f je The Weather _ U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Fair, Showers Tomorrow. ‘2 \, crip Mae gp piece ceneccp ok Sg sud bon eam -PRE S_ Details Page 2. 115th, YEAR kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, JUNE 35, 1957—28 PAGES AOC TEE eat arava PHoTos Calls Hoffa Paymaster in Bid to Hire Cheasty WASHINGTON (” -- John Cyelney, on charges Cheasty testified today that Hy-| ™ - man IL. Fischbach. put him i touch with James R.. Hoffa sft propositioning him to become a prevent Cheasty from testifying. spy Within the Senate Rackets! conspiracy. Hoffa's attorneys had seught te But the move was rejected by hotel r |PUT MAN ites Fischbach told him, Cheasty tes- x *& * Army ce en, nd at Pac > Admits Leaking | } Secret Facts ae that he had been in €on-| Committee, Distri Decet versation with unnamed union of- Cheasty is the government's’ ;u: © x your calendar. Applica- Theatergoers will climb aboard) 1st Degree Slaying Trial two luxurious United Airlines! iplanes this year and wing their! ,way toward New York and five | ‘wonderful days of entertainment. if the Kremlin agrees to} plane, then | the U.S. could efficiently knock out) the Soviet Union in case of war! |without poisoning the air or the The concrete results of a 29- jminute presidential appeal added |up mostly to silence on the part lof the governors and their official | families. Eiserhhower got applause when he arose to speak. He got a smat- tering of hand-clapping halfway ‘through his address. He got the lusual applause for a_ president when he concluded. But the over-all effect pro- duced from GOP Gov. Theodore | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) | ‘Press Theater Plane Shepherd Mute They're going like those proverbial hot cakes. at Arraignment Birmingham Man Faces | in Death of Wife | James D. Shepherd, 36, of Bir- 'tional inspectors in Russia, the! Just listen to this lineup of Man- The world-famous sights of Gotham mingham yesterday stood mute to |U. S., ;ocean area. This announcement puts the U. 8.. in an extremely advanta- | keous position in the London talks. if the U.S. agrees to suspend Thursday's outlook again calls) testing of new “clean” weapons, it can claim it is making a con- cession equal to Soviet accept- ance of inspectors on Russian | territory. On the other hand, the American Britain and the Pacific hattan’s five top hits that are on won't be forgotten. tap for Pontiac area residents: ‘My Fair Lady,” “Visit to a Small Planet,”” “Happy Hunting,” “‘The Bells Are Ringing,” and ‘Tunnel lot Love.” | The popularity of the 1956 ex- | cursion is shown by 14 reserva- | tions received so far from last | wide interest, The Press has a the 1957 trip to accommo- y 150, year’s travelers. Because of the | PLENTY TO SEE There will be a tour of the Unit-. led Nations Building, an after-thea-| ter supper at Leone’s. restaurant, a private boat trip to view the city) 'a look-see around a giant ocean liner (if one is in dock), and many jother. memorable features. 4 All this in a packet for $182. This lincludes the round trip plane ticket land rooms with private baths at the Faramount Hotel. ) By JOE SINGLETON, SPARTA, Wis. Pon- tiac’s 703d Tank Battalion arrived day with enthusiasm. . An advance party bh: d assem! + a good night'¢ sleep, activities ot gx In oe s Press ened, and they began their two-|% _}week annual field training yester- the battalion equipment, and after) - is ice al cad ‘4 he 13 to check their enka and equip- ee ; County NOWS pu cssstevscess | | Editorials ae ae 6 Gunlock NOG Poe teers odages..t0 Learn How to Swim. eer yer | | basen eee ; Markets ,......,..... dete ssstte Obituarley 2s. Cilesa Cqnees 3 AT thru Sporte ssn) Theaters TV & Radic Program. coded okt sh oleis pe eae. section started setting up com- munications lines for contact with different sections of . this huge 63,000 acre World War fl basic training camp. as the carbine, pistol, and the sub-). ing will be proficiency testing of City Reservists Begin Camp in High Spirits . Special attention will also go to}will eat and sleep in the field and the firing of small weapons such/operate under combat conditions. In diseussing this year’s summer machinegun. Included in the train-jtraining, Lt. Col, Lloyd A. Gabler, te- battalion commander states,’” This The 703d) Tank Battalion, which year, the 703d has more and bet- ia first-degree murder charge in- , volving the fatal stabbing of his wife. Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland ‘entered a plea of. innocent and ‘ordered Shepherd returned to Oak- land ‘County Jail until trial, prob- ‘ably in September, | The former salesman {fs ac- cused of stabbing his school- teacher wife, Elizabeth, 42, during a: quarrel in their home, 1509 Pierce St., the night of May 27. — He maintains that after taking itranquillizing pills earlier in the evening he “blacked out’’ until the moment he found his wife dying on the living room floor. _At Shepherd’s pre-trial examina- tion) the woman's daughter” by a first marriage testified she saw her stepfather take a decosative knife from the living room wail and stab her mother once in the , in tank firing and firing of small, sushnict camp Will be: the ever: is a part of ‘the 70th Infantry pi-idividual soldiers to find the areaSiter equipment’ to work with than vision, mostly from Michigan, and/of training for the most concen-jany other summer training’ that part of the Fifth Army will be in/tration. we have ever had.” direct competition with other ‘units The highlight of this year's | ‘Col. Gabler ‘also said that be- bi cause relly hecal of pra = arms, jment a ause 0 ig! night’ bivouac with all the units om ‘spirits’ of the| \men this will be the ‘Training in this area with over| : 5,000 other reservists, the Battalion) pl cA ag Infantry ~~ FN best summer: training camp ever. back &s she tried to flees = The girl, Janet Hutton, 13, and another daughter by the first marriage, Betsy, with relatives in Police theorize the’ ed a family argu and that Shepherd; who | tank noe, driv || Poster's Mawe. & Spie. Geet \ jleave hér tusband, place Wednesday, the! Open Evenings & Sundkys | \ will ¢ its training on \ neo lait 1 ~- ‘firing communication. a oe \ CT {pets this ihivouac, wh il | Barnum Schéol, had threatened to % , wo oe Tati d See 2 ue THE | PONTTAC PRESS. “TUESDAY. JUNE | 25, 1057 rea ee sateen - Water Pioline | Study Approved - Board Grants $58,000 )- = to Examine - Feasibility The Board of Supervisors yester- day approved $58,000 for a study of the engineering and economic feas- ibility of a proposed Lake Huron to Oakland County water pipeline, . * *. * The study will be made by the internationally known firm that has said the pipe- Bechtel Co., an ~line- is feasible -and--would: provide}: an answer to Oakland. County's growing water crisis. JOINS PROJECT Macomb County, which is joining has already. ne in the project, proved its, $58,000 share of hil and glass store. The By E. H. SIMS «Do peoples’ corns and bunions, ' as well as ladies’ hair, serve as weather forecasters? might really have done just that. Almost always, people are more energetic and vigorous when a cool, high-pressure air mass is overhead. They feel better. Sales- men will find selling opportunities potentially better in high-pressure, good weather periods. The Weather Fell U.S. Weath = Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair to- lew 56, Tomorrow partly eloudy seattered thundershowers by after- boo A night, ge ts Gentle northerly £ a rei late thi: , Sftermecn and: tenight ° "| Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am At 8 am: eo velocity 12 m p h. Sun sets Tuesday at 8:13 pm. Sun rises Wednesday V 457 am. Moon sets Tuesday at 6:04 pm. Moon. rises Wednesday at 3.52 am. A ene | arnremae pase said. “But I believe there is 7a. Meccccrees8l 12 B..... ll , ‘a field in smaller activities of the ) 8B. Mevses.-02 64 1p. m......j...71 federal government where there ie seenees y ce scces q Sone y 2? m..-..+.-Zican be some transfers to the Monday in Pontiec states, if the taxing power is re; {As soceréea downtown) turned to them. MTD wacersccesesess- 67 fo somportoare sseesees 58 De * * * Mean sate 62.5 : ati , . - eather Rain, i mocratic Gov. Averell Harri One Year Age ki Age tn Pontiac fovedt, temperature ores FORMS os scvcnceses.++.-. the governors about the programs Secegnsapen Feat BA he had in mind but failed to do Pa Na oe Cer sae ” iMichigen’s Democratic Gov. G. land County Juvenile Home were By PETE LOCHBILER A pleasant, grassy hillside in the} Oakland County Service Center occupied — county supervisors’ at- tention While touring the Telegraph road center, supervisors were much concerned with the one that wasn't there as with the many that have been located in the area lke Urges States Enlarge Control (Continued From Page One) R. McKeldin of Maryland the observation: “I'm convinced |! nothing can be done about it.” |! MocKeldin has been one of Eisen- + hower’s staunchest, rooters. Eisenhower, who flew here for ‘an overnight stay, suggested that) the proposed federal-state task |force concentrate on a_ single ‘program where there is duplication! of state and federal effort. He said the cost in state taxes of carrying gut the program should be com- jpared with the cost in federal! taxes. ECONOMY SEEN AT COUNTY CENTER—Facilities of the Oak- the Telegraph road service center inspected yes- terday by the Oakland County Board “of Super- since the service center was con- ceived more than a decade ago. 80. As far as Delos Hamlin,- super- visors’ chairman, is concerned, the new building is but a few steps away from reality, despite contro- versial legal entanglements. SEES VICTORY for the courthouse are still locked Hamlin.sees recent legislation as a victory foF the new building. ' the Farmington Township super- money — whether supervisors can ‘use funds they have on hand, or whether they ki be forced to start saving ag & among those at Supervisors Gaze at Hillside, Envision ‘New Courthouse be possible quickly and easily, Hamlin thinks. At least many supervisors hope Although immediate prospects n a court battle on the one hand, Even if the court battle is lost, visor believes the building can still go under construction within a few years, if not sooner. The question hinges mainly on There is ee $1,400,000 in visors. Examining auto parts vocational education are (left to Duncan, of Troy; Maylon Hoard, of Township and Scott C. Belyea, of-Troy. right) tn ae aa a man seriously doutts that the county ever will be forced to a in aot a Pera adin were in ac- technically wrong cumulating the monéy,” he says, “I don't believe the court is em- powered to order a tax reduction. GOES ALONG “That would be solely up to the Tax Allocation Board, which has always gone along with the coun- ty’s policy of accumulating year- end surpluses." * * hope to build the * Supervisors first $2.5- $3 million section of the $4.5 million building with the funds on hand and additional money from sale of county lands. * * * The second section of the build- ing would be built whenever more building funds can be accumulated. Hamlin thinks this shouldn't take very long. 2 a internal Police Friction Rising officer illegally. Unde? the civil service law, Straley went out of his authority as chief when he recently sus- pended Patrolmen Louis Romeos, accerding to Theodore Carlson, chairman of the Joca] civil serv- The announcement of the suspen- sion came. yesterday from Inspec- tor Clark M. Wheaton, who is act- ing chief since Straley left Pontiac Saturday on police business and will not return until] Thursday. : x * * Wheaton said Straley suspended perior officers.” : * * * Wheaton added the suspension followed a complaint of two ser- geants who called Straley when Romeos ‘“‘talked back to them” after they lecturéd him for not hav- ing all proper equipment on his person. * * * The officers association planned a showdown at 2:45 this after- noon. At that tinie, Romeos said, he will try te return to work on his regular shift. Wheaton’s statement that Stra- ley received permission to suspend Romeos during a phone ‘conversa- tion with Carlson Friday night was denied by Carison. x * * “Straley phoned me and told me the city manager was out of town and he wanted to have Romeos suspended. I told him he should prepare a list of charges against the officer and present them to City Manager Willman Monday,” Carlson said. ’ . “] didn't say he could or should suspend him.” Meanwhile, Herbert C. Cooley, president. of the Pontiac Police Officer’s Association, who recently vowed to oust Straley, said the four-man Civil” Service Committee of the association would present Willman with a partial list of grievances against Straley today. * * * The “illegal action of Straley in suspending Romeos will also be another grievance we intend to file,"’ he added. * * * City Manager Walter K. Willman said he heard about the suspen- sion during a phone call from Wheaton yesterday morning. ‘He said he had ‘‘no comment” as to the legality’ of Straley’s action. said jt would requite “realisticat ly relating tax rates and assessed valuations to expanded incomes and real property values.” * * * “Once the committee acts,’’ he said, “I have it in mind that all of us would cooperate in secur- ing the necessary action by the Congress’ and the various state legislative bodies for the health of.our republic and the good of us all.” Republican Gov. Lane Dwinell lof New Hampshire didn’t share 'McKeldin’s attitude that nothing | Practical could be done about the -'President’s suggestion, | “There are some things like the igasoline tax that can’t be done away with at this time,’ Dwin- man of New York said that Eisen- hower had it in his power to make some specific suggestions to Mennen Williams said that he tax reductions—as the Taxpayers’ League wants—there is still a bright side to the picture. The new state law allows coun- ties to save up to one mill a year from non-tax sources for build- ing purposes. Although county revenues can only be estimated | in advance, Hamlin figures that up to $750,000 a year could be saved for the courthouse under the new law. This is in addition to funds that can still be accumulated under the older law, which allows .1 mill for building purposes out of tax monies. At this rate, the pay-as-you-go financing of the courthouse would re building funds at present. But this | hd ° ; A Piers Reap ssa ainatlig tied up by a suit that charges 6 | Reservation Application than state taxes would be raised it was accumulated illegally. ‘ i to support the transferred func-| If the suit, brought by tle 5 Pp Th T © tions,""' Eisenhower said. “The| Oakland County Taxpayers’ ' TESS Ca er OUI. aaa the po tag Red Ferg amet — ne wise -" Please make the following reservation for me on The the ‘freight charges’ on money be-| could start at once, Hamlin y Pontiac Press Theater Tour to New York City, departing Mon- ing hauled from. the states to! figures. ; day morning, September 9, and returning September: 14 Washington and back (a bill, I re-| If the decision is against the Miss mind you, that is always collected county, the money still might be! Agoua0ee ; in full)—would save the American available for the building, despite @ ........Mrs. taxpayer a Vd a the fact that the county would | " dhave been found technically guilty! " Sees ne see UTE. -cooochac scopagohcephooocseneasecopnnsonseaSeogec04 S Focerer sai any such proj- of accumulating it legally, Ham ect — ae a ay said. fi i tion of all state monetary AGGrOSS oo... ccc eee ese ccceee cee enweneessecscenenseerecetentens . cies, including taxes, _ bonded BRIGHT SIDE debts, “operating costs and cash| Were the county forced, some- City Phone reserves to meet natura disas- how, to return the $1,400,000 to ¥ Cee eee teense trae eeeteareeee eeeece & SEVER tere ear reeneneeee * ters and other emergencies. He|taxpayers in the form of 1957 I understand that the $182 I have enclosed includes trans- portation, hotel, theater tickets, mentioned in Press articles. cations and that my name will if I am not included among the luncheons, tour of the U. N. Duliding andi cther-extts Seetwwes (Single Room $8 Extra). I Agree to Participate in the Pontiac Press Theater Tour Under the Following Conditions: I have included the full payment with this reservation. If I am unable to make the tour I understand that I shall be given a full refund providing I give notice by Aug 8. 1 understand that reservations will be made in order of the receipt of appli- the after-theater dinner party, be placed upon a waiting list first 150. I understand that I tl “Brought to Head} Straley “allegedly” suspended an} Romeos Friday night because of 1“insubordination to two of his su- and Recreation Dept., a total of “GIVE ME CAMP ANY DAY” — This was the concensus of the first group of Pontiac school children who yesterday left school days far be- hind and headed for the opening of the Frog Hol- low Day Camp. Operated by the Pontiac Parks 504 kids will en- joy camp seiilans at the Pontiac lake Recreation Area before the summer is over. Seventy kids were on hand for the first day of the camp yes- terday. This picture shows a bus load of them leaving the courthouse. 2 Killed, 2 Hurt in Gun Battle Photographer's Wife, Her Son Die in Fight With Truck. Driver TERRE HAUTE, Ind. #—A gun battle between a photographer and a truck driver who had traded wives resulted in the deaths of the The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — Harold Turner, car dealer, to have| three lots at Bowers and -Elm Streets rezoned to permit the park- ing of cars, met a 4-3 rejection at the hands of commissioners last the sale of at the fireworks display July 4, at Birmingham High School football field. Lawmakers Deny Dealer’ s Request for ‘B’ Rezoning The request of The First Methodist Church Tan- dem Club has received an OK for refreshments night. bd * * photographer's wife and her son early today i wounded two oth- ers. State ses and sheriff's offi- cers searched a wooded area “just south of west Terre Haute for Thomas Whitaker, 47 - year - old; truck driver, believed injured. Whitaker's former wife, Mrs. Aima Martin, 38, was killed by a} shotgun blast in the chest in the shooting at her home near the woods. Her son, Jack Whitaker, 10, was killed by shots in the stom- ach and chest. The woman's present husband, | Stuart Martin, 49, a well-known photographer with studios in Ter- re Haute and Evansville, was tak- en to Union Hospital in fair con- dition with a wound in the left leg, His stepdaughter, Regina Whitaker, 9, was seriously wound-| ed, Her left arm was shattered. a a a a Martin said he believed Whit- aker was cut by flying glass be- fore fleeing from the house. He said Whitaker broke into the house at 2:45 a. m. Police said Whitaker had been. threatening the Martins while he) was trying. to work out a court- approved plan to visit his children more often. Both couples wére di- vorced last October, followed by the wife-trading. Whitaker's present wife and her two children by Martin were put under police guard recently on complaint that the truck driver had threatened them, too. VanAtta Dismissal Protested, Praised (Continued From Page One) receive better cooperation from other police agencies in the area.” * * * A Pontiac policeman, who lives in the township, Jerry Smith, lauded Van Atta’s police work and said, ‘As a Rontiac policeman, we have had nothing but fine coopera- tion from the Waterford Township Police Department.” Although Van Atte’s backers liad petitions signed for his re- instatement, the board felt that all interested citizens should have a chan:e to express them- selves. Trustee Charles. Pappas suggest- ed that petitions for and against Van Atta’s reinstatement be pre- ' board may participate in all of the schedule of events except for pos- —" in order that — sible changes or additions made necessary by some event be- ' yond control of The Pontiac Press. =-ee®eeeeeeeeeeeeseweseeneeeee © & bers may ‘earn how the commun- ity feels about this matter. The board approved the sug- gestion. and for employe parking. Through his attorney, George Cram, Turner had agreed to pro- vide alley access at the rear and build a wall between the =“ and nearby homes, Charles Kass, appearing in be- half of 67 residents on nearby streets, asked that this busjness B request be denied. He said he and his neighbors fee] that grant- ing it would be the first step to- 'wards business encroachment that would ultimately spoil the residen- tial character of the area and downgrade property values. Following the commission re- jection, Fred Pew, Birmingham realtor, warned the commission that business C, the favored son- | ing for this area, can be danger- ous, He told them that it can, become as big a threat to residential areas as any other zoning. Pew expressed the opinion that ‘because of its classification, the professional-type building, it is more acceptable to residents on first appearances, but can become a burden just the same. “Please use caution in passing this type of zoning, before it does become an unpleasant feature,” Pew concluded. * * * Patricia Newhall, formerly of Birmingham, and student and teacher at the Cranbrook Summer Theater School, is making theater history as New York’s youngest, most talked-about and most versa- tile director. Miss Newhall is currently di- recting a veries of John Milling- ton Synge plays for Theater Turner told commissioners he wanted the area to store new ve- jhicles, use it as a holding point ‘for cars going to the bump shop * * * Chamber of Commerce Secre- tary Charles Mortensen told city officials, ‘This is probably the last year a refreshment stand will be operated at the affair.’ Colonel Confesses ‘|night for posts on local commit- East. Dramatic critic William Michfelder is predicting an out- standing career for Miss New- hall. Carl D. Wonnberger, Cranbrook director, says he is not surprised at the success the 28-year-old for- mer student is heading for. He commented on the outstanding work she did at Cranbrook, both a 3 The names of. Reland Reese and Herbert H. Gardner Sr., were ap- proved by city commissioners last fo Leaking Secrets icated service . . . to his inten- tions and motives.’’ At stake personally was a 19- year Army career that friends of the rocket expert described as “brilliant.” In focus was the nation's guided. missile program and another in- ter-service row. The big question in the Army-Air Force feud was this: Is a self-guided missile that travels 1,500 miles a plane or a bullet? SETs OFF CHAIN It was Secretary Wilson who set off the chain of events which led to this trial by deciding last Nov- ember that the intermediate mis- siles — those designed to wallop an enemy 1,500. miles away — belong to the Air Force. Subsequently, according to the charges brought against the often decorated colonel, Nicker- son complied a document highly critical of the Wilson order. Nickerson was then coordinator of field information about all larmed forces missile projects sta- tioned at Redstone Arsenal] near Huntsville. The document apparently was put into the hands of congressmen and various civilians, including some industrial leaders and news- flatly denied. ° formation “which he had. reason to believe could be used to the injury of the U.S, or te the ad- vantage of a foreign nation,” Ee ee he has had “some success” be- cause public opinion has been brought to what he considers the Army's need for its own medium range missiles. tees. ° Postmaster Reese was re- named to the Recreation Board, on the Retirement Board of City Employes. Crusader Still Featured at ‘Garden’ Marti Haymaker, “Yes, Billy Gra- in Wrestling Tonight — - Billy Graham vs. Satan] NEW YORK (#—Sidelights from the Billy Graham crusade: People come to the Madison Square Garden information booth asking, “Is there wrestling tonight at the Garden?” Replies Miss Dodgers did the same for 10 team- mates. . *. * * Baritone soloist George Beverly Convicted in Wife Killing ““s FS doesn't-think: Eisenhower has an-|er ate wrestling with Satan.” DETROIT i — Roland J. Jack ae alyzed all the problems involved, x* * * o 4 ernors had ‘been passing resolu- night | was ‘convicted by a Recorder’s eS aitions tor ral| Someone dropped a cardboard salt years urging the box’ full of carefully Court jury Monday of first’ degree AE Bleovernment to turn back ‘to the\° saved Pem!murder in the Feb. 15 shooting of ay $|states the highway building pro- his wife ina downtown department |‘ $igram. It was just four years ago eo. store. Shepherd’s wife, Helen, 49, Spi, — reversed this is Pte Ss MA nhac Tale Fat rt) ing td. the Gov- a meeting, then made a/quarrel Recorder's: J aul Bde Conference that it endorse |r Aoertalion ‘to bring of his[Krntoe oat Friday Sr sentencing eo p Maheray — Cart Ere ff Sei mens a oe. \ Shea, while on tour with Graham abroad, became fond of an old’ Swedish “How Great Thou try to lead Christian lives, but aren't certain how to go about it. The evangelist said the first step in Christian living is accept- ance of Christ as the Savior, thre _|after that being a Christian takes “a lifetime of working at it.” ~ , His text was -from Colossians 1:27: “To whom Ged would .make known what is the riches of the willie (ase gentiles, which is Christ to you, the hope of glory. ....” There were 529 “decisions for Christ,” raising the total so far to 22,@28 during the campaign, —o t. ) Auto Mileage Goes Up _ WASHINGTON — More’ than 85) per cent of U.S. passenger miles si Cour Br a 7 ly 3 edbsssceaces 0 ani | COME IN! while Gardner, head of the Bir- x . mingham branch of the Detroit ow Open Business Bank and Trust Co. will remain Sal Pye i ecoce ee arenes | Established in 1898 Farmer-Snover ah FUNERAL HOME. 160° We Huron | PARKING. ON, PREMISES ‘anFEsTcETieenseenseenesenson seeooene, ‘PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL Place your order with Pontiac’s newest dealer and come in for Top Service now! — R & R Motors, Ine. 724 Oakland Ave, . Phone FE 8-6801 FE 2.91 a THE, PONTIAC PRESS. T TUESDAY, JUNE. 25, 1957 a i \ - Sparks-Griff in FUNERAL HOME THOUGHTFUL SERVI 46 WILLIAMS sr. none FE 2-584} --+vived-by three sons; the Rev, Mau» rice A Fenton, Homer of Pon-| ™® St., is survived also by her puneral Home in Drayton Plains. tiac, and Kenneth at home; two grandparents. Surviving are his wife Helen,/ ‘the Pontiac Memorial Day Asso- ter, 13 grandchildren and 6 great- ‘grandchildren. Memorial Day Group Names New Officers ERICH PAUL SCHUDLICH CLARKSTON —. Service for Erich Paul Schudlich, 62, of 10161 Crosby Lake Rd., who died yester- day are.pending from the Coats cy Hospital, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday from Price Funeral Home. Rev. Harold Moran -will of- ficiate., The infant, daughter of Nermnes and Alice Krebiehl of 2301 Dele- MRS. GEORGE M. rerEeson Mrs, George M, (Clara M.) Pe- terson, 74, died at her home yes- terday at 309 Osmun St. Besides her husband, she is sur- - {five children, Paul John, Patrick Walter, Patricia Ann, Erich Paul Jr, and Mrs. Herbert May of Clarkston. Also surviving are © brother Walter of Detroit and two sisters Mrs. Merrell Brown of ‘Otsego and Mrs. Emma Forsythe of Chicago. : |Riley, 3170 Warren Dr., secretary; CLYDESC. WATSON ‘Mrs. Harold Willis, 344 First St., |. | WEST BRANCH — Service for|treasurer; Arnold Aarni, 244 Nel- Clyde C, Watson, 69, who died of son St.. trustee; and Floyd E. Cre- a heart attack Sunday at his West mer, 248 S. East Bnd: caarseel daughters, Mrs. Vida Brooks of Auburn Heights and Mrs. Florence Prestel of Pontiac; two brothers and a sister. Funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday from the First Baptist Church, Dr. H. H. Savage officiating, with burial in White { Chapel. Cemetery. Arrangements _ are being made by the Huntoon Funera] Home, SHERYL ANN BOGGS ciation has elected officers and re- viewed movies taken of this year’s Memorial Day parade. New officers. are: Malcolm Os- walt, 460 Jordon Rd., president; Tamara Ellsworth, 1571 Parkway |— Dr., vice president; Mrs. Frank * MILF Branch home, will be at 2 p.th. of the day. soo Dame ot tame Cayo ha Wednesday from the C, F. Sher-; All officers ‘carry one-year terms’ man Funeral Home, Ortonville. except that of trustee, a three-year ‘will be held from the Morgan Fu- neral Home, Reedsville, W. Va. Her body will ie at Richardson- |Bird Funeral Home, Milford, this evening. Sheryl died yesterday, She is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Hersel Boggs; a sis-| ter, Kathy Lee; and_her—grend- parents, Mrs. Dora Boggs and Mrs. ' Emma McMurdo, both of West Vir- ginia. MRS, MARY FISHER NORTH BRANCH — Service for Mrs. Mary Fisher,-74, who died! wi |The Rev. Isaac McPhee will’ offi- term. M iciate and burial will be in the| The association plans to begin & Pleasant View Cemetery, Oak-/ work immediately on next year's) wood. | parade and invites . suggestions Mr, Watson is survived by two) ‘from area residents concerning dace, | Mrs, Helen McGrath of' the ® Preparation of its floats.” Tokesoff | Lee 16 BY MAGIC MRS. MILDRED OLIVER Mrs. Mildred Oliver, 87, Dies at Home Mrs. Mildred M. Oliver, wife of ¢ Contest closes HURRY! ¢ June 30, 1957 * This is your big opportunity-to win « big, beautiful new Cadillac. . -or one of 165 other thrilling awards worth aaron toni one a pees ae en easy to win! Come in and get your Official Entry Blank today ... we'll help you complete it! WANT A 1957'°GOLD’ CADILLAC? ---justr re the pup and follow the simple rules on the entry blank. _ ACT NOW! CONTEST ENDS JUNE 30th Automatic Heating Co. 17 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9124 Sunday, Will be held at 10 a.m.! - Wednesday from SS. Peter and, the late John J. Oliver who for 40 A N ew . {Paul Catholic Church, preceded by| years owned and operated a bottle’ Discovery that ey poimaaig! 7 patlegesl] eo plant in Pontiac, died this, removes uneral Home at 8 tonight. Rev ; her home at 353 W.| see Edward Sobczak will officiate with yon cy | Callouses burial in SS. Peter and Paul)“ Gaasiary! Mrs, Oliver, who was.-87, had) Hardened and Mrs, Fisher is survived by one been ill for several months. | , zg 4 Dead Skin from son William of Mt. Morris, two daughters Mrs. Josephine Krush- A life-long member of All Saints | ‘Episcopal Church, she belonged to| Any Part of the x 3 x es ee ee TROY — Service for Carol Ann tion. Krebiehl, who died shortly after) Mrs. Oliver's husband died in. birth yesterday, in St. Joseph Mer-| |1925. A brother and a-sister, both y = lof California, survive Mrs. Oliver. | |The body is at Sparks-Griffin Fun- | Deaths Elsewhere ee TAKE OFF CALLOUSES © ELIMINATES OFFICE ELBOWS _ @ REMOVES EXCESS CUTICLES _ © KEEPS BACK OF HEELS BEAUTIFUL @ GETS RID OF DISHPAN HANDS | © SMOOTH ROUGH CHAPPED HANDS ; i LONDON PF — The aia Earl Nelson, 66, great-great-great neph-| ew of British naval hero Horatio. Nelson, died Sunday. The -sixth earl served with the Austratian infantry in World War I.. | Insure With Agencies Displaying This Emblem, “seaves/ Foe Preste J. Clifford Metty | Frank A. Anderson Agency Daniels Agency —_—— ‘ Th dun tbe * Patt Austin-Norvell _— Wernet Agency gency, — — : W. A. Pollock | Baker and Hansen 4%. W. Huttenlocher —_— Agency Noyce W. Strait ' Brummett- — —— Lincicome, Inc. Maynard Johnson Wilkinson Agency | Crawford-Dawe- Lazelle Agency Grove Agency 7 ne, J. L. VanWagoner - Agency, Ine. eens Association of See ens HT | || Pitney-B o we s, TEL AVIV, Israel (® — Prof. Moshe Weizmann, 80, scholar and! brother of Chaim Weizmann, the late president of Israel, died yes- ‘terday, He was born in Motol, | | Russia. Rub a few drops of “TAKE-OFF” in Briskly _and rub your callouses and Rough Dead Skin off. NO IRRITATING INGREDIENTS. Guaranteed to Satisfy _-Ever-Lasting ALUMINUM Mail-Box SIGNS Easy-to-read biock letters and -nu- merais, mounted into rmanent bracket. Simple or Money Refunded we | NEW YORK — Evan Biddle. | Shipman, 53, writer on horse rac-| ||ing, died yesterday. sleds! [P to. install on any columnist for the Daily Racing os sag eg com neenoe Form and a contributor of maga-| zine articles, He was born in Bracket - 9 Inch. . 1.00] reianeld, No it | Bracket - 19 Inch. $1.50] Inc., Stamford, Conn., manufacturers ‘of the post- || age meter. < WASHINGTON — Walter H./l Letters umbers as nn BY MAGIC Bowes, 73, pioneer in the develop- & i - .10¢ ment of the postage meter and the metered mail system, - died! esterday. He - was | y ay. He-was a founder of Rasdeess Dent —2nd Floor | Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 to 4 P. M. COANE ny Os Hen- t r i T a known hctadet Cranpelin diel REMING ON hi re Fool kee ‘er. — Oates, Optometrist 3 NO. SAGINAW ST. - | Sunday. He failed to recover from ~ | injuries suffered in a fall a week | ago. * . ¢ | turing concern. ij|—Mrs. Kathleen O'Connor Reyn- = olds, 60, once leading lady to the : late movie cowboy Tom Mix, died Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED rector of the Marathon Corp., died Sunday after a heart attack. He also was an officer of several affiliates of the paper manufac- F ALL-IN-ONE { - Amazing New Capsule Plan for SAFE NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. i yesterday, She was born in Day- ton, Ohio. rebuilding costs | got the “JUMP | on you?» 4 ”y Does the insurance on your home still cover it ade- quately? Or has the rising cost of rebuilding left you only half-insured? Full insurance*need not cost you more. We'll save you money by placing your protection with Central Mutual, the company that lowers costs by insuring only “preferred risks!” ™~ out about oat sanennnor—at a saving. See us now. ™ = “Be Sure, You Are Wel Insured” | Kenne th G. Prva | INSURANCE ’ ¥ sm Ce. | _ FORT WORTH, Tex. 9 — : Helps You Take Off Pounds and Pounds of Excess 4 { Weight While You Eat All the Foods You Choose 7 lk —s = 3 fe: ident Syngman Rhee. | diving platform, jumped off, hit the side of the tank and was|] killed. : Robbery at Edgewater | DETROIT (® — Safecrackers |; escaped with between $8,000 and ] | $10,000 Sunday night after batter- ing-a hole in an office safe at i lcastle on the market—rent free, |Edgewater Amusement Park in iL. Asks No Rent LONDON i?—The Eafl of Tank- Optometrist i North Saginaw § Street ) _Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things in Sight” Boe: Friday Evenings Closed Wednesday 7 “Afternoons “I consider that this is the best/Northwest Detroit. way to save the place,” said his| gage lordship. “‘Its condition is undoubt- edly deteriorating because I can't The castle in Northumberland, about 15 miles south of the Scot- tish border, consists of four tow- ers and 50 rooms. R. C. Rose, director of Brit- -DOUB TRAD says the place is in pretty good pe. The earl is ready to throw in about 25 acres, also for free, to any responsible tenant who agrees to keep up the plage, and pay the as taxes of about $472 a year. AWW; The earl inherited the castle ed Thrifty PHARMACISTS Cha “WEDNESDAY i: HOLDENS. ING STAMPS LESS for Filling rge which, in the first historic action| of its kind by that organization, | | formed a volunteer international army to put down the communist aggression, The 24th division of the United States — which shouldered the 29h en ny SALE! | major burden among the 16 U.N. | mations that rallied to Korea's | help—was hastily moved into ac- | tion, But the 24th, combined with the) ‘regrouped ROK Army, was still far outnumbered and suffered de- feat at Taejon, where Division Commander Maj. Gen. William Dean was captured. GET TO SCENE It was not until the Reds had pushed the U. S. and ROK forces ‘to the ‘Pusan Perimeter’’ at the southern tip of the Korean penin- sula that other U. S. as well as U.N. units were able to get to the i scene. | Slowly and painfully, the allied | ferces pushed the invading Reds _ back north. In the meantime, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, in a bold pincers move- ‘ment, landed his forces at Inchon, 'Seoul’s gateway, 200 miles behind the Communist lines. That was Sep- tember, 1950. It was an operation that decisively turned the tide of OFFICE DE DESKS and CHAIRS et “aor » Swivel Choirs — re Chairs EXTRA SPECIAL! ya _OFFICE —_oier umn Straight Chairs war. . | But the Chinese Communists/ ‘joined the fray, sending over one GNED FOR THE * FUTURE DES! The National System of Interstate and Defense Highways will save an estimated 3,500 lives a year. That's because it's designed for safety. To make the most of this chance for safer highways in this state, these roads should be paved for safety—with concrete. Rigid concrete doesn’t soften—it doesn’t tipple and washboard under traffic. Its low crown doesn’t interfere with steering. Its gritty- | textured surface grips tires for safe, sure stops, even in the rain and | its lighter color greatly improves visibility at night. You drive in | _ comfort and confidence over the safest, smoothest-riding surface that ee ca ae © ee ene re contaann seats : , i ___ | Concrete highways are first choice for enous, tool Concrete | = ‘| roads last twice as long and cost far less to maintain, This : gives motorists the best buy for their tax dollars end teleases - | more funds to improve —* sécondary roads. if. ss N- FATIONAL TOWER, LANSING. 8, MICHIGAN: os ‘CEMENT ASSOCIATION \ \y gee appealed to the U, S. for modern! from his father and has tried to |weapons with which to redress this| sell the lease for 25 years. The) 'imbalance—so that should the Reds' main objection is that it’s away strike again, South Korea caniin the wilds and requires plenty meet them on equal terms, And of servants and heating. last week the U. N. command an-| “Chillingham castle is ghost) j nounced those weapons, including/free,”” Rose said. PRESCRIPTION Ps | sd | e-*' f oo | e-¥ F > OLDS Miow & Mo STERN LIVING “Lasting Value is the thing ; that sold me on Olds !" et TRG oe REIS de ee @OLDEN ROCKET 88 HOLIDAY COUPE Attendant: Well, I've looked at Olds from every Attendant: Sure, take that Rocket Engine’. . . angle, underneath, under the hood, and I can tell you—Olds really knows how to put ’em together! Owner: Yes, and Olds has style that you know will stay in style, Ever check on how much more you get for an Olds trade-in? Attendant: You get more than lots of nigh priced cars bring. . Owner: Right! The way Oldsmobile value lasts _ makes it a smart investment. And .— «there's Jota more... 4 u Ls * i ¥ a : \ / A Nouh AUTHO Rize there’s still nothing quite like it: I always talk it up, even‘though the new J-2 Rocket does mean I pump less. gas. Owner: When you add it up, and take a look at the price—it really makes sense to own an Olds. Attendant: That's for sure. I'm a atuies a Golden | ! | Seeth now e Damone Show : Rotket 88, too! And more of my , Bvery Wednesday on CB8-TV customers are going over to‘Olds: {95 | ) waiting for aet » separa You Os This! ments, but haven't applied for them. Disabled persons under 50 whe haven't applied to have their Social Security records frozen. jgroups in a somewhat different/ way. But, both groups stand to lose valuable Social Security| rights if they don't apply before July 1. 65 who are eligible for disability To oro be eagle Ex disability pay: ments you: 1. Must have a permanent dis- ability which is so severe that you’re unable to do any sub- stantial work and which has | lasted for at least six months, 2. Must have worked in Jobs covered by Social Security for five of the 10 years before you were| disabled, including a least half of f — but haven’t applied for|i« ind FASHION ACCESSORIES — Street Floor Reg. to $10 Better Jewelry 44c, $1.44, $1.88, $2.88 up ~ Sore ea gney ae er See aos See Rar oe gr nee enn ea ne SUMMER. FASHIONS | the three years immediately before Reg. to $1.95 Full Fashioned, Hose. .88¢, $1.44 S . Advertisement) ame “os Sm era Reg. to $5 Leather, Plastic Wallets ............. 4M4c SHARD FLOOR KS . a tt you apply for payments betoreif, R€9- 0 $1.98 Leather Belts, Assorted colors....... 44¢ | © BETTER DRESSES © : June 30, your disability can date Reg. to $7.98 Better Handbags, = " beck 2 Oct. 1, 1941 — the eartiest Some Leather ......... 44c, 88c, $1.88 Reg. to $29.98 7.88 . e you co vell Reg. $2.98 Cotton Skirts, Many Potterns........ $1.44 c WOULD LIKE TO GET MORE Social Securit nn ead no neti] Reg. to $1.98 White Gloves, Short, Long......... 88c Reg. to $24.88 5 .88 : FUN OUT OF LIFE? still be — 7 ee | ae caren piece? — aie Many Styles. .$1.88 — Prints, eyelets, chiffons. Sizes 10-18, 1612-2242, | : ; eg. " Hankies, Prints ............... 22 «# . ARTHUR MURRAY Riera Sippose meet the R€9- $1.00 Novelty Dolls, Some Animals......... Ile | @© FORMALS @ . SNVITES YOU “(occk cequirenuads 40 Ea agile Reg. $3.98 Orlon Sweaters, Many Styles....... $2.88 * — ; to ace ang hegpaie: a et sews beenf Reg. $2.98 Slipon, Cardigan Sweoters.......... $1.88 Reg. to $29.98 10.8 8 a D tril Lesson ("2 least — of the 10 bee cattle | Reg. $3.98 Polished Cotton Blouses, Many Styles $2.88 _ yp iri! Lesson itween Jan. 1, 1937 and and Jan. Reg. $2.98 Cotton, nylon, jersey Blouses........ $1.88 — e Coime in for your Reg. $3.99 Washable Orion Stoles ............ $2.88 SPRING, SUMMER COATS ‘sy 8 S trial lesson now. 4 Discover eS Jam Driver Course Reg. to $39.98 S quickly and eae mre : MEN’S WEAR, ACCESSORIES — Street Floor $9Q come 4 populat|up Monday at 6:30 am and more | Reg. $49.50 Benrus Calendar Watches. -.:--. $19.88 Reg. to $49.98 ; s Arthur Murray (an 1,000 teenagers were turned} Reg. $3.98 Long Sleeve Sportshirts ............ $1.88 | : wey Thews paid rig Mech ser phoy ooh pig Reg. $5.98 Long Sleeve Sportshirts ............ $2.88 ' Reg. to $119.00 $48 2 tet and even be-|Detroit high schools. A. capacity Reg. $2.98 Long Sleeve Sportshirts............ $1.44 | seees 6-20, 1-05 : ee can do on of more than 2,400) : { . :; that in almost rees REG. to $1.98 Long SI rtshirts ....... 88c, 44c = C time So don't put it off another mis the takaeg is ropeieed by law! Reg. to $5.98 eee ahaori Jackets... ae i ° JUNIOR, MISSES’ SUITS @ © can were «life of fun aod good ee nee Treat 18 can obtain Req $7.98 Long Sleeve Sweaters ............. $2.88 | Reg. to $39.98 $] 8 k Reg. $5.98 Long Sleeve Sweeters ............. $1.88 | $ 4 ARTHUR MURRAY Obscenity Law Upheld Reg. $5 Long Sleeve Sweoters ................. 88 Reg. to $49.98 28 2 Reg. $2.98 Swim Briefs ...............2-00005 88 : WASHINGTON Supreme, é 25 E. Lawrence St, {Court yesterday upheld the federal Reg. to $5.95 Soiled Dress Shirts ........ $3.44, $3.88 | © RAINCOATS © ; B Ph. FE 2-0244 nity statute, which bars thell Reg. $4.00 Soiled Dress Shirts.......... $2.44, $2.88 © Rea. t 4 lpr senses $244, | . to $29.98 : a Merattre._¥ Reg. $2.98 Soiled Dress Shirts .......... $1.44, $1.88 an hes vs I 5 Reg. $1.00 Shorts, Large Size ............. oe Ae End- of - Month Reg. to $12.98 Washable Both Robes ... $3.88, $2.88 | © SUMMER DRESSES ® - Reg. to $10.95 Pajamas, some mated 1 88, 2.88, +: 88 ' Reg. to $14.98 3.88 E S A LE NOTIONS, STATIONERY — Street Floor : Reg. to $14.98 5.88 | Reg. $1.29 White Nepkins, Box of 500......... 66c 8 8 8 ge | Reg. $1.98 Bow Moking Kits .................. 88 Reg. to $19.98 . e Reconditioned Portable Reg. to $5 Stationery, Soiled ........... 44c to $3.44 i ° e ) A? Reg. $1.00 Leather Pencil Cases ............... 22¢ Reg. $3.99 2.88 E SEWING MACHINES Reg. $59.95 Typewriter, Slightly Damaged....... $22 Many colors, fabrics. Sizes 12-20, 12'2-22'2, 7-15. | , ) . Reg. $1.00 Wrought Iron Novelties ............. 22¢ a From % Fully Gueronteed! Reg. $2.98 Plastic Grob Bogs.................. 88 © DAYTIME DRESSES ¢ Ei . % 1 Year Free Service! Reg. $5.98 Nyolene Auto Seat Covers.......... $2.88 — Reg. $3.99 ] 88 Reg. $1.00 Insect Repellent Sticks .............. 44c ij Whites, other F Mokes! 9 pe : . | $ |. pein They on I Reg. $2.98 Plastic Table Covers, Damaged...... $1.88 Reg. $5.99 2.88 ‘ : Reg. $1.00 Terry Foam Dolls .................. Me F , Reg. $5.98 Beach Umbrellas, Lorge Sixe....... $2.88 ~ Reg. $8.99 5. 88 , Reg. $3.49 30 Garment Storage Chests.......... 88, Many colors and styles, sizes t2=20, 1412-2412 i Reg. to $2.98 Throw Pillows, Soiled........ 88c, $1.44 _@ UNIFORMS @ : Reg. $16.98 Wooden Chests, 36x36x12........ $6.88 i Reg. $4.98 Wooden Chests, I shelf ............. 88 | Reg. to $5.99 1.88 ' Reg. 1.49 Chair Cushions, Slightly Soiled......... A : ™ — oe seme “fel @ MATERNITIES ® , LINGERIE, FOUNDATIONS — Second Floor 4a 4 ! ’ be ' Reg. $2.98 Nylon Tricot Slips ..............5. $1.88 Reg. to $10.98 3.88 F Reg. $5.98 Nylon Tricot Slips .............4.. $3.88 © Reg. to $4.99 2.88 Fe Reg. $5.98 Nylon Tricot Half Slips .......'.....$3.88 2-plece dresses, matemity tops, skirts, t Reg. $2.98 Slightly Soiled Petticoats ............ 88 sia aug kag ag . Reg. to $10.98 Bouffant Petticosts ............ $3.88 | © SUMMER MILLINERY ¢ : Reg. to $2.98 Rayon Knit Gowns ............. * | : Reg. $3.98 Cotton Pajames and Gowns ........ . Reg. to $15 98 2.88 | Reg. to $5.98 Girdles and Panty Girdles........ L Assorted. summer, straws. ¢ R . to * ird ooev ee eere e =e * * . MORE TERRIIC BUYS, GUARANTEED! | fez ws200mewmee [| Genuine Punched Pigskin = | | : © FLEXWALKER SHOES @ ‘ e RECONDITIONED PORTABLES e D ’ € pnd te sew, w/I “ro ie 50 $ 68.88 Reg. to $19.98 Girls’ Wool Coats, 3-14 eooacds $6.88 , Reg. to $8.95 4. 8 8 : Risers Dalene, Foreurd & hove Reg. to $29.98 Girls’ Wool. Coats, Sub. 8-14... .$8.88 | W/lite attachments (like new) $159. 9.95 $ 76.88 Reg.$2.98 Girls’ slip-on Sweaters, 7-14 ..... «$1.88 White, tan, medium and low heels. Broken sizes. co sit sd tm i - vical Rag. $2. 98 Girls’ Blouses, 7-14, “Sub. 8-14...... $1.88 : Walnut, with: gttachments. $149.00 $ 59.88 9 Reg. to $2.98 Boys’ Short Sleeve Shirts, 6-16. ... .88¢ WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR Sal lice Grayber, walnut finish, Reg. $2.98 Boys’ Chercoal Jeans, Irregs. 12-16. .$1,88 Reg. $5.98 Cotton Skirts ........... yeoscudees 88c _ with attachments ........ ; $129.00 $ 49.88 Reg. $3.98 Boys’ Baseball Suits, SM,L ......:.$2.88 foo. ane eu rqgatel ond Capes ......... pe e oe FF Reg. $1.98 Little Boys’ Sportshirts, 3-6x.......... 88 Reg. to $12.98 S WHS Dore e cece nee GSs @ ficece MODELS A Reg, $2.98 Little Girls? Summer Dresses, 1-6x....88¢ Reg. $5.98 Pedal Pushers . /............-- . «$3.88 “Rewren meee pies Cees $150.00, $109.88 |, Reg. to $3.98 Little Girls’ Dresses, 1-6x........$1.88 Se $5.98 Bormodé Shore ets ee A ; : | ’ a . Cheon weeeerene so oe Peo soon evioe guhey ethers ws winkaa 1 to $2.98 Boys’, Girls’, Overalls & Slacks, 3-6x 88c Reg. to $14.98 Skirts. /..... Ce aad voce a $5.88 Forw’d; Reve Round Bobbin $189.00 $139.88} Reg. $2.98 Cotton Crib Blankets, SI. irreg. .... .$1.88 “Reg. to $11.98 Skirts $3.88 White Zi Hetil Gait” : Reg 33 98 i Keni Si Soiled ‘a’. SRE Lh ees), exbvesres \ <) Sews: ns; buttonholes, etc. $374.00 $268.88 fants’ ee ene 6 BGO \ Reg. $4.98 T-Shirts. 6.. 2 dee epee eee $1.88 \ Bla-Ze th ce . "33900 ‘$259.80, MISCELLAN fou $—Strest Floor. \ Red, to $6.98 Slip-on Sweatary josh S288 Ud i ae Ad Z \\ . pe ‘to 45¢ fe eee dys eee Me! - Reg. to 98 B i ‘deed 32- 38 . mene * » $1.88 ] Mt ite, Sow! pes § 98 Nylon Blouses, sizes a2.ps von e 1 $388 - Reg. $3.98 Assorted Ladies’ Golf Irons .. Starts Today, Ends Tomorrow at 5:30! Sorry, No Mail or Phone Orders, No Deliveries. All Sales Final! AT LEAST 1/3 OFF! STOREWIDE! DOMESTICS, CURTAINS — Fourth Floor Reg. $5.99 Nylon Ruffled Curtains, All Sizes $1.88 pr. Reg. $2.69 Tailored Panel Curtains, All Sizes. . .$1.88 Reg. $7.99 81” Fiberglos Ruffled Curtains .. .$4.88 pr. Reg. $8.98 Lined Draw Draperies . .$5.88 pr. Reg. to $3.69 54” Steel Venetian Blinds .......$1-88. Reg. $1.99 36 Adjustable Cornice Boards ...... .88¢ Reg. $29.95 Studio & Daveno Slip Covers .....$12.88 Reg. $24.95 Glider Cushion Sets ........ .... $15.88 Reg. $6.99 Full or Twin Seersucker Bedspreads. . $4.88 Reg. $5.95 Printed Summer Blankets ........ . .$3.88 Reg. $7.98 Full or Twin Jacquard Bedspreads. . .$4.88 Reg. $8.98 80x84 Patchwork Quilts ...........$4.88 eevee eee Reg. $1.49 Zippered Blanket Bags ........... . -88c Reg. 59c Cannon Muslin P. Cases ............ . 44c Reg. 89c Cannon Percale Pillow Cases .......... 66c Reg. $1.99 Cannon Muslin Sheets, 72x108 ..... $1.66 | Reg. $4.99 Foam Rubber Mattress Toppers, Twin $2.88 Foam Rubber Mattress Toppers, Full $4.88 Group Soiled Display Domestics .......... *_ Va Price Reg. $1.98 X Large Cannon Lurex Bath Towels... .88c Reg. to 79c Ass’t Dinner Napkins ............ . 226 Reg. 39c Embossed Plastic Plece Mots .......... 22¢ Reg. $4.95 Lace Table Cloths ......... diseases $1.88 Reg. 79c Stripe Bath Towels .................- 44c Reg. 49c to $4.98 Dressmaker Remnants ..... V2 Price Reg. to 69c Summer Cotton Prints ....... ere 33¢ Reg. $1.59 Irish Dress Linen, 36” ............ *, .88¢ Reg. $1.39 39” Silk Blend Calcutta Prints ....... 88c Reg. to $1.98 Broadcloth, Seilcloth Cotton Prints. . . 88¢ Reg. to 79c Summer Cotton Prints .............. 44c CHINA, HOUSEWARES — Fifth Floor Reg. $1.59 25 Ft. Garden Hose .............-..- 88c Reg. 39c Stainless Flatware ...... craleteievel er 4 for 88c Reg. $1.98 Can Moth Spray ...........-.s-00-- 88c Reg. to $1.69 Ovenproof Pottery Bakeware....... 88c Reg. $7.98 Interior Paint (Galion) ........... $3.88 Reg. $3.98 Picnic Basket with utensils ......... $2.88 Reg. to $12.98 Table Lamps with shades........ $8.88 Reg. to $6.98 Soiled Silk Lamp Shades... .$1.88, $3.88 Reg. $4.98 8 cup Coffee Carafes ............. $3.88 Reg. to $5.98 Discon. Pattern Dinnerware. .28c - $2.88 APPLIANCE SPECIALS — Downstairs (Floor Samples, Demonstrators, Used) Reg. $249.95 21" RCA Console TV............ $188 Reg. $229.95 21” RCA Table Model TV........ $177 Reg. $89.95 Admiral Portable TV .......... .. $66 Reg. $139.95 Admiral Portable TV ......... .. $118 Reg. $645.00 RCA Color Console TV .......... $538 Reg. $850.00 RCA Color Console TV .......... $788 Reg. $179.95 21 Ambassador Console TV.. $128 Repossessed 17” Philco Console ..... veceees $99 Repossessed 21” Philco Console ......... soe gies Used 17” Console TV’s ...... terete eloteleteretetere at $40 Used 21” Console TV’s .........ccccceeeeee: $60 Used G-E 9 Refrigerator ............ Sew seces Soe Used Magic Chef 30” Deluxe Range ........... $80 Used Apt. Size Electric Range ................ $40 Apartment Size Gas Range ............2-208: $88 Reg. $119.95 36” Sumray Range ...............- $88 Reg. $9.98 TV Loop Antennas ..........+..-- $3.88 FURNITURE, SPORTING GOODS—Downstairs Reg. $199 52 H.P. Corsair Outboard w/tank. ..$128 Reg. $12.95 Chairs, plastic upholstery, brass plate $7.88 Reg. $29.95 Lightwt. Canvas 26” Pullman is $16.88 Reg. $32.50 Ladies’ 26” Pullman Case ....... $18.88 Reg. $39.95 9x12 Nylon, Rayon Rugs ...... . $25.88 Reg. $24.98 Innerspring Cushion Set.........$18-88 Reg. $19.95 All Aluminum Grill ........ oe - $10.88 Reg. $14.95 Folding Picnic Table & 4 Chairs... .$3.88 Reg. $5.99 Lightweight Golf Bag ..... coven $388 weeee $1.88 Reg. $14.95 Deluxe Golf Bag ...........-.- $12.88 Reg. $22.95 Aluminum Padded Chaises, soiled. .$15.88 Reg. $99 Chrome Dinette Table & 4 Cheirs..... .$44 Reg. $349.95 20 H.P; Martin Outboard Motor. . | 248 Reg. $49.95 Duren Plastic Upholstered Chair. . $28.88-- “Reg, $4.98 All Metal Serving Tables... . @ Aluthinum Cot 2.05 +.cconets ae Reg, $12. : Cane\Tub Choir. he oe eee) i 1, ’ Reg, $5.98 Rep. ie 98'45- Pe, | res ‘ ; \ ey | \ a \ oye ay | i ho “ \ ye \ ‘se el ea % ; i; ; isk \ Reg, $12.95 Men's Electric \Rexore Satawenioan Reg. i “ 2 se ae ae a a | ko Wied F3 88 Tool Set with box ...\. ves $2888 5. specialists a schedule of flood insur- ance rates has been set up covering 14 different zones. People living in these zones could buy flood insurance _ from commercial firms. The Govern- ment would underwrite the policy because private companies are not in a position to do so. } In this way the Government mands for relief of flood victims and they, themselves, would con- tribute to their own protection by payment of insurance premiums. x *k * Now, in the name of economy, the House has voted to deny the $14 mil- lion necessary to put the flood insur- ance system into operation. Some loss - might’ be incurred but. the Offers potential advantages to the Government as well as to flood vic- tims and should be given a trial. : aE . Life Can Exist on Mars As the possibility of inter-plane- tary travel grows brighter, more peo- ple wonder if human life exists on any of the other planets. New light has now been shed on this question _ by a group of scientists reporting to a@ gathering at Flagstaff, Arizona, recently. : Rat ~* | Their report made no claim that human life exists on other planets, but it did indicate that living micro- organisms and bacteria can survive on Mars. . The scientists are biologists who have been conducting experiments at Randolph Field near San Antonio, Texas, at the U.S. Air Forte School of Aviation Medicine. They report that their experiments have demon- strated that organisms can live and propagate themselves under condi- tions simulating those on the planet Mars. = . x wk ke Soil samples were collected from’ desolate areas resembling the surface of Mars, as deter- mined by astronomical observa- tions. Atmospheric conditions on Mars were simulated, warm days and bitterly cold nights, with no oxygen and little water . vapor present, The group reported that des- pite these conditions, the organ- isms existing in the soil samples continued to maintain them- - selves, thus indicating that “the basic stuff of lice can endure on Mars and even generate new . Strains that are better adapted : to the harsh climate of Mars.” - This. statement would seem to point to the. possibility, at least, that higher forms of life could de- team of biol reported it was not are welcome. And the fact that this year’s crop is the biggest in seven- teen years brings added cheer to those devotees who rate strawberry shortcake as America's No. 1 dessert. The Man About Town Labor or the Law? Reason Why Young Men Do Not Become Attorneys Pioneers: Those who blazed the trail, many of whom have de- scendants who burn the road. Again I wonder why more Pontiac young men do not enter the legal pro- fession. Among the 15 from Oakland County (more than any other county in the state except Wayne), who passed the latest bar examination, only one, Kenneth B. Cutler, is from this city. Can there be something upon which to ponder in the answers given me by several members of the local bar? They all suggested that there's mote money in working in an auto plant, ea job which doesn’t take four to eight of the best years of your life to prepare for it—not counting $5,000 to $10,000 invested in your head before you're ready to begin earning. 4 Severely criticizing the “sob sisters who Oppose capital punishment,” Mrs. Harriet Stemmer of Keego Harbor, writes me to express wonder if the murder of little Mary de Caussin . will “make a dent in their thick skulls.” Here’s congratulations to Oakland County’s own Billle 8. Farnum, who next Monday takes over as Michi- Assistant Secretary of State. My personal experiences and contacts with him prove to me that Billie knows his gan’s way—and politics. A drive into the country in the Pontiac drea will bring you the joyous discovery that “O’er the fields there comes the scene of new mown hay.” No Paris per- fume can beat it. “You print items about the luscious- ness of our peaches, but how about Oak- land County home grown strawberries?,” writes Beverly Bowerman of Auburn Heights. Well, Beverly, they're 50-50 with peaches, and right now I’m wallowing in them at three meals a day, : also between meals and midnight snacks. ee With the many Babe Ruth and other little league baseball teams in the Pon- _ tiac area, I like “The Detroit Tigers of 1967,” ‘as the name by which their sponsors call them. ean Verbal Orchids to— : Mrs. Edith Currin of Beaverton, formerly of Holly; ninetieth birthday. : ot Holly; sixty-fourth wedding anniver- gy. Le ae : ‘Mr. and Mrs. Bert Smith of Durand; sixty-eighth wedding anni- | | Mr. apd Mrs. GaVerne Giddings“) ~ [Se Mert Aeaneh: ethdin wedding. ©. ‘ | | : Or 1 ts - 2 \ = j i #4 | 2 1 t ® 7 ie | i, ¥ ; ‘ } <\ : , : i i } : Hers \ he. ; ae ‘ rh | Fy “e {| “i \ ae \ . Wey h. S ‘ iid \ \ ‘i \ ie | y -\ ; i \t \ 4, Bs ® 1 WASHINGTON — Who really writes the decisions ot the Supreme Coyrt justices? Do they use “ghost writers,” as a Presidents occa- sionally do? Should the pub- lic be told what part of a deci- sion is actually written by a jus- tice and what part is the com- position of his law clerk? Is this a part of the privilege which This commission of 12 prominent citizens, appointed by the President and by the Senate and the House, issued last week a recommenda- tion that hereafter the judicial branch of the government should “take effective steps to insure that its employes are loyal and other- wise suitable from the standpoint — of national security.” Here is what the commission says in its formal report: “It is fundamental that there should be. no reasonable doubt concerning the loyalty of any Fed- eral employe in any of the three branches of the government. DISLOYAL EMPLOYES “In the judicial branch, the possi- bilities of disloyal employes caus- ing damage to the national security are ever present. As an example, Federal judges, busy with the ever- crowded court calendars, must rely inadvertently reflected in court opinions in crucial security, Con- stitutional, governmental or — security and to our federal loyalty- security system generally. “There appears to be no valid reason why an employe of the jedicial branch should not be screened, at least as to his basic have the assurance that the men and women who carry the admin- istrative responsibilities of the courts or assist in the preparation of decisions are loyal, dependable Americans. “The commission therefore rec- ommends, as in the case of the legislative branch, that the judi- cial branch and the executive branch endeavor to work out a program under which adequate investigation or screening can be Country Parson “right to know” | It will be news to many people that the Supreme Court justices are dependent to some extent on their law clerks. in writing their opinions. For years it has been an open secret around Washington that the big Eastern law schools selected their top scholars for a year's serv- ice as ‘“‘law clerks’ to Supreme Court justices. Today, when so-called “‘liberal- fem” amounts almost to a fanati- cism, some of the law school professors engage in active cam- paigns to advance publicly the views with which they indoc- trinate their students. Maybe: the Congress ought to appropriate enough money so that could enjoy the bipartisan luxury of two so-called “liberal” and two so-called “conservative” law clerks. Maybe the Supreme Court opinions would be better balanced then. At least, they might be more Representative Martin Dies, Democrat, conducted — from 1938 to 1945 — exactly the same kind of ‘(Copyright, 1957) Dr. William Brady Says: . Schizophrenia? Neurosis? Well, Son, It’s Like This--- Wisconsin schoolboy writes: “Would you kindly send me your knowledge of | or neurosis and psychosis for our high school health : class? We think praecox. Some schizophrenics are at first ing through quiet Sherman's Hol- « low, a few miles southwest of a wonderful wife and a wonder- ful mother— and she did. Psychosis is just a fancy word for any kind of mental disorder, such as my father’s dictum that “all © disease begins in the stomach.” not more than one page or words « pei te personal | gag Mh Mg my a be answered by Dr. Brady, if a — self addressed erivelope is sent to Pon- (Copyright 1957) things. They'll - answer, sucker.” Never hear a murmur from the boys, though. Only the wives burn when the dues come out of ‘the budget and they wonder if there will be sufficient left to feed the family until next payday. You So They Brawl’ The world’s finding out. The Yanks can't take it. Since they aren't leading by their usual eight games, they've resorted to fist fighting and brawis. Bad cess to the lot of them. Tiger Readers Discuss Doctor’s Charge The medical society should go hang its collective head. Pol * * & Dr. Joseph H. Kris is a ‘‘national figure’ over night. But what a price to pay. Ed. * * * Maybe that doctor's bill was a they’d never make a living. Since - the doctor thought a lot of money shouldn't send the customary state- eae SE ek aoe ak a ee ee oh 3 ol &, RE 2 ad noe s ioe SiGe Ary " | six : Ke y i ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS,.TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1957 J : | — THE PONTIAC PRESS Mr ttrerto te uaneing of we ‘Voice ofthe People : Fate gma PE EE, as mater’ Dans urttey'the next few months. .” Tells f Fine : Published from wx forme Passe Buldiog —

ident boy wes fain tor the aay. Smoking Issue earee pearance Funds peer. Strawberries from Florida a. SS eae T cxinhdy) dint noes) tat enl a. and other southern states fill a and there had been no_ com: tells if you're Christian or y rouse Vote real qual: af esacen Gar/teag Cl plaints, but I must pay a fine, SOK Tdoctors don't know if ’ ~ As a result of over a billion dollar in the void before the Michigan ag ee, cat = i oda bry — loss. from floods during 1955, Con- _ berries are available. But the Cause we feel we should find a s,"‘or drinking, Christ himselt gress last year appropriated $500,000 § homegrown variety always tastes new home for our “Lucky - made the best wine ever served. to set up the Federal Flood Indem- __ best. Its freshness provides a full- a cross between a Brittany spaniel 1. also said, “Let he that be with- ndem- | ; and a Weller setter, a good hunter. ou sin cast the first stone” and nity Administration. . bodied flavor which the shipped in Anyone interested call after 8 P.M. «;uaz6 not, lest you be judged.” The FFIA w ; th varities have lacked. C. BR. Elliott Humble write tensive os totaling ~ = _. And while frozen strawberries like- 951 Berwick Blvd. . ts ek © x than $3 billion which could be Wi#e extend the strawberry season NEA Service. In. ‘Don’t Complai aon papammy Ga aR Yeiend to $5 biltion u80n authori throughout the entire year, there is ee n mp ana our bodies. We fail to cherish our sation of the aan he of nothing which can quite compare “He'll Make a Better Trophy if He Isn’t Breathing” Could Be Worse bodies by, both overeating, and course. would not be an expend! 8 Ga of Juley, completely ripe Concerning Dubious’ letter about fiesh palmer yes ol . ae ; - , ~ aimster mansion, don’t much 4 ture of Federal funds but merely P68 Which have come from the 1114 T awrence Says: a — aan cnges scr of prepared for all good works of ce liability garden only a matter of minutes ago. a ae on el nays rom i . SE rs * 2 den aw. Who Writes High Court Decisions? 27> Bh skp rarer “watt to the 1997 aietigan stro Who Writes High Court Decisions? * © # surat mms With the help of support a weil palatial old. are told not to defile the y p of commercial rating berry crop! The new berries always each justice of the Supreme Court Printers’ home, among oo “temple of God which temple ye are.”” Tobacco is a certain poison. accurate as to facts. Last week, feriows who lay out from five to LeRoy Dean for example, Chief Justice War- ten dollars a month stop crying, Milford rep cng, Cone they may ap herons — the decade following World War 1 #### 0 you. ‘If Others Work, there appeared a new kind of Con- Not-Se-Dubious So Can Teachers’ _gressional inquiry unknown in prior _ periods of American history.” "Yanks Don’t win I'd like to know why teachers think they’re-so sacred they can’t stoop to “scrounge” ‘Northender’ ‘Likes Press Article You are to be congratulated on Anderson your article on William on June 13. You ate crow number of years and whatever he undertakes he goes all out to complish whatever he thinks best. Date With Barbara ' Intrigues Another If you can’t fix up a daté with People, try it for me, I go for that delicious dish. ” Double D. Case Records of a Psychologist: » Crane Backs New Music Society By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE | ‘Case V-320: Mitch Miller is known to most of you readers as the famous Director of Columbia this fact over 300 years ago. s Be {he last. “ I am all for this new Society. It Tete: THI is iff : i af 7] a e apy 4 ee. NEW YORK (INS) — — The funny; man who throws pies on television and looks cockeyed when he sput- ters his lines came to town this ‘week on -@ mission “so poignant as oa eo? SA, gushy request his autogra an affront. - = * * * oe PS mettictahatie ragedy C without his baggy pants, top hat and chimney-soot beard as he takes his little boy sightseeing in a big city the boy has never! ‘before, They've been to the battered Statue of If that seems a crowded 3 ule for a little boy, the| tathor hes his reason. ‘|Memorial at midweek. The West to jthe distance. -. A} > \ Red Shetioe’s. little boy goes to Coast leuiiersia doctors have gone ALMOST UNNOTICED One of the biggest sports events "jot the season, one with definite jensening . for w -machine-obsessed generation, went almost unnoticed. U. s. Cites Political Reason x NAACP Parley Opening Today 48th Annual Convention Being Held in Detroit Through Sunday Today marks the opening of the 48th. annual convention of the —National -Assogiation for ‘the Ad- vancement of Colored People ~to be held in Detroit through Sunday, with headquarters at the Veterans’ Memorial Building, 151 W. Jeffer- Korea Jet Delivery Halted) "SOUL (INS) — The first flights of American atomic-capable jet fighter-bombers into ‘Korea are being held up. Informed sources said the pro- jected flights have been withheld ‘indefinitely on instructions from top echelons—presumably in Wash- ington. The reason tor the-“thold” or- der was presumed to be politi- cal rather than military. The Air Force was known to be prepared to fly at Jeast a squadron son Ave. * * F * The Oakland Cou NAACP ot modern F100 Supersabres from Japan to South Korea today to bring into force the announced in- tention of the United Nations. to Chapter will be represented by its president, Otis. Lawrence of 205 Nebraska Ave.; Mrs. Maxine end the existing military imbal- ance on the peninsula, Mills of 222 Earlmoor Bvid.: Mrs. Odessa Lattimore of 498 Wyoming) Ave, and Charles Tucker Jr., Franklin Rd. structional workshops, and par- ticipate in the development of | NAACP policies to meet the Among the more notable ~con- vention speakers will be Walter P. Reuther, Jackie Robinson, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and attorney Thurgood Marshall, whose work for the association brought about the Supreme Court’s ruling against segregation in pub- lic places. ° The Rev. Mr. King will be presented the 42nd Singarn Medal for his leadership of the Mont- gomery, Ala., bus protest move- ment. The medal is awarded annually to a Negro American for distinguished achievement. Firefly Week Opens— Worth 25 Cents per 100 BALTIMORE W — It's firefly season in Baltimore. Eighty-five youngsters brought their catches to John Hopkins Uni- versity last night as the six-week season officially opened. Each col- lected 25 cents per 10 fireflys. A student t graduate explained that the firefly tails are used in/er. the university's research studies on the conversion of chemical en- ergy into light. “Politicos Praise Radio-TV Plan Bipartisan Boost Given to Dulles Proposal for Exchange With Reds WASHINGTON (®—Both Demo- crats and Republicans applauded Secretary of State Dulles today for! proposing to Russia ‘‘a regular ex- change of uncensored fadio and television broadcasts.” * * * . They said this “approach to the people’ of both countries, if ac- cepted, might smooth the paths of disarmament negotiators in Lon-|y. don and strengthen soos for- suggestion don B. Johnson (D-Tex) that it an “open curtain’’ to help Propose he United States express its views directly to the Russian people. * x x Sen. Mansfiel€ (D-Mont) said the action “indicates a meeting of minds between the Lyndon John- son proposal and the efforts of the State Department over the past year to bring about a break in the Iron Curtain." “We will now see whetherii On Friday, the U.N. told the North Korean Communists it ,was of flagrant Communist violation of the same provision virtually since the signing of the truce in 1953. - The first concrete implementa- tion of the U.N. action wag to have been the. sending of the Supersabres into South Kerea. The South Korean defense min- istry meantime claimed—and the U.S, Fifth Air Force denied — intruded over South Korea terri- tory.. ete A Republic of Korea spokesman said the MIGs hovered over the Kumbwa and Chorwon areas south of the armistice demarcation line along the central Korean front ‘Pontiac May Be Testing Center for Civil Defense | |the long time needed to find the Merchants Face | Mass Boycott Law Excluding Négro Voters From Alabama City Is Cause. TUSKEGEE, Ala. ee Passage Said one Negro leader, William ‘P, Mitchell, an employe of the Tuskegee Veterans Administration Hospital: *x* * * “T guess you could say our peo- ple feel that if they can’t vote in Tuskegee they won't trade here either.” Mitchell and other spokesmen said an undetermined number of their race have already begun to withhold patronage from the merchants in Tuskegee, but how extensive the boycott will be- come remains to be seen. A mass meeting has been called for tonight at a Negro church, pre- sumably to discuss the impending new law. Handbills announcing the rally. spoke of a “crusade for citi- zenship."’ Negro t* *& * Negroes outnumber white resi- dents approximately 7-3 in Tuske- gee, a city of 6,800 population. In the county where the trade terri- tory extends the ratio is nearly 5-1 in the Negroes’ favor. Consequently, a serious boycott could have a paralyzing effect on the city's commerce, Alaskan’s ‘Copter Boosts TV Sales JUNEAU, Alaska @®—A televi- sion retailer in Juneau has come up with an air-age development to help him sell TV sets in outlying areas. The main difficulty in making sales, Al, Glover says, has proper antenna location for homes 12B helicopter with TV aerials on each landing skid. He hovers over the. home of a oemenive customer until a clear picture is Obtained on a 17-inch portable set in the copter’s cockpit. The site feated MIT's electri¢ brain—| in checkers but the is almost as fast ne * wife [ieee at night. when opr seeps about | bow checkers. nominated for® checkers‘ hall of fame, when it is constructed, was checkers, which numbers almost as many books (300) as have been} As the.eerie contest began; with, Weslow reflective and the machine to be going past MIT on a barge, | the man called out the position of not to be denied. He is a man who| Nas Fead the entire bibliography 6 written about Lincoln. EERIZ CONTEST Z clacking and giving off light signals to a female Univac which the checker he was about to move and the location to which he moved whirrs, purrs, American flags and “‘tilt’ spelled out in Sanskrit. Then it notified an attendant by electric typewriter to make. certain mounter-moves.. And so it went until the 10th move. With a small gasp of de- | light, Mr. Weslow sensed that he | had a pigeon. He moved in | quickly, for the kill against a | suddenly demoralized machine. | “It can’t adapt itself to the situ-| ation at hand,” the conquerer said as he dusted off his hands and left| the arena. : | | i The importance of our partici- pation in all international fairs and exhibits, including those which| take place behind the Iron Curtain, | has-received a stamp of approval’! which we must not overlook. x * * | the American exhibit at the Poznan Fair in Poland said of the spanking | new ranch-type American house, | fully equipped, and the free food| we are dispensing, ‘‘This is like a rich man's showing off in front of a poor man.” | Mebbe so, but the Poles love it, just as they’ve loved our | been| demonstrated creature comforts wherever they've been shown. A good American hamburger and/| milk shake joint in any Communist} country might very well tip the balance of power there. Greek to Go to Egypt ATHENS — Prime Minister| Constantine Karamanlis will visit| is marked on the ground for erec- tion of an antenna. Egytp the end of August or early foot; ” wna wacner diode ACL DETROIT, alcn bitwore Wye ha ries sgh edt Ae ‘| CANADIAN mg, ‘|christened IB M 704—in what may/f hate been a turning -point not only |i A Commie newspaper, reviewing! September. . | | ¥ tO GEORGE'S) ea he = 00 stock __ DISPOSAL. BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN! | Come! Save on Vacation ,.. 4th of July Needs 2° New low price! just wash ‘n’ wear, . Sizes }0 to 44. Bates Yard Goods ee eee $2 Muslin Sheets da mous “Surewhite” ha a 2 re po First quality. Gases wi cespecss ‘$3e 3.99 Ladies’ Skirts 79° noe oe gga _ smart summer More Cuts! Domestics, Linen Dept. 1.39 Quality | 5.95 Group 1.99 Huge [| 49¢ Quality Feather Print =| 80 Pillow Drapes Rugs Percale || 88° 3” |89* |33° 1 mee | Baca | ate | FE Garment | Chenille Dish Curtain Bags | Spreads | Towels | Panels 99*| 3° | 10* 177° 22x44 CANNON TOWELS © How's this for a bargain? Steck up fer the het summer shead. Act new! 37° $3 LADIES’ SUNBACKS . “Evergieze” prints that wach and need neo ironing. Sizes te misses’ and hall sizes. Se 88 SAVE ON LADIES’ DRESSES, COATS Ladies’ Better [Better .Peplin | 8.99 No-lron. White | White Hats a0 , | | hed 1a eka "White - Materaity | Taille Uniterms | “Mie [Dresses | Coats 2* 10°] 1% |g 1.99 Ladies’ Shorts 88: Suess ey fest Ff t% $1.00 Ladies’ Polos. acevellé 718 Men’s Und'w'r 47: =p on oette, eee. and wea le The Bota ail sees 88" 3% 37° 1° eed oa Ro Ladies’ Ladies’ Pedal Bras | Prrses | Pushers bemondl a7 99° YW 9.99 Men’s Panis 3°° Dent m Ra? value better pan’ = abs, moveliics washable $2.99 Men's Play Jeans. a The feature in white 4 1.99 MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS of our sale. Better styles calor. Sock up fer Semmer 97° 1.99 MEN’S SWIM TRUNKS _ Big bargain in fine quality fabrics. $, M, L. Stock up. $2.69 Birdseye DIAPERS ahaa nm iat $9 Boys’ Shorts. ie 1.49 4 te 10 8% 3 to 8 Boys'* $7°\49° 188° 37" 1.99 6 te 14 1 69¢ Beacon Girls’ Receiving Blankets ‘Seow Tots’ 90 2 ts 99 4 te 14 Girls’ 194 99° 1” 94° eS as te 14 Sw'msnits i aaNet of Lt Se Nh ai Se) 0S ee PONTIAC, PRESS TUESDAY, JUNE at NG Fy {Meee ite EIGHT eae use of American railroads's; tiny ie tac in alte Baie re burt when copies add a Ew vamtocnanae all es Sdca Shae a bilheh ny of baie @ friend to se many as to give them | Ss aiuch fap on tibia. og cosnang ddl W. Dant hes j Trends ! | on SAVING CERTIFICATES te t Deposit your surplus savings og savings at any one of our banking offices. gS f vestment ¥F ” convenient des Co yi it unity Nag el Bank SOF PONTIAC Rt wi er pal shy ae m were sent trom Washing-| | y place. For instance, the Emp t \ r 4s Editors Quiz on- f TI Pe NS ANSWER: Yes indeed, lightning often strikes twice in the same State Building in New York, tallest building in the world, is hit e after time during electrical storms. This is because lightning ysually seeks out the tallest object in the area. The skyscraper is nét hurt because its steel beams conduct the - Jelectricity to the ground readily. Some 200 years ago, Benjamin Franklin watched lightning flash across the sky and became curious about it. To prove the theory that lightning was electricity, Franklin made a kite and put a piece of jwire at its top. Qn the string that held the kite, he tied an iron key. He sent the kité into the sky during a thunderstorm. Suddenly Frank- lin saw the loose ends of the string stiffen. When he reached out and touched the,key, he got a little shock. On thé basis of this and other experiments, Franklin concluded that lightning was electricity. He also decided that it passes from cloud to cloud and sometimes back to the earth. . x * * FOR YOU TO DO: Count the number of ways around your house that electricity is used. Then figure how the same jobs would have to be done without electricity. You may also color the picture above. , * * * (Frankie L. Finly, Dayton, Ohio, wins $10 for this idea. Send in yours to this newspaper. Fomorrow: When did the world’s largest creature live? Violet Moore Higgins, AP Newsfeatures. ) Aristocrat 4. Piece Place Setting . . A once in a lifeime value. Sterling Silver—made by COME IN TODAY— Royal Windsor . . 313,45 a 6 Piece Place Setting . . . 919.95 x oldest and best known exclusive Sterling manufacturer—in these , well-loved patterns. All the quality features of the highest priced | Sterling tableware — yours at exciting low, low prices. USE YOUR STERLING TONIGHT PONTIAC’S OLDEST JEWELRY STORE . | | | Sterling | AT SAVINGS — FOR YOU! the country’s e Old English - ‘Sandwich Spread. cu ‘Mayonnaise mr... YCOMPANY. =s |. Come See.. = You'll Save at Aap on, ys az tw E Early-Week Buys, Too! I AP “Wiss, tax QuabPy COOK-OUT FEATURE Spare Ribs Star Kist Tuna ws: 9/088 z- 89 F r uit Cocktail SULTANA ene CANS 1 -00 wa * “SUPER-RIGHT” CHOICE OF 4 TASTY VARIETIES | COOKED SALAMI, . PICKLE & PIMENTO,' LB. OLD FASHIONED OR PKG. SPICED LUNCHEON —“"SUPER-RIGHT”~ . 2 TO 3 LB. RIBS Whole Sweet Pickles 23 .. % 39 AGP 46-0Z. 99c CANS Grapefruit Juice - “BRAND! 9 a u/h e a AMERICA PREFERS THE | Aly SWEETNESS and LIGHT COFFEE THAT'S ‘Alive with Reaver! as i Glazed Donuts‘ Pkg. of 12 S3t 35: Regularly SICAL! Tender, raised donuts ~ positively fancy with smooth icing glaze for extra flavor, extra value! More Jane Parker Valves! pep cincue | BOMAR ee ee ee “= Ate + 89s rr wt 93° Cookies “SSSR. . HE 29 Soled Drepdng sin ci 26e Baby Food nt, 6 59 French Dressing arak Sh 23e China Beauty Sisscn” "8" 65¢ Pesiut Butter wer. . ie 79 Wesson Oil . . 39% = 7c “Old Style. Sauce ‘st A5e sus “nt 27¢ Pie Filler ™ > “ __. More Ann Page Valves? Pork & Beans ..... + DERE 29 “Hot Dog Relish er oe Me. SLICED LUNCH ani/ ee ee ee ae a ce ec apis Rr yl iio: sir age Ce he cn aaah ats Try” to tind stand ( One: Track AIGA new yorK (Ns) — eee ‘ people with one-track minds will ~ be. the. first to tell- you, with -an exasperated shake of the head, that if there's anything they can't| — People with one-track land mental blémishes JUST SYMPATHIZE results in \your being considered either cruel or crude — which quite likely you are if you g .{around criticizing 2 sige 8 physical|cover up his uncertaintiés, No, the best way to deal with black’s-black type of personality is to understand and sympathize “NOW SHE rxns |. DOG TIRE CHECKING |. | D ACCOUNT... wow!" As you know, “Life is too short to do without a checking account.” Paying with cash is a t-i-r-i-n-g, old-style way. Stop in at the Pontiac State Bank and open an account. Save those feet. , PON TIAC STATE BAN K MAIN OFFICE: In Downtown Pontiac's Tallest Building Saginaw at Lawrence BRANCH OFFICES: 1305 Baldwin Avenue at Yale Auburn Heights Drayton Plains Every Depositor Insured to $10,000 by F.D.I.C. » listen to local and national news WCAR ot 6:30 A.M. to 6:45 A.M. Monday thru Friday with him or ‘her, for care is a person who is trying, with either positive or negative firmness, to * x * Insecurity, . shyness, fear — all these are subconscious reasons for coming boldly to the surface with single “fixed ideas,” and re- fusing to be shaken from them iby reasoning or emotion. A psychiatry professor nanied Dr. Joseph C. Solomon of the University of California Medical — School explained it: recently. He said a person who holds to fixed ideas is probably clinging to the “obsessive notion” because he’s reaching for a mother who may have been an uncertain figure in his early life. fixed ideas,’’ he explained, “like a scared little child hangs on to its mother.” x .* * The notion that this fixed idea is his great principle — and noth- ing can shake him from it — is as buoying to the energies of a subconsciously uncertain person as dope is to a dope addict. SUCCESSFUL DEFENSE Dr. Solomon also advised mem- bers of the American Psycho- analytic Association that for many one-track-minded folks, the fixed idea is a successful defense against the use of emotion. (If you can say decisively that black is black, and know that even your closest opinion — what's ever to get het up about?) ._ It’s good to know these things. t may make the multi-tracked minds a great deal more sympa- thetic with their sisters and their till now, have appeared to be the block-headed stumbling bocks in every conversational expedition. Now, when Aunt Amanda says for the 18th time this week, .| “Money. is the root of all evil,” realize that she’s only feeling in- secure again, Give her some love and an evil old 10 spot and see what happens. * * * freightload of ideas that are locked in the terminal of that one-track mind. But you may strengthen the ties — conceivably making it possible to railroad through some new —— in the future, Slate Panel Discussion on Hospital Insurance Hospital insurance is the topic of a panel discussion today at the June meeting of the Eastern Michigan Chapter of the American Association of Hospital Accountants to be held at Devon Gables Restaurant. Miss Mary Johnson, business Hospital here, and chairman of the program, said a panel of four in- surance experts wil] discuss work- man’s compensation, genera] lia- bility and malpractice: liability. “The best words for cheer, friends Sunny Brook whiskey, that is!” smoothest of fine Kentucky whiskies... soft and golden as a Western sunset and mellow as Indian summer! “Some people hang on to their). friend can't deter you from that|- cousins and their aunts who, up’ You won't at once derail that|- manager of St, Joseph's Mercyj- ; : i . ; f f y rae pe - - : - 4 & é eae ae looc 4 : x : transfusion— for hos an 16 experiment This 1874 engraving from the Bettmann Archive is an artist's conception of a 19th century blood transfusion. Compare this with the life-saving care you get in a modern Blue Cross participating hospital of today! ...thank goodness — times have changed! Ih 1874, a blood transfusion was little more than an experiment ... a procedure doctors knew little about and seldom tried. They didn’t know that blood types differ. If a patient received ~ his own blood type, it was by pure chance. Even then, the shock of the crude transfusion was often fatal. « .._,.. Consider how far we’ve come in three generations. - onl Blood transfusions are a routine life-saving function in today’s modern hospital . . . not a last minute gamble. Transfusions play : a vital role in bringing about the recovery of countless accident , victims . . . they make delicate new miracle operations possible ... and send many a patient home happy and healthy because the right type of blood was on hand for immediate use. The intricate laboratory equipment . . . the time and personnel it takes to type, process, and safeguard blood, however, are just a few reasons our hospital bills are higher today than ever before. A iadad ind A Pita ~~ But isn’t the cost of living worth it? If you are a member of Michigan Blue Cross (and half the people in Michigan are) you don’t have to worry about higher hospital bills, For Michigan Blue Cross —the non-profit hospital plan—pays tle full cost of basic hospital services. And Michigan Blue Shield —the non-profit medical plan—helps pay for the finest _doctor care in the world today. MICHIGAN HOSPITAL SERVICE : MICHIGAN MEDICAL SERVICE Blue Cross, Blue Shield, hospital care Pr desir care (Copyright 1956) CHAPTER 26 been a time when she was im; pressed by him and hung on every word, but that time had been jong gone. These Sunday- .