oe ok F yt ord Extends Hope * for. Labor Contract Recent Talks Bowntown Pontiac. _ Show Promise of Settlement Company Head - Fails ‘to Say Whether Strike Likely to Be Stopped DETROIT (#) — Henry Ford II, president of the Ford Motor Co., said today “events of the past few days encourage us to believe we can reach an agreement that’ will be economically sound and fair” with - the walkout-threatening United Auto Workers Union. Ford did not speculate whether settlement. would come before Wednesday’s 10 a.m. strike deadline. He expressed himself as his company prepared to present later today a new contract offer it hoped would avert a UAW walkout that could idle an estimated 140,000 Ford employes. The Detroit Times reported today it had-learned Ford would offer a three-year contract car- rying a wage increase of betweon 24 and 30 cents an hour over that period. Without disclosing any source, the Times story added: “It will Sunday negotiating ses- sion with the UAW that Ford was ready to get down to brass Ford's contract situation, which was made against the backdrop of the UAW’s strike threat, was a du- strike, In 1955—the last year of bargain- ing between the UAW and the au- tomotive big three—Ford, Chrys- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) to Become Carnival Plans are crystallizing for downtown Pontiac’s gala five-day festival which will turn the business district into a carnival scene startin _ Amusement: rides will be set up at two locations, Nor- g Thursday. Holding Driver in Death of 2 Police Report Men ‘Changing Tire When Hit in Drayton Plains A Davison man is being held today for investigation of man- slaughter in a Drayton Plains traffic accident which killed two area men. Oakland 21, of 163 Augus-]| . , ta Ave, and] Mm 58 David J. Wil- liams, 33, of 6831 64. Saline St., Wa- terford Township, Being held is Alfred H. Thomp- UAW They Don’t Stop Him SOUTH LYNN, England (UPI) —John Watt became a Boy Scout official during the weekend. . Watt is 90 years old. early Sunday) — 4man Pattison, president. of the Downtown Merchants) Assn., sponsors of the event,| disclosed today. At city parking lots, W. Law- rence and Wayne and E. Pike at + Hill, a variety of rides will be in} operation starting Thursday and continuing. through Tuesday of next week when the festival ends. OUTDOOR COOKING — cooking facilities are planned so the public can enjoy barbecue, hot dogs, coffee and soft drinks at outdoor tables, The stores are also busy at work on booths that will be placed out- side their doors and will feature special values, entertainment, To Say ‘I Do’ in Unison CHIAVARI, Italy (UPD—Giu-. seppe Costa said today his six children — four men and two women—will: be married Thurs- day in a single ceremony. After their collective “I do,” the six Costas and their mates will move into three villas of two apartments each built by the At both locations, too, outdoor) “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 195880 ek ok Costa sons. Little Rock in ‘Cold Fury’ Faubus Closes Four High Schools LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) —) He has ordered State Police tojat home. Faubus said he fearedjence that. State Police “are on Gov. Orval E. Faubus said today/help City Police put down any/integration would have provoked|‘‘tentative alert” and may even that the sending of 150 U.S. deputy |disorder : . it Bae violence, if he had let the schools marshals to Little Rock on inte-| All four of Little Rock's high/open. gration duty ,has whipped the/schools closed today on Faubus’ people into “cold fury.” bus. Citizens ; are awaiting a plan to operate the x * orders and 3,470 students stayed! He said today in a new confer- school » the next move . force the school. : * ' 4P Wirephot as a private institution and speculate on -by'the federal government to en- a Supreme Court order for integration at Oct. 7. The U.S. Supreme Court last Fri ‘day integration to proceed help the U.S. marshals. if they find themselves hard-pressed in a Bat he said State Police will not help either City Police or the U.S. marshals integrate Central or any other high school. oon ‘Tn fact, he said, the reason he acceded to a request to let State Police. help City Police put down disorder is because city authori- ties made it “crystal. clear” that x = *® a Neither Faubus, the grote or immediately’ and Faubus ordeted them closed as of 8 a.m. today. ; « *€ ‘e “There is no sense.in the Negro ‘My conviction js that the feeling | | PAGES kk * ches Plunge Into Newark Bay we kik’ Stuart E. Whitfield, chair- man of a Pontiac area Chamber of Commerce committee that has aided p.m. Sept. 27 in area of the W. The announcement was made.jointly by Acting Post- off! master Robert C. Miller and bo Past Draw-Span 10M. Accident Jersey Central Railroad off a bridge and into New- _, went through a raised 4 drawbridge at 10 am. and " fell 50 feet into the oilly — bay waters, = DISASTER SCENE — A commuter train Rescue boats converge on the scene,The pic- sey shore to Jersey City. | 1 plunged through a raised drawbridge into ture shows two coaches remaining on the The. first coach was empty, a: US Red China Newark Bay this forenoon. One coach sticks track. The Coast Guard at noon had recovered ‘“‘deadhead.” The second disap- ewey out of the water. Two ather coaches followed 15 bodies. More bodies may still be in the peared below the bay with between © : the two diesel locomotives and are submerged. coaches under the water. 30 and 50 passengers aboard, . . ' A third coach fell part way in, Trading Views Millon | ‘Budcet tenn representatives Meet in IK $12-Million County Budget,).™testsne: am a, p J \32, of Plainfield, N.J., was one of Poland to Discuss Far| .., : Fs 3 : ng Servint i sachs ate, :- mes” Circuit Judge’s Pay to Be Cufssieases: paper when st there ircult sugges Fay. fo De Ul se 2.nee ee oto oe “WARSAW, Poland @ U. S. | SreTue ‘coach, filed, euickly. wlth and Chinese Communist represen-} Circuit of Oakland County| et and a 1959 salaries schedule raises for su- shee Saki tatives sat down in a Polish palace will cpg pay cut on! ot $5,100,200 were recemasensed |pervisors trom $10 t $15), wh eri wt saved viene nd pe oe K vecotion and) god, Wipee Set Se, top ee ae eaiantae. cadens ee ’ iry part of ) of "4 ; a p 7 aes Me wie Wang Ping-nan braved a barrage RE ahaa . [aid not pane, also decided to boost salaries at the 2 nag pebtpe’ he 2 of reporters and photographers 88|.¢"arain commissioner's Slary| trons ce aages for omer pamty|eh, of one thousand dolars more| . he, tain had let ieabet ace, 18th-century hunting lodge of|Rext_ year $1,200 more than the!employes, who received increases) han the maximum set by law. ee ease eerie the kings of Poland. | a wank [ere ar ne F. nts Birming- way across one 1500-foot span to e The negotiators said they would; Approved along with the budg-' Included in the new budget too) moved that the county continue mapas i ye es e discuss the crisis in the Far paying its share of $11,000 year, | Railroad spokesmen said normal- tS EE, : ona" il ei en om acute of any roves © MO UITINETLCl Will Speak | “ve seen axed ty in sail 2G gin mee? ie Ss is cnn) i eigenen t P t Offi Dedi ti ‘vould mot, attempt to enlorse thelr sow and stop the train cies here that if the talks show (C2 OS ice ICATION | rictutue setting the maximum,” In Cumat arene eh Se Sere te ech: — . Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield has ac- ag. definitive stages. He said this was based on a cepted an invitation to act as main speaker at dedica-|, f° tld this was based on Cloudy and Cooler bie eee ar ri tion ceremonies for Pontiac’s new $850,000 post office.| tha: aw was oe ae rea - 7 aS 4 —— low will be in the 53-degree range. mperature soared to a pleas- Sunday afternoon. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) - As for the the ( on Page 2, Col. 2) - tain around the Nationalist off-— shore islands, The Pescadores are about midway between For- mosa and Quemoy, x * * The supply problem for the outposts, however, was. still ob- viously a big headache, despite the successes of the past two days. U.S, Rear Adm. Paul P. Blackburn, Formosa Strait patrol commander, told newsmen. the supply situation “could be better —a helluva lot better.” _ “7 don’t guarantee anything except that we are going to try } the best we‘can,” he added. Red shelifire in the past fev: on Little and supply-short Quemoy. This hint that .some sort of major operation might be under Way Cale as°a new sea convoy was forming at the Pescadores island supply: base 30 miles from Formosa and 70 miles from Qye- moy, The Nationalists also stepped up their propaganda war, drop- ping milliong of leaflets on the mainland... cae 'oday’s Press In PT eee eee eee ee Pr eee eee eee Re ee ee 19 Theaters TV & Radio Programs....,. 28 Wilson, Barl...ssscccescsss 2 the % Women’s PAZOS...- vr 0n 11-13 E Quemoy e Nationalists some new tech- As usual, escort ships from the # i « i THE KEEPING UP TO DATE — Pontiac Central _ PONTIAC PRESS, MON U.S. Jet Planes, Coming Down Rhine Cliff Teday in Penttae arn temperature preceding 8 @.m. Ab 8 am.: Wind velocity 15 m_p.h. Direction: Southwest Sun sets Sun _ Moon coe eneewas sure from parents. _ The Justice Department is ex- pected to go to court today with an action to counter the closing order. ernment’s status; that is, making it-a direct party to the integra- tion action. So far, the legal dispute has been between the NAACP and the y| Little Rock school board. The gov- ernment has taken the position of a friend of the court. |Airdrop Supplies to Little Quemoy (Continued From Page One) the Nationalists said, wheeled vehicles raced ashore with the supplies and the LST with- drew. An indication of the long-range aspect of the buildup came with the disclosure by military sources that a large engineering firm al- ready has sent. representatives to Taipei with a crash program to build launching sites for U.S. ground-to-air Nike missiles. Barrack areas also are being laid out, presumably to house a reported total of 5,000 American troops believed due here. “ost would be specialists such as mis- » sile men, The U.S. Embassy confirmed that a program has been set up to evacuate most of the 6,000 Ameriean women and children on Formosa. They are the depend- ents of the 3,000 U.S. advisers to Chiang’s forces. : So far the evacuation is wholl, . BESesRseasszrs voluntary, ok 4 3 [Shock Troops Train Jumy . The train was about an the rails. its side ripped open. Virgili Roland, an adjutant people but soon was pulled legs had been severed at the was in-critical condition. § Rail, 18 Killed _ BONN, Germany (AP)—A cog train carrying sightseers to the picturesque Drachenfels Dragon’s Rock above the Rhine suddenly slipped from its cog last night and plunged off the tracks, killing 18 persons and injuring 60 others. steep mile run from the top of the rock when it left The steam engine crashed into a ditch. Two cars careened off the tracks and the third remained on the right of way, * * This was the first accident on the railway in the 75 years it has carried more than a million persons to visit the ruined fortress 1,050 feet above the Rhine. . corps who was on the train with his family, said he heard the noise of a cogwheel slipping out of the cogs.” The train began to take on terrific speed,” he said. ; Roland said he heard a crash and was knocked out. When he came to he was under a pile of about a dozen “I looked over and saw my wife,” he said. “Both of her and tried to bind the stumps of her legs, The doctors ar- rived very quickly and gave us shots to relieve the Roland was not seriously hurt but one of his daughters eighth of the way down its in the Belgian army medical out. knees. I took off my-necktie lay Top De Gaulle Aide McLeod and Elmer Johnson of Du- luth, Minn., were in a nearby hotel and came running out when they heard the shooting. A French de- tective with a pointed gun stopped them from — ia The first litigation probably will |‘ be a petition to perfect the gov-|/ * * : Next to Premier de Gaulle him- self, Soustelle is the biggest gov- ernment figure the Algerian na- tionalists could attack _in France to underscore their determination to win independence for that vast North African territory. Soustelle sits at De Gaulle’s right hand in the French Cabinet and is his chief propagandist, * * * Soustelle, at a news conference after the shooting, blamed the at- tack on the Algerian National Lib- eration Front (FLN). Police at first said the attackers were mem- bers of the Nationalist Algerian Movement (MNA), which rivals the FLN for leadership in. the Al- gerian rebellion. * * * The attack came as Soustelle, with his usual police escort, pulled to a stop near his office. Sudden bursts of gunfire shattered the rear window of the car and pep- pered its sides. Two American tourists, Jack Soustelle told reporters that after the terrorists had stopped firing at his car he got out to head into a building. Then another Algerian, standing nearby, pulled a weapon from under his raincoat and opened fire again. «© “T threw myself to the ground,” Soustelle said. Police and body- guards seized this Algerian as he attempted to flee into a nearby subway station. iiyeer-old Go to Formosa Sa! r = Bigs idea eG Bs Be ee “Wheeler. Algo kill all /(AP)—A contingent of F104 Star- + in one - fighters has arrived in Formosa ; ugne the|- Also newly arrived in Formosa a, fe ee Little Rock inte andiis a composite U.S. air strike Bett the bitter fall, force—the recently created “‘small enact was quiet today. war deterrent” force capable of ownship, Ottawe So were the other schools: Halljdelivering nuclear weapons and robert ie i and Little Rock Tech, both white,|/the same type of unit that was Se ee and Horace Mann, a Negro high/sent to the Middle East last July. hode, a 43. About 175 teache their ss Gent dak ca rs were at The number of S ters ar- ' : aaa nora _jtract and have been paid since/+ja: group is at a base in northern Deed ‘unorthodox with] sent, 2, the day the schools were|romnosa, Two of two tire-changers. _ = * ‘ormosa, Two of the supersonic eT we eR jall supposed to open. jets, which hold world speed and ‘ : Se & & altitude records, whizzed over this Their opening was put off two/Ssouthern air base Monday after- weeks to await the Supreme/®0on. Court's iritegration ruling. If ce 7 Faubus, who said he feared inte-| The detachment probably came gration would bring on more vio-|to Formosa from Hamilton Air lence, had not ordered them|Force Base in California, which closed, they would have opened at|announced recently that a unit of 8:30 a. m. today. Starfighters had left for overseas : Instead, he ordered them om, pt Closed at 8 a.m. ike, who los 7 About 40 white girls, in t| The United States is the major nd-@rdek : shorts and swé oelipheath. er offetion to the United Rockford in _jreported to and were ad-/i , having exported 588,000 eee guards. did members of the|August to March. New “They are members of the pep Contract Off uad,” a school official said. in’ i W 2! a ‘| Assassin’s Bullets Miss Soustelle Expected From Ford |tiere ‘are mo classes: : are no rad . sa -. _|Iry to S _ (Continued From Page One) He said the band members were “Jer and General Motors—it was|“hecking out instruments. PARIS (AP) — Algerian broke contract dead There were only a few curious A jock by otfering the UAW. adai.|omlookers, in addition to about 29/sins tried to Kill French informa- tional pay for unemployed workers,|TePorters and photographers in| tion Minister Jacques Soustelle in in addition to that already provid.|{ont of Central. The guards re-|the heart of Paris today, but ed them by the states, fused to let them on the school|missed Bim. = The Ferd settioment cost on ex: | ral of A was cut above \ - ae te denihe ie hates tet cach It was quiet at the other schools. | S&N€ vee. of Ford’s 140,000. workers, with | There are 3,470 students regis- . five cents of that amount going | tered in the four high schools, Eyewitness Story into the supplemental pay fund |. most of whom are worried about Page 16 ! known as SUB, GM and Chrysler | their academic future. Many 9g + ‘ater made similiar concessions te | who would have been seniors * the UAW. have already applied te colleges |the eyes and under his chin by ‘In the intervening three years,| 1° eutrance next fall. glass shattered in bursts of gun- __ the balance in the SUB fund at| It is entirely possible that they|fire at his car. One bullet whizzed Ford has risen to 31 million dol-|will lose a whole year of school|through his coat as he dived to _ lars, while at GM it is $1 million|credits unless the schools are re-| the floor. and at Chrysler, 19.8 million. opened soon. The government is ._* *& Reuther made this fund one of|believed to hope that Faubus will) In the blistering gunfight that the principal targets in his bar-|soon begin feeling internal pres-| followed, one Algerian was ki They‘re Too Realistic HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP)—The fofthcoming re-enactment of the enough for Mrs. T. J. Sharp. She got a cannonball, vintage 1862, in her back yard yesterday after- noon, ‘‘Soldiers” who will stage the Civil War battle were: practic- ing at a farm about 1% miles from Mrs. Sharp's. = «© battle of Antietam already is real |’ ha He is one. of the Algeria. : a “ TERRORIST TARGET — Two strips of leading exponents of continued French control in Soustelle long has been a De Gaulle supporter and an exponent of a hard French policy for Al- geria. x« * It was Soustelle that diehard Frenchmen cheered loudést when De Gaulle made his first trip to Algeria to rewin the loyalty of the right-wingers who staged the May 13 revolt against the Paris gov- ernment. Soustelle had fled to Al- geria after being pyt under house arrest by the then government of Premier Pierre Pflimlin, _ Soustelle was minister of infor- mation in De Gaulle’s World War II Free French government. in London. He is known for a per- sonal determination which borders on truculence. AP Wirephote via Radio tape on his forehead cover the only wounds suffered by French Information Minister Jacques Soustelle after rebels’ bullets ripped through his car. Soustelle was cut by flying glass as Algerian ‘terrorist gunmen opened fire on the car with revolvers and submachinegun. bullets. ~ cars DAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958) Se : OK County Budget, : fo Cut Judges’ Pay. (Continued From Page One) rate to meet 1959 needs will be $10,164,723.42, Estimated other re- ceipts come to $2,121,000. — * W. ' at two weeks a year for those em- ployes with nine years or less seniority, and three weeks for those with more than nine years employ- ment. The Salaries Committee had recommended one day per month extra in the first Instance, and 1’, days per month for those employes with the greater sen- jority. “This proposed vacation plan is considerably.better than the em- ployes of the areas we represent,” said Yockey in recommending re- tention of the present plan. x * * | Forty supervisors supported his move, while 35 were for the in- creased vacation allowances. Also deleted from the salaries report was a recommendation that employes’. sick leave allow- ances be cut from 13 days a year te 12. Supervisors agreed to cutting this proposal out as a recourse to off- set the already disallowed vacation increases. x * * Despite a written plea for an increase from Harriett Phillips, supervisor from Huntington Woods, supervisors refused to grant more than the budgeted $32,500 for the Oakland Child Guidance Clinic, boosted from the proposed $11,250 to $12,450. The 1958 salary for this position has been $9,750. “The present drain commissioner has assumed an enormous responsi- bility far in excess of other elected officials,” Lilly told the board this morning. The only supervisor to speak out against this Wage increase and the others was Sydney Frid of North- ville, A voice vote overruled his objec- tions and the drain commissioner and other five officials had pay hikes for next year. New Jersey Train ‘Hurtles Over Bridge (Continued From Page One) ing in case the train passes the red light. BUSH -20 RESCUE . .. Police and Coast Guard launches, tide, Two and a half hours after the train plunged over, the third coach, which had been lying half in water, slipped completely below the sur- face. The bridge is a vertical lift with a section 120 to 150 | feet long in the center of a 1,500- foot span which is raised when ship traffic passes, The engineer of the lead locomo- tive was Floyd Weilburn, Red Bank, N.J. The train conductor was J. S. Kelly of Somerville. Other crew members included Peter Andrew, Jersey City; Robert B. Kinlock, Point Pleasant; and Theodore B, Dayton, Bayonne. The drawbridge is a wooden one on a mile-long trestle. It had been raised to permit a boat to pass through when the passenger train sped off the tracks and into the water. The diesels, Edward McCarthy, who owns the two locomotives were |Elco Marina Boating Dock in Bay- onne, was at dockside: when he saw steam gushing from the water be- neath the bridge. McCarthy immediately put out in a small boat. In three trips, he brought back three bodies and nine survivors. Small boats from throughout the busy New York harbor flocked to Company, usually engaged in tow- ing ocean liners to piers, were on the_scene. Two New York City fireboats and three police department launches sped to the scene, : Every available ambulance in Bayonne and Jersey City was sum- moned A railroad spokesman said the tracks on the bridge are fitted with a precautionary device which is supposed to automatically halt trains when the drawbridge is Shipping Foreign Fords to Port of Philadelphia ber of Commerce said the. first cars will arrive this wedk and the Subway 4 A Awe the scene, Four tugs of the Moran will move through this port) city at the rate of 8,00) a year.|] in New York City as early as 1800. [)_ The Day in Birmingham Police Apprehend \After Wild Auto Chase Officers. Edmund Long , and Donald said they had attempted to stop Ridley. to ques- tion him about ownership of the car. , es During the chase, which began. near the Birmingham Country Club, Ridley drove across lawns father, police said. Birmingham police are holding Samuel Tumminelo, 30, of 2025 Decker Rd., Walled Lake, for in- ment, Herbert Herzberg, city planner, side yard reduction Commissioners will award bids on the Cole avenue sewer and water main construction. They also will discuss City Clerk Irene Hanley’s proposal for addi- tional registration hours prior to the Oct, 6 deadline for the Nov. 4 general election, : He said this is to remind school district residents of the ruling and to notify all students that school credits will be withheld from any who join such groups, Each student is required to sign a second statement at the end of each semester, stating he hag not been a member of any illegal or- ganization, Board members of the Feder- ated Civic Assn. of Bloomfield Township will meet at 8 p.m. to- Youth hear reports of the group’s various committees. : The reports will be consolidated for the FCA mecting scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Sept, 23 at the Representatives of the township’s 70 civic associations have been in- vited, as well as any other inter- | ested residents. Mrs. Beryl Conrad Service for Mrs. Beryl (Maude) Conrad, 77, of 16155 Beverly Rd., Birthingham, will be held at 2 p.m, Wednesday at the Forest G. . Hay Funeral Home in South Bend, Ind» Burial will be in Cline Cem- etery, Royal Center, Ind. Mrs. Conrad died yesterday aft- er a short illness. The body will be taken to South Bend today from the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Surviving are a son, Donald R, tl ot Birmingham, and two LJ children. ‘(Summerfield Heads Dedication List (Continued From Page One) x * * former Pontiac. postmasters, Les- lie H. Dean Sr., George Stockwe! and —" a In addition, all other Oakland County postmasters are being sent invitations, Miller said. - . Lions Trade Back Karilivacz to Giants DETROIT #—The Detroit Lions today traded defensive halfback Carl Karilivacz to the New York Giants for a high 1959 draft choice. Karilivacz became expendable when Terry Barr and Gary Lowe came through so well for the world champions last season. Detroit coach George Wilson did not say what draft choice the Lions .jreceived in exchange for Karili- vacz, who has been with the Lions since 1953. His departure trims the Detroit squad to 38. The team must be morrow at the conference’ room of down to 35 players by next Tues- Bloomfield Hills High School to day. Announcing New! Daily Service to Drug Stores and Camera Shops FILM DEVELOPING & PRINTING — Black and White Kodacolor . _* # @ Kodachrome ........ Ask for: HITE PHOTO, Inc. - =—mAt Camera Counters— ea e@eeeoeveeeeten 1 Day weeeeee- 293 Days ssssecseee ss Days a All Quality Offering Our Lower Overhead Miller’s Offer More Than 29 Nationally Known Brands of Home Furnishings *Living Rooms ¢ Dining Greatest Savings in Our History ‘You always get the most for your money at Miller’s’ Easy Terms, Too! MILLER | “Our 23rd Yer at Thin Same Location” — 144 OAKLAND AVE...) Rooms * Bedrooms F urnishings You the Makes the Difference - COMPANY - : se = THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 | / ie SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .— end appears near for a five-week tieup in long-haul Western truck- ing which involved 30,000 Team-| rection. sters Union members and 1,200 k *« * ‘In the balloon, the stream of air/E ; escaping from the nozzle produces |E Nine striking Teamsters locals the action. The force that pushes against the front wall of the bal- Trucking Tieup Settlement Nearlof Jet Engines: WASHINGTON: (UPD+-Blow up| with the air. In the-cockpit, the pijState Building goes off today, injig ) Right Off the Boat! a Nine Striking Teamster Locals OK Agreement to End 11-State Dispute gine works. The jet, or “turbo-jet” as the|tail cone of the engine with tre-je engineers prefer, merely applies|mendous force. And your jetliner, Newton’s 278-year-old law that ev-| is under way. ery action produces a reaction/; . equal in force and opposite in di-|— firms. in California's central area and “= Joaquin Valley, and units in Angeles and Denver, Colo., . yesterday approved a ’ master = Gr hon = agreement aimed at ending the dispute, The vote count was not available. x & # Trucking operations in 11 West- ern states affected are expected to resume by Wednesday or Thursday, Votes were to be counted today and tomorrow in Seattle, buquerque- and Salt Lake City. The tieup came when the nine valley locals walked out in an ef- fort to win wage parity with San Francisco ‘bay area Teamsters. The employers shut down, consid- ering a strike against one West- ern trucker a strike against all. x» * * The agreement reportedly gives long-line drivers three annual ear © ie = Pima increases, plus fringe mailing cslor-filmes ‘movies oF slices) The agreement gives the valley| {2.J0 home. Get yours now at achieve parity with.San Francisco locals $2,474 by Jan, 1, 1959, to sm | ‘6 «a r benefits for! CAMERA DEPT. —Main Floor TT leat Teamsters. Pay and fringe pickup and delivery drivers would increase to $2.47% cents an hour by May 1, 1960, Any homeowner will tell y lawn is a thing of beauty and a chore forever .. usually an accumulation of all the easy things you didn't-do when you should have. —Earl Wilson, The Al- 10- - Hard work is \Child’s Balloon Shows Principle ; toon te the “‘reactidet'—or, the |Empire State Building . . turns on a spark that ignites the/deference to the migrating habits one a ciliPs tatoo bet don’t, tie S atk of dir und Saal, of birds. | ‘Imported From Holland Release it—and fly a8 tk we! 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PTT ITI I IIIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiy) | : Famous “BURGESS” BVI | : Electric Paint Sprayer | “Breet ® | WaaVaal » BROTHERS Fleer E _ $12.95 List Price 3 outle Pa Fo rar electric é - ‘a an Start spra : | WwW # e * pete nts, namels cr / vareiinee. : ete. ROTHERS vo. THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1988 Bookkeeping Business _ Administration 3 | GhrkcTypat - Comptometer: Calculator | ~ Dictaphone e - Business. Institute if W. Lawrence St. . ALFRED B, ADKINS | ot eee, See | ters. | - Service will be held. at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Voorhees-Siple i ‘Funeral Home with the Rev. Tom Baptist fifiptekee # 7 nd R R Be Smee . an, weuiee Connolly's JEWELERS: “16 W. Hurva St.” FE 2.0294 > MIRACLE MILE GIANT AUCTION ot. 26th 7:30 P.M Auction. Bucks at All uitela CUS CENY GS Cy; Start Saving Now! Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. : Wednesday at St. John’s Lutheran Church with burial following in Oak Hill Cemetery. Arrangements have been made by Hunton Funeral | Home. DAVID SAGAMANG Sagamang. of St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church and was employed at Gen- vision. Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth; four sons, Tomas, of Pontiac; Dav- id and James Sagamang, who are stationed in California with the U.S. Army as U.S. Marines re- spectively; Donald Sagamang who jis serving with the U.S. Marines ‘in Quantico, Va.; and six daugh- (Advertisement) ” Science Shritks Piles N ew Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain “New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to ‘ink hemorrhoids, stop itch- and relieve pain — without in one pmrarietd o _— after eis coats mprove- Loa i veri- <baarvations, rellowed promptly. And while gently relieving actual reducti * traction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all — this im t was main- . tained in cases wliere doctors’ observations were poorest p- | guaranteed a problem!” And among these sufferers were a very wide va- riety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne*) — the discovery of a world-famous research institu- tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in su “ip bad or oint- ment form called Preparation H.* Ask for individually sealed convenient lay ~alateto H su positories or Preparation ointment with special a: eator. Preparation H is aa all drug counters. Satisf or money refun li- at ion ‘Shae a Reg. U.8. Pat. Off. [be beld:-at 19 6.m. Tuesday at St. oh Church ..|Drayton Plains, Daniel Williams of will be recited at Funeral Home. Funeral service wi HARRY F. SAUNDER Harry F. Saunder, 49, of 152 Washington St., died suddenly of a heart. attack Sept, 11 at Delhi, tario, Canada, e is survived by his wife, Rhea Jagoe Saunders and three broth- ers and two sisters in Virginia, Service was held this afternoon in Halifax County, Va. DAVID J, WILLIAMS David J. Williams, 33, of 6831 Sa- daughter, Denise, at home; and his mother, Mrs. John Ring, of Esca- Two brothers, Floyd Williams, of Cornell; and a sister, Mrs, Earl Johnson, of Ortonville also survive, His body is at the Coats Fu- .|neral Home, Drayton Plains. ; hs i in Pontiac and Nee iy, Areas ters tr, Louis Downs, Patciajage, He tad been employed Margaret, Barbara ‘$s welder. na, RAYMOND srepuExs |. LAPEER =» Service for ‘Mrs. Raymond (Grace), Stephens, 50; of pear arise Soary, wile Teed abe bad a 7a Charch with|* Surviving are her husband; three ! daughters, Mrs. Elaine Hewison of | injury Metamora, Mrs. Roselyn Johnson of Compton, Calif., and Mrs.Irene- Yaklyvich of White Pine; and a son, Robert at home.’ She also leaves her parents, Mr. Hospital after/2 Area Drivers Hurt . in Brandon Smashup Woman Hurt in Colson | Deaths Elsewhere .BLUEFIELD, W.Va. (AP)—Dr. BOSTON (AP)—Arthur J. Good, _|7S, news editor and assistant man- "laging editor of the Boston Daily Record, died’ Friday. He was a lupe peak with a 9,000 foot altitude. | TRUSSES | $8.50 ui » Thrifty Drug Store 148 N. Saginaw -< Near Sears ” vena FITTING BROOM Highest point in Texas is Guade eral Motors Truck and Coach Di- e to feel cared for! it's wonderful HURRY! ‘Til SEPT. 30 get Blue Cross-Blue Shield protection ‘Without belonging to a group! 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City. | nat Cry of PONTIAC _ from The Pontiac Police Officers Association On Sept. lads tot, none sinus Woncce appecned a:the nis of te potelociiagy demning the Pontiac Police Officers Association for its charges against Chief of Police Herbert Straley. These three articles praised Chief Straley and upheld his actions of late. None of the letter writers chose to. give their names. It is our opinion that ghey could not give their names without revealing the fact that they are either close friends of Chief Straley, members or a small group of policemen who stand to benefit only if Chief Straley remains Chief of Police, or else Chief Straley himself. We find it difficult to believe that the average citizen is going to condemn any organization which is charging or attempting te expose any public official whom they feel is guilty of wrong-doing. Every police officer in the city of Pontiac including the Chief of Police is responsible to the citizens arid taxpayers who make their jobs possible. These people have every right to expect full value for their tax dollars. When the actions of any individual in the service of the public is such that the public is deprived of the type of service they are entitled to, then it is the responsibility of any and all concerned to do everything within their power to remedy the situation. Exposing an individual as powerful as 2 Police Chief can sometimes be very difficult. in all three of the afore-mentioned letters reference was made to the fact that the Police Officers Association, for several years now, has been at odds with Chief Straley. They sey that we have placed charges against Chief Straley several different times in the past. These state- ments are all true. Not once have we ever attempted to hide our actions. On the contrary, we have made every effort to bring them to the public's attention. It is our opinion that until - the public learns just what is taking place within the higher ranks of its Police Dept. and City Hall, then little or no remedial action will take place, It is true that some of. our charges and complaints with Chief Straley have been of the type which would occur in other types of employment and which concerned working condi- tions, and wage problems common in other fields. No one can deny any working man the right to fight for fair wages and working conditions. However many of the charges placed against Chief Straley were of a nature that seriously lowered the caliber of police service ren- dered the public, in every case the public was either directly or indirectly effected by the conditions that existed. Any time any municipal employee, regardless of position, is suspected, charged, accused, or even remotely connected with any. criminal acts, wrong-doing or dereliction of duty, the public has a right to know about it and expect disciplinary action. Whether it is an officer, a civic group, or individual citizen, anyone has the right to voice objections: and demand action from those so empowered to act in such matters, , The writers of the three letters in the voice of the people seem awfully anxious to “shut our association up,” as one of the writers put it. If Chief Straley is so innocent of the charges we have preferred, then why hasn't the City Manager placed the matter before the Civil Service Commision so that he can be officially cleared. a 105S ¢ pethilinon ide Ueikad We cocign ev Uo Qind tae cally excebinigniieis 2 Geniet to a prisoner on trial. One writer states that Chief Straley had every right te help Mr. Burke get @ parole. The same writer then asks what business it is of the Association's. We will answer the first statement by pointing out that the man Straley helped get paroled was 2 known criminal with a long list of convictions, and a man who on release from prison im- mediately organized 2 gambling syndicate, which only recently was broken up — not by our department, under Chief Straley, but by the State Police investigators who had been called in secretly by members of the Dept. Hasn't anyone stopped to wonder why the Chief of Police wasn't informed by the State Police of the investigation and the raids which followed? The question asked as to what busi- ness it is of ours, we will not answer, as the question itself is too ridiculous. It is not only our business, but the business of every citizen in Pontiac. tn two of the letters writers knock Civil Service and refer to it as “that thing we voted in.” Civil Service is not to blame for the situation that exists now. Police Departments all over the country operate efficiently with civil service. Our own Fire Dept. hes operated for many years without any trouble of any kind. But then our Fire dept. is not under Chief Straley's command. Shes of is silicie aid shen was Sabtod the passin Gol warned es Gs cher ep had to gain; implying that. someone was misleadng the members of the association for per- sonal gain. The officers and committee members of our association are elected to their jobs by a vote of the members once-4 ybar, The persons holding those positions seldom hold them two years in s row, The only thing that these men in office can ever expect to gain is retalia- tion from Chief Straley for representing the men in their grievances and problems, Such things as holding up of pay raises, refusal to make promotions after the wrong men passed the examinations he himself ordered, failure to furnish adequate uniforms as ordered by the City Commission, and a hundred other things which he as Chiet has the power to control. Hardly any man who ever served as an officer in our association or ‘on one of the committees hasn't been threatened by'Chief Straley at one time or another. This is the gain they can expect, 57 police officers on this Dept. signed 2 resolution to City Manager Willman asking for charges against Chief Straley just recently. Not only patrolmen, but Lts. and Sgts. signed the resolution. The resolution was passed by secret baflot at an association meeting. No pressure was brought to bear by anyone. To think that a patrolman could pressure a Lt. or Sgt. is ridiculous te begin with. Had ne endorsements been called = on the resolution, the facts ‘would have still been the same. Had any other officer on the Dept. Kiss aesianbl stil 6! Konda: adeteal tw is ex ner Chief Straley was, he would have been immediately stripped of his equipment.and sus- pended from the Dept. pending further investigation. You cannot expect a dept. to operate correctly with two different sets of rules. Wenge Poni remy Fete aenbertty ehenld helt wes for the Chief of Police and his associates. We of the association realize that there are a few on the Dept. whe would hate to see Chief Straley go. Many of the positions that they hold are the result of their friendship with the Chief. Such things as using city vehicles for their personal use, holding jobs on the dept. that rightly should be held by officers who passed examinations for them, and in general, receiving favored treatment by the Chief. Several of the positions these few men hold were considered unnecessary by the Public Administration Service report that the city just completed. This report even suggested that they be performed by departments other than the Police Dept. We can understand why these few officers would make every effort to protect Chief Straley, and thereby protect themselves. We cannot condone their actions, However, when the entire dept, as well as the city must suffer, In Sept. of 1957 City Manager Walter K. Willman and the City Commissioners authorized the expenditures of $8,000.00 of the taxpayers’ money to obtain a report on conditions within the Police Dept. This survey and subsequent report was made by the Public Administration Service of Chicago, Ill. Their investigators spent several months in Pontiac preparing this report which is public information and is available to every citizen requesting same at the City Clerk's Office. We strongly urge every interested citizen to make an appearance at the City Clerk's Office to read and study this report for we are confident that they will then be truly enlightened and caro to the existing circumstances surrounding the present and proposed operation of t Police Dept. This report was highly critical of Chief Straley and his administration of the Dept. A suggested plan for improvement was outlined in detail by this same report which included a complete re-assigning of the department's personnel and equipment. Up to the present date only two of the survey reports recommendations have been placed into effect which include the hiring of a Director of Public Safety and the placing of the present violations bureau from the jurisdiction of the Police Dept. to the Municipal Court. As a final thought, we would like to point out the fact that in Monday's paper a letter was printed from someone signing their letter “Observer.’’ The very next day, a letter answer- ing “Observer” was printed. How was the person signing the letter “Conscientious Objector” able to get his letter through the mail, to the press, and get it printed in one diys time, One would almost think that the letters were both written at the same time, by the same person, and mailed one day apart so as to appear in the Press two days in succession. In the past the Pontise Press has declared that its policy involving letters criticizing in~ dividuals or organizations was that they would not be printed without also printing the writer's name. Why then were these three letters printed with fictitious names while other letters voicing different issues were net allowed to’be printed? - We realize that the Press is 9 powerful means of controlling public ‘opinion and thet their support usually means success for an individual or a project, The Pontiac Press as well ., as the City Manager and the City Commission have backed Chief Stratey in almost everything. that has taken place. It is indeed unfortunate when one man ¢an have such power over so many people. We are confident, however, that eventually the public will demand an eccount- ing of the actions of those who have thwarted the efforts to remedy the matter. A “One Newspaper” town does not have the opportunity to receive more than one interpretation of | facts and situations, They say that you can’t beat ‘City Hall”. They should add “Or the Press.” In conclusion, we pledge that our association will never stop trying to expose any and oll acts of inefficiency or malfeasance in office of Chief Straley, or any other Police or City Employee or official any time we discover them. With or without the help of the Pontiac Press or the City Commission, we are confident that no one individual, guilty of ee can avoid being =“ in due time. Signed. Ogee | | * Pentien Police Officer’ Association as 1 & | | South Bares Teeth in Defiance: ‘Forcing Integration Is Up to Ei enhower By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (AP)—President Eisenhower is on the spot, put there by the Supreme Court and Southern states, For years he tried to soft-talk the problem of school integration. It didn't work. Now he has to act. » The court, in ruling on Little Rock last Friday, did more than say mob violence and community opposition can’t block its ban on public school segregation. The nine ujstices, by their un- flinching stand, said in effect to the Eisenhower administration; the next step—enforcing our order —is up to you. * * * Enforcement—or the lack of it —was a central~ theme in the court’s hearings on the Little Rock school board’s request for a 2%- year delay in integrating Central High. Richard.C. Butler, attorney for the board, criticized the Eisen- hower administration for not pros- ecuting mob leaders in Little Rock. He also critized the city and state authorities for not pre- serving order. Eisenhower, in the four years since the court's original ruling that segregation by race was un- constitutional, had given no indi- cation his Justice Department had Ingtead, he kept calling for pa- tience, although in those four years hardly any integration had occurred in the South. It was as if he had set. himself the. policy of not irritating Southerners, But while he talked patience and understanding, the Southern’ states were bitterly erecting massive barriers of defiance to the court with new laws of their own for blocking integration. : “There. had to be a showdown sometime, Now it’s come in Ar- kansas and Virginia. * * * In both states the governors, acting under their new laws, have closed schools ordered integrated | by federal judges, What the admnistration- intends to do is not yet known, But at least Atty. Gen, William P. Rogers seems better prepared to meet the days ahead than his predecessor in the Justice Depart- ment, former Atty, Gen, Herbert Brownell, Since Rogers has arranged for a number of extra U.S. marshals to work ‘in Little Rock, he may be planning legal steps like court injunctions, ‘to force compliance with the court order. Marshals could arrest violators. * * * This indicates more foresight than was shown by Brownell plans for coping with local or statewide defiance of the court. when he headed the Justice De- partment last September at the time the opposition of. Arkansas Gov. Orval E. Faubus and mob violence suddenly blocked integra- tion of Central High. The Ejisenhower-Brownell an- swer then was to send in troops— a move Eisenhower had previous- ly indicated he never wanted to make—to back up the court, That was an extreme step, It’s one the administration may have to use again, but probably not be- fore it has taken intermediate steps it didn’t try before, The administration’s plans for Virginia are also still up in the air, One Dies Aboard Junks Fired On by Red Patrol HONG KONG (AP)—An official report said a Red Chinese patrol boat fired on a fleet of 40 Hong Kong fishing junks and killed one junk owner early today. The report said that whether the junks were fishing inside or outside Hong Kong territorial wa- ters was not known, In recent months the Red Chi- nese have been t to force Hong Kong’s 2,000 junks to join mainland cooperatives oer face capture, The pinon was chosen as the official state tree of New Mexico U.S. Airman Japanese Police ° Say} Charge of’ Negligence Likely in Shooting © URAWA, Japan (AP) — Japa- nese prosecutors began their ques- tioning today of Peter E. Longpre, who fatally shot a Japanese youth on a train at! Johnson air base near here. | Police filed all documents with the prosecutor's office concerning the shooting. They said although the shooting was an accident they thought he should be, indicted on a charge of gross negligence. - x * * Longpre, 19, of Lakewood, Calif., fired his Mi. aro * acest’ igned to gu uty a toe’ bone. 38 miles northwst of Tokyo. The bullet pierced the win- dow of a passing train, hitting 22- year-old Sachiyuki: Miyamura, a music studenf, — ; Longpre said he hadn't realized the gun was loaded. . Z The U.S. Air: Force ruled that the shooting did not occur in the performance of official duty, and turned Longpre over to Japanese jurisdiction, The Air Force said Longpre violated regulations con- cerning the use of weapons. ; If indicted on the gross negli- gence charge, Longpre will face a maximum penalty of three years in 1949 because it produces both fuel and food. imprisonment or a 50,000 yen ($139). fine. og v U.S. Airman’ 1. Steak Tenderizer « Cast aluminum. 88c Holds 6. Pastry Cloth, Pin Cover. Non-stick 8c MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS FILLED ON 4 OR MORE! COME to WAITE’S HOUSEWARES CARNIVAL — FIFTH FLOOR! 2. Extension Cup Rack 10 cups. 88e 3. Kord Tender Holds cord where wanted . - Sale of Kitchen 38: GADGETS A regular bonanza of bargains in handy, helpful items that speed your work, help make housekeeping egsier! Sturdy, attractive, colorful... they also make fine gifts and prizes. Order by number . . . mail your order or phone FE 4-2511. Many more besides those shown here! Shop tonight ‘til 9! 88c Wood. 7. 3-Pe, Pan Set 8. tce-Cream Scoop 9. Cake Racks Aluminum ‘sauce Use for mashing Set of 2 cooling pans. \88¢ potatoes. 88e racks, 1%, Steam fron Cleaner Removes rust, crust, scales. 88e 16. Oven Thermometer Accurate. B8c Colorful funny faces. 88¢ _ cans 12. Terry Coasters 8 terry cloth coaster. 88¢ 17. Record Holder Brass, holds to 40 # Records. 22. Rubberized Bag Rubber fined shopping 1. ; Double edge 88¢ 88e action, Serewy Washer Squeegie ‘n sponge 88e 18, Frozen Food Knife pan, 19. Napkin blade 88e Plastic, odorless, 28, Decorated Ceramic: Dishes in. Willow Baskets | dishes, 2 rectangular dishes, 3 port each basket 88 — Round dish, 2 round dishes, all: in willow baskets. * 4. Mill & Shaker Set Peppermill, salt shaker. Heavy aluminum drip Holder . Hand painted wood, 88« " 2he Boudoir Baskets © 88c blades 88e 10. Towel Ring Set Set of 2, suction ” cups. 88 15. Brass Belt’ Hanger Holds belts tidy. 88e 88c Z 20. Shower-Massager Anti-splash, fits all faucets. 88e 25. Boilproof Tumblers set of 4, 88 88e THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER. 15, 1958 Begin Quizzing | , Terrific Values tess Waite’ Fourth Floor! Phone FE 4-2511! SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9 Washable ... No-lron ... Sun Resistant... Deluxe Tailored ~ 2 « ad “ : 3 2 ge” o © SPARKLING WHITE CURTAINS:-— \} DELUXE DACRON CURTAINS $4 VA | @ Tailored 41" wide by 63, 72, 81 or 90” | long. Reg. 1.99 cba «Ge ee eee se e Panel Nee @ RUFFLED 56 x 54, 56 x 63, Reg. 3.99 ee ee ne ne js caus cacacantt 56 x 72, 56 x 81, 56 x 90, Reg. 4.99 Poo errs Sg! pr Double Width x 90, Reg. 9.99 ...... onus cewe tacled t We Triple Width x 90, Reg. 14.99 ..... rrr ke @ TIERS = 30 or 36" tiers, Reg. 1.99 ........ 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Masland Duran Covered _Wrought Iron Hassocks Reg. 7.98 $6.99 Wipe clean with damp cloth, full 18” round, “Barbary Print’ Shower Curtain Sets $6.99 complete Shower curtein and «window curtain set of fine plastic, Choose from 5 colors, - Twin. or Full ‘ Bedspread Selection _ Values to 14.98 $9.99 _ Choose from print and solid new fall pat- terns, Tailored and ruffled = i; Bees a Is A A = s. 3 4 =e 2 “Se 4 $8 W. Baron st. new school bus law has gone into _ effect. The new regulation requires - that all vehicles stop at both front and rear of halted school buses, ex- cept on divided highways. ®t Careful observation of this law _ may save the life of some child. ‘4 Many of the children now in school “are going for the first time and may ‘become confused and excited and ‘dash into the street. Others who have _ gone to school for only a year or two "and are still young children may for- get the = eae. mee 3 ae of * + It is up to all drivers to be © cautious while driving _ in schol aes All traffic signs n should be obeyed. ) d our schools will be congre- ed the greatest number of chil- prtaging, neoateaeipsyl ox: pra - ry in. hi sb ea oo a to dart b inte ws aah Lye of your car. into through.Russia in the U.N., to foree the U.S. to recognize his rights in Formosa. “What more natural quid pro quo from Peiping’s point of view,” says The Nation, “than an acknowledgment of legitimate West- ‘ern interests in the Middle East in return for an acknowledgement of of legitimate Chinese interests in xk. *® ~ Pointing out that Russia would have more to lose than Red China in case of reckless attack, EDWARD »CraNKsHAW of the London: Observer News Service writes that at ~~ the present time the Chinese are in the ruthless Stalinist stage of revolu- - tion; that while Mao TsE-TUNG may believe there would still be 300 mil- lion of the 600 million Chinese after a nuclear war, Mr. KHRUSHCHEV knows. that with its present popula-. tion of 200 million, there would not be 300 million Pusiane. The Man About ‘Town the all-out attacks on Quemoy and . . Mao Tsz-ruNna may feel that © A colo dlvees tans oll o= — the he now can bargain from strength, Will It Give Him a Lift? David- Lawrence ‘Says: * No ‘Defiance’ in Integration Hassle $300 Is the Prize incre tg —— The state of of ‘‘equal but separate” facilities and then “affirmed and re- not “defied” the ue of aien.. ge, ‘after "1958 Football Contest Gets Supreme Court of the United States instruction from parents and teachers they seem to have the feeling that they are always - safe. In their minds they seem to Sepen, het, you. ye PS ‘We must all take on this job. The _ youthful, not yet mature school chil- - dren are our future citizens, Guard- ace for the future. ls tragic that the children’s return to school is some- ° tine manivod ty total ot sttias 1n- jury accidents. Let’s make this year & happy school so de emi ak two Red China Unlikely to Get Nuclear Arms As a matter of self-preservation there seems to be some doubt that Russia will go so far as to supply nu- clear weapons to Red China. © Up to nowethe Russians have re- tained tight control of these weapons, rejecting requests of Euro- pean satellites for atomic missiles. The United States has consistently . refused to give nuclear weapons to its closest Allies although establish- ing nuclear stockpiles, under Ameri- can control, in some Allied countries. ee RO The theory ‘is that the more nations there are with such “weapons, the greater the peril of a firing, perhaps accidental, which would plunge the world into atomic holocaust. Experts _ feel that when only the U.S. and Russia have nuclear warheads, there is a balance of fear that deters use. But if more nations get the missiles, control is weak- ened and the possibilities of a firing through fear or accident are so enhanced that mankind will live in constant terror. x «*« * Russia’s mere promise to give Red THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by Tue Powriac Parss Company Pontiac, Michigan Daily Except Sunday Trade Mark ae Bassett, President Tfouw A. Rrrr, ee Advertising ' cone gem Gant M. Ttrapwrtit, : wee _ Circulation Manager G Massratt Jorpan, Local Advertising Manager Taan, /Geonce C. L ms Editor Classified aemaeer The itlec exciusively to the use a soe hews printed tn this - Under Way: Ends Sept. 26 Minute: When you can win $300; see below. ~~ ‘ Opening today is the 1958 Man About About Town football contest. The -prize is $300 in U.S. Saving Bonds. It goes to the person who comes the nearest to predicting the winners in the 14 games below listed. There is no entry charge, and every member of your family is eligible to com- , pete. Each entry must be on a separate piece of paper, but all can be sent in one envelope.’ You don’t haye to make a purchase, clip a coupon, write an essay, participate in a phony TY program, or do anything else but make your forprast. If you wish, you can simply clip out ‘the list, of games and check the team which you predict will win. If you think the ghme will bein te, 63. not check either team. You can write out the list for other members of your family. Be sure a name and address is attached to each list. — one entry is allowed for each per- ” hie of The Press and. members of their immediate families are not eligi- ble to compete. Here is the list of games. Sept. 27—Ohio State vs. South- ern Methodist. Oct. 4—Michigan vs, Mich. State. Oct. 11—Purdue vs. - Wisconsin, Oct. 18—California vs. South- ern Calif. Oct. 19—Detroit vs Baltimore (pro). Oct. 25—De troit vs. Arizona State. Noy, 1—Notre Dame vs. Navy. Nov. 8—Iowa vs. Minnesota. Noy. 14—P ontiac Central vs. Flint Central. Novy. 22—-Yale vs. Harvard. Nov. 27—Texas vs Texas A&M. Nov. 29—Army vs. Navy. Dec. 6—Holy Cross vs. Boston College. Dec. 14—Detroit ys. Chicago (pro). All entrants agree to abide by the find- ings of the judges, as this is an elimina- tion contest. You’re in the running only as long as you forecast correctly. ; All entries will be divided into three piles before the first game: ‘Those who predict Ohio State will win,. those who favor Southern Methodist and whose who predict a tie game. Those who predicted correctly on the first game will be divided the same way for the second game, the others being eliminated. This will be the rule on each succeeding game. All entries must be received in The Pontiae Press office by Friday noon, Sept. 26. Better check over the list of games RIGHT NOW, and send in your entries, and not let that $300 get away from you. Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Albert A. Foisy of 160 Willard St:; fifty-fourth wedding anniversary. Ebenezer Dolson of Birmingham; eighty-fourth birthday. Mrs. Experience Austen of Bloomfield Hills; eighty-second birth- day. . by closing the has the state of Virginia commit- ted any act of “defiance” by closing schools. _ The federal _ LAWRENCE by supporting ‘plans that seek through the courts a means of reopening the public Each is acting within dats own constitutional orbit. The exercise of legal rights to contest the valid- Although Abraham Lincoln had always held that the southérn states had never been out of the Union, Congress—after his death and three years after the war be- tween the states was over—insisted that the southern states be ex- eluded from representation in the House and Senate. * * * So when the Fourteenth Amend- ment was voted on, there was no representation in either house from many states in the Union. Also, when the state legisia- tures in the South—subsequent to the war—ratified the Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery but rejected the Fourteenth In case’ after case the Supreme Court of the United States has always evaded the issue of whether the Fourteenth Amendment was constitutionally “ratified” and has said that this is a ‘‘political ques- tion’’ and not within its power to resolve. Many people are saying that all this happened long ago and that it isn’t feasible to turn the clock back now. The present Supreme Court, however, in its 1954 de- cision, did turn the clock back 58 years and nullified the “settled law’’ of the land on the question The Country Parson “About the hardest part of correcting our own faultg fs .. finding them.” ' Ration (free) which had been upheld by some of the most eminent men who ever sat on the high court, incliding its greatest liberals. What is “‘settied law’? Abra- ham Lincoln defined it as some- thing that has been initially decided by the Supreme Court when the issue was first raised, affirmed” in decisions for years afterwards, it is “settled law’’ today ‘that no state can be compelled to appropriate money or keep schools open or do any affirmative thing just because the federal govern- ment may want to see it done. (Copyright, 1958) « Dr. William Brady Says: ‘Cure’ for Painful Joints Can Be Very Dangerous A Vermont invalid, aged 42; had her first baby 16 monthseago. When ‘ the baby was five months old, the ders, phlebitis” or what have you; and administered DR BRADY injections of vitamiri B-12. The ethical nostrum vies with aspirin and acetanilid (phenylace- tamide) or phenacetin (acetphene- tidin) as a pain-killer, although it ’ costs the victim a hundred times as-much as these familiar anal- ‘gesics and, in my opinion, is far more dangerous. The spiels say “usually produces complete relief of pain in twenty- tion by the fourth day . In the medical sense of the term, resolution means termina- tion of inflammation. When the Vermont reader had a that matter if hee diet w: good one, B-12 even by aaah wouldn’t be necessary. It beats the Dutch how honest some doctors are about such ques- tions. The Vermont andes does not say whether the doctor outlined a good diet or a “well bal- anced’’ one. But she insists that “something” is necessary. She has always taken a quart of milk a day, plenty, of raw vegetables and fruit, dairy products, and lately more proteins. Still she feels tired and weak. When her joints hurt her muscles seem lame, and she wakes in the morning wishing she were just going to bed. * * * For the last six years she has had a goitre which comes and goes, usually about the size of a hen's egg. Her doctor advised her under no condition to take iodin ration, but wouldn’t explain why. She is sure there is no emotional factor, for she is very happy with _ her husband and. her little girl, or as happy as a ——_ person can. be. All I can say is that The Iodin cent ae self-addressed en- velope, can do no harm, goitre or no goitre. One who takes iodin ration gets no more iodin than the minimum daily requirement for good nutri- tion, outlined in the booklet on joint dis- ’ ability gets only the vitamins and minerals which every adult should get but only a few do get from everyday diet. There is no competent evidence that vitamin B-12 by mouth, com- bined with its potentiator, folic acid, is less effective than expen- sive injections of B-12 into a vein, © into muscle or under the skin. The Vermont reader’s descrip- tion of her joint trouble somehow suggests .something 0 than rheumatiz (physical degéneration of joint tissues) — a staphyloccus infection perhaps or brucellosis. Signed letters, hot more than one page or 100 words pertaining. $0 personal health and ne, not dis- csotend er tas ent, ‘will stam onladionaed envelope is cout to Pontiac Press, Pogtiac, (Copyright ) Voice of the People ‘Union Members Must Ad to Prevent Dicte rships’ wigiias wide fed coe Aneel Werle “08d en ve ahd destroy dny individual or organization that threatens it. We all like to feel that our law makers, with thelr sacred trust, would dle for it. How naive we are. x * * They are not subjected to the same laws as you and I. Their power haa enabled them to break'e vey y law and' still comé aus, Unacatied, These things are set before us every day in your average citizen must awake to the fact that these things are happening now to ~ him and to his family, and now is the time. By not taking an active part in his labor organization, he has allowed it te become a dictatorship, instead of a democracy within a democracy. He has allowed a minority group-to destroy his in- 1 suggest interviews with union statesmen as to their advertised methods of democratic procedures, : and then get the facts as to how it's actually done. % ‘Don’t Blame All for Just a Few’ Don't condemn the whole police department for the actions of a few. Maybe the rest don’t like what's going on any more than you do. As far. as Civil Service goes, some of them are just as surprised _ at the results as you are, have you do-gooders ever t of that? Maybe they should have looked into it further before they voted it in, but on the other hand, so shoul id you, One Who Knows ‘Now Is the. Time to Do Something’ I wonder how many people no- ticed the following writing on last. week’s movie page: ‘Just because I undressed in front of him is no a ee t have to marry Seale filthy can we get? Must the Press publish all the trash sent to them? * x * «getting It’s a shame when business hen will stop at nothing to make mon- ey, I would be afraid God would strike me dead. It's time people of Pontiac got busy and did some- thing about the filth getting into Pontiac and ruining our young people. . Barron 715 N, Cass Lake Rd. * & a + i és Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE It used to be quite incorrect . .. To type a social letter... The longhand style was said to be ..+% there were a vote on forms... This one would be elected... Because it takes so little time ... To say a great deal more... With never any writer’s cramp ee such as voting and policy making, Flag Waver Here’s the 1e Solution to the Whole Thing Why not a three way school sys- era hongreled echacle-006 bil ho want them for their children; Ne- gro schools for those Negroes who ~prefer them; white schools for those who prefer them? That would give freedom of choice and no force against either race. , Frances Welch New York ‘American Conquest Would Be Easy’. Russia won't ‘How Can They Justify the Vote?’ The South tries to keep the N life of the Negroes in that state. Why do any Negroes® anywhere vote the bessantic ticket? L, G, Henley * Smiles The worst wreck results when a deluxe automobile runs into a jalopy bank account. x * & Just because some work is hard and trying shouldn't prevent you from trying hard. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY We love him, betause he first loved us.—I John 4:19. x* *« * Love, it has been said, flows dowriward. The love of parents for Case Records of a Psychologist: Warns of Psychotic Symptoms nes of cases like Lola’s. She is in grave danger and needs psychiatric attention quickly. The best antidote jor such conditions is psychologi- cal “vaccination” in childhood so she will never.want to flee from external reality. People . don’t desire to run away from happiness, so teach children how to be paomenat in social relations. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE . CASE 2-319: Lola G., aged 17, has been a brilliant ‘student. * * * “But, Dr. oa ped her worried a -this. past year. And she was al- ways’ neat and well groomed. “But during the she has begun to show little inter- DR. } est in hér clothes hair. or even “And she now gets grades of ‘©’ without showing much con- corn, Why, that is so unlike Lola that we are alarmed. “A year ago, shée’d have a. shocked and disconsolate if ‘she even got a ‘B’ grade. pit, @ WKB. . “Meanwhile, she moons atound and stares, as if in a dreamy . ‘state. And it isn’t because she is ‘in love ot has been jilted. t do~ you think is wrong?” ' DANGEROUS SIGNS as Lola is doing. past six months, The most widespread type of insanity comes on during the teens and is called schizophrenia. It often strikes bril‘ant boys and girls who have been topnotch. stu- dents and who have been .meticu- dous in their grooming. They follow the pattern which Lola indicates. First, they grow inattentive to reality and show lack of normal emotional. concern at low grades or uncombed hair or dirty clothes, etc. 8 * * * They may try to hide away from people. Or, when they are in the family group, they may appear in a daze or daydream state. They often appear to be lis- tening to distant voices, Their faces may thus light up, as if they are in conversation with an invisible person. Not all schizophrenics are teen- agers but that is ‘the favorite time’ for the development of this wide- spread form of mental collapse. NEUROSIS VS. PSYCHOSIS A psychosis, such as Lola is be- ume to develop, means insan- ty. A neurosis, however, fs quite a different thing. In fact, we regard a neurosis as.a form of insurance _against psychosis, In the neurosis, the may seesaw back and forth in a deep conflict between opposing motives, But the patient is mean- avhile fighting toward some sort {ee his dilemma. In the peycosla; faiwevit, “the vietim flees from reality into’ a dreamy state. - * * *. = # - What is the solution to insanity? Well, one of the best antidotes is a vaccination during childhood. Bat the “vaccine” is not the No, 8 ts and con- external reality so well that he does not want to flee from it. Shy, unsociable people, who lack friends and are wallflowers, thus may regard the external world as a cold, cruel place, so . finally ty to get away from i y * Escape may be of many forms, as of v: (rolling stone addicts), or alcoholisms and drug adaletion, insanity and even sui- Tomorrow Ill go into this prob- lem more fully, Meanwhile, send ns the booklet “How to Prevent ervous Breakdowns,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents. : Use ‘it with all teenagers to vac- - cinate | them against insanity, re * .* * Always of the Ponting Dr. in care W, Crane ich: along de 4c ane typing and printing boots whee ng paychologicn! ey pam (Copyright, 1958) i y T: | if a Polifical Confab| With Ike Today ~ GOP in Rhode Island Hope to Offset Dem Victories in Maine py? NEWPORP, R. I. (AP)—Presi- dent Eisenhower today holds his first formal political conference since the Republicans took a trouncing in the Maine elections a week ago, : The meeting is with Rhode Is- land Republican candidates for Congress and state offices, and other state party leaders, * * * Democratic victories in Maine were a staggering blow to Repub- lican hopes for capture of control ‘of Congress, ‘Today's meeting gave Fisen- There was no advance indica- tion the conference would deal with the demands of many Repub- lican candidates that Eisenhower get rid of Sherman Adams, his chief White House aide. * * * The demands are based on con- tentions that Adams, under in- tense new fire because of his re- lations with Boston industrialist Bernard Goldfine, has become a major political liability, Eisenhower has remained silent about Adams since the party set- back in Maine, where the Goldfine case was an undertone issue. In June the President said Adams had been imprudent but that nev- ertheless “I need him” to stay on in the White House. * * * There have been reports. the last couple of days that Eisen- hower may end sometime this week the work-vacation he started here Aug. 29. But whether he would go directly back to Wash- ington is uncertain, There is talk of an in-between stay at his farm home at Gettysburg, Pa. The President: has tentatively scheduled at the Newport White House tomorrow a conference with TOP KNOT—This new coiffure by Walter Florell of New York features wide bands of hair that boldly wrap the head and spiral according to the team, headed |son and for three months, by Dr. Joseph T. Doyle, associate professor of medicine and direc- tor of the cardiovascular health center. In their study of 1,900 middle- 3 & 2nd Mate Howard T, Hanson. Red Mine Changes Name ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 Cite Likely Factors jin Disease of Heart * ALBANY, N.Y. (UPT)—Obesity, _| high diastolic blood pressure and elevated cholesterol may be fac- Suspends Skipper, Mate for Running Aground aieke Ba to a chignon on top. The hairdo is called ‘‘Pride and Prejudice.’ Atty. Gen, William P, Rogers on school integration problems. Eisenhower attended services yesterday at a Navy chapel, After the services he played golf at the Newport Country Club. Man Really Swallowed Five Pounds of Metal STOCKHOLM (UPI) — Reports that a Swedish mand had swal- lowed five pounds of metal rang false to skeptics until the news. paper Expressen yesterday printed a picture of the 2,300 items re- trieved from: him by an operation. The items included fish hooks, tacks, pins, buftons, curtain rings, screws, keys, nails, brads, a num- ber of Swedish coins. and an emblem emblazoned with the word “peace.” ; (Advestisement) Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort @ pleasant alkaline taste or feeling. (denture breath). 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Complete ~ . nish. 4 eo . «with handy electrical cule atte a > holds roving “Hea ne We 3 Se eee ’ Pa te Pee aes ee ee eps =e Fe ¥ = % ig t y) Yormal for Children: to] oy avis BATTELLE This is a normal abnormality . be afraid or get nee child says he hates |ing. | “Every kid hates -his parents Ls the children come out of it. * * * . “And when a kid says, ‘I hate my teacher,’ is this anything to get a mother disturbed? Give the kid a chance. Maybe he’s justed. “Adjusted to what? How can you ' have a well-adjusted. kid in a mal- * id = > + MEET IN PAKISTAN — Secretary of the Army Wilbur M. A ce Un tween war Brucker; daring his recent visit to Pakistan is shown meeting Pfc. omer , Dwight W. Bunton formerly of 1141 Cherrylawn St., Pontiac. Sec- * ¢« ¢ eees Sree Sap tabing 24 Rape visit of the Pacific and “And another thing, why does Middle East. every mother want her little boy sometin, st wah Gay my tny tobe ‘tender’? When a! kid ap- he says. wish you'd fall out a window, they|{ it shows that the child is think-| "31." sincerety want you to talll out a winihiee tnt See SETS * * * “Everybody's a psychiatrist now, particularly mother, She worries. She talks about ‘sibling rivalries.’ If her ‘kid doesn’t act just like all the other kids, he’s a weirdie. To- day a kid who shines his shoes is maladjusted. But the kid, like mine, who. buys: white bucks and ’ Mothers also worry physical health of f thelr youngters. They hear a sneeze and call in a doctor. The doctor leaves a bill and some pills. Now the problem is, how to get the pills into the y kids? “S9 today,” says Levenson, “they use persuasion. Take this | pill, darling, and you can have a color television set, “You know what my mother, who had: eight of us, used to do? She didn’t have time for persua- sion, but she was smart. She threw our pills on the floot, know: YAWIES Sept. 15, 16 and 17th SOU : — : MY PEOPLE'S BONUS. COUPON == m2 CAMPBELL’S Vegetable P < 2 as a cause for so much family} who| dissension these days. 1 CAN LIMIT 3 2 GOOD AT BOTH PEOPLE'S MARKETS WITH THIS COUPON ONLY . te "a S. No, 1 2%” Minimum ‘ 7 - _ MelIntosh or Wealthy — oe —e _ yr ' APPLES | ~aa> reer 3 COUPON EXPIRES ° -d ai = a a OO er ew SR su PER VALUE | BREAD 2= 29 GOOD AT BOTH PEOPLE'S ‘MARKETS : WITH THIS COUPON ONLY. : COUPON | EXPIRES SEPT. 7 = \ Nn ‘Farm Fresh Grade A. Whole Pan-Ready FRYERS LIBBY‘S TOMATO JUICE 132 Can 10: SWIFT’S CHILI 1Y2-LB. 3 9° CAN FE eobro=m Pike Street Sanford Street Ph. FE2-1298 Corner JDER-MARKET Auburn Ave. Ph. FE 5-83 * se se CS A . TAC: PRESS. Mg DAN, Ss PTEMBER. 15, 1958. ef fe ‘ / Greeting Card Maker |Finds Weight of Feather | NO RR a ee OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY siamber Amatinn’ Aimectation ot Oreit Cover > het ? Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You" _ Hours Daily 9:10 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't. ) MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS ,*% 716 Ponting State Bank Bldg. ‘etahins washable snowsuits ARE CURON INTERLINED! Featherweight -Curon foam in- / terlining, nylon lining! Bootees, 95 mitts, hat! Even safety stitch- ing, Talon Closures! More! Machine wash in-warm water! Pastels. sixes 1 to 3 oo PENNEY’S __and SAVE! ‘fie Lik ee ee aeteeRs catalaation savings! you get SOFT COTTON KNIT Gripper back and waist make dressing easy. Non-skid plastic : soles are porous. Absorbent knit 5 cotton. Machine wash in luke- warm water. Pretty maize, mint, blue, pink. sizes | to 4 4-SPRING ADJUSTMENT! big saving s! Penney’s great HARDWOOD CRIB BUY! easy access to’ baby! -4-level spring adjusts as baby grows! Plastic teething rails. Finest northern hardwood in Wax Birch. Compare! 42-coil innerspring mattress .... 7.77 machine washéble ‘pram 3-PIECE TERRY SLEEPER’ Asleep or awake or even a bit damp — nothing like Penney’s 98 terry set to take care of baby! Cuddly, absorbent ’n pretty in - rosebuds on pastels. Non-skid sole bootees. Sizes ¥2 to TY. = ¥ Sturdy, full sized!‘Drop side for : : — KIND TO BABY! QUICK DRYING GAUZE DIAPERS » PUFF KNEES for BUSY CRAWLERS 98 2 ‘er 7 ro |} Tete. 3 # ee ~ THRIFTY SILKY DURENE POLO 98: INFANTS’ SHIRTS |: & TRAINING PANTS |: Jie D8 |. Sizes 1 te 3 oe slses VY te 2.) Sizes 2 to 4 . | Fine- 100%. combed cot-. | * Goin’ good in Sanforized | Penney bu y!. Gentle, |“ Penney’s snap-shoul- |:ton knit. with double Le cotton corduroy. Goin’ | quick-drying © .di- | dered polo classic for | body and triple crotch. fé thru machine... pro- | apers, woven to elimi- | tots in mom's standby— | Elastic at leg openings. [i ' tecting knees... glow- nate writkles, protect | it’s so well made and low | The shirts have short f° in’ in red, toast, navy ’n | baby’s tender skin. 20.x | priced. Soft smooth | sleeves, convenient Jap tC | pastels. Easy-goin’ price! | 40 inch size, Sanitary | combed cotton Durene in | shoulders. .. Maximum shrinkage 1% |, See-thr u package. white n pastels. Pinning reinforcement, " , a . 1) | MIRACLE MILE LE Penney’s Store Hours : - DOWNTOWN Penney’s Store Hours 4 Daily Monday Open M and F 9:30 A.M, to 9 .M. .* i 10:00 A.M, 1 aoP Au ote oak hese 130 A.M. te 330 PM rd - Eee er, ae ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 Cason on Race Riots Judge Sentences Nine |lence but you hoes brought shame upon the district in which you live and have filled the whole nation with horror, ian and disgust.” x * The jail sentences were the first drastic action taken by British au- thorities to stop the racial vio- The nine defendants were Youths to Four Years|chargea with wounding three Ne- Each for Attacks _|gPoes and assaulting two others. LONDON (AP)—A British judge Home Fluoridation Is today cracked down on racial riot- ing by sending nine youths to jail New in ‘Do-It-Yourself’ for four years each for attacks} NEW YORK (UPI)—The Ameri- on: Negroes, can Chemical Society reports that The nine between a new gadget may make possible wnt Con dole. ‘do - it - yourself’’ fluoridation of} song Aug. 24armed with iron bars, table|**inking water. legs and a knife beating up Ne- The device, developed in Cinada, groes, It was the beginning of is a six-inch canister with its own London race riots, — koe * supply of fluoride. This, says the ACS, can be attached to the water tap and adjusted to suit specific Judge Cyril Salmon told the eg Estimated cost of installa- youths: “It was you men whojtion: $130, started the whole of this violence in Notting Hill, ' About 60 per cent of American Cee ee ae Pree Den penmital' 0d maelica! arcane See een eee Italy's Fountains Ruled Off Limits for Coin Hunters ROME (AP) — Tourists may throw their money ‘away when they toss coins in those fountains. But, says Italy's Supreme Court, it is a crime for anyone to try to fish them out, An old tradition says a traveler|, pitching a coin in some of Italy's old fountains, such as ‘Rome's famed Trevi Fountain, will return to. the scene someday, ‘Fhe coins in the Trevi Fountain inspired a "Three years ago police in -Ge-} _ noa.caught a man taking coins out of the fountain in Piazza de Ferrari, He was charged with A "Genoa court acquitted him. | d that the money had been| | way and belonged to: no Over ‘the weekend Italy’s high-| - est tribunal reversed the acquit- tal, It said money tossed into pub- IMPORTANT NOTICE 1 | wait AND WATCH FOR ADVERTISEMENT IN WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17 PONTIAC PRESS FOR Fant? = rent DETAILS! easel MISS wa: TO THE BUYING PUBLIC. : | Z NDERSON| | MICHIGAN FREESTONE, ELBERTA, (Price Year Ago—Bushel 3.29) ce | ardware Co.| Peaches - LOCATED AT 2182 S. TELEGRAPH DIRECTLY ACROSS FROM MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER—CLOSING UP ... QUITTING BUSINESS} - THE ENTIRE STOCK AMOUNTING TO *35,000° | WORTH OF SPORTING GOODS - HARDWARE}; BOATS-MOTORS-GUNS- FISHING EQUIPMENT WILL BE SOLD DIRECT TO THE PUBLIC In A SENSATIONAL GOING-OUT-OF US LS SALE! ANDERSON STORE WILL BE CLOSED MON.,| SEPT. 15 - TUES., SEPT. 16 - WED., SEPT. 17 TO MARK DOWN PRICES, INVENTORY ‘STOCKS, | ENGAGE. EXTRA SALES ‘HELP, ARRANGE STOCK, ETC... | SALE BEGINS ITTHURSDA Yis || PROMPTLY at 10.4. M. Ew Ay E *s 4 Fs A C7 _- =, es OF QUALITY TUESDA 4 AT A&P | | | Here's Proof? You Do Better | a Ranh i A OER EOE AIS REM AS S R “QUTSTANDING SARL WSEN a ih ! peel. G5 Sirloin . so te oe Cube or oa Porterhouse LB. 99° | _ 5-POUNDS : 299 | , CALIFORNIA (Price Year Ago—2 Ibs. 25¢) Tokay Grapes........ he _IMONDAY-TUESDAY SPECIALS i Bennybroo Small Grade “A” "Choice ¢ i : | F aN as aA Fresh Eggs 3 = 1.00 _ YOUR CHOICE! PILLSBURY OR BALLARD | Biscuits 3 & 29e “" | | EARLY WEEK FISH. SPECIALS Halibut ott 39 c Perch Fillets = » » 59e Dressed Perch ~ mos AQe SAVE 6c AT A&P ON RISDON'S | Cottage Cheese . Ae SAVE 6c ON SULTANA, FINE QUALITY Salad Dressing ..... = 1% : 19° SAVE 10¢ on A&P’s OWN All-Purpose Oil dexola « x 4Qe SAVE 10c on sanquer , Te Frozen Dinners AQ Choice of Chicken, Turkey or Beef. OR HEINZ SAVE 9¢. ALL VARIETIES Strained Bony Foods er I- vn | a =. Ee SAVE 4c perrer aREAKrAST ev Mother’s Oats os = 3Te Price Effective thru Tuesday, Sept. 16th soy o> ae ive fe fe 7 “8 . x 4 f . / . ; . 