The Weather U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast Light snow tonight; cloudy, cold teomerrow +> (Details on Page 2) THE PONTIAC PR 117th YEAR xkkaekex PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959—32 PAGES 7 ' » 4 UNITED PRESS ATIONAL A > ra Court Orders Steelworkers Back to Their Jobs : a - 7 Developers Eye Service Center for City Airport A $2,500,000 airplane service center, to be developed by private capital in anticipation of a boom at Pontiac) Municipal Airport, has been proposed to the City Com-; mission. The project could get under way immediately if the | city allows it to tie in with the airfield proper, said) Joseph E. Miller, a partner in the venture. Foreseeing a big potential demand for more air facilities and services at the airport, Miller and his) partner, W. G. Wade, have outlined their plans in de-| tailed letters to the City Commission members. They have asked for time to present the plan in| person at a regular Commission meeting. | Miller is a-Birmingham man who helped found Flite! * Line, Inc., a sales and serv-| ice company at the airport. | A Southfield resident, Wade, is owner of Wade Amuse- ment Rides, a carnival out-' fit, and has guided his vari-| ous shows about the state many years. Forming the Miller - Wade. Co.. |the two businessmen own one 39- jacre site and have options to pur- werees another of 47 acres, both lo-| /cated immediately north of the airfield. * * * They said that they are pre- pared to construct a cluster of hangars on eigher site for storage and maintenance of aircraft, as well as overnight facilities for pas- sengers, including motel units. They also propose to lease some of their land for construc- tion of private hangars by cor- porations which conduct basiness by means of private aircraft. “The airport needs this kind of development in order te handle VICTOR McLAGLEN Movie Actor Succumbs at 72 Victor Mclaglen Was Famous Tough; Won Oscar in 1935 pect will occur as a result of the new terminal and tower and longer runways,” said Miller. * * * sufficient money for such a proj- ect, he said, ‘‘but we do.” “It would be foolish not to have the facilities that would allow the HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) - airport maximum use.” ‘ Victor McLaglen, one of the mov- ie’s all-time rough-tough actors and Academy Award winner, died today. He was 72. To put the facilities td use would require direct access fof aircraft died|{rom the airfield’s taxi strips to Tha London-born actor . from heart disease at his home at the gervice center. . nearby Newport Beach after an} Such access would be one of the illnes& pf six weeks. ‘first, if not the first, at any pub- His widow; son, Andy; and | .doq daughter, Sheila, were at the | bedside when death came. | , = ments would common. McLaglen, who won his Oscar} pice in the aur Gabies when it in 1935 for one of the screen _| 5 oe appareat that public House Struck by Flying Parts / EXAMINE WRECKAGE — Two men check for smoldering wreckage in the home of Alex Force jet trainer crashed nearby six minutes - , ® 7 7 Pentiac Press Phote Will Swing | Taft-Hartley Injunction io] Deals Upheld 8-1 by Tribunal ; : WASHINGTON (#\—The Supreme Court today up- wail ok TY qs shows to an (held an injunction ordering striking steelworkers back other phase of show business —| to the mills. a hoe. ee ene Pee. The ruling means the 500,000 striking steelworkers Charges of skulduggery and)must return.to their jobs for an 80-day “cooling off” bribery in promotion of records, —+under emergency provisions eT ee eee ee lof the Taft-Hartley Act. The ‘ruling came on the 116th ceived by the House Leguatve| DD litics Stall Oversight subcommittee. 0 | | day of the strike. “Certain charges have been | e The court action makes the 30- Action on Crisis made to the sabcommittee and day cooling off period effective we shall look into them,” chief immediately beginning this counsel Robert W. Lishman told morning. Bipartisan Tax Talks Broken Off in Lansing Amid Accusations Spotlight to D] Deals WASHINGTON (AP) — A House; a reporter Friday night. Although the United Steelwork- He refused to say whether this ers Union vigorously fought the im- is one of the things Chairman Oren junction, Union president David J. Harris (D-Ark) had in mind when} McDonald has announced its meme he announced the inquiry will be bers will be sent back to their choked into other television jobs without delay, Pa le LANSING i — A political stale- x * * However. ofe report ~ ow far mate today stymied progress on} The 80-day injunction does not lemergency tax legislation to ease of itself solve anything. It merely Michigan’s cash crisis. \orders: the meén back to their jobs jockeys and sales promotion of! . \for that ‘iod. and both popular music records will be the} Bipartisan tax talks were broken | vies 4 a to posh pa chief target of the new inquiry.|off, at least temporarily, dimming = chances for a settlement in mid- ment before the time runs out. The Lishman confirmed that, strike could resume after the 80 unconfirmed — had it that disk November. Zebelian Jr., 25229 Dayton Rd., Armada Town- after take-off. No one was injured. The two among other things, subcommit- | Penublicans and. Democrats ac- days. the increased business that we ex-! The city has neither land nor) by a private airplane for, ship, showered by debris when a Selfridge, Air Five Narrowly Escape Death as Jet Falls in Armada Twp. -jing lunch at the time, said the WILL MEET DEC. 9 An Armada Totwnship farmer's | wife, her son and daughter-in-law narrowly escaped death yesterday when ,an Air Force jet trainer! crashed nearby, showering thei: homes with flaming wreckage. | They were not injured. x * . The two pilots also escaped. se- \rious injury when they bailed out ments. lat 8,000 feet six minutes after! Ajex Zebelian Jr., who was eat-| the north: Chiefs Drop Bay City ‘takeoff from Selfridge AFB. | Mrs, Alex Zebelian Jr., 26229 Dayton Rd., said she was talk- ing on the phone to her mother- in-law, who lives next door, when she heard her scream and | drop the receiver. “I heard the explosion at the were taken back to Self by helicopter They ridge The jet chisled a 15-foot hole several feet into the open field. Parts were scattered more than a quarter-mile in every direc- tion. smoldered like. macabre pilots parachuted to safety. Wreckage caught. in trees = Col. Wallace said everything orra- tee investigators plan te look ing ‘ : into allegations of bribing of roar = arteries ames wo Neither side would move, threatening a repetition of the bitter impasse that tied the Legisiature in knots last sum- mer. Asked if a complete deadlock had developed, Sen. Frank D. Beadle of St. Clair, Republican |majority leader, said yesterday . \it could be.’’ Gov. Williams said ; Harris said the subcommittee the next move was up to Repub- t was will meet again Dec. 9 to plot its | Hicans | future - activities. * The final witness Friday, CBS | disk jeckeys to promote new popular records. The subcommittee also is ex- |pected to take a penetrating look jat TV and radio advertising com- |mercials and at the practice of \undercover cash payments for| |plugs of persons or products on \TV shows explosion was “like a sonic boom” | but not quite as sharp. more rumbling,” he said. * * Zebelian was able to extinguish the fire on his home and his |mother’s with a garden hose. eo eueh ter @ Gis ‘end SHORTAGE GROWS From Grid Pedestal Friday was a banner night in Meanwhile, the state treasury’s| cash shortage climbed toward an) estimated 93%; million dollars at the month’s end with state spend- Steel industry sources say that half of the 80-day period of op- erations prescribed by the in- junction will have passed before full production can be reached. The strike involves a dispute over both wage and fringe benefit demands and working conditions. UNUSUAL HOUR The action was announced in a | five-page unsigned opinion handed ito newsmen in the court's press room shortly after 9 am. — ‘a highly unusual hour for announce- |ment of any court action. Justice William O. Douglas wrote a 14-page dissenting opinion. The court’s vote thus was $-1; that the primary responsibility was normal at the start of the | Hes with the broadcasting in: ing exceeding income by $330,000 qoaiing-oft provisitn of oe Tey flight as the plane climed toward | dustry itself. CBS is moving |“: parrpes, Ramenilael,s0e ne ae forward im that conviction.” Uncertainty grew over whether | not viemtive of the prohibiting courts “At about 9,000 feet,” he said,) Before adjourning thé quiz show the state could meet its 94,468,- from exercising ‘powers of a leg- “there was a muffled explosion.|hearings, Harris inserted in the| °® Payroll on Nov. 19 or 22 | iistve oe executive mature, In a few seconds, our fire warn-|record a letter and memora cnlllien - dollar schecl aid Ge powers not capable of being con- tribution due Nev. 15. Interparty ing light flashed on. * * * “It showed that the fire was in} the wing or center section of the tax American Guild of Authors and Composers. discussions from Burton Lane, president of the|ground to a halt yesterday after Democratic }awmakers refused to plane, near the fuel célls of the sign five nuisance- tax bills or- ferred upon a court exercising solely ‘the judicial power of the United States.” The opinion noted that the union contended that the Taft-Hartley samie time,” said Mrs. Zebelian. | es Sallenk cement ad Ge weed bor forward port engine. ~*~ *& * dered drawn by Republican Sens. | section involved was constitution- DEED ACCESS | lically owned airport, Miller teon- | But he predicted such arrange- | |FALLS ACROSS ROAD | “] ran outside and saw the plane crash across the road. Our roof was on fire. I couldn't move and just stood there for a minute thanking God it didn’t hit us.” The wheel of the fallen craft struck the home of Mrs. Zebelian | Sr., 26571 Dayton Rd., leaving a | gaping hole in the roof. Siding | from the front of the home was shorn off. | Mrs. Zebelian Sr. had to be put | Central classic performances as “The In-| funds are not sufficient te meet junder sedation. former,” had been fairly inactive th. demands of the air age | The two airgien, Lt. Col. Robert) in recent years. His last job was) . . , 'D. Wallace, %2, of Kennebunk} in a “Rawhide” TV show which) Miller said the company wasiteach, Md., and Ist Lt. David W. his son produced. |prepared to pay for access rights x * * |through fees adjustable to the Mctagien also was nominated| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Frederick, Md..,| quarter-mile | lSmith, 26, of lwere picked up a from the crash scene. Pontiac high school football teams. Charley Brown, Jerry Rush and Dick McCauley were just a few of the heroes for Pontiac as the Chiefs dumped top-ranked Bay City Central with a 12-7 triumph at Wisner Stadium. Pontiac Northern's Huskies guaranteed themselves a_ win- ning season in their first year of varsity competition by defeat- ing Rochester, 26-20, at Roch- ester. Waterford bowed to Dearborn Fordson, 33-18, and Avondale lost | the Oakland B League title to Fitzgerald, 31-7, in other local games last night. For details, | turn to the sports pages. “There is no doubt,”’ Lane said, “that commercial bribery has be- come a prime factor in determin- |ing what music is played on many broadcast programs and what mn- sical records the public is surrep- titiously induced to buy. * * * » * * | “We headed the plane toward j|Lake Huron and called a Mayday |\(distress signal) to the field. We cut back on the engine and be- |gan our emergency procedures. | “They didn’t help. We started | to lese power and the chance “ . | “From reports in various pub- of an explosion increased. At jications, it is clear that some of about 8,000 feet we both ejected | : : jthe scandalous facts have come to at the same time. Neither ef us ithe attention of both the Federal saw the plane in the air again. (Trade Commission and the Fed- “We drifted into the overcast|erat Communications Commission. shortly after our chutes opened. I| Yet, neither of these bodies has Cariton Morris and Clyde lings. whisky, cigars and gasoline. Rep. T. John Lesinski (D-De- troit) said Democrats would supply votes to pass such a “mess of garbage” but wouldn't father it. He restatéd the Demo- etatic position in faver of an inceme tax. H. Geer- Geerlings and Morris, who al-| ready had signed the bills, said) The majority opinion said that | ally invalid because it did not set jup a standard of lawful or un- They called for new or increased} |awful conduct on the part of la- levies on soda pop, coin machines, |bor or management. *® * * | “But the statute does recognize | certain rights in the public to have unimpeded, for a time, production in industries vital to the national health or safety. It makes the United States the guardian of these | rights in litigation,” the opinion ; * x * from where the plane|4uthors and composers of music.” crashed. I was thankul that no one was hurt. Smith landed in |mile landed in a cornfield about a half-|@¢ted to protect the public or the! the refusal ‘betrayed the Gover-|the court had conchided that Taft- nor’s pledge of mutual responsi-|Hartley “‘entrusts the courts only esa with Republicans in solving |with the determination of a ‘case the crisis. another cornfield not far away." SPEED 250 M.P.H. for a supporting actor’s Academy! Award in 1952 for “The Quiet) Man,” like ‘The Informer,” a) story of Ireland. The son of the Anglican Bishop | of Claremont, McLagien grew up in South Africa where his father was stationed for many years. — After serving in World War I, McLaglen first became a profes- sional boxer, but later went on the stage where he soon developed in- to one of the top portrayers of rough-talking types. His stage work brought him into British movies in which he became a star. He cAme to America dur-} ing the movies’ silent era and made ‘Beau Geste’’ and ‘What Price Glory.” Later, he and actor Edmund Lowe teamed up as the raucus, hell-raising soldiers of World War I, Capt. Flagg and Sgt. Quirt, that were box office favorites in the late 20s. Seek Meeting in India Between Ike, Dalai Lama NEW DELAL India (Ph — Friends of the Dalai Lama are trying to set up a meeting of Ti- bet’s fugitive god-king with Pres- ident Eisenhower during his vis- it to India next month. In Today's Press LAO REE Church News .............8-10 ) BT TT Tiere 6 Héme Section ...........: 17-22 eee rT eee 4 Sports . 14-416 4.95 : pny Ath Programs e" SPLITTING HAIRS — Two-year-old Jean Wiheey Mate | vies iscies... 3 Wolfe won't go far if her sisters Julie, 4, left, Women’s Pages, .......... i243 | and Sylvia, 5, have anything to say about it, \ i) Two Determined Baby Sitters parents to visit ‘ AP Wirephete They take her in tow on the deck of the liner United States as they wait to sail with their relatives in Germiany. The two-seater TF102 Delta training flight when it todk off at 12:13 p.m. * * * The “emergency” signal was said the plane was about 250 m.p.h. Smith was at the controls. Wal- |lace had never flown the F102 and was taking instruction. Both are assigned to the 7ist Fighter In- terceptor Squadron. * * * Wallace had replaced Lt. Col. Montie Davis, who accidentally shot down one of his own men on a training mission earlier this year. ‘Another Frosty Morning Predicted This morning's clear blue skies will become mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow and chilly temper- atures will continue through Mon- day. traveling t * * The casional light snow tonight with the mercury dipping to 30 degrees. Tomorrow's high is expected to reach 40. x * * One-mile-an-hour wind, southerly at 10:15 a.m. today, will become westerly at 12-18 miles late this afternoon and southerly tonight shifting to northwesterly tomorrow. * * * The lowest temperature in down- town Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 25 degrees. At 1 p.m. the reading iwas 36 ‘ Dagger was on a_ transitional| received six minutes later, ac- | cording to base officials, who | weatherman forecasts oc-/| or controversy,’ on which the ju- dicial power can operate, not con- taining any element capable of on- ly legislative or executive deter- mination.’’ * * * “We do not find that the termi- Seize Smuggled Nylons TAIPEI, Formosa — Police have seized 57 dozen pairs of nylon) | stockings smuggled into the south * * * The Senate GOP caucus, alter a minute debate, instructed’ them against introducing the bills. |Formosa port of Kaohsiumg| Eighteen senators who had |aboard a south Korean freighter.| waited in Lansing six hours to for- | The stockings had an estimated | mally receive them then scattered|nation of the injunction after a ‘sale value in Formosa of $5,000. ‘for the weekend. |specified time, or the machinery - established in an attempt to ob tain a peaceful settlement of the - underlying dispute during the irt- Waterford Firm to Pay _ | nmeiin’s'rendency, detracts trom f R . Ww H this conclusion,” it said. | Or azing rong ome At another point in the opinion ‘ ithe majority said they thought the The owner of a Waterford Township wrecking com- Judgment of the lower courts in . upholding the injunction to stop pany has been ordered to pay $7,200 for razing OMe|ihe strike for 90 days is “amply Archie C. Hunt, owner of the Arch Wrecking & “"x® perils 2 a Salvaging Co., 5340 Highland Rd., heard an Oakland) The court said the majority felt County Circuit Court jury of 10 women and two men they did not need to pass om the Pp government's contention that nat- grant the judgment against*— (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) One of Hunt’s demolition crews! then a free lance plumber, re- ‘last January was clearing 103| turmed late the next day and |homes in Detroit to make way, found only a hole where the Tension, Stress ifor an’ 8.7-acre experimental in-| house had stood. ‘dustrial development when some- He also found a large chunk ot LOO Much? See Down Went a two-story home jhe had left in the bath tub to belonging to Mrs. Blanche Hill, ‘soak. The tub, too, was gone. | - 54, of 2265 E. Milwaukee Ave. | x * | Most of us have tensions and It wasn’t supposed to. | Mrs. Hill got quite a surprise, Stress of ome sort or another — when she went to the home Jan.| imferiority complexes, resent: 17 to collect her $35-a-month rent} megt of the boss, feelings of in cy. IMPERILS U. 8. SAFTY home too many. |supported on the grounds that thé | ural safety im this context should him yesterday. | might with friends, Edmonson, | ‘body got his numbers crossed. ice entombing his clothes which ‘ Monday’s Press That night a tenant in the sec- gn eae apartment 4 100, OF tom Edmonson. No only as he son, 47, returned home late, not at home, but her home had climbed the stairs, lit a match, a and lo and behold, saw the moon looking down from where the roof should have been. * * * Edmonson, who since died, also * * A Detroit housing official said Hunt’s crew went ore house too far. Some consolation to Mark 'Herley, assistant housing director, . ; jand perhaps to Hunt was that filed suit against the company. the frame home was to be torn He said he lost all his personal) 4. in a few months to make ie belongings. The suit is pending. | way for the Walter P. Chrysler being carried on by his adminis- expressway. trator. Hunt jumped the gun by a few After spending a bewildering | months. 4 A } & _ Stevenson, ~~ ~ Mountain Expedition of 32 Feared Lost eps ATMANDU, Nepal, (AP) —!miles west of the world's highest “My husband has climbed moun-|mountain—the 29,002-foot Mt. Ev ’ tains for 20 years,”’ said the wife |erest. of Hideko Kato. “He would not lose out to a blizzard.”’ ider mountains that includes Mt “But while Mrs’. Kato refused to'Cho Oyu, which claimed the lives] believe the worst at the couple’s|of two European women and two! guides month home in Japan, Nepal officials Sherpa during héid out little hope for the veteran tion last Moscow Marks Red Revolution Festive an expedi climber and 31 members of his Mt. Gauri Sankar expedition ~ * * * They vanished more than three weeks ago while trying to scale the forbidding face of the 23, {got Himalayan mountain named fer the Hindu god of destruction. | Mt. Gauri Sankar, which strad-| dlés the Nepal-Tibet border 22 miles northeast of this Sherpa vil- jage, never has been conquered? It was feared that Kato, his two Japanese companions and 29 Ne- palese porters perished in_ bliz- zards and avalanches that swept the mountain last month, * * * Kato’s party has not been heard |; a festive from since leaving its base camp} and Peace Talk MOSCOW (AP) - day celebrated the Moscow 42nd anniver mood with the short ;est litary parade ever staged} 18,000 feet up the mountain, TWO | for the big heliday, 7 porters were left at the camp and} “The asi peace ig ident | ov Fi them —— word — everywhere both in speech and| ay of ne usappea ance. _|signs throughout the Soviet | A ground search got under WAY | Union,” gala Meetai radio oe 8 under way. 10 days to reach Gauri Sankar. | An air search also is expected | to’ begin shortly. Indian planes probably will not participate, how- eVer, because of current border disputes between India and Com- munist China. * Square rally, Defense Marshal Rodion |praised Premier Nikita Khrush |chev’s world disarmament pro }posals to the United Nations * * It is part of a semicirele of bor-| Mood Reigns Amid Military Parade) to- sary of the Communist revolution| But he also said that fe Soviet | | -| In the keynote address at a Red Minister Malinovsky | post commande R. Cavalier, BROTHER ACT — These brothers played a big part in the formation of a new Amvets Post in Pontiac last night. William A Cavalier, (right), newly installed commander of Robert William Apple Post No. 182, is given the area Lodge, 350 Mt tion of the new ~ , - : ,.,|Union will maintain «# state of Some in Katmandu suggested | ion military preparedne until T A | : repar <8 . that the expedition may have) ary preparedness un Moose Lodge Becomes Unique New Post : . jthe proposals are accepted an fdund it impossible to scale the} ' . one ap all U.S. foreign tases are liqui- Nepalese side of the mountain— | 3 ted described by experts as unscalable | The —and tried the Tibetan side. If} 20-minute military _parade this happened, the sources said jcontained nothing spectacularly ; , . ;;new in equipment, according to the party may have been arrested | ” perry y |Western military attaches Friday was a big day in two|marshal and Larry Normond by Red Chinese troops stationed | uong the Tibetan border | teliowad ~ . = included a Mt Gauri Sankar is about 35| miniature ene cate display jappeared in a Red Square parade | Thousands of athletes and other | civilian groups participating in the |parade cheered Khrushchev and other government and party lead- jers atop the mammoth mauso- at Wheel Fatal =: Moscow streets were decked out with red streamers and flags to mark the 1917 revolution There was plenty of evidence of recent Soviet scientific advances. A model of Lunik III, which transmitted the first pictures of the hidden side of the moon, hung over Sverdlovsk Square. Huge photographs and models of other Pontiac Man Dead on Arrival at Hospital After Hitting Two Cars A 60-year-old Pontiac man, who apparently suffered a fatal heart The civilian demonstration that ways for local Amvets of | i This WaS|was dedicated last night, and the ithe first time such cars had ever | Fifth Annual trustee A new and unique Pontiac post} The post was installed by State Commander Andrew J. Skender of Fall Conference of Mount Clemens. Chet Burton of Michigan Amvets began yesterday. | Milford, state .senior vice com- mander, handled installation of The new unit, Robert William | Apple Post No. 182, was installed | last night at the Pontiac Moose | Lodge, 350 Mt. Clemens St. officers ’ The present membership of 25 is expected to grow to about 200 It is the only post of its kind in DY the first of next year. the nation Its membership will be made up only of members of the Moose {Lodge who are veterans of World |War II or the Korean conflict. No jother post in America has been lorganized in conjunction ifraternal group | * | In an_ impressive officially opened Court Orders Skender also * ceremony, | . . 7 (Continued From Page One) third The ceremony took place at the Pontiac Moose State Amvets Parley Opens Here “Back to Jobs Immediately THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959 y Snow Blanket = {0 Grow in UP 10 Inches on Ground at Marquette; All of State Gripped by Freeze By The Associated Press Up to two inches of new snow was forecast today for Michigan's already blanketed Upper Penin- sula * * * The U.S. Weather Bureau said fresh snow was expected to spread jeastward across Upper Michigan adding to accumulations of 10 finches at Marquette, 7 at Hough- ton, 4 at Escanaba and 7 at Kin- ross. Subfreezing temperatures and brisk winds ranging to 25 m.p.h. were expected to accompany the snowfall. Near freezing or be low freezing temperatures. were | predicted for all, the state tonight and Sunday. Houghton recorded a low of nine above at 7 a.m. today. It was 10 at Marquette and 13 at Sault Ste Marie and Escanaba WINDS SLOW SHIPS High winds Thursday and Friday slowed Great Lakes shipping in the Canadian Soo area f. Commander E, J. Bodenlos of the U.S. Coast Guard Friday re- ported downbound shipping through the locks at a standstill. Coast Guard spokesmen said winds up to 50 m.p,h. hit Lake Superior Thursday night and Fri- day. ; Pontiac Press Phote r's gavel by his brother, James district Amvets commander Clemens St., post following installa- Shipping was expected to return to normal today as winds dimir- ished. Rural roads throughout the Up- per Peninsula remained snow cov- ered with drifts up to five feet reported. Icy road conditions pre- vailed elsewhere the weekend conference today in a kickoff ceremony at 1 p.m aaa at the Roosevelt Hotel ° ° - & & TV Quiz Winner It is the first time Pontiac has Denies He Was Hero in Battle been the site of the fall conference, which attracted veterans from throughout the state Lf * * Hosting the state Amvets are LAWTON, Okla. (UPI) — The members of Pontiac's Bemis-Olsen'! former officer who won $106,000 Post 113, Jimmy Dey Post 12 and House subcommittee day his resignation from the Army was not pushed on him. * * * And he denied receivirfg the Dis-| tinguished Service Cross or being a war hero Michael O'Rourke, captain at Ft. Sill near Lawton, and onetime ROTC instructor at Wright-Fournier Post 161 Steelworkers formerly a parties to the labor dispute in their attack at the wheel of his car, Wes, pronounced dead yesterday afternoon on arrival at Pontiac Soviet space vehicles were placed in prominent spots in other sec- tions. third district gavel|be given. a broader construction |Pesotiations, and conjecture as to \jthe course of these negotiations in |\James R. Cavalier, jcommander, presented the —_ General Hospital. ; : * * * a - “He Leo F. Buckley. of; 1 249 Liberty St. Sakies'a a » ot Florida Search ing north Bagley street, t | er a red light at treet, went fOr Cuban Army sweet intersection, hitting two. ; other cars waiting for the ining Chief Under Way signal. MIAMI, Fla. (—A search for | Maj. Camilo Ciengueg®s, missing Cuban army commander, was started by U.S. Air Force and civil air patrol planes today over the vast Florida everg!ades. Orders to search for the Cess- na twin-engine plane in which | Clenfuegos disappeared Oct. 28 with a pilot and one soldier came from the 14th Air Force Search _. Harry J. Stephens, 45, of 734 Alpena St., Pontiac Township, told police Buckley's car sudden- ly swerved out of control and hit his auto head-on, then Guashed into the car of Ressel | J. Murett, 45, of 1962 Birchcrest | St., Waterford Township. Stephens and a passenger in his car, Carl Stephens, 38, of 2943 Ju- dah St., Lake Orion, were both) and Rescue Division at Macon, treated for minor injuries at St.| Ga. . doseph Mercy Hospital and re- There was no immediate re- leased. port on where the request for * * * the hunt originated, but there Buckley was pronounced dead by) was speculation that it might have been made. by Cuban Pre- mier Fidel Castro. Dy. Isaac Prevette, Oakland Coun- ty deputy coroner. Grand Rapids Gets Snow Cold Air Numbing East in {INAZ- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS'Western points showed Numbing cold air surged over ing recovery from the season's the Atlantic seaboard today in the|Most intense cold onslaught wake of a deep freeze that stung * * * the mid-continent Scattered rain splashed the At- While the mercury plummeted |jantic coastline overnight. Rich- throughout Eastern sectors, some|mond, Va., was doused with 2.50 linches during a 6-hour period h W h while Cross City, Fla.. caught Fhe Weather 1.10 inches * ® ¥ Fall U. 8. Weather Bureau Repert PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly); The advancing cold mass trig- clgudy and continued cold today with a ; s few snow flurries this morning, high 38. gered a drop from 10 to 3 de- Cleudy with eceasiona!l light snew te- night, lew 36. Temerrew mestly cleudy and continued cold, high 40. Westerly) grees from a previous carly morn- ing period over a wide area from winds 2 - 18 miles teday, becoming south- erly tonight and shifting te northwest- Alabama and Mississippi north- erly temerrew __ eastward Today in Pontiac The upper Mississipyn Valley west temperature receding 8 am -“" , “a = was the coldest area with read- ” o ay velocity 2 mph ings generally in the teens The c 1 WwW “fon sets Saturday at 5 18 pr Ohio Valley and Eastern § areas 3 ‘ Sunday at 7 i4an ? r+ aligns Sunda: at 12 25an showed some improverrent Moon rises Saturday at 1 2) ¢ A . m Dewntewn Temperatures Traces of rain ind oa small 6am 25 11 a.m 33 : 7 am 2% «12m 35 blanket of snow dotted the Great , ) 3 as ~: pm Lakes region Bemidii, in north- a ‘ 10 a.m 30 western Minnesota had two Friday in Pentiac inches of fresh snow he (as recorded downtown) . * * * Hikhest temperature 4 ; Lowest temperature 30 «© Grand Rapids, Mich.. reported Mean temperature Weather—Snow flurries One Year Age in Pontiac a snow accumulation of one inch while Marquette, in the northern Highest temperature 4s'part of the state, had more than Lowest temperature 0 11 inches on the ground Mean temperature Weather—Sunny Highest and Lewest Temperatures ~ Mishew nis Date in 87 Years Mercury in October Win 1916 24 in 1940 Friday's Temperature Chart Enjoyed Excellent Sales Alpena 3 21 ook ag be a a em 8 } ; Bismarck 33 28 Miami Beach 62 3 DETROIT (®—Ford Motor Co.’s ee we Milweuket, 22 14 M-E-L Division today said sales Chicago 39 20 Sow & ms ¢ 3 of its Mercury Cars in October 7 7 7 aon ed 6 1 Senohe 24 ©20)TOse to 16.691, the highest of any Donver S87 37 Pellston 39 25) month in the inet two. vears Detroit 47 2% Phoenix 73 4 at ; Duluth iz 12 Pittsburgh * 30) Mercury sales in, October were Se neoe 33 Fe He + 92 34/46 per cem higher than September Houghton in 9 8. Ste Marie 27 1) when 11,396 cars were sold. Mer- Jacksonville 85 49 Trav. City 4, 26 ’ . I Kansas City’ 32 25 Washington 77 38,cury sold 8.399 cars in October Lansing 24 Beattie 50 32 1958 los Angeles 9 57 Tampa 85 66 VU. a Western Michigan University, Kal- amazoo, resigned Wednesday after to his brother, William," newly|or application i bs pecsived 1 =i" elected commander of the post, | As to the union's suggestion that the future. sas sale reuneiie t a ee | Je whe lives at 1494 : isome mills, but not all, should be- “‘We do not believe that Con- ; c oa rh haat quiz show “Tic-Tac- | — 2 reopened because a few could;gress in passing this statute in- 7" Yesterday, he said all the talk dale St., West Bloomfield Town- ship, was presiding officer for the installation. William, of 309 imeet specific defense needs, the jcourt said the Taft-Hartley law : “was designed to provide a pub- — ae Tae elected com: |1i¢ remedy in times of emergency: mander last Tuesday night. we can not construe it to require Other newly elected officers are/that the United States either for- Erwin Carver, senior vice com-|mulate a reorganization of the af- mander; Lloyd Marks, junior vice fected industry to satisfy its de- commander; William Vandruska, fense needs without the complete adjutant; William Haddrill, finance reopening of closed facilities, or officer; John Kerezsy, judge ad-|demonstrate in court the unfeasi- vocate; Charlies Cowger, provost bility of sueh a reorganization.” “There is no room in the stat- ute for this requirement which the petitioner (United Steelworkers Union) seeks to impose on the gov- ernment it said The court took note the un- ion’s argument questioning propri- ety of the District Court's exer- cising equitable jurisdiction to en- Eye Development at Pontiac Airport (Continued From Page One) of - join the strike once it had made amount of business conducted by j¢g findings the .center. The court said the union argu- * * * With a green light from the City Commission, the company would finance taxiways to the airport's runway system, Miller said begin construction of the first into bread is- policy, the ment ranged widely sues of national labor availability of other remedies available to a President. the ef- and fect of a labor injunction of the 150 collective bargaining processes, by 200-foot hangar consideration of the conduct of the He said there is alloted space in the 39-acre site for 10 more hangars, including another one fi- - a nanced by Miller and Wade Officer on City The company plans to build a restauram and a four-unit motel, capable of expansion to 12 units eventually, he said. Fire Department Arrested in Orion The 39-acre parcel is directly op-| “A Pontiac Fire Department lieu- posite the site of the terminal-tow-|tenant was arrested by Oakland er project. County sheriff's deputies last night | * * * for investigation of felonious as-| Miller said that if the city needs | sault after he appeared armed with| the 39-acre site for runway expan-)a shotgun at the hame of an Orion| sion, the company would switch its Township man plans to the 47-acre site, located Detectives said today that Lt along Williams Lake and Hatchery Raymond Fay would “no doubt be | roads released without charges brought! There is no big road leading to against him.’ the 39-acre site’ at present. It is south of Hatchery and is bounded on the north by Edgeton road In June, the Waterford Township Board rezoned the 39-acre_ site from Residential to Commercial to He went to the home of Wil- liam H. Whitmire, 19, of 3715 | Grafton St., who was exonerat- by a coroner's jury Tharsday in the fatal knifing of Louis Van- | itvelt, 26, of Pontiac Oct. %, make way for the service center| ! | and the increased taxes that would) deputies said. result from it Whitmire's brother opened the * * * door. He told deputies Fay asked Discussions about access rights!him if he had killed Vanitvelt have already been carried on with; He said he hadn't and slammed Homer D. Hoskins, airport man-|the door ager, according to Miller. Fay left the home and was picked up by deputies nearby Teamster Local Chief | when his auto got stuck in a | ditch. i Suffers Fatal Attack | | Fay was a close friend of the DETROIT W—Orville Matheney|Vanitvelt family, deputies said. of Redford Township, president of |Teamsters Local 51, suffered a fatal heart attack early today ‘while conferring with James R, Hoffa,. Teamsters president, and other Union officials at the down- Levy Vote Monday MANISTEE .— Voters will bal-| lot Monday on a 2.25-mill levy. for! 17 years to finance a proposed town hotel Sheraton-Cadillac. He!new $800,000 medical care facility was 61. to replace the present Manistee * * * County Hospital. The present 80- Matheney, who headed the Bak;|patient facility has been con- ery Drivers Local, was dead on|demned by the State Fire Mar-! arrival at Receiving Hospital. shal’s office. ‘ ‘ot tended that the issuance of injunc- tions should depend upon judicial inquiries of this nature. Congress was not concerned with the merits about his being a war hero and having the high battle decoration was not true the parties’ positions or the conduct of the negotiations.”’ it added * *« * , “Tts basic purpose seems to have been to see that vital pro- duction should be resumed. or continued for a time, while fu ther efforts were made to settle the dispute. To carry out its pur- poses, Congress carefully — sur- rounded the injunction proceed- ings with detailed procedural de- The hard-fought 12-Town storm relief drain case flowed back yes- vices and limitations terday to where it has spent most TO of its life—a courtroom. It will stay there for awhile too. Benzie County’s Jail to Be Opened Nov. 14 In an action which promises to further drag out the jtablishments. The displays will be| The Day in Birmingham ; School Activities to Mark U.S. Education Week BIRMINGHAM — Birmingham school activities will be built around a different theme each day next week in observance of Ameri- can Education Week, Nov. 8-14. The natiorial theme is ‘Praise and Appraise Your Schools.” City’s merchants will cooperate py placing educational displays in the windows of their business es- arranged by the school system's art department headed by philip| Savaglio. The subjects featured each day are: “The Child: What Does Ed- ucation Mean to Him?”; Parents: How Can They Work. for Better Schols?’’; “What Is a Teacher?"’; “The People Next Door: Who Are They?"; “Re- sponsibilities of the School Beard Member’; ‘‘How Can the Schools Wins $10,666 in Assault on Greyhound Bus A judgement of $10,666 was awarded an Ortonville mother for being assaulted on a Greyhound bus in 1957 by an ex-driver for | the company * * * An Oakland County Circuit Court jury of eight women and four “The | | Service the Adult Citizen?"; and | “lew Does the Voter Make His Decisions on Education?”’ Schools will hold ‘‘open house” jthroughout the week, Henry Corbacho, director of the | Instructional Materials Center, is jmaking available to all civic or- iganizations films on educational isubjects which will be suitable for programs. * * * Projection machines -and opera- ‘tors will be provided and can be obtained by contacting the mate- jrials center. ; | The City Commission Monday {will consider action to start vaca- tion of portiogs of Island View drive and Path avenue for con- |struction of the North Woodward parking lot. ‘ | x *« * City Manager L. R. Gare has asked the Commission to prepare idescriptions of those portions of ithe two streets to be vacated or abandoned, the resolution author- izing the’ city attorney to initiate Circuit Court proceedings. The Commission will also con- sider passage of a city ordinance authorizing the erection of signs designating multiple family resi- | dential units. The proposed ordinance would jlimit such signs to 10 square feet men returned the judgement yes- |!" area and not exceeding an over- terday in favor of Marion L. Ish, 20, after deliberating nearly four hours The judgment was against the bus company, Gene Roberts, 37, » of Bay Clty, no longer employed $47,102,000 drains currently with heavy rains in 14 south Oak- by the company, and W. Doug- las Cole, 35, of Taylor, Mich. Miss Ish had asked for a $50,-| 000 judgement against the three| }all height of four feet above the ground level. * * * The ordinance calls for signs to be made of noncombustible ma- terial and requires they be lighted |in the evening. As drawn up, the ordinance | would also bar any advertising | or information other than the name of the residential unit, defendants claiming she was at- tacked Oct in Cole's bus after M15 while on the ville from Pontiac. * * Miss Ish sought support of a child assault. way to Orton- * the money for born after the on a quiz show investigated by a Commercial Vehicle said yester- Enforcement to Rise BATTLE CREEK (UPI) — Michigan Department of State enforcement officers are in train- ing. this weekend as a result of plans to step up commercial ve- hicle enforcement. * * * ; The state department said it 15, 1957 by Roberts| he pulled it off| sider a recommendation from Po- The Commission wil] also con- lice Chief Ralph W. Moxley. that two-hour parking from 8 a.m/ to 6 p.m., except Sundays and holi- days be established on West |Brown street between Pierce and |Chester streets. * * * Other business includ@$ appoint- ments to the Electrical Examining Board, Martha Baldwin Park Board and Board of Zoning Ap- | peals. ‘AF Plane Crashes in Formosa, 15 Dead will have eight men in the com- | mercial vehicle field in outstate TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—A U.S. Michigan and eight men im the |Air Force plane crashed in south- Detroit area on a full-time basis |ern Formosa today killing al! 15 starting this month. * * * Previously, outstate officers had a number of other duties as well as enforcement. By GEORGE T..TRUMBULL JR.) portiénment is faulty and shenuid be disallowed,” said. attorney Harry N. Dell, hired especially by the city te try the case. The huge drain project, first en- visioned in 1952, would supplement unable to BEUI . , . issue, Oakland County Circuit BEULAH (UPI) — Benzie Coun | judge William J. Beer refused to|land communities. ty’s new $85,000 jail will be throw out a lawsuit started by formally opened Nov. 14, it was announced today Dedication for the 12-cel! struc- ture will be held by Sheriff Jerry Madison Heights in which the city contends its new share of the proj- ect was arrived at illegally. * * * Pelton and the County Board of . Se Supervisors Judge Beer set Nov. 17 as the Benzie County's old jail was trial date condemned by the State Corree- “We will attempt to prove to tions Commission the court that the method of ap- ra aa ee GUARDS JET WRECKAGE — A member of the Ist Air Police Squadron guards a piece of the smoldering wreckage of a jet trainer that crashed inte -an. Armada Township. field six minutes after take-off from Selfridge Air’ Force Base. A FOLLOWS HIGH COURT OK persons aboard—ll passengers and 4 crewmen. * . * Names of the victims were with- held pending notification of kin 12-Town Drain Plan Clogged in the Courtroom Once Again charging that appertionments | among communities were unfair. Yesterday's court. action was to hear arguments on Oakland Coun- ty’s motion to quash a writ of certiorari granted the city. This calls for the court to review apportionment proceedings to see if they were arrived at properly. Arguing for the County Drain- age Board, Claude- H. Stefens, The Meédison Heights suit fol-| Detroit attorney, contended the lows a Supreme Court affirmation| question of apportionment legal- this year of Judge H. Russel Hol-| ity had been settled in the pre- land's ruling that the formula for! vious legal action. apportionment was equitable and legal. Southfield, Troy and Royal Oak townships in 1956 filed. suit Pontiac Press Photo The wreckage will be checked for clues to the plane crash. The two pilots bailed out. No one was injured, although debris was sent flying into two nearby farm homes, Quoting from a case involving Port Huron versus a dairy, Ste- vens said, “Our courts cannot per- ‘mit litigation of the same old cases.”’ | ‘SAME OLD QUESTIONS’ | “The city is raising the same old | questions previously settled,’ he said. He said further that the city “even got down on its knees to beg the court in 1956 to sus- tain the action of the (rrinage board” and build the long- awaited sewer. : . Dell countered by saying that al- though Madison Heights was one of the original petitioners for the drain, it didn’t necessarily mean the city agreed to the design and method of apportionment. “Nothing could be further from the truth,” Dell said. The city believes it should receive more than the board's planned $302,429 credit for exist- ing drains, thus lowering its share from $2,848,803. The drainage board arrived at the new costs after The city made known its protest then, No other communities lodged protests. Robert Allen, assistant corporation counsel on drain matters, v + ee eo Sea ee ee ee le | wl ’ cai - __ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959 a REF Aid Virus Research : Manufacturing Begins i Allegan Jail Unsafe; T Y TV Perjury Action State Orders It Closed (6 p.m.to 10 p.m.) (9 a.m, to 10 p.m.) MSU Professor Collects Warts sicczsiccvzz:l0 Be Considered sires: ms oe BUVERS BONUS BUYS at Van's Manufacturing Co... 2 NEW YORK (UPI)—District At- closed by next Feb. 1, County By BILL. SINNOTT (tumors, including ones that are, move them from patients in his newly opened Lake City branch of|torney Frank Hogan said Friday Clerk Ester Hettinger said” Friday Here are 18 BONUS BUYS for WEEK-DAY SHOPPERS — who don} EAST LANSING « — Professor | cancerous MSU laboratory. The progedure |. puiiding and supply firm which| tliat possibly 100 persons lied when = = * want to pay those high ‘Sunday Prices’ . . . Hurry, rights reserved to Walter Mack collects warts.- If] Two Detroit skin specialists are|takes only a few minutes, and it operates in Lake City and Kal-| Questioned by a grand jury investFTSpyilt in 1903 with a 31-prisoner limit quantities you've got any—particularly fresh|helping Mack add to his wart/is relatively painless kaskt, The new plas operates in 84ting fix charges against TV quiz capacity, the jail has been con ones—he wants them. |collection. They periodically re-| * * * the former Lake City High Schoo! Sows He said perjury action demned by the State Department There's a serious purpose behind |—-~— | However, __ although countless shop building. ould be considered. , of Corrections as a fire hazard Cl OSED All DAY SUNDAYS this. Mack, a professor at Michi-| |persons are afflicted with warts, —————— Those who appeared before a and generally unfit for human gan State Universjty, specializes H tMack doesn’t have enough for his New York County Grand Jury in-|occupancy. Closing would mean ~ in the study of vireo. Boston News Strike | research The Indians in Wisconsin are cludes Charles Van Doren * and temporarily housing Allegan Coun Ladies’ Reg. 79¢ NYLONS x *« * Continues in 2nd Day | One reason, he says, is that divided into eight main tribes and Hank Bloomgarden, both big mon- ty prisoners in other counties until Warts, though generally _non- , ; . many people think they can, treat they er SOA, 000 acres of land ey winners on “Twenty -One."’ new facilities are built. | BOSTON Ww — New England’s malignant, are similar to other largest city went without most of tumors, Mack is trying to find out. He is looking particularly. for ers s vewspapers for the sec- € Sid el ont js if they are caused by a virus. |" daily newspapers f ell , Warts On young persons s . ; ond day today. There was no sign! - B This might lead to a major of a break in a strike of 1,150| “We'd like some real fresh ones}! breakthrough in the fight against ineen tor Wier wines 'which are more likely to have a cancer. For if a virus causes)! . mS ita 5 : SS. live virus,” he says warts, support would be lent to a! The strike, called Thursday night theory that a virus causes other after Local 13 of the International — - Typographical Union rejected pub- the U.S. than girl babies, but lishers’ proposals for arbitration, since women live longer than mer, ‘ was followed by suspension of pub-|the total number of women in the lication by six dailies. Some 5,500|U.S. in one given year somewhat OW ver ue other newspaper employes werejexceeds the total number of its t left without work men ConBooksBe? 275 Volumes,. Missing since 1779, Suspected Public Is Invited to Be British Booty WORLD. TV PREMIERE ec oe: FIRST QUALITY nylons in 60 gauge ¢ tremsees 15 denier with dark or self seams. Full fashioned in sizes 8'2 to I}. Ladies’ ‘Lovable’ BRAS Advertised nationally at $1.50. First ¢ quality padded style bras in size 38B only mv. 2 SUNDAY CHANNEL 9 4, A Communist Changes He breaks with Party—finds faith —puts free men on the offensive with a big idea. ANGELO PASETTO — Former Com- munist cell leader writes his own gripping story. He tells how an answer to wer in industry has been brought in the "Little Stalingrad” of Northern Italy. Fired with a ‘blazing passion for the class struggle, he finds in Moral Re-Armament a su- perior ideology to Communism and re- turns to his Catholic faith. Kids’ 2-Pc. SLEEPERS é Regular $1.98 sellers—-Heavyweight 1” VEVEVUVTTET ONTO ETO TETY cotton knits with plastic sole feet, gripper fasteners. Sizes 1 and 4 Boys’ Flannel SPORT SHIRTS Valued to $1 98 Ssuictived and wash ‘n 1” NEW PORT, R.I. (UPl)—Red- t v wood Library just never gives up.! Oo ) It’s still looking for about 275 books — missing since 1779, ex- actly 180 years ago, And who else but British Army tofficers could have swiped them? O P 3 N hi O U S = “After all,’”’ says Donald T. Gibbs, who runs what is the na tion's oldest library to be located | in its Original building, ‘‘the Brit- ish used the library for an offi- cers club when they eccupled Newport during the revolution. & » **‘Maybe we're just making scape- goats ‘out of them. But the fact} : is that when they left . . . well, you figure it out.’’ x wear flannels in check plaids, patterns Sizes 6 to 16 Men’s Flannel SPORT SHIRTS First quality American made heavyweight ] 59 VUCUPESEIUSEUTVOTETEVECETETEOOETS flannel in plaids, stripes, patterns. Sizes S-M-L. Regular $1.98 to $2.98 values a Nee 1 Men‘s INSULATED U-Wear \ TOPS AND BOTTOMS—EACH Washable nylon shell with “Air-Cell”’ 3 66 insulation for warmth without weight Several years ago, stockholders Olive color in sizes M-L-XL. of the library — Redwood is pri- * —_=aamame ‘ alae : 2 : . - Se Se See eee aeaaeauanq ms = vate ly owned with some _900 bor Rochester Road at Squirrel Road . rowers of more than 115,000 vol- ‘ D 12-Quart PLASTIC PAILS umes — authorized a search to find and return all its missing \\ books. about 575 in all ; Our $1.49 value—flexible plastic pail ¢ “We've recovered about 300 of T S d + 8 ; ; with bale handle. Assorted colors. , the books,”’ says Gibbs, ‘but we Omorrow, un ay, OV. — THRILLING, HEART STIRRING DRAMA — doubt that any. of these ever was Sas 2S SRR RE Ree in the possession of British sol- Passetto oe ee by Angelo . TYPING PAPER - 240 Sheets either been destroyed or are ly- 2 to 5 m ( pocdeaniaiole some attie or cellar p. s There is an answer to Lay Offs, Unemployment and Deadlock Regular 98c seller—pack of 240 sheets ¢ : 3 Cs . of fine typewriter paper. Limit | pack Gite gnid that the library will Before a God-led unity every last problem will be solved. Hands will be filled with sat ‘patti =e for Baus from the same work, stomachs with food, and empty hearts with an ideology that really satisfies.” Gibbs says the cost of getting —— the books back has been relatively} small. The highest price paid for) one of the volumes was about $70. Have they tried looking in the Redwood Library for any of the missing books? . “Of course,"’ says Gibbs, ‘‘that’s} the first place we looked. No luck! there . . . but every so often we check some particularly dark cor-) ner of a shelf.”’ —=. | CLIP THIS COUPON Now | Stainless steel imports of $1.00 ¢ values. Fits most type of ladies’ watch. Limit 2. GILLETTE Razor Blades Advertised at 35¢— pack of 10 ‘Thin ¢ Blades’ for all double edge Gillette type razors . 2 ° / SS SB SR SSS SF SSB See eee eee eee LISTERINE Toothpaste p> Regular $1.06 Twin Pack 2 Tubes The a type teoth paste ¢ kills mouth odors and germs. Limit 2 twin-packs. ieaelncagiian apace Aareina Aad cin ain cin ain a din eat DAMON AAA Ae Food Town - People’s Bonus Coupen fide 19 Charges rges FCC Knew of Rigging on Show in ‘52 WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Walter Rogers (D-Tex) says the} Federal Communications Commis-| sion had information as early as| 1952 about “skulduggery on the| now-defunct TV show, ‘‘The Big| Payoff,’ but refused to investigate. | Rogers, a member of the House | subcommittee investigating the | quiz show scandal, made the ac- cusation during testimony yester-| day by Dr. Frank Stanton, presi-| dent of the Columbia Broadcasting} System “The Big Payoff’ was one of} the early TV big prize programs. | Prizes consisted of mink coats and| other valuable merchandise. It has| been off the air or several years. | The FCC refused to comment on} Rogers’ charge. With this Coupon—Sun., Nov. 8 Only Limit 1 Coupon per Customer * Limit 1 te Custemer—Expires Nev. 8, 1950 | LARGE PACKAGE ONLY- oT COUPON | Oh! What a Wonderful Breakfast Treat! 7 Peter’s Pure Pork Hamilton Grade “A” Medium I SAUSAGE EGGS qa ra a 4s DOZEN a WEDNESDAY IS DOUBLE STAMP DAY BRECK Shampoo & Hair Spray Actual $2.40 Value—BOTH FOR $1.75 shampoo for oily, normal or dry hair ] 33 and 60c Hair Mist hair spray can. Both rat this price Toy AIR BOAT KITS Regular $2 98 \ value — battery 38 operated boat that goes in water. Easy to put together Regular $3.89 value—all steel con- 39 struction with automatic scoop power shovel—as shown mm ee eee ee eee se Electronic Toy TELE-TYPER $9.95 original seller—actually sends and 4* reéeives telegrams. As shown—2 sender stations, OAKLAND Fue. | =p SUPER MARKETS .4 PAINT FOOD MARKETS “BBB 2135 pixie wiuway, 1200 BALDWIN ave WA M263 AUBURN I 465 E. PIKE ST. MH 700 AUBURN ST. i mM /~ » C3 Call FE 5. 6159 = * ot TELEGRAPH 80 ee "9 ———— tape hha OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK a) BROTHERS ALL FOOD TOWN MARKETS—OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. tc 6PM : CLOSED SUNDAYS OPEN SUNDAY 9 te 6 9 AM. till 10 PM 98 N AGINAW ST. _— ~ - m ° 3 Floors of x ) tr Be. BARGAINS a — Rey ep oy ‘ a Katy be aces } . Sud HIA0 VW cae wotiac Panes SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959 | te Z : Ancient City of Amman Seethes With Arab Unrest Today ~~ Confident Living = : Crean Susan Hamilton to Speak Building Fund King Hussein of Jordan Holy Baptism Pastor Organizes Class on Home Missions Visit. |. . . ‘Wise Man f i . y Bap tor Adults at U.P. Church | ne ncaa a, Dive Starting "8°22 108 Fils Years 1 Bo Qheoryed eee ee Eari Eddy, Mrs. Ben Wilton and | be organized and taught by the; of the Sermon on the Mount. Susan Hamilton, a member of Sethemy. Rictit Clash and das By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE of 10 young people who visited) Floyd Foren. - I am writing this piece on the wide veranda of the Phila- j several home ‘mission stations of * ®« St. Stephen Canvosser : delphia Hotel in Amman, Jordan. Philadelphia is the vld| Men of Orchard Lone |Ray, ¥. Wits hirer rite The ‘Rev. J. Rotuey Beni, of ; the American Baptist Convéntion| Thasiey Allen, Joseph Cox, Mrs. Visiting Parishioners in Biblical name. of this place which was the capital of the Church in Charge of let Auburn Heights Royal Oak 7 proach *' the hd perches at) the 8 pan wegen Robert Sickels, Tom Hutchison and) Homes Sunday ancient Ammonites. Directly across the road) Sunday Canvass 2 es eee aes “Who Rules Your Heart.” | a Mr. Snover will serve as. captains are well-preserved ruins of a Roman amphi- ceived for the “Michigan Synod . hour Sunday. . . | *~* * *® S ae , | Development t the 11:15 : One of the counselors with the Of the calling committee with Mr.’ The Rev. Robert L. Dewitt of theatre, seating 4,000 persons, which indicates) The sacrament of Baptism willl morning ae aoe Elders and laymen will gather group was Patty Looman, a ion mauart et enton Ham ! Christ Church Cranbrook and Dr. the town's importance from ancient times. pe celebrated at both worship serv-| . at the church at 7:30 p.m. Wednes- member of the faculty of Water- per. Paul eae rae (Burton S. Levering, former rector On the heights above the city Davidiices of the Orchard Lake Com-| Monies willbe used for capital |day for instruction for the Every ford Township High School and witon will be c rae r-of All Saints Episcopal Church. placed Uriah, the Hittite, in the forefront of munity Church (Presbyterian), Umprovements in United Presby- |Member Canvass. The Men’s Club also a member of Bethany. co-captains. Detroit. spoke at the dinner at the battle and had him killed. that he might | tomorrow. terian work around the state. will meet for a dinner and program 1 Others participating in the serv- ~* * Christ Church Thursday to launch take his wife Bathsheba. Not far away down - = ® Receiving special help will be|#t 6:30 p.m. Thursday. ice will be Robert Richert and) Mary McLaughlin and David'the building fund drive of St es send tes Josiah the pla! tJ The pastor, the Rev, Edward D.'Alma College, youth work in nine wees oy | Judy Hunt. Smith will be youth assistants a! Stephen Church e adil e plains of Jubboch Auchard, will preach on “When state-supported colleges and uni- cae ' ie i> — yp, the morning worship hours Canvassers will visit parishoners where Jacob wrestled with the angel and Jesus Was Baptized.” At 9 a.m.|versities ministry to young preo- +) a - ‘ ee — orton, sie a Sunday where his name was changed from Jacob to the Chancel Choir will sing “‘Al- ple in camps and conferences, the rom the Seceeth thee pene . ~ * * Israel.. Biblical history encircles you about mighty God of Our Fathers” and erection of new churches, and de- ist Church and the Jewish faith Churches Rise A mission of Christ Church, ihe PEALE at-Amman. But current history also thrills. me se will present “Praise |yelopment of a home for the aged | e ~ ’ : ce s N y 7? “ : as ® part of the program known | St. —_— s congregation Doi nt. Amman is a rapidly growing city of nearly 300,000 péo- om eat ak Th am Glory ner a as “Operation Understanding.” ly conducts services at Eastover pie, swollen in the past ten years by thousands of refugees + © « will seeak to the children on “The School, Adams and Westover roads. from Palestine. Built on seven hills, like Rome, the heights Under the leadership of John Second Commandment” and to the 2 = ® Members and friends will have | The Rev. Barton M. Lloyd serves) the opportunity to make their F as vicar and Luel Simmons as #%¢ crowned by beautiful homes. The center is an oriental (Ashby and Wayne Helfrich, the congregation on “An Answering eee h . tithes and offer-| senior warden. city with all the typical sights and sounds of teeming Every Member Canvass of the con. Love.”’ { , ings at the 8:45 and 11 a.m. - F ati ill be conducted Sunday | ~ *& * , f services Sunday or Dedication Methodist Sanctuaries Mrs. Elizabeth Hotton, superin- streets. afternoon . mp rry McCarth ill lead é| | Saniiny. Being Built at | tendent, and a staff of 13 teachers Bearded bedouins, black-veiled women, sheiks and thou- —7 ra = sis aa bo : ; « « <€ 9 -_ = Seoul oie in charge of the church (sands of Jordanian soldiers mingle in the throngs. Cars weave The Senior High Fellowship TM YOU | BSCE BUM | NUE 7 Dr. Chapman will.speak at both) @nd New Delhi school. in and out-through a continuous procession of small, pert! Wil! meet in apes Hall pen will Be.” ( services on “Money and Your Women of the church meet once | donkeys and ponderous camels carrying all sorts of produce. | hone in inguirers Chen 7 a 3 | A panel composed of Donald Life. A large new Methodist church 4 month under the leadership of |Bright-colored merchandise fills the shops and bazaars. p.m. : Davis, Orvin Weaver, Leroy Swartz t Members working with Omer has just been completed in the’ Mrs. Luel Simmons. Mrs. Sherri | x xk * whe W °: Acenctat and the pastor will answer ques- } ‘apital " -y, Simpson is director of the ir ; e Women's Association Is Sp0n-| tions put to them by youths at the| Lewis on the every member Capital city of one Asian country, Simpson Is oe chor Arabs are lovable people and in the many days I've spent soring a beef dinner from 5:30 to secon hich masta , anvass committee include by Feb 1 jand Mrs. Br Beecher, : : _— mandi _— roa etal ee en eta mee er “lin the Middle East I have a memory of flashing smiles and 7 p.m. Wednesday. Reservations me a major new Methodist church. | The Young People’s Group meets much kindness. They like Americans, whom they think of as may be made at the ehurch office. The post high groep will have ala hurches to Ask P ki t R d x * * ‘twice a month with leaders, Mr.