| afternoon dinners had become [aan ae mp: ge-enathing, Mathers, al wadied by our entrance. We had’ not been gone as long as usual. “Get cold?” “Yes,” Nela sald, “but that isn’t why we came back. We that beautifies all, [the have something to tell you.”" Sarah laid her sewing in her llap, stuck the needle through the a — aR City last month.”’ hide us. e x "s face went deathly white. ery came out of her as if she bestos shingles .., I've painted ‘em all with Exterior Paint.” PONTIAC FE 5-6184 . masonry'surfaces | ea? é 3 TEXOLITE Vinyl} PAINT Mfg. Co. | 17-19 S, Perry St. ‘| were choking; then she whirled ‘chair around and wheeled it bedroom as fast as she. could and slammed the door. Only then did I look at Mathers. He, anapiens me by crossing’ the room and holding out his hand. “Congratulations,” he said. “I should have foreseen this, but I didn’t. I have only one thing to say. You'ré getting the finest 3 - =t ie 8 Sp a8 _ I 7 ag gai 2 3 i 5 g : “T aim to,” I said. ‘\Nela kissed him then, and be-| gan to cry. “I was afraid you | wouldn’t fee] this way,” she said, | Bf 7 = + e. ‘ “I hate weepy women, but I guess| want |I’ve been worrying about this too long." < done.” * aN ® -Mathers patted wher awkwardly sewing, plainly bored. There had| “proper.” But it presents a prob- and sat down and wiped her eyes. “To have . soninlaw, and; I SUP a grandchild on, the : icc with the Box P.” antes ay ees by Apert MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS “5% §. Saginaw: Assist You" : ‘No, bat 1 hope you will seca,” Nela said quickly, “I knew you would want it that way,’ -he-said, “and it's right and lem, Beeson; As Nela has prob- ‘ably told you, I cannot help you financially. So my question is a natural one. How will you be able to support a family?” x * * “T have a little ‘money.’ I ‘said. “If I don't stay here, Tit get a job.” Irritated, I added, “We never lexpeeted to live off you.” « He didn't. act as if he had heard me. He stared at his pipe, ; jhis face troubled, and now his thoughts seemed to turn _— SG Il lose my housekeeper,” he said. *‘She’s a good one, Beeson, a very good one. So that makes jyou the winner in every field of ‘action.’ I said, “You didn’t expect Nela to stay with you all her life, did . you?” ' “No, of course not, I wasn't jthinking of that. You have called ‘|me your enemy. Unfortunately, |you. have been proved right in }your predictions. Our crops did| jnot mature. Perhaps it was the| season, but the fact stands. Over | jhalf of our people are gone. Only | the farmers are left besides me and Scott. There is talk of mov- jing onto your range and Costel- lo’s and Braims’, Those who are| Vacations are suppo sure of comfortable agammo step. A Long Distance @ all to hotel, motel or resort will assure your fami ily’s comfort. When MICHIBAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY modations is the first THEY DIQXN’T PHONE AHEAD FOR RESERVATIONS oksd to be fun. And making you’re vacationing, telephone ahead for reserva- tions, before you leave home or from handy Pub- lic Telephones along the way. You can call places - a day’s drive away for less than a dollar. don't know, She can’t fire eee ’ be- . of the : te your lis | 7 rf A | to do, We can build another house : | with your dad until I get back.” jcould see in my eyes what was in my heart. * * * Nela smiled and said, “Let's igo beard the lion and lioness in their den.” ‘We walked up the slope togeth- er, her. arm though mine, for nqw we didn't care what they saw or said. Just before we reached the house, I said: “‘There is one thing. I'll be gone for two or three weeks, depending on luck and weather. You'd better Lt RN Xx w SS = Nee Py . “Ot course,” she said. “I. wouldn't fit : oe on roundup very p We went in. Mathers was in ‘the middle of one of his mono- logues. Sarah sat by the window Should ! Call when the need Make the name and phone number of the Donelson-johns Funeral Home well known in your household. In —call them first, 9° Service is required, i af ria Funeral Director Each epee of your femme should know the answer to this question. Where you are arises does not matter. You can today telephone the firm of your own choice from anywhere on this earth, and get prompt and careful service. from any place that the event of necessity ’ Parking On on Premises B4oocjoodjood}> > A “ ee A aa More beautifully built and shows aS) 1S The new Chevede Bel Air sues eden with hn Body by Fisher. itm This sweet, smooth and sassy Chevrolet looks tar the pilot’ apeege ves live... it! . new Chevrolet. ative «+» and sete itl = Fear te bracts off a silken And the lively, light-hearted _ response—whether you're driv- way it responds to your touch py scntamehadion vB. Youtake akes f _every driving situation in you makes for the happiest stride. Hills ahead? This’ car driving you" ve ever i known. _— up oan so smoothly and | Only rancho Cheerelet ant Jcnevrotrr Th — new, Chevy through its vay aoe ou i AIR 8 CONDITIONING.-TEMPERATURES MADE TO ORDER-AT NEW LOW"COST. GET A DEMONSTEATION High silobied as a colt i in cloiie! For the happiest feeling you’ve effortlessly that it makes others seem muscle-bound. | Chevy was built for drivin. . Its. well-balanced weight and -broad-based outrigger rear springs give it.a solid stance on the pavement . . . a.clinging — sureneéss on curves. shit Your Chevrolet dealer put \ 7 | MORE PEOPLE DRIVE. \ GHEVROLETS THAN ANY . aeanearesmas x \ ——== mM Aseaer wei . y, am —\w ee ae , —_—_— . Pe Ee 2 TAGE ZA EE OTHER CAR - ‘The Pontiac Republican Women's Club entertained Monday U.S. Rep. George A. Dondero and Mrs. oz Pictured atthe tea (from ¥ left to right) for former of Detroit. Traveler Gets Male With Mail Job With Airways Leads to Marriage to Diplomat By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor _ Any girl can see the world, meet fascinating men on every continent and make her life a fairy tale come true—if she just wants it enough. * * * The authority for this happy statement is a small town girl who started life as Florence Teets, of Milledgeville, Ill., and now is the wife of E. F, Drumright of Drumright, Okla.. U.S. consul general in Hong Kong. Even now, when she is an inter- national hostess entertaining am- bassadors, princes and potentates| practically every night at dinner,) Florence has the scrubbed pink| cheeks, slicked-back blonde hair} and excited blue eyes that always) will mark her as a_ wide-eyed American tourist. She loves to go! Places. Her goal since childhood! has been to see every corner of, the earth. And as now, she has| just about done it. , ~*~ * * I first met Florence about 10, years ago, when both of us were! making our first trip to Europe. | It was a weekend flight to Eng- land, inaugurating Pan Ameri- can’s two-decker Stratocruisers. Florence worked for Boeing Air- craft, who made the planes. Dur- ing our two days in London, Flor- became a travel writer. Writing travel books and doing tourist pamphlets for Pan Ameri- can, she managed to hit most of the far corners of the earth. In 1955 she was halfway through a) round-the-world trip, doing a book on marriages in all countries, ‘when she met a tall, gangling ca- reer diplomat from Oklahoma, at a chief-of-missions conference in the Philippines. IY ask, “Why help a competi- : ton E. Traver of \ ; tor?” But we would ' Phone FE 4-0553 Only and the seidenrcaniis cease Sea it pays off aeeeieatyn nom | neigiens eypme rene eres PEE a Gane ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Rowland Jackson of Ps ever is to give her away. But if|were of white nylon sheer print ‘Wyandotte. Willis Hodges of Wyandotte}! The same is true of people pre-|there are only a very few persons|with cap sleeves and draped bod- C R HASKILL | Fer the cere rs served Walter as best man. Ushers |P@ring for retirement. present, she and the bridegroom ices. They wore large picture hats —— * = TUDIO | des a w sixteen meee were Albert Johnson of Berkley x * might possibly walk in together. |of illusion. Mrs. Stone carried blue 1 : ; calieea eegseras ene and Thomas White of Wyandotte.| To each one, the business of —~ and white carnations. The brides- = Mt. Clemens St__ : Pontiac + ace wa held] —FOF the reception Ta the church |8¢tting older and being retired is| “Dear Mrs. Post: When you ge |maids carried bouquets of re¢-and afternoon |White carnations. * * her waist-length veil. She carried | pariors Mrs. Traver wore a |2 dismal prospect; but attacked! to visit a friend in the light biué sheer nylon with a |i0 groups, it becomes an enter-| amd you find that she has other ae . = = =| white hat Mra Jack the (taining project. Since it is more| Suests, is It proper for the unex-| Attending the bridegroom were bridegroom's mother, wore a (fun, it is therefore more success- pected visitor to stay, or should Allan es eer be ; acy steelel ful. Se ee kw ee a Con't eat ; Ricerca cs Hie 0 possible?” orris as ushers. Ta * ty : = , | cessories, Both wore corsages of For the reception held in the % aati | red carnations. This kind of “group therapy”! Answer: If they are playing) church pariors Mrs. Morris chose ~T'm on my way to ‘ bi ee , ___|benefits the older housewife most bridge, or seem to have been hav-/ . biue jace dress with biue D Ww « +5 rf ier ghe ie re a wedding | o¢ all. ing a conversation that you are aocensertes. ; e e * Pp in East, new Nrs.| , int ing, you should make ' | With their children grown up opatins and leave. But if the| Mrs. Cone wore a pink and white at Matthew-Hargreaves jj, Jackson wore a tan linen dress| |, the feel iwith- a corsage from her bridal!) a i se women ice! conversation is general and you|nylon dress with pink accessories bouquet. the need to employed; but, are made welcome, you may stay. * * * ae ae eee For traveling to New York, the | Almost every one of the states ° Philadelphia ts believed to have bride changed to a navy blue dress |has recorded a tornado at some| When they can organize a (established the first zoo in the U.s.|with white accessories and the time, group and meet weekly to plan |jn 1874. _ corsage from her bridal bouquet. Ly Soroptimists Hear Barrister at Installation New officers of the Soroptimist slid sats cccmag the ra ing at ‘Ox . < and Hounds Inn, Remember that Wed. ‘ti | * won ol ial Night is Family Ss mpest, one 0! : ; Doris : a on a! ; Night at Howard of Leeds, England, and a member ohnson’s. Complete of Dinners. at $1.75 ond Only 99+ for Children 3650 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains Your Summer Fun Clothes... it’s vasy to. calor plan your home vith THE CASUAL LIVING COLLECTION — of Spectrum “‘Evernu”” Fabrics k | | ‘$9201. $929 00F yard Shorts and Bermudas . SEEDS : | | $3.95 » $5.95 Bulk or Packages Prints, woven textures, plaids, metallics—the most. breathtaking ; ALso A array of glorious new colors and fabrics you ever saw! All are deftly Insecticides — Fungicides color-keyed for FAULTLESS coordination—designed to make decorating easy re for you. Use “Casual Living Collection” of 48° fabrics for every room Sleeveless Blouses T ASKER'S $2. 95 to $5. 95 63 W. Huron St. “FABULOUS “EVERNU” PERMANENT FINISH MAKES LIVING EASIER FOR YOUR FAMILY: © Wonderfully Washable—no dry cleaning necessary! © Wipes Clean—with 2 damp cloth or sponge! © Water Repellent—liquids, moisture roll off! © Years of Beauty—wears longer...stays fresh and clean longer! © Tops in Quality—Fast-color! Preshrunk! — © Wrinkle Resistant—Keeps its trim, neat appearance! FE 5-6261 Swim Suits $10.95 » $29.95 | | tn the house...for draperies, slipcovers, bedspreads, upholstery, pillows! | | : | Our Store As Air Conditioned i Your Shopping Comfort. Soe ae” | DRAPERIES — ” wae x, : TELEGRAPH at HURON - BEDSPREADS — Mon, Tues., Wed,., Sat: 10 to 6—Thurs.. and Fri. YO to- 9->-Sun: 2 to 5 (PARK FREE REAR OF STORE a ee ee ee Esl BEES a, Ae 5 : k e i | ee! : eo j ey : 4. : THE PONTIAC PRESS “TUESD. AY, JUNE 25, 1957 js — THIRTEEN. « chessmen and Kabul dolls sculptured heads‘ from Africa; Take Time to Enjoy Your Vacation Trip Br l h \W tT d | H from Japan; stuffed animals, | flowerpots, fat cupids and r ng t e or nto ome preferably wistful tigers, from | jther assorted pottery from CHICAGO (INS)—The most | American, French provincial _Germany; spears, — masks and ' Haly, fe or_stainless- steel_modern. The | only rule is to mix things up. Slay-at-home housewife -can pretend té be a world traveler Don’t Rush Right Past the se ~ Dr. Staley W. Black | this year simply by following | * * * By, JOSEPHINE LOWMAN ee but everyone was in this Venice?” The other re faube a decoration trend for inter- a : plied,;ly know where you have been or Pt ee Items that originate 10,000 Why a give yourself a little} such a hurry to get to their des- looking at their schedule, ‘‘Let's| what you have seen. Balional accessories. miles apart are stylish this OPTOMETRIST more = a long mofor tination that they never stopped |see. What day is this?” - ie RMLAXING | * * * “ear set wegetliet Gn a ainkie ss — a poll aes duaey cee a Wa acy as eae — To x * * en u eirig Cantatas | Italian pottery and Turkish coffee table. One table, in Now Located at oe lay he regrets ‘haste ; . = ” long mo | pipes, African spears and Ger- fact, had a rum bottle from ee This h ll th . , , vacation into a grind! As an ex- = deprived him of such an it g ore a a bod Pages Ee cnaling a we even vine man stuffed tigers, South Seas Cuba, a Chinese goddess and 3513 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. Jnteresting experience. given to most of the beautiful scen- Se epertiins ore weir Today I Ses es Beston ferns are ; a Venetian glass ashtray — 1 Block West of M-59 eee This reminds me of two women/ery and the famous spots you pass, would like to bring you some which| Playing U.N. in practically | and it was a Danish table. Corner of Cass Lake Road, Pontiac who were traveling. One said, “Is|when it is all over, often you hard- may be helpful. } every room display at the In- The accessories used. were ; TAs | ternational Home Furnishings | not expensive; many can be OVER MAC’S DRUG STORE - . | Market. duplicated by using import : B e at Mj ddle- ge d Slu a Don't —_ ames egg Decorators are using as gadgets from the five-and- Formerly of Rochester TMENT A mM a hurry” yo | many as 20 different kick- dime, They included: l p prageiy ror ene oP. ie ne knacks from -20 different coun- Goddesses, -abacus~ counters EVENINGS BY. APPO N by / \sserting lt Y portance tie ‘snd stop at” 3 or soon after in’ ines a one room,.and.it does. | and Paper mache masks from Phone. FE. 2-2362 cous d Wednesday. the afternoon, you will feel rested’ = matter if the room is early _China; assorted-size Buddhas, ._— —— = Remember That You Have Duty to Get/*t the eni-cf your vacation: : 2.Take an extra day or two so Your Share of Happiness that you wil) have time to read 2 historical markers, to stop in at ME _— - By RUTH MILLETT Well, here are a few tip-offs: a regional museum, or take a Fi t’s a mistake for any woman to Se ; longer route which has more in- ‘ : —~ § . Iget the middle-aged feeling that ames aa pe i prem teresting scenery oF a natural ; 4 cP Fy : t t she isn’t Important any more. | teenage daughter more than she | “PACT 8& am attractie | Ran of America’s Largest Exclusive, and Most Famous t H * : needs? 3. The habit of — a —— ‘ ow does a@ woman know when ; trip into a grind actually endan- ’ . she is letting herself slip into the) Do you make a practice of giv. gers your life as well as your en- w England Silversmiths... REDUCE THEIR: P RICES: : _ middle-age doldrums? ing up your own plans every time JOE in al ot to we é ; ; t-} aws whic are they conflict with the plans of eotect you and your family and’ ° s other members of the family? jother drivers and their families. AT ON Oo Wear Heart tos + i Pic LL Have you let your figure go be You are more aba to drive in r ! on Sleeve cause you secretly feel it doesn’t fog, to go too fast on wet, slick -¢ ‘ ‘ imatter any more how you look? Toads, to be careless about such : yo ° ue . small but important items as ‘ i——O' F | Nn e r SEEMS EASIER cleaning the windshield from bugs. ‘ g Have you slipped into the habit/ You may drive at night when the : NEW Y . of doing all the housework and|chance of having an accident is can © . ORK o — You jrunning all the family errands|almost triple of that in daytime. 4 aseve (Gis sue sigh ingle yourself because it seems easier CAFFEINE TABLETS t your neck, on your wrist ‘or than eetting yom ¢ children to pitch So—guard that you aren't grind- ~t finger. in and help? jing—just going. \ h The only thing is, the heart | | * ok | If ~~ igh poke aos ; ‘ as to sparkle. Do you demand less of your|900M, Sleepy stump Lage ? ~ ek children than you should because ;want to stop for a cup of coffee, « . : ‘e or if you are driving late in the| : That's what one jewelry con- jyou believe in the ‘let them have night, you can take one or two of| fhe you ever trav cern has decided, and to put (fun while they can” theory? the caffeine tabletsn ow available. i oled ~ | the Point across they have | Do you plan so little for your |the caffeine tablets now available. ' ed in such haste | launched an “Arlene Francis hese in the glove compartment ’ collection based on the heart | oW@ enjoyment that the days all these in : ° you've had to check pendant the TV personality | seem alike? . * * 2 your schedule to see wears, If after answering these ques-_ If you would like my leaflet | hich ci ee 4h he : ., |Tricks in Camping’ send a ° wht city you're in: The heart comes suspended |tions you decide you are in a mid-| tamped, self-addressed envelope | ¥ —_ a necklace or bracelet, (dle-aged slump — all you have to aa your request for leaflet No. . auiple, a) young men) ence (hd - : =* ra ring oF a do is realize that you are just @S/g9 to Josephine Lowman in care A me that his family had made three! sieeve maritime ae lotines aut" important as a person as you ever |of The Pontiac Press. . trips to California when he was in able spot were, You not only have a right; Tomorrow: ‘Here's How to 3 his teens. Color ‘a an important part of but a duty to get your share of|Make Motor Trips With the Chil- > Each time they. passed with. | the coming look in jewelry, and happiness. dren Fun.’ ' in a few miles of the Carisbad the heart design jewelry is _ is available in sapphire, topaz, : P i amethyst or ruby stones. ‘ REPEAT by Popular Demand .. . ‘ ) x * * y : The World's | smi» | 3-DAY SPECIAL your heart on your sleeve, you Most Fabulous can wear a chevron on your neckline, provided it is made : on of rhinestones, or a rhinestone AN Y FUR COAT i and Montana sapphire combi- nation. Jewels. as The conservative but elegant — ® Cleaned look is represented by textured Wh th ? gold highlighted with pearls. | ® Glazed 0 owns them ! Coin bracelets, pins and ear- | ; . rings remain a top item. ( Flawless emeralds, diamonds A. startling cahination mS ® Stored that sparkle with blinding achieved with turquoise and jet fn li historic jewels stones set into antiqued sil- a a ie es the ae Bright = - ; ah . tia 5 world’s largest diamond—all ay oe palehy aie ae Ref rigerated | arein this priceless collection. ] Now, in the July Ladies’ Vau t . Home Journal, read about this breath-taking collection for $ (inet. that’s not appraised and not Only Gecreaee even insured! And learn leg- a ends about your favorite gems. All in “The World's Most Fabulous Jewels.” THREE DAY SPECIAL , 7 Meet the Daughters of Bob : - Hope, Henry Fonda, Walt - ANY OLD FUR COAT Royal Windsor Disney, Fred Astaire and oe Director Norman Foster. y . This pattern that speaks in the See th of ae en ” Aristocrat Georg! a em wearing some ris ra yeorgian mood is as regal as its panniers = cae 1957 Style Cap € name implies. In deference to the ions in “Pretty Dau ; 4 source of this regal design, every ters of Famous Fathers.” 7 A famous Towle designer's inter- : ¥ oy ‘ Also: Should Hasbenie ‘Ad- AND Old English pretation of Grecian simplicity, Piece marked with the crown of a SON fi li flowi the Royal House of Windsor, in | just for Marriage Hapylnens? 7 | A traditional pattern with a Vice The refined paneling, long flowing 4. manner of the English hall- . Find out in “Don't Husbands 22 East Pike Street FURS I torian flavor. The graceful shape, ine and reflections give Aristo- . Haye Any Responsibility?” FE 2-1310 free fl . ; ils crat the beauty and simplicity of mark. IN ALL, 37 articles, stories: , | the free owing. a ptured i aaa an ancient Grecian column, yet All Patterns Regularly Sell for end feats , — and leaves with conventional roses strikingly modern. $38.50 but Now Are Specially Priced at 6 et hee today! which are essentially feminine — . . | : | carrera \ 5390-5400 pixie Hwy. |] Srey2Pical of tte warm hospitality DELUXE SERVICE FOR ONE — 6 PC. $19.95 —_ | IULY LADIES’ HOME ‘ a ve KNIFE, FORK, SALAD FORK, PLACE SPOON, TEA SPOON, : 9 l aud ou rn al GE | | ott a WATERFORD BUTTER SPREADER. fue = OR 3-1225 SERVICE FOR ONE — 4-PC. 313 45 PLACE KNIFE, FORK, SALAD FORK and TEA SPOON M World's Largest Magazine jor W omen DELUXE $159 60 ee The manufacturer will not 4 p¢, COMPLETE SERVICE FOR 8 . * _s = * * ° > Picnic permit us to use their fine 39 pC. SERVICE FOR 8 AND. ADD $107.60 Cass er ol name in this special price of- EXTRAS LATER ° fer but we can assure you that ANTI TARNISH CHEST FREE WITH 32 OR e it is the very finest and heavy 42-PC. SETS. PRICES PLUS FED. TAX weight silver. The maker's ALL ODD SERVING PIECES ARE , Ay G name is stamped on every AVAILABLE AT THE SAME SAVING. ames J i ee BUY ALL THE SILVER 9 S These patterns are open stock YOU ‘NEED AND PAY f nl umMmMer and you can be sure of deliv- ONLY 10% DOWN AND 10% A MONTH! Budget Terms, of Course! ery if you wish to add at a sa he. later date at the regular price, eS e ot ee Is the Bargain Season _ While you aré working out-of-doors and using — your porch, have your living room’ furniture re- upholstered. You can choose from the largest | selection of fabrics in Oakland County... plus expert workmanship from Elliott’s master crafts- | We have never been privileged to bring you a better ‘silver offer so buy your set ‘today and if ydu wish USE OUR : ee LAY - AWAY — A SMALL pi DEPOSIT WILL RESERVE. YOUR SET. KP ey \ } EWING MACHINE ows Evenings by | Appainament 16 W. Huron Sti), | ] i ‘ \ e* \ _ if WHER 2 good tim Serve STROH’ > ; -America’s only fire-brewed beer! When a hot dog and Stroh’s Been get together, guests just can’t help but have a good time! | “Stroh’s lighter, smoother, more refreshing & | flavor lends special enjoyment to any food. In bottles, cans and on draft, fire-brewed Stroh’s beer always adds good taste to good times! You'll like | _ON TV: Jack London's CAPTAIN DAVID GRIEF (Tuesday 10:30 PM, Channel 2)... The NEW ADVENTURES of MARTIN: KANE (Friday FIRE-BREWED AT 2000 DEGREES! it’s lighter! — = te . i THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT 26, MICHIGAN Neg ‘ae eS : a : : ; I 10:00 PM, Channel 4) ee 1 { \ ‘lee <= } Sin} if Y \ \ 3 : x eee \ “ ' , a y l , ‘ \\ \ Y ; ¥ Hots i \ \ yi eh ¢ \ 2 i? . L a id no j \ | ae } | | \ at . : : , \ 3 re rm t , + t S s \ \ fe } . yh) 4“ ‘\ i \ tt rf ps al t 1: \ A + f 4 \ L- y i { : 1s ce 2 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN as __TUESDAY, JUNE 25, + 1957 Accused Missiles. Officer Aims - at Getting C.E. Wilson to Testify HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (NEA)—De- fense Secretary Charles Wilson| will be sitting the seat of the accused anedile --Cok, John. Nickerson, Jr., if the Strategy of ~Niekerson’s defense works~ out’ as planned. Nickerson is being court-mar- tialed on charges of having leaked secret information on ballistic mis- siles to newsmen, for failure to safeguard secret documents he| had at his home and for denying | under oath to Army investigators that he was guilty of such actions. The trial begins here June 25, Before getting into, his jam the tall, bespectacied, scholarly West Pointer had 4n outstanding com- bat record and was regarded as a dedicated, brilliant ofticer, In| trying to keep that record clean Nickerson will claim: that infor- mation which he gave. newsmen Was not secret because it had been printed in non-secret publi- cations earlier, But in trying to prove this de- fense he will also try to show by SPOTLIGHT ON THE COLONEL — Missile expert Col. John Nickerson (right) confers with a parade of. big-name witnesses | program in. connection with the that Wilson was dead wrong in Nickerson case. ruling that the Army must get) A semi-official Air Force spokes- out of the intermediate rangé bal-/ man has cker listic_misslle field, {effort at the Army's Redstone. Ar- x * /senal near here “the great, missile hoax,"’ and ¢alls Nickerson a~''self- wasn ORDER ‘appointed martyr.” - This Wilson order is what the Most of the top Army generals Nickerson trial is réally all about. and officials are embarrassed The colonel is gambling his ca- reer against 10 years in jail and a’ $10,000 fine that he will prove at his trial that Wilson was wrong) in giving IRBM development to the Air Force. There is evidence | that Nickerson planned it this way | Involved in this desperate hu- man gamble is the whole, frantic multi-billion dollar U. 8, ballistic - missile program, with roots that 0 back to the development of | the German V-2 missile. TOE saa . Nickerson was one of the top _ Secretary Wilson is privately en- bosses of the Army's ballistic mis- raged at Nicherson, _sile program before his trouble. He ; x & * ,has since been confined to the post President Eisenhower has Pub-| and _ relieved of his duties, Working * tions, His most loyal defenders are the civilian and Army offi- cers working at Redstone Arsen- al, and a group of retired Army generals. All have been served subpoenas as defense witnesses. Nickerson’s attorneys are the ‘colorful Ray Jenkins,-who ran the ‘Army-McCarthy hearings, and Rob- ‘ert K. Bell of this city. licly -backed Wilson's decision: to! with him was Dr. Wernher von get the Army out-of the IRBM|Braun, the German inventor of a * one of his civilian attorneys, Robert K. Bell, in Bell's office in Huntsville, Ala. man has tagged Nickerson’s whole! II | po ¥en Braua's thinking has dom-. and irritated at Nickerson’s ac- | ithe V-2 who was brought to the U. S. with other top German rocket experts at the end of World War inated the whole Army missile program. He-was.a key man in developing the Redstone missile with a 200-mile range, and the | dupiter with a range of 1,500 miles, He will be a key defense when he testifies. It was Wilson's decision late in 1956 to end the Army's work on | Jupiter which inspired the irate Nickerson to sit down and write a | 14-page. paper called—“Considera-) /tions on the Wilson Memorandum.” ‘Among other things the paper! charges that Wilson's decision will} ‘break up the famed von Braun team, a ee ae This has not happened so far, but the Jupiter has money for de- 1957. Nichergqn sent copies to sev- eral congtessmen, which were ‘quirkly gathered up by Pentagon -afficets. whem the deed was dis- wovered, & copy was sent to Drew Pearson who gave it to his assistant, J’ae¢k Anderson, to take te the Bentagon for clear- ance. Pearson never got it-back.. Another copy was sent to Erik witness and should make news | 4 | pier ; | UP-AND OVER — This is one version of the | “brush” jump which is used in- most jumping velopment only through December, events for horse -shows,;--including the Detroit Competitive Horse Require Form; Style Plus Clearing the Hurdle“... 22% tesco Eyes Treaties: He'll Push for App ‘ov ; . of Euratom Plan Af | OK on Tax Boost 1 PARIS «® —- Ratifieation-of- European. Common Market al |Euratom treaties now are ‘Pre mier Maurice Bourges-Math — ‘noury’s next goal since his tax — |program has squeaked through the National Assembly. , The Assembly gave Bourges- Maunoury a 251-210. vote ‘of confi- dence last night on his plans to ‘raise more tax revenue to build ‘up France's near-bankrupt treas- ‘ury and finance the fight against ‘the nationalist rebellion in Alger- (ia. Although—Bourges-Maunoury gained a narrow victory on the ¢ issue that toppled the government of Guy Mollet last month, more than 100 Assembly members stayed away or did not vote. ; * * * : , 4 . zs a The vote was the first parlia- Horse Show. The obstacle simulates a bush or mentaEy abowioen foc the a hedge which mighf confront a hunting horse on the chase. Jumping Requires year-old Premier since his coali- - ‘tion of middle-road and - Socialist ‘members came to power less than two weeks ago. Bourges-Maunoury went into the confidence test with a terse speech in which he warned the Assembly that there is no way to reduce the bills France must - pay. * * * ‘Popular Republicans (MRP) and ‘most of the conservative Inde- Bergaust, editor of Missiles and, There is more 'to horse jumping)walls, chicken coops and other failure, to maintain the pace be- pendent Republicans provided his Rockets, a magazine. ‘An assistant than just getting over the barrier, obstacles which a horse might be/tween the obstacles is also penal- margin of victory,.. Voting against returned it to Nickerson. without @t least in top-flight competitive called on to hurdle in the processjized in competition. reading its Rergaust claims in an affidavit which he Has given the Army, EVERY "PERSON Practicallyg every person who saw the; memorandum decided im- mediatelythat it contained’ secret * information, There were dates and facts on. “record-setting missile flights, data on missle perform- ance ‘characteristics and copies of top-{ewel. memoranda dealing with missile ‘programs in the 14-pages, it is reported. One statement jn the memorandum said: U.S. Hides Behind Talks _ While Arming, Says Red # ooo MOSCOW uw — Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko charged | today that the United States is using the London disarmament negotiations as a screen to con-| tinue and intensify the arms race. called by a Soviet foreign minis- ter since Nov. 30, 1953, Gromyko demanded that the United States. either put a stop to “aggressive | - and incendiary” statements by its: political and military leaders or tacitly admit aggressive inten- tions. * *& & Gromyko took his text chiefly. from recent testimony by U.S.| Gen. Lauris Norstad, supreme | NATO commander in Europe, in| which Norstad told a closed ses-| sion of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee that Russia faces) sure and “absolute’’ destruction from the air if she attacks the from the government of. the Unit- West. ° ed States." * The correspondents were given * * Reading a prepared statement, " chance to question Gromyko,, A facet to the ‘dispute isthe use he west Coast ithe ! la nae ; skyscrs Yor- aircraft industry’ fov fts missile} Ey ¢ a | United States, a participant in the €MC€ room in the skyscraper For- aircraft ¥ : n the first news conference, iis on disarmament, really ¢i8n Ministry immediately after work. Nickerson claims that this “If the Who left the seventh-floor confer- Gromyko commented: wishes to help achieve the neces- Teading his statement. sary agreement among the pow- The Soviet official again warned ers, then there can be no place the nations of Western Europe for aggressive and warmongering|that establishment of atomic bases speeches like Norstad's. abroad and moves to arm the * * * | West German army with atomi¢ “But if Norstad and other cham.|"c2P0"s proved the “groundless. pions of the eeld war reflect the Johenon _ slatements oe real policy of the United States, | 8 oe nature of US. foreign then how is one to evaluate the P°!°Y: U.S. role in the disarmament Ls a * talks? Are not these talks being used as a screen to continue and intensify the arms race? .., ~*~ * * “The answer. can only come | Gromyko aimed a special warn- ‘ing at Britain, “has quite a few U.S. bases on its territory,’ that American as- surances of peace did not meas- ure up to warlike statements he Air Command Gets New Boss SAC Head Since 1948, Gen. Curtis E. Lemay Bows Out to Move Up ’ OMAHA #®—The Strategic Air Command, the United States’ long-range bomber force, formally changes commanders today at Of- futt Air Force Base. * x * In a 30-minute ceremony, Lt. Gen, Thomas S. Power, 52, one- time deputy chief of SAC, will as- sume command from Gen, Curtis, said were coming out of Washing- ton. jof achieving agreement on cer- [tain partia} disarmament meas- ures appeared in (the London talks, particularly after the Soviet Union introduced jits new pro- Pposals.”’ The chief new proposal js for Ld to be enforced by imternational in- spection teams. stationed in the Britain and areas... Hemorrhage Kills Newsboy in Detroit GEN. CURTIS LeMAY E. LeMay; who has been upped to 'vic@ chief of staff of the Air Force. * * * Power has been chief of the Air Research and Development Com- mand. : ‘ * * * Departure of LeMay, 50, marks an almost unparalleled record length ‘of assignment in the Air Force. Taking over the fledgling command in October 1948, Gen. LeMay has overseen its growth from a. force of 52,000.men, 14 bomb wings and two fighter groups to a command of more than 200,000 personnel, an author- ized strength of 51 wings, more than 30 bases in the United. States and moré than 10 overseas. — 2 GMito Celebrate on TV : DETROIT w@ = General Motors ‘Corp. inaugurates ifs 50th anni- versary year Noy. 17 with a ‘two- ristot bash i < hats Smith Act, are We a: hour television program devoted to| waild ‘direct an hae wliNut Ganley, Sts ake Ween in ll 5 pe iseperey a the: oe Diego reg ge ladle * Wie Allan, , sang, Saneed nd loved: jn Mer, where more than\ 800'Thomas D, Dennis, 38; and Philip \ five from 1908. to, 1938, | cases of flu\pecurred. = Schade, a, ese : PM iss | ; 4 Vo’ 3c Trying fo Identify California Flu Cases trying today to identify influenza! outbreaks that have affected some| 900° persons at Davis and San| Authorities said an autopsy Diego, director’ of public health, said ieee eo could not be stated with certainty/Returns Convictions yet whether the “three-day flu’’ Suffered by nedfly 100 teen-age| girls at Davis is related’ to the; virus epidemic in the Orient, | lister, chief of the Bureau ot Acute Communicable, Diseases; te year-old newsboy, Lester J. Price has been ruled a natural ‘one by. the Wayne County médical éxam-. iner’s office. “ *.* * The boy's body was found by his’ _ father, Lester B.. Price, 46, yes-| BERKELEY, Calif, ® — Cali-|terday beside the js, DiS Customers, The father began to search for his son when the boy was late returning from his paper route. showed young Price died of hem-| Dr. Malcolm H. Merrill, ‘state|°'Thage of the pancreas. | ito Court of Appeals The illnesses in Califotnia aFe consideration. to tof Dr.. Merrill said Dr.A. C, Hol-| Gromyko said the “possibility | a ban on nuclear weapon tests, _ {United States, the Soviet Union, | “ee Flutter i DETROIT #—The death of 11-! 4 * * * | “It appears that Adm. Rad- , | ford (Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) is a bitter en- | emy of the U. 8, Army and has | made a long series of recommen- | dations to Mr. Wilson which are This wai the tone of the argu- |ments presented in the paper. It was also critical ef the Air Force mpeti-| Thor nnssile, the Jupiter cor tor. “ ih é fe pa & A ¢° by the Air Forge ‘oft is an unsafe concentration of mis- sie work * * * _ President Eisenhower backed | Wilson's decision to let the Air Force proceed alone in the IRBM field with this recent statement: “Why would the Army want a 1.500-mile missile? The first req- i uisite of using that kind of weapon \is that you have very good obser- /vation to find out whether it is do- which he said! ing the job you thought it was. The jonly way you could find out would be with an Air Force that could penetrate at least 1,500 miles into jthe enemy territory, and that puts 'you right square into the big Air Force business."’ * * * In spite of this statement and the seemingly overwhelming odds against the Army getting back into the IRBM field, Col. Nickerson, on ithe eve of his trial, is confident \that this will be the result of his court-martial. He is also confident of being declared innocent of any | Wrong-doing. . jumping Depending on the jumping class, form and style gan be as important aS cléaring the hurdle. There are two,main classes of jumping in competition, the bunt- er division and the. jumper . gi- vision, The huntgg elags: is large- | ly a style and form competition » | with relatively low femeea,, On the other hand,sthe jumper) class utilize#{smore atid’ higher fences and getting over is impor- tant, as well as how it -was done. “Preparing the jumps for a major show. like the Detroit Horse Show whi¢h opens today, is no small will hive jumps constructed ‘With brush, fences, troughs, gates, ‘benches. oi] cans, road signs,:stone' Loss of forward movement task, The Detroit show, being held obstacle, for touching the obstacle’ ‘at the Bloomfield Open Hunt Club, supports or for failing to clear mentary, revolving around the the government were the left and * * * iright extrenies, the Communists - | | Fl f 4 j } \ i - ; at E> pies. | } “SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC ERRSe TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1957 Fi , + a dis Irish Week was celebrated in : Miss~ Sanders plans ‘to . attend ” | Dublin to, remind peoole to “Buy ‘But Visitors Must Take Guide, Follow Set Routes ae = isi Scholarship. wales i University agd major ON AT YOUR WALAKE used East of Walled Lake MA 4-3135 1 KNOWS, ° \LiSOn 4 UN FOR A COWARD ~~ - = 4 — 2150 Opdyke Road Phone FE 4-461! Commissioners will hear bids for the renewal of insurance on city- owned vehicles and for compen- sation for waste collection workers. The following public hearings are scheduled for this evening: Intention to construct a trunk storm therstone road from Mt. | to eastern city limits; inten- ing’ seeking stricter enforcement of a 1955 amendment to the ordi- nance, which requires an 18-year or older assistant on all vendor's trucks to protect youngsters from traffic hazards, A lawsuit is pending question- ing the legality of this and a. ‘ , OLYMPIC STARS IN ACTION! June 25 through 30 DETROIT sewer of ae to construct pavement and poco) | further restriction prohibiting pong on Featherstone from Mt. Clemens H peddlers from using bells on their |°°.208*T.c"hwlgvis te Bang ‘ vehicles, Intention to construct curb, gutter, A COWARD tn anit ne eee Me er gee ee : BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MICH. Ea ; versial topi and for sidewalk on the north side of ray c. icivil service for city policemen—|second avenue from Josiyn to 171.4 feet | EMaAS cope ALL DAY 81% will once again appear on a 23-| ‘+. | seem eee . - * * point docket when the city at- ™ \torney reports on a recent meeting! To be taken up in other business will be the introduction of an ordinance to boost city water tap- ping charges from $75 to $125. | The commission will hear the resignation of Harold Hackett from CYL hints Stony jthe Zoning Board of Appeals. ._ DRIVE-IN THER Tee C_ * } 7 iF Co I S HERE PT hin : PE 5-F5 00g. “= of Drowning Victim --EXCLUSIVE--- Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. North of Telegraph Rd. FES-4500 I rhe body of Edward Lester, 36,| ~~ een Fireman Finds Body FIRST RUN SHOWING! . = , : ". by AVA. shipwreoked on a desert island-with T'VW7O MEN'! ee Cea ome ae ie Veal ! Gordon Rd., Waterford Township, | and his son, Gerald Jr. 2 Fettig is a member of the Union| Lake Fire Department. AVAGARDNER . pS%See* STEWART GRANGER «= ESS DAVID NIVEN ‘tains about four-fifths as much wa- 'ter as is to be found in all of Lake Erie. “PHILIP, PD LIKE PERMISSION TO MARRY YOUR WIFE!* “EXCUSE ME, HENRY, BUT ISN'T IT MY WEEK TO SHARE THE SHOES? “You’vE BOTH KNOWN ME FOR YEARS. THERE MUST BE SOMETHING YOU CAN WORK OUTI® M-G-M presents the ' Spicy stage comedy in BLUSHING color!’ The Little Hut "Introducing | : Deborah 7 “Robert WALTER CHIARI - &5 HUGH HERBERT KERR- MITCHUM Based on the Play te is br AREAL BLN English Stage Adaptation by NANCY MITFURD , EASTMAN GDLOR AHERBSON S.A-PRODUCTION Dread y MARK ROBSON Produced by F. HUGH HERBERT and MARK RERSON Av N-G-M Relea eat hvere: KNOWS. Mr eae tin * Lm0s. 7 Paesoms PaBoUC Tom FIRST-RUN of °57’s Big EXCLUSIVE SHOWINGS New Movies PHONE FEDFR AL LAND: ONED xey.\; ¥ AiR CONDIT The Powerful Best-Seller Comes to Life on the Screen! Sta (OTelsslealeiaek dnan ie tt cae Cnmenane MASON © JOA DORTHY Saal bd HARRY BELAFONTE e sa: COLLINS Now Showing at 1:00, 3:10, §:20, 7:30, 9:40 N PONTAINE Last “20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH” Plus Day = “27TH Day” Another Thrilling Double Bill Storts Wednesday! edt amend. 8 _ PLUS SPINE-TINGLING ‘CO-FEATURE! Seuth End of Union Lake Road at Haggerty Road. EM 3-066) | Corner WILLIAMS LAKE and AIRPORT ROADS Phone OR 3-2683 nnn CP pee « EVA SARTOR at Gamma ttn tin pil Z Sports Edi tor; -Peatiac -Press Press Box BY BRUNO L. KEARNS Ho: bum — the Yankees lead the Aseocican league again. It isn’t anything new. For awhile it looked like the old story might have a different beginning when the 1957 World Series rolled around while the White Sox were holding a five and a half game lead. [with the Washington Senators. -.But_as they said Jast year-and- the year: before, ‘ast Mickey Mantle goes, the Yankees go twice as well. When Mantle started ‘his hitting spree which has now pushed him to the top of the American League Tigers WASHINGTON «.— The skid- ding Detroit Tigers arrived here today with one foot in the 2nd di- vision to open a three-game series ‘A-6-0 loss to Baltimore lastnight | knocked the sagging Tigers into a tie with Boston’s Red Sox for 4th place in the American League. The loss, dished up by Balti- more's Hal (Skinny) Brown, left the Tigers with six losses and one. victory ina disastecous-zeed. strong third to a shaky fourth in the standings. The Tigers, losing three times lright time took its toll on .the for the lack of one run, dropped three straight to the New York Yankees and then fell three times| in four games with the Orioles. Their lone victory was a 2-1 de- cision in 13 innings Sunday. Lack of punch at the plate at the Tigers. Discounting last night's 6-0 loss and a 10-2 shellacking at the hands of the Yankees, the Tigers lost four games and won one by a total difference of four runs — 13 for” the” Tigers... 17 for” their, Op-| ponents. Last night the lack of effective hitting could be blamed on Brown, who gave the Tigers only five hits * and didn’t permit more than ane troit. per inning. _Althongh they managed to get a man on base: in seven of the in, nings, the Tigers never mustered a serious threat. Orioles, a mighty team when it comes to knocking off hopeful first division teams, tere into Duke Maas for two runs in the fourth on Billy Goodman’s homer with one on. They got another off Maas inthe sixth on .a-single | Al Pilarcik and Joe Durham's single through the/ middie. — Then. Al Aber game on for De- The Orioles punched him around for two runs in the sev- enth and one in the eighth. * * * . eighth. « * * * The Tigers, who left home nine days ago with a five-game win- ning streak in their pockets and firm hopes of dvertaking the Yankees and moving into second ‘place, have -found-.themselves - in with a .392 mark, the Yanks started clobbering everyone and they did so for 10 straight. games until the White Sox finally took the last come of their four-game series Sunday. During this 10 game streak, the 25-year-old slugger pelted the ball around at a “meager” .500 clip and as re- sult the famitar names of Mantle and the Yankees are back in the driver's seat for the triple crown and the pennant. x * * Before the season started Yankee officials predicted that someday the Oklahoman would put the 100 grand) figures of Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams down on the totem pole once he got into the six figure bracket. When the Copa episode took place a few weeks ago, the Yankee front office was unhappy. They were more concerned with the affect it had on Mantle than all the publicity individual players re- celved. x & * Some say that it wasn’t really the night club brawl but the influence which Billy Martin exerted on Mantle which gave the second baseman his one way ticket to Kansas City. Martin was blamed for Mantle missing a train, for breaking some curfew rules and then to help blow the candles on Martin's birthday party at 2:00 a. m. that fateful mornnig. x *«* * Now Martin is gone, Mantle is hitting and the Yankees and ’ole Casey are happy again, much to the anguish of all the Yankee-haters. DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX _The National Collegiate Athletic Association’s foot- ball guide has hit the sports desks and the grid experts are painting a picture similar to that of 1956, that is, Oklahoma and Michigan State again as the teams to beat. Minnesota with Bobby Cox, Iowa with 31 of 44 a) c]> ONE CHAMP TO ANOTHER — tional Open Champion, Dick Mayer, extends best wishes to U. S. Senior’s Champion Al Watrous, Oakland Hills pro now in Glasgow, Scotland, Recent Na- ‘muscle, * * * |__Jim Bunning (7-3) and Maas (7-5, after his losing bout with Balti-/ more last night) have provided surprising zip, but the two of them are not enough. Manager Jack Tighe called for help yesterday and got his an- wer from the front office in the ¥ where he will meet John Burton, British Senior's Champion in an International match starting Friday at Pollock Golf Club. ‘Bums’ Welcome Trio ‘Back’ Rose Bow! members returning, Michigan with back- field depth and question-mark line, I}linois with aging veterans are called the strongest in the Big 10 ixvewnancinamennene: Snider Fyrillo, Erskine Pace Win been mentioned 1-2-3 or 4. What’s up, Woody? Bassey New Champion PARIS (INS) — Hogan (Kid) Bassey, who began boxing in dock. | side scraps as a ten-year-old, has ended a long uphill struggle by. winning ,the world featherweight) championship and thus becoming: the first Nigerian ever to hold a) world title, Bassey went into last night’s fight with Cherif Hamia of Al- - Amateur Sets 32 Qualifying Areas wi'secis iy 19" NEW YORK Ww — The United/annual Michigan State champion- States Golf Assn., today estab-|ship baseball tournament for non- lished Fad bergen an he pro clubs with players of unlimited more than last year— age will be held at Grand Raj Natiénal Amateur Golf. Champion- July 19-21, 26-28 and Aug, 1-4 ve ship at The Country Club, Brook- Nationa Baseball Congress said today, Miltor’ J. H. Knabusch, NBC commissioner, confirmed the geria a pronounced: underdog, but he piled up a fat lead before tak ing a technica] knockout deci- sion at 2:22 of the tenth round. | Bassey, British Empire cham-' pion, ascended to the world throne vacated by the retirement of Sandy | Saddler in January. | To defeat Hamia, Bassey had to | survive a second round knockdown when he was floored for a seven- count by a hard right from Hamia = their scheduled 15- rounder at ‘aris. State Baseball Event Will Begin July 19 entry of 1,600 last year, when there were 30 sectional qualifying locations. be submitted to either his office dates and said entries could now |place By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |League champs, no better than !fifth at the moment what with hit-, 'ters slumping and pitchers ‘ailing. |welcomed “back? Duke Snider, | Carl Furillo and Carl Erskine to- Only one American imore Orioles, behind Hec Brown's! five-hit pitching, ;again 6-0. * * * League'two-run job in the ninth Brooklyn's defending National game was scheduled. The Balti- 3-for-5 night. for a The Phils got a 2-0 lead on Stan belted Detroit Lopata’s first-inning home run off, |Warren Spahn, . veteran southpaw with his fifth de- Philadelphia at st. Louis, then tagged the A six-run seventh inning won for feat with a tie-breaking, four-run) the Dodgers, who trailed 2-1 day. They hoped to show a profit then after the Cards had started chee’s two-on home run. Harvey! ‘on. the run against Erskine. The Haddix won his sixth, but needed ‘veteran righthander had two relief:Jim Hearn's relief help. on the second half of their trip; ‘through ~ west. i ® The foe, ae led the league /by a half game June 8, have won six of 18 since. But they’re 44 on the road trip—with first place} St. Louis and second place Cincin- nati out of the way and injury-| ridden Milwaukee and last place Chicago ahead. They haven’t lost to the Cubs yet. * * * . The Brooks salvaged a split in the four-game set at St. Louis last night, edging within 2's games of. the Cardinals with a 10-3 victory, as Snider and Furillo batted in| three runs each and Erskine, giv- ing his bum shoulder the big test, ‘and Furillo had been hitless in 19 iat bats, an had only two hits in ‘his last 52 trips. He stayed in the job warmups after treatment dis-' posed of calcium deposits. He gave Wild Throw Gives two runs and. four hits in his six frames. He walked none, and was touched for only one hit after the first inning. * * * ‘Sam Jones lost his third, with PeeWee Reese unloading a bases- loaded single: in the big seventh |, game to blast a ninth inning hom- ler off Lloyd Merritt. * * * Lakeland 2-1 Win A wild throw by the catcher ‘after a strikeout enabled the win- ning run to score all the way from 2nd in the 9th inning as Lakeland Pharmacy nipped White Bros., 2-1 ast night in a Waterford Softball League game. Studt, who led off the inning with a double, scored the deciding) run off loser Bernie LaRue. Both | |teams had only three hits. Snider socked his 13th and Mth White Bros. home runs, rifling a solo shot ms eee ‘the first inning and smacking & Rouelle a aon 010 001—2 3 0 Herr Poe e waren ee and * * It was oné of but two games| scheduled in the NL, and trimmed the Cards’ lead to a half game) fourth-' won his first start of the year. | * i Claas at the USGA ‘office in New York Aug. 8. Exemptions from sectional qual- ifying are available to the follow- ing players if they enter: USGA amateur champions, British. Ama- teur champions; the 1956 U.S. Sen- ior amateur champion (Frederick J. Wright), the 1957 USGA Public) Links and Junior Amateur cham- pions; members of the 1957 Walker} bell of Knoxville, tom, and Sone First Quality Oviginal Equipment Quality 2 *. SS » MUFFLERS or to the national office in Wichita.'1% BOAT — MOTOR INSURANCE All Risk Insurance on Outboard Motors. ‘and Boats eee ‘NEW LOW RATES PERSONAL . Also COMPREHENSIVE LIABILITY ‘eon Lost Pct. Behind iNew York ..........39 3 29 — | Chicago . 28 BD 6 % | Cleve: 4 @ 5 5 | Boston . 33 31 «S60 67 I roit 3 31 516 7 Baltimore 29 6 46010" Kansas City 25 3 4.397) My on 224 «6328 Sa MONDAY'S RESULT Baltimore 6. Detroit 6, night Only game scheduled ry St Second Division form of Harry Byrd, a veteran pitcher called up from the Tiger farm club at Birmingham. Lou Sleafer relieved him in the|tonight for the Tigers, opposing! |Washington’s Pedro Ramos (5-6). * stand at Washington. Tigers move to Boston for three games and re- turn home against the Chicago White Sox Monday night. }Detroit .... Baltimore ..,.+s006 After 28 Miles. of C icling ‘He > | Still Ts Hao Lary is scheduled to take the hill * * After completing the three-game E—Boy Durham, scored in Tth double play). man. 8&—Busby, DP—Boyd, Miranda and Brown; Kuenn, Samford and Philley. Left—Detroit 1. Baltimore 6. BB-Maas 1, —Maas 3, Brown 6. HO—Maas 8 in 6: Aber 4 in 145: Cleater 0 in %,. Maas (3;3), HBP-—-By Aber (2-3). Chylak, A—10,932. _ Oo 000 000 000-—6 +. 000 201 21x—6 d, Miranda. RBI—Goodman 2. Boyd, Miranda, (Gardner when Goodman hit into Brown 1. 5O R-ER— Aber (3-3), Sleater (0-0). (Gardner). W—Brown trouble” both at“theplate-and on} DETROIT | BALTIMORE, run. —— nine ie eet Fume) 3 $ i seats. ¢ fa) | Remade beveled heme tt. wip”) 2 * WW ve Yoman 3b 4 2 2/| after the game. ° Billy Hoeft, a 20-game winner Kaline ot ‘ ° @ Piareik ‘ o? . axwe UsbyC 1 Ld LJ * ny Plage ees = Mg Dissected reer ess sl ramenel ae 4 Wins Illinois Opener 4 Eos tcher last/Mess> 20 O-Brownp 4 1 1| CHICAGO um — The Hamtramék, caeapael 21 cen a 48a? ORR Mich., squad got off to a roaring record. Paul Foytack (8-4) “was /Bertols yes start yesterday with impressive hampered recently by a pulled; Totals 33 0 5 Tot als 31 6 12/vietories in the opening round of Bertoia flied out for Maas in Tth. the Mlinois State Junior Temis tournament, Jerry Dubie, who ranked seventh nationally last year in the 15-and- _ under division, paced the Michigan “|group with a 6-1, 6-1, second round victory over Jim Schreier of Bev- erly Hills, Tl. Virginia Hesse drew a first round bye in the junior division but reached the quarterfinals in L—Maas (7-5), U—Plaherty, ‘e, hick T—2.23 ‘Ithe 15-and-under class. TODAY'S GAMES | Time Eastern Standar a at New York. 7:15 api —Mosai | 41) vs. Sturdivant (6-3) Chicago at Boston, 7:15 pm. — Keegan| (23) vs. Sisler. (5-3) cae at Washington, 7 pm —Lary (48)' Ramos (5-6) ‘Kansas City at Baltimore, 7 pm. —Urban (10) vs, Loes (7-3) NESDAY'S — Kansas City at Baltimore. 7 pm. NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen Lest Pet. St. Louis ...........%6 %@ 3 Cincinnati 7 3 Ct Milwaukee... % @ 36) Philadelphia ss... . so B@. ( ve sebocoont Se: : New York %® Mu OD Pittsburgh 41 359 «#14 Chicago 7 = Sl WM 2 MONDAY'S RESU - |Brooklyn 10, Louis 3, night Philadeiphis; 10, Milwaukee 4, night Only games scheduled. 000 001 000—1 3 4 Ltt: sclbd —— Standard ‘Pittsburgh = cance 1:3 p.m —Priend (47) va. Kaiser (2-5) New York at Cincinnati, _ p.m.—Crone (41) vs. Lawrence (7-4 ‘Brooklyn at Milwaukee, 8 ’p.m.—MeDevitt ef vs. Burdette (3-4) Only games scheduled WEDNESDAYS GAMES Pitts! |New York yn at In 1832~ GO years before the Motor Car was invented began distilling whiskey | PEN 35% STRAIGHT WHISKEY, 6 YEARS OLD, BLENDED WITH 65% FINE GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. GOODERMAM 6 WORTS, LTD., PEORIA, ILLINOIS. 4/5 QUART $366 Code Ne. 778 PINT $931 Code Ne. 17 SAWE WITHOUT SAC SPACE BUY an ARMSTRONG Sceet Oil-Fired Hi-Boy - Winter Air-Conditioner GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING 3401 W. Huren (Corner of Elizabeth Lake Rd.) RIFICING EFFICIENCY Now you Can enjoy the convenience of automatic oil-fired _ winter air - condi- tioning without wasting space FE 2-7849 ‘til fourth capped by rookie Ed Bou-| e e | ee a / i} i as No car is a bargain if “| bought a Ou: sad-faced friend is Bill MeGoo, Who thought he'd bought a car brand-new: And while he got a “special deal” His disappointment he can’t conceal! While others drive in Swept-Wing style Poor Bill just mutters curses vile: “They got new styling, features, too— ‘deal’—boo-hoo, boo-hoo!” Moral: Yesterday's looks and features are no bargain at any price! it it’s ‘obsolete in pons and engineering features. And the Swept-Wing Dodge actually obsoletes other cars in its Held with its low, low \ { look of tomorrow and revolutionary advances like Torsion-Aire Ride, Push- Button oN and Total-Contact ae es So don’t get Ageia ool a eee w rer ery > ¢ at SR EARTSD N Y Links ~ . NEW YORK—~—The only way to beat the long, long wait weekends at the public golf courses in New "York City is to cheat, but the) Parks’ department knows the an- swers to all the tricks. * * a these birds come up with a new maneuver,” says Man- ny Kaluser, supervisor of the twin There are always a few chisel- ers who try to squeeze into line ahead of others, sign up twice, use someone else's permit or = a fast one. : it’s on weekends and holidays that the wait can go to four or ‘five hours. ‘We don’t sign’ them > up until 5 a.m, or tee off until 5:30 but the line starts. at 3:00 under way at the gaily-capari- soned Bloomfield Open Hunt club site on East Long Lake road,| in pl (turn left at Bloomfied Hills, from| ; Pontiac; right, from the south on «Woodward avenue), Allphysical work had been. completed at the Hunt club, stands, lights were up, all con- By H. GUY MOATS Several score hopeful and en- ithusiastic junior ~horsemen~ and many fine mounts today started the 40th Detroit Horse Show off to a bright and colorful beginning. The week-long (five nights, too) show, rated among the best in the United States, out-of-doors, is jumping events over 10 obstacles; the junior “Prix de Nations” over 14 ‘obstacles and the relay jump- List. of exhibitors reads like a register of ‘“‘who's who” in the Like fine whiskey? THE ONLY THING YOU'LL LIKE BETTER THAN PM's QUALITY 18 ITs PRICE! = a.m.,”" supervisor Fred Catania | At.40 an hour, that's five hours y|wait for the jast man already.” ™ jon Memorial Day, Catania cut clerks at the door to handle the crowds." « * * Still, no matter how it is han- died, the course can absorb only| | @ certain amount of players per. hour. The theoretical maximum is} - 40 per hour, but that seldom is the case, : That applied to all 10 city where problems “When we open the doors at 5:00 * * * Dyker's peak wait was 5‘ hours away all the rough and to speed up play and says it is im- -field Hills younger horsemen recently preparing for today's a at the elub reports a top elt atx hours weekends, and 2 hours weekdays, “We. get a lot of LESSON IN DRESSAGE = Three of Bloom- of the Detroit Horse show's 40th annual: exhi- bition. They were starting a lesson in dressage with &year-old Susan Kuschell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Kuschell in the saddle on At left is ‘Biff were pictured year-old sister opening session .”” Bloomfield Open Hunt’s school horse. Jones, 15, while Kristine, his 9- stands at Susan's stirrup. The latter two are children of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones. Kuschell and Jones are vice chairmen of DHS committees. Annapolis to Newport Yacht Race Nears End ABOARD THE USS RAYMOND @—Leaders in the Annapolis to Newport yacht racé were expect- ed to arrive early today for the the 468-mil WASHINGTON \W—Bob Feller, who set major league strikeout records while fastballing for the Cleveland Indians, makes a dif- ferent kind of pitch today for big league ballplayers. « «* * Feller, now retired from base- Le) H. D. Wheeler's Cotton Blossom was known to he one of the lead- era da she was sighted off Atlantic — J. early yesterday, fol- lowed by Windigo, only nine miles ball, goes before a House Anti-) trust subcommittee to tell about, changes he thinks should be made in basebal] operations. * * * In advance of his testimony, Fel- ‘ler told newsmen he favors putting baseball under the antitrust laws but with stipulated exemptions. He would exempt the contract reserve clause binding a player to the club that first signs him and ‘'Elks, Stadium Stun Leaders New Pitch for Feller also territorial rights which pro- tect a club from encroachment on which its franchise a 4 4 sh aA derby.” -_ pounds in weight. Saleem .. angler, Tony .Romanelli, 745 East Pelham-Split Rock courses in the, 2-™- om weekends,” Klauser . nore ooaresy Competition wee. North Bronx, “we slap on a new! ‘ells. both “A” and “B" divisions. regulation. _ “We had to put floddlights out- There will not bee night showing side~to~ make sure ~those~ night|— today, but starting Wednesday, the » hawks wouldn't get hurt. We set! ~ {show.-will-operate-on..a morning .« gtr 8 up special tables for our ticket afternoon - evening schedule (8:30, rc Sa ETE aS: ae! Pentiag Press Phote NEW LEADER — Here's the - latest leader in the ‘bass division of The Pontiac Press “big fish The fish, shown by its was even five It was 21 inch- es long and was landed on Voor- lake—Saturday by—the~ proud captor (above) competition, | First street, Pontiac. Wednesday, first big day, be- gins with the Open pollen (pas 5-Pounder Takes Lead 1 street, Pontiac, Punch, Saturday. Tony, Carl, and a friend, Norman Troy, the five-pound largemouth prompt- ly took the lead in The Press “big -| fish derby.” Romanelli’s husky brenzeback displaced a pair of 4-pound-10- ounce bass that previously held “| the edge, They were entries by Henry Puddubny of Oxford and Garland Hale of Pontiac. harness, trolling in deep water,” Tony reported. ‘I got a big kick out of seeing that bass come in— Pro Grid Slate took.” Tony and his partner land- Feller recommended, however, a maximum of about five years on the duration of a reserve clause. At the end of that period a player could negotiate for himself, x * * Robin Ro b erts, Philadelphia Phillies’ pitcher; Eddie Yost, i BiJis PHILADELPHIA (# — Commis- sioner Bert Bell today released the 1957 National Football League schedule of 72 games, three at night, two Saturday afternoons, one Thanksgiving Day and 66 on the pro's traditional Sunday play- jing day. Another lucky angler, but not a contest entry, was Charles Ver- way, 362 East Mansfield, Pontiac, who landed an unusually big yel- low perch in Lower Straits lake. Verway'’s fish was. 10'3-inches long, was taken on a flyrod, with) worms as bait. He also got five) other big perch, some big’ blue- ‘Tony Romanelli, 745 East First was proud as fishing on. Voorheis Lake with his son of 738 East Mansfield, landed the biggest bass he ever hooked. And ‘| “I was using a night crawler it was the biggest one I ever ed several other smaller fish, including some nice bluegills, he), Said. New Entry Paces ‘Derby’ of bluegill “and calicos. The big bass put up a 15-minute scrap, Kilmer declared. . A two and five-eighths pound * smallmouth bass Monday gave Pontiac angler, Albert Dowd (554 Valencia) a 15-minute battle be- fore being landed at Scott Lake, near Drayton Plains. Without a net, Dowd had to haul his prize in by hand. If it had been taken in an Oak- land County lake, the one-pound T-ounce bluegill landed hy Clarence Osborne, 355 First, Pontiac, at Oxbow. Lake, in Kalkaska County over ‘the weekend, would have grabbed the Pontiac Press, divi- sional contest lead. Fish was 10°; inches long, weighed 14 ounces cleaned, Osborne says. “It was the biggest bluegill I ever saw,” the lucky angler added. He and his wife were on a weekend fish- Washington Senators’ third base-| « *« * man; and Jerry Coleman, New; the unda York Yankee infielder, all said -at 29 sith abc qamaoe! pean p es yesterday's hearing the reserve Y iant clause is essential to baseball. pag joan gra pig Sb aa. GRE. gills and roach. His neighbor. Carson Millikan, was with him. Patrolman Karl Kilmer, Pon- |tiac police officer, helped a com- DON’T RISK TRAGEDY ON YOUR HOLIDAY TRIP Shaw's, Birmingham Upset Elks No. 810 and Stadium Inn ‘pulled the biggest upsets of the 11957 City Softball League season last night at Beaudette Park. | \ A ill 3 . 4 | ® | staff, handed the Jewelers their If, J lst setback of the year, 2-1. Bir-| ‘mingham, the Jewelers’ top threat | The Elks, refusing to be awed| ‘by Shaw's magnificent pitching the 3rd stanza for its narrow mar- gin of victory. Verle Sheldon outpitched Roger Reynolds for the triumph. Chuck Nichols slammed a two-run hom- er for the losers in the 3rd. In games at North Side Park, CIO Local 653 scored one run in the 7th for a 5-4 win over Oxbow for league honors, was upended by) ‘Pavillion and Pontiac Select-A- Their argument was this: Throwing all players on the mark-| et every year would disrupt the sport and enable wealthy clubs to corral the best men, And it would discourage a club from scouting for talent since after developing a potential big leaguer it could lose jhim to a higher bidder. * * * Eastern Divi- ‘sion contest and the Western|panion land a fighting largemouth |champion Chicago Bears in an in-|bass on White Lake, Sunday, and tra-divisional tilt with Green Bay.|it really took both himself and the x «' |‘original” angler, Ed Remback of Other openers send the Chicago|Holly, to bring the 4-pound-12- Cardinals to San Francisco for a ouncer to boat. “He got into the meeting with the Forty Niners, weeds and I had to handline him Philadelphia to the West Coast to in,” Kilmer said. Ed's brother, meet the Rams, Detroit to Balti-| Chester was in the group that took more and Washington to Pitts-|several other bass, limit catches MOTOR MART AUTO PARTS Montcalm Roberts said the majors ought) burgh. ‘Stadium, 3-2. Drink pounded out 14 hits to rout | Eddie's Bar, 12-7. to consider a four-year limit on the wate SANDERS | te zihe’ wrath, Maser, whe had |;, TUEM'S games: Lane's, Drive rons, (Dene) But be sald Bauer Plans Offense |“ uiams Leads FOR RENT previously hurled two one-hit 4) mn, end Franklin Products vs./2 boost to club morale for a play- Mantle in All TRAVIS oe er oe agg ta Deni’s Corner, 8:30, at Beaudette: ally? rp ee one organization). c abana Affair -terda: 7 = them re 7 : is lee “a ” _ timely. West Side Merchants vs. Ginger eid some’ ood mighe|tll LOPACE Star Team Poll | fi BAROwsee. C. come from limiting the effect of the clause but questioned any period less than 10 years. Coleman opposed any limit on the clause. He said. most Tavern vs. Drive-In Cleaners, 8:30, at North Side. Pee ne Oe HOH OOH eH eee NEW YORK (® — Ted Williams today led Mickey Mantle in their duel for biggest in the 1957 All Star baseball poll. The Singles by Don Stone and Howard Willis produced the Elks’ 1st run in the 1st inning, while a /U walk to Stone, a stolen base and NEW YORK (# — Hank Bauer, New York Yankee outfielder and an ex-Marine, planned to take the legal offensive today against SAVE « almost 1/a | on Aba! reston wy 101 000 6—2 3 1 000 001 O—1 41 = = 5 — ‘ The legal history of the case/they have had in a time, dates back to: 1954 when it was|and the senator Se enter- wather- obvious that-Harney’s--mo-..._. ment of glory may be a short one,” raed posed os ae be tain them,” the aide said. Schoendienst Joins |. | Custom=-- tion. Following an appeal by the Braves Injury List government, the Supreme oust ruled-— thatthe antitrust case MILWAUKEE. (#—The Milwav- against the-IBC- should go to trial: After the trial last year, Judge Ryan found the defendants guilty, March 8, and set yesterday for “unknown” in professional golf- ing circles as far as triumphant headlines were concerned until he hit a $5,700 jackpot in the it presumably would go to the U.S. Brisson, Green. JEE Medalists Grace and Badger Also Picked for State Trip in Birmingham Tourney There will be four youngsters ‘instead of two representing the Birmingham Junior Chamber of state Jaycee golf tournament July 8-9 Commerce at the annual - in Grand Rapids. Birmingham's Jaycee chapter - elected to double its representa- tion after taking notice of the four outstanding scores carded in Monday's junior golf tourney at Birmingham Country Club. -, Despite a wet, slow ‘course, ‘two boys in even par scorecards and two others were breathing distanee away. Pete Green of Birmingham and Joe Brisson from Grosse Pointe were medalists in the 18-hole tournament with par 72s. Brisson defeated Green in a sudden-death playoff with a birdie three on the 20th hole. Tom Grace of Southfield Town- ship posted a 74 and defending champion Bud Badger from Bloom- field Hills shot 75. Both Grace. and Badger were picked to join Brisson and Green for the jaunt to,Grand Rapids, Dave Crook, who failed to quality, received medals for winning the driving contest and the “closest shot to the hole” competition. Green actually won the driving contest, but sacri- MHSAA amateur rules. Green and Brisson were award- ed trophies by the Birmingham ' Jaycees while medals went to Grace and Badger. A total of 18 *boys competed. Yesterday's tourney completed the Jaycee events in this area and. raised to 13 the number of youths going to the state test~four from Birmingham, four from Pontiac and five from Waterford. BIRMINGHAM JAYCEE SCORES Bed Badger . Gary Mouw. Dick Sing, no card Gary Shannon, no card Bob Stephenson, no card TO INDIANA — Former St. Michael and Avondale gridder, * Ron Elmy, was this week award- | his final decree, effective July 1. |years to sell their interest in the Garden which amounts to about 39 per cent of the total stock. However, within 30 days after July 1 they must resign as offi- cers and directors. The two, pro- moters are forbidden_to vote for officers or determine any busi- ness policy of the Garden after July 1.. A trustee will vote the stock during the five-year period during which a sale may be arranged. After that the frustee will be em- powered to sell the stock if Norris and Wirtz haven't found buyers. All exclusive contracts with champions and challengers were declared void by Judge Ryan, also all exclusive contracts with stadia pther than those owned by Norris and Wirtz. As a result of the findings that the IBC of New York and Illinois and Norris and Wirtz were guilty of monopolizing title fights, Judge Ryan ordered that the Garden could not promote more than two title bouts in any dne year for the next five. Norris and Wirtz also were limited to two championship contests a year for the same period. Judge Ryan said the sweeping decree was designed to reopen professional title fights to “‘legiti- mate and healthy competition.” Norris and Wirtz will have five kee Braves, hobbled by the loss of jpowe# hitting first baseman Joe Adcock, today faced the prospect of three games ‘with the Dodgers without the slick fielding and robust bat work of neg Schoendienst. Schoendienst, at -.307 one of only three .300 or better hitters in the /Milwaukee lineup, retired from the action last night as the Braves were defeated 10-4 by the Phila- delphia Phillies, fourth in the Na- Rolladium Down 8-1 * Rallies for Victory ‘Trailing by 8-1 on one occasion and__still losing -8-6.after -six--in- nings, Pontiac Rolladium came up with three in the 7th to down Swaine’s 9-8 in a Waterford Junior Softball game last night. Bob Dia- mond slammed three hits and scored the winning run. In the Little League, Elliott Fur- niture tripped Indianwood Homes| 9-5 as Mike Kaines gdrnered three safeties. MONDAY’S STARS | PITCHING—Heec Brown, Orioles shutout Tigers 6-0 with a five-hit- ter, striking out six, walking one. HITTING — Duke Snider, Dod- gers, drove in three runs with two home runs and a, single iw®five nals. COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. — University of Detroit star Tommy Watrous of Royal Oak was only| three strokes behind the leader as; the nation's outstanding college| ‘golfers began the 2nd qualifying ficed his award to abide by | Mantle Nearing 400 Hit Mark NEW YORK .\#—Streaking at a .446 batting pace since June 1, Mickey Mantle of the New York Yankees threatens to become ma- jor league baseball's first .400 hit- ter in 16 years. He also is in a good position to win the triple .|crown for the second straight sea- son, a feat never accomplished. Mantle will take a .392 batting average with 21 home runs and 51 runs batted in into tonight's 3\game against Cleveland. Watrous Fires 72 in NCAA |round of the annual NCAA golf |tournament here today, ; Watrous fired a 37-35-72 os day as compared with a sizzling three-under- -par 69 for leader War- ren Simmons, the Eastern Colle- giate champion from Syracuse. Simons’ 69 set a new record for the course. clusion of the 2nd round begin in- dividual match play tomorrow. Tourney ends Saturday. ‘In team competition, Arizona State and North Texas State were tied after the Ist day with 302 fol- lowed by Iowa at 303. Pelicans ‘On Rocks’ NEW ORLEANS, La. (INS) — The New Orleans Baseball Club has notified the Southern Associa- tion that “continued operation bes yond July 5 appears unlikely.” . trips in 10-3 victory over Cardi- da The low 64 golfers at the con-| tor a double play. GOOD FOR JUST ONE — Charley Maxwell, Detroit outfielder, is forced at second base in the fourth inning of last night's game with the Baltimore Orioles. Frank House attempted a sacrifice bunt which Oriole pitcher Hal Brown fielded and.threw to Willie Miranda in time for the forceout. The relay to first was not in time AP Wirephete |Giants last night at Wisner Field. ‘ *. x: * - |bother Reaver. He struck out 12 Shutouts Fea Pontiac Boys’ Club pitchers fea- tured the opening day of the sum- mer baseball season here yester- - y. A total of 10 games were played|’ A pair of two-hit shutouts byjin five different leagues at various Call McDougald Best Shortstop NEW -YORK (#—Rival manag- ers arid players, who should know best, rate Gil McDougald of the New York Yankees as the best all- around shortstop in the American League Detroit Manager Jack Tighe, who has a pretty fair shortstop of his own in Harvey Kuenn, calls Yankees. Chicago Manager Al Lo pez, who may have the best de- fensive shortfielder in the league! in Luis Aparicio, regards Mc- ‘Dougald as the most underrated player in the circuit. “It’s about time somebody gave that guy the credit he deserves,” remarked Billy Pierce, ace White Sox lefthander before facing the Yankees in the first game of Sun- day's doubleheader at Yankee Stadium. WASHINGTON — About °74 per cent of America’s commercial for- est land is privately-owned. “UNEQUALED? ve ay and the public proves it + More people ask for Seagram’s VO. ee ‘Lage ion noting aed | McDougald the solid man of the! ‘ ture Openers 15:30 p.m. city diamonds. gems for the BC Class E team blanking Dick's Sales & Service 10-0. He had 14 strikeouts, includ- ing the last seven successive bat- ters, and allowed no walks. Jerry Williams paced the hitters with three singles. * * * Darly Thorpe had the other two- hitter whipping Stewart-Glenn in Class F play. He had 11 strike- outs and paced the offensive with two of his team’s five hits. Other opening day scores were: CLASS F LEAGUE © Sheriff's Dept. 19, Arnoid Drugs 1 E LEAGUE Lake Orton 8, Clarkston 5 CLASS D LEAGUE West Side Kiwanis 3 5, Auburn Heights Boys’ MIDGET LEAGUES (Amertesan) co 17, Auburn Helghts Boys’ Club * white Box yearns Eagies 2 2 : National Yankees 13, Athletics 12 Orioles 15, Indians 7 | Tom Mays hurled one of the'stone | The contest was played in a steady drizzle, but that didn’t batters, tops for the season, and walked only two while giving up} and another two - bagger in the 7th. Shaw’s supported Reaver’s shutout hurling with a six - hit attack off Ron McGuire, includ- ing home run by Dave (Boots) Kringe, Kringe had an unusual night at the plate, getting hit twice and walking once prior to the round - tripper. Ellis -Catchens* doubie off Reaver in the 7th just missed being a homer. The ball bouneed over the four-day Flint tourney. ‘A pleasant, easy-going’ fellow with a big grin, Harney never knew what it meant to win a major professional event until Sunday. Victory in the Egyptian his only previous moment of glory in 244 years on the pro circuit. Harney turned pro in November, 1954, following- a hitch in Uncle Sam's Navy. He joined the tour- ing pros immediately. _ He was a fairly consistent mon- ey-winner. on the pro tour, but Ist place always seemed to evade him. Then last week’s $37,000 Carling test came along. right field fence for a ground rule two-bagger. Shaw's win was its, Sth in six games. * * Resurgent Griff’s Grill meets CIO; Local 594 in today’s City League game on the Wisner diamond at SHAW'S JWLRS. MICH. seresity | The next year his earnings In his Ist year on the circuit, Harney grossed about $5,000. leaped to $12,000 and this year’s “take” prior to the Flint outing was an unofficial $7,000. His win at Flint jumped him from 26th Tailored SUIT S 4 J @ COSTS NO MORE @ FIT BETTER @ LOOK BETTER @ FEEL BETTER Priced trom Custom Tailors and Clothiers .— Alterations, Remodeling, Repairs H DWNT 908 W. Huren at Telegraph Pontiac FE 2-2300 to 13th on the PGA money list. Harney, a bachelor who wil] out of Bolton but is a native of! Worcester, Mass. One of the nation’s outstanding BRH AB RH Scheibner 3.1 1 W. McGuire l 1 Sato 2 0 0 H. Moore 3 0 06 Thomas 4 0 1 Battle 300 Kringe 1 2 1 Smith 2060 Bachard 4 © 1 Harrison 300 Thomason 4 6 1 J. Moore 3006 2 0 O Catchens 361 McGlashen 1 © 6 Vachon 1060 | Johnson 2 0 @ Woodmote 2 0 @ Reaver 301 1 R. McGuire 2 0 23 4 ‘ 23 0 2) Shaw's .oecee eovcevcess O10 O11 a 62 Giants .rcsseeee- . 000 E—Harrison 2, Sato, Stone; HR— Kringe; 2B—W. McGuire, Catchens; RBI—McQlashen, Thomas, Kringe; WP | Reaver; LP—R McGul re. Underdog Kerwin TKO Victor Over DiBiase NEW YORK (—Gale Kerwin, a Canadian welterweight with re- cently developed power, is the latest underdog to come through for matchmaker Teddy Brenner. * * * | Pee hasn't lost his touch at |11 television main events ‘at St. Nicks. Nicholas Arena. Kerwin’'s fifth} aes technical knockout of Tony] DiBiase last night made him the 7 eighth underdog to win in the last/¢st Harney should say “I was out of 56 matches during his three jvarsity years there. ‘Eastern Inter-collegiate title in /1952 and was NCAA medalist the | jsame year. Beginning in 1958, Harney will represent “the world's largest golf — the 8,000-yard Sur- | course” prenant National Golf and Country Club at Bolton being financed. by industrialist. | scaling a slight 140, Harney av- erages 280 yards with his drives. It was appropriate that the mod- | lueky’” after his victory at Flint. He'll need all of his luck and skill turn 28 years of age in July, plays) collegiate golfers while attending Holy Cross, Harney lost. only four He won the Albert Surprenant> Clinton, Mass. | Harney is a slender youth with | a pulverizing swing and only big | George Bayer outdistances him | off the tee. Standing 5-11 and SPECIAL! sens Purpose DECK ENAMEL Perfect for Porches and Boats — Medium Gray Only Sale Price 3 *97S Gol. 2] j # t t DONALDSON LUMBER CO. 27 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-838) | “HEA signals, spare Yom get. the opinions comfort of a 6-pemenger sedan (room for eight with optional Hideaway seat) ... smart, functional styling that will last . 6-cylinder engine that gives up to 29 miles per gallon .. . ~, plus more than 93 cubic feet of carrying space with the “year seat down. For work or play, this new Scotsman Station Wagon is today’s best value... and tomorrow’s, too— because of the extra craftsmanship built into every Studebaker product. See the new Scotsman Station Wagon . . . and its companion 2-door and 4-door sedan models . . . today. Save hundreds of dollars when you buy... +more esch day you drive ‘DAVIS MOTORS Oss) . . & full-powered # So inallididk ws wee diveutioked: tire and wheel, double wipers, mirror. Pay only | - local taxes, if any. and ee Bend. St th nS Ptr ca tir ay The New Champion SCOTSMAN i Fa PRINTZ, MOTO Relax in the ¢ }eaethong tradition... om a = Cig to its exclusive supere con Po OR R SALES ¥ / Ve PF a fitlig a BO mh EK M sil “om 3.809 “enti, Mh America’s Lowest-Priced Three Features America's Lowest-Priced Full-Sized Station Wagon sisbebihe Bacdeatd | RATION . Seg — “PRAISE — = ee eee 2 States has asked U.S.-registered ships and shipping companies to report -any interference with the right of “innocent passage” of the Aqaba. mee Egypt for eight years barred Is- of Eilat, at the gulf's northern tip. The blockade was lifted ‘by Israel's invasion of Egypt last fall. P The U.S. action was taken as a 1 woc reaffirmation of this government’s policy that waters of the gulf form 2 GAREN 3 ETRES o wae WN = an international passage, 4 HETTRE President Eisenhower said in a 5S ALIMAN speech last February that “‘no 6 GEDIO Y 6-235 sAnd, finiSh, morTor, wolEr, coRnice, cEment, tRowel. answer: gyPsum, Lime, eee States was prepared to “exercise this right itself to join with others to secure general recognition of fs raeli ships from the Israeli port) - ec, Me ed eA ial PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 25, WHAT'S MY LINE? |» U.S. Ships Asked . _ | UNSTRUCTIONS: | is re’ to work, \ : “ \ | sorb ated meee ime m4 Bos “anueer | Hf Report on Aqaba ESAD BUSTER LAREN'T fF 117 OU WHIZZ e 3 A BIT Too SWiFTLy 7 FLITTING “~ THESE-MODERN 4 FASTUS ARE TURNPIKES DO TEMPT A MAN TO"EST HIS WINGS — HAK-KAFF/ +> BOARDING HOUSE ALL GREAK- “IN FACT HE'S JUST IMPORTANT GUY -By Ernie Bushmiller AUNT FRITZI--- I JUST HAD A DREAM ABOUT THE ATOM BOMB ete eee ee we -— ee ee | HE OLD BOUNCER . i== = ee gag -SUSTHIT 44= QUT OUR WAY . I WOULDN'T OF IF YOU HAD ANYTHING ) 777/ ‘. MINDED MUCH, TO DO WITH TYING : BUT TYIN’ MY THEIR CLOTHES, GET \//f, ; SHOE STRINGS OUT THERE AND UN- |7 ’ WAS SUCHA / TiE THEM AND stop //q ‘ LOWDOWN THAT PICKETING = | tem vsenon BORNSTHIRTY YEARS TOO SOON JRWILLIAMS 6-25 1) 1957 by NEA Serving, toe, DIXIE DUGAN Sa a i\ i ee oS HALF ACRE CASTLE — ON ACCOUNT OF “WHY ARE CRYING ? tHe FALL-OUT / ~ SS ( ’ ~ - bal aster ama: meee ee Re Se ee | BAA doe ON 7. *, * * @ a. ail rf ) : ; a CEL ATe cA Service, Ine. a ~= ‘ WES BEGWNIWWSG F AOD I'D OTT SOOR TART SOO DEPARTMENT TARE & RODWNEN. VLEQDE OF ABSENCE, % ROYGG.ES... 7, ~*~ : 4 "4 Gea N~\ @o-2sS 1967 by NEA tne. T.M. U.S. Pet. and Strieber NDMA Wao % COSTING YOU TO HAVE |} FAMILY TREE LOOKEO UP 7 YOU MEAN THAT 16 ALL ITS Y ALL HE YOUR ] ASKED! kideisy as rata a WATCH-OUT-FOR-THE-SNAKE!” \ : > ' ae i Ve K Wi ls eet ye ‘\ mh | ' 4 , \ 1 + ; \ i \ , es ‘ ¢ i id } ‘ < i av } i RRB i | po 3 j i 4 : i i " oe { ~ Grain Develops. CHICAGO W—A lower trend de-|2c#lly en ‘veloped in grain futures in early|P#rmer Board of Trade dealings today aft- ont CES er-two sessions of good rallies. Wheat and corn were off on sell- ing caused partly by a return to clear weather in the growing)1, 2 areas. Oats showed an easy tone in sympathy, : Soybeans dropped due to indica- of a large crop, government Sales and trade belief farm-stocks!bchs. Leeks Nt will be moving to market before . unchanged to % higher, July 65%; rye was % to % down, July $123; soybeans were % to % lower, J $2.33%; and lard was unchang to 15 cents a hundred pounds|1.0e1 higher, July $12.92. ~Grein Prices ___ CHICAGO GRAIN ae June 25—(AP)—Open to- 1 Wheat (old) Oats— duly | ...... 