7 ges 3 f so ee ee vane ot Pewee fe ee ere eee oe won eee i : ; j : R ‘ . : f : Vi i Op F 4 / eee "THE. PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1958 / od ete , oS ie etal pellgiee Oe pele: The Ame “fooubes or Popeye! jue «et te an toine for Doge 2 zs, > et thn sencoant etrt_10Wn/MBOC ar - - — | 1 honestly believe that... | “There Is No Finer Fuel Oil Than New Mobilheat F » “Ever since | converted my furnace to the burning of oil, ! have used NEW MOBILHEAT, the furnace oil with saved on wardrobe replace- jf ; be the amazing additive RT-98 ..... This cleaner burning all Tod . an. oil always gives an abundance of warmth even on the “é - U phys wid | —e coldest winter days . . . the delivery of this better fuel tle ee et | ™ oil by Gee’s metered trucks is almost automatic . . . This | wonderful combination of NEW MOBILHEAT and GEE SERVICE mokes for a more comfortable home, economi- cally heated... ° “If you want-a warmer home, cledner home, more eco- nomical heating, | advise you to call FEderal 5-8181 today.” ; ay * FE 56107, | DRY CLEANERS _ 12 West Pike ~ Park Near Our Door Th ® , : 1 f his score | : ee British Nations iy “breck Hkbond cre itrmaton shut Osborne For Over 30 Years GEE Has Served admission’ h Better Fuel .. . . tevertmenty ‘dar |tez amission'to the University of Thi A ‘+ People 60 to go/Ask More $$$ ot. of Florida <1 | enn hesitate to pay their respects to curious visitors. ‘Authorities coristantly campaign, however, against allowing the friendly .— but strong — bears getting too close. headquarters at the county dump and never rica’ . ob at Sal aan rice’ ational Seis: dae “or Seek Development of ‘of Florida be 7 Within the Next Few Days | Industries, a in Arm wenched: dithe first time today (Advertisement) : We Will Mail to You. 3} for Sagging Prices [aye university disclooed three New INVEST Ot. FOR i eq tees "|woaks ago that & Negro had qualt| CARBURETOR SAVES | Even without seeing your tank gauge, we know how much oil you are usi ind when we should make our next delivery. This service, which we call our “degree-day’’ system, practically guarantees that you'll never be caught short; never run out of oil— apply f | MONTREAL (AP) — Nations of|fied to enter this fall but refused even in the coldest weather. It’s only one of the insurance Do help take care the British to . GAS BY .“JET-ING” : many special services we offer you—in addition to of final expenses without burden-|today for more capital to develop * “*k * at-cuee- cals ace ene 3 = | supplying you with the finest fuel oil available at ing we a Se ene ee, ne Wil imanay ond Bot outst oper ges oe . low prices. : ‘ to do is a = = ees we petmibton’ "Yo ‘sae Eaadie’taclmadity prices. trict Gourt order ised last June Wil Pe plese to learn of «Wi P= | Dial FE 5-8181 for AM of : ed 5 bligati kind [after speech as members of the|Negroes could not be barred from jin i ue on an Iination economic partnership or-jthe | university graduate schools a ae sna gy Ee eae ganized by Britain opened their of race. : Easily installed in « few in 25 years against the | Beach, who began an assault on|manufacturers, a ee NEW MOBILH EAT Tae a mounting Soviet |the segregation barrier eight years|Carburetor Co. 7617-424-T State a 452) “trade in the world’s un-|ago, ‘was one of two Negroes who|oty, Wauwatoss, Wis. are offe —> Mobitheat - as derdeveloped countries. took Aug. 2 qualification tests for/install it on his car to save gas or . . — — — x * the law college at the university. |and to help introduce it to others. | The Fuel Oil with : - they|He said later he did not pass. Base Be wank a ; wey particulars the amazing additive RT-98 . ee, See ay = x 2 send your | materi and sky-| The other, Carl R. Osborne of|post card today. jthey want to broaden their econ- e - a ‘Bing over the chairmanship of the two-week meeting, told the 300 del- @ @ . eZ ® ; legates that the Commonwealth's : : 1660 million people possessed ‘“‘a & : and varied share of the | world.” lie in itselt fer lig a matter of’ = said, > be | ©. -@:::@ is FUEL OIL a dependable GENERAL ELECTRIC Cp eeakegde pe | Rae | | a water heater gives plenty of — eee te. [oe ee eB | ow ci Fe hot water for all your needs. : No more waiting to take a shower, or to do the (7° — laundry, or wash the dishes! With this General 1 Electric quick-recbvery 52-galion-water heater you — 4 | I. } | get all the hot water you want—exactly when you ' want. it.. . , | | Stier = : | 0 N LY adel YESZARG | th ANNIVERSARY | CLEAN, SAFE—plus this added feature—install any- | : ) ] where—near point of greatest use, eliminating long, , : og oes SPECIAL! eal cae = | j EFFICIENT, ECONOMICAL—no heat is lost through Lee ee vent or chimney, extra-thick insulation seals heat in. GUARANTEED—10-year protection plan provides a one-year guarantee on the complete heater, four more years on the tank and fittings, plus an addi- tional five-year tank protection plan. AND GENERAL ELECTRIC MAKES IT, so you know that it’s bound to be dependable. _Why wait? Start enjoying all the hot water you = with this dependable General Electric. water eater. NOW ..... 20 Hours oF &. DANCING INSTRUCTION and i You Save 1/2 Reg. $75 Value DETROIT EDISON'S SUPER SUPPLY PLAN... makes General Electric electric water heaters even more efficient. You'll have ali the hot bay! you _ 5 all the an et urs a day, for an operating cost as low as $3.65 a month. Ask Edison how this new water heating service, combined with a new c electric water heater, can | mean hot water aplenty round the clock. GET IT HOT... GET A LOT! | @ 6 Hours of Group Lessons © @ 6 Hours of Latin American e Dance Sessions a @ 3-Hour Stydio Party i PLUS... | @ 10 Lessons of Private Instruc- a tion with an Individual Teacher 20-Hour : Program 37" ONLY : * | Private Schoo! ~— Selected Clientele ko v2, ARTHUR MURRAY | Ay: Phone FE 5-9438 / a ee PONTIAC SEE lee ee Program Tues., at 7 P.M. ae WWI-TV CHANNEL 4 ‘See your Gonral Eecicdeder of DETROIT EDISON a * * Judy Humphrey ok-Hudion avenue wouldn’t go | | | Couldn’t | You Have SUS i Rett ele A aE Amc eo <i i abe ST wR NM 3 aa acter ianateeseae i Nn LS aa nse ern e+ ee Tried? ‘By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs, Post: My ‘hus- band and I were invited to din- ner at the house-of one of his business associates. The main course was roast beef which was served very rare. (Evi- dently this. is the way they like it), The host carved and put a large slice of beef on my plate. Much as I like roast beef I could not bring myself to eat it and left it untouched on my plate, “My husband criticized me later and said that I should have forced myself to eat at least some of it. Was this bad taurant? I mean just how im- portant is it that he follow this - Tule??* ¥ ono Answer: Although seating her on his right is correct, at a cocktail lounge this is not important at all, nor at din- ner in a restaurant if the seat on his left is the more de- sirable, Moreover, seating. on right is a foreign—rather than an American—exaction, = “Dear Mrs. Post: In the case of air travel, when the serves a meal aloft what is the customary proce- dure regarding tips? I will be taking my first airplane flight soon and want to be sure I do the right thing.” Answer: She is not given a tip, In fact, tipping is strictly forbidden by airline regula- Miss Sutton Honored at Shower Patricia Sutton was honored with a miscellaneous bridal shower held at the home of deanette Ball on Virginia ave- nue. Connie Ladd was Cohost- ess, Patricia who is the daughter of Mrs! William Sutton of Ta- coma court, will become the bride of Donald Kleindl, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Kleindl. Westbrook avenue, Sept, 27. * * * Mrs. Everett Magule, sister of the bride-elect, will be ma- tron of honor, Bridesmaids will include Miss Ball .and Miss Ladd. Vicki Sutton will be flower.girl and Billy Donnelly, ringbearer. * * * Guests ‘at the Thursday shower were Mrs. Sutton, Mrs... ° Gail Hodges, Kleindl, Mrs. Vinton Ball, Mrs. Everett Nagule, Elinor Ball, Mrs., Joe Kleindl,-Jean Tweit, Marion Lape, Margie Madsen, Diane Livingston, Shirley Par- ent, Mrs. Fred Madsen, Mrs. Morris Madsen, Myra Goines and Alice Reed, ¢ ; «back to school without her collection of stuffed ani- Selecting records from her collec- tion to take back to school is Leah Mae MacNutt of: Neome drive. Melvin White of Avondale street, a prée-dental student at U. of M., checks over his wardrobe as he prepares for Donald Hibbs Speak Vows . Céntral Christian: Church was | eas: oT ~ rd E rn PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 | | Area Students Pre tor Return to. ‘ a* mals. Judy will be a sophomore at ' Michigan this fall, Leah will noon wedding of Gail Hodges and Donald Hibbs, The Rev. G. W. Gibson officiated at the double-ring ‘cerefiony, * O° 2 The bride is the daughter of ‘Mr, and Mrs. William H, going back: to school. Melvin Spent ‘summer as a lifeguard. % z e be a junior at U. of M. with plans for © becoming a dental hygienist. % * the bridegroom is itie son of Mrs, Raby L, Veazey of Rus- sell avenue, 7", : Alice Hodges and Forrest , Ragsdale werd the attendants. After a honeymoon to Floyd Russell avenue, “Pontiae Press Photes the University of - - . the Chippewa road home of ’ Lake, the couple will live,on , Ee i the first time this fall and plans to major in mathematics. Her brother, Carl Jr., is a sen- Another is Karen Elaine Bowman of Draper ave- Polishing up his golf clubs, which to continue using at U. of M., is Roger Anderson of West Iroquois - he plans June Group Meets at Lewis Residence _Members of the June Group were welcomed by chairman Mrs. Duncan McVean when they met Friday afternoon’ at Mrs, Ericson Lewis, x wk Assisting the hostess were Mrs. E. G, Winn; Mrs: M: 1. Lamb and Mrs;.Gordon Hayter, . Participating in the program were Mrs. A. .L. Drury and Mrs. Bessie Brown. Mrs. Galen Hershey was a guest. = - nue,’ She majors in mathembt- A freshman in the eollege of “engineering is Joe McGrath of! “Niagara road. Carl E. Code Jr. of ‘Dexter road, also a freshman, is majoring in Eng- al lish and social science “and will also be on a pre-legal course. He. is.a Michigan PTA delegate to the Michigan Youth Advisory Council,’ i, 4. 8% Enrolled as a junior in the MPO LBRO, { “. . . And don’t forget to write,” says Brenda Lewis of Hatchery road as she makes calls to friends whom she probably won't see until Christmas... Brenda will be a U. of M. freshman. : sciences. | Colonial Group — iy a i ' this year—regents alumui, liter- ature arts and science, and Stockwell. . a Be - “g & : # if a9 - - fo ti FE mT tr ty 3 a e HF rb . E Z a Luncheon Held road. ‘Roger will be a sophomore this year, His special interests are the ’ By Shower at Campbell Home Gail Barber Honored : Gail Barber, bride-elect of Lee Hathaway, wag honored at . a kitchen shower Friday eve- ning given by Patricia Camp- bell of Onaway. The affair was held. at the home of Mrs. Kurt Bemman Jr. on Parkinson ave- nue. « Parents of the couple, who will exchange vows Oct. 18, at First Congregatiénal Church, - afe Mr.' and Mrs. Wilson Bar- ber of Cherokee road and Dr. and Mrs. F, Milton Hathaway of East*froquois road, Shower guests included Mrs, Barber, Mrs. Hathaway, Mrs, Clyde Hathaway, Sue- Ann Hathaway, Mrs. Kurt Bemman Jr., Mrs. Kurt Bemman, Mrs. Fred Bemman, Mrs.~ Robert Bemman, Mrs, Helen Dernber- ger, Patsy Dernberger, Mrs: Robert Hogan, Mrs. Jack Os- trander, Mrs. Clarles Houston, : and Beth Tenny. : Stil others were Mary Orr . and Carol McCleary, both of | Detroit, and Janet Magers of | Lincoln Park, ° | _at Purdy Home Colonial of the First Congregational met at the home of Mrs. C. H. Purdy on Mary Day. avenue for a one o'clock luncheon Friday after- noon. Thirty-five members and three guests were present. Mrs, Purdy was assisted by Mrs, Robert B. Tarr, Mrs. F, Milton Hathaway, Mrs. Ken- neth Ollis, Mrs. George Sutton and Mrs. Leroy Smith. Guests included Mrs. 8. E. Mrs, H, B. Lowes. Participating in the program were Mrs. Tarr, who outlined plans for the fall program; Mrs. Kline, who talked on the Women’s Fellowship Plan for the fall; and David Wilson, who played two piano solos, ‘Mrs. Porter Hosts . Presbyterian Group it =5 is THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, eabricien qe 1958” _f What's ‘he effective threat be- ‘ [hind those notes and phone calls, Mrs. B,? It's *If you-don't make) - Tom produce, oe ANNOUNCING: ee have to keep our conversation dull so Tom won't get interested in it assign- it? _. 0K, At this bright little boy ted to interesting con- | ine where we're going. te have s me ess Car Spring From Some Failures (Couple Wed in Ger Wing frimds and relatives : | in the Pontiae/ area, former Pontiac residents Mr.:and Mrs, John Muldoon | and their infant son, Kevin John, have returned to their home in Los Angeles, Calif. The avenue, * Pontiac Press Phote cou stayed at the home . of Mrs. Muldoon’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Stottler of North Tilden . |Jennings both of St. Louis. ‘They |both cdrried bronze chrysanthe- Hlinois. White officiated at the ceremony. Parents of the couple are Mr. " Gérol Zeilmann of St ‘Souk, Mo. was maid of honor with brides- maids Dolores Hill and Patricia Ruth Athlee Hagler and Walter| Granite City, Til, The Rev. Howard and Mrs, Albert-Hagler of Granite| City, Tll., and Mr, and Mrs, Matt| — D. Shelton -of Charlotte avenue.| before sailing to: Europe. a “Mr. ‘aud Mrs. Russell A, Gustanson of Hilltop. drive are pictured on board a Swedish vessel just The couple is en route. for a three-week visit in Sweden, a trip to the Brussels World Fair, and a four week's stay in London. ~ wore ballerina-length organza dresses with scgop necklines, brief sleeves and Empire bodices trimmed with velvet. The maid of honor was dressed in green and carried yellow chrysanthemums. One bridesmaid was dressed in yellow and the other in pink and Lawrence Shelton was his broth- er’s best man, with William White-|F law and Robert Burton of Granite City, Til,, as ushers. . + & 2 at-a reception in the church parlor, Mrs. Hagler wore navy blue chiffon dress with blue accessories and | Not if You Look in Right Places—Abby : : on Us ter Paper S beatles Reni an | or Upright -- Hoses -- Sweeper _ Brushes — Cords -- Armatures 1685 wp, Ved Washes 38.95 up ! Over’ $0,000 Parts in Stock THLE ELECTRIC omar, Johwen snd Howard FE #5109 \ the girdle you buy inthe sme sie se your drew! Dress Mae ol f ee Sized - rmfit *16°° Regular misses dress sizes 10 to 20 Graduate Corsetieres fo assist you fo a* proper fit. Charge Acc’t Invited It’s sf easy,90. smart to ask for « DRESS SIZED” girdle No. 1597, Just give your regular misses dress size and get a whole new concept of easy figure control. You'll find that the “DRESS-SIZED” girdle is wonderfully lightweight. A high- rising waist and bias-cut panels gently control your midriff. Airy nylon powernet molds hips and thighs. Length increases with size for sitdown comfort with.no garter pull. White with pink embroidery or Black. Stop in and ask for your Sapeier setes arene vise 10 to 20. BOBETTE SHOP A North Saginaw St, “fh FE 2-6921 Pt 2 By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: I know you aren't running a matrimonial bureau but maybe you can take good care of her. I've never DEAR DANNY: Are you for ~ real? You'll Scie respectable women in respectable places, wield tad oe tooo vase 7 : lies “at | Good Girl Hard to. Find? IE ee his men friends, If he runs inté anyone and has to intro-. duce me, he makes it look like For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this paper. Enclose a_ self-addressed stamped envelope. “* ~*~ * If you want a collection of Abby's best letters and an- * Fall Fashions Exciting: So Is’ This New: Hairdo! . Free Form Cut Fall’s newest hairdo is just - a whisk of the scissors away.: _ The Free Form Coiffure with soft wispy curls and waves tumbling. prettily over your head is_a flattering new season change for careerist or mother, * - Fast, New, Super Service After 1 P. M, | HOLLYWOO | 78 North Saginaw { OVER we sg Air’ Conditioned! ? _* ALL PERMANENTS Cut ond Set Included NONE HIGHER YOU GET. ALL THIS: % Custom Haircut % Pérmanent by an Experienced Licensed Operator lk tae ee Hollywood buys quality Per- manent Wave Supplies direct from manufacturer chemist. Hollywood uses exclusive time-saving Per- - I meeting. Congregational Church Units © Hold Meetings Afternoon groups of the First Church met on Fri- day. Mrs. Peter Vanderhoek assisted Mrs, Walter Gingell at a dessert WSCS Sets Date \for Turkey Dinner Woman's Society of Christian Service of Oakland Park Method- ist Church met evening with Mrs. Joseph Wagley presid- ing. Mrs. Irl Williams spoke on the Fifth Assembly held at St. Louis, Mo,, which she attended in May, Nov, © was the date out fers turkey dinner. Deborah Circle act- ed as hostesses for the Thursday manent Wave equipment. '- COMPLETE sor | SHIRT St. FE 8-3560 SERVICE BAZLEY’S ; | | ~* ‘i be smart-look smart Mrs, ‘Shelton wore a navy blue Pilgrim Group met for luncheon) with Mrs. William. Travis on)’ Gladioli,.garden flowers and palms banked the altar of High- land Congregational Church for the Friday evening wedding of Carolyn Faye Arnold and David Earl Long- * lfield. The Rev. Maurice Dirette » lofficiated at the candlelight cere- mony. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. John .Morey of North Perry street and Mr. and. Mrs. i jumper requires 3% yards 39-inch; blouse, 15% yards. tern part. Easier, accurate. © Send 35c in coins for this pattern —add 10¢ for each pattern if you Longftield- Arnold N uptials Solemnized at Highland length gown of embroidered net over ice-blue ‘satin. Her short veil was held by a lace cap of ice blue and ‘she carried a white or- chid on a white Bible. SISTER ATTENDS Edith Kay Longfield, the bride- groom’s sister was the only atten- dant. She wore a ballerina-length dress of white nylon sheer with peach embroidery and her flowers were a colonial bouquet of minia- ture giadioli. On her head she wore a tiara of rhinestone. Richard Longfield was his -broth- er's best man. Ushers were Charles Diver and Dick Morrish. ok * * Following the ceremony, a re- ception was held in the church parlors: The bride’s mother wore a navy blue suit with pink carna- tions. The bridegroom's mother was dressed in a rose lace and linen dress and she wore a cor- sage of pink and white carnations. The couple will live in East Lansing where the bridegroom is attending Michigan State Univer- sity. They are honeymooning to northern Michigan, Printed Pattern 4500: Misses’ sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 Printed direttions on. each pat- Charm ‘Onn » by Rowena Wilson’ Fall Hairdos | The chemise is said to have in- spired many of the new hair- styles. Most of them seem to be along the ; head ~- hugging styles of the twenties. It will be for your coif 3 what the chemise © sunesiill Sivan’ Wiis cost Galtatead with individuality. Emphasis is placed on height and bangs with the overall effect being one of softness. Emphasis should always be placed’ on an attractive ap- pearance. To create the right effect your hair must always look lovely and well-groomed. Se why not make an appoint- wish Ist-class mail. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Poritiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St.. New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly , address with zone, size and style number. ment now for a new wave at Rowena’s Beauty Salons, 4831 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains. DRE 3-3541, 14 S, Main, Clarks- ton. MA 5-1000,. 1216 Baldwin, Pontiac. Fe 5-3735. fea Cleaning Sake: 1929 Huron e FE 4-1536)) | be smart-look smart citi ila 41" Bifocals $3.00 Extra SATISFACTION @ Prescriptions Filled e RX Sun Glasses Baker | O GLASSES , COMPLETE Frames High in Quality! -Low in Price! Your Choice of Frames... Latest in Styles . “ @ Frames Replaced. Come in. and Have Your Present Glasses Adjusted — —No Charge! * Glasses. Adjusted | he sal Means Better Vision _ ptical Co.. 861, N. Saginaw gt Bagg to . FE 8-4331 HOURS 9:30 « 5:30 — FRI. ‘(11 8:30 — ike: INT! NECESSARY) ie ; WEDNESDAY GUARANTEED @ Safety Glasses @ Repair Service af / / ; | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, oi Tt 15, 1958 ‘Married EASY Apne: Need Exercise for Beauty ceaon at | TERM oe afternoon at 90 DAYS JOSEPHINE “Oakland Park|| CASH By B LOWMAN Kvsrcioe’ je: Ghe hest- seated soi oniec: Yet it will do so unless ajthe fingertips to the upper arm. : cK The firm, gentle roundness of al “ithe! of these conditions, Stretch-|woman takes to prevent|Return arms to sides and continue. Methodist | : of a meqsures youthful arm and the tapering i=, “xereises Will help in reduc-|it, Even when the size of the upper| ron FAT WRISTS Church we lines of a dainty-wrist add tion of a large arm and other exer-|arm is perfect, flabbiness will de- wins rch were much|cises will aid in’ building contour.|velop as the years pass, unless|, Many women who have wide, Bonnie Sue to feminine charm. Weight distri-|Sometimes a very large arm maylone does special exercises. This is|H€@VY Wrists long for dainty slim cy bution varies in t individ-|indicate a thyroid deficiency, al-lalways true unless a woman in-|°%¢S. This is usually a question Allen and uals, Many-womsen with matronly}though this does not necessarily|dulges in sports to an unusual de-/®f bone, structure. If so, nothing other comparatively slim women at ar ae if there is an accumulation of fat Hugh M. have ah upper arm which is too| We seldom hear the arm men-| Is the ee ne cee nose yer following exer; Parks. Their erge: es 3 tioned: as @ spot which gives age| day 1 want to giye you am exer- ‘“ F parents are ° ° ' : 3 cise which will help firm this | Baise the left hand up in fron Specially Priced! spot. Stand with the left side | ° you try to touch the finger- Mr. oad Mix In either Ces niture, such as a tall chair, a | pm U eens ar Ge coe Paul J style. Dead ot ae haae OF the Read: | sible, Atter a while, do the same Ales and WING SOFA thing wi : § , Place the fingertips of the left] also petoae mee phate Mr. and Mrs. went — rom our Foam Cushioned : hand on the top of the piece of| with the wrists, moving first in lovd M Early Ameficon and Your Choice of Fabrics iurssiare, oon signe bg the} one direction and then another. Floy * Solid Solid Co Ler gl Bx: | Regular Price $269 $ : raat a Hoth SEE yu wed Ute Yo ta By , Parks, BERR SA NOW ONLY | 169) s 0 ve , Ee " : you count to six slowly. Relax. leaflet * be goer of Beauty,” send , ee iain ; ie are gt uke comand the| with your moose for | aflet No. pos betes beaten rs = ee 3 Furnit : en eatiet NO. = e ure furniture and do the same thing.|11. Address Josephine Lowman in iB Willia Wri h “ie Mant ae nave ae er Parks-Allen Nuptials Said am Wright yates anging at s, palms fac Tomorrow; -“Have Right Bra, Bonnie Sue Allen and Hugh M.,|jer; Keith Parks, the bridegroom’s Serving Pontiac forward, Take a weight in ach Exercise to Achieve Lovely Bust-| 5.115 were married in Oakland prother, and ‘Tom Diesing of 270 Orchard Lake Ave.. FE 4-0558 “OVC; yea : Park Methodist Church Saturday Grosse Pointe. Te. Teh soe fc Phyl aero. The Rey James "hen the cole eto 8 hone: = i exercise will help you fight upper arm : om Parents of the couple are Mr.|™0on through northern Michigan ERMANENTS | ee yllis Dafoe Becomes |: Mrs. Paul J, Allen of Oller ras wearing navy blue sheath ¥ DO) gonpiie ca maiet nt ns $6) () ; ; p. . street ; rs. o App't Necessary : Br ide of Barr Y Baldwin M. Parks of Lowell street. | Te58, NOt a cscs frown hee ‘LOUIS | eng ; News of Personal Interest ‘ The bride selected a gown of | bridal bouquet. 10 W, Haren * Phyllis Ann Dafoe and Barry Chantilly lace and nylon tulle se Oe ee ee AIR CONDITIONED Dr ens wik av wand cc : 60 Att d F ll T G. Baldwin were married Sat- featuring a fitted basque waist en arewe Ca urday evening at First Meth- and a modified neckline |= odist Church. The Rev. Harry accented with open work of ap- O. Martin officiated at the dou- pliqued lace and sequins. The | Mrs. Merritt D. Hill of Bir- Janice Antona left for Wash- | Dle-ring ceremony. floor-length skirt was of tiers of T k. Off Y mingham entertained 60 at a | ington, D. C., today. to partici- Pslgparyt§ ee ae lace and tulle. A lace crown em- ake our : i ifr Mr | pent Natl Cre | Bi St at nd Siael eae Geme | ——-*> age York City Birmingham. . . where mshe thelr IN TAFFETA AND LACE or and bridesmaids were Stephanie a = Se home. The bride was dressed in a Jones and Nancy Jackson. They EE peerek ey, We Assisting Mrs. Hill were Miss gown of Chantilly lace and ruf- wore pink dotted nylon dresses Norma - Strickland and Mrs. fled tulle over silk taffeta fea- with scoop necklines and ballerina- John E, Windiate. . turing long sleeves and a ba- length skirts with harem drape : * * teau neckline accented with hems, Their hats were of imported Pe Leaving for their home in scalloped lace. The gown had a braid and they carried colonial fitted bodice and long skirt. Her full circular veil of im- ported English illusion was held by a queen’s crown of sequins, and she carried a bouquet of INVISIBLE, CONTACT length white dress to match the bride’s and carried a basket of honored at many ‘ white roses and white orchids. among Ge Sicte wane Mr. x e white baby crysanthemums. | and Mrs. Noyce Strait of Cher- Mrs. Gerald Watts of Lake Gordon Brown of Wayne was okee road, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- Orion was her sister's matron best man. Seating the guests were . ert Armstrong, also of Chero- of honor. Bridesmaids were Richard Allen, the bride’s broth-| ; kee road, Mr, and Mrs. Wil- - liam Jackson of Mt. Clemens tham, Mr. John Thors Jr. of Northport Se and Mrs, Harry C. Striffler of Yes, it's TRUE! Many persons who now East Dn wear glasses can see without them per- ben Magic Beauty! fectly with invisible, comfortable-to+ <:. more attractive appearance — if you want complete freedom from glasses at FLUFF-DRY SERVICE work or play », . then you should in- “NU-FACE” : ie this amazing ific Miracle C. Berra of Detroit, and Doug: vestigate Scienti No discomfort! Pace lifting las R, ot Make Mondays Sunny-days at NU-VISION right away! and peel. Cosmetic and ham. : adviser to Holly- x« * * What a reliet to send all your family wash to Pontiac s : : xy for 40 on To receive guests at a recep- Laundry! Oceans of gentle suds and man aegs | mabe Open Dally 9:30 a.m. te 5:30 p.m, z tion held in the church parlors, it oh-so-bright! Clothes and towels are - —— Monday & Friday til 8:30 p.m, Stockholm Graduate Specialist the bride’s mother wore a folded. Then when Careful Dan retums them there's % dress of dusty rose lace over nothing left to do. Wouldn't you like this a ae , DR. CHORYAN Optometrist = Free Plastic Bag with Dry Cleaning : CAROLYN, NILSON | | sent ony citaners 1 NU-VISION 7-Hour CAL peck at Our ] 540 S. eae Rd. OPTICAL STUDIOS : $888. flunte 109 North Saginaw St ae ‘ Dept., P.O, Box 164, Old Chelsea) Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print| plainly pattern number, name, address DR. B. R. BERMAN FE 4-1071 and zone. 48 N. Seginaw in the Romantic manner. Flattery.... soft spoken... to delight the woman in you . .:, this is Marquise. And so apropos this Autumn ‘58 as the gentle fashion silhouette returns! See: colors of great flair... blacks or sorcery... new slants on the vamp... toes pin-pointing the beauty of leathers handled with an extravagant air... in our enthralling Shoe Week Collection now showing. 1693 WOODWARD at SQUARE LAKE RD. , oF Pt) Eee SF “Ee ; ie & a. fa ane Al shit = ; : ‘MERCY SCALES PRISON WALLS ~-. Joan " Lede ah deciae Niabd Wham, wai stomata, Losasso, 11, of Lodi, N..J., victim of a rare blood ' fondling her pet dog, Brownie, has had about 200 | © disease requiring continued transfusions, will ‘get transfusions since birth. Doctors say she has a a new lease on life trom inmates of New Jersey's chance. if she cen leap wp her blood supply for a ee ee another three or four years. Oakland Has 62 Per Cent Growth in Population in Eight Yeors ‘Since’ 1950 the ‘population of Oak-) Park, with an enormous 528.4 per|wood Village (325.5), Madison land County has increased 246,999, jcent gain. Heights (153.4), and Clawson or an eight-year jump of 62.4 per pa, is eee ‘i & g gege Other areas with large numerical Ask Asylum in Denmark |increases are: Oak Park 27,833; - Waterford Township 18,725; Madi- ROENNE, Denmark (AP)—Twol gon Heights 16,042; and Bloomfield juniformed. members. of a Polish|township 14,349. ES Pe 4 : Independence ‘Twp.—146.5, 5,052. Poles asked for politica] asylum. sais bra : are ‘ Farmingoe Tw9 10.3. 12.316. mission statistics, has been 7.6 | Jewish New Year 5719 one-quarter years. "> |Ushered In at Sundown |U.S. Sends Ghana Aid | | 2 Polish Fish Inspectors ‘an increase of 28102 pérsons.| However, the commission re-| “Wwrew YORK (AP) — The Jewish|. ACCRA, Ghana (AP) — The, ak cede part ot tee rel in Se Dalind States is sending Ghana a. THE OS A Y. M. C.A. MEMBERSHIP Your Entire Family Can Enjoy Recreation The Year Around. Make America Strong by Building a Strong Family Unit — Use the Y.M.C.A. Through a Family Membership Plan! RECREATION EVERYONE CAN AFFORD! x SWIMMING FOR FUN AND EXERCISE | * BASKETBALL AND ‘(3 x BADMINTON, PADDLE BALL AND WEIGHT LIFTING i «HEALTH MASSAGES, STEAM ROOM, AND SUN LAMPS: For Men, Women, Boys and Girls Call the ‘Y° FE 35-6116 for More Information! and Come In and Visit Our Building and See Our peas _Y.M.C. A. 131 MT. CLEMENS STREET PONTIAC, MICHIGAN © Ask today about our new Family i Group Activities Plan! GREATEST BARGAIN | IN TOWN GYM EXERCISES | = | NO MONEY E / DOWN “On This New 1959 Wringer Washer -. with Gyrafoam' | ro agi PRICE ee PAY ONLY $1.50 WEEKLY! Dependable Maytag quality and performance. Enamel finish stays beautiful’ and easy to clean. Maytag Gyratotor creates currents. that ety force water through your clothes. _ ih The finer Maytag . . . with the fabu- lous automatic water - level control that permits selection of correct water level for any size load. So automatic, it washes, rinses, damp dries and shuts off automatically. Famous lint re- mover tub. AUTOMATIC DRYER This is not an ordinary high-heat hard-on-clothes dryer .. . This is the finer Maytag with the gentle Halo-of- - Heat that safely, gently dries ALL fabrics! Revolving disc lint filter, Full-time Stee! Ror. BOTH FOR $ ONLY 3 NO MONEY DOWN! sts, 2.FULL YEARS TO PAY i| 4-Piece MODERN BEDROOM SUITES Single Dresser Mirror, Bed, and Matching Chest of Drawers Reg. $139.95, NOW eee NO MONEY DOWN! What a value!... Expensive construc- tion features . . . rich, modern finish with sparkling bright brass hardware. Easy s lide center - guided BRIGHT BRASS PULLS CAS HEADBOARD WITH SLIDING DOORS, OPEN TONIGHT Until 9 Be is _THE PONTTAC PRESS ONDA, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 I cialnde ac. MICHIGAN, tet hat A visit to every home, of. the Women’s Division Campai gn leaders as they plan for the forth- coming Tenth Anniversary Pontiac Area United Fund drive. Residential solicitations in Pontiac, Waterford Township and Lake Angelus will be conducted during an intensive 10-day campaign to be Oct. 21. Recruitment of a sufficient number _ of volunteer workers to conduct the actual door-to-door soliciting is the first order of business for the division’s area and district chairmen. “ Mrs. Donald White, division chair- lieutenants, . Mrs. Noel Buckner, Pontiac; Mrs. Rob- ert Giroux, Waterford and Mrs. J. S. Tuttle, Lake Angelus, are heading i man, and her three chief division this fall. * © it “When the group was organized in ‘Geographic Division. The name remained until this year’s reorganization of the 1952 it was named the division which resulted name, — During iis firs} year, activities -were restricted to an area encom- six small. districts in the Today, it has- seater moa Pontiac. MAPPING CAMPAIGN — Completing their plans for the Women's Division part in the Pon- tiac Area United Fund drive which opens Oct. 21 are these leaders, (-r) Mrs. Jerry Lawrence, omen in UF |§ to Visit Homes} is the goal chairmen kicked off has almost mushroomed to the extent that three separate co-chairmen and eight area are needed to supervise solicitations. The division’s expansion since last year’s campaign has been equally re- markable. Where 22 district chairmen handled the Waterford solicitation in 1957, 53 are needed this year. Similar- ly, in Pontiae the number of districts has jumped from 18 to 43. Moreover, the total number of volunteer workers doubled since last fall, “Collecting more’ money by tapping areas which were previously missed by our workers of recent years is only a.part of the thinking behind the re- organization of the division,” stated Mrs. White. tional values in our division’s solicita- “The inherent educa- tions is the area in which its real in its new worth can be measured.” “If the wives have an opportunity to learn something about the many serv- ices made available by the Fund’s 55 health, welfare and recreational agencies, I’m sure they will be most anxious not only to make a pledge in their own name, but, in addition, urge their husbands to increase their pledges at wotk,” Mrs. White added. ( Pontiac Press Phote Pontiac District 38 chairman; Mrs. Noel Buck- ner, Pontiac chairman; Mrs.. William. Muhme, Waterford District 44 chairman; and Mrs. Robert Giroux, Waterford chairman. fleetness. Shown is the Electra, of Detroit. Buick Shows FLINT—Buick’s 1959 cars, with more glass, delta-wing rear fen- ders flaring outward and new over- al] styling, go on dealer display Friday, Prices, to be announced with the dealer presentation, will give the first indication of the industry’s general pricing trends for 1959. The 1959 Buicks come in three series: LeSabre, the lowest-priced in the line; Invicta, the ottstand- ing performer, and Electra, the luxury series. * * * LeSabre and Invicta are mount- ed on a 123-inch wheelbase and measure 217.4 inches in length. Electra is mounted on a 126.3-inch wheelbase and has an overall length of 220.6 inches. Companion models, Electra 225, also are mounted on a 126.3-inch wheelbase and measure 225.4 inches in length. Hardtop models are under 55 inches in height, but headroom - [remains approximately the same as last year, Electra and Invicta models are equipped with a completely new Wildcat V-8 engine with 401 cubic inch displacement and a four- barrel carburetor. The compres- | sion ratio is 10.5-to-1, The Wildcat engine in LeSabre tor, which improves is offered as an option. Compres- sion ratio in LeSabre engines also jis 10.5-to-1 when equipped with ' iin sign features a flat roof line a slender pillar behind each rear door. The area behind the rear door pillars is encased in a huge, ’ |eurved “picture window” enclosing the rear passenger compartment. In two-door hardtops the rear window curves up into the roof. The roof itself has been short- ened to give rear seat passen- gers the illusion of sitting in the LOW SILHOUETTE — Buick’s 1959 hardtops accentuate the low silhouette, with the delta-wing rear fenders to give a look of for 59 Cars most luxurious of the new Buick line. The petite models in above picture are the Schultz triplets 3 New Series This Week on all but LeSabre series. Triple turbine Dynaflow, with its im- proved performance, is optional on all series, A new kind of air ride, a combi- nation of air springs in the rear and coil springs in front, is option- al on all models. Electric wind- shield wipers are standard on all models, Aluminum front wheel brake drums, which Buick pioneered last year, also are standard on al: models in 1959. In addition, air-cooled brakes are offered for the first time on the rear. The new rear brake drums have 60 fins which increase air turbulence for better cooling. Power steering, which is stand- ard on Electra models and option- al on all others, has been improved so that less than two and one-half pounds of effort is required to turn the wheel, * * * The new “magic mirror” exte- rior finish, which maintains its original luster for years, is stand- ard on all 1959 Buicks and is of- fered in 13 colors, Fulfills Her Dream, Weds on Horseback - DETROIT (AP)—The horseback wedding dream of Pat Thomas, FLAT ROOF LINE — Buick turns to the flat roof line on all four-door hardtop models, -The model above, in the LeSabre series, features curved rear window that encompasses the entire str eet. will be on display Friday and will be shown here by Oliver Motor Sales, Orchard Lake at Williams ics | Symbolic Struggle in Virginia a RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The closed doors of Warren County High School symbolized today the intensity of Virginia's battle to prevent race mixing in the public schools. x * * Under the state’s anti-integra- tion laws, Gov. J, Lindsay Almond Jr. took control of the county's only: high school, a white facility: And 1,045 students looked for ways Warren High Starkly Empty. Dist. Judge John Paul to admitjHigh School and Venable Ele- to keep ogcupied until the crisis is: resolved, Other localities — chief among them. Charlottesville and Arling- ton—face possible. school closings. this week. At the same time, the broad outlines of a new round of litiga- tion intended to put off integration at Same Corner 3 Youngsters Hit in the Warren County case; Laneil7 Negroes in white schools. Attorneys Will. Meet Over Debbie, Eddie HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Attorneys for Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reyn- olds are due to get together this week to work out a divorce that will end the 1955 marriage of the film couple. 28 Polio Suspects Reported in Wayne DETROIT wW—At least 28 cases of suspected polio were reported in Wayne County over the weekend, 20 of them in . anscnmdrtmiaaneas Detroit. Dr. Joseph G. Molner; Detroit- Wayne County health commission- er, said they would boost the city's polio total for the year to 331 with) io, 10 deaths, Total for the city and county combined is 429, & “+ & The new cases were reported as city health authorities urged. any- one who has not had Salk yvac- cine to get inoculations ‘Promptly. x «*« * One Parent-Teachers Assn, unit a vigorous follow-up program is planned. * 6 The chairman, Mrs, vies s. Schaap, said a general criticism| a mi-| of,polio clinies is that only nority ‘of those who get the first injection appear for the second and say the city’s And with the lawyers entering the picture, the barrage of state- ments that marked the. breakup of the marriage last week sim- mefed to silence. - . * * * Fisher withdrew to an undis- closed hideaway to concentrate onjliam his television show, which starts Sept. 30. Debbie spent a quiet day with her two children. Elizabeth Taylor, whose dates with Fisher apparently touched off the marital explosion, stayed out. of sight at her agent’s home. * * * Pesce phaser aright -old singer will not contest je’s divorce action so that a messy trial can be avoided. The friend said Fisher is anxious to spare. both Debbie and Miss Tay- ° 2 4: * The quieting of the situation left one mystery still unsolved. The Chester (Pa,) Times published a Friday under Fisher's by- Fram Slated for West Point Broomfield to Appoint Principal, 3 Alternates in 17-22 Age Group Examinations for eligibility to enter West Point will be held for Oakland. County candidates Mon- ma Nov. 17, Congressman Wil- Ss. “Broomfield announced to-| the day. Candidates will also have to pass a preliminary physical examina- tion, he said. The four applicants who score an ed on the civil service tests be named as Broomfield’s seateal and three alternate ap- pointees to the military academy. All youths who are residents of Oakland County and between the ages of 17 and 22 can apply, if of good moral character, by contact- ing Broomfield at his offices, 2300 N. Woodward Ave., Royal Oak, or in Washington, Room 1422, New House Office Building, by. Oct. 15. The -examinations will be held in Detroit, Flint and Pontiac at times and places to be announced later. Health Research Eyes Dust Counts in Winds - “ ATLANTIC CITY, N.J, @—Dust! storms can be created with winds port, Frank FE, Adley ‘and ‘Wallace E. Gill, of the General Electric Co. in Richland, Wash,, said dust cous videed free’ 000000 Sale ticles per cubic fovt of air at a 2 mile an hour wind to about 15 miles an hour, two}the To Prevent. Ceecktie in New, J unior High . By REBA HEINTZELMAN Huge expansion bars installed in the new John D. Pierce Junior High School in Waterford Town- ship, permit the unique $244-million building to “breathe without break- welt.” Made of solid copper, the 5-inch accordion-type bars aré literally wrapped around the five wings of the school and are clearly visible inside as well as outdoors, They control the expansion and contraction of the structures, eliminating any possibility of walls cracking due to sudden changes in the weather. This is only one of many new ideas incorporated in the construc- tion of Waterford Township's new- est school, which opened to some 1,300 pupils today. * * * Entrance to the school faces west and the 30-foot high -walls on either side, are Chinese-red enameled. brick — an idea taken from. the ultra-modern Geheral Motors Technical Center. The walls begin on the outside and extend through the plate glass doors into the main oi Instead of one big kitchen for preparing more than 1,000 lunches each day, there are two compact, efficiently. arranged areas that open into two sepa- rate serving areas. room. Two completly equipped serving units accommodate pupils who* may enter from the hall, be The served and file into their respec- tive dining rooms at opposite ends of the room, he we * Another idea improved upon and} taken from no school] rather than four or five steps up or down. Not only is it cheaper to .con- struct, but it is safer for walking} © and transporting equipment through the halls. Almost all of the larger rooms in the school have folding doors so that each may become a series of units when necessary. + * * : In the choral department, three circular, raised tiers permit grouped arrangements, and an identically designed room for in-| - strumental pupils is separated by the teachers offices. One of the finest features of the —_—— an hour wind, - On either side of this “‘food-prep- Results of ieir tests were re-|aration center” are two. separate ported to a meeting of the|dining rooms, approximately 40 by @0 feet, rather than one big} by at the Isaac Crary School.