|friends, and they are very appreciative of our Point Four > _ akisian ne The J. S. Ryang Memorial Meth-/and Mrs. Jack Yoder, Mrs. Carijassistance in road building, education and industrial guid-' ollowing the 35 p.m. supper waere c ; P odist Church, costing $100,000 and Zuber, director of the Altar Guild, | ance. Thursday, the Junior en : = a i or F unds to Send MELVIN ©. TOSS Director seating 2,500 in the sanctuary, was/has recently organized a Junior! ship will see two filmstripa, *"W hom : | dedicated recently in Seoul, Korea. | Altar Guild. |SAW REFUGEES , Shall I Date” and “Is It Love.” Food Abroad ° oe Gets Ambulance | In ~— are ao the Cen-| Mrs. Simpson heads the cecre-| UNRWA officials took me to refugee camps,.of which there Discussions will follow. : ‘Detroit Boy Giving - |tenary Methodist Church, to serve tarial staff; and Jack Diemer, Jay/are forty in Jordan, comprisin 600,000 displ z- NEW YORK— s of ; es Brite to an erage aad con-| 2,000 Hindi-speaking Methodists, is Harness and Randy Hotton pie lal In the whole Middle East the number is spptonimacely Ch h H Rj ht Americans will be asked for $365,- Recital at Trinity ribu y American church peo-| under construction and is expected jag acolytes. ‘one million who lost homes, property, jobs—everything. It «is urc as Ig 210 to feed more than twenty mil- pile to Pakistan were ed presented to to be ready for use next February. | f th t satan , . lion hungry people overseas in a the Red Cross director Wajid Ali It is expected to cost about $144,000. one © e great sociological problems in the world today. special appeal to be launched dur-, The junior and children’s choirs Shah. | ; The Ryaig Church's the larg: Native of West One wonders if there can ever be true peace or scieperity 00 pea ut ing the Thamkagiving Seas to of Trinity Baptist Church will In a ceremony in Karachi at- 4+ ygethedist church im Seoul. It | . in the world where any injustice remains uncorrected. The finance the 1960 Share Our Surplus present five-year-old Melvin B. tended by refugee and relief lead- bis aie Sia honor of Bishop J. s. Indies to Serve world cannot shut its eyes to any human problem and not! The churches have the right to, program, through which three hun- White in a vocal recital at 5:30 ers of both countries, Dr. A, Ryang of the Korean Methodist | 7. . suffer for it. Certainly we have not grown so callous that we speak out fearlessly on con- dred million — food from p.m. Sunday. Vollesw apie one gift Church, whe disappeared during ‘Bible Institute do not care about human agony any more. trovergjal issues just as Christ Gid United States surgits stocks will * * * wagen S; gift of we Kk war and ef whem ne One individual I met, a young man twenty-four years of in His time, the Rev. Dr. Edwin be distributed free in some twenty-- The son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin T. Dahlberg told 450 church leaders five distress areas abroad. White of Detroit. he is a member Church World Service, which, com- : z . . | word has been received since. @NDERSON, Ind.—Cariton Cum- age, happens to be a king; King of the Hashemite Kingdom of . . os 5 r ° in Hartford, Conn., recently. Objectives of the appeal were an-jof the Tabernacle Baptist Church mobile dispensa: ° iiding berbatch has become the first na-| Jordan. He is a great favorite of his people lige: ry serving’ The new building is located 0M | tional to serve as president of the | ty wit . roe ; In a plea that the American nounced today by Dr. R. Norris in’ Detroit. His sister. Faye, will - ; : ~..West Indies Bible Institute, spon-' My wife, my three children and I visited him in his churches and their members de-/Wilson, executive director Of/aiso sing several numbers as will irector rogr: Met y | ’ , ; é | nine Dr Bonncienicy oe veare Wan one of the “cathedrals” (sored from general offices here of - palace high above the city. There is little formality and bate openly the issues of a world Church World Service, National the children’s choir of the Provi- to increase shipments of food to of Korean Methodism. It has @/th¢ Church of God. He was ap-| absolutely no stuffed-shirtism about this young king. * faced by “‘destrttction and de- Council of Churches, which spon- dence Missionary Baptist Church Pakistan in additi -y| large social hall and extensive {q-| Pointed by: the school’s newly con- spair,"’ the president of the Na- sors the program on behalf of ** * tan in addition to emergency | larg ae ; ituted boa He has a delightful sense of humor and we had a lot Of tional Council of Churches said, major denominations in America. ,. supplies sent to victims of the’ cilities for Christian education. stitu rd of trustees. _, fun in our visit “J or belied te ‘ Following the program, refresh- recent devastating floods in that) Construction began in May in Located near Port-of-Spain, Trini- : ; esus ned a | mee Value of U.S. surplus com- |ments will be served in Fellow- country. He also announced that!New Delhi's new Centenary Meth- dad, Cumberbatch’s birthplace, the|_, For a youth of twenty-four, King Hussein is the most ma- personal and public issues head jyodities scheduled for distribu- |ship Hall. Mrs. Sarah Gary is di- school serves Church of God youth| ture young man I think I have ever met. Being always inter- °- tien im 1960 through the 80S |rector of Trinity Choirs and the rehabilitation and vocational train.| odist Church. ing projects are being worked out from throughout the southern|ested in what makes people tick, I asked if I might put a per- Declaring that the vigorous pro-| program, Dr. Wilson said, ts |Rev. Joseph W. Moors is pastor. nouncements of Jesus on fhe approximated at slightly ever for refugees there and others in ‘J ‘ H ve Caribbean area, training them for|sonal question to him. “In view of all you have been through Peta , need. his \s the el P saaaapal ge in the chureh in that/how did you preserve such balance of mind and spirit?” \ ‘Sabbath a 2M. of ba $25 millions. ; Minister Rebuildi u Through September this year, pert of tne — x *& * temple tax and tributes to Caesar SOS foods. Dr. Wilson explained, mnrerer yiiaing Cumberbatch, who studied here r, come from the United States store Old Theater Organ Church World Service has shined TOPIC of Sermon at Anderson College four His quiet answer was, “I try to do pight. I do my best, that “sent Him to the cross,” D 1,544,810 Ibs. of U.S. surplus and years Dahibe ; oo“ ef surplus commodities accumu- . » ; rg continued: “‘If, he had rplu ; = other foods valued at more than| ago, assumes the presidency of|1s all. Then I leave it to God.” And that isn't a bad answer for “Uo 0B on ot Nivey lated by the United States Com-| NORFOLK, Va, # — The Rev $100,000 to Pakistan. Of this. a sub-. The Rev. Malcolm K. Burton of the eight-year old school following|anyone, king or commoner. King Hussein impresses one as a M I He. would neve, modity Credit Corporation under William R. Smith, minister of stantial part consisted of grains First Congregational Church will/@ trend of modern missions to|born ieader of men. As one of his prominent subjects said to)... been heard of.” the- agricultural price support sys-|music at Norview Baptist Church and other produce donated by preach on ‘This Is the Heir’ at|transfer administrative responsili-| me, “He is the grandson of a king, son of a king, and himself . tem, They are made available to|says he hates to see a musical American farmers to the Christian|the morning worship hour Sunday. |ties in church and related institu- |g king, but if he were a plain man he would still be somebody.” the churches without cost only|instrument or a human being wind Rural Overseas Prograin (CROP),| The Chancel Choir will present|tons to younger churches at the| He has great plans for his country, chief of which is to Baptist Missionaries after provision has, been made for|up on the junk heap. a unit of CWS. “The Beatitudes" by Glarun and | cartiest possible time. ‘help his people to live lives of freedom and peace. He hopes tn Africa Are Shifted needy people in the United States.! That's why he is rebuilding an | The SOS foods, he said, are given|old theater organ with parts he In addition, 16,911 Ibs. of vita- Mrs. Arthur Kendall will sing) The Rev. Don Johnson, formerly mins, and 17,697 Ibs. of clothing|“‘Christ Went Up Into the Hills.” |of Anderson, has been serving as that American citizens will get acquainted with Jordan and have been delivered there to date) Organ numbers by organis{ President of the school, which con-| 8 in emergency relief to disaster|says come from the ends of the : itati Americans BLANTYRE, Nyasaland (‘#—The sz) aa yma ps Gd aoe: Sr Sedat, Oe: le He AIT, SR ART NALON 1a Ae an Baptist Mission ie Central Africa Victims, in supplemental feeding earth, He admits it will take some \. this year, Charles R. Wilson will include ucts a unique program of indus-/ to visit his country. = issionary Programs for widows, orphans and rebuilding to suit his purposes. It eee = ae tuner” by Croft and “Bene. A anahte wae Rar Dia au . (Copyright, ad : oases oon eee i, Southern ‘school children; in progra is equipped with xylophone, base * ; \dictus” ‘by Couperin a v: Rhodesia to come here to prepare|ing hospital patients and agéd peo-|and snare drums, castinets, mar- Williams Lake oo : for the opening of Baptist work. iple, and in assistance to a. a bird whistle, a klaxon Church of ‘|The Vital Difference | Missions Board N * * * and others In ise nelle. sO the Nazarene | ASHEVILLE. N. C. & While o* ae bl w d ‘They are the Rev. and Mrs. a psychiatry seeks to ‘“‘make man Asks Application 1 e or g William S. Wester and the Rev. | . . C) Corner Airport & acceptable to himself,” religion ° e eamelior hey —— lg Alaskan Villagers Discover Hatchery Road ‘seeks to ‘make man acceptable of Psychiatrist )? fo Tt d. newest mission field brings to #0 10 AM SUNDAY SCHOOL to God,” the Rev. George C. An-) x C 0 ay Ftories in which Southern B ist FY ] ] N T ib] ‘11 AM WORSHIP HOUR derson, director of the Academy The Board of Missions of the [a a> “= —— = hace Seeneers = OSPI1 ta ot SO errl S 7 PM WORSHIP HOUR of oe and — Health, la Church is seeking a psy-, ROMANS 12:21 — “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome MIssIONATIES meeve. 7 — “* shea ‘ = sonee an on ceri = evil with good." (RSV) Bewa Ch rch Unit The strange world of the modern)their families in far-off villages. ° . stitute overseas. Either a man or ~ & * re Unvu Y hospital. is made less frightening|Public Health nurses take the Marimont Ba tist Church a woman will be acceptable, When a cloud charged with electricity moves over a house it gf Expense of Doctrine to patients from remote Alaska|tapes with them on their visits and : p Professional qualifications are ajimduces an opposite charge in the house. If it comes near enough) ’ | villages by Miss Alice Green. For/return to the hospital with taped 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 Doctor of Medicine degree, and|there will be a destructive flash of lightning unless there is a light-- ATLANTA W& — The president of | the past three and a half years messages from home. Sunday School 10 A. M certification as a psychiatrist by|ning rod through which a steady stream of the opposite kind of the North American Christian’ she has served them at Govern- a peg a eS ee ae Moming Worship 11 A.M. the American Board of Psychiatry | electricity flows out to neutralize the cloud. | Convention has warned that — ment Native Hospital . agree ra m yee J hi m ler M a A CONVOCATION ‘RECORDED and Neurology. When a person filled with hatred or resentment comes in contact Unity must not be wrought at the/as a special iar ipo ag ord ahem a : : expense of central doctrine. \tional Council of Churches Divi-| they are very fond of singing Youth Group 6:30 P. M. In addition, the person selected [With others, the same attitudes may be induced in them and revengeful “Oi, w Hay of Lotiisville, Ky../sion of Home Missions ‘hymns to each other on the tapes.” 7:30 P. M. Evening Service should have “a deep commit. |words and actions may result. But if people have a good connection’ gig delegates to the NACC con-! t * & Church Lists Servi “THE SERPENT OF BRASS” ment to the cause of Christian |with the divine source of love which dissipates hate and bitterness, vention. oe - cl ee eee PASTOR SOMERS PREACHING BOTH SERVICE: reereee and © warm Christian \they can prevent much that would destroy character and human re-|" “The only kind of unity about ., Sivange foods. | language ome ‘The Pleasant Grove Missionary COMING NOVEMBER 15 to 22nd xperience. lationships. 'which we are concerned is the jae terrifying to these patients,”’| Baptist Church is sponsoring a For further information, write! Hate generates more hate but love inspires more love. Through unity for which Christ prayed. Our she per “particilarly the chil-/Program at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. DR. CHARLES MacDONALD Harold N. Brewster, M.D., medi:|private and public worship and study of the Bible we maintain our! plea is for Christian unity in all ieen? On a short furlough state-|Regular services include Sunday REV. ROY GUSTASSON . = a a — of Missions, |relationship to God, keep our hearts filled with love and learn how to that the name ‘Christian’ implies." side, Miss Green reported on her|School at 9:45 a.m. and worship THE HOWARD SKINNERS ve., New York 11 N.Y.|counteract hate with love and overcome evil with good. ~ — work at a meeting of the Alaska at 11 a.m. each Sunday. i Seventh Day Baptist Charch Schools for Ministers | Committee of the Division in New! —— NIGHTLY SUN. Thru SUN. 7:30 P. M. [Baptists Plan to Extend Rockville, R. I. ~ Got R d Attend \York City. MARIMONT ... A Growing Church with |tibrary Service in U.S. Neal De Mills ee ne | aye tutay tebe . > . : y or- | a Friendly Welcome! SAN MARCOS, Tex. u» — The nme University's sommer achosls| sanized has helped patients of | ‘Holding Forth the Word of Life” Southern Baptist Convention is Spiritual ‘Point Four’ , ; for South Carolina ministers at.| all ages adjust to the new ca- - —— planning to extend its library serv- Westminster Choir lracted a otal oe ee cle at vironment and for most it is the f = = ice into every “‘small town, village) NEW YORK \W—A_ spiritual |largest -number in the p ore bright spot of the week. When and open country area in Texas.'’|‘‘Point Four” program to assist Af ; if 11 year history rogr she visits the wards, children P The Rev, Prentis Chunn, Texas| Jewish communities in Latin Amer- on rican our The ae teaching Bible| C@!l out to her, “Is it Sunday | Finst FREE Baptist library president, esti-|ica has been launched by the _ ; . | study, practical ministry and con-| ye?” IY mates that there are about 2,000) World Council of Synagogues. The SALISBURY. Southern Rhodesia|temporary religious thought, were Using interpreters, she teaches METHODIST ecitiie. ime’ —— ae in the | program involves supplying rabbis (®—Twenty-three golden - voicedjheld in Greenville, Orangeburg,|Ruyssian Orthodox and Protestant state but most of them are injto South American congregations americans are singing their way|Spartanburg, Camden, Cayce,|patients. A member of the nell Lyell oh bevateon, Pastor aes tenes _ —_ — I which have _ ae ee around Africa and making new Aiken, Florence, Charleston, West- isterial Association, she recently . ws 6 { ‘'H RISTIAN SCTENCE friends for the United States. minster and Anderson. organized a religious education) Sunday Services ed Se §| The Westminster Choir is visiting oO leadership training school in An- : | African countries during a five-' Views of God Haz chorage and works closely with it Sunday School 9:45 AM. DISTRICT SUBJECT FOR SONDAY i month tour on funds*provided by | y in addition to her hospital work. | Worship 11:00 A.M. 7 4 the U.S. Cultural Exchange Pro-|) HAMBURG, G wm — * * ® } : a t , Germany A Officially coordinator of chap-|| ©°@ntification and Fellowship » YOUTH RALLY “ADAM AND FALLEN MAN” = “birecting he tour is 1Dyearald| and” poe menus Tenet ney aevices atthe “hospi | 3 3 irectin our a } irls i i 5 ’ nm : g ye and girls in Germany indicates Miss n ills ons AYF. 6:00 PM. | Dr. John Finley Williamson, | i Nop running y |that only about one in 10 have a ping and: errands for F ‘ Sunday Services and Reading Room A , : y F a TONIGHT 7:30 1s “#\ sprightly founder and former presi-| personal conception of God. “The Evangelistic i os : . Lod Tha 2 East aco ieaa % ident of Westminster Choir College | vast majority moves in a haze - — end helping them _ Service 7:00 P. M. 4 SUNDAY SERVICES . ee Wednesday Evening IL AM toS PM. ee |..." said a report of the survey. fs j 5 Service 8 P.M Friday to 9 P M To help. her ‘in her work, the “Reformation or Regeneration?” Sunday School 10:00 A. M. Worship Services 11 A. M. i FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH | | Fore Bas i Anchomes ewe] mw. LANPHER, Att anc and 7:00 P.M. a Lawrence and Williams Streets | Prayer Meeti Wednesday ‘ HURON AT WAYNE ; 7:30 P.M. HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS Poster REV. WILLIAM H. MARBACH, 0.0. ; THE Major C. Marvin Russell will speak RADIO STATION CKLW 800 KC Associate Paster REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, 8.0. Pentacostal it , nome hi SUNDAY 9:45 A. M. | WORSHIP SERVICES . . . 9:30-1:00 LAM. nena aa vies wv: Sunday, Channel : . e . ‘ Morning Worship ....1 LA. 4 \ Come and Bring the Family! | eaten me "7 eens as i. | CHURCH SCHOOL . . 9:30-1:00 Ms > ...7:30P. ' EON. a a Ree Oe ee aS s } , ; : / Ay 7 4 . rc a P : a \ : . v ‘ . : ; : 7 i | , h | | ¢ nn “$79Yd HINO IVA SF. =, ta, B® 2 - * @ * . THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959 ¥ Expect Sellout at Performances of Fever Follies This is the way Mr. and Mrs. Earl Smith, left. and Mrs. David Jennings and Lynn Walker will look The “Take Back Your Vink” number is one of the highlights of the High Fever Follies. From left to right are Mrs. Edward Dalton of Drayton Plains. Fred Dear Abby Gets It Right and Left Japanese vs U.S. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: You recently advised a GI who had fallen in love with a Japanese woman while in Japan that if he wanted an American woman to bathe and dress him he should get himself ¥ admitted to an old folks home Like all American women, Abby you missed the point American me.n do not fall in leve with Japanese women because they such excellent ABBY make servants. A Japanese waitress in Ginza has more fresh affection in her voice than some American men hear all their lives in the J. 3.A: It is easy to understand why a man would prefer a wife who would rather help her hugs- band wash his back than drive him out to a PTA meeting. How are you going to lick such an offer? The . saddest. sight if -all Japan is that of an American woman who has caught sight for the petition first time of her com HAROLD HUGHES (Portland Oregonian staff writer.) * * * DEAR ABBY: Whenever I! hear someone sound off about how ‘‘devoted, obedient and loyal’ Japanese women are, | reply, “Why don’t you go to Zanzibar or Saudi Arabia and buy a slave for ten pounds British sterling?” CE. D; : x * * DEAR ABBY: I resent your attitude toward American men marrying Japanese women Witness our own James Mich- ener who wrote the beautiful stories ‘‘South Pacific’ and “Sayonara.’’ Michener recog- nized the superiority of the Japanese women. Further- more, he proved his sincerity by marrying and bringing home a_ beautiful cultured Japanese doll. ROSS DEAR ROSS Mr. Mich- ener’s Japanese “doll” was not “imported.’’ She was a Jap- anese-American. when the High Fever Follies show goes on. | Pentiac Press Phetes Mrs. Jennings and Lynn are featured in the beatnik number. Fuller and Mrs. John Nicolls of Bloomfield Township. Vrs. Dalton and Mrs. Nicolls are “follies” cochair- men. DEAR ABBY May I re- spectfully advise you that when it comes to the subject of com- paring American women. to Japanese women you do not know what you are talking about * * * \s an American man who has spent many years in Japan I can testify that I have never seen a Japanese woman elbow her way into an elevator nor have I ever heard a Japanese woman raise her voice to her husband in public Realism in Art ls Discussed The art appreciation group of the Pontiac Branch of the American Assn. of University Women -met Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Homer McVean of Bloomfield Hills. * * * Mrs. Alfred Simmons spoke on realism, illustrating her talk qwith prints of. masterpieces \ The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Kenneth OI- lis in Sylvan Lake. ; al for Wife! They are not all out of the rice paddies, either Righty per cent of all high school graduates in Japan go on to college. You American women would do well to pattern your behavior after your Japanese cousins. ONE WHO KNOWS x * * DEAR ABBY: I lived as a bachelor for many years. in Tokyo and never found it diffi cult to resist the ‘charms’ of the Japanese women. To be perfectly frank, their idiotic conversation would drive a normal man to drink I observed a handful of Gls marrying Japanese girls, but 99 per cent of these misfits would have had a tough time getting an American girl of any age to marry them. Sincerely, COULD WRITE A BOOK * * * DEAR ABBY: My brother was in the U.S. Navy and he went nuts over a Japanese doll He married her and went away on a 6&month cruise. When he came home he found his won- derful Japanese wife washing somebody else's feet BROTHER BEN w Show Cast Winding Up Rehearsals By MARJORIE EICHER A sellout house is expected for High Fever _ Follies Wednesday and Thursday eve- ning. Rehearsals are at that last, hectic stage, and it may nev- er be known who has the most fun — the audience or the cast This fall show Pontiac looks forward to each year will be staged at Pontiac Northern High School for the _ first time * * * A variety of skits and spe- cialty numbers is tied togeth- er by the theme of travel in outer space Visiting Saturn. Miss United States invites inhabitants to join visitors from outer plan- ets on a trip to Earth These other-worldly visitors discover such institutions as the cha cha and life among the beatniks * * ~ They are given a glimpse of what could happen to televi- sion if grand opera were com- bined with a western The *‘Take Back Your Mink”’ number, a kind of Mary-Mar- tin-Heart - Belongs - to - Daddy in reverse has been one of the favorites of the cast in re hearsal * * * All seats are reserved. Tick- ets may be purchased at Os- mun’s downtown store Monday and Wednesday during store hours and at Osmun’s Tel- Huron branch today and Tues- day, also during regular busi- ness hours My seat’s on the aisle — I'l] see you there! ’ Chairmen Listed by Alpha Chapter Alpha Alpha Chapter of Ep- silon Sigma Alpha Sorority met Thursday at the YMCA. Pres- ident Betty L. DeGroot appoint- ed Mrs. Lacey Schiefler mem- bership chairman Mrs. Harry Rhodes and Mrs Elmer 0, Johnson have been named. co-chairman for the Christmas basket Mrs. Fred Mueller, Christ mas dance chairman, _ an- nounced her committee as Mrs Edward Hummel, decorations: Mrs. Anthony Grand, tickets; Mrs. James Vincent, orches- tra: Mrs. Donald Moore, pa- trons; and Mrs. James Stone, publicity. H. E. Mansfield Is Married Mrs. Alpha Capps of Beulah Mo. and Hosea FEF. Mansfield were united in marriage re cently at Houston, Mo Mr. “Mansfield, an ordained Baptist minister, recently re tired after 23 years of service with Pontiac Motor Division After some travel, the couple will reside at Beulah, Mo GOP Women Set Brunch, Fashions Brunch followed by a fashien show at Rotunda Inn Tuesday at 11:30 am. is planned by the Republican Women's Feder- ation of Oakland County Reservations may be made with Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy Jr. of West Iroquois road The slender line focuses at- tention on the rich cape collar of white Point de Venice lace in this Rembrandt design black velvet sheath with self belt and bow : ’ as Dr. John Foster and Dr. Lynn {len enjoyed themselves thoroughly at the the dress rehearsal for the High Fever show must be they can't help laughing. Follies Friday evening. Their parts in hilarious because Womens Section News Notes From Birmingham . Get-Togethers Planned By RUTH SAUNDERS BIRMINGHAM — Reports from the Virginia mountain resort, The Homestead, near Hot Springs say the ski runs are almost completed. Mr. and Mrs. Richard C Scales have just returned from the resort Friday. Mrs. Scales and her daughter Mrs. William Hogland entertained at lunch- eon in Mrs. Scales’ home on Westwood drive. Honored guests were Mrs. Carl A Underhill Jr. and Mrs. Alan Marsha]! * * * Mrs. Marcus Richards and Mrs. Edmund O. Bartlett of Winnetka, Ill., are spending several days in Birmingham. Mrs. Richards is staying with her sister-in-law, Mrs. John W. Gillette, and Mrs. Bartlett is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Page * *® * Mr. and Mrs. J. Kirk Martin hosts at dinner this Caldron 70 Chairmen Announced Mrs. Roger Smiley, Mighty Chosen One of the Daughters of Mokanna, announced ¢ her committee chairmen for the year at the Wednesday meet- ing of Iraq Caldron 70 They included Mrs. Wayne Scott, finance; Mrs. Herbert Gartner, telephone; Mrs. Fred Crossman, sunshine; Mrs. Ray Haertter, hospitality; and Mrs. Earl Brunson, publicity. Others are Mrs. William Koggenhop, ways and means; Mrs. Ben Richardson, relief: Mrs. Matt Shelton,» cerebral palsy; and Mrs. Albert Kug- ler, Mrs. Scott and Thelma Anderson, trustees. » -* &* A Christmas party with an exchange of gifts will follow the meeting Dec. 2. Plans were made for a rummage sale Dec. 5. Mrs. Smiley and Mrs. Ed- ward Pritchard served re- freshments in the Pontiac Fed- eral Savings and Loan Build- ing. will be Epsilon Chapter Invites Guests A pledge tea for Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa was held Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Thomas Walsh on Sanders Place. Mrs H. A. Mitchell and Mrs. R. M. Campbell were cohostesses Mrs. Norman Smith showed slides of her trip to Russia, England and sevéral European countries. Guests included Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Vida Walker, Mrs. How- ard Booker, Mrs. Marvin An- drews and Mrs, Carroll Por- ritt Others were Mrs. William Sturgeon, Mrs. Owen Wright. Mrs. Fedelia Yale and Mrs Merle Bennett evening in their home on Guests will in- Robert L Argyle drive clude Mr. and Mrs Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Craig, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Royal Jr., Mr. and Mrs David E. White and Mr. and Mrs. Paul McKenny Mr. and Mrs, Jesse Judd also are giving a dinner party this evening * * ® Pinehurst, N. C., is the Mecca for ten days of golf and hunting for the annual get- together of a group including Joseph E. Wellman, John S. Judd, Edward A. Proctor, S. K. Thingstad, John L. Mc- Quigg, Burt R. Shurly Jr., E. Wright Yount, Thomas King and William J. Bird. Priest From Colorado , MRS. THOMAS FORTINO First Winter Club cocktail party, dinner and dance will be held Nov. 28 at Bloomfield Hills * * * Original members Mr. and Mrs. Genaro A. Florez and Mr. and Mrs. J. S. O'Gorman who have moved away will be missed * * * From Webster Groves, Mo., comes news of the birth of a son, John Kyle, to Mr. and Mrs. Holt Ackerman Oct. 27 Mrs. Ackerman is the former Judy Loud. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Percy K. Loud and Mrs. J. R. Ackerman of Colonial court is paternal grandmother Betty Jane Thomas Rudolph Fortino this morning at St. Benedict Catholic Church. couple are Ur. and ~loseph Felice and Mrs. Dominic Fortino of Vorth Cass avenue, Officiates at Wedding The Rev. Dennis Langdon of* Pueblo, Colo., was the offici- ating priest at the wedding of Betty Jane Felice and Thom- as Rudolph Fortino this morn- ing at St. Benedict Catholic Church. * * * The bride wore a gown of Italian delustered satin featur- ing a fitted bodice and a Sa- brina neckline trimmed with French lace. The gown was_ re-embroi dered in iridescent sequins and pearls with long tapered sleeves and a redingote skirt underlaid with lace that ended in a chapel sweep A crown of lace and sequins secured her chapel length veil of pure silk illusion edged in lace and she carried a semi- cascade bouquet of stephanot- is and orchids * * * Mrs. Paul Felice, sister-in- law of the bride, was matron of honor Bridesmaids were ‘ Mrs. Henry Felice, Mary Fe- lice, Joan Pritchard, Sally Ko- bodian, Noreen Salvador and junior bridesmaid Rose Felice All wore floor length strap- less candy pink gowns with velveteen bodices and jackets The nylon sheer bouffant skirts had a draped effect accented with large velveteen roses, They carried modified . cas- cade bouquets of white carna- tions and pink Briarcliff roses * * * Joseph Fortino was his broth- er’'s best man. Ushers were Zorob Koldian, Armand Gig- lio, Robert Giglio, Donald Fen- ton and James Felice. James Spadafore was junior usher. Susan Felice and Mary Cal- abrese were flower girls and wore floor length white chif- fon gowns with draped skirts. A reception was held in the VFW Hall in Keego Harbor After a two-week honeymoon in Mexico City, the newlyweds will live on North Cass avenue. Felice married Parents of the Mrs. of Navajo road ‘When he was traded to the Lions, < * * * : ~*~ * * Bobby Layne Giants Meet Cards in ee Wilson, Parker Match Strategy Sunday Sunday’s NFL Features . ee ee i Or ee ee. Oe, ee Re ee ee) OPT ie ee dee THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1959 * & DRESS BOX and Rote Set for Ait Wat eats rw tert . | Need Victory |and New York Giants, pinning their National Football League ti- tle hopes on stout defenses, . shackle razzle-dazzle offenses Sn-| }day to protect their one-game di-| New York, leading the Cleveland vision leads Browns and Philadelphia Eagles San Francisco, leading the West-' (each 4-2) by a game in the East, ern Division with a team that al- entertains the Chicago Cardinals They are always tough at home Lions at Pittsburgh to Climb Out of Cellar pion Baltimore Colts, have wen only oNce in 9 previous tries at Los Angeles. 2 By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editer, Pontiac Press Ohaus — Coach rir lowed its first six opponents to av-' and is a seven-point choice The wae” ==* — ; obin erage only nine points, tackles the Cardinals (2-4) cannot match the tote, who were once understudies Rams at Los Angeles. The game experience or defensive power of to coach Buddy Parker and quar- is rated a tossup although the the Giants (5-1) but have just the terback Bobby Layne, respectively, | Forty-Niners (3-1) handed the of- type of wide-open offense most face their rascal — morrow | fense-conscious Rams their first/likely to trouble New York Sa vivk a mae ae a be shutout since 1949 last month, 34-0 * * * played in the NFL this season. Wilson would like to admit, and he does without being too con- vincing, that this game is just another Sunday afternoon pro foot- ball struggle. The atmosphere, however, proves that te be false. The Liens, who sit in the Western | ‘Division basement in standings and statistics, are keyed up for The Rams have a poor record The Colts (4-2) were beatef last but top the league's 12 teams in Sunday by Cleveland in one of the tetal offense with 2,159 yards. ‘best games -_-—- 2 ir The old pros, especially Joe Schmidt, Jim Martin, Jim Doran, | Lou Creekmur, - Charley Ane,! Harley Sewell, Jim David and Yale . who received all of their pro football tutoring from Parker want more than anything to show) how well they have really been! taught. '~ * * Rote and Eari Morrall both have something at stake in the game. | Rote and Layne shared the laurels) in 1957 when the Lions roared in. spectacular fashion to the NFL championship. | But last year, in a surprise | move, the Lions elected to string | along with Rote by trading Layne te the Steelers, The deal came | shortly after Tom “The Bomb" | Tracy went to Pittsburgh, At the time of the trade, coach ‘. te Wilson said “It's better to have a NOT LIKE GEORGIA — Gibrgia Tech grid- No. 1 and No. 2 quarterback. Hav-| gers left to right, Pred Murphy, Max Baughn ing two quarterbacks as your No. | and Capt. Taz Anderson did some shivering when 1 a nals mand tecings,” | SHY SepwPd out om the snew.covered Notre So, the Lions had Rote as No. 1 drill weather. 49ers Battle Rams — | and the Forty-niners, nursing a |back at the expense of the Red- | far during the 72-game campaign.;came back with two more in a one-game lead over the cham | ing (2-4) at Washington. of the season. Theyj|or failed to win by the point-spread Dames field to practice after: arriving The southern boys wound up moving indoors to The old rivals tangled today in more cool Somebody else besides Dick Warren finally got into the scoring) act for Morrice High last night.) After opening the game with a! TD and extra point, he had all + of the team’s 93 points. Then Paul | are 10-point choices to bounce in half of the 36 games played so Fuller broke the spell. Warren | San Francisco Marts a rugged | 25-@ win. He now has 105 of 111. |four-game road swing in Los An-| x * * | Sunday’s other key game pits | ae geles where it has been humiliated | ues w ad the Eagles against the Browns (5, often by its California rival.| — were erat terday for Claude Williams, one at Cleveland. The winner of this |'The Rams buried the Forty-Niners of the nine players banned from clash of second-place teams is under a 36-7 landslide last year at) baseball after the 1919 Black Sox assured of remaining a game be- Los Angeles. Bill Wade and Del scandal. Yesterday, death took Sho{ner, two of San Francisco's : former Michigan and Ohio mid- hind New York and will tie for dleweight champ Jack Decem | the lead if the Giants lose. The key targets Sunday, enjoyed spress Browns, who played one of the in that game. Wade threw ae | ber, He had been « resident of . great games of their hisiory dur- touchdown passes and Shofnei Mt. Clemens, ing the 38-31 victory at Balti. gained 136 yards on two catches. et more, are favored by 7') points. The Bears (2-4) are favered over the Green Bay Packers (3-3) by seven points at Chicago. The. favorites havé been beaten New York has been winning with a defensive unit that per. | mitted the cub’s first six op- | ponents to average only 2.7 yards per rush, a league low, The Giants may lean heavily on their defense again Sunday, Three of | their offensive stars — quar- | terback Charley Conerly, half. | back Frank Gifford and end Bob Gary Player fired a closing 67 et oe to’ win the Victorian Open Golf| sine California. ‘championship Friday. Howie John-| “@P-UP of play. son led the U.S. golfers into the \3rd round of the Mexican Open ltoday at 136. Jose Gonzalez of Guadalajara leads at 134. * * * The New York Rangers have jtouchdown passes for Baltimore in four times in the clutch, faces an- in Valley Lead nial series. . * * other mastér nasser in Philadel- ome nag ven Asia 26-6 Win Over Hillites, |. Te Pairings, with Great Britain rown, Clevéland s niunack, ’ | listed first: scored five times ‘against Balti- Pontiac's Assist Lands | Norman Drew-Doug Ford, Ken more but the Eagles also will have to concentrate on Milt Plum Bousfield-Mike Souchak, Harry Weetman - Bob Rosburg. Dave Vikings on Top Plum's performance at Balti- Thomas-Sam Snead, Dai Rees- lalla Mati si igen With an assist from underdog, Dow Finsterwald, Peter Alliss-) owed bv the Brown-Unitas Press pontine Central, Flint Northern:;Jay Hebert, Christy O’Connor-| notices but Milt had a brilliant | ook undisputed possission of 1st| Art Wall Jr.. and Eric Brown-| day. Eleven of his 14 comoletions : -e in the Saginaw Valley Con-|Cary Middlecoff. ivainst Baltimore's rugged defense place g ) AP Wirephote fererice football race last night with Friday down situations and enabled the Browns to dominate the gamc« with a classic sample of ball-control. Flint’s Atwood Stadium. forsomes, In that match play each ‘ » Ci tral, _ viously unbeaten Bay City Centra deans of (aw plays, vee ball an 12-7, in a thriller at Pontiac's Wisner Stadium to shove the P * Wolves into 2nd place with a 3-1 * * Valley game, Flint Central de- | | feated Saginaw High, 20-7, at ,and O'Connor turned back Wall === Pistons Down Lakers in Scar uss Balanced Play th The Lions with a 1-45 record a.24 i Features 118-113) i “spl weer in Pene ROAG Triumph - settle a personal score with Parker. Shue, Howell Spark’ Detroit Offsetting 33 by Baylor start the second half 12-game schedule. * * * Parker said, “He’s not my style of quarterback, he will never make | this league.” The Steelers started the season plagued with injuries with such outstanding players as Jack But- ler, Jimmy Orr “Rookie of 1958,”’ Jack McClairen out of action. MINNEAPOLIS (AP)—The De-| troit Pistons handed Minneapolis) Tracy has also been ary * a fifth straight defeat Fridayj leg injury, but “The Bomb rom | night, whipping the Lakers 118-113 @Birmingham ts still the oma in a wild, two-overtime National eee star with 298 yards /p.sketball Assn. game * = Rookie Bailey Howell and vet- It is surprising to note thatierang Dick McGuire and Earl Layne, who very seldom moved | joyd proved too much for the across the line of scrimmage with)] akers in the second overtime as paar now ee Pall OM the Pistons evened their record at plays seve imes during |3 3. each game. The steadier Pistons, with six The, outspoken Layne used t0\men in double figures, were al- verbally lambast the Lions ior | most out of it in the first over- ward wall for letting opposing |time, but Shellie McMillon hit a ~_ swarm = oie ~ pee jump shot with five seconds left rying to pass. Now he w \for a 106-106 deadlock may = gee pocigh nie Elgin Baylor, who lead the » ALEX NSIT, , Gene Lakers with 33 points, had sent Cronin. and Schmidt with which 10 the game into overtime on a hook contend. he Shot with five seconds remaining, hie ol cmecles Bay met in regular time for a 95-95 knot. | tons a : | In-the second overtime, Howell's | in regular season play with Wilson tree throw and McGuire's field, = eon ee Cn eat | S08! shot the Pistons into the lead| — oats for keeps, at 109-106. Detroit in oe exhibition game’ The Lakers came within two) Se nate reg pome rookie Ray LaRunos ation ae Ue jtip-in. but Lloyd's free t y and) panel at the ‘‘Meet the Lions ban-|iwo by Gene Shue put it away]. quet. for Detroit. Shue tovped the! Kickoff s ged Ed and {he Pistons with 22 points, followed by | game will be televised back "| Howell with 17 and Archie Dees Pontiac on channe . with 13 = — s/n LaRusso scored 25 for the|’ Curci leads Miami Lakers, hitting 11 of 14 shots from} Win Over Tar Heels BILL COX Bill Cox, getting his 1st real | good chance in the Pontiac injuries, scored one of the touch- downs and did some excellent running as the Huskies downed tough Rochester, 26-20. He is a 3-9, 140-pound senior. the field and three of seven foul! shots. He also picked off 18 re- bounds Veteran center Larry Foust also BOB GALAN Bob Galan scored a touchdown Northern backfield because of | | Friday's Prep Stars Saginaw’s Alumni Field. The (and Ford, 3 and 2. start of the game was delayed And in the most dramatic match for 30 minutes when .a power jof the day, highlighted by. Wéet- transformer failed, plunging the |man’s controversial shot and a field into semi-darknress. felutch 9-foot putt by Capt. Snead. Flint Central now holds 3rd place |e Snead-Middlecoff and Weet. > 7 — ; | | aS Al ai |. -Thomas combinations ended with a 2-1 record, followed by |™man Faculty Group PCH at 2-2. Arthur Hill comes next | to Soint Each team scored one- point. with a 1-3 mark and Saginaw, | e+ + ‘ i 2 .