM Bahn = iss"haee spar sibel, Regier ; fOr te DRAEOR ie ae “Zamore) Dre rayton P} .Paim * ONLY $1,650 CLOSE IN WITH TREES PAVED STREET APPROVED MORTGAGE é. wl ai you can be ne a ati tie Be sai a & a a 3 Ta ‘Sale Industrial Prop. 46A| poe Ke Pps e ok 1 and with 3. * if 3600 ie a + oa me oS Can sors N Bepare A Fon St PB &-0406 For Sale Acreage’ ‘47 s containing a overnend ‘sors. sold Inc, 4 to 35 Acres LIQUOR HOTEL ~ SOLID a ING, 35 miles ore seins over E teed or ente ment. » “ae8 008 ith a5. 000 down wii’ take trade for part. Michi je hove listin: stings ‘tr strom = = bes. Our experts STATEWIDE Beal Batate Service of Pontiac Call us for acreage — we hay CHARLES, REA rge selection trom % ‘ 35) p027 8. Telegraph he acre parcels. we don “pate Detroit Office: TWinbrook 3-3286 pete Ye want — we'll help|MASSAGE P PARLOR AND EQUIP- s ment. lease, rent or sale. Write Press Bor TT. Howard BE. Fox SERVICE New. 2-bay meres y aaies he 5178 Dixie wy. i Prevten Plains for Tease, Ic locate at Or 0: a he SOT AEE PRACRLG BEAD. ie euraaTA OE TH THRIV- - sites. $100 down, 2 830 |SRCRETA aT SERVICE penanes - for enced , gee who c PANGU ealtor | would like to be her own boss 1919 M15, Ortonville NA 7.2616 | CB, Mrs. Sa Sorenson. L 2672 * ried sien, 8 aad PONY BuaNO Boi rae S58. ic ee ee go x‘ Pranks, 4395) Sac. LI -2845_or 13-2039 eves. li ACRES LET'S TALK Neatly completed home. Plent ISINESS” ats S “om plete Ie, Plenty BUSINESS Doroti age der Lavender) . _ Grocery-SDM YEARS Here ‘fs a well est . grocery (M-50) - with beer overation. fo Lassted is Gexiand af Lake ne sae "ea © g ove f a 15 acne KSTON. e Owners if kes thi MAple _5-2480. of Bieck’ als, “Gest bund epbor- 25 ACRES, 1300 FT. On PAVED| tunity for. you road with 3 bedroom home, FE Cleaning Est. °- —_— — This concern located Pontiac area is a real live wire. Present ring gp og a Pons , "for details. . 5 rms.; 10 ACRES — full bath. basement. “330° mil yan “aown paym *CEORGE BLAIR OR 3-1251 DRAYTON PLAINS . OR 31 WEST SUBURBAN emai 2536 Dixle H Lot 100x800 . fito0 terms. Choice 5 acre parcels - B building spot. Lake $5,000 terms. -10 acres. pee trees. ‘land. $5,000, te Dorothy Snyder La Lavender EARS pat Ra use) | ___ EM MU 4.64 REAL’ 2 bedrms. on main privileges. eautifful Rolfing > MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR MIDDLETON GROCERY A UP AND GRoOW- es community 12 ear out Pontiac. land. y ot ceauteels opti. Leslie R. _ifiddleton BROKER N eae oo PE 5-7721 — OR he2 — FE 8-6003 ~ Sale Land Contracts 52 ~~ For Sale : Farwie 48 60.000 IN LAND CONTRACTS TO PEALE ALLAN, sell. or all at discounts. 10 ACRES & PANGUS, R Realtor Large ranch home i th, attached 1919 wis Onepeie NA ame r garage Bratt Ess” dower bermcso3| ue Siesneee-anaers) this place is if excel — con- ; ? . fava $30,000 cash mort} _WHEN YOU NEED . Clarence C. Ridgeway $ $ REALTOR 20 roa 100 975 Baldwin Ave. FE -4-6203} you “can et, Ht quickly, on your Son u ree H ea) “ payments to suit oe on ae en, a I E et ee TATE me FINANCE CO. — FE 4-1574 Terms. or EM '3-6210. Ta now, MU cod ny only, hae. ae evel Bea Wear? OF ef Ideal ke eee ie cent =. Only $20,900 From 1 100, fy toned commer soar st garage, zoned Commercial | Properties . (e) IN OAE- FINEST — easy Pull” ue only $10450—easy - ferme, al. Tay ae jae me tine Lake ~ DIXIE. HIGHWAY 400 FT. FRONTAGE ated in « small — ete re nr itis magmas EGE s ees AS "Ee | Rout Cia “for Bus. Pr I St. : Pence balowin RBE au AIRPORT ih [ . Corn 1s THE “BIRD” TO SEE H B wei ee * ee apt. Mew rem pd ‘gs i reall only - $9,500 "Northonk ape tei Maa hs See ees ae ee for en nS ns Hae oo _: 02 Pontiac State Bank Bide —_ ONLY AT HFC E ait| Money Service backed by —s0 YEARS EXPERIENCE For fast, friendly rervice from i $500 in gitvhes. Ls pment toy Sam ‘Household Finance Corporation 3% 8. seuss, ve ng Kay. Bidg. Quick ‘Cash $25 TO $500 On*your own signature, auto, or other eae, ig ,| fenaly” ang nelptu, Phoo F rei Home & Auto LOAN CO: 1M. Perry St, (Corner Pike) TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOANS $3 TO $500 “WORKERS We make ‘cash loans off workers. No prinet hy! pare ment until you ack ork for 30 days, Our Requirements Are: 1, That ou own furgitare oF 8 car es : r ai ate «@ ~— siden x That you had ® good wor ‘ and a recor fore becoming unemploved If you owe bills —_ are Ag | — paym to +64 us & ce ane be “raeved of worry, we have you and in your commu- nity, . Loans to $500 Made Quickly Je a gr ” BUCKNER Finance Co... AYTON N PLAINS | LAKE a | SAVE sctegacoaa is set| WANT ADS! To find a ate, place to”live or a). good used car, see Gaassi- m fied bei johe ws Opportunity 81 ? Pe we Bg tl ‘FOR | oods . stor’ elles Loan Company CALL us for any kind of real * i ta ‘Sasinoas in schools pis. come — 5 gg _ Mpstairs gg will siways sleet on ant Yrlendiy oe cane co Co, GET CA ies SuIeeLy Up te $500 Oakland Se FE 2-9206 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG, LOANS “commuNity LOAN CO” LOAN CO 30 B. LAWREN E 8-042) FRIENDL SERVICE ___ Mortgage Loans 54 A “Mortgigt: Problem? We make mortgage loans to me tne castes em k's Mees Al al 1 ser’ so bur ‘land contrasts and we Buy Squities : CHEFF MTGk.& RLTY. CO. 10 W HURON 8ST PONTIAC E 8-8589 Eves. EM 3-0048 A BETTER MORTGAGE Open end, 5% per cent pterert and up to 25 yrs. Can paid ° r) pH meng OU'RE Bi BEND $2 W. Huron FE 86 THE MAN WHO SAVES you . 55/9 3 BEDRM eer Py FoR. SALE OR _trade. ORjando $8415. 