t Ect a The Weather Wednesday: Fair, Warmer . Details page twe a / ‘ ae 4 aad \ THE PONTIAC PRESAKE Gil PAB t F } ‘ 112th YEAR tke x * ; PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1954 —32 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS U D Pi INTERNATIONAL NEWS VICE 7¢ GOP Advantage | DISCUSS CAMPAIGN PLANS—Assembled before this morning’s Pontiac Area United Fund “kick-off’ breakfast were (left to right) Dr. Henry Hitt Crane, guest speaker; Frank S. Lyndall, campaign manager; Ralph T. Norvell, chairman of the commercial division, Dulles on Way for Paris Talks on Rearmament New Chapter on U.S. Foreign Policy Seen for West Germany WASHINGTON (INS) — Secretary of State John Foster Dulles takes off to- day for Paris where crucial talks on West German Re- armament open a new chap- ter of American foreign policy. Dulles leaves for Europe by plane at 4:30 p.m. Ee He told newsmen: “I'm not going into the optimism | game. We will just go ahead and do the best we can.” Pentiae Press Pheies GM Gives $100,000 to United Fund Civic Leaders Gather for Fund Kick-Off Floating Acre of Concrete Workers Rally at Breakfast Opening Drive Lyndall Says Campaign Will Exceed Goal of $525,823 By BURDETT C. STODDARD The Pontiac Area United Fund drive was off to a fly- ing start today with an- nouncement of a $100,000 gift from General Motors Corp. . Campaign Manager Fran S. Lyndall told some 350 volunteer workers of the a (EST). He refused to say corporation's generosity this Mas ft ae whether he was optimistic morning at a “kick-off” ; “a or pessimistic on the out- breakfast in the Elk’s Tem- a Ob vi come of the Paris meeting. ple. : The amount was $10,000 above last year when $90,000 was pre- AP Wirephote LARGEST DRYDOCK—Tugs slowly inch a huge 400-foot floating ‘However, diplomatic ob- servers expressed the opin- | jion that the European and Glern H. Griffin, master of ceremonies for the breakfast. The annual drive begins today running through Nov. 4. Noted by Nixon built —will be turned over to the Navy after being | wi, the new Pontiac car and e oe in this country . . . : : = . ‘meeting, which is designed | outfittg ry equipment, including crew's quarters @9d | innovations im the GMC treck Believes Election Fight On tario Con tinues Search : 450 tines Holding ou | to put the London agree, . | piper stated, “Pontiac Will Be Won or Lost in| pon ? ies Against Drivers’ Strike ment on Germany intestie ; — should fave a banner year” . . ai . | tn 1965. A successful drive now Final 2 Weeks f Or S tor m Victims Bodi aes for Higher Pay fect may well be the “anak: keqd b Edison for next year’s UF agency tunds WASHINGTON (INS) — Vice] TORONTO \P—Relief operations moved ahead swiftly] ew YORK @—A\group of 450! eae Serica Of Seasiana Dy : Dal y | — President Richard M. Nixon starts; today in storm-riddled Ontario while the grim search }tryck companies & continue | ON the new POP, y . P | Pestuved apecher wee Dr. Semry his final 10-state pre-election swing | for bodies went on in the hard-hit suburbs of western | heiding out: »® driver's) American (ange programs # ‘Hitt Crane, pastor of the Detroit today convinced that the Republi- Toronto bs fee ; — pone! les\gneg > Rem — rig OF an in | Central Methodist Church, who battle for Con will be won . t are i r 5 a > : or lost in the final two weeks of | The death toll from the final strike of Hurricane Hazel | ployers agreeing to union terms. Allies ; 2 Wen nay | works for overall comm bares th ign. issin : third sovereign mn place « Nixon ecared in a predeper.| S100 at 78 in Canada. Six persons were listed as raising) TAGh@Ry SRR Saag 2 | i Cot Suis (INS) — Brig. Gen. David Sarnoff foresaw | erment as “revealing our exgen- ariepeairea em SS a pe ES = Bon on Sy es 8 . a , tern bright new world for mankind sparked by a new | rl cease Gined ts cok Ss : . ° ' id “ o The public is becoming increasing-| 4 fund to aid those strick- - ported an “avalanche” ys | D electronic light which would “make vision p0S-| in and poor Ss 4 —— ly aware of the barrenness of and/ en in Friday night’s storm | She rd Tria al Nettlements, mostly with darkness. Po. oes Crom, “at Ge & complete lack of genuine issues IM) neared the million-dollar firms. ‘ Fie said that the revolutionary electronic light “bids a whee sarsctees, we have the |™Ark yesterday, its first _ The holdout 7 Ar to be produced” as the result of television research. | grat iin ry goat day. A goal of 10 million Second ) a MPa Sarnoff, chairman of the board of the Radio eubeolts to great Eisenhower administra- a - of the e Corpora-| “When a person ee eae Scavivers moved beck into some | In ay c Ttion of America, spoke at a St. Louis Chamber of Com-} compulsion something is broken program, which has brought us peace, stabilized our economy, safeguarde@d ctf internal se- flood-ravaged areas and began to! clear their homes of mud and | Defense Again Requests | ie 2 3 of 42 | merce luncheon in observance of light’s diamond jubilee. * “We are now engaged in curity, and restored honesty and gan Traffic are mete west | Venue Change Despi pages en , lp ee the development of a new) said Crane. decency to government, day. using the three Humber River) Rebuff by J , aes | | form of light —electronic| 1, The “lawless” whe te ; day, using the three Humber River | e y udge ’ g iL awless"’ person The peupte resize tht to oot | tS bet standing. Raliwey tal | co sve an aye “wit tel! whether syodertag Ao start light,” he said. “This new does just what he wants to do tinue this program, the President | ; 4 CLEVELAND — The defense| ‘at full 2. The “law following’ person must have a Republican Sth Con-, fic Was returning to norma]. | today renewed its request that the continue to hold the line, A. Denver | + ‘form seems destined to wie what ip required. The vice president flies to Penn-| Army engineers trom Ft, Bragg | ''™* SS "| inyolved ‘in the strike, 1 he outlined for M work sparked by Edison and | what is required, not because he sylvania today to address an out-| moveq im today to assist the | Samuel H. Sheppard be moved to | geferal freight rir oe haemo cay I hac me Pte Ps “i is likely to loom ever larger | is forced to, but because he wants door rally and a luncheon in Pitts- hurricane-stri¢ken beach resorts. ‘another city, but was rebuffed stretching from po ad S.A bh strat- ives Slates Broadcast in public consciousness ‘as | to. burgh and a reception and a GOP ain land throwgh New York yt . 8. for the . ; . \ohia develacment ro-| The third type of os finance dinner in Philadelphia, The troops will help clear away | ®&ain- ‘south’ as far as Trenton, the chief execu-| to Discuss ‘Startling, | . pm P Sts ond Guuaien sccm a the He retyrns to Washington tonight | the debris and assist in putting) William J, Corrigan, chief de- and north to Poughkeepsie, d with Adm. Arthur Shocking Situation’ gresses. ‘United Fund drive is the mold and departs again early Wednes-| water and sewage distribution sys-| fense counsel, at the start of to At Washington » published i, chairman of the joint He added that an electronic | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) day for speeches in Illinois, Mon-| tems into operation, | day's session renewed his port that Dave Beck, tof staff, and moved into a) NEW YORK w—Sen. Irving M.| light amplifier, now in the de-| tana, Wyoming, Nevada, ‘Arizona,| Immediate transfer of a batta- for a change of venue on grou el the AFL Teamsters Session on defense prob- Ives, the Republican candidate for velopment stage, “may be . Idaho, Oregon, California and|lion (about 500 men) to the Wil-| that public sentiment in Cleveland has been supplanted 7 lems with Defense Secretary governor, announced today he will expected to lead to devices which | Predict More Frost Washington. mington area Was recommended | and surrounding Cuyahoga Co@@¥) — Soffa as the real , rles E. Wilson, Dulles, Rad-| 2, on 9 statewide television-radio| Will make vision possible in | yesterday by a special committee | was unfavorable to his clieue ~ | the Quge labor orgaateation Ras [1070.27 other members of the | network tonight to discuss ‘a darkness.” | ‘ A State Jaycees Seek of rriohenpuran and jocal repre-| Corrigan introduced as evidence} been denied @ally by both mem: = ag ore seme? revolved | artling and shocking situation”) These will add greatty to the 10f ontiac rea “ sentatives following an inspection two files of news ; ; aera | involving Averell Harriman, his ' Clothing for Toronto ef the Nerth Carciinn devested| See eee ae coe comms) "There is not one tote of truth | around the Far East—including the | nemocratic-Liberal rival, ne nd ena ae he Fair and cool with frost again ae . jin the report,” said Beck yetter-| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) | unce- : : tonight is expected for the Pon- ANN ARBOR ®—The Michigan | areas. About 300 Army engineers He also cited a debate BANGER TGhy in Seattle, Wai, “Tlofta | The short, dramatic annou perils of night driving, tec, are | Junior Chamber of Commerce to-| were sent to the Myrtle Beach two Gleveland aewapa nro haw nriythinng to do with yonning | . | ment gave no hint of the nature - Ubely te be reguced and perbaps foe —_ sg a of rrilngpae day launched a statewide drive area. ‘ , a : | the charge, Harriman himsel emperatures openi for blankets, bed linens and warm| Ed Rankin, secretary to North | ‘he handling of the : een Serge oe ot fa NILTIES — coure not be reached immediately Se ae iectromie of pheasant séhson Wednesday will ai a that was broadcast ov his capacity of 10th vice president H head.| Svices providing far-reaching || “glightly warmer” with a high clothing for Toronto victims of Carolina Gov. William B, Ump- Station WHK | in chatee of the Mideest. Anyone | fom comment. His campaign a light with y Hurricane Hazel. | stead, said National Guard troops Radio Sta ie an . pep | quarters had no immediate com- gtare. of % to 60. Eino Kainlauri of Ann Arbor,| may be moved into the Washing-| The debate was —— "ment. _| “In ‘short, the sky is the limit) Light variable winds are expected the state organization's interna- ton, N. C., area to prevent looting.| W. Collins, city Hoffa told B there | | a 0 0 Ives last night abruptly cut | in imagining the future of elec- | t with an 8 to 12 mile-an- tional relations chairman, said all Beaufort County Sheriff Bill Run-| Cleveland Plain Be dors that he ” a short an upstate campaign tour | tronic light. The one certainty southeasterly breeze tomor- 100 chapters in Michigan would jey reported that some damaged| rest Allen of the ind Boag e in ns to return here. Speculation im- | is that, like other major scientific. row, join in the campaign. He said of- cottages along the Pallico River . prvetoe: i eal Kenneth Coon Riding mediately developed in political | innovations in the past, it will A .03 rainfall was recorded in ficials of the Toronto Junior Cham- were beifig looted Only one juror bad in Car Which Struck circles that some surprise meve | open roads to improvements on | downtown Pontiac Monday as tem- ber had confirmed the need for the | : jat the end of the was planned. existing products and processes, | peratures ranged from a low of 35 items. /180 . . —_ of Dr. § Tree Saturday Several straw polls being con-| and will give birth to entirely new to 50. At 8 a.m. today the ther- Kainlauri said means of- dona- | Candidates Listed | first-degree mu ducted in the state have shown Ives | instruments, appliances and serv-|mometer registered 39 degrees, tion would be publicized in the) GRAND RAPIDS @ — The fall | coning last July everything Kenneth Coon, 20, of 4180 Eliza-| to be trailing. ices.” | rising to 46 by 1 p.m. Winds were ‘Dust Off Those Cherished Dreams various participating cities. The | reunion of the Ancient Accepted Wife Marilyn, 31) Attorneys esti. beth Lake Rd., Waterford Town- collections will be trucked to To- | Scottish Rite will confer degrees | mated it would requige @ week or ronto within the next few days. /on 180 candidates 10 days to seat @ jury, i pale Hoffa, chairman of the union's Central States Conference, recently entered the New York truck driv- ers strike after Beck apparently had intervened and then with- An Endless Variety of Hobbies Offer New Roads to Useful and Happy Hours Time was when a hobby was! Those who seek therapeutic val- ) high on the popularity Ist; knit- | something a little unusual; some-| ue in keeping busy and learning | ting, making of hooked rugs and thing to be followed as a last | M€W creative arts. weaving on looms occupies many; | resort as a time-killer. | Hobbies can be followed alone | sketching and painting is booming, But times have changed. The, With aa =e ae also a, ‘especially since some highly prom- hobby has come into its own both | rohinda t an \ hoon by | inent citizens have turned to paint- | for the pleasure to be derived and | jogether, ps y | : for many other substantial values.| ™@"yY hebby clubs which have | ing as an avocation. — . Today cab hieetareina longer | come into being. | The demand for information | cause he felt Hoffa had more ex- drawn. Beck said Hoffa has done a “fine job in New York and we are very close friends.” Beck said he picked Hoffa to head up a committee of five | Teamster vice presidents named to handle the New York strike be- perience than the other four on the committee in long line hauling, “the nature of the New York | strike.”’ Candidate Lights ship, died this morning in Pontiac General Hospital from injuries suf- fered early Saturday when the cam in_which he was riding hit a tree at Airport and Elizabeth Lake Rds., and skidded into the Clinton River. 5 ; John Williams, 20, of 5611 Cros- well, the car’s driver, will prob- ably make a statement today at the Oakland County Prosecutor's office, according to Waterford Township Police Chief Frank J. Van Atta. Williams and another passenger, William Mack, 18, of 9260 Gale Rd., were treated at the hospital for cuts and bruises. A fourth pas- senger, Charles Henke, 16, of 5063 Pontiac Lake Rd., who has a pos-| sible concussion and skull fracture, | ‘fads.’ They have become an ac- cepted part of the pattern of American life. Additional leisure time per- mits many thousands an oppor- tunity te turn longings into reali- ties. Hobbies attract people in ail | There seems to be no end to the | fields into which hobbies lead those | who have a yen to learn some- ' | thing new, and something besides their accustomed vocation. Ceramics and china painting are In Today's Press about hobbies, snowballing along is reported in fair condition today. The announcement was issued in Republican headquarters by Wil- lism W. Tyler, Ives press aide. “Senator Ives has canceled his! Adenauer, Mendes Seek Answer to Saar Question PARIS (# — West German Chancellor Konrad Ade- ‘nauer arrived here today for a ‘series of conferences aimed at bringing a rearmed West Germany into the Western defense system. The first hurdle he faced was campaign appearances scheduled for today to prepare for a tele- vision broadcast tonight (6:30-6:45 pm., WRCA-TV and a statewide NBC telévision and radio net- work),"’ the statement said. Harriman, former federal mutual security administrator, was nomi- nated with the support of Carmine de Sapio, Democratic Naional com- mitteeman and head of Tammany Hali, the powerful New York Coun- ty party organization, Mrs. Ley’s Petition fo Be Heard Dec. 3 with the increased interest with Henke and Coon were both tossed from the car onto the pavement | | * ° j Campaign Trail— = eee papery . = i for Op I nent after the impact, according to po- | ‘column in our Classified pages| DENVER «—Albert Cohen, can-| lice who quoted Williams as say- | for exclusive use of hobbyists. | didate for the Colorado House of ing he was going “‘too fast” to! to) Here will be listed many of the | Representatives, spent all day yes-|negotiate a turn on Elizabeth sources of supply and instruction | teTday Passing out 500 match Lake road. in a never - ending variety of ac-| advertising his candidacy. | MUSKEGON (UP) Circuit Judge Noel P. Fox Monday grant- ed a six-week postponement of a hearing on Mrs. Lois Porter Moon Ley’s request for a new trial on she to defraud the state of $10,000 and upwards in highway right-of-way land deals. Mrs. Ley pleaded guilty 16 the charge six months ago and is now serving an 18-tmonth to 5-year pris- on term. Her attorney, Edward B. Barn- ard, Detroit, asked for a delay so that he could answer affidavits filed by state and Muskegon County attorneys denying allegations in Mrs, Ley’s petition for a new trial . Looking into the future, Sarnoff (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) | the thorny Saar question. from the north at 14 miles per hour, Adenauer flew in from Bonn less than five hours before the scheduled start of talks on the Saar with French Premier Pierre Mendes-France. said a settlement. of this question must be reached before the French National Assembly will approve the Allied program for bolster- ing Western defenses with German manpower. “TI have come to Paris with a great deal of hope that. these next few days will bring great advan- tages for peace of our peoples, The , scheduled for Mon- wat, ean ey ae 8 ena , | tee a tpomebare a sling cre Fat Ones Will Flunk fe Breey, De & | The possibilities are truly end- | this Republican candidate. TOPEKA, Kan, ®—Mrs. Bernard Those ‘who have a natural in-| Gommg occas | Less Weedwerking tm all its | Today, Cohen is trying to collect! Evanhoe, an instructor at Topeka terest in working with their hands pose ae such abBosecheece FJ forms attracts many; perhaps (the match books again. He's a Night School, is starting a new in spare hours, and the people whe| Crane, Dr. George... 6 you would like eae an that | Democrat. course tomorrow in which she want an opportunity to find more ae - prea prea te the ~ ome : hopes to see less and less of her knowledge of particular“interest. oo wr Dotan Z collect Summerfield to Speak students aig the eight weeks term Those who are new residents in| fervice News 16 | things; or sre you a budding | IONIA (UP) — Postmaster Gen- | progresses. . ion “ty any locality. These people often . . os | weather — eral Arthur E. Summerfield will) The course is Reducing make new friends through carry- | TY & Radio Programs. epee Phin gereasd apr Sear will al as principal address at a Diet ing on their hobbies in new lo-| . 