|pupils as a corridor in covered walk connects'from one unit to another. Sr Pierce School Breathes Like an Aceotdion He says not, ai kan Soon poorest sited taeidi: aaa would be much more expensive fo i another heated, lighted cor- “It in asmeaae a el OPENING TODAY — The: covered walks” Me St ce ard rai shown above will shield some 1,300 pupils begin- | | Crescent Lake and Hatchery roads. Cost ning, today ag the new John D. Pierce Junior _bullding. wan $2,300.00, . \" re ! Justice “aly Raps Kennedy t “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 Senate Rackets Prober Upbraided for Charges of Foot-Dragging WASHINGTON (UPI) — The LITTLE Faubus? What lies beyond for the many South's massive resistance to the desngregntian af tea Sallie pikcain? i i a Apel fier 'Bob Consid nsidine Says: Ike Must Prepare for Faubus’ “Next Move val Faubus, knowing that whiche ever way he moves he’l | be ROCK — Whither goest There is speculation now that he gration might even try for «fourth term as governor, two years hence, hav- ig won so handsomely nis ace will tell you that he'd like to drop Mhel ack to his old $5,00-a-year job as the state’s road commissioner. Right now, Faubus’ future _ be giving There are a dozen Justice De- partment lawyers in town sifting the wording and intent of the in- juhetion Féderal Judge Davies| slapped on Faubus a year ago, en- joining him against interfering ee ein et. But the move against Faubus, if there is a move, probably won't come until he attempts to reopen the closed schools as segregated 5 5 i ae pel ge fl Near Are de Triomph Watch scene of Assassination Try | tlie bi : att ate cFE F x & f +6F b fe Ht al gs g atte McLeod and Sehenion said ey oe .|tive was pistol-whipping him — iq| Algerian. Algerian, handcuffed. The detec- hitting him with a pistol — and several times he fell down but they jerked him up again. “By then a number of people had come into the street and they joined in kicking and hitting the * *® * “I tried to take a picture of them,” continued McLeod, who had a small movie camera loaded with color film, ‘The detective pointed the pisto] at me and said ‘Non, non, hon!’ They didn’t take my camera but the camera of an- other man was taken away by the police. “The Algerian was thrown into the back of a truck (evidently a police van) and there several of the police kicked him some more. “‘A few minutes later a man was advance against him. Still, the Jus- in an allied to onl eve i nations entanglement with Washington, sarge sal -eclisinly crea tice Department people here on the scene will do nothing on their own. They will wait-for orders from Attorney General Rogers and Rog- ers, in turn, will wait on the pleas- ure of the White House. : * * * This whole case has become a duel between Faubus and Eisen- hower. Ike, as head of the execu- tive end of the government, is charged with carrying out that with which the Founding Fathers saw fit not to entrust to the Su- preme Court—the enforcement of a court order. People down here figure the President will move with great |. caution, Even the pro-integra- tionists seem solidly of the opin- ion that his use of bare bayonets last year was a colossal blunder that set back peaceful integra- tion for years. The use this year of U.S. Mar- shals, with orders somewhat akin to those of cops inserting overtime parking tickets under windshield wipers, is evidence of the Adminis- tration’ ssecond look at the scope of the problem and the nature of the people caene = it. What an President may want to avoid, even at the cost of fur- ther expanding on his own moder- ate interpretation of the high court’s meaning of ‘‘delibarate speed,” is any step that will in- crease Faubus’s growing aura as a martyr. All the fires that have smoul- deréd since the age of the Car- petbaggers, al lthe misgivings that have existed since the sov- ereign states.-first grudgingly yielded certain powers to the cen- , tral g government, have been fanned ang reactivated a Little Rock case, ment which knocks him down, he'll he won’t wind up even with thi job of road commissioner. Old Or-| ‘ knocked down, It it is the govern- be a greater Kingfish than Huey Long ‘ever dreamed of becomingt If he yields to the law of the la val must be having’ some restless nights. But then so is Washington. At least 95 per. cent of American families include some kind of canned goods in their regular diets. SAVER [ck uP THe Phone when you'd like to get it. Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car 7 WEST LAWRENCE STRECy, ForeS 2 PLP roe at ! / NON-SLIP, TWIN-GRIP .-. famous for “9 lives” of Safe, comfort- able wear. . . best buy for all the family's _/ Shoes! Always look for, ask for Cat's Paw heels. .. Cat’s Paw thin heel lifts. , . and Cat's Paw twin-gripper Soles SHOE REPAIRING cH a a lay ie We Limit One Can Please eee wes VAN CAMP 16-Oz, Cans 685 vist BLVD.; PONTIAC STOKELY’S finest TOMATO JUICE : ‘Ca Slices or Halves STOKELY’S No. 2 Limit Two Cans Please PORK & BEANS 19 p Limit Twe Cans Please FO nest ‘PEACHES Can psi BEANS 3415 ELIZABETH LAKE RD., PONTIAC 2375 ORCHARD LAKE RD., SYLVAN LAKE / 4889 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS Stokley'’s Finest, Limit Two APPLE SAUCE Stokley's Finest, Limit Two SWEET PEAS Stokley's Finest, Limit Two CREAM CORN Twin Pack Natio featuring faery] STOKELY-VAN CAMP) / Finest Foods Easy does it — when you serve these sesydo-prepere, easy-to-serve Stokley-Van Camp canned foods. Stock up at National now—during our EASY DOES IT SALE! POTATO ¢ In the hurricane’s eye stands Or- Cans Please 2-2 Cans Please pst 2 Cans Please No. 303 nal’s 100% Pure Fresh and lean poane 55¢ HIPS * :5 9: 2-99: Natatecens Stokely’s Golden Corn 2.0hette ee ee ne teehee Orde. Whole No. 303 Kernel 2 Coens 35° Stokely’s Cut Green Beans4™:.” 89: ~ Stokely’s Shellie Beans 42.2" 89: Stokely’s Grapefruit Juice 3 “co: $12 FOOD STORES |= = = P< % \ ; Ys * ‘ Pa THE. PONTIAC’ PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER. 15, 1958 { i. More Marines to Quit Lebanon |. 2 Battalions Pulling Out With 9,600 Gis Left as Rearguard BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—Two mere U. S. Marine battalitns are leaving Lebanon and are going home. ' The VU. S. Navy announced most of the 2,012 men of the 1st and 2nd battalions of the 8th Marine Regiment would go on shipboard! today. Werking parties began loading equipment yesterday. * * * _ Their departure will leave one Marine battalion of about 1,600 men and 8,000 Army men in Leb- anon @s the rearguard of a force that began landing here July 15; ~ One Marine battalion, with- drawn in August on the eve of an emergency U. N. General Assem- ly session on the Middle East, remained with the U. S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean. But a Navy spokesman said the 1st and 2nd battalions will be sent back to the United States. ‘They are being pulled out on the eve of the regular U, N. General Assem- bly session in New York. Nearly 15,000 Marines and sol-|" diers were ordered here at the re- quest of President Camille Cha-/ moun, who,charged that the Unit- ed Arab Republic was endanger- ing Lebanon's independence. * x * The emergency U. N.. session instructed Secretary General Dag Hammarskjeld to make practical arrangements. to facilitate with- drawal of the troops, He has an- nounced no agreement by Arab countries on stationing -a U, N. police force, observer force or representatives in the’Middle East to watch out for infiltration and subversion. a * * * . Conditions have been gradually rturning to normal since Che- hab’s election. Rebel leaders an« nounced that starting today stores in the business section of Beirut could stay open until 1 p. m. with- eut danger of being bombed for violating a rebel strike order. The rebels called the strike May 10, but eased up a week ago by allow- ing stores to open up until 11 a.m. Arrives for Pilgrimage LA ROCHELLE, France (AP)— Francis Cardinal Spellman, Ro- man Catholic archbishop of New York, arrived here today aboard the .liner Olympia, . heading a group of 580 pilgrims en route to ‘the Marian Shrine of Lourdes. Red Observers Watch Every Move By CHARLES SMITH BIG RUEMOX (UPI) — How zles of communist guns? Well, life goes on on Big Quemoy Island but it’s an edgy kind of existence. ts hundred shel: es g EI AF AgaifLaichés ‘Missile Successfully CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, (AP) —The Air-Force has successfully tired another Atlas, setting the stage for the first attempt to shoot the missile at intercontinental range, , rocket in the free world at. pres- ent, blasted away early yesterday on another 3,000-mile test of guid- ance and strength. * * * vee! Mest: fhilkcihge “Atien stot? some 6,325 -miles—is expected Soon, it was learned that the latest test. was highly successful. That made the third straight time that the 100-ton Atlas sent its huge ‘nose cone spinning in on target with- out a hitch, * * * The %5-foot missile thundered skyward from a huge ball of white flame shortly after midnight, and disappeared in a mass of storm clouds within a minute, Three engines—twin - booster rockets and a_ sustainer—were blazing as the Atlas. rose ponder- ously aloft, More thany 360,000 pounds of thrust is needed to push the rocket toward the 15,000 m,p.h. speeds necessary for space travel.’ Coffee Break Lacking Without the Doughnuts JOWA CITY, .Iowa (UPI)—Cof- Iowa State University’s © Dr. of management fee alone at a coffee break isn’t Steven M. Horvath told a group here re- es a i tenn €.2 E. Huron St. Death Always Near on Big: er to about « hundred: yards. You sooderss shirt, a a You drive north along the shore, still under direct observation. You look at the cloud of dust the jeep is leaving behind, and you — have the queasy feeling. ew #* It increases. a little when you be- gin to spot huge shell craters in the peanut and cabbage_fields that abound in this area. The best farming land is in the western plain: that. slopes down from the rocky barren mountains to the sea. ioe teen You stop:at a small farming vil- id women with tanned, wrinkled faces and graying hair sitting in the shade, They're | Cool Headed | patie to a rw You took across tne samy eyo Mose thee vlages, pe panse ocean and distanee|dom more: than one or two: but | does it feel to live under the muz-jof a few miles seems. to shrink’ when you get to a village and walk| feel as if a comminist observer|through,: people begin to pour outi} is- counting the buttons on your|of the battered and weatherbeaten old houses to get ‘a look at.a for- eigner — something they don't see) up close too often. In some villages the children| rush to pose for pictures but in) this one, they run or ery in fear if you point a camera at them,/ | eo owe N44 You leave the village and go tol nearby artillery positions. You see evidence of heavy shelling. You are told by the command- er of a fortified 105-mm. battery that the small area around & single gun position was hit by 600 red shells during a recent bombardment, He: says his crew returned about one-third ofthat ume and photograph a group of “eee ase | He has his crew fire @ round chatting and picking|for you, aimed at a Red artillery peanuts from the vines stacked|position, The gun crew elaims to around them. They. just like women anywhere sing the village news. They smile and continue you, phote- Atlas, the most powerful war) graph thetn, as if they -didn’t know’ there was a war on. have destroyed at least three enemy gun positions since Aug. 23. ! The commander tells you | would like to fire more but it will bring return fire from the com- munists. This is the way it is in western Quemoy, facing the Red- nid main- You don't see many , people asiland., i GIGANTIC SAVINGS PIANOS and ORGANS Displayed at Michigan State F. air - Buy One of These Fine Piarios or ORGANS and SAVE! NS ene of eo "Special Offer Free Piano Lessons £ oo dee Music Co. LES&ON alimited time, are able to offer when you purchase or rent en e ® ° 2 4 Used Grand Pianos Used Walnut Spinet Open Mon., Fri. *til 9 P. M. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. FEderal 4-0566 || Used Limed Oak Spinet BIG SAVINGS f. store here’ is the only one in the building that’s not air-conditioned. oor aioe. ‘the executives have ce AEC Runs installations ¢ Energy Commission, which be QUERQUE, N.M. @®— The}total in om A TRUE - OPEN-END ‘MORTGAGE We are proutl to offer these truly open end mortgages .... This is what they pre @ You may way up the mortgage at any time © without advance notice and withaus penalty. e Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. @ You may pay any additional amount at any time without notice or penalty. @ You may pay interest and principal i in advance at your con- venience. @ Terms on our conventional open end mortgage up years. e Monthly payments jnclude Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance. We have cash available today . . . for these attractive open end mortgages. Come in and talk with one of our frinedly, courteous representatives. WE SPECIALIZE in HOME* LOANS Ltn CURRENT io RATE on SAVINGS to 25 — - All Savings Accounts Insured fo $10.000 by an Agency of the U. 5. Government WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS | Pontiac Federal Savings Rochester Branch 407 Main St. Home Office 761 W. Huron Street Diowidtioieel Branch 16 E. Lawrence. * Coming: THURSDA ~FRIDAY -SATURDA ‘MONDAY-TUESDAY % T. ¥ * Plan now to come downtown during Festiyal Days. There will be more excitement than you've . seen in years! Carnival of rides for everyone. Outdoor Chuck. Wagon Food Stands. Sidewalk displays and counters in front of your favorite store! Clerks in colorful costumes. And a vk gale: atmosphere all over the area! Get the spécial FREE tickets from Association Merchants. for the Kiddies to. ride at reduced rates! You'll be glad you-came downtown. Be Sure to See - preenene s Pontiac Press for ae Section. of Values and Festival Events! , bo ‘ r ; \ w \, < ; : + i % pry ely. ioe iy ‘i ee LJ ill a VEEP ER UE FAR FEES Re Sly . .@ : i ‘ i] home for t for Retarded rect Fire Hazard = me tion was Supervisor Fr ee re a : * * * Gerald Barr, member of the Tax Commission, will conduct the hear- ings, The Commission must submit its findings as. the result of the Frank! 2. | of Farmington Town- | - OXFORD — Mary Justine Oliver) Detroit, lece of the of Oxford: wes married Saturday The double-ring rite was per- - -|formed by the Rev. Parrish. bride’s mother, Mrs. Oliver, lives on Mechanic street in Oxford, The bride chose a white, bomba- zine taffeta gown, with re-embroi- dered Alencon lace across the bod- ice, forming a V waistline in back, accented with a bow, : Her full skirt billowed into a long chapel train. Her fii i James burgh, Pa., Ronald Woody of Al- bion, and George Rogers of Bay City were ushers.» | x 2 8 The reception was held in the church social hall following the Upon return from their honey- _\mioon in Indiana,’ the couple will reside in Albion where they are seniors dt Albion College. Mrs. ‘Kréul is affiliated with Alpha Zi Delta sorority and Mrs. Krsul, Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Bedroom Fire Results in $800 Damage Here A; bedroom. fire .at 785 Bigham ‘Ave., early this morning did $800 |damage,. the Pontiac Rire Dept. a ~ ene «+ | hearings within 3 stimates. gh ah ie by ‘gins Watice ‘0nd Aes ie gs within 15 days tak veil of lace traced with tiny pearls Orie tank kk aed oes ator a The ‘Tax Allocation Boa i Was secured to a cap, and ! . brick preserit reasons at the hearing why eatried a c of tric lamp, the firemen report. The : ascade of white fugi and of the ~ |they set the 1.32 and .86 rates. mums and ivy. : ma ere one- a was tho maid of heer Bier Firemen fought the bis for 2 Suburban Lass : a OA . maids were Jeau Strachan ef 7 minutes, Damage Was estimated at ' MR. AND MRS. ROBERT LEBARRE Seonial: aut Sherry Hood ‘of -1$500. to the building and $300 to Royal Katherine Gartner of . coritents, fen Crowned Queen|Rochester Newlyweds aly . * bed Ed i Pert Rosalie Hall, 18 ! = Z | Bacscles maser ad Ot Hell, 18, Will Return to College |mm ! PRAISI ‘Miss Outdoorama’ - ROCHESTER — Upon returnjof Kingston, Donald Kerr of De-| [ a) . anathet Mig ioe Seek he i titer Ga ake . F er of the Romeo State Police Post,| COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Ro-|Michigan t , Mr. rs, ray ster, = wi ‘ salie Hall, 18, of 5074 Virgie St.,|Robert LeBarre will make their kok F F The Parents Foundation for the . Was crowzied: “Miss home in Mt, Pleasant where they The reception was held at the = S: . A saci stich coeretnt|Ousoptarma of 188" Gaturéay a are students at Central Michigan! avon Park Pavilion in Rochester.| i (i. . oe s -ejomer he preter’ ga hoses BS aa ay ee ie i ied at the ee ie, cl on ice 2 aus nee : 1 ch 1 couple was married a Al and the . . nts. They appear clean, well be og 2 First Congregational Church in at rye t i VINYL » ; Sharon Dreyer and Carole Ryden a the Rev. E. John a". ‘ TILE “It wil] be & small matter for |W°Te TUnner-ups. mee | | ile es : yrna Anne Maass, a8 Lifetime Guar. wages a ee oc yp aleas Panky ond aaa oer veel ae tare tne gare pole © Sees Over 80 Pupils a | and assure renewal of its Heénse. | urdgy and Sunday. Day Perrys | ona street peat: Parl . a gemral chairman ofthe stent, (Cota, sret, Rocheste. ==" for Kingsbury School] jam » come from) 04 at 10,000 and Mrs. Robert LeBarre of Al- ea “We found ‘a : eee pena, formerly of Rochester. || METAMORA — Kingsbury; gg” a0 : en aa were judged for oe ‘ertanality,| _ Given in marriage by her fath |School, a non-public school ren os Detective ‘Ormei O’Farrel of|posture, beauty and figure. Judges er, the new Mrs, LeBarre. wore jeast of here was expected to orl " Detroit, State Police fire marshal.|were Art Stewart, Joe Cluff,-Don| * Princess-style gown son * its top enrollment when it opened - +e * Steenrod, Russell Higgins, Don Dit- a a green eck ltoday. More than 8 pupils were | Miia wever, that despite|ttich and John Pope. Sy cored usa csed ee Cees 8 net ae We Loan You blows syatera, in .o coe 4... page prow yore | wacderibewean! cea |i Fools and Tile F , bait and fly cast-) ape. | This compares to last year’s 72. : fe Wate. fu war chuttbion, wet bow 0 Ere tele fer Ringed? well |The school, whilch has sll grades) Miyais : Cutters! : ors in outdoor sports competition, narra a6 atte en through eight, had an enrollment * = * + Veolllecting “280 of a possible 600-| Tet 4 stephanotis of 13 when it opened its doors for) Figg F Music Club Sets point total. chide. the first: time five years: ago. | maui ) ar ing s/t An honored guest on Sunday was| Marjorie Pearsall of Highland|Students ‘come from Metamora, = urn-Proof hovever, (Season's First George Wilson, head coach of the|Park was the maid of honor.|Oxford, Lake Orion, Romeo,| jim a = ° Detroit Lions football team, who| Bridesmaids were ‘the bride's so-|Rochester, Lapeer, Dryden, Clark-| #™ 8 ' = 8 Meeting in Oxford presented awards to winners of|rority sisters, Jane Harvey of Mt.|ston, Washington and Ortonville.} - ’ = : sports events. Pleasant and Marlene Kage of|There is one new teacher ‘this) Am u ; . 90-101 S$. Sag. i ee ; _. |fall, Mrs, Robert Schrader of La- . s About 18 million fishermen and * ‘* % “_..., |peer: She will teach the third and| Aili _ Open Monday & My LeBarke,\urth a ae Ps Friday ‘til 9 P.M. joes 0997, 20g FE 8-6553 “CONSTRUCTION — “COMPANY. Shedd Aa behead | ROOM ADDITIONS 4} | mc EST HURON ST. . ora > ; # : AS LOW AS | < : . ‘ NO MONEY DOWN Gover, = » 5 YEARS TO PAY ; ip ONLY $4.82 PER WEEK ik : E 5 { : Good Producers When Contented. . Keeps Chickens Happy = | : =. ’ + : : i i Pontise Press Phote ; By United Press International | phase of Alway’s chicken opera-| . Shik cite tee. “tliity chal M Mathis, and foe | iat Gee eek ooh content| fi esing te ben howe. ‘Wihinna dir loz Quah Mrs ibe Cae, ear dager, Gwen, Mra: Sinan Nelle, peqsldint : @ Pe lle eae Ladington has But he no simplified that mat-| rocponding secretary of the East.Oakland Area of the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teach- ‘ “gone out of his way to make sure welbe’ open Rig ll gee Dad pa PTA Council, at the St. Mary of the Hills Church ers, will present a discussion of Michigan schools | “his. chickens are contented at alll o¢ the palace and clean the floor) Pear Lake Orion where tile group me Hag a in the ae paler 2 or on afternoon ; . + And be’ does At with a minimum Soa. scraper, agched to Ms\ qccompatgheig Mrs ‘Cane Gas grou nonpi bility Mra. Cosi said: — a Alway has turned his “chick- | | _ en palace’ into a Sonty ail. | TENDER, SLICED | JUNEDALE BRAND ) it is better for the chickens and | | fil. | Denne a8 {+ D5: | ~ di. Eat 39: | “For Our Free Planning ache +h spe -, Sig of Pontiac ; | The palace, a 60 by 150-foot cis | iricnics th | Operators on Duty 24 Hours Every Day ; ider block has city lay * . | A oe eee ee a io lag i. Tb | 78 N. Saginaw | Open Friday ‘til 9 PM. | i mae h ‘ {| Bete are some of the auton JUNEDALE BRAND »__, | EXTRA LEAN, FRESH | YOU DON'T i ; | | | PORK SHOULDER | i e et eae, is cov- | YELLOW LBS. C ; ic Whee CASH. t | mich eotleate” the ess s= 1 OL EO FOR ROAST bb. en You Call | : Gey am Bs TS or rm © 0 e@ ‘ | THe a a 3 incline, | LT ey er ” i ¢ and onto belt whlch carries It % nm | ai KOSHER STYLE Say : Ua UNOREAR ~~ Se ee aaa ~3 CORNED | LOWEST PRICES slong «al eck, Brey 20m ; ee CALL NOW | tutes it brings : a fe | birds, agers A vr ORESSED B EEF ee eee lb. | Alway also has. THIS VALUABLE COUPON ENTITLES THE , RIB STEAKS Pan-Redi Fryers. oe TOA ULB. LIMIT FRESH conn ¢ ! ie Lb. Fac | REMUS ‘ae Y # 69° 29 | surrer eo ae aw a oe fy ' see, “WITH MEAT PURCHASE a Mae West May Air Views on Sex Over TV HOLLYWOOD we ake Masjwith a TV gation to db'en advice: the-lovelorn West, who invented sex and still|to- program. cane 2 2». ‘Offhand, honey,’’ she said at The ageless “Come up and see|*et Santa Monica Beach home, ; can’t think of anyone more quali- fied for-the job. Besl Besides, I call it (POORS OPEN 6:45 THE ATE R 7 * LAST TIME TONITE LDA IT'S THE BIG, GARNER BOLD PERSONAL steer or he OF THE i aenican COMMANDES! e@ PLUS @ with AUDIE MURPHY jeducational TV.” Just to show she is still in rare form, she told how she would answer @ sample question, to | wit: What's the best way to hold a man? , ? “In your arms, honey, in your arms.” Miss West~who is called Mae by sscisnaveg apele ‘shida tar’ aacie c stage and movie position: reclining on a white chaise lounge in her jliving room. . * * f Her hair was just as platinum- colored, curly and long as ever. At the age of 66, she look half her age in a beige-and-white low-cut ihouse gown and flimsy beige stole. She still has a figure-eight figyre. | She still doesn’t drink or smoke. And she still has that huge mirror) on the ceiling over her bed. | In her sultry Broadway drawl, she how she manages to stay on top in show. business. “You've got to know the ground lrules,”” she said. “For instance, love’ thy neighbor—but not thy neighbor’s husband.” x * * Then she answered some more sarmple osteo that might arise ‘on her show. Q.—Should ‘a. ‘girl tell a man Walled Lake MA 4-2151 TONITE! everything _ before she marries him? A.—She should tell him every- pon ay guamaceea lances ac iow should a wife do if she finds that her husband is running A.—Let me see the other wom- an first, Q.—Should a girl run off with her beau_if her mother objects? A.—I know it may sound funny coming from me—but mother al- ways knows best. Frankly,” she elaborated, ‘one of the reasons I've managed to keep on top is that the women like me as much as the men. toy e use psychology. In all_of sy. pic- ~ |tures and plays, I always protected the other woman. I never took a man away from a Woman. x * * “I must admit, though* that sometimes it’s pretty tough. Some of our best men are married.” How should a women get a man? “Sex appeal is always the secret weapon, honey. A girl should always try to be loaded with it. She can’t do without it.” One of the troubles with modern movie stars, she said, is that they don’t play up their sex appeal as much as in the old days. “They try to be too average — cooking, washing and all that,” she said. Can she cook? “Nobody ever asked me to,” she drawled. Miss West said she spends a lot of her time reading — always in}. bed. She likes to read about “famous bad women who made good.” . She said she feels she achieved a certain niche in posterity with such lines as, “It isn’t the men you see me with that: count. It’s the men you don’t ‘see me with that you should worry about.” An optimist to the end, she re- marked: “There’s nothing in the world that can’t be improved—not even a man.” And, as a parting shot, she noted that she still likes to be called buxom in stories about her. Objectively speaking, she still is. Hollywood Headlines By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS HOLLYWOOD — That most con- troversial book ‘‘Lolita’’ by Vladi- mir Nabokov, has been bought by Stanley Kubrick and James Har- ris, and I must say they are brave young men, in Canada and in England, and is certainly nothing for children to read. Since Putnam published it Aug. 18, however, it has sold over 100,000 copies, I don’t know how much of a only a child, but I suppose they could make her older, Overheated Book ‘Lolita’ Being Readied for Film The reason the Yul Brynner insect bit Yul on the eyelid, Trene Dunne and Dr. Francis Griffin hosted a party of ten at This little book has been banned the Cocoanut Grove to hear Ann Blyth. The supper honored Mr. and Mrs, Emory Bronte of Hon- olulu, friends of Gov. and Mrs. Quinn. In the party were the Jack Wrathers and Jack Benny. . Ann Warner is hopeful that she can move Jack to the villa-in Cap D’Antibes next week. He'll re- cuperate there for five or six weeks before he returns to Holly- wood, : k &@ One hundred and fifty thousand). Jim Garner Day in his home- ‘| when singer-actress Abbe Lane strikes a fetching pose in a | # ? x ERY TERROR! iar we AMES MASON | REDBUTTONS TAINA LG | | INGER STEVENS _ yours, just call our Business. Office. Save precios minutes, save yourself, with a handy extension on the wall of your kitchen. Chat with friends and order sup- plies without leaving your cooking or your children to chance. There'll be no more delays and you'll sail through your chores in a breeze —have more time for yourself and your family. Remember, homes today have handy phones—where you work, where you relax, where you sleep, Each extension tele- phone costs only $1.10 a month* plus installation. To order *Plus 10% federal tax JOTWORK SAVE dollars was paid for the film|town of Norman, Okla., on the rights, plus 15 per cent of the/19th, will bring out at least 50 gross, and if any young producers|cousins and several dozen nieces can handle this censorable book,|and nephews, Jim is praying his Kubrick and Harris should qualify. | wife will be on her feet by then so They have made excellent pictures,| she can meet all his kinfolk. x & *- That's all today. See you to- I am happy that Barbara Rush/| morrow! (Copyright 1958) in | , 7 (THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 135, 1958 N Negotiating for Advice-to-Lovelorn Program ‘ : in Ten Days Time . FREEPORT, N. ¥. (P)—Stu-f dents begin classes today in a) brand new one-story - =A | where 10 days ago there were on: | Holy Redeemer Roman Catholic | Church pitched in and built the | school after the old one burned Aug. 28. ; * * *& The temporary, six-classroom structure was blessed yesterday by Msgr. John J. Mahon, LOVELY LANE—There’s more than spots before your eyes leopard swimsuit at Lido Beach, an the Italian Riviera, She and. her husband, Bandleader Xavier Cugat, were attending the Venice Film Festival, Officer Slays Negro in Troubled Atlanta shot and killed by a policeman, shots were fired at one trolley and another was stoned during a se- ries of weekend disturbances in Atlanta’s northwest section. * * * Police Chief Herbert Jenkins took personal direction of the probe last night and detectives were told to stay out of the Negro residential area except on neces- sary police business, - x %* * Shortly after the Saturday night disturbance, T, B. Woods said a crowd in the same general area threw rocks at his trolley, smash- shots and that a bullet punctured his head. has landed the top feminine role in “The Philadelphian’’ opposite Paul |. a Newman at Warner Bros. Bar-| ‘| Call on French ‘| and Germansto | Work Together he ought to be told, that the little woman at home is in there pitch- reunification, and the future of jsuch European organizations as the Coal-Steel Pool and the Com- Josephine Sedgewick, mother of made it obvious that ‘‘the inten- the late director Eddie Sedgewick) tions of France and Germany are “edgier ecgiratana glial ee ee ae WATERFORDIES RIVE: IN THEATER Cor. tit Lake-Airport Roads—Box Office Opens 6:30 P.M. LAST TIMES TONITE! THE MONSTER O FUTURE! 1, MU ALLIED ARTISTS: PICTURE staring erie Fs - Ds «cout. sped away from the scene. No pas- injured, ATLANTA (AP) — A Negro was}: the trolley windshield inches from |‘ In both instances the trolleys}, _ He praised not only the enter- TF Rebuild Schoolhouse si a ee ae Lewap nn of the] \|sarecutes| 2150 OPDYKE RD. FE 4-461 1 BLUE SKY > > $ o _ COLOR BY o€ Luxe Braz Fowtae BRADFORD DILLMAN’ CARERE | sommy MATHIS - 4, hs STREET OF. Feature at 11:00- 2:35 - 6:10 - 9:46 DIXIE HWY. (US-10) - 1 EXCLUSIVE! OPEN 6:30 — ADMISSION Adults 90¢ Children Under 12 Free Block North of Telegraph - FIRST ” SHOWING! — AND LIFE WIDE SCREEN in GOD: CREATED: WOMAN. FOR MAN Storring CHRISTIANE MARTEL ona CARLOS BAENA The Former MISS UNIVERSE from FRANCE ALSO BEGAN! Eastman Color | Lowell Thomas y mat ea FIVE MILE Pe er ee wr ey Pd tate te haere ~*~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,’ SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 é Td 7 Foytack’s Three - Hitter Wins First, 6-1; Hoeft {Takes Nightcap, 9-3 x *k * kk * ake Their Anal Fal Showing} x * * : But Pirates Refuse to Walk Plank for Braves By The Press It’s official now. The Yankees can start thinking about the Mil- waukee Braves and the World Series, But the Braves can't think about hair. The Pirates simply refuse to nine games to play, Pittsburgh will up with five runs in the 14th in- eo anne Kale Terry a double loser. Demeter. As a.result of the defeat and the Pirates’ double success, the Braves’ lead was cut to six * ; an Joe Cunningham, filling in for Stan Musial at first base, hit two home runs against Philadelphia as St. Louis racked up a 6-3 decision for Sam Jones. The strikeout lead- -|Aaron of Mil Willie M ios ote second at Cincinnati with a double and three singles in San Francisco’s second game victory 6-4. Bob Purkey won his 7th for Cincinnat! in the opener 4-3, * * * Richie Ashburn of the Phils boosted his average to .342 with three hits in five trips against the Cards to widen his lead in the Na- tional League batting race. Stan Musial of St. Louis was idle re- maining in second place at .338. Mays moved up to .335 while Hank waukee slipped one point'on a aoe afternoon to .332. * Chicago sel the rehiring of Manager Al Lopez for another; year by bumping off Washington twice 7-1 and 6-5, As the White Sox long have been largely concerned with ‘saving second. place this was|; an important development. Rocky Colavite had~two hom- ers and Vic Power one in Cleve- land’s 7-4 opening victory over x *k * * Yanks Make It ‘Official Baltimore, Arnold Portocarrero squared matters for Baltimore by winning the second game 4-2 and hitting his first homer. Duke Maas won the clincher for the Yanks although he needed help from Ryne Duren and Art Ditmar in the ninth. It was the Yanks’ 24th pennant and their fourth straight and their ninth in 10 years under manager Stengel. i * * * Virgil Trucks was the second game winner for the Yanks with a fine six-inning relief job. Five hits, two stolen bases and two walks enabled the Yanks to score ine in the 14th, Bob Cerv homered in each game, his 35th and 36th. Billy Pierce gained his 17th vic- tory for Chicago in the first game, losing his chance for a_ shutout when Roy Sievers hit his 38th hom- er. Earl Torgeson hit two homers in the second and rookie John Cal- lison, Sherm Lollar and Bubba Phillips one each. Faye Throne- berry hit a pair for Washington off Ron LaParl a Battle Creek scored a hig upset in winning the West Michigan PGA golf tourna- ment Sunday over four-time winner John Barnum of Grand Rapids at Owosso Country Club. LaParl fired a 36-hole total of 68-68—-136, six under par, for a three-stroke See "feron wen she set bon Chuck bel his first Major League Jim Wilson. Pontiae Press Phote home run while watching thé “Tiger-Baltimore contest on télevision. He hit it off Jim Bunning. a # : E & Fife Eee DETROIT BOSTON : abrh rdi abrh rbi Kuenn,et $111 Klaus,ss 4111 Grothet 6000 Runnelsib 4010 eae atte Williams,if ages Malzone,3b 9 Herrin 4021 Stephenscf 3000 wate 312190 Berberet 20006 2 3111 Jensen,rt 2060 ops OU ABB H van, Poyteckp 4131 A-Keough 10006 < Pornieles,.p 1000 B-Renna 1000 Casal, p 0000 Totals WC Totals 2917 - A—Struck out for Sulliven in 3rd; —Struck out = pecenes in 8th. iN . 006-000 001—1 Di O30 090 00x—6 IT E—Fornieles. PO-A—Boston 24-10. troit 27-7. g gy and Harris. LOB —Boston 3, 7B~-Malzone, Veal,” Bollin, olde ea 3B—Maxwell. HR—Klaus IP H R ER BB SO Sullivan (, 119) 3 6 3 0 1 Pornieles = = = | 6 5 3 3323 Casale ¥*4 0060 080 1 Foytack (W. 13-12) 9 3 1 2 8 1 —Sillivan. 0 — Rommel, Rice, NAPP,. ‘T—2:11. 1, Lep- ; Buddin and Runnels. | etisen, Buddin. BR-+-Maxwel!, Har- id “Central Defeats Northern, 27-14 * By The Associated Press The lid's off the new Michigan Mankato State spoiled Michigan k|Tech’s debut in the new Northern State college conference. It was the second straight year Tech lost its opener to Mankato, They played at Houghton. All four teams played the “‘go for broke’ style on the extra points. There were 12 touchdowns and ‘only once was the kick (one point) tried, They tried runs and passes for the two points on the 11 other occasions. Some worked and some didn't. Kentucky walloped the visiting University of Hawaii, 51-0, Satur- day in the only game involving a major power as sophomore Cal- vin Bird scored four touchdowns. 21-Minute Ride ion Kite Claimed as World Record LAKE WALES, Fla, (AP) — A ‘|water skier hanging onto a large|, kite stayed aloft for 21 minutes yesterday and claimed the time KANSAS CITY (AP) — Casey Stengel and his habitual American League baseball champions took their clinching of the 1958 pennant in routine stride Sunday. Stengel and some of his old- timers ventured the opinion they can beat Milwaukee in the World Series provided they are able to go at or near full strength, x* «*« * “I’m proud of my players be- cause you can’t win a pennant without players, you know, and I'm proud of our scouts who find these wonderful players for us, and I’m proud of the front office which pays me,” Stengel — told players, photographers and _ re- porters crowded in the Yankee dressing room between games. Amateur Champion SAN FRANCISCO -— Deter- mination born of a miserable round in last year’s Masters tournament furnished lanky Charlie Coe: that extra something needed to win the 1958 National Amateur golf title. “When I shot an 86 for a round at the Masters, Ik knew I had to do something about it,’ the 34 year-old Oklahoma City oil broker declared. * * The payoff came Saturday over the tricky Olympic Country Club course when the 140-pound, 6 footer whipped husky University of Flor- ida collegian Tommy Aaron 5 and to collect his second national chatigleaitp. Later the U.S, Golf Assn. named ab rh bi ab rh bi Kuen ef 4119 Suddin ss “5110/88 a World record. He ‘said the|, team of Coe, Billy Joe Patton, pe gd ‘ H 3} —— 4 : H 3} old mark was just one minute. Dr. Frank Taylor and William larris Ib °° 4224 Jensen rt 3012, Kenneth Tababo, 29, made the a Seti t- S156 bam 48d len Hyndman III to represent the olling “2b $9.90 Piersall of 461 9/fieht during a one hour and 1]/ United States in the World Cham- — tts wi 2” «$82 g)minute ride behind a motor boat/pionships at St. Andrews Scotland Hoeft p 2000 cKlaus 1¢00j/0n Lake Wales. He also stayed up'Qct, 8-11 Morgen p 61.000 Brewer > 188 8iwithout touching water for sever-| — — __ Wall p 000 0/al-minute-intervals other times : . | Ber’e 888 during the ride. Naval Architect Ssrale.2 §=6$$85) He discarded his water skies a . isa Hone wale ne? short time after the ride started, Sailboat Champ Pied out for Kiely iar : e~Flied out)and skimmed over the water in for wate in ith Flied out tor Casale/his bare feet whenever he touched) OXFORD, Md, (AP)—A Naval aes tstenca ea saeeevens > ot down. architect beings — nee . ton 24-11, Detroit 4. DP--Buddin. Lep SUNDAYS HOME RUNS . — MERICAN LEAGUE Maxwell] 3), ae (19), Tigers; Pow- er (15), Colavito 2 (37), Indians: Sievers: 38>, hrenet a (3), Senators; Klaus’ 2 @), eutltted “wr ortocarrero (1), Ori oles; Loliar (19), omg | 1), Tore econ %. White Soxr 2 38), Ath ronan Bead Qo. Toshove. 