The Weather U.5. Weather Bureau Forecast Warm, humid, chance of showers (Details Page 2) Fo gee ae salt ae al be nia ag Se i Fh GU ee Re ng » HE PONT C PRESS « Home Edition 117th YEAR— eww Kk PONTIAG, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959—28 FAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASROCIATED PRESS 9 , 4 fa Destroy P Decent Labor, Say Probers Lawmakers Meet to Iron Out Taxes LANSING (?) — Michigan’s tax fight shifted to the House-Senate conference phase today after majority Republicans pushed their one cent use (sales) tax in- crease through the Senate.a third time. The bill, heart of thesGOP Senate revenue program, cleared last night on 20 to 11 vote amid new signs of political jockeying over details of a final settlement. Tet behind by GOP strategists was e business 4 Sontenesd ARTHUR C MOONEY Teacher Given Jackson Term Free on Bond Pending Appeal of Conviction on Gross Indecency Charge Minutes after he was sentenced to 2 to 5 years in Jackson Prison, a former Waterford Township High School mathematics teacher was out on a $1,000 bond pending an appeal to the State Supreme Court, on his gross indecency conviction. * * * Arthur C. Mooney, 50, returned to a farm he is living on in Imlay City as his attorney, Carlton S. Roeser of Pontiac, prepared legal papers opposing his May 6 convic- tion by an Oakland County Circuit Court jury of eight women and four men. Mooney, formerly a principal for a Chicago elementary school before coming to Oakland Coun- ty, appeared this morning before Circuit Judge Frank L, Doty for his often-postponed sentencing. He was pale and thin’ after spending seven weeks at the Vet- erans Administration Hospital in Dearborn with a liver ailment. He took the pronouncement of the prison term calmly while standing beside Roeser. * * * Mooney, formerly of Commerce Township, was charged with gross indecency after an investigation in- to an accident last December in West Bloomfield Township in which one of Mooney's canes was killed. Three other students in the car said in a statement to Prosecutor Frederick C, Ziem that Mooney purchased two six-packs of beer for them before the accident from a grocery near his home, using their money. At the same time, two of the three survivors of the crash told of having immoral relations with Mooney in his Pontiac Township motel apartment in February of last year. * * Later he was cleared of a second charge of furnishing beer to mi- nors, Pending still are his appeals of convictions of“dfunk driving, and driving with a revoked license. GMC Is Only Bidder Seeking , DSR Contract GMC Truck & Coach Division e The Division's bid was $25,417.80) for each bus, with air conditioning costing $4,193.18 extra per coach. The DSR Conimission took the |- bid under consideration and de- cided, informally, to ask Mayor Louis C. Miriani whether extra money should be spent on air conditioning, ’ Action on the bid is expected within 10 days, said Leo J. No- activities tax (BAT) revi- dollar addition to intangi- bles tax paid by banks. The BAT measure carries the last hope of Democrats for mak- ing business shoulder part of the new revenue load. The House ap- proved it with a two per eent surtax on corporation profits. The House, bers present, delayed the for- mality of throwing the use tax bill into conference until the afternoon session, when a fuller attendance was expected. Sen, Carlton H. Morris (R- Kalamazoo), calling GOP tax shots, said what is done with the bill, and when, ‘‘depends on developments”’ in conference bar- gaining on the use tax increase. He wouldn't “amplify, but seemed to mean Republicans might yield to a token bite on business)! generally — not just corporations — if Democrats softpedaled argu- ments that GOP senators are cod- dling corporations. FOR SMALL BUSINESS After huddles with House lead-' ers last Friday, Morris drafted a proposed BAT formula, not yet dis- closed, that he said would give “‘some”’ relief to concerns making little: or no profits. In debate last night, Sen. Clyde |: H. Geerlings (R-Holland) raised GOP revenue sights for fiscal 1959- 60 another 10 million dollars, This was on top of a three million rev- enue increase he forecast last Thursday. Geerlings cited record high duly sales tax collections, and a guarded forecast by Revenue Commissioner Louis M. Nims that sales tax receipts could hit 318 million dollars. : Booming business was bound to pump up predictions on yields from other revenue sources, he argued. As their part in the jockeying, Senate Democrats withheld votes needed to give the use tax in- crease immediate effect, They ad- mitted trying to counter GOP Strategy, xk *& Besides boosting the use (sales) tax to four per cent,’ the Senate bill would apply the higher levy to hotel and motel rooms, telephone (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) sion bill and a two million: with only 70 mem-' Nixon Pleads for End of War; Visits Ghetto Bemoans Ruined Parts of Warsaw; Decorates ‘Polish Grave Site WARSAW, Poland (7) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon visited the site of mass executions during |World War II today. Then he made a plea for the end of racial prejudice as he stood on the spot of Warsaw’s destroyed Jewish ghetto. He coupled his pleas with the warning there must never be another war be- saw would be destroyed. Nixon plans to fly back into Washington tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. trip. * * * Today, he stood before the re- mains of a bombed-out building where Jews fought in their last bunker to resist ‘‘the almost inde- lscrihable suffering of the Jewish | ipeople in Poland and other coun- tries.” _| hope ‘will be a period of peace and of good will, whatever be our economic or social philoso- phies, we must all unitc to fight against prejudice and_ racial hatred because here is what hap- pens when such passions are released,” Nixon said. Earlier he had gone to Palmiry Forest where he laid a wreath on the site of graves of 2,200 Poles slaughtered in Nazi mass execu- tions early in World War II. HONORS TRACK STAR He laid a special wreath on the the grave of Janusz Kusocinsk, Poland’s 10,000-meter run winner in the Los Angeles Olympics in 1932. The track star was one of the most noted victims buried at the spot, about b miles north of War- saw. * x * * Among others who died ,there, American officials said, were Par- liament Speaker Maciej Rataj; and Mieczyslaw Niedzialkowski, Socialist party leader and editor. Nixon was the first foreign dig- nitary to visit the site. In his statement on the spot where the ghetto stood, Nixon said “this should help us realize the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) cause cities such as War-|s “As we move into what we Loosen Collars, but Keep Your Raincoats Handy Loosen up your collars, but keep your raincoats handy. That’s the advice from the weaipermen who says it'll be warm and humid tonight in the Pontiac area with a chance of thundershowers. Skies will be ‘part- ly cloudy. Seattered showers or thunder- showers are possible Wednesday and Thursday with the high reaching 88 tomorrow, the weatherman said. Today’s 6 te 12 mile an hour winds will be briefly higher in thunderstorms able at night. Scattered showers with warm, humid temperatures are forecast for all of Michigan tonight and tomorrow, Temperatures through- out the state will register in the 80s. Sixty-four was the lowest record- ing in downtown Pontiac preced- ing 8 a.m. The reading at 2 p.m. was 77. 59 Pontiac Output Still (EST), ending his 15-day European} Leads Field From Our Wire Services Pontiac Motor Division continued to lead the medium-priced field as automakers reported their July re tomerrow becoming light vari- 1 hower, who yesterday announced trading visits with Soviet chief Dwight D. Eisenhower rode with terpart, Marshal Georgi Zhukov | production was up more than two-| ‘thirds from the same month a year | ago. * * Auto companies ae 590,384 cars were assembled last month and a| total 3,838,401 so far this year. By comparison, last year in duly 321,130 cars were built and the seven-month total stood at 2,561,433, All five companies reported hefty increases over 1958 figures. General Motors Corp. reported 1959 production was running néarly a half-million units ahead of 1958. x * GM said there were 41,586 Pon- tiacs assembled last month, bring- up to 289,229. There were 16,490! Pontiacs assembled during July of last year and 136,675 during the first seven months of 1958. Pontiac production figures for July were topped only by the low- priced Chevrolet, Ford, Plymouth and Rambler, Other July production figures re- leased by GM_ included 162,130 Chevrolets, 38,115 Oldsmobiles, 16,- 836 Buicks and 14,124 Cadillacs, compared with 111,188 Chevrolets, 23,292 Oldsmobiles, no Buicks and 11,825 Cadillacs produced in July 1958. In the first seven months of this year, GM built 1,047,676 Chevro- lets, 264,144 Oldsmobiles, 158,426 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ing the seven-month total this year, VISIT TO BE REPEATED — President Eisen- chev, will be no stranger to Russia. The then Gen. He'll Be Coming Back his intention of Nikita Khrush- his Soviet coun- , on a tour of month. Leningrad during a 1945 visit to the Soviet Union at the end of World War II. Marshal Zhukov, later Russian defense minister, since has been demoted. The President said he will visit Russia following Khrushchev's trip to this country next ell i AP Wirephete Khrushchev Due Sept. 5 in Washington Via Plane United States on Sept. 15. himself. Where Khrushchev will WASHINGTON (?)—It now appears that Nikita S. Khrushchev will begin his momentous visit to the State Department officials said today it is safe to as- sume the Soviet premier will arrive here that day. They said they could not officially confirm that date, how- ever, since the final word has to come from Khrushchev land in the United States Antifreeze Highballs Kill Five Prisoners PUTNAMVILLE, Ind. (AP)—A weekend binge on highballs made from antifreeze and soft drink powder brought death to five In- diana prison farm prisoners. At least a dozen others are less seriously ill as a result of drink- ing the mixture. The victims were: Raymond Morton, 23; Paul Dur- cho, 39: Carlos P. White, 28; and Jesse W. Tudder, 41. The antifreeze was taken: from drums in a garage at the farm. Blind Cigarette Girl at Courthouse By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG Ada Dodson has done business with some of the most influential men in the’ county . . . with some at the other end of the pole, too. She has overheard confidential conversatioris of judges and crim- inals alike. all, wicki, DSR. genera) manager. She sees nothing. She has been blind for 17 years. Ada has the cigarette, candy and soda pop concession in the Oakland County Courthouse on Saginaw and Huron streets. Her counter occupies a small She can be trusted. Ada hears corner on the first floor, situated knows—all and tells nothing. in a good vantage point to both Hears All but Tells Nothing entrances: of the ‘building. This, month marks Ada’s 10th year in that spot. have a cheery word for her, and she for them. Ada says, ‘I know ‘the voice of | almost every lawyer in town.’ Pontiac Press Phete blind since she was 17, Ada's disposition and cheery outlook on life could for all. One of her satisfied customers is attorney Joseph F. Kosik (right) of 160 Mohawk Rd. serve as an example *depends on the type of air- plane he will use, officials said. It is expected in any case, that he will come di- rectly to Washington. Informants said that since Khrushchey is an official guest of the United States, his visit to Washington would by all mean precede _an eventual appearance elsewhere, such as the United Na- tions General Assembly in New York. This does not rule out the pos- sibility that the Russian leader may address the Generas As- sembly after his Washington visit. President Eisenhower mentioned only September in announcing yes- terday that Khrushchey would come here, and that later in the fall he would return the Russian’s visit. * * * In any event the Khrushchev-Ei- senhower exchange of visits raises U. S.-Soviet diplomacy to the sum- But, it's more than just ‘Hi,’ ‘she says. | Ada’s counter is the conversa- She recognizes voices easily and|tion corner in the old building. It} a day doesn’t go by that each ofjis a place to congregate and dis. | the courthouse employes doesn’t cuss old news, current happenings) Chev and an earlier trip to Eu- or simply the weather. than many people who have sight. “People ask me for directions) all day,’’ says Ada. ‘‘When it's right there in front of them, I still have to point out the drinking fountain, the telephone or the stair- way. I guess they just don't look.” * * * mit level, whether or not it re- sults: in a formal summit confer- ence on a broader scale. His exchange of visits with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- | rope to confer with heads of the ' major western Allies will give Ada is kept well informed, and + Eisenhower direct contacts with more observant, say her friends, | the participants in any later summit meeting. | A generally favorable réaction, both in this country and elsewhere in the world, greeted ‘Monday’ 5| Se: announcement that Khrushchev has accepted Eisenhower's in- vitation to visit the United States next month, eee EXPRESSED Ada makes change by “*feel.’’| She can tell a dime from a: erry | by its rough edges, a nickel by its’ size and thickness, and a quarter’ from a half dollar by its rough edges. She will change a dollar bill, but nothing higher . “Some blind people say they can tell a dollar bill from a five doifar bill,” says Ada, “but I don’t believe it. They must be fibbing. There’s no difference in size. They must be able to see a little bit.” Ada went totally blind at the age of 17, during her senior year in a Tennessee high school. She doesn't) - know how, it happened or what caused it. ‘uy guess | 4 too} hard,”’ she says. She came to Pontiac in 1943 and learned of her present job through! a friend in-a braille, class. , “* * * “This is the first job I've ever had in my life,” says Ada. ‘I guess) , I’m a lazy one.” She says she doesn't miss the use of her eyes. any expressed hope that East- we a 1 temo would be eased if Khrushchev were impressed first hand with the nation's strength and peaceful intentions. PTalks with Eisenhower and a 10- \day tour of the country are among the plans for the Khrushchev visit. Reports from Moscow said the Soviet Premier is expected to bring along his wife, son and daughter. With most details still uncertain, there- has been no announcement (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) In Today’ s Press SEILER. EEE CEE ie So A “I think if I could see all of a {Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) " Comics veces WO County News aeereease eee 16 Editorials ...........++ score 6 Obituaries ..........5-5 oven er Coe eee 18, 19 Stay Alive Longer ......-- 5 Theaters ..........,..00 oe 16 TV & Radio Programs ......27 ‘Earl eeoetee**ee ;%1 Women's Pages ....... .- M113 Ivan Expects _ Good Will Come of Visit Swap By HENRY SHAPIRO MOSCOW (UPI)—The climate of Soviet - American relations im- proved sharply and suddenly with the announcement that President Eisenhower and Premier Nikita Khrushchev will exchange visits. A sampling of man-in-the-street opinior in Moscow indicated a general feeling that ‘“‘nothing but good can resuit’’ from the visits. It also revealed considerable good will for Eisenhower,. “We respect President Etsen- hower for his wartime leadership and apparent devotion to peace,” said a student from Moscow’s electrical institute. “Comrade Khrushchev said the President knows what war means and that he honestly fulfilled his (wartime) agreements with us. Need more be said?” “It’s high time the heavyweights got together,” said another Rus- sian. Warrick Assets Being Checked Internal Revenue Men Probing Possibility of Tax Evasion Pontiac police today were still without a motive, and a mur- derer, in the slaying of Dr, W. Carleton Warrick, while Yederal treasury agents were making an investigation into his financial as-! sets. ‘ “When we find the:motive, we'll, ifind the murderer,” predicted: George F. Taylor, chief assistant Oakland County prosecutor. * :- & Meanwhile, James F. Deane, as- sistant director of the Detroit dis-’ trict office of the Internal Révenue Service, said agents Were making a “routine” investigation. “We make such an investigation wherever there appears a possi- bility there may have been an income tax evasion,” Deane said. * He would not comment on a report that agents found an es- timated three-quarters of a mil- lion dollars in stocks and bonds in the Pontiac office of Dr, War- rick, at 244% E. Huron §t. The Tl-year-old doctor was shot in his office on the evening of July 24 by a bandit, whom he later described as having a “‘very red face’ and who announced he intended to rob the doctor. 8 * * However Taylor —— rob- vestigating, Taylor said there w was) “gome question about the doctor's ba - Cleared after be passed a truth serum test administered Sunday was Lloyd J. Tunnell, 53, who op- liams Lake Rd. Tunnel] had been (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Stevenson. Senators Hing Charges in New. Report Today Group Claims Leader of Teamsters Abuses His Union Members From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — The Senate Rackets Gommittee asserted in a new report today that Teamster Presi- dent James R. Hoffa “will successfully destroy the de- cent labor movement in the United States” if his power remains unchecked. The committee flung its” allegations in a report pre- pared~to be filed with the Senate this afternoon by Chaifman John L. McClel- lan (D-Ark). ‘The committee said no member of the eight-man committee raised a dissent to the findings. “In the history of this coun- try,” the report said, “‘it would be hard to find a labor leader | who’ has so shamelessly abused his members or his trust.” The committee made public the report before filing it with the Senate, after learning that a. pre- liminary draft which was substan- tially accurate had been leaked to some newsmen. The committee outlined a 21- point indictment against the con- troversial boss of the nation’s larg- est union in the first section of an interim report based on its 1958 hearings. * * * It charged that Hoffa has formed, or is attempting to form, alliances with elements of crime, corruption and Communists both within and without the giant truckdrivers’ union, The section of the report deal- ing with Hoffa was expected to be filed in the Senate later to- day. Parts dealing with three other unions will be filed tomor- rew and other sections will ‘fol- low later in the month. The committee lambasted Hoffa and his associates on a half-dozen points, including his “‘faithless- ness” to his own union, his ‘‘cal- lous’ repression of democratic rights” and- his ties with racketeers. The committee recalled that it had called Hoffa’s Union leader- ship ‘tragic’ in an earlier report _ based on 1957 hearings. Since then, - it said, testimony of “even more sordid nature’’ has developed. ‘|FINAL REPORT COMING The report did not touch on the recent hearings involving Hoffa. These findings will be included in its final report expected to be published next January. “In 1968,”" it said, “ignominy was piled on’ ignominy as the testimony wove through stories of vidlence, financia] manipula- tions, callous repression of democratic —— and a control. ” erates a rest home at 1755 Wil-/| Norton Barber Shep, epen. Jéhn ; In the face of this “ugly situ-. ‘ation,”’ it said, Hoffa and some of ‘his Union underlings appeared to take the attitude that “they are above the law.’ The report said Hoffa sought to “justify his outrageous behavior” by claiming he was acting in the best interests of his Union mem- bers. ¢ But, it said, “he has betrayed these members so frequently that it has become absolutely clear that Hoffa’s chief interest is in his ber of whom are racketeers. . These examples serve to |destroy Hoffa's self-painted pic- iture as a steadfast champion of working people.” Typhoon Ellen Roars Toward Okinawa was 224 miles southeast f vad wa at 1 p.m., (midnight EDT), moving northwest at 15 miles an hour. It was expected to be 93 miles northwest of the island own advancement and that of his, friends and cronies—a great nurmn- * F % folig F ae % F af ~- “THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959 1 ycte : J e aed 'The Day in Birmingham : Award Contract Baldwin Library Plans for Water Main Accepted by Commission Waterfor d Area Boar d BIRMINGHAM — The city com- See “FBI Hesitatina in Cases om Probers’ Periury List | | ances! macting tote tad Souk WASHINGTON (UPI) —. Justice/Ark) of the Senate Rackets Com- Al Plans Addition to mission voted at Jast night’s meet- 11, at Mackinac Island.. The Department officials said today the | mittee has been sympathetic to the +” ‘ . n ing to accept final plans prepared league will vote upon a reiolu- PBI still ig investigating only six/department on this score. He re- Main Fire Station, by architect Linn Smith forsthe, thon te extend its corporate term of #2 cases submitted by the Sen-'cently told reporters he. realized : . abe ag addition to Baldwin Li- which expires in to 30 years. ate Rackets Committee for pos- the difficulties in proving perjury)” A water main contract and a/°Frary- ‘ The quarterly parking meter sur- sible perjury prosecution. ng testimony, proposed $5,000 addition to the Fire Smith estimated construction’ |. submitted by Police Chief — “ee costs for the addition would be approximately $115,000 and that 33 per cent more space would available. * * | But rackets committee counsel, | Robert F. Kennedy, has fired some barbs at the Justice Department iLast year, he criticized the de. The six cases involve 17 individ- uals, Dept. Building was the main order of business last night at the Water- ford Township Board meeting. The Allard Contracting Co. of Ralph Moxley showed a slight in- ‘crease in average meter revenues iover July 1958. According to Mox- \ley, a reduction in the number of * * * Most of the other cases, many rl = i ? Linn Smith Associates will re- meters may account for the i» involving Teamster Union officials, ““” ey ae eae New Hudson was awarded the’ : were dropped on the grounds that) Partment for taking “np action | $5.513 contract for @ 640-foot water celve $300 from the city for plans crease, there was not enough evidence °" Perury cases referred to it. main extension to the’Stringham prepared for the Birmingham — He cvcdite! the sharp ‘ise in “ev- enue for the fou hay me's in cnr’ pal pr king lot No. 4 to “the large number of good movies shown in the local theaters lately.”’ The average per meter jumped from §.83 in April to $1.35 in July. Fire Dent. training tower, the Commission decided, The Board also took under con. Construction of a training tower sideration a proposed $4,699 ad. Was first considered in 1957, but dition to its main fire station as matching funds were not avail- on M59 at Crescent Lake road. {able the project has been dropped | : ‘for the present, according to Cit The addition would house a new) P e "i fire engine and offices for a full-' School. The Allard Co. was the to get a conviction. There have jlow of four bidders. been no convictions among the 42 cases, . Assistant Attorney General Maicoim R, Wilkey explained that while contradictory testi- mony before the committee may show someone was tying, court Security Force Plans for Mr. K o * * * In its final action of the night, | Manager L. R. Gare. ® * * proot of perjury !s another mat: | ter. The department went to court, with charges against two Union officials ~ Teamsters’ organizer’ Clyde C. Crosby and James G.| Cross, president of the Bakery and Confectionery Workers’ Union. OUT OF BOUNDS | But it lost out in both cases, when the judge ruled that the rackets committee had asked ques- tions which were not relevant to ite legislative purpose. x & Wilkey pointed out that it is perfectly for the committee to fire “miultiple-parreled’*.~ques- tions at witnesses’ testifying under oath. But such questions, he said, would be out/of bounds in the “We havé to have a question,” Wilkey said, “‘that will stand up in court. It has to be proper.” “Natwrally.” he continued, ‘the committee does not tailor its ques- tions’ for possible perjury . . dmbe its objective is not to nail a/witness for prosecution.” ye * * ® / The government's role, he added, / however, is to prove “by clear, evidence to the satis- faction of 12 men — who was lying. It also has to have two witnesses to make its point.” HARD TO PROVE Chairman John L. McClellan (D- He Can’t Move River Rouge, Say Property Owners DETROIT (UPI) — A Redford | | | ;| caused if Khrushchev was - Expect Protests While Red Boss Visits U.S:, Eisenhower Concerned ‘security officials worked today to devise airtight arrangements to protect. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev during his visit to the United States next month. ee * * * One local police official, accus- tomed to guarding VIP visitors, said Khrushchev's Visit was likely to touch off protests by organized groups and individuals “‘who just plain don’t like the guy or Russia.” The official said Khrushchev was sure te attract more dem:- onstrators than his deputy pre- miers Frol R. Koslov . and Anastas I. Mikoyan, who visited here recently, because the Russian leader ts much better known tn this country. A major | international incident would be | 4 harmed while in the States. United wk & & , State Department security of-| ficers will have primary responsi- WASHINGTON (UPI) — Worried) Community Club. Club members plans at the park are (from lef PLAN PARK DEDICATION — Plans for the Hawthorne Park dedication ceremonies, including a gala celebration, to be held Labor Day are be- ing completed by the Owen-Wever-Hawthorne Gray, 54 E. Ya man of the eve Dr., Waterford going over final tributions, and t) Mrs. George Ed ‘Petrovich’ Sullivan Wows "Em By ALINE MOSBY MOSCOW (UPI) — Ed ‘‘Petro- vich” Sullivan, speaking haltingly in Russian instead of English, opened a Soviet tour last night with a gala premiere of a variety show as part of the American exhibition here. The show was approximately the imixture Americans are accus- tomed to seeing on television — jugglers, pretty singers in tight, low-cut dresses, a contortionist and a magician, among other acts. Ballerina Nora Kaye and oper- atic soprano Rise Stevens, sing- ing “Getting to Know You” in Russian, provided a spice of bility for guarding the Soviet chief. They will be aided by the Secret culture to the bill. Service, FBI, local police here | and in other cities Khrushchev will | and the Russian’s own! | j | * * * The State Department security forces held the first of a series of planning séssions within hours after President . Eisenhower an- nounced yesterday thit Khrushchev was coming, District of Columbia | police held a. similar planning meeting. ' builder wants to move the River Rouge, but a group of homeowners want the stream left right where it is. _ The:tomeowners took the issue to court and Circuit Judge Horace WwW. Gilmore scheduled a hearing for Thursday at which time Esriel Weissman will be asked to show cause why he should move the river. Nine residents in a subdivision near Telegraph and Lyndon west of Detroit charged that Weissman is having a new river bed cut 300 feet closer to their subdi- vision, They said running tHe river closer to their homes will cause a flood and health menace. The homeowners contend that Weissman is rerouting the stream to increase the footage of usable land he owns fronting on Tele- Don’t Fence Me In! | GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI) — Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Shaw charged yesterday that their neighbor was too emphatic in protesting against a fence they put up. They filed a court ‘suit claiming that Mrs. Margaret B. Olander cut the fence wire, pulled out hooks, tried to dig up the cement blocks that enchored the fence, uprooted the Shaws’ flower garden, and turned a hose on Mrs. Shaw when she tried to One veteran security chief said | if any incidents do happen, ‘‘it won’t be for lack of trying’’ to prevent them. . x * Eisenhower is known to be con- cerned about the security problem and anxious to avoid any incidents. | He ‘told reporters in announcing, the visit that Russiar officials had, been alerted to the fact. that there were “uncontrolled individuals’’ in this country. He said he was cer- tain “that we can control this matter.” ® * The President has told friends that public opinion in this country must be prepared carefully to aoe anti-Khrushchev demonstra- tions. An audience of intent, smiling Russians applauded every act, al- though in some cases it wasn’t cer- tain that they got the point. The turns they liked particularly were called back repeatedly for bows. A critic for the official Tass agency said the audience ‘‘accept- ed the performance in a very warm, friendly manner.” x * * Sullivan's show, specially tailored for Russian audiences, is sched- uled to play two weeks in the outdoor theater in Moscow's Gorky Pafk. He plans also to play Odess and ‘Tbilisi (Tiflis) before return- ing. home. The TV master of ceremonies, whose father’s name was Peter, | adopted ‘‘Petrovich” (Peterson) as his middle name for the duration! of the tour. (A Russian's middie name cus- tomarily identifies him as his fa- ther’s son.) Sullivan delighted the audience by introducing the acts in halt- ing Russian, a language he learned during a recent three- week stay in Las Vegas. “I was the only person in Las Vegas studying Russian roulette,” he quipped last night. In addition to the Misses Kaye. ! ! ' (Continued From Page One) would | destruction another war bring the world. Nothing would be| left in a great city such as this if! atomic bombs hit their mark. MUST AVOID BOMBS has suffered! “Thig nation | enough. These people have suf-' fered enough. All this makes it! most important to avoid anything that would allow Poland to be bombed again.” . | Nixon Bemoans Ruins in Warsaw; Sees Ghetto its broaght a question immedi: | ately from politically conscious Poles: When will Eisenhower come to Warsaw?, There was speculation that Po- lish President Aleksandr Zawad- { [ Russians Applaud Variety Show and Stevens, hits of the show in- cluded.dancers Marge and Gower Champion and a team billed as Janik and Arnaut featuring: a girl contortionist who coiled around her partner like a snake. GM Elects Board Member Dr. Killian Has Long History of Service to Nation, Education The Board of Directors of Gen- eral Motors yesterday elected Dr. James R. Killian Jr. a mem- ber of the board. Dr. Killian is chairman of the \Corporation of the Massachusetts jInstitute of Technology and a member and former. chairman (1957-59) of the President's Sci- ence Advisory Committee. He is a leading figure in the fields of education, science and public service. He holds hon- orary degrees from 27 of the nation’s leading colleges and universities as well as a doctor of applied science degree from the University of Montreal. zki was drafting an invitation to the U.S. President which Nixon! would take back with him. | @awadski, in a toast at a recep- tion. he gave for Nixon Monday night, noted that Eisenhower had visited Warsaw at the end of |M.LT. Dr. KilHan was graduated from in 1926 and became as- sistant managing editor of the Technology Review at M.I.T. the same year. Review from 1930-39. From that position, he advanced to various time chief, both expected in Sep-| tember, Pontiac Press Photo * * . * _The commissioners named Ed- ward R. White, of Berkley con- tractor for the Birmingham 4959 the commission confirmed the ap- pointment of Mrs. Ogden W. Vogt to the Baldwin. Library Board. Rd., Porttiac Township, general chairman. le Ave., Pontiac, assistant chair- nt; L. R. Stanley, 2290 Rosewood Township; co-chairman of con- Leslie H. Hudson, 361 Gallogly | j eee | | t } | The Barry sisters, in eaite dresses so tight they could hardly: walk, drew gasps of delight with a jazz version of the Russian song) “Dark Eyes.” The girls also sang a medley of western Songs, wearing pink-and- white, sequined ‘‘c o w bo y dress- es,’ but Americans in the audience weren't sure the Russians got the point. John and Bonnie Shirley made a hit with the balloon - loving Russians by twisting balléons in- to animal shapes and floating them out into the audience. The Russians swarmed out of their Patrol cars of the Waterford Township Police Dept. logged’ 14,- 644 miles during July while offi- cers answered 787 . calls. Chief of Police Millard J, Pen- der reported to the Township Board that 28 persons were ticketed dur- ing the month for traffic violations within the township limits. The monthly record also, showed 24 arrests made for | crimes committed, 19 of them | adults and five juveniles. — | Of the total calls answered, 78| of them were for accidents, while; 709 were miscellaneous. The arrests made included two) for safe burglary, two for break-/ ing and entering, one for leaving: the scene of an accident, one for, auto theft, one for malicious de-! struction and others of a minor, nature. { 4 P.3 paving project. White bid $14,- William Green 601.61 to build the N. Woodward) Retired Birmingham police ser- avenue access drive from Redding’ zeant William Green, 62, died of © street South, extension of the South- g heart attack Sunday while vaca- field road access drive at Wake- tioning with his wife in Ripley, Va. field street and the Maple-Bates ‘Sgt. Green, who was residing at alley. ee | 5975 noe St., wenene Town- iship, rett from the Birming- Commissioners 1 eateries bam police force in 1963 after 30 an appropriation of $8, or re- years service. He then went to moval and replacement of concreté work as Bloomfield Village's sole pavement on Maple avenue imme- policeman. diatety west of the Rouge River. Funeral ments are pend- The commission decided not to ing — a purchase false arrest insurance at Pa en this time. According to R. S, Ken- Mrs, William H. Yoemans ning, assistant city manager, cuch | Service for Mrs. William H. (Lot- insurance offered too limited cov- tie M.) Yeomans, 49, of 2216 North- erage and the premiums were too |awnAve., Birmingham, will be h ‘held at 1 p.m, tomorrow at the Proxy. appointments were au- Bell Chapel of the William R. Ham- thorized by the commission to ‘ilton Co, Burial will be in White | the Michigan Municipal League Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. | Atter Paying seats to grab at the balloons. The Russians also liked soprano Margaret Tynes, who sang songs from ‘‘Porgy and Bess’’; Hawaiian tenor Gharles Davis, singing in his native tongue, and Eddy Man- non, who played Rimsky;Korsa- koff music'on a harmonica. A Russian orchestra directed by Elliot Lawrence and paced by American drummer Conrad Buck- ‘ner played American popular jtunes. ury was flushed out again today, speeding 1514 million dollars to universities, welfare recipients and the state’s iongest overdue sup- pliers and contractors. | The state administrative board ordered the money dispatched yes- terday hours after $14,900,000 in tax revenues were checked in. At a special meeting, it decreed this distribution: 1. Two million doliars to state | pe uamesR. KUAN IR | Dontiac Maintains Lead Medium-Priced Class | | - | in | (Continued From Page One) |Buicks and 103.568 Cadillacs, com- \pared with 823,682 Chevrolets, 202,- State Is Broke Again LANSING (® — The state treas-) _ Mrs, Yeomans died Sunday at | her home following a brief it. { | Ress, | Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Ruth of De’ voit; tworsons, James and Stephan, both at home; her parents, Mr, and Mrs. George Butchart of Wire- ton, Ont.: four sisters and three brothers, all living in Canada. , Mrs, Hattie (Rolley) Fuller cases, it meant payment of con- | Service for Mrs, Hattie (Rolley) tractors’ bills dating back to Fuller, 78, of 1461 Webster St., December, including some who Birmingham, will be held at 8 halted work on state projects. (p.m. tomorrow at the Manley 2. Six million dollars to com- Bailey Funeral Home. plete 1969-60 appropriation in- Graveside service will be con- stallments for three major state 4ucted at 11 a.m. Thursday at the universities — three millions to Downing Cemetery in Deckerville. the University of Michigan, ! Mes, Fuller died Monday at the $2,300,000 to Michigan State and BI (eld Hospital after a long $700,000 to Wayne State. | 3. About $4,100,000 to Wayne | lines. to wipe out arrears for the fiscal | She was a member of the Bir- year ended June 39. . |mingham Rebacca Lodge and of 4. Transfer of $3,200,000 to ap- the Pythian Sisters of Birming- ply against current morthly wel. ham. fare payments to the aged, blind, | Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. disabled and dependent children. ‘Archie Livingston of the same Some Debts contractors, suppliers and serv- icemen. This triggered release of 5,000 state warrants (checks) held for lack of funds. In a few | | year, Chrysler built 306,245 Plym- ouths, 108,950 Dodges, 33,969 De Sotos, ‘50,277 Chryslers and 11,919 Imperials, compared wth 237,258) “What'll you have left?” state 2ddress, and three brothers in ‘treasurer Sanford A. Brown was Ohio. asked. “We'll have nothing left. We're 678 Oldsmobi) k 3 Oldsmobiles, 133,111 Buicks and Plymouths, 66,256 Dodges, 22,956 88,876 Cadillacs built in the same iperiod a year ago. Ford Motor Co., which siearly doubled its output of Ford cars last month, reported its best July since 1955, when the industry en- joyed its greatest production year. Ford turned out 143,516 Fords and Thunderbirds, 12,316 Mercurys, 1,971 Edsels and 1,850 Lincolns and Continentals last month, compared with 72,879 Fords and Thunder- birds, 7,899 Mercurys, 596 Edsels, ‘and 1,185 Lincolns and Continentals ‘in July last year. * * *® For seven months this year, the company has built 969,732 Fords and Thunderbirds, 95,060 Mercurys, ! 330 Imperials in the same period of 1958. American Motors Corp, sald it is assembling cars at a rate of about 2! times greater than a year ago, ‘ American Motors assembled 42,- 368 Ramblers in July and 259,139 ‘in the first seven months of the year. In July 1958 Rambler output was 18,038 and seven-month output was 110,850. , Studebaker - Packard built 9,002 cars in July, compared with 3,524 ‘in the same month of 1958. The seven-month S-P output this year was 98,081 compared with 23,584 in the same period a year ago, | { De Sotos, 35,545 Chryslers* and 8,-| 25,270 Edsels and 17,747 Lincolns' and Continentals, compared with) 577,853 Fords and Thunderbirds, | He was editor of the 72,161 Mercurys, 7,540 Edsels and 16,018 Lincolns and Continentals in the same period of. 1958. CHRYSLER UP Chrysler Corp. said its output this year is 141,015 units ahead of last year. Committee Handling Tax Confabs Today (Continued From Page One) ‘bills and materials sold for use on federal projects. Geerlings, who last. week priced ‘flat. Nothing but bills,’ Brown said the payout dj leave the state about 85 million dollars in the hole and actual ac- cumulated debts of about 60 mil- lions. The university allocations came too late to prevent two of them from borrowing to meet last week’s payrolls. The U. of M. bor- rowed $1,000,000 and MSU $1,500,- 000 against September _ tuition payments. Wayne, with restricted borrow- ing powers, received $500,000 of its July installment last week. Of the two million dollars for contractors and suppliers, one million ‘vas to cover release of 5,000 warrants (checks) held by Aud. Gen. Frank S. Szymanski for amounts of lesa than $50,000. They will come off the bottom of the stack. This will cut Szymanski’s back- log down to about 23,000-warrants ’ he replied.' out would) Blind Girl Tends Courthouse Stand (Continued From Page One) sudden I’d be scared to death,” she exclaims. And then with a laugh, “If I could see again I'd really have to get out and work. “Then, too,” says Ada, “IT have a lot of friends and I get a lot of attention.” And she gives a lot of attention. An. officer of one of the courts approached the stand and asked Ada for “the usual.” She picked two. of his brand of cigars from a box (all arranged so that she knows where each brand is in the counter). She handed the cigars to the man and said teproachfully, “Johnny, you smoke too much.” Ada doesnt know ye: whether totaling five million dollars. The other million was to be ap- plied against larger obligations. These include $771,000 in payments to contractors on the Boys Voca- tional School (BVS) at Whitmore space will be allotted for her stand in the new courthouse to be con- structed. It might pose too great a transportation problem, too, from her home at 219 Rapid St., where she lives with her aunt. executive posts at M.I.T., becom- Chrysler produced 51.240 Plym- the package at 116 million dollars, Lake, the Plymouth State Home ing the Institute's tenth president. ouths, 12,007 Dodges, 2.837 De So- shoved his yield estimate last night and Training School. and an expan-| Among the many public service tos, 5,464 Chryslers and 53 Impe- to 127 millions. ‘sion of the state power plant at. posts Dr. Killian has held are ¢rials in July, compared with 34,- He said this would supply |Kalamazoo. ‘ Nixon also visited a huge steel imill about 15 miles north of the icity, before he went to Warsaw , University to talk with the faculty. | World War II. He said there had been a great deal of reconstruc- tion here sincg then. work in the garden. During the course of 10 years Ada has made many close friends. (“I sure hope they have room for The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Bereau Report * PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Considerabie! and NMitle warmer with Ms wap ny. sreitin tefl higher in then. Today in Pontiac a temperature preceding 8 a.m.! At 8 am: Wind Velocity § m. p. bh. Direction—Southerly : Sun sets Tuesday at 7.48 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 5:28 am. Moon sete Tuesday at 7:38 p.m Students gathered outside in the courtyard to cheer him. Announcement in the Warsaw press today that President Eisen- nid tonight hower and Soviet Premier Nikita |full day in Warsaw, was devoted largely to sightseeing. Khrushchev would exchange vis- two officials conferred for three Moon rises Wednesday at 6:37 a.m. ; Deentewn Temperature ' OW, cae hog US ee . 6 recor a nee m... ono a.m.. 66 ? p.m... oo, a.m. 10 2pm. 508 a.m. 73 ' Monéay in Pontis wanrecorded cornices) Highest temperature ........ eh Lowest temperature .................. 8 Mean Weathe: y. One Year Age in Pontise } eat temperature ee Mean temperature... 8 and Lowest Temperatares Date ts 66 Years 08 in 1004 47 im 1004 Monday's ature Chart \ipena "* fyporecen 70 g Baltimore Memphis “ eimarck iS i aent Beach 8 rowneville- S $ iwaukee f chicage 8 i New Yor i 6 See’ Ba fam aE ver : i . nis q trett gee oe * a q i 8 re i Marie %s a. Genttio t trav City, 4 ¢3| Washington & 6 & | WANDS OF FRIENDSHIP? — Vice President Richard Nixon and Poland's Communist chief Wiadyslaw Gomulka begiri to extend their hands to each other as Nixon is distracted for a moment. The come by the Polish people yesterday. Nixon in reply said: “I wish he , (Eisenhower) could be here today; to see what the Polish people have. done in rebuilding this city.’’ Nixon's program today, his last hours aftér an enthusiastic wel- chairman of the Army Scientific Advisory Panel, 1951-56; special assistant to the President of the United States for science and technology, 1957-59; member of the Board of Visitors to the United States Naval Academy, 1953-55: member of the Committee for the White House Conference on Edu- cation, 1954-56; and a member of the President's Board of Con- sultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, 1956 to the present. He has been a trustee of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation since 11954. Dr. Killian is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a holder of nuferous awards for his public service con- tributions. ‘Herter to Return to U.S. by Special Jet Thursday GENEVA (Secretary of State Christian A. Herter plans to leave Geneva at 9 a.m. (3 a.m. EST) Thursday for his return trip to the Uniteq States. The foreign miu- isters’ conference ig scheduled to end here tomorrow. Herter is to fly home in the same special jet which brought him here for the second half of the Geneva conference nearly four weeks ago. The plane will make a refueling stop at the Azores Thursday and Herter and his party will have lunch. It is due in Washington at i 4:15 p.m- local time Thursday. t |886 Plymouths, 10,115 Dodges, 3,- ‘089 De Sotos, 5,300 Chryslers and 712 Imperials in the same month of 1958. De Soto and Imperial were the only makes in the industry which showed lower output in July than in the same month last year. * * For the first seven months this Tax Men Checking Warrick’s Assets (Continued From Page One) ithe only suspect arrested so far in the slaying. During the truth serum: test he admitted receiving frequent : pre- scfiptions from Dr. Warrick for the narcotic drug Demerol. Pontiac Police Det. William Nes- bitt said records of the doctor’s patients at Romulus Hospital were being checked for possible clues to the shooting. He said he would also look into a $20,000 lawsuit filed in 1956 against Dr. Warrick by a Pontiac money needed to balance ‘" : 1959-60 state budget and leave 15 millions over for reduction of the state’s 100 million dollar deficit. Sen. Harold M. Ryan of Detroit, Democratic floor leader, ridiculed Geerlings’ revenue data. He called the GOP bill unfair, inequitable, insufficient and unconstitutional. Sen, Stanley Novak’ of Detroit, assailed the GOP package as de- signed to protect corporations making the highest proiits in his- tory Sen. Philip Rahoi (D-Iron Moun- x * * Some $200,000 was routed to the Henry deKoning Construction Co. of Ann Arbor, prime contractor on the ‘BVS project. me when they move,” says Ada. 'The others do, too. Ist Parcel Post WASHINGTON — A parcel post service was established in the United States for the first time on January 2, 1913, (Continued From Page One) Mrs. Elsenhower will accompany her husband to Eu- U.S, officials said details of the newly announced travels must be But he cautioned that would have to. be cut steel strike Tasted menths. couple charging negligence in pro- fessional services. : “fy ri 4 gure | "s years as an int \commander. ¢; separately with the -British arid French chiefs and with Ger- many's Chancellor Konrad Ade- i served many. Nikita Coming Sept. I 9 some differences, see eye to eye on most problems. The largest exception in this harmony scene is the towering figure of French President Charles de Gaulle, whose ideas about France's destiny have caused concern in- the Western : has embarked ' terms of Eisenhower's pl mn 8 © le a Western Big Three summit Abpea poeta eg . meeting in Paris, plus talking . Blue Eyes Mean Trouble ‘BALTIMORE — ernational military The Allies, despite Pe es ae ee Serf we t «THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, avout’ 1959 THREE: -|Grand Rapids to Host Only. 4 Days Left! Final Wind- Up of SIMMS: AMVETS Confab 1 He Greatest. BIRTHDAY SALE-bration Our greatest sale of the year ends this Saturday at 10 P.M. . . and we are thanking you—our eystomers®by givikig the best bargains now .. . nothing is held beck, cash and every item is a guaranteed money-saver. : Stuart Symington ue) wie be : rif aE YEARS Si former Georgia Gov. Ellis Arnall x will be the toastmaster at a ban- will hold its 1959 national conven- ee toe 2,500 delegates were : : Sapeese to ta pee a ie cee We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities on These WEDNESDAY Only Specials! Red Radio Accuses - IE S1RTHOAY BARGAIN: SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS Shah of Iran of Treason forse aes 4 Famous Hosiery Maker Cooperates —_ ; LONDON (UPI)—The Shah of Ladies’ SL 23 to Bring Prices Lower than in 1934 Ball Point Iran was accused of treason Mon-| day by the Moscow Radio for al- $1.95 Quality P ens legedly seeking American atomic weapons for his army. A Moscow broadcast charged|—E that American rocket bases were being built secretly on Iranian territory near the Soviet border. Regular 25c 5° Nylon Hosiery Original } c $1.00 Sellers 3 PAIR 99 eeee rs mee 49° Loven Poe “with i size = 4- Biack only ry Representative Here Triple-Tier Nylon WEDNESDAY 2 te 3:30 P.M. & ' Now Only REMINGTON jf , LADIES 60 Ga. 15 Den. Full Fashioned Smooth writing pen : Electric Shaver : BOUFFANT a. on. FU asnione with retractable . AP Wirephete via Radie ints, tal ket SOBER CONTEMPLATION—Russian Premier 707 jet airliner that flew Vice President Nixon SLIPS Tan or beige in light or dark seamed styles. Minor chovernd. Liesit pe RECONDITIONED QQ irregularities do not affect wearing quality. Sizes 81/2 Nikita Khryshchev, who recently announced that to the Soviet Union. He appears duly impressed to 11. per person. he will wing his way to the United States for a with the giant aircraft. At the upper right are ¢ BIRTHDAY BARGAIN, visit in September, takes a look at the Boeing silencer tubes on the big jet engines. i —While You SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS BIRTHDAY BARGAIN Wait Service— da.95“ntty — pint Remington only in nee sma. medium BIRTHDAY BARGAIN Irregulars of $1.95 Ladies’ Brassieres Odds & Ends Clearance Sale! Tee-Shirts 5 Men’s Underwear | jews HANES BRAND * T-SHIRTS $1 49° * BRIEFS * U-SHOR * U-SHIR _ Ike Was Honored in Red Square Mr. K’s Visit to Be Russian Ist — By the Associated Press reme Commander of the Allied {convinced him Russia's eet _—~Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush-| forces which had swept from |aim was to be friendly with the chev's visit to the United States} Normandy to a union with the |United States. in September will be a historic Russians on the River Elbe in | Eisenhower has met Soviet Pre- first—no other top leader of Rus-| Germany. mier Nikita Khrushchev before, sian communism has ever visited; At the time, Eisenhower said too. It was in 1955 at the summit the United States. the subjects Stalin had talked meeting in Geneva. The Soviet ; : P : Premier there was Nicolai Bul- It will pose a massive security|about during their social meetings : : problem for federal officers and ganin but Khrushchev was power- - for state and local authorities : a even then, as first secretary . wherever Khrushchev may go. Ly ae ® Communist party. This was Citizens Will Study only time Eisenhower ever saw Mewever, ‘Seomnity tices 2 Khrushchev. ready have had practice work- . cuts in protecting lewser Soviet (Michigan's Problems officials in whirlwind tours of the United States. DETROIT (UPI) — A volunteer Deputy Premier Fro! R. Kozlov |group of ae pena voters is was here from June 28 to July 13, organizing a “Citizens For Mich- following up a visit by Deputy jigan’ committee to study and help Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan in|solve Michigan's governmental January. problems. While no top man in the Red| ‘The group will hold its first Russian hiearchy has ever visited|membership meeting in Lansing this country, the late President |Sept. 21. Franklin D. Roosevelt did visit] «citizens For Michigan” is Russia. headed by George Romney, presi- In February, 1945, Roosevelt, dent of American Motors Corp., as # British Prime Minister Winston : : om : ‘O™\temporary chairman. Romney said Churchill and Soviet Premier a survey is being made among Reg. 98c 29° ; aa ner Lge the beard for ‘ester, closer electrie aon IBIRTHDAY BARGAIN] TN . Your Choice 29° és Your Choice White in sizes small and 49° : 00 Irregulars. 3 For [90 | Boys’ TEE-SHIRTS Reg. ite: White cot- $ T-shirts in sizes S-M. Briefs in | ton knit. Sizes me- for sizes M-L. Athletic shirts sizes S- | dium and large. M-L and shorts in sizes 38-40-42. WHITE TERRYCLOTH Site 2 and 3 Only Boys’ Gaucho Shirt | Boys’ Sport Shirts Reg. $1.89 Reg. 97c Value » 66" | iy 47° Al Size large only. 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Hoy, ee lof the state’ bl sho : . % ich abuewoammenyintisleecea ~ Time to Brighten Up for Summer and Fall Briets 1 ; Bovs’ Sport C x oy *x« * * = ol medium and Boys oto oys pe ’ t to Moscow before, in 1945, as an Buys Michigan Brass L R a honored comrade-in-arms in the Renews Color Beauty to Faded, Soiled F ab . ifetime Elastic Style $3.95 50-foot victory over Nazi Germany. GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — Ap- SU O0r Demily 10 2 eket, 20? a CURITY Crib Sheet S, oe hpoks. REVIEWED PARADE plied Arts Corp., a Grand Rapids |B 12-QUNCE PRESSURE CAN BIRTHDAY BARGAIN] 1» Not as Pictured $1.95 Value - automotive parts manufacturer, t 999 It will be 14 years ago Aug. 12/53:4 Monday it has purchased the|[E to life again’ with FABSPRAY_ not a paints tint onan that Eisenhower mounted a plat- Michigan Brass Co. of Grand == mineral spray that covers stains, spo form in Moscow's Red Square with | raven. <= Ray-0-Vac or Eveready ct acucan con an ad at a Navy short pants matching sport a parade and ee Applied (Arts Olticials aki the mise et = " coats. Bizes 3 to’ 6x. aT . 63-year-old Grand Haven firm, alos North n cr He was the first foreigner S0|.1ich manufactures brass plumb- z f mM hal 2 {{® 2nd cee ft 1 00 Matche Ti B , lt ; honored. ing goods, will be operated as a/—E- BROTHERS Flees a = & Sets ST Res. 11° Eisenhower was then the Su- |wholly-owned subsidiary. 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Rack poles, VALUE-RATE the ROCKET ~AT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY DEALER'S * a E THE VALUES CAR OF THE mentu PRICE CLASS! $1.50 Rands Instant 49° Curl Permanette Sipioes $2.0 H. H. Ayers — $4" Colortone Shampeoc .. $1.79 Charles Antel —- ho, 9 Forteata tn Jor .. 79° | $1.25 Royal : ‘meee PON THE DEST 180 IEW CARS, WEED CARS, AND SERVICE... 991 TOUR LOCAL AUTHORIEED LDSMOSRE GURLNY PRAEIRI———~ Shampes — 10 eunces 44! JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 280'S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. i 000000000009 60020000000000008 3200600600000 008OHOHHOHHHHHHHHHH888H0HHE8ES | be f THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESD a @ AY, AUGUST 4,:1959 * Four, increased b ceaer . Mackie. LANSING uf — State highway department engineers are trying to solve the problems, involved in some highways id almost to the slickness of bowling alleys by “A combination of increased horsepower and vastly improved tire design, as well as tougher rubber, is rapidly polishing many ‘ of our heavily-traveled highways'wide survey of every mile of hard- dangerously smooth,” said state'surfaced.trunkline routes to test highway commissiorier John C.)skid resistance in 1957. It expects’ ment — Horile of Cars Slick Highways State Tries to Halt Road Skids plained. skid resistance when new, use, Mackie said. * * * ito finish the job late this year. “The result is an increase in skidding and accidents when highways are wet,” he ex- “Most pavements have a high polish up under continued heavy The department started a ‘state- “We've learned a lot about, the relationship of skidding and cer- tain types of aggregates and sands used in pavement makeup,” Mackie said. “As a result, some changes in our specifications for new pavements have taken place making.” : The department also is working on a method of de-slicking pave- ments that need treatment. Michigan’, skid-testing equip- icknamed Skidometer | — consists of a truck hauling a GACH ACCOUNT INSURED to $10,000 Where you save does make a difference ALL YOUR SAVINGS | BARN 314% te SAVE Rv Tht tte EARN = soe FEDERAL | SAVINGS 9? West Maple 3065 W. 12 Mile Ad. Comer of fierce Berkley Mi 4-1711 | trailer with wheels braked at a i speed of 40 miles an hour. The | truck sprays water in front of the trailer wheels and skid re- | sistance is measured by a spe- cial recording device. 4 The department is studying skid- proofing treatments which employ types of adhesive binders and aluminum oxide grits. A counter- pffensive is planned against high ways that have shown low skid re- sistance. 2 Experimental non-skid treatment has been given to high accident in- jtersections on Telegraph Rd. at (West Chicago Blvd. in Wayne ‘County, two sections of Fort St. \in Detroit and a section of U.S.23 south of U.S.112 in Washtenaw County. * * The Telegraph-West Chicago in- tersection is the only section where accident data is complete. |Skidding accidents there dropped ‘from 48-to 19 in a 12 month period ‘after treatment. Mackie said Michigan is the first state in the nation to under- take such a comprehensive pro- ‘gram of skid testing and preven- |tion. eading the program are E. \A. Finney, director of the depart- ment’s research laboratory, and engineer. Folks of Adopted DEXATRIM A TRUE APPETITE DEPRESSANT JUST RELEASED WITHOUT A PRESCRIPTION 689°H. Blvd. | Cor. Perry j FE 2-0259 ae i 2" 1 Capsule Daily Does the Work PERRY DRUGS. 1251 Baldwin at Ypsilanti FE 2-8359 ee Korean Orphans Stage Reunion -EAST LANSING —It was like any other good sized picnic group except the kids, from dia- per-weafers to nine year olds, all were black-haired, doll-faced youngsters from the Orient. The occasion was the second annual reunion of Michigan par- ents of adopted Korean war or- _ Abeut 30 families of the es- timated 45 eligible im the state showed up Saturday. Lee Mast, a Lansing repair- man, said it was like any other big family picnic with ‘all of us admiring the children as they romped and played.” Mast said the parents hope to form themselves into a state as- sociation and make the outdoor get togethers an annual affair. Almost 90 per cent of American homes are of wood frame. and other changes may be in the: Myron Brown, chemical research T Million Idle Tons Cut Oil Ship Rates. business. commented. The United States’ portion of the idle tonnage was 1,050,000 tons on July 1, according to the Institute. That was the third largest tie-up of tankers in U.S. history. The two previous records | were 1,397,000 tons in 1949 and i 1,384,000 tons in 1954, the report ‘said. | Commenting on the effect of idle tankers’ upon freight rates, ithe Institute said that the charge jfor hauling peroleum from the \Netherlands West Indies to U-S. “North Atlantic ports in July 1959) iwas only $1.08 contrasted with ‘$7.86 a ton in early 1957. “Even with this low level of ifreight rates, the U.S. tanker fleet has increased in size over the past pee years, due to the large vessels added from new construction .. .”’ the Institute said. The Institute said that the U.S. jtanker fleet gained a total of ,415,000 tons, or 7 per cent, in the best 12 months. | S \Water Puts on Pressure | amounts to about one ton per square inch for every vertical mile in actual depth. “This surplus toonage hanging pover the market has aided in keep- ing tanker freight rates at an ex- tremely low level,’ the Institute | BOSTON — Water pressure Says Hello ‘to Child Patients Si 78h WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Mrs. Richard M. Nixon met one of Po- land’s famous surgeons Monday— man who has devised a new method for treatment of curvature of the yspine resulting from polio. Gray-haired Dr. Adam Gruca took the vice president's wife into his office in a big Warsaw hos- pital and laughingly — suggested that they interview each other. *.