000 1 =, 1957 18 2 ig FOOT perecpnest “obnson, new trailer, rer Swaps id. an” fe excellent she: get : [MODEST MAIDENS \ _ THE woaietie PRESS, _ MONDAY, AUGUST 1 11, 1958 he bad any Alen Fi For Sale Miscellaneous 60 be ap ae. | a Doors : ORANDFATHER cLocK. SILVER be rag yy on sie. oh amas i sizes cast, 438-8 “It will come in mighty handy if we ever get hungry around here!” Knotty whi paneling iNo. dastem oe as nee | | Mahogany} Plywood "y" grooved 4°x8’x%e" $4.09 Sale Household Goods 57 57 oxl2 Felt E Base Rugs 3 $3.95 mo Ft. OWall, Tile Be GUAR, HOUSEPAINT Gal ‘4 PS Sal __Syers, 141 W. Huron. PE 4- X 12 RUGS WOOL FACE, jee Reverses $16.50, Im ported, $34.95. Axmins' ter, $48 68, ioe TTENTION i om o for teed TVs Yorking or SACO MATIC WATER SOFTEN- er. Swap for freezer, furniture, gun, etc.? MAple 5-2142. BRICKS DROOM: DEN oR’ RECREATION R 24¢ CERAMIC TILE BATH * e IMMEDIATE POSSESSION JAYNO HEIGHTS one mile east of Silver Lake Rd. on Walton Bivd. Watch for signs, OPEN DAILY 4-8 P.M. TRADE Your Present Home or Equity 4 Bateman Kampsen : “grt lot, Located in Auburn eigh Will swap For Sale or Rent & - peters heme. oe paved street, ry _ Or ‘ane i inone- ah oe Tm contract. Owner. 1 gave SEVERAL. Nice fi take almost ny howe Ea roo have for down paymen DTOMATIC WASHER AND NEW AUTOMA dryer for th equal value. gocniens ry ita CREAGE. WILL business with Hving eae, ea 4-820). ss OR TRADE S' = SHOOTING ga. complete with re Eres, will sacrifice for ¢ash. RING-TAIL SOREEY , FOR. OUT, board motor er what have you. TRADE “63 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4dr For 16 ft, aluminum boat r with contros. Or sel) for $460. WILL sea Oh » DOWN-PAYMENT — ON. — modern home for painti |} « peter ‘eo “Ss mason work. Work ue Bri x. Brow n- Realtor. ped Bro Le Evenings call OA te Sale Clothing 56 G_ DRESS. SIZE 10. RUMMAGE, SALE. DAIL nave “RoW ON Banta, birt, Workmage Oui. sry He. REALTOR , FE 4-0528 | 371. Telegra Eves. _& Sun, CHEAP, MODERN 3 RM. HOUSE, commercia: ity, ¢ . 3028 Whitfield Dr., Waterford. RUMMAGE BALE EVERY DAY. _Open_24 Hrs. qe orem take Paces, 0 oy ee ee eee ae AUTOMATIC WASHER, LATE panes & : dryer. k. NaS, electric. range $65. Schicks. MY 3-371!. ia BRAND NEW WROUGHT IRON -bunF beda, co with sprin & eg sal . Tees. Orcha Lake ie: coNaoe & spuine. g. 500d con. BEDROOM. DA Nish MoD. LIKE at Drapery Uphol. fabrics. FE | 6. BIG 1) CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR. . $178 5 MA 6-6011.. Samuel” BABY CR —— st plete with ‘mattre: 5 S885, Péar- , Cot $12.95. Pearson's ve. ITH BED FACTORY a8 Per a vai makes S688. 'e @ bod N : Sohawon Pe 441 60. FR ~ PT, CHEST. $200 50 en easy coyy erm. ‘Samuel's Ap- UPRIGHT, FAMOUS oad, quereine dies hots rahe ‘vie OF e. "utichigan uorescent a Orchard GE RAL ic Hes th . NAtional 17-3312. Sale Household Goods 57 Srants occasional chair, Mahog- Round oak tal ING brand new davem ee here 3 go oye 3 ecorator la’ iv % meekly, ong $ f. mat- acuum. "i vxpri Dee 5 tree, ae ASaeh, “Olive ie | WATERFALL DINING RM | - t. $20, Walnut ay ne, een ah ve, range. moteurs $4. “io 15. D PRSnAnGe 2 PC. SECTIONAL, $45. GREY / . | GE w GAS RANGE; ‘ANGE. CHEAP, GUARA EB O- ne btn on Frigidaire. Thor, iv e s ROY 8 REPLACEME 96 Oakland Ave. : TRONRITE TRONER, GOOD CON: ase trover, 2 yrs. = resser and “fia, ete! Mt £0058, Limed , oak table & 4 chairs. Duncan Phyfe. Craftsman band saw,. 12 in, ‘HP. motor, used | _St._Cre just a few times. OR 37665, aftér Spm. . RUBBER BASE PAINT, Gal. $3.75 P : oy ‘Mich, MA &| NORGE DRYER USED 3 MORTHS. Pair of table lamps. FE YOUR PROBLEM: i hire, it’s FE 2-8181, aiwooaNY BEACON HILL BUF- fet. Plenty of storage and drawer space. FE. 4-7430, “MONARCH “RANGES i ailab’ ow avails le, © ppliadce: Bat F 3 epee h A BUILDING? Then make sure it's Burmeister’s. ae Studio covch Davenvort @ chair . Blectrie rang anna Coal f Wari Morning +e Ae | ECONOMY 361 S. Saginaw PE 2-0151 VACUUM CLEA 50 P. Murra 956 WINE VELVET DAVENPORT. $95, $95. 8. — & record dita ‘washer i po Se ref. " - a Pair < an & hostess chairs. is. m set § , PL. . be pe plastic pie, per ft. G.A. eS Wily saat St ee ck A ah eS "PLUMBING "loo Fa a “pentane for Oe the Oey ag peg 0 PER | at ea wa a a Age Bot : oan Sum SAVE a 8 page was Daeg oe ‘hes - Cat O1 arnbdee 14-2 _ROMEX coll acs o°a° Tmown ant aay hahaa Hak Want Ads! To sell, rent, | OO eeeT a pa cca We rent ruc 42 mW | Fir id) eden 7! oy, Bore Paes $3,55 each ixB'x%" = .....- ehcnsasee a e each pas’x's” int. fir ... .... ea. xa a" bireh plywood, sides two NY asain * © N Chane FOR DELIV ERY fae eperntars, Bue pod tes . Pr 20203 Stalls. Haggerty eesing a - CO! ‘LUMBER CO, |coonvaw rory som, wger| | GALLAGHERS . dl hot water heater. Sites 18 EB. Huron FE 40566 1941 Haggerty Hwy. Walled Lake Stnased -insul, PE 5-2646. aa a — pohigel ye ay ee 1 i x ie en's' Phone Arket ¢1084___"'| shoes size 8-—$2.50. 204 Beach St. op aoe onl ONDT ANCHOR F NCES NEW GAL ‘ON _ 3-004 NING Ko moter down, FHA sporoved. Win Hiatt lengyna “ize ATES FE 5-7471. ein, ét~ neths . sar Mt FIXTORES, tae he 113 OE PLUMBING ‘SUPPLY... | Sale Sporting, Goods 65 na ‘aot ater ates NEW & USED AQUA L na NEW & USED ers Automatic water heater ps 4 Screens, storm windows & doors ED AIR ware, electrical supplies. crock Reasonable prices — EM 3-329. FE 56-3608 and tile, galvanized —— on kb 0.8 UA A lack pipe and ‘ittings. we 233 Ne $39.00" publir Bros Paint and. op Y Kemtone. febuny ‘yt taperty dam- Pou ar pita | SUPPLY gge car Serer, A 4-3959. : = ‘ : 2688 LAPEER RO PE 45431 Ri LING a | 2 POR ah is Sale Household Goods 57| BEEF AND PORK - HALF AND eee "hp ee 1 a me ae 2 rrow 2 bottom plc quarters. Opdyke Mkt, PE 67061.) 20, a 4 bait gy eeu "28, MURPRY BED, COMPLETE, MI i. PROPAN pation ROP al. capac regulator. garage & Good c reason- able. e Call TOwnsend ie De- troit for information. PLYWOOD | Pere ere Ae Dix x cued carts. Rex: gt tt Reg. $50 now SFORnTIRG Ein ane s Sales & Service | 921 Mt Clemens oe x's’ 4’x8"x! pads, $5.95. Pearson Furniture, Open 8 &.m to 8 p.m. Sun. 10 to 2.) m All * it Pr. _OEEP PRESZE TIES uate CYKE|NESCO ELEcTRIC ROASTER van BORTIAC, FE 5-466, 184 Mt, Clemens, bo Ne ey a — Cash ‘Way > PAINT S 416 is cU-FT DEEP EY FREEZE. 