8 | others to share your interests Republican rally here Saturday . \ cales, | Women's" Pages... ™* % Pix i. | among hobbyists. night, 5 pay hE " 4 day, rescheduled for Dee, 3. The French leader has* complete agreements reached at the recent London rence. Foreign ministers of United States, Great Britain, France and nie | ~ Commission ~ for Hearing From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — Lawmakers at | Another hearing, this one for Nov. 12, was scheduled to amend the Parking District B ordinance, increasing the height limit of light- ing fixtures from 8 feet to 12 took place over last week's recom: | mendation of the Troy Township Sets Date on Parking League-of the Handicapped when it meets with Mrs. King Ruhly, | Women's Fellowship of the Con- gregational Assn. of Detroit at 4 12:30 luncheon tomorrow at the | church, following the organiza- tion's 10:30 a. m. business meeting and study session. The Rev. Robert D. Dewey will | speak on ‘‘The World Council in) | Review" in a program to follow A play entitled, “India” also witl be presented by the Oxford Con- —os ? / ; when THE PONT pene TAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBE Espionage Jury Expected to Act possibility that with others and did not act alone. five women heard three govern- ment witnesses yesterday, shortly after a judge instructed them eith- er to indict or to clear the physi- cist-mathematician who worked al- most 12 years for the security agency before he was fired on- Oct. 1, UR 19, 1054 ee ees May indict or Clear Former Code - Breaker Joseph Petersen | Petersen plotted The special panel of 16 men and North England a Heavy Floods | Hit Scotland, LONDON i—Two days of heavy | rain brought the worst flodds in /' 2 years to parts of Scotland, northern Ireland and _ northern | England today. | ‘Funeral for Arthur James Mc- | Vean, 76, of 239 State St. will be held Thurgday at 2 p.m. from the | Huntoon Funeral Home, Dr. atom Malone of the Emmanue}] Baptist Church will officiate with burial in Oak hill Cemetery. Mr. McVean died Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a month's illness. | I Foypt, Britain fo Sian Treaty Police Guarding Hall Where Suez Evacuation Pact Will Be OK'd troops from the canal zone within | 20 months the brotherhood has been agitating against the pact. Leaders of the religious-political organization have charged that British influence will continue be- cause of a treaty provision giving British troops the right to return if Turkey or any Arab state is attacked by an outside power. Nasser has accused the Brother- rg = Sulidgs Devt ot ee ca ak pale A. Only one of yesterday's wit- ‘Grocery Store Robbed pore of a to take over the ner be rezoned to commercial B-1! —* * * ny : | ar i momar OT IS of $174 in Merchandise rame use, for a proposed shoping cen. | Reorganization of the Bloom. | one of the world’s leading ex- Over $174 worth of meat and General Motors Gives m4 commission had notified separate PTA'S sor al Macey re perts on codes and ciphers. other articles were noted ove? ‘ The : be | from a grocery store at ° township snsidered | district's schools : han Friedman was understood to be | $100 000 UF p pol negotiations = be prema- | and Wing Lake Schools ayy a consultant to the super-secret | St. he i a HB to rive ture, Inasmuch as the necessity | their own parent-teacher organiza- | jagency, where Petersen had a ee ee, (Continued From P. for a anbetng exuter has not = now, with the Bloomfield |$7,700-a-year job as a “research| Owner of the store, Dominic u om Page One) Much opposed to the rezoning. Pembrook representatives said Hills PTO board to act as a steering committee at first. Along with the new organiza- the school THAT'S A PET? - Cleveland, Ohio, City Jail, Detective Frank Opalecki had the shock of his life when he stuck his hand in the suspected burglar’s coat pocket and pulled out a foot-long alligator. The prisoner said he bought While frisking a prisoner al) United Press Phote the tectives to feed him fish or ground meat at 3 p. m. daily. Detectives, however, decided to turn the “pet” over to the Animal Protective League. |analyst’’ and code-breaker. “3 . i Petersen was expecting an im- | ‘gator, “Leo” at a pet shop and instructed de- portant promotion in the agency | just a few days before he was ar- | ‘rested by the FBI. The ‘bespec- | coffee, 51 pounds of shortening, 15 ‘tacled former professor has been | cartons of cigarettes, 4 cartons of | Mandelari of 25 Oak St., Auburn | Heights, said thieves stole 100) of assorted meat, 23) pounds of cheese, 17 pounds of | from which ‘‘all emerge,’’ he stated. “The ability or lack of bility to contribute by voluntary ges- tures makes or breaks a com- munity.” creative acts { Locherbie avenue WASHINGTON (INS)—A federal into a sewer a gwollen — | CAIRO, Egypt —A heavy po- | > ) . _1e acn e av . r the | Bie iat night's City Commission meet: | ting at the Manor road hoine grand jury may report today on | and peg tog = mati yf ke guard was Gross today | ing a Nov. 8 hearing date 0" | 6¢ \irs. Ben Schenck, the Ruth the mysterious espionage charges | Streets and a reall traveled re ea Parliament's Pharaonic the ity of creating a special | ier group will see pictures of against Joseph S, Petersen Jr., @) whoat | Hall, where the British-Egyptian assessment = api oe ieee the work done by Mrs. Schenck veteran code breaker for the top-| The main England-Scotland rail- | teaty on evacuation of the Suez -é wr pavieell pe Pierce and | in Mexico shown by Mrs. Kesh secret National Security Agency. | way between Beattock and Lock-| canal zone is scheduled for signa- Merril Sts. Deas a educa- fe The special panel opened its in- erbie was Pisa aifiaage! and ontlgeass Commissioners enlarged the dis-, "'0P °F © . : vestigation yesterday into allega- | landslides, ing a detour precaution was taken to trict to include property north of be h - = Kiwanis | ys tions that Petersen violated the | onside lines. Trains from the north | block any last-minute attempt by Maple and east of Woodward. There ‘an. ae crime taxes .. espionage laws is a crime “just nota London up to three the Moslem Brotherhood to wreck were No apparent objections from a * one step short of treason.” hours . ceremony, marking eae Living” program and dinner at | ~~" 4 Firemen rescued dozens of fam- | 72 years of British armed interven- merchants attending the meclng.| ¢ so tonight at the Community *. The 40-year-old Artington, Va., | ijies trom flooded homes in Cum-| tion in Egypt. Premier Abdel Ga- shared equally by the city and| Mouse to Clarence Vilet, of Sis ‘ a i anpreperty’ Y btaining | Ccr!and and southern Scotland. | ma! Nasser called a Cabinet meet- , nates . j : Kiwanian . ‘ ; nets HEY on was Metarion, Viet to Bir highly classified defense docu- _ cry Gan on oui sseuiens The city is working adios mingham's former superinten- a, penumty for an unnamed Pontiac Deaths | agreement was reportedly reached necessary property acqu ~ | dent of schools. foreig : last night. and has set next January — = * » It was learned that the Justice | — . ._ * * completion date for ali real ¢*- Women of the Congregational Department has since broadened Arthur James McVean Although the treaty provides for tate arrangements. Church here will entertain the the hush-hush case to include the evacuation of all 80,000 British — . ; mn ee ___ | free on a scaled-down $10,000 bail | candy and six cartons of gum. wine a ae ot for the newest construction. A . = . for the past week. | Police borg hogy Medes building | whieh — four ee program has been planned tor F3 gh High School In a vain attempt te keep him | "8S. gained by g a rear which 8 migh month . i ae tomorrow night and will center lrm1n am 1 Cc OO oman un e in prison on higher bail the | window. lems prospective con- ! | around am open house for all in ~ overnment argued that his al- | ; ss Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley | on | B k W A d | & ; . 1. “Are you aware?’’ Do you see eS nae | Syst aes om Yar BOO Ins 4WalId . leged crime may dave bed 2 6" Dulles Leaves Today |x wis: soe wane to sce or do Patrolman Robert Rowe, who will ~~ | BIRMINGHAM — -The Birming- | of J. W. Sexton High School, Lan in an e ase sare and sasigs affairs. | |you look at people in need and leave the department at the end | Visitors will mect the new | ham High School year book is one sing, and the Echo of Grand Blan f N Ps . T lks help them? of the month to go with the alcohol | teachers and be shown through | of three in the state selected for High School. . They refused to state, however, | or ew aris a Each problem must be seen, tax unit of the U. S. Treasury the four new classrooms, multi- tgp) honors in the National Year- Included in the second place win Charred Corpse Still what foreign nation may be imph- | (Continued From Page One) | stated, studied and solved, Crane Department in Pineville, Ky. Rowe | purpose room, . clinic, lounge, book contest conducted annually! ners were the Theresian of the U id tified: 2 J il d cated in the case, Other sources) | said, but the hardest part is to joined the department in January | kitchen and other facilities. bv the Columbia Scholastic Press! Shrine of the Little Flower Hligh niaentitied; ONCG | have said-it was not Russia. | Chinese Communist threat to For- | see it. When you have a commu- of this year. In: addition, Superintendent of Assn - | School, Royal Oak, and the Blue in Southwest Mystery a /mosa and differerices with South) nity that sees and cares, you get ® e¢ °*@ Schools Eugene L. Johnson will | Medalist award for ‘Yearbooks and Gold of Redford High School. | ® | Korea over U, S. relief policies in| things done. . “Dilemma of Democracy” will | speak at a brief meeting to follow, of Distinction’ went to the Bu Entries were judged on the basis DALLAS, Tex. (Police had a Researc y ison \that war-ravaged country, 2. “Do you care?” Are you con- be the topic of Ray Shute as he as will Mrs. Max Miller, new presi- /mirgham Piper, as well as the of school enrollments as well @5 | shapely, 111-pound brunette locked . Meanwhile, ‘een. | Cermed =— Degg taal ernst Lye Seno he PFO, Sind ra Lo of on ih at tnd of rept. tut ey wer x ho Q GLQW Brighter | Sperm at a ats “a ct parca ° ? r “Alor gh —_— | ” c and wives and friends at a dimmer | with ey Geneva ay School SS ing for another woman in the case sagen ey an sean the United Fund if you only work at 6:45 p. m. tomorrow at Devon | school principal. - | The association, sponsored by Co 3 000 Homeless of Oklahoma's charred corpse (Continued From Page One) | will be expanded into 30-minute for your own gang.” Gables. * * * llumbia University, said more than , Still in jail was David Hagler, predicted dpi alge addresses. 3, “Wilh you be fair?” If you Mrs, F. R. Woolfenden will | 1,100 colleges and elementary, jun- ° K Fj Jr.. %-year-old Fort Worth busi-| in television kindl y the elec- get the other person's view you Sey & Hoh Coie, © | speak on “Hands Across the Sea” jor and senior high schools sub- in orean res nessman, charged with murder in) tronic amplification and ‘conver-- sts lek? aetetregnie ogi oe can “create amazing community former state senator, has on * hos 1088 onte |e American Jewish Tercentenary v. land “India and Pakistan” when | mitted entries in the 1954 contest the death of the unidentified man.! sion of light. cl authored 15 becks and bee | i ionary B of the First Pres-| Its purpose is to stimulate stu. | PUSAN, Korea (® — More than) Fort Worth, Tex.. police held him) ,, asa ae |dinner tomorrow night and at the a served for three years on the byterian Church meets for a 12:30 | dent interest, to serve as a guide 3.000 persons were made home- jn lieu of $10,000 bond. - . «+ I believe | Alfred E. Smith Memorial dinner) 4. “Will you share? When you educational beard of “The juncheon at the church tomorrow. | for the improvement of the books less bere last night when two fires) The burned body was found more | tube of today will eventually be Thursday evening. | give more than you can afford, it's Christian Register.” He also oe ‘lard to provide a periodic rating streyed 481 homes than w eek ago near Davis, Okla.,| timinated. ft will be displaced Since the talks were billed as | a spiritual deposit in the bank of served two terms as mayor of Mrs. Marija Jakevich on a nationwide basis One fire which started in a Ko in the fire blackened hulk of a| >Y 8 thin, Tat screen like a non-political, they were expected | the eternities. A new world is born hin city, Monroe, and is s fellow Service for Mrs. Marija Jako First place honors were won by | 4? home leveled 361 homes, mak- station wagon Hagler had bor- | picture on a wall. Or, it may = to deal with several aspects of for- of mutual | devotion and dedica- of the Reyal Society of An- vich, 8. of Ahmeek, formerty of the Capri of Mumford High School ing 2,400 persons homeless. rowed a few days before from his | be an easel-like frame that will eign policy and the worldwide tion. tiquaries. | Birmingham wilt be Friday at Detroit: the Lantern of Eastern Another fire started from a kero- ex-wife. set on your living room table fight of the free world against} Prior to Crane's address, door Charles D. Howell, of the local | the Sacred Heart Church in Cals liigh School, Lansing: the Oracle .S¢Re lamp in a refugee-crowded * * * and, being portable, can be Communist aggression. |Log Metis — a Sun ; . = : sector and destroyed 120 homes Elisabeth Maria Bergmann, 25,| meved to any other part of the ——————— | scout Johnny Kimball, 10, 0 Unitarians, is serving = Chale. | re iy vag tom i ° rom ; It left 800 Koreans homeless. No was held as a material witness and, reem er house. If desired, the ‘Escapes Serious Injury | Osemaw Rd. and boy scout Ronny man af the dinner meeting. Co- Maniey Bailey Funeral Home here casualties were reported. Police es- | for investigation of customs viola-| sa ram could be received Newman, 13, of 35 Waldo St. as- he U ithis aft I r investig s me program id . ee aes eee tae gems! WANE STUGENTS — vmtee tre toss at 528000 el on. a number of screens in | HASTINGS — J@n W. Brad. | sisting master of ceremonies Glenn po ogee po ee Aus — — cn meee - | She admitted to police during 10, different reoms of the house. | field, 18. of Nuncia, escaped serious | H. Griffin in the distribution. rbor hwest ls survi vy three daugh- Church and Church of Our Father, * . * Parents of present and former students of the nursery school are invited. Mrs. Raymond Flynn is chairman of the newly-formed parent education committee whirh is sponsoring the meeting. The school has been meeting regularly for over 10 years at Chfist Church Cranbrook. Mrs. Robert Kerr 1s chairman of the 44 mothers who now have children enrolled in the school. * ° * Two women's groups of the First Methodist Church have meetings scheduled for 8 tonight. The Beulah Runkel Group will hear a talk by a representative of ihe The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair and cost wtth frest tonight, lew %2-55. Wednesday slightly warmer, high 34-60 Light veritable winds tonight becoming southeasterly 8-12 miles Wednesday Tedey tn Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a m 35 At 8 eam: Wind veiocity Direction: North sets Tuesday at $45 pm Sun rises Wednesday a: 650 am Moon sets Tuesday a: 2:18 pm Moon rises Wednesday at 12 45 am 14 mph . Dewntewn Temperstures Oi Cisacccce:- 3% 11 a. m 44 WG. Diccsocesns B@ 8 188 45 OS. Bi. cece. B ip m “ oa. mm... . 42 OD GO. Ge .00..0.-: “ Menday in Pontiac (Ae recorded Gowntoern) Highest temperature.... . se Lowest tempereture.. 35 Mean temperature... 42 ime. Rath 03 inch F One Year “Age to Pontiac temperature. ....... ; temperature suas coees< 7 ters, Mrs. Victor Kirby of Bir | mingham, Mrs. William Mutter and Mrs. Archie Baril, both of Hough- ton; three sons, Julius 'mingham, Albert and Joseph, both of Detroit; two sisters and one brother. j ! | 2% E. Brown St. will be held | at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Man- jley Bailey Funeral Home, with | burial im White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. | He died Monday. Surviving are his mother, Mrs | J:. Wright of Detroit, a brother |Gecrge of Dearborn, and a sis- ter Mrs. Lester Anderson of De- | troit. The BPOE ef Pontiac will ' duct a Lodge of Sorrows at 8 p.m. today at the funeral home Paul Wright Columnist Jackson Dies in Detroit at 60 DETROIT (UP)—H. CL, Jack son. who for nearly 25> years wrote the “Listening In on Detroit’’ col- umn the Detroit News night in suburban Wyan in died Monday dotte General Hospital of a heart attack The 60-vear-old Jackson entered the hospital a week ago for treat ment of a heart ailment which he had for eight years The Detroit News said it would carry Jacksen'’s column in to- day's edition but the newspaper said other prepared columns might not be printed. Jackson Started writing his col- umn in the 1920's and it has been a permanent feature in the News ever He started his news paper career in 1913 after grad uating from the University of Mich igan _ He was survived by his wife. the former Gretchen G. Dold of Butf- since Temperateres This falo, N. Y., and two sons. Daniel Date in. 8? Years 2 im 1878 | D. and Harold Jr, ihncilahis | Funeral arrangements are in- fe "HT heworieane 7 s4 | Complete. i $6- Satnnee polis 3.1 a New York 6 bi) F Omaha se 43| More than two million persons Phoenix os se 4 | are employed in the nation's pub- 4 Louis 4 30} lic eating places and the industry SES 44 je ranks third in the number of per- . th J a sons. Who are given” steady em- on 4 4. ployment. Y é , , . j ® me } of Bir- | Service for Paul Wright. 47, of | con-- , Was on fire Pursue Panties 500 Swarm Into Girls’ Dorms, Egged On by Many Coeds NEW dred swarmed into girls dormitories last ORLEANS UW—Five Tulane hun male students night and took panties in a raid which touched off a mot call, a Tire alarm and wild confusion avail Police, who rushed every able car to the campus, were met by a barrage of rocks. The arrest of four students for disturbing the peace and the threat of tear gas sie. before peace was declared About 10 pieces of firefighting |equipment sped to the scene after a call that one of the dormitories It turned out to be a false alarm * * * The girls offered little resistance One girl said many coeds yelled encouragement because “it was good for school spint. That was more spirit at Tulane than I can remember A psychology professer told the boys, ‘I thought you were college gentelement but you're acting like three-vear-old kids. Go back to your lollipops . He concluded his speech immedi ately when someone poured a bur A et of water on him from a, male dorm window Kellogg Estate $35,000 GRAND RAPIDS 1? Paul Kel logg. president of Kellogg Vine gar Co, who died Oct. 12, left an estate valued at $35,000. The sum was revealed Monday in a petition filed at ptobate court Kel logg'’s vinegar firm interest: was left to his son, Paul. of Lowell and the remainder of the estate was set up in two‘ trusts from which Kellogg's widow, Edith, will receive quarterly payments, On Safety Committee “ GRAND RAPIDS uw — Inspector Ebberne H. McConnell appointed a member of the safety and traffic committee of the Mich- igan Assn. of Chiefs of , Police McConnell was named -b\ Thomas Gillespie of St. Joseph- associa ,tion ppesident, ~ P 3 Traffic Violations Cost $130 or 80 Days Richard Skaggs, 34. of 22791 Al bion, Farmington, may serve up to 80 days in Oakland county Jail if fines and costs on three traffic | counts against him are’ not paid Skaggs pleaded guilty before Farmington Justice John JT Schulte Jr. yesterday to drunk using defective auto equipment and driving with a rejected oper- ator’s heense On the first count he was fined $100 and $25 costs or 60 ‘days in jail: on the second, $10 fine, $5 costs or 10 days in jail; and for the third charge Justice Schulte sentenced Skaggs 10 days in jail to driving, | hours;of questioning that a recent cablegram calling her to Munich, Germany. to visit her “ill” father was prearranged. She acknowl- edged also that two diamond rings found in her luggage had not been | declared in customs when she flew to the United States yesterday to help Hagler, her fiance. i AJ * * Oklahoma police. meanwhile continued the search for a miss- ing waitress, identified only as ‘Georgia,”” whom Hagler claims }ean prove his contention he drove to a tourist court in Cedarville, Okla., to leave his car for her to pick up was from Oklahoma City When the charred body was first found in the burned-out station wagon, it was believed to be that of Hagler. But he later turned up in Waco and surrende red WE TRUTUD US... tm ‘ al uv = Rv - s\ eo X. WANNA HAUNT A HOUSE? | ROBABLS THE ONLY MAN IN THE WORLD WHO MAKES A BUSINESS OF HAUNTING HOUSES, IS BOB NELSON Ce COLUMBUS, OWN. 116 COMPANS SUPPLIES SHOUTS BUTTERS Ele. oo tt ray © Leeds eesitee \eoqace? ats \eedsiee® tee IT RESEMELES GOLO ORE PYRITE 1S CPTEN MISTAKEN FOR 6OL0. AMONG THE EARLIEST VICTIMS WERE THE PAMOUS CAPT. JOMN SMITH AND OTWER GBARLY COLONISTS WHO THOUGHT THEY HAD MSCOVERED “GOLD” WHAT DOES A MAN OWE HIMSELF ? “The pictures could be controlled from a little television box no bigger than a jewel case or a cigar box. No cabinet will be required. | The television box will contain all | the controls—tuning. volume, light. Hagler says the waitress | station selector—and a knob will enable you to make the image larger or smaller, and in black- | and-white or in color to suit your eye and your mood.” The general made it clear that | television ‘“‘is only one of the avenues through which electroric light will flow and added “Right dewn the line it will provide substitutes for present types of light used for illumina- tion.” On the subject of atomic energy. Sarnoff predicted that research would lead to ‘‘atomic generators of electricity small enough to be installed for use in the home.” He said that when atomic bat- teries become available they will | bring into the realm of practicality a jong array of miniature devices. such as wrist-watch radios, or vest-pocket radio telephones, or | electric shavers no bigger than a penknife “The atomics are unfolding simultane- ously,”’ he declared, ‘‘is a portent of incalculable changes ahead. “Never before have two such _ mighty forces been unleashed at Together, elec- | the same time. tronics and atomics are fated to dwarf even the industrial revolu- | tions brought by steam and elec- | tricity.” Lost Mail Bag Hunted GRAND RAPIDS uw — Postal | officials sought a mail bag Mon- day containing more cash, a check and registered mail. 