* * He was prepared to discuss the work of the famous orthopedic clinic, but Mrs. Nixon quickly told him she came to say hello to some of the child patients as she has done throughout the tour of the Soviet Union. “IT don't want to examine any- * * * | Visitors come to the doctor from|* jall over the world, and 400 stu-|. \dents are at the clinic of the 180- ibed hospital. They went to the wards and Mrs. Nixon gave a greeting, hand- shake, and a cheery word to the youngsters, 3 * * She from a bouquet and handed them to the children. — staff followed along. were surgeons. were. x « * a male colleague. ‘We don’t think so,” retorted a shoes with open toes. ithing.”” she said, “I know it is!» took several carnations). As she went around, doctors and|; Two young women in the group| Asked if there| % . were many women doctors on the| 24 staff, they answered that there/ =. “Too many women,” interjected | ' pretty blonde surgeon in high-heel | ; “When Mrs. Nixon left, Dr. Gruca kissed her hand and gave my table.’ \Pat Nixon Meets Surgeon WASHINGTON (UPI)—~= The! ant American Merchant Marine Insti- tute, Inc. reported Monday that in the middle of this year, 7,000,000 tons of tankers were laid up throughout the world for lack of Get Social Security WASHINGTON—About one-third of all Americans over the age of 65 receive sorge form of social security payments. “DR; HENRY A. MILLER Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 . — “Better Things in Sight” Contact Lenses Open Fri. Evenings—Closed Wed. Afternoons — s) We carry a full stock of the special: foods and con- centrates mentioned by Lelord Kordel in his wonder- ful “Stay Alive Longer” articles — includin g: "LECITHIN _ GRANULES You know how highly Lelord Kordel thinks of t lecithin. Don’t let one day go by without at least 3 tspns. of lecithin. You'll never regret it. Y2-Ib. jar only $2.49 (2 jars -for $4.49) | VITAL HEALTH FOODS 140 W. Huron St. & : Across the street from New Post Office ; eas ais TAY ALIVE LONGER? ‘NUTRI-TIME. This is the famous vitamin-mineral food sup- plement used by Lelord Kordel himself. So you know it must be. right! NUTRI-TIME is more than “just vitamins” — as you'll see, once you've tried it. Bottle of 90 tablets (average 2 month’s supply) is only $3.95. = Phone FEderal 8-198! mr \ . x * * « 7 = a :* ‘ ‘ A ’ \ ‘ \ and so gentle to drink! means the absolute top! ; | WENTUGKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHIBKIES + 100 PROOF, BOTTLED IN BOND +46 PROOF HE OLD TAYLOR DISTILLERY COMPAITY, FRANKFORT & LOUISVILLE, KENTYCKY + DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL OISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY « / ee WHY THE BUBBLES DANCE FOR JOY! ERE are highballs as they should be — sparkling and zestful, rich in bourbon flavor. Yet—and here’s the big point—they’re light and mild, The reason? 86 proof Old Taylor~lightest full-flavored Kentucky bourbon you can buy—is the same in quality as our famous 100 proof bonded bourbon. That, of course, A deeply satisfying highball can be light on the palate—as your first taste of, Old Taylor 86 will prove, delightfully! & % 4° TASTE! %e and they “. NO DRY... "SMOKED-OUT" ° 2 "Pocccececceee” Outstanding... BOO OOS ef elt es are Mild! ‘money can buy. a a : eatin S NOFLAT : “FILTERED-OUT” ae FLAVORIS L a friendly to your taste! Get satisfying flavor... See how Pall Mall’s famous length of fine tobacco travels and gentles the smoke— makes it.mild—but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! _ wianeainin. semanas @ bi fe ees es a Stay Alive Longer! Don’t Settle for Life of Chronic Fatigue By LELORD KORDEL Installment Twenty Could this be you?> Are you tired when you wake up in the morning, exhausted by the time you get to work, wondering by noon how you'll ever make it through the day? Is your fatigue =m, of such duration that you're be-! ginning to wonder if you were literally born tired? How did you get this way? What happened to your zest for living, 4 The costs of high mortality have: presented a symposium of quali- become too great for insurance | fied - professional views on health. companies. Consequently they are’ The symposium put significant preaching health consciousness. Dr. Tom Spies, of Northwestern University, tells us: ‘“‘The use of nutrients to replenish the tissues and to prevent disease is the physi- cian’s primary problem. “He knows that the nutrients imust be supplied: for the body ifrom the outside. No statistics can jdetermine the loss and no words lean describe the waste when physi- emphasis on nutrition. ‘‘It is the kinds of food that matter. Nutri- tional deficiencies . . . are apt to increase with aging and are a primary source of the afflictions of old age. For instance, the bones of elderly people are easily bro- ken. This is due mostly to gradual demineralization of the bones, es- pecially loss of calcium .. . Once the demineralization has started, exercise, concentrated vitamin- and-mineral supplements, and-a high protein diet —: ‘We're all creatures of protein,’’ he says— Cammings takes soybean leci- thin three times a day. Robert Cummings enjoys his life, his work, and his aecomplish- ments, which are many and var- ied. His excellent care of himself has paid off in the good health which makes all this possible. iminerals that we should have. For ‘PONTIAC your drive, yqur dreams of ac-'cians do not meet this challenge, | complishment? head-on.” What happened to vou? aiid *€ “ re ‘SECOND-RATE SELF Chronic fatigue. is not normal. Why should you settle for a sec- Neither is disease. But your low 0nd-rate self? Why* be only half- N. Q., or nutrition quotient, can alive, low in energy and spirits, | make them so. \losing confidence in yourself and, Roland H. Berg, in discussing Your future? Trade neglect for the socioeconomic factors affecting Know-how, and come over to the medical care in the United States,|utritionally safe side of life. deplored the state of the nation’s) A famous doctor of the Holly- 'wood stars said recently: ‘‘Motion ‘picture stars are the healthiest 4 people in the world. “Even the old ones are vigor- ous, firm and _pink-cheeked. | They eat the best food — and | less of it! — than anyone else.” They also take vitamin-and-min- eral supplements. “The amount of food eaten has Do You Have Eating Plan? . Tomorrow is your last chance to get a copy of Le- lord Kordel’s Better Eating Plan! It is designed to give nothing to do with good nutrition,”’ you the protein, vitamins according to one of America’s and minerals your body leading weekly magazines, which needs for dynamic living. * You may have a copy FREE by sending a stamp- ed, self-addressed envelope to: LELORD KORDEL care Report Reduction of The Pontiac Press (This I've told you the facts, the rest there is little or no help for it. is up to you. “But it can be prevented by de-' liberately increasing the intake of __ ea ea foods rich in calcium and minerals how, and lengthen your life instead during middle age, when the of shortening it? Is it so hard to do process begins.” o ithe following simple things—when ithe only lif you have is in the FORMULA FOR YOUTH / balance? Robert Cummings, the motion 4, High-pretein foods: Eat with a picture ‘and television star, shares purpose. Don’t junk up your ma- with us his formula for youth, en- chinery with starches, sugars, and ergy, and vitality. Cummings, at fats. A good rule to follow: First almost 50, is young, handsome, and eat all the foods you need. Then, vigorous. He says: ‘Usually, byjif you still have the capacity for the time an actor learns his trade,| something else, have it. Chances he’s SO old and beaten up that helare you won't want it. doesn’t look well. So I take good! » ‘Vitamins and minerals. The care of myself. jrealistic fact is that our foods just Among other things, including ‘do not supply-all the vitamins and tthat reason, in addition to good, eating, use a concentrated source| of all the“ vitamins and minerals. | . I have found for my own use the formula called Nutri-Time to be ar idea] vitamin-mineral food sup- plement. 3. Lecithin, the miracle food. For Lyour health’s sake — and for your sake as a man — please include at least three teaspoonfuls of lecithin’ granules in your program daily. Don't wait until your body is Start today to be the person you! want to be ... the person you can be. * * * | Realize your latent potencies. ‘Utilize the talents that have been ,buried beneath inertia: Race through life instead of limping.. .! stride toward success instead of stumbling along half-alive. Stay at your mental and physical best, al- ways, charged with enthusiasm and the capacity for living joy- ously and abundantly! All Rights Reserved. Adapted from | the book. ‘“‘Live to Enjov the Money | You Loe | Lelord Kordel. Pub- . lished by World. oi Te Ponuac Pres «TOs Tin’ Mental Patients midnight — so be sure to | | mail your request -before WASHINGTON (UPI) New then!) ,tranquilizing and anti-depressant drugs brought a steady reduction’ in patients in state mental hos- pitals in the past three years despite record high new admission rates. | The National Committee against Mental Illness, Inc., also said that: if’ present rates continue, even, more new treatments must be; found or one out of every 10 Amer- | have the scientific knowledge to jicans will spend part of his life in| ward off many of the crippling a mental hopsital. | chronic diseases and the sudden | deaths from heart attacks, but we don’t use it. You've heard of hidden hunger. “Sure,” you say, ‘but I eat three good meals a day, not to mention) the coffee breaks. That couldn't on mental illness research. | apply to me. Couldn’t it? How much do your, The report said that at the end: meals contribute in the way of pro-| of 1958 there were 545,465 patients | tein, vitamins, ‘and minerals? |in state mental hospitals, a re-' Do you know what your body/duction of more than 13,000 since’ actually needs to withstand the/1955. The drop occurred, it’ said, stress and strain of everyday liv-|despite a record increase ‘in ad- ing, to build up tissues, and to missions averaging 10,000 new pa- avoid nutritional deficiencies? tients annually. SAFE... | DEPOSIT | BOXES health. ‘‘We have been winning the battle against acute diseases,’’ he said, ‘‘but losing the war against chronic killers.”’ The ‘mortality rate for the largely preventable -chronic dis- eases continues to mount. We Calling for more local and | federal funds for research and training, the committee noted | that. Americans are spending | more than times as much on | alcoholic beverages as they are | wf wg | | For a few cents a day you can keep all your valuables safe from theft, loss, fire. Safe deposit boxes come in various ‘sizes — there’s one to fit your needs. Ideal for wills, birth certificates, savings bonds, car title, irreplaceable personal things. Not only are ‘all these important items safe, but you know where they are when you need them! iy COMPLETELY SAFE! LESS THAN 2 CENTS A DAY! | f f § a r when it’s a question of money, see your banker first! pajamas, too, with print rib trim. Get several — save dollars! All i 4to 8. B. Toy Elephant print top, gripper back, gripper-grow waist STATE BANK CONVENIENT MEMBER Norris = FDIC, with checked rib trim. Sizes 4 to 12. ie This transitional print has deep, rich tones... Drip-Dry Nylon Jersey WHEE! WHAT A SAVING! FAMOUS-MAKE PRINT SLEEPERS | WITH PLASTIC SOLES...SPECIAL All in warm, fluffy knit (Redmanized for shrink-resistance) ... so gen- erously cut... so well-made! Some with sturdy plastic sole feet. Ski n pink, blue or yellow (prints on white ground) —for boys or girls. A. Diamond Check pullover top; solid cdlor pants, plastic soles. Sizes , solid color pants, plastic soles, Sizes 1 to 4. C. Solid Color Ski Pajamas 5 L Waite’s Children’s World ... Second Floor at a tiny $5.99 This pretty transitional has the deep rich tones that go so beautifully into fall. Needs little or no ironing, sheds wrinkles, travels easily. 34 sleeves, elasticized waist, self belt. Choose blue, green or fuchsia in sizes 12 to 20 and 1412 to 2412. Phone FE 4-251! or Mail Your Order — Waite's Budget Fashions a eee Third Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959" Russian Jews Alone STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) —! An appeal, to Soviet authorities to let Russian Jews follow their own way of lif® was issued here ‘Sun-| day night at the opening of the Fourth Assembly of, the World. ’* * * | Jewish Congress. | “There is no people in the world suffering more from the cold war than the Jews,’’ said Nahum Gold- mann, president of the assembly. | * x: * | “Most other people live either! on one side of the lron Curtain, or the other,’ said Goldmann ' Will you trade neglect for know- completely deprived of its reserve. “The Jews live and work on both sides."* The only Jews from Eastern Fu- ‘\rope attending the assembly are three Polish observers. Ask Soviets to Leave | 1 Out Of 10 Americsne’ has a serious mental problem Ba * +} These people need the under- standing.of all of us. Beyond this, we should learn to understand our own emotional tensions. And stop °° | such tensions from making life unhappy for us—and for others. Find out what to do. Send for the free booklet, “How To DEAL WITH YOUR TENSIONS”. Write: Box 2500, New York I, N.Y. Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the Newspaper Advertising Executives Association. — THE PONTIAC PRESS. / WEDNESDAY ONLY! Starts at 9:30 Sharp, Ends 5:30— or Phone FE 4-2511 Tomorrow! INNERSPRING 7-Yr. MATTRESS $6”? Reg. $8.98 grey. pant and booties set. infants’ sizes, 3 pastels. Reg. 3.98 $ if eae 2 for 5 Slight irregulars of a national brand. nos sizes. Full Panel . . . Wax Birch 7-YEAR CRIB "219.99 Full panel hardwood seven year crib with plastic teething rails, dainty decal trim. Save on this sturdy crib tomorrow! Stroller $12.98 Value Hooded. reclining stroll - er complete with safety strap, padded seat, 4 backrest, Turquoise or Not’l Infants’ 4-Pc. Brand Cotton Fitted 4 or 8 Ounce Loungee Sets Gauze Diapers Crib Sheets Evenflo Bottles Reg. 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All these tender ut- terances are a mere political play designed for publicity. x *& * In a recent interview, Senator JoHN F. KENNEDY of Massachusetts declared in one breath that Senate Majority Leader LYNDON JOHNSON’s weaknesses as a Presidential pros- pect are that, “He fluctuates and is not a heavyweight thinker.”: Next, he reverses himself and says JOHN- SON is a great guy and would be a better president than some bland character. Kennedy says, “like Franklin D. Roosevelt, Johnson has the fac- ulty of attracting brilliant people to work for him, and this would offset his weaknesses.” He further said of his opponent for 1960 that he was “tough,” and at least would get things done. x *«* * A few other hopefuls joined KEn- nepy in singing the praises of Joun- son. Why? Perhaps they are courting JoHNsoN’s support for pas- sage of some legislation. Stuart Symincton of Missouri sent his orchids like this: “Lynpon would make a finé president. He un- derstands government, and that’s not the most prevalent trait around Washington today.” kok ke Senator Mike aghtaed “ Oklahoma stated: “Lyndo compromiser, true, and don't like compromisers ordinarily. I like people who fight things out. But a leader must have this qual- ity. Lyndon does terrific. mental homework, and he has a memory like an electronic computer.” . xk «wk * We strongly suspect that after all these kindly words Senator JoHNsoN will be returning favors to Messrs. KENNEDY, MonRONEY and SyMINc- TON. Prime Minister Nehru Ousts Kerala’s Reds After more than two years of turmoil and a complete breakdown of law and order, Prime Minister NeuRU has used his constitutional powers to force out of office the Communist government of the State of Kerala. a Communists gained power through a small majority in the April, 1957, election. By August their “People’s Action Commit- tees” had usurped the functions of the law courts; had cut down the authority of the police so that they were helpless; instigated strikes on the slightest pretext and freed all Communists from jail regardless of their crimes. x * * Unrest mounted when the Kerala government recently passed an educational act giving Communists control over appointment of teachers jin thousands of government aided schools in the state. Anti-Com- munists carried on a stepped up campaign to force action by the cen- tral governm. at. th the announcement by the Commiinist regime that the prom- dsed August elections would not be held, violence flared. Prime Minister Nehru then was forced to act not on the ground that the Kerala government is Communist but rather that the people had been denied their fundamental rights of democracy guaranteed under India’s constitution. m8 * * New elections are expected to be held within six months. If Kerala bas learned ‘its lesson, the .Com- munists should be completely routed. * TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959 t and Secretary anager Maser 2 Ree, ‘ Eant M Tesapwet , Managing Editor Circulation Manager THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan by The Hontiac Press Company Prreceratp President and Publisher Jomn W. Prraeenaco, ' Jomn A. Rear Treasurer a Advertising Direeter G_ Marstatt Joapan, Gronge C. Inman, Local Advertising Classified Manager Manager and Editor Churches Enlist Aid of Air Conditioning An interesting sidelight on how clergymen are using air conditioning to help increase their flocks and keep summer attendance up comes from a cross section survey. * * * To be sure, certain sections of the country experience more hot and humid days than others. But figures released by the Carrier Corporation point out than more than 8,000 church buildings. are air conditioned. Results after cooling churches all follow the same pattern. A New Orleans church reported a 44 per cent increase in summer attendance. -In Dallas, Texas, one newly condi- tioned church found 1] extra cur- ricular meetings scheduled during a single summer week. Summer is normally an inactive period. * * * In the Midwestern state of lowa an air conditioning installation in one church was not only followed by an increase in attendance, but some of the other churches re- ported a loss, which in part pos- sibly contributed to the other gain. The only conclusion to be drawn is that in certain areas air condition- _ing is becoming quite commonplace. | k ok * It would be a pretty sad commen- ‘tary, of course, if people went to church only because they were cooler there. At least they are going to church, and in our fast moving life today, nothing is more important than religion. The Man About Town Doing Something Three Local Girls Make Use of an Opportunity Heat spell; What we longed for last winter. At a time when so many teenagers complain about nothing to do, Sue Turner, Valerie Fox. and Sue Maddsen, 7 all of Pioneer Ave. in Pioneer Highlands, and on the lower teen border, are out- Standing exceptions. Each Wednesday and Friday morning they hold a play school for the small children of the neighborhood. It. is con- ducted like a nursery school, and the girls furnish soft drinks and cookies to the children, and help them on projects to take home. They also play games with them, and keep them entertained until lunch time. It’s a plan worthy of emulation every- where. The children are happy and kept off the streets, their mothers are hap- pier, and the two Sues and Valerie are not the least beneficiaries from the proj- ect: —_ | \ Supplementing the request of General Manager Donald L. Swanson for old premium lists of the Michigan State Pair, I wonder if any of my readers have premium lists of any of the times it was held in Pontiac over a, half century ago. There's a column mention for the first one reported. Writing that ‘he’s coming to Pontiac's centennial celebration in 1961,"and send- ing recollections of a half century! or more ago, is ' Roger Pastrink, now living in Chicago, who says he lived in Pontiac when Dan Davis . was running the Democratic party, and the mayor's job was alternately switched between Republican Dr. Harry Guillot and Democrat Dr. John Riker. Verbal Orchids to- . Dora Lahyman of Auburn ‘Melghtn 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Kalavos of Drayton Plains; 54th wedding anni- versary. Perry Orson of Waterford; 81st birthday. Garfield Willoughby: of Walled Lake; 84th birthday. Miss Ida Burt of Holly; 91st birthday. eg A ( David Lawrence Claims: Quite a Load to Dump on Him President Knows Visit Is a Gamble WASHINGTON—President Eisen- hower certainly deserves an ‘‘A” for effort in trying to maintain world peace — but his decision to invite Soviet Premier Khrush- a chev to visit the United States will probably prove, through no fault of the President, as fu- tile a gesture as was the ““‘sum- mit” of 1955 at neva. Memories are Ge- LAWRENCE passed since Eisenhower frater- nized with the top leaders of the four years have Kremlin, including Nikita Khrush- chev, and worldwide acclaim and enthusiastic comments in the West that this was the way to bring about an “easing of tensions” and a_solution of the current contro- versies of the ‘‘Coid War.” But every pledge made at Ge- neva has since been broken by the Soviet government. It became necessary afterwards for the United States actually to take a military posture in the Far East to prevent a Soviet-inspired inva- sion of Formosa by Red China's forces. ” Also, the United States had to land Marines in Lebanon and take other measures to forestall a Soviet conquest of the Middle East. Not only has the solemn prom- ise, made at the 1955 ‘‘summit” meeting at Geneva, to assure the reunification of Germany been broken, but within the last few months the Moscow government has issued.an ultimatum to the Western powers to withdraw their forces from West Berlin or face the threat of war. MUST BE ‘GIVE’ For several weeks now it has: been the American position that there must be some ‘‘give” on the part of the Soviets before’ there could be a ‘‘summit” conference. The Moscow government has re- fused to give an inch. Conse- quently, the conference of the four foreign ministers has been dead- locked and is ending in failure. The President has said there would be no “summit’’ confer- ence until developments at Cie- neva ‘‘justified it.’ Nikita Khrushchev insisted that the for- eign ministers couldn't settle anything, and that the “summit” was the place to do it. He hasn't vet had his way en- tirely on that point, but he will have a chance in a two-man "‘sum- mit’’ meeting to indicate whether the Soviets mean to withdraw their ultimatum on West Berlin. Meanwhile, the President will go to London and Paris later this month to canvass the views of ‘Prime Minister Macmillan of Brit- ain and President de Gaulle of France, Presumably, Eisenhower will reflect the views of the West- ern Allies when he meets Khrush- chev, though the President will. as he says, not be their authorized spokesman in a formal sense. Then, after Premier Khrushchev has vis- ited America, Eisenhower will pay a return visit to the Soviet Union. The Country Parson “Men can be hooked easier than fish because they are at- tractéd by so many more kinds of bait.” conference _ short, but only Two points of view prevail to- day aheut the exchange of visits between the Soviet dictator and the American President. One is that tension will be eased and the “Cold War’ will thaw out a bit. The other view is that Khrushchev will tighten his hold on the Soviet people and will tell them that America now accepts the leaders of communism as equals. With a controlled press, this will mean misleading propaganda in- side the Soviet Union and within the countries occupied by Soviet troops. * The impression will be cultivated that the United States no longer is hostile to communism and that all dissenters in Eastern Europe had better give up their battle. TIME WILL TELL ‘ Time alone will tell which view of the Khrushchew trip will turn out to be the correct appraisal. But the Soviets thus far have given not the slightest indication of any concessions or changes. ‘nor have they exhibited any evidence that they will not break .agreements again. The President himself is under no illusions. He. knows that Khrushchev is bent on world conquest. But Eisenhower is bet- ting on the inevitable restraints that peoples themselves can exer- cise when their leaders go too far. He is hoping his own visit to the Soviet Union will furnish another opportunity; like that accorded Vice President Nixon, to convey certain truths to the Soviet citizens. It's a gamble, and hereabouts the comment is often heard that the advantages of a-visit by Khrush- chev outweigh the disadvantages, and that no harm can be done by trying to ‘‘educate”’ him. This, however, ignores the effect on;the peoples of the ‘‘captive na- tions’’ of Eastern Europe who yearn for freedom and who have hoped in vain. Dr. William Brady Says: Pop, Confections Foster American Malnutrition Common factors of the apparent- ly increasing malnutrition of Americans are lollypops jin the preschool years, pop in the early teens and sweet / confections in place of undoc- tored cereals. Even now it is frightening to think of the great numbers of young men who are phys- ically unfit for military service. I believe that the increasing use of narcotics, sense; deadening drugs, including, of course, alcohol, /as well as bar- biturates and tranquilizers, is the manifestation of the vain desire of the victims’ of malnutrition to be free for an hour. from con- sciousness of their own inferiority. The drug brings oblivion. An ironical yet familiar scene: the school cafeteria ostensibly supervised by physician and die- titian, but equipped with an elab- orate pop dispenser which keeps the children away from the milk bar. BRADY Youngsters who are allowed to indulge in such substitutes for proper food at their own whim hanker after the stuff in prefeér- ence to milk (whole milk or skim milk). From the sugar they get a quick but brief spurt of energy. For half an hour they seem as live- ly as healthy children should be all the time. But then they lose interest in the game, feel tired and languid, as children with malnu- trition feel all the time. x * * A glass of whole milk or skim milk contains more suger (milk sugar, lactose) than a bottle of pop, and in addition gives the drinker the long lasting energy and building material of protein and vitamins and minerals essen- tial for health and vitality. * * * For “persons who will not or ‘cannot take whole or skim milk, the super milk shake described here recently may prove highly satisfactory. For instrictions for preparing the drink (with electric blender) send me a stamped, self- addressed envelope. The super hy- dramin powder used in making this delicious high protein, high vitamin, high mineral beverage, makes it good not only for growing children but also for convalescents, feeble elderly pe , persons who want to red (it may be taken in place of a meal) or persons who \ ’ \ ' } , 2 = 7 want to gain (it may be taken in addition to regular meals). Signed letters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, teers or treatment, will = singed athaSdreted saree eat se ess env: te ‘The Pontise Press, Michigan. (Copyright 1980) Voice of the People ‘Hope Veep’s Report Includes U nemployed? I hope the Vice President's abi report ,of his visit to Russia and Poland will include the number of unemployed people he met: To date, no government official who has visited there has made any reference to automation or its effects on worker$. x « * Car output here is at its highest peak with record marking sales ‘and almost a record number of working hors for those Corporations are playing a dangerous game by not loyed. ing auto- mation for the benefit of the nation. Labor laws will be changed when the Labor Department acts to place the people first in the Constitu- tion, first in the heart of government, and first in common sense. * x * Never let it be said that this-is the last of the slave states. Are we the unemployed half slave and half free in the eyes of the world? Reader Defends Public Utility I read in this column recently the letters criticizing the telephone company for its attitude and ac- tions on a particular subject. * * * May I say something in its de- fense—the company has a big heart. As a handicapped person I have received aid at a great ex- pense to the company in selecting telephone equipment suitable to my needs, and I have always found ‘it willing to assist me. I have thanked therm many times privately, but in view of the criti- cal letters printed, I feel people would be interested in hearing an- other side of our great public utility. ge William Reid How would you like to be with- out a telephone today” Art Robertson 78 Washington St. Extends Thanks for Support I would like to express my earnest appreciation for your per- ceptive editorial comment during — the Senate consideration of my ap- pointment to the President's Cab- inet. I am grateful for the en- couragement and support you gave me, ; My faith <n ‘the - democratic process reassures me that time and events will vindicate your opinion and my record. Lewis L. Strauss Khrushchev-Ike Talks May Thaw Cold War (Editor's Note: Henry Shapiro, United Press International manager in Moscow has been following e rise and fall of Soviet-American re- lations for almost 25 years. In the feltiowing dispatch the dean of west- ern newsmen in Moscow discusses the Eisenhower-Khrushchev. exchange of visits.) —_——— By HENRY SHAPIRO MOSCOW (UPI) — Assuming all goes well, the exchange of visits between President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev may finally lead to a thaw in the 14-year-old Cold War. The agreement between the leaders of the world's. two greatest powers is being taken in Moscow as the first concrete result of Vice President Richard M. Nixon's nine- day tour of the Soviet Union. The President-Premier meet- ings may be only the first of several important developments to emerge from Washington and Moscow after Nixon's conversa- tions with Soviet officials have been analyzed and evaluated. Nixon, like the nine U.S. gover- nors who preceded him on a Soviet tour, got the distinct impression that it would be ‘‘useful’’ to have the leader of the Soviet Union see for himself the American way of life and the political and economic systems of the country. There has been a feeling in Mos- cow that a face-to-face meeting between Eisenhower and Khru- shchey might break the interna- tional logjam, especially in view of the total deadlock at the Big Four foreign ministers conference in Geneva. There are serious problems con- nected with the Khrushchev visit to the United States, both from a standpoint of security and oppo- sition to the visit by large seg- ments of the U.S. public and Con- gress. Although Khrushchev recently canceled a Scandinavian trip be- cause of “‘insulting’’ attacks in the Norwegian, Danish and Swedish press, it was considered unlikely that he would do anything to in- terfere with his visit to America— a country he has publicly said for years that he would like to see. Furthermore the stakes are incomparably higher than in the case of the small Scandinavian powers, What is said and done during ihe Eisenhower and Khrushchev ex- change visits will have great bear- ing on the future of world affairs. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE — What really makes for happi- ness ... As we consider life? , . What joy do we derive from all . . . Qur struggle and our strife? .. . We may become quite famous on .. . The business scene, the stage .. . In sports or music, politics . . . At almost any age . What difference does it make if we... . Are rich or poor this day? . . . Our joy could well be measured in’. . . A very different way , . . The happiness of doing For others on this earth . . Which speaks most eloquently for . . . Our greater human worth . . . Wealth and fame are nothing more . . . Than tem- poral success . . , But charity as- sures us of .. . Eternal happiness. (Copyright, 1959) Ps Case Records of a Psychologist: Petty Jealousy Cuts Job Efficiency Bill brings out several very interesting problems from the Steel Mills at Gary, Indiana, but similar cases of kinder- garten jealousies occur in al- most every factory. Employers nowadays must serve as foster parénts to all sorts of childish personalities. Surveys have shown that 65 per cent of work- ers lose their jobs for poor psychology instead of technical inefficiency. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE C408: Don X., aged 35, is an able executive at the Gary Steel Mills. “Dr. Crane,"" he began, “I heard your recent address on the psychiatric prob- lems in industry. “You said that social and family difficulties, jeal- ousy and person- ality feuding, pull down. efficiency and produce labor troubles. “Well, I wish to give, you my heartfelt ‘Amen.’ And T'll cite a few DR. mh samples of what occurs right now among our workers here in Gary. “Two girls, employed in the same , haven’t spoken to each other in seven months, though they used to be close friends, * x “And what caused the rift? Well, the second simply bought a dif- ferent brand of automobile thi year than the first girl had . chased. “Apparently, the first giri felt thé second was being disloyal to her. Anyway, she will not speak to the other young —* ‘ isn’t it juvenile? ‘But such deuding goes on and causes frictién between those two workers! So — juvenile or not, it is a real problem in that depart- * “In another department, a sim- ilar quarrel has arisen between two of our female employes. They used to be bosom friends. “One day the first git] forgot to bring her glasses. So a third party with an extra pair, vol- unteered to lend them, “The second girl spoke up and warned her friend not to wear * anybody else’s eye glasses lest she might injure her vision. “But the first girl ignored tthe warning and used the borrowed glasses. As a result, these two former friends no longer speak to each other. IMMIGRANT PSYCHOLOGY “Maybe we have a few more problems than some other fac- tories, for our employes often come from immigrant homes. * * * “They are on'y the first or second generation Americans. Their older parents or grand- parents may still speak a foreign language. “And the older generations try to domineer over the modern young people, who greatly resent such European dictatorship. “Thus, a lot of girls will desert their parents and try to locate a room somewhere else. “They start breaking away from home at 17 or 18. And in their revolt, they often go too far and thus take up bad habits that hamper their efficiency at the steel mills, k * * ““Sometiones, too, those old folks emphasize frugality and other vir- tues of the past generation so_.]... strongly, that the modern young people kick over the: traces. “For example, many em- ployes aré more concerned with a dows payment on a shiny new aute, than on paying thelr rent or grocery bills, :. & & "A few yet , thousands of new cars hed to be repossessed i 4 Ve : ‘ overgrown by the finance companies when we had a shutdown. * * * “The old folks obviously eet this’ tendency of modern youth to splurge and squander money on non-essentials. “Young people, especially of immigrant parents, think they will be disgraced and looked down upon unless they can flaunt their social success by driving a shiny new car. “So all sorts of friction de- velops. It isn’t entirely the fault of the parents nor of the young folks. But we personnel directors feel the effects. “Please warn workers té widen their vision and quit acting like infants. | Employers shouldn't have-to serve as kinder- garten teachers, too.” : Pel ice i write The Ponting” Pres, W. Crane Michigan ry yy 4 sta: 5 ressed "ord ant Ste to aevet typing and p when nd po psychological charts and (Copyright 1968) | Press 18 entitled nee for repunli- onde as” Nt aP aim. i , skages tor a8 -— hs i ae 2a? & a / ie! "THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, s ‘ N entrusted to us to-do is done to the best of our ability ... this is a part of our creed. “Thoughtful Service” 46 Williams St., Pontiac - FE 2-584) QUR EXPERTS WILL BE GLAD TO DISCUSS YOUR PROBLEMS! Come in and talk over your insurance needs with one of our experts in the field. There is absolutely no obligation. If you decide to insure through us, however, we guarantee you will be most satisfied with our service. H. R. NICHOLIE AGENCY 49 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7858 Dependalle ; ...to see that whatever is ©\Steven Rockefeller, and, by her way when Anne Marie leaves her Moore Chapel, Auburn Heights _ UL 2-1800 |Rockefeller’s Fiancee Faces Problems KRISTIANSAND, Norway (UPI) — Pretty Anne Marie Rasmussen She already has had a taste of one problem — the publicity that accompanied her romance with own admission, she was ‘scared stiff." More problems are on the home in the quiet town of Sogne to set up housekeeping in a New York apartment. But friends will tell you she is a stable, well adjusted girl, with old-fashioned — though by no means outdated values, and she is quite ready to take on the challenge. Anne Marie was born 21 years ago on the island of Boroeya outside ‘Tvedestrand, where her father had a household goods store. She moved to Sogne, on the southern tip of Norway, after World ‘War II. Anne Marie loves good music and art. “You can keep your rock and roll as far as I am concerned,” she says. “When I dance, it is vin the did fashioned way.” ] * * * ! Some reports would have it that ;Anne Marie grew up in an overly \Strict, Lutheran home, dimming her capacity for a good time. Buf ie Marie denies this. “T like to have fun and I think 'T am a natural Norwegian girt,” |she says. She has the sparkling peu eyes and blonde hair to yrove her point. Anne Marie has had compar- atively little formal education. She attended a- rural elementary school for seven years. In 1956 she went to New York to study English, spending two years at a supplementary school. Her quest for work to pay for her studies took her into the 1 “Now you wise homemakers pay so tittle for : the blanket you’ve read so many good things about! Acrilan is soft and long-wearing! Acrilan has high loft for more warmth! Acrilan is shrink - resistant; machine wash, medium setting. Nylon life-of-blanket bind- ing. Maize, pink, peacock, beige, flame, green, blue. She'll Keep Heritage business and pleasure. Last year |modations. AUGUST 4, 1959 Today, more people enjoy boat-;steamship advertisers invested Glycerine was discovered in| The evening and _ partdime ing than ever before.‘ And moreover ,000 in daily newspdpers/ 1779 by K. W, Scheele who was anjschools in the States have people are traveling by boats for |to tell travelers about their acconi-|eminent Swedish chemist and sci-|an enrollment normal years of. in entist. ‘ about two million. a La hs Rockefeller home as a maid. There she had her first introduc- | tion to Steven. She also worked | in a department store and an| insurance company, returning home last April. “She did not know much, | Steven recalls. ‘‘But she took special lessons each night and was | rather good alter eight months.” | Her attractiveness, resourceful- | ness, and tremendous energies made Anne Marie one of the most | popular girls in her hometown. (In London, reliable sources said Anne Marie once was en- gaged to the son of a printer at’ a Kristiansand newspaper, but broke off the engagement before her trip to New York.) Anne Marie and her new hus- | i | | ' is. t | band plan to start off simply — | they won’t have a maid in their new apartment and Anne Marie will do al? the housework and cooking. She plans to take piane lessons and study art in between her housewife’s chores. Anne Marie knows what drastic | changes face her in marriage to) a Rockefeller, but she doesn't in-| tend to let her new life affect her sense of values or her apprecia- tion of where she got them. “Whatever happens and what-) ever my station in life will be, I will never forget the heritage 1/ bring with me from my father ‘and mother,” she said. ! In the United States, the average’ person consumes 1,500 pounds cf! food a year. Grocery advertisers’ last year invested over $148 million, in daily newspaper advertising to, tell consumers about their prod- ucts. | BANK at ‘toe Why Settle for Less? aft Bok aceeears Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation SPECIAL ALL ACRILAN® BLANKET! WHAT A PRICE FOR THIS QUALITY! C 712 by 84-inches It’s ready for you tt now—at all Marathon stations. It’s Marathon SUPER-M. Here’s a super-octane gasoline that goes all the way to make your gasoline dollar go farther. It’s power-tuned so today’s high-compression engines can operate at top efficiency for top mileage. It’s power-tuned with remarkable Marathon developed perform- ance accelerators. You get quicker starting . . . faster warm-up... new freedom from misfiring spark plugs. Alt these gasoline-saving advantages are yours with Marathon SUPER-M, plus all the power your engine can use to stretch every gallon over the most miles. Next time swing into the nearest Marathon service station. Then fill "er up with Marathon SUPER-M. See for yourself how many extra miles there are in every gallon of Marathon SUPER-M. — - : "Home of SMILE-maker Service — Bl O26 covet | SUPER-M® and MILE-maker® gasolines vag SUPER-M FOR SUPER MILEAGE MARATHON SUPER-M SUITS YOU—or your money back... It’s covered by the SMILE-maker SERVICE guarantee : The Ohio Oil Company stands behind the Marathon petroleum products and the automotive services ayailable at this service station. We guarantee that if you are not satisfied with such prod- ucts and services, upon presentation to us of your evidence of purchase within : : 60 days from the date of such purchase, gears! ued poiry . your money will be promptly refunded. owned by The Ohic Of Ca. | r A | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959 aioe ite ARE ta, ieee? | teeta water, ly ie al Deahs in Pontiac and. Nearby Areas MRS. HENRY BRANDON Mrs. Henry (Affie E.) Brandon, $3, of 48 Virginia Ave., suffered a stroke yesterday morning and| | Thursday at the First. Church of was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital, She had been! ill about two years. Mrs, Brandon was a member of the First Church of the Nazarene. Mrs. Beatrice Watson of Flint;-# of Pontiac. Service will be held at 2 p.m. ‘the Nazarene with burial in Perry |Mt. Park Cemetery. Her body is jat the Huntoon Funeral Home. MRS. HARRY L. ENGLEMAN Mrs, Harry L. Orion, a former Pontiac resident, two sons, Donald and William, both} died yesterday afternoon ! (Eva F.) Engle- Survivors include a daughter,)/man, 47, of 686 Lake Ave., Laké iri St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, She had ‘been ill six months. , Surviving are her husband; her, father, Elgin Milligan; a son, James | E. of Endicott, N. Y.; a daugh- ter, Mrs. Dempsey Spillers - of Williams Lake; five grandchildren, and a brother. Service will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Donelson . Johns Funeral Home with burial in Ot- tawa Park Cemetery. Less than 6... @ Siding @ Patios @ Comb. Doors ~& STORM WI O. EXTRUDED ALUMINUM l V alue! 100% MRS. ELLIOTT HEALY | Service for Mrs. Elliott (Bea- ‘trice M.) Healy, 64, of 493 Lowell St., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednes- day at the DeWitt C. Davis Fu- Chapel Memoria] Cemetery. Surviving are a son, Leo Bowden | ‘of Drayton Plains; a daughter, | Margaret Fowden of Holly; two STORM © WINDOWS 10" 6or-More....... .. $21.95 ea. We Also Specialize in ALL ALUMINUM. @ Awnings @ Carports @ Basem‘t Comb. ~@ Porch Enclosures ALL AWNING NDOW SALES L. W. BOGERT—Owner ‘brothers, Bert Monroe of Pontiac jand Selby of Lapeer; two sisters, | Mrs. Gladys Jankowske of Clio and Mrs, Hazel Peterson of Averill; and three grandchildren. Mrs. Healy died unexpectedly at her home Saturday. e MRS. J. FRANK SHAMBAUGH Word has been received of the ‘death of Mrs. J. Frank Shambaugh of Celina, Ohio, mother of Mrs. Vernon (Pansy) Abbott of 111 Il- ilinois Rd. ° | Mrs. Shambaugh. diéd of a heart, ‘ailment yesterday at-the home of | another daughter, Mrs. Rolland | Shoemaker at Waterville, Ohio,| jafter an illness of several months. Other survivors are a son, Jo-; seph of Celina, and two erand:| , children. Service. and burial will be in Celina. ORVILLE M. FELMLEE | ROYAL OAK — Service for Or- ‘ville M, Felmlee, 55; of 603 W. Lincoln St., will be held at 8:30 ‘a.m, Thursday at William Sullivan '& Son Funeral Home here. | t neral Home with burial in White! on School Aid Issue = a E C2) ORIGINAL ROGERS SILVERPLATE MADE BY THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY Connolly's 16 W. Huron St. tional Turke? SALES OFFICE WAREHOUSE The funeral mass will be at 9 3415. W. Huron 8t. PE 3-1800 333 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 8-1123 |a.m. at St. Mary’s Catholic Church |with burial to follow in St. Mary’s s| Cemetery. SERRATED Mr. Felmlee, owner of the Ro- chester Turkey Farm, at 1171 S. Rochester Rd., Avon Township, died as the result of a fall. He was a member of the Na- Federation and of thé’ Holy Name Society of St. Mary’s Church. Surviving are his wife, Anna M.; two daughters, Mrs. Robert T. Cameron of Royal Oak and Susanne, et home; and two grand- children. His father, Orville Felm- lee, and three brothers, Clifford and Roscoe, both of LeSuere, Minn. and Lester of Troy, also survive. | WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Gen- eral Services Administration (GSA) blames a light bulb for the five- alarm fire that swept through a secret Air Force storage room at the Pentagon July 2. The government housekeeping ‘agency also said after an inves- tigation that total damage to gov- ernment-owned property was $690,- 000. It noted, however, that the “greatest damage” was to com- the Remember.....Wednesday is DOUBLE STAMP DAY at Drug Stores For Holden Red Stamps five million dollars by company officiais. The GSA said that just before the fire, workmen had been mov- ing storage racks in a storeroom which housed highly inflammable plastic tapes Bearing statistical in- formation. a eon * * &-: The GSA noted that temporary lighting had been installed until /lin the moving jobs were finished. State’s Collection jot Sales Tax > Zooms to Record 48 Have Gone and Returned Prison Tries LANSING \?—Sales tax collec- tions zoonied last month to a rec- | ord $29,411,000, an increase of bet- ter than 20 per cent over July} ment reported Monday. * * * Commissioner Louis M. Nims said the bumper receipts tended to support optimistic revenue es- timates unveiled by Senate Repub- licans last week in the legislative tax fight. GOP senators pegged probable 1958, the State Revenue Depart-| BRIGHTON (#—Forty-eight con- |victs have walked away from the state’s prison camp near here in irecent weeks. . Camp officials watched them go. Nobody tried to stop them. And, they all returned within three days. Their departure was part of a daring penal experiment launched at the Brighton youth camp this spring. Some of the convicts left on three-day furloughs. Others carried sales tax income for 1959-69 at | 318 million dollars as compared with the 312 millions previously foreseen by top state budget planners, . tinue into the fall months, then we may be badly hurt and es- timates would have to be revised accordingly,’ he said. * * * Stepped up auto sales were main- ly responsible for last Jnonth’s ban- ner showing. Solons Far Apart LANSING \®—Conferees on 1959- 60 school aid meet again today, | With the growing possibility they will be unable to agree. Two House and two Senate mem- bers of the six-member committee discussed inter-chamber differ- ences for an hour yesterday with- out settling any of them. The House approved an aid formula based on $210 a pupil and 313 mills deductible, the fac- tor taking account of low prop- erty. taxing capabilities of “poor” school districts and favoring; them accordingly. The Senate position is for a $200 and 3. mill deductible formula. From a program cost standpoint, the two chambers are 10 million 12-hour passes, Unusual? Yes. Risky? Yes, again. But, state corrections men be: lieve the risks are more than off-) ‘set by the advantages. “If the steel strike should con-. The Brighton facility is an open-type camp where prisoners are trusted to stay on the prem- ises. Most of them are under 25 years of age, serving short terms and rated good security risks, Furloughs and passes are rightly controlled by the camp staff and issued to carefully selected pris- oners. The three-day furloughs go only to men who have been granted a parole and are sweating out the usual 30-day waiting period before release. ° Many such prisoners are caught} in a dilemma as the time for' their release nears. State law bans release of pa-| rolees who do not have a promise of an outside job. On the other hand, very few employes will hire a parolee without a personal in- terview. A furlough often ends this di-) lemma. It also allows a potential, parolee to secure outside living accommodations and take care of any special problem that might crop up before his release. The 12-hour passes are issued, after approval by five staff of- ficers, to men who have been at the camp at least four months and have no black marks on their |. ‘dollars apart, prison records, A pass enables a prisoner to keep in contact with his. family and society, Sometimes it permits a birthday celebration at home or attendance at a funeral of a close relative. In the four months that the pro- gram has been in operation, only 12 furloughs and 36 passes have been granted. The men who re- ceived them were released to the custody of their parents or ap- proved relatives. A similar program has been in| operation for two years at Camp: Puesley near Traverse City. There, however, the inmates are probationers, At Brighton, the pris- ;oners are felons. | The whole experiment could col- lapse if one man on furlough or pass failed to return, or committed camp. Parents of Teenage Drivers Take Heed As parents of youths old enough to drive, here is what you and =I m=" Eile! a crime while away from the __ Donald FE. Johus é yi Carl OV. Donelson 1s The Best of Everything... alls ils T Many are the things that we must constantly supply for the funeral, and for use in the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, For all of these, we always provide best quality. r It can be truly said that every part, every item and every service \l of the Donelson-Johns Funeral V i Home is the best of every thing. - { W There is just nothing finer. ‘ W Phone Parki W (| FEDERAL arking 4 : 4511 On Our Premises S\\= Donelson. (1) A high accident rate that, finds more than one out of every, ; three teenagers who drive involved ‘in an auto crasif each year. (2) A “safety lag” in driver education courses that sends | young students out on the high- ways at night without Aequate training. (3) An increase of up to’ 90 per: cent in the amount of insurance; premium you have to pay on al car_that a teenager drives. | Frankly worried, safety authori-' ties point to the disturbing fact that only 600.000, or a slim 10 per cent of the total six million teen-age drivers, received fully, adequate driver education courses last year. | | \ they are up egainst: @ 714 Community Nat'l Bank Bldg. Phone FE 4-1568-S Your ndependent fasurance AGENT "eaves Yew Fisere® bd BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Donald! E. Hansen Res. FE 5-3793 Res. FE 2-5513 Homeowners’ Policies Accident. Insurance Fire Insurance: Automobile Insurance Life Insurance Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Tenants’ Policies An Alaska bull moose may weigh up to 1,800 pounds. LONDON (AP)—Most West Eu- ropeans today cheered the im- pending exchange of visits by President Eisenhower -and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev as a. near miraculous melting in‘ the cold war ice. The general enthusiasm was tempered in some capitals by a fear that the two superpowers would work out a settlement in which the lesser nations had no voice. Eisenhower's pre - Khrush- chev tour of the major West Eu- ropean capitals was designed to assure the Allies. * * * One West German newspaper warned the meetings would be “pregnant with danger” for Ger- many; and an Italian newspaper expressed fear the two powers might “carve up” spheres of in- fluence. The conservative L’Au- rore of Paris regretted that the negotiations would ‘‘pass over Europe's head.” * * *® But the West German govern- ment officially welcomed the ex- change of visits, Italian Premier Antonio Segni said “every step, every contact which contributes to the clarification of relations be- tween East and West...can only be viewed with great sympathy.” And informants in Geneva said the French government approves the Eisenhower - Khrushchev ex- change as something that ‘ would stall off the Soviet threat to Ber- Diplomats in Geneva said the ) BANK at Most Europeans Cheering Visits; One Headline: ‘End OK Frozen Mitt’ United States has assured its chief, Western Allies they will be kept fully informed of developments and consulted on any specific agreements which may be pro- * * * But one veteran ambassador in Moscow said Khrushchev obvious- United States and considered the other Western powers relatively unimportant * bd bd The British were delighted at developments, with no talk of be- ing left out. Prime Minister Harold Mac-; millan declared: ‘‘I have always’ believed that tension in the world) between the East and West can. largely be resolved by personal contacts and discussions.”’ IT’S A HOMER “Yes; it's a homer,” shouted | \together was ‘‘a great victory for ly was intent on a deal with the) In the ordinary business of life industry can do anything which genius can do, and very many things which it cannot. —H. W. Beecher, 1870 Lord Beaverbrook’s Daily Ex-| press in an eight-column front, page headline. ‘‘Miracle of 1959,” | said the Conservative Daily Mail.’ “End ok frozen mitt,’ said the leftist Daily Mirror. | Sweden’s Socialist Premier Tage Erlander said the decision to get | ONE WEEK SPECIAL! USED SINGER pig eos & Electrified PORTABLE . . oe 319, 50 Console $29.50 gee Pek et reason.”’ Another Socialist, Dan-| ish Premier H. C. Hansen, said it was a sign of ‘‘a sense of reali- @ New Cabinet @ Reconditioned Head tes and a really political state of | FREE — rerio : S-Specd Mote tito | FE 5-4049 o 3 ou Soviet newspapers splashed Gusrsates across their front pages the an-. After Hours OR 3-9702 $ ;jnouncement of the Khryshchev- Free bonus gift. All purpose zigzag Terms 1.25 'Eisenhower visits. | attachments. Trade-ins accepted. We Per Week | rebuild and service all makes. CURT’S APPLIANCES 1077 W. HURON Diplomatic observers in the So-| ‘viet capital cautioned, however, ' that there was still hard bargain- {ing ahead to bring any results in isuch major issues as Garmany | ‘and disarmament. ALL NEW . Quguat for more operating dependability , TRADE-IN —less service headaches NEW SUPER H 20 HORIZONTAL CHASSIS uses only standard handcrafted Seisy, WORLDS FEST PERFORMINGTH: SPECIAL ALLOWANCE! THE GREENBRIER —- Model D-2240 1960 SLIM TRIM Zenith Quality Console TV T allnew 1960 ITH * console TV no production shortcuts! 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Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | Hod’s R Omter's , | Pe ort ane fas al AUBURN HEIGHTS: OXFORD: | ROCHESTER: Boole ws Taecoeats ne Gabert N. 121 N. poy one: 5-o189 td * Why ». ane ’ a ‘oe _THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. AUGUST 4, 1950 > - ult a 8 | NINE > * sessions in South America com-' miles. lis located at Hamburg, Germany. |and weighs '30,000 tons. Hal Boyle Says:”: a a a Py Ne f | De th’ |. British, French and ro 90s |prise an area of 208,812 square; The wo.ld's biggest floating doc! i is 630 feet let 142 feet wide } | Opera Star Faces a Dilemma {Jury's Ruling mE ag a SE eR - 4 | . ow i od . * 4 ee YORK (aPy— “Young men famous turn out in a way to be.a peri stars very sexy,” she said But Colorado Mother Is) @ | today are impossible,” said Elaine|"everse curse. They scare away/ flatly. Held on Murder of Tot| i _ . : _ |. nn albin, the ‘tiny spittire of opera. oa men, : Loy I prefer businessmen and writ- by Smothering oe | : ' . 3 ; + Miss Malbin has a problem. cs ‘pert o& my wo prs. *. F She is young and pretty and as said Elaine ruefully. Brooklyn - born Miss Malbin ' : a i : ; “Of course, it’s partly my fault!started singing at 11, made her) DENVER, Colo. (AP) — Death — Se ait oe too. I'm afraid I can't be attract-|debut here at the age of 14, She pe oe ¥ ed to just an ofdinary guy. I'wearies sometimes of the exact- ' of autymn leaves. i month-old Carol Bonner as she lay; 4 She has one of the best lyric) hesitate to date a man who isn't!ing dicipline of opera, particu- St SYPIC| interesting. And to me the inter- larly since she says it is financially in her crib. under two heavy’ ‘esting men are those I feel are far less rewarding than television leather coats, a_ coroner's jury | in the lang, She above me mentally, or who have or the supper elub circuit. jhas ruled. - . re makes up to $75,-| achieved more.’ | She still practices three hours: The infant’s mother, Mrs. Shir- 000 a year, oa va *” every day. ey Mae Bonner, 30 is charged tt Ss But she has a She finds the current crop of, “But the hardest thing to me is, With murdee + ‘ ‘ problem. It is 4™eri¢an young men pretty dull) that I have to tive in accord with —- ) the same prob- CoMpany—even “impossible.” the demands of my vocal art,” she’ She surrendered to police ast - lem taced by “Young men are too glib,” (she) Said oe « Thursday ond Per of ee : . | millions et thee) Said. “They are glib about things| . suffocate the chi a e ih | cancer wow € nj they know’ nothing about-such as| “It means I can’t talk as much suffering. Carol was born wi Bie 3 | ‘ber age—finding, work. I have worked too long and|/as I want to; smoke at all; or congenital heart malformation, ie the Fight guy hard myself to care for glib-|stay up late at night. ter on the brain, and a cleft iN Buy. ‘ness. I like older_men because! ‘I've worked very herd and palate. , : The public ‘they appreciate you more, but the|long. I've worked and watched the| The jury ruled the heart ailment came by natural causes to 19- soprano voices, BOYLE never thinks the best ones are already taken.’ | world go by. Now I feel I want|had caused Carol’s death. feminine stars of the entertain-| Why not fall in love with some-|to see more of the world—and x * * - . ; ment world have many dating one in her own field? Miss Malbin|watch the work go by.” It added that her ailments may a ’ 4 woes, But they do. They have! shook her midnight mane vehe~ “T never regret what I've done, have been aggravated by lack of, > plenty. | mently. and I don’t want to live to regret|°xvee" when the coats were . ee ki. | x & * what I have not done. I'm very|Placed over her. ; oe | The very gifts that make them “I don’t find American male stormy, and I guess I like stormy The district attorney's office, a —— le who are tremendous work-|/had no immediate comment on : ‘aka the ruling. jers.”’ Mrs. Bonner now is under Fp) y She paused, brooding. Asked if) chiatric care. She is the mother}! Aj, t Conner there was anything else she want-|o¢ three other small children. The; Ate ring ed to say, the little girl with the husband and father is an account: M O S t | e O [ e Do big fine voice smiled and said: ant : ~ | “Help!” 4 = ; F t [ | In 1958, the sporting goods indus- | ‘ 78 North Saginaw St. Pontiac Guide at U.S. Exhibit try did approximately $1.8-billion 7 business. To keep sales up, the: Thi Beck WEDNESDAY SUPER SPECIALS AT BAZLEY'S Reveals Russian Doubts |industry invested $47 billion in ie ._|daily newspapers, 84 per cent COUNTS | . . | TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) — Doris CENTER CUT, WELL TRIMMED Johnson’ of Ann “Arbor, Mich., i s|more han was invested during the| one of the student guides at the j ! | Cc United States exhibit in Moscow : ; b ‘quoted in press releases from the ; ° > ; } Pa _ Member Federal Dsposit Insurance Corporation tussian capital, ‘ | Miss Johnson, a graduate stu- WHOLE, CUT UP FREE dent at the University of Michigan, : 8 > .is quoted as stating it will be many : c years before the effect of the = U.S. exhibit will be known. Miss : or Ons bb. ‘Johnson, who learned to speak ‘Russian at Michigan, said -the 4 Russians express doubt that : FRESH, LEAN Americans can walk‘into a store ) 4 . and buy the household appliances _ G d B f C ‘being exhibited. C i ~ | wrounag pee Ib. | | One tree can produce one million matches. BREWED © _FOR FOR FATHERS WITH GROWING FAMILIES. One life insurance policy...one low-cost premium covers you, your wife. and ; children with Nationwide’s new FAMILY POLICY. And ‘ | Sa each new baby... after 15 days...is covered automatically with no increase in premium! \* & THIS NEW IDEA in family protection offers you up to $15,000 of life insurance plus cash values for emergency use or retirement income. Protects Mom and the kids, too, and guarantees your children’s right to insurance in the future. —_ 4 / Find out how you can save with Nationwide’s con- Sone © / - -»y ¢ : venient FAMILY PoLIcy. Just stop by or phone We brew Stroh’s for flavor. That’s why it’s fire- on re ee caer nmeaatine Tisha Melo _ brewed at.2000°. This extreme heat brings | WILLIAM F. 'PICL forth the finest flavor of the finest ingredients 4 - Nationwide Insurance . . ; . | 16525 James Couzens Hwy., Detrojt, Michigan Phone: UN 1-9380 eee releases a refreshing flavor you wont find } | in any other American beer. Try America’s only fire-brewed beer today. You'll say it’s the lightest, smoothést beer you’ve ever tasted! ATIONWIDE ' oo _ ye | meee YOU'LL LIKE TTS LIGHTER! ssvenennen sous Seeedcngescedcesedicecvaccocsces - / } : \ ‘ & t : j ‘ f 7 , / 4 + ' : wf 7 ay asi _ 11 . : a n ae : ae SS ie ; / ¥ PO ee meet erence cement -sneeppenemmmens ee een ® “s. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, August. 4, 1959 ; , ' allowed to ..prace : tik duis ib amined at Women ‘were Pull Scale B: ttle L Ezra Taft Benson Pouble Existence Revealed Atter Death iDefense Depariment tsi Sse star Sa a'n + Full Scale Battle Looms. (Ez Te | | wale. Saie ten Oc ee re Sa | Led Jekyll- d-Hyde Lite Passes H SSS -. jn House Over Labor Bill Notes 60th Birthday\Led Jekyll-and-Hyde Lite |Budget Passes House < ’ASHING - t - WASHINGTON ' — The House WASHINGTON (AP) — A wide-)1614 by the, House Labor Com. ot Agrivelture' Eire Tall’ Barwon Los ae ce by nied passed by voice vote and sent to|V) Short Cuf.,+ Save 240 open floor batti@pver labor con- mittee but’ opposed by many Who! observed his 60th birthday working robber, posing as a policeman by the Senate today a bill appropriat- Driving Miles : ‘trol legislation was- indicated to-| /want it changed on the House at his desk today. night. ing $39,228,239,000 to finance the *day as the House Rules Commit-| . t & He arranged to take time out.at Tha’s the —Jekyll-and-Hyde dou- cseoaprlbipr cision ugh the fiscal ‘tee called hearings to determi ne' noon for cutting.a birthday cake ble life police say was‘lived by year that started July 1. ; The committee consequently | supplied by office aides. Daniel M. Snyder, ex-Marine, art The compromise measure, big- | Without rki the | eas Holes tosent te et ts Beside the cake was a large |lover, and man about town. gest money bill of the session, in- a . _ : i working over the legis-/ the floor wide-open to amendment! a ’ icluded a 35 million dollar allotment af. WM. | lation itself, the committee de-'to satisfy members who contend it cartoon depicting .a gun pointing x * * for- advance plansing for. a 380 een MILWAUKEE, WIS. end ‘cides on debate limits, the extent’ js too weak and needs strengthon-| 2! the figure “60. His honest path by day and dis- million dollar nuclear carrier which MUSKEGON, MICH. of amendments to be allowed, and ing, and others who say it is too} An aide said smilingly this could honest path by night came to will take four years to build. The Daily Sailings "East and Avie A ground rujes which play a big part tough and needs toning down. have a double meaning — his 60th light after police had shot him to . _|Navy. now has one such craft. bape Reise es Deentifel Possenger 95,23 } in shaping House action on bills. Ty. Rules Committee, under birthday or the election in 1960. death during a drugstore holdup See apaciows decks *Pive Tex : ; Before it was a bill approved pressure to get the bill before the Some friends have, mentioned attempt Sunday night. z mfortable bedroomis and berths . . . ° . House this week, suspended hear- Benson as a possible vice presiden- pacers nay Saver is = I nvestigators tertainment . children’s playroom; - os “fine 4 BOOKS ” ings on other legislation to give it tial candidate, hie Sdecet Bf a ee ey Begin Probe food and refreshments at sublets ita | riority es , FOR INFORMATION: in ; Light Fiction for |”. , Police Set. Cain L. Wood and car- | Vv 9 ti Readi As it came from the Labor Com- Disappearance lried a detective sergeant’s badge of Plane ‘Crash Muskegon Ticket Office and Dock, ‘The Mart,” Tel. 2-2665 acation Reading mittee, the measure eased many: ithat was a remarkably accurate In Detroit, 1841 National Bank Bldg. ~ WO 2-6916 OLD PROF’S BOOK SHOP ‘restrictions of the Senate-passed of Fugitive iduplicate of the real thing. He plese ats : ; : MBER A ; ; Ale SUMMER SCHEDULE CONTINUES THROUGH SEPTE . . bill but followed that bill's al held up two markets and got Federal and state aeronautics in-' : eee exall watts Battles Police away win ssxon fe eee reg ee Deore of ! : ————— SS It would ban “hot cargo” clauses “- | * the plane crash which claimed. BETTER , _ in union contracts and extortion WARQUETTE w — The disap- By day he moved in high fi- hae tee Town- GET . | HARD of HEARING ‘picketing. A modified labor “bill | pearance of fugitive Mike Gisondi nancial circles and was regarded ship corn fe unday, HO . GRADES of rights’ is included, but with- grew more baffling today as police as a shrewd investor with appar- x ® . | SC OL ? —SEE— out the criminal penalties the Sen- criss-crossed a heavily wooded ently unlimited income. He had The investigation was started “ . ate voted for -violations, The bill area 27 miles west of here for the no criminal record. yesterday by the Federal Aviation’ Rent a Typewriter . Hton : : would require unions to make ex- second day. “We were to be married this ~ Administration and the Michigan og Ms ee Service ivenave financial Nateesl rs na Gisondi, 29, escaped from the week,"’ lamented Mrs. Hilda Loar, ° Civil Aeronautics Board into the $ 00 Per . maw St. ‘would require the Nationa ' maximum security prison at Mar- 29, a divorcee. i cause of the crash of the Piper Phone FE 47711 Relations Board to take jurisdic-! quette five days ago in a truck! * * * DANIEL M. SNYDER Tri-Pacer. Month tion in all labor dispute cases. The which he commandeered by Sunday night he entered a ‘dr ug: | board may now decline jurisdic- threatening the driver with a store, flashed his detective badge 'ficers arrived. Snyder bolted for tion in small cases, and the states nife as he left the prison with a and told the manager, “I’m here |the back door, then turned on the are prohibited from acting. load of garbage. ‘to prevent a robbery.” lofficers, gun in hand. They fired x & * | The manager recognized Snyder first. Is strongest and most influential | The escapee was serving & ‘from descriptions of the man who| “He | was strange in many backing came Monday from ‘life term for murder in the ‘had robbed two markets. He!ways,” said Mrs. Loar. ‘Sam Rayburn (D-Tex), who de-| aeneeing (ot ses poem Ie a Rare ped a silent burglar alarm. Of- understand why.” clared: “I think it does a splen.| Park tavern in 1956. did job.’ Rayburn said the Labor| The manhunt was coneentrated Committee bill “covers racketeer- in the Humboldt~Junction aig. straight down in a tight spiral after| ing in a fine fashion.” jnear U. S. 41 early yesterday after, P on tiac Ta kes I n Over its engine peuiteres ro stopped. | But only five of the 30 Labor|a man dashed from a truck into) * 4 'the woods about 300 yards f Th f demolished but ST ee esis pike tomes omen 4 Per Cent of Its Taxes |i cut," demoted bu there was no fire. Both men were ‘it would be too tough on labor, or Said the truck had approached described by relatives as expe- ‘not tough enough. with its-lights out. rienced pilots. Inyestigators will State police at Marquette said also try to find out who was pilot- they are checking out several r ports by area residents that they taxes during last month's collec- ong De Pinte ee mee Killed in the crash were Earl | A. Tregesch, 29, his son, Mark, | 4, and cousin, Robert Sowders, | 34, all ef Warren. /| er 3 Months $12.50 For Complete Examination Without Obligation Home er Office Cords and Batteries For All Makes Pontiac’s Only Authorized Beltone Dealer No Elevator — Ground Floor Investigators said they will eats “Now I tion witnesses in an effort to clear ' up the mystery of the reason for the crash. Witnesses said the plane came) 123 Noth Se Saginaw new Sk Pee Fr 23 =e ceed Set.. Aa | 4.95 TRUNKS — FOOT LOCKERS Priced Low To Go | T EDWARD'S 18s: saginaw In terms of ‘money, the dif- ference is about $100,000. “Tax collections have been very | Pontiac took in more than 94° e./Per cent of its city and school | WORRIED OVER DEBTS? (eee Bay Big | ; C : ‘ x *® * .|tion period, almost ope per ‘cent/good this year,’’ said Marvin / . unable to yments, debts or bills when due, see | (Advertisement) _ ane wl coogeas s ee in nage oo Pet!more than last year. Alward, city finance director. meee, ome Abela dee a mignon ve ose | hUNEELLGRS "snd "arrange, yeoman ee aa | nada is miles long and 500 : : A dnigh* d 94.13| So far, $9,435,455 in 1959 property ‘ oe age BUGGY ? Fingerprints on the truck, a} As of midnigh* Saturday, | NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY - Member American Association of Credit Counsellors Get rid of roaches and —_ with Miles = Johnston’s No-Reach, th method of aaaact passccly It is said to have taxes have been collected, said|2>out two miles west of Pontiac 1 water area greater by fur times|MC#¥P model, are being checked percent Of the July tex spread Mtg wounds forthe Manila Aiport han that of all of the Great Lakes ith Schools and one-third for city gov- |. it police said. The vehicle was stolen|Treasurer’s office, cnapared with at Negaunee. 93.20 per cent last year. ernment. - x + « Solo Employs spread is S002 897, with soon 01| HOL{G Tactics’ at Senate Hearing earmarked for the schools and Alward estimated that about si “Let 14 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 716 Pontiac State Bank SLOW Virginia extends. farther to the ‘west than parts of West Virginia. 3 If Williams Sees Khrushchev SOROS SOS OSSSOOSOOSS ELE TESSELOSCEOOOESOSOOOCOE: $3,678,636 for the city. or 98 per cent of the tax spread | Established In 169 :To Take Oft His Gloves = wil collected by the end of the Fa rmer-Snover SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (# —|should get only ‘‘honeyed words’’ year. Gov. Willliams, who described his|in their tours of this country. He; x * * Funer al Home talk with a Russian official last}said a previous visit by another! A one per cent tax penalty that : - month as a “‘table-pounding fight,”’|deputy Soviet premier, Anastas went into effect Saturday will be 160 W. Huron St. ‘FE 2-917] says Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- | Mikoyan, had produced ‘‘fawning" |increased by an additional one eg PARKING ON PREMISES Orit iii? chev will get the same kind of by U.S. hosts and gave the im-jper cent charge for every month - Dr. Stanley W. Black questions if he decides to visit|pression that ‘“‘we were a bunch that tax payments are delinquent, | Optometrist Michigan. of cream puffs.” ihe said. 3513 Elizabeth Lake Rd. WASHINGTON (®)—The House rules committee, hearing argu- ments on labor controls legisia- tion, was picketed today by Rep. William H, Ayres (R-Ohio). Ayres, a member of the labor committee, appeared in the eapitel corridor outside the com- mittee with large flashily lettered placards bearing such | slogans as “hot cargo sold here,”’ “join now or starve later,” and “don’t eat here. Scabs.”’ x) x «x Ayres grinned broadly at labor union representatives in the cor- ridor. “I’m here to explain blackmail “If Khrushchev comes to my) state, I'd want to talk turkey with! ihim,’”? Williams said yesterday in jcommenting on the Russian lead- |er’s forthcoming visit to the United Sater Watlans ix atenaine eT VEStigate Car Vand ali sm “here. a Link in Shooting Accusation? Detectives from the Brighton{| The suspended patrolman said Evenings by Appointment ‘Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wed. ates Because several million peo- ple have used O-Jib-Wa Bitters with great success, I highly recommend that you try AMERICA’S- NO. 1.HERB TONIC if you too would like to enjoy better health. Ask your druggist for O-Jib-Wa Bitters. Corner of Cass Lake Rd. | 1 The Democratic governor said he would give Khrushchev the same kind of treatment he. gave touring Soviet Deputy Premier Frol R. Kozlov early last month. Williams described the conversa- tion afterwards as a ‘“‘good, knock- down, finger-pointing, table-pound- ing fight.’’ The meeting followed a refusal by -Detroit Mayor Louis Mirianj to reet Kozlov. The. governor said the conflict in his talk with Kozlov was main- ly over the treatment by the So- viet Union of its satellites. Wil- liams said Russian tempers flared when Kozlov was asked when satellite nations would be given a chance to hold free elections. Williams said in a news con- ‘more than $100 by police. State Police Post and Detroit Po- lice are investigating vandalism of the car of a Dearbérn woman whol ; he knows nothing jt the slashing incident, Detectives are attempt- ing to find if the two incidents picketing,” he told newsmen. “These are typical of Hoffa’s (Teamster president James R. | Hoffa) blackmail! picketing last week accused a Detroit pa- trolman of shooting at her. are in any way connected. tactics.” Patricia Kingsbury, 22, of 4878 E. Korte St. ported to stat / ‘ % police Sunday’ that vandals dam. Between. City, Pontiac General aged her car and the car of her mother, Margaret, at Camp Dear- born in Milford Township, Troopers sald the vandals slashed tires and upholstery and smashed glass on the dashboards | City commissioners tonight. will of the two parked cars. be asked to formalize this year’s Damages were “estimated at financial arrangements with Pon- tiac General Hospital into a new, Miss Kingsbury has accused Ro- two-year pact. ; bert L. Bush, 31, of Detroit, of City Manager Walter K. Willman, shooting at her car after she at--Who drew up the pact, said it Jo Act on Hospital Pact ing requirements to a slight degree, especially those con- cerning plumbing. Two public hearings are sched- uled. One is on intention to pro- ceed next year with a ‘sanitary Sewer system on Stanley avenue Cal * Bm, ...we're open ‘till 6 p.m.! ference after the Kozlov visit that|tempted to break off a two-year/embodies all the points city and Meadowla ; he did not feel. Soviet visitors} romance with him, hospital officials have formally and Cloverlawn duives Sotcca, Yea oe ee +— |informally agreed to since hospital|janti and Columbia aventies. Drive America’s No. 1 Success Car! : Ne new points have been (struct this summer a water main RE ee eee me me a gem ae ee Ae Sra ee es ana om wala monday through saturday at our Banking Service office 4 east Lawrence street added that have not been previ- jon Palmer drive north of Mt. ously reported, he said. Clemens, Main item in the pact concerns tants: aay age sige are a Senator Langer’s Wife wing. The city is loaning the hos-|Dies After Cancer Bout pital money to make the repairs i ; WASHINGTON (UPI) — Mrs. perk eee pay yd Lg or Lydia Cady Langer, 68, wife of Latest estimates -by Willman |S°", William Langer (R - ND), save tel i ray! ¢ $350,000 died of cancer shortly before noon wig Sea Paste Costs. & n funds |'002Y at George Washington Uni- 4ov' above constructio be versity Hospital after a long ill- alloted to complete the hospital jens ., expansion program. : The senator and their four The pact was approved by the = ‘ daughters were at her bedside. a s board of trustees last) Mrs Langer, a former New York It is subject to review City socialite, was the daughter of every two years. famed architect,J. Cleveland Cady Commissioners, in other busi-|who designed the Metropolitan ness, are expected to adopt a/Opera House, Carnegie Hall and resolution formally recognizing the| many other well-known buildings. Pontiac Police Reserve for the first time. Although the reserve ° has operated several years as a Backs Up His Boast WIGGINS, Miss. (UPI) — Au- civil defense team and_ police auxiliary, its~ status has never) thorities today searched for an been legally defined by the city. | escape artist who they said As part of urban renewal prep-| picked a lock to get out of the F aration, it will be recommended) city jail, sawed three bars to that the city adopt provisions of! free his wife from the cotinty jail, then picked an auto dealer's . - . : the State Housing Law to meet SAVE $131 TO $209 ON SEDANS, SAVE UPTO $176 ON RESALE— federal requirements for an urban| lock to steal a pickup truck. C. B. McNair, 29, of Hattiesburg, HARDTOPS— Based on manufactur- Rambler tops all other low-priced renewal program here. ers’ suggested prices for comparable _ cars in trade-in value by more than City Attorney William A. Ewart | Miss, had boasted earlier 69 models. Get room for six 6-foot- ever according to both N.A.D.A. said adoption of the state law | “There ain't no jail that can s pial) _t IT’S A FACT: Rambier sales bteak records every _ month. Now we're celebrating by handing a a er a a4 ‘want ers, easiest parking, and save with Used Car Guide and Redbook Na- locally would stiffen some bulld- | hold me.” | u to th Peo every mile, tional Market Reports. (Advertisement) (Advertisement) ! © shore our success : DOES MORE THAN JUST “SHRINK” PuLE TiIssUES) . +» come in now for, SAVE UP TO $500 ON STATION | WAGONS—Get the 100-inch wheel- ‘base Rambler American . . . $500 less than the other 2 best-selling station wagon makes. Full 5-passenger room +. top gas econonty. SAVE ON GAS, REPAIRS—T wo Ram- ‘ biers topped all cars, all classes, in the Mobilgas Economy Run. Sturdi- er Single Unit Construction’, Deep- - Dip Rustproofing* save you. more on upkeep. - © fademart American Motors COME IN Now AND STRIKE IT RICH! SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS DURING BONANZA DAYS! : _ SEE YOUR NEARBY RAMBLER DEALER No Surgery Needed To -- , Stop Pain Of Swolien Pile (| ™ Tissues While They Heall (| To stop nagging discomfort of pire oh cae ed most swollen piles in minutes, thou- Khown for © sands use Stainless Paro®. Not only reduces tisfue swelling but stops pore at once, promotes hes!- ing of inflamed tissues too—<ail : = act to “shrink” piles can’t rc THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. ‘AUGUST 4. 1959 a . ELEVEN * cock Looking on as Mrs. Harry Hen- . ,derson of Ferndale, president of the Republican Women’s Federation of Oakland County, cuts the GOP birth- day cake are, left, Mrs. Peter Gibson - lican Club. Volunteers of America Help of Monroe, president of the National Federation of Republican Women and Gordon Haupt of Ferndale, president of the Oakland Gouna Lincoln Repub- Mom Can. Go to Camp, Too _ By MARY PRIME NEW YORK (UPI) — When junior goes off to camp in some parts of the country, .mom goes with him. The camps are set Up for “tired mothers’’ and_ their + children by the Volunteers: of America. The youngsters play under supervision, leaving the mo- thers free to participate in handcrafts, swimming, and other camping activities. The women join their children at Mealtime and tuck them in bed at night. “We keep the families in- tact. Each mother has a cabin to herself and her children,” said Col. Emily Coleman, fi- nancial secretary. ‘Not just any mother who would like a.rest is eligible. Women must be underprivi- leged and referred to the Vol- unteers by hospitals and wel- fare agencies. Only mothers with two or more children are accepted. * * * Col. Coleman recalled one mother who came with her 12 children—‘‘so many they would not fit in one cabin''—and an- other who brought some of her 18 youngsters. She parceled the others off to another camp to give them a rest from each other. A camp on Staten Island N. Y., now in its 38th year and one of 60 such camps in the east, midwest and far west, each season averages about 30 mothers and 200 children, some without their mothers. One counselor tends 8 to 10 children or fewer, depending on the age group. * * * Some camps take fathers, too, she said. The Bar-None Ranch in Anoka, Minn., recent- ly started to help straighten. out first offenders jn juvenile courts. Instead of being re- leased from court to home, the children first must spend a week at the camp with their parents. “It’s wonderful to see these mothers relax,’’ Col. Coleman said in an interview. “For the first time, they don't have to do dishes or worry about food. They know their children are safe and off the city streets.” * * ¥ One weman was so eager to come she had planned the visit for before one of her Honoring Future Bride By RUTH SAUNDERS BIRMINGHAM AND BLOOM- FIELD HILLS—The approach- ing marriage of Anne Jackson Alexander and Peter A., Cart- wright, Aug, 22, is occasioning many parties. Early this month Anne’s aunt, Mrs, James R. Weeks, gave a luncheon and shower before the Weeks fami- ly left to spend the summer at Rockland, Maine. Another aunt, Mrs. June Bab- Vinton, gave a dinner party in July. Mrs. Frank S. Cartwright has entertained for her future daughter-in-law and Mrs, Jo- seph Dodge and her daughters, Ellen and Allana, will give a table top shower at | a ies tof ly of Birmingham, are spend- © ing several weeks at their Roaring Brook cabin. ¢& @ & Mrs. William B. Graham and her daughters. have spent ten days in Birmingham. They di- vided their time between visits with her mother, Mrs. George ° A. Beecher and Mr. Graham's parents, the William L. Gra-. With Showers, Parties hams of Wimbleton drive. They are returning to their home in Fayetteville, N. Y. today. Young Hairdos by Famous Stylists babies was born. But the baby arrived early. Not to be thwarted, the mother went from hospital to camp—infant in tow, “We forget that city children don’t always see animals,”’ Col. Coleman added. ‘‘This year at Staten Island, we had goats, lambs, a baby skunk, chicks, bantam roosters and a piglet. One mother told me it was the first time she and her chil- dren had seen a lamb.” ; * * * A Volunteer for 29 years, Col. Coleman is the wife of a tex- . tile businessman, Arthur J. Coleman and the mother of a son earning his master’s de- gree from the University of Pennsylvania. ‘The work gets in the bl she said. ‘You realize you've helped make soneone else’s burden a little lighter. And people remember it. Once I took a carload of children from the camp on a shopping trip. I was stopped by a policeman because I had too many chil- dren in the car. But he found out where I was from, and let me go. He had lived at the camp when it was a home for children.” They Play to Win Pontiac Duplicate. Bridge Club met at Elks Temple Mon- day evening with 17 tables in play. Winners were John Kraus and Charles Strelinger; Mrs. M. J. Specht and Bruce Cor- yell; Dr. and Mrs. Earl Leitz; Mrs. Douglas Haddock and Mrs, John Jarno. Hear Talks at Park ‘Last Night The Republican Women's Federation of Oakland Coun- annual birthday picnic at Avon Park in Rochester Monday evening. Rep. George A. Dondero of Royal Oak was guest speaker for the affair. The invocation was given by Mrs. Charles Crawford and Mrs. Sadie Wil- liams led the pledge of the flag. Robert Miller, Pontiac post- master, sang several selections and Mrs. Meta Mcllroy ac- companied the group in com- munity singing. Ed Smith en- tertained with organ music dur- ing the dinner hour. * * * "Mrs. Harry Henderson, pres- _ ident, introduced clu b pres- idents and guests including Mrs. Rae C, of Mount Pleasant, nai committee- woman; Mrs, Thomas Will- more of Detroit, president of the State Federation of Re- publican Women; Mrs. Beulah B. Rickhart, tri-county area chairman of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties and Jos- eph Bianco, president of the Young Republican Club, and Mrs, Bianco. * * «* Mrs. Peter Gibson of Mon- roe, president of the National Federation of Republican Women, spoke. Gordon Haupt, president of the Lincoln Re- publican Club, introduced Art Elliott and Jack Gibbs of the, Oakland County Republican of- fice in Birmingham. Also in- troduced were all the county officers and their wives. A letter was read from Con- gressman William S. Broom- field and Mr. Dondero cut the birthday cake made by Mrs. Ralph Cook of Royal Oak. Mrs. Arthur Griswold is in charge of the guest book. Conduct Beauty Pageant Women of the Moose, Pon- tiac chapter 360 held officer chapter night at~8 p.m. Mon- day at Moose Hall. Mrs. Clif- ford Lynch was master of cere- monies for a beauty pageant given by chapter officers. Taking part in the pageant were Mrs. Richard Dawson, Miss Indiana; Mrs. George Harshbarger, Miss Michigan; Mrs. Harold Finn, Miss North Dakota; Mrs. William Sharp, Miss Tennessee; Mrs. Myles Dyer, Miss Germany. x * * Mrs. Dyer was crowned queen and Mrs. Finn received a bouquet of flowers for sec- ond place. Mrs, Finn reported on the state convention held in De- troit. Candidates enrolled: by Pon- tiac chapter 360 were Mrs. Wil- liam Dimes and Mrs. May Worth. The class was given in honor of Mrs. Roy Post. ok * * An fce cream social and chuck wagon will be held at 5 pm. Aug. 12 at the Hill- field road home of Mrs. Harsh- barger. Every one is invited. The next meeting will be held at 8 p.m. Aug. 24, 4 GOP Women P The Hon. George A. Dondero, guest speaker at the 27th annual birthday picnic of the Republican Women’s Federation of Oakland County discusses politics (naturally) with (from left) Mrs. Rae C. Hooker, a- national committeewoman, Mrs. Covert, icnic at Avon. cena as a Mrs. Margaret C. Norton of Rochester. Pontiac Press Photes Mrs. Frances Covert, the hostess, and Mrs. Norton pre- sented one of the two large birthday cakes. City, County News of Personal Interest Former Pontiac resident, El- mer G. Wilson of Marlette and Orville .Powers of Cherokee road have returned from a week’s trip to Mackinaw Is- land, Saulte Ste. Marie and the Soo Locks. They also visited Indian River and saw the 55- foot cross of redwood just be- fore the figure of Christ, re- cently shipped there from De- troit, was placed on it. * * * Mrs, Howard Barker of Mar- tell drive in Bloomfield Hills was hostess today to the smor- gasbord luncheon committee for the Travelers Market being planned by the Save the Chil- dren Federation. The benefit will be held at the Cranbrook pavilion Sept. 19. Present at the luncheon were Mrs. James A.. Beresford, chairman of the committee; Mrs. Harold A. Fitzgerald, Mrs. George T. Trumbull, Mrs. Alfred E. Grann, Ruth Cumming and Mrs. S. J. Lang. * * *® Mr. and Mrs. Harvey W. Perry of North Lake drive en- tertained 30 guests at a Perry family reunion picnic Sunday. - Mr. Perry’s sister, Mrs. Ar- thur Parker from Benson, Ariz., came the farthest dis- tance, Guests were also pres- ent from Flint, Bay City, Mount Pleasant, Battle Creek, Wolverine and Gaylord. * * *® Mr. and Mrs, Chester Caug- hill were hosts at dinner Sat- urday evening at their home . on Michigan avenue honoring Mrs. Frances C. Steele’ who has been visiting her sister, Mrs, John’ H. Rawley of Eliz- abeth Lake road and other rel- atives during the month of July Mrs, Steele left Saturday by plane for her home in Glen- dale, Calif. Guests at the Caughill’s were Mr, and Mrs. Rawley, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Crawford, Mr. and Mrs, Howard Johnson and Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Rowley. * * * Patricia Bannon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Barney Bannon of Birmingham has been ac- ’ te cepted for the coming year at Monticello College in Alton, Ill, Vacationing in Jamzica until mid-August are Joanna Wiggs ‘ of East Fairmont street and ~ Kay Walser of Myrtle avenue. They also plan a long week- end in Haiti. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Austin Jr. of Seattle, Wash., and their children, John, Glenn and Mary Kay are visiting Mr. Aus- tin’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Austin of Cherokee road for two weeks. * * * Pontiac area students who will be freshmen at Western Michigan University this fall have been recent visitors to the campus for get acquainted tours, testing and@counseling. Pontiac students are Sheila G. Wooster of Avondale street, Richard’G. Reynolds of Illinois avenue and Jessica C. Roberts of Crescent Lake road. Lynda S, Wise and Kenneth A. Wood Jr. of Bloomfield Hills also took part in these two day visits. Leaving by motor Thursday for Miami, Fla., to attend the first International Convention of Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority is Mrs, Eugene Carey of West Iroquois road. She is a dele- gate and president of the lo- cal Zeta chapter and will be accompanied by Mr. Carey. Alternate delegates are Eliz- abeth Halsey of Lorraine court and Mrs. Jobn Borsvold of Syl- vester road, They are leaving by plane Saturday. Margaret MacKenzie of De- troit is also attending. The convention will be in progress from Sunday through Aug, 13. Mrs. Borsvold and Miss Hal- sey will then sail to Nassau for a sight-seeing cruise be- fore they return to Pontiac. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mercer of Cass Lake announce the birth of a son, Donny Joe, born July 26 at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. Grandparents are-Mr, and Mrs. Charles Sias of Keego Harbor and Mr. and Mrs. Car! Mercer of Harrietta. s Mr. and Mrs. Neil Crandall (nee Frances Glisky) of South Roselawn street announce the birth of a daughter, Anne, born July 29 at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. ~ MRS. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Michael Glisky of South Sanford* street and Mr. and Mrs, Frank Crandall of Glen- wood street. ~ Hazel: Lee Miller and Clyde R. Kizer were married Saturday evening at Clarkston Methodist Church. The bride is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Royal S. McGill. The , bridegroom Mr. and. Mrs. Maynard Kizer. CLYDE R. KIZER °* Waterford Girl Wed in Double-Ring Rites Clarkston Methodist Church was the scene of the Saturday evening wedding of Hazel Lee Miller and Clyde R. Kizer. The Rev. ¢William Richards offi- ciated at the double-ring can- dlelight ceremony before 250 guests. ; The bride is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Royal S. McGill of Waterford and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard R. Kizer of Clarks- ton. The bride wore a dress of Rosepoint lace and taffeta with a Sabrina neckline and long Hairdo prediction for fall 1959 is sléek, round and lifted at the crown. _ From left to right are. 1. The rounded look for medium short hait, a good cut for hair with natural curl and body. By Thierry of Paris. 2. A love iat gives extra height at the crown in this new looking coiffure for medium length hair. Center part, rounded crown and Wu By Enrico Caruso. 3., a en curved ends distinguish this almost severe style for the classic oval face. By Leon Amendolla of Charles of the Ritz. 4. A special zigzag part adds width to the sides of this trim. and ‘ r tailored half page boy. Hotel Sheraton East. By Verdi of \ sleeves. The full floor length taffeta skirt was overlaid with Rosepoint lace. She wore a fin- gertip veil. trimmed with se- quins. She carried a bouquet of white orchids and white roses on a white lace covered Bible, a gift of the bridegroom. Mrs. Stewart Pickering was matron of honor. She wore an emb: turquoise sheath _ dress with a chiffon overskirt and a short veil accented with bows. She carried a white fan with pink daisies and pink roses. * * * Ann Lowrie and Mary Jo Willits, both of Waterford, were bridesmaids. Their sheath dresses with chiffon overskirts were pink and yellow repec- tively and their veils matched their dresses. Miss Lowrie car- ried a white fan with blue daisies and pink roses and Miss Willits carried blue daisies and yellow roses with her fan. Sandra Lee McGill was jun- jor bridesmaid. Her dress was of white nylon over lavender taffeta and she carried a bou- quet of white daisies and white roses. Nate Riffle of Clarkston was best man. Ushers were Fred Vess, Leroy Volberding of Clarkston, James Williams of Waterford, Douglas Fortin and William Shanks of Clarkston. Maynard Kizer was junior usher for his brother. HOLD SUPPER, DANCE A reception was held after the ceremony in the church parlors. Following the recep- tion, a supper and dance for relatives and the bridal party was held at Mountainview Country Club. For her going away outfit, the bride: wore a white em- broidered cotton dress with a lavender sash and matching accessories with the white orchid from her bridal bou- quet. ) The couple will at Niagnna’ Falls and tour New York. They will make their home in Ypsilanti, where the bridegroom is a student at Eastern Michigan = pen He is’ affiliated with Tau Gamma fraternity, "vue Honor Society and Kappa Delta Phi fraternity, . “is the son of Abi 2)” Te mee ae | ee pe we ee IN YOUR INFORMAL WEDDING bape ... OF COURSE Admiration for the maids, ee: ments for the wed that’ what yeh bear for the wonderful infor: we will make t gor pecutiful "just come in, phone for your appointment. FOR Y YOUR WEDDING . .. QUALITY AND QUANTITY elt PHOTOS 1 IN aon @ FREE @ A WEDDING GUE Le BOOK eA oye boomy RIAGE e aLABGn ‘ust MARRIED" All For Only $39.95 C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 4-0553 s rk aaa. This is the Marathon the thighs. By doing the exercises and following the calorie chart | Husband Proud oe LOWEST pla Rey » Relay. ome! Sold caret Or wailv MAG ‘sevice ver a Wine S Sastvclbes Reetenecnen Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN I think most folks like to read success stories, the success has to do with a sub- ject of universal interest to wom- an — improvement of the figure. Because I believe this to be true, every August I print some of the} letters I receive from readers who ‘joined my 8Week Self-Improve- ment Marathon in January. The following is a very gratify- ing and thrilling letter: ‘‘Dear Mrs. Lowman: As a young girl I had a lovely figure. After 15 years- of marriage and nearing middle age I had gradually accumulated 20 pounds too much. That was -10 years ago. Now I have been mar- ried for 25 years. “T am ashamed to‘say that dur- ing the last 15 years I have hated this overweight. It made me self- \conscious. It absolutely ruined my pleasure in clothes and it even affected my life in more important ways. especially when I gave up sports and dancing, and became less interested in my appearance generally. As you ean imagine these extra pounds even affected my personality be- exercise for and general weeks. cause I myself did not FEEL attractive. “How I could have allowed this situation to exist for so many years I cannot .now imagine, looking back, but I did until last January, 'when [ read about your Marathon. ‘LOST 20 POUNDS “With your ‘shots in the arm’ jof encouragement, enthusiasm and confidence I lost 20 pounds in eight weeks. I also lost 442 inches If you missed from my waist, 6 from my abdo-|. men and 5 from my hips. My measurements are just right now. “IT cannot possibly tell you how this has changed my entire out- look. I hope you will pass this along in your column so that it may encourage other women. “I feel and look 20 years younger and this summer I am swimming for the first time in many years. My husband is the happiest and proudest man in town. Thank you so much.” * * * Marathon last January and would like to have the same routine this reader used, send 10 cents and a stamped, self- addressed envelope with your re- RUGS for 9x12 ROOM SIZES ee “ull ROOM SIZE Less Than $40! - 24x36 27x48 36x54) bal 1666 SOUTH TELEGRAPH South of Orchard pee NEW SHIPMENT of raided Rugs New shipment of our exclusive Aurora Wool Blend Braid Rugs:.. Perfect with Early American or Colonial. Reversible for twice the wear. Outstanding quality!” 9% August Sale Pouff Rugs The rug that rivals nature’s fur! Buy now for yourself or for gift giving at these reduced prices. REGULAR AUGUST PRICE 6.95 OAD. « 13.95 CHOICE OF 18 BEAUTIFUL COLORS - FE’ 4-0516 7.95 10.95 15.95 olfs DRAPERIES BEDSPREADS 8x10-Ft. Size .. 8x9-Ft. Size ..... 4x6-Ft. Size ..... 3x5-Ft. Size ..... ae ee OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY, N IGHTS- hg ; families. directions in the Marathon booklet, you can lose up to 20 pounds in eight Feels 20 Years Younger quest for the Marathon booklet. Address Josephine Lowman in care of this paper. * * * Tomorrow: | Fete Couple on Their 41st Anniversary Mr. and Mrs, Robert Thomp- son of Walled Lake and Mr. . and Mrs. Charles Miller of Pontiac gave a 4ist wedding anniversary surprise dinner Sunday for their uncle and aunt, Mr, and Mrs. C. O. Miller. The affair was held at the Millers’ Pine Lake home. * * * Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bassett, Ethel and Vera Bassett, George R. Bas- sett, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ewles and Mrs. Paul D, Ham- mond. xk -* * Others were Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Whitfield, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilkinson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank McElhaney of Birmingham and Mrs. Wesley McClean of Chicago, Ill. “It Takes Just 8 Weeks for Big Beauty Improve- ment.” Have You Tried This? May Take the Prize By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs. Post: I have attended quite a few showers lately and have noticed that the guest of honor took part in games that were played, which is all right, but is it correct for her to accept a prize if she wins? Shouldn't she refuse it and let the runner up or the person who tied with her, have it, as she received many presents already? I think it is a very selfish act. What is your opinion?” Answer: I am sorry, do not agree with you and think that whoever wins a game, even if she has received other presents, should keep the prize. “Dear Mrs. Post: My hus- band is planning to give a bachelor party for my brother who is soon to be married. It is to be held at his club and of course he will pay all the expenses of the dinner. “However, he would like to present the bridegroom with a present at this time and thought of asking the men invited to the dinner to con- tribute ten dollars toward the present. Would this be in order, and do you think ten dollars too much to ask?” Answer: If your husband asks the guests to contribute toward the present, it becomes a joint present from all of them and they should decide together how much to con- tribute and what the present will be. “Dear Mrs. Post: Is_ it permissible to present one's physician or physicians with a gift? One doctor performed the operation and one assisted. After the operation I was in the care of the latter. If it is permissible, how should it be delivered—in person or sent by the store where the , gift will be bought. “Is a note of appreciation necessary or just a name card enclosed? I would appreciate your answer to these ques- tions.” Answer: A gift is certainly not necessary, but if you wish to send one you certainly may do so. Write on your visiting card, ‘‘With many thanks’ and have the store enclose it with the gift which should be sent by them. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press ‘Home Editor Today's recipe is for an in- teresting raisin-nut bread. Oatmeal in the batter gives = the bread more nutrition, es- pecially vitamin B. Further- more, the bread tastes good. * * * Lately we've been getting recipes from mothers of large Mrs. Ralph Rein- hart, today’s cook, has five. ; 3 She’s active as a Den mother = and in teaching Sunday s School. In the winter the Quick Raisin Nut Loaf Enriched by Oatmeal Reinharts love to square dance. Cooking is her hobby. OATMEAL RAISIN BREAD By Mrs. Ralph Reinhart Put in bowl: 2 cups raw oatmeal 2 cups sifted flour Mix well and add: % — light molasses 2 tablespoons melted shortening 2 cups sour milk Beat well and add: 1 Sup sates’ Pour into two greased loaf pans. Bake 45 minutes at 375 degrees. : but I- a # Ed ee : YOUR KITCHEN MODERNIZE “Let Us. Help You Plan ands Modernize Your” Kitchen with ‘SCHEIRICH’ Bronzeglow Birch Cabinets” D MABENSON = 3 BY JMBER+F N SAGINAW iv], ale) if a) SA, / we , “Tt ! TWELVE \ THE PONTIAC PRESS: TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959: Neither a f straw hat nora somewhat tight skirt can stop magazine reporter Terry Dobrowolski from get- ting the cate on automobile me- absorber. UPI Phete chaties i in New Wak She has squeezed under an auto to check on a shock Call His Bluff « 0% , Abby ‘ together” By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I love my husband and I know he loves me. ve have five children “i : from the ages of two to twelve years old. My _ hus- band is a good provider. We've never fought over anything but now I have a problem, He plays cards almost . évery night — so he says. But the men he says he plays cards with say they don't play with him, I am very con- fused. Should I ask for the truth or should I try to keep our home together and be quiet? UNDECIDED DEAR UNDECIDED: A home, in order to be ‘‘kept must have a sturdy foundation. Mutual honesty is the cornerstone. You'll never get rid of termites by ignor- ing them. Nor will you solve your problem by closing your eyes to it. Lay all your cards on the table .-, . and ask your husband to do likewise. Now that he’s dealt you a full house — call his bluff. * * * DEAR ABBY: I wish the woman who signed herself RECKLESS DRIVER'S WIFE” would read this. May- be she'd think twice before she let her husband drive again. Five months ago my hus- band was killed by a reckless driver. He left me with three children, ages 5, and 3 and 1. I am 23 years old. The reckless driver who hit him is now serving time in prison, But that doesn’t bring my husband ‘back. No mother enjoys telling her children why Daddy isn't coming home any 4\. more. Believe me, I have suffered many sleepless nights because of a reckless driver, Thanks, Abby, for letting me tell my story to millions of people. It’s true, Every heart-breaking word of it: YOUNG WIDOW * * * DEAR ABBY: My problem is a sweet little niece who is 14 (almost 15), Shé thinks she is in love with a 24-year-old man who works at the neigh- borhood grocery store. She runs there every eve- ning and asks him for a/ ride home in the market truck, He takes her for a spin around the block and then home. She doesn’t even know his last name, but firmly believes she’s He Says He’s Playing Cards, but His Friends Deny Story contribute toward home ex- in love with him. She won't listen to her moth- er. (She says she’s “old-fash- ioned.”) Please say something in your column (she reads it faithfully) before this crush gets out of hand. ; AUNTIE DEAR AUNTIE: This crush cannot get out of hand if she leaves the grocery store on foot. Ask the Romeo at the market to co-operate by ex- plaining to her that he isn't allowed to have riders in the truck, \ * «x * DEAR ABBY: Our son is 24. He's just been divorced and is living at home again. He is robust, gainfully em- ployed and is buying an au- tomobile and motorcycle on time. He is on the go seven nights a week. Should he be expected to penses? If so, how much is G fair? We are in moderate cir- cumstances. DISAGREEING PARENTS _ DEAR PARENTS: A 24-year- 1G old ‘‘boy’”’ is a man. He should, in my opinion, contribute the same amount at home that it would cost him to live in a hotel (or rooming house) plus his board and laundry, You do him no favor by supporting him when he is able to sup- port himself, * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO ‘“‘GOLF WIDOW:” Play with the girls. There’s more than one fair way. * * * What's your problem? For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this newspaper. En- close a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Rx for Girl Wallflowers: | Take Up For By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor Girls who yearn to be popular, always in demand and the life of the party might heed the advice of Betty Penson, women’s editor of The Boise, Idaho, Statesman. “Learn to tell fortunes,” says Betty. “If you add a smattering of astrology and handwriting an- alysis, so much the better. You'll never have a dull moment.” Betty subscribed to a course in fortune-telling and palmistry a few-years ago, got interested in the whole psychic subject and add- ed astrology. Now she's the center of attention at every party, at a loss for dinner invitations, and besieged on all sides by friends who look on her as an oracle. * * * “T wish I'd discovered this when I was a teen-ager,” says Betty, who now has a teen-age daughter of her own. “I could have:had a lot more fun than I did because then I used to suffer from shy-' ness. But a girl who can read| palms and all that always has more dates than she can man- age.” A different’ suggestion comes from attractive Marianne Probst, of Augsburg, Germany, who re- cently was named_the world’s champion accordion )player. “No girl-who can play the ac- cordion is ever a _ wallflower,’ says Marianne. “It’s a wonderful way to make friends and also, if never/has participated tune Telling you take it seriously, to see the world.’”’ ; Marianne won her championship title during the recent World Ac- cordion Competition, held for the first time in New York. She won out over 24 top performers from 15 different counties * * * Someone gave Marianne an ac- cordion when she was 12, and she became so proficient that she started giving concerts and teach- ing accordion classes. She has been playing in competition since 1950, when she was runner-up for the German championship. She in the world championship matches since 1954, when she placed fourth. In 1955 she finished second, in competi- tions held in Brighton, England. This year she got her first trip to America to compete here. x & &* , This summer Marianne. is visit- ing friends in Michigan, taking ‘her accordion along. No doubt Michigan sicnics: hay- rides and square dances will be much livelier this summer, and there certainly will be no dull moments for Marianne and her accordion. Girl wallflowers please, note. ° é Colorado has the highest mean elevation of any of the states av- eraging- 6,800 feet. By contrast Delaware has the lowest with 60 feet average. The Sectional you want is ‘olveys available at Elliott’s im the design and covering of your choice. Special shapes, any length, crafted to your taste and need at — cost. . © ELLIOTT'S © ta of WATERFORD OR 3-1225. | ~/ = { pov: ip i | ue € 4 a ! 3 ye f * . Li Z ‘ ~ 29 \ od 7? wer . = 4 . i =, \ 6 | PY NRAy yf orgie oe Some P By MURIEL LAWRENCE Once upon a time, so the story goes, there was-a Little Red Hen. Her wheat needed planting so she asked Goose, Donkey and Pig’ to help her. They excused themselves and she planted it herself. By MARY PRIME NEW YORK (UPI) — When it comes to decorating a home, verage vakian presidents, and 56 fore- eign embassies in Prague. Ger- stel owned the largest furni- ture. factory in Europe and de- signed for the cream of inter- national society until he was forced to flee Czechoslovakia in 1939. * * x How’did Gerstel find his blue- blooded clients to deal with? “Easier, much easier,” he said in an interview in his New York: office. He generally was given a free hand when deco-° rating embassies and palaces. For example, he was com- missioned to re-model the ‘Japanese embassy. His price was high, but the Japanese ambasador sent a check with- out looking at one sketch or more excuses. Finally, when the wheat needed threshing, she went to them again—and once more Goose, Donkey and Pig pleaded other engagements. : Are you sorry for Little Red Hen? I'm not. She enjoyed dis- : “happy” with them. But Amer- ican women want a complete change every time they re- decorate. a -é Tastes varied from simple to luxurious. Gerstel recalled do- Teens in Past Years eople Secretly Delight in Rafusal help, she would not have sought it from animals known to be flighty, stubborn and greedy. So she wanted not help but disap- pointment. She wanted the re- fusals that enabled her to regard herself as an overworked martyr Today, asked to do an errand, our 10-year-old Ella will say, ‘‘How can I when I have to finish dusting my bookshelves?"’ To this excuse we'll bring two feelings—one we're aware of and one we're not. Con- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST: 4, 19597 —~ Americans Fussier Than Kings on Decor ing a red damask reception had panelings .which took 68 room for King Alexander of woodcarvers five years to com- Yugoslavia and oriental bed- plete. rooms and modern baths for * * the king of Albania. The Al- A hearty man who has been banian queen had been to the ‘in business since 1919, Gerstel United States, and wanted an is divorced and has thrree sons indoor swimming pool and a and one grandchild. After flee- room furnished as an American * ing his country, he came to the bar. United States with ‘“‘no money, x * & but my business in-my head.” Unfortunately, the rpyal Al- In 1944 he opened his own of- so the job never was complet- ed and Gerstel never received payment. : missile research. “Kings are delightful custo- In Czechidslovakia Gerstel mers, but it’s difficult to get lived in a castle with 19 serv- ¥ paid,” the decorator said. ants. “They felt they were doing us “It was fun sitting on the . an honor. They had no busi- right hand of queens, but it ness sense,’ ‘Gerstel’s most expensive job was a $3-million bank (now the equivalent of $12 million, he said). It looked like a pal- ace and contained a staircase modeled after one in Chester- field House, then owned by British Princess Mary. Lord Chesterfield had purchased the staircase in 1760. The bank also. But Little Red Hens of the world never really protest refusal. They themselves responsible — and everyone else, geese, donkeys and pigs — to be able to protest it. In. the words of psychiatrist to her family. Ed Bergler, they ‘collect Next she asked them to help| appointment. She wanted re- imund Bergler, y “collec heat. They found! fusal. If she had really expected | Human parents sometimes share injustices.” = ae her pleasuré in disappointment. ek et The collected injustices give them q sense of security — the as- surance that they alone are the long-suffering servants of duty. They are the only ones who care about the wheat crop or tomor- sciously, we'll resent Ella’s re- ; : row’s breakfast eggs. Everything usal, but unconsciously we'll be depends on them. are too secretly pleased to prove) Garden Unit Sees Other Prizes Farm, Members of Lorraine Manor Branch of Woman's National Farm and Garden Assn, met Thursday evening in the gar- den of Mrs, E. L.. Armstrong of Fernbarry drive. . “Mrs. H. Burton Strong showed colored slides of prize - blooms from the. gardens of members of other branch clubs in the state. Mrs. Allan B. Wagoner was cohostess. The first balloon tires were in- troduced on U.S. cars in 1922. Last year the tire and tube in- dustry increased its investment in daily newspaper advertising by 11.7 per cent over the previous year. quite pleased with it. Had Different Rules | By RUTH MILLETT Children and teenagers may not have been any better when { was adults to live with. harm and weren't afraid to make protection and for the protection of other adults. ~ When we were ids, we weren't allowed to go to our friends’ houses on Sunday. ‘“‘A man has a right to have hig home and family to him- self on Sunday,” my father used to say. If that seemed like a hardship to us kids at the time, we now now it wasn’t. We read a lot of good books on those long Sun- day afternoons. And all the fa- thers in the neighborhood actual- ly got their day of rest. did a lot to keep our neighbor- the day. Now teenagers use an automobile horn to save their legs. Many of them even have a habit of giving a tap on the horn every time they pass a friend's house. - There was another phrase most growing up than they are now.iid. were well aware of when I But they were certainly easier for! 4. growing up. It was: “n't wear out your welcome.’ Now Adults, in those days, s€W NO\,i4. and teen afraid of ‘wearing out their wel- and enforce rules for their Own) .ome” that they take over the houses of their friends. Another thing about those by- gone days, the telephone ham | mainly for adult use. Now im the | vet pleasure in‘ it, we'd say average home, kids develop tele- | briskly with no whine in our ivoice, “We'll want eggs for break- fast tomorrow morning. As Meyers’ didn't deliver them, you'll have to 'go and get them.” phonitis by the age of 6, From then on they make and receive | about 10 times as many calls as their parents. So the home is never quiet even when the children are al] away. For the telephone keeps ringing |~ and Mama or Papa — whichever! one is good-natured enough to take | ,. over the job as children’s secre-|# We weren’t allowed to use ajtary — keeps repeating over and | horn for a doorbell either, which| over such phrases as, ‘‘Susie isn't), here. She went swimming. Yes, hood quiet. ‘Get out of the car and/Mary Beth went with her. I think go to the door” was the order of|they’ll be back about five. Have her call you as soon as she gets): home? All right, I'll tell her.” rs are so uf Since we've expected refusal, | getting it will fortify our conviction that Ella is a combination goose- donkey-pig—and that we are the only good and responsible creature in the barnyard. If you don’t believe me, listen to what we say to Ella. With a whine in our voice we complain: “] might have known It. Every- thing around here is left to me.” If our anger at Ella's refusal were pure, not adulterated by our, Couple Exchange Vows July 25 at Drake House Rosalind Ann Latham. and Don-|Bloomfield Township and Mr. and} - ald Arnold were married July 25|Mrs. Donald C. Arnold of East i at Drake House in Farmington.|New York street. . s The Rev. George Crosbie of St. Clair Shores Community Church, | the bride’s uncle, officiated at the ceremony. | Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Latham of West r Yarns ® Lessons © : THE KNITTING NEEDLE Audrey, Spicer of Aurora, Ill., | % was maid of honor. Joan Crosbie |< of St. Clair Shores was brides- maid. Marsha Mullen of Bir mingham was junior bridesmaid and Kathleen Harrison of Bir- 9 mingham was flower girl. Arlie Latham Jr., brother from Pontiac, was best man. Jerry Campbell of Pontiac was usher and another of the |bride’s brothers, Alyin Latham of 452 W. Huron. FE $1930 ]|West_ Bloomfield Township was & the bride's |! < —_— ANNOUNCING... . ) _ the installation of our revolutionary new * color-dispensing , machine that mixes any of your choice of 1400 colors es in seconds! 4 Honor Two Marsha Stapp was hostess at her Inverness avenue home for a bridal luncheon Satur- day honoring two bride-elects. Guests of honor were Bar- bara Calhoun, bride-elect of Thomas Cross and Linda Schel- lenberg, bride-elect of John Ensworth. Miss Calhoun is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Calhoun of Spokane drive. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Milo J. Cross of North Hammond Lake drive. Brides-Elect Miss Schellenberg is the daughter of Mrs. George Schel- | lenberg, of West Bloomfield Township. Her fiance is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Robert Ensworth of Drayton Pains. * * * Guests were Mrs, Dale Han- nah, Mrs. Charles Parks, Mrs. James Jones Jr., Delores Lutz- kiw, Beverly Tatu, Joyce Whitfield, Jeanette Cockle, Carey Charles, Lee Patterson and Nancy Nicholson. 2 ee ee ae goby apes apt ccigesm camer ment. 7 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac - 4 If You Are Not Employed Now, THIS IS THE TIME TO GET MORE TRAINING Enroll in the DAY, HALF-DAY, or EVE- NING CLASSES and prepare for a position which you can fill when we are again enjoying prosperity and abundant employ- There is always a demand for well-trained secretaries and stenographers. New Classes Are Being Organized in All Department for TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 VETERAN APPROVED | For Information, Call in Person, Telephone or Write for Bulletin The Business Institute COLOR MIXING MACHINE || ° FE 2-3551 PITTSBURGH PAINTS keep Available in Sun-Proof® House Paint, Sun-Proof Trim Quality, Sun- Proof Flat House Paint, Cemerithide® Rubberized Masonry Paint, Rubberized Wallhide® Wall Paint, Wallhide Alkyd Flat Wall Paint, Wallhide Semi-Gloss Enamel, Wallhide Gloss Enamel Come in tora demonstration today! / PONTIAC GLASS CO. | 23. WEST LAWRENCE STREET Free Porking | FE 5-644] tes Tolme that b We Deliver enon. lo naqer woman. Even/source of vitamin C. COINS — STAMPS SUPPLIES’ - We Buy and Sell PONTIAC STATIONERS “Fermerly Brown Bres.” an. gaginaw FE 2-4242 ' 63 W. Huron St. FE 5-6261 THIRTEEN ’ Simplicity is still the agp seal dng ‘are an important wwe insurance Protection tomorrow—against an unexpected loss (your car, or hurt your standard of living. The sign we pfou T? TTT agegases' THT i Titits Call now... peo ke a tt ‘Gul . om +t th | ALIN as advertised in the Saturpay Evenine Post. % by ne Aoloms Step-in with a smart angle on slimming the larger figure—side buttons pave the way from contrast} collar to smooth. skirt. Choose | checks iced with white. Tomor-' Kenneth G, HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 101 E. Haron cet TOMORROW MINDED Insurance is a matter of knowing you have protection your home, your business) that might wipe out your savings yudly dis play tells you we plan insurance the “tomorrow-minded” way—to give you full, lasting protection—with substantial savings through Central Mutual dividend-paying policies, FE 4-8284 - Printed Pattern 4664: Women's ——— row’s pattern: Misses.’ | | Sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size, ; 36 dress takes 4% yards 3Sinch| h() PERMANENTS ee $ OU complete witn Haireut and set No App't Necessary FE 5-8000 LOUIS stor” Printed directions on each pat- | | | SHOP tern part. Easier, accurate. Send Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. $950, 10 West Huron—2nd Floor Next to Buckner Finance Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press,: 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. THELMA CROW, Owner There are more than 10,000 varieties of seashells. 86 Wayne St. Relax ... in Air Cooled Comfort while you have your PERMANENT or SHAMPOO-SET RANDALL'S BARPER METHOD SHOPPE FE 2-1424 Further Reductions dy Regular’ to $19.95 ' _ ad ers &SVA ew . | ~ “ee | 2 2» | 2 for Be - ~ Swim Suits Only at Alvin’s . . . such a complete selection! ROSE MARIE REID ROXANNE JANTZEN NANI OF HAWAII ALIX OF MIAMI ’y Off @ R Park Free Rear of Store HURON at TELEGRAPH Mon., Thurs. & Fri. 10 to 9—Tues., Wed., Sat. 10 to 6 4 , ; \ ’ & : ; ‘) Se Summer Dresses - Reg. $22.95 & $24.95 . a, , a = ae ; bes Me. a © ae . Ps : ’ ® | pa cr gy a as eee ee ee ee ee TT TN eee ee. ee ee ea ae ae eee _ chines lubricated, and in most ft _ FOURTEEN. eS. SS eS sf ie ire i OR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 41959 “ SS se Ok CE S”6h hU€Fm ee el Ur "Began. ‘in Western Pennsylvania Si oe Sa os, soe | = two tehes describing he oll has t to worka daring ite fiter bent r ® source what it ‘is likely ¢ to mean “ia the years a) By CLYDE H. FARNSWORTH NEW YORK (UPD—A century ago a retired railroad conductor drilled an oil well in western Pennsylvania and an industry des- tined to shape the course of his- tory was born. Oil had been known. centuries before. Noah calked the ark with a form of petroleum ealled pitch gathered from seepages in Meso-: potamia. Job tellls of a rock whith! poured out “rivers of oi.” But it wasn’t until Edwin LL. Drake was hired by the Pennsyl- vania Rock Oil Co. to igvestigate the firm’s Titusville, Fa., prop- erty that this energy was un- leashed ‘and its commercial po- tential tapped. In the America of 1959 nearly all heavy work is done by ma- cases, powered by petroleum prod- ucts. The big day in the industry's history was Aug. 27, 1859. After numerous delays and financial dif- ficulties the Drake well reached into a rock crevice at a depth of 6944 feet. x * * It was a Sunday afternoon. Or- ders had been received to aban- don the project, already dubbed “Drake’s Folly.”’ The disheart- ened Drake's chief driller, Wil- liam A. (Uncle Billy) Smith, peered into the well. It was just possible .. . The long shot paid off. Within a few feet, according to industry chroniclers, a dark green liquid bubbled and frothed. With a crude bailer Smith lifted several gallons of oil to the surface and the era é i Oi} helped power the transfor- mation. It also supplied kerosene which replaced dwindling supplies of whale oil in the pre-Edison portant dates in the growth of the . {Wayne County AFL-CIO which rep- Oil Industry 100 Years Old (The petroleum industry, which depen the advice of spiritualistic med and dowsers, or just by sail- ing an old hat into the air and “spudding in” where it happened to land. : Here are some of the other im- industry: —1861, first year of the Civil War: The first ship to carry a cargo of oil cleared Philadelp‘ia for London. —1863: John D. Rockefeller in- home town of Cleveland, Ohio. * * * 1865; Last year of the Civil War: the first pipeline was built to transport oil. 1876: Oil went west and was -lis- covered, in California. —1890: The Sherman Antitrust Act led to reorganization of the Rockefeller interests into a num- ber of holding companies. —1893: Charlies E. Duryea built a horseless carriage by at- vested in a new refinery in his line importance of oil. It supplied gaso- Flying Formers Elect» Standish Man to Post |" ic srangh bee bom so, n8 sees ley Coch Sartorset Magi Bae Guat of Te Meakin Payne Fiat Lockwood of Jackson, Phil Jones According (0 9 recept report, 85, meats, milk, ee shortening, of Brooklyn, Ernest Irwin of Clare, |per cent of the food shoppers select|soaps and detergents, and sugar. dias sid Mekhi sh. ack He eee Ypsilanti anditheir food store on the basis of|More food advertisers invest their each day and opened up the fab- ulous East Texas oil field. —1903: Orville Wright took off in a box kite powered by a gaso- engine at Kitty Hawk, N.C. 1914-1918, World War I: oil was used to’ fuel tanks, trucks and planes of mechanized warfare for the first time. kt * * “—1939-45: By. World War I, there was no question about the line and lubricants for vehicles, was the principal ingredients of synthetic rubber and plastics and even supplied ingredients for heal- ing salves and other medicines. (Next: The Second Century.) Snub for Nikita? Mayor Miriani Isn't Talking ani, who snubbed Soviet Deputy Premier Frol Kozlov on a recent Detroit visit, dodged a direct com- ment today on a possibility that Premier Khrushchev might pay a call here. * * x “T have nothing to say. I'll make the appropriate comment when the right time comes,”’ Miriani said. In scorning Kozlov, Miriani said he did so because word of the deputy premier’s visit had not been officially given him before- ie First reactions of organized labor to the chance of a Khrushchev visit were divided. ° * * * Al Barbour, president : of the resents 450,000 workers, welcomed the possibility because he said there would be ‘‘a lot of questions’’ labor would like to ask him. On the other hand Thomas Mc- Speculation marked the early a years of the industry. The Titus-| ville discovery touched off a. scramble for oi] lands that rivalled, the gold rush. Fortunes were made! iDetroit Building Tyades Council, of ahy reception for the Premier Charge 10 Men With Smuggling DETROIT (#—Mayor Louis Miri- | Namara, secretary-treasurer of the} by way of Canada. said his group should have no part: Herbs Brought In From Red China Against Ban, Say Indictments MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)—A fed- eral grand jury has indicted 10 men on charges of smuggling more than a million dollars worth of contraband herbs from Red China int6 the United States. The indictments, charging 13 counts of smuggling, trading with the enemy and conspiracy _ were unsealed here Friday. They were returned last April but kept secret in hope that three alleged Cana- dian members of the smuggling Ting might be picked up in this country. In San Francisco, E. E. Mins- koff, chief enforcement officer of the treasury’s foreign assets control section, said the herbs were smuggled into this country Minskoff said the herbs were labeled ‘‘dried vegetables” in New York and shipped to distribution “as long as there are no free trade and lost. Crude oi] prices. ran. ag Unions in Russia.” high as $20 a barrel and as lew as 10 cents. Today crude eil averages $3.25 a barrel, * * * Incidentally, Drake, who had been so right about oil in the earth, turned to speculation as an oil land promoter on Wall Street ‘and’‘did everything -wrong The wife of the man wae found- ed an industry now worth billions had to take in boarders and do sewing to make ends meet... Most of the early drilling was confined to New York and Penn- sytvania. Historians tell us wells were drilled on hunches, with Last of Honor Flotilla Passes to Lake Ontario PORT COLBORNE, Ont. @—The last ship of the ‘‘Operation ‘Inland Sea” Flotilla passed through the Welland Canal Sunday. night. The destroyer Roan was the last of the 27 U.S. Navy vesseis to make its way through the Wel- land Canal from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. The flotilla sgiled the Great Lakes this summer to honor the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway. _ 4/S qt. “The world: agrees on ‘Gilbey’ s, please’! Dey’s latte (pndon bry ia 90 Pret. 100% Grain Neutral Spirits. W. & A. Gilbey, Lid, Cincinnati, Ohio. Distributed 493 ee nee ney points in Chicago and Memphis, From there they were routed to Chinese population centers in many sections of the country, as far west as Honolulu. The herbs are considered nec- essary medicines by many Chinese. > wk *x Joe cee alias Joe Wilson, of Chicago and ‘Memphis was called the ring’s key man in this country. Also named in the indictments were Quong’s two sons, Joe Wing Wah and Joe Wing Fong; Lun Fee Lee of New York City; John Hong Hall, Fong Quock Tip and Won Shew Git, of San Francisco. The three Canadians are Henry Edwin -Chad, Sydney Rotk and Ernest Buchamer. The imports were illegal under a foreign law banning trade with Red China. Former Dean Applauds. Captive Nations’ Week SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)—The former dean of Notre Dame's law school, Clarence Manion, said to- school, Clarence Manion, said Sun- day night that President Eisen- hower’s recent tion of “Captive Nations Week’? marked one of the “few times” since the cold war began that the United States had seized the psychologi- cal initiative, © “At long: last,” Manion said. “our.anti-Communist program has taken the offensive.” LANSING &# — Herbert Peppel|ing at Capitol City Airport, sale = tle ber, stn, items:. Net oe ee food, _ butter, y ne gasoline qives you this... Follow the example of the Mobilgas Economy Run drivers — and you'll save money —get better gas mileage, too! In this punishing Run, 47 brand new stock cars, driven by people like you, averaged 19.44 miles per galion using Mobilgas Special—The New Car Gasoline. Use it in your new or late ° model car. Helps you get top power and acceleration—top miles per gallon! 4 BORN IN FREEDOM ° 1859 WORKING FOR PROGRESS OIL’S. FIRST CENTURY 1959 FREE... if you want to get better gas mileage from your car—and save money—send for this helpful booklet that tells how. Write: MobilGas-Saving Book- let, Mobil Oil Company, P.O. Box 1860, Grand Centra! Station, New York 17, N.¥. hey b 4 ®) voy Have more fun, more relaxation, outdoors this summer with an extension telephone at your elbow. You can answer your phone+ or make calls—without leaving what you’ré doing, without leaving “| your family or friends. You won't miss anymore calls, and. you won't track mud and dust into the house! All you need is a portable extension. phone, and one; or more’ ‘Today—outdoor living calls for an OUTDOOR TELEPHONE weatherproof outlets—installed by the patio or basiiees: Whenever you go outdoors, just take your step-saving extension phone with you! For more information about convenient outdoor telephones, call the Michigan Bell Business Office. A Service Representative will help you select the outdoor service that fits your needs. MICHIGAN clos TELEPHONE COMPANY 4 & Signed for the shopper's a b THE PONTIAC PRESS LUN PLAC. MNMHIGAN , READY FOR OPENING — ing at ~303 Main St., Doris Hayes Wom- en’s Apparel Shop, located in a brand new build- Rochester, Thursday. Osoners are Mr. and ats: Fred R. : 5 : ‘ will open Pentiae Press Pheto Hayes, who have moved into the upstairs apart-° ment from their former home in Sylvan Lake. ‘Mrs. Hayes was owner of-the Doris Kay Shop, Oxford, for 13 years until she sold out in 1957. + > In Rochester Thursday ROCHESTER—A new store in French colonial design; Doris Hayes Women's Apparel Shop, will open its doors here Thursday. It occupies the first floor of 8m i building, located at 303 Main E * *« ¥ The owners are Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Hayes, who have moved from their home in Sylvan Lake into thé apartment over the shop. Mrs. Hayes formerly owned the Deris Kay Shop in Oxford fer 13 years. She sold out in 1957 and for the past two years has been associated with the Flora Mae Shop in Pontiac. The new building was designed | and built by’ Bruce -R. Later, archiect and contractor with offices on S. Felegraph road near Pontiac. The interior of the shop is de- ease Turkey Farmer Dies uties said that Felmlee appar- Doris Hayes fo Open Shop Lighting is recessed in the ceiling and the store is air conditioned. * * * . Hayes said she will feature m-priced and- better suits, dresses and coats, a complete line of accessories: plus boutique items. * «x * The shop has a rear entrance leading to a free parking area. The apartment carries out the same decorating motif of the shop | and has a second-floor roof garden| jand ‘garden hdtse”’ at the rear. * bf * Mrs. Hayes said the apartment} fis versatile for it will double as a |home and as a setting for fashion | showings whenever the -ercasion arises. of Injuries From Fall AVON TOWNSHIP > The 5)5-| year-old owner of the Rochester! Turkey Farm who fell down a \60-foot elevator shaft at the farm a week ago today died last night of his injuries. * * * After a week-long struggle, Or- ville Felmlee of 603 W. Linculn St., Royal Oak succumbed at 6°15 a.m. in St. Joseph Mercy Hospita!. Suffering. multiple back injuries, he never regained full conscious- ness following the mishap. Oakland ‘County Sheriff's dep- ently was fixing the motor at | | | | | REV. PAUL VANAMAN Area Pastor Now in Europe Conducting Evangelistic Meetings Finland in English , CLARKSTON — Pastor of the|. Dixie Baptist Church here, the} Rev. Paul Vanaman, is conduct- ing evangelistic meetings in. Fin- Nand . and a_i at the present time. His whirlwind tour of the two Scandinavian countries is taking him to Vasa, Turku and Helsinski in Finland and to Stockholm and!’ Vasteras in Sweden, where he is preaching the gospel in English. Also assisting Rev, Mr, Vane man are Mr, and Mrs. Enos Zim-| © merman, American missionaries to! Finland. Rev. Mr. Vanamah has been serving. as a Baptist pastor since 1949. He organized the church in Clarkston in 1956, He also teaches at the Midwestern Baptist Schools im. Pontiac, He is married and has four children, The Scandinavian’ tour will be qpncluded by Rev. Mr. Vanaman’ this after which he will return to ¢hurch here at $585 | four stories high, when he fell. iSons .Funeral: Home, Royal Oak. in’ Sweden,!* the top of the shaft, which is The farm is located at 117) S- Take First Step in Setting Up Water System ~ SOUTHFIELD — The first step in plans to set up a master water supply system was taken by. the city council when it met with the City Planning Commission last night. * ¥ * The council authorized Mayor Donald L. Swanson and City Clerk: Patrick Flannery to sign a con- tract with the Southeastern Oak- jland Water Authority which will jclear the way for the city to nego- jtiate with Detroit for water when lthe plan gets under way. — ek ke the planning commission Monday when the matter will be a further. : Electric Auto Plans on Shelf Because of Cost SAN- DIEGO, Calif. ‘®—Pro. | duction plans for an electric , automobile have received a tem- porary setback. x -« & Plans te produce the car have been shifted to Germany or Ja- pan, Dr. Charles Graves, execu- tive vice president of Stinson Aircraft Tool & Engineering Corp., said yesterday. Costs of manufacturing in this country appeared too high, he added. x * * The council will meet again with) Finds New Career at 16. By LEE WINBORN ROMEO — Robert J. Kost felt he was a square peg in a round! hole until he took up creative writ- ing and became an overnight suc- cess. wrote appears in this month's is- sue of Esquire magazine. It is en- titled “A Girl For Me.” Since’ its publication, with offers from leading publish- ing houses and authors’ agents who are interested in his future works. “No new fame or success will give me more of a thrill, though, than selling miy first story,” Kost, who is 46,‘said today. He describes himself as being “rather short, a little tao heavy and losing a little hair.” He is married and the father of two, a daughter, Julie, 17, and a sori, Marc, 15. The Kosts live at 421 N: Bailey St. Kost’s success story starts back in January 1958,. when his.- wife, Vonnie, sensing her husband's cur- rent restlessness, suggested that he take an aptitude test in Detroit to see just where his talents lay. Analysis of the comprehensive two-day examination pointed di- rectly to the field of creative writ- ing. Kost works in the engineering department of a Detroit cutting tool plant. “Actually I got into this phase of the cutting tool trade during World War Il and am now well paid and fairly successful. Conse- quently my employers couldn't un- derstand my discontentment,’’ said Kost. , ENROLLED AT U. OF M. The next ‘move in this saga of success is that the fledgling au- the new ~ Romeo author has been deluged - Romeo Author Makes the Grade. |thor enrolled in a course in cre-| for three years he studied at the iM ‘effort was. “A Girl For Me.” Kost t§ a man of many talents. ‘ative writing at the University of| Detroit Conservatory of Music Michigan. And his first productive and the Detroit Institute of Mu- sical Arts. | He was just beginning to achieve He has a rich, tenor voice and ja reputation as a soloist when a The first short story Kost ever ~ Pentiac Press Phote FIRST STORY CLICKS — Forty-six-year-old Robert J. Kost of Romeo took a course in creative writing after an aptitude test showed that was the field where his capabilities lay. The test | throat allergy forced him to give) up singing. A quiet, unassuming person, Kost, also has made his mark as an ac- my having appeared in a number of productions by the Romeo Play- ers. Further proof of his artistic versatility is his hobby which is portrait sculpture. * * * The budding middle-aged novel- ist wrote ‘‘A Girl For Me” in six hours—“‘after thinking about ft for six months,”’ he said. “IT don't know now if I can ever equal it.’ Kost said humbly. “It had all the elements of adolescent psychology and human tragedy which will be hard to duplicate.” HAS WRITTEN MORE Not resting on his new-found laurels, Kost has written two more stories, both now under considera- tion by two national magazines. When asked if he planned to write the “Great American Nov- el,” Kost sald, “This is all too new. Pve never thought about it, but I may.” When he does, he has numbers of contacts to draw from and an agent. Among the authors’ agencies. he has. heard from is Jacques Chamburn Inc. which rep- resents Ben Hecht, Somerset Maugham and Grace Metalious. * * * He also has had letters of en- couragement from several publish- ing houses including Thomas Y. Crowell, The Viking Press and Doubleday & Co. Inc. * * * “The worst part of this whole profession is the waiting—after the . proved accurate when Kost’s first short story was accepted for pub-~ stories are written—until I find out lication. He is employed in the engineering department of a pretreat cutting tool plant. ? if they’re sold,” Kost concluded wistfully. Blood Bank to Accept Donations Monday WALLED LAKE — The ;\Commerce Township Blood Bank | will accept donations from 2 until 8 p.m. next Monday at St. William Catholic Church at Walled Lake. %e i *, *. x ““Donotions may be credited to any blood bank, at the donor's request. Anyone from 18 to 58 years of age, inchisive, is eligible to do- gate to the bank. However, donors under 21 years of age must pre- sent written permission from a parent or guardian unless mar- ried or a member of the Armed Forces, Appointments may be arranged by contacting Mrs. Edward Genack (EMpire 3-3806.) x « *& Residents of Commerce Town- ship and the city of Walled Lake may obtain blood from. the bank upon request, according to Mrs. Genack, official of the blood bank staff. Graves also said production has been set back 12 months while foreign production sites are studied. bd * Several pilot models, which -feature a home-charging battery * Rochester Rd. bg * * i Funeral arrangements are pend. ing today at William Sullivan & 3 Se ee yee “ft SERAWLINNG COMMUNITY ~: Watted Lalbe ty couty one of bpd gg growing municipalities in Oakland County. The city, with a population of 2,569, is currently planning a festive homecoming patade, under the Chamber of — beards for the event, which will | charges, os that would ran 77. miles between have been produced here by Stinson. The company | expected an initial retail price of $2,300, dropping te $2,000 as | | production increased. Fire in College Building | JACKSON (P—The east wing of; the John George Hall administra- ition building at Jackson Junor! \College was damaged by fire Mon-; \day night. The damage was con-' ifined to a lounge in the building. INo injuries were reported. blaze was believed to have been| lcaused “by an _ overheated in-) ‘cinerator in the basement. | SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — Virginia Colombo and Ernest F. Kulaszewski were united in mar- riage Saturday in solemn High Mass at St. Veronica Catholic Church, East Detroit. The Revs. <4 Jerome P. Shanahan, Edward Wal- ling and Thomas Litka officiated at the double-ring ceremony. Virginia is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Colombo of 12101 Big Lake Rd., here. Ernest's par- ents are the Adolph Kulaszewskis of Redmond avenue in East De- troit. : A gown of soft nylon tulle over silk “I Do’’ taffeta featur- ing a shawl collar with re-em- broidered decals of organza was chosen by the bride. Each decal was accented by tiny seed pearis and borealis sequins. The billowy .skirt offset by a tulle drape, ed in a chapel train. Her fingertip veil of illusion was secured by a Swedish crown of French lace accented with se- quins and seed pearls. Virginia carried a white orchid and stepha- 'notis centered on a mother-of-pearl] ‘topped prayer book. was accented by decals and end- — Rosalie Marino of Detroit served | ‘as maid of honor. Bridesmaids iwere Grace Russo of Center Line, Carolyn Russo of Davisburg, Jean| Clark and Marguerite George of} Ann Arbor and Madge Kulaszew-| ski of East Detroit. Attending as best man was William Forton of East Detroit | | Virginia Colombo Wed in Double-Ring Rites MRS. ERNEST F. KULASZEWSKI and ag ushers were Robert and David Kulaszewski of East De- troit, brothers of the bridégroom. James and Joseph Kotcher of Center Line and William Rog- ers of St, Clair Shores, A dinner and reception was held in the evening at Alcamo’s Hall, ‘St. Clair Shores. Upon returning from a honey- lmoon in Northern Michigan, the jcouple will reside in Ypsilanti from September until June, at which time the bride will attend Eastern Michigan University. Limp Got Trouble, Not ‘Subscriptions’ ROYAL OAK — Arraigned on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses, Dennis R. Hall, 22, of T16 N. Edison St., stood mute yesterday before Recorder's Judge Murphy in Detroit. Hall is’ accused of soliciting subscriptions supposedly for in- mates of the Dearborn Veterans Hospital in a confidence game. According to Detroit Police, Hall fooled his vitcims by limp- ing into their homes, saying he was just released from the vet- erans hospital. Police say he crossed himself; up when he forgot to limp on his way out of one apartment. The suspicious dweller alerted the police. | Adventists Announce _ Annual Camp Meeting GRAND LEDGE (#—The Mich- igan conference of the Seventh Day. Adventists’ 91st annual camp meeting wil] start at the church’s S4-acre property here Thursday. More than 4,000 church members are expected to attend the nine- day convocation which will be ad- dressed by hationa] and interna- tional church leaders. The. campsite which represents an investment of $800,000 has 131 permanent cabins; an infirmary, hotel, cafeteria and other modern facilities. " Ful cianksed Greets First Day Every Inch of Grounds Filled With Displays; Judging Begins Today IMLAY CITY—The East- ern Michigan Fair got off to a bang-up start last night with the grandstand a “complete sell-out,” Ken- neth Ruby, fair secretary, said today. ~ “It was the biggest crowd we ever had in the grand- stand,” Ruby reported en- thusiastically. He added that every inch of the fairgrounds is filled with displays and exhibits in all departments are “breaking all existing rec- ords.” x « * There are 50 riding horses in the stalls, 60 pens of sheep and 2% head ‘of cattle in the barns, Ruby said, oan.) The Fieral Hall, where exhib- itors display their canned geods, produce, grains, baked goods and other farm and home items, is filled to overflowing. Commercial exhibit space also ts sold out with a complete variety of farm machinery and equipment presented for public viewing. x « * Last night’s opening was marked by the traditional flag-raising cere- wed followed by an auto thrill wf eS Today is judging day in the Flo- tal Hall and for +H livestock de- partments, Beginning at 7:30 p.m. Lapeer county firemen will have their annual tug of war, and at 8 p.m. the horse-pulling contest will be staged. DRAW FOR RACES A behind-the-sceres activity to day will be the drawing to see ;which horses ‘will be entered in the harness races which begin to- ‘morrow night, Ruby said, x ¥ -*£ Also on the schedule tomorrow is the judgirig of dairy cattle: and horses. Thursday’s program will fea- ture of livestock at 16 a.m. and harness racing again at $8 p.m. Friday is judging day for all Fu- ijture Farmers of America} depart- |ments at 10 a.m., the tractor haul- ling contest at 1 p.m. and harness racing at night. * Over 200 trotters and pacers are expected to race for the $19,000 in purse money with top horses from leading area tracks to be repre- sented, the sé@cretary said, ‘ * * * A total of over 75,000 people are expected to attend this yedr’s fair which is billed as ‘‘the biggest and -best’’ in its 61-year history. 7 t} marching with thei Commerce's sponsorship, for the last weekend in August. The parade will be 28, at the Walled Lake Casino, for the selection of Mrs. Lion Club of 1959. rs ‘ girls colorful floats, bands playing, and children- ot Bxotestve Ponting Prete Adtial Phots pets’ The male population of Walled Lake is growing “Parade judges will award prizes for the cutest pets and for the include a coronation ball the evening of Aug. _ bicycles. The parade will be held Sunday, Aug. 30. 3 | . } EERE PSS OSS PHOENIX — Navajo bridge itf Prize for Painting i ot aes south points of the Grand Canyon, is 616 feet.Jong and 467 feet above the water level. . 8 in Art Show NEWBURYPORT, Mass, (UPI) | — A 22-year-old paralytic, who paints with a brush held between | his teeth, was declared the win- fi i} ner of the first prize at the annual Newburyport Art Associa- tien show, ; Glen Fowler of Beverly, Mass., whe lost the use of hig arms and legs after suffering a broken neck in an automobilé accident five years ago, took the award ter his entry in the mixed media division, Fowler took a correspondence course from a Westport, Conn., artist to perfect his talents. It took him months te learn how te direct the brush with his teeth. NOW Shows Start at 7:00 & 9:10 Thurs. ADULTS 70c CHILDREN 20¢ ‘Congressmen Voted F~|* WASHINGTON # — How Michi-|!® (SIXTEEN, , _THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, avoesr 4, 1950 | ‘ ek ; ae . : Swear ‘ of women’ high- Navajo Bridge long = |Paralytic Wins ‘How Michigan’ 5 Pumped for Answer ene nen. nd the explana, MADISON, ‘Wis. (UPT) — John|tion is that he was rehearsing for Frahm, a University ef Wisconsin), college production of “Du Barry recently broke a bone|Was a Lady.” Greenland has an estimated area miles. P to tell appened. [San memes ot cor eretT voten: (But the fact is that John fell while'a¢ $26,000. square -| On Long (D-La) motion adopt- ed 49-42, to send back to committee a bill to eliminate loyalty ‘oath requirement from National De- fense Education Act (in effect kill- ing the bill): against—Sens. Mc- Namara (D), Hart (D). partments: for—McNamara. Not voting—Hart. , 230-87, of bill author- American signed to expand economic growth of Latin America: For — Reps. Chamberlain (R), Cederbert (R), Griffin (R), Griffiths (D), Lesin- ski (D), Machrowicz (D), ‘Meader (RY, O'Hara (D), - ley ®), Bennett (R), Hoffma (R), Johnsen (R), Knox (R), Not voting MA 4-3135. LATE SHOW STARTS AT 10:1 — DRIVE-IN HEATRE Twn — Broomfield ‘(R), Diggs (D), Dingell (D), Ford (R), Rabaiit (D), On Passage, 279-136, of $3,186,- 500,000 foreign aid appropriation bill:. For—Broomfield (R), Cham- berlain (R), Diggs (D), Dingell (D), Ford (R), Griffin (R), Grif- fiths (D), Lesinski (D), Machrow- icz (D), Meader (R), O’Hara (D). Against — Bennett (R), Bentley (R), Cederbert (R), Hoffman (R), Johansen ' *(R), Knox (R). Not vot- ing — Rabaut (D). |He Doesn't Want TAKING ADVANTAGE — These office girls etijoy their lunch in one of Toledo's four down- ‘yesterday. The downtown stores are fighting to hold their retail business, and are experimenting with the lure of trees and flowers. me °] w “GANG WAR” “ENCHANTED ISLAND” Starts WEDNESDAY 2-BiIG HITS-—2 DEBORAH KEPR YUL BRTNNER ANATOLE LITVAK'S THE JOURNEY ISUN ROBARDS JR TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — town Toledo, fighting to hold its retail business from the lure of shopping centers in the outskirts, is using some of the tricks of its suburban rivals. The city began Monday a 43-day trial of four downtown pedestrian malls, complete with grass, trees, flowering shrubs, blooming flow- ers, benches, and a playground for the kiddies. PENGUINS FROM Z00 And to top what the shopping centers offer, the malls include jan — pool containing five town shopping malls which officially opened People Exclaim: ‘About Toledo’s New Malls Down-penguins from the Toledo Zoo and brick, and the busy bustle of ve- ‘We at other spots Saturday from the Toledo Museum of Art. All this where only four days ago were only asphalt, cement, hicular traffic. * * * Thousands of Toledoans_ re- sponded as the malls officially opened, milling through the four- block area, and, as was hoped, dropping in at the stores around it to browse and buy. *® * * Inspector Frank Baumgartner, head of the Police Traffic Bureau, Hollywood Headlines: : All Passes Void During This Engagement smu ne Fred MacMURRAY .. Jean HAGEN TORY YAR ANNETTE FUICELLO: TM CONSEORE “HEN eer ORCA Roger Smith By BOB THOMAS - AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Roger, Smith passed unnoticed ‘in the already slender frame, and his hair was close - cropped. But his = ‘spirits were bright, as any man’s would be after return- ing from a brush with death. Roger is one of the new crop, of stars created by television. He iplays one of the slick sleuths of ithe hit show, “77 Sunset Strip.” 'He also scored as Rosalind Rus- |sell’s grown- up nephew in ‘Auntie Mame.” — TONIGHT — Box Office Open'7 P.M. BLUE SKY VE IN THEATER Ps Show Starts 8:20 P.M. *\ & CLOVER PRODUCTION. A COLUMBIA PICTURE SORRY, MERCHANT PASSES CANNOT BE ACCEPTED DURING THIS ENGACEMENT Seasappuocensoscsscveccosasuccdene®’ ' we ~ . j . - Life was full for Roger. . He was making money, had a happy a marriage with actress Victoria H/shaw, and they, were, blessed with, THE THe each After Brush With Death football at the University of Ari- -|Pain tortured him for five days, "|then vanished. He returned home, Full of Life zona, Rest was prescribed. But he began suffering massive jheadaches and had to be hospital- ‘ized. This time he was said to have had strained neck ligaments, ,and he was placed in traction. painted his garage and did some interviews. But the pain returned. Now he was told he-had mi- graine headaches and was given sedatives and tranquilizers. * * * “I could think about nothing but the pain,’”’ he recalled, “One night I lost the power to speak. My arm became paralyzed, then my tongue .and my cheek. The pain was so great I went off my rocker. I rolled on the floor, rocking my head from side to side, trying to find some comfort." They said Roger had a nervous breakdown and sent him to a pri- vate sanitarium. He prescribed a two-week treatment. But his wife felt he needed more help, and she brought in a psychiatrist-neurolo- gist. He recognized Roger's trou- ble as physical and tested him at another hospital. The tests re- vealed. a massive blood -clot. ab x 0) Sean © Fred MactMURAAY Jean HAGEN ! UNION LAKE RD. NOW SHOWING Po Like It’ said traffic on the rims of the malls was heavy but kept flow- ing smoothly. * * * Michael Yamin, president of La- Salle’s Department Store, said the mall idea was ‘‘a shot in the arm for downtown Toledo. It looks ex- tremely promising.’ First 3 Shots, Fourth Is Best Arkansas’ polio epidemic.. ““T want palo att. be sae my fourth polio shot,”’ he asked. J. Easley, assistant state health, officer. | “Oh, I haven't had the first! three,” the man said, “I just) want the fourth one. I've heard | that’s the best.” The number of shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange in 1958 was 747,058,306, compared, with 559,946,890 shares in 1957. | \ Mrs. Paul Rausch of Napoleon, Ohio, here with her husband, said: “We came only out of curiosity, but I like the atmosphere and we'll be back. It’s a big improve- ment.” MOST SENSIBLE Carl Clymer of Fremont, Ohio, | said the mall was “by far the|l’ most sensible thing Toledo has ever done to improve business conditions.” To get space for the malls the! city shat off two block’ each of! Adams Street and Madison Ave- nue between Huron and St. Clair) Streets. Thirteen bus lines were rerouted. * * * Over the week end 150 work-' men placed 2,400 feet of asphalt curb to outline curving walkways down the center of the mall blocks, Eighty tons of topsoil was|} WALLED LAKE 7) | bbe i 4cotes Woead Special | This Week Only! } THE DEL RAES Daringly Different | Aerial Thrillers | SRA; PHONE FFORRE TORKTAND: Features at 1:40, 8:40, 5:40, 7340, 0:45 Tchaikovsky and Five WALT DISNEY’S Delightful Song Hits! “GRAND Prices for This Attraction | DOORS catare soe autinee =| GANYON” | Pen at starts FRIDAY! AUDREY HEPBURN m FRED ZINNEMANN'S prooucox o THE. NUN'S STORY PETER. FINCH TECHNICOLOR® DAME EDITH.EVANS DAME PEGGY ASHCROFT DEAN JAGGER em mioreo OUNNOCE, SCREENPLAY BY ROBERT ANDERSON PRODUCED BYHENRY BLANKE oecctee o FRED 2iNWEMARD NOW! STRAND Open 10:45 Regular Prices ALR CONDITIONED COMFORT 25cto 1:00 Pi va, THE. ROBE” 11:25 — 3:45 — 8:00 P. M. DIATORS” 1:40 — 5:55 ——— 10:15 P. M. THE GREATEST PICTURES EVER MADE! TWO 0 VICTOR MATURE © SUSAN HAYWARD © JEAN SIMMONS 20th Confury-Fex Presents in. sccmeammamannnen leveled back of the new curbs and ceed with 350 square yards of The workmen set ge . en] trees, more than 100 sh some 10,000 flowering iatits, To! ledo nurserymen supplied these at cost. Open New Expressway West of Saginaw SAGINAW, Mich. — A one. 1 million dollar, four-mile express-| way reconstruction project on M46- TWO FREE SHOWS NIGHTLY! Tuesdays and Thursdays FAMILY BARGAIN NIGHTS 47 west of Saginaw was opened to traffic Monday, ‘ It extends from the Tittabawas- see River Bridge west and basical- ly is designed to smooth the flow of north-south traffic around the west edge of Saginaw. ALL ] O° RIDES ADULTS & CHILDREN Free Admission—Free Parking PONTIAC é EM 3-066! ADULTS 80c ‘ CHILDREN 25¢ ° - ‘Susueuusenecenseans THE HORSE SOLDIERS VEIN Tea t e PONTIAC STARTS | 4 4 THURSDAY : % PREMIER SHOWING! IN OAKLAND COUNTY of This FOUR-STAR MASTERPIECE! DRIVE-IN THEATER 243 Dix oc Hwy a | fi Suri: ‘oor OWNDY Ragas /caser nit CASEY ROGNGON / HENRY Kin /EowaD Wu A WevEnnLorremmanonn, Rerund =) ar eempeny Into Possible Link of Auto Fumes, Disease Michigan's Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams parried questions about his during a news tions about his political futere conference at which he ‘said New York’s Gov, 15 West Huron. Street PONTIAC, MICHIGAN * | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. AUGUST 4, 1959 SEVENTEEN Former TV Contestant. _ {34.000 question television, program : POP LL Lan : tim 1956. Death Notice | li h R | Cokechah heahatatahatabad ) Ohne by Hs Wife < aco pu =oT6M Considers pecics wie. |Williams Might:Run vere —— N Betsy G. McCutchen has been|ledns, was awarded poved of | ‘DR. CLARENCE L PHILLIPS Guest Ge of Ex-Sergeant fc | = aemeae see zr Cancer Probe fFxSerse=n" | lor Governor Again * Opameria . rose to nationwide atten ns ne | mony: Details of: the “exparation . William H. Suggs’ wife received 206 Cepliol Barings and \ attention on the agreement were not disclosed. May Finance Research two letters from the U.S. Army! can JUAN, Puerto Rico “(uPD— \ PHONE FE 4-3241 nie tate \. \ \ COME, SAVE! WEDNESDAY | DETROIT (UPD —General Monday DOUBLE Los A ; 6 . os wy e) : ever undertaken by a single auto- There is “ h. ” he will left for work three re no chance’ he w mobile company. hotrs belove. {bad to come home| for the United States Senat.|an 770 0g ; and CONSOLIDATION of DEBTS Your Beste to buy fae: auallty Se Summer and A spokesman and convince her I was alive.” (Michigan already has two Demo- ells of M eetings vacation goods at low, prices... however, that the project has | Suggs, a janitor, retired from|cratic senators. prov GET TWICE AS not progressed beyond the “con- ithe Army in 1958 Te per} As for running for governor of Ike and Mr. K * inp: wwe Tour Home ; - versational stage.” cent medical disability. again, Williams said ‘I haven't . “The or ja under study but “The letters all gave my right ruled out’’ the possibility of a WASHINGTON = — The Voice * Consolidate All Faymenss - MANY STAMPS no commitments have been made,”|name, my rank and my serial seventh term. of America told thé world Monday Save All That Interest Money S said the GM spokesman in New number,” he said. “It was all right x & * of President Eisenhower’s ex- * Pay Off recon te Mortgages ee for yourself the big bargains for your family @ | york. —all except for that one thing. Asked if he considered himself|-hange of meetings this fall with or Land Con and home. Be here when doors open 9: “ini A. M. All officials of General Motors a candidate for the Democratic). i. premier Nikita S. Khru- 1! You Have et Equity were in New. York attending a Alli N | presidential nomination, Williams|)) oy DOUBLE STAMPS board meeting. eS NO onger said “No, I do not.” But he also|™'°"*Y * Low Interest Bate , Another GM_ spokesman ex- said he would not and could not} A spokesman for the govern- 12 to 15 Yesr Terms -,,governor of Michigan. future political plans Monday and it added up to: He might be a candidate for an unprecedented seventh term as He could be a candidate for and diehard’’ Legislature. the Democratic presidential nomination. He could be a ‘candidate for the Democratic vice presidential nomination. the national average. Nelson Rockefeller would be the strongest Republican candidate. He also fielded some sharp ques- tions about Michigan's financial woes, which he blamed on a ‘‘tough He cited Michigan's industrial growth, -which he said, is above Voice of America uoarep paixina at rear or sonoma «6 OPPO PCPCC LLL LL Lahde MORTGAGES for Home Improvements WITH THESE BIG ATTRACTIONS plained that the idea was proposed do anything to “remove or inject’’ himself’ ment agency said the President's into the La) ‘Occupy’ Germany BONN, Germany (UPI) — West Germany's NATO Allies formally abandoned their status as an-army of occupation Monday. Ambassadors of six Western nations signed agreements in Bonn formally regulating the status of their troops in Western Germany. some time ago and that officials of the Sloan-Kettering Institute proposed drawing up a contract. He said there were still many discussions to be held concerning just what form the investigation would take and how much jt would cost, as well as how big an area would be involved in the study. If the study were undertaken, presidentia]| announcement was broadcast in 37 languages to 80 countries. The newscasts, the spokesman said, stressed that the exchange meeting is not one for negotiating of international differences, but an opportunity to increase under- standing between two major pow- ers. ; OPERATORS ON DUTY 24 HOURS A DAY Ask for Mortgage Department Big Bear Construction Co. 92 West Huron Pontiac picture. As for being a vice presidential possibility, Williams dodged that. by saying “I am still in the busi- ness of being governor. I anticipate ney in politics until the day I ie.”’ Williams answered the ques- FREE APPRAISALS Free Consultation Service om 99°. © $3 Ladies 1" e ny Cannes 49° e ia ane Cc Bath Towels 1 19 2 di 77 © Birdseye Diapers © 1.99 Ladies’ Bermudas © 1.29 Boys’ ie (8 ‘ it include chemical | The agreements meant that the Shirts " 9 : re 1 enatyelo ot er a fumes te | troops of the six nations—Britain, . : isolate any materials that might | the United States, France, Can- ~ © Girls’, Boys’ © 69c Men's be suspected of eausing cancer. | 8da, Belgium and Holland—no longer have the status of occu- piers of a conquered country. Henceforth their standing will be, exactly the same as that of Amer-) ican forces in Britain, France and other NATO nations. The new agreement means that West German courts now have the right to try Allied troops and de- pendents for non-military crimes committed off-base. It would also inveive “trapping’”’ Play Shorts air in congested areas with heavy concentrations of auto traffic, such as Times Square, New York. ~ Auto exhaust fumes, including |o hydrocarbons and oxides of nitro- Underwear 74 N. SAGINAW ST.... FREE PALKING lung and skin cancers as well as iother diseases, but no positive ets ever has been proven. Brace-Smith Funeral. Honie Insured Funeral. Arrangement Plan Marathon Mountaineer Up 31 Peaks in 27 Days DENVER (AP)—Cleveland Mc- Carty, 26, a Denver dental stu- dent at Washington University in St. Louis, is four days ahead of schedule in his attempt to scale all 54 of Colorado’s 14,000-foot peaks in as many days. ' He has climbed 31 of the peaks in 27 days. He took the day off Monday, resting at Buena Vista before at- tempting to conquer Missouri Mountain, Mt. Beoford and Mt. Oxford today. —— 4%, ‘Liberal Pasty Head Asks for International Cabinet LONDON (#—Joe Grimond, \ead- jes of Britain’s once powerful Lib- eral Party, proposed today that an international cabinet composed of Western heads of state be created. He also suggested the establish- ment of a Western foreign min- Pays for funeral expenses regardless of where death occurs. Can be used to pay for all FUNERAL ‘ EXPENSES. Please ca!! or write us for further details at no obligation. Earl J. Smith istry. Grimond spoke at Oxford Uni- versity. He said his idea would give Western chiefs of State a chance to talk over general lines of coordinated policy. Brace-Smith. Funeral Home 138 W. Lawrence St. FE 5-0738 MODEL DH-2980 - Gibson —— — Eddie Steele Gives Expert Service OUR NEW ELECTRONIC SCILLISCOPE Takes All the Guess- Work Out of Car & Truck Service. DEHUMIDIFIER © PUTS AN END to TOOLS WON'T RUST! STOPS WOOD ROT! PIPES WON'T DRIP! — DRAWERS WON'T STICK! Ends Damage From Mildew Brand new floor mats with paint job $5.83 a Mo. Four brand new tires with genuine Ford remanufactured engine installed complete $27.24 Mo. Universal joint re-pack with Fordo- F R E E matic adjustment special $14.95 STARTING AT 7:00 A.M. EVERY DAY Free pick-up and delivery—Bus to downtown runs past the door LET US DRIVE YOU TO WORK OR HOME Accident damage repaired so you can’t tell it. _ BETTER SERVICE-BETTER DEAL—You Get BOTH From EDDIE S| 2705 ORCHARD LAKE RD. MODEL DH-2981 SHOWN $119.95 The new Gibson Trimline dehumidifier eliminates moisture damage and the discomforts of high humidity. in game rooms, basements, laundriés and workshop . . . turns these areas into livable, usoble space. Just plug Dampness! in and immediately Gibson starts wringing moisture out of the air. ... | ; | Removes as much as 3 gallons of moisture a day from your rooms. - : , | F FE j E FORD Operates for pennies a day _ saves dollars in repairs! KEEGO HARBOR | Harwew ourobon rownoom — Scvestrot On UC kad i tp ‘ j « va 4 A Ps ri ° . . Ste ores ~ Fs . ¢ ‘ ‘ ‘ “ , f r Be ox ' ¢ ‘ ™ ‘ o : . : - oe \ : . - : : ‘ : ’ ’ j ; . ; ! = + = i f be : P . . : . jeoe ae Pata : \ j S : : t : : ods A ; s ® Fi BS \ ; ‘ ’ <. » 8 eS . ; 1 4 fa PGT tala Hiteacanht, cis Rar aigitws:, i ee eager ‘ ' ruer AERP EEeeeeey Tae ee e ate + L “THE PONTIAC PRESS, _rupSDAY, AUGUST 4,-1959 ry = VS VV wa CT SES OU CULL UU } Lp on MIL ie pes, Sete CON Sel tn et From the Press Box We are losing the battle with Russia for dominance - of Olympic sports. This is the opinion rendered by| Bob Richards, two-time Olympic champion and three-| time U. S. decathlon king. Rev. Richards points to statistics which show that Russia has 1,000 competitors to every single American participating in Olympic sports. To help the U. S. cause in the physical education of our youth, he urges a nationwide summer program laid out by individual communities. This brings up the question—what has happened to . the Pontiac Junior Olympics? x * * . Once a great local attraction for youngsters the Junior games moved from bnipublictzed obscurity to jin *hothing. . They had peak years from 1948 through 1952 and they could claim much of the credit for the great track years of Pontiac Central from 1953 ’til now. But now the last of the products of those Junior Olympics are moving out of the high school scene and how Pontiac holds its prestige as a track power on the’ state prep scene, remains to be seen. x * * . Next year would be a great time to revive the Junior Olympics and in 1961 when the city celebrates its cen- tennial anniversary, the pageantry of the World Olym- pics in miniature .would add: color to the celebration and be Pontiac’s answer to Rev. Richards’ plea for com- munity response to U. S. Olympic needs. DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX “Remember Willie DeWalt, Pontiac Central’s outstand- ing all-state basketball ace of a couple years back? He will undergo a second operation on his arm Wednesday morning in Pontiac General. Willie sustained an arm injury with fractures in the elbow and wrist down at Florida A & M.where he is now attending school. : Wo: He went through the elbow operation and now must have surgery on the wrist. “Doctors say I'l be ready by October and so I hope to play basketball this winter,” Willie says. DeWalt transferred to the Florida school from Central Michi- gan in the spring of 1958. He played four games-in the second semester this year, having to wait out a year under transfer rules. x* * * VIVA FRANCONA! ; Frank Lane of ‘the Cleveland Indians says “Viva Tito Francona, it was my best deal sinct coming to Cleve- * Jand.” " ; It. we recall, Francona. was the gay to whom the Tigers gave a first baseman’s mitt and kept him shagging loose balls near the dugout in Lakeland. His batting average for the last 20 games is about .450, and if you’re interested Gail Harris is batting .209, and Larry Osborne .207 for the Tigers. ‘Eddie Wins NSSA .410 Crown World Record for Brow (Special to The reanes Press) ata Skeet Shooting Assn. LOS ANGELES w — The fate of a future second All-Star Game appeared uncertain today. Baseball Commissioner Frick said he planned to take an- other vote of the players shortly to learn whether they want to con- tinue the second. game for next year. * x * “I don't think they're for it,” he said” ‘However, it’s their game and they'll have to make the de- cision. If they vote against it. ‘I'll drop the game. I don't want to detract from the original one n any way. tor at yesterday’s second All- Star game of the year, won by the American League 5-3. There were pro and cons among the players themselves, * * * “Yes, we the Yankees- voted for it,’ said- New York catcher Yogi Berra whose two-run -homer was the difference yesterday. “Else we wouldn't be out nere- It’s for a good cause.” “But if we have another one, I'd like to see both games played in a space of five days. Then everything wouldn’t be crammed into such short notice like this one.”* .Los Angeles pitching ace Don Drysdale, who was charged with tie National League's defeat, agreed with Berra, x * * ; “This game has been badly pre- sented to the public,” said, “It’s for a great cause. I can’t understand why people are against it. The most vehement of the dis- sidents were Early Wynn, the veteran Chicago White Sox pitch- er, and Frank Malzone, flashy Boston Red Sox third baseman. “T think two All-Star games are stupid,’’ said Wynn, “‘] said so be- fore and I have seen no reason to change my mind.” ‘“‘We just won,” said Malzone, “and nobody gives a damn, This AMERICAN LEAGUE YESTERD. RESULTS . American a bo All-Stars 5, National oie Biot fot Betis Cleveland EOnce 4 “4 S77 «#3 Baltimore _..... 530 53 500 «11 Kansas City . 51 51 500 11 New York ...... 50 $2 490 12 Detroit ........ 51 55 424i 13 Boston -& 58 437 17% Wi 62 40 20% 43 TODAY'S Games ). ashington, 7:05 p.m.—Per- = "ome p ew York. 7 Tonctay (13-7) ERE = bots | Future Fate Uncertain | Players Speak Pro-Con on 2nd All- Ford: Frick was an interested specta- | | Star Game dragging mv tail tomorrow.” * xk: - Outfielder Al Kaline of Detroit thought a second game was. not fair to the players. “There are five teams in the nant races,” he. said. ‘It’s not fair to ask them to use up the pitchers they need for the games that may decide the pen- “nant.”’ _Ted Williams and Stan Musial, two. of baseball's all-time greats and granddaddies in the All-Star business, both spoke enthusiasti- cally fo\two games. “I'm sure glad I was asked to play,’ said Musial. “I got a kick out of coming. I think most of the fellows feel the same way. They like to play.” All-Star game, whether :t’s one or two,” said Williams. ‘If the fans want two games, then I’m all for it, especially if it's played for a good cause.” Added Mickey Mantle: “‘] like it. I'll play anywhere, anytime they tell me. That's how I make my living.” is a farce and I’m going to be “It’s an honor to play in the| - BACK THE HARD WAY — Mickey Mantle of the American League All-Stars gets a mouthful of dirt as he dives back to first on an attempted pickoff play. Stan Musial of the Cardinals, play- ing first for the National League, the tag. Mantle -to steal second. tried to minke yesterday. The American League won, 5-3 in Los Angeles American eae All Siar Fven Count With NL ! Stenael's Team AP Wirepheote went out a moment later trying base. Umpire is Charlie Berry. Yankees Must Face Nemesis Tonight GEES LYNN HAVEN, Va. — Turning; in a world’s record 98x100, 14 _ year-old Eddie Brown of Birming- ham, Mich. yesterday captured the world’s junior .410 skeet cham- world championships here this week, were by veteran Alex Kerr of Beverley Hills, Calif, Kathy| Detroit at New, McDowell of Shreveport, La.,_Dave ,?™. City af Boston, 7:18 p.m. Yager of Anoka, Minn., Jay Dee or, Eatouris ey = a Senay (7-7) TOMORROW'S ——— ULE New York, 1 p Baltimore, ashington. 2. twi-night. 5 2, twi-night, 5:35 Boat Club’s senior eights present after winning their event at the Pionship, shooting against the fin- est youngsters in the world. The Michigan shotgunner’s score wis three targets under the former junior record. It was also the best of the day for | Michigan shooters. Chet Crites of | Kerr fired a record 99x100 to Detroit had 96x100. lretain ,his world’s .410 crown. Other top performances in the Miss McDowell won the ladies .410 title with 89x100; Yager is the pro champ with 9%6x100; Wil- liams won the sub-seniors with 95x Williams of D.C., and ill WwW . D.C, 'the team of a and T. H. Met- ‘wound up in a tie with H. E. chusetts for the team event. Gold Cuppers Make N. Y. won seniors .410 with 94 tler of Bakersfield, Calif, who, su Meyers and Floyd Scott of Massa-. 100 and R. R. Bogie of Loon Lake, |, p.m. “NA NAL LEAGUE, | = Lest Pet. Behind Memorial Trophy ‘are William in Port Dalhousie, Ontario. Kneeling by the CHAMPION EIGHTS — Crew of the Detroit a winning smile Hanley Regatta left: Pat Cogftll Jim McIntosh, Alan Pierrot, John Welchli, Gardiner, Tim Dinan and stroke’ Art Geiger. Lary fo Pitch First. Game of Eastern Trip Tiger Manager Happy Casey Snubbed Frank for All-Stars NEW YORK (UPI)—Frank Lary, New _ York’s No. 1 nemesis, will be on the mound tonight when the Detroit Tigers open a three-game jean, Leaguers Beats National Leaguers, 5-3 » Berra’s Two-Run Blast Puts AL Squad Ahead at Los Angeles LOS ANGELES ® — The count stood all square at one apiece for the 1959 All-Star classics between the American and National League today. And back-to the formal pennant races went the ball- players. Manager: Casey Stengel’s Amer- pinned a 5-3 defeat Fred Haney's Nationals as a ald. attendance of 54,982, fourth highest inthe game’s history, sat through. the game in sun-baked Memorial Coliseum yesterday. be victory avenged a 5-4 set- back absorbed by the Stengel men in the first All-Star game duly 7 at Pittsburgh. The game grossed $283,120 and netted, after taxes, $262,336.47. The All-Star game held last month in Pittsburgh grossed $229,- 636 and netted $194,303.46. Individual honors went to catch- er Yogi Berra of the Yankees, whose 2-run blast off Dodger pitcher Don Drysdale put the Americans in front, 3-1, in the third inning for’a lead they never relinquished. Oddly enough, this was Yogi's lith All-Star appearance but the first time he had hit for extra bases. Collective honors went to the American League pitchers who throttled such sluggers as Hank Aaron, Ernie Banks and Willie 'Mays. * * * The winning pitcher was 20-year- old Jerry Walker of Baltimore, who just a year ago was laboring for Knoxville, Tenn. in the Class A Sally League. , Walker, inserted into the squad just the afternoon before. yielded but one run and two hits in the three innings he worked. The loser was strikeout artist Don Drysdale of the Dodgers. who was voted the Most Valuable series against the fading world ‘champion Yankees. Lary boasts a 20-5 life-time mark! against the Yankees, including four | wins and no losses this year. He was forced to go 10 innings for his most recent triumph over New York, gaining a 1-0 decision on July 26 when pinch-hitter Neil Chrisley lined a two-out single te score Gail Harris from sec- ond, Despite his mastery over the Yankees, Lary was snubbed by'| New York manager Casey Stengel for a pitching berth in each of the two All-Star games this sum-' mer, x *& * ° AP Wirephote captain and coxswain Bob Kroll. Standing from o of Birmingham, Pat Callahan, Jim Chicago ........ Pittsburgh (ape roma wees —S8pahn ( cel incinnat! at Los Angeles, Hot anger aris i Peay (49) vs. Williams ( Podres ( Pit! at St. Louis, 8 p.m.—Law (11-7) gt ay Ray i thusags 3 poncteberts HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI) — Own- ers of the first two of six teams to 100. Kad Qualifying Trials SEATTLE (AP) — Five boats scheduled qualifying efforts today Finsterwald’s Golf tay OM me scuEDUL make up the new professional foot- Soy ot fis cies, . 8 Dm. ball league said today there will bE seem wk —— » ne oY p.m. be no “cut-throat competition’’ be- ,tween the American Football League and the current National Tip: ‘Football League. p: | Millionaire oilman K. S. (Bud) for next Sunday’s Gold Cup un- limited hydroplane race on Lake Washington, KOL-Roy of Seattle was to try) to do what her sister boat, KOL-. Roy Too, failed to do yesterday—, turn three laps of the course at an average speed of 95 miles per hour or better. Aim Before By DOW FINSTERWALD 1958 PGA Champion The player not lining himself up jcorrectly is like a hunter shooting vA 7 at a rabbit without aiming. Others listed for qualifying Thot's why I consider properly rounds were Miss Spokane, the lining up the shot next in impor- Pay ’n Save of Seattle, the Mav- tance to the grip. Even a fine erick of Lake Mead Nev., and Swing that is well grooved is mis- the Breathless II of Oakland, SPent if you fail to put yourself Calif. jon target. Ever so many golfers lack a concept of how to get prop- State Men Finish High erly lined up, and to the definite |detriment of their score. LANSING — A pair of Michi-| The first step is approaching gan sharpshooters have taken sec- the ball (in my case a Dunlop) ond and third place in the .22 cali- from directly behind it on an ber pistol- championships of the) imaginary line from the ball te National Guard at Camp Perry,| to the objective. Step twe in ad- Obio, state guard headquarters an-| dregsing the ball is to ves the | nounces. feet close together on the line Dorr F. Wiltse of Ionia took sec-| directly opposite the ball. ord honors with a score of 858 | You will notice in following tour- zoints out ofa possible 900. Al- inamert golf that most of the bet- ate a Rehr teal m Clemens iter players stand up to the line of = i 7 a - fight with their feet only slightly arrell rover of the Mon-|s5ar: before assuming their final tana ‘heard fopped some 250 er- lalance. tries to w'n the champiorthip wit) ba Ad goore of 839. he reason is that this is # start- 2 +> ‘Lug yoint trom which ghey can [move into their stance fof any shot fears rees! i 117, Sell: az) 'from 8 iron to driver. ee - At this point, 1 systematically on the club even a half inch can lead to sliding, hooking and other shot-dissipating headaches, Adams, 36, said he will definitely field a team from Houston and that he will be the sole owner of the team. It is the second team to be entered. Lamar Hunt, 26, who will field a team from Dallas and was the driving force be behind the nip tion of the new league, was hand when Adams announced nis entry into the circuit. They said that there would def- initely be four more teams ready for the 1960 season, and that they Modified Hardtops Race Here Tonight Don Porter of Flint will be out to make it two in a row when the modified hardtops return to ‘the M-59 ‘Speedway tonight. Last week the hardriding Flint pilot held off the last lap charges of Joe Doyle and Joy Fair. The: recently reopened local You Shoot check my grip to make sure my hands are in propér position on the club. Moving the hands out .of position Harahan, club would be announced within the| next 30 days. They are expected to be from New York, Denver,! Los Angeles and the Minneapolis-\a St. Paul area. . Two additional teams will be added in 1961. Hunt and Adams, both million- aires, said the new league has a verbal agreement with the Nation- al Football League to honor each other’s contracts and that there will be an unlimited television pol- icy. “There will be two separate player drafts," Hunt explained. “If a player is drafted by both leagues, he can take his choice.” Hunt said that the American League will be able to televise anywhere in NFL territory, but there is no definite television con- nection at present. “It will be sold as a league,” he said. Adams, a wealthy man in his own right and president of the Ada Oil Co., is the son of K, 8. (Boots) Adams, chairman of the board of Phillips Petroleum Cv. Hunt is the son of H. E.. Hunt of Dallas, reputed to be one of the richest men in the world. Hunt said his only’ connection with the league once it is formed will be as owner of the Dallas ‘éam. Adams said he ig going to 4ry to get Pice Institute Stadium for the Huston team’s uge during the 1969 speedway seems to have cured iis car-shortage problem, with! over thirty competing in each of the last two programs at the track. Time trials for tonight’s pro- [orem start ot 7:3) wih: te Ben ‘jrace slated to - erated at istadium will be ‘completed for the ‘season ani hope that a new county 1961 seasdn. Harris county voters last year approved a 20 million dollar bond |e:30. | aes issue to build a stadium in: which |i both football. and baseball can be and diving. Rich Oilman Backs New Grid Team Houston is also a member city in the recently announced Conti- nental Baseball League, and Ad- ams is ip the Houston Sports As- sociation’ that &cquired that fran- chise. Honors for Swim Team A synchronized girls’ swimming team entered by the Pontiac Rec- reation Department in the state tournament at Ferndale tied for team with Dearborn. The Pontiac team was made up of Judy- Dearing, Carole Murphy, Barbara Strang and Carole Stacey. In solo event, Nancy Donaldson took third place and in duet Bar- bara Patterson was third. ', Stengel’s snub of Lary drew crit- icism from Detroit players because Frank's 13-7 record makes him of the top three hurlers in ithe American League. Early Wynn of Chicago and Cal ‘McLish of Cleveland are the only other hurl- ers in the le ., Who boast as many Wins as this season. | Detroit manager vous ae Player award in the Pittsburgh \game. Don served up homerun alls ‘to Frank Malzone of the Red Sox and Berra. * * * “This was a great day for the Italians,’’ said Yogi, referring to the home run by Rocky Colavito jof Cleveland in the eighth inning and Malzone’s four bagger. Sharing pitching honors with Walker were Early Wynn, Hoyt Wilhelm, Billy O'Dell and Cal McLish. Malzone’s homer came in the second inning, which tied the score at 1-1 after Johnny Temple doubled in the first and scored later on Aaron's s&crifice fly. In the third, Nellie Fox singled and scored on Berra’s homer. From there on it was a homer duel, with the Americans leading the way. ALL-STAR GAME | American ABR H BI | Runnels 1b Power 1b ° Dykes was about the only soni whe was. begs: inal Gtnari | didn’t pick Lary as one of his | pitchers for yesterday’s second | All-Star battle at Los Angeles. “If Casey had picked either Lary or (Don) Mossi, | think they would have come up with a gore arm in a hurry,’ Dykes said. ‘‘Now, they're both ready to go against New York.” * *® * Mossi, who has five straight wins over the Yankees this year, will oppose New York tomorrow. Stengel picked rookie Eli Grba to face the Tigers t t. Grba has won one game lost two since ayesingpees from the minors several weeks The Tigers ca the fifth place Yankees by one game and are only two, games behind Baltimore Kansas City, conoiders of and place. On the strong pitching of lasy and Mossi, Detroit has built up a 10-4 edge over New York this sea- son, Paul Foytack is the lone Tig- ers’ hurler aside from Lary and Mossie to halt th® Yankees in 1959. Deadline Wednesday The Pontiac Recreation depart ment will hold its first annual com- Preliminaries will be run Satur. Swim Meet Entries Open -|day and the finals will take place ‘Thursday, August 13th at 7:00 p.m. A special program of demonstra- tions will -be held in conjunction with the competition on the night of the finals. |Bald Mountain Ace The 5th hole-in-one of the sea- son was recorded at Bald Moun- tain Sunday. Russ Martin of Royal Oak be- came the first to ace the 185-yard 8th hole. R.. Harpster of. Pontiac, A, Uzelac; Troy, and H. C. Fred- erick of ' Oak witnessed the 2-wood © shot.’ Martin's round was 102, . per" Fox 2b Williams If i Kaline lf-cf | Berra c |Lollar c ‘Mantle cf O'Dell p McLish p Maris rf Colavito rf Malzone 3b Aparicio ss Walker p bWoodling Wynn p Wilhelm p {Kubek if Totais National Temple 2b dGilliam 3b 4 Beeorrwadsi noo“ sownnwearan > d - & BOF OOF OFM ON NN WO & kk WH Nh MooooeosorwoocoowoscowHasocoonrvHow PR Oc ocosoceorsanosceosooooorooP SS INS) OS IS OE SS EY Co SS St @oooocoorrwooceorsrYHwoonaoao eoococooocoSCeoeo coo OHS SOHO oOFHoO ER e@soooococo SoFMPrH OTOP ONDOKH SOO Rococo COCO OU WENWNODONS BooHoOHH OH OCOwMhNSOOWRS Totals $1 a—Struck out for Drysdale in 3rd. b—Grounded out for Walker in 4th. c—Hit into force play for Conley in 5th. d—Walked for Temple in 5th. e—Ran , for in 5th. f—Walked for Wilhelm in 7. g~—Grounded out for Jones in 7th. h—Grounded out for Face in 9th. American -012 000 119—5 National -100 010 100—3 E. — Jones, Banks, Robinson. DP—Runnels unassisted, LOB — — 7, National 7. — | Temple. HR — Malzone, ° oo ‘Robinson, Gilliam, ‘Cole- . & THE PONTIAC PRESS. “TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959. SECRET WEAPON? — This mage yesterday and may not. p Pontiac Press Photo football player looks the Lions’ secret weapon. This is tackle John Gordy and he doesn’t have four arms. That’s little Jimmy David, defensive halfback, getting his hands on the ball from the bak, Gordy hurt his ankle in scrim- lay in the Lions’ first exhibition game Saturday against Los Angeles in Boulder, Colorado. ‘ Football? a ee rye Major Leagues Back to Normal Flag Races Resume By the Associated Press {Cleveland Indians, finds both clubs Now that the player <pension|Stepping off on long road trips. fund is rolling in .crisp All-Star | Chicago will play 13 games at dollars, the athletes can turn their|Baltimore, Washington, Detroit —Lions Play Saturday k k (First Exhibition | Contest Against Rams in Boulder Rookies to See Action Warren Spahn, a 14-game winner, to oppose young Mike McCormick who has won 10 games. It will be the Braves’ first look at young _NINETEEN Pro Camp Notes: Grid Giants _ By The Associated Press The New York Giants have the makings of a two-pronged offense built behind the quarterbacking of Frank Gifford on one hand, and the combined talent of Chuck Con- erly. or George Shaw, at quarter- back and Gifford at halfback. That is what Coach Jim Lee, Howell is working on these days | at the Giants Winooski, Vt., Na- for 2- Pronged Otene as og Set Plans. staying out of pro football *his. year to open an insurance basi- ness, Pittsburgh Steelers: Had rookie tackle John Perkins of Mississippi Southern taken to hosiptal after collapsing in his room, ostensible from heat prostration. Defensive \end Billy Ray Smith reported to undivided attentior to the bread jand Kansas City before returning. and butter realities of the pen-| nant races. The National League struggle could be cleared up considerably in the next few days when the) third - place Milwaukee’ Braves visit both the leading San’ Fran- cisco Giants and the runner-up) Los Angeles Dodgers. The Giants, clinging to a half | game lead over the Dodgers, entertain the Braves for the next three days, starting Tues- day night. Milwaukee then | moves on to the coliseum for | two big weekend games. The:two-team rae¢e in the Amer- ican League’ in which Chicago holds a three-game edge over the Playoffs Continue in City Leagues Playoffs in ‘tity softball and base- ball continued today with Elks 810 meeting Lakeside Royals and Blue Star facing Harrison in 7:00 and 8:30 games at Beaudette. These are Class A and C playoff games. * * * At North Side, Pontiac Mer- chants face UAW-CIO at 7:00 p.m. and at 8:30 p.m..Buttercup meets Huron Bowl in “B" and ‘'D”’ games. In Class B baseball playoff yesterday Talbott Lumber scored a 9-5 victory over Pontiac Busi- ness Institute with timely hitting by Ken Senter and Glen Funck. Edgewood Caddie Is Low _ Jackson Country Club took team; honors in the District Caddy cham- pionship yesterday at Red Run by edging Edgewood Country Club 506-508. Individual honors went to Don U.S: Picks Team for Wightman Cup Net Test PITTSBURGH (AP) The; American team was announced today for the 31st annual Wight- man Cup tennis tournament at —— nearby Edgeworth, Pa., Aug. 15, and 16. x * The team includes Darlene Hard, Beverly Baker Fleitz, Sally Moore, Jean Arth and Janet Hopps. Mrs. Margaret Osboene DuPont, who will not play, and Miss Hopps have been named co- captains. * * The Wightman Cup tourney pits the top amateur women stars of the United States against those ofjtry Great Britain. The British are the defending champions, having won the cup last year at Wimbledon, 4-3, The United States has won the cup 25 times, the British five. Stipcak of Walled Lake High School, a member of the Edge- weed team. He put together a 38-37—75 to pace, the field of 167 caddies entered. ‘He is the son of Edgewood greenskeeper John Stipcak and he did not play golf at Walled Lake High the past season because of doctor's orders. Ray Levandowski of Dearborn oun) Club was runnerup with 'a 77, followed by Jim Buck of | Edgew with 78 in a’ three-way itie for third. ‘Jon Shaw of Orchard Lake had a 79 and Bill Dingel of Edgev-ood had 80 among local entries. Southfield Legion Rolls to Fifth Win Rolling along au unbeaten sched- ule, Southfield's Junior American Legion ball club yesterday won its fifth straight over Rochester, 11- 6. Jim Jarvis and Harry Hrdlicka gave up 11 hits, while their mates got 13 ‘off Denny Scott. Five Rochester errors hurt Scott's good Dave Boyd, wit: 3-for-4, Jotm Dempsey -with 4-for-4 and Dave Newsome, 3-for-3, led winners’ bat- ting. Dineen’s 2-for-4, and Feed and Sawyer’s 2-for-4 paced losers. hits while his teammates collected fine. Larry Cates struck out seven Talbott batters and he helped his own cause by getting a hit and scoring two runs, but eight errors by PBI was his downfall. * * * In softball action, Stadium Inn Marv Holler limited PBI to five’ advanced by defeating Lakeside Royals 3-1 with Fred Konchis and Percy McConner, opposing: pitch- ers, each giving up only three hits. Homer Harrison got two of the Stadium hits and Grant Heffer- nan got the other. Edgar Mullin got two Royal singles. Two errors helped the Stadium cause with two runs in the 4th inning. Arro Realty, behind the pitching of Art Weiss, defeated Harrison's 2-1 with Jerry Christoferson get- ting two hits, including a triple, and John Snyder getting a pair for Arro. Jim Faust had a single and double for Harrison’s. * * * nip Deni’s 5-4 in an error-marred game. There were 13 miscues in the contest, seven by the winners. Bob Rapin had two singles for the winners and Ben Traxlor and. Bill Nunez each had a pair i the losers. In Class“ Fy playolts, intl Boys Club took a 2-1 decision ‘trom Auburn Béys Club, and In- de took an 8-3 verdict from Our Lady of Refuge. Tom Zink allowed the Auburn Boys only one hit, that being a single by pitcher Danny Allen. Zink ‘struck out 12 batters and he was helped by the hitting of tay Trevino ‘and Mike Marcum. Independence collected 13 hits including a homer by Jerry Powell and two hits each by Dick Sheldon, Bob Thomas, Sonny Weston, Mike Applegate and Powell. —_— ~ : HAVE YOU TRANSMISSION TROUBLE Come in today and let us.give your car a free inspection. No ebbaation. AROS. one day service.. Completely in- stalle FORD-O-MATIC POWER CLIDE ALL WORK | NEW EASY | GUARANTEED FINANCE TERMS . ' a BEATTY'S TRANSMISSION § SERVICE & 197 S. Saginaw St. FE 8-6022 fel 7 | | a a a a | | mi‘ STRATO-FLICHT , DYNAFLOW . oh home for the final visit of the ‘eastern teams. Cleveland will hit ithe same cities in a different irotation for a total of 14 consecu- itive road games. | Unless both “the White Sox and |Indians collapse ‘completely on ithis journey, they should have ithings all to themselves the rest! ‘of the way. Baltimore and Kansas ‘City, tied for third, are 11 games, sational new first baseman who; is hitting .500 in four games. While the Giants and Braves are trying to cut each other's throats, the Dodgers have twe games with a Cincinnati club that. sééms to have come alive. As the White Sox and Indians start on-their long road trips, an Willie McCovey, the Giants’ sen-! in Early Preseason Encounter tional Football League training ‘round out squad while fullback camp. |Howie Ferguson was returned to Howell announced before the the Green Bay ‘Packers. It sounds silly — football in: |August — but the Detroit Lions halfback spot. Then just as quick- will open their exhibition season, ‘Saturday against the Los Angeles’ timore Colts. ‘Rams in Boulder, Colo. Coach George Wilson said today ‘he will use a generous sprinkling lanalysis of the standings shows it!of rookie material along with the drills began that he would move + ¢ ¢ Gifford to quarterback from his | Green Bay Packers: Dick Em- erich of West Chester, Pa. Teach- ers, their No. 30 draft choice, re- ‘ported to camp while fullback _ly he obtained Shaw from the Bal- He still has Don Heinrich and rookie Lee Grosscup among his ‘ signal callers but did not deviate |man Jerry Spranders, a free agent, were placed on waivers. Philadelphia Eaglés: Had dé ‘back, New York in fifth place is would be next to impossible for 12 games off the pace and Detroit jany other club to shoulder its way : : his plans for Gifford. Yesterday, veterans in order to find out just y what capabilities his 1959 team | he had him working at the quar- may have. | terback post then switched him fensive back Jerry Norton in fold, which draft choi¢e A-1 Benecickof Another close game saw CIO 594; iin sixth trails by 13. to the pennant. Both races may be won on the| road this season. Look at the ‘schedules of the top teams for, the rest of the season: AMERICAN LEAGUE To Play Home Away. Chicago ...... 52 23 Cleveland ....50 21 NATIONAL LEAGUE To Play Home =| San Francisco 50 24 Les Angeles ..47 22 os Milwaukee ....52 23 29 For the opener of the big series at San Francisco, manager Fred Haney is calling on the veteran oe | Chicago has won 62 games with 52 to go. If they play .500 hall, |winning only 26 of the rest, they iwill have won 88 games. A ‘similar pace by Cleveland in its ‘last 50 games would give them 29-85 victories. | Baltimore with 48 to go would ihave to scoot at a 36-12 pace to ‘top Chicago. Kansas: City with '52 to go would have to play 38-14 ‘ball. New York with 52 to play jwould need. a 39-13 record and \Detreit in 48 games would need a 38-10 record to beat Chicago’s .500 pace. Trips Spencer After Trailing 2-0 Waterford Recreation’s Ameri- can division softball title was tucked away for 1959, last night by Nonne’s front-running club, with a 7-6 win over Spencer Floors. * * * In another AL contest Drayton Drugs disposed of Snobol, 10-3 for its 4th straight victory. All four teams have one more sched- uled game left in the circuit, but it can’t take the title from the Nonne’s outfit. The champs had to do it the hard way. They trailed 2-0 going | into the 3rd frame, but speedily wiped the deficit off with a 6-run blast in that session, and wrapped up the victory with a 4th inning tally. Al Sharrard Ladies Western District Starts Mrs. Anneaux to Defend Title at Lansing CC in Match Play LANSING (# — Mrs. Dwight Anneaux of St. Joseph will defend her title today as match play gets underway in the Women’s Western District golf tournament at the Lansing Country Club. Three teenagers grabbed posts in the title flight during the qualifying round yesterday. They are Nancy Way of Grand Rapids Lincoln and Patti Shook of Sauga- tuck, both 16, and 18-year-old ‘Sharon Miller of Marshall. Mrs. Anneaux, as defending) champ, was placed in the title {flight automatically, * * * But Mrs. Jack- Scripsma of Grand Rapids, annual title threat and former champ, was. knocked out of title contention with an 89. In addition to the title flight, nine other flights with eight players each will be on hand for the match play which extends through Thurs- day. The title flight and qualifying: scores: ay Charles Chandler, Gull Lake (84). arolee Everise, Grand Rapids Green- ridee (83) vs. Patti Shook, Saugatuck Sharon Miller, Marshall (83) eres Martucci, Jackson (85). Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Lansing Country Club (84) vs. Nancy Way, Grand Rapids Lincoln (86). A eccraed Evertse and Sharon Miller hared medalist honors with their 838 vs. Mrs. MTrrttiitittiiitiiitititititittititiititttiiiiit titi the qualifying round. Auto Races Tonight Modified Stock Cars EM 3-6900 "214 HOURS. Mrs. Dwight Anneaux, St. Joseph vs,/ Nonne’s Wraps Title Up tripled, then scored what proved to be the winning counter when the fielder threw the ball away on the throwin. In the free-hitting tilt Randy Beedle had 2-for-3 for winners and Monty Tipton a double and a single for losers. Norm Jennings was the winner in relief (replaced Jim Christy with bases loaded on walks in first). Loser was Arlo Flesher, who was relieved in the 3rd by Jack Nelson, Drugs also had to come from behind an early 1-0 lead (in the 3rd) to defeat Snobol. They col- lected four runs in that frame on two walks, an error and three singles, added two more in the 4th, four in t 6th for insurance. Losers scored one each in the first, 6th and 7th. Jim Cuthrell hurled a 8-hitter as winner, while Drugs got 10 off loser Dale Badder. - : Compton Builders defeated Frisk, 6-1, in Little League action. When Buddy Parker was coaching the Lions, k was his idea to win every game — in- cluding the preseason encount- ers. Wilson is a little like that, too, but he is not quite as intent about winning the games that do not count. “Sure,” said Wilson, “it’s im- portant to win all of them. I'd! like nothing better than to open the season on Sept. 27 with a whole flock of preseason victories behind us. * * * “But the most important thing about these games is to find out what a youngster can do, to find out whether the veteran still can cut the mustard. If you can win, fine. But we're trying to learn things, too, and to get more infor- mation on our ball club.” * * * The Rams will rate a distinct edge over the Detroiters in .this initia] encounter. The Los Angetes club has been in training a couple more weeks than have the Lions. Too, the Rams have Ollie Mat- son this year, and such out- standing returnees as Ron Wal- ler, Bill Wade, Tommy Wilson and Jon Arnett. Meanwhile, the Detroit club went ahead with plans for its 10th annual ‘‘meet the Lions” banquet | te his halfback spot with Conerly / camps: Syracuse Jeft camp. Baltimore Colts: players on waivers including half- back Tom Stephens from Syracuse, one of their high draft choices. and Shaw running the team. The Cleveland Browns received a jolt when offensive tackle as Capt. Mike. McCormick must u * P Mel Schmidt of Idaho and line- . Placed three _ dergo an operation of a right knee injured a week ago and will miss six to eight weeks. Elsewhere ‘around .the training | CATCH BIG FISH FAST The New “Big Fish Goe-Getter" Commerce Hardware Only Commerce, Mich. $1.50 Los Angeles Rams: . Lost half-| back Tom Wilson for Saturday's, exhibition with Detroit, with a knee J ~- injury. Washington Redskins: L ost tackle Bob Toneff for a week NEW ‘59 WAGONS with , knee injury and learned || RADIO 00 that nackacher Larry Morris is HEATER 3] 995 | BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER Birmingham Babe Ruth | Mi 6-3900 Gets Bye in Opener Pairings have been announced for the Babe Ruth Staté Baseball championships which take place at Ypsilanti this Friday, Saturday and Sunday. e Birmingham's entry got a bye jena paring Ready and it will meet the winner of the |i e Summer Prices—3 Lines Garden City-Morenci game Satur- $1.00 ° or = dco : © Teams and Individuals : 10: .m .—Gar- “ den City vs. Morenci; vy el Port . hoses Seer Now ‘for Huron vs. Berkley; 3:30 p.m. Benton MOTOR INN REC. ti Harbor vs. Berkley; 3:30 p.m. Benton MS. Perry (Except Sundays) Harbor vs, Iron Mountain SATURDAY SCHEDULE: 1:00 A Ae Bir- mingham vs. Morenci --Garden City win- ner; 3:30 p.m. two winners of other two Friday games. snide. oe. It will be staged Monday night, Aug. 17, at a hotel in downtown | Detroit. All the players;—both veterans’ and rookies, plus the coaching one-time Notre Dame football and basketball player and a ‘former football coach, will be the main speaker. Gull Laker 2nd in Star Race CHICAGO — Flame, skip- pered by C. Stanley Ogilvy of Larchmond, N. Y., won the first race in the International Star Class North American Yacht Championships Monday. The championships, which run through Saturday with Thursday off for a day of rest, will serve as the qualifying round for the Pan-American Games. * * * Second was Barnstorm, §skip- pered by Charles Barns of Gull Lake, Mich., with Shrew, skip- pered by William Parks of Chi- cago, third. Sfate Netter Bows | SOUH ORANGE, N, J: (# |Kalamazoo’'s Sue Hodgman was turned back in three sets in the opening round of women’s singles in the Eastern Grass Court tennis touramtnt, The Michigan lass was defeat- ed yesterday by Barbara Brown- ing of Burbank, Calif., 6-4, 3-6, 6-1. Wansen Will Retire CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. ® — The wife of Boston Red Sox star Jackie Jensen said Monday night he “probably” will retire from professional baseball at the end of this season. ‘I spoke to Jackie in Boston Saturday,” she told reporters after the Boston Globe quoted an informant as saying Jackie will quit. Boost Pan-Am Field CHICAGO #® — Entries from! day for the third Pan-American Games, Aug. 27-Sept. 7 Canada, Columbia, Costa Rica, five more nations were filed Mon- | The five include the Bahamas, “Olmedo Wins Easily Junior Champ Beaten SOUTH ORANGE, N. J. (AP) — tennis circuit Monday with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over little-known Don Thompson of New York as three upsets marked the opening of the Eastern Grass Court Champion- ships. x * * ford, National Junior Denny Ralston and Thomas, were ousted round surprises, * * * The _ seventh-seeded Piedmont, Cailif., Art Andrews, Iowa City, and Ralston, 17-year-old Bakersfield, .Calif., who won the, U.S. junior title Sunday, was sur-| prised by Marty Reissen, Chicago, | 4-6, 6-1, 8-6. Arnaz Pays $40,000 for Pair of Yearlings DEL MAR, Calif. (AP) — Desi Arnaz paid $40,000 for two horses to top the first night sales of the Del Mar yearling sales last night. The $21,000 he paid for a. Laguna Seca-Old Westport bay filly was the highest bid of the 50 sales. He also bought Red Cloud, chestnut filly belonging to Mr, and Mrs. John Eder of Rialto, Calif., for $19,000, second highest price of the night. * * A total of $287,900 was bid for the 50 yearlings for an average of $5,758 ‘Chisox Hold Tryouts WYANDOTTE (® — The Chicago White Sox have scheduled a base- ‘ball tryout camp at Wyandotte on Monday, Aug, 17, at Pulaski Park. | Paul (Dizzy) Trout, former De- staff and front office personnel | will be on hand for a going-over' by pro football fans. Harry Mehre, | Alex Olmedo returned to the U. S.! U.S. Davis Cupper Chris Craw-, champion} Gwyneth! in first-| Crawford, | lost 6-1, 6-1 to: Towa, | from | of THRILLS and CHILLS MICHIGAN’S GREATEST DRIVERS The FINEST in MODIFIED Stock Cars TIME ‘TRIALS 6:30 RACE TIME 8:00 P. M. Racing Every Tuesd ay and Friday Night - M-59 SPEEDWAY JU 8-1144 8 MILES WEST OF PONTIAC and Cuba and bring to 21 the num-|troit Tiger and American League ber of countries from North, South pitcher, will join with ex-Yankee and Central America, plus the hurler Red Ruffing in heading up Caribbean Islands, now entered. | the. camp, 2x 4's 10 —12 —14-—16 $9800 A THOUSAND aa DONALDSON LUMBER a7 Orchard Leke Ave. FREE. CUSTOMER PARKING FE 2-8381 WANTED DISTRIBUTOR | NATIONALLY ADVERTISED FAMOUS CANDY SXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY FOR RIGHT PARTY We are looking for a reliable person in your area who is capable of handling a confectionery dietriytorsht and will give accounts prompt service. No experience needed, We establish accounts for you. The man or woman selected will find this highly profitable operation which can be handled in their time. Larger territory is available for prosperous full time busi. ness. This is a year ‘round repeat business that is non-seasonal. If you are sincerely ieereated in handling this territory and running a business of your own, we want to hear from you. For personal interview, write fully about yourself and give phone number. ROMCO 3424 East Lake Street Minneapolis, Minnesota BRAKES RELINED US FAMOUS SERVICES: incloding lbor and { drums; adjust all ¢ wheels po brake; oe Pgegtt aa eylinder; clean, ees pa fron 7 oy adjust - clearance; pes brake fluid; check all grease 95 ® Chev. : seals; clean entire assembly; oan sone . tries; cheek shock absorbers: free 500 mile © Plymouth inspection; rotate tires if desired. © Ford Other Cars $16.95 Except Nash. Studebaker, Hudson MARKET TIRE CO. 77 W. Huron FE 8-0424 xx ser ry é bé ed FREE INSTALLATION! | 20,000 MILES or 1-YR. WRITTEN GUARANTEE Sree, ix ST a. i ¥ ee PRRUIMION << BRAKES RELINED | Pontiac P behind Federais FE 3-7855 “COMPARE THESE SAVINGS T He. While You Wait +8 id] Moke URE Oe koe | FORD |$30.80| 9.95/$20.85 CHEV. | 25.30) 9.95| 15.35 x PLYM. | 27.00) 9.95) 17.05 STUD. | 30.36) 12.95) 17.41 aua bf PONT. | 34.45/12.95| 17.50 Wheels £" RAMB. | 37.70 12.95 24.75] ford, Chevy, Plymouth ALL OTHER US. CARS ONLY... $12.95 + Pree Ford, Chevy _ Installation! AT Va--ton Pick-Upe ha SHOCKS “*", "SAKES : | BRAKES £: $ 87 RELINED FF famous Natlena! 5] 0” Power ¥ 121 WAYN . SS pe od | &. ; ee “a fs a "ae aS TRESS ST Se See SSO einen ee Ai, Se i Ot ee Pe Se i FS oe a a le a eS. i te Re Be oe Re a he te & sem y Bc ae ae 2 Oe ae cy, + . : ¥ = ‘ ! : .- : oA? . * “ : ee j % Soe * Be i ® + aes Pa = © . i \ ; j 1 : ‘ , See « ‘ ; s j ® h . ‘ ® : 2 “i ' rs 3 ; ; ; SS ; 1 3 : | : s fi j Z ¢ 3 : : = | i . a & : { < i * “WENTY | ee ae ee _THE P PONTIAC PRESS, "TUESDAY; “AUGUST: 4 1950 = g Po sioareaanes . Toughest Prekions still “Unsolved : at 4 ADAM J AMES "Congress Plods Into Eighth Month By VINCENT J. BURKE: | erate measure for a far tougher | ‘of ceilings, on interest on povern-| record high and canhed. tem- WASHINGTON (UPD—A weary administration - backed substitute. ment bonds seems headed for the) porary Korean War taxes for an- Congress plodded into ‘its ‘eighth 'If it does, Senate-House conferees deep-freeze. As for his plea for a} other year. . month of lawmaking today with'could deadlock in trying to draft a five-cent stamp of first-class mail.) j¢ aiso raised, income taxes on}, its toughest problems still -un- final compromise. If it doesn, | ‘Democrats have ignored it and jite insurance companies, boosted solved. ‘the moderate bill could be killed) /Republicans would just us soon not the U. S. subscriptions to the in- The most Erie battles of the/in the House by a coalition of; mention it. * ‘ternational monetary fund and the session — over labor reform andiRepublicans who want a tougher, Although Congress hasn't ~ yeti ternational bank, and extended civil rights —lie ahead. ibill and pro-labor Democrats who completed action on eight of the 16, federal grants for construction of money bills needed to finance the, federal government in the year) ahead, it has enacted a lot of local airports. for two more years. Despite administration misgiv- ings, Congress raised railroad Lawmakers agreed that Con- want & mnnter one: gress fbefore adjourning also (Civil rights—Chances are better must do something to prevent than 50-50 for enactment of a mild Greatencd: shutdowns ta (1) (Dill. The House judiciary commit. legislation since January workers pensions 10 per cent. fi- T KNOW 1S GBSOLITELR |[On, PEARL TO AFRAID L ; major housing programs and tee may finish drafting a bill today,; It made Hawaile the 50th state, nancing them through higher pay- : FDICASLOUGS BAYT LO) GAS | | KWAN XE BOR ROS A (2) federally - financed construc- ‘But it’s expected to take at least) extended the military draft four ‘roll taxes on the’ workers and the = ROGER GENT QE VE CRASSA on or), . tion al highways.: another week, perhaps longer, to years, increased the maximum /railroads. It imposed—with cer- i! 2 FLOW ERS, get a bill out of the Senate com-, interest rate on new GI housing tain exegptions—a $50,000 limit on | Unless Congress ‘can dispose Of jittee. Then, it would face lengthy! mortgages, raised the ceiling on direct price support benefits for! | these and other matters this senate debate, | the national debt to a peacetime individual farmers on 1960 crops.’ a i rs will be stuck ; : rath, the longest. session in five. Mighways—Congress hasn't yet THE GIRLS Ry Franklin Folger ‘ years. But the prospects aren't decided how to avoid blame for : bright--\Many legislators are fear. ®” impending halt in federal eq financing of road-building. the | until sometime in September. House ways and means commit 2 Democratic ieadern. want to dis-| tee rejected the President's plea pose of as many time-consuming, for higher gasoline taxes. But controversial measures as soon as| the administration and many possible, clearing the decks for a| 2wmakers oppose the commit: short session in the 1960 presiden-| 'e’s double - barreled alterna. tial election year. _ tive: A slowdown in construe- x *« * | tion doubled with the sale of ‘ o | bonds to provide new financing. Here's the outlook: Labor reform — Prospects are| Housing—With FHA-mortgage in- good, but far from certain, that surance and other housing pro- Congress this vear will vote to,grams threatened with collapse, curb labor racketeering. Awaiting|the President threw the ball back | House action is a revised version'to Congress by vetoing the far- of the Senate-passed reform bill. |reaching Democratic bill. Demo- The House may reject that mod-jcrats keep talking about over-, = riding the veto, but don’t have Wns | votes to do it. Probable result: | . Passage of a stripped-down bill County Births less objectionable to the President. | There's almost no chance that | Recent births in the Pontiac area|Congress will pass a new bill to) recorded in the Oakland County|curb wheat surpluses to replace | Clerk's Office are listed below|the one Eisenhower vetoed. A_ ful adjournment will be delay THE BERRYS | Fa PETER, DONT YOU WAN TO GO TO GRANDMAS FOR DINNER 2 by the name of the father. - pick-up in business also has just. Pari jabout 7s che er House | < Oat ssage of a Serlate.bill to bey LY Reagan 610 Kenilworth. cconorically-dépecssed: communi- | aa Oe ae ee eee a aro. a . remhar © * | Sedieg J Revelo, guis tnehiene: es. ‘-« * | “Well, I'm not interested in meeting him — when a man gets that | LOOKING GIRL — Gene M. Rea 4851 Sherbourne dent's plea for removal ‘tan, he isn’t working!” HAVE POISE — Bee v. hneae anh a Rutger poe presidents P Joel Rodgers. 73 Jackson * Omer W. Rice S410 Vincent BOARDING HOUSE tae | ry Beore F. Riharb , 1728, Pontiac Lake. | S j Ve Yi TL MY W RD JTWIGGS, BID Gyn Senet i. eaves ra a Orchard —~>SS Le Wh Yj é ZA Lit NY ADIE TO YOUR ERIEND Yi, Lake Ze YJ HOSS LINI Z Ronald G. Sears, 79 Blaine. —{ MR. TITTLE WAS MENT WILL 2 A MAKE HASTE TO Yy Arthur F. Sasser. 77 Forest. SHOWING US HIS Yy typ yy, - Howard. p. Shelion, 10) Vernon ~\ZARM MASOR, K/( MAKE YOU SHARPER’) QUIT THIS STEAM mets J. Schooner: on ie Wenenah.| J | P/ ZATHAN A PITCHEORK, 4\ ING WASTELAND! aries Saliba, 5265 Tubbs N DEMPSEY / Seibert G. Stanfield. 8 W. ralrmount. WHEN DEM Se IN PP we TLL F \T GETS ANY Benjamin Santana, 26'4 Cherry. “tH Y N THE COLONEL Hi LE I : - Oliver sarees, 3731 Grafton. * IT YOUO = E RIGHT AFTER HOTTER SOME . ‘award M 628 Balbor Place. SOUTH SIDE AND T SOME RIGHT A , Daniel “A. — Seren NORTH WE SIGN THE INTREPID ‘ Eugene D. Sulenskt. 8080 Casm YOU FLEW NORTH) —S& SAPAPERS : EXPLORER YEARS ape, Sirsa, a 8 winon. | gad AGAINST THE, NCE WILL Thomas F. Shirley, 2655 Massena. BARN! ie je HE arvey V. Smith. 107 rand ad & STUM6BLE OVER Carlos Sanchez. 150'2 Orchard F } K D. Sands, 2028 Paulsen ‘ts OUR SUN- Clyde Streetmean, 470 Fme-son. \ —_\ —_—__—. f ‘ ad C. t uea vin noes We \ BLEACHED _aurence “B. Saxton, 177 "Woo Ann | *. 0 a 14, BONES! ON j WE oN 5 Cc SFORD ipa ib (t Henry L. eo 2350 Baldwin. 4, LL. eT. : r tae ec ames M. Ricketts, 71 Dennikon. ti —_ " Sebek, 196 p WY) PATA | t 4, uy Sebek. Donald R. Shagena, 53 Pontiac. Donald L. Bovee, 31 Park. ~, LAKE Vietor - Carnell, 331 Arvida letor Ge R. Corbett, 885 oe n, 909 innan o G. Dowell, 3962 Pusher. Edward W. Evans Jr.. 1528 Paramount Clare E. Gray, 3080 Menérane. i ee Te eh. am ° ‘ tl, sv =: id 5 © 1000 by MEA Barve, tna, TM eg. UA Pet OR ack H. Smith, 1690 Bolton. _ john T. Johnston, 2593 Terry. ' fa = Ly By Leslie Turn>r orga Sone get one | ap, va rs ag “arg | 76 ro! aplan, encov: i _ : Mv ac “ . We ohn V. Kocaman. 5675 Leyibnetone.| : i) \ : : ty 4, 1 DID... YEARS AGO! WE'RE JUST EAST Sohn, 2121 N. Hoeft. - As ~ OF DARRO. WE MUST RISK GETTING Seober Ww Kirvy. ts, Brishane LP i . x ‘% 3 THRU IT ON THIS OTHER ROAD! Joseph D. Lareau, 1109 8. Lake. BRID: = | : | osep’ : | Kenneth L. Eg Tp 1788 Swaney. | Homer sparks Amenia. i Willard C Schiiver, 250 Ook as | Slocum, 726 Lu i | Hi th Norman R. : — bert C. Shouse, 125 are John A. Trusty, 216 Endwell. ; Robert S. VanSickle, 4220 Bunker. George B. Wade, 117 "Payewood a —— — s at mena ‘anderburg, 1 | Wilbur Ireland Jr., 800 Alberton, OUT OUR WAY DRAYTON PLAINS James O. Cunnington, 3418 Levee. | i) in eo yy) m Zz VV m —_ BY 8-4 G.1959 by REA Ser ice, tne. TM. Reg. US. Pat. Off.” “Charles G Earls, 2800, Secbsiat. | OH! I SAY! WHAT DO NO--BUT I HADDA. Anthony © Orimaldl U3 Lenmes. | THINK YOU MEAN, WITH GIT IN TH' BATHROOM Raymond M. Esinayneki. 0630 Midland 1SEE, THIS OLD, SMOKING }| SOME TIME T'NIGHT-- J roe —T NOW! RAG IN A CAN -- SHE AIN'T TH’ ON'Y Jack D, ‘Onis : 222 Vanasimpen nA WHY, , AND YELLING ONE WHO'S GOIN Try rice, i Ps Dale D ‘sheidon. €254 Wilsons (\ THAT “FIRE, FIRE"? TO 'AT PARTY-- = Wateon Bicciaski $563 Pieseant LITTLE-- ARE YOu TRYING I GOTTA GIT NANCY . ae berms 2005 Brigns | r pw BE FUNNY? /__ Rear 00, ~ MISTER--- OH.WE OUR PROBLEM iS Richare ‘T. Grban’ 2188" Brige: at (ee an KIND { DONT. FIELD MICE; Benjamin F. Walden. 2781 ae aeten Harold J. Young, 4685 Pinedale. Joseph E. Bersche, 2075 Highfield. James R. Blumenschein. 2320 Pauline | Edward J. Boyer. 2277 Pauline. | = ‘TROY ~ ; Gerald W. Delinko, 3360 Kilmar ' Theodore R. D , 2335 Vermont William J. Earnest, ponds Burtman, Twins _ Ronald W. Hacker, 1737 Kirkton j Peter M. Kedrow, 31 £ Square Lake Prank W. Killian, 86¢ 866 Hartiand Thomas W. McCarth $i 1060 John R: Jan G. ares — Wi L. Marro Royal Dale Predrick W. P Parker, Mie Pebius roe a fen © fetes, 1 brome eg Lares arena olay 8, eietakan Rochester - Steinkamp, 193 Kirk Lane _bawerd . VanDevelder, Il. 805 De- Berdess &. Witkowski, 451 Lesdale ph H.W FARMINGTON | er Torvik, 20670 Moran i rederick C. Tweker, 25359 Harcourt | Kenneth W. verne. 33757 Glenview . | William T . hee 34070 | K ler, 21301 Co { Beivete enneth P Virgil A Nebo ehh, 33247 Cloverdale | ison, Rhons ilac } ] mI. Homier 20976 Beacontree . | Waldon | i nel | pene J. St. Arneuk, =r. ” 22131) @ 1960 by NEA Service, inc. T.M. Rog U.S. Pat. OFF, john A. “starter, 29830 Highmeadow | | 7” TRwiiams 8-4 me } Raulff. 31979 Tamar | Na a WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY € 1959 by NEA Service, Ine. a ww { = Grabowski. 30040 Lochmoor —> DONALD DUCK a By Walt Disney oMY,. DION'T KNOW | Pare. YOu ANALYZ NG IT, TRYING TO ner) GRANDMA ) | HE Mw AS SO SERIOUS ALD $ — OF AGAG LINE! ABOLT ART! | BETCHA THERE'S AB BARGAIN SALE SOMEWHERE DOWNTOWN T'DAY/ oe ihseuitick: ida ~% THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST: 4, 1959 TWENTY-ONE SOMETHING FOR THE SPORTSMAN — GMC truck dealers are now offering this sports cab as special equipment installed at “T didn’t discern executive vice United States - Trends Down cca, dimroe we we veces MiQye Upward les grown produce brought to the Farmer's ’ Market by growers and sold by NEW YORK (—Oils held their them in wholesale package od CHICAGO (#—A brisk flour busi- ground in an otherwise mixed|Quotations are furnished by the|Mess boosted wheat futures prices stock market early today. Trad-|Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of|2bout a cent a bushel on the near- ing Frid by contracts during the first sev-| was moderately active, ay. CG and 1 ¢ freces eral minutes of dealings today on, . me and losses of fractions) to Detroit Produce the Board of Trade. about a point prevailed among Other grains and soybeans were most key stocks. A tendency fto- keslia. Derek tae wn 1 steady to weak although Septem- ward the downside was apparent.|abpies, Red Bird, ou. 27272.2222:1/55}38)ber soybeans were strong at the Apples, Truettet bu. . es 335 opening. me of the farm machinery (Blackberries. gS GAB cae etesece eee $.90 stocks made strides following |Cantaloupes, bu.’....”-....5...... 60, _ Trade advices said one of. the that Peaches, “Red Haven, bu. .......... 4.50] Major banking concerns had pews teat farm machinery sales eeere, Saget bu e220 240] booked flour tor 90 days ahead. in 1959 are running 20 per cent Raspberries Red, 24 Gts. ......6. o3 It was described as one of the ahead of the year ago pace. ee ee eee nee: verses 3-9") largest commitments of the new New York Stock veamranens | git acne , o e forerunner ew Tor toc s Beans, green, flat, bu. .....00..0: $2.25 other large long-term purchases. Beans, green, round, bu. ........00+ 2.25 (Late Morning Quotations) Beans, Ky. Wonders, bu. 3.76 5 ushe Figures after decimal point are eighths | Be#"s-. Roman, bu. yes clits ago] Wheat was 44 to % cent a b l ns, wax bu. ieeise wiginie acts ele eis ove sic so higher after about an hour, Sep- inicheariy GIs ed ree a Beets, No. Pic gos, bens.” .......2.... _90|tember $1.91 %; corn unchanged Allied Sire <.:.°60.6 Kresge, 88... 345 phenyl ong phere tae = 00 |t0 % lower, September $1.19%:; Alum ‘Lid... 313 eer er ass (217 31S) Cabbare, Curly, bu. . +. 3.75/oats unchanged to % lower, Sep- we intin 2 aga Ete MCN&L'-. 13" |Gbbase sproute, bu... "21: £89 |tember $1.91%; corn unchanged aim ae oooos BP cack aire «<2 Sed]eartote, BMS Lasseescccccccecss 288] eve 9% to 1 cent lower, September Am Mary: 13 Tose 8 Tie oo: 213 Caatttiower, Bee. osama omcanesene 328 $1.82; soybeans % to % lower, Am Motors ".. 45.3 ‘l/Gelery, dos. tks. .........0s.sc05 Loo | September $2.15%. . eet if Ss l Am Tel & ‘Tei 78.7 ; Grain Prices Am Tob ..... 101.5 28. Anaconda. .... 63. see Gos. Dehs. 6. occ e ee vecees 1.00 CHICAGO GRAIN pny ie 3 opti ae oH mespent ban e. pk. pa COLI + CHICAGO, Aug. 4. (AP) — Opening Armour & Co314 Merr Ch&s 20 Eegplent, GZ CTYPE, PR. ..cceess.oe 30 grain table: o Atchison ..... 20.6 pls Hon 144 Leeks, des. be . 2:35 Wh oo (new ed +8 vco Co eee Minn M&M ..146.6 Okre. pk. ” ” 250 Sept. ...0+..11 % — b Oooconod <i als |b as Minn P& 36 Onions, seen @ s2ce | isle sine ss e's\elew sien 4 Dee. = ewareeeee — Os swescweew : Ma el. °:: S$:1 Monsen Ch ... $8.3!onions’ - & 59 | March ...---- e + ond ‘atre..... 333 Mont ward -. 4 Baraley. curiy. do 1 igi auly Rye vgox,| ofa Joint Session Set Saas § Mot Wheel ..; 19.6 . ; : 32% lege atte <<. 18 “Motorola... ci1¢ : Boi gept. non. EBbte Dee 14) for Today but Federal: 401 2 yee 29. Winccni Mase 1.36 Srun Balke .. 99 Murray Cp -.. 28.2 0 Deo ese 113, Lard (drums) | Mediator Shrugs Burroughs .... 34.7 Nat Cash R .. 63 $0) March ...... 116% Nov ......... 8.95 3 , ‘118 9.57 Gelum aH ..Sr4 Net Gye os er pene © july LIIitey ~~ b—Bid Campb Soup « : $25 Nat Lesd -..132.2/gauger scorn. Yo bu. DODEE py NEW YORK (AP) — Industry Can Dry ..... 213 NY fentrai : oe q Hetous. «» 2.00 and union chiefs—each side blam- Capital All -. 17-1 Nor Pac... 55 |Seuast (Guntaver vig ho : . ing the other for prolonging the Gare gt 2 Ohio nou. az |romatoes, hothouse, & Ibs oo 188 ews in rie three-week-old steel strike — have a ay ait wens Chg... $7.7 feraipenteees eee tee stepped up the pace of their nego- Chrysler ..... 668 Owens Ti) GI..101 | Turnips. topped bu. .. 250 Paint and brushes valued at tiations. Cities Sve |... 5 ree : : Clark Eau | 86 Pann Ape We ae jabout groan tol ene The third joint session since the Colg Palm |.. 40.4 Param Pict .. 46.4/Cabbage, No. 2, bu. ............ ....$180/from a t at the farm 0!) strike began was called for today. Colum Gas .. 21.5 Parke Da . 48 (Collard, No. 1, DU. ....ccsseceeees- 1.75!Norman Buckner, 5030 Granger A joint ion Mon failed to Con Edis .... 64.4 Penney, JC 1.112 |Kale, bu. .........0.5 o 1 Bird Ponti Township, ac = joint session day Cee eae EE tae coe ee ne eee nce ee anne oa tre nem break the deadlock that has shut Cont Can e's $0.8 Soogsed el SEED a, Spinach, hu poets - 143 * Oakland County sheriff's depu-\iqwn almost 90 per cent of the Cont Om. ee : : phil Pet oon 49.2 |Turnips, DU. ....cscsse DOcseeccece 135| 2es- . es igs production. act ; : TOC cae . osep . Finnegan or 0! Curtis Pub’;\..13 Pure Oil ..... 43.6 SALAD GREENS Best Carpet Cleaners. Owned ’ : . Heoues ac "863 i aa =) Celery Cabbage, doz. .........00. $2.75 |and Coeratad by Jim Bradford. A|the Federal Mediation and Concil- Dis C Beag ... 364 Revlon... 61.9 Badive, bU. ...s....-.cscsscecceceee 2.00|DUMber of years, experience with|iation Service, is sitting in on the Doug Aire ... 474 Rex Drug ..... 46.4|Escarole, bu. ........ soceeeccccers 2.00;0n€ Of Pontiac's largest carpet! tans. Dow Chem ... 87.4 Reyn Met 114.5 — BidD, OK. ..cecccccecccceece En cleaners. Quality cleaning of car- A * * Fast air D1. 388 Reval Dei 22 rtd Cattecs bone be. SSIES 195 |peting, are and furniture. Free . East Kod ... 94.6 Safeway St .. 37.1|Lettuce, leaf, bu. .......scsscsesss 2.sojestimates at your convenience.| Asked if he had noticed any cate Mig asic “3 it Reg Pap : 3.1 Romaine bU. = ....--eseeeee Sseoes. 1.66 wey do it yourself, Call Jim. FE|change in the attitude of either Har ed ccaah Beet Bo gtd — ienlgs ioe eae ee trie RR ..... 14.1 Sinclair ..... 61. Oxbow Lk. Butlers Bakery. Open.) 50 ustry union by Secre- Er cel O72 82 Bocomy” 6.2. #3 Poultry and Eggs Next to Dinner Bell Mkt. | Adv.|tary of Labor James P. Mitchell, Pition “18 seu a sees | eine :pETROIT POULTRY. ee ee ang Pik ce i ut ° per a f0. b. Spetroit for No. 1 quality | ° . any particular impact. sides Ford Mot... 184 std Ou Cal’.. 35 | per Toots Shor Wields First [372 aware of the statement.” Frueh Tra ... 266 Std Oil 64.7 Yieavy, “type hens 17-18; light type . k« *« * Gen Dynam .. §3.4 Stevens JP 33. | hens 10; heavy type broilers and fryers Blow to His Restaurant _ wo Gen Elec ..... 80.6 Stud Pack 12.2/3-4 Ibs. whites 19-20; Barred Rocks 21- Monday’s joint negotiations had Gen Fds - $7 Sun Oil ...... 61.4|24; caponettes under 5 Ibs. 21-22; over : b Gen Mills a Retser Pep oc. 284 dee ap a iod heavy type young} NEW YORK w® — Toots Shor’s| been arranged by Finnegan be- O Tel & El 266 Tenn Gas”... 342 restaurant, a celebrity hangout for|fore Mitchell accused both sides Gen Time 94.6 Texaco ..,.... 87 DETROIT EGGS nearly 20 years, began comingjon Saturday of failing to make Gen Tire . 17.4 Tex G Bul .... 20.1] DETROIT Aug. 4 (AP) — Eggs f.0.b. : | for alserious efforts to settle their con- Gillette foe Timk R Bear., $82 Deiraiten ct Gre dts federal sate tradet: wledl Shee itn, Peer Bg (ai Goodrich’ “1:2! 944 Tran W Air ., 22.3/large 43: large 41; medium 29-32; small |Palace-like hotel in mid-Manhat-/tract dispute, Suse Ge Receee oo HAIR Se ae alte, Shore will set, wp business] Finnegan said that an exchange Gt No Ry ... 545 Zoeati Coes: 25.2|dium 29: small 20: checks 22°, again in new quarters a blockjof viewpoints Monday convinced Greyhound 218 Un Serbide : 146-4 Commercially trad SS 2: away. both sides that another joint ses- Hammer Pap 344 Unit Air Lin’.. 428 / medium 2%. 28: browns. 5, omar A |The well known restaurateur a sion today would be SE 1 ¢ 363 Ua fra” alsee coats Tee S3'2-38; medium) at the controls of a crane to R. Conrad Cooper, top industry Isl Crk Coal.. 382 Unit Pruit ... 344/38; L = : Homest ‘3 Un gas cp ee 333 =: swans the first blow of a ton-and-a-half! negotiator and Indust Ray .. 26 US Bteei .....103.2 Livestock demolition ball against the four-|president of the 1 5 ene oo we Orion. seeeees ——- ‘ story brick building on 5ist street] Steel Corp., and David J. McDon- Inspir Cop“: 41 Van Real’... 354| |.) DETROIT Livestock __/between Fifth and Sixth avenues. |ald, president of the striking Int Bus Mch. 4244 Walgreen _-. 50.6) DET Rot sole 00" ‘Bulk early supply United Steelmakers of America, Int Nick .....084 Weste A BE . 45 ——— utility "and ries grades:| A lobster has a possible life|issued public statements aimed at Int St oe oe. 35.7 White Mot |.. $7.4) bulk ~~ ow ©» average shoice: jexpectancy of 50 years. pete Ne 4 Wilson Co 44.7 few loads choice Be ——e = fn early Int Tel & Tel. Ww .. 88 ign ‘recaps: on and heifers. ful = Johns a: ¥ Tow 36.6] steady; cows and bulls vy: sround Jones & L . - 95 Young 8 & W 41 /5 loads ave: to cholic. Kellogg 38.5 Yng'st Sh&T 142.4] Jooe1100 Ihe S8.Sea8 Te. load 1090. Te = Kelsey Hay ... 49.2 ith Rad ..117.2 eos high choice 20.06; most good to sTOCK AVERAGES ar dt 7 ood 10-36-00; bout, ® dor O ee ew [ S NEW YORK—(Compiled by the A : adit "| 27.00: most to rae oe aes elfers 1 15 60 eee. Rails Util. — Prev. day 55.6 142.9 99.3 235.8 Week ago oe standard A 26.00: utility cows canners zi. cutters 14.00-17. so: ates bulls up to 355. 4 L 381.9 141. 98.6 233.6 s—S: jonth ago <.-380:1 1464 973 2338 =e ton etrong.” most tren a carne Peery it f f upply, closin 08 1950 high |... M54 - 1438 1038 4258|cteaty: | seu creeds’ tureehenk: ek 1959 low .sees. 306.1 133.8 93.7 211.5 stned "No. by 3 190- bs. butchers 1958 high ...... 312.0 136.5 - 95.7 2143) '4.50-14.75: few uv to 15.00 ai mixed 1958 low ...... 334.7 80.9 172.9 156.6);No. 1 a 190-230 Ibs. 15.00-15.25: oe Flere’ M3 ae 270 be ie eariy, nN i 3. . cere ess 106, Re. 3 “Hebei Baits Pigures after decimal points are eighths mined prada aon +t 38 aN ig Low Noon| 12.28: No. 2 and 3 bs. ee torre Allen Elec. & op sg Co. 2.4 2.6 Soatete salads 150. in Baldwin Rubber Co. ..... * 22. 24 | most choice and prime vealers 8 bo. Ross Geer Co. ........... * 42.4 44.4) 40.00: few choice heavy vealers over Gt. “Lakes. gl docoaa Co. * 13 1.4) 250 Ibs. 33.00- ;. standard Howell Zlec. a. * 11.2 12.2) 26.00-36.00; cull and utility 17,00-26.00. Peninsular het Prod. Co. “* 10.2 11 |, Sheep—Salabdie Not enough slaugh- The tas phet C * 16.2 17 | ter oy ao in early run to soutacturing ‘Co.:; * 12 12.9/\tretid: few head lambs and ewes un- Tolete ison C O. ani, 162 16.2 16.2) fhanged, ee Ss ae Ger sieate oe ane eee good and choice: few hes h choice spring slaughter lambs fan cull choice slnualnter ewes too-t‘b0. Asks Hearing in Wife's Death Pontiac Man Charged With Manslaughter in Auto Smash A 20-year-old father of two has demanded examination on a charge of manslaughter arising from the death of his wife in an auto accident Thursday morning. Delbert Zimmer of 219 Willard Ave. appeared yesterday before Municipal Court Judge Cecil B. McCallum, His examination has been scheduled for Aug. 12, Zimmer was returned to the Oakland County Jail with bond set at $2,000, He is charged with forcing his wife into a car and driving at @ high rate of speed into another auto at Judson and Paddock streets where police said Zimmer admit- ted failing to see a stop sign. His wife, Sophia, 17, who planned to divorce him, was killed in- stantly. Zimmer arid two occupants of the other car were injured. Won't Override Ike's Veto of Housing Bill WASHINGTON (AP — Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill) reported today the Senate Housing subcom- mittee had rejected by a 5-4 vote to of the housing bill, Douglas, who left the meeting before it was finished, said Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala), the sub- committee chairman, end Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) joined three Republicans to defeat the motion. This suggested the Senate Dem- ocratic leadership had decided against any effort to reject the veto and instead had decided that a néw compromise ——s bill should be written. California Judge, 84, Dies of Heart Attack PALO ALTO, Calif. — Asso- ciate Justice John Shenk of the California Supreme C-urt died last night at the Palo Alto Hospital. Shenk, 84, was stricken with a heart attack Saturday night at his hago home at Twain Harte, Witnesses told . the Zimmer|in the Sierra, en oa be to 90 miles}; Shenk had been ‘a Supreme yi ee eg ee ee et by few. Friend Richardson, BOW (6 i= * 1 e -| courthouse, Oakland County super- ¢:| visors will convene tomorrow in sh| expected to produce many empty 7{Chairs due to summer vacations headitors announced they were with- With hopes they can get down to earth soon building a new a rare summer meeting to scrap old construction bids and ask for new ones. Wednesday’s meeting — which is +was prompted when two contrac- drawing their bids submitted back in April. This was not all disheartening news to county planners as it was followed by a promise that a law- suit against the county, waiting an appeal decision in the State Supreme Court, would be morrow, supervisors will be con- fronted with another timely topic —that of the sanitary sewer sys- tem for Michigan State University Oakland. * * * Planners of the $660,000 project —the county’s Department c¢* Pub- lic Works — are eyeing the cal- revenne bonds pay a ble solely from the net revenues of the system. They will not be a gen- eral obligation of the county.” for Courthouse prospective bidders in the general construction and mechanical fields will be asked to submit new bids for the proposed $3,000,000 court- house. * * * The Fredman company decided it couldn't afford to wait any long- er in holding its $2,116,740 bid firm. Winning mechanical con- tractor — R.. L. Spitzley — de- cided the same with its bid. However, top ejectrical bidder ~—Schultz Electric Service — has already signed its contract with the county. * * * Delays were encountered \ the county awaited word 1... Lansing of action on an appeal by a Royal Oak man, Frank P. Scruggs Jr., in a lawsuit protest- instead of the low bidder, A, Z. Shmina & Sons. Co. Three county circuit judges had ruled earlier that the supervisors were legally correct in awarding the top contract to Fredman. Ex-Rep. Faulkner, 84, Dies in Barry County DELTON (UPI) — Funeral serv- ice will be held tomorrow for ‘|former State Rep. Ellis E. Faulk- ner, 84, who died Sunday in Water- sa probate judge for several Sourh aver World War 1 Gnd ales was secretary of the State Board of Agriculture. 350,000 Lose Land WASHINGTON — About 350,000 American farmers lost their farm |to. in 1933 during the great Truck Becomes Sportsman’s Delight the factory. Designed for sportsmen, the GMC sports cab fits on a wideside. pickup, can be installed for use in a matter of minutes. ® GMC Offers A sports cab that fits over the| cargo space of the GMC wide- side pickup truck is now being loffered by GMC truck dealers, it was announced today by R. C. Woodhouse, general truck sales manager of the GMC Truck and Coach Division. It can be installed in a matter of minutes, he added. For sportsmen, campers or va- cationers, the GMC wideside pick- up with sports cab offers roomy, Williams Offers Data on State Would Prove to Fellow Governors Michigan Is No Worse Than Others Sports Cab overnight accommodations fer up| to five persons. The interior meas- and 98 inches long, has hardwood two six-footer bunks with thick cotton mattresses. The exterior is all aluminum, finished in automotive enamel. The body is fully insulated with one-half inch fiberglas. Roof ventilator and easily positioned windows provide excellent venti- lation, Two interior lights give ample illumination. A drop-out rear section is easily removed for the loading of bulky cargo, or can be elevated for a sun-shade. The sports cab fastens securely to the wideside box with six bolts. Two skyhooks on top the cab per- mit hoisting on or off quickly. One minute you have a load. carrying pickup and the next it's ready for recreation, The cab also serves as a big, weather-proof SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (UPI) — Michigan Gov. G. Mennen Wil- experience today when he report- ed to the Governors’ Conference on state tax and revenue prob- lems, He offered 40 pages of charts, graphs and statements to show that Michigan is not alone with its fiscal woes, Williams noted that 35 states considered tax increases this year. ‘The nation’s senior governor, who hinted yesterday he may seek:a seventh term as Mich- igan’s chief executive, said tax problems in all states can.be laid to explosive population growth, expanding technology and mush- rooming cities. Williams also figured in a five- governor committee that proposed to the Governors’ Conference to- day a combined federal, state and local effort to provide civilian’ pro- tection against radioactive fallout as “a major contribution to peace.” The committee was headed by New York’s Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- feller, but its recommendations cid not go as far as a New York state advisory committee which recently proposed to him that fallout shel- ters be compulsory for all New York state residents. Others members of the gover- nors’ committee besides Williams are Edmund Brown of California, and Ernest F’. Hollings of South Carolina, all Democrats, and J. Hugo Aronson of Montana, a Re- publican; as is Rockefeller. Their report called for state edu- cational campaigns on the dangers of fallout, and for federal, state ‘nd local campaigns to help indi- ‘iduals protect themselves against fallout by shelters and other means. Ad Man Reports Layouts Stolen Advertising layouts of a product believed ready to go on the market next year were reported stolen from a Birmingham ekecutive’s car, it was revealed today. Robert J. Hungerford of Camp- bell, Ewald & Co., an advertising firm in the General Motors Build- ing, Detroit, discovered the lay- outs missing from his car yester- day morning as he started for his office. He reported the loss to the Birmingham Police. The car had been parked on the street overnight in front of his home at 599 Westchester Way, Birmingham. Thieves had forced a window of the car to open the door, The stolen layouts were encased in a three by two and a half- foot leather folder. Birmingham Police Lt. Merlin Holmquist said he didn’t know what the advertising layouts = Hungerford had taken them home to work on over the weekend, ‘carrying space for tools, displays ior exhibits. liams spoke with the authority of | ‘NBC Oftering Nikita ‘Time’ to Answer Dick NEW YORK (UPI) — The Na- tional Broadcasting Company is offering Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev “equal time” to answer Vice President Richard M. Nix- on’s Russian radio-TV speech, the network said yesterday. NBC said it suggested that Khrushchev record a speech using the equipment displa y Radio Corporation of America at the U.S. ures 53 inches high, 74 inches wide’ . paneling, wide storage shelf and! # —_ Business Notes The Bramson Publishing Com- pany of Birmingham has an- inounced that George H. Amber of Detroit, formerly’ a consulting engi-) neer and author, of numerous in- dustrial articles, has been added to the editorial staff of ‘“Produc- tion,’ the month- ly magazine of mass yroduction and metalwork- As associate ed- itor, he will inter- pret the significance of scientific and engineering developments to mass production, and will be re- AMBER Herter in Confabs Over Reds i in laos : French colleagues here today on the Communist rebellion in the The U. S.. secretary of state met with British Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd and Maurice Couve de Murville, the French foreign min- ister, for nearly an hour. Their talk was described officially as a Reneral exchange of views on the situation in Laos. ' Lloyd told Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko in a quickly arranged conference two days ago that Britain is concerned about the alarming state of affairs in Laos. Britain and the Soviet Union are charged with overseeing the terms of the armistice that settled the Indochinese war and set up Laos, Cambodia and Viet Nam as inde- pendent states in 1954. British informants said Gromyko failed to give any assurances that the Soviet Union would use its good offices to prevent interfer- ence by Communist forces from outside Laos in the internal affairs _\ot that country. To Buy Water System DETROIT W—The Common Council was expected to ratify Tuesday a contract under which the city of Detroit will purchase the Wayne, County water system for 54 million dollars. The con- tract already has-been ratified by the Wayne County Board of Super- visors .and the City Water Com- mission. GET YOUR SHARE OF PROSPERITY An interesting 20-page booklet, “What Every In- vestor Should Know”, is sponsible for feature articles per- taining to industrial automation, electronics, and au- tomatie control, Amber is a registered profession- al engineer and is coauthor of the textbook, “Anatomy of Automa- tion,’’ $60,000 Fire Destroys Mount Pleasant Barn MOUNT PLEASANT #—Fire de- stroyed a large storage barn early today at the Mount Pleasant State Home and Training School. Offi- cials estimated the loss at $60,000 The 136 by 36-foot wooden and concrete structure formerly was used as a dairy barn. Cause of the fire was not de- termined. It broke out in the hay mow which contained only a small amount of hay. Fruits such as apples, oranges and bananas are rich in sugar values. yours for the asking. Cover- ing fundamentals of iinet ment, it’s ful if you aren’t a Comet buyer of stocks, Stop in, write, or phone for your copy. wea, fee LERCHEN Member New York Steck Exchonge - ond other leading exchanges sacar eat | a Lerchen & | y 42 Pentise State Souk Bldg. i Pentise, Michigan i Address OOLereeneserecosatesseces I city OP ec reeeeeeeseseees seeeeereeree boos enc ne ee Exhibit in Moscow — the same equipment before which Khrush- chev and Nixon carried on a por- exhibit's opening day. Nixon’s broadcast to the Russian people was highly critical of com- munism’s expansionist aims, 2-Car Collision on Dixie Highway Injures Three Three persons were injured early this morning in a two-car collision on Dixie highway at W. Walton boulevard in Waterford Township. Karl H. Liewert, 20, of 2355 Ter- ness Dr., Drayton Plains; his pas- senger, Mary C. Beechum, 19, of 4787 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains, and Charles L. McCarty, 38, of 380 Dick St., Pontiac, were treated and released at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Police said McCarty told them he thought Liewart’s car was moy- ing as he approached it from the rear and could not avoid the col- lision. According to Liewart, he was Standing still at the red light on Walton street when McCarty ran into the back of his car. Detroit's Albert F. Wall Died Monday, Age 58 DETROIT (—Albert F. Wall, Detroit industrialist who was a tion of their public debate on the, We'll Show You How to Own It Now It’s Easier Than oo « easier, sooner than you You Think... with a Low-Cost Home Loan! Yes, a home ef your own can be yours think. See us new about @ convenient, easy-te-repay home lean. Because we specialize in home financing, our experience helps smooth the wey for you . . . assures ex- pert attention fo all details. to a Mortgage and breeder and racer of thoroughbred horses, died yesterday at the age of 68. plating firm, and president of Wall Gases Co. He was born in Mot- treal. Z He leaves his wife, Christine, and two daughtrs, Mrs. W. T. Clark and Mrs. W. Z. Breer. Consumers Asks Ruling on Sharing A-Plant Cost LANSING (UPI)=The Public Service Commission said today it will probably be next week before a decision is reached on a bid by part of the cost of an atomic pow- gearch and development. In a hearing July 20 Consumers officials said big Rock Point atomic generating plant might - He was chairman of the board of | the Wall Colmonoy Corp., a metal’ er plant near Charlevoix-to re-'s { Convert Your Seasoned Land Contracts Acquire Your Deed! Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. Established 1890 | 75 W. Huron St., Pontiac CUSTOMER PARKING IN BACK OF OFFICE FE 4-056] C. J..NEP FE 2- 818 Community National Bank Bidg. “OUR PACILITIES EXTEND pt OM FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL HLER CO. 9117 oS SE eae < little southeast Asian country of — Laos. . / & — z+} i -Dawerry-rwo | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959 OE a ae ee ee er ee ee ee: Se Sa a ee % din ‘Death Sentences ~ Less in Canada . ‘Law for Murder on G4 Books but New Cabinet ; ‘Grows lenient — OTTAWA (AP) — Capital pun- ishment has been reduced in Can ada since the Conservatives came to power two years ago. Prime Minister John Diefen- baker's Cabinet has commuted 25 of 32 death sentences since June 1957. The previous Liberal Cabinet allowed 21 hangings and commuted 18 death sentences be- ‘tween 1954 and 1956. * * * Under Canadian criminal law, the courts must sentence anyone convicted of murder to death. But the federal Cabinet decides .wheth- er a murderer hangs or receives a life sentence instead. * * * The Conservatives’ reduction of death sentences has led to criti- cism in some quarters that the Cabinet is making a mockery of court decisions, Justice A. M. Manson of Kamloops, B.C., char- ges that the Cabinet’s action con- stitutes an whee of Par- liament’s rights. ‘ Lester B. Pearson, Liberal lead- er in the House of Commons, said that if the government wants to abolish death sentences, it should propose such a change in Cana- dian law and let Parliament de- State fo Ask Death He’ll Be Masked Flier AP Wirephotos MAN FROM TOMORROW—These youngsters gaze at a soldier ‘equipped for the nuclear battlefield. He's Sgt. 1/C Ben Sawicki of Pacific Grove, Calif., and he’s modeling the latest battle dress for U. S. soldiers. The equipment includes a radio helmet, infra-red binoculars, a rocket-powered ‘‘jump belt’’ and an explosive device _for digging fox holes fast. in Rape Accusation LAGRANGE, Ga. (AP) — The demand raping two white women last Sat- urday, Solicitor General Wright WARRINGTON W — The com- Lipford said Monday. bat soldier of the future, an om some appearing individual, porters Monday. the annual meeting of the Assn. of the United States Army: Reveal Future Gl shown to a meeting of Army sup- A briefing officer, pointing: toa) GI in futuristic battle dress, told) tive contamination. His garb con- “This man is geared to the nv-| \Clear battlefield, equipped for what the Army thinks war will be like in the immediate future and from ” The GI was a grim figure. His | for protection against radioac- | sisted of contamination - resis- tant material and flexible body armor made of 16 layers of ny- lon.” Baptists Giving Up ‘|Privafe School Plan from three would-be Negro pro- , teetors. McNamara Raps the ‘Segregation’ of Aged Citizens WASHINGTON (UPD—Sen. Pat ee a ee nny nare McNamara announced that his subcommittee would continue its hearings on the problems of the aged today, Wednesday and Thurs- day by hearing representatives of various groups which work with * Olcer pérsons. Khrushchev Invited fo See Liberty Bell PHILADELPHIA ( AP)—City of- ficials have invited Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to come to Philadelphia during his visit to the United States next month. The formal] invitation, drafted. Monday by Mayor Richardson! Dilworth and City Representative sian system of government.” Frederic R. Mann, was forwarded | | Khrushchev gets a first-hand view Deputy City Representative Abe/of the wonders of New York he to Khrushchev directly, S. Rosen said that ‘‘we are sug- gesting that, after the official amenities phia to see where this great coun- try of ours got its start.” “We want the Russian leader not only to see the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall, but also how the people of Philadelphia live and just what we did to im-' prove the city,”’ he added. Lear Awarded Contract for Navy Bomb Releases GRAND RAPIDS w~ Lear, Ine. of Grand Rapids, has been award: ‘ed a $12,635,000 contract by the Navy Bureau of: Aeronautics for LPS Baptist Assn. has given up—for the present—its efforts to open a \private school for white students. commission met Monday night and announced that public apathy had caused them to abandon the plans. we couldn't make it drink,”’ the commission noted. tained that its school plan is work- voctety N.Y. Will Greet | workings of our own 5 al in Washington, Mr./ Wagner said. Khrushchev be taken to Philadel-| by the designers in Detroit. its electronic low-altitude bomb releases. , ‘The announcement. yesterday fol- - lowed earlier information trom the a. a office of Rep. Geraig R, Ford (R-| device was developed by! accumulates, two years ago to be) In addition a cat can be used It followed a court battle and 8am.” 2, in commection with “toss- for a longer period and will give months of wrangling between fes- < by \the Navy greater satiataction if kept reason-|tival producer Josegh Papp and ‘The District of Columbia has aircraft. Path acetone ale: lay 1 wien oc rofl Bes SELMA, Ala, (AP)—The Selma Atop his head, he wore a radio helmet, already in use by the Army and designed to. keep the individual soldier in constant contact with his command. The army added to the model’s items a sample of the things to come in the near future, includ- ing a ‘‘jump belt.” Five days of preregistration, a method of determining public in-' terest, brought only one applicant. | The association's education * * *® “We led the goat to water, but ~*~ © * However, the commission main- able and will be held in readiness in the event schools here are closed—by integration orders or for other reasons. Khrushchev if U.S. Requests It NEW YORK (AP)—New York City will cooperate to any extent * * * This is a rocket device to assist |soldiers in taking giant strides as |they move about tomorrow's battle- fields. With it, the Army said, the soldier will be able to jump down cliffs, using the rockets to decel- erate his drop or leap over ob- stacles in apparent defiance of gravity. He may move into battle in some type of “air car” like those already being tested by the armed forces. These vehicles use a downward directed blast of air to serve as a cushion and send them skimming across near- ly any kind of terrain. Also displayed at the meeting was a new portable central sys- tem for directing anti-aircraft mis- sile fire against enemy planes at- tempting attack on troops in the battle field. The Army said the equipment is being sent overseas. The highly mobile system, mount- ed in five truck vans, is a com- bination of radar, electronic com- puters and two-way radio contacts between the central control and requested by the State Depart- ment should Soviet Premier Nikita | Khrushchev visit the city, Mayor. Robert F. Wagner said today. to King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia because of reported anti-semitism and slavery in that country. The mayor said President Ejsenhower, Vice President Richard M. Nixon and the State change of visits will serve the purpose of world peace. He said that under these cir- cumstances ‘‘there can be no ques- ‘tion’? that the city would cooperate officially “regardless of any opin- lion we may have about the Rus- “I am sure that after Premier |will have fewer doubts about the School Car Pools Mean Wear, Tear A new gee semester creates in setting up neighbor- hood car pools. Carrying four or five lively chil- dren each day can subject a car to wear and tear never dreamed of According to Joseph Weiss, president of Rayco, keeping the interior of a car trim and clean ig as important as keeping the | | Sttside washed and polished, Use | of seat covers, Weiss Says, as- sures that a car's interior will eloped after her first year at Doane to resume work on her degree. It college again in 1956 when onl ee husband moved to. Lake- land. sheepskin, she enrolled at Florida Southern. Shakespeare F Festival ‘Allowed in New York widely dispersed missile batteries. With this equipment, the Army _face was hidden behind a misk [| Just a Myth, {ting enough to carry on his re- search. Test Child's Hearing — Regularly Something just seems to have come over little Frankie. He behaves terribly. His temper is so short that he doesn’t have friends any more. He's fallen be- hind in school, although he never had trouble before. He won't let anybody help. He won't talk about it. All he wants is to be left along. Frankie doesn’t know what’s wrong. It may be months or years before parents or friends or teach- ers recognize the subtle symptoms of hearing impairment. * * * David H. Barnow, an executive of a hearing aid company, says: “Frankie, like three million other hearing handicapped - children, needs help. The first step is simply to discover that there is something wrong with his hearing. Once that’s been determined, there is plenty of medical, scien- tific and social help available to cure, or help him compensate for, his hearing | loss.’” * * And, he Grosses the only prac- tical, effective way to take that first step is through a hearing con- servation program conducted in a community's school. Barnow points out tht 27 states have laws requiring school chil- dren to have hearing tests period- ically. Outside these states, many school districts provide hearing tests without compulsory state legislation. “In thousands of schools, how- ever, there are no hearing tests, and loss may go undetected for years,” he stresses. Each child, he says, should be tested at least once every three years, preferably as often as once a year. Try Proper Light , for Good Studying How many homes have a book- shelf 18 feet long? That’s the length needed to hold all the books an average student must read by the time he graduates from high school. How many light bulbs he burns out in the process is anyone's guess, However, good lighting is said, ‘the’ process. of pinpointing to split seconds.” The directing system is being produced for the Army Signal Corps by the Hughes Aircraft Co. of Fullerton, Calif., which re- ceived a 30 million dollar contract last year. Gets Her Degree After 31 Years In, Out of College LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Mrs. Stanley Katherine Apfelbeck start- ed college in 1928. Next Friday she will graduate from Florida Southern College with a bachelor of science degree. The 53-year-old grandmother - |College, Crete, Neb., reared a family and worked part-time as a newspaner reporter. In 1954 Mrs. Apfelbeck decided was back to Doane and the Uni- versity of Nebraska. . x * Mrs, Apfelbeck dropped out of she Still determined to get her NEW YORK (# — — Shakespeare’ Fy an essential of good studying hab- Wagner refused two years ago: ‘targets and firing anti - aircraft) ‘its. It prevents eye fatigue and to extend an official city greeting | Missiles is reduced from minutes. aids student comprehension. A manufacturer of desk and study lamps says studies show that a minimum of 40 foot-can- dies are required for prolonged reading or studying. This may go up to 100 foot-candies. According to Lightolier techni- cians the light also should be soft and well diffused. Too great a contrast between the light and the surroundings forces the eye to ad- just continuously. America Lags in ‘Capitalistic’ School Courses Besides a seesaw battle with Russia over science supremacy, this country is lagging in ‘‘capi- talistic’’ training. The teacher education commit- tee of the American Economic Foundation recently made the dis- covery that “‘practically nowhere is the study of economics re- grade school teachers are poorly to pass on to pupils basic equipped feconomic facts and principles. “The need to make American children literate in the field of eco- nomics ig made more urgent,” the “Julius Caesar” has finally ar- committee declared, ‘‘by Russian ‘rived at Central Park. This year’s boasts that Communist social and always be presentable. A damp first offering of the New York economic methods will conquer the cloth will take off ang dirt that My cena. day night. ( s 1 \ Shakespeare Festival came Mon- free enterprise system unless we maintain a strong economic pro- t is up? Or when is a summit con- ference not summer confer- ence? No matter what they're called — and they are not being called Analyst| book, for a while, anyway. . * * between Presiden Eisenhower and Premier Nikita Wise Ol Ow]|With Informal ‘Summit’ Meetings ke and Nikita Off Hook for Time Being As 0 reed of i be tal done, | he is getting exactly what he wanted; a personal meeting Yet, as of now, Khrushchev is : . ickrastichiet” poi ‘boib” nies off a; * away ahead on points in his duel with Eisenhower over Berlin where he precipitated. a crisis which. he ,has never let subside. He knows, and Eisenhower knows he has the United States on a tough spot. 4 Congress May Escape Decision |Should Khrushchev Speak WASHINGTON. — _. Should Congress invite an: address from Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khru- shchev? That's a delicate question al- ready bothering some members. But chances are they won't have to answer it. They won't if Con- gress has adjourned before Khru- shchev arrives. Leaders are aiming for ad- jourament of Congress by early September: — at the latest by Labor Day, Sept. 7. Khrushchev is expected about Sept. 15. From the standpoint of protocol, an invitation to Khrushchev isn't necessarily called for even if Con- gress is in session. Such invitations traditionally go to heads of State. But Khrushchev is technically not head of state, but head of government. * * *. Visiting heads of government Ears Look Alike, : Hear Differently Your ears may look alike but they don’t hear alike. That’s because, even if they are perfectly matched physically, they do not receive exactly the same set of impressions from any given source of sound. According to Raymond W. Sax- on, a vice president and general manager of RCA Victor, the dif- ferences are in part caused by differences in the. paths of the sound to either ear, This, he says, is the reason that stereophonic sound makes a dif- ferent end more realistic impres- sion than any single-channel sound source can mae. _ Upper-grade. high school students and college students are among the most enthusiastic advocates of stereo. This is partly because of their interest in electronics and partly because of their alertness to “realism” in sight and sound. Don't Brush Off Proper Hair Care The soft, baby hair of a child grows out after two. And for some men it continues to grow out, more or less, as the years go by. How- ever, aside from this latter state of affairs, maintaining healthy hair starts with childhood care. The scalp of children, even more than grownups, needs cleaning and stimulation just as much as the face or hand skin, = When shampooing a child's hair, mothers should rub the hair with dry, Then brush the hair vigor- Today there are over 900 news- papers with a combined circula- tion of over 44 million copies daily offering advertisers news- paper run-of-paper color. With Can- ada added, over 1,000 newspapers with a combined circulation of over 47 million daily, offer run-of-paper color. _|ment is completing a project to a soft towel until it is almost} ously with an upward, outward, -| stroke until the hair is dry. have been invited to address joint Senate-House sessions, wartime British, Prime Minister Winston Churchill for one. But when Harold MacMillan, the present British Prime Minister, visited Washington recently he was not asked to ad- dress congress. Says Rocky to Enter the Presidential Race NEW YORK (UPI) — Newsweek Magazine said today that New York’s Republican State. Chairman L. Hudson Morhouse told a group of congressmen last week that Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller will begin to campaign for the Repub- lican presidential nomination be- fore the end of the year. The magazine said Morhouse | told the group Rockefeller’s name, will be entered in the New Hamp- shire primary next March 8 and that a well-financed and organized campaign will be conducted in the state. He was quoted as saying he didn’t know if Rockefeller would participate personally in that cam- paign. The magazine said the con- sensus of those at the meeting was that Vice President Richard M. Nixon presently has a_ better chance for the nomination than Rockefeller but that Rockefeller appeared to have a better chance to win the election, against any Democrat, than Nixon. Worker Strikes Oil Excavating for L.A. Building LOS ANGELES (AP) — They struck oil in the civic center. A jackhammer operator, dig- ging in the excavation for the new Hall of Records Building, Monday hit a seam of heavy viscosity oil four feet down in shale strata. It was a small pocket of as- phaltic oil and insufficient to jus- tify commercial production. Workmen plugged the ‘‘discov- ery” with the concrete footing of a steel column of the building. * s It seems safe to say that if Khrushchev hadn't caused the Berlin crisis, and refused to budge an inch, Eisenhower wouldn’t be asking him to Washington in September. The igo 4 describes a sum- mit as the highest point, Since Eisenhower and Khrushchev are the top men in their governments, no meeting between Americans and Russians could be any more of a summit than this one. JUST INFORMAL Still Eisenhower doesn’t call Khrushchev’s visit here and his later visit with him in Moscow a summit meeting. He says they will have “informal talks...which will afford an opportunity for an exchange of views about problems of mutual interest.” * * * Actually, the two men can reach understandings on their problems without signing formal papers, That could be done later — at a meeting officially billed as the summit — with Britain and France sitting in. Whatever Eisenhower works out with Khrushchev will probably be acceptable to the Allies. He’ s|w making it plain he won't do any: |{é thing behind their backs. Mississippians Vote in Primary Today JACKSON, Miss. (AP)—A rec- ord 450,000 Mississippians were expected to turn out today for the Democratic primary to choose a governor and other state and local officials. Tabulations probably will be slow since only one of the 82 counties, Adams, uses voting ma- chines. Four men seek the governor- ship, They are Dist. Atty. Charles Sullivan of Clarksdale, Lt. Gov. Carroll Gartin of Laurel, Attorney Ross Barnett of Jackson, and Robert Mason, a Magee welder. Nomination in the primary is equivalent to election in the pre- dominantly Democratic state. In the event there is no clear mar- gin, a runoff election will be held Aug. 25. Will Postpone Hearing for Finch Accomplice WEST COVINA, Calif. (UPI) — The prosecution agreed today to a week's postponement in the pre- liminary hearing of Carole Tregoff to permit famed Hollywood lawyer Jerry Giesler to study the case. She is charged with helping Dr. Bernard Finch murder Finch’s es- tranged wife. India to Ge NEW DELHI, India (AP)—With foreign help, the Indian govern- Milk is a luxury in India. Those twho can afford it usually get milk from emaciated, sickly cows, di- luted with impure water. ww * * But to a devout Hindu, milk is nectar. It is one of the prime of- ferings to a deity. Nothing is said to please a departing soul more than a few spoonfuls of milk. The government is building a big milk processing plant in the heart of New Delhi's industrial suburb. A system of cattle col- onies is being established with a 50-mile radius of the: city. BAR PRIVATE SOURCES Sacred cows will continue to wander in Delhi’s streets, but ‘\from Britain, t Pure Milk but Cow Still Sacred small, unsanitary private farms will be banned from the city. Five countries are supplying money, experts, and equipment for the first milk plant of its in India. More than half of funds for the four-million-dollar project came from New Zealand, through the Colombo Plan, Ten experts and machinery have come West Germany, Sweden and Denmark. * * * The plant will turn out 100090 gallons of milk a day. It will also produce ice cream, butter, and the first powdered milk made in In- dia. * * * The foreign experts hope to get the plant into production by mid- September. The original comple- tion date was Independence Day, Aug. 15. A water and power short- age caused the delay. a Making “Pastures” in the Ocean— FLOATING CHAIN be the most important means of FOOD FOR THE FUTURE — Man has begun to take a closer look at his watery planet in this | day of expanding populations*and dwindling re- sources. Some say that the oceans one day will lions. But areas of the sea which are abundant with life are limited to’ places where a natural vertical circulation brings nutrients up from the a ae feeding the bil- —— above. x PLASTIC PIPE parr elle age : poe wrapehen bottom to the sunlit waters where plant and ani- mal life can flourish. Vast other areas are virtual “deserts.’’ To solve this problem and populate these unproductive sections; oceanographers of the National Academy of Sciences-National Re- have suggested three possibile ee ee “the Ben Gamble, aNaborer, had re- fused to let health authorities inoc- ulate the children. Mrs. Gamble testified that her son, Arthur, had had one shot in 1955 and became “deathly ill.” She said she “vowed to God” he wouldn’t have another. Gamble’s defense attorney said he was “getting ready for the Su- preme Court.” NOTICE OF SPECIAL ELECTIO To the qualified Electors in har pevi vi the EN reen Sewer District lyin — } ‘Pontiac se Oskiane neion ergreen Interceptor to pro “~ in Pontiac Township in said po! tion the polls Shall be par at 7:00 o'clock in the forenoon and sha continued open until 8 o’clock in afternoon and no longer. Every agen! resent and in line at the at “| ber ilowed ito for ey closing RETA oy" ot allow LOCK, Township Clerk August 3, 4, 'd9. ONAL BANK AC COMMUNITY NATI OF PONTI - Pontiac, Michi: NOTICE OF SHAREHOLD ’ MEETING Notice is hereby given that, pursuant a eal of tts di North Saz-- Street, in of Pontiac, te of Mich! an, on Ga matey anew ee t {0:06 amt ‘the Orited States, aeatl be ee. and for the pur- =| other matter prepeon merger of the A Bye of the aforesaid by a majority of directors of “each of the two banks. providing for this a dar ts on file at the bank end =s3 be in dur Se aor torr — aly 17, 2. A. G. GIRARD, President ees 20, 31, 22, 33, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 30 and 31. Au Hi 3. 4. 8. 6.7 10, 11, 12, 13, 17, 18 and 19, $e. 14. 15. 3879733—20 : Pre 9: bad A. a. on fe Wen., will pe aol sold at publie sale at 22500 Wood- ward Ave., Ferndale, Mich., that address being where | vehicle is stored and spect may be in. August 3, 4, 1959 SALE ugust 10, 1950 a 1983 al number 38504713 3612913—10 IC BALE At ol a on August 10, 1959, a 1956 Sedan, serial’ number SeWASeoTZt ein be sold at a sale at 22500 Woodward Ave., Ferndale, Mich. that address being where the vehicle is stored and may be inspected. August 3, 4, 1959 Death win baa al AUGUST 3, held Thursday a Hirt ¢ 1959, 2 p.m. from the First Chureh of e Nasarene with Rev. K. Hut- chinson officiating. talarmant in Perry Mt. Cemetery. Mrs. Bran- don will lie im state at the Huntoon Puneral Home. CRANE, AUGUST 2, 1959, WILLIAM L., 2214 Garland Ave. Sylvan Lake, age 39; beloved husband of June A. Crane, dear father of Royal and Richard Crane, dear brother of Home. Interment in Oak yi _Cemetery. G |. AUGUST 3, 1989, © Faye, 686 Lake Ave., Lake oe 41; ar Pet wife of Harr Mifigan, @ dear m — of James E. EVA —_ ren also ges, § grandchi will be — Thurs- 6 from er neral service day, Donelson 1 p.m. Interment in Ottawa Sar Cemetery. Mrs. Engleman will Rod in state at the elson-Joh: Puneral Home. HEALY, AvgusT © 1, 1959, BEA- trice M., 493 Lowell Bt. ante 64; dear muabar ris 2 Miss Wednesday, August 5 from the _ ee hes Puneral Home wi Horace Saen officiating. Interment _.in_ White Chapel. —_ SLAVIN, AUGUST 3, 1959, ESTELLA Grace, 35 Clarence, 74; dear mother of Mrs. Noel (Maxine) Hayward; dear sister of Mrs. -Alice Messner. Puneral service will be Dope Posheepocpear August 5, 1959 from Hun- fie esa oe with Rev. GW. Gibson officiating. Inter- ment in Roseland Park. WALLACE, AUGUST 1, 1959, PRAN- ces W., 627 E. Kennett, age 60; dear coher of Lyle W. McClem- ents, dear sister of Mrs. Lewis Jolls, 1 granddaughter also sur yives. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, August 5, at 1 p.m. from the ‘Voorhees-Siple oe : H. Bank offici- in Fairview the ‘Voorhees-Siple Puneral Home. BOX | REPLIES: At 10 a.m. Today t*ere were replies at The Press office in the following boxes: ae 5, 6, 7, 14, 28, 30, 31, 32, 34, 35, 56, 63, 80, 88, 90, 103, 107, 110, 119. The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FF 2-8181 From 8 a.tn. to 5 p.m. should be re- Fresg_ acgumen no’ respon 8 hes rrors ba cance ebarges for served t et of th e first the Pall nig pot rige= has been ren- dered valueless th error. ier ee ness o’ _N To The Atudligg for cancele ¢ is nee 6: 216 8 the rat blication a Ticot t foe ic x the firs CASH want AD RATES Lines ba -Day ey coe i. ry woud aE Sensaveun THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGU 1ST“ e-1988 oe ~“ TWENTY TY-THREE WE Wisk ¥ ‘ r ves eg ont, wapaeres usband cad ther. A : wal e to Rev. Joseph men, The eo-seever Funeral L. Holcoimb i i In Memoriam . 2 —ewr nr we te ern ce VING ae S F PRANK eg ee J pomee away missed by 4 uy and da’ i Funeral Directors 4 PPRPALIAI Oe ene COATS PUNERAL HOME ~ Drayton Plains OR 3-7787 SILVER LAKE FRONT ne Ph _ Neat as a oa FA heat. Water er E reteneas | soppy a Donelson-Johns PUNERAL HOME “Designed for funerals’ Near bus and schools. this extra-nice Tardvene pant Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME bulance Service Plane or Motor: = FE 2-8378 SPARKS-GRIPFIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service FE 2-5841 % ACRES ideal for the part ime aC furnished attic or additional For Sale Houses 6 BEDROOM, LARGE LIVING room, oil heat. nicely landscaped. | Storms and screens. West subur- ban $8,500. Mortgage, costs down| __for_veteran. soil. Only $12.000 full price with FRANKLIN BOULEVARD Ideal for professiona) erties | or can be a family BY OWNER. 2 SSP modern home, basement file bath, screened porch, garage, stoker heat, caayentent location. immediate Fees $9.500. Roselawn BY OWNER. 2 BEDROOM HOME, built 1954 1%-car carer, paved ee ames - in yard. hier “Ypsilanti. FE 5-59 e lovely corner landscaped . Fell shaded Let us show : WILLIAMS AL ESTATE & INSURANCE FE 4-064 out of state. Will consider any reasonahje off FE 32-7750. er. “T's TRUE — NO COMPLICA: Co. IN BUYING THIS FINE Nearly new — 3 bedroom ranch, with ar garage. Has 1'2 baths, | Heh e ag Orme many more 1010” Trier a. Roc 8-ROOM cae 4 BEDR aa Family kitchen. Ige. utility. 13860 insulated garage. 1 acre of lot.) $950 down Private owner. 3145 Warren Dr. __Drayton_ Plains. OR 3-5855. FOR COLORED _ $8,000 with $750 down. FE 2-304 WEST | SUBURBAN... sa pba verse walls. Full basement, garage. Landscaped rl t. lot, close to. $875. EQUITY. (TAKE OVER PAY- ments, $80 m ee ‘BRICK Saaeron | Plains, O MAN LEAVING ‘TOWN. SACRIFIC- ing home. Five rooms. 3 bed-| rooms, ete basement and ga- a bb ub PERSONALIZED. HOMES FOR “COLORED 3 oo home. $450 dwn. FE EAST BOULEVARD ,room modern terrace, small price. Negoe 8 LK. RD: 6 room, utility, car ars % acre. | gil oe fee: must sell. Paul M. Jones, "Real Est. A. Lo- | FE_4-8550 eae, norty of Lake Oakland. OL 17511 a SHEPARD. REALTOR | N - othing Down wil build ae home on RILEY 6 rms. & bath. Nr. school & pert p | "Vilage SCHOOL im- w with fenced with approximately 6 acres = art Jabl d. Pri i i Sone erik cas Weak e lan Price includes Oo any, Owners anxious to Sanit now and make offer. iar peo — 8 ACRE 4 miles West P) city limits on Tuiter Rd. Large farm ee home that meee eae Princ CITY, § peer REAS. 2-6682, 1138 Lakevi Eee” 7 Ric HOME. NEAR EE __Large lot. 91 Euclid 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. SLZABETH|’ f 5-2990. _Lake front. By owner. FE oy STORY, va BEDROOM, 2 Prot 22-ft. li arage. ck e bas ports fireplace. Tse. ety Reasonable down payment. By owner. FE 2-5700. CUSTOM BUILT LAKE HOMES. Twin Lakes ee . of Pon- __tiac, Starfire Bldg. Co, EM 4-6531 RUSH. HURRY. PLEASE. NEED the Money. Investor's dream or home buyer's savings. 2 Bedroom modern, nice location on Wil-! liams Lk. Rd. across from Mace- day Lk. $2500 down, smal) balance owing. MY_ 2-3791. J BEDRROM HOUSE, BASEMENT. Sivas near Auburn and East lvd. Terms. FE 8-2340. BY OWNER. 4 RMS. & BATH. Low down payment. Call FE! 4-3979 eves, after 6 2- PAMILY INCOME -8021. CLOSE - IN. $6,750. Terms. OR 3- ON SUITE bove Good Housekeeping Shop AVENUE el a af i oa vane in a mest visit it) Central Ave. 3. bedroom k home with full basement and auto, heat. Large Storm windows and screens. Reseoustly priced NORTHWEST SUBURBAN 3 Bedroom brick bungalow. Family sized dining and kitchen area. Full basement . Aute. water softener. NO DOWN PAYMENT ROCHESTER coe Cod Colonial, ane new, 1 sq. ft. 4 bedrins lus ga- Tage and peccmene, 62¢ sab00 down. OL 1-8141. We have several 2 & 3 bed- i y Remee 1s and out of OAKWOOD MANOR LAKE PRIVILEGES SANDY BEACH in a highly restricted subdivision between Dixie Highway and Low- er Silver Lake. rge Lv Room and Dining “L" with wall to wall carpet. Kitchen with eating space, recreation m, plaste two subdivision’s private sandy beach. Sale by owner. Price $22,500 PE 8-1784 buy for $8,500 with only $1.- D00 down. Gasek possession all today 5 FAMILY INCOME i yo mekice money. call us and make an spout to see market rvateo “at only TUESDAY TE pu CALL: NICHOLIE & HARGER CO. 3 BEDROOMS Pull basement. Gas furnace. New- ly decorated. $11,000. Terms. 9 ROOM see rete pacha Nice loca- ‘CUCKLER REALTY 236 N. Saginaw _ FE 4-4 ee) MT. CLEMENS HILLS By owner 6 large rooms on 1} oor plus 5 rm. private apt. on ES acre. Lawns and trees, $12,500. easona own ayment. 47562. pay iia ROCHESTER AREA. 3 BEDROOM brick on paved rad: Automatic gas heat, basement. 22-ft. living room, la ki lot. Fruit. tre en eae rees. Terms available. 2 BEDROOM, in Auburn Heights, with large modern kitchen, full gecaarse storms and screens. Guns bus and schools. Only 950 full price H. C: NEWINGHAM Auburn at Crooks Rds. UL 23310 BY OWNER, 2 BEDRM,, RANCH, 4 years old, > 68 500. 2641 Walnu _JUniper 8-2581. ; MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GAYLORD TAKE TIME TO BE HA and you can be happy in this po pono oe ere is -four @ rooms and ‘ba floor has is the time to "nnd = comfort and happiness in wan such a e'll be happy bungalow, Call us. to show you this home anytime le sirable bungalow situa’ nice fenced in yard. ere is first Now ste voy that comfort and happiness WREN Ww. GAYLORD 136 i ae : OPEN EVES. FE 8-9693 XBOW LAKE. 3} BEDRM,, 3 Bi inws Gostrent. ee GUIDE TO GOLD: Sell things you're not using through Classified“Ads! water. om Lake privileges. Near schools stores. 3 BEDROOM FRAME * Pull base Goo | beat. Bet GOING or OF ST STATE — MU sell » ae r B lot. Loads basemen! win fares for quick Sale Cal! <*E 4-3838 MODERN ¢ fayton HOME 3. Gladwin. $3,000 down will handle. Terms. Dorothy Snyder Lavender ealtor Est. 20 eae ce) 2000" Highland Rd. (M 50 Phone EM 3-3303 or MU_ "eat. YY OWNER. WEST SICH. 3 SEDRM | Tome. Oll heat. Near acheal & pping center. FE 4-4191. NOTHING DOWN Beautiful bi-level d& tri-level starter homes. If youd are looking for _afupity. Nothing down on your Jot or we have several choice lots available. ARRO REALTY TED Mc Fae a REALTOR 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Rd. O47 OR 128 to 6:30 p.m. oyna 3844 ~ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE G.1.’s be Large fix21 ft. living Ww carpeting. Full peer 1% car Garage. 712x317 ft. lot, Taketront With 3 bedrooms. This older home is in exce ~ condition. Nicely landscaped lawn. comple! sro fenced. Large living rage, Bice: dining area. 1% car garage. Elec- tric heat & selling for $12,500 : ae “ With a large bedroom aa home. 16x20 ft. living room Coun- try style kitchen th plenty of cupboards. 2% car attached ga- rage. The acreage is completely mall barn, corn crib other outbuildings. The home only 6 years old. Down On this 4 year old ranch t home. Loca’ bey = est of town. Aluminum storms "* screens. Lg per cuass insulation. ofl furnac Hid car areas: Lake eriiege: 3 blocks: swe) Bs ‘Sep moto: Loven Rk OR aes a “ESTATE ete SS 500 nseetn Lake Aap FE 5-1284 re 4-344 Open 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday 1-5 NORTH END BEAUTY 2 Bedroom in new condition in- side and out. Living and dining rooms carpeted. Only $10,250. Ex- cellent location 1 block off Jos ‘ lyn. Phone OR 4-0306, J.A. Taylor, Realtor. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Bar zs 4| Very sharp 2 bedroom ran rp = country kitchen, family aS Taylor, Reahec 4915 PINE ed ear Maybee Rd. baw “ONLY $05 DN. 2 bedrooms, automatic heat, nice- KEITH G. SIEGWART Custom Building FE 54-0782 Lake. Full basement. Oil furnace r OR 3-6358 evenings and BY OWNER ¢ BEDRM. 1% STORY frame home. 3 lots. 1% car ga- rage. 14x18 workshop. FE 5§-3564. MODEL HOME 3. BEDROOMS $7995 $495 DOWN NO OTHER CLOSING COST OPEN DAILY & SUNDAY 2-8 i .M. OAKLEY PARK COMMERCE | LE. irectiouns' Commerce Rd. 8. Commerce Rd. Left to Ganley Park. Rd Right to Roselawn, left 2 blocks to model. Watch for signs Johnson is the location of this nice} $759 DOWN — 3 bedroom in per- Lovely living room with new wall-to-wall car-| Jot. Nice lawn, lots of shrubs & and hot eee heater - bedroom brick ranch home. full 80 125 teen to * pristing ‘Gl Pa oresee: PIONEER x HOE OR beach. l¥e-car erage room, water soft. wi E_5-6012 LAKE ORION vos up unts o,Seornge u & full "basement, arere heat, ose 2 bed- Tinea jot Fruit ane 31 RESALE blocks from ‘waterford per mo, $750 down. OR “SMITH” | WEAR PONTIAC OENERAL A a fe — with ¢@: ors | Olas 1 Rolfe it Smith, Realtor : BE. g 7 3-100), Sine micwway” TTS, ore, J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton MILLER fect condition. North sice 80-ft. flowers. Beautiful kitchen, full basement, with new oil furnace basement, gas heat. Includes liv- rates ing room & stairway carpet. Ven. blinds & water softener. New 2- sat Head 7 is positively one best buys of the year. Call now—do = be the second vk an see this home. 1,900 READY TO OCCUPY — FURNI- TURE INCLUDED — 6 rooms & bath, Elizabeth Lake Sie. 24-ft. a oes Mr. Chatter- giassed-in porch, storms and A. JOHNSON, Realtor 17 S. _ Telegraph Rd. sereens Low taxes and only $9.- 000 — Terms. « IDEAL FOR SUBDIVISION OR CHILDREN’S CAMP — 48 acres, sivas iake. oy pt oid farm . 2843 ft. road f Lop oe: Stl close “to city. Cal] for further i formation. Tou POPPED INTO OUR MINDS s 800n as we listed this erepersy you wanted. A brick ranch, not too far — the city rec Bits wate large “titehen with formica count- TAC “INCOME.” —_ os gloat & aes wits. TE screens, Sear atta garage. lace im janted la) . bets owh utilitie: Ae P age = ts bes w eres er ‘ or I consider trade. mats A WEEKEND SPECIAL] this home built in. rtops, S sgur of ¢ — eeramic of our cou Holes full Sacomens. ert om we ylenend) 8 her yen tals Fret property. Cot WFORD AGENCY: in-| We're = hed assist = with your 609. Pint ae Fin Ma William Miller Realtor | FE 2-0263 670 W. Huron == Open 9 to 9 ; 365 | Neat Modern Home close in suburban glnA ity room, full bath, basement, furnace, softener, Dandy 2 Bedroom on Large Fenced Lot and 2 car ful lake- excepticn.| 9 % 100 feit with beautiful lake: lal — chain ane , Sue an her: hood for Gas heat. full bath, part © 2 ca Ey an Giroux-Fran at cel) landsca’ lots. Lake privileges.: MODEST MAIDENS ayo, AXLAN-= “I just love millionaires — especially when they have - DRAYTON WOODS. 3 neal 2 car Lea! age. cement drive with ” lot of money! aped fenced yard. By Jay Alan Investment peting. sSerthe fireplace. Eeset Near M8SUO. ‘iw. © For Sale Houses 6 . 6 443 ORCHARD LK. ‘AVE. "PE 58-9683 BY OWNER. 3 BEDRM. RANCH. Paneled m, All ——. Car- ‘OL Your Choice [0% Stove, refrig. or dinette in the no/down 3 BEDRM. FULL BASEMENT HOME Model located: 389 CAMERON st house no. of -Peatherstone _— Sereda aphid $78.50 & insurance M. ’R. “WW. ison ‘Realty EM 3-6556 $99" MOVES YOU IN! NO MONEY DOWN terms. Be Rosiva. F Oe 4 der less lar Puneled For Sale Houses 6 po et = Ne ~ BY OWNER LE—TRADE—OR LEASE With option — 5 bedroom home on extra large lot in desirable terms or will trade equity for nd carpeted living beer 2 car = ge. Extra lot. FHA approved, Only bo with $1, - down, Phone 4-0306, J. FOR SALE OR RENT. 3 BEDROOM house with privileges on Union $8,500.00 with $1,200.00 down. OR 3-2798 0} ONLY $8,750. 4 BEDROOM H Bun po cate MODERN, 2 BEDRM., hh Se roe Low down payment. a LeBAR RON STREET, 2 BED- rooms, finished attic, plastered walls. Tile bath, full basement, storms & screens. Gas heat. Nice lot, $10,300. OR 3-8021. SEVEN RM. HOUSE WITH TH REE bedrms Access to Cass Lk. Price $6,000. $1,000 down... Will take car. vacant land, or house trailer as down aS EM_3-0135... TRI Aidan BRICK $15,200 $1,500 down os eye appealing modern _ to minute bedroom —_— -with numerous cote -pointments that HN} oe kitchen, is certainly a lot of home at the above pee. located near new Michigan State College. G.I. SPECIALS Wonderful buy $9,950 with mortgage cos’ caly down, his exceptional nice 3 bed- room — with fant base- ment, ny c Reatea ot Bale. ood five room bungalow a large expansion attic, Le basement, good garage, cross from Longfellow sheet $7,500 no down pay- ment to G.I. WATKINS LAKE HOME BEAUTY $13,950 Live -right on the lake, this is an ideal home for re- tired or young couple, spa- cious’ L shaped living fa dining room and wonderfu kitchen, panoramic view of lake from large picture win- dow, gas Coleman biend air heat, home very tastefully furnished in rattan furniture which is included in above price. $2,500 down. IFUL SILVER LAKE BEAUS, ALE OR TRADE Broeption nice family home, aor omer a 56 with massive ne edo da Mb rice $18, x DORRIS & SONS REALTORS 182 W. HURON PH. 4-1557 MUERELs LISTING ‘SERVICE -cat garage, Exclusive community Paget ball scot Sm nee aie utihty & Hn a. e STEELE LTY. 138 Highland PEELE gi at Milford Rd., High land, Michigan. MU 42045. OWNER: BEDRM. FACE sald LAS oy Newiy dec. ler basement, 118. 73. with pe down. 44 per cent interest ote ediate posses- - OR 33 Gr. : Nothing Down pO ae Coz Y. $280 CLOSING cost yin \WRIGHT, Realtor kiand Ave. FE 56-0441 a8 Ce Open ‘till 8:30 SMALL HOUSE, NEEDS REPAIR. East Auburn. No down eipateting PE 4-7928. $100 Down pie pete & 3 bedrms. Pull = = ng. $6350 on our lot. Saree on your lot. _MA 6-3858. song t asaae possession a 400; down. Easy monthly PLEASE need a new owner—I have 4 Learecuas ‘and 2 baths. I am made of brick and am on &@ paved And I can in bought Por $1500 down ~ DRAYTON PLAINS There are 2 kitchen, 14 x 19 liv reom, full bath and vanity. divided basement with hl x enim screens. : oe A new 7 1% mi n A Ewe drapes Poa = The car 4 price of Gt se tte ts ie Open Eves wi 0: Bander, 10 Tu 8 6 For Sale Ifouses * 6 wall to wall carpeting a: WEST SUBURBAN 3 BEDROOM. Tau: meeera Vi t Pains on a aS ort -repair ce $11,200. Mort- th option to purchase. Cali fo DOWN PAYMENT —W tor rticulars. payment. Call FE 3 3-7862. Best offer accepted. M room and garage. MY 1% STORY FACE | MODERN 2 BEDROOM. ON 31 < 2 car garage, qeres. ater tft e. ae tenant caroeting. drapes. fireplace, ne: 3-8747 Will = starter home on your size. po Pull sement. . Your & or ours. OR 3 I RUSS "McNAB | __ ART MEYER @STATES, BY owner. 3 bedroom, full basement with finished recreation room, ag Coe obit 2 car ~~ pa ROAD VI- cinity. 2 bedrooms, utility room, furnace, a completely re- Seoers or desired. Must RE ard at Dg og with $500 down ons: for cash. UL 2.5548 milly” room, aa epase! ‘ years old. OR 3-9528 after p.m. CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN CO. 7 ‘ROOM woe OIL FURNACE, BY OWNE BEDRM. HOME. ed Scar saree. it acres. Call after 3, 15 W. Huron a FE 4-056 R. newly col throughout, nice location. $3,500 with a low down T MT coe NORTH PERRY NEAR "SCHOOLS. HO 2 bed 2-0604. . attached ag Ordo, 4 West Side $12,000. 3 bedroom ranch. RoR THIDE MODERN, 2? BED- family. Easy ae Seareom: yauslt pereet room. 1% | xcellent’ beach privile You be che to see this &. BRICK ee HOME al- se ed for the poomeee E: waiting is this modern con- temporary setting -on over an acre of wooded land and yet only a few minutes from downtown Pontiac. Natural fireplace. The beautiful trees are a pleasure to behold. May we show you through? You'll need very little cash to get you in with tmme- diate possession lf desired. ing costs wit bu: 3-bedroom, tty eres street feat Tor RAY O’NEIL, ates 262 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 3-7103 arech MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ONEIL PONTIAC-WATEING. is HURON GARDENS — aceee pane. Full price is $5,500 th $500 down; balance $50 cis mo. Be sure to see this “YOU ASKED FOR IT" — A bungalow’ with a base- new ea carpeting ind the bus line cea stores. MACEDAY LAKE FRONT— Priced to sell at $13,950. “FREE — An opportunity to have an especiall 5 rooms for yourself. lovely big living room carpeted and oes. Peas modern m. Corsa tach. $ a 22 8_. Telegraph Rd. FE 3-7103 one! GI—nothing down and insurance. Income ing house. 5 sleeping rooms. refused. West Suburban 2 cite Pireplace. Separa down. per month payment. HOYT REALTY ____ 254. 8. Telegraph Ra Paul M. Jones, Real Est. Sep- arate aie room. Full basement 80 x 120 ft. lot. Very little traf- vst casi, Low down fic. Ideal heme ii raise | i son. Call now this tis be Pine Large older home. 2 story. Ex- colent condition. 3 bedrooms & . Kitehen, living room and caper dining room, full base- Nething Down ment. Total price $7 per month payments inclu ing taxes No more money problems if you are the next owner of this room- apartment. 4 garages. Large own- er’s quarters. 4 lots. Present own- er must sell—no reasonable offer Serco Elizabeth Lake Rd. $10,500. rate dining room, Large utility room. 60 x 120 lot. Nise shade trees. Lake privileges. Terms. $2300 FE 2-9840 2-9966 2 BEDROOM, UTILITY, NICE shaded lot. 1 block off Dixie afoh Ped Midget Bar. Bargain, ___For Sale Houses 6 a For Sale Houses BOBOLINK 132 ‘HAYDEN mg ol less than a bidck Loa eee Ue chade & carpet son Jr. c pe in. LR. The bath. Nice kitchen with natural cu Base- ment hes divi TH i: Very clean 3 m home close to Northern Hi, hoo! garage. Low F.HA. Term “se STRAITS LAKE a rge room home. En porch. Bath. 3 tae Privileges on _ paves beach, $350 down. per aue RN HEIGHTS m Brick home. Oak floors. th. Basement with gas furnace * A he! see Water softener iy Cc HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton FE 8-044! Open Eves. - 0 DOWN. BEAUTIFUL LAKE- ac “Lake. room and. kitche able terms. $750 Down. Al! brick, three bed- rroms ii} west suburban area. Large cérner lot. Newly decorat- ed, immediate possession. $700 Down. Exceptionally © “clean home. 2 bedrooms, large kitchen and beautiful knotty pine sun rch. Partial basement finished. 10,500. Low monthly payments. FE 4.3569 . FE $-5841 WM. KENNEDY 3101 Y MURON sT._ BROWN $5009 DOWN — Large 8 rm. home that needs painting. Located near St. Fred's. Priced at only $5,600 96.500 FULL PRICE ~— Modern 3 bedroom home with basement. Paved street. St. Michael School district. Terms. “Owner leav city, and offers an unusual val- Gen! NOTHING DOWN — Repossessed home, only 3 years old. ‘3 bed- room bungaiow.’ Oil AC furn. Alum. storms. Large 100x139-it. lot. ‘All you need {is your closing costs.” All newly decorated. Ideal spot for children. $13,000 LAKEFRONT — Modern to the minute, Full basement, two- car arene Good beach. ‘Clean as a pin GI SPECIAL — Rambling rancher — Gr bmn and tge famil ape lot with lake privi- lege: “On _ 4% miles from city.’ ac living here: " All you need is your mortgage costs. NOTHING DOWN — If you are a Gl — Two homes and two lots, all for the price of orf One has full basement. Located on ved street. sae from << wil $4,900 FULL PRICE — Little farm 832 W. Huron - Almost an_ acre with 24x28 {ft FE 4-8550 PE 8-1275 bungalow. Basement, bath and oil ~ oe (fia Here is a bargain. eeds some finishing. WARM How about a swim when you arrive home from the office? Like to read your Press on a screened-in Teh in the evenings, — ng those coo] breeses PARTICULARS Open 9-9 Three bedroom ranch home, FE _5-8775 with living room. dining ell, birch kitchen and utility Toom. Brick and Asbestos shingle construction, four years old. Nice big lot on paved street. Aluminum windows, storms and screens, water softener, and lawn al) in. Picture windows in dining and livingroom Privileges on Williams and Maceday Lakes $12,800 with $2,800 down to ceitins mortgage of $10,- Cail owner at Orlando 3-T753 “FOR SALE OR RENT "i TOTAL DOWN CS Vacant HUETT. Realtor FE 8-0458 TRI-LEVEL STARTER HOME Nothing down your lot, small down, our lot Plattley EM On Porter road, 10 miles west of Pontiac. Near M50. 2 bedroom home on 2 acres with basement Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE LAKEFRONT Partridge AND ASSOCIATES If you're looking pod a fine jake- front home this is one you = iia room fireplace. 9x16 dinin ron plus 99 | F= 4-358) 10560 W. HURON FE 5-8775 OPEN TIL 9 Pine Lake Area or Bp Looe thermopane NEW 3 BEDROOM. RANCH. Well dom vent fan, § mel oem Tslpocst = constructed, oak floors red yard bgp room, ates eres lente Nights OUere at 320,300 & range, basement, oil auto- Ideal Family Home Top Location’ kas oe a ot rites, POSSESSION, don't wait “BUD” Nicholie, Realtor ” ol are ihaloer ¥ CLARK modern home at front. Only $13,300. Terms. Pine Lake, | beth light oak floors, Separate gg to nes room, edd | Gininig room, blacktop Toad, 2 car 2 garage. $12,500. Term matic heat. $13,000. Terms. to w k home full wasement. wa Hills Bas" ¢,,ted be & toummereser. $i4.- igh, ans 250. Terms e- INDIAN VILLAGE. immediate pos- . rec. session. Attractive brick home. , attic exhaust fan, wall to wall carpeting, Brick firepince. Pe gg preecee Breakfast nook 1% baths, family room, landscaped lot, 2 ‘car ga- sit tee and other nice features > HOME & BUSINESS. Large 6 room in good condition on Com meron 1 with plenty bd ing neerr new 3 om brick of room bulld_ «tore ear Pd ro Pine Lake HALF ACRE LOT. 6 room modern ‘COLEMAN STREET OFF WEST HURON. Mod PE 37898 — RES. CLARK REAL ESTATE one bar ustits alahar SELL OR TRADE — 20-acre farm with all tools, tractor, etc. Mod ern 6room home, new automatic washer & dryer. Good barn, other outbuildings. Fruit trees, etc “Will trade for cheaper home.’ $24,500 BRAND NEW — Brick rancher with 10 acres of land. Custom-bullt home with attached Soest Pa da Ledge stone fire- Completely carpeted. Built- nee oven a range, washer & dry- er. Cupboards and closets galore. Designed and built for comfort- able and convenient country liv- ing. 11 miles from city. Shown by appointment only. LIST WITH US—For fast and are clan Pade tle BUY, SELL . 20 yrs. serving Pectice & Vicinity n 9-0. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 2407 Elizabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3564 or FE 2-4810 Multiple Listing Service IN . 250 The city . .. 6 room home, three bedrooms, separate dining room. Full basement. Large lot. Full price $6,500. CROOKS . gem! 5 room seine: cae party *Piastered walls, pan- eled family roo.n with fireplace. Four bedrooms, 11%16 dining room and 24¢-foot living room. $24.950, Humphries $3 «ON. rot Open Eves. -9236 " waneiy uiseieg SERVICE _ Gateway Drive Attractive 5-room re a bungalow all newly decora’ l%-car ga- oie oe 50x 150. rues privileges. 900. Terms. Off Glenwood Pay only $1,000 down on this Loh lent 6-room modern brick. Full basement. Recreation room, gas heat. matt garage. Vest Side For , working couple. or for investment. 5-room modern brick terrace Many, many extras. Also connie garage. Right price and “Wide Open Space Your entire family will enjoy hav- ia 3 big 5-room modern ° pa . heat, gare, = oo service. Logs at Te Ales! Fe A $0,500 WILLIS “«M. BREWER “rE Er uron Be ems with Eves. OPEN 5664 Hummingbird Lane EVENINGS 5 to 8 P.M. MONDAY thru FRIDAY DRAYTON eal 3 bedroom brick enesiew with large kitchen, family room. fire- pies. Ceramic | Mile with van- — ga- rose. nn “ores at As buy! Gis 2 to 4 bedroom homes, —— fn —— Wikes go ee some down @ show ra a ion Ne “Sbligation Call today. George R. Irwin one o suavice recreation room. Off qestya. sil.oeo. Terms. p. Large. rooms | . throughout. 2 bedrooms. Reason- | almost any section of city and- Suburban Living At Its Best eurance. C. PANGUS, Realtor 2160 M15, Ortonville, NA 71-2818 nance cost, alum. full basement. Only $1 down to super mkt., a. lst floor livin garage. $0,750, term N... 100, terms. Base COLORED OCCUPANCY $22,000. terms. Baas ted cherry paneled ‘ormae T... Brick Colonial, ft. fron’ session at once. terms. C Huron Street Open "beeuines & Sunday 1-4 be eae 24) wv: W. ROSS | ‘HOMES paatett Don Don, McDonald del to show, “Eat, Set 2 bedroom modern, basement, $65 a month. Includes taxes and 1 ANNETT LEAVING 8TATE — North side location, low mainte- siding, screened porch, 3 bedrooms. bath, family ue kitchen, MODERN HOUSING—Close schools & iuing room, Rd rifenen, a rooms & Basement, oil heat. oa “cat aoe VILLAGE — 3 bed- ms, possession at once. aH saute ® az 3 tnd. Price eased v0 $11,- Brick spartment & house ocat Pad rate house at rear. Will bring in $300 per month. 10 ACRES -- 335 ft. paved road frontage, ust west of Pontiac, owned by landscape ms or rasta 4x20, A opel Sis femily room, stone floor, 2 spa- cious b rooms, tile bath, 11 block basement. auto- — oil heat, separate ga- with em & oi ee tag. 32850 out- EE * a Tee. $35,000 WATKINS LAKE Uf gaiealeirg attac garage with sun deck. Pos- 500, ROY ae INC., REALTORS FE 8-0466 Best Buys Today WILLIAMS LAKE BRICK Compact 3 bedroom ranch on eautifully landscaped shaded ‘o with privileges on Williams Lake. Built in 1956 with ment e tedned iia ged garage. x —— oe —*. aries ine nded. cee right st $17,500. CLOSE TO 8T. MIKES reold ‘4 block to Catholic r 8s 3 rooms down and 2 e bedrooms and bath nace a r tion = ecrea' room. ‘aved drive to : Por real : at $1 Also Re- a frigerato, stove and new asher. NORTH OF ROCHESTER Cute and cle 4 room bath home with —_ y $50 down moves you in, no mortgage costs. FARM iNCOME 2") acres of fertile garden soil grows everything. Fruit Wes _ 2 homes, 5 rooms for owner, 4 réoms for potas unit and garage. Off Perry Street in city mits. A steal at 89.500 with $1,500 down. STOUTS Warren Stout, Realtor TN. Sagitaw st FE 5-8165 SCHRAM eae FRONT edrm.. brick ranch with op living rm. with fire- | ome 10x13 kitchen. Oi! orced air heat, 1% car at- pa garage. Located on canal fo Loon Lake. Price ts $17,950. Terms can be arranged. “Ean on PLAINS Pees usd essen tae erierd rage a G at $13,500 onthly” paymet og m including taxes re ance. Pe IVAN W. SCHRAM MOLTIPLE LISTING SER REALTOR | FE 5-9471 OPE 942 JOSE COR. MANS tbe | GILES North Suburban A “~< a : a pee WG. boty 24078 fan price Terms srranged. for appointment. 3 Bedroom Brick tras here for the price. } €, x Fisher Street | 2 bedroom home plus a 2 Best of a: on oly - pases ses full rice terms. “Sn for ice we ferme | GILES REALTY CO.: Wher ron Fer Sale Houses 6 Bateman Kampsen MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 2 BEDROOM BRICK on large lot. La Séehen with ratte Land even Full brick breeze- way. ae eater beet. Ca peel weation ocveed Suburban $15,000. 3: BEDROOMS $50 DOWN Pull price $4950. Full base- ment. 3 dedrooms. Sheil house on 50 ft. lot with lake privileges. Exterior Finish intartor te suit yourself. Big discount for cash. q PIONEER HIGHLANDS Close to James K and lake- rivileged lot — 3 bedroom rick built in 1964. Reeree: asinator, water s0' er. Auto. ventilating fan and many other extras —_$18,- 750 with $2,750 down on A HOT ONE. for 12 per cent. return 6n ie investment. 2-family— rooms each side. Separate utilities, 2 gas furnaces and 2 blocks from ‘‘Sears' ae cash ta ‘hew mortgage. LAKEFRONT RANCH on a « oa . Cyclone fented rooms. Ledge . —,° s fireplace and spacious 38 ft. porch facing lake. Thermopane picture HY 3 pens because it's ws A at Te ee FE 4-0528 —REALTORS— 311 8 TELEGRAPH OPEN $950 Dn-$75 Mo MODERNIZED BRICK Attached Garage ge t losed ches. Compile ay - * shined uehading, sleet or a with auunay Phas a full basement. 2 BATHS, tupey RM. Imagine only $13,266 Check this 3 bedroom. Two of them 13 ft. & one 10 ft. 9 closets, large 314-sq.-ft. , range & oven built birch cabinet in 1 fune' Kitchen. 2 dinin areas Aluminum wind Sas. lect oak floors, wet pias- es ; Man: cies wanted po s 3. r a tures. Weil castom “QUALITY BUILD” it. Top $$ for Your Home W. H. BASS, REALTY Builder FE 3-7210 SMITH WEST SUBURBAN 3 droom with ~ 8T. BENED 8 s8CHOO DISTRICT. 3300" — Terms. TRADE This neat bungalow with 1's = arage. on 2 lots with TS on Williams Lake = ze a Call us for full *faformation A star) HOUSE — aorere — be- heat. = aot sg a es POR: fins | Bey a i. HIGH | Wideman 412 W. EE OPEN EVES. E 4-4526 VAL-U-WAY FOR VALUES & TRADES $50 PER MONTH r ineled walls. rs. Built. in —— Lot 100 x or Williams Lake area. fii odk Low “month tn — R. " “DICK “VALUET REALTOR 345 Oakland Ave. Open ‘til 8:30 FE 5-0693 or FE 4-3531 t = own 2. 4 BEDROOM HOUSE. ful rpeted, ——— seni i a awnings. Large fenc: vara, _on « 59,000 Will build 3 vedroonmr ranch style home on your lot. Pull basement, oak floors, tile bath, birch cup- WATCH The Nationals’ Go Up! NOW STARTING CONSTRUCTION IN Judah Lake Estates “NO. 4” See for Yourself... SORT pon as LOW AS: NOTHING DOWN $70 PER. PER MONTH FHA- : ozs BOW} 3 DOWN $73 DIRECTIONS: COME OUT Pestte os Soa Re: FE 2.9122 , ; « “ ie . Py Beautifully landscaped, large gar- den area. 2 car garage. Now at $17,500 — terms. 2 ACRES Paks, Saearme. plas: e rms., plas- ne oe . ‘modern kitchen, 1's baths, edaete n Hreplace = iv ing room. $12,800 FHA APPROVED — Sylvan Lake) rivileges. 3-bedrm. brick ranch fe ome- with breezeway to attached Tu ba s = Large garage. med porch. You can buy this ay only down. Call tonight Floyd ‘Kent, Inc., Realtor 2200 — ral at 7 coerce AMPLE CU CUSTO R PARKING OLDER HOME, 6 RMS. AND SUN porch, aluminum a good condition. $1500 $75 a month includin, petty “and in- surance. PE 4-6693. —- FOR COLORED, 3 BED iM, dining room, front room, kitchen and bath ‘ow down payment, quick possession. Cal) from 9 to +: FE 3-0584. OWNER. MODERN 5-ROOM heats ip Ward's Orchard. Lot size 60x120. $1500 down. FE 43874. 4 BEDRMS. $1000 DOWN 2 ‘ile Later Fenced lot. aS wi carpe New Call owner. OA 8-2918. $8,000 WILL BUY - I%» story, 6 rm. home. Good East side location. You have se- oa and economy in this pace: us now for sppointmen “ORION INCOME 3 family, 1 3 bedrm. spartment down, 4 rm. apartments up. All with bath. Ges heat. Close ud : now for @ ment. CRAWEORD ACENCY We're one to assist a your 609 E. Flint, ary ae Tr FE 8-2306 LAKE ORION—GI $11, $11,400 Gr terms rms. é. LTOR : Lake Orion. 23 29-2291. john K, Irwin ‘a car at- x 120. aes 500 with Gusse down. Flagstrom ALTORS 4900 Hisniend Rd. (M59) Pontiac, Mich. Ph. OR 4-0358 up. safe for children. Hurry for this one. $12,200. §2, 500 dow Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 832 W. Huron E 4-8550 ____PE_8-1275 CASS LAKE WOODS Lake one 4-bedrm., full base- ment. aol 4g Drive to Leroy off Commerce Then left to 5054 Virgie Lcd offer. KENYON REALTY Mt. Morris, Mich. NI_ 3-5 NI 3-5162 USE ALL Hi YEAR ROUND NEAR Brendel Lake. Real bargain. EM _ 3-8511. LIKE ly! LAKEFR fireplace, full. eat Pe ee nicely fu and- scaped lots. Greatly ridaced for $10,500 cash. ‘R. HAYNER Sa 406. W. Maid st.. ee 9-841 or ony pusisy 4 beautiful model homes from $23,500. Ope: afternoons of call OR 3-9957. saree ee —_— ESTATE 2 acres on small lake, near Pon- = iver’ $3,000 full price, Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 8323 W. Huron PE 4-8550 FE 8-1275 OPEN HOUSE Bios brick 3 bedroom _horres, Froo Pri x 245 feet. Waterfrontage. Access to van and Cass Lakes. Btop at 373 Cass Lk. shire Sub. Rd. iincoln- Paul M. Jones, R Real Est. 832 W. PE 4-8550 SUSIN LAKE ere & Dixie H room ranch on jerae Tooms. Tile bath, electric heat & stone front. Attached ga- schoo! & SONS ~- COLONIAL HILLS: rege lovely well rca homes in the Bloomfield 8c Dis- Two Bedroom Rancher on beau- tiful lot. Priced at: $18,960, Bricks. from Llbmad ind 9.200 3 a well kent, 8 Call fort fu: ner ‘chame renin rage. ie ls & Porta’ heey down payment on mn be seen any time. 1- Ly “ae or MI ¢ 208 before 10 & afte Suburban Property 10 WNER, INCO! PROPERTY. ickory 8t., Milford. Walk- ine deta tance to sho g center, rooms an oer 6 and bath — down. ccebed Herendeen carpeted, Pan- den. Gas fired im heat. Garese la John K. ! Irwin & Sons ALTORS a4 313_ West iearen Street FE 5-0447 or FE 2-4031 EVE FE 8-4274 87 ADELAIDE 4 room home — good neo any A iy moving jak al Gane iw age pay- Phone Ce re Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 1 West Huron FEderal $8161 or FEderal 8-2620 ick Possession -leve] in Union Lake ares large ——— 1% baths, is. bright and airy. large lake priv iat on be only $2500 ‘dows John J. ‘Vermett REALTY ! 9203 Commerce Rd. EM 3-6466 For Colored GI — mo DOWN PAYMENT — 6 rooms bath. 3 nice bedrooms, blichen Full To see these homes call Mrs. Howard, FE 2-6412. wm. Miller Realty, 670 W. Huron St. ‘WESTRIDGE room brick oe: 3 large bed- rooms. Exce mally nice living room with ieepiaee. 12 x 20 fam- fly room. Secaguionn kitchen. Parquet floors & plastered walls. 2 car pavers garage. Gas heat. 2 blocks to — of the Lakes church & school. Owner serie state. Price is far below bare on ao houses in this tifu OAKLAND LAKE 2 bedroom bungalow situated on 34 acre lot. 12 x 18 living room. Beparate Coir degli exceptionally Nice kitchen ke privileges and poles distance to schools. FHA “WILLIAMS LAKE 3 bedrooms. Large living room. Nicely arranged , kitchen with loads of cabinets. Hardwood 7 fea basemen “* Of] heat cond. About year old. sears ges. 1 biock to lake. with reasonable down pay- : “GEORGE BLAIR + ALTO R 4536 Dixie “en OR 3-125 DRAYTON PLAINS : Evenings OR 3-1708 or OR R_ 3-8842 | Templeton Yo Ac ae Lot, Lake Area ranch style home, ag —— overlook- — th, Mice large oi] acer Recently : beau- fin- ithe 1 160° = i oo poross lot .to Nort ate ice Ponti: o a land contract as - KL. Templeton, Realto altor 2290 Orchard Lk. Rd. PR 4-4863 After 6 FE 2-902. SMALL TOWN Big value aa room home. Pull basement pre. 5 Peden coumaneiien, “$. terms, Hurry! C. SCHUETT, Realtor ___ FE 8-0458 © y | hi: Priced to sell, $16, is ® rUtans 4-8073. For Sale Lots 11 1_ACRE BUILDING. NEAR Square Lake. FE 1%, AS A “Sag pie FARM ate ONLY tins Lo ee a iw wn ments, CUSTOM. BUILDING STEELE REALTY Ra. (M50) at at Miiford land, Michigan. MU . 2 ADJOINING LOTS, a xX 240. ana 50 x 240, Bargain! Lambert 135 np epland High- _ Shores Acres. Fives. FE_5-9820. Goop 61 R LAKE OAKLAND WITH PRIVILEGES. $600 EACH. TERMS. SEVERAL DRAYTON woops AT $1600 ss UP TERMS. 2 EXTRA LARGE LAKEFRONT NORTH SHORE FOREST LAKE. he CALL FOR PARTICU- 2 ACRE LOTS. RURAL. TERMS. SILVER LAKEFRONT, BARGAIN PRICE AT $6,500. 