00D | saaae AUTOMATIC ‘ex AINT §$ condition. GReenleaf 4-9535. aoe i WASHER. Prices Special Bere Bros nouse paint, Wi INCH Tv, JUST RECINDI-| SveR 59 USED TV SETS. <= SAKE aD tit Pater tioned. Ph_ OR, 3-7665, after 5 p.m. Tia bs Sp TV antenn TV sere. Pi R < Visetoe | xa on Gna ea pele s. 4x8x TOO’ 5 ‘sormapmene nee HINGE CONGUE Veda!) WALTON TV | fated Bitemeetanriresoe #18 | ERE ; Tigi NORGE CLOrmES | be sae | ae ee he] Beet Seas a Si 9100.05. Norge clothes dry 128 PIANO, DUNCAN PHYFE DINING | 151g Dremiuto shipl per tt $ igte| Taare = 1x10 m lap, per M $115, $s Norke gas clothes, dryer 148 furniture, desk, 9x12- rug. | js e%o kn M $130.00 | ROMEX $3i8.38 | a ease eo di ~ 198 Retrig. atts re suite, paontene 4x4 Redwood, eo ; e Leg Cutter 12 cents The No, } & better. & & 16M $110. cm RARE ABER gag | RECREATION RAL TORNPFURE. | et Re: |S cee Cir Hits) ak, lth Baio deep A-l, EELVINATOR REFRIGER- chairs and", bitte aoe: living 2: = 6:8 sash doors re ae _Take Ra pares pen: 2-2049 = . suite. + | 3:0x6:8 flush door with li ; 7 XiR CONDITIONERS. FLOOR | Kenmore, automatic dish ; ite Siete | REDUCED PRICES models $90 & up R. B. Munro like new, 5 yr. baby crib, good Cabinet Rergwsre wp to 60 e have a few power mowers | _Electric Co _1060_W._ Huron. 194, ™ dresgers. cheap, FB! per cent Ki ™ at special AIR CONDITIONERS, FLOOR REFRIGERATOR. "DAVENPORT Aine Comp. tove. comp :- $35 ces, Also some tillers samples $75 & w “Samuel's Ap-| REFRIGERATOR. DAVENPO! ‘um. Yate 4 i ‘Credit i B-60li with T,cotiee tables, 2 | 2x4x7, fie, each “8 28 | gene bots oP en lance, MA = aortice Sia a hg 100 Ft... § 200 | EVANS EQUIP DIXIE, - | Al CONDITIONERS, $109.95. was nr 2 | £23 pine. Be ae. ioe FL 1. 8 300| BAST 3-7924 $249.95, 21° RCA color TV, $325. _8% UPRIGHT DEEP | ip inch power mower... $80.98 feet TYPE POWER OEE. Myotl” $10, PE Satis Used eve $18.95 meg up. Sweet's geen Will cell fee. b1s8 over | Ciear B-board, ED. Fis 08 =.. OR 3-8834, . = Ey, Mata ce | OT ee en at Baas OS ea wy ae * AMERICAN: , Sie 8x7? grace A steel gar. door $4.56 | Large stock of all all fimsnes, ; ALL TILE SOLD sei $45. Blonde Hi-Fi aS oe : AT DISCOUNT PRICES “Rand = Excel. gond. $55. 21 tn. | Gola’ a "paint .: 38 bers Sent tseniat. ‘wid sei io P ene ite sphalt tile—Now ......- we a pg — gre 4 Stee) cloches posts. 4 hooks. $ 4.95 % Off Plastic wall ile .......... new $65. 5-2766. 5 Lb. top qual. grass geed .. $ 2.95 Armstrong finor tile. ea.| STOVES, BOUGHT, 8OLD, Ex: | Alum. windows : us x 4 covering changed, Turner's, 602 Mt. Clem- | 8x8" cleanout doors ea. z i tie | ens. 2-0801 x16" Foundation vent drs. 1.98 Ar nstan "vin ee es Oe TTD, Airanrdigck ante Ghaes Mortar’ & bags or mors, en. re | Betting tile eres gee = Lounge Barrel Beck chair ee | eee cioks eee fetut cement §) 238 ‘ le’ Tile Co, aohee Pictures. Lampe FE s1027 | Matt thick insulation. G:B. . 8 32.00 we ee 27 | ‘Alum. foil, 1 side, roll ...... $ . 5.95 1058 W, Huron FE SINGER C 50; -PORT- | Heavy duty Bsm't Jack “post $ 6.95 Red Stamps ables, $10.90, with Zig, Zag st | 5 Pe A + -~ hd anpathrea 3.95. A-1 Attractions lux vacuum cleaners with at | fs Lb. $0. ewe 4... HY sor"rante ees nose eee Used Television, Name brand Asbes Side., Sq. $ 13.95 12” Table Model ....---.... ; $14.95 models. Terms. Cutts TV and ear "oer Me — Bs 1 RCA table model....... 4 AEE tx6 14 & ib Pt. pee a6 cate tl % = estinghouse ..,..... s» 83 CHINE. Vacuum Fence posts, eac' werent ie ¢6 eumetle. es eons $40.95 tepaiting, Pree esi PE | Chrome buill-in oven... Be 24" console - $79.05 rome S00 .. ssusenus i All sets rebuilt * mens . shovel ........ $ 3 OBEL, ort NOE8 . c-cckru er 3900 Eusaven Lak Windows. al! sizes, from ... § 13.05 AMOR, ee Our FOUND AT 1 chi Se oes z ‘ances of all kinds. 5 an ‘prob- Visi’ our’ trade dept. ret) << BURMEISTER'S rape lose ortnern ay -of LUMBER CO. Taos ‘Lumber ce ae iene oid spec ial Vehncs’ isan F i ive Sane TOILETS Hey > $095 $90.05 Faskeowts ait things -pe bath sete with trinr -pe!’ colored bath set with Wie, ‘actor’ 2nds-—trregul otis ie PLUMBING is hie Stars. ues.” m “EMPIRE, DIMENSION LUMBER ———- 2x4-6-8-10-12 width wie U6 per 1000 ft. MIN. CASH pane CARRY «Empire Supplies C 0. 34148 gaa aes ALL BRE ge come’ caret We carry complet, roads done, Trimerion oy 8 ent, building materials sorta = |B ee my td see QU 1-826 Pomoenette es. oa = interior. exterior combina as ee e's Si : sereen doors alls W. Monteaim. ere 4, LUMBER OF 3-7092 os r Pry er a pete wh a8 ts | __Do It Yourself 61) FOR RENT t tp ee floor sand- a oes rs,_ polishers: és Pun bint Lake jie Trained, Boarded 70 rresrani Equipment 61A ot JOIN KRESOE’S FILM CLUS With . Im, sine ‘20-1 de nd ce Kresge's will replace i t tim in the’ same size, white 3 YEAR ouD RR , pares sl } Lake ‘COLO Frat Yon SPRVICE LL ROWELL, : Te! "Fee Bile Cate 9 “FovwouTt, 1956 : This has eve YOU ° MUST COME. DOWN AND SEE TO APPRECIATE {THE FOLLOWING 18 ONLY ‘A SAMPLE OF THE ake F SELECTION OF CARS WE HAVE ON OUR LOT AT THIS aie. GARS ARE PRICED SLIGHTLY ‘OVER WHOLE- - : 56 FORD VICTORIA HARDTOP | “. : Auzous a TNC ROT. radio, es white tires. 