| Hoosier’s Allen Says| “messin four loop starts, Oc) With the British leading 1 up y icupies the cellar. : : t h F; eat Chief Fli Cent ) coming to the 36th hole, Snead’'s Encroachment Limits! The Chiefs and Flint Central) ond shot landed in water ode- ° rill battle for 3rd spot and 4a| 2 . Athletic Heads Pow pes corating the course to the left. ) | ds Power possible chance at runnerup honors!" r,3+ seemed about it for the i | COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Indi-|Ding at Atwood Stadium in the | shot plunked into a tiny lake to |ana Athletic Director Frank E. Al-|final game of the 1959 season for/tn. right of the green. len leveled a blast Friday at what , PCH. | After both took penalty shots, |he called the “creeping encroach-| Middlecoff pitched over the water, ment of faculty groups into the leight feet from the . Thomas |assigned duties’’ of Western onliPii A Leaders “il one nine feet con the pin. \ference athletic directors. | : Weetman putted, and was short. | Allen, a nationally known schoo! BOOSt Margins | Snead, notorious for missing putt jadministrator before coming to|: of Indiana, addressed a football 122 Week's Play luncheon here a day before the The. t , t Ponti i i teams 0 ntiac Indiana-Ohio ‘State’ football game. je Tennis Assn. added to their D@John Blasts Powell, - : oe ry j | A . eae! acon tne | Asked abou a rumor that ig/200 tna nts week's action Earns Shot at Machen ; | : . ma y shutout wins for New-| elation esl rapid ecrely cake ak — berry Market and Capitol Barbers, rlpg otic NY. fi — Big fe © a - hey | a. YY Cur’! sharing top spot. Mike De. 's smashing 47-sec- =~ 31-7 to Fitzgerald in the eueeioee policy an ocnermine Newberry dumped Frostop Inn, ond disposal of Charlie Powell saenideiadle: Masai |as- participation in the Rose Bowi|€., Barbers did the same thing/has eared him a bout with Eddie leame Allen replied: ito Seaman’s Mfg. , |Machen and a long - awaited | “We've had separate and joint! Barbers’ Paul Collis defeated|chance to move up in the heavy- |meetings, but they haven't been Seaman's Vic Corpron in the|weight ranks. secret. We're merely seeing a|TUnd’s best match, 19-21, 21-18 and * * #*# naciee * ole t understanding of 21-19. | DeJohn caught the ex-footballer |what, athletic directors can. do.” | Next week's top feature will be With a amt Se he beert: ant 2 The athletic head said, “There|the battle for top spot. between vicious left hook, dropping Powcll ‘can be no question but that the | Barbers and Newberry. -|three times before referee Joc academic life of athletes should} Other results this week: be under faculty supervision, but! the fringe things should be under |2: Boys’ Club 5, A.& W Root Beer "5° WALT COOLEY “Walt Cooley, 511, 195 senior, night. ROSBURG BLASTS — Bob Rosburg of the U.S. a losing cause against Cleveland, . the British half a point in the| will provide another big problem Ryder Cup golf matches : for Washington's weak defense in 0 ern That put the U.S joni eheail The Redskins have allowed 171 24 to 149 going ae today’s de- points: the lenmie inks : cisive, 36-hole singles matches in| Cleveland, which halted Unitas the wind-up of this famed bien- The Yanks, intent on regaining| were recorded on crucial third), 66 triumph over Arthur Hill at the big gold cup which the British a alternates shots. Souchak and Rosburg spanked| J league record, Northern now heads | the pack with a 3-0 mark. — ee vl — 4, ces j | Gy welnigt ther Ga gids \poattits ant Res up. | But Britain’s crack pair of Alliss when they collide next Friday eve-| ,mericans. But. then Weetman’s| jond of that distance, sank his—then| Palmer called a halt to the na-' All aluminum 4, Pontiac Motor |tionally televised 10-rounder last AP Wirepheio team, blasts from a trap on the 3rd hole in Ryder Cup play yesterday at Palm The Yanks took a one-point lead into today's U.S. Takes Point Lead Schnelker—may not play against | dropped Eddie Shack and 8 the Cardinals beeause of injuries. | brought up wing Parker McDon- | | The Cardinals are the only! ald and center Bill Sweeney from N.F.L. club that attacks mainly | the minors. from a double-wing. They are * * * . . . young and fast with 20 first or! The United States won the two- PALM DESERT, Calif, (AP)—| happily threw both the U. S. and second-year pros and may have! day triangular senior golf battle| It may not be a shot heard round | British balls into the lake the league's best ball-carrying| for the Lord Derby Cup by rising the world, but it had international | «* * * quarterback in King Hill. ‘from 2nd place to whip defending | reverberations in golf today. Weetman later said he had John Unitas, who fired four|champion Great Britain Friday. Gea mena sae arrotes, | hoped his bold 5 iron shot would reach the green for a 2 up, iu sional, Harry Weetman, and cost stead of 1 up, victory. “Okay, I hit it ‘thin,’ he said, “If I'd made the green, you'd hever have heard gq ward about it.” Said Capt. Rees: ‘He should have played it safe and short.” A few minutes before the match ended, Rees was asked about his prospects today. * * * “If we get out of this 2-2 we have a go at them tomorrow,’” he said. ‘‘The boys who win today wil] be full of cockahpop tomor- b) é row. Cockahoop. Rees spelled it ou€ \It means, he said, his boys would ; 4 be full of vim and vinegar. ‘won in England in 1957, had quite | : . Pontiac Central conquered pre-|* Scare in yesterday's four Scotch Wings Shooting: to Regain 2nd TORONTO # — A bitter three- way dogfight for second place in the National Hockey League hae developed with the Detroit Red Wings losing their once-firm grip on the lofty position. The Wings are embroiled in a battle with the Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins for the runnerup slot behind the runaway Montreal Canadiens Detroit plays the Maple Leafs here tonight with a chance to regain undisputed possession of second place. The Red Wings. completely cooled off after their sensational start, share second with the Boston Bruins, cach with 15 points, Toronto is right behind with 1! and can vault all the way to sec- by beating Detroit tonight The Bruins, who climbed into the itie by trouncing Detroit 83 Thurs- day, are idle tonight. * * * The Red Wings have won only lone and tied two of their last six games after thelr quickest geta- way in years had zoomed them into first place. Detroit returns home tomorrow and faces the fifth-place New York Ra~gers, victors in only two of 13 games. Billy McNeill, whose wife Joan died of polio last week. is expected to rejoin The Kid L'ne over the weekend, OPEN-7 A.M. TO 10 P.M. Monday thre Saturday KUHN AUTO WASH 10 W tteren Across from Firestone Nutrilite Food 4, Fox Cleaners 2. | Fo ‘South Lyon Defeats — wo Y 1 1 Newberry Mkt 23 | Schafer Eleven, 19-6 Capito! Barbers 22 | Nutrilite Foods 20 4 - . |Boy’s Club ) ! South Lyon came up with a big!geaman Mite. / ° 13-point 3rd period to defeat | Fox —— - i : 8 ‘ole ° | Wyandotte Shafer 19-6 and finish|an Atuminum 9 13 lits grid season wi 43- |Pontiac Motor 9 13 its grid season with a 43-1 record oe = a . a last night. Prostop Inn 7 4 W. Root Beer 4 20 MEL JOSEPH Dave Wren and Harold Choate “ tallied the touchdowns which broke i 6-6 halftime tie. Jerry Duncan had scored for the Lions in the Mel Joseph, 5-10, 175-pound jun- ior, started the scoring for Clark- HOCKEY AT 4, GLANCE SATURDAY'’S SCHEDULE NATIONAL LEAGUE 7 Never can tell what can happen on a hunting trip! a RN aera ge a _ scored 25 or Minneapolis. and performed well overall in | ston in a 28-12 triumph over ; . ‘ ya te (AP euart, 152-pound DETROIT MINNEAPOLIS Romeo's 18 upset of Troy. He | Bloomfield Hills and ran well OPenins period. _ Detroh’ at Toronto ami's toug! aeeh Se . err . GFT stands $11, weighs 190 and is a_ before leaving the gamé in the . ; a SSS CTR TNE : ~ . quarterback, _scored one touch- Contin 3 : 3 ike 0 |2 °3\ senior Ist half with a knee: injury. if _ vache going On G down and broke up two North iar $ 717 Foun = 8 925 - apres hunting trip, make sure Carolina drives Friday night. | McGuire 2 6 10 ard 611 that you carry Sports sparking the Hurricanes in a 14-7 Lore 4 311 Hawkins OS oe ag bbyiey s Ouaie . football victory over the Tar|Cebie ; ce Krebs ", 3% Will Become USGA Leads Ar my to — . __ Liability insurance. This ‘fees «$3 Fleming = 8 8 ED ; will protect you against every unforeseen even- Heels... ” Noble 6 612 smith oo 3 Oxy In January H t ] T ] . amazing little Curci got tne stetae 28, eer) ; ep agona It e tuality, from smashing a farmer's window yo! iiiaial tachdewe b. oi imacspelis, 28 98 18 33 $1 3-43 NEw rome ey . Jean. G ‘ne oes net with buckshot to accidently shooting a human - oc ach, Calif., will! = : . - passes set up the other in the iy a Geenne’s weealen record 40 be being. It will protect you against costly law- F Wi $1 succeed John D, Ames of Chicago} pbaae its. Thi i : third period. an Wins $13,725 intact and Army still is*the Hep- . suits. This type of policy costs very little. It can In between the scoring forays, as president of the U.S. Golf Assn.|tagonal Cross Country team cham- be writt t basi ; Curci stopped one North Carolina; CHICAGO W—An unidentified lat the annual meeting in Janv- | pion. | written on a term basis. See us for, details. threat by knocking down a ‘pass) racing fan won $13,725 at Sports. |@°Y. * . | The 61, 23-year-old Army senior | = am er at the goal line, checked another; man's Park Friday by selecting wR from Sacramento, Calif,, easily 6 rr intercepting a pass and round-| all five winners in the daily Clock, a former president of the; won the individual title yesterday | : A st a I A | a out a brilliant night by putting) double quintet. California’ Golf “Assn., heads the|over Van Cortlandt Park's 5-mile| 256 S Saginaw FE 8-4541 USTIN-ROrVe gency, nc. the Tar, Heels in a at one| The lucky better selected the slate of officers presented Thurs-|course while leading the Cadets '| . 70 W. LAWRENCE AT CASS stage with a Sl-yard punt dead to! winners from the fourth through (day by the USGA Nominating/to their second straight champion- | % _ FE 2-9221 the 7 ys the eighth races. Committee ' ship. - aeesenene i ’ j 4 “ : : ,*7e . . / PeheLs ma . . ry ; a ‘ | ° ; THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959 M , 3 . ’ i they +4 "og ‘ : y a ai pee aes e soe Ss . ‘ OY ’ masiab — Special or any type of woedwork after fin-|shrink,. loosen or stain. bstitute for Closet ‘a ba « 4 hie S . share ts yen me Now We | Pour insulating ‘meteyiale, gine or Old Time Hatrack ; RET daa te Pe ' Ao eee as inexpensive and re-usable, 4 tt coats and Sigh La Sd al ee aes (Concrete Anytime | senate Pontiac Electric Supply Co. Raph orstredy: SG ee ae. ee crele Any aap ; ‘as | a . . They are said to permit the Electrical Distribus f | filled is a wintertime poser. In- | BUFFALO, N Y. (UPI)—Nation-| .oncrete to harden properly by esertOutors jor jexpensive and goodlooking hat = jal Gypsum Co. has developed two|keeping in the heat. . © Wiring Supplies @ Light Fixtures @ Motor Controls racks made of natural wood (wal- - eae eae a oS | new products it says “could revo-/ The company said Thermaform teak, mahog: knobs eo “Ny Pi) sag lutionize the yearly cycle of heavy|is for walls and Thermaslab for FE 2-9279 mt aka Kl ae SF eee, § | construction.” |concrete floors. Both will be on or hats or coats, can be mounted ef Ee Dean D. Crandell, vice president|the market before the end of 1959. HOURS 8 TO 5 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY on a wall. ae More decorative, more expensive and equally useful for storage are narrow strips of black and brass. Square brass -hooks anchored be- tween two black strips swing out ede when needed for coat or hat stor- ti age, When not in use, the hooks tec are flat against the wall, forming fia decorative pattern. ‘ _|in charge of research for the firm, } aa eee ne © oem kane = eRaad jnoted that in the past when con-| lerete was poured at temperatures! lbelow 40 degrees ‘‘it usually | 3 BEDROOMS |failed to develop satisfactory set-| $100 MOVES YOU IN! {ting action or performance.” WALL-TO-WALL CARPET National Gypsum’s new proed- 135 W. KENNETT ucts — Thermaform and Ther. | ae SuPF ERAT AARNE RAN a ae Ree: es 2432 W. Huron at Elizabeth Lake Rd., Pon FE 5-025! | MMMM NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1960 LET US ‘ FINISH YOUR i Oil Heati kes th eS Se nse W ¢ 6 | yo UJ re BEFORE — Workmen are beginning the job small. bedrooms and needed more room. They of building an addition to the Samuel Ashley also wanted a garage that they could use as a . _ pla I ning your home | James V. Sayers Home _ JFair VIEW HILLS a Constructed by Son sunita home~ on Inglewood: The family had only two recreation room. om Page 11 | | $11,990 And Shell Heating Oil (Continued trom Pace 1D | atu bwlae : } __ the refrigerator there are more is your best buy because... 4 now, into a large family room or bedrooms. Let us build that un-used attic into more live-able room for you. We will help design and modernize your home for you. Many building problems can be easily solved if you call Oak-Wood Building & Material Co. | cupboards. Accessories are Brown inserts in the beige tile floor set ‘the color scheme for | copper. | he recreat . | poor tile te beige with mans | (E,Feezeation foom. The butt | ATOOWVIERR |= wo MONEY DOWN—UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY ’ | colored spatters. Cabinets and | the exterior wall and makes < It’s safe... per ales aerate pmerepeme wall and makes an | WACUUM FREE PLANNING SERVICE . . .. _o. ‘ I birch. Walls above are cream. ee SALES an With oil heat, your fuel and air ignite within the combustion Counter tops are yellow with Bult up bricks, capped with and SERVICE stone make window seats at the . ‘ t picture window overlooking the Retherined Dealer lake. A brick planter is placed FREE PICK UP just-inside the door. Walls are Expert paneled in knotty pine. Furni- Pad Reece ture down here is rustic in style BARNES HARGRAVE and sturdy. 742 W. Haren St. FE 5-9101 Free Parking at the Deer beige squiggles. The curtains are striped in gray and brown. {The soffit is pap red. chamber. There’s no possibility of dangerous unseen leakage—no worry about reduced fuel flow when a cold spell hits. OAK-WOO0D MATERIAL. CO. 24 Hour Answering Service 1006 Joslyn Road, Pontiac FE 3-7925 STHNMUILANUNNUULINNULSAUONUGSUONUGOOOUUNAOLUUAOOUUAAOOUUOAENOUUOAROUUA Ai In one corner cf the breakfast It’s cle an... room an attractive brass basket . ng: . ider plant. The table Shell Heating Oil is refined for clean-burning. And when you heat pels . a op vaaacution with oil, exhaust is discharged outside of the home. | marble. -Steel framed chairs have striped plastic upholstery in- Ba r-Lavatory ls 7 | — HUHAANAUUUUUUUULYAQ9000000000FOUGUOGYOQOQOQNEOEOREOEUOOUUUUQOUEEEEEERTEOOAUEOOGAOHOEAAOAOOEUEEREUUTUUUOOUAAEAAGEEAEE | | | | | outside grill on the cement patio | | | | Sulit , * It’s economical... | beige, brown and gay. . : n irc e | ® It’s true that the initial cost of your equipment is slightly greater, is aqua sculptured carpeting. Che a 10 Build because your oil burner is a quality engineered mechanism. But | aed aad oe lower ta | p ' oil gives you more heat per dollar. What's more, there’s no costly them. In addition to a desk and a ae : it $ Easy to Insulate pilot light to keep burning year-round. a Dookease kee: ee: Oss eR | maatecal way . i bulid «eink . , |equipped bar area and a powder = The bathroom has two shades | = ‘ |room in the basement is to locate Y rf th You get these SCIVICES... alee _— Gah, “ta ure the facilities on opposite sides of a our ome e nson ay! With our Certified Comfort Heating Oil Plan you get automatic | fixtures and. the ceramic tile vantesy cee wane supply ; ; . refills... free tank protection against rust...metered delivery | vanity top. io aqua and lines. Sounds like a frightening undertaking? . the pink curtains have an aqua =| the wall also will : receipts. . aad peek dian ) Co rccerly pico Marne mt It need not be—just one stop at Benson . | Bob’s room is pleasantly mas- |Since it carries no structural load, . . | | ee ee Se ee ee a ters big pockets a Lumber Company will set you up with \ i valls. Th hite curtains | Oversize medicine and storage ca ; . ee ee aie |ost a Meee oe every detail you need to insulate. You | - them. Th ad and | An attractive bar-lavatory layout H Ww U | ae ae “re brillonanks color. | with a common plumbing wall was get more warmth, spend less on fuel, | , int little black | featured in a recent issue of Pop- : : : ouses Warm Up ee eet ete aia, [ular Science magazine. A unique when you install insulation yourself. to Shell | Sayers’ bedroom. Otherwise the {hideaway idea feature in the mag- furniture is pale gray. Walls are jazine's design was a hinged bar ; : |that swings around to cover the pink and ——— isink when it is not in use. M A REN CON | MORE LILA | P ’ oda Lilac flowers on a white ground | For 2 gecd-lesking yet ssanl | ' S18.a7Get veowees Do It T y Ss : tical decor, the walls, bar, lava - Wint Is H e * | carries out the color scheme "| tory and sink counters are cov- | -d LUMBER + Biuclers SUPPLIES *FUEL er ere | both bedspread and curtains . : oF "an NA tt MO nt atl ered with plastic-surfaced hard. [| = - Tomorrow! | L The curtains have some pink in board A handsome woodgrain | 1 549 N SAGINAW ST. Pontiac 6, Mich. Tee FE 4 2521 - e them as well. gives the bar area an informal | ; Down in the basement there's | ernie while . distinctive a a compact little kitchen in the | ™marvie pattern om the twin lava: | veseeemn ere nmErenrnEES inks 5 spieae , : tories and side walls accents the | 9 Se PE Fd : RE : FE 2-8343 590 S. PADDOCK ST. EY ee rarer a rem, | colertal wall pancie tn the powder | cae igeat cake | a ‘i New decorating fresh We warml mmend ou tot us large storage area. Near the Highly-resistant to heat and =. cw ec Ing CSS y reco Fi ry door opening to the lake side (moisture, this hardboard never re-| fl BL . : . —_]\ is a dressing room and shower (quires refinishing Extremely easy | New exibility — —— |to maintain, even hard-to-remove | i: . . . : stains can be wiped off plastic-| a7 lighting by CHANGE YOUR OLD STYLE Weight and Cord |*~ cc) el all | r — LIGHTOLIER | A free plan showing construction , > g : | details for a bar-lavatory arrange- s s ment built from a common plumb- | $ ing wall can be obtained by writing | : An eye-catching ® a postal to Marsh Wall Products, | 7 silhouette for your Inc., Dept. PR-2, Dover, Ohio. | dining or living room; dinette, playroom. ee t . “ . t Pesce coe gna Rp senbet * Sweeping (21”), shim- | hous s. The home| . »Efficien «Economical = - Convenient J ea ee sane nue mering brass shade i worth $25,000 before the mortgage | Cal dle" is paid. cheerful “twin Ae , | effect. Plentiful diffused 7 © Save 65°/, on Air Infiltration downlight plus BS Be ——y soft play of uplight. r _— © Get 200 more inches of glass Raises, lowers — . and with Lightolier’s wall opening ingenious new ceiling ; | track, can be installed a © Have a counterbalanced window tll as enveliee” at xi BLDG. & SUPPLY CO slides along your that always operates easily —_, " rs ceiling. 