244 8. Te! FE 3-148 ae OPEN BVENINGS Tree LOTS. Eac 3 . Co mbis H. 310 W. $1750. CHEROKEE F HiLts BEPORE ¥ e Lake Rd: * Scott Lake Rd., 3 blocks to Lacota. Carl W. Bird, Realtor 503 Community National Bank Bidg. PE 4-4211 = NT PESIDENTI bi) rec- on ares and beach, Moderate . OR 3 W. aterford Hil Hills F Estates s oe o— lots left. asetase 100 | ape $50 down further formation call FE HERBERT C. DAVIS 4915 IRWINDALE DR. ___ For _Sale » Acreage 13 13 1-5-10-20-40-ACRE BUILDING PAR- iN {5 ACRES, Located cels, As low as $50 down. iz PANGUS, Realtor i160 M15, Ortonville, NA 17-2818 8 ACRES See this large new 3 bedroom, 1's baths, oi] furnace, auto, wa- ter heater, plastered walls, pan- eled a nice cupboards, oak — basemen oot to sel. Terms. North of Ind a PON NTIAC REALTY FER 5-8275 a a ahee. 60 acres, $175 per pos 80 acres, $150 per acre 100 acres, $150 per acre Some low with stream, Some high with timber. Some gravel, some muck. F. C. Wood Co. Williams Lake Rd. at M50 OR 3-1235 After 6 pm. MAple 5-1691 60 ACRES Beautiful rolling parcel just out- side oe limits of Holly. Front- age i nese $240 per acre with ‘terms * Warren Stout, Realtor Ti N, Saginaw st FE 5-8165 Open daily "tll ¢ ACRES—ACRES ae 19 oan te North Bide location. Mp Aled miles from Pontiac City Umits WI" divide. Terms. Excellent building {WE allan 1g have i.eny other acreage RILEY REAL ESTATE 1 al hake Be 4-4821 For Sale Farms 14 36 ACRES VACANT ON LAKE NEAR Holly. Price reduced. $15,000, $6,- 000 d ee 100 ACRES. 1 SET OF BUILDINGS. 50 acres ia soil bank. Near Holly, eee: Reduced to $25,000, Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 832 W. Huron PE 4-8350 =e 8-1275 LAKE R ~ PONTI ONLY $9.950 WIT ® acres with iveite 10 miles from. Pontiac. Good well, pressure water system, full bath, extra lavatory. Large attic. Will take lot, car or truck as down payment. Call owner, MAy- fair Sale Susiness Property 16 ATRACTIVE BUILDING 8svUIT- able for doctors office teed etons modern home = t hed mear schools and rar cen er. Priced rit, 3 with terms. __Broker OR 3- 3 2. COMMERCIAL a LOCATED across street from papeemerine $1,000. OR 3-9702. Rent, Lease Bus. Prop. 17 17 ess. FE 4- 4443 between Help Wanted Male 19 2 MEN WANTED IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT, ASK FOR FOREMAN, 78 N. PADDOCK. 2 EXPERIENCED AUTONOBILE ainters. GM cars preferred. uaranteed pay. Vacation pay. Pinest working conditions ‘on - tiac Retail Store. General Motors ee 63 Mt. ——— 8t., Pon- jac. PE 3-7117 ASSISTANT MANAGER Branch being expanded: a brand new opportunity for you. clnspae por Prestige, excellent earnings. will ee ss ecm pietely trained for this positi now No canvassing, no delivering. no Ceara For in- ae write Pontiac Press, Box ALERT MAN Who wishes career -in interesting Pte National firm will train be able to be high All_replies confidential, Post Office Box 5. tiac A MAN wanted for sales and service. sore we e income for Ln bs Pontiac x 8, e Press yin prevent job, age tel eleptone numb: BARTENDER exPEee 2 nights per wk. Contact Steve, Sort pad County Boat Club. FE BOYS, “WETS= RAVEL! 18 TO 26. Mexico, Hawail gag eonmee = U.S.A. and return, Any. ma apply including English» - lepaakine foreigners. — cars furnished Rocuctomied ta earn $125 weakly: ‘ommission & bonus. No expe- rience needed. Apply to Bobby Du Roosevelt Hotel. 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m BAKER Exp. all around man. FE 3-9783. BARTENDER. APPLY TUESDAY between 6 and 9 p.m. No phone calls ue Guest Morey's Golf Club, ScurEn AND PAINTER, EXPE- rienced only, plenty of wor! not — tiac Auto Body, Service. FE 4- Couple - Caretaker Cook - Housekeeper FULL TIME FOR BOTH. remises. Accomodation only. Salary $300 saeeny sent t ee Pia rmanen ons. perma Call owner JO 4-6 COUNTER PARTS MAN, EXPER- ienced In tight mechanical work. A at Keego Sales and Serv- ice, Keego Harbor. CAB DRIVERS. STEADY, NIGHTS and days, age 30 or over. Apply 1 p.m. 438 Orchard Lake Ave. DESIGNERS DETAILERS First class oa: on sarxe fix- Ae . =~ over time. tr Too Ss NGINEERING no CAMPBELL ROCHESTER =u =D GENTLEMAN add to present sales line, al can speek ie art, house to house. MI 66102. refer- i XPERIENCED ROUTE MAN, Collins Cleaners, 650 Woodward, Rochester. OL 2-7711. EXPERIENCED REFRIGERA- tion and installation man. Apply Huff Refrigeration Co., High- land. MU_4-5665 for appointment. ENTER PRISING, AGGRESSIVE pager, ge man with no previous auto- ie rience sell Plym- ouths, ges & Chryslers. ill operate as directed. Excellent in- Write set tell us about yourself, ano if you think hee are capable of selling 4 or cars Lovin week. Write Pontiac Press B tt. EXPERIER CRS FOR wholesale Tanent packing company catering to restaurants and stores, Must be good boners. No drinkers. Furnish references in Ist letter. We offer good working conditions and over union wages Write Pon- _tiac Press Box 104. GROOM TO TAKE CARE OP SAD- die horses, middlea, man pre- ferred. Mires s Riding Btable, 23175 4 Mile Rd. HEATING - AIR. (CONDITIONING ‘unit: tor —_ man. Janke 1 Air Conditioning, 177 Edison &t. Ph. FE ¢381' days, Eves. eali _FRF 40445. MARRIED | — WITH CAR AND 43, who is Wiper wht a a plees Ho “yuaranteed to Good - training raares Write _ Box 57 Pontiac Press.” MECHANIC AND GAS BTATION attendant for service station work, Apply 720 8. Adams Rd., Birmingham, OPPORTUNITY PLUS — MARRIED man 21-43 car, phone, to train as unit mgr. for large National Sales Organization. $432 a month Wn oapeotee guaranteed to start. rite Box 62, Pontiac Press, REGISTERED PHARMACIST full time. Pleasant work. Spartan _fomer. 691 Orchard Lake Rd., ~ ROAD JOB OPEN Sot Mabenel, ceaseen: Sraepee . Above average Roberts, 10 4 .m. Thurs, only, Roosevelt Ho- SALESWEN : SALESMEN MONEY -M NEY MONEY $120 commission per sale. 3 sales a week aT for specialty sales- He 1700 Telegraph 8 to 5 ~ SHEET METAL ‘MECHANICS roto-ty pe band forming and “— ab Th ‘My mom's painting the ceiling!" CRAWFORD AGENCY A eiuA ee: yOuae epee alified. Ask for Ted Mecu ours. Sr. FE 5-3030, Arro Realty 23 _ lastraction. PRIVATE MATH TUTORING FE 4-5614 __Work Wanted Male 24 6 FT. HUSKY WANTS WORK ANY kind. Have earl tools for most ee $1.50 UL 2-358 or FE 4-1 ALL TYPEs SEL Free Estimates FE 2 4-1 PAINTING D WALL aa pering. FE 2-471. A-] PAINTER TERIOR AND exterior. Reas. FE 4-6462. A-1 CARPENTER as ORE. NEW and repair. FF 4-4210. Help Wanted Male 19 sears, Roebuck & Co. - mi \Will select 2 ambitious, neat appearing young men for training as field repre- sentatives for Pontiac and surrounding area. The men selected will receive thorough training and will enjoy above average earn- ings. Weekly draw against commission and bonus. Numerous company bene- fits provide security for the future. Unlimited op- portunities for promotion. Call for confidential inter- view, 9 AM. to 1 P.M., August 5 and 6. MR. LYNCH WALDRON HOTEL be FYE 5-6168. Pontiac, Mich. TELEPHONE CANVASSERS For modernization sales, good commissions. FE 2-82345 or FE 23-0777. Heating salesman wanted i{m- mediately. Plenty of goalies leads furnished. Absolutely no canvassing. Commission or salar Call me today a - _ Business is excellent. YOUNG MARRIED MAN TO work with horses, & wife to care for 2 ical Men gas apt. OA 8-2296 p.m YOUNG MEN TO ASSIST Manager in local branch in coast to coast chain organiza but must be able felligeaniy. And satisfied w Per week to start. Rapid pete ee ment to those accepted. We train you & our expense. Car fur- Call MR. BANDY FE 8-8013 FE 8-8103 Before 2 p.m. Salary $80 Per Week YOUNG MAN, 18 OR OVER, TO train for office manager. Car es- sential. per week plus car allowance and Pay increase. For a call hor ie or , Help Wanted Female 20 A-1 WAITRESS counter. type. Poot hey 22 Bis Neal ‘aap Pe _Bivae " Birmingha ae “Toy AND or ev pgierbe tors. 3 managers. 33 cent commission. No collecting. se de livering. no back ca to de- liver, no bond to sign, no cash ’ Investment, no andere license. Weekly pay check Christmas bon- us Leva l year old reer pany: new to Michigan. FE ¢- AVON — WORLD'S L LARGEST COs- metic C has for (5) women. in Pontiac & surround. ing areas. Earnings to $50 a week. No _mnetiovanee with home duties. e today 4-4508. or write Drayton Plains P.O. Box 536. ATTRACTIVE Weil-groomed woman to be fash- fon ow director for Emmons Jewelers, Fu rt time. No ex- perience. Will train. For’interview write Pontiac Press Box 36. ATTENTION LA Want to Cage op our spare ie + UL 23782. EPER FOR SMALL BUSI- ness, OR 3-0412. Couple-Caretaker Cook-Housekeeper 22. TO 50. PULL TIME FOR BOTH. Live on premises. Accomodation for couple bot @ month plus ¢ food 1 rm, furnished, heated a closet space, bath: adjo! os rele tric range—refrigerater, for snac ctricity. taundry sent out. Gas biel car. — oeiet Good ent positio: references. Call owner. 30 4 Med CARHOPS. —EXPERIEN person. Frost-Top ‘Drive- in. ws W__ Huron. CARH FOR rol & W ROOT __Bee “gO Baldw: r hour in FE 56-4955 DRUG CL’ C8. EX- rienced Apply in person. nion Lake Drugs, 8060 Cooley Lake Rd 3-414 OR Mir er apr perm oe e Tf over rs “ er Ra eran eben Ro Roc warns, 11 A.M. 7:30 hone calls. Pek Inn. O75 orcnata ry Ave. XPERIENCED w aii RESS evened: 23175 14-Mile Rd EXP. WAITRESS ren person, Gave's Grill. iL) tolder 7 days a . Pike St. re) - . Montcalm or phone PULL AND PART - TIME WAIT- ease — shift, 6-10 -=. end a.m. Hudson’s Diner, PARTIES NOW arn how Pag earn. 1 earn. al UMP & Pat Max, roa Economy Share r with ertime. McGregor Mfg. Corp. 278 Maple MI ¢me "he an is Oo Help Wanted Female 20 INSIDE GIRL. SUPER CHIEF Drive-In. Telegraph near Dixie. A-1 PAINTING INTERIOR & EX- Stee Free estimate Reas. OR 3-3752 or OR 3-8117. AVAILABLE NOW CARPENTER o_ cabinet work New and re- pair. D. H. Murdock. FE_2-7861. LADIES WITH A PLEASANT voice to do telephone work from our office. Open: ary he MIDDIZAGED WHITE LADY FOR a lady. Light housework, Hid in. § days. $40. Pontiac Press = sharee of home and LOVELY ROOM, WITH KITCHEN rivileges or board, for Christian auy. in exchange for light house- work. FE 55043. 9 to 6 p.m. ISTERED PRACTICAL FOR nursing. home. Also aides. Write Pontiac Box 119. SALAD MAKER, EXPERIENCED for cafeteria fast, efficient. wom- Ca need not apply, SEWING ee ee MENDING. aieratens EM_ 3-3380 SINGLE GENERAL FARM HAND. Room rd & good wages. No _ milking. MUlberry 89-1487. SEAMSTRESS pantED MUST be experienced ary. cleaning repairs & ancrations erg Clean- ers, MAple 5-3521. TOY PARTY MGRS. AND DEMOS. needed all of Mich. No invest- ment, no collecting or delivering. 28 to er cent comm. 300 items, wkly. check. Catalogs. Best plan anywhere. Highest overwrite, Box 12. The Pontiac Press. TOY DEMONSTRATOR penings now for ambitious peo- le to sell nat advertised ys, _ plans. Tr WOMAN 7S TAKE FULL children. Toy Chest & Remmert’s Have openings for dealers. Earn that needed extra money in your spare time. No investments, col- lections or deliveries Car Favs: . ee: Call “right now. a WOMAN FOR HOUSE- t love childre and child care. M = ren. References. Live in. FE ocx WORE AN TES “Custom a Paving Excavating Grading. aks Go x ig. MY 3-5821, geez SHARPENED AND AND MILLERS FLOOR SERVICE. LAY- ne eed & finishing. Terms. Business Services RPP DADS ote dian aii alia ie ate an BURKE ASPHALT PAVING Let us estimate your driveway or parking it. Our jobs are our best reference hone 5.5037 or UL 2-3420 FURNACES CLEANED AND service. C. rvice. CL. _Nelson. _FE = 6-1788. “"NEW-WAY ASPHALT re work guaranteed. Licensed & nded a LAWN WORK, ODD JOBS, EXP. & ref. $1.25 per hr. FE 2-2870. Work k Wanted Female 25 25 A-1 WASHING & cae ror PICE _Up and Delivery. OR 3-84 FIREPLACES wtd. Local ref. 8-4264. - S980, , ee estimates. FE BOOKKEEPING ALL TAXES | pati ST GTT EMpire 3-3416 Gell BO ee 9 ork RE- CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN- | PLASTERING — Kitchen a specialty. FE| Work RING (— NEW OR F. REPAIR GAR \, SAWS MACHINE FTL} CARPENTER WORK OF _ANY | mani” S ogi CHINE ao - kind. oe Call after 6 WE CARRY PARTS FOR ALL _Pp.m, 9439. ; FAMILY MAN NEEDS WORK| ‘alg S2¢ Wringer washers. whole. __ desperately. FE 5-3372. APPLIANCE SERVI ROY’S. 96 Oak) kland 1 PE 24021 Dressmak’g & 1 & Tail Tailor’ z 30 eee eA ALTERATIONS, CU CUSTOM MADE es. experience. 5-1530 E _5-6237. = FE 3 WOMEN WANT WALL SARE. ing and house ocleaniig. FE 3-7581. MI} COLORED WOMAN DESIRES DAY work Tuesday thru Friday, $8 ATs bry ame references. TRONINGS WANTED. FE 5-1620. LADY WOULD LIKE HOUSE- bho iee by week. FE 80074 after LADY WISHES DAY WORE OR motel work. PE 3 yas. DAY WORK WANTED, IRONING or cleaning, experienced. 428 Mid- way. EXPERIENCED GIRL WOULD like bab so hapten 3 and light house- work. LADY wae HOUSEWORK. | Lj days week, FE 2-888: MATURE WOMAN DEaIRES EM- joyment in Union Lk. area. Bookkeept: ee ane & switch- board eee available if re- quired. aiMEOGRArEING: “TYPING. 8EC- retarial service EM 3-2842. eae MEDICAL ASSIST- ant, ae rp igelbeceme all office, heer Hag R procedures. MAy- r BABY Srna AND IRONING. FE 8-6038. WTD. BABY SITTING & IRONING in Crescent Lk. area, “oe 8-3013. WORKING IN _A REETRURANT or clerk in FE 8-6823. ae WOMAN OVER 35 TO care for 9 yr. old twins, while Soon works days. $20 wk. FE ae PONTIAC LAKE 1 Apply in’ person. WIVES Are yee naan os ears be- cause jusban inco won't miter stretch? Rather hots yourself, ease his incomé. Phone, O F.] INN. your home. WTD AITRESS KITCHEN HELP & ails eirls. Moheburger Drive In. a eae North of Waterford on bape HOUSEKEEPER. MIDDLE 25-60 years. No laundry. oon. apt. with bath. No smoking or drinking. 2 adults. WOMAN DESIRES DAY WORK 5 —s Stee week, Go home nights. FE ___ Building : Service 2 26 AAA CEMENT CONST. Sidewalk & Driveway Licensed_and een FREE “acs mates. FE 4-3371 or FE 5-0833. A-1 BLOCK, BRICK ab CEMENT 25" yrs. or FE 5-6 DRESSMAKI KING, TAI TAILORING AL- Mrs. Bodell. FE 4-0053. terations. DRESSMAKING TAILORIN terations, drapes & Forusn coe n_ my home. a FE 55. SLIP COVERS, PEs eoencion rice Work ed _8-9369 eves. Pick up & delivery. ___ Garden Plowin wing 31 PLOWING, GR, GRaDIxa, DISCING & Mowing. 175 Scott 4-4228 or OR 3 ott Lake Le rE WARNER'S ROrOe TILLING —Yacant lot mowing. eae mene ___ Laundry Service 34 COMP PAMILY LAUNDRY Service — Shirt service. Pontar rrr k $40 S. Telegraph. FE Landscaping 35 A-1 MARION AND KY. BLUE UE SOD. Hp elie made or you pick up. rooks Rd. UL 2.4643, i A-1 ace aerae SERVICE moval and trimmin me _PE 2-118 of FE 60738 Get our bid. LL KINDS OF SF LAWN WORK-Fi FIN- ish grading. Top soll..PE 3-0603. COMPLETE . LANDSCAPING. free removal and trimming. 1775 we Lk. Rd. FE 4-4228 or OR LAWN SERVICE, | MOWING, LAND- scaping & sodding. All kinds of 23891. service. MA §-9602 or FE LAWN BUILDING REPAIR. Complete lawn service, Lawn cut- ting and maintenance. MI 6-4109. Moving & Trucking 36 tod ft Reduced Rates 1 bed oviNG ohm wett All time. A-1 eae AND BLOCK WORE. Also repairs. OR 3-0464 Po: = gla aranteed. Call any work, Reece! a x mae SMITH cial. Also under house basements. — OVING SERVICE We sre, yes Cones. Gearen: Reasonable 1 Rates FE 6-3458 _teed work . ASHES AND TRASH HAULED. A] BRICK AND CEMENT WORK} 2yug “ Deevy ‘vucking, FE We specialize in porches HAULING & RUBBISH. NAME your price,. Any time. FE 8-0095. LIGHT HAULING _- F@ 4-0031 y to A-1 SAND & FINISH. FE 5-3722. _Pontiac Hardwood Floor Service. rates. FE HAULING AND RUBBISH. $24 $2. A load, any time. FE 4-0264. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish, fill dirt, top soil, sand, iy and front nt end loading FE LIGHT eel REASONABLE | tage on vacation for 2 ‘weeks. wk, Write Pontiac 4-1 BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT 103. = ‘e Bresé Box work, Also fireplace. OR 3-9402. WAITRESS. APPLY AT BAU-| ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK, _ man's Restaurant, 600 8. Blvd. E. Teasonable. Jenson. FE 2-2340. , FULL TIME, STEA: A-1 COMPLETE BUILDING SERV- days. Prefer experienced. Must pga Quality work, be neat & dependabie. Also wom- BOWKER INSTRUCTION CO. an for kitchen help. Gad Dun- | MA 4-2253 or OA 8-3272 — lop's Drive-In, Auburn & E. Bivd.| 4g q GROUP OF BUILDERS WE ANTED LADY FOR LIGHT offer low prices Sree volume housew: and re- rehases on custom Drcmed Mable. in, Te. oo; uilt’’ homes — 800 re 1} secure mortgage. No ebtigntion. bet. 9:30 & 5 1 reno Wun tom |. Builders Exchange charge of motherless home. Chil- | FE_3-7210 or UL _2-3464 dren oe enn Generous allow- BULLDOZING & oe ance. PE 8-4101. DON TURNER FE 5-2853 Help W. di BLO rae ‘“ mene _-_.2) | saeaxwateas np CEMENT DIRECT SELLING — EXCLUSIVE red ae Urcle brand new in Michi- gan 0 $0 Per cent commis- sions. Be wise, phone FE, 2-7911. Employment Agencies 22 PPO PPP LLLP LLLP AL AL DPA PPP COOK Must Be Sreehle < Reliable $100 PER WEEK TO START recall all Evelyn, Edwards FE 41429 EVELYN EDWARDS RECEPTIONIST ...... pot $175 Local Hospital. PBX RECEPTIONIST ........ $210 Busy board peal EE DR.'’s RECEPTIONIST ....... $225 pee 21-35, Local. LIBRARY sseeeeosteees $325 24 Years college, GENERAL OFFICE .......... $200 Local retail store. seeneee E CLERK es $326 fg aa Lon department experience TYPIST $250 IBM Executive typewriter experi- ence. RECEPTIONIST .......c000+. $228 Must wear glasses, BILLING CLERK .............$235| B Posting. BOOKKEEPER ......... saves $325 NCR 3100 Experience. ene seccssce $200 ORF ye ves $300 JUNIOR STENO ............ . $200 Lite shorthand and typing. STATISTICAL TYPIST ....... $350 $200 “MIDWEST Employment ot Pe leet te. work of all kinds. free estimates. FE 8-3785, UL 2-1443. BRICK, BLOCK, STONE & CE- ment work Residential & Com- mercia} Bill. EM _ 3-3168. BLDG. REPAIR PLASTERING Pla block, cement work. FE BULLDOZING — peg te _ Lake Dredging Se ‘ic Tanks — Drain 3 eit tm in- stalled. Free Estimates. on 3-6932, BASEMENTS WATERPROOFED, Free Est Trucks to Rent TRUCKS TRACTORS %-Ton lorie 1%-ton Stakes Dump trucks Semi-Trailers "Pontine Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. Pe 4.04823 8: WOODWARD ua 4-0461 FE Open Daily ~ Including Ply O’DELL CARTAGE Local and long distance moying. ______-Phone FE 5-6806 UNWANTED ARTICLES PIC PICKED up free of charge. FE 5-4638. Painting & Decorating 37 37 18T CLASS PAINTING AND DEC- _ dae Cash or terms, UL 18ST CLASS DECORATING. PAINT. _ing and wallpapering. FE 4-0255. A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. Papering. FE 8-0343. Work guaranteed. FE BLOCK, BRICK, CEMENT WORK, and ropuece: FE _5-8007 CEMENT I8 OUR SPECIALTY. _Floors, basements. EM 3-4879. CUSTOM HOMES BY LICENSED builder. Free estimates. UL 2-5175. CERAMIC TILE FREE ESTIMATES TERMS. Advance Floor Co. OR 3-8701 CEMENT WORK | Walks — Drives — Floo: Licensed — Bonded, UL 2.2762. CARPENTER WORK. NEW & RE ir small jobs & specialty. 1 or 6-2017.. CEMENT & BLOCK WO) FE 5-0782 CEMENT WORK ogee large or small. > oe cape op “On ait, estimate. Special price. DRY Wi WALL TAPING AND Glas ing Free estimates, FE 81. ELECTRICAL SERV.—FREE EST. Partney Electric FE 5-5430 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR struction and maintenance. Connop Electric UP 2-3902. Con- Ed EXCAVATING TRENCHING LLDOZING — EM = PEER TCHEN PLANNING | Call FE 5-8431. _ighens, putin, counter tops, ens. counter a anne aster, Ctepossis. a SoM ro Elec Co., 1060 W. H CARPENTER MASON -& roofing work. OA 8-2018. : PLASTERING & REP & REPAIR }— REAS DON'T PASS UP MONEY! Sel! unneeded belongings for cash FE 28a ‘Classified a a "* A-1 PAINTING INT. & EXT. REAS. FE 4-5206 or OR 3-4915. A-1 PAINTING & wor eae Paper removed. FE 4-69 A-1 PAINTING TRTERIOR terior. 10 per cent dise. for cash. Guaranteed. Free est. FE 4-9305. AAA PAINTING & DECORATING. 26 years experience. Reasonable. __Pree estimates. Phone UL 2-139 98. PAINTING INT. & EXT. PAPER Banging! Mason Thompson. FE 4-8364 Wall Soe Sphere! a ashing — Paper Mov! GUARANTEED) PE. 2-2312 Television Service 38 AY OR NIGHT TV SERVICE DAT e100 oF PE 66590 —s evening. Call PE’ 2-0498, Upholstering 40 EAKLE'S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- ~~ $174 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 3-2641. AL'S UPHOLSTERING FE 4-8797 HOMAS UPHOLSTERING 197 NORTH PERRY 8T. 8888 Lost & Found Al FOUND — 1 BOXER pee. hada | colored. In Walled Market 4-3836, Rd, FE a 6178, Reward: : with Ros markings MOR 3-8879. REWARD. - _Nesees & Personals 5 43 uty 0, ass a a ure the “exper sae fa f- tine neckow "Paine Seren” st ns WOULD ‘LIKE TO HELP YOU with your car problem ~Cal ae ice Palies at oF Owens FE OP 3-9674. 9 _k 8 A-l used cars. WOMAN NEED- ine Gi oA rhs bats or Aas KNAPP SHOES Pred Herman OR 3-1502 New Fords or all In Debt? If you are having trouble a our payments, see us tod MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSEL- INC. Room 16, Pontiac State 1 Bank Bldg. FE 8-045 _ LOSE WEIGHT aArELY™ AND economically with newly released Dex oe tablets. 98 cents at SIMMS. AND A D APTER THIS DATE AU- Se 4, 1959 I will not be re- sponsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Lowell Mick ° 355 N. Paddock, Pontiac, ON“AND AFTER THIS DATE AU- gust 4, 1959 I will n be sponsible for any debts Matracted by any other than myself. Edwin L. ueooty 2000 Collins, Utica, Michiga WE | nae ‘DISHES, 3, SILVERWARE. punch bowls. FE 4-5895. Wtd. Children t to Board 44 44 SATEEN PASTE CORE Wtd. Hoaschold asade 45 CASH FOR USED TV'S, FURNI- ture and misc. FE 20367. “AND: AP- CASH FOR FURNITURE pliances, Odd pieces or housefull. Prompt couretous service. FE 4-7881. FURNITURE NEEDED “ Entire home or odd lots. Get the, dollar. Will buy outright or cell it for you. B&B Community le. Phone OR 2-2711. — —— we BUY EVERYTHING = _ SUN SALES A §-3341 WILL LIQUIDATE youn eae hold goods either by private sale or public PP tieg Appraisals. L. € Smart le Farm, Roches- ter, Michigan. OL 1-5631. WE NEED ALL TYPES OF FUR- niture. Call FE 2-8855. Wanted Miscellaneous 46 HAVE YOU A TYPEWRITER, ADD- ing mecnce: or voemen & ice furniture or e in weet We will buy these items. _OR 3-9767. a ent 48 ____ Wanted | to Rent _ FURN <ISHED iM 2 OR 3 BEDROO q ao. pent 17. house or apartment. in advance. UL 2-501 +6 RMS. & BATH. $55 UP ‘on month. Pontiac vic. Ref- erences. OR 3-8913. sz CLEA BEDROOM WITH BASE- 3 preter north end. OR WITH 3 as GHILDREN 2 or 3 bedroo: 9) ur- piched) by Avg ais yo pot able. In or near Pontiac. Phone Fenton MA 9-7008 or write 3240 Ponemah Dr., Fenton. RENT OR LEASE house by Aug. 29, west side. 8-6682. ‘Share Living Quarters 49 WTD. LADY TO SHARE HOME. Evenings only, FE 5-8716. Wiad: Contracts, Migs: 5 ABILITY To sell your land contract at the lowest. ecrpet pe discount — ts a service Ted McCullough has given for many years. Also cash for your equities. Mortgages avail- ASH BUYERS WAITING A _gbitention, pay hour. PE ™ARRO REALTY iY a PASTEST AC- y d contract. Cash rs waiting. Call Realtor Part- ridge, PE 4-3581. 1050 W. Huron. QUICK ACTION ON LAND CON- TRACTS. Clark Real Estate. FE es. FE 4-4813. Ask for 4 BEDRM. 3 OR rE FE $ TOP $ WE BUY, LIST AND SELL CON- TRACTS of ony re size, located anywhere in ic WE COVER THE STATE. TRY US. ATEWIDE REAL ESTATE inp 8. Telegraph | FE 4-0521 CASH F OR LAND CONTRACTS. CASE enwelt, Psa Dixie Hwy. - OR 3-1355 IMMEDIATE ACTION On any good land contract. New or seasoned. Your cash upon sat- istactory inspection of property and title. Ask ie Ken T L clean. No drinkers. Ez 38. 2 ROOMS, SUITABLE FOR RE- tired or worki en: Private en- trance. FE 2- LARGE nS CLOSE iN nicely furnished. Private bath and. entrance. Ground floor. Welfare acepted. No dringing. FE 23-2181. 2 ROOM, PRIVATE BATH AND entrance, everything furnished, Seneca St. FE 2-5236 or Fé 5-7805. 2 RM. EVERYTHING FURN. BA- —_ 65 E. Howard. FB & 2 ROOMS, KITCHEN & BATH. Sat welcome, 431 N. Perry. FE 2 RMS. APT. WITH BATH, PVT. ent. Children a reome. $12 wk. Pant 2-0772. 41 Whittemore. MS. & BATH, UPPER. WHITE. * g8s 313. «8. Paddock St. FE 2 RMS. 144 State. 2 ROOMS. ALL UTILITIES FUR- nished Private entrance. 141% Oakland Ave. 2 AND 3 ROOM ALT rere, pririte bath 79 Clark 2. RMS. NEWLY DECORATED. PE Tpse private, 279 8. Edith. 2 LGE. RMS. WITH PVT. BATH & ent. 89 State St. FE 2-0566. 2 RMS MAIN FLOOR. PVT. ENT. bath. Close in. FE 4-1483. 16 Pioremse ie ROOMS & BATH. $12 1 week. Child welcome. PE 5-1061. __ inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. 2&4 noon: ~~ TO DOWN town. FE 4-5 ROMS Al anes Sonar PVT. ENT., near bus line. PE 2-066]. After 6 _§& p.m. FE 5-5322. 3 RMS PRIVATE BATH. 31 Stowel: 4-219 _ 3 LARGE ae ae PVT. BATH ane oe $16. 264 S. Parke. FE 3 LARGZ ATTRACTIVE ROOMS, ® sie week. FE 8-3473. 3° RMS. AND BATH, SMALL BABY welcome. 106 Dresden. 3 RMS. & BATH. CLEAN, coo private. Air conditioning. $75 pe month includes uullties. Couple only. FE 5-4032 3 ROOM. APT. CLOSED IN SUN perch. ground floor, private en- Trance and drive. Util. furnished, _ year round lake home. FE 3 ROOMS NEAR GENERAL HOs- _bital Lincoln Ave. OR | oi. 3 LARGE ROOMS. VERY NICE. All utilities. $17.50 weetiy: Adults only. After 4 p.m. FE ,2-6454. 144 Summit, 3 RM. APT. FURN. OR UNFURN. FE 4-1039. 523 N. Saginaw. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATHS entrance. 2nd floor. $18 weekly. Corner Augusta & 197 Sanderson. 3 ROOM FURNISHED APART- Noctis 3348 Primary St., Auburn 3 RMS, UPPER, PVT. BATH & ENT. __162 Augusta. UL 23-2752, OA 43106. 3 ROOMS. FRONT. WEST side. $12. week. Adults. FE 2-7562. 3 ROOM APT. WITH PRIVATE bath and «ntrance. “* Nope) small baby welcom per = —_ Te at 273 Salawin Ave. 3'@ RMS. ALL UTIL. 3 CLOSETS. Neat. clean, well fern Adults _only. See after 4:30. 16 Pinegrove. 4 ROOMS AND BATH, WEST SIDE, ~4686. _All util. FE 4-4 4 ROOMS, BATH, NEAT, i8T __floor, r, close in. PE 2-7503. 4 ROOMS | AND E BATH, PURNISHED. _27 Mechani # ROOMS APT Ae ADULTS. FE 2-515 5 ROOM APT. PARTIALLY FURN. Private ei PE 2-2825 or OL 1-6411 $16.00 WEEKLY. 3 ROOME, PRE vate bath and entrance, ie py welcome. Apply out rt 90 OAKLAND 2 rooms, bath. Clean, heat fur- __nished. $55 mo. __See caretaker. AVAILABLE iMMEDIATELY. 3 bath tleat & laundry facii- _tties. O49 8. red oy 1456. ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED 4 room apt. Pvt. bath, laundry rm. Garage. N. Shirley & Lois. Pon- __tiac. ac. Adults. OL 1-1 L_1-1875. BACHELOR APT. NORTH END. eee bath & entrance, Very _hice. $15 per wk. FE 2-4376. BASEMENT APT. 2 OR 3 MEN. FE 3-7308. Nic _Nue Jocality CLEAN, SMALL, NICELY FURN. with garage. 590 E. Walton. COUPLE, ACREAGE, RENT FREE to board owner. 4-0086 after 4. K, L. Tem mpleton, Re Realtor 2339 Orchard 44-4563 CONTRACTS. TO BUY OR to sell. Ear) Garrels, EM 3-2511 ae EM 3-4086. SHOP AROUND, THEN SEE U8 H anvindd's SAN to PITOL 8A Ww. Huron 8t. FE 4-0561 Wanted Real Estate 52 100 salesmen to serve you. For quall- fied appraisal, and fast, reliable action, CALL | Humphries COLORED. MARRIED S child. FE: 2-4850. eS CENTRALLY LOCATED TO FAC- tories. 2 employed ay = go Adults only. Alberta Paddock. ODERN APT. PVT. ENTRANCE. yu furn. 44 E. Chicago, after NEAR FISHER BODY. KITCHEN. living, bedroom combination, Pinte. util, $1250 q week. OR NEWLY DECORATED. PVT. 3 RMS. & bath. Child ‘welcome. Call aft- er 5 p.m. 421 N. Perry St. SYLVAN LAKEFRONT Suitable for oe or individual. _ Reasonable. | a l FE 4-C877. UPPER 3 RMS. FURN. PVT. bath & oat ier Augusta. UL.2-2752 or OA 8. WOMAN, «PRIVATE BATH AND entrance, 4-2847, WESTSIDE. ATTRACTIVE 2 RMS. bath. Private entrance, air- 83 N. Telegraph Open Eves. cmitiaea, utilities furn. Only FE 2-9236 65 lod mo. for right couple. FE — unt) 56, FE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 5.5042, after 5. AUBURN HEIGHTS the most desired H. C. NEWINGHAM Auburn at Crooks Rds. UL 2-3310 CASH 48 HOURS HOME— EQUITY WRIGHT-VALUET . PE 54-0693 PE 5-9441 ‘ASH MONEY Por bees cee wil a Gr we wilf sh bow fo. get cath vacant Ow you, ‘ATE FE 4-1157 GI AND FHA CASH FOR YOUR HOME Rent nt Apts. Unfurnished 55 1 chy Laven RM., gy en, bath. Ref & Ran Ground floor, Gas ‘heat. Bik, off _Commerce Rd. EM 34115, 2 & 3 RM. PVT. BATH, NEWLY _dec, 285 $5 Whittemore. 2 BEDROOM LOWER, MODERN clean, automatic oil heat and hot Ta furnished Near GMT. FE 2 BEDRM. CLEAN. CHILDRE —— North East Side, 300 FE 40090 or FE 47581, ee RMB. wou afer 6 r 3 RMS. & & BATH. PVT. ENTRANCE terford area, $45. mo. OR _tayt 3 ROOMS & BATH. #10 A WEEK. FE 2-8470. 3 RM APT. HEAT & HOT WATER oe Bae bed. Stove & Refrig. Yes, we can sell batt home for AN cash with very small down pay= "ar corps entrance, Nice location Btn Sb 3h fle | SSE ancnerbay ite will appraise your property and erator urnisned. 203g. Maraheli ss = emg eash you can receive — FE 3 ROOMS AND BATH, $38 A WE ADE WE BUILD - os: a Wa & BON, tee hare nished. OW Bobs vege hig © 3 ROOM, LOWER WITH BATH, util, Adults FE 92-6962, 3 ROOM NEWLY goes RATED, thine, aie tiles furnished, $13 DESPERATELY - | vest, By 6 Fae Pre NEEDED 7 docgrtna," Weak hog ater” ASH OVER THE COUNTER Marsh ‘i FOR YOUR LAND GONTRacY | —&-Marsnén. Yel oiges, ° A. Johnson, Realtor |? room, bedroom, bitchen, dinette 1704'S. Telegraph Rd. | aut. 'Bew Sditestes in Ponting FE 4- 53. ‘heat, hot a eee turnished. New ~ Sell Us Your. Equity saehiierges Y APTS Don't lose your home, pt a SHIRLEY A TS. / Service. C “ Fs, SES ESE | o Pe eam SH FOR 7 en APTS. “eghted Ce ‘J REA bert $1 Mechanic rE / ating Sara land "Tones, , Feal M. J =a old we = | stn te all FT | pet et a oars yt a ee ae, ee eee fe, Tr. oe ee me er = Re es eee « 1, © - : e, \ ; a oe f a 3 a ¢ ct, : ; = i « \ = 3 ; ans a . . : : . ii y | . TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, ‘AUGUST 4, 1959 : | ” Ror Sale Howses, 6) Income Property 7 For Sale Acreage 13 CARNIVAL ; By Dick Turner. Help Wanted ~ 21 Building Service 26), Not‘ces & Personals 43) Rent Apts. Furnished 54 ~ POPOL LALA A PLL LPL . r ON el lll LOL LO PE ‘ IDE; ROOMS | FOR SALE BY OWNER, 4 ACR S } ESTABLISHED WATKINS PLASTERING, NEW AND REPAIR.|BEST CARPET . CLEANERS. ONE 4RM. APT, | owe Melrose AK, ba = available. Full or part time. Av-| Vern Keller. UL 2-1740. ened and operated by Jim Brad- FE 2-1476 7 ; a GRA — sit $2.50 Bees. br. 150 N. Perry. R. G. BNYDER- FLOOR LAYING, | ford..A number of years experi- .i RM KITCHENETTE. BVT ENT. ENT. ° , 8 ¥. 8; sandt ? ence with one of Pontiac's largest F" Utilities. PE 40122. 51 Pine. he y 31 acres located on ed road, sanding and finishing. Phone FE __ Utilit : close to ar a of ye | _s-0002. Sf Patpeting. tage and’ farsi’ | 1 ROOM MODERN, SHOWER, GA- +t, ALL ELECTRIC. Grevel, © betas. Senciy ooms- “favestmeat peeet Cad ROOF REP AIRS Free estimates at your conven-| _ rage. 154 Judson. gray brick, full ent, water home. A "Some por FE ¢6is. __ fence Why do t yourself. call|T (RM. APT. NEAR PO: oT a . Established in 1916 softener, built-in re © Po ag ine bome and Opportunity Is Knocking TRENCHING. BRCAVATIN ORT ee | lima PE poe we bedr. Private oe s i R SCHOOL Area. Pine| er. EM 30076 Dorothy’ Sn rder "Lavender Tecueey Rgnedtly sect financial | "septic Field tile footings, “Open Tucey Thurs. Pr. evenings | 7 BEDROOM APARTAGENT (WES (West four years. home, on sheceans AT Al oo a eT Ba. tse ; 3 years. Call: 38. tor inter- | —ditches_and “boat well. UL 25404. | Dorothy's. FE 2-1244. side) | New furniture, utilities fur- Kitchen, full ‘bsm't. gas beat. hardwood floors, 3 pe bath. Pull prone ipa Re Mt U_ 496417 view: ~~ Building Supplies 27| CHARLES CHESTER. : if gs Gee . $11,500 ‘with $2,000 down, basement swith’ recreation REAL ESTATE SALESMEN. OPEN. | ~~~~~~~~~"~~ AIR CUSHIONED SHOES 1 OR": MEN. EVERYTHING FUR- shower, toilet, & "ev. KE ing for 2 men or women, full | custom MADE PICTURE WIN-|£. H. MILLER OR _3-4942| nished. Modern. FE §-0303 CLARKSTON — Nearly new brick} 2 Porches — assed and | TTT AMORA {ime preferred. Top Commission. | “dow. 9 ft. x 5 ft. Complete with : ‘eptias a a5 | ee ete 8 ee home with full bsm't./ Screened. Attached garage. 2 se me ‘Deautifuny wooded scres with Plenty of floor time. storm sash & louvers. Like new. DAINTY MAID SUP’ Welles. ¥E)* noe RO KI Attractive liv rm. with pic-! tic tanks. Pull price $13,900 wi b Good buntin MR. -WIDEMAN. ShITH wi WIDE-| PFE. 3. es Mrs. Lo - sie, Ty oe th and entrance, ture window and pulitin features ,000 down. ca sia 600- Terms. e. bave _MAn net wT iceE ROnru. | LL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS SiNery—MatD eur PLIES awa rants a Betore See PRE large c! ro ; or - . PRI- ree lot, high and. scenie, Now PONTIAC LAKE—1 story, built in sf racreage with lakes Ca West corner of Seymour and Sash-| reired by ,"Seneral Printing Athens 6t., Drayton Pisins OR| vate bath & entrance. Very nice. at Daly $16,500 — ems: 1953. Bg eigen —. all a vabstov ie ES I eed” Rd. Monday. Wednesday! oftice ly Co., Low. | 323437. Mrs. Gardiner. _ $15 per week. FE 2-4376. Lak — See} double laundry tubs. 350 gal ol] H. P. HOLM ne. eee SALESMEN ANG _tence 8t. Phone FE EVERYTHING FOR THE 1 ROOM, WITH MODERN KITCH- WATEINS ot ae you = Pleas- conaee 1% ara ttached . rage. | 9531 §. Lapeer Rd. "FE §-2053 REAL ESTs ESTA rE SALESMEN AND AND | ALUMINUM SLIDING GLASS ‘ = brie ane rae bath, util, 140 Mt. Clemens, ant brick ranch bome with large & screens. Very neat. et oe TRADE. BY OWNER. expansion, we | door, 7x10, in excellemt cond.| Invitattons— leurs : enc UPPER FRONT. BUS LINE. bedrms. Aliractive kitchen, bireh| Only $2500 down. | et Be oly ADE if. bo need help tp ower P’ pontiss office. | $100. EM 3.0933. Wedding Boo Guest Books | ane ‘wk. 355 E. Bivd. 8. upboards and lazy Susan. 1's bat niles Gf ne ce ae rine opportunity with this | BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. | BACKE “1d E. LAWRENCE 7 FURN RMS WITH PVT. BATH. Uled baths, full bam't., rec. rm. from LAKE FRivisoss — F. B. Schram. 5-8818. “et y* Wai} and windows. Reasonable Pleasant surroundings & j aa # &y eo , 107 7 r 5 . we W ; —— . = _ TRE PON PTAC: PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST-4, 1959 TWENTY-FIVE. + = } t \ | c - v Rent Apts. Unfurnished 55 Rent Rent Houses Unfurn., ‘37 Bysiness Opportunities 66 | TIZZY é - By Kate Osann ‘Antiques 74) For Sale Miscellaneous 76 Sale Musical Goods | 79 Hunting Dogs 878 4 APT. NEWLY DECORATED. OWT Ti Seat TH. wit NN ~ > ~N SNS Ba wa aie . hall children an SPINNIN WHEEL, REFINISHED PIANO TUNING — OSCAR SCHMIDT 2 GERMAN -HAIRED " a SELL @! ¥, Gaso1an * Condition, OL_i1i6s. GARAGE DOORS _| FE 25217 __pointers. AKC. "gees _Judson £ aoa mipn. 038 . - + 00d _conditic fosters Gost from’ 6 —~ ; 1 < GLE~ 3 7 LARGE ROOMS _& AND BA Maa. S000. wes _ wee $25 and UP. | 620.00 down-3 to pay. We| years old. A g ‘and heat Ti | Studio tiving rma bedrms. | SACRIFICE DRY Hi-Fi, TV & Radios 74A Eiecirie door doors eee ere cating | Dave the latest models of the |, dog. 2578 weer - State Bt. $70. teat Pr ; ble | shop. Good business. $675.. cash.. ““ famous Clark line. mF. FS +08. Pd PE or PE 3.3713. POR USED TVs. PUR- et OT ecaties G6 ollaee t MORRIS MUSIC BRITTA : M CY & FOUR PE 2213. at your home 2-0367,) W eet eatage 3% 8. Telegraph descendants. of show stock, F: § ROOMS & BATH. ON PAVED cod STANDARD OIL it thasndtfiee ie ware | = . oe FS children need unfurn. house in HA’ ANSMITTER. i180 WATT 5 Across trom Te}-Huron. 5-1800. * street. PE 2-6333 or 23-6788. city. Ref. PE 5-7474 * Ay ; : PLAYER PIANO. BENCH. CAST § : = oes nie Boad wn aE ; | Modern 2-stall stations for lease, ect. Dream rig, $140. FE Poy BE. PLAYER PIANO. BENCH. CABI- | SZAGLES & PODNTERS. GUARN. 0 CLEAN RMS PVT. ENT. wast. |EMALL HOUSE FOR RENT. CALL| £004’ abd free rain financial : BERRY. DOOR SALES + = Trial_given. 3001 ® side. . OT i UL 2-3333. Y AND av WANTED: D: ULTRASONIC 8 SOUND m 8. poe mi PE $4385" een Hi REG BRITTANY i 6 RMS. & BATH . LOWER IN j SMALL HOUSE. $60 PER uO. Fe BRE ; equipme: 20,000 cycles per sec- | <-° =" a 1 asonable. PE 4-5801. OR 3-6061, | OTY. ONFURYEED —Wous — Fos AND ELIZABETH LAKE gud oy over, PE List OT WATAR, HEATERS, TERS, at Fiano-Organ Bargal ms Hay, Grain & Feed 88 6 RMS. CLOSE DOWNTOWN. 267| tent Moire Inquire at "08 | Can MI GO31) dase or VE 1-226 Water _ Softener 75 peers ee nee | Te meee, Eee. cone: y: cnet Re ainee White Lk. Ba. MU ¢8133. — Evenings. : nae vee Kiso electric, olf and. bottled gas | Practice piano, $50. ALL TYPES OF ist & IND CUT- ? Ger emsubed qe oar se SINCLAIR OIL CO. “\osed. ATIC, SOFTENER, NEW OF gan Fluorescent, Sea Orchard ‘ix. Smal] Baby Grand piano, like new. liver OA 831 #2170. na on. mode rvic = — t month. K. G. Hempstead, 102 : WEST SIDE for lease on Diets Hwy “Tas iT PRESS AM JENNY. | Small upright piano, $150. aes ane 7 aad hang 1A Burg St, FE 4-8284 or FE BEER DURLEX. close to Webster] large 40 ft. sales room: Can be -— | For Sale Miscellaneous 76 H i Oe ie Single : , maatre and . bs a hool. screens use r associa ness - 4|/ _ . See eal electric oo Ul Neri ake Demonstrator, limed oak organ. 90 OAKLAND ms VASBINDER'! INC. ae ie 1 | i> GaLvanmen PIre, uc PER | _Huine lawn neve te. Ss ae S109} mencsl, 17 pedal beard. 9006 | OOS we led combine. Can Clean 3 rooms, bath. Heat fur- ft. ae Lavhiseaaerg pipe, l?e per ’ furnish OA 8-2179, - Dished.” 460° mo. See “caretaker FE 5-8875 SHELL OIL CO. ft’ to Standard dort 0.4. | | JELLED a AGIC | GALLAGHER’S fore: LOWER 4 RMS... BATH & SUN. Has for lease a modern 2 ba _Thompso 5 M28. _West. not drip, sag oF Rupber or Music COMPAR TS For Sale Livestock 89 porch. Heated. “Stove turn. $70. ; station. Located at 1050 | ELECTRIC STOVE, { GAS STOVE. oil, base, ‘Fundrede inst chores to | 18 E. Huron _ ror sale Livestock 8% ite only, No ps a 473 8. Highland (M59) near Teggerdine 730 gal. gas tank fitted with hose rom RENT A PIANO WITH OPTION Paddock St. FE 2 is : . Wonderful fusiness oppor- and nozzle, 18 ft. boat with 32 “OAKLAND. FUEL & PAINT to buy. All money paid will be| 1-2 HORSE TRAILER FOR SALE LOW RENT O _.Rent L Lak Cotta 58) tunity wi min: financia h. Johnson motor. Call FE e. FE 5-6150 applied as down payment. or swap for what have you? LOW RENT OPPORTUNITY — ce Cottages ronubementec. Rac talermation 5.6420 +8 _Orehare si AGHE Call after 5 p.m. 63 G niles Iecation near East. cal bic, Blosenioe’ re — at LAWN ee ‘SHARPENED. as eaten LA LAGHER'S oe 4000s | owas OGD bias ies Mais WA- ern Jr. & veaf For |ALL MODERN ATTRACTIVELY | to 4:30 P.M. ie After Cc eee eee “Pick-up. FE_2-1311 __ - ike © ee, were. fespsosible party. Op i uy sue for moat Pat Ace cat 4 FM. 2 ALUM 4 Nas, “STORMS LAVATORIES. | OME MIXING pp UaED SPINET Some were 8 atx cows. MIXED BREEDS. 3866 a “. Ce fo money down, $5 mo. & up| faucets $24.50 value = f val for a week or rae Err a TELS ° thtubs. Toilets, Shower Stalls,/ left on appro bangs tested. 184] Burreus Rd., want A. Kern, oe ITCHENE: TE MOTELS, BEACH Sale Land Contracts 67 i VatLELY macar? Pactory, irreguiars. Terrific Val- ay ierecr ecorery “Mas to Ortonville. off Sherwood. off Sash- + “Seals EE SEE BO ECE SES ape : ues. Michigan Sipser eles 393 U very. $25 | _808¥ Pontiac Lake. OR Auburp & Roches Rds $365. With bench and delivery. $2 BA. E Foss LAND CONTRACTS TO BUY OR UL 2-490 Eves. OL 1-6623| Orchard Lake Ave. — 1. dowa ‘while they" last. Write or NICE 3RD GENERATION ABA 3 rms Bath refrig. Stove 860| Gongnn COTTAGES ON LAKE| ‘0 sell. Ear! Garreis. EM 3-2511 12 WHEEL TRAILER. x 7 STEEL phone Lindy Music Co., 35 Crock- ov Jersey bull ¢ ) l rm. a 50 N __Aauilts only, FE 90 mo.| Leelanaucwith boats apd beach. | or EM 3-4086. \ & frame. One new tire and er St. Mt Clemens, Micblaes, _S pases aon teers _ Everything furnished. OR 3-904. verce’ star “spare tire & tube. K HERE HO 8-t901 gona ) HORSES. 310 W. AVON. ig oll as BEDRM. 3 = cK ISSAUKEE LAKE M eney to Loan 68 $75. Call OR 3-2303. —~UsED LOWRIE ORGA __Rochestey- Mich _ sowie Dect a SQUARE ne Ey are owed erecoe eres en || \\ |? WHEEL TRAILER NEW. $65, and You'll Buy Here excelent, oat tines | ___ For ‘Sale “Poaltry 91 E D UPPER Sama UL MORRIS ic fiat. ¢ rooma & bath. Garage. Heat _medere P6100. “Fee 63300. a 2 FFUED OI TANKS GOODCON: | rina ite ............cte on. | 368 Telesraps FE 2-0867| 1959 BLACK PONTIAC CATALINA in Heine “rE wes on Sand Point, near ae BI \ © 1989 by NEA Service, me | dition. Will deliver. FE 5-0120. | Shelf boards ..........-.....16¢ = Across from Tel-Huron Sports Gove, radio & beater. rr . @ - * ‘ase- —~ ep rans. after 6. " 2a oat — $. available | = 8-4 re ee tee ome es "aay enc plus tan Pigs Steel ‘clothes st es $45 or. Chee ePiMer’ S “COREOLS Fc seh haan to Pontiac ae rE Tess NEAR TEL- HURON | _weekly. UL 2-3342. #0) FINANCE COMPANY cones ; es . change. Herb’s, Auburn and shir-| Ready mix ances = eee ae an wd GALLAGHER’S | eee atc mimes — wate: bath upper Stove, i - WHERE YOU CAN It's not that I don't realize I’m wrong — it's just that 1 FaPRED_Wi OW FANS, 424 6 S caisitinise ts veer —~ jack, Brown. ees PE 4-1319 refrigerator. "abt, eros | For Rent Rooms 59 BORRO UP TO $500 | think I have a perfect right to be wrong!" pen every evening. Ham Fire SRICe Steet W urlitzer S TI da Sale Farm Produce 92 welcome. All util. furn. $75 mo. i“ Poodac = fotoe rel — Utica - _Blectrie ric. 825 W. Huron, FE 43835. FHA Terms Free Estimates estar dihgagtal bois 3969. AN On 34108. RACTIVE BOOM Fe FOR GIRLS. | Walled Le.. Birmingham, Plymouth 3 DA IECE BATH. PEE IssO § (56 ON. tare 028 APPLES. TRANSPARENT & RED. OXBOW LAKE. 3 BEDROOMS,’ ee _Sale Household d Goods 7. 73 Sale Household Goods 73 a P Open 8-5: N. . WE CARRY THE FINEST Astrachans. Homestead Orchards, priva a ewly ecorate r NV PP re eh ew ww . + re. a 5 od oh PE) ous 5 “aes ed. "ye gige ree PRONT Ri Bo oy vith Confidence HIDE-A-BED INNE RING MAT- o $3. 78 3 bot pie, oer leap SU RPL US LUMBER an coe ee : = Pes ones “a ICED. _ 7 0ess. $25 to $500 9x12 Felt Base oa $3.95 tress. Like new. Reas. Drop-lid east oom — == MATERIAL SALES CO. fed EM FAIS Tma: vv Pick your own. Bring containers. ty are STS 3 ROOMS.| BUSINESS LE. SHOWER, eee Finance RUBBER BASE ree are $3.75 | desk with drawers. 867 Glendale. Gucw S01 mE PT a | Be Highland Rd. M-50) OR 3-7092 oon wa TUNER, _20¢ Ib. OR | ate he OPER ROOM ee ee oe ration of Pontiac Ic PAINT S HAMILTON ELECTRIC CLOTHES |“ gump Pumps 2. $3296 [LARGE TABLE SAW WITH 720| MR CLIFFORD WEIGAND. —cucuMBERS FOR 8 CANNING. OPPER 5 ROOMS AND BATH, GAS ROOM FO PVT. | 31 8. rs St. FE €035/41/ it Wall Tie © as _aryer. 7 yrs. old. $50. FE 5- gave E PLUMBING SUPPLY 2 hp. electric motor and side WIEGAND MUSIC CENTER eat, $50 month Available Aug. or ‘% shower, $7 pth FE 2-2416. TO $5 ae | ty2o tks a ae oes JC HOOVER VACUUM CLEANER, ¢ sete! 112 = Saginaw FE 5-2100| planer. $150. UL 2-1349 after 6 MIRACLE, MILE BAZAAR AREA CANNED PROT oaF Ste i erin fame Pet GET = om 350 Syer’s, 141 W. Huron oe min Ml eakle et Oe |e FOLDING C “CHAIRS, 4 DINING | P=. Pisne Prout yr ia a WEST SIDE. 4 RMS. & BATH. PVT. = ee oes rig. 680 includ-|# UNION TERRACES ARCADIA NO. 1 WOLVERINE FRANKLIN mew decoraits Spe | block. All pom bedroom pr ppt, get dinette, | SLATER APTS. 53 ‘ye ea 8T. NITES: FE 4-418 FE 43546 aoe 4 LGE. RMS. BATH. & privileges. 2 children welcoe. xe eral St. FE 4-7287 COURT APTS. Downto House. ‘an newl h cross ventilation af- forded by front and rear win- ows. Thes room ana. bath apts. rent for $56.50 per month. | Adults only in this building. K. G. Hemostead, E. Huron 8t. FE 4-3884 or FE 2-7439 after 5 WEST SIDE DUPLEX? eae ee ent automatic heat. $85 month 3 pak near Pontiac Motor. 42521, be- $60 m, __fore 5. FE ri after 5. Rent Houses Furnished 56."'8 3 RMS. & BATH. $10 WE. Bi a S FOR PROFESSIONAL MEN EX- = cellent — 563 Hi PE 3-7111. MIDDLEAGED Laer ON P.M. shift wants room & board with girsee referred Write Pontiac e385, 10. __ PRIVATE, DOUBLE AND SINGLE room. Near Genera] Hospital. FE ROOM AVAILABLE FOR RE- fined gentleman. zee ex- changed. 584 Oakland SLEEPING ROOM FOR MEN hear Fisher Body. FE 4-1039. _ _Roons with Board 60 VERY CLEAN, HOMESTYLE meals. TV. FE §-0377. _ Convalescent Homes. 61 WE OFFER THE FINEST IN equipment and service, at rea- sonable rates Men or women. Bed or ambulatory. 24-hour care. FE 4-2225. Rooms by Day or Week Also 1 or 2 room apartments. ; Cooking. and pats Cie units. —__46_Audgro_— | 46 For Rent Stores 63 MALL STORE GOOD FOR BAR- ber ler ne on tan, and ne 8 T ORES WEST 23-2144 tromt Leas a Se tJune, j Pp fSEAUTIPOL 3 BEDRM. LAKE- Apo ranch. Sept. thru June. EM CASS LAKE FRONT. OFF COM- merce Rd. Modern. Sept.-June. FE 43133 PURN. OR UNFURN. 4 YR. OLD. Bedrm. bungalow. Full base-| ment. Available August 14. _mo. Don Lynn, MI 6-95 MODERN LAKFFRONT HOME — - Suitable for —: or smal) fam- |—— ily. Lease EM une. Near Union Lk. E 32193. NEW WATERFRONT 3B BEDR Hype eaet Tough school al SMALL HOUSES Pi RENT, IN- quire at 1676 Ta a A Asie for __Lonnie Weaver. @ ment V = YEAR-ROUND 2 BEDALE “FURN. rifice at ta t08— ee Aisee Setters (or wanea Gian 8 efined a on. Oil furnace, conipletely caeaeen H. Pp. HOLMES, Inc. boat. Call Holly, MEtrose 7 17-7327. | 2531 8. Lapeer Rd. FE 5-2953 Mrs_ Henry Cook. BOOMING REA. Attractive mdn_ bid 60x30 soll Rent Houses Unfurn. 57 1 BEDROOM, EXTRA CLEAN, gh OE ae ern ees . an nion Lk. Rd. Reasonable. 3-4115. BEDROOM E£ Sines so 7 WATER- ford. $69 mo. FE b_9-652 BEDRM. HOUSE, 941 MYRTLE 2-5893, Call after. 5. BEDROOM DUPLEX, NEAR Webster School. Near sh center. FE 2-5192. eed 2 agin HOME IN CLARKS * eee. Pd saggr tag people. & or inspection Sat. MA 3633. 3 BEDRM. WITH GARAGE. OFF one Lk Rd. MUtual TON Va- — 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX — BEAUTIFUL EAST BOQULEVARD HEIGHTS Now Renting For $75 PER ONTH OFFICE: 544 ON. E. Boulevard at Valencia) 7 rare ies DAN aes 00 aS, a e privileges. $1 ves. FE _2-4713. 3 ROOM HOUSE _MAple_ 5-3021 on Polat — ao — MOE: __ Rent Office Space 6 Bre OFFICES - WEST ‘pn. 7 FE side. FE 64 cE FOR RENT. 269 BALD- win Ave. FE 5-105!. OFFICE FOR RENT. FE 1-9626 PON-TSL CENTRE, SOUTH - rem Rd. oot air-condi- oned office, 2 lavatories. Gas Henry anpe rking. Rolfe H. ey Te Serena FE Business Opportunities 66 10 STOOL CONEY ISLAND, MAIN highway. resort area OR 3.9119. BEAUTY PARLOR In Lake Orion. Excellent beauty Parlor business with good equip- 100x500 lot 94 W. ‘Aubura Rochester Rd. Suitable any wast. Ness Owner. OL 1-6623 e FOR SALE fone DRY cleaning pl: tipped and operating, For ee write Pontiac Press, Box 175. HOTEL & BAR | CLASS “‘B” con 8.D.M. In the heart = vacation just north of Bay Cit 7 Excellent apartment for nar Cleanliness - iebheajgs .- air a @ marvelous busin WILLIS M. BREWER 4-5181 "Eves, FE 0-082 “LET’S TALK BUSINESS” Soft Ice Cream This Dearborn area, soft ice cream business, requires a small down payment and is capable of a good net profit. New equipment in well es- tablished location. Boat Wells ery, 8DM, and Groce 3 ROOM STONE HOUSE NEAR Rochester. Ideal for couple or single person Reasonabie rent, Warren Stout, Realtor TT N. Saginaw St. Open ‘til 6 p MICHIGAN’ BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION 4 oe NEAR, OMAR. de WEEK- _ly. P.O. Box 367, ee i. FURN. ¢ oRNT ompletely fence: ar gches _feene” 2566 na, Union @ BEDROOM ICK, Troy area, ae yard, ull base- ment, OL 1-9761 aft- er 6 p.m. OL 1-1038. 4 ROOMS PARTLY FURNISHED, near Oxbow Lake, off Union Lk. Year sround, EM _ 3-2043. 4 RMB. = BATH. NEWLY PAINT- to, gas heat. FE 2-2051. eed vany R. ate efor - pare: Call after basement, a t. Thi i al as hea s is a brick te : 208 EB. Bivd., South $60 pee & SON, REALTORS 782 OW. Huron St. jel or etween 12:6 12-6. 3 chide FE iy tae aot Peake IN NORTH NORTH rt RE ee mo u. 01 2 Rent, ign School thw, anos 7 ROOM MODERN HOUSE On ox West Side. FE 4-6388. Eves. FE. mle) ROOM HOUSE “AND GARAGI E AND Gan AGE, NEW CLEANING STC STORE & PLANT wi . ser ‘wey “Tg. Weaats| epee be ary leaning plant | LARGE Side A ito a ....| sary. Trained expert help 2276 GARLAND, VAN LAKE rwards. Salaty. Share im- love aa — Ge oe gas TE ol ited rs Ri nncosl required for "tage. Rent or ‘ell Walnut g1s0.| °° Per ee re 8 LARGEST! Ba a ag eB OR ean, c ere: im rT School. 3 000 . reimforced be eat. 08 E. SALE OR RENT, HALF DU- = opposite Holy Name Church. rton Lake Birming- ham. bedrooms. rge living Eicon aahinh fom" fs New oii combina- |. ses 6 UNIT MOTEL with cents & office separate. Also 3 bedroo: home paved highway, Pull pr: 000 on terms. See pictures in our office. Hagstrom , ALTORS 4900 Highiand Rd. (M59) Pontiac, Mic Ph. OR 4-0358 'MOTEL — 6@ cabins & beautiful 3 bedroom home. Live town on US-112, Arrangement with this a 000 on main a! DD-L19U0R STORE & SUNDRIES h cae oe 508 incre includes we otieen Invent baad ¥i N ISLAND DS equipped, to open for Recher * $850 pp es me STATEWIDE Real Estate rvice of Pontiac 1717 8. Telegraph | —--~‘FE 4-0521 Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE Dog crete. a ao tamp connected. Ist hoor wroem & offices juarters. o whs ‘ Signature 0 Bt He See OAKLAND Loan Company __202 Pontiac State Bldg. LOANS $25 TO $500 < other a ik tay raed beige “THIOME & AUTO LOAN CO. TN. Perry 8t. Corner E. Pike LOANS | $50 TO $500 — $25 TO $500 COMMUNITY LOAN_ CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 6-042 FRIENDLY SERVICE 1 shotel Rooms 62) TEAGUE FINANCE CO. HOTEL AUBURIN 202 S. MAIN - 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS $2 TO $500 We wv Os STOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 60711 OL 1-9791 PL 2-3519 PL 2-3510 ____ “FRIENDLY SERVICE” “QUICK. $25 TO $500 LOANS Seaboard Finance Co. N. PERRY STREET East Aise — Phone FE 8-9661 WHEN YOU NEED $25. TO $500 We will giad to help you STATE "FINANCE co. 103 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. FE 4-1574 oa LOANS. $25 TO $509 BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE 4 W. Lawrence ‘st PE 4-1538-9 ‘Mortgage Loans — 69 2ND MORTGAGES 35 N LOW AYMENTS. PHONE WoO 1-5189 EVES. DI 14-1689 CONSOLIDATE our debts. Get cash to one your land contract or age & to modernize your hy e do the work. Anywhere in Sear — . Free Apraisals. e Consulta: BIg BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. . Huron PE 3-7833 70 ~~ _Swaps ‘$1 STUDEBAKER FOR MOTOR- _ cycle. EM 3-2795. 1956 FORD 6. EXCELLENT CON- dition. Trade plus cash for ‘57 ‘ord 6.° FE 2-8855. to ‘59 Ford . nites OR_3-8863. CASH FOR USED TV'S. TAPE recorders and r: ‘aphs. _Working or not. owe DOT ~ COLDSPOT DEHUMIDIFIER. USED 1 season. Original price he Will — for $80. PE 8-22 after p.m. OF DRAWERS CHEST aeED es small size Hollywood Sed EQuity IN HOUSE FOR HOUSE trailer. 35 to 40 ft. Taylor Twp., vicinity of Telegraph & Eureka. WHitney 1-262 POR SAI OR TRADE, ‘50 LIN- coln, excellent cond. PE 5-9395. FREE AND CLEAR HOME. VAL- + ue $9,000 for equity in house out of city. Call after 4: 2-6007 LARGE GARDEN TRACTOR WITH 10 inco plow, cultivator, disk. Will trade for ‘large oven electric stove, freezer, or $75 cash. MY 2-6164, SELL OR TRADE FOR CAR, CABIN near Glennie. FE 8-6498. SELL OR TRADE. 1 WHEEL _camping trailer. FE 6-5890. SWAP Ol UITY IN 1965 SKY- lin a ee on for car, clear Call OR 3-83 D.m. ee RAMBLER STATION saree soe TRADE in EQUITY "IN WA- terfron at Commerce Lake. of equal value. MAr- WATER SOFTENERS TO RENT or sell. $3.50 month. OR_3-2360. WANTED: PLATFORM SCALES. 100 to 500 ibs. or eres Also chicken — trade broil- ers, tractor _what hat_ do yes _heed? WOOD SHAPER, 9 INCH ARBOR, & foot bed, swap for 4 inch shap- er or naa oR. a 4707, k * er es Ant aber “ison sou’ a river ‘tieeange. MAy- 80 fair Fedese. For Sale Clothing 71 & FORMALS AND 1 WEDDING al) size 9 and 10. OR Oe ee ee iso fl worms & tackle. Open 1 days, Orchard Lk. Ave. Sale Household Goods 73 PAP PRARAAPAALRABRALS PAPAL LLP 2 ELECTRIC STOVES. 910 AND $125. 384 N. Perry 3 PC. BLUE LIVING reine “ afte: TRADE cyment on £ acres West Branch. ey iF rm. sae & — ta mea 4 MAROG. INING used, Will sell for, Se" price "Cal wn! PE b-t0e0. ATER Soostel this week ay. B. Munro Elec. ~ ng UE 2 Brags 4 weekly (Ak id Orch Ge LIVINGROOM SUE venport and chair new » matching Bi for Private pa: lot plus adjacent large munie i eless y mend 128°, Heart of uses. Covered parting, ‘purniture or Discount Maximum Security Ware- housing ete. Sacrifice ¥ settle estate Partridge: AND assocts FE 43581 RON ornn He Me Faye weekly, Orchard FE 4-3064 5 ROOMS OF FURN. REASONABLE. UL 32-5308. 9X12 RUGS, WOOLFACE, “113.95. Reversible. $16.60, impor $34.95. Axmins Rug | pede. $5.05. Pearson Furnitur 42 Orchatd Lake Ave. 1l_CU. FT. CROSLEY 5 _ Excellent cond FE 41251 ie ae eae ADMIRA RT MOREY esx conieneenanen 20 other sets to choose from, all rebuilt & ee ee 30 or. Parts & feoer’ Obel Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FE eais. We take trades! 3% = =6IN. FRIGIDAIRE “ELEC. stove $100. 2 yrs. old. OR 33239. 30 INCH. ELEC. RANGE LIKE hele meat and oven timer. FE AUGUST SPECIALS KELVINATOR ered ge New. Freezer. Deli 69. Gale ee Delivered. wailed. aes GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP Of Pontiac 51 WEST_ HURON FE 4-1555 ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT R TH OME AN B TR New. ds. NEW & Visit ue ame dept. bargains. MONTHS TO PAY sell or trade. Come out . 2 acres of free for real 4 miles E. of Pontiac or 1 mile E of Auburn Heights on Auburn Rd. M59 36 IN. 4 BURNER GAS RANGE. _Exc. cond. $40. 132 W. Chicago. 36 INCH KENMORE oS RANGE, _3 yrs. old. $50. MA 5-1989. 1954 FRIGIDAIRE aay __ thirty stove. Call MA 5-5711. AIR - CONDITIONERS. NEW & _MA‘5-8 ant low prices. Samuel's. BUY ) TRANSISTOR - Rapios — Real bargain! FE 5 _ BLOND DINING eee SUITE 6 chairs, es buffet. Excellent condition. UL 2.2349 BREAKFAST os LIKE NEW. _ Cheap. FE 2-468i. BR. aia Hable WROUGHT IRON bunk 86. —_ springs and aanieas a earsons Furniture. 42 Orchard piake ae BRAND NEW SOFA yam BEAUTIFUL SINGER SEWING machine cabinet model. Zig Zag equipped. A-1 condition. Balance 7.40 cash or jax} $8.10 month or ® months. 1 credit Mer FE 1. A & K. Home Prod- acts ss BUILT IN RANGE OVEN, stainless steel. Terrific buy. Lies r : ean Piuorescent, 393 Or: ve. — 29. BAN KRUPT STOCK Living room Bedroom idl breakfast sets. Chairs bs i en ie 1.000 ft. north Dixie Hwy., Pre ton oo Ag “til 6 Frits _of A & P Marke oreaeiuCe Son “DEMONSTRA- tor floor model. 7 ft. Youngstown Kitchen display. Washers, dryers, ranges, refrigerators. ori ae R. unro Elec. Co., 1060 W. Hu- ron. DUNCAN 1] PHYFE | FABLE | AND 4 __chairs. ~6997. s. FE 5- DOWN CUSHIONS, mahog. leather top seryer chest, smali dinette set, radio phono combination, double door refrig. ra ecse, chair. Antique organ. ELECTRIC STOVE. EXCELLENT cond. $50. UL 2-3128 EXC. BUYS ON APPLIANCES. LIKE new 30° Westin poms deluxe stove, $110. Frig. Ft. $55. voumenees Auto. Washer $68. aft” oe Motorola T.V. $75. Hand mower ‘a5. Garden seer other household articles. Small rw e sale. 1735 Shipman, Birm. ues. & Wed. evenings 7 to 9 p.m. or Ph. MI 6-0 EL) ECTRIC D L- lent TRIG DRYER. iis. ce PREEZERS — UPRIGHT F MOUS name brands. Scratched trific values $149.95 while wie last. No phone grb ease. Michigan orescent, 39.4 chard Lake Ave FURNITURE, LIKE NEW. 2705 OR- mond Ru. corner Grass Lk. Rd. rfect canal “pissed vies nt. c ic eee, ee sag POR SALE: LIKE-NEW. BEAUTI- ful desk ce with all toneoe oh ‘ood pi ik ‘bi ntique cherry w ink marbl top tab ble f for $ Reason for sell lea state. OR 3-3307, Us ZIG ZAG pith Sews on bu aes hems — Finest at . at Cash. ‘or 9 months. Call AaM edit mgr. FE S402 AbK Home FREEZERS — — big dae E FREEZERS seratched or New models sii crate-m “Dhendy sera at big dis- count prices om ss in < makes at: FE 54-6189 sen am T BARGAIN at 8 available. Samuel's A ,_ Davisburg, MA 54-6011. LL BED, BOX SPRING mattrets $30, to teh. $15, 2 cushioned carenners ry air, $35, 1 chest, ad, 17" very good sha a f table. $25, be cone $35. Call after $:36 403 Windemere, Royal Oak. GOOD G8. AUTOMATIC ye. a bargain at $50. 2578 Shores Dr. GREEN DAVENPORT. E- EXC. CON- dition. 2 = | leather chairs Call after 5. OL 1 GIBBON 6 Sas PatoeT ‘Aamirat 11-ft freerer $199 a Rs ea ROY'S ‘ENT PAR 0 Onkinnd Ave. PE 2-401 _ and misc, MI 4-5411. KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR. Good working cond. Cheap. UL 2-4191. _ LINOLEUM & PAINT SALE, HALF price. At Jack's. 281 Baldwin. LARGE UPRIGHT FREEZER. ‘58 . oa Take over payments. FE tovEt pore ZIG ZAG SEW- ing (does not need at- tachmentas Button holes. over- casts, monograms, embroidery de- LIMED OAK —- G ROOM SET, table, 4 chairs, china cupboard, _ $85. FE 8-6909. LARG E CRIB AND MATTRESS, brand new, owes aie s Fur- niture. 42 Orchard Lake Ave. MODERN SOFA & CHAIR, Hammond spinet organ, $1, MA 5-1484. NEW RAYON CARPETING, $1 Y>. Sofa bed resser, is, an anti: os Large ramed mirror $17. 50. Clothing, toys, canned vegetables, lastic waste baskets, vega and er other misc. items. 0 Edison. FE 2-5289. at “9 QT. PRESSURE COOKER canner. FE 5-2460 OVER 50 a" TV SETS. FROM $14.95 TV N TV $9.95 WA LTON 515 — See E_2-2257 Tae LINOLEUM 9 x 12 Rugs, $3.95 SHOVER’S 140 8. Saginaw REFRIGERATOR, $45. 21 IN. TV — good condi — . Wringer wash- er, stove, $30. Electric stove, $35 “GE dishewasher, Trailer hot water heater, $20. Gar- den tractor with en nice _ Like new, $125. Record pla al coat set — Like new, 320. RESPONSIBLE PARTY TO TAKE 6 payments of $6.65 after deposit on new portable sewing machine. All essential features of machines selling for $119.50. Sin- ay Sewing — FE 2-0811 or E 8-0352. ROLL AWAY B BED’ LIKE NEw. Full size. $15. 390 Whittemore. REYNOLDs FACTORY REBUILT softener. 64,000 grain unit. Reconditioned Frigidaire washer, CRUMP 3465 Auburn FE 4-3573 UL 2-3000 SINGER PORT. ZIG-ZAG ATTACH. $19.50 Electrolux vacuum. $14.95. _Terms. Curt's A 3-0702 AIR & Day oe All in good condition. FE 27310. 8TOVES BOUGHT, SOLD. 7D. Ex changed. Turner's 602 Mt. Clem- ens. FE 23-0801 SAVE $$$ AIR CONDITIONERS Were Now Deluxe G.E. 220V, T1000 BTU _ |, 940.98 184.00 Custom GE. 110V. T7100 BTU 184.00 SUPPLY LIMIT $5 DOWN DELIVERS GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 8. Cass FE 45-6123 TRADE GAS RANGE FOR FE tric oom he R. B. Munro Electric Co W. Huron - Fae 2 SUITER, FOR sale, cheap. A-1 cond. or would trade for leather suit case. FE 5-3624 after 4 p.m ~ SAVE “$100 New Fedders air-conditioners. 9,000 Ard Ft. a on P $149 yr. _ guarantee. Schick's MY 33711, STANDARD KENMORE WASHER & stationery tubs. Good cond. OR 3-9121. | SINGER PORTABLE SEWING MA- chine. $18.50. $1.25 wk. Michigan _Bewing Center. PE 2-3337. TAPPAN GAS RANGE. CALL OA 8-2473 or MI 17-0877 after 5 p.m. — = an R. RANGE FOR GAS Munro Electric Co. ‘wv. ituron. ~~TWIN BABY STROLLER Like new. $10. 245 8. Tilden. a TABLE TOP GAS RANGE $10 Kitchen cabinet : ve on Cabinet ‘Tosley a a Singer joni chine $25 Bendix comb’ on washer — a ae EIN DE i . washer Norge Ba is eeee. Many other items available. 18 W. ke E-Z terms. FE 4-1122 USED ELEC. RANGE, ay. R. . _Munro Elec. Co., 1060 W. H ~ Used Trade-In In Dept. $ Oceasiona] chair . .......... $ 9.98 Drum e coecevecce. § 9.98 Swivel rocker <osioenieasiese cise 9x12 rug and ieeeeeese A Davenport and chair ,....... $34.50 Gas range - $34.50 6 ALesced dining room suite | $48.50 iv “THOMAS ECONOMY" 361 8. Sa WHQUE Bison _iatt_ Mere “tarvletop tebies "Ronee type. Thyle's WILL wit se WO DERN FURK i. ture or exchange ter washing schine. oo gg en m7 _ $4. Swing set S10. WAL. BED, MARBLE TOP, dress, nic hpgrvba mirrors, pic- tures. dishes, rE _Open ‘afternesns 7. Dwight SAVE ENERGY, USE WANT ADS! To find a job.—place to ie. or a used car, mt NOW.” I | LEC. | roow chairs. a 2 oants suit, 3 _TMPE’ 6301 and > scooter, other misc ax10 W Wit TERT FOR CAMP- ing, $25, 26° Hiawatha boy's bike, ood ft. hyd ro rg with 16 HP. “Mercury en- ine. Good cond 1-0053. a YR. 52 GAL. Sea WATER heater. $67.50. Cash & carry. G. A. Thompson, 1006 Mise. west. eves. ROMEX SPECIAL, CO n Eves. 21" SELF-PROPELLED ROTARY mower, $25; 7 qt. pressure Magers $10; 51-3 h.p. out welding outfit, $35. 1 §2 GAL ELEC. ag ed 900-95, 30 gal auto. gas heate ae sinks and fittings, tia 8 ea grt trays with a 6 pony SAVE PLUMBING 1728. 