8). Tanner i, Robinson, (30), Red-| legs; Noren (2). _ tan Paci $ , adnerss coe Ieaserenlt 19), Skinner 327. (18), 3) iAmerican Star Sailing champion. -!Old Greenwich, Con., who with years ago is the new North He is E, W. “Skip” Etchells of = wife Mary as his crew sailed to fifth, two firsts and two thirds in the five-race series ended yes- terday to pile up enough points to Clinching 1958 AL Title Taken in Stride by Casey] have been losing as of now,” Most of the between-games pe- riod was devoted to the customary quick snack of sandwiches by the players, Veterans Yogi Berra and Hank Bauer, only Yanks who have been on each of Stengel’s nine championship teams, both said they felt the club would take Determined Mr. Coe {ititvaukee x * * “We are not too excited right now,” Berra said, “but we'll get that way as the World Series gets Yanks as “‘the best I’ve played with for the first 244 months of | Chi the season, then not too good | P® r on started getting injuries and slumped a bit.” Fox Hunters Hold Field Trial, Show Michigan Fox Hunters Assn, an- nounces its 12th annual field trial and bench show for this weekend at Lapeer. The event, that an- nually draws a large field of hounds from all parts of the state, begins Thursday, Sept. 18, con- cludes Sunday afternoon, Dogs will be entered Thursday at the Center building on Elm street, Lapeer, where the bench show takes place, Saturday at 8 p.m. First cast is set for 5:30 a.m. Friday. Hounds in the derby divi- sion will run two days, those in the all-age go three days, to be judged separately. William Martin, Zanesville, Ind., is master of hounds and bench show judge. . A Winning Combination |. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ham. Richardson of. Arlington, Va, and Sally Moore of Bakersfield, Calit., won the mixed doubles title in the Pacific Southwest Tennis Cham- . Braves; Pirates. take home the trophy, Pionships yesterday, <ci’s m geod thing we got off|t - | Cincinnati 4, San Francisco 3, AMERICAN Won Lost Pet. Behind LEAGUE YESTERD AY'S RESULTS New York 5, Kansas City 3, ew York 12, Kansas City 7, Sa inno Chic: Washington 1, Ist game Ch ane 6, Washington 2nd e Det 6, Boston 1, Ist game Detroit 9, Boston 3, d game Cleveland 7, Baltimore 4, Ist game Baltimore 4, Cleveland 2, 2nd game SATURDAY'’S RESULTS New York 5, Chicago 4 Cleveland 4, Boston Detroit 13, Baltimore 2 Washington 8 Kansas City 5 Pigg «oe 5 a Baltimore Cleveland. dz .m.—Harsh- man abs) ied Moss! Only game led TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE New York at Detroit 8:15 p.m. fa og at Cleveland, 7 _ Baltimore at ‘0, & p.m. Boston at ‘Kansas ~ 2 p.m. NATIONAL a Pet. Behind Milwaukee ......- “ i 54 Pittsburgh ....s 80 65 SZ Sen Francisco ..75 70 £517 11 Cincinnati = «..45..72 74 A939 14% ae 6 a we Y tphia .. 62 1 44 06« YESTERDAY'S RESULTS aol Angeles 5, Milwaukee 3 teburgh 5, Chi . 4, lat game Pittsburgh 6, Chic: 2, Ind game gt 6, Philadelphia 3 lst game San Francisco 6. Cincinnati 4. 2d game SATURDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 8, St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 9, = pus eles San Francisco 6 Philedeiphia 5 Cincinnati 9, Chica: ago 2 (9-5), Louis at ia, 7-p.m.—Mizell (10-11) vs. "tes G13) heduled. games sc! TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE San Francisco at “Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Chicago at Philade — p.m. Los Angeles at Cincinnati, 2, 6 p.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh | J 15 — pre- ceded by of game. Cranbrook Team Defeats Foreign | Boys in Soccer The Cranbrook seit team scored a goal in three different quarters to blank an American Field Service team of foreign boot- ers ~ a 3-0 count Sunday at Cran- brook. st. * * * John Hartman tallied the Ist two goals and Larry DeWitt kicked in the final for the Cranes. Eleven boys from ag many dif- ferent nations made up the AFS contingent which turned in impres- sive pi dhe pine me A similar group Michigan i} |weekend at Country Club of Lan- - |District’s AP Wirephote a a re a a aed ont of his specialties yesterday when he robbed Boston star Ted Wil» - liams of a probable home run when he made this leaping catch - against the screen in the 4th inning of the Ist game of a double- . header which the Tigers swept. He also did well with the bat with’ four hits to move into the AL hitting race with a .312 average. tions Handicap won Saturday ‘el Clem to’ move within $25,451 of matching Nashua for record earn- ings. Rose’s Gem won the Hazel Park Handicap Saturday. Andonian, Smith Shine in Defeat District Golfers Post 11-7 Win Over Publinx Team at Lansing CC Despite the herculean efforts of State Publinx champion Mike An- donian and Royal Oak policeman Wally Smith, the Detroit District’s 16-man golf team retained the At- }jlas Cup with an 11-7 victory over last the Publinx golfers ' Andonian and Smith, both from Pontiac, scored impressive vic- matches, Andonian fired a two- over-par 74 to defeat four-time State Amateur champ Gienn Johnson, 1 up, and Smith downed Dr. Robert Corley, 3-2. Smith : Jim Funston c to nose out Jay Law, 1 up. * * * The DDGA seized a 4-2 lead in Saturday’s alternate shot doubles matches and won by a 7-5 margin and two doubles ended in ties. It was the 9th win of the series for the District Players compared to six for the MPGA, Sunday's Singles Results ary oe (P) def. Glenn Johnson (D), Wally, "gmith (P) def. Dr. Bob Corley yesterday. Four singles matches) Wolverines, ANN ARBOR (# — Michigan's football team has turned Bennie Oosterbaan into a man of chang- ing moods. The Wolverine coach is laughing and confident one day, depressed and. disappointed the next. His daily turnover reflects the per- formance of the Wolverines and probably what is in store for them once the season rolls around. _ After two weeks of practice, Michigan has indicated it may be sharp in one game, clumsy and ragged the next. “For the first time, I'm encour- aged, we're passing well and mov- ing the ball well and most of all ~—blocking well,” Oosterbaan said after a mid-week scrimmage the tories in Sunday’s singles (other * * * “I wags satisfied for only the first 15 minutes,’ Oosterbaan said after Saturday's 24-hour session in Michigan Stadium. “We were sloppy and ragged. It wasn’t very encouraging. We're far behind where we should be at this stage.” Despite Oosterbaan’s ropes tune, Michigan showed solid ity to move the ball consistently for short yardage Saturday. ‘The first stringers, scrimmaging the second stringers for the first time in Oos- terbaan's reign, punched over six touchdowns on long marches. The second unit moved the ball well, sity’s 8-yard line. The varsity won 41-0. EAST LANSING (# — Michigan State Coach Duffy Daugherty is hoping that a rest will help his sagging Spartan football team this }, de Art Olfs 3r. (D) def. John Kurach cP), | Week a, Wendrow (D) and Doug Wilson LL Caplin (P) def. Dave MacHarg (Dy, Roy Nelson (D) def. Roy Iceberg Pr. Tony Skover (D) def. Don Nelson Ap), rom Stevens (P) and Vie Cuiss (9), Carry Bianco (D) def. Sal Pomante Cecti Priest (P) and Bob Reynolds (D), Ralph Ellstrom (D) and Ronnie Nicoll (P), tied, * tie tes ineni hag te bor segue ws _fisude Dwight (FP) def. Bob Bilig (D), e! at waukee : liams : ‘OD or Kipp (6-5) 5 aw ‘Willey Bill Schwope (P) def. Roy Burgin (D), “Bruce Studebaker (D) def. Jim Briegel )», 1 w iphimold’ Dutta (D) def: Ken. Parkins . iay’s Doubles Results Johnson and Punston (>) def, Andon- fan sod ‘Smith (P), 1 up. Corley _ Cults (D) def. Kurach and oon (P), Olfs end ‘MacHarg (D) def. Wilson and Priest (P), 1 bi Iceberg and Nelson (P) def. Studebaker and Nelson (D), 3-1. Skover = Reynolds (D), def. Cane and Briege! Stevens and 'pigne (P) def. Bianco ang Banna I ook Ph @ uttela (D) and Nicoll and aoa endrow @) sdutuees and dim aicangabe (P), tled. Cincy Nine Favorite BATTLE CREEK (UPI) ~— Cin- cinnati’s undefeated entry in the National Amateur Baseball World Series was favored to take the AABC crown today. Cincinnati pounded two Tacoma defeat in the. second round of the tourney yesterday. Earlier, Hous- ton, Tex., edged past Wyandott,e Mich, 2-1, to eliminate the Michi- dim Funston (D) def. Jay Law (P), ert 1 w Th pitchers “for 13 hits and an 11-6): j Daugherty was outspoken in his ticism of the squad showing in a full-dress game-type scrimmage Saturday. He termed the play ‘‘sloppy”’ and said it was the poorest day since the start of practice. “I know they are tired from the Jackie Pung Winner Following Record 32 JACKSON, Miss. (8 —. Long- hitting Jackie Pung won the $5,000 Jackson Ladies Open Golf Tourna- ment Sunday after shooting a record 32 on the back nine in the final round. Mrs. Pung, the veteran pro from Honolulu and San Francisco, fin- ished With a 75-75-70 in the 54-hole andievent over the Colonial Country Club course, a 6,700-yard layout with a par of 74 for ladies. — *Mrs. Pung’s total of 220 was one stroke better than the score of Mickey Wright of Bonita, Calif. Miss Wright, runnerup to Betty Dodd of San Antonio, Tex., in 1957, took a 73 Sunday as she bogeyed No, 18 for-a 221 total. 75-75-70-220 ae 72-75-7321 ee ee Wer LT atte —_— gan squad from the double-elimina- tion series, oe STE OM but couldn't get beyond the var-| Spartans Sloppy’ in Scrimmage grind of two workouts. a day,” he added. “Perhaps they'll perk up when we cut back to one afternoon practice daily on Monday.” * * * Daugherty planned only two more full-scale scrimmages before the opener with Southern California two weeks away. One will be held Wednésday. The second, closed to all except newsmen, again will be an after- noon affair in Spartan Stadium. Fullback continues to be a prob- lem. Daugherty said he thought neither Don Arend nor Bob Ber- cich, the two leading candidates, looked too impressive in the. work- outs. An added complication was the loss of third string fullback Bob Ricucci, a junior from Chicago. Ricucci fractured his right collar- bone in the hitting session and will be sidelined for the season. Races Canceled Because of Dust Too much dust from flying wheels on the Oakland Courity Sportsmen's Club sports car track wiped out the sports car category event for the OCSC group's week- end program. The race has been rescheduled for Sept. 28,° when addition of more calcium chloride and additional work on the road- bed is expected to eliminate the trouble. However, the sedan class was run off, with Jack Jenkins of Royal Oak (Grand Tourisimo Saab) set a new mark at 2:00.2 for the single lap, five seconds under the former record. On Oct. 5 the club will be host to the Michigan Sports Car Club, and on Oct. 12, will conduct the final event of the Pioneer trials. al ee KAYOS MACHEN — Sweren's Ingemar Johansson, undefeated Eurdpean heavyweight champion, scored a surprising knockout of highly ranleed American ‘Eddie in the Ist round of a 10-rounder in Goteborg Sweden. Sunday, ~ OE rey ee ane ee ee tar ee ET Sear RNR eM eT Tie Oe MN aT ee ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 ae Pontiac Press .Phote QUEEN, ‘LION-TAMER’ — The Detroit Lions’ big “tamer,” George Wilson, enacted a new role Sunday when he served as distributor of awards at the big outdoor evént at Multi-Lakes Con- servation Assn. Above, Wilson, Lions coach (center) awards the 2nd “place Medalist trophy to Detroiter’ Robert Handey, as Out- doorama queen, Rosalie Hall, of Orchard Lake looks on. Handey placed: behind Ben Hardesty, as “‘medalist.’’ Hardesty had left the scene before the awards were presented. .s \Lions Need * |gseconds when Norm Van Brocklin, _| DETROIT ‘Go Taseed with their third loss in five.exhibition games, the world champion Detroit Lions were back home today and anxious to even the record, Kansas State halfback. On the strength of past perform-| The loss to the Eagles might ance, they'll probably succeed.|very well have been another ' |They play the Cleveland Browns,|Layne Show’ Lion victory. joer got once, at s+ ¢ Cleveland Saturday night.’ Bobby ‘passed two second-quar- {game concludes the pre-season} +o. toychdowns—one for four yards schedule. to John Henry Johnson and the Coach George Wilton ‘gave. no jother for five to Gene Gedman. indication of tess over they Lions’ $1-24. feat to the Philadelphia Eagles at Norman, Okia., Saturday night. athe tletans be rons whey to get. down to the required 38- man roster, Yesterday they re- leased Ralph Pfeifer, former because Jim Martin kicked a 32- yard field goal in the first period. On his return in the ‘24-24 tie in to Square Record): Tesing C Of By BILL: CORNWELL That provided a 17-14 halftime lead a score “ the last quarter, tavee moved his team 60 yards only to have a: pass intercepted. The Ea- gles failed to click and Layne tried again—but this time Retzlaff inter- cepted and made his long run to set Up the Eagles’ winning touch- down. to give Detroit its brief last quar- ” tet lead. Billy Barnes and Ciar-| ke that: ence Peas, former Michigan State delphia in the second quarter. Barnes ran 46 yards for another The Lions lost it in the last 10 former Los Angeles Rams-quarter-| Flip” Sends Racer to in the third period. You've heard it many times. “What a life those Tobin Rote and Jim Doran col-\Professional golfers have. Nothing to do except travel laborated on a 64-yard scoring passjaround and play golf every day. Wish I had a snap The person guilty of saying such words and miean- star, scored on plunges for Phila-|ing them seriously is either appallingly ignorant of the facts or else he’s a frustrated golfer who wishes he could play just half as well as they do. Get Plane & Steamship Space ... Use AAA's critic Hospital golf, has no knowledge of back, threw a four-yard. pass to yards as Layne was trying to move the Lions out of a 24-24 ‘tie. Bobby had come back to action after De-| Only serious mishap of the day, troit lost a 24-21 lead when Bobby! sunday, in the season’s final out- _ kicked an I-yard field), 314 races for the midwest area, . c «st at. Sylvan Lake, ollie ay “ of Monroe to a | ital. ] Bihan d egy he wan “aot t08 dis Michigan Class-B utility champion, out to do, which was to get a look his boat, when it flipped during the at the rookies,” he said. 3rd lap of his class race. Choppy , water, stirred by a stiff wind, and The Lions were to cut one | waves from a pleasure craft, upset the speeding utility. Kalbe was treated at Pontiac Genera] Hospital, where seven { ~ Rebuilt Automatic Transmissions Easy Credit Terms Available Fall Special COMPLETELY “INSTALLED PRICES! Includes Rebuilding. Installation, Labor & Lubricant _ DYNAFLOW HYDRAMATIC ‘4B to "52 ......$ 15 | ‘48-to ‘50 .......$65 SPN 208 ae Ue re. cL. ‘54 eeeeee bese s Quan ‘52 to ‘54 are ‘SS ...........$150] ‘55 and ‘56 ......$90 Power Glide - Ford & Merc-0-Matic | $0 te SZ .......$70 7% DO te BZ ......: ‘53 and ‘54 ......$80 | ‘53 and ‘54 Ito. ‘55 and ‘56 .......$90 | ‘55 and ‘56 .....$90 Complete Power Steering Service Pontiac Transmission Service At Moter Mart, 121 £. Montcalm FE 4-8230 Strikes and Spares stitches were taken in his lett side. He returned to Oakland carrawce===Kalbe Hurt at Regatta the game at all and speaks tempt to understand the County Boat club where the problems of a touring pro. races were under way, but did not drive again. curred hydro division, but eae aE te all boats|2ware of the hazards of playing haps. n idea. The racing field included 94 boats, out of 100 entries. . a winner of the day was Dave , who won the Class August issue of the Southern Golf- x * * Lambert taking Class-C and Jack aa point perfectly. Baltimore Wins First Exhibition Green Sey Loses to Washington 23-14 By The Associated Press Who’s gonna tame the big bad Bears? That was the question today around the National Football League as the exhibition season ‘ By Joe Wilman made ready for its last fling with Most bowling leagues are’ just Chicago the only undefeated team. getting under way now for the} Sunday, the Baltimore Colts coming fall and winter. For those}won their first game by defeating | bowlers who have kept active dur-|the New York Giants 27-21, The |ing the summer months with open|Colts have lost three games, The bowling or a summer league,|Giants have a 1-4 mark, |the opening of the new season| Saturday, Washington moved to isn't much of a problem. the top of the Eastern sector by But if you haven't been bowling | downing Green Bay 23-14 to bring for, say, the past two or three|their mark to 3-2. Philadelphia and RADIATOR SERVICE Credit Terms Available Factory Trained Mechanics MASTER SERVICE = 29::0 et AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION |months, let old Professor Wilman/ (2-3) handed the defending cham- | ive you some good advice: pion Detroit Lions their second 1, Before you begin your league |defeat in four games, 31-24, season, try to get in atleast} The Colts had to break away two or three practice sessions as we illustrate. Don’t begin your|downs—one on an interception by first few times out. Remember, | you're using muscles and liga- ie ments that may have been inactive 200 yards, one a 24-yard TD fer several months. pass to Tom Bratz. Baker kicked (COPYRIGHT 1958, three field goals, 22, 28 and 41 _ SOHN F. DILLE CO.) yards, MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER TIRE and SERVICE SPECIALS Hardesty Is Medalist in Outdoorama Contest International fly-casting cham-|ity with casting rod, shotgun, pion Ben Hardesty, resident of the|archery and other skills. B. F. GOODRICH SAFETY-S 9 5 “Plus Tax and Retreadable Tire 6.70-15 Bloomfield Hills area, yesterday s emerged as the big champion at dpa wes Robert Handuy Multi-Lakes Conservation Assn.| o Detroit and Royal Oak's Fred ‘ Meinecke was third place win- Outdoorama, at Reed’s Lake. Ben a outpointed -a fine field of con- ° testants in the two-day “‘medalist’’| In the women’s division, Lillian competition and was named Mich-|Backman was medalist. She was igan's top sportsman for 1958. The |followed by Judith Ramsey and title was based on all-around abil-|Ruth Handey of Detroit, in order. Juergens. The 3rd annual Outdoorama was a big success, say M-L officials, ws estimated the attendance Sunday as around 8,000 to 10,000. Scores of exhibitions, contests, Guaranteed BRAKE RELINING 2% High quality lining 1,000 mile adjustment, As low as $1.25 a week. WHEEL ALIGNMENT §9> perts. caster, toe-in, toe-out. _ 1958 Electronic equip- ment, Factory trained ex- Correct camber, demonstrations of all types of out- doors activities marked the event. We believe we have the : : ‘i lowest auto- : iS mobile repair ef prices in town © MEDALIST—Ben Hardesty, in- |” s ternational bait and fly-casting 4 champion added another title to | GEORGE and TOM’S | his long list, Sunday, when he ||. G AR AGE a became the medalist in Multi- For Free Estimate ~ Lakes Cons, Assn., two-day Out- || doorama, Ben, above, in action, |= Call FE 2-3067 Blow-Out Proof Muffler . Written Lifetime Guarantee Free. Installation i didn’t stay around to receive his |~ fine trophy, ; MEN WANTED € ‘To Train for High Sclary Position in Electronics, Radio & Television. Day and Evening Classes Allow You to Remain Fully Employed While Training. eee a oe 6 2-5660 we ssrruere ued Né ion, mnt | We Woodward (Donovan Bldg,) nst tute:"»-2: of For Theater. ‘ veep Approved. 9-15 NAME cedeccedscccdececccccersedesdwedssecdescesoesRBOMG: oy coscesesorsrsen Address Obeasebecorecersacceccesereeesesscesecseces ONG cccedecceascoecese and your team’s success. and the ball] on the Giant 2% 2. Concentrate on your arm-| quarterback John Unitas hit Ray swing, footwork and timing when|Berry with two passes to put the you practice. These three funda-|ball on the 4. L.G. Dupre took it mentals are the key. Don’t worry/across. Brown then intercepted a about scores. Charley Conerly pass and moved Bg Bian ald feel tired|66 yards for the clincher. you're practicing, sit down} ‘The rifle arm of Rudy Bukich land relax, Don’t overdo it the! and the talented toe of Sam Baker 1 You get more clean heat per dollar— Young Class-D, Winners added 700 * Pott, who hails from Shreve- points to their season’s totals. cect, Kat sae ‘ » Is one nation’s Utility class winners were; A, cam Yet } young pros. er -coenacl tle D, mee he has had a “devil” of a time Trophies, ribbons and cash went collecting a dollar for himself. to the winners. event. 72-hole score of 284, even par, and two strokes out of the finished In the Insurance at Another Ace at Pine Lake eeadd Con. be yr Vere Hodges of Pontiac ac- |two-under-par 282 and won counted for Pine Lake Country {grand total of $20. Club’s 7th hole-in-one of the year <iue 8 when he aced the 160- | This is not an effort ‘to yard: 12th hele with hig 6-iron. ~wion asad tias! prope gor: Accompanying him were his wife |have never asked for pity and Vera and Harry Hamilton of |none. They have made their Pleasant Ridge. and are happy to lie in it. Whatever the weather .... No fuel supply problems ever, with us! De- liveries of Gulf. Solar Heat oil to your home are fully automatic—carefully cal- culated by our scientific Degree Day Sys- tem. And each delivery is metered to ensure accurate measure and billing— completely worry-free and safe always greater peace of mind to /ully enjoy the finest indoor com- fort available Try it! We keep you in comfort AUTOMATICALLY for as long as you like LOW MONTHLY Budget Payment Plan Phone FE 4-9595 392 S. SANFORD ST.. wr Or, more likely still, the doesn’t even play through emotion alone|2#me and has confidence that he without making any at-|the bilifold. ’ Anyone who likes to play golf and appreciates its never-ending A. half dozen other spills 0C-|-hallenge is at least partially were towed ashore. Some bloodied|the game for a living. Friendly noses and assorted bruises were|Competition in = weekly mag are financially secure today, but the extent of these personal mis- par can provide some kind of| ost of them had rocky starts. In : To get down to brass tacks, being|rewards that accom success a golf pro is a hard lot. In the on the toumament tral. For example, in the Rubber City | A good gallery watched the!Open at Akron, Ohio., Pott fired ai H. COLE OIL CO. The traveling pro knows the risk Complete involved but is willing to take the gamble because he enjoys the is skilled enough to keep cash in Pott played excellent golf in the Rubber City. and Insurance tournaments, yet he didn’t earn enough to pay the entry fees, let for all Air & Ship Lines O EXTRA COST TO YOU Also headquarters for: alone meet his other expenses. His case shows the fierceness of |] @ Foreign Documents and Several of the nation’s older PPS it | @ Auto Shipments, rent- als and purchase = @ Guided and Indepen- dent Foreign Tours & Cruises ‘ ae - 46 Williams Street FEderal 5-1451 <fane Vie 3 Gym Trunks Sn cal eeevenve eee ee ee Holiday Shop: ! 696 W. Huron let us revitalize the safety features on your car 1. Remove front wheels and inspect drums and lining. 2. Inspect grease seals for possible leakage. % Check and add ‘brake fluid if needed. & Adjust beaks shoes te sapere - s drum contact, ! Rey. 3°° 5. Cocaliany test brakes. @ FRONT WHEEL BALANCE © WHEEL ALIGNMENT 1. Correct caster and camber 2, Correct toe-in, toe-out, 3. Inspect steering ALL OF THIS SERVICE a regular *19.00 job e-Je lolol an -¥-3-10)-1-14,7— easy terms @ 15,000-mile guarantee. MOST CARS *MUFFLERS Installation | Firestone STORES “4 } > i iu 8 B ef u alt = : aa ‘be ne | r wo eet his Raiders are ie| Jerry Laycock at Almont will not only be shooting for another Thumb crown but more important figured strong con- | .Clark Burnett went winless in his | |debut at Dryden but should be able ae better that with 15 players still and ' lin school who won letters in 1957. ong the | \Four backs and two linemen have ‘at Mc. | ~|won at least two : Ted | | ‘The Cards received a big boost wes § ; _|Englert transferred to «Dryden ison |-lafter playing three years for Class and Jim : A Lapeer. : Ds a Bh at wk order to form a solid forward wall for his ‘pony’ backfield of Mickey Patton, Bill Porte, Bob Zarate and John Parrish. e e = dptaty * * * how the teams are picked in tral Cont a erence for al | the teams are picked in Thumb for 1958: . | te aS e Sa j ’ y, j ; : i / | : 4 ; : Y-TWO 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 _ / , ‘ ; nee ye ae YS aeRO esone 4 # i 4 t : ie 1 / De j por Ae) > , “Wr NFL EXHIBITION STANDINGS ‘ fe a OF ‘WEEKEND COLLAGE FOOTBALL | Driver Bob Walker of Little Rated Tops in Southern Thumb —. Wings Add Canadian | -“xarreay‘commsance —|D'Agata Beats Ali The aseciated Pree lock, Ark, was killtd in @ pre- i a RG i AE EOS Player to Roster Vane Scan ‘ay 13] CAGLIART, Sardinia (AP) --| fottn patois oe |tmalnary event of en Tenis spte ee) el ee . 1 DETROIT —> The Detroit Red] leven atte i 400 108 130\ Mario D'Agata, Italy's former}, Wood . b wenars | Coll. racing program yesterday. Norm Po aeghee pe avorl e ‘Twings have added to their roster|hew Yak 1.4 8.300 @ s@jWorld bantamweight champion, Ee aa S et Wis. @@eaege ; =a 4 {a member of the Whitby, Ont., Ww CONFERENCE | \outpointed Ben Ali, Spanish Mo-| lows Teachers 29, Bradley 12. ee es, , : hockey team. that defeated Russel at feet, “1 2 $B Hf splrocean tholder, in a Wbround sree Hs a. die nk) 2 a ther in « series of has been experi-jtenders for state honors in Class C./for the International crown last| ore ost s-2 2 k: t before a crowd ,* he Bo ae Bere Pings Sf backticlds. "A No wonder, Fullback Frank Hart-| year Balin cach ‘eat se sb 000 PAgnn wanes TK, Am cure the newcomer who may help is half-|way and guard Dean Upleger were eos : SATURDAY, Sept. 29 1%, - see . back Doug Stott, a transfer from/both All-State in 1957 while ends He is Charles Burns, 22, a na- Sept. 31 - Ee Holt. Halfbacks Dick Duncan and|Jim Ostrander and Bob Taylor.|.i.. if — SEARO | ‘The opening Barry Harris, tackles Gerry Hight/halfback Larry Ostrander, line-|i, ‘roronto amateur hockey, weighs eas vs es vski, guard Frank/backer Dick "Howe | and | many |1s0 pounds and plays center. ; _ . d . f S con days away Pen tinlay city Hardgrove and Jim Casey, an end, others are proven stando : ayton En -of-Seasor ag Fg ay < Linewe noaitt” his nucleus. - : Armada and Brown City are oan us Almont of the rn Thumb! , Millington has enough experi- | expected to wage a battle for the , | one headed towards titles for the third enced hands stil! around to make | No. 2 slot. Both are well set for AG straight year. life miserable for alt opponents | at least strong starting units ae _ Axid-they are not getting much featuring ball carriers Bill Saw- | despite the loss of starters | : argument from the rival coaches| Yet and Dick Kolaza and tackle | pin Louiselle at Armada has = > jn either case although Imlay, “#rry Reed. been doing some converting in Save on Gold Seal RECAPS j= @ THE THRIFTIEST TIRE BUY IN TOWN @ FULL SHOULDER TO SHOULDER CONSTRUCTION @ EXCELLENT TRACTION DESIGN Now $ - | Only 6.99 Exchange FITS FORD, CHEVIE, PLYMOUTH tum 1958 PLYMOUTHS FULL DELIVERED $ 00 PRICE $175 Dn, $13.81 per week Payments Include Tax, License | ‘and Carrying Charges © Heater © Undercoat © Washers © White Walls © Wheel Covers © Two-Tone and Sport-Tone 1958 Dodges 9144" Sot 227.00 Down, 15.29 Per Week Payments Include Tax, License and EASY CREDIT NO PAYMENT Carrying Charges TERMS ‘til Nov. 1 © Heater © Undercoat © Washers , _ © Signal Lights 4 tom Rammler - Dallas, Inc. oe . gbr® The! ) Dodge — Plymouth — Chrysler — Imperial OLive 2-9111 i = : q & 77 W. Huron _—*FE 8-0424 Dodge Trucks 1001 Main Street Rochester, Michigan sh inci hans: geil aD ln, 8 deo Simos lei is ee Ra al AP ee AR | a vl 4 ) The Whistle Blows Again for the MAJOR HOOPL V7 4 Wy \ FOOTBALL FORECASTS! Watch The Sports Pages This Week _ For Forecasts of Saturday's Games Dear Pontiac Press Readers: Once more; good friends, | am the bearer of happy tidings. By poputa nay, by overwhelming — demand |. am repeating this fall that famous autumn institution, the Hoople Football Forecasts. My peerless pigskin prognostications will appear each week on the Sports , Pages of The Pontiac Press. Match your own picks against mine. A most pleasant pastime, egad! [-<«< My fearless forecast will appear weekly and will appear well ahead of- the games themselves. This year the first predictions will cover the games of Saturday, September 20. A new system | have worked out with Prof. Hugo Speamkofluptsch,’the eminent statistician and inventor of the on- side kick, will assure sensational results. i The whole world is familiar with my record, of course. What other expert would even dare to prophesy the startling upsets that |! do? And this year — Hak-kaff! — | fully expect to accomplish the impossible and outdo myself! Confidently yours, Major Amos B. Hoople. £ very Week Major Hoople’s Prognostications Will Appear in THE PONTIAC PRESS {THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 7 - UNITED NATIONS, N,.Y, (AP) ~The U, N, has not yet taken the first step in its plan to settle the troubles among the Arabs in ‘Three weeks have passed since the General Assembly in some ur- gency adopted a four-point reso- lution on the situation in Lebanon and_ Jordan. * *« * Three of. the four points gave jobs to Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold. He has not yet done them. The fourth point was an agree- ment among Arab governments. That agreement shows signs of breaking down. * * * anybody can see, and - foreign Jordan, * e. .2 2. Before he left on that trip, he told correspondents he wanted to be briefed on the Arab League’s m plans on economic develop- ment, But he said that “belongs to a somewhat: later stage than the one I am now planning.” .* x * * 3, Hammafskjold has not yet published his report. He is expect- ed to do so about Sept. 25, , 4, Before he left, he told news- men the first result of the Arab pledge of noninterference might and UN. Delaying First Step Ss Toward Mideast Solution people to overthrow King’ Hussein. 24-—by ment between the U, S, and Leb-|Will take part in panel discussions anese governments. anon in August, and two more be- : gan loading up today to leave for . home. But one battalion and about Remove Wax First 8,000 Army men remain. British troops soon will be with-{it. drawn from Jordan, whose King|wax with Hussein. is estimated even by a/spirts or one of the other solvents friendly Western government to|available in all paint stores. Steel n “ons ¥ mi Egyptian Missile, Space Experts calling on Jordans Gathering in Detroit te * There is considerable expecta- operated plant in Sterling Town- agree-| Civilian and military experts anid workshops on improving Amer- e+ ke ica's position in missile and rocket One Marine Battalion left Leb-|4evelopment. — There is little expectation that|face that you know has wax on You can easily remove the turpentine, mineral The Assembly met in emer- gency sessign Aug, 8 to consider Lebanese and Jordanian com- plaints of subversive. attempts by the United Arab Republic. U. S. troops landed in. Lebanon July 15 and British troops in Jordan July 17 at the request of the two gov- ernments, kk &* In a resolution, sponsored by all io Arab countries, the Assembly: *1. Asked Hammarskjold “to make forthwith, in consultation with the governments concerned, such practical ents as would help in upholding’ U. N. 2. Invited Hammarskjold to con- tinue current studies of the possi- bility of international help for an Arab development bank “and in this context to consult as appro- priate with the Arab countries.” e<-* * , 3. Instructed him to report back “as appropriate, the first such re- ‘port to be made net later than” Sept. 30. : 4, Welcomed the Arab countries’ “renewed assurances,” in line with the Arab League pact, that they would respect one another's governmental systems .and not try to change them. : * * * Here is what has happened on each of these four points: 1, Hammarskjold has made aj” 20-day trip to the Middle East and back and consulted the govern- ments in Beirut, Amman, Cairo and elsewhere, But he has made no “practical arrangements’ that Marriage License Applications David E. Longfield, Highland Carolyn F. Arnold, 577 North Perry Charles L, Wedge, Clawson Patricia A. ins, Clawson Wiliam R. Taylor, Milford Effie B. Pettengill, Farmington James B. Johnson, Ferndale Jane E, Racine, Waterford Walter F. Meinecke Jr., Birmingham| irmingham Lois P. Baldwin, Birm! Earl G. Harrelson Jr., Drayton Plains Sharon L. Oliver, Drayton ing William J. Allen, Wixom Shirdey A. O'Leary, South Lyon Ronaki &. Turnbull, Ortonville Janice L. Lane, Auburn Heights. Roland D. Porter, Utica Barbara A, Sayers, Royal Oak Warren R. Nevenschwander, Clawson Aimeda J. Smith, Clawson Richard C. Sulick, Detroit Deanna 1. Robbins, Drayton Plains Kenneth R. Morris, Whitmore Lake Marion N. Nowlin, South Lyon James L. Beadle, Milford Mary L. Bedford, Milford Dale BE. Hannan, 621 Harper Susanne J. Daly, 149 Tlinois. Roya) Oak. jaweon James A, Bogan Jr. Evelyn L. Johnson, John P. Lovell, Madison, Wisconsin Joanne C, Granger, Ortonville HALF ACRE CASTLE be some kind of radio truce, Yet|/have the support of only 20 per/wool will help to remove the only Saturday a dispatch fromicent of his people. softened wax. < " | -BOARDING HOUSE (T GOES TO SHOW THAT LUCK’L TAKE YOu FURTHER THAN BRAING/ WOODEN LEG! (IT JEST GOES TO FOUR KINGS, SNUFFY + LOOK AT EN? OL” UNCLE JAKE'S LUCK HAS TURNED! LAST NIGHT I GOT ROPED! INTO A CHECKER GAME AN'E BH DIDNT GET ANY MORE e<& @ NOURISHMENT THAN A Ee MOSQUITO BITIN'A SHOW THAD A FULL HOUSE ALL TH’ WAY AN’ YOU. DREW THREE CARDS/~w- eo a — a *~ nie Sraict Ly An Sih TIFIC Ny EE = 4-45 ie s000 oy Mad Sorter OUT OUR WAY GAWSH! ‘THET WAS CLOSE/ THEY TELL ME THEM PORKYPINGS . WILL SURE PUNCTURE A‘TIRE/ Pr THE RIGHT OF WAY T.RWILUAMS is - 1068 by WEA © by Serviee, ine. John Morris ’ You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day tm the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and selling problems, To Place Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 oe us oI 8. FH: \ hei S ‘i a “Except I'M not wearing a girdle!” | DETROIT Missile — moor Lebanon's’ rebellion, “which led|¢*Perts from all over the na her to complain against the|S@thered in Detroit won Hed the U. A, Ri, has. died down since|furday fall meeting of the Ameri- Gen, ‘Chehab was elected presi-|°@" Rocket Society.” dent July 23 to succeed Camille Chamoun, troops are still in Lebanon andj : Tg tion that U, S, troops will be on|ship where ghe Jupiter missile is A highlight of the session will|- be a’ tour of the Chrysler Corp.-| Never try to paint over 4 sur- ; BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES _ [* mh Md/ CAPTAIN EASY Feira 1 hen OAR Bor ighe st D LEAVE | Rs . COULEILOOT HUP, Two, THREE, FOUR All i} I I Tear anes estendeanlee LSE) ©: GRANDMA Distregted by King Features &) mdivate, i Ly War id Righta Reserved ni sllins PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 10958 Turning Weak zest '.ee1in Active Trade (stains, i"2) > Market by growers and sold by vertising sg F ean been them in wholesale package agency. Forsyth _ CHICAGO #—With the Far East-|Quotations~are furnished by the) NEW YORK w—The stock mar-|#ctive in. ern situation going into diplomatic! Detroit ‘Bureau of Markets, as of|Ket moved higher on average in|‘sinment field, as well as with the talks. greltfutures, peices Serted| Thuraday. ‘Pakty nective, earky trading. satay, eek See. : weak today early dealings stocks advanced from new . ‘orsyth the Board of ‘Trade. * Produce tions to about @ point, There were| will assist in the on of tele- no en sae are eXx-) aS some losers in around the a Fo neg sig ws in the _— | pected from negotiations on ree headquarters the Chinese Communist-National-|3 a crete) “iigis.”sader-'30| The market was higher in a brisk|agency. His -home is at 342 Me- aly ye) cae long as Besdhes, Hate Mavens s Meseeeee ei trading slowed, iia eee the talks continue. Plums, Damson, Me BTID 28] Business news. ever the week- a fully equipped branch office ev A es teal ot Gon en po Watermelon, ee 2.00 end was favorable and the mar- races cog, & Co., Detroit been protected for the weekend |Beans, Wax, bu. eeceveccceces av» 244] record: highs. The” possibilty ef tion in Bloomfield Hills and will in Friday’s broad short-covering. |Broceoll (bens.) dot. .....+sssecs.s 235| an @uto strike at Ford and the |°Pe! about Dec. 15. The branch, Trade was very low near the end|Caniiowsr ark. oe eseeseee ++: 173) negoti ti bet Red Chins located in the Barbour Building of the first hour with wheat ¥% tolCslery. dos. stalk 000.000.0000... 1110] and the United States were back- malls Long ar ag hid pipe eee” “takhe ales ba ie * _ Wi avenue, test a % cent a bushel sig a Cucumbers. | pickle size, bu. cose 5.50 ground factors tending to in saelts of os cna Wr the frm, Yelower. Regan, bu... sites 180 ed Eggpiani, No. dot: s ee conen 6.00 rye ° +o eeeeseeeooe 1.28 eee eeeneere 1.50 Rie B ged ype 17-19; Pm ay of hoa at a no fryers; caponette sievicut tx: Wks tan Ciieeal cente; heavy type young toms’ 23. 1 to 1% lower, September $1.30%: Onions, dry (bags) 50 sveeren Sad f ‘aon. . eee este 1.00 soybeans 1 to 1% cents lower, Sep- 6 Feo ms secs Se tember $2.18%; lard tol Pepe ba eerie 10 cents a hundred pounds higher, Potatoes, bag) 60 seserecceone 120) September $12.87. F eg ome Ba... es ; tag ——— ‘0 Re _ white, {bchs.) doz, ...... 90 : “ia rb oc eel og GOR, .sse0e 2 * * Bq Delicious, tebe weceoee dy Te Mo. 1, BU. «20000 sevecce 2.00 Grain Prices furnips, topped Ou | ..eseeeee- 2.50. a Son ee nr ~ 7 5 — ~ | Ce ‘e ai “ae) egeeiaceiel ae a day: . ‘ : ig |Co a bu. TPL eRe ee soe eo : Oni onthe Ee eeoeeiahe: eveseve 1.25 Sept, je oseen ST Sept. . «s«.. | Seeeeenerens eeenene Dec. ieuie 18 fo os ehece O45 bu. wnaes Oeeeteoerseereesee + 150 0 eco 19TH March . .... 6Ti/Gmnech, De. ..-00s «ones 140% “BMay . -p.09 OB alan niet cones 3 Ae Rye— Selery i ebaescssepeese 350 Gorm el, Bao = sore 130 [dive “Digan ba, coool 38 Dec. = site ro — onan ie Lettuce. bead. (erate) 3 wn _ 2.40 Corn egier” r nl eee 1.24% aine, eee eeees aeeoee ee ees dei and Eggs oa os. ry oe ABlerion Ban MARKETS [Stocks Advance couped about a point of its 10-point loss last week. Western Union opened at 27, up % on a big open- ing block of 7,000 shares. Lorillard, Goodrich and Union Carbide were. clipped for 1-point losses. Slightly lower were Amer- ‘ican Telephone, Du Pont and New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) However, most had returned tole Blea? 4 at Dairy 45.4 , 990-1140 Ib. steers 27.25-27.75; small lot Co .-.00. 168 Hat Gype 0... 56 their jobs today after UAW leaders eg 1084 Ib. steers 28.00; small lot 1038 thy og! sess 383 Nat Lead ....103.2 the walkouts were hampering] dard sisent se seks enzg 8d Stan lCampb Soup's. 48 No Am Av ....35 negotiations. [ale ao betes atseanabr lees Bor ~~. 83. Nor Sia Bean : 20.00-24.00: utility|Cdn Pac ..... + 28. sear 8 cows 18.60-20.00; few strongwetght uility (Capital Airl .. 16-2 andl eel Te ws up to 20.80; ecanners and cutters|Carrier Cp ... 40.6 Ovens Che... 20, : i Gath Carrier Ov 2°. $08 Qvene ti Gr: 22 “ /, —BSalable 700. Butchers uneven, Catt soe 80 | Pan A W'Air . 18.6 ou | 25 cents higher: sows m Ches & Oh ... 50.6 Pan Ep! * 614 ‘ 26 cents’ higher; Sheree 7°? 33° param Pict ... 42-4 | U8. Mo. 2 & 3 190-260 Ib. |Cin tae °*"* 35, Parke De ..... 96 n Y ir: .50-21.00: mixed No, 1 & 3/ oie sere SOd Pennev, JC 4, 99.2 190-240 J, 2-00-2118; few lots mostly |Gove Cola’ ./.1isa BS AR i--:-- 144 No. 2 & 3 ‘te. butchers *|Colg Palm <... 648 ~—dhpepdive htt Was Until mised erader 100.60 I. butchers 10.50 Gon Edis s.... $4.3 Phelps B+... 584 it Is Well |18.0058.00; No.2 & 3 400-600 Ib, 11.00 |Consum pws. $37 Phill Pek <.0.. 45.7 | Vealers—Salable 250. Steady with last/COBt Bak ---. 404 pire ae 378 | week's low close; choice and prime! Cont COPS: . $3 Rea pines ts Insured” " and oo pe cor ft On ig 2 36.7 Reyn Met ..... 515 Sa Pan te et Ba ASK us + bs Bets apie i Selewny gt... 43 SS e: ii D Carag: re Se e 323 ett ig Dour or 5 ars ee . HOW TO ‘S0-i0.067 good tnd eholce 80-18 feeder | Dow chem °. 65.1 helt Ones: Bs : amd E Air L.. 35.1 —_— Jai: ey SAVE 20% st Kod. ...121 Socomy, o2enn46.7 Diabetes can be detected readily | $1 é"ktus’,.:: °$.g SoU Pac -......536 ON ‘YOUR be d & Mus... 32 sou Ry ........481 in an eye examination, according | E™*" Ft¢"*-- $5 soerry Rd ....19-4 Ho the Better Vision Institute, which |Ex-Cell-O _:::: 42.3 Std Brand ....51.4 INSURANCE eee BB . estimates that a third of all dia- food Mach .. 69 St4 Oli Ind ...s76 eed betes cases show up first in eye rree Bar... 968 Std Off Oh -..-54.2 One policy and one premium gives coverage on symptoms. jerdner Des 33 comes 5 -. GL Pee | fire, extended coverage, theft, burglary, liabil- seaXQTICE TO CONTRACTORS = lee... $8 Sun ON real be Feceived at sone Swift von. ity, and medical payments. the, votilee of Village Clerk, Village, of] Sen Mile *: %. sy urd 488 o'clock p.m. of September 29, 1958, at| Gen time’... a6 Tex @ Bul... 31.4 ve ones — the bids be pub Gen Tire .... 