5 © Give your home the modern look NO PAYMENTS be : ’ TIL 1960 ON Quality Workmanshi AVERAGE SIZE ALL _—LESS: THAN @ Family Rooms . ea READY TO SET IN 00 © Garage fol i eclin i $ @ Kitchens Stop in Anytime From 8 A. M. to 5-P. M. Tuesday Thru Friday— oe ; Monday 8 A. M. to 9 P. M ee WALL .. . COSTS. @ Additions _M. oer ye ten Ze Recreation Rooms KEEP YOUR HOME SAFE—Make Sure All Wiring Is Doné By a Licensed Electrical Contractor rPuRp FE 3-7833 1b eae —nietipa maar : @ Aluminum Siding Electrical Heating Specialists ' vt scout ate Standard Electric C a Se as - a : s ‘ ¥ (me ete 175 South i - ie ae ie s os =i Operators on Duty Saginaw Street FE 2-9261 92 W. HURON, Pontiac FE 3-7833 24 Hours a Da 7. FREE PARKING ADJACENT TO MAIN BUILDING - u y. a - eee : ial aes ae: Te eek EE Pw Pe ee ee eee g Sie se ti oS ill te el te er i ae ae det: iets ie » ora i +e" 2? oe — r SS . \ . . * eo , a2 bad ’ 1HE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1959 . indows Comply — Aan } tubs ¢ meen". With Council Rules PLUGGING IAMP TROUBIES Bathtubs Come Bes SALE primitive men and can still be . 2 found in “backward” cultures. | in ree yies | ST LEY Wood, meta!, clay and asbestos are) (Careful window planning makes one window no smaller than 24x30 arg ge nome roofing sag a bouse safer for its occupants, inc ee in permit easy escape 1n - oo _ : als, but the most popular of a case of fire anning the bathrooms for 7 says the S$ 1) H s Co 1 of today is the asphalt shingle with Te, Uivecaity Of Ilinois in its. 4. Floor to ceiling windows |new house or an existing house! co PORCH ENCLOSURES its coating of mineral granules copyrighted * cir ular, “Hazard Should start 6 ‘to 10 inches from} bec modernized? You may choose € ADDITIONS TE a Free Houses for All.” the floor to avoid the hazard of three different types of bathtubs. Common law marriages are Here are some of the Council's Mistaking the window for a door. | There is, first of all, the rec- BREEZEWAYS valid in 23 of the states scicocath . vhs svindons - ny! §. Minknum alll height for | tangular or conventional type of crs Alb ~~ nd ee | bathtub. More than 75 per cent . ore stairway er second floor should | ee bactibsdea ot thin’ Lyte ate: 5 teat FOR YOUR HOME - 1. To avoid collisions with pro- pe 36 inches, These should be | ir t ; : = ' rae | | rom 30 inches wide ‘ jecting awning and casement win- screened securely, but with | ee ae eee Ht the Satare nes Oil Burners sa ela planting heds should be put screens readily removable la | a front rim seat the outside width| Sal a. Servi beneath thin. never sidewalks. cane of fie. | / | |is around 33 inches. The inside es an ervice 2. All windows which cannot Building material dealers carry) lJ ERS width of this type of bathtub is | eg" be reached from. the ground or 4 wide variety of wood windows! from 27 to 28 inches. i * MOERY’S porch should be of a type that jn stock that are adaptable to all Nol This type of bathtub can also can ‘be washed from inside. wf these safety recommendations ibe obtained in other sizes such OIL BURNER yms ing = ————— U _ jas 442 feet long and 5!» feet long. | ’ 3. All major rooms, including 5 FE 2-4970 basement playrooms, should have Automobiles were first sold on The second style of bathtub is | ae a door leading outside, or at least the payment plan in 1905. PLACEMENI! square or nearly square. Some ——— SS bathtub | PTTT{ITit i manufacturers make a : aes PITTI Tree ier EEL | ef this size that is 48 inches | ae Pe. =| LAMP TROUBLES — Most lamp troubles are little ones that square whereas others make a | ee. m| can be fixed with a minimum of time and effort. Learn what to | fixture that measures 48 by 46 | ~~ : look for when the light goes out. . or 48 by 44. eta 4 ALSO This model of bathtub, which ci ee AILING : ‘Let's Throw Some Light > site's’ ste Maina Sai ; : RON nr seanaicdly } g ‘ |\bathing area on the diagonal, is CUSTOM R popular because it serves as a ALUMINUM WINDOWS & DOORS = | Fora Step in Beaty &0N Lamp Difficulties = wwe" @ AWNING WINDOWS e — €. ‘he third style of bathtub is mor CHECK THESE FEATURES: a There’s not much reason for'no obvious trouble the switch is arhone: eee than bathtub, @ HORIZONTAL SLI DERS Ge Lit Tet j @ One-Piece Constru-tios : st ix about 42 inches by from 29 : P eva ur =a APS orn. Get ¢ >w socket. t is about 42 inches by from 2 Tee mnt TEd Permanent Beau—Royged “homing m lamp any amiss a MOEN Gk 9 ow SIA ye ty 38 iehes and from 10 19 1 © JALOUSIES © ie Tr en oar so long yc af « _ . ay — om -ayagrewerid ti stand looking at it anymore. bought and used in the old brass !"C hes deep. Like the square bath, ae edi * pecification shell. A cardboard liner goes be- !¢ too, has a built in seat or a seat * 7 @ Strong Reirforced Casting w Short of a complete smashing tween the insert and the shell for 0 the rim. It is ideally suited as DISCOU NTS ¢ 1 OE @ Avoid Messy Installation @ there's little that can go wrong insulation. Connect wires the same 4 Shower receptor, as a foot bath, Wiese and asa child’ s bath. iY) * eg with one that you can't repair,way you did in the plug, in a OR h See i © ' é ef EE=”.s @ easily and cheaply. clockwise direction. yynnntt _ UP O i a Cl @! Next time a floor or- table lamp| CORD — If it's frayed or brok- WHEN You HEAT=* Wh TO Oo Slippi mn Free Estimates — We Deliver Anywhere! Satety. Trnad Reduces Sipping begins to flicker or won't even} a ee where also = i 3 UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE Wllight, check it over yourself. It), 1. oes on and off a5 you move i é light g you y 4 @ won't take long. And a lamp that’s : z A. i. the wire that’s your trouble. When ® giving trouble should not be kept di Sin service without being repaired the ae the socket end. BUILDERS 4 w The fite hazard can be great. P _ : -- 6497 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 3-7715 bf First, check the obvious cmt aay — ne —— dod you ee ving ! The <| and : © things. Is the bulb screwed in in modern fuels deserves : : PTTTTTTTTTiritittee LLL tight? Is it a good one? Try re- age, a cafes eee earl best ia modern equipment. CONTRACTORS PT aaa teeta placing it to find out. Is the and pull 4 back thréugh Play safe. safe. Be sure. Call ED f Wholesale Prices % lamp cord plugged in? Is the , a or a ACCEPT NOTHING BUT and Complete Information : 3 & fuse' blown? Remember it's cheaper and 5 safer to replace any of these parts a ; gw If it’s none of these things, then arn F | A ~ check the three main parts of the |r. nae certain eh ae | Mi 6-4188 FE 2-1684 ‘ a lamp: plug, cord and. lamp socket. is disconnected before working on Biaua——MD HEATING PLUG — The prongs lose their jt. =) @ springiness after a time. Spread) | NY TYPE f WORK Nee ae ane eee etten (U Col Wark EQUIPMENT A oO @ crip in the outlet is any better. Use Color in orkshop | ™ Make certain that the terminal Effi Tool THERE'S NOTHING FINER BUILT! RR RE igh hat the: wi as iciency oo De, ° 5 wana’ RaPERA TES . a screws are tight and that the wires | FREE HOME Lowest Prices , NO MONEY DOWN , a are securely wrapped around| Bold use of colors in your work- EER § mithem. If the prongs are loose OF shop makes it an inviting place | PLANNING : § ) Hi the entire plug cracked or broken |tq q handyman tasks. But| SERVICE N Eff tz : J WARP LG SEDO vow: o your handyman tasks u Ow im ec ; ; @ replace the plug bright colors can also help you * ~ BUILDERS. i ee - SUPPLY. co. bare wires to the terminal screws. Wrap the exposed wire | paint measurements in feet on) in mw shockwine. diréctien, Mike |these rafters and on upright posts. certain that the bared wires pitta don’t touch each other. 0 es > ~ FOUNDATIONS n s HOUSE RAISING ‘code’ the contents of drawe = aa gw Cut the wire just back of the T | plug. Pull the two wires apart |29d cabinets. 2690 WOODWARD e KITCHENS e ATTICS bd RECREATION ROOMS ° BATHROOMS | for about two inches. Then | Keep pieces of developing Proj Across From Ted's Drive-in @ PLUMBING @ HEATING @ SHEET METAL WORK @ scrape about a half-inch of in- |°Cts in cabinets of the same color. | \ Mi 6-4188 FE 2-1684 @ ulation from each one. Run |And when painting the rafters oa | s both wires through the new plug, died hippie a maki ng] ee tie a double loop knot (Under. | Tulers’’ of them to help in visua Open. Mon. - Sat. S| writers’ Knot) and connect the ('2ing larger projects and in esti- 9 A.M.-7 P.M. Closed Sundays = jmating the size of boards. Just a ow a a a a There are several new patented @ plugs available that will save you all that work. Simply insert the lamp cord without spreading the | D 7 M Building Service | FEderal 222 "oo — insulation and make - contact. These plugs only will! 2255 E. Walton Bivd. Open Daily to 9 P. M. ~ work with flat rubber-coated lamp Corner Opdyke Sunday 12 to 4 =f © cord SOCKET — Dismantle, but pull CI . EVENINGS and SUNDAY OR 3-2276 @ pull the plug first. Look for loose TIPLE eC blll lelleba tsi broken connections. If there's) HOME IMPROVEMENT 10% OVER COST! If You Call Right Now NO PRICE Increase at BIG BEAR SPECIAL FINANCING— We'll gladly accept cash, of course, if you want to handle it that way. But if you prefer or want . credit, you can take advantage of Big Bear's exclusive Personalized Budget Financing Pian. This wonderful plan permits you to lump all your payments — including mortgage and any other outstanding bills—into ONE lower month- ly payment. Take to 15 years to pay. No charge for this valuable service. NO PAYMENTS ‘TIL ‘60 — NOW... During This Double Feature Pre-Thanksgiving Special Only... We Will Completely With Every Job YOUR ENTIRE HOME! . , a © Complete Frome @ 4 Side Walls Ut Signed Between : 4 @ Pius Entire Attic .. ; ‘i =n ONT $ ace Sak : SIDING ony *16" Finish Shell Homes*39 ~:~ ADDITIONS 22° | : sia — NO MONEY DOWN ter Me Month Per Pla ‘ em ten 8349000 “tg” || THANKSGIVING COMPLETE SERVICE BY PONTIAC’S LEADING HOME REMODELING COMPANY TURKEY You can have fuel savings up to 40°4, plus a comfortable, draft free, healthier — ‘ an ot 4 sf non. , ; is is just our way oO home with our installation of fire-proof, non-settling Owens -Corning Fiberglas. showing you that it PAYS LET EXPERTS DO IT DEAL WHERE YOU’RE CONFIDENT @ TO TALK TURKEY with ” Pontiac's oldest Insulation TERMS ‘oO MONEY DOWN—UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY! [§ Company. | NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1960! Call , S a eee aw) FE 5-8405 AMBASSADOR INSULATION | ::e::---e3. CALL ANYTIME! Operators on Duty 24 — a Day NG test aa Natit hs i aera ais iy oe SG, SC Call FEderal 5-8405 2110 Dixie at Telegraph Free Turkey? "You Bet! CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 W. HURON ST. mache a ; : / F ; ; ; * me ‘\ i : Fi . 4 \ = ~~ 7 ‘ ~ | . /~ _*% ~ * . . Sete oF : . . 2 - , rte . . ' “ ee ‘fp Pub Sal Se re) ron ray 2 rs : . \ - Wainted Real Estate 30 Ren A shed _ est SONTINC*PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVE) IBER 7. 1959 Peni eee ; en : = -_——-— ——— a = y 6 . Yie Ar “CI AND ON te Fere La Rent Fel nad Unfurnished 38 Rent I Houses Unfurn. 40 CARNIVAI By Dick Tar ee ; ne ee a Pa | Y. SEVEN Nee PE , ¢ Ww : — PE SS aos | “« tnt 2 RMS. PRIV. BAT H, Se Gals, & back: pi he 5 ‘RM | WARM NEAR UNION LAKE Call before 3 p.m FE 5-2856 CHEM Gente DORN ice ban 92 W Huron FE 3-7833 PERSONALIZED HOMES (.o Per month. includes taxes sta $12.50 week. 1 baby Permit- FE 4.6246 ee 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX _Rooms with Board 43 = redroom nome 1 je bath Ly) DONT LET LACK OF CASH STOP | a ‘payment MASA Or BN aoe PEP ALR OPIN ng room, kitchen. utility rie. - you from owning your own home | ROCHESTER 1 137¢ ADAMS. 3 BED- CLOSE TO SEARS. F E| ted. Call after 4 p‘m. FE 2-2213 See SEABORN N room brick, 2 FINANCE, 1185) aoe car garage 1J4x ea TO CLARKSTON Excellent e257 3-4 RM. AND BATH APTS. UPPER ° ROOM BRICK. NEWLY DECO- NOW AVAILABLE LOVING CARE. FIN trie water heater, oil auto. 2579. —______+__+_+=_=_=_| Heat furn. PE 2-7832 fated 24 Glenwood FE _ 4-070? lady. MA 4-2269 INDE OODSEOR matic furnace Wisner & are N Perry FE 8-966) _ ; ; Pi lot. No basement Open! . 2 BR home on Waldon na ban 7 RMS. & BATH COZY & CLEAN iq RMS. & BATH COUPLE ONLY eee OSS HERS >) BEDEMENE ROOM AND BOARD & DINTE HWY, oe ee — “100x200 seaee Toe, furnace. Lot tion Adults PE 8-3352 eves — |4 ROOM ce Einegrers_ = }7 RMS CLOSE IN. NEAR “SUPER - Nicholie & Harger Pa. > FE 8-9855 i ee home with acreage. 12x27! 3 houses on 1 fee 1 | - ; bliin ca Nekome, Wt pat son. ‘hot water ond beni Far Ges neat TY eta & bus line 531, NEST HURON FE 5-818) _ Convalescent Homes 4 | 247 WEST BTRATHMORE house. Adjolaiae ean neces | store: aed (mee us-10, near J.C. HAYDEN Realtor j radio FE 2-4849 : - | Ss an ransportation. §3 7 — ‘ week, PE 5- | Gispes, Phone FE 4-1106 or MI! ATTRACTIVE 2 BIROOM LAKE | SEAGHFGLY Sp «i! % HONGEMEDL BGk Poe a SEY DOW for price & ‘terme Derses Call) will handle ad bad “ounttet PE 8-0441 2 ROOM "FOR S oREING MEN BON Se front home, until June 1 Em CEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM RANCH “ gerly people loving care given RELIABLE PE RSON CUCKLER . ai. oC bite ge REALTOR pen tp Bune lito 4) Plus OE ede rm. Close to Fisher 4 sau coe ae EVERYTHING _ 3-0134 Diackee take herd pee those you love. 26 hour ‘mursine * “IN. A ew REALTY UL 2-2930 $1200 Dow , ate. Inquir i ~ a ———— | privilege 7 . N, ie SO Re PE ery Mzabeth Lake BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED 6@RM Fofestal FE $-1473 care, doctor on call. Trained pet- 2 bedrooms. almost new Base- Saginaw PE 4-4091 SEMINOLE HILLS. « BEDROOMS | * 2.0 te oe ce 2 RMS. NICELY RR Ty, Gas: house for rent all year ‘round | Gor, : - — sonnel. Good pg food ment, automatic heat and hot EXCELLENT 4 BEDROOM Brick | baths. brick exterior, automatic) Lak ae, eet GT. resale. heat. Pvt. ent Babysitting if. 4 RMS.. UPPER. MODERN. WEST Cail from 1000 to 500 at OR COLORED, 3 BEDRM BRICK, Flexible rates. FE 4¢-6018 water, storms. screens Vacant. Seminole Hulls heat, fireplace. carpeted living. | ale vileges Brick, 3 bec!- needed 101 8 Paddoc Side. 319 Liberty Adults only FE _3-0582 full basement. 880 mo FE 8-6819 WE OFFFR THE FINEST IN Pen. immediate possession Walk SEMINOLE HILLS Lot win | fining, ‘balls, Basement garage.) room) 1! pan OF, th bea 2 FURNISHED ROOMS, ary TO, —77339_or FE 2-123 CLEAN 3 ROOM HOUSE AND CLARKSTON equipment ano service, at rea- /© and look at it and call owner sell or bulld to suit saree Oy aay immediate pos- and dink val ween downtown, baby welcome. FE'S RMS & BATH. NEWLY DEC bath. acre of ground. Call afte: GI owner 3 bedrooms. 2 baths spnapie rates Men or women. Bed _ 10 8-9851 FF 5-8183 Ask for DON pong By appointment. Charles kitch ee ell Breakfast area 11 2-2390 or FE 5-160. PE 2-4536 or FE 3-9259 _4 pm_ PE 3-726) FMA 51430 7 of ambulatory 24-hour care. FE $450 DOWN DRAYTON PLAINS. CUSTOM 8UiLT LAKE HOMES. State Bank pee” rr. Pontiac | sash and screed (ors. stopm 2', ROOMS KITCHENETI£ ON 5 ROOM AND BATH. UPPER. WEST * I eats | | vic : CLAKSY*ON 3 BEDROOM RANCH —£2225_ - 2 bedroom modern Fenced in TWin Lakes Village, W. of Pon- SEE THE “VIKING” Io tl lawn. 2 years old. Neat and ri Pontiac Lake. Modern Clean, ga, ‘ide Call after 5:30 OR 4-0109 ‘Nzabeth Lake Front 1'2 bath. near schools Lease Rent Stores 46 =i yard) 2 ‘ots. near Pine _ tac. Starfire Brig Co EM 4-653:. Lake Bstatee F NG” AT JUDAH Transfer only feason {3 Rice ; heat Responsible people OR 5 LARGE ROOMS LOWER 5450 hosed furnished year-around 3 rent. option to buy MAple 5-1537 oo : nob School Must sell MY 2-3791 — —— —<———— s es. PE 2-9122 Le 3887 Aquarina, Lake Oakland }-§292 after 6 pm month. Children welcome FE part gume,home $100 per month FOR RENT IN ROCHESTER. ULTRA-NEW STORES. Ww DRAYTON -< ,SALLEE WOODS SUB, | —Hetgnts or 3-4714 ‘ 2 & 3 ROOM. UTILITIES FUR. _5-8827 =e room duplex with garage in town side. FE 2-216 ens “AINS Brick 3 bedroom r=-nch ~ nished. good laundry off State 3 RM & BATH HEAT FURNISHED HOME YEAR Near schools Call OL 2-4622 Be 1 acre. # room house. 1% car Ready to move i “3 si ty. Bteinbaagh ee _ ‘& HOT around Reasonable 8990 Pontiac FARMHOUSE NE Ly Rent Office Sr 47 cerage Large tool shed #4.000 mc beak ret Mckee ne / ROOMS. re by Nev. 1 aie2 ch rent ee Bes “ "Stove hea $0" ok , pace We will arrange terms to fots FHA mail Pacing peli 3 HING FUR - ure - ae a —— = : per ontn ~ 4 , - payment « nished, for 1 or 2 tore sid eo _Aubura Heights ce LAKEFRONT MODERN Lincoln 1-6937 ; DOWNTOWN PONTIAC. NEW LAKE PRIVILEGE a Open ote 280 W. Yale. corner S ; Phone FE 5-8339 5 ROOM APARTMENT. STOVE AN ~ aon ee ca rpeted HOUSE FOR RENT. 2 BEDRMS building. Beautiful panelled ot- Will build 3 bedroom f¥nch_st ea two lakes, nice community - ey 3-9036 or UN_ 4-4586 4 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE refrigerator furnished. s85 month i 11 «First time offered ROSIN Acdereon eli RcaduewWaiee fices divided to suit vour busi-, home on your ty sty! e| each 3 bedroom almost finished SYLVAN V VILLAGE TRI - rier Apply at 103 Bloom arge living room Tiled t J t | y ot Full basement! home Lot 170x300 Pull j Bee this b and bath Couple only $13.50 ya oomfield Terrace bath ord ness Up to 1400 sq. ft. of clear oak floors, tile batt price is beautiful model at a os Paddock &t next to St. Joseph ‘Hopital raided room Very easily HOUSE ON WATKINS LAKE 6 space available Lights heat & boards. OR Tes. _birch cup- $5,000 Terms that will suit you Glenwood. A M_ Cattel!. ei ‘Nothin D 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT 5 ROOMS UPPER. GAS HEAT i ie ee Till June rooms: OR 3-7459 oo ~ parking included At $75 per mo RUSS McNAB ART MEYER | == oe g own everything furnished. Men only | Kaus e's ie near hospital er longer lease Rsk ae IDEAL FOR A THRIFTY COUPLE and up. PE 2-6280 after 10 AM CRAWE ‘ORD AGENCY Jes es MAYBE RD. 3 $10 week. FE 4-3135 : E people : ePOneture small emi-modern home. Good PRONT OFFICE. 20x2¢ FEET 258 W Waiton PE 8-23 ths, 2 car garage, MISTER GI — Do you need ; : - i Ea 4 ‘ 7 te a t , Carpeting, $1,000 down Take) room for th 2 ROOMS UTIL $i2A WEEK > ROOM” SFMI-MODERN WEST D hy S : residential section. $3750. Ployd &¢ross from new bowling ale. on ASSOCIATE BROKERS oo Ss Pin MY 3-185 Ne) or that growing fam- Howard Street $35 orothy Snwder Laver der K Elizabeth Lake Road P. 7 over pymts. OR ,_3-6267 lly? Let us shi FE 4-8612 | a month FE 4 A Wer ent. Realtor FE 5-6105 arKing Investment Company, Inc — SSUES ot oaah nc tbeded OW you this a | 4. : ‘ A Ne Neat hd bate bes tae : —— h 2 RMB GROUND FLOOR” PVT : hoor & BATH L 001. Wightend Ra uso: aia HARBOR ¢ ROOMS © niched EB 'S-2gqj) Utllitivs fur- 443 Orchard Lake Ave PE 8- -9663 EASY TERMS 7 "beat ne ae 3, with fireplace, al weed ent Adults. PE 4-1319 ‘ OWER_ IN - bath $40 per month or will = = =. _ N c- dinin oo Gebed Gia aa UE Pontiac MI_ 6-8050 _ . ones rand 3-3303 or MU 4-6417 lease with option to buy with ro oflice “a ee cee a A B UILDE R ache wer tarenea Sec hacia 100" ae a“ ok Lot en win small breanien: Paddock. FE 2-7720 . e oamiks FRED sg ergs 3 dren wuss Coca gta down) payment 7 any type stibualnsceuone ake One-Stop Bldg. Service pargan riced ° ne! a. ae i &@ sun room > ceutra t ras . z room s wick Cinik Lame cent FE y Pay ed Extra mile otas hea ees ae $50. pe: FE El LOVE! mast? heat $0 eye month including be Aygo Sg open —— Ppt 2 a stage Good rental tec: THIS OLD HOUSE | me Basement. casa private entrance. utilities, wash- __ mon: S35 Fox EM 3-4005 2-4875 = +1661 pr IE rs ng assistants! tion §1.5 “| heat, 2 car garage. Han ing privileges. garage. 209 Nor- COLORED 3 1eEDROOM ,APART- TO cg COUPLE — 4 ROOMS LAKEFRONT 2 BEDROOM HOME pic orrices en ee = aan pe: fsountioed bose 21 vere Gare PONTI AC REALTY | ig my three. Rents agg Priged at £10:000 ton j an a Garage Garde with family room Auto oil heat SIDE rice L | and mortgage costs wi! : = ee water $80 month = | N space pri Let us fi get yours f * } AND BATH. LOWER UTIL TV.