'M. E. Chirgwin, assistant postmas- ter. said the pouch disappeared Saturday night. He said the mail truck driver, making the pickups. was unable to remember loading it aboard, Lost Is Found BIG RAPIDS — Mrs. Maurice | Boonstra of Comstock lost her high school class ring at a ball game | near Big Rapids 27 years-ago. The into daily life” | fact that electronics and | than $500) injury Monday when his car veer-| Two songs were presented by ed off M37 near Middleville and| the “Key Finders’, a local bar- crashed a tree. Barry County | bershop quartet. After viewing a Sheriff Clarence Donovan said) special UF movie, workers picked Bradfield apparently fell asleep | up their campaign kits and left to at the wheel. Bradfield was listed begin solicitations in good condition at Pennock Hos- | The breakfast was sponsored by pital but minus his front teeth. the Community National Bank — —_—— Noroom charge for diildren under 4! This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year ot Statler % Ifone or more children under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room. ¥% If one or more children under 14 occupy a room without a parent—that is, if more than one room is pene pa a family—the one-person rate applies for the room. Bring the family for weekend of fun | ot the Detroit Statler ! SPECIAL STATLER FEATURES FOR TRAVELING FAMILIES © Children’s menus °* Children’s pletes and silver * Balloons for the youngsters efter meals * Formules prepared ® Reliable baby sitters °* High cheirs and cribs © A basket of fresh fruit in every room occupied by children ® Radio in every room ‘ } — wore, STATLER, Detroit: Facing Grend Cirevs Perk Tel.—WOecdwerd 3-6000 ring recently was returned by Mrs. | | Florabelle Reid, who spaded it up on her farm and traced it through , initials engraved inside. | oe i THE PONTIAC PRESS. San Marino, tiny miguntainous | in central Italy, is the world’s - Williams VS. Leonard country occupying 38 square miles | smallest republic. oo forward Donald S. Leonard, 51- year-old former commissioner of spring to make the run tor gov- director of Michigan in 1%§ and 197 and the Democratic member TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, Jap Town Sutfers TOKYO w—This was the day of yO54- Flood Spends downstream a flood eruption moved It was hardly just high MAKE PAGE... 7 EDNESDAY S Is A dA ive Gove | . tate Is Assure ggressive Governor biitond d | CE Simms “ONE-DAY ) money pane el adleay i. aceunien He became superintendent «f defense during much of the war. . i readers. withthe leading candidates for the uniform division § in 1945, At the same time. and following $5.000—For One Week Costs Only $2 state offices in the November elections’) acting commissioner in 1946 and the war, he served as state fuel NoG tD S . or $1.00 for 3 Days LANSING (P)—No matter who | Commissioner in 147. In this administrator o Ureat Vamage oeen is elected, Michigan's next gover- post .-he served until 1952, when Both men, native Detroiters as Tame Ohio Moves ' ‘Don't risk your family s security on rish ag ive | he retired and immediateiy was are married. Leonard has two Wednesday Store Hours 9 a. m. to 6 pm en your hunting = ip. Play a oad his ce oes | selected by Detroit's Mayor Cobo children and Williams three Downstream y Special Accident Insurance Policy ‘ 3 2 PAF . . the chance that you won't be hurt Again, the Democrats offer the ‘° head that andy Lenni nage POMEROY Oho ih_This vil BARGAIN BASEME NT lor hunters now give double pro- |] voters Gov. G. Mennen Williams, leonard resigned that post tas jlage of 4.000, as accustomed to i tection at lowest cost. Pays hospital 3-year-old scion of wealthy high water as the next one, waited : 7), hh ___Fire . medical expenses if injured, and toiletries and pickle families, ernor without any apparent excitement Big 72x84 Inch First Quality $5,000 to $25,000 if killed while the Republicans nave put Williams was deputy OPA Mammoth Hangover today as the Ohio River's latest 100 % NEW WOOL Blankets the Detroit Police and the Miciu- of the State Liquor Control — -the mammoth hangover in the water The Ohio's Sunday punch gan State Police. i mission in 1947-48 under appoint- , warcvunit Yy to | Was SPO nt, and nearly all the force Kenneth G. ee ment from former Gov Kim | mountain community of amato that brought death and destruction If Williams wins he will be | Sigler, a Republican which has just concluded its 1,047th upstream appeared to be gone Compare Prices Anywhere! H EMPS I EAD oy Deora crdermnay dd While cerving an 0 police |Obmervance of “Mountain Moon-| The cold, muddy waters which “ win a f consecutive two- ; >. Leenned etadied tow. Wie shine Sake Festival ; had taken four lives Sunday in 9.00 | | year term. Pa . ae ef Wayne web The festival, north of Tokyo, Pittsburgh were expected to in § INSU RANCE If Leonard wins he will have i ‘ oak at the opens each year with “sacrificing” , vade only a few bottom lands in j . | accomplished what no man. has verulty studied a bottle of new-made moonshine.” these parts Value , hi . University of Michigan Law aterward. it is traditional that all * | achieved in Michigan yet—beaten gonoo) He has a wide member- Williams at the polls. Leoaard — participants get thoroughly soused.' Autumn rains tore the river trom . . : chip in legal and law ealuwce- Tax collectors turn their backs its banks Sunday in Pittsburgh and All First Quolity i ; will then have broken Wiliams’ ment organizations. during the festival, but promptly 400 families evacuated at Wheeb Double Bed Size ' three-term run, the iongest in | : : modern Michigan history and the Williams attended Salisbury show up to tax the unconsumed ing. W. Va _ The crest at Wheel- ‘ ; . - Preparatory Schdol in Connecticut S4ke—rice beer with a wine taste ing was 44.7 feet, nearly 9 feet >, Guaranteed 100° virgin (not first on the Democratic side of the I ys = kick ace : ar reprocessed) wool. Deep nap. i ballot and was graduated from Princeton which accounts for the splitting above flood stage warmth without weight. Keep ; in 1933 and from the University ¢f heads and jangled nerves. There It. flood force apparent!) spent, cozy and warm Choice of Williams started in public lie Michigan Law School in 1936 isn't much sake left the river leaked into some low wine, hunter's green or navy as an attorney for the Socal, “Cugan Maw s : ; lands downstream. where alerted colors = fr — | Williams went into World War II : =e Security Board in Washington :n/| lran Executes 10 Reds farmers had hastily picked their as a junior grade lieutenant in CHAIN LINK WIRE ............. 30c per ft. 1998 and 1957. : the Naval Reserve and saw active . late corn. Occupants of lowland PRICES SLASHED on Sheet Blankets Then he became an assistant duty 0s on air Combet intelligence TEHRAN, Iran («®—Ten men’ areas had cleared some basements CLOTHES POSTS, attorney general of Michigan as olficer Se cae paint charged with es Communist | hut feared no first-floor damage. Ist Quality 70x80 5 . * Spies were executed by an army pre s gto ‘o x Heavy Steel with 4 hooks. $5.05 cach | 3,2 oe FTm, Bunker Tl Paes, Hort 304 Tring Squad toy" Sue weve of Note Pelee ther fan B® $1.69 PLAID ALL TYPES OF FENCES U. S. Supreme Court justice. tHe aii Lil es opeesl Ar ficers in the air force, gendarmer- Walker reported the crest at 37.5 followed Murphy to Washington ie and police. The other Was & fect, about 1.5 feet above flood Sh Blank Also RUSTIC TYPE FENCES and was an assistant in the U. 5 Leonard was a member of can. rig Kayvan, a Roads | stage eet et aoe in a Installed Us al’ “e t A . civil defense inistry official j * * « us —_ or spars gh ards ee sarcomere nae to England - —— At Wheeling, city officials chal Stitched Edges 1 Leonard began his climb as a in 1941 te ebserve Nazi bomb- Wears Several Hats i lenged a large damage estimate Gay and colorful since! = Ss ee ee ing and help develop America's One official said reports of the pote gga and rose through the post of civil. deéease LONDONDERRY, N. H. (UP) — damage were ‘‘exaggerated green. blue or detective sergeant, lieutenant, : Selectmen here recently appointed The Wheeling News - Register —°)~CO captain and district commander He was a special consultant to Ralph E. Stevens as chief of po-' sai the flood caused “no very ™ Open Mon.. Tues., Wed., Thurs.. Fri. Sat. 8-6: Sunday eh of the Metropolitan District tron: | the federal civil defense director lice He is also the fire chief, fire serious property damage The wn M1. Parke Se. Phones PE 3- 5572—Eve. © ten, er? 1930 to 1945. and director of the state civil warden and deputy sheriff paper made its reply to an esti — ——— = = ——— = ; mate by the Army Corps of E:ngi- neers, which set flood damage at $6.700,000 for the Wheeling area Wheeling City Manager Robert L. Plummer said, “I can't con- ceive of any such figure as that.” Ld . * com otlice ba There Was ho immediate mem from the engineer's 2 WI at Pittsburgh Col. Edgar B. Sykes, West Vir- ginis. civilian defense director, said Waka lime. and Work. : actually Ist Quality —70x90 $1.98 WHITE Sheet Blanket Stitched Edges S$ a 57 let quality white sheet blankets in big TO & 06 inch double bed ser Geed weight, in white only evacuated their homes | Others. he said, may have left r ‘voluntarily or rode out the flood Indiv idually _Boxed—S ATL N BOU ND with friends on higher ground The Wheeling Intelligencer said | Virtually all the mayors of other 72x84 Inch Size 100% Wool Blanket towns and municipalities in the Wheeling area agreed that outside reports of evacuations and dam- Regular | jages had been exagge rated.” $10.98 ) ies Value Mexico Finds Bodies | Use Our Leyewey Plen new woo bienkete th big 18x00 inch size, satin bound. Choice -o wine, hunter's. green or royal blue ond FLOOR SPECIALS {s Pictured—ALL METAL LUNCH BOX With Pint VACUUM BOTTLE Regular $2.19 | 88 One-Day Only — Black all metal lunch kit with sanjtary white interior ul pint vacuum bottle with new top and pouring lip. Styled as pictured SCSSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSEHSSSSESESSSSSSSOSECS wn | Styled as Pictured—Modern hesrcis HASSOCKS IRON legs with colorful seat top. aaa This price—one day only of 6 Mountain Climbers MEXICO CITY «—The bodies of six mountain climbers swept away | by an avalanche on Mt. Popocat | epeti were found last night in a crevasse near the 17.887-foot sum ;mit> Two other members of the | party who escaped the snowy slide |were rescued earlier | The, dead included two women | It was the highest toll for a single | mountain accident in Mexico's his- | tory SKINNY? No more wet- weather worries! hoe 2) 4 Regular $4.49 Seller’ > Styled as pictured hassock + in modern wrought iron ) No more soot, dict and dust | {1l-Purpose Stainless Steel HOLLOW GROUND Kitchen Knife ~ You'll save work and time—and your clothes will dry fluffier, softer than when they’re hung on a line! There’s no sun fading, no airborne soot, smoke or grime Regular C Lifetime stainless 98e steel knife in hollow ! : round blade style Seller tvetéd hardwood e handle. qeecdddecudesaesibecbescececeaucaseusetasose Famous GILBERT Portable “WHIRL BEATER’ Electric Beater $12.95 Value 7 77 One-Day Only Portable beater complete with 3 ot gag in gift box —— No more lugging = heavy loads! —and you can wear many clothes as soon as you take them out of the dryer! @ COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC — just set and forget! @ FLEXIBLE CONTROLS MODEL DA 6221 for all types of fabrics! % DIAL LIGHTS =m 8 1592 Sale Price for easy visibility! @ AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER dampens clothes when you're ready to iron! @ OZONE LAMP Regular | gives clothes that “‘fresh-air’’ smell! Light fe eae ag powerful purpose ) ter for hundreds o! bor savi on in your @ EXTRA-EFFICIENT kitchen ng ; No’ more sun- LINT p eePmeceeeeeesceceoeeeoeoeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeeee TRY AMAZING NEW WATE-ON Nationally Advertised at $6.95 FAMOUS ‘COUNSELOR’ Scales removes annoying lint! @ SAFETY ENGINEERING — motion stops, heat goes off when door is opened! bleached gorments! UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY WHEN PURCHASED : (Mise Concentrated Pewier) } @ RESISTO-MAR® FINISH WITH G-E WASHER Party ete ashram oe a | : —so easy to keep clean! oF EMULSION of CONCENTRATED Im One Day Only | @ PERFECT MATCHING MATE ‘ nana te oon. $5.50 for 32 on Family Sine: You Saas | Femous arch $ 77 to the G-E Automatic Washer! . Don't be tae when WA AON starts pe = eg | Bay now - day. for gift giving. I Ua BROTHEF IMMS | 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor - Baby eats better if cereals taste fresher! eee sychiatry Service Program Described by Dr. McHugh sented difficulties in all areas, Eric had to look upon the world as a ea eg 89 Hos- By JUDITH L. CLEMENCE B. , ‘ battle ground. yg pcs, in| The imeffectual father generous the program for mentally disturbed to a fault, frequently alcholic, was youngsters at Pontiac State Hos-| the only harbor he had. The emo- pital, we interviewed Dr. James | tionally unstable mother was a tre- M. McHugh of the Child Psychiatry | mendous threat to the security of Service the child's concept of life. This interest and cooperation) He was barely able to hang from the community is greatly ap-| onto acceptable behavior during by Dr. McHugh’and the the early years of his life and * + | had now to begin the real battle of|a marked disrespect of adult fig- emotional survival, This was a des- | ures in his world. perate battle against the adult These desperate demands as | world about him destined to end in| manifested by Eric, have con- futility. Eric’s failures only in-| timeed to stimulate pioneer en- creased his feelings of being lost| @¢#vers by organized medicine ta and nearly accomplished the death| + Meld of child psychiatry. The of his emotional life. combined efforts of beth gevern- It was the fina] stages of regres-| ™*@t and private interests are | sion ¢o infantile levels that finally | %e® Partielpating constructively | breught Eric to Pontiac ‘State Hos-| © this frontier of human needs. pital. Bizarre behavior, impulsive | The deprived, and rejected young |emotional outbursts and long pe-! people of today cry out in ‘their THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1954 The general goals of this new | twenty-five young people at Pon- are: | go necessary, needs of emotionally disturbed | !Y. @Ad monthly activities, looking youngsters. ” to their physical well being and 2. The establishment of addi-| Providing a variety of specific tional child. education and | ?*/chotherapeutic situations is but child rehabilitation activities. | Side at prone task being worked 3. The orientati levels of “ith at present. personne] - geht sat} Eric participated in the develop- Reeds of disturbed boys and ™€ Program to the degree that he | was able to leave the hospital and i | PARTY | | riods of withdrawal from his sur-| demands for help in meeting the completely coltapsed into overt | roundings were the signs of his ill-| prcblems of a complicated world The realization of these goals|PeturD to school. The lack of more will provide Pontiac State Hospital | #4¢quate facilities and trained per- | emotional instability the death of his father, the only | person he loved and who loved him. ; With no one to protect him, Eric| Engagement Told at Dinner Party BIRMINGHAM — At a family dinner Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Donald Tennyson Stanton of Mohegan drive announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Mar- garet Holmes Stanton, to Kent McDonald of Birmingham. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. McDonald of Phoenix, Ariz. Margaret was graduated from Michigan State College where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and has received a degree at the University of North Carolina. Mr, McDonald graduated with a masters degree in music from the Eastman School of Music, Ro- chester, N. Y. Group Chooses New Chairman Mrs. Arno Hulet appointed Mrs. Joseph Bette entertainment chair- man when the auxiliary to Cook- Nelson Post 20 met Monday. The auxiliary represented by Mrs. Hulet, Mrs. Leo Mineweaser and the Americanism chairman, Mrs. William Paetow, presented an American Flag to Wisner School on Columbus day. A hard time Halloween party is planned for Saturday evening at the Legion home. Mrs. LeRoy Busse appointed Mrs. Don Sutton and Mrs. Ray Guerin to assist with the annual Christmas party for juniors. PERMANENT Hair Tinting—Electric Manicures FLORENCE’S Short, Snap-Back LANOLIN ‘q°° Special! BEAUTY SALON FE 5-2663 Beech-Nut stay fresher Cereals following | ness at the time of the break from| distorted because of the mental in- reality. Prior to this there had| been general behavior difficulties such as failure in school, truancy, | | Overstreets | teelings of anguish and futility by fighting with other youngsters, and acts of delinquency in the home, in | HARRY and BONARO OVERSTREET juries they have suffered. These youngsters manifest their with the type of treatment center sonnel necessitated a longer stay interfere with the final Eric's case. isis Many individuals and groups from the communities immediate- ly surrounding Pontiac State Hos- pital have risen to. the occasion, accepted their roles and are par- ticipating in the present pioneer project. The State of Michigan, Pontiac State Hospital and the community are all necessary for final success. Im another article recognition to vari- ous groups end organizations will be given. | | to Present | | Mental Health Picture | Human relationships can be im- proved and man can understand | himself and others Harry and Bonaro Overstreet, ; author-lecturers on psychology, | Have spent their.lives proving this | point and working out and testing |techniques for the successful ac- complishmem of these huge tasks. On Wednesday evening at 8 in the auditorium of Pontiac. High School, the Overstreets will give a team lecture on ‘‘What Emo- tional Health Looks Like.”’ Some of the symptomatic dif- ferences in behavior between the emotionally healthy and the emo- tienally unhealthy individua! will be given. The Overstreets will point out how knowledge of these differences may make It possible for us te know when an indi- vidual needs help. They will show how we may help |ourselves by changing conditions |that make for emotional distur- ‘bances and will tell @ how to | Promote the positive factors in jour shared life that make for }emotional health. | Harry Allen Overstreet, perhaps | best known as an author is a | philosopher and psychologist who in new size packages NOW YOU CAN Get ALL Four Beech-Nut Cereals in the handier new 4-0z. size. Baby finishes this smalle cereal while every spoonful tastes start solids, rpackageof with Beech temptingly fresh and delicious. You can please him with greater variety _of cereals, too! Nutrition experts Beech-Nut Cereals to help Baby grow strong and sturdy. He’ll love their smoothness and delicate flavor! developed When the doctor says it is time to make mealtimes happy -Nut Cereals. Try all 4 kinds in the new size packages. Every Beech-Nut Cereal, Strained and Junior Food you give your baby is accept- ed by the Council on Foods and Nutrition of the American Medical Association. -Beech-Nut Foods for Babies ,has pioneered in adult education. Among his widely read books jare ‘The Mature Mind,” “The Great Enterprise,’ and he was co- author with his wife, Bonaro Wil- kinson Overstreet in writing ‘“‘The Mind Alive.” Educated at the University of California and at Oxford, he was for many years head of the Department of Philosophy and Psychology at the College of the City ef New York. During recent years, he and Mrs. Overstreet have taught short courses for the University of Mich- Couple Married | in Arkansas The Lutheran Chapel at Camp Chaffee, Ark., was the setting for | the marriage of Kay Keller and) © Pvt. Glenn Vallance, Oct. 9. | The bride is the daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Jack Keller of East} | Mansfield avenue, and he is the | son of Mr. and Mrs, Harvard B. | Vallance of Rochester. The bride wore a dusty rose suit with avocado green accessories and a white carnation corsage for the ceremony. Mrs. Alva Ezell of Minneapolis, Minn., attended the bride as ma- tron of honor and Howard Tim- merman of Indian was best man. Guests Invited to Join Club On Saturday evening the Hoe- downers Square Dance club sea- son officially began at Owen School. Forty couples joined in the call to “square your sets’ by Harvey Gilchrist, Ralph Monroe, Robert Grosjean, Walt Ashley, De- Witt Hart and Art Thomas. On the guest ‘list for the evening | were the Lloyd Rowans, the Gil- | bert Grosjeans, Richard Gilchrist | and Bonnie Lovie, the Corbin | Reams, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Rydress, Mr. and Mrs. Ronaid | Carr and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bar- | row. Others were Mr. and Mrs. Lowell | Wilkeson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rosie, | Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Chapman | the Loren Beattys and the Walter Andersons There's music in the Rochester ‘ : |air—and it is being heard in — advise that couples i- | Pontiac too. Members of the Hollis igan Extension Service and for other institutions throughout the ‘country. Psychologist, poet and author, Bonaro Wilkinson Overstreet is “| also distinguished as an adult edu- cator and lecturer. | Her special field of interest t | She has been a regular contribu- tor to the National Parent Teacher magazine for many years, serving it also as an advisory editor. Her | terested in joining a square dance | |club or in getting instructions | _ Sage = | should contact the Department of | ' ; | Parks and Recreation. Orchestra this season. Their story Friendship Group Is Entertained tionship as well as the harmony This family is obviously one |ship degree of the Women of the! of the busiest in Rechester, so |Moose of Mt. Clemens Lodge 905.| it follows that they probably Guests were also present from the! can’t find time for anything but Pontiac Loyal Order of the Moose, happiness. Music brought Mr. | 182. | and Mrs. Hinkel together and Mrs. William Davidson and Mrs.| they have repaid their debt by | Jerry Hould assisted the hostess. introducing their children to music as a character builder latest book j “Understanding . ae = To Attend Session | i i aan or Born and educated in California, Several committee members of | - eee eee oeeenenereeeeeiocnancemneaede Mrs. Overstreet has taught in both th> Centennial Celebration of the oe high school and junior college as|YWCA are leaving for Lansing, PT A Activities well as in adult education pro- | Thursday where they will hold an | Pontiac Lake grams. all-day meeting. Pont@c Lake MOMS Unit 60 wi!) spon- sor a bake sale, to begin at 1 pm. Tues- day. at the Dixie Recreation Bowling BAL <= LL FISH- IOC WOT PART CEREAL! P| 1 Give ne... All-Gish 3 LITTLE KITTENS “Cooked to a Cat's Taste!” Send for CAT-O-GRAPHS Alley in Drayton Plains LeBaren Executive board of LeBaron PTA will meet Tuesday at 1 pm Central Central School PTA will meet Thurs- day at 2:30 pm. in the Kindergarten room A panel of sixth grade pupils will discuss “Student Help in School Government" Lincela Lincoln Junior PTA qill meet this evening at 7:30 in the school auditorium The speaker is Dr. Dana P. Whitmer. Wiisen Wilson School PTA will meet Thursday at 2:30 p.m. in the sehool auditorium “Audio-Visual” equipment and supplier Will be discussed . w Wisner * School Dads Night Thursday at 730 im the gymnasium. Mrs. Edna Forman, English teacher at Pontiac High School will re- view the book, "The Key to Peace.” re Three of the Hinkels will per-| form with the Pontiac Sympnony | | tells of a harmony of family rela- | | counselor for the Melody Minors, iener | PTA will celebrate | A daughter, Sharon, a sopho- more at Rochester High School plays flute and piccolo in the orchestra, and her parents will help make up the string section. Church and community also benefit from the family's skill, | Both educated at the Detroit Con- servatory of Music, Mr. Hinkel is a junior music club in Rochester, while Mrs. Hinkel supervises the Sunday School of St. Paul's Meth- odist Church in Rochester Lynne, whe at the age of seven, has already had two years of piano and is now playing the accordion. choir of St. Pauls Church after fin- ishing her duties as organist for the Sunday school. Mrs. Hinkel plays the saxophone in her hus- band’s four-piece dance orchestra The Hinkels have carried out a philosophy on musical education which may prove a valuable hint | to parents just starting to think | about their children’s future. Mr. and Mrs. Hinke| started their children at the piano at the age of five as a means of build- ing a good foundation. Later each one is allowed to choose his own instrument. A son, Howard, who is 13, studies cornet and joins his sister in the school varsity band. Both Sharon and Howard have partici- pated in state music festivals each | year. Sharon recently won the coveted first chair in the flute | Ellio CAT FOOD Styled for (cow THis’ ovr) 7 Babies love them..:thrive on them! | icieedieesioinesteedie ieee Hpabnattipetny san} 8 Se. 2 lebols [15 aa H ol « {15 on. sine} copy of ( tts 4 ful workmanship. Today as always the same skill and attention is given all reupholstered furniture | as is required in the making of our fine custom | Since 1920 we have gained a reputation for care- | | - pieces. Elliott will return your old pieces new and ready for years of additional use. Plant and Showroom 5390-5400 Dixie: Hwy. Waterford, Mich. OR 3-1225 You..... ay by Appointment Volume 2 0 Volume 3 0) comfortable . .. a Open Evenings J ‘ Sharon joins her father in the Pentise Press Phete MR. and MRS. HOLLIS HINKEL and DAUGHTER, SHARON, of ROCHESTER Three Music Makers of Rochester Lend Talents to Pontiac Symphony section of the All State Orthestra at Interlochen. Mr. and Mrs. Hinkel admit that their children's musical training | has required many hours ef trans- portation to and from music lessons and their present schedule is fast paced, but the results have been priceless. Somehow, the Hinkels had to [it the Pontiac Symphony into their schedule, for Mrs. Hinkel says, “The opportunity of playing in the Pontiac Symphony Orctiestra un- | der Francesco DiBlasi should not | be passed up by any musician within driving distance. ‘Dads’ Role Outlined for Culture Club Two talks on father and son re- lationships highlighted the Thurs- day evening meeting of Child Cul- ture held in the South Marshall street home of Mrs. Neil Nelson. Ole Sorto spoke on “Dad and the Small Fry’’ and Dale Swanson chose “Dad Works with Adoles- cents’ for his topic. Mr. Sorto told how the father, by his conduct in business and everyday life. helps develop the attitudes and values of his very young son Mr. Swanson pointed out that | the kind of home activities offered is most important to the teen- ager. Coming Events Parliamentary Study Club will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Masonic Tempie, 18%, Bast Lawrence Women of the Moose committee chair- men and executive board will meet Wednesday at § p.m Orange Social Club will meet with Mrs. Robert Sanders, 7‘, Chase 81. Thursday at 7:30 p.m Royal Neighbors of Bast Central Dis- trict will hoid a. get-together in Flint Thursday. Those planning to attend may contact Mrs. William Paetow Queen Mary Section of the Needlework Guild will meet Thursday at 1 pm with Mrs. Charies Creighead, 165 Caigary Rd. Group Pour OES will meet Thursday at noon in the Lawrence street Masonic Temple Zone eight MOMS Past President Club will meet Thursday at noon for luncheon with Mrs. E. K. Vanderlind, 57 8. John- son Ave Malta i@ fish supper 82 Perkins street p.m Guild 10 of All Baints Episcopal Church will meet in primary room of Stevens | Hall Tuesday evening at 630 for supper meeting Metropolitan Club Ladies Auxiliary wii] | meet Tuesday with Mrs. Davy Gilpin, 40 Neome : Women's euxiliary of Pontiac Typo- graphical union will meet Tuesday with Mrs. Chris Greve, 46 Hudson street for & cooperative dinner at 6 o'clock Northern Oakland County Gir! Scout council will meet Tuesday at 10 a.m. in Grace Lutheran Church Temple Board is sponsoring Friday at the tempie at Serving begins at & - Group three OES will meet Wednesday at 12:30 for a cooperative luncheon at 17% EB. Lawrence 8t. Better Home and Garden Club will hold its annual meeting at Devorn Gabies on Thursday at 12:30 p.m. Officers will give reports. (Advertisement) Perfume That i ee ee - TWENTY | Approval Given Waterford Law Naming 5 Man Group Follows Controversy of Chief's Firing WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A police trial] board was established by the Waterford Township board. last night. The ardinance provides for the appointment of members by the Township board and de- fines duties of the trial board, The board will consist of five tax-payin gresidents of the town." ship, who shall hold no elective. or appointive position in the | ship, who shall hold no elective | ment, and must be a United States citizen. Creation of the trial beard | | | \ follows the controversial firing of Township Police Chief Frank Van Atta in August for allegedly using his office in campaigning for a candidate in the August primary election. , After several mass meetings of residents favoring Van Atta’s re-| instatement, the township board | held a hearing on the matter, ant later rehired him. Following the rehiring, the town- ship board asked a committee of | three residents to recommend tive | outstanding citizens to form a trial | board. The ordinance will take effect | 30 days after publication. Each member will hold office | for five years, and one member shall be appointed by the township board each year. Officers of the trial board will be chosen among ‘themselves, at the first meeting of the board, and | at the first meeting of each calendar year thereafter. | The chairman, vice chairman and secretary will hold office for one year, or until a successor Is appointed. The ordinance states that he member of the police department wil) be discharged, demoted, or suspended for disciplinary reasons for more than two weeks, unless a written com- plaint has been filed with the trial board secretary, and a copy given the accused. All complaints must be verified. Within 48 hours, the trial board must hold a meeting to hear all | evidence. Within 72 hours after! pal of Baker Junior High School; all evidence is presented, the trial board must file’a written cum- mary and recommendation with the township clerk. |Norman Barnard, Pending hearing by the board, | the accused officer shall be sus | ship parks and recreation and fire pended from duty, but if exon- | departments will explain Proposals erated, will lose no pay. At the next regularly sched. These proposals are designed to uled township board meeting, the clerk will present the trial and fire facilities. Alex Tunstall beard’s summary and recom- mendations to the beard. The township board must either accept or reject the trial board recommendations, giving reasons for their action. If the — board fails to act, the accused is fully exonerated, under the ordinance. township | } | | | | | |no more nations are admitted to membership. ‘on 100th Birthday |birthday anniversary but the 60th} janniversary of his wedding. | Wife, who is 82, Vd HINO JVW eee i ' 5 ccmnatecoen — _ THE PONTI. “ PRESS, TUESDAY, Township Board Establishes Police, Tria OCT OBER 19, 1954 ae SCRAMBLE PROCEDURE — Members of the | were privileged to tour the base recently, watch Milford Ground Observer Corps, accompanied by the jets take off, and study the air traffic in a Air Force Major Maxwell Gurman watch two of 250 mile radious via radar. Attending were Mrs. the Selfridge Air Force Base jets “scramble” in George Eberle, Mrs. Charles Shepherd, Mrs. Albert a simulated emergency takeoff to intercept enemy Maddock, Mrs. George Agnew, Mrs. George Feeley, planes. The Post members, awards as one of the state’s finest observer crews, recipients of several | ‘and Mrs. June Fellion. Deaths in Nearby Communities Clara 8. Silating ROMEO —Service for Miss Clara S. Slating, 81, of East St. Clair street, was held today at the Wil- bur Funeral Home, with burial in Romeo Cemetery. Miss Slating, a former school] teacher, died at her home Saturday. Her sole survivor is a brother, Edgar, of Romeo. Troy 2 PTA Plans Panel Discussion TROY TOWNSHIP—A panel dis- cussion on ‘“Troy Now and in the Mrs. Anna Ziclesch ROMEO—Service for Mrs. Theo- dore (Anna) Zielesch, 75, of 140 Tillson St., will be 2 p.m. Wednes- day at St. John Lutheran Church. She will lie In state at Roth Home for Funerals until noon Wednesday. Mrs. Zielesch died Sunday at her home. She is survived by three daugh- ters, Mrs. Alice Hillman and Mrs. Martha Neddermeyer of Romeo, Mrs. Edith Hulett of Armada; one son, Clarence of Armada; one brother, Ernest Kegler Sr. of Ro- meo; ten grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Mrs, Archibald R. Landmesser BIG BEAVER — Prayer service Future,” and an explanation of | ‘tax proposals to be voted on in the | |Nov. 2 election will be presented | tomorrow at an 8 p.m. meeting | of Troy No. 2 PTA. Speakers on the panel will be township su- pervisor; Sherwood Shaver, Troy postmaster; Boyd Larson, princi- the’ Rev. Robert Ward of Troy Methodist Church; and Dr. D. Reid of Big Beaver, Jack Goodman will act as chairman. A representative of the town- 6 and 7 on the November ballot. provide a tax for recreation, park will be the moderator. Fifth grade mothers wil] serve refreshments. Alphabetical Rule Stays Bonn Hand on NATO Reins PARIS (UP) — An alphabetical accident will prevent Germany from presiding at top-leve] Atlantic alliance meetings for at least 15 years after she is admitted to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). By NATO custom, the chairman- ship rotates annually every Sep- | tember, according to the English | alphabetical order of the member | nations. : France held the chair until last month, Now it has passed to Greece. Since West Germany is to be called the “German Federal Republic” under NATO terminology, Germany has | “missed its turn,” which nor- | malty would come after France. | So. Germany will not again be | eligible for the chairmanship un- der present rules until] the cycle has gone a full circle—15 years if 60th Anniversary Falls BUTLER, Pa. (®—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morris held a double cele-| wration yesterday. | It was not only Mr. Morris’ 100th | His | gave this reason) for her husband's longevity: “It's because he eats oatmeal. for ——— every morning.” | Plan Hunter Meals SEYMOUR LAKE—The Crusad- ers of Seymour Lake Methodist Church will serve meals to hunters and also to the public from 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Wednesday and Saturday. Tuesday Dances Set WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Ballroom and novelty dance in- struction is being sponsored by the Merry Mixers Club every Tuesday evening from 810 p.m. at the CAI building. Ae \ for Mrs. Archibald R. (Ottilie) Landmesser, 65, of 3186 Rochester Rd., will be held at 12:30 p.m. | Wednesday at the Spiller-Gramer Funera] Home, Clawson, with ad- ditional services at 2 p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Royal Oak, and burial in Oakview Ceme- tery. She died Monday. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Calvin of Fern- dale, Harold of Pontiac, Darrel of | Royal Oak, eight brothers, two sis- ters, and two grandchildren. Maxwelj V. Mitchell ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Serv- ice for Maxwelj Vinson Mitchell, 63, of 26332 Brush St. will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Wessels Funeral Home, Pleasant Ridge, with burial in Oakview Cemetery. He died Sun- day at his home. Surviving are his widow, Jesse; a daughter, Mrs. Virginia M. Dis- tel of Birmingham; and one sister. Kari L. Muth MILFORD — Service for Karl L. Muth, 39, of 9516 Round Lake Rd., will be held at 11 a. m. Thurs- day at the Orchard Lake Com- munity Church, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. Arrange- ments are by the Van Valkenburg Funeral Home, Detroit. He died Sunday. ~ Surviving are his widow, Har- riet, a daughter Linda and sons Robert and John, all at home, a brother Maxwell Muth and a sister | Lillian. Mrs, Daniel Ferbes MARLETTE — Service for Mrs. Daniel (Grace) Forbes, 74, was held today at First Presbyterian Church, with burial in Marlette Cemetery. She died Saturday after a long iliness. She is survived by her husband and two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Trafelt of Columbus, Ohio, and Mrs. Veva Libbers of Lapeer. Man Put on Probation In Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday, John Clark, 28, of 92% | Bagley St. was placed on two years probation and assessed $200 costs by Judge H. Russel Holland after admitting to attempted break- ing and entering Oct. 8. Clark was accused of encouraging two juveniles to break into the Bagiey Hotel, ‘Barbara Kalaiz, Jack Blair Wed in Saturday Rites DRYDEN — Sacred Heart Church in- Imlay City was the setting Saturday morning for the marriage of Baybara Kalaiz and Jack Blair. The bride is the daughter of ‘Board Schedules -will include intersections at = Special Meeting New Building Code Set for Public Hearing in Waterford Township WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The township board will consider a new building code in a special meeting at the town hall at 7:30 p.m. today. The meeting is open to the public. The township board last night went on record in favor of the % mill tax for the new Oakland County court house, at the site already selected on Telegraph read berdering Waterford Town- ship. Board approval was given for a street light survey to be made by | the police department. The survey Lake Road and M-59, Pontiac: JAMES H. SMITH __ MES, road and Telegraph, Crescent. fake | Road at M-59, Cass Lake and Pon- tiac Lake road; and Frembes and Hatchery ds. The resignation of Ray Schell, assistant building inspector, was | accepted. A plat for Moore's Acres sub- division on Lechhaven Road was approved, as was Lorraine Ma- nor Ne. 1, plat on Scott Lake read, subject to Oakland County Read Commission approval. The board voted to ask the Road Commission to advertise for bids for blacktopping Crescent Lake Road from north of the high school to M-59. A petition requesting concrete sidewalks was received from resi- dents of Preston street, between Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Kalaiz Sr. of Lake Pleasant road, Mr. and Mrs. John Blair of Dryden are the parents of the bridegroom. A gown of lace over net, fash- ioned along princess lines with a choice for the ceremony. Her full length veil was held in place with a crown of net and seed pearls. Matron of honor was Mrs. Stan- ‘ley Kalaiz Jr. and Patty Kalaiz, the bride's sister. Gladys Chap- man and Marcia Stanlake were other attendants, Ronald Kalaiz, brother .of the bride, was the best man, with Boyd | Blair, the bride groom's brother, jand John Gill attending. | Frank Smith and Vance Chapman | seated the guests. A breakfast was served after the ceremony, and a reception held at Hunters Creek Hall in the evening. Registrations Rise in Waterford Area WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Registrations for the November election show an increase of 1,000 over the primary registrations, Waterford Township clerk Louis Barry has reported, Fotal township registration for | November is 14,500. The development of new subdi- visions in the township is con- sidered to be the primary reason for the increase,-Barry said. County Calendar Imiay City The Women's Fellowship of the Con- gtegationa! Church will hold its annual meeting, Thursday, following « luncheon at ip m. in the Community at the village hall Waterferd Township The Pontiac Camp Gideon suxijiary will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs Merritt Cooley on Middlebelt Road on Wednesday at 11:39 for a luncheon Trey Tewnship