26.5 Textron ...... 14.7 pened and read aloud and the rates of/Gillette ..... 42 Thomp Pd .... 57.4 the repait to exiting deme net oom Sab Tren W AIP. 133 The quantities invoived in Goodyear |... 93.7 Transamer ... 28 INSURANCE: and REAL ESTATE = fori: Setamtnise'ss Sunteron gt Me hy 3 ay Be . Tiec rs tee. ee ey Ta oe £9 UNCOTWO .asee & Piling 12 ga. Guif Of] ....110.2 Un Carbide ...110.6 Phone FEderal 2-2326 60 un. i Timber Piling. dergh Choc -- $2 Un Poe. 302 2 cu 5, Concret . 1 oe 28. 49 Mount Clemens St. ’ Pontiac, Mich. 600 Ibs. Mesn and Re-Stee!, mi Cem BE Unit Aire ..... 68 | : . 12 ea. Concrete Flasn Boards. ag PoE ‘g5 ‘nit Fruit .... 48.2 Repair existing concrete walls. niand st! "ya.g Un Gas Cp... 3°.2 Hemove old concrete. mspir Con .. 336 US Lines ..... 597 (Advertisement) (Advertisement) poet ene structure. | inter ak a ae = = seo. “ 4 ich 405” US Steel ....... © |plans and specifications are on file at m ery... 33 US Tob ...+. oo 26.6 tops nsti ation ur arch caoearae Aerio Rt Baer 8d we at 1307 Pontiac State’ Bank Building |Int Pa ey Slee 38.6 — Michigan. Copies of decamants mt Shoe .... 33.7 West Un Tel .. 27.1 99 be obtained by depositing three| int Silver | 36.7 Weste A Bk .. 25.4 e to “ Dollars, with Johnson & Andersen ‘Inc, ms att & fa Rs Wests Bi... 84 ing Colon” =k Peer eS OT Ba Be 8 ; or documen Johns Man :: 45.2 * 48. will be refurided to bidd . Woolworth ... 48.6 New laxative discovery ose 3 essentials ae ae documents in good condition| Kelsey fear SE Tee a tee 33 ays after o enneco -.» 98. 2 for normal regularity. kc A certified dct heck or bank craft's pay- Rim Cik |. 63 Zenith Rad ..-1112 i. able ju t ft As you grow older, the internal mus- (1) Corona moisturizes dry, Wolverine Lake of Oak land County, STOCK AVERAGES cles of your colon wail also age, lose + bardened waste for easy passage with- (Michigan, or a satisfactory bid bond| (Compiled by The Associated Press) the strength that propels waste from out pain or strain. (2) Covonam's |Cxecuted by the bidder and » surcty com- 30 15 1560 the body. Stagnant bowel contents be- unequalled rebulking action helps re- ber "cent 15%) of the bid shall be sUb-|ier chance . _, aust Ralls Util Stocks come so dry and shrunken that they tone flabby colon muscles, (3) And |i! Meta tatch ona — Flas dered | Monday ..2610 1138 83.9 189.4 i fail to stimulate the urge to purge. CoLonaip acts gently, on the nerve Prev. day ....... 80.6 112.6 83.8 189.0 ‘ : ge t A ject to the conditions stipulated in the Relief, doctors say, lies in a new reflexes that stimulate the vital “mass instructions to bidd ers. ° . Seteablp ost oe lop Hie aes laxative principle. Uld-style bulks and = movement” of your lower colon. veloc Gat Oc all prevoenie onda waleg Tour OES 2878 1 729 172.7 moisteners may create gas, take 30r | COLONatD relieves even chronic defects in proposals is reserved by Vil-|igep hoe” *."''-35u4 Bg. 129 1566 4 days for relief. Old-style salts and constipation overnight; is so gentle it |'*ge, of ,Wolverine Lake. 1957 high ....... 280.0 134.7 ‘71.5 188.8 y creer ° 1987 OW .sssses. 226.0 782 66.2 150.9 drugs cramp and gripe the entire system. Of all laxatives, only new - CoLonam gives you its special 3-way relief that works only on the lower colon (area of constipation). was hospital proved safe even for ex- pectant mothers. And CoLonam won't interfere with absorption of vitamins or other food nutrients. Get CoLonaip today! Introductory size 43¢. Garr C. FINLAYSON, ier Village of Wolverine Lake. 297 Glengary Road Walled Lake, Michigan, JOHNSON & ANDERSON INC, Consulting Engineers. . Sept. 15, 22, "58 As oe Now’s the Time for Thrifty Buyers | WE MUST CLOSE OUT. au. 1958 * Huge eae for You Buicks! | * Limited nips ‘So Hurry! | OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Loke Ave. Phone FE 2-9101 BIDS WANTED wonied bids ales be publicly. a = = 10 a E. September 26, 1958. the Teitics of ‘he Oakland County Board, of auditors, 1 Lafayette, 4th Floor, Pon- tiac, Michigan, for the construction of| access roads in various locations within the Oakland County Service Center, s¢- gregating approximately 3800 lineal feet of roadway. A set of plans and specifications in- cluding proposal, contract and bond forms is on file at the office of the Construction Engineer, Mr. John Mc- Cormick 1260 West Desierank (Mainte- nance Building), Oakland County Service gaa and - the office of the consult: in enginee Services 2655 Stephenson awe Hazel Park. Michigan, sets of which may be obtained at the above mentioned loca- the deposit of Five Dollars for ieygior ri obtained. This de- e return (5%) of the amount bid. e Board of Auditors reserves the right to accept or County. p coy may be withdrawn for a riod a days after bid iP bere All Propossls eat bid bond Bresre = ered to the office of the Oal Board of Auditors, 1 yp gpd herp = A be: ptember 26. ra . sealed . PRO A 0. OAKLAND GouNTY SERVICE | CENTER.” wo bats contain- | cava e Oakland Veer gy Maa poe gi Consultant fe tephenson Highway at Fae 90.4 son, Hubert B, Young, Eunice L. My ..--%2 5! Dunigan, Carl Martin and Gerald 20.4/ Neeley, 2+ +0685 are ...:.30,|Columbus’ GM Workers > .::aa\End Five-Day Walkout Rt. tion and maintenance employes, 4 tives from the union and two from - Business Notes ’ said Edward T partner. Goud E. Zubalik, an employe of Community National Bank, was graduated recently froma summer course in banking at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin. ~enmet lives T. Bennett Jr., The RCA Service Company’s Pontiac branch at 2711 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Waterford Township, shared in an award of honor pre- sentéd to the company’s East Cen- tral Region division by the Na- througlt Saturday national conven- tion of the American National In- surance Co. in Denver, Colo., will be nine members of the Pontiac District office, as a reward for their sales record, Included in the group are Rex E. '3|Kelley, Ann Martin, Roberta J. Miller, Robert Ross, Cornell Wil- COLUMBUS, Ohio i — General the company negotiate further. At issue are production demands, lack of a contract, time and work Attending the Wednesday)’ Buick First, Sept. 19 The price-labeling law, or more formally the Automobile Informa- available to the car buyer. | To be printed on the stickers is the manufacturer’s suggested retail price, including excise tax .In price packing the list oles suggested by the manufacturer for the car and all its optional acces- Another factor in passage’ of the price -labeling legislation probably was the fantastic mer- “Price S tickers on New Co ars Expect Protests on Open Ditch Waterford Board Set to Hear Residents in Airport Road Area A delegation of Waterford Town- ship Board meeting, protesting the construction of an open ditch, x i& -® Residents living on the west side township to withhold payment until Weissman settles a $1,317 bill he owes the county. The county's bill is for black-top- ping repair work and new ditching studies —— by the —— chandising of recent years. This stances it was necessary for the construetion company to tear up the roads and the county later did the repair work, Faces Trial in. Holly on Charge of Arson IONIA, Mich. (UPI)—New insec- ticides which were. only to fight unwanted pests are’ blamed for © decline of 20,000 colonies in Michigan’s bee population during the past five years, The in- secticides have proved injurious to bees too, , involving the pital, Guth was burned less seri- Alumni Give to Smith NORTHAMPTON, Mass. (UPI)— gifts and bequests during the 12 oded|1260B West Blvd. b ously dragging Mosley away from }|the flames. Motion te ee ren teh t the Bloom- Ott nold's pat ibe at the toons: wil bola ® public Road, on the +. S ber inks, at 8:00 o'clock. a4 atone rame one-story lets e: ving 8 aes Plat Nok 3, ested on corner of r Road yan well Ave., 6, id To ge are requested _— ZON- Leonard, mother of said Petition age: hy been filed in this abo’ a — ae of said minor is Gependent — aw for na 2 port and that should under the eg A = of thus of the le of the ts i eee : Oakland He be _ Service Center, tiac in said Coun’ a September, Lae 7 the afternoon, and you are pes! com- manded to appear personally « make Smith College received $1,498,289 in| (seat) iA t ’ “ rears f Probate rue co oO om ELSIE J. VASeA 0, completed by the county on Vdor- months ending June 30, 19558, in- ‘te rt, Juvenile Division Sept. 15, ‘53. ark, d sad 1 Pi : nai 18, 18-17, 's8 - Fi ry dealers have said: ‘You can’t’ex- pect a man to buy a car immedi- ately just because He sees the full list price posted on the car he knows he can buy fer a lot less than that.” a Insecticides Kill Bees Death Nofice Card of Thanks 1 Help Wanted Male 6| Help Wanted Male 6 WE, WISH 70 rtd’ Foes SALESMAN NEEDED 4 bors is [SETS Sitti better | ements ar op <| Bee oer. ‘W. Adkins; son of Dewey ey sg: ~ We neeed 1 advertising. an opening in ¥- Agumn Selgved oon Fox. Oscar R. Merritt E.| stternoon 2h ye sort Tee. dear father of 1 Fox, Myrtle Deaver, Lola Green-| tember 17, from 12:30-to ay, See j Robert Dale Adkins; dear brother | 20! Harold C. Fox, and Raymond We want a neateap , hard- of Mrs. Calvin Smith, James Ken- | —=-—P°- Must be 16 years of age. working man who has the drive neth Adkins, Mrs. Raver Walker, RA sad efmpition to obtain m Mrs. 3 omen Le Lee and Chester pe and eympetay Apply in person to better than just « living. Y 1 be backed b trai beld Wednesday, “Sept. ett 3 ryarqmet, the Srey st; the tot BERT PALENER ie peeaeees Sees caper with Tom Malone officiating. |. UC'y, all i messages, | Circulation Department sonal help one finest Interment in Oak Hill Cemete cards, flowers and ot ae . . and largest — in the busi- seit esi he inusteat the | stance ‘helped. te ‘lente eur | THE PONTIAC PRESS | ™%: “st? 44a! roe corhees-Siple Punerel Home _torrow” Mary ‘Ford asd fami. Your rewards will be mmis- Tuesday _evenin, Fu Director 4 ‘ . sions paid weekly, year-end bonus: |BOYLE, het 1“ 1958, - neral rectors sation; e i om ~ ms clusive territory; plus incentive Be: beloved { husband of rs or. “A ae * A Steady Jc Job rewards for sales. ence -W. ; dear steady Write ion M The Roderick A. ,. Mrs. ! Gordon McCollum, a Neboks, Christopher &. and Brian FUNERAL HOME pei reference one goa mechan. Getlech-biarkiow Gos Jollet, i. -W. Boris: dear of, Mrs. may, atten, 31: Smith, Pupersi, service “willbe | om | geroMonee THINK! eg 2 S44 Rg | EGS to work? Pull Lars Rev. Willian Cc. of- D i hns eae Renault; & part time ois, ot Helatin Interment in Perry one son- Oo S used cars. at B 4 = Frank toe =< rE for Park. Mr. 7 lie in sta in Metropolitan ng- t the iple Funeral FUNERAL HOME benefits. somal sales force, See e. ple Puneral/ ‘Designed for Purefais™ _| or call y. E. Hodges, TRUCKERS : ’ Inc, in Birmin rulscham, 20 360 8, Wood- . we weer t| Voorhees-Siple| rsa 40 Charlotte St.; age 10, beloved p Canvaastns 6 Gl OWNER : weather" of dulees 4 Sull: Soer FUNERAL HOME modernization sa og & com : - sister of Mrs,. Harriett Albrough | Ambulance Service—Piane or Motor Fe. A248 ae telenhone eoticitors oo Noma i Sol ore sane OT ee aun orem | OPERATORS service will held Thursda ‘Have a car? Enjoy talking to WE HAVE Sept. 18, at 10 a.m. at St. i Cemetery Lots 5 = Excellent earnings oppor- : chael’s Church i —- ent in “ _ sultant. Comple “trainin caing with HAULING tae Rousry will be be W ei 3 GRAVE LOT IN WHITE CHAP-| check the first week. fesevinw og the Huntoon eral | 0h Garden of Religion. OA 83465.) Thursday & Friday. 1-4 p.m., » OAKLAND HILL M MEMORIAL GAR: Roosevelt Hotel-Mr. Guest |. R A in, or rm NTED. x |EVANS, SEPT. 14, 1958, MATILDA| Mount Garden, $60 per lot. FE i ant only, secured ee ke a oe Elizabeth, 469 Mt. Clemens St.;| _2-7349 after 4. leads hotter than ‘ave work for reefers, vans, and } age 68: "peloved. wife of Albert eanY iat. PARK CEMETERY, | come, est ov: prerese gs. We have steady runs for ans; dear ; - Soar a ix ye $100 “or or @ graves on, au Mr. Eari Chenowith will siso need trac only, or wii ‘ ) : ell trat {- Bran, te Ste Phase | Pena =| serene MORI OR| fe Ree ae Shins Sat McLeod, Mrs. Carl T see. 5, Lot ae ae 2 graves. No, 1, in = opportu truck or car in ie. Must have Orel Chambers, Carleton Cham- pace. Strs to earn mor commission, act te years’ experience bers; Mrs. Gerald Walsh, Mrs Fred sta Sales ee ee, Pee refe e 25 to 45. Carl Hitter and Harold Chambers. aa r} ¢ ers With Prod] See Mr. singer. 1 Y TRANS. wneral, service, wil be held | fiz cois, eye i yeast or il} Bi oe: core a Deke ae © Sentai cae fecs the’ Pare Geuren Pine | EXPERIE ny MA af , eee 3 3-8 Natarene with Rev. Ki ; for machine m & gene: MARRIED AN TO ee pe Hutchinson officiating. Interment farming. Reference required i ‘3s cow dairy. Wibite Chepel. Mrs, Sve oo _ Box Replies 3 citiaren iccsints C40h, ne |. Gree bgne eens tunities, Boral Home untlt Wednestes soon 2, 4, 8, 10, 11, 14, 15, fami “= present 106 ation. ao See ~~ — ime she will be taken 18, 25, 27, 28, 30, 32, 50, OND Wf ecu. A Nic. 7 ExPe- pues Pontiac Press Box No, 15. = FULTZ, |SEPT. 12, 1968, RONDA 60, 68, 74, 76, 86. TOM BOHR INC. MU. ¢1718. epting as applications. Aooly {os Auburn Ave. Auburn FLORIDA JOBS. ALL KINDS, EN- between 10 & 11:30 fo Het wlll me pg patent oe meet f olacnoegs eS WRITE a.m ‘ i Fastway Service, Daytona Beach. — serv? = on ‘held fternoon at TIONAL CONCERN HAS,OPEN. wie. oe Real Ys date taken “4 the Moore Cha Sparks- The Pontiac Press =" for moored man agé 30 of position Phone for appeint- % = rut Ps a. Interment s s a Rie be able % iam effec- ment te ent +110. B Eerry FOR WANT AD PERS ON, SEPT. 14. 1958, LARS R fain "given. Drawing aecomnt RAY not i Realtor seeped aeogad ae Meee | OVAL PE 28181 9) SEAS Sipe peers ro | WORE stating qua’ ee Birming han clean. aVon Ryden, Mrs. Frank Perna, — | RECEDED erg || Fromtemiotem |) Baus ROOD | ropa amt ans ais ‘@Xas i rother of Albin, Jons. Victor and All erro hould be re amb alified to Eric Person. Funeral ee will cn enemionte The NEED § PART TIME MEN sree ign chon ye a st. be, at be held Wednesday, Sept. 1 Press assumes no resnon- ou work Saturdays, eve- ing nertence nt poe he — | Eevee ai seen eat: | | atin, lor rar Somer || lee? had owen our] Wh Hey aati, etn son officiating, Interment in Oak | eagle! nee of the Bap wee —— b dbmon f oe igh Pree oe rivine ful Particiars ae marr ie Hii Cemetery. Mr. Fersm gill |] insertion ef the savertise Chester Shoes, Dept. Gi0i6, Brock- single Be tyes neral Home. ss ent, which han bern. ren. | _ton, Mass. Give. telephone. number. SAGO, SEPT, Te DAVEE | | orgy, cements | |" Feat gia eto Help Mcteed Rooms, 7 '. * =: le A Begemeny; Gig ag can oie: we a yh day, Til train, bEApTY asae ak tis Wangtnn. | Bl See des Bar| ee seus vaxeer rs | OG ra Said James; Donald, Pa’ ‘omas, Closing time for sdvertise Earn rey $40 Margaret and Barbars Sagaman ls Dusiness. ts per pa ee tire, Gongue! Deming) deat | | Reyer ‘Ghen toraar. angie ee gees Np ‘niece. Sie . Tuesday, fe 12 o'e! noon need man r are Boot. ta, oh ie bam treme Bk y previous to wubiicstion. at To Saarastes irae oy ate Gate tait Gertrude, Dears mene te ron p gh Sng ent Want Ads may "Gentleman with : sense of humor. a 3 Mr. Sagamang will lie In state at | § B¢ cancelled up to 9:30 a.m. time, er salary us ne Melvin A ut Puneral jd yond of publication after PLEASANT ourpoor RK FOR | . Lent lady Write enced, Tp Home where recitation of the | ; en with sales ability. Possibility Fon” ul be this evening 8) t oash WANT AD RATED —" employment ee ee telep . eT a ae DAVID ting Salary, Reputable firm, Do James, 6831 Saline Waterford: Lines 1-Day §-Daye » Salary ng Car Allowance not apply Tt ng xperienead’ in age 33; beloved husband of Mrs. 2 61.50 bots Ol, 1-6833. oan Williams: beloved son of 3 (1.80 NCED TYP: Mrs. Jobn (Mildred) Ring. sr.; 4 = 1.80 Circulati lee work, age 21-35, f dear father of Denise Williams: $s 33 AC PRES Dept. ee he’ dnocenn - “| gear brother of Floyd end Daniel § . PONTIAC PR ition. Some simp! Chacon, ‘Punerelcrvengemests | $ See miveoeraph helpful but Fiera home tM” Geotabew | fn sHORT_O r Five day rs ~ Drayton Plat pee 2206 8. Telegraph. ea roe whe ‘é . ! : f / : . : . : Lys . Ee ; h ; ey: AY Aa ATED ONE - THE PONTIAC PRESS MoNDaY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 struct ulldin | By Jay Alan| Wanted Real Estate 32A Rent Hi 7 ” Rent Apts. Furnished 33 Rent A nfurn ) Houses, Services pts. U ished 34 R P opular Pia no Harmon . Pvt lessons core Y | Picking! Piee eotimates, FH 6463 am cuilgren, : WANTED: LOTs WI _ and - TH ” BEWER : ’ 4-0612 sie: _@. > Wulams. FF z : ROOMS, EERO West, | SID ae. AND * T ’ Et } WASTED: IMMEDIATELY. "hd tnd lock off Ma iat REBT .— eas ae fo oe aE At : Wisner ona ly. furnished. Auto. nat ond bet | Coll belore . ere gy LEVISION | ited seaieels Paul M . ‘J cet Real Fat water. seen to. b - ure #32 W, Huroh __preolsted, Re = os ae eee oe “Sitaram arr | WOMEN - AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. UP- . 3 8, 3 roo HOURS .- st, ha eae 9 Wale BROS.” LAND CONTRACT | _satbetuie, torte, — © "ral soos Bite ty. ALL UTILITINS. MODERN 2 RM. _ til 9: Sun. 10 “til § HOME — EQUITY apts. A ‘ se : to heat, e) 5. QUITY. | Blesisregas dey ae wk, EXCITING - Vy ae bonera com] name verona TUOMAS MAShEC AND GR | permet tp te & board me exe for| OPPORTUNITIES on, : OAKLAND venve Ye bl t n mepens ane, transporte. Riis wets a Boro executive for we Wained tal ary Pat Leo PE >7033 , (alan fn } fe { Me Ale PE 56-0441 Big wee. ule yet = res Front mer Children cn es ADINS, CAPABLE OF BEING se _tachnietnns. 60m cay ROOF REPAIRS ’ Aa Pris Cree rear windows let cool ver Baas Prasase ro BENG] ‘sien and oters is rr eng of eave OOF R PAIRS (ALU Aa aie HAVE CASH WILL | kifee _ APARTMENT, FRE commer. Nice |i p PE 54-6334 START YOUR CAREER NOW TRENCING, - 2. TRAVEL BACHEL Ce aaerts aie ‘ad roms and AE Bongp on mally of pred Helga! ar | septic, tanks. “field « NG. won We will travel to se ea, Mn Ait utiles fu bat Lark Le ye tee Red. Gur nationwide tain pro We DIG BASEMENT oe Your nome, and fs ee) ee ee. at sien | sae fires at #8) Ric m has helped hunc rs UND . act or acr 1 mo. nour_ in ‘anves| five road, fp fuceeas mgee, alms Sone a hE work. FE | Yy yy , Wij)? ; serine. ore Wminus | FURNISHED LOVELY 2 BEDRM. Rent Houses Furnished 35 wt tre ace at ees Kol a fogs Seng ag Mea eee Yl Ve <" “a C R EE, Broker tltchen, fe, ba una moderti |) BEDROOM, NICELY =| Saltese ee . Call Hol — y arranging easy budget Business Se . * §09 Elizabeth Lake Rd, _ oil furnace. { $75 mo. MA oa. ished. ad “tiene. YF TRS; A haat e after 6 mai ~ rvices 33 WF thy ya) 2R Ct © Pe 44921 | Lor, PRIVILEGES. eae HA. |) On ieee ee NEAR CATH: wey done On WATE ush* reply today for full A-] JANITOR, PORTER = N We) WAR i} pu ‘ ) p 2 ges R CAT | Oe edrooms. ail WATKING LAKE. mation to: ll infor-| taker, A-1 Ref PORT AL FE (ous. i Vy 4 yi ! Rent Apts, Furnished 33 ere ob bona 3 AND BATH. | 2 > aEbasear rent or lease with of tonto ey : sea ee tee pee one rae a yo owar our | pay ” port, Adults. "ons 1043; nr, ait-| home on Bald Woes ny gg Ac COMPTON i month. : r mew ose ase | BRICSS that of last 18T FLOOR, 4 RMS, & BATH, ONTIAC month. GR 43010 after 6 a| 3441 or PE IN ‘ NS, OR : TELEVISION DIVISION North he «co Call FE "s-1917 for free monthly. Lake Orio Orion. FE 2-06 ng CLEAN FONTIAC LAKE 3 BEDROOM HOM. ta, | PARTLY fue FO Schools, Dept. Dept.” SION, Nort —_ ates. ; i BEDRM ace = Clean furniahed apts. Se ce Lake $80 mo. MO BON. 7 Salemi pote Sean ae : Views” Nomameker repaired , eh ing ll Bg q-15 = SS BEY cd welcome Ears + Hg i "Motel, OR 3-4580. per we |” 3 ennee ve MARE ORS oe. oy | : marital, status ped aueh | MAME ... 50 soe tee see oe —— office. General Printing & AP Wve setters Amy Plea Jere saredice FE .2-8756 or FE| KITCHENETTE APT. ON 13 as MY_3-2863. —. fate? ac re: o one iv i] . “2 io a L AKI ae REPINED TAB (iY 10, Seo Pe ADDRESS 00... ..et ecco Leveeaes | ees aa Lee FOR MEN. NICE = bowl eg gs ya pee #508 MA” 4230 c ee RENT W WI Viti is) ; yeiene cITy ... rance, Parking close eck for 1 OF 3 persons LOOR, 4 a ably someone wotects reter- vee tee « AGE v2. vee We service all makes Lo ple as . in FE 45 Sere & up, $17.50 | 3rd floor, close in, of Ea bedrm, .. TON my Mie Tor sappawument, STATE ... ... ... PHONE eit, Foun washers. 30 yrs. I know you shoilldn’t repeat gossip—but what else can Mises BEDRM, PARTLY FUR- cee 7 si 3 Highlebd Re) 3 gO washer 3 SFORN, OAS | Fae hart ould” nen a as ss een * a ce * a “ ” @ ky (o: * @ RELIABLE WHITE LADY FOR _HOURS I WORK: FROM_.. TO ne Lath. FE_ 2-402) you do with it?” RM. ra iaTCHENE OR_3-9105 washing, covune: fret a BATH, aes: 3330 8. brooks Rd. ‘Auburn ue nee Theta * WOULD LIKE TO HEAR FROM PHALT PAVING ent, a ETTE, PVT. xt rE sou + “Park Pisce CK RANCH home. 3,4 3ecreom . e RELIABLE WOMAN TO CARE train to overhaw =. bd can riveways, poe Television Service 22 Ww 1 3 aa APT, ALL 355 E. Blvd. 8. ONT. CLEAN. ats ltra-modern new fur- ster 3-400, on, a for 2 small childre: conditioning, beating and refrig- Free estimates ots, & etc. ere ng | td. Miscellaneous 28 util furns soft water, well heat- | ORTONVIL re. TV set and washer in- | SMAL ore. tage r out. Drayton mpg thes : — if ment, Lowel Abin MA 5-1206. re on br. service.| ALL TV SERVICE Ca'.Le | ed. 236 Judson, , eat- | Clean Le | UPPER. FL x Tr cluded, Quick possession. Call for| FE 0908 af iter 4 p-m — c i" Z a. P . re Ol Seeds te emmet coe willing to] wre’ ASPHALT PAVING —. hi ecBore day OF dig a BIULDING FOR WARE- Arteactivs PLAYGROUND ee eine erren L HOUSE 3 ROOMS. interes ENOGRAPHER For FREE present “occupation. Free evimetes, FE €1i10 or FE AS els turing. “s'AYceling “double truck Ae ust tuccined 3 mode Lota Age hig AND | 25 i awy REALS month, Fe ps" <= resting position, 40 itie —— write Util- AVON-TROY CARPET CLEANERS BEARDSLEY F- DAY” SERVICE, eo chain fall é t e truck} bath apt. Wash rooms &{ furn, Coug oned, all utilities DIXIE HWY. _FE 44661 i | Hare e perachas ist ce | Sar on BF DP PES | ges et tA oy al |e Tolls | NE € noon Lage 70 vom | TO Lake Cottages. 364 : r home. Free pi -| BOTTLED GA ke, FE 45203 PE: Fr AR pickup and de- “O RIOHY Ty SERVICE 8 cord WA : RM. FURN. HO FURNISHED, x THURS Ww ork Wanted Male 10 volts Free stim sien | moth DAY Fe a 70 SERVICH heater, Write Pontiac Press TER| i9T FLOOR, 3 RMS, & BATH WATERFORD. | (2 ROOMS AND | 5 -- Bretsered 6 Ry eet a 70837 SUITABLE FOR 2. “ be jeaners. OLI ae i. mE 27425. | | __3-2251 . ROOM FURN, HOUSE, $45 RN, AGE cleaning. plant. Stead Day |“) CARPERTER WORE. Rod TRAILER SIZ 1 RM, KITCHENETTE asl 200M aah, a5 A FAR ROUND. “el . Steady, Doug NEW~ PORRITTS E Ol HEATER x - ap NO! W J ROOMS AND BATH (50 MONTH, ve 8._Wood lat] cVaILABL@— ROW CARPENTER Bout WIGHT SERVICE ~ | _DUotherm. OR_ 31023 | end, "Ve =e ATERFORD APTS. |* & N Wa: 4 8 Woodward Bim. ivalLaslw Ww tre iG AND LEVELING and TV. FE $5770, __ | WTD.: ry Bie, FS 32%. 3 aR BATH, $50 MONTH "96 Ren TO PREP. : CARPENTE e cutting and removing FE —BUNNAN HONING MA-| ! GIRL TO cn tig $75 onth, nes Ba. r Rent. oaint 37 meals ARE cabinet 2-87 F chine, SHARE ATTR. ROOMS ail od man’ coavaleecing from: bro- pair D . es Spal PE rect 00M - ans SRE Typewriter Service 22A inet mige, machinery. oho iL it. Sore rE iE 29-0663. ACTIVE WH oR, TE BROS. i 7 an ay ax. aA a CLE poe TN dah da, BE ARGE ROO! “are elfar, : Fiston. ‘OR 3 aie Mutora, "Go name nights An agg tnt ee oe Free est No obligation, FE 21 etic, | TYPEWRITERS A ND WANTED: GOOD. CLEAN, USED Pet eat as STOMENETTE | oon Ever th ee bee wi MA Se. we hie) BM Saris repairs, additions.| Chimney - Furna Wet er ggg A‘nxpert Call FEY 8-085 peal small dog’ kennel | Clean Staab bee TB MILE R an sone ut | _sonvenlences a re 2 = ce Wor eral Printing, and es Sar RITCHIE ath. FE 8-1370, | Rent one es ie rps Bayise Pins | ha pevegl pone nsstnnnee Be summer toten or a ctimegre | oe Ww. Lawrence, Te Seana ES oa os vera 3 ree hoo! age CARE OF BABY | Pe Fe ew ne: Be ca replace, water Upholstering 23 ___Wanted to Rent 29 $45 no. OR: a ity oe oa Ma-| 1 BEDROOM AP OP amt Cres MAKE erator cleanin 045 _mo. OR -3-4315 0. ._ 130 : tent Lene va| tape Kitcwens © epectalty PE a gone nelle specialists, | EAKLE'S CU 2 OR 3. BEDROOM HOUSE OR |’ bath 0 Fe Sand PVT. | F BEDROOM LOWER PE «ss. bef rs Con for estimates| 1 STOM UPHOLSTER- lower Apt, West Side — R bath, 2 employed girl .|2 BEDROOM LOW r \ CARPENTER WANTS @MALL ore rexular price or cot aE | 3-364 8174 Cooley Lake Rd paves Set, WO cca Rabereness| | nramctx toe ee ot couple | rage. $60 ch wire Ga.| recre , ek beat VELL GROOMED Area SMALE CARPET REPATRING._REWEIY. 334 5 UPHOLSTERING — EM | _FE_ 03064. eferences.| _ Alberta. Ap ee 3 ROOM Upper. ‘hiv, entrance bathe, 3 cae perege, 15 replaces. EXP MAN WITH : gn AIRING, SEWwaAY: ae =I 3 OR 4 ROOMS UNFURNISHE 2 RMS AND BATH WITH PVT. = KERN INC. — Fash ion wants B painting insid te g, restretching. OL FE 5-8886| apt. or house, FE 5-1381. D = = welcome, $12 per week. 5 REDROOM REFRIGERATOR, Paper banging, wall washin ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE. LANDLO®: 7 _RMS._& BATE phan cma assist ne. wii ic M SER DS! 9 RMS. (— WEST SIDE. electric stove . Depart ag Se ae ee ere —am ERE |__Lost & Found 24 |"tni@Bint "an "tei tes] Feo ot Ria, SERA | Sate ta te ae ae ALL C@EANING, PAINTING. : ranges, T ROOM APT. ADULTS, 344 W. we ment | sau Shayass, Fee Pinrieed o,f, Nebo, FE 6.008, 2g PLU SPARAEEET — FE | xey canoizebets he. "dt aud le | pany Tra Brain Prin Head = ton pas D006) UCK, WILL DO it | OAKLAND APPLIAN ERVICE “onien LIGHT BROWN WALLET.| MIDDLE AGED 3 AW FE ~ ties, Weare accepted MA jTiLi-| to do vatows, Near ba —. WTERTOR AN 1. We service all makes a Soashota Ss nts is all T want back, Vicin-| room & beara ta a WANTS 7 ROO Ls 1081. | Cheap. He calls after 5 i ' MUST BE GOOD BAI. tag. Pree eat Reas. MTOR saat econditioned. apt hanean tr gt downtown Ponte war pontiac Frese. Box we Fisher Body. iy. 618 wek. OR 3-7206, 1308. Sreince ta y time. 7X znd. Sa SON, APPLY, TUESD ES PER- 152 ot OR 38117, _ Kes, sgonizggned Speuances for) Lose T SEPTER BER In ANT TO RENT 1 CAR GARAGE LARGE R A TROOM CLOSE IN” NEWLY DEC. SON, APPLY TUESDAY, § AM. MIDDLEAGED COUPLE TO MAN PLASTERING - NEW OR REP Pointer, white cae FEMace in Pontiac or Auburn RAGE | quiet BROOME, SisciENe, ROOM. CLOSE IX: ¥ DEC. ike spt _bulleins: UF Teaco | Tare sesrameed Te byt Ogos oe a ood. Inquire $5) a week. 51 Fenele eee te W WANTS WORK, CEM SAWS MACHINE Fi ANS WALLET CONTAIN- ICE LARGE ROOM A SUPPER A Paver a 3 EOE, or block small ENT | Maniey L: LED ing important Share Liv Tage, pvt. Gy on TS: 2. +BSEDRMS “7< r ant Co. a cm ceed all jobs. Call after Dre mar = r Bagley St =. retary all to owner a8 seine Rcaataaranead ; roe bath & ent, Close in| [ration oeartfncoin Sr a 4 . : : MAN wa ‘NTS WORK aking, Tail -_FE_ 45821. PLE 4 OR MS, NICE FU A 00 Buclid sire : Miracle Mile | ursretics Tak ay | _Taloring 16| "255, Sroees serra | Se at em | ee ee ee | ee el Shopping Center OR 31929 cay Kind, | 41, KINDS OF ALTERATIONS Reward. PE 24 right eye.| OTK. (hao ater ee |? 7 AND 3M. U eM oan ____| > sranse, baults. “Baga oe ae” Bs WIDOW Work Wanted Female 11 | ~ or. ERICSON. CUSTOM dete “TAR AND, waite Bias WANTED 92 LADIES TO SHARE geet eee RN. |3 RMS. & BATH OUTIL. “Iie OAK OAK ite furn, ma HO [acta OR MEN WITHOUT 7m 11 lor. alterations ne w lll ge Sieh or 3438 Auburn Hgts FE noms. Phone after § p.m. FE| _ Caretaker, Steinbaugh' Ct. See 7 ‘Ave. No children. FE 4-0621. wt new family obligation. ear necessary.|! DAY, IRONING. SER ae thop’ PE. #se11, | LOST: PARAKEET, AQU aT T LARGE ROOM PM. APT. BATH NEAR BUS: Ls CARE Dey, otis are © EGSMAKING. TAILORING. Alp ery ot Nesme Dr. Be ages | Wid. © State oa, i os * Goo ing ontr 10 es Pa ones “eae a Pa Far EXTRA Some ben eat Mors tr| bushel. Fm S1¢T1. SERVICE. $3 ations. Drapes, Bere as | LOST Bt PE 2-167. . Contracts, Mtgs, 32)? on ain a & GARAGE. $60 MO sien “aN eo ee Fee NEWT BED: OTE Pueais. 14. Me __bome_than e 6-1471. = 4 : BLACK & TE BEA- ius utilities, 3 NEW om oT Bes id gr WOMEN WANT WAL ORFSSMAKING TAN ORING “ED ES ACK & WHITE, BEA-| CASH Wel a5e0 Disie Hwy. _Wiher Uk. “Ginveson — ROMS, MD BATH, 690A] [°°C" aay” 30th Len Avail. Oct ag EITHE, = oe week. et ‘housework, 1 day rewaeanae a ott s tei, | 2 —— Mer eel” “FE| fon, Plains. Child's pet. Call a anWelt) 4540 Dizie Hwy: | * sundry frun. Near Pont ND * coe UPPER WitH TILED en oe. Be. Mt. Clemens] aioe rs AND . a DO run, Near Pontiac loors, very cl BL menlinnctiaoen tesa and Opdyke. FE 5-058. ae up an iat aie Furniture Refinishing 16A eh TIGER 7 HOR CAT {SHORT BAIR. | - Ciark fea! state. 23 TANTED chet FE ean ze High heat ind’ et a modern. Auto. BiasS. BRAN Be HOUSE, ADULT RED DESIRES LIGHT ssing ‘since August 4-6492 or FE 44813. ROOM ae Beet. SMALL HOME 1 -BEDROOW, housework or care of 1 FURNITURE +167 gust 25th, Cail) _ Mr, Clark. ‘Ask for | ———.°!_B,_Cass_Ave 3 BEDROOM Me, 2 REFINISHING, dee 3 7 ROO N,_Cass Ave, _ APT. HEAT Hor| fenced grounds, bus 4 Need rr ren, Waitress pecliote types, free estimates, FE 4-7904. MS AND KITCHENETT . — water, reftig.. ‘sto¥ ities suppl line. All util- ROU { ¢ pvt. en ‘Ki, e, turn. ied. Neat, WAITE'S [sear saree =| Carden Plowing _168 “abies ESwpptes a| CASH | Eid tah St) fy elie Gaya | romeo caes | eC eee, —_Balds Ave PAINT ~ | ™T 32-6102. 4 ROOMS AND 2 STO ow USE. COM- aye Day or Week. NEED __ |RRONTNOS. Wy busut PICKUP CUSTOM PLOW, DRAG, & LIGHT Ane OF RUMOR Tackevetoes | BUzeT? UNLIMITED 7 ROOMS AND BATH. EVERY- eed turn, Palm Vita Cac aedeieenes 2, . PART & FU aver. OR 3-197. _grading. Anywhere, OR 3 T | Book Store. 15 E Leer enstose | new land oot for seasoned and| No child od. eneee. Bane burn. FE 2-6859. _ Fae LAKE SALE ULL TIME age $2.50 BUSHEL. 671 E. LAWN ROTO-TILLING. 315 E. =—— Hensonad ge ag grove. ren or @rinkers. 13 Fats: | * ‘a & BATH UPPER. FE cr: - sallagamma . Em poeta be 13 og th — _Wilson. PE | 2-6920. 2 Le “an e@x- uy SLADIES iRONINGS DONE, 63 BU LOT MOWING. LAWN GRADING Notices & Personals 25, *' — a a * fare ed ee” chia telean, {ROOMS UNFURNISHED APART: | YEAR If bf ou have retaili iomne dene FE_ +4035. “ioe Nereling, FE Co AEROTR: — 5143 Case Ft ingelvitle SE s.1027 eee: _Pe ssa — po - — ing ex- i§ WANTED, OR 3-1705, NY EDS - | TED MeCULL TAND'3 oF aes | # RMB. perience, why not come to a2 3:30 pa 05, Laundry Service 18} preg KNAPP SHOES Pee MeCULLOUGE, REALTOR parking space. LAPIS. QUIET. | ° ver POLL BATH NR. SiL- peat ii the PERSONNEL DEPT. neat PES aE FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY, SERV. AUCTIONEER va ‘ents Willing and Able |" 7 AND 3 ROOM APrs wean |* ROOMS. LOWER CARETAEER Unfarn. and discuss the opportuni- ADY WANTS GENERAL HOUSE. a a = tke fo sell fo oD act for fou, MADI cuuract, Gall Realtor Parti Madison, Je igh, &00 Robinwoed | 7 ROOM Diag. FE 22008. | Nove bedrsoma’ Punt ties Waite’s has to offer.|"housework or 1 BABYSITTING. CACe CORTAING. PLATW OR RUF. or ‘Maple 60006, Die B-ised | - Per sod. f Bartridge, 7 MALE ROOMS OR ET FLOOR turn, Colored’ only, FE ae" heat garage. #85, | econ «kone = _Tstadey Phove ‘PE 3801. inv oTRL IRL OR | With byt “bath R | 7S COPE ST UN PONTIAC. $e th "in oe _ tate a 1. ings friendly sdvt riser phone FE C A$H a bam a 8p. 3000 Joslyn | | Parity _durnished., Double ers = help with child houseelean, also week. ‘Transportation evening (of ping 18A | secteY EPECIALA- COLD WAVE. WE NEED a, = 0714. welcome, Md b children . 7 tion needed. Co y i es aR —“—Moaeu£, See ee cee: on Same | alas Gomi Oo on ma | Sit, fommlete. Darekar” ee LAND CONTRACTS LORIA ‘APTS town, E side. Child Hel 4elp W ™ IRA PHING TYPING 8EC wee and trimming Get our bid. ee = ‘ 180 ©, Huron Mair tas a Fe 4-8362 or hg we ok s month rE Edward M. Pe Real ARE Kz Robeivn. os orrice wom owe OF a) = “pnee for- eve we eion Vicwals wr iboae bee 2 RMS., UTILITIES PA re su _feor Fire, Duplex apt. in ‘pepe reo ole : ou WANTINO WORK SMALL OFFICE ery budget. Virginia DDEN FEES to downtowm. On . CLOSE oF ooking, OR| __Preferred, FE He ‘remove, cabling | Ms arrel operators, Permanant welcome ous stop. Baby |5 RMS. UPPER, TILE t _ ‘ou don’t find it? PRACTICAL NURSE, HOSPITAL ht tg "Sie $6.50 up; shampoo and set, 50 rd: . $13 & $15. 65 E. How- furnace. G BATH, GAs re apr wes 3 Ses ek whereas: PR ceues LAWN BUILD rae Bio's! Pm 518 Te ent to Do- Soa Harger Co. lrea se of PE 5-1600. Hospital, Adults” only PE 2.1822. 3 8 to 19 a.m ask Fepair and maintenance, Pree es: | COLD WAVE = SPECIAL: a. eae | “AE 33_W._ HURON CON | out bath M BRICK APART |° CUP tarace, Private ent FLOOR, Ruta El. UBINESS YOUR eee nak bedek Deivees ice, FE 4-6510 scope Serv-| poo & set. $1.40: MAH. Strle-Ri = | CARS opiigation Call PE" 44526 01 DS Sm ecehinie tareied. Bea Private entrance, 67 |? ; own hou se a » Biers on GOMPLETE LAWN BUILDING, Williams Lake R 731 = Ask tor Ik gana, acute 32 Au ubara, alles fa reer. |i ache 42. pm he mine ber br Adult 0 03 | COMPLETE LAWN | BUILDING: car NouiE e Wideman.|2 RMS. 1ST FLOOR, PVT. E RM. CLEAN MODERN BRICE ne a sor entice fealty, oe +4 = | leveling. Gagne. seeding. 40d)? sea. as. chu LD FARM Hous SMITH-WIDEMAN |3 ‘ ooh 16 Fierenee FE ies, 5 =) 2 : comm, : urch moved or BATH, GARAGE. EE c i @ unnec.| da: 3| drive &| rased. Sealed bids. Will REA _util, Pvt. ent. E. 5 ROOMS AND BATH. Free ie, Me, MNS ams, RSE DOES | fae ch rer geen, Ee tat “ol oth sau Pi ba Rowe ec | BE ET UNEP ALE OP Employment Agencies i _. i S amp) Sees wae an o Sym 34508. | OM | Sater Adulte, BE 4 OMe furn, ‘or ‘rent ab 289 8A| WASHING, & TRONINGS removal. Pb. FE 66503 or OR Right tp reject all bids reserved.| CASH Ht ee ee BRIT PE 45067. E. Blvd, 8. 2 ; men or CANDScAPING BODDING SEED | . a CTIV $ ROOMS. LOVELY. HEATED EVE (Hoe family, Reas. OR | LANDSC. ome aEES |. Ey BEAUTY 1S AVAILABLE FOR LAND CON. entrance, | priv. bath, FE Ae B newly arcorsted CY HEATED. Fy LYN WASHING AND IRON REA. i “ain top, Free estimates, ERYONE’S DUTY | ¥° Spiigation CALL 7 RooMs-PVT_ ENT: estas on alba | EDWARD TE a up and deliver, | = morte. OR 32163 dirt He manne face, peeling. & Swe Swe- = furn, FE Sah a eke: GenaedLeten weet. al wi} re S iLL Cake VOR SMALE ANDSCAPING SEEDING AND een te A >more: . TC NEWLY DEG 4 Bil & BATH. |” ence. Bide. — nights, “ Flor. ~_ ‘eniuehy Milue erase deliv. E22 Et iat . O Nson chi “gore ea ite. 368 /Ore cigar i Fle rE tea a AUR REE ae qa. : ing with ;|D ——s om” chard Lake , ~ 18ST FLOOR 3 SAL GIRLS |WOMAN WILt. CaRF FOR SMAIA. he AR igh — a I are ee MAID SUPPLIES MRS. acaiah 42533 |? RMS 2 BLOCKS children welcome, north Bh peveg M.| if desired. Dra: e : poy yg ecece. 178) 3-978. Drayton Plains area. ice. 2 anytime, eo oo Gert | are Sotibe FE 3-7293 1704 8 Telegrauh Mind "_Reas, OR 3 KS FROM TOWN. | epee ere: 4-7581 or FE 1.0000 erty 90-4635. yton aia a5 ; a : y a! LYSIS es N | Dee RECESTIONIBT......, Bullding Servi Semian BUUE, SoD. sea ise) On Laon vaseerme | TMMEDIATE. |,“etone ‘80 ESE VSR | so PLEASANT FoR COUPLE |? ENP SSai NUT MEAS TAKE Sana saree Ss : 200| <a sanD a mek ew ce =—12 a! Se ee eh ae “CH ARLES HESTER | A I N 3 Rocks AND. “BATH. CLEA EAN. po hg my a rE S athe. —~pai. | 3 BEDROOM 1 BRICE FC FULL Base. | plum dust re ome Hs FE 5-3722 LAWN BUILT. FINISH CT O 45976. nee, low rent. FE) “PRA ae } , Clarkston. Children ee "lose to in- * Pon. Hardwood Fioor, Serv rading Backfield to AIR _ CUSHIONED SHOES : NKELIN APTS. e. OR 3-684i. schools, » soll, FE| ©&._5_™ MILE . a Close to downtow . $300 35 iy COMPLETE ETE BOWDING. saRV- Fins DAINTY i X49en | OM Any good jand contract. New Pe 3 RMS. PVT. BATH «| ‘¢'.,80¢ transportation. Phese sil: * Sungale down, terme. Fis ‘ ; Geely wore, Pe ees ~ Moving & T eee ns a 9 rao Ohne |p conten = est_side FE 04623 issn Sree apte, with private Reese So DOWN as g & Trucking 19 gleeinee aie Wales, istactory inspection of, property 7 ROOMS. UTIL, “AND LAUNDRY oe economical, attractive | fs ‘call prcgupeney..,$100 per! S,foRe Seas tom Take ¢ “ come. 285 Whitte- ts eae no cost! aad ety. 22-5452. _ | pre N A-1 LIGHT HAUL! FAT FOLKs K.L. mere. 7 SP ss00Tf tT! DR tderpianing." Also. mason. ve re Tene Fa eos you ae weight ar ow | 2338 fem he Realtor ; ROOM, CLEAN.) MODERN. NICE gow ap bel cool I breese ese ventilation. ; 3 BEDROOM LAKEF RONT, YEAR waraity "5 DRAYTON PLAINS Vie ; pa e eas: & ed i rated. and w ern, R th shout ba nome wa. Electric motors. AAA Floor Sanding ‘| Reasonable eT RV geen en ee bs’ % 33 aocaie B rE 336 cas Adults Se ree ae ners . ¥ REPL, BO SMA sy " Gatling = tts Reasonable FE 6058 — FE 22000) Siebel me very minu : — PRIVATE ENTRAN per mo. including heat, hot" nt OWNER, 5 BEDRM, BRICK, CAN t REORN BRICK CaN vocaTtonat, counsetina [© BOD BILLS = AAI Reduced Rates our sate, cue reluding, Be ond, bath. Adsite. 400 “Man Gold _waier. K. Banal | 5 144 E. Howard. ER, Mt, = : mn i 7 “ r luc . : - a) Sil COMMUNITY (BANK. BLDO. A-A A TRENCHING ae ea FE 443i Sat Bow TO abpolament Boke Aba gven town our | 88 Center St BATH: | HEATED" APT elena ae Y basement,” Central ! 54-0886 te Field, OR 3-6068, | FAMILY MAN ifAL - oer AND = HEATED APT. CLOSE TO HIGH it, $85 month. EM Gunite oe A & B TRENCHING | #antme-§ er NEEDS, TOUT | Nezmmadete fon Yor oanausts snd Liveinds ON Reb thes OF | hs a ae a 5 meio Bone Ure : Must be ened “cae & girl 2090, Fe eh water tines Meld tile | Your once Po Bisw ena ME A og led ren erion Asphalt | LAND ¢ é NTRACTS AND BaUL > seemed: AT in om Ce San ie ‘murphy bed, or tn-door | —-1867_after 4 pi MAple rent, | brie Br ape) eer mtnoveh ba JIMS MOVING & /TRUCKI Boon, bet, 18 amt 18 © . WAITIN 3 ae 3 Lk. PE 53160. | [atindry facilities, ii Retrigerator. ; i s- UTILITY: Hox | reoms. 13 roathe, % 4. "406 ob eary Midwest Employment floo S ae WORK. veheaper. rE 5-1348, fr =o: J. y. "TOLL RE ALTY Pyt, bath & HEATED APT.| _FE #-8901 iat st class pepe. land 1 block ak opane, _ hear, State Bank Bide. El able Ji crives. & eialty. Reason- LIGHT, TRUCKING aay Kind In Debt? 2536 DIXIE HWY, 801 27 "pathdaies rE. i. Fishers. “H OLLY ante Mrs. ; SeoneS re bs a a ot Oar i | aad even, oven, atlached rage. oy Be eee eee | LE 23575 J ROOMS roe ile BATHS, | Hy OW sre er i Instructions 9| ‘Brick. & block. Licensed & bond: iiGHT AND HEAVY TRO It you are having srouble meeting WE NEED ROOMS, AND BATH. BVT.) Furnished of poe Apts. $162 _per_mo. Ma S46. BY ow "OWNER, J REDRM BRICE. | ane ne? tater es sas etd baka em eiegere | Lome ete mea ng ec | Be NE NEED | ringoiraPre ca ¥r pare | it ®. Hows a Fe rtd a oe tenn " sone Rear) kt Bod tt —sarson_wome | ORWRTES ARTS ED zwei FE 4 een ees ed | wil be setected. tm en| Fireplaces ‘re MASON WORK. | ONWAN CL: Bate ‘Band Bid if FES Pontisc| SASONED LAND CONTRACTS. | dren, Seat ~ INDIAN. VILI Vite Ce Maen Ba 71 | _shopping center. Terms, OR 34 & ol Sere eee io Specie On | ae tee t charge 8 eat |i ci gout | Beara IRE Sate | FB cil TE Seer no enc| ql NDIAN VILLAGE ||" gaat = hoe Ot] | PE ag ® | tions as Airline Secre Iny, TYPE _OF HOUSE PLANS A fuie © with x. . HAYDEN, NO 0 J ROOMS NEWLY ND BATH, ALL | _MAple ntiac, Call basemen divided : tary, ’ Hostess, Re ere wate work, TON TRUCK| EM 3-4039 fer he please cail : BLI- |” apart LOVELY BASEMENT| FLO DECORATED, SECOND $-5541. oo ge are with recréa foom | Den wuseus Reservatjonist, ir OL 1.8200. 5.6348, any time. FE| [os after 6 2 va oN ‘AYD bp ment. Erb Apartments. 119} NIS OR. ALL UTILITIES FUR 4 ROOMS, BATH AND_ UTIL lace. 2 car brick ga- : Records sor F Ticket AB {| SLOCK, “BRICK CEMENT WORK & WEIGHT SAFELY & ECO. EN, Realtor | FE_5-2203, (ISHED PLUS STOVE, REFRIG- | jRGou FE _2-6332 768. a fa breezeway. Situated | 7 nomica: with ne 1 86 ©. Walton 3 LARGE RMS $a SRATOR AND APT. siz: G- | § ROO -_ FE _2-6332_ or FE _2-5788. & large ener lot on Lk. on : ae Bice fireplaces. MA Truck Dex ADiet ‘tablets, 08 floor. AND BATH FIRST | GUinED Pr. SIZE WASH-|* Close in. 18s Augusl BASEMENT, wee auPatice. Seen ee IN Ss to ent SIMMS cents at Poy i Fireplace. Ga- QUIRED. PH _ REF. RE- | —S08¢ in, 185 Augusta. FE 5-0273. Aiffes for only 7 gtt800 ill ost trainin can qualif BLDG, REPA age Wanted ce. Util and aut. heat APPOINTMENT, OR 3-7193 FOR | 5 ROOM TE : 3 rms, Ni with liberal i inde h tagcat i waif vats Brick, block, ce ING. TRUCKS, TRACTORS ON AND AFTER THIS DATE . Real Estate 32A | -*= month. Couple only wy ENT, lus RRACE ON 5. BLVD. NORTH SIDE PONTIAC. 