2.07% July se Sept. — sasae 11% Sept. . .... 66% Dec. 1105. 2:17 Bept. . 1... 124% March . ,.. 2.17% Dec. ....... May . ...0. 2.12% wares « ess 1.33 y. Corn— July. sssee 1.28% Lard— Bept, . seocs 1.31% July . ...... 13.07 « esses 1.25% Sept. . ....06 13.50, Dec. March . ... 1.30% Oct. . ...0. 13.20 1.33% Yo2 evens News in Brief William E. Stevenson, 24, of 2822. Leach St., paid a $10 fine instead of} one day in jail Saturday after he changed his plea from innocent to guilty before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan when ac- cused of running a red light June 15 and causing an auto accident in which the complainant, Geneva M. Crosby of 563 DeSota Place, re- 3 ceived a minor back injury. The reckless driving charge against Ralph Rizzuto, 28, of 170 Elm St., was reduced to speeding by Municipal Judge Cecil B. Mc- Callum yesterday and the accused paid a $25 fine instead of five days) in jail. ” Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCal- lum has found Val F. Theschbirck, 51, of 803 Oakland Ave., innocent larceny filed against hiri by Thur man Milton Jr. of 276 S. Blvd. W. Rummage Sale Thurs. Cor. of Indianwood and N. Baldwin. Adv. OF PUBLIC SALE On June 38, 1957 at 10:30 am. undet- signed will sell at public sale for cash, Lo Apt paca Serial No. 12497919, Vehicle is stored and at said address, mae Se tnevortet et cases Arrivals 2; ts 632; ETROJT PRODUCE lowing ope po! uce L Sed be ag, hs . » 3.00-3.50 % bu. - a % we + 3.00-3.50 8-lb. . bas: 00-1.25 doz. behs. “GREENS: Cabbage, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. Collard, No, 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Kale, No. }, 7 bu. Mustard, bu. Sorrel, No. 1, le u. Lettuce, Bibb, No. et. Lettuce, Boston, No. 1 Lettuce, tuce, ‘Rom: EGGS: Large, 11.00: Medium, °*9.50-10.00; DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, June 25 (AP)—Eggs, f. 0 .b. included, » Wtd. avg. 35, Commercially graded: Grade A, CHICAGO POTATOES June 9° tailed losses. ‘omatoes, hothouse, 1.00-1.50 bu. Spinach, 5 bu. Turnips, No. 1, sm. extra large 31-35; “e-34; medium 28-29. Grade B, track slightly slow; market slightly w Teported; new: Arrivals 94: track 411; supplies liberal; demand moderate. stronger; Long Whites 3.25-3.60; California Reds 3.60-3.75. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS June Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady; re- cetpts 1.490.000; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 59; 92 A 59. 90) 5642; 889 C 55; cars 90 B 57; 89 C 5514 Eggs barely steady: wholesale buying prices unchanged. 65 per cent or better A white ; Standa.ds 28; dirties 2543; checks 25; current receipts 26%. Market Enters * * * .| What as the U, 8. sury’s short-term borrowing c: de- clined from the 24-year * reached last week, trend. * *. * sey). er trend. x * * New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) Huron, Pontiac, Michigan./higher; vealers choice 4 sale rf July 1, 1087, at 223 Main Street, Rochester, Michigan, at 1:30 p.m. i (Advertisement) (i Mill the door be open? Let’s hope so! . When your bright young son is 18, let’s hope ra gd Aan Sh by the college of his choice. Let's hope his four years there are truly golden years, that he grad- uates cum laude, and makes his mark on the world he’s now pre- e..- . Sure, let’s hope. But let’s also face facts. : 2 The pressure of college appli- |>* eations is mounting fast. It’s ex- pected to double by 1967. Our — and ig aeagtoonags = do- ng best, ley are ham- pered by lack of funds. Not onl expanded facilities are need but more: and better-paid profes- sors and instructors to maintain high scholastic ‘ nless something is done about it, your intelligent young son = not get into any college. ~ or the sake of your children and the future of your country, help the colleges and universities of your choice— now Published as a public service by The Pontiac Press in cooperation with The. Advertising Council and the Newspaper Advertising Execu- tives Association. few sales choice 28.00; utility and stan Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK A CHICAGO, June 2% (AP)—Saiable hogs | 8,000; slow earl , later trade moderacely to 25 lower on butchers; decline on weights below 240 Ib.; esti- mated 40 per cent receipts sows; these steady to 25 lower; only fair shipping demand; No. 2-3 190-230 Ib. 19.50-20.00; few.lots No. 3 down to 19.35; several] lots mostly 1-2 200-220 Ib. of the May 9 charge of simple 3035 115; few head 275-300 Ib. _ 425-550 Ib Salable cattle 7.500; calves 200: prime| Borg Warn .. all weights and choice over 1250°Ib. steers Briggs MI ... st@ady; all other weights and grades Brist ot nce) moderately active, steady to 25 higher;;Brun Balke .. other slaughter cattle also steady to 25 Budd Co .... steady; no earl Jonds of prime 1200-1375 Ib. 25.50-2659.,CmpCS _—B.. few loads mixed choice and prime steers Camp Soup .. 24.50-25.00; bulk good and choice 21.25- 24.25; few standard steers 18 50-2050,/Cdn Pac 4 heifers ut. ity and commercial cows 14.00-16.06 most canners and cutters 11.50-14.78; | © utility and commercial bulls 16 75-16.75.\Cater Trac .. June 24, 25, 87./ good and choice vealers light culls as low as 10.00. p 500; spring lambs strong to 50 higher; old crop lambs and year-| slaughter ewes abseen: and choice spring 5 se ast average choice 770 Ib. fed >; most : ‘ost good utility and standard 14.50-15.50; canners and cutters) byes utiity and commercial bulls! Calves—Salable 250. Very slow. Few sales. Steady to weak demand. Narrow and prime vealers 25 00- | o a, choice 20.00-24.00; | im erades 15.00-20 00. A a 200. Market not estab- few IVESTOCK -| Deere heifers | Pirestone «.-0¢ 93.4 Ot Food Mach <9 . Std O11 Oh .. Freept Sul {111 Stud Pack . Freuh Tra’... 17.4 Sun '4Otl Gardner Den 42.4 Suther Pap .. Gerber Food 85.5 Swift & Co ‘ 9. Rocks Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT; June -25 {AP)—Prices paid pound f.0.b. Detroit ‘f G quality live poultry up to 10 a.m. Heavy type hens 18-20: Neht type 12- 13. Heavy type broilers (21-3 Tbs): whites 24-2": bad cn 24-25: Barred nonetes (5-6 Ibs.) 28%. Ducklings 29-31. . ° Breeder turkeys: Heavy type hens 19- 22; heavy type tome 18-20. Heavy type young hen turkeys 25. Market about steady, Supplies ample on all classes of poultry. caponettes slow in clearing. Overall de- mand moderate and critical of sizes Prices on white variable depending on state nf oriein. |f Young hen turkeys tn fair demand. CHICAGO POULTRY % CHICAGO, June 25 (AP\—Live poultry steady; yesterday 70,000 Ibs.: wholesste buying prices unchanged: heavy hens 14- 16; light Fens 12-13%; ald ronstore 12-13: le — 4% Ibs. 25-25'4; over Round aqmiral , ... 112 Int Shoe .... 3 |Air Red ..,.. 59 Int Tel & Tel 3* Allied Sh .... 865 Jacobs ....... Allied Strs .. 462 Johns Man . Allis Chal .., 34 Jones 3 L Alum Ltd .... 48.3 Kelsey Hay .. Alcoa. . 05 Kennecott Am Airlin’... 192 Kimb Clk ._.. 6 , 88 Am News.... 30 Loew jAm Seating .. 26.4 Lorillard Am Smelt... Lou & Nash .. Am Tel & Tel 172.6 Mack Trk ... Am Tob ..... 112 May D Strs .. m Viscose .. au McGraw H Atchison . . 233 Minn M&M .. |Atl Cst Line, 464 winn P&L .., aeiee eS ens ee as Monsan Ch .. -09- | Aveo Pi wec E Ward ie) Beed lean 1, i: No. 2-3 Balt & Oh .. as mace Wheel i 19.60; weights over 260 Bendix Av ... 58 ib. scarce; few No. 3 325-375 Ib. 16.75- neers 18.00, Jarger lots mixed sows 16.00-17.25, |Benquet . .., 13 Mueller Br ... Trades 330-425 Ib | Beth Steel .. 48 Murray Cp... 27 ts 300-320 Ib.|/Boeing Air .. 44 Nat Bisc ... 18.00,/Bohn Alum .. 2f Nat Cash R .. . 14.75-16.00; Uttle below Bond Strs .. 16.1 wat Dairy ... | Borden -- 61.2 Nat Gyps ..... Na Pew z ze 9 5 - 8 > Nia M Pw | Nort & Weat -l No Am A¥ and B -roughs . .. 4S Nor Pac . several Calum & H 4 Nor Sta Pw... Nwst Airlin ... 7 Qhie Ol ...... Can Dry .... : Owens Cn e |Capital Airl .. 7 eee a) ee Carrier Cp .. 7 Case JI Cav 4 Panh Ep! ..... Param Pict Parke Da £04230 SF 1 Swe we SEsseeuensseeycetIseseges Cen Il Ps .. 6 rke Boog 18.00-33.00; few / co, @ Oh |. 611 Penney, JC... | Chrysler 7 Pa Sees | Cities Sve .... 2 Pepsi Cola .. Clark Equip .. Pfizer I : owned D Cluett Pea , co. prime 100/ Coca Cola ....103.4 Philip M Colg Palm Phill Pe Col Brd A .... 31.5 Cc : 3 1 settee Roval ut 3 6 6 3 2 6 j 4 Safeway St a / 7 5 1 6 3 peers Se 35 = looker eos 33.4 ' . Tl Cent ..... 88.2 weer Se Tel Indust Ray, .. 28.1 Westg A Bk .. Ing Rand ... 81.2 Weste El ... en = ve 66 “a nepir Cop ., 43.4 1 ; Interlak Ir .. 28 Wonreun ee : the, leas chai Brooklvn Police Nab Bold Check Stealer NEW YORK (P—An embarrass- ing mystery at Brooklyn police ers was solved yester- . x * For eight months a thief had been stealing paychecks out from|2o™e" nder the noses of detectives andjThe jpatrolmen, The thefts totaled $885. \Toitke efi 0 Edison Co.,.......134 134.13 Wayne 8. Products Co". uh 16 ice phen P. Kennedv's own special’. sven _isquad moved in! ‘Yesterday head- announced the arrest of a civilipn | porter. = fu John Russo, who headquart Net change ..... +2 oon today .....269.2 123.8 3 v. day .,....967.2 122.7 173 Week ago ......2745 125.2 76 Month ago ,,..266.7 1245 7 Year ago ..000.2586 141.0 72 1957 high ..,...278.6 1347 7 1957 low ......240.6 118.4 12. 1956 high ..,,..276.3 155.1 6. 1956 low ...... 244.0 126.2 @9. ‘a mre ye lost the -money- Grah Paige .. 14 U" Pac. .... Gt No Ry ... 43.6 Dnt Air Lin . AVERAGES STOCK NEW YORK—(Compiled by the As- sociated Press): DETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nephier Co.) Figures after decimal points are eighths High’ Low Allen Elec. & ~ CB... A jBaavian Habbo see ats Ross. Mo ehees es 4 62 “No sale; bid and asked. NEW: YORK (®—The stock mar- ket moved to the upside in moder- ate trading early today. Leading issues advanced from fractions to around a point. After an active opening the pace x .*®% * slowed. The market was recover- Ning from five successive daily set- backs and continuing the rally- ing trend of late yesterday which Street's renewed concern about tight money was relieved some- retreat they have made recently); and were about the best of thela groups. Chemicals also rallied. Most steels were on the upside,'street to .|but Lukens was down more than| Residents ofthe area were pres- “ja point on profit-taking® after its recent run-up against the market Royal Dutch rose more than a _U, S, Steel, Bethlehem and Re- public Steel showed a slightly high- Du Pont climbed more than a point. Good fractional] advances iwere made by American Cyan- airid, Allied Chemical and Dow. township. 19.2 i) Anaconda .. Mead Cp .... 108.3) 916 25.6 Rex Drug .... Reyn Met ... Rey Tob B... Rock Spe ..... 28.5 ;: #!Into Sea of Flame ermee 5 faaile ¢ > van ae ani s ezaun8 — > te & = oH st 0 15 (15 60 andust. Rails Util. Stock: 42.0 41.1 + BOs oe bs ew THE PONTIAC PRESS: Tr Waterford Reverses Lot Zoning Decision Waterford Township Board mem- bers reversed their decision at last night’s regular meeting onthe re- zoning of lot 18, located on Wil- liams Lake road at Maceday drive. corner. p down a recommendation of the township beard and the Oakland County Planning Commission to rezone the land from residential to commercial. _ Oils staged a comeback from the beech School will be opened Residents had presented peti- tions objecting to the trucks and the issue had been tabled twice before last night’s action. The request for the change was made by the J. H. Hyman Con-' struction Co., represented by Jerry Anderson. He presented plans for 0 erase that session’s|the building of a drugstore on that 4" Tesidents must buy the signs. and reeemmendation: Josephine street area requested that. stop. signs. be posted to-slow down a “speedway” which has developed on their street between Voorheis road and West Huro street. MUST BUY SIGNS Johnson told them that the town- ship pays the installation charge survey must be made by the Oakland County Road Commission before action can be taken, he said. * * * The board rejected the original request on the grounds that the _A hearing date was set by the board for July 3 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. regarding proposed street UESDAY JUNE 25, 1957 (For Supreme Court Germany Sees Return of Jews _ DUESSELDORF, Germany (R— The Jong way back {s‘slow and often painful, but the Jews are returning to Germany. : Net in great numbers, for to ‘many Jews the very name of) Germany remains an object of, hatred. They recall that the Nazis killed 442 million Jews in. the early 40s. Of that number, 180,000 were German Jews. * * * : In this beautiful city on the Rhine, the German Jews have set lighting for Bird Island, located in Lake Oakland. The board will meet with the the street in the fall and c hazard might be created with children crossing the busy ent to protest the zoning change; however, Trustee Charles Pappas pointed out, “‘We should encourage new business in the area.” All board members voted ‘for the point and Gulf Oil a major frac-|change, except Clerk James tion, Other gainers were Texas/|Seeterlin. ~N Co, and Standard Oil (New Jer- OWNS PROPERTY Anderson said that Hyman now owns the property and plans and specifications will be drawn up for the construction of the drugstore. Other business covered by the board included approval of a re- quest from an ice cream company| to operate a second truck in the July 2 Date Scheduled A request from Fire Chief Ed- 53 ward Smith to send two men to ination July 2 on first degree mur- ** $63 the Ann Arbor firemen’s school ' der charges in thé mutilation slay- this week was approved by the ing of 6-year-old Mary de Caussin. re 4t4 board. . * * * .. 76 A group of residents from the 5 f 63.5 40.5 "s “ 5 S ; < Am Rad .... 14.7 Lone 8. com 1 Alaska Natives 804 ; / #8 See Wonders 5.6 383 of Civilization FAIRBANKS, Alaska (—Allen Alowa, 17, a first-class Boy Scout 38.2 from Savoonga, on St. Lawrence -: }$3 Island in the middle of the Bering . 473 Sea, saw his first tree, first cow ‘ and first horse here last week-; O'Brien ordered the warrant shortly after Turner, in a state- ment to police, admitted attacking the Ecorse Township gir] when she came into the store where he 3! The youth is one of 23 boys worked, four blocks from her 2 end S| Alowa also had his first ice 41.4 cream‘cone and first automobile “*''32.7 Tide. people to decide on the question and hear objections for the crea- tion of a special assessment dis- trict for defraying costs of light- ing on the island. The Detroit Edison Co. has made recommendations to the board for installation of lights for lots 115 to 140 in subdivision 1 on the island. . - Mary's Attacker fo Be Examined After Arraignment of Turner in Slaying DETROIT — Convicted rapist Lawrence R. Turner faces exam- The 50-year-old Turner, who was Prison last January after serving raigned on the charge yesterday 'before Ecorse Township Justice Donald C. ‘Neitzel. Turner broke into sobs but made no answer when Neitzel asked him how he pleaded and a plea of innocent was entered for him, The first degree murder warrant. was issued by Wayne County Prosecutor Gerald K. O’- Brien, ‘ 2 from the midnight sun district go- home. -- 472 ing to the Boy Scout Jamboree at 143 Valley Forge, Pa. 402 xis * “") 594 Ovens I Gi: $4/ To reach Fairbanks, Alowa Pan AW Air’. {52 traveled 40 miles by skin boat 50.4 Pilleby Mills .. 04 with the 22 other midnight sun | Jackie Cooper _ | Living Cost Rises for 9th Month in Row | 1 ae ~ Saw ee Pict mo”. a4(scouts for Seattle. They are due 61 4'in Seattle June 29. ae “Gas Turns Yard Pomt ......192 @inclair ... ++. 63.7/ as a sliver of flame turned a pro- East Air L . 0.4) East Kod 4 42. | pane storage yard into a sea of ‘El Auto L .... 36 : y one | Ei @ Mus .°., y Rd .j. 23 fire. hettars {Erte RRL... Ee ang x *« * Ex-Cell-O .... .. 55.5! ‘| Pairb Mor .... 48 -. 832) Firemen said propane from a Gen Bax ..... ¢ Sylv E) Pd ‘: 496 trailer into the tank. Two hundred Gen Dynam . 60.3 sere oul | ao ei feet away the trickle caught fire. 2 vo. 67.5 Tex G Bul .. 275 on Fae phe habe ....13%/ The flame raced back to the pea roars ne Time R Bear $13 truck and tafik, which burst into Gen .. 405 Tran W Air 3.4/fire with a roar heard five miles en ga.q Trangamer , 5 Gillette...” . 39.4 went Cen away. Goodric Ba) Mate be oe *| Vannatta fled as flames spurted U c :7/50 feet into the air behind him. He escaped unhurt. x oe *& fore: the blaze slackened. * * * VAN NUYS, Calif. —A truck! driver ran for his life last night aky valve trickled fro ma big = 8 § ball-shaped storage tank as Bob 97.4) Vannatta, 40, poured the liquid 416 petroleum gas from his truck- | mutilated body was found lyi ‘in a burlap bag and mutilated it released from Southern Michigan 15 years for rape, was ar- up a council whose basic job is to help the returning fugitives settle comfortably into. new homes. The man who runs the council WASHINGTON — A proposed 1 constitutional amendment which Flow Back Isn’t Large; would make Supreme Court jus- Many Still Remember tices subject to Senate approval = 2 A 6 — 4 : a =e World War Il Atrocities every four years was protested by Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn) today. He said it would inject polities into the court's deliberations. The amendment was introduced late yesterday by Sen. Eastland (D-Miss), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Sen. Olin D. Johnston (D-SC}, a com- +mittee—_member.._Eastland\ called the move ‘‘an attempt to save form of government.” ’ Almost simultaneously, Repre- sentatives Andrews (D-Ala) and Mason (R-IIl) said they are spon- soring & move to win support among House colleagues to start impeachment proceedings against all the members of the court. “We hope to have at least 100 members of the House either _TWENTY-ONE l md Senate Approval Sought duce individual resolutions of their own,” Andrews. said. ‘““We are get- ting one of the best lawyers in America to prepare an impeach- ment resolution.”” Eastland and Johnston ‘intro- duced their amendment proposal after the Supreme Court yester- — |day set.aside three’ contempt of Congress convictions growing out of investigations of communism by the Senate Internal Security . subcommittee and the House Com- mittee on Un-American Activities. Relations Confab Opens DETROIT # — A series of “shirtsleeve seminars” will be held at Wayne State University Aug. 19- 30 at the annual Human Relations Workshop. Participants, ifricluding social workers, educators, upion and business le sponsor the resolution or intro- discuss easing of racial, religious and cultural tensions. is a.lawyer from Berlin, Dr. Hen- drik van Dam. He fled Germany| during the reign of terror and re-| turned A_decade ago. 7 “The' people who come back. should have no feeling of resent-| ment, nor should they have. any, pro-German sentimentality,’ says, Dr. van Dam. NO PLACE FOR THEM | “Jews with such sentiments can. live peacefully outside Germany, but there is no place for them here.”’. He says the present-day Jewish’ population of Germany is about 30,000, of whom some 2,500 live in Communist East Germany. This is a handful compared to. the bustling, influential Jewish community of 600,000 in Germany ‘before the rise of Hitler. Last year alone, he reports, the: number of Jews in Germany in-| creased by 2,000. The larger pro- portion of the returnees came from Israel, where they found their economic opportunities re- stricted. Van Dam says the Jews now. living in Germany have been as- similated quietly and peaceably into the German community. He was lavish in his praise of the Bonn government's role in easing | their return. | Each returning. Jew receives a minimum of 6,000 marks ($1,500) | in compensation from the federal and other real property KEEP GRIM REMINDERS As a reminder to the German people that “it must never happen gas chambers and execution grounds. Mary’s disappearance June -12, ‘prompted an intensive search. Her it is everywhere else. There is a anti-Semitism vigorously. . 4 “The great majority is indif-' ferent.” Denies Racing Police at 145 HOLLYWOOD «—Jackie Coop- er denies that he ran the tires speeding 145 m.p.h. in his Ger- man-made sports car. The actor, stopped Saturday at a roadblock about three miles north of the desert community of Mojave, was cited for reckless driving and speeding. © * * * Cooper said yesterday that while driving baek to Hollywood with his son John, 10, from a fish- ing trip near Bishop he may have “hit about 100 m.p.h. on an open stretch of the road.” The highway patrol reported Firemen said propane from a second storage tank apparently fed the fire through pipelines. It was more than half an hour be- Seventy firemen from a dozen companies kept the flames from spreading to adjacent sfructures. Firemen were unable to deter- mine what touched off the trickle over 100 m.p.h., dropped out of the chase because of tire trouble. Cooper gave this account: While breezing along in his sleek Mercedes-Benz he passed a patrol car going in the opposite direction. By the time the car turned around and gave chase, he had stopped for a soft drink at a roadside cafe. . * * The officer, not seeing him, ap- parently radioed ahead and had a roadblock set up. “When I got to the roadblock of escaping propane. It could have been a cigarette, they said. they asked me what had delayed me,” the actor said. off two highway patrol cars whil e (cost of living rose to a new high that two patrol cars, doing well, Do You Own Stocks? Seasoned investors know the solid investment value of - owning. good common stocks over the long pull. How- ever, to minimize the risk that is necessarily assumed in . owning securities, experienced investors review their holdings periodically. If you are in need of investment information, coll us at FEderal 4-2895. You can be sure your request for help will receive our courteous and thoughtful attention. WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Members New York Stock Exchonge ond Other leeding Exchanges % PONTIAC: 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg.—FEderal 4-2895 DETROIT: 3rd Floor Ford Building—WOodward 2-5525 government. Additionally he is. Forty Years of Serving Michigan investors © 1936 repaid for losses to real estate, 714 Community Nat’l Bank Bldg. Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt again,” the Gemany government) has seen to it that the scene of the darkest hour of German his- tory—Belsen, Dachau and the oth-. ers — remain standing as ‘testi-| monials. These former death camps for millions of Jews stand, in al] their grimness, with their) “There is anti-Semitism every- ng in| Where,’’ Van Dam said. ‘In Ger- a wooded area near her home the ™any, anti-Semitism today is as, Homeowners’ Policies Accident Insurance Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance Burglary Insurance’ Tenants’ Policies Donald E. Hansen Res. FE 2-5513 Fire Insurance Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Bonds—All Types “NO MAN IS FIT TO COMMAND ANOTHER THAT CANNOT COMMAND HIMSELF.” —William Penn, 1669 WASHINGTON (INS) — The gov-. err.ment reported today that the, in May for the ninth consecutive month. The consumer price index for May was 119.6 per cent of the 1947- 49 average, an increase of three- tenths of one per cent over the pre- vious month and 3.6 per cent over a year ago. : | The Labor Department's bureau | of labor statistics pointed out that, consumer prices have declined. only once in the past 15 months — in August of last year. Commissioner Ewan Clague told a news conference there are indi- | This Year —Get Boat and Motor | PROTECTION For a Few Pennies Per Day! Call us now for informa- tion on how to protect your boat and motors for a very small amount of +H. W. HUTTENLOGHER Agency H. W. Huttenlocker 318 Riker Bldg. cations of an additional .increase | Max E. Kerns FE 4-1551 in June with a possible leveling off in July and another downturn in August Do You Own Lazy Dollars? Summer Enrollment - at U. of M. Hits 7,304 ANN ARBOR ( — Summer en- rollment at the University of Mich-| igan totaled 7,304 students as classes opened yesterday . N. Edd Miller, assistant summer | session director, said he expected | the final enrollment to total more than 10,000. The opening day figure | is almost 700 more than last year. $| A statewide probe of justice courts, aimed at streamlining pro- cedure, will occupy the attention of the annua] Michigan Justice of Peace Assn. convention today “At Anbther workshop, Gordon || Pageau, | Oakland nty’s new request. | justice court probation —_ talk “about : eeu probation officer specifically as- tion-on the paper - work procedures developed for Oakland County jus- tice courts over the past six years. REPORTS MANDATORY justide \Court reports, such\as Oak- IN and” \janolstony, a over the state. ' t Ae . fe if \' Tertien says the Oakland 'the Peace ‘State Justices Seek Betfer Methods: only county in Michigan to have a signed to justice court cases. The county sought and won legislation setting up the office, and although other counties have not provided for the post, many ‘ate anxiots to do so, according to Gerald A. Terrien, Oakland County Justice Court Coordinator. “Terrien will address the conven- \ ation this spring. makes of auditing “justice -court books Put them to work by investing in “SHARES OF AMERICA” These Common Stocks Yield 4% or More *Based on current price and indicated dividend. INTERNATIONAL TEL. & TEL. COLUMBIA GAS SYSTEM GENERAL MOTORS CORP. REYNOLDS TOBACCO “B” For More Information Without Obligation—Call C. J. Nephler Co. 818 Community National Bank Bldg. FE,/2-9119 CONSUMERS POWER CO. DETROIT EDISON CO. HOURS: 8:30 to 4:30 County method is more efficient and concise, easily providing | copies of convictions to the | County Clerk, Board of Auditors, | Probation Officer and Secretary | of State. It is expected by Terrien that, the convention will recommend that justices model their reports on Oakland's system, / , ‘The state law also makes .man-; datory the Oakland County practice na i em enn teen a within the county, amet of by the state. OY Justice Allen C, Ingle, of Farm Capital Wanted *25,000 | * To be used to purchase established com- mercial printing plant in Florida. | This. loan, which will be repaid at $100 per week ‘for 10 years, in order to give a _ return, on investment. \{f -inte | dy for immediate ac , Box 1396, Sanford, Flor business will be H | S. TUESDAY, wun» 25, 1957. = be Pn , - ; : Sane Gm Heads MA ve | ae) . = ) sae EI Tae Tes | | Le CLERK : Donelson-Jobns = Eo _ AIRLINES NEED YOU. pom! our ad under of ipetrueiens 4, ARE ¥ ATISFIED WITH’ —_— , pines, Would you e to add $30 wd +e ‘a week to ROMEO —~ . Plans for the 25ththe list of committee chairmen|traditional three-day 5 annual Peach Festi celebration}. — val celebration, eezin last night by the Fes rr ae cores sree sched- ‘dies Apple Drive 7 aA Sere: Coveutry u or p.m ug. 6 in the . sustom to. Be Started Thursday | ari “ oust re etl Me : to be held ee oe Labor Day |tiva weekend, are well under way with] Next event _leadin, ~in West Bloomfield | / FUNERAL HOME | of Teniiiting interested? — fe ' ea Care puna Met BAR MAID, 6 ave ve, WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-|/ ~~ Cemet if ery Lots 5 Sieady, reliable and’ have. pleas- SP — Acie commies| gre ATG | Seca ub aah SRAUTY. Kg lene EXP. p. PULL | up to the'auditorium of Romeo High School. | for the honor of reigning over the Sashabaw Sels |r rsrewes = Capac, Rochester, Oxford, Lake Clubs will be represented at a spe- = st ay | amp Se Oe) inn Casnane ie cial meeting at $ pm. Thursday| [| BOX REPLIES SEAT, OPERIG® STD son, Armada and Almont. to plan a “buy and use Michigan 4 At 10 a.m. today there FE 43700. a! = eel ” . were at the Press EPER, 75 Brownies, Gil Seous| ye, "ata, al fone commen 7") ha aces | | "EER RR i : i rf . f m _ Bt. m, “to Attend Two Sessions althougl not eligible to enter the : est _5. Seginaw, St. Call after 4 p.m. = It will be held in West Bloom- 8, 10, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, BOOKKEEPER - STENOGRAPHER t 4 Bar D : 8 contest—will be included : field Hall. -4 eae mond for part or il time worl. in re- a ar Ranch as @ member of the queen’s ie _— . Township — . - 4460 West 26, 28; $4, 56, 58, 60, 76, tail Btate qualifications & _ caayl nal Gahisl partial allies MARY J. WILSON Commerce road. ; 71, 82, 83, 84, 97, 99, 161, salary. “apply box IC, ontiac SASHABAW PLAINS — Pians| tival activities. ‘the engagement’ of Mary | _ THe will also by/at least one | 4 Ot US SUS ae have been completed for the first) The peach festival publicity Josephine Wilson to William representative from Wayne _ . ° Girl Scout Day Camp ever to be float, due for completion on Sat- Clyde. Wilson has been an- Sa Countiog, . - < held for the Sashabaw neighbor (oT24Y, Will make its first appedr-| Rounced by her parents, Mr. and | ot the West Bisunfield Cab who | { . "00 Pentioc Prose CASHIER AND ae tease abam neighbor’ ance in Utiea's “Fourth of July] Mrs. Myron J. Wilson of Lapeer. | te earnestly peshing the project. | FOR WANT ADS ; ‘ ce Township,’ 'Parade.” Miss Romeo will ride in| He is the son of Mrs. Clyde. = BOOKKEEPERS The Old Orchard Day Camp" the place of honor in front of | Wilson of Detroit. An August 21 The group will decide upon what DIAL FE 28181 is located on a 38-acre section of giant-sized fan on the float. wedding is planned. part each clib will play during the ini the 4 Bar D Ranch of Mr. and — fall ane ncn From 8 a.m. to.5 p.m. to start training at once. Mrs. K. P. Davidson, 7701 Eston | 4 All errors shoaid be re § | J'xperience not necessary, | Roe 4 Mrs, Dav dice to & Dintriet Patsy Stauffer Wed One item that = ay dis- Frees sirumes te The P y, rman for Northern Oakland cussed concerns the possibility of : other "RE ee ) County Council of Girl/Scouts. The R e a a L k ] d Kiwasis selling apples, instead of bores Fame ee S. 8. KRESGE €®: Peatiae Prete Photo |CA™MPers will also have the use of akeian Ser vice Peanits,.on a special day that is a North Hill THAT’S SOME GAME — J. J. Balser (left) of Gallagher’s Music |* nearby wooded section. used to raise money for a youth dered Yalu valueless through the : ; Store, Pontiac, is offering tickets to the Music Circle production of | Approximately’ 75 Brownies WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — In oc . are, made gobo 35 tions Shopping Center Pajama Game, now showing at the Botsford Inn, Farmington, at a | and Intermediate Scouts are ex- a 3 p.m. ceremony at Lakeland) on abemgregbed of a “good” crop Sajustments will oe siveo 1471 Rochester Road Se ee in return is a pair of old pajamas, | pecfed to attend the camp, which Presbyterian Church: June 15, Rev. apples — meni ' . ere W. E. C. Huthwaite of 527 W. Iroquois takes advantage of the | Will be held/July 9-11 and July Al Kasten united Patsy Ruth Eavward H. Trin, precidest maar aetoneelieeot ane 40: ‘eek offer. The garments will be given to charity. 16-18. / deeudiar and Richart pond Ruth} Michigan Apple Growers and | mente conte rapt” cats oan Hour Week. =e Agnold Getzan and Mrs. marriage. = ——————— aan yy ecies treaties coon Liberal Salary to Start ; Charles Boggs are the directors of Daughter of Mr. paign, Georgene Forbush Wed the cantp, and will have 14 trained scales Tat eye “tel na pe canesiod upto £30 Sm Apply Now: Mrs. Davis ~ ~-teounselors; drawn from the Jead- bride wore a gown with high neck- is hoped that the drive for in- Se . _ Perfor L ers and mothers of the Sashabaw line, fitted bodice, long - resus - of Michigan apples S. S. Kresge Co. m a Pp eer Service Neighborhood, to assist them. perksg to poses ind oe will grow ‘to a point where all CASE WANT AD RATES . / tm addition, a narecry will ‘aor leant. ‘The 5 vel wae Kiwan wanis clubs in the state will Ltece 1-Day %Days ¢Days in Downtown Pontiac LAPEER — Honeymooning in Veda cate and seamestinns io te of pure silk French. illusion secured |"**tctPate in & 1958 campaign. 3h Sn Se Niagara Falls, Washington, D.C. | younger children of the camp by a tiara of pearis and sequins. $ ois ts is and the eastern states are the new counselors. , She carried a hand cascade of Find Long Gone Wallet 1 ch te ae. CASHIER AND | BOOKKEEPERS Mr. and Mrs, Aldred George Van- Activities will iffclude hiking, eS , ¢ je cs 38 Fence ot necessary. 8. 8. Kresge dewarker, who were married in trail blazing, progressive outdoor Attending Incr sister ap maid | JACKSON WP — A wallet re- fi Rochester Ra to hour weet. cooking, lashing, bird studies, bot- ot honor was Doris Stauffer, with [Ported as stolen three years ago Liberal salary to start. Apply from Mrs. William Mogle turned Help Wanted Male 6 psa pee Virginia Smith, Dolores Booth, = & neighbor’ till ¥ Norma Peschel as bridesmaids. a s garden, s with a $100 bill tucked among Te ee en you “Gast posing ory LIABLE any, and a treasure hunt for geo- Oindy — was the flower _ Mrs. Mogle said the wallet pleasant vacation job, at Wil- logical and nature objects. The ate antl Hams Lake. August, Lt. house- * * * last day will be a “Sharing Day” The 8 p.m. candlelight ceremon: 6 ay 7 was cacteseed by Pag Ray. = * a Mey oS = , ot. ; was taken from her home April XSSISTANT MANAGER FOR ONE . keeping, child care, no laundry mond R. Lamb and was witnessed ne activities will serve to|_ Ag Dean Good of Pontiac served 28/14, 1954. When found fiv .e-, ~*~ troriag ‘hoe Live in, pvt. room. Alt. Thurs. rae - wees best man while the guests were bills were. missing. — only five $1) Yatcement mood, sernines. plus | irs, Shapero, UN 337 about guests, termediate Scouts. ~ . seated by Eugene Hubbuck of Pon- ° an, free. Insurance, egy Ve at CLUB OR DINING ROOM WAIT- Mrs. Ross Woodworth is Sasha- tiac, Richard Simmons of Wate: — "a ee esses. Call MU 0.1100. 6738 ater- must have Aber | : Rochester Rd. aceeees is & 1 ——4 Waterford. Lonnie Fischer was the baw Neighborhood Chairman. MRS. RICHARD ny ford and Charles Wilkins also of Death Notices good ret Appr A. a “Beck Mile Must de 3 co. WANTED Alert ‘Men , nr fashioned with hadhes of. lace ring bearer. a , = over satin. The ballerina skirt ( Offi : ] ‘R ° 4| A reception was held in the) "008,270 424na \uustoras ues featured lace panels and tulle ounty 1Cla etires, ‘church parior after which the pair prikered Guapuier al teed ant ded for outside work. Work: Curb Girls over satin. Her elbow length ‘ a left for a trip to Mackinac Island, Lee Boges! dear eranddaughter of iF: Huron, between 10:3 a ue. openings for eure snes the on nae cs ove re but He'll Be Busier, Now |22zoo =o) ELS SEG | “garper—stesby | | Gey gee pap rye agg palo ’ — wate ibe Righaanoa gird Tu. | W000 tke beme poy, PE veut; | {77 ae ord, 5 pearis and sequins. She carried 1 eal The round of applause at the ~~ she will be shipped ‘to BODY MAN FOR AL HANOUTE —WOODWARD AT 8Q. LK. RD. _ & white Bible to which was tied me . . _., -| [Board of Supervisors meeting yes- ° the coggan Funeral Morice ond | OWN TOOLA PLENTY OP | vate Hours te sult Pull or part an orchid with white satin terday was not, Stanley J. Filkins fate Fair Offers, a ee ae WORK. NY 520) age. Hours to suit Pull of pert streamers _mt._& @. VANDEWARKER insists, because he is retiring from OTT Palsgrovs; age 66; beloved. wil for Corstmas season. Send na Tite twide 1s the Ganghtor of far.| pee Mia ies 7 ree shoe $140,000 in Prizes | fe j SeeMeeernowt et | py, BOYS 18.23° | _Pootae prem Borvtuat ™ * . Cou . . a wail, , Wer sel Vike Mares ban ce, SIOTINS CIOCKIen | rant act ae ’ H Bels ‘and. Patiick Lynch Pe: sect a ambuious “sass Growing | _- Phooe wi cso. Adams St. and the bridegroom is Throu h East is the wrong word because he plans An alltime high of $140,000; ¢ay Fomtag ~ le pig) tomar ished BI a 2 ssongsen. EXPERIENCED, NEAT. ONMAR- the son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen / g. ast, 'to be busier than ever for agriculture and livestock iches! Catholic Cherch | with atch Roosevelt 4 to &. Wo phone ee Soe ween. tom ane Vandewarker of Brown City . 21g” ets 7 aie] oY a 8 a Gael iors Grotsemeanl cequses: The m ° Arizona Wilts The Board honored the Sylvan }| miums will be offered at the 1957) etry. ‘Recitation of the’ Rosary Business Machines Mi 44313 between Sand maid of honor was Ann ry “4 Lake man on retirement from Michigan State Fair, General Man- will be at 8 p.m. Tuesday, June Salesmen ¢'p.m_or write Teo Vaughan Rd. ; ue Passa, Roe ages by) By THE ASSOCIATED PREss | "* Jeb of deputy drain commis- ager Donald L. Swanson has an- Home where hrs. Cot Dh ey ‘sy per EXPERIENCED | ——— naa wa knee . ’ Li he 0 ™ s al te Pearce of Lapeer and Nelda Van.| Thunderstorms crackled over Gain * which he has held since — GRAY. JONE 26, 1967. HARVEY AL- fite toe sslecmen. with e, bene: Siien 7: cat MO “Hie Rao dewarker of Brown City. Marga- parts of the East today in a con- Swanson also announced that Pevacsagr eget; eseed oon ot fo = ¢ Iden EXP. WAITRESS FOR DAIRY na Dodi = Htinuation of violent weather in Filkins. associated for many entries for the State Fair, Au- per. ond mre. Prove Geog, be | tise Press Sppoiniment Wor 110, Pow pes Teeet be me Ire Oe ere a «Oe - ba 22 Army reservists were vent, cents Reid pao move- = 30 through September 8, will dear retber of Sones: Lieyd. BUSS SAW. - Sean SAW & TRE ay ee on eatery 0 Be ured a t close Friday — john, Charles, Donald, Dougias or hor. PE | yp Brother of the bride, David Wen-| The onlie eecad for mmore|oge _comumtenion accountant in ae aes iat ar OY | Raton’ Pua serfs wi Ap ORTYERS, Pi aa fie Cass oe zel, was the ringbearer while Alton |blistering heat after a record June |1930. He had previously been a be baud Wednesday, June 26, at 2 "25 of older, FE 3-020 Seely, “Detvete me. 38 Hillman of Brown City performed high 120-degree reading w: UNE! bonding expert for the State High- Premiums have been increased! Pitersi Home with Rev. Law: NCED APPLIANCE Weimes, Monday trough Friday. g was re- by — $9,000 da serviceman OR } , Monday through Friday. the duties of best man. Seating/corded at Yuma, Ariz. Nighttime|”°” Department in Howell, ' uring the past two) fence Dickens stficieting letr- So ee 142 — Ten Pontiac PE 20101. the guests were Frederick For-|temperatures in the desert region BOARD OF AUDITORS vce : farm Seckey Ee fn [state “at the * END Mat TAN PLENTY DF OnE, om Py atic of Onn cl a cm lla ees a Snanem wreed farmers to make] fiewy Rgeacgasr os | Mod eney Tae Erie et weet le) _8 o'clock ‘tonight. i en “the A * * & the Board of Auditors. we: Ye. to avoid the last minute rush and| PETERSON. ONE Tee ib0T, CLARA pe gt a ed fe Pa BABYSITTER ee following the cere-/ A tropical storm began brewing} It's the Boy Scouts that will re- sr to keep from being shut out of| — loved wite of George Mo Peterson: _asT8. “Cull ‘after 3:30 mony, was held in the church par-|in the Gulf of Mexico about 709/Ceive much of Filkins’ attention A the State Fair bec: Gear’ mother of Rev. Msurice. R. GENERAL WANDYWAN, Pant | EXPERIENCED FOOD WATTRESS, lors. The couple will live on a (Miles southwest of Miami and 300 “uring the coming months. A. 2 = << anne ot ee ot gon, Mrs. Vide Brooks, Mo- om ES me se ga ena Gad ns imine used ch eevee oune me | space. In recent years, practically] if" Datteen, i puartst "gee roo ne ge Ae athe NT Exe WATTREAS PART —— Tex. The Weather : II categories have been filled to} sister of Peter Nelson, Harry Nel- © semi-retirea. Apply in person. fuli time. Good hours & good pay: Bureau ordered) Treasurer and member of the, Dallas Apartment Fire —|capacity—many long before the and Mrs. Emme Blanchard. Somnoliy's Jewelers, 16°. Tturon.. phone. cals. Merry-So-Round . ship and air reports to determine|€xecutive board of the Cli : Funeral service will be held INSURANCE GIR | _Restaurast. tot 8, Sagan. SI . e Clinton Val Kill T d deadline for entries. Thursday, June 27, et 2 GIRL NCED COUNTER GIRL ate Hot-Dog Roast its nature. ley Council for the past 15 years, ills Two Aged Men | fromthe Sree Baptist Charen Que perhaps now working but EXPERIENCED COUNTER GIRL The reservists, all from Phila-|Filkins plans to attend with Dr. H. H. Savege officiating. lssatisfied. Can you write and oN eiuce bree to aeiaan ADDISON TOWN: o attend the Na-| DALLAS uw — Tw terment in White Chapel. Mrs. pe fe and auto, take short. ter Bivd. in Birmingham power SHIP — The/delphia and in the 79th Infantry|tional Scout Council in Philadelphia! ), 0 aged men’ A Crying Shame will lie Jn state at the and file? Not over | GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE- Doctor's Committee will hold a/Division, were training in Indian.