The Troy Nad's Auxiliary will be held até m. Thursday at the Troy High , with Mrs. William Menry and Roy Taylor as hostesses for the Mrs pmog | oung Peoples Group of the Coun- try-Bide Chapel wil] meet at 745 p.m | Thursday, to work on plans for a Hal- loween party Lake Orion organised Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will hold a famii style baked ham dinner at the church from 6-7 pm. Thursday The Buchner Acres will meet at 10 am. Wednesda home of Mrs. Lynn Haines, o Washington, Oxford Extension Club at the 7176 8 Thomas The Thomes WSCS will’ meet at ¢t home of Mrs. Iven Hieter for an after: noon meeting Wednesday. Seuth Hadley The Ladies of South Hadley Lutheran Church will hold thier annual besaar and chicken dinner in the parish hall Thursday, with serving to begin at 5:30 p.m. waltz length skirt was the bride's | The Women's department of the Re Edgefield and West Huron. The Oakland County Drain Com- mission request for right of way for the McIver Drain was approved by the board. Lois Pickett Wed to Paul Broecker at South Hadley METAMORA — Ferns and can- dielight set the scene for the wed- ding of Lois Pickett and Paul Broecker, held at Christ Lutheran Church in South Hadley. Lois is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pickett of Metamora. Paul is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Broecker of Hadley. The bride wore a street-length | gown of white satin and net with A tiara of seed pearis held he fingertip veil and she carried bouquet of pink carnations with | white satin leaves. Phyllis Brewer served as maid of hener, and bridesmaids were danet Pierson, Margaret Bretz and Sharon Unger. Best man was Milton Ousnamer of Hadley. Harold Gee, Darwin | Sander and Lonnie Pickett, brother | | of the bride, seated the guests. The bride's sisters, Patricia Ann and Verna Mae Pickett, were flower giris, and Larry Broecker, the bridegroom's brother, was | ring bearer. A reception for the 250 guests | was held in the church hall Following a honeymoon in north- ern Michigan, the newlyweds are | making their home with the bride- | groom's parents in Hadley. Taxicab Drivers Seen in Major CD Role LOUISVILLE #—The one man who knows his eity better than | most motorists will be in the front | line of civil defense in the event | of an atomic attack. The taxicab driver, says A. P Miller, Battle Creek, Mich., will |be called upen to help evacuate the public from. cities, move wounded to hospitals and deliver ‘medical ‘and other supplies where | needed. ganize the group. Teachers to Miller, an official of the Federal Civil Defense Administration, spoke iat the opening of the National Assn. of Taxicab Owners’ 38th conven- tion yesterday. Junior High School Sets PTA Meeting TROY TOWNSHIPThe Stuart K. Baker Junior High School will hold | a PTA organizational meeting at 8 tonight in the school gymnasium. Mrs. Mark Goddard, PTA direc- tor of District 7, will help or- Parents Announce Daughter's Betrothal ROMEO—Mr. and Mrs. H, C. Kernaghan have announced the en- gagement of her daughter, Patricia Aldrich, to Joshua Loren Hudson. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Heitmeyer, A February 19 wedding date has been set, Speok TROY TOWNSHIP — The Smith Cari Allen and Mrs. Clark Teller speak on the curriculum at the club’s meeting at 8 p.m; Thurs- day. * Grapes. grown in California ac- |. a lace overshirt and lace jacket. | Carver Board toBe Quizzed State School Head Calls Royal Oak Twp. Group to Answer Charges ROYAL OAK. TOWNSHIP — vestigatirig charges that a Carver school election last July “rigged,”’ state superintendent of public instruction Cur L. Tayter called a meeting this morning with the Board of Education of the George Washington Carver School Oakland County superintendent of schools William J. Emerson also was called to the Lansing meeting The order was issued Monday e430 votes cast last July for seat. Picketing of the school followed “Citizens Improvement Commit- tee,” which claimed that Cash had not been legally elected. District No. 1, issued a back-to- | | school appeal to parents of some | These’’ 2,200 pupils at the school. Buffing- jton said denial of a $400 wage increase had angered the teachers. | * New Drug Found for Pneumonia Aid PHILADELPHIA (® — Philadel- phia General | been found equally effective aureomycin and terramycin in the | treatment of pneumonia while hav- | | ing fewer adverse affects than the | older drugs Dr. F. Lioyd Mussels, executive director of the hospital, | @ five-man research team had test- ed the drug, and reported that ithe new drug “promptly broke | high temperatures, usually within 48 hours, and caused untoward re- j action in only four cases—an ex |tremely good record compared with other drugs." He said that penicillin doubtless | would remain the most valuable | drug for treating pneumonia and | other infections but that “‘this one | should find its own place In some le cases it may prove useful where | patients react adversely to peni- cillin or other drugs.” Broomfield, Elias to Talk | at Clarkston Tomorrow CLARKSTON — Two candidates for the state Senate in the No- vember election will be speakers at a meeting of the Women's Com- munity Club, to be held at 1 p.m tomorrow at Clarkston Commurtiity Center | Fred Elias, Democrat, and Wil- jliam §. Broomfield, Republican, will outline their political objec- tives for the group. The special program will include a panel dis- cussion ‘Clarkston Club to Meet CLARKSTON—Mrs, Percy Low- ery will be hostess to the members of the Clarkston Past Matrons’ Club at noon tomorrow for a lunch- eon and business meeting at her home on Maybee road. l System Sally J. Rouse Becomes Bride of James H. Smith + t when 47 of the 65 teachers at the Carver School went on strike pro- © testing the failure of the board of ' education to conduct a recount of | “i! be on display a board friction between a school beard faction led by Lonnie Cash and a | Meanwhile Walter Buffington, su-— perintendent of Township School | council! Hospital announced | | last night that a new drug had as | said that | Unless You're A Two-Car Family YOU NEED ‘BUS SERVICE If you want bus service when you need it... USE-IT NOW, AT LEAST ONCE A WEEK WATERFORD TOAVNSHIP Sally June Rouse became the bride of James Harold Smith ‘Saturday in a ceremony at 7:30 p.m. in the Christian Temple The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David S. Rouse, of 2810 Otsego Drive. The bridegroont is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel! C. Smith of Osceala Ark The bride's gown of Chantilly lace had a fited bodice, with a mandariy collar trimmed with tiny seed pearls and sequins. Her bouffant skirt fel cathedral train, and a seed pearls und held veil edged with dace Mrs. Donald Hoover ter of the bride. was matron of honor Bridesmaids were Mrs Harold P.ouse tirin-luw of the bride, Shirley Couise and Mrs. Don Martel! Sut Campbell as bridesmaid dori Smith, brother of the bridegroom, served as best man, with Harold and Edwin Rouse, i brothers of the bridegroom, Les- | ter Wheeicr, Robert Fastman and shame aera dr. as ushers. A re inch par lors folio med the ceremony and the couple left for a honeymoon in St Petersburg. Fla "ome Pack 87 to Install Bobcats in Rites Tonight ROMEO—New | in a long tiara of s fingertip Nora Day witt Jacqueline Bobcats will be nducted and receive their pins, registration cards and a feather signifying their membership in the pack at the 7:30 p.m. meeting to- day of the Romeo Cub Pack 87, in the high school auditorium The program will consist of a series of ‘Hoe-Down"’ sketches pre sented by the five dens Various projects completed dur ng the past month by the dens Romeo Church Group ‘Holds Meeting Today ROMEO—The Romeo Council of | the United Church Women will hold | its October meeting at 8 p.m | today in the Methodist Church, to | acquaint members and friends with the purpose and activities of the A short film, “The Least of will also be shown. ‘PHLUPS' | MK OEMUGHES Forty-three years ago in for- bidden Tibet, behind the highest mountains in the world, a young journalist named Edwin J. Dingle found the answer to this ques- jtion. A great mystic opened his eyes. A great change came over him. He realized the strange power that knowledge gives. ’ That Power, he say: form the life of anyone. Ques- tions, whatever they are, can bg answered. The problems of health can trans- death, poverty and wrong can be solved In his own case, he was brough | back to splendid health. He «« quired wealth, too, as well world - wide professionat recogni- tion. Forty-three years ago, hie | was sick as a man could be and \ live.. Once his coffin -was bought Years of almost continuous tropi cal fevers, broken bones. near blindness, privation and dar had made a human wreck of him physically and mentally er He was about to be sent back home to die, when a strange mes- sage came—“They are waiting for you in Tibet.” He wants to tell the whole world what he learned there | under the guidance of the greatest mystic he ever encountered during count for 85 to 90 per cent of do- * = (Advertisement) FRE RE Free Sample at your Drug Store FOR THE RELIEF OF RHEUMATIC= ARTHRITIC PAIN* *SURIN is @ fast, efective treatment for pain relief — not o cure. SURIN 1S SWIFT— DIRECT! No matter bow suffered arthritic - rheumatic Storms are ahead! This is Re-Roofing Time INSULATED SIDING EASY TERMS! 3 YEARS TO PAY! Free Estimates Our Representative WI) Cell et Your Cenventence Call Today! FE 2-121! G&W Construction Co. 2010 Dixie Hwy. at Kennett Road Do We Have to Die? his lifetime of travel throughout the world. He wants everyone to experience the greater health and the Power, which there came to him . Within ten years, he was able to retire to this country with a for- tune. He had been honored by fel- lowships in the world’s leading geographical -seeteties, for his work as a geographer. And today, 43 ve later, he is still so athletic, capable of so much work. se young n appearance, it is hard to be- lieve he has lived so long As a first step.im their progress toward the Power that Knowledge gives, Mr. Dingle wants to send to readers of this paper a 9,000-word treatise. He says the time is here for it to be relea:.d to the Western World. and offers to send it, ‘Pree of cost or obligation to sincerg of this notice. In addition he will give to each of them @ 64- page book bose ye astonishing events the world m&y soon expect, ccording to great prophecies. reader For your free copy of both works, imply send a postcard or letter to The Institute of Mentalphysics, 313 South Hobart Bivd, Dept. L43, Los Angeles 4, Calif. WEDNESDAY AT BOTH: THRIFTY DRUG STORES i ie —— DETROIT PRODUCE | DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale — farmers markets report reau of Markets: Pruits: Apples, Delicious, fancy § 50 ou CHICAGO w — Hedging pres-|River, Number (1, 3.00-3.50 | bushel: 50 bu; Jonathan, fe : No, 1, $3- gure again got the better of corm | 3.50 be. McInvonh taney a6 be MeL u gprser we ah. on the Board of Trade today but | 333 ba. gnaw No! 250-300 bu: Wolf the rest of the grain market had | Pivet Ne. |. m case. Grapes, a firm tone. ‘steo'h 3 Br tot ‘Pearn Bona : ' had suffered | 3 ee be hclons. No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu | Vegetables . @reen, Wonder, No. | 200-250 bu, . | freen, round, No %. 3.00-3.50 bu; beans, | scored smal} gains even though | ng age esc weren't able to stage any 1 ee as Beets, No 1. 15-00 | § No. strong advance. What got off to | dos behs: fancy 1.25 dos —. beets alow start and then pounded ieee sf. he iia me ahead on bullish news in the Cabbage No. 1, .75--90 bu; cabbage | world wheat situatic curly. No. 1. 100-125 bu: cabbage red . No 1, yoationy bag ope TD sing - Wheat near the end of the first Ne. 1 100- bu. Carrots 1%. | hour was % to 1% higher, De- ‘00-150 Gunes. wet 12s- | cember $2.19: corn % to ly lower, ae eis phe dl — December $1.53; oats unchanged No. 1, 125-150 doz Cucumber) slicers. fancy. 330 bu: No.-1, 3.00-3 50 %>u. Dili, | to % lower, December 80%; rye No |. 65-80 doz bchs. Rggplant, long. N A] % to % higher, December $1.38; |350 bu; No. 1. 3.00-3.80 bu. Dill, No. 1, } . % to 30 cents @ hundred pounds high- %-10¢ tb Parsley, curly, No 1, 15-¥0 October dos. bdchs rsley, root No. 1, 15-00 oe, $16.95, hs "Pereuios. No. 1. 150-296 = ‘y-bu Peppers, Cayenne. No. 1.60-1.00 pk 4 ° u. Peppers, Cayenne, No. 1, 65-100 pe Grain Prices peppers, hot, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 pep- pers, Pimiento No 1. 1.50-1.75 bu; pep- 1, 100-125 bu; peppers [ . 1. 100-150 bu Potatoes : _ a _ a CHICAGO—AP—Opening grain 'No 1, 130-180 50-lb : potatoes, No. Lowe's, DuPont and Kennecott May 1406's | 1. 250-280 100-Ib bag Pumpkins No 1. Copper. , bd Dec. ...... 218 May 1 42's | 90-100 bu. Radishes, red. No 1, 15-90 } eae ee 7 Soybeans = dos — — — — we. . 15-00 | k k “ if § 0 oris S « #80. ov ; 2 dos. be ui corn 6. 4, duly -»- 210% Jan 275 1.25 bu; squash, Butternut. No. 1. 1.06-| New Yor Stoc s Corn May 276% 125 bu; squash, Delicious, No. 1, 1.00-) Dec. . ; 1s July 277% 150 bu; squash Hubbard, No 1, 1.25- | adams Exp . 35.3 Johns Man 6 March . .... 1.58% - 175 bu; squash. Tomatoes, fancy. 1.28 14-| admiral . . .. 256 Jones & L 25.7 8 duly . -see 5.60% Oct 16.85 ib bekt; No. 1. 76-1.00 14-Ib bakt; toma-) air Reduc 21 Kelsey Hay 204 Oats— Nev. 1.42 toes No. 1; 200-250 bu. Turnip, No. 1 | ales L sti 335 Kennecott oas' 0 Dec. . ...... M% Dee 13.87 | 1.00-1.30 dos behs. Turnip, topped. No}. anied Ch . . 92 Kimb Clk “a4 March . .... ait, May —- | 1.50-2.00 bu | Alted Strs ... ae coe 88 304 | MOY ~ severe / e end salad greens: Celery cad- | Allis Cha) ,. 66 roger duly. 4s 16% Dee 10 80 a . Endive, No. 1. | Al Ltd .... 636 Lehn & FP... 207 Rye - + — e eeeee 40.78 | Taoci = a a five. "Cesaned No e | Alum Am 622 COP Olas " j Experts Say Proper Dee. . .... Vos sees } 2.00- bu. Escarole, No 1, 100-125 bu; | Am Airlin 151 Lib McNAL . . . March . 140% July... 1088 forse 4 bleached. No. 1,200-250 >u. [Am Cas 41 «Ligg & My . sis | Attitudes an Aid for | Lettuce, head, No. 1, 2.75-328 3-dor. | Am Cyan 471 Lockh Aire 1 . : crate; Lettuce, leaf, No. 1. 200-280 bu; | Am Gas & EI. 46 Loews |. 108 Driver’ Le -* 35 ane Ford to Resume Line Romeme, Ba t : am in réy.. 30 ‘orubard 234 ; of Continental Cars Am Motors... 101 Mack Trt 193) CHICAGO — The average mo- | Poultry re Rea . by Martin one 33 ‘torist is suffering from a case of DETROIT (UP)—Ford Motor Co. | : | Am Seating .. 313 vad 44 bad atitudes, safety experts were has announced it will resume pro- | DETROIT POULTRY = Congr Tei 1704 Mid Con Pet 942. told today. duction of its luxury Continental |, DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per pound | im Tob $02 Mid Sti Pa 381 ; was made b fob. Detroit for No. 1 quality live poul-| 4m Tom eo onsen Ch 0906) ‘That diagnosis was 1 y cars again in 1955. bel ga os 1%08 Light type 13-| Amt Zinc = 174 Ment Were m4 five members of the Cincinnati ’ hens 11-18; r . u 1. la- William Clay Ford, vice pee 3: neory Ube roasuers © wo Se penne | nord — c 03 Motorola “61 Se at the Na . ° 4 ing) whites 28. Caponetios (4% to Sty | Armee St Murray C 363 | tonal Safety Congress . Ford's Special Product Div " 32. = | poor gy vy ay eas rp ad ‘3 The malady was defined by oT said the new Continental will be |, Turkeys: Heavy type—Young hens 30. | Seniesa isd Nat Cah ROHS Borin Jr of Miami (Ohio) Uni- introduced sémetime in 1955. Au jas ry! Nat Gyps ... 364) versity as failure to ‘think safely The new car will be a low volume DETROIT EGGS Atlas Pdr 462 Nat Lead o ¢ and let our actions be governed car. The special product division, DETROIT (AP)—Bggs, {.0.d. Detriott. Avce Mis $8 Lov —. . me mk ee ; F | cases uded, federal- ade ima 2 will be changed to the Continental ee ° A rape took oan | Balt & Oh 23 )6«CONY Air Bre .. 197 y Division. . jed @ 62; large 44-47%, wid avg | Bendix Av 924 NY Cent 192| Such thinking, he sald, j | t4% 36-28, wid 27%; small | Benguet 15/16 Nie M Pw 295 1 The name “Lincoln” will be | 17-2 aa ao 20% pre tates Jo. | Beth tec! ... 104 Norf & West 43 not require a high level of in- from the new Continentals | ‘2, 14 eve ot Peewees 17 Dosing Ais + 03 Nor Pac fg tellligence — just enough for the 45. wid } m Alum : pk ey the cars will be built by | 43: medium Gh wid oop Oo: colt te Borden ee oe stride Ai Le driver to punerisggy Ealing 31, wtd avg 2 Grade B large 41 riggs iS. , real r the new division And not the Lin- | Fico “hes te. Peewees eit wid | Brist My 251 Ohio Ou a5 | of safety per _coln Division. avg 17 Checks 30. Co 133 a <2 122| tance and apply them, emereneees Burroughs ; 4 . { | Calum & BH 103 Owens I) Gi co2| Mrs. Betty B. Montgomery o " CHICAGO BUTTER AND ®UUs Can Dry 126 Pen A we” 6}? the Cincinnati Child Welfare Ser- tes CHICAGO (‘AP)-Butter irregular, re- Can Pac 273 — EPL ud : cetpts 872,971; wholesale buying prices Capital Airi 162 oe — ae vice said high school courses in be. 0b bei. bec segs, | currier CD MT Penney JC. . 066 |Griving should emphasize attitudes Tour Plants Toda | cars: 00 B $7.28, 9 C 56 Cater Trac. e244 Pe RR... 171 over the teaching of mechanical weak; recet 12,532, wholesale Celanese 22 2 ar = _ skills buying prices \ to ¢ lower, US large Cen I PS. 238 Phelps 344 James M. Hare, Democratic can. | sgt, 2: mined 38; US mediums 21: | Cort-teod 20.7 bri Mor... 372| She said the youngster who @idate for secretary of state, will | dire: 10; checks Ban ERMA oy Pht ree as Casreter os 4 friends ‘‘will almost always end tour the Fisher Body Division and 4. Cities ove... ten7 Pit Plate O.. 61. ; = GMC Truck and Coach plants in Livestock Clark Equip’. 462 froct & G... 2 up as a daring, reckless speed- Pontiac today Games Se... SS pare Of 417) ster : DETROIT roc ; Radio Cp | Another ber of the Accompanying him will be Paul pgrroit iaP> Pegg Coca Cola ...1072 porns. 7 member o group, = ible 628. No Col Gas ..... 146 5°” Sutton, candidate for the U_ S. | erly sales | oe See «:::: BE Meo asters. -. | +Cattle—Balable 800 Around 50 t Repub Btl...., 621 Congress from the 18th district, | cent trees receipts cows; high good “to | Coneuen Pe at Seve test : a1. | oct reasearch methods be pre to jal | steers Very scarce, cows - | akes vers and. Fred Elias, state senatorial | re Setive; other "clases how, | O28, P Pf % 114 Roy Tebahrdateui | candidate. |General market Sround steady: early | Cont Can .... 17 REO Piet... $2 | sections segpal be Piggy Bg ell a a hatewee at) ans| Dr, Abraham Jacobs, director es Psa a ' prime absent early; fap sales uitlity and Copper Bag at jos Lead . 311 | of vocational rehabilitation at commerc eress steers and heifers 4 Community National [22.09 y,c cw cet com |crer SBS Secnatnn | | pagsicatty handicapped pereoes | meretal cove 6.80-11.t0; ters! supply Curtien Wr 28 + aan AL RR =: physically handicapped persons anners 3 Ress - Bank heavy cutter and utility cows 10.00. no |Dis C meng 327 Shel OU 41) aeunlly are safer drivers be. 5 ‘. of Pontiac te the State of Michigan. at a Wee tocnee Sous — of y sears ° 84 | cause they employ caution and close of business on October 7. 1964. | slow, about steady. but not fully estab- fy Pont 1412 BSecony Vac 472) thought te compensate for their Published fr 1 to call made by | lished; early sales good to low choice Bagh P 261 sag ds atl limitations. Comptroller Currency, under See- | vesiers 21.00-28.00; no high choice or gast Air L 32 — - ton S211, U. &. Revised Statutes, prime sold, some utility and commercial | gast Kod so9 Sports Ww .... ati. Bad attitudes change quickly Cash. balances with other : i Seiaie 108 Market not estab. |S _ os 1 rr Sia ‘brand - te down an unsae driver, reported Rests. Sactating reserve shed: moderate supply fresh receipts | Emer Rad 12 Std O COl.. 25/7 + Arh ' balance. items ; ades : ehri ‘ —— pg —— a OEY eae wl ogy 7. 4 on NS | cinnati pues aces me United States Government — ego 114 Std Ol OW .. 