7 STOR? ton and_pleasi hool educa-| 4.2290, cement work, FE AND EQUIPMENT September 15, 1058, I DATE | nen nee |) ROOM APT FE 5-4032, | LAKE FRONT. 5 ROOM MO’ ca tae al “wae | eens PONTIAC. 2 cludes 4 Blesing” personal 5 nee | x x. 1), ae Yo-ton Pickups 1M-ton Stakes | be res sible for a ‘an = Sell Us Y for 3. FE SLEEPING ROOM | —27-_stound, adults, EM DERN. | heater OR +700. 3. bedrooms. Income sd Pe ae aren pee steers ee ae pontiac Farm eae Ohie satchel y ghey inns myrsit ing vee bee oe a Fol pany Te BATA AND RapERN« Rh. GATED, tm| , chard Lake.” OR GReenteat 4-3807, 4 ane fone Owner. MA é a : a Berta’ train» Diviign | Se Also taimneys. No job. te Industrial Tractor Co. ON AND AFTER THiS DATE, tines, Sirus ranks. 4398 Disie| baby “ng weeny, pilities, fur.) em a eee le” See tee onal School of Aeronautics, esidential ‘and co September 11, 12, : a me Apply 804 St. | PVT. 5 ne | 6 ROOM 13, Pontiac Press. utics, Box} cial, Guaranteed work m mh er WOODWAR pod ga 13. 1058, I will air : 3 LGE, RMS. & BATH. S AND BATH, GAS H 3-1128 ., Ph MY en. oe Daily ° aceon sund e responsible for any depts} [IST ~ ond floor. All newl SEC-| 2-car, earage. Game EAT, ei - | RIG BLOG a ; ¢ ov contracted y other than my- STINGS WA NT 3 ROOMS, $63 month Gas rept PC eigartpheaeton _3i647_ after on, $75, OR is IEANY EOOR work. ain poe co CEMENT OD LL =e ee — Geel "Werle. 344 pees BUYE WAITING, LED nished, Ty, yg a TUR _FE 8.2884. ; 35 Auburn }+@ RM. wis , ODER ae EQUIPMENT |éaweer wore rr. EM 3168, | toon) and, lone oa GE | wed. Child a ET ORC Sues igs BNI teachers or ‘ te, segking mon tn this, ares sonable rates. FE_ 8-3687. ae ee See td. Children to Board 26 PROPERTY, we BUY ; ROT see. awz_| ORCHARD CT. APTS. 7 HOON SEAR AROUND HOUSE Nothing Dow pee aa for sidewalks, es nyt ok Painting & Decorating 20| 41, 394"pINe OME. BY DAY on : Breve? VE Bites Eat |, AR CONDITIONED ‘alms jo, app a desired. Re- 4 at Induntry With 0 vy} rates, 1 gare ‘es and Le _or_wk, Licensed. Leslie R. Middlet for work urn. Clean & perfect 9 SALMER Street — Pontiac’s 2478 Archdale y only. Inquire at INCOME BUNGALOW . ore if oe A gy Fe es ment fie to dL 18st — PAINTING A ND DEC. CHILD CARE, Four. OR “Sani BROKER . a ge Hwy. 1 bt Mol Bontine ire sewot — epariment Pearse wh . Lake. EM pletely furnished. scams * BROKER 53 FOR AnD Om = ae formation, witout obligation, in- : : terms. me, license, MA_$-2328 HAVE BUYERS FOR LAN _in'Wieater, PH 21813 atte rive; | trances. Beasnful istehens: stor = ROO a & BATH. AUTO. GAS er Week, 5 roume aud bain to how our of contune LOVED AND tracts “and home equiti 3 ROOMS AND BATH, BAB & g Move |, fest, Sr. Mocus School own rent for $85 afning OL | __ de Treas, OL. 1-314) or FE 218 sonable discount non | Phone eer a Ae | nota Reasonable, FE 20053.| full bases rn ‘pore 5 | ei PARRING,” PAPE wi : asec || test sta Genk caine ROOMS, MOD- and gee heat. , “ing Boer Gomera Pe. ei Wed. Household Go 27 CER AIR — 3 P MS = B. 1 eating 402 nese ay , jm om Sayppbibnine St, Relorunces, 92 $65 yee Ber price, soo Cyne da. ods. Huron : mediate cocups' NO. Ahous Sie . ee AND PAPERING. | Cine PEE 2-6061 yornirore & | “DRAYTON PLAINS ; nana. — WAM THRO § PAL ; ron sty Mod Rear of 488 W. Hu}. VERY hia ohana MEN SRAGLINE WORE, ROAD -SUtiD- Ae Ee We cor cons dies, for caah | : SED 3 Eves. on vives | + ait Ae DOWNSTAIRS. 3 RM FE 8-6918 s900 We. Stu COMPTON & BONS peony = ree ving to train sigh vow mal van etc. Sugatees ee Bet FE 40208, _ple Sti, ont Be es Me GI AND FHA 7 pt. Be week, 1b Cie re St, | and Fas ge Et ee EE Hoon WT OR 93-7414 ‘Foam, 2 "hedigome St empie < ia Sil py rps cep iten | FURNI Hyg NEEDED ree, Ear ah our owe ie ele lowed ris | *, pEAUTIBUL BN TORNGON.| Shell aes +| PAPER cash, with ver ome fet, OD., PRIV ICE UPPER FOUR EMS BEAUTIFUL. LAKEF t.’ Alum pA 7 ely OUR PR WER TO EES Sas nevarre: PE ey Sofa “ty tauase ae |, Heat de athe iat: | «RMS, KURU Bind oe Fpeie| Kok eee eter beso a Aen ee Se ow a i PROBLEM: od you i, 8 Community will appraise you pe Wel Sede ome ee MED HEAT FURNISHED. | si30 her mo. Leas “Lake Village. ¥ 5 tell you the cash pihig ss and | (Nice R One Rea wi _ PHONE OR 3-4718 or OR 3-7812. $130 per mo. Lease lage. eet ; ecel 00 OR 37512. | cola, 2-0889 early. Lin- e 1h Saag UR + ely sevens | Wo vee ote CAPR Bag, MEAT NORD VERY nice RMATE“NwEt | Reekenan” “EY OO Ben ae ith if ae 4 - base eee: , it’s FE 2-8181, we TRADE, we Bory — | Wesisite, Adults only, PE 21900. ee cae Bilis ney, treater orm Beran tee for. wetsing nace, eS ne! Ayes, i Y . aw & SON REALTORS ‘ - 5. A re ae vests ; ie ee ly, decorated. ‘amply Bare athe — a re a = ‘eum agora Pa ray hikes alae. stenmeroe Gs RAY 0’ be \ : , : 7 ~ . | rm, of unfurn os +3008, . orsied, cones, me i oo dec- I 82 oak BE R gi “i ‘= : 4 - * pm ' ° ® at - | \ FSSA ee ee Te E NT aT e Tel en ew ee ee TTT ny eee ee tee - CLARK REAL ESTATE i pelt ___/ ae. PONTIAC PRESS, MonDaY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1058. Wicich Memes 43 For-Sale Houses 43 SLICES OF HAM 7 i ‘CONDEMNED!!! “4 house on 40x130 4 near pnd Alum tients oF eta PA Peat GI-NOTHING DN. P vie fall py as 1% baths, St. 2 garden, tru a th FHA T ERMS oa ET Perry torms be my Pay- i ROOMS — privileges, brie om weary ful ait Pag oy tines ae 2 = Hiltz FE 5-6181 GOOD 6-RM, MODERN HOUSE BY OWNER $500. 180 WALL DOWN FE 2-3736 PLIZABETH. LAKE See aie M. Sicil Bitte “e * Sethe rae 3 Bedrooms, $750 Down mes Pes REALTOR PARTRIDGE PE 43581 1950 W. HURON MULTIPLE VICE will accept trade, # my 4 5 DOWN, $10,575. mag es mation bait 000, Th: bed- Ng A in Chero- bath down, 1 large bedroom tp, gueeton coniion, fl ave ons attached 2 car garage. soci availabie. 5 TO BUY, TO SELL, TO TRADE FE 46492 or FE — 1362 W. Huron Open MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE a BROWN DOWN — Brick bungalow only sie years old. Pull basement, Oak floors. _ Alum storms. Paved street. Recently decorated, is a honey of a value. $e 5 per cent interest. $1500 DOWN — Income epecial. Over $160 per month income and your own @ for free, Paved street, Excellent condition, furnitire included, $9800 ¢ SPECIAL — Nothing down — Only your guse' 5 te costs which are about edroom w with 2 acres of land. cellent location, agg about 3 “Here COMMERCIAL — a Paige bi ee eae es street TeAIsO. 8 many, types . - 6 low ee . Michael . 1 Dis- oe “Sood gisas co aie Fi ick ATE nea aarover a an bag , Excel- Youll Sad ving La ipxon 'N, Realtor and ag tty kitchen. with rec. Large patio, garage, nice’ “peach, Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Oe es AMPLE CUS8T . | GILES $650 Down 2 Located pear ($60—- for further “mation al “PLU, i* Aukeen Hei; ranch + eee te Auto. “ou “tur iar. as GILES REALTY CO. a heart small Oakland County village, modern home in beautiful of trees and shrubs. 2 oll heat. Espe- cially s' income prop- ert convalencent or funeral —s Priced for quick ‘sale, BEAUTY—New in "57, ranch e. 3 ‘n ER PARKING tem, landse 3101 W. Huro’ of "ie 30 500 on — will Pog ing. I SPECIAL = Sin make some family. ful home, pare Bring | Foda. nice ndsca| schools, chi = Price Realtor Loon Lake Privileges See this MODERN three bedroom bome range in the m and with built in oven and kitchen, base- ent with paneled recreation rm. forced air ol! heating situated on a large, Decca | 0 Shown By aI goad Be ‘Only. WM. A. — aan KENNEDY So Open Evenings Jt 8 MILLER 43568 WATKINS LAKE FRONT ~— If you are interested in owning @ fully ipeecaped iat = ACT now. ully lan = ot ~ no eg rty. r seer ut, keep try- fa NORTHERN HIGH DISTRICT — jer tive poss, 3 8 ag ¥ room kitchen ‘with built in oven and range, This exceptional home bas everything. — our fam- fly to enjoy its ome G) wer transferred out Sta ind is sacrificing at g0ee0 on This two bedroom &@ wonder- enient to at shopping a0, "GI rms. William Miller : B rams isprics FE 46550 3 edvchen 2 lots, garage and workshop, ‘must sell. Take late trode! auto or $1,000 down; - Wisner School oom and bath for owner 3) up. 2 car garage, Paul M Jones; Real Est. 832 W, HURON OA 8-3653 “MUTART REALTY | > e tounaeurT ° HOW MANY WAYS ,,. ~ RILEY =. a+ me Bee po Nags By ag age es Poom: . madsen kiehe Full auning ment room & "aekee eed } Saat ter aes o ’ 8. tice, Seite Stra ran ant i] we we ¥ Fa $450 DOWN — 4 Acres — Small Condition Carpeted floors. —_— urnace. Lots 2 "Tots satnes Pay cadet ne oe is Drive. Ba. Estates. ooo a with ah very w oe pay- “LOVELAND pe, Cass Lek - @ Rea e106: ae ee f Templeton For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 Pontiac Lakefront WHITTEMORE ST. cep cece ites | pe ee en, etn oe ag foes bench Faget non ogy Caras © Ridgeway | K L. Tem leton, ; Realtor REALTOR 2339 Orchard FE 4-4563.|.975 Baldwin Ave FE 4-6203 Aner 6. FE 30508 “ZBEDROOM BRICK”| ASSOCIATE BROKERS INVESTMENT Foe Finsne almost 1200 equate cae fect qf Ror area. Taevik uae | East Boulevard ace, sized bed- $990 DOWN — 3 bedroom room, ceramic eatures, Hot- home, Gas beat, * eal base- ‘ , oven included. Slid- ment. See it today! e~ covered terrece, Birch | 443 ONCHARD LAKE AVE. $16,450 ad Woes enclosed, porch, aanay | —2 Or will ote nis on your $i.800 down. 1 Coie Real Estate mia y. for oa St zum. re rty BY OWNER low down own payment 3 bedroom brick. ranch eet curt Realtor | a Sue te etme, PH EM 3-4197 NOW | Sues We ae need tar et water et stay dat 7 ee See eT m0 a 2 CERAMIC BATHS Pea FAMILY ROOM $11,768 $12,566 With Basement ? lote of closete—sele & ss ms foe : eat caret es 2 Worme and, servens. Custom bull | Ea pros ee suet eee ween Pat ors| Breer aar er WILLIAMS LAKE | Bate yourstot peia’tor, 7 poe My ong Tal neat Foedroom, "No OBLIGATION — GET OuR . All the rpoms are large r cent jorit Youngstown | = W. H. BASS ge Pana a situated on 'e plee | re Stu10 or PE 38-0531 900 with “G1.000 dows, re DRAYTON PLAINS. |@ 7, Bedroom, fu Basement a big t basement. Has — se on Ave., $525 pa sory F nvork ‘Ase, i will| . basem. with ott mar 3 E BakoS™ “eS ce eae vlad dows sie plus PHA closing costs Open Ev: ate Sunday 10 “10 8} 2 Fen we | REAR BED: B tutte tar, Pegte tate |” ee ota et nn tarongheut, sso base- oan gas men ae cen hot air heat. — Exira Tnvatcry: bus & schools. Possession at onc’ 17% ar Twain sc $1,500 down. si = PRA SYLVAN VILLAGE .— 2 bedroom brick, pollade tile bath, carpeted | ON DIXIE be hd nm rooms living room, large kitchen on pl = ; re Pe ae Law cakes "unfinished room wih in features. na ~~. it ent, ft 100x300. in. yo% your spare = oan er aalecturing, inke “privtcees. eur Zed for reslal ot chop. cused cap be @ ed & fenced iam FRONT — set seeet bath, sun porch om lake, pone ma ~~ agen at 8 with FA Lol heat, $15,000, reasonable down payment. REALTOR FE 5-9471 HOME THAT HUGS THE 942 JOSLYN, COR. MANSFIELD ‘ OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY _MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KNUDSEN GROUND — Step saving design. Owner transferred, wishes they | could take it with them. Living room with center island fiteplace, = = wall carpeting, dining tone planter a through to palenon table top range, therm- ador oven. 2 large rooms, je Souble slosets ‘ne wth nay Som. oa ueEe with 6 Soloman” PA oil heat, washer beautiful rooms and 2 ce- & dryer. 2 car attached qarage. ramic tile baths. Also a < aa Riteber. Large i gone HAMMOND oa at and noise. par fireplace. Aiegi st outside eat and noise a rage. = ~~ Rpg ori ..3. bed Cail for appointment. . rooms e en, utility room. chee living | \Vest Side ‘prick’ fireplace wall, Swe foot 6 Room, 3 bedroom bun- ceilin riooking landscaped galow with full basement to ing overlookin, Pp one rear FA oil Ons ; Fentently car A a ig oe a a. oe and Schools, $11,350. Roy Annett I man OY AMNEI INC. 4 Family Brick _—— omnes 1923 North ‘side Each unit 28 FE. Hur eral 8-0466 Open Evenings: ‘Sunday 1-4 mite Oe Private baths and entrances. Central auto. heat and hot water. Newly decorated. An investor's delight. WM. H. KNUDSEN REALTOR 244 S. Telegra Rd. FE 4-4516 Evening No. FE 2-8503 MULTIPLE : nian SERVICE In Bloomfield LAWRENCE W. Gaylord are there to say perfect. Frankly, we have run out . of adjectives for this home. fal dag mmo ce and comfort 3 Bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2 ides y sui ble for _Fefined ltv- bat a cepa ae | tam, seeing, NORMA section ner 8. the next owner of this pres- — and one, with gr tige home. rooms and 2 baths Pane ed ree- reation room 15x45 eat. HUNTING . eterson double pane windows. To include rich one and for a bargain? Here {5s an outstanding heme within a block from a good @rade 3 Large bedrooms, . Truly one one of the best in Bloom- school, extra lprge lot. Ideal for ‘a . ‘ family’ tome, Only $9,500 | West Side—G.I.'s Near Webster School. 6 room, HAVE A LARGE FAMILY? two story home ond all in clean condition rnace. Shade Then you'll love this 4 bed- $0x150, $9,500 with room home that will give $1,500 or nothing om’ G ‘oa plenty of space to live veteran, Will also. sell tonuhee. . Excellent base-. Owner moving to California, pero mn boi - ‘Total : . te price Ss 000 with terms. West Side Brick ake an appointment to see A wide green lawn sets off the this home today. modern beauty of this brick as ye wes 6 seems Oke 1M all large @ dsome: r an Fitsacet fiekes dik eat replaces, kitchen nuit in to 74 zie rm, ge range-oven and dishwasher. . bedrooms, 2Cear garage Only blocks to new Water- and a Workshop. Very* good Foeation.” for a biusinegs ation For « smart in- ford grade school. Owner trans- f rat nee, low price on easy er vestor who can see the fu- ture in "this isto tala it is a sae price 136 E. PIKE ST: FE 4-584 61) W. Huron Bt Ph, FB 4-958 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ' OPEN EVENINGS 5 pqooms AND BATH. LAKE on Case jake. Kew far Se g and bath in, Needs fobbing inside $500 —down, OR _3-8954 $150 DOWN BARGAIN—14 I ND BATH — 8T. PAVED STRE: JIM WRIGHT REALTOR 345 OAKLAND AVE. Pe Eset OPEN NINGS UNTIL 8:30 EVENIN MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE i a wats HS, OR 3-9723.* IRWIN orn Tole woe seas Soe eel as tans ‘Hills gub. No. 2, SYLVAN car parece 4 x 2% Call for in- rmation, $29,500 SYLVAN MANOR Very comfortable modern brick pome. 3 a room, Carag : Be Redu ced’ in price. , GI. 2 oo wme oo 8 droom kins. fase for newlyweds. ds. so000 | ™ John K, Irwin & Sons Realtor % Since 1925 1 3 3 West Ssuron str Street LAKEF RONT R 3-1235 EQuiry IN HOUSE AND FURNT ture. Must sacrifice, OR 42, or 4260 Barnard, Waterford, Immediate Possession PONTIAC TRAIL 3268 or $7 . MAytair | "WASHINGTON PARK rooms & = a —_— Pull Sasenens with Oli heat _— rard “ar Fmortange, Only $1, 000 Down Union Lake Home Among other neat homes, floors, plastered walls, oil heat Large corner feet. Nice lawn and shade. Im- mediate possession, 3-Bedrm. on 3 Acres No Down to GI. Dandy close-in suburban la -Large tion oa eee fireplace. matic of] furnace, Huge 2-car ga- rage and dog kennel Fertile soil. Live streams Giroux-Franks GENERAL REAL ESTATE OR 3-9701 SSFPERSONALIZED HOMES AO) cry — Be altel A Pe carpeted jie room and pe hpowrd Gast itchen, full base- HEAT. 2-car A pa IMMEDIATE POSSESSI PONTIAC-WATKINS RANCH E $12,950 — ONLY for this lovely 3 bedroom cedar — ranch on large 100x150 jot. Lots of room ~ the ee to romp. Has large living with dining ell, a reall gomfortable family kitehen, FUL MENT, tf ig choice labatvision @ aver from tr traffic 1 ‘ontil yet so close to with floo: to . ceiling LEDGESTONE fire- place, Plus es DINING ROOM, ~ oven and scunterten stove. TRCH ctipboards, formica coun- i tops. Laundry room and play room makes this one of the most attractive homes we have seen the area. HOYT REALTY | FE 2-9840 "at 8. a Telegraph Rd. $450 WN PHA « terms, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, large lot, $800 4 room bungalow. — os youne couple or retired couple 9| STOP. LOOKING “ 500—LAKE FRONT rooms, 2 seeeees. basemen iw car gare Doantitul HURRY 0 ‘Smith- Wideman fot REAL rarare OPEN EVE. 412 W: HURO! FE 44526 All rooms, o i ood wellty and forced air i. iv 4 $ Db ein ee ‘OTHING pow Pay Civilians $2,000 dn. : be _For Sale Raves 43 For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 CASS - ELIZABETH Newt as Priced tor thee pM oor} man. ‘un nen ation. ie toe y eS, Am Bes Sake “atlas LOVELAND 188 Cass Lake Rd Fs Fe 2.4915 PP 4-1661 eS lae ob 7 RMS. -payment, Fl after 4 p.m. 190 W, COLUMBIA. Vacant—Move In Nice well-insulated 2 rm, frame. floor, WO _1-0504, if” no ant. VE_t 1261 6 ROOM AND all | jent terms. EE BEDROOM BRICK jortheast Side — Vacant — Comb, storms, Full base- ment, Ba heat. Low down paym ent s RBAN eat econ brick and TWO FAMIL West side, Down. crore viftites. § Double este ea TERRACE Five gy Immediate pos- session, Low down payment. Terms to suit ; HURON (GARDENS _|NICHOLIE & HARGER CO. 33_W, HURON FE_5-8183 Cherokee Hills Brick Custom built in f sooal for present could growing ‘ou'll like the close-in c ry location of fine home, it's well shrubed 84 x 1% lot — and, particu- larily, it's realistic price! CARL W. BIRD Realtor §03 Community National Bank gs 4 PE. 4-421] Eves. FE 5-13 LIKE finished vy to move in, MY rent, 3 bedrm home, Almost re Lake Orion a vicinity, 23-3701 SPLIT-LEVEL STARTER HOM®. No money down. $6,450. EM 3-0482. Gordon Plattley ‘Blar, MULTIPLE LISTING ERVICE tile bath with vanity end very nice lot in Drayton Woods. ‘ex.| NORTH END Large 3 bedroom home with car- peted — tile nog Je ry ar garage and corner lot. — cellent Jorstion. George R. Irwin REALTOR 269 RoLowrn AVE. PE 5-0101 nia 1,000 do ae fooma 2 baths eee. Basement, eat, 2car garage. or JO 45644 ier ge Custom nap AF Oe 8-1198 MODEL HOME NOW FOR SALE Attached —. ll ot hot wa- ter heat. (2 «baths, therme-pane windows wall to — GE appliances, Dorothy Snyder Lavender oe EST PS it YEARS EM EM 33803 or MU coat UNTIL OCT. 1 Will build on your lot. your plan or ours, no down payment, ex terior complete. you finish in- terior, we will furnish material. _A. C. Compton & Sons 4900 W. Huron OR 3-7414 SEPTEMBER SPECIAL Priv. lot across street from this attractive ranch home on 50° b bedrms. amic tile Rea, oll beat. A. real buy at 12 with only 22 per cent $190 » Paved MY Mang VES, SAT Down os basement, Built baeiae ¢ heat, hot water, raved stroot, ‘Vaca Immediate wo 300 & SUN TO 8-0851 hu only 3 left. Must have $300 DOWN Modern 6 bedrm.. ful oe road here at acon ‘C! PAN SaUNTS, Beatcr | 1919 M15 Ortonville NA 17-2818 Vacant “Ne bock aft Rad (ar on page hy “ ek gas nae ebster School dis’ Teccotment service, Inspect by appointment, Two for One nome & paréwere store, both for vil age, net, oo Takes soak at cost WI LEIS ate | eg from Pontiac, in- room in a small PNiave ws ako M. ‘BREWER. $65 Down bedroom brick starter 2 3 home. lot 84 x 300 ft. on pave- “\WILL TRADE New a eee ag with extra large at eee i Seameres oi} furnace, oo Rg Lae Gwen AGENCY. MY 31143 LAKE | 609 E. Flint 8t. ON, MICHIGAN PRE-BUILT HOMES WEST SIDE bedrooms and am 3 basement, — oil iced reasonable at pest gietes ws wht 18 ACRES *CUCKLER REALTY 236 N. scemeneeamanstil fA oo. 4 Menenoeacuniieran OWNER LEAVING STATE WAT- kins face brick nding Hills SAGINAW 4-408; e : ved streets & walks, aun Ss bedeaeh easement. 3 rooms, 1% cer- amic tiled baths, formica in kitchen, complete storms land- goaped. $17, Minimum $4,000 _ OR 3-6015, 4 to 7 p.m. M ulti-Lakes Realty LARGE BEDR At Highland Immediate “sce ae Mapeee, 1s Large prices $8, = — ve & good bay Full 3060S. Commerce Rd. MA 41578 6 RM.. MODERN RANCH home, near Clarkston. Large 4 pedrones modern home on est Side baths 3 bedroom waae type rm, a Home. About 2 acres. 9 miles out, ~~ $s 000, Several faseonen INNA P. W. DI NAN" 66 W. Huron FE 4-2577 vs —_ sacrifice. wn. low interest. 3 SaOORT 1% to wall pa wh SE, BATH, WALL storms and reasonable offer. NO DOWN . — r a em Dorris & Son RANCH HOME COUNTRY ESTATE hom surrounding country, numer- ous fruit trees, raspberries, strawherries, ing shade large spread- trees, evergreens and shrubs. attached 14x14 polbscagea rage, rear it merous oo pointm en’ selling ap- OUTSTANDING BUY ry LAK five ment, off ——— in inest lake ing walls on Williams retain ‘amily room + aandy lot 113 terms. EFRONT WILLIAMS LAKE Ideal home for retired cou- beautiful heat, hg porch, one of the front lots and Lake, beautifully landscaped $16,800 FHA Thi at al: Ss eye-a a miethe © ppe: ilege priv —— $700 di SPECIAL Bungalow modern two bedroom bun- ith oak. floors. and can own complete. down. WE TRADE IF YOU ARE AMBITI And, have limited capital, this | o59 'w, ee pee be ae sho’ a a) offer on ome in convenient joca- ronta re only $500. $8,9: in otlers invited, EMBREE & GREGG 352 E. Beverly FHA DOWN — 5 STANDING BEDROOM ME AL M SIDING, BLOWN-IN INSU- TION. RECREATION OOM IN LARGE ENT. OVERSIZED 2 ARAGE ON BEAC. ORI 1 ROR CORNER LOT, HURR “Lero” ile GI 4845 HATCHERY RD. — - R. J. vacuo: Realtor LN ENINGS UNTIL 630" ULMPLE LISTING SERVICE ? . n HAYDEN NORTH gett aoe #2 Bedroom i, unfinished ak rs. . Ol $00 Cash to mortgage . Bal. Pra per ‘cent ye H-- OFF JOSLYN. Clean 3 bedroom walt” wiring per mon Pull Peneclinn Sy and fn 3 Bedroom home. tng Stop in inspect our p ) APPROX 9 ACRES, Orton Twp 2 Bedroom Lite Bath. Nice gar- den $1,480 dow =| CEDAR AnD bake. © 61 Ege ranch Law wareage your ae Open pres inal slow edroom home in Jel C c AUDEN Reel tor ae | hey te am 6. —_ iM Peg tok Rt ell 471s, afte NOW Oren ¢ NEW 2BEDROOM HOMES | — “= In The Heart of Pontine - $8,350 $350 DOWN $09 PER MONTH Youngstown ens —City Sewer & Water ile High dod. Grade 8 | ner shogping Cr Center LOCATED ON MELROSE | Between Perry & Mt, Clemens St. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT _ CALL: DLORAEH BLDG. CO. PE 2-0123 3 BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BASE- ment, 508 Avon, pore down and you take ove of mort gage at 4% per cent interest. 3-3531. Something Different ff you like surprises ~ + ee see this! Of course, it bedrooms, full basement: wit gas heat and eS essentials. It's Los coed wate ali th pg oe extras. e block from’ Tel-Huron ‘Sho Center aa is price? ? SUrDr e— only $11,000. Easy term 4 Bedrooms ‘and Basement, too! Ny 1 dscaped lot. Plus a ale Figen we me is eons i: Watkins-Pontiac ts tes nos priced to sell! $131900, 'HA terms. We need emall home as trade-in on one ¢ thes LWOOD pealry FE 2-5453 FE_8-0844 ARRO Near Washington Jr. ewe | 5 room ‘alow with c ted liv’ & ' rooms, ful Se- a heat, attached br way & garage & fenced yo $10,900. Will trade for m within 10 mile 1215 COCHOCTON a 4 le A ini? Tiving room, Ixia Kitchen. oak = : ane storms & th ; bid a Rs a AY ‘dow ig T g Rd. ton, oF yer ~ brand a :. bedroom full ‘basement. of) heat. We wil home ecuity land Open a.m. — 7:30 p.m. Sunday 1-4 -NOTHING DOWN wa —_ 3 bedrm. starter home| ~ bow (sow down pormest. = 3 Bedroom HOMES $100 DOWN Plus minimum costs. Moves You In! SO WHY PAY RENT? BUILT IN RANGES & OVENS LOADS OF MODERN FEATURES |. MODEL OPEN WEEKDAYS SUNDAY 1TO 7 er REET, RIDA Lincoln J: WESTOWN REALTY | FE 02163 or EVES MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GUILTY !!! ladly = it we are GOmTY of offering this beautiful 2 bed ch- type home and =. excel- lent landscaped x 275 ft. ig a site to thor’. Tt aie offers. ——— walls, tloors, Aluminum crotins and screens, 2 car arage, ® utility room 20 x 1344 ft $14,500 be the one for which pouve been looking. DO NOT... miss the % 8 eR the Village ot | 262 wit be “thrilled with mullt-in oven, e and ; tor the large the Secidente new Tateres | Hung home — — double glazed venggentd th screens, 2 led fireplaces, throughout tiled vanity and tle" “Let Us take through. NEW... 3 bedroom Ranch home, Full nagar eo - rear ex- ure. tile a you yt ewers, aris of pod L . haw BRICK & ° FRAME Owner chance to own thi , excep- , Santos) Foon $14, with. 1 cent ann Ca. for appointment no VE 1. OEE, Ty AD. oorrpacts re Bateman ~ Kampsen 1} REALTORS PD 4-0528 Eves. & gun. NY, aad BECTION. OME oe PER TO "CARH RD “ou bee OFF JOSLYN Beautiful 3 room -f with plaste walls rapes, Se foo aplenty. foreed air heat to own for Q MONEY “ae at ee JIM WILLIAMS REAL ESTATE wut wr 1483 BALDWIN . ‘case Near Wisner School 2 room family hom e handy to school, saves. featuring gas heat Good Environment For Children In this ——— ee 000, “Bud” Naheiie, Realtor Hess or FE 48773 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE O'N ELIZABETH LAKE ES- TATES—Large family home on 2 nice dining reom, pelea. Stepraaving kitehe! eu. nod 2 space, ¥. Ame led reation Say 314,500 with’ approximately $600 plus mortga, bade rigage costs DO YOURSELF n save! T bedroom home with oe —9 — rock on, sink, and furnace =. ae wiring, wel), and Only $7, Approximately pao. down $65 m : ABOUT $1,100 gg de! will buy this fine bedroom west side come. Living HS ol and dining ell, nicely rations H freshiy done. Dandy oxy : heat fe ee oer tas ot be seen any id “HOUSE BEAUTIFUL” ts decorated, = fiedming on i: Teation roo is @ isons ‘absolute piste in nt detail. and built bumpe ‘com. - see Priced at $13.500— oe ae os down and $85 F ELIZABETH LAKE privi- —— go with this large 3 bedroom — Ca living room and dint el lodgereck fireplace in living kitchen and utility with cards. lots of birch Way and car ~ & too ox Priced at 415. 500 down, ~RAY ONEIL, has s Pepe IC (OLL “peedroge mid story Di Dutch Casati bk onl as. tin iving and ‘ining screened zh ing! basement, of Bary 13.980 with ere x ansee, oxronemp SELL HOME ADE finished on the = side. 3 ra aa ell large rredee venee oes: er. rox000, Call and f GI aT A TAMIL. Be roo Fee core a ome? eye Evenings Sifter AS, or 5507 | 208 D 2530 pein FOL REALTY ay an Income Property 43A 2 LARGE {ROOM HovsEs, NEAR gy vate tented” ; beanie ro 44 new Linco! of aa Shae Sale cry, Prop. 44 91 Fort ie ie AGE ON he og fohoed. in} RANE bg ped lot Buitable for tri-lev, : terms, PRI $00 FT. for only sell a or ras day for d ver foot, i ie Call to- % 7 ij - x ley « SITE. _ BLOOMFIELD HILLS Seymour Lake Front racti fiatied, Stat aten ‘tome, You fhlate home Just rit “ray aot fave alway, wanted WHITE BROS. 3-1295 6660 Hwy. Ey: ‘til 9; Sun, 10 -*til 5. For Sale Resort Prop. 44A % “ACRE, RANCH TYPE HOME- site. Near Crooks: & Auburn, RE- public 2-76 ATER- or for ¢ lot ed basement at shade tre ranch home r ‘Oakland. gg en 200, FE 2-06 4 r FE 38-8500. Link Onions ONE @ LOT aa. WATERFORD TWP. 5 Nice bullding sites. Lots 75 © 154. $1,150 each. ZONED MANUFACTURING. 88 x 133, North Side $950. Terms. vars poigbasl commer- APPROX, § pees N, pants ds C. HAYDEN, Realtor, Walton OPEN_EVES. . MIDDLETON EEE dit 150 down and oer ; Leslie R. Middleton BROKER 198. JOHNSON FE_5-1721 : an approve: Then make sure it's For Sale Acreage 47) , K . ceil rece eat once, Don't wait.| BURRS, SOREL" a i 2 ; ee eae <4 ampsen BENDEROFF reise hoa? ows 141_W,_ Huron | i in”? Burmeister s ‘ Huron C PANGU US. Rea Realtor REALTORS FE 4-0528 nore 55 , fike roe. , put desk and chat mahogany buffet.. cach $20.00 Open $ a.m. te 8 p.m, Sun. 10 to 2. ’ 371 8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. ps a ig Piace gmail $7333 1 os Ortonvile aus i? IN TV. J gr save $25.00 nee om 1% ACRES oe HORSE DRAWN CUTTER, RED| "uoned, Poof pam. | bquate, el Cash Way © |x: eon hee asnadsaaneedre! Partridge | i "ke Maco, Fe Faets : : ean oe eee eae ep ien enar oS |S ga. BS | Prices aye | paved se bul 18 THE “BIRD” TO SED ou Fe 7s, "relat a TRADE FOr Mantes af a sor model Ee “th excellent . \ 4 - ri . Mahog. ..8 4.95 PONTIAC per ae" Class C in Pontiac ey. A.) , Dougian, fr plywood $ 3.20 WHITE BROS. $20,000 Full Price 7 "REDROGH FF wu side, Will trade Lee. Ors 3 pba, RADIO.PHONE $28 Douglas, fir vip. i 1.38 AL Ears Seldom if ever can you buy a) Say ona per mee rk ELEC. REEN| tomatic change — ‘ chai oki p, per M $115.00 xie Hwy. full year liquor license and going| PSks, triese ene tng hidrabed: Mh ece =~ | 1x6.8.10 knotty ping M $130.00 Bi -sunday 10 “W_g} business for only 420-000 on, e8st | i pr. pt TRAWLER, SLEEPS 6, | sree ds sn | Special — $12 — Special | taf Retwood, Unt ------ 8 9 DERN HOUSE WITH terms, Food business and all * a Be Gs Sead tend § = rapes, : F ry rebuilt Singer sewin mae 2: = 6:8 sash doors ...... ry nt, Gravel vp tte | elran| eauipment included, We'll come | - 60 acres ore moda, aint. ACHUESTRI iE twa Eutton | 3;0x8:8 flush door with lights § 14:98 aM to see you as quickly as you le i66¢ ADMIRA Ceands| ee ee eee guaran- | *%5x3¥9 brass 0 aw Ge ow cd Ferg ie OVE AND 3 OR ore en ove os Bee = se esmam, Uae wee, 1 yt. cote bashed sectional chairs for an apt, size | 7 KaretT REPRIGERATOR, | ec etanine “tid.08, Alum. Comb. door. comp. .. $ 25. FOR COLORED — [REALTOR PARTRIDGE| gigggie sieve er wil sell: FE “Sccollent condition, We. 40) Or: | afchigan Sewing Center, PH .s037.| Alam door get big sg Dae § ACRE ROLLING, Businesses wt’ Mich ines FORD GOOD CONDITION ieee 1x2 ee 100 Pt. “8 2.00 ch Hirut nomesites | £398) Open _— IWirade tor deep freese. EM 33116, ae SLEIGH BEDS. TWIN. BETRA 1 then Saoeer " gs085 i SEL ie Be jonta. = BURLE BRAUTY_ BAG 3216 PRIDHAM, KEEGO pas re dere stig wes wa er. is god baliece sses. ty gee ist 8 gy PE io fe ig! home. sho — bor. Balance ow 3s os nes : ane > — oy acer ite vd sagnatane sre r. $2,000 down, By owner. — $60 per mo, rE suits. =” way i %. A Gold bond F Paint gal: 4 ND AVENUE is fa vaerttes ~ | 399 9 | ss--sao-s BRAND WEW GOV: [SE 3 003/ SPATEWIDE SPECIAL Fi ee -Bgoter en HORS BO | aL OST. OOF s SED BEANO BBW OV" | its 5 Agnetha F AYERN, RESORT P sanen'§ motorscooters. Swa “or modern Bination TY 63 a8. Com- BOL +. 08, 8 89 "B IR % Oakland >see — ycle. NA %-9361 bina’ ay bear. changed, 4s, 002° Mt, Clet- Bg _— } Brick A WINDOWS Al matey at nl, ot as | Anco Pape ceeya Pa |- Sag op ats den: fiat | 12 | me Wil trade. i . ce a away | 588 Eistischments, $19.90. Late $92. 9 room Si home PONTIAC casH FO! bea ie a aoe aT _—— 1 side, roll arere | $98 5 bedrodms, hew modern ba’ s 13 not, FED 2-0967 nour Al SORE Curt’s A e. . eo y BI a: ed ai oll heats BLDG... full Basement, Income SEs oP ocean’ ¢ ra Fouxn At La 8 SALES, TAIN s 2 E k Asbes. Side., 84. ed potiiry oase. it trees. second floor © per month. Pius | " o or Dp ruck, slso| A little out of the way but a lot eT . Pah on veacee $ 85.00 Satie oi Mace] Seen set os | SETAE | Geren | Be a ed be Ria tr ote an ane GARAGE ORDERS rantna — Siegler “TNT 8 g9.00 ressonatie down ate i. © “STATEWIDE TAKEN NOW FOR we muy ONTHS TO PAT |, Olt oF et Round ‘point “shovel ae P08 | - G GEORGE LAIR Res al Batate 8 Be of Pontiac I N and | ot free | SCHICK’S MY 3-3711 Broom rakes rere 49 | mad A vb TRi Ponting Rd. 36 Disie Hw amg 11281 ut 6. O peloatns Eaton 4-0521 - OR 3-2360 rane x eat. 8 raat o |SRwisG Mase Pee es eee Leclplk 138 FEA or PECii2 PLAIN TWinbrook_3-3086 | op FURNITURE, - cleaner, ; poy 7 erie, OB. 116 Start Your Onn Business Complete. trade, for late model b wot" Auburn Pott py F— SIMMONS BED, BOX SPRING & ‘BOX SPRING & inceding « Gu SEPTEMBER COMMERCE ROAD _| “rr elt | ear of sell OR 9.861 ee ame —parRERRTOT | _Se tse, dreveor, table, PE 40H ae eave mole eet! ~=SPECIALS . ban ats 9 ya 2 |S a a ee gee Pied ( ahogan WHITE Tal KE ROAD | wi Ney up Be helt oats AAA S ECIALS TAKE OVER UNPAID BATANCES BURMEISTER’S “ve pave bor AT Aah we 4.90 8, seres, Priced from $660 per sere, fometime ot Sop er oF | ay, qUSED TV CLHAMANCH,, | On wien vite: borektare, tte Dew. wi Fir Plyscore Low down’ payment ; G ment Pw at FF ec cath ae |e Pol nee OTUNETT) | sie ecco BASS fe vAP OR Ls $1000 ke f and ran at oBRt ‘ fi ‘ * tiech nivewand- ad ea, 06 m3 i ae Wil con deeiicr noue Na T2588" Orton 3000 Hilbetn aM} = Apt. alte eRe sO¥e «o.-u ae 3 | mo LUMBER CO. can het Bite pvwood $15.95 on, PH NE EM 341 giub a 3730. Ore cope were ey ot , Fe 42208. ™ ot ite elec. Tage ss Cree © oe te . re daily "Knotty White Pine OXFORD AREA | chard ‘Late "Rd, No. (elephone Sarre OMS con | ATR CONDITIONERS: - yea errs a calls, please. — eveene town kitchen oil and gas fur- 80 Pg =F sage poses ig wh road fi Be For Sale Farms | 2 ence ‘BROS. p | 200 AA |, CBSA? BINNAN™ and’ ¢ tract or home Pull price s17.000. Clarence C. Ridgeway: REALTOR — 075 Baldwin Ave. PE 4-6203 '|Sale Business Property * |7 ROOM, UBE & CE. ft, neine, Gamera) frontage. Center’ ot Drayton Plains. fe 22 W KENNE Sar commercial sens commercia] Inquire win PE 8-1431 979 - 985 Oakland ue ft. frontage with z.. commer bldgs. $i pe. wFWE 3-621 3-6211 OPPORTUNITY *lror mee foot of choice com- e, Located — 2 orp te centers, Wate ford area ced for medion zoned Bald- Contact WM. A. KENNEDY ‘ Office open Sunday 1 - 5’ WM. A KENNEDY REAL 3101 W. Huron bor m Evenings till 9 SMALL arn STATION & fo aa quarters, Lot soenie.. Be trade. 8060 M15. Clarks ie Templeton | Commercial Building Just of Pontiac on Tele- fa thoor Bagh A meu, te wer bgolnest. ne 1 KL. Tem enpicton, Realtor 2339 Orepgre e Rd gd 44563, Benes Opportunis 8 — ER. RICH garden’ me buliding site Pavement. Business ral, 6233 -Dixie Working man’s bar, located in Pontiac’ $13,000 down, Clarence C. Ridgeway ee AUTO SALES ~ ATTENTION INVESTO ern Brieh Completely wy Doroth cay 246 er pode 29 YEARS = = 8 bert) = Oe ~: J dow. | Se oly For Sale Farms | 48) ‘|WORKERS PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG Taxes ANS $25 $500. i BAXTER & GSTONE —8 with 3 ‘bedroom’ ranch style hom way. price. ctr - Money to Loan 53 a ee Saomneed Landers) | TEAGUE ey gatag CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. ora rasp Be ‘er Sor tor 30 Says Our Requirements a 1. That you own furniture or 3 That you are * eae re roa, naa had ® A <= tore becoming gen Bene pressed for payment ge to see us at once and be relieved of worry, We have confidence ip .your commu- ‘ Loans to $500, Made Quickly po always receiv. leasant Teourteous considers ie and friendl ng Me Sy for BUCKNER Finance Co. PON melee ae NEED $25 TO $500? SEE SEABOARD PHONE FE 8-9661 Seaboard Finance Co. “Parkin, pn ae _1186_NORT: Y STREET “LOANS - TO $500-$25 TO $500 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E LAWRENCE FE #0631 FRIENDLY VICE WHEN YOU NEED $25-$100_ KES FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 gis to ec00. A iaihecerd ar | Loan Company|_* FE 2-9206. 64 W Lawrence St PE 41508 us gt our office. . Home & Auto LOAN CO. 1 Perry St (Corner Pike) _ “OF FICE LEASE West Side — Ground floor— Private entrance “on tn 0) ASK Bateman ___Mortgage Loans 54 “LET’S TALK BUSINESS” Groceries a ee ‘BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION | ~22%% BROKER PARE AT OU Re NT D TO GET IN OUR NEW PALL rc om nye ok. “10 aa ciates, 6 ” Wor sell $3.50. mouth, OR_3-2300, Peel WATER, Gisor monte, O50 month, OR OR 538 WE TRADE ier Eas | Witt: gwar TAVERN FOR DoWs Baines cose ob Ea oe GUIDE TO GOLD: Sell things you "re not using through Classified Ads! i yas TI2ZY Cte | |e, a eee For Sale Miscellaneous 60 ie ROM AP- ¥ qualit ible EY aRae $3 wk. plete stock for , ‘ um, & fiber- & UP. Or- $9. 2 aL alum, storms, mt AS LLELY CO. “The Reliable Pioneers” Auburn & Rochester Roads . For Pree > Estimates Call OL 1-994) 11960 by MEA Sorvipa, the. TIE Reg, U.S. Pat. OF q-75 | If no answer call OL 1-6623 F ‘ 2 RED TICK COON HOUNDS, 1 . ésearclg, 1, }yr-old, 1950 Ford Station Wagon, exc. cond., for ‘ ale or trade for pickup truck. GEneva 7 ; ee 3 CONT ‘There! For once I'm on time! All we have to do is wait| comm sizes, , 2? and F my nail dry.” ; ie vi steel /and black ‘Bes ate ey: riced to eet Dixie Moral, 5233 _ Bitte Hwy., Drayton Plains. For Sale Clothing 56| Sale Household Goods 57|? WHEE! TRAILER, PHONE FE BOWS TOPCOAT, 6. $2.00. | ELECTRIC RANGE AND REFRIG- LB 4 re on Will. FAMED. OE Poise. Boy's Spon Jacket, ae 10, $2.| erator, Refrig. needs repair, Both TincH SOIL PIPE, 5 FT. $3.73 FT 370 Boy's cha ¢ more oe te for $73. OR | 3-2040. Sump Pum aire eee 2% | Stee Grown gabardise eport coat, $1. | ELECTRIC, CLOTHES | DR ¥ Shvk. PLUMBING SUPPLY 15 Lakewood Dr. Wa cond, $60, Call after 5. 7 1728. 6 w ke. Phone OR 3-2216, Sone Ai é IN. BLACK & peCKER iL MAN'S TUXEDO, SIZE 40 LONG, FALL SPECIALS Polaroid Goma tort never been woe a* 4018 . acre ls of . Reasonable. Lakewood Dr. OR 3+ 7 , Close-Outs osm 4563 or Kem: PCO. SIROR eee .0| 57 RANCH TYP, SECTIONAL “Brown tweed. he oodlectoth SWEEPERS. GB or EURERS. 1 Sige garage door. cars | og TNS NOM g120.98 yy 2 DOU- capree. MEN e a PE 6.0638. S novediituer : , bfe hung. Mul ign windows, 1 worm SILVER FOX COAT, VERY NEW Ce OT tae SHOP | ie sTORM EDOWS 6 aaTEE & fashionable. $200, Call eves. | 51 W. HURON PE 41555. . 6 with FE 5-5528 frames, also 6 french i. . UPRIGHT, PAMOUS| offer. FE 8-1274, after 5 p.m. WORK PANTS FR. 25¢ WOOD/| name brands, ratched, terrific je x ie BUI BE army ikts, & shits. fr. Soe —| values $140.96 while they last, No tT, DING: 5 de Ocoats & suits 2 — e orders please, Michigan | _™0v: : A wed, gps, & formals $3. $3.50. & ‘S. nt, Or Lk, Ave. | 30 : 72 a . 8 IN, an FRIGIDAIRE, 6.8, GOOD COND. beam. $iod for al 00 for all. FE SOS. $25. y Lawn, Roches- a ro BTU Toi tank bg Sale Household Goods 57) . ter. Sole eee Se Gas AS STOVE #10; FICE TABLE | —— | CHEST TYPE DEEP FREEZE; OR, a con A ‘t Horton ironer, PE 48302. GE ¢ REFRIGERATOR. 7 PAIRS| Cap sinks and fittings, $57.95 up. 2 GRAY UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS.| {itis roller Ja. & 9.| Laundry trays, stand eoety, omens ee SOME AED REBUILT WAGE: una. fabri. Wl on yr758 oF ine machines, all, makes. $19.95 112 south naw 8 up. Th vie Electric. Corne . 2 WASHING | MAC eee SPIN | Johnson & Howard FE 45160. oe an SN damp fall ye _EM 3-014. "| Gas DR} UTOMATIC WASH.| weather—use KO" IN. Warwick's PIECE BLUE ape GOOD} er. fator te mise. 1185 | _ 2678 Orchard : 7 Condition. Reas. 2558 Litchfield, Crescent Lake Ra ~ANCHOR FENCES __Drayton. GARBAGE DISPOSAL $5995, i <a aaaca! a PHA ® val WHEEL CHAIRS, ONE USED i an oe ere? ) PREE Mons 1411. 15, 1 new, “065. PE 26101, 24 | TOS RONER <PimcE | X WHOLE crry CITY BLOCK OF DE- leon _St._y blond leather. sectional, double | {relt mansions being » wrecked, Ma- } PC. BEDROOM SUITE, COM-| Hollywood bed. All exe, cond.| terial better 7 ae ; Plete. Whirlpool automatic wash-| FE 8-6311 Hardwood : er. 346 Osmun 8t., after 6 p.m. IRONRITE: IRC ONER. GOoD CON- oes $8 PC, SOLID OAK DINETTE SET. __FE 46-2003 6 PURCE att! SILVER GRAY fe an ESA an TA t A Pear Piece oa peer fiat Bs is oe —— ae 74; Ft Ft. Wall Jail Tile 25c ang F m hag od ‘Hamtiton clothes gainer gat, B00 RONRITE 1 TRONER. Goop Om “1 2,yis, old grec “purcntid” chair | 268 pe 4 wa Good e rice yack’s N. 3 W. Lumber Material yard loca at Third and Ferry, Wreck- Co. ae 3-1033, 7 days week. 8 te pg Wee teen ee enee o- lic ea. al oeene -eeeeee eenee We carry a complete insulatios — ~ BUILDING? haces. Hot water and ste y. irre ales $4.95 valu ues, pore light res for qaidies’s be dr rd pane Ave, — 2. oe R stove. Ken- = = apt, ae heater 3-7033, — FOR SALE, E, EM- re. ‘NEED A. FINANCE- FIXER? Orden Classified Ads to sell, rent. find a i} good job, ‘PE 28181 is . the Want Ad nuthber | . 92-5523 ms re Ba, oe | tit yg Sa eerste |W lack pipe, ® 8, -Qx4x7_ Kl, Cl Sale Household d Goods 57 Gf 60 Used Trade-In Dept. _| SOX¥ Ol, BURNER, AND oi alga 00 = a ere Lee ee Piruraace. A-lcond 162 N. A-l cond 162 N. Genesee, ENBIRE Special 1x4—6-8-10-12 2x4—6-8-10-12 $99.50 pe a M Truck hee ast» ck delivered free 2600 Union Lk. Rd EXTENSION LA like new, $10. DER, 20 door. 72-4933. hoa ann WORK. REA- ° ogiats payment i entices a —ecerta neal el .