| Ine wtee a Gee In Commerce $65 EM “3-42b0 Only $75 per mo Call J A | 23-2144 Loe gure your needs 737 Baidwin FE 5-8275 | - work’ Priced as wie Ge ae! move you in. 1 child. FE 4-8612, 90 Cottage FE 8-0466 VERY FINE MODERN BUNGALOW . TAYLOR. Realtor OR 40306 | For ‘Rent Miscellaneous 48 J h Ly | ELIZABETH | LAKE ip ESTATES. J NE AR NORTHERN H1 a edroom. §& LAKEFRONT 2 s vw Mm 5 n home wit un I w } = , Lacomgt -4 pad Nap EN: | DFSIRABLE NEWLY. DECORATED. month PE 4- ee nace Aa ment coral on, age 1 STALL GARAGE. CAN BE oe O n J er ett oe kitchen, extra "ae ee. PE? son while, “con hone —— ) c t r 00 rt. a —— ——— > e privi ee rs, ce cae OE SL yeatite dis] West 8 ines ae WILL LEASE FOR 7 MONTHS Waterford Only $70 per mo Call, to repair cars. Commercial we . REALTY Lake Mt Small down pay-| TRADE FOR INCOME OR SELI.| le bath. Large - kitchen Baldwin bedrooms, tiled bath, Pull dinte, | N@wly decorated. modern. 2 ,nu-4_Tavler. Realtor, OR #:0306 | _PE 58-1081 mae Soniteerer_ Bd EM 3-6466 FE 5-7608_ mennnatee .perey: Saat) 2 Rytreom home, modern. FE; [ull basement and ly-car 3 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT "90M. spacious well-lighted living bedrm home. oil heat, 2 car LOWER LONG LAKE DISTRICT DOWNTOWN APPROX. 59 x BEACH DR_ 5 RMS $12 DOWN ~~ —— —_——____ _2-7151 a garace Just mortgage costs : ’ rooms We! @arage adults . : 2 bedrooms. Beach privileges MI 100 ig $17 wk. LI 1-311} ee 0 00 | 00S eet = Utilities included 52 Norton MA Well managed high-grade only. 608 E. Ken- 7 large heated basement sui a : 5-2438 | brick building Walking distance | _2ett_ FE 2-7215 — — a able for barber shop, basement BY OWNER. FOR SALE OR RENT FOR COLORED VILLAGE LAKEFRONT & LAKE pour 1 3} ROOMS NEWLY DECORATED to City Hospital Central High WALLED LAKE.) LAKE FRONT MODEDN HOME HALF = ACKF store, etc DAWSON & BUTTER 98 E Longfellow Immediate pos- 3 BEDROOM brick All on privileges New & used home All. Fin ACRE of land main floor 326 Mt Clemens and downtown No pets. adulis home. 5 rooms MArket 4-2080 iahion yp rg ae " ee ee eee eh Mined eee esa basement iaree aah priced) wk) terms bearer Case | he rig : ee ee only References : i ishing close $40 month Empire - This h e selection to ch ome 5 ) LARGE ROOMS $15 WEEK FE) Cail pean OPlY $6500 free ttving” tot ding Ce 2 or MU A825 “For Sale Houses (49), yeg.ao8Y OWNER, ale and’ can be bought for $20 STEELE RE me ng glving rm, Pull din. 2497 ning room . > “ ‘ soaps val 000 down with 1 REALTY. 1246 N. MIL- and LARGE FIVE ROOM APARTMEN $60 MU 9.2353 MODERN 8 ROOM FARM HOUSE , biocks from school near MSU O. balance at fordiRd. big kitchen down Pull b 3 LARGE ROOMS WITH BATH >? bedrooms West site i in the Ortonville area OA 8-294] 2 BEDROOM LARGE LIVING Garage iarge lot, tices 7 : 2aper cent interest, Pay- etreen Highland & | ment apf 2 s Heat f ; knotty ‘ ! Milford, Highi Economical coal oil pane oe — tushed | oe Phone FE 5-6143 no. Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 MAURER ST. 5 BEDRM BRICK ce eat. nicely landscaped. Pg Ro te, led bath $400 dn ile ine lude taxes and in- 42043 shland. Mich MU oe Rec room too $11 uave ae MA 5- ——~ ranch Ot! furnace, storms & $8500 GI. Nothing do 4 SCHRAM_ Realt WHITE L. NSHIP 4 RMS | e Brice with ap- ROOM Se OvAte ae LOVELY 3 ROOMS AND BATH 2-BEDROOM RRICK. —itens_$8_mo_FE s-619_ per mo Taxes & insurance in. BEAUTIFUL TREES 5-471 aiiinaled and bait: Be nantes PMS. seals Neantaliaa Nec d . oN - riv in . ~ 4 Sr ae = i) ble 2 edroor r ‘ a - ee . = dacs, Md Sekene Ge 6 ae) Ce oe Lake ara Adu GAS HEAT VACAN’ MACEDAY BAKE cluded OR 3-8021 home with lake privileges Paul! 'CRN LARGE PORCH Harp. _ CPt Needs repairs EM 30135 DRAYTON PLAINS AREA- derson. FE 5-7809 k 825 . ~é — Vi ANT 2 bedroom. like new 4072 Maid- 3 BEDRM LOG WITH FIREPLAC<« basement Auto Sil furnece: ‘cog floors, plastered. insulated | WALLED LAKE 2 BEDROOMS | Situated on a corner lot-175 LARGE ROOMS, UPPER PARK-| MONEY FOR i MOVING AND RE- $75 PER MONTH ee rec_ rm. garage. FE 2-4369 Drapes & rug included Only [8k* privs Tmmed poss $8500 Small down payment MA 4-1292 | 328 ‘This Cape Cod type ing space 102° Parkhurst FE BOARD FINANCE, Ties 8 = gg lost a eee nome LARGE Lo EL ae aia a ~ WEST BLOOMFIELD HILLS. 6444 throughout. The ‘ving roses 5-5502 _ry er- : 2 1m! ake privileges fully insulated _ Tamberlane Dr Corner of W ' ng room } ROOMS. NICELY PURNISHED |x FE 8-066! gn holie & €& Harger Co. Money POR MOVNG AND RE-| Aluminum storms. and. screens era ; FOR COLORED Maple Rd attractive 3 bedroom sited’ Gabe” a Mi Newly decorated Utilities. Adults NEWLY DECORATED 3 RGus 2 W Huron FE $2193 furnishing? Get up fo $600. SEA Drapes and carpeting $8500 ‘ull David Ward Young. Rit TWO 9 ROOM HOUSES ranch. separate dining room bedroom and beth down } 0 eS | cludes at and ho - AR INANC 1185 N Perry price. $500 down or trade ior : ee 2 ith 7 giass sliding doors t 4 bed af plgictlechanie TE IH ee) water” On bun Dine, ate Soonie | 71 7 BEDROOM $00 MO 803 TAN. St FE #-0601 what Dave you. OR 2 ee ate eT eet aie BEDROOM aw Street. Can be bought complete baths, large ‘kitchen | Moker "coal heats sand nee. ee ey | I yment Many fra | ng entrance. PES- 3745. Newly decorated 5 rooms and| — 2 7 BEDROSNT DUPLEX - - er ere e, t bedreoes — a END TERRACE Pe ae Prisilenes ‘Cail wees cial IWAN Wee SCHRAM. tached garage Lot 135 _ Pr may be purchased ty b god _ent _PES-3' _ _ s and. ~ — , le, 5 semi- : FE 4-2312 & ve 3 RMS. ERB APARTMENTS, 119! hash Re gee downtown | mocern house Excellent for crops 2 car garage, bsmt.. auto ge : _ - Realtor FE 5-0471 Terms can be arranged Also = for $11,600 with Just _ State Street. FE 5 203 | frigeratac water, stove and re- AUTIFUL » beef, Days WOodward 5-3840 or storms and screens, refrig: and a ier PINE LAKE AREA FOR SALE OR TRADE BY. OWN_) ee me Tichin Arron. BR crate ag ga Waa approni 7 ROOMS. “PRIVATE ENTRANCE | mast BOULEVARD HEIGHTS On SELLY ‘1300 evenings churches’ and “doretowee ols; brick dining area Large’ paris | i, Duplex on west side near | SIT or MA 6-661 soe Oh cece ne oes te an at t ' nt! FP ' SEL R . Dif : : t bli i _Padddck utilittes Ot NW fl eo eee 28 OF $75 PER Menern iiouwel letee lot. MY 3 BEDROOM tow down pr "Good cone » many extras $16.900 FE 8-0038 a Was titeat ce. coemicialy oe bola ide! Lake. for sale or rent R AY O'NE EIT abl OFFICE ham-Rochester area. Schoo! bus fols he uy from decorated Reasonable d ne Toom ranch home. fam- | ; i ee e down Se . 3 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS. Par : ($44 NB Boulevard at Valencia %¢, oot. Available immediately. aoe ment on contract or will trade | !¥ Foom. 1% baths, 2 car at- 262 8. Telegraph Rd. Realtor, no drinkers. 1048. Paddock ORCHARD COURT |2 BEDROOM HOUSE. GAN HEAT oareeen 71-0257. Eves and week- 2 BDRM. aa ee “FENCED IN WNER mo 2551 Pe Sena property. | tached gare e, also lots avail- | FE 3-7103 tune AT tf A pratt 4 basement. and x _ends ; ck y 2 C@r garage. Will- : 255 4 : n by appointment, Til- | 3 bel Sine ee ts WEST | APARTMENTS | _required Rochester "RE 21410" ROCHESTER. MODERN. DUPLEX. | oni s take a _ 6515 Dandison , — e-sser BR 3-8171 or MA — — mvt ent Auto heat. fenced back- on the corner of Green Lake kd model homes 3 & 4 bedroon = ) > = 3 ROOMS PRIVATE ENTRANCE Ate CONTE 2 Se FLOOR. FIRE- vara" Ref OL 6-0851- e and Dandison. Lake privileges = baths paved streets. communit FOR COLORED WEST BLOOMPIELD LOVELY 4 a aby welcome one — east A 2 BEDRM HOME, PVT BEACH water system Luke privileges or z y M home on 66 bedroom. many ext ' FE 5-5668 2 BEDROOM BREFZEWAY 4 RENT OR LEASE 3 BEDROOM private like Landscaped $2 * ft lot Can be : ; ras, lake priv- Haseltine i ee \ Cia priv $759 a 65 iia 5 sandscap $21 000 n bought fo ‘leges Publ} i 3 ROOMS AND BATH IN AUBURN hea Grate Soe slit Barage $25 every 2 weeks at pe i aa aie oe re ese own, $ per oa to li 00 . Term , Twin Lake 600 ceee 35d Pal month- schools near Sivkings parochial & | “11> . Pelahte, sverrthing farm. $16 8° | interested in busin payment if or (4 children welcome MAple 2? BEDROOM BRICK PULL BASE. Rd on Moe. Hightand "fined. School IVAN W SCHRAM. ses Se IARGER CO. 7 C's most exclusive. modern worth sh enil > 1965 ment At Lower Straits Lake Or: Kelly-Cook Inc EM 3-6531. Realtor FE 35-9471 3 ROOMS. DOWNTOWN AREA S18| metcony type oundinn development 2 RKGRGEL ee: 2-4 RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY 2 corner lots Room for 2 n a > sa ran ah ara sD a er aces ual entzance With fdivid- “rane area S88 me wah neon al. a bedrooms upstairs $11,500 xii FOR RENT SALE. LEASE Frames Some. win kt _ 3 A VERY Beautiful kitchens wit EM_3-6518 mere s sie ET ot el dled rick wit Rie . ments. Auto h va ial PE 5-4638 853 Woodland nets in aecarater cimte Coe heel 2 BEDROOM LIVING ~ Roo RENT WITR OPTION TO BUY John Ver ett I} hae cad \creave a we BRICK nan num storms and yr Mg os (eee ee ic. top Stove and refrigerato: bath. kitch 3 Wn 2 hedrm modern home Owner : . mM rea . Bue OY Chee ‘ uy CH down payments with low 3 RMS, BATH. NEAR TOWN FE adurnishe ; “6i tchen utility room Ul MY 3-371! = brick llome on 7 acrés A HOME 2 GARAGE M monthly payments. ° 4.4807 uto heat and hot water ‘softy fur 5 or UL 2-4910 a 5 tEALTY arge rooms. fireplace ful KNOTTY PIN . RECREATION ote -\3 ALL HOME. NEAR ELIZABETH 9203 Commerce Rd EM 1-645 basement 2 - ¢ gltacnRa ROOM $150 a VERY LOE ROOMS MODERM “nikhed Kitchen fan. master TV mg pM HOME, NEWLY DEcC-| Late Estates. partly furnished 2 BEDROOM ~ a oes . runge Ware Waneren 300 DOW H WEST OF PONTIAC Util. $65, PE 2-5408 or PE 4-3064 de and many other fine fea- 7 penkoon ae Phone FE 5-9095 ; 2 in capdel Gece ue on barr Igeal family home FE 2-2319 AFTER 4PM | a & ee a 3 RMS. & BATH. 31 1 STOWELL : E. . FURNACE 1 ee ee Gea te ge a ‘ 4 tear at epi Term oe j uto FE 4-2190. ADULTS ONLY Jan = Long Lake Road near S Al. L. E E W OODS St 8. ; ‘arp aoo 7 tea oweT Immeciate possession Cal i dR COLOR ED | $100 DOW N { a. pare ee About $250 = - | aia Se Will ren f IND J A TAYLOR Re ltor OR $650 WwN— > r ? y 3} RMS. REFRIGERATOR & STOVE |Manager ig Saimer St, Apt. 6,2 BEDROOM. MODERN rath or Tete Gok ee STEN | hema on 3 acres Gf lend ugar 4-0306 _ SOR ee et gt mnaroom MOVES YOU IN - All utilities. 13 Pine Grove | FE 8-6918 | _decorated $65 mo. 7 ae” | ment. tiled bath pds oe ‘West Branch Good huhting & basement aud eee pdt | ESTATE INCOMES 3 ROOMS A re oo HEAT. Open Daily & Sun. 10 am-9 pm j2 1 BEDROOM HOME. ~ MODERN.| ‘“creens Paving 280 W. Yale. _ fishing area. $4500. FE 8-2229 $6500 full price NO MORTGAGE COSTS | pa & peor - North | PRIVATE 4 ROOMS A N Newly decorated. OR 3-04 73 | corner Stanley FE 3-9036 or UN 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 3350 DOWN IN INKSTER PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT | Needs some + As Price. 3 FINE Sova AnD BATH, AUTO-| stove and Frigidaire. ay TH. | > STORY. POLL Ree | __ 4-4586 Balance $2,100 Payments $35 pe: i bedroom home tn. Inkste $500 DOWN—2 family income excellent buy 7 hte ie heat, ‘cueies preferred. | nished. 1 child welcome. UL 2-1320| _TOoms. Ottawa Hills mp SMALL MODERN _ phousE AND F mene OR 3-4264 AMNch Full basement asbe pipes fee Balen. in id | By Fisher Body. $3,209 full ~4032. Auburn Ave Aubu 7 REnNRAAL ah arage, ciean. aby welcome EDROOM BRICK — WOODED tos siding. aluminum asidins 2 e PEN | Price. Needs repairs Both 4 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND. _ Heights m3 ila ee HOUSE. INQUIRE 12 hone FE 5-1969. 6260 Elizabeth ot. 165° x 700. Completely fin- ior iiicrerie Nes See this today roperties vacant and can entrance, heat furnished. ast paul A. Kern, | | Myra Avenue. — | __Lake Road ished basement. attached garage : z Auto $1000 DOWN. Semi-b ; WEEKDAYS & SUNDAY 1.30 TO 6 seen anytime. side. near bus line. FE 2-79 au ern, Realtor 3 peak ee a DRAYTON — | SMALL CLEAN HOUSE. ELEC. chen of hae beater $38 fui 1 bedroom and tiled Gath down 2 blocks is ere | BRICK RANCH or PE 2-2185. fir FE 2-9209 rnishe OR 37917 ric range. refrigerator, picture ‘ as evenings 2 bedrooms u wall t nor of Montcalm _ entee CFE - 3 ROOMS, window, lake privile N aL > ¢ . : p o wall car- — se Lake. Michi 4 RMS. & BATH. COMPLETELY | -_ MODERN, AUBUR ges. No pets. 4-BEDROOSD IME peting. full basement with gas y ; . ehi- LF i es ETELY Upper Flat—Heated Heights, ‘Cail UL 2-2306 N 960. OR 34330 3 bi ROOM HOME heat A-1 condition in and oat ESTOWN REALTY | earpert bedroom brick with 8 |3005 AUBURN AVE. AUBURN HTS SMALL HOUSE 2 ull basement. Living room Call for a on decorated and re oon Mad eon Living room. dinette, bedroom , ag ge i hunni 33. FE #0534 bath. ne ee ig oie nile dining room and den : i ) : —" vs one oe Eye 1d pete s-s8T = ed im FHA terms and 4 RMS. & BATH. COMPLETELY kitchenette a 2 Auburn ee S ew oil FA furnace Garage On down or will rene for a7 >: ; RSE g. ECS furn. Newly decorated.‘ block| rear private yg 3 BEDROOM HOME GAS HEat | SAM WARWICK HAS IN SYLVAN 878° lot in good condition. $10 wen Wate & HUE Oba RILEY REAL ESTATE ak - {rom Broadway. All utilities furn.| Attractive four-family building | —C@_after 4 pm. My 3-2780 | Lake 3 bedrm. brick at 1924 900 terms OR 4-268 ari Elizabeth Lake Rd TURDAY & SUNDAY Gas heat. 44 Park Island, Lake| $75 per month Refer g.)3 ROOMS JAND BATH, Warwick. Carport. lake privileges C20) DOWN eo menoes( PE 4-118 FE 4-4821 Call FE 2.7273 Orion. Shown from 3 p.m. Sat. to _ quired. FE teferences re-| ~ of MODERN $125 lease. FE 4-5099 & FE 2-2105 “ * LAKE ORIGN § ROUMS & BAIH Ask For Mr. Castell ei 7 p.m. or call WEbster ‘UNF seat ea Cg | or PE 5-8985 i> = 3-2 TO COUPLE NEWLY DEC Incindes Binley costs on 2 bed- . modern lakefront: Owner. MY OARAGE TYPE Te soko - room m tT 1 6: " -37) 3 chen - i 1 vias” a peonNieand oa = RENT ER AOU pase HEN FURN orated. 5 rooms and bath. $55 includes taxes and insorance. Brie 3 BEDROOM BASEMENT — CUNY. gas hot water “on large 2 WEST HURON GA ae — © couple hours ee ma ; eae SES ‘ot Cali MY 2-1 ee eee GAS HEAT, iT, "WEST SIDE” 3 BEDROOM END TERRACE GA. odd Jobs each ape Bours. (" PANGS. Healt $250 down. $35. month FE 8-9770 Sean ae FE 5-8183 _week. Call F FE 5-9441 3 ae bath. Washer. ato ame Off Bade Refrig and 2-3204 2160 Mi5 Ortonville NA 7-2815 BY OWNER FE MANSFIELD ; 2 Bedroom rapt fie coat eure 4 RMS_ NICELY FURN.ALSO| refrigerator Second floor “A PE a-29 win Ave Close in VERY NICE MODERN” s RM. AND 4 ROOMS AND BATH. DUPLEX [0OMS. Dasement oll heat New and ready for you to move in | Wil Ua) 3 rms. $65 a mo. FE 44686 _ utilities furnished OR 37193 2 “SROROGH ~~ FIREPLACE ee Be ec ee ate TOL Madison Jt High & nee nen. —- Lacated. in the Walton. Opdyke I 4 ROOOMs AND BATH. PRIVATE WEST SIDE. S,AND_5 ROOMS WITH «quire 1858 Whit Lak IN WALLED LAKE 2 BEDROOM — ‘illo $43 monn “Or aes zie} His Bl immediate FHA Prone a Mg contract or entrance, heat bath. < ke Rad MU rege with option to buy } FE 5-0712 gh School Immediate | FHA Phone OL 1-7511 « 2-2110 In vielen ee, Labuk Gir ee el _4-1292 , — SE. 2 “HS cuparex $6950 Jess for cast FRANK SHEPARD. REALTOR NT SONS nity of Auburn. WANT to IVE i BinaitiGaa nN ROOMS 7 ‘na ta os _ 6 RM HOUSE. 2 PATHS SMALI OR 23-2573 : : _ Heights. BLOOMFIELD HILLS Pictun cone Le Aweeet HRELIABLE down payment FE 5-374! : SINGLE HOME FOR SALE 58.900 , CLARKSTON AREA 4 ROOM. PRIVATE BATH & ENTR fequen oe = 22963. . eights. UL For R jt tR ~ 19 ACRES BY OWNER 6 ROOMS oo BATI! Full basement. 41, rooms 48 i 5 rm. modern frame ho ' Pine Knob Rd. OR 3-7887. ipa BEDROOM IN sy . en Ooms | 42 $20 1: frontages On Ocmand Re 29 S Shirley FE 4-045 Roth Bivd Clawson Call ti pi aac front porch pode ae ‘We have everythin LVAN VIL- ~e with 3 bedroom modern hom, 3 BETTER HOME i age i aoti88 with numerous sh : ri $16 00 WEEELY. “3 ROOM, FR: dreanied dof Us aperteece marae ee wexet lived in. “12 bath. $95! LARGE ROOM. FIRST FLOOR car garhee. Chicken house. Man; brick overlooking Red Run “Gel! LAKEFRONT. 6 ROMS FOR pees: ins reduced,” $6450 “he utilities. Apply 806 St. Clair. Child | pg [t a real treat, come & . Tont. 89 State Street. FE 2-0566 apple trees Small spring fed Course Roval Oak Gas heat owner plus 3 room apartment. down payme : per ety or youreeltt R. J. (Dick) VALUET 11 " schaee RM. NICE SHAPE. FE Pond. Level land A wondertul Tile basement Carpeted Fire- full basement $16 900, terms | NEAR PONTIAC HIGH : — | 1 oO sub-divide ced at plece. Ga 00 LAU : | 5 RMS. PVT. ary & ENT. Model apartment open 1 pm. daily | 345 Realtor i me._Commens ae only $20,000 with reasonable down lL a. hl SE Sac A ___OR 308138 | Large family home { : OR _3-1388 & Sundays. 982 _N. Adame ma Fr a? Ave Open 9 to ¢ REFINED LADIES. GHARE AT. payment. Terms BY OWNER, MUST SACRIFICE, 4 | gondition on choice nant ae 8 COTTAGE ST. 1-3-3 ROOMS. Rorth of Mupte Read oe meat at | one 3 OR FE 3a | * ceadee residence. Also 1 rm WILLIAMS LAKE room house in Drayton area. com- STRATHMORE 231 WEST Sur la 3-5 Pul ment. Gas heat and ho! mod.. all util. farn. Apply B-1. oodward. 4 Pang a KITCHEN, DIN | — Set. Oe7 _W._Huron. 2 bedroom modern Large living teil i oie vo 18, elec- 244 iday 2 j ag 1 car garage. Carpetin : : ing room with fire aoe 2 RMB. (1) $6 (i) 7. | +[t00om Dining area. Kitchen Tic hot water. large lot. $6900 ( 1 other featur rege Pe taal BIRMINGHAM MANOR) BF seu Seti as Fe Vath Rate HOU Es Shou h'tlo gin 'Bad'doen“ae'wite ®”— CIVILIANS ntawa De | Bata lle ct 2| 11 6-0020 AT RUS STOP_LOE. FRONT Aa OP" Til! Randle a rr0 bedroom. Picture window i rs - f Be Ry e E. FRONT _-8 See Big brick family home on ex- | DRA OODS “ ae oil tan pL at IM W IGHT. Realtor Everything for < aventence, Dorothy Snyder Lavender BY OWNER ] clusive Ottawa Drive. Large tiv. | Neartne. Woops TRI LE _ 18th. EM 3-4227. . oe Oe aoe ee is ag per Ba get | Nearly new. Built 1955 Full fin- dning room, femie a full | Prick and alum. siding. Peatur BA ACHELOR APT SHOWER-BATH. WEST SIDE. 1 BLOCK OFF Y ROOM IN NICE WEST . Caaee . ished basement, automatic heat. ng room amily “kitchen, rm., liv. rm. with natu wad. Vere naa oe eae BUS LINE 3 ROOMS & « ROOM WITH PART | ‘Side home, Bus. telephone. TV | phone _EM_ 3-3303 or MU 4-6417 5 rooms, nice furniture. paved NO OTHER COSTS music room. den, 2% baths, ree ireplace,. Paneled Ty utility r BATH. FRONT & REAR | bath. $30 mooth REpublic 2-8631. Meals if desired. FE 8-3338 i street. landscaped corner jot Sac- 2 room with bar, new base ray ‘a — vanit main bate BACHELOR. 3 ROOMS AND BATH ENTRANCE HEAT, SOFT 4 ROOMS A BATH, BUSINESS PROPLE SHOWER rifice $10.750 $750 down Terms hedronms, full basement. § heating system, ‘many other fea. : beautiful t Kitchen with Seease eee ecr| RIM GaagE gtr CACM Ano EAT, Ophir | PURER Rao Mowe SSO MONTH vale LA Beret hte Gaga ee Ry | Re cet eh arking, heat fur- ELECTRIC) | re $4 month, or sell | Coa Wome : BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM H inlee. . ane ment. hot wate nion on. 0444. M v ' ss COUPLE AND BABY FLOOR § FRONT WILL A oN Morton om: eS | 6 bneds de perage ten rarpeline Varant, ‘immediate possession amas Bssion | way Buy Sow and select ‘youe . cevncna ee a rooms, 2 baths. full ba: nds & gara full ‘ , : selecs | 4-2847 | DECORATE ADULTS ie Tota ‘BATH AND HALP HALP. i COMFORTABLE RM. FOR GEN GEN. j GI. nothing down ry — Call for appointment MAS 7181 John ‘ | 4 | + Colors. Priced at $21,800 COLORED Rs AND BATH. PM. — a * Mt Vernon Ra OL 2-5207" and tieman neat Fisher Body & Pon- | pM toseos c Bi’ owner oot Rene ik Eke Ewen Sc" ons bili liaiiaes “4 Private. near gt. Joseph Hospital. ’- 4 ROOMS AN | Hac Motors; FE 4-5908 W. W. ROSS HOMES CHEAP $150 Down 2 BEDRM , Peay Rolfe H. Ss Q ‘ FE 2-5845. . =e 4 ID GARAGE. ~ | CLEAN. AUTOMATIC HEAT. PARK. OR 3.8021 full bsmt Auto, oil furnace & 313 West. Huron Stic viel mth, Realton Ps FE 2. ing. 23S Paddock PE 8-8127. : bor water heater Josiyn Rd “| PAYE WO 33350 - Phone FE 8-9647 or PE 210); “** © Tylewrapn eS 3008 . MI 6-1432 after 7 Eves. Sat & Sin TO 89851 EVE. FE 2-850; AU Evenings MA 5-6431