412 . , Obligations, direct and CMICAGO LAVESTOCR | ad Mor 23) Stevens JP. 25q| Peau. He added: 33,900,587.68 | CHICAGO ‘AP)—Salable 12,000 ¢ Sun Ot ez; * ES acts i casein | ET ae eae | eet At SeitraPtE "Ah changed. atte: by wise we : | sows ter trade dull Oe Bak 93 wt @... Gee cme tant eae tee tetany [Sn gees HT Paadcet jeg verbal warning, written warning . sree - chers - ‘a 722 . ” te ‘stocks ‘including 18.60: a few doubles choice No 1 and 2s Sen Mills 673 Tev G Bul....103 Or arrest s of Fea- 190-220 ib carly 18.66-18.7%; a few lots Gen Motors aie Thomp Pd a54 —————E—EE ee ae fa Seat cde a en an tees weet SY Poa we Me “ r : - Qen Refrac 22 ant 0687.44 overdrafts: 18.615, 498.37 | 15 00-16 75. Gen Bhoe $12 Transemer . ne) | premises Balabie cattle 19,000: calves 500. Gen Tel 13 Twent C Pox. 287 on ners es ee i $080,071 28 slaughter steers and heifers moderately Gen Time 10.4 Underwd . 32 | — and enees «sq | Stttve: steady to 25 higher, cows slow. | Gen Tire 35.4 Un Carbide . 194 e ones 506.33 043.577 58 | mostly steady: bulls steady.io 56 higher. | Gillette 725 Un Pae 142.2, as uses un A Real estate owned othe | vealers fully steady; most high choice | Goebel Br 74 Unit Air Lin. 296 in r ant . en. een yd steers 26.00-28.50; a few loads Goeerten _ Sane cs mt j r . r re Otner anets 381. 708.40 | Seiehis 28.7. mest goad and choice | W Gran Paige 12 Unit Pru. se¢| LONDON (INS) — Thousands of oo 416. 780.97 | steers 21 00-25.75; @ few commercial jo | tnt Tel & Tel 207 Un Gas Im... 37.7 | foot-sore Londoners got a break Total OM asta 16,780.97 | low grades 17.00-20.00. load lots fsi Crk Coal 19 US Lines 18.41 ooday wilde . ae Geposits of individ mixed choice and prime heifers 2475--|Gt No Ry oe - — poh) y as at strikers on the , 25.50; most good bulk good Gt West 8 19 tee ‘ citv’ : cpertiens 00 aman @ | hetfers m0 $000 $0: utility and commer. | Greyhound 124 US Steel pt...160 beady ret Sack Time deposits of individuals, ~ : cial cows 9.75-13.50; canners and cutters |Guif O11 ., 57.4 US Tod - 17.¢ | WOre. A eorpora- 3 £0-16.00; a toy light canners down to —- b mes : ae w 0s Fup boat Fifty-five of the -87 bus depots ; wethie b . a * e : “ot “United tes aa 18.00; good’ and choice yealers 16 0 ies ——— r wa baller hi 63.3 |in the sprawling British capital — commercia 00 | Homes w w , : oo er nment (including soon iso 21 © be cnmmeos | erodes aoe. © ve oe a 35 Woe on 702, Were operating normally this morn postal @ Gates tad po lambs weak to 50 lower: yearlings steady Ul Cent 495 White Mot .. 317, ing. And the six-day walkout was —— 10.542.082. to weak; slaughter cheep steady; good Indust Ray 442 Wilson & Co *6 expected to be ended by tomor- ’ 23 Wis | | ony of banks maiage mestly good to choice native Inlaad Bt S36 woolwerth art | row or te (certified and woolde lambs 1860-2000 several smal! inspir Cop 3 NV oolwor - cocker checks etc), cat.enz.cn | chetes tne prime 20980 cull to oe Int Mery > Ey Younes ew | Set] But the dock workers strike in ‘Fetal Deposits 675.351.853 12 Gadi qheles (Ms: 1 ciseed tate seeriis. Int Paper 796 Ynest Bh & T $8.3 London and Liverpool, the nation’s Land contract 14.723 80 18.60-20.00 and two double decks good Int Silver S17 Zenith Rad. 4 two largest ports, continued despite and choince $2-99 Ib yearlings 16 00-17 50 Jacob: 64 Ger Bebeites . 1.072.219.33 Cun te choice slaughter sheep 400-5 50 “ome Pleas by union leaders and the “Total Mabilities 876.438, 796.14 —— - > = STOCK AVERAGES government. al ACCOUNTS M d ‘Comptied by the Assoc — oo A total of 44,000 longshoremen Captial sto 30 1 5 ‘ ‘ Common stock satan tek' us « lien Sentence ul erer roy Rails Wil techs ship repairmen and barge opera- total par 500. ¢ . 1880 9 134.8 | : - a pn 2 08 008 88 e a rt ant) Gs tae fons —_ otf pie jobs. The num- 3 @a Month ago 156 6077 «6647 1352/| ber of idle ips in port rose ‘and §=retirement to 15-30-Y [ T rm Year ago 1000 797 546 1067) 193 acecunt for preferred 4 1902 1007 683 1374 | 93, ’.= “ 165.009 37 . 1984 Low .. 1439 778 554 I080) —_—_—---- - _ —-— For the June 15 slash-murder of 1983 High iste 936 888 1163 a ce . Capital Accoun's §— 3.977 903.83 37 year-old mother of five, Rob-| 1989 Low 1302 138 808 088 Hickman Price to Head 4 , a7 —_ Scaauaenaas . Tota! Liabilities = ga0 41675097 ert J. King. 37, of Dolomite, Ala.. PETROIT STOCKS Willys Motors Sales MEMORANDA was sentenced to a 15-30-vear term . vada & Weeks) tne | ; . Assets pledged or assigned . Pigures after decimal points are eighth } TOLEDO Ww — Hickman Price te secure Mabilities and in Southern Michigan Prison at High Low Noon for other purposes 8 3.900.000 00 , ~ Baldwin Rubber* 1s 6«.:- 3. |Jr., hag been named vice presi- Jackson Monday by Circuit Judge | 5 . ‘ 5 : ; Leans as shown above are & C Navigation 8 152 18.6 | dnet h f { W , . net in charge of sales for Willys after deduction of re- |H Russel Holland, Gerity on ; _ 3 ¢ | Motors Inc Ww. & thei vice shathens aaa King, an Air Force staff ser- ae iene 26 27 | P ho h bee ouben of the sbove-named bank, do | geant formerly based at Geneva, | Midwest Abrasives .. ‘ e| te. as n_ president solemnly swear that the above statement | oy fijeg ity plea Oct. 1 to) Rutz. Mis _|-- 4 44|)of the company's export division, is true to the best of my knowledge |‘: *-. ‘Hed a gully plea Uct. Wayne Screws 15 16 takes over the domestic sales post . ~ Mrs No sale: bid and asked. i end belief the second degree murder of Mr W. A TAYLOR |taura Marshall, of 58 Chapman | held by Roy Abernethy. In addition Vice President . ° h | Price will continue to direct ac- Correct—aAttest: a es near the slayin | Foreign Exc ange tivities of the export subsidary. OS Stremocusn ki police said podhtcly Mrs. ..XEW YORK (AP)—Foreign exchange Abernethy has resigned as vice = 2 eanaae inane im A = ‘eal . retes — arent Briatin in dollars. president in charge of Kaiser- Directors “ars 0 a in a alous others in cents State of Michigan, County of Oskiend rage after she told him there was “another man" in her life. before Ann Arbor Dog Thief Operates Like Pack Rat ANN ARBOR u—There’s a dog! thie: in Ann Arbor who operates like a pack rate. Silas Grant, told police he Went | outside the other morning to feed | his dog, a.cross-breed Cocker Span- iel-English Setter. Tied in its place | small, red dog of nonde-| pt breeding. Police traced the second dog to Zielinski, who lives a block |Up the street from Grant. Zielinski ‘animal bad disappeared before. dog is still missing. | MARKETS {Rails Showing ~ ~-= Strength Today No. 1, 4.00-4.50 bu. Greenings, Yo. 1, 3.00- | 3.00-3.50 bu; Cider, No. L | No. 1, | Livqt. cast. Pears Bosco, Mose. | Seaboard Air Line, and Union Pa-| Kentucky |some of the lower-priced carrier my) | their show of strength because they » * ’ . ~ NEW YORK_ (®-Some railroad | | shares scored gains of better than) /a point in the stock market today. | | Otherwise, fractional pares were the rule Santa Fe, Atlantic Coast Line, | cific showed good strength and shares were active on the upside. | Also advancing were the steels, aircrafts, rubbers and oils. Burlington Mills, St. Regis , Pa- than were among specialties on the higher side | The rally in the rails got under- the have often pointed the way for the | rest of the market. | : Advancing stocks included U. S. | an organization Steel, Chrysler, U, S. Rubber, Boe- ing, Douglas, Glenn Martin, Radio Corp., Consolidated Natural Gas, Monsanto, Cities Service and Texas Lower were Consolidated Edison, | plastic hook holders between weed Willys domestic sales. Abernethy's dis- Canadian doljar in New York open market 3% per cent premium of 1034, UB cents. unchanged e Europe. Great Britain (pound) §2 70%» p “e of a cent, Great Britain 30 gay futures 2.79 21/32. up ‘s of a cent; Great Britain 60 day futures 279 11,16, up ‘s of a cent: Great Britain 00 day futures 278 23:32. up 1/16 of a cent; Belgium ‘trance: 199 15-16. unchanged, Prance (franc) .28% of a cent, unchanged, | ee ae ecto ye gence mark) | 85, unchanged, a iguilder) 26.33, | ; ; off 01 of a cent; Italy (inns 16% of a Plans Service Unit cent, unchanged; Portugal (escudo) 3.50, | unchanged; Swetien (krona) 19.34 un- | changed; Switzerland (franc) free) 23.34, up .01 of a cent; Denmark krone) 14.50, | unchanged. 2 - Letin A uachenged: Brasil (free) 166, un- che: Mexico 6.02, unchanged; Vene- suele ‘bolivar) . unchanged. Par t: Hong Kong dollar 1745, un- changed plans were not immediately closed. Price was one of the original group of men to form the Kaiser- Frazer Corp. at Willow Run, Mich in 1945 . Argentine (free) 134./@ service unit in Eaton Rapids. ,queen of the 1954 Southwestern No. 4. | Lt. Carl Amick, commanding of- |ficer for the coutty, said units {for other area communities will follow. The nation’: greenhouses—about 15,000 of them—require fron 50 to California's grape crop industry 15.000 tons of coal each growing amounts to about $200 million an- season, ss | nually. '| said the organization will organize ;dates are being accepted THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1954 ‘ THE LIMIT—Five shares of stock in ‘‘Plastico,” | it will be liquidated. No of 30 high school juniors and/buy more than five of seniors, were seld today to Philip J. Mormaghan, | company is one of nine JA general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division | operation experience here this fall by Frank Nonamaker, 81 Maines St., president of | Other “Plastico” officers } the Junior Achievement firm. Sponsored by the | 165 Elizabeth Lake Ave. Gulf Producing ae the JA company will manufacture and sell | of 271 S. Anderson St. and May, when | { | | : Lodge Calendat | Special communication, Tuesday, October 19, 1954. Brotherhood | Lodge No. 561 F. & A.M. Work in | | F. C. degree. Francis M. Mahaffy, | W. M. —Adv. | Special communications Cedar Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M., Clarks- | ton, Thurs., Oct. 21,7 p.m. Work) in E. A. Degree. Elgan R. Wood, | Ww.M. — Adv. News in Brief | Thieves broke into the West De- troit Glass Co. last night at 82 Myra St. and stole $51 and tools valued at $175, according to Pon- tiac Police. | Richard Sauve, 42, of Detroit, pleaded guilty to drunk dri¢ing yesterday and was fined $75 and $25 costs by Orion Township Jus- tice Helmar G. Stanaback. Drunk driving cost Felix Darga, 134, of 103 Madison, Clawson, a /$100 fine yesterday when he | pleaded guilty to the charge before | Bloomfield Hills Justice Alva J | Richardson. Mrs. Fred Norton of 12175 Rat- talee Lake Rd., Rose Township, re- | ported yesterday that thieves took two chain falls. used for hoisting beef, from her farm, according to Oakland County sheriff's deputies. | 615 learns to drive by imitating his Mrs. Norton estimated the loss at | of Roller’s car to State Police and $60. | Family style turkey dinner. Oak- land Park Methodist Church. . Montcalm and Glenwood. Thurs., ‘i) g13\ J. C. Denton, suggested that mar- | Oct. 21 from 4:30 to 7. Adults $1.75 and children 75c —Adv Dixie Cab. OR 3-4102. Waterford, Drayton, Clarkston area. —Adv. Family style chicken dinner at the Oxford Methodist Church, Ox- | ford, Mich, Thurs. Oct. 2ist. Serving from 5:30 p. m. Adults $150, children, 5 to 12 years, T5c Under 5 years, 50c. —Adv. Rummage sale at the First | Methodist Church, Birmingham. | Maple at Pleasant, on Thurs., Oct 21 from 9a.m.to5p.m. —Adv. | Save $50 on Water Softner. Call Haley, FE 2-4971. ~AdV. If your friend's in jail and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-5201, C. A. Mitchell —Adv. Rummage Sale: Redeemer Luth- eran Church, Birm., 1800 W. Maple, Thurs. & Pri., Oct. 21-4& 22, 8 to 5 —Adv. A. A. U. W's. Used Book Sale. Birm’'s Detroit Edison. Oct. 18-23. | —Adv., Business Notes Appointment of William J. Bird, of 1120 Lyonhurst Rd., Birming- ham, as vice president in charge of sales for Plymouth Motor Corp. was announced today by firm pres- tident John P. Mansfield. Bird, a member of the firm for 20 years, has been general sales manager since April last year. Members of the Pontiac Cham- ber of Commerce have been noti- fied of a new products, new meth- ods and patents exhibit being held at Detroit's Veterans’ Memorial Building today through Friday. ‘Robert J. St. Clair, C. of C. mana- ger said today. Retiring Nash Official Appointed Consultant | DETROIT (UP) — H. C. Doss, | of survival vice president of sales for the Nash Motor Division of American | born in the hospital. The Schwart- |Motors, is retiring and will be. | 268 have two other boys and a} | come a consultant to the company, it Was announced Monday. George Romney, American Mo- | tors president, said Doss will con- tine to have offices in the com- pany’s headquarters in Detroit. Doss has been sales head for Nash for 10 years. Before that he was a Ford executive for 27 years and was general sales manager for Ford in 144 when he resigned to join Nash-Kelvinator as vice president of sales. To Judge Potato Queen EATON RAPIDS i — Eaton) EDMORE ® — Committee | m2nt° County Salvation Army spokesmen chairman Tom Burns said candi-|Frembes Subdivision for Michigan. Potato Show Nov. 45. | Contest entries are restricted to | district residents between the ages of 16 and 25. More than 70 million meals are served every day in U.S. eating establishments, i groups gaining are Bernice and Plumber Pleads | Guilty to Arson Detroiter, 23, Admits. Setting Fires in Oakland | and Wayne Counties | '55 Model Retool Word that Willys Motors, Inc., i Ma ing H : . : Financing plans that make sense and save dollars! The soundest way to home ownership is via one your special needs! Come in and let us explain of our low-cost mortgage loans, tailored to fit our easy method of financing. Up to 20 Years to Repay! Capitol Savings & Loan Co. — Huron Se. ngs FE 4-0561 Donald J. Roller, 23-year-old De- | troit plumber who was charged | with setting fires costing more} than $100,000 in Wayne and Oak- | lana Counties since July, pleaded | guilty to arson Monday before Cir- | cuit Judge H. Russel -Holland. | Roller, who told police after his | arrest Sept. 8 that he didn't know | why he set the fires in sia homes and an old schoolhouse, will be sentenced Monday. He had orig- | inally stood mute on the charge and was scheduled for trial. A self-styled fireman, Roller told police he returned to the scene of each of the fires garbed | in a fireman's heimet, raincoat and boots, passing himself off as a “volunteer fireman.” He was arrested after Trenton's fire chief became suspicious of Roller ‘‘just turning up at a fire there."’ The chief gives a des€ription 511 Community Nat’l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Donald E.- Hansen Richard H. DeWiu Res. FE 2-5513 Res. FE 5-3793 Accident Insurance Automobile Insurance Burglary Ins Bonds—All Types Fire Insurance Liability Insurance Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance “Temperanc is moderation in the things that are good and total abstinence from the things that are foul.” —Frances E. Willard the arrest followed shortly there- after. Pleads Not Guilty fo Illegal Liquor Sale Harry Alien, 36, of 205 Hughes | St., arrested with eiglt others dur- | ing a vice raid by Pontiac Police | early Sunday, pleaded innocent to) ‘illegal sale of liquor Monday when | he appeared before Municipal | | Judge Cecil McCallum. He furnished a $200 bond, pend- ing his trial Oct. 28. Miss Betty Hall, 35, of the same | address, pleaded guilty to the same | charge and was released on per- | sopal bond, pending her sentence Friday She also pleaded innocent to aid- | |i and abetting the sale of beer | |and was ordered to appear for | trial Nov. 4 after.furnishing a $500) , bond | | Charged with soliciting and | Pleading innocent were Miss Ther- | esa Wright, 24, and Miss Bea- | trice McIntosh, 27, both of the | Hughes street address. Both were! | released on $200 bonds each, pend- | | ing trial Nov. 4. | Five men arrested in the home | ‘during the raid paid fines of $35) each after pleading guilty to loiter- | | ing charges. } ' . _2-Pound Detroit Baby Struggles for His Life | DETROIT (@P) — One of the smallest babies ever born in De- troit, a premature 2-pound boy, | ff was in an incubator fighting for his life in St. John Hospital today. | The smal] boy, 24% months pre-/ ff mature, was born to Mrs. Rich- | ff ard Schwartz, 24, Roseville, Mon- | The baby showed no signs of | life when first born but after doc- | f tors worked on him about an hour | ff he finally showed signs of life. Dr, Walter W, Hassig, the attend- | | physician, said every hour the | lived increased his chances | ing It was the smallest baby ever | girl. * Hawaii hag a total of 72 resort | hotels, inns, motels and apartment | houses, operating the year round. | NOTICE I8 HEREBY GIVEN OF A public hearing to be held by the Water. | ford Township Zoning Board at the Township Hall Wednesday. November 10 at 7:30 pm_ to consider the following change to the Zoning Map 1. To change trom Agricultural 1 te) Commercial 1 a parcel of land located | at the BE corner of Hatchery Road and / Williams Lake Road | 2 To change from Agricultural 1 Residence 1 the SW ‘4 of the Section 18 except for the above. Also the W % of the SE % of the NE ', Section 18. Also the NW % of the SE ‘, Section 18 ~— 7 To change from Residence 1 to Com- Lots 32 to 36 igelusive of 4. To change from Residence 1 to Com- mercial 1 Lot 327 of Supervisors Piat Persons ed are ited to be A _ of the Zoning Map together with « list of the proposed changes is on file in the office of the Township Supervisor and may be examined by any one ADSIT STEWART, Chairman Waterford Township mth ft Zoning Board LOUIS G. BARRY. Clerk Waterford ‘To DETROIT EDISON COMPANY COMMON STOCK YIELDS ABOUT 4.8% Having paid dividends continuously since 1909, this stock offers an excellent investment in a growing Michigan utility. Telephone: WOodwerd 2-2055 First or Micutcax Corrorariown = - Investment Bankers BUHL BUILDING — DETROIT NEW YORK CHICAGO — BURGLARY Your possessions may not be worth a million dollars— but they represent your life’s work — so protect them with adequate insur- ance. H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency H. W. Huttenlocher Max E. Kerns 318 Riker Bldg. FE4-1551_ STOCKS — BONDS Consult us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to a member of all principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute quotations service available at all times. C. J. Nephler (Co. 414 Commanity National Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 wnship Oct. 1, "B4) -. Complete Investment Facilities » «= at Your Finger Tops Just pick up your phone and call us for experienced service on your investments. Your inquiries are welcome ~by phone, by letter or in person. WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Member New York Stock Exchenge end other leoding exchanges PONTIAC OFFICES 716 Pontiec Stete Bank Bidg. , FE 4-2895 ’ Ue es 7) _THE, PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1954 2: a . For Sale Miscellaneous 60! PLLA A tt ANTIQUE ORGAN: or Sale Miscellaneous 60 PPLE DPE — APPROX} | gimorRic & GAS WATER MEAT. Pine | cabinet 8 einks. PROJECTION SCREEN, 309 X #@ bead glass mateiy 100 years old. ers, all sizes ed Sree | taundey tr tra! ose wont saad. A a ais. ANCHOR FENCES oH id eine, eta Midwest ¢Tl. FRA soprovea No money down E gunn tte RUMMAGE SALE. OUR LADY te PETS Se aertaclt |" GTS MCOMPANY. | “guanine Sarg be ainot Ooey tet tree trial be com | S4WS AND SCISSORS MACHINE im Pri, Oct 22, 836 /_Wineed Rules, 21900, ATED VO NE | om. te t.pm’ Good bergeie “915 PUEL OIL TANKs 2750 PE 5-039 : 2am e Raq | SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED WAIL for es little as 96.96. GA. Thompson, 80 8 Perry. Plumbing and Heating Supp! Degquindre et 20Mile Oven Sundays 1, 24x72 MIRROR AVY PLATE. 275 ees is ge eee, 4 which makes full size bed $25. ° 24245 mirrofs, heavy plate, Paar y = $75. 3315 Lexington $15 each FE 21414 Backenstose D 0! e _ Book Store 15 E Lawrence (EEE OOTS | save On x GUTTER. 17 CENTS ANGLES. CHANNELS. BEAMS Time wil) tel Warwick. - Pipes. Reinforeing rods, basement QUALITY y eA Yass _. Geren - posts complete line of structdral Taylor Made Garage Doors 3% GALLON steel, new and used Typhoon G Lakes Ove Door Co gs —— beaters, $81 50 Steel Co. 135 Branch St. (across | 201@ Dixie Hwy. FE 45654 a from American Forging & 80ck-|/Gag RANGES ; $190 | STEEL CLOTHE) LOCKERS. et). FE 4-0583 Apt. size refrigarator $49.95} ideal for small rome 9 ALWaYs | WRECKING _| Reconditioned washer $39.95 Reasenahte, Call for « omeat used building materials Frigidaire 30 im. range eee _to see, A J. a ae or. S wail feet : — a ore _ oa ning bed ° umber Doors, plumbings, sash. | Ironri = brick Union Wreck 'o., 31245 Paid At eee sell for ss 3315 Lea- w Eight Mile arm- CRU MP ELECTRIC” _ ington, Scott Lake screens, 284.6% over all: 4, 35x56, 2, 24535, 1, 28x44by _FE 20731 FT BATH ° TUBS CHIPPED $39 95. 