57 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. SEDAN . r windows, AUTOMATIC transmigéion, radio. beater. Man's ae} eéels Fh. O81 ai | 3988 ~~ x club ast PRICE FOR JUNK CARS. : | — fone engine. Ghovratnt —_ | FE .. CA A * heater «........4. eakeneé on was i alles SALES — 1956 Chevrolet seals ft NRU . ; Cate bt Pike - FE 5-7398 . : powerglide, radio and bostet JUNK CARS. | owner, low Trtggd og FE 5407 x, fain Deda JR CAR sah ear me cape 2 a sont Gian *haotor Ser -_ 2 ew cqpare, eine abd I ay, Way siikeu3| 1350 N. Woodward “Laat Word Faitiane $00, V8 eo-| a5 Buick, 2. dr Century erdiog. | © ese art 56 ‘CHEVROLET: 6 CYLINDER rs iS B'ham ‘ fT 4.1930 i oe atic aa ame, “ie ” Radio. emma ve $1143 REPOS ame a POWERGL LIDE, | radio; heater. Beige and Saharri Gold, 9: eee wae weaee -44 \ re “"R & R MOTORS” ato Cn a ‘sh Sidemoniie. 2 dr. HVGTE yy) $168 full prion, S168 pa monte || “454 ‘PONTIAC STARCHIER CATALINA weeoe Trade Up o onal Va 'S6 Forg ‘te ton pickup with lar aH Srite Bn carts goosed, Me, Bell AUTOMATIC, | transmissie radio, eater. , white, rer ‘ 124 Oakland 43529 Che 2 ee ae 3S PONTIAC STARCHIEF CATA || °55 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 4 DR. SEDAN Haskinis Ch at ae ° ia SE --o9 Li. ae eee Liueky vAiio. Beles 03 ne * TOM Ane irene, Tae is ere er EST SeeM & M | wasie *| 192 Olds a8, 2 dr. sedan. Hyde) SALESMEN DEMO || ‘56 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON, 4 DR. ; dollar bo late mode! cars 1955 DESOTO = ‘58 Pontiac, Ctilettain Catalina, STANDARD Teaveeon “en I orrTHiN Ce Turquoise, Bn Blue ’uey'™ "Gm ss | -— toe HOMER HIGHT MTRS.|, 24%; 28 wi, wee WA ona bave-githout © doubt the) "15 minutes Prom Pontiac” | “ terrific a ser cian ‘Blacher at '55 CHEVROLET CONV ERTIBLE WE — oe @ | Bicest 27,000 mile Desoto in town. OxFOND. “Mic GaIGAN "0. POS a-asze Se Fee Retail” Stare AUTOMATIC. trepamission, 12¢ radio. hester, B21 glass, brand . ‘This clean, 2-tone green gem has | 1954 MERCURY MONTEREY. 4). "40" PONTIAC HYDRA 355 er ITI NEED C ARS , Jr s those bedtime hig cael to Buster — I get so" power steering .d& brakes, The ee Beautiful ort ‘ OR_37761 =: . NEW THEY 298. JOB. 33 PONTIAC, er at, braromath, warty teat Secet price is higher than the arenes day, Call MI et) eve" FACTORY BRANCH: age = 7 pla cae “5 tT . pre ar : eT re ee ear cit | TTSZ.CURVROLET STATION NACOS ¥ you see rive «it, T D , . Top $85. Dollar ____For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 91 | youll: see why, $160 dn, $38| el spew 05 5. Eddie Steele |, BEF ONSIAS LOOK AT THESE BIG » , GOOD USED CARS _ | #4 ButcE, av m= 4 DR, HARD- i955 cx, UEVROLET, || STRAIOHT | , mo. “Bee Mr. “Murphy at B’ham- a TERCUI RCURY, 195 3400 setusl a et heater ! > At Our New Location Eoameres Rd. at anion nk ne ah mg Bon 193 8. aeiba. 4 teehee, 200. #, Montward, 0 pine bed wit with *crercomati ibd } TRUCK VALU ES _ 952 W. HURON sadlan beter’ “notoabtes strane ea CRT ie "i FORD, PATRCANE 7 DR_RAH Ete . tte Mi Nea eee “RETAIL. STORE” oe Oe FORD % TON PANEL — svt Shia Sai tet Rae | coe teeta cor | tee ee) gg rE Lan TRE ta) Bega ne here aie’ GLENN Ss) 10ga. ‘North Chevro- | “Yertibies i905. 1 ‘owner, Gt GGRTOM FORD 6 CYL: Tie - rT NS” ST. ; “a | te r Biva. at 8. Wood. Ps err. Tin. SCHUTZ BEHIND THE POST. OFFICE _ 58 CHEVROLET 14 TON PICK-UP MOTOR 8! ard. Ave, Birm tonbam, Mr TL GHEW EXCEL TRANS, cLEAN| Sa7pl Er Boe a nprivaug owner veishe : 33 PONTIAC 4 DR. a ABSO- SIDE WHEEL MOUNT. % TON BOX, Cascade Blue. | i cae migetaa PE 43014. 1g ees teehee Auwuime. payments of age amt \CHEVROL .ET SEDAN DELIV ERY + a ' ‘ MI ‘Party ai L HE JOB FOR ANYON ees Be _| __ REPOSSESSION er oven yorD _.| PREACHER’S CAR. tt eS 7 pr} ’54 FORD PLATFORM that's what this gleaming Pca pectin ag ee oy tie 57 FORD. and YUP! The previous own: ae ee Sam R&H, white walls. TWO TON UNIT, Fant" asta Ges ut'sppuees in reat Lakes, Par oui oz, they tak care of thelr cars cis — snow, otgfORD TRAILER HAULER J ‘ : *-¢ — 2 7 J sn’ * * ¥ * eae eam... s Coupe, adi, hie, we weye ro gh vg Ng 3 We're Cree: wer purr 40, DODGE 3x5 DUMP : ; . =| take over ents. 7 Prall, itlox ° 8 AIR. SCHUTZ: | Femara] QWENS |e | ERS ESS | os oe AI DOUER CATATLEE ser ; " . , with Ww I $12 8. Woodward, Birmingham ges, Pa, etre NO 147 ‘ ae oo kan SCHUTZ br res part of all.is the price. . a la blade. THIS IS A MONEY . | 1983 CHEVY | Sedans si eee LES] PAR | © SCHUTZ OM L ma 4 De. > muarea 5 Ste R MOTORS 43520 | 53 HARDTOP. m gots FEYMOUTH | d tt CWS ; : WP : MUBr SELL OUFOF Wonk is| Efi, ™ “Stow Ge ye) M2 8. Woodward LARRY tyke sme. ii’ payments owed, ; PORTIAC__4 DR SEDAN, ert & mo. 11 payments owed. Get Wise, Economize eRe can get financed ites FORD _COSTONLINE DR, “DE R AME > “Clarkston otter Sales . BLER access s ertect cone is, Pe S a V e S CHEVROLET, 1953 Rel Aie.4 dace nee CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH D: #8122 after 6__ s Clarkston "MA §-5141 NEW & USED CARS GOT MY GREETINGS. * :. errand whee, Only #4 7 aa Mice acoot radio, heater auto | 29 PAIRLANE $00, 2-DR. BILL SPENCE en Hawk 8 pass, Must sacriice matic ‘ranamissioo, power steer Pordsmatic “—R & HWW, EM-| RAMBLER SALES & SERVICE | —OR 33568. F x : power 2 S. Our stock | 3-4231_after *,' p.m 211 8, Sag FE 5-9297 i. 8 "4 WILLY's 2 DP. “OVERDRIVE. ee & aap. SCHUT fd No. 4455. North Chey-| i955 F FAIRLANE, RADIO, |'52 | RAMBLER | WAGON. GooD ABSOLUTELY NO MON- Nog Prot or eae 3 rolet Co. Sipler Bh ty rd ot 8 Mi heater, auto. ens, New brakes,| ‘condition, FE fae oom As Sy Oo y 163, @ CYLINDER | 912 8, Woodward, Birmingham os. ik dak ioditag battery. Reasonable, See “ Se \MBLER i. Morya ai 7 Ee 47500 Harold Tur- “4 ~ FP gg he a 2-0889. B’bam-Rambier ; o sei 3 ; et Ee ie Ly TOR CUSTOM 2D) P 53 W WILLYS 2 D GOO! B wets | Meson mes at we coer | RR, & Cy Rambler EO A ROOLUTELY RO ee Seek ie tt Pesan The BIG-BIG. Lot ; “age. low miles” Our stock of $11.4% mo. Call Credit 50 WILLY 7 ; : 5 Sue, ' Raw a Freie Oe. Seeoaee ied: : We oe oP a one a tier Me, ar Ford sue lain Pogrign care oe cd ee ve aie ad ‘1 st ae Le t 631 OAKLAND AVE. IRD PANEL, 1963 8 CY =| at §. Woodward Ave. Birmingham. 