|Rext month. died today in a three-alarm fire)” 7 2 oo $00 Ri incleke eee pete eee. | Elgin O38 > oo on Saturday at 7:30\town Gap, Pa., military reserva-| Filkins lives with Kis wife at ‘hat destroyed a two-story frame QUINCY, Ill. ow. — Burglars| - Ta 5s. Mees Gt age oF: ie W telee Sree HOUSEKEEPER FOR HOU 68 E- ‘m. for the doctors and their tion. Lightning struck twice near 1474 Benvenue Rd. They have a Tooming house here. An elderly|roke into a downtown drug store SF Ee cease erat Pe SAN WITH UPHOLSTERINO EXP. Sima The public their gun position last night, Their/$°" and a married daughter. woman was critically burned, but|*%d took $122.50 from the cash) fete armas mente ale, epefatign at “plant Milford public has been invited to|injuries were not serious and none : y : register despite the tear gas bomb _Grittin Puner End if you ‘tre wi eo pot Fe et, eee : 5 Gt “thelr ou =a — — She éarried a ce In Memoriam 3 tb ponerse auc + ced a for Pp eral nouse- ; ' Jof achievement and service to e with white carnations IN LOVING MEMORY OF wWIL- us! Bee . childre monicnne . } ne centered nt _ o a+ i. who passed away June wee oustay, Sunday of sara " eety every other : * wert we placed upon your : oe i ~< Alphonse G. Ai of 637 s,|. Mrs. William King ar ot Ann Bia ba May wither nd decay: . Z 3 is yr & =, id , ’ j : ‘ ‘ a y 4 7 mentee Bywood \St., Cla as promot.|Arbor, sister-in-law of bride wae Ree canee a DP ACK A916 " | ee Mi. AND MRS, FRED ~ _— desk sergeant to ‘plain. er matron pf honor, / MRS. GEORGE CARPENTER, Yi | Sever. es ae aes _ PLACE A “LOST AD.” ; SARGEANT thesman with the det .| Mrs. Robert ro: apd soe eats : : seul deeuaian — ese ai nescaagege = ectives ba a ie b Reuter of Commerce church parlor, Mrs. ig chose a since death te shadow east within | Call RE 28181 for'an ad. a brating their 50th wedding aniversary s been with the force a ridesmaid. navy blue lace dress @ cor home: ae eae Goce arepedde Mr, and Mrs. en Sargeant, 5215 N. Rochester Rd., Roch- “: years. David Carpenter served as. best|sage of pink carnations. Mrs. Car- We miss aN “ltrs, Nat to recover a loss. Dial FE : with an open house Sunday at their home. aul W. Carpenter, of-21301 Tele-|tnan for his brother, a groomsman|penter. chose a dress of pink nylon — = “| affair, coming from Lansing, Windsor, waient Dine Southfield Township,|was. Paul Aurey, ‘while William|net with a corsage. \Dewn here ive mourn, but ‘not io | (28181. for . an adawriten ple has one son, George F. and one /uty oe wns seek of tg ae pak Robert Field ated newlyweds will honeymoon| Fer wp tn neayen we \witt meet |/ Cay" “charge ie “1 ey, ith the de t yes ft Northern Michigan. . | \ BAe mtonna nieren, / \| py PA \ o iW partin meals oo For the ine theld in cine a ne OS hie | ua Mind \ \ (oe \ i | » 1 | \ if | 4c , cc} a i Ne | fay Sy \ | ; : x \ x : \ fn he \ A aa t 5 4 a wy oe bo iy \ { \ a i ys ‘ \ oe . ye * aes Wahl i. [oe $ ’ ; : ‘ 1) | | it Lae 9s : : ; Wa ie \ ys : , ‘d Hl ; ; * 2 ss | \ , 1 ; \ al ats . 1 4 ae \ ‘a >¥ : \ ; « \ * f i ; Aik Pe i 4 Be _: \ . a xj) = & THE PONTIAC PRESS. iy UNE 25, 1957 al & Country ‘m280 aa imeree on me Rd. ~ paces “write pendas Press, Box TO TA home & . AAT ood ‘ ence brelerted a. OL i ia OUSE- wort "tor workine - mye Sa aw MIDDLE GED OR ELDER-| no Peed woman in’ ice cot Ng you yo in aaa discuss some of x. a pe! mt of the many interesting jobs avail- * “! ~ REGEPTIONIST KE PRX 25 Pleasant rsonality to meet the | DENTAL ASST $215 Prefers some }i experience to train as tssistant Some typing ry for MESS ly lady. to for jelderiy” lad MAJOR 325 ca MY — MY Selec la crperance or ee WE TR ¥ ~ QUICKLY.| typing. .‘* — aleiy:’ Mall | ee Meroe PENCILS Avon . A pleasant, prof- = Mable. oe og ou. Ca wet) POISED Help. ‘Wanted MEN & a. FULL | OR PART time. sei] Watkins spatenetty ad- No x i vice hacia 8A Book Instructions 9 Siecraical WIRING, LICENSED se) =) 'Ce NE A urray, FE 2-8657 OO k eper aT RTINE> NEED YOU | FLOOR LAYING. eae AND T and women will be selected im- See the Yenow Pages PE 31607, : repeat doe venoms ee attrac- FREE : gh-salarie : hostess, reservationist, comméni- marr he eee Somers 0 cationist, station agent. Enjoy Lacie le - sient reel travel passes. con ‘ in- 4 a Pbelodl ag “mr bookkee & typis ce, etc. Short low-cost train- ~ schoo’ or posaage Wd go i ing can qualify. Must be between |. 3-2516. ence jRuslifies you for ws job in| 17-38, bave high school diploma | PLOOR LAYING, SANDING AND d office. See Miss, 824 apres Personality, Includes | finish old ‘loors a specialty. Gackoea. at CAREER CENTER, special training in personal de-| #E 32-8789 or FE 2-2630 B-l Riker Bldg. PE 8-04 primomet for women. Ges GENERAL SLDG: REPAIR yk dele) egos School of “prick work, cement, plastering. EVELYN» = pose teoe at ee SELLING = one a on refined e. ping and = cnertend are neces- WORK IN PERSONNEL... dep eases of Personne! ® prestige com asked Us to send hi Oca. ihatie with and Sieeea a office * KEEPING BOOKS _... In a small office can be a rhea Leeman ede when the $350 office bas a oe atmos- een and “charming that thie” one does. Bookeepers take notice, EXEC. SECRETARY $4 Here is an immediate op- Lote ‘or a real career yeah Pah doing. Heavy skills are re- quired plus a dynamic r sonality. This !s a real chal- lenge re qualified person. You Men Are Always Right... BUT ARE YOU ON THE RIGHT TRACK? RESTIOE SALEs ives: SISt A Nationa! office equip- ment company that rey the reputation for being a won- derful place to work asked us to send agra ea young on who will train Products — All benefits, TRAIN TO TRAVEL . A National company is jlook- ing for young men 23-30 who are sharp and aceree- sive to train from the bot- tom up in their sales pro- gram. This ieads to a per- manent career that will take you traveling around ood State All expenses paid. $400 MATURE MEN .. SALARY OPEN ak small insurance firm ts pape dian mature dignified men do public contact and s on a high level. This is not just an ordinary sales * sh ops e hours aid an e com foadea with pesetigerany ACCOUNTING DEGREE =~ qutomotive concern — $650 ants a level sit an se deg associa’ ted ry its Gaui Accounting Dep" . This is the perfect se .for the man on his way up. EVELYN EDWARDS IN ROYAL OAK IT's 306 Main Professional Bidg. LINCOLN 64400 IN PONTIAC IT's 602 Community Bank Bidg. FEDERAL 4-0584 $300 _ en i to sel) hele presage iY | | To take light dictation from the firm's fair haired boy. MIDWEST PONTIAC'S OLDEST ; FE 5-0227 —46 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. LEARN TO DRIVE: aes BANE | habe AT “SAFE- 8 shh DRIVER ING 8CH ' Bus i 2-2253, eee FE _ 8-1645 LEARN WELDING NOW! BIG demand in well-paid Tidustries. Spare time trainng in Heliarc, Gas, Are Weldi pre res you quickly. Write-ttilities Inst:, Box 14, Care Pontiac Press. nt too larg too Tee estimates FE COLLEGE STUDENT housepainting, FE 5-316. EX-SERVICE MAN WITH 3 | college wou'e like work pha | kind. Fg 2-7959. 'HOUSEPAINTING WTD. -f lege student Experien _sonable. PE 2-3664 4 SARPENTRY 2} . bnew & kitchens a spec porch enclosures. F \MASON x» » YRS. repayy, Formica Jalousie WORK, § | S008 and | — _time work. , Work Wanted F Female il \{7:YEAR-OLD GIRL WANTS “BA bysitting, will live in. Call afte: _ 6: p.m n. FE i? YR OLD GIRL ‘DESIRES BA- bysitting 5 days 9 week. FE $3 A BUSHEL. aa | service, FE Las erences: IRONINGS 1 day ae TRORINGE, GOOD WORK’ & seterenees Pick up & delivery. s done FE 4-2965. ALL TROeG ONE PIECE OR one load, 1 day service. FE 4-3841, “i KIND OF HOU8EWORKERS. cava SITTING & LIGHT HOUSBE- work Teenager. oo home DA\ WORK WTD. BY DAY OR _week FE 2-104) DEPENDABLE HIGH SCHOOL girl wishes sittis full or art time, - area, Dall between 6 & 7, OL 12-1367, EXP, TEENAGER WISHES BABY- gitting in Rochester-Pontiac. area. first aid, OL 6-1407. = * BOOKIE ee _part time work. FE_2-5020 GIRL DESIRES SIRES BABYSITTIN NO & _housework OR 3-8838. GIRL WANTS DAY WORK. __Housework FE 8-3093. JIRL 16 YSITTIN: ob days, vic. Union & Coole akes a aa EM _33a30 GIRL WOULD eed ee wn vic, of Dray ty - __ton Plains, On 54078. “HELLO GIRL” RECEPTIONIST $225 {RONING DONE in MY HOME. OL 2-762 RE would like. wendy work or babysitting. _erences, OA Bidg FE 56-0277. PONTIAC JOBS FOR MEN ee sales—car lacie“ vetecheges qasetasaee, he 3 TRAINEE, holga: >a miss’ INEE, peat thon (3212) TRAINEE male steno. (2408) Graebner's “MICHIGAN’S LARGEST” 33 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FD 6-827 tol ) $400 =) MIMEOGRAPHING TYP kes rie k iM 3.2842 sop WASHINGS OF bap sell so WASHINGS & ing _fetarial NEAT Witl. i WASHING. BABY- __Sitting. Reas. 308. SECOND YEAR COLLEGE GIRL desires summer wotk. knowledge of business —- can type - words inute. Dry cleaning counter ‘p. . Ais aoea driver. ae Kimmel, MA _ 6-1179. é car fare Exp & Refer FE | 841. _| CEMENT WORK oF _MU 40563. Milford ___ Building Service . “12 42) BRICK WORK. BRPESES at ALL | 5 .BRIC B 4ND K, BLOCK CEMENT ‘Ef mao ee pe a igi hn nga = ag 3S mepe BUL CBoaINe Rit ae a SEP- tie installation and ais et s08e1 custom eee HEATING installation and repair FE 2- EDENS Lic Contractor. City side- walks & app: es, Drivewa: . Free estimates — Reasonable prices. Ph FE LL KINDS. 3-8654. T & BLOCK _ WORK, FE 5-0782 CEMENT 18 OUR SOCAL. Floors, basements, EM CEMENT WORK sidewalks, basements, garage floors, eap "job too small or too large. Gharanteed work. Phon FE_1-8037. Day or night calls. calls, HOMES - CEMENT driveway .. iM FE 8-22009 or FE 3-9623 DRY WALL TAPING. GUARAN- feeg work. Free estimates. OR ORY WAL” WORK COR, FREE estimates PE! 5-4 GARAGES - rooms, additions & at Sonresuaee satisfaction, T, Traynor, genera! contractor, cali Clarkston MA § 1592. GET OUR BID ON HOU o_ Pr NG—FOUNDATION PIANO LESSONS |. WORK-—GENERAL M Majors in religious music & also_ One ences TEnee TUF beginners. Will come to home D MB TO Mand 2 cles FOS ye ee Joos OED res OR 94 _ Work Wanted Male 10. GUARANTEED ROOFs j—_ ON LN AP nal kinds. Est. 1018, os er 2 MEN DESIRE WORK OF Any | _35.N. Case. PE 23021, l. FE 40227. 0S FLEMING FLOOR be GARPEST IER WORK NEW — — finishing 155 . _rtepair FE 4-4210 aoe AUDITOR—CcOsT OR GENERAL HOUSEMOVING a FULLY accoun F. C. Bookkeeper. | equipped FE ¢-8450_. A. Young. $45, 36. abeeter Pontiac area. OR JACK’S TREE SER E, TRIM- ming & removal, Ly e estimates. AUTOMATION SERVICE & TOOL | _FE_-3063 machine wiring Ed Murray. FE _2-8657 AVAILABLE NOW! CARPENTER & cabinet work New & repair. _D_B Murdock FE 2-7881. BOY 16. DESIRES 8UMMER work of any kind. 1. FE 23-4035." /BOY 18, WANTS | WORK OF (AN) ANY 2 im a ™m 4 > mim MASON CONTRACTOR, JOURNEY- CARPENTRY, NEW & REPAIR. agar hk haconean "Work Guaranwed. C oR} 38748 Fe fireplaces & basement, OR CABINE] MAKER AND CARPE Pex VICE. te: Kitchens « speciality. FE PUD fe, SALES “AND SER 2 _ R. o SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING CARPENTER WORK WTD. NO. ” Phone FE eo oF small. | 8-3400. WAN lawns & odd jobs. rs e sha ng Also mise, tools. business No auteur. st work | 244 Cottage, FE 3-7322. so ai Reliable Painting ‘ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE- airing & rewinding. 218 ©. Pike Anat 2 rING sPAPERHANGING — a PP tae WALLS CLEAN TUPPER wOR _ 37081 Television Service 22 SPD PDA POPP PPP PLL LAPD COPENHAVER’S RADIO '& TV ® Repair, ~~ W.-Huron, Night serv- tee calls, Bay oF SR OLE ka SERVICE 56-1296 or nt 5-8290 GUARANTEED TY REPAIR. ANY ANY +0796 NDON'S RADIO & TV 121 8. FARKE ST & ADDING MA- ge Expert tk. Wo! fi mneral tim , Ponasttn Of ue B8up- EASLEY) CUSTOM 8174 Coole FE| xJou. Pree FURN, UPHO auto, ae fs is at home. _? ae eeimetes “THOM 48. fELEORAPH FE 5-089 SLIPCOVERS. DR & BED- | iMMEDIATE CASH POR Ui- _spreads. Your Jmeterial, FE 5-5797 = and land contracts alge ROOMS & BATH Lost & Found Mie Mone) Witsutotan Lane tive, K. L. Templeton, Realtor modern, nice build ding. washer, 2 yr. OLD GRAY-TELLOW | rE. 2339 Orchard ke Rd. FE 4-4563 ey parking. $20 weekly. FE ™ i = y more & faith. Reward. PE 82340, =" 2D PROPERTIES i ‘ncnn |? ke gAND, BAT 70.10% |. OND: “FOOTBALL, INQUIRE) or more with W00ft frontage. |S RM, PVT_ENTR AND BATH. County Crorks Cities, Court B. D CHARLES '1i7 8. Tel n: ‘lil. Telegraph. FOURD: Jars J COLLIE. CLAIM = agin, Hh a Pgs oan ROOM & 2 ROOM APT” NEAR ad ‘EB 4-082) es. FE 5-8801 Pr esse ping room for 3. ~ ase ec Se HO a ma’ Se — YELLOW wf OVER $1,000,000 RMS. PVT BATH AND ENTR. Tennyson PE 2-1361. ‘| Available to purchase iand con-| Adults. 402 W. Huron, FE YS ON CHAIN Sracts = =tmmetiate so Call 3 ROOMS CLEAN. t errr intial “T', Vie, 8, Saginaw. Re- re, Ph oe | Sed, Sale, welcome. FE Oat ase, < ey * = . : - # WE NEED Aid UPPER APT. CLEAN. UTIL. Land Contracts. Have buyers for va desc contracts or equities. Ask for Mr.|3 RMS. PRIV. ENT. CHil- Mayden at FE posal. No obliga- en e.. PA yp some comes || Bialr Heth} "We. ‘aise East! ‘iseu equitias and’ tana eon os. | FRO Wtd. Children to B censed home FE 5 5-57. + ird 26 26 Oar CARE FOR CHIL REN, “ Wtd. Household/ /Goods 27 Beers eae Ue seh dolla, bu! ', for eee & FURNITURE/NEEDED lots Get the outright or Community | jaié, Phone 3-9717 ' [ | EER FA GLIDER _** = j ROLL furniture. FE 5-73 it ep e A one EEE WANTED, ne “BOY, oi oe paae nib TYPES 2 & furniture MY Sor ANT TO BUY A row boat, for $25 cash 61784, after 8 p. m. Vtd. Miscellaneous — Wanted to Rent | sermacey | meeds 2 or 3 bedroom furn. | references, Call "E 3-0203 5 p.m 29 | call MILE EXECUTIVE | house, before SALARY EMPLOYED. Prefer in city. MY 3-1422. 3 BEDRM | | WANTED * r RENT FURN. ? BED- apt Lp a we or Call FE Me 1017 before 10 | _or after pm c Ww td. ‘Transportation 31 | RIDE TO UNIVERSITY oF "Mich, from Walled Lk & return. | Wed & Fri MA Arket _4-3520. 2 LARGE ROOM, , NICELY FUR- | Wed: Contracts, | Migs. 327 *900,000.00 At our PL to purchase new. ‘and contracts Alar! ears service to a satisfiea clientele See me before ‘ for b Mah of seasoned our clients 71 3 oe o Buy — To Sell n Evenings & Fees - MAHAN REALTY CO. REALTORS Sundays FE 2-0263 “ASH FOR LAND x oy 5. vanwe elt, 4540 Dixie OONTRACTS. Pade ~ VAN W | SCHRAM ill = Josiyn REA $ CASH $ BUYERS WAITING FOR YOUR LAND CON- LTOR CASH boom service to and -lientele. REAL 1704 8. Tele bse Ra. _ WE 49533 IN A FLASH For land contracts, see Au- Ble J : - 20 A. Johnson before you «ell Ev rN. Sepinaw St. P Ph. Pe LET US £id on the sale-of your contract Edw. M. Stout. Realtor 5-165 28 BROKER "WANT TO BUY OLD now ane GODD oS . Pa. | | = = BUY OR SELL 1 wil) personally buy prop erty or will se ft ey a and show you how to get cash if the price is reasonable Cuil and let us prove it RILEY BROKER i FE 41157 TRADES. can nod sperewe tradin, your. e are pecialists in as me : yredes are made to sat- isfy concerned Don't feel ob- ligated. Call us for turther infor- mation, WE TRADE, BUY & SELL DORRIS & SON REALTORS ‘$2 W. Huron 8t - Phone FE 4-1557 LISTINGS WANTED TITIES. Leslie R Middletog burned out of condemned house to repair, anv iocation. Write $ office Box 8@. Royal Oak |WE HAVE QUALIFIED BUYERS waiting for commercial proper- ties. Farms, & Acreage. A phone will give you immediate action. ox : ROY KNAUF 266 W. Huron &t. FE 2-7421 OA &3 ichigan | | | | | 3 erly Apts, Furnished 33, | FURNISHED DUPLEX 1 aes / SROOMS—CLEAN 9 PRIVATE BATH Close to. downtown, FE 42579 or FE 2 2-345. : 3 ROOM AH FLOOR, N _ children. APE S72 5-72 ‘ad _Rent Houses. Unfurn. 36 3 BEDROOM HOME Wire, mS 7 RMS. BATH, ee “ENTR. ALL util: In exchange for wife's part time service in adjoining home. _58 Franklin Blvd. + ROOMS & BATH. WEST Bit SIDE. _eas heat Inquire 96 Dwight — 4 LARGE RMS. CLOSE IN: MOD-' _ern. FE 4-0808._ __ | 4 ROOMS & BATH, UPPER | ty only. Call efter € FE. 4 ROOM. 1 CHILD. IND JPLOOR. _No drinkers 12 Washi 4 ROOMS & BATH. PV a west side. FE 86-6486 ar after 6. FE 5-5322. i ALL MODERN, NEWLY 1 DECOR- rom h & bath, prt. ent. pean es i ge we . oy Have references ond cradle and _ ing option. Call PE 41064. J BEDRM. HOME. ray, REA- able, 9 Maynard Ct, All day . Bunday. ‘4 ROOM HOUSE, CHILDREN EN Werle epme, $40 per month 5, 2685 Orchard Lk. A 5 ROOMS MODERN, GLENWOOD area. Call FE 4-0 4-0722 after 6 p.m. 5 ROOM MODERN, TWO BED-> Foo. house, large living room, fireplace. good residential area. OA 8-2753. A SCENIC COUNTRY setting. Newly remodeled. Auto heat. Large 4 and regret also large §& and ath. GLEAN 3 ROOMS & BATH. | Adults only. Pvt/ Entr. FE 5-2414 | _tage & Osmupi FE ELIZABETH ,LAKE PRIV, _bath & enfr. Adults. FE’ 2 ~ FURNISHED ean 303. _ POR nt, lake privileges, washing & aiden privileges. ‘ol yt _f Sears. PE 8 8- ela He ‘USETRAILER F ede “RENT. 3300 ligabeth Lake Rd. FE 5-3678 ZAROE BASEMENT. ALL MOD. ern. opens out on lake. MY. 3-3002* MODERN 2 BEDROOM. WOTIL: _furn. in town. FE 5-4 _ MODERN FURN = , COM- | merce Lake & Oakley Park 1416. _ Botkins St. off Moranza St, NEWLY DECOR. SMALL APT Only $15 wk. Al) util. included. By the water for cool comfort. _OR _3-4555. NICE UPSTAIRS APT, PVT EN- trance and driveway. 44 E. Chi- eee NICE 3 ROOMS IN PVT. HOME, 4% block from Tel-Huron, garage. Adults only. FE 2-5638. NICE 2 ROOM APT. COUPLE preferred, will rent cheaper for | care of 7 year old child, davs. _Call after 3:30 p.m. FE 2-7829. SMALL. APARTMENT SUITABLE for 1 or 2 »veople. Anply Piper's _Novelty Store Auburn Ave. THREE ROOM, STALL SHOWER, private entrance, $65.00. 518 Or- _chard Lake. FE 23-5997. VERY DESIRABLE. 3 ‘RM, FIRST floor. Pvt. Entr., bath. all war | ie E | 'M | ities furn, $68. No children or ee Near Franklin Blvd. WATERFORD 2 RMS. & BATH, modern, pvt. entr. OR 3-2251_ & WEST SIDE. LOWER 4 ROOMS & __ bath, private entrance. FE 2-5606. Rent nt Apts, Unturnished 34 18T FLOOR, 3 & BATH. NEWLY decorated, reference. FE 2-745. 1 & 2 BEDRM. PARTLY FURN.. Tiled bath, Yr. around. Lake _front apt. 8615 Pontiac Lk. Rd x BDRM APT., INCLUDING stove & refrig, $85 per month See caretaker at 3165 Sashabaw Rd. Drayton Plains ks E _of Dixie Hwy. R_& R Apts, 7 BEDROOM, LOWER APT. ALL util, furn 18 Stout 5t or call _ before 5.30 FE 8-6064 A CHED GARAGE, LARGE LANDSCAPED LOT. FURTHER INFORMATION. PHONE FE_ 5-771. LARGE “HOUSE PARTLY FUR- nished. FE 2-9613. Between 7 and MODERN 3 BEDRM. HOME ON large lot Drayton — area. $90 per, mo. OR 34-5140 RENTAL UNITS Attractive new duplex tal units, Reasonable rent, Loca’ in Pon- tiac on East Bivd.. and Perry 8t. CALL PE 4-7833 UNFURNISHED YEAR AROUND modern 5 room, 2 bdrms. a ment, porchés, lake front, __ +4670, Rent Lake Cottages 36A Perr 2 BDRM FURNISHED COTTAGE Et au Lake. $30 per wk. 3 ROOMS FURNISHED, PVT. EN- trance on Oxbow Lake. 130 Hul- bert St, 1 biock off Elizabeth _lake Rd, A oODERN 3 ROOM COTTAGE n Maceday Lake, aor bath. Available A Sho” ‘ust ine OR AT 3 LA 3 Lagre rE BA aie | Pee. Say sleeps 4. | rit COMPLETELY TOGERHe LAKE front. Sleeps 8 Boat. Weekly 15 miles N. of Pontiac. OR 3-7227. CAS LAKE 8 & 4 RM. APTS. eat und or seasonal. _swimiming Boats, FE 5-3160. ODERN aaa ce LAKE CITY MApile 56-7086 MOTEL CABINS ON PONTIAC Lake. Sandy beach, good fishing, clean, modern, $46 a week, R.& Cabin n Bay, OR 3-039. SMALL PURNISHED CAREPRONT _cottage, $65 month. SUMMER TCOPERGIE FONT eae _Children_weleome. OR 3-413. __ TO SHARE WITH YOUNG CHRIS- - tlan couple, reference, Write Pon- tiac Press Box 65. __ WATKINS LAKEFRONT, C CLEAN, modern, 2? bedroom, Safe beach. OR_3-8058. ; WALLED LAKE, MODERN CONV. Pvt. beach, 2-bedrm. Reas. MAr- ket 4-2203. 00" LAKEFRONT HOME — _ visas Thoms wien Oe" ot, wale: cle! ome w front, Call for appointment. WATER FRONTAGE room garage. pullt in bookcases. Large picture windows. —_— oil heat. Priced at $13,250. 1,000 DIFFERENT HOME PLANS 3 pesremms brick ranch. Full base- ——_ cl 15x16'8"* _ beautiful bri x fi ¢ Cie th See eg Metres wood floors, gor man Offers over nea telly Low down pay- termes. ay E. James 5 Cooley Lk Rd. EM 3-631) Buy Thru Partridge List Thru Partridge 2 BEDRM. AUTO HOT WATER. near Pontiac High & downtown _MYrtle 2-6251. - 2 ROOMS, CLOSE Parke. _FE 2-7198 Se 2 BDRM APT. UPPER GARAGE, heat & hot water furn. 1 small _child welcome, OL 2-4111 00 7 RMS LIGHT roe & GAS, furn, Pvt ent Call FE 4-7500 3 ROOMS AND BATH. | ALL UTIL: | _ ities furnished. FE 4-4526, | 3} ROOMS & KITCHENETTE f FOR rent with hot water, heat & refrig. | _furn FE 805460 7 7 ROOM aND BATH MAILN feo: . Close to downtown Pon- tac, per month. — Realtor Partridge _ bi Jc! E IN, 23 B] cps ___For Rent Rooms RAS 1 | LAROE | ng room, 2 LIGHT HOUSE! 2 GENTLEMEN IN ra ie | _home._ Close in.) gE 2 2-051 446 |2 SLEEPING see =e N. POR | _son. Phone FE 5-240 Bus ae PRIVATE EN Af keepin _ men. Nri Auburn HG |FURN. APT. CLE Also oe get . FE 2-6000 7 MLEEPING RMS, fice available. Cail FE 2-697 a p ROOMS: | STOVE. i REFRIG. Plenty of parking space. agate 57 Mechanic. GLORIA APTS. (ROOMS, 2 BEDRMS. PVT ENT _and | bath. th. 1 chiid. oR 3-1388. Rent Apts. Furnished 33 1&2 oo ges PARTLY FURN Tiled bath. around Lake front _apt. 8615 Pontiac Lk. Rd. LARGE ENETTE FOR with utilities 5-00 KITCH singles. Pvt. entr. _Glean, $12 weekly. nished, close in. PE _2-3181. rx , LARGE. | $15 PER week, -4380 or 73 Norton. 2 7 Rows | BATH, ADULTS. 344 W. a NEWLY DECORATED, 3 nicel furnished, al] utilities. Adults, 133 E. Howard. 2 RMS. ADULTS. NO Lge obama . & Bat & 283 ry ROOM. CHILD WI _ly decorated. mi 2 ROOM. KITGHEN & BATH. _Child welcome; 431_N. Perry. 2 ROOM, MODERN, GAS STOVE, refrigerator . ‘@ washer. 1 block from bus. ‘49 blocks from down _town. 57 prceaee. 2 ROOMS, /DOW) WN, EVERY- thing furnished. eure 2 Au burn, year office, 3 T LARGE RM BASEMENT. APT. re we re we Henderson. nals BATH NTR., 233_-8. Telenraph, moral of uth FE 58-2432 after _§, call FE 5-6942 7 CLEAN ROOMS. quiet place, no drinkers. Pacreee 3. CLOSE IN, FE ‘APT, CHEERFUL, “gu xe. for elderly lady. aeec. Rene. maid 36. KITCH beth & ‘ent. cen couple. 385 _Prospect or FE 72-8406 2 NICE LARGE RMS. [ST FPLR., Pvt entr. Utilities. Washing: priv. Garage. 200 aera 4 ROOM UPSTAIRS APT. BIG gas children welcome, $60. EM 35-0486 4 RMS. UPPER -_ BEING DECO- rated. Adults, FE 68-2413. 68 6. _Francis @ RMB 5 — UPSTAIRS. FE _ 23-2803, W Sid TcY PORN ROOM APT. IT FURN Share a bath. 153, Chamberiain, 4 (LARGE | ROOMS KITCHENETTE. b Suitable = 2 coupies or oe rer _Wwelcome FE 8 erie 444 Epi. @ ROOMS & BATH. aS “& HOT water furnished, private entrance 2 feinity Auburn © 4-604). 5 ROOMS ea 2% SPOKANE. 51 ROOMS & BATH, PER NEW- ly decorated, new birch kitchen, Indian Village, vacant July Ist j= First house off Huron, near mee | ping center. FE eth ar bonne 5 RMS. & BATH FPURN Lincoln, Wisner acai! "put FE | 4-689, i 6 LARGE RMS. LOWER FLOOR. QGs« heat furn, Pud basement. La 8. Parke ROOMS, UPPER. AVAILABLE _duly 15. West side. FE 65-4429. 6 ROOMS. SECOND FLOO _Close in. FE 2-6663 "or FE 31134. ADULTS. 3 RM. EFFICTENCY. UP- | Electric stove,-heat. & hot | ir. bus. Available | aoe APT. ON LAKE. orrr reasonable rent Lake Orton, | Adults, MY 3-7491. ' CLEAN 4 RM UPPER. UTIL. _furn, 200 8. Parke. IN. PVT. « & BATH CLOSE Screened porch & cage, FE 8-1414. CHOICE NEWLY DECORATED 3 rooms and bath all marge rms., tocated close te down town. 2 RM. BASEMENT APT. PVT. entr. Adults. $14 wee ou furn. FE 5-1625. 11 8. Jessi 2 ROOMS BATH, PARTIALLY furnished — Stove refrige Murphy bed, utilities furn, 11 Howard, FE 5-6839, HOLLYWOOD APTS. 7 Re. PVT, BATH APPLY Edw. M. Stout, Realtor ol » Opes Evenings tt) 730 Del-Rio Apts. 281 OAKLAND Frms & bath, stove, refrig. Util. __furn n Couple with baby welcome. & BATH ON back ener, and basement. Heat, hot wa- FE 4-2806. 3 ROOMS, PRI Pkte ATE oT & EN- trance, utilities. 1 child or “4 welcome, $16 weekly. , Apply __St, Clair Street, * ROOMS. NEWLY DECORATED, _S30k welcome. 814. week. 3} LARGE RMS_ AND BATH, PE 4-3212. _ter furn. 48 “WO 4 ROOM APTS. UNFURN- | ished, 1 available now, other July Ist FE 4109! THREE ROOM aly waa APART- ment in country free to couple in exchange for !ight eres some driving during and some yard work. Write Wee 13 Pontiac Press SEVERAL APTS AVAILABLE FOR non Ge BLAIR Estate BUY, SELL OR TRADE ‘tion, - 3 < af HAYDEN, Realtor Wanted R Real Estate 32A turn. - BATE 8 ENT! ie AE a tw -~ Tiagell cos Lol 3 RMS. & BATH : 28 3 ROOMS, ae CLOSE IN. Rd $ RM WiTH BASE wet Lake. OR 3-9138. NIC RNISHED HOUSE R —— "2 N. Tasmania. 2-4676. ALL - SE NT IN hs ee or MY SMALL - = FOR RENT, A : : wel Ra ry \pished, price, | frew $65 to $92 = month. SHIRI- EY APTS. E. HURO! & bath sith stove & arking. 2% rms. rein : ax = —, , soe Adults feed. itt “ K. empstead, _ Huron, S aeiee W. SIDE. 5 RMS & BATH, UP- Days, PE 25449; PE 4-8560. Rent Mouses F Furnished 35 ‘eon ROOM MODERN HOUSES. "Te hot nonere Heats. 3330 2rooks. _Phone | ‘Rent | “Houses Unfurn. 36 5 PANTY | HOUSE PARTLY FUR- shall, FE 5-0564. | 466° Auburr OR BRICK FRONT STORE, 1 WsEKEEPIN( oF ; 300 ‘Elizabeth Lake Rd. moe ROOM FOR LADY. ‘E, 973 Baidwin nee ¥ C . Open Eves. "tl 8 -Grescent Lake Privileges : Lovely 5 rm. All newly decorated. ' Fenced corner lot. witn $1,500 down, edi- ate possession. Must be seen. a Rip TOR PE 4-6203 WALLED LAKE MAPLE ROAD 2871 West of Haggerty, Open Ev enings Open Sunday 2 to 7 an Only 816,850" ro best offer with —— st oll g Anoneng & dots = RL WICKERSHAM 7195 West Maple MaAsfair 6-6250 LAKE ORION AREA : pa htful new count me, 3 em ond ba th, Sie baseman . wee ashing privs. 115 St., “an 6 » Call before 2:30 _ 1421, _ = feces ae " & heat. FE 4-2780 RO OM FOR GENTLEMAN, Ja _ Call FE _8-1548 or FE 2-134 RMS. FOR 2 OR 3 GIRLS IN } ot home. Kitchen priv, 9 _ Maynard Ct. All day | ‘pendar, “ SLEEPING ROOMS WitH ~ KITCH- Fg Kar! Mis 060. OXFORD. ‘Micw A 98-3122 NOTHING en priv. in a ome. For men on, se to downtown, FE 8-1475 er ROOM, __ __ Huron _Rooms W with Board 38 CLEAN WEST SIDE. . LE bed. So comfortable, With o with. out fine home cooked ‘food. For _one or two. FE 8-3338. EXTRA CLEAN — HOME pha" 4 meals, 14 Matthews. FE | PVT. ROOM & BOA Maciek 7 _town & bus, $15 Week. FE 2-8887. FE 2-8867. Hotel Rooms 39 _ 39 * HOTEL AUBURIN oe by Day or Week § RMS. AND BATH ON 8. MAR-, Co. oking and rcietgunnacct Guat: PE : ‘HOTEL CLEAN got rms & apts Hone with TV. i day ov week. pegsssee rates. 125 N. Perry FE 56-8126. 40 Rent Stores 900 ft. Ideal for any business on Me. _Reasonable rent EM_3-4062. __Rent_ Office fice Space 41 OFFICE BPACE. FOR RENT, Main floor, 4540 = Hwv H. J Van Welt OR 313 | SPACE IN AIR | CONDITIONED bid — =—e or beauty sho iw. ad . DOWN Will bufld 2 or 3 bedroom starter “Why pay eat? | A good 2 bdrm. year-round hom a : lots. $1,200 dn. Full price $5,450. Mares Sen endurceun a aa ee furnace, at $3.50. wn T.G. Trocke 1648 Union Lake Ba EM 34671 § ROOMS, BREAK REAKFAST NOOK & th, ‘water, a e auto, of] hea pte low E 2-6300 betwe ra oot Fes down pay yment e-30 & A | saad m home, One "ke garage fr ranch cus- _ is hot yaer ester. tile itch beth. Aluminum aoe & aa minum. awn He ening patto b & water . For Ren ‘Miscallansos 42 Call For Sale Houses 43 A Dandy opuahl For Retired Coupl Quiet bp trata ple g-# block fro! fonee ay Large lot, age on ded with towerin, oak trees. Completely modern bedrm: bungalow. Full bath, basement with off furnace. Over- sized 2 car ge with covered patio attached. You will just love the surroundings. Full price only ; eash to mortgage. 4-Bedrm. -Home On 6 Fertile Acres Snow white frame with 2 bedrm full bath, 29° lHiving ae Ham dining. room down, cae bedrms. Full Sansa BIG 30X40 GARAGE,’ roe RENT. _FE 4-864, after 3:30. eee ne of Clarkston. bie a 500 with $2,500 dow Giroux-Franks Coie ney REAL 4395 Dixie Hw: CRESC ENT LAKE 2 bedrm. modern bungalow with = ——— lake priv. $8,500 Pert) _' OR E2701 | oy, W IL. Ll. IAMS LAKE Modern 2 bedrm. ——— with ‘lake priv, $1,200 dow: PONTIAC LAKE nes sg tol es for or price of one. Both ated on lake front cna blacktop" aaa. tee with $4,500. down. / F.C. Wood L Co. p.m. lean ANCH : ‘ rm old, $1250, down. 2: ie ee | heat, 4 ‘bedrooms, 3 pa: . ed. Equi ‘ith eles will alge With or ‘ business. or without f By owner. OLive 1-1265 .-/ S$ ROOM MODERN acre of land, $8,000 will take late : 1% east race. 7 BEDROOM RANCH HOME WITH ry mee garage, lake privileges $15, 180 Will bufld this fo00 ft. 3 bed- rm. brick ranch full’ basement, with eae at at cali abet ors 1 On 4 TO 6 E. DUNLAF INVESTIGATORS F Oak floors, 1% baths d : 3 Dae a eR Be Oe a ee ee. ae ee Se ee es ee ced PR 7 aE To eee ae ee, | gone aL es ae . i P f ‘ . Ws =: We , | frp! Fl. Poe NTY-FOUR 7 * eb fim 4 We * = . | . a; * ¢ i for : . : f . , i Sole Houses" 43)__ For Sele H — TH ae ae SERVICE For Sale Houses 43/ Ss, TUES | 7 43; For: Sale Houses 43 430A SDAY. JUNE 25, 1 Ce be ~ INCOME E [’ r T _ RNIVAL 7 : 957 ae 2 SPF : | pigst, sreeet.: ——— by Dik Turner] For’ Sale # beg 1 me ELIA “OFFERS | , 4, ares urner|___ For Sale Houses. 143 ae : : mi, excellent k e i meme : | consists of Ape | Off 0 : ——< oil heat, 1% ¢ full \ ‘ a ; 4, ACE nin + For. Sale Houses \ mh er than much yke IN , ar ga- MULTIPLE LI : 43 F for. owner. Srerdge rooms | yee rs LAKEFRONT ——— foal” Gey a, : __ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE INCOME. 1 __For Sale Houses 43 $iéo per eae bring in hardwood floors, a bene oe = a Veterans ) rn neine 8 same tet, ato ¢ aie ae car Of beat, ath down ms. Seoten oko ‘ ONLY $8.950 . $300 Down feria. Pat €3142."101 8, Johnson, Je —— age, 123 ft. on pay eee ied teas’ fame 190’ of lake nominal. price. For FULL PRICE j ‘yam a : comparison at $13,080" toe I bait] invagpun''t bearasn, home Sengalow. Carpeted. fiving rosm: come, aree oo hog, | MULIEPLE LasTINO | aoe ~ —_ with Clarkston ene : = ies room with nat: excellent ‘kitchen and dinetie full , ey ‘cape Famil —— : : : ES |_Stone fireplace. = roo! t with p ute the = Li Mod eled “den. House need Pan- m, fenced lot d recreation well ent, +f ivin : IN VESTO fireplace ger hemes with leper ap challenge to Aas -4. ‘ranged. . Ternis can be a cule tot. ‘3 s #8 ip best is this convenient “for that S| = shady ares. = heostt- slightly cour Priced) isi JUDSON COURT nee eve : 4 ay “ on “Mark St. and near personal — Med : were mes Sark boss me Forges Ned Me Lovely 2 family in Prete ana Give us a a English chiomal An all white atv AR.. in tow, ‘wee = SET siz woe 2 = responsible buyer. erms to gocerats ated reams ag ve F w you anytime. prema, oun aol gar Wig orrtny |] e RANCH = owe room 8 with 3 bed- = . , terms. f oy FE ee . e and . 15x24 ike § IMs baths, full base- Summer Cott < queen ee floor’ with privale vqueraneae fi erry Street - _ New wellto-wal hen room et oth bewutitull &, ‘ws OPEN PRO 500 _ Modern e—5 Lots lake eninge landscaped landseaped lot. a eat Large | modern home 3 -bed- CANT aud only Now Ps cheerful tamily fms room and a3 ING Pe ak BO = povssot bl agg oom sad bath. bedroom, brick aueactive 2 with terms ptoe $i, * ull basement, 10-A iy $3000 down. | attached. garas La teh eon mer cotta, ed um- anch hom stone 3 i i. la % SYLV veetiocea age. Electric stove, Manage serecaat otis" liv. 0g thls 3 $300 Dow 76 ra for garden, ad F ‘ruit Farm > | DRAYTON . YLVAN Tepes eee) Frat ns oel se | ee Rete a LVN ee go Na obownet L AKEFR ON dock. gxecilens beach and. by appotntn Caisse, Geeue full caccmek. ceramic tle Tasge aT Gos mith dee partion: attached 2 car Spesement and | pe oe ie c FURS. f ent only, arage, excellent — eat, 2 car ° kennel with | e. Heated en with eal: Wotersiziin T |2:Family In NORTH | ere ation, , ; and new im rage. Heated | 0G ghtl fenced in ft Beles its saeellial oe 3 bedroom can 1% bath h pees ec peal do Only $7,000 do EET ides Open Spaces : ft “i of over 800 young bearing | forthe e niddies, Gorgeon cons roses DEAL 2 an I~ room om n. 6 wn- 5 wn on [ : $s, str landsca: Large gereceed’ = dn toni Si ivomente eres | Rice front a Sci | jeep caucreroam a ial ine panties aaat| eat fe Shed es fog tae she euron Ertaestsind cot est te ea eae | came oo te fo Supbres ate Fast Side—$1,500 Dn. _|soeiaw anes phot meee : out ew ar . st : ‘room be 3 Paneled. famatly room. plus ENGI gre ciinavcie ast W, Pa Ths i a oxctpoony nat ang| fates DOWN? Mates Sttachea 3 plus eet in beautif aved AVENU will ] extra lot with | i—3 m fre Srune. an cubteotne neighborhood ul east side Webster 8 E * ers. for poostn ving room &— me, home ee peng es | = - $18,000, terihs. Sere s what cnn kote cupboards. ail SE ate the —— oe haar: d tlow- kitchen 10x16, _ ce large pineertul se p eheses Expertly Remodeled [ae el LR. ead a oe and TV antenna “i stent; | Bedroom Bath oak. floors, Nnaster In Cla " rice. My LenS Rea closed rear » big age wired fo car ge-| walkin cosets, basement, . rks Itor lookin, Porch © for r work g distance to - G a Leslie Ro re SB scion BE 2 a i seme — RES ALE ee nepinses al come =e. Tripp. Realtor | MULTIPLE aan Ret Fm baa pool oy @ ied , For action ’ —— eres, qmaster le aonting PE 58161. or Street $15, 750 - oon equal val Spence Street CAL For courtesy. lente ig eay eerecune & aienee tex aa : E 2-1396| Attractive 2 bed DN — Brick and frame En HOYT RE ALTY “ with ewly csrpeting 6 rapes icon Reactive 9) bedreest) brick “ranch priced | ci ae lonial. 6 well pl glish Co- | FE 2-9840 sin Bving sem Gnd Holl, perimeter asement with i IN M a eet tate eneeelnd cemmas [pees wed path down and SON-TEL CENTRE, ye sue Lasgo Sete eg dot. Priced ocated on noe Large lot| 2 mits BELFORD : ll basement, cergetes: garage, eear ni bedroc sD. bere and | ___354 8. Telegraph E cent $10,500 with ie pe Ready a Hekeogarar eg Perea weet ecar Popes lot. _transportation. Owner Mi 61467, tiac F peo conven: Dag tion Rd. «- —_ a Sage TE a 500; terms. : e. ls } School new Perry Hi a yment and CLAY IOME & BU . Price $11,500 gh JAMES pay- STOKES AG ME & BU $300 4 509, terms K BL feet ear Roy Annett I Mutual 24788" Michigan’ Be eI a Eee ST as coe votre | een) (inn EEE: n : 3-4783| dining ee ciinen sues “Good ite—8t. ___——-Open—Eves. : Pet Bata eon location. W £8. Huron EAETORS c. ; dising, room, nice xichon. 3 bed land! You'd think wi FE 49584 —— Pally pasted | wee ocean - Huron gas heat, sement, with abroad with all the : 2 a vestib e: Offerin Open E FEderal 8-0468 win 2 car gai they could find money we’ BEDROOM, sEMI ie imece wih geet Immaculate 2 bedroom ed Got been) gnam Legit ra fen ie Ais better jobs than that!” e’re sending | {i ™ fom bs FINISHED. cloget-to 23 ft. tiving room ‘wit -golew leceied 3 salles Lao * ON sorta of fast growing village just : —. Pg et heehee ioeaa Maen Lg ore town Gieamlan'aek tires) nia} PALME cial. Fu ae Eaned ie F : ina ure window overlook, firs, é_ RM. : ME ll price. ommer- or Sal 670 W. Hu ¢ Byivan Lake, Samia Ea ai A eek nON PALMER ST. | OFA FISHERS For Sale Houses 43) _ For Sale H ‘DEN oe fe oon) Ste ae Seer * so j - — z ‘ at . rou shade. sm: — of “gt? WITH anaes Fated 2 story with full ba Fedeco- | ¢ room hous: ISHERS . i or Sale Houses 43 | ws pee WITH OLD A eS with oy cutee A to respousible buyers akin HOME IN KOR WN, | room: kitchen, full —- oe ee oe | DO S home on your lot Call for | S’bedrm » completely fur FARM | boards, drain "boards, birch cup: dens. Close IN iN GC on ‘fir bath, 2 large |e started to “own ace to : mation ay. or press room with plent ely furn, Doin: Dutch door. Ceran vent fan and 5 : to AR- eo shoo st floo ome, - P your o os A wees exce mty of hot with eramic tiled bath AUBURN nme ees Fe _latee down, Let bated own | MULTIPLE LISTE é A | ACRES, just excellent deep well, 22.0 rods oer with | colored fixtur De »~ ALSO arage. A jarn.in back used f CRAWFEF one. NG SERVICE 2 FOR BETTE 6 Rooms. $700 a of Oxford. er. This i Pvt. own-| 5U2 peseate ds with heat and A : O ) MEW 3 BORMS. Pull bace- eae 0,500 | 53% W. WEORD AGENCY BEAUTIFUL, COUNTRY HOM =i R BUYS eocumes Down . a party a Bascien: tunity for ing deo double a bed- _M N R ae ize Cam Crescent Lx. Evening FE ¢1540 AKE EB: iRF UTIF 8ST. 3 Bec acs est din} j shoe closet, M slid- to mo -| H, r s call MY 3-11 spacious sess 3 be. “ UL ment. 2 - car om tee nce an lake area, with ghting, "T closets. ercur Secememe built faba 3 gether FE Hed ison Se INGHAM | baw Fhgal § Heteed? CLOSETS, thal bepaaay me country ‘nome | bie garage, good, horthrest a aibtig,| Bree, Write "Pontiac ‘Press, Box Iii ecreation foom, sx, bath large bedrooms’ with * ; Corner ‘Auburn & Crooks Rds ai turaace carne Basement. | Surroundings. Ou among towering | yon's chose “fo veverything. This NEAR WATERFORD HIOH. ———_ earns garage, with parece | enecr ire see | EE ey gence | Reedticent ate at ee oe] ee! ee Ne spacious living SP sehen Geer sacel weaaec\ Nc Land bre pee tow] Sees “can” euare senciees N home. Close to f / acer SO reap Von tate Anderson | ee Auburs Heights sat contracts for sale = dis Ritchen, one bedroom pews NIC 2-BEDROOM ee srenvens: / frontage on James E Bird, Wash- marble = rms_ Ph 4.- tile bath, i ‘i rooms up, lovel of Baldwin. One year = GI RESA School district. gh and Webster Sg es eee 3:BEDROOM ee room Sia fu | li, "eves, Ow te cid. tun | “ment 4.300 Down, sit per ments Be ae aa or from just. 3 blocks th, plus ee down and , Tich wall to insurance I rms. A NICE . Pull es y. hare. low, on this mod many other wall 'N AN EXCL 950—term price $15,- pace = Bes tats one toeani Sosee wares. mas bee “reel to cents Priced 10 sell $16,000 Arnold Real Estate fer atare nt ht ems Oakwood Manor CATION. “ASK for See Mahan B 5 wee poteray Hoes ‘windows, ete. Full « RO ene, BE re soc eS a meni, Garage. $11.06 ogee tic) Snick 3_ bed To Buy—To Sell—To Trad 7,250 . i. Garage. $11, ck of ] r tel nan ‘ wt) DOWN LOV Mow vacant. Best Bu Ss One. of Pe ie ae ee $3 FE 55783 | income . ab Th ent oe vith = -. , | Sesh S88 telat | ELAND T eee ee 00 DOWN |,* p zoned wanes, 2ramup,| teat cating if MAH . clean, Be ater, Neat and $8 Cass Lake R : d nice fireplace. er than average, |? - replaces, carpet with 2 : : Kam with § fruit trees. Locate PE dais” PE eos! caddy . Bedoment™ cli SS" eusy” term, home, starter | INCOME. N._Johnse drapes. ceramic. tle ‘bath , : / off Aubura Bede leg ~ MODERN SASEMENT E 4-1061 ped grec small Bene, terms, ey as ” rhe! "rat le Lk. basement, peseaaet 8 Rooms, en pare bath off kitch- REALTY CO., REA it Blvd, “payment. FE 49336 — LOW DN. HURON GARDENS in trade. or con- 437. Mc- ge. $3,200 Down, large —— in Hi Fi, FE 2 LTORS REALTOR Leslie R. M PA NADY is ENS WATK ao C. HA Meat) suet cahemer oe air = 20263 sre Towa ves aan PE eT 4 Middleton MULTIPLE LISTING SERVI Sungalow home only 2 biks. Set okey terme YDEN, Realtor | Pre home for ‘finer’ ving. next DOOR TO BR ¢ ° Eves. & Sun ars oo $1,500 — rom Tel-Huron, on Fecal A beputitul shingh = ORDINARY “open. inves FE 8-041 yourself at only $24, fo oe A... LCE, NEW, MODERN 3 poceeee| Sat {DOWN—3_ bedroom igh and dry lot. Pull panes —o Saavaioe ct oar. Ranch hom . 3B Bel adi Sf look to- Marston full priv. $7 house 5 RAN h ull basement, home ment, Of] heat, f ase standing recreati w with out-| space. e€, 1700 sq. ft. of If DRM RANCH . basement. ané . near eee eat, 1 car auto. gas and n .. full bath, hea on room, plus 2% Gas he TYPE Bal S| Puce ot oh | peri” rete ai at Ta, ia ee st bearer tor | Hee sae ie | Ree we ssdBt | Cherkoee Hills . s 200° FRONTAGE, “Child 5 ao ats! Only 4500 down, dion exte- | to investig icind Keiehen. pest, ol] peivlloged hborhoed xcelient estab- | INCOME Omisme | |S) bedrosm brick igh, RETOR ie macs arent oe| ieee cee Noute to acere—| a ede oR rg tur se a den ti ae |e bs ated unga- 7 we : : a large t bed ee. a i foce "Sawertudeprty| Ht Std poms ree ig nd pts of tage OME ao aos | oe recientes | BS Ok cetyrcar |Home gach Rene yey - w ceramic ¢ ro pg NE cea | ater ll price $3, near cake Le of Clarkston t vely modern ho: i € . boards, tile pfeniy at reuse with solid bi rge kitchen cedar shake siding o: 3 modern. . yy ise, Ww : oundation with me 28x40 on __ GE KITCHEN sista’ of poe th. Mask cen: form! reh cupboard: lead jeeated (wor n a acres of ’ eabtacte, 3 tance Desutiful birch 750 DOWN mui remesneaturmle tile water oil full vaspment = sista of 2 apart F con- ea counter = about north Ponti bas Mean te | carat it sas i've nines | Rigs giles rool KITCHEN | Sesaiee oe Gore wecieee ee | Se aout imi 1 | ; may be oa Attached earaad fearghd and schoo bear _ bus, mak Toom, newly eacd: ee e perros all rooms Leads the itst of r. joe Reason Seat forced: hot water only $6, K west of Ponies. of sm ER re dining ¥ rac $1, 400 DOWN Dorothy Sos L price owner, -_ == for an ne i my i oe _inlousie VICE Vain ae on Exc. cont Gas ue more informa’ id garage "Sail tor for Multiple Ping Bar 24810 < oset rooms, good 10" 2 C tt Spacious year old = Piet baad avender Sccpeuee iat nah wall-to-wall aly. Giese ace ail base olberry oft BE tol wilh \sereenedsin patio SM ] fe) iS . home on fe en EM 3533903 1 Highisnd Rd ing nsomnes jing Ube I ene c will h Pp good buy 15900 PED Sl nee: A H- OU e ° | Ee reem | SRIGK RANGH YG Walls. Pleasantly "de 2 k H rr ETH | Eavtd’ atresia: Lake privtiges on Pearoom “acttiee room" 17) STrood sted sito furnace. _ Fuga Realtor ark Homes WIDEMA UTSTANDING HOME pate ™. screens| kitche ng room, . 2 full ardwood fi rent, 2 aw St Ph. F , . D N ‘SUNDAY 2: ATES woo SS bs at wae Bice oy eae) ae Sabena a aaa SEN |e». mse pe ae Skee) tee me ee Se for jarger b dn. or will| 61332. wentied Aaa nt ek year a caro oan $600 per Yale, Mich Rei Ag 007 IN|. , = qe) Sloe spect this beau-| and sh Tot with nice lnee, chrube AT WHITE co Aiko, Appr. nse — rik) tis auieinam sided iepesa ig Nella ‘ encush Drive Nice x ORTH END oS “our lrg 2 edroome ity ort me iba KE : Dn. 500. te Daily a lent 3 bedroom rear bedroom, beth, f oor, that are com ms on main| kitch dinin ares Like new § (tp eestend alleen he MULT ric me ent + 3 to 7 eel ae pelt | ped cme whicn | 2 Gon. — arewherriea! mpl ieeaty uae Panecycocnathtopscna || [en prdacenlgy Dior Uaby fb eS ed fee Senne Nelna Soeue hesoate eased MULTI-LAKES Only eS ee mee been very well | kegel) FOR CO $1,000 down. "| Sod ee a cnskene abboed pe shee 99.500," full ee von White. Lase Naturai iastered painted. walls REALTY Reid “Fowaship) can, poe, find Ra, Sahy"agulpped ead | ge tet LORED doors "tg beautiful outcoor ine eer ‘ows : eled in the 1 ari reezeway and attac walls, - hod on voy riectl school ing cente erty in exc income. Prop- n terrace, ha outdoor CLos : fage. Onn a Iya vear aa SYLYAN VILLAGE rege | Sererned, pose 2 be LAKE PRIVILEGES ee Rick RANCH reer Oy oe trans: oY pare oe an. yard ue AC heal, comm) ae rol ORL Bh grr OV og pe 2a moving . e roo! ‘ i a i zh node Bento immedattiy: Ouiy sar] Beat’ sorm i? freum frame| On 8 ight a | Se Tersce Madea FatiLy “noow” te, bathe erage, wo! Call for pere| ~CUCKLER REAL Fgh ren senha AEC . a, . . . . 