6. A. Thompson, 80 South try < 2 WILLIAMS OIL-O-MATIC COM- mercia| water heaters. One with 200 gallon tank tank 1791 Dorris Rd € YR OLD CRIB AND SPRINGS, $13 OR 30904 I OVERHEAD GARAGE DOORS | ehrame kitchen set, chest on chest, FE 5424, BEFORE YOU INVEST IN A WA- ter softener, investigate the Rey- Polds-Shaffer Ba!!-O-Matic No down payment. Smal) monthiy payments. | O73. FE 43573 BRAND NEW SET AMERICANA Encyclopedia with case. Never used. Reasonable. FE 5-768 BATHROOM FIXTU BOIL Pipes and fixtures, automatic oil and gas water heaters, oi] and eoal furnaces. go and hot water boilers, oi) HEIGHT TS SUPPLY 2685 Perry St. Phone PR 4-! ~5431 LES, BOYS’ ENGLISH made 3. 5 s hand brakes value, $43.95 These are slightly transit marred Michigan. Piuorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. BECAUSE WE ARE CHANGING to gas heating we very cheap our Stokol reid condition, tan if desired National Building PE or 200 N ‘ BURMEISTER LUMBER TWO YARDS Pontiac Detroit OPEN 8 wr A. TO 8 P.M. SUNDAY 16 TO 3 2?” bianket tns! WP. combina: Aluminum combination doors $29.95. 3 piece coloret bao set all fit- ce only $149.95. RDWARE - PLUMBING BOYDF uu oes Ir YOU ARE BUILD “ HOUSE DRIVE OU" TO B nigendates ND SA.E UP TO $500 ON ALL MATER 5 MAKE SURE [1° 8 BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co. tes 8197 Cooley Lake Rd. =zM — ana ¥ Mile Ra ] _ PL 1-418 javertha 5 RECESSED ehy $30.95 Lavatories com- plete With gleaming chrome fau- cets $14.95. Stall a Tita $34 45 Michigan Fluorescent. 383 Orchard _ lake Ave. Blackett's Offer rT Knotty pine paneling $8158M ‘', ir ulility plywood. $425 per sheet 224s and Ix6 boards $§75M 2x6's | and 2x8< $95M Paint. inside and | ourcide white and colors. $2.96 per gation | 6161 Dixie Hwy Clarkston | MA 5-5411 CR AFTSMAN sAW 6 TABLE inch with motor table extenston end stam’ $40 Call FE 8-0044 aft- er pm CLEAR RENWOOD Combination doors Coal lumber and supplies _ A. Benson oe lagees FE 4-2521 CHIPPED SINKS ALL Sizes IN- ciuding 2 comp't low as $6 SAVE SUPPIY 106 5 SAGINAW CASH POR FURNITURE - _¥E 4-7981 10- inch ine) Logan floor model periect “fondition used oniy 20 hours Compietely equipped including quick change gears and ‘2 hor-epower motor FE 5-030 DIVIDED KITCHEN SINK ACCES- sories included Rea:onable. EM DOORS and one without | 3465 Auburn skates. size 7%: dark green ton gas, new approved Consumers lines, $98.50 & values, $49.50 and are slightly marred 393 Orchard Lake Ave. faucets, terrific values Orchard Lake Ave LARGE STOKER. A-1 CONDITION. | HALLICRAPTER RADIO. SOREL jacket with fur collar. site 10, 231 Nor PE 4-1684 HOT WATER HEATERS. 330 GAL for use on Also electric™ oi] and bottled gas heaters at ter- rific values Micaigan Fluorescent LAVATORIES COMPLETE WITH $24.50 value, $1495 Also totlets, bathtubs, shower stalls at These are crate marred Michigan Fluorescent. 393 “SURPLUS LUMBER © AND MATERIAL SALES CO peg eta" trade for typewriter Sncotient sos 2 es = =. 2268 - HE? 2TH Ee” RED ie BACH as et Oe a oe | BuAck ee eaee EACH 1 a 6 sheathing ; $9.90 per 106 @'x6" TAN 2c: ris a om Concrete & ee ar BLAYLOCK Steel clothes posts ee $11.48 pr. COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY CO. | Many other items | 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 | 6340 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR a MOLLINOSHEAD VARIETY eee oe MOTOR store miles out ¥ rm- REA strong floor covering and Mac-O- single phase, used only 2 mon’ _Lac paints. Phone FE 1-7845 1% H. P. Wii) sacrifice. mroveel ICE SKATES SIZE 5. ROLLER| _¢-*038. STALL SHOWER BATH. COM- $35 30-30 Winchester deer rifle. 200 Sanderson SUMP PUMP - GENERAL tric motor. $79.50 value $39.50 Blightly crate marred. Also deep & shallow well jet (A ar Michi- Orchard HOME OWNERS! ALUM AWN- fa ir mediate - free _ings, factory price FE 46089. estimates. ane makes. hb H. P JET PUMPS, $69.50. 4% Milford MU 40855 Nights, H. P. deep well ao pumps with _EM 3-8156 or PE VENTILATING FANS FOR Bsr ens, $49.95 value et $29.95 large selection of coor chimes a extraordinary values. Michigan Fiuorescent, 383 Orc Lake Ave } TENTS. GASOLINE STOVE. folding metal bed, army cot and hbammoc« $50. Kitchén sinks = doors $12.50 & up 2x4 to 2x12 No. siding. See us for new low prices. Driveway culverts State approved. 6120 Bogie Lake Rd EM 3-2731 1 USED CHAIN SAW $175 ton Chain Saws Sales & Service. OR 3-2211. 9140 Pontiac Lake 56 GAL. OPEN HEAD Also _clored head drums. $1 ea H Sutton MY 2-6432. 24° FURNAC® ANT PE 45200 LOOK! HOME OWNERS EXTRUDED ALUMINUM SELF- STORING STORM SASH, $13.95 HEAVY EXTRUDED ALUMINUM DOORS, 95 SPECIAL ALUMINUM AND FIBERGLAS AWNINGS *E 4-6089 2 OIL HEATERS 1. § TO 6 ROOMS. $275 1 3 to 4 rooms _ 34334 MOTORCYCLE ENGINE. _INDIAN twin, 30% cubic inches. 3 ed transmission Run less than 1 hour. Perfect condition. Ideal for 500 ¢ ¢ rece car. 870. EM 3-374 MEDICINE CABINETS LARGE 2 inch mirror All metal cabinet $705 value $295 Slightly marred Also large selection of medicine cabinets with and without lights 210 thick butt shingles C & C 1-3 2? & better fir lumber, get our | price now. New type insulated 4 hooks steel clothes post, 65.45 Commerce LINOLEUM. .49¢ sq. yd. RUBBER BAS" PAINT. $3.85 gal. SMITH’S 2357 S. >. Saginaw “CLIN- _Ra. drums for burning your rubbish in. 4750 ~Josiyn Rd. STOKER. $15 6 inch table saw without motor $12. OR 2 burner ga Ler ss cu ixin sere” $12. Day ion doors * oak “So aren 6 left handed golf by 30 by 1 FE 20 clubs. $5. 500 gallon fuel of] tank. rE 5-0913. 219 8 Marshall. 7 TIMKEN OIL BURNER. CONVER- el a E a _ston and blower. PE 2-2600. 1x8 white pine beards a. 08. % 1 TALBOTT LUMBER $85; 1x12, 5 M. sq. ft. oF more, Lumber, doors, windows, hard- ware, plumbing. B. P. 8. paint. Septic tanks, sump pumps. Thor system for wet basements. Sheet rock, rock lath and used brick _ 1025 Oakland Phone 4-2622. FOR SALE. BTU HOMART OIL furnace, and duct work in- _cluded FE 2-8111, extension 8382. “UNCLAIMED LINOLEUM SALE 9x12 LINOLEUM..$1.98 ea. Sewer crocks & drain tile & PAINT $1.49 GAL. fittings WP P. paneling — cedar oe oe Tile 6c 18e sq. fl. Oak flooring 3c Plastic Wall Tile . 260 art Ft. in windowall. Plywood. interior Gar AGE Cans 198 exterior. Get our quantity ato lg ve bibete a sate : 4; ay “Wall Tile...... g Paul St. Cyr Lumber Co. | cigernis Iniaid 1 Plastic Linoleum ' 60% Off 2c Rubber Base : ie Ft. Harold’s, 140 S. Saginaw FE 2-5450 Free Free Delivery Double Red Stamps Today Open Friday Nite ‘THe PM. USED OIL GAS AND COAL FUR- naces Also stokers, oi] and gas burner floor furnaces, water heaters, blowers and good supply. Wayne Heating end Air Condi- tioning Co. 523 N. Main. Roch- ester. OL | USED ) LUMBER, SHEATHING & & 2 by 10's. Will deliver. PE 26722. UsED POWER MOWERS } AND used garden tractors must be sold tan mediately because of stor- e problems. Make an offer inspecting our stock. Same = iller, wn Equipment, 1593 8 Wood- ward Ave ‘North of 14 Mile Ra.) Birmingham Midwest USED 1.000, 2.000, 3.000 AND 4.000 Equipment Co_ 10479, y Htighiand Ra. USED MODEL LT 35 TOWMOTOR fork lift truck ton capacity FE_ 42541. Benson | Lumber Coe | 0SED WELDER FOR SALE. FE 42644 afer 4 pin USED ELECTRIC MOTORS, ‘« .& 16 hp Refrigerators washers. aetate and gas ranges at low prices. The Good Housekeeping _Shop 51 W. Huron §© OR 60 STORM WINDOWS AND screens different sizes. MA 6-3900. oer WOLVERINE MEYER’S PUMP ,LUMBER AND WRECKING CO. Shallow w-!) Meyers 4 ddock FE 2-078 jet pump $99 50 ne 3 oak flooring, M. $95 50 Deep and shallow well pump im- | Used sheeting, per $75 00 stallationr New totlets $8 bs "pumps own 15x14 lavatories with fittings $16.95 sed pum = We carry a full tine tn ‘umber, KELL Y's H. ARDWARE plumbing and builders sugpiies. yess Aubur) at Adams FE_ 2-881! | ace oe berm aE —YOd—sUY SS ee - . ai your gas or oii conversion. We K nmore wsher $35 also install all types of furnaces 34430 Baldwin re 4-5047 with flat duct. PHA terms. Stan Garwood EM 3-2080 i water heater 2 rwRee ROMEX. NO 16 “Toe. rT in full cotls. G. A. Thompson NEW. NEW. JUST OUT -REVERE latest tape recorder. Don't buy, just listen PADDOCK FILM SERVICE, 1055 W Huron, across from Huron Centre, FE 54-8753. NEW AND USED ol! and electric beaters. Soves & eppliances for housetrafiers and cabins Cash or terms Aluminum x68, $30 per door Were $69 Storm « dows from $84 per window Fiber Glass awning. Phone FE #2575 DAYTON SHALLOW-WELL JET | pumps $78 05 DuPom fiat wall paint $278 gal DuPont tnterior semigioss $3.79 gal McBride Hardware Open Sundays 8-12 1927 Auburn Rd ‘at Crooks) | ee FE 29302 = =— CIRCLE FLUORESCENT FIx- tures. newest brightest and mest modern type of lighting for kitch- ens, dinettes, bedroo.n and rec- feation rooms. #1196 value $5 95 Slightly factory marred Call at ctory showrooms Michigan Flu- orescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave DUO-THERM OIL BURNER. 4 OR $ room. 2 of! drums # in. gas heated marmie FE 44381 FACTORY 2NDS ~ WASH BASINS, $995 G. A. Thompson. 8 South Perry. FRIGIDAIRE. 8's me $i10) FE 3-72 Fiat FRESH weak | WHOLE. ny or quarters. Opdyke Market 5-7841. parale Radio | Genera) Electric wet cell recharg- FT. LIKE s for recharging Or use as radio New battery needed before | screen Win- | TRAILE® EXCHANGE PETRO HFAT SERVICE CO 60 8. TELEGRAPH Open Evenings & Sundays PM Gen Jelure Winchester mode} 71. 348 caliber, xling & Texan scope with lead Got 2 boxes o shells. ART LAWSON S GUN SHOP, 6455 Dixie Hwy. OIL FORCED AIR eR URNACE with controls $75 FE 4-2438 ‘PETRO . - HEAT SERVICE “WILL HEAT YOUR —_ Por tess with an H.C. fully guaranteed nceen floor, utility room, or basement duct- type, ol] furnace. Now et reduced can install and service tt your- self, Hundreds in use tn this area. Demonstrations daily. As- sociated with Trailer Exchaage, 60 S Telegraph, across from Tel- Open Huron center. eves. and _Sun PM 4 wee, GALVANIZED F PIPE. | % tn. lengths) ft. “% mm “2 ft. lengths) = ft. SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY 100 5. Saginaw s*FEE 5-2100 RUMMAGF SALE. ST JAMES Episcopa Church Birmingham . reed at Chester Thurs.. Oct. pall eends Opiginall: ont | PERMUTIT MATIC WA. $65. Will sell for $30 St ter softener, cost $375. sell $300. battery. M1 4 TE 3a EVANS OIL. BURNER. 5 RM. CA- ISiT OUR NEW STORE GENERAL WAREHOUSE co Evans FLOOR cond FE 22467 __| 2058 DIXIE HWY — PARK FREE LOOR FURNACE. HEATS REINFORCED CONCRETE SEPTIC Tr Mn. rooms 5300 BTU tanks Ph. OR 3-7686. FOR SALE FLOOR sANDER FE) PLUMBING SPECIAL __ #0284. "$2 gal. & year electric hot water FREE STANDINO TOILETS $17.95.| hesters. Installed free on Edison Washbowls fittings $11.95 | lines. 999.50 - 21x32 double sinks tunes 2 ARNASON Piece bath sets w es ’ White S488. Colored $100.80 PLUMBING SUPPLY ‘actory s—Irre; rT 968 M-15. Ortonri Phone | SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY We oo a sand 100 8. ¥ FE 5-200 P] CG An kinds. plain & decorative bn De cold rt ot 5 a vena oe ae doors & drawers M femodeline cad tmaaites | tan PONTIAC PLYWO®D Co. v's Petter - PE sae | Son UMP PPO — peace ° s P BERRY DOOR SALES VO, new a (ese bis es ere i a ee, h fh New sliding ae — units all] §. Perry. at exceptional ree ‘Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Do It Yourself ¢ 61 Ave = CLEANERS WALL Pa steamers and sanders. Oat- 65-6150 CAMP CHEMICALS Scientific Sanitary. Efficient Safe Septic tank cleaner & condidioner Drain field cleaner. Root-A-Way for sewers F. J. Poole Co. 151 Oakland “sss PE +1508 COMPLETE LINE OF FURNACE —, — our caulking. of firepiace fixtures. od free parking. Barnes Hardward. 742 ' W Huron | COMBIIATION shakes CHURC ty s "INC. FE 2-0233 Jalousie Doors For Porches and Doorwe: Cee Weedon HOME EQUIPMENT 1661 8. Telegra __FE +2597 SAWS OF ALL KINDS PUMPs. pipe dies, elec hammers etc. Rented. For post diggers, sale dra.r Open TE STOP! Sebodal LEAKING BaSEMENT Bondex Heavy-Duty Sealer possible protection Oakland plete stock soil. drain tile. ly 156 West Montcalm. FE §-4712 Friday through Wednesday _9 to 6:30. Closed every Thursday. Sale Musical Goods 62 PRIME PABA OO OPP OL OO LOLLD 6 A CHASE AND BAKER BABY Grand piano, very 00d condi- tion __FE » 71-0759 anytime. ACCORDIONS FACTORY PRICES. UPRIGHT PIANO A-1 CONDITION. 93 Union St UPRIGHT PIANO FOR SALE. Cheap. FE 54-0736. PIANO blag Sr AND REPAIR- ing. Oscar Schmidt. FE 2-5217. | BEAUTIFUL 30 66 ENPLELD| rifle with sportatock & red field receiver sights. 411 Kennilworth GOLT AUTOMATIC SPORTSMAN round end holster $55 Us. ringfield sport mode! $70 Ob 2-0 joo SAVAGE never been shot 12 GUAGE REMINOTON AUTO- matic, model 11, full choke. 327465 DELUXE WINCHESTER MODEL 171. 48 CALIBER. NO & XAN SCOPE 2 OF SHELLS ART LAWSON '8 GUN SHOP. 6455 Dixie Hwy DEER RIFLE 30 - 30 WEnceesres. MODEL —— Pull re eon 16 price _OR 3 7088 = Lake BR Rd 2 GAUGE REMINGTON AUTO. Mod Bran new $875. esr DOUBLE BARREL GUN. ROD 2 boxe = shells, coat, en — B. mee boots. 1 SS f CARBINE case. Perfect seasons $50 GUNS, BUY SELL. TRADE. SHOT guns and rifies. $12.50 up. Burr- Shell. 375 8. Telegraph. | FE 23-4708 GUNS-— NEW - USED bee Sadan Brownin matics Ptr Ithics Pumps. Doubles Single RIFLES. Rem deluxe auto. 300 721 30-06. Rem. 160 Win. 32 Spe. Win 30-30 Marlin. a Cal. Mausers 8MM 30-60, 300 Cal. Krag 30-40. ALL TYPES AMMO ART LAW- BON GUN SHOP, 6455 Dixie Hwy A 5-7926 [eae] ecru oe OH NEARLY NEW STEVENS 7410 auge com . bos Fe Se . ‘nation, rife Dae RIFLE 30-06 SPORTER sTOCK A-1 shape. 1 Box of shells. Phone _FE 40061 TRADE TWENTY GAUGE REM- ington sportsman for Remington FE 5-7332. PLAID HUNTING BUIT. FELTS _OR 3-4590. 1 REMINGTON 12 GAUGE AUTO- matic with ventilated rib. poly choke and Nydar sight Higgins 12 gauge pump, lated rib and poly choke. L : _Obdertin. 2242 42:8 __Telegraph — Rd PRACTICALLY NEW 30-30) =Car- bine deer case and 1 bos of shells WINCHESTER PUMP. = choke. Good “12 GAUGE condition. FE ANTED SHOTGUNS AND DEER ig Manie: Leaci 10 Bagley WE STILL HAVE A FINE SELEC- tion good used deer rifles and shotguns 1 —— yy gauge ~wutomatic 1 c Smith 16 gauge peal field arade $27.50.- Both guas like new We will accept any modern or antique gusn or any U. 8B gold c ror silver coins as trade in. Carland's M-65®. across _eity airport, OR be Hunting Accommod, 65A a, i CABIN FOR RENT. OGEMAW State Forest near West Branch FE 2-8575 IN FE ROOMS WITH Cres. COTTAGE FOR, sleeps 6 FE rr WAR aploe “ROUSETRATI- Wonderful condition Ht BREAKFAST. Michigan. Call HUNTING, _Huron or rE “Sand, Gravel A-l TOP SOIL, FILL DIRT AND sand gravel. stone. rE 2-2817. -A-1 TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT Gravel and fili dirt. Lyle Conklin _FE 2- or VE rE _ #1112 h- TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT. FILL, SAND GRAVEL. SCHAEF- FER. FE S014 FE 60000 BLACK DIRT dirt Sand and gravel. FE Fin BLACK DIRT. SAND & GRAVEL PE 17-9319 BLACK DIRT AND PEAT D6aD- wed or delivered 1280 Crescent Lake Rd. OR 37540 B® B-4 TRUCKING SERVICE Top soil, shredded peat _&ravel, stone L Blade FE CHOICE TOP SOIL _ & Yard Loads $9 Delivered. VE 46588 sand 5-04ee ELKINS BROS. TRUCKING CO Band. gravel, fill ~ top soil _FE 4 or OR 34197 . PILL DIRT. TOP SOIL, AND & aravel Quick delivery FE 20603 gravel Pit run 60-40 and send. Wilkinson Sand & Gravel. _FE ; 46218 FE 2-6303 ~ Shredded Peat Humus_ FE 17-0245 (5 _yards, $12) FE 5-7686 PROMPT DEL IVERY on” YARDS black dirt or Peat * 10644 WASHED SAND aD ~ GRAVEL. yam pag tod fil) dirt and rucking tier Take ‘Build _Supplies. OR 3-1534 a 6 YDS sSTPAW MANURE 816 Gelivered Pill dirt. ton soll, sand and gravel _ EM 3-4207 WASHED SAND GRAVBi. & FILL _Airt Mike | Jenkinson OR a Wood, { Coal & Fuel PP PL PLE LLP PPL cushion DRY CORDWOOD _Two tor aL. 1, dejivered FE 27188. Goon 1 DRY 8 SLAB woop. | $5.50 _©4 2 for $10. Delivered FR 46588 HEAVY DRY SUAS WOOD $5.50 “ cord Al kind _ Pee sseeg, 7" PO. Ai ining QUANTITY TREE TOPS. LOG slabs and sawdust. Carpenter 6 | tga J-siemn to Silverbell FE Plants, Trees, Shrubs 68 PLL LP LLP PL PPL LLL Pe TOP SOIL, PEAT HUMUS AND peet moss. Loaded on your truck or delivered Phone days. FE __ 2-412 and evenings FE 40959 A BLACKHILL SPRUCE FOR =: also Bive Norway and White: Fir Douglas and Conco- jor; Pine, Austrian, Scotch and Mugho Arborvitae juniper native r Ra straight west 3 miles from merce Village on gravel rd Nursery. MUtual ¢6038 1-161. FOR SALE. OVER 5.000 BEAUTI- ful evergreens 27 varieties, to feet tall Country fe ae ‘Highway or U. 8.10 to 5990 Grange Hail Rd at Math- ew — & Groveland Eye Hos- MUMS, ALL COLORS CENTS and up Also tulip bulbs. Keylon’s Flowers. 2450 wy. FE 2-64%4. Across from Drive- _In ter BOOAR | MAPLE SIL MAPLE 1% tnmch and 2 inch. All kinds of shrubs and evergreens. Landscap PE 5-0477 120 BASS aCoEBON, VERY _ good condition, $80. FE 8-369. NATIONAL - ic , OoFTaR and am after 6:30. FE SELL THE SURPLUS through Classified ads. Land, livestock, machin- ery, hhything! Dial FE 2-8181. BRAND NEW | $8 PE 41152 FE | “& Dirt 66 FOR BALE BLACK DIRT. ROT- ted menure and cement | _ gravel, FEL ve noatle_Miscellancous __ ¢ 00 _Sale:Sporting Goods « 65 “MODEST MAIDENS © i 1 | | _ By Jay, Alan, Sa ’ a? Now wearer a, ee AN LAN at least he's making quite a — *. “I think he’s a playwright; play right for me!” For Sale Pets 69 AFRICAN LOVE BIRDS, BLACK mask. 1 pair 2 years old, $60 1 Peach face male, $25 FE 71-7106 | AIREDALE PUPPIES, VERY reasonable ® Union e Rd. __ EM 3-053 AKC REGISTERED | B BEAGLES. ¢ 4 months old OR }’ AKC COLLIEs | ain eR ), SABLE and white mae. Blue Merle & tri eT Booey Merle stud serv- _ice EM 2 YR as aS euALE BOXER. Good wit! children $40 PE 5-5668 7MO OF D- BEAGLE. Street _ akc REOUTERED. . BOSTON TER- Euclid Lad _of Oakla | AKC REO. BEAGLE PUPS. |. SIRES —Int. Fid Ch. ‘‘Lynchs Pow ag el Near Pid. Ch.—*Bunny Run er” Dams lag Linesman & Speed Sammy Lonedale $25 i143 Op 2 Opdyke Rd PE 5-141. “AQUATIC GARDENS TROPICAL _— AND dione 57 N. Mul 42853 ADAM avanae pene He BEAGLE > ed end price BEAOLE HOUNDS, AKC REGIS- tered 4870_ Highland Ra. BEAGLE HOUND. 1%) YEAR OLD. easants. 381808 BEAGLES, AKC CHAMPIONS. Good rebbit and | eras hunters fs aol Mound , Washington ich BABY vg gt eres AGES AND supplies. OL BEAUTIFOL TAME, baby a. 2 biack Peking- _@se puppies BY 32603 Baby Parakeets.... $2.98|~ WRITTEN OUARANTEE $01 4th St. PE2-4025 Closed Sun. are a PUPPIES. FE AFRICAN LOVEBIRD. Y OU NOG. healthy, female. Peachiace. EM _3-3604, evenings . AKC ko RECs COCKER PUPPIES, Al _tered Alsn stud service FE 40225 CAIRN PUPPIES AKC REO FE 50107 — NOLIGH H POINTER. ONE OF THE yuanGa P RSOOLES | TOY. $165. MI 4-5023 FOR SALE 40 CHINCHILLAS. ALL ) or part, with cages. No reason- able offer ref: Milford, MU- tual 63573, FOUR FEMALE CANARIES 6 62 00 eech Call after 1 p.m rz 5-on38 _ _ TRAINED COON _ Tennyson. _ 3} BEAGLES. GOOD HUNTERS Phone FE }-7420 $125, HOUNDS 429 E. FEMALE BEAGLES. 3% MO. OLD. $10 OR3-2260 a FOUR FEMALE CANARIES each Cail after 1 pm FE 5-9038 2 REGISTERED BEAGLES FROM excellent stock. Fenaie. 28 mo. Male 15 mo. OR 3-905 ERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES By our champton Tor-V- -Liebatraum FORJAN “KENNELS | Puvs cuarenteed OR 3-9265 | HOMES FOR 6 NICE LONG haired kittens Also home for mother cat. Ph. PE 2-0957. HAMSTER. TU¥TLE DOVES. All Pet Shop 69 & Astor FE +033. | INDIVIDUAL AKC REG ) BEAGLES for sale or will take shotgun. ONE YEAR OLD BEAGLE WALK- er male. rece 5-198 LOVELY, YOUNG. MALF AWOORA __ rabbits $2 each MA 5-4785._ PARAKEFTS AND CANARIBS. Auburn Ra. FE 446510 CANARIES. CAO. Bince 19277. 564 Oakland SUPPLIES 358 Oak tang PE_6-6931 \caoetenes TOY Fox TER-' _ lent house doe FE 5-3458. . PEDIOGREED ENGLISH SETTER gd years od. $75. OL 2-3778 or omeo, PLateau 23775 sEGMTEAED ENGLISH SETTERS ® mo. old. Bigler’s Grocery. 