3-142 EM 3.4135 |@ FORD COUPE BODY LIKE 953 Willys 2-d | & Teal clean truck, Call Bob But- ha 8, . Brust 2% cars in 1 ee ‘ B Ch, i RACE EN. “HOUGHTON & & ‘SON | A vary ates arene 6 “ linder. | ° FE 4.4547 : si plete service 8 a.m. ‘til? pm.) C. TO pBuen. OMY : OL, 1-9761 aL aig will surprise © Fou $265. me -- Oakland C ae ~ : NEW ‘CAR TRADE- INS DODGE, 1987 a . 33 ee ‘52 OLDE Ronkouny gows 8 Onkiand = AUTO SAEs yee aklan County s Largest Clievrolet Dealer : See ae COR me ments of $31 Balance | Assume payments of $14.48 mo. = { m Bregareaie geigeeis | Ais BE ea Pe = : 7 ® 1 OLDS 9% HARDTO DELUXE. || . : i , : pcg g Fado! oe NEW CAR TRADE-INS “power EP ny gen eve emcee Mk . Spaeth SHARP CARS sour teat Pt Bg oo . | E Se ; Take over nynen . ‘ tis EEWMOUTN wir | an DERDEELYMOUTE. | Heys” parmesan | —*nemeon Sie Sen_ tae See . . ae eek < , ' ] ; ‘ “meaty prAncn | SPS Sere Sbat RG | Fee ee STEELE FO DON qT Bri 1g ht Spot "Dllcad at Cal EDDIE [+ bse, 8 EDDIE STEELE FORD Bas . | Foreign & Sports Cars 908 Sey eae dais stim | at ow as vere ; , | WHO APPRECIATE A | - months on balance. 35 FORD CONVER SRE TES | || oP Boeah. aed: amine: Pee’ Rags amaacne of, tampons, 8 Ponuiae «br. Sed REALLY FINE car? | FORD SCHUTZ. |e aeaehae) TM nS st te iia aan nat oo : ' MART OG. © a oe Manet ee ee wr oe 1958 2705 OGCHARD LK, RD. DESOTO-PLYMOUTH models on hand, come out &| to" suit: your budget. com term We alg 1 West 1 , ° MERCEDES. |siniticien wite|ie tee en | Rubum Motor | 3.0095, |] eterna a g1g95 , 8995 A « ove ” : : 2 DR. . me, 'S4 Olds “88 @Dr. Sedan, : BENZ Es GOOD ~ CHEAP rain = SSESSION Sales ; — A eile oi tae Hat st — wa eal Wea ad poe 008 ons. ter. hydramatic. 4 : 300 D so ORDA Vay An Ruming. os, Great Lakes, ae Salas __ CORNER Ea a may Wanom : | | ee | Be eee al bobge be |reorecrvocwserr |= Of | , , utomatic transwiseion, | ‘32 NASH RAMBLER WAGON, Wagons We resilly ‘ge AND YOUR FAMI ’57 CHEVROLET vm Tt Fuel injection engine. ee N,| more Wagons We really got } MILY uE . PRICED | BON rine, es 80 Caley, 98. cur" file * money savers IN A TOP VALUE BEL AR ee a - $9,500 “aes of ayia up or down or Rigrsand» power" brates set * s USED CAR- , ro) : : | . | Contact: SALES MANAGER = ba , a : 57 BUICK : muscu) PONTIAC - ECON lade Mcgee Tee et ye ee wines, | AeeTashen Ser gaye] > SPECIAL, «DOOR 7” . ; ine IMPALA CHEVY CONVERT "B8 DeSoto # Bed ' : ( : \ agin, pee ager STORE - |* ully equip "poese crore ob SCHUTZ Uiseimlied, ene ee, pare 55 PONTIAC . © TOBER Ist ; moe ae DESOTO-PLYMOUTH _‘| 57 Plymouth Plaza 6 4 dr. SrA 4 POOR CHEVROLET. ve =, DRO o12 Ss. =e. Birmingham Radio, 9,500 mi.............. $1450, . just THINK : soa bel P , i957 ISETTA 300. Red, full iat . $2 FORD + DR. CUSTOM. WILL ha! Piymoutn Bus. Cpe, . .e ull weeks before your first payment arrives on any : ties | Bee Sah aii 8 5pm, PE 46001, 124 Onn at Re 43520 ante aM oe rie, 5 etree — ee $1300) : amizee Se used car at JE ROME “Bright Spot”, We use all finance outlets ane give i. Gtuon, By owne?, a Ag er Se ee ae te boca, | 2elieas condition, OR 3-184, “power steering. 08 miter gt $1,794 you your choice as to whom you would like to repay your obliga- UESROSOLITAN 06, WITS i SHE HRI Te Salta Gold solor.. ~ $2395 57 FORD tion. ALWAYS 75 used cars to choose from and we have one of the oat" on Fat $800° Cali alter 6 cr. 2 vp. Pipes 2-6171, eg Aint “power engine. FAIRLANE 7300" CONVERT. - nicest selections in our long. 26 years-history. ALSO you will find a selec- Radio, 4 door..4...........- $1208; aa Ae ~ ahd If tion of NEW Olds and Cadillacs on eoy at terrific end of model low prices. : SAVE $700 ON 1956 VAUXHALL, 2 tone, 4dr. Only 1100 mi é ar ‘ 58 : | | Sab signals. sweater Better than B ' “tee Ties *55 CHEVROLET : : RE ween... $1405 BEL AIR HARDTOP ne "Eee Sale Cars. 91 ey pe oe , $1306 ane ~ $9695. $995 BETTER BUY USED CARS 3000 mniies. "very clean.... § 895 : ee, Sprri Good Transporation. |'55 F i 5 ‘86 Plymouth Bel. 8 4 dr.. : ’°54 PONTIAC ~ ‘83 Olds 4Dr. 8% Sedan with "58 Chevrolet Tmoala Convert- “54 Bulck, Suver F ? ord Wagon ...$1195} = * Hardtop. P te W: cue the famous Rocket "86" engine. ible. Dover white with beauti- to tous uate bende | 306 Orchard 1 2-8020 | 3 Chevrolet. clean...’ $4498 | 4 DR. COUNTRY SEDAN. Ra- Radio, ects wile. $1595 SAR ETS AMINA = rolt. 7 Wane Soler ready a @ Mt 31 Kaiser. overdrive.......... $ 95 dio, heater, automatic : s - Sieede ie: $7050.12" Chip-/"46 Hudson 0. = FSi. | . : "We, Poeaian at. ‘Starchiet 4 ar. 'S4 FORD / p Siiwee . Roger’ s Sales & Bene 53 Chevrolet 2 Dr..$ 395 Steering, 28,000 miles... $1795 VICTORIA_HARDTOP DO Q: STANDARD STEEL PimRS Stn smears FE 2.9559; SEDAN, heater. standard shift $875 + v8, fads ‘s docks. al docks, se SUN |" RAMBLER JEEP DEALER : q / ‘S$ DeSoto Firedome 2 Sara P 7 — a have 'a variety of ciean| BUICK, "67 SUPER 4 DR HARD. ‘55 Buick ¢ Dr. .... $1195 i = & Beck. Foveriiite, 45 $5 CHEVROLET © heater rere sat Cystomting .¥- hyge amatie. “power 7 staenne = cia. ADMASTER SEDAN, all - ade ee BEL AIR 2 DOO . neg a ‘ Parrmpton 4 Boat a a ea er, radio, heater, DAN, ll = Peete DeSoto Firedome Sp.-2 dr. sive ® : — , : Z oe 5 . ambler sedan .. $2095 Sed & white, power steeri 4 : : ESSRCS ND [escots ORS Hyer oy SS er $2495 - $1080 : ie a aety 2 ae ROADMASTER all power radio, | '31 Dodge. 