|GAg & OIL FURNACES, FREE FE _4-0456, estimates. FE Garage ‘Doors Factory seconde & and Fi standard Wood "ts stee) foldway closet doors = et Soon SatES 31 8. Paddock GILLEN OIL FLOOR CaRACE 6 rm. size. FE 6-1012. sashs ood dom sizes, aS. "PE boss. HEATING "STOVE, | PASTING resse jack, FE Seto of abe! HE EAI TING STOVE. PASTING oa trestles, & & large — ; sine cheb “< on SPACE HEAT- er, PE a meee Gl good shape. FE 22 IN.. STEEL FURNACE,, Empire Suppli ies C Co. Sie WwoonEn alVo0d Close Closet Deork . louvered etald tive doses,” A BERRY DOOR SALES aa we ate CO. Sone’ MAPLE — cabinet, EM aor WA’ HEA’ Consumer Power ap- corner cabinet, LAVA c faucets. #2480 value v.56. aiso bs, ts, er 38 Factor ars, terrific val- wes! — Fluorescent, Orchard : e Ave. — ft. j Ss ” $1.00" ae ae B i % PREE ESTIMA se | SURELUS Comeek & mt ms. {1 set EARN: | LUMBER CO. wgtaaee le Pada _ Phone Market 4-1084 4 ' ~ & ACCORDION . “i ms WIN PIA PIANO oI BOE M. at tow ee prices op with 8 a ; fw | your m aly eegmeeie Ke z CALBI MUSIC CO. eee ae Yo = a : USED © ELECTRONIC ( ORGAN MORRIS. MUSIC ezote From wn BAND & ORCHESTRA | 54 Tats! EY ia cote | Pagan “TORR MUSIC 7 PE 20567 % 8. #4 8, Telegraph off on a deer Joe, ode} 12, Reg. $104.95, Winchester Model 50. Featherweight Reg. $44. ee 114 a, nae : vl 12-18-20, ? ulate, Teg. now 0 N. 60 8. ee | Open # to é: Bob Hutchinson ‘ : : ioe j ome PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1938 New Stewarts. Generals-Holly Great Lakes-Zimmers & to 10 foot wides, ali len «hak tans ees | aealeie ae rental an. ‘parts, ‘bottle S SPARTAN eteisar Fasisas _ Ask for Keith ae tt 37117 or call TRAILER EXCHANGE New Andersons We buy, sell and trade. Used 8-10 Wides USED Wenees F wa pRENTAL Bottle Gas Parts and Supplies Closed ig Be Pontiac Chief —_ Detroiter Bargains—Bargains 15. to 50 ft 8 & 10 wide Get our trade-in wance ever, G ae deal eres you buy. Re- ~ ip ites ve hundreds Mobile Home Sales Inc. 430) Dixie Highway Sates Boe Pontiac Open sa Week SHORT OF MONEY? i rom ou Ger, proprietor sucticheer Oxtoré, “OA B-215 For Sale Housetrailers 78 amerree i) LIGHTWEIGHT er. Since 1932. Guar- a ¢em t - “er Sales. W. Huron. (Plan te one of Wally Bryan's caravans.) PT. SETRAL — $256. 12 Venice Ct. off Lake Phone ree \# BEAUTIFUL ——s ~ WHEELS — THIS 3 Ge a Open § Sunday. _haw. ~~ For Sale Bicycles 84 2%) «=6<GIRL'S BIKE — EXCEL. 1956. . FE 4-5382. Boats & Accessories 85 HYDRO SUPER 10 HUR- with ——= lower | ARD WITH = trailer, SAILBOAT, GOOD CONDI. | es $150. 14 ft. Clinker boat & owt P. motor. $175. MY 2-3611. 2¢FT. TRAILER FRAME COM. plete, 5000 Ib, capacity. hunting or boat Must sell. sis. 3.3284. 25% “Reductions oO mot models of Evinrude mo-| Buy where you wil! get service. Also some boats.at reduced prices. rude. ing’ Harrington Boat Works | YOUR Beth APH RD 18989 § TELEG FE 2-8033 Open Sundays 1958 16 neta Ngeoies ocagrd BOAT with Mark 75 EL motor and con- — trailer outfit complete Take overpayments Mazurek Marine Sales S Bivd & §. Saginaw FE 4-0588 _ 1958 FACTORY MADE RIVERIA . teele pontoon boat. With Jdohn- ten motor, electric started and controls, Has luxurious 16 ft, x 8 ft deck with rail. 22 -ft. Pon- Canvas top and rail covers. Spray = ‘ete. Fides os blue. thoy newest Demo plete 31198 rE ‘9-0092 after “i weekdays, ALUMINUM BOAT & MOTOR } FOR __sale. Inquire 100 8. Asto aeA p CAKE - N- Ohad wae Th is a deluxe boat. fully eauipped ew pare Bs motor and Revers 2 pits Mercury a $895. Bie, i scount 01 jarge selection m ponte, end im and mo- byt A Hollv ns i * sony siitiress 2, Big Discount On new and used boats and mo- S Hie a ie jracie Reiley Tees ag ree ri rE E 50062 (Ach BOATS | FIBERGLASSED, Rusts. | Orion, MY 3-1448 BOAT CLEARANCE OW & Runa ones ALES Bivd. 140) bwood at ‘Walton w FE #-4402.-9-6. Open Su. | a CHRIB (CP CRAFT -— 8 FE 4-9370 DINGHY — eel $25. FE 45382. ITEVINRUDE MOTORS” Clearance Sale Big discount just a few, asian on ARINE | } Beowaed re Rd., +8. FE 60113, é 2 Boat trailer $12.08, cow $7 t OWENS chews SUPPLIES Rvervitey ter 396 Orchars Lk. Ave, FE. 2-0020 Transportation Offered 87 CARS R “ORE. tee aituwens ance “ey Tertiord, Conn. FE 23015 FE 2-5823 efter 6 p.m. PLY ¢ ENGINE AIRLINER TO California, Hawaii, $99.10, _ Ferry Service, tne. OR 3-1254 i 4-1] PRICES. JUNK CARS AND te: rap, Free tow, OR 3-6015. “A BETTER PRICE ~ Out of state dealers on the | Will out-bid Michi an oe, on thru ‘3¢ cars, Nice cars or ro apse Call argue J iF LUCKY AUTO SALES Saginaw ea aan ‘$l- . b466, 184 Mt. SOUGHT IN rE 41170 or FE CASH FOR LATE MODEL USED CARS Community Motor Sales AUBURN AT EASf BLVD. — FE 8-4539_ ONES SATISFACTION AIM + Bs. oe Baa Hwy., pays the Doliar for all late models. eh OR 31355 . as g MUCH AS WO POR J FOR JUNK AND S000 deve spd Pg Beer PRICE FoR_FORE CART" CASH 1 FOR CARS HARDENBURG MOTOR SALES ER, PE. 5.7308 DON’T HESITATE Bring Your Car to GLENN'S Motor . Sales Top $$$ Dollar WE NEED CLEAN CARs * NEW LOCATION "952 \ W, HURON M & M Motor Sales Te late motel cars. aunt Also used: tires. rE eis. 7 iC. PICKUP. i) FE £6 | NEED-A US™D eRCCK? PICKUPS m "52. to ‘57 “0 14. t om. PONTIAC TRUCK CENTER GMC RETAIL BRANCH Oakland at Cass wae neni Cars 8s) hog | CARNIVAL. , at ‘TM, Reg. U.S. Pat. OF. 2 1958 by NEA Service, Ine, “Oh, I’) grant you your Alvin is all boy! Th fact I some- times find it hard to believe he’s just ONE boy!” hi 0 * myers. radio ond heater, extra $1505 ee er naflow, and black “a door, Hydramatic, radio and eereee SHELTON Pontiac - Buick Rochester -OL 1.8133 1953 BUICK. SPECIAL, | «| DR. ihe 5036 Lake Ange- “FOR QUALITY CADILLACS Also a fine selection of other clean used cars. It's Wilson-Pontiac Cadillac 1350 N. Woodward Bham MI 4-1930 CAR Center 232 S, SAGINAW ~ wagon. Fordomatic:. $1895 ae °F. $1485 sof pee or niin gue a Meret vas. “ tic § 845 weave . $ 695 "56 Chevy 2 ar. Powe . $1196 : $1395 ‘65 Ford Phirlane 2 dr. i . af a a ge aa. I to Olds 2 ar. st, neee 3 165 Many Shes a Pieone trees Russ — Dawson Mercury - Edsel - Lincoln English-Built Fords 232 S. SAGINAW PE 2-0131 | Foreign & Sports Cars 90B '1938 ENGLISH FORD STATION Wagon, exc. condition, R&H, low mileage. MA 65-1116, HILLMAN ‘57 STATION WAGON. Will trade, OR 3-2002. 91 For Sale Cars » ULLY 0081. H. $3 BUICK sPECIAL equipped, Bargain, EM 3 1. DRIV- 4, _Riggins 1950 BUICK, 2 DR. GOOD ing cond Call anytime after FE 2-9080. CAR PAYMENTS 1 TQO0 £ BURDEN- some? Let us help vou adja to some less expensive model. Lake Orion Motor Sales ‘ M24 AT CLARKSTON RD. | FORD — ~ MERCURY MY 2-2611 | Goed Transportation | '52 Kaiser ..... a §2 1°62 Willys . weve { $125 ‘31 Ford "$83 Roger's Sales & Service 695 Aeeurn Ave FE 2-9555 YOUR BEAR WILLYS DEMOS, SAVE UP TO $1100 IMPALA SPORT COUPE WHITE—Automatic transmission, power steering. power brakes, air suspension. 2:0 HP H engine. $2395 BEL AIR HARDTOP 4 DOOR—2-tone, automatic trans- mission, power steering, po Wer brakes, air suspension, 230 HP engine am $2345 BEL AIR SEDAN 4-DOOR — 2-tone with automatic transmission, power steering, pow- er brakes, padded dash, EZzI- oo prota air suspension, white wails, $2205 OTHERS FROM $1694 NORTH CHEVROLET | Hunter Boed. t a. Vectra Pod Birminghant, MI 4-2735 HAUPT Pontiac Sales For Good Will Used Cars 1957 Chevrolet, V-8, 4dr.. Bel-Air hardtop, Powerglide. Radio Heat- er. Power brakes White and turquoise = car can be down “ Bp a Soe = on balance. sedan, Hydra. matic Raito Seater “whitewalls. at 95 down 1 ; Par’ tTplet 2 ton — woes Lo — a. real buy * down 1958 "Pontiac Keretser’ Catalina. All leather trim. Hydramatic Radio, Heater, white walla, $195 down. 1956 Chevrolet, 2 dr., hardtop, radio, heater, powerglide power eames, excellen sco see dow Also rtation Bee 8 Ove ite “4 "pil ana ahts MApie f or bate 56-1141 OLIVER | Motor Sales Chevy Wagon ..$2395 Buick Sedan ...$1995 Buick Convert, $2295 Plymouth ......$ 295 Ford Conv. V-8 $1195 + Chev y BA 2-Dr. $1995 uick Sedan ...$1195 ntiac 2-Dr. ...$ 995 hevy Wagon ..$ 795 th tat or on tn un tn on tun Oy ta ee +B Po 54 C Pontiac Cat. Ford 2-Dr. V-8 $ 695 Chevy Sedan ...$ 495 Buick Sedan ...$ 545 53 Olds 88 2-Dr. ...$ 495 54 54 "53 53 tn wn Ask for Glenn Sawyer or Henry -Schlaefer In new car department ask for Duane Brown, Dave Wilson, Harold |’ Anscomb or Dwight Blinn. OLIVER BUICK . 210 Orchard Lake Ave. | FE 2-9101 Open Eves. or Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 91 STOP, LOOK, BUY | 50 BUICK. $150 ccs COMMUNITY Ford Victoria ..$1995 | wee 795 |: 52 Buick H’top ....$ 195) ain ‘Motor Sales "68 Buick Super..°.. ........ $2905 "68 Cadillac Devitie <siae . $4005 "68 Ford T Bird full power. "ST On BYT..2...<.:8 nr ‘ST Chevy. wagon 4 dr,.....-.- Rf pere. enture ar” eres = 38 Chev. ag: ee $1195 " s OE « tavenea sss "6S d convert... ccs. $1195 6S AMG Dr... ce snecee- 8 905 ‘ST “ee Fasc case 2 "54 , | Serer o) 54 B GF. .sccccveqees, § 'B4 Nash 2 dr.........cenee 605 "63 Ford 4 dr. .....ccccseceees 8 05 "53 BOG 6 OF... xcs cseccees $l: a” ie ge ee ae ne 305 Auburn at East’ Blvd. ' FE 8-4539 1957 CADILLAC 62 cgore 2825 Otsego PE 56-0560 §3 CADILLAC COUPE, EXC. CON. 900 miles. sonite wall ac’ supreme tees. FE 5-7020. Hardenburg 2 pers Z dr. 6 R&H.... $174 a * ambler C-country "52 q Chevrolet 4dr. ee $ 245 CORNER CASS & PIKE FE 5-7398 Cadillac 62, 4-Dr. beautiful "53 dark blue top, = blue Pomd very Peo in- le — R&H, tomatic, is one, wil please Fol PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES Oakland FE 27-2351 ‘51 BUICK SUPE R - REPOSSESSION Clean car, extra running conf. tion gies full “ee Payments 10.06 mon‘h needed r. Bell. Great Lakes. FE 8-0402 Get Wi ise, Economize RAMBLER "BILL ‘SPENCE RAMBLER setae & agg 4 211 8. Sa PE 5-9297 $$$ REMEMBER $$$ sou’ ak ARE Boos! UGHT PP aND Dixie “OK” Lot DOLLAR ea Ae CLEAN TOP CARS AND PICK po JOHN L ge Trg OR MANY" Pa en he «MAKES 4 ane Auburn Motor ~ ‘Sales -. COMMER FIER & E. BLVD. CADILLAC. “4 DR... 1989 ~ ful 57 C = TAKE over payments. ing a mo. FE 2-1345 after 5 JEROME "Bright Spot” $2150 ‘ST yom tiac +DR. HARDTOP, full $1595 ‘ST “FORD 8 GYLINDER, radio and heater. D1095 ‘55 -DESOTO 2-DR. SPORTSMAN, It's a beauty! 9/90 ‘S44 MERCURY MONTEREY ¢DR., beautiful joo, © $950 © ‘ba OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE, red bottom and black top. $995 "$5 PONTIAC STARCHIEF 4-DR. ~~ $850 ‘94 BUICK 2-DR HARDTOP, super: Riviera $1350 ‘$5 OLDSMOBILE “88 HOLIDAY, full power. $1395 ‘30, OLDSMOBILE, "88" Super Holi- ay. ‘ $495 ‘50. CADILLAC, one owner, JEROME "Bright Spot’ Olds - Cadillac Dealer Orchard Lake at Cass by Dick Turner Chea — tation . ref Nice ete nana i CARS TO’ + oY a . ECONOMY USED: CARS. 22 Auburn (off Saginaw) ee eee wail tires ...c-scrs, Ste s8 Holiday” Cre., Pri rsh 88 Holiday Cpe.. load- wi pow Gonvé., a real nice ek Century, +Dr. Htop, WIGUGHTEN & SON ‘68 we CON- Lesunie site Mtn Ry PEs 815 | 7 FORD. ALL PARTS FOR SALE. YOUR FRIENDLY 1 DEALER FOREIGN CAR ALES , wer pone payed cuieNs 528 N. Malan Rachester” OF 1.9761 _ BEHIND iHE POST et OPrice 66 CHEV. STD SHIFT 2 DR 1053 FORD CONVERT, FOM, = 8 th nic.” Exc, cond, $950 ‘ON: i N me pa 1953 Cae 7 DOOR, HEATER, ue af Pate . Sat crea radio, good condition, $500, Mi Sa tage te 1987 FORD FAIRLANE 8. i084 CHEVY, DELRAY CLUB R&H, mation, Sears an or coupe. Sharp, Eddie Steele yore. ttle” cash down: Eddie Steele FE 5-0204. PE eg Sanh DR. OR ustom 6, R. & C. Rambler) ":"itit Bia Eat 58 THUNDERBIRD EM. sant ean m beat oy “aga 93-4155 Demonstrator ‘36 Lincoln Premier, 4 dr. Less than 1,000 mil¢és. Also 2 ‘58 full power, air-cond,, be beautifuf convertibles. Save $600. 55 evy 6 cyl. 4 dr. Clean TOM BOHR, INC. MU 4-1715 34 ed Bel Air. Nice ‘3. FORD, VIC.. FORDOMATIC. ‘53 Olds 88, 4 dr. Sharp RaH WW Only $ "63 Rambler. hardtop. C Cpe. clean R luctors "52 N. 4dr t Bite 124 Oakland PE 4.3529 Beat Th ese Ua or Frices ‘s1, FORD § FULLY © Complete Service, 8 a.m. ‘ti oy one 8pm} ‘53 0 pore for equ ay. | $1,200 FORD CONVERT, LIKE NEW. “al or little cash down. le Ford, FE ogarare FE 5-5877. | ioe FORD CUSTOM. V-8 ae Rinvins. Bargain. FE 3-754 | i986 — STATION WAGON, 6 Rite “e untry sedan. Your car or ttle cash ere Eddie Steele _FE_5-9204 oa ee een Stes ir. . $1,800. §025 Eliz, Lk a FACTORY BRANCH nt FORD RIA == RDTOP — Yana Porn a stee heater, ar “RETAIL rte in CLEAN ‘56 CHEVR: — or ROLET, 2 DOOR trade on small station- FE 2-114. ina” 4 DR. HT.. 8 AUTO. R&H, whites, Your car or little ry down, Eddie Steele Ford. 5-0204 Good top, white tir Fowe wide. es, erglide Exc. . FE 4-6412 ONE OWNER. 55 CHEVRO — wet ae. Tian adio, + Ss Fe fom tke res 39,000 miles. $1,005. OR ear - 1957 2 DR. HARD- TOP. be: beautiful Coral & white ~ tu-tone, aw tic transmis- sion, radio & nea ter. Look this one over! ONLY $1795, COLE’ S ‘86 CHEVY 6._ PERFECT CONDI- tion. Will take ad trade, $900. ee a53 sy Rs . A REAL eer ene Sasse nT a "REPOSSESSION - Paym *j cash needec 11.46 montn. Mr. Lakes. FE $-0402 - dr. auto, trans. good cond. $1,150 a 6: 1963 DODGE ‘or SEDAN. 6 __ cylinder, SHARP. rE ee. DEMO 1958 FORD 500 oh ar Power coors 6 d. Less _ FE 5-4101 or FE pest 4957 PORD 2 DR. 6. STD. TRANS. R&H. Your car or le ce down, Eddie Steele . Late Model SALE BE AUTIFUL Priced Low To Move Fast HURRY — HURRY °56 FORD ........$1595 VICTORIA — Auto, trans, Radio & © Reser. W.Walls. Beautiful Onyx '56 CHEVROLET $1195 2 DOOR 210 — Radio . Heater, Pa ope: trans. 6 Cyl, A beauty. 56 CHEVROLET $1495 eke — Power steer- Auto. trans, Light BLUE we ails. A t-owner special, $7 CHEVROL ET $1775 B-AIR 2 DOOR s YEL- LOW & pie GR REEN. W. Walls, Radio & Heater. Powerglide. Sf PL YMOUTH ; $1795 BELVEDE TOP — GRAY & IVORY, Hy Cyn Radio & enter, "57 CHEVROLET $2045 | ° STATION WAGO § Passen- cs — Py Cyl., POR adio & Heater, 58 CHEV ROLET $2450 STATION WAGON — nae wv Heater, Auto..trans., 8 Ww. Walls. Honey BEIGE. '58 CHEVROLET $2550 | B.AIR 2 DOOR — Radio & Heater Auto. trans, W.Walls. 8 Cyl, Solid BLACK. °S8 CHEVROLET $2295 Steer Ww PO Walls Cotetial | - CREAM. ‘58 CHEVROLET Company Official Cars ONLY A FEW LEFT AT Reduced Prices: Matthews Hargreaves t CHEVROLET THE BIG, BiG "LOT 631, OAKLAND AVE. ££ FE 80488 _ Open till 10 FE 4:4547~ = “CY” OWENS FORD 56 FORD CONVERTIBLE o “——y™ OWENS 147 8, SAGINAW | FE 5-4101 SHARP 52 FORD 2-DR. V-8. STD. ei clean. PE transmission, 2-3935. ~. FORD FAIRLANE, 7 DR. Your car 2 little cash down. Hadie Steele F FE 5-9204. REPOSSESSION §5 DODGE STATION WAGON. 4 SELECTION . 983, Pontiac Chieftain deluxe 2% pod r Beornitig way above average. lave $ill oa. cee =~ ioe vege over: drive, Gave 4204. 1956 Pesiies 210 4-door wagon, radio, heater, gas saving over- drive. Save Pg! Buick ial 4-door hertien, Radio, hea’ ter, dynafl flow, One ow: er, Clean. $323 958 Chevrolet Impala. hard va Powersiiie rete, heater. good as new, e $829 Save These cars carry Haskin's per sonalized used car guarantee. Haskins Chev. |¥ oni Dixie Highway a. M15 Maple 5-8071 = Opep nites “til ® 52 FORD VIC. HT. Sears R &, it it. Veaks oh .| 1953 HUDSON; i real coma car, No money de PE down, Eddie. Steele Ford, $54 MANN. 4 DR - | KP ISER—1004 Rau, Hydra. Eten clean. Full n price & $305 THE BARG Hunter Bivd. at Haynes. birm, MI ¢ 64456 53 JEEP STATION IN WAGON, NEW __motor. C 285 Oakland, UN- 1940. ine LASALLE TF DR .GOOD condition, 59 Cherryland, Au- pure ‘Hel ts. or Pe 1950 MERCURY SEDAN. ReH. AB- 80L LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of be mo, Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Pa’ at} 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. 1954 MERCURY CLUB COUPE Sharp, Eddie Steele Ford. FE 6-0 $2 MERCU ¥Y CLUB CPE., HARD top, Ver clean. $395. Adkins Used Cars 138 Oakland Ave. FE 5 RAMBLER (WAGON. . Russ Johrson Mtr: Sites. MY 2-2871 1062 y RAMBLER STATION WAGON Overdrive. R&H. ABSOL' ay NO MONEY ~ a = ‘parks mo, Harla “fume i oe Bde aces a Ferd, "55 RAMB Ww New tires, overdrive, os 3 Sales. MI 47500. AGON, FACTORY BRANCH S7 OLDSMOBILE “98” Full power, aute. trans., ra- dio and heater. .For You AFTER A VISIT TO "952" West Huron .FROM OUR SeAnD- SELECTION TAIN TO CAR YOU Stop In oO PLI R NGE S0ir Yo 57 BUICK . SUPER CONVERTIBLE trans., nt full piles. Pa PONTIA $10.90 gue sites oF Good Aer oo adage nae, "RETAIL Ss ORE” heater. Mr Bell. Great Lakes, 3-T117 t FE 8-0402. PCLEMEN “PL YMOUTH te FORD. 2 DR. 3. H. Man- BEMIND THE POST. OFFICE 1000 Maple ot Pears ° Trail ans. U —— FOM aaa Ls) Raga +l — ¥. isd FORD CLUB COUPE 6. er brakes. eluxe rior. Walled Lske ‘MA pout R&H, whites. Your car or little| ery clean. $875 J. Wheeler. EM isi CHEVY 2 DR” Glin cash down. Eddie Steele Ford. | _ 33415. SBRGLURELY ao udnay | FE 5-020. __ 8 OLDS, 88 HOLIDAY COUPE. 9 sume ot 1961, Ba CLUB SOUFE, ¥-a.| 7600 miles, loaded, full xe Call Credit Mgr., Mr. ¥Y NO MONEY | _ Will consider trade FE Pa at MI 7500. Bareid’ Ture DOWN Sascume. payments of | 1952 OLDS a8 HARTOP, HYDAJ $8.65 m Mer. Mr.| R&H. A BEOL UTE. Y NO Moxey IPERIAL CROWN CON- Parks = MI 47500. Harold Tur- DOWN vertible, full power steer! ner Ford, 1437 mo Call ‘Creat Mars Mr. brakes. windows, Sway eat & | 49 FORD CONVERT. %4. 53 CAD- Tks at MI 47500. Harold Tur: — Pag leather; dy engine. New tires & paint.| ner Ford. ok big ater, other| Exc. cond, throughout. $600 EM- 1953 PACKARD. EXC, COND. NO Cin: c. ew must “. — oe aa 6 é m. __Tust, $325, PE 5-2766 arkston Motor Sales — | 197 PORD, 2 STD, R&H. | PLYMOUTH ‘31 BELVEDERE Your car or little cash down, Ed- Hardtop. Automatic. H. : See Wak ae reeerrr die Steele Ford. FE 5-924. . brakes and steerin; stike Dem. a CURVY V7 DR Bans rar private owner 91.108, MI_ $3511. tone. 1 owner. $1,196 RE'LL BE ‘96 PLYMOUTH. aver. Exc MOTORS __N ern white ‘tires te re r ~~ res 124 Oaxtand = FE ¢3%) “MORE WALKING |< For Sale Cars -For Sale Cars 91 For SaleCars . M1) aA < a oe "Le ep. . SACRIFICE, FE Pe ene "55 FORD. Eee 1 ana te as. 90a OE Doe Sat Scam | HASKING pais emcee ae ~ mate ear ese! BERATD) | _woney-savine G2 or down, full price PLYMOUTH 1 LER SHEER EA =| “Bayar” | SPECIALS aoe 1987 PL Kittle oan dene Pord Fz ara REPOSSESSI IN o credit Checks — whee” NATIONAL MOTOR 560 A ph ny Ave, Fe $4551 8-4551 FACTORY BRANCH — 58 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 4-DOOR Radio and heater, on matic, Power a. and Brakes. WHITE ith BLACK accent “RET. AIL ! STORE” “ PE 32-7117 2 PONTIAC, 51.000 8-0076. vite FONTIAG | EXCELLENT H. Manning. a5 PONTAE CONVERTIBLE TRI. ~ Tak : coe gp pend ttle cash do A or Eadie Stecle Ford, FE $0204. ase Vi AG Fe choos 1956 Volkswagen $1450 Larry Jerome waren ron? DEALER SHOR WAGON, 50 Cash, 5 Ey 190 8. Jemeaon.: > “SUNROOF Us ~ er. over sil6o. to all our customers in, power, Auto, Nose! = Heater. . . $2004 37 OLDSMOBILE, SUPER “88” H.TO: Pull pproen Tadic & Heater, _ trans, . $21be! - | 57 CHEVROLET | DEL ner 216 a 6 EEN — & . $1404 Sur 157 CHE Vv a r balboa i! at joor ‘e Pewetaise. Extra ie + » $1804 55 PONTI AC STARCHIEF 4 DOOR ano s eee se tebe #1 55, PONTIAC — WAGON Safari — Hydramatic, Pow- er brakes. Soe Abs Gear cuecemna Suny bes $1304 56 CHEVROLET % TON PICKUP amide “deo 56 ‘OLDSMOBILE 2 DOOR #8 H.TOP Hho baneeosy Power brakes. Betis —e ese $1544 157 F ORD FAIRLere “500°” Door — Fo-O-Matic, Radio a Heater. - _ perest aes 155 ‘PONTI AC CATALINA H.TOP ween. a & —_ a brakes. eee $1144 ‘54 PONTH AC STARCHIEF 4 DOOR Hydramatic, Power steering tee = = ‘Heater. . $704) ‘SI ‘FORD CustoM + Doon Heater, §& Cyl. — me j o. $244 55 CHEVROLET “— WAGON 2 Door 210 — & Cyl., Radio & Heater, Power brakes. * Clean, one le 52 FORD STATION week 4 Door Country Squire _- nome e gee Eg | 56 STU DEB AKER‘ CHAMPION 2 DOOR «+, $804 ‘GLENN'S Motor Sales 952 W. HURON R/ NEW I windows. appreciate its beauty. and like mew condition. STATION WAGON. radio, ‘ heater, as a ‘58 model, paint. back-up lights, “washer, free miles. THIS WEEK. OUR OCATION rf “TOP. VALUE * USED 1707 | E4237 FE 41797 \ PE 8-4539 © Our Reputation For many many years we have been dealing in the sale of used cars and it has paid off handsomely FAIR PRICING TOP ALLOWANCES _ BEST of FINANCING And |customeR SATISFACTION Come in and take advantage of the many years of our experience. 58 CADILLAC Sedan Deville .............$4995 4 DR. HARDTOP, power steering. brakes, seats and Electric radio. You must see this car to '58- THUNDERBIRD 4- “passenger ........ $3795 HARDTOP. Beautiful White finish, power steering and brakes. power seat and white tires. 57 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4-Door .........$2195 11,000 actual miles, V-8 engine. rear seat speaker, lights, gold and white finish. a wagon is as nice '57 MERCURY Monterey 2-Door .....,... HARDTOP, push button drive, radio, heater, white tires, low mileage car with beautiful Coral and Ivory 57 FORD Fairlane “500” HARDTOP, Red and White finish, Fordomatic, Thun- derbird’ engine, radio, heater, white tires, windshield condition and @ one owner. 56 CHEVROLET. 4-Door 210 . V-8 ENGINE with Powerglide, radio, heater, tires, rear seat speaker, one owner. This ty a nice job. 55 PONTIAC 860 2-Door Sedan .........$ 945 TU-TONE PAINT, radio, heater, Hydramatic, very clean car and will give you many thousahd trouble- SPECIAL THIS 55 PONTIAC 860 2-Déor Sedan ..........$ 895 HYDRAMATIC, heater, tu-tone blue and white finish. This is @ nice car and priced for fast sale. vain We have many good ’53 and ’54 Chevrolets, Fords, Pontiacs and Nashes, All are priced for quick sale. . “| COMMUNITY MOTOR. SALES Auburn at East Blvd. . eo 4,000 miles powerglide, fog $2195 | 2-Door .......... $1895 padded dash, like new SPECTAL. becec ene ns $1295 white WEEK. FE 8.4590 Eg a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15,1958 fe | ie jp a ag st ; -- Today's Television Programs - - Programs furnished by stations Usted tn thie columm are subject to change without notice ‘Channel 2-WJBK-TV Channel &—-WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9 CKLW-TV ba TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00 (7) Curtain Time. Comedy. (9) Popeye. (4) News. (2) Racket Squad. 6:10 (4) Weather: Eliot. 6:15 (4) Box Four. 6:30 (7) Comedy (cont.) (8) Farmer. Alfalfa. Car- toons. (4) Life of Riley. Comedy. (Re-runs.) (2) News: LeGoff. 6:40 (2) Weather. 6:45 (2) News. 7:00 (7) Mama. I remember Ma- ma series with Peggy Wood. (9) State Trooper. | (4) Death Valley. Desperado rides to escape sheriff's posse. (2) Hunted. William Lundi- gan, “To Lift a Feather.” 7:30 (7) Youth Bureau. Boy wins contest with faked: names. (9) Million Dollar Movie. Greer Garson, “Julie Mis- behaves.”* (°48). (4) Haggis Baggis (color). (2) Robin Hood. Old enemies clash. (Re-run.) 8:00 (7) 26 Men. Rangers take the ‘‘Killer’s Trail.” ' (9) Movie (cont.) (4) Restless Gun. Sheriff turns crooked on last day of duty in order to retire: rich. (Re-run.) (8) Burns, Allen. Language barriers plague the family when exchange student moves in. (Re-run.) 8:30 (7) Bold Journey. South- eastern Alaska. (9) Movie (cont.) (4) Wells Fargo. Former out- law is jailed for shooting) ~ man in self-defense. (2) Masquerade Party. Panel), . quiz. 9:00 (7) Voice Program. Musical |7: Fred Waring and the Penn- sylvanians. (9) If Had Million. (4) Twenty One. (2) Top 10 Lucy Shows. Lucy, Desi ate interviewed on “Face to Face” TV show. (Re-run.) 9:30 (7) Polka-Go-Round. (9) O. Henry Play. (4) Turn of Fate. Detectives uncover bizarre murder plot when Jack Lemmon. reports his wife is missing on air- plane flight. (Re-run.) (2) Frontier. Justice. Ida Lupino, James Whitmore hide from killer in shack. (Re-run.) 10:00 (7) Polka (cont.) (9) News. (4) Suspicion. Policeman jeopardizes his life to pro- tect murder witness. Ed- mond O'Brien, Janice Rule co-star. (2) Studio One. Rosemary DeCamp, Tommy Rettig. 10:15. (9) Weather. 10:20 (9) Film Fare. 10:30 (7) News: Daly. New time. (9) Starlight Theater. Clark Gable, ‘Manhattan Melo- drama.” (’37). (4) Suspicion (cont.) (2) Studio 1 (cont.) - 10:45 (7) time. Sports Parade. New 10:55 (7) Weather. Soupy’s On. Theater (cont.) News: Westerkamp. News: LeGoff (color.) Weather: Eliot. Weather (color). 11:00 (7) . @& (4) (2) 11:15 (4) (2) 11:20 (4) Sports. (2) Sports (color). 11:25 (2) Nightwatch Theater. fession. ("38), 11:30 (7) Night Court. (9) Theater (cont.) (4) Jack Paar. (2) Nightwatch (cont.) TUESDAY MORNING (2) Meditations. (2) On The Farm Front. (2) TV College. . (4) Today. (2) Wild West. (1) Cartoon Carnival. (7) Big Show. (2) Cartoon Classroom. (4) I Married Joan (2) News. (2) Beat the Clock. | (4) Romper Rvom. (7) Our Friend Harry. (4) Dough-Re-Mi. ~ 11:55 Victor McLagien, “Full Con-/2: 10:00 (2) For Love or Money. — 10:25 (9) Billboard. 10:30 (2) Star Showcase. (4) Treasure Hunt. (9) Movie. 11:00 (2) Arthur Godfrey. (4) Price Is Pight. 11:25 (7) News. 11:30 (2) Top Dollar. (4) Concentration. (0 Ricky the Clown. 11:45 (7) Noontime Comics. TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life. (9) Stevi-o. (4) Tie Tac Dough 12:15 (9) Song Shop. - 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You (Color). (7) The Erwing. (9):Mary Morgan. (2) Guiding Laight. (2) Ladies Day. (7) My Little Margie. (9) Movie. (4) Amos 'n’ Andy. (2) As The World Turns. (7) Topper. (4) TV Reader’s Digest. (4) Faye Elizabeth. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (7) Movie. (4) Truth or Consequences. ~ (2) House Party. (4) Haggis Baggis (color). (9) News, (2). Big Payoff. (4) Today Is Ours. (7) American Bandstand. (9) Movie, 2:00 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From these Roots. (7) Who Do You Trust? 0 4:15 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. (9) Laff Time. 4:45 (4) Modern Romances. 5:00 (2) Susie. (4) It’s Great Life. (7) Sir Lancelot. (2) Bandstand. (4) (color) George Pierrot. (7) Mickey Mouse, 5:30 ACROSS ’ B sae h’ W = oss ritish’ Warship : ow Tig | tC) Stalemate aa | {Fails to Blast Fort 15 the 16 moisture | BALTIMORE (AP) — A huge 18 Pay crowd had gathered for re-enact- 30 Evaluate ment of the bomardment of Ft 2a Every McHenry 144 years ago in Balti- = Man's name more H + i Bate oe A Coast nd ce out in the ee | harbor, was representing the 8 cosines |_| British warship. + blanks Used to chop — — The first salvo of blanks from ret trees the shore batteries boomed across 39 Herote poetry the darkness of the water, A hush of om ad : came over the cowd. Nothing 42 Prosecute —— - minutes pissed pod 5a and still nothing happen oe Beteer looking * * * ‘ Spals ‘trae a J ca = Then an announcer’s — voice eee etn dhdemtiaeatiies amuiesinaammennmanel e SS ie thle place 3 Mused 19 Evergreen 38 Ecclesiastical blared over the public addres sys- nichnsmne chamber 24 Firat man “dons ould a Ip pi va oor 7 Go astray 26 Duseular a eee of ng: “yom Sita, «6 eee. SEeea ey | Many tnenems bales Inte 1 Japanese Hy simple : 28 wen drinks 46 French father j|the ipso ar to, oe outcas az > ury fy tie Transmitted appe: : ne Segenge meriey pd pA te Exclamation nerstones. -- Today's Radio Programs - - = WIR, (700) CELW, (ape) WW, (60> WOAR, (1180) WXYZ, (1278) WPON, (1660) WIBK, (1498) WXYZ, Breakfast Club 1:30—WJR, Dr, Malone someet 1 wandetand CKLW. news. Bs ae WXYZ, News, Shorr 6:00—WJR, News W. News, Surreil W. New W. Heatter, Davies WWJ, News CKLW, News, Sports WCAR, News ‘Martrn Ww. Baseball CRLW. Kews, Chase WIBK, Stere WPON, Bob ws, Don McLeod | WCAR, WCAR, News, Bennett WPON, Music $0~—WJR, Jack Herris a rg egy Nol aeaaas News, Bea a News M. Labbi CKLW, News, Davies 6:30—WJR, See Date WWJ, Bob weil WEAR: Oane’s Party 8 ‘parte Pile . 11:30—-WJIR, Music TUESDAY MORNING 6:00—WIR, Voice of Agric. WJBK, News, R . Cal pid CKLW, News, or f Morgan WPON, Chuck Lewis 2:30—-WJR, Cpl. Next Door wwe Fam WPON, ae Wie, Pred ted 3:00—WIR, Helen Trent Tee thceee House CELW. Rooster, Club 10:30-—WW3. Don A a Ww. Matinee ee CKLW, Lewis’ dr. WAR. News, Sueriven — CKLW. ghinbreak, Davies Weak Rirhgtt™™ sewer dag wen mpmene vm | BER Bec om_mvis 3 ster Extra «| “ORLW'O. Musi Davia Ya,“ Curtain Cal WEON. Sim “Ameche r a im, 7 WXYZ, Night Train WJBK. News, Géorge Giie: hens maa’ male ‘Ford 4:30_WiR,_ Rowse Party CKLW, Bu bavies WCAR, News WCAR. News ; ‘Ww. Woman in House WPON, Jim WPON Sports WPON, Chuck Lewis writ. news, McKenzie 8:00—WJR, Amos ‘n’ Andy e Wolf WWJ, News, Cederburg 8:30—W. Answer Please CKLW, News, Davies Ww. Nightline cat News Toby David ooKLW, iad ie TUESDAY AFTERNOON Wa 7:30—W. Music Hall - cam N. Casey show oH IR, Music 9:30—WJR, Cloak Room CELW. ‘world Today ‘wg New hg tm n CKLW. WBE: News. ‘Georee David :30—WJR, Time for Music OR tet Lage Pheer ORL. Gras, Ctiteetode CKELW. News, Chase 4: Bh arias ‘Parade of. Bands WxYz, Mwatirick, McKenzie are, tome Ree WEAR. News, Bennett wow Don MacKinnon 4:30-—WJR, Music Hall CKLW, News, Chase e .|and found it easier to bat law BEST FOOT FORWARD — carrying, gun-toting Western hero, “Bat Masterson,” in a new filmed series starting on the NBC-TV network, Wednesday, Oct. 8. Po Gene Barry to Portray Cane ‘Canping. Western Gene Barry portrays the cane- hunting, hoping she’ll be able to open the fall mating season, } said. “So many girls call up the guys for dates now.” IN. pursue up to a point. Bat Masterson Role Unusual Actor — Says Lawman Dressed for Burial in Case He Died By RON BURTON HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — One of the new Westerns set for this fall’s TV fare is about a lawman who usually dressed in clothes suitable for burial, because he never knew when he was going to die. The series will star Gene Barry in the role of Bat Masterson. It debuts Wednesday, Oct. 8. * * * “The series is based on incidents in the life of Bat Masterson, sidekick of Marshal Wyatt Earp,” Barry said. ‘‘He was a product of the post-Civil War days. “{ think my costume as Mas- terson will be the most unusual business suit. I have a derby and a cane, too. The point which Bat always made was that he figured he usually wasn’t very far from an undertaker.” Barry, 6 feet 2 and a solid 180 pounds, said Masterson’s real name was William Barkley Masterson. He acquired the name “Bat” from a defensive maneuver he used with those who didn’t see eye to eye with him when he wanted to enforce a law. , x * * ‘Once he was wounded, and it had a relatively minor permanent effect on him,’ Barry said. “‘The result was that he carried a cane breakers with it than go through the routine of a formal fight. I guess he batted so many guys that the name stuck.” Barry, a full-time actor and part-time general contractor, stayed. away from TV series because of a fear of being identi- fied with one type of role or one role, He changed his mind when the Masterson series was pro- posed to him. a “Anything really good which ap-) peals to an entire family will be accepted on TV,” he said, “so I'm doing a Western series.” x * * ’ Barry, who has film and Broad- way credits, said the contracting effort is an outgrowth of an epi- sode which happened several years ago in New York, “Pd done a little plumbing,” he said. “My uncle came to a theater to see me in a Broadway play. Afterward he told me, ‘I saw your show, and you should be a plumber.’ “I’m not laughing about it now. An actor has a peak, and when it’s over he should have some other business all set. I’m studying gen- eral contracting now, and it’s like going to school all over again. The first job I’m letting out to sub-|/many, many years ago: do right. contractors is my own new house Marilyn Monroe Goes to Hospital—Is Tired HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Marilyn Monroe is in the hospital and her husband says too much work is the reason. . = * x * The blonde actress finished a torrid love scene with Tony Curtis yesterday at the Coronado, Calif., location of “Some Like It Hot.” * Her husband, playwright Arthur Miller, then drove her to Cedars of Lebanon Hospital here. Miller said his wife probably would be in the hospital] four or five days for a complete checkup, k * * Director Billy Wilder said Miss Monroe complained of feeling ill Saturday but went on with her scenes. j ‘Big Three Seek No Intervention. on TY. It is a conservative, dark |. Asking Gov. Williams. to Keep Fingers Out of Auto Negotiations DETROIT — Gov. Williams was asked by the big three ayto firms today not to intervene’ in the current contract negotiations with the United Auto Workers be- cause such action might, delay progress toward a settlement. Telegrams were sent to the gov- ernor by Henry Ford II; president of Ford Motor Co.; John F. Gordon, new General Motors ‘Corp. presi- dent, and L. L. Colbert, Chrysler Corp. president, which asked that the auto firms be/left alone. a E : what the/staff should be doing, if anything, at this point (in the auto negotiations) .” Ford told the governor that “events of the past few days en- courage us to believe we can reach an agreement that will be eco- nomically sound and fair to all concerned. Progress toward this goal can be achieved most rapidly . « »« Without outside intervention of any kind, however well-inten- tioned.” Gordon said “mediation” at this late date by outside parties not familiar with the complex nature of the current situation and prob- lems could only cause damaging delays and could accomplish nothing.” Colbert said, “We are convinced that any mediation by a third party would tend only to detour attention and ... delay the efforts to re- solve our difference union).” If you want to learn a woman's bad points, praise her to another woman ... Mark. Twain said it “Always This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” — which we're building now in | canyon near here.”’ Earl Wilson. See Detroit ‘Channel 6 - “Yagi” Antennas Do-it-yourself Kits $450 \ Installation Service Available Lions Foothall Games ‘TV ° Radio 8:00—WIR, News, B. Guest WoAR News. Purse ‘ WsBK Botnd OF WW3, News,- s,) rts WIBE: Kingsley Stereo Oe ate pelan nev CELW, goes. Deve WPON. News, wd. Watirick, *MeRensie ‘ _ L) , j 10:00—WJR, Orchestra Wow, Lark 12:30-—-WJR, Time Out, Music WIE, Rews, Met Leod WWJ, Bandstand i WXYZ, News, Shorr WCAR, News. Tenn, Ernie wae Ron 1 Knowies $:20—WIR Music Hal CKLW, News, Davies - pay eas * CKLW, s P 30—WI . Music Hall in WIBK. News, Georee : 1;00-WW3, News, Maxwell | WXYZ, News, McKenzie e iw; Ne avies 4, ie cy 9:00-WIR, News Mrs. Page | WIBK: News, Reid” - WOAR. _ WCAR, News Ace | WPON, Sports Slants 4 , WWJ, News, F, Elizabeth ' , Bob Lark Service 770 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-5841 ‘When Plane Stalls | There are aaat 3,70. marie theaters in Japan, Chorus Girls Divulge Man-Chasing Tactics By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Taffy Tuttle, the husband-hunter, is_ still so I took her over to get some tips from the chorus girls. “Every year seems to be getting to be leap year,” Taffy . “We | don’t ask boys for dates where I came from down in Greenville, S. C.,” spoke up Ann Shirley, 18, who’s been in town three weeks. “If I did that here and the folks at home found out about it, they wouldn’t let me some back to Green- ville!” Pretty Terry McDermott of Fairlawn, J., laughed and said, “American girls :|| MUFFLERS | oro | INSTALLED | “They then stop and let the man chase them. The man| can’t figure it out and it drives him crazy.” FREE! But—she confessed—a girl friend had pursued. “We were at a dance. She said, “phe that boy over there?| _ A oe I’m gonna have him.’ She bor- & j TERR GG aT rowed my eyebrow pencil and i jy y wrote a nants and address While You Wa ut and put it in his pocket. “Three weeks later he called her and said, ‘I seem to have your name and ad- dress.” They were married three months later. We. laugh about it now and she says, ‘Oh, wasn’t that a ter- rible thing te do!’” Chorus girl Gloria Curtis— whom the other gals call “Grammy” because she’s all GLORIA oeN of 24—comes from Emporium, Pa., which during the war} was referred to as “Girlstown.” At that time it had 20 girls to one man; it’s still rated| about six to one. : “Anyway,” she continued, “I was in a’ Las Vegas show| and another girl and I would ‘scout the audience’ while| dancing. ‘Sure, you look over tHe fellows in the audience. “If you see one you like, you glance at the girl you're working with and we know. One night my girl friend glanced at one and said ‘I like his looks. I'd like to meet. him. He was engaged to the girl he was there with and it wasn’t easy. / “But later whén he stepped away from his table to gamble, | ENT mio. AS MUF * lene a . =| } 4 ai E ae my gir} friend appened to bump into him—accidentally, of gel go course!—on her way to the ladies’ room. “The next weekend he came to Las Vegas without his fi- FE 2-1010 © ancee. Seven months later he and my girl friend were married. Open Mon. thru Thurs. . “But I/wouldn’t want you to think that I believe in girls “til —_ Ba ate pursuing / /men,” added “Grammy” Curtis. “Tt’s’ always somebody's girl friend that does it!” mut- tered Taffy Tuttle. “I think I might let my ogi friends worry and tty it for myo et —ae THE MIDNIGHT EARL ame Nelson Rockefeller’s expecting to use Pat Weaver, “roresee| NBC Pres., as his Robert Montgomery in the TV portion of his N.Y. election campaign . , . Audrey Meadows is giving up her| Washington home, will move to N.¥.:and do more TV... Ethel Merman’s show, “Gypsy” (Gypsy Rose Lee’s bio), is stalled—sister June Havoc hasn’t given her OK to be por-| trayed in it.. EARL’S PEARLS: Have you ever noticed that the adjective in “cheap politician” doesn’t refer. to what he cost the’ tax- payers? TODAY’S WORST PUN: Roger Price says a friend: in Texas is drilling for oil, so Roger sent him a get-a-well card. That’s earl, brother. . (Copyright, 1958) Killed on Joyride | RCA COLOR and § SWEET'S 5 RADIO i OU CAN FINCH | | MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — A tather| . Re AT HOME who took his two children joyrid-/ in your ‘sein time. 1f you left school, write for FREE ing in a plane yesterday was BOOKL tells you how. PD P9-18 killed when it stalled and crashed American Schoo! — P ©, Box 2 two blocks from their home. Please send me your f i <a Howard J. Smith, 43, died in alll Name... a= ou cements Me hospital less than three hours aft-| denne 7 ne “ee eee eevee erence e TERS weevee Pe cee eee eeene ee eeteeree er the crash, The children, Doug-/ civi;: cars Aida aint ects ne las, 15, and Sharon, 12, suffered| a Mee ee ee recover, Mrs, Smith said her husband] often took weekend joyrides and usually flew over their home. a ome aon uae aggoonl Mrs, Smith said yesterday, oh, my Sed, yt goo lice GET A PARAKEET. FREE WITH ANY. MAJOR APPLIANCE PURCHASE! Enter Parakeet Specking Contest! Teach it to say: “Hampton's have bargains in Home (with the}, Appliances. Near the New Post Olfice and Just as Reliable” Contest . December 25, 1958 .* Portable Television—Grand Prize HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Haron St. Open Nightly ‘til 9 P, M. FE 4-2525 broken bones but —— BELTONE PONTIAC CO. | y PP NIGHT SOUNDS Gig a 7.50 PMt0 1150 PM 1460 KC. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958 the didn’t open his mail: — NEW YORK (AP)—Things. a columnist might never suspect it pistol, It carries enough fuel to last the average motorist 45 years. decline, “the city had 956 public baths, and free shows were given the populace on 175 days a year. That's the trouble with giveaway programs—they never last. 't ‘| = Pevchiatrists Using Posture~ Charis Now One reason for Europe's original ;now has two or more television|meant. ‘ sienoeia” oe “divide.” sets, New England has been settled|had more good harbors than any| Milk is one of the oldest miracle “ : over 300 years, but three-fourths|/other continent, . sad ae Woman’ will” be | the of its area still.is classified as “ a | a England was ruled by Rome for|to drink a pint a day, Hippocrates, x ok * period that the When ancient Rome, started its|@ropped one of their quaintest cus-|centuries before the | themselves blue, | Era. ' ‘Sta-Clean” | * * * The average U.S. citizen now} In olden times the English mar- (stanpano) Budget Terms | some 500 years, It was during thisjthe “father of medicine,” pre- Pa “the ‘English matives|scribed milk to his patients five\| HOME HEATING OILS | ‘ riage One in 14 American households|depart.’’ The word “depart” i } | foods. Modern doctors tell adults/last thing civilized by man.” service read ‘ Eb Perey th TE 4-1584 herians abies 1c : 3 Your Independent Insutance Agent | FIRE — AUTO — BURGLARY INSURANCE MAYNARD JOHNSON General Insurance ‘807 Community National Bank Phone FE.4-4523 Japanese Teachers | Walk Outi in Protest ' % g Toe =A hi as Lil Flame-Resistant Brand-Name PAINT SALE | CEILING TILE “Pay Regulat Price of | isish QE Sqvere $5.95 for 1 Gallon te o” GALLON I SALE ON PLASTIC WALL TILE Masonry Paint P ‘ = Siew tenia al a All IF Each © Primer-Sealer’ Und ‘ , : wiieu tatoo pean. 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