8 FE 1 LB. PRESGURE pase pipe % Inch 5c, in. _ Pegdrese el ifs; ured G. mm pson, M59 West Opes Py ANCHOR FENCES No money down. FHA approved. FREE ESTIMATES ; §-1471 A COMPLETE UNIT HOLLAND gas automatic furnace, BTU out- ut 60,000. MI 6-8050. : . A-l WINDOWS. DOUBLE HUNG, Birect “ picture windows. Reas. at from meaoufacturer. EM or EM 3-8003. aapaaie PATCH ..... eo es 1 Clothes Posts ..... §10. Steel Drivews Culvert ris SEWER PIPE — DRAIN TILE | Creosote Wood Preservative, $1. - MURIATIC ACID $1.67 G. SCREEN DOORS FROM re ITY WHITE $1.95 GAL. COAL & BUILDING 8UPPLY CO. 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 ~ AVATLABLE NOW , Tavior stee! overhead doors exts and @x7's. Factory seconds. Also ® few used doors GaM Dixie Highway. 3ATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL & bar furnaces. hot water & steam lers. Automatic water heater. reasonable. Hardware elec supplies, crock & rie aint. Super Kemtone Rust- «685 Lapee: Rd. FE 4-543) tile Galvantsed copper, black, bet and fi 8. Sabalel lon Brothers Oleum HEIGHTS SUPPLY BOY'S SHOP-BUILT MODEL CAR. 2 cycle, 4% h.p. engine. Call MI BOAT TRAILER. GARDEN oa lawn mower. Metal lathe. Benc tractor Fruit jars and crocks. FE 2-1048. BUY AND SAVE 4° sot) pt Dome 3” soll Nis aa 3 outside flush door No. 7 Oak $65 M Complete 42° sink cabinet with wall cabinet, $81.95, Wolverine Lumber (20 8. Paddore FE 2-0784 BEEF AND PORK PORK — HALF AND quarters Opdyke Mkt. FE 5-794 CHICAGO Regt comand ay table. 6 pocket pool ert 2 peg Far ES & bowling oo oLer RI Te INSTALLED: RE- _baired & fepiaced. MA €-2114. CASH WAY. LUMBER PRICES STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS Burmeister’s NORTHERS LUMBER “Company Lake Ra a.m 8 e m. Sunday- 10 a to 2 p Deliveries ravahasle - DE oa “61 STUDEBAKER DEEP FREEZE. LARGE SIZE. Excellent cond. $135. FE 5-4255 before 5 ee DE | ELVIS SPRAY 2%, with 28" _OA 44 vio ___ ELECTRIC LIGHT = for ever — 3-4171 daily m. 1044 eet | re are $4.50 va ue, a1 98 wee ireauars and samples at tory can_ giv juor - secant; 393 Orcharanl Lake Ave. FRE«. os TOILETS 4 = Double bow sink $5 24e ft. $89.95 3-pe. bath sets with trim colored bath set with trim en $00. 173, 5. Serinas wre E3100 ands — re, rs SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY FOR SALE. MINK EQUIPMENT. FE 44143. Haggerty CASH & CARRY SPECIALS 2x4-7 fir We Build Roof Tene CALL FOR PREE ESTIMATE MA 4-455] HAGGERTY LUMBER SUPPLY 1947 Haggerty Highway Walled Leke, Michigan Weekdays 7 a.m. to 6 p SATURDAYS 7 a.m. to re p ce FOR SALE f used oil furn furnact. 1 use FE 5- eo 1 used gas space heater. a cents a = me work- cach petty “RE oN T 1 1 + FAS! through Rent Ads! Room, house, apartment, any- thing — Want’ Ads ‘give ou ACTION. Dial FE -8181. OM. 1 rd, $30: 5. 121 Voorhels. fau-» Construction Company. 2260 12 | exhaust fan, $500 MARBLE TOPS 48-60" rectangular broken mar- ble tops. 2, 3 or more pieces. Use for small table tops, ves- npr patios, fireplace hearths . $10.00 each. WIGGS 24 W. HURON ~NEW Sool ahs PIPE _ length sin Hitt lengtne Tee Ae -in engths ..... ™e et hl BING Ll deh 172 3 §-2100 EFiNisHED FARELING MAHOGANY " ...... r ft. Birco 4%" ....--. = oe ft. Cherry benelin “ Sle per ft. BENSON LUMBER CO. PLYWOOD SPECIALS %,"" Plyscord 4'x4° a” ecw — 4e5 ae 4” sco "x : : Aluminum eating 100 sq. ft. Poll uine formica . . ft. See PO! AC PLYWOOD CO. 1488 Baldwin Ave. 2-2543 ‘NIC TABLES, USED LUMBER, —_ & ends. OR +6022. 5011 Wal- _dor_ a >UMPs MUST ya ae AND deep weil jet on 13 gal. tank. $70.79. Thompson, 005 M59 West st Open Eves. —PAINT— FACTORY TO YOU -Fiat-Glos US. babel Palos ie MCTION M MERCHANDISE Mant 8 1 Mile N. Miracle Mile FE — Opposite Bloo Bloomfield Fe Fashion Shop PATIO STONES - ; 30% OFF 24X24, $1.20, 4, $.70. Mferte eg, senza: color. ue ory aN y Authier Co., 10570 High- land Rd. (M59) 4 miles west of Pontiac Airport. EM 3-4825. PICNIC TABLES, FOLDING OR stationary legs. 6 top. ‘ Onl 95. FILON en ~y aw S7c eq. ft. ee 1 ses 8 per run. f 70 8. Squi FE 5-0293 RANGE HOODS WITH FAN ONLY 8. G. & Thompson, 7005 M59 est. REBUILT BATTERIES, $5.95, 6 3 geginew easrenies: FE 8-1816 192 8 NTER. COM- ics ges ce: Oe Phone 2.3040. eekdays after 5: oe SAVE ON PAINT Spred Satin Rox - Deft - Koton — Waterlox. au Latex . RWICK ae SINGER SEWING ots Full p $38.60 > stonth. Excellent endl ton Had very little use. Capitol Appl. cove “KITCHEN CAB SINKS. — —. hay? ei Bot aged sinks, Iv = e in and see th antas yalues. Michigan "Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake SPECIAL CHURCH’S, INC. OL _2-4000, ‘THE SALVATION | ARMY ED SHIELD STORE Evers thing to meet your needs Clothing ‘Furniture, Appliances. __118 WE ‘WEST LAWRENCE Tractor & Mower Sales Several used tractors and mow- ers, al] re-conditioned. 1 David Bradley tractor with snow blade, cultivator, spike tooth, sickle, and plow, $275 Gibson riding tractor snow blade, disk and cul- tivator, $345. Reduced ates on some new — Credit terms. agg Equipm 6507 Dixie _Hwy. MAple + TET or OR 3-7024. THE FLOOR SHOP Linoleum Rugs 9x12 $4.95 Tweed Carpet 0x12 ...... $29 95 Plastic Wall Tile ......... le each Inlaid Tile 9x0 . eac 99 S. SAGINAW FE 4 4-5216 “TALBOTT LUMBER ~ Glass installed tn sash. Thorosea) for water proofing basements. Paint, hardware, ee elec- trica] supplies & lumber. 1025 kland Ave. FE 4-450. “USED On FURNACE. CALL Mach hinery _____76A ead LAKE CLEANING RIG. IDEAL FOR __ subdivision. OR_3-6126. FORD DIESEL ENGINES 4 & 6 eylinder for trucks, saw mills, etc. ord gasoline engines for ies s cations few used engines available. Gall __distributor, MT 46063. Do It Yourself 77 ~_— DO Le bintod EASY WAY! ERS—WALL PA - DRILLS - FLOOR BOWNIES HARDWARE PGANFORD * PE +6105 FOR RENT Wall pane ie me ane floor — on sande Gein vacuum cleaners. Fuel & Paint. 436 Orcha: Ave. Px #6150 estrough and fenc- kdays 6:30 to 6. fe itentouies i 156 W Montea pen ndaye 19 ers ied e rE ~ Sale Musical Goods 79 LLL LR LPAI PPA PORN lt 5 FOOT MAHOGANY GRAND PI- py oie Reduced for quick sale. FE ito BASS ACCORDION. BEST once, athe 4-8811. a in tie finance ane. van. CORD HAMMON B Ge Word. ye used. a ‘this mmetraiment © a ries guarantee 77 8. gn og rE ies with ow y rental items FLOOR SANDERS - HAND SAND-| Phone FE 2-4924 WANTED USED PIANOS Wiegand Music Center BAZAAR AREA MIRACLE MILE Sele Gtlice Equipment 8 OFFICE COUNTER. 2 DESKS - attached. Can be made into a bar. Bargain at $40. FE 43541, Sale | Store » Equipment 8! 81 6 FT. LIGHTED GLASS SHOW _case. FE 2-3251 or FE 2-3220. _ Sale Sporting Goc Goods 82 10X12 COTTAGE eps WITH 8X10 screened porch. MA 4-2865. 57 MODEL WILSON aces STA leather bag. 897 Kenilworth. AQUA LUN NEW AND USEB, See ecens alr. 80 Parkhurst. EAR BOW. 35 LB. GRISLEY. ee used. Rets. MA 5-710]. Clarkston. ENGLISH LEATHER RIDING size 9%. Also all Phar teil riding breeches size Ww in good condition. Pirst $20 ‘takes. rr 4- es NEVER USED. tered. Complete BUY, _ Manley Leach, "10 Bagiey. oBar — MODERY ¢ OR reaps mount uy, f+ repair and ~ urr-Shell. 375 a. HOMaETEAD TENT. 10 x and camping equipment. aac CAMP TRAILER, GOOD __cond. Reas. FE §-6722. Bait, Minnows, Etc, 82A a DZ. 60c; RE D- worms, 50 for 45c: big worms, 50 for 50c. Tackle. Also clean used 2 ngs pants from 35c. Open 7 389 Orchard Lk. Ave. _Sand, i, Gravel & Dirt 84 10A STONE & OVERSIZE STONE. $2 Yd. Also crushed stone, mason . TOP SOIL, . Wil deliver oa P SOIL, BLACK DIRT. , eravel & peat humus. FE 8-488. A-1 TOP SOIL, Sand, gravel, FE 61112 or $10.50 CR STONE. te Conklin, FE 72. . = & Walton. CHOICE FARM TOP eat. & Ybs. $10 Delivercd. ed. FE 4-6588 ne BLACK DIR DIRT PIELD. 5 50 for. next 36 oot), “also, fill. FE 32-0346 or FE 49177. FILL iach eana Bec, 5c , eared Baek Sal Wa song peadvoreesl Mk ston gravel. 5-9602. FE 2-3801. CRUSHED STONE, SAND, GRAV- el. Earl Howard. EM M 30531, GOOD ROAD ¢ GRAVEL. an | YARDS for $7. Delivered. SUP. aking & tile & dirt. Gn eae PONTIAC Lake porisies 0K ply. Sons morta YARD, aaa “OR ADING, _top s soil, 1, gravel, fill etc. FE 5-3552 Plants, Trees, Shri es, Shrubs 86 ree DAYLILIES, IRIS, ORIENTAL E. Long _& “Livernois. OAKLAND TREE SERVICE E TRIM- ming & removal, FE 8-2273. ____ For Sale Pets 87 Snr ghelgltds 1 yemele 10 wks. old. 1 1 yr. old. Red. Cc ane: oL Yas” “gs Miller, FE Roche ican oo DACHSHUND. after 6 AKC R&GIS 5 ENGLISH 8 Poel wise & oe at vi Cham- " 2-8046, ine eeui eh ED > COLLTE PUF PUPS. 880_ Farnsworth. Oxbow Lake AKG DACHSHUND PUPPIES. 7 aA cee ae WITH _papers, $20. FE 8-4280. N TERRIER STUD CHAMP stock, Curtiss. OR COCKER PUPS. AKC. REAS. 3. 6U- scriand Cockers. EM 3-0242. FORJAN KENNELS Long-haired dachshunds meee e . dam t Puppies aratiasie ar my ee at stud FEMALE BOXET, AKC REG., | MU 4.0563 SHEPHERD, TAN AND old, . FE GERMA papers on puppies for male or female. 19ip e Rd, PA 183 Sanderson _. 1 PARAKEETS, CANARIES & oe. ane 8 Bird Hatchery. Auburn. UL 2-2200. PEKINGE | PUPPIES. 10 WEEKS old. AK "OE sos ae quality and POODLES § STYLED LED BY yeresss ven | FERS CAN " Food. Since 1027. $84 Oakland A REG: ¥Y FOX TER- rier female _ $25. MA 54-1270. RABB MICE, ALL PET Shop. 55 Williams, FE 46433._ REG RIER PU Dies: + 30, FE 46004 or FE 2-4436 NMARANER FEMA LE. ALA, AKC. FE fons. Dogs Trained, B'rded § 87A poas aNd caTs 2 BOARDED Burr-Shell, 376 AGGER ot i. ie ANSPA RENT ETE N AP- . Fresh sinks pl —— 8. ) Clarkston Rd. e Orion. “Sale Farm Equipment 93 ‘$2: R. McCORMICK apistotlletS combine with motor. tion, also —<—- Seas ol erater. 28831 Halsted Rd., Farm- _ ington. Tel. ¢ Greenleaf 423969. \CHINERY — NEW AND phe J ieroas Oliver Sales on M24 just north of Oxford. SPECIAL HAVE THE a, Pontiac = at Opdyke #1112 “USED “SPECIALS PRICED GARDEN mom HOUGHTEN “& SONS New Idea ape ROCHESTER a L, 1-976 N DEERE NO. 25 COM- om 4 weet Machinery, NAtional 41-3292. Ortonville. For Sale Housetrailers 95 = i056 SEYLINE 3 HOUSETRAILER. a“ ft. $1,000 rT nays PT., Exc. cond., 2 a A $0556. ‘66 SPARTAN, 30 FT. TUB BATH, “ Exirs 2539 full ipped. nice. Must sell. Make of- pele ers 1 Gays: or nights 33 +FT. MOBILE HOME traler $1900. Like new. EM BOB HUTCHINSON SERVING GREATER DETROIT & Pontiac for the = 13% years and still continuing to a Chieti" D Getsole ihobile Homes.” ogre Al 9 different ALL NEW 1960 PONTIAC CHIEF DETROITS. clearance of my .U 7 ts to pay. Open Se ricanmson . 10 C) ¥. ; LATE 56 PONTIAC CHIEF, 8X37, 1 bedroom. Keego Trailer Park. OXFORD TRAILER SALES TEWART GENERAL GARWOOD HOLLY VAGABOND & 63. $ to 1@ side, 40 mag from. We trade, sell or rent. e hate some erful buys t now! See us today. One tlie south of Lake Orion oo M6 2-0721. . — & trailer for vi an: Pixie Trailer Sales, 1045 N. La- peer Rd.. Oxford. : PARKHURST __ TRAILER SALES 1540 Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion 4 1 atu new 1959 New Moon bile es. Between Laks Or- fon and Oxiord, Oo in. SHORT's M a falas By Combiete line, and and gers. wired. sige sith ACATION TRA SALE or rent. J ‘s ller Sales, $685 Williams Ra. is OR }-2838. VACATION TRAILERS — in this are lotation aves ee at: Rent Trailer oc Space_36 96 y COACH » HOL- ou Pe ee ee EY amy ot ke, ge coubeengionetglan deans eS re : / a \ ; oo ; “ i a i = : THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1059 — a sae me F rs 110, For Sale Used or Sale Used Ca . Wanted Used Cars 106 wate Used Cars 106;SLICES OF HAM . For Sale Used Cars 110 For: Sale Used Cars 110 ms : s scm “ “~ : "$8 DeSOTO F-Fite 4 door agg RM fie. Pa ae COUVERTINLE, s. Power steering, Pow- : ATTENTION! | “tosses a" Staa™as,e "sr — "hacia beaior pale wal’ ds: |- VACATION SPECIAL | Bente Sid Afar i ; es. sane excellent Priced to sell now, beautiful 1959 | ‘57 1 DeBOTO ¥F-Dome 4 Wiss om iy PONTIAC | C ea ‘War Serene reeaer | e A UNCUT Wnt at Fully sauipoed tneniding us HP. ‘1 DesOTO F Nreep 2 ar... $1508 _ Serge. eo Soot haga WERE PAYING ~~ CASH | LR: ; “CLOYD._ Gf OVER @ sion, 1 imeter,” whitewalls, |.0 Seporo FPitte 6 dr. $138 PONTIAC power. i TOP $$$ DOLLAR — ono we LES mar os per gallon triton . Anyone can Power steering, windshield wash- : Power steering. radio. One owner Hed Fe 2-328. es : F Cass_at 5-7308 Ont $is0 down. eas ora, oe. Mone eaeet << ery Come WILL TRADE "52 PON- ED WILLIAMS ( ‘—LENN S TOP BUCK — 30 —30N CAR TRUCK Eee ig pg 4 BeSOTO Fdome, 4 Door | tia; and take over your pa 4515. Saginaw st Raeburn : S : 65175. 2 ee M&M Worur Sales — ute Services ices 99 MOTOR SALES Por 2021, Dixie Hwy” on eter mode! oore cy COLONY ser ARK REPOSSESSIC ION NDING IN THE “ie cadet inicoe SF ad loaded with __ “Your fer Since 1930" CRANeERAre S8r FE 7371 FE ¢1797 Toe PRICE WE CARS a in OR, 3-1291 $295 full price. No cash needed. rs rebored Zuck Ma- and includes CONDE | Pogo wey, th. Mr. Bell. King Auto. “Shine 23 Hood. Phone FE FE TIONING. You won't find he stoplight in Waterford oe : Wa ANTED JUNK CARS. TAYLOR nicey one MOTOR SALES Ln 4 FRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ma cveet Pare FR see $209. DeSOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER | _ 63 PONTIAC, © DOOR Saget score wall 4 P CASH 6st eed ? “y S 35 YEARS PAIR R DEALING REPOSSESSION | vice. ve ice. Sale | Moto " Scoote t a 100 ANY MAEE OR MODEL ECONOMY CARS “a AUBURN CASS A oy BS A Site per monn. Mr. ue bell RES tor Scooters TOY] FOR W YEARS WE RAVE |” Used Truck Parts 100A ! . _Auto. PR s-o002 . PAID THE TOP DOLLAR ee eM Tae ee T R T ortation |3 Sy RAMBLER STATION Wit WAGON. 1957 MUSTANG WITH EXTRAS, FO) et RIGHT CAR. Tour] -Wdsel-Lincoln . 5 ansp “OvmRD Ei RADIO & excellent condition. Phone after’ SEE MALEN ELLSWORTH USED TRUCK PARTS sialk Gane RIVER GR ¢3170 be ABSOLUTELY NO. MON NEY ibm Yet eee SV ANWELT HEiGuTS MOTOR SALES 1 MILE oF FOR REAL VALUE, “Plus DOWN. Assume 6 5, CUSHMAN “EAGLE, #908 6062 om: aisss 7’ GMe inte Mwy. | 2635 “hobo ae “Ee ORCHARD LAKE ROAD Gall Mar. y_Ril. | . ogy MERCURY. $95. KING AUTO. SEE — “53 Nash Sedan ...........--. t MI 47500, Harold "36 CUSHMAN GLE JUST OVER-| For Sale Used Trucks 107 115 8. Saginaw. FE &-0402. ‘54 Nash sation Wagon =m _ hauled, 109 8. B dosephine. i PRP re ROS aan oe "54 Nash 2 doo ci cae snes 36 MILES "$7 MOPED. ar ‘56 MERCURY, 2 $525 ‘53 Chevy 2 door ........... per gallon. $150 dows 0 1 1953 GMC. ONE TON PANEL GARNERS bsep CARS : T Air Hardtop .. $495 h MINGH. Feereycrn a STERN EXE truck. FE 2-8469 after 5 p.m. 222 W. sfontcalm o Chevy Bel al Janno ae a BLER, an eoon AnD. ar cond. Driven on!y 850 miles. $100 YOUR C AR ae PICK-UP MUST BE ine Mercury, Lge NEW, $00 PONT] AC ‘$1 Plymouth, Sedan ....00.+. $448 | oe Soe EAGLE = janeeaal” ‘ te 5.1001 1956 4-DR. OLDS. HARDTOP. POW- ‘52 Ford Hardtop . ory $1008 full price. BIRMINGHAM as m2 Te. __| your peymente to ball” Ca at ins" CHEVY ae Gindiwe power cievring, ‘com-| 2966 FORD 4 DR. VICTORIA. | (33 Ford 3 (0or o es tits Rambler, 666 8. Woodward, MI NEW & USED CUS: "CuSHM SCOOT) ‘Some out today: an CURTREL EY PANEL? 20.000 pletely overhauled, No rust. Exe. Ve Te Ente ale aimee |"S4 Ford Bedas .. . $495 ee aes ES Ners_00 B, Pike. FE +4246, Eddi Ct ] miles, excellent condition. Brown _fond., $1385. _MUtual 45921. _ |. WHITE “& BLACK. 1 OWNER | ‘54 De ie waren’ Eee eee 115 8. Saginaw. FE 8-0402. "$5 ALLSTATE. EXCELLENT CON- 1e eele Bree, 4 We Hoven 1961 OLDS. $98 KING AUTO, 115] CAR, SMALL GOWN PAYMENT. ‘$3 Dodge Station Wagon .... EW CONDI: dition. Sharp FE 4-719) FORD 1046 1%-TON caeyncrae DUMP . Saginaw. FE 6-0402. 24 MOS. ON eee ee cee 373 VoLKaWA GON, | 58. eniewele: $1. *$8 ALLSTATE DELUXE. REA- truck. Good mechanical] condition, hove techs ron ‘$1 Pontiac Sedan eeeeenen + $75 | G95. 18 In Indian Lake Road. wee tee ie MOPED-ExcRitENT conD| "“ eeece"Ranbon | 3 57 OLDSMOBILE maM atop out and buy. | '33 Pontiac Pedan (2 $345 | Shas 1958 MO-PED, EXCELLENT COND | 2 M15, 1 mile north U8. ‘53 Plymouth chub pues BEER D CONDITION. FE 5-1840 , FE_5-9204 FE 23%) HOMER HIGHT MTRS. sh Raaedaaikes $8 4 DOOR Holiday. A new car pi 3-8586 or Maple bite ‘82 Plymouth Club Coupe |... $145 Tos? WIELY: §. GOOD COND! rd i » “"1§ Minutes F Pontiac" — re ‘ow For Sale Motorcycles 101 Sele Sater NERS TPR PRS sg $1795 — aS DOW Wie nAN DL NY OF : IAN 74, $175 1985 MODE! IHC. 2 TON TRUCK THESE CARS. , t TOR3-9676 -| Dex K d WITH 18 FT. HYDRAULIC TILT “You're just allergic to flowers!” ER OME Paul Bunyan "$07 HARLEY DAVIDSON, EX : *fent "condition. OR ‘S-aied ae ren cennec Y we anes fal ae gt a. : Specials SALES PRICED 1 _KING BROS. FE 401. FE oy rs 11 For Sal ma vars 110 —For Sale Bicycles 102| i6 PT. STEEL SIDE TRUCK BO | For Sale Used Cars 1 23) _For Sale Used C “Bright S ot” ae a Motor Sales YCLES. ALL, TOP DOLL AR Se a Smith Movicg re i CHEY. $96, KING AUTO 115 | 1953 FORD «DR. FORDOMATIC. rg D UNION LAKE ies $2645 ROLLFAST BIC = | ginaw. “miles k c AUG.5 & 6 : 5 € saodeaes fr on all makes. ‘5? CHEVY PANEL TRUCK. LOW Orchard Lake at ass d : 2 Paige RE BGM FOR YOUR CAR GREG stian ts PE) pcre enone gon i | Tonp, Paints. va | msi b son jestom & 2 door, nex nu SS VOLKSWGN. | $1895 ~ . < i : 1985 OLDS SUPER 8a. A SE- ‘Boats & Accessories 103, CASS OAKLAND NEW 88 CHEVROLET IMPALA. FOR| ‘ake el PE vee ee Hydra, Fiene pai, Rig M,| [ree radio. ester, a nice clean BIRMI GH AM}> eae are frpenem Newest — "=D Moder Pickup _OR Die after 6 or older car. bliin a extras. Very clean. ‘S$? CHEVROLET 2 Door sedan, 6 38 CHEVROLET $1995 » HP MOTOR FOR SALE. FE sees OAKLAND AVENUE oss E 2 — — FORD DEALER — ‘MOLDS. 88 HARDTOP gue | Sfuins gee Cfeeton R AMBLER 4209 77 7 | This price includes all standard | 1951 CHEVY. $05 KING AUTO. 115) 4.1 Used Car Shopping Center GARNERS USED CARS” | '54 MERCURY 2 door sedan, stand- __“ - sR FORD cence eee 0 $2095 fs uP CHAMPION, 1956 MODEL. | factory equipment and federal tax |. Saginaw. FE 0-0002, 222 West Montcalm ard transmission, radio, heater.) 666 S. WOODWARD Se eRe good UL_2-2342. CT — Michigan sales tax and li- | 52 eye a LIKE NEW. RE- ’54 FORD $4 CUSTOM OLDS, WITH 68 OLDS | A sharp one owner car. $425. : - 5 - (0 HP. JOHNSON, 1957 MODEL. cense extra (Limited time offer.) | built motor, very cle ete ativan «acon 3 sage BE a $3 FORD 2 dr. station wagon, 6 MI _6-39CO S7 BUICK aoeciene = plOoS GFT METAL BoaT-aRD-3%| _ MONEY TALKS ! oot Mn ocmasTER gas “siaton $595 - r QLDEMOBILE. SHAEPL WEL Me gTA elaretiet © Guten | ARE YOU TIRED 37 JEEP. FC 170 ..$1995 Good condition, $100 | So shop the rest, then drive out 2-91 HEVROLET BEL A th ¢ Owens. FE 5-401 or a , dbeautifu r , “ >? q e- ER Snse. ___| f0%, the teat and’ prove to your- =: REPOSSESSION 'C ' O Ons OT soe | ANPTRERE 1S ALWAYS 4 GOOD | S\'powa Gusiaws Suan. .... a4g5| 50 VOLKSWGN,. $1095 \LDED PLYWOOD RUN- T <P 168 full price. No cash needed. FOR SALE OR TRADE '52 ry ION SPORTA- |, on ’ 5 ane lnssed, 25 HP elec: ie pa ae ie P Ontiac s. $1006 month, Mr. Bell. King Y wens 98. 116 Agelside TION LS, '49's to i ben roe ee '36 PLY MOUTH .$ 895 ¢ Evinrude. $495. OR DIXIE “OK” Li Truck Cénter Auto, FE 8-0402. : BE E AND VISIT US AT OUR | «43 Willys i Wagon. 0.D. .. $145|'56 BUICK Sedan. .$1095 oe ee See ‘38 CHEV. © TMPALA CONVERT. I sore DISP IN $0 Ford Club Coupe ........ $85 |, 2 5 i2 PT. CEDAR STRIP THOMPSON J. Ll. LIBERTINE _kaxc cond UL vu * ONS. REPOSSESSION ane nn | Bi Mash plitd Top. © s 65 |’56 BUICK Super. .$1195 Runabout, | Mahog. deck. wheel. Jit HARTLEY GMC ‘33 CHEV, VERY agen: {NO RUST $295 full price, no cash needed. ROGER & ‘SERVICE '55 PONTIAC .....$ 895 and canvas cover, 16 h.p. Scott $295. = a us aes 1933 FORD, PULL FLATHEAD, $395.| $17 month. Mr. Bell, King Auto. 603 ‘Auburn Ave 2-9555 Atwater motor ‘and. boat ee Di : "OK" L { At Sunoco station corner Auburn| PE 8-0402. C ARPENTER USED JEEPS _ OUR SPECIALTY , STARCHIEF | 2 — condition, 1Xle O Factory Branch REPOSSESSION and Adams Rd. , | 1866 PLYMOUTH SAVOY, 4 DOOR. 55 BUICK veces e $1195 Ti (FT. DELUXE RONABOUT, (35) Dizie Hey.. near Sashaber OAKLAND AT CASS | 125 tu price. No cash needed. | 989 FORD CUSTOM 3 DR. FORD- 55, eutemeatic rane opel BEVPOLET, CO Yom. JOHNSON: se BUICK Sedan ..$ 995 = ee a Bacriice SEPTIC TANK CLEANING TRUCK | $1.50 month. Mr. Bell, King Auto. plete areraer di we ea Clarkston Motor Sales as comturdags wat § pm aor AKE ORION cae Loe . oe ware Meee TS — uta Insurance 108 |™,GE™%, PEE? CE ROWE, |, Sal ir Sones "wiee Sto | cunnacen mu ywoura- paces sg tort wen scar beauty. |'53 BUICK «..4444.$ 995 rr’ $8500." won nn o~ 9752. ~—~"*53 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP H AS INS "56 onary = 9 pass. Sharp ; 2 DOOR . is FT. 's6 THOMPSON, 30 _ YOUR PL, & PD FOR MOST CARS. $9.60 | 54 CHEVY DELRAY COUPE $205 58 EDSEL REPOSSESSION K ee pene acon Gr = 55 BUICK ee ee electric sBrinrade, trailer, many dn, 8 mos. Pmts. of $4.99 ea. GARNERS USED CARS cash needed "36 Mercury Convert, Full power. extras. $605. eee PE 3596. Eves, PE 24353, Montcalm oe teenies Full) Sings per crac aie Ball itiod "85 Buick rie seli. 35 » OLDSMOBILE $ 795 $5'H'®. ‘Evinrude, $305. Bow Al. C AR! : Power. You a = ae T month. Mr. e oe Bonnevile “Convert >. 9 EM 3-6117. 1024 Sherbrooke, Com- ‘$6. CHEV. CONV. EXC. uto. E __merce. ce UND BOTTOM CEDAR (Js bese & trailer. $135. FE wae FAST SAND ND IN HP EVINRUDE. 2 eed cond. $75. FE 4-2004 A REAL BUY | toot ovens runabout, 1958 rte rig § — Ble fa uly quipped & wakes vn iad. approv if preserver as Sshie if etc. Per- be — boat. $1,195. Call MA TLMATEAPY ca MERCURY 25 Motor, ears duty trafi- he wheel. water skis. _ 4. AUTH DEALER JOHNSON ANK PINANCING FIBERGLAS Ts - BOARDMAN’S ‘OR €02 1575 Highland Rd. tase at Wms. Lake Rd. SHIELDS. $20.95 IN- Perudes" hardware. Ferry Service, - 6129 Highlend Rd. ae 8. - ALUMINUM, Steel, ‘oe Trailers, $89.56 jiberglas, $185. Chi 135. 9669 $120. Big Wa fruna- West. $. pb ine ee —T MOTORS TRAILERS Ww a, Aluminum , New & ent ee ee oieer shad suk weEADILLAC ALUMINUM INLAND LAKES SALES 3172_W. pos a USED MOTORS ae ee 7 ae sare. [iso SON MOTORS © boats. Gator and Air. trailers. Everything for the MARINE aes Created tas SO TELIES New 12 ft. occ. coche! as ee ontrols 1 hp steering j Evinrude. Only 3005" ‘| $164, 12 ft. "cers boa 129 t, now $235 aluminum at, now $179.50. ry ‘ft. fibergias, decked, runabout, $175. KELLY ‘S HARDWARE 3094 Auburn at. er FE 2-881) big aa BOA . a = WOL- center de ew 35 HP. siesta oa. starting. zuer includ- RENT OR 4 ea PONTOON BOAT terford Mil) Pond . Munro's ried DUNPHY WAYFAR- is still time location ‘sav money C cure GRETERS oUe OLLY. MELROSE, mr Mage FOR EVIN- Orchard SPECIAL ALL BRAND Mcetee er. atte two rope & sk: — & ready to go! A jpCakland Marine Exch. elle Eves. Cu SEVERAL clean reed boat & motor Soop. . = a Works Your Evin- ‘Harrington Boat Works FE . Sunda: he Evening ings wipe j Sesh UMINUM A- _noe MA 1922, Clarkston ca ‘103A BOATS FIBERGLASSED, “types, fibergias pack- by RD. CENTER. 15210 HOL- Deas. repair ex WA ATER S SKI NEW iner 25 h.p. ripe boat ise vase. Dut price. $995" Onis FE 8- th 8; sun. 12 to 4| WE HAVE Some with Evinrude motors Har- BANK .FINANCING - Pibergias . Me tr bod Fare Orion, MY 3-1915. _/ransportat'n Offered ed 105 ca ee a aa gp RE $80, Se S138 wilted re . Seas Eee PART ; LIKE A REAL CAR BARGAIN ? Lots of 'em "im the Want Ads f f GET THE MOST FOR IT! . And the most is what you get at JEROME “Bright Spo Ocaard Lake ch cas, 8-0488 3 ™~ Paid FOR GOOD USED CARs Russ Dawson __ 232 S. Saginaw St. NOW READ THIS BRING YOUR CAR HERE FOR TOP DOLLAR WE NEED 500 C. aioe fay fe ane ina" wean AVERILL'S OUR CONFUSED DEMAND _ “CLEAN CARS” WE'LL GIVE YOU $$$ CASH $$$ a GOOD DEPENDABLE CAR ‘| BILL SPENCE: “RAMBLER” -SALES & SERVICE- 211 8° SAGINAW FE 8-454) For Sale Used Trucks 107 The Truck You Need '48 PONTIAC HEARSE Just iike new. $395 | 1950 FORD Y% ton pickup. Black. $245 "51 INTERNATIONAL 12 foot metro. $295 ° ‘52 FORD F-6 14 ft. aluminum van and lift gate. $895 51 INTERNATIONAL & yard dump. 2 speed and clean. $595 53 DODGE Pickup, red. $475 53 FORD My ton pane]. V-8. $495 "34 CHEVROLET 12 ft. stake, sharp. $795 34 INTERNATIONAL Pickup, good rubber. $490 ‘34 FORD % ton with utility body. $748 54 INTERNATIONAL 14 foot van. $795 '55 FORD F-100 Pickup, 8 cylinder. $745 55 CHEVROLET 2 ton chassis, 102 C.A. $795 55 CHEVROLET 2 ton, 12 ft. van, sharp. $1098 55 INTERNATIONAL t. van. $685 55 DODGE ¥-8, 16 ft. van. $1098 , 56 FORD’ Courier, sharp. $798 57 FORD F-100 Pickup, 8 ft, box. $995 ‘57 FORD F-100 Panel, 6 cylinder. $1095 THESE ARE JUST A FEW OP THE MANY MORE AT - - Turner's Truck Center ag ups AND SEE FOR A DEAL THAT’s RIGHT! 464 8. WOODWARD FE ‘til 9 mre M1 4-7§00 Foreign « & & Spts. Cars 109 Lore SEKODA,. NO MONEY DO like new, ray Auto Sales. _8. Saginaw. FE 4-1006. _ 1957 COR 38 TRANS. 270 engine. 411 rear end. EM 3-0105. _ 1957 A HEALEY. EXCELLENT Lalrndhs on OR 3-0408. WN, 193 KARMEN GHIA VOLKSWAGON. Low mileage, Excellent condition. $2500 -6125. Mr. Vaughn. LARGEST arom OF DUNLOP im zee and antique tires in Mich. All sizes to we Lh a — c= oe ee et Tire For Sale Used a 110 ‘39 AUSTIN 4 DOOR, RADIO AND heater. This car sold for $2370 new, 4 months ago. Sale price, $200 down. peak $0 per month. Gets over 40 mil altar pag a MINGHAM R WOODWARD, MI 900. ‘34 BUICK aikoTOe $5 DOWN. No credit problems at Eddie Steele Ford, Po705 Orchard Lake Road. _ Keego Harbor. FE 2-2528. 1954 BUICK-HARDTOP A nice clean Century, clean in- side and out, radio, heater, auto- matic A one owner you PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES 68 Oakland PE 2-2351 ‘55 BUICK 2 DOOR. RADIO A AND heater. A very clean car for a i ca ‘erms. ance. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 666 8. oe te $5 BUICK HT. 6605. SMITH MO tors. _tors. Crooks & Auburn. $4 ~=BUICK 1 — HARDTOP. RADIO, hi . W-walls. Clean. May be seen at Standard es hulens Station at 8. Saginaw & Franklin. 54 BUICK. CENTURY, 4 DR. full wer $525 GARNERS USED CARS 222 West Montcalm Community Motor Sales jan Pontiac Cat., one ‘owner . Pontiac Sed. delivery . $ 150 COMMUNITY MOTOR SALES, INC. - Home of qualit used cars Auburn at E “Bivd y FE 8-4530 ‘93 BUICK SPECIAL get DE- -iorheaiary car. EM 3-0081, 1956 OLDS 88 CONVERTIBLE. py equipped. Beautiful on 1954 Buick Super 2 dr. Hardtop. Red & biack. 1 owner $585 o weeee 1953 Pontiac 2 dr. Hydramatic. = mechaaial cond. Bod 1957 Mex retet. a v Power, ort Like new Sige 1957 Buick. 4 dr. ee be flow. Radio - hea an 1 owner .“..... hola 405 HOMER HIGHT MTRS, “15 minutes from Pontiac” Oxford, Michiran OA 8-2528 REPOSSESSION $1 oe full See os a needed. i. 50 mon £0402. . King Auto. ‘56 CADILLAC 62 Coupe with full power. Really nice. $2195 JEROME “Bright Spot’ aoe Lake. at Cass 8-0488 n heater white tires. BEATTIE H. Rig- “Your FORD ler Si 1930" sae bixiz SY i. a jer nee Hi 1M ie Waterford iC tne, enlehe » DR. | in PS | 8 ie walls aif —— 8 Ain. WO money down. Community Motor Gales. FE §-4530, COND. __Call between 3-8 p.m. OR 3-7713. ~~ PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS ‘ Wagon., 4 dr. V-8 ..$1595 "56 Buick RM, 4 dr. Air-cond.. .$1495 ‘67 Ford Custom 2 dr. IM. .$1395 "56 Ford V-8, 4 dr. Wgn. ....$1295 "56 Buick Spec. 4 dr. i ae 1295 56 Chev. 2 dr., 6, one ay ....$1095 ‘56 Plymouth Bel., Auta. soe Buick Century’ Br sense ‘$5 Po-d rlane 8 ........ "55 Studebaker 2 ar, / OD. "§ 695 "4 oebagehy 2 dr. $5! "34 Chev. 4 dr $59) 83 Chev. 2 ar. ‘53 Mercury 53 Ford, 4 dr., "51 tiac 83 Plymouth | ..)).....0.2 22. 1260 Perry at Madison — ‘36 CHEVY, 6 CYL.. STICK SHIFT. good cond, Call OR 3-0189. CHEV. V-8 STICK CON Your car for my equity. foes mo. EM 3-0081. 58. CHEVROLET DOOR. V ~ BEL AIR Assume ayments of $27.24 per mo. Call rey ne: Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford 53 tA cone’ BEL AIR HARD- top, $5 wn. No credit prob- lems at Eadie Steele Ford, 2705 a Lake Rd.. Keego Har- as ao pratt BEL AIR. PG. R&H. MY 3-1915 ‘34 CHEVROLET. 9- PASSENGER ag $5 down. "No credit — lems at = Steele Ford, 2705 Orchard e Road, Keego Har- _bor. FE 52589. 33 Gon kee oH 2-DR, RA- O & HEA ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY I N. Assume per id real a) ti Pe per mo. Call redit Parks at MI eee Turner_ CHEVROLET, SHARP. Tr 35 Air. Best st alter over 5586 1815 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. after 34 ap NDSOR CHRYSLER. Clean. Mechanically very Good rubber. FE 5-1378 55 DODGE CORONET 4 $695. Sedan JEROME “Bright Spot’’ Orchard Lake at Cass PE 28-0488 __ Open till 9 DODGE CONVERTIBLE, WIRE wheels. Radio & heater. Auto- matic. Special interior. Special engine. In fact, a very special ear. Full price $895. BIRMING- HAM RAMBLER, 666 8S. WOOD- WARD, MI _ 6-3900. } 1954 DODGE, 4 DOOR REPOSSESSION $288 full price. No cash — od “rp Mr Bell, King Auto. igi oy — $95. KING AUTO. _il5_8. Saginaw. FE 8-0402. 33 DODGE Va. 33,000 MILES. FE 1981 DODGE. #95. & EIN 2 AUTO. 115_ 8. Saginaw, F 1956 4 FORD DOOR, aE A-1 shape. radio & heater. $850. MU 4-3319. 1950 FORD, $95. KING AUTO., 115 8. Saginaw. FE 8-040, 38 FORD ......... $1595 | - . dr. Sedan. Automatic transmis- sion. PACTORY OFPICIAL’S CAR Larry Jerome DEALER $195 FORD = 1-9711 $21 FORD. Vi STORIA...... GARNERS USED CARS 222 W. Montcalm ‘32 PORD PICKUP, '52 OLDSMO. bile 2-dr. sedan, ‘51 Chevrolet 4- ~e ae in running condition. FE 1964 FORD CONVERTIBLE. FE _#1556 afte: "$3 FORD > SOR Ta FIRLE- $ down. No credit problems att re die Steele Ford Keego Harbor. PE Ao = '54 FORD cmeerig49 4 DOOR JEROME “Bright Spot” porchard Lake, at Cass tin 9 ea wim Po ree a ei + $95 __ FE PE 4.9100 <= ‘Hunter Bivd. at 8. wheat tr Ave. Se PORE MI J FROME “Bright Spot” ‘Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 Open till 9 . '56 Olds. mo- full, LaSalle ere Com- See UL 1956 FORD FAIRLANE. 2 TONE = — . R&H. After 5, FE ‘33 PONTIAC aon ae BLACK. 2-tone. — rane 85 FORD | R. A-1, SEE AT Gpatee, x eens Station. Perry & dyke 38. CROWN VICTORIA, POWER steer a brakes & windows. Ford- omatic WSW. R&H, Rear win- bade damned OR 3-3439, after REPOSSESSION ce. No cash needed. Mr. Bell, King Auto. 1954 FORD V-8 REPOSSESSION sis magne) ben eens =i Pex 2 DOOR. RADIO AND heater. Sale rice, $1295. eagle feed 36 months BI MINGHAM RAM. 8. WOODWARD, MI SEE OUR SELECTION Of fine late mode) wu: JACK COLE, "ING. w 1000 aan ast rat h ‘833 FORD—REALLY NICE CAR. at T-Huron — $23 W. Huron. 8-9973. fel aed Legyaes WGN. NEW jocks, good tires. Vi _Clean, UL s ior. aaa sal 53 Ford pickup HOUGHTEN & SON YOUR FRIENDLY Let DEALER FOR N CAR SALES ARO SER VICE 528 N. Main, Rochester OL 1-9761 1959 GALAXIE A white convertible nearly new. We is sharp one in on a Mercury. Save hundreds. $2495 DUSSEAU Lincoln-Mercury-Edsel 33015 GRAND RIVE: GR 1 MILE WEST OF ORCHARD LAKE ROAD ees BUICK H-TOP. SUPER . 4-3170 $1495 iss2 vy pe eco ree SMIT rer SADES ______1501_Baldwin Ave. 1955 FORD RANCHWAGON. Ni ne money down. Small monthly ments. Lucky Auto Sales. 193 *S. Saginaw. FE 4-1006. ‘83 FORD $125 FE 5-8643 NORTH CHEVROLET CO. Has the INTERNATIONAL 1-YEAR Discount WARRANTY GIVEN FREE WITH EVERY CAR 100% Coverage ; No Exclusions Fordo. North Chev. 4-2735 REPOSSESSION tite "per meta Mr B Bell, jfepesseneet Fiation- 1955 Eero < poo. NICE car. No $27.24 month. tacks Ak Auto pie 193 8. _ Saginaw. FE 4-1006 55. PLYMOUTH PLAZA 2-DR RADIO & HEATER, ABSOLUTE- LY NO MON Mer. Harold Turner Ford. "32 PLYMOUTH EXC. TRANSPOR- tion On: 6 TOM BOHR, INC. MU ¢1715 054 PLYMOUTH SEDAN, VERY nice car. FE 2-7542. H. Riggins. ae eT MOvIn: BELVEDERE "GARNERS USED CARS 222 W_ Montcalm = PLYMOUTH SAVOY 4 DR. SE- dan. Automatic Radio & Heater. V-8. The perfect family car. Sale price, $1196, $195 down. $51.70 month. BIRMIN' GHAM RAM- BLER, 666 8S. WOODWARD, MI 6-3900. a | 1951 PLYMOUTH 895. KIN Auto., 115 B. 115 8. Saginaw. FE 8-0402. 1952 PONTTAC, $95 rae A AUTO. _118 8. Saginaw. ‘56 PONTIAC 4 DR. TORE “EXC. CLEARANCE 1954 Chevrolet 4 door sedan. Radio, a er. Above average - condi: 1955 Chevrolet 219 2 door sedan. Beautiful 2-tone green finish. Ra- dio, heater, one owner. $ 745 1956 Chevrolet 210 4 door s adio, heater, beautiful blue finish. Like new ..... Lo! Chevrolet 210 4 door poten Ve 3 e. Powerglide, radio, fike new 2-tone blue finish . oi05 to et Biscayne 4 door se- -8 engine, radio. heater, Seauttfal Beles and gold $1695 1953 Pontiac Convertible. Hydra- matic. fo, heater, like new throughout. ‘Solid black .... $695 edan. 2-tone $1145 1957. Ford tudor sedan. Radio, heat- er, beautiful solid white fin- WOR eign 65 ee, eee $ 995 1957 Oldsmobile Holiday coupe, Hy- dramatic. Power steering, power brakes, radio, heater. Solid light blue finish. One owner .... $1745 Days at Union Lake Aug. 5th & 6th B gure te see our display *. A 1902 RAMBLER R ‘& C Rambler Sales 8145 Commerce Road EM +4155 We have 75 new werseael to sell in the next 45 days. OUR DEALS ARE THE WAY YOU LIKE THEM! Crissman | Chevrolet ‘Rochester Offers Only the Best Wholesales the Rest 1955 FORD V-8 Sedan. Tutone ivory & blue, standard trans- ‘mission, radio, heater, white tires and very nice. $795. 1955 PLYMOUTH V-8 2 automatic transmission, solid black Hrsg set off by gleaming ma ires. Radio & heater too. 2 Door with io CHEVROLET *%4 TON Pickup. ompletely Me saitinned: od 5 and steel bed. $575. 1956 FORD Fairlane 4 Door. Tu- tone ivory & blue and beautiful. Automatic transmission, Radio, heater, white tires and power ; oe von $1195. 56 FORD Custom Ranch w hite without a scratch, $1095. 1955 CHEVROLET Bel Air ls — = in new condition tole ibe 8 Powerglide, radio, heater and white tires $1075. 1955 OLDSMOBILE 98 Holida Coupe. Tu-tone green with full — Genuine ther interior hroughout. $1245. 1955 CHTVROLET Bel Air V-8 4 Door. Green & Ivory with power- fires: * so ter and white CHEVROLET Bel Air V-8 rt standard t oe & white new w/wall tires. §1 1956 ht green - ais, heater,. whitewalls. $1095. 1988 Bel Air 4 Door Crabancheddh, redin, hoster, whine ma ORT, Bd tat OLDSMOBILE 8 Ho ise coupe; Beautiful wht waste & bron: Custom Ranch Wagon. Gaetan tranemiocion. Aegan be eg and finish... | Crissman | Delray 6 2 dr. |. immecula te, Ra. d, Will acc older car in trade, OR yaser wis rege es 8] indy perp aition "53 NTIAC 8sE-| * ony DAN. RADIO & HEA’ AB- thro aeseun Asacucococpoccocr LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. H ki Ch Assume Beat ieee a5, et ASK1nNS ev. mo. t 4-7500. er vag = Highway at M15 Ford. : MApie 5-507 Open, Nites ‘til 9 1951 PONTIAC. $95. KING AUTO., | ‘55 SSS 2 Br, cond _ CHIEF. w. FE 8-0402. A-1 cond. nt and —— __other acces. $795. “2108. Paul Bunyan isa PORTIAC OR 3-330 ‘51 PONTIAC GOOD RUNNING sera ave, $738. FE 49219. 363 Au- 1954 PONTIAC 2 DR. CHIEFTAIN. Can be seen at Gulf Station. Cor. Auburn & Perry. Pontiac. 35 P ONTIAC, 810 HARDTOP, _Sharp, OR 3-5274, STOP! LOOK! SAVE! w stee . power brakes, -tadio heater, ya matic, ‘whitewall res, back other accessories, 2: aan miles. Has been used as demo. Shop early and sav 1958 PONTTI. 1955 BUICK ............... $1045 Super 4-door sedan, wer steer- ing, power brakes, Dynaflow, ra- dio, heater, white wal mileage and MONG UTC as eee: $895 Super 4 door sedan. Power steer- Wer brakes adio, heater, ite wall tires. Solid white beauty. *gtation CHEVROLET tires. Low just like new. ots res, Low miles, lavender and ivory wowace $2205 an A ag v-8 Mecgirat Power- pag ens whitewalis. ‘ar is Bee's 1956 FORD .......=.......... ine, Cun sacs wagon, V-8 engine, Fordomatic, radio, heater, bets tires.” Beautiful green a ivory. = mileage. = ‘beauty Powerglide, radio, RAMBLER 1509 Super, radio, heater, one owner. "Ce fury convertible. til” power: en iv ie as n nical car for Wis ideal weath- 1957 — SiR setae, savevaimessimenis ain r pow a ing, 2 aed brakes, Fadlo, lente: accessories, - dered Bea ite ny Aston heater, whitewall tires. Low miles and sharp. 1006: BUIOR (oon osc esses $1145 Special Gap asec new tires, new top one ner, 196 FORD ....... Reece +4 $1408 pe power brakes atic, VE "Fordomatic. © 1987 BUICK :............... 905 r “15 4door top, has everything. Buy this one and go class: ously rears sk . $21 Boras Seg ea en : with Y -power, ra- fio. “ate whitewals. Bold ck finish 1987 srt ke on ‘agi car, ican, oot it bise rv Pontiac Buick ~ Ta ——o ‘OL 59m A rea] gas saver, Whitewall tires., 25 Trang ration Pay aa RUSS eee LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES MY_2-2871 ors MY_—(3-1461 1954 PONTIAC STARCHIEF 4 DR. Good shape, can be seen after 5 p.m. OR 3-3447. . PONTIAC STARCHIEF, 4 DR. have g nice Starchief Cata- lina Coupe. $795 full price with very low monthly pym'ts. Luck — Sales. 193 8S. Saginaw. Teen GUARANTEED USED CARS ‘57 Ford Custom 300, radio. heater. fordomatic, white tires, al] white finish 295 "36 Chevrolet 4 dr. wagon, 35 BUICK seeeisle sp O23 55° PONTIAC sie e =p O95 _ SPECIA 55 BUICK . anges $i 095 46 JEEP & PLOW $ 345 STATION WAGO HANK OR GLENN PONTIAC’S BARGAIN BARONS FOR A HAT-FULL OF SAVINGS OLIVER Motor Sales heater, real nice Save $$$ bh es Piymouth Savoy V-8 4 dr. ss ord 4 dr. CORN NER CASS & PIKE FE ‘S138 5|FE 2-9101 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Open Eves. —- HOT ENOUG THESE CARS ARE . FORD .... PONTIAC Two to choose from. MERCURY MERCURY FORD .... CADILLAC 69" aus. ue Buus pion piaeieee & FORD .... Heater, Fordomati BUICK ... White Paint. PONTIAC ARCHIEF Saramale, ‘90 BUICK 3|PON "GOODWILL 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. ; (BEHIND THE ESL Fan LOOKING FOR A DEAL THATS SO SHARP - PRICED SO LOW YOU WON'T BE ABLE TO RESIST — COME ON DOWN AND LOOK THEM OVER — WE GUARAN- TEE YOU A REAL HOT DEAL EVERY TIME! CHEVROLET ...... $1595 BEL AIR 4 DOOR — Radio & Heater. Powerglide. STATION WAGON — Radio & Heater. Hydramatic. Both have very low mileage. 2 DOOR — Mercomatic. Radio & Heater. 4 DOOR HARDTOP — Radio & Heater, Mercomatic. 4 DOOR — Radio & Heater, Fordomatic, FAIRLANE “‘500" eneerOe — 2 Door, CHEVROLET ...... $1095. BEL AIR 4 DOOR — Radio & Heater, straight stick. SPECIAL “ Radio & Heater, CATALINA COUPE — Radio & Heater, 32 DOOR HARDTOP — Radio & Heater, FAGTORY BRANCH RETAIL STORE H FOR YOU? vores 82095 B Fore tet vee e eee ee 1395 eee ee es P2095 eee eee 1395 meee +e oe PLAOD Eee YAR.) Radio & Heater, Hydre- . Power Brakes veel even eee WLZ95 Radio & ee ece es $1395 Dynafiow. Blue -& See e ees. $1095 “icc je ¢,81095 HAC USED CARS” FE 3-7117 POST OFFICE)" s peat THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1090. _TWENTY-SEVEN = ~Today’ S Television Programs - Channel iis etal Channel ‘wwarv Channel 1=WXYZ-TV Chan tc) 9=CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV MIGHLGHTs 6:00 (2) — (4) N (D Time. with Johnny Ginger. (9) Popeye. (4) Weather. (4) Mr. Adams, Eve. (2) News, (9) Woody *Woodpecker. (2) News Analyst. (2) (4) (7) News, Sports. (2) Baseball. Detroit-New York. (4) Col, H. Flack. Comedy. Flack has Garvey agree to fight ferocious bull in order to help beautiful girl. Fa Aan oe oes as se ose oe Sas Bae (9) Hawkeye. Adventure: Young -army man _ whose family has n wiped out by Indians has developed fanatical hatred of them. (4) Northwest. Passage. Western: Dan Wade (Gene Nelson) a young colonist, whose three brothers have murdered trapper and stolen his furs is ostracized because of his relationship to thieves. (7) Sugarfoot. Western: Tom : Brew: (Will Hutchins) seeks secret hidden in house in which four Kelly brothers who were hanged, and. their mother,- who died after- wards, had lived. (9) Million Dollar Movie. Big-shot gambler makes good the Josses of his patrons following holdup of his night- club in ‘‘Smart Girls Don’t Talk.” ('48) Virginia Mayo. (4) Steve Canyon. Drama: 1:30 8:00 3 Returning from San Fran-|. cisco in C-47 transport, Can- yon and Williston are kid- naped by three hoodlums dressed as airmen. (2) Baseball (cont.) (4) (color) Jimmie Rodgers. Variety with guests Lennon Sisters and comedian Roger Ray, (7) Wyatt Earp. Western: Marshal Earp hunts third member of quartet of out- laws who ambushed his two Indian friends, Mr. Cousin and Mr. Brother. Repeat. (4) Fanfare. Drama: When young wife (Virginia Mayo) suddenly realizes that ner efforts to be kind to her hus- band’s business partner are being misunderstood she launches a match-making campaign. (7) The Rifleman. Western: Akim Tamiroff, guest .stars in role of Riffauges, vice lord fleeing justice who de- 9:00 : Comedy off ‘his ranch. member of Nazi spies in Emerson. (2) Scoreboard. (2) Spotlight house. Drama: - Play- operation and he can’t find money to pay for it. Repeat. edy: Chuck enlists aid of his Uncle Bob to offset roman- tic competition of rock and roll. idol, (1) Naked City. Drama: Gangsters attempt to use Manhattan’s .sewer system as escape route and young man must decide between his father and crime. (2) Andy Williams. Musical- variety with guests Dorothy Collins, Gretchen Wyler, Morey Amsterdam and Bill and Cora Baird. (4) David Niven. 10: 00 Drama: tiful woman who jis forced to face up to realities of her marriage to rackets boss in “Twist of the Key.” (7) One Step Beyond. Drama: Young girl, about to be married, has strange dream of a coming sea dis- aster in which she sees ship being’ struck by iceberg and she sees the name Titanic. ' (9) News. 10:15 (9) Weather. 10:20 (9) Sports Show. Milt Hop- wood 10:30 (4) Panic. Drama: Imme- diately after taking some is told he is to be made partner in the firm. (7) Bold Venture. _Adven- ture: “Shannon receives note 11:20 (2) Nightwatch Theater. Drama: Robert Donat, “Lease of Life. ('54). 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. Guests Anita Bryant and Betty White. (7) Night Court. (9) Starlight Theater. Com- edy: Spencer Tracy, “Tor- Answer te Previews Puztle tilla Flat.” ('42) bacaica Bh Eka a WEDNESDAY MORNING Campus Clothes SSE Sirs] (6:40 (2) Meditations. When school bells ring, leather eH CR Giteraren (6:55 (2) On the Farm Front. acon ven al on ee Lal | Te NS) 2k ee | i roc TINIDT TIMOR Sisian «(7:00 «(2) TV College. ty: JEM ted te ISIN (4) Today. young and not so young, rey § ates sels tae a (7) Big Show. jackets and coats of sueded "any A Etre 1:30 a) Cartoon ee smooth acy - lightweight, Breakfast Time. rugged care 8:15 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. College men will find high-styled le cabretta 8:30 (7) Johnny Ginger. suede vests and pliable leather suburban coats with easily acnoss accessible slash pockets and knit 1,7 Scottish poet |} } 6 718 19 WOM trim designed for them. 3 Lecturer , Most 4 Mouth roof I ec the this fall are dark 5S Tomorrow on campus ~- Be cs of brown, tan and ivory. The suedes cloth 18 can be inexpensively dry cleaned, 11 Dessert Ee while the smooth cabrettas need 19 Broog. me — but a damp sponge. 3 ‘Ancient 71 Y students have a wide Thoroughfares range in jackets of sheepskin and =) cowhide. Pile and shearling 30 City in provide warmth in jackets and 31 pod coats that resist scratches, scars 33 — and scuffs. n * * I | Lonenel 3 oma From freshman to senior, the: 38 Meat dish college girl is fashionably wrapped = ares |in leather coats topped by high oe coe 4 i} shawl and portrait collars. pa ffnd es Tweed and leather make hand-| “ aetien > - some combinations in blazers, io % y| |lored and cardigan jackets. Suedes ; bretta come in a ran - brackian ie ‘ of plo white, black and gold. " andres 8 Grave 24 Poker stake 43 Rave : 86 Place for 9 Narrow inlets 27 Hops’ kiln 44 Grafted (her.) catch: bia anche 4 wee a menct I st Newspapers are keeping modern. “pow RY Seca Sls lay aly meerrapern © proc erch y daily i peel eee == — is 37 Tae" * —s ehlana plants, equipment and product. 7 on a well known 40 Pertaining another of These same newspapers, it is es- 21 Emphasis to a his poems dditi 1 $75 ; Electrical part 22 Asiatic “ protuberance se Verb 7 timated, spent an additional 3$/9,- ; fatale 1 23 picmms “ ~ 42 Prosts - Law (ab.) 000,000 ‘tor improvement in 1958. cides to run Lucas McCain (9) Theater, Drama: Young attorney falls in love with cret Enemies.” ('42) Faye! ~ Ralph S8el- lamy stars as New York po- lice eaptain who is disillu- sioneq and tempted to take bribe when daughter needs|- (4) Bob Cummings. Com-}y- Anne. Francis stars as beau-/1; herself in lifeboat on whichig: ’ company money, an employes: 9:00 (4) (color) Bozo the Clown. (2) Movie, 9:30 (4) Life of (7) Stage 3. 1:00 (4) Dough Re My (7) Jean's Notebouk. 10:25 (9) Billboard. 10:30 (2) Sam Levenson. (4) Treasure Hunt. (9) Special Agent. 10:55 (7) News. 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) Price Is Right (color). | (7) Lady of Charm. (9) Abbott & Costello. 30 (2) Top Dollar. (4) Concentratiun. (9) Foreign Legionnaire. 11:45 (7) Detroit Today. WEDNESDAY anEenn cos 12:00 (2) Loye of Life. . (4) Tic Tac Dough. (9) Albert. 12:15 (9) Rope Around the Sun, ° 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) (color) It. Could Be You. (7) Pantomime Quiz. (9) Serial Theater (2) Guiding Light. (9) News. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) It’s a Great Life. (7) Music Bingo. (9). Movie. (2) As the World Turns. (1) Topper. (4) I Married Joan. (4) Faye Elizabeth. (2) Bor-Better or Worse. (4) Queen for a Day. (7) Day in Court. (2) House Party. (4) Court on Human Rela- tions (7) Gale Storm. (2) Big Payoff. (4) Young Dr. Malone. (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. (2) Verdict Is Yours. (7) Who Do You Trust? (4) From These Roots. (2) Brighter Day. 3:00 i— Steven Rockefeller and Anne |‘Marie Rasmussen said jthey’ve definitely settled on Aug. jhis father and mother, Gov, and jhe hopes several other members jof his family will be on hand. |probably in the afternoon, in the Noung Rocky Sets the Date Couple to Be Married August 22 in Soenge in Small Wedding KRISTIANSAND, Norway (AP) today 22 for their wedding date. Steven told a news conference Mrs, Nelson Rockefeller of New York, will attend unless some- thing completely unexpected hap- pens. * * * Young Rockefeller added that The couple will be married, Lutheran Church at nearby So- enge. The ceremony will be per- formed by the Rev. Olav Gaute- stad, an old friend of the Ras- mussen family. * * Steven David, a publicity man sent over by Gov, Rockefeller, said the wedding would be com- paratively small and therefore could be held in the 18th century Soenge chapel instead of in the newer but larger Lund church. New York Orchestra in Europe for 10 Weeks NEW YORK \#--The New York Philharmonic Orchestra left by plane Monday on a 10-week Euro- pean and Middle Eastern tour that will include 50 performances in 29 cities. * * * The first concert will be heard Wednesday in Athens, Greece. tei ik x og Pe oat ABC-TV Wants Abtion AP Wirephote U. 8. MUSCLE CHAMP — Harry Johnson, 35, of Decatur, Ga., has been chosen Mr. America in the annual competition at York, Pa. He says he has been lifting weights and taking body building exercises for the last 16 years. TV Dicks Modern Robin Hoods (4) (color) Truth or Conse- telling him he is to be killed, quences. and he f one of his island (1) American Bandstand. hotel guests murdered. | [4:15 (2) Secret Storm. (9) Wrestling. Live from|4:39 (2) Edge of Night. : Windsor. (4) County Fair. — 11:00 (2) (4) News, Weather. (9) Sherwood Forest. (7) Soupy’s On. 5:00 (2) Movie. 11:10 (2) Weather. (4) (color) George Pierrot 11:15 (2) Sports. Presents. (9) Looney Tunes. (1) Mickey Mouse Club. (4) Sports. Suede, Leather to Rule Fall 5:30 Expect Glamour in Detectives By RICK DU BROW UPI Hollywood Writer HOLLYWOOD — Why are pri- vate detectives the new heroes of television? “Because they’re the modern versions of Robin Hood — and there'll always be a Robin Hood,” says Frank Lovejoy, star of the -~Today'’s Radio Programs -- Programs furnished by ‘stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice wae (700) CRLW (800) WWs (980) WOAR (1190) © WXYZ (1270) WPON (1460) WJBK (1500) content 0:00. W. News CKLW. Joe Van nt Ee Time ww. es P. Bitsadeth | WPON. Chues Lewis ww, News warn. on -CKLW News, Davie WJBK, Baseball wxrYra, Wattrick, McKensie one. seo WIBK, News, Reid 1:30—WJIBK, Baseball CELW, News 1130— WIR, Music WCAR, News. Martyn 2:00—WJR, Showcase WJBK, News, McLeod WPON, News, Lark ry os — WCAR, News, Page — 9:30—WJR, Jack Barris _ WPON. News, Sports A 2:30—CKLW. News, Shiftbreak WEDNESDAY MoRNTING «| CELW. Mary Morgan 1100—-WIR. Co ; culture | 10:00—WIR, Music ' . Composite soe wee Sones Dene Se rey ww, News, “True Story WWJ, News, Maxwell WWJ, B. Meswell WWJ. News, Roberts WXYZ. Peter & Mary W2YR, 4. Daly WRYB Wolf CRLW, Joe Ven rowel ‘tee WCAR, Page's Party CKELW. Rooster Clud WJBK, News. Reid WCAR. News. Bennett WPON Candielite WJBEK,, Tom Georke Wi News, Lark WXYZ, M.. Shorr mi WPON, News, Lark 9:90-—-WIR, Guest House WCAR, News, Gherides tose WHYS. Pout winter wine pacnan WWJ, News, Maxwell — WETE, atouna ‘Town | $:30—WJK, Composite WXY2, B. P, Morgan ¢:30—WJR, Music Ball 1100-0 shirley CKLW News. Davies CKLW, Fulton Lewis Je. | CKLW, Eye Opener HA a beater Wie Preach ae Woodling WJIBK. Neéwa, George haw: Jor ta 0 4:0 Wik, News, Musto 1:00—WJR, Dan Kirdy WW, News ae—wwa, soar extra | "Wor tees, Roberts Wan fers, 8 Bartye | WXYA Wattfick, Shérr WRYS, Might Trato Weve “howe Ww . News, Da CKLW, R. Knowles , Mews, Toby David tose cime tor Musie | we News BK, News, WPON fomie J news = ae ¥ Berrttee Trase Sw eee" 190— WH, Muste fall : —_ i . 6:30— WK, Music 8 ks Fe ne pea cui porte “Aserna wenemena arrenneen | wave 'lt Ghee - f Lhd 4 WUAH few: Sean News germ, aM ~ News, Haegert cKLw hewn, Davies #:380~WCAR, woodling oin~ Guest pet Be dos vee WJBK porta “MeLeod 9:00—CKLW, Wwe News. Raberts WXYZ, Paul Winter 6:00 -WJK. News, Muste | ww, : RYS. News, WOAR. Bows Purse WWJ. News, Prencs. , World Tedey 2. oo Oe * News, Lewis CELW.. Spores Dovtie moore Bee. ences (2100-WIR, Time for Musie| » Grate Pore ‘ w. fan 1:00—W, Showcase 5:38—W2YZ, M. Shorr Music \“Sauw. ‘wows, Davia | WW3, News, Hegeart CKLW, News, Davies * \ 5 * oi : “=t ¢ “Meet .McGraw” series on the ABC network. Lovejoy, 45, who portrays a charming and unarmed private eye, elaborated: “People like to think there’s always someone around to help the weak ones—someone who's strong, has ethics and is glam- orous. You can make a private eye glamorous because very few people know anything about them —or ever came across one. “You couldn't do that with most trades—an accountant, for instance. Too many people know By EARL * an American dollar.” by a charming to the 1500s, rooms, rooms.” - “About how WILSON “Fifty-one,” | servants. There's Nothing Cheap About Caracas Prices WILSON CARACAS, Venezuela — I just found out why Gov. Nelson Rockefeller likes Venezuela. He can afford it. * * It‘s a great sightseeing place, though. You ought to come down here al to look at the prices. “The only thing cheap in Venezuela,” commantog sadly, “is the We were lucky and got invited to lunch millionaire, Emanuel Vincente Rodriguez, 71, who sighed as he showed us around his rambling house which goes back “We have nothing but rooms, * * * many?” we asked. he__ recollected. And 14 “I started living early,” he said, chain-smoking cigarets. tai-|“By the time I was 20, I had three bullets in me.” A juvenile delinquent? No, he smiled, just some argu- ment over a girl at a dance Grandson of a Venezuelan back around 1905. President, he’s the stepfather of N.Y. and L.A. Cafe Socialite Renaldo Herrerra Sr. Laugh- ing, he said he was an average Venezuelan — he'd been exiled and also been in jail, during a revolution or two. * .*® * “I was unhappy when I was in exile — even though I was exiled to an apartment on Park avenue in N.Y.,” he said. Palm B service.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL, ar O'Hara. He'll start shooting it early in '60. The “Ah, Wilder- ness,” the “Connecticut Sum- mer” show he'll do on B’way has been renamed, “Take Me Along” (the name of,a pros- pective hit song in it)... Monique Van Vooren got a big break: she was cast as the |dramatic lead in a U.S. Steel TV. show Aug. 26 (“A Case About Champagne”) and will also be able to do the next Bardot picture in France... There’s talk of the Jack Paar TV show going to England — _|but Jack admits most of the talk is on his part. the young actor, gets bioged in fights and the tequilla. Behind Bars.” his wife would have preferred.” 4 + He spent much of his exile at El Morocco and some in and some with Mike Romanoff in L.A. When in jail, he discovered he knew thé chef and so he got special “cell Jackie Gleason will use his millionairish home at Peek- skill as the setting for his TV series about a press agent named NAPLES .. Bob Evans, the 8.E. Post. x * Opéra Star Delores Wilson is in Mexico sampling the bull- :. Prettiest bartender in N.Y. isDelores Naples, 24, size 37, at the Hob Nob on E. 4lst street. This lovely mixologist contemplates writing a “book, “My ahs Years WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Marriage,” ‘claims the Vexstonds, “is a period during which a man finds out what sort of fellow (Copyright, 1959) accountants. and ‘their normal routine. The same goes for your postman. You think of him in a benign sort of way, so it’s hard to cloak him in glamor.” Sipping a drink at the bar of his Beverly Hills home, the dark- haired, Bronx-born actor -said he thinks TV viewers prefer glam- orous stories to truthful ones about their heroes — even his- torical ones. S, * * * “If you want to be honest about it,” he said, ‘Wyatt Earp was hardly anything like you see on TV. I'm not knocking the show, but he wasn’t exactly a wonder- ful person. And I don’t think Bat Masterson won any medals for|: wants to hear about that. “It's like Custer’s last stand. Heaven forbid that the Indians should make the picture from their viewpoint.” Lovejoy said that even private eyes—as glamorous as the aver- age person might imagine them to be—must be further glamor- ized for TV consumption. “Let’s face it,” he grinned, “there’s nothing really very glamorous about listening in on a -party line. And if -you shot the whole thing in Joe’s corner saloon, you'd have a great big “So they get you in a studiv— and the lights are right, and the broads are better looking, and naturally you look better. Who wouldn't? Let's be honest again— all real-life private eyes aren't exactly great. But who can sit down and tel] their kids that? . x © *. “When I was a kid, we used to play cowboys and Indians, and I always wanted to play the cow- boys. Only the jerks played the Indians. Why? Because the cow- boys were glamorized. We don't want to sit down and be educat- ed on TV, If there’s an idea in it okay—but entertainment is what we want.” Lovejoy, whé is married and has two children—Judy, 16, and Stephen, 13 — admitted, how- ever, that he does try to get one idea across as McGraw. “I never use a gun," he said. “I never carry one. It’s a matter of personal conviction. I don't be- lieve in it.” Two Boys, 17 and 14, Tie Dogs to Tracks VAN WERT, Ohio (AP) — He and a friend tied two dogs to rail- road tracks and waited for a train to come, Danny Clem, 14, ad- mitted in juvenile court. Danny related that he had wait- 17-year-old companion watched The judge sentenced the boy to. elven years in Ohio’s Boys Indus- | trial School, with recommendation | that he not be released before serving the maximum sentence. J The case of the older boy is being handled by a court in ad- acent Paulding County. — The incident July 21 a \ : humanitarianism. But nobody ed behing some boxcars while his|10 By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK (AP)—In the com- ABC-TV will continue 5° of programming for the network, in describing ABC-TV's plans. ~ “Action — adventure is at the moment the most effective en- tertainment in our medium. It will continue as long as we can’t come up with something more appeal- ing “The coming season will see a continuation of our programming philosophy of the past few years. The emphasis will be on action and adventure. We would have liked to add new situation come- dies. “But the successes we have had indicate it’s quicker to get an audience with action adventure than to pioneer a situation come- Nearly all of the network's pro- grams in prime evening viewing time will be on film. ABC-TV will have very few spe- cials, compared to the other net- works. Walt Disney plans three on man in relation to space,” and three others will feature Bing Crosby, Pat Boone and Frank Sinatra. Emphasizes Escape on Mondays at 8:30 p.m. will car- ry the concept into a New Orleans background. ‘Hawaiian Eye” Wednesdays at 9 p.m. will carry it to Hwaii. On Sunday nights the ABC-TV screen will bristle with action. **Maverick’”’ at 7:30 is followed by “Lawman” and then a new West- ern, ‘‘The Rebel,” which Moore describes as ‘‘the adventures of a Reconstruction beatnik.’’ Then comes a new hour adventure se- ries, “The Alaskans."’ Three hour -length action pro- grams stand back-to-back on Mon- days: “Cheyenne,” “Bourbon Street Beat,’ and the new ‘‘Ad- ventures in Paradise,”’ concerning the skipper of a schooner in the southwest Pacific who seeks ad- venture. vs TV News and Revie ws Baseball on By WILLIAM EWALD NEW YORK (UPI)—It is only logical, in a summer freighted with offer a repeat of the All-Star’ base- ball game. ~ Yesterday, a group of gentlefolk from the National and American Leagues reenacted an exercise or- iginally presented on July 7. The cast was changed somewhat — not- ably missing on the National side were two skilled # performers, Or- fF] lando C and William White. And the point of origination was shifted from Pitts- burgh to Los An- EWALD moving to the West Coast anyway. However, there was one rather ‘duly 7 original, won, Yesterday, the Americans won. a dandy solution to the problem of summer répeats and I suggest other TV series might adopt it — if Peter Gunn and Marshall Dillon and Wyatt Earp were to lose all their winter gunfights dur- ing the summer, it might add some tang to the schedule. that it's The Great American Bore. On television, the game is less than satisfactory. TV offers sec- tional baseball — its canvas dis- plays only partial glimpses of its complex actions like the = and run, the double play, the base hit with men on. One typical example; for the Americans. switched back to Fox roosting on first. .. JUST A KEYHOLE What was missing was the TV reruns, that NBC-TV should geles, but that’s only fitting since almost all network television is In a way, the idea seems like TV Breaks Into Keyhole Episodes of Champagne” on CBS-TV’'s U.S. Steel Hour Aug. % .. « Lioyd Nolan will guest in a CBS-TV Father Knows Best epi- sode next fall titled “Bud Plays It Safe.” Westinghouse will sponsor the Democratic and Republican politi- cal conventions and election night on CBS-TV in 1960 for the third consecutive tective, currently seen Sundays on CBS-TV, will switch to — aes on NBC-TV starting Oct. . . . Richard Boone, star of CEB iy's Have Gun, Will Travel, will direct an episode, ‘The Cam- paign of Billy Banjo,” for the fall series .. . NBC-TV's Cavalcade of Sports will cover the middleweight . |Gene Fullmer Aug. 28. Denies Queen Ordered to Undergo Examination LONDON (UPI)—A Buckingham spiracy of silence about baseball with nobody quite willing to ‘admit Yesterday in the seventh inning with Anthony Kubek on second and James Run- nels on first, Nelson Fox singled The camera showed the ball slithering. toward the outfield, picked up Kubek as he planked the run and then ret “tv CONDON’S TV t fe S0no ne, Plus the latest slim-trim eye- glass models. is available ve SONOTONE - of PONTIAC 511 Pontiac State Bank Phone FEderal 2-1225 fer Free Home DELCO: 5: | Product of General Motors | OR 3-4492 RCA Color TV Sales and Service 36S. T VR 4-07296 «= Across ‘el-Hurew RCA COLOR TV c SWEET $ RADIO. TW HAMPTON urcraic Fy 825 w. Wares @, <= Open Gresinge 9 9, i mH 42528 — e \ i \ , ‘ : | ; / © ot { ! : I a = a eee THE PONTIA® PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 10595 -.- UY oe a = : ; ors : “ ~ atl : fo ' | Sf f\ R§ No, we weren't washed-out last Wed. | \ \ ROEBUCK AND CO. but our basement was flooded. 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