2 ie ‘ re we 5 v WARD E. PART sania ms & screens, garage. LAKEFRONT — 3 3060 8. Commerce Rd. M FOUL BATH BEDROOM. = Seminole Hills re saat’: Serinew TY ee priced right./ kitchen lown, = nee i. REALTOR FE 43581 ag | er commer na oa cirn| San To” oi a em SE BE re sau] aedbaFey aUtantow oy Sls as Fev IMMED: Livin roughout. location le school : . New rage. with attached ton Wood UTIFUL Located -on LOW with reial ._ HURON 8ST 1 IATE POSS bohlaon | Marge bole pd mod off Perry st school” and 8st. H ge. Includes 4 bedrooms Ital) 8 20x11 livin lot 67 nice quiet str Would trade $1,975 down OPEN | ‘EVE. On Pion ESSION : edge rock ft corner peqepente 7 rooms. al . nice atid chareh and Ugo piu: a den on rooms | © ceramic ikiten @ room x147 % block eet, with ie. . ms || Rominee eer just north pied Rag hg raved Kone cement’ oll fumnece, 9. acres to MIRACLE MILE Shop- RE cs te crise cad caren: a en, built in| ore’ te ueimute: wat from school | UN TRADES W homer ei Excellent fi of Me- dow overl ctyre win- nice lawn, sh mace, 6 acres, pin : » see thes LE t prite and terms room, double | : Sali master bed-| °™ ‘© minute is beautiful mod- TON LAKE PRIVIL: y ith full ve room Wall tlooking the wate $1,000 down rubbery, $2,500 dn: at are bet e new mode W | room. lar, closet, 13x10% be iow with white frame bun, bedroom home, EGES. Two FOR A ANTED AC heat,- atta basement. Oil -to-wall carpeti r sack tae nee, a: pia vied cask. Prisea © completed each M. H, KNU paom Maren closet, 9'4x9% d-| ent h stacked gntare. omenk || Tie eparat full = . show \ This wilt enrol ote seg sl erpood pom) oo fecbrest ta ist poataate dingy: Bling tee eet | 900 plus eed Hight ot only GA-| Pera NUDSEN bath, Lo nil bed-| heat. dandy Desement with gas fioors. large utility. fenced oak Tem cee ee creat pemncigee ley | bee D 208” ath. Attached 1M peal aaorgl par ostop lrg tae nn con Reb pnta: + Come .- | FE 44516 dus 8. Tele fan DS ar ee ee andy living | with gas | 150 e utility, fenced lot $0x if e has a Woul tered d-car pl zed. ‘Ca: ath, mod- FRO! LOCK: Li Ra. 3x5 cos! y, 30° atti Exceptions room 12x17 sae bi ar: large sibtinios. Ail pl tomes own. Make would key 182-000 le ree Sarees: All cerea: mediate fest nel mais garage, im- WOODWARD Fetes OF SHAI Evenings gh opts ghelt | ¢ cane large, mia aeruaa many othe other foros 1212, ido Pokal buy at rock hgh = : basement. of! surnace, 3 en. = INCO! — er fences. Zoe, visseent) eke ““ _ ONTIAC REALTY AKE ROAD SQUARE Make tis ADE TREES eee ae into van ¢ appointments | bome Will accept equity in aw Lake. Ar ges on Eliza! pe off Bal . Baldwin “4 : a low y 3 bedroo large screens, ga Lng ISAAC CRARY JR sabeth) (5) rooms dwin avenue Five PIONEER HIGHLANDS CLARKSTON AR FE _$-8275 Indian Village jow with Dasement. gas saelibenet| ace erase basement, extra “LOVELY ok COUNTRY HOME OXBOW, CEDAR Gudscoens. tell bastencateneee: three 3) ro rooms oo ee Swerpine yestlbas Colonial. 1% bath N AREA, 3 “BEDROOM, Newer charm bungalo home even on fireplace © cool 890x227 ft. terrace Sascaieet: ies: (oe ® ae AREA. Three } LAND LAKES Rifai fireplace, tara bes. Beaw| Pay. POR ITSEL 00 down. Fan Gperieaa | vines roots: $12,200 "ea S-1164 Seren tes Pair and tiled Mark street is ence Seeraavaer: forme, OR secal not ony reo Petey eve trogen room| nice kien Range itving : ¥ e kitchen. . ITSELF amily dinin, room. 116 a sion” atti stairway to ex & Ont is excellent joc acy. A ote . kite garage, complet 7 an lot on chen, utilit ee _ am- WILLIAMS. MA Ta picker ‘bean veialroay Boe, So See) a pan-| Only 2 blocks from ation} = Bu Se ee de wate | 120 fect. Only $7.20 vith tached. storms & pone dhe Right bet CEDAY LK. ARE to the large San stairway WI alumina oolvent awnings fur-| $15,900, Shown by by Tradeter y Thru Partri d wild about, est — will be with Largs fendtsaped “mae “ariveway. Piva dite - sae tie bem feu boon: oe tt cor teen _ heel ais ee List. Th ge = peioreag material) OFF Land ween ment ath, full base- /] 2 car ga reens. FRAN ru Pa oll heat, Pp, full basem MT. CLEME =. terms scaped lot Only $16, done for you. scaping is ail . Gas heat en drive. To ii rage. Cement K SHE PA rtridge yard, water softener. ent; $950 down NS. $5,640 ASS LAKE 200. Car Large ord Hee windows and sc Jalousie draperie nelude carpetin OL 1-7511 RD $500 ah landscaping and and the| 3 . Four rm. 1 fh with PRIVILEG eee a cate bott:) Teree rear pati screens on - « sed 2980 Tienk DOWN ade trees a ‘spreadin pe. bath, living room, aiming - = ZR Agata: nice livin, {3) bed- foe lee On Garage and cor- - Buy T en Rd. ‘oniaa L ideal for reti re just beautif room, kitchen, 1 room, dining ly- mina oh” Elcchte nee’ Geen Only $16,500, -- JOH y Tnru Partridg 3. bedroo AKE AREA red couple, ment. oil furna bedroom. base Lv really dene ov: en has been 5 . N Li ridve tunity — starter home BA Avi realueati ace, 1'% car gara - EWood. REALTY ree nanan srange and) steel Sean ee oe Family ly Special k INZLER ait tt hru Partridge - im tito payments’ auiy 36 nett nae Saeceean i nome price Rowse at 6 frat Ra ee f - wood slg¢w, hard- , re cI only $60 ar sh . PE S124 of FE ¢384e GOOD possession. $13,000. ‘ood floors. full basement, — | > pedroom home close to bs cen’ fan n ben Boe ‘EMBREE floor, ‘beautiful flush ‘birch “doors, CLARK RE! r-oyen5yn-o.o. 2 spmx,||\] Eenetiyirmce cies | Eka tae a nso S08 ew ural BO cent fa Tao LiSie EE eckecG | sof ceaes eae SLR REAL ESTATE D, LD, 2 BDRM. ICH us almost at e ae own, auto m and.% bath Ph. tian o cearegna| (Aa n- | so Lake Ra = storms end arte rr el screens Fenced, Only the wate . gas heat Open‘ Ev 43525 bags $800 vene- nion Lake . 200 well screens, lot 3 faih Low “down a heat tle LI E Say Stipe don tnd grounds S'Brlcea “re viandaeanes |" Ful price 6 Erenines —_| monthly uperments, Call after 8, EM 3-400) 07 BM 39314 invenigaie at io404, terme. Muttpie Listing Serviee . yment. i at $6,750 ri NTOW . . Se! & HARGER BYLVAN MANOR — ete Ce ee: tue Wee: price’ $6,000. 41,000" down, gays sen at ete COMMERCIAL 33: W. Huron &t Q, eens brick & stone 3 bed- RAINBOW ‘. TRADE 500 00 ment, se foundation, full b. con’ bate TAL, BALLWIN AVE Open Evenings teers. oranens hardwood Washitigton Park Sub FE_$-2721_FE Lae TY} Cups TAKE FREE A ’ ° a grger Ninonad heating Farage. $10,000 Tull; lovely” yard, S micuneers Gecorated teins tiered ary bas ome on OWNER $1200 DN. rE it PAYMENT. ON As DOWR The atove figure te the full trees. ideal lake ho Tut. and ahade price mic tile fe galow { bedroo rooms. 6 LARGE EDROOM GE 3 fall boos ul price e., NEEDS 80ME rms: acrifice—B Screened _patio- atures. peted eatures. brick ront. bun-| ed, off bedrms. new! Bites pul anaes i ful ranch home wi OFFI This 4 FINIS GI T v Owne many extras porch and ed living roorfi ont, car- ak large ba y paint- —O FULL BASE: car gar and Lod ‘CE OPEN § ‘ P do lial pe, aa Bae i sts, Tn | Maa ore | area, Soci | Bit SP Bates Bree oer | ESR Ge sia = seat | Se ena |S ene ee vestment. price. Good m™ —< on new R “ ° water, case auto. gas hot m. w. After 5 in wner planni 2 W Huron D SELL * of Pontiac room. just. w “meen ins uaa On barete tank oe AY O'NEI becnoll) Grapom bach altrpaadt FO g fot the sunny on isav.| ATTR Phone FE ite Knotty Pm est $900 DOWN : sacrifi ardtop ro 26 NEIL, Re sy ction priced paved - RC = southiand, ACTIVE 3 1587 e. handweed pan- pare 8 ‘room hom M ee for $1500, on re sia BS Rd.” alton, ace. to 4 per cent a ilo BLOOMFIELD TW . WEAT.2 OOM HOME Available on F 57° nigh "igcated, pear Basters tures. Gniy' $1800 si teite fea: rer res Sle eo | BEM, RECT er DOR, NICHOLIE pe gem, Siac, 8 com HEAT“ONLY wor DOWN.” ble on FHA | SAMGSML Cat thy eh Inside the City a. this one to- $250 ALS pepldee! a water in, . S tached 614 room : insul eater, oi] heat, side the Ci DOWN lana f about 2 = arage, bi 8 & at- , . ated, Home se fully |. 8 foo itv JIM WI I Meee aes roa he wooded bam! sae. 938 8 ¥ month neh ct feed ae r Clemens aur OR Fr sim eres ec ran ait vine = va ongtanSEh IM W W (RIGHT WM. A. = lots wi with at oe wip tencea. knotty ee, full | Dasement, : LL site, Only Lake’ Beautiful’ b pad eck 2918. FE 2-3370 - Sil Getnce Meautitur ceram- SELARD payment Ste tee with a tear an heat, breeseway & fenced- VENIN FE 5-9441 session. Phon Immediate garage. 2 ay & htt AMS = yard, patio & grill, Shor o8 UNTIL e FE pos.| G¥clone fenc lots with: i Win ave Fe 4s qo, x B00 feet includes exerie or Colored J BEDROOM HOUSE, GARAGE, By ,gpPaitiment ony.” #16800 meek OR iG onl = 2m. fariier information.” FE 40567) GT fae, eludes excellent emens, FE 5-6761. conn as reek the Oe r 3001 'W. Hu 3- ent. 4% Ho! —**| Basiest of term mes sandy bea o F ‘ PIONE b: ent $20 owner & 4 ron ' Bedroom * : Henk, a Per cent interest. 183 $2,500 FIVE ACR “ amilies ghast gons a as Only 7 $8, ‘Gay heat paved street —Fh bran WOE a Kae : wetee en at Brick . ES—Nea orhood. 0 vely neigh- | ©- HOUSTON j 000 Ww Oak, rans bu r Oxford) N cic tare nee eee REALTY 2 bedroom N ; floors portation, value. hea. s route. Excellent ewer 2 bedroo rge livin, out of PE 4-6331 s, 2 on full “ba: painted h m bt brigh g orm. d 331| inum storms yrs... soaceh an walts $1,150 FULL * ewe terme | et Pac Venetian Coinas, Mice seis floor earn and bu _%4-ACRE LOT cee mi, weréens, 4" toe, | same onies ss tntereet? | SLRS Gowa rae four Ia own and $49 with $850 sement, 1 tm. up Ww 2B = ws , . ft. lots. W. ree 60) in mo, incl. fence: car EDROO! on R ou ‘A. DRIV! ene a eee surance. foxes and| PRIVILEGES fenced “back yard. Price—$it, QAk TLoORS Oil HEAT. tan aevern, OF rae oe rm fen vees "room ere) ons secs SRE teal bargain.” for puilder,; Bassett St. a ae ‘en IZA Fs ow BEAUTI- Lae ; PLASTERED want’ 1-161) OL 1-1731 Foo room. Oe OL 0 . on 221 BALD ne CO. ; w. De room b = lovel . RAGE. Nae ed vish ‘eotert J ee L. H. BROWN, Realtor Sieg oe quae anise room eo ngaiow. Huge mies John K. Irwin PRICED At ga.s0. ELIZABETH 1 LAKE | Be Sie te ving “cheerful rm roe i “ a ie W 5 ve- SOMPLETERY FURWnibe Dee Howard. | is “Gil pone heat, & | oie itches. «3 “pies “mod: REALT BARGAIN! roo possibiity “f padiional bee] 3 room, Y bath downstairs: 3 MULTIPLE LisTt on eee Pr peeee Lake FE 26412. Gillespie St. Ph.j jorms end om. 2 pice bed- oe mes) as ps FE oe yt MONTH reaped, Nery, ,clesn wel — pine large & 1 Toot ioe dy NG SERVICE Seth te Trignes.” o8 Sint y |, Bareg anedes | ity rm, | Phon est Huron FAMI THIS ped. Storms and se up Just —_— en OR 30844, | pe » at" s'Sih, Bio Teooes ore Saat Bre} CLOSE. TO DOW NT down! tund| 5 000 couie no be dupieated for | TEWAY SPECIAL ewlete Rigi Rete! eos faeces | Witt BUILD | Ry vat Eigte | ,,, LAKEFRONT fare Bette 5 to OCHESTER A 4-528 ORTH On BRAND ted. H REA, END — your lot, CR, BRAND NEW - pest WA J count . BEAUTI fami § bedroom lonial any size. En Plaste: - # TKINS SS F&F olor eel hom: = 3 Dedrme A room. pavement att . nin ones eal'an ads i rages 45 oJ. VALUET, Realtor me walls, mp “eased — 2 bedroom: agg Bong nfl? For Colored — frontages aad incre at Toe A tate treet #4 Bitty | SY oad ea DUSTING SERVICE ce aa | peeeatlo, attached garage =| NU RANCH H Es ha ¢ “4 = . . ott Freakin REY ons Aapare PG. Bourn of] die down itera me oe abe CHOICE dow ain, ‘isso0" a ee gg A jeg space Arey EE TWO cm . Or eta kad toa $100 DO | NO .-. | Behoot” home? - os bac Foam ana TelLcanstructed “4 \good one ad 7% °| We will bulla on WN RAY O'NE ‘ \ ¥ . 1 district. Living roo PIN coupe. ee “loved: living: rop ie featuring 2 at § 5 Reson ‘en by ~! home pan ce ours, berg i 2 383 8. Tolar, a” Realtor D a bai al ge = tiled ene VIEW } M ANOR on spacious : Wichen = a, el ire. Paya ‘ iy ‘a a 1 Leslie. R. Middet er < " ALRAVING ve tat)” WN eahemewer ens] fates Som! Randuone” Replaced Bit oes ate rere. Ie i Middl a ote NG ST¢¥ pe 3 Box 6h of] Brick! windows ely ft proven eton AC “rene “Atkracts 3 STATE | PA ni Sear gare roughout. weeda ‘hana |. 22" Otered for’ sii 980, e 188 c COM mT loos ve 2. a name ENT on Pine . Lake Page! very for the. Saar i garage ideal |. _— eae fe ye 4900 W MPT & SON " garage. ‘ntee of a! 2 or ‘ pone payiment. nd full setting. Ir seeking a pe aca i! concrete lenty 3 ‘pedtoom Oh, poeg tu . Im ==, ATO To Buy—! : ee : \" OR E416 TURON BT. : side grill. ‘and ir te: with ful . starter Seated Be tal th one Be sr bright face be uy ‘To Sell—To Tred te on lake ing, On gh il chee itehen ° , Ao" | Beier a] BRS S| ale e@acess! atin A oy 17 ae: A v7 elit ead after 1: ‘On “i ump! | zor ction | fe | meee Vat, “ oe i \ is 1 3 ° Rat Fe 207 ‘ies 2 \ HOY | te courteny ; 1 i , ~ Y jr { : - : a Ble cena | ae yo \ 4 ek 1 8a.N. Tele = Catt : neat ’ 2 Ue. oa j - Poy ‘ \ ‘ 4 Fa oe ae. wah 7 : een Ba. sel” PrON-1 LTY fy nee Ti “ ~ . 4 ae ey hs tos ‘4 Luss “% a y obo i | fer sel : . ay “ee \ | THE PONTIAG PRESS. "TUESDAY. JUNE 25. 1957” ‘TWENTY-FIVE, y 5 . . NEW- ee are large bain. they lens. an pee 7 one full Ang By acres. $10, Templeton Avon School Area 2 bedrm. ranch style nents nat- t areal lots. Vacan' Ae extra Ga or wal cccenl Gee boat for equity. $ housetratler or Keego Harbor 1 _— — privileged beach, paaen Gl ae. a henee ceteated veces "areas. $1,000 1000 downs | - Lake Angelus Rd. farm house, modern, with nearly 2 acres land, needs air but nas excellent possi- . low down payments, kK. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lak +456 pe eg Ag Pos — 3 § RMS. AND BATH DESIRABLE location Sk G _Call FE to downtown SPECIAL $10,950 1% BATHS 3 BEDROOMS 17x 15.8 .FT. LIVING ROOM NICE SIZE KITCHEN WITH DINING SPACE Ist BDRM. 14x9 FT. 2nd BDRM. 13.4x10 FT, 3rd BDRM. 10x9 FT. Imagine all this custom and quality built on your lot for only $10,950. Phone for Appointment Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor FE 20123 $400 DOWN A ressonabie offer on this 2 bed- room modern home, full ae, bath, oi) forced air heat, lake priv DOWN 5 room home on 5 or 10 acres of good ground, full —— fur- ace chicken coop PANGU S. Realtor ‘collect: Ortonville NA 73-2813 ~ OFF F SASHABAW ‘ozy and cute ranch style bunga- low, with oak ft! < tered walls, ilar, ge living foo oa ee with picture windo moet oer det pris ess pit : ice ! in me nee jluced to $7750 CASS LAKE RD. | 4 bdrms. and full bath, oak and plastered walls, ‘Tull Keane ment — $1,000 down and Possession, 3"BEDRMS— $500 DN. hebosed sephora with lake pare 2 paaeaty preheat = LOWELL STREET Lovely 2 bdrm. home immaculate conatien inside and out, full base-| ment and heat, complete 8 5 and screens, fully insulat- ed. It's w real buy at $8.700 on terms R. D. RILEY, Broker ecu Elizabeth Lake ree Johnson FOR BETTER HOMES Dee Tron PLAINS sierra 5227. Owners have moved Ps Fah tent ite tits Parl gical - $500 4-4821 will move Lda into this m modern home with Feige and room for extra bedroom in oer gilts Pail eric cae sense, price only GI ——- P wner moving to Call: mua sail an ; fornia ford pole _= e with race with paved Seee me Barrys one. 6 Mr. Ereners after cal Lease 5. an FE +117 A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4.2533 TOO HOT CAN'T FIND A PLA PRI CE GET ? END IT ALL? You “Can = JUST +2544 THE TEST INFORMATION ON pa ; PLAY IT ¢ COOL! ‘ CALL too HOw TODAY WILL TELL J. 100 daxicna Ave od-' 9969 Cooley Lk. Rd. ‘For Sale Houses A3 | —— on Hughes 8t., $1000 RAINBOW Office ve re baie ‘on PE Saal or 502 S. Paddock — Office Hrs. 9 to 9. Established tn 1916 3% ACRES —- North of Pontiac; “900 - ft. ad ) bemaped rolling e,som mA agri pray bargain. a are 400 down, HERE 18 THE HOME — You have been waiting for. Nearly 2 oars with attractive 3 bedroom hom well arranged and beautiful) 7 . landscaped, spring fed ep | Greer” srry at thao rr on ie. $17,000. 7 ‘ mee Peal Only INCOME WESTSIDE — 14 rooms made into 6 apartments, month- ly income over $300. furnitur included. On paved street, bus oe shopping center close by. ome will more than _for itself. Only $23,000; terms, Ra eerone LAKE ESTATES — room attractive ranch homé, fede rock fireplace, 3 pleture windows, carpeting in living rm. ee large bedrooms tiled bath. Attached garage, 100 f nT Gaon c Eeke privileges. Only term = Flovd Kent Inc., Realtor ary, Dixie Hwy. at Teleerapt AMPLE: CUSTOMER PARKING » Income Property 43A 4-FAMILY BRICK $5 ROOMS EACH—separate ag ments, heating’ plants, etc »- | side in good repair, some work | on outside should be done, at low | rentals of $65 per mo Owner | still realizes better than 9 per) cent net. $26,500, ae appoint-— ment only, CAL J. R. Hiltz REALTOR | W Huron ! i ‘O11 FE 5-618! 4 mcpT CINT <5 ' WEST SIDE 2-FAMILY Thorpe Street. 5 rooms & bath down, 4 rogms & bath up. Upper rents for $115 monthly urniture included in Upper apartment. ice rooms, dining room in each apart. | ment, hardwood floors. plastered walls, full basement, furnace, auto [ie water heater, lot 40x140 feet, | car $16,500: terms. Clark Real Estate. tbea w s. es or premise? ; 4-6402 E 4-481 For Sale Lake’ Prop. 44 hee ACRES WITH ABOUT 800’ water frontage on Grass Lk. Nicely wooded & roiling 's mile east of White Lake Full price, $14,500 with j $3.000 down. Paul A. Kern __Inc FE 20200 _ _| '@ NICE BUILDING LOTS 1 BLK from 3 nice lakes. witn lake priv- | fleges in Orion Twp. Cail after _5 pm. MY 21002 | 5 RMS. AND BATH, OIL FUR-. nace, gas water heater, wired for elec. stove, combination storm win- meat garage lot 75°x200', shady | a rivileges, _pleted | 1842 Elsmere. _ T acre ae ‘site with 800° wa- ter fremess on fine bass pond miles north of Holly Pull price $7.500 with $1,500 down Paul A. Kern __Inc FE 2-62000 0 LAKEFRONT COTTAGE ON Lake Orion Natural esi windows natural fe with $1,500 down Bir Yiew, Lake Orion MY_ 2-6381 Northern Lake Lot Crystal ‘lear ‘Shapphine Lake), pear Lake City. Mich Sandy pooch. exc swimming & sect. x 150°. Bargaiw priced, oni Hy 100. JERRY F.. ADAMS CO "|Open Eves. 11) 9 o2 3472_W. Hure W. Huron 8st $6,800 — FULL PRICE. With the easiest terms imaginable, enables you to purchase this mod- ern 2 bedroom home. Full cy lake privileges plas beach. Landscaped. Partially fenced yard, trees, shrubs & huge stone barbecue grill. | amall family or retired couple. Earl E. James © ACREAGE. WITH APPROX. 400 ft. lake frontage, 25 miles west _of Pontiac. PE 2-7344_ A FINE ; CHOICE 0 OF LAKE PROP- erties: ft. Ales front at Whipple, ik. $3,050; @ 2-acre lot. 12,300; ft. at frontage. on Walnut JY 8 road rights at Whips on rms __Phone conan: Aura ease BEAUTIFUL HOME SITES OVER- looking Walters Leake, 806x100 ft. Lake privileges. $750. Low down iy eon J terms. NNIS O'CONNOR, pore 2-0940 58-0683 ar & DRY LAKE Faowt Lor. Call OR 3-1500, after 10 a.m. MILFORD AREA. ALMOST NEW. 3 bedrm. brick home on three Activities Lake priv. SECLUDED aoa on WATKINS yrs old. C jetely m — TAYLOR, REALTOR FE 42544 i livin) ar 2 Low Down Payment $1 oe down for this large 2 bed- m home. 1% car betinn oi blinds. a Ve Bry 70,860 DOWN 3 rm. get ranch, 1 rage . Lot, 68x3id. Total ‘peion “HURON VALLEY on Sect | at Pontiac Lone » Hempstead rota W,. SUBURBAN Out ef town ett to omey anxious to isiay ae the deat | send pen oot creating basement with shower, heat, electric wa- ter aoe. storms & — wall A iay—we he LAKE. ORION Gi Feat oa bane : six room bu low. Gas benno as water beater, privileges. Sheet ter soumte oF MACEDAY r GARDENS (?, = = A) 0, *yal bay aim cr ¥ rent) 4-2420, 4 wit-| ay re VE beat 8. a ber shail. pices, screened porch, ful. ee near schools. 2180 Jey St. N. shore, Watkins Lk. OR F183. + WALLED LK. YR. UND DU- plex on 2 waterfront secludeq & shaded lots. § rms. & bath, each oak floors, natural fireplaces, auto. hot water, 1 side er incom furn. . pearl garage. Winter income $120. ¥ only $3,500 sown. S olties cobs Wy 7 x. “FRONTAGE, orton 2 Uving modern. $13, 300 Mi For ‘Sale ) Resort Prop. 44A 20X24 LOG CABIN, poser Presque’ Isle State, For oe 58 close elect & ood wel well. bg eerie im A COUNTY. ot & Seaeeng | sites. Reas. OR _3-1732. ou find | CON VENIENTL ¥ nearly com: | ——— frepiecs, . as For Sale Lots. ARAN AAR a Avon ie ee og Set ee FOR BETTER Cherokee Hills You'll like the advanteges of its | pone eoye tocation—Eliss- Telerens Rd ee CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 60s Community National Bank Bid PE. 4-421) . Eves. FE. 4-: DARB LAKE COLONY Exclusive lake front & lake priv Well eee Reas. price. Biller. Rd. '4 mile north of Com- «Rd, Across Ada Marsh- sg Park. EM 3-4 ~ Buy Thru | Partridge List Thru Partridge LAKE FRONT AND LAKE PRIVI1- leged lot» * miles from town | tone ~~ «tarted. FE 54-0676. or -NICE LOT 100X150, PONTIAC Watkins Estates OR 3-7555 | PERRY ACRES AVE EVERYTHING YOU ULD WISH FOR IN YOUR EW HOME BLACKTOP ROADS ~ No mud or WONDERFUL WATER - At about | Na! i 3 EXCELLENT DRAINAGE trouble with septic tanks. NEAR RECREATION — Joins dae: park, hunting, fishing, ridin swimming. picnicking. '§ — Level lots, hill- | 1D) side lots for tri-levels. has at least 100 ft. frontage —all - carrey srestricted for your a BEAUTIFUL ¥ will IEWs panes country: On Lapeer Rd. ‘M24) & oes ‘north | of Pontiac limits. PRICED FROM $1,200 WITH | 10 PER CENT DOWN ‘ SEE AL HAD At The a Branch Office Of | H. Let ods | 2531 8. LAPEER R FE 5-2953 For Sale Acreage 47 ACREAG 49 vacant acres, ‘« road | mile 17 miles Sag Will sell. frontage with smell down yment. Total price $6,950. Call Keeirose 4-6000 5 Se oS | BIG FISH LAKE -:; We are fortunate enough to ‘ have 2 excellent acreage parcels with on paved road, 1 has 1117 feet frontage and ts over 600 feel deep—con- tains almost 7 acres—priced to sell at $3,850 with terms to suit. PARCEL No. 2 has 363 feet frontage and is over 800 feet deep — contains 5 : H ARE A SHORT DISTANCE FROM BIG FISH LAKE. and completely surrounded by STATE LANDS. LAKE ANGELUS RD. Very nice The acre parcel | just @ -abort distance o ff Baldwin, almost 300 feet frontage, good black dirt in rear of WORTH EVERY OF $5,- 500 with $750 DOWN Fdw. M. Stout. Realtor TiN. sence st. Ph. FE 5-8165 Open Eves ‘til 8:30 For Sale F. Farms AS 1'g to 6 pe Parcels Beautiful wooded. & rolling land. Cc. to $2600. Your terms. PANGUS, Realter ie ‘collect: Ortonville NA_ 17-2815 LAPEER COUNTY 40 acres of with 4 rm modern house asement & fur- nace. All for $6 650 with terms Fiegeway’ —¥OR FARMS AND ACREAGE _ Call Rutledge. OR 3-1111. | rE +0003. Buy Thru Partridge List Thru Partridge Rent Farm Property 48-A FOR RENT, ~ EXCELLENT HORSE-| sture with shelter, tac room facilities & friding trails, Lake Oxford area. 545 Indian d., Lake Orion, Mich | Sale e Business Property y 49, Buy Thru Partridge List Thru Partridge | Heels | HIGHWAY _ ft. f age on Dixie. 26x34 building Ideal setup for used ear lot ost kind —— down payment operated as ce qe. Owner oh GEORGES BLAIR 4596 Dine Bw Qh 31251 Eves, OR 3-1708 or On §3087 DIXIE HWY. Vey pnb WATERFORD pe ft. pa side road, as rear Jos ne, _ f% deep on } side and 485 eep @n the other side. conta ine 2 ng 2.88 acres, $38 per foot HOLMES - BARTRAM 4302 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1950 Everyone | WARD FE. 46, Business Opportunities 5S) _ Buy Thru P List Thru Partridge [PEI Ss) TALK BUSINESS” TRADE Your bome on this gas station. - ware Neer Caro Grocery & hard 2 main highways intersect at this corner, Living quarters large Sa for 2 families. Business | “grossing $100,000: == COMMERCIAL PROPERTY be 5 rm. pen ese 160° A ate! | pire wo! aia mane “wil | location for a drive-in Owner will | o the Just Pontiac. consider any reas offer MICHIGAN BUSINESS | SALES CORPORATION | SOR S LARDNER, BROCE ARK AT OUR FRO .FRONT DOOR | Partridge | UP NORTH Gsy 1 a tanon and gas station on main ~™ highway near St. Helen. Modern rustic a owner's s home includ- ed. Just ,009 on accept ened: DOWNTOWN LIOUOR Liquor bar on main street in Pon- tiac. Rentals & game income pays rent. Partners must: sell. Will ac- cept trade. Only ; A DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT) A drive in ts how this restau- rant on a busy highway should be operated Room to park cars Lots of room to work. Sharp Nowhere equipment, Deal for pigza or any | al wants other specialty. Owner terms quick deal! Price $6,900 PARTRIDGE REALTOR | REAL ESTATE & BUSINESSES THROUGHOUT MICHIGAN 1040 W. HURON 8ST OPEN EVE. ‘Til 9 STANDARD OIL CO: Is now accepting lease applica- tions for new service station lo- | cated at M-59 & Forrest Exc opportunity. _ investment required Financial as- sistance available. Call today. FE 4-1584 TAVERN FOR SALE. nerth of Pontiac NA 1-25 son for selling. illness. WOULD YOU LIKE A BUSINESS of your own, be outside, be your 20 Gi = own, boss, miake -good monev” Require $1,005 to handle’ FE 2-7188 after 8 p.m 20% DISCOUNT Coutract balance, $6 15427 par- able $63 per mo. Contract issued | on new 3 bedrm ranch home with full basement. Near Lake Orion Wood Co OR 31235 zaners 6. call OR 3-2603 $1,750 DISCOUNT | ‘TAKES $5,250 TO HANDLE } —$60 PER MONTH AND 6 PER CENT INTEREST. JIM Leet TO 345 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-044!) _ OPEN EVENINGS 8 UNTIL 8 8: 2 $5,000 BAL- $6,500 house on basement. Your NEW CONTRACT ance. Secured b North Side Ful cost, $4,000 2 mo old contract with $6,815 bal- ed by $8,000 ance. Secur home on East a Full basement. cost, The RR ADAMS Bun 1! to 5 Open Eves f ® 3172 W. Huron 8t FE 4-461 co. | SEASONED 6 PER CENT land contract on excellent ove at Watkins Late alance due $7,718 — dis- count 18 per cent—tost to you WE HAVE OTHER CONTRACTS AVAILABLE RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 262 8 Telegranh Pd Open 69 | FE 3-7103 LAND FE 5-7202 Money to Loan (State Licensed Lenders! PPBPLDPPL LPP PALL LOANS $25. TO $500 BAXTER & weft bint Maal) 64 W. Lawrence 8t “S| rtridge ‘| ; NOMES SEE | | IS THE “BIRD” TO SEE Ss rocery with beer & wine —~(¢) terms. Will as ™~. —_— 20 | FE 43581, Minimum emount of | “Sale Land Contracts 52. Your; _ +1538 | MODEST MAIDENS — x are * : a lot of money! Money to Loan 53 Sale Household “Goods 57 By Jay ‘Alan = Howe Goods 5 57 For Sale Miscellaneous 60 en naa "WACUUM | 1L1--A AW [ea Capers, al makes, ‘ ear erie antee. up Thyle ‘Electric. == sm 8 = $511 ' FLOOP’ T , $5: Metal boat, $48. PRIG. REFRIG. 2 DR. 15 CU. FT | Exc cond Oniy $149.05. Milk’s. | | MU 6-1300 | 4 burners, large middle oven. | | separate broiler. | clock. elec. condition, 985. GE. AUTO IRONER, PORTABLE. Almost new. EM 3-6193 _ Gas STOVE, Gas HOT WATER _ heater, $50. FE 2-66857. ; ELEC. RANGE. JAMES, } POR- GE. | “table dish washer. PE 2-14 \ timer, electric | retrigerator—freezer only onel train & access 6-3523 ‘KENMORE AUTO. WASHER | with suds saver, needs $16 re- | pairs, sei) fer tg Curtain, | stretchers, 64. Mag. rack, . $5 MI 4-8307 , a . KELVINATOR, g, EXCELLENT CON dition, very reasonable FE 28627 | LAWNMOWEB RUBBER TIRES. Maytag washer, exc cond ila refrig, good cond, and ironing “LEAVING STATE. RADIO, TV, | Phonograph comb. Kitchen, bed- room and living — furn, Alpo | __Mmisc. items. OR 3-5858 MATTRESS SALE! | i |FULL SIZE INNERSPRING. . Ae | i} a ad . (State Licensed Lenders) ee pee ye a pee ails LEE Ge) Twin size innerspring . sa fs | GET CASH QUICKLY “so ee _ "$29 98 | *' $199 95 NORGE ELEC. DRYER s bal is Springs $25 00° Up to $500 $139.95 Tappan gas range -.. etal Bead Frames. en poked 4 Speed Queen Soho é $n castors Wo See 695 1950 to 1956 ‘ears Bring your $270.95 Norge auto washer FREE DELIV title Most deals closed in 30 Ler) ae Kelvinator refrig, 11 seas WAITE'S inutes. Loans also made on fur- . Ciera! signatures and other se- UP eA ix YEARS TO PAY, albalargenty : | curities. YNE GABERTS 121 N_ pels | FE 5-6189 MAHOGANY BOOKCASE “AND OR- _ | _jental rug. OR +5423 Oakland BORROW WITH CONFIDENCE HFC—Household Finance Corpora- est finance comoesy. backed by 7? years of ex borrow up to steady income and fee is fast. same day. Phone or stop in Household Finance 9 (eae. of Pontiac 3% 8. Sa St. The Kay Bid and ol a "Room 304 _ PE +0555 28 TO $50 TOOMMUNITY LOAN CO, 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 60421 FRIENDLY sERVICE WHEN YOU .NEED Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 49 5 ROOMS’ ye 900 TERMS OR. _trade, P.O. Box $35. __ 20x60" ‘Sioa SPACE. FE _ STOR _2-6362, 31 Adelalie. FOR LEASE, APPROXIMATELY : space at rk- sors pads rE ve. Large Jot in rear. Day time ca ie, Eves, E2410 2 MODERN OF- x, 6,000 s doc wes 5-0653. WIXOM, MICH. Real Estate & Insurance office, ro cleaning establishment. MA Business Opportunities J Le acy Thru: Partridge — al bisa. Partridge ALL H 4 ACRES, GooD DRIVE STORE ON WY hunting & fishing area. Near Hill- ro a5 eal Ortonville. mea. Phone MA 9-0003. SELL, REALTOR We Finance—We Finance tO akrnivan RD" | Let us build your .ottage or re- iPPED RESTAt i peg oped tas our, new — ny, eau in Pizea TAURA i t Sri Michigan Land O'Lakes Gur) ing trade) Fm joes. 1127 W | aisv build and finance on your nesta j . Low. dowr varment E-Z oe ee oe Lit atthe SALE. 15 W.. terms. *Wilsen Prt pg Oe - lew price | Johnston & Hubbard Pam citer Tam. ee wone UILDERS RE - ore. ore ary ms Seats 50. Black top MOD_ LOO cA S ciker COMPLETELY | fot. ‘on Ge Oakland scroes from fe: Bie iy Mey gee| Ee rison, . Owner. FE 92-7813. CEA>S C BAR : ‘ PORT HURON, No food or dane- > For Sale Lots: 46 ing. Gross profit 1 yn ear only Pp sf or oludvta. tse tor 1: "$109 eS ee Seseraration eal) FE * MOTEL: NEAR HOWELL. Gross over $10,- Tae ee cop nae rae} *29 - $500 You can get tt quickly on your. signature. car or furniture. No | endorsers. Payments to sult your. budget. We will be gind to el - STATE - FINANCE CO. . _ FE 41574 072 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. - Buckner Customers Happy Folks —- employes serve with a mile in the most friendly man- is easy to to deal rf Buck- kind- ple: ‘or your tomedinte and ppiness by —- for &@ cash credit account with th tior is Americas oldest and larg | RIDGEWA regular monthly payments. Serv-— i appreciated Loans to $500 Up to 24 months | ‘STATEWIDE B. D SS nef Telegraph ot Ponte as HARDWARE E STORE to repay. - BUCKNER FINANCE CO. 2ND FLOOR NATIONAL” BLDG PONTIAC on DIXIE ——- DRAYTON PLAIN 290 BARNSTON. WALLED LAKE 45463 VAN DYKE. UTICA _ TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN . ROCHESTER, MICH. LOANS $25 TO 9800 LIVES hoc GooDps OL @4711 OL 1-0791 $25 TO $500 / BENEFICIAL ~ / FINANCE, CO. (Prov Ph. =LOANS cf fs | St. (Comer Pike) : ~€ —— =. ee 7 t . LIVING ttle SUITE. Pe. new, daven “MOHAIR DAVENPORT $15 | Pr sist | pon ge es chard Lake ia pa Bases i i | weet ‘ N | \ luxe. Fully avto, Like new Repu if Reta acts “obey 149.99 Sagina® | WHIT? EL GAs’ C gag. stove. Like new. $55. MI 2898, i \ ve ree eee oe ELECTRIC FANS LIKE _y INSIDE DOORS — 2 WINDOW AWNINGS , FOR T & 3° GASB STOVES, aaa poeiece: “FE 3 ocC. TABLES, veorr JARS, = 26 «cents a dogen: $2 HOTPOINT RANGE. 6 BURNERS | ®@ pair; adult eiocang sie Or- Good cond. Only $75. Milk’s. M1! chard Lake Ave. FE 5-872 eee = AOSAvE eLbuaino ver. pe HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS best of fer takes, $600 ‘56 - 1 172 8. Saginew ___ FE 35-2100 300 FL UBH For Sale Mince $0 WNINGS, IMMEDIA deli at Alum., steel & fibergias, —_ Alums down; $5 mdnth 3 Plo clearance on paints. FLUORESCENT | LIGHTS, on aa — kien apt aa siightly earned “LUMBER SARGAINE GE WASHER. RECONDITIONED | rdware, locks, sliding | Frigidaire washer etc. VALLELY’S. Used snd New 'Xenmore Mangle, $10.95 “Rochester Rds. OL | 5.5 pine a ft. Leonard refrigerator. 908 Sxt shore ft: . oryer, good condition i 000 BTU GUN °ox8; 2x10; 9212: 9x12 ej Cramp: Electric, ne. for ‘counter all lengths, bargeip prices 465 Auburn Rd. E #3673 for under used toilets, sinks, ‘steel GAS STOVE 39 x 2% aa GHT ments with (Field tile and ne ‘hana oven, good cond, me 4-2337. | ork ioe Somes: ete hr motor si 15 GAs RANGE, TAPPAN DELUXE, | Ceda, fence pos' we Bi vompia eine hardware. An, od NE Sell reasonable. Call FE- TES cr after 5 p.m —— ve’ xX 6° & outside doors 28 = ¢ FE 5-167¢' after 5 or Saturday. _windows. FE 22-2905 ELEC. oo 50 ‘970.98 | 30 Gal. Auto, Gas Heater $54.95 | Cab. sinks & fittings $59.50 up) | 82 $2 GAL. Laundry trays, stand faucets $23.95 | SAVE PLUMBING | : ____tt2—-South_Saginew— St | or 60° TRACY WHITE METAL | SINK game stainless steel top, $65. FE, SoS DISCOUNT _ On Super Kem-tone and see = e a paint icone colors ry Bros flat and miele ints. Oskiand Fuel and Paint, 436 Or- chard _Lake Ave FE 5-6 se is JECTS, almost eerie’ Call before 10 a.m. or after but before dark, Anytime sat, Sun. A TRAILER WILL HOLD BOAT luggage, new, never used, Estimates SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES CO. land Rd. (M39) OR 3-7092 METAL LATHE, WINTER € Sas ow m ust sel] this _take FLYER hls MANHOLE LE RINGS & COVERS SIZES FROM 12 TO fr INCHES Solid or ecrasaee Style Covers Catch Basin or Drain Covers *’ to 4” Perforated or Bar Trpe ~ Manhole Steps and Angle Tron 4+ < COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY CO 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-710 NEW GALVA 1% in, 21-ft. lengtha ........ i3e ft. ein Te UMBING' SUPPLY. 172 8. 1G. Saginaw FE 5-2100 Outside White 1 gal. cas and gallon ....... es edeeees se 9 01 Two gallon: ere Se Flat Paint ....... 1 gal, $4.48 _ “ae eee penceeneenene a a = wo gallons aves : FLOOR SHOP __—99_8. Saginaw PICNIC TABLES 413 & | & UP. 7600 Elizabeth Lake PLYW OOD “SPECIALS Cash & =p | * Pir «nb 8 95. gnaw 172 8. DO} MONEY! Make vit easily | through Classified Ads. TO, & chair, 2| or modern otep tab may Oana Overstuffed chair $5. come, have # look. Bert Monroe, le C fol , au ter table 2. deeorate ri peat, Kis Saat parley $10 ws 5: Recess. Pe anak or ‘to =* AS 5 oan Uompany | Pearson's Purniture. 42 Orchard | Apt. electric range $15 ANCHOR F ‘ENCES | Call Us 00 other plywoods. Interior 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG Lake Ave Soest ene - oH $15 ee eatin Ae er Prntiac PI wood Co. as gas TES iL § PLECE DINING SET, ALSO ODD we BUY. BELL AID. EXCHANGE gyrHROOM FIXTURES. YOUNGS | 1480 Baldwin ai Ph. FE 2.2543 dresser FE 2-2578 ew EVERYTHING FOR THES ROME) l wisers hei of} & gas furnaces.| QuaNTITY OF > “LARGE Size ‘\1° PHILCO TABLE MODEL TV. | pil) (hahaa, $523 Hot water and steam boilers. |“ phillips screws, ler Reconditioned and in perfect con- 104 8. Saginaw amas automatic water beater herd-| non m screws and hers. Mot L - 54 _dition, Phone OR 3-7665 after 6:00 | MOVING — MUST SELL ALL BY | ware electrs.al supvlies. Crock | pop ; : gage Oans Wed eve. Very cheap. Matching snd tile. galvanized copper. black = is " PRR RAR ARI AA \r INBOARD PTRADE, FOR 1055 headboard, spread aud. cornices. | ipe and futines Lows Bros, | REEL 4 ce sae LOANS—S$600 to $1,500 Automobile. PE 651 —_. | kitchen table. stool, curtains. | aint and faa Scwie ne.| & 7a. ad | mower. & Svecter Ce Ma 30° GAS RANGE, BABY “BUGGY, | power mower, tricycle, sofa. | MEIGHTS 87 LY. Lepeer| mewer omen Line ane bones Gasere er uel ts Teeter-Babe_FE lamers lee oe ere oe | fd PE ts ae a WAP FE 86-3716. : omes, r : : . | ih e “ A = Kllhent ctdid ce Oakland County - | 36° FRIGIDAIRE DELUXE, , ELEC. See cst roomtatl jacket At)| quarters “opal re Mit. PE s4NP. | xeyNoLDs - eCHA WATER 2 For home additions of tric_range, $79. FE ter 6 00. 29 Niagara MOVED | softener, MA 6-435. improvements — 36" GAS RANGE. ——— Vase gare ss BUILDING 26x30 TO BE eine iw o UEED - 3. To rough in or enclose FE 21-1403 | NORGE REFRIGERATOR. GOOD | or torn dewn. Call FE 47216 after re 1380 Bexis Dp MERC mae house partly constructed. ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT | cond, $50. MY 3-637) _4 30 pm Pains. | Mich. 4° Bulla a carage or on fs THE HOME G&x BE FOUND NORGE REFRIGERATOR, $30, TA- GAVE AT WARWICES: GUTTER. a garage home Les SA | ble and 3 chairs, $8 FE 46584 BUY 2 13¢ "aprons 2h $3,35 A Second) mores ery | a utete ‘out of the way but a lot, NEW HP. REFPIG is PER CENT i i oe Apply 200 National Building fess to pay Ges and elec. refrig-| off. Usea TVs Siv 9S up. RCA col | From your jocal menutecnnver ia 4 ver __ Pontiac 0 or_phone_FE 4-4730_ grators Ranges & water heaters; or eets Rado & Ap | THE LAKE AREA'S LARGEST —paint \ Swaps 55 | dts, chests, | tells lg ll mour a avr, o at GREE | Open Evenings—Please __ soil.” "ant Sell PE b-0000. _ 8 Hochester = ® BOATS : ‘iito, CHEV. PANEL STRUCK. i GHEV i053, DEL RAY. 1 OWNER.| Phone MAple 5-5141 "o> soit, shee BL DIRT. oENEADUING AE FE 2-0022 : | --00. Reve 601 &_ Sage tone a ee cae _32 8, MAIN 8T., CLARKSTON Saat Fe cas Snare “G'n | peoocomacaam tame CC AVBAUGITS |r SOUP MEO fa Var ome ag, wae | Trade Up or Down, > TOP Som, GRAVEL & PILE. FE 190 _Crooks_Rd Mr 6-046 PE 28-0653: 3 RTERNATIONAT aul i083 CHEV. 10,000 ACTUAL MILES. a TRACTORS AND BIG TRADE-IN ON _ | 1, DopOe DUMP. Br> sop. "si ot kt CLARESTON RD. ; J IURON MTR. SALES | ain at” Spard, tmnediainl Gr MOWERS || EVINRUDE MOTORS | stir 7 Site eee SEAT Book i ndind ans & Wheel Horse Fac-|21 years. repair experience, Boats, | SUMP BODY AND HOIST. 6 TO oie ee FORD PICKUP TRUCK, 1 TON. crt more ae oe ® LOAD.| tors. Porter os Spnetions & lot _& supplies. Tex "tan Matic | \ 7@._cse. Ver Wihemetin eal ‘Chev. Bel-Air, 2° door, — Clean throughout, FE §-1600. Rett mn, Mart distence,| Motomower ~ Jacobean ~ Bolans| _Pe #-0112."Open 10 to fut % TON FORD PICKUP, 6|-s5 Pectacd 400. Hi. 7. tow "| —ipae FORD a DOOR Re basis tor moving. Sf «Sita Bolans vowee-pan. st" B B we pont oe Ee | git! | a ae eek om __FPES3i77. MASON * |. Roto-hoe, od PICKUP. sHOwW 6 ee are: i sand, state-te road “gravel @| Kee. tospade, Mustang & Jeri oat uyers room cond. 3,000 mi. MI 67853 or | ,., MAZE orok a ee repre BEE, G05 eee. 2 - * Hf = a te a ay - & we 3.9083 & id Plants, Trees, Sh bs 68 Special ME mowers. Used. eauip: ‘Goer Our Daal Srey poe ect. OF Sain ahr 56 z VETTE FE 3-2063 : - PETU win mover, Mnvacie tn NF Get Our Deal | ae xas D PANEL TRUCK iiss CHEV. 4 DR. POWERGLIDE,| yin at NIAS, NOW 13 OFF. AT er, fiwaukee 4% i. Va" engine Oe Ae | ele, FE bt - Lak Si Stamm? Green Howe. FE’ rowers, 3 excie bare. wrerel | REfOTE You B wore “for, you. Save on | — ¢ Orion FON ey 220i mowers, t terms. etore You DUY Si. ‘a one at only $7: Ford-Mere ~_For Sale Pets 69 ser DEV ANS HQUIPMENT se% off on Gil nents te tock. North Chevrolet Co. - Os aaa aoe, 7D. REAT- REG, ature wa |" aga OF Ra Sear |e rea ager eae | Satu 7 POMERANIAN SEALE POPPIES ome DISCOUNT BOA1 COVER, ALL SIZES, MAKES long. Good cond. FE 4-108 : Harold Turner Ford. _poodie puppies FE §-0851. One brand sew Case 140 Baier | JOE'S A&N SURPLUS wpe 20022 | a FORD ¥-1 PICKUP. a. S. Sa l aW ‘tl FORD CUSTOM € sedan bar- ake “PEEING: Ait serviced and Forage harvester. COSTELLO'G MERCURY 0 QUTBDS.. . box. FE 0-8426._ g gain, $325. 1 : patb-coiors a biseds he eae Tanats EVINRUDE MOTORS | ‘Spolsnt, Bic. Good shape. Mate| DODGE - PLYMOUTH | °//PQ_ + _or PE $220. : HOUGHTEN & SON EADING BRANDS IN BOATS or Fe eee. ‘BT Belvedere 2 dr pve Br 1 ht AIREDALE AKC i ¥R. REA-|_ J. 1. Case & Ferguson Dealer olverine Whirlwind, DODGE DUMP, RUNNING GOOD. | °57 Chev. 4 dr. PG g ree soRPoe as er co a1. American Je Sramman. | 32 Pg RDF ANEL V-. “Gite. ied | 58 Bolek Super h Sines . u or Housetrailers 78| Sterting : ' S gue Sir Robin Paiticolored. OR ye ecw ee we tedoe Tens AvAILABLE FIGKUF_TRUCK POR SALE_WE. ‘8 Plymouth, stgion wagon’ Save pot BEAUTIFUL FAWN COLORED Oak fais, 1618 Raltwin | een ote moay | isd DeoeaP a1 av "38 Ford Custom 4 if TC 8} Boren year ee COLORED mow ir oe ont ‘ives @ SUNDAY | ibd PICKUP. 41, SHAPE. c, $235. a 4 V8 4 dr ‘4 AUTO SUPER MART us Sab sh | RERUN OUE PRLS | WILSON GMCS aiirtar stat 12a) '56 Olds 98 Dix Hol, Sed if GENERAL HOUSE TRAILER | CENTURY-TROJAN-YELLOW — A : ’ 4 i S one 5 gACEST @ CADILLAC ALUM. New & Used Trucks ‘3 pod 2dr lee deen 3-408 4 ery ine . PT. HOUSETRAILER, ALL Mgt 52 Hudson 2 dr 1 $265 or oor aay Wossk beaees_nor Me FINANCING AVAIL Oakland at Cass | ‘Si Chevy cl, Spe. Ps FB... $ 388|°55 Olds 98 Dix. Hol. Sed. i ee a Bee BOF INLAND LAKES SALES FE 5-9485 ‘$0 Pontiac 3 dF......0.000.. $3981 °54:Buick 4Door . u27_W. } \W. Huron: FE +7121, PE 2-6122 For Sale Cars . 91 "Sl Buick 4 dP. .....c.ceeveeees $ 195 "54 Pontia cap ue “FRAILER | CRIS CRAFT BARRACUDA, MER- =F ; ie waoALES ener. _53. BUICK 2 Bete te mete $18 8S Bord Door "mate Sem gate omer cmemeirsore| mre | TENTENGCHINEID | S$ Chrysler #Doo oma oa ot Gee oe __monson’s, 9140 Poritiag Lk. Rd.| | aan Olds rage EVINRUDE MOTORS. "CREST! / \ \ “CY? * : Chevr fn, accessories 4 : Gekce tralers. Biggest Sader’ od} DON T PASS uP *51 Cadillac Coupe tors. “Bank terms elly's, Hard: he "54. Buick '4-Door iii 3004 Auburn "atc viel PO “n't Dealer | MONEY!, Sell unneeded] '50 Studebaker 4Dovr Heights cue’ aler _ 1150 Olds, Convertible * AV ad FE 28181. , \ 7 ( oe 345 Saat a < ee "ae t} a. belongings for\ cash ; j thro: Sop aioe Ads!) Olds “Cadillac \ . FE ‘36 OLDS 0 HOLIDAY. FULL ‘power. Exc. cond. 8 to 4:30, FE 2-01 After 7, OR 3-1726. THE WORKIN iG N'S PRIEND 115 8, Saginaw Used Cars ‘47 “PONTIAC, SE, running condition, cheap. FE 4-2398, 820 Parkwood. —_ i063 PONTIAC SAFARI STATION wagon, 19,900 miles, —— paw ve clean, * be oan at Rex's Standard Service, corner of Perry, & Mount Clemens. FE 7:30 p.m. “|CAR PA 5 some? ‘Let us you ae to eome ‘mi I Fastest Growing i Vv down matic transmission. Lovely t job. Price reduced to caly North Chevrolet Co. eee ae er Ave. Birmingham on 1954 4 DR. ALL POWER. a a pew. 1 owner. B’ham Suburban Mtrs. Olds Dealer LOOK 30 used cars, 1949 to 1954's. All makes, at wholesale prices. Make your own terms. New 1957 Pontiacs AS LOW AS $2,334.54 DELIVERED Keego Sales & Service from 9 till 9 Open tr ie OLDS. mS SALE OR TRADE. PE 86-3334. ‘38 OLDS 98 38 HARDTOP A-1 CON- dition. 