4-dt. Coronet... $1843 | "55 Dodge Comet 6 4 dr. CORTON 2 ote ; d1195 e $350 dr sation ‘wagon, 1956 Chev. 4 eater, Dynafiow ‘3 CY VROLET Conve $1845| Radio std. tran _. $805 with OVERDRIVE ‘58 Chevrolet Impala Hardtop, °85 De Soto . cet Oa Beant ste ae ‘51 CHEVROLET 2-dr, eden $1495 $704 black finish with level-air sus- good tires, Pb raesgdle Be taton. ' One ‘owner °56- Ford ; eats few mliengs. wondertu! miley sity "37 Volkswagon ... $1495 | 3 36 ¢ BLYMOUTH. +r. Hones Hee "35, Ford Custom 6 2 dr., 54 CHEV ET pension. power steering and outstanding interior es this extra clean one. | A taca! tor inboard et Gtviaer, throughout THE ECONOMY IMPORT 3 CHEVROLET dr pei Air-t aoe New 5 aint. seat covers, — 1 - ee . oy @ real sharp car. down. 1, NON A dy. Bel Air-$ 995 | overdrive «62... 2.2.00. ition eee 87 ~ Auburn Motors 57 Pontiac. 860 Sod $1795 " of 'Mancuny 2dr, hardtop. 3 Ses 85. Olds 88 Hol, 2 thier MILES ‘ Aa ane ~<~| Cor. Pike & East Blvd. CATALINA CPE., radio, heater, (8) CHEVROLET $dr ........ yd. Power brakes, radio . $125 see Our sales staff consists of Mike Flynn, Ton Hayes, Dave Foster and. Joe Zon = te ertiors Con ea aan °° \988 PORD = cqupe, sense ‘03 ‘S4Chevrolet 29 wagon, = CHEVROLET Nichdls who are well known and very mopdlar | in the Automotive business Seats i ES "Bootie, Sut as CAR 54 Chevrolet 2 Dr. ‘ Si 695 a "rg Mesnamagioaies Like $ 500| ag cply 7 “s PowERGLIDE in Pontiac and ‘surrounding areas. Call at your convenience and anyone of c . . ‘A ca : Buick special hardtop. 28,000 miles | Fide ee ‘i PORD Sar tub coupe..? is Powerlite, Tadio, power eee our top flight salesmen will be eager to serve you. OPEN TIL 10 P.M, : -°55 Chevrolet 2: Dr.. .$1195 | BORD 44F oo ce #148 jaggy aii Firedome 4 TUDOR : HURRY! , ; BEL_AIR HARDTOP. radio. heat- E Yellow & biac readies” $344 er, Powerglide, ONE OWNER | THEY SELL FAST AT OUR ‘LOW powerflite, WSW..........., $ 605 52 BUICK ‘ . Gj 5 fe _ Pontiac Sales 55 Buick 4 Dr. ....$1095) loin $505 SPECIAL 2 DOOR ‘88 Pontiac Starchier Cat. Cpe. Own-| SPECIAL SEDAN radio heater, $204 ft 3 demo. Full’ power. ve $$$ ere EZI glass, ONE OWN- | fy Soae eg Royal 8 4 dr, PS 81 Pontiac Cat Ope. Hydra. R&H. a ; “‘LivehitG rato ‘$505 | S51 CHEVROLET Whitewa DO 96 Olds 2 dr. sedan. Hydra, White-|’52 Ford 2 Dr. . $~395 adi, one Owner 8 588 “ae ° a | dio, one owner............ ; 4 e walls : 56 > Ford Potriene 3 tr. Portomatic.| FUSTOMLINE SF DAS, radio, | ut R&H. Whitewalix heater, standatd shift ' ’ ‘$3 DeSoto 6 4 4 j ~!ge y * te "$5 Buick Special. 2 dr. R&H. White- aAWSOl Power steering ie fyscvese ss, © UB a rox Page RO po : righ Spot walla Hiker alate “Ee Sh ASSES Io ee ae R&H. WiiteWwalls. OLIVER ¥ Motor tie BRAID . i GLENN’ = ~ OLDS-CADILLAC onjeed wie he: “Me "63 Poutine 4 dr, sedan, R&H, fitewalls Lo "53 vy Bel Air 4 = Powerglide, B I Company \ f MOT A S nie ‘gre is neta | ( 1K ‘MERCURY EDSEL-LINCOLN — pes fOTOR SALES | oun. NEM se caro FoR rOR otor Sale N. Main 'St Ee LINE 4 : BLVD, Wwigiits 20 Ge 70'S SAG | 34 Years Feit Deal Ming Pe 2 & mya wane Ea ‘Ape bits | FE 2 3ig, orcara — os, Ever PS neha sed 4 Pe sole wi a of “HURON'S ee : : yf “ak i | ‘ Es x rl \ r ! { . . : : 1 So - + = ‘ } | ‘ i | ‘ | Ee v \ \ i ( . / \ 4 + # | “> : bic oo » 4 | : \; poe é \ Eee, eee i Pont ener _THE PONTIAC PRESS, af i Monpay, aveusr Nn, 1958 _ Tennessee Ern’s & F ordisms’ . marten rent J + - - : \Stonemason, 75, - -Todety’ S Television Programs ~ -- tis is Mechs Fre raat oes 1 Programe furnished by stations tated to thie column are iubject to change without notice : tH He Built - Channel 2-WJBK-TV Channel 4WW4J-TV Channel I—-WAYZ-TV Channel 9 CRLW-TY, ‘Ait Occasion ee At One +a | a tl ~~ - ; METAMORA, Ill. (UPI) -—- Many} y’ ] * 2 MONDAY’S TV HIGHLIGHTS tries to get into Rickey’s\10:00 (2) For Love or Money.’ Star Is Strong Believer |houses fall before the bulldozer night club act. (Re-run.) (4) Dough-Re-Mi. : when new highways are built, but 6:00 (7) Mr, Danger. in Relaxed, Comfortable | tow homeowners feel worse about (9) Popeye. 9:30 (7) Polka-Go-Round 10:25 (9) Billboard, leaving their property than does (4) News: Williams. (9) O. Henry Play. School of TV a pa ger rates As here who (2) Racket Squad. (4) Turn of Fate, Attorney|10:30 (2) Star Showcase, personally built his stone dwelling. | (David Niven) risks his life (4) Treasure Hunt. By GARBER DAVIDSON tok ® | 6:10 (4) Weather: Eliot. to prove that circumstantial) (9) Movie. HOLLYWOOD #-— Tennessee) terman Weber built the house : evidence alone can convict/11:00 (2) Arthur Godfrey. Ernie Ford was asked if bejin 4941, using stone from creeks @:15 (4) Box Four. 5 innocent Person, eras) (4) Price Is Picht : ee Oe ne rege and fields near this Woodford Coun- 6:30 (7) Three Musketeers. ling Hayden makes a living! '!*™ (1) News. yes or no or maybe. He said: La paisa pie nd en wen - Royal Visit. State dinner and). by hunting wanted crimin-|11,3y (2) Dotto, “No use digging bait when yout 11g The state set a price of| Motor Company poster dl og cp Sd als. (Re-run.) (4) Trath or Consequences got a boatload of fish.” js18.200 for the property, but Weber] 939 S, Saginaw St. | “ (4) Frontier. 18:00. (9) News. (7) Ricky the Clown, . That's a Fortiam. Swans no| oe rather nave bis i FE 2-91317 F na Feed) egrets her actions : occasion calls for it he comes out) said. ““There’s all that sentimen- 6:40 (2) Weather. when she consults doctor| . TCESDAY AFTERNOON =e cae distin 2 i ae, . SERVICE ut ing di J 5 : e loo at the stones, grey, 6:45 (2),News: . Edwards. - about recurring dream Jef 12:00 (2) Love of Life. Asked for a few typical Ford|green, blue, brown, red, and other . (2) Studio One. James Greg- (9) Stevie O. phrases he came up with a hefty! colors, and said: SPECI AL - : 7:00 (7) Sports Parade. ory in ‘Tagalong.” Young (4) Tic Tac Dough list, some of Tennessee origin and| “T’d like to take sorhe of them . ‘ (9) Hawkeye. Mexican boy forces himself] 19:15 (9) Song Sh others coined: by Ernie. Here they|with me, but I don’t know if they a nee Id : oe ly ‘upon pair of. adventurous t ng Shop. are, mostly self-explanatory: would clean well so they could be Get white woman an “gn : again.” warriors. as older boys. When accident 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. Shot ice bea be corte = <= A happens, the older boys find Be that’s laid a three-pound egg. et k& cquaint (4) Death Valley. Letter de- their lives depend on cour- (4) It Could Be You (Color). Weber has been a stonemason livered by retiring postman ; (7) The Erwine. “Thicker than fleas on a wet). age of younger campanion. “ ince he was 16, and iis still active er — vd life. (9) Favorite Story. Cold he ‘S ell; , Stonemasons, he said, are a breed (2)"Badge’ 71 . : , “Colder n a beaver’s belly.’ : : : : 10:15 (9) Weather. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. “i apart; they aren't brickmasons, 7:10 (7) Weather a . 2 Das as well mile a bucket, you mAY/and there aren't many stonema: Lubrication .. + O8¢ : er. ; i 1:00 (2) Ladies Day. ‘s ; ‘ Sons. left. : 10:20 (9) Film Fare. (7) My Little Carel. PEA. PICKIN’ STAR — Tennessee Ernie Ford doesn't come out Nervous = o bee tates cat in| «ts hard to take, them coming Brake Adjustment 5e 7:15 (7) News: Daly. acta’ @) Felice Bast (9) Movie. with any simple yes or no answers to questions. Instead, the pop. ® Toomful of rocking chairs. in here and smashing that house | Motor Tune-Up $3 ‘951 a90 (7) Youth Burdes , (9) Starlight Theater. Lewis (4) Movie. ular TV personality will usually reply with country-style meta- 2 feel like I been rode hard |to bits,” he concluded: » (Minor Plus Bored : - : ‘ ogr4 ij an put away wet.” piped « : atevie. ~ Stone, “Absinthe.” ('29.) . phors, which fit the occasion very nicely. nm i be ling. "The oe a » 1:30 a - The Worl Turns. : - = + “Redder than a gandev's feet Infant Asylum Closes; FACTORY TRAINED 41.) ; 11:00 (7) Soupy's On. _ : ; Oana ey ate talk as afoster. Homes Better MECHANICS (4) Royal Visit. Princess (4) News: Westerk'p. 2:00 (2) Miss Brooks. I VY é h C 7 . ae Margaret's favewell address. (2) News: LeGott. @ Movie. - ncrease 1n out r ime gga a ee oor bago gle MILWAUKEE (® — st. Vincent's|| LINCOLN MERCURY — (2) Robin Hood. Robin helps « “, Infant Asylum is closing its doors] EDSEL - , A : i , |ants.” een! | 6ailvee, e Troubling Britain Also pl ee because orphanages have become] ENGLISH FORD LINE serf's children. (Re-run.) —— 2:3@ (2) House Party. Ford is doing very well in tele-| The asylum, founded in 1904, " Above Ofer Good ; 11:20 (2) Sports. (4) Haggis Baggis, LONDON (INS) — An “appall-) In. 1954 the number of indictable |vision ang television is his main-|"¢e cared for as many as 60 chil- for One Week Only = 8:00 0 * = Finkel euliicas (iv Wghewetch Th “The ing” increase in crime, and par- offenses known to the police was|stay. Unlike many other entertain- dren at a time, but populations of| ee = er oes eats : (Re-| Melody Lingers n » (35,) 2:50 (9) News. ticularly crimes of violence, is 434,000 but by 1957 it had soared ers, he does not make movies or ingen have declined because F ll eae Bomer. — Nauta cauaing the British Government, |to 545,000 and is still rising. raat fog ag eS bee Slacing childtes te tena Pets RCA : WHIRLPOOL — (2) Burns, Allen. Gracie|11:30 (7) Night Court. a) Today Is Ours. local authorities, police and pub- . * * ‘and county fairs. ‘His. other caer) The Daughters of Charity of St. GAS OR ELECTRIC puts claims adjustor in a (4) Jack Paar, Judy Holli- (1) American Bandstand. lic the gravest anxiety, More people are confined in the|tainmen tactivity is making re-|Vincent de Paul plan to abandon) DRYERS INSTALLED © spin. (Re-run.) day. (9) Movie. nation’s prisons today that at any |cords.. their present building in the fall.' ce & - y. Jo P time in British history, In the year Richa. a show into the home baad are —— Le) ranges P Conia | nn (2) Verdict Is Yours. - N dl VJ W ending last March the total popu-\is altogether different from the|of a small home for emotionally rh wells Fargo. Badmen ; “ ° e ¢ : * ps ms stab known = nor rented. * i. kee egret a en —_ ” (7) Who Do You Trust? 000 prisons, locally as “‘Bor-|mented. “ p remembering CA ¥ o ‘ova ae vale a (4) Queen for 2 Day to $232, Mark 24.500, = government stdin ie ead going ling pe ‘OU N FINI (2) Masq'rade Party. Panel|¢:88 (2) On The Farm Front. a: 3 . irt- : : aaa al mat | ep Bandana NEW YORK, (AP)—Toiy Nol i atte pe freed ata Fo ae : , :00 (2) TV College. Gee Pay ler became the second highest |v a se sable proportions.”” baby sitiie nod thay ean chanee| 9:00 (7) Frontier Doctor. West- (4) ‘Today. money iwnner, in TV quiz history om a ti the proven ‘at any Seat” . sa =. $8) Ra Soe: m) Seer Se Me dl: Nae, ex Shkc| wach bo the auieaay eities elt ! AT HOME : , Mo., z ia nica a ~~ ney 2 (1) Cart ‘vel (2) Edge of Night. © boosted his winnings to. $232,000 wave is sparked by youth, In Maybe the hillbilly ‘singer has in ti if | f hool, : (2) Top 10 Lucy Sh’s. : eon Carnival. (9) Laff Time. ‘ |by defeating Mrs, Lorna Hahn of| 1955 the number between 17 and peeemngyat P fare Hoge | BOOKL 4 Shiai oe we ‘write for FREE. : plays the clown when an 8:38 (7) Biz Show. Philadelphia, a Temple University| 21 found guilty of indictable of- cee oe os thar onal ore you ee PDPS-i ; * —_ 4:45 (4) Modern Romances. history instructor, on CBS’ The! fenses showed an increase of 19 |). 4. was retrenching American School — P. ©. Bex 24 ae : "es 2 | x - |$64,000 Challenge. per cent over the previous year. |/ rd pom apse, Sn — Please send me —_—— U:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. 5:00 (2) Detroit Bandstand. . ie ae It was recetitly revealed that the sine dened ww ta pene Name . Seve Time (4) Amos ’n’ A owiy. Nadler won $16,000 when Mrs.