6019 | Willams Lake Ro, REO POINTER. FEMALE GOOD hunter, 18 mos Hearonable FE 63 4 MONTH OLD eae eens Female registered $-0831 2 BEAGLE MALE aay NINE —months, PE 7-773. = REGIFTERED BEAGLES. FIELD champion — sired FE 22468 | SPRINGER 1 SPAKIAL THIs HAND. puppy bred tt hw MA det | SPRINGER SPANIFLS CLOSINO | oot kennels A‘! stock for sale Lawiand Kenreis FE 2-6019 } riet. 3 moriths oid makes excel- ] | 789 BLAINE . | For Sale Livestock 72 PPP GUERNSEY CAT TLE Herd of 8 pure bred Guerneeys 3 milking 2 coming fresh, 180 tb base Wil) finance Fraanfield Farm, 21633 Beck Rd, North- ville WEEK OLD YORKSHIRE igs Harmar Farms, 6280 N. Oxtord Rad OA 68-2036. ; FEEDER CATTLE, STEERS AND heifers. Silverbrook Farm, 41770 Tossed Mile Rd. Ph. Farmington borses, 1 4 year old mare. 3 gaited, 10 year 5 gaited Geld- ing $100 each _MI 4 40085 ) after 9 REG JERSEY, 2 YRS FIRST place +H winne, | _OA 62035 REGISTERED SHROPSHIRE earling ram ¢H Stock Lee Perry Clarkston. MA_ 5-9674 REOISTERED “OXFORD RAM, EX- cellent. grade. yeart ram. Phone Farmington, | Probie REGISTERED CORRIEDALE _rams, will trade one, EM 3-3855 @ BLACK ANGUs “STEERS ~guir- able for +H calves ‘orest Jones, MA 65-5206 _Clark ston A 6 GOOD YEARLING HOLSTEIN heifers $'00 for poth MA_5-3085 For Sale Poultry ARAN 74 Sale Farm | Equipment 76 =. ag CHAIN SAW W AND USED Step in tor & demonstration, ; . Miller's . _Birmingham Phone _ M1 4-6009 N . SEE THE Pct W ECONOMY RID! NG (Fata fince 1932) and power Anderson oval. ampion, Bee ae eg ee Lee's Sales & Service models te “4 fe Choose your #21_Mt_Clemens i PE 3-080; own f plan. Lowest sien are eee. 2 own. " Seles te resins” mY 2-8 zee and — ra as § per cent fi-- New and used farm equipment. mance Re 1 op at makes of tractors PAR’ TS—ST ORE and Wiserndn motors Everything for the trailer trom Pontiac Farm Supply JOHN DEE 3 NEALER W211_Pon''e- Rd FE 461400 77 Auction Sales? 41ALE OF > sae Arann & B auc THE aUCTION Fri night at B house, Dixie Hwy. between Dray- ton Plaws and Waterford. Beau tiful furniture sew and used Style excellent condiien wor derful Lovely new bedroom Maple suite in room watering can Phyfe dining room sutte with large black chair Some sturdy and = walnut suites also Ond feat tables, center tables in hugary just lke of chests f ers standard and automatic, vac- wum cleaners, racios, televisions, rollaway beds, rockers, occ®- sional chairs. fireplace equim ment A number of fine men's shirts and sults Sewing ma chines. dishes s, off ham windows, doors, style bugey, coves Breakfast sets. A beauti- ful ¥ bac wit) brass ral A brown studio van in perfect condition. An assort- ment of rugs toilet bow! high chaira, water- ee « and tar Could go on indefinitely W' hot come and see for yourself B & B mee OR *-271%. ocT lagi ren renter having stock I will gy om public auction all my farm machinery from 400 jocated about 7 miles ‘arm north of Pontiac on M24 Suves Bell Rd. then turu west This machinery condition and re tractors Case Deere and McCormick Deering. 3 Genes plows on rubber. John Deere 13 hoe dise drill, I-row corn moter motor, wire 2-row oulti. eld chopper mo- tor side rake on Tr. Also a complete line A wher arm equip- ment. Large assortm prac- Graham Clerk prop Meta ond ben _tord. Auctioneers Phone OA eT stand, marble top table, chins cabinets, several chests and pare ¥ desk bookease YEAR OLD WHITE ROCK HENS See | a... ae NEW HAMPSHIRE RED PULLETS starting to lay. FE 44008. 2616 _Crooks Rao : CHICKEN COOP AND. EQuIP- m _ Cheap LAYING HENS ees ens GALL after 6 pm OR 30479 200 WHITE BGO LAYING HENS _#60 Walton Bivd Drayton Piains Sale Farm Produce 75 APPLE® herd VAR Wholesale retail Crab ap Peck oe cider . Water- Hin Parm. a Mwy. APPLES, PICK THEM Younse:y The Hall-Watt ferm, 061 gan Ra, FE s-O0t4 ATTENTION APPLE CIDER. _Whoelesale lots Phone FE 4-755. APPLES Gackmore Farm 1900. Bilverbell _Rd_ 1 to 6 pm, Sun. Choice tomatoes, $1.50 per bushel ; or pick your own, $1.00 per bushel. Also sweet peppers. Bring baskets. FE 4-4228. 775 Scott Lake Rd. CANNING TOMATOES THIS WILL be your last chance this gad k them yourself, $1 25 id- Bring own baskets. 3660 © dings Rd_ PE 5-6060 INSIST ON TIBSIT’s SWEET Cli- der at your local market. POTATOES ROUSSETS AND se bagoes, by bushel or car- loads OA 629 __ ATOES «ND APPLES bushe: Out Baidwin to — Nort of POTATOES. DIG THEM YOUR- self, 60c per bu. Cail after 6 30 pm OR_}7539 Tomatoes, $2 a bushel, or pick your own, $1 a byfh- el. 775 Scott Lake Road FE 4-4228. Sale Farm Equipment 76 BOLENS GARDEN TRACTORS. M E Tillers Roto Hose Gas engine repair Evans — 6607 Dixie Hey MA ¢ CALL CY LOCKHART WHEN IN NEED OF SERVICE ON ANY MAKE TRACTORS OUR SERV- ICE DEPT 18 OPEN DAILY IN- CLUDING 8UNDAYS FROM 6 to 6 sory WE CARRY A aan or ore FITTIN FOR Mant or HYDRAULIC EQuiP. PONTIAC FARM AND INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR CO. 825 8 Woodward FE 401 Pe41442 eo FARMALL CUB, LIGHTS HY- draulie Hft, power take off, piow. Gise dr cultivator Must go this week ake = an offer Phone Ortonville s86F15 POR SALE FARM-ALL CUB EM 3-6008 CORN CRIBS. CORN CRIBBINO Gere” Davis Machinery. Pa. as v . Pa. inery GARDEN TRACTOR, GEAR DRIV- en. with cultivator, Pract) cally brand orw ME} _Tose 44250 Holly MASSEY HARRIB ? ROW § SELF propelleq corn picker excellent conditien $1660 one W-30 Me- Cormick Deering tractor on rub ber, in $300.; 2 Allie good shape Chalmers WY tractors TRAINZD BEAGLES N- tative. Ine Cc ew teed. 3091 Roc ven: g°ere* Dealers Van Dyke at 18% burn Heights _mi rd, Utica, RE 2-387 TRAINED BEAGLE & BEAQLE NOW IS THE TIME —Pups ' THOROUGHBRED BOSTON TER-| 19 yoy ct oo“ a eee _fie?. Non-sex_ re ose és) anal aew THOROUGHBRED _DACHSHUND se garden puppies, MU 4-0252 . BE. rototilier ch cha saw WANTED GOOD HOME FOR GER-| Parmall tra +> min 2435 Maplecrest, in or call us today. We also _oft _Hatchery. W' Williams Lake —e & © ‘ 20 gh occl ial = t me WIRE-HAIRED TERRIER PUP-| wo take trade ine and eredit terms. — oy eat fee eS. | PE sory FE ¢i112 bra =e _ KING BROS. 1 BEAGLE, BROKE LAST YEAR YOUR I-H. DEALER oesr st A eee 88 FE) Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 CORN. OAIS. HAY STRAW. sais i ; 0 BU CLEAN 4 se, TALS ot oats. o gonr, JOHN DEERE TRACTOR, MODEL B. Newly overhauled. MY 3-379). SALES ACTIONT!! Come tp and see | ° Bu and Save Now!! OUGHTEN’S 528 N Main Rochester OL 1-9761 SILVER KING peaact DRIVE Be een tee y Sr > & Repeir For Al Dick's Air Cooled Engi oe 77 NN. Saginaw St. FE 5-8165 Open Eves. ‘til 8:30 a =F gn ier, seen to be appreciated, 5050, ran ey Gy gra a eid giessware, linens, echoolmaster's desk antiq retary rockers. chaira, many other items. Sale will last till everything ts sold Broadway Auction Bob Perry, suctioneer, Dany” BALE FRI. auction ee ji aT o'clock Loe 3 mites north, ty q oo 6. Across from T 2a pra ra. whinge ‘Flanders 16787 : Trailer “| Exchanae wheels to rool Telegraph Open Eves and Sunday PM Rent Trailer S Space 79 — inside and out el-Huren Center 79 sewers, N Groves Trainer _ #9201, PARKHURST TRAILER COURT. Me’ 3-461) TRAILER SPACES WATER Shore of White Lake AND Park, Milford, MU ears and true eral late mode Auto Acessories err errr ATTENTION! We are wrecking 1948 to 1954 ke We have sev. | low mileage used rear axles and body — generators and voltage SCHR: RAM AUTO PARTS 2530 Dixie Hwy parts, Rebuilt Lots of used oes Oahlend TWO 600216 TIR! parts _ #7201 2 SPEED ED TRUCK AY AX am. “PE 22184 GLASS, GLASS, GLASS We speciatize tm saiéty glass, for ears: drucks, and buses, urance honored ans woile you walt free oe ® customer each or = windshie al work guaranteed m Gat until 4 pm 122_ Oakland Avenue LOULE® AUTO PARTS Ooen Eves Starters and generators iit springs Ave. Ph. PR 4-4913 _ practically new WRECKED 1950 FORD 6 FOR 1 wrecker crane. FE —c4 w eal) FE 41006 7 days a week 58 ceeeecesees $100 parts for “46 cars ES WITH WHEELS 324 Nelson. Auto Service| save you money Greneustosten= 6 axel CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ear Cylinders rebored. shoe, 3 eee ees W Tea Lj sorerdrive and ‘reat _W. wahon om REPAIRS. al FR RE ESTIMATE Zuck Ma. Hood Ph. FE Riemenschneider’s Truek Specials *g1 OMC eo COE with new “302” engine, air brakes, 6x20 Sth wheel and saddle ‘49 Dodge 2% ton tractor. ‘41 Ford Y% tam cab and chassis, ‘49 GMC 2% ton COE, sleeper cab. Pully equipped and sad sendy © oe 4. RIEMENSCHNEIDER BROS. Dodge Trucks Phone FE 2-9131 232 S. Saginaw St. ii GMC, STAKE TRUCE 1 suite Cambridge j Dr ; «+ -$32 45} 1951 Plymouth Cambridge | ‘4 fj Cece eee ee 1950 mi mouth Deluxe 4 Dr. $33 34) 1950 Hudson Sedan ........ $70 1949 DeSoto 4 Dr... >:ss:. $42 55 1948 Dodge Deluxe 2 Dr..... $29 87 1948 Mercury Sedan een eee Ot 1940 DeSoto 2 Dr. ......... $21.25 Motor Sales | DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer “20 Years Fair Dealing” Cass sh W Pike St. 2-0186 1952 Plymouth SUBURBAN STATION WAGON Beautiful 2 tone blue and gray. Has large factory tn- stalled fresh air beater. This car its spotiess inside and out. If you are looking for a car fof all of your needs —this is it. Also a 1950 for $695 with $149 down and the . balance on low bank rates SCHUTZ Motors Inc. DESOTO-PLYMOUTH Sra. —- Wood ward, 9128S WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM ad AND Factory Officials Cars Custom Line Fordors Sunliner Convertibles Skyliner Hardtops Lincoln Capri 4 Doors Lincoln Convertibles ¢ LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer : PH OL 1-711 “FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY.” FQR A BETTER CAR SEE THE | in thé. wc car. colymns pas. Bargans are there! Want 2 4 FORD EVERY NIGHT EXCEPT _For Sale Used Cars 1 acta Custom 2 door radio, heater ¢ = 4 whitewal| tires A real nice car 1949 FORD......... $295 25,804 actua) miles Two door biack veauty 8 cyl inder A rea! b BOB FROST. INC, ) ; $20 Down LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER MOTOR 8ALES | 850 8 Woodward Birmingham NATIONAL __ 171 8. Saginaw &t 9 FORDS _fonable EM 3-4 Y'all Come 3 see Us! We Finance aqua top cream bottom = white leather upholstery, power steer ing and low mileage. Call after EVERYBODY'S Jom at PE 4638 Bs |} FORD ‘50 SUPER DELUXE CON- Credit Is Good Here vertible, overdrive clean. MA 6-2525 NATIONAL i MOTOR SALES 171 S. Saginaw St. 19624 DOOR STATION. | g00d Condition new tires over-drive FE wagon, radio and heatr: 1951 Plymouth | DR THAT ‘8 FULLY EQUIP [(D WITH RADI re AND ALL oer EXTR 505 $95 Down SCHUTZ Motors Inc. DESOTO-PLYMOUTH 12 Woodward Birmingham Open Till 9 P.M. SAT “Mercury $149 Dn. | EVERY ‘4 FORD 2 DR Porp FOR SALE. REA hs 1312 W. Montcalm |CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 1951 Station Wagon “as tere factory | pect oes and ail-leather tn- terior ave we sold one ike this. “aus Balance On Easy Rates SCHUTZ Motors Inc. DESOTO-PLYMOUTH $12 8 Woodward Birminghem Open Till 9 PM NIGHT EXCEPT SAT $10 ap tal & assume peym: nts 4 oo ward, Birmingha'n 49 V-a 2 DOOR CHEAP _FE 37319 1950 FORD ORD ‘4 KADIO aND HEATER _815 Scott Lake Rd SPECIALS 1951 Hudson A beautiful maroon pas Henry J 6 cylinder Like new Chevrolet club coupe. Clean cd Dodge. A real transportation Cau in and make us an offer. North Pontiac Auto Sales ‘ FE 49151 BKYLINE 2 TONE 44 FORD BEST BUY 195¢ STUDEBAKER COMMANDER attractive cream heater, automatic directional signals, fine mechanically Starlite Coupe finish radio transmission good tires Ideal Car for the Wife $595 aa Keller-Koch | Woodward at 13'2 Mile Rd Lincoln 68410 850 6. Woodward Birmingham 49 PORD Vé CUSTOM 2 DOOR. Clean. 3395. FE 4-0178. “41 PORD 4 DOOR DELUXE. RA- dio heater, spotlights, aed white Walls Very clean OR 3-134 Wi “ORD. 4 DOOR DELUXE RA- dio, neater spotlights _ Walls Very clean 0. OF ‘ i961 FPORD CUSTOM 8 SEDAN. Ver: clean Pordomatic Radio FE 3-154" A 149 FORD BEST OFFER AC- cepted. FE 5615), R. Wilde. 1949 FORD, V 8 HEATER ONLY $165 00 You'll do better at Ste warts Aute 8 Sales s. 255 Monte alin 2 HENRY J. 2 DOOR. $10 DOWN 8 and assume payments. Wood ward, Birmingham. HENRY J, 51. Ave 464 $295 (2635 Auburn i LASALLE COUPE. 2591 MANN 4 *50 MERCURY 2 DR. A beautiful ebony biack, well kept car, radio heater, whitewall tires 26.704 actual miles. Not many ‘lke this. BOB FROST, INC. er MERCURY. DEALER 650 Woodwi. vd Birmingham “ amnee n¥ ¢0R. $10 Down & assume paymeni« 464 Woog- ward Birmingham. 50 NASH RAMBLER yGONVERTI. ble $305 FE 4-3371 1950 ‘NASH — STATESMAN. RADIO. hear, overdrive and bed. Bal- ance §311.11 Take over pay- ments. FE 5-935! NASH RAMBLER STATION WAG- on. 1951 custom. Good condition $600. OA8-2715 PONTIAC 1853, 4 DOOR. CHIEF- tain deluxe Fully equipped. 9,000 mi Original owner Mrs. J. F. Cahill, 2600 Woodine ; : 7 PONTIAC 48. °4 DOOR HYDREA- matic Excellent) OR 3-0872 PLYMOUTH ‘41 RONS GOOD Bes t offer _OR 3-0872 Come to Clark- ston for a good deal on a used car! 1951 Ford custom 8 4 door sedan Fordomatic drive, radio and heat- er. A clean car selling for $795 1952 club light Plymouth Cranbrook coupe radio and heater blue finish. The price $645 1950 Nash Statesman 4 door and heater Price, $395 Radio Three new Chrysler @ door sedans Pully equippei Big Savings Trade now CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER Clarkston Mich MAple 55141 Open 6@ AM to 8 PM Gaily. rections) tehts 62.100 Cal) aft er 6 pm 6244 Pine Knob Rd _bet May dee & Waidon Rds. 1953 MERCURY Monterey Coupe, yellow and biack finish, full viny! trim, redio, heat- er whitewal) tires and 2 spot lights. $1,695 BOR FROST, INC LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER 650 8 Woodward Birmingham OLDS 1948 #8 ¢ DOOR, RADIO and heater very oo tires and motor $225 MY 32893 e OLDS 1953 HOLIDAY 98. ALL power equipped $2,200 3-2781. ~ 1950 OLDSMOBILE 88 Holiday coupe radio, heater, Hydramatic whitewal] tires. 19,- 000 miles. actuaj] one owner car! This is reaily a sharp e! Huron Motor. Sales 952 W Hurte FE 2-26i1 NASH ‘50 ish _ ow! ng ? TONE PIN- for balance 4 DOOR, > nice! Selling FE 5-2 2731 j 50 OLDS 88 FOR SALE OR trade: older car 6859 Elizabeth Lake Road or Phone FE 71-6832 1950 NASH Custom four door, radio, heater and overdrive. b299 No Cash Needed Where Can You Buy a Car Cheaper Than at SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. DESOTO P Y» OUTH 912 8 Woodward itrmingham Oper Till 9 PM. EVERY NITE EXCEPT SAT. 1951 PONTIAC GOOD CONDI- tion, new tires. 27000 actual miles. Call PE 4¢- 5293 after 4 PONTIAC. 52. EXCELLENT CON- dition FE 46 ‘to 17] We Finance NATIONAL MOTOR SALES 171 8. Saginaw St 1953 PONTIAC. 4 DOOR. BLUE. heater and hydramatic. 46681 PONTIAC ‘@i 2 POOR 6 CYLIN- _Ger $150. FE 5- 53 “ONTIAC 6 BaORE 4a.DOOR Hydramatic, radio. heater and “convenience group accessories, One owner Ph FE 54-8720 Jacobson. Pontiae’s Exclusive. Hudson Dealer Cass at Pike FE 2-6359 PET ERSON 1 1961 Henry J 4 AISER BALES & SERVICE 3776 ATIKURN PE 44093 1953 PONTIAC, - ae DELUXE, Lots of accessories. A-1 shape, inside and out. $1,500. FE 4-229, i647 PONTIAC CLEAN. VERY 30425. COOR, RUNS _ feasonable, OR PLYMOUTH ‘@& $195. 340 Baid- good sedv rough. win Ave FE 8-1431. ‘$1 PLYMOUTH $10 DOWN & AS- sume payments 464 §. Woodward, Birmingham NICE ‘# PLYMOUTH CLUB coupe $100 and assume payments. Balance $27 F* 56-2874. PONTIAC ‘54 CUSTOM CATALINA, hydramatic ete. 3600 miles wii tase trade im OR 3-2040. ‘50 PONTIA® © DOOR. $10 DOWN and assume rayments. 464 6. _Wooddw: rd, Birmingham. ‘M PONTIAC STAR.AIEP CATA- lina. Radio heater hydramatic. _Mr_ Perry FE 2-9255. “49 Pl YMOUTH DELUXE TUDOR, 1 owner Very clean throughout. _ FE 3-7542 - PONTIAC ‘54 STA ny Sofa DE- luxe 4 door FE 2-731 “49 PONTIAC TUDOR. § oa CLEAN imside and out Low mileage. Pri- vate owner FE 5-8939. PONTIAC ‘49 EXELLENT CON- dition 40000 miles oe $:30 PE 2-7221 «ves FE _3-2315. PONTIAC 1954 STARCHIFF cus. tom 4 door 3600 mi. Exceilent condition Fully equipped. FE 22-6908 STARCHIEF CUS- Excel- 1954 PONTIAC tom. 4 door, -hydramatic. lent condition. FE 4-5909. $$ PONTI‘ ‘33 STATION WAGON, 3 seats. radic and heater plus _extras MI 4-893. PONTiAC 8 1951 ? DOOR. BLACK. M~st sacrifice for only $75 down and take over.payments Balance _of $660 Real buy! OR _3-0662. West Side Used Cars 923 W Huron FE 42185 "39 to ‘52 models to choose from WE BUY SFL AND TRADE . WHEN YOU THINK OF STUDE- baker think of Carkner’s in Bir- mingham. MI 4-341 and we're stilb rolling or used car from us in aoe | TRUTHFUL Regardless of what some people may say and think all of our cars in this ad are wholesale priced or be of-state dealers but we prefer to advantage of these low prices. ‘93 $3195 Cadillac 62 Coupe with radio heater Hydramatic, white side walls, and 2 tone green fey $2195 Cadillac, sedan with blue top and grey bottom, radio, heat- er, Hydramatic and 1 owner. ‘O93 ..... $2095 Olds 8 sedan 4 dr. with radio heater Hydramatic, power steering and power brakes ‘Ol $1695 Cadillac segan with white ‘op and a black bottom. Olso ra- dio, heater ahd Mydramatic. ‘03 $1595 Pontiac 2 dr with 2 tone green finish plus radio heater, Hydramatic and tinted glass Rey $1395 Buick Super Hard Top Riverta with 2 tone paint, radio. heater. Dyriaflow and white ‘03 ..... 51395 Ford 2 dr sedan with 2 tone blue paint radio, heater, overdrive and white walls 03 ..... $1395 Chevrolet 210 series with 2 tone green finish Radio, heater, and Power Glide. ‘O] $1195 Olds eedan with black top and red bottom The Holiday Sup 88 Cpe. with all extras. ‘52 $1095 Pontiac sedan with 2 tone grey finish, radio, heater, ydramatic and white wais JERO BRIGHT SPOT Olds—Cadillac “22 YEARS iN FE 8-0488 or Orchard Lake Rd, at Cass Ave. ey low We could sell them to out- give the people of Pontiac the i) ere $1095 Olds 98 sedan. Gun metal erey finished 4 dr with radio | heater, and Hydramatic . $995 Nash sedan one 2 tone black and red. adio heater, Hydramatic ana white walls ‘02 $995 Dodge sedan with 2 tone paint Radio, heater and best of all —an automate transmission ‘Ol $795 | DeSecto.. Mahan Gold 4@ dr. cus- tom Radio, heater and au- |! tomatic shift, A real value |! 50 $695 | Pontiac sedan Radio. heater and Hydramatic Owned by a local minister. Really sharp 5) $695 | “eve 8 © @ @ Nash Ambassador Maroon 4 dr Radio heater A feal mice car. ‘90 $595 Ford 2-dr Truly a one owner Black sedan with new tires, good motor and solid body. ‘48 $375 Ford Club Cpe with radio and heater This ts @ sharp car ‘48 . $235 Mercury Iieht grey with radio [) heater and overdrive. Good solid transportation. © ‘47 $215 |) Packard “Ask the man who owns one“ Good trans. with |) many miles left | ME'S and Hydra. = = « s « PONTIAC” , FE 8-0489 mean BUSINESS! $245 48 Chevrolét. Club Coupe. Good runner. $595 ’°5O Buick 2 dr. Deluxe, new paint, radio and heater. $695 51 Ford 2 dr., Custom- line, radio, heater, real value. $2095 53, Buick Super 4 dr. Dynaflow, radio and heater. Special paint, $295 "49 Ford Custom, radio, heater, no down pay- ment. $1395 *§3 Chevrolet 2 dr., Air, 2 tone paint, shape $295 "49 Buick 2 heater Bel- top dr., radio, and Dynaflow. $1195 *S1 Buick Riviera Hard- top, Dynaflow, all the extras. $395 $9 Plymouth 4 dr., ra- dio and heater. $1595 ’52 Olds. 4 dr. 88, Hy- dramati¢, good tires, radio and heater. 1/4 heii WE DON'T SELL THEM ALL BUT WE DO OUR SHARE! ~ Thanks to you good people our used car volume is DOUBLE over last year Many of your friends have bought either a new the past year. Ask them then drop i in to 210 Orchard Lake Avenue for prompt service. compare our prices, either in town or out, you'll see for yourself, we really $795 "31 Buick Special De- luxe, radio and heater, 13 down. $895 51 Mercury 2 dr., radio and heater, looks and runs yood. $895 52 Dodge 2 dr., net, one owner, and heater. $995 "*0 Chevrolet 4 dr. De- luxe, new motor, radio, heater. $595 51. Studebaker Club Coupe, radio, heater. A real value. $1195 "51 Olds. Holiday 2 dr., radio, heater, Hydra- matic, hardtop, S895 °51 Chevrolet Bel Air Hardtop, radio, heater. Low price. $295 47 Pontiac 4 dr., luxe 8 Beautiful. $1295 °53 Hudson Hornet 4 dr., Hydramatic. Ready “to go. G3 Plymouth Sedan, radio and heater. Wow! Coro- radio De- ie 52 “SUPPORT THE UNITED FUND” OLIVER BUICK OPEN TILL 9 P. M. 210 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 2-9101 | / about our service and Incidentally, + $1295 52 Buick 4 dr., Special, radio, heater and Dyna- flow. $995 51 Olds. 4 dr., radio, heater, Rocket 88. $545 30 Ford 2 dr., Deluxe. radiv, heater, ready to go. $1195 ’31 Pontiac 4 dr., De- luxe 8, Hydramatic, ra- dio and heater. $475. "51 Kaiser 4 dr., radio and heater, good value, 9295 "50 Hudson 4 dr., and heater, payment. $195 48 Pontiac 2 dr. De- luxe & Good transpor- tation. ~ $95 "47 Buick 4 dr., a little work on this one and it’s ready to go. $995 53 Nash Rambler, ra- dio, heater, Hydramat- ic. Low mileage. radio no down REMEMBER ' 70 cars on our big lot. We're open till 9 p.m. Stop in today, all cars are winterized. — 2 — J fq