16,000 miles. PE easis. LDS. 1956 08 ¢ = P. Blue & white. awe Pbk Low mi. 1 owner. Sein ua Sw Motors. |: Suburban Mrs. Olds Dealer | 563 8. Woodward ingh it OLDS 1956 SUPER 88 «¢ DOOR sedan. Very low miles, m Ford-Mere : fee ner m1 . | Save pak Neh 5 aoeaan peseae get buy! ¢ “Pontiac Auto, | Brokers ae L TOTR YOUR EVERYBODY'S CREDIT 18 GOOD 1940 éesdevisws. PE $20. j a te Net o PONTIAC : *. DRA... $150. _S ‘sh Gn‘ oe eee RD., L. OVER- Side Used Cats |e make an sorni<, 30 $383 Pine mis where overhead is low Rd. and “ind els peng ami ‘S$ Pontiac Siw. Hydra... $1695 ‘ Spec T | $1605 RKING MAN'S FRIEND $e Pontiac peti , oe $1395 7a8 wonky ‘_ ® JON re ee gp hee Se 795 | 115 8. Saginaw sed_Care ev ; spre, 183 Lineola HF Hrd, Shar. $3) = CONFUSED?? SEC Rie Sle oe, ae OS stom .......- A tO Cite 00 ger, Be... 6 “pel ‘nie, Rai, PA PS. PO. » PONTIAC - | "88 Olds. 98, 6 S e Hydra. Ps. P-B, loaded. ~~ AUTO BROKERS 2 aoe 1260N. Perry FE 49100} 3 el xm PONTIAC 2 DOOR. EXCEL- Good second W cadition PE 21866 after §.| MANY O CHOOSE FROM 1950 PONTIAC, 2 DR., R&H, $175. FE 2-4600, Safe Buy Used Cars CENTRAL PONTIAC’S ONLY LINCOLN MERCURY DEALER CASS AT PIKE §TS. FE 4-3885 1957 PONTIAC pened HARD- IENDLY OLDS - YOUR FR: pty 1953 Chevrolet | 1951 Ford 1963 Buick Super merane: 1953 Ford towe Squire MOST MA caneam 312 W. Montcalm HOUGHT EN & SON omc SEE OUR NEW LINE OF . ENGLISH AUTOS. ~ NORTH PONTIAC. rectors Beautiful. Vic. beautifu D MODELS TO. AUTO TO SALES PE 49151 top, $2360. FE 2- ‘31 PONTIAC, Bock: 8. GOOD 23-0572. condition. OL ‘59 PONT. 8 FULLY EQUIPT. very nice. EM 3-0081, H. Riggins. 1953 WILLYS Station Wagon ~ $095 LARRY JEROME ROCHESTER FORD DEALER ‘36 Frac. SeEOUTIVE CARS ~UP- TO $900 i | | ores a 88 SUPER, 4-DR., TWO- power. R&H, W-W. . Bham trade-in. ~p! Suburban Mtrs. Olds Dealer 565 8 Woodward Birmingham ~ HAUPT Pontiac Sales 1957 Pontiac Starchief custom Cata- lina coupe. Hy power. Factory executive's car. 1956 Pontiac Catalina coupe. Like new. Excellent buy a Pontiac 2 dr. Hydramatic. Re Beautiful condition. 1988 | Dodge. Excellent condition, 8T.. CLA aneron Open Nights ‘Til MAple 5-5566 or MAple * sana DISCOUNT PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St Ss FE 3-711 1952 PONTIAC CONV R&H. HY- dra. W.W. tires, red color, Ex- cellent condition 4 aT CLARKSTON RD. Lake Orion Motor Sales MY_2-2611 36 STUDEBAKER. COMMANDER. spreet take over payments. FE | ic drive, power steering, power brakes, Spotiess interior. New car appearance. See this one - owner beauty today Only $306 or your ca: down, \ Olds Dealer 565 8. Woodward Birm| ‘a1 i PLY MOOT 2DR., RUNS LIKE down. LUCKY AUTO _ SALES 193 8. Saginaw. FE Ga i? PLYMOUTH 4 DR. CLEAN, | runnin, cond. 46,147 emai 8 of Q ‘86 Olds super 88 4 dr. 5 $905 asKkIns CV, | 56 Ford Customline 2 d $1505 ‘36 Plymouth Belvedere 2 ‘dr .: $1695 6751 saan Highway me M15 ‘S$ Merc. Monterey HT $1695 MApie 6-607 Nites ‘til 8 ‘55 Ford Customline 2 dr, $1205 aa oepRUORTEE 3 Futuna en ge 4 ‘ ctoria Cpe. ...... heater, SMOBILE, “RADIO_AND 55 Buick Century HT ....... $1795 ceva aces engnemip f ate. | et CTs MOS er... § 945 Call credit Mee kar, Perks. Mid: ‘34 Buick Super HT... $1295 west 47500. Harold Pord Ss ea crn pe CS cedaosces 805 1964 86 HOLIDAY , _ Hydra. _ befhy shomgrerh bores — BUD SHELTON OFFERS “Bud Shelton Motor Sales Auburn at EB. Blvd. "$2-53 BUSINESS IS GREAT OUR USED STOCK BULGING 8 RAMBLERS "S1-'56 hd. _wegmne, , convt 5 FORDS "83-55 wagons. sedans, convt. 7 NASHES ‘S255 Ambassadors, Statesman 2 CHEVROLETS "50-'54 . 4 8 DSMOBILES 1-8. Hardtop, 2&4 doors Ov ER 80 CARS IN STOCK SALE ON. FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS AND DEMONSTRATORS BIRMINGHAM NASH 66 8. westweree O 4-6790 MI 6- FE 4¢€728 Complete parte & service arcananes Call credit Mer Parks. west 47500. a - “Turner Ford, PL LYMOUTH 1955 CLUB expan. | out. Just your car easy payments. Haskins Chev. | 675] Dixie Highway at M15 MApie 5-507' Open nites ‘til PONTIAC. CLEAN pe | Ee: Fe Ge I. 1 OWN- 3-1323 down, very, ins eecita 35.000 MI. er, first $750 takes “ee MY 31333. 1955 pdectigg < HARD TOP. RA-| tone = u- at only $1305 with easy terms. North Chevrolet Co. 1000 8. Woodward Ave. Birmingham SEDAN, and extra term North Chevrolet Go. 1009 8. Woodward Ave. B am ru re NOTE tins CLARKSTON RD. Lake Orion ante art Sales FORD-MERCURY SUMMER _ CLEARANCE: SALE 1957 CHEV. DEMOS. AND OURTESY CARS AT. TERRIFIC SAVINGS 2-DOORS — 4DOORS WAGONS--CONVERTS $195 or your car ddéwn do Wine we at Oe TAKE ADVANT! LOW I j locaTION “eee . CHEVROLET “Oakland County's | ova od at os ot ua "Tot Shadi HASKINS Month E North Side 641 South Side 'S7 FORD Fairlane “300” eed eet, age! ‘56 FOR! ado & Heater. "55 PONTIAC 4 eee 55 PONTIAC 4-Door *... °54 CHEVROLET Bel Air 54 FORD 42Door seein 53 LINCOLN’ Ca Be nec! ui Trans.. vine. BEIGE MAROON. ’53 Dobe. 2-Door ... & Heater. Dark eae eeaew | °54 CHEVROLET Station ER~-Radio & Heater. 52 iy 2- fogs ‘51 BUICK 50 CHEVROLET 2D >: Boor. From $95 to $245 Aa teal gt lg MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES OFFERS VALUES GALORE ’36 BUICK Special 4-Door ........... . $1755 Radio & Heater, Dvnafiow, IVORY & BRONZE. 55 FORD | Vi ictoria nopddnondce dasaaneoodas 1545 r. Ford-O-Matic. IVORY & TURQUOISE. 56 N ASH “Metropolitan a Hardtop °.. . os $1095 55 CHEV ROLET. Bel Alr ...... cece eee ee $1295 & Heater. ney & Harvest GOLD. 55 CHEVE ROLET, 2D 2- Door 210 K epile © tare sarees $1295 . Biscayne BLUE 55 CHEVROLET. 20: 2: Dost 310. Se ae. $1095 ter Dark GREEN. 54 NASH ‘Rambler I Hardto aioaislelsacieeslce cp OOS "54 CHEVROLET 21 2 Door 210 . Gg 845 io & Heater. IVORY & Light B 53 oLDSMOBILE {Door rr Daciceeiseeecies $ 895 vydramatic, IVORY & RED W-Walls. “453 CHEVROLET ADO0r oss sccctcesen sc. $ OS ter Sea Mist GREEN 53 CHEV ROLE ET Station W agon vecueecnee $ 895 ER—Radio & Heater, BEIGE & BRONZE a) MERCURY Monterey’ Hardtop ........ $ 995 oe Radio & Hester. Merc-O-Matic. BLACK & RED. 353 DODGE Convertible, ............... see o8 595 iio & Heater Auto. Traas. eCyl. 53 PONTIAC 4-Door? oon... eee 1S 645 eater. Sun Visor. Dark GREEN '§1 CHEVROLET 2Door sos... cece. $ 345 Radio & Heater. IVORY & BLACK: 2118) Saginaw ring. Power Brakes, 36 CHEVROLET “Bel Air 4-Door ..... lo & Heater. Powerglide. Power Brakes, weWwala, Victoria a Hardtop . 55 CHEVROLET "Bel Air Hardtop - Spor W-Walls, BEIGE & Heater. epee: IVORY & Light GREEN. _— ne peer 7, Myseng ste. Power Steering, Power iio & Heater. Poweralide, IVORY & TURQUOISE. Ca 2-Tone GREEN "52 FORD. Rese as MANY sg TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS —YOUR TERMS _ A Phone Call Brings a Courtesy Car to Your Door ~MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES. "Your CHEVROLET Dealer” . SAGNAW: * CAgs' AT OAKLAXD" nd Sale Oakland Ave. $1695 eee eee ewer ee IVORY & er rr 2-Door $ 895 issn rews cows 795 oseee ee teenees . $1095 Power Brakes, Power eee ee eves eee eee tee eonacee Wagon Wa a eeeae .. $1095 Py BROWN & soceee eG 445 9 395] . sccrcetovecscesp 445 sisisiearsinslew sais 295 eee eterna can eeneee No WIR, (10) CRLW, (som WWJ, (950) WCAR, (1198) WXYZ, (1278) WPON, (1460) “ eS (a9) 7 WCAR, Shook CKLW, News, David WPON, Chuck we WPON, News, Sports a —— a 1 :20—WIR, Dr. ae ll: CAR, ‘s, 3. en 30—WJR, Music WPON, News, Shanley pated Bf neti %. _——— 0:38 —WiR, Jack Harris: See fae NN WEDNESDAY MORNING | | = Fam Geeree 1:45—WJR, Nore Drake’ %. = wl tee News, —— oe ry pa Phy oo ons 2:00—WJR, Ma Perkins ».“ “awa Bob Maxw wxyY True — \'WJ, NBC News ; wxyz, News, Wolf CELW News, Honechats | CKLW. Austin Grant, Davies}: Suse: —— Club WJBK, News, George WCAR, Don Zee Wea — a a PO CAR, News, MD. 2:30—WJR, 2nd ~-Mrs. Burton” sam one 8, a WPON, America to Knees | WW4J, Mulholland, Harris Country Roundup | | _ WXYZ, News, J, Slagle moma Agriculture WXYZ, Girl Marries oneness wens News CKLW, News, Mary Morgan WCAR, Sports “ SE deatcrs | Wron, GiSanaizy M/s wan, Pasetaee wit L ‘J 5 Tran wae She Reid 00 yea Godfrey - a Rote oo uiTeam _ WPON, Early Board sports WHYa, Jack Jock wws. btar 00—WJR, Dan ts ¥ See Rene | BSA aces Ethce | SSO, ee CKLW, News, eed vid = he erty Tak Mews ‘Reid aE rial Tine, tee Music | WXYZ, News, McKensie PON, Early Bird Club wx rz, Curtain Calls wank, a 1:30 WIR, Music » Robert Hurley WPON, Bon Maxwell WJBK, Clark Reid 4:00—W4JIR, none. Ans, Man Wiz, p Bawe, Watt sy | Ware, "Weltrick ‘Sports wise’ See Warten WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON | WXYZ Wie ( 5 WCAR, News" 12:00—WJR, Jim Vinall WJBK, News, McLeod WPON, 8:00 WWJ, News WCGAR, News, Walrod WJBK. fcores oo WIR, Jim Vinal WXYZ, Cu Is 4:30—WJR, Music Hall 10:00—WWJ. News Bob Maxwell _CKLW, Grant, J etree WW4J, Jim Deland ww neve iui fener ben | Wiae Sete gee, Sieriy| Wane aclase abhi Jack Burrell WJBK, News, Reid whos World Ne Bruce Martyn) Woo De ‘ News, Alle week. WPON, Music With Mason | WPON. World News - 12:30 —WJR, Time tor Muste po=ee eye eerie 16:30—WJR, Government Ww, Faye Ww, News Lda = ens 8:30—WJR, Music Hall WwxyYZ, ts WXYZ, Wattrick, ‘Sports cepa of Town wee. Maxwell News CKLW, Bud W, Sports co , Lenhart XYZ, F. Wolf WPON, Noon ong Serenade Ww JBK, News, McLeod WWJ, Witehing Hour wine News, Reid 12545—WXYZ, Lady of Charm WCAR, WXYZ, Top of Town WCAR, Allen, T. Malon ‘ WPON, Music With Mason or’ — Sports WPON, Early Bird Club 1:06—WJR, Wendy Warren | 6:30—WJR, Music Hall ¥ —— Kasem WW, News, Mu id eee Jim Deland 1 lWIR, Mule Owws" Minuten peared = Geen Gears. CKLW, tad oor i Trace ewe. OF ews, 46 WPON, Music With Mason ' WXYZ, Breakfast Club CKLW, News id WJBK, McLeod _ 6:45—(4) News. __7:00—(9) Million Dollar Movie.’ star Nina Koshetz tells true .Plomgp, Detroit. ; JOYCE GLADMOND. etc., then to Europe . ‘who* holds out'his hand wait- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE. 25, 1957 WE N = y SEVEN Actress Mari el . -- -- Today's S Radio Pr 4 \ ograms. -- -- Today's Television. ‘Programs -- Channel 2—WJIBK-TV Channel ‘—ww5s- TV Channel 1—Wwx YZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS (4) Color. Arthdr Murray. (2) Phil Silvers. 6:00—(7) Sports F . wt be News. cn ea 7:30—(7) Wyatt Earp. Wyatt has| bho 5 ONG olor); a love affair. (4) Panic. Darryl! News. Hickman plays discouraged 6:10—(2) Weather. | youth who hunts to find a girl _ 6:15—(7) News: (4) Weather, (2)| he met by chance on Christmas News. Eve. (2) Private Secretary. 6:20—(4) Box Four. ‘|8:00—(7) Broken Arrow, ‘Med- 6:30—(7) Conflict: Men design,| cine Man” vs. doctor in epi- build, test jet aircraft. Scott) demic threat. (4) Jane Wyman. Brady stars. (9) Headfine. (4)) Miss Wyman is a nurse who Jon Winters. Singer Jill Corey.) helps mother-to-be. (2) To Tell (2) Name That Tune. | the Truth. '8:30—(7) Telephone Time. Opera. Passing ‘Sympathizer’ Offers Foreman Solace : BY EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Poem scrawled on the construction walls of the’ new 611 5th Ave. Bldg. by a member of Sidewalk Superintend- ents: “There, there Mr. Foreman, don't you weep, Your men aren't dead. They’re just asleep.” * * * Slob that I am, I slobbered all over the place sneaking a peek at Joan Crawford's new picture, based on “The Story of Esther Costello.” As Joan led the little blind-deafdumb girl out of the darkness, tears trickled down my grizzled beard and I) groped for my breast-pocket handkerchief. My wife was.already bawling into it, partly because her hero, Rozzano Brazzi, was about to get pistoled to death for doin’ both of 'em wrong. Joan will be the new sob girl after this. Johnnie Ray never cried this much. Only two laughs occurred in the film—one when some kids in Ireland looked at the American auto, said, “Look, they're Gatholics!”—and pointed to the license plate ... which said “Mass. ” The other snicker came when Joan flew the little girl to Boston Airport and we saw Joan right under a Pepsi-Cola sign. . a x & *. Al Steele, Joan's husband and Pepsi board chairman, says they should change that sign in the picture .. . “We should make it larger.” * x * Jack Benny reports from Las Vegas that he goes into Los) Angeles Cedars of Lebanon Hospital July 12 for a checkup. If suffering from nothing worse than an enlarged wallet, he'll fly over the Pole’ to Europe for a rest . . . Good news from Florence, Italy: Gladys Swarthout's recovering nicely from her remarkable heart operation. Her husband Frank Chapman says she'll be singing again in a month or two... <* -* * . The Rocky Marcianos are reducing in Miami Beach, where you sit down at a table where you see everything you love to eat; however, everything's a low calorie substitute. In one week one patient lost 6 pounds and his disposition . . . Which reminds us, Alfred Hitchcock wired that friends, “It’s all right— it’s healthy fat.” Oh sure. THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Red Skelton is bringing son Richard to see the White saga the*Liberty Isell, . Terry Moore’s 3 withdrawing her divorce ac- tion. Joyce Gladmond, subbing for Edith Adams in “Li'l Abner,” will get a screen test. a Mrs. Joe Louis’ll donate a day’s take at her beauty par- lor—plus all salaries'— to the NAACP ...NBC-TV wants Nat (King) Cole for 12 spectacu- lars, plus his new — ; show. WISH PD SAID THAT:! re optimist nowadays ig anybody ing for: change. — John $i. enny, Youngman ak he. ‘attended a drive-in’ theater \ana saw a film so bad he not, ore swore ar’ a RE but also | he just put on 6 pounds. But he assured , _|4:38 (2) The Early Show. story of her life of dedication to, Town Mayor. (4) “The Hunted: (2) Red { ; music, (9) | Circle Theater. Eva Soreny Story.” | Skelton, Gregory \Ratoff. 9:0@—(7) “Frank and Jesse James.” (9) This Is Your Music. Byron Palmer, Joyce Weldon. (2) $64;000 Question. Ed Sullivan subs for Hal March. 9:30—(7) Goldbergs. (9) “I Highway Patrol. 10:00—(7) Theater. (9) National (4) Rosemary Clooney, News. | (2) Annapolis Men. '10:10—(9) Weathervane. 10:15—-(9) Theater 15. te:30—(7) Powell Theater. (9) By- | line. Mark Stevens in ‘Trial | Lawyer. (4) Traffic Court. (2) | Capt. David Grief. 11:00—(7) Soupy’s On. (9) Million | Dollar Mystery. Ralph Bellamy in Ellery Queen story. (4) News. (2) News. '11:15—(4) Weather. (2) Miss Fair- weather. 'L1:20—(4) Sports. (2) Sports. (11:23—(2) Nightwatch Theater. (2) Charles Coburn in “Unex- pected Uncle.” 11:30—(7) 30 Minute Theater. Ana Harding in ‘Young Girl in Ap- ple Tree.” (4) Tonight. WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:50 (2) Meditations. (4) Farm Report. 6:55 (2) On the Farm Front. 7:00 (2) Jimmy Dean. (4) Today. 7:45 (2) News. 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo. Cartoon Carnival, 8:30—(7) The Little Rascals. 8:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. 8:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. ¢:00 (2) Garry Moore. (4) Home. 9:30.(2) Arthur Godfrey. (7) Our Friend Harry. 10:00 (4) The Price Is Right. 10:30 so ieee 8 EKe (4) Truth or Consequence 11:00 (2) Valiant Lady. (4) Tie Tac Dough. 11:15 (2) Love of Life. (7) '11:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You:. D Robin & Rickey. 11:45 (2) Guilding Light, 11:55 (9) Billboard. ° WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON | 12:00 (2) (color) Ladies’ Day. (4) Play to Win. (7) 12 O'clock Com- ies, (9) Junior TV Club. Ereite: (9) Pride of the Fam- y. 1:00: (2) Our Miss Brooks. M Lady of Charm. (9) Bill Ken- nedy Showtime. 1:30 (2) House Party. (4) Tennes- see Ernie Ford Show. 2:00—(2) Big Payoff. (4) (Color) Matinee Theater. (7) Afternoon Film Festival. 2:30 (2) Bob Crosby. 2:40—(9) Myrtle Labbitt. 2:55 (9) News. 3:00 (2) Brighter Day. (4) — > a Day. (9) Fun With Food 15 (2) The Secret Storm. 3:99 (2) The Edge of Night. (7) My Little Margie. (9) Howdy Doody. :45 (4) Modern Romances. 4:00 (2) Susie, (4) Dear Phoehe. (7) Ramar of the Jungle. (9) Circle 9 Theater. (4) Romper Room. (7) Mickey’s Rec- ord Room, , 5:00 (7) Mickey Mouse Club. (9) Honor wis Librarian, scholarship by the’ gamma ee" nt nosis." Detroit Hypnology Assoc #seri demonstration. (4) Whistler. (2) ® KANSAS CITY (#—Jean Lowrie, ; supervisor of the Western’ Michi-|" ” gan University library at Kalama- |z00, has been awarded a $1,000 ae Li-| , ‘lbrary Association at its ve illiams Defenc : if : S Video Soap: Oost Portrays Lydia in Brighter Day’ Believes Suds Dramas Allow Development of | Deeper Characters, +. ‘. By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK —Let’s turn over ‘the witness stand today to Muriel) Williams, a comely and talented actress who has a few words to say in behalf of television soap operas. . * * * As Lydia Canfield of ‘Brighter Day” (CBS-TV, Monday through Friday, 3 p.m., EST), she has had nearly. two years of experience in the daytime. serial field. “As Lydia Canfield,” she says, “TI have a husband and have been involved in far more e onal adventures than practically any ‘married’ woman you can name. But each adventure in itself has not been over-dramatized or over- ly turgid. . * * * “T think the reason some people criticize so-called soap opera is because they look at one once and fail to enter deeply into the story since they haven't been following it. It's like opening a book in the middle, glancing at one page, and ’|saying, ‘This stinks.’ Or else some- one will sit down and look at three or four serials in a row. That's like eating too much dessert all jat once.”’ On one score Miss Williams had No argument from her inquisitor: ‘the acting in daytime television serials has a high level of excel- lence. * * * “Portraying a character over a) eced of time gives an actor more ichance to develop depth than in. a one-shot,’ she says. “It also: gives viewers an opportunity to. evolve genuine personal reactions, to the characters. There’s an aura lof stability, reality and continuity to the surroundings of a daytime ® rial.” - jonally an actor or actress is written out of the script of a soap pera for a while. Thus Miss Williams will shortly fade from the story line of “Brighter Day” for a couplé of weeks in order to play in “Anniversary Waltz” at the Sacandaga Park Theater near Gloversville, N.Y. * * Born in Dover, N. iF ,Miss Wil- liams was married to “the late Francis Hart when he waiman- ager of the Cape Playhouse, in death, ‘she has remained vice pres- \ident of the Boston model agency) which he founded. j ‘Survives Plunge From 15th Floor NEW YORK — A 51-year-old | floor of a skyscraper in the down- town financial district last night —and fived. Joseph J. Klein crashed through a skylight on a second-floor set- back. Police said he ‘“‘jumped or fell” from an office adjoining his own in a 22-story building just south of Wall Street. * * * Klein was reported in critical condition today at Beekman-Down- town Hospital. His injuries includ- ed fractures of the ribs and mght elbow, His wife Betty went to the hospital. * * * His: fall was believed ‘‘cush- ioned" by numerous wires just in- side the skylight, where an air- conditioning system was being in- stalled. Police found the light on in Klein's office. His wallet, watch, glasses and cigarettes were on the desk. The coat to his blue suit was neatly folded over the arm {of a chair. 12:30 (4) (Color) Club 60, (7) The». Not a Mass Execution, Just\Tests for Dentists electrical ‘outlets have been in- stalled and30 collapsible chairs have been setup in the basement of the New Mexico state prison this week. It isn’t preparation for a mass execution. It was the-scene of the tion. Five dental technicians and 25 dentists worked yesterday on dentures for convicts, will work on fillings today and have their work inspected tomorrow. Ocean Tide Takes Six children drowned yesterday when the southeast coast ‘of this Medi- terranean , island. Artorico Polt- accountant plunged from the 15th|J | sociate justice of the New Jersey SANTA FE, N, M. W—Special |i ‘annual three-day dental examina- |3? CAGLIARI, Sardinia #— Five, the tide swept them out to sea off| 5, By JAMES LEE WASHINGTON (INS) — A fight- ing Irishman who used to be a milkman, a prohibition era foe of bootleggers, and a Kansan who ence earned his keep by trapping skunks are the three newest mem- bers of the United States Supreme Court. : All three were appointed by President Eisenhower. One is a Democrat and an avowed liberal. The. others are Republicans with strongly conservative leanings. ON HIGH BENCH In order of their appointments to the. high bench, they are: John Marshall Harlan, 58, who ( took the oath a prohibition enforcement prosecutor he was a nemesis of bootleg kings and beer barons in the wild 1920's. William J. Brennan Jr., 51, who got his start in life as a Newark, N.J., milkman. He took his seat on the court last Oct. 16. Charles E. Whittaker, 56, Kansas City, Mo., lawyer and judge who was named to the tribunal last March 2 to succeed: Justice Stanley Reed, retired. ‘Nine Strong Men’ Interpret Constitution Ike's Appointments to Supreme Court Include One Avowed Liberal Democrat The newest justice is one of the most devoutly religious mem: bers of the Supreme Court. He is an ardent Methodist and a “member of the board of stewards of his church in Kansas City. Like. most other Supreme Court bare secret FBI reports that form the basis of testimony of prosecu-. tion witnesses in a criminal trial or dismiss the case. Brennan, as the years go by, is expected to be known as one of the dominant liberals of the ‘Supreme Court. justices, Whittaker often turns to The reverse, however, is ex-the Bible as a source of the intel- pected of Whittaker, who, thoughlectual and patriotic stamina which he has taken a comparatively makes the membership of the small part in this year’s greatGreat Bench — whether they be decisions, ‘has shown leanings de-liberals or conservatives — “Nine scribed by court observers asStrong Men.” “‘stoutly conservative.” (End of Series) On Bringing Arms to Korea ‘Isolation Seen for Egypt-Syria Saudi Arabia Complains “at Newspaper Attacks as Arab Rift Widens _ DAMASCUS #—The Egypt-syr- the rest of the Arab world today in the wake of Saudi Arabia's threat to break relations with Da- ‘mascus. Observers here believed some face-saving solution Would found to avert an open break with the Saudis, enraged over Syrian” press attacks on Kind Saud, _ * * Saudi Abia s ambessador to ‘Reds fo Challenge UN |pected the Reds to propose a re-, newal of the neutral nation truce inspections that were suspended a year ago or call for a political conference to settle the Korean issue. SEOUL (P— Communist North Korea is expected to challenge} the U.N. Command decision to bring new weapons into Korea at a meeting tomorrow of the Joint Military Armistice Commission. North Korea yesterday request- ed the meeting of U.N. and Com- munist delegates. * * * It was believed the Commu- ‘nists might make some conces- ASSERTS INDEPENDENCE Harlan and Whittaker are Re- publican appointees. Brennan is a big city Democrat who has never been afraid to assert his inde- pendence of political machines. Unlike most of the other mem- bers ef the Supreme Court, all three of the “newcomers” have had judicial experience. | Harlan bears a name famous in ‘the annuals of the court. His|will ask the ‘grandfather, John Marshal] Harlan, iserved on the Supreme bench from '1877 to 1911. The 34-year span is the second longest in Supreme 'Court history. \s A native of Chicago and a gradu- ate of Princeton, Harlan entered public Service as an assistant U.S. ‘attorney in New York City in! 1925. He was assigned to prohibi- tion law enforcement cases was celebrated as the prosecutor who sent showman Earl Carroll to prison. Carroll was convicted of violat- ing the Volstead Act by acting as host at a memorable party during. which one of the young lady guests dunked herself in a bathtub full of champagne. Friends predict that Harlan will become one of the most forceful |Dennis, Mass. Since her husban@'s| nembers of the Court — in a con- rvative direction. There is no n for doubt as to his zeal. He de rated that as a U.S. air force 1 in World War II, iwinning America’s legion of merit ‘and France's Croix De Gurre. |LOSING BATTLE . ao. whos e appointment a si made news ‘Kehoe he took office. The late Sen. for his taste, violently assailte the nomination and gought, to Senate confitmation. In a se last battle, a losing one. The elevation to the supreme _came after Brennan had served for four years as an as- Supreme Court. Though he was comparatively unkown on the national level when Eisenhower nominated him as his first Democratic appointee to the Supreme Court, Brennan, the tr- bunal’s youngest member, lost little time in making headlines. He wrote the majority opinion Allied observers said they eX- <1. if it would enable them to iget truce inspectors friendly to ithem into South Korea again. The inspection teams were pulled out. ie both South and Nerth Korea last June after the U.N. Com- Hears charged the Communists |were using them to cover up the, | military buildup in the North. Tax Structure Study Director Requested LANSING (B—Rep.. Rollo G. Con- * A * lin (R-Tipton), House Taxatiorr Committee chairman, states he, The U.N. Command announced Legislature to au ‘at a joint commission meeting thorize hiring of a director and’ co-. last Friday that it no longer con- ordinator of search to supervise sidered itself bound by provisions and analyze Michigan’s tax struc- of the armistice agreement bar- ture, jring introduction of new weapons. ISt., Conlin announced two weeks ago The U.N. said it would bring i modern arms into South Korea because the Communists had long ‘ignored the truce ban on weapons. High Commissioner HAMPTON SPECIALS that such a study would be under- taken, He said he also will ask a citi- | zens’ advisory committee to take a hand, with members to assist in mapping out general policy | and review information turned up uw: the break would come unless Syr- ian papers stopped the smear "campaign begun when Saud backed Jordan’s King Hussein. x * * The attacks reached their clli- max last week when the Damas- cus paper Alrai Alaam said a for- mer Egyptian foreign minister and 10 Egyptian army officers were being held in Cairo. charged with plotting President Nasser’s death. The paper quoted the ac- cused as saying Saud was behind the conspiracy. Woman Represents city as Crossing Guard Mrs, Josephine Orser, 123 Mark is in Detroit today to repre- sent Pontiac in the “Michigan Women Crossing Guards’ Week” ceremonies. ‘ Mrs. Orser and Capt. Joseph Koren will represent the city’s crossing guards and police at the luneheon, which will include 47 guards and police officers from 22 communities in the Detroit area. © ia axis swung still fruther from — a ee warned Syrian Presi- . Included in the. observance will be the naming of “Mrs. Greater Detroit Crossing Guard of 1957," who will receive a week's free maid service. by researchers. The director, Conlin said, should be an expert tax analyst who can) coordinate the work of research staffs at the University of Michi- gan and Michigan State Univer- sity. The two schools have agreed to do spadework for the study. tied up with any state institution or interests, would be preferred. Conlin « said he hoped the re- search and analysis phase of the study could be completed by De- ‘Associate of Gandhi ‘Succumbs in India the Brennan issue was McCarthy's | NEW DELHI wna ree, | a Christian from a earlier this month which decreed that the government must either. cember 1, and that thereafter con- centration could be, placed on de- veloping recommendations for the | future, appa, scholar and long-time of Mohandas Gandhi, y today of a cerebral . He was 61. died e hemorrha prominent Sotitth Indian family,| spent: much of a compiling Gandhi's written s and re- vised the Indian leadét's autobiog- raphy. He said an “outside” man, not | stepped ‘Awaits Examination ‘on Felonious Assault Named in Canada _ | HamPTon sreciats — | Whirlpeci. Phileo, Sylvanis, Easy. LO iN eo Cimadien Prime Minister’ John Diefenbaker today'] COOD T.V. SERVICE MEN , fo lead- named George Drew, former le DO-IT-YOURSELF Tebe Tester, with expert pévice. er of the Conservative party, to be Canada's high commissjo nert RCA COLOR TV Call Us—Free Home Trist. London. Drew, 63, a writer and lawyer, PORTABLE TELEVISION 6 Makes — $89.95 Up down as Conservative OPEN ‘TIL 9:00 party chief in September 1956 be-; 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 i cause of ill health and was suc- ceeded by Diefenbaker: He re- isigned from the House of Com- mons last January after represent- | ing Ontario since 1948. At that |- [time he said his doctors had or-) i ldered that -he rest for several COLOR TV ' months. Sales and Service ~ Diefenbaker told a news confer-, RCA and SYLVANIA ence that Drew had fully recov-, CONDON’S ered his health. | Josepli Thomas, 29, of 484 Branch St., is in the Oakland County Jail) today awaiting examination in Mu- nicipal Court on a felonious maar, charge. He is accused of attempt-| ing to cut his wife, Vivian, with al butcher knife. Thomas was remanded to jail yesterday by Municipal Judge Ce-| cil B. McCallum after he failed: to furnish a $3,000 bond. He demand. At the time of his death he was chief editor of an official collecting Gandhi's complete t- | ings, expected to total more than 50 volumes. ‘The first volume is'> scheduled for publication in Octo- ber, ACROSS 1 Screen actress, ed examination when arraigned ‘and was ordered to appear for it July 3. RCA COLOR TV d Sale on SWEET . RADIO. WV About two million persons visit the. Lincoln Memorial in Wash- |ingtot, each year, more than are — recordéd,. for any other national shrine or Lae Howard —— 12 Is indisposed 13 Negative 20 — 22 Kind of race Wed 28 Svelte 3 pomp ™ Operatic solo 35 Phratry Bi] poche = 24 Spar 23 Dyeing 26 Mature 77 Roster ; 28 Back of neck ‘ 30 Dull and m % 31 Ir@land 49 Names (Fr.) 32 Wading bird 50 “39 apparatus Seaport ‘ab.) at mophs sin, 42, who accompanied the 20 children in the swimming party, drowned while trying to save the|) youngsters. | a 1 egative | 371 Woorheis Ro Road Air Condition FA a sale coe C, e Air or water cooled models ‘te fit any home @ install in attic, utility closet, basement, crawl * ' space. : © Cools, dehumidifies, filters out dirt and pollen — compact, easily instalied packaged units © Built and backed by General Motors—instailed by Frigidaire factory space-saving ceiling type units ... and cooling is fust one part of the benefits. Enjoy quiet, clean, healthful living in every room. Noise and dirt e screened out for quieter, FRIGIDAIRE eve living—healthier ap- - ; petites. Many allergies from Low-Cost dust and pollen are relieved. CUSTOM COOLING Cleaning work and costs tailors air conditioning to your — shrink. Your home is vaca~ | add-on unit with furnace pita or Rane nee ae ition happy all summer long. The Gals Heating Dealer Whe Gives Red Stamps o-pRIEN HEATING & SUPPLY \ FR 2-2919, j ; : : M as F oe ‘i : 4 | > oy = eae \ r | \ / / ae i fl Aes. i i — eel: THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1957 a Hal Boyle Saye: _ “The store that has never on quality.” NEW ‘YORK Pi Speers: rmen are the best built world,’ said Franeesca Lebow. * * *® the world, But, unlike! women, they aren't frank and) wholesome about their, vanity.! They yearn to look well in their) clothes, but they are scared. to death of being called fashionable. men in “what men should «wear. the word cles. ® * * “We'd give thousands of dollars! to anyone who could come up with! a new term that: would make men|/ @ "4 « i . U. S. Men in the/Store by himself to pick up a suit, iit t often is one which his wife has. ithe pants too long: | scouted for him in advance." | “They are also as vain as any his own buying? * * Bow, and fabrics suit him best—and isn't afraid of trying something new wear black or charcoal. Men like|jtor’s Note: Whatever man knew /now and then.” said the cuffs on suit | cowardly Amer ican male’s fear of, trimmed evening jackets—neither Woolly looking tweeds, but a “fashion” is one of the of which, it must be admitted, has) ™an ‘should wear a smooth, fin clothing industry's greatest obsta- caused the average manly heart|finished fabric.’ ito beat much faster. Here are a few clothing tips she land. avoid/ somber hues. And what should tall, dark and “That doesn't mean he has to) “A may with a beige skin (Ed-|/handsome men wear? “Nothing at all, “if he knows what colors | charcoal suits because they think if he had a beige skin?) ‘looks them around,” Le- ‘any color shirt or necktie goes| better a deeper rather than a/ Bow, sighed « Mrs. * * * oe Tin podtuea i he att Among Mrs. LeBow's own inno: ‘well ae it. But it is a lary lighter a _ need advice.’ | x ee man’s color. } * man has a suntan, a white ; Standing woman consultant on) vations for men are removable | ne eae heavy,;sum r jacket will sex it ott Be (Advertisement) coats | and braid-* stout / Mem don't-let your personal-| e.|ity fade into the fabric of your » ‘suit On Main Street Ls = * “They're ki sd sooner 2g, hits 0; “You wait,”| What about colors? | Japan Needs Rooms - TOKYO ‘w = Japan is having trouble with classroom space for|1g palit sinteate gheglied bn.Je- three million primary and junior|pan. tion ministry says it needs 63,000 2 schol iscatente, The educa- more classrooms. There are about ————— = “The most dangerous color of ' “There aren't very many ot F “and men like that don't] } Woman Tortured|s ~” NEIGHBOR SAYS © FELICE “A man with a light fair skin) Women, because it brings out the!] ¢ | said Mrs, LeBow, who is as firm) “Blue is the most universal col-| /‘If a man has a red face (Ed-| pou", Shen snows way moa as she is pretty. “I'll still win|or for all skin tones,” said Mrs.jijor's Note: And who doesn't,| with soathing lanolin such Sea | ‘both those battles.” . |LeBow. “But that doesn’t~ mean! e days?) he will look best in to soften stinging corns ealoutey be | plain old blue serge. Blue will be/soft muted blues and grays that! b eo ag instead of frightened. The word ‘style’ won't do. For some reason applied to them.’ Mrs. LeBow, who was the first menswear editor of Vogue maga- | ine, became even more interest- | ed in the field after marrying Vic- tor LeBow, a clothing manufac- turer. “Approximately 70 per cent of all men's clothing is now either selected or actually purchased by | women,” she said, ‘and the per- centage is increasing. [Mayflower II Dispute Ended Co-directors Offer to a or oe a Leave Project in Favor This cus tives up 6 of Educational Venture every expectation. And | its price is so modest! LONDON (INS)—A_ solution to the dispute over the Mayflower I Two Trouser has been announced inh London. : Warwick Chariton, public rela- tions man who originated the proj- | ect, announced the solution after a trans-Atlantic telephone conver- Dacron Blend sation with co-director, John Lowe, Dip this suit in suds lightly rub collar and cufis, Rinse, Hang “up dripping wet. It takes about five minutes! Within a few hours, it's ready for more wear. No pressing required. It's the really modern suit! You look your best proud of being fashion-conscious ps qaen think Ttsourrds” cheap — aa ™ x SEARS lela -itid @-1, lenge) RE- CLD UXT DN ALL HOMART .. GAS, OIL BOILERS <== and CONVERSION BURNERS! FORCED AIR FURNACES With Fan and Limit Switch, Plenum Chamber,. Thermostat, Humidifier, Oil Filter! |: Suits $5 5 wr tei Memerice were ~~ Charlton said: Mr. Lowe informed me that he had Ynade public our offer to with-| draw from the Mayflower proj- ect in favor of the Plymouth Plan- | tation, the American Education Authority which is to berth the ship in perpetuity.” } He said he and Lowe were pre- Available at Both Stores DOWNTOWN and , TEL-HURON CENTER | pared to hand over the ship at ence “in the interests of Anglo- | | American relations and after consultation with the project's le gal advisor, Mr. Sydney Rutter.” Charlton had flown back to Lon- don to face the storm blowing up ‘over the Mayflower after one of its leading backers, Felix Fenston, re- ‘signed from the project. ! * * *& Fenston said at the time that he jwas stymied in his efforts to set jup_a charitable education fund with ithe proceeds expected from the iplanned exhibition of the Mayflow- ‘er on America’s East Coast, He added that he would be hap- py to return to help run the pro- .posed fund if Chariton and Lowe ‘would quit. | Missouri cottontail rabbits rear 3.8 litters annually with an aver-. age of 44 animals in 1 each litter. | -— accept our invitation to with a special gas mileage tester. See for yourself how) How Many Miles To The Gallon Are You Actually Getting ? Now You Can Know With This Stop guessing about your gas mileage. Come in for Free! MILE-O-DIAL that ‘enables ‘you to. make an accurate check on the gas consumption of your present car. Then| drive a Rambler equipped] ‘ Many extra miles per gallon you can get in a Rambler — the car that costs you less to buy and brings more when} you trade or sell. Make this FREE test today. pe obli- if. gation. It’s a lot of fun, Come in now. { abe AmpExican MOTORS MEANS Gy. MORE FOR AMERICANS. See Diekiyland—Greet TV for al the family over ABC Network | Huy Hurry! Get Your FREE Mile-O-Dial Today! kt & Cc ROGERS SALES. - VILLAGE | _ & SERVIC \ MOTORS, ao iJ ay ¢ |, 3342 Auburn Roa 4 ” Passio | : v ee o_o * Homart Oil-Fired Boiler save 240 | 3 545° "NO MONEY DOWN — FIRST PAYMENT OCT. 1si Winter's a long way off! By buying and installing heating equipment now, during the slack season, you make substantial savings. This HOMART system is complete! Regularly sells for $394... you save over $39! Call us today for an estimate! 100,000 BTU. Model MAIL THIS COUPON ' 1 Reg. $434 ...:..390.60 | 1 ee mete eet a , 128,000 BTU Model See ek aa el Please arrange fer Reg. $474 beeen 426.60 FREE HOMART home heating estimate. " NAME .....c0eeeees ereeeeres epocevcceece oe : 151,000 BTU Model : ADDRESS Soca A Se SL ! Reg. $554 ...... 498.60 tensa na senea esas aca NO MONEY DOW’N Homart Basement GAS FURNACE 282° HP FY ou. 300.60 [sora 345.60 I Model Reg. $414... 372.60 200,000 BTU Model, Reg, $494 ... Mm NO PAYMENTS UNTIL OCT. Ist > Efficient Homart GAS FURNACE 80,000 BTU Model — Reg. $284 255” Ist Payment Oct. Ist 125,000 BTU, Reg. $339 . $305.10 * 100,000 BTU, Reg. $303 . $278.10 CHEK sEARS FOR INSTALLATION HOMART Marbleized Solid Plastic Seats In 6 Colors. 7.95 crack or ‘warp. 80.000 BTU's Reg. $314 Bath Accessories ' Sparkling Chrome Plated 7Pe. Set 1 9.95 Will not split, . - Gives a luxurious modern ap- Colors go clear through, wont fade? Stainless steel pearance. No expésed screws, hinge posts. Standard bowl Easy to install and keep size clean. Each. piece available Others Available, separately. Priced from ..,....++..3.95 —— eben: cea. Y a ee er f eS inna = Homert Ventilator for Wall or Ceiling - Shallow Well Pump ‘Towel Rin : g With 17-Gol. Tank eee Stirrup Type Beauty. and Utility Medicine Cabinets 13%x19%In.. 42,95 un? 89.95 tn. Size 29. 95 tad 16x22-in: plate glass aly $9 DOWN $3 powN “mirtor in stainless steel frame. ou Pumps up to’ ‘280 GPH....Cast- Square top, 2 adjustable glass Lucite plastic: ewe! ring. iron pump, galvanized tank, Modern fan with “air- flow’* | oghelves, blade drop. Ideal for. bath, kitchen or brass cylinder all resjst rust. chrome-plated grill. Capacity Easy fo, install. Homart. neat Sook, size. *aeee Seid —550 CFM ‘5-year _guardntee closets. Chrome plated base, on rugged motor. a le Priced from, . onan te sae Easy to irepiedl. SEASON HEATING SALE BEAT THE RUSH! Choose Your Model .. . Have It Installed Now! NO PAYMENTS UNTIL OCT. Ist Homart 5-Section OIL BOILER Ist Payment Oct. Ist Regularly 439.00 Includes Primaxy~control, com- bination control, drait regulator, plain nipple, port plug, relief valve, circulating pump, ilow control valve and gauges. eNO MONEY DOWN _ .Homart Oil CONVERSION » Ist Payment Oct. Ist Regularly 104.00 Scientifically designed to provide more heat for less. Inquire about Sears Low In- stallation Costs! NO MONEY DOWN Homart 4-Section GAS BOILER Rew. $209 | 224.10 cae 251.10 Ree $289 269.10. Rew. $328 296.10 Reo. 3350... 323.10 7 eras... 377.10 3- Control Switch ‘ 2 3.95 3-speed switch for use with Homart Adah predion Fits standard single gan conduit box. . ‘Near Reversible ran | 95 - with Built-in Timer $7 Down. Electrically vvetable: — changes heen intake to exh at ‘the flick of a switch! Fits windows 27¥4: 37in. — Big‘ 20-in.-fan cools average home in mine , With 7ft. cord and plug, ingen St. , . ¥ rs ’ j 7 \ i : : Fa \ J eis! : TELS esieeins eed POLIS at ————y , — 9 am ) ear a ' , ; ie) ae Tee Bi en | eo Ao: ii 4 . ‘oly hk . pod Bet 4 ak , ip ; \\ ! \ =i . \ muy t\ ‘e —= RS 14 North I Hl ‘ Ph. rE ESN i