| first six months of last “year | oo ong already . be coun] Address ve oN (9) Looney Tunes. history question. that age group of no less than iad i (2) Beat the Clack 2) lees: part ‘Sm, Stsearad scene| gms ana 26 per cet ®t /30) Million Persons ; (4) Rom per Rvom. a Mickey Bouse Club. prodigy, who won $242,000 on ra higher courts. - I . quiz shows. ‘ ’ (7) Our Friend * 3 | Already experts like Sir Hartley 0 h U 5 Harry ) Serial Theater Sais wt ; Se ‘ — “Shawcross, former Labor Attor- verweig t in U.J. n ' a VOM ney-General ly warn a : _ Nardrott was second to Strom. She that something rust be Gone | NEW YORK = Health-insurance| 170 Con me Ri eee choice of | } Twenty-One. GRAVE CONCERN 000,000 people, or a fifth of the Electro-Voice. — in and see ' _ ° “This problem of crime by young| rar eight > POPuation are 1 (Snorter Strip tor Jets|mer. the carrying’ of ottensive p [ ’ Studies reported by the Health MUFFLER weapons, the prevalence of gangs : 8 | : , *| Insurance Institute show that the . SHOP the hooliganism, is a matter of individual his as Banked Turmoffs|erve exec Sx‘nariy” re eurn® ola cn exes cently 3 wy cun| eet oes See 2 eS | MUFFLERS - | INDIANAPOLIS — Banked run-|Teverse this trend, we shall ex-|¢9, ies aici ) | way turnouts being built at the In- perience the evils now being seen| 4 man of average height who Wy, | |@ianapolis: Municipal Airport will in some ‘of the great cities of the weighs 150 pounds at age 29 can IN La allow pilots landing new jet air|United States. These young men expect a weight increase of four 32 Galty YY YY |_| liners to speed off the main run-|are the fathers of tomorrow's chil-| pounds by the time he is 34, and 3 Reparation sen Yip —— ways at as much as 63 miles an dren. . ¥ by the time he’s 60 her can nor- FREE! %6 Architect's ti, hour, permitting use of shorter run-) oe siartbey salipugs the war ‘mally expect to weigh 163. This Uy [ y | ways. | A ’ resen ei ° a s + & . |with ste disruption of family liteltenue tcc 15 Mi Servi The airfield, being remodeled nd discipline, familiarity with vio- inute Service with heavy - duty, wire reinforced —s and ee = a ~ , + concrete runways for the jet age,|@4y 1s & powerful factor in this j j i - While You Wait : a} ats s_etting the- nation's is tend, The war was followed te Police Find Evidence : 3 —— — } |flush center-line landing lights. certain. socia economic con-| TUCSON, Ariz. —Tucson police ursda Our Grand Goulet 5 Prevaricator 24 Recwerses 40 Holy person * * * Sequences of a more subtle kind were inclined to believe James J. See Th y's v Page ie SA hes Br pte |, SOE Oe OR SE Te ccigtipeset tan poses trian Os unr bene. doles woes DISTRIBUTING p With A Sate Ae § Swoon 26 Set ain 8 Teritate the plane’s re pon — = ae ries ipa! has on 5 fo with the law before. Jackson was 1—| sedliliadheh ne een an notes in jcountersunk white-light strips until/ Young men getting a ra $-|arrested on a drunk charge. Items} ANY LENT TUEDAS MUFFLER it student 26 Arrow olson “s French, father flashing blue warning lights alert |torted idea of their own value. found when officers cenraed him COMPANY . Pe SY FTELEPEREUT IT ERTIWNRENO 17 5 Mane eculiar 48 Britian tite |him, then peel off and follow a; whatever the precise causes included a policeman’s night stick i9 a OM sate ‘in Beast i Liguid "80 One ot the ‘center Tine of blue lights éounter-) of the current crime wave al- |and a call box key. , , 3 secu 23 Plateaus 38 Squandere Women” sunk into banked curves. ~ most everyone in Britain is wor- : =. 3 ried about the resultant vio- ey : j lence and disorder, = i : London recently had its biggest | es Today's Radio Programs ee ig lle Rois ridden eer eeaL a ‘imei 2 and pear hagpagh ages = gp _e a j was stolen in a le week, ai sR, (268) CRLW, (300) ww, (se) woar, a WKY2Z, (127) =60pWPUN, (15602) WJBR, (149%) in a number of cases people were Abe oun ie rutually beaten, Bank megsetigers TONIGHT =~ YZ. News, Surrel Wx¥2, ‘Hreakfast Ct ; dip orn. sere SAE Gest Sr” | Saale nent'bone™” [‘Wevk'Neoe Ser [and others who carry money and je BK, Stereophonie WIBK, News, George CRLW. Heatter, Davies payrolls are now demanding se- m \ DAS 4 in to — toes tr] sagan 2:00—WJR, Rt. to Happiness —_ . bee. MUFFLER WiBK. News, Don Meleod |11:30-WJR, Muste WPON. Bob Lark. WWJ, News Confessions x * * / e SHOP LIFE WPON, News. P coe 9:30-WJR, Jack Harris CKLW News, Davies a. pe vitally con- poe CKLW News, M. Labbit WJBK. Reid ce in crime over : GUARANTEED AGAINST “way, Bob Maxwell . 10:00--WJK, Arthur Godfrey t:80— Wok, Cpl Next Door | the past two years, A special crime 2 6. RUST-OUT, BURN-OUT. GEL. } &, rugeess Seem WWJ, News, True Story WWJ, One Man's Family (Prevention committee has been YOUR SERVICE : AND BLOW-OUT wean Ea, ty ot wae news Renn WXYZ, Curtain Calls CKLW Shiftbreak, Davies formed at the Yard to study all 3 fo ee, ee | Se ee ee | : ne: se ? ‘a z! i ? KING’S |= 1 a -c : HEADQUARTERS WEAR Kews ‘Pate | Wow, Bob wesley. |Gxrw Yuin perce” |. GREW. Shaftoreak. Curie | MMT PMS Wo) ay - Midas | Muffler Service dietight (EE renhage ti 7 ; We Se we 7:30—WW), Star Extra O13 Wl ae Mo W aserigh a Whispering Ste. WJBK WNewa fgg P ; _ ’ e rvice CA Victor Color TV ; Fy ken od "RANE Right SE Sewn ‘Georm> | Bn’, Neem, heh iciypl Negierniegs sales and Servic ’ Plus All Other Make TV, Radios, Hi-Fi £34 FE 2-1010 Sh a a Aid curiam Cals, | gecwans soune gary re a | | ave ccc el WPON, Sports. WJBK sows reas, wt | "Wes, gees tems, SWEET’S RADIO TV Also Expert Appliance Service on : Open Mon, thru Thurs. our Life tam ws News, Musto WPON, Chuck Lewis. ‘CKLW. News, Chase Open Mon. & Fri Night All Makes Washers & Refrigerato ‘til i